Can the Padres win despite their offensively challenged lineup?

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 24: Fernando Tatis Jr. #23 of the San Diego Padres hits a double during the fifth inning against the Athletics at Petco Park on May 24, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

What a week at Petco Park.

The San Diego Padres played a thrilling three-game series against the Los Angeles Dodgers that lived up to expectations. The Athletics came to town and battled in a very competitive weekend set.

A tale of a broken offense

The first six games of the homestand have shown the Padres’ inability to capitalize on numerous scoring opportunities. The majority of their runs came on home runs. If the ball was not traveling out of the park, the lineup had trouble manufacturing runs.

Currently, the Friars rank 30th (last) in team batting average at .219. 29th with a .662 OPS, and 25th with a 92 wRC+. Despite all the struggles at the plate, the team has a respectable 31-21 record.

It has been a frustrating week watching the lineup fail to come through, especially with runners in scoring position. Suddenly, their confidence had slipped away from situations they had capitalized on all season.

Is clutch hitting a thing of the past?

It is hard to imagine, but the Padres’ bats have been very productive with runners in scoring position. Oh, what a stark contrast this week. On Monday, the Friars posted a .258 team batting average with runners in scoring position,

However, the offensive struggles saw the lineup go 2-13 and three inning-ending double plays with RISP in the first two series of the current homestand. Poor execution dropped the team’s batting average to .223 with RISP.

The batters seem to lack the focus needed to put runs on the scoreboard. Collectively, they’re swinging at bad pitches that end potential scoring threats. 

Empty at-bats with the bases empty

The lackluster offense has trouble putting runners on the basepaths. The team bats a paltry .204 with a .271 OBP when the bases are empty, ranking second-to-last in the majors. The lifeless, listless at-bats have convinced the Friar Faithful that the lineup slept through the first quarter of the season.

It is one of the more extreme batting splits you will ever see. Clutch situational hitting with RISP has driven in nearly three-quarters of the Padres’ total runs this season. 

Now, solo home runs have become the main source of the offense.  But to become a playoff contender, the entire lineup will need to contribute.

Sheets and Andujar: co-early season MVPs

Thankfully, Gavin Sheets and Miguel Andujar are keeping the offense afloat with big hits over the first six weeks of the 2026 campaign. Their timely hitting late in games has hidden the blemishes with the lineup. 

Sheets has posted a 137 OPS+, performing 40% better than the league average. By any measure, no one has been more productive at the plate for the Padres this season.

If you’re still not convinced, look at his production on a road weekend series against the Seattle Mariners. Sheets went 6-for-8 with three HRs, five RBI, and four runs scored.

Not to be outdone by his teammates, Andujar is on a hitting spree, hitting safely in four of the six games on the current homestand. He is working toward having his highest RBI total since his rookie season with the New York Yankees in 2018. 

Andujar has been an amazing free agent signing, as every major league team could have signed him last offseason. He is playing a much looser brand of baseball, as the Friars have moved Andujar to the No. 2 spot in the batting order. The front office hopes to ride his momentum all the way to clinching a postseason berth. 

How to solve the offensive drought

Everyone has a solution to the Padres’ scoring woes. The consensus is to string together several good at-bats that produce some runs. Others cry out that a couple of weeks of good hitting will diminish early-season struggles.

Let’s rule out replacing the hitting coach — Steven Souza Jr. is the fifth person to hold the position since 2020. Juggling the lineup order has brought moderate improvement, but the leadoff hitter for each inning is batting .167.

The Friars’ lineup resembles a weekend softball team. As a home-run-reliant roster, they are highly susceptible to extended scoring droughts whenever the ball stays inside the park. Furthermore, the lineup lacks the speed required to manufacture runs when the bats go silent.

The lineup has more than enough talent to turn this around and resemble their former selves. They need to put good swings on hittable pitches and see what occurs. Just keep their hitting approach simple.

How long before the front office looks to upgrade the lineup? It may not be about identifying which position is more of a need, but rather about improving the offense in general.

Rays Minor League Roundup: Week 7

BRADENTON, FL - MARCH 02: Ty Johnson (82) of the Tampa Bay Rays delivers a pitch during a spring training game against the Pittsburgh Pirates on March 02, 2026 at LECOM Park in Bradenton, Florida. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

This was the 7th week of full minor league play (stats are entering play on Monday, May 25th).

According to FanGraphs (which factors in age and proximity to the big leagues), 19-year old Caden Bodine has regained his spot as the top hitter spot in the Rays system. The backstop was recently added to Baseball America’s top 100 prospect rankings and is up to 4th in the Rays system.

Meanwhile, Aidan Cremarosa is still the team’s top minor league pitcher and among the top performers in all of minor league baseball and is also now ranked 27th in the Rays system by Baseball America. The 22-year old was taken by the Rays in the 8th round of the 2025 draft out of Fresno State. Thus far over eight starts in Single-A, Cremarosa has a 2.89 ERA | 2.69 FIP with a 33.7 K% & 5.4 BB% over 43.2 IP.

RUMBLINGS

  • Since being activated from the Injured List on May 11th, Ty Johnson hasn’t allowed an earned run over four starts in Triple-A. Thus far, he has compiled a 0.00 ERA | 2.31 FIP with a 29.6 K% & 7.0 BB% over 17.1 IP
  • Connor Hujsak, 2024 13th round pick, has now matched his career homerun total (12) entering the season. The 24-year old has been on a tear as of late. Since May 3rd, he his hiting .367/.391/.750 with 6 HR over 64 PA.
  • Marcus Johnson and James Quinn-Irons were both moved to the 60-day Injured List
  • Michael Grove began a rehab assignment
  • Trevor Harrison has been placed on the 7-day Injured List

TEAM LEADERS

  • Must currently be assigned to that team
  • Baseball America’s top ten prospects are featured below each team they’re currently assigned to.
  • (minimum of 80 TBF & PA)

Tampa Bay Rays

Top 10 Prospects

  • None currently on active roster

Durham Bulls

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .329, Victor Mesa Jr (Promoted to MLB on 5/24)
OBP: .420, Victor Mesa Jr (Promoted to MLB on 5/24)
SLG: .543, Victor Mesa Jr (Promoted to MLB on 5/24)
HR: 6,Blake Sabol, Dom Keegan, and Tatem Levins
wRC+: 150, Victor Mesa Jr (Promoted to MLB on 5/24)
SB: 17, Rayndel Delgado & Jacob Melton (Placed on the IL on 4/23)

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 2.05, Evan Reifert
FIP: 4.04, Andrew Wantz
K%: 31.9%, Evan Reifert
BB%: 5.2%, Jonathan Heasley
WHIP: 1.18, Evan Reifert
AVG: .169, Evan Reifert
WHIFF%: 12.9%, Luis Guerrero

Top 10 Prospects

  • #2 Brody Hopkins
    • AAA: 3.98 ERA | 5.50 FIP | 23.4 K% | 21.3 BB% | .205 AVG | 12.3 WHIFF% | 43 IP
  • #3 Jacob Melton
    • AAA: .231/.346/.431 | 40.2 K% | 15.9 BB% | 1 HR | 17 SB | 98 wRC+ | 82 PA
      • 4/23: Suffered sprained ankle. Expected to miss 4-6 weeks.

