Aaron Judge homers, Cam Schlittler dominates as Yankees blank Giants, 3-0

Cam Schlittler shoved in his first start of the 2026 season while Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton left the yard as the Yankees defeated the Giants, 3-0, on Friday afternoon in San Francisco.

It's the 60th time Judge and Stanton homered in the same game. 

After Max Fried and the bullpen blanked the Giants in Wednesday's opener, the Yankees had an encore. Through two games, Yankees pitching has allowed zero runs on just four hits.

Here are the takeaways...

-Schlittler was on his game early, getting two strikeouts in the first inning, including getting Rafael Devers looking -- thanks to a successful ABS challenge by the Yanks. Schlittler would continue to keep the Giants lineup off balance with his impressive pitch mix, even striking out four consecutive batters at one point.

His only mistake came in the second when Heliot Ramos doubled off of him. That would be all the Giants would get on Schlittler, who finished with eight strikeouts across 5.1 innings. He got 13 whiffs, most coming from his four-seamer, which averaged 98.5 mph.

Schlittler wasn't stretched out in camp because a strained oblique set him back, so he only threw 68 pitches (49 strikes). His limit was at 70 pitches. 

-Manager Aaron Boone used a right-handed heavy lineup on Friday as the Yankees were going up against the southpaw Robbie Ray. Ray is the only lefty starter they expect to see over the next week, so he felt it was a good chance to get Paul Goldschmidt, Amed Rosario and Randal Grichuk in the starting lineup. However, the former Cy Young winner got the top of the order in order to start the game and wiggled out of trouble in the second after Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Jose Caballero singled with two outs.

Ray mowed down the Yankees lineup until the sixth. Goldschmidt led off with a double that was assisted by a carom off the wall on the right field side. Then Judge entered the box for his third at-bat. Ray took care of Judge in the first two, but the two would battle. Judge got a low strike overturned using ABS and Ray battled back from 3-0 to get the full count. However, the reigning AL MVP would get the last laugh, getting around a 93 mph four-seamer on the inside part of the plate to deposit a homer over the left field wall. The blast went 405 feet. 

Ray would get one more out before he was pulled. The southpaw went 5.1 innings (89 pitches, 57 strikes), allowing two runs on five hits while striking out four. 

-Stanton, after narrowly missing an opposite-field homer earlier in the game, launched a homer of his own in the sixth. The blast went 414 feet (108 mph off the bat) off reliever Jose Butto. After getting two hits in the opener, Stanton picked up another two and finished 2-for-4.

-Judge, who went 0-for-5 with four strikeouts in the season opener, flew out in his first AB against Ray and struck out swinging after his check swing couldn't hold up on a 1-2 slider in the dirt. His third at-bat was the homer, but he then struck out looking in his fourth time to the plate. Judge finished 1-for-4 with the home run. After two games, he's struck out six times. 

As for the right-handers Boone put in the lineup, Grichuk went 0-for-2 before Trent Grisham came in the seventh innings. Rosario also went 0-for-2 before Ryan McMahon pinch-hit for him in the sixth, while Goldschmidt finished 1-for-5 but stayed in for the entire game.

-Five Yankees pitchers allowed just one hit on Saturday. After Ramos' second-inning double, Schlittler, Fernando Cruz, Tim Hill, Camilo Doval and David Bednar allowed just two baserunners (both walks) in 3.2 innings. Here's how the bullpen broke down:

  • Cruz: 0.2 IP, 1 BB
  • Hill, 1.0 IP, 2 K
  • Doval: 1.0 IP, 3 K
  • Bednar: 1.0 IP, 1 BB

Game MVP: Cam Schlittler

The Yankees were in a pitcher's duel early and Schlittler kept the Giants off the board long enough for Judge and the offense to push across some runs.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees wrap up their series in San Francisco with a Saturday game that starts at 7:15 p.m.

Will Warren will take the mound against Tyler Mahle. 

Series Preview and Friday Game Thread vs. THEM

WASHINGTON DC - August 29TH: Franzia, Chile, 5-liter box: Like Bazooka Joe chawed down on a bid wad of bubble gum and used it to filter storm water runoff shot on August 29th, 2017 in Washington DC. (Photo by Goran Kosanovic for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Friday at 7pm CT on ESPNU, Saturday at 1pm CT on SEC Network, and Sunday at 11am CT on ESPN2.

This might be the first time in 20 years that neither us, nor the Franzia Funnelers to the East are ranked. Gross. Clearly, ESPN didn’t think this would happen to both of us, as they put all three games on actual cable networks, and not just the app/SECN+.

The Knoxville Buttchuggers (NR)

‘26 Record: 18-7 (3-3 SEC). In OOC play, The Chuggers opened with a series sweep over Nicholls before the wheels came off and they lost 2 of 3 to Kent State. They also lost to UCLA, but just as with Clanga, losing to the #1 team is nothing to hang your head about. In that same mini-tournament, they beat Arizona State and Virginia Tech. They also took 2 of 3 from the Wright State Freds to close out OOC play as a decidedly middle of the pack SEC team.

In conference play thus far, they dropped 2 of 3 from Ugga in Athens, and then took 2 of 3 from Missourah (spits).

