PEORIA, ARIZONA - MARCH 11: Colt Emerson #85 of the Seattle Mariners at bat during a Spring Training game against the Colorado Rockies at Peoria Stadium on March 11, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images
In an unexpected announcement Tuesday morning, Seattle Mariner top prospect Colt Emerson reportedly agreed to an 8 year, $95 million contract extension with the organization. The deal includes a ninth year club option as well as various escalators that can bring the total up to $130 million. Additionally, Emerson was granted a full no trade clause in the deal.
In signing, Emerson has secured the largest pre-debut contract in MLB history, surpassing Jackson Chourio’s 8/$82 2023 contract with the Brewers.
The team’s first round draft pick in the 2023 draft, Emerson has graced the top of prospect lists since joining the professional ranks and is considered a consensus top ten prospect in the sport. At just 20 years old, the uber-talented shortstop now figures to be on the fast track to debuting with the club and will be locked up in the PNW for the next decade.
BREAKING: Colt Emerson and the Seattle Mariners are in agreement on an eight-year, $95 million contract extension, sources say. The deal includes a ninth-year club option, a full no-trade clause and escalators that can bring it north of $130 million. Emerson is represented by…
A sweet-swinging lefty shortstop, Emerson possesses some of the best bat-to-ball skills in all of minor league baseball and is renowned for his plate discipline, a trait that’s given him an incredibly high floor as a player since his time of drafting. His game, however, has taken a jump, as he’s now posting some very intriguing underlying power numbers without sacrificing his contact rates all that much, rounding out his game and making him a complete player that looks like a threat for 20+ homers a year. Offensively, there’s not a ton to poke holes in.
His glove is where the most progress has been made. Once considered a strong candidate to move to third base, Emerson is now a true shortstop defender that should have little issue manning the six. He’s got an excellent arm and solid range, and though he may have to play a different position to get his reps in on this roster, shortstop is undoubtedly his long-term home.
Whether Emerson is expected to join the roster right away or remain in Triple-A for extra seasoning is yet to be announced, but it seems reasonable to assume the Mariners would promote Emerson now that he’s officially on the big league payroll. Though clarifying the Mariner roster for most of the next decade, this move undoubtedly muddies the water for how the 2026 roster shakes out, and how they choose to handle it is a fascinating discussion that needs to be had. Have your own thoughts? Sound off in the comments below!
HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 30: Ranger Suárez #55 of the Boston Red Sox looks on during the first inning of the game against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on March 30, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) | Getty Images
So the Red Sox offense so far is… ah, not great. Roman Anthony, Jarren Duran, Willson Contreras, Trevor Story, and Ceddanne Rafaela are all carrying an OPS below .700. Caleb Durbin is carrying an OPS below the gates of hell. But all is not lost offensively, thanks the prodigious play of Wilyer Abreu. Following his outstanding WBC performance, the outfielder is once again off to a hot start. And, this year, the Sox coaching staff thinks he has the potential to turn into an “elite” bat. (Alex Speier, Boston Globe)
If the lineup continues to struggle, then one of the talking points of the season will undoubtably all of the offensive options the Red Sox elected not to pull the trigger on this past offseason. One of those players was Isaac Parades, who recorded a hit against the Sox last night. But he actually sounds a bit relieved that he’s not in Boston, owing to his troubles at Fenway: “Truthfully, it’s not a stadium that I can see the ball well [at]. I don’t know why. It’s just difficult for me to see the ball there.” (Tim Healey, Boston Globe)
Parades actually hasn’t started all that well either, though he’s been better than the man the Red Sox settled on to play third base, Caleb Durbin, who is 0-14 with one walk and three strikeouts. But Durbin’s not all that worried yet: “Baseball is just one of those sports I think where it’s a very feel sport. So the more you’re in rhythm and the more you have your feels right, you’re going to be hot and you’re going to be feeling good. So it’s just trying to get back to that and work through that. Like I said, it’s just working. You’ve got to put in the work to get those feels back.” (Christopher Smith, MassLive)
And here are two more names to throw into the “not worried” hat: Ranger Suarez and Johan Oviedo, who both struggled last night but are taking it in stride. (Christopher Smith, MassLive)
Truthfully, we all should take the words of Durbin, Suarez, and Oviedo to heart. It’s just four freaking games, everyone! Having said that, there’s an argument to be made that the blueprint that Craig Breslow put together for the team this offseason leaves little margin for error. (Rob Bradford, WEEI)
And given that the roster construction could lead to a lot of variance, it’s no surprise that the Red Sox are one of the most polarizing teams in the league with respect to preseason prognostications. (ESPN)
The New York Mets paid how much to watch Bo Bichette strike out all the time? And another catcher is going to hit 60 home runs!
