Arizona Diamondbacks announce spring training broadcast schedule

Mar 18, 2023; Scottsdale, Arizona, USA; A detailed view of the TV camera operator filming from the outfield during a spring training game between the Chicago Cubs and the San Francisco Giants at Scottsdale Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Allan Henry-Imagn Images

Well, it took a while – the first game is tomorrow – but the D-backs finally released their broadcast schedule for spring training. It does look like you will be able to follow the majority of games one way or another: we will actually be doing a thread every game, so you will have no excuse! Here’s what the team’s press release had to say.

The D-backs’ Spring Training schedule includes 26 total broadcasts, including eight free telecasts on DBACKS.TV and local television providers, 11 radio broadcasts across Arizona Sports 98.7 FM and ESPN 620 AM, three Spanish-language broadcasts on La Campesina 101.9 FM & 860 AM and Sí Se Puede app, and four dbacks.com livestreams, giving fans multiple ways to follow the action all spring long.

Fans can stream Spring Training telecasts for free on DBACKS.TV by registering with an email address. Annual subscriptions are available for $99.99 to watch the team all season. Telecasts are also available through participating local TV providers.

2026 D-BACKS SPRING TRAINING BROADCASTS

Top pitching prospect Elmer Rodriguez set to start Yankees’ Grapefruit League opener

New York Yankees pitcher Elmer Rodriguez throwing live batting practice at Steinbrenner Field.
Elmer Rodriguez throws a pitch during a live batting practice for the Yankees on Feb. 15.

TAMPA — Let the games begin.

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After four days of full-squad workouts at Steinbrenner Field, the Yankees are set to begin their Grapefruit League schedule Friday against the Orioles in Sarasota, Fla.

Elmer Rodriguez, one of the club’s top pitching prospects, will get the start while the Yankees are bringing infielders Jazz Chisholm Jr., José Caballero and Amed Rosario, plus catcher Austin Wells, all of whom will be leaving camp next weekend to play in the World Baseball Classic.

Aaron Judge, who is also leaving to captain Team USA, will make his spring debut Saturday at home against the Tigers, starting in right field, before likely serving as DH on Sunday against the Mets.

Elmer Rodriguez throws a pitch during a live batting practice for the Yankees on Feb. 15, 2026. Charles Wenzelberg

Aaron Boone has said he wants to get Judge into four or five of the Yankees’ first nine games before he heads to USA’s camp.

The 22-year-old Rodriguez, acquired from the Red Sox last offseason for catcher Carlos Narváez, will pitch for Puerto Rico in the WBC.

The right-hander broke out last season across three levels (High-A, Double-A and one start in Triple-A), posting a 2.58 ERA with 176 strikeouts in 150 innings.

“[Rodriguez has made] a big impression,” Boone said Thursday. “He’s one of those guys that I hadn’t seen really in person, but one of those few guys you get excited to come down here and see. I think he’s got a chance to be a starting pitcher in this league for a long time. That’s how he profiles to me and everything I hear about him. I’m excited to see him go [Friday]. I think he’s got a really bright future.”


Rafael Montero has a locker inside the clubhouse at Steinbrenner Field but has not yet reported to camp due to paperwork and visa issues, Boone said.

The reliever from the Dominican Republic signed a minor league deal with an invite to big league camp last week, but is delayed in getting to make his case to win a bullpen job.


Will Warren threw three innings of live batting practice Thursday while building his pitch count to 49.

With his fastball sitting at 93-96 mph — it averaged 93.3 mph last season — Warren at one point struck out Cody Bellinger, Giancarlo Stanton and Judge in succession.

Dodgers’ Freddie Freeman sets lofty goals –– for 2026 and beyond

Dodgers star Freddie Freeman

PHOENIX –– Freddie Freeman knows he won’t win the argument. But he at least wants to put up a stubborn, symbolic fight.

Already this spring, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts has signaled his intention to give Freeman more off days this coming season, hopeful that increased rest will benefit the superstar first baseman in his age-36 season.

But on Thursday, while speaking to reporters for the first time in camp, Freeman flashed a sly grin when the subject was raised.

Freddie Freeman knows he won’t win the argument. But he at least wants to put up a stubborn, symbolic fight. Jason Szenes for CA Post
But on Thursday, while speaking to reporters for the first time in camp, Freeman flashed a sly grin when the subject was raised. Getty Images

“I’m going to prepare to play 162 games,” the nine-time All-Star and former MVP winner said with a laugh. “And then when that day comes or the night comes where they say, ‘We’re going to give you tomorrow off,’ I will fight that battle and most likely lose. But I want to play every game.”

This is nothing new for Freeman. Over his 16-year career, he has annually set a goal of playing all 162 games of the regular season (he has achieved that twice and logged 161 in another). As a future Hall of Famer who has been defined by his consistent production and presence on the field, he is still loath –– albeit, also slightly more accepting –– to even the occasional day stuck sitting on the bench.

“As I’ve gotten older, I try not to think about that,” he joked. “But they are looking out for the best interests of me. I do understand that. So if they want to give me (a day), I’ll just say yes.”

