Nebraska Baseball Drops Series Opener at Michigan, 2-1

Caleb Clark throws at Michigan | Nebraska Athletics

Friday nights between Michigan and Nebraska always seem to turn into pitchers duels. It started off very precariously for both teams on the mound for different reasons, but after they settled down, the offenses went dormant.

Nebraska started the scoring in the first. Mac Moyer led off the game with a hit as he seemingly does every game. This one however was pulled into right field, which is very unlike Moyer. He cruised into second with a double. Catcher Jeter Worthley followed up with a sharp single. Case Sanderson then lifted a ball to left. The Michigan left fielder seemed to fight the sun and dropped the ball, allowing Moyer to score. The Huskers couldn’t do any more damage, ending the half inning up 1-0. Usually a bad omen if you can’t get a big inning on a starter despite being gifted an out.

Husker hurler Ty Horn really had a hard time in the bottom of the inning. He had issues controlling his off speed pitches. Combine that with the size of the zone shrinking to about a 6 inch square and it was a huge relief to get out of there with no runs allowed.

Michigan wouldn’t be denied in the next inning. Senior outfielder Greg Pace Jr hit s hard grounder right back up the middle. He stole second base, and then came home as a ball just barely sneaked between short stop Dylan Carey and second baseman Jett Buck, tying the game at 1-1.

Horn continued to struggle in the 3rd, not locating his breaking pitches and his fastball having a seemingly different zone for the umpire. Three Michigan singles scored second baseman Carson Luna to go up 2-1.

Michigan’s starting pitcher Kurt Barr had his slider working to perfection from the start. Other than the error in the first inning, Nebraska rarely even threatened through 6 innings. Multiple times with a runner on base, he would come back and strike out the final batter to end the inning.

In the 4th Ty Horn found his off speed pitches and went on a run. He struck out the side, part of six straight strikeouts before walking Michigan’s best hitter, Colby Turner with 2 outs in the 5th. He would have to retire at 102 pitches at that point, having thrown way too many pitches in the first couple innings. His line on the day was 4.2 innings, 2 runs on 6 hits with 8 strikeouts and 2 walks. A good battle despite not having anything but a fastball early and an adventurous zone.

Barr made it through 7, getting just an absolute gift of a strikeout call on Rhett Stokes to lead off the inning. The ball ended up about 6 inches off the ground on the chalk line making up the left handed batters box. Moyer then singled to right. He appeared to swipe second baseman despite being beaten to the base by the ball. He was called out on the field and the umpires seemingly couldn’t see an angle where the glove touched his shin after he slid into the back of the base. Barr struck out Worthley for his 10th and final strikeout, to go with no walks.

Caleb Clark threw 2 innings of no hit ball in relief of Horn. He struck out 1 and walked 1. Tucker Timmerman came in to take his spot with 2 outs in the bottom of the 7th. He pitched perfect against 3 batters, striking out 2. Grant Clevenger came in and struck out the last batter in the 8th.

The Huskers threatened in the 9th, Miken Miller led off, his first at bat since Florida State due to injury. He hit a chopper to 2nd that was too tough to get him out at first. Preston Freeman came in to pinch run for the catcher, representing the tying run. He didn’t last long, as Drew Grego hit a ball sharply right at the short stop for an easy double play. Devin Nunez gave the Huskers another chance as he took a ball to the hand on a checked swing. Rhett Stokes poked a ball through the right side, bringing up the top of the lineup. Moyer worked a full count, but rolled over a ground ball to the first baseman to end the game. 2-1 Wolverines.

The Husker offense had come in red hot, excelling at getting lead-off runners on. Today that only happened in the 1st and 9th innings. It’s no surprise those are the innings that included their single run and next biggest threat of the game.

Nebraska’s 4-6 hitters of Buck/Carey/Overbeek were a combined 0 for 9 with 4 strikeouts (3 by Carey) and a ground into double play. A Buck walk and Overbeek hit by pitch were the only ways they reached base. Those guys have to be big time contributors for this team to reach their goals.

The two teams are right back at it tomorrow, with first pitch in Ann Arbor at 1pm CDT.

Spring Game #28: Athletics versus Cubs Game Thread

MESA, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 22: Luis Severino #40 of the Athletics takes the mound before a spring training game against the Cleveland Guardians at HoHoKam Stadium on February 22, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by Justine Willard/Athletics/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Two evening games in a row? What is this, the regular season?

