Blake Snell, Tommy Edman among 7 Dodgers placed on injured list

Los Angeles, CA - March 24:Dodgers player Tommy Edman runs sprints as he rehabs from an ankle injury at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, CA on Tuesday, March 24, 2026.(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

LOS ANGELES — In finalizing their 2026 opening day roster on Thursday, seven Dodgers were placed on the injured list, bringing the total to eight such players sidelined to begin the season.

Pitchers Blake Snell, Gavin Stone, Brusdar Graterol, Brock Stewart, Landon Knack, and Jake Cousins were all placed on the 15-day injured list. Infielder/outfielder Tommy Edman was placed on the 10-day injured list for position players.

They join reliever Evan Phillips and infielder/outfielder Kiké Hernández, who were placed on the 60-dayinjured list in February, and pitcher Bobby Miller, who was placed on the 60-day injured list on Tuesday.

Snell didn’t throw much in the offseason, feeling shoulder fatigue after last year’s stretch run and into November in the postseason. He didn’t throw his first bullpen session until March 12, one month after camp started.

Tommy Edman similarly had a light offseason after right ankle surgery in November, and did not play in any Cactus League games. After dealing with ankle issues in each of the last two seasons, Edman at Dodgers Fest on January 31 talked about his potential return.

“The timetable is more of as I progress, so it’s kind of hard to say when I’ll be able to hop back into a major league game again,” Edman said. “I want to make sure I’m a full go, and don’t have to worry about [the ankle] again the rest of the year.”

Both Snell and Edman participated in baseball activities at Dodger Stadium this week, but from the sound of things it sounds like they won’t be rushed back.

“Both are progressing. I still stand by the end of May. Tommy should really be an option, and with Blake, somewhere around that time,” manager Dave Roberts said Monday. “He’s going to need a rehab assignment. He’s thrown bullpens, which was good. The last one I saw a couple days ago, he was right around 90-91 (mph), so that was good. He looks good, says he’s healthy and feels good, no pain, so he’s on the come.”

Gavin Stone had a setback with his shoulder after one spring start, after missing all of last season after shoulder surgery. He was placed on the injured list with shoulder inflammation.

Brock Stewart was behind in camp after undergoing shoulder surgery in October.

Brusdar Graterol has been slow-played this spring after missing all of last season after shoulder surgery.

Landon Knack made four starts this spring, and last pitched on March 13. He’s on the injured list with an intercostal strain, per Fabian Ardaya at The Athletic.

Bobby Miller was sidelined with shoulder soreness earlier this spring, and did not pitched in a game. He was placed on the 60-day injured list Tuesday with the signing of Jake Cousins.

Cousins had Tommy John surgery last June and won’t be back until after the All-Star break at the earliest.

MLB payrolls 2026: Why Dodgers don't have the highest in baseball

SAN FRANCISCO — The Los Angeles Dodgers, the two-time World Series champions, the team that is drawing all of the hatred, the team responsible for calls for a salary cap, wishes everyone would stop and just look at the numbers.

Yes, they project to open the season with a $322.4 million payroll, based on the MLB Labor Relations Department's present-day salary calculations on 40-man rosters obtained this week by USA TODAY Sports.

But guess what?

Due to the Dodgers' heavy use of deferred contracts and signing bonuses, the team's 2026 payroll is dwarfed by the New York Mets, whose 40-man payroll is projected at $357.6 million (in MLB's calculated present-day value).

That's a team that didn’t even make the playoffs last year and last won a World Series in 1986.

The New York Yankees, who last won the World Series in 2009, are the third team that projects to open the season with a payroll exceeding $300 million.

Why, there are three teams this season who will open the season with payrolls within $50 million of the Dodgers: the Yankees ($301 million), Philadelphia Phillies ($283.6 million) and Toronto Blue Jays ($278.9 million).

A record 11 teams are projected to open the season with payrolls of at least $200 million, according to the labor relations salary figures submitted to teams.

The San Francisco Giants, who last reached the playoffs in 2021, are the only team among the top 11 payrolls who have failed to reach the postseason in the last two years.

On the flip side – to the frustrations of the big-market teams who provide revenue sharing every year – there are eight teams whose opening-day payrolls will be below $100 million. The Cleveland Guardians are the only sub-$100 million team that reached the postseason last year.

Here are the bottom 11 teams in projected 40-man payroll:

  • Colorado Rockies: $118.3 million
  • Pittsburgh Pirates: $102 million
  • St. Louis Cardinals: $98.1 million
  • Minnesota Twins: $96.7 million
  • Athletics: $91.8 million
  • Tampa Bay Rays: $89.6 million
  • Washington Nationals: $87.9 million
  • Chicago White Sox: $83.9 million
  • Miami Marlins: $79.4 million
  • Cleveland Guardians: $70 million

The only teams without a top-10 payroll who reached the postseason the past two years are the Brewers and the Guardians. And yet, the only teams with a top-10 payroll who have reached the postseason each of the past two seasons are the Dodgers, Yankees, Phillies, and Padres.

The team making the biggest payroll jump in payroll from a year ago are the Tigers, rising by more than $60 million and the Blue Jays, with about a $50 million increase. The Texas Rangers, who missed the playoffs last year, had the biggest decrease from $220.5 million to $183.5 million.

There are 76 players who will earn more than $20 million this year, led by New York Mets left fielder Juan Soto, whose salary is $61.875 million when calculated by MLB’s Labor Relations Department. The LRD numbers include the player’s actual salary plus his pro-rated signing bonus before any player or club options.

This is why Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker, who signed a four-year, $240 million contract this winter, has a $33 million salary, per MLB’s calculations this year, but skyrockets to $80.5 million in 2027. He has an opt-out after the 2027 season, and his salary is listed at $53.79 million each of the last two years, according to the LRD.

Tucker will earn a base salary of just $1 million this season, and will earn $32 million of his $64 million signing bonus. The contract jumps in 2027 since his base salary rises from $1 million to $45 million, with a $48.5 million present-day value of his contact.

The Dodgers still are responsible for a $57.121 million luxury tax hit each year for Tucker. His AAV is reduced because of the $30 million of deferrals in his contract, lowering the present-day value of his contract from $240 million to $228.485 million.

It’s similar to the calculations for Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani’s contract. He signed a 10-year, $700 million contract, but $680 million is deferred, lowering the AAV to $460 million. Ohtani’s salary this year is calculated at $28.206 million, according to the LRD.

The LRD numbers are not used for team’s luxury tax calculations. The Dodgers’ luxury-tax payment for Ohtani will be $46 million, and not $28.2 million, but still saves them $24 million a year because of his record deferrals. Luxury tax salaries are the total of a players’ salary (present-day value) divided by the number of guaranteed years.

The Dodgers and Yankees each have six players earning at least $20 million this year, while the Mets, Giants and Padres have five players apiece.

The Washington Nationals are the lone team with no player earning $10 million, topped by Trevor Williams’ $7 million salary. The St. Louis Cardinals and Tampa Bay Rays each have only one $10 million player.

