Has Martin lost backing to turn Rangers around?

"We'll see".

That was the answer Rangers head coach Russell Martin gave when asked if he was certain his board would continue to support him given what was unfolding at Ibrox.

It was far from convincing - and in stark contrast to his previous statements where certainty oozed out during what has now descended into a critical mess for the club.

"Will you resign?" he was asked in his press conference, to which he responded with a firm "no," after a fan media representative explained an overwhelming amount of the Rangers support want him to leave.

That exchange edged on hostile to say the least.

This all came after enduring the quite venomous wrath of a majority of fans, with the 2-0 defeat at home by Scottish Premiership leaders Hearts leaving Martin's side 10th out of the 12 teams after five winless games.

It's unthinkable for Rangers and a support given renewed, and long-awaited, hope of challenging Celtic earlier this year after a US-led consortium took control.

Four draws and now this defeat is beyond a crisis given the demands of being in charge of the club. It's been 47 years since they failed to win any of their opening five league fixtures.

You then chuck in a humiliating exit in the Champions League play-off to Club Brugge.

The question now, after so much turmoil on and off the park since the former Southampton manager took charge in June, is whether he can turn this around or whether he will be given the opportunity to do so.

Ibrox turns toxic after another nightmare unfolds

It was clear at Ibrox that if things didn't go Rangers' way, there was a strong chance the support would be quick to turn, with Martin the focus of their ire.

It unfolded exactly like that. Boos were deafening at times and "sacked in the morning" was sung by some home supporters.

Many simply left, it was all too much to bear.

The build-up had been dominated by his decision to continue to omit Belgian international midfielder Nicolas Raskin despite claiming an issue with the player had been "resolved".

That issue seems far down the pecking order right now.

"Only results will convince them," Martin told BBC Scotland afterwards.

"My job is to convince the players and the staff inside the building after a difficult afternoon and give them enough support and detail to improve.

"It is not going to be an easy journey for me to win favour. It hasn't been from day one with a lot of people, but we'll keep working and make sure it does.

"Professionally, it hurts a bit because nobody sees how hard you work.

"No-one sees the stuff you have to deal with, but it is what it is and is the job of a football manager."

Victorious Hearts manager Derek McInnes felt compelled to explain how unfair he felt Martin's treatment had been during the match.

That perhaps shines a light on how toxic this became.

Former Rangers winger Neil McCann was part of Barry Ferguson's interim coaching team last season, and has doubts whether Martin can survive this latest setback.

"I'm not sure," he said. "I really felt for him and he looked really uncomfortable at the end of the game.

"I know he's not one for walking away but when the fans show their disdain and their displeasure like that then it's really difficult to come through it.

"He would have to go on an enormous run to turn that fanbase because they demand better."

Case for the defence?

Martin has only been in charge for just over three months. It is so early in his tenure and the level of change Rangers required was, and has been, drastic.

Most observers would recognise that might take time to embed, but time is one thing you don't get at Rangers. Not anymore, at least, after sustained underachievement.

Martin clearly believes the squad is now there to challenge for the title, but the horse may have already bolted in terms of taking on Celtic, or maybe Hearts given their current nine-point advantage over the Ibrox side. Brendan Rodgers' defending champions visit Kilmarnock on Sunday.

Martin spoke of "difficulty managing expectation" and players "feeling the weight of it" as they try to establish themselves.

He insisted the pace of change, with a substantial squad overhaul, was required as they were "not coming into a place that is winning a lot", referencing a lack of trophies.

There does look the basis of a strong squad, but it already seems a long road back for Martin given the level of anger he endured against Hearts and in his post-match exchange.

When you lose the fans, the outcome often becomes inevitable.

"The Rangers fans have had enough," said Billy Dodds, who was also an assistant to Ferguson last season.

"They needed to get results to dampen it all today and they've not done that.

"It's not nice when things don't go well at Ibrox. Four draws and a defeat, you're going to come under pressure."

Fan view: 'Martin could get Rangers relegated'

We asked for Rangers fans to share their thoughts after another dismal outing:

Here's a selction of their views:

Paul: This game may well be Russell Martin's last. This cannot go on any more, if there are Rangers fans still in the stands by the end of this debacle I will be surprised. The fans will vote with their feet in their droves. Martin isn't cut out for this, we need someone who knows what they're doing and we need it now!

Brian: Russell Martin could get us relegated. He's the only person on Earth who thinks this is acceptable.

Brian: Martin is deluded, heard him say before the game, "we are in a good place at the moment". What? After a draw at home with an awful Celtic team? Sack him, he is an embarrassment!

Lee: Martin surely has to go. If you don't have the players to play the way you want you have to adapt. He isn't being a manager he's being a dictator. You can't force players to play in a way that they clearly can't.

Alex: How many chances does Russell Martin need to get? It is clearly obvious he is out of his depth and cannot manage. It was doubtful before he got the position and now it is firmly confirmed that he is the wrong person for the job.

Jackie: I think Martin needs to be given more time. Can't just keep changing manager after a run of bad results. At some point we have to stick to someone and see it through to the bitter end.

Baz: I said it after the first game of the season how worried I was about Russell Martin's appointment and how long a season it's going to be. Sadly, I've been proven correct and if he isn't sacked tonight or tomorrow, the crowds will start dropping and the players confidence will get even lower if that's possible.