Montgomery Biscuits

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .341, Cooper Kinney (promoted to AAA on 5/5)
OBP: .432, Cooper Kinney (promoted to AAA on 5/5)
SLG: .600, Xavier Isaac
HR: 12, Xavier Isaac
wRC+: 171, Cooper Kinney (promoted to AAA on 5/5)
SB: 28, Austin Overn

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 1.99, Chris Clark
FIP: 2.36, Alexander Alberto
K%: 41.3%, Alexander Alberto
BB%:  2.2%, Gary Gill Hill
WHIP 0.86, Owen Wild
AVG: .127, Owen Wild
WHIFF%: 15.4%, Owen Wild

Top 10 Prospects

  • #9 T.J. Nichols
    • AA: 2.70 ERA | 2.99 FIP | 23.3 K% | 10.0 BB% | .296 AVG | 10.0 WHIFF% | 6.2 IP
    • CPX: 1.80 ERA | 2.47 FIP | 20.0 K% | 0.0 BB% | .300 AVG | 9.2 WHIFF% | 5 IP
      • 4/7: Placed on Injured List
      • 5/9: Began rehab assignment in Complex League
      • 5/19: Activated from Injured List
  • #10 Santiago Suarez
    • AA: 6.03 ERA | 5.11 FIP | 26.7 K% | 4.4 BB% | .252 AVG | 13.1 WHIFF% | 31.1 IP
      • 4/25: Placed on Injured List
      • 5/5: Activated from Injured List

Bowling Green Hot Rods

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .320, Theo Gillen
OBP: .454, Tony Santa Maria (promoted to AAA on 5/13)
SLG: .640, Theo Gillen
HR: 12, Connor Hujsak
wRC+: 164, Theo Gillen
SB: 15, Emilien Pitre & Tony Santa Maria (promoted to AAA on 5/13)

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 1.27, Jacob Kisting
FIP: 2.07, Jacob Kmatz
K%: 43.9%, Jacob Kmatz
BB%: 1.3%, Jacob Kisting
WHIP: 0.61, Jacob Kisting
AVG: .152, Jacob Kisting
WHIFF%: 19.6%, Jacob Kmatz

Top 10 Prospects

  • #1 Theo Gillen
    • A+: .320/.415/.640 | 25.9 K% | 12.9 BB% | 9 HR | 14 SB | 164 wRC+ | 147 PA
  • #3 Nathan Flewelling
    • A+: .287/.384/.551 | 23.3 K% | 12.6 BB% | 10 HR | 3 SB | 138 wRC+ | 159 PA
  • #4 Caden Bodine
    • A+: .125/.300/.125 | 10.0 K% | 15.0 BB% | 0 HR | 0 SB | 38 wRC+ | 20 PA
    • A: .379/.433/.614 | 3.9 K% | 9.2 BB% | 5 HR | 1 SB | 179 wRC+ | 152 PA
  • #6 Anderson Brito
    • A+: 3.34 ERA | 4.57 FIP | 28.8 K% | 14.4 BB% | .240 AVG | 13.4 WHIFF% | 32.1 IP

Charleston River Dogs

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .379, Caden Bodine (Promoted to A+ on 5/19)
OBP: .433, Caden Bodine (Promoted to A+ on 5/19)
SLG: .614, Caden Bodine (Promoted to A+ on 5/19)
HR: 6, Taitn Gray
wRC+: 179, Caden Bodine (Promoted to A+ on 5/19)
SB: 14, Alberth Palma

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 1.96, Jacob Kuhn
FIP: 2.69, Aidan Cremarosa
K%: 33.7%, Aidan Cremarosa
BB%: 3.3%, Aidan Cremarosa
WHIP: 0.80, Aidan Cremarosa
AVG: .163, Jacob Kuhn
WHIFF%: 16.9%, Aidan Cremarosa

Top 10 Prospects

  • #5 Cooper Flemming
    • A: .301/.399/.493 | 16.2 K% | 12.1 BB% | 5 HR | 5 SB | 144 wRC+ | 173 PA
  • #7 Daniel Pierce
    • A: .239/.310/.381 | 28.6 K% | 5.6 BB% | 4 HR | 5 SB | 92 wRC+ | 126 PA
      • 4/22: Placed on the 7-day IL
      • 5/2: Activated from the IL
  • #8 Taitn Gray
    • A: .261/.375/.457| 23.2 K% | 14.9 BB% | 6 HR | 4 SB | 128 wRC+ | 168 PA

On The Horizon: Cubs vs. Pirates series preview

SITR NOTE: “Three up, three down,” the review of the previous week for the Cubs, will run tomorrow, since today’s a holiday and there’s an afternoon game today.


The Cubs have lost eight straight. That, you already know. The Pirates have lost six of their last nine. Something’s gotta give in this four-game series.

For more on the Pirates, here’s Ethan Coulehan, a writer at our SB Nation Pirates site Bucs Dugout.

After losing four games in a row the Pirates bounced back and won the last two games in their series against the St. Louis Cardinals. Those last two games in St. Louis were huge for Pittsburgh to get back to winning ways and snap the losing streak they had vs. the Cardinals. Then they lost two of three over the weekend in Toronto, taking the series finale behind a solid outing from Mitch Keller.

The Pirates are about to start another big divisional series when they face off against the Chicago Cubs. Pittsburgh is 2-1 this season against Chicago, winning the first series. The first game was on April 10th at Wrigley Field where the only scoring came from a two run home run by Bryan Reynolds. The Pirates then won the second game 4-3 in 11 innings which is just the third extra inning victory for Pittsburgh this season. The third game of the series ended with a Cubs walk off single by Carson Kelly.

The largest deficit in that series was just two runs. That shows that these teams are very even and well matched. That was a big series for Brandon Lowe who had two home runs. It was also a solid series for Reynolds, who had three RBI.

The Bucs historically have struggled against the Cubs. The Buccos went just 3-10 vs Chicago last season. In those 13 games in 2025 against Chicago the Pirates did not score more than four runs. They snapped that streak this season after their 7-6 victory.

This is going to be the first time this season that these two teams will meet at PNC Park. In 2025 the pirates only won one game vs the Cubs at home.

Carmen Mlodzinski, Braxton Ashcraft, Bubba Chandler and Paul Skenes are the set starters for the four game series. It is very important for the starting pitching to step up and produce. Ashcraft’s last performance, where he threw seven innings and had nine strikeouts and just one earned run allowed, is a very good sign for Pittsburgh.

This is going to be a tough series because of the lack of success the Pirates have had throughout the years against the Cubs. It is important for the Buccos to at least take two out of three against what is arguably their biggest divisional rival.

Fun facts

A sweep of the four-game series would raise the Cubs’ regular-season victory total at Pittsburgh to 600 since the rivalry began in 1887. Their 596 wins there are the most anywhere outside Chicago. Next most are 579 at Philadelphia and 566 at St. Louis.

The Cubs’ last four-game sweep at Pittsburgh was Aug. 1-4, 2011. This will be their 13th four-game set there since then.

The Cubs won three games in each of their last two four-game series at Pittsburgh, in 2022 and 2023. In all games there since 2021, the Cubs are 27-9.

The Cubs’ 712 losses at Pittsburgh are their most by far on the road. They have lost 642 at Cincinnati and 635 to the Giants at New York and San Francisco.

(Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)

Probable pitching matchups

Monday: Ben Brown, RHP (1-2, 2.09 ERA, 0.983 WHIP, 2.36 FIP) vs. Carmen Mlodzinski, RHP (4-3, 3.96 ERA, 1.400 WHIP, 2.98 FIP)

Tuesday: TBD vs. Braxton Ashcraft, RHP (3-2, 2.89 ERA, 1.027 WHIP, 3.16 FIP)

Wednesday: Jameson Taillon, RHP (2-4, 5.20 ERA, 1.265 WHIP, 6.46 FIP) vs. Bubba Chandler, RHP (1-6, 4.79 ERA, 1.468 WHIP, 5.25 FIP)

Thursday: Colin Rea, RHP (4-3, 4.83 ERA, 1.370 WHIP, 4.43 FIP) vs. Paul Skenes, RHP (6-4, 3.00 ERA, 0.817 WHIP, 2.87 FIP)

NOTE: As of the time of this series preview posting, the Cubs did not have any starters listed past Monday. Tuesday would have been Edward Cabrera’s turn, but as you know, he’s now on the IL. That game could be started by Jordan Wicks, who was recalled Sunday to take Cabrera’s spot on the active roster. Wicks last started for Triple-A Iowa on Thursday, so he’d be on normal rest for a Tuesday start. Wednesday and Thursday would be Taillon’s and Rea’s turns if the Cubs stay on rotation, so I’m listing them here as “probable.”

Times & TV channels

Monday: 12:35 p.m. CT, Marquee Sports Network

(NOTE: This was originally scheduled as a night game but the Pirates moved it to afternoon — at the request of their season-ticket holders!)

Tuesday: 5:40 p.m. CT, Marquee Sports Network

Wednesday: 5:40 p.m. CT, Marquee Sports Network

Thursday: 5:40 p.m. CT, Marquee Sports Network

Prediction

If you look at the pitching matchups above, you’d think the Cubs don’t have much of a chance here. But that losing streak has to end sometime, right?

At this point I’ll be happy if the Cubs can get out of Pittsburgh with a split of this four-game set.

Up next

The Cubs travel to St. Louis for a three-game series against the Cardinals beginning Friday evening.

Minor league update for 5/24/26

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - APRIL 26: (EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE) A Devon Rex cat relaxes in their pen during the GCCF Supreme Championship Cat Show on April 26th, 2026 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Shirlaine Forrest/WireImage)

Hickory played two, and in those two games, they allowed no runs on five hits.

In Game One, A.J. Russell struck out six in 3.2 shutout innings, walking one. Owen Proksch struck out three in two shutout innings.

Esteban Mejia was 2 for 3 with a homer. Paulino Santana doubled. Yolfran Castillo doubled. Josh Spring had a hit. Daniel Flames had a hit and a walk.

In Game Two, Evan Siary threw six shutout innings, allowing one walk and striking out three.

Hector Osorio doubled. Paulino Santana doubled. Yolfran Castillo doubled. Josh Spring had a hit.

Hickory Game One box score

Hickory Game Tw0 box score

Hub City also shut out their opponent, though in one game, not two.

Starter D.J. McCarty struck out eight and walked two in six innings.

Malcolm Moore doubled and homered. Paxton Kling had a hit and a stolen base. Rafe Perich had a hit and a walk. Maxton Martin had a hit. Chandler Pollard had a hit and a pair of stolen bases.

Hub City box score

Frisco did not shut out their opponent, but did allow just one run.

Starter Dylan MacLean struck out two and walked one in six innings, allowing one run. Eric Loomis struck out two and walked one in a shutout inning. Ryan Lobus struck out one in a scoreless inning.

Cody Freeman was 1 for 3 with a walk. Arturo Disla homered and walked. Keith Jones II doubled and drew three walks.

Frisco box score

For Round Rock, Marc Church threw two scoreless innings, striking out two. Alexis Diaz walked one and struck out one in an inning, allowing two runs. Luis Curvelo struck out two and walked one in a scoreless inning. Ryan Brasier threw a scoreless inning.

Cam Cauley had a hit.

Round Rock box score

MLB Expert Picks & Baseball Predictions May 25

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We're celebrating Memorial Day with baseball all day — and a full buffet of MLB picks, based on prices from Polymarket.

Our MLB experts kick things off by backing the undervalued ChiSox, along with an Under play in San Diego... with more picks to come!

MLB expert picks for today

PickOdds
Josh Inglis Josh Inglis: CWS ML+100
Joe Osborne Joe Osborne: PHI/SD u7.5-108

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Josh Inglis' expert pick: White Sox moneyline

Price: 50¢ (+100) at Polymarket

Why are the Twins road favorites today with Zebby Matthews on the mound? His run of good fortune is due to snap with a .227 BABIP while stranding 93% of his runners. He was getting tagged in Triple-A before the call-up and doesn’t profile as a good pitcher. He also threw 100 pitches in his last outing and hands things over to a bullpen that ranks 25th in ERA on the season and could be without Taylor Rogers after back-to-back appearances. Meanwhile, Anthony Kay is quietly putting together a strong season with two or fewer earned runs allowed in eight of his 10 starts. The Chicago White Sox still feel undervalued by the market, and THE BAT has this fair price sitting at -120.

  • Time: 2:10 p.m. ET
  • How to watch: CHSN/MNNT

Joe Osborne's expert pick: Phillies/Padres Under 7.5

Price: 52¢ (-108) at Polymarket

Jesus Luzardo has found his rhythm again, allowing two earned runs or fewer in five of his last six starts, and faces a San Diego Padres lineup that has struggled badly against left-handed pitching. Randy Vasquez has also been excellent with a 2.96 ERA, while the Philadelphia Phillies offense has been flat-out bad vs. righties... and on the road. The trends support the Under as well, with the Phillies cashing it in seven of their last eight games and San Diego doing the same in 10 of its last 12 at home. It also helps that the Padres' bullpen has been one of baseball’s sharper relief units lately and is well equipped to protect a low total.

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
  • How to watch: SDPA/NBCSP

More MLB best bets for today

PickOdds
Brewers ML-210
Read analysis in our Cardinals vs. Brewers predictions

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
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MLB Preview: Mets limp home for three with the Reds

Apr 28, 2026; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Chase Burns (26) during the first inning against the Colorado Rockies at Great American Ball Park. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images | Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

The New York Mets (22-31) welcome the Cincinnati Reds (27-25) to Citi Field for a three game series. It is hard to muster anything close to excitement for this team after an incredibly flat series against an uninspiring Marlins team. The Mets won the Subway Series, split a series with the Nationals, and were set up to have a third straight positive series against the only team trailing them in the division. Instead, they scored two runs over three games and looked like a little league team at the plate.

I don’t truly think that there is no way they can salvage their season, but it is looking more and more clear that this is a season that would be better suited with developing young players than chasing a playoff appearance. That is a shame, because it means wasting a season of peak Juan Soto and Francisco Lindor (when he returns), and that is something that the team really can’t afford to waste. This isn’t asking them to tank, but it is calling for a different outlook on the club.

And that probably means being sellers sooner than later. With another few weeks that aren’t a marked improvement, Freddy Peralta and a couple of the bullpen arms look to be the most likely to bring in anything of note back in a trade. A.J. Ewing and Carson Benge should be starting just about every game for the club, and it may be a good idea to bring up Ryan Clifford and see what he’s got at first base. If not, give a returning Jared Young a chance to be something other than a utility guy. Let Jonah Tong, Zach Thornton, and Jack Wenninger all get multiple starts. Start seeing what you have out of some of the minor league relief arms.

There is every chance that those players will produce as much or more than what they Mets have been getting thus far, and you get a better sense of what the future looks like. And look, we all know that injuries are playing an inordinate role in where this team is. Losing Lindor, Clay Holmes, Francisco Alvarez, Kodai Senga, Luis Robert Jr, Jorge Polanco, Ronny Mauricio, Young, and Mike Tauchman all put this team at a disadvantage, even if players like Senga weren’t exactly helping the cause pre-injury.

Now, it seems like Senga, A.J. Minter, and Young are all fairly close to a return. There’s some optimism that Lindor can be back in late June, and Alvarez is likely closer to the All-Star Break. All of those returns could be good for the club, but aside from Lindor, none move the needle enough to see them as potential saviors for this season. With Polanco and Robert as true question marks, both in terms of their return and also what they might be able to offer the club, you have to think of both of them as true wildcards. If they return and give the club anything, that’s a perk, but it can’t be expected.

