Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe continued his rehab assignment with the Somerset Patriots at TD Bank Ballpark in Bridgewater on April 17, 2026. | Alexander Lewis / MyCentralJersey / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Man proposes, and the baseball god disposes. While the Yankees seemed content to let former top prospect Anthony Volpe re-discover himself with Triple-A Scranton, an injury to incumbent shortstop José Caballero means that Volpe is heading back to the major-league roster. Cabby was sent back to New York for secondary screening on a finger on his right hand yesterday, and now one of the sparkplugs for this Yankee team will see time on the IL with a broken middle finger.
Caballero was on pace for a four-win season at the time of his injury, with a 105 wRC+, 13 stolen bases and a +2 FRV fielding value per Statcast. He also seems to be a bit of a pest to play against, already costing opposing pitchers multiple clock violations with his personal style of gamesmanship in the batter’s box. In totality José has been as valuable in 41 games than Volpe was in 153 games last season, and critically a notably better hitter.
For Volpe, he has an opportunity to re-establish himself as a key piece of the franchise, even if his .570 OPS while in Double and Triple-A this season leaves a lot to be desired. With the Yankees hitting a speed bump after a great first six weeks of the year, the pressure is on the still-25-year-old to hit the ground running and help stop this little skid his club is on. While I want Tony Fox to succeed as a fan of the team, nothing in his performance over the last 14 months makes me overly confident that the team is upgrading with the recall.
For those curious, top infield prospect George Lombard Jr. is only 6-for-30 with all singles since being promoted to Triple-A. If he had been scalding the ball, this might have been a more interesting decision, but the Yankees weren’t pushed, so they’re simply recalling Volpe.
Prior to tonight’s game, the Yankees made the following roster moves: •Placed INF/OF José Caballero on the 10-day injured list with a right middle finger fracture. •Recalled INF Anthony Volpe (#11) from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.
NEW YORK, NY - MAY 07: MacKenzie Gore #1 of the Texas Rangers walks on the field prior to the game between the Texas Rangers and the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on Thursday, May 7, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by Michael Urakami/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Texas Rangers lineup for May 12, 2026 against the Arizona Diamondbacks: starting pitchers are MacKenzie Gore for the Rangers and Zac Gallen for the D-Backs.
The Rangers play the D-Backs this evening. The Rangers will try to score at least one run in this game. It will be challenging, I know, but if we all think positive we can maybe will it into happening. Oh, and Joc Pederson is leading off.
The lineup:
Pederson — DH
Nimmo — RF
Seager — SS
Jung — 3B
Carter — CF
Duran — 2B
Osuna — LF
Burger — 1B
Higashioka — C
7:05 p.m. Central start time. The Rangers are -125 favorites.
Ahead of the Mets’ six-game homestand against the Tigers and Yankees, president of baseball operations David Stearns is speaking to the media. The biggest news over the past couple of days has been the team’s promotion of A.J. Ewing to the major league roster, as the 21-year-old is set to make his major league debut tonight. He’s batting eighth and playing center field.
The Mets, of course, have the worst record in baseball right now at 15-25 despite having one of the highest payrolls in the sport. Since their 12-game losing streak, they’ve gone 8-9, and with just 3.48 runs scored per game, they have the second-worst offense in the sport thus far. Stearns will undoubtedly be asked about the team’s struggles.
Asked about the team’s decision to promote A.J. Ewing and the situation that the club is in right now, Stearns said, “We would not have made the decision if we did not feel that A.J. was ready to make the jump. So that’s first and foremost. The situation the big league club is in and the opportunity that’s here right now is certainly a part, but we would not have made the decision to promote A.J. if we didn’t think we was ready for the moment.
Asked about what makes Ewing ready right now, Stearns said, “a combination of first and foremost performance. He’s a pretty well-rounded player right now.” And he highlighted Ewing’s maturity and ability to handle different situations throughout his time in the organization.
Asked about the Mets’ under-performance a quarter of the way into the season, Stearns said that the Mets “haven’t been a good enough offensive team” and cited a combination of injuries and players who have been healthy but haven’t performed at their typical level.
