How to watch Blue Jays vs. Twins on Peacock: TV/streaming info, schedule, preview, starting pitchers

The inaugural Sunday Leadoff on Peacock in 2026 will feature the defending American League champion Toronto Blue Jays and the hosting Minnesota Twins — two teams that started the year on different paths and have begun to both trend towards .500.

It's the final game of a four-game series with Toronto having won two of the first three games. The Blue Jays are coming off a 4-2 homestand against the Guardians and Red Sox and have climbed from a 7-13 start to 16-17.

The Twins had lost 11 of 13 heading into this weekend series, being swept by the Rays and Reds as well as dropping two of three to the Mariners and Mets. They enter play on Sunday at 14-20.

The Jays are still six games back of the Yankees, who are off with the best record in the American League as of Saturday night.

Minnesota won the American League Central in three of the past eight seasons, but has finished fourth in the five-team division in each of the last two years and are trending in that direction again after a surprising 11-7 start. The Twins took two of three from the Jays in Toronto from April 10-12, and the Jays are now looking for a little revenge.

Sunday's probable starters are right-hander Trey Yesavage for the Blue Jays and right-hander Joe Ryan for the Twins.

See below for additional information on how to watch the Twins vs. Blue Jays and a breakdown of the game. Also check out the schedule for the MLB on NBC and Peacock. There will be 27 prime-time MLB games featured across NBC, Peacock and NBCSN in 2026. NBC Sports will also stream one out-of-market game each day of the 2026 MLB season nationally on Peacock.

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How to watch Toronto Blue Jays vs. Minnesota Twins:

  • When: Sunday, May 3
  • Where: Target Field in Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • Time: 12 p.m. ET (12:35 p.m. first pitch)
  • Live Stream: Peacock
  • TV: NBCSN

Who are the announcers for Blue Jays-Twins?

Matt Vasgersian will provide play-by-play alongside analysts Dexter Fowler (a former All-Star for the Cubs in 2016 and MLB Leadoff package analyst) and Justin Morneau (a Twins television analyst and former MVP winner in 2006 for the Twins) in the booth.


Toronto Blue Jays vs. Minnesota Twins preview:

While the Twins may be cold, nobody on the team is hotter than Brooks Lee, who had hit .292/.361/.554 over his last 72 plate appearances heading into this series against the Jays after a .162/.219/.167 start to the year. Lee had a go-ahead single against the Tigers off the bench on April 9 that seems to have sparked a better stretch of hitting.

While he's almost exclusively being used against left-handed starters, Minnesota's batting leader in baseball-reference WAR coming into the series was Austin Martin, who is hitting .357/.471/.429 against right-handers despite only 33 plate appearances against them so far this year.

Minnesota's front three of their rotation has been outstanding despite the absence of Pablo López to UCL surgery in Spring Training. Ryan, Taj Bradley, and Bailey Ober were each carrying a sub-4 ERA heading into this series and have struck out 112 batters in 117 1/3rd innings pitched.

Minnesota's offensive profile is on-base percentage heavy, as they ranked in the top-10 in team on-base percentage (.327) entering the series and were in the top five in baseball in runners left on base (233) despite the efforts of Byron Buxton (ten homers) and Ryan Jeffers (..287/.394/.471, four homers) early in the season.

Minnesota's pitching staff has done a great job of limiting homers, entering the series tied for the lowest homers allowed/nine innings among all pitching staffs at 0.8.

Not that anyone is surprised by this, but Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is hitting the cover off the ball early with an MLB-leading .358 average entering this series. He leads the team in hitting WAR despite only two homers.

After a slow start to his introduction to MLB pitching, offseason addition Kazuma Okamoto has turned it on of late, hitting .278/.361/.630 with six homers over Toronto's past 15 games. It's vital for the Jays to get the rest of the lineup heated up as they try to climb out of their slow start.

Perhaps the return of George Springer will help things. Springer fractured a toe earlier in the season and just recently returned. He was only hitting ..212/.307/364 as of Saturday night, but he's coming off a .309/.399/.560 2025 season and should be able to get closer to the latter than the former.

Despite heavy investments in their pitching this offseason, Toronto's team ERA heading into this series was 4.20 — a little above the 4.16 league-average ERA. The return of Yesavage should help, while injuries to stalwarts like Jose Berrios and Shane Bieber has had them relying on depth quite a bit more than expected early on.


