May 2, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Atlanta Braves third baseman Austin Riley (27) during the seventh inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images | Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images
Dodger Stadium has been a house of horrors for the Braves over the years, and it continued to be so on Friday night as they lost yet again, 3-1. Atlanta had chances to score in seemingly every inning and just couldn’t get the big hit to swing the game. They ended the night 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position with 10 runners left on base.
Yikes.
The lone run came by way of an Austin Riley single up the middle in the second to score Michael Harris. It seemed like more could be on the way, but back-to-back strikes from Mike Yastrzemski and Jim Jarvis promptly ended the threat.
Shortly after the Braves took the lead, the Dodgers quickly responded with an RBI double from Kyle Tucker to tie it up. In the fifth, LA took the lead with a Shohei Ohtani single to make it 2-1. And in the sixth, Freddie Freeman homered to make it 3-1. And that’s all she wrote.
Chris Sale was really strong for seven innings; he deserved a better fate tonight. He struck out seven, didn’t walk anyone, and scattered five hits. One of the three runs he allowed was unearned as Jarvis uncorked a wild throw that ultimately plated the go-ahead run. Aaron Bummer threw a clean 8th inning against the top of LA’s lineup, an encouraging sign.
The series continues Saturday night and all eyes will be on Spencer Strider, who needed 80+ pitches in his season debut to record 10 outs. Strider will be opposed by Blake Snell, who may be a bit limited as he makes his season debut a little earlier than expected. First pitch will be an hour earlier at 9:10 p.m. ET.
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 08: Manager Torey Lovullo #17 takes the ball from relief pitcher Kevin Ginkel #37 of the Arizona Diamondbacks during a pitching change in the 10th inning against the New York Mets at Chase Field on May 08, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Game Summary
Let’s look back at another close loss for the 2026 Diamondbacks – or don’t and just skip straight to venting in the comments if you wish. For those of you still here, away we go.
Ryne Nelson put together his second straight strong start in May after scuffling through the month of April. He became the third of four Snakes’ starters to pitch into the 7th inning after Torey Lovullo pulled all of his starters into the office and told them they needed to be better. Well, the have been better. Much better. But Torey’s club has lost 3 of the the 4 ballgames since anyway. Tonight, Nelson was very efficient, sticking in and around the strike zone all night and finishing with 2 hits allowed, 7 strikeouts and a lonely walk to the last hitter he faced in 6.2 innings. Nelson’s one crime was a leadoff homer he allowed to Mark Vents in the top of the 2nd inning. After that, he was nails, including a run of 14 straight hitters retired before his walk with 2 outs in the 6th that ended his night. Nelly is looking much more like the pitcher he was for the bulk of 2024-25, which is great news for the 2026 D-backs.
The bullpen was also great, until it wasn’t. Juan Morillo and Brandyn Garcia put in excellent outings to keep the game in reach for the Snakes, but Kevin Ginkel came in for the 10th a gave up back-to-back doubles and a bunt single before finally getting an out before handing the ball to Torey. Jonathan Loaisiga promptly got 2 ground outs to end the frame.
Normally, 2 earned runs wouldn’t sink you, but the Diamondbacks offense right now is not normal. Tonight’s 1-run squeaker by the offense makes it 5 games in their last 9 in which they’ve been held to 2 runs or less. Unsurprisingly, they are 0-5 in those games. Nolan Arenado had a leadoff homer to match Mark Vientos in the 2nd, but after that, it was mostly crickets. They had opportunities, sure, but the good guys went 0-5 with RISP and left 8 on base. To be fair, Nolan McLean is a tough customer, but this is no longer a one-off. Hopefully the offense comes back to life soon, but as we Diamondbacks fans are conditioned to expect, when the offense figures it out, one of the bullpen or starting pitching – or both – will collapse.
Oh well. I’ll still be there to watch it all go down with you all here on the ‘Pit. The Waldschmidt era has arrived and Alek Thomas is out the door. I have a feeling that AT’s exit is only the first in a series of moves the D-backs will begin to make if they don’t figure things out quickly, overhauling much of the regulars we’ve had in the org over the past few years. Buckle up folks!
Loss Probability and Box Score
Outside the Box Score
After Gabi blew an ABS challenge on the first pitch of the game, Nelson came back and struck out Juan Soto on the next 3 pitches, culminating with a whiff on a 98mph fastball right at the top of the zone.
No bearing on the outcome of the game whatsoever, but a gentleman wearing a Dodgers hat caught Nolan Arenado’s home run ball in the third. He was clearly stoked about catching a home run ball. It’s great that no matter who your team is, catching a ball will turn you giddy.
DBacks fandom collectively held its breath at the end of the top of the third inning when Corbin Carroll made a fantastic catch fading/jumping into the right field fence. It looked like maybe his throwing hand was hurt since he was holding in close to his hip and then gave a little hop with a grimace as he ran back in to the dugout. Corbin had his helmet on in the dugout getting ready to hit the next inning so hopefully just a stinger that won’t cause any future issues.
Ildemaro Vargas made a very good diving play at second base to take a hit away from the Mets to lead off the fourth. He quickly spun around through to first while barely getting off the deck. Fernandez, for his part, did well to corral the throw far to the fair side of the bag and complete the putout.
The television broadcast showed a graphic during Corbin’s second AB of the game that showed the difference between his OPS in games the DBacks win vs. games they lose. His OPS is north of 1.300 in wins and around .400 when they lose, the largest gap in MLB so far this year. Corbin is our motor.
Ryne Nelson only had 64 pitches at the end of 5 innings. Looking extremely efficient, with only one 3-ball count through those 5 innings per the broadcast, and a Zone% of 58% (for comparison, Nolan McLean was at 49%).
Jose Fernandez was called out on strikes in the fifth on a curveball that looked pretty far outside, but already being down a challenge thanks to Gabi’s first pitch decision, made the decision to not risk the team’s final challenge at the halfway point of the game. Bummer as it would have brought up a full count with a runner on first and only 1 out instead of being the 2nd out of the inning.
Ryne Nelson owned Juan Soto all night long. 2 strikeouts and a lazy fly out and he didn’t look comfortable in the box all game.
The common refrain when something, anything, goes wrong for the Diamondbacks pitching late in the game, is that Torey was late with his hook for the pitcher. Tonight, he got up Morillo midway through the 7th and after Nelly had back-to-back full counts – with the second one resulting in a walk – Torey went out and got his starting pitcher after 6.2 stellar innings of work. Juan Morillo made quick work of Marcus Semien to strand the runner and, unfortunately, guarantee Nelson would get a No Decision for his work tonight.
