Guardians News and Notes: Guardians Lose a Game They Should Have Won

WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 05: Byron Buxton #25 of the Minnesota Twins celebrates after hitting a three run home run against the Washington Nationals during the eighth inning at Nationals Park on May 5, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Guardians lost to the Twins 2-1 and frustrations are high.

The Guardians went 1 for 13 with runners in scoring position. Two innings, a fly ball to medium deep outfield would have scored the winning run, as would likely a deep ground ball. The offense was pathetic against a horrible Twins bullpen.

With that said, Stephen Vogt either allowing or calling for Angel Martinez to sacrifice against a pitcher who had yet to throw a strike was dumb, but not quite as dumb as not intentionally walking the only player in the Twins lineup who is any good in the 11th. But, I suppose he saved us all another inning of frustration.

On the bright side, Tanner Bibee was very, very good, as was the bullpen. Peyton Pallette especially stood out. Both Bibee and Pallette made one mistake- to Byron Buxton who made them pay both times (not even sure Bibee’s pitch that Buxton hit for a homer was a mistake).

The Guardians managed to address their team problems yesterday by trading for Patrick Bailey who currently has a wRC+ of 16. Sense my sarcasm, please. It’s a fine trade but I hope everyone realizes that Bailey coming here is likely the end of Hedges’ tenure in Cleveland come 2027. That’ll be a tough pill to swallow for some. And I hope no one thinks Bailey will be a good hitter because he will not. Our hitting team is not capable of “fixing” anyone. Breaking someone? Yes.

They released another Guardians’ Weekly yesterday. Rosenhaus interviews David Fry and Rhys Hoskins.

AROUND MLB:

The Royals beat the Tigers and the White Sox beat the Mariners.

Orioles news: Boos come out as frustration mounts

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MAY 9: Coby Mayo #16 and Gunnar Henderson #2 of the Baltimore Orioles are unable to field a ground ball single that was hit by Colby Thomas #32 of the Athletics during the eighth inning at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 9, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Bill Streicher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hello, friends.

First and foremost, a happy Mother’s Day to all the moms of Birdland. May your favorite baseball team deliver you a win.

The Orioles have certainly not been delivering wins for the moms or anyone else over the parts of the weekend leading up to Mother’s Day so far. The latest poor effort saw them drop a 6-2 game to the Athletics yesterday, with Shane Baz turning in another clunker and the Orioles offense waiting until the eighth inning to actually get some runs on the board. Check out Andrea SK’s recap for more of the not-so-lovely totals.

I was at Camden Yards for yesterday’s game, my first time back since Opening Day. The Orioles loaded the bases with no one out in the fifth inning and the middle of the order – Rutschman, Alonso, and Basallo – due up and then they did not score any runs. A sizable chorus of boos rained down on the team at this point from frustrated fans.

My general observation over time is that the fans of Camden Yards are pretty generous in regards to their hometown team, almost more than they really deserve. One recurring oddity to me is how often a starting pitcher receives a standing ovation from a portion of the crowd when the outing was like, five innings with three earned runs allowed. That’s not even good!

So, with that in mind, the booing was kind of a shock. It’s hard to say it was undeserved in any way. The team’s play this season isn’t up to snuff. I think they’d be the first ones to agree with this. And as we all know, what’s happening so far this season is not happening in a vacuum. This year’s struggle connects to what happened with last year’s disappointment, and both of these things are connected to slipping to a .500 record in the second half of the 2024 season and then getting swept right out of the postseason for the second consecutive year.

That’s a long time to be a disappointment in the era that was supposed to be, as Mike Elias once infamously said, “liftoff from here.” The Orioles really did lift off for a while there! The 101-61 record in the 2023 season was great. Their first half of the 2024 season was also great. To carry on the metaphor, they were supposed to stay in orbit after lifting off and instead it seems like they’re burning up during atmospheric re-entry. If you are inside the stadium and want to vent some displeasure with that situation, booing is really the only outlet. Either that or you say to the person or people you are with, “Geez, this really sucks.”

In my case, I have this blog, so I can say it to you instead: Geez, this really sucks.

It will take a win today to avoid being swept at the hands of the Athletics. The Orioles are already in last place entering today. Don’t fall farther behind! Chris Bassitt and Luis Severino are the scheduled starting pitchers for the 1:35 game. Bassitt, really? Oof. Take a small bit of heart: At least Severino doesn’t pitch left-handed.

Orioles stuff you might have missed

All eyes are on the Orioles bats. They keep disappearing. (The Baltimore Sun)
It wasn’t supposed to be like this. But, once again, it is!

What’s really wrong with the Orioles (Baltimore Baseball)
“They’re not bunting enough” would probably not make my top 50 on the list of concerns about the 2026 Orioles season.

Orioles trying Jackson Holliday at third base during Sunday rehab start (The Baltimore Banner)
I don’t think that you need to gaze too long into the tea leaves to start to think that this means the Orioles are considering that the Coby Mayo experiment is running out of time, at least for now.

Heston Kjerstad started rehab assignment on Saturday (School of Roch)
As Roch observes, the likely outcome is that Kjerstad’s rehab plays out and then he’s optioned to Norfolk afterwards. But if you’re tired of seeing Tyler O’Neill, I don’t blame you for wondering if Kjerstad’s coming right up.

Polar Bear and his cub, Teddy, set to celebrate Mom (Orioles.com)
Needed to get at least one feel-good Orioles Mother’s Day story in here.

Birthdays and Orioles anniversaries

In the 40th game a year ago, the Orioles lost a 6-3 game to the Twins. This was the first game of a doubleheader; they also lost the second game, dropping their record to 15-26 on the season. I took to Camden Chat the next day and proclaimed hopes for the season to be over. This year’s O’s are currently 17-23. Win today and they’re three wins better than they were a year ago. Lose today and it stays at a scant two, which I think is creeping pretty darn close to the point where the hole is too deep to reasonably hope to escape.

There is one lone former Oriole who was born on this day: Happy 42nd to Kam Mickolio, the 2008-2010 reliever who arrived in the trade that sent Erik Bedard to Seattle and departed in the trade that brought Mark Reynolds to Baltimore.

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday to you! Your birthday buddies for today include: actor Fred Astaire (1899), basketball coaching legend Jim Calhoun (1942), Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious (1957), author John Scalzi (1969), actor Kenan Thompson (1978), and gold medal swimmer Missy Franklin (1995).

On this day in history…

In 1773, Great Britain’s Parliament passed the Tea Act, which set in motion the series of events leading to the Boston Tea Party later that year.

