Yankees’ sweep vs. Nationals was historic, even by their standards

WASHINGTON — Not since 1910 — before Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle, Reggie Jackson and so on — had the New York Yankees swept a series quite like this.

Ben Rice’s two-run triple in the eighth inning helped the Yankees to a 5-3 victory over the Washington Nationals. New York trailed in the ninth Friday and in the eighth Saturday and Sunday but still won all three games.

It’s the first time the Yankees swept a series of at least three games while trailing in the eighth inning or later in each of them since May 19-21, 1910, according to Sportradar. Back then it was the New York Highlanders taking three straight from the Cleveland Naps.

The previous time any team accomplished the feat was June 13-15, 2014, when Colorado won three in a row at San Francisco.

“Winning at-bats in different ways in all three games,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “A good job by the pitching staff of holding a really good offense enough in check, and giving us a chance to win each game, and the guys just did some really good things late in games.”

On Friday, the Yankees trailed 3-2 when Jazz Chisholm Jr. hit a two-run homer in the ninth. Austin Wells added a solo shot and New York won 5-3.

Washington led 2-0 before New York’s four-run eighth Saturday, which included homers by Ryan McMahon, Trent Grisham and Paul Goldschmidt.

On Sunday, the Yankees didn’t need any home runs. Down 3-2, Rice hit a drive that center fielder Dylan Crews was unable to catch against the wall.

“I didn’t think I got it quite right, but I saw it kept going,” Rice said. “The wind must have just been helping it just enough to make it a tough wall-ball play there.”

After another run in the ninth, the Yankees finished the series outscoring the Nationals 10-0 in the eighth and ninth innings.

Phillies' Cristopher Sánchez to start All-Star Game at home for NL, Blue Jays' Dylan Cease the pick for AL

Cristopher Sánchez of the Philadelphia Phillies will start the All-Star Game in his home ballpark, taking the mound for the National League against Dylan Cease of the Toronto Blue Jays.

The Blue Jays announced Cease will be the American League’s starter. Dave Roberts of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who is managing the NL, said Sanchez is his starter.

“I think he deserves it. He’s the hometown ballplayer and I think the city of Philly will enjoy watching him and supporting him,” Roberts said. “I had a conversation with him this morning. ... He was very grateful. In a time when guys are not wanting to participate, this guy in the Midsummer Classic for fans, I think this is a good thing. He’s very excited about pitching.”

Yankees manager Aaron Boone said New York’s Cam Schlittler was not planning to pitch in the All-Star Game, then hours later said the right-hander could be available after all.

With less than 72 hours left before the game, there was no replacement planned for the AL roster if Schlittler wasn’t going to pitch.

“The staff’s had a lot of injuries this year ... I don’t want to put that risk in there of kind of letting the team down,” Schlittler said after New York’s win at Washington. “I’m on the roster, and if they need me I’ll throw. That’s a conversation I’ll have within the next day or two.”

Schlittler was a candidate to start, boasting an AL-leading ERA of 2.05. He pitched for the Yankees over the weekend.

Sanchez is 11-4 with a 2.62 ERA this season. He’s third in the major leagues with 144 strikeouts. The left-hander’s streak of 50 2/3 scoreless innings was a highlight of the major league season so far.

Milwaukee’s Jacob Misiorowski, who leads the majors in ERA (1.62), WHIP (0.76) and strikeouts (167), was replaced on the All-Star team when it appeared he would be starting for the Brewers over the weekend. Then Milwaukee scratched him from that start because of arm fatigue.

Cease is 6-4 with a 2.56 ERA for the Blue Jays. He nearly threw his second career no-hitter against San Francisco, but it was broken up in the ninth inning.

Cease is the first Toronto pitcher to start the All-Star Game since Roy Halladay in 2009.

Cease got the word from his manager, John Schneider, who will skipper the AL squad, during a team meeting before the series finale at San Diego.

“It’s pretty surreal. I didn’t know what to say. Everyone’s saying, ‘Give a speech,’ and I’m like, I was pretty speechless, so it was just a really cool experience,” Cease said.

“It’s really cool how all of these things have lined up, you know, even being able to pitch in it and having a good enough first half to be in the running for it and all that. And the fact that pretty much our entire staff is going, it’s really a really great recipe,” Cease added.

Diamondbacks place Zac Gallen on 15-day IL with elbow inflammation

LOS ANGELES — The Arizona Diamondbacks placed right-hander Zac Gallen on the 15-day injured list with right elbow inflammation, while left-hander Mitch Bratt was recalled to start against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Gallen was supposed to start the final game before the All-Star break before manager Torey Lovullo announced a late change.

Gallen, 30, has struggled for more than a month, going 0-5 with an 8.24 ERA over his past eight starts, going back to May 29. He is 3-9 on the season with a 6.34 ERA over 19 starts.

“I think he felt something and he spoke up and that’s when we decided to get him examined,” said Lovullo, who added that a timeline for recovery will be established during the All-Star break.

A veteran of eight major league seasons, Gallen is 69-61 with a 3.83 ERA over 195 career starts for the Miami Marlins and Diamondbacks. He was a National League All-Star in 2023 when he finished third in NL Cy Young Award voting.

Bratt, 23, is making his second appearance on the Diamondbacks’ roster. He made his major league debut June 24 when he allowed one run over three innings in a start against the St Louis Cardinals.

Snake Bytes, 7/13: Break!

Raygun competes during the Breaking B-Girls Round Robin Group B battle between Logistx and Raygun on Day 14 of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at La Concorde on August 9, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by Harry Langer/DeFodi Images via Getty Images) | DeFodi Images via Getty Images

Recaps

[Dbacks.com] D-backs roll into break with statement sweep in LA: ‘We haven’t told our story yet’ – It’s the Diamondbacks’ first sweep of the Dodgers in Los Angeles since Sept. 4-6, 2017. They also became the first team to sweep the Dodgers this season. “You know, this is a pretty good team,” Perdomo said. “They have amazing players. To come here and play three games against those titan players, it feels good to sweep them up. They haven’t been swept [by us at home] since ’17, and I think that was our goal, try to get that sweep for us.” With the sweep, the Diamondbacks enter the All-Star break with a 49-47 record and sit just 2 1/2 games back of the final NL Wild Card spot currently held by Miami.

[Arizona Sports] Sweeping Dodgers sends Diamondbacks to All-Star break with sense of optimism – Sunday’s game did not start quite so positively with rookie starter Mitch Bratt getting touched up for three runs in three innings in place of Zac Gallen, but Arizona’s defense and bullpen simply took over the baseball game. Moreno made an athletic, bare-handed play to rob Shohei Ohtani of a potential infield single in the fifth inning. Geraldo Perdomo made a highlight bare-handed play and Arenado snagged a diving catch in the sixth. The Diamondbacks’ bullpen threw six hitless innings on Sunday against one of the game’s most dangerous lineups.

