Cole Hamels, Ryan Braun headline Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 2026 candidates

Cole Hamels, Ryan Braun headline Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 2026 candidates originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Ichiro Suzuki, C.C. Sabathia and Billy Wagner got their call to Cooperstown, but who will be joining them next year?

The three players were enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday as part of the Class of 2025 with each surpassing the requisite 75% vote from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA). Now, baseball fans can start looking ahead to the 2026 ballot.

Next year’s ballot does not have nearly as much star power as the 2025 class, which had two first-ballot Hall of Famers in Ichiro and Sabathia. Still, a handful of players could be on their way to Cooperstown next summer.

Here’s a look at the top names to watch in the 2026 Baseball Hall of Fame voting process.

First-ballot potential

  • Cole Hamels

Cole Hamels could look to follow in Sabathia’s footsteps as a first-ballot southpaw, but his resume isn’t nearly as strong.

The former Philadelphia Phillies star’s accomplishments include a 163-122 record in 422 career starts, a 3.43 ERA, 2,560 career strikeouts, four All-Star selections, NLCS and World Series MVP honors in 2008 and a no-hitter in 2015 that doubled as his last career start with the Phillies. By comparison, Sabathia had 88 more wins and eclipsed the 3,000-strikeout threshold.

Returning candidates

  • Carlos Beltrán
  • Andruw Jones

Carlos Beltrán is the most likely player to join the Class of 2026. The nine-time All-Star appeared on 70.3% of Hall of Fame ballots in 2025, leaving him 19 votes shy of Cooperstown. It was still a significant rise from the 57.1% he received just one year prior, so he’s on pace to get his call to the hall in 2026.

It could be Andruw Jones’ time, as well. The Atlanta Braves star was on 66.2% of ballots in 2025, which marked his eighth year of Hall of Fame candidacy. The five-time All-Star and 10-time Gold Glover will need a noticeable increase in voting with just two years of eligibility remaining.

Returning longshots

  • Chase Utley
  • Andy Pettitte
  • Félix Hernández
  • Alex Rodriguez
  • Manny Ramirez

Hamels isn’t the only former Phillies star on the 2026 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot, as several of his former teammates are returning players. Chase Utley is the top vote-getter among them after appearing on 39.8% of ballots in 2025, which was his second year of eligibility. Bobby Abreu (19.5% in 2025) and Jimmy Rollins (18.0% in 2025) are entering their seventh and fifth year of eligibility, respectively.

Andy Pettitte, a five-time World Series champion with the New York Yankees, made the biggest leap of any returning player on the 2025 ballot. He went from 13.6% in 2024 to 27.9% in 2025, giving him some hope for future enshrinement as he goes into his eighth year of eligibility.

Félix Hernández is the most notable name to watch among players who were first-year eligible in 2025. The Seattle Mariners legend will look to make a second-year leap after receiving 20.6% of the vote on his first ballot.

As for players linked to MLB’s steroid era, Alex Rodriguez (37.1% in 2025) is entering his fifth year of Hall of Fame eligibility, while Manny Ramirez (34.3% in 2025) is entering his 10th and final year on the ballot.\

First-year longshots

  • Ryan Braun
  • Edwin Encarnación
  • Matt Kemp
  • Shin-Soo Choo
  • Chris Davis
  • Nick Markakis
  • Alex Gordon
  • Daniel Murphy
  • Rick Porcello

Ryan Braun started his MLB career on a Hall of Fame trajectory, but a performance-enhancing drug suspension in 2013 stained his resume. He finished his career as the Milwaukee Brewers’ franchise leader in home runs with 352.

Edwin Encarnación (424 home runs), Matt Kemp (three-time All-Star) and Shin-Soo Choo (one-time All-Star) are among the players who should appear on more than 5% of ballots in 2026, allowing them to stick on the ballot in 2027.

When is Pete Rose eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame?

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred removed Pete Rose from the league’s permanently ineligible list in May, paving the way for MLB’s all-time hits leader to enter the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Instead of the BBWAA ballot, the Historical Overview Committee will oversee Rose’s posthumous candidacy. The committee is next scheduled to meet in 2027 to develop a ballot with names for the Classic Era Committee, so 2028 is the soonest Rose could be voted in.

Cole Hamels, Ryan Braun headline Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 2026 candidates

Cole Hamels, Ryan Braun headline Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 2026 candidates originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Ichiro Suzuki, C.C. Sabathia and Billy Wagner got their call to Cooperstown, but who will be joining them next year?

The three players were enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday as part of the Class of 2025 with each surpassing the requisite 75% vote from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA). Now, baseball fans can start looking ahead to the 2026 ballot.

Next year’s ballot does not have nearly as much star power as the 2025 class, which had two first-ballot Hall of Famers in Ichiro and Sabathia. Still, a handful of players could be on their way to Cooperstown next summer.

Here’s a look at the top names to watch in the 2026 Baseball Hall of Fame voting process.

First-ballot potential

  • Cole Hamels

Cole Hamels could look to follow in Sabathia’s footsteps as a first-ballot southpaw, but his resume isn’t nearly as strong.

The former Philadelphia Phillies star’s accomplishments include a 163-122 record in 422 career starts, a 3.43 ERA, 2,560 career strikeouts, four All-Star selections, NLCS and World Series MVP honors in 2008 and a no-hitter in 2015 that doubled as his last career start with the Phillies. By comparison, Sabathia had 88 more wins and eclipsed the 3,000-strikeout threshold.

Returning candidates

  • Carlos Beltrán
  • Andruw Jones

Carlos Beltrán is the most likely player to join the Class of 2026. The nine-time All-Star appeared on 70.3% of Hall of Fame ballots in 2025, leaving him 19 votes shy of Cooperstown. It was still a significant rise from the 57.1% he received just one year prior, so he’s on pace to get his call to the hall in 2026.

It could be Andruw Jones’ time, as well. The Atlanta Braves star was on 66.2% of ballots in 2025, which marked his eighth year of Hall of Fame candidacy. The five-time All-Star and 10-time Gold Glover will need a noticeable increase in voting with just two years of eligibility remaining.