In short, they’re not very good. Seeing as we are also currently not very good, and we’re at home, there’s at least a chance we can take this series.

That’s about as much enthusiasm as I can whip up right now, as I’m still reeling from the news that the cavalry is never coming for our pitching staff this season:

Player to Watch: Honestly, not as many as we were accustomed to in the Tony “The Calf” Vitello era of Chuggers baseball. I’ll go with the very old corpse and horseless motor-carriage tycoon #9 Jr. 3B Henry “Detroit Zombie” Ford (.344/.400/.646 with 5 2B, 8 HR, and 25 RBI).  They’re not mashing like they used to, so you might want to pitch around the Detroit Zombie.

Anchor of Gold Tiger Beat Hottest Pitcher: #9 Fr. LHP Cam “Apple Cheeks” Appenzeller (3-0; 1.77 ERA; 0.79 WHIP). He’s a freshman reliever who’s thrown 20 & 1/3 IP, and, well, he’s not exactly giving up many hits or walks.

Andrew VU ‘04 2026 All-Name Team Nominee: Not all that many options here, either, though they do have one classic “right out of central casting” style baseball name:#27 RS So. C Stone Lawless. That’s the type of name that comes with a free bag of Big League Chew.

On the Mound

Friday @ 7:00pm on ESPNU

Vanderbilt #39 Jr. RHP Connor “The Spice” Fennell (2-1; 5.74 ERA; 12.35 K/9)
vs. THEM #21 So. RHP Tegan “And Sara” Kuhns (1-2; 4.35 ERA; 11.61 K/9)

The Lineup

See you in the comments.

Atlanta Braves vs. Kansas City Royals Game Thread: March 27 (Opening Day)

Mar 27, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Bunting hangs on the wall before a game between the Atlanta Braves and Kansas City Royals on opening day at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Somehow, I’m not only doing the game coverage for Opening Day, but also for the second game of this series.

There was a time where I used to be in game threads a lot. Those times are over, for many reasons. I’ll pop in here and there. But, just a reminder that problems (and you know what I mean) are resolved by flagging posts. If you don’t flag, nothing can happen. Be the change you want to see in the game thread.

Also, about the body of the game thread post — what do people actually want to see in here? I never have any idea. The Statcast game preview actually makes far more sense for the lineups post, but that leaves this one barren. If you have inspired ideas, tell me — but not here, because I probably won’t see it here.

Anyway, the Braves and Royals have an Opening Day duel set, with two very good lefties in Cole Ragans and Chris Sale set to battle. For more info, refer to the preview and lineups and such. I just hope both teams have fun or whatever.

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Joe Musgrove has begun throwing again

San Diego Padres starter Joe Musgrove was in the bullpen during team introductions on Opening Day. Along with the rest of the starting pitchers, Musgrove was there to support Nick Pivetta before his start. He had already done his work for the day, revealing in pre-game interviews that he has begun playing catch.

Musgrove started an exhibition game against the Great Britain World Baseball Classic team on March 4 and hasn’t appeared in a game since. He had a bullpen on March 8 and hadn’t thrown since then until this week. He revealed that an MRI was done on his repaired right elbow about two weeks ago and showed no new issues.

In his usual effort to be honest and forthcoming, Musgrove was unwilling to put any timeline on his progression to returning to pitching. He knew that what he was feeling during spring work wasn’t what he wanted his arm to feel like but kept hoping that things would improve and he would “breakthrough.” That never happened and it was decided to put his throwing program on pause, giving his arm a chance to rest and recover from the inflammation that seemed apparent.

President of baseball operations A.J. Preller seemed optimistic when speaking about Musgrove’s status:

“It’s not like he’s been down for six to eight weeks, so hopefully he can get going here,” he said Thursday in his media availability. “But we’re not going to really know until he gets through days like today, where he starts to play catch and he puts some volume on what he’s doing and he starts to build up innings and we’re seeing the bounce-back.” – Jeff Sanders, San Diego Union Tribune.

Musgrove also spoke in the clubhouse during Thursday’s media time.

He will have to progress from playing catch to bullpen sessions and then to live BP and a minor league or sim game appearance before considering building up to be able to start a Padres game. Common sense would lead one to think at least a May/June comeback if all goes well.

He emphasized that this was an expected development in his progress back from surgery but he had hoped it wouldn’t happen. His 15-day IL stint was back-dated to March 22. By not putting him on the 60-day IL it seems they are hopeful for a quicker bounce-back.

Yu Darvish goes on the Restricted List

Preller also discussed the status of Yu Darvish on Thursday. The Padres placed Darvish on the Restricted List on Wednesday. . He will not collect any salary for the 2026 season and will have limited contact with the team during this season. His desire is to rehab on his own and at his own pace but in consultation with Padres medical staff. He will have no commitment to being at Petco, travel with the team or be around the team before or after games. He wishes to break from the routine of the set rehab and spend more time with his family and handling his recovery himself.

Darvish has not announced his retirement and Preller explained that there will be a reassessment of his status as he gets further down the road in his rehab. He also stated that Darvish is on track with is rehab so far. The team has known for a long time that the money owed to Darvish this season would not be paid to him, that he intended to do what was best for the organization financially. This is not unprecedented as Darvish also went on the Restricted List in 2024 while dealing with personal issues that required him to leave the team for an extended period.

