Spring Training Game Discussion for St. Louis Cardinals vs Houston Astros

WEST PALM BEACH, FL - MARCH 09: Nelson Velázquez (88) of the St. Louis Cardinals bats during a spring training game against the Houston Astros on March 09, 2026 at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The St. Louis Cardinals are barely a week away from Opening Day, but there are still more Spring Training games to complete. Today, they face off against the Houston Astros at Roger Dean Stadium. According to MLB.com, the Astros will send J.P. France to the mound while the Cardinals starter will be Kyle Leahy.

Wednesday spring training game thread: at Blue Jays, 1:07

Mar 11, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; Baltimore Orioles pitcher Albert Suarez (49) throws a pitch against the New York Yankees in the first inning during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Time is winding down for Orioles spring training. The O’s have just four days left in Florida before heading north for a pair of home-and-home exhibition games against the Nationals and then Opening Day. This afternoon the O’s play their second and final spring game against the defending AL champion Blue Jays. They won’t see them again until the end of May, two months into the regular season.

Albert Suárez is in desperate need of an effective start. Spring training stats don’t mean everything, but his have been particularly rough — a 10.80 ERA in 6.2 innings — and when you’re a roster bubble guy, that could make the difference between cracking the Opening Day roster or being left out in the cold. Suárez is on a minor league contract, so it would be easy enough for the O’s to simply stash him at Triple-A Norfolk if he doesn’t make the team out of camp. Chances are we’ll be seeing him at some point this season, so it’d be nice if he can show he’s still got something in the tank.

A lot of Orioles regulars are making the trip to Dunedin for this one, including a number of guys who will be starting on Opening Day, though not necessarily at the same positions. Pete Alonso gets a partial breather as the DH while Ryan Mountcastle plays first, and Blaze Alexander is making the start in center field. If Alexander proves himself capable as an outfielder, that’ll be a huge boon to the Orioles’ bench.

Orioles lineup:

RF Dylan Beavers
C Adley Rutschman
DH Pete Alonso
1B Ryan Mountcastle
LF Colton Cowser
CF Blaze Alexander
2B Jeremiah Jackson
3B Weston Wilson
SS José Barrero

RHP Albert Suárez

2026 season preview: 1 player, 1 question: Is Adolis García Enough of an Upgrade Over the Right Field Situation Last Year?

CLEARWATER, FLORIDA - MARCH 10: Adolis García #53 of the Philadelphia Phillies bats during the third inning of a spring training game against the New York Yankees at BayCare Ballpark on March 10, 2026 in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Mark Taylor/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Good Phight will be previewing the 2026 season by going over each position on the field. We’ll talk about the players that will occupy them, the players behind them, their strengths and weaknesses and give a few takes about how we think the season will shake out.

The bar is low for Adolis García. Nick Castellanos played in 143 games last year as the Phillies primary right fielder for most of the season. He was one of the worst players in Major League Baseball. He brought a beer into the clubhouse and didn’t like Rob Thomson.

Once the Phillies made the trade for Harrison Bader to play center field, Nick Castellanos began to lose playing time, eventually leading to Max Kepler becoming Thomson’s primary option against right handed pitchers. Over the final month of the season, Kepler played right field in 13 of the 17 games he played. He was the game one starter out there in the NLDS but moved back to left when Bader got hurt.

Overall, the Phillies right field output was 21st in fWAR and 15th in wRC+, mostly because of what Max Kepler did over the final two months of the season.

After a 39 home run campaign that helped the Texas Rangers win a title in 2023, García’s production has plummeted in his early 30s. His slugging from 2023 to 2024 dropped 108 points and dropped an additional six in 2025. He rebounded defensively last season but he was still a below-average player at the plate.

The inspiring takeaway from García is that he still has the raw physical talent for a potential rebound. While his bat speed has declined, his average exit velocity was still north of 92 mph last season with a plus hard hit rate. In spring training, García’s hard hit metrics still show a player who can hit the ball very hard.

The approach at the plate is a different question, however. He may be a vastly different defensive outfielder than Nick Castellanos but they’re quite similar at the plate. The general profile of both hitters looks very similar.

García:
.304 xwOBA
.232 xBA
.427 xSLG
Chase% 35.8
Whiff% 30.3
K% 24.7
BB% 5.1
Pull Air% 17.9
GB% 36.9

Castellanos:

.302 xwOBA
.242 xBA
.408 xSLG
Chase% 40.9
Whiff% 29.9
K% 22.6
BB% 5.4
Pull Air% 18.3
GB% 38.8

The similarities don’t stop there, García hit just .247 on four-seam fastballs last season. Castellanos? .246.

Against breaking pitches, Castellanos hit .220 with a .392 slugging. García? .212 with a .390 slugging.

If Adolis García ends up being a slightly better version of Castellanos at the plate by demonstrating more raw power while giving the Phillies at least slightly above-average defense, that’s a better player than the right field situation the club had last season. That’s what the Phillies are asking him to do.

