Guardians News: It’s Cooper Ingle Time

COLUMBUS, OHIO - JUNE 18, 2026: Cooper Ingle #2 of the Columbus Clippers runs the bases after hitting a two-run home run during the sixth inning against the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders at Huntington Park on June 18, 2026 in Columbus, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The news broke last night that Cooper Ingle is getting the call for the Guardians.

Cleveland Guardians Prospective was the first I saw with the move on Twitter:

It will be interesting to see what move is made to get him on the 26-man. (To get him on the 40 seems easy enough with the various injuries the team has sustained). One would assume it is a Petey Halpin demotion. But, what if it isn’t? …A Gabriel Arias or a Stuart Fairchild being DFA’d? A shock David Fry demotion? An even more shocking Rhys Hoskins DFA?

I am sure it’ll be Halpin.

Meanwhile, Ingle has a 150 wRC+ with a 22/18 K/BB% in Columbus. I checked his Baseball Savant for performance against various fastballs – .464 wOBA/.418 xwOBA – breaking balls – .361 wOBA/.301 xwOBA – and offspeed – .349 wOBA/.333 xwOBA. He seems ready for a big league challenge. He also has a 1.112 OPS in Columbus and a .865 OPS on the road. The biggest issue with Ingle is that he hasn’t been able to hit LHP very well… but, hey, join the club here. He has a .611 OPS vs LHP this year and his career numbers are solidly in the mid 600’s range.

But he’s here, he’s real and he’s spectacular. Ingle was ranked the 7th best Guardians prospect by this site, 4th in the Guardians system by Baseball America, 3rd by MLB Pipeline, 10th by FanGraphs, 5th by ESPN and 7th by the Athletic.

Drafted as a catcher, recently, Ingle has seen a bunch of time in left field. It will be interesting to see if the team mostly abandons him catching or if he mixes in occasionally with Patrick Bailey and Austin Hedges. It certainly cannot hurt to have him hanging out with those two.

I applaud the Guardians for their aggression with promotions. Would have been nice to have Ingle in Chicago… but I should not complain. I am very excited to have tickets for his likely debut tonight. Bringing my 3 year-old daughter for Ingle and fireworks as the Mariners come to town. Now, if the rain will just hold off…

AROUND MLB:

The Royals and Tigers lost.

The Pope says he is following the White Sox’ season. Explains a lot tbh.

MLB and MLBPA are still exchanging CBA ideas and insults.

Friday morning Rangers things

Good morning, LSB.

The Rangers held on for a win against the Blue Jays yesterday.

Shawn McFarland says the sluggers gave the pitchers just enough breathing room, for once.

Kennedi Landry writes about Joc Pederson’s 11-pitch at-bat which ended in the first of 3 Rangers homers.

Corey Seager returned to action after recovering from a concussion.

Evan Carter, meanwhile, is still working his way back from a strained oblique.

Elsewhere MLB Pipeline has another mock draft.

Evan Grant’s weekly Rangers stock report continues its troubling pattern.

And Kevin Sherrington says don’t expect Ray Davis to loosen the purse strings any time soon with a labor dispute on the horizon.

That’s all for this morning. The Rangers play the Blue Jays again tonight at 6:07 with Nathan Eovaldi on the mound for Texas.

Happy Friday!

Brady Smith is near unhittable in Single-A

Los Angeles, CA October 29, 2025: A Dodgers player's hat and glove in the dugout during game five of the World Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Toronto Blue Jays at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday, October 29, 2025 in Los Angeles, CA. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Four games, four wins, three of them by no more than two runs. There was plenty of drama and excitement when the Dodgers’ minor league affiliates took the field on Thursday.

Player of the day

It’s a shame the Tower Buzzers offense didn’t show up early enough to help Brady Smith secure his first win of the season. Still, at least they didn’t waste the magnificent start from this right-hander, who has been an absolute strikeout machine for Ontario, with 81 punchouts in fewer than 50 innings of work, eventually winning the game 6-2.

Smith delivered, easily his best outing of the season, allowing just one hit in six masterful innings with no walks and 11 strikeouts. Prior to this game, four innings had been the longest performance from Smith this season.

Triple-A Oklahoma City

One hit and four RBI. Austin Gauthier made the most out of his third home run of the season by hitting a grand slam to help the Comets beat the Aces 9-8.

Oklahoma City had quite the scare in this game by allowing six unanswered runs in the sixth and seventh, but the offense had enough cushion to barely outlast the opposition. James Tibbs III had quite the game batting leadoff, reaching base four times with a pair of knocks and two walks.

While Charlie Barnes and subpar defense were responsible for keeping this one close, with the Comets starter having allowed seven of the Aces’ eight runs, three of them earned, the bullpen had little to no margin for error. Chayce McDermott recorded the most important out of the game by inducing a bases-loaded double play in the bottom of the seventh with no one out. Evan Phillips wrapped up that inning with a strikeout.

Double-A Tulsa

Through the game’s first five innings, neither team scored, and the only moment the Drillers led in this one was when Frank Rodríguez crossed the plate to walk things off, delivering Tulsa a 3-2 win at home, their 47th on the season.

Strong starting pitching with five one-hit innings from Christian Zazueta and timely home runs, one from Mike Sirota, whose on-base streak remains active, and another one from Kole Myers, proved to be enough offensively for the Drillers. Sirota is now at 61 games reaching base in a row.

High-A Great Lakes

For only the second time this season, left-hander Jakob Wright had a scoreless appearance, tossing 5.2 innings before handing it off to the bullpen en route to a 2-0 shutout win with the whole staff allowing just three hits. Wright now has a 4-3 record on the season.

While Eduardo Guerrero was the standout hitter for the Loons, securing three of the team’s seven hits, including a solo shot, the go-ahead hit came from Logan Wagner on an RBI single in the fifth. Wright got the win, but the Lugnuts starter deserves some praise—Samuel Dutton caught the short end of the stick, moving to a 1-5 record with his seven innings of one-run ball.

Single-A Ontario

Between the second and ninth innings, the Tower Buzzers scored a total of zero runs, but thanks to strong pitching, all they needed was that one in the first and another five in the tenth. Right-hander Brady Smith had one of the more dominant outings by a starter in the Dodgers minor league system this season, striking out 11 through six scoreless innings, allowing just one base runner.

