What former Royals player would fit perfectly on this roster?

ANAHEIM, CA - APRIL 26: Mike Moustakas #8 of the Kansas City Royals is congratulated by teammates Eric Hosmer #35 and Lorenzo Cain #6 of the Kansas City Royals after hitting a solo home run during the first inning of a baseball game between the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and the Kansas City Royals at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on April 26, 2016 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Royals made some improvements to the roster in the offseason, but did not make the big move that fans may have wanted. Maybe that one big player wasn’t really available. But let’s imagine we aren’t just limited to players in the game right now. What if we could add a player to the roster from Royals history?

If you could pluck one former Royal at the height of his powers and drop him onto this team, who fits like the final puzzle piece? I’m not necessarily talking about the biggest star, although George Brett could certainly fit on any roster. I’m talking about a player who would be the perfect fit for right now for this roster.

Here’s your time machine – who are you bringing to 2026?

Jurickson Profar reportedly set to receive 162-game suspension for PED usage

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - SEPTEMBER 26: Jurickson Profar #7 of the Atlanta Braves during batting practice before a game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Truist Park on September 26, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Brett Davis/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jurickson Profar missed essentially the entire first half of the 2025 season after he tested positive for using performance-enhancing drugs. Unfortunately for him and the Braves, it’s déjà vu all over again in the worst possible way.

Jeff Passan of ESPN is reporting that Profar has once again tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug and is now facing a 162-game suspension. For those of you kids keeping track at home, that’s the full season.

To keep it real with y’all, this is a hot mess. It’s one thing to get caught one time. In that case, you have the benefit of the doubt where it could’ve been a mistake or a brief lapse in judgment that led to a bad decision being made. A second time is absolutely inexcusable and there’s no way to wave this away. The Braves not having Jurickson Profar for the entire 2026 season is a pretty major blow to their current plans for their lineup and it’s absolutely dreadful that this is how they’ve lost him for another extended period of time.

The only silver lining is that this now means that Mike Yastrzemski is now an everyday player for this team but just like the Ha-Seong Kim injury forced Mauricio Dubón into everyday player status, it’s a silver lining but it’s certainly not ideal. The best way forward for this squad was to have Profar serve as a DH while Yaz started against right-handed since Yaz over the course of his career is a much better hitter against righties than lefties. Losing Profar for the entire season hurts their plans for DH and the outfield as well, so this just stinks all around.

The only other positive that comes out of this is that PED suspensions are unpaid suspensions as well, which means that that’s now $15 million that the Braves have freed up to use because Profar decided to be a big dummy and use PEDs again. It’s safe to assume that the Braves are going to dip their toes back into the outfielder/DH market but as you can imagine at this point in the baseball calendar, there’s not a lot of quality out there that could come close to replacing the level of production that Profar could’ve provided.

So once again, this is a hot mess. The Braves have now lost their starting shortstop until (hopefully) May, one of their primary catchers until (hopefully) May, one of their starting pitchers for who knows how long, one of the prime candidates for the fifth starting position for who knows how long and one of the key players in their lineup for the entire season. Opening Day isn’t until March 27 so let’s hope nothing else completely absurd happens between now and then! Good grief!

UPDATE [2:00 p.m. ET]: Ken Rosenthal from The Athletic is reporting that the MLBPA is planning to challenge Profar’s suspension and file a grievance on his behalf. I’d imagine that this is strictly procedural on the union’s part but there’s that.

Is It Time Astros Pivot from Trading Paredes to Trading Walker?

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MAY 09: Isaac Paredes #15 of the Houston Astros celebrates with Christian Walker #8 after the game against the Cincinnati Reds at Daikin Park on May 09, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic calls the current situation untenable.

MLB Insider Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic believes the Astros must trade 3B Isaac Paredes and get a lefthanded hitting outfielder.

It’s a great idea in theory, one Astros GM Dana Brown has been trying to execute for several months. There’s just one slight problem with the plan: another team has to have a player you want and they have to be willing to trade them to you for Paredes.

Who knew such a small problem would be such a thorn in the Astros’ side in trying to make a deal?

Entering the offseason, there seemed to be two deals that made a ton of sense for the Astros to make:

  • trade Christian Walker to the Mets for SP Kodai Senga.
  • trade Isaac Paredes to the Red Sox for Jarren Duran.

They did neither.

Instead Senga is buried as the Mets’ 5th/6th starter and talks between the Red Sox and Astros are dead (at least for now) as Rosenthal said the two clubs haven’t been in recent contact.

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7081393/2026/03/03/houston-astros-dana-brown-isaac-paredes-trade/

Key snippets from Rosenthal’s article:

The necessary move is to trade third baseman Isaac Paredes for a left-handed-hitting outfielder, an idea the Astros have discussed most thoroughly with the Boston Red Sox, according to people briefed on the discussions. Talks stalled, however, and the clubs have not been in recent contact.

The Red Sox, even after acquiring Caleb Durbin from Milwaukee, still look like the best fit for Paredes — they could play him at third and Durbin at second without needing to rely on Marcelo Mayer. The Astros are not getting back Wilyer Abreu, whom they traded in 2022 for catcher Christian Vázquez. A deal constructed around Jarren Duran should remain within reach. By moving Duran, the Red Sox would create DH at-bats for Masataka Yoshida and eventually Triston Casas, who could return in May from a ruptured patellar tendon in his left knee.