In 1801, Barbary corsairs based in Tripoli declared war on the United States, leading to a four-year, largely naval war in which great Marylander Stephen Decatur distinguished himself for the US Navy.

In 1924, J. Edgar Hoover was appointed as the director of the FBI, the first to hold that post. He remained in charge for the next 48 years, until his death.

In 1969, American and South Vietnamese forces began an assault on a North Vietnamese-held hill simply dubbed Hill 397 on the map. This has since become dubbed Hamburger Hill as it took a week to capture at a cost of 56 Americans killed and 367 wounded – and the position was abandoned only two weeks after being taken.

In 1994, Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as the president of South Africa.

**

And that’s the way it is in Birdland on May 10. Have a safe Mother’s Day. Go O’s!

Phillies news: Alec Bohm, Fleer, Bobby Cox

May 5, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies third baseman Alec Bohm before action against the Athletics at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

It seems as though that Alec Bohm is the Phillies topic of the weekend right now. Most of the articles being written about them are centered on the struggling third baseman and the team’s plans with him. At least they are recognizing that there is a problem.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Game 41 Preview: Tigers try to avoid road sweep at Royals on Sunday

Make it five straight losses for the Detroit Tigers after their 5-1 loss on Saturday night to the Kansas City Royals. Burch Smith’s two runs surrendered in just 1/3 of an inning as the opener was too much for the wet-noodle offense to overcome and… sigh… AJ Hinch’s squad is in danger of its second-straight sweep.

The Motor City Kitties will have right-hander Brenan Hanifee on the hill to open up Sunday’s series finale in what should be yet another bullpen game. The 27-year-old has yet to surrender a run so far this season and the Tigers got scoreless three frames out of him in his last appearance against the Boston Red Sox, so maybe there is hope.

Meanwhile, second-year hurler Noah Cameron will take the mound for Kansas City. The 26-year-old southpaw had a strong rookie season last year, putting up a 2.99 ERA but a 4.18 FIP in 138.1 innings pitched with a 20.5% strikeout rate and 7.7% walk rate — those last two numbers are not far off from his numbers so far this year.

However, after opening the 2026 campaign with a 1.69 ERA and 1.82 FIP over 10 2/3 frames, which includes just a couple of walks and 10 strikeouts, he has posted a 7.29 ERA and a 5.80 FIP in the 21 innings he’s thrown since on 30 hits (five home runs) and nine walks while striking out 18. Can the Tigers take advantage of the struggling starter?

Find out on Sunday night — if you have access to the NBC Sports Network or Peacock.

Detroit Tigers (18-22) vs. Kansas City Royals (19-21)

Time (ET): 7:20 p.m.
Place: Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri
SB Nation Site:Royals Review
Media: NBC Sports Network/Peacock, Tigers Radio Network

Game 41: RHP Brenan Hanifee (0-0, 0.00 ERA) vs. LHP Noah Cameron (2-2, 5.40 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Hanifee46.216.04.061.02.380.1
Cameron631.219.47.629.54.460.4

HANIFEE

CAMERON

Is it time for the Brewers to retire another jersey?

MILWAUKEE, WI - OCTOBER 13: Hall of Famer Robin Yount shakes hands with Ryan Braun after throwing out the ceremonial first pitch Game One of the National League Championship Series presented by loanDepot between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on Monday, October 13, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Sitting and watching CC Sabathia and Dave Parker being inducted into the Brewers’ Wall of Fame got me thinking: When will the Brewers retire their next number?

The last person to have a jersey number retired was a man who never played baseball for the team but rather was born, raised, and brought baseball back to Milwaukee after a five-year hiatus: Bud Selig. This came back in 2015 after he finished serving the last 22 years as the Commissioner of Major League Baseball.

Taking a look at some of the other players who have had their jerseys retired, it comes mainly from the 1980s teams, the core players of those squads, such as Paul Molitor, Robin Yount, and Rollie Fingers. Now, as phenomenal as those players were, only one of them played their entire career with the Brewers, and it was Yount.

Spending 20 years with the Brewers, Yount was the first-round pick back in 1973. Similar to the trend we’re seeing today in baseball, he was on the big league club less than a year later, and the rest is history. Of course, Yount was a part of the first-ever playoff team, collected over 3,000 hits, played in over 2,800 games, among other standout stats. If you look at the Career Top 10 Leaders on Baseball Reference for the Brewers, you see Yount leading the way in several categories, and rightfully so.

This isn’t to discredit what his teammates, Molitor and Fingers, did back in the day, despite not playing their entire careers with the Brewers. Molitor spent 15 years with the Brewers before becoming one of the first baseball players to leave their longtime club for a nice paycheck. More often than not, Molitor batted above .300 in a season with the Brewers, not to mention the numerous times he led the league in a statistical category. Molitor was the man.

Fingers was a bit of a journeyman throughout his Major League career. However, this didn’t stop him from having a Hall of Fame career. Of his seven total All-Star appearances, two of them were in Milwaukee. He was a part of the team that led the Brewers to their first and only World Series appearance in 1982 and sits fourth all-time in the franchise’s all-time saves category.

Now that we have reviewed who hangs up high, it’s time to look at who could be the next number to be retired.

The first name that comes to mind is Ryan Braun. No one has worn No. 8 since he played his last game in September 2020. Could that be a sign of things to come, or just respect for the Hebrew Hammer? Like Yount, Braun was drafted in the first round of the draft. The only difference is that Yount was No. 3 overall, and Braun was No. 5.

Braun only played for 14 seasons, but following the steroid accusations, he never quite played a full season again. Following the 2012 season, Braun only played more than 140 games twice, once in 2015 (when he was an All-Star) and in 2019. While injuries riddling the back half of his career certainly didn’t help his case, Braun was a key part of two teams that fell shy of the World Series. Most importantly, on three separate occasions, he was a part of the team that brought Milwaukee back to the postseason.

What gets my vote is where he ranks among the all-time career hitters in a Brewers uniform. For many of the main categories, he’s in the top three.

  • 5th in Batting Average (.296)
  • 4th in games played (1,766)
  • 3rd in hits (1,963)
  • 2nd in doubles (408)
  • 2nd in RBIs (1,154)
  • 1st in home runs (352)

Had Braun been able to stay healthy throughout his playing career, I’m sure we’d see those numbers a little bit more inflated, but that’s with anyone at the end of the day.

