Shohei Ohtani hits two home runs against Giants, ending 10-game drought

LOS ANGELES — Shohei Ohtani had never gone 10 games without hitting a homer for the Los Angeles Dodgers until this month.

The three-time MVP ended his drought Saturday night — and then started making up for lost time.

Ohtani hit two homers against the Giants, emphatically reaching 25 homers for the fifth consecutive season during Los Angeles’ 11-5 victory over San Francisco.

Ohtani led off the game with his 24th, hammering Landen Roupp’s fourth pitch 419 feet deep into the right-field bleachers with an exit velocity of 110.3 mph.

The slugger had gone 10 for 40 with no RBIs since his most recent homer June 2 — although he still had an eight-game hitting streak during his power outage.

“It did feel like I hadn’t hit a homer in a while,” Ohtani said through his interpreter. “In terms of the context of the two homers, I think the first homer was more significant, just being able to score early in the game.”

Ohtani then led off the sixth with his 25th homer, sending Tristan Beck’s breaking ball outside the strike zone into the bleachers in right. Dodgers fans brought him home with a standing ovation for his third multihomer game of the season and the 22nd of his career.

He also moved one homer behind the Yankees’ Aaron Judge and Seattle’s Cal Raleigh for the overall major league lead.

“I didn’t realize that,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said when informed of Ohtani’s homer drought. “He has a way of making up for things and leveling things out, so hitting two homers tonight gets him, I guess, back on track. ... I think it seemed like a while. I think there was a lot of chase down below in the last 10 days, so tonight he got the ball up, used the big part of the field and put some big swings together. But yeah, when he goes, it makes life a lot easier for all of us.”

Ohtani had slowed down a bit over the past two weeks since he was named the NL Player of the Month for May, racking up 15 homers and 28 RBIs.

He was back in formidable form against the Giants: Ohtani reached base four times and scored three runs in his first four at-bats, drawing two walks to go with his two homers.

Ohtani hadn’t played in 10 straight games without hitting a homer since 2023 in the final 10 games of his six-year tenure with the Los Angeles Angels. He has hit at least 34 homers and driven in at least 95 runs in the past four consecutive seasons.

While his OPS (1.023) is nearly identical to last year’s effort, Ohtani is behind the pace in several statistical categories compared to last season, when he became the first player to record 50 homers and 50 stolen bases before the Dodgers won his first World Series title. Most notably, Ohtani has only 41 RBIs in 69 games this season after driving in 130 runs in 159 games last year.

But the two-way superstar doesn’t believe his numbers at the plate are due to his increased workload on the mound as he prepares to pitch for the first time since 2023.

Ohtani threw three simulated innings in San Diego last Tuesday, and Roberts has said there’s now a chance Ohtani will pitch in a game before the All-Star break in mid-July.

“The live BP is really an important part of the progression,” Ohtani said. “The intensity is different, so how that feels to my body is going to be different as well, but it’s something that I do have to go through to make sure that my body feels right.”

Ohtani remains firmly committed to resuming his career as a pitcher. The Dodgers have always been supportive, despite his value as a designated hitter — and they also could really use his talents now to help out a staff that had 14 pitchers on the injured list to begin the week.

“I do feel like just being the two-way player that I used to be was the norm,” Ohtani said when asked if his two-way work this season is tough on him. “So last year really was the abnormal year. For me, it’s just about getting back to what I used to do.”

Mets vs. Rays: How to watch on June 15, 2025

The Mets look to avoid a three-game sweep at the hands of the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday with a 1:40 p.m. start on PIX11.

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


Mets Notes

  • After a three-hit day in Saturday's defeat, Brandon Nimmo's nice run in June continued as he has 11 hits in his last 30 at-bats (four for extra bases) with a 1.106 OPS over the last seven games
  • Griffin Canning looks to bounce back from a half-decent outing against the Nationals (four runs over 5.1 innings) and find his form from earlier in the year, as he has pitched to a 4.83 ERA over his last five starts (22.1 innings)
  • Francisco Lindor is slashing .333/.410/.611 for a 1.021 OPS in his last 61 times up over the 14 games entering Sunday with three doubles, four home runs, and seven RBI
  • With Lindor serving as the DH, Luisangel Acuña gets his first start in 10 days. He has just two hits in his last 22 at-bats over 19 games (four starts)
  • The Mets carry a 30-38 record on Father's Day

RAYS
METS
Josh Lowe, RFFrancisco Lindor, DH
Brandon Lowe, 2BBrandon Nimmo, LF
Junior Caminero, DHJuan Soto, RF
Jonathan Aranda, 1BPete Alonso, 1B
Jake Mangum, LFJeff McNeil, 2B
José Caballero, 3BTyrone Taylor, CF
Kameron Misner, CFBrett Baty, 3B
Danny Jansen, CFrancisco Alvarez, C
Taylor Walls, SSLuisangel Acuña, SS

How can I watch the game online?

To watch Mets games online via PIX11, you will need a subscription to a TV service provider and live in the New York City metro area. This will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone browser.

To get started on your computer, go to the PIX11 live stream website and follow the site's steps. For more FAQs, you can go here.

ICYMI in Mets Land: Mark Vientos, Sean Manaea on the mend; Jett Williams stays hot

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


Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Shelby Miller is closing again, Abraham Toro is on fire

Welcome to Waiver Wire Watch, where I review my favorite waiver wire adds and drops for each week of the MLB season.

The premise is pretty straightforward. I’ll try to give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When I list a player, I’ll list the category where I think he’ll be helpful or the quick reason he’s listed. I hope it will help you determine if the player is a fit for what your team needs.

For a player to qualify for this list, he needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. I understand you may say, “These players aren’t available in my league,” and I 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.

MLB: Tampa Bay Rays at Arizona Diamondbacks
Roman Anthony makes a big jump after getting the call to Boston, and CES returns to the rankings.

Waiver Wire Hitters

Roman Anthony - OF, BOS: 65% rostered
(TOP PROSPECT, RECENT CALL-UP)

Anthony doesn't qualify for this list, but he was just promoted on Monday, so it feels like I need to at least address my expectations for the top prospect in baseball. The 21-year-old hit .288/.423/.491 with 10 home runs, 45 runs scored, 29 RBI, and three steals in 58 games at Triple-A, which should be enticing on its own. Anthony has also never posted a swinging strike rate above 9% at any point in the minors, except for 50 games at High-A in 2023, which will aid his adjustment to the big leagues. He has already demonstrated the ability to hit MLB pitching hard, and I believe he can be a solid asset with a decent batting average, power, and the ability to swipe 5-10 bases. He's going to sit against most lefties, at least for now, so keep that in mind, but he should be added in all formats.

Evan Carter - OF, TEX: 32% rostered
(POST HYPE PROSPECT, HOT STRETCH)

Kennedi Landry had a good piece on Evan Carter the other day, highlighting some of the changes that have led to his strong performance since coming off the IL...again. He admitted to putting a lot of pressure on himself after his injury, and cited playing looser and feeling like he had a better mental approach at the plate. In the 10 games since being activated, he's gone 11-for-27 with three homers, eight RBI, two steals, and a 4/4 K/BB ratio. He's now hitting .283/.368/.517 on the season, with four homers, 10 RBI, 13 runs scored, and five steals. We do know that Texas is not likely to play him against many lefties, so that could limit his value in weekly leagues, and he seems to get banged up quite frequently, so he remains an injury risk, but Carter is just 22 years old and has plenty of fantasy juice if he can stay healthy. Another underrated platoon outfielder is Trevor Larnach - OF, MIN (20% rostered). Larnach is hitting well over the last month and will bat in the middle of the order against all right-handed pitchers, but it can be hard to roster players that we know are going to sit against lefties.

