BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - AUGUST 3: Wilyer Abreu #52 of the Boston Red Sox slides to score during the fourth inning of a game against the Houston Astros on August 3, 2025 at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images
I know we’re all baseball fans here but I’m not sure Boston is on the edge of its seat for this game at Fenway tonight and more so for a puck drop across town. If you’re here with us, we thank you tremendously! We do have an MLB debut for Jake Bennett!
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 27: Xander Bogaerts #2 of the San Diego Padres looks on after lining out during the second inning of a game against the Chicago Cubs at Petco Park on April 27, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images
San Diego Padres president of baseball operations/general manager A.J. Preller signed shortstop Xander Bogaerts to an 11-year/$280 million contract on Dec. 9, 2022. He had a storied career with the Boston Red Sox before becoming a free agent and signing with San Diego. With Boston he won five Silver Slugger awards, was an All-Star four times and won the World Series twice. Padres fans were hoping that the Bogaerts who played for the Friars would be that same guy. Unfortunately, a series of injuries has interrupted all of his previous seasons prior to this one.
2023-2025 with the Padres
In 2023, Bogaerts had a recurrence of a wrist injury that had bothered him in the past and it plagued him for at least half of the season. He also had a calf injury toward the end of the season. He played in 155 games and hit .285 with a .790 OPS. His lowest season numbers in six seasons. His 19 home runs were consistent with his home runs totals his last two seasons in Boston. His best season was 2019 when Bogaerts hit 33 home runs and 117 RBI. He only had 58 RBI in 2023.
In 2024, Bogaerts played in 111 games due to a shoulder injury and hit .264 with a .688 OPS. His home run total dropped from 19 to 11 and RBI from 58 to 44. His arm strength was down from previous seasons, probably secondary to the injury. It should also be noted that Bogaerts played 85 games at second base rather than shortstop. Although his defense was average at best, the biggest issues were offensive.
In 2025, Bogaerts continued to have issues with his shoulder and also sustained hamstring and foot injuries that limited him to 136 games. His average was .263 with a somewhat improved OPS of .719. All still well below what was his normal for the past several years of his time with the Red Sox.
He again had 11 home runs with 53 RBI. His bat speed is up while his arm strength is improved despite still recovering from shoulder issues.The drop in power and production was the subject of many discussions among Padres fans and local media. Bogaerts has a superstar contract but was not delivering anything close to superstar production.
Defensively, Bogaerts has always had above average range but his injuries affected his throwing ability and he frequently bounced throws from the shortstop position. He did go from 15th percentile in arm strength in 2024 to 31st percentile in 2025.
Bogaerts in 2026
In 29 games and 109 at-bats, Bogaerts is hitting .275/.352/.431 with a .783 OPS. He has five homers, leading the team, and 17 RBI (one behind Ramon Laureano). Bogaerts has walked 13 times with 18 strikeouts. His expected offensive numbers (per Baseball Savant) show that he has been somewhat unlucky and should have better stats (.288 average and .458 slug).. He also has the lowest K-rate (13%) in his career. Bogaerts has the best walk rate of his career (10.7%) so far.
Since becoming a Padre there has been an unexpected development in his career, a change in his ability to steal bases.
Prior to 2023, Bogaerts never had more than 15 stolen bases in his time in Boston. Since joining the Friars, Bogaerts has 19/22, 13/16 and 20/22 steals respectively. In 29 games so far in 2026, he has three stolen bags without being caught.
Xander Bogaerts numbers so far this season makes him one of the 4 top offensive players for the Padres. He is the best performing of the regular starters with only Luis Campusano, Miguel Andujar and Ty France having a better batting average. Ramon Laureano comes closest with a .762 OPS and he has one more home run.
If we continue to see this version of Bogaerts for the majority of the season, it will undoubtedly add to the success of an currently underperforming offense that is still finding ways to win.
The ability to stay healthy and stay on the field will play a big role. Manager Craig Stammen has shown a determined intention to get his players regular rest and that could be a major factory in keeping the regulars healthy and on the field.
Xander Bogaerts has been making an impression on both sides of the ball. His desire to show Padres fans what a healthy player could do brings a new appreciation for the 33-year old shortstop.
San Diego Padres starting pitcher Griffin Canning (Photo by K.C. Alfred / The San Diego Union-Tribune via Getty Images)
The first month of the 2026 season is in the book. The main priority for the San Diego Padres is still rectifying their starting rotation. Injuries have made it impossible to figure out the rotation beyond Michael King and Randy Vasquez in the top two spots.