Looking at this current roster of players, it feels like the only ones that would have a chance at history would be those who sign the long, lucrative deals, which, as we know, are few and far between. If you talked to me after the 2019 season, I would’ve told you Christian Yelich would be the next guy, though consistent injuries in recent seasons make it hard for him to see the field regularly.

Jackson Chourio, assuming he can stay healthy and play at the pace he’s been playing at, perhaps we could see his number retired in 20-30 years from now. Chourio plays both sides of the game well and is guaranteed to be on the team through the 2033 season, giving way to the possibility of No. 11 hanging high up one day.

As of right now, it’s hard to see who else might join some of the Brewers’ greats. Brice Turang has four years left on his contract, and already with a platinum glove under his belt, it’s going to be hard to get an extension done to keep him around. He’s a player, though, who has only gotten better as his career has gone on.

When it comes to the pitching staff, early frontrunners, if they can stay around, would be guys like Jacob Misiorowski and perhaps Brandon Woodruff. If we had this discussion a few years ago, before some of the big pieces were traded away, I would’ve loved to mention guys like Corbin Burnes, Freddy Peralta, or even Josh Hader.

All in all, it’s hard to imagine a number being retired anytime soon, as it feels like we’re splitting hairs. Of all the names above, Braun’s case might be the lone legitimate case we have on hand; otherwise, we might be waiting another 20-30 years to see what comes of this core of players.

MLB trade deadline: Five teams to watch as executives weigh in on wild scenarios

The snow – except in Colorado – has melted.

The winter coats are being shoved into the back of the closets.

Summer is around the corner, and it’s time for teams to start making honest assessments of themselves.

Nearly three months remain until Major League Baseball's Aug. 3 trade deadline, but it’s no longer appropriate to say it’s still early. The season is 40 games old, with teams having completed nearly 25% of their schedule.

The phone calls have begun, letting the struggling teams know that plenty of operators are standing by, waiting for the time they’re ready to seriously engage in trades.

In a survey of club executives and scouts, here are the five most intriguing teams to watch as we slowly head into trade deadline talks.

Bo Bichette is struggling n his first year with the Mets.

New York Mets

The Mets absolutely stink, and rival executives believe they have virtually no chance to turn it around. But, hey, crazy things can happen in this game.

The Mets had the best record in baseball last June, sitting with a 45-24 record and a 96% chance to make the playoffs until their historic collapse. The Cleveland Guardians were 15 ½ games back in July last year before a finishing kick greater than Golden Tempo to win the AL Central.

Still, executives and scouts believe the Mets just don’t have the personnel to turn it around, putting out lineups that look more suited to rebuilding teams than the most expensive team in baseball.

This is why the Mets soon may be the center of attention once they realize that this season is a lost cause, letting their rivals know they are open for business. They have three of the top trade chips in the game in starters Freddy Peralta and Clay Holmes and infielder Bo Bichette.

Peralta, 2-3, 3.12 ERA, acquired from the Milwaukee Brewers in January, is a free agent after the season, after failing to reach an agreement on extension talks. They could re-engage before the trade deadline, but if they don’t reach a deal, why not get something for him now?

Holmes, 4-2, 1.69 ERA, is off to another great start in the second season to a three-year, $38 million contract. Holmes is under contract for $12 million in 2027, but with the season he’s having, will certainly exercise his opt out and become a free agent. He may too valuable on the trade market for the Mets to take that gamble he won’t leave.

Bichette has gotten off to a miserable start (.237, two homers, 16 RBIs) but the two-time All-Star has a glossy resume. He signed a three-year, $126 million contract last winter with two opt outs, and considering the season the Mets are having and the boos serenading him, it’s difficult to see him wanting to stay put. And if he leaves a free agent, there will be no qualifying offered attached for the Mets to receive a draft pick. Why not trade him and let his new team deal with the opt-outs?

Detroit Tigers

The Tigers invited teams to make offers for two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal during the winter, saying they had an obligation to at least listen, no matter how exorbitant the demands would be before they’d seriously consider moving him.

Instead of trading him, the Tigers even doubled down, signing free-agent starter Framber Valdez to a three-year, $115 million contract, and opening the season with a franchise-record $236.6 million payroll.

Well, six weeks into the season, and this has become the Tigers’ worst nightmare.

Skubal underwent elbow surgery to remove a bone chip and is sidelined for about two months. Starters Casey Mize and Justin Verlander are on the IL, too. Starter Reese Olson is out for the season. And they have 10 other players on the IL.

They are 18-21, and are winless since Skubal was placed on the IL.

The best thing they’ve got going for the Tigers is that they happen to reside in the worst division in baseball, where it’s virtually impossible to fall out of the race. They are only 2 ½ games out of first place in the AL Central with the Cleveland Guardians the only team in the division with a winning record.

Yet, if the Tigers somehow do fall out of the race, look out.

The Tigers would have the most marquee player on the trade block with Skubal since the San Diego Padres traded Juan Soto to the Yankees. The question is just how much could the Tigers get for Skubal, who has now had three arm surgeries on his career, is earning $32 million, and certainly will be seeking a free agent contract exceeding $400 million?

The Tigers would need Skubal to look like the Skubal pre-surgery, or at least back on the mound and pitching in games to get the value they need in return.

Then again, if Skubal is back pitching like himself again in July, it’s hard to believe the Tigers will be out of the race at the trade deadline.

“I just think they have too much money invested in this team to give up," one GM said. “I just can’t see them moving Skubal. They’re into this so deep."

San Francisco Giants

The West Coast version of the Worst Team Money Can Buy: the Giants, who haven’t had a winning record since 2021.

Buster Posey, Giants president of baseball operations, let everyone know his level of frustration by giving up on two-time Gold Glove winner Patrick Bailey on Saturday, and sending him to the Cleveland Guardians for left-handed fringe prospect Matt Wilkinson and their first-round competitive balance pick in this year’s draft, the 29th overall.

Bailey, who hit .222 with six homers and 55 RBIs last season, was off to a horrific start, hitting .146 with one homer, five RBI and a .396 OPS, and had lost his starting job.

Rivals wonder who could go next.

The Giants would love to unload outfielder Jung Hoo Lee ($85 million left on his contract), shortstop Willy Adames ($161 million remaining), first baseman Rafael Devers ($226.5 million remaining) and Matt Chapman ($125 million remaining) and start over.

They just don’t have that luxury.

Instead, they may no choice but to shop their biggest trade chip in starter Robbie Ray, who will be a free agent after the season. Some executives insist they also would listen to offers for ace Logan Webb. Yet, it’s highly unlikely the Giants would move him considering that he’s a premier starter with three years remaining on his reasonable five-year, $90 million contract.