Not without at least a little lobbying first, of course.

“As I’ve gotten older, I try not to think about that,” he joked. “But they are looking out for the best interests of me.” Jason Szenes for CA Post

While playing every game might no longer be in the cards for Freeman, the fact it remains his aim is illustrative of how fresh he is feeling entering this new campaign. 

The ankle injury he initially played through in the 2024 postseason, then tediously managed for most of 2025 after undergoing surgery last offseason, is finally behind him. He arrived at Camelback Ranch this month rejuvenated by a fully healthy winter training program.


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“I took four days off (after last season) and then started working out and went right back at it,” Freeman said. “I feel really good.”

So good, in fact, he has floated a new personal goal in the run-up to this year.

So good, in fact, he has floated a new personal goal in the run-up to this year. MLB Photos via Getty Images

At the Dodgers fanfest event last month, Freeman said he would ideally like to play another four seasons in the majors, which would push his career past the 20-year threshold. And while he clarified that on Thursday as more of a soft target for now –– “If it’s three, five, four, I guess we’ll find out” –– he reiterated his confidence in being able to remain productive through his 40th birthday. 

“Father Time is going to catch up,” he said, “but we’re keeping it off a long time.” 

Four more seasons would likely give Freeman enough time to check off yet another one of his long-term objectives: becoming the 34th member of MLB’s 3,000-hit club (he is the league’s current active leader with 2,431 career knocks, needing to average 143 over the next four years to get there).

It also means he will play past the end of his current six-year, $162 million contract with the Dodgers, which expires after next season.

It also means he will play past the end of his current six-year, $162 million contract with the Dodgers Jason Szenes for CA Post

Freeman said Thursday he would like to finish his career with the Dodgers but is “not worried about another contract” right now.

“I think Andrew (Friedman, Dodgers president of baseball operations) and everyone knows that I love being here,” he said. “So whatever happens, happens.”

In the meantime, Freeman’s only focus is on translating his return to full health into a renaissance 2026 campaign.

Despite the nuisance of his ankle injury last year –– which he revealed required daily treatment and tape jobs through August –– Freeman said he was still “irked” to bat below .300, finishing the year with a .295 mark that was dragged down by a poor stretch in June and July. 

Already this spring, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts has signaled his intention to give Freeman more off days. Jason Szenes for CA Post

He also noted that “I didn’t like the way I played defense last year,” bemoaning how his limited mobility led to more ground balls getting by him at first base.

“That’s a big, big goal of mine, is to play better at first this year, get more balls, be able to cover more things,” he said. “So that’s going to be a key for me.”

With another laugh, Freeman then referenced his long-term future again: “If I can do that really well and play defense like I think I can play, and match the production at the plate, then maybe Andrew and Mark (Walter, the team’s owner) and all them will want me around.”

And if a couple extra off days help along the way, he’ll begrudgingly allow it –– hopeful that, at the start of his 17th big-league season, the end of his playing days are still in the somewhat distant future.

“There comes a point where it’s time,” he said. “But obviously I’m not there yet. I love it. I’m still playing pretty good. So as long as I can keep playing pretty good, and they want me out there every day, I’ll keep going.”

Former manager Bob Melvin returning to Athletics as special assistant

MESA, Ariz. — Former big league manager Bob Melvin is returning to the Athletics as a special assistant in baseball operations.

The Athletics said Thursday that Melvin will advise the front office. The 64-year-old managed the A’s to three AL West titles from 2011-21, then left for San Diego and later San Francisco. The 64-year-old previously managed Seattle and Arizona.

Melvin was voted American League Manager of the Year in 2012 and 2018 with the A’s and led them to the playoffs six times while compiling an 853-764 record. The only manager in franchise history with more wins was Connie Mack with 3,582 for the Philadelphia Athletics from 1901-50.

In 22 seasons overall as a manager, Melvin has a 1,678-1,588 record, ranking 20th for wins. He was National League Manager of the Year with the Diamondbacks in 2007.

San Diego hired Melvin away from the A’s after the 2021 season, and he left the Padres after two seasons to go to San Francisco. The Giants fired Melvin after an 81-81 record last year, their fourth consecutive season missing the playoffs.

The former big league catcher played 692 games for seven different teams over 10 seasons from 1985-94. His most with any team were 265 games with his hometown Giants from from 1986-88.

Steven Kwan will get look in center field as Stephen Vogt reshuffles Guardians’ outfield

GOODYEAR, Ariz. — Steven Kwan will get some time in center field during spring training for the Cleveland Guardians as manager Stephen Vogt assesses the best possible outfield combination.

Kwan is a four-time Gold Glove winner in left field. That is tied with Kenny Lofton for the most Gold Gloves in franchise history by an outfielder.

Vogt told reporters on Thursday that Kwan has expressed an interest in playing center at times. Kwan was primarily a center field in Cleveland’s minor-league system but has seen action there in only eight games over his five seasons in the majors.