MLB payrolls 2026

(Entering opening week – Includes 40-man rosters, non-roster players and cash transactions)

  1. New York Mets — $357,626,125
  2. Los Angeles Dodgers — $322,385,057
  3. New York Yankees — $301,064,810
  4. Philadelphia Phillies — $283,686,918
  5. Toronto Blue Jays — $278,989,858
  6. Atlanta Braves — $252,141,372
  7. Houston Astros — $246,519,331
  8. San Diego Padres — $224,833,896
  9. Chicago Cubs — $220,693,350
  10. Detroit Tigers — $209,415,401
  11. San Francisco Giants — $200,800,003
  12. Boston Red Sox — $198,883,374
  13. Texas Rangers — $183,539,230
  14. Arizona Diamondbacks — $183,460,266
  15. Los Angeles Angels — $179,002,696
  16. Baltimore Orioles — $170,369,743
  17. Seattle Mariners — $160,726,794
  18. Kansas City Royals — $141,244,816
  19. Milwaukee Brewers — $125,467,605
  20. Cincinnati Reds — $124,308,099
  21. Colorado Rockies — $118,302,854
  22. Pittsburgh Pirates — $102,058,886
  23. St. Louis Cardinals — $98,115,902
  24. Minnesota Twins — $96,726,784
  25. Athletics — $91,849,688
  26. Tampa Bay Rays — $89,632,420
  27. Washington Nationals — $87,955,033
  28. Chicago White Sox — $83,892,150
  29. Miami Marlins — $79,429,030
  30. Cleveland Guardians — $69,984,029

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB payrolls 2026: Why Dodgers don't have the highest in baseball

Blue Jays Finalize Roster

DUNEDIN, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 20: Spencer Miles #62 of the Toronto Blue Jays poses for a portrait during photo day at the Toronto Blue Jays Player Development Complex on February 20, 2026 in Dunedin, Florida. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Most of the league doesn’t play until tomorrow, and the Jays don’t open their season until Friday, but rosters still have to be finalized and so we’re getting some news this afternoon:

  • Ben Nicholson-Smith reports that Rule 5 pick Spencer Miles has made the roster. Miles looked pretty good this spring, but it’s still amazing to see a guy with 14.2 career minor league innings in the bigs. The team probably wanted to keep a long reliever with injuries forcing them to start the season with Eric Lauer in the rotation, but Miles is talented and has to stick or he offered back to the Giants. They chose upside over short term roster fit.
  • Shortstop Leo Jimenez has been designated for assignment. There’s a good chance that that marks the end of his time in the Blue Jays organization, as other teams will be interested in taking a look at his contact ability and up the middle defence. Jimenez signed out of Panama as a 16 year old back in July of 2017. He played most days down the stretch in 2024, posing league average offensive numbers with defence that graded out below average at shortstop but above at second. Injuries derailed his 2025 campaign, though, and he didn’t have a great spring while Josh Kasevich, his likely longer term successor in the backup shortstop role, raked.

With those moves, the Opening Day 26-man roster should just about be set:

Rotation: Dylan Cease, Kevin Gausman, Cody Ponce, Max Scherzer, Eric Lauer

Bullpen: Jeff Hoffman, Tyler Rogers, Louis Varland, Brendon Little (LHP), Mason Fluharty (LHP), Braydon Fisher, Spencer Miles, and one of Chase Lee or Tommy Nance

Catcher: Alejandro Kirk, Tyler Heinemann

Infield: Vladimir Guerrero jr. (1B), Ernie Clement (2B), Kazuma Okamoto (3B), Andres Gimenez (SS)

Outfield: Addison Barger (RF), Daulton Varsho (CF), Jesus Sanchez (LF)

Designated Hitter: George Springer

Bench: Myles Straw, Nathan Lukes, Davis Schneider

Have to say, while I hate to lose a talented young player like Jimenez, that’s a mighty fine looking roster to my eye. Let me know why I’m wrong in the comments.

Mets' David Stearns explains how Carson Benge earned Opening Day roster spot

Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns met with reporters on Wednesday on what he called one his favorite days of the year. With the 2026 Opening Day roster set, the Mets held a team workout at Citi Field as they welcome the Pittsburgh Pirates into town to get the season started on Thursday. 

Stearns discussed how Carson Benge earned the starting right field job, what he expects form Sean Manaea this season, and was also asked again about potential extension talks with ace Freddy Peralta.

Here’s what Stearns had to say….

Benge’s strong spring showing

Before this year’s camp even began, Stearns said that Benge would have every opportunity to win a spot on the Opening Day roster, and that’s exactly what happened. 

Benge impressed with a tremendous spring training, both on and off the field.

“He was himself, and he just demonstrated a level of consistency in everything he did, whether it was the work off the field, his attitude in the clubhouse, the quality of his at-bats,’ Stearns explained. “It was just a very steady, professional camp for a guy who was under a fair amount of pressure and whose name had been in the headlines for a while, and was clearly going to be a story coming into camp. He had to know that. He certainly did know that. And he was just very consistent and steady throughout.”

Manaea’s dip in velocity

One of the bigger storylines this spring was Manaea’s lower-than-expected fastball velocity. After missing time last year with an oblique injury and then loose bodies in his pitching elbow, the lefty did not have elbow surgery.

This spring, Manaea’s four-seam fastball velocity sat in the high 80s, though he did hit 92 mph in the intrasquad game on Monday, and Stearns doesn’t sound all that concerned.

“We’ll kind of see exactly how it looks early in the season, but we expect Sean to be a big part of this team,” he said. “We’re going to need Sean to be a big part of this team. He’s going to make starts for us. I would expect him to make a lot of starts for us. 

“I think we saw some flashes of really good during spring, especially in the last couple of outings the secondary stuff played pretty well, the command of the secondary stuff was pretty sharp towards the end of spring. The velocity is down a little bit. We still actually saw some swing-and-miss on the fastball even with lower velocity, so I think as we get into April here and as the lights turn on and he’s playing in front of tens of thousands of fans in games that matter, I think we’ll see the velocity tick up a little bit, and I think he’s going to be good for us.”

No news on Peralta contract talks

Ever since Peralta was acquired from the Milwaukee Brewers in an offseason trade, a potential contract extension for the free-agent-to-be has been a hot topic. 

But speaking ahead of Stearns on Wednesday, Peralta offered a “no comment” when asked about contract talks, and as one might expect, Stearns followed suit.

“I’m not going to comment on any sort of extension or contract talks,” he said.

What is ABS? Explaining MLB's newest rule change before Opening Day

Major League Baseball has made some serious changes to the sport in recent years. From the universal DH to replay challenges to pitch clocks, and 2026 will be no different. This year, the league is introducing the ABS (Automated Ball-Strike) system thereby giving more power to the players.

Umpires have previously worked with virtual impunity, only subject to criticism from people on social media detailing their mistakes when it came to ball and strike calls. For all of time, whatever they said, went. However, that will no longer be the case in 2026. The ABS challenge system will give players the opportunity to challenge an umpire's ball or strike call, and given how vastly different players perform in 0-1 vs. 1-0 counts, this could lead to some game-changing scenarios.

And with Opening Day just hours away, we are ever so close to seeing it play out. Here's everything to know about the new ABS challenge system.

Los Angeles Angels right fielder Jo Adell returns to the dugout after he was called out on strikes during the fourth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium.

What is ABS?

ABS is an automated system that uses 12 cameras to depict exactly where each pitch crosses home plate. It has been used in the minor leagues since 2021, debuting in the Arizona Fall League and Low-A Southeast League before slowly being implemented into more and more minor league stadiums. Though the first baseball organization to use the system was the independent Atlantic League back in 2019.

Teams were allowed to experiment with the system during spring training this year.

How does the challenge system work?

Each team is granted two challenge opportunities at the start of each game. Throughout the contest, only the pitcher, batter and catcher can challenge pitches and they must indicate that they are challenging a call immediately after the call is made by tapping their helmet/hat.

If the challenge is successful and the call is overturned, the team retains that challenge. If the challenge is unsuccessful, the team loses that challenge for the rest of the game.

If a game goes into extra innings and all challenges have been depleted, the team will be granted one additional challenge opportunity per extra inning played, meaning they will get one for the tenth, one for the eleventh, and so on.

How accurate is ABS?

Very.

Although not 100% accurate, the system is close, but requires exact inputs for each batter's height in order to properly create a strike zone. According to MLB.com, the strike zone sits at between 27% and 53.5% of a player's height, very precise dimensions. All MLB players were re-measured prior to spring training in order to get more updated height figures.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: What is ABS? Explaining MLB's latest rule change before Opening Day

FanDuel Expands Home Run Betting Features in Time for Opening Day

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FanDuel is living up to its self-proclaimed “Home of the Home Run” moniker with multiple new markets on offer entering the new MLB season. 

Key Takeaways

  • FanDuel launches free-to-play Daily Dinger game.

  • Bettors can wager on the exit velocity of home runs.

