A Defense of the St. Louis Cardinals Victor Scott II

May 20, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Cardinals center fielder Victor Scott II (11) reacts after hitting a double against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the fifth inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

There are three players in this story. The first is Victor Scott. The second is the fanbase’s opinion of Victor Scott. And then there’s my opinion of Scott, inextricably linked to the fanbase’s opinion. There are certain players who come along where I react to the fanbase’s opinion of a player. If I feel the fanbase is particularly hard on a player for reasons that I may even understand, and I certainly do with Scott, then I tend to root for that player more than normal.

Scott is a weirder case than normal for me though. The first player this happened to was Lance Lynn, and I believe it was 2013 and it was definitely before advanced stats were widely accepted, because boy were his advanced stats good that year. But he had a 4.83 ERA in June, 4.84 ERA in July, and a 5.84 ERA in August and he became known for “Lynnings.” A blowout inning essentially. And I just remember digging my heels in and defending Lynn on Twitter, because most people seemed to want Joe Kelly in the rotation instead.

The next year, that player became Peter Bourjos, so I’m not going to pretend I have a 100 percent success rate with this. But my point is that entirely due to the fanbase at large jumping on a player I felt deserved their spot in the rotation, I became a huge Lance Lynn fan. I was never that big of a Joe Kelly fan because of this. So it can go both ways.

I share that backstory because I feel like my opinion on Victor Scott has changed based on how the fanbase is reacting to Victor Scott. In none of the players where this situation has happened has that player both simultaneously been both Lance Lynn and Joe Kelly at various stages of their Cardinal tenure. This is also a unique situation because the Lynn situation was exclusively limited to Twitter and people I interacted with in real life, not this site. This site did not need to be shown advanced stats.

But with Scott, I’m going to be honest. VEB comments are primarily what I’m reacting against, even though I do suspect the fanbase at large does tend to share the majority opinion here. How you guys feel about Scott has impacted how I feel about Scott.

It started back in 2023, when I ran my top 20 prospect series that you guys voted on and you guys neglected to put Scott on the top 20. I did my put Scott on my top 20, something I tried to remind people whenever I could because of what happened in the following year. This is what I wrote about Scott:

“I don’t know why this guy isn’t getting more love to be honest. He is (as far as we know) an elite runner and elite defender. The runner part is most likely true. He stole 13 bases to 3 caught stealing and hit 4 triples. At least in the sample shown in Low A, he has an incredible plate approach. He had 24 walks to 26 strikeouts in 142 PAs. The bat is the only question mark – probably the most important part admittedly, but still. As long as his plate approach doesn’t completely go to shit to compensate for hitting…. I don’t think he even needs to be that good of a hitter to look like an MLBer.”

And then the next year, he was voted as the #3 prospect in the system. And I did not really hide that I thought he was too high on that list. The dynamic had shifted. The fanbase was higher on Victor Scott than I was. And nothing had actually changed. Remove the first sentence and I could have written the exact same thing when putting him on my top 20 and it would have been just as true.

And this was more or less the situation for the next two years, when I felt the need to write an article saying that Victor Scott should not make the Opening Day roster in 2025. And then Victor Scott had a much better year than I expected and I think a worse year than the people who wanted him to make the Opening Day roster expected. And that is more or less where the situation is now. Yes, the slow start has exacerbated the concerns about Scott, but it felt like people were done with Scott after last year before this slow start ever happened.

First things first, in my defense of Scott, and I know some of you are going to say you can’t do this. I throw out 2024 completely. He had no business being in the major leagues and I fully believe his experience in the majors impacted his AAA performance. I also believe his AAA performance would look better if he finished the year in Memphis and not the majors. He got called back up to the majors in early August and finished the year with an 85 wRC+.

And fair enough if you think AAA should count. I’ll concede that. I absolutely do not think his MLB performance should not count though. I’ll give you a current day comparable situation. Imagine if the Cardinals called up Jurrangelo Cjintje right now to start in the major leagues. And they gave him 10 starts. And he didn’t show anything in those 10 starts to show he belonged. In 2028, when discussing Cjintje, we would pretend these starts didn’t exist, because we all knew he wasn’t ready. That’s why I think it’s disingenuous to use his career stats when saying why Victor Scott doesn’t belong. 2024 shouldn’t be included.

Because of finishing the year with an 85 wRC+ and because of a great spring training, fans were still high on Scott entering last year. As an aside, between Scott, Nelson Velasquez, and Jordan Walker (and Joshua Baez, I mean there’s so many examples) this year, please for the love of god ignore spring training results people! I know it’s still going to happen, but just remember those players when Rainiel Rodriguez hits 5 homers in spring next year.

Which brings us to this year. Scott has had a genuinely slow start and the things that are supposed to carry his game have not been there either. I can’t deny that. I don’t think those things will continue. I don’t think most people reading this do either to be honest. He has merely been a +2 OAA in CF, which says something about his standard that what would be a +6 in a season is considered a huge disappointment. And he hasn’t really been stealing bases either.

By the way, I want to address the fact that he didn’t attempt to steal Saturday in the 9th. It was the pitcher. Tony Santillan appears to be elite at preventing stolen bases. Most people don’t even try, like Scott. Since 2021, he has had 10 net bases prevented, and baserunners have attempted a steal just 0.4% of stolen base opportunities, which is the 26th best mark since he entered the league. Unless I’m reading this wrong, literally one baserunner has successfully stolen off him, and six baserunners have either been picked off or caught stealing.

Yes, stealing in that situation is great, but you just can’t get caught. That’s why getting caught stealing is a bigger penalty than stealing a base. If you as a baserunner can’t get a good read on the pitcher, you can’t steal. Santillan is apparently hard to read. I was actually really annoyed with the broadcast for mentioning that nobody has stolen a base off Santillan this year and then spent the rest of the inning confused he wasn’t stealing. Can you not read between the lines here? Some of the stolen base discussion, not specifically about Scott, annoys me because the pitcher is never really taken into account.

*This is a really fun stat, so I’ll share two Cardinals starters on opposite extremes. Pallante is AWFUL at holding runners on, with -16 net bases prevented, which ranks 478th out of 546 pitchers since 2021. Michael McGreevy however has been elite, with +6 net bases prevented and 0.2% attempted steals since he entered the league.

Sorry, went off on a tangent. There aren’t that many stats I can share to show that Scott still deserves chances, but there aren’t zero. Scott is exceptional about not chasing pitches out of the zone. He hasn’t walked that much this year, but I think he’ll walk more than he has. He’s walked just 6.8% of the time, but he walked 9.1% of the time last year and has a 8% projection. If he continues to not chase pitches, he’ll walk more.

It’s not super encouraging, but most of his x stats suggest he’s been unlucky. Not tremendously so, but when we’re talking about the difference between a 53 wRC+ and a 70 wRC+, that certainly changes your perception of a hitter. He’s got a .221 xBA when his current batting average is .197. He is 27th percentile in average exit velocity, which is a lot better than his results thus far.

I also think we should still believe his defense is elite. He is 98th percentile in sprint speed, so he certainly hasn’t lost a step. And despite the fact that he has a rep for having a weak arm…. he doesn’t. I guess he’s had some weak throws that are noticeable, but he straight up does not have a weak arm. His throws are thrown at an average speed of 87.4 mph, which is 75th percentile. He is not particularly good at using that arm strength to throw out runners, granted, although it hasn’t cost him this year. His extra bases prevented is 0, which is tied with Jordan Walker along with about 50 other outfielders.

All I’m saying is that giving a player like Victor Scott opportunities is exactly what this season is for. He’s 25-years-old, I do not understand giving up on the idea that he could be good enough to start in CF, especially when he did it last season. I know his hitting wasn’t impressive and 1.7 fWAR doesn’t pop off the page, but he did that in 463 PAs, not 600 PAs. That’s an average player.

