Really hoping to salvage this one
MLB Player Props & Best Bets for Today, June 10
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This evening, our MLB player props are rolling with Dominic Canzone, Kyle Schwarber and Kyle Stowers, all in matchups that set up well for production.
Let's take a deep dive into why these guys are catching our eye for the top MLB picks for Wednesday, June 10.
Best MLB player props today
| Player | Pick | Odds |
|---|---|---|
| Over 1.5 Hits, Runs, RBI | -121 | |
| Home Run/Double | +193 | +353 | |
| Over 1.5 Hits, Runs, RBI | +101 |
Dominic Canzone Over 1.5 Hits, Runs, RBI (-121)
Calzones for everyone, if this cashes! CALZONES!!!
The very first prop I locked in today was Seattle Mariners designated hitter Dominic Canzone to go over his hits, runs, and RBI prop.
Today marks Canzone's 24th elite rating, and he has surpassed this prop in six of his last 10 elite-rated games, per Batters-Box.
Against Baltimore Orioles right-hander Brandon Young, Canzone's matchup wOBA, ISO, hard-contact rate, and fly-ball rate all see significant boosts. Not to mention, he owns tremendous arsenal coverage against Young's pitch mix.
Recently, Canzone has been all over anything left over the plate. Over his last 30 plate appearances against right-handed pitching, the 28-year-old is producing nearly 60% hard contact with a 27.3% barrel rate, while posting a 1.324 OPS, .857 SLG, and .428 ISO.
On the other side, Young has been getting crushed by left-handed hitters at home, allowing a 40.6% hard-contact rate, a 26.9% ground-ball rate, and a 55.8% fly-ball rate.
If Canzone gets a hold of one tonight, I think it has a good chance of leaving the yard. I'd sprinkle a little on the home run and would play this prop up to -130.
- Time: 6:35 p.m. ET
- Where to watch: MASN, SEAM
Kyle Schwarber Home Run (+193) | Double (+353)
We are not paying juice on any of Kyle Schwarber's props today. Skip the nonsense, it's home run or double day.
The Philadelphia Phillies slugger finds himself in a great spot against future Hall of Famer Max Scherzer, who takes the mound for the Toronto Blue Jays this evening.
Against Scherzer's pitch mix, Schwarber owns a 70.8% arsenal coverage rate while also carrying an elite rating. Across nearly 250 plate appearances with an elite rating according to Batters-Box, the slugger leaves the yard 28.34% of the time.
Scherzer has allowed plenty of hard contact at home this season, surrendering a 20% barrel rate while sporting an 8.51 xERA. Through 53 left-handed hitters faced, opponents have produced a 14.9% barrel rate and a 76.6% elevation rate. Those lefties also own a .311 xBA, .616 xSLG, and .411 xwOBA against him.
While Schwarber is batting just .240 over his last 30 plate appearances against right-handed pitching, he continues to square the ball up at an impressive rate, posting 61.5% hard contact. On the season, he owns a 13.51% barrel rate and a 52.94% hard-hit rate against righties.
If we're expecting Schwarber to elevate the baseball in Toronto tonight, let's attack the elevation props and grab the better value.
- Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
- Where to watch: SN1, NBCSP
Kyle Stowers Over 1.5 Hits, Runs, RBI (+101)
Big day to be a Kyle, as we’re also backing Miami Marlins young buck Kyle Stowers to go over 1.5 Hits + Runs + RBI at even money.
The 28-year-old checks in with an elite rating on Batters-Box, and he’s been nothing short of consistent in these spots. Across 28 elite-rated games, he has cleared this number 57.14% of the time. He’s also recorded multiple hits in nearly 40% of those contests and has left the yard 21.43% of the time.
The Marlins outfielder gets a matchup against Arizona Diamondbacks right-hander Ryne Nelson, who enters with poor ratings in both matchup ISO and hard contact allowed. Left-handed hitters have given him plenty of trouble this season, posting a nearly 71% elevation rate alongside a .541 expected slugging percentage and .356 xwOBA.
Stowers also has strong arsenal coverage against the fastball-heavy righty. On top of that, he’s seeing the ball extremely well right now, hitting .296 with a .901 OPS and .556 SLG over his last 30 plate appearances against right-handed pitching. During that stretch, he’s produced a 56.3% hard-hit rate and a 12.5% barrel rate.
I’d do my best to grab this prop at plus money. Getting an elite-rated hitter at plus money to go over 1.5 HRR feels like a gift.
- Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
- Where to watch: MIAM, ARID
- 2026 MLB Record: 203-351-29, -0.2 units
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Dalton Rushing under fire — again — after reckless slide wipes out Dodgers rally
Dalton Rushing’s reputation for playing old school baseball added another chapter Tuesday night in Pittsburgh.
The Dodgers rookie catcher was called for interference during the fifth inning of a game against the Pirates after attempting an aggressive takeout slide into shortstop Jared Triolo while trying to break up a double play.
With nobody out and Rushing on first base, Alex Freeland hit a ground ball to the right side that appeared destined to become a double play Rushing veered well away from the bag and crashed into Triolo as the Pirates infielder attempted to complete the turn.
Although Freeland initially beat the throw to first, umpires reviewed the play and ruled Rushing’s slide illegal under Major League Baseball’s “bona fide slide” rule, awarding Pittsburgh the double play.
The play immediately reignited criticism surrounding Rushing, who has already found himself at the center of similar controversies this season.
Back in April, San Francisco infielder Luis Arraez criticized Rushing after a hard slide into Giants shortstop Willy Adames.
“For me, that’s not good baseball. It’s not clean baseball,” Arraez said at the time. “It’s dirty, but for me, this is baseball.”
Still, those who know Rushing insist the 25-year-old is not trying to build a reputation as baseball’s newest villain.
Speaking with The California Post last week, Rushing acknowledged that several viral moments have created an image he doesn’t want attached to his name.
“You never want to be viewed as a guy like that from opposing teams,” Rushing said. “You want guys to hate playing against you because of the player that you are and how great you are on a baseball field. Not because of the verbalized things you say.”