Asked about Ewing’s approach, Stearns mentioned that there aren’t a lot of holes in Ewing’s swing and highlighted his understanding of the strike zone and ability to drive the ball from gap to gap. He also highlighted his speed.
Asked about Luis Robert Jr.’s lack of progress, Stearns said that “the back soreness has not resolved” and mentioned that the team is consulting with additional specialists. But he said the team has not gotten an indication that the injury could require surgery.
Asked why he believes the team can make a run at the postseason, Stearns said that the team has a lot of talent on the roster and that there’s enough season left to make a run.
Asked about rethinking the Mets’ approach to acquisitions given the team’s injuries, Stearns mentioned that the team has to look at risk assessment on injured players and said that the team knows it’s “taking a level of risk when [it] brings in players with a history of injuries.”
Asked about Jorge Polanco, Stearns said that he needs to get asymptomatic with the bursitis in his ankle. He says that there are really good days, but then condition flares up. He mentioned that the team is following protocols recommended by physicians, which is why Polanco hasn’t been fully shut down.
Asked about additional acquisitions or trades, Stearns said that the team is always looking to improve and mentioned this isn’t the best time of year for external trades.
Asked about his defense of Mets manager Carlos Mendoza, Stearns mentioned that the organization has collectively under-performed. He said that he won’t address Mendoza’s status as the team’s manager during his regular media availability and will let his past statement speak for itself.
Asked about Francisco Lindor’s injury recovery, Stearns said that the start shortstop is scheduled for an MRI within the next 48 hours. He also answered a question about a potential Achilles issue by saying that it is not an Achillies issue.
Asked about Sean Manaea’s struggles, Stearns said that the team is working to get him to the level he needs to be and mentioned that Manaea wants to get there.
Asked about the bullpen, Stearns said he thinks it’s functional and that the pitchers in the bullpen and working well in their roles.
Asked about what he’d do differently in building this team, Stearns said he wouldn’t do a postmortem on this team in May. He cited the track records of the players on the roster when talking about his belief that the team will improve.
Asked about A.J. Minter, Stearns says there’s at least one more bullpen session scheduled for Minter before he gets back out on a rehab outing. He says the team needs time to get him back to being able to do back-to-back outings.
Asked about his message to Mets fans, Stearns said, “We recognize that the first six weeks of this season haven’t been close to good enough, and we understand that. We’re disappointed in it. We also believe we have the talent on this team to turn this around, and our focus is doing everything we can every single day to get it there.”
Asked about deciding to be sellers, Stearns said, “We’re not close to that point right now.”
Syracuse Mets manager Dick Scott knocked on A.J. Ewing’s door on Monday night, informing him that he would not be in the team’s lineup on Tuesday.
Instead, the youngster received his highly-anticipated call-up to the big leagues.
Ewing officially joined the Mets on Tuesday afternoon at Citi Field, and he’ll jump right into the lineup batting eighth and playing center field in the series opener against the Tigers.
“It’s awesome, man,” he said. “Just a dream come true, and I’m really excited.”
The 21-year-old was a bit surprised receiving this chance after starting the year with Double-A and appearing in just 13 Triple-A games, but he’s eager to help the club right away.
“I was just focused on being the best player I could and dominating the level I’m at,” he said. “The fact that it happened, I’m just excited to be here and ready to go.”
Ewing certainly did that in both levels of the minors, quickly cruising his way through Binghamton before taking the leap to Syracuse 18 games into the season.
He only continued stacking strong showings from there -- hitting a combined .339 with a pair of triples, two home runs, nine doubles, 11 RBI, a .447 OBP, and .961 OPS between the two.
The dynamic outfielder also showcased his speed (17 SB) and game-changing defense.
Now taking one last leap to the game’s highest level, he’ll look to bring a much-needed spark and energy boost for the struggling club on both sides of the ball.
“I’m confident in my ability and I’m just going to play the same game that I’ve been playing, and just go and do what I do -- I feel comfortable and ready to compete,” Ewing said.
Apr 10, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers designated hitter Christian Yelich (22) warms up in the team's new City Connect uniform before game against the Washington Nationals at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images
At long last, the Milwaukee Brewers finally have all their big bats available to them in the starting lineup. The Brewers have not had their top group of bats, Jackson Chourio, Andrew Vaughn, and Christian Yelich together all season.
