Sloppy Yankees drop series opener to Tigers

DETROIT, MI - JUNE 22: New York Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole (45) talks with New York Yankees pitching coach Matt Blake (77) during the game between the Detroit Tigers versus the New York Yankees on Monday June 22, 2026 at Comerica Park in Detroit, MI. (Photo by Steven King/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

There are plenty of baseball games where you can pinpoint an individual moment to being what the result hinges on. There are others where things just always feel destined for a loss. Despite a close final score, Monday’s game against the Tigers felt like one of the latter for the Yankees.

On the mound, Gerrit Cole did not have the best of days. He lasted just 4.1 innings, having given up five runs on nine hits and a walk. Some iffy defense made things a bit worse than they should’ve been, but still, when your star former Cy Young pitcher has a sloppy day, things are always going to be tough.

That’s doubly so when the offense remains in a bit of a slump. Facing Framber Valdez, the Yankees managed just one run on four hits, striking out eight times. They made a bit of a late charge to make things a bit interesting, but they didn’t do nearly enough. Add in a couple errors on defense, and not much went in the Yankees’ favor as they fell 5-3 to the Tigers on Monday night.

The Yankees struck first, picking up a run in the second inning. With two outs in the inning, José Caballero worked a walk to keep the inning alive, and then stole second base. That put him in position to score when Ali Sánchez doubled.

However, the Tigers got that run back and more a little while later. Zach McKinstry led off the bottom of the third with a triple, after he managed to split the outfielders in deep left-center field. That allowed him to come home when Kevin McGonigle grounded out. While Cole followed that ground out by getting the second out of the inning, he had trouble getting the third, allowing a Kerry Carpenter single and a Riley Greene walk. Spencer Torkelson and Colt Keith then both added RBI singles to give the Tigers a lead.

Detroit picked up another run off Cole in the fourth inning. Following a lead-off single and a delay caused by a Comerica Park dirt cam, McGonigle doubled home another run to increase the Tigers’ edge. Detroit then got Cole for one more run when Greene homered in the fifth. Cole ended up departing a few batters later, ending a day where he was far from his sharpest.

Valdez kept the Yankees off the board for the next little while, but they eventually managed to get something going against him. In the top of the seventh, Sánchez reached base again, albeit painfully, as he was hit by a pitch that knocked him out of the game. However, getting that runner on base proved helpful as Amed Rosario then hit a two-run homer to get the Yankees back in striking distance.

The Yankees had a chance to further eat away at their deficit, putting a couple runners on in the eighth. They didn’t take advantage of that though, and that ended up being curtains. The offense then went down in order in the ninth, dooming the Yankees to a defeat in the opener.

With the Yankees looking to bounce back and snap a three-game losing streak, they and the Tigers will continue their series tomorrow at 6:40 pm ET. Carlos Rodón will go for the Yankees, opposite Casey Mize for Detroit.

Box score

Yankees-Tigers' weird camera delay was must-see TV

An in-ground camera at second base produced the highlight of the Detroit Tigers-New York Yankees game on Monday, June 22.

During the series opener at Comerica Park, the small camera embedded in the dirt near second base worked its way up out of the ground, exposed enough to stop play. While it took half a dozen people on the field to kick and tap the camera to figure out what to do, the Detroit broadcast duo of Jason Benetti and Roman Dirks leaned into the bizarre moment.

The broadcast showed the rogue camera's footage of the up-close view of Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm trying to bury it as Benetti and Dirks hilariously narrated the standoff.

"Hey get away from me..... Quit stepping on me!"

"I'm just trying to do my job here."

As Chisholm started piling infield dirt over the camera and the view was like that of someone being buried, it got funnier.

"No! No! No! I can't see."

"This is an obstructed view seat now"

The delay paused the game with the Tigers leading 3-1 and Gerrit Cole on the mound. Detroit went on to win 5-3.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Watch camera delay at second base in Yankees Tigers game

Wacha, bullpen shut down Rays in close Royals victory

Jun 22, 2026; St. Petersburg, Florida, USA; Kansas City Royals starting pitcher Michael Wacha (52) throws a pitch against the Tampa Bay Rays in the second inning at Tropicana Field. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Michael Wacha went seven complete innings and gave up only one run in a 2-1 win over the Rays to open the four-game series. He was quite efficient – of those 21 outs in 7 innings, 16 of them were by strikeout (5) or groundout (11, including a double play).

