Will Warren’s strong start pushes Yankees past the Phillies

CLEARWATER, FL - MARCH 1: Will Warren #98 of the New York Yankees is congratulated in the dugout after being taken out of the baseball game against the Philadelphia Phillies at BayCare Ballpark on March 1, 2026 in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Both the Yankees and Phillies ran out partial lineups in Sunday’s afternoon action, with many players on both sides gearing up for action in this year’s World Baseball Classic. Despite that fact, it was a relatively tight game, that moved quickly end-to-end, featuring plenty of good pitching on both sides and promise for their starters, Will Warren for the Yankees and Andrew Painter for Philadelphia. The Yanks got the better of the Phils at the end of the afternoon, 5-3.

Warren, who co-led the American League in starts last season and will almost certainly have a regular role in 2026, looked excellent in his second spring outing. The right-hander was cut off at 50 pitches on the afternoon, but he certainly made the most of them. Across 3.2 innings of work, Warren punched out three Phillies, allowed just one hit while avoiding any walks and keeping the scoreboard blank.

This was obviously a promising start for Warren and the Yankees. If the 26-year-old can take a step forward in his second full big league season, it could be a major relief to a rotation that will be missing several key pieces in the early part of the season.

The first half of this ballgame flew by, thanks in large part to Warren’s performance in tandem with an equally dominant showing from Painter. The prized Phillies pitching prospect worked two innings against the Yankees, keeping things scoreless and striking out one in his limited 20-pitch outing. The Yankees did not record a hit against the 22-year-old.

For both sides, scoring kicked off in the fifth inning, after the bullpens had gone to work. The Yankee got things rolling their half when J.C. Escarra reached with a sun-aided double deep into center field. Two batters later, former Athletic Seth Brown singled to bring him home and give New York a 1-0 lead.

The Phillies punched right back in their half, however. The Yankees had Cade Winquest on the mound, who met Bryson Stott leading off for Philadelphia. The second baseman poked an 0-2 changeup deep and out to center field for a game-tying solo shot.

Against the Phillies ‘pen in the seventh, New York once again took the lead thanks to some high-quality two-out at-bats. With Jorbit Vivas in scoring position after a walk and a stolen base with two outs, Miguel Palma kicked off scoring with an RBI knock. Yanquiel Fernández continued the rally with a run-scoring double, before Duke Ellis piled on with a triple off the wall in left-center. Ernesto Martinez Jr. put the finishing touches on the inning with an infield single toward the hole on the left side, bringing the score to 5-1 after an eventful top half of the seventh.

After Stott’s homer, the Yankees relievers continued to keep the Phillies’ bats quiet. Angel Chivilli recorded two quick outs after Winquest left the game, and Ben Hess followed with two scoreless inning, allowing just one hit in his solid effort.

The Phillies put a solid fight together in the bottom half of the ninth against Michael Arias. After a walk, Philadelphia’s Dylan Campbell plated their second run of the day with a deep triple off the wall in left-center, before being quickly scored himself thanks to a single from Felix Reyes. Suddenly, the Yanks had their backs against the wall, with the tying run at the plate, but Reyes was able to induce a flyout to the center fielder Ellis to put a cap on their 5-3 victory.

With the win, the Yankees improve to 8-2 in Grapefruit League play, and will next take on Panama’s WBC team this Tuesday in a tune-up game for the national team.

Box Score

We’re mostly here to Paint: Yankees 5, Phillies 3

Mar 1, 2026; Clearwater, Florida, USA; Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Andrew Painter (76) walks off the field after pitching against the New York Yankees in the first inning during spring training at BayCare Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Sure, there is another loss in the ledger for the Phillies, one that will likely be forgotten in due time. We’re still gettin the good Bryson Stott right now, something to keep an eye on once the games actually begin to mean something. But today, this was the day to talk about Andrew Painter.

This was his 2026 spring debut, his first spring start since 2023. That meant that we were finally going to see how he looked three years later. How did it go?

