Apr 26, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Louis Varland (77) pitches against the Cleveland Guardians during the ninth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images | Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images
Happy Monday.
So there is a little bit of good news, Louis Varland was named AL reliever of the month. He pitched a bunch, 16 innings, 0.56 ERA, 1.0 WAR, 4 saves. Batters hit .200/.277/.254 against him.
We are pretty lucky to have him, I don’t know who would be closing games for us without him. Maybe they continue this way all season, Hoffman in a setup role, which seems to be going fine and Varland in the closer role. Or they could mix and match depending on who they want to have different guys face.
Tyler Rogers, Braydon Fisher, Spencer Miles and Joe Mantiply are all pitching well.
And Hoffman has a 3.38 ERA in his 6 games, giving up a run in each of two games, with 1 walk and 8 strikeouts in in the 5.1 innings. It’s a start.
The stuff between John Schneider and Tyler Heineman, in yesterday’s game, was weird. If John had such a problem with the way Heineman was playing, why didn’t he pinch hit for him in that spot. I get the feeling that John was mad at himself for not pinch hitting. Which is fair, I was kind of mad at him for not pinch hitting.
I don’t like managers being that public with their dislike of what a player is doing. I think things like that should be private. And, beyond that, Schneider knows what Heineman is. I mean, Schneider was the same sort of player, good glove/bad bat. If he doesn’t like Heineman’s play, why put him in the lineup. Why not talk to the front office about finding a better option.
Despite last years play, or at least the play from the first half of last year, Heineman is not a hitter. Expecting him to be one is not going to end well.
And, if John is going to start taking guys out of the lineup for a bad at bat, we are going to be forfeiting a lot of games.
John Sterling passed away at 87.
I’ll admit that I wasn’t a fan. One year, when we were on holiday, I ended up listening to him call some Yankees/Blue Jays games and I hated that he mispronounced some player’s names, Jose Bautista, Edwin Encarnacion others. And, it bothered me. I mean Bautista was one of the top players in the league. You should be able to get that one right, if your job is to be a radio announcer.
But, he had the job a long time. Called 5420 regular season games, 5,060 consecutive games. Yankees’ fans liked him. He was enthusiastic. He was different. Different is a good thing, he wasn’t boring.
Maybe I’d have liked him better if he didn’t work for the godless Yankees.
Addison Barger hit a home run in his first rehab start, and took a walk, with a ground out as well. I think the plan is for him to play three rehab games.
Addison didn’t have a great start to the season, with 1 hit in 23 PA. So, expecting him to be great as soon as he comes back might be a little hopeful, but it will be good to have him back.
Tonight’s game is a 6:30 start. Nick Martinez starts for the Rays. Eric Lauer will…..pitch at some point. He wasn’t happy with the opener thing last time against. But then, you want change, pitch better. Lauer has a 6.00 ERA in 27 innings this year. Pitch well, and he’ll likely get to be the starter next time around. Pitch crappy, and this if the best you can hope for.
ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - MAY 02: Griffin Jax #22 of the Tampa Bay Rays gestures to the outfield after a fly out in the third inning against the San Francisco Giants at Tropicana Field on May 02, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images
As has been speculated since his acquisition, and propitiated by the season ending hip surgery required by Ryan Pepiot, the Rays have formally started the transition of Griffin Jax to a starting role, and in doing so Jax has reintroduced his cutter. It’s already helping him handle left-handed hitters more effectively, and should help the transition to starting as well.
Jax entered the 2026 season projected toward the top of the Rays bullpen depth chart, particularly given his success in a relief role after being converted by the Twins, but when the season began it was a struggle for Jax to fend off lefties.
Prior to his appearance on 4/26/2026, across the first 25 left-handed batters faced, Jax issued four walks, struck out five, allowed six hits, and gave up two home runs – good for a 10.80 ERA and 8.73 FIP. The sample is small, but the underlying indicators weren’t encouraging either: below-average strike rates, elevated hard contact, and a lack of swing-and-miss.
Since reintroducing the cutter as he has transitions to a starting role, the results have began to trend in a more positive direction against lefties. Jax has gone from not using his cutter at all against lefties to using it 16.7% of the time across his last two outings.
Jax’s cutter, like most cutters, serves as a useful weapon against opposite-handed hitters. Its movement allows it to get in on the hands of lefties, often inducing weaker contact. As a “bridge” pitch, it sits between fastballs and breaking balls in both velocity and movement. That typically limits its swing-and-miss upside, but it plays an important role in sequencing while giving him a pitch that he can land for strikes.
In Jax’s case, the cutter helps support his best pitch: the sweeper.
League-wide trends suggest hitters have become more comfortable against sweepers, particularly from right-handed pitchers. Since Jax entered the league in 2021, performance against sweepers has gradually improved:
MLB
LHB wOBA and whiff%
RHB wOBA and whiff%
2021
.272, 29.4%
.248, 39.1%
2022
.281, 28.9%
.237, 36.5%
2023
.304, 27.6%
.256, 35.0%
2024
.310, 27.7%
.256, 32.6%
2025
.336, 26.4%
.257, 33.0%
2026
.300, 28.3%
.250, 31.7%
While 2026 is still a small sample, the broader trend is clear: hitters are handling sweepers better than they did a few years ago. Increased exposure and tools like Trajekt machines have likely contributed to that adjustment.
For a pitcher like Jax, whose profile is heavily built around a once-outlier breaking ball, adaptation becomes necessary.
That’s where the cutter comes in.
Against right-handed hitters, Jax can still lean heavily on his fastball-sweeper combination. But against lefties, he needed a more effective plan.
The cutter helps create that plan by pairing with his changeup. Both pitches operate in the lower-90s velocity band, but with different movement profiles. There are roughly 17 inches of horizontal separation between the cutter and changeup – less than the gap between his changeup and sweeper, which exceeds 27 inches.
While it might seem like a smaller difference in movement and velocity might hinder his effectiveness, it actually works in Jax’s favor by improving how well the pitches tunnel out of the same window.
Jax can still mix in his sweeper to lefties as a third look, particularly deeper into outings, but it no longer needs to carry the load against them.
There’s an inherent tradeoff here. Jax is increasing usage of a lesser pitch at the expense of his best one, and most pitch models won’t love that. But pitching isn’t just about maximizing individual pitch quality; it’s about disrupting timing and forcing uncomfortable decisions. The league is better equipped to handle sweepers from right-handed pitchers than it was a few years ago, so adjusting to that reality is part of staying effective.
Jax appears to be making that adjustment, and the early returns are encouraging.
