Game 55 Preview: Tigers head home to host Angels for 3-game weekday series

The Detroit Tigers got a much-needed breather on Memorial Day after playing 13 straight games, winning just twice in that span. The good news is that they finished the stretch with a 4-1 win over the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday behind Troy Melton’s first start of the 2026 campaign.

AJ Hinch and Co. will look to build on that victory back at home in the comfortable confines of Comerica Park starting on Tuesday against one of the few MLB teams that has been worse than them this season: the Los Angeles Angels. The Halos are one game worse in the standings than the Olde English D but have been much better of late, coming off a three-game home sweep of the Texas Rangers last weekend.

The Tigers turn to right-hander Keider Montero to try and string a couple of wins together for the first time since taking the final two games of the Rangers series at home at the beginning of the month. The 25-year-old was perfectly mid, allowing three runs on two hits (one home run) and four walks while striking out one in five frames of work in a no-decision loss to the Cleveland Guardians.

Montero has faced the American League Los Angeles team just once before back on Aug. 29, 2024, putting up almost a mirror image stat line of his last outing — three runs on five hits (one home run) and three walks while striking out five over five innings for a loss in Detroit.

The Angels will send fellow righty Jack Kochanowicz to the bump to do battle coming off his fifth quality start of the season against the Athletics in Anaheim. Also 25 years old, the third-year hurler threw six innings of three-run, three-hit ball while walking four, intentionally walking one and striking out seven in a game his team lost in extra innings.

Kochanowicz faced Detroit twice last year, getting bombed both times by the Motor City Kitties. Particularly in his second outing on Aug. 10, when he surrendered seven runs (six earned) on nine hits (one home run) and two walks while striking out one in just three innings of work; he took the loss in the 9-5 final that day.

Take a look below at how the two match up on Tuesday night.

Detroit Tigers (21-33) vs. Los Angeles Angels (20-34)

Time (ET): 6:40 p.m.
Place: Comerica Park, Detroit, Michigan
SB Nation Site: N/A
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 55: RHP Keider Montero (2-3, 3.83 ERA) vs. RHP Jack Kochanowicz (2-3, 4.55 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Montero949.116.37.131.84.220.6
Kochanowicz1057.116.311.556.84.510.5

MONTERO

KOCKANOWICZ

Yankees prospects: Five-run fifth dooms Rookie ball Yanks

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders: Offday

Double-A Somerset Patriots: Offday

High-A Hudson Valley Renegades: Offday

Low-A Tampa Tarpons: Offday

Florida Complex League Yankees:L, 3-8 (7) at FCL Blue Jays

1B Richard Matic 2-2, 2B, 2 BB — perfect day at the plate
RF Wilberson De Pena 0-3, HBP
C Queni Pineda 1-2, 2 BB, K, SB, picked off
3B Leni Done 0-3, BB, 2 K
SS Dexters Peralta 1-4, 2 RBI, 3 K — since the first run scored on a wild pitch, his two-run single in the third marked FCL Yanks’ only ribbies on the afternoon
LF Estivenzon Montero 2-3, K, picked off
DH Austin Green 1-3
2B Christofer Reyes 0-3, K, SB
CF Isael Arias 0-3

Stanly Alcantara 3.2 IP, 1 H, 3 R (3 ER), 4 BB, 3 K, HR, WP, 2 balks — difficult to hit but primarily because he had no idea where the ball was going
Sunayro Martina 1 IP, 4 H, 5 R (5 ER), 0 BB, 0 K, HR, HBP (loss) — the flip side is that this is just, uh, bad despite zero walks; turned a 3-3 ballgame in the fifth into a comfortable 8-3 lead for FCL Jays, capped by Brock Tibbitts’ three-run bomb
Marco Manzano 1.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 3 K, HBP — pitching savior of the day

Mud Hens walk off the Clippers on Memorial Day

Toledo Mud Hens 3, Columbus Clippers 2 (b0x)

Ty Madden and Sawyer Gipson-Long split this Memorial Day start and the Hens rallied late to walk off the Clippers.

Madden started things off firing three clean innings before giving up a double and an RBI single in the fourth. Drew Sommers took over to finish the fifth and then it was Gipson-Long’s turn. Eduardo Valencia launched a solo shot in the bottom of the fourth to tie things up 1-1. It was Valencia’s ninth homer of the season.

Gipson-Long struck out CJ Kayfus and Stuart Fairchild to start the sixth, and got a good young Guardians infield prospect in Angel Genao to ground out. He cruised through the seventh before giving up a one-out double in the eighth and then walking Kayfus. Gipson-Long bore down and got Fairchild to fly out and Genao to slap a routine grounder to second base to escape.

In the ninth, the Clippers got a leadoff single from Kody Huff, who stole second base. A ground out from Milan Tolentino moved Huff to third where he scored on a sac fly for a 2-1 lead.

However, Max Clark drew a leadoff walk from Tanner Burns in the bottom half and took second on a wild pitch. Valencia and Jace Jung both drew walks as well, with Max Burt pinch-running for Valencia. Corey Julks struck out but Burns then hit Tyler Gentry to score Clark. Cal Stevenson stepped in and drilled a ball to right field that was dropped as the right fielder leapt against the wall to pull it in. That scored Burt and sent the Hens home crowd home happy.

Valencia: 1-3, R, RBI, HR, BB

Stevenson: 1-3, RBI, BB, K, SB

Madden: 4.1 IP, ER, 4 H, 3 BB, 3 K

Gipson-Long: 4.0 IP, ER, 3 H, BB, K

Coming Up Next: The usual Monday off day is moved to Tuesday to play on Memorial Day. The series will resume on Wednesday at 11:05 a.m. ET.

FCL Tigers 8, FCL Phillies 1 (F/7)(box)

20-year-old lefty Carlos Rodriguez led the way with a solid outing for the Tigers in this one. Along with right-hander Jhonan Coba, Rodriguez is the other young international free agent pitcher most likely to join Kelvis Salcedo with the Lakeland Flying Tigers, although it may wait until Salcedo, Malachi Witherspoon move up to West Michigan. Rodriguez allowed a run on two hits and two walks, punching out three over 4 1/3 innings of work.

Rodriguez allowed his lone run in the top of the second. In the bottom of the third, Tigers’ first baseman Martin Tamara led off with a walk and took second on a wild pickoff throw. Angel de los Santos, another key name to watch down here, struck out, as did Jack Penney who began a rehab assignment on Monday. Another wild pitch advanced Tamara, and Cris Rodriguez walked and stole second base. A rehabbing Woody Hadeen singled in both runs and Cristian Perez doubled in Hadeen to make it 3-1.

In the bottom of the fifth, Rodriguez and Hadeen singled and advanced to second and third. Catching prospect Enderson Delgado singled them both in to make it 5-1.