Rookie Chase DeLauter, who made his big-league debut in last season’s AL Wild Card series against the Detroit Tigers, could see time in center and right. DeLauter dropped a high fly hit by Detroit’s Gleyber Torres during the first inning in his first game. Three innings later, he made a pinpoint throw to third base, where Zach McKinstry was tagged out by José Ramírez.

George Valera will likely play left field during Cactus League games.

Kwan, a two-time All-Star, and Ramírez were the lone consistent offensive threats on the Guardians last season as they repeated as AL Central Division champions.

“You’re going to see guys moving all over the field during spring, like we’ve done previous years,” Vogt said. “We’re trying to optimize for both our best defensive team, coupled with maximizing our potential for offense is what we’re looking for on any given day.”

Vogt added that it could be a couple weeks before he tries Kwan in center.

Mets hosting Bobby Valentine disguise night as 2026 Citi Field promotion

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Illustration of a man in a

Soon, any Mets fan will be able to recreate the legendary Bobby Valentine disguise in Queens.

The Mets announced Thursday as part of their promotional schedule that May 29 will be Bobby Valentine Disguise Night at Citi Field, a nod to when the former manager was ejected from a game during the 1999 season and slyly returned to the dugout wearing a fake mustache and glasses.

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The first 15,000 fans will receive a set of glasses and mustaches similar to what Valentine wore.

“I love it!” Valentine said in a text to The Associated Press about the upcoming promotion. “I’ll be there.

“Can’t wait.”

Valentine managed the Mets from 1996-2002, holding a 536-467 record, the team to a World Series appearance in 2000.

The dugout disguise is perhaps one of the skipper’s most memorable moments in Queens, with Valentine even playing into the schtick multiple times in recent years.

During the Mets’ Old-Timers’ Day in 2022, Valentine, 75, was wearing a fake mustache while being introduced.

During a 2024 game against the Angels, Valentine did a mid-game interview in Los Angeles’ booth while donning the disguise.

Valentine was tossed from a game against the Blue Jays on June 9, 1999, in the 12th inning, but returned to the dugout wearing the disguise until the Mets finally got the win after 14 innings.

Mets manager Bobby Valentine was tossed from a game vs. the Blue Jays on June 9, 1999 during the 12th inning. MLB

He was then suspended for two games and issued a $5,000 fine.

The promotion comes as Valentine is expected to be inducted into the Mets Hall of Fame during the 2026 season, alongside former players Carlos Beltran and Lee Mazzilli.

Valentine spoke to The Post in December about his induction, saying the ceremony is going to be special.

The first 15,000 fans will receive a set of glasses and mustaches similar to what Valentine wore. X/@Mets

“When I was a manager, I was all-in, so there might’ve been a day or two where I thought that I would always be considered a Met because there was nothing else that I was thinking of in my life,” Valentine told The Post’s Mike Puma of his Mets legacy. “I wore the blue and orange, but then we separated for a while.

“So I didn’t know if there would be a continuance, and May 30 will be as special a day as I’ve ever had.”

Valentine also admitted that even he believes his getup is what he is most remembered for during his Mets tenure.

“As crazy as our world is, I think the thing [fans] think about the most is I wore a fake mustache and went back in the dugout after I got ejected,” he added.

“That’s the thing that’s allowed me to be generational and allowed me to have someone who’s 12 years old recognize the name and face that was disguised.”

Pat Murphy gets new three-year contact with Brewers after two straight Manager of the Year wins

Manager Pat Murphy of the Milwaukee Brewers looks on during a spring training workout at American Family Fields of Phoenix on February 22, 2024 in Phoenix, Arizona.
Manager Pat Murphy of the Milwaukee Brewers looks on during a spring training workout at American Family Fields of Phoenix on February 22, 2024 in Phoenix, Arizona.

Pat Murphy isn’t leaving Milwaukee any time soon. 

The Brewers manager got a new contract from the franchise, The Post’s Jon Heyman confirmed Thursday.

Murphy is restructuring his 2026 pact and adding two more years to his deal, keeping him with the team through the 2028 season, according to The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal. The new deal also includes a club option for 2029. 

Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy looks on before the Brewers’ win over the Pirates at PNC Park on April 25, 2024 in Pittsburgh. Diamond Images/Getty Images

Murphy has been the Brewers’ manager since 2024 after previous skipper Craig Counsell signed a five-year, $40 million deal to take the same job with the division rival Cubs.

Murphy had served as a bench coach for Milwaukee since 2015 before being promoted to manager. 

Things couldn’t have gone much better for the Brewers since Murphy took over. In his first season, Milwaukee went 93-69 and won the National League Central division crown. 

Murphy won the NL Manager of the Year award for leading a somewhat surprising Brewers team to the postseason. 

Last season, Murphy made it back-to-back, winning the award and division once again with 97 regular-season wins. 

The Brewers have fallen short in both postseason appearances, though, losing in the wild-card round to the Mets in 2024 and getting swept by the eventual-champion Dodgers in the NLCS last October.

Brewers manager Pat Murphy looks on during a spring training workout at American Family Fields of Phoenix on Feb. 22, 2024 in Phoenix. Getty Images

They have undergone some big changes to their roster this season, having dealt ace Freddy Peralta and Tobias Myers to the Mets in exchange for Jett Williams and Brandon Sproat.

