The mess that is much of the American League

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MAY 27: A general view of the AL East standings is seen displayed at Fenway Park before the game between the Atlanta Braves and the Boston Red Sox on May 27, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Paul Rutherford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In general, it feels fair to say that parity is a good thing in the game of baseball. The more teams that are involved in the chase for playoff contention, the better, and 2026 has certainly been a year of such parity to this point. For better or worse, much of the Junior Circuit is within only a few games of each other, which could lead to a season full of intrigue for plenty of fanbases.

Only three AL teams have “separated” themselves to this point, and we’re getting a little loose with that term as it is. The Yankees, Rays, and Guardians were the only American League clubs to have won 30 or more games headed into this weekend. With a solid series behind them, the White Sox (!) and Mariners have now also reached that mark. What makes the level of parity more interesting, is that almost everyone else is floating around in no-man’s land.

With New York and Tampa Bay (and to a lesser extent Cleveland) at the top of the food chain, that leaves nine other teams with between 25 and 32 wins in 2026. To perhaps put the situation into better context, all but three American League teams — the Royals, Angels, and Tigers, are within just three games of a spot in the postseason. This also doesn’t consider that fact that one of the basement-dwelling teams, the Tigers, made the postseason just last year. They’ve had a truly awful time trying to compete without two-time defending Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal since April 29th, and a 6-22 month of May might have single-handedly nerfed their 2026 hopes and dreams.

There is a lot to take in on the standings page, and at this point in the season, it’s hard to make anything resembling a conclusion. The White Sox and Athletics are both in second place in their respective divisions, playing respectable ball for the first time in years, while the Mariners are in first place with a team that just crept over .500 this weekend. It’s a mess, and despite the benefits a situation like this can bring for the “good” teams, the Yankees aren’t quite able to enjoy them.

Despite the overall good baseball the Yankees have been playing, they still find themselves in second place in the East, in a League they have already somewhat separated themselves from. The Rays, who have that first-place spot by a slim margin, are the only team that has played better than the Yankees in the AL. So, while much of the American League is mired in mediocrity, the Rays and Bombers have to duel it out atop the East. Depending on how things play out, the Yankees could benefit from middling teams occupying much of the schedule, but the priority in their mind is certainly moving past Tampa Bay.

Cleveland is also in close proximity, just a couple of games back of the Yankees, but they certainly have plenty to prove. The American League Central has long been a largely unimpressive (and thus competitive) division, and the Guards once again look to be in the running for the crown.

For the Yankees, the good thing is that at this juncture, no opponent, or potential postseason matchup would be particularly troubling, as the American League remains a bit jumbled. The downside is that their strongest competition at the moment is right in their backyard, and if the Rays come out on top, any advantage New York had becomes far less significant with a longer road in October — as they endured in 2025 with Toronto.

Considering all of this, the Yankees will certainly take a head start on much of the AL, no matter what form it takes. But, however comforting that backdrop may be, a potential Wild Card berth rather than a division win changes things rather significantly. If they can take care of business, the door could be as wide open as it was in 2024, when they fended off Baltimore for the division crown and then pushed past two AL Central clubs for the pennant. The Yankees just need to find the optimal way forward for this year’s field.

Dodgers’ Alex Freeland, Ryan Ward key rubber-match win over Phillies

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows A Los Angeles Dodgers player in a white uniform with number 76 stands on a base, hands raised, on a baseball field, Image 2 shows A Los Angeles Dodgers baseball player wearing a helmet and red batting gloves runs on the field

The Dodgers had a couple debatable roster decisions to make this week.

Based on Sunday’s results, they might have been right on both.

In a 9-1 rubber-match win over the Phillies, the Dodgers were led offensively by their two recent Triple-A call-ups, getting fourth-inning home runs from Alex Freeland and Ryan Ward that helped them take two of three games in this National League Division Series rematch.

The Dodgers’ Ryan Ward homered in the fourth inning Sunday against the Phillies. William Liang-Imagn Images

“We had spent the whole morning hitting together, talking through our routine together, talking about our plan versus the Philly guys that we felt we’re gonna be facing,” Ward said. “And to have us both homer in the same inning, this is a really cool moment for us.”

Freeland went 2-for-3 with a walk and two RBIs from the No. 9 spot Sunday, opening the scoring with a double off the wall in center in the second before extending the lead with a solo home run in the fourth. 

Ward also left the yard in the bottom of the fourth, giving him his first career home run in his first career game at Dodger Stadium.

Once they were both back in the dugout, the two wrapped each other in a hug.

“I’m just uber excited for Ryan,” Freeland said. “I don’t think there’s anybody that deserves it more than him. So to share that moment with him is special.”

At the start of this week, neither player was on the Dodgers’ big-league roster. Only after injuries to Kiké Hernández and Teoscar Hernández did the need for reinforcements from the minors arise.

Even then, Freeland and Ward were not guaranteed to be recalled. For each of their spots, there were other options the team could’ve considered.

The Dodgers’ Alex Freeland homered and had two RBIs on Sunday against the Phillies. William Liang-Imagn Images

Freeland effectively got the nod over the since-demoted Hyeseong Kim, who was optioned back to Triple-A Oklahoma City after a recent slump cost him his platoon job at second base. Ward, likewise, was called up over breakout outfield prospect James Tibbs III, receiving only his second career opportunity in the majors after a brief two-game cameo earlier this year.

Both decisions were questioned by some corners of the fan base.

Both were then validated in Sunday’s blowout.

“Everybody in this locker room is a superstar,” Freeland said. “A lot of us get overlooked, just because we have guys like Shohei [Ohtani] and Freddie [Freeman]. But everybody in this clubhouse can ball.”

What it means

After a late-game slip-up from Tanner Scott on Saturday night, the Dodgers bounced right back with their 14th win out of the last 17 overall.

Of all the victories in that span, Sunday’s was among the most impressive.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto navigated traffic in a scoreless 5 ⅓-inning start, working around four hits, two walks and one hit batter while setting a season high with 10 strikeouts.

The Dodgers’ offense, in a refreshing change of pace, also provided him with plenty of run support, tagging Phillies rookie starter Andrew Painter with four runs in 3 ⅓ innings before pouring it on late.

In addition to Freeland and Ward, the Dodgers also got two hits each from Ohtani (extending his on-base streak to 16 games), Kyle Tucker (snapping a 1-for-16 slump previously on this homestand) and Max Muncy (including his team-leading 14th home run); and two RBIs apiece from Alex Call (on a pinch-hit single in the fifth) and Freeman (on a pair of sacrifice flies).

The team has now won five straight series and has a season-high 5 ½-game lead in the National League West.

“On the heels of last night, to be able to bounce back like we did, that was a good thing and a good sign for our club,” manager Dave Roberts said.