Johnathan Rogers took over from Carlos Rodriguez with one out in the fifth. Rogers was the Tigers’ 20th rounder back in 2023. He actually showed potential before an injury shut him down and he eventually left the organization before re-signing last week. Rogers is just stretching out so he cleaned up the fifth before turning things over to the bullpen.

The bullpen had a pretty easy time of it as the Tigers tacked on three more runs in the sixth. Cris Rodriguez and Hadeen both doubled with two outs, and Cristian Perez, playing right field in this one, jumped on the first pitch he saw and smashed a three-run shot to left field. That 8-1 lead held up.

Rodriguez and Perez continue to lead the FCL Tigers with an .873 and 1.129 OPS respectively. Hadeen should be back to West Michigan pretty soon.

Hadeen: 3-4, 3 R, 3 RBI

Perez: 2-4, R, 3 RBI, 2B, HR

C. Rodriguez: 2-3, 3 R, 2B, BB, K, SB

Carlos Rodriguez: 4.1 IP, ER, 2 H, 2 BB, 3 K

How influential is a championship run on a city?

CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 25: The New York Knicks celebrate with the Bob Cousy Trophy after defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers 130-93 in Game Four of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals at Rocket Arena on May 25, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees may be the most decorated franchise in professional sports, but they don’t exist in a vacuum. New York is the hub for an extensive history of sports teams across the four major sports, with storied franchises left right and center. One such team is the New York Knicks, who have wandered through the desert for much of the 21st century but have managed to put all the pieces together in 2026, culminating in a run to the NBA Finals that has energized the city in a way no one else has quite managed to.

The question at the heart of this ramble is less analytical, and more based on emotions and feeling, but considering the rush that most New Yorkers are feeling having witnessed this run it feels appropriate. How impactful is a team making a run to a championship round on the other teams that play in the same city as them? Can the Knicks’ push for an NBA Finals appearance have any influence on the Yankees (or Mets) as they get into the summer months?

We don’t have to look too far back to recall the last championship run the city has seen, as it came from the Yankees themselves. Their 2024 run to the World Series was a thrill to watch after years of coming just short in ALCS after ALCS, and while they ultimately got beat by the Dodgers in that postseason it was still a welcome sight after years of the big four sports leagues falling well short. At the same time as the Yankees’ push, the New York Liberty were closing out a title run that saw them take the WNBA championship over the Minnesota Lynx, and the Mets were entertaining hopes of a Subway Series rematch as they went to the NLCS that same year. There was an undeniable energy in the city, and you could argue that that time was also the start of the Knicks’ core assembling that would lead them to their first consistent deep playoff appearances before this year’s big push.

As annoying as it is to admit, Boston’s had this effect on display more than any other city over the last couple of decades. The combination of the Patriots’ dynasty, the Red Sox breaking the Curse of the Bambino and pushing for three other titles, and the Celtics and Bruins tacking on additional rings has kept New Englanders’ spirits high year-round. Each franchise has had their share of superstars to lean on, but having the confidence of a winning culture constantly around them can’t hurt.

What do you think? Is there something to a team in a different sport finding success that can carry over energy to neighboring stadiums? And can the Yankees capitalize on the good vibes coming from the Garden in any way?


We’ve got a super busy day lined up for your perusal today, so let’s get into the schedule. Andrés starts us off with a discussion on why Trent Grisham deserves to stick to leading off the lineup, and then Andrew has the Rivalry Roundup featuring a wacky extra-inning Rays-Orioles match. I’ll be back to talk about which struggling Yankees drew your concern, Jeremy celebrates the birthday of one-time Yankee Travis Lee, and Michael has the weekly recap of action down on the Yankee farm. Finally, Peter delivers the latest At-Bat of the Week with Grisham’s big walk to set up Aaron Judge’s walkoff from Sunday before Josh wraps things up with a look at how Ryan Weathers has delivered surprising consistency for the rotation after entering as the biggest question mark for the staff.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees at Kansas City Royals

Time: 7:40 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, Royals.TV

Venue: Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City, MO

American League's best team? Five reasons it's the Tampa Bay Rays.

BALTIMORE – The script is similar, even if many of the characters have changed. The explanation is still very simple yet also complex beyond the layperson’s imagination.

The Tampa Bay Rays are once again the best team in the American League. And this particular brand of Rays ball looks sustainable.

At 34-17, Tampa Bay has built a 3 ½-game lead over a very good New York Yankees team in the AL East. They went five weeks without losing consecutive games. They are both hard to strike out but also incredibly stingy issuing free passes.

In short, they’re the sort of low-revenue, efficient nightmare their Major League Baseball rivals have grown accustomed to emerging out of Central Florida.

And though it’s been three years since they last threatened the game’s hierarchy, their current blend – most notably an offense that’s a punishing combo of speed, power and contact – is undeniably potent.

“There’s a place for everything in the game – a place for homers, a place for guys that get on base,” left fielder Chandler Simpson, the Rays’ speed merchant with 14 steals yet zero career home runs, tells USA TODAY Sports. “If you have nine Mes, it might not work out. If  you have nine home run hitters, it might not work out.

“If you combine them together, it’s a recipe for success. I feel like both ways are winning baseball.”

Just how can the Rays beat you? Let us count the ways – five of them, anyway:

The Rays' .260 team average is best in the American League.

Speed kills

When the Rays drafted Simpson in the second round of the 2022 draft out of Georgia Tech, nurtured him through the minor league system and anointed him their left fielder in 2025, it seemed more curiosity than anything.

After all, Simpson had never hit a ball over the fence on his own until doing so in a spring training game in March. His lone homer at Georgia Tech? It was aided by a deflection off an opponent’s glove.

Yet the Rays rolled with Simpson anyway, even if modern baseball orthodoxy decreed that his lack of slug would not justify his derring-do on the basepaths. Metrics, though, can’t entirely measure Simpson.

“Chandler’s as motivated, as driven a player that I’ve been around,” says Rays manager Kevin Cash.

Simpson stole 44 bases last season, and many of his offensive numbers are trending in almost identical fashion, with 14 steals, a .285 average after batting .295 last season and an adjusted OPS of 85 – it was 88 in 2025.

So why, then, has Simpson already doubled his WAR from 0.4 all last season to 0.8 through just one-third of 2026?

He has thoroughly flipped his defensive performance.

Simpson was worth minus-5 outs above average last season, as measured by Statcast. The Rays didn’t need to see the metrics to know what he had to do: Work on his first step. Shadow shortstop Taylor Walls’ movements from his perch in left field.

And leverage that speed to chase down balls all over the outfield.

The result? Simpson’s already worth six outs above average, tied for third in the majors and trailing only defensively elite center fielders Pete Crow-Armstrong of the Chicago Cubs and Washington’s Jacob Young.

Simpson boils his turnaround down to three words: “Anticipate every pitch.”

For Cash and his staff, it was a simple objective: Get Simpson’s speed and defensive acumen to match up. Long hours spent with outfield coach Corey Dickerson, a former Ray, paid off.