But even in that world, is it enough of an upgrade? It’s a hard question to answer. That still might be the first place the team looks for help at the trade deadline in August.

There is also the path for a collapse in production. García is now 33 years old and has a game predicated on raw athleticism to make up for approach issues. It’s very easy to imagine a major decrease in bat speed, which leads to issues against fastballs. If he loses a bit of speed, he might go from an above-average outfielder defensively to someone below. Sapped raw power would lead to less extra base hits.

How easy is it to imagine that happening for a 33-year-old right fielder? It happened to the Phillies last year with Nick Castellanos.

When is MLB Opening Day? Why there are three of them

As Major League Baseball teams prepare for their final days of spring training in Arizona and Florida, Opening Day is lurking.

All three of them.

With a made-for-streaming standalone game and a handful of three-game series spread over four days, all 30 teams will open over a three-day period, as a handful of new national television windows debut.

The openers will also have a decidedly interleague look to them, as seven of the 15 series will match up American and National league teams. And while many teams build an off day into the second day of the season to allow for inclement weather, eight of the openers will be held in climate-controlled or warmer-weather venues.

When does the 2026 MLB season begin?

The San Francisco Giants and New York Yankees will begin the season Wednesday, March 25, with an 8:05 p.m. ET matchup broadcast exclusively on Netflix. Left-hander Max Fried will start for the Yankees, opposed by Logan Webb for the Giants, whose manager, Tony Vitello, will be making his professional debut. Vitello is the first manager to leap directly from collegiate coaching - at Tennessee - to the top spot in a big league dugout.

The Yankees and Giants are off Thursday, March 26 before concluding their series the following two days, including the debut Fox Sports national broadcast on Saturday, March 28.

When is MLB Opening Day?

Oh, you mean real, widespread Opening Day? That would be Thursday, March 26, when 22 teams will be in action, with all the trappings of the season opener: Plenty of bunting (hung from stadium facades, anyways) and a parade in Cincinnati and probably some Clydesdales in St. Louis.

The season openers on Thursday, March 26 (all times p.m. ET):

  • Pittsburgh Pirates at New York Mets, 1:15
  • Chicago White Sox at Milwaukee Brewers, 2:10
  • Washington Nationals at Chicago Cubs, 2:20
  • Minnesota Twins at Baltimore Orioles, 3:05
  • Boston Red Sox at Cincinnati Reds, 4:10
  • Los Angeles Angels at Houston Astros, 4:10
  • Detroit Tigers at San Diego Padres, 4:10
  • Tampa Bay Rays at St. Louis Cardinals, 4:15
  • Texas Rangers at Philadelphia Phillies, 4:15
  • Arizona Diamondbacks at Los Angeles Dodgers, 8:30, NBC
  • Cleveland Guardians at Seattle Mariners, 10:10

Which teams open Friday, March 27?

The Atlanta Braves (vs. Kansas City Royals), Toronto Blue Jays (vs. the Athletics) and Miami Marlins (vs. the Colorado Rockies) open Friday, March 27. All three series are of the three-game variety and these clubs opted to play three days in a row rather than use Friday as a potential weather make-up day (Miami and Toronto play in domed stadiums, anyway).

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: When is MLB Opening Day? Three days of openers, explained

MLB Spring Training Picks and Predictions for March 18: The Royals Treatment

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The World Baseball Classic is complete, and rosters will start to fill back out after Venezuela's stunning win over Team USA.

My spring training predictions and MLB picks for Wednesday, March 18, are bullish on the Kansas City Royals, despite still being a touch shorthanded from the WBC.

Spring Training predictions for March 18

PickOdds
Dodgers LAD moneyline-140
Cubs CHC moneyline+100
Royals Royals moneyline+115

Pick #1: Dodgers moneyline

Even if Shohei Ohtani is a little rusty on the mound in his spring pitching debut (he didn't pitch in the WBC), the Los Angeles Dodgers are trotting out a lineup including Freddie Freeman, Mookie Betts, Max Muncy, and Teoscar Hernandez in the heart of the order. 

San Francisco Giants starter Landen Roupp has a difficult assignment ahead of him, which is why I can't help but pounce on the Dodgers to win at -140. 

We're getting a longer number than anticipated, likely because Ohtani's and Kyle Tucker's absences from the lineup are being factored into the price. I'll take that discount, even in spring, on a Dodgers victory.

Pick #2: Cubs moneyline

This might not be a wild prediction, but Edward Cabrera will finish the season as the Chicago Cubs' best starting pitcher and will earn some down-ballot Cy Young attention. This is assuming health, of course, but he's looked strong in limited action this spring, authoring a 1.08 while only issuing one walk in 8 1/3 innings.

He gives Chicago enough of an early edge over Arizona Diamondbacks starter Merrill Kelly, who's historically been at the mercy of pitching to soft contact instead of missing bats. The Cubs rarely struck out in 2025, and even without Kyle Tucker, we can expect more of the same in 2026.

Grab the even money on Chicago winning here. It's a better number than we ought to be getting before lineups are announced.

