On this day two years ago, Nick Nastrini set a White Sox mark by setting down the first 11 batters he faced in an MLB debut. | (Photo by Jamie Sabau/Getty Images)
1915 It was the biggest shutout in team history, as the White Sox pasted St. Louis, 16-0. The Pale Hose put up seven runs before the home Browns even got to bat, and scored in every inning but the third, seventh and eighth. It was just a 15-hit assault with no homers, so how did the Sox score 16? With help from five Browns errors and six stolen bases!
Buck Weaver went 3-for-6 with a double and two runs, pacing all the White Sox hitters … except starting pitcher Red Faber, who went 4-for-5 with a double and three runs, leading the team in total bases! Faber, no clouter him, pitched in an AL-high 50 games in 1915 and racked up 118 plate appearances and 84 at-bats … yielding 11 hits. Yes, more than a third of Faber’s hits in 1915 came in this game.
Also a curiosity, the win moved the White Sox into first place, at 2-0 on the season, and Faber’s season record was 2-0 was well. How? Well, Opening Day was a 13-inning thriller that saw the second-year hurler relieve in the 12th inning (not too well, either, giving up two earned runs) to earn the win — with fellow young hurler and future star Eddie Cicotte getting the save with a clean 13th. The next day, this blowout, Faber threw a complete game despite eight innings of the contest qualifying as garbage time!
This game stood as the biggest White Sox shutout win until 1925 and a 17-0 drubbing at Washington (and later tied in 1987). The game remains the third-biggest shutout in team history and tied for the 18th biggest win ever for the White Sox.
1954 The White Sox helped reintroduce Major League Baseball to Baltimore (in front of a crowd of 46,354) for the first time since 1902, as they played the new Baltimore Orioles in the first-ever game at Memorial Stadium (the franchise had moved from St. Louis that offseason). Virgil Trucks got the start for the White Sox, but the O’s won, 3-1, starting a run of numerous unfortunate, strange and bizarre happenings at Memorial Stadium over the next 37 seasons.
1972 The first labor impasse to cause regularly-scheduled games to be cancelled had caused Opening Day of the 1972 season to be pushed back. Thus in the first game of the new season was in Kansas City, where the Sox lost to the Royals, 2-1, in 11 innings despite Dick Allen’s first White Sox home run. Allenblasted a shot in the ninth inning off Dick Drago to give the team a brief, 1-0 lead. Kansas City tied the game with two outs in the ninth inning on a Bob Oliver home run off of Wilbur Wood, then go on to win the game.
The Sox dropped three consecutive one-run games to the Royals to start the season, two in extra innings, but ended up with 87 wins in 154 games and battle the eventual World Series champion Oakland A’s until the end of September.
1983 Former Cubs pitcher Milt Wilcox had his perfect game ruined with two outs in the ninth inning when White Sox pinch-hitter Jerry Hairston ripped a clean single up the middle. It was the only hit of the night for the Sox, who lost to Detroit, 6-0. Hairston’s hit marked just the third time in major league history that a perfect game was broken up with just one out left. Billy Pierce was one of the other two pitchers to have that happen to him, when he lost his to the Senators on June 27, 1958.
1985 In a game at Boston, pinch-hitter Jerry Hairston collected his 51st safety in that role, setting a White Sox all-time record. Jerrywould lead the league in pinch-hits from 1983-85 and retired with 87 total in his career. He also hit the last home run to set off Bill Veeck’s original exploding scoreboard in October 1981 — a grand slam off of future Sox pitching coach Don Cooper!
1987 Future White Sox bullpen coach Juan Nieves tosses the first no-hitter in Milwaukee Brewers history, defeating the Baltimore Orioles, 7-0. Nieves was a pitching coach in the White Sox minors from 1999-2007, then worked under Don Cooper as the bullpen coach on the South Side from 2008-12. He also appeared as Francisco Delgado in the 1999 Kevin Costner baseball film For the Love of the Game.
2006 It was an all-time great defensive play.
In the ninth inning of a game at U.S. Cellular Field against Toronto, Sox second baseman Tadahito Iguchi had to charge in on a slowly-hit ball by Bengie Molina. Iguchi’s momentum carried him forward, forcing him to leave his feet and start to fall to the ground. Before he hit the field, though, he got a throw off, despite being parallel to the ground. His throw was strong enough to get Molina at first.
The Sox won the game, 4-2.
2024 In his very first MLB start, Nick Nastrini retired the first 11 batters he faced, the most consecutive outs since 1960. In the process, Nastrini broke Bruce Tanner’s mark from back on June 12, 1985.
However, the punchless White Sox still lost the game, shut out, 2-0, by the Royals — tying a dubious record. It marked the sixth time in 16 games they were held without a run to start a season. The last time that happened in the modern era was in 1907 to the Brooklyn Superbas.
The White Sox were held to four singles in the game, and if not for a stolen base by Braden Shewmake in the fifth inning, no Chicago batter would have reached second base.
Serious progress has been made. Zack Wheeler is getting close to a return to the Phillies’ rotation.
That is big news for both the ace and the organization.
On Tuesday, the 35-year-old made his fourth rehab start, going 5 2/3 innings, allowing three runs and striking out nine. Wheeler punched out five of the first six batters he faced.
It was another encouraging sign in his buildup, especially because he touched 95 mph with his fastball for the first time in the recovery process.
Rob Thomson called the outing “very encouraging.”
“He went through the minimum through five, was 92 to 95, so he touched 95,” Thomson said Tuesday. “That was good. He said he felt good after the outing. Somebody asked him if he was starting to run out of gas, and he said no, I felt good even at the end.”
Wheeler, who Thomson said felt good again on Wednesday, will make one more rehab start Sunday in Bridgewater, N.J. The plan is for him to throw around 90 pitches.
And while Thomson hinted Tuesday that a sixth rehab outing was still possible, there is no strong indication yet that it will be necessary. The Phillies are going to let Wheeler’s body and stuff guide the decision from here.
When asked Wednesday whether a sixth rehab start was under consideration, Thomson said, “We haven’t really talked about it. We’ll just see how it goes.”
