Detroit Tigers go for sweep against Tampa Bay Rays on Wednesday

Don’t look now, but the Detroit Tigers are undefeated in June after their 8-0 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on Tuesday night. Sure, the month is only two days old, but the Motor City Kitties have already scored as many runs (18) over the past pair of games as they did in the final six-and-a-half games of May.

I have no clue what happened to this team when the calendar flipped, but I am loving it!

On Wednesday afternoon, AJ Hinch’s squad will try to complete the sweep of the Rays with right-hander Troy Melton on the mound. The 25-year-old has provided some much-needed quality innings in his two starts so far in the 2026 campaign, and hopefully, he can continue to do so in the finale of the three-game series.

This will be his first-ever appearance against Tampa Bay.

Up against him will be fellow righty Nick Martinez, who has been superb so far this season, throwing seven straight quality starts — including three straight coming into Wednesday — while allowing no more than two runs in any of his 11 outings. The 35-year-old’s strikeout numbers are not particularly impressive, but he has been extraordinarily stingy when it comes to handing out free passes.

The last time Martinez faced the Tigers was last year on June 13, when he allowed four runs on eight hits and two walks while striking out five over five frames to take the loss. Hopefully, Detroit can replicate that effort — or better — on Wednesday.

Here is a look at how the two match up.

Detroit Tigers (24-38) vs. Tampa Bay Rays (36-22)

Time (ET): 1:10 p.m.
Place: Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, Florida
SB Nation Site:DRaysBay
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 63: RHP Troy Melton (1-0, 1.42 ERA) vs. RHP Nick Martinez (5-1, 1.62 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Melton212.28.08.038.13.400.3
Martinez1166.215.24.540.13.261.6

MELTON

MARTINEZ

Mets Daily Prospect Report, 6/3/26: Another day in paradise

Chris Suero of the Binghamton Rumble Ponies hits the ball during a Minor League Baseball game at TD Bank Ballpark in Bridgewater, United States, on May 17, 2026. (Photo by Dan Squicciarini/NurPhoto via Getty Images) | NurPhoto via Getty Images

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (29-28)

SCRANTON/WILKES-BARRE 6, SYRACUSE 5 (BOX)

Early on, the RailRiders and Mets matched each other tit-for-tat, with both teams failing to score in the first and second and then both teams scoring a run apiece in the third and fourth. In the later innings, the RailRiders pulled ahead and took a lead that eventually proved too large for the Mets to catch up. They certainly did, rallying in the bottom of the ninth and scoring three runs- all with two outs- but Kevin Parada flied out to former Met Kennedy Corona to end things with the tying run on second.

·  LF Nick Morabito: 1-4, K

·  REHAB ALERT DH Jorge Polanco: 0-3, BB

·  PH Yonny Hernández: 1-1, 2 RBI

·  C Francisco Alvarez: 2-3, 2 2B, RBI

·  C Kevin Parada: 0-2, K

·  1B Ryan Clifford: 0-4, 2 K

·  3B Andy Ibáñez: 1-4, R, HR (2), RBI, K

·  2B Ji Hwan Bae: 0-2, R, 2 BB, 2 SB (18, 19)

·  CF Cristian Pache: 0-4, 3 K

·  SS Jackson Cluff: 1-4, R, RBI, 2 K

·  RF Matt Rudick: 0-2, 2 R, 2 BB, K

·  LHP Zach Thornton: 4.0 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 4 BB, 4 K

·  RHP Ben Simon: 1.1 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 0 K, L (1-1)

·  RHP Alex Carrillo: 1.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 1 K

·  RHP Ryan Lambert: 0.0 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 0 K

·  RHP Ofreidy Gómez: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 4 K

ROSTER ALERT: New York Mets signed free agent 2B Christian Arroyo to a minor league contract.

ROSTER ALERT: 2B Christian Arroyo assigned to Syracuse Mets.

ROSTER ALERT: New York Mets sent 1B Jorge Polanco on a rehab assignment to Syracuse Mets.

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (18-34)

READING 3, BINGHAMTON 0 (BOX)

Binghamton got shutout, logging only two hits- both Chris Suero singles. Suero also added a stolen base, and outside of a Nick Lorusso walk, that was literally all the Rumble Ponies managed on the evening.

·  C Chris Suero: 2-4, 2 K, SB (16), E (7)

·  RF Eli Serrano III: 0-4, K

·  CF D’Andre Smith: 0-3

·  LF Jose Ramos: 0-3

·  3B Nick Lorusso: 0-2, BB

·  1B JT Schwartz: 0-3, K

·  DH Vincent Perozo: 0-3, K

·  2B Jaylen Palmer: 0-3, K

·  SS Wyatt Young: 0-3

·  LHP Max Green: 4.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K, E (1)

·  LHP Felipe De La Cruz: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

·  RHP Jordan Geber: 4.0 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 2 ER, 3 BB, 2 K, L (1-6)

ROSTER ALERT: SS Kevin Villavicencio assigned to Binghamton Rumble Ponies from St. Lucie Mets.

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (18-33)

BROOKLYN 2, JERSEY SHORE 1 (BOX)

Don’t look now, but the Brooklyn Cyclones are now the winners of their last 4- this one, sadly, was not a shutout. The BlueClaws got on the board first, scoring a run off of Noah Hall in the bottom of the second, but the Cyclones recouped that run and then some in the sixth. With Grae Kissinger on first, Corey Collins hit his fifth homer of the season off of the fence in right center into the “Jersey Shore” boardwalk area, putting Brooklyn on top. Dakota Hawkins pitched a 1-2-3 seventh, Ryan Dollar worked around a walk in the eighth, and Hoss Brewer did the same in the ninth, shutting the door on the BlueClaws and recording his second save.

·  2B Mitch Voit: 1-4, 2B

·  SS Grae Kessinger: 0-3, R, BB, 2 K

·  C Ronald Hernandez: 0-4, 2 K

·  1B Corey Collins: 1-3, R, HR (5), 2 RBI, BB

·  CF Yonatan Henriquez: 0-4, K

·  DH Daiverson Gutierrez: 0-3, BB, K

·  LF John Bay: 1-3, K

·  3B Colin Houck: 0-3, 2 K

·  RF JT Benson: 1-3, 2 K

·  RHP Noah Hall: 4.2 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 4 BB, 4 K, HBP

·  RHP Garrett Stratton: 1.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, WP, W (2-0)

·  RHP Dakota Hawkins: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, H (2)

·  RHP Ryan Dollar: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, WP, H (1)

·  RHP Hoss Brewer: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K, S (2)

ROSTER ALERT: RHP Jose Chirinos assigned to Brooklyn Cyclones from St. Lucie Mets.

ROSTER ALERT: SS Jamari Baylor assigned to Brooklyn Cyclones from St. Lucie Mets.

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (24-27)

POSTPONED (RAIN)

ROSTER ALERT: 1B Jackson Hauge assigned to St. Lucie Mets from FCL Mets.

ROSTER ALERT: St. Lucie Mets transferred OF Simon Juan to the Development List.

ROSTER ALERT: St. Lucie Mets activated SS Trey Snyder from the 60-day injured list.

Rookie: FCL Mets (9-9)

NO GAME (SCHEDULE)

STAR OF THE NIGHT

Corey Collins

GOAT OF THE NIGHT

The Binghamton Offense

Chicago Cubs history unpacked, June 3

Free of charge for the discerning reader.

