Mets Daily Prospect Report, 4/25/26: More means Morabito

Feb 19, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; New York Mets outfielder Nick Morabito (70) poses for a photo during media day at Clover Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (13-11)

SYRACUSE 3, WORCESTER 0 (BOX)

Three runs in the third were all the Mets needed in this one. Nick Morabito and Ji Hwan Bae drove basically all of the offense, compiling five hits and three walks atop the lineup. Meanwhile, six pitchers combined to shutout the Red Sox, including a perfect inning from the rehabbing A.J. Minter. Austin Warren also recorded two outs and has a 1.13 ERA on the season.

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (7-11)

BINGHAMTON 10, ERIE 2 (BOX)

Four homers for the Rumble Ponies propelled them to a 10-2 win. A.J. Ewing launched a homer for the second consecutive day and now has an OPS over 1.000, and he sure looks the part of a top-end prospect. Chris Suero, Jose Ramos, and Nick Lorusso also went deep; Lorusso finished a triple shy of the cycle.

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (4-14)

HUDSON VALLEY 6, BROOKLYN 4 (BOX)

Despite a big day from Kevin Villavicencio, the Cyclones couldn’t rally back from an early deficit. Mitch Voit’s offense continues to be sluggish, and there’s not many other names of true note on the offensive side here. Hopefully there will be some reinforcement here down the line this season, but the current iteration of the team isn’t much fun.

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (9-10)

PALM BEACH 12, ST. LUCIE 4 (BOX)

Second straight ugly loss for the Mets to the visiting Cardinals. Ernesto Mercedes was the primary culprit, surrendering five runs while recording only a single out. Elian Peña continues to look real good though, so that’s something.

Rookie: FCL Mets (0-0)

NO GAME (SCHEDULE)

STAR OF THE NIGHT

Nick Morabito

GOAT OF THE NIGHT

Ernesto Mercedes

Winless streak for Missouri baseball extends to nine in shutout loss to Arkansas

Mizzou baseball’s recent struggles continued Friday evening with a 5-0 loss against No. 24 Arkansas. The defeat clinches a third straight series loss in Southeastern Conference play and leaves the Tigers without an SEC win at home since their 12-11 victory over Auburn in May. 10 2024.

The Tigers will have one more chance to earn their first victory against Arkansas since Mar. 26, 2022, on Sunday at 2:00 P.M CT and avoid the sweep in this year’s edition of the Battle Line rivalry.

In that game, the Tigers accumulated 13 hits, including two RBI singles, an RBI double, and a solo homer from their lineup. The bats in the order on Friday weren’t able to provide this level of execution or production. Two hits, three walks, and five strikeouts were all that Missouri had to show for against Razorbacks starter Cole Gibler and reliever Steel Eaves.

‘We do meetings, and we talk about what the pitchers’ arsenal is and how they’re going to be pitched,” Jackson said. “Our guys are armed with a ton of information. But for whatever reason, there are times where we get into the box, and we have a bunch of anxiety, and we forget the things we’ve talked about, so just being mindful of that and telling them to execute when it comes to the offensive strategy.”

Mizzou and the Razorbacks couldn’t find anything to separate them for the opening three innings, as Gibler and Tigers starter Brady Kehlenbrink were both putting up zeros. No runners left on base, seven strikeouts, and no hits were surrendered by Kehlenbrink as he cruised through his opening three innings of work.

Well, except for Kaden Peer providing Tigers fans with some extravagance in the outfield. For the third time this season, Peer took away a home run from the opposing side. The robbery victim this time was Maikia Niu, who had connected on a 1-0 pitch to deep center field.

Despite getting into three-ball counts in the opening inning, Kehlenbrink struck out the side, and by the third, he began to attack the zone with more aggression, while maintaining the accuracy, mowing down three more Razorbacks by the way of the strikeout.

Arkansas broke the deadlock in the fourth inning in a big way. Cam Kozeal was second in the home run category on the Razorbacks coming into the series. He made his mark with a two-run shot off of Kehlenbrink that a jumping Pierre Seals couldn’t provide Tigers fans another SportsCenter Top 10 moment.

The rockiness of the outing began for Kehlenbrink in the sixth, after a pair of singles by the two-headed monster of the Razorbacks lineup, Kozeal and Ryder Helfrick. Eli Skidmore took the reins and immediately ran into trouble, surrendering an RBI double to Niu, who ended up getting his RBI anyhow.

After issuing a free pass to Nolan Souza, Zack Stewart extended the Arkansas lead to four on his shallow single into center field. After retiring the next batter, another walk by Skidmore led to his replacement. Left-handed reliever Isaiah Salas closed the inning, as Carter Rutenbar grounded out to short to conclude the productive three-run sixth for the Razorbacks.

Salas pitched through the eighth, and following an error at second base by Blaize Ward on a ground ball to open the inning, Nolan Souza found himself on base and took full advantage, stealing second immediately after. A groundout that moved Souza to third base, followed up by an RBI single from Reese Robinett.

QUIET NIGHT FOR MISSOURI OFFENSE

You might have just read through that debriefing and thought to yourself, “Where was the mention of the Tigers’ offense?” That offense, as described earlier, earned two hits, coming from outfielders Donovan Jordan and Pierre Seals, and left a total of four runners on base.

Cole Gibler earned his season-high in innings pitched against the Tigers, an offense that has proven itself to be explosive and timely at certain points in the season. It hasn’t shown those colors enough throughout the course of their latest nine-game losing streak, four of those occasions scoring three runs or less.

In Missouri’s 5-4 defeat to Arkansas on Thursday, there were brief moments from Jase Woita and Blaize Ward, a pair of homers that gave a spark from plate appearances. The candle was very much snuffed out in Friday’s at-bats for the Tigers.

“We’re allergic to offense and executing two-strike pitches,” Missouri coach Kerrick Jackson said. That’s ultimately what today’s game came down to…There’s a pride aspect of it where you can’t keep going up and doing the same things and expecting it to be different. Hitting is hard, and I think our guys are chasing hits and not quality at-bats.”

PITCHING STAFF FEELING EFFECTS OF PLATE STRUGGLES

As the outs continued to pile up, fellow MU baseball writer Amber Winkler and I looked through the previous games where the Missouri offense had faltered in a quality outing.

To her credit, Amber had found that in two of Mizzou’s four shutout losses, Brady Kehlenbrink has been on the mound. Now, following this defeat, it’s been five shutout losses, three Kehlenbrink outings.

The Tigers had also scored fewer than three runs in five of their outings, and each of these has now increased by one, respectively, following the 6-0 defeat on Friday. Jackson had this to say post-game on those pair of statistics.

“I think it’s tough for anybody,” Jackson said. “In one of those shutouts we lost 1-0, I think anytime you’re not scoring, and you’re going out and putting your team in a position to win, you want to be in a better position when it comes to that. So I’m sure there’s frustration on his part, but he’s no more frustrated than we are.”