At this point, Wheeler appears to have a very real chance to return to the big league club next weekend, when the Phillies head to Atlanta.
POP TO IL, BACKHUS RETURNS
In a three-day stretch, the Phillies have now lost two relievers to the injured list.
First, on Monday, they placed Jonathan Bowlan on the 15-day injured list. Then on Wednesday, right-hander Zach Pop joined him there.
Pop, who has posted a 3.68 ERA through his first seven appearances with the club, suffered a right calf strain on Tuesday night after his opener outing on Sunday. He allowed one run over two innings in that appearance.
Thomson described it as a mild strain.
“Zach was doing some agility work after the game last night and just felt something in his right calf,” Thomson said Wednesday.
It has been a solid start for the 29-year-old, especially with the development of his sinker. To begin the year, opponents were hitting just .111 against the pitch, which he has thrown 62.3 percent of the time. That has led to the type of ground-ball profile the Phillies were hoping to get from him.
To fill Pop’s spot, the club recalled Kyle Backhus from Triple-A Lehigh Valley. He had originally been optioned when Orion Kerkering came off the injured list.
After allowing three runs in his Phillies debut on Opening Day, the left-handed submariner turned in three scoreless outings after that.
Backhus also gives the Phillies another left-handed option after Tim Mayza and Tanner Banks were both used Tuesday. Thomson noted that Backhus is in a good spot physically and could give them length if needed.
“Backhus was good. Just had a couple days off,” Thomson said. “He can give us probably maybe two innings today.”
Jesús Luzardo gets the ball Wednesday as he looks to bounce back after allowing five runs in his last outing against the Diamondbacks.
The LA Angels of Anaheim (9-9) take on the New York Yankees (9-8) tonight in Game 3 of their four-game series in the Bronx.
The series is now tied at one game apiece following last night’s 7-1 win by the Halos. Mike Trout homered as part of a three-run first inning against Ryan Weathers and the Angels rolled from there. The Halos actually went back-to-back-to-back in the first with Jo Adell and Jorge Soler going deep following Trout’s third home run in the last two games. Reid Detmers was outstanding, allowing just one run on four hits over seven innings to earn his first win of the season.
Tonight’s pitching matchup features a battle of young right-handers as the Angels will send Jack Kochanowicz (2-0, 3.24 ERA) to the mound, and the Yankees counter with Luis Gil (0-1, 6.75 ERA). While Kochanowicz has been sharp from the jump this season, Gil is still looking to find his form following his return from injury. His command was a problem against the Rays in his first start of the campaign.
The Yankees are now just 3-7 in their last ten games and have dropped to 0.5 games behind the Rays as a result in the American League East. The Angels are also 0.5 games out of first in the American League West having gone 6-4 in their last ten.
Lets dive into tonight’s matchup and find a sweat or two.
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Game Details and How to Watch: Angels at Yankees
Date: Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Time: 7:40PM EST
Site: Yankee Stadium
City: New York, NY
Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, FanDuel Sports Network West, Prime Video
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The Latest Odds: Angels vs. Yankees
The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of DraftKings:
Moneyline: LA Angels of Anaheim (+153), New York Yankees (-186)
Spread: Angels +1.5 (-126), Yankees -1.5 (+104)
Total: 10.5 runs
Probable Starting Pitchers: Angels vs. Yankees
Pitching matchup for April 15:
Angels: Jack Kochanowicz Season Totals: 16.2 IP, 2-0, 3.24 ERA, 1.26 WHIP, 12K, 11 BB
Yankees: Luis Gil Season Totals: 4.0 IP, 0-1, 6.75 ERA, 1.50 WHIP, 2K, 3 BB
Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Angels vs. Yankees
Mike Trout is 3-10 in this series and all 3 hits are home runs
Jo Adell has hit safely in 4 straight games (7-18)
Aaron Judge is 4-12 with at least 1 hit in 3 straight games
Trent Grisham homered twice Monday night and those are his only 2 hits since last Wednesday (2-16)
Cody Bellinger has hit in 3 straight games (4-14)
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Top Betting Trends & Insights: Angels vs. Yankees
The Angels are 10-8 on the Run Line this season
The Yankees are 8-9 on the Run Line this season
The OVER has cashed 11 times in the Angels’ 18 games this season (11-7)
The OVER has cashed 7 times in the Yankees’ 17 games this season (7-8-2)
If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!
Expert picks & predictions: Angels vs. Yankees
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Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Wednesday’s game between the Angels and the Yankees:
Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Angels on the Moneyline.
Spread: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Angels on the Run Line.
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The Boston Red Sox salvaged their three-game series in Minnesota with a 9-5 win over the Twins in Wednesday’s finale. While it’ll be happier flight home, they still have plenty of issues to work out as they’ll take one of MLB’s worst records (7-11) into their four-game series against the Detroit Tigers.
After back-to-back series wins over the Milwaukee Brewers and St. Louis Cardinals, the Red Sox were humbled by the red-hot Twins. Minnesota torched Red Sox ace Garrett Crochet for 11 runs in 1.2 innings pitched and cruised to a 13-6 win in Game 1. In Game 2, Twins starter Mick Abel notched a career-high 10 strikeouts while Sonny Gray struggled in a 6-0 shutout.
Rookie left-hander Connelly Early quieted the Twins offense in Game 3, and the Red Sox offense showed signs of life with nine runs on 13 hits. Boston will need to carry that momentum to Fenway Park to avoid slipping further behind in the American League East standings.
So, what did we learn during the Red Sox’ 2-1 series loss to the Twins? Here are five instant takeaways:
Connelly Early a bright spot in disappointing rotation
After Garrett Crochet was crushed for 11 earned runs in just 1.2 innings, and Sonny Gray allowed five ER across four IP, rookie left-hander Connelly Early helped salvage the series with a brilliant outing in the finale.
Early let just one run cross on two hits and two walks while striking out five across six innings. He set the tone in the Red Sox’ much-needed 9-5 victory.
Early wasn’t even expected to make the starting rotation out of spring training, but the 23-year-old has been Boston’s best starter so far with a 2.29 ERA through four starts (19.2 IP).