  • The online sportsbook also upgraded with a multi-homer grid and a new “actionable” interface.

The online sportsbook announced on Wednesday three new products designed around long-ball betting just in time for the 2026 season opener between the New York Yankees and San Fracisco Giants.

The free Daily Dinger game allows users to select one player each day to hit a homer, earning a profit boost token for the next day if that player goes yard. Bettors can also also wager on home runs with an exit velocity of 110+ mph with Lazer markets. FanDuel is also implementing a dynamic multi-homer grid across the day’s games.

“FanDuel is the Home of the Home Run because we’ve purpose-built our MLB product around the most exciting and popular part of the game,” Karol Corcoran, managing director of FanDuel Sportsbook, said. “From new home run-specific markets to free-to-play experiences like Daily Dinger, these updates bring that vision to life. We are intentionally giving customers more ways to engage and greater confidence in their bets.”

More announcements 

FanDuel isn't ending its experience enhancements there. The online sportsbook redesigned its MLB interface with “actionable” insights to inform customers through real-time confirmed batting lineups, star player grids, recent performance stats and trends, and player game logs right on the app. 

FanDuel promises faster bet settlements, especially helpful for live wagering, and expanded same-game parlay functionality across core markets for prop bettors. 

The operator also announced updated house rules. Player prop bets will only activate if the player is in the starting lineup and records a plate appearance. 

Plenty of options

FanDuel operates sports betting in 24 U.S. states, as well as Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico. The sportsbook offers dozens of in-game markets, including player props and SGPs, as well as futures markets. 

Heading into the season, FanDuel listed the Los Angeles Dodgers as +200 favorites to win the World Series, giving the NL squad the shortest odds to claim the MLB title since the 2003 Yankees. 

The Yankees are -124 moneyline favorites in Wednesday's game, with the Giants at +106. New York’s -1.5 runline is at +152, and the total runs scored is seven. Moneylines, totals, player props, and more are open for Thursday’s 12 Opening Day contests.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Crawfish Boxes Staff Astros Predictions for 2026

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 27: The Houston Astros train is seen with new paint behind the Daikin Park sign and pennants before a game against the New York Mets on Opening Day at Daikin Park on March 27, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Houston Astros/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Our staff gives their roster predictions, and some key players of note for them this season.

Adam Spolane: 88-74. 2nd AL West, Wild Card Team

Big season: Before last season, Yordan Alvarez had played 135+ games in three of four seasons since returning from his 2020 knee surgery, but a fractured hand and a sprained ankle limited him to just 48 games in 2025. He should be able to bounce back into the 135-game range and produce his usual numbers. Joe Espada will likely help keep him healthy by limiting his time in the outfield, and the team can be smart with his off days, using the DH spot to cycle in other veterans for a half off day.

Breakout: The Astros’ track record of identifying pitchers they can take to another level is well known, which is why it’s easy to be bullish on Mike Burrows after they gave up a significant return to acquire him from the Pirates over the winter. Burrows pitched well last season, but Houston identified a few pitch selection tweaks—most notably adding a two-seam fastball against righties—and the early results this spring have been impressive. With Framber Valdez now in Detroit and Tatsuya Imai able to opt out after the season, the Astros need Burrows, who is under team control for five more years, to emerge. They haven’t drafted a pitcher in the first round since 2018, and right now, there isn’t an arm in their system that projects as an above-average starter.

Rough season: Dusty Baker used to say it takes older players longer to get going, and the Astros better hope that applies to Christian Walker. Coming off a disappointing first season in Houston, Walker had a dreadful spring, slashing .139/.205/.333 with a 26% strikeout rate and a 7.7% walk rate. It came in just 39 plate appearances, but you’d still like to see a little more life after he finished last season with 0.2 bWAR and a 97 OPS+. The Jose Abreu comparisons will never apply to Walker because he plays a Gold Glove caliber first base, but you don’t pay a third baseman $20 million/season for his glove.

Joel Blank: 86-76, 2nd AL West, Wild Card

Big Season: Yordan Alvarez

Breakout Season: Brice Matthews

Most Concerned About:Jeremy Pena, Jake Meyers

Three players most interested in: Tatsuya Imai, Mike Burrows, Yordan Alvarez

Possible trade candidates:Yainer Diaz, Christian Walker, Jake Meyers

Craig Larson Jr.: 88-74, 2nd AL West, Wild Card

Big Season: For all of the off-season banter about being dealt, I actually think Isaac Paredes will have a big year.   I personally enjoy watching him work counts.

Most Concerned About: I think Cam Smith continues to struggle and he’s the number one concern for me.    Unfortunately, I think when we look back, he’ll join a list of highly touted prospects that didn’t pan out.    Think of the first rodeo for Jon Singleton or back in the day, Cameron Drew who never panned out in the late 80’s.

Player Most Interested In: I think Bryan Abreu gets on a roll with total appearances, elevates his total strikeouts once again exceeding 100 for the season.  In short, he gets even better in 26′ making it harder to avoid arbitration next time around given his dominance.    He has a big year.

Jimmy Price: 91-71, AL West Champs

Big season: Cam Smith.. saw flashes last year but after a full off-season, I expect him to have a big year.

Rough season:Yainer Diaz... I’m afraid the pitch selection issues will continue to hurt him offensively.

Breakout: I’ll go the prospect route and say Cole Hertzler.

Scott Barzilla: 85-77, 2nd AL West, miss playoffs.

Big Season: I think Yordan is finally healthy enough to play 140 games and will produce a .900 OPS

Rough Season: I think Yainer Diaz falls off a cliff. He is just not selective enough and pitchers will figure out how to pitch around him.

Breakout Season:Cam Smith takes a significant step forward and becomes a four win player. He has the look of a young Jason Heyward.

Brett Chancey: 88-74, 2nd AL West, Wild Card

Big Season:Yordan Alvarez. If Yordan stays healthy, we could see something special. FanGraphs projects him to hit .294 with a 156 wRC+, and if he plays around 140 games (+/- 5 games)I believe he finally eclipses the 40 HR mark for the first time in his career. When Alvarez is on the field consistently, he’s still one of the most dangerous hitters in baseball.

Most Concerned About:Lance McCullers Jr.. FanGraphs projects McCullers for around 113 innings, but that feels like an overreach to me. At this stage, if McCullers gives Houston more than 70 innings, that would already be clearing a major hurdle. The bigger questions isn’t just health, it’s effectiveness after so much time away. McCullers hasn’t been able to stay healthy consistently for a while now, and until he proves otherwise it’s hard to project a full workload in 2026. That said, if he comes back healthy and dominates, I’ll be the first one to congratulate him. Houston would gladly take that boost in the rotation.

Breakout Player: Cam Smith. Cam is the guy I’m watching for a breakout season in 2026. His ability to play both left field and center field gives the Astros flexibility defensively, and that versatility could put him squarely in the conversation for a Gold Glove if things click. The athleticism, range, and defensive instincts are there. if the bat continues to develop alongside the glove, Smith could turn into one of the Astros’ biggest impact players this season.

Rookie to Watch: Brice Matthews. Another player to keep an eye on is Matthews. The tools are loud, and if he gets an opportunity this season, I think he has a real chance to work his way into the top 10-15 range of the AL Rookie of the Year conversation. The combination of power, speed and positional versatility makes him an intriguing piece for Houston moving forward.

Pitcher to Watch: Mike Burrows. If Houston can unlock another level with his arsenal, he could become a really important piece of the rotation depth and possibly more. The Astros’ pitching development track record speaks for itself, and Burrows could be the next arm that takes a leap forward.

Final Thoughts: The Astros might now be the overwhelming favorite they once were, but this is still a dangerous club. Houston still has championship experience, emerging young talent like Cam Smith and Brice Matthews, and a pitching staff that could surprise people if arms like Mike Burrows take the next step. Don’t count this team out. The window isn’t closed yet.

Patrick Creighton: 93-69, AL West Champs.