We got another nightcap for you guys as the Athletics play host yet again, this time to the Chicago Cubs. Both teams are just days away from the beginning of their regular season campaigns and are fine tuning their rosters and alignments. The Cubs tonight are actually split up, with half coming to Mesa to take on the A’s and the other half playing host to the Reds on the other side of town. These games still technically don’t matter, but they’re starting to have more weight to them the closer Opening Day comes, for both of these squads.

For the Athletics on the mound tonight they’ll be going with the newly-named Opening Night starter in Luis Severino. The right-hander is set to make his final exhibition appearance, which includes both spring with the A’s and his time playing in the World Baseball Classic with Team Dominican Republic. Sevy is looking to put the finishing touches on his ramp up for the regular season and we’ll be hoping to see some zeros on the scoreboard tonight.

Here’s your A’s lineup for Friday night’s contest:

The A’s are mixing up the lineup a little bit but not too much. We have a new leadoff man tonight in Lawrence Butler, who will be playing right field tonight. That’s a huge update as the final step in Butler’s rehab from patellar tendon surgery is manning the outfield grass. The club is also apparently anxious to get him as many plate appearances as possible after his abbreviated camp.

The rest of the top half of the lineup looks like how you’d expect, with Kurtz and Langeliers again batting back-to-back near the top of the order. The interesting part of tonight’s lineup is near the bottom half of the lineup card though. We’ll be getting to see Jeff McNeil log some time on the grass himself as he slides from second base to center field, displacing Denzel Clarke from the starting nine. And taking McNeil’s spot at the keystone is Andy Ibanez, who is likely to break camp with the club. Could this be an alignment that the A’s actually go to if Clarke’s bat isn’t up to snuff?

The Cubbies will send right-handed veteran Jameson Taillon to the mound themselves for what’ll be his own final spring tune up. The righty has had a tough camp so far but spring stats don’t matter. Still, it’d be nice to rough him up and get another win for our guys in Green & Gold.

The Chicago lineup tonight shakes out like this:

We’ll be seeing a mix of the Cubs’ regulars as well as backups. Shouldn’t be too difficult of an assignment for Severino but these guys are getting ready for the season themselves. Everyone wants to hit the ground running and that starts in these games over the final week.

Predictions? A win? A loss? A Nick Kurtz home run? Doens’t matter just yet but let’s still have fun with it on a great Friday night. Let’s go A’s!

Spring Breakout gamethread: Tigers at Pirates

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 18, 2026: Max Clark #31 of the Detroit Tigers bats during a game against the New York Yankees at the Himes Complex on March 18, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Join us as the Detroit Tigers farm system matches up against Konnor Griffin and the Pittsburgh Pirates farm system in the annual Spring Breakout game. The Tigers will have Max Clark in center field and 2025 first rounder Jordan Yost at shortstop in the starting lineup, with Bryce Rainer in the DH slot and hard-throwing relief prospect Marco Jimenez starting things off on the mound. We should see Michael Oliveto at some point as well. Griffin, baseball’s consensus number one ranked prospect, will handle shortstop for the Bucs, with a good pitching prospect on the mound as the starter in RHP Seth Hernandez.

Manager Alan Trammell has managed the last two breakout games for the Tigers, winning them both.

First pitch is set for 7:35 p.m. ET on Peacock, MLB.tv, and ao MLB Network.

SB Nation Site: Bucs Dugout

Cubs vs. Reds at Sloan Park and vs. A’s at Hohokam Stadium preview, Friday 3/20

MESA, Arizona — Today’s roster moves:

Friday notes…

  • FORMER CUBS IN REDS CAMP: Pierce Johnson, P.J. Higgins.
  • FORMER CUBS IN A’S CAMP: Aaron Civale, Mark Leiter Jr., Brooks Kriske.
  • SPLIT SQUAD: This is the only Cubs split squad game scheduled this spring. The home game begins at 8:05 p.m. CT and the away game at 8:10 p.m. CT.

Here are today’s particulars.

Cubs lineups at Sloan Park and Hohokam Stadium:

Reds lineup:

A’s lineup:

Matthew Boyd will start for the Cubs at Sloan Park. Other Cubs pitchers scheduled for the home game: Hunter Harvey, Phil Maton, Caleb Thielbar and Hoby Milner.

