What’s been the most positive development of this Yankees season?

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 15: Cam Schlittler #31 of the New York Yankees walks back to the dugout after being relieved in the seventh inning during the game between the New York Yankees and the New York Mets at Citi Field on Friday, May 15, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Yankees’ 2-7 road trip left a sour taste in all our mouths, the club following up a stellar stretch of play with a frustrating week and a half that saw a number of bullpen blowups and close losses. New York now trails the Rays by three games in the AL East despite pacing the American League in run differential, ERA, wRC+, and a host of other measures.

These periods of time are grating, but they happen to every team, even good ones, over the course of the season. As we wait for the Yankees to pull out of this current skid, let’s try and focus on the positives and ask: what has been the most positive development so far in 2026?

I think there are two obvious choices that will pop first into everyone’s heads, those being the play of Ben Rice and Cam Schlittler. Rice enjoyed a breakout 2025 campaign, but every last piece of underlying data we had available to us from Rice’s first two seasons suggested that he was capable of even more. This year has been proof of concept, Rice leading the majors in wRC+. For almost every team in baseball, there’d be no question that a player like Rice, in his prime, blossoming into one of the finest players in the league would be the best development of the early season.

And yet, it’s possible to argue that Schlittler’s ascension is not only the most positive development of the Yankees’ season, but of any team’s campaign thus far. Somewhat similar to Rice, Schlittler had a great 2025 that hinted at even greater promise, and just like Rice, Schlittler has fulfilled that promise and then some. He’s been the AL’s best pitcher so far and, even if it’s still early, is the current favorite to take home the Cy Young award. A year ago, many Yankee fans wouldn’t have even known Schlittler’s name; now, he is the premier name to watch in the Junior Circuit.

In truth, the most positive development of this season probably has to come down to one of these two, but I do want to highlight some other positive things we’ve seen this year that were far from guarantees. It might seem strange to note Aaron Judge here, with Judge’s metronomic excellence take for granted at this point, but the fact that at age-34 he’s still producing a 172 wRC+ even while slightly underperforming some of his underlying numbers, and while also just feeling like he hasn’t even really gotten going yet, has to qualify as a positive. And, though he has yet to debut in the majors and thus we can’t yet say anything all that definitive, the fact that Gerrit Cole has progressed has far through his rehab both healthy and flashing elite velo is also a nice development for this Yankees club. Just like Judge, Cole is at an age where precipitous physical decline could be around the corner at any moment. The fact that the team’s two superstar veteran cornerstones have not fallen off an athletic cliff yet is a positive that can’t be taken for granted at this point in their careers.

What do you think? What’s been the most positive development so far out of these 2026 Yankees?


On the site today, we’ll get Michael’s recap of the week that was down on the farm for the Yankees, while Matt sums up Monday night’s American League action. Josh will wonder whether the Yankees’ apparent sense of urgency early this season will translate to the trade market, Peter’s At-bat of the Week features some good work from Anthony Volpe (!), while Jonathan profiles Gil McDougald, one of the driving forces behind the Yankees’ 1950’s dynasty.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Toronto Blue Jays

Time: 7:05 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, Sportsnet One, TBS

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

Pirates staff have been elite at developing starting pitchers

May 15, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitchers Paul Skenes (left) and Bubba Chandler (middle) and Jared Jones (right) talk in the outfield before the game against the Philadelphia Phillies at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Over the last couple of seasons the starting pitchers for the Pittsburgh Pirates have grown into some of the best pitchers in baseball and have cemented themselves as one of the best overall units. Between strong scouting, good use of draft picks and player development, the Pirates have established themselves as an organization with a knack for creating a strong rotation.

The Pirates offseason strategy in recent years has been reliant primarily on the draft and not in free-agency or on the trade market. With this being the case, the crop of pitchers they have are all home grown talent. Mitch Keller serves as the veteran of 2026’s rotation, was drafted back in 2014, and made his MLB debut in 2019. Keller was drafted by Joe DelliCarri who ran the Pirates’ drafts from 2013-2023. DelliCarri was the Senior Director of Amateur Scouting before being promoted to Vice President of Scouting, and had a hand in selecting every one of the pitchers in Pittsburgh’s rotation, to include Jared Jones who is currently on rehab assignment.

In that 10-year span DelliCarri and the Pirates selected several of the best pitchers in baseball. Keller in 2014 was just the start as Braxton Ashcraft was drafted in 2018, Jared Jones was a second round pick in 2020, Bubba Chandler was selected in the third in 2021 and Paul Skenes was taken first overall in 2023. Carmen Mlodzinski who has seen work as a starter off and on in his career was selected by the Pirates in 2020.

To be clear, those are just the names that have seen consistent Major League action, because there are several names in the organizations top 30 prospect list that were also drafted in that span. Hunter Barco has been up and down and has been primarily used as a bullpen pitcher was drafted by the organization in 2022 is Pittsburgh’s third highest ranking prospect. Thomas Harrington is in Triple-A and is the organization’s 12th highest ranked prospect was picked in 2022, while Low-A 13th ranked hurler Levi Sterling was selected in 2024. Kristian Curtis was picked in 2023 and is the 21st highest ranked prospect for the Pirates and the 23rd overall prospect for Pittsburgh, Zander Mueth, was selected in 2023 by the club.

In 2024, following the promotion of DelliCarri, the Pirates hired Justin Horowitz to be their director of amateur scouting. Horowitz oversaw the Pirates’ draft from 2024-2025 before taking a job with the Washington Nationals to be their Assistant General Manager. While with the Pirates, Horowitz selected Sterling in 2024 and then in 2025 he drafted Seth Hernandez. In his first season of professional baseball Hernandez has blossomed into Pittsburgh’s top prospect, the third highest rated prospect in baseball and the best pitching prospect in baseball.

2025 was a breakout season for Pittsburgh’s pitchers. The Pirate’s led Major League Baseball in shutouts with 19, while allowing the third fewest home runs of any team. The Pirates also ranked tied for fourth in WHIP (1.22), and seventh-best in ERA (3.76). Skenes was named to his second All-Star game and won the NL-Cy-Young award.

The Pirates in the span that DelliCarri has been with the organization has also had a fairly consistent cast of pitching coaches. Oscar Marin was hired by manager Derek Shelton prior to the 2020 season to be the team’s pitching coach. Marin had previously worked with the Texas Rangers as a bullpen coach and two previous years in Seattle serving as a minor league pitching coordinator. For five seasons, Marin helped to develop what are now some of the top pitchers in baseball, but was ultimately not brought back following the 2025 season, with pitchers citing that they thought they were not getting all they could from his coaching.

With the departure of Marin Pittsburgh went out and signed some top tier pedigree talent in pitching coach Bill Murphy. With the Houston Astros Murphy started as a rookie ball pitching coach, but was brought onto the major league staff in 2019 as a pitching coordinator. In 2021, Murphy was named the assistant pitching coach and helped the Astros win a World-Series title in 2022. While under Murphy, Houston led MLB in ERA (3.61) and the club finished eighth in team pitching WAR (18.0) in his last season with the club.