Pick #3: Royals moneyline

Neither Bobby Witt Jr. nor World Baseball Classic MVP Maikel Garcia will be in the lineup, but that has the Kansas City Royals as +115 underdogs vs. the Texas Rangers.

I'll take that number based on the pitching matchup. Rangers right-hander Kumar Rocker may have better pure stuff than Kris Bubic, but he hasn't been overpowering opponents as much as people may have expected. Rocker has allowed 10 hits and five earned runs in just 8 1/3 innings this spring after posting a 5.74 ERA over 64 1/3 innings last summer.

The Royals were even less strikeout-prone than the Cubs last season, and even without a couple of big names, that likely won't change tonight.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
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Dodgers vs. Giants spring training game roster

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 16: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers jogs on the field prior to a Spring Training game against the Milwaukee Brewers at Camelback Ranch on March 16, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers are back at Camelback Ranch on Wednesday afternoon to face the San Francisco Giants. Shohei Ohtani pitches in a game for the first time this spring.

Lineup

Miguel Rojas 2B
Freddie Freeman 1B
Mookie Betts SS
Max Muncy 3B
Teoscar Hernández LF
Andy Pages CF
Dalton Rushing C
Santiago Espinal RF
Alex Freeland DH

Ohtani on the mound.

Other pitchers

Tanner Scott and Alex Vesia are on the schedule to pitch, which would make them the first Dodgers this spring to pitch on back-to-back days.

Blake Treinen, Will Klein, Edgardo Henriquez, and non-roster left-hander Antoine Kelly are also listed on the game roster.

Up from minor league camp are Joseilyn Gonzalez (wearing number 00), Antonio Knowles (90), Dilan Figueredo (91), and Keynan Middleton (97).

Other position players

Hyeseong Kim started the last three games, and played all nine innings Tuesday night. He’s listed on Wednesday’s game roster in reserve.

Also active are non-roster invitees Ryan Fitzgerald, Nick Senzel, Seby Zavala, and Eliézer Alfonzo.

Up from the minor league side are Keston Hiura (9), Charles Davalan (87), Jaron Elkins (88), Austin Gauthier (89), Nico Perez (92), and Samuel Muñoz (93).

Spring GameThread: Orioles @ Jays

dpatop - 03 January 2026, Brandenburg, Sieversdorf: A jay (Garrulus glandarius) throws a walnut through the air on an Aust covered in snow. The jay is a songbird from the corvid family (Corvidae). Photo: Patrick Pleul/dpa (Photo by Patrick Pleul/picture alliance via Getty Images)

After a day off, we get a Jays’ game again.

I’m mostly curious to watch Eloy Jimenez playing first. I’m thinking it is unlikely he’ll make the Jays out of spring training, but if he were to make the Jays, it would be useful if he can play more than just the corner outfield spots.

Josh Fleming (one m) gets the start. He has pitched in 80 games, 20 starts, over 5 season in the MLB, with a 4.77 ERA. A depth pitcher. He is a lefty and we likely could use some lefty reliever depth.

Today’s lineups:

Today’s Lineups

ORIOLESBLUE JAYS
Dylan Beavers – RFGeorge Springer – DH
Adley Rutschman – CDaulton Varsho – CF
Pete Alonso – DHAlejandro Kirk – C
Ryan Mountcastle – 1BAddison Barger – RF
Colton Cowser – LFKazuma Okamoto – 3B
Blaze Alexander – CFNathan Lukes – LF
Jeremiah Jackson – 2BDavis Schneider – 2B
Weston Wilson – 3BEloy Jimenez – 1B
Jose Barrero – SSLeo Jimenez – SS
Albert Suarez – RHPJosh Fleming – LHP

Blue Jays' Jose Berrios will miss start of season due to stress fracture in his elbow

DUNEDIN, Fla. — Toronto Blue Jays pitcher José Berríos won’t be ready for the start of the season after being diagnosed with a stress fracture in his right elbow.

Berríos had met with Dr. Keith Meister regarding what the Blue Jays were describing as inflammation in his elbow. Blue Jays manager John Schneider told reporters about Berríos’ diagnosis.

Berríos, 31, went 9-5 with a 4.17 ERA in 31 appearances for the Blue Jays last season. He ended the season on the injured list and didn’t pitch in the postseason as the Blue Jays made their World Series run.

Giants Reacts: Should Bryce Eldridge make the Opening Day roster?

Bryce Eldridge swinging at a pitch.
Mar 3, 2026; Scottsdale, AZ, USA; San Francisco Giants first baseman Bryce Eldridge against Team USA during a spring training game at Scottsdale Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Giants fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

When pitchers and catchers reported for Spring Training in Scottsdale more than a month ago, the biggest question facing the San Francisco Giants — other than the success and comfort of manager Tony Vitello — was whether or not top prospect Bryce Eldridge would make the Opening Day roster. And now, with the first game of the season exactly one week away, the biggest question facing the Giants remains the same: should Bryce Eldridge make the Opening Day roster?