UP NEXT

Missouri will look to avoid the sweep in the series finale at 2:00 P.M. Saturday. Claiming a victory in the Battle Line rivalry and breaking its recent losing streak is what the Tigers will be looking for to turn their fortunes.

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 4/25/26

HOUSTON, TX - APRIL 24: Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 of the New York Yankees celebrates with teammates in the dugout after hitting a solo home run in the fourth inning during the game between the New York Yankees and the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on Friday, April 24, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Michaela Schumacher/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Since splitting that strange four-game set with the Angels in the Mike Trout/Aaron Judge Show, the Yankees haven’t lost. They swept the Royals, shipped up to Boston and did the same to the Red Sox, and are now coming off a decisive win in Houston last night, their seventh in a row. The only bad part was Giancarlo Stanton leaving early with a calf injury. As we await word on whether Stanton will need IL time, the Yanks are still sitting pretty and eyeing and eight-game winning streak with Ryan Weathers taking the bump tonight. Very nice!

Today on the site, Nick will present his first edition of the monthly Reliever Confidence Index, Madison will run through the latest the Rivalry Roundup, and Matt will celebrate the 143rd birthday of a forgotten Deadball Era one-year wonder. Later, Matt will return to create an All-Star team of April birthdays in Yankees history.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Houston Astros

Time: 7:10 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, Space City Home Network

Venue: Daikin Park, Houston, TX

Questions/Prompts:

1. What were your impressions of the Astros after seeing the 2026 iteration for the first time this year?

2. Now that the dust has settled a bit on the NFL Draft, did you have any quick reactions to the first couple days?

Yankees news: Jazz Chisholm Jr. makes the adjustment

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 23: Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 of the New York Yankees celebrates on first base during the game between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on Thursday, April 23, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Natalie Reid/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

New York Post | Mark W. Sanchez: Among the many positives to come out of the Yankees’ sweep of the Red Sox was the first homer of the year from Jazz Chisholm Jr., who saw his OPS rise almost 60 points during the series. Chisholm credited a small mechanical tweak as a possible reason for his improved play over that span, saying that he opened up his stance and backed off the plate a little bit. “Probably his best group of at-bats, especially off some tough lefty matchups there,” Aaron Boone said of Chisholm this week.

On cue, Chisholm went out and had his best game of the year in last night’s demolition of the Astros, reaching base four times and hitting his second homer. Let’s hope this version of Chisholm is here to stay.

MLB.com | Steve Schaffer: Giancarlo Stanton exited last night’s game in Houston after appearing to suffer a leg injury running the bases. It’s the kind of injury we’ve all come to expect from Stanton at some point nearly each year, but it’s always disheartening when it actually happens. Stanton’s injury was later reported as “right lower leg tightness,” with Boone saying it was related to the calf.

ESPN | David Schoenfield and Jorge Castillo: This week’s series at Fenway Park highlighted the divergent fates of the Yankees and Red Sox so far this season. ESPN spelled out exactly what’s gone right in New York and what’s gone wrong in Boston, with the Yankees’ starting rotation and Boston’s lack of bop the main storylines. The Red Sox also have concerns about their ace Garrett Crochet, who’s gotten absolutely crushed in his last two starts. Boston will likely pull it together at some point, but for now, it’s not so bad to see the Yankees’ rivals eight games back in the AL East standings.

MLB.com | Shanthi Sepe-Cheperu: Gerrit Cole’s steady journey back to the bigs continued on Thursday night, the right-hander taking the ball for High-A Hudson Valley and tossing 4.1 innings, allowing two runs on five hits. Cole got up to 52 pitches (42 strikes), after throwing 44 pitches in his first rehab start. The Yankees are working him up slowly and carefully, and he appears to remain on track for a return to the majors in roughly a month if all goes to plan.

As if it was 2024 again, Cole was followed in Hudson Valley by Carlos Rodón last night, making his first pro appearances of 2026. In 4.1 innings of his own, he threw shutout ball, struck out four, and allowed one hit and a walk across 65 pitches. The Yankees expect that he’ll need just two more rehab starts before returning to the rotation from his much-less-serious elbow surgery.

MLB.com | Jason Catania: What should the Yankees do with Spencer Jones? It’s a question we’ve asked many times before, and probably will ask many times more. The options are pretty clear: bring him up to the majors, continue to let him develop at Triple-A, or trade him for immediate veteran reinforcement. The most likely outcome for now is the status quo, with Jones remaining in the minors to try and refine the rougher edges of his game, but anything is possible come the summer, when the Yankees will presumably be shopping at the deadline.

Freddy Peralta still searching for elusive Mets longevity

New York Mets pitcher Freddy Peralta (51) pitches in the first inning when the New York Mets played the Colorado Rockies Friday, April 24, 2026 at Citi Field
New York Mets pitcher Freddy Peralta (51) pitches in the first inning when the New York Mets played the Colorado Rockies on Friday, April 24, 2026 at Citi Field.

It was not third time’s the charm for Freddy Peralta. 

The Mets pitcher faltered toward the end of his night Friday against the Rockies as he lost his third consecutive start and continued to struggle with his longevity. 

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Peralta pitched a scoreless four innings before surrendering control, as he allowed an RBI on a fielder’s choice in the fifth before giving up a go-ahead double from Jake McCarthy the following inning in the Mets’ 4-3 loss

The righty had managed to get off relatively scot-free after loading the bases in the fifth but was pulled shortly after McCarthy’s RBI put runners on second and third. 

He finished his night with eight strikeouts against seven hits in 5 ²/₃ innings, and acknowledged he’s putting “pressure on myself” to finish starts off. 

“Mentally, I have to allow myself to keep trusting in the process. Because I feel amazing, man, I feel really good,” he said following the loss. 

“Everything’s been great, like the work that I’ve been putting in every day. It’s just, whenever I get to the mound — just finish it. That’s it. And I know for sure that a lot of those are going to come.” 

Freddy Peralta pitches in the first inning of the Mets’ 4-3 loss to the Rockies on April 24, 2026 at Citi Field. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Peralta, whom the Mets acquired from Milwaukee in January, has lasted six innings just once in his six starts this season, while his current ERA (3.90) would be his worst over a full season since 2020. 



Nonetheless, the Dominican pitcher said he felt good about Friday’s performance aside from not finishing the sixth, and, more importantly, has the backing of his manager. 

“I mean, he did it once already, so he’ll get there,” Carlos Mendoza said of Peralta lasting six innings. “He’s an ace. Yeah, I’m not worried about that.” 

Freddy Peralta pitches in the first inning of the Mets’ loss to the Rockies. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Mendoza conceded that Peralta, who also walked three batters Friday, does try to be “too perfect” at times, but said he has been “pretty solid” in general. 