Luis Torrens, the Mets catcher tonight, took a foul ball straight off the bottom of his mask from the bat of Jose Fernandez. He was down for several minutes and was clearly in pain based on his reaction to the Mets trainer prodding around his jaw and chin, but – as most catchers are – he’s tough as nails and got the mask back on got back behind the plate. I don’t know if I could mentally get through a full season as a Major League catcher. My hats off to them, that is a brutal position.
The Diamondbacks finally got to face someone other than Nolan McLean in the 7th inning, and the Rattle of the lineup went walk, single, walk with 2 outs to bring up Domo with a chance to put the Serpientes ahead for the first time of the night. Unfortunately, Gerry rolled over to first base for an easy out to end the threat.
Ryan Waldschmidt, fresh off the bus from Reno, came in as a pinch-hitter for ADC with 2 out in the 8th for his first AB in the Majors and spanked single that fell at the feet of Juan Soto for his first career hit in the Bigs. Congratulations on the first of many hits Waldy!
The Mets had runners at the corners with 1 out in the 10th and smartly had Semien steal second to remove the threat of the double play. Good thing for them as the next ball in play was a soft grounder right back to Jonny Lasagna, but since the Mets were running on contact, the Snakes got an easy out at the plate for the 2nd out of the inning and then Jonny induced a soft grounder to Arenado to finish the extra frame. Too bad it was 2 runs too late.
Comment of the Game
The GameDay Thread was very well attended with several topics touched on outside the ballgame (per usual). A final tally of 413 comments at time of publishing. Comment of the Game tonight is awarded to chwalter for this gem:
Coming Up
The Diamondbacks face the Mets for the second game of this 3-game set tomorrow evening with a 4:15pm first pitch televised on FOX. Righthander Clay Holmes (4-2, 1.69 ERA) will take the mound for New York and Merrill Kelly (1-3, 9.95 ERA) takes the ball for the good guys looking to show signs of life. Here’s to Merrill returning to his Mainstay form.
The Mets came alive late to beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 3-1 in extra innings on Friday night at Chase Field.
Here are some takeaways...
- Nolan McLean was a bit shaky, but he rebounded nicely following the shortest outing of his career. The crafty right-hander was hurt by a solo homer leading off the bottom of the second, but was otherwise solid, holding Arizona to a walk and two other hits across six innings of work.
McLean struck out six batters on the night, including two in a strong final frame.
- Unfortunately for McLean, the Mets' offense couldn't get much of anything going against Ryne Nelson for the second time this season. Mark Vientos' solo homer in the top of the second was their lone tally on the board, which the righty followed by giving up a leadoff single in the third, then retiring the next 14 Mets he faced.
A Carson Benge two-out walk in the seventh ended that stretch and chased Nelson from the game.
- Vientos' homer continued a positive stretch at the plate for the slugging infielder after his dreadful spring training and start to the season. The blast that left the bat at a whopping 104 mph and traveled 401 feet was his fifth on the year and gave him seven RBI since the calendar flipped to May.
- Luis Torrens had a bit of a scare in the bottom of the seventh, as he took a 97.1 mph Jose Fernandez foul ball directly off the bottom of his catchers mask. The veteran backstop was visibly shaken up as he was checked out by the Mets' trainer, but he was able to remain in the ballgame.
- Back in Arizona, an amped up Luke Weaver easily retired the first two batters he faced. The right-hander allowed the next three batters to reach, loading the bases with two walks and a hit, but he was able to get Geraldo Perdomo to roll over to first to escape the jam with the game still even.
- Brooks Raley gave up a two-out pinch-hit single to Arizona top prospect Ryan Waldschmidt in his first career at-bat, but then was helped out by a terrific diving stop by Marcus Semien and Vientos scoop at first to end a scoreless eighth.
- Devin Williams made quick work of the D-backs in the bottom of the ninth, then the Mets' bats wasted no time cashing in the ghost runner in the 10th. Vientos laced a first-pitch double to bring in the go-ahead run, then Carson Benge followed that with a run-scoring ground-rule double of his own.
- New York wasted a first-and-third with no out opportunity to cash in more, but Tobias Myers was able to come on and needed just 10 pitches to lock down the first save of his career.
- The Mets improved to 5-2 through seven games of their nine-game road trip.
Game MVP: Mark Vientos
The red-hot slugger accounted for the majority of New York's offense.
May 8, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; St. Louis Cardinals second baseman JJ Wetherholt (26) scores during the fifth inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images | Denis Poroy-Imagn Images
It was an electric night in San Diego as a brilliant start by Michael McGreevy and a “Little League grand slam” from JJ Wetherholt led the St. Louis Cardinals to another victory over the San Diego Padres.
It would be easy to start drawing some conclusions that are likely overreactions from Friday night’s game between the St. Louis Cardinals and San Diego Padres. Let’s start with the possibility that Michael McGreevy is the current ace of the Cardinals staff. He held the Padres hitless until the bottom of the 4th inning when Jackson Merrill managed a single off of him. It’s also probably too early to start thinking of the Cardinals as a team of destiny but there was another sign that might be the case based on what happened in the top half of the 5th inning.
For the first 4 innings, Ivan Herrera was the only Cardinal with a hit (and he had four of them on the night), but it wasn’t until the 5th inning that the Cardinals started mounting a serious threat (which they followed through on admirably). Masyn Winn singled to start off the top of the 5th. Nathan Church reached on an infield single and Masyn advanced to second. After Prieto struck out, Victor Scott II drew a walk to load the bases and that brought up JJ Wetherholt who did not disappoint. In typical JJ fashion, he did something productive that turned into a play that broke the game open. On the third pitch of his at-bat, he ripped a single to right field which went under the glove of Fernando Tatis Jr. and it was off to the races.
Technically, it was a single and a 3-base/2-run error, but for the rest of us, it was a Little League grand slam that gave the Cardinals a 4-0 lead with JJ getting credited for 2 RBI’s. St. Louis wasn’t done, either. Ivan Herrera snuck another single between third base and short followed by a double that was lanced down the left field line by Alec Burleson which advanced Herrera to third. Jordan Walker followed that with a nice 4-pitch walk to load the bases again and Nolan Gorman came through with a single to score Herrera that made it 5-0 Cardinals. Masyn Winn managed a sacrifice fly to score Burleson and make it 6-0 St. Louis. The Rally Dawg had to be proud of the Cardinals 5th inning.
The real story Friday night was Michael McGreevy. Six innings allowing just 1 hit and no runs with 9 strikeouts and just 2 walks is ace stuff. He did not allow the Padres to create any kind of momentum. Big offense from the Cardinals grabbed the headlines, but Michael McGreevy’s performance deserves its own standing ovation.