Brandon Williamson will start for the Reds. Other Reds pitchers scheduled tonight: Tony Santillan, Emilio Pagán, Zach Maxwell and Brock Burke.

Jameson Taillon will start for the Cubs at Hohokam Stadium. Other Cubs pitchers for the away game: Javier Assad.

Luis Severino will start for the A’s. Other A’s pitchers scheduled tonight: Mark Leiter Jr., Michael Kelly and Joel Kuhnel.

No TV for the home game. The away game will be on Marquee Sports Network and NBC Sports California. There will be a radio broadcast of the home game on the Reds flagship station, WLW 700. The away game will be with the A’s broadcasters on ATH Audio.

MLB.com Gameday for Cubs vs. Reds

MLB.com Gameday for Cubs vs. A’s

Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.

Please visit our SB Nation Reds site Red Reporter and A’s site Athletics Nation. If you do go there to interact with Reds or A’s fans, please be respectful, abide by their individual site rules and serve as a good representation of Cub fans in general and BCB in particular.

As we have done in the past, we’ll have a first pitch thread at five minutes to game time and one overflow thread, 90 minutes after game time. For today, that will be 8 p.m. CT and 9:35 p.m. CT.

These threads will not post individually onto the front page; instead, you can find links to them in the box marked ”Chicago Cubs Game Threads” at the bottom of the front page. There will also be a StoryStream on the front page with all the game thread links, as well as the recap after the game is over. The pitcher photos and regular-season stats will return on Opening Day.

Discuss amongst yourselves.

Yankees option Jasson Domínguez to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre

LAKELAND, FL - MARCH 12: Jasson Dominguez #24 of the New York Yankees bats during the spring training game against the Detroit Tigers at Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium on March 12, 2026 in Lakeland, Florida. The Yankees defeated the Tigers 4-3. (Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

It was honestly only a matter of time.

Late Friday afternoon, the Yankees optioned former super-prospect Jasson Domínguez to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, among a flurry of roster moves. Once the Yankees signed Randal Grichuk as their fourth outfielder this move seemed inevitable. Even before that, it seemed unlikely El Marciano would start the season in the majors, given the Yanks’ need for a right-handed hitting outfielder and Jasson’s struggles from that side of the plate.

He’s not the only player being moved out as Opening Day nears. Kenedy Corona, who had himself a nice camp with a couple home runs and a keen eye at the plate, is headed to minor league camp, along with a couple other folks, and a couple others join Domínguez heading to Triple-A.

But the story here is obviously The Martian. To his credit, this is no indictment of his spring. He’s been a monster at the plate and, given the lack of Discourse About His Defense on social media, my impression is he hasn’t been a disaster in left field.

This comes down to a roster crunch and, honestly, the move to Triple-A might be best for Jasson. The Yanks needed a fourth outfielder who could hit right-handed pitching, which he’s been unable to do. And even if he made the team to start the season, it doesn’t do a single thing for his development to play sporadically for the Yankees.

This is still only his age-23 season and he’s lost basically two full seasons of development and reps. First, COVID-19 wiped out the 2020 minor league season, then he missed most of 2024 after undergoing Tommy John surgery with an internal bracing on his right elbow in September 2023.

Factoring all that in, Domínguez, despite seemingly having been around forever, has a grand total of 759 plate appearances above Double-A. Sitting on the Yankee bench seems highly unlikely to help him And, given the way injuries always rear their ugly heads, it’s still very probable we’ll see Jasson in the Bronx at some point in 2026.

Dodgers on Deck: Saturday, March 21 vs. Athletics

Mar 15, 2026; Mesa, Arizona, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Emmet Sheehan (80) throws against the Chicago Cubs in the first inning at Sloan Park. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

The Dodgers reach the end of their Arizona residency on Saturday morning, with an early start time against the Athletics at Camelback Ranch. This game was originally set for a noon start, but was bumped up an hour earlier due to extreme heat.

Emmet Sheehan gets the start on Saturday, which would seemingly line him up to start next weekend against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the season-opening series, though nothing has been finalized yet regarding the Dodgers rotation order following Yoshinobu Yamamoto on opening day.

Left-hander Jacob Lopez starts for the A’s.