The offensive outburst in the tenth to take control of what was then a 1-1 game came through the long ball. Ching-Hsien Ko hit his fourth home run in the last seven games, and Mairoshendrick Martinus also left the yard, securing his fourth hit of the game.

Transactions

Outfielder Kendall George was assigned from the Drillers to the Tower Buzzers, activated off the injured list, while starter Landon Knack began a rehab assignment with the Comets.

Thursday’s scores

  • Reno 8, Oklahoma City 9
  • Tulsa 3, Corpus Christi 2
  • Lansing 0, Great Lakes 2
  • Visalia 2, Ontario 6

Friday’s schedule

  • 4:05 p.m. PT: Great Lakes (Sean Patick) at Lansing (Zane Taylor)
  • 5:00 p.m. PT: Tulsa (Adam Serwinowski) vs. Corpus Christi (Cole Hertzler)
  • 6:35 p.m. PT: Oklahoma City (Cole Irvin) at Reno (Brandon Pfaadt)
  • 6:35 p.m. PT: Ontario (TBD) at Visalia (Chung-Hsiang Huang)

Orioles-Nationals series preview: Battle of the Beltways heads to Baltimore

WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA - MAY 17, 2026: Coby Mayo #16 of the Baltimore Orioles hits a two-run home run during the second inning of an interleague game against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on May 17, 2026 in Washington, District of Columbia. The Nationals beat the Orioles, 7-3. (Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The Orioles return to Baltimore this weekend as frustrating and confounding as ever, with the team returning home after their West Coast road trip. When the O’s left for their three-series West Coast swing against the Mariners, Dodgers and Angels, they were five games under .500 and two games out of a Wild Card spot. They now return to Baltimore six games under .500 and still two games out of the final AL playoff spot.

The O’s next chance at trying (and likely failing) to build some positive momentum comes against their local rivals, the Nationals. The DC ball club comes into this series in a similar position as the Orioles. Sure, they’re actually at .500, but a stacked National League currently has the Nats 3 games outside the NL playoff picture.

This will be the second Battle of the Beltways this season, with the Orioles dropping two out of three in DC back in the middle of May. That series served as a concise example of the frustrating reality of the 2026 Orioles.

In Game 1, the O’s lost 3-2 in a game that saw them fail to take advantage of a starting pitcher with a 6.00+ ERA and where they didn’t score until the 9th inning. Game 2 was a different type of embarrassing loss, where a seven-run 7th inning turned a 4-3 close game into a 13-3 blowout. Game 3 was a completely different story, as the offense came alive from the first inning, raced out to an early 6-2 lead, and coasted to a 7-3 win behind a strong performance from Brandon Young and the bullpen.

Since that game, both teams have hovered around .500, struggling to get a foothold in either league’s playoff race. The O’s are 17-18 in the month-plus since their last meeting with the Nats, and have never gotten closer to .500 than two games under. The Nationals are18-17 in their 35 games since facing the O’s, at one point getting to four games above .500, but have lost [five/six] of their last eight.

The good news for Birdland is that the Orioles have typically found success against the Nationals in Camden Yards. Prior to last season, the O’s were 9-5 against the Nats at Camden Yards in the Mike Elias era. However, the Nationals did sweep the Orioles in Camden Yards last May, with the first game of that series being the last game of Brandon Hyde’s tenure in Baltimore. The O’s will need to return the favor this year if they want to finish the season with a winning record against their National League neighbors.

Game 1, Friday, June 26th, 7:05pm ET

Probable pitchers: LHP Trevor Rogers (4-7, 5.30 ERA, 54 K) vs. TBD

Where to watch: MASN/MASN+

Trevor Rogers is the starting pitcher whose best epitomised the maddening lack of consistency from the Orioles, but glimpses of 2025 Trevor Rogers have started to peek through the cracks in June. After posting a 10.31 ERA in 18.1 innings across four starts in May, Rogers is rounding back into ace form this month. Across his last four outings, he has an ERA of 2.22, is averaging just over six innings per start and is holding opposing hitters to a .195 average. His most recent outing, in Dodger Stadium, was the best of his 2026 campaign, as he held the two-time defending champions to one hit and two walks over seven scoreless innings.

Rogers only has one career appearance against the Nationals as a member of the Orioles, back in 2024. In his third start after coming over from the Marlins, the Nats battered Rogers to the tune of 5 IP, 7 H, 5 ER, 2 BB and 2 K.

In 10 career starts against Washington as a member of the Marlins, Rogers was typically good, putting up a 3.35 ERA with a .234 BAA. That past success may not matter this season, though, as the Nationals have also crushed left-handed pitching this season. Washington leads the MLB with a .274 average and .793 OPS vs. southpaws, though that OPS drops to .752 against left-handed starters.

While the Nationals hadn’t announced their starters yet at the time of writing, left-hander Andrew Alvarez should make his first career start vs. Baltimore. The 27-year-old lefty out of Cal Poly relies heavily on his two breaking balls, throwing his curveball and slider a combined 47% of the time. Any time a lefty is on the mound, it presents a good matchup for 3B Coby Mayo. The 24-year-old has a 1.111 OPS vs. LHPs and is one of the best hitters in baseball against southpaws.

Game 2, Saturday, June 27th, 7:05pm ET

Probable pitchers: RHP Brandong Young (6-2, 3.07 ERA, 49 K) vs. TBD

Where to watch: MASN/MASN+

This season, Brandon Young has held a similar role to 2025 Trevor Roger: the pitcher that seemingly comes out of nowhere to become the most consistent pitcher in the Orioles rotation. After making an abbreviated start against the Nats back in May, Young has been the model of consistency for Baltimore. In six outings since, the 27-year-old Texan has five quality starts, a 2.15 ERA, a .219 BAA and is averaging 6.1 IP per start.

And like Rogers last year, a Brandon Young start has usually meant a guaranteed win for the O’s. Baltimore is 10-2 in games started by BY this season, 5-1 at Camden Yards and is on a four-game win streak when Young takes the mound at home.

It will be a matchup of strength vs. strength in Young vs. the Nats upstart offense. The Orioles starter’s four-seam fastball has been one of the best heaters in all of baseball this season, as it ranks ninth in Run Value and 16th in BAA among 212 qualified pitchers. However, Nationals stars CJ Abrams and James Wood have both crushed fastballs this year, ranking third and 14th, respectively, in Run Value produced against four-seamers.