“They’ve got an old team that’s underachieving with a lot of money on their books," one executive said. “They’ve had to listen on Webb. It makes too much sense."

Arizona Diamondbacks

The Diamondbacks find themselves in no-man’s land at the moment, not good enough to be a serious contender, but not bad enough to be a seller at the deadline.

Mike Hazen, president of baseball operations, may find himself in the same predicament as a year ago when he waited as long as possible before waving the white flag, trading starter Merrill Kelly and infielders Eugenio Suarez and Josh Naylor at the deadline.

They are hovering around .500, and after deciding to DFA starting center fielder Alek Thomas, let the entire team know that they weren’t going to simply sit around and let this season dry up into the desert night.

The Diamondbacks know that reinforcements are coming, highlighted by Cy Young winner Corbin Burnes’ expected return in August, but if Hazen’s patience runs out, they could look to be sellers again.

They would certainly trade starter Zac Gallen, who’s a free agent again after this season, and would listen on offers for starters Kelly (again), Ryne Nelson and Michael Soroka. The biggest prize would be Eduardo Rodriguez.

Rodriguez, who signed a four-year, $80 million contract, was a huge disappointment the first two years of his deal. He went just 12-13 with a 5.02 ERA, giving up 234 hits and 79 walks in 204 1/3 innings.

These days, Rodriguez is pitching as well as he ever has in his career, going 3-0 with a 2.50 ERA in his first seven starts. He is earning $21 million this year and $190 million in 2027. Yet, he could add another $17 million to the deal with a vesting option in 2028 if he pitches 150 innings in 2027 or a combined 300 innings in 2026-2027.

He would be the perfect piece to move if the Diamondbacks not only wanted to replenish their farm system, but also save money.

Houston Astros

The Astros put together one of the finest dynasties since the Yankees from 2017-2024 when they won four American League pennants, two World Series championships and reached the postseason eight years.

Yet, after missing the postseason last year, and off to a 16-23 start this season with their playoff odds at 15.6% by FanGraphs, it’s fair to wonder if the glory days have ended.

They’ve been hammered with injuries and a battered pitching staff, but if their fate doesn’t turn around in two months, they could be forced to be sellers at the trade deadline for the first time in a decade.

If that happens, the buzzards will be circling, with teams asking what it will take to pry away first baseman Christian Walker, all-world closer Josh Hader, All-Star shortstop Jeremy Pena, third baseman Isaac Paredes and yes, even DH Yordan Alvarez.

Astros owner Jim Crane is one of the most competitive executives in the game, and has repeatedly said that he wants to give his team every chance to be a perennial contender, but this is perhaps a chance to completely overhaul their franchise by bringing in some of the game’s elite prospects.

Certainly, there’s no need to move on from the Alvarez, Hader, Pena and Walker quartet, who are under control for at least the next two seasons. Walker and Pena will be free agents after the 2027 season. Alvarez and Hader are free agents after 2028. Paredes will be a free agent after the season unless the Astros pick up a $13.35 million club option.

Yet, Walker, Alvarez and Hader also are owed $110 million and Pena likely another $35 million in salary arbitration. If they’re moved, the Astros would have plenty of money to re-imagine their team.

Walker, who’s having a nice resurgence, hitting .296 with nine homers, 27 RBI and a .958 OPS, would provide a fabulous influx of power and defense to any team. Pena has become one of the finest all-around shortstops in the game. Hader, when he returns from the IL in May, is the most electrifying closer not named Mason Miller.

And Alvarez, who’s hitting .324 with 13 homers, 29 RBI and an 1.080 OPS?

“He’s the greatest pure hitter I’ve seen in this game since Barry Bonds," one veteran scout said. “This guy is unbelievable. He’s the best pure hitter in the game, and it’s not close."

Said one executive: “If they traded him, I think they’d get a better package than what the Nationals got for Juan Soto."

Realistically there’s little chance that Alvarez would actually be moved, but if the Astros are offered such a deal, it would be malpractice for the team not to at least listen.

Around the basepaths

– Part of the San Francisco Giants' objective in trading catcher Patrick Bailey to the Cleveland Guardians is to now select UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky in July’s amateur draft.

The Giants, who acquired the No. 29 overall pick in the draft in the trade, picked up an extra $3.27 million in slot value, giving them a total of $17.35 million in bonus pool money.

That extra money would be used to draft Cholowsky, if all goes according to their grand plan.

The Giants have the fourth pick in the draft, but if Cholowsky demands a signing bonus exceeding slot value, the Giants will be waiting. Their slot value at the No. 4 pick is $8.988 million, while the Chicago White Sox have the No. 1 pick and a slot value of $11.35 million.

Yet, the Giants are so enamored with Cholowsky that they could privately let him know they’ll even exceed the White Sox’s slot value. If the Giants pull it off, it clearly puts shortstop Willy Adames on notice, who’s under contract through 2031.

– General managers hope to convince MLB officials this winter to alter their restrictions on roster pitcher limits, which would also quiet the unrest by teams who believe the Dodgers have an inherit advantage having Shohei Ohtani as a two-way player.

The current rules limit teams to 13 pitchers on their 26-man roster, but since Ohtani is a two-way player, he doesn’t count towards the Dodgers’ roster limit, in essence giving the Dodgers 14 pitchers.

GMs want the ability to construct the roster the way they desire, enabling them to have more pitchers on the roster and fewer position players, if they so choose. The original rule was designed to speed up games with fewer available relievers and pitching changes, but with a pitch clock now greatly speeding up the game, in place, that concern may be alleviated.

– Baseball executives cringe at the thought of expansion, bringing 26 more pitchers in the game when there already is a massive shortage.

The pitching shortage is so bad that teams have already cancelled games in the Arizona Complex League because of the dearth of pitching. The Dodgers’ rookie team walked 22 batters in a recent game that lasted more than 4 hours.

– If the Padres don’t have enough problems with their struggles of late, one of their prized pitching prospects self-deported to Mexico after pleading guilty to a misdemeanor charge of being part of a human smuggling operation in southern Arizona.

Humberto Cruz, 19, ranked as one of the Padres’ top five pitching prospects, was transporting two illegal immigrants that paid him $1,000 per person.

He was charged with one felony count of transportation of illegal aliens for profit and one misdemeanor count of accessory after the fact to improper entry.

Cruz is expected to lose his work visa for 10 years but can re-apply after five years.

He will be on the Padres’ restricted list.