If this approach holds, we could see Jax settle into something like a three-pitch mix against lefties: four-seamer, changeup, and cutter. Each of these could be used at relatively similar rates with occasional breaking balls mixed in. Against righties, a more traditional fastball-sweeper approach should remain intact while he occasional dips into his arsenal for a different look.
It’s still early, but this is the kind of in-season adjustment that can meaningfully change a pitcher’s trajectory. Jax’s ability to adapt like this will be key to sustaining the success he’s shown in the past regardless of whether he continues to get stretched out to start or moves back into high leverage in the bullpen.
The San Diego Padres visit the San Francisco Giants for a three-game NL West showdown at Oracle Park beginning Monday, May 4.
My top Padres vs. Giants predictions and MLB picks are calling for San Fran to lose a seventh consecutive game tonight.
Who will win Padres vs Giants today: Padres moneyline (-130)
The San Francisco Giants are last in baseball in wOBA against right-handed pitchers and are turning to Trevor McDonald for his first start of the season Monday.
McDonald sports a worrisome 5.40 ERA and 6.24 xFIP across 15 minor-league innings with Triple A Sacramento, while the San Diego Padres have sneaky righty Randy Vasquez on the bump.
While Vasquez has had some hiccups, it’s hard to argue with his 2.94 ERA and 3.76 xFIP while holding opponents to a .665 OPS through six starts.
COVERS INTEL: A large part of San Diego Padres starter Randy Vasquez’s early success is his 12.4 swinging-strike percentage checking in miles above his 6.7% mark from 2025.
Padres vs Giants Over/Under pick: Under 8.5 (-132)
The Giants aren’t the only team struggling against righties, with the Friars ranking 22nd in wOBA and also playing to the Under in 29 of their past 50 road games (+7.35 Units / 13% ROI).
Additionally, San Fran has only scored 2.5 runs per game while losing eight of its past 10, and San Diego has scored just 2.6 per during its active 4-1 slump.
Neil Parker's 2026 Transparency Record
ML/RL bets: 17-9, +9.23 units
Over/Under bets: 9-6, +2.33 units
Padres vs Giants odds
Moneyline: Padres -135 | Giants +115
Run line: Padres -1.5 (+120) | Giants +1.5 (-140)
Over/Under: Over 8 (-110) | Under 8 (-110)
Padres vs Giants trend
The Padres have won 31 of their last 50 games (+8.85 Units / 13% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Padres vs. Giants.
How to watch Padres vs Giants and game info
Location
Oracle Park, San Francisco, CA
Date
Monday, May 4, 2026
First pitch
9:45 p.m. ET
TV
Padres.TV, NBC Sports Bay Area
Padres starting pitcher
Randy Vasquez (3-0, 2.94 ERA)
Giants starting pitcher
Trevor McDonald (0-0, 0.00 ERA)
Padres vs Giants latest injuries
Padres vs Giants weather
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
SURPRISE, ARIZONA - MARCH 13, 2026: Felnin Celesten #5 of the Seattle Mariners throws to first base during a minor league spring training game against the Kansas City Royals at Surprise Stadium on March 13, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Bernacchi/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
Tacoma Rainiers
The Rainiers dropped the series 4-2 this week, unfortunately unable to land the knockout punch in several close games this series. They stand at 16-17 on the season, good for fourth in their division.
The Colt report this week is a tough one, unfortunately. Three walks, three hits, ten punchouts. He did hit a homer and a triple, but there’s not nearly enough production outside of that to spin this week positively. Hopefully a quick bounce back is inbound.
AquaSox alum Colt Emerson launched his fourth homer of the 2026 season for Triple-A Tacoma last night! 🚀 pic.twitter.com/JA3Zq60onR
With the major league bullpen in rough shape right now, there’s a few names in Tacoma that might end up becoming pertinent in the coming weeks. Robinson Ortiz, a lefty, has decent stuff, but walks a lot of people. Domingo Gonzalez is kind of the opposite, with lesser raw stuff but much better command. Yosver Zulueta, probably the best of the three, has major velocity on his sinker and big league experience in the past. All three are already on the 40 man roster and could be options should the big leagues come calling.
Arkansas Travelers
The Travs are hot right now! Securing a 5-1 series win over Wichita, the Travs have dug themselves out of the basement and now find themselves with a 15-12 record, a mark good for 3rd in their division. The offense has really picked things up as of late, and the stars they’ve needed desperately all season are beginning to look like their usual selves. It’s been a treat to watch.
Kade Anderson great again. Final line: 5.2IP, 4H, 0R, 0BB, 8K, 16 whiffs, 74 pitches, 56 strikes.
Kade Anderson continues to dazzle, working another 5.2 innings of shutout ball in a Wichita stadium that’s one of the least pitcher-friendly in the Texas League. Allowing just four hits and no walks, Anderson struck out eight batters in Friday night’s contest, pushing his season total to 38 across just 24.1 innings. Whether the M’s see merit in sending him to Triple-A or not seems like the final frontier in his development track; it’s not something they typically do with their premium starting pitching prospects, but Double-A is posing little challenge to Anderson at present and may ultimately force the M’s to make him an exception. Still just 21 years old, here’s where he stands amongst other Texas League arms thus far:
ERA: 0.37 (1st)
K: 38 (1st)
BB: 4 (2nd)
WHIP: 0.70 (2nd)
BAA: .157 (2nd)
Not too bad for your first taste of professional baseball.
I encourage you to check out the article we put out about Lazaro Montes this past weekend. Since then, he managed yet another homer and raised his season OPS to .928. He’s hotter than the sun right now.
Laz wasn’t the only hitter seeing the ball well this week; Caleb Cali lit up Wichita pitching all week and is thrilled to get out of the cavernous confines of Dickey-Stephens Park. With roughly a 50/50 split between home and away thus far, Cali lays claim to a paltry OPS of .405 inside of DSP. The half that came on the road? An OPS north of 1.000. Cali has one of the starkest discrepancies of Home/Away splits I can remember seeing and should be someone to monitor; there’s a chance he gets a call up to Tacoma and is finally able to unleash the major pop he’s got with some consistency.
Everett AquaSox
The Frogs lost this week’s slate 4-2, squandering some late leads and missing plenty of opportunities to take a convincing series win. The bullpen, usually a strong suit, was shaky this week, and the uptick in offense wasn’t enough to offset the lack of pitching.