The problem is that the Red Sox’s trade for Durbin improved their negotiating position while weakening the Astros’. Brown, then, might need to get creative, possibly involving a third team, possibly pivoting from the Red Sox entirely.

Now, I don’t fully understand why the Astros are allegedly so averse to a player like Duran in LF, who has led the AL in triples back to back years (27 total) hit over 40 doubles back to back years, hit 37 HRs in that span as well as stolen 58 bases. He seems like a pretty good offensive player. He also graded out with 11 defensive runs saved last season in LF per baseball reference, although statcast graded him at -5 outs above average.

Duran also makes $7.7M this season (so less than Paredes) and has 2 years of team control. Duran is also the OF the Red Sox were looking to move. The Astros were set on their former prospect Wilyer Abreu, whom the Red Sox have no interest in parting with.

As you look around the league, there aren’t a lot of quality lefthanded hitting OFs that are either available or on teams that would be willing to make a deal for a player like Isaac Paredes, who is a win now type of offensive impact player making $9.35M this season.

So if the Astros can’t find the deal they feel gives the equivalent value for Paredes, is it time to pivot to trading Walker?

Now, there has been little interest in Walker this offseason, partly because he’s coming off a down season (although a solid 2nd half) and partly because of the remaining 2 years and $40M on his contract.

I don’t know how much the Astros would be willing to eat on his deal, but the longer they wait to pull a deal to clear the logjam in the infield, the less leverage they are going to have unless they decide to wait out injury – a risky proposition because there is no guarantee a team that suffers an injury will still make a trade.

If the Astros value Paredes as much as they claim to, and they can’t get what they think is the right value, then they should pivot to dealing Walker, and be flexible on the money they have to eat. Maybe it’s half. Maybe its 75%.

The Padres don’t have a real 1B, they currently have a left fielder listed at 1B on their depth chart. They looked into acquiring Nolan Arenado and playing him at 1B. Clearly, Walker would be a better option than Arenado. Just at what price point for the Astros (salary pay down) and the Padres (return).

About a month ago, David Schoenfield of ESPN had posited a trade idea of Walker to San Diego in exchange for RP Bradgely Rodriguez.

From Schoenfield’s article: This would be an alternate trade option to Paredes for Houston, with him then playing first base. Walker didn’t have a good first season in Houston, his OPS+ slipping from 120 to 97, although he hit 27 home runs and Statcast still viewed him as a plus defender at first base. (Other metrics weren’t as generous, but Walker won three straight Gold Gloves from 2022 to 2024, so I would be more inclined to go with the Statcast evaluation.)

After finishing 28th in home runs in 2025, the Padres need more power, and with Walker at first, they can slide Jake Cronenworth on a full-time basis over to second base. The current alignment doesn’t project well, with the Padres ranking 28th in FanGraphs’ projected WAR at first base (a mix of Gavin Sheets and Cronenworth) and 20th at second base (a combo of Cronenworth and Sung-Mun Song). Rodriguez is a big-league ready reliever who can help a Houston bullpen that is a little thin from the right side beyond Bryan Abreu, and while the Astros would have to pay down some of the $40 million owed to Walker the next two seasons, trading him would still clear some payroll to make another move.

Rodriguez isn’t currently listed on the ESPN Depth Chart for the Padres, but he finished 2025 as the Padres #6 prospect. He throws a high 90s fastball that can touch 101, and a devastating change in the mid-to-high 80s. If Josh Hader were to be out for an extended time, Rodriguez has the kind of stuff to be the bridge to Abreu, and he’s only 22 (and CHEAP!).

The Astros may not want to pay down however much of Walker’s contract to get a deal done, but in a case like this, they should be open to paying down as much as $14M per year. A fireballing young RHP in the pen is exactly one of the deficiencies in their roster.

Now maybe that deal isn’t available – but it’s the kind of deal they should be looking for when moving Walker.

While it doesn’t address the lefthanded OF situation, it does address another need on the roster, it gets Paredes in the lineup every day, and I think giving Zach Cole an opportunity is something the team should be heavily considering.

If Joey Loperfido has truly made adjustments in his swing that have garnered improved results as Dana Brown said when they re-acquired him in trade, I have no issue in giving him a chance either.

If Cam Smith shows he isn’t ready, then give him the season in Triple-A he should have gotten last year. That would give the Astros two lefthanded bats in the corners who are both plus defenders with big arms., it keeps Yordan primarily at DH, and gives the Astros one of the best defensive outfields in the game. It’s a lot easier to survive with guys like Shay Whitcomb or Zach Dezenzo as 4th/5th OF guys (who can also play some IF for you as well) who play the short side of a platoon. It’s not hard to get a righthanded hitting platoon OF either, they are cheap and readily available.

As the spring goes on and the Astros leverage in dealing Paredes wanes, the more I would be inclined to eat the money and move Walker.

A lesser return for Walker means paying less down, but the right return for Walker, I think Houston should consider paying as much as 70% of Walker’s deal.

They’ve backed themselves into this corner. I’d rather buy my way out than surrender one of my better hitters on a discount.

Would you rather the Astros move Walker at this point? Let us know in the comments below.

