2026 Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Preview

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 24: Spencer Jones #78 and Jasson Domínguez #24 of the New York Yankees participate in a spring training workout at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 24, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Farm systems go through cycles. There are strong classes and cycles that rise through the minor leagues together, graduate together, and recycle through. In a situation like the Yankees’, where minor league depth is routinely pillaged for deadline upgrades, the surviving prospects who rise through the system leave chasms in their wake.

This happened to the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders in 2025. While polarizing top prospect Spencer Jones spent the year in Moosic, he was surrounded by veterans on minor league contracts, older prospects without much value or big league potential, and journeymen. The recent graduation of players like Will Warren, Anthony Volpe, Austin Wells, Ben Rice, Jasson Domínguez, and, later, Cam Schlittler, left a chasm at the top minor league level, while development continued below with reinforcements.

After another trade deadline which saw the Yankees’ farm system once again cleaned out of its depth, the top prospects that remained are continuing the cycle. Thanks to those promoted prospects, conjoined with a strong group of the yearly veterans on minor league deals and some demoted major leaguers due to newfound depth, there’s a chance that the RailRiders team we see to start the season is one of the best Triple-A teams in recent memories.

The one area they’ll likely be weak, especially with J.C. Escarra starting the year in the majors, is at catcher. A big part of the Yankees’ deadline prospect purge saw them deal from their catching depth, which included Rafael Flores. This year, expect to see two non-roster invites splitting time between Ali Sánchez and Payton Henry. Both have bounced around the league and have gotten time in the majors as midseason fill-ins due to injury, but aren’t particularly known for their bats.

In the infield, it’s full of veterans who are looking to rebuild themselves and get back to the big leagues. You saw plenty of Paul DeJong and Max Schuemann in spring training, and you figure if any Yankee infielder goes down in the early going, they’ll be seriously considered for a promotion. DeJong has over 900 games of MLB experience across the last nine years, and the former All-Star will play a lot of shortstop, while Schuemann, the former Athletic, is more flexible. Jonathan Ornelas and Braden Shewmake, two more guys with limited big league experience, also factor into the mix, while Ernesto Martinez Jr., signed out of the Brewers’ organization, should start at first base.

Where this team really shines, however, is in the outfield. The Yankees have a numbers problem in the outfield, and with them running back MLB’s top outfield from 2025 and looking to optimize their bench with a right-handed platoon bat, it’s pushed two players coming off tremendous springs into Triple-A. Domínguez and Jones would both be starting on numerous teams in the league, but find themselves on the outside looking in here.

There’s a lot to prove for both of them, who are the biggest storylines of the spring. Domínguez needs to at least be a passable defender in left field and needs to show he’s more than a platoon bat (the spring data is encouraging!). Jones has so many positive traits, but he has to show he can make enough contact for his tremendous power to have an impact against big league pitching.

The rest of the outfield is equally stacked. Seth Brown is just two years removed from being in the heart of the Athletics’ order, Yanquiel Fernandez played 52 games for the lowly Rockies last season, and there’s, of course, Oswaldo Cabrera. He was the odd man out on the Yankees’ bench, and the super-utilityman will start in Scranton as he works his way back from his nasty ankle injury last May. This hitting core has a baffling amount of talent.

Rotations are always in flux at any level, and we’ll likely only see this rotation for a few weeks, but the top of the RailRiders’ rotation has a lot of talent. Luis Gil isn’t needed in the bigs for the next few weeks, so he’ll look to refine his arsenal with a few Triple-A starts. He’s followed up by top prospects Elmer Rodriguez and Carlos Lagrange. Rodriguez, who boasts a diverse, six-pitch arsenal, got a cup of coffee at this level last year and could be in the Bronx sooner than later in a starting capacity.

With the flamethrowing Lagrange, it’s a matter of how long the Yankees hold onto the tantalizing potential of him as a starting pitcher. His stuff and the way he maintains his velocity inning after inning is legitimately one-of-a-kind. What holds him back is his command, which he improved significantly in 2025, but he still walks too many batters to be an effective MLB starter. The Yankees’ bullpen has a scarily low floor with a lot of question marks, so you cannot rule out that management deems his stuff as too good to keep in the minors and puts him in the big league bullpen this summer.

The rest of the rotation figures to include soft-tossing righty Brendan Beck and some non-roster invite veterans like Adam Kloffenstein or Dom Hamel. The bullpen has several arms who will frequent the Scranton Shuffle all season, like Yerry De los Santos, Kervin Castro, and Angel Chivilli. Some non-40-man arms that will get big innings for this team include Harrison Cohen, who pitched for Israel in the World Baseball Classic, Yovanny Cruz, who flashed triple digits in limited spring action, and former Royals reliever Dylan Coleman. There’s also former Astro Rafael Montero if he ever gets his visa issue figured out.

In a perfect world, the Yankees can lean on their current 26 (and reinforcements) all season and won’t have to dip much into Scranton to replace injured players, but it’ll undoubtedly happen. Last year, there wasn’t much depth at their disposal with a general void in the upper minors. But this year? This is the deepest and most talented minor league team I’ve ever seen. I legitimately wonder what a seven-game series would look like against the Rockies, which would probably not be as competitive as I think, but it tells you how much talent there is that could play in the majors elsewhere.

Chicago Cubs history unpacked, March 27

Free of charge for the discerning reader. Happy birthday to Lynn McGlothen and a host of others, plus more baseball stories.

Today in baseball history:

Cubs Birthdays: George MagoonBill CollinsJohnny GillWalter StephensonNewt KimballWes CovingtonLynn McGlothen*, Vic HarrisDick RuthvenDrew HallJaime NavarroJunior LakeEric Stout. Also notable: Miller Huggins HOF.

Today in History:

  • 196 BC – Ptolemy V ascends to the throne of Egypt.
  • 1513 – Spaniard Juan Ponce de León and his expedition first sight Florida.
  • 1790 – The modern shoelace with an aglet patented in England by Harvey Kennedy.
  • 1915 – Typhoid Mary [Mary Mallon] is arrested and returned to quarantine on North Brother Island, New York after spending five years evading health authorities and causing several further outbreaks of typhoid.
  • 1964 – The Great Alaska Earthquake (9.2 magnitude) and resulting tsunami kill 139 people in the largest US earthquake and second largest ever recorded.

Thanks for reading.

Pack9 Opponent Preview: Georgia Tech

ATLANTA, GA - APRIL 15: Outfielder Drew Burress #8 of the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets leads off first base during the Spring Classic college baseball game between the Georgia Bulldogs and the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets on April 15, 2025 at Truist Park in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Who’s the Pack playing?

Opponent: Georgia Tech

Mascot: Andre 3000 | School Location: Waffle House, GA | Conference: ACC

2026 Record: 19-5 (6-3, T-2nd) | 2026 RPI Rank: 22

2025 Record: 41-19 (19-11, 1st) | 2025 RPI Rank: 19

2024 Record: 33-25 (15-15, 4th Coastal) | 2024 RPI Rank: 45


When? Where? How do I watch?

Location: Russ Chandler Stadium (Atlanta, GA)

Game Time(s): Fri, Mar 27 @ 7:00pm | Sat, Mar 28 @ 7:00pm | Sun, Mar 29 @ 3:00pm

TV: Friday (ACCNX) | Saturday (ACC Network) | Sunday (ACC Network)

Live Stats: Stat Broadcast (Friday | Saturday | Sunday)


Tell me about this team

If you thought Florida State’s lineup could hit, just wait until you meet this Georgia Tech squad. The lineup is hitting a combined .373/.495/.644, 68 2B, 50 HR, 16.4 BB%, 16.8 K%, 26-31 SB, with pretty much all of those numbers sans stolen bases being up there among the national leaders, if not the outright leader. The Yellow Jackets have scored double-digits runs in 16 of their 24 games.