The Nats should counter Young with journeyman right-hander Foster Griffin. The 30-year-old spent the last three years in Japan and is now enjoying the first extended run of his Major League career. Prior to going to Japan, Griffin had a 6.75 ERA in eight career MLB innings. This season with Washington, Griffin has a 3.15 ERA in 91.1 innings and leads all Nats pitchers with a 2.3 bWAR. The soft-tossing lefty has led with his cutter most of the year, but features a true seven-pitch mix.

Game 3, Sunday, June 28th, 1:35pm ET

Probable pitchers: RHP Kyle Bradish (5-7, 3.64 ERA, 94 K) vs. TBD

Where to watch: MASN/MASN+

While Kyle Bradish hasn’t been as consistent as Rogers or Young in June, the Orioles’ former ace comes into Sunday’s start off the best back-to-back starts of his career. Nine days ago in Seattle, Bradish delivered his best start of the season (up until then), posting a line of 7.2 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, 2 BB and 12 Ks–with the 12 strikeouts setting a new career-high for the 29-year-old.

He then went out and one-upped himself in his start against the Dodgers, pitching eight shutout innings with nine Ks against the defending champs. The past two starts marked the first time in Bradish’s career that he’s pitched into the 8th inning in back-to-back outings.

Sunday will mark the first time Bradish has faced off against the Nationals since before his elbow injury in 2024. In his second start of the 2024 season, he held the Nats to one run on four hits over five innings with nine Ks. It was the first time he’d allowed a run against Washington, as he previously combined for 14 innings of shutout baseball across two starts vs. the Nationals in 2023.

To oppose Bradish, the Nats could turn to former Ray Zack Littell or turn Sunday into a bullpen game. Littell pitched well against the Orioles back in May, holding the O’s scoreless over five innings while only allowing two hits. Washington has used Littell four times this season as the follower to an opener, including his most recent appearances against the Phillies–when he allowed two runs over four innings in a 14-9 loss.


Let us know in the comments whether the O’s can even the score against the Nationals or whether it’ll be another disappointing series of Orioles’ baseball this weekend.

Elephant Rumblings: A’s-Angels Series Preview

Jun 20, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Athletics designated hitter Jonah Heim (15) bats against the Los Angeles Angels during the sixth inning at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images | Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

Happy Friday A’s Fans!

Today, the Athletics begin a three-game series against their American League West rival, the Los Angeles Angels. These two teams have matched up often over the past few weeks. Towards the end of May, the A’s won three of four in Los Angeles, capturing two victories in dramatic extra-inning games. Last weekend, the “Green and Gold” and the “Halos” split four games in West Sacramento, with the Angels winning the final two games of that series.

Yesterday, the A’s scored seven unanswered runs to rally past the San Francisco Giants, salvaging the final game of that three-game interleague series. Now, the team must carry that momentum into this weekend. They cannot afford to drop this series against the last-place Angels, especially with Mike Trout still on the injured list.

Right-handers J.T. Ginn, Jack Perkins and Aaron Civale will start for the A’s in their penultimate series against the Angels this season. In Ginn’s most recent outing at Angel Stadium, he came three outs shy of his first career no-hitter. Can he record another quality performance tonight in his second consecutive start against this team or will he take a step back?

From the other dugout, A’s hitters will face the Angels’ promising young right-hander Walbert Ureña and left-hander Reid Detmers in the first two games of the series. Los Angeles has not yet announced its starter for Sunday’s finale.

Backup catcher Jonah Heim has arguably been the A’s most clutch hitter over these past few weeks. Whenever he has batted in the ninth inning, he has delivered, recording huge hits to either tie the game or give the A’s the lead.

The organization’s savvy move to trade for him and then retain him instead of fellow backstop Austin Wynns has paid dividends. Look for Heim to continue receiving opportunities in big late-game situations, as he has come through more often than not.

Additionally, center fielder Henry Bolte appears to have emerged as the solution to the A’s center field and leadoff spot concerns. While his defense in center field is not too much of a drop off from Denzel Clarke’s, his combination of speed and power gives him greater offensive upside and makes him a natural fit atop the lineup in front of Shea Langeliers and Nick Kurtz.

Will Bolte and Heim continue to contribute this weekend, or will another unexpected A’s player rise to the occasion?

A’s Coverage:

MLB News and Interest:

Best of X:

This situation appears unlikely to end anytime soon. Unless Major League Baseball and the players’ union reach a compromise, the league seems headed toward a lockout on December 1st.

Somehow, the A’s bullpen is not the worst in the majors.

Unfortunate injury news for one of the A’s top minor-league prospects.

Congrats to A’s trainer Jeff Collins on being selected to work the All-Star Game. This is an incredible opportunity and a well-deserved honor.




Braves Minor League Recap: McKenzie Dominant; Lodise Homers Again

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 21, 2026: Alex Lodise #74 of the Atlanta Braves in the field during the first inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 21, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

There were some outstanding performances across the system for the Atlanta Braves affiliates, none more impressive than the dominant outing from Briggs McKenzie. McKenzie was moved to High-A aggressively and had two lackluster starts after that, but put it all together in the third of those with eight strikeouts and no earned runs allowed. Meanwhile Alex Lodise is the hottest hitter in the system and he went deep for Augusta again, then went and had the go-ahead hit for the GreenJackets in extra innings. Even in Columbus Patrick Clohisy had three extra base hits and Cedric De Grandpre struck out seven. It was a top-to-bottom collection of notable performances on an exciting day in the system.

(39-38) Gwinnett Stripers 0, (45-33) Nashville Sounds 3

Box Score

Statcast

  • Jim Jarvis, SS: 0-2, 2 BB, .307/.403/.462
  • Brett Wisely, 2B: 1-3 .307/.409/.467
  • Owen Murphy, SP: 5.2 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 2 BB, 5 K, 4.31 ERA
  • Elieser Hernandez, RP: 2.1 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 3 K, 4.96 ERA

Owen Murphy had his worse start in over a month, but given the standards he has set for himself in recent weeks that still wasn’t a terrible day at the office for most pitchers. The offense absolutely let him and Elieser Hernandez down, however. The team managed just two hits across the lineup and were putting up pitiful contact quality, so the times that Murphy slipped were magnified in the outcome of the game. Cal Conley gave the team the best chance to scratch out a run of any of the hitters and was part of the two early scoring chances that went to waste. He lined a single into center field to lead off the third inning and advanced around to third after a stolen base and a ground out, but a check-swing soft liner over to third had him between bases and he was doubled off to end a promising inning. In the fifth he was one of three Stripers to draw walks and load the bases, but DaShawn Keirsey Jr. hit a hot ground ball within range of the second baseman and Gwinnett came up empty again.