Who’s hot

Ward hasn’t gotten many at-bats during his limited time in the majors this season.

But when he’s been at the plate, he has made the most of them

During his MLB debut on April 19 in Colorado, the longtime minor-league prospect had a pair of singles and an RBI. And after going 1-for-2 with his home run Sunday — he was lifted early for Call’s pinch-hit at-bat in the fifth — he is now hitting .375 in his first three career big-league games.

“Even talking to Freeland today on the bench, he made a note that Ryan was probably the most positive guy down there in Triple A,” Roberts said of Ward, who had to wait seven years in the Dodgers’ farm system before finally reaching the majors this season.

“That speaks to his character. If there’s anyone that has the right to be salty and frustrated, it’s him. But he was professional about it, and he was an easy one to recall and get him here. And I’m going to try to give him some opportunities, so he can make the most of them.”

Who’s not

Home plate umpire Sean Barber, who had a whopping eight calls overturned via the new ABS challenge system.

The first two came in the first inning, when backup catcher Dalton Rushing — who was previously just 3-for-8 on ABS challenges from behind the plate this year — got Yamamoto a pair of strikeouts by successfully getting a couple called balls converted to third strikes.

Freeman found himself on the other end of the equation in the bottom half of the inning, when he had what was initially ruled a walk in a full count overturned to a strikeout after already jogging down to first base.

Not every ABS review went against Barber. The Dodgers and Phillies lost one challenge each.

Still, the eight overturned calls were just one shy of the most in a game this season. 

Up next

The Dodgers head to Arizona on Monday for a four-game series against the Diamondbacks. The opener will feature Emmet Sheehan (3-1, 4.70 ERA) against left-hander Eduardo Rodriguez (5-1, 2.31 ERA).

Yankees use 13-run third inning to beat Athletics 13-8

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Ben Rice had two extra-base hits and four RBIs in a 13-run third inning that was the biggest for the New York Yankees in 21 years, carrying them to a 13-8 victory over the Athletics on Sunday.

The Yankees got the first 12 batters on in the inning against A’s pitchers Jacob Lopez (4-3) and Michael Kelly, marking the first time they pulled that off in nearly 77 years. It was New York’s biggest inning since scoring 13 runs in the eighth against Toronto on June 21, 2005, and was one run off the franchise record set in 1920 against the Washington Senators.

Rice did the most damage with a two-run double and two-run triple, but eight of the nine Yankees batters had at least one hit and one RBI in the inning. Austin Wells was the lone exception with two walks and two runs scored.

New York finished the 43-minute half inning with 11 hits, four walks and four steals while sending 18 batters to the plate and facing 75 pitches. It was the most runs allowed in an inning by the A’s since they gave up 14 against Cleveland on June 18, 1950, in the first inning of the second game of a doubleheader.

The big inning made for an easy day for Will Warren (7-1), who settled down after allowing three unearned runs in the first with five straight scoreless innings to help cap a 5-1 trip for New York.

The A’s struck for four runs off reliever Tim Hill in the seventh on a solo homer by Brent Rooker and a three-run shot by Jonah Heim.

The Athletics allowed 47 runs on a 1-5 homestand that started with a three-game sweep by Seattle.

Up next

Both teams are off Monday before resuming play Tuesday. RHP Cam Schittler (7-2, 1.50 ERA) will start at home for New York against Cleveland’s Joey Castillo (4-2, 3.57). LHP Gage Jump (0-1, 7.20) starts for the A’s on the road against Cubs RHP Jameson Taillon (2-4, 5.37).

Yoshinobu Yamamoto helps Dodgers deliver a birthday win for Dave Roberts

Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto delivers against the Phillies at Dodger Stadium.
Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto delivers during the first inning of a 9-1 win over the Philadelphia Phillies at Dodger Stadium on Sunday. (Ronaldo Bolaños / Los Angeles Times)

Not a cake or a ribbon-wrapped present, but the Dodgers celebrated manager Dave Roberts’ 54th birthday with a 9-1 win over the Phillies on Sunday. The Dodgers ended their homestand with a 5-1 record despite their six-game winning streak ending the night before.

“You’re gonna get beat at times, it’s gonna happen,” Roberts said. “But I do think with the talent that we have, if we focus and play like we’re capable of, we should win series, regardless of home, road.”

Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto (5-4) held the Phillies hitless over the first three innings thanks, in part, to the defense.

Phillies left fielder Brandon Marsh tried to steal second in the second inning, but he took off too early. Yamamoto swung around and tossed the ball to Alex Freeland, who nabbed Marsh’s hands.

Read more:Tanner Scott struggles to execute and Phillies make him pay in Dodgers' loss

Yamamoto, much like Roki Sasaki the night before, threw his pitches faster than normal. But the elevated velocity didn’t seem to affect his performance beyond extending at-bats. Despite throwing his four-seam fastball 1 mph faster than usual, the pitch resulted in a strike 76% of the time.

“During the preparation this week towards today’s game, I was always having a great feeling, and then I think I was able to get myself pretty ready,” Yamamoto said through interpreter Yoshihiro Sonoda. “I was prepared. ... And then I was getting into the game with confidence.”

Philadelphia’s Trea Turner and Alex Bohm each clubbed singles in the fourth inning, but little came to fruition. When Roberts pulled Yamamoto in the sixth, he had blanked his opponents with 10 strikeouts, four hits and two walks.

“He just didn’t have that great command of the fastball, which I think led to some deeper counts,” Roberts said. “Didn’t take on any damage, but it just led to a higher pitch count. So tried to get him into the sixth inning, which we did, but I didn’t want to push him too much further.”

Freddie Freeman scores off a single by Kyle Tucker in the third inning Sunday against the Phillies.
Freddie Freeman scores off a single by Kyle Tucker in the third inning Sunday against the Phillies at Dodger Stadium. (Ronaldo Bolaños / Los Angeles Times)

Yet no one — not the Phillies (30-29) nor the Dodgers (38-21) — had a harder game at the plate than home plate umpire Sean Barber, who had nine ABS challenges, three of which were upheld.

Two overturned calls in the first inning helped Yamamoto settle into the game, catcher Dalton Rushing said.

“I’ve worked on that recently to kind of understand the corners to give us the best advantages we can,” Rushing said. “To be able to help him out like that was great. The command was a little touchy in the first, compared to where he’s usually at, so just to be able to kind of, quote-unquote, save him a little bit with those two challenges, I think it allowed him to settle in.”

Yamamoto agreed: “That was a good challenge, because I believe I was hitting my spots. So that was a great challenge.”

The Dodgers had 13 hits, and the runs followed. In the second, Alex Freeland’s RBI double bounced off the center-field wall. As Philadelphia’s Justin Crawford rushed to track it down, Max Muncy sprinted around third and slid into home, avoiding the tag by catcher J.T. Realmuto.