The only truly punished mistake was in the fifth inning. Wacha left a changeup high to Yandy Díaz, who just missed a homer off the left-center field wall. Isaac Collins played the ball off the wall pretty well, but with two outs, the runner on first, Richie Palacios, ran on contact and scored. That was the first time any Rays runner made it to or past third base the whole game. Indeed, it was actually the *only* time any runner made it to third base and beyond.

John Schreiber gave up a walk in the 8th, but that guy tried to steal second base and was thrown out by 35 feet. Or at least it seemed like it. That was the only threat the Rays mounted against the bullpen. Alex Lange handled the ninth without any sort of event, which was nice for a change.

The Royals offense managed to sequence things just right to squeak out those two runs for the win, because they actually had only four hits to the Rays’ six.

They had a chance to score in the first inning with a Maikel Garcia double off the catwalk. Jac Caglianone just barely missed bringing him in on a foul ball that was about 1 foot to the foul side of the line. Too bad. In the second, Michael Massey led off with a walk. Lane Thomas pulled a liner down the line that was just fair. About as fair as Caglianone’s foul ball. It went deep into the corner, which allowed Massey to beat the throw home for the first run. I think I heard an announcer say the left fielder, Chandler Simpson, had a weak arm. It did not look like a strong throw to the cutoff man. Lane Thomas went all the way to third, but the Royals failed to bring him in. John Rave and Nick Loftin struck out, and Isaac Collins flew out to center field to end the inning.

In the fifth inning, Nick Loftin led off with a single and stole second base. Collins walked. Carter Jensen smoked a line drive up the middle and extended his hitting streak to 13 games. The throw from the center fielder was a bit off-line. Despite the 109mph rocket, Loftin scored because of the off-line throw for the second run. Cags hit a deep fly ball to the center field warning track for the final out and just missed extending his homer streak.

The Royals are now 33-46. The Rays fall to 43-32. They play again tomorrow at the same time, 5:40pm US Central.

Atlanta Braves at San Diego Padres

ARLINGTON, TX - JUNE 21: Yuki Matsui #1 of the San Diego Padres celebrates with Rodolfo Durán #48 during the game between the San Diego Padres and the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field on Sunday, June 21, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Tenley Wright/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Atlanta Braves (48-28) at San Diego Padres (39-37), June 22, 2026, 7:10 p.m. PST

Watch: ESPN

Location: Petco Park – San Diego, Calif.

Listen: 97.3 The Fan



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Orioles vs. Angels discussion

BALTIMORE, MD - MAY 31: Kyle Bradish #38 of the Baltimore Orioles pitches in the first inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 31, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Jamie Sabau/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Fresh off taking two of three games on the road against the Dodgers, the Orioles are on the verge of possibly helping people to feel a little bit better about their fortunes. What is standing between now and that possibility occurring is a series against the Angels. The Orioles need to actually keep playing well now that they are playing a much worse team.

At every other turn this season, when presented with one of these opportunities, the Orioles have largely if not entirely wasted it. That’s why they bring a 37-42 record into this game. I keep bringing this up because it keeps amazing me: They haven’t won more than three games in a row all season. They have had five separate three-game winning streaks and zero have gone to four games. That’s not even what’s at stake tonight. They’ve only won the last two. But they won’t be able to break that futility tomorrow if they don’t extend the streak today.

These Angels have lost more games than any other American League team to date. Their best hitter, a resurgent Mike Trout, recently hit the IL. They were desperate enough that they recently had former Oriole Trey Mancini around for a handful of games. He got four hits in 13 at-bats, which is nice for him. Three of their six most frequent starting pitchers are on the IL, including former Oriole Grayson Rodriguez.

The Orioles are going to have to actually play well to make something good happen here. They are capable of doing that. They are also capable of not doing that. That is the frustrating thing about them this season. I would like it to go a better way tonight. That doesn’t mean it will. It’s up to the Orioles.

Note: The schedule of this west coast road trip is not kind to the availability of Camden Chat staff. The recap for this game will not be posted until I wake up and write it on Tuesday morning. Don’t stay up waiting for it!