Returning longshots

  • Chase Utley
  • Andy Pettitte
  • Félix Hernández
  • Alex Rodriguez
  • Manny Ramirez

Hamels isn’t the only former Phillies star on the 2026 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot, as several of his former teammates are returning players. Chase Utley is the top vote-getter among them after appearing on 39.8% of ballots in 2025, which was his second year of eligibility. Bobby Abreu (19.5% in 2025) and Jimmy Rollins (18.0% in 2025) are entering their seventh and fifth year of eligibility, respectively.

Andy Pettitte, a five-time World Series champion with the New York Yankees, made the biggest leap of any returning player on the 2025 ballot. He went from 13.6% in 2024 to 27.9% in 2025, giving him some hope for future enshrinement as he goes into his eighth year of eligibility.

Félix Hernández is the most notable name to watch among players who were first-year eligible in 2025. The Seattle Mariners legend will look to make a second-year leap after receiving 20.6% of the vote on his first ballot.

As for players linked to MLB’s steroid era, Alex Rodriguez (37.1% in 2025) is entering his fifth year of Hall of Fame eligibility, while Manny Ramirez (34.3% in 2025) is entering his 10th and final year on the ballot.\

First-year longshots

  • Ryan Braun
  • Edwin Encarnación
  • Matt Kemp
  • Shin-Soo Choo
  • Chris Davis
  • Nick Markakis
  • Alex Gordon
  • Daniel Murphy
  • Rick Porcello

Ryan Braun started his MLB career on a Hall of Fame trajectory, but a performance-enhancing drug suspension in 2013 stained his resume. He finished his career as the Milwaukee Brewers’ franchise leader in home runs with 352.

Edwin Encarnación (424 home runs), Matt Kemp (three-time All-Star) and Shin-Soo Choo (one-time All-Star) are among the players who should appear on more than 5% of ballots in 2026, allowing them to stick on the ballot in 2027.

When is Pete Rose eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame?

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred removed Pete Rose from the league’s permanently ineligible list in May, paving the way for MLB’s all-time hits leader to enter the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Instead of the BBWAA ballot, the Historical Overview Committee will oversee Rose’s posthumous candidacy. The committee is next scheduled to meet in 2027 to develop a ballot with names for the Classic Era Committee, so 2028 is the soonest Rose could be voted in.

Fantasy Baseball Prospect Report: JJ Wetherholt crushing Triple-A pitching; Spencer Jones continues power surge

A reminder: This is ONLY players who have Rookie of the Year MLB eligibility, and ONLY a look at potential help for 2025.

That out of the way, here’s a look at the top prospects who can help your fantasy baseball roster this season.

[Smarter waivers, better trades, optimized lineups — Yahoo Fantasy Plus unlocks it all]

1. J.J. Wetherholt, INF, St. Louis Cardinals

2025 stats: 73 G, .306/.421/.513, 11 HR, 14 SB, 48 BB, 48 SO at Double-A Springfield and Triple-A Memphis.

If I listed every reason for this, it would make this a 6,000-word article and absolutely no one wants that, but I’ll just get this out of the way: This is the least confident I’ve ever been in a list this late into the year. I have no idea whether Wetherholt (see what I did there?) is going to make his debut in 2025, but it’s not just about proximity, folks. Wetherholt’s talent is exceptional, and the fact that he’s slugged four homers with a .762 OPS since being promoted to Triple-A didn’t hurt his case for ascending to the top of this list, either. Wetherholt has played more shortstop than second base in Memphis, and the latter position is obviously covered right now for St. Louis. I still think his ability to hit for average, power and steal bases — potentially, anyway — makes him the prospect I’d roster right now.

2. Luke Keaschall, INF/OF, Minnesota Twins

2025 stats: 22 G, .244/.358/.295, 1 HR, 8 SB, 14 BB, 17 SO at Triple-A St. Paul; 7 G, .368/.538/.526, 0 HR, 5 SB, 5 BB, 2 SO at Minnesota.

You would be forgiven if you forgot about Keaschall, but now’s a good time to, well, stop forgetting. The 22-year-old missed nearly three months while dealing with a fractured right forearm, but he’s returned to action and shown off his impressive speed and approach. The power is the question mark with Keaschall, but he can put the ball into the gaps and can turn on enough fastballs to suggest he won’t be just a dink-and-dunk hitter. Keaschall should rejoin the Twins in the coming weeks, and fantasy managers could do worse than to give the right-handed hitter a shot once that takes place.

3. Jordan Lawlar, INF, Arizona Diamondbacks

2025 stats: 53 G, .319/.410/.583, 10 HR, 18 SB, 30 BB, 60 SO at Triple-A Reno; 8 G, .000/.136/.000, 0 HR, 0 SB, 3 BB, 9 SO at Arizona.

Ranking Lawlar is kinda impossible right now, but I’ll do it anyway. The case against him is pretty simple; he’s out with a hamstring injury and there’s no word as to when he’ll be able to return. The case for him is those stats you see above — the minor league ones, not the small-sampled struggles in a brief cup of coffee — and the fact that Arizona is very much in sell mode/should want to see Lawlar playing everyday. So it goes like this: If the Diamondbacks recall Lawlar, add him; he’s the type of player who can contribute in every fantasy category. But don’t be surprised if they take it easy and have their top prospect make his debut as a full-time starter in 2026.

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4. Samuel Basallo, C/1B, Baltimore Orioles

2025 stats: 64 G, .280/.394/.615, 120 HR, 0 SB, 40 BB, 57 SO at Triple-A Norfolk.

If I absolutely knew that Basallo was going to be up in the coming weeks, he’d be the top prospect on this list. He should be up already, as he’s scorching hot with a .350/.413/.775 slash over his last 10 games that was buoyed by a 5-for-5 effort with a homer against Lehigh Valley on Friday. Basallo has some of the best power in the minors right now, and the approach at the plate keeps getting better to suggest he’ll get on at a solid clip with a decent average to go with it. There’s just no guarantee that Baltimore is going to bring him up, so fantasy managers need to play the wait-and-see game. Unless you play in a league with two catchers. I’d probably roster him now in that case.

