Did you like seeing Ranger Suarez in the eighth inning for the Red Sox last night?

TORONTO, ON - APRIL 27: Ranger Suarez #55 of the Boston Red Sox reacts after pitching during the game between the Boston Red Sox and the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on Monday, April 27, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Colton Hall/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Happy Tuesday, Red Sox Nation! Last night, Chad Tracy sent Ranger Suarez back to the mound for the eighth inning after throwing 90 pitches through seven innings. The Alex Cora-led Red Sox likely go to the bullpen with a five-run lead in that spot. Did you like the move to send Suarez back out? On one hand, he was dealing, and he didn’t let a relief arm force Garrett Whitlock or Aroldis Chapman into the game. On the other, he’s never thrown over 160 innings in a season before, and the pitching injuries are already piling up.

Tracy has never managed in the big leagues before. He’s used to taking care of arms and dealing with throwing programs to protect his players. He also hasn’t had to endure the grind of a major league season, where your decisions today can impact tomorrow. Managing in Worcester isn’t about the wins and losses as much as it is about developing players and getting them ready for the next step. Personally, I probably would have gone to the bullpen after seven, but I can see it either way. I like talking baseball strategy more than I do talking about contracts and trades and whatnot, so let me know what you think.

Talk about whatever you want and be good to one another. Go Sox.

Pirates still riding high in power rankings

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - APRIL 25: Bryan Reynolds #10 of the Pittsburgh Pirates slides safely past the tag of William Contreras #24 of the Milwaukee Brewers in the tenth inning at American Family Field on April 25, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s time for a power rankings update. The Pittsburgh Pirates are sitting at 16-13. They’ve been a couple games over .500 for a while now, but haven’t been able to quite push it further. In addition, the hot start at the plate has cooled some, with the Bucs OPS falling significantly over the past week. But the rotation has them good enough to be essentially treading water, but they’re still in the top 10 in power rankings in most places.

MLB.com has them in seventh, which is down from five last week, saying:

Paul Skenes took a perfect game into the seventh inning on Friday, and it speaks to how incredible he has been to start his career that it’s a little surprising he doesn’t have a no-hitter yet. Actually, neither he nor Tarik Skubal, the clear best two pitchers in baseball, have a no-hitter yet … but that they both flirted with one within the past week is a good sign one is definitely pending.

CBS has them in seventh.

USA Today also has them seventh.

Yahoo has them in eighth.

While Fox Sports also puts them at seventh.

It seems there’s mostly a consensus for where the Bucs are right now, and that’s right around seventh or eighth-best in the Major Leagues.

The pitching staff is cruising, as the Bucs are fourth in team ERA, fifth in WHIP and third in strikeouts. The hitting, while much improved, is still not where it needs to be. The Bucs are 13th in team batting average and in OBP, but they are 26th in slugging percentage, 22nd in OPS, and 18th in home runs. So while things have definitely improved there from last season, they’re going to need to get to above average as a team in most of those categories to have the hitting where it needs to be to truly compete.

But for as low as things have been around here for a while, I’ll take just about any level of improvement, and there’s no doubting that the Bucs have that so far this season.

Which of the Yankees’ division rivals is the biggest threat now?

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 23: Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox reaches down to tag out José Caballero #72 of the New York Yankees after getting a high throw to first during the third inning at Fenway Park on April 23, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

By any account, the Yankees’ superlative play as of late has made them the favorites in an AL East division that looked hyper-competitive coming into the year. The Rays are close in New York’s rearview mirror, but the heavy hitters that everyone expected to compete with the Yankees in the division this year, the Orioles, Blue Jays, and Red Sox, have all gotten off to starts that range from “sluggish” to “borderline apocalyptic”. To wit, FanGraphs’ projections put the Yankees’ median win forecast for the season a full ten wins higher than that of any of their division rivals.

But we’ve seen this movie before. The Yankees have gotten out to pretty great starts in most of their recent seasons, but they haven’t always been able to seal the deal in the division. So, even with the Yankees looking strong, which of their division rivals do you think has the best chance to re-emerge in the coming weeks?

Tampa Bay has pole position, or at least, they do among the chase pack in the division. The Rays are just two games back, staying close to the Yankees even as New York went on their eight-game win streak. I wouldn’t say the Rays have the strongest roster in this division, not by a longshot, but they’ve won games thus far and perennially find ways to wring the most out of their 26 players.

And then, there are the Sox, Jays, and O’s, all of whom have starrier rosters than Tampa but haven’t been able to get out of their own way in 2026. Per FanGraphs’ rest-of-season forecasts, the Blue Jays project to have the best roster among this group, thanks in no small part to the fact that even though they’re limping now, Toronto will at some point get some of their injured players back. Will it be too late to turn things for the defending AL champs?

The Red Sox also have a roster that looks better than their record, but they’ve plunged themselves into chaos, upending their organizational chart a month into the season. The Orioles are the most boring of these underachieving teams, not snake bitten thus far like Toronto, nor stepping on rakes like Boston. Baltimore is just a team that looked like it should be pretty decent in 2026, and so far has been a little less than decent. Perhaps that puts them in the best position to move up, as there doesn’t seem to be anything stopping them from playing better other than just, well, playing better.

What do you think? Who will prove to be the toughest rival the rest of the way out?


It’ll be a loaded day on the site today, starting off with Michael’s review of last week on the farm for the Yankees, Kevin’s recap of Monday night’s American League action, and Sam’s celebration of Tom Sturdivant as part of our Yankees Birthday series. Later, Peter’s At-bat of the Week highlights José Caballero, Andrés praises Caballero’s work filling in for Anthony Volpe, and Josh discusses who on the Yankees should have the green light to challenge balls and strikes.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees at Texas Rangers

Time: 8:05 p.m. EST

Video: Amazon Prime Video, Rangers Sports Network

Venue: Globe Life Field, Arlington, TX

Yankees news: Giancarlo Stanton to the IL with calf strain

NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 14: Hitting coach, James Rowson talks with Gerrit Cole #45 of the New York Yankees before the game against the Los Angeles Angels at Yankee Stadium on April 14, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

MLB Trade Rumors | Anthony Franco: The Giancarlo Stanton Calf Saga is essentially at the conclusion that always seemed most likely. The Yankees had the roster flexibility to wait and see how Stanton’s tight calf responded to a couple days of rest after he was pulled from their game on Friday in Houston, but they did have him undergo an MRI. They got the results last night, and he will now hit the IL with a “low grade” strain — not dire, but enough that they knew they couldn’t keep burning a roster spot.