Garry: Martin's tactics are the definition of insanity - doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results. No wins, no progress, and no prospect of being the manager by Christmas.

Mets alumni share advice for 2025 club fighting for postseason berth: ‘Just go for it’

On the day 40 former Mets players returned to Flushing for the first annual Alumni Classic game, the legends of the franchise had some advice for the current team.

And with the 2025 squad sputtering through a rough stretch of seven straight defeats as they look to hang on to the final NL Wild Card spot, any pointers should be seen as little shards of gold dust. 

Carlos Beltran pointed to a similar situation he experienced during the 2007 season, which painfully saw the Mets’ seven-game lead in the NL East evaporate as they dropped 12 of the final 17 games and missed the postseason entirely.

“Thinking about what I can say to a team that is going through the same, I would say, ‘Just go for it,’” Beltran said. “Don’t limit yourself, don’t be timid. Just be aggressive. Be who you are. Think about what has put you in a position where you at today, because you are fighting for a playoff opportunity. 

“Do you know how many teams would love to sign up for that opportunity, to be in exactly this position?”

Beltran, a World Series champion with the Astros in 2017, added, "Just go out there and play hard baseball. And if it’s meant to be, it’s gonna be for you. And if it’s not meant to be, at least you’re gonna go down giving your best.”

Carlos Delgado agreed with his former teammate.

“I like to focus more on the positive,” Delgado said. “If you told me in February, by September 13, you are gonna be holding a Wild Card spot, I’d take that any time.

“Just continue to play hard, don’t scoreboard watch, one day at a time, one at-bat at a time, let’s win today. Let’s figure it out. And give it all out for the next two weeks and, hopefully, for the next six weeks after that.”

“The advice that I can give them now is to take it one game at a time,” Jose Reyes said. “They’ve been through some tough times, but whatever happened in the game yesterday, leave it there. Just focus on the game today and try to go from there.”

Mets Notes: Kodai Senga to make another start at Triple-A, Jonah Tong still in rotation for now

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza addressed the plan for the Mets' rotation ahead of Saturday afternoon's game against the Texas Rangers.


Jonah Tong stays in rotation

Mendoza indicated that the situation remains fluid, but as of Saturday, the plan was to keep the 22-year-old Tong in the big league rotation after his rough six-run outing on Friday night.

"So right now, he is," Mendoza said about Tong's spot in the rotation. “We gotta get through the off-day [on Monday], we said we were going to get creative, but we haven’t had conversations about not having Jonah start a game.

“Again, it’s fluid, but as of right now, he is in the rotation.”

Tong recorded just two outs and allowed six runs on four hits and three walks, but the skipper has confidence in the young right-hander's ability to navigate his first truly rough experience in the majors.

“The talent, the stuff, personality, there’s a lot to like there. And a lot to learn from it, too,” Mendoza said. “He’ll move on, he’ll learn, he’s already thinking about the next one. That gives me and all of us confidence on it.”

And the manager isn’t the only one stepping in to help Tong, who was rather emotional after his tough start.

“I talked to him last night after the game, I talked to him today, but the good thing, it was pretty telling for me, to see all the veterans, pretty much the whole team, supporting him last night,” Mendoza said on Saturday. “It goes to show you that not only [do] we have really good players, but we got really good people that care about each other and have each other’s back.

“[Friday] walking in the clubhouse and the cafeteria after the game, the whole team was right there supporting him. That gives me confidence, too. It's just a good thing to see from our team.”

Plan for Kodai Senga

The Mets will have Senga make a second start at Triple-A, Mendoza confirmed, as the right-hander still has a few things to work through.

“That was the plan, he’s gotta be down there for 15 days anyway,” the manager said about Senga pitching again. “See how he responds [over] the next few days, continue to work on his mechanics, but the plan is for him to make another one.”

The club will be hoping the 32-year-old’s next outing goes as well as his first: one run on three hits over six innings with eight strikeouts.

“It was very good,” Mendoza said of Senga’s first outing with Syracuse. “When you look at the numbers, no walks, the strikeouts, the way he used all of his pitches.

“The main thing he threw strikes, he attacked. And pretty much every pitch was working, so that’s a really good sign there.”

On the night, he got 18 whiffs on 43 swings with nine called strikes for a 36 percent called strike-whiff rate on 74 total pitches. 

He was particularly good with the 17 forkballs he threw, which was particularly spooky for the minor league competition: 11 whiffs on 11 swings.

On Brett Baty’s defense at second

After Jeff McNeil’s ejection in the fourth inning for arguing balls and strikes in Friday's loss, the Mets went to Baty off the bench to play second base. Before the season, Baty’s ability to play second was a lingering question mark. But right now, his versatility has proven to be a big boost for the club.

“You gotta give him credit, because this was a guy that wasn’t familiar with that position, and we’ve given him starts there, and you feel comfortable. You like your chances,” Mendoza said of Baty. “And then not only when he’s in the lineup, but even if he’s not, he allows you to make those in-game decisions, like what happened yesterday. Man, he’s been pretty solid, pretty steady. 

“And it’s not an easy transition, especially when you come up playing on the left side of the infield and now you gotta know, not only the angles, but there’s a lot more. Whether it’s cuts and relays, turning double plays. And he’s been really good for us.”