Gordon Graceffo pitched a solid inning of relief in the bottom of the 7th and also pitched the bottom of the 8th allowing no Padres baserunners. A nice bounce-back from his last outing. Ryne Stanek was brought in to close out the Padres in the 9th inning and he did it without drama giving Riley O’Brien a night of rest. Cardinals pitchers collectively threw a 1-hit shutout. Very nice.
Dustin May will get the Saturday night start at Petco Park for the Cardinals as he’ll do battle with Randy Vásquez who will take the mound for the Padres. First pitch is set for 6:15pm central time and the musical chairs broadcast schedule has the game being broadcast on Fox Saturday night.
CHICAGO, IL - OCTOBER 02: Charlie Blackmon #19 and DJ LeMahieu #9 of the Colorado Rockies celebrate defeating the Chicago Cubs 2-1 in thirteen innings to win the National League Wild Card Game at Wrigley Field on October 2, 2018 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images) | Getty Images
For the first time in 15 seasons, second baseman DJ LeMahieu finds himself without a Major League team. After injury plagued 2024 and 2025 campaigns, the former Gold Glove and Silver Slugger award winner is a free agent.
LeMahieu, 37, spent seven seasons as the franchise second baseman for the Colorado Rockies. While donning the purple pinstripes he won three Gold Gloves, was a two-time All-Star, and even took home the 2016 batting title when he hit .348/.416/.495 while being worth 5.5 wins above replacement.
After the 2018 season LeMahieu left Colorado as a free agent and joined the New York Yankees. In the Bronx he won another batting title, two Silver Slugger Awards, a fourth Gold Glove, and made his third All-Star appearance.
LeMahieu has yet to officially announce his retirement and is still open to playing opportunities. In the meantime, he is exploring his next steps in his baseball life: coaching.
The Royal Oak Leprechauns, a collegiate wood bat team in LeMahieu’s native Michigan, have announced that LeMahieu will be the team’s manager for the 2026 season.
“DJ has been hands-on throughout the entire offseason, and that’s meant everything to our staff,” Leprechauns general manager Danny Weiss said Wednesday. “As he steps into the field manager role, that same commitment carries over to the players he leads. He cares deeply about building a culture players want to be part of — and that’s going to set the standard for everything we do in 2026 and beyond.”
LeMahieu has been a long-time financial backer and supporter of the Leprechauns.
With his move into managing, LeMahieu joins a list of former Rockies players who pursued managerial efforts after their playing career.
Former third baseman and current special assistant Vinny Castilla has managed in his home country of Mexico.
1993 Opening Day catcher Joe Girardi has been the skipper for the Miami Marlins, New York Yankees, and Philadelphia Phillies.
Former shortstop Walt Weiss managed the Rockies for a few seasons and took over for longtime Atlanta Braves manager Brian Snitker this season.
Plenty of other former Rockies over the years have pursued Major League or collegiate coaching careers after they hung up their cleats.
What current or former members of the Colorado Rockies do you think would make a good manager or coach? Let us know in the comments!
PHILADELPHIA, PA - MAY 08: Chase Dollander #32 of the Colorado Rockies pitches during the game between the Colorado Rockies and the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on Friday, May 8, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Derik Hamilton/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
For seven innings, the Rockies looked like they had finally found the easy version of a win.
Then the game lost its mind.
Colorado built a 6-0 lead, gave it all back in one disastrous inning, survived repeated late showdowns with Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper, and still found a way to beat the Philadelphia Phillies 9-7 in 11 innings Friday night at Citizens Bank Park.
This was not a baseball game so much as an emotional endurance test.
One night after a thrilling win, the Rockies delivered another chaotic, resilient performance. They are still flawed enough to create their own disasters. But increasingly, they are also showing they can fight through them.
Colorado improved to 16-23 with the win. Philadelphia fell to 17-22.
Dollander sets the tone
The Rockies scored first without a hit.
Jordan Beck walked to open the game, moved to second on a Tyler Freeman groundout, took third on a wild pitch, and scored when TJ Rumfield grounded out to first.
That was enough for an early lead.
Then Chase Dollander made it feel bigger.
The right-hander attacked Philadelphia with upper-90s and triple-digit velocity. He looked calm. He worked with traffic. He did not always command the baseball, but he kept the Phillies from doing much with it.
Dollander used six pitches, leaning mostly on his four-seam fastball and sinker while mixing in his slider, curveball, sweeper and changeup. The stuff was real. So was the occasional scattershot command. He threw 41 balls among his 89 pitches, which helped explain the five walks.
Still, Philadelphia managed only three hits against him.
His fifth inning was the best example. Bryson Stott drew a leadoff walk and moved into scoring position. Dollander fielded a soft comebacker himself, then struck out Justin Crawford and Trea Turner to strand him.
The sixth made the line messier. Schwarber punished Dollander’s first real mistake with a solo homer to right. Harper walked on four pitches. Dollander nearly limited it there, getting Adolis García to fly out and Brandon Marsh to hit into a forceout, but J.T. Realmuto followed with an RBI double to make it 6-2.
Jaden Hill entered and got Stott to pop out.
Dollander finished with 5.2 innings, three hits, two runs, five walks and five strikeouts. His ERA rose to 3.35.
For long stretches, Dollander felt like an ace, even if he did not always look as sharp as one.
The Rockies make contact count
Colorado broke the game open in the fourth.
Rumfield led off with a single. Hunter Goodman followed with the swing that changed the night.
Goodman’s approach is not subtle: he swings violently, and he swings often. But when he squares one up, the damage is immediate. Jesús Luzardo found that out when Goodman launched a two-run homer to make it 3-0, part of a 4-for-5 night that gave the Rockies damage and length in the middle of the lineup.
Brenton Doyle walked. Willi Castro reached on a bunt single. Kyle Karros ripped a two-run double. Ezequiel Tovar added a good piece of hitting with an RBI single up the middle.
Luzardo’s Jekyll-and-Hyde season continued. He struck out six through three innings. Then the fourth swallowed him whole. The Phillies left-hander exited after just three-plus innings, charged with six runs on six hits, three walks and a homer. His ERA rose to 5.98.
The Rockies struck out 16 times as a team. That is usually a problem.
On Friday, it was not the whole story. Goodman went 4-for-5 with a homer. Freeman and Castro each had two hits. Karros doubled. The Rockies stole four bases and kept adding pressure whenever the game gave them an opening.
Still, after Freeman’s solo shot made it 7-2 in the seventh, the offense went quiet for a while.
The game flips in the eighth
The warning came in the sixth.
