Shohei Ohtani brilliant on the mound as Dodgers sweep Mets

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 15: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers (wearing #42 in honor of Jackie Robinson) reacts after striking out the side in the sixth inning during the game between the New York Mets and the Los Angeles Dodgers at UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday, April 15, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jessie Alcheh/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Dodgers honored the life and legacy of Jackie Robinson on Wednesday, and then proceeded to back Shohei Ohtani’s gem with four home runs as they swept the New York Mets with a dominant 8-2 victory.

Dodgers fans might have been disappointed that they weren’t afforded the opportunity to see Ohtani demonstrate his two-ways powers, but he certainly made up for it with another dazzling start.

Both team were held scoreless in the first inning for the first time in the series, but after Clay Holmes got two quick outs in the bottom of the second inning, Dalton Rushing continued his torrid start with a two-out double down the right field line. Hyeseong Kim attacked a sinker down the middle on a 1-1 count and sent it just past a leaping Carson Benge for his first home run of the season, giving the Dodgers an early two-run lead.

The Mets broke through against Ohtani in the top of the third as M.J. Melendez lined a double to the left-center field gap to bring up the potential tying run. Ohtani, who already had one strikeout in the inning, got Tommy Pham swinging for the second out. On the 11th pitch of his battle against Francisco Lindor, he side-stepped him, and blew a fastball at 100 miles per hour by him for his third strikeout of the inning to leave Melendez at second.

Ohtani had gone the first four innings without allowing a walk, but he immediately issued a free pass to Francisco Alvarez to begin the top of the fifth. Carson Benge would have made it two on with nobody out as he lined a would-be single to left field, but Alvarez thought that Teoscar Hernández had made the catch on a diving attempt. Hernández had actually trapped it, and he threw out the lead-runner with Alvarez retreated back to first.

The Mets made up for their base running blunder as Marcus Semien reached on Ohtani’s second walk of the inning, and Melendez connected for his second double of the game, driving home Benge and marking Ohtani’s first earned run of the season. Ohtani rebounded with another strikeout of Pham, and he kept the lead intact by getting Lindor to line out to left field.

The Dodgers had Blake Treinen warming up in the bullpen during the top of the fifth, but Ohtani stayed out for the sixth inning. The decision to keep Treinen from entering paid off, as Ohtani struck out the side in order to cap off the Dodgers’ third consecutive quality start against the Mets and a 10 strikeout performance from their regular leadoff hitter.

Teoscar Hernández greeted Mets reliever Tobias Myers rudely in the bottom of the sixth inning by connecting for a solo home run to the opposite field to give the Dodgers a two-run lead.

Blake Treinen eventually entered the game for the seventh inning, and he continued his impressive start to the season as he worked around a one-out double from Carson Benge to keep his ERA scoreless over 6 2/3 innings on the mound this year. Tanner Scott added to his turnaround start to the season with a perfect top of the eighth inning on just eight pitches.

The Dodgers looked to get some insurance against the former All-Star closer Devin Williams, and Teoscar Hernández beat out a routine ground ball to Lindor for an infield single. Things continued to unravel for the Mets, as Williams walked Muncy before Andy Pages drilled a ball over the head of Benge in right field, but both baserunners held on the play and were forced to advance just 90 feet. Dalton Rushing erased a possible save opportunity for Edwin Díaz by drilling a grand slam to center field to put the game out of reach.

In need of getting anything going his way offensively, and after lining out on a ball hit 107 miles per hour, Kyle Tucker connected for his first home run in front of the home crowd in a Dodgers uniform, giving the Dodgers a seven run lead and giving the Dodgers their fourth four home run game of the season.

Kyle Hurt made his long-awaited return from injury one day shy of two whole years since his last appearance, and it started off well with a strikeout of Brett Baty. Hurt allowed a single to Bo Bichette and then plunked Alvarez to put two on with one out, but recovered by striking out Benge. The Mets got back one run on a single from Marcus Semien, but Hurt struck out Melendez to finish the sweep and hand New York their eighth consecutive loss.