Alejandro Kirk - C, TOR: 32% rostered
(CONSISTENT PLAYING TIME, BELATED BREAKOUT?)

We've been waiting for the Alejandro Kirk breakout for quite some time, but the 27-year-old has been on fire of late, going 19-for-46 (.413) over his last 11 games with two home runs, nine RBI, and six runs.We know he's going to play at least 75% of the games for Toronto, and this is a team that has been playing well of late as well. Hitting fourth in the order now gives him plenty of opportunity for RBIs, and I like Kirk as an add in all formats if you need a catcher, but just keep expectations in check for his power ceiling.

Abraham Toro - 1B/2B/3B, BOS: 31% rostered
(CONSISTENT PLAYING TIME, HOT STRETCH)

Listen, we know this isn't likely to last, but Toro is just 28 years old and was an intriguing prospect when he was coming through the minors. He's had some hot stretches before, and he's on a pretty good run of late, batting .350 over his last 23 games with four home runs, 14 runs scored, and 11 RBI.More importantly, he's starting regularly at first base for Boston and likely will continue to do so as long as he's hitting well. As we get closer to the trade deadline, it's possible that Toro could be replaced by somebody the Red Sox trade for, but if Toro is still starting and producing in a month, you'll have already earned value on picking him up. A deeper league multi-position add is Otto Kemp - 2B/3B, PHI (3% rostered). The 25-year-old has gotten off to a slow start since being called up by the Phillies, but he's playing first base pretty much every day while Bryce Harper is on the IL. Kemp has been a fixture in our Rotoworld blurbs because he has been crushing Triple-A to the tune of a .313/.416/.594 slash line in 58 games with 14 home runs and 11 steals. He has always posted high swinging strike rates in the minors, and the overall contact rate was just 67% in Triple-A, so don't expect a good batting average, but the power and speed are legit.

Jo Adell - OF, LAA: 28% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, POST-HYPE PROSPECT)

I know we've done this a bunch with Adell in the past, and I'm not sure I buy it, but I do feel the need to point out that he's been playing well of late. Over his last 35 games, Adell is batting .276/.372/.612 with 10 home runs, 17 runs scored, and 19 RBI. More importantly, he has just a 23% strikeout rate over that span, with a 50% hard-hit rate and 11 barrels. We've seen Adell have short stretches of improved contact in the past, so there's no guarantee that this sticks, but if it does, he will be a huge fantasy asset, so he's worth adding while he's running hot. A deep league option primarily for batting average is Jake Meyers - OF, HOU (8% rostered). Earlier this season,I published an article on hitters who were being more aggressive and swinging at the first pitch more often this year than last year. Myers popped up for me on that leaderboard, and I explained in detail why I’m a fan of his new approach, so you should read that article to check out the analysis; however, I think he’s a solid add for steals and something close to a .280 batting average.

Nick Kurtz - 1B, ATH: 24% rostered
(RETURN FROM THE IL, POWER UPSIDE)

Nick Kurtz didn't set the world on fire this week in his return from the IL, but there is plenty of talent in his bat. He was heating up before landing on the IL with a strained oblique, hitting four home runs in his last five games before the injury. The talented rookie returned to the lineup on Monday, and we know that offense is going to pick up in Sacramento as the weather warms, so I'd be trying to add him in any leagues where he's still available. I'm actually surprised Kurtz is rostered in so many fewer leagues than Christian Encarnacion-Strand - 1B, CIN (35% rostered). Kurtz is a higher-rated prospect and is in a similarly strong environment. We know CES is going to play almost every day for the Reds, and we know that he flashed solid power skills in the minors. However, he has also had strikeout issues since being promoted to the big leagues and is not a lock to produce, given his career stats. He came off the IL like a house on fire and then went 3-for-17 in his next five games, which is emblematic of what we should expect from him. He's well worth a gamble given his power upside now that he's back and healthy, but I'd still rather have Kurtz.

Chase Meidroth - 2B/3B/SS, CWS: 23% rostered
(EVERY DAY JOB, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

I've had Meidroth in this column for weeks, and I'm going to keep him here because he has multi-position eligibility and great batting average upside with some steals thrown in for good measure. In 30 games since May 11th, Meidroth is hitting .310/.385/.397 with 13 runs scored, five steals, two home runs, and a 16/14 K/BB ratio. He’s another hitter I’m highlighting on here who is making good swing decisions and succeeding due to a strong understanding of the strike zone. He had never stolen more than 13 bases in a season at the minor league level, so that number is a bit shocking to me, but he can run a bit and is a smart baseball player on a bad team that has no problem taking chances on the bases. Meidroth is also hitting leadoff and playing every day, so he could accumulate runs and steals while hitting for a solid batting average. Another option for similar skills is Ernie Clement - 2B/SS/3B - TOR (19% rostered). Over the same period since May 11th, Clement is hitting .316/.352/.500 with four home runs, 18 runs scored, 12 RBI, and an 8/6 K/BB ratio in 31 games. Even with Andres Gimenez back, Clement is still an everyday player, just at 3B now. The 29-year-old has proved himself to be a solid batting average asset last season, and his multi-position eligibility makes him valuable in deeper leagues.

Parker Meadows - OF, DET: 19% rostered
(POWER/SPEED UPSIDE, RETURN FROM THE IL)

Meadows has struggled a bit since coming off the IL, but I often think that we're too quick to turn away from a player just because he doesn't hit the ground running. Adjusting to MLB pitching is hard, even if you've been at this level before. Meadows was out for almost three months; it's going to take some time for him to get his rhythm back. He's a talented hitter and is playing pretty much every day in Detroit. Scoop him up before he gets hot. On the flip side, Matt Wallner - OF, MIN (13% rostered) has been hot since returning from the IL, or has at least seen his power return to previous form with three home runs in his last 10 games. The power is exactly what you're looking for with Wallner, and he's been batting cleanup against righties, which should provide solid counting stats. I think the batting average will tick up a bit as well and maybe settle closer to about .250.

Marcelo Mayer - 3B/SS, BOS: 19% rostered
(RECENT CALL-UP, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Last week, I mentioned that Mayer was off to a slow start to his MLB career and may be a better real-life player than a fantasy player. While I still think that's true, Mayer has shown a bit more power this season and then put that on display with his two-homer game against the Rays on Wednesday. Sadly, he and Roman Anthony are going to sit versus most left-handed pitchers, which can make it harder to roster him in weekly lineup lock leagues. His teammate, Trevor Story - SS, BOS (32% rostered), is also heating up after a horrible May. Story is hitting over .319 in 12 games in June with two home runs, two steals, and 12 RBI. He's going to be in the lineup every day for Boston and has nine home runs and 10 steals on the year, so there is some power and speed here as well. He's prone to some cold stretches, but he remains a solid fantasy asset.

Jeff McNeil - 2B/OF, NYM: 11% rostered
(CONSISTENT PLAYING TIME, SURPRISING POWER)

I think most people wrote off Jeff McNeil as a fantasy-relevant player when he was hurt earlier in the year, but he has been great for the Mets since coming off the IL, hitting .268 with 22 RBI, 13 runs scored, and one stolen base through his first 144 plate appearances this season. However, he has been heating up of late, along with this entire Mets offense, going 16-for-47 (.340) in his last 13 games. The multi-position eligibility is also helpful, and while I think McNeil will be primarily a batting average asset, he is showing some surprising power this year as well. Brooks Lee - 2B/3B/SS, MIN (4% rostered) is another solid multi-position eligible player who has remained in the lineup even as the Twins have gotten healthy. With Royce Lewis seemingly headed to the IL with yet another lower body injury, that should keep Lee as an everyday player in Minnesota. The power and speed numbers aren't going to be great, but he'll chip in a few and then add solid counting stats in a decent lineup.