2025 Season in Review: Nathan Eovaldi

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - AUGUST 27: Nathan Eovaldi #17 of the Texas Rangers looks on from his dugout during the fourth inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Globe Life Field on August 27, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With the 2025 Texas Rangers season having come to an end, we shall be, over the course of the offseason, taking a look at every player who appeared in a major league game for the Texas Rangers in 2025.

Today we are looking at starting pitcher Nathan Eovaldi.

Nathan Eovaldi makes me happy.

I bet you feel the same way.

Just look at the photo that goes with this post.

(Yes, I know, there’s a video playing at the top of the post, but you know what I mean. Go back to the main page if you need to remind yourself of the photo that goes with this post.)

He is a good pitcher. He is, by all accounts, a great person and a great teammate, someone who makes a point of connecting with the other pitchers on the staff, mentoring and supporting and generally being a great hang.

He throws strikes, he doesn’t walk guys, he keeps runs off the board.

Nathan Eovaldi had arguably his best season in 2025, at the ripe young age of 35.

I kind of want to take “arguably” out of that sentence. Not kind of, in fact. I do want to take it out.

But while he’s never had a bWAR better than the 4.3 he put up in 2025, he did match that number in 2021. And his 2021 fWAR of 5.7 is much better than his 3.7 fWAR in 2025, the second-highest mark of his career.

So I’m resisting. I’m resisting the urge. As much as my right hand wants to move away from the keyboard and take the mouse and move up three paragraphs and do a big ol’ DELETE, I’m not going to do it.

Bad hand.

Nathan Eovaldi put up a 1.73 ERA in 2025. It looked like he was going to be vying for the ERA title until a rotator cuff strain in late August ended his season.

It was going to be a close call anyway as to whether he’d get to the 162 innings necessary to qualify, since he missed a month earlier in the season, but it seemed likely he’d have cracked that threshold if he had stayed healthy the rest of the season. Instead, he ended the year with 130 innings over 22 starts.

And, look, we know this about Nathan Eovaldi. He has always struggled to stay on the mound. He made his major league debut all the way back in 2011 — with the Los Angeles Dodgers! — and has qualified for the ERA title just three times. We know Eovaldi is going to have injury issues, is going to have an i.l. stint or two in any given season, and we accept that.

But when Eovaldi took the mound, you could count on him. Only three times did he not go at least five innings. Once was in late May, when he left after two innings and ended up on the injured list. Once was in late June, his first game back from the injured list, when he was on a pitch count. And once was his second start of the year, when he was pulled with two outs in the fifth. He went at least 6 innings in 14 of his 22 starts.

Eovaldi allowed more than three runs in a game just once in 2025, that one being an August start against Arizona where he gave up five runs on three homers. He allowed two earned runs or fewer in 19 of his 22 outings. He walked more than two hitters in a game just twice. He issued zero or one unintentional walks in 18 starts.

He was even the rare 2025 Ranger pitcher who was better on the road than at home in 2025, with a 1.39 ERA away from The Shed and a 2.15 ERA at home.

He has a fun mix of pitches, throwing his splitter, fastball, cutter and curve all at least 20% of the time, and all of them are pitches that he gets good results with. His occasional sinker is a good pitch. The slider he throws very rarely isn’t all that, but that’s okay, because he hardly ever throws it.

I was unenthused about the Rangers signing Eovaldi in the 2022-23 offseason. I now want him to retire a Texas Ranger.

Previously:

Gerson Garabito

Tyler Mahle

Kyle Higashioka

Adolis Garcia

Luis Curvelo

Alejandro Osuna

Blaine Crim

Jake Burger

Jacob Webb

Nick Ahmed

Jon Gray

Carl Edwards Jr.

Josh Jung

Leody Taveras

Dustin Harris

Marc Church

Luke Jackson

Danny Coulombe

Wyatt Langford

Dylan Moore

Michael Helman

Evan Carter

Cole Winn

Rowdy Tellez

Dane Dunning

Marcus Semien

Billy McKinney

Jose Corniell

Jonah Heim

Cody Freeman

Sam Haggerty

Jacob deGrom

Merrill Kelly

Caleb Boushley

Justin Foscue

Dodgers Post podcast: Is it time to worry about pitching injuries?

On this episode of The Dodgers Post, Jack Harris and Dylan Hernández get you caught up on the latest from Dodgers camp.

They start by evaluating the Dodgers’ pitching injuries this spring –– including to Gavin Stone and Blake Snell –– and debate how much of a concern it should be.

They break down what they’ve seen from Roki Sasaki so far, and why improving his fastball command remains his biggest priority.

Dylan discusses his visit to Team USA camp ahead of the World Baseball Classic, and why Clayton Kershaw seems perfectly content with his life post-retirement.

And, they talk about Mookie Betts’ new mindset, and whether they are buying into his hope of having a bounce-back season.

A Red Sox love story turned tragedy, featuring Triston Casas

Fort Myers, FL - February 18: Boston Red Sox first baseman Triston Casas runs. The Red Sox held Day 9 of Spring Training at JetBlue Park on February 18, 2026. (Photo by Barry Chin/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

When you think about the Red Sox as a team, as a collection players, as a drama, you have to think about Triston Casas. In the story of Tristan and Iseult, the knight, Tristan, is on a quest to bring the princess, Iseult, from Ireland to England to marry the king of Cornwall, his uncle. The tale, dating back centuries, is set even further in the past: Arthurian times. They eventually fall in love but, crucially, never marry and the two die apart. So too, in a way, have Triston Casas and the Red Sox.