Schwarber punished Dollander’s first real mistake with a 415-foot solo homer to right. It was loud. It was also survivable.
Brennan Bernardino had delivered one of the biggest outs of the night to end the seventh, striking out Schwarber with a sweeper to strand a runner and keep the Rockies ahead by five. Then Bernardino came back out for the eighth, and the game started to slip.
Harper singled. García walked. Marsh singled home a run.
Then Jimmy Herget entered.
For a moment, it looked like he might stop it. Herget struck out Realmuto for the first out. Then Stott doubled home two runs, cutting the lead to 7-5.
Then Crawford delivered the gut punch.
With two outs, Crawford hit a two-run homer to right-center. Tie game. The 6-0 lead was gone. The 7-2 lead was gone. Most of the good baseball Colorado had played suddenly felt very far away.
One inning changed everything.
Vodnik restores order
The Rockies had a chance in the ninth.
Brett Sullivan was hit by a pitch. Jake McCarthy entered as a pinch-runner. McCarthy stole second with two outs.
Freeman had the chance. He is a hitter the Rockies trust to put the ball in play. He fought through a tense at-bat, fouled off tough pitches, and then struck out. McCarthy stayed at second.
Every Rockies fan watched while gripping the couch. Victor Vodnik made sure they could let go for a moment.
Vodnik struck out Schwarber, got Harper to line out to left, then punched out García. That sent the game to extras.
Then he came back out for the 10th and did it again.
The automatic runner started at second. Colorado intentionally walked Marsh to create force plays. Vodnik got Realmuto to fly out, Stott to pop out, and Edmundo Sosa to line out.
After the bullpen nearly gave the game away, Vodnik gave it back to the Rockies.
The Rockies answer in the 11th
The Rockies did not fold.
After watching a six-run lead disappear, Colorado found another push in the 11th. Troy Johnston, pinch-hitting for Karros, ripped an RBI double into right field to score the automatic runner and put the Rockies back in front.
Inserted earlier as a pinch-runner, McCarthy had already stolen a base in the ninth. In the 11th, he delivered with his bat, lining an RBI single into center to score Johnston and extend Colorado’s lead to 9-7.
Extra innings do not offer soft landings, and Crawford immediately made sure the pressure returned. Crawford, the same hitter who tied the game in the eighth, singled to put runners on the corners with one out.
That brought up Schwarber.
The winning run. Just one easy swing and it is over.
This was the at-bat that could have flipped the whole thing again. Mejía did not pitch around it. He attacked Schwarber with power, reached back for a fastball above the zone, and got the Phillies slugger to check his swing at a pitch he could not do anything with. Strike three.
For seven innings, they looked like they had found the easy version of a win. Then the game lost its mind, and for a while, it looked like Colorado might follow it there.
Instead, the Rockies answered.
They survived the collapse. They survived Schwarber. They survived Harper. They survived themselves.
Up next
The Rockies will try to keep the momentum going Saturday at Citizens Bank Park.
Kyle Freeland is scheduled to start for Colorado. He enters at 1-3 with a 5.04 ERA and 24 strikeouts. Philadelphia will counter with Aaron Nola, who is 2-3 with a 5.06 ERA and 40 strikeouts.
First pitch is set for 4:05 p.m. MDT. After two straight chaotic wins, the Rockies will look to keep rolling in the second game of the series.
Sean Burke struggled early in a tough outing on Friday night. | MLB Photos via Getty Images
What appeared to be a pitcher’s duel between two young pitchers quickly turned into a game of “first to 10.” After sitting down the Seattle Mariners in order and going into the second inning with a lead thanks to another Munetaka Murakami tank, things quickly unraveled for the White Sox, as they dropped the opener of the homestand, 12-8.
A single and walk started the second inning before starter Sean Burke struck out JP Crawford but threw a wild pitch in the process. While he got Luke Raley to go down swinging, he walked another batter before hitting Cole Young to force in a run. Burke got out of the inning, but things didn’t get much better from there.
After the Good Guys went down in order in the second, Burke got two quick outs before the Mariners inflicted some major damage. Two quick singles and a walk loaded the bases before Raley strolled to the plate. He would not be made a fool twice and made Burke pay for a lazy fastball down the middle, swatting it over the fence to give Seattle a 5-1 lead.
In the past, a four-run deficit was enough to make the White Sox pack up their bags for Saturday, but this team is different. After Sam Antonacci brought in Tristan Peters on a single and two consecutive walks, Colson Montgomery came up to the plate. Montgomery did his best Lee Corso impression saying “not so fast, my friend” as his bases-clearing double tied the game at five heading into the fourth.
The bats for both teams finally cooled for a bit, as the next eight straight were retired before Julio Rodriguez left his mark on the game with a solo shot of his own to give Seattle another lead, 6-5. Thanks to Drew Romo’s ability to catch the Mariners stealing in a manner that would make Paul Blart blush, only one run crossed the plate as reliever Sean Newcomb was able to get out of trouble.
A leadoff double by Chase Meidroth in the bottom of the sixth put the Sox in a great position to equalize, but unlike Denzel Washington in any of the three movies, the White Sox couldn’t finish the job.
The stalemate continued into the top of the seventh when yet again the Mariners caused trouble with two outs. A single and a walk set the stage for Raley yet again, and he gave everyone in attendance déjà vu by mashing his second homer on another lazy fastball over the plate. Again, the lead climbed to four runs and this time, Chicago didn’t have enough in the tank to fight back. A Josh Naylor three-run homer in the eighth gave the Mariners a 12-5 lead and all but put the game to bed.
While the White Sox were able to put three more runs on the board over the final two innings, it was all for nothing as the Mariners held on for the 12-8 victory. In a game that saw both starting pitchers look incredibly shaky, it was the Mariners bullpen that outpitched their Chicago counterparts and escaped Rate Field happy.
May 8, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Tampa Bay Rays manager Kevin Cash (16) reacts during the fifth inning against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images | Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images
The Rays had an early opening against Connelly Early. Yes, the pun was sitting right there, and unfortunately so were three Tampa Bay baserunners in the third inning that got stranded on the best opportunity to score a run Friday night.
Tampa Bay opened quietly against Early. Yandy Díaz struck out after an ABS challenge overturned the original call, Ryan Vilade flew out, and Junior Caminero lined out sharply to center. Rays starter Jesse Scholtens had to work around a pair of first-inning walks to Willson Contreras on an ABS challenge and Wilyer Abreu, but he escaped with two popups from Masataka Yoshida and Trevor Story. Early baserunners, no damage. Fine enough.