Happy birthday to Munenori Kawasaki, and a mighty host of others.

Today in baseball history, in 1995 – Pedro Martinez of the Montreal Expos pitches nine perfect innings against San Diego before giving up a leadoff double to Bip Roberts in the 10th inning of the Expos’ 1-0 win. Martinez becomes the second pitcher in history, after Harvey Haddix, to have a perfect game broken up in extra innings, and other stories as well.

Today in baseball history:

Cubs Birthdays:Munenori Kawasaki*, Steve Smyth, José Molina, Robert Machado, John Dobbs.

Today in history:

  • 1539 – Spanish conquistador Hernando De Soto claims Florida for Spain.
  • 1871 – Jesse James & his gang robs Obocock Bank (Corydon Iowa), of $15,000.
  • 1943 – A mob of 60 from the Los Angeles Naval Reserve Armory beats up everyone perceived to be Hispanic, starting the week-long Zoot Suit Riots.
  • 1946 – First bikini bathing suit is displayed in Paris.
  • 1961 – American President John F. Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev meet in Vienna.
  • 1989 – Beginning of the Tiananmen Square Massacre as Chinese troops open fire on pro-democracy supporters in Beijing.
  • 1991 – Thomas Hearns captures WBA light heavyweight title.
  • 1993 – 66th National Spelling Bee: Geoff Hooper wins spelling kamikaze.
  • 2017 – The Amazing World of Dr. Seuss Museum opens in Springfield, Massachusetts.

Today in Music History:

  • 1967 – Aretha Franklin‘s cover of the Otis Redding song “Respect” reaches No. 1.
  • 1970 – Ray Davies of The Kinks travels round trip NY-London to change one word in “Lola,” (Coca-Cola to Cherry Cola) because of a BBC commercial reference ban.
  • 1972 – “Hot Rod Lincoln” by Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen hits No. 9.
  • 1976 – Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” goes Gold.
  • 1992 – “MTV Unplugged” broadcasts singer-songwriter Paul Simon and 11 of his band members performing in Queens, NYC.
  • 2013 – New Zealand teenage singer-songwriter Lorde releases her debut single “Royals”.
  • 2019 – Jay-Z named the world’s first billionaire rapper by Forbes magazine.
  • 2023 Ed Sheeran concert with 77,900 concertgoers breaks attendance record at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

*pictured.

How concerned are you about Aaron Judge’s injury?

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 29: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees takes batting practice before their game against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on May 29, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees lost an annoying game last night in a series opener in the Bronx against the Guardians, but that’s probably not what’s front-of-mind for most of their fans. For the first time all year, Aaron Judge was absent from the startng lineup, as manager Aaron Boone revealed that he’s been battling a bone bruise on his right rib cage that’s affected his shoulder.

In short, it stinks, and while Judge is set to see a specialist today to get another opinion, it appears that for now, the Yankees are in “wait and see” mode with no IL move just yet. What was that Homer Simpson once said about The Waiting Game?

Yeah. We don’t have a collective game of “Hungry Hungry Hippos” to distact us, so instead I ask you to rate your concern about Judge’s injury. Maybe it won’t be much in the grand scheme of things—remember when the world freaked out about Juan Soto’s elbow in June 2024 and those were almost literally the only games he missed all year? And yet we can’t rule out something more.

So let’s say it’s a scale of 1-5, with 1 representing no conern at all and 5 representing PANIC CITY. I think I’m honestly at a 2. Bone bruises just make me wary on principle; call it long-term damage from what Derek Jeter’s 2012 bone bruise turnedinto, though obviouly he was four years older than Judge is now and it was a different part of the body. But I do think that this will ultimately be something minor causing Judge to only miss a few games. Maybe. Hopefully.

My primary hope is that if it’s looking like they do need to put him on the IL after the specialist meets with him, they just get it over with and don’t play a man short for too long. Again, different injury, but Judge had a quick 10-day IL stint last year to get over a right elbow flexor strain and didn’t miss a beat upon returning. Fingers crossed that this is the worst-case scenario.


Today on the site, Josh will deep-dive on what’s going on with Aaron Judge and what his bone bruise may or may not be affecting (as compared to his age), Matt will run through the Rivalry Roundup, and Jeremy will celebrate the 51st birthday of a former World Series champion and true defensive genius behind the plate. Later, we’ll talk prospects, as Scott looks back at a bumpy May for the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders, Michael breaks down George Lombard Jr.’s first month at Triple-A, and Andrés considers Carlos Lagrange’s development within the past month amid the recent news that he’ll be working out of the bullpen.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Cleveland Guardians

Time: 7:05 p.m. EST

Video: Amazon Prime Video, Guardians.tv

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

Mud Hens crush Cubs as Justin Verlander rehabs

Toledo Mud Hens 16, Iowa Cubs 1 (box)

With Justin Verlander on the mound, the Mud Hens’ offense honored their famous temp by absolutely mauling Cubs’ pitching on Tuesday.

Verlander, sidelined after one start this spring with a hip issue, looked pretty good. He had no trouble at all with the Cubs, scattering three singles and a double without allowing a walk. He struck out four, pounding the zone consistently throughout his outing. The slider and his changeup were both pretty sharp, and his fastball command looked good as well. Verlander averaged 93.5 mph and 19 inches of IVB, with several pitches topping out at 95 mph. That will do pretty nicely, and hopefully he can find a little more gas in the tank as he builds up. He threw 48 of 64 pitches for strikes. Presumably he’ll get one more rehab start before returning to the Tigers.

Funny and nostalgic seeing Verlander in a Mud Hens uniform. Last time I saw him pitch at Fifth Third Park was a rehab start in 2015 before he returned to the Tigers and served notice that his incredible career was nowhere close to done. The only guy who hit him in that game was a young prospect named Francisco Lindor.

The Hens gave the future Hall of Famer run support right out of the chute. Max Clark started the game with a walk, and two batters later Max Anderson cracked a two-run shot to left. In the third, Ben Malgeri and Anderson doubled back-to-back, and then Eduardo Valencia cleared the bases with his 10th homer on the year to make it 5-0.

In the fifth, Malgeri led off with his second double of the game, and Anderson reached on an error. Gage Workman plated Malgeri with a single and Valencia singled to load the bases. Trei Cruz stepped into the box and lifted a towering shot to left for a grand slam. 10-0 Hens. They went on to score two more runs in the inning.

Jack Little gave up the lone Cubs run in the seventh. Max Clark launched a solo shot in the eighth against a position player, his third on the year. With Anderson and Workman on in the ninth, Cruz lined out to center field, but a poor throw from the Cubs center fielder allowed both runs to score and make it 16-1.

Anderson: 4-6, 4 R, 4 RBI, 2B, HR

Cruz: 2-6, R, 4 RBI, 2B, HR, K

Clark: 1-3, 3 R, RBI, HR, 3 BB

Valencia: 2-3, 2 R, 3 RBI, HR

Verlander (W, 1-0): 5.0 IP, 0 R, 4 H, 0 BB, 3 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 1:08 p.m. ET start in Des Moines on Wednesday.

Richmond Flying Squirrels 8, Erie SeaWolves 7 (box)

A late rally fell just short on Tuesday night in Richmond.

The SeaWolves scored quickly as Seth Stephenson doubled to open the game, and then scored on a John Peck grounder that went for an error. That 1-0 lead didn’t last, as Max Alba allowed three runs in the bottom half and single runs in the fourth and fifth.

