Owen Hall throws three perfect frames in FCL play, Valencia homers again for Hens

Omaha Storm Chasers 11, Toledo Mud Hens 3 (box)

Eduardo Valencia continues to swing a hot bat, but a bullpen day for the Hens did not go well.

Things did start well, as Ben Malgeri led off the game with a double, and Max Clark smoked a drive to right for an RBI double, but was stranded. 1-0 Hens.

Carl Edwards Jr. made his first appearance in the Tigers’ organization. His outing started with a Malgeri error in right field. A single and a strikeout followed, and then Edwards threw wide on a pickoff attempt, and then allowed a three run homer to Brett Squires. Walks followed, and the Hens turned to Yoniel Curet, who promptly allowed a three-run Luke Maile home run. 6-1 Omaha.

The Hens rallied in the third when Clark walked, and Valencia blasted a two-run shot to left center field off an Aaron Sanchez curveball. That cut the lead to 6-3 Omaha, but the Hens wouldn’t get any closer. Drew Sommers allowed a run in the third, and in the fourth Scott Effross gave up four more runs.

Veteran reliever Nick Sandlin made his first Tigers’ appearance in the fifth, spinning a perfect frame with two strikeouts.

Clark: 2-3, R, RBI, 2B, BB

Julks: 2-3, BB, K

Valencia: 1-4, R, 2 RBI, HR, K

Edwards Jr. (L, 1-3): 0.2 IP, 5 ER, 2 H 2 BB, K

Sandlin: 1.0 IP, 0 R, 0 H, 0 BB, 2 K

Coming Up Next:

Erie SeaWolves vs. Richmond Flying Squirrels (postponed)

The series remains tied 2-2 after the SeaWolves and Squirrels were rained out on Saturday. They’ll play two on Sunday starting at 12:05 p.m. ET.

Great Lakes Loons 7, West Michigan Whitecaps 5 (box)

Rayner Castillo gave the Whitecaps a decent start, but the pain continued as the bullpen blew this one late.

Castillo allowed a run in the bottom of the fourth inning. Otherwise, despite some lack of control at points, he was solid for four innings, and Carlos Lequerica took over for a scoreless fifth and sixth inning.

Meanwhile the offense had built a sizable lead. Andrew Sojka led off the third inning with a single and Ricardo Hurtado was hit by a pitch. They pulled off a double steal, and Sojka scored on a Bryce Rainer ground out for a 1-0 lead.

Jackson Strong launched a solo shot in the fourth for his second long ball of the series.

Rainer doubled to lead off the fifth, stole third, and scored on a passed ball. So through five innings it was 3-1 Whitecaps. Garrett Pennington was back in the lineup in this one, and in the sxith, he doubled in Juan Hernandez and Sojka to make it 5-1.

Unfortunately, Luke Stofel allowed a run in the seventh, and with the bullpen depleted they didn’t have many options to replace him. Instead Stofel allowed five more runs in the eighth as the Loons once again stormed back to win.

Pennington: 2-5, 2 RBI, 2B, K

Rainer: 1-5, R, RBI, 2B, SB

Sojka: 1-3, 2 R, 2 BB, SB

Castillo: 4.0 IP, ER, 2 H, 4 BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 1:05 p.m. ET start on Sunday.

Clearwater Threshers 4, Lakeland Flying Tigers 3 (F/10)(box)

Lefty Caleb Leys put together a solid start, but they couldn’t find that last run and ultimately got walked off in the 10th inning.

Leys allowed a solo shot in the third, and another on an inside the parker in the fifth. Otherwise he was solid, going 4 2/3 innings with three punchouts and no walks.

The Flying Tigers had some baserunners but never really put together a great threat until the sixth. Jordan Yost led off the sixth with a triple to center field, and then scored on a passed ball. Zach MacDonald followed that up with a solo blast to center field for his 10th home run.

Donye Evans cleaned up the fifth and spun a scoreless sixth. Eliseo Mota took over in the seventh. Jose Guzman pitched a scoreless eighth.

In the top of the ninth, Javier Osorio walked with one out, and Anibal Salas singled, but a ground out and a strikeout followed.

In the tenth, Newremberg Rondon started the inning at second and Clearwater reliever Richie Cortese wild pitched him to third and then home to make it 3-2 Lakeland. Jesus Pinto singled to right field, but they weren’t able to cash that run.

Jatnk Diaz took over trying to hold the lead, but he gave up an RBI single, and the runner stole second and took third on an errant throw from catcher Hunter Dobbins. A single to right ended it.

Pinto: 2-5, K

Yost: 1-4, R, 3B, BB, K

Goodman: 1-3, 2B, BB

Coming Up Next: The Flying Tigers lead the series 3-2 heading into a noon start to wrap up the series on Sunday.

FCL Philles 7, FCL Tigers 6 (box)

Angel de los Santos: 2-3, 2 R, 2 RBI, HR, BB

Owen Hall: 3.0 IP, 0 R, 2 H, 0 BB, 4 K

Brewers' Brice Turang may already be 'one of the best players in the world'

Milwaukee Brewers second baseman Brice Turang is the black-and-white reel amidst today’s brilliant cinematography.

In a world filled with celebrity attention-seekers, Turang is a gray Ford Taurus in a lot filled with Bentleys.

He plays baseball without flipping his bat after homers or pounding his chest after making brilliant plays.

There is no marketing on his social media account. There are no notable sound bites in interviews with the media. He doesn’t have his own podcast. And never does he open his soul to anyone but close friends and family.

He’s simply a grinder who may be the best all-around second baseman in the game.

“He could have played in any era, the 60s, the 70’s, the 80’s, you name it," Brewers manager Pat Murphy tells USA TODAY Sports. “He’s not looking to impress you with his flair. He’s definitely not a 'Look-at-me' guy. He’s not looking for attention. He’s a team guy. He loves baseball.

“He just loves preparing for the game and playing it. He’s really special. It’s all legit, bro."

Brice Turang celebrates his walk-off home run on May 10.

You want a glimpse of Turang? Check out the first walk-off homer of his career with two outs in the ninth inning on Mother’s Day against the New York Yankees for a 4-3 victory in front of a sellout crowd of 40,175 at American Family Field.

The place went bonkers when his 411-foot shot cleared the center-field fence, with his teammates screaming and jumping over the dugout railing to greet him.

Turang’s reaction?

He dropped his bat, rounded the bases with no emotion, methodically high-fived third base Matt Erickson and stepped on home plate.

When he was doused by a bucket of Gatorade by his teammates, he looked almost annoyed that his cap got wet, and then spoke for a brief minute on the field.

How did it feel hitting his first career walk-off?

“Yeah, it felt good," he calmly said. “Got the pitch I wanted, and drove it, so it always feels good, and feel even better when the team wins.’’

Not exactly riveting, but that’s Turang, who gets more giddy finding a local gas station that just dropped their price of unleaded.

Nothing shakes the guy.

When MLB Network unveiled its ranking of the game’s best second basemen this spring, Turang was ranked 10th. It was laughable, bordering on absurd. You’re talking about a guy who won the Platinum Glove award as the best defensive player in the National League in 2024. A guy who finished 14th in the MVP voting in 2025. A guy who hit .288 with 18 homers, 81 RBIs and a .794 OPS last year leading the Brewers to the NLCS.

Turang saw the rankings, and didn’t utter a word. He’ll simply let his performance do the talking.

He’s having the greatest offensive season by any second baseman this season, hitting .297 with an MLB-leading .418 on-base percentage, .921 OPS, six homers, 27 RBIs, 33 runs and eight stolen bases this year. He opened the season reaching base in 21 consecutive games – the third-longest streak in franchise history – and in the last two weeks is hitting .375 with a 1.087 OPS.

He has been the metronome for the Brewers’ success in a season in which sluggers Christian Yelich, Jackson Chourio and Andrew Vaughn have played a combined 34 games for the Brewers. Turang has played and started in 39 games, almost refusing to ever come out.

