Justin Turner is playing for the Tijuana Toros. Why he 'wouldn't trade it for anything'

Tijuana, BC - May 16: Justin Turner runs through a team tunnel after not wearing the right practice uniform to batting practice during a Toros de Tijuana game at Toros Mobil Park on Saturday, May 16, 2026 in Tijuana, BC. (Ronaldo Bolanos / Los Angeles Times)
Justin Turner runs through a gauntlet of teammates as punishment after not wearing the right jersey to batting practice before Saturday's Tijuana Toros game. (Ronaldo Bolaños / Los Angeles Times)

Justin Turner did not wear the correct jersey one day, and now he would pay for his sin.

His teammates formed two lines, one facing the other. Turner snaked through the gauntlet, as his teammates playfully slapped and shoved him around.

Turner is 41, an All-Star and World Series champion, one of the most beloved players in Dodgers history. Yet there he was on a gloomy Saturday afternoon in a 50-year-old stadium in Tijuana, subjecting himself to a mashup of a kangaroo court and a hazing ritual, three hours before he would play in a uniform with six advertisements on the jersey and four more on the pants.

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“Justin doesn’t have to be here,” said former major leaguer Roberto Kelly, the manager of the Tijuana Toros. “He doesn’t need this to continue his life.”

For the first time in 17 years, Turner is not playing in the major leagues. No team wanted him.

In Tijuana, whether he decides to end his career here or elsewhere, he has nurtured a special bond with his son and emerged as an improbable tourist attraction for Dodgers fans.

The sun sets in the neighborhood surrounding Toros Mobil Park.A fan hands Justin Turner a bobblehead of Turner to sign before the start of Friday's Tijuana Toros game.Justin Turner follows through on a swing while warming up in the batting cages before the start of Saturday's Tijuana Toros game.
The sun sets in the neighborhood surrounding Toros Mobil Park. A fan hands Justin Turner a bobblehead of Turner to sign before the start of Friday's Tijuana Toros game. Justin Turner follows through on a swing while warming up in the batting cages before the start of Saturday's Tijuana Toros game.

Life is what you make of it. When Turner signed with the Toros, he wanted to make a video introducing himself to their fans. He drove 45 minutes from Studio City to East Los Angeles, to the only store he could find in L.A. that stocked Toros caps, then stood in line to buy some.

“Are you buying these hats because Justin Turner just signed in Tijuana?” the clerk asked, without looking too closely at the customer.

“Yes,” Turner said, without letting on.

When Turner went job hunting last winter, the top line of “41-year-old with a .602 OPS” carried the day, even if he was primarily a platoon player last season, with a .759 OPS against left-handers.

Justin Turner jokes with batboy Valentin "Chevale" Burgos before the start of Saturday's Tijuana Toros game.
Justin Turner jokes with batboy Valentin "Chevale" Burgos before the start of Saturday's Tijuana Toros game. (Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times)

He said he pursued a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training, then simply a minor league contract, where he could start the season at triple A and both he and the team could evaluate as the season went on. Even the Angels, whose annual lack of depth already is on stark display, said no.

“I wasn’t expecting to be handed anything or guaranteed anything,” Turner said. “But I was not expecting to not even get a chance to play at all.”

He looked into playing in Japan and South Korea, but the guaranteed roster spots there filled as he held out hope for a job in the United States. In Mexico, where the season does not start until mid-April, three teams offered him contracts.

He chose Tijuana, where he and his family could live in San Diego and commute to the games.

Lights in the stadium turn on and off as Saltillo Saraperos players have a mound visit.
Lights in the stadium turn on and off as Saltillo Saraperos players have a mound visit. (Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times)

“It’s hit and miss, same as L.A.,” he said. “Depending on what time you go, it could be 20 minutes, or it could be an hour.”

Turner’s son, Bo, turns 2 in July. Dad could have stayed home with him all year but, in baseball as in life, diamonds are forever.

Bo Jordan is held by his father, Justin Turner, while he takes photos with fans after Saturday's Tijuana Toros game.
Bo Jordan is held by his father, Justin Turner, while he takes photos with fans after Saturday's Tijuana Toros game. (Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times)

“I got a late start in parenthood,” Turner said. “I’ve been around a lot of guys who had the opportunity to have their kids grow up in a clubhouse, and I’ve always thought that was really cool.

“He wakes up in the morning, and the first thing he says is ‘baseball.’ He’s definitely not at the point where he’s going to retain any of this, I don’t think, but he’s already developing the love for baseball that I have.

“I wouldn’t trade it for anything.”

Neither would the Toros. With Dodgers fans regularly making the trip from Los Angeles to see Turner, and with the Dodgers having the largest fan base of any team in Mexico, Toros president Omar Canizales said, ticket sales are up 30%. The Dodgers’ Pantone 294 fan club has bought a block of tickets for the Toros’ June 2 game.

The Toros never had sold jerseys with player names on the back until this year, a team official said, and 98% of the jerseys sold have Turner’s name on the back.

Luchador masks and other Tijuana Toros merchandise on display for sale.
Luchador masks and other Tijuana Toros merchandise on display for sale. (Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times)
A roasted pig lays on a flat iron stove at a food stand.
A roasted pig lays on a flat iron stove at a food stand. (Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times)

Canizales declined to say how much the Toros are paying Turner this season. He said top Mexican League players make in the $150,000 range and Turner would generate enough business by himself for the Toros to recoup the entire cost of Turner’s contract.

“We haven’t seen anything like this before,” Canizales said through an interpreter. “There’s nothing to compare it to the impact Justin has made in such little time.”

The influence Turner had in Los Angeles lives on among fans that have not forgotten that he is one of them.

Read more:Roki Sasaki, offense dominate as Dodgers rout Angels again

The kid who watched Kirk Gibson’s 1988 World Series home run in his grandmother's living room grew up to be the third baseman that helped the Dodgers win their next World Series, in 2020. Turner took a moment every night to sign a ball for the military veteran honored at each game at Dodger Stadium, and no Dodger did more in the community.

About 15 minutes before game time in Tijuana, a line forms next to the Toros’ dugout, and Turner signs for fans in Dodgers caps and lucha libre masks.

Fermin Padilla of Los Angeles got Turner’s autograph on a jacket, cap and jersey. “It would have been impossible to get that at home,” Padilla said.

Tijuana Toros fans scream for a baseball during Saturday's game.
Tijuana Toros fans scream for a baseball during Saturday's game. (Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times)

David and Samantha Anderson of East Los Angeles got a selfie with Turner, who signed two baseball cards for the couple.

“If it wasn’t for Justin, I wouldn’t be here,” David Anderson said. “Now I’m going to come all the time.”

