Martín Pérez returns to Braves on a minor league deal

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 31: Martín Pérez #33 of the Atlanta Braves pitches in the fifth inning during the game against the Athletics at Truist Park on March 31, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Jack Casey/Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ah, the veteran DFA process for a player without minor league options has come and gone full circle. In the case of Martín Pérez and the Braves, this situation felt like it went from “Huh? He got DFA’d?” to “Okay, maybe he’ll go through the entire waiver wire and not get claimed” to “Oh. He didn’t get claimed but he’s not going to Gwinnett, either. Farewell!” to “Ah, he just signed another minor league deal. He’s back.”

Indeed, Pérez is back with the Braves after having signed a minor league deal with the organization on Wednesday morning. Jon Heyman of the New York Post was the first to report the news.

If this process sounds familiar, it’s because we saw it play out a bunch of times with Jesse Chavez near the end of his career. I’m not saying that Martín Pérez is the new Coach Hat Man around here but it’s at least good to know that he’ll be sticking around in the minors for the time being. Pérez was pretty effective as a fifth starter for the Braves as he produced an ERA of 3.14 and a FIP of 4.07 across 14.1 innings of work and three appearances. Those numbers aren’t spectacular but for a fifth starter, that is perfectly fine.

For the time being, it seems like he’ll be staying active at Gwinnett while serving as organizational depth in case the Braves need him for a start or two — then he’ll either pitch his way into staying in the rotation or we’ll just have to do this merry-go-round all over again at some point down the road. We’ll see what happens.

Good Morning San Diego: Padres keep winning; Nick Pivetta lands on IL

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 14: Fernando Tatis Jr. #23 congratulates Jackson Merrill #3 after he scores on an RBI single hit by Xander Bogaerts #2 of the San Diego Padres during the third inning of a game at Petco Park on April 14, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Diego Padres improved to 11-6 on the season with their sixth consecutive win last night. The Padres combined a solid start from Michael King with just enough offense off Seattle Mariners starter Bryan Woo to take the first game of the three-game series, 4-1. Xander Bogaerts drove in three of the four runs scored for San Diego and finished the night with three hits. Jackson Merrill also logged three hits in the game. King allowed just one run over six innings, and the bullpen trio of Adrian Morejon, Jason Adam and Mason Miller secured the win. The start from King was good to see after Padres fans learned prior to the start of the game that Nick Pivetta was going to the 15-day IL with elbow inflammation. The move allowed San Diego to bring Matt Waldron up from Triple-A El Paso and he was joined by Alek Jacob who also joined the MLB club. The Padres will look to continue their winning ways in the second game of the series against the Mariners today at 6:40 p.m.

Padres News:

  • Mason Miller has been the most dominant pitcher in the game since he joined the Padres at the trade deadline a season ago. Cheri Bell of Gaslamp Ball points to some minor changes to his mechanics that have allowed him to be even more effective this season.
  • Craig Stammen has had an interesting start to his managerial career with the Padres. He has shown he is not afraid to change the lineup, to give veterans days off or to play his superstar right fielder at second base. Tom Krasovic of the San Diego Union-Tribune says that is because Stammen is not managing scared.

Baseball News:

  • Yoshinobu Yamamoto allowed a leadoff homerun to start the game against the New York Mets, but then settled in and shutdown the Mets offense to lead the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 2-1 win.
  • Dominic Smith hit a walk-off home run to help the Atlanta Braves earn a win earlier in the season and he was the hero again on Tuesday with a three-run double to help the Braves complete a comeback win over the Miami Marlins.

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: Twins shut out Red Sox, Astros snap eight-game losing streak

Apr 14, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Sonny Gray (54) looks on after a bulk is called on himself against the Minnesota Twins in the first inning at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images | Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

Welp, just when it seemed like the Yankees bats were waking up with their 11-10 walk-off win in the series opener against the Angels, they immediately went back to sleep scoring just one run in a listless middle-game loss. It never helps when your starting pitcher gives up back-to-back-to-back home runs in the first inning, but the offense has yet to score a run for Ryan Weathers in any of his four starts.

It was a full day of action around the league, so let’s see how the games involving the Yankees’ AL rivals shook out.

Minnesota Twins (11-7) 6, Boston Red Sox (6-11) 0

A day after Garrett Crochet got rocked in his worst start with the Red Sox, the Twins again thoroughly outclassed their opponents to continue their surprisingly hot start to the season. This time it was Mick Abel — headliner in the trade that netted the Phillies closer Jhoan Duran at last year’s Deadline — and Byron Buxton who stole the headlines. Abel authored the best start of his major league career, twirling seven scoreless innings allowing four hits and no walks to go along with ten strikeouts.

Buxton meanwhile was a one-man wrecking crew, going 4-for-5 with a pair of solo home runs. The first was to lead off the third — a 401-foot moonshot to left — followed by a mammoth 438-foot missile to left-center in the sixth.

The Twins tagged Sonny Gray for five runs on nine hits in four innings. Brooks Lee also left the yard to lead off the fourth, and three batters later Trevor Larnach drove in a pair with a single.

Toronto Blue Jays (7-9) 9, Milwaukee Brewers (8-8) 7

What looked like a pitchers’ duel pitting Kevin Gausman against the flame-throwing Jacob Misiorowski didn’t quite deliver on that billing, Gausman allowing three runs on six hits and three walks in five innings while Misiorowski allowed two runs on five hits and no walks across 5.1 innings, both striking out five. Instead, this contest was all about late-game chaos that continued into extra-innings, the Blue Jays riding clutch hitting to tie and then win the game.

Jake Bauers opened the scoring in the fourth with a three-run blast after Brice Turang led off with a single followed by a Gary Sánchez walk. Andrés Giménez responded with a two-out solo shot an inning later, and Daulton Varsho cut the deficit to one with a solo homer of his own in the sixth. The two sides traded runs in the seventh and eighth, Sánchez crushing his fifth home run of the year only to see it canceled out by an RBI groundout from Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

That brought Toronto to the ninth trailing by a run, only for Trevor Megill to blow the save. Eloy Jiménez drew a leadoff walk, advanced to third on a Davis Schneider double, and scored the game-tying run on a single by offseason signing Kazuma Okamoto. Giménez followed with an RBI groundout and Ernie Clement extended their new-found lead to two with a single.

To their credit, the Brewers immediately fought back, leveling the score on a two-out, two-run double by ex-Yankees farmhand Brandon Lockridge. Garrett Mitchell drew a walk to load the bases, but Louis Varland entered the game and put out the fire by striking out Joey Ortiz to send the game to extras.