Now they finally will as Christian Yelich has been activated off the IL and is recovered from his adductor strain. The Brewers optioned Tyler Black to make room on the roster.
Prior to his injury, Yelich was hitting .314 with a home run, 10 RBIs, 10 runs scored, and a 132 OPS+. He was off to one of his better starts over the last few seasons and helped keep this lineup afloat after they had lost Chourio and Vaughn on the first and second games of the season.
With Brandon Lockridge currently on the IL dealing with a knee laceration and bone bruise, that could allow more opportunities for Yelich to play in left field rather than DHing upon his return.
Tyler Black had been performing well, hitting .333 with an .839 OPS and 135 OPS+. He had gotten his first semi-regular run at the big league level in quite some time and even though he wasn’t hitting the ball incredibly hard, the results were quite good and he’s put himself in line to be promoted again soon should a spot open up. But when everyone is healthy, it’ll be difficult for Black to crack the roster right now.
The Brewers are a much better lineup and team with Christian Yelich in it. A top five in the order of Chourio, Brice Turang, Yelich, William Contreras, and Andrew Vaughn is a much deeper and more dangerous group than the Crew had largely been putting out there over the first six weeks. Yet they still have been six games over .500 in the absence of that lineup and perhaps this will be the final piece to get this offense clicking like they know they can be.
The Cubs injury-laden pitching staff has forced a number of players into roles they likely weren’t anticipating at the start of the season. After all, how many of us thought the Cubs would have a 27-14 record along with seven different pitchers having saves as they head into a clash of the National League titans in Atlanta? But the player whose role may impact the team’s overall success the most might be Ben Brown, who has bounced between the starting rotation, bullpen and Iowa over the past couple of years as he tried to find the right fit.
This time might actually be different. In a February piece from The Athletic, Brown was quoted: “I developed a sinker and changeup this offseason.” Those pitches might end up being more consequential than anyone imagined at the time. After all, Brown’s problem has never been stuff, it was always sequencing, predictability and the ability to locate his pitches.
Last season Brown struggled to the tune of 5.92 ERA with a 1.44 WHIP across 106.1 innings while splitting time between the rotation and bullpen. The culprit was a two-pitch mix that smart hitters learned to sit on. As Chi City Sports noted in March, “opposing hitters teed off on his four-seamer” batting .315 with a .526 slugging percentage while producing just a 14.8 percent whiff rate. Hitters knew what was coming and they mashed it. Enter, stage right, a sinker:
That sinker made Brown a much more dangerous pitcher. He’s throwing it 42 percent of the time to right-handed hitters, and the results have been excellent. Batters are hitting and slugging just .217 off the sinker. It has also induced an 82.9 mph average exit velocity.
Brown is also throwing a changeup 5.6 percent of the time, almost exclusively to southpaws. He’s thrown 25 changeups so far this season and it’s a weapon. Brown’s changeup sits at 90.4 miles per hour and has a 40 percent whiff rate so far this season.
All of it adds up to a much more dangerous version of Ben Brown than the one who started 15 games last season. So when Matthew Boyd needed meniscus surgery, Brown was ready to rejoin the rotation. According to the Chicago Sun-Times, Brown was already working multiple innings in anticipation of potentially needing to start during the season:
Brown said he didn’t think it would take long for him to be stretched out as a starter. Counsell said he has made a point of giving Brown multiple innings. He went 3„ innings in each of his first two appearances this season, and has gone at least two innings in eight of his last 10 appearances. He has thrown a team-high 25% innings out of the pen, posting a 2.10 ERA while striking out 10 and walking eight. Four of those walks came in his first three appearances.
The result was four no-hit innings against the Rangers. As Bleacher Nation noted: “Brown tossed four no-hit innings, struck out three, induced six ground ball outs, and had only one baserunner to deal with as a result of his one walk. He needed just 46 pitches to get through the four innings and threw nine sinkers and four changeups, getting 40 and 100-percent whiff rates on the two pitches, respectively.“ It’s a minuscule, but promising, sample.
