NEW YORK, NY - AUGUST 1: Yandy Diaz #2 of the Tampa Bay Rays reacts after hitting a home run against the New York Yankees during the third inning at Yankee Stadium on August 1, 2023 in New York City. (Photo by Adam Hunger/Getty Images) | Getty Images
DRaysBay works best as a place for community and conversation. Accordingly, in the lead up to the new season, we are posting “Daily Questions” in the month of February. I look forward to seeing you in the comment section!
Don’t say a prospect unless they are on the 40-man roster!
But even then, be careful… Prospects will break your heart.
JUPITER, FLORIDA - MARCH 14, 2025: Quinn Mathews #68 of the St. Louis Cardinals throws a pitch during the first inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Miami Marlins at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium on March 14, 2025 in Jupiter, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
The Cardinals have had one of the more interesting off seasons in recent memory. Chaim Bloom did his best to keep the fanbase engaged by completing one big transaction each month starting with Sonny Gray in November and culminating with the Brendan Donovan trade in February. Despite Bloom’s best efforts to keep us entertained, there is only so much enjoyment one can derive from offseason trade rumors and updated prospect rankings. With pitchers and catchers reporting and spring training games now only a week away, we will soon have real results and on-field performances to dissect and overanalyze. The biggest spotlight this spring is going to be on top prospect JJ Wetherholt, but there are going to be plenty of other stories and developments to follow. Here are nine stories I will be following far too closely and reading way too much into during spring training.
1. Joshua Baez Playing Time
I could make the argument that Baez is one of the most important players in the organization both in the near and long term. The Cardinals outfield has been a complete mess in recent years. Since ranking third in baseball in outfielder WAR during the 2021 season, the Cardinals have ranked 8th, 20th, 26th, and 26th. Over the last two seasons combined, they have ranked dead last in baseball in home runs from their outfield. Enter Joshua Baez, who boasts some of the best exit velocity and advanced hitting metrics in the minor leagues. Baez’s playing time in spring training will give us a clue as to how the Cardinals view the timeline of a major league debut. Will he be given a handful of at-bats throughout the spring or given something closer to a full workload of 40 to 60 plate appearances? Performance will, of course, be a key factor in how much of the Grapefruit League spotlight Baez earns, but we could get some hint about his timeline based on the opportunities he is given. After the Victor Scott and Jordan Walker rushed debuts, many fans are leery of pushing prospects too quickly, but I have confidence that the front office will not do anything to compromise Baez’s development.
2. Increased Velocity
Every spring reports come trickling out of camp that some pitcher has added three or four miles per hour to his fastball. It may be a selective memory on my part, but these reports seem to have more signal than many of the offseason adjustment stories you hear. Before his breakout in 2024, Quinn Mathews came to spring training pitching in the mid-90s after living in the low-90s at Stanford. Last year, Brycen Mautz and Cooper Hjerpe came to camp with fastballs that had ticked up in velocity. While Hjerpe ended up missing the season with Tommy John surgery, Mautz parlayed his improved velo to an excellent Double-A season and the Cardinals Minor League Pitcher of the Year award. The Cardinals seem to think that Red Sox acquisition Blake Aita has room to add velocity. Perhaps former bonus babies Branelli Franco or Reinier Lopez will come stateside and start lighting up radar guns in Florida. From the 2025 draft class, Liam Doyle and Tanner Franklin got most of the attention, but Cade Crossland and Ethan Young got big bonuses as well and are gearing up for their first professional seasons. The Cardinals are playing a numbers game when it comes to pitching development, and with the stockpile of promising arms in the system, we are sure to have a few big velocity gainers emerge this spring.
3. Infielders in the Outfield
Chaim Bloom is still indicating that the Cardinals are looking to add an outfield bat, but how serious of a look will Thomas Saggese and Jose Fermin get in the outfield this spring? Assuming Wetherholt makes the opening day roster, playing time on the infield could be a bit tight. Both players could give themselves a huge advantage in finding their way into the lineup if they can improve their versatility. For the Cardinals, finding a right-handed hitting outfielder internally to stopgap any potential poor performance from Walker or a slow recovery from Nootbaar could do wonders in raising the floor of the team. Saggese has not played any outfield in his professional career, and Fermin only has a handful of games under his belt, but both players are athletic enough that it is easy to imagine them handling the transition without too much issue. Saggese in particular is well positioned with 78th-percentile sprint speed.
4. Aggressive Minor League Promotions
Which minor leaguers will be promoted more aggressively than anticipated? Last season, the first hint that Ixan Henderson was an up-arrow guy was when he broke camp with the Double-A club after only six starts at the High-A level. While Bloom has the reputation for being relatively conservative with minor league promotions, there are still going to be some players to receive an aggressive assignment, which will be a great window into how the Cardinals view their progress to date. The reporting from minor league spring training is much more difficult to come by than on the big league side, but there should still be plenty of information coming in around the action on the backfields.
