Sam Antonacci wondering if anyone remembered to pack the bats. | (Patrick Gorski/Imagn Images)
The White Sox bats have gone comatose.
Four singles. That was it. Chicago never seriously threatened a rally in a 5-0 snoozer against Boston, snapping its winning streak of 10 straight home series. The offense has seemingly vanished, producing just one run in 21 innings dating back to the Cleveland series. (Thankfully, the Guardians bailed the South Siders out by getting walked off in Minnesota.) The All-Star break can’t get here fast enough.
Davis Martin came out dealing, mowing down Boston on 10 pitches in the first with two loud fly outs and a K. Jake Bennett matched him, and Martin tossed another clean frame in the second. Early hope, quickly dashed.
Chicago squandered its best scoring opportunity in the second when Chase Meidroth singled and Sam Antonacci walked to put two on, with nobody out. Cue the collapse: Braden Montgomery whiffed on a high heater, Junior Perez watched strike three zip by, and Kyle Teel dribbled one to kill the rally before it started.
Boston cracked Martin hard in the third. A leadoff walk to Jarren Duran, a sac bunt by Carlos Narváez and a single by Tsung-Che Cheng put Boston on the board. Chen then scooted to third on a Teel miscue. The mess continued with another walk, this time to Anthony Seigler, then Ceddanne Rafaela laced a double to make it 2-0. A wild pitch uncorked by Martin allowed Seigler to race home before Perez ended the mess by colliding with the center-field wall.
Luisangel Acuña tried to spark something with a leadoff single in the third, but the next three Chicago hitters went quietly on a fly out, line out and ground out. Story of the night.
The Red Sox padded their lead in the fourth, collecting four singles to plate two more runs. The five-run home outing was particularly uncharacteristic for Martin, who had allowed just four total earned runs across his previous seven Sox Park starts combined. His night ended after four innings, as Will Venable gave him the hook to bring out Chris Murphy for the fifth.
Murphy danced out of trouble after a leadoff double and a hit batter, while Seranthony Domínguez worked around a walk to Cheng in the sixth after Teel erased the would-be thief at second:
None of it mattered.
Antonacci singled in the fourth only to be wiped out by a double play. How about Acuña’s hit in the fifth? Nothing. The Sox went quietly the rest of the way, four straight innings with three up, three down. Four base hits, zero clutch — 0-for-3 with runners in scoring position.
Defensively, the White Sox did themselves no favors either. Acuña booted one, Teel let a ball get by, and Martin spiked a pitch. Sloppy all around, as Boston coasted to the shutout.
The 27-year-old told reporters after the game that he didn't have his "best stuff" and credited catcher Francisco Alvarez for calling a strong game against a Royals squad that had scored 31 runs in their last two games.
"I felt good about it. I didn't have my best stuff today, but I thought Alvy called a heck of a game to keep the hitters off balance," Scott said. "It's a team that scored a lot of runs recently. I'm just trying to mix speeds and do my best to stay in the strike zone, out of the strike zone, help them expand a little bit. But yeah, I thought Alvy called a great game, defense played great, and obviously A.J. [Ewing] leading off gave us a boost there. I'm just riding that wave."
Scott noted how he had to battle through the first two innings and was able to hold the Royals scoreless despite throwing 49 pitches. He thought his cutter was strong, especially against left-handed hitters, and his slider was working well, too, in tough counts.
Overall, Scott allowed three hits and struck out five with a walk over 90 pitches, lowering his season ERA to 3.17. Looking ahead, the right-hander knows there's more he can accomplish.
"There's always something to get better at," Scott said. "For me, I know it's going deeper in games. I take that to heart; I take that personally. Being able to go out and do that consistently is my goal. I'm always throughout my career going to be trying to get better at something. For me, right now, that's what I'm going for.
"Going deeper in games can help this bullpen out, help the team out. Being able to do that hopefully gets us more wins. That's my goal going forward and I'm excited to do it."
Interim manager Andy Green agreed, saying the two spoke after Scott's night was done and believes "he's better" than he was Wednesday night.
"It's a great outing, you go five scoreless innings, right on 90 pitches. It's a great outing. He's better than that, too, at the same time," Green said. "...He can step on the neck of the other team when he gets two quick outs. That's how he's going to get deeper into the baseball game. It was great. I don't want to take anything away from it. Knowing what someone has inside of them and what they're capable of... the process stuff for Scotty can get better and better.
"And part of that, he's coming back off of TJ, he's pitching in his first full major league season. He's doing a lot of great things, but the bar is going to be held really high for him because we think he can reach it; we know he can reach it. We're just going to keep talking about those things... There's another level there and even with five scoreless, we're going to keep asking for more."
With the team's support behind him, the future looks bright for the righty. He will have to wait until after the All-Star break for his next start, but will certainly be looking to complete at least 6.0 IP for the first time this season when he does.
Jul 8, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers manager Skip Schumaker looks on from the dugout during the second inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images
The Texas Rangers scored one run but the Anaheim Angels scored 13 runs.
Well, you might not see a more definitive baseball game than that, I reckon.
The Rangers are 1-4 against the Angels on the year now. The Angels, of course, are quite literally the worst team in the sport. The Rangers meanwhile have like a 60% shot at the playoffs. Imagine what that would look like if they could beat teams like the Angels.
The Rangers had a scant three hits tonight. Were it not for pinch hitter Kyle Higashioka hitting a solo home run in the eighth inning, they would have been shut out.
Also, Higashioka pitched the ninth.
Texas waited until the eighth to get their one run despite drawing five walks off Anaheim starter Walbert Urena, who they knocked out after four innings.
Meanwhile, MacKenzie “For Five Prospects” Gore allowed seven runs in five innings as Chris Young’s great hope has become the league’s worst starter among arms who have tossed at least 100 innings this season.
After Gore exited, the Angels scored four more runs off actual Texas relievers. They scored twice off Higashioka, which doesn’t count.
The Rangers are .500 again. At least the Mariners lost.
Player of the Game:
Pablo Sanchez is here at the Rangers game by the way. He’s the big one in the yellow hat. pic.twitter.com/M1wuv6VF3S
Up Next: The Rangers and Angels close out this series in a rubber match where RHP Nathan Eovaldi is expected to make the start for Texas opposite LHP Reid Detmers who will instantly be on Perfect Game watch for Anaheim.