The rest of the rotation, which was supposed to be the club’s biggest strength, has been a letdown. Boston will need more consistency from Crochet (7.58 ERA), Sonny Gray (4.43 ERA), Ranger Suarez (5.02 ERA), and Brayan Bello (6.14 ERA) going forward.
Masataka Yoshida has earned more playing time
Yoshida played in two of the three games in this series, going 3-for-9 at the plate with a double and one RBI. He has a five-game hit streak dating back to April 5.
In the series finale, Yoshida put the Red Sox ahead in the third inning by driving in two runs on an error by the second baseman. It should’ve been an inning-ending double play, but the sequence showed that Yoshida’s ability to consistently put balls in play can alter the course of a game.
The outfield logjam persists, and it will likely continue to prevent Yoshida from getting consistent at-bats. But at this point, he’s making it difficult for Alex Cora to keep his bat out of the lineup. He has a .852 OPS in 11 games (28 at-bats).
Trevor Story is the X factor
The Red Sox are a different team when Trevor Story is hitting. We saw it last season, and it has been the case so far this year as well.
Story has started to heat up after struggling out of the gate. The veteran shortstop gave Boston’s offense a much-needed jolt in the third inning of Wednesday’s win with a three-run homer, his second blast of the season. He finished the day 2-for-4 with a double, HR, and five RBI.
Story has played a critical role in four of the Red Sox’ seven wins. In addition to Wednesday, Story went 4-for-5 with a double and two RBI in Sunday’s win vs. the St. Louis Cardinals and had two-RBI performances in both of Boston’s wins over the Milwaukee Brewers.
ABS challenges are still a problem
Red Sox hitters have been among MLB’s worst at ABS challenges this season. That trend continued in Game 2 of this series.
In the sixth inning of Tuesday’s loss, Sox infielder Andruw Monasterio challenged a strike call on a pitch thrown down the heart of the plate. You’d be hard-pressed to find a worse use of the ABS challenge so far this year.
ABS confirmed in #RedSox at #Twins (Top 6). Andruw Monasterio challenged the called strike against Mick Abel. Called strike confirmed. HP: Lance Barrett | Upheld 39.1% (9/23). Result: Andruw Monasterio called out on strikes. pic.twitter.com/1932lMOfRz
Boston has won only 45 percent of its ABS challenges at the plate this season (5-for-11). That’s the fifth-worst percentage in MLB, with the Cincinnati Reds posting a league-best 69 percent (11-for-16).
Red Sox need more from Jarren Duran
After grounding out in Game 2, Jarren Duran made headlines for his obscene gesture at a heckling fan. Duran later explained that the fan “told me to kill myself.” Given Duran’s history with mental health struggles, and his admission that he tried to take his own life in 2022, his knee-jerk reaction to such a crass remark is understandable.
That said, Duran is one of the most important players on the Red Sox roster, and they need him to ignore the noise. The 2024 All-Star is slashing .170/.204/.298 with one homer in 15 games, and he went just 1-for-14 with five strikeouts in this series. It’s clear his frustrations are boiling over, and rightfully so, but he’s needed as a leader in the clubhouse and as one of the biggest threats in an inconsistent lineup that could use all the help it can get.
FORT MYERS, FL - FEBRUARY 20: Masataka Yoshida #7 of the Boston Red Sox poses for a photo during the Boston Red Sox Photo Day at JetBlue Park at Fenway South on Tuesday, February 20, 2024 in Fort Myers, Florida. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
TV: NESN
First Pitch: 1:40 p.m. ET
Well, this series couldn’t have started any worse.
Red Sox starters gave up 15 earned runs in the first two games, thanks to disastrous starts from Garrett Crochet and Sonny Gray. Boston’s lineup also got shutout for the first time this season and is lacking momentum entering Wednesday afternoon.
In another lineup shuffle, Ceddanne Rafaela moves up behind Roman Anthony in the No. 2 spot. Connelly Early gets the ball and while he needs to go deeper into starts, he’s impressed so far to the tune of a 2.63 ERA.
Here’s who the Red Sox will send to the plate in the series finale.
View of American baseball player King Cole of the Cubs warms up before a game at the Polo Grounds, New York, New York, 1909. (Photo by Transcendental Graphics/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Long before the Yankees became the Yankees of Ruth, Gehrig, October mythology, and even Gerrit, Leonard Leslie “King” Cole (not to be confused with Nat) was one of the franchise’s most intriguing early arms. For a season, he looked like the kind of pitcher who could help stabilize a club still searching for its identity.
Instead, the ending was rushing toward him long before anyone realized it. Tragically the King’s New York chapter became one of the shortest, strangest, and saddest stories of the franchise’s early years.
Leonard Leslie “King” Cole Born: April 15, 1886 (Toledo, IA) Died: January 6, 1916 (Bay City, MI) Yankees Tenure: 1914-1915
Before he ever became “King,” Leonard Leslie Cole’s story began in much humbler surroundings. Born on April 15, 1886, in the rural Iowa town of Toledo, Cole’s early life carried a level of instability that would quietly mirror the unpredictability of his later baseball career. A troubled family situation led to his separation from home at a young age, and by 14 he had been sent to the Industrial School for Boys in nearby Eldora. In those difficult early years, the baseball diamond quickly became home.
By his late teens, Cole had already built a reputation as a talented pitcher for Toledo’s town team, the kind of local arm whose name traveled beyond county lines before organized baseball ever formally called. His path to the majors was anything but ordinary.
In 1907, Cole joined one of the era’s barnstorming “Bloomer Girls” teams, one of the traveling girls clubs that toured the country playing against town, semipro, and minor league men’s teams. To help draw crowds and raise the level of play, these clubs often employed male pitchers and catchers known as “toppers,” players who wore wigs to blend into the novelty of the traveling roster. For a brief stretch, Leonard Cole was one of them.
It is one of the strangest and most perfect details in his baseball story: before becoming King Cole, he sharpened his game as a pitcher for a Bloomer Girls club, barnstorming across the Midwest and learning the loose, restless rhythms of early baseball life. That journey helped carry him to Bay City, Michigan, a place that would become deeply important to both his personal and professional life.