5. Starting Pitching
The Cardinals have a clearly defined top seven starters with Liberatore, May, Leahy, Pallante, McGreevy, Dobbins, and Fitts. The battle for the starting rotation will be interesting enough, but how will the Cardinals deploy the depth that does not make the rotation? We are likely to see some version of a six-man rotation in the early going to reduce workloads. The Cardinals could also use one of the seven in the swingman/spot starter position that Steven Matz occupied last season. If they elect to send one of the potential starters to Triple-A, he will be joining an incredibly full starting pitcher depth chart in the minor leagues. Guessing the minor league rotations at this point in the spring is a fool’s errand, but to give some perspective on how crowded things are, below are starters that should be competing for spots at the various levels.
AAA: Quinn Mathews, Tink Hence, Brycen Mautz, Ixan Henderson, Pete Hansen, Max Rajcic, Ian Bedell
A+: Brandon Clarke, Tanner Franklin, Braden Davis, Nate Dohm, Frank Elissalt, Leonel Sequera, Mason Molina, Blake Aita
A: Yhoiker Fajardo, Cade Crossland, Ethan Young, Andrew Dutkanych, Jacob Odle, Tyler Van Dyke
The list above does not even include starting pitchers like Jason Savacool and Brandt Thompson that started a lot of games last year and may still be battling for rotation spots at the various levels. This picture should get even more crowded depending on when and how injured pitchers Cooper Hjerpe, Brian Holiday, Payton Graham, Zack Thompson, and Sem Robberse return to action. There is also the possibility (probability?) that Cade Winquest will not make the Yankees major league roster and will be returned to the Cardinals as well. There is no such thing as too much pitching, particularly when the major league rotation projects as below average, but it will be fascinating to see how the pieces of the puzzle come together this spring.
6. Use It or Lose It
By my count, there are four fringe roster players that must make the opening day roster to guarantee the Cardinals retain their rights. Justin Bruihl, George Soriano, and Bryan Ramos are all out of minor league options. Matt Pushard was the Cardinals’ Rule 5 pick in December and must remain on the active roster all year or be offered back to the Marlins. If these players look good, they will have a leg up on the players with the flexibility to spend time in the minors like Gordon Graceffo, Nick Raquet, Ryan Fernandez, and Bryan Torres.
7. Mountaineers Going Oppo
Both former West Virginia Mountaineers, Victor Scott II and JJ Wetherholt, talked about using the opposite field more effectively in 2026. I wrote at length about Scott last week, but Wetherholt had some interesting comments at Winter Warmup too. He believes the Cardinals’ player development crew was too focused on him adding pull power to his game that he got away from his biggest strength, opposite-field power. It will be interesting to see if either player is making an obvious change to their approach in Spring Training.
8. Sorting Through the Catchers
Tracking Ivan Herrera’s progress behind the plate will be a big storyline this spring. Oli Marmol has already stated that he is going to need more than just spring training to prove he can handle the catcher position, so we can expect the trial run to extend into the regular season. With Herrera still feeling his way through things, two of the Pedro Pages, Jimmy Crooks, Yohel Pozo group will also make the opening day roster. While depth is always better than the alternative, this still seems like a misallocation of resources. Crooks is a real prospect with starter upside and will need regular reps when he is in the big leagues. Pages and Pozo have both proven to be viable major league catchers as well, but one of the three will have to start the season in Triple-A. Is Chaim Bloom still open to trading one of the catchers in spring training? He has shown much more creativity making trades than his predecessor, so I still think there is a chance one of these players is moved before opening day.
9. Sleepers to Make the Roster
Every spring it feels like there are only a couple of battles at the back end of the roster, and then by the time opening day rolls around, Jordan Hicks, Victor Scott, Jordan Walker are on the team, or Matthew Liberatore is in the starting rotation. Injuries or performance could still create some chaos and leave an opening for a surprise addition. The Cardinals are light on right-handed bats and first base types, so could a lane open up for Blaze Jordan? Could Quinn Mathews come into spring throwing strikes and sitting in the mid-90s? If so, he would look like the best pitcher in the organization and could force the Cardinals’ hand. Could Ixan Henderson or Brycen Mautz make a play to start in the bullpen? Individually, the odds for any of these players are pretty low, but there is a decent chance someone completely off the radar forces their way into the picture.