5. Spencer Jones, OF, New York Yankees

2025 stats: 68 G, .314/.411/.706, 29 HR, 16 SB, 42 BB, 94 SO at Double-A Somerset and Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

I want you to look at that number of games played and that number of homers closely, because it still feels like that’s not possible. Jones homered three times for the RailRiders on Thursday, but has been out of the lineup since then due to back spasms. Obviously that injury is a potential concern, but with potential concern comes a 6-foot-7 left-handed hitter who has homered 13 times in 19 games since being promoted to Triple-A. Yes, he strikes out a ton. Yes, there’ll likely be an adjustment period when he gets a chance to face MLB pitching. But yes, I am still rostering him if the Yankees promote him because of the potential power production.

6. Bubba Chandler, RHP, Pittsburgh Pirates

2025 stats: 20 G, 82.2 IP, 3.27 ERA, 1.34 WHIP, 41 BB, 104 SO at Triple-A Indianapolis.

I feel like this late in the year we have to have a pitcher on the list, and the fact of the matter is that Chandler — with all due respect to Andrew Painter and a few other names — is the best pitching prospect in Triple-A right now. So, I’m adding a spot for him. He’s also been pitching well after a bit of a funk in the middle of the summer, and fired back-to-back shutouts over six innings to begin July with a 5 2/3 inning effort of two-run baseball with seven strikeouts in his most recent outing. The Pirates are just as likely to shut down Chandler as they are to promote him, but if he gets a chance in the majors, his swing-and-miss stuff and ability to throw four pitches for strikes makes him relevant.

There’s a lot of debate as to who the best prospect in baseball is, but right now, I would argue that the best fantasy prospect in the sport is Jesús Made. Made has been solid with the bat all year, but better of late with a .306 average and .836 OPS over his last 10 games. Even as a player that turned 18 in May, the switch-hitting shortstop has shown off four plus-tools, and three of those are relevant to fantasy in his hit, power and speed. There’s some question as to whether he’ll need to move off shortstop, but the Brew Crew have a few years to find out exactly where he profiles best. If he sticks at short, he has a chance to be a fantasy superstar, but if he moved to the outfield, second or third base he’s still the player I’d want the most in any eligible format.

The Marlins have been a pleasant surprise in 2025 — if only because the expectations were so incredibly low — and they also have seen Robby Snelling develop into one of the best left-handed pitching prospects in baseball. Since being promoted to Triple-A in July, Snelling has an ERA of 2.30 over his three starts with a 15/4 K/BB ratio over 15 2/3 innings with the Jumbo Shrimp. Eleven of those punchouts came in his start Saturday against Triple-A Durham, and he’s shown the ability to miss bats with three pitches while throwing them for strikes on a consistent enough basis to suggest good things. He could make his MLB debut in 2025, but even if he doesn’t he’s a name to keep a close eye on for 2026.

We talked about Jones and his impressive power display, but there’s another slugger who has been bashing the ball over the fence in Triple-A lately, and it’s Mariners’ first base prospect Tyler Locklear. Locklear has homered six times in his last 10 games, and in that timeframe he’s slashing a robust .417/.511/.972 for Tacoma. The 2022 second-round pick really struggled in his short time with the Mariners last year, but he’s a player with well above-average power and the ball jumps off his bat when he makes contact. Seattle isn’t likely to give him a chance in 2025 after the trade for Josh Naylor, but he does have the skill set to be a middle-of-the-order hitter in the coming seasons. If he were to be traded before the deadline, he’d be worthy of consideration; assuming he gets promoted after that transaction, of course.

Cole Hamels, Ryan Braun headline Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 2026 candidates

Cole Hamels, Ryan Braun headline Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 2026 candidates originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Ichiro Suzuki, C.C. Sabathia and Billy Wagner got their call to Cooperstown, but who will be joining them next year?

The three players were enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday as part of the Class of 2025 with each surpassing the requisite 75% vote from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA). Now, baseball fans can start looking ahead to the 2026 ballot.

Next year’s ballot does not have nearly as much star power as the 2025 class, which had two first-ballot Hall of Famers in Ichiro and Sabathia. Still, a handful of players could be on their way to Cooperstown next summer.

Here’s a look at the top names to watch in the 2026 Baseball Hall of Fame voting process.

First-ballot potential

  • Cole Hamels

Cole Hamels could look to follow in Sabathia’s footsteps as a first-ballot southpaw, but his resume isn’t nearly as strong.

The former Philadelphia Phillies star’s accomplishments include a 163-122 record in 422 career starts, a 3.43 ERA, 2,560 career strikeouts, four All-Star selections, NLCS and World Series MVP honors in 2008 and a no-hitter in 2015 that doubled as his last career start with the Phillies. By comparison, Sabathia had 88 more wins and eclipsed the 3,000-strikeout threshold.

Returning candidates

  • Carlos Beltrán
  • Andruw Jones

Carlos Beltrán is the most likely player to join the Class of 2026. The nine-time All-Star appeared on 70.3% of Hall of Fame ballots in 2025, leaving him 19 votes shy of Cooperstown. It was still a significant rise from the 57.1% he received just one year prior, so he’s on pace to get his call to the hall in 2026.

It could be Andruw Jones’ time, as well. The Atlanta Braves star was on 66.2% of ballots in 2025, which marked his eighth year of Hall of Fame candidacy. The five-time All-Star and 10-time Gold Glover will need a noticeable increase in voting with just two years of eligibility remaining.

Returning longshots

  • Chase Utley
  • Andy Pettitte
  • Félix Hernández
  • Alex Rodriguez
  • Manny Ramirez

Hamels isn’t the only former Phillies star on the 2026 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot, as several of his former teammates are returning players. Chase Utley is the top vote-getter among them after appearing on 39.8% of ballots in 2025, which was his second year of eligibility. Bobby Abreu (19.5% in 2025) and Jimmy Rollins (18.0% in 2025) are entering their seventh and fifth year of eligibility, respectively.