Brown’s next test will be one of the league’s best offenses in Atlanta. He’s slated to toe the rubber for the Cubs opposite Chris Sale in Atlanta on Thursday.
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 10: Nick Castellanos #21 of the San Diego Padres celebrates his two-run home run as George Soriano #65 of the St. Louis Cardinals reacts during the ninth inning at Petco Park on May 10, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Meg McLaughlin/Getty Images) | Getty Images
It was looking bleak for the San Diego Padres for a while there.
Sunday’s series finale began as a pitcher’s duel between Walker Buehler and St. Louis Cardinals starter Kyle Leahy. The latter managed to keep the Friars scoreless while Buehler pitched deeper but surrendered a two-run shot to Jordan Walker.
That seemed like it would be all the Red Birds would need as the Padres failed to capitalize on any of their opportunities. With the Cardinals elite closer, Riley O’Brien, coming in to finish out the bottom of the ninth. (O’Brien would probably be considered the best closer in MLB if not for a guy named Mason Miller.)
Going into that game, the closer held the longest active streak in innings pitched without surrendering a home run (60 1/3). That all came to an end on a two-out, full-count splitter that Nick Castellanos sent into the left field bleachers to tie the game in the bottom of the ninth. The Friars finished it off in extra innings with a sacrifice fly from Manny Machado.
Sunday’s win helped salvage a split after San Diego dropped the first two games to the Cards. It gives them a bit of momentum heading into their series against the Milwaukee Brewers today.
Taking the mound
Brandon Sproat (MIL) v. Matt Waldron (SD)
Sproat came over from the New York Mets in the trade that sent starter Freddy Peralta to the club. He’s been thrust into a role that he likely wasn’t ready for yet. He’s struggled to a 5.87 ERA across seven appearances.
Still, Sproat is a young pitcher with an incredibly high ceiling. His last start against the Arizona Diamondbacks was impressive, with the righty going four scoreless innings while allowing only one hit. If he can repeat that performance, Sproat will go a long way toward redeeming his 2026 season.
Waldron has had similar issues, though he is on the other end of his career. He’s been a kind of veteran minor leaguer, spending seven seasons between the majors and minors. This may be his last start for the time being as Lucas Giolito has to be called up by May 16.
The knuckleballer had a difficult time his first two outings but has markedly improved in his most recent ones. He pitched five innings and surrendered three runs to the Chicago Cubs before following it up with five more innings of one-run ball against the San Francisco Giants. If Waldron can keep that pace, he could earn a roster spot if Buehler stumbles.
In his gem against the Giants, reliever Bradley Rodriguez pitched the first inning, serving as an opener before Waldron pitched in bulk relief. That formula worked so well that the Padres are going to go with it again today. It should hopefully give Waldron the ability to work deeper into the game.
Batter up!
Unfortunately, San Diego doesn’t have any experience against the rookie Sproat. That will give the Milwaukee starter somewhat of an advantage. But that has been the case for most of the year and it hasn’t helped Sproat’s run prevention all that much, so the Padres should be able to tag a few runs off of the right-hander.
Manager Craig Stammen seems likely to use a fairly standard lineup, with Jackson Merrill remaining in the leadoff spot. Xander Bogaerts has been on a tear lately and could bat higher as well.
Jackson Merrill, CF
Fernando Tatis Jr., RF
Manny Machado, 3B
Xander Bogaerts, SS
Gavin Sheets, 1B
Ramón Laureano, LF
Miguel Andujar, DH
Freddy Fermin, C
Sung Mun-Song, 2B
With the off day yesterday, the starters will be out in full force. Andujar has seemed to serve as the regular DH lately, though his bat has cooled off recently.
Relief corps
With the Friars down two runs for most of the game, the club utilized most of its lower-leverage options. Ron Marinaccio covered two splendid innings before Bradgley Rodriguez pitched a scoreless ninth. Jeremiah Estrada came in to pitch the 10th and got two outs before Stammen turned to Adrian Morejon for the final out. That completed a scoreless outing from the ‘pen.