Saturday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Athletics
  • Ballpark: Camelback Ranch
  • Time: 11:05 a.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: A’s Cast

Dodgers vs. Padres spring training game roster

Feb 13, 2026; Glendale, AZ, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani (17) talks to catcher Will Smith (16) during spring training camp. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

After their final Cactus League off day, the Dodgers host the San Diego Padres on Friday night at Camelback Ranch. Yoshinobu Yamamoto makes his final spring tuneup before his second straight opening day start.

Lineup

Shohei Ohtani DH
Kyle Tucker RF
Mookie Betts SS
Freddie Freeman 1B
Will Smith C
Teoscar Hernández LF
Max Muncy 3B
Andy Pages CF
Miguel Rojas 2B

First time back in the lineup for Shohei Ohtani and Will Smith since returning from the World Baseball Classic, the Dodgers’ closest to their opening day lineup all spring.

Other pitchers

Edwin Díaz is scheduled to pitch in his first game since returning from the World Baseball Classic. Also slated to throw are Jack Dreyer and the last two non-roster invitees in camp — Antoine Kelly and Chris Campos.

Up from minor league camp are Evan Shaw (wearing uniform number 90), Kelvin Ramirez (91), Myles Caba (92), and Nicolas Cruz (93).

Other position players

Non-roster catchers Eliézer Alfonzo and Seby Zavala are active on Friday night.

A slew of minor leaguers are active in this one, including outfielders Eduardo Quintero (07), Mike Sirota (08), Charles Davalan (88), and Kole Myers (); infielders Jake Gelof (06), Sean McLain (87), Jose Izarra (00), Kyle Nevin (05), John Rhodes (95), and Logan Wagner (94).

Victor Bericoto and Gregory Santos reassigned to Minor League camp

Victor Bericoto in the batter’s box.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 27: Victor Bericoto #83 of the San Francisco Giants bats during the fifth inning of the spring training game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Scottsdale Stadium on February 27, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Jeremy Chen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Opening Day is just five days away for the San Francisco Giants, and the camp cuts are coming as fast and furious as my favorite modern movie franchise. The big news came on Thursday, when the Giants optioned top prospect Bryce Eldridge to AAA Sacramento, along with Grant McCray and Tyler Fitzgerald. That ended the camp-long question of whether or not Eldridge would make the roster for March 25’s Netflix special.

But more news came on Friday, when the Giants made their seventh round of camp cuts. This time, rather than optioning a trio of rostered players, the Giants reassigned a trio of non-roster invitees to Minor League camp: outfielder Victor Bericoto, right-hander Gregory Santos, and infielder Osleivis Basabe.

The biggest name here is Bericoto, who had an absolute breakout of a performance in his first Spring Training, which resulted in being named the 2026 Barney Nugent Award winner shortly before being reassigned. Bittersweet day!

Bericoto, a right-handed hitter who signed with the Giants in the same international period as Luis Matos and Marco Luciano (and who re-signed on a Minor League contract this past offseason after reaching free agency), was positively dynamic in Cactus League play, while manning both left and right field. In 19 games he hit a blistering 18-38 with a team-best three home runs as well as three doubles, while sporting a 1.264 OPS and a 221 wRC+. He also posted some of the most impressive exit velocities on the team, while striking out just seven times.

To the naked eye, then, it might seem like the Giants are making an error by reassigning him instead of giving him a spot on the Opening Day roster, especially since the players in the running for the fourth outfield spot — Matos, Will Brennan, Drew Gilbert, and Jared Oliva — aren’t exactly tearing holes in the box scores. But Bericoto, who recently turned 24, was never seriously in play for an Opening Day assignment. Spring Training numbers should always be taken with a grain of salt, and as exceptional as his were, it bears noting that he drew just one walk, rocked a hilariously unsustainable .517 BABIP, and did the bulk of his damage against fellow Minor Leaguers and NRIs. Most importantly, Bericoto has just 11 games in AAA to his name (during which time he hit just .196/.196/.283) so, despite his performance, he’s in need of some further development.

Still and all, he opened eyes, and certainly impressed his teammates, coaches, and front office. Given how unproven that aforementioned quartet is — plus McCray and Jerar Encarnación — there will almost certainly be a roster spot for Bericoto in a few months if he hits well with AAA Sacramento.

