SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 1: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees takes the field at Oracle Park on June 1, 2024 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Andy Kuno/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images
After a long winter, the snow has at last thawed. Spring is here, and more importantly, so is baseball. Tonight, the Yankees and the Giants will kick off the 2026 regular season with an opening night prime-time matchup at Oracle Park in San Francisco.
Leading off is center fielder Trent Grisham, the Yankees entrusting last year’s breakout slugger with the job of setting the table for Aaron Judge, in his typical number-two slot. Cody Bellinger hits third and plays left, a spot he’ll be expected to hold down on most nights for the foreseeable future.
Ben Rice, who rakes, bats cleanup and starts at first, the 27-year-old one of the most exciting hitters in the lineup to watch this year as the Yankees hope he can fully break out after a couple seasons in which his batted-ball data outpaced his actual results. Giancarlo Stanton bats fifth, looking to pick up where left off in his sensational, abbreviated 2025 campaign. The lineup’s depth becomes apparent here, as Jazz Chisholm Jr., he who posted a 126 wRC+ last year and has 42 homers and 49 steals in just 176 games a Yankee, plays second and bats sixth.
That’s about as good a top-six as you’ll find in baseball, and though the bottom of third of this order drops off, the weaker bats towards the end are all accompanied by superlative gloves. José Caballero bats seventh and starts at short, Ryan McMahon slots in eighth at third base, and Austin Wells bats ninth and plays catcher. He’ll be behind the plate for Max Fried, who went 19-5 with a 2.86 ERA in a stellar debut season with New York.
I don’t know about you, but that looks like a strong lineup to me, one that should give Logan Webb and the Giants everything they can handle. First pitch is scheduled for 8:05 pm EST on Netflix. We’ll see you then.
Igor Shesterkin is no longer the young kid he once was when he joined the New York Rangers’ organization all of those years ago.
At 31 years old and a little bit over a year after signing an eight-year, $92 million contract extension to remain in New York, Shesterkin finds himself in a peculiar situation.
On Jan. 16, Rangers president and general manager Chris Drury issued a letter to fans outlining the team's plan to retool the roster, with their sights set on the future as opposed to the immediate present.
This sort of news certainly impacts Shesterkin, who is in the midst of his prime and now is forced to sit through a “retool” that does not have an exact timeline of how long it could last.
However, as one of the pillars of the franchise, Shesterkin knows he’ll have to step up and help guide the team over the course of this turbulent time.
“Yeah I think so,” Shesterkin said about whether he feels more responsibility to step up as a leader. “I need to show my best every day. I need to be better every day, and I need to be my best version if I want to be successful.”
What exactly is Shesterkin’s leadership approach?
“I don’t like to talk too much. I just try to show my game and try to help my teammates and help my teammates win,” Shesterkin said.
Shesterkin’s impressive play was a critical reason the Rangers were able to go 6-1-2 coming out of the Olympic break.
He’s elevated his game to the point where he’s able to keep the Rangers’ in games where they are getting heavily outshot, specifically in their 4-2 win over the Minnesota Wild on Mar. 14 when he made 46 saves despite the Blueshirts being outshot 48-18.
The superstar goaltender has taken notice regarding the emergence of the team’s younger players, specifically when it comes to Gabe Perreault and Noah Laba.
“They have showed pretty good hockey right now,” Shesterkin said of the Rangers’ younger players. “We're so happy to have them and we hope they will develop well and they will play way better every game.”
He may be a man of few words, but Shesterkin has shown a level of buy-in to being a part of the Rangers future, and a commitment to helping the team navigate through this retool.
Opening Day in the Majors brings a marquee matchup in San Francisco, but this one sets up as a difficult spot for the Giants against a pitcher they struggled to handle all last season.
With Max Fried on the mound and San Francisco’s well-documented issues against left-handed pitching, my Yankees vs. Giants predictions and MLB picks expect New York to create separation, making the runline a strong play for Wednesday, March 25.
Yankees vs Giants predictions
Yankees vs Giants best bet: Yankees -1.5 (+136)
The 2026 MLB season begins with two aces toeing the rubber, with Max Fried facing off against Logan Webb.
Fried is coming off a year where he owned a 3.38 xERA while the Giants had the third-worst wRC+ and were dead last in OPS against lefties, and didn’t do much to address that in the offseason.
I love backing slight road favorites on the runline at plus money, and the Yanks have plenty of value on Opening Day.
COVERS INTEL: Logan Webb was hit hard and often last season, ranking below the 39th percentile in both expected batting average and average exit velocity.
Yankees vs Giants same-game parlay (SGP)
Aaron Judge is coming off his third MVP season in the last four years, where he led the majors in batting average, slugging, and OPS while swatting 53 dingers and 114 RBIs.
Simply put, he’s one of the greatest hitters of all time and has a solid track record against Giants’ starter Logan Webb (more on that later).
Another guy with good numbers against Webb is third baseman Ryan McMahon from his time with the Colorado Rockies. McMahon has a career .310 expected batting average in 46 career plate appearances vs. Webb.
Yankees vs Giants SGP
Yankees -1.5
Aaron Judge Over 2.5 H/R/R
Ryan McMahon Over 1.5 H/R/R
Yankees vs Giants home run pick: Aaron Judge (+250)
All rise!
There’s no other place we should start the season with our home run bets than with the greatest home run hitter of this generation.
Judge has whacked 210 dingers over the last four seasons, including 53 last season.
So, of course, the three-time MVP has great numbers vs. Webb. He’s 3-for-7 with two homers in his career vs. Webb, who has been prone to giving up hard contact.
It would be cool to see Judge plunk one in McCovey Cove on Opening Day.
Yankees vs Giants odds
Moneyline: New York -124 | San Francisco +106
Run line: New York -1.5 (-136) | San Francisco +1.5 (-176)
Over/Under: Over 7.0 | Under 7.0
Yankees vs Giants trend
The Yankees hit the Team Total Over in 18 of their last 23 away games last season for +12.40 Units and a 46% ROI. Find more MLB betting trends for Yankees vs. Giants.