Plus, he’s been so much better lately, I kind of feel like it’s gone unnoticed just because his stats were so awful in that first month, that it’ll be a while before his stats don’t look terrible. Obviously, I am arbitrarily choosing the best time period to make Scott’s stats look good, but in his last 49 PAs, Scott has a 94 wRC+. It came with a 20% k rate, .313 BABIP, and .116 ISO. It might be too little, too late given Lars Nootbaar is coming back soon, but I just have felt the same criticism despite better play.

At the very least, if all you take from this article is that Victor Scott is playing better lately, then it’ll have been worth it to write it for me. I think that deserves to be acknowledged.













Series Preview: Pirates will face off against Cubs for the first time at home this season

Apr 11, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates center fielder Oneil Cruz (15) slides into home plate to score against Chicago Cubs catcher Miguel Amaya (9) during the third inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images | Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images

The Pittsburgj Pirates are about to start another big divisional series when they face off against the Chicago Cubs. Pittsburgh is 2-1 this season against Chicago winning the first series. 

The first game against each other was on April 10 at Wrigley Field where the only scoring came from a two run home run by Bryan Reynolds. The Pirates then won the second game 4-3 in 11 innings which is just the third extra inning victory for Pittsburgh this season. The third game of the series ended with a Cubs walk off single hit by Carson Kelly.

The largest deficit in that series was just by 2 runs. That shows that these teams are very even and well matched. 

That was a big series for Brandon Lowe who had two home runs. It was also a solid series for Brayn Reynolds who had three RBIs. 

The Cubs are currently struggling after losing 2 out of three to their rivals the White Sox. They also got swept by the Milwaukee Brewers which at the moment puts them in second place in the NL Central.   

The Bucs historically have struggled against the Cubs. The Buccos went just 3-10 vs Chicago last season. In those 13 games in 2025 against Chicago the Pirates did not score more than four runs which they snapped this season after their 7-6 victory.    

This is going to be the first time this season that these two teams will meet at PNC park. In 2025 the pirates only won one game vs the Cubs at home. 

Carmen Mlodzinski, Braxton Ashcraft, Bubba Chandler and Paul Skenes are the set starters for the four game series. It is very important for the starting pitching to step up and produce. Ashcraft’s last performance where he threw 7 innings and had nine strikeouts and just 1 earned run is a very good sign for Pittsburgh. 

This is going to be a tough series because of the lack of success the Pirates have had throughout the years against the Cubs. It is important for the Buccos to at least take two out of three against what is arguably their biggest divisional rival. 

Tigers fell apart after Tarik Skubal injury but Detroit says 'season is not lost'

BALTIMORE – Summer in the D is glorious, as a winter’s worth of chill finally gives way to warm days, late sunsets and good times in the Motor City. And when the Detroit Tigers return home to Comerica Park on Tuesday, May 26, the temperature is forecast to hit 82 degrees, a perfect prelude to Michigan’s high season.

If only the Tigers could so easily flip the switch on what was supposed to be a similarly sublime season.

Instead, a series of calamitous events, paired with abominable play, has this anticipated juggernaut fighting for survival. The final season for two-time Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal before he hits free agency took a jarring turn when the lefty was shelved May 4 with bone chips in his elbow that required surgery.

What happened since has been more dispiriting.

The Tigers lost 16 of their next 18 games, tumbling into the American League Central cellar, creating the impression they collapsed in the wake of their ace’s ailment.

More accurately, a handful of ailments, along with a roster not constructed to withstand them, has had a cascading effect. Fifteen Tigers are on the injured list, most in the majors after reliever Brant Hurter landed there Sunday with lumbar spine inflammation.

And the setbacks seem to get more macabre.

Kenley Jansen has a 5.02 ERA in 17 appearances.

Sunday, the club lost for the 21st time in 28 road games when closer Kenley Jansen gave up a two-out, two-strike three-run ninth inning homer, his third walk-off blast yielded in this young season. The Tigers recovered to win the nightcap and gain a doubleheader split against the Baltimore Orioles, snapping an eight-game losing streak

And with that, they packed their bags and headed home, admittedly in an odd spot: Just as the city comes to life, the Tigers are forced to adopt an unexpected mantra.

Not dead yet. We swear.

“I want to keep encouraging these guys that No. 1, the season is not lost. The division has not been won,” manager A.J. Hinch insisted, on a day the Tigers fell 10 1/2 games behind the Cleveland Guardians. “The playoffs have not been named.

“All the goals you had as a team, eight weeks ago, are still available to you.”

It’s just awfully hard to see from here.

Detroit is 21-33, with only the Los Angeles Angels sporting an inferior record in the AL, and its 8-21 road record is the worst in the major leagues.

Center fielder Matt Vierling was a member of both the 2022 Phillies who started 21-29 and reached the World Series, and the ’24 Tigers who sold off parts at the trade deadline, were eight games under .500 on Aug. 10 yet rallied for a wild card and reached the AL Division Series.

While there’s no Knute Rockne speech to be given – the club’s performance after Skubal’s injury would’ve made such eyewash even sillier - Vierling says he’s made a point to pull teammates aside on the team bus, at dinner, in quiet moments in the clubhouse to keep the road ahead in sight.

Even if the current ride is bumpy.

“It’s difficult when you lose one guy, you lose two guys, you lose five or six,” says Vierling. “Kind of like a ‘Whoa, OK.’ The whole dynamic changes with everything. Unfortunately, that did happen to us.

“But that doesn’t have to define our season. It might define what’s going on right now, but we still got plenty of time left. Miss those guys a ton, and I know when they’re back, they’re really gonna help us.”

Yet the pain has yet to abate.

'It's been awful'

Gleyber Torres was an All-Star last year, and while his final numbers weren’t gaudy, his presence in the Tigers lineup balanced their offensive diet. He’d posted a .389 on-base percentage through 32 games this year when, two days before Skubal’s prognosis was revealed, he injured an oblique muscle.

He is nearing recovery, but the Tigers’ struggles without him has made it harder to watch.

“It’s been awful,” Torres said Sunday, now traveling with the team after getting treatment at the club’s Florida complex. “Being injured is no fun. At the beginning I thought it would be a short period. I feel frustration because I feel I can’t do anything for the team.

“When I was in Florida I see the game but I don’t be around the boys. Now I’m here and just feel whatever they feel right now.”

“It’s awful.”

Torres’ absence has been felt throughout the lineup. When he occupied the No. 2 spot on most nights, catcher Dillon Dingler typically batted fifth or sixth – and flourished, with a.257/.330/.495 line, an .850 OPS, six homers and 23 RBIs in 29 games.

In the 18 games since Torres’ injury? A .194/.279/.400 line, with four homers and eight RBIs.

“Even on his bad days, he’s going to find a way to get on base or get a hit. That’s very, very stable in the top third of the order,” says Hinch of Torres. “Everything changes when you lose someone of Gleyber’s presence. And we have to overcome it.

“We need somebody to get hot or get on base a little more to create good things in the absence of someone as talented as Gleyber.”

That won’t be Kerry Carpenter, sidelined with an AC sprain in his left shoulder, nor veteran Javy Báez, out indefinitely following a grim ankle injury.

Given all the absences, all too often it’s fallen to a dazzling rookie to lead them.

Kevin McGonigle: Indispensable rookie

Jumping Kevin McGonigle from Class AA all the way to Detroit wasn’t necessarily in the master plan. Yet the manner in which the 21-year-old handled himself in spring training – at the plate and in every facet that makes a big leaguer – left them little choice.

And he’s justified their decision almost every day.

