FLUSHING, NY - AUGUST 08: Chicago Cubs Shortstop Dansby Swanson (7) turns a double play with New York Mets Shortstop Francisco Lindor (12) sliding into second base during the ninth inning of the Major League Baseball game between the Chicago Cubs and the New York Mets on August 8, 2023, at Citi Field in Flushing, NY. (Photo by Gregory Fisher/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
The Yankees begin their 2026 season in just over 60 hours from post time. Before they face the Giants in San Francisco for Opening Night on Wednesday though, they’ll stop by Arizona for a couple exhibition tune-ups at the Cubs’ spring training complex in Mesa. We also have a Brewers team preview coming up today, so we’re in a Senior Circuit state of mind this morning.
So for our question today, we want you to know who you think is the NL’s best team outside of the Dodgers? There’s no getting around the fact that the two-time defending champions are the favorites, but if someone were to seriously challenge LA this year, who would it be? Shooting from the hip, I’d say that the Cubs, Mets, Brewers, and Phillies are in the clubhouse, though if someone wanted to argue Braves or Giants, I would at least hear them out.
But it’s cheating to just name a whole bunch of intriguing contendersteams. To name one, I’ll go with the Phils. When that starting rotation is humming along at maximum power, it has multiple Cy Young contenders to throw at you between Zack Wheeler, Cris Sánchez, and Jesús Luzardo (plus Aaron Nola). Losing Ranger Suarez hurts, but they’re in good shape. And though there are reasonable age-related concerns with the lineup, it’s hard to turn up your nose at the Kyle Schwarber party.
Today on the site, John will present the final edition of our Making the Team Meter for 2026 spring training, and Sam will check out one of the relievers expected to land a spot in middle relief: Rule 5 pick Cade Winquest. Later, Kevin will wish old pal Dellin Betances a happy birthday, Jeff will preview the Brewers, Jonathan will offer some Yankees-themed fantasy baseball tips for 2026, and Madison will put out the call for your mailbag questions.
Today’s Matchup
New York Yankees vs. Chicago Cubs
Time: 3:05 p.m. EST
Video: N/A (audio available via WFAN 101.9 FM/660AM or MLB.tv)
BRADENTON, FL - MARCH 20: Konnor Griffin #75 of the Pittsburgh Pirates stands on the field to receive the 2025 Minor League Baseball Rawlings Gold Glove Award prior to the game between the Detroit Tigers and the Pittsburgh Pirates at LECOM Park on Friday, March 20, 2026 in Bradenton, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The Pittsburgh Pirates have the consensus top prospect in baseball in Konnor Griffin, and they see him as someone who could be the face of their franchise.
The Pirates reportedly have already discussed a big-time contract extension with Griffin who still hasn’t played a game in the major league, according to Jonathan Mayo of MLB.com. The details of this contract that Mayo reported go further than $100 million over a massive nine-year contract.
Griffin was the ninth overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft out of Jackson Preparatory School in Jackson, Miss. and he spent the entire 2025 season in the Minor leagues.
The 19-year old hasn’t even featured at Triple-A yet, but Griffin brings exactly what the Bucs need and what they have been looking for out of that shortstop position.
Griffin not playing at the Major League level yet makes a contract extension very risky for Pittsburgh, but one that they are willing to take. Waiting until Griffin becomes a MLB star will make signing him much more difficult, in terms of the money involved and the years too.
MLB teams get six years of team control with their players before they become free agents and can then choose who they want to play for.
A contract extension would give both sides what they want. The Pirates would take off years of free agency from Griffin, three years if they did sign him to that nine-year deal, and Griffin would make money far earlier in his career than waiting until after the 2031 season to do so.
Griffin being the top prospect in baseball and signing an extension before his MLB debut would be record breaking. The contract would also have potential to be the biggest contract in Pirates history too.
It is very rare to see a move made like this especially for a player with no major league experience but it’s a move that I think is smart. Griffin is the future of the franchise and if he turns out to be as good as everyone is saying then it would be smart for Pittsburgh to have locked up for a while.
A nine-year contract for that much money does seem like a lot, but we have seen the Pirates in the past not want to spend money on star players and they let them walk. I am glad it looks like they don’t want history to repeat itself and have Griffin walk. Now he could obviously leave after his extension but this move is something we are just not used to seeing the Bucs do.
