May 16, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Boston Red Sox pitcher Payton Tolle (70) celebrates after a victory over the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images
These teams honestly could be twins this seasons…almost identical records, not great offenses, stuck in weird places. Still, these Minnesota Twins shouldn’t be taken lightly, as the funniest man on the team takes the mound for the Sox tonight! Welcome to the long weekend for Memorial Day!
Kimbrel did not make the Opening Day roster, but the right-hander had been with the team for more than a month since he got called up on April 11.
In 14 appearances for New York, Kimbrel pitched to a 6.00 ERA (1.47 WHIP), but aside from two poor outings against the Minnesota Twins and Colorado Rockies in which he allowed three runs and four runs, respectively, Kimbrel pitched well for the Mets. In fact, the 37-year-old didn't allow an earned run in 10 of his 14 appearances, often pitching in the middle to later innings of close games.
Kimbrel's last outing on Wednesday against the Washington Nationals was the longest of his Hall of Fame career when he pitched 2.2 innings to help save New York's overworked bullpen. Unfortunately for Kimbrel, he faltered in that final inning and gave up a two-run home run that put Washington out of reach for good in that game.
Still, manager Carlos Mendoza has nothing but respect for the former closer for his willingness to pitch in any role that was asked of him this season.
"Super tough," Mendoza said when asked how hard it was to break the news to Kimbrel. "But that’s what makes him who he is. Not only what he’s been able to do on the field, but off the field – the person, the human. He understood, he was very professional, but it wasn’t an easy one for me and David [Stearns] when we talked to him last night.
"But again, such a pro. We appreciate [him], nothing but respect, wishing him the best. [We'll] see what happens here as he goes through waivers and we’ll go from there, but it wasn’t an easy one there."
Mendoza didn't close the door on the possibility of Kimbrel coming back to New York and is even hoping he clears waivers so he can maintain in the organization. However, the skipper is aware of the very real possibility that that may not happen, given Kimbrel's experience and track record.
"We like being selfish here, we like to keep him around, but also understanding that there might be some options for him out there, especially with the way he’s been throwing the ball as of late," Mendoza said. "What he was able to do for us the other day, going three ups -- something that he’s never done throughout his career -- and he felt good, bounced back well."
Once an elite closer for the Atlanta Braves and Boston Red Sox, with spurts for the San Diego Padres, Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers, Philadelphia Phillies, Baltimore Orioles and Houston Astros, Kimbrel has been in the league for 17 seasons and owns a 2.65 ERA with 440 saves.
He was able to impart his knowledge and wisdom to his teammates in New York, starting all the way in the spring when the Mets signed him to a minor league deal with an invite to spring training.
"Just how he goes about his business, understanding situations, his ability to pose just that mentality overall," Mendoza said. "From the very first day in spring training, he had a huge impact on the guys here."
Burst into Tong
Now that Tong is back in the majors, the question is how the Mets will utilize their young pitcher.
The answer, at least for now, appears to be out of the bullpen.
"He’s, as of right now, part of the bullpen," Mendoza said. "Could be a long reliever, depends on how the game goes, but yeah, for today, tomorrow he’s part of the bullpen."
Tong will likely see game action on Friday when New York begins a three-game series with the Miami Marlins because Tobias Myers is getting the start (in what was normally Clay Holmes' spot in the rotation), but is capped at around 35-40 pitches.
Speaking of Myers, who has been excellent for the Mets (3.41 ERA) in various roles out of the bullpen this season, the right-hander will not be stretched out into a full-time starter -- something he has experience doing in his career.
"I don’t think this is gonna be one where we try to stretch him out," Mendoza said. "He’s been huge for us in the bullpen and he’ll continue to be a big part back there. So just happen to be today that we’re giving him the start, but I don’t anticipate trying to stretch him out."
PITTSBURGH, PA - MAY 16: Bubba Chandler (36) of the Pittsburgh Pirates delivers a pitch during an MLB game against the Philadelphia Phillies on May 16, 2026 at PNC Park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Pitching Matchup: Bubba Chandler (1-5, 5.14 ERA) vs. Kevin Gausman (3-3, 3.45 ERA)
The Pittsburgh Pirates are on the road today against the Toronto Blue Jays looking to grab a win.
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Ahead of Friday night's series opener against the AL East division-leading Tampa Bay Rays, Yankees manager Aaron Boone fielded questions from the press on a variety of hot topics.
Gerrit Cole's return
Boone began his news conference talking about Gerrit Cole, who will return to the mound for tonight's game against the Tampa Bay Rays for the first time in 569 days.
"We're all really excited to get our ace back...he's ready to perform at a high level...get outs at a high rate."
