Carlos Mendoza thanks Mets, fans in statement following departure as manager

The Mets' disastrous first-half of the season finally reached it's tipping point on Friday morning, as the team announced that they've fired manager Carlos Mendoza.  

Mendoza was in the midst of his third year at the helm in Queens. 

Behind an absolutely magical turnaround, he led them to an 89-73 finish and an NLCS appearance as a rookie manager during the 2024 season. 

But Mendoza Mets would miss the postseason after a second-half collapse last year, and that disappointment carried over to this season after a winter of wholesale changes. 

New York holds a 34-47 record following their ugly four-game series sweep at the hands of the Cubs. 

Though things didn't end as Mendoza or the Mets hoped, the skipper penned a statement on Friday afternoon thanking Steve and Alex Cohen, David Stearns, Mets fans, and everyone throughout the organization. 

"New York will always hold a special place in my heart," he wrote. "I leave with tremendous gratitude, pride in what we accomplished together, and confidence that the future of this organization is bright. I wish the Mets and their fans nothing but success in the years ahead." 

Yankees Sequence of the Week: Ryan Weathers (6/24)

DETROIT, MI - JUNE 24: Ryan Weathers #40 of the New York Yankees pitches against the Detroit Tigers during the first inning at Comerica Park on June 24, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Duane Burleson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees rebounded from a recent three-game losing streak to secure the final two games of their series against the Tigers. They couldn’t keep that momentum rolling into the series opener against the Red Sox as countless mental errors piled up en route to a 6-3 loss. As such, we have to go back to that series at Comerica to find a candidate for Sequence of the Week, that distinction belonging to Ryan Weathers in the rubber game.

We join Weathers with two outs in the bottom of the second on Wednesday. Paul Goldschmidt led off the game with a home run off Tarik Skubal, but Weathers handed it right back with a Spencer Torkelson double, Hao-Yu Lee walk, and Zach McKinstry RBI single. That put runners on first and second with the score tied, 1-1; every run crucial with the back-to-back reigning AL Cy Young on the mound for the home team.

With the nine-hole hitter Jake Rogers at the plate, it becomes imperative that Weathers go right after him and halt the early rally here to avoid turning the lineup over to AL Rookie of the Year frontrunner Kevin McGonigle. Weathers starts Rogers with a first pitch sweeper, Austin Wells setting a target on the outside edge as they attempt to steal a called strike one.

Instead, Weathers pulls this pitch down and in, and it lands a full two feet away from his intended aim of back-dooring the pitch. Had he landed a fastball in the zone before this, there’s a much higher chance that Rogers would have chased this pitch, but as a first pitch offering, there was nothing to set it up.

Despite failing to execute that sweeper to his spot by a wide margin, Weathers tries the same backdoor tactic again.

He’s lucky that Rogers gives up on this pitch early, because it ends up right down the middle for a called strike. Had Rogers been sitting on another breaker, there’s a good chance he would have crushed this pitch having gotten a good look at its movement profile on the prior pitch.

Now that Weathers has shown Rogers two straight off-speed pitches that break toward the batter, he has the situation set up to start a changeup down the same tunnel as the sweeper he just threw so that he can fool Rogers with a pitch that now breaks away from him.

The process is sound but the execution not so much. He yanks this changeup just like he did with the first pitch changeup, and it ends up well below the zone for ball two. The pitch starts as a ball out of Weathers’ hand and only travels farther away from the zone, making for a straightforward take from Rogers.

This pitch wasn’t as poorly executed as the result might suggest, and it appears has found the right seam orientation at release based on the sharp, late breaking movement downward. The pitch must have felt good coming out of his hand, because he shakes off Wells to get back to the changeup.

This one is an absolute doozy, as evidenced by Rogers spinning out and falling into the dirt as he whiffs wildly over the top. He’s obviously selling out for the fastball here, and is made to look silly by an absolutely disgusting changeup.

After seeing such an out of control hack from Rogers, the only logical choice would be to try to replicate that pitch.

Weathers throws the perfect changeup, on the corner down and away with wicked sinking and fading movement. Even if Rogers takes this pitch, it’s called strike three. However, that’s a moot point as Rogers once again swings and misses super early and over the top as if he is anticipating a fastball. Weathers strands both the runners, giving his offense the chance to grab the lead again as Goldschmidt crushed his second homer and Jasson Domínguez went yard off Skubal as he continues to look much improved batting righty.

Here’s the full sequence:

Weathers needed this turnaround start badly having allowed at least five runs in four of six starts before this game. In allowing one earned run across six strong innings, Weathers’ ERA sinks back below four, Weathers crucially keeping the ball in the yard amid his home run issues. Weathers and Will Warren are currently fighting for their spot in the rotation with Max Fried’s return from injury on the not-too-distant horizon, and a performance like this is certainly a mark in Weathers’ favor.

A look at the 2026 Cubs at the season’s halfway mark

Let’s look at the season this way for a moment.

If, on Opening Day, I had told you the Cubs would be 44-37 after 81 games, you’d have probably been a bit disappointed. That’s an 88-win pace, which is good, but fewer wins than last year and probably not enough to win the NL Central.

The thing is, I think a lot of Cubs fans are hugely disappointed in the team right now. They’ve generated enough offense, I’d think, to win more games than that. They currently rank sixth in MLB in runs with 399 (and they’re only 10 runs behind the third-ranked Pirates). That’s just less than five runs per game. Generally, if you can score around 800 runs in a season, you’re going to win 90+ games.

Except if the pitching staff isn’t doing its job, you’re not. And this pitching staff has been riddled with injuries. I don’t need to recount all of those to you, you are quite familiar with them. And right now, the team has allowed 362 runs, which ranks 16th, exactly league average. What’s worse, though, is that they have served up 123 home runs, most in MLB. The A’s are second at 120, and as you know, they play in a minor-league park that’s known for long balls.

The weirdest part about this very odd Cubs season is how they got to 44-37.

First 16 games: 7-9, 73 runs scored, 69 allowed
Next 23 games: 20-3, 142 runs scored, 90 allowed
Next 29 games: 7-22, 93 runs scored, 151 allowed
Next 13 games:
10-3, 91 runs scored, 52 allowed

That is…

I mean, what team does that in half of a single season? That’s a .500 club for a couple of weeks, the best team in baseball for three weeks, the worst team in baseball for four weeks, and the best team again for two weeks.

Hitting? Pitching? As you can see, it’s both. During the 20-3 streak, the team averaged more than six runs a game and allowed fewer than four. Then they spent nearly a month scoring only a bit more than three per game (and scored 1 run or fewer nine times), but also allowed 5.2 per game.

In the current 13-game stretch, they’re back to pounding the ball — seven runs scored per game — and also have had solid pitching, allowing four per game.

Where does this team go from here?

Acquiring David Peterson will help. As has been written elsewhere, he’s an extreme ground ball pitcher who will be helped by the Cubs’ elite infield defense. We just spent four days watching how bad the Mets infield defense is (and that’s not a one-year problem, either).

But clearly, the team needs another starting pitcher, too. Today we stand 38 days from the trade deadline. The Mets, incidentally, should be one of the teams selling, and Freddy Peralta pitched well enough Thursday (and for most of the season) that he should be a Cubs trade target. Peralta, too, would be helped by the Cubs defense. There are other pitchers out there that I’m sure Jed Hoyer & Co. are targeting.

They could use some relief help, too. If I’m Hoyer I’m on the phone with my old buddy Craig Breslow in Boston, seeing what it would take to get Aroldis Chapman. Hey, it worked 10 years ago. Chapman isn’t the pitcher he was in 2016, but he is still an effective MLB reliever and he could close games in Daniel Palencia’s absence.

Other than that, the offense has begun to click again. If the team can get Alex Bregman, Seiya Suzuki and Michael Busch going, it could be a real juggernaut in the season’s second half.

That second 81-game stretch begins tonight in Milwaukee. Hopefully this Cubs team can play better against the Brewers than they did last month in Chicago.

As always, we await developments. Go Cubs.

If not now, when? Phillies vs. Mets series preview

May 8, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; New York Mets first baseman Mark Vientos tosses his bat after hitting a solo home run in the second inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The Phillies could have easily been swept by the Washington Nationals. They generally played poorly for most of the four-game series, but thanks to some late-inning magic against a garbage fire bullpen, they ended up winning the series.

Speaking of garbage fires, there’s the New York Mets. Since defeating the Phillies last Thursday, they’ve lost six games in a row, some of them in embarrassing fashion. But hey, at least some people in the stadium managed to enjoy themselves.

However, if there’s one thing the Mets have been able to count on in recent years, it’s beating the Phillies at Citi Field. The Phillies have lost ten straight games at the stadium including two games in the 2024 NLDS. With the Mets in freefall, if the Phillies can’t find a way to win a game this weekend, it seems possible that they might never win there again.

…..And as I was writing this, it was announced that the Mets have fired manager Carlos Mendoza.

This is not a positive development for the Phillies, as the Mets may likely experience a “new manager bounce” this weekend. On the other hand, it gives me a reason to use this clip:

Opposition research: Mark Vientos

In 2024, the Mets thought they had a young star on their hands. In his first full season, Mark Vientos put up an OPS of .837 with 27 home runs. And he went on to destroy the Phillies in the NLDS, going 9-16 with two home runs.

He’s continued to perform well against the Phillies. Last year, he batted .313 with two home runs against them, and in the series last week, he was 2-5 with a homer. However, he hasn’t hit all that well against anybody else in that time, and combined with horrendous defense, he’s been one of the least valuable players in the league.

Things aren’t trending in Vientos’ direction either. He’s batting just .179 in June and went 1-10 in the series against the Cubs.

Defensively, the Mets accepted that he couldn’t hack it at third base so they moved him to first this season. However, he’s proven to be equally bad there, committing a league high six errors. Mets fans are now openly pining for Pete Alonso.

Does any of this mean that he won’t have a few big hits against the Phillies this weekend? Of course not!

Hating on the Mets

There’s not that much I can write about the Mets that their own fans haven’t already said.

Let’s see what Mets fan Jerry Seinfeld has to say about that.

Trivia

Last week’s answer: The three relievers to earn wins in the Phillies’ sweep of the Mets in September 2007 were Tom Gordon, Antonio Alfonseca, and Geoff Geary. MG77 and Morris Buttermaker each named one of them.

This week’s question: The Phillies last win at Citi Field was a 12-2 romp on September 20, 2024. Which Phillie had four hits and four RBIs in that game?

Vote for the Phillies! Just not necessarily the ones you expected

It’s kind of hilarious that Brandon Marsh, Alec Bohm, and Bryson Stott have all reached the second round of All-Star voting while Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber did not. While Marsh clearly deserves inclusion on the team, it wasn’t that long ago that fans wanted both Bohm and Stott traded away for anything they could get. (Can you imagine the reaction at the end of April if someone told you that Alec Bohm might be an All-Star?)

Harper and Schwarber both have a good chance to be named to the team as reserves, although they could always get excluded due to the “every team gets a guy” role and whether or not Dave Roberts feels he has to choose a rookie with six starts under his belt.

Additional thought about the series

Late inning comebacks are really fun, and the Mets also do not have a great bullpen. (Sure, it’s better than the Nationals’ relief group, but I don’t think it’s possible to be worse.) That said, it wouldn’t be a bad thing for the Phillies to simply get out to an early lead and sustain it for the entire game.

They should have an opportunity to score early runs. The Mets are calling up rookie Zach Thornton to start one game, and it seems likely either Kodai Senga or Christian Scott will get the ball at some point. Either way, the Phillies won’t be facing a top-notch array of pitchers this weekend.

I am slightly worried that the Mets can’t possibly continue to play as poorly as they have been, and they might be somewhat motivated by getting their manager fired. On the other hand, the Phillies can’t keep losing every game at Citi Field, right? In the end, while I’d love to see the Phillies extend the Mets’ misery, I think I’d be happy if they can come away with one win this weekend. That’s not too much to ask for, right?

Two-start pitchers: Tarik Skubal headlines a plethora of elite options as we turn the page to July

Hello and welcome to the 14th installment of our weekly two-start pitcher article for the 2026 MLB season.

I will continue to be here every Friday to highlight some of the best two-start pitcher options in fantasy baseball leagues for the upcoming week providing my insights and recommendations on which options should be started or benched.