In his first season with Pittsburgh, Murphy and the Pirates currently rank in the top 10 in baseball for K/9 (10), HR/9 (4), BABIP (10), HR/FB (3) and WAR (7). The Pirates also have the 11th lowest ERA in baseball (3.86). Paul Skenes leads the staff as he is currently tied with eight other pitchers for the most wins in baseball with 6, and is 11th in K/9, first in BB/9, second in BABIP and seventh in WAR.

Overall, the organization hasn’t had the results in the win column that fans would like, but it is undeniable that they built one of the best rotations in baseball and have several more young pitchers waiting in the wings.




Yankees news: Could Gerrit Cole be activated on Friday?

Gerrit Cole returns to the dugout after pitching in the third inning for the Hudson Valley Renegades during their game versus the Winston-Salem Dash on May 5, 2026. | Patrick Oehler/Poughkeepsie Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: In Gerrit Cole’s most recent rehab outing, the former Cy Young winner touched 99.6 mph on the gun, velo that would impress even among the best in MLB. Given that pitch-level success, it’s been debated within the Yankee org whether it would be better to let Cole have one more rehab outing, or activate him in time to pitch on regular rest during this current homestand Friday night. While the Yankees will be understandably careful after Tommy John at Cole’s age, adding a player of his caliber to both replace Max Fried and spell the bullpen a bit must be awfully tempting.

New York Daily News | Gary Phillips: As I said above, adding someone like Cole could eat up innings that are currently being taken by the bullpen, and generally those are not well pitched. While the club has continued to shift payroll allocation away from the relief unit, avoiding the bloated contracts that kept people like Aroldis Chapman around for longer than he probably should have been, the replacements brought in have yet to impress, particularly in high-leverage spots. Part of this is the lack of swing and miss, for all the value of a groundball — and the Yankees boast a 50 percent GB rate — when you really, absolutely need an out, a strikeout is preferential to anything else.

NJ.com | Bob Klapisch: While discussing how underwhelming the bullpen as a whole has been, David Bednar in particular has become a problem. We can debate the exact value of a true, ninth-inning closer, but when you’re handed a three-run lead in the ninth, you really need to come out of that game with the win. While his FIP is significantly lower than his ERA, which should indicate some positive regression coming your way, those kind of splits can last for longer than you think because of how little closers pitch, and the impact two or three bad outings can have — both on a pitcher, and in a close division race.

MLBTR | Darragh McDonald: We close with a couple of “in case you missed it” posts. The Yankees optioned Elmer Rodríguez back to Triple-A after a meh start Sunday, bringing righty Yovanny Cruz up as pitching depth while Max Fried will continue to be evaluated on the IL.

MLBTR | Darragh McDonald: Happy trails to Gio Urshela, one of the big pieces of the 2019 Yankees, putting up three-plus wins in a year that saw the Yanks make it to the ALCS. The ten-year vet announced that he was hanging up the spikes yesterday, unable to find an MLB job this season. Best of luck going forward, Gio!

Beltway Beatdown, Tarps Off: Rays 16, Orioles 6

To start off the evening, we had a patented dome field advantage at One Trop Drive. There was a thunderstorm that passed directly over Tropicana Field for about the first hour of tonight’s contest, and had it been 2025 we might not have got the ballgame in. 

Tampa Bay placed seven right-handed hitters in tonight’s lineup against southpaw Trevor Rogers, and boy did it pay off. 

Yandy Diaz had quite the night to say the least, finishing with four hits including two doubles, four runs, and four RBI on the night, and just missed a leadoff home run to start tonight’s ballgame. 

Junior Caminero delivered the proverbial dagger with a three run homer to right field, right after a Gunnar Henderson miscue led to Baltimore only getting one out instead of two in the fifth inning. Caminero would also score two more times and walk twice tonight. 

Are you sensing the pattern here? The righties swung it, and swung it well. The Flappy Boys went 9/20 with runners in scoring position, and had 15 runs by the sixth inning. 

The Vilade Brigade, the new manta started by DRaysBay’s own Ben Whitelaw for the Rays’ right-handed utility man, kept on trucking. The Oklahoma native had a three-hit, three RBI night that included a triple, and Taylor Walls helped himself to three runs scored and a pair of doubles. 

It would behoove me to not talk about Shane McClanahan’s efforts, as he not only got the win, but collected his 500th career strikeout. 

If you thought 16 runs on 18 hits was enough to satisfy Rays fans’ palates, about 250 of the announced 13,633 fans gathered in the left field corner in the 8th inning, took their shirts off, and swung them around their heads, even prompting Raymond to hop in and participate. 

The Rays conclude the night 16 games above .500, and with a 12-0 drubbing of the Braves from the Marlins, Tampa Bay is the best team in baseball. 

If you don’t know by now, this team is for real. They love being around each other, they play for one another, and most importantly, they win for one another.

Believe it, Tampa Bay.

Colt Emerson hits first big-league homer in Mariners 6-1 win over White Sox

May 18, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners third baseman Colt Emerson (4) celebrates with fans after hitting a 3-run home run and his first MLB hit against the Chicago White Sox during the eighth inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images | Steven Bisig-Imagn Images

We have a running joke around these parts about how the Mariners and White Sox are incapable of playing a normal game with one another, but tonight’s game really stretched the bit thin. At the end of it, though, the Mariners emerged with a 6-1 victory, shaking off the doldrums of their series sweep at the hands of the Padres this weekend with an electrifying finish.

The game didn’t start out seeming like it would be the vibes-changer it would grow into. Bryan Woo had a shaky first inning, fighting with his command and issuing two walks. Although he threw first pitch strikes to all five batters he faced, he then fell behind, needing 25 pitches to clear the inning and only throwing fourteen of them for strikes. He got helped out by The First Weirdness of the evening: a truly bizarre TOOTBLAN where Sam Antonacci, who had led off the game with a hard-hit line drive single, attempted to steal third after Woo had issued a walk, apparently trying to catch the Mariners defense napping? But Woo and Colt Emerson were having none of that, no sir, cutting down Antonacci as he attempted to sneak into third. (Colt also made a nice play at third deep to the third-base line right after that, snapping off a quick throw to Cole Young to get the lead runner that I don’t think Leo Rivas makes. Competent third-base defense! Perhaps I can finally take that photo of Ben Williamson off my mirror.)

After fighting through the first, Woo’s pitch count was saved by a lightning-fast second inning, needing just eight pitches to mow down the bottom of Chicago’s lineup. But he scuffled again against the top of the lineup, again needing 21 pitches to clear the inning, although this time the damage wasn’t of his own making – just a pair of singles, one where Antonacci threw his bat at a changeup and a rare single from Munetaka Murakami that snuck just past a diving Josh Naylor. Woo bounced back with a sharp fourth, though, striking out the side, and then was in cruise control the rest of the night. Postgame, manager Dan Wilson pointed to the fifth inning, in particular, as lengthening Woo’s outing: he needed just eight pitches to get through the 8-9-1 hitters, allowing him a sixth inning of work.

Woo said postgame that it wasn’t necessarily that he was overcompensating trying to set the tone after the disappointing weekend sweep, but thought he was maybe trying to “do too much” in the first inning. He was pleased with his ability to clean it up after, though, simplifying the game and going right at hitters.