Preller explained this took some time because of the legal issues and the amount of people involved in the decision-making but the process began a long time ago when Darvish decided to pull away from baseball after his surgery last year.

The Padres also have starter Griffin Canning rehabbing from Achilles surgery and there has been no timeline announced for his return. Relievers Yuki Matsui and Jason Adam also began the season on the IL and both are retroactive to March 22.

Colorado Rockies game no. 1 thread: Kyle Freeland vs. Sandy Alcantara

Colorado Rockies v Milwaukee Brewers

It has been a busy six months since the 2025 season ended at Coors Field with a loss to the Giants, capping off the most torturous season in franchise history. 

The Rockies finished 2025 on a six-game losing streak enroute to 119 total losses on the season — a number that still doesn’t quite feel real. 

A lot can change over the winter. 

This offseason brought sweeping changes. Paul DePodesta and Josh Byrnes were brought in to reshape the front office, signaling a long-overdue investment in analytics, player development, and infrastructure. A new coaching staff followed, reinforcing what the Rockies hope is a philosophical reset from top to bottom. 

PECOTA  projects the Rockies for around 60 wins in 2026. That’s not contention, but a record of 60-102 would represent a 17-win improvement. No one is confusing this team with a miracle turnaround like the 2024 Royals, but for the first time in a long time, there’s at least a sense of direction. 

The roster looks very different. 

Over half the team has changed since last Opening Day. Kyle Karros will make his Opening Day debut, while TJ Rumfield is set for his Major League debut tonight. Overall, the roster is young — especially on the position player side, with only Brett Sullivan north of 30. The rotation is more experienced but features three new faces aiming to provide stability. 

This may be the most intriguing Opening Day in franchise history — not because of expectations, but because of what could be taking shape. And it all starts tonight at loanDepot Park in Miami.

On the mound for Colorado is veteran lefty Kyle Freeland, making his franchise-record fifth Opening Day start (2019, 2022, 2024, 2025, 2026). A Colorado native, Freeland enters his 10th season coming off a 5–17, 4.98 ERA campaign across 31 starts. He’s at his best working with tempo and generating weak contact, mixing a fastball, curveball, cutter, and sweeper to keep hitters off balance. 

Opposing him is former Cy Young Award winner  Sandy Alcantara for Miami. After returning from Tommy John surgery in 2025, the right-hander posted a 5.36 ERA over 31 starts but looked more like himself down the stretch, going 7–3 with a 3.33 ERA in his final 13 outings. He brings a balanced five-pitch mix anchored by an elite fastball. 

One thing to watch early: the offense. 

The Rockies quietly put together a strong spring, leading MLB with an .858 OPS andscoring 202 runs in 31 games. Just as encouraging, they cut down on strikeouts, finishing the spring with the 13th fewest. 

The pitching lagged behind — posting the second-highest team ERA andallowing 209 runs — but the Rockies still finished the spring with a 15-15 record. For a team coming off three consecutive 100-loss seasons, that’s meaningful progress. 

The question now: do those offensive gains carry over, and can the pitching catch up? 

Now for the details… 

Game Time: 5:10 pm MDT 

How to watch: Rockies.TV

How to listen: Rockies – KOA 850 AM/94.1 FM

Follow Live: MLB Gameday 

Lineups –  

Game #1, Athletics vs. Blue Jays Game Thread

Luis Severino gets the Opening Day nod for the Athletics against the reigning American League champion Toronto Blue Jays | Dennis Lee-Imagn Images

The day we’ve all been waiting for has finally arrived. A’s Opening Day baseball is hours, minutes or just seconds away. Granted, it’s not “our” opening day at “our’ our ballpark, we’ll have to wait another week for that celebration, but it is the start of the most promising season in recent memory.

There’s a buzz around this team that I haven’t sensed in a while, and it will all get started today as the reigning American League champs host our A’s for the weekend! Let’s hope that watching the Blue Jays hoist the American League Pennant will serve as even more motivation for this young and uber-talented team to take their play to the next level.

Taking the mound for the A’s today will be Luis Severino. The 32-year-old righty hopes to improve upon a rough first season in the Kelly-green and gold where he went 8-11 with a 4.45 ERA in 162 innings. He ended last season with a definite upswing and pitched well in the World Baseball Classic (WBC) this spring, so there is reason for optimism.

Severino will go up against 35-year-old righty Kevin Gausman. He finished the year with a 10-11 record over thirty-two starts. He logged a 3.99 ERA with 189 strikeouts for the Jays.

Gausman will face off against this lineup for Mark Kotsay’s A’s tonight at the Rogers Center in Toronto:

Severino will go up against this lineup for the Jays today:

Follow the Game:
Watch:
Athletics – NBCSCA
National – MLBN

Listen:
Athletics – Talk 650 KSTE, A’s Cast

Mets' Jonah Tong goes four scoreless innings in Opening Day start for Triple-A Syracuse

One day after the Mets began their season, Jonah Tong was on the hill for Triple-A Syracuse's Opening Day as they took on the Worcester Red Sox at Polar Park.