“He played three or four games he shouldn’t have," Murphy said, “with his sore ankle. “But he gives you that funny look if he’s not in there. He wants to be in that lineup every single day.’’

He’s a genuine superstar, but when you’re playing in Milwaukee, the smallest-market in baseball, folks tend to ignore you.

“He’s not just the best second baseman in baseball," Brewers shortstop Joey Ortiz said, “I think he’s one of the best players in the world."

Turang gets rave reviews from Aaron Judge

It’s not hyperbole. If you go back to last August, Turang ranks as the fourth-best player in the game, according to FanGraphs, with a 4.8 WAR. He trails only Dodgers three-time MVP Shohei Ohtani, Judge and Kansas City Royals shortstop Bobby Witt.

“He’s one of my favorite players to watch in the game right now," Yankees three-time MVP Aaron Judge told Milwaukee reporters last weekend. “He's going to be a bright young star in this game for a long time. …

“He’s one of a kind, man. I wish we had him on this team."

Judge and Turang were teammates for three weeks during the World Baseball Classic, and it was Turang who stole the show, hitting .364 with his eight hits, four doubles, five RBIs and a .931 OPS in the six games. Turang left his USA teammates gushing about his skills, saying they knew he was talented, but hadn't fully fathomed his all-around greatness.

It was the rave reviews that supplemented Turang’s confidence, knowing that he could not only hold his own with the finest players in the world, but actually thrive, and be recognized as one of the game’s greatest.

“I learned so much from that experience," Turang said, “understanding what makes them great. These were some of the most respected guys in the game and they were so cool helping me out, learning how to go about your business, the mental side of it, the routine, and competing."

Said Yelich: “You could see the difference. He came back far more confident for sure. When you’re on a team with those kind of players, and you fit in, it does a lot for your confidence. And confidence is big part of his game.

“He’s always been a talented player, but he’s turned himself into a great player."

Turang, 26, grew up in a family with his dad, Brian, playing outfield for the Seattle Mariners, and his mom, Carrie, playing softball at Long Beach State. He has five sisters who were collegiate softball, soccer and volleyball players. His brother-in-law, Tress Way, punts for the Washington Commanders.

He has always had a quiet burning confidence, but rarely exposes it. Yet, when he was drafted by the Brewers in 2018 with the 21st pick out of Santiago High School in Corona, California, they were $1 million apart in negotiations at the outset. Turang, who had a scholarship at LSU waiting for him, offered David Stearns, the Brewers president of baseball operations at the time, a little advice.

“You going to let $1 million stand in the way of signing a Hall of Famer?" Turang asked, matter-of-factly.

Turang, with less than 24 hours left before the deadline, agreed to a $3.41 million signing bonus, nearly $400,000 over the slot value.

And the Brewers had their future star.

Turang reached the big leagues in 2023, and the Brewers have won the NL Central every year since his arrival, and with a 26-18 record this year, are in prime playoff position again.

Brewers vs. Cubs showdown looms

They open their biggest series of the season Monday against their hated rival, the Chicago Cubs, at Wrigley Field, sitting 2 ½ games behind the Cubs. Really, it’s a similar predicament to a year ago when they were six games behind the Cubs at this point, only to win the NL Central by five games.

And, just to prove they were the superior team last year, knocked off the Cubs in the NL Division Series, with Turang hitting a home run in the seventh inning of the deciding game of the best-of-five series, a 3-1 victory.

“I remember him coming to the dugout after his second at-bat," Murphy says, “and he says, 'Murph, I’m right there. I’m just missing those things. I don’t know how I’m missing it.' "

The third time up, Turang crushed a 416-foot homer over the left-center field wall, and with the stadium shaking, Turang calmly came back to the dugout and said, “That’s it. I told you I was right there."

Now, with the Cubs and Brewers set to play for the first time this season, Turang isn’t planning to get hyped, either. There are no trophies handed out to the winner of the series. A sweep one way or the other isn’t going to make or break a season.

There’s far too much time left to get overly excited, no matter that Cubs second baseman Nico Hoerner, perhaps his primary competition to be the National League’s starting second baseman at the All-Star Game, will be across the field.

“It’s going to be a good time," Turang says. “I like playing there. They draw really well. They’ve got a cool fan base. And it’s always competitive. But we don’t look too much into this. You just got to stack up wins, and see where you are at the end of the season.

“We’re going to play our style of game. And I’m going to play my style. We’ll see how it all works out at the end."

In the meantime, we’ll see if this is the year Turang finally gets his due, and is on the national stage in Philadelphia in two months with his first invitation to the All-Star Game.

“Forget the personal stuff," Turang says, “I want to be a good teammate. I want to stay on the field. And I want to win.

“That’s all I’ve ever wanted. Just win every single day that I can."

Around the basepaths

– “The Curse of the Schwarbs?"

It was back in 2021 when Schwarber was traded to the Boston Red Sox, and he badly wanted to stay when he hit free agency. The Red Sox never made an offer, and kept J.D. Martinez as their DH before signing Masataka Yoshida to a five-year, $90 million contract the next winter.

Schwarber wound up signing a four-year, $79 million free-agent contract with the Phillies. The rest is history.

The Red Sox have since had only one winning season, finished last in two seasons, are in last place again this season, and mired in a historic offensive drought. The Red Sox have scored just 34 runs in their last 16 games at Fenway Park, their lowest output since 1917 – two years before they sold Babe Ruth to the Yankees, and the birth of the Curse of the Bambino.

Schwarber has since hit 207 homers for the Phillies, including a major-league leading 20 this season, and has turned Fenway Park into his own playground with a career 1.139 OPS.

– Rival executives say that one of the hottest commodities at the trade deadline will be Colorado Rockies pitcher Antonio Senzatela.

Senzatela, pitching in relief for the first time in his career, is thriving since the conversion. He’s 3-0 with a 1.32 ERA and a 0.768 WHIP. He’s in the final year of his five-year, $50.5 million contract, and should bring a nice trade return for the Rockies.

– The Chicago Cubs, who are seeking a front-line starter at the trade deadline, may have no choice but to move infielder Matt Shaw, who’s blocked at third base by Alex Bregman and second base by Nico Hoerner. He has been in the starting lineup just 22 times this season.

– While the St. Louis Cardinals’ surprising success may thwart plans for selling at the trade deadline, teams still are keeping a close eye on closer Riley O’Brien and pitchers JoJo Romero and Dustin May.

– It’s absurd that after the Dodgers and Giants four-game series ended this past week, the two historic rivals don’t play one another again until Sept. 18.

– Houston Astros manager Joe Espada’s job may be in increasing danger with each passing day.

– They were two of the most highly-sought after amateurs in their draft classes, were each dumped by two different teams, labeled busts by the baseball industry, only to emerge this year as potential All Stars.

Say hello to Mickey Moniak of the Colorado Rockies and JJ Bleday of the Cincinnati Reds.

Moniak, the No. 1 pick by the Phillies in 2016, is hitting .306 with 12 homers, 26 RBI and 1.023 OPS.

Bleday, the No. 4 pick by the Marlins in 2019, is hitting .345 with six homers, 19 RBI and 1.241 OPS.

– Now that two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal is expected to return to the Tigers before the Aug. 3 trade deadline, would it make sense for them to trade him if they're out of the race?

The Tigers have lost 13 of their last 19 games.

– The greatest race of the year may be for the National League Cy Young award:

  • Paul Skenes, Pirates: 6-2, 1.98 ERA
  • Jake Misierowski, Brewers: 3-2, 2.12 ERA, 80 strikeouts in 51.2 innings
  • Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers: 3-2, 0.82 ERA
  • Chase Burns, Reds: 5-1, 1.87 ERA
  • Chris Sale, Atlanta: 6-3, 1.96 ERA
  • Cristopher Sanchez, Phillies: 5-2, 1.82 ERA
  • Mason Miller, Padres: 1-0, 0.86 ERA, 14 saves, 44 strikeouts in 21 innings.

You make the call.

– While MLB’s national viewership has increased this year, perhaps most encouraging, according to Playfly Sports, is the increase in viewership by younger fans.