FORT MYERS, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 11: Johan Oviedo #29 of the Boston Red Sox and Brayan Bello #66 of the Boston Red Sox react during a workout at JetBlue Park at Fenway South on February 11, 2026 in Fort Myers, Florida. (Photo by Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images
One of the most fun things about spring training is the annual emergence of one young player who makes the whole camp his own. Two years ago it was Ceddanne Rafaela. Last year it was Marcelo Mayer. This year could it be Kristian Campbell, someone who has already won a player of the month award at the MLB level? After a strange and ultimately disappointing rookie year, Campbell is back trying to find a place for himself in the big leagues. And while he admits that he was nervous last year, he thinks this spring is going to be different. This year, I feel like I’m a lot more under control and calm. I know what’s going on around me. I know more people in the locker room this year. It’s a better environment, for sure, for me, personally. I feel a lot more comfortable.” (Alex Speier, Boston Globe)
Campbell probably will be able to fly under the radar a bit this year. Most of the spring training attention falls on the new faces, and the Sox have plenty of them, especially on the mound. And one of those new faces, Sonny Gray, says that, “on paper,” this Red Sox rotation is the best one he’s ever been a part of. (Tim Healey, Boston Globe)
Johan Oviedo is another one of those new faces, though in his case it seems like he is in the media shadow of both Gray and Ranger Suárez. He’s also already really close to at least one of his new teammates as, even before he was traded he Boston, he spent the winter working out with his countryman Aroldis Chapman. (Christopher Smith, MassLive)
And speaking of being in the shadow of bigger names, how many baseball fans even realize that Patrick Sandoval is on the Sox this year? Right now, it’s looking unlikely that the man who once led the league in shutouts (with, uhh, one) will start the season in the Red Sox rotation, both because there’s a lot of competition and because he hasn’t thrown a competitive pitch in a looooooooong time. But he feels like he’s getting closer. (Sean McAdam, MassLive)
I think most people assume that Oviedo has the inside edge on the fifth rotation spot, if for no other reason than that the Sox gave up a lot to get him. But according to Craig Breslow, there will be competition for the role this spring, including not only Oviedo and Sandoval but also Payton Tolle, Connelly Early, and Kutter Crawford. (Tyler Maher, NESN)
The Sox have so many new pitchers that Brayan Bello is now the most-tenured guy in the starting rotation (most tenured in a Sox uniform, that is.) That seems wild given that most fans still thing of him as a young arm who is continuing to hone his game. Case in point, he recently received some pitch grip tutelage from Ranger Suárez. (Lauren Campbell, MassLive)
And on the other side of the ball, Trevor Story is now the second-most tenured position player. Which is why he’s being called “unc” by the kids. (Ian Browne, MLB.com)
Unc will open the 2026 season with an entirely new infield than the he opened 2025 with. Marcelo Mayer and Caleb Durbin will be in the infield somewhere, but at what positions? They’re both going to work out at both second and third for now, and Alex Cora doesn’t seem too stressed about it: “We went through this dance last year. I know how to dance it. Just be patient.” (Kaley Brown, Boston.com)
Boston, MA - April 24 - Leo Rivas #76 of the Seattle Mariners steals second as David Hamilton #17 of the Boston Red Sox bobbles the ball during the fourth inning of a MLB game at Fenway Park. (Photo by Matt Stone/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images
To David Hamilton, formerly of the Sox, Watching you play often made my insides balk. Your errors were many, your hits were quite few. I’ll admit I wasn’t the biggest fan of you.
But since you’ve been traded, I’m distinctly less jaded. Happy for you, that you’ve found a new place, Thrilled for us, with new hope for second base.
You may be Quad-A Which is why you struggled to stay With Boston’s MLB club. You were asked to do too much, too often. It’s not all your fault—we kept you too long in Boston! But I wish you the best as you leave The Hub.
I hope you impress in Milwaukee And that your second stint there won’t be so rocky.
May your batting get better and the ball find your glove, From a distance, I send you this Valentine’s love.
Tampa, Florida: New York Yankees' George Lombard Jr. fielding a hit by the Minnesota Twins' Anthony Prato in the top of the 5th inning at George M Steinbrenner Field in Tampa FL on February 26, 2024. (Photo by J. Conrad Williams Jr./Newsday RM via Getty Images) | Newsday via Getty Images
Around this time every year, prospect hounds across the country release all their lists, from team Top 10 lists, Top 100’s, and farm system rankings. The last few years, the Yankees haven’t looked so hot on those farm system ranks. This year, ESPN had them 23rd, and Baseball Prospectus put them at 22nd. It was a similar story last year, when ESPN pegged the Yankees 21st, while BP had them in 25th.
Those placements compare poorly to those of the Yankees’ direct rivals. The Rays perennially have one of the best farm systems in the sport, and perhaps most concerningly, the Red Sox and Blue Jays, probably the two biggest threats to the Yankees in the AL East, still sport above average farms per most sources despite pushing a lot of chips into the middle in the past year.
Is the Yankees’ lagging farm a serious issue? In theory, it seems like it could be a major long-term problem. At the major-league level, not much separates the Yankees from Boston and Toronto; the recently released PECOTA projections have New York as AL East favorites, but barely over the rival Red Sox and Jays, and with only roughly a 40-percent chance of winning the division. If the Yankees have only a narrow edge in the bigs right now (or arguably a non-existent edge, given they did just lose the division in 2025, albeit via tiebreaker), then it stands to reason that their rivals equipped with deeper farms could ease by them in the near future.
On the other hand, the Yankees’ farm system has generally ranked poorly in recent years, but has still managed to produce both major-league contributors and prospects that Brian Cashman has traded for productive veterans. Even as the system lagged heading into 2025, Cashman turned a host of prospects into David Bednar, Camilo Doval, Ryan McMahon, Amed Rosario, and more at the deadline. Plus, most prospect lists didn’t have the likes of Ben Rice or Cam Schlittler very high a year ago, yet those two look like they could be stars at the major-league level as soon as this season.
