Jun 26, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts (50) is congratulated by third baseman Max Muncy (13) after hitting a solo home run during the second inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images | Denis Poroy-Imagn Images
Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s June concludes with his fourth consecutive Saturday start.
Jun 27, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets starting pitcher Christian Scott (45) pitches against the Philadelphia Phillies during the first inning at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images
Full disclosure I started writing this recap in the fifth inning when the team was down 2-0 and they couldn’t get any runs home against Alan Rangel, but as Shakespeare wrote I got hoisted on my own petard and the Mets surprisingly won 6-2.
Speaking of Shakespeare, in Henry VI, in Part II, Act III word of an Irish uprising gets sent to the king saying:
Before the wound do grow uncurable; For, being green, there is great hope of help.
Meaning there is still hope to end the skirmishes since they have only just begun. The Mets are now in their own Green era with new manager Andy Green, are there is some hope of help with both Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto together again in the lineup, and the return of Christian Scott to the rotation.
Lindor got the first big hit of the day when he tripled home two runs to tie the game in the sixth inning. After the next two batters walked, A.J. Ewing singled home two more runs with the infield drawn in to give the Mets their first lead of the day. One inning later it was Juan Soto’s turn to triple home a run to extend the lead 5-2. Bo Bichette followed with a sacrifice fly and the Mets held a 6-2 lead. It’s a shame Francisco Lindor, Juan Soto, Carson Benge, and A.J. Ewing haven’t played much together because when they are all on they have the potential to be electric.
As for the pitching, Christian Scott was solid in his return from the injured list. He gave up a home run to Bryce Harper but otherwise kept Philadelphia in check. He could not complete the fifth inning but his final line was 4.2 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 2, BB, and 6 K. A.J. Minter, Huascar Brazobán, Luke Weaver, and Devin Williams were all stellar to finish off the game and snap a seven-game losing streak.
Did you know many common phrases in our vernacular have been borrowed from Shakespeare? Some include good riddance, a piece of work, a sorry sight, set your teeth on edge, what’s done is done, seen better days, dead as a doornail, come what may, for goodness’s sake, and laughingstock. I mention these for no particular reason but for whatever it’s worth the Mets are now 1-1 under manager Andy Green.
Big Mets winner: Francisco Lindor, +30% WPA Big Mets loser: Brett Baty, -7% WPA Mets pitchers: +12% WPA Mets hitters: +38% WPA Teh aw3s0mest play: Francisco Lindor’s RBI triple in sixth, +34.9% WPA Teh sux0rest play: Bryce Harpers’s home run in the third, -22.3% WPA
The Mets' offense exploded for six unanswered runs as they defeated the Phillies, 6-2, on Saturday evening at Citi Field.
The win snapped the team's seven-game losing streak. It's Andy Green's first win as interim manager.
Here are the takeaways...
-Christian Scott, making his first start since coming off the IL, was solid, getting out of trouble in the first and pitching two scoreless innings. But Bryce Harper took Scott the other way for a two-run shot, the slugger's 43rd career blast against the Mets, in the third inning to put Philadelphia ahead.
That would be the only mistake the young right-hander made as he pitched into the fifth, but after a one-out walk, Green decided to pull Scott at 82 pitches. Scott allowed just the two runs on three hits and two walks, while striking out six.
-The Mets offense was mired in futility for the first five innings, but they awoke in the sixth. Back-to-back one-out singles from Juan Soto and Bo Bichette set it up for Francisco Lindor. The shortstop lined a triple down the first base line to tie the game at 2-2. After Jared Young and Mark Vientos walked to load the bases, A.J. Ewing jumped on the first pitch and hit a single through the drawn-in infield to push across two more runs.
Soto added on in the seventh with a triple that scored Carson Benge. Bichette brought in Soto with a sac fly.
Soto, Bichette and Lindor -- the Mets' No. 2-4 hitters -- went 4-for-9 with four RBI.