The tickets are cheaper than Dodger Stadium, of course, and the food is better. The kiss cams and sing-alongs and air horns and thunder sticks are all integrated into the game, not reserved for stoppages in play.

“It’s three hours of music, dancing, drinking and entertainment, with a sprinkle of baseball,” Turner said. “There’s not really any lines they won’t cross down here.”

In one skit between innings, a character wore a sign around its neck that said “ICE.” Another character pretended to rough up the first character until the sign opened to say “ICE CREAM,” and then everyone danced happily.

Newlywed couple Jessica Oneda Rojas and Moises Benitez celebrate.Mascot Mascot Toron dresses up as a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer.
Newlywed couple Jessica Oneda Rojas and Moises Benitez celebrate with mascots Tonia and Toron after signing marriage papers before the start of Friday's Tijuana Toros game. This was the first wedding held at a Tijuana Toros game. Torina the mascot lays on the ground trying to catch her breath as a member of the Toritos dance crew performs on the field in between innings on Friday. Ronaldo Bolanos/Los Angeles TimesToron the mascot dresses up as a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer.

Kelly, the manager, played the last two years of his career in the Mexican League. It can be a long season if the bitterness of the major league rejection of the winter lingers into the spring and summer, but Kelly does not see that in Turner.

“He’s been a good addition, not because he was a big leaguer but because of what he brings to the club. He’s not just a name,” Kelly said. “He doesn’t let us know that he played in the big leagues or how good he was. To see somebody like that come down and just be one of the players is very good for our team.

“He enjoys it. You can see him around these guys and he’s having fun.”

Orel Hershiser, the officiant at Turner’s wedding, ended his career at 41.

“I had really lost my ability,” Hershiser said.

Justin Turner works out with a barbell in the Tijuana Toros' gym.
Justin Turner works out with a barbell in the Tijuana Toros' gym. (Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times)

At the same age, Turner is betting he has not. Hershiser said he has not talked with Turner recently but wondered if a season in Japan could be in his future if a return to the major leagues is not.

Is Turner going to keep playing until he either gets back to the majors or knows he is not?

“No,” he said. “I’m playing until I want to be done playing.”

I told Turner that Julio Franco played in the Mexican League at 49. Turner laughed. That might be about all he rules out at this point.

Read more:How Shohei Ohtani scored a Little League home run during Dodgers' rout of Angels

“I love playing,” he said. “I love competing. As long as I feel I’m serviceable and not just here for entertainment purposes, I’m going to keep doing it.”

Turner should have the same ending as Hershiser, a Dodger standout that represents the organization in some capacity after retirement.

Hershiser said Turner could join him in the broadcast booth, or become a great manager, or an outstanding hitting coach.

“He’s almost a hitting savant,” Hershiser said. “He’s like a Manny Ramirez for me as far as how he understands swings and how he can put himself in other people’s bodies or make adjustments for them.

“He’ll be good at whatever he tries to do.”

Justin Turner walks out of the battling cages onto the field to finish warming up before Friday's Tijuana Toros game.
Justin Turner walks out of the battling cages onto the field to finish warming up before Friday's Tijuana Toros game. (Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times)

The one thing he probably would not do: serve as a Dodgers community ambassador, shaking hands and posing for photographs at Dodger Stadium and various events around town.

“I don’t want to be paraded around and be a sideshow,” he said.

For now, he just wants to play baseball. On Tuesday, he can, in Zapopan, Mexico.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

What move would you make to try to snap the Yankees out of their skid?

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 16: Austin Wells #28 of the New York Yankees runs during the game against the New York Mets at Citi Field on May 16, 2026 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

What an awful road trip. The Yankees got swept in Milwaukee, lost two of three to an underwhelming-as-hell Orioles team, and then did the same against the Mets, who entered as one of the worst teams in baseball. The 2-7 trip ended when David Bednar couldn’t hold a three-run lead in the ninth, evaporating the edge on a three-run blast by Tyrone Taylor. They then stranded the zombie runner and lost in the bottom of the 10th. That’s some bad baseball, folks.

Now, they get to play the Blue Jays! It doesn’t matter that they’ve been kind of whatever thus far in 2026; it’s not as though the O’s or Mets were rolling when the Yankees faced them this past week. So… joy.

For our Question of the Day today, we want to know what you would do to try to get the Yankees out of this funk. I only have one request: Please do not say “Fire Aaron Boone,” “Fire Brian Cashman,” or “Hal Steinbrenner should sell the team.”

Even if you think these are valid solutions, we’re trying to remain in the realm of plausibility here. None of those guys are going anywhere at the moment (if indeed ever), so consider something that could actually happen right now, in mid-May 2026. Be more creative! It sounds like the Yankees might bring a fresh reliever aboard for this series, so something along those lines could be an idea if there’s a particular target or two.

Here’s my pitch: Bench Austin Wells for this full series. I suppose if the game situation calls for him to come in off the bench and catch a couple innings, that’s fine. But the point is to largely give him a mental reset.

This isn’t about any confidence in backup J.C. Escarra, as I really have none; he may hit as poorly (or worse) as Wells. They just need to try to get Wells right though; he looks completely lost at the plate. There’s no real cavalry coming because Ben Rice is essentially a pure first baseman now (probably for the best to preserve his bat anyway because 2025 Cal Raleigh seasons are just so damn rare) and the catching alternatives at Triple-A are late-20s former big leaguers Payton Henry and Ali Sánchez. So just turn the keys over to Escarra for a few days and let Wells attempt to work things out behind the scenes. It’s brutal out there and all-too-reminiscent of Chris Stewart.

Let us know your pitch!


It’s a light slate today on the site ahead of the opener of the four-game set against the Jays. Jeremy will have the preview of the pitching matchups for this series and I’ll have the Rivalry Roundup coverage of yesterday’s notable American League action. Later, Nick will offer an 80th birthday salute to the one and only “Mr. October,” Reggie Jackson, and Madison will ask for your mailbag questions.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Toronto Blue Jays

Time: 7:05 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, Sportsnet One

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

Around the Empire: Takeaways from “a terrible road trip”

May 16, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone (17) signals for a pitching change in the fifth inning against the New York Mets at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: The Yankees limp home from what Aaron Boone called “a terrible road trip” — a 2-7 stretch that saw them fall from a half-game up on Tampa Bay to three games back of the surging Rays. The obvious takeaway was the alarming performance of the bullpen, capped off by closer David Bednar squandering a three-run lead with two outs in the ninth of the series finale against the Mets. Although paling in comparison to the disappointment of their recent run of form, there were several positives that can be taken away from the last nine games as well.