¡El Fénix está en fuego! Felnin Celesten continues to light it up at the plate and looks like the player we saw dominate the Complex League just a few years ago, spraying the ball with authority all over the ballpark. The young shortstop is slashing .457/.556/.600 over the past two weeks and has upped his stolen base count to six on the young season. Celesten has all the talent in the world and could easily be one of the best prospects in this system if he’s playing to his fullest potential. The whiffs are down, the walks are up, and he’s hitting the ball hard with consistency. It’s been a fantastic few weeks of watching him play.
Brock Moore continues to overpower Hi-A hitters. He logged three more innings this week, punching out four and walking one. He currently sits at 24 K’s through 11.1 IP this season and has just two walks, a truly unfathomable mark if you were to look at his walk totals from just a season ago. Get this man to Arkansas ASAP.
Shoutout to Brandon Eike. He was having a brutal go of things at the plate to start the season, but he’s started to really heat up as of late. He’s pushed his OPS just north of .900 and has launched five homers in his past seven contests. The K% is still untenable and will need to come down before a trip to Arkansas is on the table, but the progress has been great to see nonetheless.
Inland Empire 66ers
IE lost yet another series this week, dropping to 10-16 on the year. The pitching has had a tough time keeping games close, and though the offense is starting to pick up a bit, it hasn’t been enough to secure many wins. This team is going to benefit greatly from the draft’s injection of talent.
Mason Peters was dealing again. Final line: 4IP, 1H, 0R, 2BB, 6K, 11 whiffs, 57 pitches, 35 strikes.
The Mason Peters agenda continues forward. Similarly to Anderson in Double-A, Peters has arguably been the best pitcher in the California League to start the season:
ERA: 2.25 (2nd)
K: 31 (1st)
BB: 5 (5th)
WHIP: 0.85 (2nd)
BAA: .176 (2nd)
Spinning a gem of a game on Friday night, the southpaw starter logged four innings of shutout ball, surrendering just one hit on the night and punching out six. He’s obviously been off to an incredible start thus far, but with as much room as there is to add strength to his frame, a future velocity spike that elevates his arsenal a tick or two seems more than possible, making him that much more exciting as a prospect to follow over the coming years.
Cesar Quintas is a far less heralded prospect than most names featured on our prospect roundups, but after the week he just had, it’s impossible to keep him off. A 2024 minor league Rule 5 draftee from the Giants system, Quintas played last season with the Nuts and had a good, if unremarkable season at the plate. This year, however, has been a different story. His 15 hits this week brought his season OPS up to .957, comfortably giving him the team lead and breathing new life into a player that lacked pedigree. It’s his third go of A ball, but should he maintain this level of production throughout the year, he’ll have transformed his future and firmly made himself a name to know.
The ACL Mariners have logged just one game so far, but they managed 24 runs on an astounding 21 walks. Nick Becker, Yorger Bautista, and Leandro Romero, arguably the three biggest name prospects on the roster, all were strong contributors in the win and will look to power this potent lineup all season.
LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 24: Freddie Freeman #5 of the Los Angeles Dodgers looks on during the game between the Chicago Cubs and the Los Angeles Dodgers at UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium on Friday, April 24, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Emma Sharon/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The biggest series of the season so far is on the horizon and it’s not just big for both the Atlanta Braves and the Los Angeles Dodgers. Although it won’t be nationally televised, you can bet that the rest of the baseball world will be keeping an eye on this series to see if the Braves can send a serious message of intent with another series win this season in a stadium that has historically been a house of horrors — and one that is the home of the two-time defending World Series Champions, mind you.
Before we can get to the Showdown at Dodger Stadium, the Braves will have to continue their Western road trip with a visit to Seattle to take on the Mariners. Seattle has been a little better at home than on the road and their poor road form has been the difference between them being at .500 and being where they’re currently at. I’m saying that to say that the Braves can’t find themselves looking forward to the massive series in Los Angeles without taking care of business in Seattle first. That’s what’s on the horizon for what could be a really big week ahead for the Atlanta Braves.
May 4-6: Seattle Mariners
Current Record: 16-19 Projected Record (via FanGraphs): 85-77
Seattle’s rotation has been pretty solid so far and the Braves will have to deal with three of the better hurlers for Seattle so far. It’ll all get started against Logan Gilbert on Monday. While Gilbert hasn’t been super imposing so far, he’s done a good job of avoiding walks and generating whiffs and chases so the plate discipline for Atlanta will have to be on point if they want to be effective against him.
George Kirby will get the ball on Tuesday and that’ll likely be tough sledding for the Braves since his underlying metrics suggest that he’s been a lot better than his ERA (4.03 with an ERA- of 102) and FIP (3.33 with a FIP- of 82) suggest. He’s been even better than Gilbert when it comes to inducing chase and just as good in every other category (if not a bit better) as well. Bryan Woo will start on Thursday and that does seem like Atlanta’s best chance to pick up a win (and hopefully a series win if the first two games go well). Woo has also done a good job of limiting walks but he hasn’t been great doing much else, so there’s that.
Meanwhile, Bryce Elder, Grant Holmes and JR Ritchie will have to contend with a Mariners lineup that has hit their way into a Top-10 offense according to wRC+. Heading into Sunday’s action, they had produced a team wRC+ of 103 with a team slash line of .232/.320/.382 with a .317 wOBA. The good news is that the Braves clear the Mariners in every offensive category so far (aside from walk rate) so the Braves could do well enough to out-slug yet another opponent.
Still, Randy Arozarena figures to be a problem and guys like Cole Young, Dominic Canzone and Luke Raley have to be taken seriously as well. Plus, there’s the looming specter of either Julio Rodríguez taking a game over or Cal Raleigh waking up from his current slumber at any given moment as well. On top of that, Brendan Donovan could be activated from the IL in time for this series as well, so there’s certainly a lot to keep an eye on when it comes to threats coming from the Mariners.
Monday, May 4 at 9:40 p.m. ET (BravesVision) Tuesday, May 5 at 9:40 p.m. ET (BravesVision, Gray TV) Wednesday, May 6 at 4:10 p.m. ET (BravesVision)
May 8-10: Los Angeles Dodgers
Current Record: 21-13 Projected Record: 98-64
Assuming the Braves don’t get swept and end up limping into Dodger Stadium, the Braves will enter this series with fewer losses than their hosts in Los Angeles. Heading into this season, you probably would’ve figured that that meant either one or both teams had been disappointing to start out, but nope! The Dodgers are in first place and as of right now they’re either at or near the top of the leaderboards in any given statistic that you can think of. This is the type of start you’d expect for a team that is this loaded with talent and experience so that’s really another indicator of just how good of a start that the Braves are on, themselves.