-In relief of Scott, the Mets bullpen did its job. The Mets used four relievers to get the final 14 outs. Here's how it broke down...
A.J. Minter: 1.2 IP, 1 H, 1 K
Huascar Brazoban: 1.0 IP, 1 H
Luke Weaver: 1.0 IP, 2 K
Devin Williams: 1.0 IP, 1 BB, 1 K
Weaver extended his scoreless innings streak to 23 straight.
Game MVP: A.J. Ewing
The youngster's two-run single broke the tie and set the Mets up for the win.
PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - JUNE 27: Eugenio Suárez #28 of the Cincinnati Reds celebrates in the dugout after hitting a three run home run in the ninth inning during the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on June 27, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Cincinnati Reds rode a roller coaster all day against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Saturday.
The game was delayed early by rain and got soggy again late. Chase Burns, who started for the Reds on the day, struck out 10 Pirates in 6.0 IP…but also yielded 9 hits and 5 runs. The team took an early 2-0 lead, gave it back on a 3-run homer by Brandon Lowe, later held a 6-4 lead, and eventually found themselves trailing 7-6.
That, fortunately, was when Eugenio Suárez stepped to the plate with a pair of runners on.
With lefty fireballer Gregory Soto on the mound trying to close out the Reds in the Top of the 9th – and with 2-outs, to boot – Geno lifted a ball through the fog into the seats in right field, his 3-run homer flipping the scoreboard again and this time giving Cincinnati a lead it would not relinquish.
It’s been an emotional few days for Geno, a pround native of Venezuela who has watched his country suffer so much in the aftermath of two gigantic earthquakes earlier in the week. He’s been wearing ‘VZ’ on the side of his hat in each game of this series as a way to honor his country, and this was pretty clearly a very emotional moment for him.
Chase Petty picked up his first career save in what’s becoming an increasingly effective role for him in the bullpen, and a 9-7 final goes on the Reds ledger.
Thanks to this (and last night’s victory), the Reds have won a series against an NL Central opponent again for the first time since Maurice of Nassau defeeated Jean de Rie of Varas at the Battle of Turnhout.
Jose Trevino went 2 for 4 with a double, run scored, and a pair of ribbies, while Edwin Arroyo went 2 for 2 with 2 runs scored and a ribbie of his own – not bad from the butt-end of the batting order. Sal Stewart homered as part of a 2-hit, 2 ribbie day, and the Reds pounded out 10 total hits as a club in a well-rounded effort.
The Reds will send a resurgent Brady Singer to the mound on Sunday in search of the sweep, with first pitch in that one scheduled for 1:35 PM ET.
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 26: Sung-Mun Song #24 of the San Diego Padres hits a two-RBI single during the eighth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Petco Park on June 26, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Los Angeles Dodgers (52-30) at San Diego Padres (43-37), June 27, 2026, 5:40 p.m. PST
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Jacob Gonzalez became the seventh different White Sox player to hit a walk-off this season. | (Photo by Michael Hirschuber/Getty Images)
Tristan Peters. Colson Montgomery. Miguel Vargas. Edgar Quero. Braden Montgomery. Sam Antonacci. What do they all have in common? They’ve recorded walk-off RBIs for the Chicago White Sox this season. And Jacob Gonzalez has added his name to this elusive list in today’s 2-1 win!
Naturally, after scoring 22 runs on Friday night, we were due for a pitcher’s duel. Our ace against their ace, with neither earning a decision.
Davis Martin found early trouble in the second inning, but it was only for mere moments. With runners on second and third with only one out, Martin notched a strikeout looking and a strikeout swinging to escape unscathed.
On the flip side, the Sox offense wasn’t making any more noise against K.C.’s Michael Wacha, either. In the bottom of the fourth inning, Vargas lined a single off Nick Loftin’s glove at third. Expecting a bigger deflection and a slower baseball entering left field, the always-hustling Vargas kept his wheels turning toward second base. Nick Collins provided an exceptional throw, and second baseman Michael Massey’s glove caught Vargas’ fingertips right before they reached the bag.