How to watch Yankees vs Giants and game info
Location
Oracle Park, San Francisco, CA
Date
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
First pitch
8:05 p.m. ET
TV
Netflix
Yankees starting pitcher
Max Fried (19-5, 2.86 ERA) *2025
Giants starting pitcher
Logan Webb (15-11, 3.22 ERA) *2025
Yankees vs Giants latest injuries
Yankees vs Giants weather
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
The Los Angeles Dodgers will raise their 2025 World Series championship banner Thursday at 8 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock and then welcome the Arizona Diamondbacks to Dodger Stadium for an 8:30 p.m. matchup.
Zac Gallen will take the mound for the Diamondbacks, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto will be starting for the Dodgers.
Los Angeles, which starts the season with two home series, held a 7-6 edge over Arizona in their 13 meetings last season.
See below for additional information on how to watch the Diamondbacks vs. Dodgers and a breakdown of the game. Also check out the schedule for the MLB on NBC and Peacock. There will be 27 prime-time MLB games featured across NBC, Peacock and NBCSN in 2026. NBC Sports will also stream one out-of-market game each day of the 2026 MLB season nationally on Peacock.
Who are the announcers for Diamondbacks-Dodgers Opening Day?
Jason Benetti will provide play-by-play alongside analysts Luis Gonzalez and Orel Hershiser. The pregame show will be hosted by Bob Costas with analyst and three-time Dodgers’ NL Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw.
Arizona Diamondbacks vs. Los Angeles Dodgers preview:
The Diamondbacks finished fourth in the NL West and missed the playoffs last year with an 80-82 record (losing their final five games). Since losing the 2023 World Series to the Texas Rangers in five games, Arizona has failed to return to the postseason and has the fifth-longest active division title drought (behind San Diego, Colorado, Miami and Pittsburgh).
Arionz enters its 10th season under manager Torey Lovullo (the third-longest tenured in Major League Baseball behind Tampa bay's Kevin Cash (12th season) and the Dodgers' Dave Roberts (11th season).
The Diamondbacks beefed up their starting lineup experience with third baseman Nolan Arenado (34, years old, in his 14th year) and first baseman/DH Carlos Santana (17th year at 39), who will play for his eighth team since 2022.
Arizona also will return its star trio of outfielder Corbin Carroll (the 2023 NL rookie of the year is coming off surgery for a broken bone in his right hand after a team-record 17 triples in 2025), second baseman/DH Ketel Marte (the 2024 NLCS MVP who is the dean of the Diamondbacks in his 10th seasno) and shortstop/third baseman Geraldo Perdomo (who set career highs with 20 homers, 100 RBI and 27 steals last year).
Feb 22, 2026; Salt River Pima-Maricopa, Arizona, USA; Arizona Arizona Diamondbacks third baseman Nolan Arenado (28) during the third inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images
Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images
After back-to-back World Series championships, the Dodgers might have their best team yet. Los Angeles is (of course) led by four-time MVP Shohei Ohtani (who is three short of tying Barry Bonds' record) and has won 12 of the past 14 NL West titles (a run interrupted by the Giants in 2021).
The team's estimated $543.7 million payroll again leads the league (and nearly triples the Diamondbacks' $190.1M), and the budget has grown with the addition of closer Edwin Diaz, who comes from the New York Mets after signing a three-year, $69 million deal. Right fielder Kyle Tucker was added from the Cubs on a four-year, $240M contract, which ranks second behind only Ohtani ($70M) for highest-average salary.
Diaz comes off an All-Star season with the third-best ERA (1.63) among relievers. Tucker has been an All-Star for four consecutive seasons and had 22 homers, 73 RBI and 25 steals in his only season with the Cubs.
Ohtani, who has more than 50 homers in each of the past two seasons, is expected to return as a starting pitcher this year for the first time in three years. He was back on the mound last June after undergoing elbow surgery in 2023 and had a 3.35 ERA last season (including the playoffs).
“On paper, it could be (the best team)," manager Dave Roberts said. " Looking at the guys in their prime, the experience, the talent, the starters, the pen, the depth of the young players … probably the best team we’ve had on paper.”
Sunday Night Baseball will make its debut March 29 with a matchup between two 2025 first-place teams, as the Mariners play host to the Guardians. The 18-game MLB Sunday Leadoff schedule will begin May 3, with the defending AL champion Toronto Blue Jays visiting the Twins in Minnesota. On Sunday, July 5, all 15 MLB games will be presented nationally across Peacock and NBC as part of a special all-day “Star-Spangled Sunday” showcase.
NBC Sports will also stream one out-of-market game each day of the 2026 MLB season nationally on Peacock. Telemundo Deportes will present all NBCUniversal-produced MLB games in Spanish, with Universo televising all games broadcast on NBC.
From an MLB Opening Day doubleheader on March 26 to the Wild Card round of the playoffs, NBC Sports’ 2026 schedule delivers wall-to-wall coverage.
D.J. Short
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If there’s been one certainty in Major League Baseball over the past decade, it’s the Dodgers winning the NL West.
They’ve been dominant, winning the division title in 12 of the past 13 seasons. Even though the Giants broke through in 2021, Los Angeles still won 106 games that year.
The scary part is that 2026 is shaping up to be the Dodgers’ most talented team on paper over the past decade, which leaves the rest of the NL West looking up and chasing them.
Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani smiles before being taken out of the game during the fifth inning of a preseason baseball game against the Los Angeles Angels, Tuesday, March 24, 2026, in Los Angeles. AP
The Padres and Giants both made fundamental changes by bringing in new managers: Craig Stammen for the Padres, Tony Vitello for the Giants. The Diamondbacks are three years removed from playing in the World Series. And the Rockies, well, they’re still the Rockies.
The California Post’s Jack Harris previews the National League West
1 – Los Angeles Dodgers
O/U wins: 102.5
Key player: Shohei Ohtani. The four-time MVP is entering perhaps his most highly anticipated season yet, returning to full-time two-way duties in pursuit of a third-consecutive World Series championship. Never before has Ohtani had to shoulder such a big load, on a team with such big expectations. But if he can handle the rigors of both hitting and pitching, it could super-charge the potential of their already loaded roster.
Player who’ll need to step up: The Dodgers signed Edwin Díaz to shore up their one big weakness from last year, hoping to avoid the late-game bullpen problems that plagued them for much of the 2025 season. Díaz was the best closer on the free-agent market, and gives the Dodgers their best closing option since the departure of Kenley Jansen. Now, he needs to live up to the billing, and maintain his All-Star form in L.A.