Following Luis Gil’s Sunday night demotion, Jasson Domínguez had just been promoted yesterday to get some reps against the Rangers with Stanton unavailable. Now, they’ll be able to call up a pitcher to take an extra bullpen spot, as they won’t need a fifth starter until May 5th. Triple-A relievers Yerry De los Santos and Kervin Castro are the most likely possible options for the ’pen since they hold 40-man roster spots, though Yovanny Cruz is also a possibility.

New York Daily News | Gary Phillips: Both Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón have begun their rehab assignments, with the potential top two in the rotation due to return to the big-league roster soon enough. However, preventative care with both pitchers will be needed, and Cam Schlittler is also still in his first full MLB season. There’s therefore been some talk about how the club will manage all those concurrent needs, though it seems unlikely that a six-man rotation will be entertained. Matt Blake himself quashed speculation yesterday by pointing out that an extra man in the rotation leaves the bullpen a man short, and that seems outside the bounds of the Yankees’ risk profile.

NJ.com | Randy Miller: Once again, the Yankees boast a top-five offense in the game, and once again nobody walks more than the Bronx Strollers. A league-high 12.6 percent BB rate means there’s often a great deal of traffic for Yankee hitters, and that approach has been a hallmark of Aaron Boone’s time as manager. There have been instances this season where I feel the Yankees have been a little too passive however, and while a .197 ISO also paces the league, it’s a couple of ticks lower than last year’s mark, and might indicate that the club is leaving runs on the table by just walking.

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: After a brutal start to the season, Jazz Chisholm Jr. seems to finally be returning to his baseline. The Yankee second baseman has had back-to-back strong series against the Red Sox and Astros — ABS challenges aside but more on that later today — after getting an extra day off against the Royals two weeks ago. Jazz used that time to reset some mechanical issues and move slightly back in the box, two tweaks that he’s credited with helping him get off better swings.

New York Post | Brooke Steinberg: One of the downsides of being arguably the most famous sports team in the world is apparently that a whole lot of people express their fandom through their passwords. A recent study shows literally millions of Yankee-related passwords have been leaked online, reminding even baseball fans to come up with stronger, more creative roadblocks for their personal data.

Padres win, Mason Miller sees scoreless innings streak come to an end

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 27: Nick Castellanos #21 of the San Diego Padres connects for a two RBI single during the fifth inning of a game against the Chicago Cubs at Petco Park on April 27, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was almost shocking to see. The most dominant closer in the MLB allowed a run. In fact, he allowed two runs. San Diego Padres closer Mason Miller worked 34 2/3 innings without allowing a runner to cross the plate. That streak came to an end in the top of the ninth inning against the Chicago Cubs, but the Padres still walked off the field with a 9-7 series-opening win at Petco Park on Monday night.

Miller came into the game in a non-save situation after Gavin Sheets crushed a solo home run in the bottom of the eighth inning to give San Diego a 9-5 lead over Chicago heading into the ninth inning. Miller started warming when the Padres had an 8-5 lead and Sheets found himself in an 0-2 hole with two outs before he hit a 422-foot blast into the right field seats.

Miller no longer had an opportunity to earn his 11th save of the season, but San Diego manager Craig Stammen brought him in to get the final three outs of the game, which he eventually did, but not before he got into the first trouble, he has faced all season. Miller allowed a single to Matt Shaw on a ball down the third base line that was not hit hard enough to reach third base. Ty France, who was at third for Manny Machado after he left the game with a left leg injury, allowed the ball to roll into what appeared to be foul territory, but the home plate umpire called it fair.

Shaw was on first when Miller faced Dansby Swanson who also reached on a single to put runners at first and second with no outs. Pete Crow-Armstrong had the third consecutive single, which loaded the bases against Miller and all but assured his scoreless innings streak would come to an end. Nico Hoerner did the damage with a ground ball to second base that resulted in a forceout before Shaw scored to break the streak and make the score 9-6.

Miller still needed two outs to secure the win for the Padres, but he gifted the Cubs a second run against him with a wild pitch that allowed Swanson to score to cut the lead to two runs at 9-7. With a runner on and one out, Miller found his groove and got Michael Busch to groundout and Alex Bregman to strikeout to secure the win for San Diego.

The Padres found themselves in a fight early in the game. After scoring three runs in the bottom of the first inning off Cubs pitcher Matthew Boyd, they watched Chicago score five unanswered runs and jump on top 5-3. San Diego scored a run in the bottom of the third inning to cut the lead to, 5-4 to set the stage for Nick Castellanos to come through in the bottom of the fifth inning.

Manny Machado hit a double to start the bottom of the fifth inning, which was one of three hits in the game for the Padres’ captain. He was followed by Xander Bogaerts who grounded out and Miguel Andujar who popped out for the second out of the inning. After a passed ball and a Ty France walk. runners were at the corners and France stole second base. Castellanos, who had not been hitting well or playing at all, lined a ball through the middle of the infield which allowed both runners to give the Padres a 7-6 lead that put the home team up for good.

San Diego will try to continue its winning ways and Miller will look to start a new streak in the second game of the series against Chicago at Petco Park at 6:40 p.m.

Long delay + huge comeback = White Sox win

Munetaka Murakami took over the MLB home-run lead tonight, with a three-run homer that held up as the game-winner. | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

After a three-hour rain delay, the White Sox and Angels decided to start playing tonight’s game … at 9:40 p.m. CT. Or for this writer and editor, 10:40 p.m. The game ended 35 minutes into Tuesday in Chicago, but the Good Guys somehow pulled off a massive comeback, winning 8-7. Oh, and Mune leads the league in home runs. No big deal!

The first inning brought the pain quickly for the White Sox, as Mike Trout doubled and scored on a sac fly, putting the Angels up, 1-0. The Sox tried to answer with two singles of their own and failed. This would matter even more in the second, after starter Anthony Kay continued to struggle. With one out, Kay plunked Nolan Schanuel, gave up a single to Travis d’Arnaud, an RBI double to Bryce Teodosio and an RBI single to Zach Neto. Teodosio was caught stealing home, but Kay walked Trout to put two on with two outs. The frame ended with a force out to second, but not before Kay hit 45 pitches and the Halos tacked on two runs, making it 3-0. Brendan Hunt of Ted Lasso fame joined Connor McKnight to plug The Movement You Need and call all three pitiful outs as the Sox were retired in order to end the second.