The fantasy baseball season is a marathon, not a sprint. As we creep toward the All-Star break, it’s easy to fall into bad habits and not spend as much time on teams that have struggled out of the gate, but now is not the time to panic or give up. Keep putting in the work and plugging away, striving to improve each week, and you’ll reap rewards at the end of this season.

This is a living document, so we'll update the options below as the weekend moves along.

Before we get into it, we'll start with a couple of notes on situations that may be unresolved or teams that may not have a two-start pitcher lined up for the upcoming week:

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Someone from the Cubs is likely to make two starts next week (vs. Padres, vs. Cardinals), but as of Friday afternoon we still have no idea who that will be. It won’t be Colin Rea or Matthew Boyd, that much is sure. With Edward Cabrera (hamstring)and Ben Brown (neck) hitting the injured list though, the Cubs are going to have to get creative. Both Javier Assad and Shota Imanaga pitched in Wednesday’s doubleheader against the Mets, so one of them is likely to get the ball on Monday with the other going on Tuesday. That leaves Jordan Wicks and David Peterson to try to get through the weekend on Saturday and Sunday against the Brewers in Milwaukee. Imanaga is an every-week start regardless of whether or not he goes twice. Assad would be much more appealing if he’s lined up to start Monday.

The Astros have shifted to a six-man rotation, at least for the time being, so with six games on tap for next week none of their hurlers are scheduled to pitch twice. If anything changes, or if someone gets skipped this time through, Peter Lambert would be the beneficiary and he would get a two-start week (vs. Twins, vs. Rays).

The Royals only play five games next week, so unless they plan on skipping someone in their rotation, no one is going to get a two-start week. If they do decide to adjust their rotation, Noah Cameron pitches on Tuesday and would draw the two-start week (vs. Rays, vs. Phillies). We’ll update here if anything changes.

The Mets are currently rolling with a six-man rotation and only have six games on the docket, so it’s unclear if anyone is going to pitch twice. They also canned manager Carlos Mendoza on Friday morning, so major changes to the rotation could be coming. Nolan McLean is scheduled to pitch on Monday and would draw the two-start week (at Blue Jays, at Braves) if the Mets do shake things up. There’s no actionable takeaway though as McLean should be an every week start in all leagues regardless of matchup.

Going Twice…

Note: Probable pitchers as of June 26 and are subject to change.

American League

▶ Strong Plays

Tarik Skubal, Tigers, LHP (at Yankees, at Rangers)

Since returning from the injured list, Skubal hasn’t been quite as good as he has been over the past two seasons – posting a 4.96 ERA, 1.10 WHIP and a 21/2 K/BB ratio over 16 1/3 innings in his three starts. He has served up six home runs during that stretch, a trend that’s unlikely to continue as he continues to shake off the rust. You can’t sit Skubal for a two-start week, even if it includes a matchup against the Yankees in New York. With the Tigers’ playoff hopes sinking by the day, he’ll have the added motivation of auditioning for interested clubs over his next few starts as the trade deadline approaches.

Ranger Suarez, Red Sox, LHP (vs. Nationals, at Angels)

The Red Sox as a club have been a major disappointment this season, but there has been nothing disappointing about what free agent acquisition Ranger Suarez has given them. Through 15 starts he holds a brilliant 2.83 ERA, 1.14 WHIP and an 84/25 K/BB ratio across 82 2/3 innings of work. He should be an every week start in all formats, so just sit back and enjoy the added production from a two-start week. As a bonus, the matchups fall in his favor this week and he’s likely to finally tally his fourth victory of the season.

Jacob deGrom, Rangers, RHP (at Guardians, vs. Tigers)

As the old adage goes, as long as deGrom is healthy enough to take the mound, he’s an elite option and should be locked into all fantasy lineups. That has been the case once again this season as the 38-year-old hurler has registered a 3.55 ERA, 1.03 WHIP and a 106/20 K/BB ratio across 88 2/3 innings through his first 16 starts. Just sit back and enjoy the added production from a two-start week this time around. He represents one of the top overall plays on the board this week.

Parker Messick, Guardians, LHP (vs. Rangers, vs. White Sox)

The 25-year-old southpaw has enjoyed tremendous success in his rookie campaign, going 7-4 with a 2.67 ERA, 1.05 WHIP and a 101/29 K/BB ratio across 94 1/3 innings through his first 16 starts. He seems to be getting better as the year goes on also, striking out at least nine batters in each of his last two starts – including a matchup against the White Sox. Those that have Messick should be using him every week, so there’s no real actionable takeaway here. He’s easily one of the top options on the board for this week.

Bryan Woo, Mariners, RHP (vs. Angels, vs. Blue Jays)

Woo hasn’t been quite as dominant as we have come to expect from him this season, pitching to a pedestrian 4.26 ERA with a strong 1.04 WHIP and a 92/18 K/BB ratio over 93 innings. His issues have come on the road recently, giving up five or more runs in each of his last three outings away from T-Mobile Park. Fortunately for fantasy managers, he’ll make two starts at home this week against offenses that rank in the middle of the pack. Expect Woo to do some work at correcting that ERA this week. It should be all systems go in all leagues for the Mariners’ right-hander.

Trey Yesavage, Blue Jays, RHP (vs. Mets, at Mariners)

So far, so good for Yesavage through his first 11 starts on the season. The 22-year-old right-hander holds a strong 3.56 ERA, 1.17 WHIP and a 58/30 K/BB ratio over 60 2/3 innings. It’s not quite the elite production that he flashed at the end of the 2025 season, but it’s been more than good enough for fantasy managers. He should be an every week start in all fantasy leagues until he gives us a reason to think otherwise. You just get the bonus of double the production and a pair of strong matchups to boot this week.

Griffin Jax, Rays, RHP (at Royals, at Astros)

Since making the jump to the Rays’ rotation at the end of April, Jax has put together a 2.40 ERA, 1.20 WHIP and a 43/13 K/BB ratio over 45 innings in his 11 starts. That’s pretty great work. It’s even better when you account for most of the damage coming in one six-run disaster against the Tigers. Otherwise, he has allowed two earned runs or fewer in each of his other 10 starts. Look for the good times to continue this week, making Jax a very strong option in all leagues.

Ryan Weathers, Yankees, LHP (vs. Tigers, vs. Twins)

It has been exciting to see what Weathers can do when he’s able to stay on the mound. Through 15 starts on the season, he boasts a solid 3.95 ERA, 1.14 WHIP and a 95/24 K/BB ratio across 86 2/3 innings. He went through a tough stretch in late May through early June where he allowed five or more runs in three straight outings, but has righted the ship with two very strong outings his last two times out. One of those was against the Tigers who struggle mightily against left-handed pitching and who he’ll take on once again on Monday. He’s an easy start in all leagues this week.

Sean Burke, White Sox, RHP (at Orioles, at Guardians)

Burke has done a very nice job for the White Sox this season, posting a solid 3.71 ERA, 1.21 WHIP and an 87/30 K/BB ratio over 87 1/3 innings of work through his first 16 appearances (12 starts). He enters this two-start week in especially good form, allowing just one run in each of his last two starts while registering a 14/2 K/BB ratio over 13 2/3 innings against the Yankees in New York and the Guardians at home. Go ahead and ride the hot hand here as Burke looks like a very strong play in all league sizes this week.

Tanner Bibee, Guardians, RHP (vs. Rangers, vs. White Sox)

Despite the fact that he has won just two games on the season, Bibee has pitched very well overall – compiling a 3.78 ERA, 1.14 WHIP and an 81/29 K/BB ratio across 95 1/3 innings. Winning games is going to continue to be a struggle while the offense is without Jose Ramirez, but Bibee looks to be a rock solid option in all formats with two home starts on the docket. He should be started in all leagues without hesitation.

▶ Decent Plays

Gage Jump, Athletics, LHP (vs. Dodgers, vs. Marlins)

This one is tough and really depends on what you’re looking for. Jump has been one of the breakout stars of the 2026 season so far, registering a 2.06 ERA, 0.96 WHIP and a 35/10 K/BB ratio over 35 1/3 innings through his first six starts for the Athletics. The major problem this week is that he’s making both of his starts at home in West Sacramento, and the first one comes against the vaunted Dodgers’ offense. The strikeouts are going to be there regardless, and I think he easily soars into the double digits there for the week. That’s probably enough to use him in 15 teamers already. Just understand that there’s more ratio risk involved here than we’re used to seeing from Jump this season.

Shane Baz, Orioles, RHP (vs. White Sox, at Reds)

It has been a rough go for Baz as of late, giving up 11 runs (10 earned) over 17 innings in his last three starts. During that stretch he saw his ERA climb from 4.09 to 4.31. Now he has to battle a couple of offenses that hit well against right-handed pitching and his second start comes in a strong hitting environment in Cincinnati. If you’re not worried about ratios and want to use Baz as a full volume play to attack wins and strikeouts, that’s probably fine in all league sizes. Good ratios from him would just be a bonus this week and shouldn’t be the expectation.

Zebby Matthews, Twins, RHP (at Astros, at Yankees)

Aside from the inflated ERA, Matthews has done a nice job through his first eight starts for the Twins, compiling a 1.19 WHIP and a 39/11 K/BB ratio over 49 1/3 innings while notching three victories. Two disaster starts against the Tigers and Pirates – both on the road – are what has brought down his overall line. He’s coming off of a strong start at home against the Dodgers, which should inspire some confidence. He has struggled on the road though and now has to take on a pair of strong offenses in hitter’s parks. I could really go either way with this one. I’m fine betting on the talent winning out here, but be aware that one of these starts could turn into another seven-run explosion.

▶ At Your Own Risk

Ryan Johnson, Angels, RHP (at Mariners, vs. Red Sox)

Johnson has been pretty disastrous overall this season, registering an 8.84 ERA, 1.71 WHIP and a 15/9 K/BB ratio over 19 1/3 innings through his first six appearances (three starts). He did flash his upside his last time out though, firing six innings of one-hit, shutout baseball with eight strikeouts against the Orioles. Is that a trend that can continue this week? That’s up to you and your risk tolerance to decide. The matchups are actually pretty good and the strikeouts should be there even if he does struggle. I could understand taking the plunge in 15 teamers.

Erick Fedde, White Sox, RHP (at Orioles, at Guardians)

Maybe the White Sox are onto something having Fedde work behind an opener instead of as a traditional starter. Over his last four bulk outings, he holds a 2.20 ERA, 1.47 WHIP and a 14/6 K/BB ratio over 16 1/3 innings. He’s not giving you much length and he’s never really been an asset in strikeouts, so unless you’re hunting for wins it’s really tough to see the upside, especially with the WHIP damage that Fedde is likely to inflict.

National League

▶ Strong Plays

Braxton Ashcraft, Pirates, RHP (at Phillies, at Nationals)

Ashcraft has been an absolute stud for the Pirates and for fantasy managers through his first 16 starts on the season. He sits at 7-3 with a 3.07 ERA, 1.09 WHIP and a 107/22 K/BB ratio across 96 2/3 innings. For someone who was undrafted and plucked off the waiver wire in the majority of leagues, that’s excellent work. He enters his two-start week in good form also, having allowed just four runs in total over his last three starts while posting a 10/0 K/BB ratio in last week’s victory over the Mariners. There’s no reason that he should be sitting on any benches this week, start him with complete confidence.

Eduardo Rodriguez, Diamondbacks, LHP (vs. Giants, vs. Brewers)

Rodriguez was supposed to have made two starts this past week, but Thursday night’s rainout threw a wrench into those plans and pushed back his second outing. It’s not all bad though, as the rejuvenated southpaw gets to make a pair of home starts including a stellar draw against the Giants to start the week. He’s still an every week start in all leagues until he gives us a reason to think otherwise.

Sandy Alcantara, Marlins, RHP (at Rockies, at Athletics)

This one is fascinating to try to decipher. Alcantara has pitched decently overall this season, as his overall line has been dragged down by four disastrous outings in which he was shelled for six runs or more. Since the calendar flipped to June though, he has delivered five straight quality starts, lowering his ERA from 4.66 to 4.01 in the process. You’d like to think that trend continues this week, but he has to pitch in the two most hitter friendly ballparks in all of baseball in Coors Field and Sutter Health Park. When Alcantara is going well he can succeed in any environment and I’m inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt here. I’d throw caution to the wind and start him in all formats this week.