Orioles lineup

  1. Taylor Ward – LF
  2. Gunnar Henderson – SS
  3. Pete Alonso – 1B
  4. Coby Mayo – DH
  5. Tyler O’Neill – RF
  6. Blaze Alexander – 3B
  7. Colton Cowser – CF
  8. Jeremiah Jackson – 2B
  9. Sam Huff – C

This is the lineup in support of Kyle Bradish. He was very good last time around!

Huff is catching after Samuel Basallo caught the four previous games. He’s earned the day off. Jackson Holliday remains out of the lineup. That’s probably due to ongoing concern about his groin soreness, though the fact that the Angels are starting a lefty, Sam Aldegheri, surely also contributes.

Angels lineup

  1. Zach Neto – SS
  2. Nolan Schanuel – 1B
  3. Jo Adell – RF
  4. Jorge Soler – DH
  5. Wade Meckler – LF
  6. Denzer Guzman – 3B
  7. Donovan Walton – 2B
  8. Logan O’Hoppe – C
  9. Jose Siri – CF

Aldegheri, the Angels starter, was born in Verona, a location notably invoked in the opening lines of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet:

Two households, both alike in dignity,
In fair Verona where we lay our scene,
From ancient blood break to new mutiny,
Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean…

When I was in ninth grade, students had to memorize a 15-line portion of Romeo and Juliet and recite it in front of the class. A friend of mine read the 14-line opening sonnet that begins with the above and then, since that was only 14 of the 15 required lines, had to finish with the first non-prologue line: “Gregory, o’ my word, we’ll not carry coals.” Does that have anything to do whatsoever with this game? No, but it lives in my head forever.

Yankees out Cole’d as Tigers win series opener

Jun 22, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers second baseman Zach McKinstry (39) receives congratulations from Kerry Carpenter (30) after scoring in the third inning against the New York Yankees at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images | Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

The Tigers are going streaking as they took the first game of their series against the Yankees 5-3.

After sweeping the White Sox over the weekend, the Tigers were riding high as they invited the Yankees to come to town. The AL East’s top team, the Yankees weren’t planning to go down quite as easily as the White Sox. The Tigers had Framber Valdez on the mound, but the Yankees had their big gun, in Gerrit Cole. While Cole only came back from the IL somewhat recently, runs would still be coming at a premium for the Tigers hitters tonight.

In the top of the first, Valdez got two outs before giving up a single to Paul Goldschmidt. Cody Bellinger then walked. This could have been a bad news situation for the Tigers, but Valdez got out of the jam. Kevin McGonigle, one of the most reliable bats in the Tigers’ lineup, singled to start the home half, but three outs then followed to leave him stranded.

The Yankees made another two-out move, with Jose Caballero walking. He then stole second. Ali Sanchez doubled, sending Caballero home and putting the Yankees on the board first. A groundout ended the inning, but the Yankees were up 1-0. Spencer Torkelson hit a leadoff double to start the bottom of the inning, but three outs in a row meant no comeback for the Tigers.

Goldschmidt got another single in the third with one out. A force-out off the bat of Cody Bellinger eliminated Goldschmidt. Valdez got the final out of the inning with no runs scored. Zach McKinstry tripled (!!) to start the home half. McGonigle grounded out, but it was enough to get McKinstry home and tie up the game.

Kerry Carpenter got a two-out single, followed by a walk to Riley Greene. Torkelson then singled, bringing Carpenter home.

A Colt Keith single brought home Greene, and by the time the final out of the inning came, with Outman, Gerrit Cole had been worn down considerably, and the Tigers were up 3-1. I also take back everything I said about runs coming at a premium against Cole, because… yeah.

Valdez got the Yankees out in order for the top of the fourth. In the home half, Hao-Yu Lee got a leadoff single and then there was a unique and lengthy break while the Yankees’ infield all stared at Dirt Cam and it seemed like they might have tried to murder Dirt Cam. The ground crew had to come out and fix it. Truly gripping television, but Jazz Chisholm Jr. was invested.

Kevin McGonigle doubled, scoring Lee, and thanks to some sloppy fielding from Caballero, McGonigle reached third safely while everyone tried to find the ball behind home plate.