The case in favor is extremely easy to make. Eldridge’s at-bats have been must-watch TV in the Cactus League. He has had remarkably composed and competitive at-bats, and has been absolutely scalding the ball (including a 113-mph fly ball off of Paul Skenes in the exhibition game against Team USA). He’s been a well above-average hitter in Spring Training, with an .849 OPS and a 123 wRC+. His defense at first base has been surprisingly strong, and you can make a compelling case that he’ll develop more in the Majors — where he’ll face elite pitchers with scouting reports, and get to work with Ron Washington — than he will in the Minors. And the Giants are incentivized to start the season with Eldridge on the team, due to MLB’s Prospect Promotion Incentive.

But there’s also a case against Eldridge beginning the year at Oracle Park, and instead heading to AAA Sacramento. Despite the competitive at-bats, Eldridge is still swinging and missing a lot, with a sky-high 38.8% strikeout rate (though, interestingly, his swinging strike rate is the lowest of his career). He’s doing a lot of damage when he makes contact, but the lack of contact has resulted in just a .231 batting average. And the offensive success is partially attributed to an unsustainably-high walk rate of 18.4%, nearly double his mark in the Minor Leagues last season. And having Eldridge start the year in Sacramento opens up a roster spot, which could potentially be used to keep Luis Matos or Jerar Encarnación — players who are out of options — on the team.

Either way, Eldridge will be a big part of the 2026 team regardless, but Vitello and Buster Posey have quite a decision on their hands. Unfortunately, we can’t ask them to answer the question … so we’ll ask you instead!

2026 DRaysBay Community Prospect List: Vote for No. 30

DCG's Taitn Gray crosses home plate after scoring a home run against Johnston on July 7, 2025, in Johnston. | Cody Scanlan/The Register / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Previous Winner

Taitn Gray, 1B/OF/C
18 | S/R | 6’4” | 220

The Rays 86th overall pick in 2025, Gray fell to the third round due to some concern about whether he will stick at catcher, but that buries the lead. Still just 17 at the time of the draft, Gray showed up to the Rays organization and proved his rumored power was real, running exit velocities up to 115 mph from both sides of the plate, although the left handed swing is sweeter. He has plus athleticism, which elevated his bat speed, foot speed, and fluidity — despite his size. It will be interesting to see where the Rays deploy him on defense, but it’s a great bat to dream on.

RankPlayerPositionVotesTotalPercentageLast Season
1Carson WilliamsSS142556%1
2Brody HopkinsRHP192576%8
3Jacob MeltonOF142850%NA
4Theo GillenOF142654%13
5Ty JohnsonRHP122548%15
6Daniel PierceSS132357%NA
7Jadher AreinamoINF152854%NA
8TJ NicholsRHP132846%NR
9Michael ForretRHP83324%NA
10Santiago SuarezRHP113037%16
11Anderson BritoRHP72825%NA
12Xavier Isaac1B92832%3
13Caden BodineC102540%NA
14Brendan SummerhillOF112741%NA
15Slater de BrunOF102540%NA
16Nathan FlewellingC82631%NR
17Trevor HarrisonRHP92635%10
18Jose UrbinaRHP132650%25
19Tre’ Morgan1B/LF152560%4
20Jackson BaumeisterRHP122744%12
21Aidan SmithOF172959%6
22Homer Bush Jr.OF102540%21
23Dom KeeganC102836%9
24Gary Gill HillRHP82532%11
25Brailer GuerreroOF82433%14
26Brayden Taylor2B/3B62524%2
27Adrian SantanaSS62623%NR
28Austin OvernOF72133%NA
29Taitn Gray1B/OF/C82335%NA

The trend of new acquisitions is going strong once again as draftee Gray enters the list after a new acquisition. Who will take the final official spot before honorable mention voting? For candidates, we add a top-20 prospect from last year Cooper Kinney.

Candidates

Fabricio Blanco, SS
17 | S/R | 5’11” | 161

A bat-first middle infielder, the Venezuelan is an elite prospect within the context of the international signing process, with some believing he’s the best Rays signee this off-season, despite gathering only a $1 million bonus. He can barrel up from both sides of the plate, but may settle into a right handed swing in the long term, with quick hands. He has the ability and instincts to stick at short, with a high-IQ approach and gritty demeanor.

Alex Cook, RHP
25 | 6’2” | 220
AA | 2.30 ERA, 2.29 FIP, 15.2 IP (13 G), 30.5% K, 5.1% BB

The Rays added Cook to the 40-man roster this off-season to protect him from the Rule 5 draft, despite only throwing 20 innings (if you include four appearances in the complex league) after a slow start to the season. Cook attempted to convert to starting in 2024 and succumbed to a should injury, but bounced back in the bullpen in 2025 throwing 99 mph — and he has shown up to camp continuing to pitch with confidence. He has plus control and command, with stuff that leans into his low release point, including a cut-ride fastball and two-plane slider, and an MLB average cutter to prevent platoon slit problems. He should slot into high leverage for Durham and ride the shuttle in 2026.