Eric Lauer, Dodgers, LHP (at Athletics, vs. Padres)

As we mentioned last week, the Dodgers finally get a seven-game week this week which means that Lauer is scheduled to make two starts. Any time we get a Dodgers’ pitcher going twice they’re a must-start for fantasy purposes. Since joining the Dodgers, Lauer has posted a brilliant 2.54 ERA, 0.92 WHIP and a 16/8 K/BB ratio across 28 1/3 innings. He was even used as a bulk reliever his last time out, which only adds to his win equity if that trend continues. He’s a very strong streaming option in all leagues this week.

▶ Decent Plays

Grant Holmes, Braves, RHP (vs. Cardinals, vs. Mets)

Overall this season Holmes has done a decent job for the Braves, posting a 4.17 ERA, 1.42 WHIP and a 65/37 K/BB ratio over 73 1/3 innings through his first 15 starts. He hasn’t made it out of the fifth inning since June 6 though and has really struggled with his command his last two times out. If he can get through five innings, he’s always a threat to earn a victory with the Braves’ offense backing him, but he hasn’t looked sharp recently. The matchups are good enough that I’d still probably roll the dice with him in 15 teamers and hope for the best. In 12’s it would really depend on what alternative options I had available.

Brandon Sproat, Brewers, RHP (vs. Reds, at Diamondbacks)

The overall numbers for Sproat this season have been underwhelming, but it looks like he actually may be rounding into the form that piqued the interest of fantasy managers coming into the season. The 25-year-old right-hander has allowed three earned runs or fewer in three of his last four starts and he’s coming off of a brilliant outing against the Reds in Cincinnati where he allowed just one hit and struck out 10 batters over six scoreless frames. The talent has always been there, and I’m inclined to roll with him until he shows any signs of slowing down.

Aaron Nola, Phillies, RHP (vs. Pirates, at Royals)

It’s disappointing to see what has become of Aaron Nola, who was once an ace-level option for fantasy purposes. Now, he’s nothing more than a source of strikeouts. He holds a miserable 5.58 ERA and 1.45 WHIP over 80 2/3 innings on the season, with his 82 punchouts the only thing that’s keeping him on the fringe of mixed league consideration. The matchups are intriguing enough this week that I’d be willing to go back to the well here. If he secures a victory and gets 10 strikeouts, it’ll be well worth the potential ratio hit.

Shane Drohan, Brewers, LHP (vs. Reds, at Diamondbacks)

Drohan has pitched well for the Brewers this season, registering a 3.12 ERA, 1.23 WHIP and a 52/17 K/BB ratio across 52 innings in 16 appearances (six starts). The ceiling isn’t terribly high here, but I don’t think there’s a major risk of ratio damage either if rolling him out for two starts. He should get you somewhere in the range of 8-12 strikeouts while posting decent ratios and giving you a shot at a victory. If you’re trying to stream two-start pitchers to add volume, he makes for a very attractive target this week.

Bubba Chandler, Pirates, RHP (at Phillies, at Nationals)

Could it be that we’re finally starting to see Chandler put it all together and figure out how to have sustained success at the big league level? Small sample size caveat, but over his last four starts, the right-hander has posted a 2.82 ERA and an 18/8 K/BB ratio over 22 1/3 innings, going at least five innings and surrendering two earned runs or fewer each time. The talent has never been in doubt, so I’m tempted to ride the hot hand here and roll with him in all leagues for this two-start week.

Rhett Lowder, Reds, RHP (at Brewers, vs. Orioles)

If you’re desperate for volume in deeper leagues and looking to gain ground in wins and strikeouts, Lowder isn’t the worst dart throw. His overall line on the season doesn’t look very appealing, but he has allowed just eight runs over 16 2/3 innings over his last three starts, going at least five innings and striking out at least five batters in all of them. That included a matchup against the Brewers his last time out. I think he could get you 10+ strikeouts and a shot at a victory this week, though his WHIP will probably leave a lot to be desired.

Tyler Mahle, Giants, RHP (at Diamondbacks, at Rockies)

It could be my own personal bias here, but I’m still desperately clinging to hope that Tyler Mahle can turn his season around and be the pitcher that we all thought he could be. He sits at 1-7 with a 5.49 ERA and 1.46 WHIP over 62 1/3 innings on the season. That’s terrible. The only category that he has been an asset in is strikeouts with 61. The matchups are tough too, taking on a pair of divisional opponents in extreme hitter’s parks. So why the optimism? After a long stint on the injured list, Mahle looked sharp this past week, firing 5 2/3 innings of scoreless baseball against the Athletics. It’s not much to go on, but it’s just enough that I’ll probably buy back in and roll the dice in 15 teamers.

▶ At Your Own Risk

Eury Perez, Marlins, RHP (at Rockies, at Athletics)

We saw mixed results from Perez in his first start back off of the injured list, as he allowed just one run on three hits over 4 2/3 innings against the Rangers. He only struck out one batter in that start though and was pulled after only 68 pitches. It was probably just the Marlins easing him back into action and he should be able to work deeper when he takes the mound on Tuesday. The problem is that he has to pitch at Coors Field and Sutter Health Park this week which is horrifying considering his issues giving up the long ball. There’s a chance he slides through unscathed this week, but the chances of him doing serious damage to your ratios are extremely high. I’d only use this one in leagues where I could handle the ratio damage or where I was in a tough spot and needed to take these types of chances.

Kyle Leahy, Cardinals, RHP (at Braves, at Cubs)

Leahy has struggled to find consistency this season, posting a middling 4.24 ERA, a catastrophic 1.51 WHIP and a 62/28 K/BB ratio over 76 1/3 innings through his first 15 starts. If the matchups were better, I’d consider him as a streaming option for his two-start week, but taking on the Braves and Cubs on the road is a bit terrifying. If your ratios are already in shambles and you don’t care about the WHIPping that he’s likely to provide, go ahead. Otherwise, I’d lean towards other alternatives this week.

JP Sears, Padres, LHP (at Cubs, at Dodgers)

Sears has pitched well in his lone start with the Padres this season and now gets another opportunity to pitch out of the rotation with Lucas Giolito heading to the injured list. He may wind up having some mixed league value at some point over the next few weeks, but these matchups are particularly brutal, having to take on the Cubs and Dodgers on the road. If you want to throw caution to the wind and hope for the best, go right ahead. Just understand the ratio risk you’re incurring when doing so.

Nick Lodolo, Reds, LHP (at Brewers, vs. Orioles)

Thus far, 2026 has been a season to forget for the Reds’ 28-year-old southpaw. In nine starts, he holds a miserable 5.59 ERA, 1.52 WHIP and a 38/18 K/BB ratio across 46 2/3 innings. That’s simply not going to cut it for fantasy managers. If there’s a glimmer of hope, he went four scoreless innings his last time out against the Brewers and struck out six. Maybe that’s him finally rounding back into form? Even so, he’s very difficult to trust at the moment, especially if you can’t even count on him going five innings. He’d leave him shelved if possible.

Griffin Canning, Padres, RHP (at Cubs, at Dodgers)

I had such high hopes that Canning could be a viable mixed league option once he was healthy enough to join the Padres’ rotation. He has been anything but. Through 10 appearances (eight starts) he sits at 1-5 with a hideous 7.38 ERA and 1.66 WHIP with 43 strikeouts in 42 2/3 innings. Maybe in neutral matchups you could talk yourself into using him as a volume option, but these matchups are the polar opposite of neutral. Having to battle the Cubs at Wrigley Field and the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium is simply asking for ratio damage. Stay away from this one.

Miles Mikolas, Nationals, RHP (at Red Sox, vs. Pirates)

Every time that Mikolas is scheduled to make two starts, he stares at fantasy managers from the waiver wire and tries to entice them into rolling the dice. It’s almost never a good idea. The 37-year-old hurler holds a 5.24 ERA, 1.29 WHIP and a 44/17 K/BB ratio over 77 1/3 innings on the season and has won a grand total of two ballgames. The upside in wins and strikeouts is low, and the risk of ratio damage is high. Do with that what you will.

Kyle Freeland, Rockies, LHP (vs. Marlins, vs. Giants)

Never Rockies. Especially not for two starts at Coors Field, regardless of how good the matchups look. Freeland owns a horrendous 7.50 ERA, 1.61 WHIP and a 61/17 K/BB ratio over 72 innings on the season. He has allowed five or more earned runs in three of his last five starts. There’s just no reason to do it. Stay far, far away.

Sean Sullivan, Rockies, LHP (vs. Marlins, vs. Giants)

Never Rockies. Especially not for two starts at Coors Field, regardless of how good the matchups look. Sullivan owns a horrendous 8.25 ERA, 1.92 WHIP and a 7/7 K/BB ratio over 12 innings on the season. There’s just no reason to do it. Stay far, far away.

Friday Jays Notes

Jun 25, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays shortstop Ernie Clement (22) tags out Texas Rangers catcher Kyle Higashioka (11) at second base to complete a double play during the sixth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images | John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

Happy Friday. I’m getting ready to be away for the weekend doing the bike ride. Thanks to very generous people I’m up to $4,052 raised, 21st our of 362 riders.

There isn’t much for Jays news. Jamie Campbell is reporting that Adam Macko is being recalled from Buffalo. No word on who is being shipped out.

The team is three games under .500 and I don’t think I’d bet that they’ll ever be over .500 the rest of this season.


Ernie Clement has been named to the All-Star team receiving the most votes of any AL player, which is pretty cool. And there will likely be more Blue Jays on the AL team. There are Jays ‘finalists’ at every position. Most of them clearly don’t deserve to be All Stars, but often, when you let people vote, you don’t get the best candidate winning. Obviously, we vote a lot up here in Canada.

The Mets and Bo Bichette are in Toronto on the weekend and they have fired their manager. The Mets are 34-47, deep in last place in the NL East and 9.5 games back of the Wild Card. That and a $358 million payroll (and a $124 million luxury tax bill) will get a manager fired. So Carlos Mendoza is looking for a new job and Andy Green gets the job of trying to get the team going.

I hate when we play against teams who have just fired their manager. The players seem to work hard for the new chief.


The owners have made a new proposal for the players, which they know will be rejected. In it:

  • New contracts for free agents can only be five years long for guys switching teams (and for $202 million at the most) and six years for players staying with their team (and for $265 million at the most).
  • No deferred money allowed anymore.
  • Qualifying offers will disappear.
  • Players will be able to become free agents at age 30 if they have five years of MLB playing time.
  • Minimum salary will go up to $1 million for players with two or more years of service time.

I always wonder why owners think they have to protect themselves from themselves but that’s where we are.

Have a good weekend

SB Nati0n Reacts results: Pirates need Konnor Griffin back in the lineup

In the most recent edition of polls conducted by Bucs Dugout fans were asked what has been the biggest loss from the Pirates’ lineup; who’s been missed more, Oneil Cruz or Konnor Griffin? The poll results are in and the majority of Pirates fans that voted said that Griffin was a bigger loss for the team with 57% of the votes reflecting that.

Griffin the former top prospect in baseball was really starting to come around right up until he was sidelined with a right elbow strain injury. The Pirates have approached his rehab cautiously as he just returned to action with the Altoona Curve earlier this week. Still though his presence in Pittsburgh has certainly been missed.

Jared Triolo has taken a majority of the starts at shortstop since Griffin was moved to the IL, and he just doesn’t provide the same spark that the latter does in the lineup. Griffin was already proving to be a very capable defender in the middle infield and was finally showing signs of growth at the plate against major league pitchers. Triolo is probably the most versatile defender on the Pirates, but he’s also an anchor in Pittsburgh’s lineup. His slugging percentage is at a career low .269 while his batting average is just .228 through 48 games played. Triolo is also not a huge threat on the base pads as he only has 5 stolen bases on the season, while Griffin left Pittsburgh with 14 steals which ranks 12th in the National League.

In 51 games played Griffin has a slash line of .270/.327/.402 with 51 hits, four homers, 22 RBIs and the aforementioned 14 steals. His return to Pittsburgh will be a welcomed one, as fans are dying to see what he can do back from injury.