The Thursday afternoon first pitch from The Shed is scheduled for 7:05 pm CDT and will be aired on the Rangers Sports Network.
ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - JULY 08: Yandy Díaz #2 of the Tampa Bay Rays reacts after hitting a double in the third inning against the New York Yankees at Tropicana Field on July 08, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images
It takes a lot to overshadow a 4-for-4 night from Yandy Díaz. Eleven strikeouts, zero walks, and another dominant performance from the Rays’ pitching staff did just that in Wednesday’s 3-0 win over the Yankees.
This time it was Shane McClanahan setting the tone, followed seamlessly by Cole Sulser and Bryan Baker, as the Rays carved through New York’s lineup for a 3-0 victory. The Yankees drew no walks, struck out 11 times, and spent most of the evening chasing a moving target.
The game nearly took a different turn in the second inning.
Jasson Domínguez and Anthony Volpe opened the frame with back-to-back singles, putting runners on the corners with nobody out and giving the Yankees an early chance to build momentum. Instead, McClanahan delivered a defensive play that defined his night. Max Schuemann bounced a comebacker that turned into a frantic scramble, but McClanahan calmly fielded it, flipped home to Nick Fortes, and erased Domínguez trying to score. What could easily have been a Yankees run became the second out, and when Austin Wells popped out moments later, New York walked away empty-handed.
Yandy Díaz got things rolling in the third with a double into left, his second hit in as many trips. Jonathan Aranda followed with a line drive single to right, bringing Díaz home for the night’s first run and a 1-0 lead.
McClanahan made quick work of the Yankees over the next three innings. The left-hander mixed his fastball and breaking pitches beautifully, generating weak contact early and strikeouts whenever he needed them. By the middle innings, New York hitters looked increasingly uncomfortable, often walking back toward the dugout after another late swing or frozen take.
The Rays added breathing room in the fifth, and Díaz had his fingerprints all over that rally, too.
Nick Fortes singled, Díaz followed with yet another base hit, and Aranda ripped a double into the gap to score Fortes and send Díaz racing to third. Tampa Bay looked poised for an even bigger inning before José Caballero made an outstanding defensive play for the Yankees, cutting down Díaz at the plate on Junior Caminero’s ground ball. The Rays had to settle for just one run, but the lead had doubled to 2-0.
The sixth inning delivered another reminder of how crisp Tampa Bay played defensively. After José Caballero reached on a bunt single, Fortes erased him trying to steal as McClanahan struck out Paul Goldschmidt, completing a strike-em-out, throw-em-out double play. The sequence and call frustrated Yankees manager Aaron Boone enough that his argument eventually earned him an ejection, followed shortly afterward by bench coach Brad Ausmus joining him for a BOGO ejection.
Aaron Boone and bench coach Brad Ausmus were both thrown out after a strike 'em out throw 'em out pic.twitter.com/iAXfdtbU0P
The delay did nothing to cool off McClanahan, who promptly struck out Ben Rice to finish his evening.
McClanahan was efficient and dominant: 6.1 scoreless innings, five hits, no walks, and five strikeouts. The strikeout total was modest compared to the bullpen that followed, but his greatest accomplishment may have been refusing to give the Yankees free baserunners. Every hitter had to earn everything, and very few did.
McClanahan came into the game 7-0 this season and 41-4 on his career when he received at least three runs of support. The Rays found one final insurance run in the seventh. Taylor Walls worked the club’s lone walk, Díaz collected his fourth hit of the night with a sharp single, and Aranda lifted a sacrifice fly to center, pushing the lead to 3-0. Aranda finished with all three Tampa Bay RBIs, adding to an excellent season so far.
From there, the bullpen slammed the door.
Sulser inherited two runners in the seventh and escaped without allowing a run, striking out three over 1.2 scoreless innings. Baker handled the ninth with little drama, fanning all three outs around a harmless single to collect his 25th save.
By night’s end, the combined pitching line told quite a story. Eleven strikeouts, zero walks, six hits allowed, and zero runs. Dominant.
For the Yankees, there was not much to build on. They went 0-for-5 with runners in scoring position, stranded their few opportunities, and watched every flicker of momentum get extinguished before it could ignite.
The Rays look to win the series tomorrow, with Drew Rasmussen scheduled to start.
Pirates manager Don Kelly said no-no to Jared Jones’ no-no bid, pulling the starting pitcher out of Pittsburgh’s 3-0 loss to the Braves after he threw six perfect innings.
The Pirates played it safe with Jones, who is just getting back after recovering from an internal brace elbow surgery, pulling him despite the fact that he struck out eight of the first 18 batters he faced and didn’t allow a single base runner.
But after six innings and 77 pitches on Wednesday night, he was pulled, even as he tried to sneak by Kelly after coming off the field, much to the amusement of the Pirates skipper.
Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Jared Jones (17) delivers a pitch against the Atlanta Braves during the first inning at PNC Park. Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images
“Yeah, I was messing around,” Jones said with a smirk about it. “Coming into the game we thought we were going to get five [innings] and the pitch count was low, so they sent me back out there for the sixth. That was all I had tonight. I was just messing around.”
Jones acknowledged the pitch count aspect “does suck” in an instance like this, but said that he “completely understands” the decision to pull him out of the game.
Kelly called the decision to take Jones out of the game a “tough one,” however, the health of a player was at the top of his list of priorities.
“Wanting guys to stay healthy is the number one thing with these guys because we need Jared for the rest of the season throwing the ball like that,” Kelly said. “Trying to push him right now when he’s only had five ups – there’s just no way.”
The Pirates pulled Jared Jones from a perfect game after six innings, and manager Don Kelly had to chase him down to tell him.
After Jones exited the game, the perfect outing came to an end, and the shutout ended in the eighth when Joey Bart hit a two-run home run off Dennis Santana.
The Braves added another run in the top of the ninth.
In A.J. Ewing, the Mets might have discovered their leadoff hitter and center fielder — a remarkably valuable combination — for the better part of the next decade.
In Carson Benge, the Mets are watching a promising rookie blossom into something greater, each at-bat stronger than the last.