After giving up a one-out double to Bobby Witt Jr. in the sixth inning, Martin’s afternoon was over. At only 87 pitches, Martin tossed 5 1/3 innings, giving up four hits, striking out three and walking just one batter. Sean Newcomb relieved Martin, successfully stranding Bobby at second.
It took until the seventh inning for either offense to break through. Massey beat out an infield single that Gonzalez couldn’t corral from Chase Meidroth. Tyler Tolbert pinch-ran for Massey and immediately stole second and third base during Salvador Pérez’s at-bat, who fortunately struck out in the process for the first out of the inning. Newcomb then made a brilliant defensive play on a Loftin safety squeeze, gloving the dribbler and flipping it to Drew Romo to nab the speedy Tolbert at home:
Unfortunately, a walk from Newcomb loaded the bases, and the Royals found a way to scratch across a run with two outs. (Even that score was made better by poor execution from K.C.) Carter Jensen extended his MLB-leading hit streak to 18 games when he lasered a pitch to short right field to score Starling Marte from third, but Braden Montgomery fielded it quickly and threw home to Romo. Loftin, for some reason taking an aggressive turn toward home even with Witt on deck, was gunned down by Romo at third.
Fortunately, the Royals lead didn’t last long. In the home half of the seventh, Andrew Benintendi notched a leadoff single. Will Venable turned on the hit-and-run with Chase Meidroth at the plate, who lined one past a diving Massey and pinch-runner Luisangel Acuña made his way to third base. Immediately following, Braden Montgomery jumped on the first pitch he saw which resulted into a fielder’s choice at second and a run across the plate.
Facing the heart of the order in the eighth, Grant Taylor sat the best the Royals had to offer down 1-2-3 on only nine pitches.
Tying his season-high of 105 pitches, Michael Wacha was once again brilliant against the Sox. At 7 2/3 innings, Wacha struck out seven, gave up his only walk to Miguel Vargas in the eighth and gave up just the lone run. Daniel Lynch successfully stranded runners on first and second to maintain Wacha’s stat line and stamp out the White Sox rally.
Taylor stayed on for the ninth and needed just 10 pitches for a second consecutive 1-2-3 inning.
All roads led to the bottom of the ninth inning, with the game still knotted 1-1. Colson Montgomery, with an inside-out swing, grooved the baseball to shallow left-center field, and Chase Meidroth followed suit with a single of his own. Braden Montgomery laid down the most perfect bunt single to load the bases with nobody out in the ninth.
The Royals were forced to bring in the infield and go with five infielders. But Junior Perez, pinch-hitting for Tristan Peters, could not take advantage of any of that free green grass in the outfield and struck out looking. With the same defensive alignment in place for Gonzalez, he went oppo, past a diving Witt, for the Sox’s seventh walk-off of the season!
The Good Guys are 17-9 in one-run ballgames this season, have 21 comeback wins and have won 10 straight series at home! At the official halfway point to the season, the Sox sit atop the AL Central by 1 1/2 games, at 43-38.
The White Sox will end their six-game homestand and look for the series sweep tomorrow at 1:10 p.m. CT on CHSN and ESPN 1000.
WEST PALM BEACH, FL - MARCH 14: Miguel Ullola #68 of the Houston Astros pitches during the game between the Washington Nationals and the Houston Astros at Cacti Park at the Palm Beaches on Friday, March 14, 2025 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Trevor Gallagher/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The Houston Astros are calling up pitching prospect Miguel Ullola, according to a report from Chandler Rome of The Athletic.
Ullola, 24, is ranked as the Astros #11 prospect per MLB.com. Ullola was converted to a reliever this season in an effort to help him with his command issues and be someone the team could potentially call up to help the big league club this season.