His two innings of work really couldn’t have gone much better. He was getting whiffs, throwing all of his stuff for strikes and generally looking like he belonged. That last part may not seem like a big deal, but it’s no secret he wasn’t up to snuff last year in the minor leagues after we heard all spring how he was a part of their July plans.

His stuff?

The fastball is still a little meh, but the velocity of it today was such that he was able to get some late swings of hitters still getting their sea legs under them. The secondary pitches all looked quite good, that slider to Jasson Dominguez particularly drool worthy.

Painter has a decent amount of expectations on his shoulders this year, so starts like this do have value. It’s nice to see him get off to a good start to his spring.

St. Louis Cardinals Game Recap – 3.1.26 – Pirates at the Cardinals

Game Summary

The Pirates come to town for their first visit to RDS ever and leave with a 28-year streak of never having lost a game in Jupiter. The Pirates broke on top early with a 2-run HR by phenom Konnor Griffin, added a 2 spot in the second inning and single tallies in the fourth and seventh. Offensively, the Cardinals mustered by one hit and scored a lone run a rally killing GIDP in the fifth.

Pre-Game Notes

The venue remains unchanged. Roger Dean Stadium. Pittsburgh is in.

  • Barco pitches for the Pirates. Leahy for the Cardinals.
  • Mautz, Rincon, Romero, Roycroft, Moreno to follow Leahy, not necessarily in that order.
  • Herrera at lead-off today. Followed by Urias, Gorman, Walker, Fermin, Pozo, Church, Davis, Rivas
  • Looking forward to seeing K. Griffin.
  • The big news is Oli’s extension gets rolled out today. Have you heard?
  • Otherwise, a quiet day at camp. MiLBers have the day off.

The Manager’s Corner (pre-game)

  • Oli came into the media room shortly after the press conference.
  • Noted Herrera at lead-off is a way to get him ABs early in the game and still get him some time behind the plate. Still in build up mode, but they like what they see.
  • Does not think WBC attendance by the 9 players listed will be nearly as disruptive as last time. Sounds like it can be hit-and-miss on what information they get back from WBC teams on how their players are progressing. Some orgs are better at that than others. Isn’t it that way with everything?
  • Seems he might know the Team USA manager.
  • Urias has been a topic of Q&A each day. I will explore that more in-depth in an article later in camp.
  • First trip ever into RDS for the Pirates. Cardinals return the favor this upcoming Thursday.

Game Observations

  • A double and a Griffin HR put a quick 2-spot on the board for the Bucs. Griffin launched a center-cut sweeper that swept into the hitting sweet spot instead of out of it.
  • Another 2-spot in the second inning, featuring more bloops and bleeders than anything.
  • Bedell into take the last batter of the third inning, with Leahy’s pitch count in the 50’s.
  • Through three innings, the Cardinals are hitless (been a bit of that at the start of this camp) and find themselves down 4-0.
  • Jhostynxon Garcia greets Romero in the 4th with a solo shot, otherwise a quiet inning.
  • Cardinals load the bases in fifth to make some noise. Davis GDP plates a run but ends the noise.
  • Mautz pitches 2.2 with 3 Ks, complicated by 3 walks, ultimately giving up a run. Nunez finishes the inning with a K after giving up a run scoring single to right. He is high octane.
  • Roycroft pitches a scoreless 8th w 2Ks.
  • The bottom of the eighth produces a Tai Peete sighting. He K’s looking. He loses the challenge and the Cardinals are out of challenges.
  • Rincon in to cap off the ninth. 11 pitches. 4-seamer tops at 97, avg closer to 95. Slider got outs.

The Manager’s Corner (post-game)

  • Leahy wasn’t as sharp as he’d want to be today. Got back in the 1st after the HR and got out in 11 pitches.
  • Herrera and Leahy seemed to be on the same page, Ivan managed the game well
  • Roycroft was sharp!
  • Mautz let some counts get away.

Final notes

  • Will work the back fields tomorrow in the AM and then begin to long trek home, so this is the last game recap.
  • Will recap the back field experience for my Friday article. It may take that long to re-surface and process all the impressions I’ve gotten. Some may marinate all summer.