Join our March Madness conversation!

Drop in SB Nation’s March Madness open thread during Friday’s games where we’ll be talking about all the wild upsets, buzzer beaters, and Cinderella runs! 

SB Nation’s cast of characters will be enjoying the game together, so join Chris Dobbertean, Mike Rutherford, Ricky O’Donnell, Mark Schofield, James Dator, and others for 12 hours of basketball chaos!

While Bericoto was the most notable name given his spring, the most surprising of the three cuts was Santos. I’ve spent the offseason telling anyone who will listen that I think Santos — who was signed and developed by the Giants before being cut three years ago, and re-signed to a Minor League deal this past offseason — will end up being the team’s best reliever this year. I’m sticking with that, though it will take him a little while to get there, apparently.

Santos struggled with command this spring, walking five batters — while striking out just two — in 3.1 innings, leading to a 5.40 ERA and a 7.87 FIP. That shouldn’t be incredibly surprising, given that there’s rust to wash off: injuries have limited him to just 26.2 innings between both the Majors and the Minors over the last two seasons combined. The bright side is, when he finds his rhythm, command shouldn’t be a big concern: the 26-year old walked just 2.3 batters per nine innings during his breakout season with the Chicago White Sox in 2023, which is an astonishingly low number for a player who regularly clips triple digits with his fastball.

Given the lack of heat that the Giants have in the bullpen after trading Camilo Doval and seeing Randy Rodríguez suffer an injury — and given that fastball velocity is the primary barrier for entry in MLB bullpens these days — it feels like a matter of when, not if Santos will be a high-leverage reliever for this team.

As for Basabe, he had a great camp, but never really had a chance of making the team. The 25-year old right-handed hitter played his usual excellent defense across the infield, while really showing out with the bat, as he hit 12-31 with two triples, four doubles, and one walk, for a 1.051 OPS and a 167 wRC+. With Casey Schmitt and Christian Koss entrenched as the backup infielders — and Fitzgerald on the 40-man roster — the usually light-hitting Basabe (who is Matos’ cousin) was always ticketed for depth in Sacramento. But he played well enough that the organization will likely be quite comfortable bringing him up should injuries create a need.

The Giants are now down to 39 players in Major League camp: 34 rostered players, and five non-roster invitees (pitchers Michael Fulmer, Caleb Kilian, and Joey Lucchesi; catcher Eric Haase; and outfielder Oliva). They’ll have to trim 13 more names between now and Wednesday.

Aaron Judge on a midseason WBC, Olympic future, and Team USA's no-fun perception

TAMPA – Try as he might to feign immunity to the noise,Aaron Judgeheard the questions about why the United States team he captained in the World Baseball Classic looked like it wasn’t having any fun. He admitted that friends and family wondered the same things the rest of the baseball world did when they saw the stoic Americans juxtaposed with the unmitigated joy of the Dominicans and Venezuelans: Why were the Americans so, well, boring?

“Everybody is different. Every culture is different. I loved everything that Mexico was doing, what Great Britain was doing, the DR, how they celebrated the game…that was amazing,” Judge said. “If they’re going to say we don’t have the passion – my passion is grinding in this cage when nobody is watching, grinding in the backyard as a six-year-old when I’d be in the backyard with my dad. That’s where our passion came from as kids. If I don’t show it outwardly like that, it doesn’t mean I don’t love the game.”

Judge said he felt certain that “every one of those guys” in the U.S. clubhouse would say they had never had more fun playing baseball than they did during the tournament. He said he saw players he had never seen show emotion unleash more than they ever showed during the major league season. But he also said he doesn’t feel there is much point in arguing.

“What am I going to do?” he said. “I can’t change their opinions.”

Few players in baseball show as dogged a commitment to a business-like demeanor as Judge, and in fairness, it seems to have served him well. He emerged as the Yankees' leader long before he qualified as a veteran. He accumulated enough respect around the league to be named captain of an American team loaded with viable leadership options. Perhaps it is no coincidence that both teams seemed to mirror his approach: Act like you’ve been there before. Winning is the only goal. Neither, or the expectations levied on both teams, allow much room for whimsy.

So perhaps it is not surprising that when asked if he would like to see more whimsy – dancing, bat flips, flair – in Major League Baseball, Judge looked down and paused, finally answering after several seconds of calculation.