Read more:Why ABS didn't deter Dodgers' Will Smith from honing his framing: 'More important, in a way'

Realmuto left in the bottom of the fourth inning with a left wrist contusion from a pitch that had hit him earlier in the game. He will undergo further testing, according to the team.

Kyle Tucker took a step toward overcoming his recent struggles with a third-inning RBI single down the first-base line. The ball skidded against the dirt and deflected off the base over Bryce Harper’s head. Freddie Freeman scored.

Tucker was one for his past 17 at Dodger Stadium before he finally connected off Phillies starter Andrew Painter (1-6).

“Today was a good day,” Roberts said. “Obviously, that [single], got a little lucky on, but the double over the right fielder’s head, García, that was a good swing. I just thought today, took some really good swings, got some good counts, chased a sweeper down below on his last at-bat, but, yeah, I thought today looked more of who he is.”

From there, the Dodgers kept scoring.

Ryan Ward is showered in sunflower seeds tossed by teammate Andy Pages.
Ryan Ward receives a sunflower seed shower from teammate Andy Pages after hitting a home run for the Dodgers on Sunday. (Ronaldo Bolaños / Los Angeles Times)

Ryan Ward and Freeland each homered to right field. It was Ward’s first home run in his first game at Dodger Stadium. Alex Call, who pinch-hit for Ward in the fifth, also drove in two runs with a single to shallow center left field.

“I’m just uber-excited for Ryan Ward,” Freeland said. “I don’t think there’s anybody that deserves it more than him. So to share that moment with him is special.”

Andy Pages scored in the sixth inning on a Freeman sacrifice fly, and Muncy homered in the seventh.

“It just speaks to how we’re playing,” Roberts said. “I expect to go out there, regardless of opponent, and play well. You know, on the heels of last night, to be able to bounce back like we did was a good thing and a good sign for our club. But I just like the way we go about things, and to be able to give guys days off, and backfill with other guys, and for those guys to step up, that was great.”

Bryson Stott put the Phillies on the board with a home run in the ninth. By then, though, the Dodgers had already wrapped the bow on Roberts’ birthday gift.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts high-fives left fielder Ryan Ward after a 9-1 win over the Phillies on Sunday.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts high-fives left fielder Ryan Ward after a 9-1 win over the Phillies on Sunday. (Ronaldo Bolaños / Los Angeles Times)

Dodgers activate Jack Dreyer

The Dodgers activated reliever Jack Dreyer from the injured list and, in a corresponding move, optioned Paul Gervase to triple-A Oklahoma City.

Dreyer had been one of the Dodgers’ most consistent relievers before he missed 13 games with left shoulder inflammation. In 20 appearances, he held a 2.08 ERA with five earned runs and 24 strikeouts.

“Really excited to be back, obviously to do what I can to help the team,” Dreyer said. “Feeling great, so just ready to go whenever my number is called.”

Blake Snell, recovering from surgery to remove loose bodies from his left elbow, is throwing plyo balls but is not on a throwing progression yet like closer Edwin Díaz.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Giants 19, Rockies 6: A blowout loss brings May to a merciful end

May 31, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; San Francisco Giants catcher Daniel Susac (6) misses a tag on Colorado Rockies infielder Kyle Karros (12) at home in the second inning at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images | Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

“I had a root canal on Thursday and I’m not sure which was worse,” said Rockies commentator Jeff Huson about today’s baseball game between the Colorado Rockies and San Francisco Giants.

The Rockies entered today’s game with a series win already wrapped up and a chance to sweep a scuffling division rival. Instead, they lost to the Giants in what might end up being the worst game of the 2026 season.

On a combined 396 pitches, there were a combined 25 runs on 35 hits and six errors—though most of those runs and hits were from just one team. The game lasted a grueling three hours and 38 minutes to become the longest nine-inning game the Rockies have played this season. It was also one of the longest nine-inning games played in the league so far in 2026.

TJ Rumfield was a late pre-game scratch with shoulder soreness, the pitching was unpleasant, the offense could have been better, and ultimately Rockies fans were left with a game they’d love to forget to finish out what has been a largely unpleasant month of May.

A truly spectacular pitching meltdown

With the Giants scoring 19 runs on 25 hits and three Rockies errors over a total of 216 pitches thrown, this afternoon was easily the worst overall pitching performance of the season.

Starting pitcher Tanner Gordon lasted just three innings and threw 75 pitches with only two strikeouts. The Giants opened up the scoring in the first inning with a double—the first of many—a walk, and a single to score their first run and it was all downhill from there. Back-to-back doubles in the second inning plated another run, though it was in this frame that Gordon notched his only two strikeouts of the game.

With just a two run deficit heading into the third inning, it looked like the ship could still be righted. Gordon allowed a single but no other baserunners in what would end up being the only scoreless inning of the game for Rockies pitching.

Gordon started the fourth inning by giving up his fourth double of the game and then hitting catcher Daniel Susac in the (helmeted) head to end his afternoon. He was replaced by bullpen lefty Brennan Bernardino, who immediately threw a ball into the outfield checking a runner to have both runners advance. He then gave up a single, a walk, and a sacrifice fly for another two runs to score. Both runs were credited to Gordon.

The fifth inning is where things completely fell apart. With a close 4-3 ballgame, Zach Agnos—sporting a newly grown beard—took the mound. Things got ugly quick.

The Giants sent 11 batters to the plate and scored seven runs in the fifth inning. Agnos gave up five extra-base hits—three doubles, a triple, and a home run—with a grand slam following an intentional walk to load the bases sealing the Rockies’ fate. Six of the seven runs allowed by Agnos came with two outs and his ERA for the season jumped to an ugly 7.78.

The Rockies sent out Keegan Thompson, Juan Mejia, and finally Brett Sullivan to finish the game in mop-up duty. All three gave up multiple hits and multiple runs.

Feared catcher reliever Brett Sullivan was finally made to look mortal, giving up his first two earned runs of the season. It was his fourth appearance as a reliever in ten days.

Hard and loud contact was ultimately what the Giants brought to the table against Rockies pitching. Of their 25 total hits, 13 were for extra bases: nine doubles, a triple, and three home runs.

What offense would have been enough?

In another world, the Rockies could have won this game and swept the Giants with a generally decent outing from their bats. The Rockies scored six runs on ten hits and drew five walks against San Francisco pitching while their defense committed three errors. However, there’s not a lot you can do when the pitching staff gives up 19 runs and you don’t capitalize on the many opportunities you had available to you.

The Rockies had at least one baserunner in every inning except for the ninth—which, by then everyone from the Rockies to the Giants to the Umpires were ready to call it a day. In several innings they had multiple baserunners. However, they ended the day going just 2-for-14 with runners in scoring position and left ten men stranded. They also had just three extra-base hits compared to the Giants’ 13.