Through 366 innings over 56 games at second base this season, Baty has two defensive runs saved, according to FanGraphs. Not bad for a guy who had not played the position at the big league level before this season.

SEE IT: Mets legends arrive at Citi Field for 2025 Alumni Classic Game

Over 40 Mets legends were back in Queens on Saturday afternoon, on the field getting ready for the 2025 Alumni Classic Game at Citi Field.

Before the game, the legends – including Mike Piazza, Johan Santana, Matt Harvey, Carlos Delgado, Jose Reyes, Bartolo Colon, and Carlos Beltran – spent time hanging out on the field, warming up, taking batting practice, and even saying hello to ex-Met Jacob deGrom.

"It's pretty cool," Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said about the Alumni Classic. "There's some really good players there... It's always cool to see some of those players that meant so much to this organization. And to have them together for one day is special."

Coverage of the Shea Stadium vs. Citi Field three-inning game begins with a special pregame at 1:30 p.m. on SNY.

Here's a look at some of the fun...

Mets recall RHP Dom Hamel from Triple-A, option reliever Huascar Brazobán

The Mets made a move to freshen up the bullpen after Jonah Tong's short outing in Friday night's defeat to the Texas Rangers.

Right-hander Dom Hamel has been recalled from Triple-A Syracuse, with righty reliever Huascar Brazobán going down in the corresponding move.

Brazobán, who was added to the big league roster ahead of Friday's series opener, pitched 3.1 innings of scoreless relief after Tong failed to get out of the first inning. He allowed just two hits and a walk, throwing 51 pitches (35 strikes).

Hamel, 26, was called up to the big leagues for the first time in early August, but was sent back down before he could make his MLB debut.

In 31 games (11 starts) with Triple-A this year, Hamel has pitched to a 5.32 ERA and 1.330 WHIP with 75 strikeouts and 22 walks in 67.2 innings. This is the first season he has worked extensively out of the bullpen after making 52 starts in 57 appearances with Syracuse and Double-A Binghampton during the 2023 and 2022 campaigns.

Brazobán, the unfortunate recipient of the demotion with New York needing a fresh arm, has yo-yoed between the majors and Triple-A this year. With the Mets, he has pitched to a 3.67 ERA and 1.296 WHIP in 47 games (three starts as an opener) with 51 strikeouts to 27 walks in 56.1 innings.

Dominic Smith lands on IL with hamstring injury after hustle play vs. Dodgers

Dominic Smith lands on IL with hamstring injury after hustle play vs. Dodgers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants will be without their best defensive first baseman for the foreseeable future.

San Francisco placed Dominic Smith on the IL on Saturday with a right hamstring strain after the 30-year-old made an incredible hustle play with third baseman Matt Chapman to end the top of the fourth inning in a crucial 5-1 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday night at Oracle Park.

After Chapman dove into the 5-6 hole and popped up with a throw to first, Smith stretched out and did the splits to ensure the Giants got the out — but it cost him.

Giants manager Bob Melvin said they are deeming it a “moderate” sprain until further evaluation Saturday night, adding it will be at least a 10-day IL stint.

Sitting at 75-72 and a half-game back of the third and final NL wild-card spot, the Giants have 15 games to continue trending upward. Melvin believes it’s a long shot that Smith will be a part of that challenge.

“Well, he’s not a speedster,” Melvin said. “Hamstrings typically take a couple of weeks. I know he’ll be itching, so it just kind of depends on what we need him to do. Our doctors will have more clarity today.”

Jerar Encarnacion will take Smith’s roster spot, but the Giants will stick with Wilmer Flores and Rafael Devers interchanging at first base during Smith’s absence.

Devers has played first base for the Giants 20 times this season since being traded to San Francisco.

“I think he’s way more comfortable now than he was early on,” Melvin said of Devers. “But he looks like he’s fine out there. The only thing I worry about is the ankle thing he had going on, but I think he’s past that now. And talking to him yesterday, he was ready to play first base today.”

The Giants have won 13 of their last 18 games, and they’ll have to find a way to keep the momentum going without Smith’s impact both defensively and offensively.

“He’s been great, both offensively and defensively, hitting in the middle of the order and getting big hits for us,” Melvin said. “I think this is probably as comfortable as he’s been in a long time with the team, too. He’s well-received here and respected here. You’re going to have certain injuries over the course of the season that are impactful.

“This is definitely one for us.”

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Jacob deGrom gets present in Citi Field return: a six-run lead before throwing his first pitch

NEW YORK — Jacob deGrom received a gift in his Citi Field return: not just a video tribute but a six-run lead before he threw a pitch.

A montage of the slender star’s highlights flashed across the ballpark video board Friday night as he started to throw long toss to Lynard Skynyrd’s “Simple Man,” his old warmup song. He tipped his cap as “Welcome back Jacob” flashed in large letters.

“I looked at it for a second, then I had to kind of look down, gather myself and continue playing catch to get ready for the game,” he said after pitching the soaring Texas Rangers over the skidding New York Mets 8-3.

A two-time Cy Young Award winner who went 82-57 in nine seasons for the Mets, DeGrom gave up three runs in the third inning on a homer and a pair of sacrifice flies but steadied to retire his final 15 batters. He allowed four hits over seven innings and is 12-7 with a 2.82 ERA in a season in which he earned his fifth All-Star selection and first since 2021.

“The mound felt the exact same,” he said.