In 2023, Casas, who made his MLB debut the prior season, was something of a revelation at first base. Over 132 games Casas hit .263/.367/.490 with 24 home runs. That’s an .856 OPS and 2.2 bWAR and earned him a 3rd place finish in the AL Rookie of the Year race. When you look at FanGraphs’ 2026 home run projections for Boston, that 24 seems mighty nice to think about. Of course, part of the reason he only hit 24 was that he ended the season on September 14th due to injury.

Casas took a bit of a step back in 2024. In his sophomore season, the first baseman slashed .241/.337/.462 With 13 homers. His season lasted just 63 games after another injury. I don’t know whether it’s proper to use “fluke” for this type of injury (tearing rib cartilage), but swinging so hard your body tears itself apart isn’t great. Hopefully with the swing mechanics team and training regimens this isn’t something that happens again.

In 2025 there wasn’t much to write home about at all. In just 32 games Casas hit (if you can call it that) .182/.277/.303 with 3 home runs. It was an absolutely dreadful start before another season-ending injury, thsi time rupturing his patella. What’s worse is that he was starting to have a better run: in his last 9 games of the season he was hitting .222/.364/.444 with 2 home runs, 5 walks, and 7 strikeouts. There might have been a turnaround in May that we were robbed from experiencing.

Over three seasons Casas went from 132, to 63, to 32 games played. He went from a home run every 5.5 games, to every 4.8 games, to every 10.6 games (that one barely means anything with only 1 homer in his first 23 games).

After the season, Craig Breslow wouldn’t commit to Casas as his first baseman. He spoke of acquiring multiple bats to upgrade the offense and the biggest, most notable bat acquired was Willson Contreras who plays first base. Casas is in his age-26 season, he’s played under a hundred games in two years, and he was coming off a devastating injury as Spring Training kicked off. In addition to having to battle for playing time he’s battling his own body.

His most notable moment since 2023 is the legendary interview in which he turned the tables on ESPN with a mid-game filibuster on Father’s Day 2025.

He’s just weird sometimes.

Alex Speier reported that Casas was taking some ground balls at third base in camp to help Isiah Kiner-Falefa get in some time at first.

Obviously the Sox aren’t carrying Casas as a backup first baseman (that’s IKF, Romy, etc.). Which sends him, most likely, to the minors. Until and unless Masataka Yoshida can’t hit well enough as the DH or something happens to Contreras. Or he’s traded.

But either way, the Red Sox Triston, like the Tristan of old, wants to be with the team he loves. And it just hasn’t worked out.

This New York Yankee Made a Hole-in-One on a Par 4—With a Range Ball

This New York Yankee Made a Hole-in-One on a Par 4—With a Range Ball

There's no way you can frame a range ball, right?

As a proud New Englander, it’s hard for me to write anything positive about New York, let alone the Yankees. But this is pretty cool.

On Monday, Yanks second baseman Jazz Chisholm posted a video to social to show off his improbable hole-in-one on a 328-yard par 4. The best part—well, maybe the worst part—is that he did it with a range ball.

Not a bad day off during spring training. Chisholm’s going to have some serious bragging rights in the dugout. The PGA TOUR even reposted the video noting that Chisholm's feat hasn't even happened on TOUR in 25 years. We'll have to do some extra digging to see if there is any data on how many baseball players in the MLB 30-30 club, like Chisholm, also have aced a Par-4—or use range balls in play.

But there’s only one way I’m going to end this: Go Sox!

Cubs vs. Italy at Mesa preview, Tuesday 3/3, 2:05 CT

MESA, Arizona — Tuesday notes…

  • FORMER CUBS ON THE ITALY ROSTER: Jon Berti and Miles Mastrobuoni. Alex Maestri, a former Cubs prospect who was actually born in Italy, is one of two pitching coaches for the team (Dave Righetti is the other).
  • CUBS 40-MAN PLAYERS ON WBC ROSTERS: Alex Bregman, Matthew Boyd, Pete Crow-Armstrong (USA); Javier Assad (Mexico); Miguel Amaya (Panama); Daniel Palencia (Venezuela); Seiya Suzuki (Japan); Jameson Taillon (Canada).
  • OTHER WBC EXHIBITIONS: There are 14 other exhibition games today between WBC teams and MLB squads. Here’s the complete schedule.

Here are today’s particulars.

Cubs lineup:

The Italy lineup:amd starting pitcher were not available at posting time. Please check BCB social media for the Italy information.

Cade Horton will start for the Cubs. Other Cubs pitchers scheduled today: Jeff Brigham, Gavin Hollowell, Jack Neely, Ethan Roberts and Jacob Webb.

No TV or radio today.

MLB.com Gameday

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

Here’s the complete Italy roster, and here’s a link to all the WBC team rosters.

As we have done in the past, we’ll have a first pitch thread at five minutes to game time and one overflow thread, 90 minutes after game time. For today, that will be 2 p.m. CT and 3:30 p.m. CT.