Owen Murphy’s command in this game was a little bit shakier than it has been in recent history, and without the higher levels of refinement in his location he didn’t miss as many bats and got hit harder than we’ve been seeing in recent weeks. He also had a matchup against a Sounds team that as a unit does not swing and miss very often, with the least number of strikeouts in the International League, and it was across the board that his whiff rates dipped. All of his pitches sort of compressed into the middle to top third portions of the strike zone, wth his fastball not getting on the top edge and his slider staying over the middle of the plate. His changeup and curveball lacked enough control to really be effective pitches in this game for him, leaving him with even less leeway with his offerings. In the end though he threw enough strikes to at least keep the team in the game, and if this is the worst we’ve seen of him over the past month and a half that’s not a particular bad version of him as a pitcher. He made some mistakes and didn’t have his A game, but still managed to find a lot of strikes with his fastball and kept the ball off of barrels.

Swing and Misses

Owen Murphy – 8

Elieser Hernandez – 5

(30-37) Columbus Clingstones 9, (37-34) Rocket City Trash Pandas 4

Box Score

  • Patrick Clohisy, CF: 3-4, HR, 2 2B, 3 RBI, .264/.331/.449
  • Luke Waddell, SS: 1-4, RBI, .200/.333/.300
  • Cedric De Grandpre, SP: 5.2 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 4 BB, 7 K, 11.57 ERA

Patrick Clohisy had by far the best game of his season and extended his hot streak to round out June with a three extra base hit performance and his second home run in as many days. In the fourth inning Clohisy got a breaking ball that spun right into his wheelhouse and waited on him to get to it, and he hit that ball further than I’ve ever seen him hit a ball in a game. Patrick Clohisy no-doubters are not a common sight but he got every single stitch on that swing. He was also responsible for sparking a rally in the first inning with a leadoff ground-rule double. Columbus would go on to score three runs to open up a good early lead, with the biggest swing being Jordan Groshan’s two-run double. After a pretty slow start to the season in regards to his power Clohisy has turned it up in a big way in the recent weeks, and is starting to elevate his hard hit balls like he did towards the end of last season. For parts of the season the timing of his swing was off and he was getting open to soon and swinging over balls, but right now he has his swing locked in and is absolutely drilling the ball on his pull side. The Braves have been placing an emphasis on getting Clohisy to pull the ball more to start to dip into the power and even with his ups and downs over the past couple of seasons that has manifested with a guy who I think has still been the best he has in his career this season even during the times he wasn’t having as much batted ball luck. He is almost certain to cruise to a career-high in home runs (though I imagine Triple-A will call on him and give him a test at some point) and add in that he is on pace to clear 50 stolen bases again and he has certainly continued to give the notion that he has enough value to fit either as a depth piece at the upper levels or a fourth or fifth outfielder.

Cedric De Grandpre was welcomed rudely to Double-A last week, but turned it around and had a solid start this week. Walks were the big issue for De Grandpre, but that is something expected for him at this point given where his control development is. The important fact was that he missed a lot of bats and his slider is starting to take shape, and even though his strike-throwing hasn’t taken a leap forward this season his command is. He has started to land his slider at or below the bottom of the strike zone with much more regularity, and if he is going to carve out a major league career that is the pitch that is going to get him there. At times since Tommy John surgery his slider just was not in the form it was prior to surgery but it was in peak condition for sure on Thursday evening, and with as good as the pitch was it made his fastball play even better. Hitters were looking for the slider in strikeout counts and De Grandpre was able to sneak some fastballs by them that made them look foolish. I’m still of the opinion that De Grandpre’s future is best served in the bullpen, though that’s developed from concerns about his changeup pre-surgery to worries about command now, and that slider is a pitch that is good enough for him to use at a high rate and still get major league hitters out. If he can find more consistent command of that pitch like he had on Thursday night he could be a guy we start talking about heading into next season.

Swing and Misses

Cedric De Grandpre – 16

Isaac Gallegos – 7

(35-35) Rome Emperors 2, (45-27) Greensboro Grasshoppers 3

Box Score

  • Tate Southisene, SS: 1-3, 2 BB, .204/.377/.296
  • John Gil, 2B: 1-4, 2B, BB, .274/.368/.436
  • Eric Hartman, CF: 0-4, BB, .297/.359/.560
  • Isaiah Drake, LF: 2-4, RBI, .251/.332/.406
  • Briggs McKenzie, SP: 4.2 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 8 K, 4.66 ERA

After a two-start adjustment period Briggs McKenzie seems to be enjoying Rome. He had a brief period in the first inning where he was having a bit of trouble locking in his command of his secondaries and he coughed up a run (which was generously considered unearned), but that was the only sign of trouble all game. McKenzie was a big prospect coming out of high school but I’m still astonished at how quickly he has developed his game at the professional level, and a guy who can locate three MLB quality pitches at this stage in his career is considerably rare. His changeup is better than I expected, though if I had some criticism of McKenzie it’s that he tends to speed up his arm on his fastball in late count situations which does hurt both his command and how deceptive his changeup is. Most of McKenzie’s success at getting swinging strikeouts, even against right handed hitters, has come on his breaking balls, but it’s the best curveball in the system so that’s just using what works. We only have two starts from McKenzie and two of those weren’t good, but still it’s looking like he might just be one of those guys. The athleticism and body control is impressive, he already has an arsenal of pitches that could have success at the big league level, and he’s improving everything rapidly. There’s a lot of work left to do in refining his command, and pitching prospects have a lot of speed bumps they could hit, but this is about as good as it gets for a guy this young. He’s ticked every box I look for early on.