Maykel Coret, OF
18 | R/R | 6’4” | 187
DSL | .273/.294/.370 (115 wRC+) 188 PA, 2 HR, 15 SB, 12.8% BB, 22.3% K

Tampa Bay’s top signee from the 2025 international class, Coret reported tall and young with a lot of projection. His future depends mostly on his hit tool, with prospect evaluators divided on a player that has a long way to go, but the exit velocity (111 mph) and foot speed are plus for his age. Promisingly, after he had a hot start to his professional career, Coret saw his strikeouts elevate in July, but he got them back under control in the final month. A move to the complex league in 2026 would be aggressive.

Cooper Flemming, SS
19 | L/R | 6’3” | 190

One of the best high school bats in the 2025 draft, Flemming surprisingly fell into the Rays laps in the second round. He has a too-quiet swing that lacks the load necessary to hit for power, but he’s historically compensated for that with a high contact rate that would have rated him as first round material if his defense projected to stick. The Rays were able to convince him to forgo an education at Vanderbilt by going above slot ($2.3m, Comp-A money).

Cooper Kinney, 2B/3B
23 | L/R | 6’1” | 200
AA | .242/.299/.386 (103 wRC+) 501 PA, 13 HR, 0 SB, 7.2% BB, 25.0% K

After a bounce back year in 2024 (137+ in High-A), Kinney underwhelmed with a 103 wRC+ at Double-A. Kinney’s calling card is a pretty swing and masterful control of the strikezone, but with a higher than average injury risk. He would have been on track for a potential appearance at the MLB level, but with his performance last season he might even be ticketed back to Montgomery. Were the problems related to a nagging shoulder injury? After a 200 wRC+ April, his performance at the plate steadily declined, and Kinney hit no homeruns between July 13 and the end of September. The org played him 60 games at second base in 2026, 28 at third, and the rest at first or DH.

Victor Mesa Jr., OF
24 | L/L | 5’11” | 195
AAA (MIA) | .301/.368/.510 (136 wRC+) 171 PA, 7 HR, 4 SB, 9.9% BB, 16.4% K
MLB (MIA) | 6 H (1 HR), 5 BB, 5 K (81 wRC+) 38 PA

This Cuban power bat already made his major league debut with Miami last year after bouncing back from a spring hamstring injury, and was dealt to the Rays in February. He profiles as a fourth outfielder but has an option remaining, so the organization may send him down for regular playing time and one last chance for something more in development. If not, he’s a center field capable on defense, which goes a long way for a platoon bat. In the running for the nicest guy in baseball.

Dean Moss, OF
19 | L/R | 6’0” | 180

Signed well above slot out of the 2025 draft at No. 67 overall, Moss’s family moved from California to the Tampa Bay Area to enroll Moss at IMG, and it earned him a new-home-town selection. A jack of all trades, Moss’s hit tool shades his best thanks to plus bat speed. His swing is clean, with and the projection for his power over time is major league average. He will have competition internally to stick at center, but may get the first nod in the rookie league.

Émilien Pitre, 2B
23 | L/R | 5’11” | 185
A+ | .268/.356/.393 (122 wRC+) 524 PA, 9 HR, 14 SB, 11.6% BB, 20.4% K

The Rays 58th overall pick in 2024, Pitre has risen on draft boards through a strong performance in the Cape Cod league in 2023, but the power was a real question mark on his profile. Now given a chance to develop as a professional, he wouldn’t be the first to add muscle. His run and hit tools are plus, with a well coiled swing and solid contact in and out of zone. He’s too old to return to High-A and it be viewed as positive. His power stroke will be the key to his success in 2026.

Joe Rock, LHP
25 | 6’6” | 220
AAA | 5.21 ERA, 5.13 FIP, 96.2 IP (32 G, 15 GS), 21.1% K, 9.3% BB
MLB | 2 ER, 7 H (1 HR), 7.2 IP (3 G), 11 K, 2 BB

Rock got the call for the first time last season, riding the Durham shuttle in June and again in September after being acquired from the Rockies for former first rounder Greg Jones in an org roster shuffle ahead of the 2024 season. Rock’s calling card is a borderline double-plus slider that’s complimented by league average stuff from his sinker and change, although he’ll pop a high four-seam to keep ‘em honest. His arm action starts with a high back elbow and ends in a lower release point, and the look elevates his profile through deception. He’s most likely in a relief role.

Victor Valdez, SS
17 | R/R | 6’1” | 186

A pretty swing with a low whiff rate earned Valdez a big payday this winter — $3.5 million — with as good of a power projection as you can reasonably ask for from a a teenage bat, having been given a 25+ home run projection by Baseball America, who also praise his plus foot speed, bat speed, and control of the zone. Reports say he has ever improving lateral movements on defense, with smooth actions and a strong arm. If it all clicks, it’s a middle-of-the-order bat on the left side of the infield. At signing, the Rays gave him a comp to Francisco Lindor. It will be interesting to see if his first professional season can solidify the five tool profile.