McGonigle leads major league rookies – a fine class this season – in hits (55), doubles (12), batting average (.282) and OBP (.386) and is one of five major leaguers with more walks (31) than strikeouts (30).

Still, it has not been an entirely linear elevator to what should be an All-Star Game appearance.

McGonigle has just two extra-base hits in his past 106 plate appearances, his OPS dropping from .963 on April 25 to .796 through Sunday.

Still, his OBP has remained steady in that span – getting on base at a .356 clip even as his slugging has dissipated – and Hinch has admitted the club can’t afford to manage his workload in his first 162-game campaign.

On a largely veteran team, he’s been objectively its steadiest performer.

“His overall contribution demonstrates that he belongs,” says Hinch. “When players – especially hitters – get here, they want to feel that they belong. We want to look at how they respond. Same approach, same demeanor, same reaction to success and failure.

“How he’s overcome making mistakes, how he has drawn walks where normal, young hitters are going to be anxious and overswing, he’s demonstrated that he belongs as a big leaguer. He’s a mainstay in this lineup and sometimes you have to remind yourself, he’s 21 and didn’t play Triple-A.”

Especially in his ability to meet the moment. Some 250 family and friends made the roughly 90-minute drive from his hometown of Media, Pennsylvania to see him play at Camden Yards.

He led off the May 22 series opener and clubbed the first pitch for a home run.

“Advanced is one of the perfect words for it. Mature is another really good word for it. His personality – to be 21 and doing that is insane,” says Vierling. “His baseball sense and what he’s doing on the field is pretty incredible. Every single time he goes up there, I feel like he’s going to hit a ball hard, he’s going to walk, he’s going to work a long at-bat.

“I haven’t really seen much like him since I’ve been in the big leagues.”

McGonigle is 52 games into his career and clearly has a decent handle on the cat-and-mouse tango that goes on in the big leagues. The book is out on him, and he has not folded.

McGonigle ranks in the 97th percentile in both chase and whiff percentage, a startling level of discipline for such a young hitter. His compact 5-9, 187-pound frame should only add strength as he gets older.

Yet he’s more than holding his own already.

“To be able to compete at the highest level of the game is awesome,” McGonigle tells USA TODAY Sports. “I go out every day trying to stay consistent with mindset stuff and trying to help the team win.”

While he’s arguably been their most reliable player, McGonigle still leans significantly on veteran sounding boards. A big league indoctrination amid a season gone sideways is far from optimal.

The Tigers’ collective woes probably provided the more profound teaching moments.

“The biggest thing they help me with is tell me this is a game of failure. As a team you’re going to fail. As a player you’re going to fail,” says McGonigle. “But the way you stay in this game for a long time is how you respond to that.

“Everyone in here is ready to keep fighting, keep trying to win baseball games and I think we’re going to be in a good spot at the end of the year.”

Learning to take a punch

But at some point, they have to start winning.

Sunday, Baltimore’s Colton Cowser joined Atlanta’s Matt Olson and Cincinnati’s Nathaniel Lowe as lefty sluggers with walk-off homers against Jansen, who ranks third all-time with 483 saves. He was stewing after the Game 1 loss, saying he should’ve “died with my cutter” rather than throw a flaccid two-seam fastball that Cowser drove out to center.

It was the two walks that preceded Cowser’s blast that were less forgivable, the sort of carelessness the club cannot afford in these dire straits.

“We just gotta keep climbing that tall mountain,” says Jansen, “and get on top. It’s one pitch I wish I could’ve taken back.”

Another regret in a season full of them. Yet perhaps the injury report will be kinder soon.

Skubal, thanks to the innovative NanoScope procedure, is returning far sooner than anticipated. He’s thrown bullpen sessions and could possibly face hitters next week in Detroit; Justin Verlander, the 42-year-old future Hall of Famer, is in a similar spot in his lengthy return from left hip irritation.

And in Game 2 Sunday, right-hander Troy Melton made his season debut after suffering elbow inflammation during spring training, earning the win with 5 ⅔ effective innings. Dingler washed away the bad vibes with a first-inning two-run homer. McGonigle contributed a two-run, left-on-left single off a lefty.

“We talk about this game being full of adjustments. Here’s a 21-year-old showing you how to do it,” says Hinch of McGonigle. “He loves his at-bats. He’s locked in his at-bats. And we love it when he’s at bat, too.”

Yet the Tigers will need this summer to be far more than the continuing saga of the McGonigle Chronicles. The reinforcements will need time to ramp up, even as the club desperately needs wins.

The goal remains not to enjoy the summer warmth, but stick around for the weather to turn again, in autumn, for the third consecutive season.

“We had the biggest punch in the face a few hours before this game,” says Hinch after the club salvaged the back half of the doubleheader.

“Our guys just stashed it away and went right back into game mode.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tigers fell apart after Tarik Skubal injury. Lost season in Detroit?

MLB power rankings: Untouchable Guardians roar to top of AL Central

Cleveland is Guards Balling its way to the top of the American League.

The Cleveland Guardians are slowly taking command of the AL Central and quieting every foe in their path, most recently outpitching the Philadelphia Phillies in a tightly-contested three-game series in which their starting pitchers held Philly's sluggers to three runs in 18 ⅔ innings pitched.

The effort began with Gavin Williams' 11 strikeouts over eight scoreless innings Friday and finished with Patrick Messick's 5 ⅔ shutout innings Sunday as the Guardians won an entertaining series - and zoomed to No. 7 in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings.

After quieting Philadelphia, Guardians starters rank sixth in the majors with a 3.46 rotation ERA. Perhaps of greater import, they're second in innings pitched, their 307 IP trailing only Seattle. That will go a long way toward preserving a bullpen in which closer Cade Smith has nailed down 18 of 20 save chances.

Sprinkle in just a dash of timely offense, and Cleveland has won 11 of 13, establishing a 4 1/2 game lead over the Whtie Sox in the Central.

A look at our updated rankings:

May 18, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Cleveland Guardians third baseman Jose Ramirez (11) celebrates at second base after hitting a two-run double against the Detroit Tigers in the sixth inning at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images

1. Atlanta Braves (-)

  • Unstoppable for five weeks, Matt Olson in a .161/.224/.226 rut with one homer in 67 plate appearances.

2. Los Angeles Dodgers (-)

  • A 38-inning scoreless streak from the bullpen - all without Edwin Diaz.

3. Tampa Bay Rays (-)

  • A split in the Bronx is just fine.

4. New York Yankees (-)

  • Ending an 11-game homerless streak amid a 4-for-35 slide is so very Aaron Judge.

5. Milwaukee Brewers (+1)

  • The Miz leads the NL with 88 strikeouts.

6. San Diego Padres (+1)

  • They were 28th in homers last season, but can win with the longball this year.

7. Cleveland Guardians (+1)

  • Travis Bazzana surging in leadoff spot: .294, .824 OPS,

8. Chicago Cubs (-3)

  • Shota Imanaga didn't even wait until June to swoon, giving up 15 earned runs his past two starts.

9. St. Louis Cardinals (+2)

10. Pittsburgh Pirates (-1)

  • Prospect Esmerlyn Valdez hits first big league homer in third game.

11. Cincinnati Reds (-1)

  • Geno Suárez finally back after oblique forces him to miss 25 of first 50 games.

12. Arizona Diamondbacks (+3)

  • Corbin Carroll already has eight triples. That's crazy.

13. Athletics (-)

  • Nick Kurtz, Yolo County legend, surpasses Rickey Henderson, matches Jimmie Foxx with 47th consecutive game reaching base.

14. Philadelphia Phillies (-2)

  • Gamble $1.2 million in signing Korean right-hander Chan-min Park.

15. Toronto Blue Jays (-1)

  • Patrick Corbin beats Paul Skenes. Can't say they don't get any breaks.