Kay hit another batter, this time with two outs in the top of the third, but escaped further damage with a much-needed strikeout. Once more, no response from the Sox. The bases were loaded in the top of the fourth after a walk and two singles with just one out. Vaughn Grissom sent a ball to the wall, scoring a run, but Tristan Peters was able to make a leaping catch for the second out.

Osvaldo Bido, who was claimed off waivers on April 18, came in to rescue Kay in the fifth, inheriting a 4-0 ballgame, and for the first time in the entire game, there were no runs scored or hit batsmen by a Sox pitcher. Thanks to heads-up base running and a few singles, a run was scored in the bottom of the fifth, as Andrew Benintendi sent Peters home to trim the Angels lead to 4-1. Overall, Bido did a great job as a long reliever, despite giving up a solo home run to Jorge Soler in the top of the seventh.

Sam Antonacci and Chase Meidroth both made their way on base for Peters to bring in a run in the bottom of the seventh. Edgar Quero took a hit to load the bases with no outs, and Benintendi ripped one to right field for a two-run double, fully taking advantage of a dreadful Angels bullpen. Nick Sandlin, who entered halfway through the frame to replace Jack Kochanowicz, was pulled ahead of Munetaka Murakami’s at-bat.

Southpaw Drew Pomeranz stepped in to sap the slugger’s strength, but instead gave up a beautiful home run to give the Good Guys the lead. Murakami officially took over the MLB lead in home runs with 12:

Miguel Vargas kept the rally going with a solo home run right after. Now with seven runs in the seventh inning, the Sox were up, 8-5.

Per Sarah Langs, Munetaka Murakami’s first 12 MLB extra-base hits have been home runs. That extends the longest such streak to start a player’s MLB career since at least 1900 (Murakami had broken a tie with Seattle’s Dae-ho Lee with his homer run on April 22 vs. Arizona). He also tied Will Smith of the Dodgers for third-most home runs hit in a player’s first 29 career games.

The Angels still had some life left, rallying off of reliever Grant Taylor in the ninth. The righty gave up a pair of hits in the ninth, allowing a run to score and cutting the lead to 8-6. The Sox were a strike away from ending the game, but Nolan Schanuel blooped an RBI double between Vargas and Antonacci to make it 8-7, with the lead run at second base. But Bryan Hudson came to the rescue, coaxing a weak ground out from Adam Frazier for the final out, giving the Sox a huge comeback win.


MLB Injury Report: Trey Yesavage returns Tuesday, Spencer Strider not far behind

In this week’s Injury Report, Trey Yesavage returns to the mound on Tuesday for his season debut. Spencer Strider is not far behind after a successful third rehab start. And Giancarlo Stanton hits the injured list with a minor calf strain. Let's break it all down as we run through the 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.

Trey Yesavage (shoulder)

Yesavage is expected to make his debut on Tuesday against the Red Sox after missing the start of the season with shoulder inflammation. He’s not likely to go too deep into games right away after totalling 64 pitches in his final rehab start, in which he gave up four runs over 2 1/3 with Triple-A Buffalo. He’ll be a risky start his first time out against Boston, but the 22-year-old right-hander brings immense upside over the rest of the season. Yesavage's return coincides with Max Scherzer (ankle, forearm) landing on the injured list.

Giancarlo Stanton (calf)

Stanton was removed from Friday’s game against the Astros with right lower leg tightness. He sat out the following three games before the team decided he would require a stint on the injured list after an MRI revealed a low-grade calf strain. Stanton isn’t expected to miss much more than the minimum. Meanwhile, Jasson Domíguez was recalled from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Domínguez should start most days in Stanton’s absence at designated hitter, at least against right-handed pitching, and has some multi-category upside with three homers and eight steals in the minors so far this season.

Francisco Lindor (calf)

Lindor was pulled from last Wednesday’s game against the Twins with left calf tightness. This comes just after the team got Juan Soto back from a calf injury. This one came out worse than Soto’s and will sideline Lindor for at least the next month. He’s set to be re-evaluated in three weeks. Ronny Mauricio was recalled from Triple-A Syracuse to fill in at shortstop against right-handed pitching.

George Springer (toe)

Out since April 12 with a fractured left big toe, Springer will not need a rehab assignment once he’s ready to return sometime this week. The 36-year-old outfielder will run the bases and hit on Tuesday at the Rogers Centre. Springer’s absence had opened playing time for Eloy Jiménez and Lenyn Sosa, but Springer should slot back in as the full-time designated hitter, where he started all 14 games this season.

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Max Scherzer (ankle, forearm)

Scherzer will get some time off after he was hit hard on Friday, giving up seven runs to the Guardians. The 41-year-old right-hander has battled through some ailments, including a forearm issue and ankle inflammation. There’s no timeline for a return, but with Trey Yesavage back and José Berríos on a rehab assignment, it might be a while before the Blue Jays need the veteran to start a game. For now, Eric Lauer remains in the rotation.

Ha-Seong Kim (finger)

Kim has been sidelined all season with a right middle finger laceration he suffered in January that resulted in a torn tendon. The original timeline had him out for 4-5 months. He may make it back in the early part of that estimate, as he’s set to begin a rehab assignment with Double-A Columbus this week. Kim would likely need a couple of weeks' worth of at-bats to get ramped up, but appears to be in line to join the Atlanta lineup by mid-May. He’d slot into the lineup as the starting shortstop, with Mauricio Dubón playing all over the diamond in a super-utility role.

Spencer Strider (oblique)

Strider is on the verge of returning from an oblique injury that’s had him sidelined since the end of spring training. He made his third rehab start on Sunday, giving up two runs with seven strikeouts over five innings. He sat at 95 mph on the four-seam fastball throughout the game and reached 82 pitches. Through three rehab starts, he’s allowed two runs with an 18/5 K/BB ratio over 12 2/3 innings. The Braves have moved Reynaldo Lopez to the bullpen as they prepare for Strider’s return, which could come this weekend in Colorado.