The logjam at shortstop
With the reinstatement of Jose Caballero to the starting lineup tonight, Boone said he is "excited to get [Caballero] back in there at shortstop today to hopefully provide that spark."
He then broke down his strategy in terms of managing both surging shortstops - the aforementioned Caballero and Anthony Volpe - at his disposal moving forward.
"I've talked to both guys...both guys are going to play...[Caballero's] versatility comes into play," Boone said. "These things have a way of working themselves out. We have two players that we feel can play vital roles in us winning games."
However, Boone did acknowledge "it's not going to be the perfect scenario every single day."
"On the days [Volpe] is not playing, I'll have him working a little bit at second base... he has played some second base in the past, at spring training."
Lineup decisions for Bellinger, Judge, and Jones
Looking past the three-game home stand against Tampa Bay, Boone also expressed a desire to reduce the workload of star outfielders Cody Bellinger and Aaron Judge.
"We've got some lefties coming up in Kansas City... I want to give Bellinger a DH day at some point," Boone said. "I want to give Judge a day off at some point."
On Judge's recent struggles at the plate, Boone dismissed any concerns for the Yankees captain. He stated that during these slumps, he is always impressed by Judge's "emotional consistency...it's a grind, even for the great ones...he's as good as I've ever seen."
Boone also reflected on the team's decision to send Spencer Jones back down to Triple-A, explaining that "it was a really tough decision... it was a good experience for [Jones], even though he didn't get a lot of results, I feel like he held his own really well... was having some good at-bats."
Rehab updates for Dominguez and Stanton
Finally, the news conference ended with some brief updates from the manager on the rehab status of Jasson Dominguez and Giancarlo Stanton.
Boone expects to see Dominguez back in the fold "by the time we're at the back end of the [upcoming road trip, meaning in Sacramento against the Athletics] or at home [starting Tuesday, June 2 against Cleveland]... that's the hope, and that's how he's trending."
Meanwhile, in regard to Stanton's status, Boone simply stated that "[Stanton] is getting an exam again early next week...we'll go from there."
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 20: Randy Vasquez #98 of the San Diego Padres pitches against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the first inning at Petco Park on May 20, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images
This was a tough series for the San Diego Padres. Not because their offense couldn’t put together runs in the finale. Not just because it was against the rival Los Angeles Dodgers. It was tough for all those reasons and more. But what made it tough was how demoralizing it felt.
The Friars seemed to lose the fight that has marked the beginning of this season. They’ll need to find it again to claw back to first in the National League West. Wednesday night’s loss brought the Padres a game and a half back from first.
They’ll face a young Athletics offense that has struggled as of late. A good performance this weekend against the AL West club would be incredibly encouraging for the Friars.
Taking the mound
Jeffrey Springs (ATH) v. Walker Buehler (SD)
The lefty Springs has had a solid 2026 with the A’s, pitching to a modest 3.93 ERA across 55 innings. His last few games have been serviceable, surrendering seven runs across a combined 16 1/3 innings.
His underlying statistics suggest that he’s been the subject of some bad luck, though not much. His 3.57 xERA is half a run less than his actual ERA. That suggests some luck with batted balls, but not enough to particularly matter.
Buehler was actually pretty great in his last start. He pitched five innings and allowed two runs to the Seattle Mariners. In doing so, Buehler lowered his ERA to 5.01 and his ERA over his last seven games has been an even-lower 4.15 mark.
Much of his success came from hitting his stride in his knuckle curve. That pitch has been his most inconsistent, but when it’s working there’s no better option for the righty. Buehler will have to pitch to keep his spot on the roster with Germán Márquez continuing to work his way back from injury.
Batter up!
The Friars’ offense continued to slump this week against L.A., while the contributors managed to show up a bit. Miguel Andujar homered twice in what’s been a productive week. But Gavin Sheets went cold after putting up a .625 batting average last week. San Diego will need those guys to get it going again this weekend.
Fernando Tatis Jr., 2B
Miguel Andujar, DH
Gavin Sheets, 1B
Manny Machado, 3B
Xander Bogaerts, SS
Ramón Laureano, LF
Nick Castellanos, RF
Bryce Johnson, CF
Rodolfo Durán, C
Tatis has become the everyday second baseman without any real options outside of Sung-Mun Song to play the position. He’s been solid in his return to the infield, so Tatis seems to be it for now.
With Jackson Merrill exiting the game on Wednesday after tweaking his back, it seems likely the Padres’ outfield will look slightly different in the series opener today. Laureano has played some center and swings a much better bat than bench outfielder Johnson but the Friars have opted to go with the latter to give Merrill a day off.