– The Arizona Diamondbacks raised some eyebrows when they designated starting center fielder Alek Thomas for assignment when they could have optioned him back to Triple-A Reno, and also had room on their 40-man roster.

Yet, Mike Hazen, D-backs president of baseball operations, wanted Thomas to at have the opportunity to play for someone else without going back to the minors, exposing him to waivers if they’re unable to trade him.

“If you're not exposed to 29 other teams where they could have had you, there may be a different mindset in terms of where you stand in the game of baseball," Hazen said. “If I option you, and you've gotten no exposure to 29 other teams, you can say that the Diamondbacks are holding me in Triple-A, but some other team would take me.

"That argument gets taken off the table if he gets through waivers, because he will both have to clear a trade threshold and a waiver threshold."

The D-backs, however, are expected to trade the speedy center fielder with several teams already checking in.

– Reliever Osvaldo Bido, 30, still has a ways to go before he eclipse the MLB record for playing on 14 different teams, but no one can top him for being designated for assignment six times since Dec. 5, and seven times placed on waivers.

Let’s see, he has gone from the Athletics to Atlanta to Tampa Bay to Miami, to the Angels, to the Yankees, back to Atlanta, to the White Sox, and now is waiting to see where he goes next after being DFA’d by the White Sox.

– There are a whole lot of teams kicking themselves watching veteran starter Nick Martinez pitching lights out for the surprising Tampa Bay Rays, going 3-1 with a 1.71 ERA. The Rays signed him during the winter on a one-year, $13 million deal, paying him just $9 million this year with a $4 million buyout on a $20 million mutual option in 2027.

– Now that Minnesota Twins ace Joe Ryan dodged an injury scare, he’ll certainly be one of the most highly sought-after trade candidates on the market this summer.

– This is the 17th time in Yankees’ history they’ve won at least 25 of their first 36 games.

They reached the postseason in all 16 previous times, winning 14 American League pennants and 11 World Series titles, according to researcher Katie Sharp.

– The Chicago Cubs, who have already produced two 10-game winning streaks for the first time since 1935, have also won 15 consecutive games at Wrigley Field for the first time since 1935.

The explanation?

“I’m not the type of person to believe something you can’t physically see,” Cubs starter Shota Imanaga said after his last start, “but I feel like at Wrigley there’s this power that you can’t see, but you can kind of feel where it’s like with the fans and the cheering, where the other team feels the pressure if you’re on the mound or if you’re up to bat.

“And then on the other side, when we’re up to bat or if we’re pitching, you feel that extra push and support of this power you can’t see. I think there is something there.”

– Hard to believe, but the Mets still have not won a single game when trailing after eight innings since the end of the 2024 season.

– Atlanta made a painful decision three years ago when they let first baseman Freddie Freeman walk away in free agency, but his replacement, Matt Olson, is having another MVP-caliber season. Olson, who signed an eight-year, $168 million contract after being traded from the Athletics, has played in every single game since the trade, and has 13 homers, 33 RBI and a 1.033 OPS.

– Scouts are alarmed at Phillies shortstop Trea Turner’s rough start.

Turner, the two-time batting champion who hit a league-leading .304 last season, is off to the worst start of his career, hitting just .226 with a .627 OPS and has been erratic defensively.

Turner, 33 in June, still is under contract through 2033 with an annual $27 million salary.

– The Diamondbacks did a deep dive on their offensive struggles and discovered that they have seen 400 fewer pitches than they had seen at the same time a year ago when they scored the sixth-most runs in baseball.

“It was alarming," Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said.

The Diamondbacks have a 25% chase rate, worst in the major leagues, while ranking 29th in walks and on-base percentage.

And entered Saturday with a 17-20 record.

– It took 10 long years, but outfielder Mickey Moniak is finally living up to the expectations of being the No. 1 pick in the draft by the Philadelphia Phillies, and now with the Colorado Rockies.

Moniak, who turns 28 this week, enters the weekend with 11 home runs and an NL-leading 1.0671 OPS.

– Athletics slugger Nick Kurtz, the AL Rookie of the Year, was such a huge Phillies fan growing up in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, that he named family animals after his favorite players.

He had dogs growing up named after Chase Utley, Ryan Howard and Hunter Pence, and still has a family cat named, “Harper,’" after Phillies first baseman Bryce Harper.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB trade deadline rumors 2026 take shape: Sellers to watch

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 5/10/26

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MAY 09: Cam Schlittler #31 of the New York Yankees grabs his left leg after being struck by a line drive in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on May 09, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees dropped their first series in a while, losing the first two games in Milwaukee after getting shutout in the first one and getting walked off in the second. New York was in control late, though they’d wasted chances to grow their lead outside of a couple of Paul Goldschmidt RBI hits. The bullpen got themselves into jams after Cam Schlittler kept them off the board through six, and when they eventually bended the game went into extras. The dreaded 10th inning on the road went how it usually goes for the Yankees, and now they’re looking to avoid the sweep today with the first member of the rotation cavalry returning in Carlos Rodón.

Before the matinee finale gets underway, we’ve got a couple things on the docket for you. Scott talks to Oswaldo Cabrera down in Scranton as the infielder works his way back from the gruesome leg injury he suffered last season, and then Matt has a double-feature covering the Rivalry Roundup and honoring Ed Barrow on his birthday. After the game, John will be around to deliver the weekly social media spotlight.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees at Milwaukee Brewers

Time: 2:10 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, Brewers.tv

Venue: American Family Field, Milwaukee, MI

Questions/Prompts:

1. How do you think Carlos Rodón will look in his season debut?

2. Can Spencer Jones collect his first career hit before the team leaves Milwaukee?

Yankees news: Rest in peace, Bobby Cox

ATLANTA, GA - OCTOBER 08: Former manager of the Atlanta Braves, Bobby Cox, throws out the ceremonial first pitch to start Game Four of the National League Division Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Atlanta Braves at Turner Field on October 8, 2018 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Scott Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

MLB.com | Mark Bowman: Just days after long-time Yankees radio broadcaster John Sterling passed away at the age of 87, the baseball world lost another legend with the passing of Hall of Fame manager Bobby Cox. Cox was the long-time manager of the Braves across two separate stints, leading the franchise to 14 straight division titles, five National League pennants, and the 1995 World Series title. Cox memorably also holds the record for the most ejections as a manager at 162, 75 ahead of Aaron Boone.