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

Discuss amongst yourselves.

How Former St. Louis Cardinals are Performing for their New Teams

SCOTTSDALE, AZ - FEBRUARY 20: Arizona Diamondbacks infielder, Nolan Arenado steps up to the plate during the first 2026 spring training game at Salt River Field at Talking Stick in Scottsdale, Arizona on February 20, 2026. The Arizona Diamondbacks went onto beat the Colorado Rockies 3-2. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images) | Denver Post via Getty Images

It’s no secret that the St. Louis Cardinals were one of the most active teams during the offseason unloading multiple veterans and their contracts, but have you checked in on how these former Cardinals players are performing for their new teams? Let’s catch up with how they’re doing in their new uniforms.

Let’s be clear that I’m not trying to draw some premature conclusions about how these players will perform over the long haul. The sample size of limited appearances during Spring Training isn’t meant to be a deep dive, but I do find it interesting that at least 3 of the former Cardinals seem to be benefiting from their change of scenery.

Nolan Arenado – Arizona Diamondbacks

It’s a small sample size since he’s only seen limited action so far, but Nolan Arenado is off to a good start with the Arizona Diamondbacks. As of this writing, Nolan has a .375 average with a couple of doubles and a home run in his first 8 at-bats with the Diamondbacks.

Brendan Donovan – Seattle Mariners

Brendan Donovan is off to a fast start with the Seattle Mariners as he’s batting .625 over his 3 games played with 5 hits and 1 RBI.

Sonny Gray – Boston Red Sox

Sonny Gray has only pitched 1.1 innings so far during the Red Sox spring training schedule, but he got rocked a bit giving up 2 runs and 3 hits in that short start against the Toronto Blue Jays. After the game, Sonny said he’s not historically very good in Spring Training.

Willson Contreras – Boston Red Sox

Willson Contreras is off to a scorching start for Boston as he’s had plenty of game time so far batting .462 in 13 at-bats with a couple of Spring Training home runs already.

It won’t be long before the St. Louis Cardinals see Sonny Gray and Willson Contreras as they will host the Red Sox at Busch Stadium the weekend of April 10-12. Brendan Donovan and the Mariners will be in Busch Stadium the weekend of April 24-26. Finally, Nolan Arenado and the Diamondbacks will roll into St. Louis on June 22-24.

The “Last Man In” free agent tournament winner!

CLEARWATER, FL - MARCH 02: Phillies Managing Partner John Middleton shakes hands with Bryce Harper as Vice President & General Manager Matt Klentak in middle looks on during the press conference to introduce Bryce Harper to the media and the fans of the Philadelphia Phillies on March 02, 2019 at the Spectrum Field in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

And the winner is…Bryce Harper!

Last month, with the free agency period winding down, I looked at the Phillies’ free agent signings from years past to see if they had brought in any impact players later in the offseason. From there, the idea of a user-judged tournament began.

While I had some hope that Ricardo Pinto might make a Cinderella run, Harper was always the odds-on favorite to win. Since signing with the Phillies, Harper has taken on the mantle of franchise player during one of the best periods in franchise history. He’s largely performed at an All-Star level, including an MVP performance in 2021. And he also delivered one of the most iconic moments in franchise history.

Now that we’re in the back half of his contract, we’ll see how the signing holds up. You may not have heard this, but there has been some talk that he is no longer elite! Regardless of how the next few seasons go, I don’t think the Phillies have any regrets in signing him.

Thanks to everyone who voted!

Braves' Jurickson Profar to be suspended 162 games by MLB after second PED offense, per report

Jurickson Profar upended his career and the Atlanta Braves' season for a second consecutive year after testing positive for a banned substance, a second offense that will result in a 162-game ban for the 2026 season, ESPN first reported March 3.

Profar, 33, was entering the first season of a three-year, $42 million contract when he was suspended March 31 after a positive test for a fertility drug classified as a performing-enhancing substance. He was suspended 80 games and returned July 2, hitting 14 homers with a .787 OPS over the remaining 80 games.

This suspension, which The Athletic reported will be appealed by the MLBPA, will be far more costly.

Profar will lose his entire 2026 salary of $15 million, bringing his docked pay for his two positive tests to $18 million over two seasons. He's also ineligible to represent the Netherlands in the upcoming World Baseball Classic.

Profar was entering his 13th major league season after debuting as a 19-year-old in 2012. He earned his first All-Star appearance in 2024 for the San Diego Padres, establishing career bests in home runs (24) and OPS (.839), prompting the Braves to sign him as their left fielder entering 2025.

Now, he won't be seen on the Truist Field diamond until 2027.

Profar joins five other players to earn at least a 162-game ban under MLB's policy, most notably Robinson Cano, who earned two suspensions amid a $240 million contract he originally signed with Seattle, the bans sidetracking what looked like a Hall of Fame career.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jurickson Profar suspended: Braves outfielder banned again for PEDs

Spring GameThread: Team Canada @ Jays

Mar 2, 2026; Dunedin, Florida, USA;Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Addison Barger (47) is congratulated by third baseman Riley Tirotta (87) and teammates after he hit a grand slam during the fifth inning against the Boston Red Sox at TD Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

And you thought the Jays were Team Canada.