Anthony Volpe collected his first hit of the season and ended with a pair of knocks and three runs driven in, the recently recovered shortstop showing improved discipline at the plate with seven walks in 16 PAs. Ben Rice slugged his 15th home run of the year, he and Aaron Judge becoming the third pair of Yankees teammates to hit at least 15 home runs each in the first 47 games of a season, joining Yogi Berra and Mickey Mantle in 1956 and Mantle and Roger Maris in 1961. Elmer Rodríguez pitched the best start of his young MLB career and looks to be improving his strike throwing at the highest level. It’s meager consolation for an otherwise wretched stretch.

MLB.com | Anthony DiComo: The Mets’ extra-inning walk-off over the Yankees on Sunday created some pretty jaw-dropping statistics. The Yankees still have yet to win a series at Citi Field since 2018, Aaron Boone’s first year as skipper. The Mets’ win probability stood at just five percent when Tyrone Taylor stepped to the plate with two outs in the ninth. Most damning, this is the first time since the 2024 NL Wild Card Series—the Pete Alonso vs. Devin Williams game—that the Mets have won a game in which they trailed after eight innings. They were 0-96 in previous such games including the playoffs.

The Athletic | Brendan Kuty (subscription required): The Yankees’ bullpen continues to be one of the biggest problem areas on the team, and now they might have yet another legitimate closer crisis. With Bednar surrendering the three-run homer on Sunday, his ERA bloats to 4.95. He’s already one blown save away from matching his total of three from last season after beefing two on this road trip alone. Unfortunately, the Yankees do not appear to have another in-house option to step into the role given that the likes of Camilo Doval and Fernando Cruz are similarly shaky, and will likely ride it out with Bednar and hope his fortunes improve.

NJ Advance Media | Randy Miller: We were provided with a raft of injury updates and speculation on which players could return soonest. José Caballero continues to rehab from a fractured finger and looks the closest to returning, possibly at the minimum return date of May 22nd. Gerrit Cole might be the next behind him. As Scott wrote up for us yesterday, he made his penultimate rehab start on Saturday. The ace could possibly make his long awaited return to the major league team in time for the series against the Royals in the final week of May, more than 14 months after suffering the injury that required Tommy John surgery.

Max Fried (elbow bone bruise) and Giancarlo Stanton (calf strain) are a little further behind, with a June return the most optimistic outcome. Finally, Clarke Schmidt (Tommy John rehab) and Angel Chivilli (chronic shoulder discomfort) are not expected back until September at the earliest.

Atlanta Braves News: Austin Riley and Mike Yastrzemski Go Deep, NL East Week Ahead, More

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MAY 17: Matt Olson #28 reacts with Austin Riley #27 of the Atlanta Braves following the 8-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox at Truist Park on May 17, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For the sixth straight Sunday, the Braves were victorious. And even more enjoyable was the Braves got the job done early in the 8-1 win over the Red Sox. Atlanta just continues to roll along, as they are now 14-1-1 in individual series so far this season.

Another good developlment is the production of Mike Yastrzemski and Austin Riley, who both went deep on Sunday. With both Michael Harris and Ozzie Albies running into regression in May, Riley and Yaztrzemski coming alive has allowed the offense to do enough to continue its winnings ways.

Braves News

The Braves signed southpaw Austin Gomber to a minor league contract.

The Braves probables for the upcoming series versus the Marlins was released on Sunday. Another big week ahead for the Braves with four versus the Marlins and three versus the Nationals.

MLB News

The NL East as a whole has been better over the past few weeks, with each team .500 or better in over their last 10 games. That includes the Phillies, who are now over .500 with their win on Sunday.

Jose Altuve was placed on the IL with an oblique strain.

The Mariners are promoting prospect Colt Emerson as Brendan Donovan heads to the IL.

Jayson Stark had a lot of fun information on the Braves in one of his latest pieces.

Colt Emerson Slams Into Earth’s Exosphere, Padres Slam Mariners 8-3

SEATTLE, WA - MAY 17: Colt Emerson #4 of the Settle Mariners throws to first base during his MLB Debut during the game between the San Diego Padres and the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on Sunday, May 17, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Rod Mar/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The term “meteoric rise” is a bit of a misnomer, though most people already know that. Meteors fall (And yet if you point this out, you are a pedant? The world is cruel to those brave enough to obsess over wording tell the truth). However, it is quite the fitting turn of phrase for baseball, prospects in particular. 

There’s a lot of similarities between the job of scouting and identifying baseball talent and astronomers responsible for solar system object identification. Both disciplines ask the observer to work with an incredibly limited set of data points. Scouts watch children who are sometimes as young as 13 or 14 years old and based on how well they play against other kids in their general area, their physical development, their attitude, and how their coaches talk about them, they decide if this actual child might have potential to pursue a major league path in the future. 

Astronomers take tiny little pinpricks of light, and from a series of still images of these pricks of light, calculate if or how much they’ve moved, and therefore, what kind of object it is, how large is it, what is it composed of, and, crucially for the meteorite/asteroid detection game, mapping the orbit of these objects to see if they are on a course to impact Earth and therefore, does it require advance action to be taken to prevent the loss of human lives. 

In both cases, the answer for the vast majority of children and two-pixel lights is: No! But in some very rare cases, the answer is: Maybe! And at that point, the real digging-in commences. Is this kid playing against other talented kids, or just raking in his podunk local travel circuit? Is this asteroid going to get yoinked by another planet’s gravity well before it reaches us? Does the kid have more growth yet in him, or is that celestial body actually just a camera artifact?

And while these jobs are very much trying to read the future based on extremely imperfect information, they both are high-stakes, though on different scales. MLB teams will use this scouting information to pour vast amounts of resources into particular players. Avoiding an extinction-level event is also important.

Sometimes, though, it’s an easy Maybe. Colt Emerson has been one of the easier Maybe’s in recent history for the Mariners. Yet in a sense, Colt Emerson’s meteoric “rise” has just begun. He’s finally made it to the hard part. He’s successfully traversed the frictionless smooth of outer space/high school ball/the minor leagues, and now he begins the relentlessly, violently frictional approach into Earth’s atmosphere, just now transcending from meteoroid to become meteor, hoping to survive the approach and become meteorite. 

In fact, his rise from meteoroid to meteor was so fast that he didn’t have anyone for him there at the game – he only found out about two-and-a-half hours before game time that he had to drive up to Seattle, now, for the Major League Baseball game that he would be playing in.

His family and girlfriend will be flying in for the rest of the homestand, but today was just him, 25 teammates and about 45,000 of his new biggest fans. 