The offensive production this game left much to be desired, though the Braves still got production from the top five in the order which is all we’re really looking for. Among those only Eric Hartman came away without a hit, though he did thankfully draw a walk. Hartman has looked great this month and every month and has done a great job of continuing to improve his contact rates, but he’s been a bit aggressive at the plate and only drawn four walks so far in June. Not a major concern yet as he has up to this point never been a guy who is too aggressive for his own good, but it would be nice to see him be a tiny bit more selective working ahead. John Gil didn’t hit the ball very hard today and got lucky on his double that it managed to find some grass, though he’s earned a bad game or two with how well he has hit everything this month. Tate Southisene drew two more walks in this game, and he has been on a crazy walk binge with eight over his past five games. His contact quality at High-A has taken a major hit and he is also striking out more often, with that patience at the plate maybe playing against him just a little bit, but this is the same pattern we saw for him at Augusta. It took him a couple of weeks there to really lock in his approach and start hitting the ball hard all over the field, and with as good as his at bats have started to look I wouldn’t be surprised to see a repeat of that trend in the near future for Rome.

Swing and Misses 

Briggs McKenzie – 13

Jarret Whorff – 4

Logan Samuels – 3

(40-32) Augusta GreenJackets 4, (40-32) Charleston RiverDogs 3

Box Score

  • Luis Guanipa, CF: 0-5, .322/.376/.491
  • Conor Essenburg, RF: 2-5, 2B, .264/.399/.473
  • Alex Lodise, SS: 2-4, HR, BB, 3 RBI, .254/.347/.457
  • Derek Vartanian, SP: 6.1 IP, 9 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, 3.78 ERA

Alex Lodise continued his wild hot streak for the GreenJackets with another home run, putting Augusta up early in this game. For Lodise that is his sixth home run over his past eight games, but he wasn’t done making an impact on this game. Both teams held on with three runs after nine and went through the tenth scoreless, bringing up the top of the order for Augusta in the top of the 11th inning. Lodise had a matchup against a lefty with an extreme sidearm delivery but showed a good approach on a sinker tailing away from him on the outer edge and was able to shoot a hard liner through the right side of the infield for a go-ahead single. Lodise’s explosion at the plate has been triggered partly by a much more patient approach at the plate. Early in the season Lodise was swinging at everything and his lack of selectiveness really hurt his contact quality, but lately he has really been chasing power contact early in counts. His whiff rates mean that’s going to come with the downside of more strikeouts, but with his power if he can just draw more walks these sorts of results are what will happen. Prior to that Lodise long ball Conor Essenburg made his biggest mark on the game by shooting a fly ball into the right center field gap for a double as part of his two-hit evening. Essenburg added a couple of strikeouts to his ever-increasing total and that’s still the major red flag in his profile, but it’s really not as dire as the recent results may indicate. His contact rate is steadily climbing after being pretty rough early in the season, but like Lodise he has settled down and been drawing a lot more walks over the past couple of weeks and that has just put him into more deep counts that lead to strikeouts. The process behind the scenes for Essenburg is churning and he seems to be caught in a bit of an approach transition right now, but there are some positive signs for him and overall he has obviously been very impressive with how hard he hits the ball. Essenburg has shown an aptitude for adjustment even in the limited sample size we’ve seen from him so I’m bullish on him for the second half of the season and expect things to click into place fpr him a bit more on the strikeout front.

Swing and Misses

Derek Vartanian – 11

Kade Woods – 5

Jaylen Paden – 4

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: Caminero puts a hurtin’ on Kansas City

ST. PETERSBURG, FL - JUNE 25: Junior Caminero #13 of the Tampa Bay Rays celebrates his home run against the Kansas City Royals during the fifth inning of a baseball game at Tropicana Field on June 25, 2026 in St. Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees lost some ground in the American League East on Thursday. A tough loss in Fenway, combined with a dominant win by the Rays brings New York’s division lead down to 2.5 games. The day’s short schedule still provided plenty of pop, excellent pitching, and plenty to pay attention to around the American League. Let’s take a look at how it all shook out.

Tampa Bay Rays (45-33) 13, Kansas City Royals (34-48) 2

The Rays jumped ahead early on Thursday, and they never looked back in a convincing win over the Royals in St. Pete. Tampa Bay took that early lead in the bottom half of the first, when Junior Caminero belted a two-run home run, his 17th on the season, giving his club a lead they’d never surrender.

It was also the beginning of big-time day for the Rays’ slugger, as he stayed hot with a solo home run in the fifth inning. In the eighth, Caminero put a bow on his massive night, when he launched his third home run of the game, this one extending their lead well into blow-out territory.

Shortly after that first homer, the Rays turned to their bulk pitcher for the evening, Ian Seymour, who was terrific in his outing. Entering in the second inning, and working 6.2 frames in total, the lefty kept the Royals scoreless and hitless, while striking out seven in a sparkling appearance.

Beyond Caminero’s damage, plenty of other Rays got in on the action on Thursday. Victor Mesa Jr. blew the game open with a three-run shot in the fourth, while Johnathan Aranda tallied three hits, and Richie Palacios and Cedric Mullins each had a pair. With a multi-run lead for almost the entire game, Tampa Bay put the nail in the coffin with a five-run eighth inning, which was punctuated by Caminero’s third homer.

On the pitching side, the Rays actually had a combined no-hitter going into the ninth inning, as the Royals had little to say with the bats. There would be some late life, however, when Carter Jensen simultaneously ended the no-no and the shutout with a two-run homer in the ninth off of Craig Kimbrel. Nonetheless, it was a dominant win for the Rays from all angles, and it helps them gain some ground in the East with the Yankees’ loss.

Other Games

Pittsburgh Pirates (41-40) 5, Seattle Mariners (41-41) 1:

With a loss on Thursday, the Mariners drop to .500 on the season, but still hold first place in the underwhelming West. Brandon Lowe swatted his 19th homer of the season in the first for the Pirates, and they held that lead until the end. Seattle’s lone run came in the fifth thanks to an RBI from J.P. Crawford, but it wasn’t enough as the Buccos countered with a pair of runs in each of the fourth and eighth innings. Bubba Chandler was excellent for Pittsburgh in his 5.1 innings, setting up a spotless evening for their bullpen after his departure.