MLB Opening Weekend overreactions are a ton of fun. Because you know, baseball is a game all about small sample sizes.
Even so, we can still use some of those sometimes outlandish statements to attack the MLB MVP odds markets.
Here are my favorite MLB MVP predictions for the American and National Leagues, based on those early-season overreactions.
MVP overreactions and early picks for 2026
Overreaction
Early pick
Shea Langeliers +8000
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. +1600
Bo Bichette +8000
Ronald Acuna Jr. +1100
Early American League MVP pick + overreaction
AL MVP overreaction: Shea Langeliers is the new Cal Raleigh!
Cal Raleigh was 28 years old during his historic 60-home-run season.
Shea Langeliers is a catcher. He’s playing in his age 28-season. He also has ridiculous power, and he hit three home runs in the Athletics' first three games of the season!
Raleigh also hit 64 home runs in the two seasons before last, and Langeliers had 60 combined between 2024-25.
Langeliers is in the middle of an A's lineup that seems to be swinging for the fences, and plays half of his games in a minor-league ballpark in Sacramento.
Crazier things have happened than Langeliers doing his best Raleigh impression this season.
Shea Langeliers odds to win MVP: +8000 at FanDuel
AL MVP pick: Unfinished business
Aaron Judge is the favorite to win another American League MVP for a reason. He’s put forth two of baseball's greatest hitting seasons in the last two years. But a slow start could cost him, and he’s striking out a lot.
I like the price with Vladimir Guerrero Jr. at +1600. Vladdy is coming off an incredible postseason run, where he hit eight home runs and came up just short of leading the Toronto Blue Jays to a World Series title.
He could lead the AL in hits and batting average, and even a slight uptick in regular-season homers could send his numbers through the roof. All while playing for a team expected to contend for another AL Pennant.
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. odds to win MVP: +1600 at FanDuel
Current AL MVP odds & favorites
Player
Odds
Aaron Judge
+180
Bobby Witt Jr.
+450
Cal Raleigh
+950
Julio Rodriguez
+1200
Nick Kurtz
+1500
Early National League MVP pick + overreaction
NL MVP overreaction: Bo Bichette sucks!
It took New York Mets fans just three games to boo their new third baseman, and not without reason.
Bo Bichette signed a three-year, $126 million contract with the Mets this offseason, but his tenure in Queens has gotten off to a rocky start. The former Blue Jay went a dismal 1-14 with eight strikeouts over the opening weekend, and the fans let him have it.
The overreaction here is that this was another huge waste of money for the Mets. But this is a guy who is one of the best pure hitters in the game. He led the American League in hits twice and was on pace to do it again last season before missing a chunk of games late in the year.
This price is too long for a guy who could be an impact bat in one of the best lineups in baseball.
Bo Bichette odds to win MVP: +8000 at FanDuel
NL MVP pick: If not Ohtani, then who?
Obviously, this is Shohei Ohtani’s award to lose, and if he starts 15 games for the Los Angeles Dodgers this season, it’s a wrap.
That said, there are a ton of great talents that could normally be up for MVP awards if, ya know, Ohtani didn’t also pitch, such as Juan Soto, Ronald Acuna Jr., and Fernando Tatis Jr., to name a few.
My favorite among this trio is Acuna. A former MVP himself, the Atlanta Braves outfielder is set to have his first fully healthy season since he won the award in 2023.
Acuna is capable of putting up a 50-home run and 50-stolen-base season.
Ronald Acuna Jr. odds to win MVP: +1100 at FanDuel
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 30: Nolan Arenado #28 of the Arizona Diamondbacks warms up in the on deck circle during the sixth inning of the home opener against the Detroit Tigers at Chase Field on March 30, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images
A sellout crowd greeted the Diamondbacks on a festive night that featured a triple and homer from Corbin Carroll and a stellar Arizona debut for Michael Soroka, who recorded the fourth immaculate inning in franchise history.
And while things did get a little too interesting, the end result was all that mattered — a 9-6 win over the Tigers in the home opener at Chase Field.
Arizona Diamondbacks right-hander Paul Sewald fired a 92 MPH fastball past Tigers first baseman Spencer Torkelson, capping off a 1-2-3 ninth inning.
The D-backs had won their first game of the season 9-6, as Sewald locked down his first save back in the closer’s role.