Los Angeles Dodgers’ Edwin Díaz throws during the fifth inning of a spring training baseball game against the Los Angeles Angels, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Los Angeles. AP
Name you’ll get to know: River Ryan. Technically, he already debuted in 2024, but now he’s returning from Tommy John surgery having gained 30 pounds and improved his six-pitch mix. He might not start the season in the majors, but the Dodgers always have pitching injuries during the course of the year. And when they do, there will be a lane for the right-hander to show off his post-rehab improvements, trying to become the next young pitcher to emerge from their farm system.
Biggest question mark: Will the pressure of a three-peat bid have any effect? The Dodgers have repeatedly downplayed that narrative this spring. Manager Dave Roberts went as far as saying the pressure on the team was more noticeable last year. Still, historic expectations can’t be completely blocked out, nor can the complaints about the Dodgers’ dominance and spending. Even for a veteran and battle-tested team, it could be an underrated challenge.
How it’ll go down: With 100-plus wins in the regular season, an extended postseason run … but, not another championship. The Dodgers might make winning look easy. But they’ve struggled for extended stretches each of the last two years and faced several elimination games en route to their back-to-back World Series. Eventually, the randomness of baseball catches up. There’s a reason three-peats are so rare.
Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani hits a double during the third inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Dodger Stadium. Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images
2 – San Diego Padres
O/U: 83.5
Key player: Fernando Tatis Jr. He is coming off his best season since returning from his PED suspension. He had an excellent showing for the Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic. And now, the Padres have to hope he elevates his game back to MVP-caliber levels. After all, San Diego was financially hamstrung this winter amid ownership uncertainty. They weren’t able to make many impact additions to the roster. But getting Tatis back to league-leading form would qualify as as big of an upgrade as anything.
Player who’ll need to step up: Michael King. The Padres’ pitching staff is rife with questions. And while Nick Pivetta was a nice story last year, it is King (fresh off his new $75 million, opt-out-rich contract) who will need to pitch like the team’s ace. The centerpiece of the Juan Soto trade, King flashed that form in his first season with the Padres (13-9, 2.95 ERA in 2024), before missing time last year with a shoulder injury. If he can get back to that, it would give the team a needed bedrock to build its rotation around.
San Diego Padres outfielder Fernando Tatis Jr. against the Los Angeles Dodgers during a spring training game at Peoria Sports Complex. Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Name you’ll get to know: Let’s cheat a little, and go with a name you’ll get to know all over again. San Diego native and fan favorite pitcher Joe Musgrove should be back at some point from a Tommy John surgery that sidelined him all of last year, and will be tasked with providing a boost in both production and morale. Unfortunately for him, he’s already slated to start the season on the IL. But if the Padres prove to be a contender this year, it’s likely he’ll be part of the mix.
Biggest question mark: Is their window still open? This may be more of an existential query, but it’s one the Padres will have to answer as this year goes on. Though they’ve been to the playoffs four out of the last six years, they’ve advanced to the NLCS just once. They still have big names on the roster, but haven’t put enough pieces together to make a serious title push. If they think a World Series is still possible, it could push them toward the kind of aggressive trade deadline that could help them more seriously chase one. If not, maybe this is the year they begin to reset.
How it’ll go down: If their superstars play up to expectations, and their pitching staff doesn’t completely unravel, the Padres should sneak into the playoffs again. But none of those are guarantees, and even if they do happen, any legitimate World Series aspirations are likely beyond their grasp.
Manny Machado of the San Diego Padres celebrates with Fernando Tatis Jr. after hitting a two-run home run that scored the pair during the third inning against the Detroit Tigers. Getty Images
3 – San Francisco Giants
O/U: 80.5
Key player: Rafael Devers. The Giants took a mighty gamble by trading for Devers and his monstrous contract last year. Now, they need him to be the impact player they thought they were getting. If Devers can return to the All-Star form he had with the Red Sox, it could make him the missing piece in an otherwise underwhelming Giants lineup. If not, concerns that his acquisition was a bust will continue to build.
Player who’ll need to step up: Willy Adames. The shortstop didn’t have a bad debut season with the Giants last year, hitting 30 home runs and driving in 87. But, he batted just .225, graded out below-average on defense, and didn’t exactly play up to the level of his $182 million contract. That’ll need to change this year. Because, like Devers, the Giants offense can ill-afford to have such a high-earner play like anything short of a star.
San Francisco Giants’ Rafael Devers strikes out against the Cincinnati Reds during the third inning of a spring training baseball game, Friday, March 13, 2026, in Scottsdale, Ariz. AP
Name you’ll get to know: Bryce Eldridge. The left-handed-hitting slugger has been knocking on the door of the big leagues for a while, making his debut in a 10-game cameo last year. Now, he is finally expected to break through more permanently at some point this year. Whatever pop he provides, the Giants will happily take.
Biggest question mark: Will the Tony Vitello experiment work? The Giants made waves by hiring Vitello from the University of Tennessee this offseason. He made history by being the first MLB manager to come directly from the college ranks. It’s a mighty gamble on the part of president of baseball operations Buster Posey. And if it doesn’t work, it risks wasting all the money the Giants have spent to bolster their roster.
How it’ll go down: The Giants could be a sneaky dark horse. There’s a world where Devers, Adames and Matt Chapman all shine. Where Logan Webb is a Cy Young candidate. Where role players like Luis Arraez, Harrison Bader and Jung Hoo Lee infuse excitement and production. Their bullpen is a big question, and their rotation depth is dicey. But a playoff appearance is far from impossible.
San Francisco Giants manager Tony Vitello against the Chicago White Sox during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
4 – Arizona Diamondbacks
O/U: 79.5
Key player: Ketel Marte. The longtime face of the franchise is back despite an offseason full of trade rumors, trying to put the clubhouse drama he was mired in last season behind him. It was only two years ago, after all, Marte was an MVP finalist in Arizona. And though he wasn’t quite as dynamic last year (especially given the amount of time he missed), he was still an All-Star and Silver Slugger. If the Dbacks are going to be a surprise contender this year, it will have to start with him.
Player who’ll need to step up: Zac Gallen. The right-hander’s first foray into free agency was a disappointment, having to settle for a one-year, $16.2 million re-signing in Arizona after a career-worst 4.83 ERA in 2025. Now, he is trying to rebuild his market, and anchor a Dbacks rotation that also returns Merrill Kelly. Pitching is the team’s biggest weakness, but a resurgent Gallen could help.