The Mariners got their first run of the evening in normal fashion. Julio Rodríguez was able to leverage some right-handed power off the lefty Noah Schultz, working a long, eight-pitch at-bat that ended in his eighth homer of the season, getting his arms extended on a sinker on the outer edge of the plate.

But the next run came via our old friend Chaos Ball. Jhonny Pereda was hit by a pitch to lead off the inning. It looked a little like the Mariners wouldn’t get anything out of the inning, when with one out Julio lined out hard to Antonacci at second; he dropped the ball and attempted to play it off like a double play, which is smart, but the umpire ruled he had caught the ball on a lineout. Arozarena then doubled deep into the left field corner, and Pereda found himself trying to get to third only to find Antonacci standing in the middle of the basepath as a spectator. Pereda trucked Antonacci out of his way, but the delay was enough to get him thrown out at home – but the umpires ruled that Antonacci did interfere with Pereda and awarded the run. This obviously upset White Sox manager Will Venable, who found himself escorted to an early shower. Postgame, Wilson said the interference was obvious from the dugout, and praised Pereda for his heads-up baserunning and third base coach Carlos Cardoza for the aggressive send of Pereda, scoring what would have been enough to win the game.

But the Mariners would add on. Randy Arozarena led off the sixth with a double, advanced to third on a passed ball, and then Josh Naylor said “Canadians don’t do silliness” and stroked an efficient RBI single through the right side of the infield to make it 3-0 Mariners. He then easily swiped second base because Canadians might not do silliness but Josh Naylor does do Basepaths Chaos. Naylor ended his night with three hits and two stolen bases, because another thing Josh Naylor doesn’t do is Bobblehead Night Curses.

More chaos ensued when Connor Joe hit a ball at Chicago shortstop Colson Montgomery that he just kinda…lost the handle on, and then Joe and Naylor executed a double steal, because at this point, why not? Unfortunately, the two young lefties at the bottom of the lineup, Young and Emerson, couldn’t capitalize on it against White Sox reliever and fellow lefty Brandon Eisert, although each put up a good battle. Poor Emerson, who had also suffered his own Weirdness earlier in the game, on a bizarre foul tip strike three that seemed to pop up over the catcher’s head like a wayward popcorn kernel before finding its way back into the glove. In retrospect, the popcorn metaphor is apt because tonight would end like a movie for Colt Emerson.

The White Sox were able to get back a run against Eduard Bazardo, who gave up a two-out solo shot to Tristan Peters, who sat on a first-pitch fastball and exploded it over the right field fence. But Bazardo made things rough on himself after that, giving up a fly ball single to catcher Drew Romo and walking pinch-hitter Chase Meidroth. José A. Ferrer came in to face pinch-hitter Randall Grichuk and needed exactly two pitches to mail the nascent rally back to the Windy City.

After the Mariners failed to score in the bottom of the seventh despite a very enthusiastic Pereda single, Ferrer continued on in the eighth. His curséd BABIP luck continued, though, as “Three True Outcomes” Murakami snuck an infield single past a diving J.P. Crawford for his second base hit of the night. But the narrative! Ferrer was able to close things up, though – despite making things a little interesting with a wild pitch – getting a flyout, striking out Montgomery, and then finally getting groundout off pinch-hitter Edgar Quero, because when you have a chance to put a guy hitting .174 into the lineup you gotta take it.

The White Sox put a righty on the mound for the first time in the eighth inning much to the delight of the Mariners lefties; Naylor recorded his third hit of the night, a single, and pinch-hitter Dominic Canzone worked a walk to put two on with none out. But Luke Raley didn’t fare as well as a pinch-hitter, striking out, and Young flew out harmlessly, putting the job of Insurance Man on Colt Emerson, who just to remind you would be just finishing up his sophomore year in college if he was actually studying to be an Insurance Man.

Facing Trevor Richards, who was finishing up his sophomore year in college when people were asking “What Does the Fox Say,” Emerson fell down 1-2 in the count before laying off a tough changeup. He fouled off another changeup and a fastball on the plate before finally dropping the barrel and golfing a changeup just over the right-field fence.

Somehow, in the middle of all that – 31,400 fans in the ballpark going crazy, his family in the stands for the first time, his first major league hit a storybook moment – Emerson remembers to acknowledge the bullpen as he’s rounding the bases. The crowd roared for a curtain call and he gave it.

“The discipline to be 20 years old and not just come out swinging right away says a lot about who he is,” said Woo, who said he re-watched the homer “ten times” before coming in for his media availability.

“He’s a two-pitch guy, but he’s got a really good fastball and a really good changeup” said Emerson postgame. “So I was just looking for something down the middle over the plate that I can hit for a base hit up the middle. Got to two strikes early, fought back, and then put a good swing on a good pitch and by the grace of God, it went out.”

The homer didn’t just put the game out of reach for the White Sox – who were mowed down in the top of the ninth by Andrés Muñoz – but also provided a lift to a Mariners clubhouse that badly needed one. Woo wasn’t the only one re-watching Emerson’s home run: postgame Andrés Muñoz’s wife Wendy walked by in the tunnel watching the home run on her phone.

“I think this is one of those games where you just felt something a little bit extra and the guys gave a little bit extra,” said Dan Wilson. “I think we’re going to be carrying this for a while.”

“We talked about wanting to bring more energy to start the game,” said Woo. “Regardless of how we’re playing, just having a much more controllable attitude of going out there and bringing the energy from first pitch. You’ve got to control the stuff that you can control.”

As far as a vibes-readjustment, you couldn’t ask for much more than this game.

“The energy was outstanding today,” said Wilson. “It was a tough series over the weekend, no question, but we turned the page, and we’re moving on, and this is a great effort to get started on that.”

Arenado, Moreno go deep in 12-2 Arizona win over SF Giants

Nolan Arenado going deep is what Buster Posey sees when he closes his eyes late at night.
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 18: Nolan Arenado #28 of the Arizona Diamondbacks hits a grand slam during the first inning of the MLB game against the San Francisco Giantsat Chase Field on May 18, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Before Monday’s game, veteran third baseman Nolan Arenado had hit more home runs and driven in more runs against the San Francisco Giants than any other MLB team. Against Monday’s starter Robbie Ray, Arenado had a career slash line of .364/.444/.773. Six pitches into Monday’s game, Arenado had a grand slam and the Arizona Diamondbacks had a 4-0 lead they’d never relinquish in a 12-2 loss.

At least he kept his pitch count down. Ray (3-6) got rocked early and often, giving up 10 runs and 11 hits in 4.1 innings, yielding four runs after two hits and a Matt Chapman error on a difficult ground ball from Geraldo Perdomo led to Arenado’s fourth career dinger off Ray and his 35th career homer against the Giants, which is three more than Paul Goldschmidt and eight more than Max Muncy. (The all-time record belongs to Stan Musial, with 89 home runs against the Giants.)

To add injury to insult, Jung Hoo Lee and Willy Adames both left the game with injuries. Lee left after suffering a back spasm, and was replaced by Will Brennan in the bottom of the 4th with the Giants already down 7-2. Adames exited after a suffering a thumb contusion on a play where his error scored the Diamondbacks’ 12th and final run. The man who hit that grounder was, of course, Nolan Arenado.