The talented shortstop will not be on the Opening Day roster, but we should expect to see him in the Majors at some point for the 2026 season.
With four off-days in the first 13 days of the season, the Yankees are going with a four-man rotation to begin the year so their starters are not going too long between starts over the first two weeks.
Max Fried will start the opener against the Giants on Wednesday, followed, after a day off, by Cam Schlittler, Will Warren and Ryan Weathers.
That leaves Gil as the odd man out following a camp in which his stuff was lacking before turning it on Friday night in a throwback performance against the Orioles.
“We’re working through that — do we want him to start a couple [in the minors] and then pop him in the rotation?” Aaron Boone said Sunday after a 4-0 win over the Phillies at Steinbrenner Field. “Is there an avenue to do it a different way? That’s what we’re working through still.”
Luis Gil throws a pitch during his March 15 start for the Yankees. Imagn Images
Gil will stay back in Tampa to throw live batting practice Wednesday to continue his buildup, making it more likely that the Yankees carry an extra reliever on their Opening Day roster.
The arms still vying for spots — with three up for grabs if Gil is optioned, two if he is not — are Rule 5 pick Cade Winquest, lefty Brent Headrick, Jake Bird and Osvaldo Bido.
Headrick and Bird have minor league options while Bido does not and the Yankees must carry Winquest on their roster or offer him back to the Cardinals.
The Yankees could use Gil out of the bullpen in a piggyback role to keep him built up, but they already have length options in Ryan Yarbrough and Paul Blackburn.
If Gil throws live batting practice Wednesday, he would likely be unavailable for all of the opening series against the Giants.
Otherwise, they do not need a fifth starter until April 11 and Gil would be eligible to be called up as early as April 9 if he is optioned.
“Obviously, he’d like to be a starter with us, so frustrating [for him],” pitching coach Matt Blake said. “But at the same time, he understands the position we’re in with the way the schedule lines up for the first two weeks in particular. Now it’s just a matter of making sure we do right by him and keep him in rhythm and find the best balance for the bullpen and our starting group.
“It’s not necessarily a specific decision around Luis.”
ANAHEIM, CA - MARCH 22: Los Angeles Angels outfielder Mike Trout (27) talks with Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts (50) before the MLB Spring Training game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Los Angeles Angels on March 22, 2026 at Angel Stadium in Anaheim, CA. (Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
There is no clock in baseball, and any half-inning could, in theory, last forever—the Dodgers decided to test the boundaries of that by scoring a ridiculous 10 runs in the third inning on their way to a blowout win. If you ask me, it was a bit overkill given how dominant Tyler Glasnow was, but the more the merrier, and who doesn’t love to see a lot of runs? This particular rally began with a solo shot from Teoscar Hernández…
…and it ended with a Shohei Ohtani bases-loaded three-run double, scalding a ball to levels that make you question if he is truly human when such majestic feats have become the norm for the reigning back-to-back NL MVP.
Funny enough, a home run would eventually come from the leadoff spot, but not from Ohtani. Once the replacements started to come in, James Tibbs III batted for Ohtani and hit an impressive solo shot to left centerfield.
The 13 runs the Dodgers scored were more than enough to back up Glasnow’s performance. Whenever someone asks you to describe the Glasnow experience, simply point to a start such as this one against the Angels, tossing five one-run innings and recording all but four of his outs via strikeout. Not nearly as efficient as most of the other ace-caliber pitchers, Glasnow dominates in rare fashion, even if he ultimately goes an inning or two shorter than you would like for someone of his caliber. Possessing two outstanding breaking balls, Glasnow can often pick up clues on which one is working best in any particular evening and just ride with it; tonight, it was the curveball.
Glasnow leaned into a curveball that was particularly dazzling, inducing a whopping 13 whiffs on 18 swings, mystifying Angel batters all evening long. The sole blemish on his record was a long shot to Jorge Soler on a 2-2 four-seam fastball that could not have been more than middle-middle if Glasnow had tried it. Speaking of Soler, if not for the Dodgers’ scoring outburst in the third, his performance would probably be the headline of this game. Soler also took Tanner Scott deep, this time for a three-run shot in the sixth. Once again, it was a fastball, this one not nearly as poorly located, that caused the damage. Scott’s blowup inning was the one big negative for the Dodgers in this game, as the left-hander allowed three earned runs while recording only one out.