In the tenth, Vladito slugged a one-out double to drive home the automatic runner, Jesús Sánchez then being issued an intentional walk to set up the killer two-run double by Myles Straw. Varland remained in the game, and though he allowed a pair of two-out singles to William Contreras and Turang to draw Milwaukee within two, he struck out Sánchez to end the game, single-handedly stranding five runners in 1.1 innings.

Houston Astros (7-11) 7, Colorado Rockies (6-11) 6

The Astros’ nine-day nightmare is over, Houston snapping their eight-game losing streak with the narrowest of victories over the Rockies, who had just swept them last week. Colorado actually scored the first three runs of the game, Hunter Goodman smashing a two-out solo shot in the first and Jake McCarthy a two-out, two-run triple in the second after Jordan Beck and Kyle Karros reached on consecutive two-out singles. Christian Walker crushed a solo shot in the second to get the Astros on the board, but it was the third inning that decided the outcome of this contest.

Michael Lorenzen gave up six runs in the frame, but only one of them was earned as Willi Castro committed a pair of back-breaking errors at second on a Jose Altuve pop up and Joey Loperfido soft liner. It wasn’t the only bit of shoddy defending that prolonged the frame and allowed runs to score, Karros failing to make a throw on a fielder’s choice and Ezequiel Tovar failing to make a play on a grounder that was generously scored a single. Yordan Alvarez drove in a pair with a double and Cam Smith another on a single as the only truly clean hits of the frame.

The Rockies didn’t go down quietly, Jordan Beck adding a solo shot in the fourth and Goodman his second of the night to lead off the fifth, while a Troy Johnston RBI single in the eighth made it a one-run game. They had other opportunities to score, but Mickey Moniak popped out to strand the bases loaded in the fourth and Beck struck out with a pair on to end the game.

San Diego Padres (11-6) 4, Seattle Mariners (8-10) 1

Michael King turned in six sharp innings of one-run ball, allowing four hits and two walks against five strikeouts to gain the upper hand over Bryan Woo and his seven innings of three-run ball on eight hits and a walk. Seattle struck first, Randy Arozarena and Luke Raley reaching on a pair of one-out singles followed by a J.P. Crawford hit-by-pitch to set up a sac fly from Dominic Canzone.

San Diego responded with three runs in the third. Ramón Laureano reached on a one-out triple and scored on a Fernando Tatis Jr. single. Jackson Merrill then singled and stole second to put a pair in scoring position, Xander Bogaerts cashing them both in with a bloop single to center.

Bogaerts drove in his third run of the contest in the eighth with a single after Merrill led off with a double. Mason Miller extended his scoreless streak to eight games to open the season, locking down what is already his fifth save.

Other Games

Detroit Tigers (8-9) 2, Kansas City Royals (7-10) 1

Cole Ragans an Framber Valdez put on a show, the former tossing six scoreless innings allowing one hit and four walks while the latter went seven innings, allowing a run on three hits and two walks. Kansas City held a 1-0 lead for most of the game, singles by Salvador Perez and Starling Marte and a Jonathan India walk loading the bases in the second to set up a Carter Jensen RBI ground out. But then Detroit finally broke through in the eighth, scoring two off reliever Nick Mears as Zach McKinstry led off with a double, rookie phenom Kevin McGonigle drew a walk, and Dillon Dingler drove them both home with a double.

St. Louis Cardinals (9-8) 6, Cleveland Guardians (10-8) 5

The start of this game was all about the solo home run, José Ramírez and Daniel Schneemann leaving the yard in the first and second only to have them canceled out by Iván Herrera in the first and JJ Wetherholt in the third. The rookie Wetherholt looks like the real deal, adding a two-run blast in the eighth after Cleveland scored three in the top-half of the frame on an RBI double by George Valera and two-run double by Angel Martínez. Cleveland closer Cade Smith was the most valuable reliever in each of the last two seasons, but he has struggled to start 2026. He came within one out of locking down the save, but a fielding error by second baseman Juan Brito on a Masyn Wynn grounder kept the inning alive for Yohel Pozo to send the game to extras with an RBI double. After the Guardians went down in order in the top of the tenth, Tim Herrin uncorked a first-pitch wild pitch to allow the automatic runner to advance to third, and on the next pitch Nathan Church walked it off with a sac fly.

Braves Minor League Recap: Didier Fuentes struggles early but bounces back

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 29: Didier Fuentes #72 of the Atlanta Braves pitches in the ninth inning during the game against the Kansas City Royals at Truist Park on March 29, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Matthew Grimes Jr./Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The story of Tuesday had to be a rough first inning for Atlanta Braves top prospect Didier Fuentes. More importantly the way he bounced back in a big way after facing that adversity to give Gwinnett seven solid innings. We also saw Sean Murphy start his rehab assignment, Aiven Cabral pitch a gem, and Herick Hernandez continued to make hitters struggle to make contact.

Memphis Redbirds 4, Gwinnett Stripers 3

  • Brett Wisely, 2B: 2-4, HR, 2B, R, RBI
  • Jim Jarvis, SS: 1-3, BB, R, RBI, 2 SB
  • DaShawn Keirsey Jr., CF: 2-4, 2B, R
  • Didier Fuentes, SP: 7 IP, 5 H, 4 R, 3 ER, 1 BB, 5 K

Box Score

Statcast

Memphis scored four in the first and the Stripers were in comeback mode for the rest of the night, before falling just short at 4-3. It was Didier Fuentes’ night, which means he struggled out of the gate. He allowed those four first inning runs, though only three were earned, including a homer. However he settled down and went six additional innings without allowing a run. He allowed just three hits and no walks over his final six innings and picked up a total of five strikeouts on 13 whiffs. This ability to bounce back from adversity is definitely a plus for the talented young prospect, especially while facing a good lineup featuring a number of Cardinals prospects. Anderson Pilar pitched the eighth and didn’t allow a base runner, as the Stripers only needed two arms on Tuesday.

Once again Jim Jarvis stayed hot, but the story for the Striper lineup was actually his double play partner. Second baseman Brett Wisely was two for four with a homer and double, picking up a run scored and one batted in in the process.

Jarvis reached base multiple times again, going one for three with a walk, two steals, a run scored, and one batted in. Center fielder DaShawn Keirsey Jr. also had a multi-hit game, going two for four with a double, and scoring one of the Stripers runs. The only other hit was a Jair Camargo single.