DeGrom had not been to Citi Field since leaving the Mets in December 2022 for a $185 million, five-year contract with the Rangers. His return was a focal point since the schedule was issued in July 2024.

“I wanted a chance to pitch here,” he said.

DeGrom went back to the batting cage behind the dugout while the Rangers knocked out rookie Josh Tong after two outs in a 22-minute top of the first. DeGrom averaged 98 mph with his fastball, topping at 99.6 mph. He induced 14 outfield putouts, three more than his previous career high.

“They just hit the bottom of the baseball,” he said. “They go up.”

DeGrom’s 2.14 regular-season ERA at Citi Field is the second-lowest for a pitcher since 1920 throwing at least 500 innings at a ballpark, trailing only Sandy Koufax’s 1.37 at Dodger Stadium.

“He was a show. He was the guy that people came to the ballpark to watch him pitch,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said.

DeGrom, who turned 37 in June, won the 2014 NL Rookie of the Year and 2018 and ’19 NL Cy Youngs with the Mets. He is the franchise leader in ERA (2.52), WHIP (.998) and strikeouts per nine innings (10.91) among pitchers with at least 500 innings.

Given his time in New York, deGrom felt strange to face former teammates Pete Alonso, Brandon Nimmo and Jeff McNeil.

“He’s always going to come after you with everything he’s got and always respected that about him when he was here,” said Nimmo, who gave his old pal a pat on the back after the pitcher beat him to the first-base bag for the final out of the sixth.

His parents, sisters, wife and kids were in the ballpark.

“They were here when I made my debut so they wanted to come back up for this and be a part of it,” he said of the adults.

DeGrom smiled when asked how he’d feel about the Mets eventually retiring his No. 48, saying it wasn’t his decision but would “be a huge honor.”

DeGrom’s final two seasons in New York were shortened by injuries. He limited to 26 starts in 2021-22 because of right side tightness, his ’21 season ended before the All-Star break by right forearm tightness and his 2022 debut delayed until August by a right shoulder injury.

DeGrom opted out of his Mets contract after the 2022 season, giving up a $30.5 million salary, for 2023. He made just six starts and had Tommy John surgery for the second time that June 12.

“You try not to let doubt set in.” he said. “Every day you get to put this uniform on, I’m thankful for that.”

He didn’t return to the big leagues until Sept. 13 last season.

“Taking the mound for the three starts last year was huge for me,” he said. “I was able to say, hey, I got back out there. Now I can prepare like a normal offseason.”

DeGrom has been his old self this year, with a 97.5 mph fastball velocity that is second in the major leagues behind Paul Skenes’ 98.2 mph for those throwing at least 1,000 pitches. DeGrom retired Baltimore’s first 18 batters on June 25 before Colton Cowser’s leadoff single in the seventh.

He is 96-64 with a 2.55 ERA and 0.99 WHIP, best among pitchers with at least 1,000 innings since the live ball era started in 1920.

“Just the way he’s bouncing back off his starts, there’s no reason why he won’t pitch in his 40s,” Bochy said.

DeGrom might generate Hall of Fame consideration if he pitches five or six more years at this level.

“Maybe. We’ll see,” he said. “My goal is to just keep it going.”

Mets 2025 MLB Wild Card Watch: Playoff odds, standings, matchups, and more for Sept. 13

With 14 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. 13.


Mets: 76-72, 0.5 games up on Giants for third Wild Card

Next up: vs. Rangers, Saturday at 4:10 p.m. on SNY (Brandon Sproat vs. Patrick Corbin)
Latest result: 8-3 loss to Rangers on Friday
Remaining schedule: 2 vs. TEX, 3 vs. SD, 3 vs. WSH, 3 @ CHC, 3 @ MIA
Odds to make playoffs: 73 percent
*Mets hold tiebreaker over Giants by virtue of winning the season series, while Reds hold tiebreaker over Mets

Giants: 75-72, 0.5 games back of Mets 

Next up: vs. Dodgers, Saturday 9:05 p.m.(Logan Webb vs. Clayton Kershaw)
Latest result: 5-1 win over Dodgers on Friday
Remaining schedule: 2 vs. LAD, 3 @ ARI, 4 @ LAD, 3 vs. STL, 3 vs. COL
Odds to make playoffs: 16.6 percent

Reds: 74-73, 1.5 games back of Mets

Next up: @ Athletics, Friday at 10:05 p.m. (Hunter Greene vs. Luis Severino)
Latest result: 3-0 loss to Athletics on Friday
Remaining schedule: 2 @ ATH, 3 @ STL, 4 vs. CHC, 3 vs. PIT, 3 @ MIL
Odds to make playoffs: 9.9 percent

Diamondbacks: 73-74, 3.0 games back of Mets

Next up: @ Twins, Friday at 7:10 p.m. (Ryne Nelson vs. Joe Ryan)
Latest result: 9-8 loss to Twins on Friday
Remaining schedule: 2 @ MIN, 3 vs. SF, 3 vs. PHI, 3 vs. LAD, 3 @ SD
Odds to make playoffs: 1.6 percent

Cardinals: 72-75, 4.0 games back of Mets

Next up: @ Brewers, Saturday at 8:15 p.m. (Sonny Gray vs. Jacob Misiorowski)
Latest result: 8-2 loss to Cardinals on Friday
Remaining schedule: 2 @ MIL, 3 vs. CIN, 3 vs. MIL, 3 @ SF, 3 @ CHC
Odds to make playoffs: 0.5 percent

Mets vs. Rangers: How to watch on SNY on Sept. 13, 2025

The Mets continue the three-game series against the Rangers at Citi Field on Saturday afternoon at 4:10 p.m. on SNY.