And Ewing and Benge may spend years tracking down fly balls to help out Christian Scott, who has bounced back from surgery to look like a fixture in the Mets rotation.
A.J. Ewing round the bases after hitting a solo home run during the first inning of the Mets’ 6-2 win over the Royals on July 8, 2026 at Citi Field. Robert Sabo for NY Post
The three youthful standouts stood out in Wednesday’s 6-2 victory over the Royals, during which the Mets rode a five-run eighth — the run-scoring work all coming with two outs, courtesy of a bases-loaded drilling of Jared Young, a Brett Baty single, a wild pitch and a Francisco Alvarez single — to win just a second game at Citi Field in their past nine.
Ewing continued to look more than comfortable both against big league pitching and atop a lineup, stepping up as the Mets leadoff hitter in the first and redirecting a fastball 420 feet to center for the only run the Mets would score until the 11-batter eighth, in which Ewing helped the cause by serving a double to left-center.
Christian Scott pitches in the first inning of the Mets’ win over the Royals. Robert Sabo for NY Post
During a breakout minor league campaign last year, Ewing totaled three home runs in 124 games. On Wednesday he homered for a second straight night and third time in four games.
“I’m super comfortable in the box right now,” said the 21-year-old, who has launched seven in 53 games.
“There continues to be evolution in every aspect of his game,” said interim manager Andy Green, who had previously watched that evolution in his role atop player development.
One of Ewing’s partners on the grass is the 23-year-old Benge, who singled in the fourth and sixth to make it three straight games with multiple hits. At the end of April, the rookie owned a .525 OPS and was the subject of questions regarding whether he would be optioned. That OPS is now .737.
His most impressive plate appearance came in the eighth, when he extended the two-out rally by turning a 1-2 count into a 10-pitch walk.
Ewing’s other partner on the grass is the signed-through-2039 Juan Soto.
It looks as if at least one aspect of the Mets is settled.
“It’s a dynamic outfield with young kids playing alongside the best hitter in the game, and the young kids play the game the right way,” Green said before the Mets (39-54) won a third game in their past four. “I think a lot of people, from the scouts that found them to the people that coach them, helped those guys take steps forward, and now they belong in the outfield. They know it.”
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Scott, meanwhile, might have been forgotten about last year, when the trio of Nolan McLean, Brandon Sproat and Jonah Tong teased that they might be the future of the rotation in Queens. McLean will be, Sproat is in Milwaukee and Tong in Triple-A Syracuse, while Scott, fully rehabbed from 2024 Tommy John surgery, has asserted once again that he belongs.
On Wednesday, the 27-year-old threw five shutout innings in which he let up just three hits and walked one while striking out five, slicing his ERA to 3.10 in 12 starts.
By just about any measure, Scott enjoyed a great night. Yet this great night was not enough for an organization that sees a higher ceiling and longer nights of work in Scott’s future.
A.J. Ewing fields a fly out by Tyler Tolbert during the seventh inning of the Mets’ win over the Royals. Robert Sabo for NY Post
“It’s a great outing. You go five scoreless innings, right on 90 pitches,” Green began, before adding the but: “He’s better than that.”
The righty needed 90 pitches to record 15 outs because of lapses such as the second inning, when he got two quick outs before falling behind Nick Loftin, 3-0, for an eventual walk. He fell behind the next batter, Isaac Collins 3-1 and allowed a hit.
In motivating one more piece for the future, Green said Scott must learn to “step on the neck of the other team.” Scott heard him.
“There’s always something to get better at,” said Scott, who has not yet completed the sixth inning this season. “For me, it’s going deeper in games.”
CINCINNATI, OHIO - JULY 08: Sal Stewart #27 of the Cincinnati Reds hits a two-run home run during the third inning of the baseball game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Great American Ball Park on July 08, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jeff Dean/Getty Images) | Getty Images
José Alvarado’s 2026 season had already been messy. There were positives to hope for as the season goes on, there was generally some brutal BABIP and situational luck that helped inflate his ERA. Even with that, there is only so much you can argue for someone who entered tonight’s game with an ERA over six.
Then tonight’s bottom of the sixth inning happened. It took him 35 pitches because he had to face seven hitters. Three of them ended with walks to first base and with two outs, Noelvi Marte caught an inside cutter right off the left field chalk that put tonight’s game completely out of reach.
It seemed like a sure thing to pick up Alvarado’s nine-million-dollar club option after 2025, even with his PEDs suspension that derailed a promising season. It was not going to be easy to find left handers at a similar rate, especially since they moved on from Matt Strahm later in the winter.
Through 32.0 innings, Alvarado now carries a 7.04 ERA and no matter what happens over the next month, finding a left handed reliever has become a major need at the upcoming trade deadline.
Tanner Banks made his first appearance with the Phillies since being recalled, following Alan Rangel in a one-run game in the fourth. Edwin Arroyo immediately greeted Banks with a triple past Gabriel Rincones jr (that should’ve been a single).
After a TJ Friedl failed bunt attempt, three of the Reds’ top-of-the-lineup hitters stepped to the batter’s box. Elly De La Cruz smoked a slider to right field to make it 5-2. Sal Stewart muscled a fastball to right field that just barely got out of Great American Ballpark for his second home run of the night. To cap the inning off, JJ Bleday smoked a hanging slider to make it 7-2, sending Banks to the showers after recording just a single out in a preplanned bullpen game.
So besides that, how was the play Mrs. Lincoln?
The Phillies put together really good at bats against Chase Burns all night, drawing six walks, scoring three runs, and making him throw 106 pitches just to get through five innings. Gabriel Rincones Jr is starting to look the part of being a semi-productive strong platoon side corner bat. He is probably not an outfielder but he did smoke a double to center field off Burns and eventually scored on a Justin Crawford triple. Kyle Schwarber pulled a Chris Paul and hit home run number 32 in the ninth inning that made me change the score on the title.
Speaking of Justin Crawford, his two hits tonight have raised his OPS to .666. It’s a funny number.
This was also a game to see how some relievers would do. Max Lazar was called up yesterday and pitched a solid 1.1 innings of work, looking like the same AAAA pitcher he’s always been. Throw more splitters.