Texas Rangers (39-42) 6, Toronto Blue Jays (39-42) 5:

The Rangers did much of their damage in just one inning to scrape a win on Thursday. In the third inning, up 1-0, a three-run shot from Wyatt Langford and a two-run blast from Jake Burger plated five runs in the inning, and had Texas up 6-0 early on. The Jays weren’t dead in the water, however, as a Myles Straw double helped cut the deficit in half in the fifth inning, and Kazuma Okamoto’s two-run homer in the ninth cut it to just one run. It ultimately wasn’t quite enough, as the Jays fell just short in their comeback effort.

Rain washes out Diamondbacks vs. Cardinals

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - JUNE 25: A general view of Busch Stadium during a rain delay prior to a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Arizona Diamondbacks at Busch Stadium on June 25, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Joe Puetz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Diamondbacks News

(Burn City Sports) Diamondbacks’ Paul Sewald calls out Cardinals after rainout costs Arizona an off day

The Diamondbacks and Cardinals were scheduled to conclude their four-game series Thursday, but with rain in the forecast, St. Louis announced on its X account that the game would be rescheduled for July 23. According to Sewald’s post on X, Arizona had asked the home club to move the game earlier in the day to avoid the postponement.

“No you’re right thank you @Cardinals for not moving our game up to this afternoon when we politely asked given the whole world knew it was going to rain tonight. I actually was really hoping we could lose an off day and turn it into a 4 city road trip.”

(Arizona Sports) Diamondbacks-Cardinals series finale at Busch Stadium postponed due to weather

The Arizona Diamondbacks’ road game against the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday has been postponed due to inclement weather, the Cardinals announced.

The game was scheduled to start at 4:45 p.m. MST, but the forecast provided doubt that baseball would be played.

(ESPN) Diamondbacks activate Max Kepler after 80-game suspension

The Arizona Diamondbacks activated outfielder Max Kepler from the restricted list Thursday following his completion of an 80-game suspension for testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug.

Kepler, who signed a free agent deal with the Diamondbacks on June 7, hit .333 with two home runs in 10 minor league games. He was fifth in the batting order and set to play left field for the Diamondbacks against the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday night, but the game was postponed by rain.

MLB News

(Bleacher Report) MLBPA Reportedly Proposes Ban on Prop Bets on Individual Players in CBA Talks

With the rise of legalized sports betting in recent years, several MLB players have spoken about the criticism that they’ve received from people blaming them for failed bets.

As part of Thursday’s proposal, the MLBPA also asked MLB to clarify that players are permitted to engage in endorsements and sponsorships from legal betting operators and prediction markets (via Purdum and Passan).

(Yahoo! Sports) MLB makes big push for salary cap, floor with public statement outlining labor negotiations with MLBPA

That changed Thursday, when MLB put out a league-approved campaign making a hard push for a salary cap and salary floor. The campaign, which is titled “Leveling the Playing Field,” makes the argument that the spending gap between teams has reached a breaking point and that a salary cap and salary floor are necessary to fix the game.

In an effort to spread the word about the campaign, MLB launched a website dedicated to the cause, which features five tabs explaining why the league believes the sport needs a salary cap.

(CBS Sports) How Jacob Misiorowski got this good: Inside the Brewers ace’s transcendence into one of MLB’s best pitchers

If young Milwaukee Brewers ace Jacob Misiorowski were part of the Greek or Roman pantheon, then he’d probably be pulling double duty right about now. Among the elemental gods, Misiorowski was already in charge of fire — this, after all, is a pitcher whose first three pitches in the majors were in excess of 100 mph. Now, though, Misiorowski has expanded his jurisdiction to include earth — mound dirt, to be more specific. Indeed, the 24-year-old primal force known informally as “The Miz” is throwing harder than ever (and harder than any starting pitcher ever), and he’s also harnessed that fiery stuff to go from occasionally dominant but flawed to just plainly overwhelming. The best pitcher in the world is right now equal parts thrower and pitcher, equal parts fire and earth.

Mariners News: Andrés Muñoz, Miles Mastrobuoni, and Corey Seager

Jun 25, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Texas Rangers shortstop Corey Seager (5) turns a double play against Toronto Blue Jays shortstop Ernie Clement (not pictured) first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (not pictured) during the first inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images | John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

Good morning folks and happy Friday!

The Mariners had another stinker of a performance last night, dropping the series finale to the Pirates 5-1 which brings them back to .500 on the season. The M’s will try to get back in the win column with the first of three games in Cleveland starting this afternoon.

The good news is that Bryce Miller seems to have taken a serious step forward. Where would you slot him into your personal ranking of the Mariners’ starting pitchers at this moment?

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

Mets fire Mendoza

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JUNE 01: Manager Carlos Mendoza #64 of the New York Mets looks on before the game against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on June 01, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The New York Mets have fired manager Carlos Mendoza, per multiple reports.

This move seemed inevitable. Despite having the highest payroll in MLB, since starting the season with a 7-4 record, the team has gone 27-43, and has lost their last six in a row. They just got swept in a four game series at home by the Chicago Cubs, including an embarrassing 10-5 loss in the second game of a doubleheader on Wednesday that saw the Mets make six errors.

The Mets have, for the last year, been pretty terrible. On June 12, 2025, they were in first place in the National League East with a 45-24 record. They went 38-54 the rest of the way, finishing in second place in the N.L. East, 13 games out, and missed the playoffs. They are 72-101 in their last 173 games.

Mendoza was a coach in the New York Yankees’ minor league system from 2009 through 2017, then was on the major league coaching staff for the Yankees from 2018 through 2023. He was hired by the Mets after the 2023 season to replace Buck Showalter, who had gone 75-87 in his second season as the Mets’ manager.

Mendoza’s 2024 Mets squad finished third in the National League East with an 89-73 record, but claimed a Wild Card spot and advanced to the NLCS, where they lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Andy Green has been named as the interim replacement for Mendoza.

Today in White Sox History: June 26

CHICAGO - 1954. Nellie Fox, far left, star second baseman for the Chicago White Sox, poses with teammates. (L-R) Bob Wilson, Jack Harshman, and Harry Dorish, in the Comiskey Park dugout in 1954.
On this day 70 years ago, Jack Harshman (second from right) authored a complete-game win that kept his White Sox teammates happy, as the team had just won its ninth straight. | (Photo by Mark Rucker/Transcendental Graphics, Getty Images)

1916
In a game in Cleveland, the White Sox became the first team to ever have names sewn on to the backs of the uniforms. Knowing who was playing didn’t help them, though; they were shut out, 2-0, on the afternoon. (The White Sox returned to the idea of names on the back of road uniforms in 1960 — and this time the practice stuck.) 