Valdez was really in his groove at this point, perhaps egged on by a need to avenge Dirt Cam. He got the Yankees out in order in the fifth. In the bottom of the inning while a crew of precocious 11-year-olds showed off their genuinely very fun signs (“No sad backstory, I just want a signed ball.”) Riley Greene hit a solo home run.

The Tigers called for a review, citing catcher interference on Torkelson. This led to another lengthy game pause. It was interference, putting Torkelson on first. After getting the first out of the inning, Cole’s night was over. Paul Blackburn replaced him, and got the final two outs of the inning.

Valdez, in likely his last inning for the game, showed how killer his curveball was tonight, striking out two of the three outs for the inning, and leaving Anthony Volpe looking silly in an ABS challenge. The Tigers went 1-2-3 in the home half.

The day was over for Valdez after six, with a final line of 6.0 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 8 K on 94 pitches. A really strong outing for him. Drew Anderson came out of the pen to replace him. With two outs, Ali Sanchez got hit in the wrist with a pitch and it looked incredibly painful. He was pulled from the game and Austin Wells came on to replace him at first. Amed Rosario then homered, and the game was suddenly uncomfortably close. The Tigers got the final out but the score was now 5-3. Ryan Yarbrough was the new Yankees pitcher in the bottom of the inning. He gave up a one-out walk to Riley Greene, but two outs followed.

With one out in the top of the eighth A.J. Hinch did the classic Drew-for-Drew bullpen swap, pulling Anderson for Sommers. Volpe singled with two outs, though the Tigers called for a review. The safe call was upheld. Chisholm Jr. hit a single right back to Sommers, nearly beheading him, and ultimately chasing him from the game. Hinch apparently decided to go for Vest to get the final out for… reasons? Vest came through in a pinch, though, and got the final out of the inning. In the bottom of the inning, James Outman walked. Lee then singled on a bunt back to the pitcher, to an empty first base and Yarbrough chased him down. The Yankees challenged the safe call, but it was really, really hard to see when the tag was applied. The dark uniform pants made it really hard to see, but the call was overturned and Lee was out. Volpe made a pretty impressive play to get the second out of the inning at first. The Tigers weren’t able to bring home Outman, but they retained their lead heading into the ninth.

Vest was back out for the ninth. The third out of the inning was a called third strike on what was very clearly a ball, but the Yankees had no challenges left and thus lost the game. Sorry not sorry.

Final: Tigers 5, Yankees 3

Gerrit Cole struggles, Yankees drop third straight, 5-3 to Tigers

Gerrit Cole got knocked around for five runs and the Yankees hitters couldn't solve Tigers left-hander Framber Valdez in a 5-3 loss in Detroit on Monday night.

New York fell to 46-31 on the season, dropping its third straight game. Detroit improved to 34-44 and has now won four straight.

Here are the takeaways...

- Cole, who worked around a leadoff single that flicked off his foot for in the first, left a fastball right down the pike to Spencer Torkelson, who crushed it for a double into the left-center gap to start the second. But the right-hander recovered to strikeout the next three: blowing a couple of fastballs (the second at 98 mph) past Colt Keith, buckling James Outman's knees with a curveball, and overpowering Hao-Yu Lee with a heater at 99 mph. 

Cole allowed the leadoff man to reach for a third straight inning as Zach McKinstry lined a ball into the left-center gap that Jose Caballero took a terrible route to, seemingly losing it in the sun, and it went for a three-bagger as the ball trickled to the wall. After an RBI groundout and another strikeout, an infield hit and a walk kept the inning going. That set up Torkelson to muscle a ball off his hands into center for an RBI hit that put runners at the corners and brought pitching coach Matt Blake out for a visit. Keith, down in the count 0-2, got a 98 mph heater in and cracked it to center to drive in the third run of the frame before a strikeout left two stranded.

Aaron Boone was hoping to get some length out of Cole with the bullpen taxed, but he was facing a conundrum as the veteran was at 66 pitches after nine outs, needing 27 in the third alone

Cole surrendered another leadoff hit to start the fourth, and with one down, surrendered an RBI double down the right field line to Kevin McGonigle to make it 4-1 Detroit. In the fifth, Riley Greene stung Cole for a leadoff home run to right, and after a catcher’s interference and a flyout to deep left-center, Boone made the call to the bullpen.