Name you’ll get to know: Jordan Lawlar. A former sixth overall draft pick who played sparingly in the majors the last few years, Lawlar is now shifting to the outfield, where the Dbacks hope the 23-year-old will find a more permanent home –– and more consistent at-bats. After an offseason of much turnover for the club, his performance will have big implications for the future.
Biggest question mark: Is the World Series magic still there? It’s easy to forget now, but the Dbacks were the last team to beat the Dodgers in a playoff series, upsetting them in the 2023 NLDS en route to their surprise World Series appearance. Three years later, the club has many of the same core stars, but hasn’t made a return trip to the playoffs. Time will tell if they conjure such an unexpected run again.
How it’ll go down: The lineup looks weaker than last year, with Eugenio Suarez and Josh Naylor replaced by Nolan Arenado and Carlos Santana. The pitching remains a question, especially after Gallen and Kelly. And despite having three players who could legitimately vie for an MVP (Marte, Corbin Carroll and Geraldo Perdomo), the Dbacks depth seems weak. In a perfect world, they have the pieces to be a potential playoff contender. More likely, they finish somewhere around 80 wins.
Ketel Marte makes a late throw on an infield single hit by Kansas City Royals’ Carter Jensen during the second inning of a spring training baseball game Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026, in Scottsdale, Ariz. AP
5 – Colorado Rockies
O/U: 54.5
Key player: Paul DePodesta. No, he’s not a player. But given the woeful recent state of the Rockies, their front office leader is more important than anyone on the current roster. Back in baseball after 10 years with in the NFL with the Cleveland Browns, DePodesta is taking on the toughest current job in the majors as Colorado’s president of baseball operations. It will not be a quick turnaround.
Player who’ll need to step up: Um … anybody? The Rockies are not worried about competing right now, instead evaluating their organization for pieces to build around in the future. Maybe that’ll be former first-round picks like Jordan Beck (an outfielder) or Chase Dollander (a pitcher). Or maybe third-year catcher Hunter Goodman will take another step toward star status. For now, any surprises will do, and plenty of young names should get opportunities.
Colorado Rockies’ Ezequiel Tovar works out during spring training baseball Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026, in Scottsdale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin) AP
Name you’ll get to know: Ezequiel Tovar. If there’s one bona fide impact big-leaguer in Colorado, this is it. At 24-years-old, he already has a Gold Glove award and a 45-double, 25-homer season. In this spring’s World Baseball Classic, he was a breakout star with champions Team Venezuela. If anyone pops from the Rockies this year, it’s likely to be him.
Biggest question mark: Can the Rockies figure out a way to improve their pitching? This is a question as old as the 33-year-old franchise itself, thanks to the extreme challenges of playing at mile-high altitude. Without better pitching, consistent winning seasons are likely to remain elusive. Any signs of progress would qualify as a success this year.
How it’ll go down: Likely with another 100-loss season, but maybe with some future pieces beginning to emerge, as well. The Rockies remain years away from anything close to contention. But if they can identify a couple building blocks, that’ll at least be a step in the right direction.
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SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 27: A general view of T-Mobile Park is seen during the game between the Athletics and the Seattle Mariners on Thursday, March 27, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Rod Mar/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The Seattle Mariners have announced their 2026 Opening Day roster, with a few surprises compared to the spring’s outset. The M’s have been fairly fortunate with their health through Spring Training, but will see expected starting SS J.P. Crawford and starting RHP Bryce Miller on the injured list to open the year. Both players are expected back early in April, but their absence has created openings for a few depth pieces. Additionally, UTIL Miles Mastrobuoni is out injured to start the year.
Catchers
Cal Raleigh, Mitch Garver
This cat has been liberated from bag-hood for a few days now, with Garver beating out Andrew Knizner and Jhonny Pareda for the backstop role. Designating Knizner for assignment would clear the space for Garver in a straight swap, allowing the M’s to run back their expected alignment with Pareda the next man up in Tacoma.
Infielders
INF Ryan Bliss, 1B Josh Naylor, INF Leo Rivas, INF Cole Young
A month and change ago, and likely more, the role for Ryan Bliss on this club seemed narrow as a needle’s eye. Either Arachne blessed him or Athena misplaced her vengeance on Mastrobuoni and Crawford, but a healthy spring allowed Bliss to outlast top prospect Colt Emerson and the rest of the M’s infield depth. Emerson’s omission was foretold in his optioning a few days ago, but a decent spring didn’t do enough to force Seattle’s hand. He’ll return to Triple-A Tacoma to add to pick up on the week of games he received there at the end of 2025. Young and Rivas will both receive time at shortstop until Crawford returns.
Utility Players
UTIL Brendan Donovan, OF/1B Luke Raley, UTIL(?) Rob Refsnyder
The M’s starting third baseman has the versatility to cover every spot on the diamond (shortstop being a stretch), and Donovan gets inclusion in this category accordingly. Raley’s return to health looks like a major boon for the M’s and he can handle every outfield spot acceptably, hopefully allowing more DH days for Arozarena alongside Refsnyder. The question mark adjacent Refsnyder’s name is that defensively, he’s a tricky fit on this roster. He’s played every infield spot save shortstop, but none since 2020 (and nowhere but first base since 2017). Corner outfield is where the 35 year old to be (on Opening Day itself!) fits best, but clearly the club sees him at least spelling Naylor occasionally. Instincts over years of threadbare M’s clubs have made this an anxiety point, but the truth is the M’s bench is quite potent – Refsnyder mostly just is here to hit and that’s acceptable due to the versatility of so many of his teammates!
Outfielders
OF Randy Arozarena, cOF Dominic Canzone, OF Victor Robles, OF Julio Rodríguez
No surprises here. This group is the best set of outfielders in Seattle since Ichiro and Mike Cameron roamed the grass.
Starting Pitchers
RHP Logan Gilbert, RHP George Kirby, RHP Bryan Woo, RHP Luis Castillo, RHP Emerson Hancock
Again, chalk. The pitchers are listed here in order of their starts, with Seattle hoping Miller’s return can come measured in weeks and not disrupt his buildup too dramatically.