Relief corps
With the Friars down, 3-0, for most of the game, the club used their low-leverage relievers to get through the final 4 2/3 innings. Wandy Peralta covered 1 2/3 innings, Yuki Matsui 1 1/3 and Ron Marinaccio 1 2/3 innings. The only blemish came in Marinaccio surrendering a home run to Teoscar Hernández.
But, apart from that, the taxed bullpen got a day to rest with the off day on Thursday. That should mean that most, if not all, of the relievers are available. But the primary options will be Jason Adam, Jeremiah Estrada, Mason Miller, Adrian Morejon and Bradgley Rodriguez.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - MAY 20: Christian Vazquez #2 of the Houston Astros hits an RBI single against the Minnesota Twins in the second inning at Target Field on May 20, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Spencer Arrighetti continued to put up zeros and battery mate Christian Vazquez drove in a pair as the Houston Astros (21-31) slipped past the Chicago Cubs (29-22) 4-2 at Wrigley Field.
Arrighetti did not get deep in this game, but he did throw 5 innings of shutout ball in earning his 6th win in 7 starts this year. He lowered his ERA to 1.32. He allowed 2 hits, 4 walks and struck out 5. He also hit 2 batters, with one of them being Alex Bregman.
Christian Vazquez got things started with a solo HR in the 3rd off Cubs starter Jameson Taillon (L, 2-4). Vazquez also had an RBI single in the 4th, which followed an RBI groundout by Zach Cole to give the Astros a 3-0 lead.
Brice Matthews laced an RBI single in the 5th for the Astros fourth run. The Astros would get 4 earned runs off Taillon today in 4.2 IP, on 8 hits and a walk. Taillon struck out 5.
The Cubs made it interesting in the 6th when Pete Crow-Armstrong drove a 2-run homer to right off Steven Okert. The one-out blast chased Okert from the game in favor of Enyel de los Santos, who gave the Astros 5 clean outs to get them to the eighth.
Bryan Abreu came on in the 8th, and got the first 2 outs before getting into trouble. He hit Carson Kelly and then walked Pete Crow-Armstrong, which led to manager Joe Espada summoning Bryan King.
Abreu’s fastball velocity continues to be well below his norms from past seasons, and he used it sparingly. His fastballs registered 92.4 MPH, 93 MPH, 92.7 MPH, 94.6 MPH. He threw 14 pitches, including 10 sliders. He only threw 6 pitches for strikes.
King escaped the inning, working around an error by SS Jeremy Pena, without allowing a run to score. He then pitched a 1-2-3 9th for his 5th save.
The Astros look to claim the series tomorrow with RHP Kai-Wei Teng (2-3, 2.61) vs. the Cubs RHP Colin Rea (4-2, 4.98). Game time 1:20 pm.
Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Logan Henderson throws during the first inning of their game against the New York Yankees Sunday, May 10, 2026 at American Family Field in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. | Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
The Brewers are coming off quite a high, as earlier this week they swept their biggest division rival, the Cubs, and moved back into first place in the NL Central. This weekend, they’ll look to keep the momentum going as they face off with the NL West-leading Dodgers in a rematch of last year’s National League Championship Series. (Check out Harrison’s series preview here.) In game one of this three-game series, the Brewers will send Logan Henderson to the mound to face off with lefty Justin Wrobleski.
Henderson is having another good season in 2026 after he impressed in five major league starts in 2025. He’s been especially good since rejoining the Brewers’ rotation in May. After a spot start in early April didn’t go especially well, Henderson went back to the minors, but since returning on May 3, he’s got a 2.81 ERA in three starts (16 innings) and an eye-catching 20:2 strikeout-to-walk ratio. In his most recent outing, Henderson picked up a win and went five innings, allowed one run on six hits while striking out seven and walking one.
Wrobleski is having a sort of bizarre season. The results are good: he’s 6-1 with a 2.49 ERA. But Wrobleski is striking out batters at an alarmingly low clip; with 27 strikeouts in 50 2/3 innings, he’s averaging just 4.8 strikeouts per nine innings, a number that would be good if it were the 1930s. The major league evidence we have suggests that Wrobleski isn’t much of a strikeout pitcher as a starter — in 2024, when six of his eight appearances were starts, he averaged 6.4 strikeouts per nine. What’s a bit confusing about it, though, is that when he was mostly relieving in 2025, he averaged a solid 10.3 K/9. In any case, don’t expect many strikeouts tonight, as the Brewers are one of the better teams at not striking out regardless of who they’re facing. Wrobleski also recently had one of the stranger outings I can think of in recent times: on May 10, he threw 8 2/3 innings, but in a game in which he allowed seven runs, all earned. He threw only 100 pitches, but it’s still not something you see every day.