“With the amount of ground he’s covering this year,” says Cash, “it’s a huge credit to him and the work he’s put in.”

Simpson, meanwhile, doesn’t have to worry about swinging for the fences, not when the Rays love him just the way he is – sticking to their word since the day they drafted him.

“Very thankful that they just allow me to play freely, to play my game,” he says. “They don’t expect me to be anything else and I’m very much appreciative of that fact.”

An offensive buffet

The Rays rank second in the AL with 53 stolen bases, one behind Cleveland. Nine Rays have registered steals, with Cedric Mullins joining Simpson in double digits with 10. Chaos can rule the day.

“We have a lineup that’s in the back of every other opposing pitcher’s minds -  if they get a guy on, they start to panic a little more. I can speak to experience about that, facing this team,” says Rays right-hander Griffin Jax, a former Twins reliever who’s converting to starting pitcher with Tampa Bay.

“Because late in the game, if you get a guy on, you’re like, oh my gosh, this guy’s going to get to third base before I throw the next two pitches. That definitely plays into the opponents’ mind a little bit.”

Beyond that, the Rays know how to get down a bunt: Their 18 sacrifices lead the majors. Yet this is no small-ball outfit.

Lest we forget, slugging third baseman Junior Caminero walloped 45 home runs last year and is on a similar pace, with 13 already this year. The All-Star trio near the top of the lineup – Yandy Diaz, Caminero and Jonathan Aranda – sport OPS of .893, .846 and .833.

Slugging pays, and the Rays’ 26th-ranked payroll of $89 million is reflected in their No. 28 ranking in home runs. But the offense as a whole can be a suffocating combination.

“There’s so many different ways we can win,” says second baseman Richie Palacios.

Winning the info wars

Including run prevention.

Pitching coach Kyle Snyder has applied his savant-like touch to Tampa Bay’s starting pitchers since 2018. Yet their success is also a symphony of front office acquisition and ground-floor coaching.

Nick Martinez didn’t top anybody’s list of top free agent starters this past winter. After a year of mild regression in Cincinnati, he was available to Tampa Bay for just one year and $13 million.

Yet the man who carved out a niche as a swingman with Texas, San Diego and Cincinnati and in four seasons playing in Japan found another gear this year, at age 35: He’s 4-1 with a 1.51 ERA, even while striking out just 36 batters in 59 ⅓ innings.

 His explanation is almost an echo of dozens of itinerant pitchers who preceded him at Tropicana Field.

“The information we get is really good,” says Martinez. “The communication they give us, maybe when we fall off the wagon a little bit, to get back on track, that gives the pitcher a lot of trust. A lot of confidence.

“And allows us to be more aggressive, knowing that these guys have our backs, and we’re going to adjust to what we need to and give you the information that’s going to make you a better player.”

For Martinez, the phrase that resonated the most in a big-picture sense was simple: Pound the strike zone. For a pitcher who’s hardly a strikeout artist, that message was lost last season, when his ERA skyrocketed to 4.45 in Cincinnati.

“It starts with mentality,” he says, “to be aggressive and challenge guys early and often. And expanding when you have to, instead of being too tricky, too fine, and then fall behind 1-0, 2-0.

“I fell into that pattern last year and it snowballed on me. It felt like I was in survivor mode just trying to stay in the count all season.”

This time, he’s potentially on his way to his first All-Star Game.

Strike zone control

Martinez has bucked a significant trend in MLB this season: He has reduced his walk percentage, from 6.1% down to 5%, in a year teams are averaging 3.54 walks per game, highest in the majors since 2000.

And it seems like the Rays are winning both sides of the strike zone equation. Their 365 strikeouts by batters are by far the fewest in the majors. And their pitchers have issued 160 walks; only Seattle has given out fewer free passes in the AL.

The scary thing is it is all by design. Just ask Baltimore Orioles manager Craig Albernaz, a longtime coach in the Rays’ organization whose new club absorbed a sweep by Tampa Bay last week.

“It’s the same Rays that I know,” says Albernaz. “Their pitching is elite. Kyle Snyder does a great job with those guys. It seems like it doesn’t matter who they put in a Rays uniform on the mound. They’ll have some of the nastiest stuff you’ll see in the league.

“On the offensive side, Junior and Yandy and Aranda are forces in the box. The rest of the lineup are forces as well, but it looks different. It’s a grindy at-bat. They make you work. They fight off tough pitches. They lay off tough pitches. They have the ability to put the ball in play. They have a lot of speed over there, so it causes a little bit of chaos on the defensive side of the ball.

“It’s a very diverse team. It’s very intentional how they construct that team.”

The vibes are good

Simpson noted that he has been able to flourish because the Rays allow him to play to his strengths. And that’s been a hallmark of “Rays culture,” such as it is.

Palacios, now in his third season in Tampa Bay, has seen enough to believe it’s real.  

“They just want me to play the game I’ve always played,” says Palacios, who has a .359 OBP but just seven home runs in three seasons with Tampa Bay. “Not try to do anything out of the ordinary: Get on base, steal bases and play defense. That’s always been my game.

“It’s important that I’m able to just be myself within my game and bring the energy that I do. That’s when I play my best.”

As they say, if you feel good, you play good. And if you play good, well, that tends to make the vibes good.

“It’s not just the ability we have but the camaraderie we have,” says Palacios. “We push for each other. It’s a lot easier to make sacrifices for each other because we love each other.”

Can it last?

The Rays hit a wall last season once the weather turned hot in their temporary outdoor home in Tampa; now, Tropicana Field is repaired and the club will enjoy climate control all season.

The margin for error remains thin: The Yankees are lurking, having just added ace Gerrit Cole. The Blue Jays are not far off. The Orioles battled them for 13 innings and beat them Monday.

Yet what’s already in the bank – and what’s been built – feels pretty real.

“I think what we’re doing is pretty sustainable,” says Jax. “It’s six, seven weeks we’ve been doing it.”

And more than a few good reasons why they just might keep it going.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rays are American League's best team. 5 reasons they top AL East standings

Yankees news: Max Fried slowly progresses

BALTIMORE, MD - MAY 13: Max Fried #54 of the New York Yankees warms up in the bullpen before the game against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 13, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

New York Daily News | Gary Phillips ($): Ace southpaw Max Fried has taken a small step forward in his return from the elbow injury that felled him. Monday, Fried played catch for the first time since hitting the Injured List. Despite that, there are no plans for Fried to quickly ramp up for a return. Fried has previously called his timeline “ambiguous,” and he’s trying to manage expectations. Honestly, given the way the rest of the rotation is pitching, the Yankees are best served being careful with the star lefty. It’s not like he can hit and play third base or catcher, anyway.