Biloxi Shuckers 4, Columbus Clingstones 2

  • Lizandro Espinoza, CF: 2-3, HR, BB, R, RBI, SB
  • David McCabe, DH: 1-3, BB, R
  • Herick Hernandez, SP: 4 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 0 ER, 4 BB, 7 K

Box Score

The Herick Hernandez experience was on in this one. Hernandez mixed making guys swing and miss and missing with his command as he threw 46 of his 81 pitches for strikes, picking up four walks and seven strikeouts on 13 whiffs. Hernandez, who allowed a homer, was charged with three runs – though none of those were earned. Luis Vargas was next and allowed the fourth run to score during his inning and two thirds. Blayne Enlow pitched a scoreless inning and a third, while Blane Abeyta and Ryan Bourassa each threw a scoreless frame to complete things from the pitching side.

Columbus struggled to get the offense going in this one, which made this game feel like it was more out of reach than the final 4-2 score indicates. As a team they managed just three hits, from only two players, plus five walks. Lizandro Espinoza and David McCabe essentially were the offense. Espinoza homered, singled, walked, stole a base, scored a run, and batted one in as he reached base three times in his four trips to the dish.

McCabe singled, walked, and scored a run. Those two accounted for all of the Columbus hits and 40% of the walks, with Archer Brookman, Jordan Groshans, and Luke Waddell each having a walk as well.

Jersey Shore BlueClaws 12, Rome Emperors 1

  • Isaiah Drake, LF: 1-4, R
  • Owen Carey, RF: 1-3, BB, RBI
  • Colby Jones, 3B: 1-4, 2B
  • Jeremy Reyes, SP: 3.1 IP, 7 H, 4 R, 2 BB 4 K

Box Score

This one was over early on, as Jersey Shore struck for two in the first and never looked back on their way to what looked like a 12-0 shutout, before Rome was able to punch in a run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth. Jeremy Reyes started for Rome and lasted just three and a third, allowing four runs on seven hits and a pair of walks. On the positive side he had four strikeouts and eight whiffs. David Rodriguez got the next inning and two thirds, allowing two runs (one earned), before Jacob Wallace went a scoreless frame – the lone Rome pitcher not to have anyone score on him last night. The game broke open when Trent Buchanan came in for a third of an inning and gave up four runs. The night was finished off by Logan Samuels allowing an unearned run in an inning and two third and finally Jacob Kroger allowing a run in his inning of work.

The offense never got started for the Emperors, as they scored their lone run with one out to go in the game after totaling just three hits in the game. Isaiah Drake, who scored the only run, Colby Jones, who had a double for the lone extra base hit, and Owen Carey, who also walked and batted in the run, were the three players to record hits. John Gil, Cody Miller, and Mason Guerra each joined Carey in drawing walks. A rehabbing Sean Murphy was hitless in two at bats, with one strikeout, before being removed from the game – something normal for rehabbing players in the Braves system.

Augusta GreenJackets 4, Fayetteville Wood Peckers 2

  • Tate Southisene, 2B: 0-3, BB, R, RBI, 2 SB
  • Nick Montgomery, C: 2-4, 2B, R
  • Aiven Cabral, SP: 6 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 8 K
  • Styven Paez, RP: 1.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 2 K

Box Score

Aiven Cabral turned in a great start in this one. A late pick from Mike Glavine’s Northeastern squad last team, Cabral allowed a run on four hits and two walks over six innings for a quality start. Cabral struck out eight and picked up 14 whiffs in the process.

Styven Paez relieved Cabral and in his inning and two thirds, he didn’t allow a hit or run, though walked two and picked up a pair of strikeouts on seven whiffs. Jaylen Paden went the final inning and a third for the save, though the undrafted free agent out of Georgia Tech did allow a solo homer in the ninth inning.

The story of the Augusta offense was a pair of recent high draft picks who struggled here last year, but are off to strong starts this year. Catcher Nick Montgomery, an overslot fifth rounder from 2024, was two for four with a double and a run, as he is looking far more advanced with both the bat and behind the plate than he looked just last year. Last year’s first round pick, Tate Southisene, was hitless in three at bats, but walked, scored a run, batted one in, and also stole two bases. Southisene continues to look great following a big week for himself last week. Luis Guanipa and Alex Lodise were each hitless in four at bats, with each picking up a pair of strikeouts. The recently activated Juan Mateo had a single in four at bats, and came home to score a run.

Mariners News: Rob Refsnyder, Julio Rodríguez, and Craig Albernaz

Apr 5, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Baltimore Orioles manager Craig Albernaz (55) argues with home plate umpire James Jean (61) after being ejected from the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the third inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Good morning everyone! Happy Jackie Robinson Day. Today, players around the sport will wear the number 42 in honor of one of the game’s greatest players and bravest men to take the field.

Yesterday, the Mariners fell to the Padres 4-1 in the first of a three-game set. They’ll look to get back in the win column this evening with Emerson Hancock taking the mound.

If you’re local to the Seattle area, don’t forget to join the Lookout Landing community at the Mariners watch party tomorrow, taking place at The Rebel in Wallingford!

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

  • Orioles manager Craig Albernaz suffered at least seven fractures in his cheek and a broken jaw when he was hit in the face by a line drive during Monday’s game against the Diamondbacks.
  • MLB players are just like us, using group chats to communicate with one another. Andy McCullough at The Athletic dove into how players use modern modes of communication to speak to one another, and how trades impact the group chat dynamic. ($)
  • The Penn Museum has announced that former Phillies reliever Brad Lidge is joining their Board of Advisors.
  • It sounds like Astros starter Tatsuya Imai is struggling with the adjustment to American baseball.

A Pod of Their Own: Different year, different players, same problems

Welcome back to A Pod of Their Own, an all-women led Home Run Applesauce podcast where we talk all things Mets, social justice issues in baseball, and normalize female voices in the sports podcasting space. 

This week, we begin by discussing the Mets’ current losing streak and evaluate our level of concern about the offense, which has been struggling mightily during this stretch.

Next, we talk about how nobody (except the Dodgers) really looks all that formidable across the league. We also highlight two excellent pieces of baseball reporting from the past week: a piece by Alden Gonzalez of ESPN about the tragic death of a Dominican teenager at the hands of a corrupt system and a story by Sam Blum at The Athletic about corruption of a different stripe—a sham frozen yogurt company that managed to scam the Angels and Diamondbacks out of millions of dollars.

Finally, we wrap things up with Walk-off Wins, where each of us talks about what’s making us happy this week, baseball-related or otherwise. 