The big news out of Milwaukee this evening: The Brewers are using a lineup they’ve used already this season, which ends a streak of 47 consecutive unique lineups to start the year. Pat Murphy, for what it’s worth, claims he was unaware:
For the first time this season Pat Murphy is utilizing a repeat lineup, snapping a run of 47 different alignments.
Tonight’s lineup is same as Monday’s at Wrigley Field.
“The streak is over,” Murphy said. “The funny thing is, I had no idea.”
The lineup is the same as it was on Monday, and it worked then: that’s the game in which the Brewers put eight runs on Shota Imanaga and won 9-3. This lineup includes Christian Yelich at DH, an outfield of Jake Bauers, Jackson Chourio, and Sal Frelick and an infield that goes Luis Rengifo, Joey Ortiz, Brice Turang, and Andrew Vaughn from left to right. William Contreras is behind the plate. The Dodgers, as they tend to do these days, boast at least three and maybe four Hall of Famers at the top of their lineup with Shohei Ohtani followed by Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, and Kyle Tucker. The back of their lineup includes Andy Pages, Max Muncy, Teoscar Hernández, Dalton Rushing, and Hyeseong Kim.
A brief note of good news from the minors: Luis Peña starts a rehab assignment in Arizona today.
Luis Peña begins a rehab assignment tonight with ACL Brewers.
May 20, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies infielder Alec Bohm (28) hits a home run against the Cincinnati Reds in the sixth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images | Kyle Ross-Imagn Images
His statement game in San Diego this week made sure of that.
On the latest episode of the Dodgers Post podcast, that’s what California Post baseball writers Dylan Hernandez and Jack Harris discuss.
They break down Ohtani’s ever-evolving usage, how he seems to feel about it, and why Wednesday’s game –– in which he hit a leadoff home run and pitched five scoreless innings –– was so important at this stage of the season.
They also review the Dodgers’ overall play during their series win over the Padres, which put the club back in first place in the standings.
After a slow start to the season, Shohei Ohtani is back as a two-way star after a dominating week at the plate and on the mound.AP Photo/Gregory Bull Andy Pages’s sacrifice fly following an incredible nine-pitch at-bat against Padres star Mason Miller got the Dodgers the win on Tuesday night.AP Photo/Gregory Bull
And as always, they finish with predictions for this upcoming week, as the Dodgers head to Milwaukee for a three-game series against the Brewers.
All that and more on this latest edition of Dodgers Post.
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Anthony Volpe was out of the lineup for the Yankees' game against the Blue Jays on Friday.
José Caballero is healthy again, and as Aaron Boone indicated when he first went down with a fractured right middle finger, Caballero remained the starting shortstop Friday against the Rays in The Bronx — with Anthony Volpe still on the roster, but not in the lineup.
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How the Yankees plan to utilize Volpe remains to be seen, since he didn’t play any position besides shortstop in his minor league rehab assignment nor after he was optioned to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre before he got the call to the majors to replace the injured Caballero.
Volpe had some encouraging games at the plate and defensively — as well as on the bases — but he entered Friday hitless in his last eight plate appearances with three strikeouts and botched a double play ball at short in Thursday’s loss to Toronto.
Caballero had impressed through his first 40 games with all aspects of his play.
Anthony Volpe reacts after striking out during the Yankees’ May 21 loss. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post
The Yankees expected him to be a pest on the bases and to hold his own on offense and at short before Volpe returned from offseason surgery on his left shoulder and reclaimed the starting shortstop job — with Caballero reverting back to the super-utility role he was acquired last year from Tampa Bay to play — but Caballero instead provided above average defense and was a spark in the lineup on an everyday basis.
All that led Boone to say, when Caballero went on the IL, that he would likely get his job back upon his return to health.
José Caballero makes a throw during the Yankees’ May 10 game. Getty Images
“He’s played as well as anyone out there,’’ Boone said at the time. “That would be my expectation.”
MIAMI, FLORIDA - MAY 19: Ronald Acuña Jr #13 of the Atlanta Braves high fives teammates after scoring during the eighth inning against the Miami Marlins at loanDepot park on May 19, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images) | Getty Images
In a matchup of the top two offenses so far in MLB this season, the Atlanta Braves will be taking on the Washington Nationals. The Nationals have continued their strong offensive showing leading MLB in runs and doubles while being fourth in OPS.
The Braves are right behind them scoring the second most runs while being second in OPS trailing the Dodgers by .002. The Braves are also second in HRs, first in hits, and first in slugging percentage.