Better Know Your Blue Jays 40-Man Roster: Davis Schneider

Oct 29, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Toronto Blue Jays left fielder Davis Schneider (36) celebrates in the dugout after hitting a solo home run during the first inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers during game five of the 2025 MLB World Series at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images | Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Next up would be Anthony Santander, but he’ll be going on the 60-day IL Let’s skip to Davis Schneider.

Davis Schneider is a 27-year-old, right-handed hitting, left fielder/second baseman. Last year he played 59 games in left and 24 games at second. He was drafted in the 28th round of the 2017. He’s the only player from that round of that year to make the majors.

He has two option years left.

Davis is entering his fourth season with the Blue Jays, taking it for granted he’ll made the team.

You’ll remember, he started his major league career like a house on fire, with 9 hits in his first 3 games, then a 9-game hitting streak. 2024 didn’t go as well, he hit .191/.282/.343, and had the same bWAR as you and I, 0.0.

I really didn’t think he would make the active roster in 2025, but he had an excellent spring training. Then he started the season without getting a hit in his first 10 games, and he was sent off to Buffalo.

He was recalled June 1st and things went much better from then on. On the season he hit .234/.361/.436 with 11 home runs and a 1.3 bWAR.

Davis does a lot of things well. He barrels up the ball well, he doesn’t chase out of the zone, walks a lot and hits home runs.

And, just by watching, I thought he was robbed on more strike calls than anyone on the team. He’s going to be helped by challenge system. There is a report that he and Alejandro Kirk (more on the defensive side) are going to be the two who will be allowed to challenge whenever they want, other guys not so much.

Defensively? Well, he’s average ish at second and in the outfield. He was a 0 in outs above average at second and -1 in left last year. And he’s average as a runner. He’s never going to get any awards for his glove.

Steamer figures he’ll play 74 games, with 11 home runs, and a .217/.325/.394 and a 0.9 fWAR.

Braves have strong split-squad outing, as Austin Riley homers

NORTH PORT, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 20: Austin Riley #27 of the Atlanta Braves poses for a photo during Spring Training photo day at CoolToday Park on February 20, 2026 in North Port, Florida. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We were treated to a split-squad day on Sunday, with Reynaldo Lopez starting at home against the Rays, backed by most of the regular bats remaining in camp after a few WBC departures and Grant Holmes starting on the road at the Twins’ facility, backed by mostly quad-A players and a few prospects.

At home, Reynaldo Lopez sat around 92 MPH with his fastball, a few ticks down from his 95.5 and 95.7 MPH averages in 2024 and 2025. He allowed a few hard-hit balls, but struck out three and walked one through three innings. He generated 6 whiffs and kept Tampa scoreless in what was overall a nice outing for Reynaldo, even if the velo remained down in the lower 90s. Tyler Kinley followed Reynaldo and allowed a solo homer but got a strikeout and three whiffs in his one inning. Dylan Lee followed with a 1-2-3 inning of contact outs and 3 whiffs. Bullpen candidate Dylan Dodd got the sixth and immediately allowed two monster homers, hurting his chances of making the Opening Day roster over a guy like James Karinchak. Dodd ended up with 2.0 innings of work, allowing two homers, two singles, and two strikeouts.

The offense was pretty quiet to start the game, but scored one on an error after a Yastrzemski walk and two on a 111 MPH Michael Harris single. Austin Riley crushed a homer in the sixth, for his second ball hit over 106 MPH of the day, a promising sign. Toolsy prospect Diego Tornes made an appearance in the seventh inning, pinch-hitting for Michael Harris and worked a nice walk, still at only 17 years old.

On the road, Holmes gave up some hard contact, but struck out two and walked one through 2.2 innings of scoreless ball, sitting around 93-94 with his fastball. Garrett Baumann started the fourth inning and struck out the side on only one whiff, going on to collect another strikeout but only 3 whiffs total on 2+ innings of work, as he got unlucky on some soft contact to start his third inning. Hayden Harris continued his strong spring with three strikeouts and one walk in his 1.0 inning outing.