Cruz has certainly been a fixture that’s been missed in Pittsburgh as well. The Pirates’ converted center fielder was having arguably his best season at the plate before being sent to the IL with left hand fractures.

At the time of his injury Cruz was slugging .472 with a .264 batting average. His 14 homers and 21 steals made him a standout in Pittsburgh’s lineup, as the power and speed combination was on full display in the first half of the season. Luckily for Pittsburgh fans (perhaps this influenced the vote) Jake Mangum who has taken a majority of the reps in center since Cruz’s departure has been a positive for the Pirates. He certainly doesn’t bring the same skillset that Cruz possesses but Mangum has been a spark plug with a .291 average and .335 on base percentage.

FanDuel Sports Network has the current betting odds for projected award winners at the end of the MLB season and the Pirates’ rookie Griffin currently has +2000 odds to win the National League’s Rookie of the Year honors. If the rookie can pickup where he left off before landing on the injured list he should be in a great position to take home some hardware and to get back to helping the Buccos in their race to make the postseason.

Astros Fans, Are You Ready to Trust Tatsuya Imai?

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - JUNE 25: Tatsuya Imai #45 of the Houston Astros delivers a pitch against the Detroit Tigers during the bottom of the first inning at Comerica Park on June 25, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Bust. Disaster. Another Dana Brown failure. Bum. DFA that clown.

These are the things Astros fans were saying about Tatsuya Imai after his third start of the season.

Imai’s 3rd start of the year was an epic failure. He only got one out against division-rival Seattle. He allowed 3 runs on 4 walks and a hit. He was all over the place.

Fans had already seen Imai have a meltdown in his first start of the season. After cruising through 2 innings, he suddenly lost the plate in the 3rd and couldn’t get out of the inning. In 2.2IP, he was charged with 4 runs on 3 hits and 4 walks.

After his third start, he was IL-bound with arm fatigue. Fans screamed it was really the team’s way of getting a lousy pitcher out of the rotation.

The vitriol against Imai was strong. Even members of the media were absolutely destroying him as a total bust after three starts in a new country.

Imai had the stuff, but people couldn’t see it. They only saw the results.

He was clearly struggling to adjust to the American lifestyle, fans didn’t care.

No one on the team spoke Japanese, and Imai’s English and Spanish weren’t very good, so he didn’t understand anything being said. Didn’t understand the movie dialogue, the music, words from the wait staff or really from anyone.

He was in the country about 3 months, and was struggling. Fans and media didn’t give a rip. They were tearing into him over anything and everything they could.

With Imai sporting a 7.27 ERA for $18M this year, they all felt justified.

Imai spent the next month recovering from arm fatigue and trying to figure out why his command had suddenly left him.

While Imai mentioned Yusei Kikuchi’s success with the Astros as a reason he wanted to sign in Houston, it had become clear Imai was not comfortable with what he was being asked to do. He felt he was being asked to defer to the hitter’s strengths instead of attack with his own.

At first he didn’t share this, but during his IL stint, he did. The team decided to oblige him, and allow him to do whatever he felt would make him be successful.

He pared back his arsenal. Fans and media crushed him again.

Media and fans had the same question: Didn’t we hear Taylor Trammell say in spring training that Imai’s splitter was the nastiest thing he had ever seen? Why is he refusing to throw it? It was hard to argue with the logic. Imai just didn’t like the way the pitch was feeling to him. His command on that pitch needed work. He was going with his bread and butter.

Imai’s first two starts back from the IL weren’t great. However, in his second start back, there was a noticeable change.

Imai was more aggressive in his May 18 start against Minnesota, one that was cut short because of a long rain delay. In 4.2 IP, he allowed 3 runs (all on two HRs allowed) on 5 hits. He struck out 5 He also didn’t walk a batter.

Imai had allowed 14 walks in his first 4 starts, covering just 12.2 IP. Not allowing any walks stood out. He likely would have gone deeper into the game had the long rain delay not happened.

In his next start against Texas, Imai was terrific. He threw 6 no-hit innings in what would be a combined no-hitter for the Astros. He did walk 4, and only struck out 2, but he did get 8 ground ball outs.

In his next start, he was matched up with Jacob Misiorowski of the Brewers. Misiorowki has been setting records for most pitches thrown over 100 MPH with seemingly each start. Which Imai would the Astros get? The one who has throws 2 outings without allowing a run, or the one who melted down, lost control, and got chased early?

Imai held his own in that matchup, allowing only 2 runs (on a 2-run HR) on 3 hits in 6 innings. he walked 2 and struck out 5. Houston lost 2-0, but Imai gave a strong effort, and showed he wasn’t afraid or intimidated by the big stage.

In his next start, he would allow just 2 runs in 5 innings, and struck out 8 in a 13-2 win over the Athletics.

Maybe Imai had turned the corner? People were cautiously coming around. Maybe he can be a decent mid-rotation guy after all, they mused. Maybe, they weren’t convinced yet.

Then another disaster start struck.

Staked to a 9-0 lead before throwing a pitch, in what seemed like the easiest path to a win you could ever ask for, Imai lost his command again.

He didn’t make it out of the first inning, giving back 5 of the 9 runs the Astros scored in the top of the 1st on 4 hits and a walk. He recorded only 2 outs. It caused the Astros to rifle through their bullpen for 25 outs.

Fans were furious. They wanted him DFA’d. Optioned to Sugar Land. Anywhere but on the Astros.

Of course, $18M investments don’t get thrown away for poor early returns.

Imai would rebound strongly against Cleveland, with 6 innings of 3 run ball, striking out a career-best 11. He didn’t walk a batter.

Imai was dominant again yesterday, with 6 shutout innings of 2 hit ball, he walked 1 and struck out 10.

Imai became the first Astros pitcher this season with back to back starts of at least 10 strikeouts.

Imai’s numbers on the season still aren’t great. He’s 5-3 with a 5.36 ERA and a 1.32 WHIP in 11 starts. So let’s try and peel the onion back and see the trend:

Imai has made 11 starts, but his last 7 (even with the KC clunker) tell a different story: In the last 7 starts, he’s 4-2 with a 3.93 ERA and 1.05 WHIP. Those are much stronger numbers.

He also has 42 K in 34.1 IP. That is 11K/9. That’s a very strong number. He only walked 11 batters in that time. That’s 2.89 BB/9, quite respectable. His 3.8 K/BB ratio is excellent.

He’s now performed well in 5 of his last 6 starts, and his last 2 have been terrific. That blip in Kansas City is starting to look like a blip, and not something that he is going to give you every 3 starts or so.

But with such a small sample size, how confident are you when he takes the mound of which Imai you will get? The blip or the guy who looks like he can be a legit #2 behind Hunter Brown?

Are you ready to trust Tatsuya Imai yet?

Fantasy baseball waiver wire: Dylan Crews is heating up, Brandon Sproat turns a corner

Welcome to Waiver Wire Watch, our weekly fantasy baseball waiver wire guide. We'll be doing things a little differently this season, with Eric Samulski publishing the initial waiver-wire article on Friday afternoon. Then James Schiano updates it every Sunday to make sure you get the most up-to-date information.

The premise of the article is pretty straightforward. We'll give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When we list a player, we'll list the category where we think he’ll be helpful or the quick reason he’s listed. We hope this helps you determine whether the player fits your team's needs. Not every "trending" player will be a good addition for your specific roster.

To qualify for this list, a player needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. We understand you may say, “These players aren’t available in my league,” and we can’t help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they’re available in many places, and that can hopefully satisfy readers who play in all league types.

⚾️ Baseball is back on NBC: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Hitters

TJ Rumfield - 1B, COL (38% rostered)

(STARTING JOB, GREAT SCHEDULE)

We're not entirely sure why Rumfield's roster rate has dropped so low. He's hitting .286/.356/.584 in 21 games in June with five home runs, 12 runs scored, and 15 RBI. No, he doesn't barrel the ball or hit it overly hard, but he makes tons of contact and hits in an incredibly hitter-friendly ballpark. He also gets seven games at Coors Field this upcoming week, so now is not the time to leave him on the wire. Another Rockies option for this week could be Troy Johnston - 1B/OF, COL (11% rostered). Right now, he seems to only be facing right-handed pitchers, but the Rockies will face six of them this upcoming week. In June, Johnston is hitting .328/.406/.500 with 11 RBI in 18 games. Like Rumfield, he also hasn't been barreling the ball a ton, but he has more walks than strikeouts this month, which shows his tremendous plate discipline. He's worth a look this week.

Lawrence Butler - OF, ATH (35% rostered)

(EVERYDAY PLAYER, POWER-SPEED UPSIDE)

Butler seems to have settled back into a regular role against right-handed pitching after Brent Rooker's injury freed up some playing time for the Athletics. In 19 games in June, he's hitting .277/.320/.468 with two home runs, nine runs scored, and one steal. Even in his "bad" year last year, he still put together a 20/20 season. Yes, there remains some swing-and-miss in his game, but this could have just been a case of him needing to get his knees fully healthy after offseason surgery.

Dylan Crews - OF, WAS (32% rostered)

(STARTING JOB, HOT STREAK COMING)

We know many people dropped Crews a week or two ago when the results weren't coming, and we almost did too, but his quality of contact had been so good that we decided to hold on, and Crews has started to pick things up, going 7-for-23 with six runs scored and one home run in his last six games. He's hitting just .208 in 21 games in June, but that comes with a 12% barrel rate, 46% hard-hit rate, and 90.6 mph average exit velocity. That, in part, is why he also has a .275 xBA and .521 xSLG. We're going to be on the quality of contact winning out. Daulton Varsho - OF, TOR (30% rostered) is also off the injured list and is hitting .320/.379/.640 with two home runs, six RBI, and three steals in 11 games in June. He's still pulling the ball a ton, but no longer sporting as extreme a launch angle as we saw from him last year. That should help with the batting average, and he's clearly ready to run.

Nasim Nunez - 2B/SS, WAS (31% rostered)

(STOLEN BASE UPSIDE, HOT STREAK)

Nunez had an 18% roster rate last week when he made the waiver wire article, but he continues to produce, so his rate continues to rise. We expected Nunez to be a burner who gave you little else, but he's now hitting .379/.429/.483 in 19 games in June with 10 RBI and nine steals. Yes, he's not going to continue to run a .550 BABIP, but his bat speed is up, he's hitting the ball harder, and he runs fast, so there's a good chance he always has a higher than average BABIP. There's a good chance that he's at least a .250-.260 hitter the rest of the way, and that's going to be massive for people who need stolen bases.

Kody Clemens - 1B/2B/OF, MIN (24% rostered)

(STARTING JOB, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Clemens had a rough week, and his roster rate fell, but we'd caution you against abandoning a player too quickly. In 20 games in June, he's still hitting .256/.301/.513 with five home runs, 12 runs scored, 12 RBI, and one steal. That comes with a 9.5% barrel rate and a 48% hard-hit rate. He hits third essentially every day for the Twins and is eligible at plenty of positions, so he's a great option in deeper formats, but we understand if you wanted to move on in shallower leagues.

Francisco Alvarez - C, NYM (19% rostered)

(HOT STREAK, POWER UPSIDE)

Alvarez has plenty of talent, but can't seem to stay healthy. The 24-year-old is back from the injured list now and is hitting .319/.360/.574 in 13 games with four home runs and eight RBI. In his 50 games this season, he has a career-high 16.8% barrel rate and his highest bat speed ever. He’s pulling the ball 49.6% of the time, which is up from his 39.2% career average. He has just an 18.4% Pull Air rate, which ranks 121st among hitters with 100 batted-ball events this season; yet that has risen to 27.8% since coming off the IL, which could be part of what's unlocking his power. He's one-catcher viable. In Pittsburgh, Endy Rodriguez - C, PIT (2% rostered) has seemingly grabbed the starting job away from Henry Davis. Rodriguez has gone .260/.339/.425 over 18 games in June with three home runs and nine RBI. He also has a 16.7% barrel rate and 56% hard-hit rate over that span. was a former top prospect before two years of injuries and could be worth a gamble.