You can listen or subscribe to all of our wonderful Home Run Applesauce podcasts through Apple Podcasts, where we encourage you to leave a review if you enjoy the show. It really helps! And you can find us on the Stitcher app, Spotify, or listen wherever you get podcasts. You can also support our work by subscribing to our Patreon, which will get you bonus episodes, access to our Discord server, livestream experiences, an exclusive monthly playlist, and more!

You can follow A Pod of Their Own on Twitter, Instagram, and Bluesky (@apodoftheirown) and you can follow Home Run Applesauce on Twitter and Instagram (@HRApplesauce). You can also follow our co-hosts on Twitter and Bluesky: Allison McCague (@PetitePhD), Maggie Wiggin (@maggie162), and LindaSurovich (@LindaSurovich). You can also email the show at aa.apodoftheirown@gmail.com. 

Look for A Pod of Their Own in your feeds every week and don’t forget: there’s no crying in podcasting!

Daily MLB Expert Picks & Baseball Predictions April 15

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It's a full slate of MLB matchups today, and our baseball experts have their MLB best bets ready to roll.

Check out our favorite MLB picks for April 15, priced at Polymarket — which allows baseball fans coast-to-coast to participate in the action.

MLB expert picks for today

PickOdds
Josh Inglis Josh Inglis: TOR ML-133
Neil Parker Neil Parker: PHI ML-133

Prices courtesy of Polymarket.

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Josh Inglis' expert pick: Blue Jays moneyline

Price: 57¢ (-133) at Polymarket

Betting is a beautiful thing. I hated the Blue Jays yesterday, but with a putrid Milwaukee bullpen and a starter in Chad Patrick (who is luckier than a first-timer in Vegas), Toronto should be trading at -150 with Dylan Cease on the bump. The Jays piled up seven runs on the bullpen last night, and the blown saves are stacking up for the Brewers... across multiple names. They had one of the best pitchers in baseball last night leave with a lead, and today, that lead might not exist. The Jays are hurt, but they also have one of the best bullpen ERA's in baseball over the last week.

Neil Parker's expert pick: Phillies moneyline

Price: 57¢ (-133) at Polymarket

Philadelphia lefty Jesus Luzardo's 6.23 ERA is quite misleading: His 2.82 xERA and 1.65 xFIP suggest he has been much better than that crooked number, and both his .359 BABIP and 46.5% strand rate are unsustainably bad. The Phillies also finished the 2025 season ranked fifth in wOBA against left-handed pitchers, so I’m expecting Cubs southpaw Shota Imanaga to have trouble navigating their lineup tonight. A soft schedule has inflated Imanaga's numbers to start the campaign, and the Phillies have also been unlucky, sporting the second-lowest BABIP against LHP so far in 2026.


More MLB best bets for today

PickOdds
Cardinals ML-110
Read analysis in our Guardians vs. Cardinals predictions

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

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Mets at Dodgers: How to watch on April 15, 2026

The Mets (7-11) take on the Los Angeles Dodgers (13-4) at 10:10 p.m. on ESPN. 

Here's what to know about the game and how to watch...


Mets Notes

  • Clay Holmes has been extremely effective to this point, pitching to a 1.50 ERA over his first three starts
  • Holmes left his last outing with hamstring tightness, but was deemed good to go after completing a bullpen session
  • Shohei Ohtani takes the ball for LA, and he is yet to allow a run through his first two starts
  • Bo Bichette has two RBI in five career at-bats against Ohtani
  • Francisco Lindor picked up his first homer and RBI of the season Tuesday, leading off the game with a solo shot
  • Lindor has been showing signs of life at the plate, recording hits in six of his last eight games 


Today's Lineups

METS
DODGERS

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX

XX


 

How can I watch Mets vs. Dodgers online?

To watch Mets games online via ESPN, you will need a subscription to a TV service provider or to ESPN+. This will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone browser, or via the ESPN App.

MLB Home Run Predictions Today: Best HR Prop Bets, Picks, Parlay & Odds for Wednesday, April 15

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Betting home runs can be a rollercoaster, as I have dug myself out of an 11-unit hole in two days on the backs of just two long balls. It's good to be back in the black. Wednesday looks like another great day for home runs and MLB player props

In addition to running it back with Pete Alonso and looking at a handful of Pirates batters vs. arguably the best home-run matchup in all of baseball, I'm grabbing one of baseball's pre-eminent power hitters in Yordan Alvarez at an appealing price. 

These are my favorite home run props for Wednesday, April 15.

  • UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.

Best MLB home run props today

Player to hit a HROdds
Orioles Pete Alonso+390
Pirates Ryan O'Hearn+730
Astros Yordan Alvarez+360
💲Today's HR parlay+16763

Pete Alonso (+390)

Pete Alonso was on the card yesterday at the same price, and I’m running it back vs. a lefty, playing with house money in another strong-hitting environment. As mentioned yesterday, the Polar Bear boasts elite Blast Contact% numbers, measuring swing speed and barrels — a great indicator of home run upside.

Eduardo Rodriguez has been great since the WBC, but it’s fair to question how sustainable it is with a very low BABIP and higher expected metrics. He’s typically a fly-ball pitcher who has been keeping the ball on the ground — those long fly balls could be coming soon.

The setting checks out again in a series that’s already produced 23 runs and nine home runs. This is another +EV Alonso spot with a fair price around +330, and he’s already taken Rodriguez deep in his career.

  • Time: 12:35 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MASN, Dbacks.TV

Ryan O'Hearn (+790)

Jake Irvin might be the best arm to fade on Wednesday. He led all starters in home runs allowed and HR/9 last year and is trending that way again. Almost every Pittsburgh Pirates bat projects as +EV, but I’m landing on cleanup hitter Ryan O'Hearn at a big +730.

Oneil Cruz still projects as the top option at +390, but I want a little more meat on the bone in a matchup where Pittsburgh could leave the yard multiple times. The fair price on O’Hearn sits closer to +600, and he brings some of the best barrel rates on the team.

A round robin with O'Hearn, Cruz, and Brandon Lowe at +420 might be the best way to attack this spot, with double-digit winds and strong-hitting temperatures lining up again today.

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: SportsNet Pittsburgh, Nationals.TV

Yordan Alvarez (+360)

This could be the highest-scoring game on the slate, with a pair of questionable starters pitching in front of struggling bullpens. 

Yordan Alvarez may be facing a soft-tossing lefty in Jose Quintana, who is coming off an injury, but he has reverse splits and has crushed southpaws to a 1.094 OPS since 2024.