16. Chicago White Sox (+2)

  • Davis Martin, 20-game winner? Might not be the unlikeliest thing about their season.

17. Texas Rangers (-1)

  • After eight solid starts, Jacob de Grom gives up 10 earned runs in his last two.

18. Seattle Mariners (+1)

  • In his seventh career game, Colt Emerson bangs out four hits.

19. Miami Marlins (+1)

  • Max Meyer lowers ERA to 2.52 with seven-inning gem against Mets.

20. Washington Nationals

  • Jacob Young's six home runs already doubled his previous career high.

21. Baltimore Orioles (+2)

  • Now 3-10 against AL East foes.

22. Minnesota Twins (+2)

  • Record first three-game sweep at Fenway Park since 1994.

23. Detroit Tigers (-6)

  • Kenley Jansen has 5.02 ERA after yielding third walk-off home run.

24. Kansas City Royals (+2)

  • Stephen Kolek tosses a shutout, may just establish himself in rotation.

25. New York Mets (-3)

26. San Francisco Giants (-1)

  • Rafael Devers pushes OPS to .700, a 100-point gain in three weeks.

27. Boston Red Sox (-)

  • Sour Caroline? Now 8-17 at Fenway Park.

28. Houston Astros (-)

  • Two things can be true: They are 23-31, and also four games out of first in the AL West.

29. Los Angeles Angels (-)

  • Sign Taijuan Walker to a minor league deal. Hey, the Phillies are payin'.

30. Colorado Rockies (-)

  • Jack O'Dowd, son of former GM Dan O'Dowd, hits two homers in high Class A debut..

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB power rankings: Guardians command AL Central standings

2026 Brewers Week in Review: Week 9

May 20, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; The Milwaukee Brewers celebrate their win against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images | David Banks-Imagn Images

Last Week’s Results

  • Monday: Brewers 9, Cubs 3
  • Tuesday: Brewers 5, Cubs 2
  • Wednesday: Brewers 5, Cubs 0
  • Thursday: Off Day
  • Friday: Brewers 5, Dodgers 1
  • Saturday: Dodgers 11, Brewers 3
  • Sunday: Dodgers 5, Brewers 1

Division Standings

  • Brewers 30-20
  • Cardinals 29-22 (1.5 GB)
  • Cubs 29-24 (2.5 GB)
  • Reds 27-25 (4 GB)
  • Pirates 27-26 (4.5 GB)

Last Week

  • Brewers: 4-2
  • Cardinals: 2-3
  • Cubs: 0-6
  • Reds: 3-2
  • Pirates: 3-3

Top Pitching Performance of the Week

As Jason said last week, this is becoming the “What impressive performance did Jacob Misiorowski pull off last week?” feature. He put together another great start, this time going six scoreless innings with eight strikeouts against the Cubs, allowing just three hits and a walk. He still hasn’t allowed a run since April 25, meaning it’s been a full month since an opponent has scored on him.

Misiorowski’s performance was perhaps not even the best of the week, though, as Kyle Harrison turned in seven scoreless frames against the Cubs, striking out 11 and allowing just two hits and a walk. Logan Henderson also went five scoreless with seven strikeouts, allowing two hits and three walks in a win over the Dodgers.

Top Hitting Performance of the Week

William Contreras had a big week offensively for the Brewers, putting up a team-high 10 hits, slashing .455/.478/.591 with a homer, three RBIs, five runs, and a steal. That included back-to-back three-hit games in wins over the Cubs and Dodgers on Wednesday and Friday, respectively.

Shoutout to Jake Bauers, whose on-base streak reached 22 games on Friday night before coming to an end on Saturday. That also pushed him to a 12-game hitting streak, a career-high mark in his seventh MLB season.

Injury Notes & Roster Moves

  • The Brewers had a fairly quiet week on the transaction front, as the only swap they made was recalling right-hander Carlos Rodriguez on Sunday morning, sending lefty Robert Gasser back to Triple-A Nashville in a corresponding move. Gasser made two starts in his latest big-league stint, spanning 8 1/3 innings with six earned runs and seven strikeouts against the Twins and Dodgers.
  • Right-hander Peter Strzelecki, who was selected on May 16 before being designated for assignment the next day, cleared waivers and was sent outright to Nashville. Instead of accepting the demotion, however, Strzelecki opted for free agency, signing with the Yankees on a minor league deal. He’s now with their Triple-A affiliate.
  • In the injury update category:
    • Right-hander Quinn Priester, who had already had a short rehab stint in late April/early May, is back on a rehab assignment. He gave up five runs in just three innings on May 21 with Nashville, as his fastball sat 92-93 mph, still slightly below the 93.5 mph average we saw a year ago. He’s currently listed as an early June return, meaning we can expect at least a couple more rehab outings.
    • Lefty Jared Koenig threw a live batting practice on May 20, and a decision on a potential rehab assignment is now pending.
    • Right-hander Brandon Woodruff simulated two innings in a 30-pitch bullpen on Monday before throwing 50 pitches in a live BP on Friday, hitting 94 mph on the radar gun.
    • Outfielder Brandon Lockridge got the stitches on his right knee out on Tuesday and is still slated for a mid- to late June return.
    • Left-hander Rob Zastryzny and outfielder Akil Baddoo are also on rehab assignments with Nashville.

On Deck

  • Monday: vs. Cardinals (1:10 p.m.)
  • Tuesday: vs. Cardinals (6:40 p.m.)
  • Wednesday: vs. Cardinals (12:40 p.m.)
  • Thursday: Off Day
  • Friday: @ Astros (7:10 p.m.)
  • Saturday: @ Astros (3:10 p.m.)
  • Sunday: @ Astros (1:10 p.m.)

Orioles news: Cowser plays hero, Rogers struggles again

May 24, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles outfielder Colton Cowser (17) jumps onto home plate after hitting a three-run home run in the ninth inning to lead Baltimore to a win over the Detroit Tigers at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images | Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images

Good morning, Camden Chatters.

If you’re an optimistic Orioles fan, you can find things to like about the Birds’ doubleheader split against the Tigers yesterday. They completed a series win over a struggling Detroit team, starting their 10-game homestand on the right foot. They got another quality start from Brandon Young, who’s stepping up his game in the absence of the Orioles’ many injured pitchers. And Colton Cowser delivered what might have been the Birds’ most exciting hit of the year, a dramatic, walkoff, three-run homer with two outs and an 0-2 count in the ninth that sealed a Game 1 victory.

If you’re a pessimistic Orioles fan, you might point out that the O’s were one strike away from getting swept in a doubleheader by a sorry Tigers team that had lost seven in a row. Or that the Birds’ offense was mostly missing in action besides Cowser’s dinger, managing only eight hits in the two games combined. Or that Trevor Rogers stumbled through another unacceptable outing, giving up four runs without getting out of the fifth inning in the Birds’ 4-1 loss in the nightcap.

Either way, you’re not wrong. You have to take the good with the bad with these 2026 Orioles. Every win keeps their hopes of relevance alive while every loss puts them closer to the point of no return. For every struggling Oriole who shows signs of improvement, like Cowser, there’s another who just continues to spiral, like Rogers. It’s been an emotionally draining season and we’re only just reaching the one-third mark today.

The Orioles could hardly have afforded to lose a series to a team as bad as the Tigers, so at least they avoided such ignominy. It doesn’t give me any real confidence, though, that they’ll be able to do the same against the Rays, their next visitor at Camden Yards. The Rays, the best team in baseball, schooled the Birds with a three-game sweep last week in Tampa. If they were to do the same this week, the O’s would fall to a season-worst 10 games under .500.

The Orioles will need to shake off last night’s loss and play their best baseball against a stellar opponent for the next three days. Are they up to the challenge? I have no idea.