What will be interesting in the game today is the Braves have Elder pitching, who has a 2.01 ERA but the Nationals were originally supposed to have Miles Mikolas pitching with a terrible 6.91 ERA. Mikolas has the fourth worst ERA of any pitcher with at least 40.0 innings pitched, while Elder is in the top ten best. However there was a change and Richard Lovelady will be getting the start with his much better 3.61 ERA in 20.2 IP.
It is a bit unfortunate for the Braves that the pitching change happened because Michael Harris has been great in his eleven at-bats against Mikolas with a .455 average and 1.000 OPS. Matt Olson has two HRs and a 1.067 OPS in fifteen at-bats, and Austin Riley has a .278 average and .816 OPS in eighteen at-bats. It is a much different story with Lovelady because no one has faced him in more than two at-bats.
Before the lineup was dropped, the biggest question was whether Ronald Acuña would be in the lineup. He apparently had a bone bruise yesterday, but wanted to start tonight.
Postgame, Walt Weiss says bone bruise for Acuña who is already asking to start Friday’s game at Truist https://t.co/nqq2WYxY73
With who the Braves are facing tonight, and Acuña’s history of struggling against Mikolas, it would not be a shock if the Braves decided to rest him for a game.
Turns out Ronald Acuña was good enough to start and will lead off and play RF.
As for the Nationals and their hot offense, their best players will be in the lineup for them tonight with James Wood leading off and C.J. Abrams hitting cleanup.
Garcia has had fourteen at-bats against Elder and has been successful with a .357 average and .971 OPS. Abrams leads the team with sixteen at-bats and has a .912 OPS against Elder.
NEW YORK, NY - MAY 18: Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 of the New York Yankees high fives teammates after hitting a two-run home run during the game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on May 18, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Good afternoon everyone, it’s time to dive back into the mailbag and answer some of your questions. Remember to send in your questions for our weekly call by e-mail to pinstripealleyblog [at] gmail [dot] com.
OLDY MOLDY asks:When was the last time a Yankees team carried one or more regular players batting under .200 into the All-Star break?
You don’t actually have to go too far back, as I believe Joey Gallo in the 2022 season would be the last time the Yankees had a regular starter below the Mendoza line at the All-Star break, though they had many close calls in the years since. Just last year the team had both Austin Wells and Anthony Volpe in danger of the feat batting in the .210s, and they also had the black hole situation at third base where a rotation of guys were hitting rather poorly there — Oswald Peraza was hitting below .200, but he was a sharing the starting job with the corpse of DJ LeMahieu who managed to pull a decent .266 mark off.
That kind of illustrates the flaw in worrying too much about batting average though — we all know LeMahieu was a net negative for the Yankees in 2025, but by batting average he was tied for fifth-best on the team with a guy in José Caballero who didn’t join the roster until LeMahieu had already been released. It’s far from a great indicator of offensive production, but even with the hindsight of the analytical revolution it is jarring to see three Yankee starters under the mark. Two of those starters, Wells and Ryan McMahon, have been various shades of awful at the plate so it’s not like they couldn’t do with some more hits landing, but Trent Grisham at least looks a little more respectable with his total body of work, not to mention the luck he’s had drilling pitches right at defenders.
The Yankee offense needs to find some more consistency, there’s no question about that. It starts with the bottom of the lineup graduating from being automatic outs, but unfortunately there’s been little indication that things will change anytime soon. With the backup options also mightily struggling though, they’ll need to soldier on for a bit and prove that the team doesn’t need to consider making some drastic moves as we get closer to the trade deadline and the rumor mill starts to churn.
ReadingYankee asks:The Yankees bats are the one area we seem to be underperforming. When fully healthy, and I realize that is a foolish thing to suggest would ever happen, how should the best Yankee line up produce when compared to some of the best teams in baseball right now?
The thing is that they’re damn near close to healthy offensively. Giancarlo Stanton has been out for a while, yes, but that’s a fact that most assumed would happen at some point in the season, and Caballero has missed a couple of weeks and will be gladly welcomed back to provide a bit of a spark in the middle/lower half of the lineup, but otherwise? What you’ve seen is what you can expect with this offense, which overall isn’t a bad thing — they’re third in hitter fWAR and wRC+, with a negligible difference between them and second place in the former category.
The thing is that they’re carried entirely by their top three hitters in Ben Rice, Aaron Judge, and Cody Bellinger, with the only other effective batters throughout the season being Caballero and their platoon hitters in Paul Goldschmidt and Amed Rosario. That leads to a lot of volatility if one or two of the big three aren’t clicking, and they’ve had that problem with Judge in the middle of a slump for the last couple of weeks. Adding back some floor raisers will do wonders for avoiding a result like the Yankees’ most recent road trip, but as you noted it’s foolish to assume that they’ll get Stanton and Cabby back and just deal with no other issues health-wise the rest of the way. Jazz Chisholm Jr. has gotten hot since stepping (literally) into Stanton’s pants, and if the Yankee second baseman can transition this into playing like his old self through the summer then that’ll be do a lot to revamp their feast or famine outlook and keep them among the premium offenses in the league.