If you’re looking for a weak point, good luck. In the latest D1 Baseball Week Six positional rankings, here’s how GT stacks up:

  • Catcher – 1st
  • 1st Base – 32nd
  • 2nd Base – 1st
  • 3rd Base – 8th
  • Shortstop – 6th
  • Outfield – 8th, 11th, 46th, and 53rd

That is just an absurd abundance of riches. And while the lineup is busy destroying the ball when they step in the batters box, they’re just as equally taking care of it in the field, sporting a .975 fielding percentage as a team with no single player having more than three errors on the season.

If there’s a weakness on this team, it’s pitching. Friday starter Tate McKee has all the makings of a top three round draft pick, but hasn’t been able to put it all together. Dylan Loy and Jackson Blakely have been a mixed bag in the Saturday and Sunday roles, respectively, while there’s no clear answer in the midweek starters. The bullpen runs deep and there’s plenty of talent, but not the high-end arms like the Wolfpack ran into with Florida State last week.

If Tate can turn the corner and start pounding the zone more and they can find a reliable and productive second starter, this team will be a national seed. The lineup alone likely hits this team into a regional host, but it’s that pitching staff that really holds the keys to how great of a year this will be for first-time head coach James Ramsey.


Pitching Matchups

Friday: LHP Ryan Marohn (JR) vs RHP Tate McKee (JR)

Saturday: RHP Jacob Dudan (JR) vs TBD

Sunday: TBD vs RHP Jackson Blakely (SO)


Key Players:

Offense

C/DH Vahn Lackey (JR) – .425/.545/.851, 8 2B, 9 HR, 19.1 BB%, 12.7 K%, 7-7 SB. Is rocketing up draft boards and will be selected in the top half of the first round of this year’s draft. Had a breakout 2025 in his first year as a starter and is taking that to an even higher level this year. Not just a bat, he’s as good defensively as State will see this year. Threw out 14-of-43 last year (32.6%). Not having the same success this year (2-of-16, 12.5%), but teams aren’t trying him as much.

RF/1B Alex Hernandez (SO) – .424/.542/.624, 2 2B, 5 HR, 17.8 BB%, 16.8 K%, 2-2 SB. 2025 Freshman All-American with some legit power (16 HR last year) from his right-handed bat. Solid defender who played mostly 2B last year and should move across to 3B next year, although he’s draft-eligible this year.

SS Carson Kerce (JR) – .420/.530/.679, 16 2B, 1 HR, 15.0 BB%, 8.0 K%, 2-2 SB. Spent both of his first two years as the Yellow Jackets’ starting third baseman before moving to shortstop this year. Not the power bat that seemingly every other player that steps to the dish is, but the dude can flat out hit and probably could launch some more dingers if he prioritized power over contact.

2B JarrenAdvincula (JR) – .390/.470/.530, 2 2B, 4 HR, 10.2 BB%, 8.5 K%, 4-5 SB. Lefty hitting transfer from Cal who spent each of the last two summers in the Cape Cod League. 1st Team All-PAC12 in 2024 and 2nd Team All-ACC in 2025. He’s a complete hitter and could sneak into the 1st round of this year’s draft, even though he’s a 2B-only prospect.

DH Will Baker (SO) – .390/.510/.649, 12 2B, 2 HR, 18.3 BB%, 12.5 K%, 1-1 SB. A part-time starter last year, the Australian is crushing it this year. His line-drive approach doesn’t have him run into many home runs, but he handles the bat very well.

3B Ryan Zuckerman (JR) – .364/.486/.773, 7 2B, 9 HR, 17.1 BB%, 27.9 K%, 1-1 SB. Righty power bat transfer from Pitt (22 HR over two years with the Panthers) who strikes out a ton. He didn’t walk much at Pitt, so he’s become more of a three-outcomes hitter with GT. Seems destined to move to 1B at the pro level.

1B KentSchmidt (JR) – .347/.548/.490, 4 2B, 1 HR, 27.4 BB%, 15.1 K%, 3-3 SB. Former transfer from Georgia Southern who transferred to GT ahead of the 2025 season. Missed 20 games due to injury last year, otherwise would have been racked up a bunch of accolades. The stocky lefty batter can, but it’ll be interesting to see how MLB clubs view him come draft time.

LF Caleb Daniel (SO) – .324/.429/.662, 5 2B, 6 HR, 11.9 BB%, 26.2 K%, 0-0 SB. 2025 Freshman All-American. The power is legit, but the strikeouts are an issue for the lefty hitter.

CF Drew Burress (JR) – .276/.432/.531, 8 2B, 5 HR, 16.8 BB%, 15.2 K%, 3-7 SB. Yeah, I listed the entire lineup just to show how absurdly stacked this group is. Their statistically worst hitter this season is also a projected high 1st round pick in this year’s MLB Draft and a guy with 46 career 2B and 49 career HR. 2024 ACC and National Freshman-of-the-Year and a 2025 1st Team All-American.

C/DH Drew Rogers (SO) – .313/.424/.646, 1 2B, 5 HR, 8.5 BB%, 25.4 K%, 0-0 SB. Yeah, I’m throwing one more on here to round out the group of regulars. Rogers is a draft-eligible sophomore and it’ll be interesting to see what he’ll do come draft time because the tools both at the plate and behind the dish are legit. Strikeouts are an issue, but he’s improved significantly from last year.

Pitching

RHP Tate McKee (JR) – 3-0, 4.44 ERA, 26.1 IP, 15.3 BB%, 26.3 K%. The ace of the staff, who was also GT’s Friday night starter all last year. Has struggled with control this year, including issuing 10 BB over his last 10.0 IP. Has a five-pitch mix including a mid-90’s fastball, but should pare that selection down.

LHP Dylan Loy (JR) – 1-1, 4.30 ERA, 23.0 IP, 5.0 BB%, 23.0 K%. Transfer from Tennessee who has transitioned from a reliever in the SEC to a GT’s Saturday guy. A finesse lefty who pounds the zone, setting up hitters to chase on the breaking ball in two-strike counts.

RHP Jackson Blakely (SO) – 2-1, 3.12 ERA, 17.1 IP, 6.2 BB%, 29.6 K%. The 6’0, 220 pounder is in his first full season after recovering from Tommy John Surgery and pitching just 4.2 innings over five appearances late last year. Inserted into the starting rotation over the last two weeks with mixed results. Three-pitch mix starting with a low-to-mid-90’s fastball.

RHP Justin Shadek (rSO) – 1-0, 3.38 ERA, 10.2 IP, 13.7 BB%, 27.5 K%. Big 6’6, 235 pound frame on the Rutgers transfer. Missed his first year at Rutgers with Tommy John Surgery and control has been an issue for him since. Is an upper-90’s arm who can touch triple digits, and relies heavily on that level of heat.

RHP Mason Patel (rSR) – 2-0, 1 SV, 5.25 ERA, 12.0 IP, 9.6 BB%, 21.2 K%. Sixth-year senior who spent his first three seasons at Georgia State. Turned into the Jackets’ key reliever last year, posting 11 wins and 5 saves over 70.0 innings, all in relief. Low-90’s guy with a great changeup and a slider.

RHP Jake Lankie (rSO) – 0-0, 1 SV, 5.73 ERA, 11.0 IP, 3.9 BB%, 29.4 K%. Former transfer from Georgia who redshirted with the Bulldogs in 2024 and pitched just 10.1 innings with GT last year. Has been shelled in his last two outings (3.2 IP, 7 ER) in appearances against Auburn and Pittsburgh.