Bullpen
RHP Eduard Bazardo, RHP Matt Brash, RHP Cooper Criswell, LHP José A. Ferrer, RHP Casey Legumina, RHP Andrés Muñoz, LHP Gabe Speier, RHP Carlos Vargas
Once more, as expected. Seattle has opted in favor of just two new faces to start the year in the pen, with Ferrer a foregone conclusion as the newest high-leverage arm. His acquisition in exchange for a package led by C Harry Ford placed the ground-baller in the back end of the pen this winter. Criswell is the other newcomer, bringing a starting and bullpen background to a long relief role for the M’s. While Vargas and Legumina didn’t shine consistently a season ago, both players lack minor league options, and would have required potentially permanent jettisoning. Given the lack of standout popups from this spring, possibly excepting optionable RHP Cole Wilcox, this group is likely to see stability in the Bazardo-Brash-Ferrer-Speier-Muñoz group and turnover elsewhere, at least until health has its say.
Los Angeles, CA - March 24:Dodgers player Tommy Edman wipes sweat from his brow as he rehabs from an ankle injury at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, CA on Tuesday, March 24, 2026.(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
This is your one-stop shop for every Dodgers stint on the injured list during the 2026 season. We’ll also include every time a player misses time on the paternity list, bereavement leave, or is on the family medical emergency list as well.
Basically any time a player misses time that requires a roster move, we’ll note it here.
Every injured-list stint is a transaction and will also be chronicled on our 40-man roster page. Both are essentially living documents that will be constantly updated throughout the season as these moves happen.
Injured-list stints for pitchers are a minimum of 15 days, and for position players it’s at least 10 days.
During spring training, the Dodgers placed both Evan Phillips and Kiké Hernández on the 60-day injured list, which opened up space on the 40-man roster for other moves. On opening day, six more Dodgers were placed on the injured list, including Blake Snell and Tommy Edman.
For more information on each specific injured list stint, click on the links on the dates in the list below this table.
Note: if you are on a mobile device, these tables will show up best in landscape mode.
Player
Pos.
Injury
Date on
Eligible to return
Comments
Tommy Edman
IF/OF
Right ankle surgery
Mar 25
Apr 1
maybe end of May
Blake Snell
SP
Shoulder fatigue
Mar 25
Apr 1
maybe end of May
Brock Stewart
RHP
Shoulder surgery
Mar 25
Apr 1
Landon Knack
RHP
Intercostal strain
Mar 25
Apr 1
Brusdar Graterol
RHP
Shoulder surgery
Mar 25
Apr 1
Gavin Stone
SP
Shoulder inflammation
Mar 25
Apr 1
Jake Cousins
RHP
Tommy John surgery
Mar 25
Apr 1
Expected back midseason
Bobby Miller
RHP
Shoulder soreness
Mar 24
May 24
Kiké Hernández
IF/OF
Left elbow surgery
Feb 21
May 24
Expected back midseason
Evan Phillips
RHP
Tommy John surgery
Feb 12
May 24
Expected back midseason
March 25: Blake Snell placed on 15-day injured list, Tommy Edman placed on 10-day injured list, Brock Stewart placed on 15-day injured list, Brusdar Graterol placed on 15-day injured list, Gavin Stone placed on 15-day injured list, Landon Knack placed on 15-day injured list, Jake Cousins placed on 15-day injured list
March 24: Bobby Miller placed on 60-day injured list
February 21: Kiké Hernández placed on 60-day injured list
February 12: Evan Phillips placed on 60-day injured list
Last October didn’t end with heartbreak for the Angels. It ended with a shrug — the kind that settles over a franchise when you have the longest playoff drought of any team in Major League Baseball at 11 years. A 72–90 record, another last-place finish in the AL West, and a fanbase currently stuck between loyalty and fatigue.
Former Angels’ catcher Kurt Suzuki was hired as the Angels sixth manager in the last nine years this winter, but the offseason brought controversy when Angels owner Arte Moreno recently claimed that “winning is not in their [fans’] top five” priorities. The comments brought backlash, and rightfully so. The foundation is cracked and the franchise could come tumbling down if a change of ownership doesn’t happen soon.
Former LA Angels’ catcher Kurt Suzuki was hired as the Angels sixth manager in the last nine years. Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Most important hitter
Zach Neto isn’t just the Angels’ best young player — he’s their litmus test for the future. The bat is real. The confidence is louder than the Big A on fireworks night. Neto has a chance to be an All-Star this season for the first time. If he does, the Angels rebuild accelerates. If he takes a step back, then the lineup sinks into mediocrity again. In order for the Angels to end the 11-year playoff drought, Neto has to be the guy opposing pitchers fear and game-plan for.
“I want him to be a leader and lead by example,” said Suzuki. “Anybody can be a cheerleader, but it’s how you handle yourself in good times and in bad times. I feel like that’s the next step for him.”
Zach Neto isn’t just the Angels’ best young player — he’s their litmus test for the future. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Most important pitcher
Grayson Rodriguez walks into Anaheim like a question wrapped inside a 98 mph fastball. You know what to expect from Yusei Kikuchi, José Soriano and Reid Detmers. They’re solid middle-of-the-rotation pitchers. But Rodriguez, acquired from the Orioles for Taylor Ward, is a reclamation project with ace-caliber stuff. If he puts it all together in 2026, everything changes for the Angels. If he doesn’t, it’s another down year for the Halos. The former 11th overall pick in the 2018 MLB Draft has been injured the past two seasons and now has an opportunity to resurrect his career.
“I think it would be great [if Grayson could return to form]. That’s everybody’s goal,” said Suzuki. “We would love for him to be like he was when he was pitching in Baltimore.”
Who will have a bigger year than expected
Jo Adell has lived on the edge of expectation for years, like a spark that never quite caught fire. This might finally be the season it burns. The tools have always screamed. The patience hasn’t always listened. But something feels different about this season. With everyday at-bats and less pressure to be “the guy,” Adell could erupt into a 25-homer, game-changing force. Not a superstar. Not yet. But a problem for pitchers. And for once, a solution for the Angels.
After injuries plagued his career each of the last five years, the Angels moved Mike Trout to right field in 2025. Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images
Who is most likely to disappoint
Mike Trout is still Mike Trout, but he’s no longer the transcendent player he once was. At 34 years old, the body has betrayed him in whispers. After injuries plagued his career each of the last five years, the Angels moved Trout to right field in 2025, and he played 130 games — the most he’s been available for since 2019. But now, Trout wants to move back to center field, and the Angels seem ready to do it. One misstep and he could miss over half the season again. Trout can still hit. He can still produce. But the days of carrying a franchise like Atlas are likely gone.