Game particulars
  • Home runs— Hyeseong Kim (1), Teoscar Hernández (4), Dalton Rushing (4), Kyle Tucker (2)
  • WP—Shohei Ohtani (2-0): 6 IP, 2 hits, 1 earned run, 2 walks, 10 strikeouts
  • LP— Clay Holmes(2-2): 5 IP, 4 hits, 2 earned runs, 1 walk, 4 strikeouts
Up next

The Dodgers are off on Thursday as they fly out to Denver to open a four-game series against the Colorado Rockies on Friday (5:40 p.m. PT, SportsNet LA). Tyler Glasnow makes his fourth start while the Rockies have yet to announce their starter.

8-11: Chart

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 15: Emerson Hancock #26 of the Seattle Mariners pitches during the fifth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on April 15, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Padres 7, Mariners 6

I had some really good chart art cued up, too 🙁

A puffy vest giveaway on a chilly night: Emerson Hancock, +.18 WPA

Realizing a vest doesn’t have sleeves: José Ferrer, -.84 WPA

Game thread comments of the day:

I could not choose between these two, and my hubris has been punished by the baseball gods.

Yankees walk-off hero Jose Caballero ‘living for’ clutch moments

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees shortstop José Caballero (72) hits a two-run RBI hit to win the game during the 9th inning when the New York Yankees played the Los Angeles Angels Wednesday, April 15, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY, Image 2 shows New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) douses New York Yankees shortstop José Caballero (72) with water after he hit a two-run RBI hit
Jose Caballero Yankees

José Caballero didn’t hesitate. “Always,” he said, when asked if he longed for clutch at-bats his entire career. He wanted the pressure-filled swings. The big moments of games, like the one Wednesday night, when his walk-off double less than an hour before his answer lifted the Yankees to a 5-4 victory over the Angels. 

“That’s the at-bats that I want,” Caballero said. “I’m living for those at-bats. I want those at-bats every time I step in the box.” 

Access the Yankees beat like never before

Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Greg Joyce about the inside buzz on the Yankees.

Try it free

When the Los Angeles series began Monday, he doubled in the ninth and scored the winning run during the Yankees walk-off victory.

Two nights later, he helped play hero again with his extra-base hit, allowing both Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Austin Wells to score.

Caballero, in the middle of a shrinking window to steal the Yankees starting shortstop job before Anthony Volpe returns, moved to .400 with two doubles and six RBIs with runners in scoring position this year.

He’s driven in seven runs across the past five games, too. 

It likely won’t be enough to hold off Volpe, who received a public endorsement from general manager Brian Cashman last week in Tampa and started his rehab assignment Tuesday.

Caballero, outside of the clutch spots, has struggled, hitting just .186 for the year overall with a .543 OPS.

José Caballero rips a game-winning two-run double during the ninth inning of the Yankees’ 5-4 comeback win over the Angels on April 15, 2026 at the Stadium. Robert Sabo for NY Post

But with Volpe’s return looming, Caballero continued to make his case with the game-deciding hit. 

“He loves the action,” manager Aaron Boone said, “and, as I’ve told you, he’s really confident. That’s one of his biggest strengths, is he thinks he’s the best player on the field — and that’s an important thing to have and play the game with. It does seem like the bigger the stakes, the more he’s able to dig in.” 

So there was Caballero, who also walked and scored the third Yankees run in the second inning in a 1-for-3 night, on the receiving end of a Gatorade cooler dump postgame.

There was Caballero, one day after Volpe played five innings for Double-A Somerset and struck out twice, delivering strong defense again and then adding to it at the plate in the final moments. 



This was always his opportunity, with Volpe, who struggled last season, sidelined to start the year due to a shoulder injury. If he was ever going to snag the starting shortstop job, it needed to happen before May.

Two clutch at-bats in three days won’t change what happened before this Angels series began. Caballero’s average hasn’t topped .200 since April. He recorded four hits in four games to start the year but just seven in the 13 since. 

Aaron Judge douses José Caballero with water after he hit the game-winning two-run double in the Yankees’ comeback win over the Angels. Robert Sabo for NY Post

But even when Volpe returns, Caballero could still provide value for the Yankees off the bench.

His at-bat in the ninth Wednesday — and his swing on the 1-2 slider from Angels closer Jordan Romano that left the bat at 100.7 mph, dropped into left-center field and changed everything for one night — served as the latest example. 

“I like to contribute to the team,” Caballero said, “and I did it.”

9-9 – Rangers come up short in 6-5 loss to Athletics

Apr 15, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Members of the Texas Rangers wear number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson Day during the national anthem before the start of a baseball game against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Dennis Lee-Imagn Images | Dennis Lee-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers scored five runs but the Athletics of California, United States on planet Earth scored six runs.