By 1908, Cole was pitching for semipro clubs in Iowa and Michigan, continuing to sharpen the command and durability that would later define his major league peak. Then in 1909, Bay City gave him the kind of platform every talented regional arm needed. He thrived there.
Cole went 21-7 as Bay City’s ace, a dominant season that drew the full attention of the Chicago Cubs, still a powerhouse having won three pennants in a row from 1906–08 and the last two World Series in a row. Chicago signed Cole and gave him a chance late that season to make his professional debut, and he made sure no one forgot it, throwing a six-hit shutout in his major league debut against the Cardinals while also collecting three hits at the plate.
Just like that, the road from rural Iowa, reform school, and barnstorming Bloomer Girls clubs had delivered him to the major leagues. The Bay City chapter changed more than just his baseball life.
During the offseason, Cole stayed in Michigan, took up barbering as a trade, and earned yet another fitting nickname: “The Bay City Barber.” It was there that he also met Ada Seder, beginning the relationship that would soon lead to marriage just as his Cubs career was taking off. By the time 1910 arrived, Cole was no longer just a fascinating baseball story. He was on his way to becoming one of the National League’s best pitchers and be anointed King.
Cole won 20 games for the Cubs in 1910, leading the Senior Circuit with a 1.80 ERA and posting the kind of frontline production that made him one of the National League’s top arms. In the Deadball Era, where one run often felt decisive, pitchers who could control games deep into the afternoon carried enormous value, and Cole fit that mold perfectly. It was the season that truly made “King” feel like more than just a nickname, and if the NL Rookie of the Year Award existed back then, he probably would’ve won going away.
The Cubs romped to their fourth pennant in five years with 104 wins but fell to the similarly potent Philadelphia Athletics in the World Series. Cole got the start in Game 4, which ended up being the only playoff start of his career, and held the A’s to three runs in eight innings of work to help the Cubs stave off a sweep in their home park (West Side Grounds, Wrigley’s predecessor). Ace Mordecai “Three-Finger” Brown relieved him and held the A’s in check while the Cubs rallied a couple outs from elimination to tie it in the ninth on a leadoff double by Frank Schulte and a game-tying triple from player-manager Frank Chance. They ended it in the 10th on a Jimmy Archer and a walk-off single from left fielder Jimmy Sheckard. Alas, the A’s followed suit, beating up on a tiring Brown—starting on no rest, because hey it was 1910—to take the series with a 7-2 triumph.
Cole followed that with another strong year in 1911, winning 18 games and proving the previous season was no fluke. Even if he did not quite match the 1910 peak, Cole still looked like the kind of pitcher a manager could trust every time they put him on the rubber. At his best, he was not overpowering so much as dependable, the kind of arm managers leaned on because they knew exactly what they were getting. Then came the collapse.
The 1912 season started disastrously in Chicago. The sharpness that had defined his best years disappeared almost overnight, and what had once looked like steady command turned into something far less reliable. The King had become the Jester and was so famous for the excuses he gave that he inspired short story “Alibi Ike.”
The Cubs eventually sent him to Pittsburgh to finish the season, where he was better, but not remotely close to the pitcher he had been just a few seasons ago. The brilliance of 1910 had already started to feel far away. So far away that Cole was sold by the Pirates to Columbus of the minor league American Association.
After spending the winter barbering in Chicago and Bay City, Cole proved his career wasn’t over by reporting to Columbus and having a stellar year. He posted a 23-11 record and received offers from several major league clubs following the season. The New York Yankees, now managed by Cole’s former boss with the Cubs, Chance, had the winning bid.
When New York picked him up for the 1914 season, Cole was still chasing the heights of his Cubs peak as much as he was trying to prove he still belonged in the major leagues at all. And for a time, it looked like he did. In that comeback season Cole went 10-9 with a 3.30 ERA making 15 starts in 33 games.
One fun fact from Cole’s first season with the Yankees popped up on October 2, 1914 at Fenway Park. Cole entered in relief of Carroll Brown, who started the game opposite of a rookie left-hander named George Herman Ruth in Boston. In the Babe’s third big-league game, the 19-year-old would limit his future team to six hits on the mound and lead off the seventh inning with a double off Cole — Ruth’s first MLB hit. Little did the 1,500 or so in attendance at the still-nascent ballpark know that they were witnessing history.
Cole’s first season with the Yankees gave the club exactly what early-era teams valued most from a pitcher: dependable innings and a calming presence on a still-developing staff. He was no longer the 20-game winner from his Cubs peak, but the command and poise that had once made him so valuable were still visible.
Across the 1914 and 1915 seasons, Cole would go 12-12 with a 3.27 ERA over 192.2 innings in pinstripes. Those numbers tell the story of a pitcher who still knew how to survive, compete, and help a club even as the overpowering version of his earlier career had faded.
That makes 1914 feel especially important in hindsight. It would be the final season in which Cole still looked like a veteran pitcher writing a respectable second act rather than a player unknowingly entering the final chapter of his life. That is what makes the turn into 1915 feel so much heavier.
In spring training, Yankees manager Bill Donovan noticed something was wrong. Cole had developed a growth on his leg, something he had apparently ignored for years because it had not yet caused him any pain. That detail says so much about the era and perhaps about Cole himself. Players then often pitched through discomfort, lived hard, and treated warning signs as inconveniences instead of alarms.
Cole’s instinct was simply to keep going until someone physically stopped him. That refusal to stop becomes the emotional center of the story. Even after surgery to try to address the tumors, Cole pushed to return quickly, insisting he would be back within weeks. And he did come back, pitching for the Yankees that summer despite diminished stuff and erratic command. The performances were uneven, and the club’s patience wore thin, but there is something deeply human in the image of a pitcher trying to outrun what his body was already telling him.
The quirks of his life off the mound only deepen that feeling. Cole’s 1915 season included missed trains, an indefinite suspension, and even an automobile accident in Yonkers that briefly put him in legal trouble, all while his health continued to deteriorate. It creates the portrait of a talented early ballplayer living with the loose structure and restless unpredictability of the pre-modern game, where routines were fragile and careers could tilt off course in an instant.