The pitcher’s teammates also did him few favors with their lack of run support prior to their short-lived offensive burst in the eighth — when he had already been replaced by Sean Manaea.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. admits his ABS challenges are so bad you ‘gotta laugh’

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Jazz Chisholm Jr. celebrates after hitting a solo homer in the fourth inning of the Yankees' 12-4 blowout win over the Astros on April 24, 2026 in Houston

HOUSTON — Entering Friday, only one player in the big leagues had lost more automated ball-strike system challenges than José Caballero, but none had won more than the Yankees shortstop.

Taking into account the situations in which Caballero has challenged and been unsuccessful — not necessarily the highest-leverage spots — some have looked worse than others on the way to being 5-for-10.

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And while Aaron Boone said it is “possible” that he could get to a point where he would tell a player to stop challenging, the Yankees manager is not yet at that stage with anyone just a month into the ABS era.

That said, Boone has had conversations with Caballero about some of his challenges.

“Firm,” Boone said with a grin of the nature of those conversations. “Quite firm.”

It would not be surprising if Boone had a similar conversation with Jazz Chisholm Jr. after Friday’s 12-4 win over the Astros, following his horrific challenge on a 3-2 pitch in the ninth inning that was not close to being a ball.

“You just gotta laugh, at that point,” Chisholm said. “We were winning, it’s a kid’s game. You got to laugh at some things. Sometimes you just got to laugh at yourself and walk off. Did get fined a thousand dollars, but it’s OK.”



Chisholm, who is 1-for-6 in challenges, indicated it was his second fine of the season.

“I put that as myself fining myself,” he said. “I got to do something for the team worth at least $1,000 after that.”

Jazz Chisholm Jr. celebrates after hitting a solo homer in the fourth inning of the Yankees’ 12-4 blowout win over the Astros on April 24, 2026 in Houston. Getty Images

Coming into Friday’s series opener, Caballero was tied for the major league lead with five successful challenges. But his five unsuccessful challenges were tied for the second most, trailing only Braves star Ronald Acuña Jr., who had six.

Meanwhile, Caballero could be in his last week as the Yankees’ starting shortstop as Anthony Volpe is nearing a return from the injured list — perhaps as soon as the beginning of the homestand next Friday.

Boone said he was “not necessarily anticipating” Volpe returning on the last stop of this road trip against the Rangers in a series that runs Monday through Wednesday.


Carlos Rodón began his rehab assignment Friday night at High-A Hudson Valley, throwing 65 pitches across 4 ¹/₃ scoreless innings.

The left-hander, who struck out four and allowed just one hit and one walk, is expected to need at least two more rehab starts before he might be ready to return to the Yankees rotation.

Rodón is expected to come back before Gerrit Cole, who threw 52 pitches in his second rehab start Thursday night.

“I thought [Cole] looked really good,” Boone said. “Another good step for him. I didn’t hear how he’s doing yet [Friday], I’m assuming everything was fine, but I thought he looked good. … Overall, his fastball’s in a pretty good place, both four-seam and two-seam.”


Fernando Cruz and Ryan Yarbrough both pitched Friday for the first time in over a week.

Cruz gave up a pair of solo home runs in the seventh inning before Yarbrough closed out the game with a pair of scoreless frames.


Ryan Weathers is expected to return from the paternity list to start Saturday’s game.

Mets expect ‘minor tweaks’ will get Devin Williams out of early funk

New York Mets pitcher Devin Williams (38) reacts in the ninth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Citi Field, Thursday, April 23, 2026.
New York Mets pitcher Devin Williams (38) reacts in the ninth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Citi Field, Thursday, April 23, 2026.

Devin Williams spent Thursday night with some of his new pitching coaches with the Mets looking at video of what’s gone wrong for him this season. 

“He’s not feeling sorry for himself,” manager Carlos Mendoza said of the closer, who has been scored upon in each of his last four appearances and allowed multiple base runners in six straight outings heading into Friday’s 4-3 loss to the Rockies in which he did not pitch. 

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“They’re looking for what’s missing here,’’ Mendoza said. “He knows what he needs to do to get out of it. He’ll continue to get opportunities [as closer].” 

Williams’ changeup, which helped make him one of the most dominant relievers in the game — at least until Pete Alonso homered off him in the 2024 playoffs — has been hit hard this season, as batters are feasting on it. 

President of baseball operations David Stearns said Williams’ “changeup hasn’t been exactly where he wants it yet.” 

And his four-seam fastball hasn’t been much more effective. 

Pitching coach Justin Willard said they are working on some minor tweaks and said he does not believe Williams is pitching poorly because of playing in New York — even as he’s struggled as a closer in The Bronx and Queens. 

Devin Williams reacts in the ninth inning of the Mets’ win over the Twins on April 23, 2026 at Citi Field. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“That guy has the slowest heartbeat I’ve ever been around,” Willard said. “It’s not the atmosphere. It’s minor tweaks to get him back to the level he wants to be at, which is one of the best to have ever done this.” 


The rest of the bullpen is a bit of a mess, as well, with the Mets going with David Peterson, Sean Manaea and Tobias Myers — all options to be in the rotation — pitching in relief. 

Mendoza acknowledged Friday that might not be sustainable — and that was before Manaea threw 3 ¹/₃ innings out of the bullpen in Friday’s loss, striking out seven and throwing 61 pitches. 

Before the game, Christian Scott was optioned to Syracuse after he struggled Thursday in his return from Tommy John surgery. Scott walked five in just 1 ¹/₃ innings, but the move to Triple-A was not a product of his poor outing, according to Mendoza. 

“It had nothing to do with [Thursday] night,’’ the manager said. “The message was, ‘Flush that one, go back and you’re going to start a lot of games here.’ ” 

Since they needed an arm capable of providing length out of the pen, veteran right-hander Carl Edwards Jr. was recalled from Triple-A. 



The 34-year-old Edwards has spent parts of 11 seasons in the majors. 

Peterson, who has pitched well in long relief after three straight poor starts, may replace Scott in the rotation and will almost certainly pitch on Wednesday, either in a start or after an opener. 


Kodai Senga starts Saturday after two of the worst outings of his career. 

Despite his subpar performance, Stearns said a move to the bullpen hasn’t been considered. 

Kodai Senga is taken out after giving up a three-run home run to Carlos Cortes during the third inning of the Mets’ loss to the A’s on April 11, 2026 at Citi Field. Robert Sabo for NY Post

“We’ve seen flashes from Kodai,” Stearns said. “We haven’t seen consistency. We’re banking on the flashes and him continuing to get into the rhythm of the season, but we need more consistency.” 


Jorge Polanco, nursing a right wrist contusion and a sore left Achilles, began baseball activities Friday, but is “week to week” according to Stearns. 

Whenever he does return, the Mets still hope to include him in the first base mix since they want flexibility at DH, especially with Juan Soto still being protected after his return from his calf strain. … The Mets have lost the opening game of their last five series. 

Through the heartbreak, an underdog became a big-leaguer

Through the heartbreak, an underdog became a big-leaguer originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CHICAGO — A few hours before hitting cleanup in Wrigley Field on Wednesday, Felix Reyes reached under his red practice jersey and pulled out the pendant he wears around his neck, a constant reminder of his No. 1 supporter.