“I wanted to soak it all in as much as possible, that this is just the first of many days. Coming into the clubhouse, the guys were great to me, this is a really special group here, and I’m just happy to be a part of it,” Emerson said.

His first bit of friction was a subtly tricky pop-up in the top of the second inning. Running over his right shoulder into a spot where there could be competition for the play and there is definitely communication required, while running from the sun into the shade? Tough play for a shortstop playing third base. He took it as cool as you like.  

At this point in the game, the score was 1-0. 

Emerson’s next bit of friction was two at-bats against a very on Lucas Giolito. Emerson said he normally prides himself on keeping his cool and his heart rate down, but the first time around, in the bottom of the third, he was eager, unable to check his swing at the first pitch he saw, a fastball at the letters. 

“When I came in, I thought that was the fastest 90 mph fastball I’ve ever seen,” Emerson said.

Giolito threw another heater that Emerson swung at like he wanted to send it into the mesosphere. Finding himself down 0-2, Emerson then showed the plate discipline that got him this far, and worked the count even before making some solid contact right to Ramon Laureano in right field. 

Emerson said that the nerves he felt surprised him, but his first at-bat helped him stabilize. 

“I thought I was gonna go out there and maybe not even be able to swing a bat, but once I got that first fly ball out of the way, I was like, ‘Okay. This is just baseball. There’s an extra deck.’”

Giolito, like that one friend not letting go of a bit that’s outlived its humor (i’m friend), threw high fastballs to Emerson for the rest of the night, including three straight out of the zone to start his second at-bat. Colt, like a mutual friend with no grace for your first friend, spit on all of them before also ignoring a perfectly-placed changeup for ball 4, his first time getting on base in his young career. 

At this point in the game, the score was 7-0.

His walk was a bit of a premonition, as Giolito seemed to lose the handle there in the sixth. Emerson moved to second base on another well-worked walk courtesy of Leo Rivas, and then to third when Giolito walked Julio. 

Giolito, walking the bases loaded with no outs, would face some consequences for his actions. Colt Emerson concluded his first circumnavigation of the infield when Matsui walked Naylor, scoring his first career run. A couple of sacrifice flies and a Cole Young strikeout later, the Mariners had their most productive inning yet, without getting a single hit. 

At this point in the game, the score was 7-3. 

Emerson had his third at-bat in the bottom of the eighth, putting a great, compact swing on a golfy, down and in fastball. It also was, unfortunately, almost straight at Laureano, but he showed excellent bat speed on the swing, hitting 75.4 mph. 

In the top of the seventh inning, Emerson almost had his first defensive gem, but the throw was just a hair off and Naylor had to bail off the bag to make the catch. 

The game ended 8-3. 

***

If you haven’t had the opportunity yet to read one of my favorite Lookout Landing pieces yet, Lou Fish-Sadin’s “We Love a Debut,” I highly recommend it. It captures one of my favorite things about baseball, which is how encapsulatory it is. I don’t know if it’s the sheer volume of games, the relaxed pace that gives so much room for special moments to breathe or some mystical other thing, but baseball has a way of reflecting life’s most frustrating, rewarding, gut-wrenching, joyful experiences. It’s that joie de vivre and ennui that is hard to find anywhere else. Lou’s piece captures that specific magic of baseball and that feeling of simple goodness that baseball is capable of. 

Debuts are one of those moments, where you get to share and be a part of the incalculable joy of another human being achieving their life’s worth. Whether it’s a 25-year-old org guy who would only ever see 5 at-bats, or a young prodigy screaming his way into the gravity well of T-Mobile Park, these are moments to be cherished. 

“I know I talked about trying not to let the emotions get to me, but [when my family gets here], that’s going to be an emotional one. I can’t say enough nice things about my parents, the amount they sacrificed. My parents would split up – my brother played travel ball and I played travel ball, so my mom would go with my brother to Indiana, and my dad would drive me down eight hours to Georgia, like that was a normal thing. Without that, I’m not here,” Emerson said after the game. 

“It was surreal. You dream about stuff like that. You dream about telling your parents that you made it to the big leagues and it finally came. I’ll be remembering this forever.”

Heroes, zeros from Mets’ Subway Series win: Amazin’s snap abysmal comeback-less streak

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows New York Mets players dump a cooler of Bodyarmor on center fielder Tyrone Taylor during a celebration
The Mets defeated the Yankees on Sunday.

Heroes, zeros and the inside pitch from the Mets’ 7-6 win over the Yankees on Sunday afternoon in the Subway Series in Queens:

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Hero

With the Mets down to their last out in the bottom of the ninth, Tyrone Taylor crushed a three-run shot off David Bednar to tie the game in dramatic fashion.

Zero

In what was a rough trip for the Yankees bullpen, Bednar was the culprit twice, giving up the homer to Taylor on a first-pitch curveball — the same situation in which Brice Turang hit a walk-off homer against the closer last Sunday in Milwaukee.

The Mets celebrate after defeating the Yankees on May 17. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

Unsung hero

Carson Benge hit a game-winning chopper to the perfect spot in the bottom of the 10th, just over the mound in a five-man infield, where Anthony Volpe and Max Schuemann collided, wiping out any chance of throwing out the winning run at home.

Stat of the day

91 Consecutive games the Mets had lost when trailing after eight innings, the majors’ longest streak that they finally broke Sunday.

Quote of the day

“Baseball’s hard to explain at times.”

— Carlos Mendoza on the Mets breaking that streak that dated to the 2024 playoffs

Austin Wells not hiding from just ‘how bad’ his Yankees slump has become

New York Yankees catcher Austin Wells (28) hits a single.
Austin Wells swings during a May 12 game against the Orioles.

Austin Wells is not trying to sugarcoat his recent offensive performance at the plate.

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“Not many words to describe how bad I’ve been,” he said. “I got to do better to pick the team up.”

In what was supposed to be a day off, as has been customary for him for day games after night games, the Yankees catcher entered Sunday’s series finale against the Mets as a defensive replacement in the sixth inning and made his slump even worse in the 7-6 walk-off loss at Citi Field.

Wells took two at-bats in key spots — one with the bases loaded and two outs in the seventh inning and the other with runners on first and second and one out in the top of the 10th — both coming right after Anthony Volpe had drawn a 3-2 walk.

Austin Wells swings during a May 12 game against the Orioles. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Both times, Wells swung at the first pitch and produced groundouts, the second a double play that killed a potential rally.