The next order of business is deciding the future of Walker Buehler, German Marquez, and, to a lesser extent, Matt Waldron. None of them has been consistent at all to claim the third starter role and complement King and Vasquez.
Performance does matter.
A Canning and Giolito sighting could be coming to Petco Park
With the order of the rotation still up for grabs, the front office has some sorting out to do. Reinforcements like Griffin Canning and Lucas Giolito are working their way back to the majors.
Canning is close to making his season debut after rehabbing a ruptured left Achilles tendon suffered last June. He has made four starts with the Padres Triple-A affiliate, El Paso Chihuahuas.
Canning has a 1-1 record with a 3.60 ERA. He has struck out 18 batters in 15 innings pitched. Circle the second week of May for him to become a viable starting-pitching option.
Newly signed Lucas Giolito will need approximately 25 days to get his arm and body ready to pitch in the majors. All of Giolito’s training will take place with the Friars Single-A affiliate, Lake Elsinore Storm.
In his first start, he exited the contest after being hit by a comebacker to the mound. Giolito is reported to be fine with a bruised pitching hand and will make his next start. Before Giolito left the game, his velocity was between 90 and 91 mph, which was lower than expected but not alarming. The Friar Faithful can expect him to be available to start by the third week in May.
Canning and Giolito offer plenty of value in a starter role because of their high-end pitching repertoire when healthy. The Friars do not need them to be elite with an under 1.00 WHIP, but each must stay consistent on the mound to keep the Padres close in every game.
Will a starter move to pen?
The decision on who stays or leaves the organization may hinge on which pitcher can work out of the bullpen. The candidate must be able to warm up quickly and pitch successfully in situational baseball.
Their role is to go against only two or three hitters in an opposing lineup, but recording those outs could be the difference in a victory. Buehler, Marquez, and Waldron have all worked out of the bullpen at some point in their major league career, but are primarily known as starting pitchers.
The one negative with this possible move is that none of them throw a high-90s pitching arsenal, which is essential to becoming an effective reliever.
The rotation will remain in order at least through the interim. It gives Marquez and Buehler another chance to state their case to remain on the roster. Padres manager Craig Stammen wants to be put in a tough situation because his starting pitchers are performing well.
Ultimately, performance on the mound will dictate whether the starting rotation needs changes. The Padres need more consistent starting pitching to remain in contention for a postseason berth.
Next month could usher in a different look for the rotation.
Following an ugly 10–17 start to the season for the Boston Red Sox, manager Alex Cora and his staff were dismissed on April 25.
The Red Sox offense has dried up in 2026, ranking 24th in runs per game as of May 1. They also sit 29th in wRC+ and 28th in wOBA.
This is a lineup averaging 0.83 fewer runs per game year-over-year — the worst drop in MLB.
Conspiracy Hour🕵️♂️
There are a few theories as to why the bats have gone cold, and some point to a lost edge tied to the Red Sox's base coaches.
Buster Olney brought this to light earlier this week, suggesting Boston’s dip in run production might be correlated to the recent implementation of coaches’ box rules:
One of the interesting theories about the struggling Red Sox offense in rival front offices is that Boston has been impacted significantly by the enforcement of the coaching boxes. The Red Sox were regarded by some other teams as being extraordinary at ascertaining grips/relaying…
The theory suggests that prior to 2026, Red Sox coaches were relaying signs to hitters, taking advantage of loose enforcement around the coaches’ box. Reading pitcher grips and passing that information along would provide a meaningful edge.
Baseball, more than any sport, rewards those edges — margins are tight, and anything within the rules gets exploited. With MLB now enforcing coach positioning more strictly, that edge may be gone, and the offensive drop-off reflects it.
Yahoo’s Zach Coe also referenced a 2025 incident between the Los Angeles Angels and Red Sox, where tensions flared involving then first-base coach José David Flores, with sources suggesting sign-stealing concerns.
It adds context when you consider why a left-handed pitcher like Tyler Anderson would be that upset with a first-base coach:
Coaches and players chirping before the game. Everything is going great at Fenway. pic.twitter.com/TAMQZUvjYC
PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 19: Mitch Keller #23 of the Pittsburgh Pirates pitches in the first inning during the game against the Tampa Bay Rays at PNC Park on April 19, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Pittsburgh Pirates are at home hosting the Cincinnati Reds this evening at beautiful PNC Park looking for a win.