MLB | Robert Falkoff: If it seems like it’s been a hot minute since the Yankees lost a baseball game to the Kansas City Royals, it’s because it has been. Monday marked the 12th consecutive Yanks’ victory over the Royals, including the postseason. Monday, Anthony Volpe was the unlikely hero. His two-run single off Royals closer Lucas Erceg in the ninth inning turned a one-out deficit into a one-run lead and set the stage for the comeback win. The Yanks’ dominance over KC is their longest such streak since they won a dozen in a row against Boston during the 2019 and 2020 seasons. With Cam Schlitter going Tuesday, they have a decent chance to get to a baker’s dozen.

TJ Stats | Thomas Nestico: Another Yankee prospect is making some noise in the early going. Jackson Lovich, a 6-foot-4 shortstop playing at Low-A, has been absolutely raking the past couple of weeks. The Yanks drafted him in the 16th round in 2025. FanGraphs noted prior to this season (leaving him off their Top 30 Yankees prospects list) that the question would be whether he could overcome a penchant for striking out and maximize his power. But over the past two weeks, he’s hit eight long balls while displaying elite exit velocities, and while he’s still striking out a lot, it’s less than before. If he keeps this up, he’ll likely get a chance to see if he can hit High-A pitching sooner rather than later.

Mariners win battle of piggyback starters against A’s, 9-2

SACRAMENTO, CA - MAY 25: Luis Castillo #58 of the Seattle Mariners reacts during the game between the Seattle Mariners and the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on Monday, May 25, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Don Collier/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The piggyback situation remains an uncomfortable – and I would argue, untenable – situation for Luis Castillo and Bryce Miller, but both of them pitched through that tonight and did their jobs, pitching all nine innings without touching the bullpen, giving up two runs (both Miller’s) with a combined 10 strikeouts to just two walks (both Castillo’s). Meanwhile, the offense jumped on A’s starter Aaron Civale, lighting him up for six runs in one inning alone en route to a 9-2 series-opening win.

The box score for today’s game says “Wind, 18 mph” and where it would normally say a direction instead just says “varies.” Seems rude to ask Luis Castillo to both step into a new role and be all four of the Anemoi, but this is just another thing The Rock must absorb with dignity and grace. The wind early in this game was enough to shake the center field camera significantly and provide a uniquely unpleasant viewing experience that had me reaching for Dramamine (or at least hum the Modest Mouse song). Initially it seemed like it might be affecting Castillo, who walked his leadoff hitter on some fairly significant misses, but was able to lock things down after that, as he did for the rest of his outing.

Meanwhile, the Mariners were able to finally stack up some runs using their (almost) fully-operational lefty lineup. Lefties are hitting almost .300 off Aaron Civale this year, and after getting some traffic on early, the Mariners were able to finally break through in the third during the lefty-heavy portion of their programming. Colt Emerson, continuing to show maturity at the plate, led off with a five-pitch walk and then moved to third on a Julio Rodríguez single. Civale leaned heavily on his cutter, as he did last year, but the Mariners hitters seemed ready for it – Civale had struck out Julio on the cutter in the first inning, and tried to go to it again on the single, but Julio was able to adjust. Josh Naylor knocked Emerson home on a would-be double play that was luckily mishandled by the A’s infield to give the Mariners their first run of the game, and Randy Arozarena pounced on a first-pitch curveball for a double – also mishandled by Carlos Cortes in the outfield, allowing Naylor to score. How fun when it’s not the Mariners making defensive miscues and instead punishing other teams for theirs.

Civale then tried to get a first-pitch cutter past Luke Raley, who intercepted the pitch at the bottom of the zone and squeaked it over the right field fence to double up the Mariners lead – “squeaking” not being a way we’re used to referring to Raley homers, but we’ll take it. Cole Young followed that up by doubling on a splitter, poking it down the right field line, and then Dom Canzone saw a first-pitch fastball to his liking for a decisive homer to right-center, opening up a 6-0 advantage.

It’s a good thing the Mariners built Castillo that cushion because the bottom of the third started with some patented Sutter Home Park Silliness as nine-hole hitter Darell Hernaiz got a leadoff “double” on a ball that first got grabbed by the wind and then bounced in the outfield like an eight year old at a trampoline park birthday party. Castillo, to his credit, cleaned things up and didn’t let that runner score. Carlos Cortes, who is Annoying, hit a ball hard but not home run distance, enough to move Hernaiz to third. Castillo then pitched carefully to Nick Kurtz, walking him, but was able to attack the other head of the monster in Shea Langeliers, getting him to expand off the plate for a swinging strike three on a fastball. He then got Brent Rooker on three pitches, none of which were on the plate, as Rooker continues on a rough start to the season.

In the fourth, J.P. Crawford accidentally made himself the story of the inning, hitting a solo shot to make it 7-0 but throwing the ball away on what should have been an easy groundout to open the bottom of the inning. Once again, Castillo was forced into cleanup duty, striking out rookie centerfielder Henry Bolte looking, getting my personal enemy Jeff McNeil to pop out, and then striking out Zack Gelof looking on a pitch that was probably outside a hair but since the A’s were already down to one challenge, went unchallenged.

The Mariners’ early onslaught of runs forced the A’s into their own piggyback situation, bringing out Jack Perkins as their own second starter, but the real storyline here wasn’t on the field but in the Mariners dugout, as Dan Wilson was seen deep in conversation with Luis Castillo, who looked visibly displeased to be told he would be departing the game in order for Bryce Miller to come in. Considering Luis defeated the A’s hitters, the haunted tuna can of Sutter Health Park, the wind, and his own infield defense, it seems only fair he’d be given a win for that outing. But with the lineup turning over, Wilson opted to go to Miller.

Miller, presenting a completely different set of looks to the A’s hitters, was able to work the back five of the game, allowing Dan Wilson to keep his bullpen in bubble wrap for another day. A brief moment here to also appreciate catcher Jhonny Pereda, who had to prepare for two different starters in this game with two vastly different arsenals.- during Miller’s first hitter Pereda had to burn a mound visit after Miller shook him three times in succession – but guided his two starters through the game. Miller came out throwing hard although slightly less hard than his last outing, touching 98.2 in his first inning of work before settling in at 96.5. The standout for Miller today was his splitter, which looked sharper than his last outing; three of his four strikeouts were on the pitch. Miller was also mostly successful throwing his slider, although he did hang one to Langeliers for a homer for the A’s first run of the day in the eighth.

But Randy Arozarena got that run back plus one, finally getting to Perkins in the ninth with two outs, scoring Naylor, on base with a Naylor Special (a base hit to left off a pitch up and away).

The A’s would claw one more back off Miller off a couple of objectively stupid hits as the A’s were in swing mode down big in the ninth. Tyler Soderstrom led off with a double on a curve that he didn’t hit so much as vaudeville hook into left, then advanced to third on an infield hit. A run did score when Jeff McNeil grounded into a double play – niftily handled by Naylor, who managed to both tag speedy rookie Henry Bolte and touch first before McNeil creaked his way down there, setting up a game-ending strikeout of Zach Gelof. Since Miller didn’t get the glamor of being the opener this time, we’ll give him the honor of closing out the recap – just don’t look too carefully at the win dance, which is a little messy; appropriate, given the situation.

