Diamondbacks to buy at the deadline

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - APRIL 18: Arizona Diamondbacks general manager Mike Hazen looks on at Wrigley Field on April 18, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Geoff Stellfox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Diamondbacks News

(SI.com) Hopeful Diamondbacks Plan To Buy at Trade Deadline

It was hardly even a question, thrown in at the end of a radio interview, but Arizona Diamondbacks general manager Mike Hazen went out of his way to give a definitive, strong statement on his trade deadline plans.

“I’m planning on buying,” Hazen said, in the waning seconds of an interview with Arizona Sports 98.7’s Wolf & Luke show.

(Sporting News) Diamondbacks’ frontline starter is giving up hits at an alarming rate

He isn’t missing bats with the knuckle curve as he has in the past. And with this, Bleacher Report’s Kerry Miller tags him as the club’s most scrutinized player.

“A month ago, the choice would have been Ketel Marte. But while the three-time All-Star second baseman has turned things around in a big way, Gallen has gone from bad in 2025 to worse in 2026. He entered the year averaging 7.5 hits allowed and 9.5 strikeouts per nine innings pitched. The former rate has ballooned to 11.1 while the latter has plummeted to 5.9. His velocity has been fine, but the knuckle curve that used to be his go-to out pitch simply isn’t fooling anyone anymore.”

(SI.com) Diamondbacks Release Former Cardinals Infielder

According to the transaction log on his MLB player page, the Triple-A Reno Aces have officially released former St. Louis Cardinals first baseman and DH Luken Baker.

Baker, 29, has played in 76 major league games — 73 for the Cardinals in parts of three seasons from 2023-2025. He was signed to a minor league contract by the Diamondbacks in the offseason ahead of 2026, and made three major league appearances with Arizona.

MLB News

(MLBTR) MLB Proposes Significant Changes To Amateur Draft

Negotiations between Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association continue for the next collective bargaining agreement. Today, MLB proposed significant changes to the draft. J.J Cooper of Baseball America was among those to cover the developments.

The league’s proposed framework would be a significant drawdown of the way the draft has operated for years. High school players would no longer be eligible to be selected. In fact, anyone under 20 years old by September 1st of the draft year would not be eligible, so that would take many college and junior college players off the table as well.

(Orange County Register) Angels’ Mike Trout placed on IL with right hamstring strain

The Angels placed their 34-year-old center fielder on the 10-day injured list before Thursday’s game against the Athletics after he suffered a right hamstring injury while running to first base during his final at-bat in Wednesday afternoon’s loss in Arizona.

“It felt like a cramp and just didn’t get any better. Achy last night, so woke up this morning and got it looked at,” Trout said before the game.

(Yahoo! Sports) MLB Home Run Derby returning to swing-based system for first time since 2014

The 2026 MLB Home Run Derby is turning back the clock and saying goodbye to it simultaneously. MLB officially announced Thursday that the midsummer slugging competition is set to return to a swing-based system for the first time since 2014.

While timed rounds have been part of the past 11 iterations of the Derby, hitters’ bouts will again have no time limit.

Orioles-Dodgers series preview: Hollywood swinging

Los Angeles, CA - June 16, 2026: Los Angeles Dodgers two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17) hits a home run during the sixth inning of an MLB game against the Tampa Bay Rays at UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium on Tuesday, June 16, 2026 in Los Angeles, CA. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Baseball is the sport with the most parity on a night to night basis, particularly in the regular season. The worst team can beat the best team, and no one really bats an eye. That is part of what made the Orioles series with the Dodgers back in September so magical. The Orioles were in the midst of a disastrous season while the Dodgers were en route to yet another World Series. That didn’t really matter though as the O’s took two of three anyway, including a particularly exciting comeback from a near no-hitter for Yoshinobu Yamamoto to a walk-off winner for the Birds in Game 2 of that series.

There is a similar gulf between these two clubs entering this series. The Dodgers have a league-best +144 run differential; the Orioles are at -36. The Dodgers lead their division by nine games and are two games clear of the second-best team in the NL. The Orioles are 2.5 games back of the final wild card spot in the AL. Add in the O’s abysmal 13-22 record on the road or 15-24 record against teams .500 or better, and you can start to mentally write this series off entirely.

Looking at stats isn’t going to give you any more confidence. The Dodgers have scored the second-most runs (Nationals) in baseball and hit the second-most home runs (Yankees). They also rank first in batting average (.261) and on-base percentage (.345), while their .441 slugging percentage is second to just the Yankees.

Shoehei Ohtani is having himself another amazing year, though not quite as dominant offensively as we have grown accustomed to. His .545 slugging percentage is his lowest since 2022, and his 15 home runs have him well behind his normal pace of long balls. Even still, his 163 wRC+ is among the leage leaders yet again.

Max Muncy actually leads the team with 16 homers, and he has done that in 60 fewer plate appearances than Ohtani. Andy Pages’ 56 RBI are tops on the team, only one behind the league leaders. Freddie Freeman is still good too, posting a .279/.368/.482 batting line with 12 homers.

The negatives are pretty limited, but we should mention them. Mookie Betts is struggling, and not just in the context of a stacked Dodgers lineup. The former MVP is hitting just .203/.266/.367 with seven homers and a 75 wRC+. His peripheral numbers are much better though. His expected batting average is .277 and he rare chases, whiffs, or strikes out. The 33-year-old is due for some positive regression at some point. Hopefully it doesn’t start this weekend.

And you probably don’t need to worry about this Dodgers team beating you on the base paths. Their 31 stolen bases are the fourth-fewest in baseball, and their -2.4 Base Running Runs are in the bottom third of the league as well.

The two things you can depend on the Dodgers for in recent history are winning baseball games and a full injury report. That is the case yet again in 2026. We won’t see a number of key names this weekend. Will Smith has a stiff neck. Teoscar Hernández is nursing a hamstring strain. Edwin Díaz is out until next month with an elbow injury. And you won’t have to worry about Tyler Glasnow (back), Kiké Hernández (oblique), Blake Snell (elbow), or old friend Evan Phillips (Tommy John) for several more weeks, at least.

Game 1: Friday, June 19th, 10:10 p.m., MASN

RHP Trey Gibson (1-2, 5.91 ERA) vs. RHP Roki Sasaki (3-4, 4.76 ERA)

Gibson is having the rookie experience right now. His last outing against the Padres was his first with more than two strikeouts. It also saw him issue five walks and bean Xander Bogaerts in the head. There is work to be done, but the Orioles have no choice but to keep trotting him out there given the injures elsewhere on their starting staff.

It has been a rocky sophomore season for Sasaki. He had a 6.35 ERA in March/April, but settle down with a 3.18 ERA in May. Now in June he followed seven shutout innings against the Angels to begin the month with a meltdown against the White Sox (4.1 IP, seven runs). Which version will the Orioles see to open the series? It feels like we all know the answer, don’t we?