The Reds are 7-14 in May thus far, but have seemingly turned around the worst stretch of their season, where they lost eight in a row, including getting walked off three days in a row by the Cubs, earlier this month. Their division, the National League Central, still features five teams with winning records, even if the Pirates and Reds and just barely hanging on to that distinction.

Elly De La Cruz and Sal Stewart are both having monster years at the plate thus far, with Cruz slugging 25 extra base hits already, along with nine stolen bases, and Stewart stealing ten bases with 21 extra base hits of his own. Chase Burns is in the Cy Young conversation, but the rest of their pitching staff has been dealing with injuries. With multiple Wild Card spots likely coming out of the Central, it is too early to write them off, but they look like they’re a cut below the three teams in front of them.

Monday, May 25: Nolan McLean vs Nick Lodolo, 4:10pm EDT on SNY

McLean (2026): 58.0 IP, 63 K, 27 BB, 8 HR, 3.52 ERA, 4.14 FIP, 90 ERA-

McLean’s last start was easily his worst in the bigs so far, giving up six earned runs, including two home runs, eight hits, and two walks. But even in that start, he was felled by some poor luck/defense behind him. While McLean hasn’t exactly lived up to his brief debut last season in terms of hype, he’s been solid this season, and is still among the brightest spots on the Mets in 2026 which, admittedly, is a low bar.

Lodolo(2026): 15.0 IP, 11 K, 9 BB, 4 HR, 7.20 ERA, 7.48 FIP, 170 ERA-

Lodolo has started three games for the Reds thus far in 2026, with is most recent start being the best of the punch, where he threw five and two-thirds innings of three-run ball against the Phillies last week. But four home runs in 15 innings and almost as many walks as strikeouts isn’t going to inspire a ton of confidence.

Tuesday, May 26: TBD (Likely David Peterson) vs Chase Burns, 7:10pm EDT on SNY

Peterson(2026): 48.1 IP, 49 K, 20 BB, 2 HR, 5.03 ERA, 3.02 FIP, 129 ERA-

Peterson started on Friday for the first time in over a month. He had been working as the bulk man behind an opener to attempt to put his season back on track and, in limited appearances, it seems to have worked. In his first start since April 13, Peterson tossed five innings of one-run, four hit ball. Peterson may never get back to his first half of 2025 status, but he would be a welcome piece of the Mets’ rotation if he could approximate his performance since that April 13 start: an ERA a full point lower, a 105 ERA-, and an almost two to one strikeout to walk ratio. It won’t win him a Cy Young, but it’ll do enough.

Burns (2026): 59.0 IP, 64 K, 18 BB, 7 HR, 1.83 ERA, 3.37 FIP, 43 ERA-

Chase Burns is having himself a year. Aside from one bad start against the Angels on April 10, where he gave up five earned runs, Burns hasn’t allowed more than two runs in a single start, and has four starts in which he allowed no runs at all. He’s top 20 in strikeouts thus far this season, and has been excellent at limiting runs in just about every aspect of his game.

Wednesday, May 27: TBD (Likely Tobias Myers and Jonah Tong in some sort of opener/bulk role) vs Andrew Abbott, 4:10pm EDT on SNY

Myers(2026): 30.1 IP, 23 K, 7 BB, 5 HR, 3.56 ERA, 4.40 FIP, 91 ERA-

The Mets haven’t quite figured out how to use Myers yet this season. It’s been fairly clear for some times that Myers would be an improvement over some of the starting pitching, but with Christian Scott’s return to the rotation and Peterson straightening himself out, Myers might be again relegated to the long man/starter/jack of all trades that he’s been thus far this season. And while that is a valuable and useful role, it seems like it is somewhat wasting what Myers can be doing for this club.

Tong(2026): 3.0 IP, 2 K, 1 BB, 0 HR, 0.00 ERA, 2.75 FIP, 0 ERA-

After a truly phenomenal minor league season and a mixed bag of a call up, Tong has been working on his secondary pitches in the minors, and so his minor league line isn’t a real good indication of what he’s capable of. Similarly, putting too much stake in a three-inning performance against the Marlins is probably silly as well. That said, Tong looked very good in said three-innings, and is always going to be one of the more exciting names to see pitching the Mets in 2026.

Abbott(2026): 56.2 IP, 38 K, 26 BB, 7 HR, 3.97 ERA, 4.72 FIP, 94 ERA-

Abbot has been lights out in May thus far, allowing just two earned runs in 22 innings pitched. If there’s a clear knock on his game at this point in his career, it is that he’s walking too many batters. But the results, at least as of late, have been good despite that fact.

Arizona Diamondbacks News, 5/25: Memorial Day

HONOLULU - DECEMBER 7: A U.S. flag flies at half mast aboard the USS Arizona Memorial during the ceremony honoring the 64th anniversary of the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 2005 at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Around the country, Pearl Harbor survivors and others paid tribute to those lost during the December 7, 1941 Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor. (Photo by Marco Garcia/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Recaps

[Arizona Sports] Diamondbacks do not mess around with Rockies to close 6-1 homestand – The Arizona Diamondbacks smacked seven extra-base hits, none of which left the yard, in an all-around dominant win over the Colorado Rockies on Sunday, 9-1. Ryne Nelson threw a career-high eight innings with one earned run, while the offense supplied a 7-0 lead in the opening three innings to bury the Rockies early. The score was 9-0 after six, as the D-backs coasted to earn a four-game series victory, 3-1. With the win, Arizona finished its homestand against the San Francisco Giants and Rockies 6-1 and improved to 8-2 over the first 10 games of its Rockies-Giants-Rockies-Giants stretch.

[AZ Central] Corbin Carroll closes in on DBacks triples record in rout of Rockies – Carroll raised his career triple total to 51, two away from surpassing Stephen Drew for the franchise record. He had four hits in a game for the third time in his career. “There’s the value in taking the extra base, and if you can get there before two outs you don’t necessarily have to get a hit to score a run,” Carroll said. “Always trying to run hard and make the job easier for my teammate behind me.” “For what’s a standup double to everybody else, the majority of people in the big leagues, it’s a standup triple for him,” Lovullo said. “It’s done out of the box. When he hits that ball, he’s doing everything he can to get going full speed in order to get to third base.”

[AP] Carroll has 2 run-scoring triples, Diamondbacks blow out hapless Rockies – Nelson (2-3) scattered six singles and struck out three in his career-best third straight start of at least seven innings.Arizona (28-24) has won eight of 10 to climb four games over .500 for the first time since April 22. Quintana allowed six runs on six hits before being removed with one out in the second inning due to left elbow discomfort. Catcher Brett Sullivan pitched a perfect eighth for the last-place Rockies, who have lost eight of 11. Arizona scored two runs off Quintana in the first inning and Marte made it 4-0 in the second with a two-run double, prompting Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer to remove the left-hander with the team trainer at his side.

Team news

[Dbacks.com] Troy (D-backs’ No. 4 prospect) doubles twice in MLB debut – The D-backs’ No. 4 prospect laced his first Major League hit Sunday at Chase Field in a 9-1 win over the Rockies, ripping a double off left-hander Jose Quintana that just got under the glove of center fielder Jake McCarthy. It was the capstone moment of a whirlwind 48 hours that began when Troy got news that his dream of being a big leaguer was about to come true. Beyond having to get ready for a Major League game, Troy knew both his family and his girlfriend’s family had to be there. When the ball found the turf in the bottom of the second, his parents, Tommy Sr. and Temple, were watching from down the third-base line.“I’m still shaking, I’m so happy for him,” Temple told D-backs television reporter Jody Jackson. “I could feel the air vibrating when he was up there.”