This is a team that won 87 games as one of the greatest MASH units in MLB history. Simply being healthier should win this team 6 games easily. A healthy Yordan Alvarez alone can make that kind of difference.

Big Season: Yordan Alvarez. When Yordan is playing and not injured, he’s a certifiable wrecking machine. Don’t discount his pride and desire to win. Yordan was clearly frustrated by his injury and the “less than stellar treatment” received from the team to overcome his hand injury. When he returned, he blistered the baseball to the tune of .369/.462/.569 (that’s a 1.031 OPS) in 19 games before suffering a freak ankle injury stepping on home plate. I expect an inspired Yordan Alvarez this season, that is good news for Houston and bad news for opposing pitchers.

Breakout Season: Cam Smith. Cam has been locked in this spring, stinging the baseball to all fields, pulling the ball more with authority, and continuing to show the athleticism that has made him make the transition to outfield easily. Batting lower in the lineup to start the year will help, but his new approach and mechanics at the plate have already shown dividends, and his presence lower in the lineup really extends the lineup and makes this a more dangerous offense. Wouldn’t be surprised if he eventually leapfrogs a couple of people in the lineup, especially this guy…

Rough Season: Yainer Diaz. For three seasons, we have been waiting for Yainer Diaz to learn some plate discipline, stop swinging at pitches out of the zone that turn to weak ground ball contact, and draw some walks. After three seasons, he has not learned any of it. Yainer doesn’t post big strikeout totals because he has very strong bat-to-ball skills, the problem is all the soft contact he makes leads to a disgracefully high GIDP total (including a league worst 22 GIDP in 2024). Yainer needs to learn to take pitches and not swing at everything. He could be a legitimate impact bat if he would just show some discipline at the plate. Now entering his age 27 season, it’s likely not going to happen. At this point, he is simply the placeholder for Walker Janek.

Trade Candidate: Jake Meyers. Jake’s fluky offensive season (.292 AVG, .354 OBP, .727 OPS) is highly unlikely to be repeated. Expect hard regression to his career norms (.243 AVG, .307 OBP, .678 OPS). Jake is nothing more than a bottom of the order bat who doesn’t utilize his speed enough on the basepaths. He is a terrific defensive player despite his weak throwing arm, as he mostly runs down anything. However, the Astros now have younger players in Brice Matthews, Zach Cole, Joey Loperfido and Cam Smith who can also run down baseballs well, have excellent speed, have strong arms, and a lot more offensive upside. The time to trade Meyers was this offseason and the Astros basically blew that. They should find a taker for Jake as soon as possible to any team desperate for a defensive CF and get themselves some bullpen help.

Player To Watch: Tatsuya Imai. I am projecting Imai to be the runaway AL ROY. His stuff is absolutely filthy. His tweak to his mechanics has increased the velocity on his fastball to 98+ MPH, and his breaking stuff is electric. The only core weakness in his game is command, as he has historically been a high walk pitcher in his career prior to last season. He gets immense swing-and-miss, and his added velocity is going to make the breaking pitches even harder to hit. Imai may be fourth in the rotation to start the season, but he will pitch like a strong number two. Brown, Imai and Burrows will wind up forming one of the best “Big Three” starting tandems in all of baseball.

Final Thoughts: While the offense won’t be incredible, it will be better than many people expect. The starting pitching has the chance to be elite, especially the top 3 guys. My concern for this team is the bullpen.

Josh Hader will be considered an injury risk for the rest of his time in Houston, and with him still not able to max out his velocity should not be expected back once his mandatory 15 days are up.

Bennett Sousa established himself as a leverage reliever last season, and had taken over 8th inning duties when he got injured and was shut down for the season. Sousa now starts the year on the 15-day IL with an oblique strain and could be out two months.

This will put significant strain on the pen. Bryan Abreu must step up in the closer’s role, especially early. Bryan King is likely to get high leverage innings, and I can see A.J. Blubaugh getting high leverage innings as well from the right side. Blubaugh’s power stuff plays well in short bursts, and he could wind up being an extremely important guy in the pen. With Ryan Weiss and Kai-Wei Teng also in the bullpen as relievers who can give multiple innings, Houston can afford to make Blubaugh a key set-up man in the pen.

Clearly, I am asking for some unknown/untested players to perform in the pen. However, it’s certainly not unreasonable to think those players can fill those roles, and if they do, this team will be much better than people think.

Last year, as good as the national media made Seattle out to be, they only won 90 games. They beat one of the most injury ravaged teams in baseball history by only 3 games. That screams to me Seattle is being overrated and the Astros are being slept on.

Usually the Astros are in the frontrunner seat, with high expectations and everyone gunning for them. This year, the expectations for the team are the lowest they have been in a decade, and I expect them to outperform those expectations, be an exciting team, and give Astros fans a lot to enjoy in 2026. LFGA!

Reflections on the cusp of the Cubs’ 2026 season

A year ago, many were skeptical that the Chicago Cubs could be a postseason contender, even after the acquisition of Kyle Tucker, a genuine star.

A year later, the Cubs did make the postseason and extended the Brewers to five games in a tightly-fought division series. The 92-win season was absolutely a good one, with Pete Crow-Armstrong breaking out into an All-Star, Gold Glove year, even though his performance declined in the second half. The Cubs also got big years from Michael Busch, Nico Hoerner, Matthew Boyd, Daniel Palencia and others, as they appeared to be putting together a solid core of players for the first time since the big selloff of 2021.

Now Tucker is gone, and another former Astros player, Alex Bregman, was signed to bring a similar big bat to the middle of the lineup. Bregman also brings Gold Glove defense to third base and a reputation as a first-class clubhouse guy.

Speaking of defense, you might recall this article from a number of years ago that noted the 2016 Cubs as one of the best defensive teams in MLB history.

I’m here to tell you that this year’s Cubs might be another one making that list. The Cubs could have as many as six Gold Glove winners — the entire infield plus PCA and Ian Happ. Five of those six players have already won Gold Gloves, and Michael Busch should be in the mix for this year.

That matters. The eye test in Spring Training told me that some balls that (for example) Nico Hoerner or Dansby Swanson could have made plays on, went through the infield when minor leaguers or non-roster guys were playing there. That had an impact on the results for certain pitchers — another reason you shouldn’t pay any attention to spring results or numbers when analyzing pitchers.

It’s certainly true that everyone wants Shōta Imanaga to cut down on the home runs allowed. But Imanaga appears 100 percent healthy, in great shape, and his velocity was up from last year, when he never seemed fully recovered from that hamstring injury. I expect Shōta to be more like the 2024 version of himself. That will make this year’s Cubs rotation formidable, and Justin Steele will re-join it at some point mid-season.

That’s something that makes this Cubs team better. They’ve got five good-to-excellent starters, a capable sixth guy in Colin Rea, Steele coming back, and Javier Assad waiting at Triple-A Iowa. That’s eight MLB-quality starters — and who knows, maybe we’ll see Jaxon Wiggins join the rotation at some point in 2026, as Cade Horton did in 2025.

Horton, in my view, has the chance to be a true ace. His K numbers weren’t impressive last year, but remember, he was still ramping up to a career high in innings, so he was reported to have held back some of his best stuff. He did not do that in Spring Training, hitting 98 miles per hour frequently and in one game, striking out 10 Guardians in five innings.

Beyond the improvement in the Cubs, the rest of the NL Central has taken a step back. The Brewers traded their best pitcher and a couple of the young players who were key parts of that ridiculous 29-4 run they had midseason. The Reds are good, but have recently lost two of their best starters to injury. The Pirates are better, but… they’re still the Pirates. And the Cardinals are in a full rebuild.

In addition to the team on the field, the Cubs will be celebrating two significant anniversaries in 2026: The 150th anniversary of the franchise itself, the only original National League franchise from 1876 still operating in its founding city. The team will have celebrations throughout the year and you can vote for the 150th anniversary all-time Cubs team that will be revealed later this year. They’ll also be celebrating the 10th anniversary of the 2016 World Series champions. That World Series trophy was brought to Mesa this spring and there were long lines at Sloan Park of folks wanting to have their photos taken next to the trophy.