This is a 1:00 Eastern start and it is on Sportsnets

The Jays lineup has a bunch of the regulars:

  1. Springer, DH
  2. Lukes, RF
  3. Varsho, CF
  4. Barger, 3B
  5. Schneider, 2B
  6. Sanchez, LF
  7. Valenzuela, C
  8. Nimmala, SS
  9. Keys, 1B

And Kevin Gausman is starting.

Hazel Mae posted the Team Canada lineup:

Team USA is playing the Giants at 3:00 Eastern. I don’t think that one is on TV. And Vlad and his fellow Dominicans are playing the Tigers at 6:00 Eastern. That will be on the MLB Network.

Beyond that, there isn’t much for Jays’ news. They have officially announced the Max Scherzer signing, which means he passed the physical.

Braves’ Jurickson Profar facing 162-game ban for PEDs — one year after receiving first suspension

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Jurickson Profar hitting a sacrifice fly for the Atlanta Braves, Image 2 shows Jurickson Profar missed 80 games in 2025 after his first PED suspension
Profar suspension

So much for the “I would never knowingly” cheat claim from Jurickson Profar.

The Braves outfielder/designated hitter is facing a 162-game suspension for testing positive for performance-enhancing drugs (PED) for the second time and in back-to-back years, The Post’s Jon Heyman confirmed.

The 33-year-old is set to be the sixth player to receive the 162-game ban for a second PED violation since the penalty for a second-time violator got bumped to a full season in 2014, per ESPN, and is now ineligible for the 2026 season and the World Baseball Classic, where the Curacao native was set to play for the Netherlands.

Jurickson Profar during spring training 2026. Jonathan Dyer-Imagn Images

While testing positive once is bad enough, Profar doing so twice in two years is a stunning development, especially when he claimed innocence last time around.

Profar received an 80-game ban last year after testing positive for Chorionic Gonadotrophin (hCG) after appearing in the Braves’ first four games.

“This is especially painful for me because anyone who knows me and has seen me play knows I am deeply passionate about the game,” he said in a statement released by the union last March. “There is nothing I love more than competing with my teammates and being a fan favorite. I want to apologize to the entire Braves organization, my teammates, and the fans. It is because of my deep love and respect for this game that I would never knowingly do anything to cheat it. I have been tested my entire career, including eight times last season alone, and have never tested positive. I would never willingly take a banned substance, but I take full responsibility and accept MLB’s decision.”

Profar returned to slash .245/.353/.434 with 14 homers and 43 RBIs for the Braves in the first year of a three-season, $42 million deal, and will be forfeiting his $15 million salary for the 2026 campaign due to this violation. He still has one year and $15 million remaining on that contract.

Losing Profar is a tough blow for an Atlanta team that did little in the offseason following an injury-filled 76-86 season. He had been slated to shift to designated hitter this upcoming season, per ESPN.

Profar began his career in 2012 with the Rangers, and also spent time with the A’s, Padres and Rockies.

Jurickson Profar missed 80 games in 2025 after his first PED suspension. Getty Images

He’s a career .245 hitter with a .731 OPS, and made one All-Star team in 2024 with the Padres.

Profar is the first player to receive a 162-game ban since then-Brewers catcher J.C. Mejia in 2023.

New York Yankees vs. Team Panama: Max Fried vs. Jorge Garcia

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 25: Max Fried #54 of the New York Yankees pitches during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 25, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The World Baseball Classic is almost upon us. As the international tournament gets ready to upstage spring training, their teams will play in exhibition games against MLB teams today and tomorrow before the Classic begins later in the week. The Yankees will host Team Panama this afternoon at Steinbrenner Field. Unfortunately, it doesn’t appear this game will be televised; not even on the Gotham App.* With that said, let’s discuss the matchup ahead, which you’ll seemingly have to follow live on social media.

*If you’re curious, Aaron Judge and Team USA will square off with the Giants on ESPN at 3:08pm ET, while Austin Wells and the Dominican Republic face the Tigers on MLB Network at 6:05pm ET.

Panama will play their games in San Juan, Puerto Rico as a member of Pool A. Their opponents in pool play will be Canada, Colombia, Cuba, and the hosts, Puerto Rico. It’s a fairly wide open group, especially compared to the others—you can read our preview of Pool A here. Indeed, there is a familiar face donning Panama’s colors: José Caballero will be leading off for them today.

Max Fried will make his first start of the spring against an unconventional spring training opponent. Pitching has been the hot topic of camp for the Yankees, with impressive performances from Will Warren and Luis Gil inviting optimism about the rotation even with Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón sidelined to begin. That doesn’t make Fried any less vital to this ballclub; and health will obviously be the top priority.

Of course, there’s one notable absence in the Yankees’ lineup today: Aaron Judge has joined Team USA, who are set to play the Giants in an exhibition matchup later this afternoon. There’s still a good representation of starters here today. Trent Grisham will lead off, Ben Rice will follow, and Jasson Domínguez, hitting well in camp as he bids to make the roster, hits third. Giancarlo Stanton has had some worrying stories around him this spring but will bat cleanup today for his first in-game appearance of camp.