On offense, John Gil struck out and walked once each before scorching a 109.7 MPH line drive homer in the eighth inning, as he continues to have a really strong spring showing. Jorge Mateo struck out twice and had a sharp groundout in his three plate appearances.

Overall, it was a very promising split-squad day for most of the major league regulars and key prospects. John Gil has the looks of a guy who could break out and be a top 100 prospect this year, Grant Holmes and Reynaldo Lopez looked generally effective, although with diminished velocity, and Austin Riley and Michael Harris made hard contact. Dylan Dodd’s rough outing was a rough moment for him, as he seems more likely to be optioned rather than make the Opening Day roster, but there is time yet for him.

We’ll be back tomorrow as the Braves host the Twins and the WBC gets underway.

Quick Spring Recap

Mar 1, 2026; Lakeland, Florida, USA; Toronto Blue Jays left fielder Jonatan Clase (8) hits during the first inning against the Detroit Tigers at Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn Images | Mike Watters-Imagn Images

Jays 4 Tigers 4

I know it is spring and all, but I’d like a win again, one day.

But we were able to watch a bunch of minor league types (some of whom I had never heard of)

Pitchers:

  • Grant Rogers: 3 innings, no hits, no walks and 3 strikeouts. He was impressive.
  • Tommy Nance: 1 inning, 4 hits, 2 earned, 1 strikeout. He wasn’t impressive.
  • Chase Lee: 1 inning, 1 hit, 2 strikeouts.
  • Javen Coleman: 1 inning, 1 hit.
  • Michael Plassmeyer: 1 inning, 1 k.
  • Alex Amalfi: 1.2 innings, 3 hits, 1 walk, 1 k, 2 earned. and a blown save.
  • Hayden Juenger: Got the last out, but Sportsnet decided not to show it.

Hitters, Starters:

  • Jonatan Clase: 3 for 3, 2 RBI, double. .300 BA on the spring. Really good game for him.
  • Daulton Varsho: 1 for 3, double. .429.
  • Jesus Sanchez: 1 for 4, RBI, k. .143.
  • Brandon Valenzuela: 1 for 3, RBI. .300.
  • Yohendrick Pinango: Ok, who names their kid Yohendrick? 0 for 3, k. .077.
  • Arjun Nimmala: 0 for 3, 2 k. .182.
  • Rafael Lantigua: 0 for 1, walk. .545.
  • Charles McAdoo: 0 for 3, k. .357. He made an error, a rushed spin throw from short. He likely shouldn’t have thrown it but it was close enough for the first baseman to make the catch on. Actually it wasn’t an error, a hit, the throw wouldn’t have gotten the baserunner anyway.
  • Sean Keys: 1 for 3, double. .188.

Others:

  • Carlos Mendoza: 1 for 2, double. .571.
  • Jay Harry: 0 for 1, k, but he reached on a wild pitch for strike three.
  • Robert Brooks: 0 for 1, k.
  • Je’Von Ward: 1 for 1, double.
  • Josh Rivera: 0 for 1, k.
  • J.R. Freethy: 0 for 1, k. He looked 12 (to me).
  • Cutter Coffey: 0 for 1, k.

The Jays are now 2-6-2 on the spring.

Tomorrow, the Jays are hosting the Red Sox. Cody Ponce starts for the Jays. It is a 1:00 Eastern start.

Arizona Diamondbacks Spring Training Gameday Thread, #10 vs. Cleveland Guardians

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 23: A general view of the stadium during the spring training game between the Colorado Rockies and Chicago White Sox at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on February 23, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Ric Tapia/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Back to Salt River Fields for the D-backs, who are now without most of their expected starting infield. Carlos Santana, Ketel Marte and Geraldo Perdomo are now off to join their country for the World Baseball Classic, so won’t be back for a while. It’ll therefore be up to Nolan Arenado to marshal the infield in their absence, and that’s what we see in the line-up today. Luken Baker, Tommy Troy and Jose Fernandez take over for the trio named above, with Arenado and Alek Thomas perhaps the only players who’ll be in our Opening Day line-up. Which is now this month, folks. Welcome to March!