Lee is expected to miss Tuesday’s game while manager Tony Vitello isn’t sure about Adames, who left partly because his team was trailing by 10 runs at the time. It’s an unfortunate hand injury for a player who’s been really hitting, including a walk and a home run Monday.

Adames cut the lead, but the pitching of Zac Gallen kept the Giants bats quiet in six innings where he gave up two runs and four hits. Two of those came in the top of the third inning, when Harrison Bader doubled, Lee singled him to third, and contact master Luis Arraez delivered a sacrifice fly to make it 3-2.

But Ray simply wasn’t fooling anyone and his defense wasn’t helping. In the 2nd, a walk, a stolen base, and an Eric Haase throwing error set up a Ketel Marte sacrifice fly, though Ray gave up a triple to Corbin Carroll immediately after. Consecutive singles started the 4th inning, before Tim Tawa delivered a two-run single — before Ray picked him off.

Ray had a 1-2-3 inning in the 4th, lulling Giants fans into a false sense of security before catcher Gabriel Moreno hit a two-run homer, Jose Fernandez singled, and Tawa hit the ball off Ray’s quad on a groundout that ended his night.

The inning got even worse when JT Brubaker entered and surrendered a double to rookie Ryan Waldschmidt, threw a wild pitch, gave up an RBI infield single to Marte and then the vengeful grounder to Adames.

Moreno also got a strikeout on Drew Gilbert later with the shrewd use of an ABS challenge. Moreno and Marte each finished with two runs, two hits, and two RBIs, while Waldschmidt went 3-for-3 with a walk, that RBI double, and two stolen bases. We assume he also bet on the San Antonio Spurs, had at least four of the winning Powerball numbers, and discovered he’s immune to the hantavirus.

The game featured a number of Giants defensive switcheroos, with Schmitt going from left field to shortstop, Jesus Rodriguez pinch-hitting for the shortstop, playing left field, then moving to second base when Gilbert replaced second baseman Arraez. He turned a 5-4-3 double play without issue, showing versatility that might keep him on the roster a while longer.

Bryce Eldridge had a two-hit game and got his batting average (.143) back on the interstate. Harrison Bader hit two doubles in four at-bats and now has a higher slugging percentage than Rafael Devers. Will Brennan got his first hit of the season and looked very handsome in his uniform.

We’re looking for silver linings after a 10-run loss. Who knows? Maybe Arenado tired himself out running the bases and needs to take the rest of the series off instead of crushing the Giants’ dreams, over and over again.

MLB Injury Report: Ronald Acuña Jr. set for return, Rangers lose Corey Seager

In this week’s Injury Report, Ronald Acuña Jr. is set to return to the Braves lineup after he was activated from the injured list on Monday. Corey Seager is sidelined with a back injury. The Dodgers will see some shuffling in the rotation after Blake Snell hit the injured list with loose bodies and Tyler Glasnow experienced a setback. That and much more as we take a look at all the recent relevant injury news around baseball.

⚾️ Baseball is back! MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Ronald Acuña Jr. (hamstring)

There seemed to be some trepidation about bringing Acuña back to play on Miami’s artificial turf, but the team decided he was ready, activating him from the 10-day injured list on Monday. He missed just over two weeks with a Grade 1 left hamstring strain. Acuña wasn’t in the lineup on Monday, but should make his return on Tuesday against the Marlins.

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The Phillies are 15-4 under interim manager Don Mattingly.

Corey Seager (back)

Seager had sat out the weekend series against the Astros after dealing with back spasms and left the team to visit a specialist and undergo imaging. News came Monday that he’ll miss a bit of time, landing on the 10-day injured list with lower back inflammation. There’s currently no timeline for a return, as back injuries can certainly be tricky, but it seems the team is hoping to get him back after the minimum 10-day stint. Ezequiel Duran should slide over to shortstop, with Justin Foscue getting more playing time at second base.

Jackson Holliday (hand)

Holliday was activated from the 10-day injured list on Monday. The 22-year-old infielder has been on the shelf all season due to a hamate bone fracture he suffered in spring training. It was a slower recovery for Holliday after he experienced some setbacks. He was a popular breakout candidate after hitting 17 homers with 17 steals and a .242 batting average in his age-21 season last year. Holliday is expected to step back in at second base and see some time at third.

Heliot Ramos (quad)

Ramos was removed from Friday’s game against the A’s in the sixth inning with right quad tightness. The team then placed him on the 10-day injured list with a quad strain. Manager Tony Vitello said the 26-year-old outfielder would be sidelined for a “handful” of weeks. It sounds like we can’t expect Ramos back until mid to late June. It’s a tough blow to the team, as he was one of the better offensive producers, slashing .267/.307/.424 with four homers and 20 RBI across 176 plate appearances. Casey Schmitt is expected to see some time in left field as the team searches for ways to keep him in the lineup while getting Bryce Eldridge at-bats at first base and designated hitter.

Trevor Story (sports hernia)

Story missed Friday’s contest against the Braves with an adductor issue he’s apparently been battling through all season. It could help explain his .547 OPS through 41 games. He was placed on the 10-day injured list, retroactive to May 15, with a sports hernia. Story is weighing surgery to address the issue, which could keep him out for 6-10 weeks. Andruw Monasterio steps in at shortstop, for now. If Story is facing a lengthy absence, the team could also consider moving Marcelo Mayer back to shortstop.

Gerrit Cole (elbow)

Cole moved his minor league rehab to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and allowed one run while striking out six over 5 1/3 innings on Saturday, reaching 86 pitches and averaging 97 mph. With rookie Elmer Rodríguez optioned back to the minors, the team has an opening in the rotation for the weekend series against the Rays. Cole could be activated to make his debut for the series opener on Friday. It would be his first start since the 2024 postseason after missing all of 2025 recovering from Tommy John surgery.

Jose Altuve (oblique)

Altuve left Saturday’s game against the Rangers in the eighth inning with left side pain. He was unable to run out of the batter’s box on a ground ball. An MRI revealed a Grade 2 left oblique strain, and he was placed on the 10-day injured list. A strain of that severity will likely keep him out for at least a month. With Jeremy Peña back from his hamstring injury, Braden Shewmake and Brice Matthews should help fill Altuve’s void at second base.

Brendan Donovan (groin)

Donovan had made it back from the injured list for one week before reaggravating the groin injury that forced him to miss time from April 18 to May 8. The team placed him back on the injured list on Sunday with a plan for him to resume baseball activities in two to three weeks. With that in mind, we could probably expect Donovan back in roughly a month if all goes well. The Mariners promoted Colt Emerson to take over at the hot corner. The 20-year-old top prospect slugged his first home run on Monday against the White Sox.

Blake Snell (elbow)

Snell made it back for one start before falling victim to loose bodies in his left elbow. He had missed the first seven weeks with shoulder fatigue. Dodgers general manager Brandon Gomes said Monday that the 33-year-old left-hander will undergo Nanoscope surgery this week, the same less invasive procedure that Tarik Skubal recently underwent that comes with a roughly 4-6 week timeline. We’ll get a clearer picture once he’s throwing again. The recently acquired Eric Lauer will likely take Snell’s spot in the rotation. The Dodgers traded for Lauer after he was designated for assignment by the Blue Jays. The 30-year-old left-hander owns a 6.69 ERA, 1.49 WHIP, and a 26/16 K/BB ratio across 36 1/3 innings.