The Rangers didn’t have many hits on the night — just five total — but two of them contributed to all five of their runs with Corey Seager hitting a two-run home run in the 3rd and Jake Burger continuing to feast in Sactown with a three-run shot in the 8th.

Unfortunately for Texas, the A’s got a couple of two-out, RBI hits early off a rather inefficient Kumar Rocker and then had their own big swings with a two-run home run off the bat of Rangers killer Shea Langeliers that broke a 2-2 tie in the 6th and a two-run home run from Jacob Wilson an inning later.

Despite being solid so far this season, both homers were given up by Cole Winn in what proved to be a bad moment for a poor outing as the 6-2 lead was exactly enough insurance for the A’s.

Nevertheless, the lack of production throughout most of the game (just one hit through the first five innings) ultimately feels like more of the deciding factor than anything else.

Player of the Game: Burger and Seager tried to make it happen with their home runs but I’d like to give a nod to Gavin Collyer who made his debut, threw three pitches, and picked up the first strikeout of his career.

Up Next: The Rangers close out this series in West Sacramento with RHP Jack Leiter set to make the start opposite LHP Jacob Lopez for the Athletics.

The Thursday afternoon finale from Sutter Health Park is scheduled for 2:05 pm CDT and will be aired on the Rangers Sports Network.

Arrighetti’s 10K Lead Astros to 3-1 Victory over Rockies

HOUSTON, TEXAS - APRIL 15: Spencer Arrighetti #41 of the Houston Astros is congratulated by Yainer Diaz #21 during the sixth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Daikin Park on April 15, 2026 in Houston, Texas. All players are wearing the number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson Day. (Photo by Houston Astros/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Houston Astros beleaguered starting rotation was desperate for a strong starting performance.

Spencer Arrighetti, in his first start of the season, delivered.

Arrighetti gave the Astros their third quality start of the season, hurling 6 innings of 1 run ball while striking out 10 to lead Houston to a 3-1 victory over the Colorado Rockies.

Arrighetti was terrific, allowing only 2 hits on the night. He threw 100 pitches, 61 for strikes. He generated an incredible 20 swings and misses.

Arrighetti was backed by Yordan Alvarez, who was 2-for-3 with a double and his 7th HR of the season. He scored twice and also drew a walk.

Alvarez is now batting .333 on the season with a 1.250 OPS. He has 7 HR and 17 RBI.

Also of note, struggling reliever Bryan Abreu threw 1.1 innings of scoreless and hitless baseball. He walked one and struck out 2.

Enyel De Los Santos pitched a 1-2-3 9th for his second save of the season, and second in as many nights. He struck out 2, needing only 14 pitches to complete the inning.

With the victory, the Astros improve to 8-11 on the season.

The Astros will go for the sweep Thursday at Daikin Park. Ryan Weiss will get the start for Houston. First pitch scheduled for 7:10 P.M.

Padres fans fight each other at Petco Park over unusual giveaway item

The line at Petco Park began forming on Wednesday night long before the first pitch was thrown. It curled around the ballpark and caused logjams at the entrances. But it wasn’t about baseball. It was about a puffer vest. 

A Padres-themed puffer vest, to be exact.

The puffer vest giveaway for the Padres game. mlb.com

The story of the Padres puffer vest dates back to March 2 in Peoria, Arizona, at the Padres’ spring training facility. 

New Padres manager Craig Stammen was photographed wearing the now-infamous outwear on the field. It looked sharp and clean. Fans started saying they wanted one of their own in the replies. 

Fights broke out at Petco Park after lines wrapped around the block over the puffer vest giveaway. Instagram/@chaseizi
A crowd of baseball fans, many wearing Padres gear, are seen in a heated confrontation, with some appearing to be fighting. Instagram/@chaseizi

So when the Padres announced 40,000 of them would be handed out as a giveaway item against the Mariners, fans didn’t just show up — they descended upon downtown San Diego like the city was giving away free lottery tickets. 

What the Padres didn’t anticipate wasn’t demand. It was desperation.

Videos that ricocheted across social media showed lines devolving into chaos. At multiple gates, fans pushed and shoved, not for entry, but for sizes. Mediums vanished. Larges disappeared quickly. Some fans refused to move until another box arrived, clogging entrances into the park. 