Michael Soroka, who now looks to be back in the rotation to start the year, following Merrill Kelly’s issues, gets his second start of spring. So I’d expect him to try and get through three innings this afternoon. He allowed a run on two hits and a walk over two innings his first time out, with three strikeouts. We should get to see some familiar names out of the bullpen after Soroka, with the following potentially on the list: LHP Kohl Drake, RHP Kevin Ginkel, RHP Ryan Thompson, RHP Drey Jameson, RHP Shawn Dubin, RHP Alfred Morillo and LHP Spencer Giesting.

Again, no TV for this one, but as was the case yesterday, you can tune in on Arizona Sports 98.7 FM or online, with Chris Garagiola & Brandon Webb bringing you the game.

Finally, the first big bunch of roster moves for Arizona this morning.

Spring Training Game Thread: Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners

Feb 23, 2026; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Texas Rangers outfielder Mark Canha (33) looks on prior to a spring training game against the Los Angeles Angels at Tempe Diablo Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Kartozian-Imagn Images | Matt Kartozian-Imagn Images

Today the Texas Rangers travel over to Peoria, AZ where they will take on the reigning AL West champion Seattle Mariners who are fresh off being just a handful of outs away from the World Series before heartbreak last October.

Texas will send LHP Jacob Latz to the mound opposite RHP Logan Gilbert for Seattle.

Today’s Lineups

RANGERSMARINERS
Alejandro Osuna – LFVictor Robles – CF
Jake Burger – 1BCole Young – 2B
Kyle Higashioka – CRob Refsnyder – DH
Josh Smith – 2BBrennen Davis – LF
Ezequiel Duran – 3BConnor Joe – 1B
Tyler Wade – CFColt Emerson – 3B
Mark Canha – DHAndrew Knizner – C
Michael Helman – RFLeo Rivas – SS
Cameron Cauley – SSLazaro Montes – RF
Jacob Latz – LHPLogan Gilbert – RHP

The Mariners have video, otherwise you can listen via 105.3 The Fan or follow along on Gameday. First pitch from Peoria Stadium is scheduled for 2:10 pm CT.

Go Rangers!

Dodgers vs. Angels game chat

TORONTO, ONTARIO - OCTOBER 25: (L-R) Mookie Betts #50 and Freddie Freeman #5 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrate after getting the third out against the Toronto Blue Jays during the second inning in game two of the 2025 World Series at Rogers Center on October 25, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mookie Betts is in the lineup for his first Cactus League game in 2026, one of a handful of Dodgers regulars being slow-played this spring. Freddie Freeman is also in the lineup, in his planned cleanup spot.

Sunday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Angels
  • Ballpark: Camelback Ranch
  • Time: 12:05 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570

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Spring Training Game #8: A’s versus Reds Game Thread

The Athletics have had a rough start to spring training, going 1-6 in their first seven preseason games. However, a new month means a fresh start and a sign that the start of the regular season is inching closer. With the calendar shifting to March, it is time for the A’s to start playing better in preparation for Opening Day at the end of this month against the defending American League champion Toronto Blue Jays.

Right-hander J.T. Ginn will be making the start for the A’s this afternoon against the Cincinnati Reds. Ginn pitched well against the San Francisco Giants a few days ago in his spring debut, racking up three strikeouts over two perfect innings. The focus will be on Ginn today to see if he can follow up that performance with another strong outing, one that will likely last longer as the A’s evaluate whether the best place for him is in the starting rotation or the bullpen. Ginn should be on the A’s roster to begin the season in some capacity as he is proficient at inducing groundouts, something A’s pitchers need to induce more often in year two of the team’s temporary residence at Sacramento’s Sutter Health Park.

The A’s lineup this afternoon shakes out like this:

For the second day in a row, Nick Kurtz is batting behind Jacob Wilson atop the lineup, an alignment that should carry over into the regular season. If Kurtz homers with Wilson—or another leadoff hitter—on base, that’s two runs on the scoreboard. In general, it’s a sound strategy to place a power threat behind a high-contact hitter who consistently gets on base.