Brad Keller pitched for the Phillies for the first time since June 13, the outing where he gave up three runs against the Brewers that nearly cost the Phillies a game. It was a productive mop-up inning as a tune-up. He should probably just slot in as Mattingly’s most trusted non-closer leverage arm.
Final thoughts: The ESPN broadcast was a mess. Adam Ottavino seems like a sharp guy with some potential, he knows how to talk about the modern game and can explain difficult concepts well but still needs refinement because he hasn’t been doing this for a while.
Karl Ravech, we know what Karl Ravech is. David Ross would not stop talking and didn’t exactly say much of substance either. It was very Ben Davis-like, which is not a comparison you want to receive (as a broadcaster, Ross was a way better catcher).
May 10, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Chicago Cubs pitcher Phil Maton (88) throws to the plate against the Texas Rangers during the seventh inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images | Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images
Five days after he was released, the Cubs have signed outfielder Chas McCormick and assigned him to Triple-A Iowa. If you want to know what that’s about, McCormick invoked his opt-out at the beginning of the month, became a free agent, and then re-signed with the Cubs after he didn’t get a better offer from another team.
Outfielder Ethan Conrad was promoted from the ACL Cubs to Low-A Myrtle Beach. He did not play tonight.
Outfielder Derik Alcantara was also promoted to Myrtle Beach from Mesa.
Left-hander Doug Nikhazy went sent to the ACL Cubs from Triple-A Iowa.
Andrew Wentz started and got the win after he allowed just one run on three hits over 5.2 innings. Wentz struck out seven and walked two.
Phil Maton entered the game on a rehab assignment to start the seventh inning, faced five batters and retired all five of them. Maton struck out three of the five.
Vince Reilly pitched the final 1.1 innings and got the save. He only allowed one baserunner, a two-out walk in the ninth. Reilly did not strike anyone out.
All three Iowa runs came on a home run by catcher Christian Bethancourt in the second inning. It was Bethancourt’s ninth home run this year. He was 1 for 3.
Third baseman Owen Miller doubled three times today in a 3 for 4 afternoon.
Second baseman James Triantos was 2 for 4 with one run scored.
Center fielder Chas McCormick went 1 for 3 with a walk and a stolen base. He scored on the Bethancourt home run.
Brooks Caple got the win with a quality start of six innings and three runs. Caple allowed the three runs on three hits and two walks. He struck out six.
Luke Little pitched a clean ninth inning for the save, retiring the side in order. Little struck out one.
Catcher Owen Ayers hit a two-run home run in the third inning. It was Ayers’ 22nd home run on the year and 16th with Knoxville. Ayers went 2 for 5 with four overall RBI.
Left fielder Carter Trice tacked on an insurance run with a solo home run in the bottom of the seventh. Trice now has 11 home runs this season. Trice was a perfect 2 for 2 with two walks. He scored twice.
Second baseman Alex Madera was 2 for 4. He scored once and had one run batted in.
Nazier Mulé gave the Cubs a solid start, giving up just one run on one hit over four innings. Mulé struck out two and walked two.
Eli Jerzembeck gave up a two-run home run in the bottom of the eighth and took the loss. Jerzembeck’s final line was two runs on two hits over one inning. He walked one and struck out one.
South Bend managed just three hits. Third baseman Matt Halbach doubled home shortstop Christian Olivo in the third inning. Halbach was 1 for 4. Olivo was 0 for 2 with a sacrifice fly in the sixth inning for the other run.
Luis Martinez-Gomez started this game on a rehab assignment and just dominated. Martinez-Gomez pitched six scoreless innings and allowed just one hit as he got the win. He struck out seven and walked just one. He did hit one batter.
Third baseman Derniche Valdez homered for the second-straight night. His seventh home run of the year was a solo home run in the second inning. Valdez went 2 for 4 with a walk. He scored twice and had two overall runs batted in.
In the third inning, catcher Ivan Cespedes homered with the bases empty. It was Cespedes’ first Low-A home run and sixth overall this year. Cespedes went 1 for 3 with two walks.
Finally, first baseman Jairo Diaz connected for a two-run home run in the seventh, his second on the season. Diaz went 1 for 3 with two walks. He scored twice and had three overall RBI.
The Pelicans scored 11 runs on just five hits. It helped that three of the hits were home runs and that they drew 13 walks and were hit by three pitches.
WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 08: Luis García Jr. #2 of the Washington Nationals celebrates with teammates in the dugout after scoring on a hit by Daylen Lile #4 during the third inning against the Houston Astros at Nationals Park on July 08, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jess Rapfogel/Getty Images) | Getty Images
You don’t get to say this that often with the Nats, but that was a nice, easy, comfortable win. The offense was firing on all cylinders, and Foster Griffin threw another gem. A night after Blake Butera complained about all the walks, the Nats pitching staff did not issue a free pass all night.
On the other side of things, the offense was grinding out at bats all night long and worked 10 walks, while striking out just three times. Even when the Nats were not scoring in the first couple of innings, it only felt like a matter of time before they broke through.
That is exactly what happened in the middle innings, with the Nats scoring all 8 of their runs in the third, fourth and fifth innings. They had three straight multi-run innings, and put the game out of reach in a hurry. It started with the Nats walking two times to start the third, and then cashing in on those free passes. CJ Abrams hit a sac fly, then Daylen Lile smashed an RBI double off the wall.
However, the 4th inning is when this offense really started going into a feeding frenzy. They made two quick outs before just wearing out Spencer Arrighetti. Keibert Ruiz got a two out knock, before they pitched around James Word. The Astros must not have gotten the memo that Luis Garcia Jr. is the hottest hitter in baseball. He punished them by destroying a 3-run bomb to right.
Garcia reached the 20 home run mark for the first time in his career at just the 87 game mark. He has hit an insane 15 home runs in his last 30 games and has a 1.219 OPS in that time. I did not think Garcia had anything like this in him, and I am certainly not alone in that sentiment. He has always had some sneaky pop and good bat to ball skills, but the power is not very sneaky these days.
In the 5th inning, CJ Abrams also reached the 20 home run milestone. He has hit 20 before, but this ties a career high for him. Abrams has inevitably slowed down a little bit since an insane April, but he has still been highly productive. This was a very good series at the plate for him. In 6 games in July, Abrams already has 3 walks, which is a good sign because he only had 4 all of June.