Kyle Teel - C, CWS: 11% rostered
(PROSPECT CALL-UP, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Kyle Teel was promoted last weekend and has started every game but one at either catcher or DH. It seems like he's getting a chance to supplant Edgar Quero, who was fairly average in his first 39 MLB games and provided below-average defense. Teel also may have more offensive upside, slashing .295/.394/.492 in 50 games at Triple-A with eight home runs and seven steals. He's gone just 4-for-18 to begin his big league career, but he's worth a look in all two-catcher leagues. If you're looking for an option in a two-catcher format, you can go with Carlos Narvaez - C, BOS (20% rostered), who has not only emerged as the starting catcher in Boston but one of the better rookies in the AL. He was known primarily for his plus defense when he was acquired from the Yankees in a trade this off-season, but he's hitting .347/.448/.541 over his last 30 games with three home runs, 19 runs scored, and 13 RBI. He provides top-tier defense behind the plate and is going to start about two-thirds of the games for the Red Sox while hitting near the middle of the order.

Nolan Schanuel - 1B, LAA: 11% rostered
(BATTING AVERAGE ASSET, POTENTIAL POWER GROWTH)

I've always liked Schanuel. He has tremendous plate discipline. He makes an elite amount of contact. He pulls the ball enough to do damage, and I think he's trying to be more selective in getting pitches he can drive. The power numbers aren't great, but Schanuel now hits at the top of a batting order that includes Zach Neto, Mike Trout, Jorge Soler, Taylor Ward, and Logan O'Hoppe. It's not a bad spot, and if your primary goal isn't power, then I think Schanuel could be a good bet for you. Same goes for Ty France - 1B, MIN (7% rostered), who remains the starting first baseman in Minnesota with a solid 8.4% barrel rate. He has less speed than Schanuel does and similarly modest power, but his batting average will be helpful, and he'll chip in enough in the counting stats to help you in deeper formats.

Christian Moore - 2B, LAA: 8% rostered
(PROSPECT CALL-UP, POWER/SPEED UPSIDE)

The Angels announced on Friday that they would be calling up Christian Moore. Shockingly, Moore is now the FOURTH player from last year's draft class to already make his MLB debut, along with Nick Kurtz, Jac Caglianone, and Cam Smith. Moore struggled to start the season in Double-A, but was playing solid in Triple-A and now has a .279/.374/.422 slash line in 54 games across Double-A and Triple-A with five home runs and eight steals. He also has a 14% swinging strike rate and just a 70% contact rate, so that tells us there will be swing-and-miss issues in the big leagues. Maybe expect a .240 average but with some intriguing power and speed hitting near the bottom of a solid but not great lineup. I get wanting to add him for his upside, but it does feel like more of a deep league target. Ryan Ritter - SS, COL (1% rostered), is another rookie who has stepped into a full-time role with Ezequiel Tovar on the IL with an oblique injury. Ritter was crushing at Triple-A with a .305 average with 16 home runs, 43 RBI, and three steals in 52 games. His contact rate was under 73% in Triple-A, which isn't ideal and makes me think the batting average will be a fair bit lower in the big leagues. I don't think he'll be up for long, but in deeper formats, he could be worth a gamble if you need a MIF.

Mike Tauchman - OF, CWS: 6% rostered
(OFF THE IL, PLAYING TIME GUARANTEE)

Tauchman has been playing every day for the White Sox, batting leadoff and hitting .297/.410/.547 in 18 games since coming off the IL with three home runs, 12 runs scored, and 10 RBI. We've seen Tauchman be a solid deeper league fantasy asset in the past, and his plate discipline metrics are really strong so far this year. He will sit against most lefties, and doesn't play on a really good offense, so that caps some of the counting stats upside. However, in deeper formats, I think Tauchman is worth a look given his solid performance and consistent role. Despite the fact that I think the rule is stupid, Jurickson Profar - OF, ATL (14% rostered) is allowed to play in rehab games even though he was suspended 80 games for breaking league rules. Whatever. It's dumb. But he can return on July 2nd and figures to be the regular left fielder in Atlanta. If you have space to stash him now, that might not be a bad idea in deeper formats.

Thairo Estrada- 2B, COL: 6% rostered
(OFF THE IL, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Estrada was a big late-round favorite of mine early in the season after he signed with Colorado. I think he hurt his fantasy value by playing through injury last year, but he’s a .270 15/15 type of talent who will now be playing in Coors Field. A fractured wrist could impact some of that power, and Estrada is certainly going to be a better bet when Colorado is at home. However, I believe he could be a solid source of batting average and speed while being the likely everyday starter at second base for the Rockies. We've also seen Tyler Freeman - SS/OF, COL (3% rostered) emerge as the regular right fielder for the Rockies since being called up. He has hit .299/.367/.448 in 28 games with five stolen bases. Freeman had a solid enough season last year for Cleveland, and moving to Colorado should help him. Freeman makes a lot of contact, but the hard contact is limited, and his BABIP has been low in years past. Coors Field tends to boost BABIP, so Freeman could emerge as a .260-.270 hitter with some decent speed and multi-position eligibility.

Alek Thomas - OF, ARI: 1% rostered
(CONSISTENT PLAYING TIME, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

I had Thomas on here a bunch earlier in the season and, admittedly, dropped him in a few formats because his lack of power and speed really limit his fantasy viability. However, we have seen his power tick up a bit lately, with him having two home runs in his last 12 games. I don't think Thomas will become a power hitter, so he's probably more of a target if you need some batting average. Wenceel Pérez - OF, DET (1% rostered), who is hitting .280/.315/.540 in 16 games this season with three home runs, six RBI, and eight runs scored. He also hit .242 with nine home runs and nine steals in 112 games as a rookie last season. He's been playing a lot of right field with Kerry Carpenter shifting to DH and Colt Keith riding the bench a lot, and that could be how Detroit approaches this moving forward. He's likely only going to play four games a week, so it's more of a daily moves play or a stash and hope he takes Keith's place permanently.

Waiver Wire Pitchers

Jacob Misiorowski - SP, MIL: 45% rostered
Much like Anthony, Misiorowski doesn't technically qualify for this list, but he made his MLB debut on Thursday, so I wanted to take the time to discuss him here because, man, that was an impressive showing. He regularly hit triple digits with his fastball and had solid command after his cutter/slider, which he can also use to get ahead. The curveball command was spottier, but it has good break, and then he also ripped off a few 90 mph changeups that got some swings-and-misses to lefties. Epect some inconsistency because he's a rookie with a spotty track record of command, but by all mean,s go out and grab him.

Mick Abel - SP, PHI: 39% rostered
It turns out, Abel's stay in the rotation is going to be longer than some assumed when he was called back up last week. Aaron Nola's ribcage strain is going to prevent him from even throwing for the next two weeks, and then he'll need to build back up to bullpens before going on a rehab assignment. That means Abel may have another month before his spot in the rotation is in jeopardy. I'm not sure his ceiling is exceptionally high right now, but he has a deep pitch mix and seems comfortable attacking the strike zone, so I don't see him putting up too many stinkers for you either.