[SI] Tommy Troy’s Debut Already Setting Up Another Tough D-backs Decision – Troy may not be able to produce at this type of clip every day going forward, but he’s yet another young player with a mature-looking approach and good bat-to-ball skills. His versatility and speed are pluses, as well. But suddenly, the Diamondbacks may have another tough decision to make. Gurriel is not expected to miss a great deal of time with his hamstring injury, and Jordan Lawlar will be returning from his wrist fracture at some point in the coming weeks. If Troy is a productive player, Arizona may have to make a tough decision to reduce Gurriel’s playing time, or even part ways with the veteran.

[Mercury News] Ex-Stanford, Los Gatos High School star shines in MLB debut – “Just everything that I could have dreamed of, honestly,” said Troy, who had his family and his girlfriend’s family in attendance. “All the guys here are so supportive, loosening me up because I was a little nervous at first. But such a great moment.” “I thought he seemed very comfortable,” said Diamondbacks right fielder Corbin Carroll, who went 4-for-4 with two triples and two RBIs on Sunday, of Troy. “I think he belonged, looked like he knew what he needed to do, took care of his business. I was impressed.” Troy helped lead Stanford to Pac-12 titles in 2022 and 2023 before he was taken in the first round, 12th overall, by the Diamondbacks in the 2023 MLB draft as an infielder. He graduated from Los Gatos in 2020 after helping the school to a runner-up finish in the Central Coast Section Open Division playoffs in 2018.

And, elsewhere…

[MLB.com] Hernández caps sweep of Mets with walk-off grand slam – The win completed Miami’s first three-game sweep of the Mets at home since 2019 and gave the Marlins their first three-game winning streak since opening the season with a sweep of the Rockies. Miami has won five of its past six games against New York dating back to last August.“ We have a good team, and the pitching was really good, too,” Hernández said. “Untouchable, like it has been all these three days.” Miami’s pitchers held New York to two runs over the three-game series, including Sunday’s outing from Tyler Phillips, who made his first Major League start of the season.

[The Independent] Family continues fight against MLB team after missing out on $13,000 raffle prize that they had to claim within 6 outs – One of the 10 tickets Annette Flynn bought was drawn but she couldn’t see it displayed from her seat, which had the scoreboard behind her, and she also didn’t hear the number announced, according to court papers. By the time Flynn learned she had the winning ticket and made it to the claim table on the loge level concourse, the deadline at the top of the 7th inning had passed. Flynn told WISN that an usher mistakenly told her to go to the main level, and security video — that was shared by the family — from inside the stadium reportedly shows her racing through the hallways trying to claim the ticket.

Project Hail Mary (2026)

  • Rating: D+
  • Dir: Phil Lord and Christopher Miller
  • Star: Ryan Gosling, Sandra Hüller, James Ortiz, Lionel Boyce

This feels like bits pulled from far better SF movies, covering everything from Interstellar to Contact, ruthlessly purged of anything which might challenge or remotely concern the audience, replacing it instead with fluff. Y’know the Grogu drinking soup meme? This is that, extended to 156 minutes in length. It’s SF, only if the S stands for sentimentality. I will say, the visual elements are well-done, and on occasion spectacular. But any weight you might have considered appropriate, given the whole “imminent world destruction” thing, is consistently undermined by weak stabs at comedy. Grace falls over things. See? He’s relatable because he’s clumsy! Going by the box-office receipts, it must just be me, but I was hoping for something a bit more than Ted Lasso in Space.

Read more

Elephant Rumblings: Get Ready For The Mariners

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 23: Tyler Soderstrom #21 of the Athletics bats during the sixth inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on May 23, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to another week A’s fans!

The A’s wrapped up their Southern California road trip yesterday with a win against the Padres. That wrapped up a 4-2 road trip, They went 3-1 against the Angels but probably should have gotten a sweep with how well they played. That lone loss came in the game J.T. Ginn took a no-hitter into the ninth only to allow a walk-off two-run home run. That one stung but at least the A’s bounced back and won the next three against arguably the worst team in the league. They needed to do that to prove to themselves they’re going to be a contender for the long haul this year. The Padres’ series wasn’t easy but the guys got away with one and avoided a sweep.

Now the A’s are back in Sacramento for an extended homestand. First they’ll welcome the division-rival Seattle Mariners to town for three games to start the week off. An off-day Thursday will give the A’s a chance to get a rest, catch their breath, and get ready for a weekend series against the New York Yankees, who possess the second-best record in the American League behind the Rays.

First up, the M’s. Seattle is second in the AL West but are below .500 at just 25-29. They’ve lost two in a row and are 2 1/2 games behind the A’s in the division. Tonight’s matchup will be an interesting one as veterans Aaron Civale and Luis Castillo go head to head to start the series. Back at home, this would be an excellent time to put some distance in the standings between us and last year’s division champions.

Happy Memorial Day everyone!

A’s Coverage:

MLB News and Interest:

Best of X:

The end of a career, enjoy retirement Nick Anderson!

An interesting arm in the lower minors:

If he is, it’s looking more and more like a reliever. Thoughts?

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: Injury scares in Toronto

TORONTO, CANADA - MAY 24: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. #27 of the Toronto Blue Jays leaves the game after he got hit by a pitch against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the fifth inning in their MLB game at the Rogers Centre on May 24, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Thanks to some ninth-inning Aaron Judge heroics, the Yankees handed their most important rival of 2026 a loss on Sunday. The Yanks’ 2-0 win over Tampa Bay narrowed the latter’s lead atop the American League East to 4.5 games and handed the Rays only their second loss in their last dozen games. More Tampa losses would be just keen.

Elsewhere, the big story is in Toronto. The Blue Jays entered Sunday on a season-high, four-game winning streak and were looking to sweep Pittsburgh. The Jays, however, were done in by the long ball and also lost two of their best players to injury, though there is no indication yet that either will miss considerable time.

Toronto Blue Jays (25-28) 1, Pittsburgh Pirates (27-26) 4

Until he faced the Yankees last week, Jays starter Dylan Cease was almost impossible to take yard. Through his first eight outings, he allowed a lone long ball. Then the Yanks hit two. On Sunday, the Pirates hit two more their first time through the order. After one home run through eight games, Cease allowed four home runs in his next 6+ innings. You can’t predict baseball, Suzyn. The only saving grace for Cease Sunday was that both were solo shots.

Other than that, however, Cease looked great, with his strikeout pitches in fine form. In the top of the fifth though, he had to leave the game with discomfort in his left hamstring (they’re hoping it’s mild, but he will have an MRI), forcing the Jays to go to the bullpen early while holding their breath regarding their ace’s health. Making matters worse, in the bottom of the fifth, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. took a Mitch Keller pitch off the elbow and also left the game — though X-rays on his elbow later came back negative.

Now into the Jays ‘pen, the Pirates broke through in the sixth with the game’s big blow. Esmerlyn Valdez hit a two-run home run off Chase Lee, his first major-league hit, that gave Pittsburgh some breathing room with a 4-1 lead. Toronto brought the tying run to the plate in the ninth, but Gregory Soto got the final two outs to win the game and the series.

Other Games

Boston Red Sox (22-30) 5, Minnesota Twins (26-27) 6: This was a back-and-forth affair with the clubs trading runs early. The game went to the middle innings with Boston up 4-3 but a three-run sixth inning highlighted by a two-run, tie-breaking single by Brooks Lee looked to have Minnesota in great shape to take another game from the BoSox. Not so fast, my friend. Former Yankee Yoendrys Gómez tried to lock the game down in the ninth after entering the previous inning but allowed a fifth Boston run. If not for a great relay to the plate on that play, he would have blown the save. Boston still managed to put the tying and winning runs on base with two outs but the Twins escaped with the W.