After a bit of a bumpy first inning in which he walked two, the right-hander settled down and looked good in his four innings of work, where he allowed no runs on one hit and those two free passes. The youngster also struck out four, including three of the last four batters he faced, but his outing was done following 73 pitches (42 strikes).

Tong featured his usual fastball/changeup combo while also throwing in some cutters and curveballs as he continues to work on adding to and refining his repertoire. His fastball reached as high as 97 mph, but was typically around 93-95 mph.

The 22-year-old got better as the game went on, retiring the final eight batters he faced. Had it not been for a first inning that saw him throw 33 pitches, Tong would've been able to pitch deeper into the game and possibly get the win. 

Nevertheless, Tong left the game with a 2-0 lead after Jose Rojas hit a two-run homer in the fourth inning.

Gamethread I – Royals at Braves

Cole Ragans glares over his glove
SURPRISE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 19: Cole Ragans #55 of the Kansas City Royals poses for a portrait during photo day at Surprise Stadium on February 19, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Jeremy Chen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The long winter has finally ended. Baseball is back. And while we got to laugh at the misfortunes of nearly half the teams in the league yesterday – seriously, Oneil Cruz seems very badly miscast as a centerfielder – it’s finally our turn to fret about our own team’s foibles. Let’s play ball!

Today’s starter for Kansas City is Cole Ragans, getting his third straight Opening Day start. He’ll be looking for his first win in such games, though. He took the loss against Minnesota in 2024 and could only watch from the bench as Sam Long got rocked for three runs in the tenth inning against the Guardians last year. Even after a ninth-inning rally forced the extra frame to begin with.

We all know that Ragans was hurt and had a much worse ERA last year. But pretty much every backing stat we have says he actually pitched significantly better than fourth-in-Cy-Young-voting campaign in 2024 – at least, when he was able to be on the mound. Keen-eyed Royals fans should watch not just to hope he stays healthy, but to see if he can pitch similarly to how he did last season while he’s at it. If he pitches a full season the way he did last year, he could end up the runaway favorite for the 2026 Cy Young Award.

Ragans has never faced Atlanta as a member of the Royals; he pitched three innings of relief against them in 2023 as a member of the Rangers and gave up four runs. But that was a long time ago and a very different Ragans. Atlanta’s offense somewhat resembles the 2025 Royals in that it has some absolute studs – Ronald Acuña Jr, Drake Baldwin, Matt Olson, and Austin Riley – and then a bunch of guys you mostly would rather weren’t in your lineup. Former Royals Mike Yastrzemski either isn’t in the lineup or shouldn’t be thanks to his splits.

The Royals, as an organization, are very familiar with Atlanta’s starter, Chris Sale, as he pitched for the White Sox for so many years. But they haven’t actually faced him since 2023, when he was still with the Red Sox. He’s a very different pitcher now than he was then, back to being absolutely elite when he’s on the mound, and the Royals are going to have their hands full.

Lineups

The Royals’ opening day lineup includes four players who weren’t on the team at this time last year. Maikel Garcia also returns to his old home at the top of the lineup after a monster 2025 and an even better WBC performance, after being left out of the Opening Day lineup last year.

The Royals are really leaning into their platoons, at least to start the year, with Starling Marte and Lane Thomas getting starts over Kyle Isbel and Jac Caglianone, who each figure to get the majority of the playing time at their positions over the course of the season. However, you can understand letting them sit against one of the very toughest lefties in the game. They could both enter as pinch hitters later in the contest.

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

I think it probably says something less than kind that the Royals’ plan for leadoff last year now bats seventh, and their “big” offseason acquisition is batting eighth. But Lane Thomas is having a lot of faith put in him to bat third today. Still, it may be Opening Day, but it’s also only one game out of 162. So let’s try not to panic too much about what this lineup construction means or how lineups will work for the rest of the year. Looking purely at the positive, it’s nice to see Manager Matt Quatraro leaning into the platoon matchups the front office built for him. We’ll just have to see whether they and he did well enough.

Jeremy Peña to Make Season Debut on Friday

Astros All-Star shortstop Jeremy Peña will make his season debut on Friday against the Los Angeles Angels after missing Opening Day due to his recovery from a fractured right index finger.

Peña suffered the injury playing for the Dominican Republic in an exhibition game leading up to the World Baseball Classic. He was healthy enough to be included on the Astros’ Opening Day roster and spent Thursday facing live pitching with the Astros Triple-A affiliate in Sugar Land, TX. 

“He feels good. He’s excited to be back in the lineup. We’re all excited to have him back in the lineup,” Astros manager Joe Espada said.

Espada said Peña’s availability for Saturday’s game will hinge on how he feels after Friday’s game. Peña hit a home run while playing in Tuesday’s exhibition against Sugar Land at Daikin Park.

Peña, 28, finished last season batting .304 with 17 home runs and 62 RBI in 125 games with 20 stolen bases. He was selected to his first All-Star Game and finished 10th in American League MVP voting.