Game 2: Saturday, June 20th, 10:10 p.m., MASN

LHP Trevor Rogers (3-7, 5.86 ERA) vs. RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto (7-4, 2.52 ERA)

Is Rogers back? He has a 3.12 ERA in June and has not allowed more than three runs in any of his last three starts. His formula is pretty simple on paper. Limit the walks and keep the ball in the yard. When he does that, he finds success. That ability will be tested against these Dodgers.

Yamamoto is following up his third-place finish in Cy Young voting a season ago with an almost identical season in 2026. The strikeout numbers aren’t as dominant, but he is walking almost no one and has a WHIP of just 0.840. The diminutive righty makes you earn your way on.

Game 3: Sunday, June 21st, 4:10 p.m., MASN

RHP Brandon Young (5-2, 3.18 ERA) vs. RHP Emmet Sheehan (3-4, 4.76 ERA)

The Orioles’ string of winning games that Young starts was broken in his last outing, but that wasn’t the righty’s fault. He delivered a quality start, going six innings and allowing just three runs. His 2.83 ERA over his last eight starts has been a saving grace for a rotation that has struggled with consistency overall. The Orioles might even have the pitching advantage in this one.

Sheehan has probably been something of a disappointment for Dodgers fans this year. He looked great with his 2.82 ERA across 73.1 innings last season, but has failed to live up to that hype in 2026. Even still, he forces a lot of swing and miss, and regularly gets hitters to chase pitches out of the zone. So this is still going to be a tough matchup for the Orioles.


How many games do you think the Orioles will win in this series? Let us know in the comments.

Mariners News: Bryan Woo, Quinn Priester, and Trei Cruz

Jun 18, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Bryan Woo (22) throws against the Baltimore Orioles during the first inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images | Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

Good morning, foLLks, and happy Friday!

The Mariners shut out the Orioles 3-0 yesterday to secure their first series win over Baltimore since 2022. The second series of the homestand kicks off today against the Red Sox at 7:10pm PDT.

In Mariners news:

Around the league:

Connor’s picks:

  • Ribbie launched a few weeks ago. Per their site description, it’s “[a]ctual live games rendered pitch by pitch in a cozy 8-bit view while they happen. Watch for free. No account needed. A calmer way to keep baseball close.” While it’s still a work in progress , it’s a pretty neat way to follow a game if you tire of the Gameday view.
  • If you are looking for a new show to watch, please consider this one (~NSFW).

Pirates deal Joey Bart to Braves for familiar face

PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 14: Joey Bart #14 of the Pittsburgh Pirates rounds the bases after hitting a home run in the fifth inning during the game between the Washington Nationals and the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on Tuesday, April 14, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Christopher Denver/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Pittsburgh Pirates made a late-night trade on Thursday night that will shift the landscape of two areas of the team. 

Pittsburgh dealt catcher Joey Bart to the Atlanta Braves in exchange for reliever Hunter Stratton. 

A familiar face, Stratton was a 16th-round pick of the Pirates in 2017 and pitched for the club for three seasons.

Stratton made his MLB debut in 2023 and only allowed three runs over 12 innings. 

He totaled a 3.58 ERA in 36 appearances the following season, but struggled in 2025. Stratton allowed seven runs in 2.2 innings with the Bucs last year for a deeper and higher-regarded bullpen staff.

The Pirates DFA’d Stratton and traded him to Atlanta, where he posted a 2.20 ERA in 12 appearances. He was DFA’d by Atlanta earlier this week and opened the door for the Pirates to make the trade. 

Stratton will begin his second tour with the Bucs in Triple-A Indianapolis.

Currently on a rehab assignment for a left foot infection, Bart was in line to be the odd-man out of the Pirates catching rotation.

The former No. 2 overall pick of the San Francisco Giants was rumored to be a potential trade piece dating back to the start of spring training, and now exists Pittsburgh after two and a half seasons.

Bart hit .259 with one double, two home runs, six RBIs, and 21 strikeouts in 58 at-bats in 2026.

He performed well against left-handed pitching, but started off slow and was on pace for his worst season as a Pirate.

Bart recorded nine hits in his final six games before the injury, including a four-hit day in his final game as a Bucco. 

Endy Rodriguez stepped up in Bart’s absence and didn’t look back. Rodriguez was recalled following Bart’s injury and is slashing .267/.413/.467 with three doubles, three homers, and eight runs driving in over 60 at-bats.

He’s also shown good plate discipline with 15 walks compared to 17 strikeouts in 23 games and is beginning to emerge as the Pirates’ No. 1 catcher. Henry Davis remains on the roster and has caught every Paul Skenes start in 2026.

Stratton primarily pitched in Triple-A Gwinnett, posting a 4.38 ERA and 16 walks compared to 24 strikeouts in 24.2 innings. 

The Pirates need Stratton to channel his early Pirates career and help a bullpen that has been the Achilles heel of the team the entire year.

Pittsburgh plays the first of a three-game series in Colorado against the Rockies on Sunday at 8:40 p.m.

Justice Department opens civil rights probe after Giants’ Pride protest

An investigation into Major League Baseball by the United States Department of Justice into possible discrimination against four San Francisco Giants players has been opened after they wrote Bible verses on their hats during the team's Pride Night.

On June 12, three Giants pitchers, Landen Roupp, JT Brubaker and Ryan Walker, broke MLB protocol by altering their uniforms with Bible verses on their Pride Night caps, which featured a rainbow Giants logo. And another pitcher, Sam Hentges, did not even wear his Pride Night hat. The players received a warning from MLB for violating the uniform policy. 

The DOJ said they were referring Major League Baseball to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in a letter written to Commissioner Rob Manfred.

"The three players expressed their opposition to MLB's pro-Pride orthodoxy," Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon said in the letter. "The Civil Rights Act prohibits MLB and its franchises from unreasonably burdening the rights of players with religious objections to serving as the League's vehicle for pro-Pride messages.

“Federal law is clear: employers must modify their uniform requirements to reasonably accommodate their employees’ exercise of religion,” Dhillon added in the letter. “The Trump administration is committed to combatting religious discrimination."

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Landen Roupp throws against the Chicago Cubs during the first inning at Oracle Park.

On June 16, Vice President JC Vance publicly weighed in via social media, responding to a Sports Illustrated social media post, Vance said, “Trump won; we don’t have to do this anymore.”

The Giants said after incident that "they are proud to support Pride Night and the LGBTQ community" but also respect that individuals may make "personal choices about team activations," while also adding that the players caused "pain and anger for many in the LGBTQ community."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB under investigation after Giants’ Pride Night protest by players

Why the Red Sox shouldn’t trade Willson Contreras

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 14: Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox hits a solo home run during the sixth inning against the Texas Rangers at Fenway Park on June 14, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Paul Rutherford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Last week, I wrote and encouraged the Red Sox to totally tear down the roster with a 2014-style fire sale at the trade deadline on Aug. 3rd. 

I still stand by that for the large portion of sellable pieces. The Willson Contreras decision in that conversation became a complicated one for me and one that i’ve spent the last week thinking about rather often. In that period of reflection, the answer to what to do with Boston’s first baseman became pretty obvious to me. 

The Red Sox cannot trade Willson Contreras. 

The veteran is a rare sign of life in an otherwise dismal season that will cause several people their jobs by year’s end. Contreras is a borderline All-Star in 2026. If he doesn’t make the team, it won’t be due to any fault of his own, but more so due to the ridiculous surges of others around the American League. 

He’s enjoying his best offensive season at age 34 and clearly has plenty left in the tank after shifting away from catching during his tenure with the St. Louis Cardinals. Contreras would be a hot commodity given the usual need for right-handed power every summer. That’s intriguing for a should-be seller like the Red Sox, though there’s a different story to tell that’s even more important about the construction of the roster moving forward. 

When you have a chance to keep a hole filled for a while, take it. How long have the Red Sox been trying to find a staple at second base since the end of Dustin Pedroia’s days as an everyday player? (Newsflash: They still are).

Triston Casas still holds potential in the wild world of Red Sox Twitter/X, but the reality is that  he’s only played one full season (he did receive ROTY votes) since his 2022 call-up. It would be way easier to navigate the position if Casas could really be healthy and contribute. Ultimately, Boston would be viciously irresponsible to build the lineup in years to come with the expectation of Casas being a regular. 

Contreras is under team control through 2027 with a club option for 2028. His no-trade clause also carried over from the Cardinals, limiting Boston’s best shot at another quality return at the deadline. 

The Red Sox should probably listen for a potential undeniable offer at the deadline, but for a team that lacks real hitters the way they do, can they totally afford to lose the only one they have?

MLB News Outside The Confines: Feeling a draft

Good morning. I hope you’ve already checked out the owners-proposed changes to the draft by now.

Friday Rockpile: Brett Sullivan and the Tao of the pitching catcher

May 24, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Colorado Rockies Catcher Brett Sullivan (26) pitches against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the eighth inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Anna Carrington-Imagn Images | Anna Carrington-Imagn Images

In 2015, Brett Sullivan was drafted by the Tampa Bay Rays.

In 2023, he made his MLB debut as a catcher with the San Diego Padres.

This season, the 31-year-old Colorado Rockie made another MLB debut, this time as a pitcher. The catcher, who played some infield in college and in the minors, but has spent most of his career as a backup catcher, had a simple philosophy.

“Try to get off the mound as fast as possible. That’s it,” Sullivan said. “I don’t want to be out there that long, so I just try to let the defense make all the plays for me. They’ve done a good job.

“The approach is to throw it maybe very slow, and then sometimes not as slow,” he continued, “but know that hopefully they hit it to my defense. That’s a whole approach.”

The Rockies signed Sullivan to a minor-league deal in the offseason, and he immediately made an impact as a mentor to young catchers Hunter Goodman and Braxton Fulford in spring training. Little did Rockies fans know that he’d be spending time on the other side of home plate.

On May 19, Sullivan pitched a scoreless, hitless ninth inning in a 10-0 loss to the Rangers. Having only pitched one time in the minors, he didn’t hesitate when the Rockies coaching staff asked him if he could “go out there and throw strikes.”

“I was like, ‘Yeah, I got it,’ and that was basically it,” he said. “So I keep it simple, but hopefully I don’t have to do it again because that means we’re not winning. I don’t know what I’m doing. I’m just lobbing it up there.”

Sullivan has pitched in three more games since May 19 — all, unfortunately, in four blowout losses. However, he’s posted three scoreless innings and totaled a 4.15 ERA in 4.1 innings with six hits, two runs, including one homer, one walk and one strikeout. With his humorous and outgoing personality, he doesn’t take preparing for his side pitching job too seriously.

“I just sat on the bench, and then when the next inning was over, I just walked out onto the mound. I didn’t warm up — no routine, no nothing, just straight from the bench,” Sullivan said. “I grabbed Jimmy Herget’s glove and walked right out there.”

Sullivan said he’s used Herget’s glove three times and Ryan Feltner’s once, adding he grabs whatever is closest. 

Even if he’s just eating an inning, Sullivan has earned some impressive stats on the mound. On May 26 against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Sullivan became the only player besides Shohei Ohtani to hit a home run and pitch in a game. 

“It feels good to be in the same category as him, you know,” Sullivan jokingly said. “No, it’s that was just a fluke — a crazy, lopsided game — and you get asked to pitch, and then it happens that your spot in the order came up and facing another position player. But they all count. And it’s a fun story.”

He also pitched [kind of] like Ohtani by putting up a scoreless frame.

In his most recent outing, the ninth inning in a 19-6 loss to the Giants on May 31, Sullivan recorded his first and only career strikeout thus far. It was a memorable one, too, coming against three-time All-Star and World Series Champion Rafael Devers.

“I don’t know if I threw a strike to him, but the umpire called them, so we’ll take it,” Sullivan said. “And again, good story. For it to be Devers, who’s going to be a Hall of Famer, is funny.”

Sullivan said he kept the ball to remember the moment. However, Sullivan said he’s not practicing pitching, but does have a great response when asked what his best pitch is.

“I throw like a little air cutter, and I hope that it’s slow enough that the gravity takes it the other way off their barrel,” Sullivan joked. “That’s my best pitch right now.”

Since May 26, in Sullivan’s Ohtani game, the Stockton, Calif. native has hit four homers in 23 at-bats. That includes a two-homer game against the Chicago Cubs on June 11.

Sullivan didn’t have any home runs in his 78 at-bats before that day in L.A. Some might say being a pitcher has made him a better hitter. Sullivan credits something else, namely, taking Mickey Moniak’s advice that he needed new pants.

“I changed my wardrobe a lot,” he said. “I would say that’s the biggest change. I switched it up. I am now wearing Mickey Moniak’s clothes, and we’re gonna roll with that.

“There’s honestly not much else to it,” he continued. “This game is a funny game, it’s a tough game, but when you just have a clear mind, let things go, have fun with it, I think that things happen.”

Moniak told him he needed new pants, and Sullivan proudly said, “I listened.”

“I’m just trying to bring him a little piece with him to the plate with me,” Sullivan said. “It’s good.”

From the easy-going attitude and the sneaky pop at the plate to his ability to pitch and stay positive as a journeyman, Sullivan’s Tao of the backup catcher now also includes pitching. With the Rockies facing struggles in the bullpen and injuries to the starting rotation, it’s likely Sullivan will be back on the mound again at some point this season. It’s a role he’s happy to play if the Rockies need him.

“I think it’s just to help the bullpen when games like that are really lopsided,” Sullivan said. “You don’t want to waste one of those good arms because the next day is an opportunity to win a game, and we’ll need those guys fresh.

“So, if I could just go in there and save those guys, then you know that’s a small victory for the next day.”


On the Farm

Triple-A: Albuquerque Isotopes 3, Sugar Land Space Cowboys 2 (10)

Drew Avans hit a walk-off single to score Nic Kent in the bottom of the 10th to lead the Isotopes to victory.

Jose Cordova hit a sac bunt to move Kent to third base to set-up the winning run. Albuquerque struck first when Zac Veen hit an RBI triple in the first inning to score Chad Stevens. Veen was thrown out at home trying to stretch it to an inside-the-park homer, but the Isotopes went up 1-0. The Space Cowboys tied the game in the seventh and took a 2-1 lead in the eighth. Albuquerque answered right back to tie the game 2-2 when Mike Antico hit an RBI single to score Avans.

Gabriel Hughes had a scoreless outing, striking out six while walking three and only giving up one hit in 4.2 innings. Jordan Romano kept the Space Cowboys off the scoreboard in the ninth and Erasmo Ramírez walked one, but struck out one in a scoreless, hitless 10th to earn the win. Avans, Veen and Ryan Ritter recorded two hits apiece to make up the majority of Albuquerque’s 10 hits.

Double-A: Hartford Yard Goats 10, Reading Fightin’ Phils 6

Hartford rallied from a 5-2 deficit with a three-run seventh inning on its way to a 10-6 win on Thursday. Conner Capel hit two homers, while GJ Hill added an insurance solo homer in the eighth and Roc Roggio did the same in the ninth. Capel went 3-for-5 with five runs driven in and Hill and Roggio each recorded two hits and two RBI. Davison Palermo earned the victory after throwing 1.2 scoreless innings, Carlos Torres posted the hold by limiting Reading to one run in two innings with a strikeout. Dyan Jorge drew two walks and scored two runs.

High-A: Vancouver Canadians 13, Spokane Indians 9

Despite taking the lead in the first, second and third innings, Spokane couldn’t hold on to any of them and lost on Thursday night. Max Belyeu and Jack O’Dowd started the game with solo homers in the first as the Indians jumped out to a 2-0 lead. Jacob Hinderleider scored on a wild pitch and Belyeu hit an RBI single in the second inning to take 4-3 lead. In the third, Tommy Hofpe added a two-run homer and Kelvin Hidalgo hit an RBI single to put Spokane up 7-4 in the third. O’Dowd answered back after Vancouver tied up the game again when he hit a sac fly and Hofpe recorded an RBI double to put the Indians back on top 9-8 in the sixth, but that was the last rally for Spokane as the Canadians got the final comeback with a five-run seventh.

Low-A: Fresno Grizzlies 2, Inland Empire 66ers 3

Tanner Thach hit a two-run homer in the first inning and the Grizzlies took a lead they never lost in a big win on Thursday night. Thach came up a triple short of the cycle, finishing the game with five RBI, three hits and three runs scored. Roldy Brito doubled on a two-hit night and scored two runs, Wilder Dalis added a double and run-scoring single and Ashly Andujar added a two-run single.

Riley Kelly started the game strong for Fresno, throwing 4.2 scoreless innings with eight strikeouts, three hits and three walks. Manuel Olivares recorded the win after holding the 66ers to one run on three hits with five strikeouts, while Luke Hansel pitched the ninth and struck out two, despite giving up a solo homer.


Looking back on notable first half rookie Rockie performances | Purple Row

Skyler Timmins explores the impressive debut TJ Rumfield is making so far in Colorado, comparing him to other breakout rookies in Rockies history like Todd Helton, Wilin Rosario and Trevor Story. What do they all have in common? Ten homers and 50 hits before the All-Star break.

Renck: Rockies had their Paul Skenes in Ubaldo Jimenez. Ex-ace has ideas on how to develop next power pitcher. | Denver Post ($)

The Rockies begin a home series against the Pirates today and on Saturday, Paul Skenes is slated to pitch. With a struggling rotation, Troy Renck points out that the Rockies need an ace like they had 16 years ago in Ubaldo Jiménez.

ValleyCats INF Parker Coddou Headed to Colorado Rockies | TCValleyCats.com

The Tri-City ValleyCats, an independent professional baseball team out of Troy, NY that plays in the Frontier League, announced that infielder Parker Coddou was signed to a deal by the Colorado Rockies. From 2002 through 2020, the ValleyCats were the Class-A short season affiliate of the Houston Astros. Coddou, who scored 25 runs and posted 23 hits, while also leading the ValleyCats in stolen bases with 14, becomes their third player to be signed by an MLB organization this season.


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Friday BP: Can the Giants match their 2025 trade deadline?

Robbie Ray and Tyler Mahle walking into a game together.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MARCH 25: Robbie Ray #38 and Tyler Mahle #54 of the San Francisco Giants arrive prior to the game between the New York Yankees and the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Kavin Mistry/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

If you’re no stranger to McCovey Chronicles, then you’re probably aware that I’ve been pretty critical of Buster Posey during his tenure. Err, during his tenure as president of baseball operations, I should specify. Not sure I ever had a criticism of Posey during his tenure as Face of the Franchise/Captain America/All-World Catcher/Hugger Extraordinaire/Three-Time Champion.

While I’m in favor of giving Posey more time before reaching any grand conclusions, most of the results have been poor. His free agency signings have been middling. His managerial decisions have backfired. His control of the image of the Giants has been slipping. His unwillingness to address the bullpen has been baffling.

But there’s one area where Posey (and general manager Zack Minasian) have excelled without question: deadline deals.

The 2025 trade deadline was bizarre for the San Francisco Giants. Just a few days before the deadline, the Giants, still clinging to the belief that they could be competitive, were reported to be buyers. Then they lost a few games, admitted defeat, and turned into sellers.

What followed was excellence. The Giants sent out the expiring contract of Tyler Rogers for Drew Gilbert, Blade Tidwell, and José Buttó. They traded Camilo Doval (who currently has a 5.08 ERA this year), and got back Jesús Rodríguez, Parks Harber, Carlos De La Rosa, and Trystan Vrieling. They moved on from Mike Yastrzemski, an impending free agent, and received Yunior Marte in return.

It seems that the Giants are once again heading for sell-town. And they once again have some intriguing options: starting pitchers Robbie Ray and Tyler Mahle, and soon-to-be-four-time All-Star second baseman Luis Arráez are all on expiring deals. So too is reliever JT Brubaker. Center fielder Harrison Bader and starting pitcher Adrian Houser aren’t on expirings, but are paid modestly and have veteran cachet.

Barring a shocking winning streak, the Giants will have to fold their hand yet again, and turn their eye to the future. Can they match last year’s impressive deadline wheeling and dealing?

Stay tuned, I guess.

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants kick off a series with the Miami Marlins tonight at 4:10 p.m. PT.

St. Louis Cardinals Pitching Prospects – A look under the hood at some AAA guys

This is Part 2 of my exploration of some of the underlying details of Cardinal pitching prospects. The question I am trying to answer is… Of the minor leagues prospects we’ve been watching, who has the most interesting pitch shape metrics (ie. the under the hood stuff)? We seem to be far enough into the season to have built up some stats that can stand up to Small Sample Size (SSS) scrutiny. Since I do the daily down on the Farm Reports, I see the various pitcher usage and line score results every day. That has made me curious about some things that might be going on beyond the line score.

Last week folks got a look at the pitchers in Palm Beach. What I neglected to mention then is that the set of top 10th percentile pitch metrics was 225 pitch types deep, and the Cardinals had 25 entries in the group or just a little below league average of 28. This becomes a little less mundane when we start looking at AAA numbers.

First, I raised the bar for AAA pitchers to 150 pitches minimum instead of 50 pitches as for Low-A pitchers. This to keep the set manageable. If I used the same 50 pitch minimum, the AAA set would include 1267 pitcher/pitch type combinations. I’m looking for the outliers and that is a large outlier group. That the AAA group is five times bigger tells me that a significant difference between AAA and Low-A pitching is volume.

Same methodology as last week. I am looking for pitchers have top 10th percentile metrics. This is a “who has a tool that sticks out” kind of question. Even with a 150 pitch minimum, I still get 382 pitcher/pitch combinations in the top tenth percentile (almost double the Low-A group). In an ugly turn of events, only 17 Cardinal entries are found in this table and as you will see, too many of them are outlier in a bad way (as in last decile, not top).

AAA Metric Leader Board

Like last week, the first table shows just the pitch profile, not the results (which follow in the next section).

What do we see?

NamePitchesTypePitch PctSpin RateVelocityVert Break (in)Horiz Break (in)Sprin Rate P10Velo P10Vertical Break P10Horiz Break P10
Bedell, Ian432FF60.4229990.312.715.651091
Blewett, Scott598SL30.3216385.1-2-310694
Dobbins, Hunter710FF32231694.915.32.344510
Gastelum, Luis518CH40157182.7-4.212.974107
Gastelum, Luis518FF32.6244694.515111462
Hales, Skylar433FF56.1213594.411.70.6851010
Hansen, Pete687FF39.3239190.512.3-2210910
Hansen, Pete687SL24.5259481.3-3.1-9.32101010
Mautz, Brycen860FF38.8219192.312.712.38891
Mautz, Brycen860SL23.6227783.51.90.18851
Rajcic, Max645FF43.3220494.914.910.77462
Rincon, Hancel547SL30215585.2-2.2-1.410592
Roycroft, Chris397SI42.3211396.9316.75193
Zimmermann, Bruce969SL25.1254582.6-3.30.639101
Zimmermann, Bruce969FF20.3245289.515.47.711055
Zimmermann, Bruce969FS20.31715832.111.427105
  • People ask “what happened to Ian Bedell”. Well, he has an outlier bad FF velocity rate and gets no whiffs with it. And he uses this pitch 60.4% of the time. Pete Hansen and Bruce Zimmerman are in the same bottom decile in FB velocity across the International League, with the same whiff results. At least they don’t use this pitch nearly as often.
  • Gastelum is in the top decile for spin rate on his Four Seam Fastball (FF), resulting in a top 20th percentile arm-side run. I bet that pitch really bores in on RH hitters.
  • Skylar Hales has about the straightest FF in the league.
  • Brycen Mautz is top floor on his arm-side run on his fastball, which probably allows the fairly pedestrian velo to play up. I bet he’d be super effective coming in to face LH hitters in relief, if that sorta thing was needed in StL.
  • Mautz’ slider is odd. Almost no movement. This is one of those counter-intuitive ones. You’d rather be in the lowest tenth percentile, since glove side run is shown as a negative number in the data set.
  • Rajcic’s horizontal movement on his fastball is near-elite, and you will see later gets elite results.
  • Roycroft’s sinker profiles as elite, both in velo and drop (IVB). If only he had poise.
  • Zimmermann makes the list in a bad way on his FF, FS and SL. He limits damage by limiting walks.

Overall, this is not a good profile for the AAA group and we see this with the shortage of depth for the MLB staff. We will keep this handy and see how it changes as some of the AA studs matriculate to Memphis later this year.

Performance Matters

Stuff (and the underlying metrics which show it) are one thing. Performance is another. Which AAA pitchers are getting the most out of their stuff? Let’s look more at performance outcomes as see how they rate.

PlayerPitchesTypePctK%K% P10BB%BB% P10xwobaxwOBA P10VelocityVelo P10Whiff RateWhiff Rate P10
Bedell, Ian432FF60.416.2826.5100.396890.271016%9
Blewett, Scott598SL30.323.9615.290.361985.13644%2
Dobbins, Hunter710FF3213.5813.540.364694.91422%6
Gastelum, Luis518CH4027.369.170.193182.68440%3
Gastelum, Luis518FF32.627.8313.950.334494.53423%5
Hales, Skylar433FF56.134.5116.460.284294.42527%3
Hansen, Pete687FF39.315.988.720.317390.541011%10
Hansen, Pete687SL24.531.348.350.234381.271037%4
Mautz, Brycen860FF38.817.2716.160.381792.26824%5
Mautz, Brycen860SL23.639.6313.280.199183.45840%3
Rajcic, Max645FF43.333.9216.160.302394.87427%4
Rincon, Hancel547SL302755.420.284685.15532%6
Roycroft, Chris397SI42.312.956.510.263196.92112%7
Zimmermann, Bruce969SL25.142.524.120.271582.57940%3
Zimmermann, Bruce969FF20.3148610.384789.521018%8
Zimmermann, Bruce969FS20.329.3103.440.2881082.96736%7

In the above table, you will see many of the same names and pitches, this time with how those pitches are performing in real games. There are few new names, as some guys without top 10th percentile stuff are still getting top tenth percentile results, such as Nelfy Ynfante, who really limits hard contact without any top tier stuff.

Some notes:

  • Gastelum (CH), Mautz (SL) and Roycroft (SI) each have a go-to pitch that is effective at limiting damage.
  • Zimmermann avoids damage by limiting walks across all his pitches.
  • Skylar Hales has an elite K rate. I’m not sure how.

You know what else I notice in these lists? Quinn Mathews doesn’t appear once. I wonder why? Let’s look specifically at his Prospect Savant page.

You see that his whiff rate falls just below elite at 89th percentile. Lots of stuff between average (~50th) and really good (80th), but nothing elite. Gives me a picture he does many things well, but nothing great. Even his walk rate isn’t anywhere near bottom 10th percentile for AAA.

The other thing I see in his data: His FF is probably his worst pitch in terms of K and BB rates. He throws it almost 50% of the time. He actually has a higher walk rate (25%) on his FF than K rate (23%). An adjustment to his pitch mix is coming.

Summary

There really isn’t anyone at AAA with standout tools. That is not to say there aren’t good pitchers. My screen was for top 10th percentile stuff…elite. Apparently, that is to be found at AA and High-A. We shall see.

Links

<a href="http://<iframe src="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vSxqYqjHlZFG1sv4z7zqciltal6c87mVTWhdCigRAq1rwVYMDR2nQ8Kd2thIfvEmr-PAyLvP_FB2k4p/pubhtml?widget=true&headers=false">Here is a link to the underlying spreadsheet with top decile performance across the AAA level of baseball.

Yankees prospects: Austin Wells homers twice in rehab game

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:L, 5-7 at Columbus Clippers — also note that George Lombard Jr. went on the seven-day IL yesterday due to his sprained fingers

C Austin Wells 2-5, 2 HR, 3 RBI — homered twice (first went 376 feet; the second went 392) and caught the full game, so great rehab appearance
2B Marco Luciano 1-3, BB
SS Oswaldo Cabrera 2-4, 2B, SB — swiped home on double steal with Ornelas in the eighth
RF Yanquiel Fernández 1-3, BB, RBI, 2 K
1B Tyler Hardman 0-3, BB, fielding error
3B Jonathan Ornelas 1-4, SB
DH Payton Henry 0-3, BB
CF Duke Ellis 2-4, 2 K, SB, CS
LF Kenedy Corona 0-2, BB
PH Ernesto Martinez Jr. 0-1

Alexander Cornielle 4 IP, 7 H, 3 R (3 ER), 0 BB, 6 K, 2 HR, pickoff (loss)
Zach Messinger 1 IP , 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K
Carlos Lagrange 1.2 IP 2 H, 4 R (0 ER), 2 BB, 0 K, HR — the runs might have been unearned, but the homer was tattooed; just a reminder to be patient with his bullpen conversion
Yerry De los Santos 1.1 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K

Double-A Somerset Patriots:L, 6-7 at Portland Sea Dogs

CF Jace Avina 2-3 BB, K
PH-3B Kevin Verde 0-1
RF-CF Garrett Martin 2-3, 2B, BB, RBI, K, SF
DH DJ Gladney 0-4, RBI, 2 K, SF
LF Jackson Castillo 2-5, RBI, K, outfield assist
1B-RF Nicholas Torres 1-5, 2 K
3B-1B Coby Morales 1-4, HR, BB, 3 RBI, 2 K — 12th homer in 62 games
C Manuel Palencia 1-4, 2 throwing errors
PH Miguel Palma 0-1, K
2B Connor McGinnis 0-3, K
SS Owen Cobb 1-3, 2B, BB

Jack Cebert 4 IP, 8 H, 5 R (4 ER), 2 BB, 4 K, HR, HBP (loss)
Kelly Austin 2 IP, 4 H, 1 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 4 K, WP
Tony Rossi 1 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 1 K, HBP, WP
Harrison Cohen 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K

High-A Hudson Valley Renegades:Rained out at Rome Emperors (will not be made up)

Low-A Tampa Tarpons:L, 5-16 vs. Fort Myers Mighty Mussels — Tarpons allowed nine combined in the seventh and eighth as Mussels took control

DH Jackson Lovich 1-4, 2B, BB, 2 K, CS
CF Brando Mayea 0-1, BB — first game off the IL
CF Willy Montero 1-2, 2B
SS Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek 1-4, HR, 2 RBI, 2 K — dingered in garbage time
3B Hans Montero 0-4, 2 K
RF JoJo Jackson 2-4, CS
LF Logan Maxwell 0-2, 2 BB, K, SB
C David McCann 1-4, K, throwing error — Fort Myers went 7-for-8 on steals, including home on a double steal
1B Austin Green 0-4, RBI, 2 K
2B Luis Escudero 2-3, 2B, BB, RBI

Wyatt Parliament 4.2 IP, 9 H, 7 R (4 ER), 2 BB, 5 K, throwing error (loss) — oh no
J.T. Etheridge 2.1 IP, 8 H, 8 R (8 ER), 2 BB, 2 K, HR, 2 HBP, pickoff — OH NO
Jordarlin Mendoza 1.1 IP, 2 H, 1 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 1 K, HR — threw the game’s 19 fastest pitches, topping out at 99.1 mph and averaging 98 with the fastball and sinker
Parker Seay 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 0 K — fine aside from allowing Fort Myers’ 20th hit on the day

Florida Complex League Yankees:L, 4-7 and W, 10-4 (7) vs. FCL Phillies

Game 1 — completion of June 16th game that was suspended in the top of the third

3B Richard Matic 1-4, HR, RBI, 2 K, throwing error — led off June 16th with a bomb
DH Queni Pineda 0-4, 3 K
2B Leni Done 0-3, BB, K, 2 SB
CF Jose Castro 2-4, HR, RBI, K — had a solo shot of his own the other day, his fifth in 17 games
RF Francisco Vilorio 1-4, 2 K
SS Dexters Peralta 2-4, 2B, 3B, RBI, 2 K — saved his extra-base hits for yesterday as FCL Yanks built 4-0 lead through six, which didn’t hold
LF Estivenzon Montero 0-1, K (June 16th)
LF Wilberson De Pena 0-3, SB
C Justin Capellan 0-3, 2 K, passed ball
1B Christofer Reyes 0-3, K

Brian Hendry 2.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 5 K (June 16th)
Stanly Alcantara 3.2 IP, 3 H, 4 R (4 ER), 3 BB, 4 K, HR, HBP
Anthony Mena 1.2 IP 5 H, 3 R (2 ER), 1 BB, 1 K (loss) — he and Alcantara fell apart in a six-run seventh that zoomed the Phils from a four-run deficit to a two-run lead
Marco Manzano 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 3 K

Game 2

3B Richard Matic 2-4, 2 2B, BB, K, throwing error
C Queni Pineda 1-3, 2B, BB, RBI, 2 K
C Diego Flores 0-0
2B Leni Done 3-3, HR, 2 RBI, HBP, 2 CS — perfect “nightcap” at the plate, beginning with a two-run dinger in the first; his knock in the third then gave Yanks a lead that they wouldn’t relinquish
DH Jose Castro 0-3, 2 K, HBP
CF Francisco Vilorio 2-4, 2B, K
SS Dexters Peralta 2-4, HR, 3 RBI, K — also went deep
LF Robbie Burnett 0-2, BB, 2 K, HBP
RF Estivenzon Montero 1-4, 2B, 2 K
1B Christofer Reyes 1-4, RBI

Jerson Alejandro 0.2 IP, 2 H, 2 R (2 ER), 2 BB, 1 K, WP — bumpy stateside debut, but bullpen picked him up
Manuel Cruz 4.2 IP, 2 H, 1 R (0 ER), 4 BB, 5 K, 2 WP, pickoff error (win) — steadied the ship, even with some walks
Sunayro Martina 1.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 2 BB, 1 K, WP

Dominican Summer League Yankees:W, 14-7 (7) at DSL Miami — this was actually a 6-3 deficit going into the final frame … before the DSL Yanks scored 11; what a league!