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


Mets Notes

  • Francisco Alvarez cracked two hits in Friday's loss, including a home run, for his first multi-hit game since returning from the IL. He is now slashing .286/.362/.571 for a .933 OPS in 29 games since the All-Star break
  • Brandon Sproat climbs the hill for the second time in his young big league career and first time at Citi Field. He allowed three runs on three hits and four walks over six innings while striking out seven at the Cincinnati Reds in his debut
  • Left-hander Patrick Corbin, a familiar former NL East foe with Washington, makes his 28th start for the Rangers on the year. He has a 4.36 ERA and 1.321 WHIP with 119 strikeouts and 45 walks over 142.1 innings on the year. 
  • Pete Alonso owns Corbin: 17-for-49 (.347) with five home runs for a 1.164 OPS. Francisco Lindor does well against him, too: 13-for-44 (.295) with three homers for a .841 OPS

RANGERS
METS
Josh Smith, SSFrancisco Lindor, SS
Wyatt Langford, LFJuan Soto, RF
Joc Pederson, DHPete Alonso, 1B
Jake Burger, 1BMark Vientos, 3B
Josh Jung, 3BBrandon Nimmo, LF
Alejandro Osuna, RFStarling Marte, DH
Jonah Heim, CFrancisco Alvarez, C
Cody Freeman, 2BJeff McNeil, 2B
Michael Helman, CFJose Siri, 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.

ICYMI in Mets Land: Kodai Senga delivers at Triple-A, Jonah Tong stumbles

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


Shaikin: Why Andrew Friedman's October test is looming with Dodgers

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 14: President of Baseball Operations Andrew Friedman of the Los Angeles Dodgers speaks to the media during spring training workouts at Camelback Ranch on February 14, 2025 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images)
Andrew Friedman, Dodgers president of baseball operations, spent $1.5 billion the past two offseasons. It paid off with a World Series title last year. (Brandon Sloter/Getty Images)

The “Dodgers are ruining baseball” discourse that dominated last winter included pleas for a salary cap from the owners of the Baltimore Orioles, Colorado Rockies and Pittsburgh Pirates.

Congratulations, gentlemen, your teams are in last place. For you, the Dodgers are a handy scapegoat.

But the discourse also included this take from the owner of the New York Yankees: “It's difficult for most of us owners to be able to do the kind of things that they're doing,” Hal Steinbrenner told the YES Network. “We'll see if it pays off.”

So far, it has not paid off.

The Dodgers will make the playoffs, but the collection of players they bought to fortify their World Series title defense has fallen far short of expectations.

What happens in October could determine whether the spending spree that so annoyed rival owners might instead be remembered as Andrew Friedman’s terrible, horrible, no good, very bad winter.

Read more:Yoshinobu Yamamoto shines, but Dodgers' offense goes missing in walk-off loss to Giants

Tanner Scott stood in front of his locker late Friday night, at the latest low point in a miserable season. He had just given up a game-winning grand slam to a good-fielding catcher who walked to the plate batting .217.

Scott, the Dodgers’ $72-million closer, has an earned-run average of 5.01. He has pitched half as many innings as Clayton Kershaw and given up four more home runs.

“It’s terrible,” Scott said. “I’m having the worst year of my life. I’ve got to be better.”

It’s not just him. As a whole, the Dodgers’ signing class of 2024-25 has to be better.

After spending a billion dollars in the winter of 2023-24, the Dodgers dropped an encore worth half a billion on the rest of the league last winter.

Of 11 key players that signed new contracts to stay with the Dodgers or free-agent contracts to join them, none have a WAR of even 2, according to Baseball-Reference.com. The Angels last winter signed two free agents with a higher WAR than any of those Dodgers signees: starting pitcher Yusei Kikuchi and closer Kenley Jansen.

Dodgers closer Tanner Scott, foreground, watches a game-wining grand slam hit by the Giants' Patrick Bailey (background).
Dodgers closer Tanner Scott, foreground, watches a game-wining grand slam hit by the Giants' Patrick Bailey (background). (Godofredo A. Vásquez / Associated Press)

Friedman, the Dodgers’ president of baseball operations, respectfully declined to review his offseason.

“We’ll wait until after the season,” he said. “All we’re focused on is these next few games and October.”

The most valuable of the winter signees by WAR, according to Baseball-Reference.com: Hyeseong Kim, whom the Dodgers have bounced uneasily between the infield and the outfield, between the starting lineup and the bench, between the major leagues and minor leagues.

Then comes Kershaw, who should top 100 innings on Saturday. The only Dodgers pitcher to throw more innings: Yoshinobu Yamamato.

When Friedman said he believed in his players, it was not just an obligatory quote. He really did. He believed in them so much that the Dodgers’ only additions at the trade deadline were a backup outfielder and a setup man.

Beyond Kershaw, the Dodgers’ pitching signees last winter included Scott, Blake Snell, Roki Sasaki, Blake Treinen and Kirby Yates. It is difficult to envision the Dodgers including them all on a postseason roster, and not just because Sasaki still is working his way back from injury.