It was not, however, an easy victory. Arizona held an 8-0 lead as late as the seventh inning, but watched that lead evaporate in an ugly bullpen meltdown. But it would not end in as disappointing a manner as many others have.
The Arizona Diamondbacks are in problem-solving mode, according to a team spokesperson, as the new ribbon boards at Chase Field are causing view obstructions for fans, particularly those sitting in the 300 level.
The D-backs, in partnership with Daktronics, had ribbon boards installed below the 200 and 300 sections around the ballpark, along with a shorter board underneath the suites.
Several fans sitting in the front row of the 300 level explained that they had to lean forward or bring multiple seat cushions to see the field, as they could no longer watch the game between the rails.
Fernandez, Arizona’s newly-crowned No. 27 prospect, has been an exciting prospect to watch ahead of the 2026 season. He surged for 17 home runs in 2025 with Double-A Amarillo, then came on strong in Cactus League play with a .280/.308/.840 slash.
“You guys saw him all spring training long, a very exciting player, very youthful, continuing to climb through the system and learn and grow about our concepts, and just plugs right in,” manager Torey Lovullo said.
Just like with the pitch clock, the advent of robot umpires did not break Major League Baseball. The automated ball-strike system (ABS) debuted in the major leagues Wednesday after years of testing in the minor leagues, and in the 47 games since, exactly 94 calls have been overturned. Some were egregious, others by literal millimeters. The general consensus, based on in-stadium fan reaction and seamless integration into television broadcasts: Not only does ABS work, it makes the game better.
Skeptics and holdouts remain — just as they do with the pitch clock two seasons after it was added. Unlike the complaints about the pitch clock that mostly concern one’s personal preferences, the criticisms of ABS are rooted in math and logic. The system’s margin of error (approximately 1/6th of an inch, according to the league) is larger than some of the calls being overturned. And if the system is as good and accurate as the league says, does it not make sense to utilize it for all ball-strike calls?
There’s not an obvious cat equivalence to the ever popular Bark in the Park events held annually by most teams, but that hasn’t stopped a couple of clubs from trying.
Saturday, August 29 has been declared Caturday at Nats Ballpark. Back in 2012, Washington launched its initial Natitude Campaign as a tone-setter for the fanbase, but over time it devolved into a sarcastic rallying cry that rang out only when things weren’t going great for the club. Then last spring, with a new wave of young stars on the rise, the team attempted to reignite the bit with Next Gen Natitude and a hype video that was roughly as inspiring as the 2025 Nationals. But this year, the Nats have finally struck the correct chord with a Next Gen Catitude shirt that I would happily wear to the gym, should one fall into my possession.
Blue Jays starter Cody Ponce left tonight’s season debut on a cart in the third inning. The team has only announced the injury as right knee discomfort.
Ponce stumbled while trying to field a chopper off the bat of Rockies center fielder Jake McCarthy (video provided by Shi Davidi of Sportsnet). The big righty was unable to field the ball cleanly, then tried stopping abruptly to pick it up. He tweaked his right leg, took a few more steps, then went down on the dirt a little to the left of first base.
At surface value, it appears that the right-hander added nearly 8” of lift to his cutter based on his 2025 and 2026 pitch shape data. If you look at the raw data from Baseball Savant, his cutter went from an average of 4.9” induced vertical break in 2025 to 12.5” in 2026. That also came with a velocity jump from 92.0 MPH to 95.0 MPH.
Based on those metrics, it certainly appears that Schlittler has morphed a mediocre cutter into a “plus-plus” offering. I agree with that on principle, but his 2025 data may be an example of how improperly identified pitches can muddy the aggregate metrics. That’s an important thing to consider when you look at pitch data from an analytical lens.
Luinder Avila pitching for the Omaha Storm Chasers | Minda Haas Kuhlmann
It was not a great opening weekend for the Omaha Storm Chasers, as they played on the road, against the Louisville Bats and were swept. The Bats are the AAA affiliate for the Cincinnati Reds.
The Storm Chasers lost a pair of one run games, 2-1 and 6-5 (in 10 innings), but were routed in the series finale 10-4. Some notable stats and numbers from some players that just missed out on cracking the Royals Opening Day roster are as follows:
Josh Rojas- 4-12, 1 HR, 1 double, 3 runs scored and 4 runs batted in.
Kameron Misner- 2-12, 3 runs batted in, 6 strikeouts.
John Rave- 3-10, 1 run batted in, 5 walks, 2 stolen bases.