The Colorado Rockies bullpen was forced in early last night after just eight outs, and not every arm will be available today. Combined, these two bullpens have five losses over the last seven days and 12 on the season.

This game could get loose, and I’m happy to back the best hitter in the series at a slightly discounted price due to the lefty-lefty matchup.

  • Time: 8:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Rockies.TV, SCHN
Jinglis' 2026 Transparency Record
  • HR picks: 4-26, +1.0 units

Today’s HR parlay

OriolesPete AlonsoBet Now
+16763
Pirates Ryan O'Hearn
Astros Yordan Alvarez

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

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Guardians vs Cardinals Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Cleveland Guardians and St. Louis Cardinals wrap up a three-game set this afternoon at Busch Stadium, with the first pitch scheduled for 1:15 p.m. ET. 

With both lineups having success against today's starters, my Guardians vs. Cardinals predictions are eyeing the Over. 

Read more for my MLB picks for Wednesday, April 15. 

Who will win Guardians vs Cardinals today: Cardinals moneyline (-110)

The St. Louis Cardinals bounced back in Game 2 of this series, grabbing a 6-5 victory in extra innings after losing the opener. The Cardinals have now won four of their last five against the Cleveland Guardians, sweeping them last season. 

The NL Central club is 6-5 at home, and it's up against the struggling Slade Cecconi, who has a 5.75 ERA after surrendering 10 earned runs across three outings

Cecconi has particularly struggled away from the friendly environs of Progressive Field, allowing all of his runs on the road so far.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Cardinals starter Dustin May was better last time out, only allowing one earned run after a pair of horrible starts to begin the campaign.

Guardians vs Cardinals Over/Under pick: Over 8.5 (-115)

Neither the Cardinals nor the Guardians strike out often as a rule, with the lineups ranking 23rd and 24th, respectively, in strikeout rate this season

May improved in his most recent outing, but his ERA still sits at 9.45 through three appearances. The Guardians don't have an explosive offense, but they do make a lot of contact, with Jose Ramirez and Rookie of the Year candidate Chase DeLauter both boasting a K% below 18.

May doesn't miss many bats, but neither does Cecconi.

Cleveland's right-hander has also been prone to the home run ball, allowing three already this season after watching 24 soar over the fences in 2025. Jordan Walker could pad his already impressive breakout resume, as he's sitting in the 99th percentile or BETTER in average exit velocity, barrel rate, hard-hit rate, bat speed, and expected slug.

Two pitchers who struggle to miss bats against lineups that consistently put the bat on the ball is a recipe for the Over.

Quinn Allen's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 2-1, -1.29 units
  • Over/Under bets: 3-0, +2.67 units

Guardians vs Cardinals odds

  • Moneyline: Guardians +100 | Cardinals -104
  • Run line: Guardians +1.5 (-210) | Cardinals -1.5 (+175)
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 (-110) | Under 8.5 (-110)

Guardians vs Cardinals trend

The St. Louis Cardinals have hit the Game Total Over in 13 of their last 22 games (+4.30 Units / 18% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Guardians vs. Cardinals.

How to watch Guardians vs Cardinals and game info

LocationBusch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
DateWednesday, April 15, 2026
First pitch1:15 p.m. ET
TVMLBN
Guardians starting pitcherSlade Cecconi
(0-2, 5.74 ERA)
Cardinals starting pitcherDustin May
(1-2, 9.45 ERA)

Guardians vs Cardinals latest injuries

Guardians vs Cardinals weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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What’s one move you want the Red Sox to make right now?

Boston, MA - April 7: Boston Red Sox second baseman Marcelo Mayer and shortstop Trevor Story watch a replay in the fourth inning. The Red Sox played the Milwaukee Brewers at Fenway Park on April 7, 2026. (Photo by Barry Chin/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

Good morning! After another ugly loss last night, the Red Sox once again find themselves as the worst team in baseball. It’s still April, and no one is getting fired yet, nor do I think anyone is getting demoted. But surely the Sox need to do something, right? So what one move would you make right now to try to right the ship?

This is an easy one for me. In fact, I was griping about it well before the season started: Trevor Story and Marcelo Mayer need to switch positions on the diamond. Trevor Story has been trending downwards defensively for a while now. He finished with -9 Outs Above Average last year and consistently struggled with throws across the diamond. The Red Sox brass insisted that their proprietary metrics still deemed him as a very good defensive infielder. But even if that were the case, I would still argue that Mayer should be at short when considering the long-term goals of the team. Trevor Story is 33-years-old. He is no longer elite and won’t be a key piece of the next great Red Sox team. Mayer, hopefully, is going to be here for years to come.

Do I think that flipping Mayer and Story would save the season? Of course not. Frankly, even if they’d been flipped all season, I doubt their record today would look any different. But it’s clear to me that Mayer is currently the better shortstop, and there’s no reason not to put your best team on the field as much as you can. And when you consider the long-term implications, it’s a no-brainer.

Use this space to talk about whatever you want and, as always, be good to one another.

Game 18 Preview: Tigers look to clinch series, continue win streak vs Royals

Not too long ago, it felt like the Detroit Tigers would never win again. Following a five-game losing streak, the Motor City Kitties have now won four straight after taking the series opener from the Kansas City Royals on Tuesday night, 2-1.

AJ Hinch and Co. have a chance to get back to the .500 mark and clinch their second straight series win on Wednesday night at Comerica Park, where they are 6-1 so far this season. The lone loss came against the St. Louis Cardinals two Sundays ago, which kicked off the recent schneid that has since been snapped.

The Tigers have right-hander Jack Flaherty, who is still searching for his mojo in 2026, lined up for the start against fellow righty Seth Lugo, who has looked good so far this year. Here is a look at how they match up.

Detroit Tigers (8-9) vs. Kansas City Royals (7-10)

Time (ET): 6:40 p.m.
Place: Comerica Park, Detroit, Michigan
SB Nation Site:Royals Review
Media: Detroit SportsNetMLB.TVTigers Radio Network

Game 18: RHP Jack Flaherty (0-1, 5.14 ERA) vs. RHP Seth Lugo (1-1, 1.53 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Flaherty314.021.216.732.45.070.1
Lugo317.220.38.743.82.570.5

FLAHERTY

LUGO

Steve Cohen urges fans to 'hang in there' after seeing positives in Mets' seventh straight loss

The Mets’ frustrating stretch continues. 

New York wasted another Nolan McLean gem, as the team fell to the Dodgers for its seventh straight loss on Tuesday. 