“From a pitching standpoint, we have a very realistic chance to have the most talented 13-man pitching staff we’ve ever had,” Friedman said. “We felt that way in July, coupled with that we were most likely — well, hopefully — going to be in position to have tough conversations with guys who have a legitimate chance to make it, but wouldn’t.”

Read more:Can the Dodgers fix their ailing offense? It starts with better health — and team at-bats

He wouldn’t say which 13 pitchers he had in mind, and in fairness that could change with the next injury.

“You could take any collection of them,” Friedman said. “I’m just saying that, when we submit our playoff roster, I think those 13 arms will be the most talented — stuff, execution, talent, differing looks, right-left. I just think it will be the deepest, best staff we’ve had.”

Beyond Kim, the Dodgers’ position player signees last winter included infielder-outfielders Tommy Edman and Kike’ Hernandez and outfielders Michael Conforto and Teoscar Hernandez.

Edman and Kike’ Hernandez spent much of the season on the injured list. Teoscar Hernandez fell from a 4 WAR player last year — when his one-year contract looked brilliant — to a 1 WAR player this year.

Conforto homered Friday for the Dodgers’ only run. However, of the 191 players with at least 400 plate appearances entering play Friday, he had the lowest WAR.

“On the position player side, our with and without [Max] Muncy numbers are crazy,” Friedman said. “He’s a huge part of our lineup. But, even with that, the level of our offensive performance for two months is something that I would have said would have been an impossibility, even with an injury here or an injury there. What I thought wasn’t possible has been very possible, and has played out.

Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy reacts after being hit by a pitch during the eighth inning Friday.
Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy reacts after being hit by a pitch during the eighth inning Friday. (Godofredo A. Vásquez / Associated Press)

“Looking back, it has contributed to the situation we’re in right now, and the difficulties. I still look ahead and see the names in the lineup, and the depth, and feel really good about it. So we’re going to find out if that’s right or not.”

During Muncy’s first stint on the injured list this season, the Dodgers ranked last in the majors in runs. During his second stint, they ranked next-to-last in the National League.

It did not feel good for the Dodgers when Muncy was forced from Friday’s game after a pitch hit him on the forearm. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said X-rays were negative, and the team will see how he is Saturday.

Friedman assembled a championship roster last year, his second in five years, so maybe this past winter will count as an expensive blip.

Or, perhaps, not even that.

The Dodgers count October as part of their schedule. They have not missed the playoffs in 13 years. Under Friedman, they have advanced to the World Series with a 92-win team and failed to get out of the first round with a 111-win team.

October is what matters, no matter how poorly a player might have performed in the regular season.

Of the Dodgers that threw at least 60 innings last season, the one with the highest earned-run average made the final pitch of the year. Of all the things that Los Angeles remembers about Walker Buehler last year, his 5.38 ERA is not one of them.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Best stats from Giants' standout performances in wild walk-off win over Dodgers

Best stats from Giants' standout performances in wild walk-off win over Dodgers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

There almost were too many incredible moments to count from the Giants’ thrilling 5-1 walk-off win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday night at Oracle Park.

From Patrick Bailey’s 10th-inning grand slam and Grant McCray’s game-changing assist to another age-defying Justin Verlander start, San Francisco made MLB and franchise history in a victory that felt more like an October playoff game than a mid-September matchup.

Here are the best stats from the Giants’ win that put them just .5 games back in the NL wild-card race:

Patrick Bailey’s Walk-Off Slam

Bailey became the second catcher in Giants history with a walk-off grand slam, joining Jack Hiatt (April 25, 1969).

The blast gave San Francisco its 11th walk-off win of the 2025 MLB season, which leads the league.

Grant McCray’s Perfect Throw

Not only was McCray’s outfield assist the fastest of the Statcast era in Giants history, but it ranks No. 9 all-time in MLB during that same span. The previous Giants record was held by Austin Slater, who had a 99.6 mph throw on July 24, 2018.

Justin Verlander’s Still Got It

With his outing Friday, Verlander also became the first MLB pitcher age 42 or older to record at least two starts in the same season of at least seven innings with one or fewer runs allowed since Bartolo Colon in 2018.

After former Giants outfielder Michael Conforto hit a game-tying home run off Verlander in the seventh inning, the veteran pitcher saw his scoreless innings streak of 18 innings snapped. The streak began Aug. 26 and was Verlander’s longest since a 19-inning scoreless streak from May 10-21, 2022.

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Yoshinobu Yamamoto shines, but Dodgers' offense goes missing in walk-off loss to Giants

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 12: Patrick Bailey #14 of the San Francisco.
San Francisco's Patrick Bailey flips his bat after hitting a walk-off grand slam in a 5-1 win over the Dodgers in 10 innings Friday night at Oracle Park. (Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

It might’ve been more frustrating, had it not been so predictable.

The Dodgers starting to turn a corner, only to stumble to the kind of maddening late-game loss that has come to define their season.

Entering this weekend’s series against the San Francisco Giants, the team had won four straight games. It had started to stack better offensive performances from its slumping lineup. It had begun to believe that better health and improved pitching could spark a surge to carry it through the rest of the campaign.

Then, they came out of an off day looking flat at Oracle Park.

Then, reality once again smacked them square in the face.