Cole’s final line: 4.1 innings, five runs on nine hits with a walk and five strikeouts on 89 pitches (62 strikes).

- Caballero worked a two-out walk in the second and then stole second base, his 17th theft of the campaign. Ali Sánchez cashed in, ripping a ball through the right side of the infield (105.5 mph off the bat) and hustling into second for an RBI double.

Caballero finished 0-for-3 with a walk, a strikeout, and a run scored. 

Sánchez, who went 1-for-2 on challenges behind the plate, exited the game with two outs in the top of the seventh when he got hit by a 98 mph heater from Drew Anderson on the right hand. He finished 1-for-2 with a strikeout and HBP. Austin Wells, fresh off the IL, replaced him and grounded out for the second out in the ninth in his only time up.

- Amed Rosario, who was in the leadoff spot and went hitless with a strikeout in three chances against Valdez, got just enough of a changeup from Anderson to inside-out it 373 feet to right for a two-run homer to cut the deficit to 5-3 in the seventh. He finished 1-for-5, striking out looking at a ball that was well off the plate, but the Yanks were out of challenges.

- Anthony Volpe got the Yanks’ first RBI chance of the night with runners on first and second and two down in the first, but bounced out to short on the first pitch he saw. He adjusted his second time up, sharply lining a sinker the other way for a single. Volpe finished 2-for-4, with a strikeout looking, losing the Yanks' last challenge on a curveball that was completely within the strike zone in the sixth and hustling out an infield hit on a chopper to third in the eighth.  

- Jazz Chisholm Jr. got the visitor’s fourth RBI chance of the night with runners on first and second and two down in the third, but went down flailing at a breaking pitch well off the outside corner. He was hitless in three at-bats with two strikeouts before he followed Volpe's infield single in the eighth. He went 1-for-4.

- Jasson Domínguez, hitless in his first three times up, got the Yankees' fifth chance with a runner in scoring position and first since the third inning with runners on first and second and two down in the eighth. But reliever Will Vest got Dominguez on three pitches, getting him to chase a 97 mph heater at the letters to end the threat.

New York finished 1-for-5 with RISP, leaving seven on base.

- Paul Goldschmidt got the best of the left-handed starter early, bouncing a single up the middle with two down in the first and repeated the feat with one down in the third. Valdez won round three with a strikeout swinging on a curveball. He finished 2-for-4 with two strikeouts.

Against lefties on the year, the 38-year-old is now batting .397 (29-for-73) with six home runs and a 1.222 OPS against lefties this season.

- Ben Rice went down looking at a 93 mph sinker on the outside corner and swinging through a breaking pitch in his first two times up. He finished 0-for-4.

- Cody Bellinger went 0-for-3 with a walk.

- Paul Blackburn was the first man called upon in relief, and retired the first five men he faced with a pair of strikeouts. Ryan Yarbrough, who got stung for four runs in Saturday's loss, issued a one-out walk in a clean seventh. After Yarbrough issued a leadoff walk to start the eighth, some fine defense kept the deficit at two. First, the big lefty made a hustle play to field a bunt and, with a dive, get the out at first. Then Volpe stole a basehit up the middle for the second out to keep the runner from scoring from second. The two relievers covered the final 3.2 innings without allowing a hit or a run on 49 pitches (26 strikes).

- There was a six-minute delay during the bottom of the fourth as Chisholm and the Yankees’ infield wanted a camera in the dirt by second base to be better covered. Chisholm’s peculiarities were on display as he played the bottom of the fifth while eating a green Blow Pop.

Game MVP: Framber Valdez

The Tigers' starter allowed scoring chances in each of the first three innings, but then retired 10 straight to take the wind out of the Yanks' sails. His final line: 6.0 innings, one run, four hits, two walks, and eight strikeouts on 94 pitches (59 strikes).

Highlights

What's next

The three-game series continues on Tuesday with a 6:40 p.m. first pitch. 

Carlos Rodon (3.50 ERA, 1.25 WHIP in 36.0 innings) gets the ball for the visitors. The home side is sending out righty Casey Mize (2.58 ERA, 1.013 WHIP in 52.1 innings).