Shane Smith - SP, CWS: 34% rostered
It's rare you see a pitcher with a 2.37 ERA and 23% strikeout rate across 68.1 innings be rostered in so few leagues. But I guess that's what happens when you're on the White Sox. Smith has slowed a little bit of late, with two poor starts against the Mets and Mariners, but bounced back this week against the Tigers a bit. He has gone six innings only three times this season and has only two wins, so that can make him tough to start, but the ratios and strikeouts have been pretty good these past 6 weeks. Also, just some respect for Smith's teammate Adrian Houser - SP, CWS (18% rostered), who has a 2.15 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, and 22 strikeouts in 29.1 innings for the White Sox this season. It's still Houser, and he pitches for the second-worst team in baseball, so there's not tons of upside here, but he's been really good so far and he'll likely be traded at the deadline, so maybe he ends up somewhere he can be more useful.

Shelby Miller - RP, ARI: 34% rostered
Justin Martinez is out for the season as he deals with a UCL injury, and AJ Puk just suffered a setback in his rehab, so Shelby Miller is going to be the primary closer in Arizona for a while. With Corbin Burnes also out for the season, there's a chance that the Diamondbacks actually sell at the deadline, which means it's unlikely they bring in competition for Miller. The question is whether or not Miller himself gets dealt. It also seems like Calvin Faucher - RP, MIA (9% rostered) has taken the closer role in Miami again. I'm not sure how many saves you're going to get out of this, and Miami can't seem to settle on one guy, but if you're hurting for saves, Faucher could be a solid option.

Quinn Priester - SP, MIL: 26% rostered
Priester has been on a tremendous run of late, pitching to a 2.54 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, and 20 strikeouts in 28.1 innings. He's still more of a match-up play than anything, but I thought he was worth highlighting here.

Edward Cabrera - SP, MIA: 21% rostered
Cabrera looked so good early in his start against Washington on Friday, but then he got stepped on while covering first base and was clearly laboring. He allowed a home run immediately after the injury and was then removed from the game. Provided his injury isn't anything major, I remain very interested here. The right-hander has long tantalized with his upside and disappointed with his command, but he is making some pitch mix changes that caught my attention. I dug into him for my starting pitcher news column last week, so I'd encourage you to check that out for a more detailed breakdown.

Robert Garcia - RP, TEX: 19% rostered
Garcia is now the closer in Texas. I think. I have no idea. He has four saves in the last month and has had the last few save chances for Texas, but his ratios have been really problematic. Now, some of that is connected to a "blown" a save against the Rays last weekend, which was one of the unluckiest blown saves I've seen with TWO runners scoring on THE SAME infield single. Two of the three hits Garcia gave up in that inning were infield singles. It feels like a fluky poor performance. However, Chris Martin - RP, TEX (21% rostered) is also returning from the IL and could get back into the closer conversation as well, but nobody has seemed to want Martin to close during his career, and you have to wonder whether or not that has something to do with his preference.

Michael Kopech - RP, LAD: 14% rostered
Kopech has come off the IL and pitched the ninth for the Dodgers and then also walked three batters in one inning in the seventh. We have no idea what his role is going to be, but Los Angeles seems likely to have a right-handed complement to Tanner Scott, and maybe that's Kopech. However, Alex Vesia - RP, LAD (19% rostered) also picked up a save this week and while that was mainly due to matchups, he's been good this year and maybe can help you with your ratios while getting a handful of saves.

David Festa - SP, MIN: 7% rostered
With Pablo Lopez and Zebby Matthews both hurt, David Festa is locked into a rotation spot in Minnesota. Perhaps more importantly, he was also allowed to pitch six innings in his last start, and it seems like Rocco Baldelli may loosen the leash on him a bit. There remain some command concerns, but Festa has upside if you're swinging for the fences.

Hunter Dobbins - SP, BOS: 4% rostered
Dobbins was featured in an article I wrote this weekthat highlighted starting pitcher targets for the second half of the fantasy baseball season. Check that out for the details on why I like Dobbins, but you maybe also saw that for yourself last night.

Grant Taylor - SP/RP, CWS: 3% rostered
The White Sox flame-throwing prospect is up and pitching out of the bullpen for now. Taylor has legit electric stuff, and I think he could be closing for the White Sox in short order.

STREAMING STARTER PITCHERS

MUST BE 40% ROSTERED ON YAHOO OR UNDER (ranked in loose order)

Week of 6/16

Strong Preference

PitcherRoster%Opponent
Jack Leiter39%vs KC, at PIT
Tomoyuki Sugano35%at TB
Mick Abel37%at MIA, vs NYM
Cade Horton31%vs SEA
Mitchell Parker9%vs COL
Landen Roupp33%vs BOS

Fairly Confident

Erick Fedde20%at CWS
Shane Smith34%at TOR
Ryan Yarbrough30%vs LAA
Sawyer Gipson-Long6%at TB
Slade Cecconi4%at SF, at ATH
Jeffrey Springs29%vs CLE
Trevor Williams3%vs COL
Lucas Giolito8%at SEA, at SF
Walker Buehler39%at SEA
Keider Montero2%vs PIT
Ryne Nelson5%at TOR
Ben Casparius14%vs SD
Bowden Francis24%vs CWS

Some Hesitation

David Festa7%at CIN, vs MIL
Hunter Dobbins5%at SF
Brayan Bello16%at SF
Quinn Priester11%at MIN
Brandon Walter6%at LAA
Luis L. Ortiz25%at ATH
Chase Dollander3%at WAS
Chris Paddack34%at CIN
Nick Martinez36%vs MIN
Mitch Keller36%vs TEX
Miles Mikolas14%vs CIN
Patrick Corbin16 %vs KC
Colin Rea15%vs SEA
Edward Cabrera25%vs PHI

If I'm Desperate

Dean Kremer9%at TB, at NYY
Adrian Houser23%vs STL
Bailey Falter20%at DET, vs TEX
Logan Allen4%at SF
Justin Wrobleski1%vs SD, vs WAS
Paul Blackburn1%at ATL
Aaron Civale5%at TOR
Jose Soriano20%at NYY, vs HOU
Eduardo Rodriguez8%at TOR
Davis Martin6%vs STL
JP Sears15%vs HOU, vs CLE

The Times' 2025 All-Star baseball team

A look at the Los Angeles Times’ 2025 All-Star baseball team:

Pitcher, Seth Hernandez, Corona, Sr.: He struck out 105 in 53 1/3 innings while walking seven and giving up 19 hits. He had an 0.39 ERA and went 9-1 this season and 18-1 in two years.

Pitcher, Hunter Manning, West Ranch, Sr.: The UC Irvine commit went 10-0 with an 0.74 ERA and was the Foothill League player of the year; threw a no-hitter in the Division 2 playoffs on the way to the title.

Utility, Jack Champlin, St. John Bosco, Jr.: Had five saves and two victories while giving up no runs in 11 2/3 playoff innings in helping the Braves win the Southern Section Division 1 and Southern California Division 1 regional titles.

Catcher, Landon Hodge, Crespi, Sr.: The Louisiana State commit and Mission League player of the year batted .386 with 32 hits while supplying outstanding defense for the Mission League champions.

Infielder, Billy Carlson, Corona, Sr.: The Tennessee commit and top pro prospect batted .365 with 34 RBIs and six home runs while known for his outstanding fielding.

Infielder, James Clark, St. John Bosco, Jr.: The Trinity League MVP batted .411 with 46 hits while filling key roles at shortstop and leadoff hitter for the Division 1 section and region champions.

Infielder, Matthew Witkow, Calabasas, Sr.: The Harvard commit had 45 hits, a .489 batting average and struck out just four times in 92 at-bats and had 30 RBIs.

Infielder, Quentin Young, Oaks Christian, Sr.: A top pro prospect, he set a school record with 14 home runs while batting .390 with 34 RBIs as the Marmonte League MVP.