Rushing said he has been trying to better manage the competitive fire that has occasionally landed him in headlines this season.
“I’m gonna continue to compete, I’m gonna continue to play with an edge,” he said. “But obviously we can hone back a little bit on things that can get you in trouble in this media world.”
That competitive edge was evident again Tuesday.
While older generations of baseball fans might view the play as a throwback takeout slide, MLB’s rules changed in 2016 following Chase Utley’s infamous postseason collision with Ruben Tejada.
Under the current standard, runners cannot alter their path to initiate contact with a fielder, making Rushing’s slide an easy call after review.
The timing is notable for the Dodgers.
Starting catcher Will Smith has missed three consecutive games because of neck stiffness, and Los Angeles is reportedly considering a stint on the injured list. If Smith misses additional time, Rushing will see an expanded role behind the plate.
Rushing’s power potential remains intriguing, but as his playing time increases, so does the spotlight. And right now, Rushing is drawing attention for much more than his bat.
New York Yankees @ Cleveland Guardians: Carlos Rodón vs. Parker Messick
It’s been a series full of nailbiters, but at least the Yankees have come out on the right side of a pair of one-run games in this set with the Guardians. With a getaway day today, we have a matinee affair for you that will hopefully be a little more of a laugher than we’ve seen this week, but a pair of low-ERA lefties might mean we’re doomed to another tight one.
Carlos Rodón has looked more than serviceable in his five starts already this year, with a 2.88 ERA and 3.08 xERA that suggest he’s not just suppressing runs but suppressing good contact as well. However, there are a couple of yellow flags to note. First of all, he has a very elevated walk rate, over 15 percent of batters faced. He did walk five in his return start against the Brewers, but has only issued two or fewer free passes in one outing this year, and being able to control the strike zone will be an early key to his effectiveness. He’s also running a pretty paltry HR rate that will begin to normalize eventually, and while this Guardians squad won’t bludgeon you to death, they have a couple guys that can get some good swings off.
Parker Messick is playing in his first full season and a lot of the things we just said about Rodón could probably be said here, even if it appears Messick’s error bars are for the time being narrower than his veteran counterpart. He’s walking guys about doubly as often as last year, but with a more normal home run rate. Regardless, the two southpaws feature FIPs within .15 points of each other, so we’re dealing with two pretty similar looking seasons so far.
We see the Full Lefty lineup deployed once again, with Paul Goldschmidt leading off, but given the half-day off while DH’ing, Amed Rosario cleaning up, and Ali Sánchez batting ninth and catching. The platoon advantage is there for Sánchez of course (and it’s a day game after a night game), but after the game J.C. Escarra had, having the backup in was probably a good idea regardless of the starter.
How to watch
Location: Progressive Field — Cleveland, OH
First pitch: 1:10 pm ET
TV broadcast: YES, Guardians TV, WKYC3
Radio broadcast: WFAN 660/101.9 FM, WADO 1280 (NYY), WTAM 1100, WMMS 100.7, WARF 1350, Guardians Radio Network (CLE)
Online stream: Gotham Sports App, MLB.tv (out-of-market only)
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Francisco Alvarez goes 1 for 3 in return to Mets lineup, but Kodai Senga’s rehab on hold
NEW YORK — The New York Mets took catcher Francisco Alvarez off the injured list before the game against St. Louis, but Kodai Senga experienced a setback in his rehab from a back injury.
The 24-year-old Alvarez returned to the lineup exactly four weeks after sustaining a torn meniscus in his right knee while taking a swing against the Detroit Tigers. He started behind the plate and batted ninth, going 1 for 3 in a 7-0 loss to the Cardinals.
Alvarez had surgery May 14 and was expected to miss six-to-eight weeks. Already known as a quick healer following his recovery from hand and thumb injuries the last two seasons, Alvarez was taking dry swings within days of the operation and began hitting within two weeks.
“I always want to get back as quickly as possible to help the team,” he said through an interpreter.
Alvarez went 3 for 13 in four rehab games at Triple-A Syracuse. He played six innings at catcher in his first appearance and seven in the next two games before catching all nine innings.
“He’s unbelievable,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. “Four weeks later, not only he’s playing, he’s playing on the big league level. He checked all the boxes.
“You’ve got to give him credit — credit to our trainers and our group there — because I don’t think anybody saw this coming.”
Alvarez is expected to get the majority of the starts behind home plate going forward. Luis Torrens and Hayden Senger combined to bat .215 with two homers and 10 RBIs with Alvarez on the IL. Senger was optioned to Syracuse in a corresponding transaction.
“I feel good. I feel like my legs are strong enough,” Alvarez said. “I don’t think there’s anything that’s weak right now.”
The news was less encouraging for Senga, sidelined by lumbar spine inflammation since April 27. He was scheduled to make a rehab appearance for Double-A Binghamton before experiencing what he called a “small reaction” in the ulnar nerve while doing his between-starts work.
Senga via an interpreter said he “wouldn’t go as far as saying it’s inflammation. It’s relatively minor.”
The right-hander played catch and is expected to do so again.
Mendoza said the Mets haven’t ended Senga’s rehab assignment, and the team hopes he can resume pitching in minor league games this week.
“He’s kind of day to day,” the manager explained.
Senga has a 5.25 ERA in three rehab starts between Syracuse and Class A St. Lucie. He was 0-4 with a 9.00 ERA in five starts for the Mets before going on the injured list, and is 0-7 with a 6.94 ERA in his last 14 big league starts since straining his right hamstring while covering first base last June 12.
“I think the front office would agree that they would like to see some results and so would I,” Senga said. “I think we’re on the same page there.”
Star shortstop Francisco Lindor, who hasn’t played since he strained his left calf running the bases on April 22, is expected to participate in full baseball activities — including on-field batting practice. Lindor and Juan Soto, who missed 15 games in April with a right calf injury, have played just seven full games together this season.
First baseman and designated hitter Jorge Polanco, who experienced soreness in his left ankle while on a rehab assignment for the left Achilles injury that’s sidelined him since April 15, underwent an MRI on the Achilles that revealed nothing more than inflammation.