 

Dodgers defeat Twins, but lose Kyle Tucker and catcher Dalton Rushing

Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani celebrates as he runs.
Shohei Ohtani celebrates after leading off the game with a home run Monday. (Matt Krohn/AP Photo/Matt Krohn)

The Dodgers’ recent offensive scuffing fell down the list of their most pressing issues Monday in their 2-1 win against the Minnesota Twins.

In the first three innings, the Dodgers had two key players leave the game. Right fielder Kyle Tucker exited in the top of the second because of lower back spasms, and catcher Dalton Rushing in the bottom of the third to evaluate for a possible concussion, the team said.

Tucker drew a walk in the second inning, advanced to second on Tommy Edman’s single and was replaced by pinch-runner Alex Call soon after.

Tucker jogged off the field into the dugout, his hand on his right side as he talked to hitting coach Aaron Bates.

Tucker, in his first season with the Dodgers after signing a four-year deal worth $240 million this winter, entered Monday with a .705 on-base-plus-slugging percentage, on pace for his worst offensive year by that measure since his 2018 rookie season with the Houston Astros.

Tucker recently went nine games with a .303 batting average. But then he went hitless in the Dodgers’ two losses to the Batlimore Orioles last weekend.

Read more:Dodgers great Justin Turner answers your questions, names his favorite baseball guy

“If we can get him back to being who he is, then we’ll bet on the results,” manager Dave Roberts said before the game, noting Tucker’s reputation for controlling the strike zone. “It’s not something that we might see tonight. But I think going here forward, that’s something that I think we’re going to see.”

Rushing was replaced behind the plate by Chuckie Robinson in the third inning. When the Dodgers announced the reason for his exit, they did not point to an inciting incident. But Rushing did take a foul tip off his mask on opener Will Klein’s first pitch of the game.

Rushing took a moment to compose himself, putting his glove in the dirt for stability. But he remained in the game for two innings.

The Dodgers were already down one catcher. Rushing took over as the primary backstop the last two weeks with Will Smith sidelined by a neck injury. Smith did not travel with the team to Minnesota.

Lauer follows opener

Dodgers left-hander Eric Lauer voiced his distaste for pitching behind an opener while with the Blue Jays. But he clarified his earlier comments in his introductory interview to begin his Dodgers tenure.

Read more:Shaikin: Why a salary cap wouldn't be enough to stop the Dodgers from winning

“If you ask most starters in the league, they would probably have the same response, that they don’t like it,” Lauer said last month. “But it doesn’t mean that I’m not willing to do it. It doesn’t mean that I’m not a team player.”

On Monday, the Dodgers asked him to follow through on that promise, entering the game in the second inning, after Klein gave up a run and two hits in the first.

“We’ve been very forthright,” Roberts said before the game. “I know he’s appreciated that. For me, just telling him the thought behind it and the why and still giving him confidence to know that we expect him to take down the most outs in the game. He’s all-in. He’s all-in on winning. I do think that just getting ahead of it, being honest with him.”

Eric Lauer pitched six hitless innings against the Twins on Monday.
Eric Lauer pitched six hitless innings against the Twins on Monday. (Matt Krohn / AP)

Roberts said he told Lauer the plan after Sunday’s game, explaining that he thought having Klein face the power-hitting right-handers near the top of the Twins lineup would give Lauer the best chance to go deeper into the game.

Klein surrendering a tying home run to right-handed hitting Byron Buxton wasn’t exactly part of that plan. But Lauer kept the Twins hitless for six scoreless innings. The three walks he issued accounted for the only baserunners against him.

The Dodgers scored their runs on solo homers from Shohei Ohtani and Freddie Freeman.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

MLB Commissioner defends uniform rules, won't discipline Giants players

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told Sen. Josh Hawley that the three San Francisco Giants pitchers who wore Bible verses on their Pride Night caps were never disciplined and never would have been. Manfred defended the league’s warning as routine enforcement.

In a June 19 letter answering the Missouri Republican, Manfred ruled out any discipline for the pitchers and put the root of the controversy on the Giants.

“The players were neither fined nor disciplined, nor will they ever be,” Manfred wrote.