Read more:The Times' 2025 All-Star baseball and softball coverage

Outfielder, Trevor Goldenetz, Huntington Beach, Sr.: The Long Beach State commit led the Sunset League champions with a .409 average, including 36 hits.

Outfielder, James Tronstein, Harvard-Westlake, Jr.: The Stanford commit had 41 hits and batted .414 with four home runs and 20 RBIs while playing center field.

Outfielder, Anthony Murphy, Corona, Jr.: He led Corona in hitting with a .415 average, including 49 hits and 11 home runs, and 35 RBIs.

Sign up for the L.A. Times SoCal high school sports newsletter to get scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Verlander could return from injury in Giants' upcoming homestand

Verlander could return from injury in Giants' upcoming homestand originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

LOS ANGELES — The Giants received promising news before their blowout 11-5 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday night at Dodger Stadium.

San Francisco manager Bob Melvin told reporters that Justin Verlander, who was placed on the 15-day injured list with nerve irritation in his right pectoral muscle after a May 19 start against the Athletics, potentially could return during the Giants’ upcoming nine-game homestand at Oracle Park, which begins against the Cleveland Guardians on Tuesday.

“Every time he throws, we see how he feels the next day, but I think there’s a chance we’re going to see him at home,” Melvin said about Verlander, adding that the 42-year-old felt good after throwing roughly 65 pitches during his latest bullpen session.

Verlander said after that start against the A’s that he was dealing with “something physically that the team was aware of” and hoped it would just be a “blip on the radar.” It seems the three-time Cy Young Award winner and the Giants are distancing themselves from said blip.

It is unclear who will be removed from the rotation when Verlander returns; when a reporter asked Melvin if it would be lefty Kyle Harrison, who most recently allowed four hits and three earned runs over five innings in San Francisco’s 6-5 win over the Colorado Rockies on Tuesday, the Giants skipper was blunt.

“We haven’t talked to any of those guys,” Melvin said. “I’m not going to say what’s going to happen and when until we get home, we get through this series here.”

Melvin will cross that bridge when Verlander meets him there.

Nevertheless, the nine-time MLB All-Star has a 0-3 record and 4.33 ERA during the 2025 MLB season after his first 10 starts with the Orange and Black. At 262 career wins, Verlander still has a bit to go before earning his first with San Francisco and a lot to go before reaching his end goal of 300.

But he appeared closer to both goals on Saturday, and the Giants certainly will take the good news.

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Giants notes: Schmitt makes franchise history in odd way vs. Dodgers

Giants notes: Schmitt makes franchise history in odd way vs. Dodgers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

LOS ANGELES — Logan Porter is not a pitcher. He also might be the most consistent pitcher in baseball.

The Giants’ new backup catcher took the mound in the bottom of the eighth inning of a blowout loss Saturday at Dodger Stadium and threw 15 pitches, all coming in between 34.8 and 37.9 mph. It was the type of inning that has become the norm in modern baseball, with position players being used to save bullpens late in lopsided games, but this one went off the rails when a second position player took the mound.

Utility man Kiké Hernandez already has pitched four times for the Los Angeles Dodgers, and earlier this week he threw 2 1/3 innings against the San Diego Padres in a blowout that the Dodgers were on the other end of. This time, he was asked to protect an 11-0 lead in the top of the ninth, and he couldn’t make it to the 27th out, which allowed Casey Schmitt to make an odd sort of franchise history. 

Hernandez walked the bases loaded ahead of Schmitt, who blasted a 57 mph pitch into the seats in left for his second grand slam in as many nights. The Giants lost 11-5, but Schmitt became the first player in franchise history to hit a grand slam in back-to-back games. Hall of Famer Travis Jackson did it back-to-back days in 1924, but the second one came during the second game of a doubleheader. Schmitt joined Mike Piazza as the only players ever to hit a slam in back-to-back games at Dodger Stadium.

Hernandez threw 38 pitches and only 16 were strikes. When shortstop Miguel Rojas threw away a potential game-ending grounder, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was forced to turn to an actual reliever — Anthony Banda — who got the final out. It was an ugly way to end what had been a raucous night at Dodger Stadium.

“I don’t run that. They do what they do,” manager Bob Melvin said. “I pitched a position player too, but I’ve never done it [when leading].”

Major League Baseball’s rules allow teams to use a position player when trailing by eight or leading by 10. It was an odd way to end the night, but ultimately it will count the same for Schmitt, who put himself in the franchise record books and picked up his third home run of the road trip. 

Rough For Roupp

The game was so far gone because Landen Roupp gave up six runs in the first two innings. The second-year starter recorded just five outs and walked five.

“I don’t think I had anything working for me,” Roupp said. “I couldn’t find the zone with really anything and when I did it got hit hard.”

Roupp said he takes “full responsibility” for the loss, noting that he put the offense in such a deep hole that there was no chance to fight back as they have done so often. He also put the bullpen in a tough spot. 

Spencer Bivens and Tristan Beck soaked up most of the rest of the night, with Bivens throwing 54 pitches in 3 1/3 innings. Melvin was going to take Bivens out after the fourth inning, but the durable right-hander said he could give the manager one more. That was big for a tired bullpen, which was without Randy Rodriguez, who had a marathon outing on Thursday. Bivens and Beck allowed Melvin to save Sean Hjelle as his long man for Sunday’s game, and the Giants will be off Monday, so they’ll have a chance to regroup. 

Same Old Kershaw

The stats almost seem impossible. Clayton Kershaw has thrown at least seven innings against the Giants in 37 different games. Saturday’s game was his 10th time throwing at least seven shutout innings against them.
Kershaw will go into the Baseball Hall of Fame five years after he retires, in part because of more than a decade of dominance in rivalry games. He’s well past his prime, and every start against the Giants might be his last, but they still bring something different out of him.

“We didn’t have much of an answer for him,” Melvin said. 

There’s only one player that Kershaw has faced more than 100 times, and he watched Saturday’s game from a suite reserved for the visiting team’s president of baseball operations. Sometimes, you just have to tip your cap.

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Clayton Kershaw tosses a gem, Shohei Ohtani homers twice in Dodgers' win over Giants

LOS ANGELES, CA - JUNE 14, 2025: Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw.
Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw delivers during an 11-5 win over the San Francisco Giants on Saturday night at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The offense scored 11 times. Shohei Ohtani hit two home runs. And the team regained sole possession of first place in the division.

But on a night of all-around excellence from the Dodgers, no one impressed quite like the man who endures as the most familiar face on the team.

Clayton Kershaw might only throw 90 mph (on a good fastball) now. He might lack the ever-imposing aura that emanated through the peak of his career.

But at 37 years old, and in his 18th MLB season, the future Hall of Fame left-hander can still consistently locate his pitches, still instinctively mix his three-pitch arsenal and still pitch — in every meaning of the word — his way through a big league outing.

Read more:Hernández: Cowardly Dodgers remain silent as ICE raids terrorize their fans

It’s why he wanted to keep playing this season, even after a 2023 shoulder surgery and 2024 toe and knee procedures. Why he still holds a place in the Dodgers’ starting rotation, one that has counted on him to compensate for a swath of injuries in the season’s opening two months. And why, when handed a big early lead Saturday against the San Francisco Giants, he knew exactly what to do, breezing through a scoreless seven-inning, three-hit, five-strikeout gem in the Dodgers’ 11-5 win at Dodger Stadium.

Saturday was not exactly a daunting task for Kershaw.