“I think it’s just tough to do for 162 games. I think it’s just a lot of energy. A lot of…I don’t know,” Judge said. “I love how the game is, but definitely I would love more energy, more flair, stuff like that. I think it’s great for the fans. It’s great for the fans. It’s great for all the young kids watching the game who love seeing their favorite player do stuff like that.”

“That’s a good question,” he added, a notable addendum for a player who rarely says anything more than he must. “It was cool for that, but I don’t know.”

He was similarly as careful when asked how playing in the WBC final against Venezuela compared to playing in the World Series – a noticeable retreat from his comments during the tournament, suggesting the WBC crowd was “bigger and better” than the ones at the 2024 World Series.

“It’s different when you’ve got a band out in right field, a band out in left field, different chants, you don’t usually see that,” Judge said. “World Series games, a lot of the passionate fans, they can’t afford the tickets sometimes.”

Judge returned his focus to the World Series when he returned to Yankees camp Thursday. He will serve as the designated hitter in the Yankees’ game against the Baltimore Orioles on Friday night. As WBC participants go, Judge likely saw his spring disrupted least: He played every day. He got regular at-bats and full games’ worth of defensive build-up. And he will get a few more games of at-bats before the Yankees’ opener in San Francisco on Wednesday.

Still, he said he thinks conversations about potentially moving the WBC to the middle of the season should continue.

“There were so many restrictions, even with us. There were certain guys that couldn't pitch because of this, had to pitch on these days,” Judge said. “I think now, if you get into where everybody is built up, everybody has no restrictions, you get out there and just play -- I think it would be better for the game."

Judge said he would love to play for Team USA again, whether in the 2028 Olympics if MLB comes to an agreement to let players go, or in future WBC events. In the meantime, he said he is encouraged by where his Yankees are to start the season – and sees the return of so many familiar faces as an opportunity to improve on last year’s league-leading win total.

“I think it comes down to just details. That’s one thing we’ve talked about a lot. Fine-tune the details, figure out as a team how we can be better,” Judge said. “We’ve had stretches the last few years in July, August, when we’re puttering and you guys are asking some tough questions about what’s going on. I think if we can figure that out, we’ll be in a good spot.”

Yankees option Jasson Dominguez to Triple-A in flurry of roster moves

The Yankees optioned outfielder Jasson Domínguez to Triple-A as the club made a flurry of roster moves ahead of Friday night's game against the Baltimore Orioles.

Domínguez faced an uphill battle to win a spot in the Yanks outfield after Cody Bellinger re-signed in free agency, and with the organization looking to get him regular at-bats to help him along in his development, starting the season in the minors seemed an inevitable conclusion for the 23-year-old.

Domínguez had 13 hits, including three home runs, in his 40 at-bats this spring, good for a .325/.378/.600 slash line. He added three steals on the basepaths.

The Yanks also optioned right-handed relievers Kervin Castro and Yerry de los Santos to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

Castro, 27, was in the bullpen conversation to make the roster on Opening Day, but it sounds like his spot might go to Rule-5 Draft pick Cade Winquest.

Catchers Ali Sanchez and Payton Henry and outfielder Kenedy Corona were reassigned to minor league camp, as well.

The Yanks open up the regular season on Wednesday in San Francisco.

New York Yankees vs. Baltimore Orioles: Luis Gil vs. Zach Eflin

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 26: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees smiles before a spring training game against the Atlanta Braves at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 26, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Captain is back! Aaron Judge has returned to Yankees camp after taking Team USA agonizingly close to winning the WBC, ultimately falling to Venezuela in the final. He rejoins in time for one of their final five spring tune-ups, the Yankees rolling out something close to their Opening Day lineup tonight against the Orioles.

Luis Gil makes his sixth start of what has been an up-and-down spring for the 27-year-old rotation hopeful. He looked decent enough in his first four outings, allowing four runs (three earned) in 11.1 innings (2.38 ERA), albeit while still not looking like his 2024 self in terms of stuff. He then got shelled for seven runs on three home runs in three innings last time out against the Tigers. He and Ryan Weathers have looked the shakiest of the Yankees’ starters this spring, though the team recently locked Weathers into the rotation to start the year. In 11 starts after returning from a lat injury last year, Gil went 4-1 with a 3.32 ERA (123 ERA+), 4.63 FIP, and 41 strikeouts in 57 innings.

