How to watch San Francisco Giants vs. New York Yankees

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 04, 2026: Robbie Ray #38 of the San Francisco Giants throws a pitch during the first inning of a spring training game against the Seattle Mariners at Scottsdale Stadium on March 04, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by David Durochik/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants will continue their opening series against the New York Yankees this afternoon from Oracle Park. The Yankees have a 1-0 series lead after the Giants’ disastrous Opening Day loss.

Taking the mound for the first time this season for the Giants will be left-hander Robbie Ray, who finished the 2025 season with a 3.65 ERA, 3.93 FIP, with 186 strikeouts to 73 walks in 182.1 innings pitched.

He’ll be facing off against Yankees right-hander Cam Schlittler, who finished the 2025 season with a 2.96 ERA, 3.74 FIP, with 84 strikeouts to 31 walks in 73 innings pitched.

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Game #2

Who: San Francisco Giants (0-1) vs. New York Yankees (1-0)

Where: Oracle Park, San Francisco, California

When: 1:35 p.m. PT

Regional broadcast: NBC Sports Bay Area

National broadcast: n/a

Radio: KNBR 680 AM/104.5 FM, KSFN 1510 AM

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Chase DeLauter is on fire, Carlos Estevez's clock is ticking

Welcome to the first Waiver Wire Watch article of the season. We'll be doing things a little bit differently this season, with Eric Samulski publishing the initial waiver wire article on Friday afternoon and then James Schiano updating it every Sunday to make sure you get the most up-to-date information.

The premise of the article is pretty straightforward. We'll give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When we list a player, we'll list the category where we think he’ll be helpful or the quick reason he’s listed. We hope it helps you determine if the player is a fit for what your team needs. Not every "trending" player will be a good addition for your specific roster.

For a player to qualify for this list, he needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. We understand you may say, “These players aren’t available in my league,” and we can’t help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they’re available in many places, and that can hopefully satisfy readers who play in all league types.

⚾️ Baseball is back on NBC: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

MLB: Spring Training-Chicago White Sox at Milwaukee Brewers
Cleanup man Sal Stewart climbs further and Mets rookie Carson Benge debuts.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Hitters

Chase DeLauter - OF, CLE (71% rostered)

(PROSPECT PEDIGREE, POWER UPSIDE)

We initially drafted this before his Opening Day two-home run bonanza, so his roster rate is sure to jump. Even before that performance, the argument for Chase DeLauter was that he was a fringe top-50 overall prospect in baseball the past few years, but has struggled to stay on the field. He suffered foot fractures and hamstring strains in college, then had a sprained foot, sprained toe, and sprained hamstring in 2024 with Cleveland. In 2025, he had sports hernia surgery but returned in time to make his MLB debut in the postseason. He had a nearly 52% Hard-Hit rate in Triple-A last year and has shown the ability to hit for average as well as power. The injuries may limit his desire to run, as well as his total plate appearances, but that performance on Opening Day showcases exactly the kind of pure upside he has.

Sunday update: Well, DeLauter hit a home run on Friday night off of George Kirby and then another on Sunday against Andrés Muñoz.He's the second player ever to hit four home runs in their first three career games as well as the number one ranked hitter and most added player in fantasy baseball at this moment.Don't leave him on the wire if you play in one of the 29% of leagues where he's still available.

Caleb Durbin - 3B, BOS (36% rostered)

(BATTING AVERAGE, STEALS UPSIDE)

Durbin makes an elite level of contact and shows a tremendous understanding of the strike zone. He is now moving from a park that ranked 19th for right-handed hitters, according to Statcast’s Park Factors, to one that ranks 8th. It would not surprise us if the Green Monster helps improve his batting average from .256 to something over .270. Considering he’s also a threat to steal at least 20 bases and play almost every day in a good lineup, that makes him a solid target if you need steals or batting average from a corner infielder.

Francisco Alvarez - C, NYM (30% rostered)

(BOUNCEBACK SEASON, POWER UPSIDE)

Alvarez went back to his old batting stance after his demotion to Triple-A last year and then returned to the Mets to slash .276/.360/.561 with eight home runs and a 25 percent strikeout rate in 40 games to finish the season. Perhaps a full season of that re-adopted stance, with a slight shift toward pulling and lifting, will lead to better overall production. He’s just 24 years old and also came into camp 10 pounds lighter this season. He has had terrible luck with hand injuries over the last few years, but there could be a major buying opportunity here in fantasy baseball leagues, and he got off to a hot start with a massive blast and a 2-for-4 day on Opening Day.

Matt Shaw - 3B, CHC (15% rostered)

(POTENTIAL STARTING JOB, SPEED UPSIDE)

Despite the Nationals throwing a right-handed pitcher, it was Shaw in right field on Opening Day and not Michael Conforto. Shaw has struggled with his outfield defense this spring, so he may not have a long leash in the outfield, but his offensive production improved drastically in the second half of last season, hitting .258/.317/.522 with 11 home runs and six steals in 61 games. He also carried over into spring training, which should give us some optimism. Playing time in Chicago remains a mystery when Seiya Suzuki (knee) is healthy, but that could be a few weeks away, and Shaw is worth adding in case his super utility role leads to three to four starts per week.

Sunday update: Shaw was in the Cubs' lineup again on Saturday against another right-handed pitcher. He appears to be their starting right fielder while Suzuki is out.

Jake Burger - 1B, TEX (21% rostered)

(POWER, RBI UPSIDE)

Burger struggled to get started last season and then put tremendous pressure on himself to produce for his new team, which led to mechanical changes in his swing that he identified in the offseason while watching tape. He spent the offseason simply trying to get back to the swing path and contact point he had in 2023 and 2024 when he put up back-to-back seasons with a .250 batting average and at least 29 home runs. We don’t have to argue that Burger will be better than that. We just have to say that the real version of Burger is what we saw in those two seasons, and he showed that on Opening Day with three hits and a home run.

Jordan Lawlar - 3B, ARI (12% rostered)

(PROSPECT PEDIGREE, STEALS UPSIDE)

Lawlar was once a top-five prospect in all of baseball and slashed .313/.403/.564 with 11 home runs and 20 steals in 63 games at Triple-A last season. I know that hasn’t carried over to MLB at-bats yet, but he has looked good this spring, and ripped a double off Yoshinobu Yamamoto in his first at-bat of the season. Perhaps more importantly, he also looked really good out in left field, which means the Diamondbacks won't feel inclined to get him out of the lineup for defensive purposes. I think he has the chance to be a 20/25 guy in a full season. Considering he is also likely to pick up outfield eligibility soon, that's a strong profile to add off your wire.

Brett Baty - 2B/3B, NYM (12% rostered)

(PROSPECT PEDIGREE, COUNTING STATS UPSIDE)

Baty looked great in 110 games last season after his early demotion to Triple-A. He hunted his pitch more often and got behind in the count less, which caused his overall swinging strike rate to drop, and his barrel rate to jump to 13%. He’s the starting designated hitter for the Mets against right-handed pitching. When you add his ability to play second base, third base, and potentially even left field if the Mets need to give somebody an off day, there is still a path for Baty to push for 500 plate appearances this season, which makes him a real value at his draft price.

Sunday update: Baty started again on Saturday (against another right-handed pitcher) and stole a base! He's in the lineup once again on Sunday with another righty on the mound and is getting his first big league start at first base. He appears to be a full-time player for the Mets against right-handed pitching and may add another position to his eligibility.

Coby Mayo - 1B, BAL (7% rostered)

(PROSPECT PEDIGREE, POWER UPSIDE)

The Jordan Westburg injury means that Mayo is going to be the starting third baseman in Baltimore at least until the middle of May. He's another former top prospect who, despite his struggles, had a 10% barrel rate last season in 294 plate appearances. He seems to have settled in at the plate a bit this spring, and while I’m not convinced he’ll ever post a really high batting average, I think he could push for 20-25 home runs if he’s able to hold onto the job for the majority of the season.

Owen Caissie - OF, MIA (7% rostered)

(PROSPECT PEDIGREE, POWER UPSIDE)

Caissie was the key piece the Marlins acquired from the Cubs for Edward Cabrera this winter and has already made his presence known by going 4-for-9 with two doubles, two RBI, and three hard-hit balls in his first two games. He has freakish raw power, but concerns have persisted about what was troubling swing-and-miss as a minor leaguer. Yet, his whiff rate dropped like a rock month over month at Triple-A last season and he could have genuine 30-homer potential if those adjustments hold. Also, he's expected to be platooned against left-handed pitchers, but started against one on Friday when Christopher Morel was scratched and immediately roped a double off Kyle Freeland.

He's on the bench Sunday against a lefty though in favor of the newly promoted Deyvison De Los Santos (5% rostered) who looks like he'll have a short-side platoon role along with the newly acquired Austin Slater, pushing Caissie to the bench against lefties for the time being.

Jake Bauers - 1B/OF, MIL (6% rostered)

(STARTING JOB, STRONG SPRING TRAINING)

With Jackson Chourio (hand) on the IL, it was Bauers who got the Brewers' first start of the season in left field. The 30-year-old had a tremendous spring, hitting .462/.571/1.154 with seven home runs and three steals in 49 plate appearances. It’s obviously a small sample size, but it’s pretty eye-opening, even though it's not at all in line with who Bauers has been over his career. Still, he carried it over into Opening Day, when he went 2-for-5 with a home run and three RBI. Bauers figures to start against most right-handed pitchers for the next month, with Blake Perkins starting against lefties, so he could be worth a gamble in deeper formats.

Sunday update: Brewers' first baseman Andrew Vaughn broke his hamate bone and will be out for approximately six weeks. That will open the door for Bauers to be their strong-side platoon first baseman for the time being.

Rhys Hoskins - 1B, CLE (3% rostered)

(STARTING JOB?, POWER UPSIDE)

Hoskins started the Guardians' first two games at first base and hit sixth in each contest. He then retreated to the bench on Saturday night while Kyle Manzardo moved from the designated hitter spot to first which opened up DH for Chase DeLauter. The Guardians have plenty of these corner-only types on their roster and will shuffle them around, but it looks like Hoskins is in line for a heavy dose of playing time early on.

Nasim Nuñez - 2B/SS, WAS (2% rostered)

(STARTING JOB?, STEALS UPSIDE)

I took a lot of shares of Nunez in deeper formats because he has elite speed and figures to be the starting second baseman for the Nationals this year. However, he also had just a 4.7% barrel rate and 42% hard-hit rate last season, so he's not making tons of authoritative contact. Yes, he does make a fair amount of contact overall, but a 9% swinging strike rate is also a bit high for somebody who is really a speed-only play. Still, if he hits .240 and plays most days, he could steal 40 bases this season, and he got it started with a walk and a stolen base on opening day. No hits though.

Miguel Andujar - 3B/OF, SD (2% rostered)

(STARTING JOB, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Andujar, not Nick Castellanos, will begin the season as the primary designated hitter. Andujar hit just .220/.305/.420 in spring, but he did have three home runs and a manageable strikeout rate. He’s a career .282 hitter in 467 MLB games and could have some deep league fantasy value if he’s going to hit in the middle of the Padres’ lineup.