New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox: Gerrit Cole vs. Connelly Early

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 27: Gerrit Cole #45 of the New York Yankees works out during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 27, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Surprise! Gerrit Cole is back!

Well, sort of. The Yankee ace will be pitching in today’s spring training game against the Red Sox at George M. Steinbrenner Field. But make sure you get to your TVs (or streaming devices) in time for first pitch! Cole is only scheduled to pitch one inning today—and then he will continue his preparation for a return to full action at some point in the first half of the regular season.

It feels like even longer than a full year since the last time we saw Cole pitch. While you can never be fully confident that a 35-year old coming off reconstructive elbow surgery will look like the top-flight starter he’s been over the last decade, everyone with the Yankees has said he’s aced his rehab process so far. This Grapefruit League game against Boston is just another box to check off in that process, albeit a significant one.

He’ll be opposed by a talented young lefty we last saw in last year’s Wild Card Series. Connelly Early was overshadowed by fellow rookie Cam Schlittler in Game 3, but got out to an impressive start in that ballgame before faltering in the fourth inning. Early has had a strong spring so far as he looks to secure a back-of-the-rotation spot for a Red Sox pitching staff flush with depth.

With Team USA’s defeat at the hands of Venezuela in the World Baseball Classic final last night, Aaron Judge is officially free to return to being captain of the Yankees. That said, he won’t be in today’s lineup so soon after the fact. Most of the Bomber batters who participated in earlier games of the WBC will be, though, including leadoff hitter Amed Rosario—as well as the 6-7-8 hitters in Jazz Chisholm, José Caballero, and Austin Wells. Also in the lineup today are Ben Rice, Giancarlo Stanton, and left fielder Randal Grichuk. Kenedy Corona will play in Judge’s usual right field spot and hit ninth.

The Red Sox lineup has decidedly fewer household names—Kristian Campbell is the only player who received extensive MLB time last year. But hey, that’s spring training road trips for you.

How to watch

Location: George M. Steinbrenner Field — Tampa, FL

First pitch: 1:05 pm ET

TV broadcast: YES

Radio broadcast: WFAN, WEEI

Online stream: Gotham Sports App, MLB.tv

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Braves trim Spring Breakout roster

Atlanta Braves v. Boston Red Sox

With the Spring Breakout just three days away, the Atlanta Braves have announced the finalized version of the roster that will be a part of the exhibition. It was back on March 5th that the Braves announced the full 40 man roster so let’s take a look at those that made the cut and will be a part of the exhibition.

Pitchers

  • Blane Abeyta, RHP (2025, AA: 12 K/9, 3.53 BB/9, 2.29 ERA)
  • Garrett Baumann, RHP (2025, A+: 8.55 K/9, 2.45 BB/9, 3.40 ERA)
  • Isaac Gallegos, RHP (2025, A+/AA: 8.47 K/9, 3.35 BB/9, 3.18 ERA)
  • Hayden Harris, LHP (2025, AA/AAA: 13.67 K/9. 3.29 BB/9, 0.52 ERA)
  • Herick Hernandez, LHP (2025, A+: 11.06 K/9, 5.92 BB/9, 3.57 ERA)
  • Jhancarlos Lara, RHP (2025, AA/AAA: 13.63 K/9, 8.52 BB/9, 7.73 ERA)
  • Rolddy Muñoz, RHP (2025, AA/AAA: 8.85 K/9, 4.95 BB/9, 2.85 ERA)
  • Owen Murphy, RHP (2025, CPX/A+: 10.09 K/9, 1.78 BB/9, 1.19 ERA)
  • Luis Vargas, RHP (2025, A+/AA: 12.05 K/9, 5.40 BB/9, 3.74 ERA)

Owen Murphy and Garrett Baumann are the two starting pitchers that make the list, while the other seven are relievers. There are several notable names not included in this list including the likes of JR Ritchie, and Didier Fuentes who have both pitched extremely well with the big league team. The likes of Luke Sinnard, Briggs McKenzie, Cam Caminiti, Ethan Bagwell, Landon Beidelschies, Blake Burkhalter, Drue Hackenberg, Ian Mejia, and Raudy Reyes being the other names left off the final roster. Luis Vargas, however, making the team is especially nice, after he missed a good chunk of the season last year having a tumor removed from his head.

Catchers

  • Archer Brookman (2025, A+: .230/.289/.299)
  • Colin Burgess (2025, A: .208/.277/.292)
  • Manuel Dos Passos (2025, CPX: .222/.361/.325)

The state of catching post Drake Baldwin can be seen in this grouping. Chadwick Tromp is now a regular part of the AAA/MLB team so his inclusion was not going to happen. Archer Brookman and Colin Burgess are a pair of minor league of free agents the Braves brought into the organization recently and they are at the top of the depth chart while the young Manuel Dos Passos makes the roster. Nick Montgomery not making the club is of notable note, and no Tyler Tolve is interesting. That said, catcher is clearly an area of need in the neat future for the Braves, following the graduation of Drake Baldwin.