The Ghost of Pop Logan asks:I can recall multiple instances where the Yankees pitching lab (the Gas Factory) has been credited with adding velocity to young arms acquired in the draft. Are there any examples of adding velocity to established pitchers acquired via trade or free agency?
Part of what made the Yankees’ initial success with their bullpen diamond in the rough finds was their ability to do this, and both Clay Holmes and Luke Weaver’s time in pinstripes showcased a tick up in velo to prove just that. The current roster doesn’t any cases like that, but that speaks more to the struggles of this current bullpen and the elite status of their rotation being a product of signing already-great starters and supplementing them with their own developed prospects.
May 16, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Toronto Blue Jays center fielder Daulton Varsho (5) hits an RBI triple in the third inning against the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images | Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images
Over the past two weeks the Jays are 7-6. The offense has scored 2.0 runs per game. No sorry, 4.2 runs per game.
Hot
Brandon Valenzuela: Played in 11 games, starting 9. Hit .300/.382/.433 with 1 double, 1 home run, 4 RBI, 4 walks, and 5 strikeouts.
Why is this guy bunting? He’s been terrific over the last two weeks. There is a downside, teams are running wild on his, 14 steals, 3 times caught, though a 17.6% caught stealing rate isn’t all that bad. The Yankees stole 5 bases against him Monday, but only 1 more in the other two games when he was behind the plate. Whoever decided we should pick him up (for Will Wagner, who is hitting .212 in AAA this year) deserves a raise. He’s taken the number 1 catcher spot in Kirk’s absence and I can’t imagine they wouldn’t keep him on the team when Kirk is back.
Ernie Clement: Played in all 13 games, starting 11. Hit .349/.370/.558 with 3 doubles, 2 home runs, 7 RBI, 2 walks and 6 strikeouts.
Started 7 games at second, 3 at short, 1 at third. I hate that he swings at pitches head level, almost ground level, and well off the plate, but that’s who he is and he’s making a nice career out of it. Unfortunately, he’s not a free agent until 2029, when he’s 33, so he’s likely to miss out on the big money. But then the $4.6 million his is making this year isn’t all that bad. He leads the league in doubles.
Daulton Varsho: Started all 13 games. Hit .360/.407/.540, with 4 doubles, 1 triple, a homer run, 7 RBI, with 2 steals, 4 walks and 13 strikeouts.
He’s been terrific. He’s even hitting lefties well this year. He is a streak hitter, but his strikeout rate has dropped from 28.4% last year to 19.3% this year. His defense hasn’t been quite the same as in the past, he has a 1 above average this season. Last year he finished with a +8. I don’t know why. maybe he’s been nursing something (that isn’t showing up in his batting). Or maybe he’s just not getting the jump he used to. There has been times when he’s made the wrong first step. Hmmm looking at his Baseball Savant page, his spring speed has dropped. Last year he was 77th percentile. this year 51th percentile. going from 28.4 feet per second to 27.3 Maybe he is cursing something.
Jesús Sánchez: Played in 12 games, 9 starts. Hit .429/.438/.500 with 2 doubles, 1 homer, 2 walks and 6 strikeouts.
He’s not providing the power we expected. But hitting over .400 over the last two weeks suggests he’s been hot. I am slightly worried his little injury is more than just getting the wind knocked out of him. Defensively….he’s a bit awkward out there. Fangraphs says he’s a -2 Outs Above Average in the outfield which scans with the eye test.
Cold
Vladimir Guerrero: Started 13 of 13. Hit .178/.298/.244 with 1 home run, 6 RBI, 8 walks, and 4 strikeouts. And 2 steals.
2 starts were as DH. Yeah he’s slumping. I thought he’s with more strikeouts than walks over this two weeks, because he seems to be swinging at a lot of stuff off the plate, which is unusual. He hasn’t taken his bat troubles onto the field (well, other than going most of the way to second base for that one play). I don’t know what’s going on with him, but I hope it ends soon. We really need him to get hitting. His career high for stolen bases is 8, he has 4 now (and hasn’t been caught, he’s picking his moments well).
Andrés Giménez: Played in all 13 games, starting 10. Hit .158/.233/.342 with 2 home runs, 1 double, with 10 RBI, 1 steal, 2 walk and 10 strikeouts.