Oswald Peraza - 1B/2B/SS/3B, LAA (1% rostered)

(STARTING JOB?)

Peraza started the Angels' first three games of the season and is eligible at every infield position. That alone makes him a valuable deep league player. Past that, he's 4-for-11 to start the season with a home run in a lineup that sneakily has some thump. Be mindful, Adam Frazier replaced him at second base in Sunday's lineup.

David Hamilton - 2B/SS, MIL (1% rostered)

(STARTING JOB?, STEALS UPSIDE)

It’s only one game, but it seems that Hamilton may have beaten out Luis Rengifo for the third base job in Milwaukee. Hamilton did enjoy a good spring, slashing .333/.393/.510 with one home run and seven steals in 56 plate appearances, but he’s also a .222/.283/.359 career hitter in 550 MLB plate appearances. What’s more, he graded out as an above-average defender at second base during his time with the Red Sox but a below-average one at shortstop, so it remains to be seen how he can handle third base and how long he lasts as a starter. All that being said, his speed puts him on fantasy radars if he’s going to start against right-handed pitching because we have seen him go on stretches where he can single-handedly carry you in that category. He also got on base three times and stole a base on opening day, which demonstrates exactly the kind of upside we're talking about.

Sunday update: Hamilton started at third for the Brewers again on Saturday, but gave way to Luis Regnifo — who is hitting third for Milwaukee — on Sunday.

Jefferson Quero - C, MIL (0% rostered)

(POWER UPSIDE?)

The Brewers promoted Quero to replace Andrew Vaughn on their roster who will be out for about six weeks with a broken hamate bone. That may not make much sense because Quero is a catcher, but Gary Sanchez is expected to be the short-side platoon with Jake Bauers at first base, so Quero will work in as their back-up catcher. He objectively has power upside if he were to get enough playing time to let that shine. It's unlikely he does this time around though.

Curtis Mead - 1B/2B/3B, WSH (0% rostered)

(PLAYING TIME UPSIDE?)

Mead was designated for assignment by the White Sox just before Opening Day and the Nationals swooped in to grab him in a trade on Saturday. Their aggressiveness leads me to believe that they may have a plan to find him some at-bats. If so, his multi-positional eligibility could make him roster spackle in the deepest of leagues.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Pitchers

Cody Ponce - SP, TOR (41% rostered)

Ponce is locked into this Blue Jays rotation with all the injuries they have. He is also another pitcher who came back from Korea throwing two mph harder. He also added a kick-changeup, which has been a real weapon for him against left-handed hitters in Korea and this spring. I have some concerns about his ability to get consistent strikeouts against righties, and he has yet to really succeed in the Major Leagues, so there are some questions, but I’m willing to take a gamble because his first two starts are against the Rockies at home and then the White Sox.

Brandon Sproat - SP, MIL (38% rostered)

Sproat has won a spot in the Brewers' rotation. The 25-year-old had a mediocre four-start debut for the Mets in 2025, but he was emerging as a solid prospect in 2024 and 2025 in the minor leagues. He has a six-pitch mix that gives him plenty of ways to attack hitters, and that’s a profile that the Brewers really know how to get the most out of. He faces the White Sox on Sunday, so if you can add him before that, that's great, but I think he could be in play against the Royals after that as well.

Jordan Romano - RP, LAA (34% rostered)

I know it's really hard to trust Jordan Romano after the last two seasons, but he didn't allow a run in five innings this spring and had a 23.5% K-BB%. Then he came out and locked down a save on Opening Day against the Astros. It’s been a rough two years for him, and his fastball velocity is still not back up to what it was before his surgery in 2024, so there is a chance that this blows up in our face again. But maybe it doesn't, so that’s worth a gamble early on.

Paul Sewald - RP, AZ (32% rostered)

I think Sewald opens the season as the Diamondbacks’ closer. He’s back to throwing 92 mph, and while that may not seem like a lot, that’s what he was throwing in 2022 and 2023 when he saved a combined 54 games in two seasons. He simply needs his fastball to be good enough to set up his slider, and that hasn’t been the case the last two seasons. The Diamondbacks will be good enough to win games, but not so good that they blow teams out, which could mean plenty of save chances.

Andrew Painter - SP, PHI (30% rostered)

Painter is a pitcher I covered in a post-hype article earlier this offseason. He returned from Tommy John surgery in 2025 but had a 5.40 ERA, 1.55 WHIP, and 23.4% strikeout rate in 106.2 innings at Triple-A. Not being on the mound for two years and then pitching poorly when he did return has a lot of people questioning just what kind of upside Painter has. However, he still showed off that big fastball that can touch triple digits while pairing that with a plus changeup, a hard slider, and a slower curve. The command of everything was a little off in 2025, but the movement profiles were similar enough to what we saw before the surgery, and his arm held up to over 100 innings of professional baseball again. Those are all positive signs. In spring, we saw that his fastball remains a work in progress, and I think it may just be an average pitch, but the secondaries have looked pretty solid.

Matthew Liberatore - SP, STL (25% rostered)

This offseason, he modified his change-up into a kick-change that’s kind of a hybrid between a splitter and a traditional change-up. As a left-handed pitcher, a good changeup is crucial for Liberatore, but he posted a 8% SwStr% to righties last year with a nearly 40% Ideal Contact Rate (ICR) allowed, which was below league average. In his first start on Thursday, the changeup had zero whiffs, but it did grade out well in terms of its movement profile, so perhaps that pitch continues to improve. He also changed his cutter, which is now almost three mph harder and is a pitch he can use to get ahead against righties to set up the slider and new changeup. Yet, he threw just two of those against the Rays. I think we'll get a better version of Liberatore this season, but it may not happen overnight and he gets the Mets next, so be cautious here.

Mick Abel - SP, MIN (25% rostered)

Abel won a spot in the rotation over Zebby Matthews, and his value started to skyrocket in the final drafts of the spring. I was a fan of his in Philadelphia after he did a lot of work with a mental skills coach before last season and had a few really elite starts with the Phillies. I think that mental skills work unlocked a strong approach and demeanor on the mound. His fastballs are great, and his breaking stuff flashes upside, but he needs to be more consistent with the breaking balls. His first two starts against Kansas City and Tampa Bay don't scare me too much.

Justin Steele - SP, CHC (18% rostered)

Justin Steele has already begun working his way back from Tommy John surgery, which he had in May of last year. There is a good chance he's back in May or early June, which is earlier than a lot of starting pitcher stashes will return.

Kyle Harrison - SP, MIL (16% rostered)

Harrison seemed to unlock a changeup that worked for him over the summer. Apparently, the Red Sox worked extensively with him on it, but he didn’t find a grip he liked. He spent the offseason with some former Giants teammates and found a changeup grip that felt comfortable, and the pitch has looked electric this spring. I still need to see more of that cutter that the Red Sox added before they traded him, and we also need to see some health because he picked up a blister issue this spring, but Harrison is an upside starting pitcher you can stash on your bench.

Matt Strahm - RP, KC (15% rostered)

This is simply because Carlos Estevez looked really bad this spring, and his velocity is down. Estevez has pitched around that over the last two seasons, but he has always seemed to be walking a tight rope as a closer, and there is a strong chance that he simply falls off this season. If he does, I think Strahm could be the guy because he has looked good this spring, and Lucas Erceg (10% rostered) has also seen his velocity decrease. However, we may just see a combination of the two.

Sunday Update: Estevez blew an ugly save on Saturday night and his velocity was still barely scratching 90 mph. Erceg pitched a scoreless eighth inning and was throwing a full tick harder than he did last season. Strahm pitched a scoreless seventh and faced more of the meat of the Braves' lineup, but his velocity was a bit down as well. Now, Estevez is in a walking boot with an ankle injury which opens the door for Strahm and Erceg to duke it out for the closer role.

Zach Eflin - SP, BAL (13% rostered)

I’ve written about Eflin basically everywhere, and he’s one of my most drafted players this season. After undergoing a “minimally invasive” procedure in the offseason to fix a slipped disc in his back that was causing nerve issues, I think we’re going to see a more precise Eflin this season. He still missed plenty of bats last year on his sweeper and curve, but they performed poorly in two-strike counts, which tells me that the movement may be fine, but the precision of the command was off. That’s thanks to the back injury. Eflin has a deep pitch mix and has shown a bit of a velocity uptick in spring training. Add to that his plus team context, and I’m buying all the way back in.

Max Scherzer - SP, TOR (12% rostered)

Scherzer faces the Rockies at home in Toronto. It's as simple as that. We know he can still be an effective pitcher when he's healthy, and he's healthy now, so you can ride the wave in deeper formats.

Grant Taylor -RP, CWS (11% rostered)

Oftentimes, I'd rather roster an elite multi-inning reliever like Taylor than speculate on saves for a bad team like the Twins or Rockies. Taylor wants to throw 100 innings this season, and he posted an elite 34.4% strikeout rate last season. He has overpowering stuff and could even find himself getting some saves or cheap wins for the White Sox. I like having those ratios buffers late on my roster.

Chris Martin - RP, TEX (6% rostered)

The Rangers came out and said that Robert Garcia will not be their full-time closer. That has created speculation that Chris Martin will be the right-handed complement. I have to say, Martin has never really closed in his career, and he was on Texas last year, and they didn't make him the closer, so I have some doubts here. However, he's a talented reliever, so I'd rather add him for next to nothing on the chance he becomes the closer and just swap him out in two weeks if it doesn't happen.

Sunday update: The Rangers called on Martin to clean up a mess presumed closer Robert Garcia started in the ninth inning. Garcia — a lefty — came in to face Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper, retired them both, then let the next two reach base in a three run game. Martin appeared to retire Adolis García to close it out, but Jake Burger dropped a pop-up in foul territory and then the floodgates opened. This is still likely a mix-and-match closer situation.

Joe Boyle - SP, TBR (5% rostered)

Trust will be difficult for Boyle to earn, but going six strong innings in his season debut without walking a batter is a huge step towards building some. Under the hood, his 56% zone rate and 69% strike rate were encouraging as well. Overall, he allowed three hits, two runs, and struck out four over those six innings. The velocity on his slider and fastball were down a touch, but perhaps that helped him command them better. He also debuted a new sinker (that was his second most thrown pitch against right-handed batters) and sweeper. He's lined up to face the Twins on the road next week in another audition to prove he belongs in the Rays' rotation when Ryan Pepiot returns from the IL.

Randy Vásquez - SP, SDP (5% rostered)

Vásquez's velocity gains from this spring carried over to the regular season where he sat 95 mph with his fastball, 95.5 mph with his sinker, and 89.5 mph with his cutter. That helped him turn in six shutout innings with eight strikeouts against a Tigers lineup that had been surging over their first two games. He made a few other key repertoire changes as well.

He forced multiple whiffs with four different pitches and is a fun speculative add at the moment despite his next start likely to come against the Red Sox in Fenway Park.