The “good” news is that the Braves won’t have to deal with Shohei Ohtani as a pitcher, at least. He’s currently scheduled to start on Tuesday against the Astros and he’s usually gone up to a week in between starts so they won’t have to figure out a way to wrangle him. Still, it’s likely that they’ll have to deal with 2026 World Series hero Yoshinobu Yamamoto and an impressive 25-year-old hurler in the form of Justin Wrobleski. If we’re going on form then Emmet Sheehan should get the ball for Los Angeles in this series. If not then it’s also possible that Roki Sasaki could get a start, though I’m sure that the Dodgers would much rather see Sheehan take a crack at keeping Atlanta’s lineup quiet.
When it comes to this Dodgers lineup, well, it’s the same ol’ stuff. They’re nine-deep and the easy outs will be few and far in between with this crew. With that being said, they did suffer through a bit of a power drought as the team’s ability to hit the long ball escaped them for a bit. Hopefully, that trend continues through this week once the Braves get a hold of them. They also had to recently suffer through the ignominy of a four-game losing streak. In typical Dodgers fashion, though, even the losing streak seemed to go LA’s way because everybody else in the division had just as long of a losing streak or an even longer one so the streak didn’t even hurt them in the NL West. That’s just how it seems to go for this team!
Current streaks in the NL West:
Giants: lost 5 Dodgers: lost 4 Padres: lost 4 Diamondbacks: lost 3 Rockies: lost 3
This is the first time in MLB history every team in a division was on a 3+ game losing streak at the end of a given day.
With that being said, you know this team isn’t going to stay down for long. Ohtani is just too good at the plate and he’s surrounded by guys like Max Muncy, Andy Pages, Hyeseong Kim, Miguel Rojas and Freddie Freeman. Then they’ve got guys like Dalton Rushing, Alex Call, Teoscar Hernández and Will Smith who can deliver when called upon as well. The fact that the offense is still clicking this well without Mookie Betts is a testament to how deep and talented this crew is.
The Braves are going to have their work cut out for them and it’ll truly be an auspicious occasion if Atlanta’s streak of not losing a series is still on the line once they get to Dodger Stadium. I’m personally very excited to see how this series goes and hopefully the Braves will have taken care of business in Seattle beforehand in order to give this early-season showdown the level of hype that it deserves. Let’s see what happens!
Friday, May 8 at 10:10 p.m. ET (BravesVision) Saturday, May 9 at 9:10 p.m. ET (BravesVision) Sunday, May 10 at 4:10 p.m. ET (BravesVision, Gray TV)
There’s almost all positive news about the Cubs this week, as they took five of six from the Padres and Diamondbacks, the last five all in a row. Winning 15 of their last 18 games, the Cubs enter this week’s series against the second-place Reds two games in the lead of the NL Central.
Here’s who was hot and not for the Cubs over the past week.
Three up
Ian Happ continues his solid, consistent season
Happ batted .316/.519/.684 (6-for-19) over the week with two doubles, a triple, a home run and seven walks. That .519 OBP is very impressive and Happ is now riding a career-high 24-game on-base streak. For the season, Happ leads the Cubs with eight home runs, 24 walks and 25 runs scored.
Imanaga pitched just once this past week, but it was another excellent outing. He held the Diamondbacks scoreless for seven innings Saturday, allowing four hits with just one walk, and striking out five. Best of all this year, Imanaga has allowed just three home runs in 41.1 innings, and not more than one in any of his seven starts. His 0.847 WHIP ranks second in the National League (Tyler Glasnow, 0.824).
Brown is being used by Craig Counsell in high-leverage multi-inning relief and he has taken to it very, very well. Over this past week: 5.2 innings, 19 batters faced, one unearned run. Only three of the 19 batters he faced reached base, and on Wednesday in San Diego, he recorded five outs on just 11 pitches, including this key double-play ball [VIDEO].
H/T to Carson Kelly, who is quietly putting together a fine season.
Also a H/T to Michael Busch, who has shown signs of coming out of his early-season slump.
Three down
What is up with Alex Bregman?
Bregman did have a two-hit game last week — a game he didn’t start, he went 2-for-2 after entering in the seventh inning.
But overall, he batted just .190/.320/.238 (4-for-21) over the week, and hasn’t shown much power this year (four doubles, a triple, three home runs in 136 at-bats). He’s drawn 18 walks so his .333 OBP is decent.
Then he had a brain fart on a bunt on Friday that wound up going for a double.
The Cubs are winning without production from Bregman, so if he ever does get going, that’ll be a nice bonus.
Ryan Rolison and Corbin Martin have struggled
These guys are the back end of the bullpen and both have had good games this year — but not this past week. Martin walked the bases loaded Wednesday in San Diego and got bailed out by Brown. Then he had a two-run inning in garbage time Sunday. Rolison had been pretty good early on, then got hit hard by the D-backs Friday.
Both of these guys will probably not be on the roster once the Cubs’ injured relievers begin to return. It’s possible Ethan Roberts might replace Martin within the next couple of days.
Moisés Ballesteros had a rough week — until Sunday
Ballesteros went 1-for-20 in the first five games against the Padres and D-backs, though the one hit was a home run in San Diego. There were some thoughts that maybe the league was adjusting to him.
Cubs designated hitter Moisés Ballesteros, who is in the bottom four percent of sprint speed, per Statcast, took a big secondary lead on the play and beat out Arenado’s throw to second, giving the Cubs an extra out.
“It doesn’t matter how fast a runner you are; you can still take a great secondary and get there as fast as you can,” Counsell said. “I think we’ve stressed that to (Ballesteros). I think that’s important to (Ballesteros), and (he’s) had some pretty good examples of it and that’s another one.”
This is what good management and coaching can do. Good stuff.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 28: Craig Kimbrel #46 of the New York Mets celebrates after striking out the final batter on the Washington Nationals at Citi Field on April 28, 2026 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. The New York Mets defeated the Washington Nationals 8-0. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images
TUESDAY
Bo Bichette became the first Met to homer on the first pitch the Mets saw since Brandon Nimmo off Adam Wainwright on June 17, 2023
Craig Kimbrel struck out three batters swinging in an outing for the 63rd time in his career, but only the fifth time since the start of 2022. One of those came against the Mets in the second-to-last game of the 2023 season, when he fanned Tim Locastro, DJ Stewart, and Tuesday’s catcher Francisco Alvarez swinging.