“Against [Sean] Manaea [in the seventh], I knew he was pretty heavy heater, especially to the lefties early,” Wells said. “So I was looking for a fastball, was a little late. And then next one, I was looking for something up in the zone to get a ball in the air. It was a little above the zone, which I don’t really know how I hit it on the ground. Was looking to move the runner and drive them in.”

Wells finished the day batting .173 with a .556 OPS in 36 games, but it has been especially rough of late, hitting just 3-for-31 (.103) with three walks and a .291 OPS over his past 10 games.

Still, when Aaron Boone was asked before the game whether he would consider sitting Wells multiple games in a row for an offensive reset, the manager was noncommittal.



“We’ll see,” Boone said. “As good as [Wells] is behind the plate, I have a lot of faith and trust in J.C. Escarra behind the plate too, what he brings to the table. Obviously we got to get [Wells] going, want to get him going, because when he’s right, he’s a presence, especially down at the bottom of the order. We got to get him there.”


Elmer Rodríguez has yet to complete five innings, but in his third start as a big leaguer Sunday, he showed some improved command to give the Yankees a chance.

The rookie right-hander lasted 4 ¹/₃ innings while giving up one run on five hits and one walk with one strikeout.

Elmer Rodríguez throws a pitch during the Yankees’ May 17 loss to the Mets. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

“Felt like I was attacking more, getting more in the zone and having better results,” he said. “I know I got good stuff, so just got to go out there and compete.”

Rodríguez had walked four batters in each of his first two starts, neither of which made it out of the fifth inning, as a fill-in replacement between Luis Gil and Carlos Rodón.

Now with Max Fried on the IL, Rodríguez returned and is expected to make one more spot start before Gerrit Cole returns and takes his spot in the rotation.

“Couple strong innings to start the game,” Boone said. “Felt like they were starting to take some tough at-bats against him in the fourth and fifth, some of the lefties starting to have some better looks at him. But overall, I thought he did his job and gave us a real opportunity to win a game.”

The “plan right now” is for Cole to make one more rehab start, Boone said Sunday morning, though that description left some room for changing that plan as the right-hander comes back from Tommy John surgery.

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“Just looks like he’s in a good place,” Boone said. “But right now, the plan is one more and then we’ll go from there.”


Ben Rice crushed his 15th home run of the season in the third inning off Freddy Peralta. … The Yankees drew nine walks for the sixth time this season, which leads the majors.

Anthony Volpe nearly plays Subway Series hero with Yankees future in flux: ‘That’s the guy we know’

New York Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe hitting a 2-run RBI single.
New York Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe (11) 2-run RBI single during the sixth inning when the New York Mets played the New York Yankees Sunday, May 17, 2026 at Citi...

By the end of Sunday, the Yankees turned a potential feel-good game for Anthony Volpe into a brutal loss.

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But they need Volpe’s big day to matter more in the long run than the 7-6 walk-off loss to the Mets at Citi Field.

In his fourth game of the season, after undergoing offseason shoulder surgery and then losing his starting shortstop job to José Caballero, Volpe went 2-for-3 with three RBIs, a double and two walks.

It looked like he was going to be the hero after his two-run single in the sixth inning broke a 1-1 tie, but the bullpen surrendered leads of 5-1 and 6-3 to overshadow any positives.

“Incredible: That’s the guy we know,” Aaron Judge said. “That’s why he’s been our shortstop for the last couple seasons, is when we need him in a big spot, he comes up big for us. Made some good plays, had some big swings for us, took his walks when he needed to in some tough situations. He keeps getting more at-bats, more at-bats — he’s coming off a big shoulder surgery, so the first couple games are going to be a little tough.

Anthony Volpe connects on a single during the Yankees’ May 17 loss. Robert Sabo for the NY Post

“But I was definitely encouraged by what I saw today.”

Volpe, who collided with Max Schuemann as both tried to make a play on Carson Benge’s walk-off chopper over the mound in the bottom of the 10th, reached base in nine of his 13 plate appearances in the Subway Series, going 2-for-6 with seven walks — one of which came with the bases loaded Sunday to drive in another run in the seventh inning.

“I’m just trying to stay within myself, stay within my approach and put good swings on good pitches,” Volpe said. “Obviously, it fluctuates, but I just want to stay locked into that. Every day, that’s what I can control.”

Volpe cannot control that Caballero expects to miss only the minimum 10 days on the injured list with a fracture in his right middle finger — he is eligible to return Friday — and that manager Aaron Boone has already said he expects Caballero will get his starting job back when he returns.

But the 25-year-old Volpe at least has the opportunity to give the Yankees something to think about if he can show enough on both sides of the ball while Caballero is out.

Volpe’s first hit of the season came on a 104.5 mph double to the gap off Freddy Peralta in the second inning before he struck out in his second at-bat.

He delivered a two-run single off lefty Sean Manaea with the bases loaded in the sixth to put the Yankees ahead 3-1.

After walking in a run in the seventh, Volpe drew another 3-2 walk against Devin Williams in the top of the 10th, only for Austin Wells to follow by grounding into an inning-ending double play.

“Just trying to do my job and contribute in any way I can,” Volpe said. “I got some good pitches to hit and put some good swings on them.”

Purple Row After Dark: Who would make the 2026 Rockies more fun to watch?

DENVER, CO - SEPTEMBER 11: Manager Bud Black of the Colorado Rockies locker at Coors Field on Tuesday, September 11, 2018. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post via Getty Images) | Denver Post via Getty Images

The 2026 Rockies appear poised to win more games than they did the past couple seasons, but realistically, they are only fighting to avoid 100 losses. That’s improvement, but the season is clearly a transitional one attempting to set the stage for a more exciting future.

Given that, let’s imagine a world where we could magically have any player don a Rockies uniform for the rest of the season.

If you could add any one player to the 2026 Rockies roster, with the sole purpose of making them more fun to watch despite knowing that they aren’t playoff bound, who would it be?

Some rules for this:

  • This player could not be kept beyond this season. They’d be returned to their actual team next year.
  • The Rockies couldn’t trade this player in order to try and get long-term value from them.
  • This should be an active player. No picking Babe Ruth just to see if he could adjust to 100+ mph velocity.

With all that being said, who would you most enjoy seeing in a Rockies uniform the rest of the season?

Is it an MVP candidate able to make more games close and tense? Maybe you have a sentimental favorite that you’d just like to see in the purple pinstripes again? Perhaps you are just curious about what effect playing home games at Coors would have on someone in particular?

Whatever your pick or reasoning, share it in the comments!


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Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki produces career outing vs Angels

Roki Sasaki has begun to turn things around at the right time for the Los Angeles Dodgers rotation.

Sasaki was credited with the win after the Dodgers’ 10-1 victory over the Los Angeles Angels on Sunday after producing a career-high eight strikeouts while allowing just four hits and one earned run in seven innings pitched.