“Every at-bat, every game, he’s always here,” the 25-year-old Phillies rookie said.

The pendant features a small photo of Reyes and his dad, also named Felix. The photo was taken in February 2024, back home in the Dominican Republic, just a few months before Felix Sr., was struck by a car and killed at age 62 in the family’s hometown of Bani.

When young Felix was called up to the majors from Triple A last week, folks throughout the Phillies’ player development system and Latin American scouting and development departments quietly rejoiced.

“He’s an unbelievable kid, an unbelievable human, the kind you’d like to see your daughter bring home,” said Sal Agostinelli, the organization’s longtime international scouting boss who now serves as a special adviser in that department.

“Everybody loves him. He’s humble. Polite. He’s dedicated to his family. He’s worked his butt off to get where he is.

“We’re like a big family here. Felix has gone through a lot. That’s why we’re all so happy for him. It couldn’t happen to a better guy.”

Though physically imposing at 6-4, 256 pounds, Reyes is a baseball underdog. Like most young players from the Dominican Republic, he hoped to be signed at age 16, but was repeatedly passed over because he didn’t run well, didn’t have a true defensive position. Luis Garcia, a Phillies scout in the DR, always liked Reyes’ bat, however. He kept tabs on the kid as he moved around the diamond, even trying pitching at one point in an effort to catch a team’s eye.

Garcia eventually convinced another DR-based Phillies scout, Carlos Salas, to take a look. He, too, saw potential in the bat. They took some video and sent it to Agostinelli. For the bargain rate of $10,000, the Phillies took a chance and signed Reyes. He was already 19, a late signee by international standards. Maybe the late signee would be a late bloomer.

As Reyes was being passed over by other teams in the DR, he thought of quitting baseball.

His father would not let him.

“My dad introduced me to the game when I was a kid,” Reyes said with Phillies’ Spanish language interpreter Diego D’Aniello lending a hand. “He always took me to the field. I always say that after God, he’s the reason I’m with the Phillies organization right now because at one point I wanted to be done with the game. He’s the one who talked to me all the time and insisted I keep playing.”

Reyes’ journey through pro ball has been a slow climb. He signed during the pandemic and spent three years in the low minors bouncing between corner infield and outfield positions, trying to capitalize on his signature tool, his bat. He made it full-time to High A Jersey Shore in 2024 and had an outstanding showing in winter ball in Columbia following that season. Still, at the start of the 2025 season, there wasn’t a roster spot for Reyes in the minors, so he had to stay in extended spring training. Some privately say the team was considering releasing him. Others say the Phillies simply wanted him to get more at-bats before being assigned to Double A Reading.

Either way, Reyes finally got to Reading a few weeks into the season and when he did, he took off, solidifying himself on the organization’s radar screen in 95 games there.

Reyes led the Eastern League in batting average (.335), doubles (34), slugging (.572) and OPS (.937). He hit 15 homers and was league MVP.

Edwar Gonzalez, in his first season as the big club’s assistant hitting coach, watched Reyes’ development in his previous role as minor-league hitting coordinator. Gonzalez saw an improved hitter and student of the game in 2025.

“The previous winter in Columbia, that’s when he started turning the page,” Gonzalez said. “He had an amazing season there. He learned what pitchers were trying to do to him and he took that into our season. His attention to detail improved. He bought into his routine, started taking more advantage of resources and little by little got better. He bought into game-planning. He studied pitchers. Those qualities had previously been questionable. But in 2025, he was a different player. He showed great maturity.”

That happens when life hits you hard.

And Gonzalez knows how hard life hit Reyes.

Reyes had just finished a game with the Jersey Shore club on May 28, 2024. He retreated to the clubhouse and was blindsided by dozens of voice mails and texts on his phone. Earlier that day, his father, an electrical technician, had been struck by a car and killed while walking on a street back home. His younger sister, Yasmil, was injured in the accident, but survived thanks to her quick-thinking father, who was able to get her far enough out of the way to avoid full impact.

Gonzalez called Reyes that night.

“We connect with these players and we care about them,” Gonzalez said. “As soon as he heard my voice, he started crying and screaming on the phone.”

After the accident, Reyes returned to the DR and spent two weeks with his mom, Juanamaria, and five siblings, two who still live at home. While at home, Reyes experienced a wide range of emotions, from heartbreak to resolve. He realized how much his family needed him. The best way to be there for them was to continue to follow the dream he shared with his dad.

“My faith in God has helped me a lot,” he said. “It’s been one of the keys to keep me going. I’ve been through a lot of difficult times. It has helped me be stronger and move on for me and my family.

“I believe my dad is grateful to me for the way I’ve taken care of our family after everything that has happened. In the same way, I’ll always be grateful to him and never forget all he did.”

Gonzalez is amazed by the strength Reyes has shown.

“Something like what he went through can crush a person,” he said. “But he does the opposite. He keeps fighting. He doesn’t stop throwing punches. We were talking when he moved up. I told him, ‘You’re here because you’re doing great things.’

“It’s one of the most amazing stories I’ve seen in my career.”

Reyes’ journey to the majors included a storybook moment, a home run in his first big-league at-bat last week. The Phillies are struggling mightily and are searching for offense. There are still flaws in Reyes’ game, such as plate discipline, but he’s shown the ability to improve and if he continues to do that, the opportunities will continue to come.

Felix Reyes proudly displays a necklace that features a picture of him and his father, Felix Sr.

Baseball is a performance-based business. Reyes understands that. He understands a lot of things now. And he knows the man on the pendant he wears around his neck is with him every step of the way.

“This was our dream,” Felix Reyes said. “I think he’s proud.”

Dodgers waste Emmet Sheehan’s gem in stunning loss to Cubs

Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Emmet Sheehan reacts during the first inning of a baseball game against the Chicago Cubs, Friday, April 24, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Ryan Sun)

Emmet Sheehan’s night started with a PitchCom issue.

There weren’t many hiccups for the Dodgers starter after that.

But, somehow, Los Angeles still lost.

Emmet Sheehan twirled a gem against the Cubs, but somehow, the Dodgers still lost. AP

The 26-year-old right-hander dominated the red-hot Cubs on Friday, but a Dodgers bullpen implosion saddled Los Angeles with a stunning 6-4 defeat at Dodger Stadium.

“He did a great job,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said of his starter. “It’s just unfortunate that we couldn’t get him a win. Because he pitched his tail off.”

Sheehan, who entered with a 5.85 ERA, struck out seven of the first nine batters he faced and appeared to have control of all his pitches.

His fastball velocity — the subject of much consternation earlier this year — dipped from 95-96 mph to 92-93 mph in the fourth inning, though it came back up later.

Sheehan ultimately went 6 1/3 innings and tied his career high with 10 strikeouts. He allowed four hits and one walk.