Ben Joyce - RP, LAA (5% rostered)

Everybody is wondering whether Kirby Yates, Jordan Romano, or Drew Pomeranz will close for the Angels, but instead of those veterans, I'd try to stash Joyce on the IL. He had shoulder surgery last May, but he made a spring training appearance and will start the season at Triple-A. He could be up with the Angels by the middle of April, and it wouldn't be a shock to see him pitch his way into the ninth-inning duties. Edwin Uceta - RP, TB (11% rostered) is in a very similar situation and would be another good IL stash. Especially after Griffin Jax blew his first two save opportunities of the season in the Rays' first two games.

Taj Bradley - SP, MIN (4% rostered)

Bradley was electric in his season debut against the Orioles striking out nine batters and forcing 17 swings-and-misses. The problem was inefficiency as he walked three and only lasted 4 1/3 innings despite allowing one run. Still, his fastball velocity was up a tick compared to last season and he showed off an improved splitter that had a few inches more depth. That pitch forced seven of his 17 whiffs and left the Twins' booth speechless here.

There will always be upside to dream on with Bradley. Keep an eye on him and see if some of these adjustments turn into any consistency.

Justin Wrobleski - SP/RP, LAD (2% rostered)

This is a bet against Roki Sasaki. Sasaki made the rotation, but half of the batters he faced in spring training reached base. I don’t think his new cutter is a difference-maker, and his fastball still is getting hit a lot. If Sasaki gets chased from a start early, it’s going to be Wrobleski that comes in for him. If Sasaki gets sent down to Triple-A, it’s going to be Wrobleski that takes his spot in the rotation. I’m not saying it’s a lock to happen, but I’ll take the chance on it in deeper formats.

Gregory Soto - RP, PIT (3% rostered)

The Pirates have already said that Dennis Santana won't be their strict closer, which means they'll very likely play matchups at the end of games. I know people love Mason Montgomery, but I think, for right now, Soto will get the save chances when lefty-heavy parts of the lineup are coming up in the ninth. That's a similar situation to Hogan Harris - RP, ATH (2% rostered), who I think is the left-handed part of a committee in Sacramento.

Sunday update: Soto entered Saurday's game in the seventh inning while the Pirates and Mets were locked in a scoreless tie. He retired left-handed rookie Carson Benge to get out of a jam and then got through the top of the Mets' order in the following inning. Right now, his role is to get a tough lefty out late in a game, but the team seems comfortable giving him a bit longer of a leash.

Rivalry Roundup: Crochet starts 2026 with a gem

CINCINNATI, OH - MARCH 26: Garrett Crochet #35 of the Boston Red Sox walks back to the dugout after pitching during the game between the Boston Red Sox and the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on Thursday, March 26, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jeffrey Dean/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

While the Yankees got their 2026 season going on Wednesday night, the rest of MLB had to wait a little while. Thursday saw the season get going for most of the rest of the league, with 11 games happening on an action-packed day.

With those teams all getting in action yesterday, that means it’s time for the return of a feature here at Pinstripe Alley. All throughout the season, we recap the previous day’s results of all the Yankees’ American League “rivals” and teams they’re currently battling with for playoff position. The clubs we cover are, of course, subject to change pending* their results and status in the standings, but at least from the jump, we’ll keep an eye on the Red Sox, Blue Jays (who start today), Tigers, Mariners, and Astros.

With all that in mind, it’s time for the first Rivalry Roundup for 2026.

*Editor’s note: Out of respect for our writers’ time and the inherent focus of this feature, we also endeavor to not throw too too many teams in here. So we’re disrespecting possible playoff contenders like Baltimore, Cleveland, Kansas City, and Texas from the jump, but that’s life! You have to draw the line somehwhere.

Boston Red Sox (1-0) 3, Cincinnati Reds (0-1) 0

Garrett Crochet goes into 2026 as one of the favorites for the AL Cy Young Award, and he showed why in the Red Sox Opening Day. Crochet went six innings for Boston, allowing just three hits and two walks, striking out eight as the Red Sox shut out the Reds.

For most of the game, this one was a pitchers’ duel as Cincinnati’s Andrew Abbott wasn’t bad himself. He went six shutout innings, scattering a couple more hits than Crochet did, but similarly keeping Boston off the board.

It was when the game went to the bullpens that it was finally decided. In the top of the seventh, Ceddanne Rafaela singled home Marcelo Mayer, scoring the game’s first run. Trevor Story and Jarren Duran added an RBI each in the ninth, as Boston’s bullpen held firm, while Cincinnati’s could not.

Los Angeles Angels (1-0) 3, Houston Astros (0-1) 0

Mike Trout turned back the clock, as he powered the Angels’ offense, while José Soriano did his part with six impressive shutout innings against the Astros.

Much like the game right above this one, this game was a pitchers’ duel for a long while, with it similarly being 0-0 after six innings. Hunter Brown was okay for the Astros, while Soriano allowed just two hits and struck out seven in his six frames.

Trout broke the deadlock in this one, as his solo shot in the seventh gave the Halos a lead, while he also drew three walks on the day. Former Yankee Oswald Peraza helped the Angels tack on, although the one run would’ve been enough, as the Astros left nine runners on base for the game.

Detroit Tigers (1-0) 8, San Diego Padres (0-1) 2

The Tigers jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the top of the first and never looked back, as they cruised past the Padres.

Nick Pivetta took the ball for San Diego and quickly recorded the first out of the game, only for things to go off the rails after that. He walked three of the next four hitters, with the lone exception in there being a single. The third walk to Spencer Torkelson plated the first run, but more was coming. Highly-rated, debuting prospect Kevin McGonigle then immediately doubled to score a couple more runs, as Detroit took a big lead.

McGonigle would have an incredible debut even beyond that hit, as he recorded three more. Meanwhile, two-time reigning Cy Young Tarik Skubal was pretty good himself. He allowed just one unearned run in six innings, as Detroit handled the Padres without issue.

Cleveland Guardians (1-0) 6, Seattle Mariners (0-1) 4

José Ramírez’s two-RBI double in the seventh inning ended up being the difference maker, as the Guardians won a back-and-forth game over the Mariners.

The teams traded runs in the first inning, and gave the lead back and forth a couple times, but a fifth inning Luke Raley homer had the game tied at three. Then in the seventh, Ramírez stepped to the plate with two on and two out and he delivered. His double scored a pair that gave Cleveland a 5-3 lead.

Seattle got one of those runs back in the bottom of the seventh, but they got nothing going after that. Cleveland’s bullpen combined to retire the last nine M’s hitters in a row to seal their Opening Day win.

SnakeBytes 3/27: An unfortunate start

Mar 26, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks starting pitcher Zac Gallen (23) leaves the mound during a pitching change as manager Torey Lovullo (17), infielder Carlos Santana (41) and catcher Gabriel Moreno (14) look on against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the fifth inning at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Diamondbacks News

(SI.com) D-backs’ Biggest Weakness Exposed by Dodgers in Ugly Opening Day Loss

It began with Zac Gallen. Gallen had been working efficiently and effectively through four innings, getting swing-and-miss on his secondary pitches and showcasing a 94.1 MPH average fastball velocity. Things looked to be going well.

But Gallen ran into a blowup inning in the fifth — a type of inning that was somewhat frequent during his rough 2025 season. A pair of ground balls became singles, and a poor location to Andy Pages became a three-run homer, flipping the score to 3-2 in favor of L.A.

(NBC Sports) Andy Pages’ 3-run shot sparks Dodgers’ 8-2 comeback win over the Diamondbacks in season opener

Andy Pages hit a go-ahead, three-run homer in the fifth inning, and the Los Angeles Dodgers rallied past the Arizona Diamondbacks 8-2 on Thursday, opening the season with a victory in pursuit of their third consecutive World Series championship.

Three of the Dodgers’ first four hits in the fifth off Zac Gallen came with two strikes. Max Muncy singled, Teoscar Hernández reached on an infield single to Gallen, Pages’ homer traveled 400 feet and Miguel Rojas singled. Shohei Ohtani drew a walk to chase Gallen, who began the game with four shutout innings and a 2-0 lead.

(Arizona Sports) Diamondbacks crushed by Dodgers on Opening Day. What went wrong?

The fifth inning got off to an unfortunate start, as a Max Muncy hard grounder got past second baseman Ketel Marte for a single and Teoscar Hernandez reached on a dribbler. With the table set, Andy Pages delivered the go-ahead, three-run home run on a curveball that did not quite get below the zone.

Gallen stayed in for two more hitters, who reached base on a hit and a walk before manager Torey Lovullo pulled his starter.

(SI.com) Diamondbacks DH Scratched From Lineup vs Dodgers

Arizona Diamondbacks DH Pavin Smith was scratched from the opening day lineup against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Thursday with left elbow soreness, according to multiple reports. Infield/outfield utility Tim Tawa will take over the DH slot and bat ninth for Arizona.

Following the Diamondbacks’ ugly 8-2 blowout loss on opening night, Smith told reporters that he will undergo imaging on his elbow on Friday to determine severity

MLB News

(Yahoo! Sports) Automated Ball-Strike System sees 61.3% success rate in first games

Francona saw a walk by Eugenio Suárez on a full count overturned to a strikeout in the fourth inning while Connor Phillips’ ninth-inning strikeout of Boston’s Roman Anthony — also on a full count — overturned to a walk.

“I think our pitchers are going to have to get used to thinking the inning might be over, and it’s not,” Francona said. “It’s almost like when a guy comes out and you say, ‘Hey, way to go. Can you get one more?’ So you’re going to have to stay dialed in.”

(ESPN) Pirates ace Paul Skenes pulled in 1st inning of season opener

It was a stunning scene at Citi Field on Thursday afternoon: Paul Skenes, untouchable in his first two major league seasons, walking off the field to the sarcastic cheers from the sellout crowd after failing to survive the first inning on Opening Day.

Skenes, still just 23 years old, had never struggled to this extent over his first 55 career starts for the Pittsburgh Pirates. He was as dominant as his 1.96 career ERA suggested.

But Skenes recorded just two outs against the New York Mets on Thursday, giving up five runs on four hits, two walks and a hit batter in the Pirates’ 11-7 loss. It was not how anyone envisioned Skenes launching his Cy Young Award defense. But he’s not pressed.

(CBS Sports) 2026 MLB Opening Day winners and losers: Rookies make a mark in debuts, a home run streak dies and more

Major League Baseball’s Opening Day has arrived. The 2026 regular season kicked off in earnest Thursday with 11 games and plenty of appetizing pitching matchups. The Yankees shut out the Giants in the lone game on Wednesday’s schedule before the Mets and Pirates kicked off Thursday’s action in Queens before a bevy of mid-afternoon games got underway. There were pitchers’ duels, blowouts, tight games, and home runs. Lots and lots of home runs.

Here now are some early winners and losers from the Opening Day action.

(MLB.com) Top 10 moments from a thrilling Opening Day

Opening Day never seems to disappoint, not after we spend the offseason waiting for a day like Thursday — one full of packed ballparks, clutch hits and nasty pitches.

In case you missed any of the action, or simply want to relive the day that was, here’s a look back at the top 10 moments from Opening Day.