He was facing a Giants lineup that ranks 25th in the majors in batting average. He had the luxury of a six-run lead by the top of the third inning. The assignment, at that point, was simple: Get quick outs, keep his pitch count under control, and ensure a lopsided score stayed that way in a game that put the Dodgers (42-29) one game ahead of the Giants (41-30) in the National League West standings.

All that, he had done countless times before.

The fact he can still perform, however, inspired awe throughout the ballpark, with 51,548 in attendance witnessing his 65th career start featuring seven scoreless innings.

In the lead-up to the game, manager Dave Roberts noted a few simple keys for Kershaw against the Giants. An aggressive team, Roberts expected early contact that would require precision on pitches in the strike zone. He also noted the proliferation of right-handed bats in San Francisco’s lineup.

“We're going to need the slider tonight,” Roberts said. “If he could command that fastball on both sides of the plate, and present that slider as a strike, it should be a good outing for him.”

Kershaw began executing that script quickly.

In the first, he erased a leadoff walk to Jung Hoo Lee by getting Heliot Ramos to ground into an inning-ending double-play, snapping off an outer-half slider to escape one of his few jams.

In the second, he needed just four pitches to retire the side in order, capitalizing on a string of well-located offerings for a lightning-quick inning.

By the time Kershaw returned to the mound, the Dodgers had surged ahead.

Ohtani began the onslaught with his seventh leadoff home run of the season. The Dodgers ambushed Giants starter Landen Roupp — a second-year right-hander who entered with a 3.29 earned-run average in 13 starts — for five runs in the second.

Up 6-0, Kershaw found a groove. He stranded a leadoff double in the third, collecting the first of his five strikeouts along the way; a total that leaves him just 12 shy of reaching 3,000 strikeouts for his career.

He did the same thing in the fifth, ending the inning with two vintage swing-and-miss curveballs that left Tyler Fitzgerald looking silly.

On the whole, Kershaw got eight swings-and-misses, building upon the strides he took in a seven-strikeout performance against the St. Louis Cardinals last week.

And by the time he finished Saturday’s outing with a clean seventh inning — retiring nine of his last 10 batters en route to his first seven-inning start since 2023 — he was getting a standing ovation from the Chavez Ravine faithful, and a long line of high-fives from coaches and teammates in the dugout.

Prime Kershaw, this is still not. His fastball averaged only 88.4 mph, down a tick from its already diminished average, and it generated no whiffs. Even his slider, which remains his go-to secondary weapon, was fanned on only three times in 15 swings.

Yet, he posted a string of zeroes anyway. He lowered his season ERA to 3.25. And he showed that, even now, he is capable of greatness on any given night.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets Prospect Roundup: Jett Williams has three more hits, Kevin Parada continues recent tear

With the minor league season in full swing, let's take a look at how some of the Mets' top prospects have been doing lately.


SS/CF Jett Williams, Double-A Binghamton

After a rare 0-for-5 on Friday night, Williams roared back on Saturday with a three-hit performance while playing center field for just the eighth time this season.

The 21-year-old went 3-for-5 with a double, RBI and two runs scored from the leadoff spot to raise his batting average to .298. Williams also boasts a .404 on-base percentage and a .928 OPS while still maintaining his elite speed with 18 steals.

He's really begun to heat up lately as Williams has multiple hits in six of his last eight starts, hitting two home runs, two triples and five doubles during that stretch.

Following a lost season last year due to injuries, Williams is back to doing what he did in 2023 which earned him the Minor League Player of the Year award for the Mets.

C Kevin Parada, Double-A Binghamton

Another player on fire at the dish is Parada who went 2-for-4 with two doubles in Saturday's 8-2 win.

It hasn't always come easy for the former first-round pick, but lately the catching prospect has begun to figure things out with three straight multi-hit games.

Through 35 at-bats in June, Parada is slashing .371/.439/.800 with four home runs and 10 RBI. Over the least three games, the 23-year-old has raised his batting average from .190 to .219.

1B/OF Ryan Clifford, Double-A Binghamton

With another two hits on Saturday, Clifford extended his hitting streak to eight games and is 12-for-30 during that time. The lefty-swinging first baseman hit his 12th double and added two RBI which gives him a team-high 38 RBI this season.

Since joining the Mets organization, Clifford has been known as a power threat and has hit 30 home runs and 33 doubles in 158 games for the Rumble Ponies.

Still just 21 years old, it'll be interesting to see if New York promotes him to Triple-A sooner rather than later with this kind of production.

OF Carson Benge, High-A Brooklyn

Down a level, Benge continues to shine in his first full season in the minors.

Locked in a scoreless tie through the sixth inning with the Asheville Tourists, the Houston Astros' High-A affiliate, Benge knocked in the game's only run with a single to give the Cyclones a 1-0 win. He finished 1-for-4 and is hitting .302 over 54 games.

The game-winner improved Brooklyn's record to 42-20, good for first in their division.

RHP Nolan McLean, Triple-A Syracuse

The closest to a major league call-up, McLean had another solid outing despite a 5-1 loss for Syracuse. The right-hander went six innings and allowed three runs (two earned) on four hits and three walks. He struck out three and threw 90 pitches (55 strikes).

McLean has now allowed two earned runs or fewer in five straight starts and has a 2.56 ERA in seven games (five starts) since his promotion to Triple-A.

After getting off to dominating start in Double-A this season (3-1, 1.37 ERA in five starts), the 23-year-old owns a 2.08 ERA (1.17 WHIP) overall.

The Mets will surely like to see more of the same from McLean this season before they even think about calling him up to the big leagues, but his continued success is nipping at the heels of teammate and fellow top prospect Brandon Sproat who has had a tough time transitioning to Triple-A, owning a 5.31 ERA (1.42 WHIP) in 13 starts.

Yankees drop second straight to Red Sox after 4-3 loss

The Yankees dropped another close one in the second game of their three-game series against the Boston Red Sox on Saturday night by a score of 4-3.

Here are the takeaways...

-Hoping to get past his previous outing against the Red Sox in his last start on June 8 at Yankee Stadium, where he allowed five earned runs in five innings, Carlos Rodon let Boston tag him for another run in the bottom of the first inning to kick things off.

Rob Refsnyder led off the inning with a double that just scraped the left field foul line and was almost stranded at second after Rodon retired the next two. With two outs, Carlos Narvaez grounded one to the left of shortstop Anthony Volpe, who managed to get to the ball, but with all of his momentum taking him towards third base, he tried channeling his inner Derek Jeter and jump-threw the ball to first base.

The ball was down the line and even though Paul Goldschmidt came off the bag, he let the ball skip past him, which allowed a run to score. It was ruled a single while Volpe was charged with a throwing error.

-Rodon kept the Red Sox scoreless until the fourth inning, where they scored another run thanks to doubles by Narvaez and Trevor Story, who lined one up the middle and caught Volpe sleeping at second base to hustle into second before the shortstop could tag him out.

-Volpe got a measure of revenge leading off the next half inning, hitting one off the Green Monster but being held to a single. The Yankees would not score in the frame.

-Boston scored again in the fifth on Romy Gonzalez's RBI double, which drove in Kristian Campbell, who was hit by a pitch to lead off the inning.

-Down 3-0 through five innings and 90 pitches, Rodon went back out to start the sixth but was pulled after Story's leadoff double. Yerry De los Santos came in for relief but couldn't strand Story at second, allowing the inherited runner to score and putting an end to Rodon's night.

The lefty's final line: 5+ IP, 7 H, 4 R (3 ER), 2 BB, 4 K.

-New York's offense was held in check for most of the night against rookie right-hander Hunter Dobbins, who pitched six scoreless innings and allowed just two hits and a walk while striking out five.