The Japanese pitcher's success comes at a good time for L.A.'s pitching staff. The Dodgers will be without Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell, who were both placed on the injury list earlier this month.

“(Sasaki) had command of the fastball, command of the split, forkball and mixed in the slider when needed,” Dave Roberts told reporters after the game.

Sakaki deferred some of the credit for his dominant outing to catcher Dalton Rushing.

“I think Rushing did a great job calling a game with the pitch selection,” Sasaki said to reporters through a translator.

Entering the weekend, Sakaki had a 5.88 ERA with 31 strikeouts across 33.2 innings pitched in his first seven starts of the season.

The right-hander came into his own and played a key role for the Dodgers during the 2025 postseason after spending some time in the bullpen last season.

Watch Roki Sasaki throw eight strikeouts vs. Angels

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki produces career outing vs. Angels

To make Subway Series win matter, Mets must hang in through injuries, rotation uncertainty

For a few hours between late Friday night and Saturday afternoon, the pulse of the New York Mets’ 2026 season was faint.

Their best starter, Clay Holmes, was suddenly joining a variety of other key teammates on a growing injured list. Their crosstown rivals, having the exact opposite season to the Mets in every way, looked indisputably superior. Their manager, normally chipper, admitted that after taking jab after jab after jab this spring, his team was finally staggering backward from the blows.

Then came Saturday’s win, which included a gritty showing from the lineup and a gutsy showing from the bullpen. Then came Sunday’s stunner, which featured the Mets’ first ninth-inning comeback since Jose Iglesias wore their jersey. Sometimes wins like those change everything for teams sputtering early in the season. Sometimes, they don’t.

If the Mets are to make this one count, they will have to do exactly what they did this weekend: Make the best of what they have and hang in there.

For example: As they fly to Dulles Airport Sunday night, the Mets’ pitching staff remains in relative disarray. The team has not yet announced a rotation replacement for Holmes, who would normally have pitched Wednesday against the Nationals.

One would-be candidate, red-hot 24-year-old Jack Wenninger, threw 60 pitches for Triple-A Syracuse Sunday, which would almost certainly rule him out for Wednesday. Jonah Tong recorded just five outs in his most recent start.

The likeliest fill-in might be lefty Zach Thornton, a former fifth-round pick who owns a 3.16 ERA  in 37 innings this season and owns a 2.25 ERA in two starts since being promoted to Triple-A. Thornton, 24, also pitched Friday, meaning he is perfectly lined up with Holmes’s turn.

In the meantime, the Mets still face a decision about Sean Manaea, who struggled early in his four innings of relief against the New York Yankees Sunday, but settled in enough that Carlos Mendoza said later he was encouraged by the way Manaea was able to get soft contact from the Yankees lineup in his last two innings.

As a former starter relegated to occasional mop-up duty, Manaea also represents an obvious choice to replace Holmes for purely logistical reasons. But the 57 pitches he threw today likely rule out a Wednesday start – though perhaps not a Wednesday opening.

Thus far, the Mets have avoided any firmer decision on Manaea, who has $43 million remaining on his contract but has struggled enough that Mendoza has had to work around him in the bullpen at times – a concession they have hardly been able to afford amid their early season struggles.

That he settled in and kept the Mets close through four innings Sunday preserved every reliever but Devin Williams, meaning they do not necessarily need to find a fresh arm by the time they play the Nationals Monday. Still, if the bullpen finds itself needing reinforcements before Manaea can safely pitch again, the Mets could find themselves choosing between keeping him on the roster and giving themselves enough arms at a time when they cannot afford to give away any late leads.

Getting him right – and the fact that Manaea’s sinker sat around 92 miles per hour is promising – would increase the Mets’ chances of revival. But the Mets do not have time to waste.

As a result, they seem to be showing increased urgency with first baseman Jorge Polanco, who has been out since mid-April with Achilles bursitis. Last week, Mets President of Baseball Operations David Stearns said the team was waiting for Polanco to be asymptomatic before ramping him up for everyday duty. But in the days since, Polanco has hit during batting practice more than once, done defensive work, and gone through agility drills.

Mendoza said Sunday that Polanco will travel with the team to Washington this week so he can continue baseball activities and suggested for the first time that Polanco will either have to play through some discomfort or concede a long injured list stint.

“It’s getting to a point where, he’s gonna feel it, right? But just keeping it to a point where like, I can tolerate this,” Mendoza said. “Because if not, he’s going to be shut down for long period of time. So I think we just continue to go through baseball activities, continue to push it running-wise, and see how he reacts to that.”

Polanco would add depth to the Mets lineup – though in his absence, the Mets have had no choice but to allow for the emergence of A.J. Ewing and Carson Benge. Similarly, they will have to rely on Christian Scott to evolve into a reliable MLB starter and David Peterson to reestablish himself as one. Peterson expressed frustration with the Mets’ continued reliance on an opener before he pitches, but the results are indisputable: In 20 innings of bulk relief this year, his ERA is 2.25. In 23 1/3 innings as a starter, it is 8.10.

So the Mets must keep using an opener and crossing their fingers and doing whatever it takes to put whoever they have in the best position to succeed. They will have to make up ground with a tattered lineup while they wait for injuries to heal and sew them back together. Sunday, they proved it is possible. Monday, they must do it again.

Yankees’ recent woes captured in one ‘no-man’s land’ collision as road trip ends with Subway Series disaster

New York Yankees players Anthony Volpe and Max Schuemann walking off the field after a loss.
Anthony Volpe and Ma

In one agonizing play to end Sunday’s crushing finale against the Mets, the Yankees offered a snapshot to encapsulate a brutal road trip.

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With runners on the corners and one out in a tie game, Tim Hill on the mound and the Yankees using a five-man infield, Carson Benge hit a chopper over the mound between Anthony Volpe and Max Schuemann.

The two collided, both going for the ball, costing them any chance of throwing out the runner at home as the Mets walked off with a 7-6 win at Citi Field.

It is impossible to know whether Schuemann or Volpe would have gotten the runner at the plate had either of them fielded it cleanly and without obstacles, but they never got to find out, ending a 2-7 trip against the Brewers, Orioles and Mets.

Anthony Volpe and Max Schuemann are pictured after the Yankees’ May 17 loss to the Mets. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

“Maybe, but we’re both just treating it do or die,” Volpe said. “That was the game.”

“I was just going to be aggressive. We have to be quick,” Schuemann said. “Tough play at the plate either way. I talked to Volpe about it, it’s just one of those things that we’re both going to be aggressive to that baseball no matter what. We both want to make a play.”