Let’s meet the 2026 Opening Day roster for the Atlanta Braves

NORTH PORT, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 20: Ronald Acuña Jr. #13 of the Atlanta Braves poses for a photo during Spring Training photo day at CoolToday Park on February 20, 2026 in North Port, Florida. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are the 26 players who will be on the field, in the dugout and in the bullpen once the regular season gets underway here in Atlanta. As is tradition around here, we’re taking a deeper look at each and every player on the Opening Day roster. This includes how they got here, their basic information and then some projections and fun facts as well.

We hope you enjoy!


PITCHERS

## – Osvaldo Bido – RHP

Age: 30 Birthplace: Los Hidalgos, Dominican Republic
Acquired: Claimed off waivers from the New York Yankees on March 24, 2026
Expected Role: Swingman/Long relief

Projection: Low-leverage reliever or swingman, 0 to 0.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Was previously claimed by the Braves off waivers in December 2025, but lost ten days later to make space for the signing of Ha-Seong Kim. This started a period of five different organizations claiming Bido in the span of five months; the Braves claimed him after the conclusion of Spring Training. Bido makes the Opening Day roster despite not appearing in camp with the Braves.

49 – Aaron Bummer – LHP

Age: 33 Birthplace: Valencia, CA
Acquired: Traded from the White Sox to the Braves on November 16, 2023 in exchange for Nicky Lopez, Braden Shewmake, Jared Shuster, Michael Soroka and Riley Gowens.
Expected Role: Middle relief

Projection: Quality reliever, 0.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Made his first career start in 2025, striking out the first five batters he faced.

55 – Bryce Elder – RHP

Age: 27 Birthplace: Decatur, TX
Acquired: Drafted by the Braves in the fifth round of the 2020 MLB Draft
Expected Role: Starter

Projection: Fourth starter, 1 to 2 WAR

Fun Fact: This is Elder’s first time on a Braves Opening Day roster; he didn’t even make it when ultimately making an All-Star Team in 2023.

72 – Didier Fuentes – RHP

Age: 20 Birthplace: Tolu, Colombia
Acquired: Signed by the Braves as an international free agent on January 15, 2022
Expected Role: Swingman/Long relief

Projection: Average swingman or starter, 0 to 1.5 WAR

Fun Fact: When making his MLB debut in 2025, was the third-youngest starting pitcher in Atlanta Braves history, and the youngest debut in MLB since 2016 (Julio Urias).

66 – Grant Holmes – RHP

Age: 29 Birthplace: Conway, SC
Acquired: Signed a minor league deal deal with the Braves on November 21, 2023
Expected Role: Starter

Projection: Average swingman or starter, 0.5 to 1.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Made his MLB debut a full decade after being drafted.

26 – Raisel Iglesias – RHP

Age: 36 Birthplace: Juventud, Cuba
Acquired: Signed a one-year, $16 million contract on November 19, 2025
Expected Role: Closer

Projection: Above-average reliever, 0.5 to 1 WAR

Fun Fact: Was once ejected for throwing a tub of sunflower seeds and a bucket of gum onto the infield while his teammates were engaged in an on-field brawl.

45 – Tyler Kinley – RHP

Age: 35 Birthplace: Plantation, FL
Acquired: Signed a one-year, $4.25 million contract on January 10, 2026
Expected Role: Middle-to-High-leverage relief

Projection: Average reliever, 0.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Kinley used to claim that he was related to U.S. President William McKinley, and that the “Mc” was missing from his family’s surname as a safety measure following the assassination of President McKinley. However, this was disproven by a someone who took it upon themselves to fact-check this.

52 – Dylan Lee – LHP

Age: 31 Birthplace: Dinuba, CA
Acquired: Signed a minor league deal with the Braves on April 15, 2021.
Expected Role: Middle-to-High-leverage relief

Projection: Average reliever, 0.5 WAR

Fun Fact: I am contractually and morally obligated to repeat the fact that when he started a game in the 2021 World Series, he had the fewest career MLB appearances for a starter in such a game, in every post talking about Dylan Lee, as well as this fun fact series.

40 – Reynaldo López – RHP

Age: 32 Birthplace: San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic
Acquired: Agreed to a three-year, $26 million deal that also includes an $8 million club option for 2027.
Expected Role: Starter

Projection: Middle of the rotation starter limited by availability, 1.5 to 2 WAR

Fun Fact: First Dominican player signed and developed by the Nationals to start a game for them. (Doesn’t include the pre-Nationals, Expos tenure.)

34 – Joel Payamps – RHP

Age: 31 Birthplace: Santiago, Dominican Republic
Acquired: Signed a one-year, $2.25 million contract on November 23, 2025
Expected Role: Middle Relief

Projection: Below-average reliever, 0 to 0.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Was included in the three-team trade that brought Sean Murphy to Atlanta. As part of the deal, the Athletics sent to Payamps to the Brewers.

51 – Chris Sale – LHP

Age: 37 Birthplace: Lakeland, FL
Acquired: Traded by the Boston Red Sox to the Braves on December 30 in exchange for Vaughn Grissom. Agreed to a two-year, $38 million deal on January 4 that also includes an $18 million club option for 2026. Signed a one-year, $27 million contract on February 25, 2026 that also includes a $30 million club option for 2028.
Expected Role: Starter

Projection: Above-average starter to elite starter, 2.5 to 4.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Has made back-to-back All-Star Team appearances after a prior seven-year stretch (2012-2018) of consecutive appearances as well.

54 – Jose Suarez – LHP

Age: 28 Birthplace: Naguanagua, Venezuela
Acquired: Claimed off waivers from the Baltimore Orioles on January 26, 2026
Expected Role: Starter

Projection: Average reliever or swingman, 0 to 1 WAR

Fun Fact: Though he appeared with the Braves in 2025 and will likely do so at least once in 2026, spent part of the offseason (less than two weeks) with Baltimore after being claimed on waivers in mid-January. The Braves claimed him back in late January.

75 – Robert Suarez – RHP

Age: 35 Birthplace: Bolivar, Venezuela
Acquired: Signed a three-year, $45 million contract on December 11, 2025
Expected Role: High leverage

Projection: Above-average reliever, 0.5 to 1 WAR

Fun Fact: Was once ejected and suspended for a sticky substance during a routine glove check.

CATCHERS

30 – Drake Baldwin – C

Age: 24 Birthplace: Madison, WI
Acquired: Drafted by the Braves in the third round of the 2022 MLB Draft
Expected Role: Starting catcher

Projection: Above-average regular, 2 to 4 WAR

Fun Fact: Led his home state of Wisconsin in high school hockey goal scoring as a junior in 2018.

20 – Jonah Heim – C

Age: 30 Birthplace: Buffalo, NY
Acquired: Signed a one-year, $1.5 million contract on February 10, 2026
Expected Role: Backup catcher

Projection: Below-average to average regular, not expected to play frequently, 0 to 2 WAR depending on playing time

Fun Fact: As a child, started switch-hitting because, in his own words, “hitting from the right side is boring.”

INFIELDERS

1 – Ozzie Albies – 2B

Age: 29 Birthplace: Willemstad, Curaçao
Acquired: Signed as an international free agent by the Braves in 2013. Signed a seven-year, $35 million extension with two club options on April 11, 2019.
Expected Role: Starting second baseman

Projection: Average regular, 1.5 to 2.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Hit a walkoff three-run homer in the 2026 WBC with two outs and a two-run deficit, preventing Nicaragua from getting their first-ever victory in WBC play.

14 – Mauricio Dubón – UTIL

Age: 31 Birthplace: San Pedro Sula, Honduras
Acquired: Traded by the Houston Astros on November 19, 2025 in exchange for Nick Allen
Expected Role: Super utilityman, temporary starting shortstop

Projection: Below-average regular, 0.5 to 1 WAR

Fun Fact: Moved to the U.S. at 15 to play baseball after a chance meeting with a mission group in his native Honduras; second native-born Honduran to play in MLB, first to appear in the MLB playoffs, and first to win a Gold Glove Award.

15 – Kyle Farmer – INF

Age: 35 Birthplace: Atlanta, GA
Acquired: Signed a minor-league deal on February 6, 2026
Expected Role: Bench

Projection: Replacement level (or below), 0 WAR

Fun Fact: Appeared in the film, The Blind Side, as a high school quarterback.

2 – Jorge Mateo – UTIL

Age: 30 Birthplace: San Domingo Oeste, Dominican Republic
Acquired: Signed a one-year, $1 million contract on January 19, 2026
Expected Role: Utilityman

Projection: Below-average regular, 0 to 1 WAR

Fun Fact: Named the fastest minor leaguer ahead of the 2018 season by Baseball America. Then, led MLB in steals in 2022.

28 – Matt Olson – 1B

Age: 31 Birthplace: Atlanta, GA
Acquired: Traded by the Athletics on March 14, 2022. Signed an eight-year, $168 million extension with a club option for 2030 on March 15, 2022.
Expected Role: Starting first baseman

Projection: Above-average regular, 3 to 3.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Was ejected for the first time in his career for arguing a batter interference call during the second-to-last game of the 2025 regular season.

27 – Austin Riley – 3B

Age: 27 Birthplace: Memphis, TN
Acquired: Selected by the Braves in the supplemental first round, 41st overall, of the 2015 MLB Draft. Signed a ten-year, $212 million extension on August 1, 2022.
Expected Role: Starting third baseman

Projection: Above-average regular, 3 to 4 WAR

Fun Fact: In addition to baseball, played quarterback for his high school team during his freshman and sophomore years. Attempted to quit the football team to focus entirely on baseball, but was retained as the squad’s punter.

8 – Dominic Smith – 1B

Age: 30 Birthplace: Los Angeles, CA
Acquired: Signed a minor-league deal on February 17, 2026
Expected Role: Left-handed pinch-hitter

Projection: Below-replacement to generic bench production, -0.5 to 0.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Had an insane WPA game in the final game of the 2019 season by hitting a three-run, pinch-hit walkoff homer against the Braves while down by two runs and with two outs in the 11th. But, the game was ultimately meaningless for the standings, so no one remembers this as particularly dramatic.

OUTFIELDERS

13 – Ronald Acuña Jr. – RF

Age: 28 Birthplace: La Guaira, Venezuela
Acquired: Signed by the Braves as an international free agent in July 2014. Signed an eight-year, $100 million extension with club options for 2027 and 2028 on April 2, 2019.
Expected Role: Starting right fielder

Projection: All-Star production, 4.5 to 5.5 WAR

Fun Fact: WBC 2026 champion, baby.

23 – Michael Harris II – CF

Age: 24 Birthplace: DeKalb County, GA
Acquired: Selected by the Braves in the third round of the 2019 MLB Draft. Signed an eight-year, $72 million extension with club options for the 2031 and 2032 seasons on August 17, 2022.
Expected Role: Starting center fielder

Projection: Above-average regular, 3 to 4 WAR

Fun Fact: In his 2022 Rookie of the Year campaign, won Rookie of the Month in three of the four full months that he was up with the big league club.