2026 Charlotte Knights preview

With arms and bats more promising than recent seasons, the Charlotte Knights are poised for a winning record in 2026. | Charlotte Knights

Welcome back to the Charlotte Knights’ redemption season. Last season didn’t go as expected, as the Knights finished 65-85, the fourth-worst record in the International League East. Despite spending time early in the season with a winning record and flirting with .500 for a while, the club ultimately struggled because the bullpen frequently gave up games, and the bats were streakier than Midwest weather in the spring. Fortunately, the Knights finally appear to be sporting some top-notch talent this year.


Starting Pitching
The Knights rotation looks slightly different than last year. 

After securing a Southern League title, Tanner McDougal is ready to cruise through Charlotte. His 3.26 ERA, 1.33 WHIP, and .241 allowed batting average made him a standout pitching in the farm system in 2025. But the real test is yet to come. McDougal lasted less than four innings in nearly half his starts last year, which isn’t enough in the majors. All eyes will surely be on the only new starter.

Jonathan Cannon returns to Charlotte after missing Chicago’s 26-man roster cut. He hopes to work his way back to the majors after posting a 5.82 ERA and giving up 17 home runs in 22 games. His regression from 2024 and struggles in Charlotte require he work especially hard to reclaim any role in Chicago. 

Duncan Davitt and Noah Schultz fall into a similar category of needing to prove themselves. Davitt didn’t give up the long ball as much as he couldn’t stop the bleeding. His 27 earned runs in nine starts with the Knights set a sink-or-swim expectation for him this year. Schultz is also in hot water after his leap from Double to Triple-A was a disaster. Schultz was decimated for 15 runs in his first three starts, was plagued for a month by a bum knee, and couldn’t manage to squeak out shutout appearances in his last two very short starts. 

Shane Murphy starts the season with the Knights after breaking out last year. His stunning 1.66 ERA, 24 walks, and 104 strikeouts from High-A through Triple-A went under the radar, but he was one of the best pitchers in the minors. Murphy needs reps in Triple-A before he gets the call up, and his timeline could speed up if Erick Fedde or Drew Thorpe get annihilated in April and May.

Relievers
Shifting to the bullpen, not much has changed. A few old faces will reclaim their place in the pen after pitching at least 25 innings last year for the Knights:

  • Wikelman González – 33 IP
  • Tyler Schweitzer – 50 IP
  • Chase Plymell – 52 ⅓ IP
  • Garrett Schoenle – 27 ⅔ IP

Ben Peoples, Adisyn Coffey and Zach Franklin got a taste of Triple-A last year, but struggled in the few innings they pitched.

Brandon Eisert had two appearances in Charlotte before being called up to play out the rest of the season with the Sox. He’s been relegated back to the Knights — although it could be a brief stay given Chicago embarrassed itself on Opening Day in a 14-2 loss to Milwaukee. Eisert’s 34 earned runs, 74 strikeouts, and nine holds in 72 innings aren’t keeping him off the 26-man as much as lack of space. However, he still has yet to show he isn’t a 4A reliever.

Position Players
With Korey Lee released, the Knights will rely on backstops Michael Turner, Josh Breaux and DrewRomo. With Reese McGuire signed to an MLB deal (no demotion to Triple-A in the plans) and Kyle Teel on the mend and preparing to share catching duties with Edgar Quero, it’s unlikely that any of this trio will get off of the Charlotte busses in 2026. However, Turner is the closest thing the White Sox have to an ace catcher in the system at this point.

Making our way around the horn, first base seems anyone’s guess, while there is some strong talent otherwise. A trio of middle infielders anchor the group, including Sam Antonacci, William Bergolla Jr. and Jacob Gonzalez. Gonzalez, the only one a first-rounder, is probably the odd man out and pushed to third base, as Antonacci strutted his stuff at the WBC representing team Italy and seems destined to be the first bat up in Chicago when injury calls. Like Antonacci, Bergolla impressed with his Spring Training invite. Oliver Dunn was solid at third base and could slide over to play some first. Darren Baker also had an active camp with the White Sox, and he’ll be subbing in at second base and pinch-running.

Finally, the outfield. Dustin Harris comes from the Rangers minor league system bouncing between Triple-A and the majors. While he didn’t hold his own in Texas, he slapped the ball around for Round Rock Express (.285/.369/.435, 44 walks, 41 RBIs). He should help move runners around the diamond on a team that loved to strand hitters. Dru Baker had a strong season with the Knights and has a real chance of being called up. Acquired in the Matt Thaiss trade, Baker hit a respectable .256 batting average and kept the offense. The only issue is that he is one of the few guys who can incite an offense on a whim. Jarred Kelenic takes over right field after struggling with Braves and Gwinnett Stripers. With batting averages below or just touching the Mendoza line, there are no expectations. And finally, LaMonte Wade Jr. couldn’t parlay his terrific Spring Training with the White Sox into a guaranteed deal somewhere else, so he is back to club the ball in Charlotte.

Shane Baz, Orioles reportedly close to five-year contract extension

SARASOTA, FLORIDA - MARCH 04: Shane Baz #34 of the Baltimore Orioles delivers a pitch in the first inning against the Houston Astros during a Grapefruit League spring training game at Ed Smith Stadium on March 04, 2026 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Orioles are staying busy even on the off day between Opening Day and the second game of the season. ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported on Friday afternoon that the O’s and Shane Baz are in the process of finalizing a five-year, $68 million contract extension.