McLean dominated one of the best offenses in baseball all night, but the Mets bats failed to follow suit, managing just one run and five baserunners against Yoshinobu Yamamoto and the LA bullpen.  

The lone run and two of the hits came off the bat of Francisco Lindor, who led off the game with a homer which accounted for his first RBI of the season. 

A much-needed strong showing from Lindor was one of a few positives team owner Steve Cohen took away from the loss, despite another frustrating result in the end. 

The Mets’ first opportunity to turn things around will come in Wednesday’s series finale.

That won’t exactly come easy, though, as they’ll have to face off with Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani, who has still yet to allow a run through two outings this season.

Despite the tall task, Lindor says the urgency is “really high” to bring this long skid to an end.

“We understand we have to win, it's a must-win,” he said Tuesday night. “We're not going to sit here and just say, 'We'll get 'em, we'll get 'em, we'll get 'em.' It's everybody here has a sense of urgency and we're all trying to win -- it’s just a matter of time, we have to get it done.”

MLB Notebook: Walks are the highest they've been this century, Pirates are surging, and more

Welcome to a new column I'm doing this season, where I take a bi-weekly look around Major League Baseball to fill you in on the league-wide trends, surging teams, and top individual performances. There will be some highlight clips, some criticisms, and some personal analysis of where I think the game is at and/or going. I hope that, if you've had a busy week or haven't been able to watch as many games as you'd like, this article can be a great way to keep up with what's happening in Major League Baseball.

So, let's stop wasting time and dive right in.

⚾️ Baseball is back on NBC: 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.

MLB: New York Mets at Milwaukee Brewers
Jorge Montanez breaks down all of the relevant injury news around the league over the last week.

Are Pitchers Struggling With Command or the ABS?

In our first edition of this column, we talked about Major League Baseball adopting an Automated Ball-Strike Challenge System that had been used in the minor leagues in previous seasons. That system has been a success so far this season, but we're still learning what the ramifications will be throughout the game. Could one of them be an uptick in walks? It's become a bit of a discussion point since the league walk rate is up considerably in the early stages of the season.

League Walk Rate

Baseball Reference3

As you can see here, when I say "up considerably," I'm not exaggerating. The league is averaging 3.78 walks per game, which would be the most since 1950. Only once this century has the league posted a walk per game rate over 3.4, so running a 3.78 mark is a stark difference. Could the ABS be part of the reason for that?

The argument seems to make sense. If players are now able to challenge balls and strikes, then they could extend at-bats that would have previously been strikeouts or earn walks on at-bats that would have previously continued. However, a look at Statcast’s detailed breakdown would seem to refute that. So far, league-wide, batters have gained 30 walks on challenges. However, catchers/pitchers have eliminated 40 walks on challenges. Now, this doesn't mean that at-bat didn't end in a walk, but it's telling us that, due to ABS challenges alone, we should actually have seen a REDUCTION in walks, so something else is going on here.

A quick glance at league-wide stats on Fangraphs also shows that the zone rate is the lowest it's been in the last five years.

zone rate

FanGraphs

It's not a major difference, but it's something to note. There are more walks because fewer pitches are being thrown in the zone, which isn't a crazy notion. However, if you also look at the league average vertical movement on Fangraphs, which is broken down by pitch type, you can see that four-seam fastballs have more "rise" or induced vertical movement (iVB) that we've seen in the last five year, but also that sliders, curves, and changeups all have more vertical break than we've seen in the last five years. Could that be due to more teams using pitch modeling and optimizing arsenals for movement? Could it be changes to the baseball (like seam height), which is allowing pitchers to get more movement but causing them to struggle with command? At this stage, it's hard to know for sure, and this may all revert to the norm, but it's something we should be monitoring.

Don’t Give Up on Talented Prospects

Perhaps the star of the early weeks of the MLB season is Jordan Walker. The former 4th-ranked prospect in baseball struggled in his first three MLB seasons. After getting his first MLB opportunity at age 21, Walker was unable to establish much consistency and was demoted to the minor leagues multiple times over the past three seasons. Even though he won't turn 24 years old until May 22nd, there was some discussion of whether or not Walker may never pan out at the highest level.

Yet, thanks to a retooling of his swing in the offseason, Walker has come out of the gates on fire, hitting .333/.394/.767 with an MLB-leading eight home runs, 15 runs scored, and 15 RBI.

While it may be too early to say this is "real," we can say with confidence that Walker is an improved hitter who is showing that he belongs as a regular at the big league level. He's not the only former top prospect who is off to a great start after being a bit of an afterthought. Chase DeLauter of the Guardians, Max Muncy of the Athletics, and Colt Keith of the Tigers are all off to strong starts after having seen their prospect shine fade in recent seasons.

Much of DeLauter's waning prospect hype was connected to injury. He still ranked high on many scouting services, but injuries had prevented him from having over 242 plate appearances in any minor league season after being drafted in the first round of the 2022 MLB Draft. There was some concern that his body may never hold up over a whole season, and while we're still crossing our fingers that it does, the 24-year-old is currently 6th in baseball in wRC+ and is hitting .300/.379/.680 with five home runs and 12 RBI.

Max Muncy may never have been an elite prospect, but he was a first-round pick in the 2021 MLB Draft and was consistently one of the top 10 prospects in the Athletics' system. Colt Keith had been ranked as the 25th prospect in baseball in 2024 by MLB Pipeline, but had two fairly average MLB seasons to begin his career and fallen out of many discussions about the better young players in the game. Now, both Muncy and Keith are among the top 50 hitters in all of baseball in wRC+.

Perhaps the lesson here is to give young players with intriguing batted ball data a bit more of a leash. Last year, Walker had a max evit velocity of 117.9 mph and one of 115.5 mph in 2024. We knew he could do damage to a baseball when he made contact. DeLauter had no regular-season MLB data before this year, but he had a 52% hard-hit rate in Triple-A last year. Muncy had a 10.1% barrel rate in 139 batted ball events last season at the MLB level, and Colt Keith pisted a 9.2% barrel rate and a 44% hard-hit rate in his 137 games last year. All of Walker, Muncy, and Keith have come into this season with faster bat speeds and more optimized swing paths, which have led to more consistently hard contact.

It's not a guarantee that prospects who produce hard contact while struggling in their early seasons will figure it out (cough - Jarred Kelenic - cough), but these four hitters are a good reminder that a little extra grace with young hitters isn't always such a bad idea.

MLB: Los Angeles Angels at Houston Astros
A surprising Padres starter and two early bat speed gainers are recommended grabs this week.