Abrams seems to be locking in again in these last few games. The approach has been better, and he is getting on base much more consistently. CJ’s second half struggles have been well documented, but with this new coaching staff, I have faith that CJ will have at least a solid second half. He is off to a great start in July after a mediocre June.
We have only talked about the offense so far, but arguably the biggest story of the night was Foster Griffin. The Nationals left hander threw 7 innings of one run ball while striking out 9. He got a career high 22 whiffs, including 9 on his cutter. Despite only throwing in the low-90’s, Griffin is not just a smoke and mirrors guy. He has legit swing and miss stuff.
As he got deeper into the game, he showed that off. His 7th inning was absolutely brilliant. His first strikeout of the inning came on a beautiful changeup that he pulled the string on. Griffin finished off his night by getting Brice Matthews to chase a curve in the dirt.
Griffin has such a deep bag of pitches, and all of them work so well together. For the season, he has a 2.77 ERA in 110.1 innings. Griffin has just smashed all the expectations anyone may have set for him when he signed from Japan for $5.5 million. He has been a legitimate ace for this team and should be an All-Star.
Overall, this was a great night for the Nats. The offense was clicking, Griffin was outstanding and the bullpen did not make things overly tense. Just a nice, easy win. While the 12-11 wins are fun, your heart can only take so many of those. This was just a comfortable, relaxing win.
Jul 7, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Boston Red Sox first baseman Willson Contreras (40) rounds third base to score against the Chicago White Sox during the ninth inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images | Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images
Hey, what do you think is the worst thing that could have happened entering Wednesday’s matchup between the Boston Red Sox and Chicago White Sox?
Willson Contreras getting injured?
Yep, thought so.
The Red Sox were able to push their winning streak to a season-high-tying five games with a 5-0 victory at Guaranteed Rate Field, they just happened to also lose one of the best hitters in the American League. If it’s not one thing with this team, it’s another — and this one might be the most detrimental based on the timing and potential severity. Anthony Seigler, who has been superb in the leadoff spot, also suffered an injury and was immediately replaced, so it wasn’t all that great a night at the ballpark despite some pretty decent storylines unfolding.
Boston updated that both injuries were “contusions” during the middle of the game, but we all know this song and dance…
STUDS
Jake Bennett: I’ve had reservations about how long he can keep this pace, but the rookie shut me up for five more days as he tossed seven shutdown innings against one of the best offenses in baseball. If you’re going to play good defense, there are few pitchers you’d rather toe the rubber.
Tsung-Che Cheng: I love this freakin’ guy.
Cheng finished with two runs batted in while continuing to play stellar shortstop.
DUDS
Kyle Teel: I don’t think this guy is very good behind the plate…
Teel, of “Garrett Crochet trade” and “Big Three” fame, did more running around than you would hope out of a guy whose primary job is to be still in one spot, allowing two wild pitches to fly by him while corralling one and accidentally injuring an opponent. I’ve certainly seen better nights, as he also never found his way on base.
“OH BOY, HERE WE GO” OF THE GAME
Contreras and Seigler all but simultaneously suffered injuries that forced their respective removals from the contest, with the former fouling one off the top of his foot and the latter getting kneed directly in the shoulder while trying to score on a passed ball.
ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - JUNE 26: Michael McGreevy #36 of the St. Louis Cardinals pitches against the Miami Marlins during the fourth inning at Busch Stadium on June 26, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Jeff Le/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Game Summary
The Cardinals coming off a doubleheader sweep at the hands of these same Milwaukee Brewers, and an overall 4-game losing streak faced yet another left-hander tonight in Kyle Harrison. He was not particularly sharp, giving up booming doubles to Jordan and Burleson that resulted in RBI along with a solo HR to Jose Fermin.
On the other side of the ledger, birthday boy (26) Michael McGreevy was very sharp. Arguably among one of the best games he has pitched as a big leaguer. Alec Burleson helped that along with a late 2-run HR to extend the lead to 5-0. The Brewers break thru against Gastelum for a single rally, but the Cards win 5-1.
Pre-game notes
Harrison for the Brewers (a lefty) and a well-rested Michael McGreevy start tonight on the bump.
A right leaning line-up tonight features Winn leading off (JJW gets a day), followed by Herrera (DH), Walker, Velazquez (LF), Burleson, Fermin (2b), Jordan (3b) and Nootbaar (CF).
Interesting to take such a sub-optimal defense alignment to try and squeeze out a little offense with a pitch-to-contact pitcher.
O’Brien, Soriano and Gastelum will be hot tonight in the bullpen. Unknown about Stanek. Graceffo, Svanson and Bruihl likely hands off. Romero likely in the prefer not to use category (16 pitches yesterday), but probably not hands off.
The first innings
In the first, Yelich singled, Bauers walked, and Mitchell got an infield hit but McGreevy worked around the early threat. Winn opens with a double, Ivan advances him and Walker drives him in with a double. Burleson defeats the “can’t hit lefties” narrative with an RBI double for an early 2-0 lead.
In the second Pratt singles, but Pages throws him out attempting to steal. Ortiz K’s. Jones K’s. The Cardinals go quietly in the bottom of two. That bottom of the line-up is not fear inspiring.
In the third, Yelich K’s. Chourio K’s. What is going on here? Bauers grounds out. In the bottom half, Winn lines out. So does Herrera. Walker gets on via E-4 on a 115 mph B.B. Cardinals have had five balls struck over 100 mph, so Harrison isn’t fooling many people. NV grounds out.
The middle innings
In the fourth, Contreras flies out. Mitchell grounds out. Lara K’s. McGreevy has now set down eight batters in a row. In the bottom, Burly grounds out, proving he can’t hit lefties. Fermin hits a homerun to extend the lead to 3-0. Jordan lines out. Nootbaar grounds out.
In the fifth, Pratt lines out. Ortiz grounds out. Jones pops out. Now eleven in a row. But the seventh inning looms. In the bottom half, Harrison is out and Anderson is in to pitch for the Brewers. Pages K’s. Winn grounds out. Herrera pops out.