Team news

[AZ Central] Diamondbacks MLB Draft. Day 2 focuses on pitching depth – The Arizona Diamondbacks selected nine pitchers out of 16 picks on the second day of the MLB Draft on Sunday, July 12. Three were taken with the first three picks and eight of the first 12 were pitchers Sunday. The DBacks had five selections on the first day, July 11, two of those picks being pitchers. “You try to play to the trends of the draft every year, and a lot of hitters go early,” Diamo1ndbacks amateur scouting director Ian Rebhan said at the end of the draft Sunday. “There’s a lot of really good value in the college pitching circuit in those middle rounds and we kind of leaned into that.”

[SI] Diamondbacks Draft Intriguing Lefty Flamethrower – Worley made just 14 starts in the 2026 season at Stony Brook, but pitched to a stellar 3.12 ERA and struck out an unbelievable 93 batters in just 69.1 innings of work, though eh did walk 31. Not only is Worley a left-hander, which is a premium asset unto itself, but he’s 6-foot-5 and 220 pounds, which can easily lend itself to big velocity readings and high levels of extension. In terms of velocity, his 60-grade fastball has a bit of a wide range, but has hit 99 MPH on occasion, and scouting reports state that he measured out at 20 inches of induced vertical break, or “ride” at the Combine.

[Burn City Sports] How the Diamondbacks swept the Dodgers without their biggest bats – What made the sweep even more impressive was who led the way. Arizona’s top three of Ketel Marte, Geraldo Perdomo and Corbin Carroll didn’t play their best baseball at the plate, collecting just two hits as a trio. With its biggest stars relatively quiet, the club needed the rest of the lineup to step up. That’s exactly what happened. Tim Tawa, who was recalled from Triple-A Reno on July 5, put together the best series of his young MLB career. He went 7-for-13 with two home runs and seven RBIs, providing timely hits and steady defense at first base while giving the lineup a spark.

[USA Today] What do we really know at MLB All-Star break? Baseball’s biggest second-half questions – [The Rays] have shown interest in seeing whether the Diamondbacks would move second baseman Ketel Marte and Giants All-Star second baseman Luis Arraez as a backup plan. He now has 10-and-5 rights and is expected to veto all trades, which Arizona has told teams… Ever since several D-backs officials and players expressed their frustration with Ketel Marte for sitting out their game against the Dodgers and starter Shohei Ohtani, Marte has since played in every game – starting all but six times this season. “He’s very driven as an athlete overall,” D-backs manager Torey Lovullo said.

[Arizona Sports] Diamondbacks OF Tommy Troy getting MRI on shoulder – Arizona Diamondbacks rookie outfielder Tommy Troy will undergo an MRI on his right shoulder on Monday, manager Torey Lovullo said Sunday. The news comes one day after Troy left Saturday’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers after banging into the center field wall to make a catch in the fifth inning at Dodger Stadium. Jorge Barrosa entered the game in place of Troy. Troy’s injury comes as the D-backs (49-47) enter the All-Star break still without outfielder Jordan Lawlar, who has not played since June 19 after sustaining a right hamstring strain.

And, elsewhere…

[MLB] Ranking all 8 competitors in a stacked Derby field – Is this the most fun Home Run Derby field in memory? The Derby is always a blast, but I’m not sure we’ve ever had eight competitors who are as individually compelling to watch as what we’ll see in Philadelphia on Monday. Even without Aaron Judge, two-time Derby winner Pete Alonso or defending champion Cal Raleigh, this lineup is absolutely stacked. Any of these guys could win. Here’s a semi-educated guess at who will. To be clear: I’ve listed the players in order of what I believe to be their likelihood of winning. [2026 T-Mobile Home Run Derby takes place today, starting at, 5 pm-ish AZ time on Netflix]

[ESPN] Blaze Alexander fractures hand after being hit by pitch – The frustration of struggling through a lackluster first half of the season became alarmingly evident Sunday for both the Orioles and Royals. An errant pitch from Royals reliever Lucas Erceg that struck Baltimore’s Blaze Alexander on the left hand resulted in both dugouts and bullpens emptying onto the field near home plate during the seventh inning of the Orioles’ 8-2 victory. Though both teams began the day in last place in their divisions, there was no shortage of emotion after Erceg hit Alexander with an inside fastball. Alexander took a few steps toward first base before shouting at Erceg, prompting Orioles manager Craig Albernaz to quickly restrain his infielder from charging the mound.

Seattle Mariners Minor League Roundup – Week Sixteen

MLB: Seattle Mariners-Media Day

Tacoma Rainiers

The Rainiers managed a split this week, debuting their shiny new star prospects in hitter-friendly Las Vegas. Esteemed sluggers Lazaro Montes and Michael Arroyo donned the Rainiers jersey for the first time in their young careers, putting them just a short drive and a handful of AB’s from a big league promotion. There’s not yet a meaningful sample to draw any real conclusions (especially in such an extreme hitting environment), but each of them has already launched their first PCL homer and are looking more and more comfortable by the game. They’re must see TV.

Not to be outdone, red-hot Ryan Bliss was on fire at the plate this week, collecting 18 (!!!) hits in the six game slate. This wasn’t just empty contact either; Bliss managed a homer, a triple, and five doubles on the week with a pair of stolen bases to boot. He’s been absolutely unbelievable this month and is beginning to look a bit more like the player he’s been in the past. Though his season numbers are still in a tough spot, look for him to continue this torrid stretch and regrow his stock as a potential major league contributor.

Arkansas Travelers

The Travs wound up splitting the series this week despite missing their fearless rotation leaders in Kade Anderson and Ryan Sloan to the Futures Game on Sunday Morning. Both Sloan and Anderson appeared in the game, working scoreless innings, and Anderson let the opposing hitters know exactly what he thought of them with an ice cold walk off the mound in the first inning of action.

Compounding the temporary leave of absence from the rotation leaders, this is the first iteration of the Travs lineup without the tandem of the aforementioned Montes and Arroyo, each of whom more than earned their promotion up to Triple-A. Despite the current lack of star power, there’s plenty of names that have really turned into contributors; Charlie Pagliarini, Caleb Cali, and Hunter Fitz-Gerald don’t get a lot of buzz in prospect circles for various reasons, but each of them have really produced and have carved out a nice niche in this system. They’re one’s to watch out for as under-the-radar organizational depth.