Zach Eflin re-signed with the Orioles in December after missing the final two months of last season due to lower back surgery. He had a 5.93 ERA prior to the procedure and looked a shadow of the Rays righty who quickly excelled for the Orioles post-deadline in 2024. Things were going well for him last Sunday against the Yankees, with a pair of strikeouts in each of the first two scoreless frames, but rain brought a premature end to that game shortly thereafter.

I suspect we’ll be seeing a lot of today’s Yankees lineup to start the regular season with most if not all of their starters in. Giancarlo Stanton has been tearing the cover off the baseball this spring and can hopefully carry that momentum into the start of the season. Ryan McMahon continues to get reps at short meaning Oswaldo Cabrera starts at third, while the only change from the projected Opening Day lineup (aside from José Caballero at the six with McMahon at third) sees J.C. Escarra replace Austin Wells behind the plate this evening.

The Orioles lineup meanwhile is missing several of its regulars, Jackson Holliday and Jordan Westburg out with injury and Gunnar Henderson and Adley Rutschman on the bench. Offseason acquisitions Taylor Ward and Pete Alonso bat leadoff and third, respectively. Top prospects Samuel Basallo and Coby Mayo have been raking this spring and look to have forced their way into the Opening Day lineup conversation.

How to watch

Location: George M. Steinbrenner Field — Tampa, FL

First pitch: 6:35 pm ET

TV broadcast: Gotham Sports App

Radio broadcast: WFAN 660 AM, WBAL 1090 AM

Online stream: Gotham Sports App

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Friday Spring Breakout and Orioles spring training game thread

Nov 9, 2025; Mesa, AZ, USA; Detailed view of the jersey of Baltimore Orioles outfielder Enrique Bradfield Jr. (24) during the Arizona Fall League Fall Stars Game at Sloan Park. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Orioles fans, you’re getting a double dose of O’s baseball tonight. And it’s not a doubleheader or a split-squad game with a break in between; these two games will be happening simultaneously. You can watch one on MASN while listening to the other on the radio, if you think you can handle such Orioles overstimulation.

The 6:05 game, airing on MASN, is the annual Spring Breakout that pits a team of Orioles prospects against those of another club, in this case the Red Sox. And it’s a pretty exciting lineup if you’re an O’s prospect follower:

CF Enrique Bradfield Jr.
LF Nate George
1B Ike Irish
DH Wehiwa Aloy
RF Reed Trimble
2B Aron Estrada
C Creed Willems
3B Colin Yeaman
SS Griff O’Ferrall

RHP Trey Gibson

That’s a lineup that includes six of the Orioles’ top 10 MLB Pipeline prospects (George, Gibson, Irish, Aloy, Estrada, Bradfield). And 10 other prospects in the Orioles’ top 30 are also on the roster and could appear later in the game.

And don’t forget the Orioles’ top two prospects, Samuel Basallo and Dylan Beavers, who will be playing in the Birds’ Grapefruit League game tonight. That one starts at 6:35 and will be on WBAL Radio (and a Yankees TV broadcast on YES, if you have access). A few of the Orioles’ regulars have the night off, including Gunnar Henderson and Adley Rutschman, but guys like Pete Alonso, Taylor Ward, and Coby Mayo are in the lineup.

Zach Eflin makes the start after his Sunday outing ended after two innings due to rain. He’s facing more or less the primary Yankees starting lineup — including Aaron Judge, Cody Bellinger, and Giancarlo Stanton — so this’ll be his toughest test of spring training. It remains to be seen whether the O’s will include Eflin on the Opening Day roster or put him on the injured list to continue building up.

Orioles lineup:

LF Taylor Ward
C Samuel Basallo
1B Pete Alonso
3B Coby Mayo
CF Dylan Beavers
RF Leody Taveras
DH Bryan Ramos
2B Luis Vázquez
SS José Barrero

RHP Zach Eflin

Spring Training Game Thread #26: Milwaukee Brewers (11-14) vs Arizona Diamondbacks (12-13)

Milwaukee Brewers
PHOENIX, AZ - MARCH 03: Jacob Misiorowski #32 os the Milwaukee Brewers pitches during the game between the Team Great Britain and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Fields of Phoenix on Tuesday, March 3, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Sydni Griffin/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Milwaukee Brewers continue to push through the final few days of Cactus League play as they take on the Diamondbacks. This game was originally scheduled for the afternoon, but given the sweltering 100+ degree heat in Arizona right now, both teams agreed to move first pitch to 8:10 PM CT when the temperature should be a little cooler.