36 – Eli White – OF

Age: 31 Birthplace: Greenville, SC
Acquired: Signed a minor league deal with the Braves on July 25, 2023
Expected Role: Bench, potential weak side platoon outfielder

Projection: Replacement level to regular-quality production 0 to 1.5 WAR in limited PAs

Fun Fact: Was once part of a trade that also involved eventual teammate and current problem child Jurickson Profar. White went from the Athletics to the Rangers in the deal, while Profar went the other direction. Also, the Rays and a bunch of other players were involved.

18 – Mike Yastrzemski – LF

Age: 35 Birthplace: Andover, MA
Acquired: Signed a two-year, $23 million contract on December 10, 2025
Expected Role: Strong side platoon outfielder

Projection: Below-average to average regular, 0.5 to 2.5 WAR

Fun Fact: Is part of one of four grandfather-grandson pairs to each hit 100 homers in MLB.

To Mark Kotsay: How To Improve Your Tactical Managing In 5 Easy Steps

SURPRISE, ARIZONA - MARCH 12: Manager Mark Kotsay #7 of the Athletics looks on during the third inning of the spring training game at Surprise Stadium on March 12, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mostly I write for our readers and commenters and the discussion it brings. Every now and again I write secretly hoping that someone who knows someone might put an elbow into a rib and say, “Hey, read this.” Long story short I hope this article gets from my fingers to Mark Kotsay’s ears — just for the good of the A’s.

First things first I want to recognize that Kotsay does many important things well, from keeping spirits up to making players feel supported to inspiring the team to play hard even when it’s in a 1-20 stretch. These are not leadership qualities to be taken lightly.

The tactical piece is important too and the point here is that it can be learned and constantly improved upon. Here are some “growth opportunities” for the A’s 4-years-going-on-5 skipper:

“Infield In” — use it, don’t abuse it

The A’s simply bring the infield in too often, especially with runners at 2B and 3B. Important to remember is that the 2026 A’s figure to score a lot of runs, meaning they can afford to give up 1 run here or there so long as they stay away from crooked numbers.

Bringing the infield in with runners at 2B and 3B is extremely risky because with holes all over the infield it runs a significant risk of a base hit that can score 2 runs and set up an even bigger inning — where a ground ball out with the infield back might allow a run, but leaves just one runner on and 2 outs.

Tony La Russa was, I thought, particularly clever. He would often play the infield back but if the batter got to 2 strikes he might suddenly bring it in to guard against a batter “just putting the ball in play” and stealing an RBI. I think there’s a place for that, but more broadly if you have a team that can score a lot of runs but is at risk of giving up runs too, don’t bring the infield in with 2 runners in scoring position unless you’re so late in the game that any run is probably going to beat you.

Platoons — know your numbers

Playing platoon match ups is generally fine. If Colby Thomas is on the roster I will want to see him leveraged against LHPs as much as possible and the same is true of Darell Hernaiz. If Lawrence Butler needs days off to rest his knee, choosing games started by opposing lefties is fine.

But playing platoons just to play platoons is short-sighted, and this year’s team in particular demands that their manager understand the individual personnel.

If the A’s need to neutralize a tough LH batter late in the game, don’t go to Hogan Harris, whose wOBA against in his career so far is .350 vs. LH batters and .310 vs. RH batters. In contrast do go to RH reliever Mark Leiter Jr. With his splitter diving away from lefties he has a career .227/.298/.382, .295 wOBA track record whereas against RH batters it’s .268/.354/.469, .354 wOBA.

Tyler Soderstrom struggled against LHPs early in his career but came on like gangbusters the second half of last season. Let him hit lefties until he proves he can’t. And so on.

In other words, platoon very strategically but not robotically. There’s a huge difference.

Minimize how many relievers/game

As I discussed with pitching coach Scott Emerson in our recent interview, the future of bullpens lies in multi-inning “bridge relievers” that spare you parading 3-4 different relievers out there to try to hold a lead. JT Ginn is a candidate (assuming he pitches more like he did at the start of spring training and not like how he finished), as are Hogan Harris and, if called up to pitch in the bullpen, Mason Barnett or Kade Morris.

The idea that 4 talented but volatile relievers like Elvis Alvarado, Scott Barlow, Mark Leiter Jr. and Hogan Harris can piece together 12 outs successfully is fraught with danger. Try to get your starters through 6 IP if you can and see if you can lean on just 2 relief arms to “get it to the house”. It will also spare you having to use relievers as much on back to back days, which has been shown to be statistically less reliable

Insist on the fundamentals that anyone can perform

A leader’s job includes tough love and where it’s most appropriate in baseball is the basic fundamentals that are within each and every player’s skill set.

Hit the cut off man no matter how sure you are that “if you just heave it all the way to the plate…” You will save far more bases and runs if you just fire every outfield throw to the cut off man’s chest. {An exception can be made for a runner trying to score when there is no runner(s) behind him as there is no potential downside.}

Rundowns should not require more than 2 throws: one to run the runner back to the previous base until he is only 25 feet or so from the bag — at which point the short toss to the base has him tagged out. Anytime you see 3, 4, 5 throws you are seeing multiple throws that never needed to be made, opening up chances for other runners to advance and for mistakes to be made to botch the rundown entirely.

When you don’t have endless payroll to mask deficiencies you need to do the “little things” well and the fundamentals are, by definition, the parts of the game don’t require a super athlete, advanced experience, more strength or speed. You just need the discipline to do what you have been taught since high school — or really Little League — even in the heat of the moment.

The first time a fundamental is ignored, it’s ok to confront the player, point it out and say “never again,” and the second time it’s ok to bench them next game. They will come back the following day a better player for it and you will be a better team for it. That’s leadership.

Bat Kurtz where he belongs: Not lead off

Resist the urge to bat Nick Kurtz lead off just because he figures to have an OBP north of .400. Yes the Dodgers do a “similar” thing leading off the powerful and dynamic Shohei Ohtani but Ohtani is also a lightning fast elite base stealing threat who can turn walks into doubles. He’s a very different kind of batter due to his speed.

Leading Kurtz off is just the wrong move for a variety of reasons, one being that it suppresses his RBI opportunities by batting him once with the bases empty for sure and then following Denzel Clarke and the bottom of the order thereafter.

Additionally, not only do you want as many of Kurtz’ HRs and doubles to come with runners on base, with men on it’s harder for pitchers to pitch around him. Sure you love the idea of Kurtz drawing a lot of walks and getting on base, especially to lead off an inning, but not at the expense of lacing several more doubles and launching a few more HRs with runners on and nowhere to put him.

Kurtz makes a lot of sense in the #2 spot if a RH batter leads off, or the #3 spot behind a LH batter and RH batter with OBP skills. Wilson-Kurtz, McNeil-Langeliers-Kurtz, Butler-Wilson-Kurtz all make sense. Kurtz leading off, while it’s appealing to consider your first hitter getting on base 40% of the time and getting the most PAs, will ultimately do more harm than good. Leverage Kurtz’ slugging over his OBP and you have a better lineup.

Thank you for reading, Mr. Kotsay, and for all the great work you have done and are about to do. And thanks for taking all 5 points to heart and following through. We both just want the A’s to be the best team they can be, and compared to when you started reading the A’s have greatly improved for your eager devotion to following these 5 principles. Let’s have a great season!

Mariners News: Gilbert, Nico Hoerner, and Jackson Chourio

Mar 26, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Logan Gilbert (36) pitches to the Cleveland Guardians during the first inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images | Steven Bisig-Imagn Images

Good morning friends! My apologies for the late links post this morning — I forgot to get someone to cover me, so here I am throwing something up here quickly!

I hope everyone had a delightful Opening Day, even though the Mariners lost 6-4. Are we ready to anoint Dominic Canzone the American League MVP yet?

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

Freddy Peralta’s Mets debut was a mixed bag

Freddy Peralta throws a pitch in a white Mets uniform with blue pinstripes and a blue hat with an orange NY logo
Freddy Peralta / | Photo: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Freddy Peralta wasn’t at his best in his Mets debut yesterday. In five innings, he gave up four earned runs, struck out seven, didn’t walk anyone, and surrendered two home runs. He threw 80 pitches in the process, and the relatively high-stress nature of some of those innings combined with the lopsided score in the Mets’ favor entering the sixth inning made it a fairly easy decision for Carlos Mendoza to pull him from the game.

Aside from his temporarily unsightly 7.20 ERA, much of what Peralta did yesterday lines up with what he’s done over the past few seasons with the Brewers. Many of his starts in Milwaukee saw him pitch fix or six innings, he’s always had very good strikeout rates, and while they aren’t necessarily his Achilles heel, Peralta will give up the occasional home run. With slightly different wind conditions yesterday, perhaps he would’ve given up just one of the two home runs and would be sporting a 3.60 ERA this morning instead.

It was encouraging, though, that Peralta didn’t issue any walks in the start. The Mets have struggled mightily with walk rate for the past couple of seasons, and Peralta has generally been right around league average or just slightly worse when it comes to his walk rate.

Ideally, Peralta finds a way to go a bit deeper into games this year and comes close to matching the excellent 2.70 ERA he had with the Brewers last year. And even if he doesn’t do either of those things or only does one of them, there’s plenty to look forward to for a pitcher who’s made 30, 32, and 33 starts in each of the past three seasons, respectively. If the Mets find themselves on track for a playoff spot over the next few months, there will be plenty of time to figure out who their ace is.

Elephant Rumblings: Ready For A’s Baseball Tonight?

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 27: Jacob Wilson #5 of the Athletics hits a single in the third inning against the Seattle Mariners on Opening Day at T-Mobile Park on March 27, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Stephen Brashear/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Happy Opening Day A’s fans!

The excitement is palpable. Unlike the previous few seasons this year has legitimate promise for our A’s. We have a solid core to build around, now it’s just time to get the pitching figured out.

We begin this season in Toronto with three games against the defending American League Champions. Right-hander Kevin Gausman gets the nod over offseason acquisition Dylan Cease. Is it because he’s been a Blue Jay for years and Cease is the new guys? Nobody knows expect Jays skipper John Schneider, but that feels like what’s going on here.

Last season the A’s went 2-5 against the Jays. Not a great record but these A’s are different than the ones that took on the AL champs last time around. In fact, both teams have changed one way or another. On one end, the Jays are coming off a heartbreaking loss in Game 7 of the World Series to the Los Angeles Dodgers. They’ve lost a massive part of their team in Bo Bichette. Yes, the addition of Cease helps offset that departure but he was apart of the heart of that squad. Will the Jays be as dangerous without him in the middle of their lineup? Does Vlad Jr. have enough protection against just getting intentionally walked every time?

And the A’s are a different squad themselves since last year. Nick Kurtz, the Rookie of the Year, has established himself. Jacob Wilson, the starting shortstop for the American League in the All-Star Game, can only get better with another year under his belt. Shea Langeliers would be the best catcher in baseball if he didn’t play at the same time as the Seattle catcher up north. Brent Rooker and Lawrence Butler are good for 25+ bombs if healthy.