Mendoza acknowledged Polanco, who was expected to shift to first base and replace Pete Alonso upon signing a two-year deal worth $40 million in December, likely would be limited to DH duties for the foreseeable future.
Mets reliever Joey Gerber exited prior to the start of the ninth inning when a blister began flaring up on his right hand. Gerber spent time on the injured list due to the blister in April.
Phillies vs. Blue Jays prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for June 10
The Phillies (36-31) and the Blue Jays (33-35) wrap up their three-game series tonight in Toronto. The series is even at one game apiece following last night’s 3-2 walk-off win for the hometown Jays.
It was a classic pitchers’ duel last night at Rogers Centre. The Phillies struck first in their first at bats when Brandon Marsh doubled home Trea Turner, and for much of the night it looked like that early run might hold in a tight matchup between Zack Wheeler and Dylan Cease. Cease was dominant in his return, striking out 11 over six innings and allowing just one run, while Wheeler matched him with six strong innings of one-run ball. The game turned in the ninth. Bryson Stott delivered what seemed like the decisive blow with a two-out RBI double to give the Phillies a 2–1 lead, but the back end of Philadelphia’s bullpen cracked. Jhoan Duran, previously perfect in save chances, failed to record an out and allowed three hits, including a game-tying wild pitch and a walk-off single from Brandon Valenzuela.
Tonight, Philadelphia turns to Jesús Luzardo (LHP, 4–4, 4.56 ERA), who has been steady but not dominant, carrying an ERA in the mid-4s but he is averaging just about one strikeout per inning. Toronto counters with Max Scherzer (RHP, 1–3, 9.64 ERA), who is expected to make his return from the injured list. Scherzer’s numbers are inflated from a small sample and injury-shortened season, but the storyline is obvious—if he looks anything like vintage form, Toronto gains a massive ceiling boost; if not, this becomes a favorable matchup for the Phillies lineup.
Philadelphia has the more stable starting pitching option in Luzardo. Toronto, meanwhile, expects Scherzer to keep the likes of Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber in the ballpark.
Lets dive into tonight’s matchup and find a sweat or two.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
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Game Details and How to Watch: Phillies vs. Blue Jays
- Date: Wednesday, June 10, 2026
- Time: 7:07PM EST
- Site: Rogers Centre
- City: Toronto, ON
- Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, NBC Sports Philadelphia, Sportsnet One
Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.
The Latest Odds: Phillies vs. Blue Jays
The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of DraftKings:
- Moneyline: Philadelphia Phillies (-136), Toronto Blue Jays (+113)
- Spread: Phillies -1.5 (+119), Blue Jays +1.5 (-144)
- Total: 8.5 runs
Probable Starting Pitchers: Phillies vs. Blue Jays for June 10
- Phillies: Jesus Luzardo
Season Totals: 73.0 IP, 4-4, 4.56 ERA, 1.33 WHIP, 80K, 21 BB - Blue Jays: Max Scherzer
Season Totals: 18.2 IP, 1-3, 9.64 ERA, 1.61 WHIP, 10K, 8 BB
Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Phillies vs. Blue Jays last 10 Games
- Bryson Stott – .346 AVG, .452 OBP, 1 HR, 7 RBI
- Nick Castellanos – .314 AVG, 2 HR, .951 OPS
- Kyle Schwarber – 3 HR, .864 OPS
- Trea Turner – .279 AVG, 3 HR
- Alec Bohm – .243 AVG, .270 slugging
- Ernie Clement – hitting .366
- Vladimir Guerrero Jr. – hitting .225 with 0 HRs and just 1 RBI
Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!
Top Betting Trends & Insights: Phillies and Blue Jays
- The Philles are 37-32 on the Run Line this season
- The Blue Jays are 32-34 on the Run Line this season
- The OVER has cashed 33 times in Toronto’s 68 games this season (33-32-3)
- The OVER has cashed 28 times in the Phillies’ 67 games this season (28-37-2)
Expert picks & predictions: Phillies vs. Blue Jays
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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.
Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s game between the Phillies and the Blue Jays:
- Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Phillies on the Moneyline.
- Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Phillies on the Run Line.
- Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total UNDER 8.5
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Status Report: Uncertainty Persists In 5 Places On The Diamond
As you might expect with a team that has hovered around .500 all season, signs point upwards, downwards, and downright sideways, all at the same time, with regard to the 2026 A’s and the rest of the season.
Make no mistake about it, there are positives. The A’s have not hit the way they expected to, but joining the already superb Nick Kurtz, Shea Langeliers, and Carlos Cortes is the sizzling hot Tyler Soderstrom and Brent Rooker has shown signs of life this week as well. The A’s will ultimately hit. And the emergence of Gage Jump, along with the good arm of Jack Perkins and breakout of JT Ginn, gives the A’s renewed hope around their beleaguered rotation.
But there are still more questions than answers around the final 95 games as the A’s sit 3.5 back of 1st place and 0.5 game out of a crowded field of wild card mediocrity. Here’s an updated look around the diamond…
Third Base
Leo De Vries looked so good in spring training that it felt realistic to think he might push for a spot on the big league roster as soon as this month. He didn’t miss that fast-track by a hair, he missed it more by a finger. De Vries suffered a bone bruise in his finger that probably explains his big drop in slugging so far in 2026, with an ISO of just .107 compared to the impressive .196 of last season. All his other stats are still looking elite and he’s on his way — but not imminently anymore.
Meanwhile, Zack Gelof has been a revelation, with his .266/.315/.462 batting line pretty close to his enticing rookie season stats (.267/.337/.504) that had him looking like a core piece for years to come. His defense has been the best of any A’s candidate, night and day better than Max Muncy and superior to that of other players, e.g., Darell Hernaiz, trying to play it as their second or third best position.
So why hasn’t Gelof stabilized 3B going forward? Not because of anything he has done wrong, but because of what Jeff McNeil has done wrong. McNeil went to bed April 30th a wily 34 year old veteran and woke up on May 1st a 54 year old trapped in a horror movie best described as “Freaky Friday meets The 100 Year Old Man”. Point being the A’s might need Gelof to stabilize 2B, where his defense is even better, leaving a hole still at 3B.