Then came the cruelest turn. By December, the cancer had returned aggressively. What had once seemed like a manageable operation became terminal illness, and on January 6, 1916, Cole died at just 29 years old. For a pitcher talented enough to win 54 major league games before turning 30, the loss feels especially haunting.
His Yankees chapter lasted only two seasons, but it remains one of the organization’s earliest reminders of how quickly baseball promise can vanish. What makes King Cole such a compelling birthday subject is not simply the tragedy. It is the strange mix of brilliance, stubbornness, unpredictability, and vulnerability that defined his final baseball years. In another era, maybe the diagnosis comes earlier. Maybe the recovery plan is stricter. Maybe the life lasts another few decades.
Instead, King Cole’s Yankees legacy became a snapshot of baseball’s rougher early century. A time where even “Kings” were still barbers in the offseason. A time when people and players alike ignored warning signs of their health. A time when the storylines the games and its players was able to create mattered almost as much as the games themselves.
Happy birthday, King Cole.
See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here
Apr 12, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Justin Crawford (2) hits a double against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the sixth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images | Kyle Ross-Imagn Images
Coming into the season, one of the more polarizing prospects that was supposed to make his debut was Justin Crawford. One would think that a player that had as good a set of numbers from his minor league days as Crawford had would be the actual opposite of polarizing, but his case became an argument in “data vs. production”. From the scouting community, there was an overwhelming sense that Crawford’s success at the major league level would be muted due to his swing path and tendency to hit the ball on the ground. From Fangraphs:
Whether mechanical intervention will improve Crawford’s output, or whether it will happen naturally as he gets stronger, we just won’t know until he’s allowed to face and adjust to big league pitching over a long period of time. His groundball rate has at least been trending in the right direction since he turned pro. He was way up in the 70% range when he first debuted, and his spray chart looked like the most cartoonish slash-and-dash hitter. Zac Veen is a recent prospect whose underlying data contained similar warning signs (Crawford is also fairly chase prone), but his on-field performance began to dip once he reached the upper levels, while Crawford’s has not. Make no mistake; Crawford’s tools are going to help a big league club in some capacity, just probably as an action-pressing nine hole hitter who bunts and slashes his way on base.
Offensively, we could pretty much cut and paste any report we’ve written about Crawford since he was drafted here. He still hits the ball on the ground way too much, he still runs like the wind, he still puts the ball in play a lot, and he still swings at way too many pitches for a guy who has what is otherwise a 1990s leadoff man profile. He made some real improvements around the edges of his very durable broad profile in 2025—he cut his chase rate by over five points year-over-year, which got it from catastrophic to merely bad, while turning a few grounders into line drives—but for the most part what you think about his offensive game still depends on whether you think his reliance on nine-hopper singles can sustain a plus-or-better hit tool outcome in the majors. We’re probably a little less high on that profile than a lot of our peers in the public prospect analysis space.
And yet, so far this year as he has in his minor league career, he has produced. It’s still way, way too early to make any kind of definite determination about how actual career arc will be created, but he has gotten off to a start that has been quite good for a team that has had little production from its nine hole spot in the lineup over the past several seasons (all stats for Crawford and/or ninth spot in lineup through Monday’s game).
Based on what we’ve seen from Crawford, there are reasons to believe that he can actually producing. After all, bat control like this doesn’t come around too, too often.
With 10% of the season already in the books, it’s worth at least exploring what has happened so far with Crawford since he’s an interesting player.
Failure to launch
We all knew that one of the traits scouts have wanted Crawford to change has been how often he hits the ball on the ground. Baseball has changed so much from the Whitey Herzog days when Astroturf allowed players to hit the ball on a carpet and have it scoot into the outfield for a hit. Fielders have improved so much both in terms of their positioning and how well they field that a ball on the ground is almost an automatic out.
As of Monday, Crawford has an average launch angle when he hits the ball of -3.2o. If that number strikes you as a startingly low number, you’re not alone! I went back through the Statcast era (2015 on) to find qualified hitters that had a launch angle that was a negative throughout the entire season. To the surprise of no one, there were very few:
Eric Hosmer ‘18: -1.5o Wilson Ramos ‘19: -0.1o Raimel Tapia ‘21: -4.4o Gilberto Celestino ‘22: -1.9o Jake Mangum ‘25: -0.7o
These hitters are not ones that one would mistake for being productive in those seasons, so while it doesn’t mean it can’t happen, history suggests that it’s not going to happen. It’s possible for a player to go through an entire season having an average launch angle that low, but as you can see, the opposing team would be more than happy to have that happen. There just isn’t much of a threat to the defense.
Now, can we expect Crawford to have this low of a launch angle all season long? Probably not. At some point, he’s going to figure out how to drive the ball in the air and he does have some good power when he barrels up a baseball. He’s a lot of hittable pitches as well; he’s just hitting them into the ground.
For now, it’s just a curious thing, a negative launch angle, to see since it’s so rare that it happens for a full season. Maybe some balls in the air change things, maybe not.
BABIP, you BIP, we all BIP
Whenever one sees a ball trickle through the infield on the ground, get blooped down the line, get nubbed down the line, one silently says a prayer to the baseball gods to say think you. Specifically, the BABIP gods that allowed the ball to miss gloves on it’s way to the grass in the first place. It helps the personal numbers because, as is said, “it’s a line drive in the books!” However, having a high BABIP can often times signal that a regression is coming and with Crawford, it could be something to consider.
As of Tuesday morning, Crawford’s .405 BABIP is tied for 15th in the game among all active hitters and could be one that is ripe for regression. But what if it doesn’t regress as much as we think it will? He’s going to hit the ball on the ground as we see from above, but it’s not as though he isn’t hitting the ball hard. His average exit velocity of 88.5 miles per hour, right in the middle of the pack (and better than some current Phillies hitters). What if he’s going to be able to continue to just find holes and poke baseball down the line and keep being productive?