How to watch MLB on NBC and Peacock:

Sunday Night Baseball will make its debut March 29 with the Guardians vs. Mariners. The 18-game MLB Sunday Leadoff schedule will begin May 3, with the defending AL champion Toronto Blue Jays visiting the Twins in Minnesota. On Sunday, July 5, all 15 MLB games will be presented nationally across Peacock and NBC as part of a special all-day “Star-Spangled Sunday” showcase.

NBC Sports will also stream one out-of-market game each day of the 2026 MLB season nationally on Peacock. Telemundo Deportes will present all NBCUniversal-produced MLB games in Spanish, with Universo televising all games broadcast on NBC.

MLB: World Series-Los Angeles Dodgers at Toronto Blue Jays
From an MLB Opening Day doubleheader on March 26 to the Wild Card round of the playoffs, NBC Sports’ 2026 schedule delivers wall-to-wall coverage.

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MLB on NBC 2026 schedule:

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Today on Pinstripe Alley – 5/3/26

I’ve made this point before on Pinstripe Alley, but it’s never a bad time to bring it up: Boy, do I love a good, boring win. The Yankees have been getting quite a few of those lately, and that continued yesterday against the Orioles. The Bombers very casually roughed up Kyle Bradish, Ryan Weathers was effective enough despite not necessarily having his wipeout stuff, and the offense kept adding when Bradish left, ensuring that any bullpen lapses wouldn’t hurt too much. The end result: a 9-4 win that didn’t even feel that close. May there be more on the horizon!

Today on the site, Estevão will spotlight some trends from the Yankees’ AL East foes’ first month, Peter will present the Rivalry Roundup, Matt will celebrate the 121st birthday of Yankees pitching legend Red Ruffing, Scott will have a feature on Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre reliever Bradley Hanner, and after the matinee, John will write up this week’s Social Media Spotlight.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Baltimore Orioles

Time: 1:35 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, MASN

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

Questions/Prompts:

1. How deep does ace Max Fried go this afternoon against the O’s?

2. Any Game 7 predictions for today? We’ve got the top-seeded Detroit Pistons against the underdog Orlando Magic, and Toronto Raptors vs. Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA, as well as Canada’s last hope for snapping its 33-year Stanley Cup drought with the Montreal Canadiens trying to advance to the next around against the Tampa Bay Lightning (who, of course, have won three Cups in that timespan, including against the Habs in 2021).

Yankees news: What to do with Anthony Volpe

Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe continued his rehab assignment with the Somerset Patriots at TD Bank Ballpark in Bridgewater on April 17, 2026. | Alexander Lewis / MyCentralJersey / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

New York Daily News | Gary Phillips: Anthony Volpe’s rehab assignment will end today, and the Yankees will have to chose what to do with the former top prospect. He will either need to be activated and added to the MLB roster, or optioned to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and begin his season for real in the minors. With José Caballero doing everything the Yankees could possibly ask of him, especially with his shortstop defense, some time in Scranton to ensure that Volpe can be a representative MLB player might not be the worst idea. Of course the counterpoint is what risk do you pose in hurting Volpe’s confidence, a player who has already struggled to live up to the expectations placed on him in his career?

NJ.com | Bob Klapisch: Much was made over the winter about the new Trajekt machines, batting practice aids that replicate the arm angle and movement of virtually any MLB pitcher. At least one Yankee has found success in a more low-tech environment though, with the aforementioned Caballero sinking his teeth into onfield batting practice. The shortstop has hit four home runs on the year, after five all of last season, and credits the confidence that watching the ball travel around the stadium during BP instills with the power surge. I’m not sure Cabby will ever be hitting in the top third of a lineup, but not having automatic outs at the bottom of the order has been a big part of the Yankees’ success early.

New York Post | Bridget Reilly: Yep, I’m gonna talk about Ben Rice again. The perceived vulnerability in the Yankee slugger was supposed to be left handed pitching — Paul Goldschmidt came back to the Bronx on a $4 million insurance policy as a partial hedge against that weakness. Instead, Rice is the second-best hitter in all of baseball against lefties, with a sterling 1.308 OPS facing southpaws in the first six weeks of the season. The Yankees lost Juan Soto and then effectively made Juan Soto out of a 27-year-old Dartmouth alum, one of the more stunning player development successes in recent years. A platoon hitter no more!