In the top of the fifth, Stephenson singled with one out and stole his 25th base of the season. Brett Callahan followed with a walk, and Peck reached on an infield single to load the bases. Patience and a good eye from Thayron Liranzo helped him draw a walk that forced in a run, but Chris Meyers struck out and Andrew Jenkins grounded out to squander a chance at a big inning to get back into this one.

So it was 5-2 Richmond heading into the seventh inning. Stephenson drew a leadoff walk, but was shockingly caught stealing. Brett Callahan drew a walk to replace him, and Peck reached on an error. Liranzo drew another walk to load the bases, and with two outs, Jenkins came through with a two-run single to make it a 5-4 game.

Johan Simon did a nice job taking over from Alba and racking up five straight outs, but Dariel Fregio came on to allow three more runs in the bottom of the seventh. The Flying Squirrels needed those add-on runs.

In the top of the ninth, Peck led off with a double. Liranzo took a called strike three, but Peck stole third and scored on an errant throw from Richmond catcher Ty Hanchey. Jenkins singled with two outs, and he rode home on Izaac Pacheco’s sixth home run to make it an 8-7 game. Peyton Graham followed with a single as the potential tying run and Aaron Antonini drew a walk. Stephenson unfortunately struck out to end it.

Stephenson: 2-5, 2 R, BB, K, SB, CS

Peck: 2-5, 2 R, RBI, 2B, K, SB

Graham: 3-5, K

Alba (L, 0-2): 4.1 IP, 5 R, 4 ER, 8 H, BB, 6 K

Coming Up Next: They’ll get back at it on Wednesday at 7:05 p.m. ET.

Dayton Dragons 10, West Michigan Whitecaps 4 (box)

Hayden Minton put together an extemely Jekyll and Hyde outing, and the Whitecaps bullpen did nothing to let them get back into this one.

Minton punched out 10 hitters in 4.1 innings of work. He walked just one and allowed just four hits. The problem was that three of those hits were home runs. He allowed three in the top of the third, and one more as he departed in the fifth.

The Whitecaps answered right back after the Dragons three-run outburst with three of their own in the bottom of the third. Andrew Sojka led off with a walk and Junior Tilien singled. A Woody Hadeen ground out to first moved the runners, and two batters later Garrett Pennington launched a three-run shot, his ninth on the year.

Juanmi Vasquez and Zack Lee each allowed a run in relief. In the bottom of the eighth, Bryce Rainer drew a walk and Clayton Campbell singled. Rainer scored as Jackson Strong grounded into a double play to make it 6-44, but Ethan Sloan allowed four runs in the top of the ninth to end hopes of a comeback.

Pennington; 1-3, R, 3 RBI, HR, BB, K

Rainer: 1-2, R, 2 BB, K

Minton (L, 2-3): 4.1 IP, 4 ER, 4 H, BB, 10 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:35 p.m. ET start in Comstock Park on Wednesday.

Fort Myers Mighty Mussels 10, Lakeland Flying Tigers 2 (box)

We got some good news in this one, as left-hander Jake Miller made his season debut in a rehab outing. Miller was our preseason top pitching prospect in the system, although that’s a bit of a dubious honor considering he’s still not a top 100 caliber starter. After an injury plagued season in 2025 in which he was diagnosed with lumbar back issues that were later linked to hip labrum tears that required surgery on both hips, Miller spent until early May rehabbing and is just now ramping up in game action.

The game, however, did not go the Flying Tigers’ way as Grayson Grinsell was rocked in relief of Miller. Miller fired two scoreless innings of one-hit ball with a pair of strikeouts. He’s still going to need to develop a cutter or a harder breaking ball to go with a good fourseam-changeup combination and a slow sweeper, but Miller pounds the strike zone and has some deception and good armspeed that helps his stuff play up.

Jesus Pinto, rapidly getting love in Tigers’ prospecting circles, blasted a solo shot in the bottom of the second to give the Flying Tigers an early lead. Grinsell took over from Miller in the third and surrendered three runs. Jack Goodman answered back with a solo shot in the bottom of the third.

So it was 3-2 Fort Myers, and Grinsell then was tagged for three more runs in the fifth. They added on against Pedro Garcia, and the Flying Tigers offense stalled out despite several scoring opportunites later in the game.

Warwick: 2-4, 2B, 2 K

Espinal: 2-4, K

Miller: 2.0 IP, 0 R, H, 0 BB, 2 K

Grinsell (L, 3-2): 2.2 IP, 6 ER, 7 H, 2 BB, 5 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:30 p.m. ET start on Wednesday.

Rookie Ball

Our favorite lesser known pitching prospect, RHP Jhonan Coba, led the FCL Tigers to an 8-0 victory on Tuesday, although Johnathan Rogers, the Tigers 20th rounder in Scott Harris’ first draft in 2023, who recently re-signed with the club at age 21, got the win. Coba went three innings, allowing two hits, no walks, while striking out five. Cris Rodriguez doubled in that game, but struck out twice.

In the second game of a doubleheader, the FCL Tigers roster beat the Phillies 4-3 as well. Cristian Perez, a name to watch, homered in that one, his fifth already on the year for the 19-year-old center fielder. He holds a .990 OPS so far in 19 games.

Who calls pitches in MLB? Pushing buttons now an analytics battleground

WASHINGTON – Miami Marlins manager Clayton McCullough was lauding his ace, Sandy Alcantara, for the seven strong innings he pitched against the National League’s most potent offense, and delivering the usual platitudes one would expect in a victory postmortem.

He mixed his pitches well, McCullough said of the former Cy Young Award winner. Used his entire arsenal. Kept James Wood, the most dangerous man on the Washington Nationals, off balance in limiting the 6-foot-7 slugger to an infield single and striking him out twice.

Yet the credit for what went on between the lines really only extended to Alcantara’s execution of the pitches.

The road map to set up and punch out opposing batters was almost exclusively the domain of two men perched in a photo well next to the Marlins’ dugout, armed with reams of data and flashing numbers and hand gestures to catcher Joe Mack, who would then glance at a wristband on his left arm and relay their order to Alcantara by pushing buttons on his PitchCom device.

And then Alcantara would deliver the pitch of choice.

The technologically crude relay system belies the stupendous amount of data informing every pitch decision. And it represents the latest modern battleground in baseball’s never-ending conflict between touch and feel and decision sciences.

Marlins catcher Liam Hicks and Sandy Alcantara after a complete game in April.

Since September, the Marlins have called pitches from the dugout, taking away the traditional task of the catcher to strip the emotion and proverbial fog of war from pitch selection. McCullough and the Marlins say the upside is nearly as much lightening the mental load for their young catchers and pitchers as it is the ability to process data in real time from the remove of the dugout.

And after years of pitch-calling remaining almost exclusively the domain of the catcher, there are now, in this PitchCom era, three ways pitch decisions are made.

The vast majority still prefer the catcher calling the pitch and punching a button to alert the pitcher. PitchCom also enables pitchers to call their own games, pushing a button on their belt to inform the catcher what they’re going to do.

And then there are the Marlins, whose stance seems largely at odds with scores of pitchers and catchers who say the men in the arena have the ultimate feel for what pitch should come next.