Everett AquaSox

Another week, another split for the stagnant AquaSox this week. This squad is so immensely talented on the offensive side of the ball, but it’s been a mixed bag from the pitching staff this season. Certainly not an easy environment to pitch in due to the Baby Park conditions of Everett’s home field, but they’ll need a bit more from the staff if they really want to get things rolling.

After a rough few months at the dish, top prospect Luke Stevenson has looked great at the plate this month and is finally stringing some really nice AB’s together. Whether it’s intentional or not, Stevenson seems to have gotten less passive at the plate and is seeking out damage rather than waiting for the “perfect pitch”; having run massive walk rates up to this point, Stevenson’s walk rate has considerably diminished in the month of July, and his numbers have subsequently taken off. This could very easily be a product of a small sample size, but if a tangible change actually has been made, to see such strong results is a fantastic sign. On the month, Stevenson is slashing .351/.415/.730, good for an OPS of 1.145. With a strong defensive foundation, the potential with Stevenson remains sky high.

Yet another prospect with seemingly limitless potential, Jonny Farmelo logged yet another successful series at the dish, popping a homer in the middle of a six-hit week. Farmelo’s really gotten into some great power this year, and the underlying metrics seem to back that production up; he’s been rocketing the ball all over the ballpark and letting his exceptional speed on the basepaths turn singles into doubles and doubles into triples. He’s an electrifying player that should probably get a look at Double-A Arkansas once all the draftees are assigned to their new homes.

Inland Empire 66ers

The 66ers dropped the series by a score of 4-2 this week, though they managed to play in one of the most chaotic games of baseball I’ve ever seen. Almost immediately falling behind 16-0, IE managed to post an 11 run seventh inning to cut the lead to just two, then immediately give up a six spot in the bottom of the eighth to seemingly put the game out of reach. Comically, they managed seven more runs in the ninth, but came up short, losing by a final score of 22-21. 33 total hits, 20 walks, 6 errors, and 43 runs. What a ride.

This team is about to look considerably different in the coming weeks; the M’s went exceptionally heavy on the college demographic in this past weekend’s draft, and their particular emphasis on hitters means their lower minors rosters are going to get crowded quick. Lots of fun new names, but the roster composition could be a bit tricky to sort out unless there’s a large of contingency of these draft guys that end up being “dev only”, high performance camp types. Regardless, this team absolutely needs an infusion of talent; they’ve really struggled to find consistency this year, and some big-time bats would work wonders for this lineup.

For those that have been curious, Jackson Steensma made his return to the mound after receiving a shot in his arm for some discomfort. He logged two scoreless innings and should be on a slow ramp up in the coming weeks.

ACL Mariners

It was an objectively brutal week for star prospect Nick Becker; logging 20 PA’s, he struck out 11 times and managed just two hits (a double and a homer, for what it’s worth). Flush that one and move on.

On a more positive note, Yorger Bautista has been much better this month and seems to be getting some positive regression come his way after some unfortunate luck early in the season. Slashing .355/.375/.548 on the month, Bautista has lowered his K% significantly and may have turned a corner offensively. If everything clicks with him, he could be one of the better prospects in this entire system. Hopefully he closes out 2026 with a bang and cements himself as a future foundational talent.

Strong candidate for the all name team, OF Brayden Corn has been quite good for the Baby M’s this season and looks like he’ll be getting a shot at affiliate ball sooner than later. He was a 15th rounder last season, and though it’s not overwhelmingly loud tools, he’s posted a .932 OPS with 10 stolen bases.

DSL Mariners

It may sound like a broken record at this point, but this DSL roster absolutely mashes. It wouldn’t come as much of a surprise if this team produces several notable prospects in the coming years, and unheralded guys like Elias Perez and Fabian Gonzalez are playing themselves into the spotlight. Gregory Pio and Juan Rijo are still leading the way, but this is as fun of a roster as we’ve seen since Lazaro Montes and Michael Arroyo were making their professional debuts nearly a half decade ago.

Yankees Birthday of the Day: DJ LeMahieu

Jun 28, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees second base DJ LeMahieu (26) singles during the eighth inning against the Athletics at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

DJ LeMahieu’s career is in so many ways one of great contrasts. A bolt-out-of-the-blue signing ahead of the 2019 season, he went from being a former NL batting champion in the game’s friendliest park for contact to one that is far more served to home runs in the AL. The initial free agent deal is one of the more lopsided in Yankee history in terms of value, but a front office determined to avoid CBT penalties lead to one of the messier contract extensions in that same period. Even perhaps his greatest moment as a Yankee — an incredible, ninth-inning ALCS home run — was undercut, erased by one of the most painful playoff defeats in an era that features many of those.

Happy birthday, man of opposites!

David John LeMahieu
Born: July 13, 1988 (Visalia, CA)
Yankees Tenure: 2019-25

Already a solid MLB player by the time the Yankees got ahold of him, DJ had already taken home three Gold Gloves, won the batting crown in 2016 hitting .348, and made two All Star teams. A second round pick by the Cubs out of LSU in 2009, he got a cup of coffee in Chicago just two seasons later, before being dealt to the Rockies that offseason. He quickly established himself as a defensive-first player with a barely-league average bat, except for that ‘16 season.

There’s nothing quite like slugging, and getting that mark up to .495 that season was a huge part of one of DJ’s two five-win seasons. LeMahieu was never a true home run hitter, getting a couple here and there, but his true skill was hard-hit line drives to right field. At Coors, with a huge outfield and defenders playing further back than just about anywhere else in the sport those balls tend to drop in for singles. Still, I think it was a slight stroke of genius for Brian Cashman to notice that those hard-hit line drives to right field, once you move to Yankee Stadium or some of the other, smaller ballparks in the AL East, are either going to bounce off the outfield wall for a double, or just stretch over for four bags.

With Giancarlo Stanton in the fold joining Aaron Judge the season before, the club had about as much pure power as a team could ask for. What they really needed was a true leadoff hitter, someone to be on base when Judge and Stanton were taking their daddy hacks. Inked for two years and $24 million (lol), DJ settled in as a utility infielder before eventually shoving veteran Brett Gardner out of the top slot in the lineup by May. In a season defined by the Next Man Up attitude, LeMahieu — French for The Machine, famously — appeared in 145 games, set career highs in hits, home runs, doubles, RBI, runs scored, wRC+, and a 5.7 fWAR good enough to finish the year fourth in MVP voting. That he did it for $12 million AAV underscores what an incredible bargain that season was.

The Rockies had made the playoffs twice in DJ’s tenure in Denver, and he had stunk in both runs. In that 2019 campaign though, albeit in only nine games, the now-entrenched second baseman hit .325/.386/.625, a Judgian triple slash, with three home runs including of course the biggest one of the run:

That game should have ended with a Yankee extra-inning miracle, immediately in the annals of the great New York playoff wins. Instead, a small man gave up a home run to a smaller man, and the Yankees were bounced.