So which is it? Will the Yankees continue to squeeze big-league talent and impact trades from their farm system, in spite of meager farm system rankings? Or will it eventually catch up to them?
Today on the site, Matt goes back to the 1940’s to tell us about a strange game in Yankees history, where a player allowed one hit and zero earned runs but still lost handily. Also, Maximo writes that there shouldn’t be any Max Fried Postseason Narrative, and Nick gives us the next entry in our Yankee Birthday series, celebrating former reliever Damaso Marte.
On Saturday, Jon Heyman of the New York Post reported that Nick Castellanos signed a one-year agreement with the San Diego Padres.
It’s on the Major League minimum. The Padres will pay $780,000, while the remaining $19.22 million stays on the Phillies’ books. Philadelphia will save just over $1.6 million with the 110% luxury tax penalty.
Castellanos’ departure from Philadelphia felt inevitable for months, but the landing spot adds an interesting wrinkle. Earlier this offseason, he went on MLB Network and expressed interest in learning first base, a move that would expand the number of teams that could carry him without asking him to play the outfield every day.
That’s the idea in San Diego.
Even with a down 2025 overall, Castellanos still brings a clear skill: he has a career .853 OPS against left-handed pitching. That matters for a Padres lineup that’s set to start left-handed hitting Gavin Sheets at first base. Sheets hit a career-high 19 home runs last season, but only two came against southpaws, and he posted a .669 OPS in those matchups.
The way the roster fits suggests Castellanos won’t be an everyday player on Opening Day. After last year’s trade deadline, that detail certainly did not make the former Silver Slugger satisfied.
It looks more like a platoon role, with some first base mixed in, designated hitter reps, and minimal time in right field — especially assuming the health of Rawlings Platinum Glove winner Fernando Tatis Jr.
And defensively, the contrast is sharp. Castellanos’ Outs Above Average, which measures range, sat at -12 last season. Tatis posted 8 OAA.
Castellanos has found a new home, but he hasn’t hit much at Petco Park. In 28 career games, including the postseason, he owns a .222/.257/.352 slash line (.608 OPS).
If anyone in Philadelphia is circling a date, the wait won’t be long. The Padres open a three-game series at Citizens Bank Park on June 2.
That series will be the first real moment for the fan base to decide what the Castellanos era was. Some will remember the October swings, especially the 2023 NLCS. Others will focus on how the ending played out.
Either way, the beer, the letter and the clubhouse issues are part of the past now. The saga is over. The bill, for now, isn’t.
SCOTTSDALE — Tony Vitello has never managed a game at Oracle Park. But when it comes to figuring out the Giants outfield, he’s very familiar with what the dimensions can do to the men chasing down fly balls through the marine layer.
“At Oracle,” Vitello said this week, “You have to have a center fielder in right field.”
The Giants are moving their center fielder to right, although not because of the dimensions. The addition of Harrison Bader, a former Gold Glove Award winner, bumped Jung Hoo Lee to the corner after a disappointing defensive season. On Friday, speaking to reporters after a workout at Scottsdale Stadium, Lee said he fully understands.
“I played that position back in the KBO,” he said through interpreter Justin Han. “Going back to the past season, if I played better in center field, the organization would have kept me in center field. But, whatever it takes to make the team better. I’ve always been for the team.”
Lee initially came over from South Korea to be a center fielder and leadoff hitter, and there surely is some disappointment about where he stands after his first full season. There’s a chance that the other offseason addition, Luis Arraez, vaults to the top of the pecking order when it comes to the “bat control expert tasked with hitting atop the order” power rankings. Bader already has taken the spot in center field.
Lee has a lot to prove, and that’s exactly how Vitello wants many of his players to feel this spring. It’s particularly important in the outfield, where Heliot Ramos faces similar questions on the other side.
Ramos and Lee were unexpectedly shaky last year, and as a result, the Giants tied for last in the big leagues in Outs Above Average on the grass. Defensive Runs Saved wasn’t much kinder; they came in at 28th. Bader alone won’t fix the problem, but the staff doesn’t expect that anyway.
Ramos has drawn rave reviews for his winter work — “Ramos has worked his butt off all offseason,” ace Logan Webb said Friday — and Lee certainly has the physical tools to be a plus right fielder. He ranked in the 91st percentile in arm strength last season while playing center.
Vitello traveled to South Korea last month to spend some time with Lee, but he got his first in-person, on-field look this week. He said he thinks Lee’s arm could “be a weapon out in right field.”
“He doesn’t even have to really let it go full steam,” Vitello said. “He’s quick with his release, accurate with his throws. And you know, we all know he can swing the bat, but I think it could be a fun deal out there and in right field for him. I know the fans will take to him in that corner, and they’ll be a little closer to him.”
The Giants had an eye on Bader for a while, but the move still caught parts of the front office by surprise. The marketing department is scrambling to figure out what to do with the Jung Hoo Crew section in the bleachers, and Lee smiled Friday and indicated he was curious, too.