Mets' replay team make costly mistake in first inning against Angels: 'He missed it'

When it rains, it pours.

In the middle of a dreadful start to the season, the players and coaches on the field aren’t the only ones making mistakes for the Mets. Yes, it seems it’s now spreading beyond the walls and into the video replay room.

In the first inning of Saturday’s eventual 4-3 loss to the Los Angeles in extra innings, Nolan McLean allowed three straight two-out hits with the third hit resulting in both an out and a run scoring.

Except it shouldn’t have. 

Upon further review, the runner trying to advance to third base was tagged out, on a great throw by Austin Slater in right field, before the runner going home touched the plate which should’ve negated the run from counting.

The Mets did not challenge the call on the play and manager Carlos Mendoza was asked why not.

“He missed it,” the skipper said, referring to Mets replay analyst Harrison Friedland. “We called, obviously, and he missed it. Harrison is one of the best at his job. Obviously it ends up being a big play when you lose by one run, but I also think we had chances there and we couldn’t cash in.”

Yes, New York ended up losing by a single run in extra innings, meaning had they challenged the call and got it overturned and everything else stayed the same, the Mets would’ve won.

However, while that mental lapse proved costly, Mendoza doesn’t believe it’s the only reason his team lost. After all, once they tied the game in the seventh inning they had two more big chances to take the lead but were unable to cash in.

The first opportunity came with the bases loaded and one out and the top of the order coming up. In a lineup bereft of big hitters, this was the perfect time for the Mets to go for the jugular as Bo Bichette and Juan Soto, the two survivors of a once-thought stacked lineup, were due up.

Instead, Bichette, who had an RBI single earlier in the game, grounded into a force out at home and Soto struck out. Inning over.

Nevertheless, by a stroke of luck (and catcher’s interference), Bichette had a chance to redeem himself in the 10th inning with runners on first and second and nobody out. Once again, Bichette grounded out, this one a double play.

“I just hit two sliders in the ground,” Bichette said after the game. “I think for me just trying to be too perfect, have the perfect swing for every pitch and that’s not attainable.”

In a game where the Mets also lost Ronny Mauricio to a left thumb fracture (on the play right before Bichette’s first groundout), Mendoza admitted this loss was a tough one.

“This one stings,” he said. “We had our chances, but more times than not guys like Bo and Juan, those are the guys that we want at the plate to be in those situations. They’re gonna come through more times than not, today they just didn’t do it.”

Ronny Mauricio fractures left thumb and is headed to the IL

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Ronny Mauricio walks back to the dugout after striking out during a game against the Nationals on April 29, 2026, Image 2 shows Nolan Schanuel dives to first after Ronny Mauricio dives safely into the base for an infield hit in the seventh inning of the Mets' 4-3, 10-inning loss to the Angels on May 2, 2026 in Anaheim, Calif. Unfortunately for the Mets, Mauricio fractured his left thumb and is headed to the IL

ANAHEIM, Calif. — The Mets need a replacement for their replacement at shortstop.

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Ronny Mauricio is headed to the injured list, according to manager Carlos Mendoza, after he fractured his left thumb Saturday while diving into first base in the seventh inning of the Mets’ 4-3 loss to the Angels in 10 innings.

Mauricio hit a grounder to first base and beat Nolan Schaunuel to the bag with a dive into the base — a play that was originally ruled an out but was overturned on replay — and fractured his thumb.

He was removed after the half inning concluded.

Mauricio became the starter at shortstop just over a week ago when Francisco Lindor was placed on the IL with a left calf strain expected to sideline him for months.

Bo Bichette moved from third base to shortstop for the final four innings on Saturday and is a candidate to play the position in Mauricio’s absence.

Bichette was a shortstop before switching to third base this season.

Nolan Schanuel dives to first after Ronny Mauricio dives safely into the base for an infield hit in the seventh inning of the Mets’ 4-3, 10-inning loss to the Angels on May 2, 2026 in Anaheim, Calif. Unfortunately for the Mets, Mauricio fractured his left thumb and is headed to the IL. Getty Images
Ronny Mauricio walks back to the dugout after striking out during a game against the Nationals on April 29, 2026. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST

“I have got to wait and see who the player is coming up [from Triple-A Syracuse],” Mendoza said. “I am pretty sure Bo is going to be in the conversation.”