“We’re in a different era, obviously, of baseball. Analytics drives so many decisions,” veteran San Diego Padres right-hander Lucas Giolito tells USA TODAY Sports. “But that old-school part of me, man – that pitcher-catcher relationship, that communication before and during a game, reading swings, reading at-bats - I think that’s something players get better at with experience, especially catchers.

“Gameplans are only as good as what it gives you right when you go out there and sometimes you throw it out the window and make an adjustment based on how the hitters are doing. Do I still think that’s possible calling pitches from the dugout? Yeah, but now you’re getting a coach involved.

“For me, it feels like an extra step that’s not really necessary.”

For now, the trend is a drip, not a flood.

The Colorado Rockies are also calling some pitches from the dugout, though that’s within the context of a massive organizational overhaul that aims to solve the dilemma of pitching at mile-high Coors Field. The New York Mets dabbled in it during spring training.

Others have recoiled: Seattle Mariners All-Star catcher Cal Raleigh called it “stupid.”

And another contingent wants to see proof in the pudding, which leads down a rabbit hole of cause vs. correlation, the Marlins serving as the lab rats.

Call is coming from inside the dugout

And the Marlins are perhaps the definition of “inconclusive.”

They are having a relatively typical Marlins year, now 28-34 and exchanging fourth and fifth place in the NL East with the Mets with some frequency.

It’s not exactly the large step forward the franchise perhaps hoped for after Miami finished the 2024 season on a 54-32 heater. By September, the club decided to start calling pitches from the dugout, a practice they began with their Class AAA Jacksonville club.

Come 2026, Jacksonville pitching coach Rob Marcello was promoted to the big club, serving as assistant pitching coach. And he and major league field coordinator Aaron Leanhardt are often the ones relaying the signals, somehow an even more analog version of the goofy signs and posterboards college football teams use to relay plays in from the sideline.

The call from the dugout is typically signaled within two to four seconds of the pitch clock countdown beginning. Mack or Hicks push the buttons.

And the pitcher fires.

“It’s a lot different and it’s new to me,” Alcantara tells USA TODAY Sports. “I’ve been in the game a long time and all, so it’s different to me, but I just gotta keep trust. Because they are trying to do their best to help the young pitchers and the young catcher.

“I think it’s a great idea for us to get better.”

Alcantara, the 2022 NL Cy Young Award winner who underwent Tommy John surgery at the end of the 2023 campaign, is the senior member of the staff. Otherwise, it’s largely a young and moldable group of pitchers, with right-hander Max Meyer among those taking a significant step forward this season.

Despite the unique pitching arrangement, they did manage to import a handful of arms from other organizations, notably closer Pete Fairbanks and set-up man John King.

King, the former St. Louis Cardinal and Texas Ranger, has benefited from the pitching department reducing his reliance on his sinker, a very good pitch that he’d thrown 70% of the time. The team helped him add a sweeper, and now he’s throwing the sinker just 30% of the time.

More than a third of the way through the season, King has reduced his WHIP from 1.39 in entering this season to a career-best 0.72 and his hits per nine innings from 10.1 to 3.6.

“All the analytics and data they have – and them being emotionally apart from the game with all those numbers – what they want you to do is have a good mix,” says King. “Now,

I’ve become more unpredictable and I think they do a good job of seeing the hitters’ weakness but also relying on the pitcher’s strengths, and how they want to sequence their strengths together.”

Notably, King says the mental load has been considerably lightened. Yes, King and the catchers still do significant amounts of homework and pre-game prep, but “perhaps not as in-depth as I’ve done in the past, and I kind of like that,” he says.

“Because I don’t think we need to be thinking about 20 different things at once: Where do I throw my sinker? Where’s the best place to put this offspeed, especially with two strikes?”

And while taking away pitch-calling duties from Hicks might be professionally neutering him to some degree, it’s hard to argue with his entire contribution this season.

Hicks was a Rule 5 pick from the Detroit Tigers who stuck on the big league squad throughout the 2025 season and stayed in the organization. McCullough notes he still had to earn his way onto the roster this spring – and he did much more than that.

He now ranks third in the NL with 46 RBIs, has smacked 12 homers and has an .825 OPS while splitting catching duties with rookie Joe Mack. In an unprecedented information age in the game, the Marlins’ hope was that reducing the catchers’ homework would allow them to concentrate on other facets of their game.

Hicks would seem to be a beneficiary – even if the club has essentially taken away one of the core duties of his position.

“Yeah, calling a game is fun. Rewarding, after a win,” says Hicks. “So, you’re missing that a little bit. But you can also impact a game a lot of ways as a catcher.

“Coaches are doing a lot more homework than the catchers do. There’s gonna be times you’re not sure why they’re calling something but in the end it’s what’s right. They’ve never called a pitch without a reason behind it.”

More reasons, really, than you can imagine.

A nightly grade for the pitch-callers

If there’s any upside for catchers getting stripped of pitch-calling duties, it’s gaining the ability to say, “Hey, don’t look at me” after an opposing batter deposits a pitch over the fence.

“I feel for the catchers, because I feel like it handcuffs them. But it also alleviates the pressure,” says Blue Jays ace Kevin Gausman. “It’s coming straight from the dugout. So if it doesn’t work, it’s like, well, you guys told me to throw that slider.

“There’s positives and negatives to both of it. But I never thought I’d see it in the big leagues.”

Marcello, the 35-year-old assistant pitching coach, is the man largely charged with bringing it there. He workshopped pitch-calling as the Class AAA Jacksonville’s pitching coach, then was added to the staff this year.

He sets up in something resembling a sniper’s nest with major league field coordinator Aaron Leanhardt – also known as the guy who invented the torpedo bat – and they flash signs to Hicks or Mack.

By night’s end, the Marlins’ information machine will spit out validation – or scorn – beyond what the final score might indicate.

“There is an analytical grade, postgame, that they’ll give me,” Marcello tells USA TODAY Sports. “We hold meetings two or three times a week with everybody to ask, ‘Hey, what are we missing? What could we do better? How is this going?’”

Marlins managerClayton McCullough during a pitching change.

For Marcello, the preparation never ends. He aims to be so well-prepared that he knows what the next pitch – sometimes two – will be immediately after signaling one to his catcher.

And he pushes back gently on the notion that coaches outside the field of play can’t see what’s going on.

“I do think there’s a lot to see from the side,” he says. “Hey, is this guy on time for the fastball, or not? And a lot of it is catchers giving information to me and having that in-game communication.

“And then a conversation after: How do we navigate it, make it a smoother road?”

It is admittedly strange to see, less than a decade after the Houston Astros’ sign-stealing gambit helped them win a World Series, a team so publicly pass along signs when the PitchCom system was designed to largely skirt that.

Opponents have noticed.

“You don’t push a button from the dugout. You’re giving signals,” says Baltimore Orioles pitcher Chris Bassitt, whose team won two of three games at Miami in April. “Those signals are pretty easily deciphered to tell you, pretty much, what’s exactly coming.

“Teams that do that? Keep doing it. It helps us.”

Marcello insists the Marlins’ system keeps their signals buttoned up and they are, predictably, vigilant about what they see and hear. He uses a privacy screen to ensure his information can’t be picked up by camera.

“There’s a lot of different sign cards we can put out there,” he says. “In a game. In an inning. If we feel like they might be on to us, I can change things right there without taking a break.

“If there’s cameras around, you can’t see unless you’re dead in front of it. We know teams will try. But it’s how you protect it all.”

All at the push of a button

As this experiment unfolds, an answer to the grander question – Is it worth it? – may remain elusive.