Both of the team’s catchers are in this afternoon’s lineup as is third baseman Max Muncy, who is off to a hot start this spring with four hits in ten at bats. Muncy can put some ground between him and the other third base competitors with another strong performance today. Lastly, today’s outfield starters are all prospects. Henry Bolte and Junior Perez are getting extended looks early this spring, yet both have struggled so far.

The Reds have Andrew Abbot, one of the best left-handed pitchers in the National League, lined up for his second spring start this afternoon. Here is how Cincinnati lines up behind him:

The Reds have several regulars in their starting lineup, so it should be another good test for Ginn and the pitchers lined up to follow him out of the A’s bullpen. JJ Bleday has gotten off to a strong start this spring, but can he keep it going against his former team?

What better way to start a new month than with an A’s win. Let’s go A’s!

Game Thread: White Sox (6-4) at Cubs (4-5)

Always nice to have a last name like Anthony Kay’s that identifies what you try to do to batters. | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Do you think players trying to make the team or holdovers trying to keep their jobs care as much that the opponent is the Cubs as fans do? They probably have other things on their minds, but thumping That Other Team in Town back in the first Cactus League game was sure fun for us.

The parade of pitchers for the Sox today will begin with lefty Anthony Kay, a presumed member of the starting rotation once games count. Kay gave up a run against the Mariners in his first spring start, with two walks in two innings causing the damage.

The Cubs counter with rotation member Shota Imanaga, who had two scoreless innings but gave up three hits in his first outing. Imanaga will face a lineup recovered from the split squad games Friday:

The Cubs lineup against Kay et al. also includes a number of presumed regular season starters, but not all:

First pitch is scheduled for 2:05 p.m. Central, with temps expected to again get warmer than 90°. The Cubs Marquee network is covering the game, but the network of the team whose chairman hates fans almost as much as he hates players only has the game on radio. So if you don’t get Marquee, pull the rocker up to the Truetone, pretend it’s 1935, and dial up ESPN 1000.

Jack Leiter's mental development helps drive the physical development he needs for a breakout

It wasn't a simple road for Jack Leiter to get through his first MLB season. The son of 19-year MLB veteran Al Leiter, Jack was a dominant starter at Vanderbilt and was drafted second overall in the 2021 MLB Draft. It seemed like the younger Leiter was uniquely positioned to handle the mental and physical grind of professional baseball, but not many people expected that theory to be tested so quickly.

In his first professional season, Leiter posted a 5.54 ERA in 92.2 innings at Double-A. He missed plenty of bats, but he also gave up tons of hard contact. He came back in 2023 and spent the vast majority of the season at Double-A again, posting a 5.07 ERA but improving his strikeout rate from 25.6% to 31.3%. In 2024, the Rangers pushed him to Triple-A, and he responded with a 3.51 ERA and 33.3% strikeout rate in 77 innings before getting his first crack at big league innings. That debut did not go swimmingly, with Leiter posting an 8.83 ERA in 35.2 innings and seeing his strikeout rate drop to 17.9%.

Still, Leiter entered the 2025 season undeterred. He added a sinker to his arsenal and modified his changeup to try to help him against left-handed hitters. He garnered some buzz in spring training and then came out of the gates hot, pitching to a 3.48 ERA and 1.16 WHIP in his first 10 starts. The strikeouts still weren't near the level he had shown in the minors, but the progress was clear. After a tough six-start stretch in June and early June, Leiter rebounded over his final 13 starts, posting a 3.28 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, and nearly 27% strikeout rate.

It seemed that the 25-year-old had finally begun to figure it out, thanks to the evolution of his mental approach to the game.

"I think a lot of it's just how I've developed mentally, in my mindset and my mental preparation and my process," Leiter said after a spring training start this year. "I think the more process-oriented you get in this game, the better, especially this time of year, because you can drive yourself crazy with results... I think the more game reps you can get, which last year I was fortunate enough to have 29 starts in the big leagues, I think that just helps you evolve mentally in itself, but also with your routines, your preparation, your analysis of games."