While local viewership is down 2% for fans the ages of 35-64, and 6% for fans 50 and older, viewership is up by 2% in the 18-49 demographics, according to Playfly Sports.

Fifteen of the 21 teams tracked by Playfly Sports have shown an increase in viewership, with unique streamer viewership up by 24%.

– The San Francisco Giants’ decision to call up slugger Bryce Eldridge but not play him every day is a head-scratcher.

– The Colorado Rockies, who have spent decades and tens of thousands of dollars in research trying to find a magical formula for success pitching at Coors Field, may want to have a sit-down with Arizona Diamondbacks starter Merrill Kelly, 37.

He just threw the first complete game of his career at Coors Field. Kelly not only has a 1.96 ERA in his last seven starts at Coors Field, but also is the only visitor in Coors Field history with seven consecutive quality starts.

– Cubs veteran starter Matthew Boyd shut down the narrative that he suffered a meniscus tear in his left knee playing with his kids.

“My kids had nothing to do with this,’’ Boyd told Chicago reporters Friday. “I was just kneeling down on the floor to play with my kids, and my knee popped twice, literally. As unglamorous as that sounds, that’s just kind of what happened.

“I didn’t even get the chance to play with them because my knee popped on the way down."

– One of the most prized commodities at the trade deadline was going to be Mets starter Clay Holmes (1.86 ERA), who’s expected to opt out of his contract after the season, but with a fractured tibia, he may be staying put.

– Brewers pitcher Aaron Ashby is trying to go where no reliever has ever gone before in MLB history:

Become the first 20-game winner pitching strictly out of the bullpen.

He already has eight victories, two more than any starter.

The closest any reliever has come to winning 20 games is the Pirates’ Roy Face (18-1) in 1959.

– The Phillies are building a tradition this decade of slow starts, followed by rapid success:

2022: 21-29 start, and the firing of Joe Girardi, followed by a 25-10 stretch under manager Rob Thomson.

2023: 25-32 start, followed by a 23-7 stretch.

2024: 8-8 start, followed by a 29-6 stretch.

2025: 13-13 start, followed by a 23-6 stretch.

2026: 9-19 start, and the firing of Thomson, followed by a 13-4 stretch under manager Don Mattingly.

– You want to make Mets’ fans scream in anguish?

First baseman Pete Alonso missed 24 games in his seven years with the Mets.

Jorge Polanco, Alonso’s replacement, has missed 31 games in his seven weeks with the Mets.

– Minnesota Twins first baseman Josh Bell stole second base on Wednesday for his first steal in 978 games, the longest streak between stolen bases since at least 1900.

– Paul Skenes, who has a 1.98 ERA, could become the first pitcher since Grover Cleveland Alexander in 1915-1917 to post three consecutive sub-2.00 ERA seasons.

– How nasty is Misiorowski?

He has thrown 233 pitches clocked at 100 mph or faster this season.

The other starters in baseball have combined for 144.

Misiorowski hasn't allowed an extra-base hit since April 19.

– Cardinals outfielder Jordan Walker, who has never hit more than 16 homers in a season, already has 13 and is on pace to hit 45. How rare of a feat is that for the Cardinals? The Cardinals have had only five players hit 40 homers in a season. The last Cardinal to hit 40 homers was Albert Pujols in 2010.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Brice Turang already among MLB's top talents for Brewers after WBC turn

Yankees news: Bombers shuffle rotation, Cole sharp in rehab outing

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 05: Elmer Rodríguez #71 of the New York Yankees reacts after throwing a wild pitch that scored a run in the first inning against the Texas Rangers during their game at Yankee Stadium on May 05, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) | Getty Images

CBS Sports: On Saturday, the Yankees made the decision to recall Elmer Rodríguez in light of putting Max Fried on the injured list. However, Rodríguez will also now be starting this afternoon’s game in place of Ryan Weathers. There’s no additional injury to Weathers to worry about, as he’s now penciled in to start Monday instead.

CBS Sports: In other rotation news, Gerrit Cole was in action on Friday, making a rehab start in Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Things went pretty well for him there, as he struck out six while allowing one run in 5.1 innings. Cole has climbed the organizational ladder in his last three rehab starts, pitching progressively better after a poor outing to start the month with Hudson Valley, and is nearing the end of his time in the minors at long last. The team is expected to send him out for one more start before recalling him, assuming the outing goes smoothly.

New York Post | Dan Martin: Spencer Jones’ first week or so in the big leagues hasn’t produced eye-popping numbers so far. However, he had arguably his best game so far in Friday night’s Subway Series opener, singling twice and driving home a run. (He also unintentionally broke Clay Holmes’ tibia with a liner.) He and the Yankees believe that’s more of a sign of things to come.

The Athletic | Chris Kirschner: Not to say that having to put Fried on the IL doesn’t hurt, but having a homegrown apparent ace around in the form of Cam Schlittler certainly helps. Schlittler continued his impressive run on Friday night with another excellent game against the Mets, leaving even his teammates awed. He just barely missed out on setting a franchise record for lowest ERA through 10 starts in a season, falling just short of Phil Niekro’s 1.20 mark in 1984, but his 1.35 ERA will sure do for this staff.

Freddy Peralta feeling ‘a lot of emotions’ ahead of first Subway Series start with Mets

Freddy Peralta #51 of the New York Mets reacts after a play.
Freddy Peralta reacts during the Mets' May 12 game.

Freddy Peralta recently rattled off his impressions of a few of the Mets’ starting pitchers before the topic turned to his own season.

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What does Freddy Peralta think of Freddy Peralta?

“I think good,” the right-hander said. “I know that I have more to give and it’s a long season. We have had a long road so far, but we have to keep going and I see that I have a lot of positive things coming for me and for the team.”

A good place to start would be with a top performance Sunday in his Subway Series debut after the Mets’ 6-3 win Saturday night.

“A lot of emotions, probably a little more or a lot more than how we have felt in the past when we were with Milwaukee, facing the Cubs,” Peralta said, referring to the fierce Midwest rivalry. “I know New York is different. I am excited for this.”

Freddy Peralta reacts during the Mets’ May 12 game. Getty Images

Peralta has pitched to a 3.10 ERA in nine starts for the Mets.

Over his last four starts he owns a 1.99 ERA, but an offensively challenged team won only two of those games.

Peralta was asked for his assessment of rookie Nolan McLean, who along with Peralta and Clay Holmes (now on the IL with a fractured right fibula), has led the rotation.

“Everything is impressive about [McLean],” Peralta said. “His presence on the mound, all his emotions, the pitching stuff is unbelievable, all the metrics on his pitches, I think that he has a great future. He’s going to be one of the best.”

Another young pitcher with a high upside, Christian Scott, is the Mets’ scheduled starter Monday in Washington.

“He has showed us already how impressive his stuff is, especially his fastball and sweeper,” Peralta said. “He is somebody I was speaking with about with the boys when we were in Colorado, how terrific his fastball is. You can tell the hitters never feel comfortable with his fastball and he has a lot to show. He’s going to be able to shine.”


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Juan Soto is dealing with wrist discomfort from a swing and a sore foot (the result of a foul ball), but manager Carlos Mendoza isn’t in any hurry to give his best hitter a rest.

“As long as he’s not putting anything at risk, he will continue to play,” Mendoza said.

Soto went 2-for-2 with a walk and two stolen bases Saturday night.


Carson Benge recorded his second three-hit game this season.

The rookie owns a .983 OPS over his last 12 games.


The Mets are 9-5 in May.

Luke Weaver, Mets' bullpen show resilience in win over Yankees after Clay Holmes' injury

Luke Weaver had just delivered the relief outing of the season, two innings of near perfection that included a bases-loaded, no-outs escape that was the difference-making moment in the game.

But Weaver, who loves the big stage and enjoys talking about it, wanted a little win-one-for-the-Gipper drama of as well.

So he sought out Clay Holmes afterward and said, “That was for you. I had your name in my hat and everything.”