Despite the offseason trade of Edward Cabrera, the club’s ERA has dropped from 4.60 to 4.33, 11th in the NL, so far this season, though Alcantara is a year further away from elbow surgery and Meyer – sporting a 2.97 ERA – might have been due for a large step forward.

Legions of pitchers will do it a different way. Bassitt, Washington Nationals left-hander Foster Griffin and Tampa Bay Rays ace Nick Martinez are among those who call pitches themselves.

Griffin says it’s because his eight pitch offerings – and their potential locations – make it far more efficient with the pitch clock always lurking. Bassitt’s batterymate, Samuel Basallo, agrees with his pitcher that “the guys on the field have a better feel for what’s happening.”

And Martinez, who has a 1.62 ERA for the Rays, says a simple gesture from his catcher can strongly affirm that he pushed the right button.

“It goes back to that old-school mindset of conviction. The wrong pitch with the right conviction plays better than the right pitch with the wrong conviction,” says Martinez. “Sometimes I’m just convicted in a pitch and I’ll call it and (Nick Fortes or Hunter Feduccia) will be catching me and (nod) their head and acknowledge to me, I was on the right page.

“I beat them to the punch.”

In Miami, that’s the coaches’ job. You can see the conviction in the speed with which Marcello and Leanhardt throw their signs in the air, simple gestures with weeks of research and dozens of reports and countless meetings behind it.

Soon, the league will let them know if it was all so much wasted motions. Major League Baseball is a copycat industry, and time will determine if the Marlins are truly on to something.

They’re not waiting around for such validation.

“It provides us the opportunity to get in what we feel is the most appropriate pitch, Selection A, every time,” says McCullough. We continue to evaluate, we’re looking at certain metrics and we’ll continue to do that.

“We’re gaining more and more information over time as we do this and still believe it’s what’s best for us, the Marlins. It hasn’t changed why we still feel like it’s beneficial.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB pitchers, catchers and coaches debate who should call a game

Pirates trade Justin Lawrence to Twins

Apr 12, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Justin Lawrence (61) after the Chicago Cubs score during the eighth inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images | Matt Marton-Imagn Images

The Pittsburgh Pirates traded righty-reliever Justin Lawrence to the Minnesota Twins on Monday night. In return, the Pirates will receive cash considerations from the Twins.

The Pirates found a trade partner with Minnesota just four days after Lawrence was designated for assignment by Pittsburgh. Minnesota is adding a power pitcher to their bullpen that has struggled to find consistency behind the arms that they already have. Lawrence’s three-pitch mix consisting of two fastballs and a sweeper can elevate the Twins’ bullpen if he can regain his 2025 form.

Lawrence has shown flashes of dominance in past years, like in 2025 when he posted a 0.51 ERA, albeit in just 17 games. In 2025 the 31-year-old pitcher was sidelined for most of the season with complications stemming from elbow inflammation.

In 2026, Lawrence has not found his groove since his return to the Pirates’ bullpen. This season he has a 5.32 ERA in 23 games. He also has a 0-2 record, a 1.55 WHIP and has given up four homers.

Minnesota’s bullpen has featured 11 relievers who have recorded a save in 2026 and 18 total pitchers who made appearances in relief. Lawrence is slated to join the Twins’ bullpen, but a roster shuffle will have to take place before this a spot for him on the roster.

Yankees news: Judge out with rib bruise, Schlittler off on velo

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 29: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees gets ready to bat against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on May 29, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Athletic | Brendan Kuty ($): The headline around Tuesday making shockwaves around the team was Aaron Judge’s health, as manager Aaron Boone left him out of the lineup and then told reporters that Judge was diagnosed with a bone bruise in his ribs. Judge initially felt the injury affecting his shoulder during his swing, but during the series against the Athletics it became worse and prompted further examination. Boone said that the team was hopeful that they caught it early enough to not be a long-term injury, but any time that the Captain is dealing with an injury everyone’s breath is going to be collectively held. At the very least, it does explain why Judge had been performing rather poorly at the plate of late, and if he does return soon hopefully he can rebound back to his April form.

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: Cam Schlittler just didn’t have it against the Guardians on Tuesday, coughing up five runs (four earned) in 4.1 innings. While the overall results weren’t too worrying with the prodigal ace on a tear of late, pitching to a 1.07 ERA in his previous eight starts, the one concerning note is that Schlittler wasn’t able to find his fastball, and it was down in velocity. A similar issue popped up in his previous start against Kansas City, and Schlittler believes that “the mechanics just kind of got away from me a little bit there,” in terms of adjusting on the fly against Cleveland, leading to uncompetitive at-bats and the hole that he dug himself into. Hopefully it’s just a blip on the radar and Schlittler is able to find the adjustments he needs to get the heater back on track, but it’s something to monitor for now.

NY Daily News | Gary Phillips: The bullpen is an area of obvious need for New York, and while there will certainly be improvements available via trade closer to the deadline they’re also lining up some internal improvements as well. One of their top pitching prospects, Carlos Lagrange, is being moved over to the bullpen with the aim of fast-tracking him into a role with the big league club this year. Long-term, the Yankees are still quite hopeful that Lagrange will play in their rotation for years to come, but with the current pitching staff lacking in relievers and the rotation loaded with capable arms this is the move they could make to best help themselves in the immediate future.

NJ.com | Bob Klapisch: The Yankees won’t have Max Fried back for a minute still, as the team’s top pitcher last year is just now starting to play catch following an IL stint for a bone bruise, but that hasn’t stopped speculation about what the Yankees will do with their rotation once they’re back to full strength. The conversation around Will Warren or Ryan Weathers moving down to the bullpen has been debated since Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón were approaching their returns, but with over half the rotation having been on the IL at some point as well as Cam Schlittler having dealt with a back issue during the start of camp, Klapisch proposes the use of a six-man rotation. It’d be the best bet for keeping everyone fresh for October, though with how untrustworthy the bullpen’s been this year having them short a man might not be the best decision.

Mets’ Sean Manaea turning it around thanks to success with one pitch

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Sean Manaea throws a pitch during the Mets' 10-inning loss to the Mariners on June 1, 2026 in Seattle

SEATTLE — Sean Manaea views his success throwing his sweeper as a significant factor in his turnaround.

“Throwing it hard and selling it has really been key,” the Mets left-hander said before an 8-3 loss to the Mariners in which he did pitch. “If I try to place it and make it perfect, that is where I get into trouble.”

On Monday he had one of his strongest outings of the season, allowing one earned run over five innings in the Mets’ 3-2 loss to the Mariners in 10 innings. Manaea was utilized in a bulk relief role, behind an opener.

Sean Manaea throws a pitch during the Mets’ 10-inning loss to the Mariners on June 1, 2026 in Seattle. Getty Images

Manaea has pitched to a 2.55 ERA over his last five appearances, dating to May 10. Before his last outing he was moved into a higher-leverage role, switching spots with David Peterson.

“Even though we lost the game you have got to take the positive there,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “It was his longest outing, you saw some 93-94 [mph]. He was pretty impressive. He was really good.”

As for his sweeper, Manaea utilized it 21 times in 63 pitches.


Jorge Polanco will be evaluated for a potential return to the Mets this weekend following his scheduled start Wednesday for Triple-A Syracuse (the second half of a back-to-back day appearances).