Blake Snell (shoulder)

Snell, working his way back from a shoulder issue, will make his second rehab start with Low-A Ontario on Tuesday. He threw 32 pitches in his first outing, giving up two runs over one inning of work. Snell will likely need a few more starts before he’s an option for the Dodgers sometime in May.

Jared Jones (elbow)

Jones underwent the internal brace procedure on his right elbow last May. The 24-year-old right-hander is ready to embark on a rehab assignment at Low-A Brandenton on Wednesday. Jones was placed on the 60-day injured list at the start of the season, so the earliest he can be activated is in late May. Still, he’s worth a stash in all formats.

Logan O’Hoppe (wrist)

O’Hoppe was removed from Saturday’s game with a left wrist injury after he was hit by a foul tip. He landed on the 10-day injured list with a left wrist fracture. The 26-year-old catcher only anticipates missing a couple of weeks. Veteran Travis d’Arnaud will be tasked with filling in on most days behind the plate.

Kyle Tucker delivers his biggest Dodgers moment yet to cap furious rally in walk-off win over Marlins

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Los Angeles Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker (23) is doused with ice water from a cooler by right fielder Alex Call (12) after Tucker's walk-off single, Image 2 shows Los Angeles Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker (23) hits a 2 RBI walk-off single in the ninth inning
Kyle Tucker and the Dodgers defeated the Marlins on Monday.Kyle Tucker and the Dodgers defeated the Marlins on Monday.

Monday was shaping up to be a forgettable night at Dodger Stadium.

Then, the Dodgers delivered an unforgettable ending in the bottom of the ninth.

Trailing by two runs to the Miami Marlins, the team mounted a three-run rally on the back of quality at-bats, a big swing from Shohei Ohtani and a walk-off hit from Kyle Tucker, who lined a two-run, two-out single to center to lift the Dodgers to a 5-4 win.

“We just know as an offense we’re never out of it,” first baseman Freddie Freeman said. “We can always look over a baseball, work walks, work at-bats, and it worked tonight.”

That Tucker was the one who produced the game-winning swing made it all the more memorable.

Kyle Tucker celebrates after his walk-off hit for the Dodgers on April 27. Imagn Images

Entering Monday, Tucker was batting just .238. He was less than a week removed from being dropped from second to fourth in the team’s star-studded lineup. And he had been 0-for-4 previously on the night.

“He needed a win,” manager Dave Roberts said. “He’s been grinding and trying to find some success and some good fortune.”

But by the time he came up, the Dodgers provided the opportunity, having a built a rally against Marlins closer Pete Fairbanks.

It started with leadoff walks from Andy Pages and Dalton Rushing. It was further ignited by a run-scoring ground-rule double from Ohtani, who one-hopped a line drive over the short wall in the right-field corner. After that, Freeman received an intentional free pass while Fairbanks left the game with an injury. Thus, it all came down to Tucker, who with two outs represented the Dodgers’ last chance.

“Guys had phenomenal at-bats right there at the end,” Tucker said. “Just having the opportunity is huge.”

Two pitches later, he made sure to take advantage, connecting on a game-winning hit that prompted his teammates to mob him around first base.

“I do think that a moment like this, even for a player that’s been around a long time, can kind of inspire more confidence in him, which is good thing,” Roberts said. “I think this is the floor of what he’s going to be doing this year, and I think it’s the needle is pointing up.”

Entering the ninth, any comeback bid had felt unlikely.

The Dodgers (20-9) hadn’t scored since Teoscar Hernández’s two-run single in the first. They had squandered that lead on Liam Hicks’ three-run homer against Yoshinobu Yamamoto in the fifth. They had left the bases loaded in the seventh. They had gone 1-for-6 with runners in scoring position, slipping back into the sluggish form that dogged them for most of last week.

Kyle Tucker delivers a walk-off hit during the Dodgers’ April 27 win. Imagn Images

Alas, they quickly rallied, capping one of thier most signature wins early on this season with a first signature moment from their superstar signing.

“Kyle having this huge moment for him and us,” Freeman said with a smile. “Hopefully he can set free and be King Tuck.”

What it means

That, once again, the Dodgers are never out of a game.

Between the second and sixth innings, the team had mustered just one hit. In that time, Yamamoto stumbled in a five-inning, four-run (three-earned) outing while lacking his typical stuff or command. 

However, their superstar lineup means that, as long as they’re within striking distance, they’re always capable of mounting a comeback.

That’s what happened in the ninth, with key walks and big swings giving the team its second walk-off win of the year.

Who’s hot

Hernández is not known for drawing walks. But improved plate discipline has helped him not only earn a string of free bases lately, but also snap out of what had been a couple-week-long slump.

Hernández started his night Monday with a key hit, driving in the game’s first two runs with his opposite-field single in the first inning. After that, he walked twice, marking only the second time this season he has done so.

Following a 14-game stretch from April 7-24 in which he batted .154, Hernández is now 3-for-8 the last three days with four walks and four RBIs, raising his season average to .245.

Who’s not

At the very least, Smith was back in the lineup Monday after missing a couple games with back tightness.

However, he continued a recent slump by not only going hitless in five at-bats, but twice leaving the bases loaded in the seventh (when he broke his bat on an inning-ending grounder) and the ninth (when he struck in the at-bat before Tucker’s walk-off).

That left Smith in a 1-for-18 rut in his last five games, with a three-run homer last Friday representing his only reprieve. His batting average is down to .250 and his OPS is down to .688. Among the club’s regulars, only Tucker has a lower mark in that latter category.

Up next

Ohtani (2-0, 0.38 ERA) will take the mound Tuesday opposite Marlins right-hander Janson Junk (1-2, 3.67 ERA). However, Roberts said Ohtani would only pitch in the game, and not also serve as designated hitter. That is partially because Ohtani is pitching on just five days’ rest for the first time this year, and partially because Wednesday’s series finale the following day is an afternoon start. It marks the second time in his last three pitching starts he will not hit, as well.

Tucker’s first of hopefully many walk-offs for the Dodgers

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 27: Kyle Tucker #23 of the Los Angeles Dodgers runs after hitting a two run walk-off single against the Miami Marlins in the ninth inning at Dodger Stadium on April 27, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

They say what goes around comes around, and in a game in which walks played a pivotal part in the Marlins’ handling of Dodgers’ ace Yoshinobu Yamamoto, the same applied for the Dodgers against closer Pete Fairbanks to set up a comeback win—Kyle Tucker had his first signature moment as a Dodger, delivering a two-out walk-off single to win it 5-4 in the ninth.