Emerson Hancock brilliant, but mistakes undo Mariners in extra-innings loss

This is also the face I made watching the Mariners offense tonight
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 02: Emerson Hancock #26 of the Seattle Mariners reacts after getting a strike out against the Kansas City Royals at T-Mobile Park on May 02, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Olivia Vanni/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Randy Johnson is the first Mariners pitcher I remember watching. Somewhere there is a picture of a mulleted Randy taken by me with a hot pink camera in the Kingdome at a Kid’s Day. It’s blurry, and his head is partially cropped off, seven-year-old me tilting up the camera at the towering figure above me. That’s what it felt like watching him pitch: larger than life, scary, and a little bit thrilling.

Emerson Hancock, while very tall in his own right, does not spark the same fear, with his kind smile and soft Georgia accent. I have seen many versions of Emerson Hancock over the years: the college acee whose career and trip to Omaha was cut short; a young pitcher surrounded by other young pitching that leapfrogged him on his journey to the bigs; a beaten but not defeated Hancock searching for answers after a bad start, and another, and another; and tonight, what should have been a triumphant Hancock coming off a career-best start of 14 strikeouts against not walks, but was instead a chastened Hancock forced to explain away his teammates’ mistakes in a crushing 3-2 extra-innings loss.

Randy Johnson was famous for telling his offensively anemic Mariners teammates “just get me one run tonight, boys, that’s all we need.” Hancock would need just a little more than that. He wouldn’t get it.

The Mariners did oblige The RJ Doctrine in the first. Julio Rodríguez continued his torrid stretch with a one-out double that missed being a home run by about a foot, tagging a 90-mph fastball on the opposite corner of the plate. Josh Naylor followed him up with a classic Naylor single, the high fastball away that he punched into center field for a run. Unfortunately, Randy Arozarena capped the scoring there by unluckily lining into a double play, so the Mariners really did just get the one run, boys. That would prove to be significant, later, in a chain of events that undid this game from what should have been a thrilling win into a loss.

The Royals got their own run in the third through some bad luck for Emerson Hancock. Nine-hole hitter Kyle Isbel got a hold of a cutter at the bottom of the zone and laced it just past a diving Josh Naylor. Maikel Garcia then threw his bat at a first-pitch sweeper on the outer edge of the zone and blooped it into left field to bring home Isbel. Hancock rebounded even with one out, getting Bobby Witt Jr. to pop out on the sweeper (assisted by a strong throw from Luke Raley to hold the runner at second) and ending the inning on a strikeout looking to Vinnie Pasquantino, a perfectly spotted four-seamer at 97.4 mph.

The Mariners were able to get a go-ahead run in the fifth but it came…weirdly. With one out, the Mariners loaded the bases on back-to-back-to-back singles from Leo Rivas, J.P. Crawford, and Julio Rodríguez; Rivas then scored on a wild pitch by Royals starter Seth Lugo, the reigning Royals organizational Pitcher of the Month. Josh Naylor then struck out for the second out, but Randy Arozarena walked to re-load the bases…and then was picked off to end the inning, having lost track of the count. Manager Dan Wilson was gracious about the mental mistake postgame, saying there are times where he’s forgotten the count, or rolled the ball back with runners on, but once again, a scoring chance would be squandered, and eventually, the Mariners would run out of chances.

That sent Hancock out to protect the precious one-run lead once again. It looked like he might be done after the sixth, having to work around a leadoff ground-ball single from Bobby Witt Jr. followed by a line drive base hit from Vinnie Pasquantino. With Hancock’s velocity trending downwards and some location misses with sinkers leaking onto the plate, things felt dangerous. But Hancock spun a bunch of sweepers at Salvador Perez to get him to strike out, retired Carter Jensen on a frankly scary flyout, and then got Jac Caglianone to tap a comebacker right at him to end the inning without trouble.