Though Polanco is expected to serve as the DH once he’s cleared for a Mets return, Mendoza indicated the ability to handle first base will be necessary. Polanco, who has been on the injured list since April 15, is returning from left Achilles bursitis after initially dealing with a right wrist contusion.

“It could be in play that he is active on Friday,” Mendoza said. “But if he needs more at-bats and it’s not so much how he is feeling physically … there is a combination of a lot of things.”

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Kodai Senga is scheduled to throw 85 pitches for Syracuse on Wednesday in a potential final minor league rehab outing before rejoining the Mets.

The right-hander has been sidelined since April 26 with lumbar spine inflammation.


Mets pitchers began the day with 560 strikeouts this season, which ranked first in the National League and second in MLB.

The total was fourth-highest in franchise history through the team’s first 60 games. The 2021 Mets (580 strikeouts) are first.

Brewers blast Giants, 8-3, behind Kyle Harrison’s dominant start

Kyle Harrison made a splash in his first start against his old team
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - JUNE 02: Kyle Harrison #52 of the Milwaukee Brewers is doused while being interviewed after a win over against the San Francisco Giants 8-3 at American Family Field on June 02, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When the San Francisco Giants cut bait on top pitching prospect Kyle Harrison last season in the Rafael Devers trade, they knew there was a chance that the then 23-year-old would come back to haunt them. Just under a year after the trade, that possibility became a reality.

Harrison tied a career high by striking out 12 Giants in 5.2 innings, moving to 7-1 on the season with a 1.57 ERA. The only damage came on a sixth-inning solo shot by Willy Adames to give the Giants their lone run off Harrison in what eventually ended up an 8-3 defeat to the Milwaukee Brewers.

The Giants might have been extra regretful of the deal since their prize return from the trade was fitted for a Golden Sombrero after striking out four times in five at-bats. He did deliver a productive strikeout in the first inning, making Harrison throw 10 pitches before he was caught looking at a fastball — which now regularly hits 97 MPH. At least Zach Wheeler had the courtesy to wait a few seasons to become an All-Star after the Giants traded him.

Yes, seeing 10 pitches counted as a victory Tuesday against Harrison. It looked like the Giants might shorten his night when Casey Schmitt and Devers got his pitch count up to 16 with back-to-back strikeouts, Luis Arraez tripled, and Adames walked on five pitches. With Harrison sitting at 26 pitches, Matt Chapman swung at the first pitch he saw and popped out.

After that, it felt like Harrison wanted to send a message to his old teammates and Buster Posey. Daniel Susac singled in the second, and Harrison struck out five in a row. Adames singled to open the 4th and Harrison struck out the next three hitters. He was one strike away from exiting with six shutout innings before Adames went deep.

The Giants prepared for a tough left-handed pitcher by loading up on righties. Jonah Cox and Victor Bericoto started alongside Schmitt in the outfield, and new Giants Buddy Kennedy was the DH. The trio went 0-for-6 with four Ks off Harrison, and Kennedy also struck out against lefty reliever Aaron Ashby.

Cox delivered the game’s most frustrating at-bat in the 7th inning. After Susac and Bericoto singled to lead off the inning, the rookie center fielder squared to bunt and popped it up to the pitcher. Later in the inning, Devers grounded out with runners on second and third — but at least he didn’t end up with the Platinum Sombrero.

Trevor McDonald (2-3) probably deserved better, after bouncing back from a three-run first inning. He didn’t give up another run in the next four innings, keeping the Giants within striking range by getting lots of ground balls and a clutch 6-3 double play. McDonald also came within one strike of escaping a jam that started with back-to-back walks, than left a sinker over the plate that tuned into a three-run homer from Jake Bauers, who looks nothing like Kiefer Sutherland.

The game was full of baffling decisions, excellent Brewers base running, and some very poor Giants defense.

  • Daniel Susac made an error on a pickoff throw to second base because his throw hit the batter in the helmet. Tony Vitello argued for interference, but Sal Frelick didn’t move and was probably extremely surprised.
  • McDonald had Luis Rengfio picked off in the 2nd inning, but threw the ball away. Chapman had trouble dealing with some challenging grounders in the 8th, which were both ruled infield singles, but Prime Chapman would usually turn into outs. New center fielder Drew Gilbert also gave up a double to Jackson Chourio that hit his glove. It would have been a great defensive play, but it wasn’t, and the game went from 6-3 to 8-3 when Chourio scored on a Bryce Turang single two pitches later.
  • Bryce Eldridge sat against a left-handed starter. But to sit in favor of designated hitter Buddy Kennedy, a man whose career slash line against lefties is .194/.286/.301 is baffling. Kennedy’s name also sounds like the video game alias for a player who didn’t sign the licensing agreement. When Eldridge finally got in the game, he delivered an RBI single.
  • Maybe Jung Hoo Lee needed a rest day, but he also delivered an RBI pinch-hit in the 8th. He’s on a five-game hitting streak since coming off the Injured List and has gone 13-for-20. But platoons!
  • Devers struck out twice in at-bats where an ABS Challenge went against him, once reversing a ball call to hand him a K and once when he appealed a borderline strike himself and lost, then became Harrison’s 12th strikeout.
  • The Giants walked seven Brewers. Five of them came around to score.
  • Tristan Beck gave up four runs in the 8th, all with two outs. 1-2-3 hitters Christian Yelich, Chourio, and Turang all knocked in runs, and have scored 11 runs and driven in 12 runs in the series.

There were positives. Susac went 3-for-4, though the Giants couldn’t get him home. Adames went 2-for-4 with a walk and turned two big 6-3 double plays. Erik Miller had a nice inning of relief. No one tore their hamstring on a routine ground ball. The crowd looked like they had a great time.

The Giants aren’t done facing 24-year-old pitchers in this series. Wednesday, the Brewers are calling up Tyson Hardin to make his major-league debut, after he had 61 strikeouts in 48 innings between AA and AAA this season. He is, however, right-handed, so we may not see another Bericoto-Cox Murdered Row in that game.

Then again, anything can happen with this team’s roster and lineup decisions. After all, we never dreamed 2026 would be the start of the Buddy Kennedy Era.

Guardians News: Judgeless Yankees no match for young team

Without a changeup to flummox Guard hitters with, he looked like what happens if you pretend the L’s are capital i-s. | Getty Images

The Yankees entered Tuesday’s game 3-8 against teams over .500. They did nothing to show they were better than that at home against Cleveland.

With the help from some creative argumentative tactics, they came back twice vs Guards SP Joey Cantillo, but they ran out of tricks once he was out of the game.

CLE’s bullpen pitched 5 innings of scoreless ball, which bought time for their offense to blow the game open via a 3-run Travis Bazzana double.

The pentawhatever of Holderman-Herrin-Gaddis-Armstrong-Festa allowed just 2 hits and walked nobody. Yes, you read that right—Herrin walked nobody.

TheeeEE Yankees are now 3-9 against winning teams.

Around baseball

• The Giants promoted Tugboat Wilkinson to AAA.

• ESPN ranked prospects, including a Braylon Doughty ranking that made me happy.

• The Royals lost again. The Tigers beat TB 8-0.

• The Twins beat the Chi-Sox 6-4.

Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman help Dodgers nip Diamondbacks

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Shohei Ohtani belts a two-run triple in the second inning of the Dodgers' 6-5 win over the Diamondbacks on June 3, 2026 in Phoenix, Image 2 shows Freddie Freeman belts a two-run homer in the first inning of the Dodgers' 6-5 win over the Diamondbacks on June 3, 2026 in Phoenix

PHOENIX –– After his customary round of pregame picking drills on Tuesday afternoon, Freddie Freeman took the long way back to the clubhouse, going first to the bat rack on the far side of the dugout to rub his bats a few hours before first pitch.

“Gotta wake them up,” Freeman said jokingly.

In a 6-5 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks, the ritual appeared to work.

Shohei Ohtani belts a two-run triple in the second inning of the Dodgers’ 6-5 win over the Diamondbacks on June 3, 2026 in Phoenix. Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Freeman opened the scoring in the Dodgers’ victory at Chase Field with a two-run home run in the top of the first. Shohei Ohtani doubled their lead with a two-run triple the following inning. Both superstars contributed to another two-run rally in the seventh.

And on a night the bullpen played with fire, every bit of it was needed as the Dodgers bounced back from Monday’s series-opening loss with a narrow defeat of an intradivision rival.

“Good team win,” manager Dave Roberts said. “It was good to see us come to life offensively.”

Despite leading 6-2 entering the bottom of the seventh, the Dodgers’ relievers almost made things messy.

Following a 4 ⅔-innings, two-run start from Eric Lauer, then scoreless appearances from Blake Treinen (who escaped a jam in the fifth with the help of a diving catch by Ryan Ward) and Edgardo Henriquez (whose fastball topped out at 103.6 mph, the second-hardest throw by any pitcher in the big leagues this year), right-hander Kyle Hurt suffered his worst outing of the season, getting charged with three runs in a three-walk dud in the seventh.

The first two runs scored on a double from Nolan Arenado (which was aided by a bobble from Ward in left). The next came after Will Klein inherited the mess and issued a bases-loaded walk.

Coincidentally or not, the rally started right after a section of Arizona fans went #TarpsOff in the upper deck of right field.

Alas, the Dodgers survived.

“Got a little hairy at the end,” Freeman quipped. “But luckily, [we] pulled it off.”

The seventh inning ended on a nice defensive play from Freeman, who ranged far to his right to spear a grounder on his backhand and throw to second for the third out.

Freddie Freeman belts a two-run homer in the first inning of the Dodgers’ win over the Diamondbacks. AP

Arizona put two more aboard against Klein in the eighth before Arenado grounded into an inning-ending double play.

The ninth inning provided another scare, with Tanner Scott letting a runner reach second before finally closing out the win.

But in the end, it was the Dodgers’ bats that made the difference.

Just as Freeman hoped, they woke up just enough.

What it means

The Dodgers are now 15-4 since May 13. And of the many impressive traits in that run, their ability to shake off rare defeats continues to stand out.

The team has not lost back-to-back contests since a four-game skid from May 9-12.

Such resiliency has helped the Dodgers (39-22) build a six-game lead in the National League West standings. They are now 6 ½ games clear of the recently resurgent Dbacks (32-28).

“In this clubhouse, it’s a lot of older guys,” Freeman said. “We know how to just move on from a loss.”

Who’s hot

Freeman and Ohtani, who have both looked more and more like their typical selves offensively over the last several weeks.

Shohei Ohtani slides safely into third for a two-run triple in the second inning of the Dodgers’ win over the Diamondbacks. Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Ever since an early May slump that dropped his batting average to .233 and OPS to .767, Ohtani has been the best hitter in the Dodgers’ lineup, entering Tuesday with a .415 average and 1.229 OPS over his last 18 games.

That continued with a 2-for-4 performance that also included an intentional walk in the two-run seventh inning, extending Ohtani’s on-base streak to 18 games.

For Freeman, who was 3-for-5 on Tuesday, it’s been almost exactly the same story.

He endured a mid-May skid that lowered his average to .254 and OPS to .737, but has turned around and hit .348 over 13 games since May 19, a stretch that includes five home runs and 12 RBIs.

His only game not reaching base over that span: Monday night, leading to his pregame ritual Tuesday.

“It’s kind of how we built this team on the offensive side,” Roberts said of the recent contributions from Ohtani and Freeman. “Shohei’s been really good the last few weeks. Freddie’s been good the last month … Certainly it makes life a lot easier for everyone else. It seems like there’s always traffic creating a situational at-bat.”

Who’s not

Not to keep beating a dead horse, but still Kyle Tucker.

The $240 million outfielder went hitless in three at-bats Tuesday before drawing a seventh-inning walk, extending a recent 3-for-26 slump over his last seven games.

“I wouldn’t say disappointed,” manager Dave Roberts said pregame of Tucker’s underwhelming campaign thus far, which includes a .235 average and .715 OPS. “I would say I’m probably just hoping that there’s some traction for him and for our sake. He’s working hard. There’s a day where it looks like he’s back and feeling comfortable. Then a couple days where you look at him and it looks like he’s searching again. For me, you just hope he can find something that sticks.”

More than two months into the season, it hasn’t happened yet.

Up next

Ohtani (5-2, 0.82 EA) will return to two-way duties on Wednesday when he faces off against former All-Star right-hander Zac Gallen (3-4, 5.16 ERA).

Red-hot Mariners ride offense to eighth consecutive win

Jun 2, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners catcher Jhonny Pereda (5) hits a 3-run home run against the New York Mets during the fifth inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images | Steven Bisig-Imagn Images

Only a week or two ago, the early returns of the 2026 season didn’t inspire much confidence. Sure, the Mariners hadn’t dug themselves a hole in the standings like in years past—that’d be almost impossible with the state of the American League. Even so, watching the games felt akin to pulling teeth in some moments. The defense wasn’t clean, the offense seriously lacked consistency and the pitching was running into bumps in the road that they weren’t used to facing.

When Cal Raleigh went down with an oblique injury, it may not have set off the panic meter, but the Mariners’ margin for error certainly began to shrink. They were going to need to stay afloat for the time being without their biggest producer from the previous season.

The Mariners are more than staying afloat. They are sailing full steam ahead.

Production came from all over the roster Tuesday night at T-Mobile Park as the Mariners throttled the Mets 8-3 to win their eighth consecutive game and capture yet another series win.

In a moment that epitomizes the unlikely contributions throughout their hot streak, catcher Jhonny Pereda, making his 12th appearance of the season with Raleigh on the injured list, launched a three-run homer to break open the game and give the Mariners 7-2 lead in the fifth inning. The second homer of his career gave Mariners pitching the breathing room necessary to put the game to rest.

Over his 42 plate appearances with the big league club, Pereda is posting a 120 wRC+ while slashing .263/.333/.421. Small sample sizes be damned—there’s no guarantee Jhonny Pereda will remain on the 26-man roster when Raleigh returns, but consistent production from substitutes over even a short period can go a long way to filling even a Big-Dumper-sized void in the meantime.

“That’s what good teams do when they have guys who are injured, they find a way to step up and fill the moment,” manager Dan Wilson said postgame. “And I think they do that by not trying to do too much, you know. Jhonny just put up a good at-bat, finally got a pitch middle-in he could turn on, and he did.”

Speaking of substitutes, Patrick Wisdom was called upon to get the start at first base in the absence of Josh Naylor, who got the night off after leaving Monday night’s game with back spasms. It didn’t take long for Wisdom to make his mark on the game, giving the Mariners a 2-0 lead in the second with a two-run homer off the out-of-town scoreboard in left field.