His pristine line, however, was scuffed up in the seventh, when Alex Vesia replaced him following a Moises Ballesteros base hit. Vesia gave up two knocks, hanging one earned run on Sheehan while adding two to his own ledger.

Blake Treinen relieved Vesia an inning later and surrendered a solo shot to Alex Bregman — who was booed throughout the game — that tied the game at four.

The Cubs managed to beat the Dodgers on Friday despite 10 strikeouts from Emmet Sheehan. AP

Tanner Scott ultimately yielded the game-winning runs in the top of the ninth after Dansby Swanson took him deep to left.

Asked about his bullpen usage after the game, Roberts said, “I wouldn’t do anything different.”

“We all gotta do our parts,” he added. “Just tonight, we didn’t get it done.”

Offensively, the Dodgers started sleepily against Chicago righty Jameson Taillon, but after Hyeseong Kim recorded the team’s first hit in the third inning, they briefly woke up.

Alex Freeland worked a walk following the Kim hit, and two batters later, Will Smith plated Freeland and Kim with a three-run home run to right field.

The Dodgers tacked on another run in the fourth via a Kim single, but that’s all they’d score the rest of the night.

What it means

Baseball fans everywhere know the Dodgers are almost certainly the real deal, but they’ve sure been scuffling. They’re now losers of five of their last eight — and have some real bullpen questions.

Who’s hot

Hyeseong Kim. After a two-hit afternoon against the Giants on Thursday, the shortstop logged two more hits in the series opener against the Cubs. He scored a run, plated another and stole a bag, too. He had another hit taken away in the seventh thanks to a wild defensive play by the Cubs.

In his last four games, Kim has five hits, three RBIs and two steals.

Who’s not

Shohei Ohtani has been struggling lately, going 0-for-3 to start the series vs. Chicago. AP

Shohei Ohtani. The four-time MVP has found himself in quite the rut at the plate. After going 0-for-9 in the final two games of LA’s road series with San Francisco, he’s 0-for-3 to start things off vs. Chicago.

During one of his at-bats early in the contest, he didn’t look comfortable at all, with his helmet falling off his head on a bad swing and a miss.

Roberts, though, told reporters he thought “there was a better effort” from his star slugger.

“Obviously,” the manager said, “the results aren’t what we would hope for. But, yeah, I thought today was better.”

Up next

The Cubs and Dodgers will square off again at Dodger Stadium on Saturday at 4:15 p.m.

Cubs come back from 4 down to stun Dodgers, win 10th straight

Apr 24, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Will Smith (16) looks on after tagging Chicago Cubs first baseman Michael Busch (29) out at home plate during the fourth inning at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images | William Liang-Imagn Images

The Chicago Cubs (17-9) came into the series against the Dodgers (17-9) red hot having won nine straight games, their longest winning streak in 10 years. The Cubs couldn’t touch Emmet Sheehan in the series opener Friday at Dodger Stadium, but as soon as he came out Chicago pounced on the L.A. bullpen and scored six unanswered runs for the 6-4 comeback win.

Sheehan’s slider stifled the Chicago batters in the series opener, and he started the night with two perfect innings and four strikeouts. Ultimately, Sheehan wasn’t involved in the decision but struck out 10 in 6 1/3 and on 101 pitches in his most dominant start of the season.

With two outs in the third, Will Smith powered an opposite field three-run home run off a Taillon four-seam fastball to give the Dodgers the first lead of the game.

The first base hit of the night against Sheehan, a ground-rule double, came off the bat of old friend Michael Busch in the top of the fourth.

Andy Pages continues to impress. Busch tested the arm of Pages for some unknown reason with a three-run deficit. Alex Bregman singled to center, and Pages charged and fired a bullet to cut down Busch at the plate. Smith made a great tag as well to preserve the shutout for Sheehan.

It was the first outfield assist for Pages on the season but likely not the last.

Hyeseong Kim drove in Max Muncy, again with two outs, to tack on a fourth run for the Dodgers in the bottom of the fourth.

The Cubbies had runners at the corners with one out in the sixth looking to battle back. The Chicago batters adjusted, waiting on Sheehan’s slider. Dansby Swanson was hit by a pitch, and Busch singled him to third with his second hit of the game.

Sheehan earned his ninth strike out of the night when Bregman swung through a slider. Whiff No. 10 came from an ABS challenge initiated by Smith. Once again Smith used ABS to snag an extra strike back. Ian Happ went down on strikes, and the Cubs remained off the board through six.

It was the calm before the Chicago storm. After Sheehan was relieved in the seventh the Cubs attacked a shaky Dodgers pen.

Alex Vesia came in to take over for Sheehan with one out, and he was unable to hold off the late-inning Chicago offense. Vesia walked Pete Crow-Armstrong, and Swanson tripled to center field. Pages crashed against the wall, but he was unable to make the catch. Two runs came in to break up the shutout and put the Cubs right back in the game.

Nico Hoerner singled in Swanson, and all of a sudden it was a one-run game. Vesia reared back to strike out Busch and prevent the Cubs from tying the game at least momentarily.

Defense was on display by the Cubs in the home half of the seventh. Pages received a taste of his own medicine when he was thrown out in an attempt to stretch a double into a triple. Hoerner also dazzled with the glove to get the speedy Kim out at first.

Alex Freeland singled with two outs against Ryan Rolison to extend the inning and bring up Ohtani. The arguably slumping slugger struck out for the third time on the night.

Alex Bregman hit a bomb off Blake Treinen in the eighth to tie it 4-4. Happ singled. Moisés Ballesteros doubled but was thrown out at the plate by Kim’s relay from Pages. Another spot-on tag from Smith erased another run at the plate to keep it tied.

Tanner Scott continued to mightily struggle on the mound this year. Swanson completed the onslaught on the L.A. bullpen with a two-run home run to seal the deal on the come-from-behind victory.

The Cubs are going to be a problem.

Friday particulars

Home runs: Will Smith (3), Alex Bregman (3), Dansby Swanson (6)

WP — Ryan Rolison (1-0): 3 IP, 2 hits, no runs, no walks, 1 strikeout (35 pitches)

LP — Tanner Scott (0-1): 2/3 IP, 2 hits, 2 runs, no walks, no strikeouts (17 pitches)

Sv — Corbin Martin (1): 1 IP, 1 strikeout

Up next

Roki Sasaki (0-2, 6.11 ERA, 1.87 WHIP) looks for a dominant start after failing to find consistency as a starter thus far this season (4:15 p.m.; FOX). Colin Rea (3-0, 3.00 ERA, 1.04 WHIP) starts for Chicago.

Marlins give Giants a reality check after series win against Dodgers

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA – APRIL 24: Eric Haase #18 of the San Francisco Giants bats against the Miami Marlins in the seventh inning at Oracle Park on April 24, 2026...

It didn’t take long for the Giants to fall back to earth after taking two of three from the Dodgers.