Along came COVID-19, and the delayed start to the 2020 season, and perhaps LeMahieu’s apotheosis. I’m normally one to toss all 2020 stats, but I won’t do it when a second baseman slashes .364/.421/.590, a 1.011 OPS! Yes, it was 50 games. No, I don’t care. The Yankees had the best hitter in the American League and it wasn’t Aaron Judge. Somehow LeMahieu finished third in MVP voting, and I’m still grumpy about it. If nothing else, he was the first player to win a batting title in both leagues.

However, that great contract was now up, the Yankees had to retain a guy that good, and Cashman’s fetish for stretching contracts out to lower AAV, which was already getting the team in trouble with one Aaron Hicks, would pop up again. The Yankees and LeMahieu agreed on a six-year deal that should have been a four-year deal, for $90 million. Unfortunately, bat speed almost immediately began to sap, as over the next three seasons LeMahieu would see more fastballs than any other hitter in the game. Pairing this new vulnerability with a spate of injuries hastened his decline, and he managed just 112 games and a -0.2 fWAR in his final two seasons with the Yankees. They eventually designated him for assignment and released him from the roster in July of last year. He has not played in MLB since, most recently managing a summer wood-bat collegiate league team in his native Michigan, the Royal Oak Leprechauns.

DJ LeMahieu was a shooting star that burned out after two all-time seasons in pinstripes. In an earlier era he would not have had career earnings over $100 million, and he was worth every penny for that ALCS homer alone. Enjoy the day, DJ.


See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.

Dodgers minors: Ryan Ward, Logan Wagner, Luis Carias

Oklahoma City outfielder Ryan Ward (10) runs home to score during a minor league baseball game between the Oklahoma City Comets and the Sugar Land Space Cowboys at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. | NATHAN J. FISH/THE OKLAHOMAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Dodgers outfielders Josue De Paula and Mike Sirota covered all seven innings in left field for the National League in Sunday’s MLB Futures Game in Philadelphia. De Paula played the first four innings and singled once in his two at-bats.

Sirota struck out in his only at-bat, but much like Eric Gagne’s blown save in the 2003 MLB All-Star Game, Sirota’s on-base streak remains alive and active at 72 straight games once play resumes on Friday.

Player of the day

Great Lakes infielder Logan Wagner, playing second base on Sunday, homered twice and drove in three runs.

Triple-A Oklahoma City

The usual suspects were at it in the Comets’ win over the El Paso Chihuahuas (Padres). Ryan Ward homered and drove in three.

Zach Ehrhard had three hits, including a double, and scored twice. Jack Suwinski had three hits and a double. James Tibbs III had three hits as well.

Oklahoma City’s bullpen game worked to perfection, with nine relievers each pitching a scoreless frame.

Double-A Tulsa

Two runs in the seventh inning sent the Drillers to defeat at the hands of the Springfield Cardinals. Wyatt Crowell had already tossed three scoreless innings of relief to get to the seventh, but in that frame he walked a pair and allowed a two-run double that provided the final margin.

Christian Zazueta struck out three in his three innings and allowed a run. His start was shortened, but it was also his only time pitching on four days rest this season, as he also started the Tuesday series opener.

High-A Great Lakes

In addition to Wagner, Charles Davalan also homered in the Loons win over the Dayton Dragons (Reds).

Robby Porco and Justin Chambers combined for six strikeouts in 3 1/3 innings of scoreless relief.

Class-A Ontario

Jaron Elkins and Easton Shelton each homered in the Tower Buzzers’ win over the Inland Empire (Mariners).

Brady Smith struck out seven in his three-inning start, allowing a run. Luis Carias followed with one run over the final six innings with five strikeouts for the win.

Sunday scores

The week ahead

  • Oklahoma City at Tacoma (Mariners)
  • Tulsa at Frisco (Rangers)
  • Great Lakes vs. West Michigan (Tigers)
  • Ontario vs. Lake Elsinore (Padres)

All four Dodgers affiliates have the All-Star break off, and don’t start up again until Friday night for shortened, three-game series. From Monday through Thursday this week, minor league games are limited to the Arizona Complex League and the Dominican Summer League.

Wetherholt has $20 million in escalators as part of $112.5 million, 8-year contract with Cardinals

St. Louis Cardinals second baseman JJ Wetherholt has $20 million in escalators based on MVP voting and All-Star selection as part of his $112.5 million, eight-year contract that starts next year.

Wetherholt receives a $2 million signing bonus payable on Nov. 15 under terms of the deal announced Friday, according to contract details obtained by The Associated Press.

He gets salaries of $2.5 million next season, $4 million in 2028, $7.5 million in 2029, $12.5 million in 2030, $17 million in 2031, $20 million in 2032, $22 million in 2033 and $25 million in 2034.

Wetherholt can start earning the escalators in 2031 and boost his salaries by up to $5 million in 2032 and $7.5 million in each of the following two seasons.

He would receive a $5 million boost in all following seasons for winning an MVP award and $2.5 million for finishing second through fifth in the voting.

Wetherholt would get a $500,000 increase in the following season only for finishing sixth through 10th, and he would get a $250,000 raise the next season if he is an All-Star.

He would be given a $2 million assignment bonus if traded.

Wetherholt was selected seventh overall in the 2024 amateur draft and signed for a $6.9 million bonus.

He made the Cardinals’ opening day roster this season and homered against Tampa Bay in his debut on March 26.

Wetherholt is earning the $780,000 major league minimum this year as part of a contract that calls for a $63,600 salary while in the minor leagues.

JJ Wetherholt has $20 million in escalators as part of 8-year, $112.5 million contract with Cardinals

St. Louis Cardinals second baseman JJ Wetherholt has $20 million in escalators based on MVP voting and All-Star selection as part of his eight-year, $112.5 million contract that starts next year.

Wetherholt receives a $2 million signing bonus payable on Nov. 15 under terms of the deal announced, according to contract details obtained by The Associated Press.

He gets salaries of $2.5 million next season, $4 million in 2028, $7.5 million in 2029, $12.5 million in 2030, $17 million in 2031, $20 million in 2032, $22 million in 2033 and $25 million in 2034.

Wetherholt can start earning the escalators in 2031 and boost his salaries by up to $5 million in 2032 and $7.5 million in each of the following two seasons.

He would receive a $5 million boost in all following seasons for winning an MVP award and $2.5 million for finishing second through fifth in the voting.

Wetherholt would get a $500,000 increase in the following season only for finishing sixth through 10th, and he would get a $250,000 raise the next season if he is an All-Star.

He would be given a $2 million assignment bonus if traded.