Again, it’s going to come down to the pitching. The starting rotation feels like it has a certain floor with stable veterans Luis Severino and Jeffrey Springs atop the starting five. Not world-beaters by any means, but if they do their jobs they can help this team to a Wild Card spot. There’s plenty of high-ceiling upside behind them, but the A’s will need to get a bit lucky with some of their younger arms if they want to make some serious, noticable noise.

The A’s have a real gauntlet of a schedule right out of the gates, and a lot of it is on the road. First will be this trip up north to take on Toronto, and then the A’s have to go all the way to the southern U.S. to take on the Braves in Atlanta. Not a short trip.

We’ll have a quick home stand that the MLB schedule makes felt like they needed to get out of the way (against the division-rival Houston Astros) before packing our bags up again and heading back out East. This time they won’t have to travel far between stops as they take on the Yankees and then the Mets in back-to-back series. For the tough early schedule the A’s have, at least they threw us that bone.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. One game at a time. Luis Severino versus Kevin Gausman. The Athletics against the Blue Jays in Game 1 of the six-month long campaign.

Ready for some Athletics baseball tonight? This fan sure is. Let’s start the season with a win! Go A’s!

A’s Coverage:

MLB News and Interest:

Best of X:

Quick promotion likely:

Worth a watch!

A couple high-profile prospects in the system:

Triple-A Las Vegas Opening Night position-player roster:

Nebraska Baseball Weekend Preview: Indiana

Series Preview

Indiana Hoosiers (10-14, 3-6 B1G) at #24 Nebraska Cornhuskers (19-6, 5-1 B1G)

Location: Hawks Field at Haymarket Park, Lincoln, NE

Dates: March 27-29th

Times (all CDT): Friday @ 6pm, Saturday @ 2pm, Sunday @ 12pm

Head Coaches: Jeff Mercer (8th season, 217-163-1) & Will Bolt (7th season, 189-132-1)

TV/Stream: B1G+

Radio: All Nebraska games on Huskers Radio Network, Huskers.com, Huskers App

Fresh off a 4-1 week on the road where they stifled a red hot Wichita State offense and took a weekend series from a good Michigan team, Nebraska plays its first series as a ranked team since the first two weeks of last season. Solid starts from all of the rotation combined with an offense that really woke up (Other than the Kurt Barr experience on Friday, but he’s been confounding B1G bats for 3.5 years.) and some opportunistic bullpen experiences has really pushed Nebraska into the national conversation.

Indiana had the unfortunate timing last offseason of the best HS recruiting class in program history graduating, and maybe the 2nd best player in the conference, Devin Taylor getting drafted at the same time. They are in a full rebuild for the first time under coach Jeff Mercer. They are not taking it easy on the scheduling though. 8 of their losses are to teams that either are or were ranked at the time of playing. They were upset by Washington in the first conference series, then swept by Oregon the week after.

They have shown they aren’t dead yet. They beat Vanderbilt in a midweek game on St. Patrick’s Day. Then they won the first two games against a Minnesota team that had been off to a surprising start to the year, albeit against a VERY easy schedule. They stumbled again since, as Minnesota rebounded and won on a 10 run rule game on Sunday, and then lost to in state rival Indiana State Tuesday 5-4. That was on a late inning implosion by one of their, let’s say, less reliable relievers. We are about to see if that 3 game streak was a hiccup in their mediocrity or if they really are resurrecting their season.

Pitching Probables

Game 1: RHP Ty Horn (0-1, 3.26 ERA) vs. RHP Reagan Rivera (0-2, 10.90 ERA)

Game 2: RHP Carson Jasa (4-1, 3.99 ERA) vs. LHP Tony Neubeck (2-2, 3.49 ERA)

Game 3: RHP Cooper Katskee (3-0, 2.10 ERA) vs. LHP Brayton Thomas (1-2, 5.09 ERA)

Ty Horn found himself in the middle of just an old fashioned Big Ten Friday night pitcher’s duel for the first time. It took him a minute to find his stuff, made all the more problematic by the tight zone, rare for a game that ends 2-1. Something clicked in the 3rd, and Horn rattled off 6 straight strikeouts before walking a Wolverine. At that point, he had just used too many pitches to survive the first few innings and had to exit after 102 pitches in 4.2 innings.

Everything for Nebraska was firing on all cylinders Saturday, and that included Carson Jasa. He shutout the Wolverines in his 6 innings of work, striking out 8 and only walking 1. It was evident from the start that the cutter/change and slider were in dominant fashion for Jasa, and if those are going, tying to time up a 97 mph fastball is nearly impossible. He just keeps improving with each start.

It was hard to place what was going on with Gavin Blachowicz on Sunday, his velocity was down and just wasn’t commanding the mound like we’ve grown accustomed to as he battled his way through 4 innings. With only 1 midweek game, the Huskers were able to maneuver Cooper Katskee to make the Sunday slot he was originally brought in to occupy. The former Indiana Hoosier is 4th in the Big Ten in ERA at 2.10 and will be given his first weekend start against his former team.

After losing one of their top starters for the season, the Hoosiers are struggling to figure out a rotation for the weekend. Reagan Rivera, a Copin State grad transfer is getting the Friday nod. He doesn’t get far in games, so we are going to see the bullpen early on a Friday night, more than likely. Rivera is the definition of hot or cold. He either throws a shutout, or gives up 4 or more runs. There is no in-between.

The most consistent pitcher for Indiana is the lefty Missouri grad transfer Tony Neubeck. He had a rough go at Oregon, but most do. Other than that he has been coming on strong lately, striking out 9 Washington batter and 8 Minnesota batters, while walking only 2. Their top recruit a season ago, Bryaton Thomas is still figuring things out. He shows promise, with 20 strikeouts in 23 innings, but leads the team in walks. Minnesota burned him for 6 runs in 1.2 innings last Sunday.

Scouting Report

The Hoosiers offense is led by reigning Big Ten Freshman of the Year Jake Hanley. Hanley has started every game since arriving on campus, something easy to do because not only does he bring a good bat, but he also won an All-Region Gold Glove last season. Hanley is batting a team leading .354 with 5 home runs and 24 RBIs. He had a home run in each of the victories over Minnesota last week, and has 2 doubles in the last week, to go along with batting .416 in Big Ten play, so he is a big part of this team coming back from the dead recently.

The other most dangerous bat in the Hoosiers’ lineup is sophomore Hogan Denny. While splitting time at catcher and in the outfield, Denny is hitting .326 and leads the team with 9 doubles and is tied for the team lead with 5 home runs. He also leads the team with a 1.016 OPS.

Leadoff batter Will Moore was also a Freshman All-Big Ten Team member last season. He is a menace in the batters box, but not just because of his bat. He is only batting .250 with 20 hits, way down from last year. But he has 15 walks, and 6 HBP on the year. He is constantly working the pitchers deep into counts, contributing to his 21 strikeouts. Pitchers will need to attack him quickly.

Indiana does not run a lot, but if you see part time player Ayden Crouse in the outfield, get ready to watch him run on the bases. He has more than half of the teams stolen bases and attempts on the season, going 9 for 11.

The Indiana bullpen is not a strength of the team. They don’t use a single pitcher as a closer. Three different pitcher have combined for their 4 total saves on the season. The Hoosiers have 2 pitchers that have been consistently good for them this season.

Long reliever Gavin Seebold is leading the team in most categories. He is sporting a team low 0.83 ERA, having given up only 2 runs on the season, both in his appearance against Oregon. He has struck out 23 and walked 8 in 21.1 innings of work. He only pitches 1 game a series, usually going for 2-3 innings. 6’7 260 lb Jacob Vogel is another go to arm. He has struck out 12 and walked 7 in 15 innings this season. He has a 3.00 ERA but generally doesn’t go for more than an inning.

The defense is average, with a fielding percentage at .972. Short stop Cooper Malamazian makes some spectacular plays, but has 7 errors on the season, for only a .924%.

Series History

Nebraska owns a 20-15-1 record against the Hoosiers. They last met in 2024 in the Big Ten Tournament with Nebraska needing to beat them twice to advance to the title game. The Huskers won 4-2 and 10-4 on their way to their first Big Ten Tournament Championship. The teams met earlier in the season with Indiana winning the opener in extra innings, but Nebraska winning the last 2 games to claiming the series.

On Deck

  • Dylan Carey hit career double number 56 at Kansas State on Tuesday, tying Will Bolt for the Husker career record.
  • Dylan Carey and Mac Moyer are tied for 2nd in the Big Ten and 17th in the country with 40 hits on the year.
  • Nebraska is 9-0 at home this season. The record to start a season is 11-0 in 2015.
  • Happy Opening Day for the MLB, for those that celebrate! Especially to the Husker Baseball alums! Get well soon, Schwellenbach!

Opening day notes: Kyle Tucker, Will Smith, Miguel Rojas

Los Angeles, CA - March 26: Kyle Tucker #23 of the Los Angeles Dodgers watches his RBI double as teammate Shohei Ohtani (not pictured) scores against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the seventh inning of an opening day baseball game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Thursday, March 26, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

There is no better feeling than starting the season with a win, and that’s how the Dodgers began the 2026 season, defeating the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday 8-2.

The Dodgers used a pair of four-run innings in the bottom of the fifth and seventh innings to erase their brief deficit against Arizona, and Kyle Tucker began the rally in the seventh with an RBI double to give him his first hit in a Dodger uniform. He later scored on a Mookie Betts single and finished the night 1-4 with a double, a walk and an RBI.

Tucker spoke with Bob Costas at NBC about getting his first game as a Dodger under his belt and about playing for a team that has their aspirations set on a third consecutive championship.

“It feels great,” Tucker said. “It started off well tonight. The audience— the fans coming out to and supporting us— is unbelievable… There’s some phenomenal players on this roster. They love the city of L.A. and try to do the best for everyone that comes out and supports us.”

Links

Will Smith ended his night on Thursday the same way he ended the 2025 World Series— with a home run. Smith’s home run capped off the second four-run inning for the Dodgers, and the All-Star catcher finished 2-4 with three RBI.

Smith spoke with David Vassegh of AM 570 post-game about the depth of this new-look Dodgers lineup, noting that there are zero weaknesses from top to bottom.

“It’s a really tough lineup,” Smith said. “You got guys that can slug, guys that can get on base. There’s no off at-bats for the other team. There’s no easy outs and we take pride in that, whoever’s on the roster. It should be a really fun year. We started off 1-0 and that was the goal today.”

Miguel Rojas has now played in the final opening day of his 13-year playing career, going 1-4 with a run scored in Thursday’s victory. Rojas found out only on Tuesday that he was given the start at second base, noting that he wasn’t expecting any favors from Dave Roberts, notes Maddie Lee of the Los Angeles Times.

“I didn’t know if ‘Thank you’ was the right thing to say because it’s something I earned,” Rojas recounted before the Dodgers’ 8-2 win Thursday against the Diamondbacks. “It’s not something that I asked for as a favor. So I was just kind of speechless.”