Editor’s note: The Red Sox might very well creep back into this race at some point, but they are currently better than just three other AL teams (Royals, Tigers, and Angels). As such, this will be the last time you see them covered here in 2026 unless they have a rally to relevance or if they’re playing a more notable AL team.

Cleveland Guardians (32-23) 3, Philadelphia Phillies (26-27) 1: Once again, pitching was the story in Philadelphia. Sunday, in the rubber match of this three-game set, Parker Messick took the ball for Cleveland. He spun 5.2 scoreless innings and, thanks to RBI base hits from Steven Kwan and Rhys Hoskins, departed with a 2-0 lead. The Phils managed their lone run on a Bryce Harper RBI in the bottom of the seventh but Cleveland immediately got that run back in the eighth and held on for the 3-1 win. The victory sends Cleveland out of The City of Brotherly Love with the series win over the Phils, who’ve been much improved with Donnie Baseball at the helm (18-7).

Seattle Mariners (25-29) 6, Kansas City Royals (22-31) 8: Seattle got off to a quick start thanks to a Julio Rodríguez first-inning solo home run. They failed to follow up, however, and five runs in the fifth and sixth gave Kansas City a lead they managed to protect, though things got squirrely in the ninth with close Lucas Erceg surrendering three runs, making a comfortable 8-3 Royals lead much less comfortable at 8-6, with the tying run at the plate and two outs. Erceg, however, retired Luke Raley to end it. A little bit of good news for Seattle as Colt Emerson, the highly-touted prospect they recently called up, had a breakout game. At 2-for-17 entering Sunday, Emerson went 4-for-4 with three doubles, a run scored, and a run batted in. Not bad at all.

Texas Rangers (24-28) 1, Los Angeles Angels (20-34) 2: The Rangers and Angels closed out Sunday’s slate of games. Each club scored a lone run in the opening innings. Then the pitching took over. Especially for the Angels. Reid Detmers, who entered Sunday with a 5.07 ERA (notably his FIP was a much shinier 3.07), absolutely went off on the Rangers. throwing eight innings, allowing only the one run, and striking out a career-high 14, with everyone in the Texas lineup striking out at least once against him. The game stayed tied until the ninth when Yankee legend Oswald Peraza made his presence known. With runners on first and second and with the help of a Rangers’ throwing error, Peraza’s groundball to second that could have been an inning-ending twin killing ended up scoring the winning run.

Astros vs. Rangers Series Primer with Rangers Broadcaster Jared Sandler

ARLINGTON, TX - AUGUST 23: Elvis Andrus and Adrian Beltre laugh with Rangers Sports Network broadcaster Jared Sandler before a game against the Cleveland Guardians at Globe Life Field on August 23, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Bailey Orr/Texas Rangers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Texas Rangers Pre/Post Game Host Jared Sandler from 105.3 The Fan KRLD-FM joins us to preview the upcoming four game tilt from Globe Life Field.    

Q:  How big is this 4-game series for each club?

A:  I’m just not a big believer that this time of year truly shapes or defines the rest of the season.  I think divisional rivalries are fun and that fans feel that with in-state bragging rights, but we don’t need to be prisoners of the moment.  Neither team has achieved what they were hoping to so far, but they’re both looking to turn the arrow into a positive direction.    

Q:  Last time we saw the Rangers, they were putting up 8 runs on the Astros, some of that damage coming from Kyle Higashioka.  What is the current state of the lineup, as it seems some guys are finding their stride and others (Evan Carter) are still grinding through some struggles? 

A:  The lineup has been interesting.  They’ve largely done whatever positive stuff without Corey Seager and (Wyatt) Langford, partly because of injury but also when playing, both of those guys haven’t produced at a level that is expected of them because of the high standard they set.     

When Corey is in the lineup and going right, he’s one of the best hitters in the world, so getting him back will be huge.     

Wyatt Langford was a 20-20 guy and there’s other guys like Brandon Nimmo.   

Josh Jung has also been really impressive, his willingness to go the other way and his plate discipline with two strikes, he’s the best two strike hitter in major league baseball from a batting average standpoint.     

The thing that’s most vital for the Rangers going forward is the ability to start slugging some home runs, which they’ve been lagging in.   

Q:  There are moments where Jaco deGrom appears to have turned back time and then moments where he’s less than stellar.  What have you seen from deGrom this season?

A:  Jacob deGrom has struggled recently, but he’s still Jacob deGrom.  I think one of the most impressive things about him is the intellectual and academic approach he takes to pitching.    

When he struggles, you don’t really lose confidence in him because he’s going to figure it out.   He’s still throwing in the high 90’s with a lower 90’s slider.  He has a really good change-up and curveball as well that people don’t talk about a ton.     

The other thing is his leadership.  He’s been awesome and I don’t think that picture was fully painted in New York, but that’s been the case here.

Q:  Finally, when do you anticipate someone in this division breaking out on a significant winning streak, thus creating some separation from the pack?     

A:  I don’t know when someone is going to make a huge push for this division, all of the teams are flawed.     

The Angels aren’t even a consideration, having the worst record in baseball.     

It might be that no one wins 90 games, and with that, it’s going to be a tight race.    

The one team that I do think that has the upside to make a huge push in the immediate future would be the Mariners, just because the Rangers and Astros are super beat up.    The A’s rarely have the starting pitching advantage, so they have to do it with their lineup, which is for real but it might not be possible to rattle off a ton of consecutive wins.     

Seattle is still the team on paper, and there’s a reason why a lot of people picked them at the beginning of the year. 

Mets vs. Reds: 5 things to watch and series predictions | May 25-27

Here are five things to watch, plus predictions as the Mets and the Cincinnati Reds play a three-game series at Citi Field starting Monday at 4:10 p.m.

THINGS TO WATCH

Pivotal start? 

Nolan McLean starts Monday’s game looking to rebound after a dreadful outing in Washington his last time out. Gifted a five-run lead in that game, McLean could not hold it, leading to another disappointing Met loss. McLean allowed nine runs (six earned) and eight hits in 5.2 innings. Both were career-worsts. He also gave up two home runs, only the second time in his brief career he’s been hit for more than one in any start.

The Mets, coming off a 2-5 road trip that ended with getting swept in Miami, could really use an ace-level bounce-back from McLean. The 27-25 Reds, as a lineup, generally do not chase, so it’ll be fascinating to see how they react when McLean uses his otherworldly ability to spin the baseball.

Which will give? 

Two things that are true at once: The Mets often have trouble scoring runs. And the Reds have trouble stopping opponents from scoring runs. So the Mets should score against Cincy’s pitching staff, which is 25th in overall ERA (4.78), 29th in bullpen ERA (5.04) and has allowed the third-most home runs and the third-most walks. 

Shouldn’t they? 

We’ll see, of course. The Mets after all, are coming off a series in which they scored all of two runs against the Marlins, had just 11 hits in three games and mustered just nine total at-bats with runners in scoring position. The Mets are averaging 3.89 runs this season, fifth-lowest in baseball.

I’m (not) walkin’ here!

The Mets drew five walks in their loss Sunday, which is somewhat relevant because they had walked just seven times in their previous five games combined. This is a team with the keen-eyed Juan Soto as a lineup linchpin, mind you, even if he missed Sunday’s loss with illness. MLB pitchers are averaging 3.6 walks per nine innings, so the Mets have been missing on their fair share lately, whether it’s because of an approach flaw or running into a spate of precise pitching. Whatever the case, a few more free passes obviously would add something to a mostly punchless offense. The Mets enter this series with the worst on-base percentage (.293) in baseball. The MLB average is .318.