Links

Orioles’ Colton Cowser hits walk-off home run in Game 1 as Orioles split with Tigers – The Baltimore Banner

For a better team, a thrilling walkoff like yesterday’s could have been the start of a winning streak. Instead, well…you know.

Orioles settle for doubleheader split with 4-1 loss in Game 2 (updated) – School of Roch

Trevor Rogers almost looked like his 2025 self last night when he retired 10 batters in a row. And then it all fell apart again. What a bummer of a season he’s having, to put it mildly.

Will Orioles continue with Mike Elias? | MAILBAG – BaltimoreBaseball.com

Not forever, no. But if you’re asking how soon they’ll part ways with him, that’s something that only O’s ownership knows.

Orioles birthdays and history

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! May 25 has been a popular day for Orioles birthdays; seven former Birds were born on this day. The most prominent is shortstop Miguel Tejada (52), who had four great years with the O’s from 2004-07 (and one less-than-great return in 2010) and set a franchise record with 150 RBIs in 2004. Statistics-wise, Tejada probably deserves to be in the Orioles Hall of Fame, but his links to performance-enhancing drugs at various points of his career eliminate that possibility.

Other former Orioles born on this date are 2025 two-game righty Carson Ragsdale (28), catchers Fernando Lunar (49) and Melvin Rosario (53), right-hander Bill Dillman (81), and the late outfielder Andrés Mora (b. 1955, d. 2015) and first baseman Jim Marshall (b. 1931, d. 2025).

On this date in 2003, O’s reliever Buddy Groom set an obscure record. He pitched in his 638th major league game, in none of which he got a plate appearance (since he was a relief pitcher for mostly AL teams in the non-interleague era). That broke the MLB record set by Red Sox reliever Bob Stanley. Groom went on to pitch 786 games in his major league career, and no, he never did step foot in a batter’s box. They should’ve let him take an at-bat in his final MLB game, just for kicks.

Random Orioles game of the day

On May 25, 1999, the Orioles began a nine-game west coast road trip with a 4-1 loss to the Anaheim Angels. The O’s jumped out to a quick lead, scoring a first-inning run on B.J. Surhoff’s sac fly, but they were held scoreless for the rest of the game. Angels starter Omar Olivares worked eight strong innings and Troy Percival nailed down the save in the ninth. The Birds’ Scott Erickson went 7.1 innings but was tagged for three homers, including two by Garret Anderson. The loss dropped the Orioles to 16-28, the worst record in the American League.

Chicago Cubs history unpacked — May 25

Free of charge for the discerning reader.

Happy birthday to Neil Ramirez, and a mighty host of others.

Today in baseball history, in 2002 – With four homers on May 23rd, one on May 24th, and two more today, Shawn Green becomes the first major leaguer to hit seven round-trippers in three games. The Dodgers outfielder’s nine big flies in a week also breaks a National League record, established by Ralph Kiner with eight and tied by Ted Kluszewski and Nate Colbert. In this game, Diamondbacks southpaw Randy Johnson passes Walter Johnson to become seventh on the all-time career strikeout list with his 3,509th. After fanning Green in the 1st to catch the “Big Train”, Dodgers outfielder Brian Jordan swings and misses a 2-2 pitch in the 2nd inning to become the “Big Unit’s” historic victim — and other stories as well.

Today in baseball history:

Cubs Birthdays:Neil Ramírez*, Brad Snyder, Scott Hairston, Randall Simon, Todd Walker, Angel Echevarria, Jim Marshall, Bob Wicker. Also notable: Martín Dihigo HOF.

Today in history:

  • 1721 – John Copson becomes America’s 1st insurance agent.
  • 1787 – Constitutional convention opens at Philadelphia, George Washington presiding.
  • 1842 – Christian Doppler presents his idea, now known as the Doppler Effect (through the changing colors of binary stars), to the Royal Bohemian Society, Prague.
  • 1927 – Henry Ford announces that he is ending production of the Model T Ford.
  • 1935 – Legendary American athlete Jesse Owens equals or breaks four world records in 45 minutes at a Big Ten meet at Ferry Field in Ann Arbor, Michigan; remembered as “the greatest 45 minutes ever in sport”.
  • 1965 – Muhammad Ali KOs Sonny Liston at 2:12 of round 1 at Central Maine Civic Center, Lewiston to retain his WBC/WBA heavyweight boxing title.
  • 2013 – Yuichiro Miura of Japan becomes the oldest person to climb Mount Everest at 80.

Today in Music History:

  • 1962 – Wand Records releases The Isley Brothers’ cover single “Twist & Shout”; it becomes their first top-20 hit, peaking at #1.
  • 1965 – Dave Davies of The Kinks knocked unconscious in an on stage scuffle with drummer Mick Avory at Cardiff’s Capital Theatre.
  • 1967 – John Lennon takes delivery of his psychedelically painted Rolls Royce.
  • 1968 – Rolling Stones release song “Jumping Jack Flash”.
  • 1973George Harrison releases single “Give Me Love” in UK
  • 1979 – RCA releases David Bowie‘s 13th studio album, “Lodger”; his third collaboration with Brian Eno in what becomes known as his ‘Berlin trilogy’ features contributions from guitarist Adrian Belew.

*pictured

Yankees prospects: George Lombard Jr. helps key Scranton comeback win

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:W, 5-4 at Lehigh Valley IronPigs

SS George Lombard Jr. 1-3, BB, 3 RBI, K, SF — two-run single put Scranton on the board, tied the game with a sac fly in the fifth, and scored go-ahead run in the ninth after a walk
RF Yanquiel Fernández 1-5, 2B, 2 RBI, 2 K — with Scranton down to last out, doubled to score two runs and put RailRiders in front
2B Oswaldo Cabrera 1-5, K, SB, fielding error
1B Seth Brown 0-3, BB, 2 K
3B Tyler Hardman 0-3, BB, 2 K, fielding error — E5 allowed first IronPig run to score as Lehigh Valley went ahead 3-0
DH Ernesto Martinez Jr. 0-3, BB, K
C Payton Henry 1-4
CF Duke Ellis 1-4, K — nice diving catch in center to end it
LF Kenedy Corona 2-3, sac bunt, outfield assist

Brendan Beck 6.1 IP, 3 H, 3 R (2 ER), 4 BB, 3 K, WP — not dominant, but hung in there into the seventh
Kervin Castro 1 IP, 2 H, 1 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 0 K — gave up go-ahead double to Felix Reyes in the eighth
Bradley Hanner 1.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K (win) — down to a 1.54 ERA in 17 games (23.1 innings)

Double-A Somerset Patriots:W, 5-2 at Chesapeake Baysox

DH Jace Avina 2-5, 2 RBI, K — two-run single in the second put Patriots on the board first
RF Garrett Martin 1-5, HR, 3 RBI, K — 15th dinger of the season doubled Somerset’s lead in the fifth, new career-high
CF DJ Gladney 0-3, 2 BB, 2 K, 3 SB — they stopped him at the plate, but not on the bases
3B Coby Morales 0-5, 2 K
LF Jackson Castillo 1-4, K
C Manuel Palencia 2-5
1B Abrahan Gutierrez 2-4, K
SS Owen Cobb 1-4, 2 K
2B Santiago Gomez 2-3, 2B, BB, K — registered first career hit(s) above A-ball

Chase Chaney 6 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K (win) — smooth start
Kelly Austin 2 IP, 2 H, 2 R (2 ER), 0 BB, 2 K, HR
Michael Arias 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 0 K (save)

High-A Hudson Valley Renegades:W, 4-0 (7) at Brooklyn Cyclones — blanked in rain-shortened, three-hit shutout