Previewing the opposition: a look around the NL Central

CHICAGO,IL - JULY 2: Flags are displayed before a game between the Boston Red Sox and the Chicago Cubs on July 2, 2022 at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Billie Weiss/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We’ve given you plenty of Brewers preview content this week (and all month), but let’s take a more detailed (but still Brewers-fan-centric) look around the rest of the division and see what the teams who are trying to knock the Brewers off their perch are bringing to the table this year.

We’ll go in alphabetical order (which just so happens to be the order in which I think they’ll finish), with a rating out of 10 on the threat level they pose to the Brewers this year, as determined by your humble author, who still thinks Milwaukee should be regarded as the favorite.

Chicago Cubs

The Cubs are viewed by essentially every major media outlet as the favorite in the National League Central. The headline additions for the Cubs are third baseman Alex Bregman (who signed a five-year, $175 million deal) and starting pitcher Edward Cabrera, who came over from the Marlins for a package headlined by top prospect Owen Caissie. The Cubs also added several bullpen pieces, most notably Hunter Harvey, Phil Maton, and Hoby Milner. (They also signed Shelby Miller, but he may not pitch at all in 2025 after he needed Tommy John surgery after a late-season injury with the Brewers last year.)

On the way out, the big Cubs loss was Kyle Tucker, who of course signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers. But they also watched several bullpen arms go, including a couple who were quite good for them in 2025 (Brad Keller, Drew Pomeranz).

Chicago has been widely praised for the signing of Bregman, who is viewed as one of the league’s best clubhouse presences, plays good defense, and is a solidly above average hitter. Bregman, though, turns 32 in a few days, and played only 114 games in 2025, so that’s something to keep an eye on. And while Bregman has been a good player over the last six years, he hasn’t been a legitimate star since 2018 and 2019, when he had back-to-back top-five MVP finishes.

Bregman’s signing should help, but we need to look at it through the prism of who he “replaced,” Tucker. Even in what was viewed as a “down season” at times, Tucker put up a 143 OPS+ in 2025, made the All-Star Game, and earned 4.6 WAR in 135 games, a better rate than the 3.5 WAR Bregman earned in 114 games. Tucker is also three years younger than Bregman, and has been unequivocally better over the past five seasons.

Bregman is a good pickup for the Cubs, but he’s a step down from Tucker, and I don’t know why this isn’t being more widely considered.

As for Cabrera, he was quite good in 2025 (3.53 ERA/3.83 FIP, 3.13 K:BB in 137 2/3 innings) in his age-27 season. The question, really, is whether that’s who Cabrera is now or whether the significant control problems that plagued him from 2022-2024 will rear their head. Prior to 2025, Cabrera had made 63 career appearances (61 starts) and thrown 294 innings and walked over five batters per nine. That’s a huge number over such a large sample; for instance, the highest BB/9 among qualified starting pitchers in 2025 was Gavin Williams at 4.5. Jacob Misiorowski only walked 4.2 batters per nine in the big leagues in 2025.

Of course, the fact that Cabrera substantially lowered that rate over a large sample (last year was the first time he’d thrown more than 100 innings in his career) is encouraging. Cabrera does have good stuff—he sits around 97 with his fastball and had some of the better offspeed stuff in the league last year, according to Statcast. But if I were a Cubs fan, I’d be nervous watching his walks, at least early in the season.

Chicago should also be helped this season by the return of Justin Steele, who had surgery on his UCL about a year ago. He’s pitching again, but the Cubs just placed him on the 60-day IL, so he obviously won’t be back for at least a couple of months. Steele was one of the league’s best pitchers in 2023 and more-or-less replicated those results (although in a smaller sample) in 2024, but made only four starts before his injury in 2025.

The infield is good: alongside Bregman, Dansby Swanson and Nico Hoerner (my pick for the league’s best second baseman last season, and who the Cubs just signed to a lucrative extension) are both excellent defensive players who can hit a bit, and Michael Busch, who was the hitter in Chicago’s lineup who scared me the most in last year’s NLDS, looks to be the real deal, at least as long as he’s facing right-handed pitching.

Pete Crow-Armstrong leads the outfield, but we’ll have to see how he adjusts this season. After exploding out of the gate and making himself a Bonafide MVP candidate by mid summer, PCA struggled badly in the second half of the season and finished with a .287 on-base percentage. There are real, nearly existential questions about his plate discipline, but he did hit 31 homers and steal 35 bases last year, and if nothing else he’s a dynamic player who provides true A+ defense in center field. Ian Happ, Seiya Suzuki, and Matt Shaw are all players who should help, while Dylan Carlson and Michael Conforto are looking to get their careers back on track.

Threat level: 7/10. The Cubs won 92 games in 2025, and went five with the Brewers in the NLDS. They’re well-funded. They have some star power, and maybe the best everyday infield in the game (though I wouldn’t want to be the one writing the checks in 2029, when Bregman and Swanson will be 35 and Hoerner 32 and they’ll make something like $75m combined). But I still see problems with the pitching staff, and while the narrative out there seems to be that Chicago greatly improved this offseason, I don’t really see it. They should win 90-ish games again and they certainly could usurp the Brewers at the top of the division, but I think the universal consensus that they will is a little bizarre, frankly.

Cincinnati Reds

The Reds won 83 games in 2025 and snuck into the playoffs, where they lost two lopsided Wild Card games to the Dodgers. They’re a team with some intriguing talent, but the health of their pitching staff is in question at the beginning of the season and that’s a problem.

The biggest issue is Hunter Greene, their best pitcher, who made only 19 starts last year but pitched to a 2.76 ERA (166 ERA+) and struck out 11 batters per nine while walking only 2.2. Greene is one of the hardest throwers in the league—he averaged 99.5 on his fastball last year, higher even than Misiorowski—and has been one of the best pitchers in baseball while on the mound over the last two seasons. But he needed surgery to remove bone chips from his elbow earlier this month, and isn’t expected back in the big leagues until July, and of course any sort of elbow injury for a guy who throws in triple digits is alarming. The Reds probably need Greene in order to be good enough to make the postseason, and I’m not sure they’re going to get enough of him.

Andrew Abbott, Brady Singer, Nick Lodolo, and Chase Burns round out what is hypothetically one of the best five-man rotations anywhere in baseball. Abbott had a 2.87 ERA in over 165 innings last season, and while there are some concerns that he’s outperforming his peripherals, he’d still be a well above-average pitcher even if his ERA ticked back closer to his FIP.

Lodolo has shown a lot of promise, but he’s also struggled at times to stay on the mound. He made only 28 starts between 2023 and 2024, and while he did appear in 29 games last season, he missed some time in August. He’s dealing with a blister that landed him on the IL to start this season, which isn’t exactly what you want.

Singer doesn’t bring many durability concerns; he’s topped 125 innings in each of his five full seasons and hasn’t thrown less than 153 since 2021. Singer isn’t going to be a star but he’s as reliable an innings eater as you’re likely to find in 2026. Burns is electric, and debuted to much fanfare last season, when in 43 1/3 innings he struck out 67 batters. He was a top-25 overall prospect prior to last season, and figures to be one of the most exciting young pitchers in the league.

Speaking of exciting, on the other side of the ball the Reds boast one of the most dynamic players in baseball, Elly De La Cruz. Over his first three seasons, things have been kind of all over the place, as you’d expect for a player with so much raw talent in his early 20s—for instance, in 2024 he stole a league-leading 67 bases and hit 36 doubles, 10 triples, and 25 homers, but also struck out a league-leading 218 times. His offensive game took a slight step back in 2025. But he’s still very young—he just turned 24 in January—and Reds fans have every reason to believe that this athletic freak with real power and good defensive tools (he’s rated as not bad, but not great at shortstop so far) will be a star for years to come. Heck, Keith Law even picked him for NL MVP.

There’s also a prime bounceback candidate in Matt McLain, a new (old) guy with potential for 50 homers in Eugenio Suárez, and a big-time prospect in Sal Stewart. Noelvi Marte occasionally looks like a star, though a steroid suspension threw a pretty big wrench in his career. TJ Friedl is pretty good. But this isn’t an overwhelming lineup unless a lot of things go right.

Threat level: 5/10. There are some interesting pieces here, and the rotation, at full health, is loaded. But will we ever get that rotation at full health? That remains to be seen, and while I like some parts of this lineup I’m not thrilled about others. I’ve also got questions about the bullpen. The skeleton of a good team is here, but I’m not sure they’ll be able to put it together this year.

Pittsburgh Pirates

The Pirates are a trendy pick to improve greatly, and I saw them in multiple “bold predictions” columns and segments for “will make the playoffs in 2026.” Let’s even give them the benefit of the doubt and ignore (at least, mostly) the first game of the season, in which Paul Skenes didn’t even make it out of the first inning.

Yes, they have Skenes, and his dud of a start notwithstanding (Skenes was charged with five runs but should’ve gotten out of the first with only a run in; his center fielder, Oneil Cruz, made two awful plays in a row that cost the team at least three runs) he might be the best pitcher in baseball, and is certainly the best pitcher in the National League.

My big question here is: how far does one starting pitcher get you in an era where starting pitchers rarely throw even 200 innings?

That question is kind of central to the Pittsburgh Pirates problem. Their offense should be better this year, but that’s a low bar—they were dead last in 2025, 60 runs behind the third-worst Cleveland Guardians. Their offense in 2025 wasn’t just bad, it was atrocious. So what’d they do to address it? They traded for Brandon Lowe (who homered twice off Freddy Peralta on Opening Day), which should help a bit, and they signed Ryan O’Hearn, who had a good 2025 season, and they also signed Marcell Ozuna, who can still hit, I think.

There are a couple of problems here, though. First, none of those guys is at a stage where you’d expect them to get any better. In July, O’Hearn will turn 33 and Lowe will turn 32. Ozuna is 35, and while he was still an above-average hitter in 2025, he took a pretty major step back from the previous two seasons. The other issue here is defense. Lowe played second base today, while O’Hearn was in right field and Ozuna played the only position he can play: designated hitter. Lowe was one of the worst defensive second basemen in baseball last year, while O’Hearn has kind of mixed defensive numbers. But Pittsburgh is also going with Cruz in center—which, if early returns are any indication, is not going to go well—and while Ke’Bryan Hayes wasn’t helping their league-worst offense, he was one of the best defensive players in the league (he was traded to Cincinnati at least year’s trade deadline). Pittsburgh ranked a healthy ninth in defense in 2025. Their offense should be better in 2026, but they might give most of those runs back on the other side of the ball.

Might Konnor Griffin, the game’s top prospect, solve a lot of these issues? Yes, it’s certainly possible. As soon as the Pirates are certain they’ll get that extra year of service, I’d expect to see Griffin in the majors, and he’ll be in instant mega-upgrade over Jared Triolo at short. Griffin can handle himself defensively and has major offensive upside. He could be a star even this year.

But that’s one guy. This lineup still sent out Triolo, Spencer Horwitz, Nick Gonzales, and Henry Davis on Opening Day, not to mention the boom-or-bust Cruz and Bryan Reynolds, who despite his escapades against the Brewers, was a below-league-average hitter in 2025 (and who is also now on the wrong side of 30). In the rotation, there is some promise, but a lot of that is tied up in Bubba Chandler, who has only 31 major league innings, and Jared Jones, who can’t stay healthy (and is on the 60-day IL to start the season, meaning a late-May debut at the earliest). The bullpen looks like a weakness.