The Marlins pounced on Adrian Houser and handed San Francisco a 9-4 loss.

Houser surrendered eight runs, all earned, on a career-high 11 hits, two of which left the yard, and took his third loss of the season Friday night to open a three-game series against Miami at Oracle Park.

The Marlins (13-13) led 8-0 by the end of the second inning, which was more than enough behind Sandy Alcantara, who only allowed the Giants (11-15) to turn nine hits into three runs across six frames.

It didn’t take long for the Giants to fall back to earth after taking two of three from the Dodgers. AP
The Marlins (13-13) led 8-0 by the end of the second inning, which was more than enough behind Sandy Alcantara, who only allowed the Giants (11-15) to turn nine hits into three runs across six frames. AP

Rafael Devers and Willy Adames were the only Giants kept off the bases as the team banged out 11 hits, matching their seventh-best total of the season. They are 6-0 when totaling 12 or more hits.

Jung Hoo Lee sent a solo shot on a hop into McCovey Cove in the eighth inning. His second home run of the season gave Lee his third hit of the night and the Giants their fourth run for the first time in five games.

What it means

The Giants rode their arms to a series win over the Dodgers. But since their season reached an early apex with Wednesday’s shutout win that clinched the series, they’ve dropped their past two games. They fell to 1-4 behind Houser, who remains their only starter yet to earn a win.

Jung Hoo Lee sent a solo shot on a hop into McCovey Cove in the eighth inning. Getty Images

Who’s hot

Luis Arraez hit safely in the 19th game of the 25 he has played this season, raising his batting average to .320 with a 3-for-5 night. Arraez provided the only hit in Thursday’s shutout loss, and his second opposite-field single Friday night drove in Eric Haase with two outs for the Giants’ third run of the fifth inning.

The pitching staff had been on a roll, with the lowest ERA in MLB over the past week entering the game (2.22), but that was quickly put to a halt when the Marlins jumped all over Houser.


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Who’s not

Houser’s ERA swelled to 7.36 as he allowed at least four earned runs for the fourth consecutive start. The Marlins scored on him in all four innings he touched the rubber in his worst outing of the season, culminating in a three-run home run from Connor Norby that extended Miami’s lead to 8-0.

Adames’ 0-for-5 performance dropped him to 2-for-28 with 13 strikeouts over his past six games.

Devers’ OPS stands at .565 after striking out twice and grounding into a double play. He had a chance to stunt Miami’s momentum when he stepped into the box already down 3-0 in the bottom of the first.

With runners on first and third and one out, Devers rolled over on an 0-1 sinker and allowed the Marlins to turn two and escape the jam. It was the sixth double play Devers has hit into in 26 games, tied for the second-most in MLB. The Giants, meanwhile, are tied for the league lead with 24 as a team.

Up next

The Giants host the Marlins for two more to wrap up their home stand, and they will have to win both to take a third consecutive series after stringing together two in a row for the first time this season.

LHP Robbie Ray (2-3, 2.86) gets the ball against RHP Eury Pérez (2-1, 4.15) in a Saturday matinee.

Mariners and Josh Naylor sneak past Cardinals, 3-2

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - APRIL 24: Josh Naylor #12 of the Seattle Mariners slides safely into home plate for a run against the St. Louis Cardinals in the fourth inning at Busch Stadium on April 24, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Joe Puetz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mariners fans are still waiting for this offense to break through in the way we know they’re capable of, but in the meantime, please enjoy this Classic Mariners One-Run Win, featuring: a strong-n-long outing from a starter! A shutdown performance from the bullpen! And everyone’s favorite, Just Enough Offense!

The Mariners got on the board first with some small ball: Randy Arozarena led off the second inning with a double, moved to third on a Luke Raley flyout, and scored on a nice two-out RBI single from Cole Young, Young pouncing on a first-pitch fastball and sending it back where it came from.

This was especially good because Cardinals starter Andre Pallante was hard for the Mariners hitters to solve; he racked of up five of his six strikeouts in the first five innings on the slider, which the Mariners hitters just could not seem to pick up. So this is a good plan here by Young to ambush the first-pitch fastball and not let Pallante get to his slider. Someone is putting himself in line for a postgame trip to Dave and Buster’s.

The Mariners were able to small-ball around another run in the fourth, thanks to what we’ll call a leadoff Josh Naylor double (walk, stolen base), but Arozarena and Raley then struck out back-to-back on the slider, natch. With two outs, though, Dominic Canzone came through this time, punching a sinker through the hole in the left side of the infield to score a hustling Naylor.

That slide would be a dream for foley artists to score, but who cares, it worked.

However, all that careful small-balling was undone in the fourth. After looking deadly sharp for 3.1 innings, Kirby seemingly lost the handle in an at-bat against Alex Burleson, walking him on five pitches – the fifth being one Cal Raleigh could have challenged, and in retrospect, probably should have, because Kirby suffered some poor luck after. Jordan Walker hit into what could have been an inning-ending double play but was able to leg it out as the play developed slowly, and then Nolan Gorman turned on an inside sinker and pulled it into right field for a ground-rule double. It looked like the Mariners might have lucked into not allowing a run to score, pinning Walker at third thanks to the ball bouncing into the crowd, but in a 1-2 count Masyn Winn reached into the opposite batter’s box to parachute a slider into right field for a game-tying single. Frustrating!

The Mariners weren’t able to answer back in their half-inning despite Cal Raleigh walking and taking second on a wild pitch, but Kirby did his job to hang another zero with a quick inning in the bottom of the fifth despite giving up another annoying parachute single.

Josh Naylor then helped out in the sixth with a solo homer, clobbering a fastball at the bottom of the zone for his third homer of the season – a 418-foot blast that looked softer than it was actually hit, at 107.3 mph off the bat. This would wind up being the difference in the game, and it’s great to see Naylor’s bat continue to heat up as he wreaks havoc in all facets of the game:

After striking out Arozarena on that dang slider again, Pallante’s day was done, as the Cardinals went to the bullpen to get lefty Justin Bruihl to contend with Seattle’s raft of lefties – meaning Luke Raley’s day was also done. Rob Refsnyder kept things going with a seven-pitch walk, and Canzone – who won the right to stick around against a lefty – followed that with a walk of his own. Sadly, Cole Young killed all those good vibes by grounding into a double play, knocking his contributions back to net zero for the game. He’s gonna have to work harder if he wants to earn that trip to Dave and Buster’s postgame.

Kirby came back out for the seventh with his pitch count still in the 70s, but Winn ambushed a first-pitch sinker for a ground ball base hit. Not messing around, Dan Wilson mashed the Matt Brash button and then Matt Brash mashed José Fermin into a fine paste.

After Gabe Speier and Eduard Bazardo combined to hurl a scoreless eighth, Andrés Muñoz came on for the close and again showed a solid return to form, allowing one stupid little ground ball base hit on a slider but also netting two strikeouts, including the game-ender.