For what it’s worth, a few Rockies hitters did have genuinely solid days at the plate. Tyler Freeman went 3-for-4 with a walk and a double, Kyle Karros went 2-for-4 with a walk and a double, and Troy Johnston went 2-for-5 with an RBI.

Infielder Chad Stevens drew two walks despite going hitless, and backup catcher Braxton Fulford had just one hit but used it to drive in two of the Rockies’ six runs.

Up Next

The Rockies are back out on the road with a series against another basement dweller. With a record of 23-27, the Los Angeles Angels are just one win above the Rockies and the Detroit Tigers for the worst record in Major League Baseball.

California games also mean late start times. Tomorrow’s series opener will kick off at 7:38 PM MDT with a match-up between struggling veteran lefty Kyle Freeland and right-handed Angels ace José Soriano.


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To Live and Lose in L.A.: Dodgers 9, Phillies 1

Pablo May 31, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy (13) slides past Philadelphia Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto (10) for a run in the second inning at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images | William Liang-Imagn Images

Call it what you like: Dodger Stadium, Chavez Ravine, Uniqlo Field at Dodger Stadium if you’re a pedant or obligated by branding contracts. It’s a special place. I visited for the first time earlier this month to catch an installment of the age-old showdown between the Dodgers and their former citymates in black and orange, and soon found myself overwhelmed. The history of the place— the almost-tangible presence of the many greats who called the ballpark home, the almost-audible echoes of the crowds roaring at yet-another championship as Vin Scully voices their joy in his immortal tones—knocked me flat, left me dizzy. There was no doubt about it: the sheer presence that fills Dodger Stadium had sent me into delirium.

Actually, I was just dehydrated. One popsicle and two rapidly-chugged bottles of water later, and I was feeling normal. Still impressed by the stadium, sure: it’s genuinely great. But perhaps not quite so magical as woozy eyes might make it look. The Phillies, unfortunately, were left as woozy as I was, not by Dodger Stadium magic or dehydration, but by Yoshinobu Yamamoto and some unforced errors.

The start of the game was an exercise in frustration for the Phillies. Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper both struck out looking on pitches that were initially ruled balls and became strike three upon being challenged by Dodger backstop Dalton Rushing. Sandwiched in between was a groundout from Trea Turner. It didn’t get much cheerier when Shohei Ohtani hit a single that soared just over the outstretched glove of Bryson Stott. And it didn’t get any nicer for Phillies fans when Andy Pages skied a ball to deep center. But Justin Crawford, taking the mood of the Phillie faithful into his capable hands, dashed, leapt, caught the ball, and slammed into the wall. His cap flew off, his sunglasses were knocked askew, and the ball remained securely in his glove. After that, the Phillies got to engage in the age-old game of turnabout as J.T. Realmuto turned a Freddie Freeman walk into a backwards K via a challenge. The inning wrapped up without a run.

Brandon Marsh walked to open up the second, then got tossed out at second when he jumped before Yoshinobu Yamamoto pitched. The Dodgers had better results with their baserunner in the second, as Max Muncy singled and was plated by a double to center from Alex Freeland. Andrew Painter recovered nicely, with a strikeout of Ohtani to end the inning.

The Phillies continued to get some bad luck as the Dodgers got the better bounces. In the top third, Realmuto was hit by a pitch, which would later see him pulled from the game. In the bottom third, Freeman singled, advanced to second on a Mookie Betts groundout, then scored when Kyle Tucker hit a weak grounder that bounced awkwardly off of first base, over Harper’s glove, and into right. But luck, like the wheels of the Dodger Stadium Express, eventually turns(it does not, however, turn for the people who eschew said bus in the hopes that parking near the stadium will work out. They’re doomed). In the top of the fourth, Turner hit a bloop single that fell perfectly between a trio of descending Dodgers. Alec Bohm singled too, but it came to naught.

And it turned out the luck hadn’t changed so much after all: in the bottom fourth, Ryan Ward saw a slider from Painter that was about as spicy as the garlic fries they serve at Dodger Stadium— which is to say, not very. He sent it skyward, where it found the Phillies bullpen for what was his first career homer. It’s a lovely thing to see a milestone like that, unless it’s from the other team, in which case it’s just frustrating. That’s just a momentary frustration, though. The injury to Realmuto, who was pulled prior to the start of the bottom fourth, might be a longer one. Hopefully not. Rafael Marchán replaced him. Then Freeland saw a splitter that he rather liked, and sent a roundtripper to a similar spot as Ward did. The Tinseltowners took a 4-0 lead, Tanner Banks came into replace Painter, and the Phillies desperately hoped for a narrative change.

For a moment, it looked like they got one. Márchan singled in the top fifth, and Crawford doubled to center-right, with the ball landing just past the reach of a sliding Pages. But neither could be brought home, and the Phillies wrapped up their portion of the fifth with a run column as empty as my wallet after I purchased the $80 Ohtani-endorsed skincare for sale at the Dodgers team store.

Note: this is a joke. Not the part where the Dodgers sell that, which they do, or the part where they charge $80 for it, which they do. I did briefly consider actually buying it to turn into some sort of bit for this recap, but while I truly appreciate you, dear TGP reader, I still couldn’t bring myself to do it.

Just like I couldn’t buy that skincare, the Phillies couldn’t buy a break. In the bottom fifth Betts walked, Tucker doubled, and both scored when pinch-hitter Alex Call hit a fly ball that dropped perfectly between the onrushing Phillies.

Yamamoto walked Harper, struck out Marsh, and then finished his day (4 hits, 0 runs, 10 K). Will Klein was the choice from the bullpen, and, despite being more hittable than Yamamoto, soon thwarted the Phillies. They put two aboard, but neither came home, in part because a Bryson Stott bloop found a sliding Pages’ glove, with the latter turning the page from his earlier failed catch.

Pages then rubbed it in by hitting a popup that Stott couldn’t quite chase down, the ball bouncing away and becoming a triple. Pages promptly scored on a sacrifice fly.

As the Phillies entered the bottom of the seventh, they replaced Turner with Edmundo Sosa, and Harper with Garrett Stubbs. Muncy homered. That gave the Dodgers their eighth run. In the bottom eighth, Nolan Hoffman loaded the bases (walk, single, walk), with none out. The damage was limited, with the Dodgers plating only one more.

The bottom ninth saw the Phillies finally score, via Stott solo shot. There was to be no grand comeback, but the moment was appreciated.

The Phillies are 30-29. They return to action Tuesday at 6:40 for a series against the Padres.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto stifles Phillies as Dodgers take the series

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 31: Yoshinobu Yamamoto #18 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches in the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Dodger Stadium on May 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After suffering a deflating loss on Saturday, the Dodgers bounced back behind a dominant performance from Yoshinobu Yamamoto, taking the finale 9-1 and securing a series win over the Philadelphia Phillies.