As he told the story to reporters, Weaver then grinned sheepishly and admitted, “I actually didn’t have his name in my hat, but it sounded good.”

Weaver laughed. Reporters laughed. The Mets needed a little levity almost as much as they needed a win, one night after Holmes’ injury seemed to knock the wind out of them.

In that sense Weaver said his outing and the 6-3 win over the Yankees at Citi Field Saturday night was a tribute to Holmes, who suffered a fractured fibula Friday night, an injury that hit the team so hard because, as Carlos Mendoza said, “of what Clay means to this team, as a competitor and the quality of human.”

It’s an injury that casts a sense of doom over an already-trying season, yet before Saturday’s game the manager said “we’re over it, we’re ready to compete,”

As such they needed a win badly against the Yankees, as they continue to try and play their way out of the huge hole they dug. And they got one, with some help from Carlos Rodon’s wildness, to be sure, but also with clutch hitting and especially some lock-down relief pitching from a bullpen that has rebounded from some early-season hiccups to look formidable lately.

The win evened this edition of the Subway Series and sets up a rubber game on Sunday. Whatever happens, the reality is the Holmes injury is almost certainly going to be the most significant moment of the weekend for the Mets, because of what he has meant to the starting rotation this season.

But that can’t be their mentality, of course. They’re in a day-to-day survival mode, trying to stack wins, believing they’re building on the momentum created by the sweep of the Detroit Tigers, the sense that they’re a better team now that A.J. Ewing and Carson Benge have brought energy and production.

On this night, in fact, Benge had an embarrassing error, dropping a routine fly ball, but he also went 3-for-4 and is hitting .386 over his last 12 games, sparking the offense.

Even more significantly, Juan Soto is heating up and Mark Vientos suddenly seems up to the challenge of hitting behind him, driving in runs from the clean-up spot. With his three RBI on Saturday, Vientos has 14 this month, the fourth-highest such total in the majors.

This night, however, belonged to the bullpen. If you count Huascar Brazoban’s work as an opener for David Peterson as part of the pen, which makes sense, four Mets’ relievers threw a total of five innings, allowing only one run, and that one was unearned.

Peterson was solid in his four innings behind Brazoban, though far from dominant as he allowed six hits and three walks but limited the damage to two runs by making big pitches when he needed to escape trouble.

The Mets keep hoping he’ll find the form that fueled his All-Star first half last year, but it’s starting to look more and more that this is who he is now, an inconsistent pitcher who for whatever reason seems to pitch better when he comes out of the bullpen.

Without Holmes the Mets are going to need better starting pitching from somebody, whether they put Tobias Myers in the rotation or call up someone from the minors. As of Saturday, Mendoza said the decision had not been made.

At the same time, they’re also going to need depth and dominance from the bullpen, and certainly that was the formula on Saturday.

The game really came down to Weaver’s outing. Benge’s error and a fluky bunt single by Jazz Chisolm Jr. contributed to loading the bases with no outs against Brooks Raley in the seventh, at which point Mendoza brought in Weaver to face his old team for the first time.

The righthander struck out both Amed Rosario and Trent Grisham swinging at change-ups, then got Anthony Volpe to ground out to short on a fastball, prompting an emotional reaction.

“Weav was unbelievable,” Mendoza said. “That’s the game right there. He was pretty fired up. I could see it in his body language. And he hit 98 on the gun.”

Because Weaver was so efficient, Mendoza had him pitch the eighth inning as well, and he capped off a scoreless inning by getting Aaron Judge to fly out to center. A moment that Weaver indicated meant a lot to him, based on how much he respects Judge.

“It was a cool opportunity,” Weaver said.

Of his fired-up nature and the body language Mendoza referenced, Weaver said he felt it was a crucial moment for the Mets, coming off what he called “the gut-punch” of seeing Holmes go down.

“I wanted my teammates to know that’s what we’re capable of,” he said. “Sometimes it can feel never-ending (the injuries, the early-season losing) but a win like this, it’s like hitting the refresh button. We needed it.”

Both Weaver and Devin Williams, who pitched a scoreless night for the save, have shaken off their early-season rough patches to deliver dominance in recent weeks and give the Mets reason to believe the bullpen can be a strength of this team.

There is much to prove, of course. Plenty of questions as well. But on this day the Mets answered an important one, by getting off the deck after mourning the Holmes injury and simply winning a game, and a notable one with the atmosphere of the Subway Series.

At least in the moment, it felt meaningful.

Dodgers walk all over Angels for 4th straight win

ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA - MAY 16: Shohei Ohtani #17is reacts after sliding into home plate after connecting for a three run inside the park homerun during the eighth inning of a game against the Los Angeles Angels as home plate umpire Scott Barry looks on at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on May 16, 2026 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The sixth inning was the key to the Dodgers’ 15-2 win over the Angels on Saturday night. Justin Wrobleski the day after a bullpen game completed six innings for his sixth straight start, and the Dodgers broke open the game with five runs in the sixth inning against Halos ace José Soriano.

After a four-game losing streak earlier in the week, the Dodgers have now won four straight.

Shohei Ohtani walked and Mookie Betts singled to open the game, setting up the first run. The Dodgers have scored first in each of their last five games, including runs in the first inning in three of those contests, after no opening-frame tallied in 11 of their previous 12 games.

Soriano has allowed five first-inning runs in his 10 starts this season, but had only allowed six total runs in his other 49 1/3 frames, before the sixth inning on Saturday.

Believe it or not, Soriano did not allow another hit after the Betts single, but gave up five more runs. That’s because with one out in the fifth inning, Soriano walked two batters, hit Smith with a pitch, then walked two more batters to force in two runs and end his night.

Chase Silseth relieved him and was wild in his own right, plunking Teoscar Hernández for another run without a hit. Alex Call broke things open with a two-run single to close the book on one of the oddest pitching lines you’ll ever see.

Soriano walked a career-high six batters, which helped charge six runs to his ledger despite only one hit allowed. He’s just the fifth pitcher ever to give up at least six runs to the Dodgers on either zero or one hit:

  • Lefty Weinert, Phillies (1923): 0 IP, 0 hits, 4 walks, HBP, 6 runs (4 earned)
  • Red Lynn, Cubs (1944): 1 1/3 IP, 1 hit, 5 walks, 6 runs (5 earned)
  • Tim Stauffer, Padres (2011): 1 2/3 IP, 1 hit, 7 walks, 7 runs
  • Elvis Araújo, Phillies (2016): 1/3 IP, 1 hit, 3 walks, HBP, 6 runs (2 earned)
  • José Soriano, Angels (2026): 5 1/3 IP, 1 hit, 6 walks, HBP, 6 runs

That sixth inning really warped what to that point was a tight game, with Wrobleski tasked with lasting as long as he could after the Dodgers used eight pitchers in a bullpen game in the series opener on Friday night.

The left-hander was up to the task, with five strikeouts and a walk in six innings, and threw 65 percent of his pitches for strikes. The Angels did not score against Wrobleski until a two-run double by Jo Adell in the sixth inning, after the Dodgers already scored six.

Jorge Soler led off the fourth inning with a double to give the Angels their best early threat against Wrobleski, and they nearly scored. Nolan Schanuel peppered a ball 99 mph off the bat to the gap in right center field but Andy Pages swooped in with a diving, rolling catch to end a scoreless inning.

Wrobleski helped his own cause in the third inning, somehow reaching back across his body while jumping to snag a liner by Vaughn Grissom.

Wrobleski allowed a walk and nearly two hits in the second inning, but the first of those batted balls was to the warning track in left field, nearly caught but not by Teoscar Hernández. Jo Adell was on first base after a walk, and while waiting to see if the ball was caught didn’t get to second base in time before he was erased on a rare 7-6-4 relay force out at second base. That helped Wrobleski escape the inning unscathed.

The Dodgers were already comfortable ahead before they piled on with four runs in the eighth, in which Ohtani hit a two-run triple and scored on an error, and five more in the ninth, an inning that saw Ohtani hit a three-run double. All of those nine late runs were charged to Alek Manoah, who recorded only four outs.