The Brewers will have Jacob Misiorowski on the mound making his final start of Cactus League play. Misiorowski has just been named the Opening Day starter for the Crew as Brandon Woodruff won’t quite be ready for the first game of the season. Following Misiorowski will be Logan Henderson, who was optioned to Triple-A yesterday. On the mound for Arizona will be Zac Gallen.

In the lineup for the Brewers will be most of the regular starters. They’ve made most of their position player cuts and the top minor leaguers are all in the Spring Breakout game today. Jackson Chourio and William Contreras are back in the lineup after returning victorious from the WBC. Christian Yelich, Jake Bauers, and Sal Frelick follow them.

One last tune-up for Jacob Misiorowski. The game can be heard as a webcast on Brewers.com

MLB Places Guardians' Clase, Ortiz on Unpaid Leave

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Major League Baseball has announced that Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz, the two Cleveland Guardians pitchers at the center of a pitch-fixing scandal, have been placed on unpaid leave.

The players have been on paid leave since July.

Key Takeaways

  • MLB has placed Cleveland Guardians pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz on unpaid leave.

  • Both players were previously on paid leave and face federal charges tied to alleged pitch fixing.

  • Prosecutors allege the pitchers accepted bribes to influence bets, with the trial set to begin at some point later this year.

“As the legal proceedings involving Cleveland Guardians pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz continue to move forward, MLB and the MLBPA have agreed that both players will remain on non-disciplinary leave from the Club without pay until further notice,” MLB said in a statement released Friday. 

Clase, 28, and Ortiz, 27, did not pitch the second half of last season and were indicted on federal charges in early November. Trial is set for May 5, but is anticipated to be delayed until the fall. 

“This agreement is not an admission of any wrongdoing by Clase or Ortiz,” read the statement. “MLB has been closely monitoring the matter since alerting federal law enforcement at the outset of its investigation and will have no further comment until its investigation has been completed.”

The accusations

The pitchers were charged with manipulating performances in multiple games, with Clase accused of fixing at least 48 MLB games over two seasons, which included postseason games, a February ESPN report unveiled.

Both are accused of having received thousands of dollars in bribes to help a pair of anonymous gamblers in the Dominican Republic win nearly $500,000 in bets, with the bets centering around microbetting lines on factors such as pitch velocity or whether they would be a strike. 

Ortiz, through his attorney, claims to have played a much smaller part in comparison to Clase, with the hopes that his case would be viewed separately given the “markedly different levels of culpability.”

“With 26 months of alleged criminal conduct by Mr. Clase – including suspect pitches during 48 games, dozens of communications with (a bettor), cash transfers and coordination of illegal wagers, (Ortiz could receive an unfair trial).”

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

Spring Training game thread March 20: Braves vs. Pirates

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MARCH 17: Ronald Acuña Jr. #21 of Team Venezuela celebrates with a gold medal following the 3-2 victory against Team United States at loanDepot park on March 17, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We got a night game again and seven days from now, we’ll be gearing up to see the Atlanta Braves playing in a game that actually counts. As far as tonight goes, there’s still a few more tune-ups to go before we can get rocking and rolling again.

Ronald Acuña Jr. is officially back in the lineup after his title-winning excursion into the World Baseball Classic. Naturally he’ll be hitting leadoff and the lineup following him resembles something extremely close to what we’ll likely see on Opening Day at Truist Park.

Here is that lineup for the Braves, by the way. Bryce Elder was initially scheduled to start this one but now José Suarez is listed as the starter. I’m sure we’ll learn more later about whether or not Elder will be coming in later of if he got his work done on the back fields:

Here’s how the Pirates are lining up for this one:

First pitch is scheduled for 6:05 p.m. ET and you’ll be able to catch it on Braves Vision, so this might be a good time to go sign up for Braves.TV if you haven’t already. Even if you haven’t, the game will also be on Gray TV so check your local listings. If all else fails (or you just want the old-school option) then tune in to 103.7 FM in the Atlanta area for the radio feed.