Interestingly, Ryan McMahon is listed as starting at shortstop in Caballero’s place, with Paul DeJong sliding to third base (perhaps a test of McMahon’s ability to partially back up at the six with Oswaldo Cabrera unlikely to be active at the start of 2026). J.C. Escarra will catch and bat seventh, followed by second baseman Max Schuemann and right fielder Yanquiel Fernández.

Panama’s starter will be righty Jorge Garcia, a former Giants prospect who most rcently pitched in the Mexican League and Venezuelan Winter League in 2025 and 2026. The 23-year-old had a 5.70 ERA in 10 starts for Durango and a 4.01 mark in 11 for Margarita, and both were better than league average — though he does not get many strikeouts. Panama’s lineup contains a gaggle of current and former big leaguers, as well as a promising prospect. As mentioned, Caballero will hit leadoff; Johan Camargo, a former teammate of Fried in Atlanta, will bat fifth. Enrique Bradfield Jr., a top prospect and Orioles first round pick, rounds out the starting nine. This is a speedy crew without a ton of power (where have you gone, El Caballo?), so a more ’80s style of baseball should be their identity.

How to watch

Location: George M. Steinbrenner Field — Tampa, FL

First pitch: 1:05 pm ET

TV broadcast: N/A

Radio broadcast: N/A

For updates, follow us on Twitter and Instagram, and like us on Facebook.

Can young guns like Sal Stewart and Chase Burns help get the Reds to the next level?

Last season was a huge success for the Cincinnati Reds. They secured their first playoff appearance in a full-length season since 2013 and tied for their most wins in a season since that same 2013 season. Still, there is more work to be done. The Reds haven't advanced in a playoff series since 1995, and that was also the last year they won a home playoff game. But two players who weren't even born then could be the driving force in getting the organization back to those heights.

Chase Burns, who was born in January of 2003, is one of the most exciting young arms in baseball. He packs a 99 mph fastball that makes him and Hunter Greene perhaps the hardest-throwing starting pitcher duo in the Majors. In 43.1 MLB innings last year, Burns struck out 67 hitters and posted an impressive 16.7% swinging strike rate (SwStr%). But his debut season was not without its worries.

One of the biggest worries centers around Burns' health. Last year, he suffered a flexor strain in mid-August and was placed on the injured list. When he returned, the Reds used him exclusively out of the bullpen, and there is some concern that, due to his elevated fastball velocity, Burns could be at increased risk of that flexor strain being the precursor to larger arm issues. However, the 23-year-old is confident that it won't be an issue.

"It was kind of a minor thing," he said before a spring training game in Arizona. "I just worked my way up [to the Majors] and was throwing with such high intensity in a short amount of time, short amount of rest. It was fine once I came back and hasn't been bothering me at all, so it's been a pretty healthy offseason."

⚾️ Coming soon: 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.

The way Burns worked his way up was also impressive. The second overall pick in the 2024 draft, Burns started 2025 at High-A but made only three starts before being promoted to Double-A. In eight starts at Double-A, he posted a 1.29 ERA, 0.71 WHIP, and 36.4% strikeout rate, so the Reds moved him up to Triple-A. In just two starts there, he allowed three runs on seven hits in 12.1 innings while striking out 14 batters, and the Reds felt like he would be a huge help to their postseason push.

Yet, that quick rise to the big leagues came with some jarring changes for Burns: "I went through like, 40-something innings in the bigs," he recalled. "That shorter off time throughout the week, and throwing more high intents on a bigger stage is a lot different."

That increased intensity and limited rest time could have played a part in his mild flexor issue, but it also taught the young right-hander an important lesson in getting his body in the best place possible this offseason.

"I'm just making sure I'm staying on top of my body and listening to what my body says," he detailed, when asked about his offseason focus. "Staying flexible and loose, and taking care of the arm. Staying healthy, of course, is a big [focus], so I'm working on everything that I need to work on to build up for the season, because I know it's a long season."

In addition to potentially impacting his health, the quick rise to the big leagues also caused Burns to alter his pitch mix. In particular, Burns dialed back on the usage of his changeup, which was a larger part of his arsenal in the minors. In his 43 MLB innings, Burns threw the changeup just 5.8% of the time, but it was an impactful pitch, particularly against lefties, with a 17% SwStr%.

"I feel like I had all my pitches in the minors," Burns said. "With using a different ball and trying to get to the bigs as quickly as possible, I knew the best way was getting outs and getting strikeouts, so my focus was just trying to get to the bigs at that point. But now that I know what it takes to get up there, I feel like I need those other pitches to help me out."

That has led to a "renewed focus" on his changeup, as he looks to make it a bigger part of his arsenal. It has also led Burns to play around with both a sinker and a curveball as well: "I experimented a little bit last year with [a sinker], just because my four-seam cuts and has ride, so there's something a little bit different for the hitter to see. But another big one is my curveball, just having a slower pitch. I throw everything kind of hard, so just messing with the hitter's tempo and timing a little bit."

Of the trio of pitches, the changeup and sinker might be most impactful for Burns. Last season, he induced fewer whiffs against lefties than righties, and he seems to command his slider much better to righties, so the changeup would give him another swing-and-miss offering to lefties and reduce some of the emphasis on his slider. The sinker would also keep hitters off the four-seam fastball. While Burns throws hard, and his four-seamer can absolutely miss bats, he also allowed a nearly 48% Ideal Contact Rate on the pitch last year, which was 25th percentile among starting pitchers. Adding a different fastball variation will make it harder for hitters to make that kind of contact on his four-seamer.