For Logan Gilbert, it wasn’t a perfect night, but the cushion provided by the offense allowed him to pass the baton to the bullpen without much stress. Gilbert made it through 5.1 innings, allowing three runs.

All three of the Mets’ runs came via a multi-homer game by Carson Benge. To lead off the game, Benge struck out, but only after seeing 11 pitches and nearly all of Gilbert’s repertoire in the process. In his following two plate appearances, he was able to deposit both a cutter and a four-seam into the right-center field seats, the first of which tied up the game and erased the lead provided by Wisdom’s homer.

Despite the long ball playing a factor, Mets hitters not named Carson Benge had trouble seeing the ball out of Gilbert’s hand all night long. Gilbert generated a whopping 21 whiffs on the evening, with nine coming on his four-seam and seven on a slider that was clicking from the get-go.

“It felt good,” Gilbert said of his slider. “Good depth, action on it good. I trust it. I’m just trying to ‘put a fastball on it,’ I call it, like sell it, make it look like your body, your arm, your hand, everything, try to sell that it’s a fastball coming out.”

Gilbert was unable to finish the sixth with his pitch count nearing triple digits and a couple of Mets reaching base with one out following Benge’s second homer. Wilson called upon Eduard Bazardo, who swiftly induced an inning-ending double play with one pitch to extinguish the threat of a comeback.

Julio Rodríguez quietly had a productive night. He golfed a solo homer out to right to give the Mariners their eighth and final run of the night, and also drove in a run earlier in the game with a sacrifice fly. Dominic Canzone also continued to excel in his lefty DH role with a three-hit night that almost goes unnoticed with everything that was clicking.

“If I had the magic touch, we’d keep it forever,” Wilson said about the Mariners’ hot hitting. “Sometimes that’s just the game. We’ve talked a lot about how offense is contagious, and it just feels like the energy right now offensively has been outstanding.”

Last but not least, Colt Emerson continued a strong start at the big league level. He picked up two hits and also got dirty for a couple of sparkling plays in the field, including the game-ending sliding catch on a pop-up in foul territory.

The Mariners will close out their six-game homestand Wednesday afternoon as they look to sweep away the Mets and win their ninth consecutive game.

Mets' Jonah Tong after rough outing in loss to Mariners: 'I just got to do a better job'

After allowing just one run across his two previous outings combined, Mets right-hander Jonah Tong had a tough night on Tuesday against the Seattle Mariners.

The 22-year-old entered in the second inning and allowed five runs (four earned) over 3.1 IP, with three coming on a home run in the fifth inning to Jhonny Pereda that blew the game open, 7-2. Following the loss, Tong acknowledged his fastball wasn't working against the Mariners' bats and struggled after a solid first inning on the mound, knowing he needs to be more consistent.

"I obviously didn't have my fastball command for most of the game, so moving forward that's the definitely be the thing I'll focus on the next few games, weeks," Tong said. "Just getting that dialed back in and I'm more than confident it'll rebound right out of it really nicely."

He added on his overall performance: "Strong first little inning and then felt like I found my delivery and my stuff towards the end. Obviously it just boils down to that second and third up. I just got to do a better job."

While acknowledging the defensive errors that occurred, manager Carlos Mendoza pointed to Tong's issues throwing strikes and getting ahead in counts as the main reasons for the poor outing. In total, Tong threw 83 pitches, but only 54 were for strikes. He used his fastball 35 times (42 percent of pitches), but only had three whiffs on 16 swings and four called strikes. 

"Having a hard time throwing strikes, that's where it starts," Mendoza said. "His ability to get strike one was below average today. And then deep counts, three-ball counts. Again, we don't make a couple of plays behind him and it cost him. But I think it's just like I said before the game, his ability to compete in the strike zone, and right now he's not doing it."

Like Mendoza mentioned, Tong did have to work around two errors in the third inning by Marcus Semien and Mark Vientos that forced him to throw 27 pitches in the frame. After a long time on the mound like that, Tong said he needs to "find a way" to push through when heading back out there again quickly like he did.

"You just got to calm yourself down after that," Tong said. "There's a lot of pitches thrown a couple times throughout that inning, just got to find a way to settle down after. Just got to find a way. Right, at the end of the day, that's out of my control in a lot of cases and that's the reality we're in so I got to find a way."

The home run pitch to Pereda came on cutter, which is something he's worked into his arsenal this year. He knows the pitch needs to improve, especially in big moments like Tuesday night.

"Part of it is just gonna be you're gonna have some really good ones and you're just gonna have one that gets away from you. And unfortunately had to be that one," Tong said. "But again, I have to do a better job with that pitch. That's plain and simple there."

Tong's future as the team's bulk pitcher after an opener next time through the rotation is still up in the air, as they'll need him to improve if he gets another chance. For now, New York will look to avoid a sweep on Wednesday afternoon against the Mariners.

Close But No Cigar: Dbacks 5, Dodgers 6

Jun 2, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Michael Soroka in the second inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The Dodgers evened the series on Tuesday night by narrowly beating the Dbacks 6-5. The Dbacks had plenty of runners on base, but were 1 big hit short Tuesday night.

Michael Soroka struggled early in this one allowing 2 runs in each of the first 2 innings. He allowed a 2 run HR to Freeman in the first and Ohtani tripled in 2 runs in the second. After the second inning however, Soroka locked it in and cruised through the next 4 innings. After giving up the 4 runs through 2 innings, it was huge for him to be able to get through 6 innings and keep his team in the game.

Offensively, Corbin Carroll homered in the 3rd inning. Nolan Arenado also delivered a big 2 run double in the bottom of the 7th that narrowly missed a home run as it was hit a little to flat but plenty hard at 104 mph. Pavin Smith had a big at bat in the bottom of the 7th with the bases loaded, drawing a big walk to bring the Dbacks within 1 run. Unfortunately though, the team would leave them loaded.

I also thought it was worth noting that Juan Morillo and Kevin Ginkel were really good yet again. Ginkel had a fantastic 1,2,3 inning to maintain the momentum and shut down the Dodger offense after bringing the game within 1 run. Juan Morillo came in in the 9th and proceeded to strike out Ohtani and Freeman in dominant fashion. Just really impressive stuff from these guys once again and I think its worthy of a shout out.

The achilles heel of this Dbacks team tonight aside from the early runs surrendered by Soroka was the lack of timely hitting. The offense did a great job of getting traffic on the bases but this Dbacks offense once again struggled to have the big at bat and get the big hit. They were just 2-12 with RISP. It is tough to win games with at bats like that with RISP.  One such at bat that will certainly get discussed a lot is Geraldo Perdomo’s perplexing bunt in the bottom of the 9th down 1. Ildemaro Vargas had just singled ahead of him putting the tying run on first base with one out, and Perdomo with a 3-1 count laid down a bunt and got thrown out at first. What makes this even more scratching is that lefty Pavin Smith was on deck due to face a lefty. Im sorry, but as the regular 3 hole hitter on this team, you have to be more situationally aware than that and have the confidence to swing the bat in that situation. Major red flag for me the lack of situational awareness as well as the lack of confidence.

Overall, this was yet another game the Dbacks could’ve won and there is something to be said about that when you are playing one of the top teams in the league. They will look to take the lead back in the series tomorrow night but will have the tall task of trying to do so against Shohei Ohtani. Tomorrow is a big night for Zac Gallen. This team really needs him to start stepping up and tomorrow would be a great time to start.