For a starter who fought against the tide for what felt like his entire performance, Yamamoto still came ridiculously close to delivering excellent results, even if the execution was nowhere near its finest. Sadly, a mistake against Liam Hicks in one of his last pitches in the fifth inning left the yard for a home run, driving in three runs due to Yamamoto’s issues keeping the Marlins off the bases—over Yamamoto’s five full innings of work, the Marlins earned four walks against the usually incredibly efficient Dodger starter, two of them coming around to score on that Hicks homer.

Other than that three-run shot in the fifth, the only other run the Marlins had scored against Yamamoto came on an error in the third, as Hyeseong Kim failed to throw out Javier Sanoja on a ground ball with the bases loaded—the damage could’ve been bigger, but Yamamoto got the following batter to close the two-out threat. Increasingly defaulting to his trusty splitter as the game went on—with his vast pitching arsenal out of sync—Yamamoto left one in a 1-2 count a bit too high for Hicks, one of the few hitters he had dominated in this one until that point. There’s extra significance in that particular at-bat, as it was the first home run and extra-base hit of any kind against Yamamoto’s splitter in 2026—and only the second home run by a lefty off a Yamamoto splitter since he joined the Dodgers ahead of the 2024 campaign.

While those four runs (3 of them earned) in five innings were well below Yamamoto’s standard, it was hardly a performance that removed the Dodgers from the game. In fact, considering they were facing a struggling Chris Paddack and also the success of their bullpen as of late, the Dodgers had a considerable chance to take this one. Trailing 4-2 by the time Yamamoto threw his last pitch, it took the Dodgers until the last inning to seize it, but eventually they were able to.

Firstly came the frustrating efforts of the seventh inning, when the Dodgers loaded the bases against Andrew Nardi. The southpaw reliever had been brought in with a string of four left-handed hitters up—the primary one being Shohei Ohtani—only to face a couple of pinch-hitters as Alex Call and Miguel Rojas filled in for Hyeseong Kim and Alex Freeland. The Dodgers got the bags full, but Will Smith couldn’t do anything with it, shattering his bat on a harmless ground ball.

In the ninth, the Dodgers faced veteran closer Pete Fairbanks, and all they wanted was one hitter to reach base in order to give Shohei Ohtani an opportunity as the tying run. The first two hitters walked, Miguel Rojas popped out on a bunt attempt, and the game could’ve been tied if Ohtani’s double hadn’t gone into the stands for a ground-rule double. Fairbanks tried to pitch around Freddie Freeman and eventually had to walk him as well, the last batter he faced, leaving a mess for Tyler Phillips, who came in with the bases loaded and one out and had to defend a one-run lead. Smith’s second failed attempt with the bases loaded—this time striking out—left Miami one out away from Houdini-ing their way to escape this one, but Tucker had other plans and confirmed his outstanding career numbers with the bases loaded, winning the game for the Dodgers.

Game particulars
  • Home run—  Liam Hicks (6)
  • WP—Jake Eder (1-0): 1 IP, 1 hit
  • LP— Pete Fairbanks (0-2): 0.1 IP, 1 hit, 3 runs, 3 walks
Up next

It’s the same start time on Tuesday at 7:10 p.m. (PT) as the Dodgers return to action with Shohei Ohtani facing Janson Junk in what is the second-to-last game of this homestand.

Mets prospect A.J. Ewing already promoted to Triple-A after fast start

New York Mets’ A.J. Ewing hits a baseball during spring training.
A.J. Ewing swings during a Mets spring training game Feb. 25.

A.J. Ewing left a strong impression on Mets officials during spring training, and his fast start this season has already earned him a promotion.

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The club announced Monday that Ewing was moved to Triple-A Syracuse.

The 21-year-old outfielder produced a .349/.481/.571 slash line in 18 games for Double-A Binghamton this season.

MLB Pipeline ranks Ewing the No. 3 Mets prospect and No. 85 in all of baseball.

“There’s a lot to like,’’ manager Carlos Mendoza said in March. “I like him as a hitter at the plate. And his defense, he gets great jumps and made some good plays with reads off the bat.”

Ewing projects as a center fielder, a potential need for the Mets in the near future.

A.J. Ewing swings during a Mets spring training game Feb. 25. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

He also stole 70 bases last season.

“His ability to give you a really good at-bat from the left side and speed is pretty encouraging,’’ Mendoza said.


The Mets are still deciding on the next step for Kodai Senga, according to a club source, following his ugly performance against the Rockies.

It was a third straight rough outing for Senga.

Senga could be asked to accept a minor league assignment — a move the Mets utilized last year when the right-hander finished the season at Triple-A Syracuse — or slide him to the bullpen.

But the Mets already have two other displaced starters (David Peterson and Sean Manaea) in the bullpen, complicating the equation.

Senga has a 6.94 ERA over his past 14 starts, dating to July 11.


Austin Slater, who was signed by the Mets on Sunday — Tommy Pham was designated for assignment — will be active for Tuesday’s game, the team announced.

Slater, who brings a right-handed bat, had a .470 OPS in 12 games this season with the Marlins before his release.

The Mets also claimed infielder Eric Wagaman from the Twins and optioned him to Syracuse.


The Mets’ 9-19 record is tied for the second-worst start over 28 games in franchise history.

Only the 1981 Mets (who started 8-19-1) were worse.

The 1962, ’64 and ’83 Mets all started 9-19.

Yankees' new dynamic duo of Ben Rice, Aaron Judge makes history in win over Rangers

Ben Rice and Aaron Judge

“That’s a pretty good combo there,” Aaron Boone said. 

That combo has been in the middle of everything early on for the Yankees’ offense, and that was again the case during Monday night’s win over the Rangers

After Jack Leiter breezed his way through the first two innings, Rice was able to break through, crushing a first pitch fastball the other way to deep left-center. 

The blast left the bat at a whopping 106.9 mph and traveled 404 feet to the deepest part of the park. 

“Man, that ball was pummeled,” Boone said. 

“I didn’t think it was going to go out so I was running hard, but it was cool to see one go out that way,” Rice added. 

The 27-year-old lefty continued his spectacular start to the season, pushing him into a tie with Judge for second in the league and the team-lead for homer, though it was short-lived. 