Yet, at the end of the day, Burns' rise to potential stardom will likely fall on the back of his slider. It's already one of the better ones in the majors. It's 91 mph with just about five inches of horizontal movement, so it's more of a gyro slider than a big sweeper, but Burns has tremendous command of it. Not only does it register elite swinging strike rates, but its overall strike rate is high because Burns can put it in the zone if he wants or bury it off the plate, depending on the situation.

"I'm actively thinking and looking at a different spot," he explained about his slider placement. "For in-zone, I'm trying to throw it at the hitter's elbow, but late in the count, I'm trying to throw it right down the middle and just let it move naturally. I have a tendency of trying to do too much with it, trying to get that big swing and miss. The biggest thing for me is just staying directional and staying through the target. Then it takes care of itself."

That's another lesson that Burns learned in his brief MLB sample size after going up against hitters whose approach was far superior to anything he had seen in the minors.

"Triple-A to the bigs is the biggest jump for sure," he admitted. "There are pitches that I'll throw that I'm thinking they're gonna swing and miss, and they don't even bat an eye at it. These guys in the bigs are the best of the best. It doesn't get any better than this, so just working on that and using that to my advantage, setting up hitters for certain counts, and making sure that I throw everything hard through the zone."

The big jump between Triple-A and the big leagues is also something that Sal Stewart experienced firsthand last year. The Reds' first-round pick in 2022, Stewart is the Reds' top prospect and the 22nd-ranked prospect in all of baseball, according to MLB Pipeline. He began last year in Double-A, but after 80 impressive games, the Reds promoted him to Triple-A, where he hit .315/.394/.629 with 10 home runs, 36 RBI, and four steals in 38 games. The Reds decided that was enough to bring him up to the big leagues.

"These are the best pitchers in the world, from all over the world, and their stuff's good," Stewart said about his first impression of MLB pitching. "They locate well. A lot of them have been there for a while, so they know how to get it done. So you kind of just have to keep adjusting as the season goes on."

Which was something Stewart did just fine last year. In his first eight games, Stewart was 4-for-24 with two home runs, three RBI, and an 8/0 K/BB ratio. Over his final 10 games and 34 plate appearances, Stewart went 10-for-31 with three home runs, five RBI, eight runs scored, and a 7/3 K/BB ratio. That increased success as the season went on taught him valuable lessons about his own process: "That my preparation is enough. Everything I do before the game starts is enough, so I just got to trust that and go out there and be me, do what I do. Go out there, play hard, play to win."

What Sal Stewart does is hit the ball hard. He posted a 51.3% hard-hit rate in Triple-A and then came to the big leagues and registered a 52.5% mark with a 17.5% barrel rate and 95.4 mph average exit velocity. Stewart has good bat speed, but it's not among the tops in the league; yet, his approach is designed to do damage.

"I'm in the game to change the game," Stewart said matter-of-factly. "I'm not in the game to do anything other than that."

Stewart does that in a few ways. For starters, in his brief MLB sample last year, the 22-year-old was among the league leaders in Pull Air%, which measures how often hitters get the ball in the air to the pull side. From 2022-24, 66% of all home runs were on balls pulled in the air. Yet, at the same time, he chases outside of the zone less than the league average and has always posted swinging strike rates around 10% and zone contact rates about 85%, which are good marks for somebody with his raw power.

"I just try to hit the ball hard up the middle," he said about his approach. "If I'm a little out in front, then I pull it. If I'm a little late, then I go the other way. I just try to use my legs and stay behind the ball. Obviously, I take my walks, and I walk a lot, but I'm ready when the ball comes in the zone. From pitch one, I try to be ready to go, and if they come into the zone, then I get ready to go. If not, I'll take first."

Taking first is also something Stewart looks to do defensively as well. After playing the vast majority of his minor league games at third base or second base, the Reds started to move Stewart to first base late in his Triple-A season when a call-up seemed possible. With Ke'Bryan Hayes at third base, Eugenio Suarez at DH, and Matt McLain at second base, first base will need to be Stewart's new home if he plans to get regular at-bats, but the Reds have also talked about using him at second base when McLain needs a day off. Not that any of that matters to Stewart.

"You got to do whatever Tito says. I'm surrounded by a lot of good teammates and great players, so wherever Tito puts me that day, I'll go play defense, and I'll work on my game. When you have a lot of really good players, you've got to do whatever it takes for the team to win. So I don't see that as a problem at all [with moving positions]."

That team-first mindset is not rare for a young player who is looking to make his first Opening Day roster, but it is prevalent up and down the Reds' roster and the sign of a team that knows that last year isn't the final destination but just a small stepping stone.

"Team-wise, we want to go past what we did last year," said Burns. "I think we had a good foot forward, and we added Geno and a lot of good guys, and I think that we can make a special run with these guys."

It's a sentiment that Stewart shares: "Obviously, everyone has personal goals, and the better you play, the more you help the team. So, yeah, I have personal goals, but the main goal is to help the team win. That's my main focus."

With these two young stars locked in and prepared to take their games to another level, the 2026 season may be the one where the Reds turn the clock back to the '90s.