MLB Injury Report: Dylan Cease sidelined with hamstring strain, Cole Ragans pauses his return after setback

In this week’s Injury Report, the Blue Jays lose Dylan Cease for at least the next two weeks with a hamstring strain. Cole Ragans will shut things down after suffering a setback in his last rehab outing. And Logan Webb appears on track to return by this weekend. All that and more as we look into all the latest relevant injury news around baseball.

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

Dylan Cease (hamstring)

Cease’s start against the Pirates was cut short on Sunday as he departed in the fifth inning with left hamstring discomfort. The team placed him on the 15-day injured list on Monday with a left hamstring strain, sidelining him for at least the next two weeks. There’s no clear timeline yet, but the hope is that Cease will be ready to return when first eligible in early June.

MLB: Detroit Tigers at New York Mets
Eric Samulski and James Schiano discuss their favorite fantasy baseball waiver wire adds for the weekend.

Cole Ragans (elbow)

Ragans made a rehab start with Triple-A Omaha on Saturday, giving up one run over 4 1/3 innings while reaching 68 pitches. While he pitched well, manager Matt Quatraro told reporters he “didn’t bounce back well” following the outing. Ragans is apparently feeling the same elbow discomfort that landed him on the injured list. He’ll be shut down from throwing for a few days before he’s reevaluated. It’s not the most promising development, but we hope to learn more about Ragans’ status by the end of the week.

Hunter Brown (shoulder)

We got more encouraging news regarding Brown, who responded well enough in his last batting practice session to begin a rehab assignment. He made a start with Double-A Corpus Cristi on Sunday, striking out five over two scoreless innings. Brown reached 35 pitches and reportedly hit 98 mph on the fastball. The 27-year-old right-hander needs a couple more rehab outings to build up his pitch count, the next of which will come with Triple-A Sugar Land. Barring any setbacks, he appears on track to return in early to mid June.

Lourdes Gurriel Jr. (hamstring)

Gurriel was removed from Friday’s game against the Rockies with left hamstring tightness and was initially considered day-to-day. The team opted to give him a full ten days to recover, putting him on the 10-day injured list. Manager Torey Lovullo stated the hope is to get him back after the minimum stay. The 32-year-old outfielder is slashing .228/.284/.304 with one homer, seven runs scored, 11 RBI, and one steal across 102 plate appearances. Tommy Troy was recalled to take his place on the roster. Troy is one of the team’s top prospects. He’ll have a week and a half to make an impression after posting an .846 OPS with three homers and six steals over 44 games at Triple-A Reno.

Max Muncy (wrist)

Muncy was removed from Friday’s game against the Brewers after he was hit by a pitch on the right wrist. X-rays came back negative for any fractures, but he’s sat out the three games since. The 35-year-old slugger avoided serious injury, but the team is giving him the extra time off as a precaution. Expect him back in the lineup by Wednesday’s game against the Rockies.

Wyatt Langford (forearm)

Langford was cleared to resume hitting on Monday and took batting practice before the team’s game against the Astros. The hope is that he’ll take live at-bats on Friday and begin a minor league rehab assignment over the weekend. Langford indicated on Monday that he is feeling better now than he did the last time he ramped up baseball activities. An optimistic timeline probably puts him back in the Rangers’ lineup at the start of June.

Spencer Schwellenbach (elbow)

Schwellenbach has finally been cleared to begin a throwing progression, starting with tossing from flat ground for a couple of weeks before moving on to bullpen sessions. It’s the early stages of the ramp-up process following surgery in mid-February to remove bone spurs from his pitching elbow. The 25-year-old right-hander is expected to be an option for the Braves’ rotation in the second half of the season.

Garrett Crochet (shoulder)

Crochet is scheduled to face hitters in a live batting practice session on Tuesday after checking out fine following a couple of bullpen sessions. As long as there aren’t any setbacks, the next step would likely be a minor league rehab start before rejoining the Red Sox rotation. Crochet has been out since April 29 with left shoulder inflammation.

Logan Webb (knee)

Webb, out since May 6 with right knee bursitis, made a rehab start with Triple-A Sacramento on Friday. He tossed 62 pitches over 3 1/3 scoreless innings. Manager Tony Vitello said the 29-year-old right-hander could return to the Giants’ rotation sometime this weekend against the Rockies in Colorado. His activation from the injured list likely boots Trevor McDonald from the rotation.

Shane Bieber (elbow)

Bieber has been sidelined all season with elbow inflammation that delayed his ramp up process in spring training. He’s been brought along slowly, finally making his first rehab start in the Rookie-level Florida Complex League on Monday. Bieber struck out three over two scoreless innings. The 30-year-old right-hander will need at least a few more weeks of rehab outings to build up before he’s ready to join the Blue Jays' rotation in the next month.

Francisco Alvarez (knee)

Alvarez underwent surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his right knee just two weeks ago, with a 6-8 week timeline to return. He’s apparently well ahead of schedule as manager Carlos Mendoza reported on Monday that the 24-year-old backstop has already resumed hitting. It seems there’s a chance Alvarez could at least meet the short end of his timeline and return before the end of June.

Francisco Lindor (calf)

The Alvarez update wasn’t the only good news for the Mets. Mendoza told reporters on Monday that Lindor has begun a running program and resumed baseball activities. He’s been sidelined for over a month with a left calf strain. While Monday’s update was the most positive news yet, he’ll likely also need a rehab assignment once he’s ready for game action after his lengthy absence.

Athletics Drop Series Opener to Mariners 9-2

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 25: Aaron Civale #45 of the Athletics pitches in the top of the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at Sutter Health Park on May 25, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The A’s had no answers for the Mariners tonight as the team came up helpless on their Holiday evening, dropping the first game of the series. Time to get back to winning.

More to come…

Max Fried is throwing again, but Yankees aren’t calling it progress

New York Yankees pitcher Max Fried reacts on the mound during the fifth inning.
Yankees pitcher Max Fried reacts on the mound during a May 3 start.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Max Fried was feeling good enough to start playing catch Monday, the first time he has done so since being shut down with a left elbow bone bruise 10 days ago.

But Aaron Boone pumped the brakes on it being anything more than that, as recent imaging of the left-hander’s elbow evidently did not show enough healing to allow him to begin building back up yet.

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“There’s nothing really that would say he can start the ramp-up process yet,” Boone said before the Yankees beat the Royals 4-3 in the series opener at Kauffman Stadium.

Essentially, Fried is able to keep his arm moving by playing some light catch but is not yet ready to throw with the kind of intensity that would test the injury he is dealing with.

“Don’t read too far into that,” Boone said. “He’s been doing plyos and stuff. He’s had a pretty good week overall as far as symptoms and feeling pretty good and responding to everything pretty well. But he’s not at a point to where we can start ramping him up yet.”