The Rays had their first chance at runs in the second when Jonathan Aranda singled, but Jonny DeLuca, Ben Williamson, and Chandler Simpson could not advance him. At that point, Early still looked hittable. The Rays just needed to string together some hits.
That inning arrived in the third. Nick Fortes singled, moved to second on a disengagement violation, and Taylor Walls followed with a single to put runners on the corners. Then, Díaz was hit by a pitch, loading the bases with nobody out. This was it. This was the opportunity.
Instead, Vilade struck out. Then Caminero grounded into a double play on a chop to Caleb Durbin at third, and Marcelo Mayer helped turn it. Bases loaded, nobody out, no runs.
Boston made that hurt immediately. Scholtens retired the first two hitters in the bottom of the third, but Abreu jumped a low slider and sent it out to right-center for a solo homer. After the Rays failed to cash in their biggest chance, Abreu cashed in Boston’s smaller one. That was the difference in the game through three with the Red Sox up 1-0.
Early settled in from there. In the top of the fourth, he retired the side in order. In the bottom half, Ceddanne Rafaela added another solo homer, pushing Boston ahead 2-0. Scholtens was not bad; the sweeper that stayed up in the zone resulted in the second run allowed, and ultimately, all the scoring the Red Sox would get or need to win the game.
The fifth gave Tampa Bay its last real opening. Fortes singled again, but Walls and Diaz struck out. That was the Rays’ final hit of the night. From there, Early took control, finishing seven scoreless innings and turning the third-inning escape into the moment that got away.
Mason Englert kept the Rays alive after entering in the fifth with two on and two outs. Fresh off the 15-day injured list, he got Masataka Yoshida to pop out, then worked through the sixth after a Caminero error and the seventh after Jarren Duran reached third on a steal and a throwing error. Englert gave the Rays clean innings to keep hope alive, though the bats did not contribute.
Garrett Whitlock handled the eighth, and Aroldis Chapman took the ninth for the Red Sox. Caminero nearly opened the final inning with a hit, but Durbin made a diving stop at third and threw him out and robbed him again. Aranda and DeLuca struck out, and the Rays’ seven-game winning streak was over.
It was a clean, frustrating 2-0 loss built around one wasted rally, two Boston solo homers, and a lineup that went hitless after the fifth. Sometimes the whole game is right there in one inning, and sometimes one inning is all you get.
The Rays have a chance to start a new streak tomorrow at 4:10 PM with Nick Martinez getting the start for the Rays.
Have yourself a night Larry Eugene Fikes III! | Nebraska Athletics
The question Nebraska fans had running through their head before the first pitch against Iowa tonight was whether or not this Cornhusker baseball team would be able to put last week’s dreadful performance behind them. Haymarket Park has been very good to this team this season and Big Red fans filled the seats to find out.
One would think that with the top two hitting teams in the conference facing off, crooked numbers would dot the scoreboard, particularly with a nearly perfect night for baseball and surprisingly, only a whisper of wind.
Carson Jasa had a Carson Jasa start to the game and was lucky to come out of unscathed. Joshua Overbeek booted a hard shot hit right at him by lead-off batter Kooper Schulte and then for a minute it looked like Jasa shrugged it off as the next two guys were put out. However, when Jasa is on the mound, you never know what might happen. In this case, two consecutive hit batters to load the bases. Not to worry though as Matthew Delgado flew out on a lazy fly ball to Mac Moyer in centerfield.
After going down in order in the first inning, Nebraska took advantage of Hawkeye starter Tyler Guerin’s control issues in the bottom of the second inning. Case Sanderson led it off with a four-pitch walk, though he was forced out on a ball hit by Jett Buck on a nice play by the Hawkeye third baseman Jaixen Frost. With Buck on first, Guerin then walked Drew Grego.
With runners on first and second, Overbeek slashed a double the opposite way down the third baseline to score Buck. Big Red was looking for a big inning with two runners in scoring position and one out. That was not to be as Rhett Stokes struck out and pitcher Guerin saved two runs by snagging a line shot by Trey Fikes to end the inning.
Jasa found is groove and was unhittable in the second and third innings, striking out four of the six batters he faced. In the fourth inning he worked around a hit and a walk, thanks in large part to a timely 6-4-3 double play followed by his fifth strikeout of the game to end the inning.
In the meantime, Nebraska put a second run on the board in the bottom of the third when Mac Moyer started a new hitting streak with a single, followed by a stolen base. Will Jesske and Dylan Carey both hit balls that had a good chance to be hits but instead were outs due to the outstanding play of Frost at the hot corner. With two outs, Case Sanderson hit a nice line drive to leftfield that scored Moyer. Nebraska was up 2-0.
Iowa missed a golden opportunity in the top of the fifth, and Jasa did what Jasa does. The Hawkeyes had two runners on base thanks to a hit and a walk with their three-hole hitter Miles Risley at the plate. The two of them faced off in an eight-pitch battle with Jasa falling behind 3-0 before battling to ultimately get a swinging strikeout, bringing Cornhusker fans to their feet in appreciation of his toughness.
With that 105-mph smash back to the pitcher in the second inning at the front over everyone’s mind, Trey Fikes led off the fifth with another hard-hit ball, this time down the third baseline for a double. That brought Coach Rick Heller out of the dugout to take the ball from Guerin and pull in another righty, their top arm out of the bullpen, Kyle Alivo.
Mac Moyer greeted Alivo with his second base hit of the game, moving Fikes to third base. Will Jesske then hit a sacrifice fly to right that put Nebraska’s third run on the scoreboard. Carey followed with a single and the Cornhuskers looked to break it open. That would have to wait as Alivo struck out Sanderson and Buck back-to-back to end it. After five innings, Nebraska held a 3-0 lead.
In the top of the sixth inning, Jasa was back in the zone, sitting the Hawkeyes down in order with a groundout to Sanderson at first base and two strikeouts. Once again, the crowd showed their appreciation and hoped the Cornhuskers could find a couple of insurance runs
Joshua Overbeek was plunked by Alivo with one out and then Rhett Stokes struck out looking. With two outs, can you say Larry Eugene Fikes the 3rd have yourself a day! After crushing the ball twice already, Fikes went yard over the leftfield wall for a two-run homer – his first of the season – to put the Cornhuskers up 5-0.
Jasa pitched the seventh inning before calling it a night, leaving without surrendering a run and recording nine strikeouts, two walks and three hit batters. He threw 106 pitches and dropped his ERA to 3.31. The young man from Colorado has handled the pressure and solidified himself as the Friday starter.