The Mets had a shutout victory while scoring eight runs or more at Citi Field. They’ve done that five times in the past five seasons, and four of those five have come against the Nationals; a 10-1 win on May 31, 2022, an 8-0 win October 4, 2022, a 10-0 win on September 18, 2024, and Tuesday. Speaking of that second one…
WEDNESDAY
The homer Curtis Mead hit off Carl Edwards Jr. was the third homer Edwards has allowed at Citi Field. The first was hit by someone of the same first name as Mead – Curtis Granderson, on June 14, 2017. The second was hit by the man behind the plate for Mead’s homer – Francisco Alvarez, who hit his first big league homer off Edwards on October 4, 2022.
The Mets tallied 15 K’s but lost by 12 runs. It’s only the third time in the modern era that a team has recorded that many strikeouts while losing by that great a margin. The Twins did it in a 15-2 loss against the Orioles on July 9, 2023, and the Padres did it in a 13-1 loss in Washington on July 25, 2009.
The Mets lost by 12 runs for the first time since July 5, 2024, when they lost by an identical score of 14-2 in Pittsburgh.
THURSDAY
Freddy Peralta’s 1-0, 98-mph fastball to Jorbit Vivas in the top of the sixth inning was the fastest pitch he’s thrown as a Met, and the fastest he’s thrown since a 98.5-mph fastball to Nico Hoerner on August 18, 2025.
CJ Abrams hit only the second go-ahead home run against the Mets in the eighth inning or later at Citi Field since the arrival of Grimace in June 2024. The other also came off the bat of a Nat, when Daylen Lile hit a two-run, inside-the-park homer in the top of the 11th on September 20, 2025.
FRIDAY
Since debuting in 2023, Ronny Mauricio has now had 6 extra-base hits with an exit velocity of 110 mph or higher out of 19 total XBH (31.6%). It’s a small sample size, but of players with at least 10 XBH since 2023, that percent ranks ninth behind Munetaka Murakami, Giancarlo Stanton, Oneil Cruz, Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani, Carter Jensen, James Wood, and Ronald Acuña Jr.
SATURDAY
Nolan McLean’s four-inning start snapped a streak of 14 straight outings with five or more innings pitched to begin his career. The last MLB pitcher to do that was Matt Harvey, who began his career with 44 straight outings of five or more innings pitched until only lasting four on May 23, 2015 in Pittsburgh.
The Angels handed the Mets their third walk-off loss of the season, with New York having also lost in walk-off fashion to the Cardinals on April 1 and the Cubs on April 19. The only team that has endured more walk-off losses this season is the Angels themselves.
The Mets lost in walk-off fashion to the Angels for the second time in franchise history, with the other coming on a hit-by-pitch on April 11, 2014. Though the two games were 12 years apart, Mike Trout had exactly two hits, one walk, and two strikeouts in both contests.
SUNDAY
Mark Vientos’ 427-foot homer off the rocks at Angel Stadium was the farthest ball hit by a Met since…Mark Vientos’ 434-foot homer at Wrigley Field on April 18.
Vientos notched his sixth career multi-homer game. At 26 years and 143 days old, Vientos is one of only six Mets with six multi-homer games by his age, joining: Darryl Strawberry (17), David Wright (12), Pete Alonso (7), Ike Davis (6), and teammate Francisco Alvarez (6).
Clay Holmes turned in his seventh consecutive outing of at least five innings pitched and no more than two earned runs allowed to begin the season. That’s now tied for the third-longest streak to open a season in Mets history, behind only a pair of Jacob deGrom streaks (10 straight in 2021 and 9 straight in 2020).
Holmes now has three starts this season where he’s recorded an out in the seventh inning. That’s already more than any Mets right-hander had last season (the only 2025 Met with more such starts was David Peterson, who had seven).
Miscellaneous Mets stat of the week: Howard Johnson is the Mets’ all-time leader with 30 homers in the ninth inning or later. During Johnson’s Mets tenure (1985-1993), those 30 homers were the most in baseball in the ninth inning or later.
Suzyn Waldman spent decades sitting next to John Sterling in broadcast booths around the world and she offered a very simple explanation of why a whole sport is mourning the Yankees broadcaster who died Monday at age 87.
“That kind of love for a team and that kind of love for his fan base, there will never be another person like that,” Waldman said on WFAN hours after Sterling’s death was announced.
Waldman said her favorite Sterling moment was not one of his historic “It is high! It is far! It is gone!” and unique home run calls like “Bern, baby, Bern” for Bernie Williams. It is a simple call of a big moment that she cherishes: Derek Jeter’s 3,000th hit on July 9, 2011, when Jeter homered off David Price to reach that milestone.
“He had tears coming down his face. He was crying. I was crying,” Waldman said. “When you see someone’s whole career – we met Derek Jeter when he was just 18 years old. That call was absolutely perfect. And he did it perfectly while he was really emotional.”
Waldman said Sterling never wrote down any of his iconic calls. What came out of him, she said, came from his heart.
She pointed to his call of the final out of the 1996 World Series. Charlie Hayes caught a popup in foul territory for the Yankees’ first championship in 18 years.
“Go back and listen to what he said. He never wrote anything down. So, what came out of him, came out of his heart,” Waldman said. “And it was perfect, just perfect.”
Sterling called 5,631 games for the Yankees over 36 seasons, beginning in 1989. He never missed a game for the first 30 years, a streak of 5,060. He retired abruptly early in the 2024 season but came back to call the World Series one final time.
“Every day was a unique, funny, strange, wonderful experience,” Waldman said. “One of a kind”
Born John Sloss in Manhattan, Sterling started his play-by-play career with the NBA’s Baltimore Bullets in 1970-71. He came back to New York in 1971, calling Islanders hockey and Nets basketball. He spent nine years in Atlanta calling Braves and Hawks games for Turner Sports before returning to New York in 1989 to take the Yankees job. Sterling won 12 Emmy Awards and was nominated for the Ford C. Frick Award from the Baseball Hall of Fame twice.
NEW YORK — Anthony Volpe’s rehab from left shoulder surgery ended, but the shortstop’s next step is not rejoining the New York Yankees.
With José Caballero excelling as New York’s everyday shortstop, the AL East-leading Yankees announced they had optioned Volpe to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.
“Caballero is playing the heck out of the position and playing really well,” manager Aaron Boone said before an 11-3 win over Baltimore. “That complicates it.”
Volpe batted .250 (11 for 44) in 13 minor league rehabilitation games, mostly for Double-A Somerset. He reached the maximum 20th day for a rehab assignment in the minors.
If Volpe remains in the minors for another 20 days or more, it would delay his free-agent eligibility by a year until after the 2029 season.
Volpe had left shoulder surgery on Oct. 14, a week after the Yankees were eliminated by Toronto in the AL Division Series.