Up next
The Dodgers and Angels meet again on Monday night, this time at Dodger Stadium. Reid Detmers will be the starter for the visiting team, while the Dodgers have yet to announce theirs. Start time at 6:10 p.m. PT.
Ryan McMahon connects on a hit during the Yankees' spring training game March 22.
Observations from Yankees spring training Sunday:
Finishing strong
Ryan McMahon had little to show for his narrowed batting stance for much of the spring, but he finished strong, recording a hit in four straight games to finish camp, including two Sunday.
Ryan McMahon connects on a hit during the Yankees’ spring training game March 22. Imagn Images
Cami-lo point
In his first game back from the WBC, Camilo Doval had a shaky inning — hitting a batter, giving up a double and walking another to load the bases. But he got out of it unscathed with a strikeout and a double play.
Caught my eye
In the Grapefruit League finale, Ben Rice got his first (and only) inning of the spring as a catcher.
After starting at first base, he moved behind the plate in the sixth inning to catch David Bednar and Fernando Cruz.
Rice did catch bullpen sessions and live batting practices throughout the spring, but he is not expected to catch much, if at all, in the early going, though he could mix in some more as the season goes along.
Monday’s schedule
The Yankees face the Cubs in an exhibition in Mesa, Ariz., with spring standout Carlos Lagrange making one last start before heading to the minors.
MESA, ARIZONA - MARCH 04, 2026: Gabriel Moreno #14 of the Arizona Diamondbacks bats during the third inning of a spring training game against the Athletics at Hohokam Stadium on March 04, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by David Durochik/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
Record: 15-13-1. Change on 2025: -1. 5-inning Record: 11-16-2.
The Diamondbacks saved the best for last, punching out their biggest margin of victory in the final Cactus League game. An emphatic 11-1 victory over the Padres was anchored by Gabriel Moreno, who hit two home-runs and doubled, giving him three long-balls for spring. Jorge Barrosa also hit his third HR, and Ildemaro Vargas went deep for the second time. The D-backs pounded out sixteen hits all told, with Ryan Waldschmidt joining Moreno in the three-hit club, and Barrosa singling in addition to his homer. Ben McLaughlin drew a pair of walks, as Arizona finished by going 7-1-1 over their final nine games. Not that it matters, of course… 🙂
The pitching was almost as good as the hitting, holding the Padres to five hits and two walks. It was a bullpen game for the Diamondbacks, and opener John Curtiss went two scoreless with a walk and four strikeouts. Brandyn Garcia rebounded from his recent struggles, fanning two of the three batters he faced. Juan Morillo was the only pitcher scored upon, allowing a solo home-run in the fourth. But thereafter we saw two scoreless innings from Shawn Dubin, then Yilber Diaz, Logan Mercado and Taylor Rashi took things the rest of the way for the D-backs bullpen.
Tomorrow, it’s back to Chase Field, for the first of two warm-up games there against the Cleveland Guardians. First pitch is at 6:40 pm, with Merrill Kelly starting for Arizona.
Tampa, Florida: New York Yankees' starting pitcher Luis Gil leaving the game against the NY Mets in the top of the 3rd inning during Spring Training at George Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Florida on February 21, 2026. (Photo by J. Conrad Williams, Jr./Newsday RM via Getty Images) | Newsday via Getty Images
The Athletic | Chris Kirschner: (subscription required) Following yesterday’s game against the Philadelphia Phillies, the New York Yankees announced their rotation to start the season: Max Fried, Cam Schlittler, Will Warren, and Ryan Weathers. Notably absent, of course, was 2024 AL Rookie of the Year Luis Gil. With the number of days off during the first week and a half of the season, the Yankees can get away with a four-man rotation the first two times through the order.
At this point, it’s unclear whether Gil — who has been working with Matt Blake to change the release point on his fastball, in the hopes of turning it back into the out pitch it was in the first half of 2024 — will break camp with the big league club, working as a piggyback behind Weathers, or with the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders, allowing the Yankees to bring an extra reliever.