Wetherholt was selected seventh overall in the 2024 amateur draft and signed for a $6.9 million bonus.

He made the Cardinals’ opening day roster this season and homered against Tampa Bay in his debut on March 26.

Wetherholt is earning the $780,000 major league minimum this year as part of a contract that calls for a $63,600 salary while in the minor leagues.

Mariners prospects Kade Anderson and Ryan Sloan use friendly competition to push toward MLB debuts

The journey of a minor leaguer can oftentimes be a contentious one. Every time you step on the field is an audition for a dream job that dozens of other players, your teammates and friends, are also trying to get. You're constantly on the go in small towns and tinier accommodations. A promotion means uprooting everything you've become familiar with and moving to a brand new small town to join a new clubhouse full of new teammates with whom you are ultimately competing for a job. All while Major League Baseball continues to trim the number of minor league roster spots available.

For some, the intensity of that competition can prove to be too much. They'll put too much pressure on themselves or isolate themselves too often. For others, like Mariners minor league teammates Kade Anderson and Ryan Sloan, the competition will only push them harder.

"I think it's like a healthy competition where, every start we have, we're trying to one-up each other," said Anderson, the Mariners' top pitching prospect and the top pitching prospect in all of baseball, according to MLB Pipeline. "Not in a way to outcompete each other, but to push each other to that next step."

Anderson and Sloan have only been teammates for a year, but it's been a fast friendship.

Sloan joined the Mariners' organization first, drafted in the 2nd round of the 2024 MLB Draft out of high school in Illinois. In his first minor league season, in 2025, Sloan quickly worked through two levels, pitching to a 3.73 ERA, 1.16 WHIP, and 90/15 K/BB ratio in 82 innings and establishing himself not only as perhaps the top pitching prospect in the Mariners' organization, but one of the top pitching prospects in all of baseball, ranking 8th overall, according to MLB Pipeline, coming into the 2026 season.

In the first round of the 2025 MLB Draft, with the third overall pick, the Mariners selected Anderson out of LSU, and without even throwing a professional pitch in 2025, he vaulted to the top of the system. This spring, the Mariners decided to fast-track him right to Double-A, where he joined Sloan in the rotation. Despite the tension that pop culture has led us to expect from two elite athletes put in the same clubhouse, the two pitchers clicked fairly quickly.

"I think we built a really good bond since he got drafted and in spring training," recalled Sloan. "Just to be able to be around someone so consistently who shares the same mindset and mentality that I do, and the love of the game of baseball as I do, is really cool."

Their shared mindset is not only a major part of their success but also a key reason they are such great fits for the Mariners' organization. An organization that has had a strong reputation for developing talented and aggressive starting pitchers, the Mariners have cultivated the same approach in their two top prospects.

"The Mariners just do a really good job of simplifying everything," said Anderson. "They give you that instilled confidence of going at hitters the same way, no matter who it is." Similarly, Sloan mentioned that the organization continuously tells them to trust their stuff: "They just keep the main thing the main thing...You have really good stuff. Just throw it in the zone and have the confidence to throw it in the zone."

While a similar aggression and confidence have fueled their initial success, both pitchers admitted that learning from one another has helped take their games to another level.

"Kade does a lot of things really well that I can work on and vice versa," reflected Sloan, "so to be able to have someone who's really strong in areas I'm not super strong in, or I wouldn't consider my strengths, is really good... Something that I just want to emulate or kind of steal from him is just the fact that, when he gets out there, it doesn't matter what he has that day, he's gonna go compete. I just think that's why he's been able to be so consistent day in and day out. You know what you're gonna get with him every single day, and just to be able to learn from that and kind of take that into my own."

For Anderson's part, he's been learning from Sloan's attention to routine and detail, which are advanced beyond his years at just 20 years old.

"I think he goes about his business really professionally," said Anderson. "His routines are dialed in, so it's been really fun to just watch that type of stuff."

This season, they've both watched each other put together stellar performances that have landed both of them inside the top 10 overall prospects in baseball, according to MLB Pipeline. Sloan added a sinker, which has been a nice pitch for him to deepen his mix, and has a 4.04 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, and 77/12 K/BB ratio in 62.1 innings at Double-A. Meanwhile, Anderson has been one of the more impressive starting pitchers in the entire minor leagues, posting a 1.36 ERA, 0.69 WHIP, and 108/10 K/BB ratio in 72.2 innings at Double-A. What's more impressive is that the left-hander is doing it without a triple-digit fastball or a breaking pitch that goes viral on social media for its otherworldly movement. He just has a deep arsenal of pitches and an advanced understanding of how to attack hitters.

"I would argue that I don't have a specific outlier per se," admitted Anderson before Sunday's MLB Futures Game. "I just feel like having four pitches for strikes has given me a lot of help, and my changeup has come a long way from last year, so I just feel like I'm just keeping hitters off balance. It's not necessarily like one pitch that someone can't hit. [The changeup] has added another pitch to my arsenal, and it just helps me navigate a lineup easier."

Normally, when you have a starting pitcher putting up those kinds of numbers, an MLB promotion seems inevitable. However, in addition to battling each other, both Anderson and Sloan have to contend with their big league club having one of the deepest and healthiest rotations in baseball.

On the season, Seattle's starters rank 1st in innings pitched, 1st in WAR, 3rd in WHIP, 3rd in K-BB%, and 6th in ERA. When Bryce Miller started the season on the injured list, Emerson Hancock pitched so well that the team was forced to use a six-man rotation when Miller finally did return. Despite a few of the Mariners' starting pitchers having previous injury concerns, they have remained healthy for the entirety of the first half, which not only means their MLB rotation is overcrowded, but it also means that both Anderson and Sloan are seemingly stuck in the minor leagues, regardless of how well they pitch in 2026.

"I think everyone tries to make it this big deal where, you know, we may be stuck or whatever it is, but honestly, when you take it day by day, when you just put in good days of work, everything's gonna work itself out," said Sloan. "Everyone has their own path, and I truly believe in that, so I just think, most importantly, I'm in a great org and an org that instills confidence in me, and you know, has gotten me to where I am now."

Anderson is similarly unmoved by the logjam in front of him.

"Obviously, who doesn't want to be in the big leagues? But I've gained the perspective that I understand that there is patience that comes along with it," he reflected. "I feel like, when my time comes, it'll come. You try not to look ahead too much about that kind of stuff. I'm not worried about playing in two days. I want to play for a long time, so having that perspective of this [year] doesn't matter as much as me playing for the next 10 years."