Fun! We would love to see some more offense, of course, but this felt like a Vintage Mariners Win, like a favorite book you’ve read before but will happily read again. Sometimes it’s nice to play the hits.

Reds 9, Tigers 8: Bullpen breakdown, Queen City shakedown

Apr 24, 2026; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Cincinnati Reds designated hitter Nathaniel Lowe (31) hits a solo home run in the sixth inning against the Detroit Tigers at Great American Ball Park. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images | Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

The Tigers continued their string of games against National League Central opponents on Friday night, in the opener of a three-game series against the Reds on the banks of the Ohio River. There was a big early lead which evaporated, and then a nice comeback for a late lead, but one final home run doomed the Detroiters in a 9-8 walk-off loss.

Making his sixth start of the season for the Detroiters was Framber Valdez. He was coming off a very solid six-inning outing in Boston in which he gave up one run, walked two and struck out seven. It took me a long time to find strikeout percentage — eventually I found it buried deep in Advanced Pitching on Baseball Reference — and his is quite a bit below his career average so far this year. For his career, his strikeout percentage is 23.3% (MLB average has been 22.7% over that time); in 2026, in the small sample we have, it’s been 15.8%.

Andrew Abbott started for the Reds, and his season so far hasn’t been great: his ERA coming into tonight was 5.84 (although his FIP was only 4.32, so he’s been a bit unlucky). But if you’re surrendering four walks and over eleven hits per nine innings, you’re going to have a lot of traffic on the basepaths, and that usually doesn’t help you win too many ball games. A stat in Abbott’s favour, though, is that he’s generally limited hard contact, and that’s a very important stat at Riverfront Stadium Great American Ball Park.

Well, that wasn’t of much use in the second inning when he hung a sweeping breaking ball right into the path of Riley Greene’s bat; he proceeded to clobber that thing into the right-centrefield stands for a 1-0 lead.

A walk and an infield single off Javier Báez’s glove started the bottom of the second, and a double steal pushed the runners up to second and third with one out. But Valdez bore down and struck out the next two hitters, stranding the runners and getting out of the jam.

Báez led off the bottom of the third and refused to be excluded from the home run party, clubbing a fat 3-0 fastball to centre for a 2-0 lead. With one out, Gleyber Torres walked, Kevin McGonigle singled, and a Matt Vierling double plated both runners for a 4-0 Tiger lead.

Valdez, meanwhile, was looking good early on — he kept righties off-kilter with plenty of changeups and curveballs. He got into a bit of trouble in the bottom of the third by walking a pair of hitters with two outs. But then Sal Stewart, who’s having a sensational rookie year so far, spanked a scorching liner deep to left field — but Greene made a fine running catch for the third out.

In the fourth the Tigers just kept coming: Spencer Torkelson doubled to lead off, and then with two outs Jahmai Jones, getting a start against a lefty, singled up the middle, scoring Torkelson and making the lead 5-0… which would not hold up, as it turns out.

Kyle Nicolas, a childhood friend of Dillon Dingler, relieved Abbott to start the fifth and he had trouble finding the plate, walking the first two batters he’d face, Torres and McGonigle. Vierling flew out but advanced Torres to third, and Dingler came up to face a guy he grew up with. The battle reached nine pitches, but on that ninth pitch Dingler hit a comebacker to Nicolas to start an inning-ending 1-4-3 double play.

The walks kept coming for Valdez in the fifth, and with one out he walked Dane Myers. That was a bad idea, as Matt McLain then hit a home run to cut the lead to 5-2. After Elly De La Cruz singled, AJ Hinch had seen enough and Kyle Finnegan was brought in. On the first pitch Dingler made a great throw to nab De La Cruz stealing, which certainly helped, and Stewart struck out, which helped even more as it was the third out.

Valdez’s final line: 4 1/3 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 5 BB, 4 K. Not great, Bob.

The Tigers loaded the bases with none out in the sixth via a Greene single, a Torkelson walk and a Colt Keith single. Nicolas departed in favour of Pierce Johnson, and Báez hit a grounder to shortstop. De La Cruz came home to get the lead runner, and catcher Tyler Stephenson threw to first but upon review Báez narrowly beat out the throw to first to get out of a double play and keep the bases loaded. However, Kerry Carpenter, pinch-hitting for Jones, hit a liner right at De La Cruz who snared it and doubled-off Keith to end the inning.

That’s a squander, right there. If the Tigers had scored — as one would expect in a bases-loaded, none-out situation — that would likely have changed the outcome of the game.

The Reds further narrowed the Tigers’ lead with one out in the sixth, as Finnegan served up a fat splitter that Nathaniel Lowe launched almost 440 feet (134 m) into the stands to make it 5-3. Rece Hinds doubled down the right-field line with two out as the heavy rain started, but Finnegan struck out Ke’Bryan Hayes looking for the third out of the inning to limit the damage.

A cursory glance at the weather radar didn’t offer a lot of hope for a quick resolution to this precipitation conundrum. But after almost two hours the rain had stopped and the field was suitably prepared, and play resumed at the start of the seventh inning. Brock Burke took over on the mound for the Reds, and he plunked McGonigle on the right hand; he stayed in the game and then swiped second base. But a Dingler groundout ended the inning and it was all for naught.

Will Vest took over for Finnegan after the delay and it did not go well: a four-pitch walk and another two-run home run by McLain tied the game at 5; yep, that comfortable lead was gone. After getting two outs but surrendering a double, Brant Hurter was brought in to face a lefty, and a routine grounder to Báez (now at second base) resulted in the ball being thrown away and the run scoring from second. Another double scored another run and it was 7-5 for the Reds.

Torkelson took matters into his own hands in the eighth, as he turned around a belt-high fastball for a solo home run — his third in three days — to narrow the gap to 7-6. Then, Keith lined a single and Carpenter sat on a fastball and blasted it over the right-field fence to retake the lead 8-7.

Drew Anderson was brought in for the bottom of the eighth; which version of Anderson would we see? Well, it was the version that got two strikeouts and a harmless fly ball, which I’ll definitely take any day.

Graham Ashcraft, who obviously made me think of Richard Ashcroft and how good The Verve’s Urban Hymns is, came on for the ninth and nothing particularly of note happened.

That brought Kenley Jansen into the game, who needed 36 pitches to lock down the win against Milwaukee on Wednesday. After a flyout and a strikeout, Spencer Steer poked a single into right field to put the tying run on base. That would prove to be fateful, as Jansen left an 0-1 sinker middle up right in the meatball zone. Lowe launched his second home run of the night deep into a misty Ohio night, sealing the victory for the home team.