Samad Taylor - 2B/OF, SD (19% rostered)

(STARTING JOB, STOLEN BASE UPSIDE)

Samad Taylor is 10-for-23 in his last six games with two steals, but his roster rate has also gone up by just 1%. Perhaps people don't believe this is real, and we don't blame them. It probably isn't, but it's real for right now. Taylor was called up from Triple-A when Nick Castellanos was designated for assignment and has hit the ground running (literally), hitting .379/.438/.448 in 16 games with 11 runs scored, 11 RBI, one home run, and six steals. He also had just a 27% hard-hit rate in Triple-A and a league-average 85% zone contact rate. He’s hitting the ball on the ground 60% of the time with the Padres and has the speed to beat out infield singles, so the batting average and stolen bases could be there, and the Padres are hitting him second in the order, so why not take a gamble while he's running this hot?

Joshua Baez - OF, STL (18% rostered)

(POTENTIAL CALL-UP, POWER UPSIDE)

We like to get ahead of prospect stashes on the waiver wire, but this is a rough time of year. Most incentive deadlines have passed, and teams are still deciding if they are buyers or sellers at the trade deadline, so we may not get any major prospect promotions until after the All-Star game. That being said, it might be time for Baez to be stashed. He had a four-home run game last week and now leads the entire International League with 26 home runs in 69 games. That also comes with a .273/.343/.626 slash line and 13 stolen bases to create a nice power/speed combo. There are some lingering concerns about his contact since he’s struck out nearly 31 percent of the time at the Triple-A level this season, but when you have that kind of power and speed, you can still produce fantasy goodness. You could look to stash Yohandy Morales - 1B/3B, WAS (2% rostered), who is now up to 16 home runs and 50 RBI on the season to go along with a .311 batting average and a .923 OPS in 69 Triple-A games. He’s ready for a chance at big league pitching, but with Curtis Mead playing well at third base, the Nationals will need to use Morales as a DH or a first baseman.

Jasson Dominguez - OF, NYY (16% rostered)

(REGULAR PLAYING TIME, POST HYPE UPSIDE)

Dominguez may only be hitting .250 in 10 games since coming off the IL with a 12/1 K/BB ratio, but he does have two home runs and four steals over that time, so you're starting to see some of the power and speed upside that people were excited about. He figures to get regular playing time even when Trent Grisham returns from the IL and has been hitting in the top half of the lineup for one of the best offenses in baseball. His roster rate needs to be higher. Another risky outfield option is Heriberto Hernandez - OF, MIA (2% rostered), who is hitting .274/.318/.613 in 17 games in June with six home runs, 11 RBI, and a 57.1% hard-hit rate, which is 15th in baseball among hitters with 40 plate appearances in June.

Blaze Alexander - 2B/3B/SS/OF, BAL (16% rostered)

(STARTING JOB, STATCAST DARLING)

It seems that Blaze Alexander may have finally won himself a starting role. After putting up strong production in a part-time role, Alexander seems to have supplanted Coby Mayo at third base. He appeared in Eric’s article last week on hitters to target based on their May results, and, since June 1st, he's been the best hitter on the Orioles, slashing .388/.436/.633 in 18 games with two home runs, nine RBI, seven runs scored, and two steals. He's making better-than-league-average contact in the zone with a better hard-hit percentage than league average as well. There is an intriguing profile here, and icould be an add in 12-team formats now that the playing time is there. We also had Caleb Durbin - 2B/3B, BOS (19% rostered) on here last week. He broke his pinky earlier in the week, but still hit a home run off Cam Schlittler on Thursday. In 20 games in June, Durbin is hitting .324/.356/.618 with five home runs, 12 runs, 10 RBI, and three steals. This may be coming together.

Jack McCarthy - OF, COL (16% rostered)

(HOT STRETCH, GOOD SCHEDULE)

We mentioned two Rockies to add before their seven-game week at home, so now it's time to mention two more. McCarthy has been a full-time player for the Rockies for a while now. In June, he's hitting .324/.368/.507 in 17 games with two home runs, nine runs scored, eight RBI, and two steals. He hits leadoff and has 12 steals on the season, so he should provide average, runs, and steals during a full week in Coors. You could also add Cole Carrigg - OF, COL (15% rostered), who is hitting .271/.379/.542 in his 14 MLB games with three home runs and 11 RBI. The only issue is that, since Mickey Moniak has come back, Carrigg has only played against lefties. Now, it's also only been three games so far, so it's not 100% clear what the Rockies' plan is going forward, but Carrigg could very well be on the short side of a platoon.

Blaze Jordan - 1B/3B, STL (12% rostered)

(STARTING JOB, BATTING AVERAGE POTENTIAL)

There's this idea that Blaze Jordan is a top-tier power hitter, likely because he was hitting mammoth home runs in high school home run derbies. However, he has never hit 20 home runs in any minor league season. He had 11 in 57 games at Triple-A this season, so he may have been on his way, but he has just one in 12 games since being called up with the Cardinals. That being said, he's also hitting .286/.298/.476 with 12 RBI and a 46% hard-hit rate. Jordan won't walk much, which will hurt him in OBP leagues, but he's playing every day in St. Louis right now and is worth a shot in 15-team leagues.

Henry Bolte - OF, ATH (11% rostered)

(RECENT HOT STRETCH, POWER UPSIDE)

It took a little while for Bolte to get going at the MLB level, but he's hitting .323/.416/.477 in 21 games in June with two home runs, five steals, and seven runs scored. That comes with a 12.2% barrel rate and 53.7% hard-hit rate. Bolte is sporting a .487 batting average, so it will likely regress closer to his .252 xBA, but the rookie had improved his contact rates in the minors this season, and that seems to be carrying over. There is swing and miss in his game, so this may not be the smoothest ride, but it's fun right now.

Anthony Volpe - SS, NYY (9% rostered)

(REGULAR PLAYING TIME, POWER/SPEED UPSIDE)

The power hasn't been there for Volpe this season, with one home run and a 37% hard-hit rate. However, there has been far more contact in the zone. In 18 games in June, he's hitting .276/.354/.345 with seven runs scored and three steals. He has seven steals in 31 games since being activated this season, so the shoulder injury isn't stopping him from running. He continues to start every day at shortstop with Jose Caballero moving all over the field, and that should continue for the foreseeable future. Even if we don't get the previous power back, a .250 hitter with speed is still valuable in an offense like this. Across town, the Mets also recalled Ronny Mauricio - 2B/SS/3B, NYM (1% rostered), with Marcus Semien landing on the injured list. He was just 7-for-32 in his 10-game MLB stint before fracturing his thumb, but he had a productive season in the minors and has plus raw tools. He might be a good gamble in deeper formats for a Mets offense that is starving for production.

Victor Caratini - C, MIN (9% rostered)

(HOT STREAK, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

This is a short-term add with Ryan Jeffers eventually coming back, but Caratini has been red hot right now. In 16 games in June, he's hitting .377/.450/.679 with four home runs, 11 RBI, and 11 runs scored. That's with a 16% barrel rate and 46% hard-hit rate. If you need a stopgap at catcher, he's a good one. Joe Mack- C, MIA (4% rostered) has also been producing lately, hitting .327/.397/596 in 17 games in June with four home runs, 11 runs scored, and 12 RBI. He's still more of a defensive catcher, but the bat isn't nothing, as evidenced by his 12% barrel rate and 44% hard-hit rate in June. He's going to be Miami's catcher for the rest of the season, so there is some security there.

Cooper Pratt - SS, MIL (7% rostered)

(PROSPECT CALL-UP, MODEST UPSIDE)

The Brewers called up Cooper Pratt this week to turn the shortstop reins over to their young prospect. The 21-year-old was slashing .241/.349/.386 batting line in Triple-A, which is not exciting, but he had been hitting better before his call-up. He's also gone 7-for-27 in his first nine games with two RBI and four steals. Eric recorded a video last week with more thoughts on Pratt’s fantasy upside.

Lars Nootbaar - OF, STL (6% rostered)

(OFF THE TIL, STATCAST DARLING

People really don't want to pick up Nootbaar. We know he's another boring outfielder who is set to come off the injured list following offseason surgery on both of his heels. We know that you've been waiting for that Nootbaar breakout for a long time, but he remains a solid/productive player who should be in an everyday role on a solid Cardinals team. In 17 games since coming off the injured list, he's hitting .288/.386/.492 with two home runs, 12 runs scored, and seven RBI. He's a productive player and will continue to settle in. Another veteran, oft-injured outfield option is Trevor Larnach - OF, MIN (7% rostered). Larnach has enjoyed a nice month of June, hitting .333/.406/.509 in 18 games with two home runs, 10 runs scored, and eight RBI. He has just a 32.7% hard-hit rate over that stretch, but his .308 xBA suggests that his success has not just been luck. The Twins will also only face one lefty this upcoming week, which is good news for Larnach.

Kyle Karros - 3B, COL (2% rostered)

(EVERY DAY PLAYER, GOOD SCHEDULE)

Oh hey, look, another Rockies hitter ahead of their seven-game week at home. Karros has been quietly productive over the last month, hitting .345/.406/.517 in 20 games with one home run, 13 runs scored, and six RBI. As the son of an MLB player, he has a good understanding of the strike zone and a disciplined approach at the plate. The power isn't tremendous, but the batting average could be pretty good in Coors Field, especially with the favorable schedule. Nick Loftin - 2B/3B/OF, KC (5% rostered) could be a short-term option with Maikel Garcia out. In 18 games in June, he's hitting .306/.389/.565 with three home runs, 11 runs scored, and 11 RBI. He is sporting a career-high barrel rate and hard-hit rate, but little has changed with his approach, so we're not going to expect this to last. However, if you need production right now, he's playing and hitting well. We prefer Michael Massey - 2B/OF (4% rostered), who is hitting .315/.333/.507 in 20 games in June with three home runs, 11 runs scored, and 12 RBI. Massey has increased his bat speed and exit velocities and is a better bet to produce for the rest of the season.

Donovan Walton - 2B/3B, LAA (1% rostered)

(HOT STREAK, STARTING JOB)

If you want the ultimate hot streak play, it's Donovan Walton. We never expected Walton to be a full-time player and still don't, but he's been a starter for almost the whole month of June because his bat is red hot. He's hitting .340/.364/.604 in 18 games with three home runs, eight runs scored, and 10 RBI. This is a 32-year-old who swings at most everything and has a .217 career average in 98 MLB games, so we'd only add in deeper formats if we had an open spot and don't hold when the cold streak comes. His teammate Christian Moore(2B, LAA - 1% rostered) has been cold since being called up, but we're still intrigued by his talent and the prospect of playing time. The 23-year-old had made some real adjustments at the plate in Triple-A, making more contact and better contact, and was slashing .333/.468/.585 with nine homers, 45 RBI, and 10 stolen bases in 252 plate appearances. We're not sure why the Angels would throw a new defensive position at him along with a call-up, but if Walton or Denzer Guzman cool down, as we expect, Moore could move back to the infield. This is a highly talented young hitter who's getting another shot. We should probably give him one too.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Pitchers

Sean Burke - SP, CWS (36% rostered)

Eric wrote about Sean Burke in this week’s streaming starting pitcher article, so we encourage you to check that out for more details on his pitch mix and fantasy value. He has a good two-start week this week with the Orioles and Guardians on tap.

Joey Cantillo - SP, CLE (30% rostered)

Joey Cantillo appeared in that same article above, thanks to a new cutter he has started to lean on. We've always been a fan of Cantillo's potential upside because of his changeup and curve, but his four-seam fastball is pretty average despite elite extension. The added cutter could make a huge difference, and he has looked good lately. We'd add him for upside here.

Yoendrys Gomez - SP/RP, MIN (24% rostered)

Gomez has been really good since joining the Twins and has emerged as their clear closer. Eric recorded a video with some detailed thoughts last week.We also know that Alex Lange - RP, KC (24% rostered) continued to deliver saves for the Royals, but it just doesn't seem as believable. An 11.3% K-BB% and 12% swinging strike rate are not really what we'd like to see from a closer. Plus, his 13% barrel rate allowed and 4.12 SIERA. You can roll with this while it's working, but don't expect it to last.

Grant Taylor - RP/SP, CWS (22% rostered)

The case for Taylor here is that the White Sox are a legit playoff contender, and Seranthony Dominguez has just been really bad lately. At some point, the White Sox may WANT to use Taylor as their fireman, but he may NEED to be used to close games. If he gets that role, he could be a legit stud. Adrian Morejon - RP, SD (15% rostered) is just an option if you need ratios and some sneaky wins from a good reliever.