“It’s in no-man’s-land,” said manager Aaron Boone, who did not think the Yankees would have gotten Marcus Semien out at home even if the chopper had been fielded cleanly.

The Yankees had won nine of 12 series this season and tied in another before this road trip, when they dropped three straight series.

Four of their seven losses came by one run, giving them 10 on the season.

And two of those included walk-offs in games where David Bednar gave up a first-pitch home run on a curveball — last Sunday in Milwaukee, when Brice Turang walked him off, and this Sunday when Tyrone Taylor crushed a game-tying three-run homer in the bottom of the ninth when the Yankees were one out away from the win.

Now they finally return home for four games against the Blue Jays — the Yankees’ nemesis last season that crushed them in the ALDS — and three against the Rays, who swept the Yankees last month and lead the AL East.

“Couple [of] close games, but it’s just about finishing the job,” Aaron Judge said. “A couple games here where we got to close it out or some games in extras where we got to get a couple runs across and just don’t get the job done. The boys are playing hard though, that’s the biggest thing. Guys are playing tough and making the plays they need to, but just coming up a little bit short. We got to have a short memory and move on and get ready for the [homestand] because we got a big division opponent coming in.”

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A day after leaving 11 men on base, the Yankees stranded 10 more while going 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position.

They had still looked to be in good position to take the series by getting out to leads of 5-1 in the top of the sixth and 6-3 in the top of the seventh.



But it all came crashing down late, first in the bottom of the ninth, when Bednar capped off a rough trip for the bullpen.

He allowed back-to-back singles to lead off the frame, then got two outs before leaving a curveball over the plate to Taylor.

Anthony Volpe reacts during the Yankees’ May 17 loss to the Mets. AP Photo

“Just not putting guys away early,” Bednar said. “Overall, that’s unacceptable, but especially in that spot, it’s just very frustrating.”

Then came the excruciating end.

After the Yankees pulled Schuemann in from left field with a runner on third, Hill hit Luis Torrens to bring up Benge.

Schuemann hovered as a third infielder on the right side, shaded just to the right of second base, and Benge chopped it between him and Volpe.

Schuemann picked it with his backhand but Volpe ran into him while also trying to make the play, preventing a throw, providing a fitting end for a forgettable trip.

“It’s very frustrating,” Schuemann said. “We’re a really good team. I think it’ll turn.”

Mariners promote top prospect Colt Emerson and place utilityman Brendan Donovan on IL

SEATTLE (AP) — The Seattle Mariners promoted top prospect Colt Emerson from Triple-A Tacoma on Sunday and placed All-Star utilityman Brendan Donovan on the 10-day injured list with a left groin muscle strain.

Emerson, 20, was originally announced in Tacoma’s lineup for the Rainiers’ home game against Sugar Land, but was scratched shortly before first pitch. Instead, he made the quick drive north to Seattle and will be the youngest Mariners player to make his major league debut since Félix Hernández did so at 19 years old on Aug. 4, 2005.

General manager Justin Hollander said the Mariners electing to call up Emerson wasn’t on his bingo card Sunday morning, nor was placing Donovan on the IL.

“I probably wouldn’t have taken the kids tidepooling in Deception Pass (State Park) this morning,” Hollander said with a chuckle. “But, we want to do the right thing for Colt. We also want to do the right thing for the Mariners. We think he’s the best option. This period will get him some runway. This is not a 15 at-bat or 20 at-bat tryout to see if he’s capable of taking the job and running with it for the rest of the year.”

Hollander confirmed that Emerson, who is viewed as the shortstop of the future in the Emerald City, will primarily see time at third base at the start of his major league career. He started five games at third base for the Rainiers this season.

J.P. Crawford, the longest-tenured player on Seattle’s roster, remains the everyday shortstop. Crawford, who started the season on the injured list with a right shoulder injury, is hitting .217 with six homers in 39 games.

Hollander said he, manager Dan Wilson and president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto convened Sunday morning and decided it was time to bring up the franchise’s top prospect.

Emerson signed a $95 million, eight-year contract April 1 – the biggest commitment at the time for a minor leaguer yet to make his major league debut. The Mariners selected Emerson with the 22nd pick in the 2023 draft, and his stock only rose from there.

Emerson had a breakout year in 2025, when he hit .285 with an .842 OPS, 16 homers, 28 doubles and 78 RBIs across three levels and established himself as a big league-caliber defender. This season in Tacoma, Emerson has hit .255 with an .816 OPS, seven homers, eight doubles and 26 RBIs.

Emerson got off to a slow start to the season as he dealt with a wrist injury, but Hollander said a cortisone shot has allowed him to bounce back at the plate recently.

“He looks loose, he looks comfortable, he looks confident up there,” Hollander said. “He’s starting to put together quality at-bat after quality at-bat. There’s no reason that can’t translate over to what happens on this field out here.”

Donovan missed Saturday’s game as he continues to be plagued by a left groin injury. Donovan also missed time from April 18 to May 7 with a left groin muscle strain, and dealt with right groin discomfort earlier in the season as well.

Hollander said Donovan reaggravated his left groin injury while trying to hit for the cycle in an 8-3 win over the Houston Astros on Thursday. Donovan will receive a platelet rich plasma (PRP) injection for his groin strain, as well as a different injection in his adductor, according to Hollander. There is no timeline yet for Donovan to return to play, but Hollander estimated it could be two to three weeks.

Donovan underwent sports hernia surgery in October 2025 shortly after his last season as a member of the St. Louis Cardinals, which Hollander said the Mariners’ sports performance team anticipated could make him more susceptible to groin strains and core muscle strains.

“Our own internal view was that there would be some days where he didn’t feel good, at least for the first half of the season,” Hollander said. “I think the most important thing that we can do is that we’re putting him in position to go out there and feel good every day.”

Dodgers think Roki Sasaki is finally on his way to realizing his potential after dominating Angels

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Roki Sasaki’s eventful major league career finally appears to be going the way most everyone expected when he joined the Los Angeles Dodgers at the start of last season.

Sasaki pitched a career-high seven innings of four-hit ball in a 10-1 victory over the Los Angeles Angels on Sunday, turning in the longest and most dominant start of his strange tenure in blue.

The 24-year-old right-hander racked up a career-best eight strikeouts with no walks, doing it all with a burgeoning confidence he lacked for most of last season. Sasaki (2-3) repeatedly baffled the Halos while attacking the strike zone with a 98 mph fastball and his proliferating selection of breaking pitches.

“I think he has confidence in who he is as a big league pitcher, and we’re seeing some of the fruits right now,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said.