He had that two home runs game and that incredible at bat the other day (11 pitch walk). And yet, he hit .158 over the past two weeks. And he’s hitting .361/.390/.583 with RISP, .181/.200/.289 with no one on base. It is weird. Last year he was some better with RISP (.661 OPS RISP, .569 with none on). Career he has a .779 OPS with RISP and a .696 in all situations. I’m dubious of these things being skills. The Jays, this year, as a whole, have a .742 OPS with RISP and .676 in total (surprise I bet, I thought they never hit with RISP). It is normal to hit better with RISP, because…well, the pitcher’s obviously not doing well. He’s not pitching a no-hitter, he’s got guys on base. But, this year, Andrés is doing much much better with RISP. Why I don’t think it is a real skill is, if you could hit like a Hall of Famer, why not do it all the time? He’d be a very rich man.
Kazuma Okamoto: Started 12 of the 13 games. Hit .133/.216/.178 with 2 doubles, 4 RBI, 5 walk, and 18 strikeouts.
His little hot streak ended. I said, jokingly, that he should move up in the box a bit. I really don’t think moving a few inches in the box really changes anything, but I think getting out of your head is likely a good thing. I was reading a book about tennis and it said not to judge your game as you are playing. It suggests you have two parts to your brain, one that says ‘that was a bad shot’ and the other hears that and says ‘that’s because you are a bad player’. Once you tell yourself you are bad, you’d play bad. The Pro who’s giving me occasional lessons says ‘remember the good shots, forget about the bad’. But if I do that there are two hours out of the day that are missing….I remember going to play tennis and I remember driving home, nothing in between. But, it is important not to carry bad shots (or bad at bats) with you. He knows me know and tells me I have 15 seconds to curse myself over a bad shot, then I have to let it good. On good days, I can do that. I think moving to a different spot in the box, or say at the back of the court, can give you something that will chase the bad thoughts away. I don’t know if that’s Kazuma’s problem, but I do believe that moving in the batter’s box does less for you physically than it would do mentally.
Davis Schneider: Played 8 games, starting 6. Hit .125/.263/.123 with no extra base hits, 1 RBI, 3 walks, 9 strikeouts and 1 steal.
Speaking of cold and needs to get out of his own head. Last year, near the end of the season, the commentators talked about how Schneider would decide that today he would copy the stance of some player when he was in the batter’s box. I really admit, I thought it was silly, you should be you. But it is something that would get you out of your head. Chase any negative thought away and get you playing on instinct. It seems to me that Davis could use that. He’s a likable guy….but he’s gotta hit and we don’t seem to be getting closer to where he will hit.
George Springer: Started 11 games. Hit .217/.265/.370 with 1 doubles, 2 homers, 3 RBI, 3 walks and 11 strikeouts, with 1 steals.
Played 3 games in left, 1 in right, the rest at DH. He’s been incredible. I would have bet that he was finished after last season. Happy to be wrong. He’s got 27 home runs on the season. He’s only DHed this season and it hasn’t gone well. These last two weeks have been a little better than what he has been doing, but not much.
Myles Straw: Played in 12 games, 5 starts. Hit .091/.167/.091 with no extra base hits, 2 walks and 7 strikeouts..
He’s had 2 hits in the base 2 weeks. He’s a +1 outs above average, but that’s just 194.1 innings. Are any of the right-handed platoon players hitting at all?
Tyler Heineman: Play in 5 games, starting 4. Hit .000/.000.000 with 1 RBI and 1 sac bunt.
He has thrown out 4 of 5 base stealers in the last two weeks. Before this last two weeks, he threw out 3 of 15 base stealers.
Yohendrick Pinango: Played in 11 games, starting 7. Hit .219/.286/.344 with 1 double, 1 homer, 4 RBI, 3 walks and 7 strikeouts.
Not terribly cold, but a .629 OPS definitely isn’t hot. I’m not worried, he’ll get the swing back quick. I really like watching him play. FanGraphs has him at a +1 OAA and he has looked good in the outfield.
IL
Anthony Santander: Might get into a game before the end of the season. Who knows.
Alejandro Kirk: He’s catching and throwing and hitting. Should start a rehab soon. Back sometime in early June with any luck.
Addison Barger: Might start throwing and hitting soon.
Nathan Lukes: He’s played two rehab games. 2 hits, 1 homer, 3 RBI, 2 walks in 6 PA. Could be back soon.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MAY 08: President of Baseball Operations Buster Posey of the San Francisco Giants talks with Willy Adames #2 during batting practice prior to the game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on Friday, May 8, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The annual draft is the easiest way for a baseball team to add talent cheaply. To keep things cheap, Major League Baseball has limited the amount of money teams can spend on signing bonuses, with penalties in place for anyone who goes over their limits. The San Francisco Giants are in a unique position this season to defy those rules and stock up on a lot of young talent by spending a lot of money and taking the punishment.