As for Muncy, who is being given opportunities again to show he is capable of manning 3B every day, he brings questions on both sides of the ball. He has yet to prove he can play 3B (or 2B) adequately and the bat has not shown up since he was hit on the hand, played through it, rested, rehabbed, and returned to go 1 for 8 — and the one should have been ruled an E6.
Bottom Line: Really you want to put players at their best positions when possible, especially if there is a hole at that position. For Gelof that is 2B, not 3B, so it leaves 3B still highly uncertain given that De Vries is not yet in the picture. It continues to be the place where the A’s should probably focus if they consider a trade or waiver acquisition for the rest of the 2026 season — but they know help is on the way so they would only be looking at a stopgap of an upgrade, which is an unlikely fit. Especially for a team whose focus will be on pitching if it’s on anything.
Second Base:
Once lovingly referred to as Squirrel, then also Graybeard as a tribute to his “mature profile,” lately Jeff McNeil’s nickname has simply been Your Expletive Here. Another possible one would be This ISO Intentionally Left Blank, as McNeil’s last extra base hit came on May 20th and he has had just two since May 3rd.
It’s hard to overstate how bad McNeil has been the past 6 weeks, as his swings themselves are actually more alarming than the results, which are putrid enough. May’s terrible .216/.278/.284, 54 wRC+ performance has been followed by an even more frightening June: .091/.130/.091, good for the ol’ -44 wRC+. He is now 4 for his last 48 with 4 singles.
Perhaps McNeil’s most recent PA shines a spotlight on just how far the former batting champion has fallen. With the game on the line in the bottom of the 12th, McNeil swung at the first pitch even though it was several inches inside and he could not have possibly done anything with it but pull it weakly foul as he did. Then he took a strike which he challenged even though most of the ball was clearly in the zone. Then he waved late at a pitch up around his neck. It was a PA you couldn’t fathom in April, but have come to expect in June.
If the A’s sit McNeil they solve 2B immediately with Gelof. Only the hole it leaves at 3B, and the “what to do with McNeil?” questions remain — but both are significant queries. So 2B remains as unsettled as 3B unless the A’s can figure out a way to clone Gelof (hey, he does have a brother in the minors…).
Bottom Line: The A’s need to figure out what they do with McNeil and if it’s the Gio Urshela “It’s been fun…” treatment then they have solved 2B with Gelof, but if not most likely we will continue to see some sort of platoon that bounced Gelof around the infield.
Center Field
This is probably the least unsettled of the 5 in that Henry Bolte is off to a somewhat rollicking start — so long as you don’t look too deep under the hood. Bolte smashed his first HR last night, which is a welcome development, but he also struck out twice to raise his K rate to 31.5%. His BABIP now sits at .440.
Bolte also committed errors in each of the first 2 games of the series, first making an unnecessary throw that skipped past 3B and then getting his footwork a bit tangled as he fanned on a base hit he was charging. Bolte is still only 25 games and 89 PAs into his career, and there are clear signs of success (a .295 BA and .371 OBP) as well as red flags for regression ahead (he has struck out in 14 of his 28 June PAs).
Bolte’s job is safe in that Denzel Clarke is out for a long time and Lawrence Butler is a terrible CFer who also happens to be hitting worse than Clarke offered. But what lies ahead for Bolte, both at the plate and in the field, is anybody’s guess.
Bottom Line: The A’s will pretty much “sink or swim” with Bolte for the next 2 months. It’s just unclear which it will be.
Starting Pitching
Gage Jump has been sensational and JT Ginn has been a true “breakout SP” — including last night when he was charged with 5 ER in 5.2 IP but in the context of the hitting environment offered the best start of any of the 4 SP in the series so far. Jack Perkins is still an unknown but offers a third “plus arm” the A’s can hope to lean on to create a young “big 3” of sorts.
It’s after that things get even dicier than wishcasting great success on Perkins before he has fully shown it. Jeffrey Springs began the season with an ERA of 1.46 for his first 4 starts and hasn’t won a game since. His season ERA now stands at 4.68 and the dreaded HR ball has shown up 16 times in just 75 IP. He has pitched very much like JP Sears did for the A’s, and while Sears was useful to the A’s he was clearly a “back of the rotation innings eater”. The 5th SP is a revolving door of recently Kade Morris, potentially Joey “You think Springs gives up a lot of HRs?” Estes, and soon the return of Aaron Civale, who out pitched his peripherals for a while and then didn’t.
It feels like the A’s SP, going forward, could be anything from “surprisingly solid” — like the bullpen was last season following the Mason Miller trade — to “predictably godawful” as you can get when you rely on pitchers who have made 3 big league starts, haven’t been able to stay healthy for a full season, have pitched to poor predictive stats but better results, and so on. It’s a wild card to match the playoff spot the A’s are a half game away from.
Bottom Line: The A’s are going to lean heavily on 3 very inexperienced SPs to lead them into the post-season picture at more than a cursory level.
Bullpen
Oh the bullpen. This is a group that can throw 6.1 IP scoreless innings across 6 different relievers one day and then the very next day turn a comfortable 5-1 7th inning lead into a devastating walk-off loss. After last night, fans are bullish about the prospect of Mason Barnett and Elvis Alvarado blowing away the competition in high leverage, but how many felt this way a week ago?
Justin Sterner (3.19 ERA with underlying metrics to support his success) has probably been the A’s most consistently effective reliever from day 1 to day 67. Certainly Alvarado has the stuff as he unleashed yesterday. Hogan Harris has a team leading 5 saves but he has also walked 23 in his 32.1 IP. Barnett has been a revelation, but only for 3 appearances so far. Luis Medina has been solid in lower leverage and brings good stuff to go with erratic results throughout his career. The rest of the bullpen crew (Mark Leiter Jr., Scott Barlow, Jose Suarez) are veterans who rely on guile more than plus offerings.