Notes

  • Nine walks as a team is one more than any other game from Dodgers batters this season.
  • Will Smith drove in the run in the first inning with a sacrifice fly, a 103.5-mph rocket to deep right field that was tracked down by Jo Adell. Smith since 2020, his first full season, leads all major leaguers with 44 sacrifice flies — four more than second-most Eugenio Suárez — including three this season.
  • Pages and Max Muncy walked consecutively with the bases loaded in the sixth inning to end Soriano’s night. It was the first time the Dodgers had two bases-loaded walks in the same inning since September 19, 2024 (the Ohtani 51-51 game), when Gavin Lux and Pages did so in Miami.

Saturday particulars

Home run: Mookie Betts (4)

WP — Justin Wrobleski (6-1): 6 IP, 7 hits, 2 runs, 1 walk, 5 strikeouts

LP — José Soriano (6-3): 5 1/3 IP, 1 hit, 6 runs, 6 walks, 6 strikeouts

Up next

Dodgers go for the sweep on Sunday (1:07 p.m.; SportsNet LA, KCOP channel 13) with Roki Sasaki starting for the road team and Grayson Rodriguez making his Angels debut after missing over seven weeks with shoulder inflammation.

A’s Drop Saturday Contest To Giants 6-4

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 16: Jeff McNeil #22 of the Athletics hits an RBI force out during the fifth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Sutter Health Park on May 16, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Scott Marshall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The A’s couldn’t make it two in a row over their former Bay Area rivals. The Green & Gold dropped the middle game of their weekend series against San Francisco Giants on Saturday evening in Sacramento, with their comeback attempt coming up short in a 6-4 loss that drops their record to 23-22. Can still take the series with a win tomorrow though!

Severino‘s struggles at home return

The starting pitcher for the A’s tonight was veteran Luis Severino, making his 10th start of the year. Coming into tonight he had been on a roll, with four quality starts in a row including a couple games at Sutter Health Park, where he’s had struggles at times during his two-year stint with the A’s.

Those home struggles reared their ugly head tonight against a Giants offense that has failed to live up to expectations so far this season. Sevy gave up a solo home run in the first inning to the hot-hitting Casey Schmitt and only due to a heads up play on his part did he not allow another in the second. The Giants continued getting good contact on Severino in the third, plating two runs on three hits and a walk that quickly made this game 3-0 Giants.

There was never really a quiet inning for Severino in this one. He escaped giving up a one-out triple in the fourth but the Giants got to him again. Specifically, Schmitt got to him again as he connected for his second homer of the night, a two-run shot to that pushed this to a 5-0 game. The Giants continued to rally against Sevy but couldn’t add on to their already big lead. One more inning of work and another runner in scoring position stranded and his night was done after six full innings of work

  • Luis Severino: 6 IP, 10 H, 5 ER, 2 BB, 7 K, 2 HR, 96 pitches

Not a great outing from the right-hander tonight. The Giants were all over him in every inning, not giving him any chance to find any sort of rhythm and settle in. Goes to show you that even an underwhelming offense like the Giants can give it to any pitcher on any given day. So goes baseball. Severino will try to bounce back next week and he lines up to face the Los Angeles Angels in the series finale.

A’s offense clueless against McDonald

The Athletics’ offense was going up against a rookie pitcher with all of four career starts entering this evening’s contest. Trevor McDonald however has come on strong this year and the A’s suffered the same fate as the previous two lineups to go up against the young right-hander.

Over the game’s first four innings the bats couldn’t muster much. They wasted a two-out Soderstrom double in the first as well as a two-on, one out scenario in the fourth but couldn’t break through against the pitcher that likely none of them have ever seen before.

They did manage to get on the scoreboard in the fifth. A leadoff walk and single put runners on the corners with no outs for second baseman Jeff McNeil. A big hit could have gotten the A’s offense started and got us back in the game. A groundball brought home the runner from third but also killed the rally as the next two couldn’t keep the line going.

First baseman Nick Kurtz made it close but he managed to extend his on-base streak to 39 games with an eighth-inning walk. That ties another great A’s first baseman Jason Giami’s record (twice) for second-most in Athletics history. Only Mark McGuire’s 48-game streak is in front of him now and that record is getting awfully close.

The final frames

After Severino’s six innings of work it was the bullpen’s job to keep the Giants from blowing this game open anymore than it already was. Scott Barlow was first up and gave up a double to the first batter he saw. An error on the next didn’t help matters but another double brought in that run anyway. With no outs Barlow needed a strikeout in the worst way possible, and he got two straight. A fly out got him out of the jam but the score was now 6-1 with only nine outs for the A’s to play with. Mark Leiter Jr. finished the pitching for the A’s tonight, firing off two scoreless innings.

The Giants’ McDonald meanwhile continued to pitch into the seventh inning and the A’s still were mostly clueless against him. They finally chased him from the game thanks to a two-out double from Darell Hernaiz but stranded him there. Just six outs left.

Now into the Giants’ bullpen, the bats suddenly remembered how to hit. First baseman Nick Kurtz made it close but he managed to extend his on-base streak to 39 games with an eighth-inning walk to start things off. That ties another great A’s first baseman Jason Giambi’s record (twice) for second-most in Athletics history. Only Mark McGuire’s 48-game streak is in front of him now and that record is getting awfully close.

Langeliers followed Kurtz with his own free pass. After a harmless flyout from Soderstrom, 2025 All-Star Brent Rooker stepped to the plate and blasted an absolute no-doubt three-run homer down the left field line to make this a ballgame again:

That woke everyone up. That was longball #6 for Rook as he continues to start heating up at the plate. It also set the A’s up for a potentially exciting end to this one.

Bad luck though as it was the bottom of the order for the A’s. A pinch-hitting Colby Thomas flew out, Hernaiz grounded out, and another pinch hitter, this time Jonah Heim, also grounded out, this one ending the game and saddling the A’s with their 22nd loss.

Well, the A’s sure made it interesting in the end. Severino’s home struggles showed up again tonight as he got hit around all evening. The offense had no game plan on how to attack a rookie pitcher that they had never seen before. Kurtz’s on-base streak continues. Brent Rooker’s power is still there. Always love seeing the team fight until the end. And the squad is still in first place while both the Mariners and Rangers lost tonight, meaning the division lead remains at two games.

We do this all again tomorrow in the series finale, which will also be the final game of the home stand for the A’s. It’ll be a battle of veterans as left-hander Jeffrey Springs goes for the home team while the Giants will send righty Adrian Houser for them tomorrow afternoon. Springs has been the A’s best pitcher overall this year while Houser, an offseason addition for San Francisco, has been underwhelming in his first season in a Giants uniform. Still have a chance at a series win so flush this one and get ready for tomorrow.

Braves News: Spencer Strider breaking balls, taking stock of the season, more

The Braves lost Saturday night and will now have a chance at 1:35 PM ET today to take the series win with them from a series that they really should win. Once again, bullpen fatigue bit them, as this sort of six-man rotation arrangement with two hybrid-long-men in Reynaldo Lopez (who is also untrustworthy) and Didier Fuentes, two generally untrustworthy arms at the moment in Aaron Bummer and Tyler Kinley, and three absolute studs just is putting the Braves continually in bad spots and has directly contributed to a few losses this season. It’s a tough spot, roster0wuse, but they have got to figure out a way to have starters pitch effectively longer, have more arms they can trust in the bullpen, and/or use Reynaldo Lopez and Didier Fuentes more frequently. They’re still playing very well and aren’t paying much of a price in the standings, but this is not a tenable situation for another ~115 games.

Braves News

Ivan took his twice-monthly look at the state of the team, how the season is going, and how players are performing.

Demetrius took a look at the exceptional performance of Spencer Strider’s breaking balls this season.

The Braves lost a tight one, 3-2 to the Red Sox, as they once again suffered from a short bullpen.