Tyler Glasnow (back)

Glasnow, out for the last two weeks with lower back spasms, was shut down on Monday after experiencing a setback. Manager Dave Roberts told reporters his back “flared up” on him again, without specifying how long Glasnow will be shut down. The team was hoping to get him back before the end of the month, but is now looking at a more extended absence. With Eric Lauer already stepping in for the injured Blake Snell, Glasnow’s setback could open the door for River Ryan to get the call from Triple-A Oklahoma City.

Ryan O’Hearn (quad)

O’Hearn was removed from Saturday’s game against the Phillies with right quad discomfort and was placed on the 10-day injured list on Sunday. He’s been having an outstanding season with the Pirates, slashing .289/.368/.459 with seven homers and 29 RBI across 182 plate appearances. There’s no word on the severity of the injury or a potential timeline. Outfielder Jake Mangum was activated in the corresponding move.

Clay Holmes (leg)

Holmes took a 111 mph comebacker off his right leg in the fourth inning against the Yankees on Friday. He was somehow able to see seven more batters before exiting. X-rays revealed a right fibula fracture that is expected to keep him out for about three months. The 33-year-old right-hander was off to an excellent start, posting a 2.39 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, and a 45/18 K/BB ratio across 52 2/3 innings. With a three-month timeline, expect Holmes to move to the 60-day injured list at some point. It looks like 24-year-old left-hander Zach Thornton will get the first shot at taking Holmes’ spot in the rotation.

MacKenzie Gore (lat)

Gore gave up two runs on three hits and two walks in a 28-pitch first inning before he was pulled from his start in Colorado on Monday with left lat tightness. The team is calling the move precautionary, but don’t be surprised if he requires a stint on the 15-day injured list. We should know more after further evaluation in the coming days.

Sox offense, bullpen suffer jet lag in 6-1 setback

Sam Antonacci had an up-and-down night, on both sides of the ball. | Steven Bisig-Imagn Images

Just like the rest of us, the White Sox had to get up on Monday and go to work, and just like most of us, they played with some lethargy after a possibly overstimulating weekend, dropping a quiet 6-1 loss to the Mariners on Monday night to open a six-game West Coast swing. It drops them to 24-23 on the season, and two games back of the Guardians in the AL Central after their 8-2 win earlier in the evening.

The Sox had a chance to strike early, when Sam Antonacci singled to lead off the game against Bryan Woo. Munetaka Murakami followed it up with a relatively easy walk that could have applied a load of early pressure on Seattle’s ace. Unfortunately, Antonacci had already gotten a little bit greedy and stymied the potential rally with a foolish out on the bases as Murakami hit. The bats went quiet for the remainder of the inning.

On the other side of the ball, the hope was that Noah Schultz could set the pace early. While he didn’t make too many mistakes, Julio Rodríguez isn’t the kind of hitter to miss a mistake. It thus took just two hitters into the bottom of the first inning for the Sox to fall behind, as the All-Star barreled up a sinker and took it over the right-center field fence for a 1-0 lead.

Things got a little spicier in the third inning, when a pair of judgment call umpiring decisions made Antonacci’s night worse, helping put a second run on the board for the Seamen and Will Venable in the locker room.

First, there was a negated inning-ending double play when what initially appeared to be a smart snag-and-drop by Antonacci was instead ruled a catch on the fly, keeping the inning alive long enough for Randy Arozarena to shoot a double down the left field line. It then looked like a solid relay from Tristan Peters to Miguel Vargas to Drew Romo would nonetheless win the day, until the umpires again ruled runner Jhonny Pereda safe on the basis of interference by Antonacci earlier in the play. The resulting hubbub got Will Venable his first ejection of the season, and fourth as manager of the Pale Hose.

Schultz did manage to get out of the inning without further damage, and the Sox defense did find some redemption, once again courtesy of Peters. To my eyes, the former Savannah Banana’s defensive acumen and ability to execute offensive fundamentals is outweighing his lack of pop and putting him in a good position to survive the outfield roster crunch likely to happen once some combination of Everson Pereira, Jacob Gonzalez, and Braden Montgomery get the call to the majors.

Despite having some scattershot strike-throwing lapses, Schultz managed to avoid walks with much more dexterity than in previous starts.

Schultz largely used his sinker over his four-seamer, which led to fewer whiffs than we’d like to see, but he nonetheless put hitters away when he needed to. Promisingly, he used changeups to draw inning-ending whiffs from right-handed hitters in the fourth and fifth innings, which will be critical in going deep into games against good lineups moving forward. Schultz threw 56 of his 91 pitches for strikes (a solid, if not ideal, 61%), but despite working his way into a number of three-ball counts, he didn’t yield in any of them, making for the first zero-walk start of his young career.

Unfortunately, Woo cut through the Sox lineup like it was balsa wood, ultimately scattering three hits over six sharp innings. The Sox had one other real opportunity to get to the 26-year-old when Antonacci and Murakami once again reached base to start the third inning. It went for naught — Woo completely locked in amid the threat, going on to retire the next 11 batters to conclude his night. Very few of those 11 trips the plate resulted in anything close to threatening.

Schultz was chased from the game in the sixth inning, when Arozarena led off the inning with a double on a catchable fly ball that Luisangel Acuña got turned around on, and swiftly scored two batters later on a ripped single by Josh Naylor, who continued his now comically-long vendetta against the Sox with a 3-for-4 night. I have a hunch that Acuña, who has minor league options remaining, might be one of those outlasted by Peters when the roster crunch comes due. The same is probably true of Jarred Kelenic, who wore a hat trick of punchouts amid an 0-for-4 showing.

Meanwhile, it took Peters 130 plate appearances to notch his first big fly in The Show, but just three more to put up his second. When he got the head of his bat out front against a grooved sinker from Eduard Bazardo, Peters gave the Sox their first scratch of the night with a 366-foot big fly to right.

While the momentum continued to creep Chicago’s way when Drew Romo looped his only hit of the night into the outfield and Chase Meidroth drew a walk in lieu of Acuña, it died on the bat of Randal Grichuk, who pinch-hit for Antonacci and ended the inning with a weak ground out.

On a more positive note, Schultz’s newfound walk avoidance seemed to have rubbed off on Jordan Hicks, who relieved Brandon Eisert for the home half of the seventh. Hicks worked a relatively seamless inning, allowing a single but avoiding any free passes after Friday’s four-walk disaster against the Cubs.

More chances for the Sox offense materialized and went uncapitalized. Murakami reached base for the third time in the eighth inning on an infield single and moved to second on a wild pitch, but none of Miguel Vargas, Colson Montgomery, or pinch-hitter Edgar Quero could do anything with high-octane lefty José A. Ferrer, and hope sputtered out once again.

For perhaps the first time in Schultz’s big league career, he wasn’t the freshest top prospect on the field of play, as Seattle third baseman Colt Emerson received a curtain call from fans in his second-ever major league game. That was because he notched his first big league hit, and it happened to be a three-run bomb against Trevor Richards with two outs in the eighth that all but put the game away. Seattle fans hope it’ll be the first of many for the young infielder, having signed a record eight-year, $95 million extension with the Mariners several months ago — the largest pre-debut contract ever signed.