Best case scenario is that a couple arms emerge to give the A’s one thing they have sorely lacked all season: a clear set-up man and a clear closer to build the rest of the pen around. 2 of Alvarado, Sterner, and Barnett could potentially seize these roles, but whether they will is still anybody’s guess.
Bottom Line: “Closer and set-up man by committee” just doesn’t usually work well at all, so look for the A’s to settle on 2 guys soon and then we’ll find out if they made good choices.
A lot of uncertainty, and also a lot of potential and upside, as the A’s spend the next month or so learning whether they are contenders, pretenders, buyers or sellers, in a mediocre AL that is there for the taking — but is also not going to be taken by most of the middling teams. Your thoughts and suggested plans of action moving forward? One thing is clear: it’s not early anymore and the wheat and chaff are about to separate in the American League.
Cole Carrigg triples in Rockies debut and plays with his `hair on fire,’ Warren Schaeffer says
DENVER — Cole Carrigg’s helmet flew off as he kicked it into high gear around the bases. He slid headfirst into third base and looked toward the Colorado Rockies dugout before breaking into a little dance.
The first hit in his major league debut goes down as a triple.
“I wouldn’t want it any other way,” Carrigg said after the Rockies beat the Chicago Cubs 7-3. “I love pushing it and going for three. Oh man, it was really awesome. It was the best feeling in the world.”
Carrigg brings speed to the diamond and an aura of fearlessness to go with it.
No way he’s dialing it back, either. Nor do the Rockies want him to. The outfielder who now wears No. 16 — it was assigned to him — finished his debut 1 for 3 with a walk. Carrigg became the second Rockies player to have a triple as their first big league hit, joining Ryan Ritter, who accomplished the feat last season.
“As soon as it got by the first baseman, I’m thinking three for sure,” Carrigg said of his fifth-inning grounder down the line in right field.
This prospect doesn’t hold back.
“He plays with his hair on fire,” Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer said. “We just want that to continue up here. Anytime he’s on the baseball field, anything can happen. Just want him to play without fear, have fun, play free, and just let his skills shine.”
Carrigg was the fifth Rockies player to make their big league debut this season. He had a handful of family members, including mom and dad, along with friends and coaches in the stands to cheer.
He treated them to quite a show, too. He was doused with the contents of a Powerade bucket after the game.
“The nerves were running pretty high,” Carrigg said. “This is what I’ve worked for my whole entire life. If you’re not nervous for that moment, you’re not human.”
He got a glimpse of this level during the World Baseball Classic while playing shortstop for Team Israel. He said facing Venezuela and Ronald Acuña Jr. in front of more than 20,000 fans certainly was an eye-opening experience.
“As loud as I could have ever imagined,” said Carrigg, who was selected in the second round of the 2023 amateur draft from San Diego State. “It definitely got me prepared, for sure.”
The 24-year-old was in the midst of quite a season for Triple-A Albuquerque, hitting .338 with 15 doubles, five triples, six homers, 42 RBIs and 30 stolen bases. He played outfield and mixed in some shortstop, too.
This after after a spring training in which he hit .387 and made a compelling case to possibly be on the Rockies roster. He just went to work.
“I think when you feel like you have a chance to be up here and a chance to help the team, and you know you’re kind of playing well, it’s hard not to look up here,” Carrigg said. “It’s hard to stay where your feet are. But I think that’s the best thing you can do is just keep using those opportunities in Triple-A to make sure that you’re ready for when you get here.”
He officially found out about his promotion over the weekend in front of his Isotopes teammates. Then again, he had an inkling the moment was about to arrive. Or, his teammate, Adael Amador, did anyway.
“Adael came up to me in the fifth inning of the game and he’s like, `I think you’re getting called up, bro,’” Carrigg said. “I’m like, `What do you mean?’ He’s like, ‘I got a feeling.’ He had a feeling.”
About No. 16: Turns out one of his father’s favorite players, Bo Jackson, donned that number while with the Kansas City Royals.
“That’s the first thing he said and I’m like, ‘That’s a pretty good number to have,’” Carrigg recounted.
Schaeffer was eager to see how Carrigg’s skills translate in the big leagues.
“I mean, listen, he can run, he can hit from both sides and he can play instinctual center field, plays good shortstop, he steals bases,” said Schaeffer, who plans to use Carrigg as an outfielder. “A lot of people do that, but there’s not a lot of people that do that without fear. That’s part of his game.
“It’s one thing to have the tools, it’s another thing to use them, and he’s a guy that uses them.”
VOTE: Pick your Pirates MVP so far
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There’s a little over a third of the season in the books, with the Pittsburgh Pirates sitting at 34-33. They’ve been wobbling back and forth between .500 and a few games over all season. However, it’s better baseball overall than we’ve seen in a while, minus some hiccups.
What we want to know is, who do you consider to be the Bucs MVP with a third of the season in the books?
There’s some newcomers, a stud pitcher, a guy finally coming into his own at the plate. You decide.
We’ll be back soon with the results. Thanks for voting!
After Freddie Freeman, who are next in line for 2,500 hits?
Freddie Freeman doubled and singled in Tuesday night’s win over the Pittsburgh Pirates, bringing the Dodgers first baseman to 2,500 career hits, just the 102nd player in major league history to reach that milestone.
“It does mean a lot,” Freeman told reporters in Pittsburgh after his 2,500th hit, as shown on SportsNet LA. “There’s always another [milestone] to get to, but to step back and realize how long you have to play, the consistency over the course of that, to play at a high level for many, many years to get there, it does mean a lot.”
Freeman is the first new member of the 2,500-hit club since Robinson Canó on May 7, 2019 while with the New York Mets. The 2010s were a fruitful decade in gaining new members to this exclusive club, with 11 players getting their 2,500th hit between 2010-19.