Infielders

  • John Gil (2025, CPX/A/AA: .252/.348/.366)
  • Jim Jarvis (2025, AA/AAA: .249/.324/.347)
  • Alex Lodise (2025, A+: .252/.294/.398)
  • Cody Miller (2025, A/A+: .327/.381/.449)
  • Jose Perdomo (2025, CPX: .223/.275/.270)
  • Tate Southisene (2025, A: .219/.242/.297)
  • Dixon Williams (2025, A: .269/.395/.462)

It’s been a while since the Braves bolstered a group of positional prospects with this many tools. It will be interesting to see where each player plays as Gil, Lodise, Miller, Perdomo, and Southisene are all natural shortstops, while Dixon is a second baseman, and Jim Jarvis is more of a utility player – so who mans third and first is definitely up for debate. Two interesting non-inclusions are Lisandro Espinoza, and David McCabe.

Outfielders

  • Owen Carey (2025, A: .258/.330/.345)
  • Patrick Clohisy (2025, A+/AA: .254/.335/.346)
  • Isaiah Drake (2025, A/A+: .272/.342/.356)
  • Conor Essenburg (DNP)
  • Eric Hartman (2025, CPX/A: .240/.341/.358)
  • Diego Tornes (2025, DSL: .279/.395/.402)

Much like the infield group, this group of outfielders have some of the highest collection of tools in recent Braves history. There is plus speed with Isaiah Drake, Eric Hartman, and Diego Tornes while Diego Tornes and Conor Essenburg possess some of, if not the most notable, power in the minors. Finally, Owen Carey and Patrick Clohisy and their well rounded games make up the rest of the outfield class. The most notable absence here is OF Luis Guanipa.

MLB: MLB Draft Combine

Spring Training March 18 Game Thread: Braves vs Phillies

Feb 28, 2026; Sarasota, Florida, USA; Atlanta Braves pitcher Martin Perez (70) throws a pitch during the third inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Ed Smith Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

Welp, folks, that’s the end of the 2026 World Baseball Classic that almost all baseball fans could not only enjoy, but also feel the electric energy from the participating teams and kick off baseball season. Congrats to Ronald Acuña Jr. and team Venezuela on a phenomenal and first WBC win.


The Atlanta Braves are back to face the Philies in North Port with Martín Pérez to take the hill against Andrew Painter (not yet updated on mlb.com, but confirmed on the Phillies’ social media).

Hoping to bounce back from yesterday’s loss against the Red Sox, we’ll be set to watch the squad with Mauricio Dubón batting leadoff with more familiar faces to close out this division matchup for Spring Training.

Game Notes

Time: 1:05 ET

TV: Braves Vision

Radio: ESPN 103.7/WIFN 1340

Build Your Winning Bracket!

SB Nation’s CBB expert Mike Rutherford and resident bracketologist Chris Dobbertean will answer all your questions this week and help guide you to bracket glory! Drop in SB Nation’s March Madness Feed all week long and we’ll have both on hand! (All times ET)

MLB teams pressure WBC managers to be careful with pitchers. Venezuela pushed back

MIAMI — Venezuela manager Omar López went beyond the limit to help his nation win its first World Baseball Classic.

Major league clubs routinely place restrictions on how national team managers can use pitchers at the WBC. One key for López and Venezuela in the championship game was that he talked some MLB team executives into dropping their initial limitations. U.S. manager Mark DeRosa accepted such restraints.

That allowed López to pitch Chicago Cubs closer Daniel Palencia for the second straight night and third time in four days. Palencia retired three straight batters to seal a 3-2 win.

“I woke this morning, three text messages from different organizations trying not to pitch guys back to back,” López said before the game. “One of my strengths is talk, and I send my text back fighting for my guys and then set a phone call with everybody. When you talk and you get an agreement, you negotiate it, everything is going to go well.”

López relaxed a bit after the back and forth.

“I have my guys tonight to go back to back if I need to, and that’s the most important thing,” he said.

DeRosa didn’t use Mason Miller, perhaps baseball’s best reliever, because he promised the San Diego Padres he would pitch the 27-year-old righty only in a save situation. Miller had Monday off after throwing 22 pitches in the ninth inning of Sunday’s 2-1 win over the Dominican Republic, when his fastball averaged 101 mph.

After Bryce Harper’s two-run homer tied the score 2-2 in the eighth against Venezuela, DeRosa brought in Boston’s Garrett Whitlock to start the ninth. Whitlock walked Luis Arraez, and pinch-runner Javier Sanoja stole second. Sanoja came home when Eugenio Suárez doubled to the left-center gap on a full-count changeup.

“Honoring the Padres,” DeRosa said of Miller’s absence. “Had we taken the lead, he was coming in, but I wasn’t going to bring him in to a tie game.”

With the U.S. the home team and batting last, there was no chance for a save situation once the game entered the ninth inning tied.

“I wanted to honor the fact that there was a situation there where, if it was tied, we were going to use Whitlock,” DeRosa said. “We had talked to the Red Sox about that. And if we had the lead, we were going to use Mason.”