Inside the ballpark, the Padres rallied from a 6-0 deficit to stun Seattle 7-6 with a five-run bottom of the ninth and walk-off victory. Hopefully all the anger from the beginning of the game was settled by the end as fans went home happy with their puffer vests.

Bryce Elder pitching like an All-Star again for the Braves

ATLANTA — Bryce Elder is pitching like an All-Star again.

Considered the weak link in the Atlanta rotation coming into the season, Elder has turned in four dominating starts to rekindle memories of his surprising 2023 season.

Elder hurled scoreless ball into the sixth inning on Wednesday night, leading the Braves to a 6-3 victory over the Miami Marlins.

“This feels a little more complete,” the 26-year-old right-hander said. “I have more weapons. We’ll just try to keep it going.”

Elder was a huge surprise for the Braves three years ago, earning an All-Star berth in his first full season while going 12-4.

But he struggled mightily the last two seasons while bouncing back and forth between the majors and Triple-A Gwinnett. His ERA soared to 6.52 while making just 10 big league starts in 2024, followed by an 8-11 mark with a 5.30 ERA a year ago.

Elder might’ve been done in Atlanta if not for a rash of injuries that ravaged the starting rotation, allowing him to claim the fourth slot in a makeshift group as the Braves wrapped up spring training.

His performance over four starts — a 2-1 record with a 0.77 ERA — has manager Walt Weiss feeling good about his chances of remaining the rotation even when ailing pitchers such as Spencer Strider and Spencer Schwellenbach return to the mound.

“He’s in a really good place,” Weiss said of Elder.

He believes the Texan is a more complete pitcher than he was in ’23, with a diverse arsenal that helps him get by with a fastball in the low 90 mph range.

Elder has paired an improved slider with a change-up and three different fastballs — a two-seamer, a four-seamer and a cutter — to keep hitters off balance. Despite the lack of overpowering stuff, he has 23 strikeouts in 23 1-3 innings.

“All his stuff has really picked up,” Weiss said. “He’s throwing the ball really well.”

Elder doesn’t want to get too far ahead of himself. Better than almost anyone, he knows how quickly things can change. This time, he wants to show a bit of staying power.

“I’ve had a lot of good runs and I’ve had a lot bad runs,” Elder said. “More than anything, I’m just trying to treat it like one day at a time. Just keep my stuff crisp, keep my work right, and whatever happens that day is what happens.”

Brent Headrick continues to be ‘consistent’ Yankees rubber arm early in season

New York Yankees pitcher Brent Headrick (47) throws a pitch during the 8th inning when the New York Yankees played the Los Angeles Angels Wednesday, April 15, 2026 at Yankee Stadium.
New York Yankees pitcher Brent Headrick (47) throws a pitch during the 8th inning when the New York Yankees played the Los Angeles Angels Wednesday, April 15, 2026 at Yankee Stadium.

Right now, the pace is unsustainable. Incomprehensible, even, when considering the scope of a full season.

Brent Headrick, one of the left-handed relievers in the Yankees’ bullpen, has already pitched in 12 of their first 18 games to start the season, putting him on pace to tie the MLB record of 108 that the Dodgers’ Mike Marshall set in 1974. That won’t happen.

Access the Yankees beat like never before

Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Greg Joyce about the inside buzz on the Yankees.

Try it free

The Yankees’ early schedule, with days off worked in, helped space Headrick’s availability, but the 28-year-old has also flashed durability that he thinks will be replicable for the games he ends up pitching in — even with it being his first full season as a true one-inning reliever.

He sits first in the majors in appearances by a reliever and entered play Wednesday eighth in strikeouts (12), and after a spring training where Headrick received plenty of praise from manager Aaron Boone, he has delivered promising early returns.

“You’re not gonna be 100 percent every night, but just being the best version of yourself each night that you can,” Headrick told The Post before the Yankees’ 5-4 win over the Angels, where Headrick tossed a scoreless eighth and lowered his ERA to 1.74. “We prepared for this. We prepared to pitch one inning, like I said, multiple days a week and things like that — and one-plus even if I need to. So I think we’re ready for it.”

Headrick doesn’t have a goal for how many games he wants to pitch this season.

Brent Headrick throws a pitch during the eighth inning of the Yankees’ 5-4 comeback win over the the Angels on April 15, 2026 at the Stadium Robert Sabo for NY Post

He threw 108 ¹/₃ innings as a starter in 2022, so innings wouldn’t be a concern — but rather an ability to bounce back health-wise from one outing to the next.