MLB News

Dodgers’ star Blake Snell is set to get surgery for loose bodies in his elbow, which has felt like a common occurrence league-wide this season.

The Angels are activating offseason trade addition Grayson Rodriguez off the IL today, as the once top prospect hopes to put his injury woes behind him.

The Red Sox placed Trevor Story on the IL with a groin issue.

Jose Berrios is having elbow surgery Wednesday to repair a stress fracture and possible ligament damage.

Mets 6, Yankees 3: Mets hold on with help from Weaver to win 6-3

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 13: Luke Weaver #30 of the New York Mets reacts after pitching during the game against the Detroit Tigers at Citi Field on May 13, 2026 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mets came back to take the second game of the Subway Series by a 6-3 score this evening at Citi Field. The offense revived itself once more, and while the pitching staff got into some tight spots, they got back out again, with Luke Weaver seeming to create a miracle in the seventh.

Huascar Brazobán once again got the start and worked a one-two-three first inning. In the bottom of the first, Juan Soto hit a ground ball to right field for a single, but then Mark Vientos struck out to end the inning and strand him. After the first out of the second inning, David Peterson replaced Brazobán and immediately gave up a double to Jazz Chisholm. Amed Rosario then grounded out, moving Chisholm to third, and Trent Grisham knocked an RBI single into left field to bring Chisholm home for the first Yankees run. Peterson gave up a four-pitch walk to Anthony Volpe, but struck out Austin Wells to limit the damage to one run. Although the Mets did not score in the first two innings, they forced Carlos Rodón to work for every out and drove his pitch count up early, which paid off in the third inning.

In the top of the third inning, Aaron Judge hit a single to right field, and Paul Goldschmidt smacked a line-drive single into left field, sending Judge to third base. However, Peterson followed up by striking out Chisholm to end the inning without allowing additional runs. In the bottom of the third, Luis Torrens struck out for the second out, but only after taking ten pitches from Rodón. Afterwards, Carson Benge smacked a two-out double into right field, and Bo Bichette worked a walk to bring up Soto. Soto also walked, and Vientos came to the plate, only for Rodón to throw a wild pitch that allowed Carson Benge to score. Rodón followed up the wild pitch with a throwing error that allowed Bichette to score. Vientos eventually finished his at-bat and grounded out to end the third inning with the score Mets 2, Yankees 1.

Peterson stifled all three Yankees batters in the top of the fourth, and in the bottom of the fourth, Austin Slater walked after two outs. Brett Baty belted an RBI double over Judge’s head into right field that to bring Slater in and forced Rodón out of the game, replaced by Jake Bird. Torrens struck out to end the inning. In the top of the fifth inning, Peterson hit Ben Rice with a pitch and followed up with a walk to Judge. Cody Bellinger grounded into a force out, reaching first, and allowing Ben Rice to reach third, with Judge out at second. Goldschmidt was up next and hit an RBI single into right field. Peterson struck out Chisholm again to end the top of the fifth, allowing the Mets to keep the lead. Benge led off the bottom of the fifth with a ground ball single to center field, and Soto drew his second walk of the night, this time from Yankees reliever Brent Headrick. Vientos followed by sneaking a 2-RBI ground-ball double past Rosario and into left field, bringing the score to Mets 5, Yankees 2.

Rosario followed up with his own double into left field at the top of the sixth inning, and after Peterson walked Volpe again, he was replaced by Brooks Raley. Raley wrapped it up quickly in the sixth, but things fell apart for him in the seventh. Judge led off with a double, and an error by Benge in right field allowed Bellinger to reach second base and Judge to score. Raley followed this by hitting Goldschmidt with a pitch, still with no outs. Chisolm bunted successfully right over Raley’s head to load the bases, at which point, Luke Weaver came in to take over.

Weaver worked his magic at this point and struck out Rosario and Grisham, and Volpe grounded into a force out at second to end the top of the inning with the Mets’ lead intact. Benge bounced back in the bottom of the seventh with a leadoff single from an infield hit. Bichette grounded into a forceout that took Benge out at second, and then Soto tapped a single into right field that allowed Bichette to reach third. Soto stole second base, and Vientos grounded out, but not before Bichette scored during the play as well. During Marcus Semien’s at-bat, Soto stole third base, but Semien wound up grounding out to end the inning Mets 6, Yankees 3.

Weaver returned for the top of the eighth and kept the Yankees bats quiet again. Paul Blackburn came in to pitch the bottom of the eighth for the Yankees, and A.J. Ewing led off with an infield single that skipped over Rosario’s glove. Ewing attempted to steal second base, but was called out after review. M.J. Melendez worked a walk while pinch-hitting for Austin Slater, but the other two outs came quickly, and Devin Williams was up for the top of the ninth. Williams wrapped up quickly as well with a one-two-three ninth to get the save and the Mets win to tie the series.

The Flushing edition of this year’s Subway Series concludes tomorrow when Freddy Peralta faces Elmer Rodriguez.

SB Nation GameThreads

Amazin’ Avenue
Pinstripe Alley

Box scores

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Win Probability Added

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Luke Weaver, +39.0% WPA
Big Mets loser: Brooks Raley, -27.0% WPA
Mets pitchers: +14.0% WPA
Mets hitters:
Teh aw3s0mest play: Bo Bichette and Juan Soto score on Carlos Rodon’s wild pitch + throwing error in the third, +20.7% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Cody Bellinger doubles, Aaron Judge scores on fielding error by Carson Benge in the seventh, +10.5% WPA

Heroes, zeros from Mets’ Subway Series win: Mark Vientos’ clutch hit helps secure victory

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Mark Vientos rips a two-run double in the fifth inning of the Mets' 6-3 win over the Yankees on May 16, 2026 at Citi Field

Heroes, zeros and the inside pitch from the Mets’ 6-3 win over the Yankees on Saturday night in the Subway Series in Queens:

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Hero

Luke Weaver entered with the bases loaded and no one out in the seventh and struck out Amed Rosario and Trent Grisham and got Anthony Volpe to ground out.

He also pitched a scoreless eighth.

Zero

Carlos Rodón allowed the Mets to have two-out rallies in consecutive innings and couldn’t get out of the fourth in another shaky performance as he returns from offseason elbow surgery.

Unsung hero

Mark Vientos came through with a two-run double off Brett Headrick in the fifth that gave the Mets much-needed insurance and started a sparkling double play at first base in the eighth.

Mark Vientos rips a two-run double in the fifth inning of the Mets’ 6-3 win over the Yankees on May 16, 2026 at Citi Field. Jason Szenes for New York Post

Key stat

0-for-3: Yankees went hitless in three at-bats against Weaver with the bases loaded in the seventh.

Quote of the night

“We’ve been hit this year with a lot of our superstars, with a lot of our key players. But yesterday felt different,’’

— Carlos Mendoza before the game of the impact Clay Holmes’ injury had on the Mets

Guardians Even It Up In Ohio Cup

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 16: Cleveland Guardians left fielder Angel Martinez (1) hits a 2-run home run during the seventh inning of the Major League Baseball interleague game between the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Guardians on May 16, 2026, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

It was a fun and crucial win for the Guardians tonight after dropping game 1 of the Ohio cup. There were a ton of contributions tonight. Brayan Rocchio continues to be one of the most clutch hitters not only on the Guardians, but in the entire league. I’m not sure how long he will keep this up, but he is having an awesome season thus far. José Ramírez appears to be busting out of his slump which is massive for this lineup, the same can be said for Kyle Manzardo, who had two more hits tonight. Steven Kwan responded very well to being demoted to the six spot in the lineup, which is great to see.

The story of this game and one of the bigger stories this season is the emergence of Angel Martinez. After going 2-4 tonight with a double and a 2 run HR, he has officially been the second most productive hitter on the team behind Chase DeLauter. We knew he could hit lefties, but his improvement against right handed pitching this year has proved that he can be an everyday option for the foreseeable future, assuming he keeps this up. It has been so fun to watch, who would’ve thought he would be leading the team in Home Runs on May 16th?