Eric Lauer - SP, LAD (13% rostered)

This isn't some Dodgers' magic, but Lauer did throw six no-hit innings against the Twins and has been really solid since coming over to the Dodgers. We should note that, even in his six no-hit innings, it was with three walks and two strikeouts. It was not some dominant outing. However, Lauer was good for the Blue Jays last season and could be a solid deep league streamer while he's on a roll like this. We just don't love that he goes to Sacramento next week.

Elvis Alvarado - RP, ATH (12% rostered)

Alvarado was Eric's featured relief pitcher in this week’s MLB Notebook. In that article, Eric said, "Alvarado has battled command issues in the past and then posted an 8.38 ERA in his first 10 appearances this season before being sent to Triple-A. Since being recalled on June 6th, he looks like a different pitcher and, even after a poor last outing, has a 2.70 ERA and 47% strikeout rate in 10 innings. This version of him feels different. Since Alvarado has returned, he has showcased better command of his four-seamer but also has been able to get ahead in the count with his slider and sinker. He’s started to use his slider more as an early-count called strike pitch in addition to a whiff pitch, which has given his pitch mix another dimension that he didn’t have last year. Alvarado may only have two saves since being recalled, but he has the third-lowest SIERA among qualified relievers at 0.67 and has the best K-BB% at 47.1%.

Anthony Kay - SP, CWS (10% rostered)

We had Kay on here last week because we believed that his recent poor stretch was because he faced the Phillies, Dodgers, and Yankees in consecutive starts. Over that stretch, his ERA jumped from 3.77 on June 1st to 4.61 now. He had a good first start this week against the Guardians and will face the Royals on Sunday. Then he gets the Guardians and Red Sox in his next two starts. I think his reward for that tough stretch is a nice run of production coming.

Ian Seymour - SP, TB (8% rostered)

Oh, man. Is it happening? We've had Seymour on this list for two weeks, but it's just been a bet on the future because Eric wrote about him as one of his favorite late-round starting pitcher targets this offseason,which you can read here for full thoughts on his arsenal. Yet, Seymour hadn't quite delivered on his chances as a starter, and his stuff hasn't looked as crisp as Eric wrote about in his streaming starting pitcher article two weeks ago. Then it all seemed to click on Thursday. Yes, it was the Royals without Bobby Witt Jr., but Seymour looked good with his four-seamer upstairs and changeups low in the zone. We're choosing to believe that this is the beginning of the breakout.

Reynaldo Lopez- SP/RP, ATL (8% rostered)

With JR Ritchie down in the minors, Lopez is getting another chance in the starting rotation. He's been solid overall this year, posting a 3.50 ERA, 1.37 WHIP, and 39/21 K/BB ratio in 43 2/3 innings. We know what he did for Atlanta when he was healthy in 2024, and so, with the starting pitching landscape what it is, he's not a bad gamble right now. He gets the Cardinals at home in his first start next week.

Brandon Sproat - SP, MIL (7% rostered)

OK, we have to talk about the six innings of shutout ball against the Reds, where Sproat struck out 10, didn't walk a batter, allowed one hit, and had 18 whiffs. We should also note that Sproat has not issued more than two walks in his last four starts. On Tuesday against the Reds, Sproat's command of his four-seamer was exceptional, and he did a great job of keeping it at the top of the zone. The sweeper stayed low and away from righties, and he had four whiffs and a 38.5% CSW on that pitch. The curveball was always low and under the zone (sometimes too low), but we'd rather that than leaving it up. He also mixed in sinkers and cutters to allow the four-seamer to play up more as a whiff pitch, and you can see how this can all work. His start before that at Cleveland was really just one bad inning, and the previous start in Sacramento was good, so maybe this is Sproat coming into his own? We'd rather take a shot on guys like Sproat and Seymour than low-upside streamers like Andre Pallante (who we like).

Jake Bennett - SP, BOS (7% rostered)

Bennett is coming off a nice outing against the Rockies in Coors, throwing six shutout innings with nine strikeouts and no walks. He showed the ability to be what Nick Pollack refers to as a SWATCH (Southpaw With a Tight Changeup). He started to do that a bit on Monday and also peppered the top of the strike zone with four-seamers. He doesn't throw hard, but this is a five-pitch mix that, if commanded well, could be successful from the big left-hander. There will be some ups and downs, but Bennett is intriguing. We would NOT start him this upcoming week against the Yankees, but he gets the Angels, White Sox, and Rays after that, which could be a decent run.

Is a bigger Mets purge needed after firing of Carlos Mendoza?

With the Mets spiraling out of control -- and with manager Carlos Mendoza not under contract beyond this season -- New York essentially ripped the band aid off on Friday, firing Mendoza and naming Andy Green the interim manager for the remainder of the 2026 season.

Back in April, the message the Mets gave was that there was really no reason to blame their struggles on Mendoza -- to make him the fall guy for what the club hoped were issues that were temporary. It was quite apparent that they did not plan to fire Mendoza.

But after the team treaded water for a bit and even played a few games over .500 for a decent stretch across May and June, things devolved over the last week as they lost game after game in humiliating fashion while falling 10.0 games back of the third and final Wild Card spot in the National League.

Barring a miracle, their season is over before the calendar flips to July. And since Mendoza almost certainly would've been gone after the year, letting him go now made sense. Maybe it creates a spark. Maybe it doesn't. But continuing to do nothing about what this team had become would've been malpractice. 

While it's not fair to lay this season at the feet of Mendoza, it is fair to point out that he didn't seem to be helping matters.

Specifically, the continued mental mistakes and physical errors on the field were shocking -- to the point where Mendoza described the team's performance after Wednesday's doubleheader sweep as "embarrassing."

There were also guys running through stop signs at third base, and -- in one instance -- showing no remorse for it after. Players forgot how many outs there were numerous times, constantly challenged ball/strike calls at odd times, failed to back up home plate, overthrew cutoff men, and did baffling things on the field -- including recently, when Juan Soto attempted to bunt with runners on first and second.

But the Mets' season isn't in disarray because of the above, and it isn't in disarray because of the now-departed Mendoza.

The Mets are where they are due mainly to a combination of poor roster construction, injuries, and underperformance.

So with Mendoza now gone, what's next? 

A trade deadline sell-off seems to be a foregone conclusion, but do the Mets need to do more than just deal players who are set to be free agents after the season? In other words, are there far deeper issues at play than a struggling roster?

Feb 11, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; David Stearns, Mets President of Baseball Operations, watches pitchers warm-up during spring training.
Feb 11, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; David Stearns, Mets President of Baseball Operations, watches pitchers warm-up during spring training. / Jim Rassol - Imagn Images

One thing that stuck out after Thursday's loss to the Cubs was who the face of it was afterwards.

The only position player who spoke following the game was Eric Wagaman, a journeyman who has a grand total of 25 plate appearances as a Met and who will very likely not be a big part of the team going forward. Given that the Mets' season is falling apart, it would've made sense for a more prominent member of the team (or multiple prominent members) to be available to speak about it.

Perhaps the Mets' leadership in the clubhouse behind closed doors is sound. But the front-facing leadership has felt rudderless, which really shouldn't be a shock when you consider that most of the players who were long-tenured members of the team left as free agents or were traded this past offseason.

And that is still at the top of many fans' minds, as evidenced by the loud "PETE ALONSO" chants that rang out at Citi Field late during their Game 2 loss to the Cubs on Wednesday.

Alonso, who is now an Oriole, has 18 homers, 55 RBI, and an .815 OPS for Baltimore this season in the first year of a five-year deal.

Meanwhile, three of the four key offensive players David Stearns brought in are on the IL. Jorge Polanco has been out since April 15 due to an Achilles issue. Luis Robert Jr. has been out since April 27 because of a back injury. Marcus Semien recently joined them on the IL because of a hip injury.

All three players were struggling before hitting the IL, and their absences have led to daily lineups that include the likes of Wagaman, MJ Melendez, and Jared Young.

The injuries have also meant players being used out of position, or at spots where they should really only be used in a pinch. Examples of that? Mark Vientos getting starts at first base and Brett Baty manning right field, where their presence hurt the Mets badly during their four-game sweep to Chicago.

There have also been major starting rotation issues. The freak leg injury to Clay Holmes hurt, but underperformance -- especially by Sean Manaea, the recently-traded David Peterson, and Kodai Senga --has been the main culprit.

It's also fair to wonder if the mostly-new coaching staff is getting the most out of this roster.

To that end, Stearns said earlier this week that he's "pleased" with the coaching staff's process.

"I think our staff and our coaches are working incredibly hard every day to get these guys going," Stearns explained. "And I think in certain areas they're as frustrated as anyone that we haven't seen better results."

May 23, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; New York Mets shortstop Bo Bichette (19) speaks to first baseman Mark Vientos (27) after this at bat against the Miami Marlins during the sixth inning at loanDepot Park.
May 23, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; New York Mets shortstop Bo Bichette (19) speaks to first baseman Mark Vientos (27) after this at bat against the Miami Marlins during the sixth inning at loanDepot Park. / Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Even the minor league performance has been worse than expected this year, with many of the Mets' top prospects -- including Jonah Tong, Jacob Reimer, Will Watson, Dylan Ross, and Ryan Lambert --struggling badly. Perhaps that's a blip, given the strong performance overall in the minors during the first few years of Stearns' tenure.

But questions about Stearns' process in building the roster, the effectiveness of the coaching staff, and many players on the big league club remain.

There also doesn't seem to be a soul to this team, which is not surprising given how many of them were thrown together this past offseason. It takes time for things to gel. Sometimes, things don't gel at all.

So what now?

I was among the people this past February who thought Stearns did a good enough job putting the club together. I, like many, thought the Mets would make the playoffs and be a legitimate World Series contender. I, like many, was wrong.

Amid the offseason of change, though, I wrote last November that the Mets needed to add two legitimate starting pitchers to guard against possible underperformance from all of their bounce back candidates. They did not. I also wrote that they should bring back Alonso -- even if it took a five-year deal to do so. His power mattered. His connection to the fans mattered. But the Mets did not even make an effort to bring him back.

In fairness, it seems that everything that could've possibly gone wrong this season has gone wrong. The underperformance, the injuries, the bad luck. But this is where the Mets are now, with no clear answers beyond the fact that Carson Benge and A.J. Ewing are keepers as part of a rather small core.

Beyond that, nearly everything should be in question.

In addition to trading pending free agents such as Freddy Peralta, Brooks Raley, and A.J. Minter, should the Mets try to fast-track a retool by also dealing Luke Weaver and even Devin Williams?

Should they trade Clay Holmes if he gets healthy before the deadline, or try to work out an extension for him to stay? As things stand, Holmes has a player option for 2027 that he seems very likely to decline.

Is something more drastic needed to shake things up, such as pondering a trade of Francisco Lindor? Lindor, who has been a terrific, accountable, tough Met, certainly didn't seem off-limits this past offseason.

What about the future of Semien, who is under contract through 2028 but was borderline unplayable before his injury?

One thing does seem clear -- at least for now -- which is that Stearns will get the chance to turn this around. If he gets it right this time, the mess that is the 2026 season will eventually disappear into the rearview. If he doesn't, there won't be another fall guy to sacrifice.

MLB’s draft overhaul would limit choices for teen players — and be a boon for colleges

James Clark is a young man with enticing options on his baseball horizon.

The promising 18-year-old shortstop was taking infield practice Tuesday during the MLB draft combine at Chase Field, fluidly handling ground balls before firing to first base. It’s one of many reasons the California native has a chance to be selected in the first round of next month’s draft.

But if he decides he’s not ready to start his professional baseball career, he’s committed to play college ball at Duke, which has a successful baseball program and an elite academic reputation.

“It’s going to be a difficult decision,” Clark said. “But it’s a good one to have.”

If MLB gets it’s way, it’s a decision that future baseball prospects won’t get to make.

Owners recently proposed banning high school players from signing with major league teams, raising the age for international amateurs and slashing the money spent on signing bonuses in negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement.

If the league gets its way, starting in 2028, a prospect for the amateur draft would have to be at least 20 years old by the Sept. 1 of his signing year and two years removed from the graduating year of his high school class — a restriction that also would eliminate players who completed their first year of junior college.