Infielder Caleb Durbin was also traded to the Red Sox as part of a six-player swap.

That’s nothing new for Milwaukee, though.

The Brewers have weathered several high-profile star departures in recent years, including Willy Adames, Corbin Burnes and Devin Williams, while maintaining a winning team on the field.

New MLB union head Meyer dismisses salary cap, defends free agency, arbitration

PHOENIX — Bruce Meyer staunchly defended free agency and salary arbitration on his first full day as head of the baseball players’ association, dismissing any possibility of agreement on a salary cap in another sign of a likely labor confrontation next winter.

The 64-year-old was promoted to executive director on Wednesday, a day after the forced resignation of Tony Clark, who had led the union since 2013. The sport’s five-year labor contract expires on Dec. 1 and Major League Baseball is expected to propose a salary cap.

“We believe in a meritocracy,” Meyer said Thursday after meeting with Milwaukee Brewers players. “We believe in a system, and players believe in a system, that rewards players for performance.”

MLB players struck for 7 1/2 months in 1994-95 to fight off a cap proposal, a structure used by the NFL, NBA and NHL.

“We don’t believe in a system that’s basically a zero-sum game that says ‘If we pay you, we’ve got to take that out of the pocket of another player,’” Meyer said. “That’s how the other systems work.”

Meyer spent 30 years at the law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges before joining the NHL Players Association in 2016 as senior director of collective bargaining, policy and legal. He’s been the MLBPA’s chief negotiator since 2018, though his tenure hasn’t always been smooth. Some players tried to oust him two years ago, when with Clark’s backing he fought off the challenge.

“You’re never going to have, with that many people, everybody agreeing with everything,” Meyer said. “It just doesn’t happen. Other unions I’ve been involved with and other labor situations, you’re never going to get everyone on the same page. But you try and do the most you can. Disagreements are not just expected, they’re actually great.”

Meyer defended baseball’s system of salary arbitration and free agency that has existed since the mid-1970s and has pushed the average salary to the $5 million range.

“Salary arbitration is a crucial right. It’s something that players fought for decades ago,” he said. “It’s important because it’s the first ability a player has to really access something like their free market. It is not a perfect system, but it’s better than the alternative, certainly, that the league has proposed.”

Under the current system, Juan Soto was able to command a record 15-year, $765 million contract from the New York Mets. The high-spending Los Angeles Dodgers won their second straight World Series last season after signing Shohei Ohtani to a 10-year, $700 million deal.

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred says the teams and fans are concerned about payroll disparity.

“Salary cap doesn’t help players at any level. It doesn’t help the middle-class players,” Meyer said. “It’s not just a math game because salary cap comes with an erosion or complete elimination essentially of guaranteed contracts. ... It eliminates freedom and flexibility. And, of course, over time, once you’re in that system, the history is it always becomes worse and worse for players.”

Clark was asked to resign by the eight-man subcommittee after an investigation by the union’s outside counsel discovered evidence he had an inappropriate relationship with his sister-in-law, a union employee since 2023, a person familiar with the union’s deliberations told The Associated Press.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because that detail was not announced.

Meyer said the MLBPA will work with the same outside counsel to determine if any changes needed to be made to the organization in the aftermath of Clark’s resignation, including the future of the union’s office in Scottsdale.

“There’s a lot of things that are going to be under review,” Meyer said. “We want to make sure we’re engaged in best practices at all times. We’ll take recommendations from the people who are advising us, who are doing investigations and audits, everything is up for review.”

Meyer expects his interim role will last through the current round of negotiations. Players will then decide how to proceed.

“It’s unfortunate the way things kind of went down but we’re feeling really good, we’re confident in the people we have,” said Giants pitcher Tristan Beck, the team’s alternate player representative. “Bargaining’s the No. 1 thing on the union’s mind this year and I think we’re in as good a spot as we were yesterday.”

Soon after he was elected, Meyer spoke with MLB’s chief negotiator, whom he has clashed with during bargaining.

“Dan Halem gave me a call last night, and he was very nice, very gracious, very classy,” Meyer said of the deputy commissioner. “Despite occasional reports of contrary, we have a good relationship.”

A former All-Star first baseman, Clark had been the first former player to head the union.

“Tony’s relationships are something that I certainly can’t duplicate overnight and maybe not ever,” Meyer said.

Meyer rejected claims he is overly influenced by Scott Boras, baseball’s most visible agent.

“Scott is an agent who represents a lot of players,” Meyer said. “He has no more influence over the running of the union than any other agent.

Ryan McMahon hoping Yankees’ hitting tweaks can help find ‘middle line’ after rough year

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Ryan McMahon #19 of the New York Yankees hits a solo home run, Image 2 shows Ryan McMahon #19 of the New York Yankees reacts after lining out during the fifth inning
Ryan McMahon worked on improving his swing for the Yankees during the offseason.

TAMPA — No matter what Ryan McMahon did with the bat, he would still make his impact felt on a daily basis with the way he locks down third base defensively.