SNY.com | Alex Smith: Facing a roster crunch, the Yankees traded infielder Jorbit Vivas, who is out of options, to the Washington Nationals yesterday afternoon (as Michael covered for us). In exchange, they received pitching prospect Sean Paul Liñan (Washington’s 27th overall prospect, according to MLB Pipeline), who was acquired from the Dodgers in their Trade Deadline swing for Alex Call, and whose fastball is lacking but whose changeup has screwball-like qualities and has been compared to Devin William’s famous Airbender.
MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: With Grapefruit League action coming to a close yesterday (the games today and tomorrow are, technically, not spring training matchups, but exhibitions), the Yankees announced this year’s James P. Dawson Award winner, given to the most outstanding rookie in spring training. To nobody’s surprise, pitching prospect Carlos Lagrange, whose performance put him on the map nationally and which forced difficult conversations about whether or not the Yankees ought to have him start the season with the big-league club, was this year’s award recipient.
Lastly, in case you’re curious, a few old Yankees friends on the bubble received some news over the weekend about whether or not they made their teams out of spring training. MLB Trade Rumors helps out on the rapid-fire:
Jonathan Loáisiga cracked the Diamondbacks bullpen as a non-roster invitee to spring training.
The Phillies picked up one erstwhile Yankees reliever and demoted another, with Tim Mayza joining their ’pen on a minor-league deal and Lou Trivino getting assigned to Triple-A.
Also in the not-so-lucky bunch alongside Trivino, Gio Urshela and Austin Slater were released by the Twins and Tigers, respectively.
These notes are a few days old, but Ian Hamilton did not make the Braves’ bullpen and was outrighted to Triple-A Gwinnett, and the Red Sox signed Tommy Kahnle to a minor-league deal after his appearance in the World Baseball Classic. It’s likely that the changeup specialist will need to open 2026 at Triple-A to tune up.
The worst news might go to Mike Tauchman, who was on track to join the Mets as a fourth outfielder but instead suffered a meniscus tear in his knee. Ouch. Condolences to the ol’ Sock Man.
A year after enduring a spring training from hell, given a spate of key injuries, the Yankees left the sunny confines of Steinbrenner Field on Sunday following one of their most boring camps in recent years.
“It’s never boring,” Aaron Boone insisted with a grin.
OK, so perhaps uneventful is more apt, but either way, the Yankees made it through six weeks without any major injuries, controversies or problems popping up.
They still have two more exhibitions against the Cubs in Arizona on Monday and Tuesday before they get to Wednesday’s Opening Day against the Giants, but they left Florida feeling good about their spring overall.
Aaron Boone watches during batting practice Feb. 20. Imagn Images
“I think for the most part, I feel like it’s been a very good spring for us as far as overall health, guys getting the right amount of reps and things, some of our young guys pushing for roles and real playing time are looking the part,” Boone said. “Like the place that our depth’s in right now. Feel like we can withstand some things and still flourish. But we’ll see now.”
The Yankees are set to begin the season with four players on the injured list — Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodón, Clarke Schmidt and Anthony Volpe — but all four had surgery well before arriving at camp and their rehabs have all gone smoothly.
The good health has put their starting pitching and lineup depth in a strong spot.
Heck, the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders should probably be heavy favorites to win the International League at this point, given some of the talent the Yankees are sending there because there is not room on the big league roster, including Jasson Domínguez, Spencer Jones, Oswaldo Cabrera, Elmer Rodríguez and potentially Lagrange, among others.
The Yankees are set to open the season with a four-man rotation due to multiple off-days over the first two weeks, squeezing Luis Gil out for now despite his strong finish to camp, though they are still deciding whether he will be on the roster as a piggyback pitcher or start the season in the minors until they need a fifth starter.
Aaron Judge is pictured during the Yankees’ March 22 spring training game. Imagn ImagesGerrit Cole throws a pitch during his March 18 appearance for the Yankees in spring training. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
“Having the depth that we have in pitching, I don’t think we’ve had that in quite a long time,” Aaron Judge said. “Even if you count the guys that are injured coming back — Rodón, Schmidt and Cole, you add those guys back, we have 11-12 starting pitchers deep. So that’ll be nice. But we got a lineup that was tied for the most wins in the AL, the best record in the AL. So you add those pitchers, you get [Cody] Bellinger back for another couple years, it’s only going to equal a better season for us.”