Then, a surprise: Dan Wilson sent Hancock back out for a seventh inning of work, and Hancock dug down for what he had left, collecting two more strikeouts from the bottom of the order and getting Kyle Isbel to pop out softly to put a cap on his night. It was a brilliant, beautiful performance from Hancock that deserved so much better than this loss. It deserves a full recap devoted to the particular journey Hancock has taken this season, tunneling himself out of the fear and doubt and ineffectiveness of his first few seasons, bad outings and worse ones, and the perseverance he’s shown in making himself into not just a big-league starter, but the current anchor of this rotation.

If you want to just watch this highlight and stop reading, go ahead. I won’t fault you.

But once again, the bullpen wasn’t able to protect that slender lead, and the offense wasn’t able to add on. To be clear, Eduard Bazardo is blameless in this; he worked a clean eighth inning with some help from a diving Randy Arozarena. But Andrés Muñoz had the ninth and things started off roughly, with perpetual Mariner-killer Salvador Perez lining a leadoff single into right field and then pinch-runner Lane Thomas getting to second on a called balk. “DAN DO SOMETHING!” hollered one aggrieved fan in front of me in the press box and honestly, yes, I would also have liked for Dan to fix it somehow. Unfortunately, there was nothing he could do. Muñoz struck out Carter Jensen on a slider, but then Jac Caglianone ambushed a first-pitch heater for an RBI single – and then advanced to third on a fielding error by the normally surehanded Julio Rodríguez, who just sort of…let the ball roll past him. A swinging bunt from Isaac Collins advanced the runner to third, bringing up Michael Massey, who popped out to end the inning and make Julio’s error academic, but it felt like another missed stitch in the ugly afghan that was this game. May seems a little late to be making these kinds of mistakes, and so many of them.

The Royals brought out the anciént one (Matt Strahm) again for the ninth, causing Wilson to dip into his bench and summon Rob Refsnyder to pinch-hit for Canzone after Cole Young flew out softly for the first out of the inning. But righty pinch-hitters Refsnyder and Connor Joe couldn’t get anything cooking, and the game went to extras.

Cooper Criswell was tasked with handling the tenth and immediately had a base stolen off him, but was able to strike out Kyle Isbel for the first out of the inning, so it was basically like the sac bunt worked. That turned the lineup over, though, and Maikel Garcia was able to get that runner home with a shallow sac fly. Criswell was able to retire Bobby Witt Jr., but the Mariners – who hadn’t scored on a hit since the first inning of the game, remember – now entered with the bottom of their lineup to try to score off Royals closer Lucas Erceg.

They did not. It’s not important how. In lieu of dwelling on this annoying, frustrating, frankly godawful loss, let’s return to Emerson Hancock. While images of Randy Johnson snarling and strutting filled the giant screen behind him, Hancock warmed up as he always does, keeping an even tempo. The old baseball rule is you don’t talk to pitchers on their start days; most of the Mariners starters don’t follow that, but definitely not Hancock, who greets every member of the media as he does every day, with a soft hello-how-are-ya. Pregame, he was hanging on the batting turtle with Kevin Seitzer, maybe talking about the Braves, who come into town next, cheering a Dominic Canzone homer that scraped the upper deck. Hancock admitted he was a little starstruck by the baseball luminaries – Nolan Ryan and Pedro Martinez among them – whose voices filled the stadium before his start, but stopped short of saying he felt pressure to bring something of their greatness into his game, despite his career-best performance.

“You go out there and you try to be someone you’re not, you try to do something you don’t usually do, you can run into a trap,” said Hancock.

Not intent to dominate but intent to compete. Not a 99 mph fastball but one that ticks down to 93 at times and he lets it. Not an untouchable, harrowing presence, but a warm one that reflects the Georgia sun and open farmlands. Not a snarl but a smile. Emerson Hancock has always done it his way, and tonight he did it better than he ever has. In a frustrating game, that’s worth holding on to – the lesson that you don’t have to borrow anyone else’s persona to be great. Stick to who you are, be who you are, and you can find your own way to it, no matter how long it takes.

Struggling Jonah Tong tosses six one-hit innings at Triple-A in encouraging Mets sign

New York Mets pitcher Jonah Tong throws a pitch during spring training.
Jonah Tong throws a pitch during a spring training game March 21.

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Jonah Tong’s first month at Triple-A Syracuse this season hardly went smoothly, but Saturday was something he could appreciate.

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The Mets pitching prospect fired a one-hitter over six innings with six strikeouts and two walks against Lehigh Valley.