Cox played in the minor league systems of the Dodgers and Braves before being traded to the Yankees in 1967 for Bob Tillman and Dale Roberts. He played for the Bombers in 1968 and 1969, even sharing the field with Mickey Mantle, and appeared in 220 games — mostly at third — batting .225 with nine home runs, 58 RBI, and an 87 wRC+. He managed in the Yankees’ minor league system from 1971 to 1976 and was Billy Martin’s first base coach for the 1977 World Series title. He went on to manage 25 seasons for the Braves sandwiched around a four-year stint at the helm of the Blue Jays, and was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2014 by the Expansion Era Committee. Our thoughts go out to his family and loved ones.

New York Post | Mark W. Sanchez: The turnaround in Ryan McMahon’s fortunes at the plate began with three words to Aaron Judge: “Cap, watcha got?” The pair then studied video of McMahon’s swings together, Judge pointing out how McMahon was shifting weight from his back hip to his front heel too early. The two of them along with Paul Goldschmidt and a couple of the Yankees’ hitting coaches went into the batting cage where McMahon worked on keeping his weight back for an extra tick which allowed him to see the ball for longer. The result: going from a .167 average and 52 wRC+ through the end of April to batting .375 with a 192 wRC+ in May.

CBS Sports: The Yankees have announced that Gerrit Cole will make his fifth rehab with Double-A Somerset on Sunday. It’s been a long road back from the Tommy John surgery he underwent in March 2025, and Cole has looked rusty in his four rehab appearances so far, pitching to a 6.27 ERA with 14 strikeouts, one walk, and six home runs allowed in 18.2 innings. The team is unsure whether he will require two or three more rehab starts before joining the big league club, putting him right in line with the original timetable of a late-May or early-June return.

MLB.com | Casey Drottar: There was a scary moment in the first inning of the Yankees’ 4-3 extra-innings loss to the Brewers on Saturday when Cam Schlittler got drilled in the back of the left calf with a 109-mph line drive off the bat of William Contreras. Schlittler looked to be in visible discomfort, and worryingly threw all of his warmup pitches high when Aaron Boone and the trainer came out to check on him. However, he brushed off the pain to finish the day with six scoreless innings allowing two hits and no walks against six strikeouts.

Yankees’ Cam Schlittler ‘not really concerned’ after getting drilled by comebacker again

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Cam Schlittler holds his left calf after getting struck by a line drive in the first inning of the Yankees' 4-3, 10-inning loss to the Brewers on May 9, 2026 in Milwaukee

MILWAUKEE — The Brewers trotted out their young flamethrower Friday night, and the Yankees could not touch him.

Cam Schlittler turned the tables a night later and was just as unhittable as Jacob Misiorowski.

The only thing that really touched Schlittler was a 108.5 mph comebacker that smoked his left calf in the bottom of the first inning, but after it looked like he might have to come out of the game, he remained in it to deliver six shutout innings before the Yankees wasted it in a 4-3, 10-inning loss to the Brewers.

Cam Schlittler holds his left calf after getting struck by a 108.5 mph comebacker in the first inning of the Yankees’ 4-3, 10-inning loss to the Brewers on May 9, 2026 in Milwaukee. Getty Images

“Not really concerned,” said Schlittler, who still had the imprint of a ball on his left calf after the game. “Obviously he got me good. The warmup pitches weren’t too encouraging, but I was able to settle in after that.”

Schlittler limited the Brewers to just two singles while striking out six. He did not allow a base runner to reach second base all night as he lowered his ERA to a major league-best 1.35 through nine starts — four of which have been scoreless. Opponents are now hitting just .177 (34-for-192) against him.

One of those hits was William Contreras’ hard grounder right back at Schlittler in the bottom of the first.

The right-hander was in obvious pain as he tried to walk it off and was paid a visit by manager Aaron Boone and head trainer Tim Lentych. After some conversation, Schlittler got back on the mound and threw three warmup pitches — two of them coming in high, as it looked like he might be having some trouble with his landing (left) leg in his delivery.

“I kept trying to be pretty firm as far as, ‘Tell us the truth — even here and as we go,’” Boone said. “He was more mad at himself for not throwing a strike in the warmup pitches. So that’s why he kept throwing.”

Once he was cleared to stay in the game, Schlittler struck out Jake Bauers on a 98 mph fastball to end the inning, though he hobbled off the mound and went down the dugout steps toward the clubhouse.

After the top of the second, Schlittler did not immediately jog out to the mound as he usually does, and after a delay — it turned out he was still getting the calf wrapped up inside — Boone even started to go out to chat with the home plate umpire before Schlittler finally came out of the dugout.

“Doing some exercises in between innings, making sure I kept it loose and it wasn’t tightening back up,” Schlittler said.



With a pair of strikeouts in a 1-2-3 second inning, Schlittler began to quell any lingering fears that he might be hurt, though he did have a few more mishaps on the mound. In the third inning, he stumbled off the mound and fell trying to field Jackson Chourio’s comebacker behind him, then appeared to lose his landing spot and slipped out of his delivery during the next batter.

Contreras even hit another chopper right back at Schlittler in the fourth inning, though he was able to get out of the line of fire on that one.

“I let up a lot of balls up the middle,” said Schlittler, who also got hit by a comebacker on his quad in his last start. “They’re just finding me right now. Hopefully I can get a breather next week.”

Mets’ Bo Bichette hitting better than woeful numbers suggest

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Bo Bichette

PHOENIX — Bo Bichette’s numbers are lagging, perhaps along with his luck.

The Mets infielder, still searching for his first real hot streak, entered Saturday with a disappointing .570 OPS, but his underlying numbers suggest he should be faring better.

Bichette began play with a .231 batting average, but according to Statcast, his expected batting average was .283, placing him in MLB’s 83rd percentile.

Bo Bichette Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Bichette had two hard-hit balls in Friday’s victory over the Diamondbacks, including one to the right field fence that resulted in an out. In Saturday’s 2-1 loss, he added another hard-hit ball: a 100 mph shot to left field that went for an out in the eighth inning.

“It feels like every day there’s one at-bat when he hits a rocket and somebody is making a play,” manager Carlos Mendoza said before the game. “I am not worried about him. The ball is going to find holes. He’s too good a hitter.”

Bichette’s hard-hit ball rate (46.9 percent) and average exit velocity (91.2 mph) entering play also suggested some misfortune given his disappointing OPS.

“He’s just got to continue to focus on the things he can control,” Mendoza said, “which is to get a good pitch and put a good swing on it.”




Luis Torrens had a sore jaw Saturday after he was struck in the mask by a foul ball the previous night.