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Aug 10, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Zack Wheeler (45) throws during the first inning against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images | Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images
Coming off a sweep of the Giants at home, the Phillies will take their first road trip under new manager Don Mattingly. They’ll visit LoanDepot Park to take on the Miami Marlins in a rare Friday-Monday four-game series.
Zack Wheeler will make his second start of the season. In his first outing after coming back from surgery, Wheeler gave up two runs in five innings, while striking out six.
Apr 19, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Texas Rangers starter MacKenzie Gore (1) delivers a pitch during the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Brashear-Imagn Images | Stephen Brashear-Imagn Images
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 29: Matt Waldron #61 of the San Diego Padres pitches during the first inning of a game against the Chicago Cubs at Petco Park on April 29, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The San Diego Padres have had a streakier bullpen than usual lately.
The two runs they combined to give up on Wednesday afternoon ended up costing the Friars incredibly in their 5-4 loss to the Chicago Cubs. It was their first series loss in the entire month of April.
And here’s the thing. As much as we talk about the Padres like they aren’t a good team, as much as we bring up that the big three (Fernando Tatis Jr., Manny Machado and Jackson Merrill) aren’t producing, the team has raced to a 19-11 record for second place in the NL West.
San Diego has had an incredible start to 2026. If the Padres can keep it up with their series this weekend against the Chicago White Sox, it would be great momentum heading into their upcoming road trip.
Taking the mound
Noah Schultz (CWS) v. Germán Márquez (SD)
The rookie lefty Schultz has flashed some great stuff so far with the Sox. He’s pitched to 3.52 ERA and 1.11 WHIP marks. Across 15 1/3 innings he’s only allowed eight hits. That’s translated to a .151 opponent batting average in his first three starts of the year.
If Schultz can do the same against this Padres lineup, it would spell disaster for a club who has started to flounder lately. San Diego will need to build on the slug they showed in Wednesday’s series finale.
Márquez, on the other hand, is a battle-tested veteran fighting for a rotation spot with San Diego. With Griffin Canning and Lucas Giolito coming up soon to the major-league club, Márquez could be the odd man out in this group if he doesn’t make his case soon.
He’s started off the season with an uninspiring 4.38 ERA, but he’s pitched three wins for the Friars. That’s been due to the Padres’ offense showing out when he’s taking the mound. If Márquez pitches the way he has, he’ll need San Diego to put some runs on the board.
Batter up!
After Ramón Laureano was out of the lineup in Wednesday’s game (aside from pinch-hitting in the ninth), he’ll likely be back batting leadoff today. The lineup will look pretty typical after that:
Ramón Laureano, LF
Fernando Tatis Jr., RF
Jackson Merrill, CF
Manny Machado, 3B
Xander Bogaerts, SS
Gavin Sheets, 1B
Miguel Andujar DH
Luis Campusano, C
Jake Cronenworth, 2B
Machado has been hot lately after a torrid stretch to begin the year. He’s batted .310 with two home runs over his last seven games.
Campusano has been on a similar hot streak, batting .333 with two homers in his last seven. He’s been one of the Friars’ best hitters this year, slashing .326/.380/.674 with a 1.054 OPS.
Relief corps
Waldron’s mostly solid start on Wednesday saved San Diego from a true bullpen game. That being said, they still used four of their relievers to make it through the game.
Adrian Morejon, Bradgley Rodriguez, Jason Adam and Mason miller combined to cover four innings, giving up two runs that ended up making the difference in the eventual loss to Chicago.
That group is rounded out by Kyle Hart, Ron Marinaccio and Wandy Peralta. That group especially has been spotty lately. The off day may offer the ’pen a reset on that front.
With the off day yesterday, San Diego will have all of their relievers available. David Morgan was optioned on Thursday night to Triple-A. In a corresponding move, the Padres reinstated Jeremiah Estrada from the 15-day injured list.
Estrada just finished a short rehab stint in Triple-A after an inconsistent start to the year. The stint will hopefully act as a reset for the right-hander as well, allowing Estrada to return to his dominant self.
Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Jacob Misiorowski (32) warms up before their game against the Pittsburgh Pirates Saturday, April 25, 2026 at American Family Field in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
The Milwaukee Brewers and Washington Nationals open a three-game set in the nation’s capital tonight, three weeks after the Nats swept the Brewers in three games in Milwaukee. The Brewers will obviously be looking for different results this weekend, and they’ll get things started tonight by sending Jacob Misiorowski to the mound to take on Washington’s Jake Irving.