Judge regained the advantage over his slugging teammate just five pitches later, as he laced a 3-2 curveball 113 mph over the right-field fence for his 11th homer and the Yanks first back-to-back jacks of the season.

It was Judge’s eighth blasts over his last 15 games. 

“I couldn’t let him catch me,” the captain joked. “I had to make sure I got one after that.”

“Just trying to keep him honest, keep him motivated,” a smiling Rice added. 

Friendly competition aside, the two entered some prestigious company, joining Yogi Berra and Mikey Mantle as the only pair of teammates in franchise history with 10+ homers in the first 29 games of the season.

They are also just the third duo in MLB history to reach that mark during the month of April.   

We already know what Judge is capable of, but having the scorching-hot Rice hitting around him only makes this Yankees lineup even scarier moving forward. 

“Hitting right behind him now, it makes my job easier,” Judge admitted.

“I enjoy hitting in the order with him,” Rice added. “Whether I’m in front of him or behind him, I think there’s different scenarios where either way works, but anytime I could be near him in the lineup is a good one.”

Giancarlo Stanton hitting IL as Yankees’ waiting game ends with ‘huge’ loss

New York Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton (27) hits the ball.
Giancarlo Stanton is pictured during the Yankees' April 24 game against the Astros.

ARLINGTON, Texas — After getting 72 hours to see if his calf could make enough improvement, Giancarlo Stanton still could not avoid the injured list.

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The Yankees DH is headed for the 10-day IL after an MRI on Monday revealed a “low-grade” right calf strain, manager Aaron Boone said after a 4-2 win over the Rangers at Globe Life Field.

“Doesn’t look too serious, but enough to not want to wait a couple more days,” Boone said. “So we’ll see what we have as the week unfolds.”

The 36-year-old Stanton, who has been plagued by soft-tissue leg injuries in recent years, sustained the strain Friday night in Houston while jogging from first to second base and eventually exited the game after reaching third.

Giancarlo Stanton is pictured during the Yankees’ April 24 game against the Astros. Imagn Images

The Yankees are hoping that he came out before the calf injury turned into something more severe, but it will still knock Stanton out at least until next Tuesday.

The Yankees called up Jasson Domínguez earlier on Monday and started him at DH against Rangers righty Jack Leiter.

With Anthony Volpe potentially returning from the IL as soon as Friday, it remains to be seen whether Domínguez will get a longer stretch to fill the DH role while Stanton is sidelined.

Boone said it “could be” just a minimum 10-day stint, but he did not want to put a timetable on it.

Stanton was batting .256 with a .724 OPS, three home runs and 14 RBIs through 24 games.

Giancarlo Stanton reacts after scoring during the Yankees’ April 22 game. Eric Canha-Imagn Images

“It’s [a] huge [loss],” Aaron Judge said. “He’s a big force in the middle of our lineup. Big RBI production. But I’m hoping it’s a small stint. He was able to catch it early hopefully and he’ll be back out there.”


For the second time this year, Aaron Boone had to have a tough conversation with Luis Gil.

Both conversations centered on his demotion to Triple-A.

Another rough outing against the Astros exposed areas where the former AL Rookie of the Year needs work, which he will address in the minors.

“I would say he took it well. I think he was clear-eyed,” Boone said Monday at Globe Life Field. “I feel good about what his focus is going to be going down there. As we’ve tried to get him back to that form that we’ve seen him at, he’s done a lot of the things that have moved the needle in a lot of ways, with his winter program. Physically, he’s in some of the best physical conditioning and strength of his life. He’s a young man still.

“I think the best thing for him right now is to go down there and hopefully continue to work and hopefully string together some starts in a less-pressurized situation that gets him on track to being the guy he can be.”

Left unsaid is that the clock may be running out on Gil’s chances of impacting the rotation this season.

Carlos Rodón and Gerrit Cole are on the way back from the injured list, both expected to return at some point in May, while the Yankees also have top pitching prospects knocking at the door in Triple-A, including Elmer Rodríguez and Carlos Lagrange.

For now, the Yankees will use someone other than Gil by the time they next need a fifth starter (by May 5 at the latest).



It could be Rodríguez, or perhaps a bullpen game started by one of their long men, Ryan Yarbrough or Paul Blackburn.

But it will not be Rodón, who still needs at least two more rehab starts, the next one coming Thursday at Double-A Somerset (with Cole making his third start there Wednesday).

Gil, meanwhile, is headed back to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre after starting the season there.

He is still trying to rediscover the consistent life on his four-seam fastball, which is not generating close to the whiff rate it once did when he was at his best (9.5 percent this season, 28.5 percent in 2024).

“We’ve seen improvements in some of his work, but it’s about getting the fastball/slider/changeup now all a tick better,” Boone said. “Because once they all get a tick better, then they all help each other. It’s just been a little short there and a little inconsistent.”


Anthony Volpe will play rehab games Tuesday and Wednesday at Double-A Somerset, after which the Yankees will reevaluate his status — with the potential of him rejoining them by Friday’s series opener against the Orioles in The Bronx.


Paul DeJong informed the Yankees that he is planning to opt out of his minor league deal by the end of the month if he is not promoted to the big leagues, The Post’s Jon Heyman reported Monday.

The veteran infielder has hit .213 with a .900 OPS and six home runs in 22 games with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

But barring an injury at the big league level — especially with Volpe on the verge of returning from the injured list — the Yankees are unlikely to call DeJong up.

Which team would you rather have going forward?

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - APRIL 17: Bo Bichette #19 and manager Carlos Mendoza #64 of the New York Mets lookon prior to the game against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on April 17, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hey, 13-15… that’s… not so bad, right? The past decade or so of Giants Baseball has — except for that one time — basically conditioned us to expect and embrace mediocrity and here we are, paired again with a familiar friend. That’s actually preferrable to the vibes — nay, the objective reality — that followed the first week of the season, when it looked like everyone in the organization was in over his head. The Giants are basically playing a lot closer to expectations now and, well, even if you don’t agree with what those were heading into the season, perhaps you’d admit that it’s a far better place to be than where some other teams are right now.