Headrick struggled a bit with that last year when shifting from the rotation to the bullpen, Boone said, but he already noticed an improvement. 

His season opened with eight consecutive scoreless appearances across seven innings, and after allowing runs during his next two cameos, Headrick rebounded with a scoreless frame Tuesday.

Headrick has now thrown four back-to-backs during the first three weeks of the season, too.



“Brent’s been excellent,” Boone said. “He’s been one of those guys that kind of has grabbed a key role down there and been real consistent.” 

In a Yankees bullpen still filled with plenty of questions, Headrick has a chance to keep carving out a significant role. He’ll need to avoid fatigue with the mounting workload. He’ll need to navigate any growing pains that inevitably pop up when hitters adjust to his two-seam fastball — which he’s throwing more to lefties and righties this year, he said — and his four-seam fastball, while mixing in his slider and his new splitter. 

Brent Headrick throws a pitch during the eighth inning of the Yankees’ comeback win over the Angels. Robert Sabo for NY Post

But after the first chunk of the season, he already has a foundation to work with — even if it’s an unfeasible pace for the marathon ahead. 

“It’s a long season,” Headrick said. “I just try to stay as neutral as I can with everything, and just try to go out there and do my job and execute. Because I know that when I’m at my best, I can do that.”

White Sox spoil back-to-back prospect debuts, lose another to Rays

Sam Antonacci went 1-for-3 with a walk and run scored in his major league debut. | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

Tonight’s game felt almost like déjà vu from Tuesday. The Rays (10-7) once again put up eight runs while a prominent Chicago prospect made their major league debut, dealing the White Sox (6-12) back-to-back losses, 8-3.

Righthander Sean Burke was doing all right through four innings despite giving up a solo shot to Junior Caminero in the third, but the righthander had zero run support and started to fall apart in the fifth. Two hits in a row from Tampa Bay to begin the fifth kick-started their offense, with Caminero driving in his second run on an RBI ground out and Jonathan Aranda following that up with an RBI double to make it 3-0, Rays.

Attempting to come out for one final inning, Burke was unable to get it done and conceded a fourth run to Tampa on a leadoff home run from Jake Fraley to start the sixth. Burke was able to work around Cedric Mullins, but Richie Palacios’ base hit marked the end of the road. Until tonight, Sean hadn’t surrendered a single home run this year, and doing so ballooned his 3.60 ERA up to 4.43. Burke clearly didn’t have his A-game tonight, and his 17% CSW% (called strike plus whiff rate) was much lower than his previous two outings (averaging around 30%).

Notably, Burke’s fastball CSW% was only at 15% tonight, whereas in his previous start his fastball drew 13 called strikes + whiffs (35% CSW%), and a 44% CSW% from his April 3 outing. Burke ultimately allowed four runs on seven hits, and walked one more batter (three) than he struck out (two). At the very least, his average four-seam velocity was right in line with his 94 mph average, so hopefully it was just one of those days.

In for Sean, but not faring much better, was lefthander Tyler Gilbert, who was recalled from Triple-A Charlotte earlier today as Brandon Eisert was shuttled back down. This was Gilbert’s second appearance with the MLB squad this season, and just like Burke he surrendered four runs on two hits: a Yandi Díaz RBI double and a pinch-hit, three-run blast from Jonny DeLuca as a part of the Rays’ four-run seventh inning that made it 8-0.

It only took eight innings for a White Sox pitcher to make it through a frame unscathed — thank you, Bryan Hudson. Appearing in back-to-back games, Hudson put together a second consecutive clean inning tonight.

You’ll notice that I’ve only talked about pitching thus far, and that’s because up until the bottom of the ninth, there wasn’t much life coming from the South Side bats. Righthander Cole Sulser opened the game for the Rays and shut the Sox down for two innings before our old pal Jesse Scholtens took over for the next five. Scholtens ended up with the win in his one-hit outing against his former team, walking two and striking out three.

The Good Guys had posted just five hits and were facing an eight-run deficit through eight stanzas, and ended up waving the white flag given the starting catcher ended up pitching the last inning. Reese McGuire navigated a 1-2-3 inning, joining Hudson as the only other effective pitcher the White Sox used tonight, which is honestly kind of sad.