The Giants have worn the Pride emblem under a grandfathered exception since 2023, one of the two clubs allowed to keep it after the league stopped permitting special uniforms for most celebration days. The deal carried one condition: No player could be required to wear the cap.

This year, that exception somehow did not reach the clubhouse. Manfred said the Giants’ communication with players “was inadequate and not clear.” Some pitchers did not understand they could wear the standard cap and wrote messages on the Pride version instead. They wore the altered caps the full game. The oral warning went out afterward, before the league learned of the team’s lapse.

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Landen Roupp throws against the Chicago Cubs during the first inning at Oracle Park.

Manfred defended the underlying rule as content neutral. It bars players from writing, attaching or affixing any message on a uniform or equipment, and he said it has applied to notes as ordinary as a message to a player’s mother or a tribute to a deceased friend. The league does not want players to become messengers for political or social causes while in uniform, he said. The rule has to apply to every message to survive a legal challenge.

He also said MLB agrees players should not be compelled to take part in a celebration that violates their sincere religious beliefs.

The response lands amid mounting legal pressure.

The Justice Department referred MLB to the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on June 19 over possible religious discrimination. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier opened his own investigation a day later and subpoenaed the league’s uniform records, due July 23. Hawley had threatened to subpoena Manfred and put MLB’s antitrust exemption under review.

The incident was on June 12 at Oracle Park. Starter Landen Roupp and relievers J.T. Brubaker and Ryan Walker wrote “Gen 9:12-16” on their rainbow caps, a reference to God’s covenant after the flood. A fourth pitcher, Sam Hentges, apparently knew of the exception and wore a standard cap. The Giants lost to the Cubs 5-1.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rob Manfred responds to Josh Hawley over Giants Pride cap warning

Yankees catcher Ali Sanchez exits Monday's loss to Tigers after getting hit by pitch on wrist

Yankees catcher Ali Sanchez left Monday's 5-3 loss at the Detroit Tigers in the top of the seventh inning after getting hit by a pitch on the right wrist.

Sanchez was hit by Tigers reliever Drew Anderson on a fastball that ran up and in on him with two outs in the frame. 

Initial postgame X-rays on the catcher's wrist came back negative, but he is headed for a CT scan to get a complete image of the situation.

"Initially, he was in a ton of pain," Manager Aaron Boone said after the game. "Enough to take him out right away. Hopefully, we get clean on the CT, and it is just a day-to-day thing.

"He was in some pretty good pain there."

He was replaced on the basepaths by Austin Wells, who was just reinstated from the IL on Sunday. Wells would end up scoring on Amed Rosario's two-run homer that cut Detroit's lead to two, but New York drew no closer.

Sanchez had gone 1-for-2 at the plate with an RBI-double in the second inning before exiting with the injury.

Since being called up on June 7, Sanchez is 6-for-19 (.316 batting average) with two doubles, three RBI, and a walk over 10 games.

The Yankees had just optioned catcher J.C. Escarra to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre after Saturday's 10-2 loss to the Cincinnati Reds.

SB Nation Reacts survey: What do the Cubs need right now?

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Cubs fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.


The Cubs have struggled over the last few weeks — this should not be a surprise to you. Since their 27-12 start they’re 13-25, which is pretty bad. They’ve had the last two days as unexpected off days due to rain.

So at least the bullpen has gotten some rest, for whatever that will do to help the team’s rather beleaguered relievers.

But that’s not the only problem with this team. Many of the bats — with the exception of Pete Crow-Armstrong and maybe a couple of others — have gone silent. The starting pitching has been pretty shaky.

If you were to improve this team right now, and not wait till the trade deadline Aug. 3, what would be the first thing you’d address?

Vote in the SB Nation Reacts survey below and I’ll post the answers here later in the week.

OU baseball's Dasan Harris saves College World Series run with laser throw

There aren't a lot of plays in baseball more exciting than a putout from the outfield. Indeed, Ichiro Suzuki made it one of the most iconic plays in baseball. So many things have to go right. Just ask Dasan Harris of Oklahoma.