Quick! Fun Facts!

Georgia Tech had nine former players play at the MLB level in 2025, with five of those making their MLB debuts last season: INF Kristian Campbell (Red Sox), 1B/OF Tristin English (Diamondbacks), RHP Zach Maxwell (Reds), OF Chandler Simpson (Rays), and LHP Connor Thomas (Brewers). The other MLB players from last year were LHP Brant Hurter (Tigers), OF Justyn-Henry Malloy (Tigers), RHP Xzavion Curry (Marlins), and C Joey Bart (Pirates).

The Yellow Jackets are offering $3 beers for Friday’s and Sunday’s games. This needs to be more common at baseball games. Also outlaw artificial turf fields. I’m dying on these hills!

Georgia Tech holds an 81-62 lead in the all-time series between the two programs, including a 40-16 mark at home.

Not a single player on GT’s squad is from the state of North Carolina.


The Key To A Series Win For State

NC State’s lineup is going to have to produce. The Wolfpack is averaging just 5.0 runs/game in ACC play so far. Georgia Tech has been held to fewer than 6 runs in a game only 3 times this year (vs Auburn and twice versus Georgia State – side bar, but the Panthers are just 13-13 on the year and 2-4 in the Sun Belt; strange). Anything is possible, especially with the Pack rolling out Marohn and Dudan, but if State is going to win this series, it’s more than likely going to be on the backs of an offensive eruption.


Prediction

Given NC State’s struggles with producing runs over the last three games and the bullpen’s struggles, it’s hard to see this one going the Wolfpack’s way.

Outcome: GT takes two of three.

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 3/27/26

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MARCH 25: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees greets his teammates during player introductions prior to the game between the New York Yankees and the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Kavin Mistry/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Yankees got to take their first off-day of the year easy after demolishing the Giants on Opening Day, watching as the rest of the league got to take a shot at getting in the win column. In the AL East, everyone but Toronto jumped into action with the O’s and Sox winning to form a three-way tie atop the division — tune into the 161-game race to find out who can break that tie. New York will get back on the field today with a late afternoon game looking to make their first series of the year a win.

On the site today, Michael leads off with a preview of the loaded Triple-A roster that Scranton is rolling out ahead of their season debut, followed by Andrés tempering expectations to give Carlos Lagrange time to figure out his command in the minors. Matt delivers the first Rivalry Roundup of the year featuring Garrett Crochet blanking the Reds, Kento wishes Miller Huggins a happy birthday and gives him some flowers for guiding the franchise to their first peaks of success, and Peter breaks down your latest answers from our Reacts questions. Finally, I’ll come back around to answer this week’s mailbag questions.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees at San Francisco Giants

Time: 4:35 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, NBCS BA

Venue: Oracle Park, San Francisco, CA

Questions/Prompts:

1. Will we see the first Yankee homer of the year today, or will the hit parade continue to stay in the park?

2. What will Cam Schlittler’s stat line in his season debut be?

Swanson: Dodgers' Andy Pages proves he's primed for a potential breakout season

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 26, 2026: Los Angeles Dodgers center fielder Andy Pages.
Andy Pages runs the bases after hitting a three-run home run in the fifth inning of the Dodgers' 8-2 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Andy Pages hasn’t forgotten about last postseason, though he’d like to. And he’d surely like you to forget about it, too — or, well, most of it.

Feel free to retain the mental image of his epic smash-and-grab catch over teammate Kiké Hernández.

That stunning play in the bottom of the ninth inning didn’t just save Game 7 of the World Series, it also spared Pages’ reputation. Covered for the ignominy of his historically woeful four-for-51 hitting performance.

You know what will help everyone totally flush those memories? To turn the proverbial page? Maybe keep us from mentioning it ever again?

A steady diet of games like Thursday’s.

In an 8-2 season-opening victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium, Pages stood out among his club’s standouts.

And, as the eighth man in the order, he also served up a reminder that there really will be no rest for weary opposing pitchers this season.

The buoyant bottom of the lineup has bite, too: Let the record show it was Pages who hit the Dodgers’ first home run and drove in the club’s first runs to kick off their pursuit of a third consecutive World Series championship.

That it was he who cracked the code against Diamondbacks righty Zac Gallen in the fifth inning, teeing off on a three-run, 400-foot home run to left-center field.

And that it was his at-bat to lead off the eighth — a full-count single the other way, into right field — that Roberts had to mention postgame.

In spring training, Roberts anointed Pages as this season’s “pick-to-click” candidate, in part because of how hard the 25-year-old center fielder has been working on improving his plate discipline after swinging at 32% of pitches outside of the zone last year.

The pick-to-click distinction previously went to Teoscar Hernández in 2024, before he became an All-Star in his first season with the Dodgers. Last year, Michael Conforto was Roberts’ pick.

Small wonder, perhaps, that Pages isn’t putting too much stock in his manager’s prediction: “It feels really nice for him to say that about me, or to pick me, but obviously I'm not really focused on that,” he said, through an interpreter.

What he’s focused on, he said, “is just trying to do everything I can, every day, to get a little bit better.”

That’s what’s got his manager so revved up.

“He’s a complete player,” Roberts gushed. “And I’m excited to see what he can do this year.”

Is an Andy Pages Breakout Season loading?

Andy Pages celebrates with Teoscar Hernández and Max Muncy after hitting a home run at Dodger Stadium.
Andy Pages, center, celebrates with Teoscar Hernández, left, and Max Muncy after hitting a three-run home run in the fifth inning Thursday against the Arizona Diamondbacks. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Were last season’s 27 home runs — second most on the Dodgers, behind Shohei Ohtani’s 55 — not a breakout?

I think ... not?

Not when Pages so clearly has so much more to give.

Now when he does his homework like he did this spring, stationing himself in front of a pitching machine, calling out balls and strikes. (Watch out, Automated Balls and Strikes system?)

Not if the Dodgers can come to trust him at the plate like they now feel secure with him blanketing the outfield.

“Even last year when there were questions if he could play center field at a high level,” Roberts said. “And he's worked his tail off, he really has. Every single day, he's putting in work and he just keeps getting better — his jumps, his lines to the ball, and obviously the arm strength is there.”

Read more:Miguel Rojas cherishes final opening day as 'Uncle Miggy' in Dodgers' win over Arizona

On Thursday, Pages had another one of his sensational snags, taking an angle that would’ve made a defensive back proud in pursuit of Geraldo Perdomo’s fly ball to start the seventh. Stretched out, Pages slid beneath the ball to add to his opening-day highlight reel.

“I feel good,” Pages said, when I asked him afterward not about last postseason, but about his confidence heading into this season — though his mind went back there anyway.

“It's something that happened earlier, the postseason is what the postseason was,” he said. “I'm not really focused on that, I'm focused on what I'm doing right now and my confidence is really high right now.”

Keep it up, and all anyone will remember is the heroics — including those to come.

Read more:Plaschke: Seeing double: Dodgers celebrate titles on a sparkling opening day

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Yankees news: Offense showcased their flexibility right out of the gate

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MARCH 25: Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 of the New York Yankees reacts after catching a line drive with his bare hand for the out in the sixth inning during the game between the New York Yankees and the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

NY Post | Greg Joyce: The Yankees rolled over the Giants on Wednesday, but if you were to guess how they did it, you’d be hard-pressed to find a lot of people who would’ve had them getting 10 hits with nine of them being singles, not one home run slugged, and absolutely nothing from Aaron Judge. That’s the versatility of one of the deepest lineups in baseball though, and they put up the most runs in 2025 for a reason. If they want to repeat the process, there’ll be more nights than you’d expect where the stars take a backseat in a lineup that can do damage at any point, and Aaron Boone is enjoying the process being showcased right away — as the Yankee skipper put it, “I think we can beat you a lot of different ways.”