Many, many big leaguers began their pro careers right after high school

There are dozens of current MLB stars who signed as teenagers, including Pete Crow-Armstrong, Mike Trout and Bobby Witt Jr. Even more recently, Pirates phenom Konnor Griffin made his MLB debut at 19 years old.

Crow-Armstrong — who was selected as an 18-year-old with the No. 19 overall pick in 2020 out of Harvard-Westlake High School in Los Angeles — was committed to play college baseball at Vanderbilt but decided to begin his pro career instead.

He hopes other young ballplayers will still have that option in the future.

“I got an opportunity to grow up in a really real-life setting and I was really grateful for it,” the All-Star center fielder said earlier this week. “I think if there’s any sport you can go straight from high school, it’s this one. You’re afforded a lot of time in the minor leagues to develop, and that’s kind of the point.”

Cubs pitcher Ben Brown was drafted by the Philadelphia Phillies as a 17-year-old in 2017 in the 33rd round — which doesn’t even exist anymore after MLB shortened the draft to 20 rounds in 2021. The owners’ most recent proposal would shorten the draft to 12 rounds starting in 2027.

Brown said he has fond memories of staying in hotels with roommates in the lower levels of the minors, learning how to budget money on a low salary and being on his own trying to make it in the baseball world.

“It was the greatest blessing in the world for me to go into pro ball at a young age,” Brown said. “I had to work in the offseasons. I did plenty of things just to show up to spring training early. And the Phillies took amazing care of me as a young kid.”

Of course, for every Ben Brown or Pete Crow-Armstrong, there are countless high school signees who never reached the majors. There also are lots of baseball players who want to go to college, earn a degree and then embark on their pro career if things work out.

The college game is growing, and it’s changing the calculus

Shortstop Roch Cholowsky was a highly-rated recruit coming out of a high school in Arizona in 2023 but instead played at UCLA for three seasons. Now he could be the No. 1 selection in next month’s MLB draft after a standout career with the Bruins.

Still, he had plenty of friends who went straight to the pros out of high school.

“It’s different for everybody — whatever is best for you,” Cholowsky said. “A guy like myself needed to go to college. I got to play three years of unbelievable baseball at UCLA, learn a lot and really grow up.”

College baseball has grown rapidly in recent years for many reasons, including that NCAA programs can now offer 34 scholarships instead of the old cap of 11.7. There’s also some NIL money available at the top programs, though it’s usually not like the high-dollar deals for their football or basketball counterparts.

Mississippi baseball coach Mike Bianco has been at the school for 26 years — winning a national championship in 2022 — and said the college game has become more enticing, with more and more young prospects deciding it’s the best option. If MLB bans teenagers from signing out of high school, it likely means the NCAA version becomes even stronger.

Bianco’s four sons all played at least some college baseball.

“Even if they had been potential first-round draft picks, I would have made them go to college,” Bianco said. “At the major college level, you’re playing the best amateur baseball in the world. You’ve got a support system that’s different than the minor leagues and you’re getting educated in lots of different ways.”

MLB takes notice of better college players

In the 2025 MLB draft, 56 college players were selected in the top 90 picks.

Thanks to a variety of factors — especially money and technology — the MLB and NCAA versions of baseball have never been more similar. It’s part of the reason Tony Vitello is now the manager of the San Francisco Giants despite never working or playing for a professional organization before he was hired. That’s a first in MLB history.

Athletics slugger Nick Kurtz was last year’s AL Rookie of the Year after playing in college at Wake Forest, needing just 210 plate appearances in the minors before dominating MLB pitching with 36 homers and 86 RBIs in 117 games.

Pittsburgh Pirates right-hander Paul Skenes was a star pitcher at LSU before being drafted in 2023 and needed just 34 innings in the minors before making it to the big leagues. He was obviously ready — winning NL Rookie of the Year in 2024 and the Cy Young award in 2025.

From the MLB perspective, it’s become advantageous to let prospects develop in college instead of drafting them as teenagers, paying large signing bonuses, and then trying to project their growth. Currently, each MLB team runs five levels of domestic minor leagues, which can get expensive.

Streamlining that process is enticing. The minors are already shrinking — MLB cut 40 minor league affiliates back in 2020. MLB has said it will not seek to reduce the 120 minor league teams in the top four levels when it negotiates new professional development licenses in 2030 to replace expiring 10-year deals. But the makeup of those 120 teams will surely be different if no players are signing out of high school.

“These guys trust (college) programs,” Arizona State coach Willie Bloomquist said earlier this spring. “They say, ‘We’ll just watch them in college in three years at a Power 4 program, see how they development and then we’ll go get them.’”

Road to The Show: A conversation with Eric Hartman

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 21, 2026: Eric Hartman #64 of the Atlanta Braves bats during the second inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 21, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

No prospect in the Atlanta Braves organization has generated more buzz this season than Rome Emperors outfielder Eric Hartman. The 20-year-old possesses a combination of power and speed that sent him rocketing up hot sheets in the midst of a breakout season.

Hartman, Atlanta’s 20th round selection (611th overall) in the 2024 draft, bypassed a potential college career at Michigan to sign with the Braves for a well-over-slot value of $337,500 as the result of a rigorous scouting effort.  

That investment is paying major dividends for Hartman and the Braves. Hartman is slashing .302/.362/.569 with 18 home runs, 29 stolen bases, 47 RBIs and 51 runs scored in 65 games for Rome, where he is nearly two years younger than the average High-A player.

With roughly half the minor league season in the books, Hartman is closing in on a 20-homer, 20-steal season. No Braves prospect has combined the elements of power and speed like Hartman since Ronald Acuña Jr. blitzed his way through the Atlanta system nearly a decade ago. It can be difficult to avoid those kinds of comparisons as the numbers pile up, but Hartman is keeping his focus on each and every day rather than getting too far ahead of even his own expectations.

I caught up with the impressive Braves prospect this week to get his take on what has been one of the most exciting minor league seasons in all of baseball. I hope you enjoy our conversation.


Grant McAuley: Eric, I’d say that 2026 has been quite a year for you thus far. So, I’ll open up with the most general question I can ask you – what has 2026 been like, because it seems like some big things have been happening for you on the field?

Eric Hartman: I would say just a lot of fun. I think just having fun every day really just allows everything else to work. [I’m] just enjoying the process, enjoying the ups and enjoying the downs, knowing that this is a sport and anything can happen. So, I’m just being excited when things go good and being level when things don’t go as planned.

GM: Sounds like you’ve had an opportunity to really find out what the professional baseball life is all about. There’s another game tomorrow until there’s not, basically. So, a lot to be learned, good, bad and everything in between.

Before we dive into your story, I want to ask you about the guys that you’re playing with. There’s a lot of talent, a lot of excitement on a daily basis to come out to the ballpark with these guys. What has made the Rome Emperors such an exciting team this year?

EH: I’d say just that we can really win any ball game and we’re never out of it on any given day. I think everyone’s really excited based on how we’re stacking at-bats. Every at-bat something cool could happen, so all the guys are really good and really positive. I think that just translates into every day.

GM: As far as what you’re doing every day, it would seem like leveling up your game this year has been the overall theme. Walk me through the difference between, say, the 2025 season, and the things that you learned and the adjustments you wanted to make over the winter. How did you parlay that into a very successful first half this year?

EH: I’m just hammering the basics, really. I wouldn’t say it’s anything crazy, but just really learning, fixing and really focusing on the things I do really well and mastering those. Then it’s just being able to repeat that on a day-to-day basis and trusting myself when a bad game happens. That’s what brought me success before. Then I’m just kind of repeating the things that brought me success, and keeping a steady head on my shoulders.

GM: One of the things I love about the minor leagues is that it is the story of development and of everybody coming into their own at different times and learning more about themselves through the successes and through the failures as well. 

A lot of folks look at the draft, the international signings, or maybe how someone is traded over from another organization – a lot of different things can bring a team together. For you, as the final pick the Braves made in the 2024 draft class, what was that process like?

EH: Yeah, it wasn’t really that crazy. They kind of told me in the final rounds, like 15-19 [I’d be selected]. I definitely was getting a little worried as I saw rounds going by, but I was really pumped to see my name pop-up with that last pick.

GM: I would say that it’s worked out pretty well thus far. I want to talk about your style of play. We’ve seen some of the speed that you’re flashing early in your career, but you’ve really grown into the power this year. I know you said it was kind of hammering the basics over the winter and sticking with those things. Was there anybody you were working with in particular, whether it’s this year in spring training or over the winter, that helped you maximize that part of your game?

EH: All my coaches have really helped me hone in on better misses in terms of flyball percentage, hard-hit percentage, and really just hammering down my bat path and my approach, too. So, all my coaches throughout spring training and here in Rome, too.

GM: The spring training experience for minor leaguers is a different one than over in the major league camp. Did you have an opportunity to get around the major league side and observe some things, or maybe talk with some coaches or players who gave you a little bit of feedback to get the year going or just help you out in little ways that can help a baseball player take that next step?

EH: Yeah, I backed up a few big league games and I think just being around the guys and just realizing that for them it’s just a game, too. That and just watching them handle their business is a really important aspect of it. Learning from that and learning that they don’t put too much pressure on themselves, even when everyone’s looking at them, I think learning that really helped me.

GM: Now, success on the field individually is obviously important. As somebody who’s going out there, going to battle every single day, winning obviously beats losing. But how critical is that to this step as you go along in the minor leagues to have competitive teams – teams that can win a championship at whatever level you’re at?

EH: I think just wanting to win, and like knowing you can win, that’s when everyone succeeds individually. But when you lose focus of that, then that’s when stuff hits the fan and you start losing some of your individual talents. But when you’re all just worried about winning and doing whatever you can to help the team win, then that’s when you really shine.

GM: I talked to your teammate, [Braves 2025 first-round pick] Tate Southisene. He was just promoted to Rome, but he told me that you were one of the first guys that he got to know last year as he was just coming into pro ball. You guys are reunited here in Rome now, so could you describe what his game looks like and the difference a year in pro ball can make? It seems like he’s leveled up quite a bit, too.

EH: Yeah, when he first came in, he was just so talented and he still is. He’s just cleaned up a few things with his swing and in his approach, and it just really shows. It’s totally impressive how far even just confidence-wise a year under your belt can give you and I’m looking forward to watching him here, too.

GM: I know not every player is going to come into a year and say, “I need to get certain statistics or pile up this particular stat line.” Are there certain goals or levels that you set out to achieve in a year? Anything you say that you would like to do this thing or that thing? I know being healthy is a big part of doing those things, but anything in particular?

EH: Not really. I would say, just showing up every day, and yeah, like you said staying on the ball field and giving it my best. But I think as soon as you put a number on anything it slows you down. So, I just like to keep pushing and keeping it going.

GM: I really like that. I think that’s a great way to look at it, because you don’t want to get too focused on the here and now, because it might keep you from where you’re going to be tomorrow. 

That brings me to my final question – which is the fact that we don’t know what tomorrow will bring. But if you play really well in the minor leagues, oftentimes you’ll change addresses a couple of times. Does any of that kind of stuff creep into the back of your mind, or are you really trying to be solely focused on what you’re doing today and getting ready to do it all over again tomorrow?

EH: Yeah, you hit it on the head. Like, I’m just really focused on controlling the controllables and doing whatever I can to stay here. Yeah, taking it a day at a time, because stuff can change really quickly and I’m just enjoying the process here.

GM: Well, I think folks are enjoying you enjoying that process here in Rome. It’s been a great season thus far with a lot of baseball left to be played. Thanks so much for the time and good luck the rest of the way.

EH: Awesome. Thanks for having me.

Top prospects Felnin Celesten, Lazaro Montes headline explosive day of Mariner minor league action

Amidst an overwhelming display of prospect prowess up and down the system, premiere shortstop Felnin Celesten headlined an active AquaSox lineup by hitting for the cycle in just seven innings. This marks the first professional cycle for Celesten and underscores what has been a truly remarkable stretch of offensive production. Since May 1st, Celesten is batting .341 with an OPS of 1.024, striking out less than 20% of the time and swiping a flawless 12 bases along the way. Celesten has undoubtedly benefited from playing in the hitter-friendly ballpark in Everett (1.066 Home OPS), but his numbers remain robust while playing on the road (.869 Road OPS) and provide confidence he’s truly excelling at the High-A level. It seems likely he’ll be heading to Double-A Arkansas in the coming weeks, a welcome challenge he’s more than earned.