It was looking like another solid outing for Joey Cantillo until he ran into some trouble in the 5th inning after issuing a few walks and giving up a double to Spencer Steer. He ended the night allowing 4 runs in 5 innings, which isn’t ideal, but not the worst case scenario. His ERA sits at 3.40 on the season.

This was a masterful game from the bullpen. Holderman, Sabrowski, Gaddis, and Smith combined for 4 scoreless innings of relief, and boy did they look dominant. That was the best we’ve seen Gaddis look all season, Holderman and Sabrowski continue to be rock solid, and Cade Smith is beyond back. If those four can continue to throw this way, along with the additions of Aleman, Walters, and Espino, this bullpen will be more than fine.

The Guardians will look to secure the Ohio cup tomorrow at 1:40 pm ET. it will be Gavin Williams vs Brady Singer.

Carlos Rodon undone by control issues in second rocky outing since Yankees’ return

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Carlos Rodón wears a frustrated expression during the fourth inning of the Yankees' 6-3 loss to the Mets in Game 2 of the Subway Series on May 16, 2026 at Citi Field, Image 2 shows Carlos Rodón commits a throwing error during the fourth inning of the Yankees' loss to the Mets

The most memorable part of Carlos Rodón’s second start back after offseason elbow surgery was a wild pitch he followed with an even worse throw back to the plate.

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A pair of runs scored on the play and helped spur the Mets to a 6-3 win over the Yankees at Citi Field.

The Yankees, by virtue of their solid start to the season — backed in no small part by the rotation — can afford to wait as Rodón finds his form.

But through his first two outings, the left-hander has been far from sharp and it cost them on Saturday, as they lost for the sixth time in their last eight games.

“I’ve got to be better,” Rodón said. “Especially with two outs.”

He has struggled with his command, walking three in just 3 ²/₃ innings on Saturday and in both the third and fourth innings, he retired the first two batters only to fail to finish off the frame before allowing the Mets to score.

Rodón called his performance “pretty inconsistent … I got two outs and the inning unraveled.”

In the third, he struck out Brett Baty and Luis Torrens before Carson Benge doubled to right.

Walks to the slumping Bo Bichette and the ever-dangerous Juan Soto followed.

Carlos Rodón wears a frustrated expression during the fourth inning of the Yankees’ 6-3 loss to the Mets in Game 2 of the Subway Series on May 16, 2026 at Citi Field. Jason Szenes for New York Post

Then things got wild.

Rodón airmailed a pitch to Mark Vientos. The ball bounced off the brick wall behind home plate toward the lefty, who caught it and compounded his mistake by trying to throw out Benge at home.

His toss to Austin Wells was also wild, leaving the catcher no chance. The error allowed Bichette to score from second base and advanced Soto to third.



Suddenly, the one-run Yankees lead became a 2-1 deficit.

“That was a stupid play,’’ Rodón said. “I tried to make a superhero play. That’s one I’ve got to eat.”

Rodón got Vientos to ground out to end the inning. However, a two-out walk to Austin Slater in the fourth extended the inning, allowing Baty to hammer a 111 mph double over Aaron Judge in right field, driving in Slater to make it 3-1.

Carlos Rodón commits a throwing error during the fourth inning of the Yankees’ loss to the Mets. Jason Szenes for New York Post

Again, the fact that Rodón has been rusty in some of his minor league rehab starts and his first two with the Yankees after having surgery to remove loose bodies and shave down a bone spur in his left elbow isn’t a disaster.

But until he flashes the form he showed in 2025, questions will linger as the Yankees also wait for Gerrit Cole to return from the Tommy John surgery he underwent during spring training of last year.

The fast start to the season the Yankees got off to, as well as the mediocre state of the rest of the American League, have given them the luxury to survive without Rodón and Cole.

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Cam Schlittler has emerged as a Cy Young candidate in his first full season in the majors.

And Ryan Weathers and Will Warren have also pitched well.

But with Max Fried out with a left elbow bone bruise, the Yankees will be looking to Rodón to carry some of the load.

They entered Saturday with the third-best rotation ERA in the majors (3.09), trailing only Atlanta and Tampa Bay.

The Yankees might be able to point to Rodón retiring eight of the first nine batters he faced on Saturday — and striking out six in the outing — but it wasn’t enough to beat a Mets team that entered in disarray, after losing Clay Holmes to a fractured leg on Friday.

Too many mistakes cost Yankees in loss to Mets

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 16: Carlos Rodón #55 of the New York Yankees reacts as Carson Benge #3 and Bo Bichette #19 of the New York Mets score during the third inning at Citi Field on May 16, 2026 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

If you look at just some parts of the box score of this game with the runs stat blocked out, you might think the Yankees had come away with a win. They outhit the Mets, and they were fairly close in a lot of other stats. The issue for them is that they made several crucial mistakes.

Carlos Rodón got the start in his second appearance back off the injured list and again looked so-so. In addition to issuing three walks in 3.2 innings, he also made a costly error in the field, which came immediately after another miscue on a wild pitch. After him, the bullpen just kept allowing one too many baserunners, which allowed the Mets to keep adding pressure and eventually runs. Meanwhile at the plate, the Yankees ended up leaving 11 baserunners on for the game. The worst of those came in the seventh, when they couldn’t cash in on having the bases loaded with nobody out. Too many of those miscues in one game are going to end up costing a team, and it did the Yankees as they fell 6-3 on Saturday.

The Mets started — or should I say opened — the game with an opener in Huascar Brazobán, and he got through the first 1.1 innings without issue. They then went to the “bulk guy” in David Peterson, and the Yankees struck early against him. With one out in the second, Jazz Chisholm Jr. laced a double to right. After Chisholm moved to third on a groundout, Trent Grisham squeezed through a single to score Jazz.

Rodón looked pretty good the first time through the order, but the Mets then got to him as they started the second time. He got two quick outs to start the third, but Carson Benge then kept the inning alive with a double. Rodón then walked Bo Bichette and Juan Soto, loading the bases. He then got even wilder, as he sent a pitch flying over Austin Wells’ head. the ball ricocheted so far off the backstop that Rodón himself ended up fielding the ball. In an ill-advised attempt to get Benge at home, he then airmailed Wells again, allowing another run to come home, giving the Mets the lead.

An inning later, it was another two-out walk that spelled doom for the Yankees’ starter. Again in the fourth, Rodón got two quick outs to start the frame but proceeded to put Austin Slater on, despite even being ahead in the count early on. This time, Brent Baty did the damage, hitting a deep fly over the head of Aaron Judge in right, allowing Slater to come all the way around and score.

The Yankees then got one of those runs back when Paul Goldschmidt hit a single to bring home Ben Rice. However, the Mets immediately answered back with more. Jake Bird finished off the fourth inning and got another out in the fifth, but also gave up a single in the process, which eventually led to Brent Headrick coming in. Headrick walked Soto as well, before giving up a two-RBI double to Mark Vientos.

The Yankees then got another run back in the seventh, thanks to some help. After Judge led off the inning with a double, the spirit of Luis Castillo inhabited Benge, as he dropped a Cody Bellinger fly ball, allowing Judge to race around and score. There was then the most frustrating sequence of the game, as Goldschmidt was hit by a pitch and Chisholm reached on a bunt single to load the bases with still nobody out. However, Amed Rosario, Trent Grisham, and Anthony Volpe couldn’t do anything with that spot, stranding all three runners.

That failure ended up proving costly. That chance ended up being their last legitimate one, with a Wells single providing the only other baserunner after that. That missed opportunity was also the story of the day, the Yankees’ mistakes in the important situations proved costly.

The Yankees and Mets will wrap up this edition of the Subway Series tomorrow afternoon, with the rubber match starting at 1:40 pm ET. Moving around their rotation a bit, the Yankees will give the recently recalled Elmer Rodríguez the start opposite Freddy Peralta for the Mets.

Box score

Mets even Subway Series as ex-Yankee steals the spotlight against former team in win

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Mets pitcher Luke Weaver throwing a pitch from the mound during a baseball game, Image 2 shows Carlos Rodón reacts on the field with catcher and umpire after giving up two runs
The Yankees defeated the Mets on Saturday.