Starting Pitchers Are Adding More Pitches to Their Arsenals

In last week's article, I talked about how many pitchers were adding a secondary type of fastball (two-seamer or cutter) to go along with their four-seamer. I discussed that having multiple fastball variations allowed pitchers to adjust to the fact that hitters were now getting better at hitting higher velocity pitches and that contact on higher velocity pitches usually led to more damage. To build off of that, there is some early research to suggest that pitchers are expanding their arsenal more in general, not limited to fastballs.

The increased reliance on "pitch factories" like Driveline and Tread that use modeling to map out spin patterns and create pitches tailored to a pitcher's specific arm path and grip preferences has made it easier for pitchers and teams to create new shapes or add whole new pitches to a pitcher's mix over the course of an offseason. As I've also mentioned in a lot of my writing, pitchers who can attack both right-handed and left-handed hitters with at least three pitches tend to have more success because they can keep hitters guessing and also attack all quadrants of the strike zone with different velocities and movement patterns.

Now, pitchers are also able to build pitch mixes that are specific for both righties and lefties, which means they don't have to throw the same breaking ball to each because it's "their best one," or they don't have to throw the same fastball to each because it's their only one. They can create a deeper arsenal of pitches that is designed to fulfill a specific need against a specific type of hitter.

So far, in 2026, here are the pitches we have seen increase in usage the most across the league (remember that these are league-wide numbers, so small percentages matter a lot):

2023 Usage2024 Usage2025 Usage2026 Usage
Sinker15.5%15.5%15.7%16.6%
Change-up10.8%10.1%10.2%11.2%
Sweeper6%6.9%7.4%7.9%
Split-finger2.2%3.1%3.3%3.4%

We alluded to the increase in sinker usage above, and the increase in sweeper usage is tied to a decrease in slider usage. Pitchers have been working on using multiple variations of a slider, with the sweeper, a slower pitch with more horizontal movement, being more effective against same-handed hitters than a traditional slider, which is harder and has a tighter movement profile. Changeups are also becoming more en vogue this year as pitchers adopt a "kick-change" grip, which is a combination of a traditional changeup and a split-finger that allows the changeup to have more drastic arm-side movement and create more strikeouts. I'll likely be writing about that in more detail next time we have this column.

⚾️ Baseball is back on NBC: 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.

Team Trends

It's no surprise that the Dodgers currently have the best record in baseball at 13-4; however, what might surprise you is that not far behind them are the Pittsburgh Pirates, who are 10-7 to start the season, the fourth-best record in the National League. The Pirates made some headlines this season when they added Brandon Lowe, Marcell Ozuna, and Ryan O'Hearn. None of them were eye-popping additions, but it was the first time that the Pirates had really spent money in the offseason. Even with Ozuna not producing, the offense has been noticeably better this season. Pittsburgh ranks 7th in wRC+, 7th in batting average, 7th in runs scored, 7th in OPS, and 9th in walk rate. They are middle of the pack in hard-hit rate and ISO, so this isn't a team that's crushing the ball, but they've put together a solid offense and paired that with a young pitching staff led by Paul Skenes, Braxton Ashcraft, Bubba Chandler, and - soon - Jared Jones. With top prospect Konnor Griffin also now in the mix, this could be an exciting season in Pittsburgh.

Aside from the Pirates, we've also seen surprisingly strong starts for the Twins and Guardians, who are 11-7 and 10-8, respectively, the two best records in the American League. It may be unfair to say that the Guardians are a surprise considering they won the division last year, but, even now, FanGraphs gives them a sub-20% chance to win the division and just a 36% chance to make the playoffs. That's 9th-best in the American League. Before the season started, the Giardians also had the third-best odds to win the AL Central and were +240 to make the postseason, which suggested about a 70% chance that they'd miss the playoffs.

Meanwhile, the Twins were +500 to make the postseason at the start of the year, which makes a bit of sense considering they traded away Carlos Correa, Jhoan Duran,Eduoard Julien, and Griffin Jax and then lost Pablo Lopez for the season with an arm injury. Yet, a Twins lineup filled with players who were mostly considered afterthoughts is currently 3rd in home runs, 5th in runs scored, 5th in ISO, 6th in wRC+, and 9th in OPS. They do have the 9th-highest strikeout rate, and their pitching staff is 20th in ERA and 25th in strikeout rate, so there are some kinks in the armor, but this has been a nice start for Minnesota.

On the pitching front, it's been a surprisingly nice start for Atlanta, whose starting rotation has the third-best ERA in baseball at 3.01 through the first 95.2 innings, which is also the sixth-most innings of any starting rotation in baseball. Atlanta's rotation may be 21st in strikeout rate and 16th in walk rate, but they are 2nd in hard-hit rate allowed, 5th in WHIP, and 5th in average exit velocity allowed. Predictive metrics like xFIP and SIERA are not as convinced that this rotation is good; however, considering that Spencer Schwellenbach, Spencer Strider, AJ Smith-Shawver, Hurston Waldrep, and Joey Wentz are on the injured list, the fact that the Braves' rotation is pitching anywhere close to this well is a surprise to many people.

Individual Player Spotlights

Starting Pitcher Spotlight: Shane McClanahan, Tampa Bay Rays

It's been a long road back for McClanahan, but Tuesday's win over the White Sox marked his first win since 2023. The left-hander made his MLB debut in 2021 at 24 years old and quickly became one of the best young pitchers in baseball. He finished 6th in AL Cy Young voting in 2022, and from the time of his debut until August of 2023 (more on that below), McClanahan had the 6th-best ERA in baseball among qualified pitchers with a 3.02 mark in 404.2 innings. He was also 8th in strikeout rate, at 28%, and 8th in K-BB%, at 21%. Even the ERA predictors, like SIERA, had him as a top 10 pitcher in baseball. He began 2023 at 27 years old and seemed to be entering his prime. He was having a tremendous season, posting a 3.29 ERA, 1.18 WHIP, and 26% strikeout rate in 115 innings. Unfortunately, he felt forearm tightness in August of that season and wound up undergoing the second Tommy John surgery of his career later that month.

The surgery kept him out for the rest of the 2023 season and the entire 2024 season. He was back on the mound in March of 2025 and looked good in spring training, throwing seven shutout innings with eight strikeouts and two walks. Then, in his final spring start, he suffered a nerve injury in his triceps. While the injury wasn't expected to keep him out too long, it never quite responded to treatment the way the team hoped, and McClanahan had to have a procedure in August of 2025 to fix the nerve issue in his arm.