Vitello suggested utilizing the cove, although he might reconsider when he finally does get to Oracle for a chilly night game. Whatever the Giants decide, the seating alignment could end up being the most dramatic part of the position change. By all accounts, Lee handled it well.
“He almost tried to make it easier on me,” said general manager Zack Minasian, who called Lee when the Bader deal was being finalized. “Basically the message to me was — short and sweet — it was, ‘Whatever I can do to help us win.’ He was great.”
The Giants are confident it will be the right fit for Lee as he enters his third big league season, and Lee said he’ll call former teammate and good friend Mike Yastrzemski later this spring to get some pointers on the dimensions. The defensive side isn’t the only place where Lee has something to prove, though.
He had a wRC+ of 107 last year, with eight homers, 12 triples and 10 stolen bases. The overall numbers were fine, but there were some deep slumps filled with grounders to second base, and he has yet to fully unleash the all-around game that led the Giants to give him a $113 million deal. Their hope is that there’s more power in the tank; he could certainly run more under Vitello, too.
Vitello said new hitting coach Hunter Mense already has had conversations with Lee about what he saw in the analytics. But some of this might just be about the new staff finding a way to bring out a bit more confidence.
“For me, he looked unsure,” Vitello said. “I know that there’s mechanics to it and what pitch it was and depending on what guy he’s facing — there are crazy arms in the league — but there were moments where he looked unsure. I’m kind of stealing his answer, because we’ve had some good conversations, and he’s looking to eliminate that.”
Lee said he’s hopeful that he’ll benefit from having a full year of facing big league pitching under his belt, but some of his 2026 success at the plate also may be up to his new manager. Last year’s staff pushed Lee hard early in the season and then started mixing in more off days to keep him fresh, and Lee admitted in September that he lost about 12 pounds over the course of the season.
The increase in depth on the position player side should make it a bit easier for Vitello to keep Lee fresh, and the outfielder said learning the intricacies of right field might not be the only thing he’s focused on when the Giants return home.
“First of all, I have to eat a lot,” Lee said. “I like to sleep in a lot before a night game, but maybe I should wake up a little bit early, grab breakfast, then go back to sleep.”
Manager Craig Stammen has made it clear since his first media scrum on the opening of spring camp that he sees Luis Campusano as the San Diego Padres’ No. 2 catcher. More than once, Stammen has cited Campusano’s hard work and success in Triple-A last season. In his media scrum Friday morning, Stammen remarked on Campusano’s haircut while giving a big vote of confidence.
“He cut the dreads, got a new haircut, looks good and I know he’s excited about the opportunity and probably the first time in his career that he has had a little bit of a runway to take control of that job and win it in Spring Training and be the number two when we leave camp.”
The professional journey that Campusano has traveled has been rocky, to say the least. Coming up to the Padres in 2020 at 21, Campusano played the most in 2024, where he appeared in 91 games with a .227/.281/.361 line and a -0.7 fWAR reflecting below average defense. His eight home runs and 40 RBI did not offset the difficulties he had behind the plate. Then manager, Mike Shildt, appeared to have seen enough and never gave Campusano an opportunity to catch during his 10 game appearances in 2025. All of his 21 at-bats were as a DH and he had no hits and six walks with 11 strikeouts.
Stammen played with Campusano when he was a pitcher in the Padres bullpen. From his first comments after getting the manager job, Stammen has expressed support and belief in Campusano. He indicated from the beginning that the now 27-year-old would get every opportunity to prove he can be a major league player.
When president of baseball operations A.J. Preller acquired Freddy Fermin during the trade deadline last season, it became clear that he would be the front-line catcher going forward. He learned the staff on the fly after coming to the team and was far superior offensively to the aging Elias Diaz and Martin Maldonado.
Fermin has never been the number one guy for a team and has never played more than 89 games, which was last season. He started 39 of the Padres 52 games after coming over from the Kansas City Royals and before that his previous high was 72 games as a backup to Salvador Perez.
“I think to not burn Freddy out, Campy, if he’s the No. 2, he’s got to catch a lot,” Stammen stated. “To get those guys off to a good start in the season, maybe not exactly equal playing time, we’ll see how it shakes out, but Campy will play a lot.”
Stammen also brought up the other catchers working with the Padres pitchers in camp. Both Blake Hunt and Rodolfo Duran are sharing catching duties with Fermin and Campusano. All four, as well as top prospect Ethan Salas, will catch Padres pitchers in spring games. Either Hunt or Duran will likely be Campusano’s backup and if he doesn’t perform well, it is likely one of them will be the No. 2 to begin with.
Another interesting topic to be discussed in the scrum was Stammen’s dislike of dedicated catchers for specific pitchers. “I think every catcher needs to catch every pitcher, and every pitcher needs to throw to every catcher. Now, will there be, ‘Hey, these guys are just way better together?’ That could definitely happen, but you never know. You can’t pigeonhole them, because say one guy gets hurt and then all of a sudden, the backup has to catch those guys too.”