May 20, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Cincinnati Reds infielder Sal Stewart (27) tosses his bat after hitting a two-run home run against the Philadelphia Phillies in the ninth inning at Citizens Bank Park.
May 20, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Cincinnati Reds infielder Sal Stewart (27) tosses his bat after hitting a two-run home run against the Philadelphia Phillies in the ninth inning at Citizens Bank Park. / Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

Rookie comp

McLean figures to be a candidate for NL Rookie of the Year and the Reds have one of their own, too, in first baseman Sal Stewart, who is a big part of a Cincy offense that is scoring 4.40 runs per game, slightly above the MLB average. It’ll be fun to watch McLean versus Stewart with their elite rookie status in mind.

Stewart leads NL rookies in homers, RBI, slugging and OPS and has also stolen 10 bases in 11 tries. Overall, Stewart is 10th in the NL in RBI with 34, one fewer than his teammate, Elly De La Cruz.

Chase rates

Chase Burns, who is scheduled to start Tuesday’s game, has been one of the best pitchers in baseball at only 23 years old. The Reds’ righty is having a huge season, ranking fourth in the majors in ERA (1.83) and fifth in WHIP (0.95). He is 6-1 and has won five straight decisions. 

His road ERA (1.46) is second only to Cam Schlittler of the Yankees, who has a 1.04 mark. Burns relies mostly on a 98 mile-per-hour fastball and a slider. He’s finished off 97 plate appearances with his slider and struck out 44 batters with it. Opponents are batting .137 against the slider and .183 overall. 

Burns, the second overall pick in the 2024 MLB First-Year Player Draft out of Wake Forest, has never faced the Mets, so their hitters will have to rely on video for prep and not their personal experience. It’ll be a difficult solve for the Mets – Burns is allowing only 5.8 hits per nine innings this season.

PREDICTONS

Who will be the series MVP?

AJ Ewing: Yes, he’s been striking out some – he’s got seven straight games with at least one whiff and fanned five times in 11 plate appearances against the Marlins. But he’s still getting on base and his speed game could impact the Mets offense – the Reds have only thrown out nine would-be thieves in 48 stolen-base attempts (19 percent, five percent worse than league average).

What Mets pitcher will have the best start? 

Nolan McLean: He’s hyper-competitive, so his yearning to wash away the memory of his poor start against the Nationals, plus his elite talent, should mean a big outing.

Which Reds player will be a thorn in the Mets side? 

Elly De La Cruz: One of the most exciting players in baseball, De La Cruz hits the ball extremely hard (he’s seventh in average exit velocity, a few ticks better than Aaron Judge). The Mets have held him to a .196 average across 14 previous games, so maybe he’s due. De La Cruz has 25 extra-base hits (ninth in MLB) and he’s seventh in runs scored and 12th in RBI. 

How the Washington Nationals pitching staff dominated an elite Braves lineup

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MAY 23: Richard Lovelady #55 of the Washington Nationals celebrates after a 2-0 victory over the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on May 23, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Brett Davis/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For most of this season, the Nationals formula for success has been scoring runs in bunches. After all, they have scored the most runs in all of baseball. However, with the bats being quiet this weekend in Atlanta, the Nats had to find a different way to win. They did just that by outpitching the Braves en route to a series win.

It was a true team effort from the pitching staff, but the rotation was especially elite. If you count Miles Mikolas’ bulk relief appearance, Nats starters went 16 innings without allowing a run to the Braves offense. Given the firepower Atlanta has, that is extremely impressive. Mikolas, Jake Irvin and Foster Griffin all stepped up in a huge way.

Sure, the Nats have allowed the most runs in all of baseball, but the pitching staff has been very solid the past month. Since April 25th, Nationals pitchers have posted a 4.01 ERA. That is not elite by any means, but it is good enough with this offense. Fans have been wondering what this Nats team would be like with average pitching, and well we have seen it for the last month. The Nats are 16-11 since April 25th, when they started getting that solid pitching. 

While the Nats have allowed the most runs in the league, not all of that is on this pitching staff. The Nats have a 4.80 team ERA, which is actually only the fifth worst in the league. A big reason they lead the league in runs allowed is their leaky defense. We are still seeing plenty of defensive miscues, but hopefully that can improve like the pitching has.

The last two games of the Braves series were particularly excellent for the pitching staff. After a rough extra inning loss on Friday, where the bullpen could not hold on, the Nats needed a good start from Jake Irvin. That is exactly what they got, with the big right hander firing 5 hitless innings with 7 strikeouts. Irvin’s curveball had Braves hitters fighting for their lives and the fastball velocity was up.

However, Irvin had to come out of the game with an injury after 5 innings. With a depleted bullpen, Blake Butera had to rely on Brad Lord to give them length. As he usually does, Lord came through for his team, firing off three scoreless innings. Yesterday, I wrote about how important Lord is to this team and how much I love his no-nonsense style on the mound. 

Richard Lovelady got a big save on Saturday to finish that game off. Lovelady saw action in all three games this series. He was mostly excellent. In his first two outings, Lovelady threw two clean innings, one as an opener and the other as a closer. He came in to try and close out the finale as well. Lovelady got the ground ball he needed to end the game, but Nasim Nunez booted it. Eventually, he was pulled for Orlando Ribalta, who saved the day.

Lovelady has been a huge part of this bullpen since being picked up through the waiver process from the Mets. Since joining the Nats, Lovelady has a 1.72 ERA in 16 outings. Sure, he sometimes puts himself in messy situations, but he has been able to make the big pitch when he has needed it more times than not.

One of the heroes of yesterday’s win was Foster Griffin. As we all know, Griffin got off to an electric start before his ERA took a beating in his last two outings. The 30 year old southpaw got back on track in a big way yesterday. He fired 6 scoreless frames in the rain, in a badly needed bounceback outing. Griffin’s command was on point yesterday, rarely missing in the middle of the plate with any of his 7 pitches.

This was an outing that Griffin needed to show the world that he is no fluke. After coming over from Japan, he flummoxed hitters through his first 8 outings. However, it looked like the league was starting to figure him out in his previous two starts. Yesterday, Griffin showed that when he is locating, there are not many answers against him.

Location and execution was key all weekend. Mikolas, Irvin and Griffin were all locating at an extremely high level. That helped them carve through a Braves lineup that has been excellent for most of the season. With Ronald Acuna Jr. and Matt Olson slumping, the Nats may have caught the Braves at the right time, but the Nats pitchers are also part of the reason for these slumps.

The bullpen was more up and down than the rotation this weekend, but in 2 of the 3 games, they got the job done. Clayton Beeter looked extremely sharp in his first two outings off the IL. The previously mentioned Lovelady and Lord were also key parts of this series win.

However, a big shoutout has to go to Orlando Ribalta, who saved the day yesterday. He came into a bases loaded, one out situation with a one run lead. The Cuban righty was able to make the lead stick and win the game for the Nats. Ribalta struck out Friday’s walk off hero Chadwick Tromp, before getting Acuna to break his bat and roll a grounder to first to give the Nats the series win.

Ribalta has been very impressive this season. He has a 2.31 ERA in 12 outings, and has gotten his team out of some big jams lately. In my opinion, Ribalta has the best stuff of anyone in the bullpen. His fastball is in the upper 90’s, his slider is sharp and he also will throw a nasty changeup at times. The key for him this season has been improved strike-throwing.