Let us preface this article with a caveat: The San Francisco Giants are unlikely to “blow up the draft” as Jarrett Seidler of Baseball Prospectus suggests. It’s an expensive strategy and a risky one. The league might really hate it. And it relies on a team developing high school draftees into successful major leaguers, something the Giants have not excelled at in the last decade.
The general concept is that the Giants go over their allotted bonus pool. Like, way over. Teams get to spend a certain amount of money on all their draft choices, based on where their draft picks are. When the Giants traded Patrick Bailey for the No. 29 pick, they added $3,720,200 to their draft pool and now have $17,350,600 to spend on their draftees, which is the 4th-most in baseball.
What happens if a team spends over its pool? If they go 1-5% over that number, they pay a 75% tax on the overage. Go 5-10% over the pool and they forfeit a first-round pick, along with paying the 75% tax. 10-15% over means the team loses a first- and a second-rounder and pays a 100% tax on the excess, and anything more than 15% over the drat pool costs two first-rounders and the 100% tax.
So teams are disincentivized towards overspending. However, the nature of the penalties means that if a team is going 15% over their pool, going 100% over the pool just costs them money.
Say the Giants spent $20M on signing bonuses. That would mean they’d lose their first-round picks in 2027 and 2028 and pay a penalty of $2,649,200. Pretty harsh! But if they spent $50M on bonuses, they would have to pay $32,649,400 in penalties — but still only lose the two picks. That’s what BP called “burning the drafting ships,” named after what conquistador Hernan Cortes did upon reaching the New World, to let his crew know there was no going back to Spain. It’s also what Los Angeles Rams general manager Les Snead simply calls “F—- them picks.”
The nature of the draft means that’s a high-risk strategy, but New York Mets owner Steve Cohen believes high draft picks are highly undervalued.
Education time – Baseball draft picks are worth up to 5x their slot value to clubs .I never shy away from investments that can make me that type of return.
A dollar-for-dollar tax is expensive, but the draft pick penalty for the Giants this season would be unusually low-risk. Since they moved up in the draft lottery this season, they can pick no higher than 10th in 2027, no matter how the rest of the year goes. They might be bad in 2027, though recent history suggests the team will still try to be good. If the Giants were to make any other trades like the Bailey deal, they could theoretically add more picks and increase their bonus pool further.
Essentially, the Giants would commit to meeting the demands of hard-to-sign players. These would primarily be high school players, who have more leverage than a college junior since they can threaten to simply go to college and collect that sweet NIL money. Rolling the rice and returning to college as a senior is riskier.
There has been chatter that the Giants are interested in “floating” UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky down to their No. 4 pick by offering a record-setting bonus, though he’s facing the same risk of one of the top three teams taking him instead and daring him to go back to school. For context, the biggest signing bonus in MLB draft history is $9.25M, which is what No. 2 pick Chase Burns and No. 3 pick Charlie Condon both signed for in 2024.
The San Diego Padres employed a similar strategy in the 2016-17 international signing period. They paid out $40.8M in bonuses, which cost them $37.4M in penalties, and limited how much they could spend on international free agents the following season. It also got them a boatload of young talent.
Will the Giants do this? Almost certainly not. It seems like it would deeply unpopular with the league and other teams, and the prize — a lot of very talented, very young players — is unreliable. Baseball would probably change the draft rules if a team like the Giants went rogue.
The Padres’ haul was impressive on paper but most of the players washed out, with the biggest success story being Adrian Orejon, who was an All-Star reliever last season. Still, San Diego was able to use some of these players in trades for players like Blake Snell, Adam Frazier, and Mike Clevinger, even if they didn’t pan out in the Plymouth of the West.
Still, it’s only money, and whatever else you can say about them, the Giants have shown they’re willing to spend. Whether they’re willing to upset the structure of the baseball draft is another thing.
The Mets have called up Jonah Tong, who ranked third on Amazin’ Avenue’s list of the organization’s top prospects coming into the season. In a corresponding move, the team has designated Craig Kimbrel for assignment.
After getting called up last year, Tong started five games for the Mets and had a 7.71 ERA. He started this season in Triple-A Syracuse, and in nine games and 38.0 innings there, he has a 5.68 ERA. His last start was notably difficult, as he allowed seven runs (six earned) in five innings. Nevertheless, the Mets seem to believe that he can provide immediate support at some point this weekend, as Tobias Myers is set to start tonight against the Marlins.
Kimbrel had a 6.00 ERA in 14 games and 15 innings for the Mets, and his last appearance on May 20 was the longest of his career at 2.2 innings. During that outing, he gave up a two-run home run to Jacob Young of the Nationals.