When Fried was originally diagnosed with the injury May 15, the Yankees said he would get more imaging “in a few weeks [or when asymptomatic] to further determine when Fried can resume throwing.”

Yankees pitcher Max Fried reacts on the mound during a May 3 start. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST

Carlos Rodón is expected to start Friday’s series opener against the Athletics after he was pushed back a few days — after Saturday’s rainout — to allow Gerrit Cole to start on his regular fifth day Wednesday. The Yankees have an off-day Thursday and another Monday, so they wanted Cole to pitch on his fifth day this turn before going on his seventh the next time through. Rodón, who threw a bullpen session Monday, will be starting on his eighth day Friday before going on his sixth day the next time.


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Giancarlo Stanton is set to undergo another round of imaging on his right calf Tuesday to determine whether his strain has healed enough to start a running progression.

“I think he was actually going outside to do some of his agility stuff today,” Boone said. “Hopefully, with the next round of imaging, we’re in a position to start ramping up the running.”


Clarke Schmidt will move his rehab from Tommy John surgery up to New York next week after spending the first two months of the season doing so in Tampa. The right-hander, who could become a factor in the second half, has been throwing bullpen sessions but has not yet faced hitters.

Dodgers 5, Rockies 3: Another late lead bites the dust

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 25: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts after a double during the first inning against the Colorado Rockies at Dodger Stadium on May 25, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Katelyn Mulcahy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Colorado Rockies had a 3-1 when the fans at Dodger Stadium sang “Take Me Out to the Ballgame,” but the two-run cushion didn’t turn out to be enough on Monday night.

The bullpen surrendered four runs in the bottom of the seventh, erasing a solid start from Tanner Gordon, who reduced his ERA to 5.85 after only giving up one run in five innings of work.

While Ezequiel Tovar hit his second homer of the season, the Rockies biggest offensive stat was their 12 strikeouts. Colorado dropped its third straight to fall to 20-35, while the NL West-best Los Angeles Dodgers improved to 34-20.

Gordon gets back on track

Even though the Dodgers had a lot of traffic against Gordon, the 28-year-old found ways out of jams with routine flyballs and other easy outs. Los Angeles saw the leadoff hitter reach base in four of five innings — and two of those were doubles — but Gordon held the Dodgers to a 1-for-9 RISP and stranded five runners.

Despite giving up a double to Shohei Ohtani in his first at-bat, Gordon settled in, striking out three in the first two innings. The Dodgers then struck first in the third when Hyeseong Kim led off with a single and scored when Kiké Hernández doubled in his first at-bat of 2026 after returning from elbow surgery. It looked like it might be a long inning when Gordon walked Ohtani, but Gordon prevented the worst. He got Mookie Betts to fly out, and then Freddie Freeman hit into a double play to keep it at 1-0 L.A.

That was all the Dodgers could get out of Gordon. After five innings, he kept L.A. to one run on six hits with three strikeouts and no walks to give the Rockies a chance. His strikeouts came against Kyle Tucker, Teoscar Hernandez and Freeman.

“I thought TG was fantastic tonight — just attacking the strike zone, getting out of jams a couple times, he didn’t waiver,” Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer said after the game. “He was fantastic in his start tonight.”

Bullpen falters with debut exception

Juan Mejia entered the game in relief for the Rockies in the sixth inning and sent the Dodgers down in order.

But it all fell apart in the seventh. Mejia walked the first two batters to get the hook from Schaeffer.

Brennan Bernardino then came in and — immediately — it got worse when he hit Miguel Rojas to load the bases. It seemed like the Rockies might avoid a big inning when Ohtani grounded into a fielder’s choice and Betts added a sac fly to tie the game. But then Freeman hit a double to score Ohtani and put the Dodgers up 4-3.

“Just a couple of hiccups in the bullpen tonight,” Schaeffer said. “Juan was really good in the sixth. Then the walk-walk to lead off the inning is just — late in the game against a good team in their yard, that’s just not going to work.”

Jaden Hill then entered the game and didn’t fare much better. He surrendered a single to Andy Pages, and L.A. increased its lead to 5-3. The inning finally ended when Hill got Kyle Tucker to line out to Johnston in left field.

Schaeffer said the best way to respond is to just send Hill and Bernardino back out again because that’s how baseball goes.

“Sometimes that happens. We are learning not to do that and turn those 1-to-2-run games into victories,” Schaeffer said. “We know what it takes, and it’s just a matter of time. Tomorrow, we look to flip the script on them.”

In the eighth, Welinton Herrera made a perfect MLB debut. Called up just earlier in the day, the 22-year-old from the Dominican Republic got Teoscar Hernandez to ground out on his first MLB pitch. He then retired Will Smith on a fly ball and Kim on a ground out.

“That’s pretty much the biggest stage you can make your debut on, Dodger Stadium,” Schaeffer said. “I am extremely happy for him that he got in there and got the first one out of the way. He attacked the strike zone and didn’t look nervous a bit. I am sure he was, but he didn’t look it.”

Rockies strike in 4th, Tovar breaks HR drought

The Rockies responded to a 1-0 deficit in the third by taking the lead in the fourth. Tyler Freeman started off the inning with a double and moved to third when Troy Johnston hit a comebacker off Emmet Sheehan’s arm that bounced into foul territory over the first baseline.

Willi Castro capitalized with a single to tie the game.

Ezequiel Tovar followed with a sac fly to give Colorado a 2-1 lead.

Tovar struck again in the seventh with his second homer of the year. The 431-foot shot to left-center field was more than just an insurance run. It helped Tovar snap a streak of 187 plate appearances without a homer, the longest slump of his career.

“Tovi was good. He keeps progressing,” Schaeffer said. “People who watch every day, I hope they see how hard he is trying to make adjustments, and it’s paying off.”

The dinger off Kyle Hurt was also the first run given up by the Dodgers bullpen in 11 games (37 innings), which was the Dodgers longest streak in franchise history.

Outside of the fourth and the seventh, the Rockies offense couldn’t do much against L.A. They were held to seven hits. Hunter Goodman struck out three times and was part of the Rockies No. 1, 2 and 3 hitters who went 0-for-10 in the game. Castro and Tovar each recorded two hits.

In more bad news on the injury front, TJ Rumfield was hit by a pitch in the right hand in the first inning. He was forced to leave the game and was replaced by Edouard Julien, who went 0-for-2 with a strikeout and walk. After the game, Schaeffer delivered good news that the X-rays came back negative.

Up Next

The Rockies and Dodgers will face off again on Tuesday at 8:10 p.m. MDT. Colorado’s Kyle Freeland (1-5, 7.04 ERA) will match up against Eric Lauer (1-5, 6.69 ERA).