In the sixth, Yelich grounds out. Chourio flies out and Bauers grounds out. That makes fourteen in a row set down by McGreevy. McGreevy seems intent to take the bullpen out of a seventh inning meltdown by pitching it himself. In the bottom half, Jordan leads off with an infield hit. NV K’s. Koenig now in for Anderson to face Burleson. Burleson greets him with a 2-run HR. 109 mph, 443 feet. Who says he can’t hit lefties? Fermin lines out. Jordan with an infield hit, breaking a long hitless streak. Nootbaar grounds out. Maybe he needs lessons from Burly on how to hit lefties.
Romero in for the eighth. Issues the obligatory first batter up against the lefty Yelich. I hate walks. But he gets the next three to keep the drama low. Cardinals go quietly in the bottom.
ROB in for the ninth. Other than a two out single to Pratt, no drama here either. Cardinals win 5-1.
The decisive and bitter end
McGreevy back out for the seventh at 83 pitches, working to protect a 5-0 lead. In ways, it feels like the Brewers have the Cardinals right where they want them. Out front but relying on their bullpen. Contreras flies out. Mitchell ends the streak at 15 in a row with a double. Lara singled, ending McGreevy’s night. Gastelum in his MLB debut. First and third, one out. A SacFly breaks the rookie in. A double puts two more runners in scoring position, but a comebacker ends the threat. In the bottom half, Stallings in. Pages K’s again. Winn K’s. Herrera K’s. 5-1 going into the 8th.
Romero comes in for the 8th. He has the lefty lane and naturally complicates it with a first batter walk. I hate walks! Chourio and Bauers strike out to rectify the situation and Contreras grounds out to end the top of the 8th. Walker, Church and Burleson go out quietly in the bottom of the 8th.
ROB on to pitch the ninth. A two-out single by Pratt is the only complication and the Cardinals win 5-1.
Post-Game Notes
Check out Today on the Farm – Wednesday 7.8 for updates on MiLB action.
The Cardinals close out the Brewers series tomorrow, a night game.
After watching, my view that the Brewers have pretty much outclassed the Cardinals in every aspect of the game. The Cardinals do some things well, but the Brewers do those things better. The Cardinals do some things not so well and the Brewers appear to have no such infirmities. Maybe a lack of power that will limit them come playoff time, but that is quibbling.
Jul 8, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Milwaukee Brewers right fielder Luis Lara (18) leaps and catches a line drive hit by St. Louis Cardinals center fielder Lars Nootbaar (not pictured) during the second inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images
The Milwaukee Brewers dropped their first game since Saturday tonight, as the Cardinals put together a string of extra-base hits and the Brewers had no response in a 5-1 loss.
The Brewers threatened against Michael McGreevy right away in the first, as Christian Yelich singled, Jake Bauers walked, and Garrett Mitchell hit an infield single to load the bases with two outs for Luis Lara in his second career game. Lara grounded out to third, though, as McGreevy escaped with no runs on the board.
St. Louis then greeted Kyle Harrison rudely, as Masyn Winn, Jordan Walker, and Alec Burleson all doubled to put the Cards up 2-0 after one. Winn’s double was an odd misplay by the defense-first right fielder Lara, who took a ball off the face as he battled the sun.
A Cardinals leadoff double hit right fielder Luis Lara in the face as he fought the sun. Another Cardinals double just eluded Garrett Mitchell in center. The result was a two-run, 24-pitch first inning for Kyle Harrison. pic.twitter.com/SlP87gUdyI
Cooper Pratt started the second with a single but was caught stealing, and Joey Ortiz and Greg Jones both struck out to allow McGreevy to get through a much cleaner second inning.
Harrison worked his own 1-2-3 inning, including a catch on another adventure for Lara in right field — the rookie got twisted around as he (once again) battled the sun, making the catch and falling into the wall. Still, a nice bounce-back frame for the lefty (and for Lara after his first-inning mishap).
Luis Lara is going to need an ice bath tonight. Here are the last two balls hit his way. pic.twitter.com/zAC4Sufo4V
McGreevy worked a clean inning against the top of Milwaukee’s order in the third, while Harrison worked around an error by the second baseman Jones in the bottom of the inning. Lara added another defensive highlight, this time robbing Iván Herrera of a hit on a diving catch (see the second video above).
After yet another 1-2-3 inning for McGreevy in the top of the fourth, the Cards tacked on another run against Harrison with a solo homer by José Fermín, his fourth of the season, to make it 3-0.
McGreevy continued to mow down the Brewer lineup with another 1-2-3 inning in the fifth, though this one came with a heart-stopping 103-mph liner back at McGreevy off the bat of Pratt, though the righty was able to knock it down and prevent a scary moment.
Harrison was pulled after four innings in what was another short start for the 24-year-old pitcher. He threw just 70 pitches, allowing three runs on four hits (all extra-base hits) and no walks, striking out two.
Grant Anderson took the fifth and worked a 1-2-3 inning with a strikeout, and the Brewers went down in order in the sixth, pushing McGreevy to 14 consecutive hitters set down — the last hitter to reach safely was Pratt on his leadoff single in the second.
Anderson stayed in for the bottom of the sixth, allowing a leadoff single to Walker before striking out Nelson Velázquez. Jared Koenig then entered to replace Anderson, promptly allowing a stolen base by Walker before Burleson crushed a two-run homer to right, stretching St. Louis’ lead to 5-0 through six frames.
After William Contreras flew out to start the seventh, Milwaukee finally had a baserunner reach in the form of Mitchell, who doubled into the right-center gap. Lara followed with a single to left, putting runners at the corners and marking the end of McGreevy’s day. He was replaced by Luis Gastelum, making his MLB debut, and Gastelum allowed a Pratt sac fly and an Ortiz double, but pinch-hitter Andrew Vaughn grounded out to end the inning with the deficit still at 5-1.
In an odd move, Vaughn, who replaced the second baseman Jones, stayed in the game to play third base, with Ortiz moving over to second base. Note: Vaughn has played third base before, but just 14 career innings, almost all of which came in 2021 (10 innings). It’s unknown if Brice Turang was unavailable to play for a specific reason or if Pat Murphy just wanted to give him a full day off. We’ll keep you posted as we learn more postgame.
UPDATE: It was, in fact, just a day off for Turang. In other injury news, though, Harrison has reportedly been dealing with elbow soreness, which led to his early exit tonight. He doesn’t seem concerned, though, and indicated it’s a “good time for the All-Star break.”