Abraham Toro- 3-15, 1 run batted in, 7 strikeouts.
For the pitchers, Ryan Bergert was the Opening Day starter. He went 4.1 innings, gave up seven hits, two runs and struck out four.
Ryan Bergert was solid in his 2026 regular season debut.
Would’ve liked more length but pitch mix looked good.
Luinder Avila also got a start, despite fans clamoring for him to be a backend bullpen piece. The Royals want him stretched out to be a potential starter. In his start, he went 3 innings, gave up four hits, two runs, two walks, while striking out three.
Steven Cruz, who emerged as a key bullpen piece last season, before suffering an injury, got a save opportunity on Saturday, with a 5-3 lead. Unfortunately, the 26-year-old surrendered a game tying two-run homer to Christian Encarnacion-Strand. However, on a positive note, Cruz did strike out three batters in that inning.
The Storm Chasers are home Tuesday-Sunday for a six-game series against the Buffalo Bisons, the Blue Jays’ AAA affiliate.
In AA news, the Northwest Arkansas Naturals open their season Thursday, April 2 with a four-game road series, against the Wichita Wind Surge, the Twins’ AA affiliate. Dennis Colleran got a lot of hype from the Spring Training outings he had for Kansas City. He will be a name to keep an eye on. The 22-year-old quickly moved through the minors last season, working through Quad Cities and Columbia with dominating numbers. A 2.85 ERA over 66.1 innings, with an opposing batting average of .161, with 72 strikeouts and 34 walks.
Frank Mozzicato, the 7th overall pick in 2021, had a rough season for the Naturals last season, but the lefty is primed to bounce back and continue working his way up the ladder.
In High-A ball, the Quad Cities River Bandits open their season Friday at the South Bend Cubs, the Chicago Cubs High-A affiliate. Two top names to keep an eye on are right hander Drew Beam and catcher Blake Mitchell.
In Single-A, the Columbia Fireflies, open their season Thursday on the road against the Hickory Crawdads, the Rangers Single-A affiliate. Right-handed pitcher Kendry Chourio, who has received national hype as a prospect is the top Firefly to watch early on.
Rosters have not been set for other affiliates, but the Royals have made a few transactions. Drew Waters cleared waivers and was assigned to Omaha yesterday. The Royals released infielder Brennon McNair, outfielders Tyler Gentry and Milo Rushford, and pitchers Chandler Champlain, Jonathan Heasley, Yenfri Sosa, Fraynel Nova, Jesus Rios, Juan Martinez, and Mack Anglin. Infielder Javi Vaz, pitchers John Means, Tyson Guerrero, Anthony Simonelli, and Asa Lacy were placed on the 60-day IL. And third baseman Sam Ruta, a West Point graduate, was placed on military leave.
Baseball is just picking up for all the Royals affiliates, with everyone other than the Storm Chasers playing their first games this week. There will be more to cover and write about next week, but who might you want to learn about? Which team or prospect intrigues you the most? It should be a fun season for all the Royals affiliates and I’m excited to keep a close eye on them.
CLEVELAND, OH - APRIL 27, 2008: Pitcher Chien-Ming Wang #40 of the New York Yankees winds up during a game with the Cleveland Indians on Sunday, April 27, 2008 at Progressive Field in Cleveland, Ohio. New York won 1-0. Chien-Ming Wang08-1224115 (Photo by: Diamond Images/Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
If you watched any of the Little League World Series in the late 2000s, you will recall the number of times you saw Chien-Ming Wang listed as a favorite player. The legend began 46 years ago today in Taiwan’s oldest city, long before he became a household name in New York or a symbol of pride across his home country.
Chien-Ming Wang Born: March 31, 1980 (Tainan City, Taiwan) Yankees Tenure: 2005-09
Wang’s path toward the major leagues started to take shape in 1999, when he helped lead Taiwan to a silver medal at the World Port Tournament. He posted a 1.59 ERA in the event, allowing just six hits and striking out six over 5.2 innings, a performance that caught the attention of MLB scouts. The Yankees saw enough to invest, signing him in May of 2000 for a reported $1.9 million bonus.
At the time he was not viewed as a future ace, and no one from Taiwan had ever made it to the majors. In fact, Wang was not considered one of the top amateur players in his own country at the time. What he became was gradually built one worm-burner after another. Shoulder surgery derailed Wang’s second season with the club, so he really jumpstarted his journey to the Bronx in 2002.