Torrens said he was fine to play, but Mendoza went a different direction with the lineup, inserting Francisco Alvarez (0-for-3) behind the plate with MJ Melendez (0-for-3 with a walk) as the DH.

There is a good chance Torrens will return behind the plate for Sunday’s series finale, according to Mendoza.


Huascar Brazobán will serve as Sunday’s opener, with David Peterson scheduled to pitch in a bulk relief role. Brazobán served as the opener ahead of Peterson on Monday in Colorado.

The lefty Peterson allowed two earned runs over four innings in his last appearance. *


Ketel Marte returned to Arizona’s lineup in the leadoff spot a day after being scratched due to an illness.

Game Thread: Happy Mother’s Day, y’all!

ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - APRIL 25: Nick Fortes #40 and Shane McClanahan #18 of the Tampa Bay Rays during a mound meeting in the bottom of the third inning against the Minnesota Twins at Tropicana Field on April 25, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Parker S. Freedman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Go Rays!

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Tough luck, strong results: Clay Holmes shines again despite Mets' 2-1 loss

Clay Holmes is eight starts into his second season as a starting pitcher in MLB and has a 1.86 ERA through 48.1 IP. The former Pirates and Yankees reliever followed last Saturday's gem with a tough-luck loss in Saturday's 2-1 defeat at the Diamondbacks, allowing two runs on five hits while striking out six and walking two in 5.2 IP.

"I thought I was able to limit the damage there that one inning," Holmes said, referencing his third inning in which he retired the first two batters before Arizona (18-20) loaded the bases and scored on Ildemaro Vargas's single to left field. "They had some balls get through in the infield, a couple groundballs, and they were able to scratch a couple across there. But I felt like I could hold 'em there and I'm just trying to get as deep as I can after that and keep it there at two."

Holmes, who retired his next nine batters before Nolan Arenado's two-out single to right field in the sixth inning, threw 64 strikes on 103 pitches. He threw a career-high 104 pitches June 19, 2025, at the Atlanta Braves.

"You always want to finish on a strong note, but pitch count was getting to a certain spot where they wanted to go someone else," Holmes said. "But I feel like it ended well, and (Arenado) put a good swing on it and was able to get it there into right field."

Unfortunately for Holmes, Merrill Kelly's seven-inning dominance stifled the Mets (15-24), who managed three hits before Taylor Clarke and Paul Sewald closed the door.

"I thought he was very good," Carlos Mendoza said of Holmes. "Even though they put together some really good at-bats, they made him work -- some three-ball counts there, that third inning. But when you look back at that inning when they scored two -- two outs, nobody on base and that groundball from (Corbin) Carroll finds a hole.

"And then the walk and then Vargas with a nice piece of hitting the other way -- (Holmes) kept them on the ground. He got the groundball. Just this time, it found holes. But he was able to go back to the sixth inning and was almost able to finish -- gave us a chance and another solid outing from him."

Holmes has gone five innings or more in every start this year. He last failed to do so Sept. 24 at the Chicago Cubs in his penultimate start of the 2025 season.

"I think just being able to limit damage ... when I'm in the zone and don't give free passes, then I'm setting myself up for success," Holmes said. "So, in between the sinker, changeup, curveball, sweeper, I should be able to get guys on the ground, really limit the damage and just help me kind of go deeper in games and just trying to give the team the best chance to win."

Ultimately, Holmes put the Mets in a position to win. Huascar Brazobán looks to do the same in Sunday's 4:10 p.m. series finale on SNY.

"We come back tomorrow with an opportunity to win another series and finish off a pretty good road trip," Mendoza said. "And that's what we'll come back here tomorrow and ... do."

Braves News: Remembering Bobby Cox, strides from Spencer Strider, more

ATLANTA, GA - OCTOBER 02: MLB Hall of Famers Hank Aaron and Bobby Cox stand on the field after the game between the Atlanta Braves and the Detroit Tigers at Turner Field on October 2, 2016 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On a sad day overall for Braves Country, due to the passing of the legendary Bobby Cox, Spencer Strider gave Atlanta fans something to be happy and hopeful about with a stellar outing, shutting down the Dodgers potent offense for 6.0 innings with 8 strikeouts and 15 whiffs. He looked as good as he has in a long time. His fastball averaged 96.4 MPH, with 17 inches of induced vertical break and he had four pitches working nicely together. Even if Strider doesn’t quite return to his Jacob deGrom levels of dominance, having him as a true #1 or #2 quality starter would make a huge difference for this Braves team to pair with Chris Sale. Bryce Elder has been great this season, but shouldn’t be the second best starter in the rotation of a World Series contender. If Strider can keep something like Saturday night’s version of himself moving forward, that’s a huge development for him and this team.

Braves News

Braves Country and the baseball world at large lost Hall of Famer Bobby Cox on Saturday. We remembered Bobby’s life and legacy here onsite.

Spencer Strider had a strong outing against the formidable Dodgers’ lineup and the offense got the job done in a win on a night in Bobby Cox’ shadow.

MLB News

The Giants traded Gold Glove catcher Patrick Bailey to the Guardians for the 29th pick in the upcoming draft and a pitching prospect with the “Tugboat” nickname, as Bailey has been struggling at the plate this season.

The Orioles are giving former top prospect Jackson Holliday some time at third base during his rehab assignment, as he returns from a hamate bone fracture, but has also never fully settled in at the major league level.

Giants star Logan Webb is going on the IL with knee bursitis and is expected to return once the 10-day period ends.

The Rays DFA’d former Braves prospect Justyn-Henry Malloy, as they shuffled the back of their roster.

Blake Snell gets no help from the Dodgers' offense in loss to Braves

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 09: Blake Snell #7 of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Dodgers starting pitcher Blake Snell delivers during the first inning of a loss to the Atlanta Braves at Dodger Stadium on Saturday night. (Meg Oliphant / Getty Images)

It was Blake Snell bobblehead night Saturday at Dodger Stadium but the Atlanta Braves spoiled the left-hander’s season debut with a 7-2 win.

Making his first appearance since the eighth inning of Game 7 of the World Series, Snell showed rust early, giving up a leadoff single to Mauricio Dubón and walking Drake Baldwin. Ozzie Albies’ bunt single loaded the bases and after Matt Olson struck out, Dubon scored from third on Austin Riley’s fielder’s choice to shortstop. Snell struck out Michael Harris II to end the inning on his 25th pitch.

Atlanta loaded the bases again in the second and Albies poked a two-run single to left. Two more runs scored on Olson’s single to right and after an inning and a half the Dodgers trailed 5-0. In the bottom of the inning, Eli White made a sprinting catch on the warning track in right field to rob Max Muncy of extra bases.