Perhaps there will be another such trophy to add to the collection after the 2026 season. This team is certainly built to win; 100 wins is not out of the realm of possibility.

It all begins tomorrow at Wrigley Field. Go Cubs!

MLB Opening Day 2026: The Purple Row community offers their season predictions

DENVER, CO - APRIL 5: Fans gather outside the stadium ahead of the 2024 Opening Day game between the Colorado Rockies and Tampa Bay Rays at Coors Field on April 5, 2024 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Rachel O'Driscoll/Colorado Rockies/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s Opening Day! Baseball is back!

Earlier today, we shared our Purple Row staff predictions, and for the third-straight year, we asked the community to offer their same predictions! We received 18 responses, down from 35 in 2025, and here’s what you all think will happen this year:

Let’s start with a win total

The community was a bit all over the place regarding their record predictions, which just goes to show how volatile and unpredictable this team is right now. 63-99 received the most votes (3); the most pessimistic answer is 55-107 while the most optimistic is 82-80.

National League winners

As to be expected, the community was a bit more split with their predictions.

However, 17 out of 18 voters predict the Los Angeles Dodgers will once again be Kings of the NL West. The San Diego Padres received the other vote.

In the NL Central, the Chicago Cubs (10) just edged out the Milwaukee Brewers (8) to retake the crown.

In the NL East, though, the overwhelming majority of the community think the New York Mets will take the crown. The Philadelphia Phillies got six votes, and the Atlanta Braves got one.

As far as Wild Cards go, if the community has their way, the Phillies (9), Brewers (8) and Padres (7) will all make the postseason.

American League winners

Switching leagues, there were fairly clear winners in all three divisions.

In the AL West, 15 out of 18 respondents voted for the Seattle Mariners. The Texas Rangers received two votes, while the Not-Oakland Athletics received one.

In the Central, the Detroit Tigers were the overwhelming favorites, receiving 11 votes. The Kansas City Royals received six, and the Minnesota Twins received one.

The AL East was the most divisive division. The community was evenly split between the Toronto Blue Jays and New York Yankees, who each received eight votes. The Boston Red Sox and Baltimore Orioles received the two remaining votes.

As far as Wild Cards go, if the community had their way, the three teams to make the postseason would be the Red Sox (12), Yankees (9) and Cleveland Guardians (8).

Champions

The pennant races were quite interesting again. On the NL side, the Dodgers are the clear favorites, earning 10 of 18 votes. The Mets earned four, while the Brewers, Phillies, Padres and Arizona Diamondbacks each earned one.

On the AL side, the Mariners edged out as favorites, earning six votes. The Blue Jays and Yankees each earned four, the Tigers earned two, and the Red Sox and Athletics earned one each.

As far as the World Series goes, the Dodgers are the clear favorites, earning seven votes. However, the Mariners were right behind them, earning five votes. The Blue Jays earned two, while the remaining four votes were split between the Red Sox, Tigers, Mets, and Padres.

Hardware

Pivoting to individual awards, there was once again a clear favorite for NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani (LAD). The Japanese two-way superstar earned 12 of 18 votes. Fernando Tatís Jr. (SD) earned two votes, while the remaining were split between Juan Soto (NYM), Ketel Marte (AZ), and Ronald Acuña Jr. (ATL).

On the AL side, Aaron Judge (NYY) was the clear favorite, earning eight votes. Cal Raleigh (SEA), Julio Rodríguez (SEA) and Vlad Guerrero Jr. (TOR) each earned two votes, while Bobby Witt Jr. (KC) earned the final one.

For the NL Cy Young, Paul Skenes (PIT) was the clear favorite to repeat — earning 10 of the 18 votes. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (LAD) earned three, while Shohei Ohtani (LAD), Nolan McLean (NYM), Matthew Boyd (CHC), Mason Miller (SD), and Justin Verlander (DET) also received votes. This also means that we might see a Verlander trade in the middle of the season (likely to the Dodgers, if I had to guess, because Dodgers).

The AL side is always more difficult to predict, but Tarik Skubal (DET) was the clear favorite as well, receiving 50% of the vote. Garrett Crochet (BOS) received three votes, while Max Fried (NYY), Cam Schlittler (NYY) and Drew Rasmussen (TB) each received one.

For the Rookies of the Year, things are a little all over the map (as to be expected.

On the NL side, TJ Rumfield (COL), Charlie Condon (COL) and Konnor Griffin (PIT) each received three votes. Also receiving multiple votes were Carson Benge (NYM), JJ Wetherholt (STL), and Justin Crawford (PHI). Andrew Painter (PHI) and Nolan McLean (NYM) also received a single vote apiece.

On the AL side, Kevin McGonigle (DET) received four votes. However, the following players also received one vote each:

  • Travis Bazzana (CLE)
  • Carter Jensen (KC)
  • Chase DeLauter (CLE)
  • Colt Emerson (SEA)
  • Tatsuya Imai (HOU)
  • Munetaka Murakami (CWS)
  • Trey Yesavage (TOR)

Bold predictions

Now is the fun part of the predictions! The staff made some fun predictions, what does the community think?

Here are some predictions for the Rockies:

  • Mickey Moniak will be an All-Star Team designee in 2026
  • Kyle Karros hits a walk-off home run to complete a cycle.
  • The Rockies will finish within 5 games of the Giants
  • A Rockies pitcher wins 15 games.
  • The Rockies finish 7th in MLB attendance in 2026.
  • Charlie Condon will be called up in June….and be a Rookie of the Year finalist
  • The Rockies will give up half the runs in the first inning than they did last year.
  • Dollander becomes main closer for Rockies.
  • Condon is up by May 1 and hits .290 with 35 HRs the rest of the way
  • Rockies will not be last in the division and will sweep one series against the Dodgers
  • Condon wins NL Rookie of Year
  • Ezequiel Tovar will put it all together. He’ll hit 30+ HR, finish with 6+ bWAR, win a Gold Glove, get some down ballot MVP votes, and be named 1st or 2nd team All-MLB SS at the end of the season.

And here are some for MLB as a whole:

  • Cal Raleigh breaks the single season HR record.
  • Ohtani wins a batting triple crown while also being a top 20 pitcher
  • Elly De La Cruz steals 90 bases
  • J-Rod has a 40-40 season to beat out an Aaron Judge 60-HR year for MVP
  • Athletics come in 2nd in the AL West
  • Athletics vs Mets in the World Series. Mets pull it out in 6 games.
  • Dodgers lose 81 games
  • Ohtani throws a team no hitter while hitting 2 HR in the same game

Some of these bold predictions will come true, and we’ll all wish we had come up with them ourselves. But either way, baseball is back everyone!

Happy MLB Opening Day!


Please keep in mind our Purple Row Community Guidelines when you’re commenting. Thanks!

Diamondbacks Reacts Survey: How Many Wins for the 2026 D-backs?

A fortune teller, wearing a turban, his hands on a crystal ball before him, within the ball is an image of a woman smoking a cigarette, United States, circa 1935. (Photo by FPG/Archive Photos/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Diamondbacks fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

As is traditional, on the eve of the Diamondbacks’ first game, I have polled the writers to make their prediction as to how many wins the team will get this year. These were all submitted through a Google form to avoid any risk of cross-contamination, but it’s always interesting to see everyone’s takes, and how they reached the final figure. But before we get to that, and their logic (or lack thereof!) influences your thinking (or lack thereof!), here’s a poll to give your opinion on the topic. I’ll post the results on Sunday’s unusual off-day. But I encourage you to pick a specific number and, in the comments, post it and your own explanation. Then we can revisit it at the end of the season and see how close or far away everybody was!