The subject of Matt Waldron was also brought up and Stammen said all catchers will work with him and Campusano has already brought a glove for Waldron. He acknowledged not everyone can catch a knuckleball pitcher so the best one will get the job.
Campusano caught Dylan Cease’s no-hitter, the second one thrown by a Padre, on July 25, 2024. But his inconsistency behind the plate apparently cost him the trust of his manger. With Stammen as the new leader and Kevin Plawecki as the new catching coach, Campusano is going to get a fresh opportunity to show if he is capable of being a major league catcher. There has been no discussion of giving him time at first base, despite Stammen acknowledging that he played some first base last season. His job is to catch and earn the backup job. If he is not able to do so, he is out of options and will either be traded or have to pass through waivers to be sent to the minor leagues.
To make his job more challenging, the ABS system will be part of the major league game this year and both catchers will probably be primarily responsible for judging balls and strikes in order to challenge pitches. Fortunately, the system has been in place in the minor leagues for years and Campusano has lots of experience. Stammen said they will develop a strategy as spring progresses and games begin.
If instilling confidence and expressing belief in a player can make a difference in if they perform well, Campusano should thrive this spring. Stammen has gone out of his way to publicly support and express faith in the still-young catcher. This is definitely his last and best chance. Let’s hope he takes the opportunity and runs with it.
This is exactly the offense Husker head coach Will Bolt envisioned when he dipped into the portal with the main focus of bringing in bats that can turn around a game in a hurry. Nebraska hit .471 on the game, but when you look at the other metrics where the team really struggled last year, they were ever better. Hitting .571 with 2 outs, and .636 with runners in scoring position.
Connecticut actually got the scoring started in the top of the first against Husker ace Ty Horn. Horn sandwiched a pair of strike outs around a hit batter to start the game off. Two ground ball singles brought in the lone run against Horn, who would fall just shy of the goal Coach Bolt put out earlier in the week of getting the starters through 5 inning on about 100 pitches. Horn struck out 6 batters, and only gave up 3 hits in his 4.2 innings, but the 4 walks and 1 hits batter offer something for him to focus on going into his next outing.
Nebraska wasted little time in the bottom of the first, taking advantage of freshman catcher and leadoff hitter Jeter Worthley being hit by a pitch, and Josh Overbeek taking a 4 pitch walk with 2 outs. Dylan Carey drove in the first run, depositing a curve ball into left field to bring in Worthley. Max Buettenback worked a walk off a 3-2 count to load the bases, and the Bolt watched one of his new toys, DH Cole Kitchens, clear the bases by smashing a fastball into the right field corner for a 3 RBI double, and a 4-1 Husker lead.
Worthley reached again in the second, this time on a walk. He would eventually come around to score on a bases loaded fielders choice off the bat of Overbeek.
The teams would trade zeros through the next few innings, despite putting the pressure on the pitchers with numerous base runners. It looked like UConn might jump right back in the game in the 4th with 2 runners on and 2 outs as leadoff batter Rob Rispoli drove a ball deep seemingly to the gap, but Husker left fielder Will Jesske ran it down and made a sliding basket catch to preserve the 5-1 lead.
Nebraska opened it up in the 6th. After second baseman Jett Buck walked and first baseman Case Sanderson singled into right, Overbeek collected RBIs number 2 and 3 on the day with an opposite field shot to the right field corner for a stand up double. He would advance to 3rd on a wild throw home, and pound his chest, much to the delight of the third base dugout. He didn’t get to stay long, as Carey singled to left on the very next pitch, and made it 8-1 Big Red.
Nebraska reliever Caleb Clark had come in to finish the 5th inning with a strikeout, and struck out 2 more in the 6th, but had three straight long battles to start the 7th in which he gave up 2 walks. Tucker Timmerman, the man who took a 106 mph comebacker to his face the last time he was on the mound in Arizona, came in the get the Huskers out of the jam with the preseason Big East player of the year in Tyler Minick striding to the plate. Minick did get the best of “Tuck”, plating a run on an RBI single, but Timmerman responded by inducing a double play by the next batter and limiting the damage.
Just as they did previously, the Husker offense responded to the run by putting up 4 more of their own. Worthley doubled to lead off, his 4th time reaching base. (Not a bad debut for a freshman leadoff hitter.) Buck traded places with him on an RBI double of his own. Rhett Stokes came in to pinch run for Buck, and just as quick as he came out of the dugout, he ran right back in off a Sanderson RBI single. Josh Ovebeek stayed hot and singled on his first pitch, setting up Carey again, and again DC delivered. Carey who came back to NU because the pro scouts told him he needed more power, burned the center fielder hitting a ball to the wall, and getting a stand up, walk off, 2 RBI mercy rule triple. (I think thats enough adjectives to describe it.) Huskers win big, 12-2.
Carey led the way on offense with 4 RBIs and had three hits. (And see below for an outstanding play by the Husky third baseman that kept those numbers as low as they were.) Sanderson and Kitchens had 3 hits of their own, with Kitchens adding the 3 RBIS.