In the same game, Cleveland players wore numbers pinned to their sleeves, becoming the first players in the 20th century to do so. Each player’s number connoted their position on the diamond.


1956
Jack Harshman gave up a run by his fifth batter of a game hosting Boston — and then shut the Red Sox down scoreless on just one more hit the rest of the way, gaining his fifth win of the season and giving the White Sox their ninth straight victory. A two-run double by Luis Aparicio in the bottom of the second put the South Siders on top for good, 3-1, in a game they’d win, 4-1.

The victory pushed the White Sox to 37-22, in second place in the AL and 1 1/2 games out of first.


1960
Boston played a football game at Comiskey Park in Chicago to cap off a doubleheader — but lost to the White Sox, 21-7. The two-touchdown win completed a sweep for the White Sox, who won the opener, 4-3. The Pale Hose scored in every inning but the fifth — understandable, given that they exhausted themselves with an 11-run fourth inning. Leading the 22-hit barrage was Sherm Lollar (4-for-5, double, three RBIs, got on base a fifth time with a HBP), while Jim Landis, Gene Freese and Al Smith each chipped in two. Every White Sox starter had at least one hit, including starting pitcher Early Wynn, who went 1-for-5 and benefited from 21 runs of support in his complete game victory!

Despite the onslaught, the defending pennant-winners were still scuffling, at 36-30 and in fourth place in the AL. However, this sweep came at the start of an 18-7 run that pushed the White Sox back into first place.


1964
In a doubleheader opener, White Sox right fielder Mike Hershberger spoiled Minnesota starter Gerry Arrigo’s no-hit bit with a leadoff single in the ninth inning. The White Sox lose, 2-0, but take the nightcap, 9-4

Arrigo would finish his major league career with five games on the South Side, in 1970.


1977
Rod Carew went 4-for-5 with a double, homer and six RBIs in a 19-12 mauling of the White Sox on Jersey Day in front of 46,463 at Metropolitan Stadium in Minneapolis, raising his batting average from .396 to .403.

The future Hall-of-Famer would push his batting average to as high as .411 (on July 1) and remain better than .400 until July 10, but ultimately fell short of the .300 mark, settling at .388 on the season. It was the sixth AL batting title of seven in Carew’s career, and his best-ever batting average, helping him earn a majors-high 9.7 WAR and the 1977 AL MVP.


1983
White Sox slugger Greg “The Bull” Luzinski belted the first of his three rooftop home runs at Comiskey Park, becoming the first player to ever hit that many in a single season. Luzinski powered a pitch from Minnesota’s Brian Oelkers over the roof in left-center field, scoring Tom Paciorek. The shot came in the third inning of a game the Sox won, 9-7.


1986
It was the best trade in the short career of GM Ken Harrelson, sending catcher Scott Bradley to the Mariners for a player to be named later — and on July 1, that player was revealed as outfielder Iván Calderon

Calderon hit 28 home runs in 1987, and would be a key for the Sox in their spectacular 1990 campaign both at bat and in the field — leading the team that year with 74 RBIs, as the Sox stunned baseball by winning 94 games.

Calderon was traded to the Expos as part of the Tim Raines deal in December 1990, before coming back for nine games late in the 1993 season. To make room for Calderon’s second stint on the South Side, the Sox traded away reliever Donn Pall.


2010
The White Sox beat the Cubs, 3-2, to run their winning streak to 11 games in a row.

The streak started on June 15, and saw the Sox blitz National League clubs during the interleague portion of the schedule. They took three from Pittsburgh, three from Washington, three from Atlanta and two from the Cubs. During the streak they outscored opponents, 51-24, with three shutouts. The 11 straight wins remain tied for the sixth-longest streak in White Sox history, and capped off a 15-of-16 run for the clus.

It was the 15th time in franchise history the Sox had a double-digit win streak, and the first since they won 10 at the end of 1981 and into 1982.

In an odd coincidence, the only other 15-1 homestand in franchise history (1961) saw its final win one day earlier than this, on June 25.


2015
In yanking the fourth pitch of the game deep and out to right field, Adam Eaton became just the second White Sox hitter to club leadoff home runs in consecutive games. It was Eaton’s only hit in an eventual 5-4 win over the Tigers. The White Sox had won Eaton’s first leadoff homer game, 8-7 in 10 innings, also against Detroit.

Thirteen years earlier, Kenny Lofton became the first White Sox hitter to accomplish this feat, clubbing leadoff dingers on July 18-19, 2002. The homers were Lofton’s only two hits in the game, both losses for the White Sox, to Kansas City and Baltimore. Just nine days later, Lofton was dealt to San Francisco.

Detroit Tigers look to even home series with Houston Astros on Friday

The Detroit Tigers officially reached the halfway mark of the 2026 regular-season schedule on Thursday night after dropping the opener of a four-game home series with the Houston Astros, 2-1. Troy Melton looked sharp, recording a career high six strikeouts, but the offense went AWOL until a solo homer in the ninth by Dillon Dingler.

AJ Hinch’s squad looks to even things up on Friday night behind right-hander Keider Montero, who continues to be a steady presence in the rotation for the Olde English D. The 25-year-old’s last outing against the Chicago White Sox was no exception, allowing three runs on six hits (one home run) while issuing zero walks for the second straight game and striking out three over seven innings in what eventually resulted in a 5-4 win in extras.

Montero saw the Astros a couple of outings ago in his only relief appearance of the season. It did not go well, though, as he surrendered a pair of runs (one earned) on two hits and no walks while striking out two over 1 1/3 innings to earn his fifth loss of the 2026 campaign.

Up against him for Houston is fellow righty Spencer Arrighetti, who has also been an important presence on the Astros’ pitching staff this year. However, the 26-year-old has struggled in June to the tune of a 6.95 ERA but a less offensive 4.42 FIP stretching across his last four games and 22 innings of work. He missed the Tigers when they were in town last week, so this will be his first appearance against them this year.

Here is how those two righties match up on Friday night at Comerica Park.