So, how has Leiter's mental approach changed since his big league debut in 2024?

"It just becomes different, more refined. A game like today [allowing two runs on three hits in 1.1 innings], maybe three years ago, it would have just been kind of pure frustration off of results. But now it's about diving into each pitch and how I was executing. I like to break it down by each pitch type. Say my execution was down to, let's call it 60% from 68% last week, but maybe the cutter was kind of swaying that because it was only 3-for-9. Now it's like, okay, we have a direct point of emphasis for increasing my overall execution, because at the end of the day, execution is the name of the game, and the higher percentage that I can execute pitches, the more I'd be willing to bet on good results."

That shift in focus away from results has been crucial for Leiter, especially at this time of year.

"It's all about process. Understanding what time of year it is, and understanding what I'm trying to work on...Even the pitches where I wasn't so happy about the results, I think the shapes, the stuff, and the way that I was throwing it is definitely encouraging...At the end of the day, some pitches that get hit could have been a groundout to short. Obviously, they could always be better, but, again, you could drive yourself crazy, so I think the way to go is always a kind of positive mindset, continue to build off the positives, and learn from the negatives."

What does that look like for Leiter, specifically? Well, a big focus has been on attacking with the four-seam fastball. In his last spring training start, Leiter was encouraged that the pitch "was in the zone a lot." That's going to be important for him coming off a season in which his four-seam fastball had just a 52% zone rate, which was below league-average. That was a big reason why he added the sinker because he's able to command that pitch in the zone more often; however, being able to fill up the strike zone with both fastball variations could go a long way towards alleviating some of the command concerns that sprouted up after he posted a 10.4% walk rate.

The other focus for Leiter this spring has been on the introduction of a new cutter. The sinker last year was a good weapon for right-handed hitters to complement his four-seam fastball, but it performed poorly against lefties. His sinker allowed a 53% Ideal Contact Rate and a nearly 13% HR/FB rate to lefties, both of which were significantly worse than the league average. His four-seam fastball performed well to lefties, missing bats and not allowing much hard contact, but, again, it's not a pitch that Leiter has commanded in the strike zone regularly. The cutter to lefties could fill the same role that the sinker to righties did last year as an early-count strike pitch.

In his first spring outing, Leiter threw just two cutters, but both of them resulted in outs, so Leiter turned to it more often in his second spring start.

"It's a new pitch, and I'm working on it. I think what we saw with only throwing two [cutters] and getting two outs on them last week was to kind of see when we can and can't throw it in a game," Leiter explained after his start on February 28th. "Game results are the best feedback for that. Early on, I threw some really good ones, like in that [Kyle] Tucker at-bat in the first inning. I think at that point it might have just become like, 'Okay, that pitch is on today,” and then in the second inning, it wasn't quite the same. I think I was kind of just getting underneath it and just missing. Obviously, that's a pitch that we need to be in the zone at a high percentage, because it's meant to be thrown forward for contact. It's not a chase pitch.”

Understanding the bigger picture and what he's building towards is crucial for Leiter to take the next step in his development. However, there are some other things he'd like to see in addition to the cutter. He talked about the curveball feeling good out of his hand early in camp, and that would also be crucial for him. Even if Leiter uses the cutter to get ahead in counts against lefties, he didn't have a single pitch that had a better-than-league-average swinging strike rate (SwStr%) against lefties in 2025.

His slider, which he used 15% of the time to lefties, posted a 13.1% SwStr%, which was 43rd percentile, and was below-average as a two-strike pitch. His curveball, which he used 13% of the time to lefites had a 9.5% SwStr% but did perform well with two strikes, which suggests it could be a decent option when he mixes it in sparingly or, perhaps, is a pitch that he can find more comfort in this season and improve upon.

What we do know is that Leiter has the right mentality to figure that out.