In the past, control has been a big issue for the 6’7 right hander. However, he has been throwing a lot of strikes this season. His walk rate has gone from 14.2% to a much more manageable 8.5%. With his stuff, Ribalta is tough to hit when he is throwing strikes. Outside of a couple outings where he allowed some unlucky hits and briefly lost his command, Ribalta has been money.

At the beginning of the season, this pitching staff was a massive question mark. It felt like Blake Butera did not have any answers to turn to, but that has changed. This pitching staff is not elite by any means, but they have been solid for about a month now. They picked up the offense in a big way this weekend, but most of the time, average pitching will be good enough with this lineup.

Yankees vs Royals Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The New York Yankees and Kansas City Royals get together for an early-week series starting this afternoon.

This series has intrigue, and this pitching matchup between two arms that have overperformed their underlying metrics is no exception. We see the Yankees getting the best of the Royals in this spot.

Read all about it in my Yankees vs Royals predictions and MLB picks for Monday, May 25.

Who will win Yankees vs Royals today: Yankees (-140)

Kansas City Royals arm Michael Wacha is the perfect example of "does nothing great but does mostly everything well." That's typically a good quality for a starter, but it's also why his expected ERA sits over a full run higher than his actual mark, screaming negative regression. 

A below-average barrel rate (8.2%) and hard-hit rate (39%) are troubling against the team that ranks first in baseball in both categories.

When these two met in the Bronx in April, two of the three hardest-hit balls by New York Yankees hitters came off Wacha and resulted in unlucky line-outs. Play to -170.

Covers COVERS INTEL:Will Warren's 5.9% walk rate sits in the 86th percentile, which limits free baserunners against a Royals offense that already struggles to manufacture rallies on its own.

Yankees vs Royals Over/Under pick: Under 9 (-110)

This is a touch high.

I haven't been thrilled about backing Warren this year, but his 86th-percentile strikeout rate should play well here against a Royals lineup with limited barrel threats. This means Warren should generate plenty of swing-and-miss. 

While I like the Yankees to get after Wacha, the story of the season so far for New York is at play here: There's still a good amount of easy outs at the bottom of the Yankees lineup. I made the total 8.7; this is not a huge edge but playable nonetheless. 

Chris Hatfield's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 21-19, +1.56 units
  • Over/Under bets: 25-15, +12.34 units

Yankees vs Royals odds

  • Moneyline: Yankees -145 | Royals +118 
  • Run line: Yankees -1.5 | Royals +1.5 
  • Over/Under: Over 9 | Under 9 

Yankees vs Royals trend

The Yankees have won all 10 of their last 10 head-to-head matchups with Kansas City, covering the -1.5 run line in all but two of those meetings. Find more MLB betting trends for Yankees vs. Royals.

How to watch Yankees vs Royals and game info

LocationKauffman Stadium, Kansas City, MO
DateMonday, May 25, 2026
First pitch3:40 p.m. ET
TVESPN
Yankees starting pitcherWill Warren
(6-1, 3.61 ERA)
Royals starting pitcherMichael Wacha
(4-2, 2.70 ERA)

Yankees vs Royals latest injuries

Yankees vs Royals weather

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Good Morning San Diego: Michael King struggles, Padres fall to Athletics in final game of series

San Diego Padres Fernando Tatis Jr. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Fernando Tatis Jr. stepped into the batter’s box with the San Diego Padres trailing the Athletics 5-2 in the final game of the series at Petco Park on Sunday. Jackson Merrill and Ramon Laureano were on base after drawing walks and Tatis represented the tying run that could have sparked a ninth inning walk-off win or at least sent the game into extra innings. The Friar Faithful wanted to see their homerless superstar connect on a game-tying home run that would have ended his drought and propelled Tatis to a power surge to end the month. Instead, Tatis hit a 2-0 fastball on the outer half of the plate into right field. Jesse Agler calling the game on 9.3 The Fan, described the ball as high, but not deep and it came down into the glove of Athletics right fielder Lawrence Butler to give San Diego a three-run loss. If you look at the box score, Tatis had a good day at the plate, finishing 3-for-5 but it is the final at-bat that will be talked about more than any other.

The Padres were able to collect nine hits in the game but were unable to push a run across the plate until the bottom of the sixth inning. Miguel Andujar led off the inning with a double and that was followed by a Gavin Sheets groundout, which pushed Andujar to third base. Manny Machado was able to lift a flyball deep into left field that allowed Andujar to tag up and score from third. Xander Bogaerts singled with two outs in the inning and was able to steal second base, but Merrill grounded out to end the inning, one batter later.

San Diego was trailing 4-1 when the Padres came to the plate in the bottom of the seventh inning. Ty France changed that when he hit a one-out solo home run to right field to make the score, 4-2. A popout by Rodolfo Duran and a groundout by Tatis ended the inning.

San Diego had to claw out of a 4-0 deficit after Michael King went just 3.2 innings and allowed four runs on five hits with four walks and four strikeouts. It was not what anyone expected to see from King following his fabulous seven-inning start against the Los Angeles Dodgers his last time out. King had trouble throwing his changeup for strikes and he was unable to make the necessary adjustment to get control before throwing 81 pitches and being removed from the game.

The Padres bullpen did well under the circumstances. Ron Marinaccio pitched three scoreless innings allowing one hit, one walk and two strikeouts. Wandy Peralta followed with 1.1 scoreless innings with one hit, one walk and two strikeouts. Bradgley Rodriguez came on in the ninth and surrendered a run one three hits to put the Athletics ahead, 5-2 but he did record three strikeouts while walking one.

Bogaerts and France joined Tatis with multiple hits int the game. They each had two hits, while Andujar and Sheets chipped in with one hit apiece.

The Padres open a series against the Philadelphia Philles today at Petco Park at 3:40 p.m.

Padres News:

Baseball News:

  • Dylan Cease and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. exited the game early and the Toronto Blue Jays lost to the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4-1.

Podcast: On the Orioles staying the course

Dec 10, 2024; Dallas, TX, USA; Baltimore Orioles executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias talks on the set of MLB Network at the Hilton Anatole during the 2024 MLB Winter Meetings. Mandatory Credit: Tim Heitman-Imagn Images | Tim Heitman-Imagn Images

The Orioles getting swept by the Rays was a lightning rod to attract a lot of criticism about the way the Orioles have been doing things so far this year. This was so true that even MASN’s Ben McDonald, who gets his paycheck from a team-owned entity, was fired up enough to unload about analytics on a post-game show after the sweep.

In this week’s episode of the podcast, I’m thinking about what McDonald had to say about the team and why a lot of ultimately misguided attitudes are flowing from that. I’m also thinking about an article that was in The Baltimore Banner the day after McDonald’s rant that suggested that no changes will be coming to the Orioles offensive philosophy because that “would be an admission of failure that … would only lend credence to the criticisms” of the front office.

For me, that was a disheartening article, and I try to get into why in this episode. High-level baseball is a game of constant adjustments, where you see how they’re responding to what you’re doing and then you respond to that, and then they respond to your response, and so on down the line. Perhaps if it seems like the Orioles are poorly adapting, it’s because Jon Meoli’s report that the front office doesn’t think there’s a need to adapt. If that’s the case, then Mike Elias has staked a lot on this season, and if it stays on the failure path, he shouldn’t get another season at the helm.

Listen to this week’s episode here:

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This is my weekly podcast about whatever is going on lately with the Orioles. If you enjoyed this episode, please make sure to subscribe. You can get the show on SpotifyApple Podcasts, or wherever you prefer to access your podcasts.

How are you feeling about the way things are going with the Orioles right now? Answers could make it into the mailbag section of the next episode of the podcast.