That’s a serious vote of confidence in a player who has yet to even throw a regular season pitch for the Orioles and who had a bad ERA in his only full season to date as a major league starter. The team obviously believed in Baz’s breakout potential since they traded four prospects to get him, including two high draft picks from last year’s draft. Now they’ve put an even bigger sign down that they believe in Baz. I am surprised to see Mike Elias finally commit any kind of big, multi-year money to a pitcher. He really is doing things differently now.

According to Passan, the contract will buy out three years of Baz’s arbitration and two years of free agency. That suggests a deal that is replacing his already-negotiated 2026 salary of $3.5 million; Baz had been set to become a free agent after the 2028 season, three full seasons (minus one day) from now. The Orioles will now control his rights through the 2030 season.

The overall average annual value of the contract is $13.6 million. The structure of the near-final contract has not been reported yet. Extensions like this typically guarantee the player a bit more than they might have made through their arbitration years while paying them a bit less than they might have made if they had hit free agency on a good trajectory. MLB Trade Rumors reported that the contract breakdown is a $4 million signing bonus plus $1 million salary for 2026, $7 million for 2027, $10 million for 2028, then $21 million and $25 million over the two free agent years that were bought out.

That’s a serious chunk of change. It’s also a much lower amount in the total commitment compared to what it would cost to get a pitcher at the top end of free agency. Baz doesn’t have to do much to live up to the contract other than mostly stay healthy and mostly pitch at least like a #3 starting pitcher. That’s actually quite a lot to ask of his career track record, so it is really interesting that the Orioles have done this. I hope they’re right.

If Baz pitches like the Orioles are now betting, he would have been in line for somewhere between two and three times this amount guaranteed for his next contract. It’s not an awful deal for Baz, either, because he’ll hit free agency after his age 30 season. If he brings a solid-to-good track record into that, he’s still going to have a good chance to get a nice 3-4 year contract on top of what he’ll have already made at that point.

How are you feeling about this news? Who do you want to see the Orioles lock up next? Let us know in the comments below.

MLB star Alec Bohm's Midwestern calm shattered by allegations his parents stole millions from him

Philadelphia Phillies' Alec Bohm reacts to his three-run home run against the Texas Rangers in Philadelphia.
Philadelphia Phillies' Alec Bohm reacts to his three-run home run during an opening day game against the Texas Rangers on March 26, in Philadelphia. (Chris Szagola / Associated Press)

Alec Bohm grew up in Omaha and starred at Wichita State before the Philadelphia Phillies made him the third overall pick in the 2018 MLB draft. He's as Midwestern as they come.

Bohm usually doesn't stand out, even at 6-foot-5, 225 pounds, with the nickname Raffe because a teammate thought he resembled a giraffe. He has retained the stereotypical Midwestern qualities of humility and consistency, fitting in well with veteran Phillies stars Bryce Harper, Trea Turner and Kyle Schwarber.

Beneath the surface, however, Bohm has faced obstacles and oddities, including a frightening elbow infection and a viral social media post touting his generosity that was untrue.

Yet nothing compares to the news that he sued his parents this week on the eve of opening day, accusing them of draining staggering amounts of his money from four financial accounts they created.

The lawsuit describes deceptive financial dealings by Dan and Lisa Bohm that began shortly after the Phillies paid Bohm a $5.85 million signing bonus in 2018 and continued for years. Bohm alleges that his parents used his cash from the four limited liability companies to pay their expenses.

Read more:Plaschke: Seeing double: Dodgers celebrate titles on a sparkling opening day

Through their attorney, Bohm's parents said they are "deeply saddened by the allegations" and will defend themselves.

"Mr. and Mrs. Bohm love their son very much and have always acted in his best interests, both personally and professionally, and still do so to this day," lawyer Robert Eckard said.

Bohm's lawsuit demands at least $3 million in damages and that his parents relinquish control of the accounts. He also requests that an accountant track every transaction that involved money transferred from Bohm's personal accounts to the accounts his parents controlled.

Bohm declined to comment on the lawsuit after Thursday's opening-day game in which he hit a three-run home run in a Phillies victory.

A 2024 All-Star, Bohm has batted .280 with 71 home runs in six seasons. He is making $10.2 million in 2026, his last season of arbitration, and earned an additional $20 million or so from his signing bonus and salaries in his first five seasons.

Read more:Shaikin: The signs say Uniqlo Field. You will continue to say Dodger Stadium

Bohm's lawsuit also alleges his parents used money from the Alec Bohm Foundation to pay their expenses. Dan and Lisa Bohm, who a few years ago sold their home and title insurance business in Elkhorn, Neb., to travel to their son's games in a recreational vehicle, remain listed as directors of the foundation.

According to the MLB.com "Beyond the Bell" blog, online tax documents indicated Bohm had given $675,000 to the foundation through 2022. The blog said the foundation "helped drill about a half-dozen water wells in Africa" while also assisting Nemours Children’s Health hospital in Philadelphia and Covenant House Pennsylvania, which serves runaway, homeless and trafficked youth in the Philadelphia area.