One of the (very few) positive offensive notes was that Sam Antonacci got a hit in his first major league at-bat — welcome to the show, Sam.

Antonacci also reached base a second time to start the ninth and ended up scoring for the first time as a White Sox. Rays reliever Ian Seymour began the ninth by walking both him and Tanner Murray. Derek Hill drove a base hit out to left to load the bases up for the Good Guys with nobody out; it finally seemed like they were getting something going, far too late. Antonacci crossed the plate on a wild pitch, which felt fitting. McGuire, the new star White Sox pitcher, yanked a single to drive in their second run of the game, 8-2.

Luisangel Acuña came up in another clutch situation and actually put up a decent at-bat, fouling off a few pitches and working a full count before grounding into a double play. Whomp whomp. A third run did score on the play, but going from zero to two outs with one pitch killed the momentum, and Andrew Benintendi struck out on three straight pitches to end the game.

Looking at the box score, the White Sox were outhit just 9-7, and going 2-for-6 with runners in scoring position doesn’t seem too bad. But they had just five hits and couldn’t convert a single run through eight frames, also leaving seven on base. On top of that, they struck out six times as a team, with four of them coming from Colson Montgomery in the cleanup spot — woof.

It was a rough showing from the Good Guys these last two games, given the mental gaffes, poor defense and lack of offensive production. Regardless of how the pitching does, they aren’t going to be able to win games without scoring runs. As Ozzie Guillén pointed out in the postgame show, the White Sox have seven players batting below .200, which is borderline horrific.

It would also be really nice if they started scoring runs earlier in the game rather than waiting until the very last minute to start stringing some hits together. The series finale will take place Thursday at 1:10 p.m., with lefthander Anthony Kay on the mound. Let’s hope the offense can wake up before then.


Former Astros prospect Jon Kemmer, 35, dead in rollover car crash

_Comp_

Jon Kemmer, a former minor leaguer who played with the Astros, Twins and Dodgers, died over the weekend after getting into a rollover crash while returning home from coaching a youth baseball tournament, according to multiple reports.

He was 35.

Explore Jefferson, citing the Galveston County Medical Examiner’s Office in Texas, reported that Kemmer, while coming back from coaching the 14U HTX Battle Bucks at a tournament in Houston, was traveling on Farm to Market Road 2004 when his car left the road, struck an electrical pole and rolled over at about 6:09 p.m. local time.

He died on the scene.

Jon Kemmer of the Astros runs to first base after hitting the ball against the Cardinals in the fourth inning during a spring training game at Roger Dean Stadium on March 13, 2017 in Jupiter, Fla. Getty Images

“We are deeply saddened to hear of the tragic passing of Jon Kemmer over the weekend,” the Astros said in a statement Wednesday, according to Chron.com. “Jon was drafted by the Astros in 2013 and developed into one of the organization’s most productive players, advancing to the Triple A level and also appearing in several Spring Training games. Our thoughts and prayers are with Jon’s family and friends during this very difficult time.”

A standout player at Clarion High School in Pennsylvania, Kemmer, primarily an outfielder, played college baseball at Allegany College of Maryland, Clarion University and Brewton-Parker College before getting selected in the 21st round of the 2013 MLB Draft by the Astros.

He spent the first four years of his career with the Astros organization, making it all the way to Triple-A.

His 2015 season with Double-A Corpus Christi proved to be his most fruitful, as he received multiple honors, including winning Texas League Player of the Month for August and getting named a postseason All-Star.

Kemmer was traded to the Twins in 2018 and later spent time in the Dodgers organization in 2019, the same year he also played in the Mexican League.

Jon Kemmer of the Houston Astros poses for a portrait at The Ballpark of the Palm Beaches on February 21, 2018 in West Palm Beach, Florida. Getty Images

He later played in the Dominican Winter League during the 2020-21 campaign.

He finished his minor league career with 116 home runs and a .283/.366/.509 slash line.

Kemmer is survived by his wife, Kourtney, and their two children, according to an online obituary.

A celebration of life is slated to be held in Clarion in late May.