The Phillies were the first to strike on Saturday with a home run from Alec Bohm in the second inning. The Dodgers were the first to strike on Sunday in the bottom of the second as Alex Freeland lined a two-out, RBI double to make it a 1-0 lead. Kyle Tucker brought the lead to two in the bottom of the third with a two-out RBI single to snap an 0-8 skid in the series.

Ryan Ward bounced back after striking out against Painter by crushing a hanging sweeper 108 miles per hour into the Phillies bullpen for his first major league home run, extending the Dodgers lead to three to begin the bottom of the fourth.

Alex Freeland followed up Ward with a home run of his own— his first since being recalled from Triple-A— to give him two RBI in as many at-bats, helping extend the lead to four and chase Painter out of the game.

The Dodgers early scoring spree was ample support for Yoshinobu Yamamoto, as he began his afternoon with a pair of strikeouts against Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper in the top of the first inning. Yamamoto was working on a no-hitter briefly until he allowed a bloop single from Trea Turner to begin the top of the fourth. The Phillies had two men on base in both the fourth and fifth innings, but Yamamoto managed to work around the traffic both times.

Yamamoto was not able to throw a quality start for the first time since allowing five earned runs against the San Francisco Giants on May 12, but he struck out a season-high 10 hitters while tossing his first scoreless outing all season and his first since his final regular season start last year against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Alex Call came in to pinch hit for Ward with the left-hander Tanner Banks on the mound in the bottom of the fifth inning, and he answered the call with a two-run single to give the Dodgers a six run lead. After Andy Pages reached on a bloop triple to shallow right field in the bottom of the sixth, every single Dodger in the starting lineup reached base at least once on Sunday. A sacrifice fly from Freddie Freeman extended the Dodger lead to seven.

Max Muncy joined in on the offensive barrage with a monster solo home run against Chase Shugart in the bottom of the seventh inning to make it an 8-0 lead. It was Muncy’s 14th home run on the year— reclaiming the team lead— and it was his 129th home run hit at Dodger Stadium, placing him just one home run behind Eric Karros for the most by a Dodger at home.

Freddie Freeman’s second sacrifice fly of the game to give the Dodgers their final run. They were three outs away from a shutout victory, but a home run from Bryson Stott against Jonathan Hernández put the Phillies on the board late.

It is the first time since May 2023 that the Dodgers have won a regular season series against the Philadelphia Phillies at home. With the San Diego Padres getting swept by the Washington Nationals, the Dodgers increase their division lead to 5 1/2 games.

Game particulars
  • Home runs— Ryan Ward (1), Alex Freeland (3), Max Muncy (14); Bryson Stott (6)
  • WP— Yoshinobu Yamamoto (5-4): 5 1/3 IP, 4 hits, 0 runs, 2 walks, 10 strikeouts
  • LP— Andrew Painter (1-6): 3 1/3 IP, 7 hits, 4 earned runs, 1 walk, 3 strikeouts
Up next

The Dodgers head out to Arizona to begin a four game set with the Diamondbacks on Monday (6:40 p.m. PT, SportsNet LA). Emmet Sheehan faces Eduardo Rodriguez.

Yankees flirt with history as 13-run third inning fuels pivotal win at Athletics

The Yankees secured back-to-back series wins Sunday when they took their three-game set at the Athletics with a 13-8 victory in the finale, rebounding from Saturday's 6-4 loss.

Takeaways

  1. New York (36-23) was one run shy of a franchise-record 14 runs in the third inning when it batted around twice on its way to 13 runs, 11 hits -- eight singles, two doubles and one triple -- and four walks that spanned three A's pitchers. The 43-minute top half started on Paul Goldschmidt's RBI single with the bases loaded and none out, and Cody Bellinger's two-out edition to follow Ben Rice's two-run triple capped the Yankees' scoring frenzy. After New York scored one run in the first eight innings of Saturday's defeat, it found its stride with a breakthrough that added some needed cushion.
  2. Will Warren allowed three unearned runs in the first inning to put the Yankees in an immediate hole but subsequently bounced back with five scoreless frames. He ended his six-inning start with six hits allowed while striking out five and walking three on 82 pitches (51 strikes). Warren lacked his best stuff but dug deep to earn his seventh win at 7-1 and lower his ERA to 3.22.
  3. Warren's replacement, Tim Hill, allowed three runs or more for the second time since surrendering three in a short-lived relief appearance during last Friday's 4-2 loss to the Tampa Bay Rays. Hill (4.03 ERA) entered the seventh inning with a 10-run lead but gave up two homers while struggling to locate pitches. Fortunately for New York, the A's (28-31) create too much of a mountain to climb.
  4. The Yankees match the AL East-leading Rays (36-20) with 36 wins entering June. After a three-game skid between May 20-21 losses against the Toronto Blue Jays and the aforementioned May 22 defeat against Tampa Bay, New York has won six of its past seven games as it enters the new month with a six-game homestand on the horizon.

Who's the MVP?

Rice, whose start as the Yankees' designated hitter in the second spot of the batting order -- behind Goldschmidt, who started at first and led off -- featured four RBI during a 2-for-5 afternoon. Before Rice's aforementioned triple, his two-run double earlier in the third inning tied the game at 3-3 and ignited the rally.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees take Monday off before Tuesday's 7:05 p.m. opener with the Cleveland Guardians starts a three-game series that spills into Wednesday and Thursday. New York's six-game homestand subsequently continues Friday through Sunday with a three-game set against the Boston Red Sox.

Yankees RHP Cam Schlittler (7-2, 1.50 ERA) and Guardians LHP Joey Cantillo (4-2, 3.57 ERA) are set to start Tuesday.

13 men score in historic third inning to lead Yankees to series win

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 29: Ben Rice #22 of the New York Yankees reacts after he hit a home run against the Athletics in the seventh inning at Sutter Health Park on May 29, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

That was one of the stranger games of baseball you’ll see. If you came in blind and I told you that the Yankees would give up eight runs while only scoring in a single inning, and Sacremento pitching faced the minimum in every other inning, you’d probably bet that they lost their Sunday rubber match with the Athletics. Except, it was a really, really big inning, a historically big inning. Thirteen men crossed the plate in the top of the third, and New York finished this road trip 5-1 after a 13-8 victory over the A’s.

We were all frustrated by the start of the game. The Yankees went down quietly in the top of the first, and Trent Grisham couldn’t find second gear on a dying quail in center field:

Bad defense leading to a crooked number, in a West Coast game on a getaway day in an MiLB stadium. There were a lot of reasons for the more superstitious to believe this was going to turn into one of those games. Instead, we got to see something no Yankee fan had seen in more than a hundred years.