James Attwood – 81

The team is starting the season on the back foot because of injuries. With Burnes, Kelly, Puk, Moreno, Martinez, Saalfrank, and Carroll all in various stages of missing time, the team will be doing well just to tread water early in the season. I could fairly easily see them dropping to 7-10 games below .500 if just few things go against them. But then, assuming they do not have themselves another rash of injuries to deal with, they should get most of those players back for the second half. I expect them to be a much better squad then, the sort of squad that can make a hard charge to erase that below .500 deficit and to get them back to right around Mt. 500 by the end of the year.

1AZfan1 – 81

I don’t think the offense will be as good as last couple years, but will still be in the top half of the league. I think the rotation will be better than last year, with Ryne delivering similar performance to last year and the rest of the group all slightly improving their performances. The big problem, as always, will be the bullpen. There are glimmers of hope from ST, especially Morillo and Hoffman and Jonny Lasagna, but there are far more discouraging performers and it has my expectations very low for the bullpen overall.

DBacksEurope – 79

Hey! How are you all doing? I’ll be honest, I haven’t paid much attention to Spring Training, so I will stick to my sentiments after a low-ball off-season. We repeat last season’s starting rotation, but haven’t addressed our traditionally weak bullpen, like we are used to by now with Mike Hazen. On top of that, there is a good chance that our batting won’t be as good as last season. It seems Hazen is banking on players to repeat last season’s performance, to improve on it or to return from an injury and deliver immediately. That is a bold and naive strategy; last time we did that was in 2021 and the results were as expected. Obviously, this team is much better but there are too many flaws on the roster. I think we will hover around mount .500 for most of the season but will fail to climb over it. It’ll be Lovullo’s last season, and Mike Hazen will know he will have to deliver, somehow, in 2027 after yet another year of the rudderless Diamondbacks.

Dano_in_Tucson – 86

I dunno, really, beyond having a feeling based on little empirical evidence that year’s Diamondbacks will wind up performing better than it seems like the widespread conventional wisdom seems to be expecting. Here’s hoping I’m right, and that I have in fact underestimated the brilliance the team will unleash upon us starting Thursday.

Steak85 – 81

While injury luck almost certainly will not be as poor as it was in 2025, the Diamondbacks are starting from a worse position. While it is possible to squint and see this roster contending, it’s a long shot (unless the Diamondbacks were suddenly moved to the AL Central, where they might be the favorites.)

Contending will rely on bounce back years from Gallen, E-Rod, Soroka, and Arenado, plus sustained performance and health by Perdomo, Marte, Carroll, and Moreno. That’s a lot to ask for, and even if that does happen, the bullpen can still ruin everything. But there’s enough talent here to get to .500 even if some things go wrong, as will certainly happen.

Imstillhungry95 – 92

I’m backing off from my typical response of 100, but not by much.

I’m expecting to see a decent improvement over last year, at least in part due to just natural bounce backs. They’ll have a full season of Merrill Kelly, instead of losing him for the last month and a half. That alone is easily four wins. Gallen almost literally can’t be worse, at least if you go by his ranking among qualified pitchers.. If they can change the team record in his starts from 13-15 to even just 16-12, that plus more Kelly is more than half of my predicted improvement. Add in even the slightest bit of better luck in the bullpen and maybe the WBC reminding Eduardo Rodriguez what it’s like to pitch well, and I think this is actually fairly achievable.

Watch this be the year they finally hit 100.

Jim McLennan – 82

The team did very little to improve this winter in terms of moves. Arenado and Santana are likely not to be as good as Suarez and Naylor, and compared to Opening Day last year, the signing of Soroka doesn’t move the needle much. We’ve rearranged the pieces of the bullpen, but after almost a decade of failure in that department, it’s hard to be optimistic there. The return of Burnes, Puk and Martinez might help a bit, but expecting all three to be at pre-TJ form immediately is likely optimistic. In a tough division, the D-backs will likely be fighting for third/fourth place with either the Padres or Giants.

Makakilo – 85.1

  • 13 January. My too early prediction was 84.4 wins (774 runs scored and 739.5 runs allowed). See
  • 27 January. My updated prediction was 87.3 wins (784 runs scored and 719 runs allowed). Rationale follows: Nolan Arenado was acquired. His batting will add 10 runs, while his excellent defense against ground balls will impact runs allowed, especially for 5 pitchers. Jonathan Loaisiga and Kade Strowd will enhance Arenado’s impact because they have above-average ground balls to third. See Can Jonathan Loaisiga help the Arizona Diamondbacks Bullpen? and Is Kade Strowd the Best Offseason Acquisition?
  • 10 February. My updated prediction was 81.8 wins. Rational Follows:
    Andrew Saalfrank needs season-ending left shoulder surgery: 1.6 wins reduction
    Carroll suffered hamate fracture: 3.9 wins reduction
  • 23 March. My updated prediction was 85.1 wins. Rationale follows:
    Perdomo breakout: 2.4 wins increase.
    Carroll recovery better than expected: 0.9 wins increase
    Comment from 23 March Round Table: “This season is unusual because of the wide range of possible wins. My view is that the Diamondbacks will win between 81 and 89 games, depending on the health and performances of nearly all Diamondbacks players. Therefore, my confidence that they will reach the playoffs is [about 4 out of 10].” — Makakilo

Justin27 – 84

I just clicked through month by month of the Dbacks schedule for this season and also looked at head to head records from last year. I just did variations on series’ and pretty much assumed every 4 game series was 2-2. Nothing too scientific. Yeah, I ended up with more wins than last year… I remember one season I simmed the season 10 times on Baseball Mogul and took the average. It isn’t being released until the 27th this year. I am not sure if we did a late win predictions article or it was released early. That was fun.

Jeffern11 – 85

I am buying into the improved defense and ‘run prevention’ mantra that we have heard all spring. That and I am bullish on Jordan Lawlar, Alek Thomas, and Gabriel Moreno contributing to one of the top offensive cores in baseball. It doesnt take much for you to see room for optimism with this team.

It is all going to come down to the pitching. This teams depth is so paper thin that it is impossible to predict where we will actually end up this season giving the infinite number of injuries that can occur to the pitching. Its also complicated by the fact that we have no way of predicting how the rest of the injured guys’ recoveries are going to go. But with as much bad luck as they had last season in this regard, I am betting on some good luck. All eyes will be on Brian Kaplan and the training staff to be able to demonstrate that they can turn a corner with some of these guys and develop them as well as keep guys healthy and help them return from injury.

If they can get one of Pfaadt, ERod, or Gallen to really turn a corner and be someone this year or 2 or 3 of Garcia, Hoffmann, Ginkel, Loasiga, Jameson, Diaz, Burgos, Carrillo, etc al we should be fine. If this team plays anywhere even close to .500 ball and gets the reinforcements back they certainly should be within striking distance of the wild card. If the pitching continues to produce nothing, this could be a disaster of a season. Ill bet on the former.

mcbenseigs – 84

I have immense faith and confidence in the team’s offense. I think there are exciting players throughout the lineup that will make for some fun watching with speed, contact, and power. But the pitching is likely going to be an immense drag on the team – especially the bullpen which could be a real nightmare for most of the season until Martinez and Puk return.

I’m not sold on any of the other non-Dodgers teams in the division and if the D-Backs can improve on their head-to-head records with some of them – especially against the Rockies – then they’ll keep themselves in the hunt and be competitive heading into the Trade Deadline where Hazen will be highly motivated to push in his chips.

Spencer O’Gara – 79

I don’t have much faith in the team’s decision to rely on the likes of Arenado and Santana. But when you’re in a division with the Rockies and a league with the Cardinals, Braves, and Nationals, you’re going to win more games than you should. So I’ll go ahead and let some realistic positivity enter my prediction and say we almost break .500 again this year. Hopefully the season ends strong in the vein of 2022. That seems very likely to me.

C. Wesley Baier – 95

Although it’s a flawed roster, I think this team is a lot stronger than people think. I think the team is going to go on a tear down the stretch after Corbin Burnes and others return from the injury list. The first half will be the real test, and if they can enter the trade deadline with a winning record, I can see them challenging the Dodgers for the division title. Alternatively, if they have a losing record at that point, I wouldn’t be surprised if they finish with a worse record than in 2025.