Despite a five-run lead, close Andrés Muñoz was already loose and ready to go for the ninth inning. Muñoz has struggled uncharacteristically this season, but 5.29 ERA or not he was in his best form against the White Sox, easily dispatching the bottom of their lineup to preserve a 6-1 win for the Mariners.

After the way the weekend went, it’s hard to feel too bad about dropping a sleepy Monday night game to open a West Coast road trip. The bullpen is completely spent. Not every game can be a heroic comeback; the encouraging growth and toughness we saw in Schultz is probably more important than the individual wins and losses in the 25-odd starts we’ll ideally see from him this summer.

Tomorrow is a new day, and one that will see Anthony Kay take the hill against Bryce Miller, who makes his second start of the year after missing much of the spring with an oblique strain. First pitch is at 8:40 p.m. CT, and we’ll see you there!


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The Mets' 10-run 12th against Washington was baseball's biggest extra inning since 1983

WASHINGTON (AP) — The New York Mets scored so many runs in the 12th that by the time the game was over, it was hard to remember how many innings it went.

“It was a really competitive ballgame the whole way through, and then we kind of broke it open there in the 12th,” infielder Brett Baty said. “The 12th, right?”

After trading leads with the Washington Nationals for 11 innings, the Mets scored 10 times in the 12th on their way to a 16-7 victory Monday night. It was the most runs by a team in an extra inning since the Texas Rangers scored 12 in the 15th in a 16-4 win over the Oakland Athletics on July 3, 1983.

The inning actually began with a sacrifice bunt, moving the automatic runner to third. That was the only batter Washington reliever Paxton Schultz retired. Carson Benge, who has the go-ahead swing in three extra-inning wins in the last six days, hit a comebacker that glanced off Schultz's glove for an RBI infield single.

A single by Bo Bichette and an intentional walk to Juan Soto loaded the bases, then Vidal Bruján popped up a safety squeeze and the bunt landed in front of a diving Schultz for another infield hit that made it 8-6.

Baty added a two-run single, Marcus Semien brought in another run with a single, and then the Nationals waved a white flag of sorts by moving Jorbit Vivas from third base to the mound to pitch.

There was a lengthy delay as umpires tried to determine if the move was legal — it was — and then the Mets went right on hitting. A.J. Ewing added an RBI single, and three batters later Benge came up again and doubled home two runs. Bichette then hit a two-run double that made it 16-6.

Bichette had gone without an extra-base hit since April 28, but he hit a solo homer in the seventh and a double in the 12th.

The Mets have won six of seven and they're 11-5 in May. They're also 6-4 in extra-inning games, having played more than any other team this season.

By the time this one was over, everyone was having a hard time remembering all the details. Baty was asked about throwing out a runner at home from first base — but the play in question happened in the 10th, an inning before he moved from third to first.

It was Mark Vientos who threw home for that force play with the bases loaded to keep the game tied. Then both teams exchanged runs in the 11th.

Washington left 19 runners on base, the most in the majors this year.

Finally the Mets took a lead the Nationals couldn't come close to matching. And after 4 hours, 8 minutes, it ended.

“Really long game, but we battled,” Baty said.

Ginn loses no-hitter in 9th and then the game when Neto's 2-run homer gives Angels 2-1 win over A's

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Adam Frazier singled leading off the ninth inning for the first hit against Athletics starter J.T. Ginn, and Zach Neto followed with a two-run homer that gave the Los Angeles Angels a 2-1 victory Monday night.

Neto drove a 2-0 sinker 413 feet to center field, stunning Ginn and the A’s while snapping a six-game losing streak for the Angels. It was their third walk-off win this season.

Ginn (2-2) struck out 10 and issued one walk on 105 pitches. He also hit Neto with a pitch in the sixth.

The right-hander was perfect through 4 1/3 innings and came within three outs of the first major league no-hitter since Shota Imanaga combined with two Chicago Cubs relievers for a 12-0 win over Pittsburgh on Sept. 4, 2024.

Lawrence Butler had a pinch-hit RBI single in the top of the ninth that drove in Zack Gelof for the first run of the game, but the Angels rallied to win despite getting outhit 7-2.

Walbert Ureña tossed six scoreless innings for the Angels, allowing four hits and striking out four. Ryan Zeferjahn gave up the first run of the game and walked the bases loaded, but Chase Silseth (1-0) worked out of the jam by getting slugger Nick Kurtz to ground into a game-ending double play.

Kurtz's fifth-inning double extended his on-base streak to 41 games, tying Eddie Joost (1949) for the sixth-longest in A's history. Kurtz is also tied with Kyle Schwarber last year for the longest in the big leagues across the past four seasons.

Up next
Athletics LHP Jacob Lopez (3-2, 5.80 ERA) faces Angels LHP Reid Detmers (1-4, 4.38) in the second game of the four-game series Tuesday.

Atlanta Braves News: Ronald Acuna Jr. Activated from IL, Worst Loss of Season, More

ATLANTA, GA - MAY 17: The ball cap and glove of Matt Olson #28 of the Atlanta Braves sits on the dugout steps during the MLB game between the Boston Red Sox and the Atlanta Braves on May 17, 2026 at TRUIST Park in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Well that was less than fun.

Braves lost 12-0 on Monday against the Marlins. It was the worst loss of the season for the Braves on a rare night where they simply had no answers. While these games happen to all teams at least a few times a year, there is an opportunity for the Braves to bounce back to make sure they make the most of another week of games against the NL East.

Thankfully, the Braves will get a big boost starting today with the return of Ronald Acuna Jr. from the IL. He was activated on Monday, as Kyle Farmer went to the IL. The Braves offense has not been as potent over the past few weeks, so getting their best offensive talent back should help production get back to consistent levels.

Braves News

Demetrius Bell looks at the week ahead vs the NL East.

Matt Powers looks at the history of the 26th pick in the draft.

The Braves have reportedly called up pitcher Victor Mederos from the minors. It will be interesting to see what other moves occur on Tuesday.

Mark Bowman looks at some impressive performances from Braves prospects.

MLB News

The Padres now lead the NL East after a victory over the Dodgers.

The Angels were close to being no-hit, but instead hit a walk-off home run.

Corey Seager went to the IL with a back issue.

Former Braves Gio Urshela announced his retirement.

J.T. Ginn loses no-hit bid in ninth inning — and then allows walk-off homer in gutting A’s collapse

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Athletics pitcher J.T. Ginn reacts after giving up a single against the Los Angeles Angels, Image 2 shows Los Angeles Angels shortstop Zach Neto is doused with water in celebration
J.T. Ginn took a walk-off homer into the ninth inning for the A's but still lost the game.

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Athletics starter J.T. Ginn took a no-hitter and a one-run lead into the ninth inning Monday night.

Six pitches later, he walked off the mound with a heartbreaking loss.

Adam Frazier lined a leadoff single in the bottom of the ninth and Zach Neto followed with a two-run homer that gave the Los Angeles Angels a 2-1 victory, snapping a six-game skid while stunning Ginn and the A’s.