But first, we’ll cover today’s roster news: after the concerning dip in velocity that forced the Brewers to remove Brandon Woodruff after just 1 1/3 innings on Thursday, he’s been placed on the 15-day injured list. The news, though, is mostly encouraging. You can see Woodruff talk about what happened yesterday at the link, but imaging revealed nothing more than minor inflammation and nothing major appears to be wrong. Woodruff doesn’t sound like a guy who expects to be out long, so considering how alarming Thursday’s game was, it’s pretty close to a best-case scenario. Woodruff will be replaced for now on the roster by Easton McGee but expect someone else (Logan Henderson?) when Woodruff’s rotation spot comes up in a few days.
We also got a small update on Luis Peña, who collapsed in the dugout during the eighth inning of the Timber Rattlers’ game on April 22. Matt Arnold told reporters that all tests on Peña, who hasn’t played since then, have come back normal, though he is scheduled to see a neurologist on Monday. The fact that all the tests have been normal is encouraging, though his visit to see a neurologist suggests that the Brewers are going to make darn sure that there’s nothing wrong with him before letting him get back on a baseball field.
The Brewers have provided an update on prospect Luis Pena:
"Luis Pena lost consciousness in the dugout during the eighth inning of the April 22 Timber Rattlers game. He was transported to a local emergency room and released the following day. (cont.)"
As for tonight’s starter, Misiorowski’s last start continued a season-long trend: he’s pitched quite well and showed some real signs of progress but hasn’t quite been able to put together a full-length, dominant start yet. Against the Pirates in Milwaukee on Saturday, Miz struck out nine and walked only one, but the Pirates got him for three runs, all of which came in innings in which he plunked the leadoff hitter. The Brewers lost that game in 10 innings. Miz missed the Nationals when they were in Milwaukee (and didn’t face them last year), so it’ll be the first time that Washington gets the experience of facing one of the most electric starters in the league.
Washington counters with the 29-year-old right-hander Jake Irvin, who faced the Brewers on April 10. Washington won that game, but Irvin didn’t factor into the decision; he was wild and walked five batters but allowed only two hits and was able to limit the damage to three runs in five innings. Irvin had his best start of the season his last time out against the White Sox, when he allowed no runs on four hits and no walks while striking out nine in 5 2/3 innings. The bullpen blew Washington’s lead, but they won in extras. For the season, Irvin has a 4.85 ERA but more encouraging 4.11 FIP, and he’s striking out 10.3 batters per nine innings, easily a career best.
Milwaukee’s streak of not using the same batting lineup twice yet this season continues today, as Blake Perkins comes in for Greg Jones in left field. Garrett Mitchell, Brice Turang, and William Contreras remain at the top of the lineup.
Sort of an odd start time tonight, as first pitch comes at 5:45 p.m. CT. The game can be found, as usual, on Brewers TV and the Brewers Radio Network.
Braves manager Walt Weiss said the team plans to use Michael Harris II primarily as a designated hitter for this upcoming nine-game road trip, which begins Friday against the Colorado Rockies, to allow his lingering quad injury a chance to heal.
But Harris will actually start the road trip on the bench as he’s not in Atlanta’s starting lineup for Friday night’s series opener in Denver.
It’s the second straight day Harris is out of the starting lineup, although he pinch hit in Sunday’s loss to the Tigers.
Instead, Drake Baldwin will get a day as designated hitter after the travel turnaround while Jonah Heim starts behind the dish and hits eighth.
With Harris not in center, Mauricio Dubon will start there and hit fifth, ahead of the slumping Austin Riley, who was bumped further down to sixth in the lineup. Eli White gets the start in left field and will hit seventh against Colorado left-hander Jose Quintana, and Jorge Mateo is at shortstop and will bat ninth.
Rockies starter Jose Quintana has struggled mightily in his career against the Braves. In 11 starts, he has a 4-6 record and 6.39 ERA — his second-worst against any team — and his 1.740 WHIP is his worst against any team.
His last start against Atlanta in 2025 with the Brewers wasn’t bad, however. He worked six innings, allowing three runs on seven hits with seven strikeouts and no walks.
On the whole, this Braves roster hasn’t had a ton of success against the journeyman left-hander. Ronald Acuña Jr. is 3-for-19 (.158) against him with a solo homer, Matt Olson is 6-for-27 (.222) with 11 strikeouts and Michael Harris II is 3-for-16 (.188) with a double.
Ozzie Albies, though, has been a Quintana killer. He’s 9-for-19 (.474) with three homers and two doubles for a ridiculous 1.553 OPS. Given his recent form, this could be a favorable matchup for Albies to continue his power surge.