There have been double-digit players reaching 2,500 career hits every decade dating back to the 1970s, topping out at 14 players between 2000-09.
| Decade | No. | Players |
| 1890s | 2 | Cap Anson, Jim O’Rourke |
| 1900s | 8 | Jake Beckley, Jesse Burkett, Lave Cross, George Davis, Ed Delahanty, Willie Keeler, Jimmy Ryan, George Van Haltren |
| 1910s | 5 | Fred Clarke, Ty Cobb, Sam Crawford, Nap Lajoie, Honus Wagner |
| 1920s | 6 | Max Carey, Eddie Collins, Rogers Hornsby, George Sisler, Tris Speaker, Zack Wheat |
| 1930s | 11 | Frankie Frisch, Lou Gehrig, Charlie Gehringer, Goose Goslin, Harry Heilmann, Heinie Manush, Rabbit Maranville, Sam Rice, Babe Ruth, Al Simmons, Paul Waner |
| 1940s | 4 | Luke Appling, Doc Cramer, Jimmie Foxx, Mel Ott |
| 1950s | 2 | Stan Musial, Ted Williams |
| 1960s | 6 | Henry Aaron, Richie Ashburn, Ernie Banks, Roberto Clemente, Nellie Fox, Willie Mays |
| 1970s | 10 | Luis Aparicio, Lou Brock, Willie Davis, Al Kaline, Vada Pinson, Brooks Robinson, Frank Robinson, Pete Rose, Billy Williams, Carl Yastzemski |
| 1980s | 11 | Buddy Bell, George Brett, Bill Buckner, Rod Carew, Steve Garvey, Reggie Jackson, Joe Morgan, Al Oliver, Tony Pérez, Rusty Staub, Robin Yount |
| 1990s | 11 | Harold Baines, Wade Boggs, Andre Dawson, Tony Gwynn, Rickey Henderson, Paul Molitor, Eddie Murray, Dave Parker, Tim Raines, Cal Ripken Jr., Dave Winfield |
| 2000s | 14 | Roberto Alomar, Garret Anderson, Craig Biggio, Barry Bonds, Steve Finley, Julio Franco, Luis Gonzalez, Ken Griffey Jr., Derek Jeter, Rafael Palmeiro, Alex Rodríguez Iván Rodríguez, Gary Sheffield, Omar Vizquel |
| 2010s | 11 | Carlos Beltrán, Adrian Beltré, Miguel Cabrera, Robinson Canó, Johnny Damon, Vladimir Guerrero, Todd Helton, Chipper Jones, Albert Pujols, Manny Ramírez, Ichiro Suzuki |
| 2020s | 1 | Freddie Freeman |
Freeman is the first player to reach 2,500 hits in the 2020s, and we’re already in our seventh season of this 10-year stretch.
Jose Altuve is next in line on the active career leaderboard, with 2,430 hits. The Houston Astros second baseman will likely reach 2,500 hits at some point later this season. But the rest of the active hit leaderboard quickly runs out of steam when it comes to potential players reaching 2,500 hits by the end of 2029.
MLB active hit leaders
- Freddie Freeman 2,500 hits
- Jose Altuve 2,430 hits
- Andrew McCutchen 2,280 hits (39 years old, released by Rangers on May 28)
- Paul Goldschmidt 2,229 hits (turns 39 in Septmber)
- Manny Machado 2,109 hits (turns 34 in July)
- Nolan Arenado 1,973 hits (age 35, had 453 hits since start of 2023, ~3.5 years)
- Carlos Santana 1,882 hits (age 40)
- Xander Bogaerts 1,874 hits (age 33, last had 170 hits in a season in 2023)
- Bryce Harper 1,862 hits (age 33, topped 150 hits twice since 2021)
Of that group, Altuve and Machado look likely to reach 2,500 hits in the next three-plus seasons, and maybe Arenado depending on how he finishes out this year. Bogaerts and Harper still very well could reach 2,500 hits, but perhaps not until 2030 or later.
The 2020s might end up being the decade that sees the fewest new entrants to the 2,500-hit club since the 1950s, when only two players did so. They were upper-echelon Hall of Famers Stan Musial and Ted Williams, so maybe it’s not all bad to be in such select company.
Jazz Chisholm Jr. answers `overrated’ chants with 8th-inning homer for Yankees in Cleveland
CLEVELAND — Jazz Chisholm Jr. once again showed why he relishes being the opposing player fans love to hate.
The flashy second baseman quieted chants of “overrated” in Cleveland with a home run in the eighth inning that sent the New York Yankees to a 3-2 victory over the Guardians.
“I love it. Kind of. I feel like that was the loudest chants all day we heard, so I think it was great,” Chisholm said.
Chisholm admitted the chants got him a little too riled up in the fifth, when he overswung at a couple of pitches and struck out.
He fell behind 0-2 against reliever Tim Herrin leading off the eighth before laying off a couple of pitches and working a full count. On the seventh pitch of the at-bat, Chisholm got a slider in the upper corner of the strike zone and drove it 360 feet into the right-field stands to put the Yankees back on top.
It was Chisholm’s fourth career go-ahead homer in the eighth inning or later and his first since 2022 with the Miami Marlins.
“I swung at the first pitch and realized that it was going to be tough to hit the slider on the outside corner. So I was just waiting on a ball to start right at me. I got one and handled it,” Chisholm said. “He’s a good pitcher and doesn’t really miss the spot. So for him to miss in that situation right there in that spot, it’s just like a huge sigh of relief.”
Chisholm waited until the towering drive landed in the seats before leaving the batter’s box and beginning his trot around the bases. He celebrated rounding third near the Guardians’ dugout as he heard mostly boos from Cleveland’s supporters but some cheers from Yankees fans in attendance.
“You’re still in that mode of getting after it, so that’s what was going through my head at the time,” Chisholm said.
It also was the second consecutive home run Chisholm has hit with one of Aaron Judge’s bats, which is slightly longer and weighs an ounce more than the bats he normally uses.
Chisholm said he went back to Judge’s timber due to overswinging during his three earlier at-bats.
Chisholm is only 4 for 24 in June, but three of his hits have been home runs. The three homers in the last six games have also come after Cleveland radio play-by-play announcer Tom Hamilton made a quip about Chisholm’s appearance on “The Tonight Show” despite struggling at the plate that generated some traction on social media.