Tong, who took a no-hitter into the sixth, has pitched to a 4.60 ERA in seven starts this season, but his 44 strikeouts are tied for the most in the minor leagues.

“We need to continue to see that,” manager Carlos Mendoza said before the Mets’ 4-3, 10-inning loss to the Angels, when asked about Tong’s latest performance.

“He’s a guy that is important for this organization, for us, and we will continue to watch him closely. But it was good to see him today putting together another good outing out there.”

Tong, 22, started five games for the Mets last season and pitched to a 7.72 ERA.

Jonah Tong throws a pitch during a spring training game March 21. AP

Austin Slater and Andy Ibáñez, both of whom joined the Mets within the last week, were the starting corner outfielders against Angels left-hander Reid Detmers.

“They have done it throughout their career at this level, so there is a reason why they are here and we will continue to give them chances,” Mendoza said.

Ibáñez was 1-for-2 with a sacrifice fly before being pinch it for by Carson Benge. Slater went 2-for-3 and scored a run.


Mets officials were encouraged by Christian Scott’s performance Friday, when he rebounded from a shaky performance a week earlier — in his return to the major leagues following Tommy John surgery — and went five innings against the Angels, allowing three earned runs, with eight strikeouts.

Scott walked five batters over 1 ¹/₃ innings in his previous outing.

In Friday’s start he didn’t walk a batter.



Scott surrendered a two-run homer to Jorge Soler in the first inning.

Over the next four the Angels managed just an unearned run against him.

“Not only because of his stuff, but he’s just got a really good head,” Mendoza said. “He doesn’t get too high or low. After the last outing and the first inning [Friday] he goes out and kind of like, ‘Here we go again.’ And he didn’t show any sign. I am not surprised. It just goes to show you he’s a mature kid.”


Jorge Polanco has begun taking batting practice on the field in his rehab from a right wrist contusion that has sidelined him for the last two weeks.

Polanco has also dealt with left Achilles bursitis.


The Mets are now 305-305 all time in interleague play.

Royals defeat Mariners and the ghost of Randy Johnson, 3-2 in 10 innings

Michael Massey slides around the tag at home plate to score the go-ahead run
May 2, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Kansas City Royals pinch runner Michael Massey (19) slides home to score a run against the Seattle Mariners during the tenth inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images | Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

If you needed more evidence that it’s no longer April, the Royals gave it to you tonight. Coming into May, the Royals were 1-5 in one-run games. So far in May, they’re 2-0 in those games and in all games. For most of the game, that didn’t seem possible.

Had the Mariners won, Emerson Hancock would be the story of this game. I’m not sure he shouldn’t still be. On the night the Mariners retired Randy Johnson’s number in a pre-game ceremony, Hancock pitched seven one-run innings with a whopping 14 strikeouts. That’s not only the most of his career; it’s the most of anyone in MLB so far this year. In case you were wondering, Hancock has never been a strikeout pitcher before. But the high heat was working for him tonight. You can refer to the game thread for a representation of how Hancock has looked this season; here’s the TJ Stats summary for Hancock tonight:

Hancock had a 43.4% chase rate and 33.3% whiff rate.

Oh yeah, he didn’t walk any either.

On the other side, Seth Lugo gave up a run within three batters. Julio Rodríguez continued his scorching hot May with a one-out, automatic double to the opposite field. Josh Naylor smashed a single to centerfield.

The Royals roared right back in the third inning. Kyle Isbel led off and snuck a double down the first base line, then Maikel Garcia drove him home with a double into the right-center gap. Unfortunately, the Royals stranded him there.

The Mariners stranded the bases loaded in the bottom of the second after Vinnie Pasquantino and Seth Lugo each had brain farts on defense. In the bottom of the fifth, the Mariners had some good luck to load the bases against Lugo again. With one out, Leo Rivas had a clean single to right. J.P. Crawford snuck one past a diving Bobby into left, and Julio grounded one that Bobby grabbed on the dive but couldn’t get to Michael Massey in time to get an out. With the bases loaded and Josh Naylor at the plate, Lugo threw a wild pitch to allow Rivas to score. Lugo struck out Naylor but walked Randy Arozarena to reload the bases. Then, on a 2-2 pitch, Randy decided to take off for second. Perhaps he lost track of the count? Regardless, the Royals managed to tag him out before Crawford could score from third.