The Dodgers’ 5-1 loss to the Giants might have ended in a familiar way, with Tanner Scott giving up a walk-off hit — this time, a grand slam to Patrick Bailey in the bottom of the 10th — for the third time in the last eight days.

Read more:Can the Dodgers fix their ailing offense? It starts with better health — and team at-bats

But on this night, the embattled $72-million closer was far from the only person culpable for a slice of the blame.

The Dodgers (82-65) did not hit on a cool night along the San Francisco Bay, with a seventh-inning home run from Michael Conforto accounting for the entirety of their scoring.

They did not back up another gem from Yoshinobu Yamamoto, letting his latest dominant outing (seven innings, one run, one hit, 10 strikeouts) go to waste.

Mostly, they squandered an opportunity to continue the momentum they had finally built with this past week’s long-awaited winning streak. They let the game come down to Scott’s unreliable left arm, and reignited long-standing doubts about their ability to maintain any level of consistent play.

“When you score one run and you’re in a tight ball game, then there’s just no margin [for error],” manager Dave Roberts said in another somber postgame address. “When you’re playing these close ball games, where any flare, any mistake costs you, that’s a tough quality of life too. So it’s not just those guys in the 'pen.”

Indeed, the Dodgers’ loss was set in motion long before Scott threw an elevated fastball that Bailey lined to left for his walk-off slam.

It started with their inability to hit Justin Verlander, who pitched seven innings of one-run ball with a heavy dose of curveballs and sliders. It escalated when they came up empty in a string of scoring opportunities, going 0 for 5 with runners in scoring position. It's a problem they’ve tried to address in recent days, including with reps of simulated situational at-bats in batting practice.

Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto delivers in the second inning Friday.
Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto delivers in the second inning Friday. (Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

Little by little, the turning points began to snowball. And ultimately, it all ended in an avalanche of orange Giants jerseys celebrating at home plate.

“We had opportunities to get a hit, to drive some runs in,” Roberts said. “We had some chances late to put up a crooked number. We just couldn’t come through.”

In the first and third innings, the Dodgers couldn’t capitalize upon one-out walks. In the fourth, they had two on with no outs, and yet still came up empty.

Yamamoto, fresh off his near no-hitter in Baltimore last week, made sure they stayed in it. He gave up one run in the first inning on a Willy Adames double, which plated Rafael Devers from first base after Andy Pages bobbled the ball for an error. But after that, he retired the final 20 batters he faced, lowering his ERA to 2.66.

Conforto, meanwhile, tied the score in the seventh, hitting only his 11th home run of the season to straightaway center.

From there, however, the horrors of the Dodgers’ horrendous play over the second half of the season quickly returned. They were handed a winnable game, and found a way to give it away.

They left another runner stranded in the eighth, after Max Muncy was hit by a pitch in the right forearm that eventually forced him to exit the game (but isn’t expected to keep him out going forward, after postgame X-rays came back negative).

They caught a break in the bottom of the ninth, when Giants pinch-runner Grant McCray was thrown out at home plate by Pages on an aggressive send on a shallow fly ball to center. But then they gave it right back in the top half of the 10th, when catcher Ben Rortvedt (once again filling in for Will Smith, who continues to nurse a bone bruise on his right hand) made his own out on the bases trying to advance as the automatic runner from second to third base.

It all set the stage for the bottom of the 10th, when Scott was thrust into the kind of situation that has haunted him repeatedly of late.

Matt Chapman led the inning off with a ground ball against Blake Treinen, moving the winning run over to third base with left-handed hitter Jung Hoo Lee due up next. At that point, rookie southpaw Jack Dreyer had already pitched in the eighth and ninth inning. Fellow lefty Alex Vesia was down after making back-to-back appearances in his return from the injured list earlier this week.

Thus, Roberts came to the mound, and summoned Scott into the game.

“He had three days off [before this],” Roberts said. “I felt it was the time to run him out there.”

At first, the decision seemed to work. Scott pitched Lee carefully to work a full-count. Then, he snapped off a slider that appeared to induce a putaway foul-tip.

Read more:Dodgers sweep Rockies to keep growing NL West lead, but Will Smith is a late scratch

But as Lee waved at the pitch, and home plate umpire Bill Miller initially signaled for strike three, third base umpire Chad Fairchild quickly overruled the call, motioning the ball had instead bounced off the ground and into Rortvedt’s glove — even though replays showed that Rortvedt had secured it without the ball hitting the dirt.

“Obviously we looked at the replay, it didn't hit the ground,” said Roberts, who was left helpless in the dugout on what was a non-reviewable play.

“I thought I got it clean, it definitely didn't bounce,” Rortvedt added. “But I think the way I caught, it might have been a trap.”

Either way, the at-bat continued. The next pitch was a slider out of the zone, putting Lee on base as disaster began to stir.

The Dodgers elected to intentionally walk the next batter, right-handed hitting Casey Schmitt, to bring Bailey to the plate. Scott’s first pitch to him was a slider in the dirt. The next: A 96.5 mph fastball just above the zone that Bailey timed up for a grand slam to end the game.

“Gave up a bad pitch to a hitter that can hit fastballs [and] it cost us again,” said Scott, who has a 5.01 ERA in his debut Dodgers season with nine blown saves, four losing decisions and 11 home runs allowed (tying his total from the past three years combined).

“I’m tired of it happening,” he added.