However, the Mariners may not be as comfortable with waiting for their young pitchers as the pitchers themselves are. USA Today’s Bob Nightengale reported during MLB All-Star weekend that the team has let it be known that they would be open to trading one of their starting pitchers, most likely veteran Luis Castillo, to add an impact bat and free up some of the logjam. While that would still give Seattle five starting pitchers in their rotation, moving a starter would position either Sloan or Anderson to be the next man up, should the team need a starting pitcher.

Whichever one of them gets that call doesn't seem to matter much to either Anderson or Sloan.

"I think if you start worrying about that, you're worried about the wrong things," declared Sloan. "You start losing focus in other areas. So I think, as much as you can block that out, and it's really hard to block that stuff out, but the most you can, the better."

"Obviously, we both want to be in that role. Who doesn't?" added Anderson. "But I feel like we're gonna be in those roles sooner rather than later, anyway, so whoever comes first, it doesn't really matter to me."

For now, the teammates are content to share a clubhouse and "lean on each other for support," as Anderson put it. Their hard work has propelled them to top prospect status, a place in the MLB Futures Game, and a position on the doorstep of an MLB promotion and a dream realized. But until that time comes, they're just going to focus on the things that they can control and the mentality that has pushed them to be great.

"I just have to continue to throw the ball well, continue to be healthy, continue to throw innings, and everything's going to take care of itself," said Sloan. The rest is up to the Mariners.

"Whatever they tell me to do, I'm going to be there," said Anderson.

Whether it's this year or next, Sloan will likely be right there alongside him. It doesn't matter which one of them gets there first; the other one will be waiting.

Mariners prospects Kade Anderson and Ryan Sloan use friendly competition to push towards MLB debuts

The journey of a minor leaguer can oftentimes be a contentious one. Every time you step on the field is an audition for a dream job that dozens of other players, your teammates and friends, are also trying to get. You're constantly on the go in small towns and tinier accommodations. A promotion means uprooting everything you've become familiar with and moving to a brand new small town to join a new clubhouse full of new teammates with whom you are ultimately competing for a job. All while Major League Baseball continues to trim the number of minor league roster spots available.

For some, the intensity of that competition can prove to be too much. They'll put too much pressure on themselves or isolate themselves too often. For others, like Mariners minor league teammates Kade Anderson and Ryan Sloan, the competition will only push them harder.

"I think it's like a healthy competition where, every start we have, we're trying to one-up each other," said Anderson, the Mariners' top pitching prospect and the top pitching prospect in all of baseball, according to MLB Pipeline. "Not in a way to outcompete each other, but to push each other to that next step."

Anderson and Sloan have only been teammates for a year, but it's been a fast friendship.

Sloan joined the Mariners' organization first, drafted in the 2nd round of the 2024 MLB Draft out of high school in Illinois. In his first minor league season, in 2025, Sloan quickly worked through two levels, pitching to a 3.73 ERA, 1.16 WHIP, and 90/15 K/BB ratio in 82 innings and establishing himself not only as perhaps the top pitching prospect in the Mariners' organization, but one of the top pitching prospects in all of baseball, ranking 8th overall, according to MLB Pipeline, coming into the 2026 season.

In the first round of the 2025 MLB Draft, with the third overall pick, the Mariners selected Anderson out of LSU, and without even throwing a professional pitch in 2025, he vaulted to the top of the system. This spring, the Mariners decided to fast-track him right to Double-A, where he joined Sloan in the rotation. Despite the tension that pop culture has led us to expect from two elite athletes put in the same clubhouse, the two pitchers clicked fairly quickly.

"I think we built a really good bond since he got drafted and in spring training," recalled Sloan. "Just to be able to be around someone so consistently who shares the same mindset and mentality that I do, and the love of the game of baseball as I do, is really cool."

Their shared mindset is not only a major part of their success but also a key reason they are such great fits for the Mariners' organization. An organization that has had a strong reputation for developing talented and aggressive starting pitchers, the Mariners have cultivated the same approach in their two top prospects.

"The Mariners just do a really good job of simplifying everything," said Anderson. "They give you that instilled confidence of going at hitters the same way, no matter who it is." Similarly, Sloan mentioned that the organization continuously tells them to trust their stuff: "They just keep the main thing the main thing...You have really good stuff. Just throw it in the zone and have the confidence to throw it in the zone."

While a similar aggression and confidence have fueled their initial success, both pitchers admitted that learning from one another has helped take their games to another level.

"Kade does a lot of things really well that I can work on and vice versa," reflected Sloan, "so to be able to have someone who's really strong in areas I'm not super strong in, or I wouldn't consider my strengths, is really good... Something that I just want to emulate or kind of steal from him is just the fact that, when he gets out there, it doesn't matter what he has that day, he's gonna go compete. I just think that's why he's been able to be so consistent day in and day out. You know what you're gonna get with him every single day, and just to be able to learn from that and kind of take that into my own."

For Anderson's part, he's been learning from Sloan's attention to routine and detail, which are advanced beyond his years at just 20 years old.

"I think he goes about his business really professionally," said Anderson. "His routines are dialed in, so it's been really fun to just watch that type of stuff."

This season, they've both watched each other put together stellar performances that have landed both of them inside the top 10 overall prospects in baseball, according to MLB Pipeline. Sloan added a sinker, which has been a nice pitch for him to deepen his mix, and has a 4.04 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, and 77/12 K/BB ratio in 62.1 innings at Double-A. Meanwhile, Anderson has been one of the more impressive starting pitchers in the entire minor leagues, posting a 1.36 ERA, 0.69 WHIP, and 108/10 K/BB ratio in 72.2 innings at Double-A. What's more impressive is that the left-hander is doing it without a triple-digit fastball or a breaking pitch that goes viral on social media for its otherworldly movement. He just has a deep arsenal of pitches and an advanced understanding of how to attack hitters.

"I would argue that I don't have a specific outlier per se," admitted Anderson before Sunday's MLB Futures Game. "I just feel like having four pitches for strikes has given me a lot of help, and my changeup has come a long way from last year, so I just feel like I'm just keeping hitters off balance. It's not necessarily like one pitch that someone can't hit. [The changeup] has added another pitch to my arsenal, and it just helps me navigate a lineup easier."

Normally, when you have a starting pitcher putting up those kinds of numbers, an MLB promotion seems inevitable. However, in addition to battling each other, both Anderson and Sloan have to contend with their big league club having one of the deepest and healthiest rotations in baseball.

On the season, Seattle's starters rank 1st in innings pitched, 1st in WAR, 3rd in WHIP, 3rd in K-BB%, and 6th in ERA. When Bryce Miller started the season on the injured list, Emerson Hancock pitched so well that the team was forced to use a six-man rotation when Miller finally did return. Despite a few of the Mariners' starting pitchers having previous injury concerns, they have remained healthy for the entirety of the first half, which not only means their MLB rotation is overcrowded, but it also means that both Anderson and Sloan are seemingly stuck in the minor leagues, regardless of how well they pitch in 2026.