Andy Pettitte, a five-time World Series champion with the New York Yankees, made the biggest leap of any returning player on the 2025 ballot. He went from 13.6% in 2024 to 27.9% in 2025, giving him some hope for future enshrinement as he goes into his eighth year of eligibility.

Félix Hernández is the most notable name to watch among players who were first-year eligible in 2025. The Seattle Mariners legend will look to make a second-year leap after receiving 20.6% of the vote on his first ballot.

As for players linked to MLB’s steroid era, Alex Rodriguez (37.1% in 2025) is entering his fifth year of Hall of Fame eligibility, while Manny Ramirez (34.3% in 2025) is entering his 10th and final year on the ballot.\

First-year longshots

  • Ryan Braun
  • Edwin Encarnación
  • Matt Kemp
  • Shin-Soo Choo
  • Chris Davis
  • Nick Markakis
  • Alex Gordon
  • Daniel Murphy
  • Rick Porcello

Ryan Braun started his MLB career on a Hall of Fame trajectory, but a performance-enhancing drug suspension in 2013 stained his resume. He finished his career as the Milwaukee Brewers’ franchise leader in home runs with 352.

Edwin Encarnación (424 home runs), Matt Kemp (three-time All-Star) and Shin-Soo Choo (one-time All-Star) are among the players who should appear on more than 5% of ballots in 2026, allowing them to stick on the ballot in 2027.

When is Pete Rose eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame?

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred removed Pete Rose from the league’s permanently ineligible list in May, paving the way for MLB’s all-time hits leader to enter the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Instead of the BBWAA ballot, the Historical Overview Committee will oversee Rose’s posthumous candidacy. The committee is next scheduled to meet in 2027 to develop a ballot with names for the Classic Era Committee, so 2028 is the soonest Rose could be voted in.

Mets’ Carlos Mendoza ‘not concerned’ with Kodai Senga’s second straight shaky outing

Kodai Senga has been a bit up-and-down since returning from the IL. 

He put together four scoreless innings in his return in Kansas City, but then was knocked around and ended up being chased after just three earlier this week against the Angels. 

Sunday’s outing against the Giants was much of the same. 

The right-hander worked around trouble in each of his five innings of work, but was able to limit the damage to just two bad pitches -- both of which were Matt Chapman home run's (solo and two-run shot). 

Overall, Senga allowed those three runs on four hits and five walks.  

“First time he goes five innings since coming back from injury,” Carlos Mendoza said. “We pushed him today, we had a number in mind which he reached, so I want to say it was a good step in the right direction for him.”

Senga has now given up a total of seven runs over his first three starts back. 

Easily the biggest issue -- the eight walks he’s issued over that span. 

“I felt prepared going into tonight,” he said through a translator. “Just a lot of uncompetitive pitches, those don’t help and I know that if I can minimize those moving forward then it’s going to help me get back into a groove.”

Though Senga has been shaky, Mendoza is confident he’ll be able to work through his mechanical issues and return to his dominant form.

“This is a guy that the more reps he gets, the better he’s gonna get,” the skipper said. “I’m not concerned, he’s too good of a pitcher and he’ll figure it out, I think 

Ronny Mauricio powers Mets past Giants with first career four-hit night: ‘He made it look easy’

Ronny Mauricio is finding his groove at the big-league level. 

The young slugger had his hands all over the Mets’ Sunday night win over the Giants. 

Mauricio and Francisco Alvarez started rallies that led to New York’s first three runs -- lining back-to-back singles leading off the third and then a pair of doubles in the top of the fifth.

After the Giants jumped in front on Matt Chapman’s second homer of the night, the Mets responded right back, as Mauricio crushed a slider from All-Star righty Randy Rodriguez into McCovey Cove to even things back up. 

A few batters later, Juan Soto pushed the Mets in front with a solo shot of his own. 

“He wanted to hit one in the water, he told me since the beginning,” Soto said postgame. 

“I knew I hit it well,” Mauricio added. “It felt really good because I saw a couple of home runs of Barry Bonds hitting them into the ocean, so for me to be able to do that too that’s feeling really good.”

And the 24-year-old wasn’t done there, as he led off the top of the ninth ripping an opposite-field double, which eventually led to the pinch-running Luisangel Acuña scoring a big insurance run. 

Mauricio finished his first career four-hit showing, three of which went for extra-bases. 

“He was incredible, it’s nice to see it,” Carlos Mendoza said. “He continues to get comfortable, he continues to have really good at-bats controlling the strike zone and then doing damage on pitches in the zone.

“We saw it today with the homer against Rodriguez, a pretty tough arm to the pull side and then he goes the other way in that last at-bat after getting into a hitters count, not trying to do too much, just the ability to go the other way -- he made it look easy.”

Mauricio is now up to a .760 OPS on the season. Alvarez has hits in six straight, and three extra base knocks since returning. Mark Vientos delivered the go-ahead hit on Saturday to extend his hitting streak. Brett Baty looks the most comfortable he's been at the big-league level.

Starling Marte has also been red hot since returning from his brief IL stint.

The bottom of the order finally pitching in while the big boppers go through their little funk has shown the depth and potential this lineup can have down the stretch.

“One through nine, I feel like anybody in that lineup can take you deep,” Mendoza said. “That’s why we never feel like we’re out of a game, a couple of guys get on then next thing you know you get the tying run to the plate and anybody can clip anybody.

“We’ve been saying it all year, when those guys are clicking we’re a pretty good offense.”

Seventh inning homers from Ronny Mauricio, Juan Soto help Mets secure sweep of Giants

The Mets secured the series sweep of the San Francisco Giants with a 5-3 win on Sunday night at Oracle Park.

New York extended it's winning streak to seven games.

Here are some takeaways...