After roughing up Alivo, the Cornhusker offense saw a different righthander in the bottom of the seventh inning, Nick Terhaar. He walked Will Jesske, which brought Iowan Reed Strohmeyer in to pinch-run. Terhaar then struck out Carey, but hit Sanderson to put two on with one out. That was basically repeated as Buck struck out and then Drew Grego earned a walk. That brought Overbeek to the plate with bases loaded and two outs. Hitting from the left-side, Overbeek laced a single that scored two.
Rhett Stokes, who had struggled up to this point in the game, fooled everyone in the ballpark pushing a two-out bunt toward shortstop that no Hawkeye could get to in time to make a play. That drove in Grego, putting the Big Red up 8-0. Fans in the stands were feeling a run-rule ending, especially after Fikes was hit by a pitch to once again load the bases. However, they’d have to wait for a bit as Mac Moyer’s sharp hit to third base was gloved and Frost stepped on the bag to force out Stokes.
Caleb Clark came in relief of Jasa and got the first two Iowa batters to fly out to rightfield. But the Canadian couldn’t close it out, hitting the next two batters. Coach Rob Childress came out of the dugout and called for Tucker Timmerman. He ended it by striking out pinch-hitter Ben Swails.
When Max Buettenback stepped into the batter’s box against Ty Mikkelsen to pinch-hit, there was a sense of anticipation and he delivered, crushing a Roy Hobbs-esque home run well over the rightfield wall. With the lights flashing and the crowd on its feet, Nebraska was one run away from ending it. That came quickly two pitches later when Dylan Carey hit is own towering home run to rightfield. Ball game! Nebraska 10, Iowa 0.
The Cornhuskers answered the question of whether they could come back in a big way. They showed their grit, grinding in the early going with a run here and a run there. They felt the energy of the crowd of 7094 and came up big in the moment late in the game, scoring seven runs in the final three innings. They played solid defense and made plays when they needed to.
This was a good first step into the weekend, but anyone who follows college baseball knows that Iowa is led by one of the best coaches in the game. While they have not faced the level of competition as Nebraska this season, they have won their last two series, including one against Illinois. Rick Heller will have his team ready to play and will put out their best pitcher tomorrow to put one in the win column.
The same two teams will be back at it tomorrow at 2:00. Ty Horn will return to his role as a weekend starter and will face-off against Maddux Frese and his 2.56 ERA. A win tomorrow will secure a top-four finish in the conference standings and the all-important top-four position in the tournament.
Nebraska had 12 hits tonight, one less than all three games last weekend.
Reed Strohmeyer, who came in the came to pinch run for Will Jesske in the seventh inning, looked across the diamond tonight at his older brother Kellen. The two Strohmeyers are graduates of Dubuque Hempstead High School.
Trey Fikes had a huge game going 2-3 with a double, a home run and two RBI. Not bad for a catcher known more for his defense!
Mac Moyer, Dylan Carey, and Joshua Overbeek all had two hits. Overbeek had three RBI.
Apr 25, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Royals center fielder Kyle Isbel (28) hits a single during the seventh inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images | Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images
Royals broadcast Ryan LeFebvre has a handful of topics he likes to bring up as often as he can. Leadoff walks late in the game, pitchers catching popups, whether a catcher has an advantage when facing a pitcher he’s caught before. But one of the things he brings up a lot that I actually kind of appreciate is the idea of a “circle your scorecard” moment. This comes from Ryan’s own practice of circling what he believes are key plate appearances in a game where the outcome helps define the winner of the game.
You can go ahead and put a big old circle around May 8 on your 2026 calendars. If the Royals play into October this year, this game will be a big part of the reason why.
That’s enough of me pontificating; let’s talk about how the game went.
Kris Bubic was fighting his control for most of this game. Ultimately, he only gave up 3 runs in 5.2 innings, which is the next best thing to a quality start. But he walked 4 and only struck out 5. His fastballs, in particular, were all over the place.
That’s way too many in the middle of the zone and way too many nowhere near the zone. But still, he did his job.
Nick Mears came in, allowed the inherited runner to score, and then escaped. He almost escaped without allowing the runner to score thanks to some slick defense by Isbel – more to come – and Bobby Witt Jr., but Carter Jensen was unable to hang on to Bobby’s relay. The throw beat Dillon Dingler to the plate fairly easily, but you can’t tag a runner out if you don’t have the ball. And that felt like the ballgame.
Luinder Avila followed him out of the bullpen and had a clean inning, John Schreiber pitched the eighth, and, thanks to Kyle Isbel – who we will talk about more in a bit – running all over the dang place, escaped unharmed.
Lucas Erceg’s first pitch was a middle-middle fastball that got launched into right-center for a leadoff double, but he caught a break when Zack Short popped up a sacrifice bunt attempt. Scarily, the break almost ended up being his knee as he and catcher Elias Díaz collided while both sliding to attempt to catch the ball – Díaz made the play anyway, but Erceg stayed on the ground for a few minutes and ultimately stayed in the game.
Erceg’s fastball velocity was down around 95 tonight – even before the collision – so things were pretty touch and go. He got Kerry Carpenter to fly out for the second out, but he ended up walking Kevin McGonigle to face Colt Keith, who had hit the walk-off single against Erceg and the Royals in the heartbreaker in Detroit. This time, though, Erceg coerced him to hit a pop-up on the infield, and the Royals’ bats had a chance in the ninth.
So, yeah, I guess we need to talk about the offense. Keider Montero got the start tonight, and the Royals tagged him for four runs in six innings last time they saw him. They’ve been hitting better, so you might have hoped they’d get to him even more tonight. Sadly, it was not to be. Montero ended up pitching six innings of one-run ball.
The Royals had three barrelled balls, only one turned into a hit. Of the 17 balls the Royals put in play, 7 were considered hard hit and turned into outs. The Royals only got three hits, and all were .800 xBA or better. The Royals couldn’t get anything to fall. Then, in the seventh, AJ Hinch caused Ryan to cite one of Denny’s favorite things to pick on. He summoned a reliever despite the fact that Montero, outside back-to-back smash hits from Jac Caglianone and Isaac Collins with two outs in the second inning, had been absolutely dominant. Denny’s point – which is a point you’ll hear anyone who has watched baseball for very long make – is that every time you bring in a fresh reliever, even if he’s been good all year, you risk that this time he just doesn’t have it. Denny and Ryan compare it to spinning a roulette wheel. I’ve compared it to making a parlay bet.
Now, at first, it seemed Hinch was doing just fine. Tyler Holton came on to face Carter Jensen, Caglianone, and Collins, and he got them 1-2-3. But then, just as I was beginning to whine on social media about how much I hate the Tigers, he called upon his second closer out of three, Kyle Finnegan, who had a 0.51 ERA entering the night. When he left, it was 1.53, and the wheels fell off fast.