"I think everyone tries to make it this big deal where, you know, we may be stuck or whatever it is, but honestly, when you take it day by day, when you just put in good days of work, everything's gonna work itself out," said Sloan. "Everyone has their own path, and I truly believe in that, so I just think, most importantly, I'm in a great org and an org that instills confidence in me, and you know, has gotten me to where I am now."

Anderson is similarly unmoved by the logjam in front of him.

"Obviously, who doesn't want to be in the big leagues? But I've gained the perspective that I understand that there is patience that comes along with it," he reflected. "I feel like, when my time comes, it'll come. You try not to look ahead too much about that kind of stuff. I'm not worried about playing in two days. I want to play for a long time, so having that perspective of this [year] doesn't matter as much as me playing for the next 10 years."

However, the Mariners may not be as comfortable with waiting for their young pitchers as the pitchers themselves are. USA Today’s Bob Nightengale reported during MLB All-Star weekend that the team has let it be known that they would be open to trading one of their starting pitchers, most likely veteran Luis Castillo, to add an impact bat and free up some of the logjam. While that would still give Seattle five starting pitchers in their rotation, moving a starter would position either Sloan or Anderson to be the next man up, should the team need a starting pitcher.

Whichever one of them gets that call doesn't seem to matter much to either Anderson or Sloan.

"I think if you start worrying about that, you're worried about the wrong things," declared Sloan. "You start losing focus in other areas. So I think, as much as you can block that out, and it's really hard to block that stuff out, but the most you can, the better."

"Obviously, we both want to be in that role. Who doesn't?" added Anderson. "But I feel like we're gonna be in those roles sooner rather than later, anyway, so whoever comes first, it doesn't really matter to me."

For now, the teammates are content to share a clubhouse and "lean on each other for support," as Anderson put it. Their hard work has propelled them to top prospect status, a place in the MLB Futures Game, and a position on the doorstep of an MLB promotion and a dream realized. But until that time comes, they're just going to focus on the things that they can control and the mentality that has pushed them to be great.

"I just have to continue to throw the ball well, continue to be healthy, continue to throw innings, and everything's going to take care of itself," said Sloan. The rest is up to the Mariners.

"Whatever they tell me to do, I'm going to be there," said Anderson.

Whether it's this year or next, Sloan will likely be right there alongside him. It doesn't matter which one of them gets there first; the other one will be waiting.

Astros’ Brice Matthews leaves game against Rangers with left knee injury

ARLINGTON, Texas — Houston Astros center fielder Brice Matthews left the game against Texas with a left knee injury after crashing back into the wall while pulling back a ball hit by Josh Jung.

The ball fell from Matthews’ glove and went for a triple. Matthews crouched on his right knee for a period of minutes and was attended to by trainer Eric Velazquez with manager Joe Espada looking on. Matthews finished the inning, one more batter, but was pinch hit for in the second inning by Taylor Trammell.

Matthews, 24, is a Houston native and a graduate of Atascocita High School in nearby Humble. He’s hitting .197 through 81 games after making his major league debut last summer and playing 13 games.

Happy Birthday Bill Caudill

CANADA - FEBRUARY 20: A celebratory toast: After the protracted negotiations and 11th-hour agreement hammered out between the Toronto Blue Jays and reliever Bill Caudill, it was time to break out the champagne for a toast or two. From left, Blue Jays vice-president Paul Beeston, Caudill and Blue Jays' other vice-president, Pat Gillick. Caudill's contract is expected to be worth between $7 million and $8.3 million. It's hoped he will provide the bullpen tonic the Blue Jays need. (Photo by Jim Wilkes/Toronto Star via Getty Images) | Toronto Star via Getty Images

Bill Caudill celebrates his 70th birthday today.

For those unfamiliar, Caudill was the Blue Jays’ answer to B.J. Ryan back in the 1980s. He broke into the majors with the Cubs, then found his stride as one of baseball’s elite closers in Seattle, before moving to Oakland, where he racked up 36 saves in a season.

After the 1984 season, the Jays traded Dave Collins and Alfredo Griffin for Caudill. Collins spent one not-great season with the A’s. Griffin spent three seasons in Oakland. Surprisingly, the A’s used him as a leadoff hitter. Considering he had a .307 OBP with him, it was a curious choice.

After a decent first season with the Jays (2.99 ERA and 14 saves), the Jays wanted to lock up Caudill for the future.

Caudill became agent Scott Boras’s first client, landing a five-year, $7 million contract. Fortunately for the Jays, only the first three years were guaranteed at $4.5 million, with vesting options for the remaining two. At the time, that was a significant sum. As we know, long-term contracts for closers rarely work out in the team’s favor.

The following season was a disappointment. Caudill ended with a 6.19 ERA and just two saves. He and manager Jimy Williams clashed, as Caudill believed he deserved the closer role, while Williams preferred the powerful arm of Tom Henke. With rookie Mark Eichhorn frequently pitching multiple innings in 89 games, there were few high-leverage spots left for Caudill.

During the off-season, the Jays released him.

He signed with the A’s but struggled with ongoing shoulder issues and soon left baseball. After retiring, he went on to work with Boras.

Caudill finished his career with 106 saves, a 3.68 ERA over 445 games, and 24 starts.

Happy birthday, Bill.


It is also outfielder Joe Cannon’s 73rd birthday.

Cannon played two seasons with the Jays (1979 and 1980) after arriving in a trade from the Astros, along with Mark Lemongello and Pete Hernandez, in exchange for Alan Ashby.

The trade ultimately didn’t work out for the Jays:

  • Lemongello pitched in 18 games during 1979, recording a 1-9 record and a 6.29 ERA.

There’s an unusual note on Lemongello’s Wikipedia page:

In 1982, a few years after leaving baseball, Lemongello and his former Wichita teammate, Manuel Seoane, were arrested for kidnapping and robbing Lemongello’s cousins—Mike Lemongello, a former professional bowler, and Peter Lemongello. Lemongello received seven years’ probation after pleading no contest to the charges.

  • Hernandez appeared in 11 games across the 1979 and 1982 seasons.

Cannon played in 131 games over his two seasons with the Jays, serving as a fourth outfielder, designated hitter, and pinch-hitter. He posted a .177/.186/.208 batting line.

Ashby went on to play 11 seasons with the Astros, proving to be a solid catcher both defensively and offensively. The Jays had three promising young catchers—Rick Cerone, Ernie Whitt, and Ashby—but Pat Gillick arguably should have secured a better return for Ashby. Not all of Pat’s trades were winners.

Happy birthday, Joe.


It is also Ty France’s 32nd birthday.