With the off day on Monday, San Diego will have all of their relievers available. But those who will be freshest are Jason Adam, Yuki Matsui, Adrian Morejon, Wandy Peralta and closer Mason Miller. Any of them could be turned to, though Matsui or Peralta will likely be out first if Waldron struggles early.
The Yankees are calling up the 25-year-old shortstop, a move the club made official on Tuesday afternoon.
After undergoing offseason shoulder surgery, Volpe began his 2026 campaign on a rehab assignment. But when that rehab assignment came to an end, he was optioned to Triple-A instead of being called up to join the big league club.
Caballero, who returned to New York after Monday's game to visit team doctors, has landed on the IL with a right middle finger fracture.
Volpe was hitting .221 in 18 games in the minors this season (rehab and non-rehab games), hitting one home run with eight RBI and 11 runs scored.
He hit .212 in 153 regular season games with the Yankees last season, and had his struggles in the field. A Gold Glove winner as a rookie, Volpe committed 19 errors and had a career-low .963 fielding percentage last season.
“We want him to have the best chance to be successful, and we have to acknowledge, first how well (Jose Caballero) has played,” manager Aaron Boone said when Volpe was originally sent down. “He’s been a key factor in us getting off to a really good start this year on both sides of the ball, on the basepaths. So, it’s really as simple as that. It doesn’t change how we feel about Anthony or the kind of player we think he is and will be. But in this moment of time, we felt like this was absolutely the right thing to do, and a lot of that has to do with…. We have a lot of really good players right now competing for real roles and real spots. I think that competition ultimately is going to be a great thing for us."
PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - MARCH 19, 2026: A.J. Ewing #97 of the New York Mets bats during the third inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Clover Park on March 19, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
The Mets made the promotion of prospect A.J. Ewing official on Tuesday afternoon. In a corresponding move, Andy Ibáñez was designated for assignment.
Ewing, who was ranked No. 6 on Amazin’ Avenue’s preseason prospect list and is currently ranked No. 2 on MLB Pipeline’s list of top Mets prospects, put up an .827 OPS in 12 games after being promoted to Triple-A Syracuse on April 27. The 21-year-old was selected by the Mets in the fourth round of the 2023 Draft (with a pick received as compensation for Jacob deGrom’s departure in free agency) and has thrived at every stage of the Minor Leagues.
In his MLB debut against Jack Flaherty and the Tigers on Tuesday night, Ewing will play center field and bat eighth. He will also wear jersey No. 9, making him the first Met not named Brandon Nimmo to sport that number since Kirk Nieuwenhuis in 2015. Ewing’s presence isn’t the only shakeup in the lineup, as Carson Benge will bat leadoff for the first time since April 19 while Juan Soto bats third for the first time this season.
After being claimed off waivers on April 30, Ibáñez went 0-for-6 with a pair of sacrifice flies in just three games with the Mets. Starting at third base in Sunday’s 5-1 loss to the Diamondbacks, he made a pair of costly throwing errors which Carlos Mendoza didn’t mince words about after the game.
May 11, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays starting pitcher Kevin Gausman (34) waves to the fans after he is acknowledged for getting his 2,000th career strike out during the fourth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images | John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images
With his 4th inning strikeout of Hunter Feduccia last night, Kevin Gausman became the 91st pitcher in major league history to record 2,000 strikeouts (and finished the night in 90th place given that Andy Benes had 2,000 on the nose). Gausman is just the 10th among those 91 to have played for the Blue Jays (of 539 players who have taken the mound for the Jays).
Even in that rarified air however, Gausman holds a particular distinction: he’s the only pitcher to record his 2000th strikeout for the Blue Jays. To get a better sense of these pitchers and their impact for the Blue Jays franchise, let’s split out their strikeouts for the Jays and sort by that:
It turns out there’s a few distinct categories here. The first is future Hall of Fame pitchers who came to Toronto at the tail end of their career, with both the 2,000 strikeout milestone and their best years well in the rearview mirror such that they’re mostly footnotes for Blue Jays purposes. A 48-year old Phil Niekro made three starts for the Jays in August 1987 as a desperation stopgap before Pat Gillick was able to acquire Mike Flanagan as a real upgrade. His 2,000th strikeout nearly pre-dated the Blue Jays franchise, occurring beforehand in April 1978.