Threat level: 2/10. I don’t see it. The Angels had Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout and couldn’t make the playoffs. I don’t see the Pirates doing it with Skenes and Griffin.

St. Louis Cardinals

The Cardinals are doing a full rebuild for the first time I can ever really remember. They haven’t lost less than 70 games in a full, 162-game season since 1981. 1981! They didn’t even have Ozzie Smith yet in 1981. (The Cardinals did go 53-61 in 1994 and 62-81 in 1995, but those weren’t quite full seasons due to the strike.)

I’d say that streak is certainly in jeopardy this year. St. Louis traded Willson Contreras and Sonny Gray to the Red Sox, Nolan Arenado to the Diamondbacks, and Brendan Donovan to the Mariners. Donovan and Contreras were, by WAR, the Cards’ two best players last year. Gray was their best starter. Arenado had a rough, injury-plagued season, but he’s still Nolan Arenado.

The Cardinals are not trying to hide that they aren’t really trying to compete this year. John Mozeliak, who’d been at the helm of the front office since 2007, stepped down at the end of his contract after last season and was replaced by Chaim Bloom. The new leadership clearly demonstrated that they weren’t attached to any of the team’s veteran players, nor to winning, for that matter. Strange, for this team.

There are some interesting pieces. JJ Wetherholt is one of the league’s top prospects, and hit a homer in his major-league debut on Thursday. He could win Rookie of the Year. Masyn Winn is a defensive wizard. Victor Scott II is very fast. Lars Nootbaar has an interesting Statcast page. Iván Herrera is a good player.

But guys like these are interesting pieces, not foundational ones, at least not at this point in their career. The pitching staff might be a disaster. There’s not much else to it. I know I said in our division predictions the other day that I thought they’d win 71 games… but I don’t think they’re going to do that, actually.

Threat level: 0/10. It’s hard to ignore what 37 years of life on this Earth have told me about Cardinals Devil Magic, but they’re gonna be bad.

SF Giants News: Oracle Park promotions this weekend

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MARCH 25: A general view of San Francisco Giants stadium before a MLB game between the New York Yankees and the San Francisco Giants on March 25, 2026 at Oracle Park in San Francisco, CA. (Photo by Trinity Machan/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

The San Francisco Giants continue their opening series this weekend against the New York Yankees. So it’s time to see what promotions and events Oracle Park has on deck for fans this weekend!

The schedule continues to be a little bit odd this weekend, as the team will have a really rare Sunday off-day. So we’ll just have Friday and Saturday games.

First up, today is going to be Opening Day (as opposed to Opening Night, I guess?) which means the first 40,000 fans in attendance will get a commemorative Opening Day pin!

Saturday will be the first Fiesta Gigantes of the season, as the Giants plan to have them every Saturday home game this year to celebrate their Latino fans. Which means we’ll also get to see the team’s new jerseys for these games. There will be live performances and specialty concession options available in the park. This Saturday, the first 15,000 fans in attendance will also receive a Willy Adames bobblehead giveaway!

If you’re headed to the park this weekend, have fun and make sure to post pictures!

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants continue their opening series against the Yankees today at 1:35 p.m. PT.

MLB News Outside The Confines: The season is underway

Good morning again.

Opening Day Rockpile: Young Rockies reflect on making their 1st Opening Day rosters

Mar 6, 2026; Mesa, Arizona, USA; Colorado Rockies catcher Brett Sullivan (26) celebrates with third baseman Kyle Karros (12) and first baseman T.J. Rumfield (64) after hitting a three run home run against the Athletics in the first inning at Hohokam Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

Finally, Opening Day is here and the climb begins for the Colorado Rockies. 

For fans, it’s a chance to see the change in action from an offseason marked with front office and coaching changes.

For the players, it’s a chance to prove they can compete. For four young players, it’s a chance to prove they belong here as they make their Opening Day roster debuts. 

Two of those players, third baseman Kyle Karros and first baseman TJ Rumfield, will be in the starting lineup. Both were beyond excited when they heard they made the roster. 

Karros — the Rockies fifth-round draft pick from 2023 — had set the goal of making the team after being called up in August last year and finishing the season at the Major League level. Still, learning he’d accomplish his goal felt good.

“Obviously [my] first Opening Day will be pretty special. It was cool to tell my family and friends,” Karros said. “But I’ve kinda hinted at it a ton that the goal has been to crack a roster and hang around in The Show. The goal is to be a dude for this team and play baseball in October.”

Karros delivered a more balanced performance in spring training. The 23-year-old hit .372/.426/.628 with two homers, two triples, one double, nine RBI and three stolen bases in 43 at-bats.

“I think the offense was definitely the question mark going into this camp,” he said. “I think everyone’s seen that I can play defense at the big league level. It was just a matter of showing up here and showing I could hit big league pitching.

“And – obviously small sample size – I have a lot to improve, but it’s definitely a good start,” he continued. “Both sides of the ball went well. Baserunning went well; defense went well; offense went well. I thought I got along great with the team. I’m really excited to go through a season with this group of guys. I really couldn’t have drawn up a better spring.”

Rumfield — who came to Colorado from the Yankees in January in a trade for pitcher Angel Chivilli — went to a steakhouse and got a steak to celebrate being named to the roster. He was thrilled to share his news with his wife, Hayden.

“I called my wife and let her know and we were just overcome with emotions because we’ve spent the last five years in the minor leagues just waiting for this day and waiting for this moment and grinding it out. It’s been a long time coming. It’s a happy moment,” Rumfield said, grinning from ear to ear. “It’s a dream come true, honestly. I’ve been dreaming of this moment my entire life, so I’m just excited to get there and get to experience something like that.”

In Arizona, Rumfield, 25, led the team with five homers and tied Hunter Goodman with the most RBI at 13. That led him to be named the Abby Greer Award winner for 2026. He credits his focus, hard work and communication skills to earning the starting spot at first base, which was the biggest position battle in camp.

“I think it was just the conversations with the coaching staff and being able to communicate with them, and my teammates, as well,” Rumfield said. “Communicating with them throughout the game and picking up on different things, whether it’s a pitcher’s tell or on defense. I think it’s just a culmination of focus and hard work that just happened to land me on a big league roster.”

Earning Depth Spots

One of the biggest surprises who made the team is utility infielder Ryan Ritter, who also added right field to his resume. Ritter, 25, ended the 2025 season on the Rockies roster, but faced stiff competition with the signings of utility players Edouard Julien and Willi Castro.

Ritter, who was drafted by the Rockies in the fourth round of the 2022 draft, hit .362/.422/.603 with three homers, nine RBI, five doubles and three stolen bases. He credits his attitude and work ethic to earning his spot.

“It’s a great feeling. That was my goal – coming in here and being part of the team this year – and I’m excited to be with the boys in Miami,” Ritter said. “What I’ve done my whole life is just being very optimistic and showing up to the ballpark and improving every day. My goal every day is just get better every day, so that’s what I’ve been doing this whole time.”

RHP Chase Dollander started 2025 with Triple-A Albuquerque for a little more time to work on his pitches, which allowed the Rockies to start the season with a four-man rotation before calling Dollander up on April 6. Colorado’s 2023 first-round draft pick had mixed results and finished the season back with the Isotopes.

This year, Dollander, 24, had hoped to earn a starting rotation spot, but will start the season in the bullpen to work on finishing batters with two strikes and avoiding high pitch count innings.

“From my understanding, it’s gonna be kind of a long-relief role,” he said. “I’ll probably get as close to a starter workload as possible but we’re not exactly sure what it’s gonna look like in full detail yet. So maybe that’s just something we figure out as we go, but definitely gonna have some conversations with the coaches and stuff and try to nail it down a little bit more.

“It feels great, just to keep it simple. I’m just gonna prove myself and where I belong.”

Keeping Their Spots

All four players know the hard part has yet to begin. They will have to continue to earn their spots, but all are confident in their abilities to do so. Ritter’s plan is to keep doing what he’s been doing.

“I just say, ‘Have a good routine.’ [I] show up to work every day trying to get better and improve my game for the game that’s going to happen later in the day,” he said. “And just keep it simple – just do my best to be prepared before every game.”

Dollander is also taking the same approach, despite moving from the rotation to the bullpen. He plans to continue making his delivery to the plate quicker, limiting would-be basestealers and throwing more strikes.

“I just worked extremely hard in spring training and in the offseason to make sure that I’m put in this position,” Dollander said. “This is just part of my development and I’m excited that [the coaches] see me in that role but also being able to do that development in the big leagues. I truly think that’s special and I’m not going to take that for granted.” 

For Karros, he knows that he has had success in the big leagues and just needs to remember that when he does “hit a blip in the radar somewhere down the season.” He has goals to take a big step forward with the Rockies this season.

“I’ve always felt like I’m ready, especially putting up the numbers I’ve put up in the minor leagues,” he said. “I’ve never seen a reason why that wouldn’t translate to the big leagues. Obviously, last year – small sample size – I was pretty run down at the end of the year. And I think I’ve just come into this camp more physical – faster, stronger and ready to play at an elite level.”

Rumfield is not only looking forward to making the most of his opportunity, but also being part of a team he believes is improving.

“I think we’re going to play a really good brand of baseball,” Rumfield said. “I feel like the fans are going to respond to our passion that we have on the field and the fact that we’re going to play hard every single night and try to win every night.”


What to know about Rockies-Marlins Opening Day (Fri., 7:10 p.m. ET) | MLB.com

The teams forever linked as the 1993 expansion teams, the Rockies and Marlins will face off today to start the 2026 season. The Marlins improved by 17 wins in 2025, which the Rockies would probably like to aim for in 2026. This has all the Opening Day info you need.

Meet the 2026 Rockies: Roster includes new starters Michael Lorenzen, Tomoyuki Sugano and Jose Quintana | Denver Post ($)

No one is expecting the Rockies to even be a .500 team this year, but more competitive and more wins will go a long way. If that’s going to happen, it will begin with starting pitching, which Patrick Saunders highlights in this feature. The subhead says a lot in this article: “Colorado looking hoping to avoid becoming first team since Washington Senators to have four consecutive 100-loss seasons.” The Rockies would need 20 more wins to get to that point.

Colorado Rockies’ top 10 most intriguing prospects to watch in 2026 | Denver Post ($)

Kyle Newman put together a nice recap of the young Rockies who should make Rockies fans optimistic about the future, with info on all 10 and estimates of when they could make their MLB debuts. Newman thinks we could see Charlie Condon, Sterlin Thompson and Gabriel Hughes this season, but will probably have to wait on names like Ethan Holliday and Cole Carrigg.

Colorado Rockies viewers’ guide 2026: How to watch games for rebuilding franchise | The Athletic ($)

In a rare unicorn-like sighting of Rockies coverage by The Athletic, Jenny Catlin recaps the offseason changes, the struggles the team has faced in recent years and how fans in the Rocky Mountain region and beyond can watch MLB action in the 2026 season.


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