Wang worked his way methodically through the Yankees’ minor league system, refining the pitch that would ultimately define his career. With the help of Yankees instructors, he developed a heavy sinker that transformed him from a conventional pitcher into something far more unique. As Wang worked his way through the system, his identity was clear: He was not going to overpower hitters; he was going to overwhelm them with movement, forcing contact and turning at-bats into groundballs.
That identity carried him to the majors in 2005. And he did not arrive quietly.
Wang made his MLB debut on April 30, 2005, becoming just the third Taiwan-born player in MLB history after Dodgers bench outfielder Chin-Feng Chen and Rockies pitcher Chin-hui Tsao. He fired seven innings of two-run ball against the Devil Rays, grinding them down.
Indeed, Wang quickly proved he belonged, going 8–5 with a 4.02 ERA across 17 starts, recording a 1.246 WHIP, a 0.7 HR/9, and a 63.9-percent groundball rate — second in the majors among all pitchers with at least 100 innings to only the next year’s NL Cy Young Award winner, Brandon Webb. He gave the Yankees exactly what they needed in that moment, innings, stability, and a glimpse of something more.
Wang broke out in 2006, going 19–6 with a 3.63 ERA across 218 innings in 33 starts, tying for the Major League lead in wins and finishing second to Twins ace Johan Santana in AL Cy Young voting. He did it with just 76 strikeouts, relying instead on elite contact management. He led the Junior Circuit in groundball rate at 62.8 percent and allowed just 12 home runs all season (an MLB-best 0.5 HR/9), a reflection of how dominant his sinker truly was.
In a rotation that included Hall of Famers Mike Mussina and Randy Johnson (and big money Carl Pavano), Wang became the constant. The kid was not just part of the rotation; he was leading it.
And he backed it up in 2007.
Wang again won 19 games, going 19–7 with a 3.70 ERA, allowing just nine home runs all season, good for a 0.4 HR/9, and continuing to dominate with his sinker-heavy approach. Across those two seasons, he went a combined 38–13, establishing himself as one of the most reliable and valuable pitchers in baseball. It was just unfortunate that the Yankees were a dynasty in twilight and consigned to three consecutive ALDS losses, so the postseason resume was not there. It didn’t help that he looked worn down by the end of 2007, when Cleveland pummeled him twice in a four-game ALDS loss.
Nonetheless, Wang’s strategy for success was clear: he did not overpower hitters. He controlled them. And heading into 2008, it looked like more was coming.
Wang opened the 2008 campaign in dominant form, jumping out to an 8–2 record and once again anchoring the Yankees’ rotation. He became the fastest pitcher to reach 50 career wins in decades, doing so in just 85 starts, and looked every bit like a pitcher entering his prime.
It felt sustainable. It felt as repeatable as Wang’s smooth hands over head delivery. It felt like as long as the infield defense could remain steady behind him a legendary career was destined.
Then, during interleague play in Houston on June 15, 2008, everything changed. Fans of the era might want to avert their eyes:
Wang was allowed to reach base on an ineffective bunt that led to a force out, and he later scored on a Derek Jeter single. Immediately after crossing home plate, the Yankees’ ace hopped in pain, reached for Robinson Canó’s baggie jersey, and as his hand rested on his knee every fan held their breath. Ultimately, Wang needed help to get off the field.
The diagnosis was severe: Wang suffered a sprained Lisfranc ligament and a partial tear of a tendon in his right foot. This sparked a wave of calls for the universal designated hitter, but it would be more than a decade before that rule would be put into place. (Five years after this, Houston joined the American League and there never would’ve been a pitcher batting there anyway.)
What initially felt like a fluke injury became the turning point of Wang’s career. He missed the rest of the 2008 season began a long rehabilitation that altered his mechanics and eventually led to shoulder and arm issues.
Wang attempted to return in 2009, but the effects of the injury were immediate and difficult to overcome. Across 12 starts, he went 1–6 with a 9.64 ERA, as the command never fully returned and his sinker flattened out. The pitcher who had built his success on precision and movement suddenly could not replicate either. By the end of the season, the Yankees made the difficult decision to non-tender him, bringing his chapter in the organization to a close. The ace was gone as quickly as he had arrived. However, Wang went out with a ring—a teastament to all the hard work and quality innings he gave them in the years before ’09—and the organization has not secured one since.
What followed was not a clean ending, or a ride off into the sunset, but a long and difficult fight.
Wang’s comeback took years. After leaving the Yankees, he spent time with the Nationals, Blue Jays, and Royals, along with multiple minor league stops and extended rehab assignments. He returned to the majors in 2011 with Washington, again in 2013 with Toronto after starring for Taiwan in the World Baseball Classic, and later in 2016 with Kansas City, nearly eight years after the injury that changed everything.