Although he did it against the team with the worst record in the majors, Sasaki’s stuff is clearly working at a high level he has rarely reached as a starter stateside.

He was already a ballyhooed young star in January 2025 when he chose the Dodgers as his big league home for at least the next six years. But after a rookie season in which almost nothing went as planned, Sasaki has only recently shown why every team in the majors wanted him in their rotation.

“I actually felt better in my last outing, but today I felt able to throw strikes a little bit more,” Sasaki said through his interpreter. “Also the offense did a great job of scoring a lot of runs.”

Sasaki hasn’t been dominant in most of his starts, but Roberts said he is clearly trending upward. He is also working well with catcher Dalton Rushing, who received credit from Roberts for calling an outstanding game at Angel Stadium.

“He looked really good today,” Rushing said. “Obviously it’s really good momentum for him to carry forward, but at the same time, there’s opportunities for him to be even better. We know that’s not his ceiling. What he just did is obviously the best we’ve seen him to this point, but I trust that guy has got a lot more in the tank, and we’re going to continue to push. But it was fun to watch.”

Sasaki is again trying to carve out a permanent spot in the Dodgers’ rotation this season after famously failing to do so as a rookie. He subsequently missed 4 1/2 months with shoulder problems, but improbably returned as Los Angeles’ closer during its playoff run to a second straight World Series title.

Sasaki’s success as a reliever was a lifesaver for the short-handed Dodgers, but it didn’t change their long-term plans for him. Sasaki returned to spring training as a rotation member again — but then he repeatedly pitched poorly in Arizona and damaged his confidence.

Exactly half the batters he faced in spring exhibitions reached base, and Sasaki struggled for any control.

Roberts said the Dodgers’ message to Sasaki has been consistent: Stop worrying about minor mechanical tweaks or fine-tuning new pitches, and simply attack the strike zone with your already formidable talent.

It took a while for Sasaki to hear it, but now it’s loud and clear — and it turns out his aggressiveness is also improving his delivery. Sasaki generated 18 swing-and-misses from the Angels, a big factor in his career-high strikeout total.

“I think one of the reasons is mechanical,” Sasaki said of his recent success. “Things are kind of clicking, and I was able to execute really well throughout the game today.”

The Dodgers need Sasaki to be sharp as they attempt to get through yet another year of major pitching injuries. High-priced starters Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow are out once again, and closer Edwin Diaz is also on the shelf along with Jack Dreyer, their most-used reliever.

Los Angeles is still pitching superbly, going into the weekend with the third-lowest ERA in the majors. Rushing and Roberts both expect Sasaki to be a big part of the effort to keep it that way.

“Pretty much it’s a confidence thing,” Rushing said. “He needs to trust his stuff, understand how good his stuff is, and execute. ... With the stuff he has, it’s easy to miss barrels, and we hadn’t quite got to see that just yet. Today was obviously a big step forward.”

Cubs Minor League Wrap: Smokies storm back to beat Clingstones, 4-3

KNOXVILLE, TN - APRIL 01: Edgar Alvarez #25 of the Knoxville Smokies poses for a photo during the Knoxville Smokies photo day at Tennessee Smokies Stadium on Wednesday, April 1, 2026 in Knoxville, Tennessee. (Photo by Randy Sartin/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Cubs claimed right-hander Christian Roa off of waivers from the Orioles and assigned him to Triple-A Iowa. The Cubs are Roa’s fourth team this year already.

Iowa blew a two-one lead in the ninth. Knoxville rallied after trailing by two in the ninth.

Iowa Cubs

The Iowa Cubs lost their seventh-straight game, 4-3 to the Nashville Sounds (Brewers).

It was the best start to his Cubs’ career for Paul Campbell, who gave the I-Cubs five scoreless innings on just two hits. Campbell walked two and struck out four.

Corbin Martin gave up a game-tying solo home run in the sixth, but then Luis Peralta threw the seventh and eighth innings and retired all six batters he faced. Peralta struck out one.

But with the I-Cubs holding a 3-1 lead going to the bottom of the ninth, Gabe Klobosits came on for the save and he blew it, giving up three runs on two hits and three walks over two-thirds of an inning. He struck out one.

James Triantos was 3 for 4 with three steals today. He scored the first two Iowa runs and he singled home an insurance run in the eighth.

Shortstop Scott Kingery drove home Triantos once with a sacrifice fly and he doubled him home to break a 1-1 tie in the seventh. Kingery was 1 for 3.

Kingery’s double.

Triantos’ RBI single.

Knoxville Smokies

The Knoxville Smokies canned the Columbus Clingstones (Braves), 4-3.

It was a bullpen game for the Smokies who started Frankie Scalzo Jr. Scalzo gave the Smokies two innings of no runs and one hit. He struck out three and walked one.

Jackson Kirkpatrick tossed the bottom of the ninth and Columbus tacked on an insurance run on a solo home run. Kirkpatrick would get the win when the Smokies rallied in the ninth. His final line was one run on one hit and one walk over one inning. Naturally enough, he struck out one.

Marino Santy pitched the ninth and while it was shaky, he nailed down his first ever professional save. Santy pitched one inning and allowed a hit and a walk. He struck out two.

First baseman Edgar Alvarez hit a go-ahead three-run home run in the top of the ninth, his fourth on the season. Alvarez went 1 for 3 with a walk.

Right fielder Alex Ramírez had an infield RBI single in the third inning for the first run of the game. Ramírez went 2 for 4.

Here’s Alvarez’s home run.

South Bend Cubs

After South Bend scored 74 runs in the first five games in Appleton against the Timber Rattlers, Sunday’s game was “rained out” and will not be made up. Honestly, I don’t know whether it was raining or not, but it was awfully convenient for a pitching staff that had been battered from pillar to post.

Myrtle Beach Pelicans

The Myrtle Beach Pelicans had an allergic reaction to the Augusta Green Jackets (Braves), 7-4.

David Bracho started this game and allowed two runs, one earned, on three hits over four innings. Bracho walked two and struck out two.

It was a tandem start with Hayden Frank, who didn’t pitch as well and got the loss. Frank went the rest of the way, all five innings, and allowed five runs on six hits. However on the positive side, Frank struck out nine and walked only one.

Second baseman Alexis Hernandez tied the game up 2-2 in the third inning with a two-run home run. Hernandez went 1 for 3 with a walk.

First baseman Edward Vargas was 2 for 3. He scored on Hernandez’s home run and drove in one run with a single in the fifth.

That’s all three hits the Pelicans had this evening.

Here’s Hernandez’s first home run of the year.

ACL Cubs

Off day.