Volpe hit .212 with 19 homers and a career-high 72 RBIs last year and made a career-high 19 errors, tied for third-most among major league shortstops. He got a cortisone shot on Sept. 10 after reaggravating a previous shoulder injury three days earlier.
Volpe also had a cortisone shot during the All-Star break. He initially got hurt when he felt a pop in his shoulder during a loss to Tampa Bay on May 3 last season.
As a rookie in 2023, Volpe won a Gold Glove and hit .209 with 21 homers, 60 RBIs and had 24 stolen bases after winning the shortstop job in spring training.
He batted .243 with 12 homers and 60 RBIs in 2024.
In the 2024 playoffs, Volpe batted .286 and hit a grand slam in Game 4 of the World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Caballero has started at shortstop in 33 of the Yankees’ 34 games this season. On Friday, he had a go-ahead, second-inning homer off Baltimore’s Cade Povich. He is batting .259 with four homers, 12 RBIs and 13 stolen bases.
“He’s been right in the middle of that, defensively and offensively,” Boone said. “He’s earned some opportunities there. It’s really as simple as that.”
A 29-year-old acquired from Tampa Bay last July 31, Caballero is hitting .316 (24 for 76) with 11 RBIs in his last 21 games.
LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 28: Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani (17) reacts after throwing a pitch during the MLB game between the Miami Marlins and the Los Angeles Dodgers on April 28, 2026 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, CA. (Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani has six player of the month honors in his career, but on Monday he won his first career pitcher of the month award, taking home top National League honors for his excellent mound work in March and April.
Ohtani allowed only four total runs, two of them earned in his 30 innings of work, with 34 strikeouts and nine walks to go with his 0.60 ERA and 2.24 xERA in five starts. Among NL pitchers with at least 30 innings, Ohtani led the league in ERA, xERA, and FIP (1.98), and ranked sixth in strikeout rate (28.6 percent) and ninth in strikeout-minus-walk rate (21 percent).
Ohtani has led the National League in ERA after each of his five starts, but only intermittently so as his innings total has at times lagged behind the total number of Dodgers games played. He’s completed exactly six innings in each of his starts thus far, and will need to do so again to qualify for the leaderboard on Tuesday, pitching in the Dodgers’ 36th game of the season, in Houston.
Tyler Glasnow was among the other National League pitchers receiving votes for the monthly honor, with his 2.56 ERA, 3.07 xERA and 23.6-percent strikeout-minus-walk rate with 47 strikeouts and 13 walks in 38 2/3 innings over six starts.
The Dodgers won two pitcher of the month awards last season, both by Yoshinobu Yamamoto, in March/April and in September.
CLEVELAND, OH - APRIL 22: Yordan Alvarez #44 of the Houston Astros celebrates with teammates in the dugout after hitting a two-run home run in the first inning during the game between the Houston Astros and the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on Wednesday, April 22, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Grace Hoppel/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The latest news on the Houston Astros and from around MLB:
Is Astros Manager Joe Espada’s job hanging by a thread? MLB Insider Bob Nightengale addressed that and more with our Craig Larson Jr. in Four Big Questions:
AJ Blubaugh, who has not been pitching in longer outings recently, gave the Astros a very important 11 outs Sunday:
AJ Blubaugh has thrown 3 2/3 innings on 59 pitches. His previous season high was 44 pitches. Steven Okert was warming through the sixth, apparently in case Jarren Duran came up again. Blubaugh prevented that by getting Caleb Durbin to pop out with two on. Still 1-1.
Brice Matthews and Mauricio Dubon text each other to talk trash. This is awesome.
Brice Matthews said Mauricio Dubón texted him to "catch the ball" on Thursday after Matthews couldn't haul in Adley Rutschman's grand slam in Baltimore. After catching Willson Contreras' deep fly ball today, Matthews said he plans to text Dubón that "and some other choice words"
Bryan Abreu pitched 2 innings without giving up a run for the win Sunday. Yes, this is real life.
The Astros “didn’t have a ton of options” to navigate a bullpen game Sunday. Extending AJ Blubaugh and an encouraging day for Bryan Abreu helped them escape Boston with a series win, while highlighting a staff stretched thin:https://t.co/8ZquYAYugV
Houston’s much-maligned defense performed better this weekend at Fenway:
What two defensive moments – one ground ball, one fly ball – reflected for Spencer Arrighetti and Brice Matthews in an Astros win Saturday at Fenway Park:https://t.co/Tf81xk1XmQ
Astros dodged a major bullet with Christian Walker avoiding injury after getting beaned:
Christian Walker said he cleared concussion testing and feels "OK, luckily" after being hit in the helmet by a pitch in Saturday's ninth inning: https://t.co/xNAwHxx7lI
Zach Dezenzo is starting to find his rhythm at the plate on his rehab assignment:
Zach Dezenzo homered for the first time this season. He’s on a rehab assignment with the Hooks and is on a 4-game hitting streak. pic.twitter.com/vMp64yOfv2
First home series since firing the manager, the hitting coach and various other coaches. Red Sox hit .107 with a .492 OPS with runners in scoring position. 7 runs scored. 29 runners left on base.
Deals like this are probably why the Red Sox aren’t doing so well:
The Atlanta Braves pulled off one of the biggest thefts in baseball history, courtesy of the Boston Red Sox. The Red Sox sent Chris Sale + $17,000,000 cash to Atlanta in exchange for a prospect that hasn't panned out.
— The Voice Of Reason (@SportsAndStock1) May 3, 2026
Chris Sale is pitching his way into Cooperstown: 7 innings 3 hits 1 run 11 strikeouts He is about to go 6-1 with a 2.16 ERA and 46 strikeouts with Atlanta leading 8-1 over the Rockies at Coors Field.
BRONX, NY - APRIL 29: Miguel Cairo #41 of the New York Yankees makes a throw during the game against the Oakland A's on April 29, 2004 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, New York. The Yankees defeated the Athletics 7-5. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Our Yankees birthday series has covered players from every era of Yankees history, from the legends immortalized in Monument Park to virtually unknown characters of franchise lore. If those are the two extremes of the sliding scale of fame, Miguel Cairo can probably be found directly down the middle. Cairo was your prototypical dependable reserve—a 17-year big leaguer who played over 1500 games between the regular season and playoffs for nearly a third of all teams in the league, but never played a starring role. Cairo was, above all, the kind of guy you remember during idle conversations with friends years after he took the field.