This season, Ullola is 1-4 with a 5.48 ERA for Triple-A Sugar Land, along with a 1.55 WHIP. In 47.2 IP, he has walked 35 and struck out 64.
Since moving to the bullpen May 30, he has allowed only 3 runs in 10 appearances ( a 3 run HR) over 10 IP. He’s allowed 8 hits, 6 walks, and struck out 16.
Rome believes that Kai-Wei Teng, who admitted to some arm fatigue after today’s game, is a likely candidate to be sent down. Rome asserted that Teng was seen in manager Joe Espada’s office after the game, indicating he may have been getting informed he was being optioned.
The Astros are calling up pitching prospect Miguel Ullola, source tells @TheAthletic
Expect the corresponding move to involve Kai-Wei Teng, who has minor-league options remaining and was seen being brought in to manager Joe Espada’s office after today’s game. https://t.co/yM18eTGOaT
Teng threw a career-high 136.1 innings in 2022, but hasn't thrown more than 86 innings in any season since 2023. After today's outing, he's already thrown 64 innings.
John Mozeliak, shown before a spring training game in 2025, is the Angels' interim general manager and a consultant to team president Molly Jolly. (Justin Ford / Getty Images)
John Mozeliak is in Anaheim for one clear-cut reason: to set the foundation for the Angels to get back on track.
At his introductory news conference at Angel Stadium on Saturday, the team’s new baseball operations consultant and interim general manager laid out his vision for success — while acknowledging recent woes — alongside Molly Jolly, one day after the first-year Angels president relieved general manager Perry Minasian of his duties amid his sixth straight losing season.
“Obviously, [the Angels] lacked consistency in terms of when you think about winning, right? Because that’s the proxy,” Mozeliak said. “There’s a lot of things we can use to determine if the organization is healthy or not. … Where Molly and I are connecting on this is like, we understand wins and losses matter, but how do you get to a place where that becomes consistent?
“Look at the best clubs in baseball [and] what you admire; whether they’re large-market or small-market, they have a philosophy, they have direction, and they stick to it, right? … That’s ultimately what we need to do here, and that’s hopefully something I can help bring to them.”
Mozeliak spent 18 seasons (2008-25) as general manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, a tenure consisting of 10 playoff appearances and a World Series victory in 2011.
The 57-year-old intends to “audit” the Angels in this new role alongside Jolly, with plans to hire a general manager by the time Mozeliak’s contract is up “sometime in December.”
“I brought on board John Mozeliak to assist me in preparing a baseball operation strategy as well as guide me in the search for a new general manager,” Jolly said, mentioning that her decision to fire Minasian and bring in Mozeliak had brewed for weeks.
“I did this because John has a proven track record of building and maintaining winning baseball cultures, and my goal is to bring that here to the Angels.”
Mozeliak didn’t rule himself out as the long-term answer at general manager and was emphatic about not speaking in absolutes. However, the longtime executive said he’d rather help Jolly “bridge the gap” during the Angels’ transformative period before anything else.
The Angels have plenty of gaps entering Saturday’s matchup with the Athletics. The Angels are tied for last in the American League with a 34-49 record while on the road to a 12th consecutive finish out of the playoffs.
And all of that is before mentioning the “sell the team” chants that flood the right-field upper deck at Angel Stadium at each home game as ex-Angel Shohei Ohtani thrives with the Dodgers.
Mozeliak understands that the Angels have lacked direction in recent seasons. He asked for patience in rebuilding the team alongside Jolly.
“I knew coming in, this isn’t going to be something where Molly and I had a light switch and everything just starts working perfectly,” Mozeliak said. “It’s not going to work that way. … I would ask for some patience. We need a little time to sort of work through this … when we come out on the other end of this tunnel, we hope to be in a very successful place.”
Jolly said of Angels fans’ discontent, “I know what’s happening. I see it, I hear it. Fans have a right to have their voices be heard. Didn’t influence the decision that I wanted to make, but we all want to win. Our owner wants to win. I do. The fans deserve that, and that’s what we’re going to work toward.”