Snell started the season on the injured list with left shoulder fatigue and was brought back from his rehab assignment early to replace Tyler Glasnow, who was placed on the injured list Friday with back spasms. Snell gave up four earned runs on six hits, with two walks and five strikeouts over three innings and 77 pitches.

Read more:Emmet Sheehan shows progress, bullpen thrives in Dodgers' win over Braves

While Snell struggled, Atlanta's Spencer Strider was locked in from the start, giving up one hit and striking out eight batters in six innings before being relieved by Dylan Lee.

National League East front-runner Atlanta (27-13) widened its gap to eight games over Washington while the Dodgers dropped to 24-15 and saw their National League West lead narrowed to one game over San Diego, which beat St. Louis 4-2 earlier in the day.

Jack Dreyer, who relieved Snell, gave up one hit in 1⅓ innings before being relieved by Edgardo Henriquez, who walked Riley and gave up an RBI double to Harris — the fifth hit in two days for the 2022 NL rookie of the year. Henriquez went 1⅔ innings before Paul Gervase yielded an RBI single to Baldwin.

One night after dealing Braves ace Chris Sale his second loss of the season, the Dodgers’ offense did not wake up until the ninth inning.

Shohei Ohtani went one for four with a single and two strikeouts. Freddie Freeman had two fly outs and a groundout before Dalton Rushing took his place at first in the seventh.

The Dodgers avoided their second shutout loss of the season and finally gave the crowd of 50,209 reason to cheer in the ninth when Andy Pages belted a two-run home run — his ninth of the season — off reliever Reynaldo Lopez.

Read more:Will work for free? Trevor Bauer hypothetically offers to sign a '$0 salary' deal with any MLB club

Players on both teams played with heavy hearts following the death of former Braves manager Bobby Cox at the age of 84 on Saturday.

Freeman, in his fifth season of a six-year, $162-million deal with the Dodgers, talked about Cox before the game.

“I woke up to the news this morning,” he said. “It’s a sad day in Braves country and all of baseball. My favorite memory of Bobby is seeing joy on his face when he saw my 6-year-old. He had our backs. He wanted to win as much as you do. What stands out is the genuine care he had for every person in that clubhouse.

"My first day of spring training I walk in and he joked ‘Why did it take you so long to get to the big leagues?’ He cared about the 19-year-old and 40-year-old the same way. I have an autographed Bobby Cox jersey at home.”

Cox's death came just four days after the death of Ted Turner, who owned the Braves from 1976 to 2007.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Blake Snell returns in Dodgers’ loss to Atlanta Braves

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Blake Snell throws a pitch, Image 2 shows Ozzie Albies of the Atlanta Braves celebrates with teammates in the dugout

If the game was viewed as an extension of spring training, which is basically what it was for Blake Snell, the Dodgers’ 7-2 loss to the Atlanta Braves on Saturday night could be charitably classified as a success.

After missing the first six weeks of the season, Snell was throwing hard in his season debut.

His fastball touched 98.1 mph, and the average velocity of the pitch was 95.9 mph.

So he was healthy, at least.

If the game was viewed as an extension of spring training, which is basically what it was for Blake Snell, the Dodgers’ 7-2 loss to the Atlanta Braves on Saturday night could be charitably classified as a success. AP

Snell’s final line was ugly – five runs (four earned), six hits and two walks in three innings – but he wasn’t as bad as his numbers suggested.

Snell struck out five batters, as the Braves whiffed on 16 of his pitches. The stuff was there.

What was missing was sharpness, and that was expected, considering he was initially scheduled to pitch in a minor league game on this day. A recent back injury to Tyler Glasnow forced Snell back into the rotation earlier than expected.

Snell loaded the bases in the first inning before registering an out, but he managed to limit the damage to a solitary run by striking out two of the next three batters.

Snell’s final line was ugly – five runs (four earned), six hits and two walks in three innings – but he wasn’t as bad as his numbers suggested. Getty Images

The Braves added four runs in the second inning, two on a bases-loaded single by Ozzie Albies, who practically scraped a changeup off the ground, and two more more on a line-drive hit by Matt Olson, who pounced on an elevated slider.

Snell departed the game after throwing 77 pitches in three innings.

But Snell looked to be a series of small adjustments from returning to his customary form, and the starter opposite of him showed how much of a difference a week could make for a pitcher in his position.

Sidelined with an oblique strain until last week, Strider made his season debut in Colorado and was charged with three runs, four hits and five walks in 3 ⅓ innings.

A former All-Star and 20-game winner, Strider was much better against the Dodgers. He blanked the defending World Series champions over six innings, limiting them to a hit and two walks.

The Braves added four runs in the second inning, two on a bases-loaded single by Ozzie Albies Getty Images

What it means

The loss was something of a reality check for the Dodgers.

In the series opener the night before, they scrapped and clawed against reigning Cy Young Award winner Chris Sale to earn a 3-1 victory.

If that game demonstrated their ability to capitalize on opportunities to win difficult games, their loss on Saturday was a reminder of how unthreatening their offense can look on certain nights.

The Dodgers let Spencer complete six innings on 91 pitches and they collected only two hits in the first seven innings. Their only runs were scored on a two-run homer by Andy Pages in the bottom of the ninth inning.


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Who’s hot

Certainly none of their hitters.

But left-hander Jack Dreyer pitched a scoreless fourth inning and retired the only batter he faced in the fifth.

Dreyer has not allowed a run over the 8 ⅓ innings he’s pitched in his last eight games. His earned-run average has dropped from 4.35 to 2.41 over that period.

Who’s not

Brock Stewart wasn’t active for long.

Three days after he was moved to the active roster, the talented-but-fragile reliever was back on the injured list, this time with a bone spur on his left foot.

Stewart missed the first six weeks of the season as he was recovering from a procedure he underwent last September to clean up his right shoulder. He pitched two scoreless innings in his brief time on the active roster – an inning on Wednesday against the Houston Astros and another on Friday against the Braves.

The Dodgers acquired Stewart from the Minnesota Twins last year in exchange for outfielder James Outman.

Up next

In a showdown of breakout pitching standouts, the Dodgers will start Justin Wrobleski, who is 5-0 with a 0.56 earned-run average as a starting pitcher. The Braves will counter with Bryce Elder, who made an All-Star team in 2023 but has been mediocre since. Elder will enter the game with a 3-1 record and 2.02 ERA in eight starts.