Braves News: Luke Williams era ends, Martin Perez, more

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 11: Martín Pérez #33 and Jonah Heim #20 of the Atlanta Braves converse in the second inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Truist Park on April 11, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Braves are cruising to start this season, with the second best record in MLB and the best run differential (pending the Dodgers game tonight). While there’s been some good fortune on the pitching side, there has also been some uncharacteristic underperformance from Chris Sale and some bad luck from a few of Atlanta’s bats. Dominic Smith is unlikely to be Aaron Judge all year, but on the whole this feels in the realm of sustainable, especially with reinforcements coming over the coming weeks and months. It would be especially useful if a few of Schwellenbach, Smith-Shawver, and Waldrep could come up and be productive, perhaps giving the team and opportunity to bump Grant Holmes and/or Reynaldo Lopez into an impact reliever spot. For now though, let’s just enjoy the team being in a good spot 10% of the way into the season, a stark contrast from last year.

Braves News

Martin Perez is back and expected to start Friday’s game, after being waived, electing free agency, and ultimately re-signing with Atlanta.

Luke Williams elected free agency after being DFA’d, but of course he could always sign back in Atlanta like Perez did.

We took a minute to appreciate what Dominic Smith has produced for Atlanta so far this season.

The Braves collected another series win, this one against the Marlins in a convincing 6-3 game behind Bryce Elder and some solid offense.

MLB News

Nick Pivetta will be sidelined for significant time with a flexor strain for the Padres.

Jorge Soler’s suspension for his brawl with Reynaldo Lopez was reduced to 4 games from 7, 1 fewer than Lopez got.

Young shortstop Kevin McGonigle signed an 8 year, $150 million extension with the Tigers.

The MLBPA continues to shake up its upper level management in the 11th hour of this CBA, as negotiations are set to begin in earnest on the new CBA.

Dodgers on Deck: Friday, April 17 at Rockies

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 04: Tyler Glasnow #31 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on April 04, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After an off day Thursday, the Dodgers open a four-game weekend wraparound against the Colorado Rockies starting Friday night at Coors Field in Denver.

Tyler Glasnow takes the ball in the series opener on Friday. Right-hander Tomoyuki Sugano will be on the mound for Colorado.

Friday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers at Rockies
  • Ballpark: Coors Field, Denver
  • Time: 5:40 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Jared Young to undergo left knee surgery, miss 6-8 weeks in Mets depth crusher

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Jared Young bunts for a hit during the Mets' loss to the A's on April 10, 2026 at Citi Field

Access the Mets beat like never before

Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Mike Puma about the inside buzz on the Mets.

Try it free

LOS ANGELES — Mets outfield depth has turned shallow since the latter part of spring training.

Jared Young is the latest casualty.

Young was placed on the injured list Wednesday with a meniscus tear in his left knee, becoming the third Mets outfielder sidelined by injury. Young is scheduled to undergo surgery Thursday, with a return to play set for six to eight weeks.

Juan Soto is on the IL with a right calf strain, and Mike Tauchman underwent surgery for a meniscus tear in spring training. Tauchman’s injury created the opening for Young to stick with the team.

Jared Young bunts for a hit during the Mets’ loss to the A’s on April 10, 2026 at Citi Field. Robert Sabo for New York Post

The Mets recalled MJ Melendez from Triple-A Syracuse to fill Young’s spot. Melendez went 2-for-4 with an RBI double in the Mets’ 8-2 blowout loss to the Dodgers on Wednesday night.

Young, who also saw action at first base, owned a .350/.391/.450 slash line in 23 plate appearances.

He also provided a left-handed bat off the bench.

“There not only was going to be playing time for him, but he was giving us some good at-bats from the left side,” manager Carlos Mendoza said before the Mets faced the Dodgers on Wednesday night. “It’s a big blow, but guys will step up.”

Melendez signed with the team at the start of spring training, but was optioned to Syracuse late in camp.

The Mets later signed veteran outfielder Tommy Pham to a minor league contract and selected him to the major league roster Monday.


Jorge Polanco was absent from the starting lineup and could face an IL stint as soon as Friday, according to Mendoza, as he deals with bursitis in his right Achilles.

With Polanco sidelined, Melendez was inserted as the DH with Pham in left field.




Soto continued a running progression and took at-bats against minor league pitching at Citi Field.

The goal, according to Mendoza, is to get Soto back in the lineup during the next homestand. Soto last played for the Mets on April 3.


Luis García was released by the Mets. The veteran reliever was designated for assignment by the club last weekend.


Huascar Brazobán had not allowed an earned run over 11 multi-inning appearances since last season entering Wednesday.