Luke Weaver was a pleasant dream for his latest team and a nightmare for his old one Saturday night.

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Carson Benge’s muff on a fly ball resulted in an error in the seventh inning, leaving the Yankees ready to pounce. With one run already across and nobody out, Weaver entered with the bases loaded and produced his signature moment to date in a Mets uniform.

The right-hander struck out Amed Rosario and Trent Grisham before getting Anthony Volpe to hit a ground ball for the final out, averting crisis. The Mets held on for a 6-3 victory at Citi Field, setting up a Subway Series rubber game Sunday.

“It’s a cool moment and that is why you play the game,” Weaver said. “Things that kind of come out of you, the moment gets big, you try to find a way to channel it, not panic, not get stressed out. It’s pretty stressful.”

Weaver, who signed a two-year contract worth $22 million with the Mets last offseason after the Yankees showed only mild interest in retaining him, wasn’t finished after saving the Mets in the seventh.

He returned for the eighth and pitched a scoreless inning, highlighted by his sprint to cover first base that completed a 3-6-1 double play on Ben Rice’s grounder.

“Unicorn stuff; he’s great,” Juan Soto said of Weaver. “He comes in and shows no fear and attacks the hitters and gets the job done. It’s cool to see.”

The Mets, who won for the fourth time in five games, received a big night from another former Yankee: Soto reached base four times to lead the offensive attack. If that wasn’t enough, Devin Williams — who pitched last season in The Bronx — got the final three outs for the save.

Juan Soto singles during the Mets’ 6-3 win over the Yankees on May 16, 2026 at Citi Field. Jason Szenes for the NY Post

The victory lifted the Mets a day after Clay Holmes was lost to a right fibula fracture, another jolt to a team besieged by injuries.

“When I saw [Holmes] I said, ‘That was in honor of you. I even had your name written in my hat’ — which I didn’t,” Weaver said. “But it just felt right to say; kids don’t lie to your parents. But we just try to pick each other up.”

Carlos Rodón, in his second start for the Yankees since returning from offseason elbow surgery, threw 88 pitches over 3 ²/₃ innings and allowed three runs (two earned) on three hits and three walks with six strikeouts.

Brett Baty reacts after hitting an RBI double during the Mets’ win over the Yankees. Jason Szenes for the NY Post

Rodón gifted the Mets two runs in the third to put the Yankees in a 2-1 hole. After Benge delivered a two-out double and Bo Bichette and Soto walked to load the bases, Rodón unleashed a wild pitch. Rodón fielded the carom bare-handed and attempted to nail Benge at the plate, but threw wild. Bichette also scored.

“That was a stupid play,” Rodón said. “I tried to make a superhero play. That’s one I have got to eat.”

The Mets got frisky again with two outs in the fourth. Rodón walked Austin Slater before Brett Baty’s ensuing RBI double placed the Yankees in a 3-1 hole.

Mark Vientos rips a two-run double during the Mets’ win over the Yankees. Jason Szenes for the NY Post

Mark Vientos’ two-run double in the fifth widened the Yankees’ deficit to 5-2.

Benge, who finished the night with three hits, singled to begin the rally and Soto walked against lefty Brent Headrick before Vientos’ smash eluded the diving Rosario at third base to bring in both runners.

David Peterson created plenty of traffic in his appearance, allowing six hits and three walks that produced the Yankees’ two runs over four innings.

Carlos Rodón (55) reacts during the Yankees’ May 16 loss to the Mets. Jason Szenes for the NY Post

The lefty threw 82 pitches in his third straight outing in a bulk relief role.

Aaron Judge doubled leading off the seventh and Cody Bellinger’s fly to right should have been the first out.

But the ball ticked off Benge’s glove for an error, allowing Judge to score.

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Brooks Raley drilled Paul Goldschmidt and allowed a bunt single to Jazz Chisholm Jr. that loaded the bases before departing with nobody out. Weaver got the next three outs, without a run scoring.

“That’s the game right there,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “It’s a completely different game if we catch that ball in right field. I am glad that guys could pick other guys up and that’s what it’s all about.”

Mets chase Carlos Rodon, knock around Yankees bullpen for 6-3 win

The Mets took advantage of walks and wildness and got some clutch pitching of their own to defeat the Yankees 6-3 at Citi Field Saturday night, evening this Subway Series at 1-1. 

Here are the takeaways...

-Luke Weaver’s escape from a bases-loaded, no-out situation in the seventh inning was the game-changing sequence of the ballgame.

After the Yankees had scored a run in the seventh and loaded the bases against Brooks Raley, due in part to dropped fly ball by Carson Benge in right field, Weaver came on with the Mets leading 5-3 and got three huge outs on a total of 11 pitches.

He struck out Amed Rosario and Trent Grisham, both swinging at change-ups. Then he got Anthony Volpe to ground to shortstop on a fastball for a force out to end the inning.

Weaver has had his hiccups this season but has been good lately, with a 1.69 ERA over his last 10 appearances before Saturday’s outing.

-The Mets got some outstanding work from five pitchers, from opener Huascar Brazoban to closer Devin Williams, who got the save and now hasn’t allowed a run over his last eight appearances.

-Despite his embarrassing drop of a routine fly ball, Benge continues to spark the Mets with his bat as the leadoff hitter.

He went 3-for-4 on Saturday night, the fourth time in his last five games he’s had a multi-hit game. Over his last 21 games, Benge is hitting .342 with 13 runs scored, raising his average from below .200 to .245.

-With Juan Soto starting to heat up again, it’s up to Mark Vientos hitting behind him in the No. 4 spot to be an RBI, as well as make pitchers pay for walking Soto.

On Saturday Vientos delivered in a couple of such situations.

With runners at first and third in the fifth, after Benge singled and Soto walked, Vientos lined a double down the left field line, scoring both runners to give the Mets a 5-2 lead.

Two innings later, with runners at second and third, after singles by Benge and Soto, plus a Soto stolen base, Vientos hit a hard ground ball toward the hole between first and second, far enough that Jazz Chisolm Jr. had no play at the plate even after fielding the ball.

For the night Vientos had three RBI, giving him 14 in 12 games in May.

-Without Clay Holmes the Mets need David Peterson more than ever to recapture his old form as a dependable starter, but he remains something of an enigma after a four-inning stint as the bulk reliever Saturday in which he struggled with his command, gave up six hits and three walks, yet managed to limit the damage to two runs.

Peterson had good stuff, as indicated by his eight strikeouts, but he was constantly in deep counts, and wound up throwing 82 pitches during his four innings.

Peterson’s biggest out was a two-out strikeout of Jazz Chisolm to end the fifth with runners on first and second, the Mets leading 3-2 at the time.

-Carlos Rodon’s wildness enabled the Mets to take the lead in the third inning after falling behind 1-0. After a two-out double to right-center by Benge, Rodon walked both Bo Bichette and Soto to load the bases.

Rodon then threw a wild pitch too high for Austin Wells to catch and all the way to back wall behind home plate. The ball caromed off the ledge high into the air, allowing Benge to score easily. Rodon ran to catch the carom in the air near the first base line, and though he had no shot at Benge, he threw to the plate anyway, wild again, past Austin Wells, allowing Bichette to also score on the play.

Game MVP: Luke Weaver

Weaver’s escape from a bases-loaded, no-out situation in the seventh inning with the Mets leading 5-3 at the time changed the complexion of the game.

Weaver relieved Brooks Raley with the bases already loaded and proceeded to strike out Rosario and Grisham, and get Volpe on a ground ball to short to end the inning. Weaver has stranded all seven runners he has inherited over his last 11 appearances.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets and Yankees wrap up their series on Sunday afternoon. First pitch is set for 1:40 p.m.

Freddy Peralta (3-3, 3.10 ERA) will take the mound for the Mets, while recently called-up prospect Elmer Rodriguez will start for the Yankees.