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But the Yankees still believe there is more they can get out of McMahon offensively, a mission that began shortly after their playoff exit last fall, when he was actually one of their best hitters. 

Following a season in which his whiff rate was a career-high 35.2 percent, McMahon sat down with the Yankees’ hitting group for more than an hour and talked through areas they wanted him to focus on over the offseason, his first in the organization after a deadline trade from the Rockies.

The main goal was to shorten his stance, getting his feet closer together in the batter’s box, and getting his hips working better through his swing.

Ryan McMahon reacts after recording an out during the Yankees’ Oct. 4 playoff game against the Blue Jays. Charles Wenzelberg

“Just things I’ve done in the past and things I kind of got away from,” McMahon said Thursday at Steinbrenner Field. “They pointed them out and we worked on them. … Trying to find a way to give myself basically the best chance every single time and be really consistent with it.”

In his stance last year, McMahon averaged 42.7 inches between his feet, according to Baseball Savant, which was the fourth-highest distance among major leaguers.

Almost all of the other hitters in the top 10 used open stances compared to McMahon, who averaged zero degrees for a straightaway stance.

Hitting coach James Rowson said he would be guessing when asked if the wide stance contributed directly to McMahon’s high swing-and-miss rates.

He just knows that what he is seeing so far this spring has been encouraging.

“He’s in a stronger position to drive the baseball more consistently,” Rowson said. “Obviously throughout a major league season, you’re going to have some fluctuation depending on how you feel. Sometimes that can vary, your width. But right now, with him being a little bit more narrow, he’s ending up in a good spot to drive the ball from. I like what I see.”

McMahon is something of an anomaly in the box.

He has a strong eye, as his 11.9 percent walk rate (89th percentile) last year would suggest, but he still struck out 32.3 percent (second percentile) of the time. 

The 31-year-old generally swings at the right pitches, but too often fails to make contact with them.

Ryan McMahon hits a home run during the Yankees’ Sept. 26 game against the Orioles. Jason Szenes for the NY Post

His contact rate on pitches he swung at in the strike zone was 77.8 percent, per Statcast, which ranked fourth lowest among qualified hitters.

“When I’m going bad, I’m just missing good pitches to hit,” McMahon said. “When I’m going good, I don’t miss it. Just find a way to be in that spot where I don’t miss it.”

Because when McMahon does connect with the ball, he does so with as much impact as some of the game’s best — and that is not inflated by the Coors Field effect, his former home with the Rockies.

Ryan McMahon reacts after striking out during the Yankees Aug. 21 game against the Red Sox. Charles Wenzelberg

His 93.3 mph average exit velocity ranked 14th among qualified hitters, right behind Fernando Tatis Jr.

That has not always translated into offensive production, though, as his OPS-plus (adjusted for ballpark environments) has been below league average every year of his career.

“My career has been a lot of ups and downs,” said McMahon, an All-Star in 2024. “It’s just trying to find that middle line so I can stay there and be better more consistently.”

The Yankees may also platoon McMahon more often, having Amed Rosario play third base against lefties, which would allow him to mainly focus on crushing righties.

That said, it will be difficult to take McMahon’s glove out of the lineup, as his arrival last summer made a significant impact on the Yankees’ overall infield defense, with his presence alone looming large given Max Fried and Carlos Rodón’s propensity for generating ground balls to third base.

“That’s what I want it to look like,” said manager Aaron Boone, a former third baseman himself. “He was born to pick up a ground ball. Then that big arm, has that quarterback movement about him, side to side. He’s really good.”

Chase Burns to start Cactus Legaue opener for Cincinnati Reds on Saturday

LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 01: Chase Burns #26 of the Cincinnati Reds pitches during Game Two of the National League Wild Card Series between the Cincinnati Reds and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday, October 1, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Katelyn Mulcahy/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The battle for the final spot in the starting rotation of the Cincinnati Reds is already underway. With pitchers and catchers having congregated in Goodyear, Arizona over a week ago to begin their annual spring revival, the likes of Chase Burns, Rhett Lowder, Brandon Williamson, and Julian Aguiar all showed up healthy – finally – and ready to compete for a spot on the Opening Day roster.

As Mark Sheldon of Reds.com relayed from camp, the competition is already chugging along in earnest, with the likes of Dane Myers and Terry Francona already impressed with what they’ve seen from the group in camp.

Of note in Sheldon’s latest notes is that it will be Burns on the bump for the Reds when they open Cactus League play on Saturday afternoon against their complex rivals from Cleveland.

That’s not an indication that Burns is necessarily ahead of the other trio on the pecking order, per se, even though that would appear to be the case on paper for the time being. Burns, of course, finished last year healthy (despite a mid-season forearm shutdown), and his arsenal when clicking is perhaps as good as any pitcher on the planet right now. Still, there’s a ton to be said from Lowder, Williamson, and even Aguiar before all is said and done, as each of that trio has impressed at lower stops and made their mark at the big league level when healthy too.

Saturday’s Cactus League opener is slated for a 3:05 PM ET start time and will stream for free via MLB.tv.