Pat Murphy said Brice Turang was getting a full night off tonight, no matter what.
Murphy also said he has no qualms about using Andrew Vaughn in that situation. https://t.co/WwbZvq9qia
Kyle Harrison has been battling some soreness on the outside of his elbow in recent weeks, and he said something about it tonight. Thus the early exit.
He does not sound overly concerned. Said it’s a good time for the All-Star break.
Garrett Stallings, who made his debut with a scoreless inning against the Reds last week, entered in the seventh and proceeded to work two perfect innings, striking out three.
Offensively, the Brewers didn’t do much of anything in the final two innings, as Yelich drew a leadoff walk in the eighth and Pratt had a two-out single in the ninth, but nobody else reached base, giving the Cardinals a 5-1 win and snapping Milwaukee’s seven-game win streak against the Cardinals and four-game overall win streak.
Harrison, Anderson, and Koenig each had at least one earned run allowed in the loss, while Stallings was the star with two perfect innings to close things out. Mitchell and Pratt each had a pair of hits, while Lara, Ortiz, and Yelich added a hit each, with Mitchell and Ortiz each hitting a double for Milwaukee’s only extra-base hits.
The Brewers will look to bounce back in Thursday’s series finale, as Logan Henderson makes his return to the mound for Milwaukee opposite Andre Pallante for St. Louis. First pitch in that one is once again set for 6:45 p.m.
Jul 8, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets center fielder A.J. Ewing (9) hits a solo home run in the first inning against the Kansas City Royals at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
We’ve seen a lot of long, frustrating losses this season. Last night’s 16-12 offensive barrage was unique even for the 2026 Mets. Following that monstrosity of a baseball game, tonight’s affair was blissfully, mercifully fairly normal in comparison. It was a fairly low-scoring evening until a sudden offensive barrage in the eighth inning, and the Mets came away with a 6-2 victory.
The Mets got the scoring started early against Royals opener Steven Cruz, as A.J. Ewing followed his four-hit barrage last night with another homer to lead off the game for the Amazins. It was Ewing’s seventh major league home run—and his first in the leadoff spot—and it quickly gave the Mets a 1-0 lead. That would prove to be the only run the bats would bring home for quite a while, as bulkman Randy Dobnak came on in the second and would go on to shut the Mets down for 5.2 scoreless innings. They came close in the bottom of third when Francisco Lindor socked a ball to deep right field with runners on first and second with two outs, but Tyler Tolbert made a terrific leaping catch against the wall to end the inning.
Thankfully for the Mets, Christian Scott was able to maintain that one-run lead during his start tonight. While Scott has overall had a pretty solid 2026, going deep into games has been an issue for him—as mentioned by Gary Cohen on the broadcast, he had not made it through five innings in any of the past three starts. Tonight, he managed to make it through five scoreless innings, giving up just three hits and one walk while striking out five. The most meaningful threat against him came in the top of the second when he surrendered a two-out walk and single, respectively, before inducing a pop fly to second base from the previously unstoppable Tolbert. All told, it was an encouraging outing from one of the few bright spots in the team’s starting rotation.
Unfortunately, the Mets quickly surrendered the lead when Scott exited the game. Tobias Myers was just recalled from the minors today, and he came on for the top of the sixth. He gave up a one-out double to Jac Caglianone, and after a groundout to third brought him within one out of getting out of the inning, Salvador Perez lined a 3-2 pitch to left field to bring the tying run home. Thus, Scott would receive a no-decision despite his solid start, and we were square even once more.
Myers got out of that inning and managed to toss a scoreless top of the seventh. Brooks Raley then came on and contributed a scoreless inning of his own. The Mets’ bats, meanwhile, continued to look hapless following the leadoff homer. Reliever Alex Lange came on for the eighth inning and quickly recorded the first two outs, and it looked like it was going to be yet another scoreless frame. Then Lindor lined a single to the outfield to break up a lengthy hitless stretch. Carson Benge followed that with a walk, and then Jorge Polanco hit a dribbler to first base and made it safely when Caglionone made an errant toss to the pitcher covering the bag. That loaded the bases for Jared Young, though Lange got him to two strikes and was one pitch away from getting out of the inning. His 2-2 pitch, however, nicked Young in the elbow, and that brought home the go-ahead run. The Mets then further capitalized on the Royals’ misfortunes when Brett Baty lined a single to center to bring two more runs home and put Young on third base. Lange then made his exit in favor of Jose Cuas, and his very first pitch sailed to the backstop to bring another run home and move Baty to second. Francisco Alvarez then blooped yet another single to left, bringing home the fifth run of the inning. Ewing followed that with a double, and Juan Soto was then intentionally walked to make it eight straight baserunners reaching base following the first two outs. Bo Bichette struck out to finally end it.
The suddenly comfortably 6-1 lead allowed Andy Green to rest his high-leverage relievers, and he instead turned to new arrival Xzavion Curry to close things out. It would have been quite a 2026 Mets thing for him to quickly allow the Royals back into the game and make things suddenly dramatic in the worst possible way. And indeed, after retiring the first two batters, Curry did surrender a walk and a double to bring home a run and make it 6-2. Thankfully, that was all the drama we were gonna get, as he struck out Bobby Witt Jr. to end it and give the Mets the victory. Now they will go for the series victory tomorrow afternoon.
Big Mets winner: Christian Scott, +28% WPA Big Mets loser: Juan Soto and Bo Bichette, -6% WPA Mets pitchers: +38% WPA Mets hitters: +12% WPA Teh aw3s0mest play: Jared Young RBI hit-by-pitch in the eighth, +25.0% WPA Teh sux0rest play: Salvador Perez RBI single in the sixth, -14.9% WPA
ATLANTA, GEORGIA - JULY 6: Juan Soto #22 of the New York Mets celebrates his three-run home run on the base paths during the ninth inning against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on July 6, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Royals could not continue the offensive explosion of the last two games for another day. We saw baseball style scoring rather than football on Wednesday, at least until right at the end. New York scored 5 runs in the 8th inning to take this one 6-2.