Max Scherzer has had a few moments, but has mostly vacillated between injured and ineffective as a Blue Jay. His 2,000th strikeout likewise came well beforehand, back in mid-2017. Jack Morris at least had one solid season left in him before the bottom fell out in 1993, but is best remembered for achievements elsewhere. He was less than a year removed from the 2,000K milestone in April 1991.
The next grouping is a couple of pitchers who were in their primes with the Jays, but were short term rentals and went on record their 2,000th strikeouts later. David Price was electric for the Jays in the 2015 playoff surge, and just made it across the 2,000 mark as his career tailed off. David Cone was so good for the Jays in 1992 that they got him again in 1995 (and they should have retained him as a free agent instead of Dave Stewart). But both those stints together amounted to just 25 games pitched.
At the other end, Roy Halladay stand almost singularly in Blue Jays history. But his 2,000th strikeout came with Philadelphia as he faded in 2012. Then there’s Rogers Clemens, who is a unicorn-ish mix of the first two groups: a Hall of Fame calibre pitcher who was with the Jays during his prime (or second prime, anyway) for a relatively short period such that he’s most remembered for what he did with other teams and off the diamond.
That leaves a group of three into which Gausman best fits. Like Gausman, A.J. Burnett came to the Jays as a high profile free agent, came into his own later such that the second half of his career was better (especially from a strikeout perspective), and had some very good years for the Blue Jays that represent a significant part of his career. Even had he not opted out though, his 2,000th strikeout only came in later 2013.
David Wells doesn’t quite fit that profile, and wasn’t so much a strikeout pitcher as most others mentioned here, just pitched forever. But like Gausman about 40% of his strikeouts came with the Jays, and when all is said and done Toronto will represent the most significant part of a career spanning many stops. His 2,000th strikeout came in early 2005, more than four year after departing the Jays the second time, and almost 18 years after first breaking in with them. His first strikeout came while the SkyDome was still being built and by the time of the 2,000 it was the Rogers Centre.
One final note of interest: while (very unlikely), Gausman has at least an outside shot at 3,000 strikeouts. Though he’s first the Blue Jay to record a 2,000th strikeout with the Jays, even should he stay the Jays and hit that milestone, he will not the first to hit 3,000 with them. That was Clemens, when he struck out Randy Winn to finish off the side in the 3rd inning on July 5, 1998.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA - SEPTEMBER 26: Ha-Seong Kim #9 of the Atlanta Braves throws to first against the Pittsburgh Pirates in the eighth inning at Truist Park on September 26, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Brett Davis/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Atlanta Braves have had one of the best offenses in MLB, and they will need to lean on it tonight with Grant Holmes struggling as of late.
The Braves are third in MLB in barrel percentage, and batted ball events. When you hit the ball with quality combined with hitting it often, it generally has positive results. It should be no shock that the Braves are second only behind the Yankees in HRs, fourth in doubles, and first in slugging. This has resulted in the Braves being first in MLB in both OPS and runs scored.
The Braves are on pace for nine-hundred runs scored. This would give them them their most since 2023 and third most since 1897. 2003 was the other season where the offense stuck out with nine-hundred-seven runs.
The lineup should only get better starting with tonight now that Ha-Seong Kim is back, and a Ronald Acuña return right around the corner.
The biggest question going into the lineup tonight was how Kim returning would shake everything up. Yastrzemski has struggled to put things lightly, but has a strong history of being successful against the Cubs’ starter Colin Rea (two HRs and a 1.625 OPS). Dubón has been extremely clutch this season and needs to stay in the lineup if possible. LF makes the most sense for him to play. Without seeing the lineup card, ahead of time the best estimate would be Kim at SS, Dubón in LF, and Yastrzemski in RF.
As can be seen above, these are good problems to have. The Braves have not been this deep in years even with Murphy out again, and it makes it a lot of fun to try and guess which lineup card will be handed in. As it turns out, Weiss went with the following:
Weiss did in fact go with the most logical lineup in terms of who was starting where after all. With Murphy being on the IL now, it also makes sense that Smith would get the start at DH. Ozzie Albies turning things around this season has been huge. The simple fact that Weiss has the confidence to have him batting second against a RHP is telling, in a good way.