How do we even start? Anthony Volpe singled and stole second, before Max Schuemann and Austin Wells both worked walks to load the bases. Down three, with the bases drunk and nobody out, my thought was “You’ve gotta tie the game here.”

Paul Goldschmidt did his job, an infield single and the Yankees were able to capitalize on Jacob Lopez’s failure to cover first; 3-1. Then came Ben Rice, to knot us up:

I’m thinking, “Great, fantastic, exactly what the team needed to do.”

I’ve watched a lot of baseball, you figure they’ll maybe tack on another run or two, little bit of a cushion for Will Warren. The club pushed another run across in an eerie echo of the Grisham blunder two innings prior:

It’s a line drive in the box score, Cap.

But then something started to happen. The Yankees kept getting hits, and when they weren’t getting hits it was because José Caballero walked with the bases loaded, ahead of Trent Grisham making up for that first-inning error:

Volpe completed the bat-around with another single, scoring another run. Schuemann pitched in a two-run double. Austin Wells walked again!

Side note — if there’s anyone in the Yankee org that passed along my “Austin Wells stop swinging” advice earlier this weekend, I appreciate you.

The leadoff hitter Goldschmidt was the first Yankee retired in the frame, after a dozen men safely reached base. I can only imagine the ribbing the veteran must have received on returning to the dugout, the crack in the chain of baserunners. Rice picked up the old man with a triple that scored two more runs:

Cody Bellinger would add another run on a single, and Cabby notched the last hit in a historic frame before Grisham was finally retired.

The Yankees sent 18 men to the plate, scoring 13 runs. The franchise record in a single frame is 14, set in the 1920 campaign. I suppose it is mathematically possible that someone in the stadium today or watching the YES broadcast was around for that, but the old adage that when you go to the ballpark, you have a chance to see something you’ve never seen before certainly rang true in Sacremento today.

Suzyn Waldman noted on WFAN that 45 minutes is the decision point during a rain delay, where teams remove whatever pitcher was in at the time the skies opened up and go with a bullpen arm. The top of the third lasted 42 minutes, with Will Warren jogging down to the outfield bullpens in an attempt to stay warm. As impressive as the offense was, perhaps equally as impressive was Warren needing just 11 pitches to work the bottom of the inning, and five the bottom of the fourth — the platonic ideal of the quick, shutdown inning after an explosion like that.

Warren ended up going six innings, with zero earned runs allowed. He pretty clearly pivoted to “pitching to the scoreboard” after the third inning, so I wouldn’t worry too much about the 5:3 K:BB ratio. Tim Hill was the first bullpen arm used, likely since with such a significant lead Aaron Boone needed someone who could keep the ball in the strike zone. While Hill did that, he didn’t exactly keep the ball in the yard, giving up two home runs and taking it from a ten-run game to a six-run affair.

Fernando Cruz also allowed a run in the eighth, an RBI double off Nick Kurtz’s bat. David Bednar, in need of work after five days off, was called upon in the ninth and put a pair of men on, before finally closing it out and sealing a series win. The Yankees didn’t even get a hit outside of that mammoth third, but it was mammoth enough that we’ll remember it for a long time.

The club gets a much-appreciated day off tomorrow as they fly home from the West Coast, and then we get Cam Bump Day on Tuesday. Cleveland comes to town for a three-game set, and Cam Schlittler gets the ball for the first round against lefty Joey Cantillo. Tuesday’s action starts at 7:05pm Eastern.

Box Score

Braves at Reds series recap: 40 wins for Atlanta before June

May 30, 2026; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Atlanta Braves outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr. (13) reacts after hitting a solo home run in the ninth inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images | Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

The train just won’t stop rolling, folks. The Atlanta Braves went into this series with the Cincinnati Reds following an emphatic bounce-back series win against the Boston Red Sox and looking to ensure that this road trip would be a winning one as well. It was especially encouraging to see Ronald Acuña Jr. deliver a big hit for the first time in what felt like ages during that final game in Boston and I’d imagine that we were all hoping that this would keep on going as the team switched venues from Fenway Park to the Great American Ball Park.

As it turned out, to say that Acuña kept it going would be an understatement. It is legitimately not hyperbolic to say that Acuña looked like an MVP-caliber hitter again over the course of these three games in Cincinnati. Now granted, Acuña (and the Braves as a whole during this current era) have usually had a good time swinging the bat in this ballpark but what happened over the course of this weekend was something akin to watching a supernova go off right in front of your eyes. Let’s get into this series to see exactly how things turned out on what ended up being a typically loud series on the Buckeye side of the Ohio River.


Friday, May 29

Braves 8, Reds 3

Ronald Acuña Jr. picked up exactly where he left off in Boston as he crushed a leadoff dinger to get the Braves on the board first. In fact, Reds outfielder bake Dunn was the only reason why it didn’t get worse for starting pitcher Chris Paddack and the Reds in the first inning as Dunn robbed Michael Harris II of a dinger and then unleashed a laser to get Matt Olson out at second base after Olson tried to leg out a double.

With that being said, that didn’t stop the Braves from continuing their early onslaught once the second inning rolled around. Atlanta loaded the bases with nobody out to get the top of the second started and they eventually ended up cashing in three runs from it in order to take a 4-0 lead. That was all the damage they’d end up doing to Paddack and in fact, this was a tight game after five innings after the Reds launched two solo homers off of Grant Holmes in the fourth inning and then added a third run to Holmes’ line after Didier Fuentes gave up an RBI single to Sal Stewart to make it just a one-run lead for the Braves.

Fortunately, Yunior Marte suffered the same fate as Chris Paddack in that they both gave up four runs. Marte surrendered all four of those runs in one inning, though, as the first four Braves who came to the plate in the sixth all reached safely. Michael Harris II, Jorge Mateo (who has been lowkey heating up lately) and Mike Yastrzemski all delivered the big RBI shots that resulted in the Braves taking a five-run, 8-3 lead. Didier Fuentes sat down the side in order in the sixth inning and Atlanta’s bullpen clamped down from that point forward in order to make sure that 8-3 was how it ended.

Saturday, May 30

Braves 5, Reds 2

The long ball played a major factor in Atlanta’s success in picking up yet another series, as the Braves clubbed four homers in this one. Half of those came off of the bat of Ronald Acuña Jr., who appears to be on the start of a real heater. The Braves actually trailed after two innings thanks to JJ Bleday taking advantage of a hanging curveball from Martín Pérez for a two-run homer but after that, the homers were exclusively reserved for the Braves.

Acuña’s first dinger of the game came in the third inning as it tied the game up at two runs apiece. Two innings later, Jorge Mateo hit his third dinger of the season to put the Braves in front (now mind you, Mateo hit one (1) homer in 43 games last season) and then Acuña followed that up by reaching third base without swinging the bat following a walk and two stolen bases. He didn’t score but it’s also another sign that Acuña may be rounding into MVP form — plus it was pretty cool to see so I had to mention it.