SS Kaeden Kent 1-3, 2 K, SB
RF Wilson Rodriguez 0-3
C Eric Genther 1-2, 2B, BB — allowed 10 stolen bases from the Cyclones, tough day behind the plate
1B Kyle West 0-3, 2 K, throwing error
3B Enmanuel Tejeda 0-3, 2 K
2B Roderick Arias 0-2, BB, K, CS
DH Josue Gonzalez 0-1, 2 BB
LF Josh Moylan 0-3, 2 K
CF Camden Troyer 1-3, K, SB

Franyer Herrera 4 IP, 3 H, 3 R (2 ER), 4 BB, 7 K, WP
Brady Kirtner 1 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 0 K
Aaron Nixon 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 1 K
Thomas Balboni Jr. 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K
Jack Sokol 0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 0 K, HBP — game was called with two outs in the bottom of the seventh after Sokol hit a batter

Low-A Tampa Tarpons:W, 8-4 vs. Clearwater Threshers

SS Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek 1-4, K, HBP, picked off — not a good day on the bases for Tampa
3B Hans Montero 2-3, 3B, BB, 2 RBI, K, SF — didn’t go deep after three-homer day, but did go 391 feet on his RBI triple; up to a .948 OPS
DH Luis Puello 2-5, RBI, K, GIDP, CS
LF Willy Montero 1-3, K
PH-CF Luis Durango 0-1
RF JoJo Jackson 1-2, 2 BB, RBI, GIDP, CS, fielding error
C Engelth Urena 1-1, 2B, 3 BB, RBI, dropped ball error
CF-LF Gabriel Lara 0-4, SB
1B John Cristino 1-3, BB, K
2B Luis Escudero 2-4, HR, 2 RBI, 2 K, fielding error — first career homer in A-ball made it 6-0 in the sixth

Tyler Boudreau 5.1 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 5 K (win) — 11 swings and misses, including six on pretty solid outing
Brennan Stuprich 3.1 IP, 5 H, 4 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 2 K — kinda fell apart in the ninth
Jose Ledesma 0.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 0 K

Florida Complex League Yankees: Offday

Mets Daily Prospect Report, 5/25/26: A deluge of wins!

PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - MARCH 19, 2026: Jack Wenninger #92 of the New York Mets throws a pitch during the first inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Clover Park on March 19, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (27-23)

GAME ONE

BUFFALO 6, SYRACUSE 4 / 7 (BOX)

Jack Wenninger allowed four runs over five-plus innings, matching the total he had for the entire month of April and more than he had in the entire month of May coming into this contest. The offense kept the team in the game, with Ryan Clifford adding another double and home run to his total for the season, but the team had trouble getting men in scoring position and driving them home.

·  2B Christian Arroyo: 1-4

·  LF-1B Jared Young: 1-4, RBI

·  3B Andy Ibáñez: 0-3

·  1B-LF Ryan Clifford: 2-3, 2 R, 2B, HR (9), RBI

·  DH Eric Wagaman: 0-2, R, BB

·  RF Ji Hwan Bae: 1-2, HBP

·  CF Cristian Pache: 0-2, RBI

·  SS Jackson Cluff: 0-3, 2 K

·  C Kevin Parada: 1-3, R, K

·  RHP Jack Wenninger: 5.1 IP, 5 H, 6 R, 4 ER, 2 BB, 5 K, E (1), L (3-2)

·  RHP Dylan Ross: 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K

·  REHAB ALERT LHP A.J. Minter: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

GAME TWO

SYRACUSE 1, BUFFALO 0 / 7 (BOX)

The one run that Syracuse scored in the fourth was all that was needed to win this one. Joe Geber and the bullpen combined to shut the Herd out, scattering a pair of hits and three walks over seven innings. The lone run of the game came in the bottom of the fourth when Ryan Clifford hit his tenth homer of the year, and technically second on the afternoon.

·  CF Ji Hwan Bae: 0-3, K

·  DH Christian Arroyo: 0-3

·  RF Ryan Clifford: 1-3, R, HR (10), RBI, 2 K

·  3B Andy Ibáñez: 0-2, K

·  1B Eric Wagaman: 1-2, 2B, K

·  C Ben Rortvedt: 0-2

·  2B Yonny Hernández: 1-2

·  SS Jackson Cluff: 0-2, K

·  LF Matt Rudick: 0-2, K

·  RHP Joey Gerber: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

·  RHP Danis Correa: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, W (2-0)

·  RHP Ryan Lambert: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, BLK, H (6)

·  LHP Nate Lavender: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K, H (1)

·  LHP Anderson Severino: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, S (5)

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (16-29)

BINGHAMTON 2, RICHMOND 1 (BOX)

Bryce Conley and Joe Whitman traded zero after zero, both pitchers throwing scoreless inning after scoreless inning. Conley ended up throwing 5.0 scoreless innings, scattering 4 hits while walking 1 and striking out 4 while Whitman went 6.0 scoreless, allowing 2 hits, walking 2, and striking out 8. In the top of the seventh, Binghamton finally put something together. Jose Ramos led off the inning with a solo homer, and the blazing hot Nick Lorusso followed one batter later with a solo blast of his own. The Rumble Pony bullpen wasn’t able to keep the shutout going, as Dan Hammer put a baserunner on third that a Brian Metoyer wild pitch brought home, but they still got the job done.

·  SS Marco Vargas: 1-4, 2B, 3 K

·  C Chris Suero: 0-3, BB, 2 K

·  CF Eli Serrano III: 1-4, 2B

·  RF Jose Ramos: 2-3, R, HR (7), RBI, BB, K

·  DH D’Andre Smith: 0-4, K

·  3B Nick Lorusso: 1-4, R, HR (8), RBI, 2 K

·  1B JT Schwartz: 0-3

·  LF Vincent Perozo: 1-3, K

·  2B Jaylen Palmer: 0-3

·  2B Wyatt Young: 0-0

·  RHP Bryce Conley: 5.0 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 5 K

·  RHP Dan Hammer: 1.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, HBP, W (1-0)

·  RHP Brian Metoyer: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, WP, H (2)

·  LHP Felipe De La Cruz: 1.1 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, BLK, S (1)

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (13-31)

BROOKLYN 4, HUDSON VALLEY 0 / 7 (BOX)

A shutout is a shutout, even if it’s only seven innings. The Cyclones nickel-and-dimed the Renegades, logging three hits and drawing seven walks en route to a series split. Brady Miller started this one after the rain finally cleared after about 45 minutes after scheduled gametime, but only threw five pitches before being removed from the game due to some kind of injury; he showed no apparent pain or issues when warming-up or throwing those five pitches, but Eduardo Nunez saw something that concerned him and removed the right-hander from the game. Tanner Witt and the rest of the Brooklyn bullpen, rested thanks to Saturday’s cancelled game, ended up pitching seven scoreless innings, allowing just three hits and four walks, giving the offense more than enough support to get the win. And here’s something you don’t see everyday: stealing 4 bases is impressive enough, two separate players doing so? Most impressive.