Palencia, a 26-year-old right-hander, threw 13 pitches in a perfect ninth to close out an 8-6 quarterfinal win over Japan, striking out two and ending the game by retiring Shohei Ohtani on a popup.

He threw 15 more pitches Sunday in a 1-2-3 top of the ninth that finished a 4-2 win over Italy.

Against the U.S, he needed just 11 pitches that raised his three-game total to 39. Palencia struck out Kyle Schwarber on a 98.5 mph four-seamer, induced a popup from pinch-hitter Gunnar Henderson and blew a 99.7 mph fastball by Roman Anthony for a title-winning strikeout.

Palencia’s fastball velocity averaged 98.1 mph against the U.S., down from 99.3 mph vs. Italy and 98.8 mph vs. Japan, but it was good enough.

He threw 30 fastballs over the three games, seven sliders and two splitters, totaling 26 strikes and 13 balls.

“With that fastball, it is not easy to have good control, but I train that with my coaches in Venezuela,” he said during the tournament. “I trained like a sprinter because I learned that it is about velocity, the capability of the muscle to move.”

U.S. falls short again in WBC final as Venezuela stuns star-studded roster

MIAMI — Aaron Judge walked slowly back and forth in the United States dugout while Venezuelan players shed tears and fell to their knees to celebrate the country’s first World Baseball Classic title.

Other players from the Americans’ $320 million roster stood frozen for several minutes before receiving their silver medals. Bryce Harper, who hit a tying homer in the eighth inning, went over to shake hands with Team Venezuela players before leaving the field.

“In those moments, it’s like the Olympics or anywhere else,” Harper said. “I’m really happy for them. Obviously, I want to win no matter what. That’s what I play for, is to win a championship and a goal medal. But in that moment it’s not about me, it’s about us and our game.”

Team USA brought its most loaded roster ever to baseball’s premier international event, but the Americans lost their second straight WBC final after winning the championship in 2017.

“Obviously disappointed,” Judge said. “All of us put on this uniform to go out there and win a gold medal. We fell short of that.”

The U.S. produced just three hits and four runs over the final two games of the WBC — well short of offensive expectations for a roster of players who combined for 382 home runs and 1,111 RBIs last MLB season.

Three years after losing to Shohei Ohtani and Japan in 2023, the Americans were again disappointed, this time by an energetic Venezuelan team led by All-Stars Ronald Acuña Jr., Maikel Garcia and Luis Arraez.

Left-hander Eduardo Rodríguez mowed down the Americans’ fearsome lineup with measured ease, leaving the colorful celebration to his teammates who met him with claps as he stoically exited the mound in the fifth.

Rodríguez fanned Judge — the U.S. captain went 0 for 4 — twice among four strikeouts and held the Americans to just one hit over 4 1/3 innings.

“I’m not going to make any excuses for us,” said United States manager Mark DeRosa. “I think at the end of the day ... it’s early in spring training. Guys are getting ready for the season. Eventually I think the tournament gets moved and I think the guys are in better form pitching-wise.

“But ultimately it’s who gets hot at the right time, who gets a big swing.”

The Americans have won just one title in six iterations of the tournament. DeRosa indicated that the U.S., which has received more buy-in from marquee MLB position players over the years, is still lacking the same commitments from star pitchers.

Reigning two-time AL Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal participated this year but made just one start in pool play in order to stick with his ramp-up schedule for the regular season with the Detroit Tigers.

“I think every position player wants to play in it,” DeRosa said. “I think from a pitching standpoint, everybody’s at different stages in their career. You’ve got to get buy-in from the team. You’ve got to get buy-in from the player. You’ve got to get buy-in from the agent. I think everybody in their heart ... wants to do it. It’s just, what’s the timing of where they are at in their career?”

Venezuela’s bullpen gave up only two hits, including Harper’s two-run homer over the center-field fence against Andrés Machado in the eighth.

Arraez walked against Garrett Whitlock starting the ninth and pinch-runner Javier Sanoja stole second just ahead of catcher Will Smith’s throw, then came home on Eugenio Suárez double. Suárez spread his arms wide and pointed to the sky at second base while teammates streamed from the dugout to greet Sanoja at the plate.

It signaled another brutal finish could be coming for the U.S., which lost the 2023 WBC title game when Ohtani struck out Mike Trout to win it for Japan.

The American roster was made up of players who have combined for more than 2,300 home runs and 419 saves, and nine of them have played in a World Series.

But they never quite displayed the full extent of their offensive firepower. They hit .250 over seven games with 44 runs, 10 homers and 40 RBIs.

DeRosa said he was surprised by the lack of offense “because of the names at the back of the jersey, but not surprised because of where they’re at in spring training.”

“That’s my answer,” he added. “I really don’t have a rhyme or reason to why. I just think you’re either hot or not in a seven-game blast like this.”

After the U.S. beat the Dominican Republic 2-1 in the semifinals, DeRosa said he was still waiting for his team to break loose at the plate.

That will have to wait another three years.