NY Daily News | Gary Phillips ($): One of the topics on hand for Opening Day was the fact that it was exclusively broadcast on Netflix, adding yet another streaming provider into the mix of platforms that have MLB games in their possession. The full gambit of Yankees games this year will require access to as many as five subscriptions, a wild number to think about when the organization owns their own broadcast media company. Gone are the days of YES carrying all but the occasional national media weekend game though, and the players can relate to fans’ struggles in finding all of the content. Players like Tim Hill and Ryan McMahon expressed their frustration for fans having to juggle all of these streaming costs, with McMahon relaying how he struggled to find where he could watch the WBC games as they were happening. There’s no easy solution in sight as MLB’s wonky media rights deals will surely be a topic of discussion in the upcoming CBA talks, but it’s hard to imagine putting the genie back in the lamp after the commissioner rubbed it.

FanGraphs: Wild predictions are always fun to shoot off right before the start of the season, and the FanGraphs staff took their shot at making some fun ones. Of relevance to New York, Jake Mailhot made the bold claim that four AL East teams will make the playoffs but all of them will fail to make it past the ALDS — a prediction that, logistically, sounds impossible so long as the division winner ends up with one of the top two seeds and a longshot even if all four play in the Wild Card Round but hey, who knows. Not to be outdone, Matt Martell took the stance that neither Aaron Judge or Shohei Ohtani will repeat as MVPs this year, which would be a major upset for sure. Perhaps the boldest yet comes from Paul Sporer, who is throwing down a Ryan McMahon 30-homer season prediction — from your lips to God’s ears, friend.

The St. Louis Cardinals begin the 2026 Championship Season

Mar 27, 2025; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; The Budweiser Clydesdales runs around the warning track before the opening day game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Minnesota Twins at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

The season has started! Hooray! Alas, we have too little data to meaningfully dissect. So, today you get to read some final Spring Training tidbits.  Things that came up that didn’t make in neatly in another article.  It will seem kind of random, especially coming after the Regular Season has started.  So, there is that.

First, I will do a quick rundown on the Cardinal’s players who experienced the WBC.  Then a few random stats regarding Spring Training.  Last, will do a quick demographic look at the 2026 Opening Day roster.

Cardinal Players in the World Baseball Classic

Here is quick rundown of various Cardinal players who elected to participate in the WBC.  Suffice to say, this year was not nearly as disruptive as the experience of 2023. 

In no particular order:

Leonardo Bernal – Leo played all 4 games with Panama before they were eliminated.  He appears to have been the main catcher ahead of M. Amaya.  He recorded 17 PA, compiling a .235 BA.  He was made aware before leaving for the WBC that he would be returning to the MiLB side of Cardinal camp and find himself assigned to Memphis.  This is the next logical step in his progression.

Luis Gastelum – Luis played for team Mexico.  He appeared in 2 of their 4 games, pitching 1 inning while giving up a hit.  His limited use puts him a bit behind in camp.  Like Bernal, he was made aware before he left for WBC of his pending assignment to MiLB camp. When Oli was asked about which pitcher had caught his attention this spring, Gastelum and his change-up was the first mention. 

Matt Koperniak – Matt played for team Great Britain.  He acquitted himself well.  He got in all 4 games, going 3 for 9, with 4 BB and 3 K’s, plus 2 RBI.  He was an NRI to MLB camp this year and will retain that status upon his return, at least for a few days.  I don’t know his disposition at the end of camp.  I have him on the bubble for the Memphis squad.  Baez, Ugueto, Ledbetter and Madris would seem to be the 4 priority OFers and I’m not sure both Antico and Koperniak will make the squad.  It will be a few more days before we know.

Riley O’Brien – Riley was going to play for Korea, but an injured calf prevented him from joining the team at the outset.  Calf injuries can hang on with older guys, and yes, he is older.  He is actually one of the oldest players on the Cardinals team at 31 years old.  Only Ramon Urias and Ryne Stanek are older.  Surprised? He ended up not participating in the WBC, remaining behind in Cardinal’s camp.  He is just now getting back into the swing of things in Jupiter.

Ivan Herrera – Ivan did not participate due to insurance issues, which I suspect were related to his recovery from off-season elbow surgery.  The insurance snafu, which snagged many, may turn out to be a blessing in disguise as neither his arm nor his legs are yet in full-go condition.  WBC play would likely not have helped his ramp up, which will carry into the first part of the regular season.

To complete the report, we have Team Italy players Thomas Saggese and Gordon Graceffo, who legitimately could view themselves as the second incarnation of the Memphis Mafia. 

Thomas Saggese – Sags served a utility role for Team Italy, playing behind such luminaries as Sam Antonacci (SS), Jon Berti (2B), Andrew Fisher (3B).  He got 11 PAs over two weeks, which set him behind offensively.  Likewise, he got no time in the outfield, which did not advance his hopes to expand his repertoire and solidify a multi-position utility role.  In the 11 PAs, he struck out 5 times and did not walk.  He got one hit. 

Gordon Graceffo – Gordon pitched twice out of Italy’s bullpen.  No reliever made more than 4 appearances.  That said, two appearances in almost two weeks puts him behind in terms of building up for the regular season.  In two IP, Graceffo had four K’s and 3 BBs, with 1 ER.

For both Saggese and Graceffo, I saw both these guys as bubble guys with a shot to break camp with the MLB squad for Opening Day.  The odds became longer just because they are behind and it would be difficult to catch up in the MLB environment.  Plus, both have options.  I expected both them to start in Memphis and come up pretty quickly.  It turns out Sags made the Opening Day roster, ahead of Nelson Velazquez. Although I don’t it was Sags 40-man spot that blocked NV.

Closing Spring Training Notes

The Spring Training story is written and in the books.  I’ll put my own exclamation point on it with a few data points and conclusions (spoiler alert: Spring Training results have about the same predictive value as how often you open/close your refrigerator predicts next week’s weather). 

Record – 17-9 (with 2 ties)(not counting exhibitions)

The last time the Cardinals had such a fine run of games in Spring Training?  They finished with a Grapefruit League best at 17-7….in 2023.

As a note, the Cardinals were 7-3 in games decided by rallies in the late innings predominated by minor leaguers.  If anything, we can take a hint that the Cardinals minor leaguers are better than the other teams’ minor leaguers.

The Cardinals were 10-4 at home, where the games were predominantly established players vs. other team’s young guys (their travel squad).

At 119 runs scored, the Cardinals finished 10th in Grapefruit League play (out of 15 teams).

At 106 runs allowed, the Cardinals finished 4th in Grapefuit Leage play.  Feeling pretty good about that pitching are we?  Consider.  The Cardinals played 18 games against Houston, Miami and Washington (their closest neighbors).  All of those teams sported BA below .200 this spring.  Cause, or effect?  Good pitching?  Poor offenses faced?  Local weather factors?

In 2025 Spring Training, Victor Scott II tied for the team lead with 4 HR.  The player he tied with?  Luken Baker.  Consider that when you try to project Nelson Velazquez.   

The Opening Day Roster

The Cardinals open with a roster of players that average 27.3 years old.  That will line out to be one of the youngest in baseball, if not the youngest. I believe they capture the crown because Mikolas skews the Nats number so much.

Of the 26 players on the roster, 12 were drafted by StL and one came via the IFA route.  That is on the low side for their historical standards, but not markedly so.