There’s no reason right now to change much of anything with Crawford. He’s finding success in the major leagues and isn’t being asked to do a lot hitting from the nine hole in the lineup. He can continue seeing how pitchers attack him and adjust accordingly. Moving him up in the lineup doesn’t really seem to be in the cards at the moment, nor should it be. He’s doing just fine where he is, though if he moved up a spot or two to better use his speed instead of anchoring him in front of Turner/Schwarber/Harper, that would be fine as well.
ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - APRIL 10: Dustin May #3 of the St. Louis Cardinals delivers a pitch against the Boston Red Sox in the first inning at Busch Stadium on April 10, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Dilip Vishwanat/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The St. Louis Cardinals will try to win the series versus the Cleveland Guardians Wednesday afternoon at Busch Stadium. Dustin May, who is 1-2 with a 9.45 ERA on the season, will make his 4th start for the Cardinals. Slade Cecconi, who is 0-2 with a 5.74 ERA, will start for the Guardians.
BRADENTON, FLORIDA - MARCH 11, 2025: Eddy Yean #70 of the Pittsburgh Pirates throws a pitch during the ninth inning of a spring training game against the New York Yankees at LECOM Park on March 11, 2025 in Bradenton, Florida. (Photo by George Kubas/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
It’s been a tale of two ballclubs for the Nationals to start the season, as on one hand, they have what is currently a top 5 offense in all of baseball, ranking 4th in wRC+ at 117 and 4th in WAR at 3.6, and on the other hand, they have a bottom 2 pitching staff in all of baseball, ranking 2nd to last in ERA at 6.08 and last with a -2.5 fWAR, miles worse than every other ball club. Outside of a strong start to his MLB return for Foster Griffin, there have been very few bright spots in the rotation or bullpen, and recent injuries to Ken Waldichuk and Cole Henry tighten things even more for an already taxed group.
While help to the rotation may be coming in the next few months in the form of top prospect Luis Perales and reliable righty Riley Cornelio, the bullpen could see new additions very soon, as guys at the major league level falter and arms in the minor league flourish. Let’s take a look at 3 Nationals minor league relievers who could make an impact at the big league level in 2026.
LHP Zach Penrod
The current Nats minor league arm I think it is most likely we see in the big leagues in 2026 is Zach Penrod, a 28-year-old righty currently at Triple A. Penrod has thrown 5 innings for the Red Wings in 2026, and while the results are mediocre currently, with a 9 ERA and .609 opponents slugging percentage, it’s the improvements to Penrod’s arsenal which lead me to believe he could be the best current left hander in the big league bullpen.
Penrod threw his fastball about 40% of the time in 2025, and 5 other breaking ball or offspeed pitches, and the results were terrible, with a 7.83 ERA and 6.80 FIP in 33.1 innings pitched. This year, he’s refined his arsenal, dumping his sinker and curveball and making improvements to his remaining 3 secondary offerings. He’s increased his slider usage from 13% in 2025 to 39% in 2026, with it’s new, sharper movement dropping opponents expected batting average on it from .321 to .240.
His changeup and cutter have seen improvements as well, with the changeups Stuff+ rating going from 81 to 96, and the cutter from 82 to 102, giving Penrod more options to attack hitters with, as long as he’s throwing them for strikes.
My one area of concern for Penrod currently is that his fastball has lost some spin and movement in 2026, grading out much more poorly according to Stuff+ and currently getting hammered at Triple A, but if he can show he’s found a feel for the pitch again in the next few outings, Penrod could find himself in the Nats big league bullpen, looking to help turn the ship around.
RHP Eddy Yean
Some folks might remember the name Eddy Yean from the Josh Bell trade way back in 2020, where the Nats sent right handed pitchers Wil Crowe and Eddy Yean to Pittsburgh for the slugging first baseman. Well, Yean is now back in the Nationals organization after 5 seasons in the Pirates organization, where he climbed to Triple A before being released in the offseason. Like Penrod, Yean was throwing a lot of pitches in 2025, but only one really good one in his sinker, but in 2026, he’s simplified his arsenal and made improvements to what he does have.
The sinker is the calling card for Yean, and it’s nasty, sitting 97 MPH with almost 17 inches of arm side run, grading out at near the top of the scale 117 Stuff+. He throws the pitch 40% of the time, and while it doesn’t induce much swing and miss, it does miss barrels, with an opponents expected batting average of .147 and expected slugging percentage of .163.
Yean has a fastball and changeup he throws roughly 23% of the time each, which have performed well so far but don’t grade out well, but the secondary pitch I want to focus on is his slider, which looks much sharper so far in 2026 than it did in 2025. His slider now has less vertical movement and more horizontal movement, raising it’s Stuff+ grade from 89 to 95, and so far it is doing damage against Triple A hitting, with a 66% whiff rate and .054 opponents batting average.
Despite the 5.14 ERA in 7 innings so far, Yean looks to be having a breakout season at Triple A with his swing and miss stuff, while also avoiding hard contact at a very high rate, 2 ingredients to success in the big leagues.
RHP Julian Tonghini
One more under the radar pick for a Nationals minor league reliever who could make their big league debut in 2026 is Julian Tonghini, the Nats 7th round pick out of Arizona last season. Tulian always had the strikeout stuff in college, with a 37% strikeout rate his senior year, but was held back by his shaky command, walking over 10% of batters all 4 years. He still managed a very good 25.2 K-BB% in 2025 with the Wildcats, and cut his walk rate by over 2%, showing if he could just find a little more command, he could be a breakout reliever in pro ball.
Lucky for the Nats, Tonghini has come out throwing strikes in 2026, as the righty currently has a 5.6% walk rate at High A in 4.2 innings pitched, less than half of what it what in 2025 and in the 79th percentile of all High A pitchers. To go along with his much improved command, Tonghini is also pairing swing and miss stuff with an elite groundball percentage, as he is 66th percentile in whiff rate, 87th percentile in called strike + whiff percentage, and 100th percentile in groundballs rate, keeping it on the ground 91.7% of the time.
Tonghini is only 4.2 innings into his professional career, so I won’t declare him the savior of the Nationals bullpen or anything, but he is also 24 years old and showing legitimate success right now, meaning there is the possibility of him fast tracking his way through the Nationals minor league season. If he can stay at the level he’s at currently, there’s a chance he finds himself in the big league bullpen in the backhalf of 2026.