In the top of the sixth, the Royals put two runners on with no outs and failed to advance either runner. You’d be forgiven if you assumed the game was over then. But it wasn’t.

Lugo ended up only giving up two runs in six innings for the team’s 16th quality start – tied with the Mariners for fourth-most in baseball. He struck out six, walked a pair, and gave up seven hits. It wasn’t pretty, but it was effective. Luinder Avila looked absolutely deadly pitching the seventh and eighth innings. He allowed no runners and earned a strikeout. Matt Strahm pitched a clean ninth.

But the only reason Strahm pitched the ninth was because of what happened in the top of the inning against the Mariners’ stud closer, Andres Muñoz. Salvador Perez led off the inning and flipped a single into right. Lane Thomas came in to pinch run and was immediately awarded second base on a balk. Carter Jensen – who won April Royals player of the month, but is also 0 for his last 15 with 7 strikeouts – struck out. Jac Caglianone came to the plate with a chance to tie the game. We know what he did the last time Lugo started. Could he do it again?

Yep!

That was hit at 108.9 MPH off the bat of Jac Caglianone, and the defensive maven J-Rod had it skip past him, allowing Jac to arrive at third still with only one out. Unfortunately, the Royals couldn’t score him, so it was up to Strahm to get the game into extras.

In the top of the tenth, the Royals engaged in more shenanigans. Kyle Isbel led off with Massey at second. Isbel tried and failed to get the bunt down twice. On the second attempt, Massey got a little far from second, and Mitch Garver attempted a backpick. Massey turned his blunder into an opportunity by not panicking. Instead, he took off for third and made it a stolen base. Which was fortunate because Isbel struck out on the next pitch.

Maikel came up and, after taking a couple of big hacks, shortened his swing and got the ball just deep enough to score Massey.

In the bottom of the tenth, Lucas Erceg came out to earn his ninth save and looked like his 2024 self again. He struck out a pair – one on a slider in the zone and the other on a sinker up and away from a lefty – and got a 1-2-3 inning. Don’t look now, but Lucas has gone six straight appearances without allowing an earned run. Over that span, he’s walked 4, but he’s struck out 8 and only given up 1 hit. If Lights Out Lucas is back in business, that changes a lot of what’s possible for the Royals this year.

No matter what happens next, the Royals have guaranteed a .500 road trip with tonight’s victory. Still, they get a shot to earn a winning road trip and their second sweep of the season when they close out the series and the road trip with a late afternoon match tomorrow. Kris Bubic (3.74 ERA) will go against Luis Castillo (6.35 ERA). The game will start at 3:10 Royals time.

Mets waste numerous chances in brutal 10-inning loss to Angels

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows A dejected Bo Bichette walks off the field as the Angels celebrate in the background after their 4-3, 10-inning win over the Mets on May 2, 2026 in Anahiem, Calif. , Image 2 shows Former Yankee Oswald Peraza leaps into the air after hitting tghe game-winning RBI single in the 10th inning of the Mets' loss to the Angels

ANAHEIM, Calif. — For a second straight night the Mets rallied from an early deficit, but this time there wasn’t a postgame celebration.

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Opportunities were wasted Saturday, including a replay challenge that the Mets didn’t issue, which would have subtracted the Angels’ first run.

Along with them went the Mets’ chances of winning a second straight game — something they have accomplished only once since April 7.

Former Yankee Oswald Peraza’s RBI single against Austin Warren in the 10th inning sent the Mets to a 4-3 loss at Angel Stadium.

The loss was the Mets’ 18th in their last 22 games.

Only adding to the team’s frustration, Ronny Mauricio fractured his left thumb diving into first base and will be placed on the injured list. It leaves the Mets in need of a shortstop — Mauricio became the starter last week after Francisco Lindor was placed on the IL with a left calf strain.

Warren was ahead 0-2 in the count with two outs before Peraza ended it with a line drive single to left. Warren had walked Jorge Soler and allowed a single to Jo Adell in the inning, moving the automatic runner to third base.

Adell’s single in the first gave the Angels a 1-0 lead, but the run should not have counted: replays showed Jorge Soler was tagged out attempting to race first-to-third before Nolan Schanuel touched home plate. The Mets did not challenge the play.