“I’ve seen enough of him the last 15 years playing against him in centerfield. I know he can do it,” Suzuki said of Trout playing centerfield again this season. “He’s in a good place mentally when he’s out there — and when you put confidence in a guy like Mike, he becomes dangerous.”
Key call up
Christian Moore isn’t knocking on the door — he’s rattling it. The No. 8 overall pick in 2024 has forced the Angels into uncomfortable conversations this spring. Do you hand second base to a veteran like Adam Frazier, or bet on upside? Moore’s versatility, even getting reps at third, screams modern baseball. If he doesn’t make the Opening Day roster, then it won’t be for long. It’s not if Moore arrives this season, it’s when. The Angels need an impact player. Moore could be that guy.
“He hasn’t had much time to develop,” Suzuki said of Moore. “He needs to get consistent reps at second base and a lower pressure environment will benefit him.”
Suzuki’s first real test will come in a lineup card. AP
Biggest managerial decision
Suzuki’s first real test won’t come in a press conference. It’ll come in a lineup card. Does he prioritize development or chase respectability? Does he play Frazier over Moore? Letting kids ride through struggles is an important part of being a manager, it’s just as important as instilling confidence in them. The Angels roster is at a philosophical fork in the road. It features young players that are ready to explode onto the scene and a bevy of veterans on short contracts. Suzuki can’t straddle both sides forever.
Don’t be surprised if…
Don’t be surprised if this team is actually watchable this season. Not great. Not dangerous. Not a playoff team. But alive in a way recent Angels teams haven’t been. There’s youth here. Energy. Players with something to prove instead of contracts to play through. Nights where Neto flashes brilliance. Where Adell electrifies. Where the bullpen, patched together as it is, actually holds leads. They won’t dominate the division. But they might finally feel like a team building toward something — instead of drifting away from everything.
“We have to control the controllables,” said Suzuki of his goals for this season. “Good preparation. Attention to detail. The other teams are good, too. If we control the stuff we can, we will put ourselves in the best position to be successful on a nightly basis.”
Sure to make fans grumble
Arte Moreno’s shadow still looms over every pitch, every roster decision, every empty October. Fans haven’t forgotten the 11-year playoff drought, and they won’t be soothed by talk of “affordability” over winning. This fanbase isn’t asking for luxury. They’re asking for direction. When lineup holes remain, when bullpen arms cycle like rental cars, when the fifth starter spot feels like a weekly audition — the grumbling will return. Not because fans expect perfection, but because they’re tired of permanent uncertainty and the buck stops at the top.
How their season will end
The Angels will flirt with progress the way the desert flirts with rain — close enough to feel it, never enough to matter. Just like they always do, they’ll win more games in the first half of the season than they will in the second half. Somewhere between 75 and 80 games when all is said and done. But unfortunately for fans in Anaheim, the 11-year playoff drought will continue into a 12th year. October will remain distant, like a memory from another lifetime. By season’s end, the Angels will finally know who belongs in their future. The problem? That future still won’t be here yet.
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Mar 27, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; A general view of Opening Day signage prior to a game between the Detroit Tigers and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images
The Dodgers on Wednesday finalized their opening day roster, setting the 13 pitchers, 12 position players and one unicorn for the start of the season.
It’s the first time on an opening day roster for Will Klein, and Edgardo Henriquez, and the second time for Justin Wrobleski, who was active for the first game last March in Tokyo, but did not pitch and was optioned before the second game overseas. All three pitched in the majors in each of the past two seasons, and that trio combined for 12 scoreless innings in the 2025 World Series.
Wrobleski will be in the bullpen for the opening series or two, but he’s basically part of a six-man starting rotation that won’t be as taxed due to four off days in the first three weeks of the season. The Dodgers bullpen though does have three traditional left-handed relievers in Tanner Scott, Alex Vesia, and Jack Dreyer.
It’s also the first opening day roster for switch-hitter Alex Freeland, who made his major league debut last July. Freeland will platoon at second base, beating out Hyeseong Kim, who was optioned to Triple-A Sunday.
“I think with Alex, with what he’s done in Triple-A already, he’s really played well. There’s nothing left for him to prove there,” manager Dave Roberts said Sunday. “For us to give him a little bit of runway to see what we’ve got in him, to give him an opportunity to play here for us against right-handed pitching, and just kind of see where it goes.”
Another first opening day roster for Dalton Rushing, who made his major league debut last May. At 25 years, 33 days old on Thursday, Rushing is the youngest Dodgers catcher on an opening day roster since Russell Martin in 2007.
LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 26: Jake Cousins #61 of the New York Yankees pitches during Game 2 of the 2024 World Series presented by Capital One between the New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on Saturday, October 26, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The Dodgers on Tuesday signed relief pitcher Jake Cousins to a major league contract. He was non-tendered by the New York Yankees in November.
Cousins did not pitch in the majors in 2025, and was limited to only two games in Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre before undergoing Tommy John surgery in June. Given that timing, it’s unlikely Cousins would be ready to pitch this season until after the All-Star break, at least.
The right-hander will earn $950,000 this season, per Fabian Ardaya at The Athletic, and can earn an extra $50,000 if he appears in five games this season.
In 2024 with the Yankees, Hudson had a 2.37 ERA and 3.52 xERA in 38 innings, with 53 strikeouts and 20 walks. He took the loss in Game 1 of the 2024 World Series at Dodger Stadium. Cousins did not allow Freddie Freeman’s walk-off grand slam, but did provide the tying and go-ahead runs to reach base ahead of the historic blast.
In parts of four seasons in the majors with the Milwaukee Brewers and Yankees, the 31-year-old Cousins has a 2.78 ERA in 88 games, with 125 strikeouts and 57 walks in 90 2/3 innings. He has three years, 91 days of service time and has one option year remaining, having used minor league options in 2022 and 2024.
To make room on the 40-man roster for Cousins, pitcher Bobby Miller was placed on the 60-day injured list with right shoulder soreness. Miller did not pitch in a game during spring training, sidelined for most of camp. By being placed on the 60-day injured list, Miller’s earliest eligible return date is May 24.