Mozeliak acknowledged he’d already forgotten some names of Angels personnel he was introduced to Saturday. But he also said that first-year manager Kurt Suzuki and the rest of the coaching staff’s jobs are secure through the season.
“I met with most of them this morning, and I told them they’re all fine for this year,” Mozeliak said. “There’s nothing they have to worry about. We’re not making any coaching changes right now. I really just need to get to know them, right?”
Mozeliak spoke to Suzuki on Saturday and said that he and his staff are “very impressive.”
Across the board, Mozeliak — who hasn’t yet met owner Arte Moreno since moving into this role — is focused on knowing who the Angels are at this point, with an “aggressive timeline” looming in the background.
With that said, Mozeliak shared that he isn’t “overly concerned” with the Aug. 3 trade deadline, nor is he worried about the MLB draft, which starts July 11.
“My philosophy on the draft is to let the scouting director and his team do their jobs,” Mozeliak said. “The only real input I’m going to have is … understanding their process … and then if there are some financial decisions that are being banked into who we pick and why.”
Jolly brought in Mozeliak to help the Angels hire their fourth full-time general manager since 2012.
And while many might believe not much will change as long as Moreno remains the owner, Jolly said she has “autonomy” to assess the Angels’ baseball operations and is “confident in my authority and scope within the organization.”
Those invested in the Angels will believe it when they see it.
“When I think about the Angels right now, I just look at it as a very opportunistic time here,” Mozeliak said. “New leadership on the business side; we’re going to put a great team on the baseball side.
“But it’s going to be a place that I hope, in a couple years, we’re all proud of.”
Jun 27, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Kansas City Royals pitcher Michael Wacha (52) throws against the Chicago White Sox during the first inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images | Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images
Against the White Sox this afternoon, the Royals lost their fourth straight game, this one a 2-1 comedy of errors in which the Royals failed to bunt home a run, had a runner thrown out at third after scoring their lone run, had an infielder trip on second base, and had an infielder leave after being nailed by a throw from his pitcher in a rather sensitive area.
Your 2026 Kansas City Royals, everyone.
This loss, which drops the Royals to 34-50, was no fault whatsoever of starting pitcher Michael Wacha. Wacha continues his solid tenure with the Royals, pitching into the eighth as he surpassed 100 pitches. In the end, he recorded 7-and-2/3 innings allowing six hits and just one walk while striking out seven. The White Sox scored just a single run against him. He left with a runner on second, but Daniel Lynch IV (more on him in a minute) recorded the final out of the inning. Wacha recorded a no-decision.
The bad times for the Royals started in the top of the second. With one out, Michael Massey singled before Salvador Perez banged one down the line that unfortunately hopped the wall for a ground-rule double. With one out and runners on second and third, John Rave struck out looking. With two outs and runners on second and third, Nick Loftin, whose day would become much, much worse, struck out swinging.
In the sixth, the Royals threatened again when Bobby Witt Jr., playing in the field for the first time for about a week, doubled with one out. But Jac Caglianone popped out and, get ready for this, Lane Thomas struck out swinging.
The following inning, the Royals had their best scoring chance yet. Massey singled. Relief pitcher Tyler Tolbert subbed in as a pinch runner and promptly stole second. Tolbert stole third as Salvy struck out. Then Starling Marte walked.
One out, runners on the corners. Surely Loftin will drive home Tolbert.
Well, Loftin bunted, and his bunt went directly to Chicago’s pitcher, lefty Sean Newcomb, who fielded it and then flipped the ball from his glove to the catcher, Drew Romo. Tolbert didn’t have a chance.
Still, the inning continued. Isaac Collins walked to load the bases with two outs and to turn over the lineup. Carter Jensen extended his hitting streak with a sharply hit ball to right to score Marte. Royals lead, 1-0, with Bobby Witt Jr. coming up–
Oh, wait, no. The video above hilariously cuts off, but Loftin, for some reason, took a wiiiiide turn around third. Romo fired it to the White Sox third baseman, Miguel Vargas, who tagged Loftin for the out, ending the threat.