Nearly a decade later, he was still chasing it. That persistence became the second half of his career. The documentary Late Life captures that stretch, showing a former ace grinding through the minors with uncertainty, driven by the belief that he still had something left.
It was not glamorous. But it mattered. Because he did make it back. And in doing so, he showed something just as meaningful as his peak. Who he was. Not just the ace, but the competitor who refused to walk away.
Today, Wang remains in the game as a coach, most recently working with the Taiwanese team in the 2026 World Baseball Classic, helping guide the next generation of pitchers from his home country.
That legacy is now formally recognized as well. In 2024, Wang was inducted into the Taiwan Baseball Hall of Fame, receiving over 90 percent of the vote in recognition of both his big-league success and his impact on the game in Taiwan. He remains the most accomplished Taiwanese player in MLB history.
For a time, Chien-Ming Wang was not just the Yankees’ ace. He was one of the most effective pitchers in baseball and the standard for a generation of Taiwanese players. Wang was also a homegrown product, And long after that ended, he showed what it meant to keep going.
Happy birthday, Chien-Ming Wang.
See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 30: Cal Raleigh #29 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates his walk-off single during the ninth inning against the New York Yankees at T-Mobile Park on March 30, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Happy Tuesday! We were treated to our first walk-off of 2026 last night after a single from Cal Raleigh slipped past first base and scored Leo Rivas from third. Another stellar pitching performance featured six innings from Luis Castillo with no runs, two hits, and seven strikeouts. The bullpen largely did their job, and Matt Brash looked electric in his first save of the season.
The second game of the series against the New York Yankees starts tonight at 6:40 PM with a pitching duel of Logan Gilbert versus Max Fried.
We will be hosting a site chat on Thursday, April 2nd, at 6:40 PM during the first off day of the regular season. Stay tuned for a link on Thursday and please join in the conversation!
Around the league…
RHP Cody Ponce was carted off the field in his Toronto Blue Jays debut after landing awkwardly on his right knee while trying to field a hit. He was initially diagnosed with right knee discomfort but is expected to receive a full diagnosis today after an MRI.
MESA, ARIZONA - MARCH 08: Colt Emerson #85 of the Seattle Mariners rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the ninth inning of a Spring Training game against the Chicago Cubs at Sloan Park on March 08, 2025 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images) | Getty Images
MLB Rumors: Colt Emerson and the Seattle Mariners have agreed to terms on an 8 year, $95 million deal, per reports. This is the largest contract ever for a player under team control who has yet to play in the major leagues.
Emerson, a shortstop who doesn’t turn 21 until July, was the 22nd overall pick in the 2023 MLB Draft. He appeared in the back end of top 100 lists prior to the 2024 season after an impressive pro debut. He split the 2024 season between low-A and high-A, putting up a 867 OPS in low-A and a 648 OPS in high-A. That performance as a teenage shortstop made him a consensus top 25-30 prospect.
Emerson put up a .285/.383/.458 slash line in 2025, primarily in high-A, but with 34 games in AA and six games at AAA. He has started the 2026 season at AAA Tacoma, but with a long-term deal now in place, one would expect he will be in the majors in the very near future, likely displacing Leo Rivas at shortstop.
We have seen a spate of contract extension over the last week or so. The Chicago Cubs inked a 6 year, $115 million extension with Pete Crow-Armstrong as well as a 6 year, $141 million deal with Nico Hoerner. Milwaukee Brewers shortstop Cooper Pratt, who, like Emerson, is in AAA currently and has yet to play in the majors, is reportedly on the verge of doing an 8 year, $50 million-plus extension.
The Boston Red Sox are seeking their second victory of the season as they take on the Houston Astros. Houston's Hunter Brown, who looked strong in his first start, will face Boston's Brayan Bello, who has an ERA of 3.35.
The Detroit Tigers floundered in the opening game of their road series against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Monday night, as Justin Verlander was anything but in vintage form in the team’s 9-6 loss.
They will get another shot on Tuesday night in the desert behind their former No. 1 draft pick, Casey Mize, who opens the campaign in the fifth and final spot of the starting rotation. The Snakes will send fellow right-hander Brandon Pfaadt to the mound opposite him, looking for the victory and his team’s first series win of the nascent season.