Interestingly, 3 of the 26 were “purchased”.  That doesn’t mean anything, it just stood out. Not traded for. Not claimed on waivers. Bought. I think this is the result of a strategy to essentially jump the line on the waiver claim order for players who have been DFA’ed.

6 of the 8 bullpen arms are without minor league options.  That is a new twist.  The old days of “roster flexibility” are gone.

Mariners barrage of solo shots not enough against Guardians in Opening Day loss

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 26: Brendan Donovan #33 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates his solo home run during the first inning against the Cleveland Guardians at T-Mobile Park on March 26, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For an offense that was supposed to add more contact and on-base ability this off-season, it was a disappointing showing from the Mariners on Opening Day in front of a sold-out (as announced by the Mariners) crowd. The Mariners hitters combined for 14 strikeouts, scoring all their runs on solo homers. They only had two non-dinger hits: two doubles, one from Brendan Donovan and one by Randy Arozarena (that probably should have been scored as a single stretched to a double with some shaky play from the Guardians outfield).

Initially, it looked like the Mariners were going to be able to outmaneuver the Guardians, despite Logan Gilbert surrendering a first-inning home run to rookie Chase DeLauter, who pounced on a slider from Gilbert and took him deep to put the Mariners in an early hole.

“I was probably leaning too much on not walking [DeLauter] there,” said Gilbert postgame. “I just didn’t rip it like I usually do, a true slider.”

But Brendan Donovan was right there to pick up his teammate, making some history in his first plate appearance as a Mariner. This is the first leadoff home run on Opening Day in Mariners history:

“That’s a lot of prayers answered right there,” said Donovan postgame, who admitted he was trying to lean the ball fair when it came off his bat.

Marine layer? More like Mariner layer, as in the second Dominic Canzone proved he didn’t leave his power behind in Arizona, either, blasting this go-ahead run at 108 mph.

But that was the last time the Mariners were in the lead in this game. Guardians starter Tanner Bibee was able to keep the Mariners quiet, striking out seven over his five innings of work before being forced out in the sixth without throwing a pitch with what was later announced as right shoulder inflammation.

Logan Gilbert, while not the most efficient with his pitches, was able to match Bibee until the top of the fifth. He suffered a bad-luck weakly-hit leadoff single off the bat of Rhys Hoskins, but then gave up a double to Daniel Schneeman on a slider that didn’t slide enough to put runners on second and third with no outs. Brayan Rocchio then punished a terrible cutter that wound up dead red into the right field corner for a two-RBI double that put the Guardians ahead 3-2.

Gilbert relied on his cutter as the most often used of his secondary pitches, second only behind his four-seamer, while burying his slider in his arsenal. The fastball, which started out 95-96, was down to 94

But again, Luke Raley picked up his teammate, assuring Logan could be handed no worse than a no-decision with a game-tying solo shot in the bottom of the fifth. Raley continues to look like his 2024 self instead of the injury-ravaged 2025 version and it’s great to see

Both teams turned to their bullpens in the sixth. Tanner Bibee came out to pitch the sixth, but left shortly after throwing his warmup pitches with what was announced as right shoulder inflammation

The Guardians took the lead back in the seventh against Gabe Speier, again utilizing their brand of high-contact baseball to create traffic on the bases. Brayan Rocchio nubbed a single off a slider at the bottom of the zone, and Chase DeLauter ambushed a first-pitch sinker that caught too much plate for a single of his own. José Ramírez then doubled on a slider that was located approximately at his shoetops, sending it deep into the gap and scoring both runners, then to add insult to injury stole third base before Speier was able to

Again, it was Canzone pulling the Mariners back into it, seizing the MLB home run lead (for today, at least) with his second homer of the game, rudely greeting former Mariner Shawn Armstrong in the seventh with this titanic blast:

“Heaters down the middle,” smirked Canzone when asked what he was looking for on these homers. “And they were just kind of in the honey hole, down and in.” (Hello Honey Hole sandwiches, have I got a pitch for you.)

Casey Legumina also had to deal with some traffic against the pesky Guardians, walking Rhys Hoskins on a pitch that Cal should have challenged for a strikeout looking and giving up an ambush first-pitch single to Gabriel Arias. Brayan Rocchio then apparently his pant leg got nicked by a sweeper, loading the bases, but Legumina wiggled out of trouble with a beautiful pitch sequence to the uber-pest Steven Kwan, getting the contact-oriented Kwan reaching after sinkers up and away before burying a changeup for Kwan to swing over. In a game that maybe didn’t have a ton to get excited about aside from Canzone’s big day at the plate, let us pause a moment for Casey Legumina striking out Steven Kwan.

It was Legumina’s first-ever Opening Day start and he arrived at the park in a sharply tailored cobalt blue suit. When I complimented him on it, he smiled and said, “Thanks. It’s my Opening Day suit. I’ve been waiting three years to wear it.”

Cooper Criswell got dinged up by a solo home run in his outing, again the victim of the rookie DeLauter, who demolished one of Criswell’s cutters to lead off the ninth, but rebounded to strike out José Ramírez on a changeup at the edge of the plate. He then walked former Coug Kyle Manzardo but was able to get Bo Naylor chasing after a changeup for a weak-contact double play, neatly fielded by Criswell. If those are the two non-leverage arms those are two acceptable outings from Criswell and Legumina.

The pitching leaking six runs isn’t the path to winning baseball for any team, let alone the Mariners, but the issue tonight was the offense, which just wasn’t able to click all night, putting up disjointed at-bats. Cal Raleigh struck out to lead off the eighth, once again not using his challenge despite the pitch looking like it landed outside. Postgame, Dan Wilson reaffirmed that his hitters do have the green light to challenge and they will “remind the guys as much as we can about using the challenges” (which in Dan Wilson language is about as stern a rebuke as you will get).

“It is new for everybody, and I think it doesn’t jump to the forefront of your mind all the time when you’re in the box. But it’s part of the game now and something we will use.”

One player who isn’t panicking after tonight’s game is Brendan Donovan, who said the focus is on quality at-bats and earning a little “dot” in Kevin Seitzer’s notebook to represent a quality at-bat: “chase as many dots as possible.” Sounding eerily like his new manager, he praised this group’s ability to not quit, fighting for every at-bat.

“I know we didn’t get the win,” Donovan said, “but it’s cool to show that this group can flip it on a time at any time.”

“I’m excited.“

Sometimes excitement is a blue suit you don’t get to wear and then one day you get to take it out of the closet. The Mariners will seek their first win of the season tomorrow at 6:40 with George Kirby on the mound.

Scary thought for MLB: Dynastic Dodgers might have their best team yet

LOS ANGELES — It was Joe Namath sitting poolside guaranteeing a Super Bowl victory for the New York Jets.

It was Muhammad Ali at ringside telling the world he’d “whup’’ George Foreman in the Rumble in the Jungle.

And it was Los Angeles Dodgers owner Mark Walter and president Stan Kasten predicting a baseball dynasty.

The date was Feb. 28, 2013, and the Dodgers were coming out of the throes of bankruptcy, failing to reach the playoffs three consecutive seasons, when Walter was asked whether it was remotely possible to duplicate Atlanta’s success when they won 14 consecutive division titles under Kasten as president.

“It's going to be done again," Walter told USA TODAY Sports. “This time on the West Coast.’’

Kasten recoiled, Walter apologized, and 13 years later Thursday night, were laughing about their bravado.

“It’s funny, too,’’ Walter said Thursday, “because at the time I didn’t realize how hard it would be. But even though we did it, it's still crazy.

"It’s nuts."

It’s also reality.

The Dodgers have since played 13 full seasons, won 12 NL West Division titles, five National League pennants and three World Series championships.