“Pretty amazing he got on the Jimmy Fallon Show batting .239,” Hamilton said about Chisholm on June 2 when the Guardians were in New York.
It was one of Hamilton’s classic one-liners that has made him a Hall of Fame announcer, but whenever the comment involves someone from New York, especially when they are wearing pinstripes, it tends to resonate.
That might also be why Yankees manager Aaron Boone might have had extra appreciation for Chisholm enjoying his trot around the bases.
“I love them, I really do. Those I like,” Boone said.
San Diego loses its first game in extras, blowing multiple chances to win
By all accounts, the San Diego Padres should have won Tuesday night’s game. With the bases loaded in the sixth inning, the Friars grounded into an inning-ending double play. With runners on first and second in the eighth, the Cincinnati Reds struck out Samad Taylor before inducing a flyout from Jase Bowen to end the inning.
But the biggest situation came in the bottom of the ninth, where three consecutive singles loaded the bases with one out for the Padres. Manny Machado struck out to bring up Gavin Sheets. Sheets promptly struck out as well to send the game to bonus baseball.
San Diego quickly tied the game in the 10th on an RBI-single from Taylor. But they wouldn’t get any more than that, setting up a dramatic 11th inning. The Reds’ Sal Stewart slugged a two-run shot against Yuki Matsui that would be the difference maker.
That said, this was a productive game for the Friars. The superstars showed up tonight, with Fernando Tatis Jr., Machado and Jackson Merrill going 8-for-17 at the plate. Unfortunately, that production didn’t translate into a win for San Diego. They’ll now face off against Cincinnati in the rubber match today.
Taking the mound
Brady Singer (CIN) v. Michael King (SD)
Singer spent the 2025 season as a productive back-end starter for the Reds but has not been the same in ‘26. Through 55 innings, Singer owns a 5.89 ERA, 1.69 WHIP and an incredibly high .316 opponent batting average.
Most of the Friars haven’t faced the righty, so Cincinnati will be hoping that it takes some time to figure him out. San Diego will need to put up runs quick to take the rubber match and win their first series of June.
On the other side, King has been San Diego’s ace through this season. Despite a recent rough stretch, the righty has posted a 3.41 ERA through 74 innings. His last three starts have been tough, giving up 13 runs in just 15 2/3 innings.
Unlike Singer, King has faced a majority of the Cincinnati lineup. He’s had success against most of them, but catcher Tyler Stephenson boasts a .286 batting average and a team-high seven at-bats against the righty.
Batter up!
Samad Taylor has looked fantastic in his first week with San Diego. Across 11 at-bats, the speedster boasts a .364 batting average and a .500 on-base percentage. It’s a small sample, but he’s been a veritable spark for a Padres’ offense that had gone dark.
- Fernando Tatis Jr., 2B
- Jackson Merrill, CF
- Manny Machado, 3B
- Gavin Sheets, DH
- Ty France, 1B
- Samad Taylor, LF
- Jase Bowen, RF
- Sung-Mun Song, SS
- Rodolfo Durán, C
The stars showed up last night, but the rest of the lineup didn’t do much to help. The Padres went a blistering 3-for-20 with RISP, cutting short any hope of scoring opportunities. They’ll need to do much better tonight to win the series.
Relief corps
With the game going into extras (and Lucas Giolito going just four innings), the Friars’ bullpen looks pretty depleted after last night. David Morgan, Adrian Morejon, Jason Adam, Mason Miller, Bradgley Rodriguez and Matsui covered a total of seven innings to finish out the game.
That leaves just Ron Marinaccio and Wandy Peralta in the ‘pen for the Friars. Thankfully, King has a track record of working deeper into games than most of the San Diego rotation. The Padres hope he’ll be able to do so against a middling Cincinnati lineup.
MLB Same-Game Parlay Predictions: Our Best SGP Picks for Wednesday, June 10
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Here’s my trio of top MLB same-game parlay predictions for three night games Wednesday, June 10.
The MLB picks begin with the Arizona Diamondbacks taking down the Miami Marlins and wrap up with the nightcap between the Houston Astros and Los Angeles Angels tonight.
Today's best MLB SGP picks
| Game | SGP Odds |
|---|---|
| +390 | |
| +320 | |
| +455 |
Diamondbacks vs Marlins SGP: Snakes sink Fish
The Miami Marlins rank 26th in overall xwOBA across the past 30 days, while the Arizona Diamondbacks check in sixth, so I’m expecting the Snakes to put enough runs on the board to pull away tonight.
Arizona star Corbin Carroll has hit the Over in this market in 19 of his past 26 games, and he’s also posted a monster .375 wOBA against righties since the beginning of 2025.
Turning to Diamondbacks starter Ryne Nelson, he’s dipped to a 16.8 K% across his past seven starts while throwing fewer fastballs and adding a sinker to his pitch mix. It’s a clear recipe for success with his solid 2.89 ERA and 0.99 WHIP during the stretch, too.
This SGP is playable down to +375.
- Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
- Where to watch: MIAM, ARID
Phillies vs Blue Jays SGP: Philly maxes Scherzer
With the Toronto Blue Jays ranking 27th in xwOBA across the past 30 days and 26th in wOBA against lefties this season, I’m anticipating Philadelphia Phillies southpaw Jesus Luzardo to cash in on pending statistical correction. His 3.15 xFIP is miles below his 4.56 ERA, after all.
Phils first baseman Bryce Harper also lands in a favorable matchup with his high-end .418 wOBA and .292 ISO against righties, and Toronto turning to Max Scherzer (6.26 xFIP).
The final leg is uncorrelated to boost the odds, and Blue Jays star Vladimir Guerrero Jr. sports an elite .318 batting average against southpaws since the beginning of the 2024 campaign.
I’d play this SGP down to +300.
- Time: 7:07 p.m. ET
- Where to watch: SN1, NBCSP
Astros vs Angels SGP: L.A. bats tee up Lambert
Los Angeles Angels right-handed hitters Zach Neto and Oswald Peraza have a sneaky matchup with Houston Astros starter Peter Lambert sporting reverse splits and allowing a healthy .365 wOBA to righty bats.