Los Angeles, CA - March 24:Dodgers player Tommy Edman runs sprints as he rehabs from an ankle injury at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, CA on Tuesday, March 24, 2026.(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES — In finalizing their 2026 opening day roster on Thursday, seven Dodgers were placed on the injured list, bringing the total to eight such players sidelined to begin the season.
Pitchers Blake Snell, Gavin Stone, Brusdar Graterol, Brock Stewart, Landon Knack, and Jake Cousins were all placed on the 15-day injured list. Infielder/outfielder Tommy Edman was placed on the 10-day injured list for position players.
They join reliever Evan Phillips and infielder/outfielder Kiké Hernández, who were placed on the 60-dayinjured list in February, and pitcher Bobby Miller, who was placed on the 60-day injured list on Tuesday.
Tommy Edman similarly had a light offseason after right ankle surgery in November, and did not play in any Cactus League games. After dealing with ankle issues in each of the last two seasons, Edman at Dodgers Fest on January 31 talked about his potential return.
“The timetable is more of as I progress, so it’s kind of hard to say when I’ll be able to hop back into a major league game again,” Edman said. “I want to make sure I’m a full go, and don’t have to worry about [the ankle] again the rest of the year.”
Both Snell and Edman participated in baseball activities at Dodger Stadium this week, but from the sound of things it sounds like they won’t be rushed back.
“Both are progressing. I still stand by the end of May. Tommy should really be an option, and with Blake, somewhere around that time,” manager Dave Roberts said Monday. “He’s going to need a rehab assignment. He’s thrown bullpens, which was good. The last one I saw a couple days ago, he was right around 90-91 (mph), so that was good. He looks good, says he’s healthy and feels good, no pain, so he’s on the come.”
Landon Knack made four starts this spring, and last pitched on March 13. He’s on the injured list with an intercostal strain, per Fabian Ardaya at The Athletic.
Bobby Miller was sidelined with shoulder soreness earlier this spring, and did not pitched in a game. He was placed on the 60-day injured list Tuesday with the signing of Jake Cousins.
Cousins had Tommy John surgery last June and won’t be back until after the All-Star break at the earliest.
SAN FRANCISCO — The Los Angeles Dodgers, the two-time World Series champions, the team that is drawing all of the hatred, the team responsible for calls for a salary cap, wishes everyone would stop and just look at the numbers.
Yes, they project to open the season with a $322.4 million payroll, based on the MLB Labor Relations Department's present-day salary calculations on 40-man rosters obtained this week by USA TODAY Sports.
But guess what?
Due to the Dodgers' heavy use of deferred contracts and signing bonuses, the team's 2026 payroll is dwarfed by the New York Mets, whose 40-man payroll is projected at $357.6 million (in MLB's calculated present-day value).
That's a team that didn’t even make the playoffs last year and last won a World Series in 1986.
The New York Yankees, who last won the World Series in 2009, are the third team that projects to open the season with a payroll exceeding $300 million.
Why, there are three teams this season who will open the season with payrolls within $50 million of the Dodgers: the Yankees ($301 million), Philadelphia Phillies ($283.6 million) and Toronto Blue Jays ($278.9 million).
A record 11 teams are projected to open the season with payrolls of at least $200 million, according to the labor relations salary figures submitted to teams.
The San Francisco Giants, who last reached the playoffs in 2021, are the only team among the top 11 payrolls who have failed to reach the postseason in the last two years.
On the flip side – to the frustrations of the big-market teams who provide revenue sharing every year – there are eight teams whose opening-day payrolls will be below $100 million. The Cleveland Guardians are the only sub-$100 million team that reached the postseason last year.
Here are the bottom 11 teams in projected 40-man payroll:
The only teams without a top-10 payroll who reached the postseason the past two years are the Brewers and the Guardians. And yet, the only teams with a top-10 payroll who have reached the postseason each of the past two seasons are the Dodgers, Yankees, Phillies, and Padres.
The team making the biggest payroll jump in payroll from a year ago are the Tigers, rising by more than $60 million and the Blue Jays, with about a $50 million increase. The Texas Rangers, who missed the playoffs last year, had the biggest decrease from $220.5 million to $183.5 million.
There are 76 players who will earn more than $20 million this year, led by New York Mets left fielder Juan Soto, whose salary is $61.875 million when calculated by MLB’s Labor Relations Department. The LRD numbers include the player’s actual salary plus his pro-rated signing bonus before any player or club options.
This is why Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker, who signed a four-year, $240 million contract this winter, has a $33 million salary, per MLB’s calculations this year, but skyrockets to $80.5 million in 2027. He has an opt-out after the 2027 season, and his salary is listed at $53.79 million each of the last two years, according to the LRD.
Tucker will earn a base salary of just $1 million this season, and will earn $32 million of his $64 million signing bonus. The contract jumps in 2027 since his base salary rises from $1 million to $45 million, with a $48.5 million present-day value of his contact.
The Dodgers still are responsible for a $57.121 million luxury tax hit each year for Tucker. His AAV is reduced because of the $30 million of deferrals in his contract, lowering the present-day value of his contract from $240 million to $228.485 million.
It’s similar to the calculations for Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani’s contract. He signed a 10-year, $700 million contract, but $680 million is deferred, lowering the AAV to $460 million. Ohtani’s salary this year is calculated at $28.206 million, according to the LRD.
The LRD numbers are not used for team’s luxury tax calculations. The Dodgers’ luxury-tax payment for Ohtani will be $46 million, and not $28.2 million, but still saves them $24 million a year because of his record deferrals. Luxury tax salaries are the total of a players’ salary (present-day value) divided by the number of guaranteed years.
The Dodgers and Yankees each have six players earning at least $20 million this year, while the Mets, Giants and Padres have five players apiece.
The Washington Nationals are the lone team with no player earning $10 million, topped by Trevor Williams’ $7 million salary. The St. Louis Cardinals and Tampa Bay Rays each have only one $10 million player.
MLB payrolls 2026
(Entering opening week – Includes 40-man rosters, non-roster players and cash transactions)
DUNEDIN, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 20: Spencer Miles #62 of the Toronto Blue Jays poses for a portrait during photo day at the Toronto Blue Jays Player Development Complex on February 20, 2026 in Dunedin, Florida. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Most of the league doesn’t play until tomorrow, and the Jays don’t open their season until Friday, but rosters still have to be finalized and so we’re getting some news this afternoon:
Ben Nicholson-Smith reports that Rule 5 pick Spencer Miles has made the roster. Miles looked pretty good this spring, but it’s still amazing to see a guy with 14.2 career minor league innings in the bigs. The team probably wanted to keep a long reliever with injuries forcing them to start the season with Eric Lauer in the rotation, but Miles is talented and has to stick or he offered back to the Giants. They chose upside over short term roster fit.