The Rockies are deploying their traditional lineup against right-handed starters, going with Edouard Julien and Mickey Moniak in the top two spots after both were not in the lineup Sunday against Reds lefty Andrew Abbott.
Braves starter Grant Holmes has not had great success early in his career against the Rockies. He has a 5.56 ERA over 11 1/3 innings after starting against them each of the last two seasons, his worst ERA against any team he has made multiple starts against.
His previous start at Coors Field had a lot to do with that. In his third career start, he allowed five runs on six hits over five innings at Colorado in August of 2024, striking out eight and walking three.
The current Colorado roster, though, has not found success against him. Brenton Doyle (1-for-5) is the only Rockies player with a hit against him, a two-run homer, but he’s not in the lineup Friday. The Rockies are a combined 1-for-19 against the right-hander with 14 strikeouts and two walks.
The New York Mets are returning to the scene of their last in-season firing of a manager. Yet, it appears Carlos Mendoza will survive this three-game series in Anaheim, California, unlike Willie Randolph.
Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns told MLB.com that the 10-21, last-place Mets "don't view this as a manager problem, and don't intend to make a change."
That will surely come as at least a temporary relief for Mendoza, their third-year manager who has parried numerous inquiries about his job security as the Mets' season continues deteriorating. The club lost six of nine games against Minnesota, Colorado and Washington, a homestand that figured to serve as a referendum on Mendoza, given the opponents' mediocrity.
But no, Mendoza made the flight to California and figures to accompany the club through the rest of its nine-game trek to Arizona and Colorado.
Yet what about after that?
The dreaded "vote of confidence" from management has often served as a death knell for a manager, most recently in Philadelphia, where club president Dave Dombrowski gave manager Rob Thomson the dreaded upvote in the midst of what became an 11-game losing streak.
Mendoza would be the first Mets manager fired during the season since 2008, when Randolph, pitching coach Rick Peterson and first base coach Tom Nieto were all fired after a loss to the Angels in Anaheim. It was an overnight bloodletting, as the dismissals came roughly around 3 a.m. New York time.
Yet, Stearns seems to realize that the Mets' woes are largely performance, health and roster-related. Shortstop Francisco Lindor went on the injured list with a calf injury just as slugger Juan Soto came off. Bo Bichette, their free agent splash making $42 million, is off to a .230/.272/.317 start. And the pitching staff has been uneven from starters through the bullpen, their last loss coming when Stearns signee Luke Weaver gave up an eighth-inning two-run homer to Washington's CJ Abrams.
"We know our record is not what we want," Stearns told MLB.com, "and we know we're capable of more."
That should be partial solace for Mendoza. Thomson's unemployment, however, serves as a reminder it honestly doesn't mean much.
Pete Alonso will have to wait a bit longer to make his highly-anticipated return to Citi Field, but the slugger is back in the Big Apple for the first time this weekend as the Orioles visit the Yankees for a four-game set.
Prior to Friday's series opener, the big man described it to reporters as a bit of a trip down memory lane.
“There’s a lot of things to think about being here for so long,” he said. “My first taste of professional baseball was playing for the Cyclones and then working my way up from there -- a lot of memories here for my family and I.
“Last time we were here, I remember going to Mount Sinai with my wife and coming out a family of three, so it’s special because you look down memory lane -- there’s a lot of great baseball memories and personal ones too.”
Alonso appreciated his time and the memories while with the Mets, but he’s excited to represent Baltimore.
“I’m extremely stoked to be where I’m at,” he said.
The slugger has gotten off to a slow start at the plate this season, but the Orioles have been playing much better baseball of late as a team, taking home two of three series to close April.
As far as his old squad, though, things continue to trend south.
The Mets, of course, closed April with a 3-6 homestand, putting them in sole possession of MLB's worst record.
While things are going poorly now, Alonso still thinks they can turn it around.
“Every team goes through ups and downs,” he told SNY’s Michelle Margaux. “Every person on the planet wrote off the 2024 Mets until we made it happen -- there’s tough times everywhere, but there’s more of a microscope in New York.
“It sucks in the now, but they have talent and they’ll be just fine.”
OAKLAND, CA - MARCH 28: Manager Mark Kotsay #7 of the Oakland Athletics and Manager Stephen Vogt #12 of the Cleveland Guardians exchange lineup cards before the game at the Oakland Coliseum on March 28, 2024 in Oakland, California. The Guardians defeated the Athletics 8-0. (Photo by Michael Zagaris/Oakland Athletics/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Guardians get to put Travis Bazzana on the same field as Nick Kurtz this weekend. The angst is sure to be real.