Detroit Tigers (34-47) vs. Houston Astros (40-43)

Time (ET): 6:40 p.m.
Place: Comerica Park, Detroit, Michigan
SB Nation Site:The Crawfish Boxes
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 82: RHP Keider Montero (3-5, 3.68 ERA) vs. RHP Spencer Arrighetti (7-3, 3.13 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Montero1580.216.55.335.53.951.5
Arrighetti1269.023.210.939.44.131.0

MONTERO

ARRIGHETTI

Chicago Cubs history unpacked — June 26

Free of charge for the discerning reader.

Happy birthday to Rodney Myers, and a mighty host of others.

Today in baseball history, in 1960 – At Forbes FieldCubs rookie Ron Santo, making his major league debut, leads Chicago to a sweep of the first-place Pirates. Santo is 3 for 7 and drives in five runs as the Cubs win, 7-5 and 7-6, and other stories as well.

Today in baseball history:

  • 1938 Carl Hubbell wins his 200th game, as the Giants beat the visiting Cubs, 5-1, and stretch their lead over the second-place Reds to two games.
  • 1961 – At Los Angeles’s Wrigley FieldYogi Berra collects his 2,000th career hit, all as a Bronx Bomber. To celebrate the achievement a huge cake is rolled out.
  • 1966Ron Santo singles in the first and his next time up is struck in the face by a Jack Fisher pitch that fractures his cheek. Before Santo’s at bat, the Mets’ Ron Hunt and the Cubs’ Adolfo Phillips had both been hit by pitches. Santo will be operated on the following day but will return to action in a week. The injury ends his consecutive game streak at 390, but his hitting streak continues.
  • 1970 – Frank Robinson belts two successive grand slams during a 12-2 Oriole romp over the Senators, just the seventh major leaguer to ever accomplish the feat. They will be Robby’s only grand slams for the O’s.
  • 1977 – On Jersey Day in Minnesota, every fan receives a jersey with #29 on it, Rod Carew‘s number. Carew responds by going 4 for 5, scoring four runs, and raising his average to .403. One of the hits is a grand slam and he will hit another slam on July 4th
  • 1987 – You gotta give him credit for trying. Paul Noce of the Cubs ties a major-league record (tied 11 days ago) in the third inning by twice being thrown out trying to steal. A dropped ball leaves him safe at second base after he is caught, then he is thrown out trying to steal third. Pittsburgh beats Greg Maddux and the Cubs, 5-2. Maddux will finish 6-14, his last losing season until 2005.
  • 1994 Kirby Puckett passes Rod Carew with his 2,088 hit as the Twins’ top hit leader.
  • 2003 Edgar Martinez, who already holds the Mariners’ all-time records for games played, at-bats, hits, doubles, total bases, extra-base hits, walks and runs scored, passes Ken Griffey Jr.‘s mark for team career RBIs. His two-run homer in the Mariners’ 10-6 victory over the Angels gives the All-Star designated hitter 1,153 RBIs – one more than Junior.

Cubs Birthdays:Jason Kendall, Rodney Myers*, Mike Griffin, Manny Seoane, Dave Rosello, Howie Pollet, Elmer Singleton, Babe Herman, George Milstead, Elmer Yoter, Elmer Ponder, Topsy Hartsel. Also notable: Derek Jeter HOF. Willard Brown HOF.

Today in history:

  • 1894 – Karl Benz of Germany receives US patent for gasoline-driven auto.
  • 1927 – The Cyclone roller coaster opens on Coney Island.
  • 1959 – Ingemar Johansson of Sweden floors Floyd Patterson seven times in the third round in NYC to win the world heavyweight boxing title.
  • 1963 – US President John F. Kennedy gives his famous “Ich bin ein Berliner” (intended to mean “I am a Berliner”, but may actually mean “I am a doughnut”) speech in West Berlin.
  • 1974 – The Universal Product Code (UPC) is scanned for the first time to sell a package of Wrigley’s chewing gum at Marsh Supermarket in Troy, Ohio.
  • 1977 – Elvis Presley appears in concert at Market Square Arena in Indianapolis, Indiana; unknowingly the last performance of his career.
  • 2018 – Hello Kitty bullet train unveiled by the West Japan Railway.
  • 2024 – European Space Agency creates Lego ‘space bricks’ by 3D printing Lego out of meteorite dust, part of a project to learn how to build a base on the Moon.

*pictured.

Bernie’s Dugout Open Thread: 6/26-7/2

Sep 10, 2024; San Francisco, California, USA; General view of the helmet used by the Milwaukee Brewers before the start of the first inning against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Stan Szeto-Imagn Images | Stan Szeto-Imagn Images

Greetings, Brew Crew Ball community. The Brewers dropped their first two games in Atlanta over the weekend, but they bounced back nicely to win the series finale before sweeping the Reds in Cincinnati to extend their division lead. After a well-deserved off day yesterday, they’re now set to begin an 18-game gauntlet over the next 17 days leading into the All-Star break, including series against all four of their division rivals. This could very well be the most important stretch of the season when we look back in late September.

Feel free to use this thread to chat about (almost) anything you want: video games, food, movies, non-baseball sports, the Brewers, you name it. As long as it’s appropriate and is allowed by our moderators, it’s fair game here.

You know the drill.

This is now an open thread:

Phillies News: Justin Crawford, Don Mattingly, All-Star Game

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 1: Justin Crawford #2 of the Philadelphia Phillies celebrates with Bryce Harper #3 after hitting a walk-off single in the bottom of the tenth inning against the Washington Nationals at Citizens Bank Park on April 1, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Phillies defeated the Nationals 6-5. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Phillies are heading to Queens for the first time this season. There, they will find a reeling Mets squad that would surely love to rattle off a few victories over their hated foe as a mood-lifter. They will also find some really, really good Chinese food. I had a plate of rice rolls there that I’m still thinking about. Anyway, onto the links.

Phillies news

The All-Star Game finalists have been announced, and there’s some familiar names present…

The Phillies’ skipper will be on the coaching staff for the National League’s All-Star team. ($)

Justin Crawford has a new approach at the plate.

Cristopher Sánchez’ peers are a historic, accomplished bunch.

MLB news

MLB has presented another proposal for the next CBA, with a 5-year cap on free agent deals (6 if the player is sticking with their current club)

Mock draft season is well underway.

The top vote-getter in each league is automatically given a spot in the All-Star starting nine. Who earned that honor for the AL? Not Judge, not Trout… think north.