New York got off to a fast start. Steven Cruz grooved a 2-0 pitch to leadoff hitter AJ Ewing and he drove it over the wall a little right of center. It was not an ideal start for Cruz as the opener, but he struck out two and got out of his inning with only one run of damage done.
Christian Scott made the start for New York and he had a solid night. In the first, Bobby Witt got an infield single without really having any threat from there. His second frame he walked Nick Loftin and then Isaac Collins singled to move Loftin to third and create the only jam of the night for Scott. He got out of it. Then he went on to three easy innings. He could not go deep in the game, however, due to those first two innings taking 49 pitches. It took 8 pitches to strike out Lane Thomas in the first and 7 a piece on the walk and single in the second. So, Scott looked very good and also left after five innings.
That mattered because the Mets bullpen was pretty taxed, so taxed that they had pulled up two arms from the minors in moves earlier today. One of those called up, Tobias Myers, came in for the 6th and 7th. Jac Caglianone lined a 113 MPH ball off the wall in right center for a double in the 6th and then moved to third on Lane’s groundout to third that pulled Bichette into foul territory and opened up the bag for Cags to take. Salvador Perez battled Myers until he got the 9th pitch of the at bat for a single to bring in Caglianone and tie the game up 1-1.
I want to apologize for throwing some shade toward Randy Dobnak in the game discussion writeup. He took over for Cruz in the second and then went 5 2/3 innings as the bulk guy. He had some help from the defense. In particular, he got in a bit of trouble in the 3rd inning. With 2 outs, Juan Soto did what he does and took a walk. Bo Bichette followed that up with a single to center and brought Francisco Lindor up with two runners on. He hit the ball well to right field, but Tyler Tolbert made a running catch at the wall that I wanted to embed here for you and MLB Film Room has it linked wrong, sorry.
Regardless, a few hard-hit balls and one near miss was all Dobnak really gave the Mets. He finished with a line of 5 2/3 IP, 3H, 3BB, 2K, 0ER before Matt Strahm came in to finish the 7th on a strike out call that Ewing wanted to challenge. The Mets has lost both challenges already, and if they had not, he would have lost that one. We were now into a bullpen battle.
Lane Thomas doubled off of Brooks Raley in the 8th to give the Royals a chance at a lead. It was not to be and it started to shuffle some players around. Starling Marte pinch hit for Michael Massey with two outs and ended the inning. He moved to right field where Tolbert had been, and Tolbert took over second base. Alex Lange came in for the 8th with Soto, Bichette, and Lindor coming up. Now he is fireman rather than traditional closer? Lange made quick work of the first two before Lindor singled to right and Carson Benge worked a walk in a long plate appearance. Jorge Polance came up for just the second NY attempt with a runner in scoring position. He hit a roller to Jac at first in a weird spot that made it hard for Lange to cover first. That led to an awkward and late flip to first and loaded up the bases for Jared Young who Alex hit with a pitch on the elbow to give the lead back to the Mets. Brett Baty quickly extended the Mets new lead with a single to the right center gap, 4-1 and Jose Cuas was brought in to try and end this long two out rally.
Cuas’ first pitch was WAY outside to add yet another run to ledger and the inning just would not end. Franciso Alvarez singled to left and scored Baty. Ewing followed that with a double and Soto was intentionally walked so that the bases were loaded yet again.
Xzavion Curry came in for the Mets in the 9th, his debut for them and for 2026. He has a track record that said the Royals had a shot a big comeback. Similar to the disaster 8th for the Royals, the Mets got two outs right away and looked comfortable. Josh Rojas came on to pinch hit with no one on and two down and worked a walk. Carter Jensen doubled to drive him in and make it look like the comeback could be on. But Bobby struck out and the game was over.
This series will be decided starting at noon central tomorrow. Then one more series to the All-Star Break and Jac Caglianone’s home run derby debut.
The Mets found a way to break a 1-1 tie in the eighth inning and beat the Kansas City Royals, 6-2.
New York took advantage of Kansas City's mistakes in the bottom of the eighth, rattling off five runs with two outs. Jorge Polanco somehow reached first safely to load the bases and Jared Young was hit by a pitch to drive in the go-ahead run. With the inning extended, Brett Baty gave the team some breathing room with a two-run single, a wild pitch scored a run, and Francisco Alvarez drove in another.
Here are the takeaways...
-- After recording his first career four-hit game in Tuesday's wild loss, A.J. Ewing smashed his first career leadoff home run off of Steven Cruz to give the Mets a 1-0 lead.
He's the fifth different Met to hit a leadoff homer this season, joining Francisco Lindor, Bo Bichette, Juan Soto, and Carson Benge. The last time five Mets hit a leadoff home run in a season came in 1962.
-- Christian Scott had one of his best outings of the season by tossing five scoreless innings, lowering his season ERA to 3.17.
The young right-hander needed 49 pitches to get through the first two innings scoreless, but was able to settle down for two quicker frames in the third and fourth innings (25 pitches combined). Scott kept it going with a 1-2-3 fifth inning, but that would be all after reaching 90 pitches. Overall, he allowed three hits, struck out five, and walked one.
-- Lindor nearly had a huge hit in the bottom of the third inning with two runners on base, but Tuesday's star Tyler Tolbert made a leaping catch at the wall in right field for the third out.
-- Tobias Myers, who was recalled from Triple-A earlier Wednesday, replaced Scott on the mound in the sixth inning. Although it didn't go as he'd like, as he allowed a one-out double to Jac Caglianone and an RBI-single to Salvador Perez that tied the game at 1-1.
Myers returned to pitch the seventh inning and escaped some trouble, including a leadoff double, to keep the game knotted up. In total, he allowed one run on three hits over 2.0 IP with one strikeout and one walk.
-- The Mets bats struggled against Royals bulk reliever Randy Dobnak, getting just three hits (two by Benge) against him over 5.2 innings into the bottom of the seventh. Francisco Alvarez walked with two outs, ending Dobnak's day, but was left stranded as Ewing struck out looking on a questionable call and couldn't challenge since they had none remaining.
-- Xzavion Curry made his team debut in the ninth with a five-run lead, allowing one run on a double with a walk.
Game MVP: Christian Scott
Scott silenced the Royals' bats after they put up 19 hits and 16 runs on Tuesday night.