In the offseason, the New York Mets drastically retooled their roster and the results have been disastrous: 9-19 with a 12-game losing streak. The Phillies basically stood pat and the results have been disastrous: 9-19 with a 10-game losing streak. The Royals tried to build off their nice 2025 with some tinkering at the margins and the results have been disastrous: 11-17 with an 8-game losing streak. The AL pennant winner Blue Jays are 12-15 and the Boston Red Sox, primed to be a top team this season, are just 11-17 and on Sunday they liquidated their entire coaching staff. Finally, the Houston Astros have far too many pitching injuries to list to go with an 11-18 record.

On the other side of surprise ledger, there are the Reds at 18-10 and the Pirates 16-12 while the Padres are not just holding strong in second place but pushing the Dodgers for the top of the NL West with their 18-9 record.

That’s 9 teams that are not where people expected them to be before the season. The Giants, though, are pretty much rolling along according to plan. For the purposes of the postseason race, would you take the Giants against this field going forward?

There are plenty of compelling reasons to answer YES:

  • Willy Adames, the notorious slow starter, is off to merely a slow-ish start.
  • Rafael Devers will almost certainly hit better than this going forward, even if that might be closer to the 10-20% better than league average range.
  • Logan Webb will almost certainly get rolling and solidify that top of the Giants rotation.
  • If I list out the bullpen, it suddenly doesn’t sound all that bad: Erik Miller, Keaton Winn, Caleb Kilian, Ryan Walker, Blade Tidwell, Matt Gage. If you want to list R**n B*r*ck* here along with that group, go right ahead, but I will not participate in such perversion.
  • Luis Arraez is hitting and fielding like an All-Star second baseman.
  • Casey Schmitt is either real, real hot, or excellent trade bait.
  • Jung Hoo Lee and Landen Roupp look like the sort of load-bearing players every good team needs. Think the 2026 versions of 2010’s Andres Torres and Jonathan Sanchez.
  • Bryce Eldridge hasn’t even been called up yet.
  • And, for that matter, neither have any of the starring prospects the Giants have going for them right now.
  • The Giants’ pitching staff is much closer to being a top 15 pitching staff than a bottom third, according to the advanced metrics. They’ve got 65 more home games to really goose those numbers and create better luck for stronger W-L results.
  • Speaking of W-L records, I had tormented you all with a couple of posts about the history of Giants teams that have started 3-7 or 8-12, and I’m here to deliver slightly better news in that regard: 13-15 teams have usually wound up okay. The 2024 squad was 80-82, sure, but the 2011 team went 86-76 and before that the 1988 team was 83-89. The worst results were in 1979 (71-91) and 1956 (67-87).

But if you remain skeptical of the Giants this season — or, really, just believe that a lot of these surprisingly bad teams will be able to turn things around just as the Giants did already in April — there are perfectly valid data points to support the position.

  • They have the fourth-most difficult schedule remaining. The only soft month (on paper, anyway) is in September.
  • The top 10 most difficult remaining schedules belong to National League teams, so, it’s going to be a tough summer no matter how you slice it. Even the Rockies might prove a challenge going forward.
  • The Giants are essentially one injury away from having a bad bullpen, a bad rotation, or a bad lineup, which puts a lot of pressure on the aforementioned prospect depth to perform at or better than the level of player they’re replacing. Sure, maybe Carson Seymour could be better than Adrian Houser, but how much better? He seems better suited as a reliever. Bryce Eldridge would almost certainly be an upgrade over Rafael Devers today, but over the rest of the season? Not sure about that. Will Bednar or Wilkin Ramos or Sam Hentges or Gregory Santos might be solid Blade Tidwell fill-ins if he gets bumped to the rotation at some point, but it’s iffy.
  • Besides, it’s highly unlikely that the field remains in their present state. Obviously, the focus here is on the Giants and who they’re competing with for a postseason spot, but just taking the notion on its face, is it likely that all of the Royals, Blue Jays, Astros or Red Sox will remain big stinking losers over the next five months? Doubtful. At least a couple of those teams will turn things around (Boston is already 2-0 with their new coaching staff). It seems unlikely that the Mets and Phillies turn around their seasons, but you know, stranger things have happened. Although, seriously, 9-19s in the first 28 games has happened 118 times in MLB history and only 7 times has one of those teams had a winning season:
    • 1925 Detroit Tigers: 81-73-2
    • 2001 Chicago White Sox: 83-79
    • 1996 Boston Red Sox: 85-77
    • 2024 Houston Astros: 88-73 (Division Champ)
    • 1974 Pittsburgh Pirates: 88-74 (Division Champ)
    • 1965 Pittsburgh Pirates: 90-72
    • 1914 Boston Braves: 94-59-5 (Won World Series)
  • Then there are the teams right there in the middle with the Giants: will the Marlins be spoilers all year long? How about the Rockies? Is the NL Central for real? All five teams have winning records. That includes the perennial losers the Pittsburgh Pirates along with the rebuilding St. Louis Cardinals.

It’s not that the field is wide open so much that there’s a lot more uncertainty in the system than we might’ve expected even at this point in the season. Last year on this exact date, the Mets were 19-9 and the Giants were leading the NL West at 19-10. Only 2 of the 5 NL Central teams had winning records. And, by the way, the Brewers, who racked up the most wins last season, were just 14-15 (they’re 14-13 today)

So, it’s still early, but the Giants have shown a bit more gumption and perseverance than some other teams with even greater expectations. The Giants have played their way back into a decent spot for competing over the next five months. They still don’t have the most talented bunch when compared to a lot of teams out there, though, so, given that, if you had to make a final decision today, would you rather be in a position of one of the other teams (who aren’t the Dodgers, Yankees, or Cubs) or roll the dice and see if the Giants really have righted the ship?

Yankees hang on to beat Rangers after Judge, Rice home runs

HOUSTON, TEXAS - APRIL 26: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees motions after hitting a solo home run in the sixth inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on April 26, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Maria Lysaker/Getty Images) | Getty Images

While the Yankees’ Monday night game in Texas was never a blowout, much of it felt like it was trending towards a fairly comfortable Bombers win. Ben Rice and Aaron Judge continued to be stalwarts in the Yankees’ lineup, each going deep to help build up a lead. Meanwhile on the mound, starter Max Fried was pretty stellar. He ended up going six innings, keeping the Rangers off the board, having allowed four hits and two walks. One of the runners he allowed even ended up the victim of one of his trademark pickoffs.

However, after Fried departed, the bullpen let things get way too close for comfort, as is they tend to do. In both the eighth and ninth innings, Texas brought the tying run to the plate. In the ninth, they even had the winning run up.