That comes out as an mean of 84.2 wins and a median of 84 wins predicted by the SnakePit writers, with a range of 79 on the low side (by DbacksEurope and Spencer O’Gara) to 95 at the high end (C. Wesley Baier).

We’re About to Find Out Who the Real St. Louis Cardinals Fans Are

ST. LOUIS, MO - SEPTEMBER 21: A pair of Cardinals fans protect themselves from the late summer sun during a MLB game between the Milwaukee Brewers and the St. Louis Cardinals on Sept. 21, 2025, at Busch Stadium, in St. Louis, MO. (Photo by Keith Gillett/Iconsportswire) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

There has been much discussion about the upcoming 2026 season being one that will reveal much about who the St. Louis Cardinals will be as this rebuild process continues. I also believe that we’re about to learn a lot about the fanbase of our beloved team. Who are the real St. Louis Cardinals fans and will they show up?

It’s an amazing fact that many of the younger St. Louis Cardinals fans have not been alive long enough to remember when the team was not competitive. That’s a tribute to the DeWitt family that the St. Louis Cardinals have been perennial contender for the National League Central for more than two decades. If you just look at the St. Louis Cardinals since Albert Pujols rookie season of 2001, the team has been to the playoffs 15 times. That era includes 4 World Series appearances and 2 championships. If you’re 25 or younger, you’re not accustomed to seeing the St. Louis Cardinals lose much. That’s likely why attendance has been on a rather sharp decline since 2022:

2022: 3.3 million+ total

2023: 3,241,091 total

2024: 2,878,115 total

2025: 2,250,007 total

I’m going to make a bold prediction that the decline in attendance will end with the 2026 season. I am not saying that the St. Louis Cardinals will suddenly return to the 3 million+ home game numbers from a few years ago, but I believe that the real St. Louis Cardinals fans now understand that the settling for mediocre “we just hope we can stumble our way into the playoffs and hope for a miracle” mentality is gone. Yes, a winning record might not be in the cards for 2026, but the trajectory toward constant winning has resumed I think. I don’t agree with everything that new President of Baseball Operations Chaim Bloom has done, but I am convinced that he’s chosen a path that will lead the Cardinals back to greatness sooner rather than later. Yes, that sooner will likely not be the 2026 season barring a real miracle, but I think contending for NL Central titles at least will be within reach in the next 2 or 3 seasons.

Who are the real St. Louis Cardinals fans?

I’m not saying that if you disagree with the current rebuild or whatever you want to call it, you’re not a real fan. Not at all. Many of the complaints about the St. Louis Cardinals front office now are not that different from gripes that many of us had with Gussie Busch before the DeWitt family bought the team in 1996. But, I remember the eras when the St. Louis Cardinals were not expected to be playing in October yet we still went to games and supported the team. We kept showing up. The games I went to as a kid in the early 1970’s were not to see a playoff-caliber team. Other than 1971 and 1979, most seasons during that decade the St. Louis Cardinals were fortunate to have anything above a .500 record. Same can be said of the early 1990’s. Until Tony La Russa took over the team in 1996, we went to St. Louis Cardinals games for the atmosphere and because cheering on this team was what we did. Winning was just a bonus back then.

I think most of the bandwagon jumpers are gone now. Those who said they were fans of the team only because they were winning will gladly show up at the park once the new St. Louis Cardinals return to their winning ways, but the real fans will show up this year because they know something is different. Will players like JJ Wetherholt, Masyn Winn and Alec Burleson be the core of the next great Cardinals teams? We also can’t wait to see what Joshua Baez will do to major league pitching once he completes his development in the minors. Look at the stands at Busch Stadium this year and you’ll see the real Cardinals nation. Real Cardinals fans don’t always agree with the manager, ownership or what the team is doing, but we never leave either. I’ll be watching every single game I can in 2026 no matter what the record is. Will you?

SF Giants’ infamous Opening Day streak ends after 19 years

Barry Bonds and Heliot Ramos

SAN FRANCISCO — When the starting lineups are introduced Wednesday evening at Oracle Park, Heliot Ramos’ name will be announced as the Giants’ starter in left field. Just like he was in 2025.

And with that, the streak is over.

The Giants’ Heliot Ramos is poised to snap a longtime streak Wednesday. Getty Images

Ramos is the first Giants left fielder to make consecutive Opening Day starts at the position since Barry Bonds retired in 2007. The club rotated through different players for the past 19 seasons in what had grown into one of the most infamous and unlikely streaks in the sport.

“I don’t know that I’m going to break any of Barry’s records,” Ramos told The California Post with a humble chuckle. “But it’s something that I feel very proud of, something that obviously I’ve been working my whole life for. Not just the streak but just being a consistent big leaguer.”

First-year manager Tony Vitello previewed the news Tuesday and made it official when he filled in the first lineup card of his career for the Giants’ season opener Wednesday against the Yankees.

The move prevented the Giants from making ignominious history: One more year and they would have topped the Orioles for the longest such streak at any position. Baltimore’s streak, also in left field, ran for 19 years from 1937-55, beginning when the franchise was known as the Browns.

The longest active streak now resides in Cleveland, where the Guardians will roll out their 15th different right fielder since 2012 when they begin the season Thursday against the Mariners.

With Bonds set to return to the public eye as a commentator on Netflix’s exclusive broadcast of Opening Night, the Giants have officially rid themselves of the two streaks associated with the home run king.

Former Giants star Barry Bonds was the team’s last left fielder who made consecutive Opening Day starts at the position. Getty Images

In the final game of last season, shortstop Willy Adames launched his 30th home run of the campaign, becoming the first Giants player to reach that number since Bonds in 2004.

While Ramos, 26, established himself as a building block when he was named an All-Star in 2024, it wasn’t a sure thing that he would be the one to end the streak after his play in left last season.

Multiple metrics rated Ramos as the worst defensive player at his position last year. But Buster Posey, the team’s top baseball executive, said he is confident that Ramos has put those issues behind him.

Posey watched from the suite level as Ramos tracked down fly balls in batting practice a day before the opener.

“He was locked in on all live swings coming off the bat,” Posey said. “I’m sure he did that some last year, but it just seems like it’s more concentrated work than it was last year.”

Vitello described Ramos in spring training as a “man on a mission” when it came to his defense. It started over the offseason, when Ramos reached out to new bench coach Jayce Tingler and outfield coordinator Shane Robinson. Ramos was taking fly balls long before his fellow position players arrived in Arizona.

“Mentally was the main part, because I was making it seem like it was harder than what it was,” Ramos said. “Physically, I’ve got the gift. It’s just about not making the easy part harder.”

Ramos connected with new center fielder Harrison Bader, who taught him better technique when he feels the need to backpedal. He worked on his angles and jumps with Tingler and Robinson, who hit live fungos rather than using a machine. Now, Ramos said he feels like a “complete player.”

He’s more than that. Ramos is the streak breaker.

Since Bonds, the Giants’ Opening Day left fielders have been as follows:

2008: Dave Roberts

2009: Fred Lewis

2010: Mark DeRosa

2011: Pat Burrell

2012: Aubrey Huff

2013: Andres Torres

2014: Michael Morse

2015: Nori Aoki

2016: Angel Pagan

2017: Jarrett Parker

2018: Hunter Pence

2019: Connor Joe

2020: Alex Dickerson

2021: Austin Slater

2022: Joc Pederson

2023: Blake Sabol

2024: Michael Conforto

2025: Heliot Ramos


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Yankees vs Giants Home Run Picks & Best Bets for Today

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The New York Yankees and San Francisco Giants hit Oracle Park to begin the 2026 season Wednesday, March 25, and I’ve a pair of home run MLB picks for the opener.

My top Yankees vs. Giants predictions call for New York superstar Jazz Chisholm and San Fran shortstop Willy Adames to leave the yard tonight.