Shortstop Leo Jimenez has been designated for assignment. There’s a good chance that that marks the end of his time in the Blue Jays organization, as other teams will be interested in taking a look at his contact ability and up the middle defence. Jimenez signed out of Panama as a 16 year old back in July of 2017. He played most days down the stretch in 2024, posing league average offensive numbers with defence that graded out below average at shortstop but above at second. Injuries derailed his 2025 campaign, though, and he didn’t have a great spring while Josh Kasevich, his likely longer term successor in the backup shortstop role, raked.
With those moves, the Opening Day 26-man roster should just about be set:
Rotation: Dylan Cease, Kevin Gausman, Cody Ponce, Max Scherzer, Eric Lauer
Bullpen: Jeff Hoffman, Tyler Rogers, Louis Varland, Brendon Little (LHP), Mason Fluharty (LHP), Braydon Fisher, Spencer Miles, and one of Chase Lee or Tommy Nance
Catcher: Alejandro Kirk, Tyler Heinemann
Infield: Vladimir Guerrero jr. (1B), Ernie Clement (2B), Kazuma Okamoto (3B), Andres Gimenez (SS)
Outfield: Addison Barger (RF), Daulton Varsho (CF), Jesus Sanchez (LF)
Designated Hitter: George Springer
Bench: Myles Straw, Nathan Lukes, Davis Schneider
Have to say, while I hate to lose a talented young player like Jimenez, that’s a mighty fine looking roster to my eye. Let me know why I’m wrong in the comments.
Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns met with reporters on Wednesday on what he called one his favorite days of the year. With the 2026 Opening Day roster set, the Mets held a team workout at Citi Field as they welcome the Pittsburgh Pirates into town to get the season started on Thursday.
Stearns discussed how Carson Benge earned the starting right field job, what he expects form Sean Manaea this season, and was also asked again about potential extension talks with ace Freddy Peralta.
Here’s what Stearns had to say….
Benge’s strong spring showing
Before this year’s camp even began, Stearns said that Benge would have every opportunity to win a spot on the Opening Day roster, and that’s exactly what happened.
Benge impressed with a tremendous spring training, both on and off the field.
“He was himself, and he just demonstrated a level of consistency in everything he did, whether it was the work off the field, his attitude in the clubhouse, the quality of his at-bats,’ Stearns explained. “It was just a very steady, professional camp for a guy who was under a fair amount of pressure and whose name had been in the headlines for a while, and was clearly going to be a story coming into camp. He had to know that. He certainly did know that. And he was just very consistent and steady throughout.”
Manaea’s dip in velocity
One of the bigger storylines this spring was Manaea’s lower-than-expected fastball velocity. After missing time last year with an oblique injury and then loose bodies in his pitching elbow, the lefty did not have elbow surgery.
This spring, Manaea’s four-seam fastball velocity sat in the high 80s, though he did hit 92 mph in the intrasquad game on Monday, and Stearns doesn’t sound all that concerned.
“We’ll kind of see exactly how it looks early in the season, but we expect Sean to be a big part of this team,” he said. “We’re going to need Sean to be a big part of this team. He’s going to make starts for us. I would expect him to make a lot of starts for us.
“I think we saw some flashes of really good during spring, especially in the last couple of outings the secondary stuff played pretty well, the command of the secondary stuff was pretty sharp towards the end of spring. The velocity is down a little bit. We still actually saw some swing-and-miss on the fastball even with lower velocity, so I think as we get into April here and as the lights turn on and he’s playing in front of tens of thousands of fans in games that matter, I think we’ll see the velocity tick up a little bit, and I think he’s going to be good for us.”
No news on Peralta contract talks
Ever since Peralta was acquired from the Milwaukee Brewers in an offseason trade, a potential contract extension for the free-agent-to-be has been a hot topic.
But speaking ahead of Stearns on Wednesday, Peralta offered a “no comment” when asked about contract talks, and as one might expect, Stearns followed suit.
“I’m not going to comment on any sort of extension or contract talks,” he said.
Major League Baseball has made some serious changes to the sport in recent years. From the universal DH to replay challenges to pitch clocks, and 2026 will be no different. This year, the league is introducing the ABS (Automated Ball-Strike) system thereby giving more power to the players.
Umpires have previously worked with virtual impunity, only subject to criticism from people on social media detailing their mistakes when it came to ball and strike calls. For all of time, whatever they said, went. However, that will no longer be the case in 2026. The ABS challenge system will give players the opportunity to challenge an umpire's ball or strike call, and given how vastly different players perform in 0-1 vs. 1-0 counts, this could lead to some game-changing scenarios.
And with Opening Day just hours away, we are ever so close to seeing it play out. Here's everything to know about the new ABS challenge system.
What is ABS?
ABS is an automated system that uses 12 cameras to depict exactly where each pitch crosses home plate. It has been used in the minor leagues since 2021, debuting in the Arizona Fall League and Low-A Southeast League before slowly being implemented into more and more minor league stadiums. Though the first baseball organization to use the system was the independent Atlantic League back in 2019.
Teams were allowed to experiment with the system during spring training this year.
How does the challenge system work?
Each team is granted two challenge opportunities at the start of each game. Throughout the contest, only the pitcher, batter and catcher can challenge pitches and they must indicate that they are challenging a call immediately after the call is made by tapping their helmet/hat.
If the challenge is successful and the call is overturned, the team retains that challenge. If the challenge is unsuccessful, the team loses that challenge for the rest of the game.
If a game goes into extra innings and all challenges have been depleted, the team will be granted one additional challenge opportunity per extra inning played, meaning they will get one for the tenth, one for the eleventh, and so on.
How accurate is ABS?
Very.
Although not 100% accurate, the system is close, but requires exact inputs for each batter's height in order to properly create a strike zone. According to MLB.com, the strike zone sits at between 27% and 53.5% of a player's height, very precise dimensions. All MLB players were re-measured prior to spring training in order to get more updated height figures.