With Dobbins out of the game, the Yanks finally broke through in the seventh with two runs off Luis Guerrero to make it 4-2. After back-to-back walks began the inning, Jasson Dominguez singled home a run before Austin Wells followed with an RBI single of his own. They were the first Yankees not named Aaron Judge to have an RBI in the team's last 30 innings played.

The inning could've been bigger had Dominguez not been picked off and caught stealing third base for the third out after it appeared he thought Trent Grisham struck out to end the inning.

-The game's score stood at 4-2 as New York went up to bat in the ninth inning. Goldschmidt ripped a double off The Monster to start things off against Greg Weissert, who traded to two groundouts to second base for a run to score. Down to their final out, Dominguez also hit a double to put the tying run in scoring position. On a 3-1 pitch in the zone, Wells smashed one to the deepest part of the ballpark for a flyout to end the game.

-The Yankees' top three of the batting order (Grisham, Judge, Ben Rice) combined to go 0-for-12 with six Ks.

Game MVP: Hunter Dobbins

The rookie turned in a masterful performance to grab his fourth win of the season.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees conclude their three-game set with the Red Sox on Sunday afternoon with first pitch scheduled for 1:35 p.m.

LHP Max Fried (9-1, 1.84 ERA) pitches for New York and will be opposed by Boston's RHP Brayan Bello (2-1, 3.96 ERA).

Mets, Tylor Megill discuss what went wrong in fourth inning against Rays: 'It spiraled on him'

You never want to give teams extra outs, and that was especially the case for Tylor Megill and the Mets on Saturday evening.

Taking a 2-1 lead into the fourth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays, the wheels fell off for Megill and the Mets.

It started with Megill allowing a game-tying solo shot from Junior Caminero on a sinker running in. Although the pitch resulted in a home run, props to Caminero for getting around it and launching it into the stands.

The next batter, Megill hit with a slider before a single and a strikeout led to arguably the biggest play of the inning. With one out and runners on first and third, Taylor Walls laid down a sacrifice bunt. Megill should have taken the out at first but while fielding, he took a look at home before turning to throw to first base. The big right-hander, however, could not grip the ball and it trickled away for an error.

Now with the Rays in front by one run, Megill struck out the next batter, in what should have been out the final out. Instead, back-to-back singles scored two more runs, then a walk loaded the bases. Megill then threw a wild pitch that allowed the fifth run of the inning to cross home plate before walking the bases loaded again, forcing manager Carlos Mendoza's hand.

"He was fine for the first time through the order. And then in that fourth inning, even after the first and third, he gets the strike out and then he doesn’t make the play on that bunt," Mendoza said of Megill's outing. "That’s two outs and then he gets the next guy… And then it spiraled on him. Base hit, base hit.

"There was a lot of non-competitive pitches, especially the secondary, there were a few pitches, ball out of the hand where he’s bouncing. And then when he came back in the zone, they were all over him. He lost it there, pretty much."

Jose Castillo came in and got the final out of the fourth without any more damage but Megill's final line was not pretty. He allowed six runs (three earned) on seven hits, two walks and two HBP.

It was the most runs Megill has allowed this season and the most he's allowed since June of last year. But of all the moments in that fourth inning, Megill says the HBP after Caminero's home run was the difference.

"Biggest difference, probably the hit-by-pitch," Megill said. "Didn’t have a feel for the slider, especially coming in on the backfoot on the lefties. After that, made some good, quality pitches, sinker down and away, found a hole up the middle. The slider fell in short. Then a couple of walks, then a hung slider. By then, kinda ran up and was taken out."

On his error, Megill said the ball felt like it went through his fingers, but admitted that while the ball was slick from the wet field, it wasn't an excuse. He had to secure the ball.

"I should get my hand into my glove, secure it instead of trying to flip it into my hand," he said.

On the wild pitch, Megill said he simply "pulled" the backdoor sinker.

But Megill's error wasn't the only one by a Mets pitcher on Saturday. Castillo led off the sixth with a fielding error that eventually came around to score. The Rays scored four runs on those two fielding errors, which was the difference in their 8-4 win over the Mets.

"We’ve been playing pretty good defense. They are a good team," Mendoza said of the Rays. "When you give them extra outs, they play the small game. We saw it today. They get the bunt down, go the other way, put the ball in play and they are aggressive. That’s who they are. When you give good teams extra outs, extra bases, you are going to pay for it."

It's the first time the Mets have lost back-to-back games since mid-May and have now lost their second home series of the year (10-2). The Mets will look to salvage a win on Sunday before heading to Atlanta and Philadelphia for two consecutive divisional series.

Chris Kreider Clears The Air About Transparency With Rangers Management And Explains Reasoning For Waiving No-Trade Clause

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

For the entirety of Chris Kreider's career, he’s been with one team until now as the New York Rangers traded the veteran forward to the Anaheim Ducks on Thursday. 

The Rangers and Kreider had a successful 13-year marriage filled with memories of joy and success. 

However, it ended with a season where Kreider was mentioned in trade rumors, dealt with numerous injuries, and had an overall down year for his standards. 

It wasn’t clear if the relationship between Kreider and Rangers president and general manager Chris Drury was hindered after everything that transpired this past season. 

At least according to Kreider, there was transparency from Drury about his trade intentions and there are no hard feelings in terms of how this whole situation was handled by the Rangers organization. 

“I think so. There’s no point of reference for me. I’ve been lucky enough to have been with the Rangers for 13 years, so I’ve never been in a trade,” Kreider said. “I don’t think it’s super common to be afforded the time to kind of do my due diligence and kind of go through that emotional spectrum. I think it was done in a really respectful fashion by the New York Rangers, and I’m very appreciative of that.”

The 34-year-old forward has a 15-team no-trade clause in his contract, so finding an ideal fit was a long process for Kreider. 

After doing his due diligence, he landed on the Ducks as the team he wants to start this next chapter of his career with. 

Chris Kreider Feels ‘Gratitude’ After Trade To Ducks While Praising The Rangers' Communication Throughout Process Chris Kreider Feels ‘Gratitude’ After Trade To Ducks While Praising The Rangers' Communication Throughout Process The move by the New York Rangers to trade Chris Kreider to the Anaheim Ducks comes with great emotion. 

“I did have to waive my no-trade,” said Kreider. “When we sat down and Drury communicated to us that he was looking to free up cap space and that I could potentially be traded, we were allowed to go out and look at some teams and kind of do our due diligence. I think it’s a great fit. I think it’s a team that’s on the come-up, that has a wealth of talent, youth, veteran presence, speed, and size. 

“It’s a group that I think can win hockey games and make a push to make the playoffs. With the addition of Quenneville and his staff, that’s a massive draw for me as well. It certainly helps knowing some of the guys on that team and kind of being able to get a look behind the curtain.”

Tylor Megill struggles, another big inning downs Mets in 8-4 loss to Rays

The Mets allowed another big inning as they dropped their second in a row to the Rays, 8-4, on Saturday evening at Citi Field.

After the start of the game was delayed for almost an hour, poor pitching and shoddy defense allowed Tampa Bay to score five runs in the fourth inning. In total, the Rays scored four runs on two fielding errors by pitchers, which was the difference in the game.

The Mets have dropped back-to-back games for the first time since May 18-20.

Here are the takeaways...

-After hitting the first batter he faced, Tylor Megill settled down a bit to pitch until the third inning. Megill allowed a one-out double that was hit just fair by Taylor Walls before Josh Lowe's single drove in the game's first run. After allowing another hit, pitching coach Jeremy Hefner came out to settle his starter down. Megill responded by getting the final two outs of the inning.