“Obviously, a tough game,” Ginn said. “Just keep your head up and keep moving forward. It’s just the nature of the game that we play. I attack the zone and I live with that.”

J.T. Ginn reacts after allowing a hit during the A’s game May 18. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Frazier lined an 0-2 pitch over shortstop for a clean single, giving Los Angeles just its third baserunner. Neto then drove a 2-0 sinker to center field for his eighth home run of the season.

“Just a crazy game to play,” Ginn said. “I fell behind 2-0, threw a good sinker, and he was waiting on it and put a good swing on it. So, tip your cap to him.”

Zach Neto celebrates after hitting a walk-off homer during the Angels’ May 18 game. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Ginn (2-2) was trying for the first no-hitter in the majors since Shota Imanaga combined with two Chicago Cubs relievers for a 12-0 win over Pittsburgh on Sept. 4, 2024. The previous pitcher to throw a complete-game no-hitter was Blake Snell for the San Francisco Giants against Cincinnati on Aug. 2, 2024.

Ginn threw a career-high 105 pitches, 64 for strikes. He struck out 10, walked one and hit Neto with a pitch in the sixth.

The right-hander from Mississippi, who turns 27 on Wednesday, struck out the side in the seventh and finished the inning with his 10th strikeout — setting a career high.

“J.T. dominated all night. For him to walk off the mound with a loss there, it hurts, obviously,” Athletics manager Mark Kotsay said. “He pitched probably the best game he’s pitched in his big league career, and to have an opportunity to get a no-hitter, and two hits later you walk off with a loss, it’s tough. I had full confidence in him going out there in that inning at 100 pitches and trying to get it done. It just didn’t work out.”

Pinch-hitter Lawrence Butler put the A’s ahead 1-0 with an RBI single in the top of the ninth. Angels reliever Chase Silseth got slugger Nick Kurtz to ground into an inning-ending double play with the bases loaded.

J.T. Ginn throws a pitch during the A’s game May 18. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

It was the 30th career start for Ginn, who made his major league debut in August 2024.

“He did such a phenomenal job all night keeping guys off balance. His stuff was nasty. Just kind of rolling, you know, and then it’s gut-wrenching stuff in the ninth for it to end that way. It definitely sucks right now,” Athletics catcher Shea Langeliers said. “Baseball will humble you in all sorts of ways. … It’s going to be hard to flush this one.”

The Angels haven’t been no-hit since Sept. 11, 1999 — the longest active streak in the majors.

Yankees rebound from Subway Series with 'different mindset' in series-opening win over Blue Jays

The Yankees' first meeting with the Toronto Blue Jays since this past October's ALDS loss saw New York dig deep, especially after a 2-of-3 Subway Series with the Mets.

"We've got a lot of grownups in that room, and I trust they know how to handle the highs and the lows in a lot of these individual cases," Aaron Boone said of his team's 7-6 win Monday at Yankee Stadium.

Boone's quote stemmed from a question about David Bednar, who blew a save opportunity upon starting the ninth inning of Sunday's 7-6 loss in 10 innings.

"It's big-time," said Bednar, whose ninth inning Monday against the Blue Jays (21-26) saw him work into trouble with a walk and RBI double before bearing down for the final three outs over the following four at-bats, capped by Vladimir Guerrero Jr.'s 4-6-3 double play. "Ultimately, that's what everyone wants in this room -- trust the guys in here -- and I have the ultimate trust in them. For them to feel that about me is big-time."

With the win, the Yankees (29-19) are three games behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the AL East but 7.5 ahead of the third-place Blue Jays.

"Any in-division games are important, even though early in the season -- they all count," said Cody Bellinger, whose two-run home run in the seventh inning tied the game before Jazz Chisholm Jr. did the same two batters later and gave the Yankees a 7-5 lead. "They had a tremendous year last year, they got us last year and this year they're a good team again. We tried to come out first time against them and it was a battle, back and forth, and it was just a fun game to be a part of."

New York's chance for revenge continues with Tuesday's 7:05 p.m. start, the second of a four-game series in the Bronx.

"Especially losing to them in the playoffs, we've got to have a different mindset when it comes to them," Chisholm said. "Every time we see them, it's like, we have that feeling -- at least I do, for sure. I know a couple other guys in the clubhouse have that feeling of, like, 'We owe you something. We're going to show you what we've got.'"

A’s Suffer Heartbreaker to Open Road Trip

May 18, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Athletics right fielder Lawrence Butler (4) hits an RBI single against the Los Angeles Angels during the ninth inning at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images | Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

The Athletics and Los Angeles Angels matched up in the first game of this four-game series between these two longtime division rivals.

Few would have thought that this game featuring two teams with struggling pitching staffs would turn out to be a pitching duel, yet that is what happened. Both starting pitchers performed well, especially the A’s starter J.T. Ginn, who took a no-hit bid into the ninth inning. Unfortunately for the A’s, it was the Angels, particularly their shortstop Zach Neto, who got the last laugh, winning this series-opener 2-1 courtesy of Neto’s walk-off blast.

A’s leadoff hitter, right fielder Carlos Cortes, opened the game by working a walk against Angels’ starting pitcher Walbert Ureña. His team left him stranded, as the right-hander proceeded to retire the following three hitters and complete a scoreless first inning. Ginn matched Ureña’s opening frame, working a scoreless bottom of the first. .

A’s Waste First Scoring Chance

In the top of the third, the A’s strung together a two-out rally. Cortes walked for the second time in two at-bats and then catcher Shea Langeliers hit an infield single, the A’s first hit of the game. Alas, first baseman Nick Kurtz popped out to end the inning as the Athletics left two runners on base.

A’s Leave them Loaded

In the fourth inning, the A’s once again generated a two-out rally. Center fielder Henry Bolte hit an infield single and then second baseman Jeff McNeil reached on Neto’s fielding error. Ureña hit A’s third baseman Zack Gelof to load the bases. The Angels starter escaped the jam unscathed by getting A’s shortstop Darell Hernaiz to groundout to third.

Angels Defense Saves a Run

With two outs in the fifth, Kurtz extended his on-base streak to 41 consecutive games with a double down the right field line. Angels’ right fielder Jo Adell made a sliding catch to rob A’s designated hitter Brent Rooker of an RBI single and keep the game scoreless.

Pitching Duel

While the A’s offense struggled to get going, Ginn retired the Angels in order through four innings, totaling five strikeouts and four groundouts on just 39 pitches. The Angels got their first baserunner in the fifth via a walk, but Ginn stranded him at second.

Meanwhile, Ureña completed six scoreless innings, continuing his success since joining the Angels’ rotation. He allowed four hits and two walks while striking out four. Right-handed reliever Sam Bachman entered out of the Angels bullpen in the seventh. He continued to keep the visitors off the board over the next two innings, only allowing Cortes’ one-out single in the seventh. Through eight innings, the Athletics managed five hits and went 0-for-3 with runners in scoring position, leaving nine men on base.

Ginn sailed through eight hitless innings, striking out a career-high 10 batters. However, his offense had yet to give him any run support in this pitching-dominated affair.

Crazy Ninth!