Rays reliever Edwin Uceta didn’t feel great when testing shoulder playing catch

PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. (AP) — Tampa Bay reliever Edwin Uceta, who withdrew from the World Baseball Classic because of what was described as a cranky right shoulder, didn’t feel great when he tested it playing catching Thursday.

“He was fine, and as he got deeper, (throwing at) more distance, didn’t feel great,” manager Kevin Cash said Thursday, as reported by the Tampa Bay Times. “We’ll probably let a doctor look at him and see where it’s at.”

The hard-throwing Uceta made 70 relief appearances for the Rays last season, when he was 10-3 with a 3.70 ERA. The 28-year-old right-hander was eligible for salary arbitration for the first time this offseason, and won his case to get paid $1,525,000, up from $815,000 last season, rather than the Rays’ $1.2 million proposal.

He had planned to pitch for the Dominican Republic in the WBC but withdrew from that after he started to feel discomfort before reporting to spring training with the Rays.

Uceta could take over the closer role for the Rays after Pete Fairbanks’ offseason departure as a free agent to Miami.

Uceta first arrived in Tampa Bay as a free agent before the 2024 season. He previously made big league appearances for the Los Angeles Dodgers (2021), Arizona (2022) and New York Mets (2023).

Opening starter

All-Star right-hander Drew Rasmussen was announced as the Rays opening-day starter at St. Louis on March 26.

Rasmussen was 10-5 with a 2.76 in 31 starts last season, when he was an All-Star for the first time. He got a full season in his comeback from an internal brace procedure. That was his third major elbow procedure after twice before having Tommy John surgery.

The season opener in St. Louis also comes where Rasmussen made his return Aug. 7, 2024, nearly 15 months after the latest surgery. He threw two scoreless innings to end that game.

Brewer manager Pat Murphy’s contract extended through 2028 with club option for 2029

Oct 17, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Milwaukee Brewers manager Pat Murphy (49) speaks in a press conference before game four against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NLCS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

The Milwaukee Brewers have reworked manager Pat Murphy’s contract, locking up the reigning two-time NL Manager of the Year through 2028 with a club option for 2029, multiple sources have confirmed.

Murphy, who was entering his final season of a three-year deal signed after the departure of Craig Counsell in the 2023-24 offseason, will stick around for three, possibly four more years. If the option is picked up at the end of the deal, it would take Murphy through his age-70 season.

After Counsell ditched the Crew for a massive contract with the Cubs, Murphy picked up right where he left off, leading Milwaukee to another NL Central title with a 93-69 record in 2024.

The Cubs then bolstered their roster last offseason, adding Kyle Tucker, while the Brewers lost closer Devin Williams, leading many experts to select the Cubs to take Milwaukee’s crown. Instead, Murphy led the team to a franchise-best 97-65 record, winning the NL Central and beating the Cubs in the NLDS to make it to the NLCS for the first time since 2018.

The move doesn’t come as much of a surprise, as most two-time reigning Managers of the Year won’t coach on a lame-duck contract (unless they’re planning on retiring, which was certainly a consideration for the 67-year-old Murphy). That said, Murphy will continue to lead the Brewers for the next few years.

UPDATE: The financials on Murphy’s contract have now been reported, and it’s a massive pay bump from his previous deal. Jeff Passan reports Murphy gets $8.95 million in new money in his contract, which makes him one of the highest-paid managers in the league.

The three-year deal starts in 2026, taking over what his original contract was for this year, giving Murphy an additional two guaranteed years and a club option for 2029.

A 2026 Arizona Diamondbacks Opening Day roster, v3.0

Only a couple of weeks since last time we checked in, but there have been some quite significant and dramatic changes to things, both in terms of new signings, and in losses due to injuries. So, let’s review what the Opening Day roster might look like, now the dust has settled, and with spring training games scheduled to kick off tomorrow. As ever, new names since last time are shown in bold.

Starting rotation

  1. Merrill Kelly ($20m)
  2. Zac Gallen ($22m)
  3. Ryne Nelson ($3m)
  4. Eduardo Rodriguez ($21m)
  5. Brandon Pfaadt ($3.4m)

The unexpected return of Gallen to Arizona certainly poses a bit of a roster problem. While, obviously, we’re likely going to need more than five starters over the course of the year, there are now six on the roster. Unless the team goes with a six-man rotation to open the year, which seems unlikely, someone is going to be left out. I’d say it’s probably going to be between Pfaadt and winter signing Michael Soroka. It is possible Pfaadt, who still has minor-league options, could be sent to Reno to remain a starter and wait for the eventual need at the major-league level. But considering the long-term contract he signed less than a year ago, what kind of message would that demotion send?

On the other hand, Soroka is being paid as a starting pitcher: $7.5 million is an awful lot of money for a long reliever. It’s also a role which will make it harder to transition back to being a starter. So this could go other way. It’s marginally possible Ryne Nelson ends up being the one on the outside, though given how effective he was after moving into the rotation last year, that would be a strange decision, even if he is the lowest-paid member of the 2026 rotation. And don’t forget, Corbin Burnes should be back at some point, perhaps triggering a still more difficult conundrum for Mike Hazen and Torey Lovullo. Though let’s cross that bridge when we get to it!