- The bottom of the order did a great job creating the Mets' first three runs of the game. Francisco Alvarez and Ronny Mauricio led off the third with back-to-back singles, and two batters later Alvarez scored on a Francisco Lindor RBI groundout.

Two innings later the young duo would strike again, as back-to-back doubles leading off the fifth put the Mets back in front. Mauricio advanced to third on a Brandon Nimmo groundout, but he was gunned down trying to score on a Lindor roller to short.

Alvarez had another big opportunity with two on and two out in the top of the sixth, but right-hander Randy Rodriguez struck him out -- Mauricio picked him up an inning later, though, smacking a game-tying leadoff homer into McCovey Cove against one of the top relievers in the game.

Mauricio doubled again leading off the ninth, giving him the first four-hit game of his career.

- Juan Soto looked a little lost during his first three at-bats, but he delivered his fourth time up, lifting an 0-1 fastball the other way for a go-ahead solo homer. The Mets are the first time since April to put up multiple runs against Rodriguez.

That snapped an eight-game homerless streak for Soto, who now has 25 on the season.

- Kodai Senga was chased after just three innings in his last outing, but he got off to a better start in this one. The right-hander struck out back-to-back batters in the bottom of the second to work his way out of a first and third jam with one out.

After the Mets handed him the lead in the third, Senga was helped out by a Heliot Ramos base-running miscue to work around another man in scoring position. The Giants were able to strike against him an inning later, though, as Matt Chapman led off the fourth with a solo shot to left-center.

San Fran pushed two into scoring position, but Senga got Jung Hoo Lee to pop out to avoid further damage. He retired the first two batters after the Mets retook the lead in the fifth, but Chapman would get him again, this time with a two-run homer to center.

Senga finished the night with a final line of three runs allowed on four hits and five walks.

- The Mets' bullpen threw well behind Senga. José Buttó put together a scoreless sixth, Gregory Soto worked a 1-2-3 seventh in his Mets debut, Reed Garrett got the first two outs in the eighth, then Brooks Raley one before Edwin Diaz locked down the save.

The Giants loaded the bases against Diaz, but he struck out Willy Adames and Chapman to win the game.

- It didn't take long for Starling Marte to extend his five-game hitting streak -- the veteran righty picked up the Mets' first hit of the night with a two out opposite-field single in the top of the second. Marte blooped another single to center in the eighth, giving him another multi-hit game.

Game MVP(s): Francisco Alvarez & Ronny Mauricio

The young duo was square in the middle of things all night for the Mets -- finishing a combined 6-for-8.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets head to San Diego to start a three-game set with the Padres.

Frankie Montas takes the ball against potential Mets trade target Dylan Cease at 9:40 p.m.

Mets prospects Ryan Clifford, Carson Benge stay red hot in Double-A

Binghamton’s offense put up 17 runs in Sunday’s win over the Fightin Phils.

The Mets' dynamic prospect duo of Ryan Clifford and Carson Benge were right in the middle of things. 

They got the scoring started early, going back-to-back in the top of the first. 

Benge would strike two more times over the next two innings, lifting another solo shot in the second and then lining an RBI single in the third. 

He was walked on four pitches in the fourth and then lined another single, but was finally retired in his final at-bats of the day -- finishing 4-for-6 with three RBI and four runs scored.

The former first-round pick is now hitting .350 with four doubles, five home runs, 15 RBI, and a 1.046 OPS in 21 games since being promoted to Double-A. 

Clifford finished a triple shy of the cycle and was retired just once -- going 3-for-4 with a solo shot, single, double, three walks, and five runs scored. 

He’s up to a minor league leading 21 homers on the season, with eight of them coming in July.  

Jett Williams also enjoyed a big day, reaching base four times with two walks and two hits. 

Binghamton improved to an incredible 64-30 on the season.

Mets Notes: Jose Siri update, Starling Marte’s production at the plate

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza provided some updates prior to Sunday night’s series finale in San Francisco…


Jose Siri expected to return this season

Siri hasn’t resumed baseball activities after his setback from a fractured tibia. 

Despite that, Mendoza is still expecting him to return this season. 

“He’s still not doing much,” he said. “It’s been quite a bit here, but he’s pushing for it and I’m expecting him to be back here at some point, that’s the goal.”

Siri has been sidelined since fouling a ball off his shin on April 12.

He had just one hit in 20 at-bats prior to the injury, but was providing a spark with his speed and defense.

Tyrone Taylor and Jeff McNeil have been splitting time in center in his absence, but the Mets are in the market for an upgrade ahead of the deadline. 

Starling Marte’s production 

Marte continues to get the job done offensively. 

He was on-base three more times on Saturday night, pushing his hitting streak to five games. 

He’s put together a multi-hit showing in four of those. 

“He’s been huge,” Mendoza said. “Continues to give us good at-bats against lefties and righties. He goes down and misses a few days, then he comes back and it seems like he didn’t even miss a day. The experience, the veteran presence, his ability to work at-bats and put the ball in play, there’s a lot to like there.”

Marte’s now hitting .282 with a .364 on-base percentage through 60 games. 

Teams were reportedly checking in on his availability over the past few days, but with him being such a big piece for this lineup probably makes a trade seem less likely.

Yankees legends CC Sabathia, Ichiro Suzuki inducted into Baseball Hall of Fame

CC’s day has come. 

Yankees legend CC Sabathia was officially inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday afternoon. 

The left-hander was the definition of a workhorse over his 18-year big-league career. 

Sabathia spent his first seven seasons pitching in Cleveland, he was traded to the Brewers ahead of the 2008 deadline, and then decided to sign in the Bronx as he hit free agency for the first time in his career. 

He called joining the Yanks the best decision him and his wife ever made during his speech. 

“I loved playing in Cleveland and Milwaukee, but when it was time to go somewhere new I thought I wanted to go to LA and play for the Dodgers, close to home -- I definitely didn’t want to go to New York to play for the Yankees, the furthest team away,” he said.
“Winning mattered and money made a difference, but my free agent decision was really about where we were going to spend the rest of our lives -- we said to ourselves, we’ll play anywhere on the planet as long as our family is together. 