Anyways, Matt Olson sent one out for a solo shot in the seventh inning to give the Braves some breathing room and then Acuña put the icing on the cake with a bomb in ninth inning to make it a three-run deficit. Thanks to Martín Pérez throwing another solid five innings and Atlanta’s high-leverage bullpen quartet of Tyler Kinley, Dylan Lee, Robert Suarez and Raisel Iglesias combining for four scoreless innings with just one baserunner allowed between the four of them, the Braves ended up cruising to their 40th victory of the season. Folks, that’s 40 victories before June — PHEW!

Sunday, May 31

Reds 6, Braves 4

The good news to report from this one is that Ronald Acuña Jr. continued to absolutely light it up at the plate. Acuña reached base four times in this one and in fact, the very first pitch he saw from Nick Lodolo during this game ended up landing in the right field seats for his fifth home run in four games. As far as the plate production goes, the Reds will surely not miss seeing Acuña for the rest of this season!

The bad news is that the Braves couldn’t really string together enough offense to deliver a big inning that could’ve potentially turned the tide in this one. The Reds responded with an RBI double from (none other than) JJ Bleday in the first inning to tie it up and then Bleday hit liner out to right for another double that gave the Reds the lead in the third inning. As a matter of fact, the Reds basically just wore out Acuña out there in right field as Will Benson’s double in the fourth inning ended up turning into another run scored for the Reds as Acuña had a devil of a time trying to retrieve the ball. Spencer Steer went first-to-home as a result and the Braves were in a 3-1 hole.

That was the second of five straight innings where the Reds added exactly one run to their tally. Despite another Jorge Mateo home run in the fifth inning and a sacrifice fly from Austin Riley in the sixth inning, the Braves were unable to keep pace with Cincinnati and found themselves dealing with a three-run deficit once the ninth inning rolled around. Atlanta was able to get a rally going in the final frame which saw Acuña drive in another run to make it 6-4 while also getting themselves into a bases-loaded situation with two outs. Having Matt Olson at the plate was about as good as what the Braves could ask for but unfortunately, Olson grounded out to third and the Braves ended up having to settle for a series win instead of a sweep.


So, that’s another series win, another successful road trip and another wildly successful month of baseball for the 2026 Atlanta Braves. They’ve now won or split 15 of 17 series that they’ve played so far and they’re the first team to win 40 games this season. They’ll be the only team with at least 40 wins for at least a few days since the only other team that’s knocking on the door of 40 wins is none other than the Dodgers, who have 37 wins. The Rays and Yankees aren’t too far behind with 36 and 35 wins and then you have the Brewers with 35 wins as well and the Guardians are continuing to practice witchcraft over there with 34 wins of their own.

No matter how you slice it, the Braves are red-hot and they aren’t showing too many signs of stopping. For reference’s sake, the Nationals have gone 20-13 over their past 33 and they’re still firmly in the rear view mirror. The Phillies are starting to recover from their rough start and yet they’re right there wit the Nationals in terms of distance behind the Braves. No current divisional leader has a bigger cushion at the top of their division right now than the Braves do and it’s tough to imagine that changing any time soon.

It also sure helps that Ronald Acuña Jr. is showing some loud signs that he’s getting right again. The Braves have been successful with Acuña kind of treading water (for his standards) and now it’s fun to imagine what this team can do with Acuña firing on all cylinders like he’s capable of. It was clear that the offense needed some sort of a spark after Drake Baldwin went down with an oblique injury and ever since the series finale in Boston and throughout this series in Cincinnati, Acuña has provided that spark for this team and it’s been truly exciting to witness.

Now, the Braves will get a day off on Monday before kicking off the June slate with a six-game homestand against the Blue Jays and Pirates. With the way this team is continuing to play, they can reasonably believe that they’ve got a very good shot of winning any and every series they play in, which is some rarefied air to be in this deep into any given regular season. Plain and simple, this is a very fun baseball team to watch right now and hopefully it’ll continue for a good, long while — especially if Acuña can keep on lighting it up as the Braves return home.

Game Discussion for St. Louis Cardinals vs Chicago Cubs Sunday Night

ST. LOUIS, MO - APRIL 13: Matthew Liberatore #32 of the St. Louis Cardinals pitches during the game between the Cleveland Guardians and the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium on Monday, April 13, 2026 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Ali Overstreet/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The St. Louis Cardinals will try to rebound and win the series Sunday night when Matthew Liberatore takes the mound for another national broadcast. Jordan Wicks will get the start for the Chicago Cubs. First pitch is set for 6:20pm central time as the game will be watchable on NBC/Peacock.

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Blue Jays’ Jesus Sanchez exits game after being hit with ball thrown by fan in bizzare scene

Toronto Blue Jays players Jesus Sanchez and Andres Gimenez speak on the field.
Blue Jays right fielder Jesus Sanchez (12) speaks to Toronto Blue Jays shortstop Andres Gimenez (0) during the sixth inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.

Jesús Sánchez wasn’t “trying to play catch” — but a fan apparently was.

The Blue Jays outfielder was injured in bizarre fashion on Sunday, when he was hit in the hand by a ball thrown from the stands during a game against the Orioles.

During the sixth inning, Sánchez was talking with a fan in the outfield when he put his glove up, which seemingly led the fan to believe the MLB veteran wanted a ball thrown his way.

But the 28-year-old had put his glove down when the ball came flying his way, and he was left in pain when the ball hit him.

Blue Jays right fielder Jesus Sanchez (12) speaks to Toronto Blue Jays shortstop Andres Gimenez (0) during the sixth inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

Sánchez was attended to by medical staff and ultimately left the field holding his hand.

He shared after the game through an interpreter that the situation with the fan was a “misunderstanding.”

“I wasn’t trying to play catch right there with them,” Sánchez told reporters.

“I just looked at them and they thought maybe that I wanted them to throw the ball back to me.”

The Blue Jays, who lost the game 9-5, said Sánchez had suffered a right wrist contusion, but that X-rays for a fracture had come back negative.

Toronto Blue Jays right fielder Jesus Sanchez (12) is attended to by medical staff during the sixth inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

The Orioles also released a statement to reporters, which said that the fan had been identified and removed from Oriole Park at Camden Yards.

Sánchez is slashing a .287/.324/.461 line this season with 28 RBIs — and the Blue Jays will hope he doesn’t miss much time.

Yankees explode for 13 runs in historic inning vs. Athletics

The Athletics are playing in a minor league ballpark again this year as they wait for their new home to be built in Las Vegas. On Sunday, in the top of the third inning, they pitched like a minor league team as well.

The New York Yankees teed off on A's starter Jacob Lopez and relievers Michael Kelly and Jack Perkins for 13 runs in the top of the third inning.