Bullpen

  • Ryan Thompson ($3.95m)
  • Kevin Ginkel ($2.725m)
  • Taylor Clarke ($1.55m)
  • Kade Stroud
  • Paul Sewald ($1.5m)
  • Michael Soroka ($7.5m)
  • Brandyn Garcia
  • Drey Jameson

One in, one out. An unwelcome surprise was the news that Andrew Saalfrank is going to miss the entire 2026 season after undergoing shoulder surgery, and he has duly been taken off the 40-man roster and placed on the 60-day IL. In exchange, the team signed Sewald to a one-year deal, the fanbase reacting with a response somewhere between “Why?” and “Meh.” I doubt he will be seeing save situations initially. The question would be, who will be getting those out of the gate? I’d say it could be Thompson, Ginkel or Stroud, and is something to be decided over the course of spring training. Torey is certainly not committing at this point.

The other change is spurred by the loss of Saalfrank. Simply replacing him with Sewald would have given the team an entirely right-handed bullpen, which isn’t something Torey Lovullo appears to favor. Right now, Garcia and Philip Abner are the only healthy left-handed relief options on the 40-man roster, so options for the role are limited. It might be an area where there’s a chance for a left-handed non-roster invitee to break through, but as we previously discussed, the options there lean more towards starting pitching than the reliever. It’s possible this is an area with more work to be done before Opening Day.

Starting line-up

  • Catcher: Gabriel Moreno ($2.55m)
  • First base: Carlos Santana ($2m)
  • Second base: Ketel Marte ($15m)
  • Shortstop: Geraldo Perdomo ($6.25m)
  • Third-base: Nolan Arenado ($5m)
  • Left field: Ryan Waldschmidt
  • Center field: Jordan Lawlar
  • Right field: Alek Thomas ($1.96m)
  • Designated hitter: Pavin Smith ($2.25m)

The broken hamate suffered by Corbin Carroll has put a major spoke in the wheel of the intended Opening Day line-up, though if all goes well, Carroll should be back not too long into the regular season. There’s even a chance he might be back for Opening Day, but that may be optimistic. With just two “true” outfielders healthy on the 40-man roster (Thomas and Jorge Barrosa), the door is wide open for top prospect Waldschmidt to stake a claim to a position on the MLB roster. His spring training performances will determine that. But it looks like Lawlar will be used in CF: given his entire professional experience in the outfield is three (3) games, that’s going to be interesting.

Of note on the infield: Tyler Locklear is going to be out of action quite some way into the regular season – to the point he could be a 60-day IL candidate if the team needs another 40-man roster spot. Torey Lovullo said on Sunday Locklear won’t be back until at least the second half of May. When he does, he’ll have to prove himself better than Santana to justify anything like an everyday spot in the line-up. Though as we are about to see, the Arizona bench is not exactly a Maginot Line of strength.

Bench

  • James McCann ($2.75m)
  • Tim Tawa
  • Jorge Barrosa
  • Ildemaro Vargas

The team is still looking to add a utility player, and with the news that Del Castillo is likely going to miss Opening Day with a calf strain, the depth on the 40-man roster has become thinner still. Of the sixteen position players there, four are now potentially off the table, Del Castillo joining Carroll, Gurriel and Locklear. This leaves the D-backs with a scant dozen healthy bodies – fewer than the bare thirteen needed to form your typical Opening Day roster. We could end up adding Jose Fernandez, since there isn’t anyone else left on the 40-man roster – but would still need to bring in Waldschmidt, as discussed above, simply to complete the roster.

On that basis, let’s also dip into the non-roster invitees to fill that final spot at the back of the bench. There are some prospects who have a shot, including Tommy Troy and LuJames Groover. But there’s nobody who is more familiar with Arizona than Vargas: he first joined the Diamondbacks back in May 2015 (when Troy and Groover were both thirteen!). We saw his positional flexibility last year when, in just 38 games here, Ildemaro played at every infield spot, and also started three games at DH. The last time he appeared on Opening Day here was 2020. There would almost be something historic about him doing so in 2026.

Payroll

  • Estimated 2026 Payroll: $195M
  • Estimated Final 2025 Payroll: $188M

Well, so much for the team cutting payroll. According to the Fangraphs figure, the team is several million dollars above where they finished last season. Admittedly, that final figure was after they shed payroll at the trade deadline, getting rid of Kelly, Eugenio Suarez, Josh Naylor and Jordan Montgomery. But it certainly does not seem like any incoming utility player is going to be a free-agent – and, certainly, not an expensive one. Per Gambo’s Tweet linked above, that player will be “most likely coming via trade and using minor-league depth.” Payroll will likely be a consideration, but since he’s likely to be a bench option, I doubt he’ll be that expensive.