One of Cairo’s best MLB seasons came in 2004, during the first of two different stints in the Bronx. He filled the keystone position admirably that year as the direct predecessor to franchise cornerstone Robinson Canó. Two years later he returned to the Yankees and stayed through August of 2007 before his winding journey through the league resumed for another five seasons.
Miguel Jesus Cairo Born: May 4, 1975 (Anaco, Venezuela) Yankees Tenure: 2004, 2006-07
Cairo was born in Anaco, a city in northern Venezuela further inland and east of the capital Caracas. (For those curious, Anaco is roughly 6,200 miles away from the capital of Egypt—Cairo, New York is about 4,000 miles closer.) Cairo signed at the age of 15 with the Dodgers as an amateur free agent in 1990, and began a slow and steady climb through the Minor Leagues in 1992. He left his first organization, for whom he never played a game, in a trade to the Mariners, a team he wouldn’t play for until the back-nine of his career in 2008. He was shipped to Seattle in a November 1995 deal for third baseman and clairvoyant Mike Blowers—then flipped by the M’s to Toronto in another trade the following month.
It was with the Blue Jays in 1996 that Cairo first had a cup of coffee in the Show—and we do mean a cup of coffee, as he played just nine games and logged 30 plate appearances for a fourth-place team. In the offseason, the Cubs acquired Cairo in a prospect swap, and afforded him 16 games of Major League action for an even less impressive team. Then came the 1998 expansion draft, in which the Diamondbacks and Devil Rays entered the league. Cairo was selected by the latter club and at last planted roots in the Cairo of America: St. Petersburg, Florida..
Cairo’s official rookie season, which came in the Devil Rays’ rookie season of 1998, was by bWAR the best of his career. While he only managed a 74 OPS+ at the plate as their everyday second baseman—a mark well in line with career norms—he quickly proved to be a strong defensive player. Cairo stayed in Tampa for three seasons before being released at the end of 2000. He signed with Oakland, then returned to the Cubs in a preseason trade for Eric Hinske. Chicago waived him in the summer, so he caught on with St. Louis at the end of 2001, hitting .333 down the stretch for a playoff team.
Cairo couldn’t replicate that success at the dish in two subsequent seasons with the Redbirds, but had at last reached free agency ahead of 2004. Enter: the big bad Yankees. In a move seen as highly unfair to the rest of baseball, the Yankees signed Cairo in their most publicized deal of the offseason to form a new star double-play combo with captain Derek Jeter—the kind of co-star capable of hitting clutch home runs like this go-ahead grand slam in Texas on August 12.
…Okay, fine. Maybe A-Rod was a bit more important to the Yankees’ success that season than our hero, but Cairo was quite valuable for them! Incumbent second-sacker Enrique Wilson wasn’t cutting the mustard at the plate, so Joe Torre made the move to Cairo about two months into the season. Miguel rewarded his skipper with one of the best offensive seasons of his career, hitting .292/.346/.417 (good for an OPS+ of exactly 100), giving the Yankees a perfectly pesky ninth-place hitter that opponents couldn’t overlook.
Enough ink has been spilled on the Yanks’ 2004 postseason that we won’t belabor it here, but Cairo continued to play well for New York throughout the run—posting a .383 OBP across 11 postseason games. He was particularly effective against Boston, grabbing seven of his ten hits in the ALCS.
Cairo became a free agent again in the offseason, so he simply moved across town to Queens to spend 2005 with the Mets before the Yankees welcomed him back to their neighborhood in 2006. Of course, the Bombers had a new everyday second baseman in town: the smooth-swinging, sweet-smiling Robinson Canó. So Cairo wasn’t about to get his starting role back, but plied his trade as a dependable utilityman for the Yankees throughout 2006 and the better part of 2007. By August, however, the 33-year old appeared to be running out of steam, so the Yanks cut him to give more looks to young players like Wilson Betemit and Shelley Duncan—two more excellent Remember-Some-Guys guys.
Cairo’s journey was far from over. After sojourning in St. Louis in September (say that five times fast), he had a few more destinations to check off his bucket list. In 2008, he finally played for the Mariners, who had dealt him away 13 years earlier. A season later at age 35, Cairo joined the defending champion Phillies, and made a few appearances off the bench throughout their NL pennant run—though he never appeared in that year’s Fall Classic against the Yanks.
Cairo spent the final three years of his playing career in the Queen City, hitting to a highly respectable .751 OPS with the Reds across 193 contests in 2010 and 2011. But in yet another win for sports’ greatest dynasty, Father Time, Cairo’s numbers plummeted to subterranean depths in 2012. The vet made three more appearances in the playoffs for the Redlegs in their NLDS loss to the Giants before finally calling it quits.
Unsurprisingly, Cairo has stuck around baseball since retiring as a player. His MLB coaching career began in 2021 with the White Sox, and he served as interim manager for Chicago in 2022 after Tony La Russa stepped away for good. He did the same for the Nationals last season after the dismissal of skipper Dave Martinez.
This season, Cairo joined the Orioles’ staff as an infield coach—meaning he’ll be celebrating his 52nd birthday tonight at Yankee Stadium. Welcome back, Miguel! ¡Y feliz cumpleaños!
I’ve often said to friends that the Guy We Remember is one of the most universally respected kinds of people in American life; players who weren’t good enough or prominent enough for public opinion to tilt one direction or the other, but whose mention elicits a hearty “oh yeah, that dude!” Cairo is the perfect example of a guy we fans love to remind ourselves of—but owing to his longevity in the league and success as a coach, it’s clear he was more than just a great pull on Immaculate Grid. It wouldn’t be surprising if Cairo gets an opportunity as a full-time manager in MLB someday soon. After all, it’s hard to imagine there’s anything he hasn’t seen throughout a full life spent on the diamond.
See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.
It's the first full week of May, and that dinger weather is knocking on the door. There are some great spots today with a lot of +EV home run props and MLB player props. Let's dig out our favorites today on a board with some bad starters and good wind.
Michael Busch is in a great spot to break out of a home run drought with the wind blowing to right field at Wrigley today. I'll also circle some big-time power possibilities for Cal Raleigh and William Contreras.
These are my favorite home run props for Monday, May 4.
UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.
Best MLB home run props today
Player to hit a HR
Odds
William Contreras
+650
Cal Raleigh
+390
Michael Busch
+378
💲Today's HR parlay
+15121
Home run pick: William Contreras (+650)
The St. Louis Cardinals could be giving up runs from start to finish today, with Kyle Leahy sporting some of the worst BlastContact numbers and HR/FB rates among MLB starters. He’s a groundball pitcher, but when the ball gets elevated, it’s leaving the yard — and that has William Contreras written all over it.