“I learned from a young age to help those less fortunate,” Bohm told MLB.com at the time. “My parents and I were often involved in local church efforts. We helped others whenever we could.”

None of those donations is listed on the foundation's website, which states that the "Alec Bohm Foundation's mission is to inspire philanthropy and create a meaningful impact in communities nationwide. We do this by cultivating generosity, strengthening nonprofits and initiatives, and engaging the community around issues elevated by Alec.

"Our investments are guided by Alec’s passions — which include high school and collegiate athletics, medical research and innovation, and the eradication of homelessness."

Read more:Puka Nacua denies woman's claim that he made antisemitic comment, but says biting her was 'horseplay'

Bohm was a late bloomer in high school, growing so fast that he required elbow surgery between his junior and senior years. A plate and screw inserted in his elbow to fix a growth plate injury became infected and required emergency treatment.

Gangly and awkward, Bohm was not drafted out of high school or offered a scholarship by Nebraska, his school of choice. He blossomed at Wichita State and by his junior year became one of the nation's top MLB prospects.

Bohm, 29, soon cemented himself as the Phillies' everyday third baseman, and he has been a consistent cog on a team that has made four consecutive postseason appearances. Still, a strange, viral Facebook post in 2025 caused a distraction.

The post on a Phillies fan page proclaimed that Bohm had donated his "entire $15.9 million bonus and sponsorship earnings to a homeless shelter in Omaha." Comments lauded Bohm for his generosity, but he explained that the post was a hoax.

Now his name is trending again, his lawsuit against his parents a startling revelation.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Ozzie Albies hits third, Eli White and Jonah Heim draw Opening Day starts

BRISTOL, TN - AUGUST 03: Eli White #36 of the Atlanta Braves is greeted by teammates Ozzie Albies #1 and Michael Harris II #23 after hitting a three-run home run during the 2025 MLB Speedway Classic presented by BulidSubmarines.com between the Atlanta Braves and the Cincinnati Reds at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday, August 3, 2025 in Bristol, Tennessee. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Hello and welcome to the Atlanta Braves Lineup, Opening Day (Night) 2026 Edition.

For your perusal this fine March evening, we have entrees such as “Jonah Heim is on this team?” and “Eli White hitting sixth.” To be fair, the Braves are making the best of their situation, but both Heim and White will likely bedevil the future version of you that tries to do the whatever-the-2036-Sporcle-equivalent is and gets stumped by the missing spots in the 2026 Opening Day lineup you try to re-encounter in your mind palace.

In any case, this lineup is largely as expected, just… kind of jarring. Ozzie Albies is hitting third because Kansas City starter Cole Ragans throws baseballs with his left hand. Among players available to the team, Steamer’s split-specific, versus-southpaws projection is the fourth-best, so hitting him third makes sense. Given the uncertainty about whether Albies is firmly in the twilight of his career or not, there’s at least a chance this makes sense.

Both of these lineups are somewhat similar in that they are basically halved into “pretty scary” and “not so scary.” The Braves’ trio of White, Mauricio Dubon, and Jonah Heim — whether pressed into service due to injury or not — is more defensively-focused than anything else; if Michael Harris II has another struggle-laden year, that trio could be a quartet. The same goes for the 6-7-8 spots in the Kansas City lineup, including acquisitions Starling Marte and Isaac Collins. Carter Jensen absolutely destroyed the ball in 69 PAs last year and may not be hitting ninth for long. (Amusingly, both teams have two catchers in the lineup.)

If we’re talking head-to-head history, well, there’s not much. Six Braves in this lineup have a combined 20 PAs against Ragans, and 12 of those come from Dubon (who actually has a .376 xwOBA / .382 wOBA in those 12 PAs, though he hasn’t faced Ragans since 2024).

There are also six Royals that have faced Chris Sale, and again, it’s overwhelmingly tilted towards one guy: Salvador Perez has faced Sale in 69 distinct PAs, and has an uremarkable .236 xwOBA / .273 wOBA. The other guys all have fewer than ten (or zero) PAs against Sale so far.

With this being Opening Day and all, both starters probably aren’t going to stick around too long. Expect to see Mike Yastrzemski come in when the Royals move to a righty reliever; the Royals will probably throw Jac Caglianone (and maybe Kyle Isbel for Lane Thomas?) in there when the Braves do the same.

New York Yankees @ San Francisco Giants: Cam Schlittler vs. Robbie Ray

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 11: Cam Schlittler #31 of the New York Yankees pitches during the fourth inning of a spring training game against the Toronto Blue Jays at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 11, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Mark Taylor/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After a dominant Opening Day performance and early rest day, the Yankees are back at it again this afternoon for the second game of their series with the Giants in San Francisco. Cam Schlittler will get the ball for the Yankees against veteran left-hander Robbie Ray as the Bombers look to keep the momentum going from the Wednesday night victory.

With Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón still on the mend, Schlittler is the Yankees’ de facto second starter behind Max Fried—an incredible step up for the young man considering the fact that he was in Somerset this time last season. Cam looked good in three spring starts, allowing just one run in 9.2 combined innings, and now he’ll give a multifaceted Giants lineup their first taste of his high-octane repertoire.