Spring Training Game Thread X – Brewers vs Royals

SURPRISE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 19: Kris Bubic #50 of the Kansas City Royals poses for a portrait during photo day at Surprise Stadium on February 19, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Jeremy Chen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s deja vu, for the second straight Sunday, your Kansas City Royals are playing the Brewers. Last week, the Royals were triumphant in a 7-3 victory. It was lefty Bailey Falter that towed the slab to start the contest, however today it’s a different lefty for the Royals, Kris Bubic.

It’s good to see Isaac Collins back out there for the Royals, there has been some concern with him and potential injury problems. The other eight guys that make up the lineup, seven of them could very well be on the Opening Day roster. John Rave is the only real questionable one, the other six are pretty much locks, I’d say. Sorry to starting shortstop today, and Shawnee Mission, Kansas native, Connor Kaiser, but he will probably not break camp with the big league club. The overall point being, it’s a rather MLB starting lineup today for the Royals against Chad Patrick.

Hopefully Bubic looks the part today, as he finished last year on the shelf. The game can be listened to on 96.5 The Fan. First pitch is set for 2:05 p.m. CT.

Mariners Spring Training 2026, Game #10: Thread

Feb 19, 2026; Peoria, AZ, USA; Seattle Mariners pitcher Ryan Sloan (97) during spring training photo day in Peoria, AZ. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

Happy Sunday! Major League Baseball games that count will be played this month. Logan Gilbert is on the bump today, and Ryan Sloan will make his spring debut. It’s a good day.

Lineups:

The players have officially departed for their World Baseball Classic teams, leaving us with a lineup that won’t be the Opening Day one, but is an interesting lineup nonetheless. The left fielder is Colin Davis, who you’ll know by the end of the game for his big personality and shock of white-blonde hair. Rob Refsnyder gets a start against the lefty Jacob Latz. Cole Young, starting at second, draws a tough left-on-left assignment.

Scheduled to pitch behind Gilbert are Ryan Sloan, Gabe Mosser, Troy Taylor, Alex Hoppe, and Nick Davila. The most exciting name here is of course top pitching prospect Ryan Sloan, making his spring debut. Sloan will be capped at around 35 pitches, while Gilbert will have around 50.

Meanwhile, the Rangers are bringing a decidedly away-game lineup to Peoria.

Injury Update:

J.P. Crawford took live at-bats yesterday and all went well; he also played catch. He’ll have another day like that today and then will start to work into games at DH following the off-day on Monday. Matt Brash also threw a live bullpen.

News:

The Mariners made the first cuts to their spring training roster, re-assigning catchers Josh Caron, Connor Charping, and Luke Stevenson to minor-league camp.

Today’s Game Information:

Game time: 12:10 PT

TV: Mariners.TV

Radio: 710 AM Seattle Sports or the Seattle Sports app; Gameday audio

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Cactus League Game 8 – Reds at Athletics

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Andrew Abbott (41) warms up with a bungee at the Cincinnati Reds player development complex in Goodyear, Ariz., on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. | Sam Greene/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Andrew Abbott yielded a dinger and a pair of earned runs in 2.0 IP in his initial outing of Cactus League play for the Cincinnati Reds this spring. On Sunday afternoon, he’ll toe the rubber against the Philadelphia Oakland Las Vegas Sacramento Athletics of Mesa at their home park as the Reds continue their mini road trip across the Land of the Endless Strip Mall in central Arizona.

It’s hard not to say the Reds are rolling out their B-squad for this game, since that’s effectively what it is. However, as the history of B-squads of the Cincinnati Reds goes, this year’s sure feels like it’s a significant improvement. For example, they’ve got Nate Lowe at cleanup, a top of the order featuring Will Benson, Noelvi Marte, and JJ Bleday, and even Tyler Stephenson and Christian Encarnacion-Strand rounding out the order.

Down in the bullpen for the day, each of Emilio Pagan, Connor Phillips, Brock Burke, Luis Mey, Tony Santillan, and Zach Maxwell are available on the travel roster, so it’s certainly not a bullpen B-squad on the day.

First pitch is set for 3:05 PM ET, and while there is once again no televised coverage, you can listen to the game via 700 WLW.

Here’s the full travel roster for the game: