Mariners slugger Cal Raleigh hits MLB-leading 58th home run against Astros

HOUSTON — Seattle’s Cal Raleigh hit his MLB-leading 58th home run on Sunday night, a two-run shot in the second inning against the Houston Astros.

The Mariners were up 5-0 after a grand slam by J.P. Crawford in the second when Raleigh, who was batting left-handed, connected off Jason Alexander for his home run to right field to extend the lead.

The shot comes a night after he passed Ken Griffey Jr. for the franchise’s single-season home run record with his 57th homer. Griffey hit 56 in both 1997 and 1998.

Raleigh has also surpassed Mickey Mantle’s MLB record of 54 home runs by a switch-hitter that had stood since 1961. He has also set the MLB record for homers by a catcher this season, eclipsing the 48 hit by Salvador Perez in 2021.

Raleigh is five home runs ahead of Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani and Phillies slugger Kyle Schwarber, who are tied for second place with 53 each.

At the most crucial moment, the Mets are simply giving it away

If you want to believe the fates are somehow conspiring against the Mets as their wild card berth slips away, Jacob Young’s two spectacular catches at the center field wall in Sunday’s 3-2 loss to the Washington Nationals, one that included kicking the ball skyward to keep it from hitting the ground, played into that narrative.

As Carlos Mendoza said in amazement, “I’ve never seen that before.”

But if you’ve been watching these Mets play some dreadful baseball in recent days, weeks, even months, from their bad defense to boneheaded baserunning to the bats going silent far too often, you know that’s the furthest thing from the truth.

It’s not fate. The Mets have played poorly for much of the last three months — 17 games under .500 since June 13. And now it appears they’re also collapsing under the weight of trying desperately to avoid the embarrassment of missing the postseason with their star-studded roster and their gazillion-dollar payroll.

In short, there’s really no other way to put it: They’re giving it away.

How else to explain losing two of three games to the lowly Nationals at such a crucial point in the season, and playing raggedy defense when their focus should be as heightened as possible.

How else to explain failing to muster any real offense against Jake Irvin, one of the worst starting pitchers in the majors for the last several weeks, as evidenced by his 9.36 ERA over his last seven starts. Or the inability to score against the Nationals’ bullpen, whose 5.60 ERA coming into Sunday ranked dead last in MLB.

How else to explain all the defensive and baserunning miscues lately, to the point where a week ago Mendoza admitted, “We’re not playing good fundamentally right now.”

All of it only happens to a team as talented as these Mets when they’re playing tight, squeezing the sawdust out of the bat, trying not to make mistakes rather than playing freely.

And now the prospect of a full-blown collapse is more real than ever, after the Cincinnati Reds won their fifth straight game on Sunday to pull even with the Mets for the third wild card spot — but not really even, since they own the tiebreaker should the teams finish with the same record.

So in truth the Mets are suddenly behind, to the point where even winning their final six games, three in Chicago against the Cubs, and three in Miami against the Marlins, wouldn’t get them in unless the Reds cooperate.

In the Mets’ clubhouse on Sunday, Brandon Nimmo was doing a group interview when the Reds’ score went final, and he was asked if he could believe the Mets were now out of playoff position.

“Yeah, I can definitely believe it,’’ he said. “It’s been happening right in front of our eyes.”

Yes, the Mets have been sliding for weeks, letting teams like the Reds, the Arizona Diamondbacks, and the San Francisco Giants back into the race. And the closer those teams have gotten, the worse the Mets have been playing.

On Sunday, in fact, in what the Mets had to feel was a must-win game, they met the moment with a litany of mistakes early that contributed to a 3-0 deficit by the second inning.

There was Juan Soto getting picked off first base. There was a throwing error by Francisco Lindor that helped fuel the Nationals’ three-run rally. There was a fumble of a routine ground ball by Pete Alonso for another error.

There was also Sean Manaea giving up a two-run home run to a light-hitting backup shortstop named Nasim Nuñez on a flat fastball, which led reporters to ask him why, as Mendoza said, he again wasn’t able to elevate his fastball.

Said Manaea, after several seconds of thought: “I don’t know.”

Even with all of that, the Mets’ worst mistake in some ways, and one that epitomized their  play of late, was Cedric Mullins’ lack of awareness on the bases that proved costly.

It happened on a weird play in the fourth inning: with Luis Torrens on second base, Mullins’ fly ball down the left field line at first appeared to be caught by a diving Daylen Lile. But as he hit the ground, the ball came out of his glove, and according to Mendoza, third base umpire Jeremie Rehak made a safe sign, indicating the ball was in play.

With the ball in plain sight on the ground, and Lile writhing in pain, Torrens took no chances and went back to tag up, then ran all the way to score as the ball still stayed untouched on the ground. Mullins, meanwhile, said he saw no signal from the umpires (nor did first base coach Antoan Richardson), and because he saw Torrens tag up, “my assumption is that it was an out.”

So he lingered around first base, watching Torrens run. Meanwhile, Mendoza said, “We were all screaming from the dugout” to go to second. Mullins didn’t hear them, and only noticed when he finally started to go back to the dugout himself. At that point, umpires had called timeout, and though Mullins did go to second (he was tagged out, though Mendoza said they would have challenged), the play was ruled dead and Mullins was awarded first base.

Clearly Mullins should not have assumed, since he didn’t see a signal, and instead kept running. And it mattered when he was immediately doubled off first on Lindor’s line drive to Josh Bell. When Soto followed with a double to the right field corner, Mullins’ mistake loomed even larger.

Had the Mets’ offense come to life at some point, of course, the play would have been a footnote. Instead, it potentially had a major impact on the outcome. Another blunder that has become far too common for this ballclub.

And so now the Mets are up against it. In their quiet clubhouse the players insisted they still believe. But the tone of their comments shifted as the chasers now.

“We put ourselves in this position, we’ve got to find a way out of it,” said Lindor. “If we want to be where we want to be, we have to play better.”

“We can turn it on in an instant,” added Nimmo.

At this point, though, it’s hard to believe they can merely flip a switch. They’ve been a mediocre-to-bad team longer than they were a good one on this long and winding road of a season.

And most significantly, no matter what they do, they now need help.

Dodgers fall to Giants in regular-season home finale, plan to return in the playoffs

Los Angeles, CA, Sunday, September 21, 2025 - Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Emmet Sheehan.
Dodgers pitcher Emmet Sheehan delivers during a 3-1 loss to the San Francisco Giants on Sunday afternoon. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Half-filled duffle bags littered the floor of the Dodgers' clubhouse Sunday afternoon while a jumble of suitcases stood inside the locker room door.

Sunday’s 3-1 matinee loss to the San Francisco Giants, a game which featured another late-inning bullpen meltdown, was the last chance to see the Dodgers at home during the regular season and 46,601 people brought tickets to mark the occasion, pushing the team’s attendance above 4 million for the first time.

But the vibe wasn’t so much “goodbye” and it was “we’ll be right back,” since the team and its fans are expecting to return to Dodger Stadium to open the National League playoffs next week. Even the retiring Clayton Kershaw made that point when he briefly addressed the crowd before the game.

“Remember, we’ve got another month left,” he said. “So we'll see you at the end of October.”

Read more:Dodgers to reach 4-million fan milestone for the first time in team history

That may be a bit ambitious. But barring disaster — never count out the Dodgers’ bullpen — the team is guaranteed at least two more games at home this season. The Dodgers will hit the road Monday for their final six games of the regular season with a magic number at three, meaning any combination of Dodger wins and Padres losses totaling three will give the team its 12th West Division title in 13 years — and the Dodger Stadium playoff dates that go with it.

“Our head right now, to be honest, is on winning this division and going forward,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I just want to win the division and get to the postseason.”

The team missed a chance to move a big step closer to that goal Sunday when it wasted another brilliant performance from right-hander Emmet Sheehan, who held the Giants to a hit over seven innings, retiring 15 in a row at one point.

Sheehan, who didn’t allow a runner after hitting Andrew Knizner to open the third, matched a career-high with 10 strikeouts. But for the third time in four appearances that wasn’t good enough to get the win after reliever Blake Treinen gave up three eighth-inning runs to turn a 1-0 lead into a 3-1 loss.

And that left Roberts to once again profess his faith in a pitcher who has taken the loss in four of his last five appearances and given up 11 earned runs in his last 5 1/3 innings.

Read more:Clayton Kershaw delivers another 'perfect' L.A. moment as Dodgers clinch playoff berth

“I've got to trust what I'm seeing, and not solely bet on the person or track record,” Roberts said of Treinen, who is 0-5 with a 11.57 ERA in seven innings this month. “We all need to see a couple good outings but most importantly, I want to see his confidence up. And to be quite honest, I think that right now he's just not as confident in himself as I am in him.

“The main thing is that we got to get that confidence back.”

That didn’t happen Sunday when his brief appearance turned a pitchers’ duel into batting practice.

Giants’ starter Trevor McDonald, who was making his first big-league start, nearly matched Sheehan through six innings before tiring in the seventh. Max Muncy opened the inning with a walk — the only one McDonald issued — and moved to second on a two-strike single to right by Andy Pages. Michael Conforto then looped the first pitch he saw into left field to score Muncy and end McDonald’s day after 89 pitches.

The Dodgers could get no more, however, with pinch-hitter Tommy Edman lining into a double play to end the inning. And that proved costly when Treinen (1-7) came out of the bullpen to give up three consecutive hits, the last a run-scoring double from pinch-hitter Patrick Bailey.

Three batters later, Willy Adames drew a bases-loaded walk to give the Giants the lead, an advantage they extended to 3-1 on Matt Chapman’s soft grounder to short.

Dodgers pitcher Blake Treinen, right, speaks with pitching coach Mark Prior and catcher Dalton Rushing.
Dodgers pitcher Blake Treinen, right, speaks with pitching coach Mark Prior and catcher Dalton Rushing after giving up a bases-loaded walk Sunday. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

The Dodgers went quietly after that, with a pair of Giant relievers holding them to just a hit over the two innings, spoiling the day for a sun-splashed crowd that made history by pushing the Dodgers’ home attendance to a franchise-record 4,012,470.

The Dodgers, who averaged 49,537 fans a game in 2025, have led the majors in attendance the last 12 years — excluding 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic forced teams to play behind closed doors. But the most they had drawn in a season previously was 3,974,309 in 2019.

The Dodgers are the fifth team to top 4 million, joining the Blue Jays, Rockies, Mets and Yankees, but the first to do so since 2008, when both New York teams did it. Colorado holds the major league record having sold 4,483,350 tickets during it inaugural season in 1993, when it played at an 80,000-seat football stadium.

“Like every season it's been up and down, an emotional year. And for these fans to show up every day, it's incredible,” Roberts said. “There's a reason why I feel that we have the best fans in sports, and the numbers speak to it.”

The Dodgers rewarded that loyalty, with their 52 wins at home this season ranking second in the majors. What they weren’t able to do was clinch the division title in front of their fans.

Read more:Dodgers defeat Giants, but Will Smith's playoff availability remains a concern

But if they can do that on the road this week, they’ll be right back home for at least two more games at Dodger Stadium in the playoffs.

Notes

Right-handers Brock Stewart and Roki Sasaki both pitched scoreless innings in relief for triple-A Oklahoma City on Sunday in their final rehab appearances before the postseason roster is set. Stewart struck out one and gave up a hit, throwing nine of his 15 pitches for strikes. Sasaki did not allow a runner, striking out one of the three batters he faced and getting strikes on five of his eight pitches.

Both pitchers will join the team at the start of the road trip in Arizona, as will right-hander Brusdar Graterol, who threw a bullpen Sunday. It’s a sign of just how uncertain the Dodger reliever corps is that Graterol, who hasn’t pitched all season, is still a possibility for the postseason roster spot. Graterol made just seven regular-season appearances last year but pitched three times in the World Series.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Ben Rice's 10th-inning grand slam powers Yankees to 7-1 win over Orioles

BALTIMORE (AP) — Ben Rice’s tiebreaking grand slam in the top of the 10th inning lifted the New York Yankees to a 7-1 victory over the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday, keeping the pressure on first-place Toronto in the AL East.

New York remained two games behind the Blue Jays — who won at Kansas City — thanks to Rice, who had four hits and drove in five runs. His shot to right-center in the 10th off Keegan Akin broke a 1-all tie. Jazz Chisholm Jr. added a solo homer and Anthony Volpe an RBI single before the inning was over.

Kade Strowd (0-1) took the loss after striking out the side in the ninth and walking Aaron Judge to start the 10th.

David Bednar (6-5), one of six relievers used by New York, got the win.

Samuel Basallo homered in the fifth for the Orioles, and Rice answered with an RBI single the following inning.

Baltimore starter Kyle Bradish allowed a run and two hits in six innings with nine strikeouts and two walks.

New York rookie Cam Schlittler permitted a run and three hits in 5 1/3 innings. He struck out six and walked one.

Key moment

Immediately before the grand slam, Rice hit a dribbler toward third base that rolled just foul. That would have scored one run had it stayed fair, but it would have also been an easy force play at third for the Orioles. Given another chance, Rice cleared the bases.

Key stat

It was the ninth grand slam of the year for the Yankees, tying Arizona for the major league lead.

Up next

Both teams are off Monday. The Yankees send Luis Gil (4-1) to the mound Tuesday night against the Chicago White Sox. Baltimore begins a home series against Tampa Bay.

Despite series loss, Mets remain confident amid playoff push: 'If anyone can do it, it's us'

By losing again Sunday and dropping their crucial three-game series to the lowly Washington Nationals, the Mets now find themselves in a tough spot with six games left to play in the regular season.

They are currently tied with the Cincinnati Reds, who completed a four-game sweep of Chicago Cubs on Sunday, for the third and final Wild Card spot in the National League. But the Reds hold the tiebreaker over the Mets by winning the regular season series and would make the playoffs if the two teams finished with the same record.

Knowing what's at stake in the coming week, Carlos Mendoza said the club needs to do everything it can during this final stretch.

"We got to keep going," Mendoza said. "We got six more and a lot can happen. That's where we're at."

The manager is still confident in his players, believing they are often "one hit away" and adding that anything "could happen."

"You look at the talent there, we're one hit away, making one play, making one pitch. We're close," Mendoza said. "We just haven't be able to get that last hit like I said, to make that play when we need to, or to execute a pitch. It could happen."

Sean Manaea added: "Just looking around at everyone in the room, I feel like the veteran guys have been in this situation before. Maybe not the exact situation, but we've been in some precarious situations before. The young guys have been stepping up. I think combination of that is good. I think if anyone can do it, it's us."

Acknowledging that where the team is in the standings is on them, Francisco Lindor said it's their responsibility to figure out a way to win.

"It comes down to winning," Lindor said. "We've put ourselves in this position, so we've got to find a way to get out of it. And that comes down to winning. We just got to win ballgames."

Brandon Nimmo shared a similar message about the position the team is in, saying they need to "pick ourselves back up" and "put it all together."

"It's been happening right in front of our eyes, so yeah, I can definitely believe it," Nimmo said. "We're down to the last week of the season and our playoff hopes are in front of us. We've got to play winning baseball and put it all together.

"It's come and gone during the season, so we just need to pick ourselves back up and win some games down the stretch here."

The Mets are off Monday and then begin a three-game series with the Cubs on Tuesday and then finish the regular season in Miami against the Marlins over the weekend. Their odds to make the postseason are currently at 63.2 percent, with the Reds at 31.5 percent, per ESPN.

Fan gives back Mike Trout's 400th career home run ball, but not before getting to do something cool

DENVER, COLORADO - SEPTEMBER 20: Mike Trout #27 of the Los Angeles Angels hits his 400th career home run against the Colorado Rockies in the eighth inning at Coors Field on September 20, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)
Angels star Mike Trout hits his 400th career home run against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on Saturday. (Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)

Many people have a fond memory of playing catch with someone special — a parent, a grandparent, a sibling, a lifelong friend.

A fan who sat 485 feet from home plate at Coors Field on Saturday probably never dreamed he'd be doing so with a future Hall of Famer.

But thanks to his quick thinking, the fan, whose first name reportedly is Alberto, boldly asked Mike Trout for the favor after the Angels defeated the Colorado Rockies 3-0.

What a cool request! Trout had already agreed to give Alberto — who attended the game with his wife and two children — three signed bats and two signed baseballs in exchange for the ball he crushed.

While Trout signed the balls and bats in the dugout long after the game had ended, Alberto politely asked him while making a throwing motion with his right arm, "You mind if we play catch with a ball on the field?" the three-time American League Most Valuable Player didn't hesitate, saying, "Yeah, you want to do it?" Alberto grabbed his glove.

A post on the MLB.com X account shows Alberto tossing the ball back and forth to Trout, who catches it with his bare hands while wearing his cap backward. At one point, Trout says something to Alberto's young son, who is watching in awe.

And no wonder. Shortly before Trout hit No. 400, Alberto told Trout he'd turned to his son and said, "He's got a lot of power." No kidding, enough to drive the ball deep into the left-center field stands. Alberto caught the blast with his bare hands.

It was Trout's third home run of at least 485 feet since Statcast began tracking long balls in 2015, the most of any player. The 34-year old outfielder in his 15th season became the 59th MLB player to reach 400 homers and the 20th to hit them all with one franchise.

The No. 400 ball clearly had more monetary value than the signed balls and bats, but nowhere near the value of a career 500 home run ball or, say, the home run the Dodgers' Freddie Freeman hit to win Game 1 of the 2024 World Series — which was sold at auction for $1.56 million.

Read more:Shaikin: Mike Trout hit his 400th career home run. Here's an appreciation, not a lament

The home run was meaningful to Trout, who admitted to feeling pressure as he approached the milestone. It was only his second long ball since Aug. 7.

He also recognized that catching the ball and returning it to the player who belted it was meaningful to Alberto, who likely has already done what dads do — play catch with his children.

"Once they get older and realize, that'll be an awesome memory for the dad to tell the kids, to experience that," Trout told reporters. "I know how I felt when I went to a ballgame with my dad."

Read more:Kid makes family more than $1 million after Freddie Freeman grand slam ball he caught sells

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Sean Manaea struggles as starter, Mets' offense quiet in 3-2 loss to Nationals

The Mets lost 3-2 to the Washington Nationals on Sunday at Citi Field, and in doing so, also lost the series 2-1 against a team with a record of 64-92, the second-worst in the National League.

On Sunday the Mets fell behind 3-0 in the second inning and couldn’t put together a comeback against the pitching staff with a 5.33 ERA, the second-worst in the majors.

Here are the takeaways...

-- The blame for the loss has to fall mainly on the offense, but maybe the Mets should have stayed with what worked last time regarding their piggybacking plan.

They flip-flopped Sean Manaea and Clay Holmes, opting to start Manaea because of the Nationals’ lefty hitters at the top of the lineup, and it backfired. The left-hander gave up three runs in the second inning, two on light-hitting Nasim Nuñez’s home run to left field.

Overall Manaea didn’t look sharp, and Carlos Mendoza was quick to pull him with no outs in the fourth when Robert Hassell reached on Pete Alonso’s error at 1B. For the day, Manaea threw only 50 pitches, allowing four hits and no walks, while striking out three.

It had to be disappointing for the Mets because Manaea had given reason to believe he’d turned a corner of sorts, pitching well after his talk in the tunnel two starts ago with Mendoza.

Holmes did pitch well as the back half of the piggyback plan, throwing 3 2/3 scoreless innings.

-- There was plenty of reason to think the Mets’ offense would have a big day. Starter Jake Irvin has been one of the worst pitchers in baseball in recent weeks, at least statistically. In his seven previous starts before Sunday he had a 9.36 ERA, having given up 34 earned runs. He also had a road ERA for the season of 6.15.

And though Irvin had pitched well against the Mets in D.C., he was 0-2 with a 5.40 ERA at Citi Field. Yet the Mets managed only two runs against the right-hander in 5 1/3 innings.

Even so, the Nationals needed 11 outs from their bullpen, which started the day with worst bullpen ERA in the majors, at 5.60.

-- The Mets made all sorts of mistakes early that contributed to falling behind.

In the first inning, Juan Soto was picked off first as he tried to get an early running start on a steal attempt. In the second, Francisco Lindor made a bad throw that contributed to the Nationals’ three-run rally.

In the third, lack of awareness on the bases by Cedric Mullins proved costly. With Luis Torrens on second, Mullins’ fly ball down the line at first appeared to be caught by left fielder Daylen Lile going into the wall, but the ball fell out of his glove as he hit the ground. The ball was in plain sight on the ground, as Lile writhed in pain from a knee injury, and Torrens came around to score.

However, Mullins stood near first base, seemingly thinking the ball had been caught, even while watching Torrens score. He only ran to second when teammates yelled at him from the dugout, and by then umpires he called timeout due to Lile’s injury. Had he kept running he would have been allowed to stay at second, and that proved costly when he was doubled off first base on Lindor’s line drive to Josh Bell. It looked worse when Soto followed with a double to the right field corner.

In addition, Alonso made an error on a routine ground ball in the fourth inning, and though it didn’t cost the Mets a run, it continued their trend in recent days of playing sloppy baseball.

Game MVP: Nasim Nuñez

The Nationals’ backup shortstop came into the game hitting .185 with two career home runs in 151 plate appearances, but he hammered a fastball from Manaea over the left field wall for an early 3-0 lead that stood up.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets head to Chicago for a crucial three-game series with the Cubs on Tuesday at 7:40 p.m. on SNY.

David Peterson (9-6, 3.98 ERA) is scheduled to start against Cade Horton (11-4, 2.66 ERA).

Mets prospects Jett Williams, Ryan Clifford, Carson Benge all homer in season finale for Triple-A Syracuse

Ending the season on a high note, Mets prospects Jett Williams, Ryan Clifford, and Carson Benge all homered for Triple-A Syracuse (77-73) on Sunday in a 9-0 win over the Lehigh Valley IronPigs.

Williams blasted his seventh home run at the Triple-A level in the top of the third inning, giving Syracuse a 2-0 lead. 

Joining in on the fun, Clifford and Benge went back-to-back in the top of the sixth inning to go up 5-0. Luke Ritter and Kevin Parada also homered in the win. 

Williams, the No. 1 prospect in SNY's midseason rankings, finished his 2025 with a total of 17 homers, 10 coming in Double-A.

He slashed .281/.390/.477 with 29 doubles, five triples, and 37 RBI over 94 games in Double-A, earning a promotion in the middle of August. In addition to the seven homers in 34 games with Syracuse, Williams also recorded five doubles and two triples with 15 RBI. He hit .209 with a .718 OPS in Triple-A.

Clifford, SNY's No. 6 prospect, ends his 2025 season with 29 total home runs, 24 of them coming in Double-A, and 93 total RBI. He made the jump from Double-A to Triple-A at the same time as Williams and Benge after posting an .848 OPS with Binghamton. 

Benge, viewed as the No. 3 prospect, racked up 15 home runs in his first full professional season across all three levels of the minor leagues. He dominated Single-A with a .302 average over 60 games and was quickly promoted to Double-A at the end of June. The 22-year-old kept it going with a .317 average over 32 games with Binghamton before his August promotion to Triple-A.

Tyrone Taylor, playing in his second rehab game with Syracuse while recovering from a hamstring strain, went 1-for-5 with an RBI-single in the seventh inning. Carlos Mendoza said prior to Sunday's game against the Washington Nationals that the team would make a decision on the next steps for Taylor after he played.

Highlights

Phillies end 6-game road trip with 9-2 loss to Diamondbacks

Phillies end 6-game road trip with 9-2 loss to Diamondbacks originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

PHOENIX – Small ball, long ball, ugly ball. It was all there early in the series finale between the Phillies and Arizona. Philadelphia supplied the ugly, the Diamondbacks the rest as they cruised to a 9-2 win.

Arizona, which had 15 hits on the day, batted around in the second inning, when they scored five runs off starter Ranger Suárez. They loaded the bases to begin the inning without a ball leaving the infield. Tim Tawa hit a chopper to third that Alec Bohm bobbled and threw late for an MLB single. Jordan Lawler walked and Jorge Barrossa laid down a perfect bunt. Katel Marte’s single scored two before Corbin Carroll launched a rocket to the rightfield seats for his 31st home run of the season and a 6-0 lead.

“They made me pay for all the pitches that I left in the zone,” Suárez said. “Ending the season healthy. There’s one more start before the post season so I just want to pitch as well and end the season on a high note. Pitch better, think a little bit better when I’m on the mound and just perform a little bit better.

“That’s what we work for (the playoffs),” said Suárez. “That’s why we have such a long season ahead of us every single year to get to October and perform in the postseason. It is exciting. We want to perform in the playoffs. I think we’ve lacked a little bit the past couple of years. We all want to perform there. That’s what it’s all about. We want to get it done this year.”

If Suárez needed to get an ugly performance out of his system before the playoffs begin, this one was it as he gave up six runs and eight hits in the first two innings alone. He was done after four innings and 79 pitches.

“He had a 33-pitch second inning, basically is at 80 pitches after the four,” said Rob Thomson of removing his starter. “Down 6-0, I just wanted to take care of him. They’ve got a lot of speed and other than Carroll’s home run, I don’t think they hit many balls that were hard off of Ranger. They’ve got a lot of speed.”

There was little excitement provided by the Phillies – perhaps the Eagles used it all up – as they could do nothing of significance against Arizona lefty starter Eduardo Rodriguez, who allowed no runs in his six innings. They did score two in the eighth on a single by Nick Castellanos that drove in J.T. Realmuto, and a bases loaded walk by Weston Wilson. Third baseman Alec Bohm remained hot since his return from the injured list on Friday, as he was on base five times with a double, three singles and a walk.

“He’s been great,” Thomson said. “I’ll probably have to move him up. He’s on everything. Maybe that healthy shoulder is really helping. He’s swinging the bat good. We had plenty of opportunities today. I think we were 1-for-14 (with runners on). Casty had the base hit. We had plenty of opportunities we just didn’t come through.”

There were some signs of a pulse in the sixth when pitcher Tim Mayza plunked leadoff hitter Katel Marte after Jorge Barrosa hit his first major league home run and celebrated circling the bases a bit too much, but nothing came of it. Later in the inning, Carroll stole second base for his 30th swipe of the season, becoming the first player in Arizona history to have 30 homers and 30 stolen bases.

The Diamondbacks got another run in the seventh when Tim Tawa belted a 2-2 slider from Orion Kerkering to the seats in leftfield. Kerkering gave up two more hits in the inning but got out without any more damage. They closed out their scoring by getting a run in the eighth off Jhoan Duran, who was simply getting in some work having not pitched since Tuesday.

“I talked to Duran and I said, ‘If you don’t pitch today, you’re going to be off six days going into Tuesday. Do you want an inning?’ And he said yes. So that’s why we pitched him in the eighth. I asked the same thing to David (Robertson) and he said, ‘Not necessarily.”

The Phillies have an off-day Monday before facing the Miami Marlins on Tuesday to start a three-game series. Cristopher Sánchez will get what could be his last start of the regular season as he prepares to be the Game One starter for the Phillies when they begin the playoffs.

Though his performance may not have showed it Sunday, Suárez is ready for the postseason.

“I feel better overall, if you want to compare it to last year (at this time),” Suárez said. “I’ve been feeling better overall after every single start. Whatever is best for our team to win, (starting) Game Two, Game Three, Game Four. I’m willing to do whatever it takes to help this team win.”

Giants rookie Trevor McDonald nails audition, earns another shot at starting

Giants rookie Trevor McDonald nails audition, earns another shot at starting originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

LOS ANGELES — Trevor McDonald said all the right things Sunday, even though he’s just three appearances into his big league career. 

The Giants right-hander mentioned he was thankful for the opportunity and is simply focused on helping the team win as many games as possible down the stretch. But for the 24-year-old, September is about more than just filling innings.

Every opportunity is an audition, and McDonald certainly opened some eyes on Sunday. The game was won, 3-1, after he departed, but he more than did his part, allowing just one run over six-plus innings against a Los Angeles Dodgers club that has had its way with the Giants all season. 

It’s too soon to know what that will mean for McDonald in the offseason. But for now this much is clear: He has earned another start next weekend. 

“Yeah, for sure,” manager Bob Melvin said. “You pitch six innings against a lineup like that, you deserve another start.”

The Giants have much bigger questions to answer over the final week, but here’s a small one they should probably kick around in meetings next week at Oracle Park: Why did it take so long for McDonald to get a shot?

The right-hander is not a top prospect and didn’t explode off the page in Triple-A, but that’s a tough league for pitchers, and he generally handled himself well. Plus, there’s the simple, overriding fact that the Giants ran out of pitching weeks ago and McDonald has been on the 40-man roster all season. 

That lack of depth helped drop them below .500, but McDonald led the Giants on Sunday as they at least avoided a sweep. He struck out three and scattered six hits while getting a couple of huge double plays behind him. 

“Man, that was great,” Melvin said. “To be able to go against that lineup, his first start for us, I’ll tell you what — he’s not afraid. There’s some determination in him.”

That was no surprise to the organization’s top prospect, who also arrived on this road trip. Bryce Eldridge made his first start at first base and helped out with a diving stop that started a double play. Afterward he said McDonald was his favorite pitcher to play behind in Triple-A because he works quickly and throws strikes. 

McDonald relies heavily on his sinker, but it was the breaking ball that stood out Sunday. He got some ugly swings from Shohei Ohtani early on and said that helped him settle in. 

“That took the pressure off right away,” McDonald said.

When it got turned back up, the gloves were there. 

Willy Adames and Christian Koss teamed up for an athletic double play, and Eldridge ended the seventh with the dive and then a throw across the diamond to Matt Chapman. It skipped, but that can be excused from the former two-way star. A lot was thrown at Eldridge the last week and throws to third were not high on the list. 

“Thankfully we’ve got a Gold Glover over there,” Eldridge said. “I told him I’d get him back a few times.”

Eldridge should get a few opportunities over the final six games. The plan is for him to split first base and DH with Rafael Devers on the homestand, which could mean another day behind McDonald.

The Giants have had two empty slots in their rotation for most of September, but Kai-Wei Teng has impressed the staff with his strikeout stuff. Carson Whisenhunt could be back for one more appearance, but there still will be an opportunity for McDonald. It wouldn’t be a surprise to see some veterans shut down when the Giants are officially eliminated, which could come as soon as Tuesday. 

McDonald said he’s just trying to contribute, but he knows there’s a lot at stake for him right now, even if that’s not the case for the team overall. 

“I’m trying to finish strong,” he said, “and carry that into the offseason and come back next spring and try to make the team.”

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What we learned as Trevor McDonald's stellar first start fuels win vs. Dodgers

What we learned as Trevor McDonald's stellar first start fuels win vs. Dodgers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

LOS ANGELES — In at least one way, the Giants got what they needed this weekend. The New York Mets dropped two of three to the lowly Washington Nationals at home, continuing their late-season slide. 

It wasn’t the Giants, though, who went charging through that door. 

The Cincinnati Reds are now in the driver’s seat for the final NL postseason spot, and the Giants will head home knowing they could be eliminated in the next 48 hours. They at least made sure the flight was a happy one. 

Trevor McDonald impressed in his second outing of the year and the Giants rallied late, winning 3-1 to avoid a four-game sweep at Dodger Stadium. They finished with a 2-5 road trip and will head home at 77-79 on the season. 

The game was scoreless and zooming along at an incredible pace until the seventh, when the Dodgers scored and put two in scoring position with one out. Tommy Edman hit a line drive to first but it was snagged by the 6-foot-7 Bryce Eldridge, who was making his first big league start on the dirt. Eldridge isn’t just tall, he also used to be a pitcher, and he made a quick throw to third for an inning-ending double play. 

The momentum carried over, as the Giants put three runs on Blake Treinen in the top of the eighth. Treinen got booed off the field after a stretch that included a go-ahead walk of Willy Adames with the bases loaded. 

Quite The Audition

In his third career big league appearance, McDonald certainly did enough to earn a start next weekend against the Colorado Rockies. 

McDonald had a shutout going until the seventh. With a struggling bullpen, manager Bob Melvin tried to stretch the right-hander out and it hurt his final line, but he certainly showed something.

McDonald started his day by striking out Shohei Ohtani and he finished with three of them, along with nine groundouts, which is the norm for him. He scattered six hits and walked just one. McDonald was a two-pitch guy (sinker, curveball) in the minors and it was that way Sunday, too, but it worked. He threw his curve 40 times and got seven whiffs. 

That Was Quick

Adames and Christian Koss teamed up for one of the best double plays of the year for the Giants … 

Both were a big part of the game-winning rally, too. Koss ignited it with an infield single and added a hustle double in his final at-bat. 

Revenge Season

In the future, Old Friends will have a hard time topping what Michael Conforto did to the Giants this year. Conforto is hitting just .204 overall and continues to lose playing but he would be well below .200 without the four series against his former teammates. 

It was scoreless until the seventh, when Conforto followed a walk and single with a single to left. That gave him 10 RBI against the Giants this year; 28 percent of his RBI for the season have come in rivalry games. Conforto is 14-for-37 overall against the Giants with three homers, which matches the number he hit all of last season at Oracle Park. 

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Mets vs. Nationals: How to watch on SNY on Sept. 21, 2025

The Mets wrap up a critical three-game series against the Nationals at Citi Field on Sunday at 1:40 p.m. on SNY.

Here's what to know about the game and how to watch...


Mets Notes

  • Juan Soto is slashing a robust .347/.422/.708 with seven home runs, three doubles, one triple, 20 RBI and 15 runs in September (72 at-bats). On Saturday, he recorded his sixth RBI to tie the game or put the Mets ahead in the seventh inning or later.
  • Francisco Lindor extended his hitting streak to nine games with a single in the third inning on Saturday and finished 1-for-5. Since Aug. 13, he leads the majors in hits, is tied for first in runs (35), and ranks eighth in OPS (1.020, minimum 100 plate appearances).
  • Sean Manaea is slated to take the mound first, with Clay Holmes expected to follow in a bulk relief role. The lefty-righty tandem swapped duties in Tuesday's home win over the Padres, allowing a combined three runs on seven hits with six strikeouts across nine innings.
  • With Manaea being reinstated from the paternity list, RHP Chris Devenski has been designated for assignment.

NATIONALS
METS
James Wood, DHFrancisco Lindor, SS
Dylan Crews, RFJuan Soto, RF
Josh Bell, 1BBrandon Nimmo, LF
Daylen Lile, LFPete Alonso, 1B
Paul DeJong, 2BJeff McNeil, 2B
Jorge Alfaro, CMark Vientos, DH
Brady House, 3BBrett Baty, 3B
Nasim Nuñez, SSLuis Torrens, C
Jacob Young, CFCedric Mullins, CF

What channel is SNY?

Check your TV or streaming provider's website or channel finder to find your local listings.

How can I stream the game?

The new way to stream SNY games is via the MLB App or MLB.tv. Streaming on the SNY App has been discontinued.

In order to stream games in SNY’s regional territory, you will need to have SNY as part of your TV package (cable or streaming), or you can now purchase an in-market SNY subscription package. Both ways will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone. 

How can I watch the game on my computer via MLB? 

To get started on your computer, click here and then follow these steps: 

  • Log in using your provider credentials. If you are unsure of your provider credentials, please contact your provider. 
  • Link your provider credentials with a new or existing MLB.com account. 
  • Log in using your MLB.com credentials to watch Mets games on SNY. 

How can I watch the game on the MLB App? 

MLB App access is included for FREE with SNY. To access SNY on your favorite supported Apple or Android mobile device, please follow the steps below.  

  • Open “MLB” and tap on “Subscriber Login” for Apple Devices or “Sign in with MLB.com” for Android Devices. 
  • Type in your MLB.com credentials and tap “Log In.”  
  • To access live or on-demand content, tap on the "Watch" tab from the bottom navigation bar. Select the "Games" sub-tab to see a listing of available games. You can scroll to previous dates using the left and right arrows. Tap on a game to select from the game feeds available.  

For more information on how to stream Mets games on SNY, please click here.

Rangers 2-0 Hibs: What the pundits said

Former Rangers and Scotland winger Neil McCann on BBC Sportsound

It's a difficult game for Russell Martin and the team - demonstrations before the game, apprehension in the stadium.

When they got the second, they were comfortable. Hibs looked a bit lethargic and Rangers adjusted how they defended at times.

It's a big relief for Martin and his players.

I don't think there was ever a doubt from people who know Nico Raskin that you'd get the right reaction.

He's gone from sitting in the stands to the starting line-up and you can see why. He bossed the game today in terms of the energy required.

It took Nico's header to take the nerves away from the team.

What's happened within the bowels of Rangers, we're not privy to the details, but what fallout there might have been, you have to find a way as a manager to resolve it and do the best thing for the team.

Nico showed today that he's a big player for Rangers.

Former Hibernian midfielder Scott Allan on BBC Sportsound

The way Rangers started the second half, they looked to really pin Hibs in at times.

The only way Hibs were getting out would be a ball turned down a channel, hoping Kieron Bowie could spring from there.

They looked more hopeful than definitive in terms of how they were going to create chances. They had chances from set pieces, but the delivery wasn't on the money when you know the quality they possess.

Rangers defended well the second half but it all comes from how they played. They dominated the ball and moved the ball well.

Hibs ran out of ideas and didn't look the same as they have done since the start of the season.

There's no question David Gray will be disappointed in the goals that they lost, especially after the disallowed one.

It's the poorest I've seen Hibs this season, I can't lie.

Mets 2025 MLB Wild Card Watch: Playoff odds, standings, matchups, and more for Sept. 21

With seven games remaining in the regular season, the Mets are looking to hold off a handful of teams for the final Wild Card spot in the National League.

Here's everything you need to know ahead of play on Sept. 21...


Mets: 80-75, 1.0 game up on Reds for third Wild Card

Next up: vs. Nationals, Sunday at 1:40 p.m. on SNY (Sean Manaea vs. Jake Irvin)
Latest result: 5-3 loss to Nationals on Saturday
Remaining schedule: 1 vs. WSH, 3 @ CHC, 3 @ MIA
Odds to make playoffs: 75.9 percent
*Mets hold tiebreaker over Giants by virtue of winning the season series, while Reds hold tiebreaker over Mets. The tiebreaker between the Mets and Diamondbacks is TBD, and will likely be based on intradivision record since the two clubs split the season series

Reds: 79-76, 1.0 game back of Mets

Next up: vs. Cubs, Sunday at 1:40 p.m. (Andrew Abbott vs. Jameson Taillon)
Latest result: 6-3 win over Cubs on Saturday
Remaining schedule: 1 vs. CHC, 3 vs. PIT, 3 @ MIL
Odds to make playoffs: 20.5 percent

Diamondbacks: 78-77, 2.0 games back of Mets

Next up: vs. Phillies, Sunday at 4:10 p.m. (Eduardo Rodriguez vs. Ranger Suarez)
Latest result: 4-3 win over Phillies on Saturday
Remaining schedule: 1 vs. PHI, 3 vs. LAD, 3 @ SD
Odds to make playoffs: 3.4 percent

Giants: 76-79, 4.0 games back of Mets 

Next up: @ Dodgers, Sunday at 4:10 p.m.(Trevor McDonald vs. Emmet Sheehan)
Latest result: 7-5 loss to Dodgers on Saturday
Remaining schedule: 1 @ LAD, 3 vs. STL, 3 vs. COL
Odds to make playoffs: 0.1 percent

ICYMI in Mets Land: Defense costs New York in extras; updates on Kodai Senga, Tyrone Taylor

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Saturday, in case you missed it...