CF Isaias Castillo 0-4, BB, RBI, K — bases-loaded walk put DSL Yanks ahead late
SS Stiven Marinez 1-3, 2 BB, RBI, K, 3 SB
RF Yostin Pena 3-5, HR, 4 RBI, K, 2 SB — solo shot in the first and late had RBI in separate at-bats in the seventh
DH Juan Torres 1-4, 2B, BB, 2 RBI, 2 K
LF Manuel Aguilar 2-4, HR, BB, 2 RBI, 2 K — his first career pro homer plated two and made it an 11-run frame in the seventh
1B Juan Martinez 1-3, 2B, BB, RBI
PR Kendry Diaz 1-1 — scored tying run in the seventh after consecutive wild pitches from Junior Pina
1B Edgar Jimenez 0-0
C Cesar Lopez 3-4, 2B, HBP
3B Abrahan Pichardo 0-1, 4 BB, fielding error
2B Alfred Ciriaco 0-3, 2 BB

Jhosneyker Colina 5.1 IP, 5 H, 5 R (2 ER), 1 BB, 3 K, HR, 3 WP, fielding and pickoff errors
Brandon Rodriguez 1.2 IP, 3 H, 2 R (2 ER), 1 BB, 1 K, HR, WP (win)

Dominican Summer League Bombers:W, 14-2 vs. DSL Rangers Blue — had 14 runs of their own to match their other DSL team, albeit in a regulation game; 10 were scored in the last two innings to take a 4-1 ballgame to the final score

DH Daniel Santana 1-4, BB, K, 2 SB
SS Mani Cedeno 0-4, BB, 3 K, fielding error
2B Carlos Bello 0-4, BB, 2 K
RF David Carrera 1-3, HR, BB, 3 RBI, outfield assist — first pro homer made it a 3-1 ballgame in the fourth
C Alessandro Rodriguez 2-4, RBI, K, SF — all three runners scored on his eighth-inning sac fly with the bases loaded because the Rangers made multiple errors, hell yeah
1B Poly Ojeda 2-5, RBI — the 4-6 hitters all have an OPS that starts with nine
3B Germayhoni Beltre 2-5, 2B, 2 RBI, 2 K, SB
LF Richard Meran 2-5, 3B, 2 RBI, 2 K — RBI triple started the six-run party in the eighth
LF Eddison Charles 0-0
CF Alfiery Matos 0-1, BB, 4 SB, 2 HBP — go go, go Alfiery go, go; Alfiery B. Goode

Cesar Acosta 9 IP, 5 H, 2 R (1 ER), 4 BB, 11 K, 2 WP, pickoff (win) — damn, I don’t know when I last saw a minor-league, nine-inning complete game at this level but his pitch count must have been great (the 11 punchies sure were)

Chicago Cubs history unpacked — June 19

Free of charge for the discerning reader.

Happy birthday to Blake Parker, and a mighty host of others.

Today in baseball history, in 1846 – First officially recognized baseball game (played by Cartwright Rules) – NY Nine defeats the NY Knickerbockers 23-1 in Hoboken, New Jersey, and other stories as well.

Today in baseball history:

Cubs Birthdays:Blake Parker*. Also notable: Lou Gehrig HOF.

Today in history:

  • 1865 – Union General Gordon Granger declares slaves free in Texas, now the date the end of slavery is celebrated across the US as Juneteenth.
  • 1917 – The British Royal Family, which has had strong German ties since George I, renounces its German names and titles and adopts the name of Windsor.
  • 1936 – German boxer Max Schmeling KOs up-and-coming American heavyweight Joe Louis in 12 rounds at Yankee Stadium, New York.
  • 1937 – Second of two legendary recording sessions by Delta Blues musician Robert Johnson with producer Don Law at the Vitagraph Studios, Dallas, Texas.
  • 1946 – First TV sports and boxing spectacular, Joe Louis KOs Billy Conn in a match broadcast across New York.
  • 1960 – Loretta Lynn records “I’m a Honky Tonk Girl”.
  • 1964 – Ameican folk singer Bob Dylan completes his first UK tour.
  • 1970 – Jim Bouton’s controversial baseball diary “Ball Four” is published.
  • 1971 – Carole King starts a five-week run at No. 1 on the U.S. singles chart with the double A-sided single “It’s Too Late / I Feel The Earth Move.”
  • 1973 – “The Rocky Horror Show” stage production first opens in London written by Richard O’Brian and directed by Jim Sharman and starring Tim Curry.
  • 1978 – Garfield, created by Jim Davis, first appears as a comic strip.
  • 1992 – Evander Holyfield beats Larry Holmes in 12 for heavyweight boxing title.
  • 2019 – Oklahoma writer Joy Harjo is named the first Native American US Poet Laureate by the Library of Congress.

*pictured.

Bernie’s Dugout Open Thread: 6/19-6/25

Sep 10, 2024; San Francisco, California, USA; General view of the helmet used by the Milwaukee Brewers before the start of the first inning against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Stan Szeto-Imagn Images | Stan Szeto-Imagn Images

Greetings, Brew Crew Ball community. The Brewers bounced back this week with a strong homestand that featured a pair of series wins over the Phillies and Guardians, keeping a hold atop the NL Central. The Brewers are now in Atlanta as they’ll face off with another one of the best teams in baseball thus far in the Braves. They’ll then face a stretch of NL Central opponents in the Reds, Cubs, and Reds (again).

Feel free to use this thread to chat about (almost) anything you want: video games, food, movies, non-baseball sports, the Brewers, you name it. As long as it’s appropriate and is allowed by our moderators, it’s fair game here.

You know the drill.

This is now an open thread:

Orioles news: Cal Ripken is coming to (maybe) help

Sep 6, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; The Baltimore Orioles honor Cal Ripken Jr.'s 30th anniversary of record 2,131 consecutive games before a game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images | Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

Good morning, Camden Chatters.