“When Amber and I were kids, things in our family were inconsistent. Now we have three kids of our own and we wanted to plant roots, that’s what we talked about -- that’s how we made the best decision we’ve ever made.”

Sabathia finished with 251 wins and a 3.74 ERA across 3,577.1 innings of work.

He made three All-Star appearances over his 11 years with the Yankees, finished in the top-five in MVP voting three times, and won his lone World Series title (2009).

Ichiro enters the Hall

CC wasn’t the only Yankee to be enshrined on Sunday, Ichiro Suzuki also entered the Hall. 

Ichiro spent the first 11 years of his career with the Mariners before being traded to the Bronx. 

At 40 years old, he played two and a half seasons with the Yanks. 

“Thank you to the New York Yankees,” he said during his speech. “I know you guys are here today for CC, but that’s okay he deserves it a lot -- I enjoyed my two and a half years in pinstripes, thank you for giving me the experience.”

Ichiro was a lifetime .311 hitter, who accumulated 4,367 hits in his professional career between NPB and MLB and also holds the MLB single-season hit record (262, set in 2004).

Royals put Kris Bubic, Jac Caglianone on IL; newly acquired Randal Grichuk into starting lineup

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Royals placed All-Star left-hander Kris Bubic on the 15-day injured list with a rotator cuff strain and outfielder Jac Caglianone on the 10-day IL with a strained left hamstring amid a series of moves before their series finale against Cleveland on Sunday.

The Royals also welcomed outfielder Randal Grichuk, who was acquired on Saturday night in a deal that shipped reliever Andrew Hoffmann to Arizona, and recalled right-handed reliever Jonathan Bowlan from Triple-A Omaha to help the bullpen.

Bubic walked the first four batters he faced and only managed to last 2 2/3 innings against the Guardians on Saturday, when he started the second game of a split doubleheader. He needed 42 pitches to get through the first inning, and he wound up allowing four runs and three hits in his shortest start since Sept. 18, 2022, at Boston.

“He’s getting some further testing and then we’ll talk to the doc here and see what we got,” Royals manager Matt Quatraro said.

Bubic said he’s experienced some shoulder soreness for much of the season, but he’s been able to pitch through it at a break-through level. Even with the rocky start Saturday, he has a 2.55 ERA — the fifth-best mark in the American League.

“I mean, you see how he’s performed,” Quatraro said. “Most pitchers when they go out there, they feel something almost every time. The severity of it and his ability to continue to deal with it has been manageable, by his own admission. ... And it’s gotten to the point where, you know, he doesn’t, and we don’t feel like it’s best for him to keep fighting through it.”

The Royals rotation has suddenly thinned considerably. Left-hander Cole Ragans remains on the IL with a strained rotator cuff and is not expected back until late August, and right-hander Michael Lorenzen is progressing from his strained left oblique but may need to make a rehab start before he returns to the Royals sometime in August.

The Royals already have had to plug one spot with 45-year-old Rich Hill, who pitched well in his debut for them this past week.

Caglianone, the Royals’ 22-year-old power-hitter, felt tightness in his hamstring while running down a double into the gap in the first game of Saturday’s doubleheader. Then he felt the twinge again while running to first on a groundout later the inning.

The timing of the injury could have been worse: The Royals had been working on a deal to land Grichuk, who nearly signed with them in the offseason but will now help them primarily against left-handed hitting for the rest of the season.

“You’ve seen our outfield had gotten very heavily left-handed. Something we thought we needed to add was a right-handed bat,” said Quatraro, whose team began the day 51-54 and 4 1/2 games back in the AL wild-card race.

Grichuk was 0 for 2 on Saturday night in Pittsburgh, flying out in the second inning and the fourth, when he was told by the Diamondbacks that he had been traded. He hugged several teammates in the dugout and then headed out, catching a flight first thing Sunday so that he could be in Kansas City in time for the series finale against the Guardians.

He was put in the starting lineup right away, batting sixth and playing right field.

“When they called they said, ‘If you’re willing to be here to play, you know, we want you in the starting lineup,’” Grichuk said, “and yeah, I want to play. That’s kind of my M.O. And so I said, ‘Let’s do it. We’ll make it happen, even if it’s crazy travel.’”

The one hang-up was Grichuk’s number: He’s always worn 15 and that number was taken by backup catcher Luke Maile. But it turns out the two knew each other from their days together in Toronto, so a quick text message smoothed things out. Maile took No. 17 and gave his old buddy No. 15 — “We’ll work something out,” Grichuk said of potential compensation.

“It’s pretty cool that he was able to give it to me,” Grichuk said.

Seattle’s Cal Raleigh calls his 40th homer ‘a cool milestone’ during the catcher’s historic season

Cal Raleigh reached another landmark in his incredible season Saturday night when he drilled his 40th home run deep into the right field bleachers at Angel Stadium.

Becoming the seventh catcher in major league history to hit 40 homers has been all but inevitable for Raleigh ever since the Seattle Mariners slugger got to the All-Star break with 38 — and then won the Home Run Derby.

Raleigh still felt the 40th was special, mostly because it broke a tie and propelled the Mariners to a valuable 7-2 victory in their playoff chase.

“It’s a cool milestone to hit, and I’m very thankful for it, and it’s a cool moment for sure,” Raleigh said. “I look back to 20 or 30, and that was cool, and 40 is definitely very cool as well. I’m not trying to downplay it, but I’m glad we got the win tonight, and I’ll look back one day and it will be cool.”

Raleigh is the first player in the majors to hit 40 this season, doing it before the calendar even turns to August.

He crushed a 2-0 fastball from struggling Angels reliever José Fermin, driving it 416 feet with a 113.5-mph exit velocity. The shot put the Mariners up 3-2, and they added three more runs in the inning to take control of their second win in three games in Anaheim.

“I’m sure it feels great to get to 40,” Seattle manager Dan Wilson said. “I’m sure he wants to get to 41 as soon as possible, because he knows it helps us win ballgames, and at this point, that’s what he’s looking for. Knowing Cal, he wants us to win. But a big milestone for sure. The season, the numbers that he’s put up is pretty staggering. This is just another one of those notches on the belt.”