With just four games elapsed, the American League Central division has the Cleveland Guardians out to a half-game lead over the rest of the field with a 3-2 record, while Detroit and the Kansas City Royals are both 2-2 so far. The Chicago White Sox and Minnesota Twins inhabit the bottom portion of the standings, both at 1-3.
But the year is young! There is plenty of baseball to be played.
With that in mind, take a look below at a brief comparison of Tuesday night’s pitchers.
Detroit Tigers (2-2) vs. Arizona Diamondbacks (1-3)
The New York Yankees (3-1) face the Seattle Mariners (3-2) in the second game of a three-game series. Cal Raleigh walked off the win for Seattle in the opening game. Max Fried (1-0, 0.00 ERA) starts for the Yankees, while Logan Gilbert (0-0, 5.06 ERA) pitches for the Mariners. The Yankees are narrow favorites with a moneyline of -115.
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 30: Luis Arraez #1 of the San Francisco Giants talks with Manny Machado #13 and Fernando Tatis Jr. #23 of the San Diego Padres before the game at Petco Park on March 30, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Through four games of the 2026 season, the San Diego Padres have managed a grand total of nine runs scored, while allowing 16 runs to the Detroit Tigers and the San Francisco Giants. The Padres dropped the series opener to the Giants at Petco Park on Monday 3-2, but the score makes the game appear much closer than it was. San Diego did not have an answer for San Francisco starter Landon Roupp who recorded seven strikeouts over six innings while allowing just two hits. The runs scored by the Padres came off Giants reliever Ryan Walker. Jackson Merrill hit a two-out, two-run home run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning. San Diego was one pitch away from being shutout for the first time this season by a division rival who was looking for and got its first win of the season. Padres manager Craig Stammen has been shuffling his lineup looking for something that works and it appears that will continue until the San Diego lineup can provide some signs of life. Perhaps the home run by Merrill will carry over to the second game of the series with San Francisco when the teams reconvene at Petco Park at 6:40 p.m.
Padres News:
The addition of Jose Leclerc to the San Diego organization became official on Monday and Lincoln Zdunich of Gaslamp Ball believes that once healthy, the former World Series winner can be a mid-summer boost for the Padres’ bullpen.
Tom Krasovic of the San Diego Union-Tribune believed the roster would give Stammen and his Padres a slight edge over Tony Vitello and the Giants, but that proved not to be the case in the first game of the series. There are two games remaining for San Diego to turn that around.
Mason Miller debuted his new entrance music when he runs from the San Diego bullpen to take the mound. He took a suggestion from a member of the Padres clubhouse staff and early responses seem to think the new entrance is a hit according to AJ Cassavell of Padres.com.
It appears Stammen is going to use his catchers equally to start the season despite the fact that Luis Campusano continues to have issues at the plate on offense. He has improved defensively, but the Friar Faithful are still waiting for his Triple-A success to translate to the big-leagues. It seems Stammen is going to give “Campy” plenty of opportunities to make it happen.
Baseball News:
Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh has not had the best start to the 2026 season, but he came through for his team when it mattered most. Raleigh came through with a clutch hit that resulted in a walk-off win against the New York Yankees.
Michael Soroka of the Arizona Diamondbacks threw the first Immaculate Inning (three up, three down on nine pitches) of the season. It is the first Immaculate Inning since Padres closer Mason Miller accomplished the task in 2025.
Shohei Ohtani makes his first start on the mound for the Los Angeles Dodgers this season. Tanner Bibee will pitch for Cleveland. The Guardians won the first game of the series on Monday, handing the Dodgers their first loss. Los Angeles is favored with a -235 moneyline and a -1.5 spread.
How to watch Cleveland Guardians vs. Los Angeles Dodgers
Date: Tuesday, March 31
Time: 10:10 p.m. ET / 7:10 p.m. PT
Where: Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles
TV Channels: SportsNet LA, Guardians.TV Presented by Progressive
The HR article connected on a Kazuma Okamoto +520 homer in the ninth inning last night in Toronto, and we’re right back at it with two early looks this morning and another to come this afternoon. The MLB player props are still offering plenty of value.
I’m targeting a pair of +475 middle-of-the-order bats in strong matchups at +EV prices: Jake Burger and Brent Rooker. Not an easy day for pitchers dealing with these two.
These are my favorite home run props for Tuesday, March 31.
Best MLB home run props today
Player to hit a HR
Odds
Jake Burger
+475
Brent Rooker
+475
Jake Burger (+475)
Conditions are ideal for power, with 17-mph winds blowing out to left-center and temperatures around 80 degrees — a strong setup for home runs.