Kim will make his debut hitting eighth and playing SS.
Austin Riley has been heating in May with a .294/.314/.500 slash line and it may continue tonight with him having a .958 OPS against Rea in eight at-bats. Matt Olson, who has been the best hitter MLB as of late, has an OPS of 1.681 against Rea in eight at-bats of his own.
The Cubs have been an offensive force in their own right. They have scored the fourth most runs in MLB, fourth in OPS, sixth in HRs, all while leading MLB in walks. This could be a huge issue for Holmes who has struggled with walks this season.
Only Bregman and Conforto are the only players to face Holmes before. Bregman is hitless in two at-bats, and Conforto has a 1.550 OPS in five at-bats.
BALTIMORE - In a startling reversal of fortunes for a former franchise stalwart, the New York Yankees promoted shortstop Anthony Volpe from Class AAA Tuesday, May 12, just more than a week after optioning him to the minor leagues, according to multiple reports.
The move comes the same day incumbent shortstop José Caballero was examined by a hand specialist and club orthopedist Michael Ahmad after he suffered an injury to his right middle finger.
Caballero, third among position players with 1.6 WAR, sat out the Yankees’ 3-2 win Monday but did pinch run and was thrown out on an attempted steal for the last out of the game.
Volpe, 25, produced 3.3 and 3.5 WAR in his first two major league seasons, hitting 21 home runs in his 2023 rookie season. But he slumped to a .212 average and .272 OBP last season, after which he underwent shoulder surgery.Rather than call Volpe to the minor leagues, the Yankees simply left him in Triple-A as the reliable Caballero seized the job.
LOS ANGELES, CA - MAY 11: Max Muncy #13 of the Los Angeles Dodgers rounds the bases after hitting a home run in the sixth inning during the game between the San Francisco Giants and the Los Angeles Dodgers at UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium on Monday, May 11, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Nicole Vasquez/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
One home run every four games or so is roughly the clip Muncy has battered the Giants throughout his career, now with 27 home runs in 98 career games against the Dodgers’ longtime rival. Among active players, only Nolan Arenado (34 homers in 156 games) and Paul Goldschmidt (32 home runs in 170 games) have hit more against San Francisco.
A convenient seven of Muncy’s 11 home runs have been hit at home this season, giving him 127 career home runs at Dodger Stadium. That’s second-most in the ballpark’s history, only three behind Eric Karros.
Counting the postseason, Muncy is the most prolific home run hitter ever at Chavez Ravine, with 134 home runs to 132 for Karros.
FORT MYERS, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 13: Connelly Early #71 of the Boston Red Sox reacts with Payton Tolle #70 of the Boston Red Sox during a workout at JetBlue Park at Fenway South on February 13, 2026 in Fort Myers, Florida. (Photo by Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Red Sox and Phillies have had similar starts to the season: they’re two big ballclubs with big aspirations who both immediately fell on their faces, prompting two managerial firings. And while the Phillies have done a better job righting the ship under their new skipper than the Sox have, they’ll both share some history tonight, as it’s the first time in 22 years that two teams with new managers will face off this early in the season. (Thomas Harrigan, MLB.com)
That’s not exactly the type of history teams generally want to make, so here’s some more, slightly better history. When the Sox rolled out five straight left-handed starters last week, it was the first time they had done so since 2018. They’ve also had more games started by rookies this year (14) than any other team and, for the most part, those rookie hurlers have come through. (Alex Speier, Boston Globe)
Could the Sox have another lefty rookie pitcher a few years down the line who not only follows in the footsteps of Payton Tolle and Connelly Early, but does so as a local kid made good? With the 20th pick in next month’s MLB draft, the Sox could be in line to select Bishop Feehan’s Brody Bumila, a 6-9 lefty who already throws 100 MPH heat. (Hayden Bird, Boston.com)
The success of the rookie Red Sox pitchers points to a well-functioning minor league system. But that system received a shock with the Alex Cora firing and the subsequent coaching staff shuffle, and that hasn’t been easy for the organization to deal with. “There’s times when change happens and you kind of see it coming,” said Portland Sea Dogs coach Kyle Sasala. “None of us saw this coming. I woke up one day and was defensive coach. Next day, I was the manager.” (Alex Speier, Boston Globe)
Speaking of things no one sees coming, is Trevor Story poised to turn his season around? “It’s only a matter of time,” says the veteran shortstop. (Gabrielle Starr, Boston Herald)
As Story’s 2025 season reminds us, it’s helpful to have patience in baseball. But can we all be as patient as David Ortiz, who waited nearly 20 years to get revenge on Joe West for calling him ugly?