Although he was the Mariners’ designated hitter Saturday, Raleigh joined an elite club of hitters who primarily played catcher during their 40-homer seasons.

Johnny Bench and Mike Piazza did it twice, while Roy Campanella, Todd Hundley and Javy Lopez were joined in 2021 by Kansas City’s Salvador Perez, who set the single-season record for catchers with 48.

Perez’s mark is eminently reachable for Raleigh, who would need to average just one homer a week for the rest of the regular season to top it.

Raleigh is only the fifth player in Mariners history to hit 40 homers, and he joins elite Pacific Northwest company: Ken Griffey Jr., Alex Rodriguez, Nelson Cruz and Jay Buhner.

“They’re really good players,” Raleigh said. “They’re some of the best that’s ever come through here, so very honored to be a part of that group. It’s a cool thing. Just try to keep going and see how far we can take it.”

Raleigh also tied Griffey (1998) for the most homers in Seattle history through 105 games of a season while becoming only the eighth player in major league history to hit 40 in his team’s first 105 games — just the second to do it in the 21st century, joining Aaron Judge (2022).

Raleigh even reached his latest landmark on a day when his AL MVP candidacy indirectly got a boost: Judge, the obvious front-runner for his third award in four seasons, went on the 10-day injured list with a flexor strain in his right elbow — although the Yankees superstar’s absence isn’t currently expected to be lengthy.

Raleigh’s production has actually slowed in July. He came into Saturday night’s game batting .162 with just 11 hits in 18 games this month, although six of those hits were homers.

Raleigh had two hits and struck out three times Saturday night, but Wilson has seen progress in Raleigh’s approach at the plate in recent days.

“I think for the most part, it’s an adjustment period,” Wilson said. “Teams start to pitch around you a little bit, and I think you become aware of that and start making the adjustments there. But I think he’s just been very consistent pretty much all this season, and I think that’s what’s been so great for me to see, and for all of us to benefit from. He’s just been so consistent, and to do this while raising his batting average at the same time, pretty incredible.”

Ichiro Suzuki adds humorous touches to Hall of Fame induction ceremonies

Ichiro Suzuki adds humorous touches to Hall of Fame induction ceremonies originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

If you want someone for your next celebrity roast, Ichiro Suzuki could be your guy.

Mixing sneaky humor with heartfelt messages, the first Japanese-born player to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame stole the show Sunday in Cooperstown.

Morning showers and gloomy skies delayed the ceremonies by an hour, but the moisture gave way to bright skies and warm temperatures. The sun seemed its brightest during Suzuki’s acceptance speech.

The outfielder was joined by pitcher CC Sabathia, also elected in his first year of eligibility, and closer Billy Wagner, who made it in his final try on the writers’ ballot. Suzuki fell one vote shy of being a unanimous selection and he took a jab at the unidentified sports writer who didn’t vote for him.

“Three thousand hits or 262 hits in one season are two achievements recognized by the writers. Well, all but one,” Suzuki said to roaring laughter.

“By the way, the offer for the writer to have dinner at my home has now expired,” he added, with emphasis on “expired” for good measure.

A pair of Era Committee selections rounded out the Class of 2025: Dave Parker, who earned the nickname Cobra during 20 big league seasons, and slugger Dick Allen. Parker died June 28, just a month before he was to be inducted.

An estimated 30,000 fans crowded onto the field adjacent to the Clark Sports Center, sun umbrellas and Japanese flags sprinkled around. Suzuki’s No. 51 was seemingly everywhere as fans, thousands of them Seattle Mariners boosters who made the trek from the Pacific Northwest, chanted “Ichiro” several times throughout the day. A sign that read “Thank You Ichiro! Forever a Legend” in English and Japanese summed up the admiration for Suzuki on his special day.

With 52 returning Hall of Famers on hand, Suzuki paid homage to his new baseball home in Cooperstown and his adoring fans by delivering his 18-minute speech in English. His humor, a surprise to many, delighted the crowd.

He threw shade at the Miami Marlins, the last stop of his professional career.

“Honestly, when you guys offered me a contract in 2015, I had never heard of your team,” Suzuki joked.

He kidded that he showed up at spring training every year with his arm “already in shape” just to hear Mariners broadcaster Rick Rizzs scream, “`Holy smokes! Another laser-beam throw from Ichiro!’”

He even took a moment for some tongue-in-cheek modesty.

“People often measure me by my records. Three thousand hits. Ten Gold Gloves. Ten seasons of 200 hits.

“Not bad, huh?” Suzuki said to more laughs.

He thanked his late agent Tony Anastasio for “getting me to America and for teaching me to love wine.”

But he also took time to get to the root of what made him extraordinary.

“Baseball is much more than just hitting, throwing and running. Baseball taught me to make valued decisions about what is important. It helped shape my view of life and the world. … The older I got, I realized the only way I could get to play the game I loved to the age of 45 at the highest level was to dedicate myself to it completely,” he said. “When fans use their precious time to see you play, you have a responsibility to perform for them whether you are winning by 10 or losing by 10.

“Baseball taught me what it means to be a professional and I believe that is the main reason I am here today. I could not have achieved the numbers without paying attention to the small details every single day consistently for all 19 seasons.”

Now he’s reached the pinnacle, overcoming doubters, one of whom said to him: “`Don’t embarrass the nation.’” He’s made his homeland proud.

“Going into America’s Baseball Hall of Fame was never my goal. I didn’t even know there was one. I visited Cooperstown for the first time in 2001, but being here today sure feels like a fantastic dream.”

Sabathia thanked “the great players sitting behind me, even Ichiro, who stole my Rookie of the Year award (in 2001).” He paid homage to Parker and spoke about Black culture in today’s game.