The Yankees even survived sending nearly half of their Opening Day roster to the World Baseball Classic, with all of their participants — most significantly Judge — appearing to have avoided any calamities, though the jury is still out on if it will affect them at all over the course of a long season.
As the Yankees broke camp, the bullpen still loomed as the club’s biggest question mark entering the regular season.
They were still finalizing the last two spots as of Sunday, and while the Yankees could potentially fold some starters into the bullpen once the likes of Rodón and Cole return, they still have to withstand the early weeks of the season until that is a possibility.
“I just want, really guys taking and grabbing and establishing some bullpen roles,” Boone said. “However we break, there’s going to be a few guys that don’t have a ton of experience necessarily or that are in that mix of a lot of competition, we could go a lot of different ways. But hopefully guys taking opportunities and establishing and growing in roles down there.”
Chase Meidroth drove in the first Sox run on Sunday, slashing a double into the right-field corner. | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images
I have to be honest with you, reader, the players on the field in this one were about as tired of Spring Training as I am. Sean Burke was solid in his final tuneup before adding “Day After Opening Day Starter” to his CV, allowing just a pair of runs over five innings. Unfortunately, he wound up the hard-luck loser when his lineup failed to make a dent in the formidable pitching operation of the defending AL West champs.
Burke registered six strikeouts in those five innings of work despite severely diminished fastball velocity, averaging a hair faster than 92 mph on his heater tonight after sitting in the 94-95 mph range all spring. Given that it’s his last outing before the games actually count, it could be that the sophomore righthander just wasn’t trying to fully air it out and risk being fatigued for his scheduled regular season start on Saturday. Still, it’s something to keep an eye on.
And the diminished velo was directly responsible for one of the two runs he allowed, when he placed a fastball on a tee up in the zone to Mitch Garver, who is not an impossible hitter to get a high fastball by if it’s not 91 mph.
One pitcher who wasn’t working with diminished stuff? Bryan Woo, who gave up a double to Andrew Benintendi to lead off the game and then proceeded to sit down the next 16 Sox hitters, four of them by strikeout. He brushed 97 mph on a buzzing heater and allowed just an 84 mph average exit velocity, with no one topping 100 mph between Benintendi’s double and a 107 mph line out from Munetaka Murakami in the fifth.
Burke gave way to lefty Chris Murphy, who threw a scoreless sixth inning in what will presumably be his last appearance before opening the season on a major league roster for the first time. In the Chicago half of the inning, it was the newest member of the club who finally got to Woo, as Reese McGuire’s one-out double snapped the Sox out of it. Woo nonetheless looked to be on the verge of escaping the jam before a fantastic piece of hitting from Chase Meidroth shot the ball into the corner and brought home a run.
Woo departed after that inning, but he was followed by Andrés Muñoz, and you just know that late-spring depth Sox bats had a fruit fly’s chance against him, so that was that. The rest of the game was played as if both teams were ready to board a plane back to their respective cities. The seventh and eighth for the Sox were handled by non-roster players Lucas Sims (who pitched ably) and Chase Plymell (who did not, allowing the Mariners to tack on two more). Big righty Riley Gowens capped things off with a scoreless ninth for the Pale Hose, his last work before potentially heading down to Charlotte for the first regular bullpen work of his career.
The White Sox did claw one back in the eighth courtesy of a solo jack from, you guessed it, McGuire again. The guy must have missed being in pinstripes.
The ninth was handled for Seattle by erstwhile Red Sox starter Cooper Criswell, who allowed an extremely on-brand bloop single to Rikuu Nishida to nearly spark a comeback. The Sox loaded the bases with one out against Criswell before the crafty righty shut things down, and that was all she wrote for the this one. The Sox drop back to .500 for the spring, with one more chance to finish on a positive note before finalizing the roster and cranking things up for good.
That one chance will happen tomorrow afternoon, as this edition of Spring Training concludes for the Sox in Mesa against the Athletics. First pitch is at 2 p.m. CT, with Anthony Kay taking the ball with one more chance to prepare before his return to the big leagues. Leigh Allan — 5-0 on coverage this spring — has the game, and we’ll see you there!