Shelby Miller is joining the Chicago Cubs, according to a person familiar with the situation, after the pitcher had major elbow surgery in October.
Miller has agreed to a two-year, $2.5 million contract with Chicago, said the person who spoke on condition of anonymity because the agreement was pending a physical. The 35-year-old right-hander is expected to miss the 2026 season.
Miller played for Arizona and Milwaukee last year, going 4-3 with a 2.74 ERA and 10 saves in 48 appearances. He was traded from the Diamondbacks to the Brewers on July 31.
He made his last appearance of the season on Sept. 1. He was placed on the 60-day injured list on Sept. 3 with a sprained ulnar collateral ligament in his throwing elbow.
Miller pitched in three games for Chicago in 2021, allowing seven runs and seven hits in two innings. He is 51-69 with a 4.04 ERA in 133 starts and 169 relief appearances in 13 years in the majors with 10 teams.
Also Friday, the Cubs announced that they had agreed to minor league contracts with right-handers Kyle Wright and Vince Velasquez. Each pitcher received an invitation to big league camp for spring training.
Wright and Velasquez haven’t pitched in the majors since 2023.
Wright helped Atlanta win the 2021 World Series, and he went 21-5 with a 3.19 ERA in 30 starts for the Braves in 2022. Velasquez is 38-51 with a 4.88 ERA in 191 career big league games.
Feb 13, 2026; Tampa, FL, USA; New York Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole (45) throws a bullpen session during spring training practices at George M. Steinbrenner Field. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images
Yahoo! Sports | The Associated Press: All aboard the Cole Train! Yankees ace Gerrit Cole took the mound yesterday for his first bullpen of the spring, marking the next major milestone in his return from last March’s Tommy John surgery. Speaking to reporters, Cole reiterated that his elbow feels better than it has in two seasons – remember, he missed the first half of 2024 with an elbow injury – and remains on track for a late spring/early summer return.
SNY | John Flanigan: Yankees general manager Brian Cashman addressed a number of topics yesterday, including the roster status of Jasson Domínguez. Despite the team’s decision to re-sign Cody Bellinger this spring, the Yankees still have high hopes for the former top prospect. This means, of course, that the team will have a decision to make: do they roster the Martian in the hopes that his athleticism and strong bat from the left side can be a weapon off the bench with the big league club, or do they send him down to Triple-A Scranton so that he plays every day and continues to develop? Time will tell — because let’s be honest, the baseball gods, not the manager and front office, are always the ones to make these decisions anyway.
The Athletic | Brendan Kuty: (subscription required) One of my favorite parts of spring training is getting to hear a bit about the dynamics between players, especially between former stars like Paul Goldschmidt and up-and-coming youngsters like Ben Rice. If you have access to The Athletic, I encourage you to take a look at this piece about the Rice/Goldy relationship from Brendan Kuty, especially if you’re a little unsure about the Yankees’ decision to re-sign Goldschmidt. While it’s clear the 2022 NL MVP’s best days are behind him, it’s clear that the organization — and Rice — are eager for their young first baseman to learn everything they can from him.
Nov 3, 2025; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Detailed view of the 2025 World Series Commissioners Trophy during the World Series celebration at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images
To bookend the week in the same vein as Monday’s Purple Row After Dark question, I have another one for you. Many folks have complained that last weekend’s Super Bowl was one of the most boring Super Bowls in recent memory, even though the final score was 29-13.
Baseball-wise, though, we had a great World Series this year (minus the champion). The Dodgers cakewalked through the National League, despite having a “down year” but then were taken to seven games by the Toronto Blue Jays, who had some stiff competition in the American League and nearly won the whole thing. Last year, the Dodgers beat the New York Yankees in five games after an exciting run-up that almost saw them get bounced by the San Diego Padres.
So the question tonight is this: would you rather watch boring playoffs but exciting World Series, or exciting playoffs but a boring World Series?
PHOENIX — Right-hander Zac Gallen has agreed to a one-year, $22 million contract to return to the Arizona Diamondbacks, a person with knowledge of the deal confirmed Friday night.
The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the deal is pending a physical.
The 2023 All-Star — who is a client of agent Scott Boras — was hunting for a multi-year contract, but after nothing acceptable materialized, he’s coming back to the desert where he’s spent the majority of his big league’s career.
MLB.com first reported that Gallen and the D-backs were close to a deal.
Gallen had his worst season in the big leagues in 2025, finishing with a 13-15 record, 4.83 record and an 8.2 strikeout rate per nine innings, which was the lowest of his career. But his velocity was still good and he performed better after the All-Star break with a 3.97 ERA over his final 13 starts.
The 30-year-old was one of the best pitchers in the National League from 2022 to 2024, finishing fifth in the Cy Young voting in 2022 and third in 2023.
He was the ace for the D-backs in 2023 — finishing with a 17-9 record and 3.47 ERA — when they made a surprise run to the World Series before losing in five games to the Texas Rangers.