When McClanahan returned to the mound on March 31st this season, it was his first MLB start since August 2nd of 2023, and his win on Tuesday was his first win since June 16th of 2023. His fastball is no longer where it used to be. He's averaging 94.8 mph on it now with just 14.7 inches of Induced Vertical Break (iVB) when his four-seam fastball sat 96.8 mph in 2023 with 16.6 inches of iVB. It no longer misses as many bats, and the command of it isn't as pristine as it used to be; however, command issues are often the last thing to be fixed after extended absences. His slider has also lost some velocity and break, which has made it a less impactful swing-and-miss pitch, but his changeup remains a really strong offering that both misses bats and induces weak contact against righties. That profile still makes him a solid starting pitcher, but certainly not one with the upside he used to possess. Perhaps that version of him is still in there somewhere, but for now, just getting that first win is a moment to celebrate.

Relief Pitcher Spotlight: Mason Miller, San Diego Padres

I know most people reading this know about Mason Miller, but I just have to highlight how ridiculous he has been to start the season. The Padres closer has saved five games while allowing one hit and one walk in 8.1 innings while striking out 20 batters. 20 BATTERS! Pitching 8.1 innings means that he has gotten 25 batters out this season, and 20 of them have been via strikeout. He has faced 27 total batters this season, and he has struck out 20 of them. If you want to go back even farther, since August 6th of last year, Miller has pitched 29.2 innings, allowing five hits and walking 10 batters but striking out 62 and not allowing a single run. It's absurd. He currently has the 6th-best odds to win the NL Cy Young, and while that won't happen, that's an impressive sign of respect for a reliever.

Hitter Spotlight: Andy Pages, Los Angeles Dodgers

After his brutal postseason stretch last year, many people forgot just how good Pages had been for much of 2025. During the regular season last year, Pages hit .272/.313/.461 with 27 home runs, 86 RBI, and 14 steals in 156 games. He did that while playing above-average defense at all three outfield spots. However, in the playoffs, Pages was just 4-for-51 (.078) with an 11/0 K/BB ratio and only one extra base hit. Considering how many people were watching those games, Pages performing so poorly unfairly tainted what was a really impressive first full MLB season for the 25-year-old.

Yet, it didn't take him long to get redemption. As of Wednesday morning, Andy Pages is the best player in baseball. Literally. Yes, you can argue that this won't like - and it likely won't - but Pages, at this moment, leads all of baseball with a 1.3 Wins Above Replacement. If you want to talk about his value strictly as a hitter, he is second in baseball in wRC+, trailing only Ben Rice. Pages is hitting .417/.453/.733 with five home runs, nine runs scored, 20 RBI, and two steals. That's first in the league in RBI, first in the league in batting average, 3rd in the league in OPS, and tied for 7th in the league in home runs. For almost a month, Andy Pages has been among the best players in the game, and considering how he must have felt during last year's postseason run, that's a hell of a turnaround.

Individual Stat Leaders (4/1 - 4/14)

Hits

  1. Andy Pages - OF, Dodgers: 19 hits (.422 batting average)
  2. Drake Baldwin - C, Braves: 18 hits (.327 batting average)
  3. Jo Adell - OF, Angels: 17 hits (.340 batting average)
  4. Oneil Cruz - OF, Pirates: 17 hits (.347 batting average)
  5. CJ Abrams - SS, Nationals 17 hits (.405 batting average)

Home Runs

  1. Jordan Walker - OF, Cardinals 7 home runs
  2. CJ Abrams - SS, Nationals: 6 home runs
  3. Shohei Ohtani - DH, Dodgers: 5 home runs
  4. Mickey Moniak - OF, Rockies: 5 home runs
  5. Gunnar Henderson - OF, Orioles: 5 home runs

Steals

  1. Oneil Cruz - OF, Pirates: 7 steals
  2. Bobby Witt Jr. - SS, Royals: 7 steals
  3. Jakob Marsee - OF, Marlins: 7 steals
  4. Jose Ramirez - 3B, Guardians: 6 steals
  5. 4 players with 5 steals (Geraldo Perdomo, Jose Caballero, Elly De La Cruz, Chandler Simpson)

Strikeouts (K-BB%)

  1. Drew Ramussen, Rays: 35.9% K-BB%
  2. Cam Schlittler - Yankees: 32.8% K-BB%
  3. José Soriano, Angels: 32.7% K-BB%
  4. Tyler Glasnow, Dodgers: 27.1% K-BB%
  5. Steven Matz, Rays: 26.2% K-BB%

Saves

  1. Paul Sewald - Diamondbacks: 4 saves
  2. Emilio Pagan, Reds: 4 saves
  3. Mason Miller, Padres: 4 saves
  4. Lucas Erceg, Royals: 4 saves
  5. 8 pitchers with 3 saves

Minor league update for 4/14/26

A view of the Appomattox River from City Point in Hopewell, VA. | Kristi K. Higgins/Progress-Index.com / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Aneudys Mejia went four innings for Hickory, allowing one run, walking two and striking out five.

Paulino Santana was 1 for 3 with a walk and a stolen base. Dewar Tovar homered. Yolfran Castillo was 2 for 4. Marcos Torres had a hit and a stolen base. Daniel Flames was 3 for 3 with a walk.

Hickory box score

Hub City starter Aidan Curry allowed one run on a solo homer by former #5 overall pick Elijah Green, striking out six and walking one in five innings. Bubba Hoopi-Tuionetoa struck out one and walked one in 1.2 shutout innings.

Paxton Kling was 3 for 4 with a pair of stolen bases. Malcolm Moore homered. Chandler Pollard had a pair of hits and a stolen base.

Hub City box score

Frisco starter Josh Trentadue gave up 5 runs in 2.2 IP, striking out five and walking one. Ryan Lobus gave up a solo homer in 2.1 IP, striking out three. Eric Loomis struck out one and walked one in a scoreless inning.

Ian Moller had a pair of hits and a stolen base. Keith Jones II had three walks.

Frisco was trailing 11-8 heading into the ninth, but scored 7 runs in the top of the ninth.

Frisco box score

For Round Rock, Alexis Diaz retired the one batter he faced. Josh Sborz struck out two in a shutout inning. Michel Otanez struck out one in a scoreless inning. Gavin Collyer struck out two and walked one in a scoreless inning. Peyton Gray went two scoreless, striking out two.

Justin Foscue was 3 for 5 with a double and a homer. Alejandro Osuna had a hit, two walks and a stolen base. Cam Cauley had a hit and two walks. Aaron Zavala had a hit.

Round Rock box score