Sometimes all you can do is laugh.
Down 1-0, Chicago came right back as, ugh, Andrew Benintendi singled to left. With one out, Chase Meidroth hit a ball up the middle. It looked to me like a double-play ball, but then Tolbert couldn’t make the play. Looked like he stumbled over second on his way to field it. Regardless, it led to runners on the corners with one out. Luisangel Acuna, who pinch-ran for Benintendi, scored on a groundout by Braden Montgomery to tie it at 1-1.
In both the eighth and ninth innings, the Royals went down in order. Professional job, hitters.
The bottom of the ninth, though, takes the cake. With runners on first and second and none out, Montgomery laid down a bunt. Lynch fielded it while running toward the third base line. He hesitated for a second before firing the ball to Loftin at third for the force out. Except…well…it was a bit of a low throw that Loftin didn’t catch. Instead, it him, uh, below the belt, if you will, and Loftin collapsed like a house of cards. Dude left the field on his own accord, but looked shaken. Deservedly so.
John Schreiber relieved Lynch. After striking out Junior Perez, Jacob Gonzalez singled home the winning run.
Jun 21, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Logan Gilbert (36) throws against the Boston Red Sox during the first inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images | Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images
While the Mariners’ streak of scoring three or fewer runs didn’t end last night, they were able to pull out a win against the Guardians on their home turf. Another win would clinch the season series, so it would behoove the M’s to continue their winning ways – but maybe with some more runs this time around.
Lineups:
It’s another shaken up lineup tonight, as Dominic Canzone is rewarded with his hot hitting by being placed in the third spot. Cal Raleigh moves down to sixth, the lowest he’s batted in quite some time. Logan Gilbert is on the hill tonight, but unlike the previous plan, he will not be piggybacked, with Emerson Hancock set to start tomorrow.
Gabriel Arias gets the start at the hot corner over Daniel Schneemann, but the Guardians are running out a similar lineup to last night’s otherwise. Slade Cecconi – who Cleveland acquired in the 2024-25 offseason for one Josh Naylor – will be on the hill, and he’s coming off a stretch of four straight starts allowing two or fewer runs.
May 20, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Kyle Harrison (52) throws the ball against the Chicago Cubs during the first inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images | David Banks-Imagn Images
After a nice 6-2 victory on Friday night, the Brewers will look to secure another series win over the Cubs in the second game on Saturday night.
Left-hander Kyle Harrison gets the start for the Brewers, while the Cubs will deploy a left-hander of their own in David Peterson, who they acquired in a trade with the Mets earlier this week.
Harrison, 24, is coming off his first appearance in which the Brewers lost in more than two months, dating back to April 11 across 10 starts. He didn’t look bad in that one, as he exited with a lead against the Braves after allowing two runs on four hits and no walks with seven strikeouts over 6 1/3 innings. For the season, he’s 8-1 with a 2.50 ERA, 3.05 FIP, and 87 strikeouts over 72 innings.
Peterson, 30, spent the first seven years of his career in New York before the trade this week, meaning this will be his first non-Mets appearance. After a great season in 2024 (2.90 ERA, 101 strikeouts over 121 innings), he struggled a bit in 2025 (4.22 ERA), but he’s been even worse in 2026 (6.09 ERA over 68 innings across 16 appearances (eight starts)). His last appearance was a four-inning start against the Phillies, when he allowed five runs (four earned) on six hits and a pair of walks, striking out five in a 6-2 loss.
It’s a lefty-heavy lineup, as Jackson Chourio leads off, with Brice Turang and William Contreras to follow. Andrew Vaughn bats cleanup and Gary Sánchez slides into the five-hole as the DH. Blake Perkins, Sal Frelick, Cooper Pratt, and Joey Ortiz round things out.