And the way they looked Thursday night in their 8-2season-opening victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks in front of a sellout crowd of 53,712 at Dodger Stadium, their dynasty isn’t about to end any time soon.

The Dodgers, after spotting the D-backs a 2-0 lead, proudly showed off their relentless lineup, pounding out 10 hits while limiting the D-backs to just one hit the final six innings.

“I think the word to say is ‘relentless,’’’ Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “It’s a relentless lineup. ... When you face a lineup like ours, it certainly has to be taxing. When you feel like you have to be perfect, and continue to be executing and executing, it’s tough, mentally and physically.’’

Really, the most difficult aspect of the Dodgers' evening was to keep a straight face during the pregame ceremony watching award-winning actor Will Ferrell driving a blue Cadillac through the center-field gate carrying the Dodgers' Freddie Freeman and Miguel Rojas in the back seat, pretending as if they had retrieved stolen World Series championship trophies from Ferrell as they paraded around the outfield.

“Freddie and Miggy ... argh, it was rough,’’ Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts said. “They did all right. I gotta get them in some [acting] classes.’’

Said Roberts: “I think they’re probably be 'B' actors.’’

The Los Angeles Dodgers' Freddie Freeman and Miguel Rojas carry the 2024 and 2025 World Series trophies in a car driven by actor Will Farrell before the Opening Day game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium.

The pregame ceremony was a sweet reminder that the Dodgers are the first team since the New York Yankees a quarter-century ago to win back-to-back World Series titles. Their next conquest is vying to become the first National League team to win three consecutive titles, and only the third overall.

Unlike a year ago when the Dodgers felt pressure to repeat, this time around they consider it a privilege just to have a chance for a three-peat.

“To win three in a row,’’ Roberts said, “that’s unprecedented in the National League. So that’s where it’s more like everyone’s hopeful, excited about it on that potential. But it’s not necessarily a pressure thing in my opinion.’’

While the rest of the baseball world might become nauseous at the sight of seeing the Dodgers back on an October stage collecting yet another World Series trophy, the Dodgers have decided this year to mock their haters.

They showed a video before the game hyping the possibility of history saying, “What’ wrong with being the bad guy?’’ The video ended with the tagline: “Great sequels build legendary trilogies.’’

“That’s self-proclaimed,’’ Roberts said, “so I’m going to embrace it. I don’t know, I guess people like a villain. That’s respect in some way. So, I don’t know, I guess that’s a good thing.’’

Says Betts: “I personally don’t care. You can call us whatever you want to call us. At the end of the day, you’ve got to go play the game. So villains, not villains, whatever. The game will determine who wins and who loses. The villain thing is outside noise.’’

Really, Kasten and Walter will tell you, there’s no reason for anyone to consider them the bad guys. They play by the same rules as everyone else. It’s just that their stack of chips are bigger than everyone else. Their revenue was about $850 million last year, so why not dole out more than $300 million of it to their players, along with $150 million in luxury tax penalties to help out their peers?

Would people be happier if the money just went to the Guggenheim investors to fatten their checkbooks, or would the Dodgers still be hated?

“I don’t think fans hate us now,’’ Kasten said. “I think competitors are impressed with us because they know how hard the job is. I think other fans respect us. So, I think hate is the wrong word, I really do.

“Yeah, we’re the bad guys because everyone needs a target, 'Let’s beat the Dodgers.' My God, we’re playing a game for goodness stakes. Everyone wants their home team to beat someone prominent. And if we could serve that purpose to motivate other teams, great. I’m happy to jazz up the local fans.’’

But no matter how much the Dodgers win, no matter how much they spend, Kasten says, don’t hate the player, hate the game.

“I’ve said for years we have advantages in this market that other teams don’t have,’’ Kasten said. “I acknowledge that. I‘m not going to apologize for capitalizing. That’s what we do. That’s what we’re supposed to do.

“I’m very proud of what we’ve done, but I recognize we have advantages that other teams don’t get to benefit from, and yet, they’re dong a great job with what they have. I have total respect for every team that is competing hard, I really do.’’

There will be a time, Kasten and Walter say, when the winning will ultimately stop. They realize it’s not good for the game for the Dodgers to win year after year. The game needs an injection of parity, Walter says, giving fans hope in every market that their team can be the last one standing.

“We want the game to grow,’’ Walter said. “It’s good for everyone.’’

In the meantime, while waiting to see if a salary cap is imposed, Kasten and Walter believe the postseason is still the equalizer. It’s not as if the Dodgers are rolling out 110-win seasons. They just happen to get in the playoffs year after year, and unlike their predecessors, are becoming October warriors.

“People need to understand that in our structure in baseball we have the firewall of our playoffs system that keeps things even,’’ Kasten says. “It doesn’t matter how you do in the regular season. You’ve got to win the postseason. Anyone has a chance.

“So good team, bad team, a villain team, ruining baseball, it stops when we start the postseason.’’

The Dodgers lost their first two World Series appearances before ending their drought during the 2020 COVID season. They were down 2 games to 1 in the best-of-five series against the San Diego Padres in 2024 only to pitch consecutive shutouts. They were down to their last two outs in Game 7 of the 2025 World Series to the Toronto Blue Jays, only for Rojas to save their season with a game-tying homer.

“It’s funny,’’ Walter said. “That was the only game I thought we’d win was he night we won it.’’

If the Dodgers had lost those World Series, it would have been eerily similar to Atlanta’s fortunes when Kasten was their president, winning the 1995 World Series, but losing in four other World Series appearances. The difference is that Atlanta was an absolute mess, and they had to chop the team down to its studs before building a dynasty. Kasten and Andrew Friedman, president of baseball operations, didn’t have the luxury of taking their time for a rebuild. It was win, and win quickly.

“When I came here,’’ said Kasten, a Hall of Fame executive candidate, “we knew we were joining an iconic, historic franchise that had been down on its luck a little. We had an opportunity to do this, and to bring the Dodger brand back. We couldn't come in and say, 'Wait for us. We'll be good in four or five years.' Because we had a fan base that had supported this team for five decades. They deserved and expected success now.

“But we said from Day 1, because of the resources in the market, we can do both things at once.’’

Now, 13 years after the start of this dynasty, the Dodgers believe this is their best version, their most talented, compete and perhaps closest team assembled.

“This is the best team,’’ Roberts said. “I think in ’21 it was a very talented team. That was the year we won 106 games. But I think this team, as far as the talent, the complete buy-in, this team is it. But like I’ve said every single year, we’ve still got to go out there and play.’’

When the Dodgers arrived to the ballpark on Thursday, awaiting was a gold-trimmed jersey, a gold-brimmed cap and a giftbag from Shohei Ohtani. Inside were custom watches, and a note: “Let's three-peat.’’

“That talks a lot about what kind of human he is, not just on the field but off the field," said Rojas, who is playing his final season. “That watch, we’re going to keep it forever, and we’re going to remember the best player in the world gave us a watch for Opening Day in 2026.’’

They’d love to finish the season with another piece of jewelry, like another diamond-encrusted ring, knowing that perhaps the only thing that can stop them is a lockout at the end of the year.

“Enjoy it,’’ Roberts said, “because nothing is guaranteed. It’s going to be a great year. I hope everybody pours their spirits and nd their joy into this season because it’s going to be a great one.

“We’ll just figure out where it goes after that.’’