Ty is a glove-first first baseman. I’m not a fan of a glove-first first baseman. But he’s having a decent year with the bat for the Padres this year.

He’s had eight seasons in the majors, 910 games, a .263/.334/.406 with 92 home runs.

American League vs National League Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB All-Star Game

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The National League All-Stars are favored in Philadelphia, but I’m taking the American League All-Stars at the better price.

This is, obviously, not a normal starter handicap because both teams will cycle through elite arms, but Dylan Cease gives the AL a strong opening counter to Cristopher Sánchez. That's enough for me to take the plus-money price.

Here are my American League vs. National League predictions and MLB picks for July 14.

Who will win the All-Star Game today: American League moneyline

Odds: +127 at Polymarket

I’m taking the American League All-Stars and would play them down to +110.

Calling any All-Star Game a massive edge is a stretch, but +127 is too long in a short-burst pitching format. My analysis could simply be: "Both teams are very good, so why such a large gap?" but I also think there may be an early edge for the AL.

Dylan Cease opens with a 36% whiff rate and AL-best 148 strikeouts, while the American League can still layer Cam Schlittler’s29% strikeout rate and Drew Rasmussen’s steady command behind him.

The National League has bigger names, but Cristopher Sánchez enters with a 9.58 ERA across two July starts, giving the AL at least a chance to strike in the first inning. That ultimately may be all it takes in an environment where runs should be hard to come by.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Christopher Sánchez is dominant overall, but his sinker has allowed a .371 xwOBA and 56.0% hard-hit rate, giving the AL one early pitch to attack.

All-Star Game Over/Under pick: Under 7.5

Odds: +113 at Polymarket

I’m taking the Under because this game’s structure naturally works against the offense. The Under has cashed in 14 of the last 19 All-Star Games for a reason: hitters get one or two plate appearances, rarely see the same pitcher twice, and face arms throwing max effort in short stints.

That does not mean the Over cannot win. It means even if the AL gets the better early swing, sustained rallies are tougher to build in this format. I expect scattered damage, not a full slugfest. Both teams have incredible pitching depth behind the starters, with names like Paul Skenes, Jhoan Duran, Mason Miller, and Cade Smith available.

Chris Hatfield's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 38-34, +6.15 units
  • Over/Under bets: 42-32, +12.96 units

All-Star Game odds

  • Moneyline: AL +120 | NL -142
  • Run line: AL +1.5 (-172) | NL -1.5 (+142)
  • Over/Under: Over 7.5 | Under 7.5

All-Star Game trend

Three of the previous four Midsummer Classics have been decided by just one or two runs.

How to watch All-Star Game and info

LocationCitizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
DateTuesday, July 14, 2026
First pitch8 p.m. ET
TVFOX
AL starting pitcherDylan Cease
(6-4, 2.56 ERA)
NL starting pitcherCristopher Sanchez
(11-4, 2.62 ERA)

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

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The Washington Nationals had a good first half but it could have been so much better

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 11: Clayton Beeter #39 of the Washington Nationals hands the ball to Blake Butera #10 as he is removed from a game against the New York Yankees during the eighth inning at Nationals Park on July 11, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jess Rapfogel/Getty Images) | Getty Images

If you told me at the beginning of the season that the Nationals would be 48-49 at the All-Star break, I would have been thrilled. Don’t get it twisted, this has been a successful first half given the expectations. There have been so many standout performers in the lineup and even in the rotation. However, it could have been so much better with a real bullpen.

This Nationals bullpen has just been the ultimate vibe killer this season. On the broadcast yesterday, Kevin Frandsen was talking about how the fans needed to get up and support their team in the 8th. This is nothing against Frandsen, but I think the reason Nats fans did not do that is because they knew what was coming. All their fears were right, as the bullpen blew yet another game.

Right now the MLB record for blown saves in a season is 37. However, I do not think that record will last for long. The Nats are already at 27 blown saves, and we are only at the All-Star Break. I have seen a lot of bad bullpen’s over the years, but I’ve never seen one blow games in the 9th inning quite like this bunch.

The Nats have scored the most runs in all of baseball, and they are below .500. That is just a mind blowing indictment on this pitching staff. Really, it is mostly just an indictment on the bullpen. The rotation has not been elite by any means, but it has been solid, especially the past couple months. 

Foster Griffin and Cade Cavalli have been a good 1-2 punch at the top of the rotation. Even Zack Littell has a 3.52 ERA since May 1st and Miles Mikolas has a 4.43, which isn’t great, but is not terrible for a 5 starter. At this moment in time, the bullpen is truly the only reason they are not a playoff team.

There are just so many individual games you can look back on and say what if they got that one. If the Nats won that Giants game and even three of the six games they blew against the Phillies and Yankees, the conversation would be so different right now. There are about 10-12 truly awful meltdowns, and even if you could get six of those back, this team would be squarely in the wild card hunt.

Whether it is the deadline or the offseason, it is obvious that Paul Toboni needs to throw resources at the bullpen. Those resources can be money or prospect capital, but this unit needs to be addressed in a real way for 2027. Toboni tried to build a bullpen without using many resources. The idea was that you could build a decent bullpen on the cheap and there are always undervalued talents to find.

Well, Toboni has shown that he is not able to find those hidden gems. He cannot moneyball a bullpen the way the Rays have been able to. With that in mind, he needs to self-evaluate and realize that the bullpen is a spot where he needs to make big moves.

The Nats have blown 27 saves now, and the average is around 13 or 14. Imagine if they had only blown 13 saves. Yes, not every blown save results in a loss, but their record would be so much different. It is truly wild how much of a buzzkill the bullpen has been to what could have been a truly magical season.

You cannot say that this season has been a disappointment or a failure at all. It has been a big success. However, it could have been one of the most magical seasons in Nats history. It is still a good season, just with a massive vibe killer mixed in.

It is like the bullpen’s job is to tell us that we really shouldn’t get that excited. You can never get too happy watching this team until the game is over because truly no game is out of reach. I really think that this bullpen is so bad it gives other teams extra confidence that makes things even worse. No team ever rolls over against the Nats because they know there is always a chance to win the game against this punch. You can be down 8-1 in the 8th inning and still win.

I know that they love playing the matchups, but there has to be a real closer next year. The 9th inning is different, and this season has shown that. Whether it is going out and signing Adrian Morejon or making a big trade, something has to be done to address this.

Insanity is trying the same thing over and over and expecting different results. This is only year one of this regime, so they are not insane by any means. There is not a whole lot they can do to fix this bullpen right now. However, they are going to have to prove to fans that they are willing to try something different next season. The priority for this deadline and offseason should be pitching, pitching and more pitching, especially relief pitching.