But comparing like to like, the current figure is about ten million more than on Opening Day last year. Even more surprising, the team is within striking distance of the first luxury tax band, which is certainly unprecedented. For that purposes, the payroll is considerably higher than the raw ”actual” figure, because it uses the average annual value of each player’s contract, so excludes deferments. Right now, reports suggest Arizona there is only about $7.5 million short of moving into the first luxury tax bracket, where they would be subject to a 20% surcharge on all overages. I doubt we want to go there, so there likely will be no significant salary added at the trade deadline by the Diamondbacks.

Spring training open thread: February 19

NORTH PORT, FL - FEBRUARY 23: A general interior view of CoolToday Park during the Spring Training game between the Detroit Tigers and the Atlanta Braves at CoolToday Park on February 23, 2020 in North Port, Florida. The Tigers defeated the Braves 5-1. (Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

We’re not too far away from seeing actual spring training games! Excited yet?

The floor is now yours and here’s a random clip:

Mookie Betts eyes a bounce-back year at the plate: 'I'll see what I can make of it'

Phoenix, AZ - February 16, 2026: Mookie Betts at Dodgers spring training in Camelback Ranch, Phoenix, AZ on February 16, 2026. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)
Mookie Betts enters his seventh season with the Dodgers firmly entrenched at the shortstop position. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts did not hesitate when asked about his expectations for Mookie Betts.

“He will be in the MVP conversation this year,” Roberts said this week. “But again, I think, speaking for Mookie, his main goal is to help us win a championship. So, I think whatever falls out from there, I think that will happen. I just want him to focus on just being healthy, helping us win, and then whatever happens outside of that, will happen.”

Coming off a season that got off on the wrong foot with a stomach virus that caused him to lose 20 pounds and then saw him set career lows for batting average (.258), on-base percentage (.326) and OPS (.732), Betts is eager to move forward. And with a more typical spring training timeline this year — unlike the previous two years when season-opening games in South Korea and Japan sped up preparations — Betts can ease into his seventh season with the Dodgers.

Read more:Healthy, slimmer Teoscar Hernández 'out to prove something' this season with Dodgers

“I haven’t had a regular spring maybe since I’ve been a Dodger,” said Betts, who also won't be participating in the World Baseball Classic as he did in 2023. “I just know that, being 33 now, I don’t have to hurry up and get here, and be ready to play from day one. So, I can just kind of embrace that. Not everybody’s blessed to have that, so being that I am one of the ones that’s blessed with that, I’ll see what I can make of it.”

One thing that's not in question for Betts heading into the season: his shortstop play. Despite the nearly unprecedented shift from the outfield to the infield, Betts played 148 games at short last season and was a Gold Glove Award finalist. The work he put in to learn a new position raised questions about whether that was a root cause of his hitting struggles, a point he granted some credence to late last season.

Betts did pick up the pace late in the season, batting .317 and nearly doubling his home run total from 11 to 20 over his final 47 games. But he slumped in the NLCS and World Series, batting a combined .136 and was eventually dropped from second to third in the batting order for Game 5 against the Toronto Blue Jays, then fourth for Games 6 and 7.

Roberts said this week that he intends to slot Betts third in the batting order this season, with Shohei Ohtani still in the leadoff spot. (He added that Freddie Freeman, Will Smith and newcomer Kyle Tucker are all in play for the second and fourth spots in the order.)

“I like [Betts] in the number three in the sense that there’s an on-base component, there’s a ‘get hits’ component, there’s a drive-in-runs component, and you’re more of a Swiss Army knife in the lineup," Roberts said. "So, I’m not beholden to it, but I like him in the three-hole right now.”

And as a result, Roberts feels bullish about Betts this season.

“I think he had a great offseason,” Roberts said. “He’s in a good headspace. The body’s good, and I think for me, it’s just getting back to being who he is. I just think that last year was an outlier offensive season, and I’m not too concerned about Mookie at all.”

Yoshinobu Yamamoto to start Cactus League opener

Roberts announced Thursday that World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto will start the Dodgers' first spring training game Saturday against the Angels at Tempe Diablo Stadium. He did not share how many pitches or innings Yamamoto expects to throw, but he did state that it will likely be Yamamoto’s only Cactus League start before departing to play for Team Japan in the World Baseball Classic.

Roberts also revealed what players may start Saturday’s Cactus League opener.

“I would expect Will Smith to be in there,” Roberts said. “I expect [Teoscar Hernández] in there, and probably Andy [Pages]. I think that’s safe, and then we’ll go from there.”

Roberts plans to hold other veteran players until next week.

Read more:Where River Ryan and Gavin Stone figure in the Dodgers' crowded pitching plans

“Guys like Mookie and Muncy, I’m going to start those guys a little bit later than this weekend and see where we go,” Roberts said. “Once they get going, then we’ll stagger and give them the ample time in-between. I’ve got to appreciate that it’s a longer spring. So, if they’re going to be here for six weeks, then I don’t want to kind of come in too hot, I want to pace them out a little bit.”

Freeman said Thursday that he will not play in the Dodgers’ first three spring training games.

“I feel good, I’m ready to go, but we are going to slow-play it a little bit,” Freeman said. “I won’t play until I think Tuesday, so the fourth game, and then I’ll get going.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.