The Yankees sent 18 players to the plate at Sutter Health Park, pilling up 11 hits and four walks in the biggest inning the team has had since at least 1974, according to the WFAN broadcast. Lopez wore most of it before manager Mark Kotsay turned to Kelly and then to Perkins, who finally put an end to the circus.

Lopez was charged with seven earned runs on five hits. Kelly allowed six runs on six hits and two walks.

Ten runs were scored before anyone made an out. No Yankees team had ever done that.

Ben Rice batted twice in the inning and drove in four run, with a two-run double and a two-run triple. Every starter got two at-bats. Aaron Judge singled and struck out for the second out of the inning. Anthony Volpe had two singles and stole a base. Cody Bellinger had two singles.

The last team to put up 13 runs in an inning was the Boston Red Sox, last May against the Baltimore Orioles.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Yankees score 13 runs in historic third inning against Athletics

Royals swept again, lose 6-3 against Rangers

May 31, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Kansas City Royals pitcher Eli Morgan (34) delivers a pitch to the Texas Rangers during the eighth inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jim Cowsert-Imagn Images | Jim Cowsert-Imagn Images

It was another tough day of Royals baseball. They were promptly swept for the third time in their last four series. They have lost 6 straight and 16 of their last 19. They are one of the worst teams in all of baseball.

A four-run first inning, all with two outs, doomed Michael Wacha and the Royals. Ezequiel Duran tripled to score two, scoring himself on a single y Alejandro Osuna. A Kyle Higashioka double would plate another run to make it 4-0.

Wacha would allow two more runs in the bottom of the fifth. Wacha, who’d thrown five straight quality starts, just simply didn’t have it today. His final line was 5 innings, 8 hits, 6 runs, 4 walks and 5 strikeouts. Steven Cruz, Eli Morgan and Mason Black all pitched scoreless innings for the Royals.

On offense, Michael Massey hit a 2-run homer late to make it 6-3. He had a pair of hits, and Bobby singled and hit a bloop double in the ninth to give him a multi-hit day.

I wish I could say more, but there is simply nothing positive going on right now for the Royals. Their road trip continues tomorrow as they open a 3-game set in Cincinnati to take on the Reds. Luinder Avila is the expected starter for what should be a bullpen game. First pitch is set for 6:10 p.m. CT.

At least my Kansas Jayhawks might clinch a super-regional berth tonight! 🙂

Yankees rout A’s after erupting for wild 13-run third inning that lasts 43 minutes

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees player Ben Rice hitting a two-RBI triple, Image 2 shows Athletics manager Mark Kotsay signals a pitching change
The Yankees erupted for 13 runs during the third inning of their game Sunday against the A's.

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Looking back, the most remarkable feat accomplished here Sunday afternoon may have been that across eight combined innings, the Athletics faced the minimum against the Yankees.

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That’s because for one inning in between — a 43-minute top of the third — they faced a Yankees parade.

Sparked by a message from Aaron Judge to wake up after a “sleepy” first two innings, the Yankees began the third by having their first 12 batters reach base safely and scoring 10 runs before they made the first out. And their stupefying rally did not stop there.

By the time the marathon inning was over, the Yankees had sent 18 men to the plate, with 15 of them reaching and 13 of them scoring — one shy of a franchise record that has stood since 1920. They racked up 11 hits — incredibly, none of them leaving the park — four walks and four steals, seeing 75 pitches from three pitchers. Anthony Volpe, Ben Rice and Cody Bellinger each had two hits in the inning, with Rice driving in four runs on a double and triple.

In the process, the Yankees turned a three-run deficit into a 10-run lead, sucking the life out of the A’s pitching staff one painstaking at-bat at a time on the way to a 13-8 win.

Ben Rice triples during the third inning of the Yankees’ May 31 game against the A’s. AP Photo

“We were sitting here kind of flat, but when we have energy and we press on the gas against all these teams, we’re the best team in baseball,” Judge said. “Just wanted guys to remember that.

“A couple choice words there, just get it going. The boys responded.”

Amazingly, in the eight innings outside of the ridiculous third, the Yankees only had a single base runner: a leadoff walk in the sixth inning that was erased by a double play. In other words, the A’s were one inning short of a combined no-hitter.

“Today was one of those crazy games that I don’t know what it was, but it was a win,” manager Aaron Boone said.

Will Warren, who had to jog to the bullpen during the second pitching change of the third inning to warm up because it had been so long since he last threw a pitch, did not allow the A’s (28-31) to return serve. The right-hander took the gaudy run support and cruised across six innings, allowing only three unearned runs, as the Yankees (36-23) wrapped up a 5-1 road trip in style.

“It’s very easy in a day game to, ‘Oh let’s go through the motions,’ but that’s how you get your ass beat,” Warren said. “I’m glad we woke up and turned it around on them.”

Cody Bellinger singles during the third inning of the Yankees’ May 31 game against the A’s. AP Photo
Mark Kotsay makes a pitching change during the Yankees’ May 31 game against the A’s. Getty Images

The 12 straight Yankees to reach base to start the third inning matched a franchise record from 1949. Phil Rizzuto led off that rally with a walk before the likes of Joe DiMaggio and Yogi Berra piled on.

On Sunday, it was Volpe who got it going with a bloop single after the Yankees had not even hit the ball out of the infield through the first two innings against A’s lefty Jacob Lopez and trailed 3-0.

Former A’s utilityman Max Schuemann and Austin Wells followed with walks to load the bases for Paul Goldschmidt, who roped an RBI single to make it a 3-1 game.

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Rice came up next and smoked a two-run double down the line to tie the game before Judge blooped a single into center field for the 4-3 lead, and the Yankees were off and running. They did not make an out until Goldschmidt, batting for the second time in the frame, was called out looking at a pitch out of the zone, at which point they led 10-3.

“It was crazy,” said Volpe, who was on deck to hit for the third time when the inning finally ended. “I felt like I would run the bases and then I’d get up and have to put my stuff back on [to hit].”

They leaned on station-to-station action to keep extending the lead instead of waiting for the big swing to clean up the traffic with a home run. The long ball never came for the team that leads the majors in homers, but they found a different way to attack against Lopez and righty reliever Michael Kelly.

“We got guys up and down this lineup that can hit homers, but it’s guys taking walks, guys just putting the ball in play and seeing what happens,” Judge said. “I feel like [for] a couple years, we haven’t had that ability to do something like that. But now we got the capability with the type of lineup we have, there’s a lot of grit in this team.

“That inning was fun.”

The A’s made things semi-interesting in the seventh inning when Tim Hill got some work in and gave up four runs on a pair of homers, but eventually the Yankees escaped with the win.

“I don’t think the prettiest game on either side necessarily,” Boone said, “but we were able to make a really outstanding inning stand up.