First pitch in this one is at 6:10 p.m. on Brewers.TV and the Brewers Radio Network.
Jun 3, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Andre Pallante (53) pitches against the Texas Rangers during the first inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images
After a pitcher’s duel Friday night, the St. Louis Cardinals and Miami Marlins will tangle again Saturday night. It appears that Dustin May will skip his start and Andre Pallante will be Saturday night’s starter for the Cardinals and while the Marlins say that Ryan Gusto will take the mound for Miami. First pitch is set for 6:15pm central time at Busch Stadium. The game TV broadcast will be handled by Cardinals.tv.
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 25: Jorbit Vivas #84 of the Washington Nationals throws to first base after forcing out Brandon Marsh #16 of the Philadelphia Phillies in the seventh inning at Nationals Park on June 25, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jamie Sabau/Getty Images) | Getty Images
This feels like a game that the Nationals really need to have. They have lost 4 in a row, with the first three coming in brutal fashion. This offense has shown resiliency all season long, but has the bullpen kicked them in the teeth one too many times?
Blake Butera is going with a very lefty heavy lineup tonight. Dylan Crews is the only natural right hander in the lineup, playing in center field and hitting 5th. Jose Tena is hitting third despite a .465 OPS in his last 30 games. Luis Garcia Jr., Jorbit Vivas and Drew Millas make their first starts of the series. Nats ace Foster Griffin will be on the mound.
With Griffin on the bump, the O’s are responding by going righty heavy. Gunnar Henderson is the only natural lefty in the lineup. That means Jackson Holliday and Samuel Basallo are out of the lineup. Chadwick Tromp, who had a big moment against the Nats as a Brave, is now catching for the O’s. Brandon Young has had a nice year for the O’s, and he is on the mound.
This is a huge game for the Nats, who need to stop the bleeding. They have not had many big winning streaks or big losing streaks this year. Hopefully that trend keeps up with a win tonight. They have the right man on the mound. Follow along in the comments down below and let’s go Nats.
May 24, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles pitcher Brandon Young (63) pitches in the first inning against the Detroit Tigers at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images | Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images
The season series of the Battle of the Beltways is split so far, with two wins each for the Orioles and Nationals. The O’s struck the most recent blow with their 3-1 victory in last night’s series opener at Camden Yards. Now they’ll try to make it two in a row as they turn to Brandon Young, their most reliable starter.
Read that phrase again: “Brandon Young, their most reliable starter.” Entering the 2026 season, I don’t think any Orioles fans would’ve ever anticipated we’d be using those words. And yet, the second-year right-hander has been one of the most remarkable stories of an otherwise tough O’s season. Young, who was something like ninth on the rotation depth chart when the season began, is now 6-2 with a 3.07 ERA in 12 impressive starts. The Orioles have a 10-2 record when he pitches. He’s a stopper, folks.
One of Young’s few poor outings this year, though, came against these Nationals in Washington on May 17. In that game, he allowed two runs and eight baserunners in 3.2 innings even after being staked to a five-run lead, and the bullpen had to bail him out of a bases-loaded jam in the fourth. He gave up a dinger to a fellow Young, Jacob Young, who is not in the lineup tonight.
The O’s are facing lefty Foster Griffin, a former first round pick who couldn’t stick in the majors initially but has made an impressive return to MLB after three years in Japan. The southpaw has a 3.15 ERA in 16 starts this season. Jackson Holliday, who was back in the lineup last night after missing time with a groin strain, returns to the bench tonight. And third catcher Chadwick Tromp, who played six games for the Orioles last season, makes his first appearance for the Birds after they reacquired him last month. He starts in place of Samuel Basallo against the southpaw.