Yankees vs Giants home run picks for March 25

PickOdds
Yankees Jazz Chisholm+800
Giants Willy Adames+600

Yankees home run pick

Jazz Chisholm (+800)

New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm posted an impressive .360 wOBA and .267 ISO against righties last season, in addition to 26 of his 31 home runs coming against right-handed arms.

While Chisholm is just 3-for-13 and without an extra-base hit against San Francisco Giants starter Logan Webb, that’s overpriced into these long odds.

Giants home run pick

Willy Adames (+600)

San Francisco Giants shortstop Willy Adames hit 10 of his 30 homers with a rock-solid .226 ISO against left-handed pitchers last season, and he’s also gone 2-for-6 with a pair of doubles against New York Yankees starter Max Fried.

How to watch Yankees vs Giants and game info

LocationOracle Park, San Francisco, CA
DateWednesday, March 25, 2026
First pitch8:05 p.m. ET
TVNetflix

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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SF Giants finalize Opening Day roster — with surprise decision

Giants exec Buster Posey

SAN FRANCISCO — Jared Oliva is 30 years old and hasn’t played in a big-league game since 2021, but that’s set to change after the Giants included the speedy outfielder on their Opening Day roster.

Buster Posey and the Giants opted for Oliva over 24-year-old outfield prospect Luis Matos, who was designated for assignment Wednesday ahead of San Francisco’s season opener against the Yankees.

“With a lot of hard conversations the last few days, that one was one that stood out as a real bright spot,” Posey said of Oliva, “to be able tell him he was on the team.”

Oliva, who led the Cactus League with 14 stolen bases, will serve as a pinch runner and the second backup outfielder alongside Jerar Encarnacion. Since appearing in 26 games for the Pirates between 2021 and 2022, Oliva spent three seasons in the minor leagues for three different teams.

“Honestly, pretty emotional,” Oliva said. “It’s been a lot of hard times. It’s been very tough. A lot of times looking at yourself in the mirror and feeling like you’re going against the current sometimes.”

Outfielder Jared Oliva made the Giants’ Opening Day Roster. MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Giants chose to go with Oliva, a career .179 hitter, and Encarnacion, a slugger signed out of the Mexican League in 2024, over Matos, a onetime top prospect who was out of options.

“The Matos one was hard. Been a Giant for a while now. … He’s shown flashes of being a really good big leaguer,” Posey said. “Ultimately [we] felt like carrying Oliva with what he can do on the basepaths, defensively, is a weapon for us. … With Jerar, the hope is to have some power.”

There weren’t too many other surprises — or decisions left to be made — as the Giants finalized their Opening Day roster after top prospect Bryce Eldridge was optioned last week.

Rule 5 pick Daniel Susac won the backup catcher job over Eric Haase after putting together a strong spring at the plate. The Giants would have to offer him back to the Athletics if he wasn’t on the 26-man roster. Blake Sabol, in 2022, was the last Rule 5 pick to make the Giants’ roster out of spring training.

“I really wanted to see which player stood out the most, and both played well,” Posey said. “Daniel, I think the most important part, carried himself well defensively and swung the bat well also.”

Haase was released, leaving the Giants with only one other catcher in the minor leagues who has played the position at the major-league level, 30-year-old Logan Porter, who will be joined by Jesus Rodriguez and Diego Cartaya at Triple-A Sacramento.

The Giants had indicated that they wanted to carry three left-handers in their bullpen and made good on those intentions with Ryan Borucki, Matt Gage and Erik Miller.

Buster Posey and the Giants opted for Oliva over 24-year-old outfield prospect Luis Matos Getty Images

Borucki, who worked with pitching coach Justin Meccage with the Pirates, was signed to a major-league deal this week after being cut by the White Sox. Joey Lucchesi, who was also brought into camp late, was granted his release and signed a major-league deal with the Angels.

Despite two days off over the first five days of the season, the Giants went with a 13-man pitching staff rather than using the favorable schedule to carry Matos or another position player into the season.

Ryan Walker and Miller are expected to split closing duties in a bullpen that also includes long men JT Brubaker and Keaton Winn, with Jose Butto, Caleb Kilian and Gage providing middle relief.

Spencer Bivens and Tristan Beck, who both had roles in prior year’s bullpens, were optioned to Triple-A.

“The Beck and Bivens decisions were tough,” Posey said. “Guys that have played roles with us (and) this year are certainly going to help us at some point. We’re confident of that. Excited for guys like Kilian to get an opportunity. The pickup we had with Borucki gives us a third lefty out of the bullpen. Brubaker’s a guy that’s going to give us length. He’s been there and done that before.”

There weren’t too many other surprises as the Giants finalized their Opening Day roster. Getty Images

Kilian, a former Giants prospect, made the team as a non-roster invitee after flashing a heater in the upper 90s and posting a 0.96 ERA in eight spring appearances.

Fellow reliever Reiver Sanmartin, who suffered a hip flexor strain in a World Baseball Classic exhibition, was transferred to the 60-day injured list to create room on the 40-man roster.

Left-hander Sam Hentges (right knee surgery/left shoulder surgery) and right-hander Joel Peguero (left hamstring strain) will start the year on the 15-day IL.

SF Giants Opening Day roster

Pitchers (13): LHP Ryan Borucki, RHP JT Brubaker, RHP José Buttó, LHP Matt Gage, RHP Adrian Houser, RHP Caleb Kilian, RHP Tyler Mahle, LHP Erik Miller, LHP Robbie Ray, RHP Landen Roupp, RHP Ryan Walker, RHP Logan Webb, RHP Keaton Winn

Catchers (2): Patrick Bailey, Daniel Susac  

Infielders (6): Willy Adames, Luis Arraez, Matt Chapman, Rafael Devers, Christian Koss, Casey Schmitt

Outfielders (5): Harrison Bader, Jerar Encarnacion, Jung Hoo Lee, Jared Oliva, Heliot Ramos


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Cincinnati Reds set Opening Day roster, add Jose Franco

GOODYEAR, ARIZONA - MARCH 5: Jose Franco #74 of the Cincinnati Reds throws a pitch during a Spring Training game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Goodyear Ballpark on March 5, 2026 in Goodyear, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We don’t yet know when, or if Jose Franco will take the mound for the Cincinnati Reds, but we do now know he’s going to have a very good opportunity to do so within the next two weeks.

With Opening Day set for tomorrow – Thursday, March 26th – and with Nick Lodolo needing a trip to the injured list while his blister recovers, Franco has been added to the team’s Opening Day roster as depth. MLB.com’s Mark Sheldon relayed the news earlier on Wednesday, noting that Caleb Ferguson was also predictably placed on the 15-day IL to begin the 2026 season.

Franco was added to the 40-man roster over the winter after a 2025 season that saw him pitch to a 3.11 ERA and 1.26 WHIP with 118 K and 54 BB in 110.0 IP split between AA Chattanooga and AAA Louisville. It was his second straight solid season after he missed all of 2023 while recovering from arm surgery, and while he’s been used almost exclusively as a starter he’ll now be tasked with a depth role to begin 2026.

In essence, Cincinnati is leaning into carrying him as a long man in the ‘six for five’ starter scenario they originally planned to use before the blisters and injuries to the rest of the starting staff. Given that Nick Lodolo will be out for nearly two weeks, he’s almost assured to get at least one chance to pitch in bulk while on the active roster.

Congrats to Jose on making the bigs!

Here’s the complete Opening Day roster:

Catcher (2) – Tyler Stephenson, Jose Trevino

Infield (6) – Sal Stewart, Matt McLain, Elly De La Cruz, Ke’Bryan Hayes, Eugenio Suárez, Nathaniel Lowe

Sal Stewart (1) – Sal Stewart

Outfield (4) – Will Benson, Noelvi Marte, TJ Friedl, Dane Myers

Starters (6) – Andrew Abbott, Brady Singer, Rhett Lowder, Chase Burns, Brandon Williamson, Jose Franco

Bullpen (7) – Emilio Pagan, Graham Ashcraft, Tony Santillan, Pierce Johnson, Brock Burke, Sam Moll, Connor Phillips