American baseball player Jackie Robinson (1919 - 1972) during his time with the Brooklyn Dodgers, 28th August 1949. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Texas Rangers and Athletics continue a four-game set tonight at Sutter Health Park in Sacramento, with first pitch scheduled for 9:40 p.m. ET.
My Rangers vs. Athletics predictions are eyeing the hosts to erupt against Texas right-hander Kumar Rocker.
Read more for my MLB picks for Wednesday, April 15.
Who will win Rangers vs A's today: A's moneyline (-113)
The Athletics bounced back in the second game of this series last night, winning 2-1. While they’ve struggled to score runs this season with only 3.9 per contest, tonight’s clash against Texas Rangers starter Kumar Rocker presents a clear opportunity to string together runs.
Rocker has a 4.75 ERA through two starts, and the A's are hitting a mind-boggling .588 against the righty.
The likes of Shea Langeliers, Jacob Wilson, and Tyler Soderstrom have hit him around the ballpark and sent him to the showers early in their lone clash against him in 2025, scoring five runs on seven hits in just 1 2/3 innings.
Rocker hasn't developed as much swing-and-miss as his prospect pedigree may have suggested, as he ranks in the 40th percentile in chase rate, the 34th in whiff, and 27th in K%. This sets an A's offense up for success at their launching pad of a home ballpark.
A's starter J.T. Ginn isn't anything to write home about, but he keeps the ball in the ballpark, limits hard contact, and doesn't walk anyone.
COVERS INTEL: Ginn has held opponents to a .184 average in 2026.
Rangers vs A's Over/Under pick: Over 9.5 (-115)
Rocker is a very shaky starter, and he’s had just about zero luck against the Athletics in his career, owning an 11.37 ERA while surrendering eight earned runs across two starts.
While I do believe Ginn will improve upon allowing seven earned last week, Texas does have a .341 average against him across 44 at-bats.
Sutter Health Park is extremely hitter-friendly, especially with fly balls often turning into home runs due to the Sacramento air and wind patterns.
Quinn Allen's 2026 Transparency Record
ML/RL bets: 2-1, -1.29 units
Over/Under bets: 3-0, +2.67 units
Rangers vs A's odds
Moneyline: Rangers +100 | A's -120
Run line: Rangers +1.5 (-190) | A's -1.5 (+160)
Over/Under: Over 9.5 (-115) | Under 9.5 (-105)
Rangers vs A's trend
The Texas Rangers have hit the Game Total Over in 32 of their last 50 away games (+13.30 Units / 24% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Rangers vs. A's.
How to watch Rangers vs A's and game info
Location
Sutter Health Park, West Sacramento, CA
Date
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
First pitch
9:40 p.m. ET
TV
RSN, NBCSCA
Rangers starting pitcher
Kumar Rocker (0-1, 4.50 ERA)
A's starting pitcher
J.T. Ginn (0-0, 3.27 ERA)
Rangers vs A's latest injuries
Rangers vs A's 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.
First Pitch: 12:40 PM TV: Twins.TV Radio: TIBN, WCCO 830, The Wolf 102.9 FM, Audacy App Know Yo’ Foe:Over the Monster
Rewind the clock to ‘46, Of segregation politics: A minor league second baseman, Jack; Opponents wouldn’t play him ‘cause his skin was black. The Army dropped him when he made a fuss Of being ordered to the back of bus. But then a star with Kansas City; Dodgers brought him aboard; A future of acceptance he was bringing us toward:
Those Teams laughed for so long, “Your existence is wrong!” Bore so much, wouldn’t flee: You knew whom you’d be: You’re an MVP In number 42.
In ‘47, got the call to the Show; Yes, some around supported, but the hate would only grow: You’d hear the cruelest epithets from bench and stands, Get block-written letters with murder in their plans. But on the field, it was ball and bat, Same ninety feet no matter where you’re at. You hit .300, stole thirty bags, And the Dodgers soon raised pennant flags;
Though Teams laughed for so long, You were proving ‘em wrong. With no such guarantee, You were whom you’d be: You’re an MVP In number 42.
You got down to business, and here you’d thrive, You won Rookie of the Year, then a ring in ‘55. One more season, then you were done; Did you know what you’d begun?
It’s nearly eighty years since your debut, And every player will be in 42. Through all that old hate that’s rising and stark, There’s plenty on field who have skin shaded dark. So many further enshrined with a plaque Who played because you opened up a crack. Now there’s a game ahead, and the fans are awed; We know today whom we must applaud!
Though Teams laughed for so long, You have proven ‘em wrong. There’s so much to decree; You were so more than you’d be: You’re an MVP In number 42; Yes, you’re our MVP In number 42.
The cozy confines of Comerica Park have been kind to the Detroit Tigers since the calendar flipped to April.
Detroit rides a four-game home winning streak into Game 2 with the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday after taking a tight 2-1 series opening win yesterday.
The Tigers, who are 6-1 in their last seven contests inside Comerica, will see that home cooking slow to a simmer tonight.
Our Royals vs. Tigers predictions like Kansas City’s starter and my MLB picks are riding with the Royals as short road dogs.
Who will win Royals vs Tigers today: Royals (+116)
The Detroit Tigers’ recent run at home includes wins over Miami and St. Louis — two teams having issues keeping foes off the scoreboard.
The Kansas City Royals have been much stingier on that side of the plate, thanks in part to the efforts of starter Seth Lugo.
The right-hander’s 1-1 record over three outings doesn’t reflect his performance, allowing just three earned runs on 13 hits in less than 18 collective innings. What’s more impressive is that two of those starts came against the big bats of Atlanta and Milwaukee.
Lugo had a head start on the 2026 season after pitching well for Puerto Rico in the World Baseball Classic. He’s already working deep into games, getting into the seventh inning in two of his first three outings.
That takes pressure off the Royals’ wobbly bullpen, which gave up two runs late in the series opening loss to Detroit.
COVERS INTEL: Kansas City allows the fewest runs in the opening six innings, including just 1.57 runs allowed through six frames in road games. The Royals are 6-11 O/U against first five inning totals, including 2-5 O/U in this derivative market as visitors.