Dodgers pitcher Tanner Scott watches after San Francisco's Patrick Bailey hits a game-ending grand slam.
Dodgers pitcher Tanner Scott watches after San Francisco's Patrick Bailey hits a game-ending grand slam in the 10th inning of the Dodgers' 5-1 loss Friday at Oracle Park. (Godofredo A. Vásquez / Associated Press)

Roberts tried to give the closer a vote of confidence afterward, saying “we've just got to continue to try to give him confidence and, when the time's right, run him out there and expect good things to happen” — even though, the manager also acknowledged, it might be time to finally use Scott in lower-leverage sequences of games.

Rortvedt also took blame for the decisive pitch selection, even though he insisted the location of the fastball was one that “no one's supposed to hit.”

That didn’t seem to give Scott much solace. He was so dumbfounded by his latest late-game implosion, he openly wondered if he was simply tipping his pitches.

“They’re on everything, it sucks,” he said. “I have no friggin’ clue right now. ... I’m having the worst year of my life.”

The Dodgers, of course, aren’t having a banner year as a team, either. They might not have ceded ground in the National League West standings on Friday, remaining 2½ games up on the San Diego Padres after that club’s own stunning loss at home to the Colorado Rockies. But, the Dodgers did lose all the momentum they had carried into this rivalry series; putting Scott in a position he has so often struggled, thanks to their earlier inability to put the game away.

Sasaki's next steps

Roki Sasaki could rejoin the Dodgers' big-league roster before the end of the regular season. But first, he'll have to pass one more minor-league rehab test.

Roberts said Sasaki, the rookie right-hander who finally rediscovered his 100 mph fastball last week after missing most of the season with a shoulder injury, will make one more start with triple-A Oklahoma City next week after experiencing a calf issue in his start last week.

If Sasaki comes through that outing OK, Roberts said he hoped to see Sasaki back in the big leagues, where he hasn't pitched since posting a 4.72 ERA in eight starts to begin the season.

"I don’t know in what capacity," Roberts said of Sasaki's role, which would likely be in the bullpen if he were to make the postseason roster. "But I’m hopeful that we’ll see Roki here before season’s end. ... From my understanding, Roki is in a good place to do whatever it is to help the team."

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Yankees hope Luis Gil’s hitless outing can be ‘springboard’ to help get him in rhythm

Luis Gil was terrific for the Yankees again on Friday night. 

The right-hander stepped up and delivered six hitless innings to help New York take the opener of a huge three-game set with the division rival Boston Red Sox. 

Gil was forced to work through traffic at times, but he navigated it well. 

He retired first four hitters he faced before Masataka Yoshida reached on an error in the bottom of the second, and after he advanced into scoring position on a wild pitch, the youngster got a pop out to strand him there. 

He then issued a one out walk to Ceddanne Rafaela in the bottom of the third, but a fly out and groundout helped him escape without any damage from the top of the order. 

Gil put together a perfect fourth, but had to battle again in the fifth. 

He was hurt by some questionable calls on back-to-back free passes to lead off the inning and then balked them into scoring position, but was able to retire the next three to get out of the frame with the no-hitter still in-tact.

A Jazz Chisholm throwing error then pushed Trevor Story into scoring position with one out in the sixth, but Gil got a strikeout and groundout to again escape the inning and end his night without any damage.

He finished with four walks and four strikeouts across six hitless innings, bringing his ERA to an outstanding 0.99 in five career starts against the Sox. 

“Where we are in the division right now, everything is so tight,” Gil said through a translator. “All of the games are so important for us and we want to just do the best we can and keep things right there and just find a way to contribute.”

Gil certainly has done his part of late -- including tonight, he’s now allowed just one earned one over his past two outings, both of which have come against divisional opponents in the Sox and Blue Jays. 

He's now down to a 2.83 ERA on the season. 

Aaron Boone went as far as saying this is the best he’s been since returning from the IL. 

“He started losing the strike zone a bit,” the skipper said. “But his stuff was good and he was able to get big outs. To buckle down in the fifth and hold them at bay there was big, hopefully this is another springboard for him.”

Jacob deGrom: It would be ‘huge honor’ to see Mets retire No. 48 at Citi Field

Would Jacob deGrom like to see the Mets retire his No. 48 at Citi Field? 

“That’s not my decision,” the right-hander said. 

If he were to have stayed when he hit free agency, that answer would be much clearer. 

After leaving for Texas, though, it remains to be seen where the organization stands. 

DeGrom will go down as one of the greatest pitchers in franchise history. 

While his lone ring came with the Rangers, he took home the NL Rookie of the Year, a pair of Cy Young awards, and made four of his five career All-Star appearances in his nine years donning the orange and blue. 

And he was arguably the most dominant starting pitcher in the game during that stretch  -- accumulating a 2.52 ERA, 0.99 WHIP and 1,607 strikeouts following his big-league debut back in 2014. 

Injuries derailed things towards the end of his tenure in the Big Apple, which led to the two sides going their separate ways, but there’s no taking away the countless dominant efforts deGrom put forward in a Mets uniform. 

The 37-year-old said it would be a huge honor if he were to join the legendary group. 

“Every time I took this mound for the Mets, I left it all out there,” deGrom said. “There were obviously some times where I got injured, but you can’t really control that, so when I was on that mound I felt like I left it all out on the field.”