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Dodgers ride Kiké Hernández's emotional comeback and seventh-inning surge to beat Rockies

Dodgers third baseman Kiké Hernández rounds the bases during the fifth inning of Monday's game against the Colorado Rockies.
Dodgers third baseman Kiké Hernández rounds the bases during the fifth inning of Monday's game against the Colorado Rockies. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

In his first big-league game back since Game 7 of the World Series, Kiké Hernández received playoff-level cheers at Dodger Stadium on Monday night, nearly drowning out his walk-up song as he stepped into the batter’s box against the Rockies in the bottom of the third inning. Some fans tipped their hats. Others joined the rising “Kiké!” chants.

After taking a ball, Hernández sent a four-seam fastball hopping down the left-field line for an RBI double that scored Hyeseong Kim. The crowd of 48,778 exploded.

It was shaping up to be a happy return, but it wasn’t until the seventh inning that the rest of the Dodgers lineup found its footing, taking advantage of some shaky relief pitching to rally for a 5-3 victory over the Colorado Rockies.

Hernández reached on an infield single in his second at-bat before being lifted for a pinch-hitter as the Dodgers began to rally in the seventh.

Read more:Dodgers bullpen extends scoreless streak as they beat Brewers behind Yoshinobu Yamamoto

Hernández’s journey back to the big leagues has been an arduous one. Throughout his two-month stint last year on the injured list, he received seven injections in his left elbow. None worked.

A procedure by Dr. Neal ElAttrache helped numb the pain, but it came roaring back when the 34-year-old dove for a ball in Game 3 of the National League Championship Series against the Brewers.

“Every time I would get in my batting stance, I would feel like I had a blowtorch on, and it was kind of frustrating because there was not much we could do for it,” Hernández said before the game.

Hernández had made peace with his injury, given he was able to push through to a World Series win with little time to heal. After the season, Hernández had surgery on the elbow, not knowing the damage or the timeline for return.

When he woke, still a little delirious, ElAttrache told him the news: “This was the worst injury I’ve ever seen of this kind, and I don’t know how you played,” Hernández recalled him saying.

Hernández then FaceTimed Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman.

“I told him, ‘ElAttrache, tell him what you just said,’” Hernández said, “I was like, ‘I did this for you, so you better bring me back.’”

Hernández signed a one-year, $4.5-million deal with the Dodgers in February, and began the process of starting over, relearning how to play baseball with a newly reattached left elbow.

Read more:Teoscar Hernández drives in six runs, helps Dodgers rout Brewers

In the process, he missed playing for Team Puerto Rico in the island territory where the team had been located in the group stages of the World Baseball Classic, what he called a “childhood dream.” He also missed spring training and opening day for the first time in his career. Still, he wouldn’t change a thing if given the opportunity.

“In a weird way, I would’ve rather missed the WBC and win a World Series than getting to fulfill a life dream of playing in Puerto Rico after losing a World Series,” Hernández said. “It was a fair trade.”

Hernández will play a mix of infield and a little bit of outfield, giving his teammates a chance to rest. Utility man Santiago Espinal, whom the Dodgers claimed on waivers and broke out in spring training, was designated for assignment to make room on the roster.

“Santiago was great for me, great for the team, and I think we were very forthright, up front, about the expectation, so I think he respected that,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said.

While Hernández found contact on each of his at-bats, the rest of the team sputtered through six innings. Rockies starter Tanner Gordon commanded his slider, throwing the pitch for strikes 74% of the time.

Trailing 3-1, the Dodgers (34-20) found their momentum in the seventh after Rockies reliever Juan Mejia walked two, and Brennan Bernardino, who replaced Mejia, hit pinch-hitter Miguel Rojas with a pitch.

Shohei Ohtani plated a run on a forceout, Mookie Betts drove in Kim on a sacrifice fly to tie the score and Freddie Freeman bounced a double off the right-field wall to drive in Ohtani. Andy Pages hit a looping ball to right-center off Jaden Hill, the third Rockies pitcher of the inning, to score Freeman and complete the Dodgers’ scoring.

“Fortunately we were victims of good fortune,” Roberts said. “ I think that allowing ourselves to build off that inning, and then we started getting some hits, which was great. It was good to see us show some life tonight.”

Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman rounds third base on his way home during the seventh inning of Monday's game.
Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman rounds third base on his way home during the seventh inning of Monday's game. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

Starter Emmet Sheehan ran into trouble when he gave up a ground-rule double to Tyler Freeman to lead off the fourth inning. Troy Johnston smacked a line drive on the next pitch that glanced off Sheehan’s right arm for an infield single. After Roberts and head athletic trainer Thomas Albert checked on Sheehan, the right-hander stayed in and gave up a run on a single to right field by Willi Castro to tie the score. Ezequiel Tovar put the Rockies ahead with a sacrifice fly to left field.

“I felt fine,” Sheehan said. “I knew it just caught muscle so stung in the moment, but it wasn’t anything to be worried about.”

Sheehan completed six innings, striking out eight and walking one.

“I gave him every opportunity,” Roberts said. “Thomas gave him every opportunity, but he wanted to stay in, and we took him at his word.”

Kyle Hurt, who eventually picked up the win, replaced him in the seventh and immediately surrendered a home run to Tovar on the second pitch of the at-bat to pad Colorado’s lead. The homer ended the bullpen’s franchise record of 38 consecutive scoreless innings set Sunday.

Will Klein pitched a scoreless eighth before Alex Vesia and Blake Treinen pitched the ninth, with Treinen picking up the save on a strikeout of Braxton Fulford.

“Kyle’s been great for us, and Tovar hit a changeup,” Roberts said. “ It was good to see Kyle come back and get that next hitter.”

Max Muncy Update

The Dodgers are hopeful for a Max Muncy return Wednesday after the swelling in his right wrist decreased. The 35-year-old was struck by a 95.5-mph slider on Friday. Initial X-rays were negative, and he hasn’t undergone more testing for the injury since. Roberts didn’t rule out a retroactive move to the injury list, though the team feels good about him avoiding it.

“He’s done better,” Roberts said before the game. “He’s a little less sore today. The swelling has dissipated.”

Roberts said after the game that Muncy was available if Rojas hadn’t been able to continue on after getting hit.

“I didn’t know how bad Miggy was, so I wanted to check in on Max to see if he could potentially go up and stand at third base,” Roberts said. “He was up for it, but fortunately we didn’t have to use that.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Kiké Hernández’s season debut was worth the wait for Dodgers

Los Angeles Dodgers' Enrique Hernández drops his bat after hitting an RBI double during the third inning of a baseball game against the Colorado Rockies, Monday, May 25, 2026, in Los Angeles.
Kike Hernandez had an RBI double in his Dodgers return.

First came the return. Then, a long-awaited rally.

On a night Kiké Hernández impressed in his season debut, the Dodgers did the same in just the nick of time.

Down two runs in the seventh inning on Monday, the team needed just two hits to surge to a 5-3 win over the Colorado Rockies, negating what had been a frustrating offensive performance with a four-run outburst.