Contreras has the best BlastContact% on the Milwaukee Brewers over the last two weeks and an elite Ideal Attack Angle, ranking second in baseball at 81.4% over that span.
The right-handed bat also benefits from a double-digit wind blowing out to left. Once he’s through with Leahy, he’ll get a crack at the Cardinals' bullpen, which has one of the worst ERAs in baseball lately.
Time: 7:45 p.m. ET
Where to watch: Cardinals.TV, Brewers.TV
Home run pick: Cal Raleigh (+390)
It’s not every day we get +EV on a stick like Cal Raleigh, but today is the day to back a big name at value. This is the top +EV home-run play on the board, per Covers projections, and has a fair price of +290.
Raleigh draws a strong matchup vs. JR Ritchie, who has been fortunate with a .227 BABIP and carries shaky HR/FB numbers in a small sample. His ground-ball rate won’t bail him out much, and Atlanta Braves starters tend to be pushed into the 90–95 pitch range even with subpar stuff.
Ritchie has been tougher on righties, but all three homers he’s allowed have come off left-handed bats — and the switch-hitting Raleigh has six of his seven homers vs. RHPs.
There’s some risk after Raleigh sat out yesterday with right-side soreness, but a recent MRI came back clean. He took BP on Sunday and said he’s feeling better. The bat wasn’t slowing down anyway, with five homers over his last 11 games.
Time: 9:40 p.m. ET
Where to watch: Mariners.TV, BravesVision
Home run pick: Michael Busch (+378)
You’re looking at one of the best HR environments on the board at Wrigley Field. With ~16 mph winds blowing out to right field, and temps around 70°F, the carry is significantly boosted — ideal for left-handed power.
Michael Busch gets a great matchup vs. Chase Petty, who is making his season debut for the big club after being just average at Triple-A. He logged six innings last year with the Cincinnati Reds and gave up three home runs on 14 hits. He also threw just 2 1/3 innings in his last outing and will likely hand things off early to a bullpen primed for regression.
Busch hasn’t gone deep in nine straight games, but he had an extra-base hit in every game vs. Arizona and finished that series 5-for-10 with 10 total bases.
Time: 7:40 p.m. ET
Where to watch: Reds.TV, Marquee
Josh Inglis' 2026 Transparency Record
HR picks: 9-55, -7.9 units
Today’s HR parlay
William Contreras
Bet Now +15121
Cal Raleigh
Michael Busch
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - MAY 2: Designated hitter Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts after striking out against the St. Louis Cardinals during the eighth inning at Busch Stadium on May 2, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Jeff Le/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Dodgers offense reached its nadir to date in 2026 last week, failing to hit a home run in any of their six games, losing four — two each to the Miami Marlins and St. Louis Cardinals. It’s the longest home run drought for Los Angeles in a dozen years.
Batter of the week
The choices on offense were sparse here, but we’ll go with Max Muncy with his two doubles, four singles, and three walks, narrowly over Teoscar Hernández with his five singles and five walks. No Dodgers regular had an OPS of at least .800 last week.
Honorable mention to Alex Call, who had three hits in six at-bats.
Pitcher of the week
Justin Wrobleski did not strike any Cardinals out on Sunday but still pitched six scoreless innings, something not done by a Dodgers pitcher in 35 years. Wrobleski since joining the rotation has 29 scoreless innings in his 31 frames.
A close call over Shohei Ohtani, who struck out nine in his six innings on Tuesday, while allowing two runs (one earned) against the Marlins.
Week 6 results
2-4 record 16 runs scored (2.67 per game) 20 runs allowed (3.33 per game) .399 pythagorean win percentage
Year to date
21-13 record 175 runs scored (5.15 per game) 112 runs allowed (3.29 per game) .694 pythagorean win percentage (24-10)
The Dodgers run the Sonny Jackson gauntlet this week, finishing up the road trip with three games against the Astros in Houston, then return home to host the first-place Atlanta Braves in Los Angeles.
Apr 30, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Chase Shugart (55) prepares to pitch during the ninth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images
Well now, that feels much, much better, doesn’t it? After getting their manager fired with their poor play on the field, the Phillies turned around and swept the inept Giants, then took two of three in Miami before wrapping that series up today. It’s pretty impressive what good play will do for a team.
Three up
Zack Wheeler – Boy, it’s just nice having him back in the rotation. I know I wrote about him last week and how he looked good in the first start he made even if the results were so-so, but this week, he looked good and had good results to go with it. I think it was Tom McCarthy who talked about how when Wheeler is on the mound, it’s similar to when Roy Halladay or Cliff Lee in 2011 were on the mound: you just kind of expected to win the game they were pitching in. That’s a nice feeling to have.
Chase Shugart – Listen, let’s give credit where it’s due. Shugart has been a nice story this season. His fastball/sweeper combination has kept batters off the bases and he has missed barrels so far in the batter’s box. His being able to come on in a doubleheader and pitching in and win both games is commendable as they can be pitching staff crushers. Shugart ghostbusted the runner in the second game (hat tip, Phillies Therapy), which is a huge lift to a team that has to equal or better what is done in the top half of the tenth inning in an extra inning affair. Can he keep it up? Maybe! The team is likely just thankful he’s been competent so far.
Jesus Luzardo – Maybe it was Rob Thomson’s fault that Luzardo had been off at the beginning of the season. Because in two starts since Don Mattingly took over, Luzardo threw 13 1/3 innings and struck out 18, walking nobody. Coincidence? I think not.
Three down
Rafael Marchan – Marchan is not a major league hitter and should not be thought of as such. The idea that he and Garrett Stubbs and J.T. Realmuto should exist on the same roster is patently absurd, but this is the path that Don Mattingly and Dave Dombrowski have chosen. However, Marchan has been absolutely dreadful at the plate and should not have his defensive prowess behind the plate outweigh the fact that major league pitching is vexing to him.
Felix Reyes – Yeah, it’s probably time to send Reyes back to Lehigh Valley to get him some more playing time. If an outfielder is needed, best to bring back Bryan de la Cruz and let him twist in the 40-man roster limbo wind for a bit. Reyes is just proving he isn’t major league ready just yet (and that’s ok!).
The Phillies’ front office – First, the news came out that they were trying to hire Alex Cora before firing Thomson, then they just went ahead and fired Thomson anyway. Seems a bit bumbling if you asked me. Then, they had fans come to a game on Tuesday that was eventually rained out, but not before people were already there and in their seats. Maybe “bumbling” would be being kind with this one. Just not a couple of days of good looks here for the front office.