Jake Burgergets a premium matchup against Zach Eflin, who is coming off back surgery and posted the second-worst HR/9 among starters with 60+ innings last season. Burger, hitting out of the cleanup spot, is 3-for-7 with a home run against Eflin in his career.
THE BAT projects a fair price around +375, making current numbers appealing.
Betting on the earliest game of the slate is also an easy decision for my MLB picks.
Time: 6:35 p.m. ET
Where to watch: MASN, RSN
Brent Rooker (+475)
I don’t usually put a lot of weight into batter vs. pitcher data given the small samples, but it’s hard to ignore that Brent Rooker has taken José Suárez deep three times in just five at-bats — especially with Rooker sitting at +475.
Rooker had a strong spring and may be off to a slow start, but the power is real. He has legitimate 40-HR upside, which puts him in a rare tier of hitters.
Suárez is more of a bullpen arm being stretched into a starting role because of Spencer Strider's injury, which adds risk. The environment isn’t elite, but 80-degree weather in Atlanta with a total of 9.0 is still solid.
Fair value on this HR prop is closer to +400, and Rooker projects similarly to names like Ronald Acuña Jr., Shea Langeliers, and Austin Riley — all of whom are priced shorter.
Time: 7:15 p.m. ET
Where to watch: Braves Vision, Gray TV, NBCSCA
2026 Transparency record
HR picks: 1-2 SU, +3.2 units
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
The Los Angeles Angels hope to snap a three-game losing streak when they face the Chicago Cubs tonight at Wrigley Field.
The forecast promises a cold, miserable night, and my Angels vs. Cubs predictions expect LA starter Jose Soriano and his sinker-slider combo to rack up the strikeouts.
Angels vs Cubs best bet: Jose Soriano Over 4.5 strikeouts (-108)
Jose Soriano is riding a jaw-dropping 41.3% whiff rate from his 2026 opener, where he struck out seven Astros in six innings of work.
This follows a strong spring where the Los Angeles Angels righty struck out 13 across 11 2/3 and eight punchouts per nine frames in 2025.
The Chicago Cubs lineup presents multiple strikeout candidates, and they’ve struck out in 22% of their 91 plate appearances against right-handed arms in 2026.
Cold, heavy air at Wrigley Field plays right into Soriano's hard sinker and devastating slider combo. Back him to punch out at least five tonight.
COVERS INTEL: Soriano averaged 3.7 pitches per batter and struck out 8.05 batters per nine in 2025, and seven Astros on Opening Day at Houston.
Angels vs Cubs same-game parlay (SGP)
Cold weather, limited scoring, and the more reliable arm on the mound sum up this three-leg same-game parlay.
Soriano was excellent on the road last season (8-3), and he just threw six scoreless innings in Houston. His 69.2% ground-ball rate limits damage and keeps traffic off the bases.
Jameson Taillon allowed 26 earned runs across 13 1/3 spring innings, and he’s hard to trust right now. In a game where runs will be scarce, that edge on the mound leans toward the Halos.
Angels vs Cubs SGP
Jose Soriano Over 4.5 strikeouts
Angels moneyline
Under 7.5
Angels vs Cubs home run pick: Mike Trout (+310)
Mike Trout doesn't need much of an invitation, and Taillon is practically rolling out the red carpet.
Ten home runs and nine walks in just over 13 spring innings tell you that he is a pitcher who can't find the zone and is getting destroyed when he does.
Trout has already taken Taillon deep, and the Angels slugger launched two bombs on Opening Day at Houston. I’ll back him to crack one tonight.
2026 Transparency record
Best bets: 1-1, -0.2 units
SGPs: 0-2, -2 units
HR picks: 0-2, -2 units
Angels vs Cubs odds
Moneyline: Los Angeles +120 | Chicago -142
Run line: Los Angeles +1.5 (-188) | Chicago -1.5 (+155)
Over/Under: Over 7.5 (+116) | Under 7.5 (-142)
Angels vs Cubs trend
The Chicago Cubs have hit the Game Total Under in 64 of their last 117 games (+13.65 Units / 11% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Angels vs. Cubs.
How to watch Angels vs Cubs and game info
Location
Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
Date
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
First pitch
7:40 p.m. ET
TV
FDSN West, Marquee
Angels starting pitcher
Jose Soriano (1-0, 0.00 ERA)
Cubs starting pitcher
Jameson Taillon (2025: 11-7, 3.68 ERA)
Angels vs Cubs latest injuries
Angels vs Cubs weather
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.