Final score: Reds 9, Tigers 8

Numbers and Such

  • Jahmai Jones went 0-for-10 to start his season; mind you, he wasn’t getting many opportunities as the Tigers didn’t face too many left-handed pitchers.
  • Since that slow start, coming into tonight, he’s been 6-for-15 with a pair of home runs, including the tying solo home run against the Brewers on Thursday afternoon — but not including the RBI single in the fifth.
  • There were plenty of Tiger fans in attendance at the stadium on the riverfront, and could be easily heard on the broadcast.
  • Jon Bois has a new weird series about charging the mound. If I were you, I’d make some time for this.
  • On this day in 1916 the Easter Rising began in Dublin, Ireland as a rebellion against British rule. It was the first real step towards Irish independence, which was declared in 1918 after Sinn Féin won the first real elections in the country.

Mets unbothered by Freddy Peralta's inability to go deep in games this season: 'He’ll get there, he’s an ace'

The Mets were hoping to extend their winning streak to three games on Friday, especially with their ace Freddy Peralta on the mound against the Rockies.

Unfortunately for the Mets, their high-profile trade acquisition was good but not great and, more importantly, could not go deep into the game again as New York fell, 4-3. 

Peralta, who suffered his third consecutive loss, allowed just two runs on seven hits and three walks while striking out eight batters. However, he only pitched 5.2 innings and gave way to a beleaguered Mets bullpen, which would not keep the Rockies lineup off the scoreboard. 

After Friday's loss, Peralta's ERA is at a respectable -- for this time of year -- 3.90, but the right-hander's inability to work deep into games this season may be concerning. 

He's pitched a complete six innings just once to this point and has not recorded an out in the seventh at all with the Mets. Look even further back and Peralta hasn't recorded an out in the seventh since July 13, 2025. 

"He’ll get there, he’s an ace," manager Carlos Mendoza said of Peralta after the loss. "I’m not worried about that. I trust him and I know that he’s more than capable of going long in the game."

So, is there a reason during his starts this season that haven't allowed Peralta to pitch deep? The Mets skipper doesn't believe there's any one thing, but every start has been different. 

"I thought today, stuff-wise, was good," he said. "That swinging bunt [by Ezequial Tovar in the sixth] changes the whole thing... In general, every case has been different. I thought today, it was that one pitch the lefty [Jake McCarthy] was very aggressive. A walk here and there, trying to be too perfect…in general, he’s been pretty solid."

That last part from Mendoza, Peralta actually agreed with. 

"I think mentally, I have to allow myself to keep trusting in the process because I feel amazing. I feel very good," Peralta said of what's holding him back. "Everything’s been great, the work I put in every day. It just, whenever I get to the mound, I finish it, that’s it. I know a lot of those are going to come soon.

"Sometimes [wanting to go deep into games] comes to my mind, I got to finish this. I think I put pressure on myself just thinking about it."

Peralta said that mentality has forced him to be too fine with his pitches sometimes, and that has led to walks and hits.

Friday, Peralta's seven hits allowed were a season high, and he has now issued three walks in three of his last four starts. 

"[This has] happened in the past, and then everything’s fine again and I’ve been working on it," Peralta said. "It’s only six games into the season and I’ve been fine. The most important thing is that I’m feeling good... Everything. Pitching arsenal, body, how I feel, my arm. Everything is feeling very good."

Cubs Minor League Wrap: Owen Ayers breaks out in Smokies win

Nov 9, 2025; Mesa, AZ, USA; Chicago Cubs catcher Owen Ayers during the Arizona Fall League Fall Stars Game at Sloan Park. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Other than the ones involving the major league team which we’ve covered elsewhere:

Right-hander Jace Beck was promoted from Double-A Knoxville to Triple-A Iowa.

Right-hander Ben Johnson was promoted to Knoxville from Low-A Myrtle Beach.

Iowa Cubs

The Iowa Cubs got spooked by the Louisville Bats (Reds), 5-4 in 11 innings.

Trent Thornton was activated off the injured list and made his season and Iowa debut tonight. He pitched two scoreless innings, allowing just two hits. Thornton struck out two and walked one.

The I-Cubs went into the ninth with a 3-1 lead, but Ryan Jensen couldn’t hold it. Jensen allowed two runs on three hits and four walks over 1.2 innings. Jensen struck out two.

With Iowa out of pitchers, Casey Opitz had to pitch the tenth and eleventh innings. He acquitted himself well, allowing only the automatic runner to score in both innings. But Iowa was unable to score the tying run in the eleventh when automatic runner Kevin Alcántara was thrown out at the plate on a single. So Opitz got the loss.

First baseman Jonathon Long was 4 for 5 with a double and a game-tying RBI single in the tenth. Long scored once.

DH Owen Miller was 2 for 5.

Here’s Long’s game-tying single in the tenth.

Knoxville Smokies

The Knoxville Smokies blinded the Chattanooga Lookouts (Reds), 11—9

Jake Knapp pitched the first 2.1 innings and allowed three runs, two earned, on two hits. However, Knapp walked six batters and struck out just two.

Ben Johnson gave up three runs in his Double-A debut, but he ended up getting the win anyways. Johnson’s final line was three runs on three hits over three innings. All three of the runs came on a home run in the eighth inning. Johnson struck out five and walked just one.

First baseman Ethan Hearn hit a two-run home run in the second inning, his first of the season. He was 1 for 4.

Catcher Owen Ayers hit his first Double-A home run in the third inning with the bases empty. Ayers was a perfect 2 for 2 with a double, the home run and three walks. He scored twice.

Later in the third inning, center fielder Alex Ramírez hit a two-run home run, his first on the year. Ramírez went 1 for 5.

The Smokies saved the best for last as their fourth and final home run was a grand slam by right fielder Andy Garriola. It was his fourth of the year and third in two games. Garriola was 1 for 2 with three walks and two runs scored.

Left fielder Carter Trice was 2 for 4 with a double and two runs scored.

Here’s Ayers’ home run.

South Bend Cubs

The South Bend Cubs were burned by the Dayton Dragons (Reds), 6-4 in a game that ended in the seventh inning because of rain.

Koen Moreno started and took the loss after he allowed five runs, three earned, on four hits over three innings. Moreno had trouble finding the plate as he walked five and struck out just one.

Left fielder Kane Kepley was 1 for 2 with a double and a walk. He scored twice.

Center fielder Kade Snell was 1 for 3 with an RBI double and a walk. He scored one run.

DH Cameron Sisneros was 1 for 1 with a double, a walk and a sacrifice fly. He drove in two and scored once.

Here are Snell and Sisneros’ doubles, which both came in the third inning.

Myrtle Beach Pelicans

The Myrtle Beach Pelicans lost to the Fayetteville Woodpeckers (Astros), 5-2.

Victor Zarraga started and took the loss. Zarraga gave up two runs on three hits over 2.1 innings. He walked four and struck out three.

Edwardo Melendez relieved Zarraga and gave up one run on two hits over 3.2 innings. But most impressively, Melendez struck out eight and walked no one.

The Pelicans only had three hits tonight and their two runs were both scored by Jose Escobar on a passed ball and a wild pitch. Escobar was 1 for 3 with a walk.

Right fielder Eli Lovich was 1 for 1 with three walks.

Here are Melendez’s eight Ks.