Though not as flashy as a cycle, top slugger Lazaro Montes mashed his way to a four-hit game on Thursday night, launching two homers and a double in the always brutal Dickey-Stephens Park. Montes has consistently been the best bat in this Traveler lineup and ranks second in the Texas League in home runs (23) on the year. With teammates Caleb Cali and Hunter Fitz-Gerald (16 each) rounding out the top five of that same list, Arkansas’ lineup has an astounding amount of thump despite their brutal offensive environment and has a chance to produce several big leaguers in the coming years. Now officially into the second half, the Travs will look to continue this hot hitting and mash their way to a second half crown.

Rounding out Thursday’s offensive explosion with some excellent performances of their own, the ACL tandem of Nick Becker and Yorger Bautista led the Baby M’s to an 11-4 victory over the Royals’ squad. Bautista (2-3, 3B, 2BB) has had a very solid year in his first action stateside, but last year’s second rounder Nick Becker (2-3, 2B, 2BB, 3SB) has been on another level. Ranking 15th in OPS across Rookie ball, Becker’s 23 stolen bases place him third amongst his leaguemates, and his two caught stealing proves he’s achieved this gaudy total in a highly efficient manner. Each of these two have otherworldly ceilings and are absolutely names to know moving forward.

Stone Cold: Mariners at Guardians Series Preview

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JUNE 20: Steven Kwan #38 of the Cleveland Guardians celebrates with Brayan Rocchio #4 after defeating the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on June 20, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mariners have not scored more than three runs in a single game since dropping 10 on the Nationals way back on June 12. Over the last two weeks, they’ve dropped from second in the AL in wRC+ (107) to eighth (101)! They’ve gone 4-7 during this cold snap and have lost merely a half game in the standings. The mediocrity of the entire AL West — really, the entire American League — has been their saving grace all season long. Now, they’ll wrap up this Midwest road trip with a stop in Cleveland this weekend.

GameTimeMariners StarterGuardians StarterMariners Win%Guardians Win%
Game 1Friday, June 26 | 4:10 pmRHP Luis CastilloLHP Joey Cantillo51.3%48.7%
Game 2Saturday, June 27 | 4:10 pmRHP Logan Gilbert / RHP Emerson HancockRHP Slade Cecconi57.1%42.9%
Game 3Sunday, June 28 | 10:40 amRHP George KirbyRHP Gavin Williams52.2%47.8%
*Game odds courtesy of FanGraphs
OverviewMarinersGuardiansEdge
Batting (wRC+)101 (8th in AL)92 (14th in AL)Mariners
Fielding (FRV)-21 (14th)4 (3rd)Guardians
Starting Pitching (FIP-)89 (3rd)98 (7th)Mariners
Bullpen (FIP-)88 (2nd)92 (5th)Mariners

The Guardians are in the middle of a tightly contested AL Central race — and therefore in the middle of the crowded AL Wild Card race too. The only problem is that José Ramírez, their superstar third baseman, fractured his hamate bone in his left hand on June 13 and will be sidelined until August. That puts a ton of pressure on the rest of the roster to at least tread water until he can return to lead the lineup. So far, the team has lost all three series it’s played without Ramírez, though that’s been good enough to stay tied with the White Sox atop their division.

PlayerPositionBatsPAK%BB%ISOwRC+
Travis Bazzana2BL21320.2%12.2%0.185125
Kyle Manzardo1BL25331.6%11.1%0.164105
Brayan RocchioSSS29613.5%8.1%0.119108
Rhys HoskinsDHR23330.5%15.9%0.17590
Daniel Schneemann3BL22730.0%9.3%0.13175
Kahlil Watson (AAA)RFL25428.0%14.6%0.236124
Steven KwanLFL29910.7%13.0%0.04872
Patrick BaileyCS16225.3%7.4%0.07440
Petey HalpinCFL5129.4%2.0%0.06321

The Guardians’ lineup looks a lot less dangerous without Ramírez anchoring it. Their best hitter is now Travis Bazzana, their rookie second baseman who made his big league debut a couple of months ago. He’s been excellent so far, with a 125 wRC+ and seven home runs in 50 games played, though he can’t carry the load all on his own. The problem is guys like Steven Kwan and Kyle Manzardo, who had been solid sidekicks for Ramírez in the past, have really struggled this year. Kwan’s issues are a huge problem in particular. He’s been Cleveland’s second-best hitter since debuting, but a 47 point drop in his BABIP has completely sabotaged his contact-first approach. If you’re looking for something positive, Brayan Rocchio has taken a pretty big step forward at the plate this year, though he’s hilariously miscast as a number three hitter. That’s just the reality of the Guardians’ options without Ramírez taking that familiar place in the lineup.

Probable Pitchers 

Updated Stuff+ Explainer 

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Joey Cantillo8022.4%10.9%11.8%41.3%4.054.41
Luis Castillo70.221.8%7.9%10.2%36.9%5.224.08
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam38.1%40.6%91.888651150.393
Cutter3.6%3.0%87.380
Changeup31.2%18.5%80.5111125820.262
Curveball23.4%17.0%79.51091051030.227
Slider3.7%20.9%82.88381610.366

From a previous series preview:

Joey Cantillo spent last year split between the bullpen and the rotation. Once he made the move to starting in July, things really took off for him; he posted a 2.96 ERA and a 3.21 FIP across 13 starts down the stretch. His calling card is a phenomenal changeup that produced a 49.4% whiff rate last year! His two breaking balls are okay too — his curveball is the better of the two but he was testing a new grip on his slider this spring to hopefully increase that pitch’s effectiveness. His command is his weakness, though his walk rate improved slightly after joining the rotation last year. With a role in the rotation secured to start this season, he’s well positioned to take a big step forward if he can get his errant command under control.

The Mariners scored two runs in 3.2 innings against Cantillo in his first start of the season way back in April. It’s been an up-and-down year for him since; he had a 3.57 ERA but a 4.53 FIP through the end of May, but a rough pair of outings against the Yankees and Rangers at the start of this month have pushed his ERA up a hair over four. 

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Slade Cecconi84.118.2%7.4%12.8%46.0%4.484.45
Logan Gilbert9327.2%6.0%12.7%33.8%3.293.78
Emerson Hancock8524.2%5.7%12.9%41.1%3.603.84
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam26.8%32.5%93.29586920.356
Sinker26.8%15.7%93.39372660.349
Cutter29.5%25.2%88.1891001330.301
Changeup0.4%2.9%81.6
Curveball9.5%21.3%75.495105630.304
Slider7.1%2.4%83.795
Sweeper9.5%3.2%81.695

From a previous series preview:

Slade Cecconi came to the Guardians last offseason in the December 2024 trade that sent Josh Naylor to Arizona. He had a decent year in Cleveland, managing to stick in the rotation for the entire year after spending the first two years of his career as a swingman in Arizona’s bullpen. He doesn’t have outstanding stuff and won’t overpower batters, but he does have excellent command and a deep repertoire to keep batters off balance. His two breaking balls are his best pitches and he added a cutter and sinker to his arsenal last year. His fastball is pretty lackluster and that’s where his whole approach breaks down. If he’s not keeping batters honest with his secondary pitches, they can key in on his heater and do some real damage.

The Mariners rocked Cecconi for six runs in 4.1 innings in his first start of the season. He continued to struggle over his next six outings but has since turned things around; he’s got a 2.96 ERA and a 3.50 FIP in nine starts since May 9. The biggest difference has been the introduction of a revamped slider to replace his sweeper. That new breaking ball has returned a 40% whiff rate so far and he’s throwing it about 15% of time this month.

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Gavin Williams96.228.5%8.0%16.9%45.7%3.823.85
George Kirby9620.9%5.7%9.3%49.0%3.943.35
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam25.4%33.5%96.71041451070.357
Sinker48.1%14.8%96.494100980.405
Cutter7.2%15.4%92.281104930.430
Curveball19.3%36.3%82.7109931150.305
Sweeper58.3%23.0%87.21131291030.242

From a previous series preview:

Gavin Williams ended last season on an extremely lucky run. From June through the end of the season, his BABIP allowed was just .221 which led to a 2.50 ERA that far outpaced his 4.27 FIP. Most of his underlying peripherals stayed pretty stable through the season, but a ton of good batted ball luck allowed him to be a key piece of the Guardians’ playoff run in September. He added a sweeper to his pitch mix last year and it returned a 44.0% whiff rate. That gives him two excellent breaking balls to attack batters with alongside a hard fastball. The issue is his command. His walk rate is well below average and it’s pretty shocking he was able to get away with all those baserunners without giving up a ton more runs.

The Mariners really made Williams work in his first start of the season, scoring three runs in five innings on Opening Day. Williams walked six in that outing, a season high for him. He’s steadily improved his walk rate over the course of the season, marking a significant improvement to his results. His strikeout rate is up nearly four points as well, though he’s paid for it by allowing a ton of hard contact and a ton of home runs.


The Big Picture:

TeamW-LW%Games BehindRun DiffRecent Form
Mariners41-410.500+4L-W-W-L-L
Astros40-430.4821.5-39W-L-W-W-W
Athletics39-420.4811.5-54L-L-L-L-W
Rangers39-420.4811.5-13W-W-L-L-W
Angels34-480.4157.0-36W-W-L-W-W
TeamW-LW%Games BehindRun DiffRecent Form
Rays45-330.577+7.0+13W-L-L-W-W
Guardians42-390.519+2.5-8W-L-L-L-W
Astros40-430.482-39W-L-W-W-W
Athletics39-420.481-54L-L-L-L-W
Blue Jays39-420.481-28W-W-L-L-L
Rangers39-420.481-13W-W-L-L-W

The Astros started a four-game series against the Tigers yesterday, winning 2-1. That’s their third win in a row and it moved them into a virtual tie with the Rangers and Athletics for second in the AL West. Both Texas and the A’s won yesterday as well, with the Rangers beating the Blue Jays. That means all three of those AL West teams and Toronto are tied for that final Wild Card spot. After salvaging a win against the Giants yesterday, the Athletics will head to Anaheim to face the Angels this weekend.

This Week in Mets Quotes: Sisyphean Mets complete 6 contractually obligated games

May 24, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; New York Mets manager Carlos Mendoza (64) watches from the dugout against the Miami Marlins during the first inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Rhona Wise-Imagn Images | Rhona Wise-Imagn Images

Your 2026 New York Mets: My [team’s] a liar, but I’ll stand beside them

“We know our record is not what we want, and we know we are capable of more. We don’t view this as a manager problem, and we don’t intend to make a change.” -David Stearns, May 1st [MLB]

[They’re] all I’ve got, and I don’t wanna be alone

My [team] don’t see me when [they’re] with my friends

“Carlos has led the organization with passion and grace and is beloved by everyone who works with him on a daily basis. Carlos’ impact on our players, staff, and culture over the last three seasons has been transformative. Unfortunately, we know we are falling short and change is necessary to move forward.” -David Stearns [The Athletic]

[They’re] all I’ve got, and I don’t wanna be alone

“Our commitment to bringing our fans a championship-caliber team has not changed. There is no sugarcoating it: this season has been a disappointment and our fans deserve better than what we’ve delivered.” -Steve Cohen [The Athletic]

No, there is no other one

“It’s a completely different inning, especially for Freddy’s outing. It’s just routine plays that are costing us. At this level, you expect to make plays like that. … You understand that they’re not going to be perfect, but those are as routine as it gets. And teams are making us pay for it, especially the past few nights.” -Carlos Mendoza [MLB]

No, there is no other one

“I think I have been a little inconsistent but I have time to be better.” -Freddy Peralta [New York Post]

I can’t have any other one

“It’s very tough to give up the lead right away but it’s part of the game. We have just got to be better. We have got to play better baseball and go out there and execute.” -Juan Soto [New York Post]

Though I would now I never could with one

“Embarrassing. Overall, you know, the whole day. Two losses, but just the way we played overall. That last game, unacceptable. Obviously, everybody’s pissed. Everybody’s frustrated. As simple as that.” -Carlos Mendoza [New York Post]

Nobody knows me like [them]

Nobody knows [them] like me

We’re all we’ve got, and we don’t wanna be alone