·  SS Mitch Voit: 1-3, R, BB, 2 K, CS (2)

·  CF John Bay: 1-3, R, 2B, BB, K

·  LF Corey Collins: 0-3, BB, K

·  DH Daiverson Gutierrez: 0-2, BB, SB (2)

·  PH Diego Mosquera: 0-1, K

·  3B Yonatan Henriquez: 1-3, R, RBI, K, 4 SB (4, 5, 6, 7)

·  C Ronald Hernandez: 1-2, R, 2 BB, 4 SB (5, 6, 7, 8)

·  2B Colin Houck: 1-4, 3 K

·  RF JT Benson: 1-2, 2B, 2 RBI, BB, HBP

·  PR Sam Biller: 0-0

·  1B Trace Willhoite: 0-2, BB, K

·  RHP Brady Miller: 0.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K

·  RHP Tanner Witt: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K, W (2-0)

·  REHAB ALERT RHP Adbert Alzolay: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 0 K, H (2)

·  LHP Gregori Louis: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, H (1)

·  RHP Bryce Jenkins: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, H (3)

·  RHP Juan Arnaud: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K

·  RHP Hunter Hodges: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (20-25)

ST. LUCIE 5, PALM BEACH 4 (BOX)

St. Lucie held on and secured the win by the skin of their teeth, staving off a ninth inning rally. Antonio Jimenez, back from the developmental list, doubled in a run to put St. Lucie on the board in the third and the team scored two more in the fourth. The Cardinals chipped away, scoring a run apiece in the sixth and seventh, but both runs were negated in the bottom of the eighth, when St. Lucie put up a two spot. If they hadn’t, the Mets would’ve lost this one, as Joe Scarborough had problems in the top of the ninth. A single and a double between a flyout and a groundout put men on the corners, and then an overturned strike call led to a walk that loaded up the bases. Shortstop Ryan Weingartner hit a ball into left-center that luckily ended up turning into a ground rule double, scoring two runs but keeping the tying run on base. With a blown save staring him in the face,  Scarborough hunkered down and got third baseman Brayden Smith to weakly fly out to center to end the game.

·  SS Elian Peña: 1-3, R, BB, K

·  3B Antonio Jimenez: 1-4, 2B, RBI, K

·  1B Yohairo Cuevas: 1-4, R, 2B, 2 K

·  C Julio Zayas: 0-3, BB

·  DH Jeremy Rodriguez: 0-2, 2 R, 2 BB, 2 K

·  LF Branny De Oleo: 1-3, R, RBI, BB, K

·  2B Kevin Villavicencio: 1-3, RBI, BB, 2 K

·  CF Sam Robertson: 1-3, RBI, BB, K, CS (4)

·  RF Simon Juan: 0-4, RBI, 2 K

·  RHP Joel Lara: 2.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 3 K

· RHP Justin Armbruester: 1.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K, W (1-0)

·  RHP Emilio Obispo: 3.1 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 0 BB, 7 K, H (1)

·  RHP Christian Rodriguez: 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, H (2)

·  RHP Joe Scarborough: 1.0 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 0 K, S (2)

ROSTER ALERT: SS Antonio Jimenez assigned to St. Lucie Mets from Brooklyn Cyclones.

ROSTER ALERT: St. Lucie Mets placed LHP Conner Ware on the 7-day injured list.

ROSTER ALERT: St. Lucie Mers activated RHP Joel Lara from the 7-day injured list.

Rookie: FCL Mets (7-8)

NO GAME (SCHEDULE)

STAR OF THE NIGHT

Ryan Clifford

GOAT OF THE NIGHT

Jack Wenninger

Phillies news: Cristopher Sanchez, right handed bats, J.P. Crawford

May 24, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies right fielder Adolis García (53) reacts after striking out to end the eighth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

That’s a big side of offensive ineptitude the Phillies delivered this weekend. Now, luckily, they get to move out west and play two teams playing good baseball, including a juggernaut. Cool.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

MM 5.25: Maryland baseball alum Kyle McCoy tosses five scoreless innings in High-A debut

BLOOMINGTON, IN - APRIL 29: Maryland pitcher Kyle McCoy (22) fires the pitch to the plate during a college baseball game between the Maryland Terrapins and the Indiana Hoosiers on April 29, 2023 at Bart Kaufman Field, in Bloomington, IN. (Photo by Jeffrey Brown/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)(Photo by Jeffrey Brown/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The talent within Maryland baseball’s pitching staff has continued to blossom over the years. The Terps have had eight players selected in the last seven MLB Drafts — the most recent being Kyle McCoy in 2025.

Despite being an eighth-round pick, McCoy has shined in his first season of minor league baseball. The former third-team All-Big Ten honoree allowed just 10 runs across 23 innings pitched with the Daytona Tortugas, the Cincinnati Reds’ Single-A affiliate.

But McCoy saved his best outing for his High-A debut with the Dayton Dragons on Saturday. Maryland’s most prominent arm in recent memory tossed five scoreless innings and only gave up two hits to lead his team to victory. 

While McCoy still has a long way to go before making his MLB debut, the left-hander’s success thus far has been notable. His quick rise within the farm system, coupled with his college dominance — he had the Big Ten’s sixth-best ERA last season — highlights the potential that put him on professional scouts’ radars after just two years in College Park.

In other news

Maryland basketball’s incoming five-star recruit Baba Oladotun was selected as one of the 19 finalists for the USA men’s U18 national team.

Maryland men’s soccer head coach Sasho Cirovski was inducted into the Maryland soccer Hall of Fame.

Former Maryland baseball infielder Nick Lorusso has been on a tear with six home runs in the last 11 games for the Binghamton Rumble Ponies.

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 5/24/26

BRONX, NY - MAY 24: A general view of the New York Yankees scoreboard displaying a message for Memorial Day during a game between the Tampa Bay Rays and New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on May 24, 2026 in the Bronx, New York. (Photo by Andrew Mordzynski/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Good morning, everyone! If you’re from the United States, then today is Memorial Day. This is a particularly meaningful day on the calendar for many, a final tribute to members of the military who lost their lives in action. We hope that you’re fortunate enough to not have to work today on the federal holiday.

Today on the site, we have a reduced schedule aside from familiar Yankees gameday material. Estevão will preview the Yankees’ upcoming three-game series in Kansas City, Kevin will have the Rivalry Roundup, Jonathan will celebrate the birthday of a Yankee who isn’t even the most famous Yankee with that name (you’ll get what I mean when it goes live), and Madison will post the latest mailbag prompt.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Kansas Ciry Royals

Time: 3:40 p.m. EST

Video: ESPN

Venue: Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City, MO

Questions/Prompts:

1. Will Aaron Judge follow up his slump-busting, walk-off homer from yesterday with another bomb today to begin a hot streak? Or are you unsure about the matchup with Michael Wacha?

2. Do you have any plans for the day off today, if you’re not working? Cookouts, or something along those lines?

Yankees news: Aaron Judge lives up to Aaron Boone’s promise of a slump breakout

May 24, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) reacts after hitting a walk off two run home run against the Tampa Bay Rays during the ninth inning at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: John Jones-Imagn Images | John Jones-Imagn Images

New York Post | Dan Martin: Before Sunday’s victory, the Yankees were mired in a 4-10 slide that dropped them 5.5 games behind the Rays in the AL East. Despite this, the Yankees’ manager expressed optimism that Saturday’s rainout could be an inflection point. “I think it will serve us well,’’ said Aaron Boone of the postponement. “It’s been a crappy couple weeks for us, result-wise, but I feel like we’re in a good place team-wise. I feel we have a good run in us here.” In addition to a slumping offense, the team’s bullpen has blown some close games, losses that Boone called “tough” as they try to turn things around.

New York Daily News| Gary Phillips: As previously noted, the Yankees won Sunday’s game in dramatic fashion, with their slumping captain walking off the division-topping Rays. Aaron Judge entered play with just one hit in his last 24 at-bats but recorded two hits in the win, including a two-run homer off Kevin Kelly to send the rain-soaked faithful home happy. Boone had previously said to reporters during Judge’s slump: “He’ll get through it, and somebody will pay the price real soon.“

In case you were watching the YES Network broadcast, here’s the Dave Sims call on WFAN!