May 10, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies first baseman Bryce Harper (3) watches the ball after hitting a solo home run against the Colorado Rockies during the first inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: John Jones-Imagn Images | John Jones-Imagn Images
It was a while back when I posted something in the Feed asking for your hot takes for the rest of the Phillies season.
In the middle of a supremely cold streak is not usually the time to hope for optimism and joy, so naturally a lot of the responses were of the negative variety. Still, it was awesome that so many of you decided to partake, so let’s go through a few of them and talk about them.
In the weeks since the post was put up, Harper has hit .315/.415/.667 with five home runs, 14 runs batted in over 65 plate appearances. He is currently 11th in baseball with a 159 wRC+, 11th with a .405 wOBA, all while doing with so with a pedestrian .279 BABIP. The parameters for what makes one “elite” in the game today likely combine some offense and defense, an issue for a player like Harper that the defensive metrics mostly agree is having a down season to this point. Yet if there was someone on the team that I would consider affixing that label to, Harper is near the top of that list.
Nola? Well, I’m not sure a sub-3.50 ERA is near his future, but getting it under 4 at this point would be a feat unto itself. Crawford was never going to be an All-Star for the National League this season, let alone the starting option.
It’s the Aidan Miller part of this take that caught my eye. Trading him this season is likely off the table. First of all, he’s injured with a mysterious back injury, which torpedoes any value the team might think they could get back in a trade in the first place. Second, he’s still an important part of this team’s future once they are able to get him back onto the field. Without knowing what is going on specifically, it’s hard to determine what that future actually looks like. The team has been hesitant to say out loud what the specific injury is, citing potential HIPAA violations, which leads to speculation. That kind of speculation can be dangerous. Amongst the TGP writing staff, the name “David Wright” is getting bandied about, and not in the good sense. So while there is the theoretical idea that Miller could be moved for something at the trade deadline, the plain truth is that the team isn’t going to do that.
Bryce Harper isn’t getting traded by the team. Not now, not ever. Do whatever it is you need to do to flag this, but he’s not going anywhere. Any trade idea that includes his name is just not worth the time. From the reasoning that was taken here, the idea was to do something that would shake up the clubhouse in the midst of a long losing streak, a streak that has since been broken with the assistance of Harper himself.
Now, to the broader idea of shaking up the clubhouse if the team does not advance far enough in the potential postseason, that’s still a viable idea. At some point, the front office is going to have to acknowledge that the group they have assembled needs a refresh, that new faces need to be included. Thus far, Crawford and Andrew Painter have added to that mix, but maybe they will see that something new is indeed necessary. Aidan Miller is theoretically ready to take over for Bohm, but the rest of the roster, as has been written over and over and over, really can’t go anywhere else. Their contracts have sort of anchored them to this team. Would it require creativity? Sure, but that’s why front offices are paid what they are paid.
Here’s another one.
Adolis Garcia.
Where to begin? Is he good or is he not good? Is he part of the team’s future, or is he part of the ever growing list of right fielders that are taking up the space for the Phillies? He’s been a godsend in the outfield for the team, particularly when compared the stone footed Nick Castellanos, but the bat has been lacking. There are some good under the hood things happening – getting his walk rate back in line, hitting the ball very hard – but it hasn’t resulted in extra base power that the team was hoping he’d find again. There is next to no chance the team moves away from him this season as there isn’t much of anything viable enough to replace him at the moment.
He’s just been….fine. Nothing more, nothing less. Do we wish there was improvement? Of course we do. We’re almost 200 plate appearances into the season though. Is that leap coming? Not quite sure that it is.