The inning began with back-to-back walks from Rockies right-hander Juan Mejia. Lefty Brennan Bernardino then came in and plunked pinch-hitter Miguel Rojas with an 0-2 curveball.

Just like that, the Dodgers had the bases loaded with no outs. The top of their order was due up. And though they had gone 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position to that point of the contest, they finally found a way to push some runs across the plate.

Shohei Ohtani #17 and Andy Pages #44 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrate a run scored in to take the lead 4-3 after a double hit by teammate Freddie Freeman #5 during the seventh inning against the Colorado Rockies at Dodger Stadium on May 25, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images

Shohei Ohtani trimmed a 3-1 deficit in half by beating out a potential double-play grounder at first. Mookie Betts then tied the score with a sacrifice fly to left field, hit just deep enough for speedy Hyeseong Kim to race home with a slide. 

After that, the club at long last got some big hits to drop in. Freddie Freeman roped a double off the wall in right to push the Dodgers in front. Andy Pages collected his MLB-leading 46th RBI with an insurance-adding single in the next at-bat.

“I just don’t think our focus was where it needed to be early,” manager Dave Roberts said. “But what we’ve done all year is, seventh, eighth and ninth innings, we start kind of bearing down a little bit more.”

Indeed, the Dodgers had been desperate for such an inning.

Without it, contributions from two of the night’s other stars would have gone to waste.

Hernández went 2-for-2 in his first game back from offseason elbow surgery, getting a loud ovation before his first at-bat –– then an even louder one when he lined an RBI double down the third-base line to open the scoring in the bottom of the third.

“I felt tonight was good to have him in the game, get him a start,” Roberts said. “I thought he was going to bring some energy, just obviously having (not) played for a while. And did bring that, got a big hit for us.” 

Starting pitcher Emmet Sheehan also gutted through a six-inning, two-run, eight-strikeout start. Both runs came in the fourth inning, after Sheehan was drilled in his upper right arm by a 103.8 mph comebacker. But he went on to retire eight of his final nine, after twice convincing Roberts and head athletic trainer Thomas Albert he was OK to stay in during visits to the mound.

“He’s just a good competitor,” Roberts said. “This was his day and he wasn’t about to come out of that game.”

That all kept the Dodgers in striking distance just long enough, allowing their offense to finally capitalize on a golden opportunity late.

“Fortunately, we were kind of [the beneficiaries] of good fortune, allowing ourselves to build that inning,” Roberts said. “We started getting some hits, which was great. It was good to see us show some life tonight.” 

What it means

The Dodgers (34-20) are still hot.

Fresh off an impressive 7-2 road trip, and having won nine of their previous 11 games overall, the club stayed in the win column Monday by picking up their 18th come-from-behind victory already this season. In the seventh inning or later, they led MLB in OPS and rank third in batting average.

It also helped continue a recent stretch in which the Dodgers have produced more consistently. Monday was their eighth time in the last 12 games scoring at least five. On the year, they are back up to third in the majors in scoring.

Who’s hot

Hernández had waited two long months to reach Monday night, after opening the season on the 60-day injured list while recovering from his offseason surgery.

So in his first at-bat, he didn’t hesitate to be aggressive, jumping on the second pitch he saw from Rockies’ right-hander Tanner Gordon for his RBI double on a 100.6 mph grounder.

Kike Hernandez had an RBI double in his Dodgers return. AP Photo/Jessie Alcheh

Hernández would get another hit in his next trip to the plate, chopping an infield single in the fifth that was misplayed by Rockies third baseman Kyle Karros. 

He was only removed when the Dodgers did some strategic pinch-hitting in his spot in the seventh –– initially calling upon Dalton Rushing to get the left-handed Bernardino in the game, before pivoting to Rojas in the at-bat that loaded the bases.

“You’re so excited to get back, [a lot of guys in that situation are] trying to do too much,” Roberts said. “There’s a lot of emotion, adrenaline, anticipation. That’s probably the thing you got to guard against. But he did a good job of managing those emotions.”

Who’s not

The Dodgers’ bullpen, but only barely.

After setting a franchise record by combining for 38 consecutive scoreless innings dating back to May 12, the team’s relief corps finally faltered for the first time in almost two full weeks Monday.

In the top of the seventh, the first man out of the bullpen, right-hander Kyle Hurt, gave up a home run to the first batter he faced, Rockies shortstop Ezequiel Tovar.

With that, the Dodgers’ bullpen streak ended 7 ⅔ innings shy of the all-time MLB record. It went down as the longest such run by any team since Cleveland in 2017.

“All good things are meant to come to an end,” Roberts joked. “and “We’ll start another one.”

Indeed, the unit bounced back once the Dodgers went in front. Will Klein retired the side in order in the eighth, which was puncuated by a 100.5 mph fastball. Alex Vesia and Blake Treinen combined for three outs in the ninth, with Treinen collecting his first save this year.

Up next

The series continues on Tuesday, when Eric Lauer will make his Dodgers debut after being acquired in a trade with the Toronto Blue Jays last week. He’ll face off against fellow left-hander Kyle Freeland (1-5, 7.04 ERA).

26-29: Chart

SACRAMENTO, CA - MAY 25: Randy Arozarena #56 high-fives Luke Raley #20 of the Seattle Mariners during the game between the Seattle Mariners and the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on Monday, May 25, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Don Collier/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Mariners 9, Athletics 2

Trampoline Parks: Luis Castillo, .14 WPA; Randy Arozarena, .13 WPA

Trampoline Parks Masquerading As Baseball Fields: J.P. Crawford, -.04 WPA

Game Thread Comment of the Day:

Iowa Cubs Wrap: I-Cubs outslug Indianapolis, 9-7

Mar 13, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Chicago Cubs second baseman Owen Miller against the Chicago White Sox during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Normally there is no Minor League Wrap on Monday, but Indianapolis wanted to play a game on Memorial Day. So here we are. Everyone else, including Mesa, is off.

Iowa Cubs

The Iowa Cubs raced past Indianapolis (Pirates), 9-7.

It wasn’t a great start for Doug Nikhazy, who gave up one run in the first inning and five more in the second. His final line was six runs on five hits over two innings. Nikhazy walked three, hit one and struck out three.

Tyler Beede pitched the next three innings, gave up just one run on two hits, and got the win. Beede walked one and struck out two.

Yacksel Ríos pitched the next two innings and allowed no runs on one hit. Ríos walked one and struck out two.

Luke Little pitched the eighth and ninth innings, retired all six batters he faced and got the save. Little struck out two.

Left fielder Owen Miller had a huge game, coming just a triple shy of the cycle. Miller was 4 for 5 with a double and a solo home run in the eighth inning. It was his third on the year. Miller had two total runs batted in.

Third baseman James Triantos was 3 for 5 with a double, a walk and a stolen base. He scored twice.

DH BJ Murray went 3 for 5 and scored once.

Center fielder Brett Bateman was 3 for 5 with a steal. Bateman scored twice and drve in two.

Miller’s homer.