Robbie Ray revived his career with the Giants last season, putting up vintage numbers across an All-Star campaign. The 2021 AL Cy Young winner pitched to a 3.65 ERA across 182.1 innings, with his trademark high-strikeout, high-walk profile. He’s always been vulnerable to letting a village get aboard against him—and we’ll see how his command is out of the gate. But when he attacks the zone he’s among the hardest pitchers to square up. Even with a multitude of left-handed bats, the Yankees typically hit southpaws well last season. Will that trend continue in 2026?

With that in mind, lefty smasher Paul Goldschmidt enters the lineup as the leadoff man ahead of Aaron Judge, who seeks to rebound from a rare four-strikeout night on Wednesday. Cody Bellinger, who was the best left-on-left hitter in the league last year, bats third with Giancarlo Stanton cleaning up. Another platoon man bats fifth: Amed Rosario makes his season debut at third. Jazz Chisholm Jr. will hit sixth followed by José Caballero and left fielder Randal Grichuk, making his first appearance in Yankee drapery. Austin Wells will do the catching and hit ninth.

How to watch

Location: Oracle Park — San Francisco, CA

First pitch: 4:35 pm ET

TV broadcast: YES Network, NBC Sports Bay Area

Radio broadcast: WFAN 660/101.9 FM, WADO 1280

Online stream: Gotham Sports App, MLB TV (out-of-market)

For updates, follow us on BlueSkyTwitter, and Instagram, and like us on Facebook.

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

How much has the bullpen cost the Arizona Diamondbacks?

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JULY 25: Merrill Kelly #29 of the Arizona Diamondbacks warms up in the bullpen prior to the MLB game against the San Francisco Giants at Chase Field on July 25, 2022 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Kelsey Grant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This was provoked – triggered might be a better word – by paulnh’s feed post about the D-backs’ bullpen. The key conclusion was, “Since Mike Hazen has taken over, the Diamondbacks bullpen has been the second worst position in all of baseball, better only than the Pirates shortstop. That’s an even 300 positions (30 teams x 10 positions) and your D-backs bullpen ranks 299th.” As a kneejerk response, last night’s opening game of the 2026 season didn’t indicate any improvement. While Ryan Thompson and Juan Morillo looked good, and Andrew Hoffman wobbled into and out of trouble, Taylor Clarke served up batting practice. Overall bullpen ERA = 9.00. Not a great start.

This continues a trend which, frankly, we have banged on about for years. It has probably gone past dead horse levels, and is now circling dead parrot levels of obviousness. Mike Hazen has a bullpen problem. But how much has it hurt the Diamondbacks overall? To find out, I decided to look at each season from 2018-2025, and give the D-backs simply a league average bullpen. For this, I used fWAR, because Fangraphs allows easy splitting out of starting and relief pitching. I took the mid-point between the 15th- and 16th-ranked bullpens as the average, and saw how many more wins than the actual D-backs bullpen that would have given the team.

The chart above shows the math. But those averse to such things can focus on the final two columns, which show the actual wins for the Diamondbacks and the “ABP wins”. That is the wins Arizona would have had, with an Average BullPen. Now, there are some season it wouldn’t have made a difference. The biggest bump comes in 2021, when our bullpen was five wins below average. However, that would only have given the D-backs a record of 57-105. They would still have had the second pick in the draft the following season, so an average bullpen that year really would not have moved the needle at all.

The same goes for all the seasons through 2022. In 2018, the last wild-card went to the Colorado Rockies who won 91 games, so Arizona would still have been well short. Of course, back in those days, there were only two wild-card teams, so the bar was higher. But a third wild-card team would have been the Braves at 90 wins. No difference. In 2023, the D-backs would still have had a wild-card spot. Though the extra two wins would have made the last week or so considerably less nerve-wracking – or “exciting”, if you prefer. It would have bumped them above the Marlins to face the Phillies in the first round. Would we have beaten them in five? We didn’t in the first five games of the NLCS…

But it’s 2024 and 2025 where the bullpen really hurt the Diamondbacks, and that’s perhaps why we have focused on it so much over the past couple of years. In 2024, the Arizona bullpen was the closest to mediocrity it has been since 2019, just a win and a half below average. But considering the team ended up on the sticky end of a three-way tie for the last two spots… Those 1.5 wins would have propelled the D-backs from the outside of the dance to the second wild-card position, and a series against the Padres. Who knows what might have happened? Could hardly have done worse than Atlanta, who trailed at the end of 17 of the 18 innings played against San Diego.

Although the D-backs were worse in 2025, so was the post-season standard. The Mets got in with just 83 wins, three more than the Diamondbacks. With our bullpen 3.7 wins below average, we would have been rounded into the final wild-card spot based on ABP victories. [Three wins would have led to another three-way tie between New York, Arizona and Cincinnatti. I do not have time to go down the rabbit-hole of that hypothetical scenario, especially since we split the season series against the Mets!] We’d have replaced the Reds against the Dodgers. Again, we could hardly have done worse, as Cincinnati conceded eighteen runs over two games.

Based on the above, it’s fair to think that, with merely an average bullpen, the D-backs could have gone to the postseason in three consecutive seasons. That’s something the team has never managed to do. Let’s hope this is not another article about our relievers I need to start bringing out every winter.