Michael Massey, leading off, took a splitter that didn’t quite dive out of the zone and drove it into left-center for a leadoff double. Kyle Isbel – we’re still not done talking about him – drove him in with a single. Wencéel Perez, who had driven in the go-ahead run back in the sixth inning, let it go under his glove, and Isbel managed to go all the way to third. We didn’t even have time to start arguing about whether Kyle should have tried to score before Maikel Garcia smashed a line drive right back at the centerfield camera to single Isbel home and tie the game.
Bobby Witt Jr. walked after he finally challenged a fastball just off the outside edge that had been frustratingly called a strike against KC most of the night, and that they had let go unremarked. The Royals had runners at first and second, no one out, for Vinnie and Salvy.
Now, Vinnie and Salvy have been doing better lately. Vinnie, in particular, had a couple of really good swings earlier in the game against Montero. One of them would have been a home run in 14 parks, but was a flyout at Kauffman. But the Tigers called in another lefthander, Brant Hurter, and Vinnie had a 3 wRC+ against lefties coming into tonight. As Matthew Lamar pointed out on social media, this is what Lane Thomas is in KC for.
Salvy, even at his hottest, doesn’t belong in the middle of a big league lineup anymore. We’ve talked about this ad nauseam, so I don’t need to reiterate it. But Vinnie grounded into a double play, and Salvy did everything he could to make an out but was ultimately forced to take a walk. Finally, Lane Thomas was called upon to pinch hit for catcher Carter Jensen – that’s why Díaz was in in the ninth – and he grounded out to end the threat. The game felt over again. Especially after the previously described first pitch from Erceg in the ninth.
In the bottom of the ninth, things continued to go poorly. Hurter was left in to face Caglianone, Collins, and Massey. Cags got a hittable pitch, but one he needed to go the other way with; instead, he hit a soft liner to right for an out. Collins struck out looking. Then Nick Loftin pinch-hit for Massey.
Now, I wasn’t a fan of this move. There were already two outs and we were surely going to want Massey’s glove in the tenth. Even if Loftin got on, Kyle Isbel – almost there! – was next up and against a lefty, that didn’t seem worth bothering with. Loftin had a really good at-bat that ended with him smashing a double into the left-center gap. Great, here comes Izzy to face the lefty.
Isbel did exactly what he should do with that pitch when facing that pitcher, and it was jsut enough to walk off the game.
The Royals now only need to win one of the next two games to be able to claim a successful homestand. No one in Kansas City would complain if they replicated each of their past two weekends and swept the dang thing. But, either way, it will all start again tomorrow night.
Michael Wacha (3.05 ERA) will take the mound for Kansas City. The Tigers started the day with TBA as their starter, changed it to Ty Madden at some point this evening, and now it shows old friend Burch Smith (1.59 ERA in 11.1 innings of relief in only his second big league season since 2021) taking the ball first. Regardless of who starts the game, it – like Sunday’s contest – is likely to be a bullpen affair. Lots of opportunities for AJ Hinch to come up snake eyes in his roulette parlay. The Royals just need to be ready to leap on it at least as well as they were tonight.
May 8, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Seattle Mariners right fielder Luke Raley (20) watches his three-run home run against the Chicago White Sox during the seventh inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images
Luke Raley’s done a lot of things in his career. He’s the rare Mariner who can both get to the third deck in right field and also routinely bunt for a base hit. He burst into fans’ hearts in 2024 by doing exactly that. But something he’s never done is hit a grand slam. At least, it was something he’d never done until tonight.
It was the second time the Mariners had loaded the bases in just the first three innings. The first time, they were turned back after driving in just a single run on a Cole Young HBP. But this time, Luke Raley would torch a fastball at 113 mph off the bat into the Mariners’ bullpen.
Mariners fans in the Chicago crowd would come up with a few of the balls hit into the stands tonight, but Raley’s lucky this one went to the pen. Eduard Bazardo ran it down and affectionately dusted it off for presentation to Raley after the game.
Another thing Raley’s never done is drive in seven runs in a game, which is hardly a surprise, given that only a dozen Mariners had ever done it before. At least, it was something Raley’d never done until tonight. But in the top of the seventh inning, Luke Raley matched the 372 feet of his prior home run with his second of the night.
After an injury-riddled 2025, Raley has been hitting the ball so hard this season that he’s got a 149 wRC+ despite striking out more than a third of the time. That comes from the kinds of full-effort swings that he just couldn’t get to while nursing a sore oblique throughout last summer. He’s also taken over the team lead in home runs with 8 and RBIs with 23.
Of course, RBIs aren’t really an individual achievement, as they require your teammates to get on base in front of you. “I was blessed that the bases were loaded,” Raley said after the game. So he’ll probably buy a Chicago steak dinner for Randy Arozarena and J.P. Crawford, who accounted for four of Raley’s RBIs, with each man quietly reaching base three times tonight. For setting up Luke Raley’s achievement with little fanfare, Randy gets tonight’s Sun Hat Award for individual contribution to a game (edging out J.P. with a stolen base).
Like Luke Raley, Julio Rodríguez has done a lot of things in his career too, such as being one of just three Mariners with at least 100 home runs and 100 stolen bases. But one thing he’s never done is get off to a hot start. At least, it was something he’d never done until this season. For despite struggling through the first week of 2026, Julio’s started his take-off earlier than usual this year. Since April 8, he’s got a 152 wRC+. So yes, he took a minute to get going, but unlike in prior years, it really was just a minute. He kept that going tonight, going yard for the sixth time.
This home run highlights a mechanical change that’s led to Julio looking much more comfortable in the box this year. After keeping his bat pretty straight up and down, he’s now resting it almost parallel to the ground with just a little waggle until the pitcher starts his motion. The result is a more fluid motion that just goes straight into the swing rather than backing the bat up first. Whether the mechanics are actually better is above my pay grade. But the results are not: He’s never had a wRC+ this high by May 8 before.
Josh Naylor has done a lot of things in his career too. And Josh Naylor always looks fucking sick.
Police have been called to the Fairfield, Conn., home that former Yankees pitcher Carl Pavano and his ex-wife, Alissa Pavano, still share custody of nine times since 2024 — and as recently as April 29 — as a nasty legal battle involving a prenuptial agreement drags on, according to CT Insider.
Divorce papers were served two years ago, according to the outlet, and Alissa has wanted the court to invalidate the prenup agreement signed in Florida before they were married in 2011.
Carl allegedly “demanded” Alissa sign the prenup, according to a court briefing viewed by The Post, and she also alleged “intense” and “controlling” behavior by the ex-pitcher. According to the briefing, she walked on “eggshells” around the allegedly controlling right-hander and he insisted she give up “her residence, potential employment, and all financial independence.”