Another series, another series loss. The O’s dropped the opening leg of their three-city road trip with a 2-0 shutout loss to the Mariners yesterday, which you can read about in my game recap if you’re so inclined. If you missed the game, don’t worry; so did the Orioles’ offense. The Birds’ bats have been M.I.A. in two of the first three games of their West Coast tour, and things are only going to get tougher, with a three-game series against Shohei Ohtani and the 48-27 Dodgers up next. Good luck.

The Orioles continue to be stuck in quicksand, gradually sinking deeper into the muck without making any real progress toward freeing themselves. They’re back to six games under .500 with 76 games in the books. That’s barely improved from where they were after 50 games, at a season-worst eight games under .500 on May 20. Improving by just two games over nearly a month’s worth of action is probably not the best way to vault the Orioles into contender status…although, with the current sorry state of the American League, who knows?

In the meantime, there’s some changes going on behind the scenes, where Orioles legend and part owner Cal Ripken Jr. is set to take on a larger role in player development, as reported by both The Athletic and The Baltimore Banner. The idea is for Cal, who grew up under “The Oriole Way” during his Hall of Fame playing career, to help emphasize fundamentals throughout the organization. The O’s, as you might have noticed, aren’t a particularly good defensive team, and they’ve been sloppy at some aspects of baseball that don’t necessarily show up in the box score — failing to turn double plays, missing cutoff men, etc.

At first glance, the idea of a team owner becoming heavily involved in on-field operations could spark unsettling flashbacks to the late-90s era of the Orioles. But then again, this is Cal Ripken, not Peter Angelos. If there’s anyone who knows the finer points of baseball and is qualified to dispense such wisdom, it’s the Iron Man. And as the Banner article notes, Ripken will be just one part of a larger group of coaches and personnel who are tasked with establishing best practices in the minor leagues regarding defense and fundamentals. He’ll have his say, but he’s not taking over the whole operation himself.

There’s a sizable contingent of O’s fans who have been clamoring for years for Ripken to take on an on-field role, with some even suggesting the Orioles should hire him as their manager or general manager. I’ve never quite understood that sentiment, and I say that as someone who considers Cal my all-time favorite player. It’s been 25 years since he retired and he’s never held so much as a coaching role since then, so I don’t see any reason to believe he’d be capable of taking on such a prominent position as skipper or GM.

But this? Working behind the scenes, offering tips to young players on how to prepare, how to position themselves, how to focus on the minute details of playing defense? That’s up his alley. Whatever work that Ripken and the development team do might be too late to save this Orioles season — akin to closing the barn doors after the horses have gotten out, and all that — but if there’s a chance that it can have a positive impact on the future of the ballclub, them I’m all for it.

Links

Will the Orioles finally draft a pitcher in the 1st round? – BaltimoreBaseball.com

Do college outfielders still exist? Then no, the Orioles will not draft a pitcher in the first round.

O’s pitching prospect Luis De Leon looks to get back on track after slow start – Steve Melewski

The hard-throwing lefty’s rocky 2026 season has dropped him off some prospect lists, but the Orioles insist his struggles will only make him stronger in the long term. Uh, sure. Let’s go with that.

Rutschman exits game after being hit by throw on left ear – MLB.com

Adding injury to insult yesterday, Adley Rutschman might be hurt after taking an errant throw off his head. If this team didn’t have bad luck, they wouldn’t have any luck at all.

Orioles birthdays and history

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! A whopping seven former Orioles were born on June 19. They include right-handers Cody Sedlock (31), Logan Verrett (36), and Willis Roberts (51); outfielders Val Majewski (45) and Butch Davis (68); and lefties Bruce Chen (49) and the late Don Ferrarese (b. 1929, d. 2024).

On this date in 1962, the Orioles signed 18-year-old shortstop Mark Belanger as an amateur free agent out of Pittsfield HS in Massachusetts. It was a good decision. Belanger debuted in the majors three years later and developed into an all-time elite defender at shortstop, manning the position for 17 years with the Orioles and winning eight Gold Gloves.

Random Orioles game of the day

On June 19, 1969, the Orioles blanked the Washington Senators, 2-0, to notch their seventh straight win. Dave McNally improved to an incredible 10-0 on the season by throwing his second consecutive shutout and fourth of the season, holding the Senators to a meager two hits, both singles. McNally would finish the season with 20 wins and 11 complete games. Washington righty Jim Hannan countered with seven shutout innings of his own before the O’s broke a scoreless tie with two runs against reliever Dennis Higgins. The aforementioned Mark Belanger reached base three times on two hits and a walk.

Elephant Rumblings: Can A’s Get A Win on Juneteenth?

Jun 16, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Athletics right fielder Lawrence Butler (4) attempts to catch a home run during the seventh inning against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Sergio Estrada-Imagn Images | Sergio Estrada-Imagn Images

Happy Friday everybody,

Today is Juneteenth, an annual holiday commemorating the end of slavery in the United States. This holiday was not recognized until 2021, when President Joe Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act into law.

The A’s are celebrating by making tonight’s first of four home games against the Los Angeles Angels African-American Heritage Night.

While outfielder Lawrence Butler is the only African American on the current A’s roster, the franchise has employed some of the greatest Black players in MLB history, from Rickey Henderson (the Man of Steel) to Reggie Jackson (Mr. October), Frank Thomas (The Big Hurt) and Coco Crisp (Mr. Bernie Lean).

Down on the farm, two of the A’s top 10 minor-league prospects, outfielder Devin Taylor and infielder Kuroda-Grauer, hope to add more of an African-American presence to the A’s roster in the coming years.

Overall, MLB still struggles with roster diversity as squads primarily consist of White and Latino athletes.
According to MLB.com, Black players make up 6.8% of active and inactive Opening Day rosters in 2026, marking two consecutive years of growth. This is the highest percentage in nearly a decade, yet more work remains.

The Athletics were deeply ingrained in and involved with the diverse Oakland community during their 57 years spent playing at the Oakland Coliseum. They continue to remain active in the communities of their temporary home of Sacramento and future home of Las Vegas. However, both cities have fewer African American residents than the East Bay, making any community impact there likely less impactful.

Meanwhile, struggling veteran left-hander Jeffrey Springs gets the start tonight, looking to reverse his recent slump and get back in the win column After falling short on Pride night earlier this week, it would behoove the Athletics to secure the win on this special day.

A’s Coverage:

MLB News and Interest:

Best of X:

A’s top prospect Leo De Vries continues to hold his own in Double-A. He remains on track to reach Triple-A Las Vegas sooner than later, which would be the last stop on his supersonic ascent through the minor leagues.

The A’s pitching staff continues to give up runs at an alarming rate. It is a testament to the team’s offense that they are entering the weekend with a nearly .500 record, which outperforms their expected record of 32-42 based on runs scored and allowed.


Zack Gelof’s re-emergence as an everyday starter and major contributor has arguably been the Athletics’ biggest bright spot so far this season.

What do you think of this draft proposal as well as the corresponding one for international players?