Megill would pitch into trouble in the fourth after the Mets gave him back the lead. Junior Caminero led off with a solo shot, but then another HBP and single put runners at the corners with no outs. Megill got a strikeout, but a Walls sacrifice bunt was botched by the big righty, which led to the second run of the inning. This is where things fell apart for Megill and the Mets.

Brandon Lowe then hit a two-out bloop single to score another run for Tampa. Yandy Diaz tacked on with an RBI single and then Megill threw a wild pitch with the bases loaded to push across another run for the Rays. After Megill walked Caminero to load the bases again, manager Carlos Mendoza had to take out his starter. Jose Castillo came in and Jake Mangum hit a grounder up the middle but Francisco Lindor backhanded it and tossed it to Brett Baty to get the force out at second to end the five-run inning.

Megill's night was done after throwing 82 pitches (52 strikes) through 3.2 innings, allowing six runs (three earned) on seven hits, two walks and two hit batters. He struck out five batters but his ERA rose to 3.95 on the season.

-Baty has struggled of late (one hit in his previous five games), but the left-hander hit a laser (115.6 mph) off of Drew Rasmussen to tie the game at 1-1 in the third. It was the hardest hit by a Met this season. The Mets would tack on in the same inning whenLindor hit a double, which was followed by a Brandon Nimmo single, all with two outs.

Ronny Mauricio, who was 0-for-his-last-12, tomahawked a Rasmussen fastball up in the zone 374 feet over the right field wall to cut the Rays' lead to 7-3. A two-out walk to Lindor, a passed ball, and Nimmo single brought the Mets within 7-4 in the fifth.

-Unfortunately, the Mets bullpen could not hold the Rays from scoring for long. A Walls double scored Matt Thaiss from second -- Thaiss reached on a single and advanced on a passed ball in the fifth. Castillo allowed the leadoff hitter in the sixth to reach on his fielding error before Jose Butto allowed an RBI triple to Diaz that Juan Soto tried to grab at the wall but it bounced away from him.

Despite that, the Mets tried to get back in this game by putting traffic on the bases, but just couldn't get a clutch hit. They had two runners on in the seventh and eighth with two outs but Nimmo and Baty did not come through. The Mets had 11 hits but only had four opportunities with runners in scoring position (2-for-4), with Nimmo coming through with those lone two hits.

-Pete Alonso extended his on-base streak to 22 games with his eighth-inning single. He finished 1-for-4. Soto went 0-for-4 while Starling Marte, who had three hits and drove in three runs on Friday, went 1-for-4.

On a defensive positive, Luis Torrens gunned down two runners and made a great play in tandem with Butto on a wild pitch that got Diaz out at the plate. Torrens did have two passed balls, so it wasn't all great for the Mets backstop.

Game MVP: Rays bullpen

While the lineup dinked and dunked their way to eight runs, the bullpen held the Mets off the board. They pitched four scoreless innings, allowing just four hits and one walk.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets and Rays complete their three-game series on Sunday afternoon on PIX11. First pitch is set for 1:40 p.m.

Griffin Canning (6-2, 3.22 ERA) will be on the mound as Tampa will send Shane Baz (5-3, 4.97 ERA) on the bump.

Why The Rangers Are Built For A Retool, Not A Rebuild This Off-Season

After a catastrophic season that saw them fall from top spot in the NHL’s 2023-24 regular season to completely out of the Stanley Cup playoffs this year, the New York Rangers have made significant changes to their organization. Coach Peter Laviolette was replaced with former Pittsburgh Penguins bench boss Mike Sullivan, and longtime core component left winger Chris Kreider was traded to the Anaheim Ducks this week for a prospect and draft pick. And the off-season has barely started.

It’s clear Rangers GM Chris Drury – armed with a new contract extension that shows team owner James Dolan has full confidence in him – is going to reshape the Rangers’ lineup in a major way. But is Drury going to completely rebuild the roster from scratch, or is a retool-on-the-fly more likely?

We believe all signs point to the latter option. Dolan has never been one to stomach a full rebuild, and Drury’s work leading up to this point has built a team that’s exceedingly difficult to disassemble. You’re not trading star left winger Artemi Panarin, even if he’s entering the final season of his lucrative contract. You’re not trading star center J.T. Miller, less than a year after the Blueshirts acquired him. You’re definitely not dealing star goalie, Igor Shesterkin. And you’re not trading star defenseman Adam Fox or veteran center Mika Zibanejad, both of whom are signed for at least the next four seasons.

That means the road ahead is a retool, although Drury is still likely to reshape the roster. The Kreider trade opened up $6.5 million in salary cap space, but the Rangers have only $14.9 million in space – far from the amount the Rangers need to outbid opponents in free-agency. Blueliner K’Andre Miller is an RFA, and his asking price may hamper Rangers management’s efforts to acquire veteran players, so he may be traded. 

Thus, trades will probably be the route Drury takes to change the makeup of the team. But even then, Drury may be limited in what he can do. Seven current Rangers have some sort of no-trade or no-move clause in their current contract. And while Drury showed with the trading of Kreider and former captain Jacob Trouba that he isn’t afraid of going to players with no-trade or no-move clauses and still finding a way to trade them, the market for those players may be more limited than the Rangers like.

Mika Zibanejad celebrates with his teammates after scoring a goal in the third period against the Tampa Bay Lightning. (Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images)

That opens up speculation about Rangers who don’t have no-trade protection, including young winger Alexis Lafreniere. The 23-year-old’s offence dropped off considerably this season, going from 28 goals in 2023-24 to only 17 goals this season. Lafreniere is entering the first season of a seven-year extension paying him $7.45-million annually, and the Rangers may have buyer’s remorse.

Drury gave up on another high draft pick last year – winger Kaapo Kakko, who went on to have a solid half-season with the Seattle Kraken – and so it shouldn’t be a complete shocker if Drury moved Lafreniere.

Regardless of who winds up getting traded or signed, the prevailing sentiment around the Rangers is that this team will be markedly different by the time training camp rolls around. Drury has a mandate of getting his team back into the post-season right away, and that means he can’t run it back with the same group of players. The Rangers are built to win now, and in a few weeks, we’re likely to see a Blueshirts squad that is even more hyper-focused on being a playoff team in 2025-26.

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Giancarlo Stanton expected to return to Yankees during Angels series

It looks like the Yankees are on the verge of getting Giancarlo Stanton back.

After announcing the possibility that Stanton could return to the team for Sunday's series finale in Boston against the Red Sox, it appears the slugger will instead join the team back in The Bronx when New York hosts the Los Angeles Angels for a four-game series starting on Monday, per manager Aaron Boone.

"Giancarlo Stanton is expected to return during the Angels series," Boone said. "Could be Monday or Tuesday."

After sitting out on Friday night for Double-A Somerset, the designated hitter was expected to play in his fourth rehab game on Saturday, but with wet and rainy conditions in the area, Stanton is not in the lineup.

With that, it likely means the 35-year-old will be recalled on Tuesday as the Yanks want him to play at least one more game in the minors. Of course, some of that depends on whether Stanton can play on Sunday, which has inclement weather in the forecast, as well.

Boone also provided updates on some injured pitchers, saying Jake Cousins, who began the season on the 60-day IL with a forearm/pectoral injury but has since paused his rehab while dealing with an elbow injury. Boone said Cousins is still waiting on opinions after undergoing an MRI. However, the skipper said it is trending towards Tommy John surgery.

In 2024, Cousins appeared in 37 games and posted a 2.37 ERA (1.05 WHIP).

Meanwhile, Luis Gil (right lat strain) is still 10-14 days away from throwing a live bullpen, per Boone.