Orioles lineup:
LF Taylor Ward SS Gunnar Henderson 1B Pete Alonso DH Coby Mayo RF Tyler O’Neill 3B Blaze Alexander CF Leody Taveras 2B Jeremiah Jackson C Chadwick Tromp
RHP Brandon Young
Nationals lineup:
LF James Wood 1B Luis García Jr. DH José Tena SS CJ Abrams CF Dylan Crews LF Daylen Lile 3B Jorbit Vivas 2B Nasim Nuñez C Drew Millas
Jun 27, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Texas Rangers first baseman Jake Burger (21) celebrates with teammates after scoring against the Toronto Blue Jays during the fifth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images | Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images
The Texas Rangers scored seven runs while the Toronto Blue Jays scored four runs.
I was thinking it. You were thinking it. We were all thinking it.
The Rangers hadn’t scored since the third inning last night and were facing Dylan Cease who entered the game leading the American League in strikeouts on his way to a likely All-Star nod as a first half contender for the AL Cy Young award.
Texas, meanwhile, was sending Cal Quantrill to the mound for his second start of the season. Even then, he was only starting because Jack Leiter recently had ankle surgery. Before that Quantrill had been a member of the bullpen as the long relief/mop up guy.
In fact, Quantrill hasn’t even been built up to make a traditional start so loaded with about 50 pitches today, Quantrill was tasked with potentially getting the ball to Winston Santos, who would be making his MLB debut if he entered the game.
So yeah, despite winning the first two games of this series against a fell .500 straddler club, the deck felt stacked against the Rangers.
Baseball is a funny sport, though.
Instead of giving us the expected, Quantrill tossed four shutout innings and the Rangers knocked Cease out of the game the next half inning as, even though he struck out ten, he allowed four runs on four hits and five walks. The Ranger lineup worked hard to get Cease out early as it took him 107 pitches to collect 14 outs.
Like the other two games in this series, the Rangers scored in the first inning. This time it was via a two-out RBI single from Jake Burger as Cease had committed a real pitching sin by allowing a couple of two-out walks. The real satisfying inning came in Cease’s last, as in the top of the fifth, the Rangers put up a crooked number for a five-run frame – all with two outs – that included the rarest 2026 Rangers unicorn of them all: a two-out, bases loaded hit.
Again like the previous games in this series, the Rangers needed that outburst as immediately after Quantrill left, the Jays scored a couple in the bottom of the fifth and then two more an inning later. Sandwiched between those two rallies, Corey Seager hit a solo home run to help extend Texas’ lead for a bullpen that had to piece together most of the innings today and likely with Jacob Latz unavailable from the outset.
The star in that regard was Peyton Gray. After Robby Ahlstrom and Joe Ross has each allowed a couple of runs following Quantrill, Gray came in and tossed 2.1 scoreless innings with four strikeouts to quiet down the Jays and help finish off the win with Tyler Alexander grabbing the save with a scoreless ninth.
It was a victory that seemed unlikely from the outset. No real starting pitcher. No Wyatt Langford in the lineup. No Latz to save the day. Ultimately though, it was no worries and no problem as Texas locked up a series win ahead of tomorrow’s finale.
I was thinking it. You were thinking it. We were all thinking it. Everyone except for the Rangers apparently.
Player of the Game: Burger lead the way with three hits, including two RBI hits for the first two runs of the game. Alejandro Osuna had a couple of hits, including the RBI hit with the bases loaded. Elias Diaz continues to make an impact and delivered the biggest blow with a two-out, two-run double following Osuna’s hit.
But it’s hard to ignore the efforts from Quantrill and Gray today. Quantrill kept putting up zeroes early to allow the Rangers to work over Cease and then when the Blue Jays started to battle back in the middle innings, it was Gray that shut them down.
Up Next: The Rangers go for a four-game sweep (or are we calling that a mop now?) of the Blue Jays with a noontime getaway game featuring RHP Kumar Rocker making the start for Texas opposite RHP Shane Bieber for Toronto.
The Sunday finale first pitch from Rogers Centre is scheduled for 12:37 pm CDT and will be aired on the Rangers Sports Network.