The right-handed reliever had not allowed a run over 8 ¹/₃ innings this season, tying him for fifth in scoreless streaks among MLB relievers.


The Mets’ offensive stats were ugly even before they suffered their eighth consecutive loss.

During their previous seven losses as play began Wednesday, the Mets had a .178/.211/.258 slash line from their lineup.

Opponents outscored the Mets 36-10 in those seven games. Six of the Mets’ runs during that stretch were scored in one game, against the Athletics on Saturday at Citi Field.

Mariners Game #19: Game Thread II

Apr 15, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; Seattle Mariners designated hitter Dominic Canzone hits an RBI double during the second inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. All MLB players are wearing number 42 today to honor Jackie Robinson. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images | Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

More game thread!

Reds, Sal Stewart smash Giants in 8-3 victory

CINCINNATI, OHIO - APRIL 15: Sal Stewart #27 of the Cincinnati Reds is congratulated by Elly de la Cruz #44 and Matt McLain #9 after hitting a three-run home run during the second inning of the game against the San Francisco Giants at Great American Ball Park on April 15, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. All players are wearing the number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson Day. (Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The older you get, the easier it is to think four, five years ago wasn’t ancient history. I still have the same phone, same laptop from 2022, for instance – the same desk chair, car, house, backpack. But watching Wednesday evening’s contest in Great American Ball Park between the Cincinnati Reds and San Francisco Giants was enough to make one realize just how long ago the promise of the early 2020s Reds really was.

Tyler Mahle, who was dealt during the 2022 teardown to Minnesota for the likes of Spencer Steer and Christian Encarnacion-Strand, was back on the mound in GABP to face the Reds. He was doing so as a Giant after he’d been a Twin and Texas Ranger in between, a nomadic post-Reds trip that shows just how fickle the business of baseball can be once injuries begin to tear away at your fabric.

Mahle was the vet in this one, the one whose velocity is down and pitch-mix is new as he works to figure out how to pitch once rearing back for a couple extra miles per hour isn’t in the cards any more. Sharing the mound with him was Rhett Lowder, who was a 19 year old pitching for the Strasburg Express in the Valley League of collegiate summer ball during the same 2021 season when Mahle posted career-bests in bWAR (4.9) and IP (180.0) with the Reds.

And it was Lowder who was in command.

Cincinnati’s righty exited after going 6.2 IP, his longest outing yet in the big leagues. He’d allowed 2 ER while on the bump, though Brock Burke did allow one inherited run to score once taking over in the 7th. It was an effective, efficient 90 pitch outing for Rhett, who limited hard contact for the most part and threw all of his pitches all over the strike zone.

The same could not be said for Mahle, however. He spiked a handful of balls in the dirt, walked 5 batters in his 4.0 laborious IP, and left enough pitches over the heart of the plate for the Reds to not just homer four times off him, but post some tape measure shots in the process.

Neither of the 3-run blasts by Sal Stewart were tape measure, truly, as both only flew into the first few rows of GABP’s small confines. Still, they were lasers off the bat on pitches not exactly right down the pipe, both coming on swings where Stewart’s elite combination of hand-eye coordination and reaction time allows him to put his own unique swing on each pitcher’s pitch and still find ways to barrel them. Both were also to right-center, in case anyone’s worried whether or not he’s a step-in-the-bucket rookie who’s just thriving on pulling the ball.

(He’s tonight’s Joe Nuxhall Memorial Honorary Star of the Game, by the way. He was a senior in high school down in Florida during Mahle’s brilliant 2021.)

Similarly, Eugenio Suarez (3 for 4, HR, R, RBI) poked a slider the other way for a homer on a pitch Mahle left up, a good piece of hitting as opposed to just running into one that missed in a hot zone.

Elly De La Cruz, though, hit the snot out of one. He launched a 442 foot homer to straightaway CF off Mahle, a true tape measure shot from the left-side of the plate as he reminded us that, despite recent success hitting righty, it’s him hittin’ lefty that’s the show-stopper.

All told, it was a brilliant night of baseball for the Reds, who won 8-3 and moved to 11-7 on the season. They claimed the series win over San Francisco, as that ends tomorrow at 12:40 PM ET with Chase Burns on the mound. They also made the iffy-hamstring issue that closer Emilio Pagan is dealing with a moot point for a night, as their offense finally kicked it into gear enough to make needing a closer not really a thing.