The Guardians are 16-16, 23rs in wRC+ at 93, 27th at baserunning at -2.2, 10th in defense at -1.1, 4th in starting pitcher ERA at 3.43 (3.97 FIP) and 20th in bullpen ERA 4.34 (4.08 FIP).
The A’s are 17-14, 20th in wRC+ at 96, 12th in baserunning at 0.5, 12th in defense at -1.4, 21st in starting pitcher ERA at 4.42 (5.00 FIP) and 15th in bullpen ERA 3.98 (4.43 FIP).
Matchups:
Game One: J.T. Ginn, RHP, 3.24 ERA vs. Joey Cantillo, LHP, 2.97 ERA
Game Two: Jacob Lopez, RHP, 5.84 ERA vs. Slade Cecconi, RHP, 6.23 ERA
Game Three: Aaron Civale, RHP, 3.23 ERA vs. Parker Messick, LHP, 1.73 ERA
Watch out for Shea Langeliers 165 wRC+, Nick Kurtz 135 wRC+, and Jeff McNeil 111 wRC+. Meanwhile, Daniel Schneemann 166 wRC+, Chase DeLauter 131 wRC+, Brayan Rocchio 119 wRC+, Angel Martinez 119 wRC+, Jose Ramirez 114 wRC+, David Fry 106 wRC+ and Rhys Hoskins 100 wRC+ lead the Guardians.
Yankees manager Aaron Boone provided a couple of injury updates prior to Friday night's game against the Orioles...
Dominguez in the clear
There had been some concern about Jasson Dominguez after he was forced to undergo additional testing following a hit-by-pitch on the elbow during Wednesday's series finale against the Rangers.
However, it appears that the young outfielder is officially in the clear.
Boone told reporters pregame Friday that Dominguez's CT scan came back clean, and the hope is that he'll be available off the bench for the series opener.
Dominguez was seen doing baseball activities before Boone spoke.
That's certainly encouraging news for the Yankees, as the 23-year-old was expected to take on a big role in his return to the big leagues with Giancarlo Stanton on the IL.
He had just one hit in nine at-bats prior to the injury departure.
Volpe not back yet
The Yankees will not have Anthony Volpe back for the weekend set with the O's.
There was a chance he'd be deemed ready to return, but instead, he'll continue on his rehab assignment with Double-A Somerset through the weekend.
Volpe's 20-day clock expires on Sunday, so the team will either have to activate him from the IL on Monday or option him back down to the minors.
The shortstop has now taken a total of 33 at-bats on his rehab assignment, and he's enjoyed a decent amount of success, hitting .303 with a homer and three RBI.
He's appeared in the field in all 10 games and has only committed one error.
Next steps for Cole and Rodon
Volpe isn't the only injured Yankee who will continue on his rehab assignment, as both Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodon are set to make another minor league appearance this week.
Both are set to take the mound Tuesday night in two different levels of the system.
The current plan is for Rodon to be with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, and there's a chance that this could be his final outing before rejoining the big league rotation.
The lefty threw 75 pitches across 5.1 strong innings on Thursday night.
Cole, on the other hand, remains a bit further away and he'll throw with Hudson Valley.
He allowed three runs on three hits, two of which were homers, while stretching out to 60 pitches during his third rehab appearance in the second game of Somerset's Wednesday doubleheader.
Sep 23, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Ryan Pepiot (44) throws to first for an out during the third inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images | Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images
The Tampa Bay Rays will be without right-handed pitcher Ryan Pepiot for the entire season.
The 28-year old opened the season on the Injured List after dealing with an issue that was later described as ‘right-hip inflammation.’ There was hope that with some rest that the issue would resolve itself. However, during a throwing session at Tropicana Field a few weeks ago, Kevin Cash said that Pepiot had a “bad day.”
Now, the official word is that Pepiot will have to undergo hip surgery in order to resolve the issue and will be out for the remainder of the 2026 season.
Pepiot originally came to the Rays as part of the return for Tyler Glasnow following the 2023 season. Pepiot would joint the Rays rotation for the 2024 campaign and over the past two years, he has proven himself as a dependable starting pitcher. Since joining the Rays, Pepiot has a 3.75 ERA | 4.18 FIP with a 25.4 K% & 8.9 BB% over 297.2 IP.