PEORIA, ARIZONA - MARCH 11: Mitch Garver #77 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates with teammates after scoring a run during a Spring Training game against the Colorado Rockies at Peoria Stadium on March 11, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The next time Bryan Woo pitches, it will count for real.
The Mariners beat the White Sox 2-1 in the next to last game of the preseason. Woo got the start and looked sharp. He needed just 73 pitches to get through his scheduled six innings. He struck out four, walked none, and gave up three hits. His velocity was a touch down from a year ago, though not in a concerning range. It was a solid final warmup before the real thing next week.
It was who Woo threw to on Sunday that stole the show. Mitch Garver smacked a homer and drove in a run with a sac fly. That’s after it was announced this morning that Garver had won backup catcher job to begin the season. Shannon Drayer shared this quote from Dan Wilson when the news announced, hinting at the team’s thought process for keeping Garver around.
“I think the job that Garv does is tremendous,” Wilson said last week. “And I think he’s able to lean on experience. He takes our information very seriously, too. When you combine those two, Garv does a really good job back there. I think that’s a huge asset that we have in that we have Cal, who does such a great job, is one of the best catchers in the league, was one of the best players in the league, period. And then you have a guy with experience, and as the backup role, that really helps a lot in the background, too, behind the scenes with a lot of our guys. And so it’s really a good combination to have.”
Garver was obviously not what the Mariners hoped for when they signed him to a two-year deal in 2024. He posted an 86 wRC+ in 720 plate appearances before becoming a free agent. That’s fine for a backup catcher, but the initial plan was for him to serve as the team’s DH. It wasn’t clear whether he’d continue to serve as Cal Raleigh’s understudy after reaching free agency this offseason. It seemed less likely when the Mariners signed Andrew Knizner and Johnny Pereda. But Raleigh reportedly reached out to Garver, the latest evidence of his impact beyond the field, eventually leading the Mariners to bring Garver back to camp. He has now won the job.
I like Garver. He’s a fine backup catcher. He continues to hit lefties pretty well. I’m not sure there’s a less consequential role than backup to Cal Raleigh, and Garver fills it well.
There honestly wasn’t a lot else to this game. Andrés Muñoz pitched and was fine. Jose Ferrer pitched and gave up a home run. Cooper Criswell closed out the game, with only a touch of heart burn. Each team collected just a few hits. It was fast and painless, which is all you can ask for at this time of year. Bring on the regular season.
SURPRISE, AZ - OCTOBER 24: A general view of Goodyear Ballpark during the game between the Peoria Javelinas and the Surprise Saguaros at Surprise Stadium on Thursday, October 24, 2024 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Roster moves
The Arizona Diamondbacks made the following roster moves and have 33 players in camp.
Optioned to Triple-A Reno:
LHP Philip Abner
Reassigned to Minor League camp:
C Aramis Garcia
INF Jacob Amaya
The first of these is a bit of a surprise. Only yesterday, I was noting how Abner seemed to have the inside track for left-handers job, after the recent meltdowns of Brandyn Garcia. Now, it seems either it’s Garcia’s job, or the Diamondbacks will be going without a left-handed option out of the pen.
Lineup Update:
CF – Barrosa 2B – Vargas C – Moreno 1B – Smith LF – Waldschmidt DH – McLaughlin 3B – Soler RF – Ortiz SS – Clark SP – Curtiss
The finale of the Cactus League today, with the remaining games tomorrow and Tuesday being on the hallowed (artificial) turf of Chase Field. John Curtiss gets the start, to be followed by LHP Brandyn Garcia, RHP Juan Morillo, RHP Taylor Rashi, RHP Shawn Dubin and, uh, according to the D-backs team notes anyway, RHP John Curtiss again. I presume the Curtiss start is to avoid a divisional rival getting experience late in spring against a recognized starting pitcher. This game was originally going to be broadcast on Arizona Sports, but the team notes make no mention of this. The change in start time from an afternoon game may have screwed things up there.
Feb 26, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow against the Chicago White Sox during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Tyler Glasnow makes his final start before the regular season as the Dodgers visit the Angels.
PHILADELPHIA — The Philadelphia Phillies have agreed to a new six-year contract with opening day starter Cristopher Sánchez.