Carl Pavano throws a pitch during a 2008 game for the Yankees. Neil Miller
Alissa, an Instagram influencer with 20,000 followers, alleged that Carl “planted drugs” in her belongings to get children taken away from her, placed a secret camera in the bedroom and stole her jewelry, in addition to calling Alissa words and phrases such as “loser” and “white trash,” according to the brief.
State Superior Court Judge Thomas O’Neill initially ruled the prenup valid, according to CT Insider, but also gave Alissa a one-time payment of $300,000 — in addition to reportedly ruling that Carl buy her a house containing a value up to $1 million, $50,000 worth of jewelry and a new car.
“A prenuptial agreement is an acceptable way for individuals, prior to marriage, to condition how their financial interests and responsibilities will be determined after marriage,” Alissa’s lawyers alleged in a brief. “It should not be an acceptable way for a monied spouse who has already started a family with his significant other to force her to give up her financial independence, and then to extract financial advantages in the premarital agreement under the threat of taking the minor children away from her and leaving her destitute.”
Carl Pavano is pictured during an August 2008 game. Anthony J. Causi
The couple shares three children, with two born before they were married.
They met in 2005 — when Carl pitched for the Yankees and Alissa was working as a waitress after graduating from Florida State, according to the brief — before breaking it off and beginning to date again two years later.
Pavano, who had a 14-year MLB career, only made 26 starts for the Yankees across three seasons after signing a four-year, $39.5 million contract before the 2005 season and earned the nickname “American Idle” from The Post’s George King for how little he pitched.
May 8, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers pitcher Kumar Rocker (80) is visited on the mound by pitching coach Jordan Tiegs (83) and catcher Danny Jansen (9) during the fourth inning against the Chicago Cubs at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images | Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images
The Texas Rangers scored a run but the Chicago Cubs scored seven runs.
The Rangers introduced Elvis Cam tonight with Elvis Andrus manning one of the television cameras for an inning or so. It was a cute idea to see a Rangers legend and fan favorite covering the “action” but then they ended up forcing the poor guy to film the most wet fartiest game possible as Texas was pummeled by an actually good team while cosplaying as the junior varsity Anaheim Angels or whatever those City Connect uniforms are.
The Rangers didn’t have a hit until the fifth and luckily for them their second hit scored a run otherwise they would have been easily shut out.
Meanwhile, tonight’s starter Kumar Rocker couldn’t make it out of the fourth inning again as he endlessly went to 3-2 counts and collected just 11 outs for his 87 pitches to put the bullpen behind the eight ball to begin this series.
The Rangers are a season-worst four games under .500.
Player of the Game: Maybe statistically history’s worst big leaguer Justin Foscue drove in the only run if you’re curious just how much the rest of the lineup should feel embarrassed.
Up Next: No matter how we feel about it nothing can stop the fact that the Rangers and Cubs will play again tomorrow with RHP Jack Leiter set to take the mound for Texas opposite RHP Edward Cabrera for Chicago.
The Saturday evening first pitch from The Shed is scheduled for 6:05 pm CDT and will be aired on the Rangers Sports Network.
Glasnow reinjured his back during a May 6 meeting with the Houston Astros while throwing warmup pitches during the second inning, which took him out for the rest of the game. The Dodgers won 12-2.
Glasnow's back injury history was known by Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. He said that it's been "a reoccurring theme" and would monitor the pain with more precautionary measures, such as pushing back his starts.
But the team announced on X, formerly Twitter, Friday that Glasnow was placed on the injured list with low back spasms and recalled right-handed pitcher Paul Gervase.
The Dodgers recalled RHP Paul Gervase and placed RHP Tyler Glasnow on the injured list with low back spasms.
MILWAUKEE, WI - APRIL 30: Shane Drohan (55) of the Milwaukee Brewers delivers a pitch during an MLB game against the Arizona Diamondbacks on April 30, 2026 at American Family Field in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Kicking the festivities off in the top of the first inning, Misiorowski was able to strike out the first two Yankees batters he faced on three pitches each. With Aaron Judge at the plate, he was able to quickly get the first two strikes, as he looked to become the first Brewers pitcher since Josh Hader in 2019 to throw an immaculate inning, and then he missed about an inch out of the zone. On the next pitch, he got Judge to fly out to right field to end the inning.
With how spotty the Brewers offense has been to start the 2026 season, jumping on a Cy Young Award candidate like Max Fried early in the game was crucial to any success they were seeking. Luckily for the Brewers’ bats, Fried struggled to find the zone, giving up back-to-back walks after allowing a lead-off single to Gary Sánchez. With the bases loaded, the Crew got RBI singles from both Brandon Lockridge and Sal Frelick to give them a 2-0 lead. Joey Ortiz was then tasked with yet another bases-loaded opportunity, although this time, it wasn’t the worst-case scenario, as he grounded into a fielder’s choice, but a runner did score to extend their lead to 3-0. After the RBI groundout, Jackson Chourio made his presence felt with an RBI knock, wrapping up a nine-batter, four-run bottom of the second inning.
As Misiorowski continued to wheel-and-deal, there was a scary moment with Lockridge, who was off to a great night at the plate. With Cody Bellinger at the plate, he hit a fly ball down the left field line where Lockridge slid in foul territory, banging his knee into the cement along the wall. Lockridge was carted off the field and ultimately pulled from the game. Post-game comments from Brewers manager Pat Murphy indicate that his X-rays were negative for a fracture and he suffered a deep laceration that goes to the bone.
The Brewers offense was able to scratch across two more runs following Lockridge’s injury, but made Fried work. He ended the night with six innings thrown, giving up five runs, three walks, and striking out five batters.
Outside of the stellar outing for Misiorowski, we saw a couple of other positives tonight. First and foremost, Ortiz hit his first extra-base hit of the season. They have gotten virtually nothing out of his bat this season, but perhaps this could be the turning point of his season, as he also had an RBI tonight.
On the pitching side, Shane Drohan picked up his first-ever career save. Meaning, first-ever save in high school, college, Minor Leagues, or Major Leagues. He threw almost three perfect innings as he allowed just one walk and struck out three batters.
Despite getting a much-needed game one win, two big questions loom: how long will Lockridge be out for, and who will his replacement be? Will we see the promotion of a top-performing prospect or an old friend rejoin the team after being in Triple-A for a week?
It’ll be another night of young shining stars on the mound as the Brewers go for the series win tomorrow night. Cam Schlittler will get the ball for New York while Kyle Harrison takes it for Milwaukee.