Eventually though, the bullpen got the required outs, as the Yankees picked up yet another victory on their road trip, downing the Rangers 4-2.

After getting kept off the board in the first two innings, it seemed like the Yankees had missed a chance in the third when José Caballero got caught trying to steal second for the second out of the inning. However, Trent Grisham kept the inning alive with a single that deflected off pitcher Jack Leiter and to safety. Rice and Judge then went back to back, drawing first blood on the game.

Rice’s blast tied Judge for the team lead with 10, and amusingly, the dead heat lasted only a couple moments because Judge followed with his own clout.

The following inning Jazz Chisholm Jr. got in on the action and continued his recent run with another homer.

Fried exited after six innings, as the Yankees went to the bullpen to start the seventh. That was also where the shutout ended. Camilo Doval came in and allowed a one-out solo home run to Joc Pederson for Texas’ first run of the game.

Tim Hill came in for the eighth and ran into some trouble. He issued walks to Ezequiel Duran and Josh Jung, allowing the Rangers to bring the tying run to the plate. Said tying run came up in the form of Corey Seager, who Hill got to ground out, but it was a bit of a hot shot.

With David Bednar on the hill, the ninth then got off to another scary start. Jake Burger reached on what was ruled a single to start the inning, after Chisholm got to a grounder but didn’t have much of a play on and threw wide. Pederson then seemingly also reached in not unsimilar circumstances, but Chisholm successfully threw to first on that play and on review, it turned out that the throw beat Pederson to the bag.

Bednar than came back and struck out Kyle Higashioka, but things got even closer after that.

After Josh Smith hit yet another grounder to Chisholm, the second baseman committed an error after booting it. Alejandro Osuna came up next and dinked a single into center. That scored one run and brought the potential winning run to the plate. Bednar finally managed to finish things off there, inducing a grounder to short that José Caballero safely fielded and threw to second for the final out.

With that, the Yankees bounced back from their Sunday loss and have now won nine of their last ten. They’ll try to keep that going tomorrow, when the Yankees and Rangers will continue their series tomorrow night at 8:05 pm ET. Cam Schlittler and Jacob deGrom are expected to be the starters for that one.

Box Score

Aaron Judge, Ben Rice join rare company as Yankees keep rolling with win over Rangers

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge reacts towards the dugout from second base, Image 2 shows New York Yankees players Ben Rice and Aaron Judge bump elbows after Rice's two-run home run, Image 3 shows New York Yankees pitcher Max Fried winds up to deliver to the Texas Rangers
The Yankees defeated the Rangers on Monday.

ARLINGTON, Texas — Aaron Judge is no stranger to showing up next to the all-time greats in the Yankees record book.

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Now he is bringing Ben Rice with him.

Rice and Judge crushed back-to-back homers in the third inning Monday night, joining select Yankee company and providing the jet fuel for a 4-2 win over the Rangers at Globe Life Field.

With Rice’s 10th home run of the year and Judge’s 11th, they became only the second pair of Yankees teammates to each hit 10-plus home runs in the team’s first 29 games of a season, according to MLB.com’s Sarah Langs.

The other was Yogi Berra and Mickey Mantle in 1956.

Aaron Judge (99) and Ben Rice (r.) celebrate after a home run during the Yankees’ April 27 win. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

“I’m glad I don’t have to face them, let’s just put it that way,” said Max Fried, who delivered six more shutout innings. “Those are two of the best hitters in the game.”

Jazz Chisholm Jr. also homered, continuing to heat up, as the Yankees (19-10) won for the ninth time in their past 10 games.

Judge has had a few different wingmen over the years, including Giancarlo Stanton and Juan Soto, but now Rice looks like the latest as the two sluggers have been on a tear to start the season — their combined 21 home runs more than the Giants, Brewers, Mets and Red Sox each have as a team.

Judge’s long ball was just part of his big night, as he added a pair of doubles and was hit by a pitch, raising his OPS to 1.010 — which still trails Rice’s 1.191, both in the top four of the majors.

“Tremendous,” manager Aaron Boone said of the duo. “Obviously Benny’s off to an amazing start. Judgey’s a ho-hum 11 homers already. Maybe his best game of at-bats tonight, where he’s on all four times, stings two doubles, smokes the homer. It’s a pretty good combo there.”

At least for a few minutes, Rice tied Judge for the team lead in homers when he crushed a two-run shot off Jack Leiter in the third inning.

The first baseman went the other way for a 404-foot blast, showing impressive opposite-field power for his sixth home run in his past 11 games.

Judge then one-upped Rice and clobbered a 414-footer at 113 mph off the bat, landing right around where his record-setting 62nd home run did in left field here in 2022.

Aaron Judge reacts after hitting a double during the Yankees’ April 27 win. Imagn Images

“Man, [Rice’s] ball was pummeled,” Boone said. “This is a ballpark, they’ll tell you, it doesn’t yield a lot of home runs. To hit a line drive into the bullpen the other way, impressive. The only thing more impressive was the [113] breaking ball that Judgey rifled into the seats right after him.

“That was a little bit of a, ‘Hold [my] beer’ moment.”



Rice said that after Judge got back to the dugout, the three-time AL MVP joked, “I’m not going to let Benny catch me.”

“So just trying to keep him honest, keep him motivated,” Rice said with a grin. “He’s getting a little complacent, so.”

Max Fried throws a pitch during the Yankees’ April 27 win. AP

Judge said he has been most impressed by the consistency of Rice’s at-bats.

“It’s must-watch TV at this point,” Judge said. “Benny Rice has been our sparkplug all year and he’s going to continue to do that.”

An inning later, Chisholm joined the home run parade, swatting his third in the past five games — after going 23 games without one to start the year — to put the Yankees ahead 4-0, marking the third time in the last four games that the Yankees hit at least three home runs.

That was plenty of support for Fried, who did not allow a run for the fourth time in seven starts this season.

Coming off eight shutout innings against the Red Sox, Fried turned in six scoreless frames against the Rangers (14-15) in which he scattered four singles and two walks while striking out five.

He also became the fourth straight Yankees starter to record a pickoff, which has only been done one other time in franchise history.

“We worked really hard on it in spring training and we’ve been executing well so far,” Fried said. “Really proud of them and I know they’ve been taking it very seriously.”