After Oklahoma took a 2-0 lead in the road half of the second inning of June 22's decisive College World Series Game 3, the Tar Heels were threatening to answer with runners on first and second and two outs. Rom Kellis V drove a pitch from Nick Wesloski the opposite way that was fielded by Harris, and rather than going home to try and save a run, Harris instead threw a rocket to third.

The ball was fielded clean on a hop by Cam Johnson, who applied the tag to Carter French to get the Sooners out of the inning. Exacerbating the out for North Carolina, French was tagged out before Erik Paulsen crossed home plate, sending the Tar Heels out of the inning empty-handed despite a challenge from Scott Forbes that confirmed the timing.

Harris, a former walk-on, even got another angle of the throw posted.

It's a championship game where every run and every out will matter, so we'll see how big of a difference that throw ends up making. But there's no question Wesloski was happy for the help, and for the fortunate break that Paulsen was just a little bit behind the throw to third.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dasan Harris guns down Carter French to save run for Oklahoma in CWS

Colorado Rockies vs. Boston Red Sox game discussion: Jake Bennett vs. Ryan Feltner

Jun 16, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Colorado Rockies pitcher Ryan Feltner (18) throws the ball against the Chicago Cubs during the first inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images | David Banks-Imagn Images

Fresh off a series win against Pittsburgh, the Rockies (30-48) will now host the Boston Red Sox (31-43) Monday through Wednesday, aiming for their seventh series win of 2026. Colorado’s seven series wins pre-All-Star are their most since winning 10 first-half series in 2023.

The matchup is a showdown between the National League’s worst team vs. the bottom dweller of the American League. B0th are 4-6 in their last 10 games.

RHP Ryan Feltner (2-2, 5.05) will be on the mound tonight for the Rockies. This will be Feltner’s fifth start since returning from the IL (right ulnar nerve inflammation) on May 30. Feltner has gone 1-1 with a 3.86 ERA and 16 strikeouts and eight walks in 21 innings. The Rockies have gone 2-2 in his starts.

LHP Jake Bennett (1-3, 4.79) will get the start for Boston. Bennett, 25, was a second-round pick in the 2022 MLB Draft by the Washington Nationals. He was traded to Boston in December and made his MLB debut on May 1. In four starts, he’s gone five or 5.1 innings in each outing with 13 strikeouts, five walks with one homer.

The Rockies enter the season with a 10-8 record in interleague play and with a 14-18 all-time record against Boston (7-6 at Coors Field). The Rockies were swept by the Red Sox last season at Fenway Park.

Former Rockie Trevor Story is currently on the 60-IL (since June 4) with a sports hernia.

The Rockies got some good news on Monday when Mickey Moniak rejoined the team after being on the IL since May 22 with right ankle tendonitis. Read more about the Rockies roster moves here.

First Pitch: 6:40 p.m. MDT

TV: Rockies.TV

Radio: 850 AM/94.1 FM KOA Rockies Radio Network; KNRV 1150 AM (Spanish)

Red Sox SB Nation Site:Over the Monster

Lineups:

For the visiting Red Sox

For the home Rockies


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Dodgers activate Brock Stewart; send down Chayce McDermott

May 8, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Brock Stewart (41) pitches during the eighth inning against the Atlanta Braves at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

Formerly of the Twins, as recently as last season, Brock Stewart has been activated just in time for the Dodgers’ three-game set against Minnesota. Making room for Stewart’s presence on the roster—freshly recovered from a bone spur on his left foot—the Dodgers sent down right-hander Chayce McDermott.

McDermott’s latest stint on the big league club was short-lived, with the right-hander only appearing in one game, Sunday’s blowout, filling in as a sort of bridge between Treinen’s IL placement and Stewart’s readiness to return to the fold.

Stewart is brought up having appeared in just 5.2 innings, two of them this year, since the Dodgers reacquired him last season for James Outman in a straight swap with the Twins. With Treinen out, Los Angeles will hope to rely on Stewart as another high-leverage arm for this bullpen. The right-hander tossed a couple of scoreless frames with three strikeouts for the big league club in early May this season.

GUARDIANS AT WHITE SOX: Kay vs. Williams, discussion

Jun 17, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Cleveland Guardians pitcher Gavin Williams (32) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images | Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

Here’s the Guardians lineup:

Here’s the White Sox lineup:

Let’s go, Guardians!