Judge wasn’t the only hero on this day. Ryan Weathers starred as well, holding Tampa Bay off the board through seven innings to keep the Yankees in the game and drop his ERA to 3.27 on the season. And in the eighth, a potential Rays rally was squelched by bad baserunning from Junior Caminero, who was thrown out on a heads-up play by Cody Bellinger. The left fielder himself credited third baseman Ryan McMahon, who immediately signaled for Bellinger to get the ball to him; McMahon applied the tag before Oliver Dunn crossed home plate.

Also from Phillips: the Yankees confirmed that ace Gerrit Cole’s second start of 2026 will come on Wednesday in Kansas City. Cole went six scoreless on Friday against the Rays in his first start since completing his Tommy John surgery rehab. MLB.com’s Bryan Hoch reported that Will Warren will start today and Cam Schlittler will get the ball tomorrow.

MLB.com | Tim Crowley: Yankees prospect Hans Montero had a night to remember Saturday, hitting three home runs for Low-A Tampa. The performance raised his season OPS to .923. The infielder, who received a $1.7 million signing bonus from the Yankees out of the Dominican Republic in 2021, is not among the team’s top 30 prospects per MLB Pipeline but is still just 22 years old.

Series Preview: Can the Giants turn the tables on the Dbacks?

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 21: Corbin Carroll #7 of the Arizona Diamondbacks celebrates after hitting a walk-off single during the ninth inning of the MLB game against the Colorado Rockies at Chase Field on May 21, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Diamondbacks won 2-1. (Photo by Jeremy Chen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Wait, didn’t I just do one of these? No, seriously. Literally a week ago I was in this space talking about how the Giants were going to see how they measured up against a non-Dodger, non-Padre NL West opponent and a team that had all the scrappiness they’ve craved. So… has anything changed since then?

Nope.

Well, except that Arizona embarrassed the Giants pretty thoroughly, dropping them to 20-30 on the season and compelling Bay Area media to ponder not just on the radio airwaves but in an interview with Buster Posey himself if the team was undergoing a “soft rebuild.” They looked so bad in getting swept by Arizona that people thought it must’ve been intentional.

It turns out that, no, the Giants aren’t doing a “soft rebuild,” they really are bad despite trying.

Oh sure, winning a series against a White Sox team on the upswing is good fun and Rafael Devers’ bat does seem to be swinging back to his career averages, but the hole is pretty deep, and that’s before considering how it’s been endemic within Giants fandom this season to extrapolate a season of success from a win or two. Now, before accusations of simply doing the exact opposite — extrapolating a season of misery from losing streaks — I must point out that the Giants have lost a lot more games than they’ve won and have spent most of this season looking more bad than good, including approximately 117 hours ago against this very team.

In the Giants’ favor is that Arizona did lose 1 of the 4 games they hosted against the Colorado Rockies, so, it’s not like the Giants were gobbled up by a team on a white-hot streak of success. The Dbacks outscored the Rockies 19-9 in those four games compared to 23-8 against the Giants in their three-game series, so, the Giants are kinda-sorta worse than the Rockies at this point.

On May 8, Arizona tied their season low of 3 games below .500 at 17-20 (they started the season 0-3). Since then, they’ve gone 11-4. Ketel Marte (202 wRC+) and Corbin Carroll (198) have led the charge on offense — they combined for 7-for-11 with 5 RBI in today’s 9-1 win over the Rockies, with Marte hitting a pair of doubles and Carroll a pair of triples. So, they’re rolling. The rotation has been strong, with Michael Soroka (1.50 ERA), Eduardo Rodriguez (1.74 ERA), and Merrill Kelly (2.05 ERA) making three strong starts apiece. But, they’ve also played 9 home games during this stretch and are 8-1.

Arizona’s road record on the season (10-14, -16 run differential) might just be how the Giants get some baseball revenge on the snakes. If the Giants keep hitting a little bit more like how they did in the latter two games of the White Sox series, they’ve got a solid shot of winning the series. Here’s a little secret: in the same “Since May 9th” split I used up above to contextualize Marte’s and Carroll’s hot streaks, five Giants have hit above league average (an important note that none of these figures incorporate the latest win):

  • Luis Arraez, 158 wRC+
  • Willy Adames, 145 wRC+
  • Casey Schmitt, 137 wRC+
  • Rafael Devers, 122 wRC+
  • Matt Chapman, 110 wRC+

And, as a team, they have a 113 wRC+ Hey! This is all great news! It certainly is the silver lining in what has been a very thick and steady coverage of storm clouds. The question is can the pitching keep pace? It’s Landen Roupp and a pair of TBDs against those three Arizona starters who’ve helped propel them back into the Wild Card chase. They have a 5.02 ERA over these last 15 (and are just 7-8).

Logan Webb is expected to make his return on Wednesday, but you have permission to wonder if Logan Webb is still LOGAN WEBB. Before he hit the IL, I looked at how a guy like him with so many innings on his arm might already have pitched his best games. Buster Posey and the Giants are certainly hoping that’s not the case, and whatever little success the team has this season will be because he’s making regular starts… but who knows? Arizona’s hot, Webb is not. But, it’s also baseball, and one game can turn around a lot of things. But can three games turn around everything?

Series overview

Who: San Francisco Giants (22-31) vs. Arizona Diamondbacks (28-24)
Where: Oracle Park | San Francisco, California
When: Monday at 2:05pm PT, Tuesday at 6:45pm PT, Wednesday at 12:45pm PT
National broadcasts: None.

Projected starters
Monday: Landen Roupp (RHP 5-4, 3.27 ERA) vs. Merill Kelly (RHP 4-3, 5.71 ERA)
Tuesday: TBD vs. Eduardo Rodriguez (LHP 4-1, 2.24 ERA)
Wednesday: TBD vs. Michael Soroka (RHP 6-2, 3.27 ERA)


Prediction time

The Giants will not get swept.

Marcus Semien’s prolonged slump continues as concerns mount for Mets

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Mets second baseman Marcus Semien (10) singles against the Washington Nationals during the ninth inning at Nationals Park

MIAMI — Marcus Semien’s season hasn’t had many highlights, and these days he stands among the symbols of the Mets lineup’s futility.

The veteran second baseman went 0-for-4 in the 4-0 loss to the Marlins on Sunday that completed Miami’s three-game sweep. Semien’s day was marked by the double play he grounded into in the sixth inning after Brett Baty drew a leadoff walk in a scoreless game.

Semien owns a paltry .552 OPS in May.

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He isn’t alone among the Mets who have underperformed, but the team at least received a semblance of life from Bo Bichette earlier this road trip when he delivered three homers over two games.

From Mark Vientos to Baty, right down the line, the Mets aren’t receiving production, other than Juan Soto’s hot bat. And Soto was scratched from Sunday’s lineup because of illness.

Semien, 35, arrived in the November trade that sent Brandon Nimmo to Texas.

The deal was orchestrated by president of baseball operations David Stearns largely to swap the five years and $102.5 million remaining on Nimmo’s contract for the three years and $72 million on Semien’s, but the Mets also expected some level of production from Semien.

They have not received it.

Mets second baseman Marcus Semien (10) singles against the Washington Nationals during the ninth inning at Nationals Park. Brad Mills-Imagn Images

“What I am feeling is that I am putting the ball in play, but I am not driving the ball,” Semien said. “I am just trying to do everything I can to be on time, to be ready for high velocity and handle the off-speed they throw.”

Semien overall owns a .214/.263/.297 slash line with three homers.

“It’s been hard for him, but this is a guy that continues to show up and put the work in, day in and day out,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “You hope at some point that he’s going to come out of it. He’s been in this league a long time and there is a reason why we want to continue to run him out there.”

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Mendoza was asked for his concern level that Semien, at 35, simply doesn’t have it any longer.

“I am not worried, because I am watching him grinding behind the scenes,” Mendoza said. “How much he cares and he’s been a really good player, so we trust him. We have got to continue to keep going and support him.”