“It’s an extra honor to be a part of Dave’s Hall of Fame class. He was a father figure for a generation of Black stars. In the ’80s and early ‘90s when I first started watching baseball and Dave Parker was crushing homers, the number of Black players in the major leagues was at its highest, about 18%. Me and my friends played the game because we saw those guys on TV and there was always somebody who looked like me in a baseball uniform.

“Baseball has always been a great game for Black athletes, but baseball culture has not always been great to Black people. I hope we’re starting to turn that around. I don’t want to be the final member of the Black aces, a Black pitcher to win 20 games. And I don’t want to be the final Black pitcher giving a Hall of Fame speech.”

Wagner urged young players to treat obstacles not as “roadblocks, but steppingstones.”

“I wasn’t the biggest player. I wasn’t supposed to be here. There were only seven full-time relievers in the Hall of Fame. Now, there are eight because I refused to give up or give in,” he said.

Suzuki received 393 of 394 votes (99.7%) from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. Sabathia was picked on 342 ballots (86.8%) and Wagner on 325 (82.5%), which was 29 votes more than the 296 needed for the required 75%.

After arriving in the majors in 2001, Suzuki joined Fred Lynn (1975) as the only players to win Rookie of the Year and MVP in the same season.

Suzuki was a two-time AL batting champion and 10-time All-Star and Gold Glove winner, hitting .311 with 117 homers, 780 RBIs and 509 stolen bases with Seattle, the New York Yankees and Miami.

He is perhaps the best contact hitter ever, with 1,278 hits in Nippon Professional Baseball and 3,089 in MLB, including a season-record 262 in 2004. His combined total of 4,367 exceeds Pete Rose’s major league record of 4,256.

Sabathia, second to Suzuki in 2001 AL Rookie of the Year voting, was a six-time All-Star who won the 2007 AL Cy Young Award and a World Series title in 2009. He went 251-161 with a 3.74 ERA and 3,093 strikeouts, third among left-handers behind Randy Johnson and Steve Carlton, during 19 seasons with Cleveland, Milwaukee and the New York Yankees.

A seven-time All-Star, Wagner was 47-40 with a 2.31 ERA and 422 saves for Houston, Philadelphia, the New York Mets, Boston and Atlanta.

Tom Hamilton and Tom Boswell were also honored during Hall of Fame weekend. Hamilton has been the primary radio broadcaster for the Cleveland Guardians franchise for 35 seasons and received the Ford C. Frick Award. Boswell, a retired sports columnist who spent his entire career with The Washington Post, was honored with the BBWAA Career Excellence Award.

Dodgers 2-way star Shohei Ohtani to start on mound Wednesday. Team goes to 6-man rotation

MLB: Los Angeles Dodgers at Boston Red Sox

Jul 25, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani (17) runs for third base during the fifth inning of a game against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images

Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images

Los Angeles Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani is expected to start on the mound Wednesday as he continues his buildup from elbow surgery that kept him from pitching all last season.

Manager Dave Roberts said Sunday before the Dodgers faced the Boston Red Sox in the finale of their three-game series that the plan is for Ohtani to work four innings at Cincinnati, with an off day to recover before hitting in a game.

With the Japanese superstar working his way back along with left-hander Blake Snell, who pitched 4 2/3 innings on Saturday in his fourth rehab start for Triple-A Oklahoma City, the Dodgers will be using a six-man rotation.

They currently have Clayton Kershaw, Tyler Glasnow, Dustin May, Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Emmet Sheehan in the rotation.

“Shohei is going to go on Wednesday and then he’ll probably pitch the following Wednesday, so that probably lends itself to the six-man,” Roberts said.

In Ohtani’s last start, he allowed one run and four hits in three innings against Minnesota on July 22. He struck out three and walked one, throwing 46 pitches, 30 for strikes.

Roberts feels like this season is sort of a rehab year in the big leagues and doesn’t foresee the team extending Ohtani's workload deep into games for a while.

“I think this whole year on the pitching side is sort of rehab, maintenance,” he said. “We’re not going to have the reins off where we’re going to say: ‘Hey you can go 110 pitches.’ I don’t see that happening for quite some time. I think that staying at four (innings) for a bit, then build up to five and we’ll see where we can go from there.”

Also Sunday, the club activated right-handed reliever Blake Treinen from the injured list and recalled left-hander Justin Wrobleski.

The 37-year-old Treinen was a big part of last season’s run to the World Series title, picking up two victories in the Series against the New York Yankees.

He has been sidelined since April 19 because of forearm tightness.

“I think the only thing I’m going to be mindful of is the up-down,” Roberts said on Treinen’s usage. “To come into an inning of leverage, I have no problem.”

Wrobleski, 25, is with the Dodgers for the fourth time this season. He’s a starter now, but Roberts said he’ll work out of the bullpen.

“Just trying to get a quality arm, get some length, potentially using him in two-inning stints, three-inning stints is going to be helpful for our 'pen," Roberts said. “The goal is to get the best pitchers on your roster in whatever role.”

To make room on the roster, LA optioned right-handers Will Klein and Edgardo Henriquez.

Mets’ Paul Blackburn puts together second consecutive strong rehab outing

Taking the mound for Syracuse on Sunday, Paul Blackburn was strong again.

The Mets’ starter worked into the seventh inning this time around, allowing just one run on five hits and a walk while striking out six batters. 

Blackburn retired the first nine batters he faced, but Omaha was able to strike against him in the fourth, as back-to-back singles and a two out double brought in the first run of the game. 

He worked around another double in the fifth, and a one out single in the sixth. 

The righty came back out for the seventh but was pulled after issuing a walk -- Alex Carrillo entered and gave up back-to-back singles, but was able to escape the threat without further damage on his line. 

Blackburn has now allowed just three runs over his three rehab outings.

Carlos Mendoza said the team still isn't sure what his next step will be. 

“I just saw the line score, it was pretty good,” the skipper said. “We’ll wait tomorrow and call down to the guys in Triple-A, check in with him and the trainers and see what’s next with him, but it was good to see him throw the ball that way.” 

Blackburn has been on the IL for about three weeks with a shoulder injury.