Follow Bob Nightengale on Bluesky and X @Bnightengale.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers embrace villain role with sights on World Series three-peat

Guardians Defeat Mariners for Opening Day Win

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 26: Chase DeLauter #24 of the Cleveland Guardians rounds the bases on a home run coming on a 3-2 count in his first Major League at-bat in the first inning at T-Mobile Park on March 26, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Russell Lee Verlinger/Cleveland Guardians/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Tonight was mostly very fun for Guardians fans with one big caveat relating to Tanner Bibee. But, Cleveland beat Seattle 6-4, and here’s how it happened.

The game got started with a very exciting event – a Chase DeLauter home run on his first official major league at-bat:

There is a reason we have been screaming for him to play for Cleveland since last May, folks. Please, please, stay healthy.

DeLauter debuted a new home run celebration for the team:

Apparently inspired by a team trip to Medieval Times:

Unfortunately, Brendan Donovan followed up with a homer off Tanner Bibee to tie the game as the Mariners’ first batter. Bibee gave up three solo homers, one on a fastball, one on a sinker (to Dominic Canzone) and one on a cutter (to Luke Raley). So, that’s not helpful. He only gave up 4 hits and 2 walks and struck out 7… but left in the sixth with what was later reported as right shoulder inflammation. So… that’s bad. Hopefully it’ll be a short IL stint.

Back to more positive news- after a Rhys Hoskins single and a Daniel Schneemann double, Brayan Rocchio put the Guardians up 3-2 with a double:

After Bibee gave up the game-tying homer, Jose rapped a double to score Rocchio and DeLauter who had reached via singles in the top of the seventh.

Shawn Armstrong surrendered another homer to Canzone in the bottom of the frame, but Canzone got a well-placed cutter in the bottom of the zone. The bullpen was spotless outside of that with a scoreless inning from Connor Brogdon in the sixth, and ine and a third DOMINANT innings from Erik Sabrowski, who struck out four and went through the heart of the Mariners’ order like a knife through butter. Cade Smith had a perfect ninth for the save, striking out one.

Oh, did I forget to mention that DeLauter hit ABOTHER HOMER??!!:

The Guardians got their first win and I already can’t wait for tomorrow night’s sequel!

0-1: Chart

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 26: Cal Raleigh #29 of the Seattle Mariners strikes out during the fifth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at T-Mobile Park on March 26, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Guardians 6, Mariners 4

Opening Day festivities: Dominic Canzone, .23 WPA

Opening Day fartivities: Gabe Speier, -.31 WPA

Game thread comment of the day:

It was not the most fun Opening Day game, but always remember:

Oklahoma City Comets preliminary 2026 roster

Oklahoma City's Hyeseong Kim (6) catches a fly ball during the minor league baseball between the Oklahoma City Comets and the Tacoma Rainers a the Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, April, 16, 2025. | SARAH PHIPPS/THE OKLAHOMAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Oklahoma City Comets, the Dodgers’ Triple-A affiliate, unveiled their initial roster on Thursday, with opening day set for Friday night in Oklahoma City against the Albuquerque Isotopes, a Rockies’ farm team.

Among the 43 players on the Dodgers 40-man roster, 10 are on the injured list (three on the 60-day IL, which expands this list to 43), and 26 are active in the majors. Six of the seven remaining 40-man players for the Comets.

River Ryan is the only unaccounted 40-man player not on the preliminary Oklahoma City roster, but he could join them soon. Ryan is slated to pitch this weekend in Arizona, Fabian Ardaya at The Athletic reported Thursday.

Hyeseong Kim lost out to Alex Freeland for a spot on the opening day roster, with the Dodgers wanting Kim to split time between second base, shortstop, and center field in Triple-A.

“There’s no doubt that Hyeseong at some point is going to come help us out. I think the driver, as far as at the outset, is giving Hyeseong an opportunity to play every day, play all over the diamond,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Sunday.

Kyle Hurt is among the relievers. After an impressive spring training, the Dodgers opted to slow-play the right-hander missed all of last season after Tommy John surgery. It wouldn’t be a surprise to see him get called up as a need arises in the majors.

Paul Gervase also impressed in spring, and left-hander Ronan Kopp is in his first year on the 40-man roster. Expect a lot of strikeouts from that pair.

Ryan Ward is also on the 40-man roster for the first time, but he returns to Oklahoma City, where the reigning Pacific Coast League MVP he holds several club records in the Bricktown era, a period since the current ballpark opened in 1998. Michael Siani will patrol the outfield for the Comets, likely flanked by Zach Ehrhard and/or James Tibbs.

Ehrhard and Tibbs, acquired from the Boston Red Sox for Dustin May last July, impressed as non-roster invitees in camp and as the older and more experienced of the plethora of stellar Dodgers outfield prospects are the closest to the majors among the group.

Jack Suwinski was briefly on the Dodgers’ 40-man roster this offseason, as was utility man Ryan Fitzgerald, who will likely play all over the infield and potentially some outfield for the Comets. Defensive whiz Noah Miller will play shortstop for Oklahoma City, whose infield also has Nick Senzel and Ryan Fitgerald, all of whom were non-roster invitees this spring for the Dodgers.

Veteran pitchers Cole Irvin and Keynan Middleton are on the Comets’ staff. Other Oklahoma City pitchers with major league experience are River’s brother Ryder Ryan, Garrett McDaniels, and Carlos Duran (pitched one game for the Athletics last season).

Irvin and Ryder Ryan will start the first two games, followed by Christian Romero on Sunday, per play-by-play broadcaster Alex Freedman.

Left-hander Antoine Kelly and right-hander Chris Campos, who were the last two non-roster pitchers standing in Dodgers camp this spring, each are on the Comets preliminary roster. left-hander Logan Allen, who signed a minor league contract last week, is also with Oklahoma City.

Pitcher José Rodríguez, who was touted as a potential Rule 5 Draft pick last December but went unselected, was a non-roster invitee this spring training but did not pitch. He starts the season on the 60-day injured list, as does veteran first baseman Matt Gorski.

Oklahoma City preliminary roster

  • Starting pitchers (4): Cole Irvin, Ryder Ryan, Cristian Romero, Carlos Duran
  • Right-handed relievers (8): Kyle Hurt*, Paul Gervase*, Chris Campos, Keynan Middleton, Jordan Weems, Wyatt Mills, Antonio Knowles, Jerming Rosario
  • Left-handed relievers (4): Ronan Kopp*, Antoine Kelly, Logan Allen Garrett McDaniels
  • Catchers (2): Eliézer Alfonzo, Seby Zavala
  • Infielders (4): Ryan Fitzgerald, Noah Miller, Nick Senzel, Austin Gauthier
  • Outfielders (4): Michael Siani*, Ryan Ward*, Jack Suwinski, Zach Ehrhard
  • Infielder/outfielders (2): Hyeseong Kim*, James Tibbs III
  • Injured list (2): rhp José Rodríguez (60-day), 1b Matt Gorski (60-day)

The Comets will finalize the roster before Friday’s season opener.

Carson Benge’s electric Mets debut was ‘everything and more’

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Carson Benge hit his first big league homer in the Mets' Opening Day win on March 26, 2026, Image 2 shows Mets Carson Benge is greeted by his teammates after the final out of the ninth inning, Image 3 shows New York Mets starting pitcher Sean Manaea (59) dumps water on right fielder Carson Benge
Carson Benge Mets

A bird defecating on a person’s head promises good fortune, according to the old superstition. 

There is less information established about the dark or promising omens when a bird dies nearby in your major league debut, but maybe Carson Benge will be the test case. 

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On an afternoon that had a bit of everything — a phrase that nearly applies literally in this case — the Mets’ exciting rookie first sunk, then soared, then watched a bird soar and then sink in a scintillating and strange 11-7 Mets Opening Day victory over the Pirates at Citi Field. 

How did this measure up to your expectations, Carson? 