Royals vs Tigers Over/Under pick: Under 8.5 (+102)
Lugo will keep Detroit’s bats in the check while he’s on the mound. As for Tigers starter Jack Flaherty, he’s coming off his best showing of the young season.
The righty went 5 1/3 innings versus Minnesota, allowing one earned run on five hits with six strikeouts. Flaherty has fanned six batters in each of his last two starts and faces a Kansas City lineup that has struggled to produce away from home.
The Royals are driving in an average of just two runs per road game – tied for lowest in the majors – while hitting a collective .171 BA. That’s pumped out a 1-6 Over/Under record on the road.
Jason Logan's 2026 Transparency Record
ML/RL bets: 0-1, -1.0 units
Over/Under bets: 1-0, +1.0 units
Royals vs Tigers odds
Moneyline: Kansas City +116 | Detroit -126
Run line: Kansas City +1.5 (-182) | Detroit -1.5 (+163)
Over/Under: Over 8.5 (-115) | Under 8.5 (+102)
Royals vs Tigers trend
The Kansas City Royals have gone Under the total in 28 of their last 45 games (+9.60 Units/20% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Royals vs. Tigers.
How to watch Royals vs Tigers and game info
Location
Comerica Park, Detroit, MI
Date
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
First pitch
6:40 p.m. ET
TV
MLBN
Royals starting pitcher
Seth Lugo (1-1, 1.53 ERA)
Tigers starting pitcher
Jack Flaherty (0-1, 5.14 ERA)
Royals vs Tigers latest injuries
Royals vs Tigers 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.
A.J. Ewing was one of the young standouts in Mets camp this year.
With numerous regulars competing in the WBC, the youngster took full advantage of his opportunity for playing time, showcasing the many ways he can impact the game.
Thus far, he’s been able to carryover that success to open the Double-A season.
He finished the day 3-for-5 with two runs scored, an RBI, and a stolen base.
The 21-year-old is now hitting a whopping .421 and he’s put together three multi-hit showings over his first eight appearances on the season.
Ewing has also walked (8) more than he’s stuck out (5), he’s ripped five doubles, and has swiped five bases to help rack up an incredible .538 OBP and 1.119 OPS.
He played second base on Tuesday for the third time this season, which as Joe DeMayo noted in his recent prospect mailbag is about maintaining his versatility.
Pair these early results with his strong finish with Binghamton last season, though, and there’s not much left for the former fourth-round pick to prove at the Double-A level.
If Ewing can keep this up, perhaps he’ll make the leap to Syracuse soon enough.
No pitcher in baseball has more strikeouts over the last five years than Toronto Blue Jays right-hander Dylan Cease, and I expect him to continue to rack up the Ks in tonight’s matchup against the Milwaukee Brewers.
Read on to see why he’ll be the feature player in my Blue Jays vs. Brewers predictions and free MLB picks for Wednesday, April 15.
Blue Jays vs Brewers predictions
Blue Jays vs Brewers best bet: Dylan Cease Over 6.5 strikeouts (-155)
The Toronto Blue Jays' pitching staff largely baffled the Milwaukee Brewers in the series opener with 12 strikeouts, and I expect that trend to continue with Dylan Cease on the mound tonight.
Cease has faced the Brewers four times in his career, and went Over today’s 6.5 strikeout total in each outing, averaging eight K’s per contest.
The slider has been his most effective putaway pitch this season, garnering 10 strikeouts on a58% whiff rate and a .053 opponent batting average.
Milwaukee has the ninth-highest strikeout rating against the slider with a 33% K-rate.
COVERS INTEL: Cease's 38.8% strikeout rate is second among MLB starters to throw at least 10 innings this season.
Blue Jays vs Brewers same-game parlay (SGP)
The Blue Jays' bats seem to be coming around, sporting a .294 average over their last five games, averaging 10.4 hits per game. So I’ll continue to bet on the bats and take Over 4.5 hits against Brewers’ starter Chad Patrick.
Additionally, Patrick’s main pitch is his cutter, a pitch in which the Jays own a .389 batting average against this season.
I’m also going to keep the Daulton Varsho train rolling and take Over 0.5 hits for the outfielder. He’s recorded a hit in five straight, totaling nine base knocks in that stretch. It’s also a great matchup for him, as Varsho posted a .500 average against the cutter last season.
Blue Jays vs Brewers SGP
Dylan Cease Over 6.5 strikeouts
Daulton Varsho Over 0.5 hits
Chad Patrick Over 4.5 hits allowed
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Blue Jays vs Brewers home run pick: Daulton Varsho (+335)
I’ll continue to bet on Varsho today, who looks to be turning things around at the plate with five extra-base hits in his last five games.
Three of those have been of the home run variety, and this is a plus-matchup for him to hit one out of the park again tonight. Not only did Varsho have a .500 average against the cutter last season, but his xSLG was also .752 with a 35% hard-hit rate.
Additionally, Patrick is a flyball pitcher who ranks in the 25th percentile in hard-hit rate. Varsho’s raw power should shine through tonight.
2026 Transparency record
Best bets: 5-10, -2.25 units
SGPs: 2-13, -5.5 units
HR picks: 3-12, +0.4 units
Blue Jays vs Brewers odds
Moneyline: Toronto -130 | Milwaukee +110
Run line: Toronto -1.5 (+135) | Milwaukee +1.5 (-155)
Over/Under: Over 7.5 (-110) | Under 7.5 (-110)
Blue Jays vs Brewers trend
The Toronto Blue Jays have hit the Game Total Over in 10 of their last 15 away games (+5.75 Units / 35% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Blue Jays vs. Brewers.
How to watch Blue Jays vs Brewers and game info
Location
American Family Field, Milwaukee, WI
Date
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
First pitch
7:40 p.m. ET
TV
Brewers.TV, SN1
Blue Jays starting pitcher
Dylan Cease (0-0, 2.45 ERA)
Brewers starting pitcher
Chad Patrick (1-0, 0.73 ERA)
Blue Jays vs Brewers latest injuries
Blue Jays vs Brewers 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.