Gallen was drafted in the third round of the 2016 draft by the St. Louis Cardinals after playing in college at North Carolina. He was traded to the Marlins in 2017 and made his big-league debut with the organization in 2019 before being traded again to the D-backs in a deal that sent Jazz Chisholm Jr. to Miami.
Overall, Gallen has a 66-52 record and 3.58 ERA in seven MLB seasons.
Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Zac Gallen (23) throws in the eighth inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium, Wednesday, April 2, 2025, in Bronx, NY.
Zac Gallen isn’t going to have to move.
The right-handed pitcher, arguably the best left on the free agent market, has agreed to a one-year contract worth about $22 million to return to the Diamondbacks, The Post’s Jon Heyman confirmed.
Per Heyman, the 30-year-old received multiyear offers but liked the idea of staying with Arizona.
Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Zac Gallen (23) throws in the eighth inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium, Wednesday, April 2, 2025, in Bronx, NY. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
The Athletic reported that the deal contains about $14 million in deferred payments.
The deal ends a long free agency for the 2023 National League All-Star after he rejected a $22.025 million qualifying offer in November, which is, ironically, about how much he’ll make in 2026 anyway.
The qualifying offer attachment meant that if a different team had signed Gallen, it would have had to forfeit draft picks, with Arizona getting awarded draft compensation.
The Orioles, before signing Chris Bassitt earlier this week, were interested in Gallen, Heyman reported in January.
The Cubs, Padres and Angels were among the other teams interested in his services.
But it’s Arizona he goes back to, a place he’s pitched the last seven seasons.
Arizona Diamondbacks starting pitcher Zac Gallen throws during the first inning of a Game 2 of their National League wildcard baseball series against the Milwaukee Brewers Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2023, in Milwaukee. AP
“It’s been humbling,” Gallen told reporters at the WM Phoenix Open. “That’s kind of been the constant thing the last couple of weeks. People have been like, ‘Hey, we’d really love for you to come back.’ I think people understand what Phoenix means to me.
“My wife is from here, I’m calling this home base now, so for us to be here would be awesome.”
Acquired by the Diamondbacks at the 2019 trade deadline from the Marlins for Jazz Chisholm Jr., he quickly established himself as a reliable arm at the top of the rotation, receiving Cy Young votes in three different seasons.
He had a strong three-year stretch from 2022-24 with a 3.20 ERA and 568 strikeouts over 542 innings.
But 2025 saw a dip in production with a career-worst 4.83 ERA.
Gallen’s peripherals weren’t great either, with his strikeout rate dropping from 25.1 percent in 2025 to 21.5 percent in ’25.
Still, he’s pitched over 180 innings three times over the last four years and should help solidify Arizona’s rotation as it tries to keep pace in the NL West.
But Brian Cashman “didn’t think that was right to do,” he acknowledged over the winter, because there was still a role for the outfielder to play off the bench in a playoff chase.
Now the Yankees are entering a spring in which they have another crowded outfield, with even more dollars committed to Trent Grisham and Cody Bellinger, and Domínguez on the outside looking in.
Might the new year and new situation change the equation for whether Domínguez will be optioned to Triple-A once camp breaks?
“If everything stays the same, we’ll be forced to determine what’s our best course of action to help this team be impactful,” Cashman said Friday from Steinbrenner Field.
“I would concede it’s in his best interest to be getting everyday reps.”
Jasson Domínguez hits a ground-rule double during the Yankees’ Aug. 27 game. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post
Realistically, barring injuries, the only place for that to happen would appear to be at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.
Domínguez just turned 23 and the Yankees, through some of his growing pains last year, often pointed to the fact that he did not play a whole lot during his rise through the minors because of injuries and having a season wiped out by COVID.
So there is value in giving him a chance to go play every day in the minor leagues, even after spending all of last season in The Bronx and providing some production in 429 plate appearances.
That case is only bolstered by the fact that there is not a clear lane for Domínguez to play off the bench, other than pinch-running.
He is a switch-hitter who is stronger from the left side, but Grisham and Bellinger also hit left-handed.
The last spot on the Yankees’ bench — especially after they re-signed Paul Goldschmidt — may be better used for a right-handed hitting outfielder, and/or an above-average defensive left fielder, which Domínguez was not last season.
Jasson Domínguez makes a catch during the Yankees’ July 28 game. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post
“Domínguez is an extremely talented player,” Cashman said. “He’s one of our best runners. So having him as a choice for our manager to use coming off the bench at times as a pinch-runner to steal a bag or first to third, second to home, what have you, definitely improves our chances of success because of his pure athleticism.
“We’ll just have to wait and see how the spring shakes out, who’s standing and then we’ll make the appropriate decisions when we have our meetings closer to the end of camp.”
It would only take one injury for Domínguez to jump back in the mix, though Spencer Jones — the center fielder with thunderous power but high strikeout rates — will also try to make his case to be the next man up this spring.
“Depth chart, in theory, you’d have him behind Domínguez going in because Domínguez has had more experience than he does,” Cashman said. “But that’s not going to stop him in competition.”