“Everything and more,” Benge said, accurately, after a Thursday that was mostly wondrous and part bizarre. 

Carson Benge hit his first big league homer in the Mets’ 11-7 Opening Day win over the Pirates on March 26,
2026 at Citi Field. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

First, the wondrous: Every at-bat from the club’s No. 2 prospect looked stronger than the previous one. He struck out twice, first against Paul Skenes — “Calm down,” Benge told himself after the three-pitch strikeout. “Deep breath, calm down.” — then Yohan Ramirez, before an impressive fight against lefty Mason Montgomery in the fifth. Benge dug a 1-2 hole before fouling off two pitches and letting three balls go by, earning an eight-pitch walk. 

With a bit more familiarity and feeling better about himself, Benge stepped up in the sixth inning, got a first-pitch sweeper from Pittsburgh’s Justin Lawrence and smoked a home run to right field

A person known as a baseball player and not an entertainer — a throwback who does not show much emotion on the field — made an exception. The 23-year-old watched the ball fly, touched first base and took a leap, his back to home plate, while his arms crept toward his torso and flexed. The moment he had dreamt about as a child had become a reality. 

“I just got chills,” said Benge, who was a spring star and only learned Monday that he won an Opening Day job. “This is where I’m supposed to be and just having fun.” 

Carson Benge is greeted by his teammates after the Mets’ Opening Day victory. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

He resumed his gait, rounded the bases and arrived at a rocking dugout. Manager Carlos Mendoza “told me it’s fun here,” Benge relayed with a smile. “I was like, ‘You’re right.’ ” 

He went through the high-five line, which was punctuated not by a slapping of hands but a big hug from Juan Soto. 

From there, Benge heard the sold-out crowd swell louder until he made his way to the top step of the dugout, where he took a curtain call. 

“It means the world,” said Benge — whose parents made the trip from Oklahoma, and who had 22 friends and family at the park. “Having all the people that have sacrificed so much for me come up and watch that happen is definitely big.” 

Offensively, Benge added a five-pitch walk in the eighth and swiped second base, which was the last normal “first” he could check off. There was the bizarre one — perhaps one proving that Benge can take whatever that is thrown at him in stride. 

Late in the game, “I heard a thud,” Benge said. He looked over and a bird had fallen from the sky a few feet away in right field. 

“I looked over and it was just down,” Benge said. “Down for the count.” 

He did not panic, his eyes trained on the batter. At least on the field, he appeared to be the only one aware of the animal. 

Mets starting pitcher Sean Manaea dumps water on right fielder Carson Benge during the Mets’ Opening Day win. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

“I just looked around and was like, is anyone going to grab this?” Benge said. “No one was looking at it, so I wasn’t about to stop the game for it.” 

Unfortunately for him, the fans noticed, too, and they began chanting for him to pick it up. He declined, and after the frame a stadium worker ran onto the field and removed the bird, ending a surreal first day of Benge’s major league life. 

Is this a good or bad sign? 

“I’m not superstitious,” Benge said. “It worked out.”

Andy Pages’ 3-run shot sparks Dodgers’ 8-2 comeback win over the Diamondbacks in season opener

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Andy Pages hit a go-ahead, three-run homer in the fifth inning, and the Los Angeles Dodgers rallied past the Arizona Diamondbacks 8-2 on Thursday, opening the season with a victory in pursuit of their third consecutive World Series championship.

Three of the Dodgers’ first four hits in the fifth off Zac Gallen came with two strikes. Max Muncy singled, Teoscar Hernández reached on an infield single to Gallen, Pages’ homer traveled 400 feet and Miguel Rojas singled. Shohei Ohtani drew a walk to chase Gallen, who began the game with four shutout innings and a 2-0 lead.

Juan Morillo came on and got two quick outs. But he walked Freddie Freeman and gave up an infield single to Will Smith. First baseman Carlos Santana dived toward the foul line and stopped the ball before bobbling it, allowing Rojas to score from third and extend the Dodgers’ lead to 4-2.

Pages made a sparkling defensive play in center leading off the seventh. He chased a fly ball from Geraldo Perdomo, diving and landing on his belly to make the catch.

The Dodgers tacked on four more runs in the seventh off reliever Taylor Clarke. Kyle Tucker got his first hit and first RBI in his debut. The $240 million right fielder doubled in Ohtani, who was hit by Clarke, and then scored on Mookie Betts’ single. Smith had a two-run homer, making it 8-2.

Arizona led 2-0 on Perdomo’s two-run homer off World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto (1-0) in the fourth. Corbin Carroll singled leading off and Perdomo followed with a two-strike shot.

Yamamoto allowed two runs and five hits in six innings while striking out six.

Gallen (0-1) gave up a leadoff single to Ohtani in the first and a one-out walk to Muncy in the second. The Dodgers didn’t have another runner until the fifth. Gallen allowed four runs and four hits in four innings, struck out two and walked two.

Up Next

D-backs RHP Ryne Nelson (7-3, 3.39 ERA) starts the middle game of the series Friday against Dodgers RHP Emmet Sheehan (6-3, 2.82).

Yankees look to build on balanced attack from Opening Day win

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Austin Wells had two hits in the Yankees' Opening Day win over the Giants on March 25, 2026 in San Francisco

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SAN FRANCISCO — Aaron Boone likes to call this the week of overreactions.

Small sample sizes in the opening days of the season can provide dangerous fodder from which to make sweeping conclusions.

But given that this group of Yankees hitters had a substantial run together last season on the way to scoring the most runs in the majors, there was a little more legitimacy behind their reminder Wednesday night of what they are capable of on a daily basis — rolling deep and making life tough for opposing pitchers.

“I think you got a lot of different guys with a lot of different abilities,” said Austin Wells, who chipped in two hits out of the nine-hole in a 7-0 win over the Giants at Oracle Park.

“I think it blends really well and we all feed off each other. Starting with [Trent Grisham] at the top and working its way down, one through nine, that’s how it played out [Wednesday] and it’s been playing out for the last half-year.”

Austin Wells had two hits in the Yankees’ Opening Day win over the Giants on March 25, 2026 in San Francisco. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

On many nights over the course of the season, the Yankees will crush homers or jump on Aaron Judge’s back to rack up wins.

But since this group has been playing together after last year’s trade deadline, it has also shown the ability to have nights like Wednesday, when it racks up 10 hits — nine of them singles, with Grisham’s two-run triple being the only exception — with a well-balanced attack.

“I think we can beat you a lot of different ways,” Boone said. 

Boone noted some of the Yankees’ aggressiveness on the bases paying off — such as Giancarlo Stanton scoring from second on José Caballero’s single to left field, Caballero hustling into second on the play when the throw went toward third base, and later Jazz Chisholm Jr. beating out a double play and forcing an errant throw that allowed Ben Rice to score from third.

Even more encouraging was the production from the bottom of the lineup, which fueled the five-run second inning and took the pressure off Judge, who went 0-for-5 with four strikeouts.

“I think guys were just going up there, doing what the game asked them to do, take their knock and we put a bunch of balls in play, found a couple holes and ended up putting up a good number,” Ryan McMahon said. “No easy outs. If we can just [keep] stacking those good at-bats, hopefully good things like that keep happening.”

The Yankees will try to show off more of their lineup depth Friday, when Boone plans to play all of his right-handed hitters against Giants lefty Robbie Ray (the only southpaw scheduled to face the Yankees this trip).

That could mean Paul Goldschmidt leading off and playing first base (for Ben Rice), Amed Rosario manning third (for McMahon) and Randal Grichuk starting in left field (with Cody Bellinger sliding to center and Grisham on the bench).