In the top of the ninth, the A’s bats woke up. Gelof singled with one out against Angels right-handed reliever Ryan Zeferjahn. He stole second base to put himself in scoring position. Pinch-hitter Lawrence Butler singled to center, scoring Gelof to finally break the deadlock and give the A’s the lead. That was arguably Butler’s biggest hit of the season to date.

Zeferjahn proceeded to walk Cortes and Langeliers to load the bases with one out for Kurtz. Fellow right-handed reliever Chase Silseth replaced Zeferjahn and did his job by getting Kurtz to hit into an inning-ending double play. That was a crucial opportunity to add insurance, but for a change, Kurtz failed to come through.

Adam Frazier led off the bottom of the ninth with a single, breaking up Ginn’s no-hit attempt.

For some reason, Athletics manager Mark Kotsay did not pull his starter from the game despite the fact that Ginn had thrown over 100 pitches and just suffered the deflating blow of losing his no-hitter attempt. That decision predictably backfired as Neto hit a two-run walk-off home run, delivering a 2-1 victory for the hosts that snapped their six-game losing streak.

In a span of a few pitches, the A’s went from thinking they were about to celebrate their pitcher’s no-hitter to sadly walking off of the field losers of a third straight game. This dramatic defeat that put the team’s record under .500 is the kind that can result in a season-derailing tailspin. As a result, it is imperative that the Athletics reset and bounce back tomorrow or else this losing streak could stretch much further like what happened in May of last year.

Tomorrow will be the lefty vs. lefty matchup this series as Jacob Lopez will take on Reid Detmers. Lopez (3-2, 5.80 ERA) has struggled this season for the A’s, although he is coming off back-t0-back quality starts. In his last outing against the St. Louis Cardinals, the southpaw allowed two runs on four hits over five innings. He will be opposed by Detmers, who is 1-4 with a 4.20 ERA through nine starts this year. Lopez will likely not pitch as well as Ginn did tonight, but the A’s simply need him to keep them in the game and give them a shot to win.

Arizona Diamondbacks 12, San Francisco Giants 2: Ray-pocalypse Now

Record: 23-23. Pace: 81-81. Change on 2025: -1.

I’ve learned not to tempt the baseball gods by starting on the recap too early. The only time I did so far this season, was the game against the Orioles, where the D-backs led 7-2 in the middle of the sixth inning. It… did not end well. But I did feel tonight, with Arizona ahead by ten runs after five innings, that I could safely boot up the laptop on this one. It was not former Diamondback Robbie Ray’s night. He had only allowed more than six ER once in his career: he gave up seven in just his fourth MLB appearance, back in 2014. It was his worst Game Score too, at 11. But tonight? The D-backs plundered him for 10 runs, 9 earned on 11 hits and 2 walks in just 4.2 innings. The resulting Game Score? 2.

This was an absolute palate-cleanser for the recently struggling offense. Giving a pitcher who came in with a 3.04 ERA, a career-worst outing, is something I hope the “Why do we always make scrubs look like Cy Young winners?” crew remember. Things tonight started early, and extremely quickly. And by quickly, I mean after a 1-2-3 inning by Zac Gallen in the top of the first, six pitches into the bottom half, Arizona had a 4-0 lead. Ketel Marte singled on an 0-1 pitch, Corbin Carroll singled on his first offering, and Geraldo Perdomo reached after he grounded the first pitch off the glove of the Giants’ third-baseman. That set the table for Nolan Arenado, whose ownership of Robbie Ray was close to Goldy/Timmeh levels: 53 career PA and a 1.244 OPS. That increased after this:

It was only the second time in franchise history that our fourth batter of the game had hit a grand-slam. The previous occurrence had been on April 28, 2011 against the Cubs at Wrigley. From the SnakePit recap: “Chris Young led off the bottom with a double, and suddenly, Dempster couldn’t find the strike zone with the help of a native guide. Kelly Johnson drew a walk, and after a LOUD foul ball into the cheap seats, Justin Upton was hit by a pitch, loading the bases for cleanup hitter Stephen Drew. [He] took [Ryan] Dempster to the bank, depositing a fastball into the outfield seats for his first career Grand Slam.” That did take more pitches: nineteen, so more than three times the number to reach tonight’s lickety-split slam.

Okay, having spent over four hundred words and not even reached the first D-back out, I’d better gallop on through the rest of the game. It seemed initially like Gallen might be a little shaky, allowing San Francisco get on the board in the second, then another run in the third. But Arizona had no trouble responding on each occasion. They scored one in the second on a Marte sacrifice fly, then added two more in the third. That came courtesy of a rare Tim Tawa start, who singled home both runs. But the game was ended as a meaningful contest by the D-backs getting a five-run fifth. Gabriel Moreno had a two-run homer, Ryan Waldschmidt and Marte added RBI knocks, and Arenado drove in our twelfth and final run on another of the Giants’ three errors.

Thereafter, it became a bit reminiscent of a spring training game. We pulled Carroll, Arenado and it looked like we were perhaps going to end replacing Moreno with James McCann. I say that, because the last-named did potentially make this a bit of a Pyrrhic victory [to re-purpose one of last year’s popular recap titles]. After a half-inning spent playing 1B McCann, trying to leg out an infield hit, appeared to tweak something in his leg. While he did get the hit, bringing him back over the Uecker Line, he had to be lifted from the game immediately. Adrian Del Castillo took over for him on the basepaths, and Moreno stayed in the game. No word on McCann as yet.

Gallen got through six innings with no more damage, allowing four hits and a walk with five strikeouts, for his first quality start since April 1. At 81 pitches, he could perhaps have gone deeper. But the bullpen probably needed the work. Ryan Thompson, Brandyn Garcia and Jonathan Loaisiga each tossed scoreless innings to close out the Diamondbacks’ first double-digit margin of victory since the 10-0 win over the White Sox last June 23. However, let’s not get too carried away with ourselves. The Giants do have the second-worst record in the league, and we should be shutting down their offense. Their 167 runs is twenty-five fewer than any other NL team.

But tonight was one for the Arizona offense: 16 hits in total, tying a season high every starter notching one by the end of the fifth. Waldschmidt had three hits, a walk and two stolen bases, while there were two-hit games for Marte, Carroll, Ildemaro Vargas and Moreno. The win pulls the Diamondbacks back up to .500, and with nine more games against these woeful Giants and Rockies (3-1 so far) before we face anybody else, I’m hopeful the team will be able to take advantage of this stretch of the schedule and get well above even by the time we start seeing other franchises.

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Colonel Kurtz: Nolan Arenado, +14%

Seriously, that’s it. Nobody else bar Arenado came in at better than plus seven percent, and nobody at all reached even negative one percent, so I’m not going to call anyone out. It was, I’d say, probably the best-played game by the Diamondbacks all season. Fine pitching (the quality of the opposition notwithstanding), great hitting and solid defense. Hard to ask for much more. I’ll give comment of the night to Webb Gemz, not least for demonstrating the correct use of the sarcasm font.

Same two teams tomorrow, same bat-time (6:40 pm), same bat-channel, and I would not mind at all if it were to be the same bat-result. It’ll be Ryne Nelson taking the mound for the Diamondbacks.