Neto and Peraza both hit in the top half of the Los Angeles lineup and check in with respective .372 and .375 wOBAs against right-handed arms this season.
While Angels starter Reid Detmers sports an impressive 28.5 K% this season, I’m anticipating him having a tougher time racking up punchouts with the Houston Astros ranking sixth in wOBA while striking out at the fourth-lowest clip against southpaws.
This SGP is in play to +425.
- Time: 9:38 p.m. ET
- Where to watch: ABTV, SCHN
- SGP picks: 5-13, +5.2 units
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
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Paul Skenes is in a bit of a rough patch. A visit to a local Little League field cleared his head
PITTSBURGH — Paul Skenes was bored and driving through the northern Pittsburgh suburbs — a rare in-season off day — when the Pirates ace caught the familiar lights of a baseball field out of the corner of his eye.
The next thing the reigning NL Cy Young winner knew, he was circling the parking lot, searching for a spot. Not long after, one of the brightest stars in the game was watching various Ingomar Little League teams practice.
The 24-year-old star tried to stay “incognito,” which is kind of hard to do in general when you’re 6-foot-6 and 260 pounds and one of the brightest young stars in your sport. Soon enough, Skenes found his way onto the field in sandals, a T-shirt, and a pair of shorts, a sure sign that the typically well put-together Skenes hadn’t planned on stopping in the first place.
Over the next two hours, he played catch, signed autographs, and remembered a time in his life when his relationship with the game was far simpler.
The impromptu practice went viral, as things tend to do when Skenes is involved. His girlfriend, former gymnast turned influencer and actress Livvy Dunne, shared it on TikTok. A popular Pittsburgh DJ did the same on Instagram.
Skenes has learned to accept that attention comes with the territory, even when he’s trying to avoid it.
“Should’ve worn some sunglasses and a fake moustache,” he joked.
Yes, Skenes is well aware of the core memory he created for the players at Ingomar Little League, about 20ish minutes north of PNC Park. Los Angeles Angels outfielder Garrett Anderson did the same for Skenes when the two briefly connected while Skenes was growing up in Southern California.
Yet just as importantly, with the Pirates in the midst of a losing streak that stretched to four after they were drilled 12-2 loss by Los Angeles — when the Dodgers exploded for 10 runs in the seventh immediately after Skenes departed — it offered Skenes a reminder of why he does what he does for a living.
“I went to watch some baseball, but you got to remember it’s just a game,” Skenes said. “There’s a lot of things that make it a business. It’s work. It’s a job for us, for sure, on some days more than others, but you got to remember you love the game and why you started playing it in the first place.”
Particularly during the times when that love can feel elusive during a difficult stretch like the one Skenes is in at the moment.
Despite limiting the two-time defending World Series champion Dodgers to two runs over six innings and retiring four-time MVP Shohei Ohtani all three times he faced him, Skenes remained winless over his last five starts after the bullpen imploded behind him.
Is Skenes in a slump? Only in comparison to the remarkably high bar he has set during his rapid ascent to one of the best pitchers in baseball. His ERA since May 17 is a pedestrian 4.50, more than double his career ERA up to that point.
Things were a little better, a little sharper against the Dodgers than they have been of late. He recorded seven strikeouts, and Los Angeles swung and missed at more than 15 of the 103 pitches he threw.
Skenes’ fastball largely went where he wanted, when he wanted, and if Pirates second baseman Brandon Lowe can knock down a sharp grounder that instead deflected off his glove and into the outfield with two outs in the sixth that allowed Freddie Freeman to score and tie the game, Skenes might have exited with the lead.
Not that it mattered in the end. The 10-spot the Dodgers put up in the seventh made sure of that.
Still, Skenes is trying to keep things in perspective. The season is long. Every team struggles at some point. He is trying his best to remain focused on the process.
Asked why his fastball — which now sits more in the 97 mph range after frequently topping 100 as a rookie two years ago — looked better than it has in a while, he shrugged.
“Just a good day, I think,” he said. “Kinda comes and goes as the season goes. Just a good day with that.”
The lobs he threw to the Little Leaguers didn’t have nearly that kind of velocity. They might have as much meaning, however, over the arc of a season that can sometimes feel more like a slog than a dream come true.
“We’ve all played those sandlot fields when we were nine,” he said, later adding, “The game looks different when it’s 200-foot fences and there are no ads out there, no fans out there, just playing for the love of the game.”
Braves’ Ronald Acuña Jr. leaves game at White Sox with tightness in left hamstring, his 2nd injury of season
CHICAGO — Atlanta star right fielder Ronald Acuña Jr. left a 6-5, 10-inning loss to the Chicago White Sox with tightness in his left hamstring.
Acuña pulled up and was limping after trying to beat out a grounder to Chicago third baseman Miguel Vargas in the fourth inning.
Eli White replaced Acuña. The Braves announced the initial diagnosis of the hamstring tightness.
It is Acuña’s second left hamstring injury of the season. He was on the 10-day injured list from May 3-18 with a strained left hamstring also suffered when attempting to run out a grounder.
Braves manager Walt Weiss said this injury does not appear to be as serious as the strained hamstring in May.
“It doesn’t seem as bad as the last one,” Weiss said, adding the team considers Acuña’s status to be day to day.
“We’ve got our fingers crossed, hoping this one is not too bad,” Weiss said.
Weiss said Acuña will have an MRI to determine the severity of the injury.
“It’s certainly not as bad as the the last one,” Weiss said. “It’s the same leg, but we’re gonna hold off and see how he feels tomorrow.”
Acuña told reporters after the game the injury did not feel as serious.
“This one ... I don’t really feel any pain, I just feel a little bit tight, so we’ll see what happens with the MRI tomorrow,” he said.
Acuña, the 2023 NL MVP and a five-time All-Star, also has suffered two serious knee injuries in his career. He suffered a season-ending torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee in May 2024. Acuña tore his right ACL midway through the 2021 season.
The 28-year-old Acuña is hitting .251 with seven homers and 22 RBIs.