The deal announced Sunday for last season’s NL Cy Young Award runner-up begins in 2027 and will run through 2032 with a club option for 2033.
Terms were not immediately available.
Sánchez had been pitching under a $22.5 million, four-year contract that was through 2028.
He went 13-5 with a 2.50 ERA in 32 starts last season and struck out a career-high 212 batters. He’s 30-21 overall in four full big league seasons.
Originally signed by the Tampa Bay Rays as an amateur free agent in 2013, Sánchez was acquired in a trade by the Phillies on Nov. 20, 2019, for infielder Curtis Mead.
Mead played in just 41 games for the Chicago White Sox last season while Sánchez has blossomed into one of the best pitchers in baseball and helped key the Phillies’ run to consecutive NL East titles in 2024 and 2025.
The Phillies want to keep their postseason run going — four straight appearances headed into 2026 — and have locked up all veteran members of their staff to long-term deals.
Jesús Luzardo earlier this month finalized a $135 million, five-year contract that starts in 2027. Zack Wheeler has a $126 million deal through the 2027 and Aaron Nola a $172 million, seven-year agreement through 2030. Rookie Andrew Painter is under team control through 2031 and earned the fifth starter spot in the rotation.
PEORIA, ARIZONA - MARCH 11: Bryan Woo #22 of the Seattle Mariners looks on in the dugout during a Spring Training game against the Colorado Rockies at Peoria Stadium on March 11, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images
It’s the penultimate night in Peoria, er, Glendale.
Bryan Woo will get the ball in the Mariners’ next to last game of Spring Training. The next time we see him, it’ll count for real. Catching Woo today is newly appointed backup catcher Mitch Garver. The rest of the Mariners lineup is not quite what they’ll send out on Opening Day lineup, but still a group of players who will feature throughout the season.
Also expected to pitch today: Andrés Muñoz, Jhonathan Díaz, Jose Ferrer, Casey Legumina, and Cooper Criswell.
Sean Burke takes his last spring start, for the last home game at Camelback Ranch. | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Four, that’s right, four days to go until the games start meaning to mean! Until then, we’ll have to sate ourselves with whatever kind of scrap of news this is.
The Chicago White Sox have agreed to terms with catcher Reese McGuire on a one-year, $1.2-million contract.
Uh, alright? Nothing wrong with a little catching depth, I suppose? Korey Lee doesn’t have any options remaining and has had a productive spring, so he’s been a lock to make the roster the moment Kyle Teel pulled up limping in the World Baseball Classic. The whole “$1.2 million” thing there, though, indicates that McGuire has a real possibility of making the roster, if it’s not already foregone. This, to me, is strange, because while I’m interested to see whether Lee’s offseason hitting work has paid off, he doesn’t need to be in the lineup almost every day like both Teel and Edgar Quero do. That would make a third catcher on the roster redundant, so I’m curious to see what it all means.
Anyhow, not a ton interesting about the lineup the Sox are running out against Seattle tonight, but the battle between Tristan Peters, Everson Pereira, and Derek Hill rages on for what may now be two open outfield spots, with Brooks Baldwin out of the picture for the opener on Thursday. It’ll also be the last time Camelback Ranch sees White Sox game action until 2027, as they’ll be on the road for their final outing of the spring season tomorrow.
Sean Burke takes the ball for one final tune-up start before they really start to count, hoping to end with a flourish to offset what to this point has been a somewhat wobbly spring. He did look solid his last time out, nearly making it through five innings against Texas last Monday while surrendering just a single run. He’s on pace to get the nod for game two of the regular season against Milwaukee, on Saturday.
Opposite Burke, Sox hitters will get a look at Seattle’s burgeoning ace in Bryan Woo, who surely wants to come into the regular season hot after injuries kept him out of the 2025 postseason rotation despite a Cy Young-caliber campaign. Outside of Woo, most of Seattle’s big names are getting the night off, as Cal Raleigh dons the tools of ignorance by his lonesome without any of Julio Rodríguez, Randy Arozarena or Josh Naylor buffering him in the lineup.
This one is scheduled to tip off at 8:05 p.m. CT, and for the first time this year, I’ll actually be able to watch a game I’m recapping, as the CHSN TV crew will be on the call like usual. Hallelujah!