A dejected Bo Bichette walks off the field as the Angels celebrate in the background after their 4-3, 10-inning win over the Mets on May 2, 2026 in Anahiem, Calif. Getty Images

“We called obviously and he missed it,” manager Carlos Mendoza said, referring to replay coordinator Harrison Friedland. “Harrison is one of the best at his job and it ends up being a big play when you lose by one run, but I also think we had [other] chances there.”

Nobody had a rougher night at the plate than Bo Bichette, who grounded into a double play in the 10th inning after Brett Baty reached on a catcher’s interference. In the seventh, after the Mets had tied the game, Bichette batted with the bases loaded and hit into a fielder’s choice out at the plate. The Mets never took the lead.

“We had a chance to win it,” Bichette said. “I had two chances and didn’t get the job done.”



In his shortest career start, Nolan McLean lasted just four innings, allowing three earned runs on six hits with six strikeouts and one walk.

Bichette’s RBI single in the third tied it 1-1. Austin Slater, in his first start for the Mets, doubled before Bichette delivered against Reid Detmers for his 15th RBI this season.

Vaughn Grissom’s two-run single gave the Angels a 3-1 lead. Soler walked and Adell singled before McLean’s wild pitch moved the runners to second and third. After Grissom delivered, Peraza singled, but McLean avoided further damage by striking out Travis d’Arnaud for the final out.

Former Yankee Oswald Peraza leaps into the air after hitting the game-winning RBI single in the 10th inning of the Mets’ loss to the Angels. AP

“I just wasn’t executing,” McLean said. “I got behind in counts in the fourth and it’s really hard to pitch behind in counts.”

The Mets scored twice in the seventh to tie it 3-3, but left the bases loaded when neither Bichette nor Juan Soto could deliver. Bichette grounded into a fielder’s choice out at home plate before Soto struck out against Sam Bachman.

Andy Ibanez brought in the inning’s first run with a sacrifice fly before Taylor’s RBI single tied it.

Slater then singled and Mauricio’s squib to first base became an infield single following a replay challenge won by the Mets.

But Mauricio fractured his left thumb on the dive into the bag. Bichette and Soto were then retired, leaving the bases loaded. Mark Vientos’ double started the rally and Marcus Semien singled and stole second.

“Guys like Bo and Juan, those are the guys you want at the plate in those situations and more often than not they are going to come through,” Mendoza said.

Tobias Myers worked into the seventh and departed with the go-ahead run on first base and two outs. Huascar Brazoban ended the inning by retiring Soler.

Myers allowed three hits and one walk over 2 ²/₃ scoreless innings. The right-hander has pitched to a 2.05 ERA this season.

Offense Explodes As Guardians Take 2-0 Series Lead

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 02: Travis Bazzana #37 of the Cleveland Guardians bats against the Athletics in the top of the second inning of a major league baseball game at Sutter Health Park on May 02, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Was that the most fun game of the year? I think it was. It’s been a long time since we saw the offense score the way they have in the last two games. Seeing Travis Bazzana get his first big league hit with the bases loaded was truly special. His surface numbers may not look great so far but I have been very impressed with his ABs. He is going to be a good player for a very long time.

Chase DeLauter continues to do absurd things for a rookie. I told some of my friends earlier today that he’s like a video game character with maximum hitting attributes. He truly has no weakness at the plate and it is an absolute joy to watch. Over his last 7 games he has a slash line of .565/.630/.696.

Maybe the most important thing from today was Kyle Manzardo hitting a pinch hit 3 run bomb. Let us all pray that this is the start of him going back to being the Kyle Manzardo that we know he is capable of being. José Ramírez also seems to be in a bit of slump, it was nice to see him have that big double today that knocked in a couple runs.

Angel Martinez continues to have an awesome season with 3 hits today. And how about David Fry? They have had a lot of patience with him and it looks to be starting to pay off after he hit a huge HR today off a lefty. How could I possibly forget AUSTIN HEDGES? With two doubles and a HR today, he is now hitting .325 with an .864 OPS on the season, good for third best on the team behind Schneemann and DeLauter. I do not expect this to continue, but we appreciate any and all offensive contributions from Hedgey.

Now that we have went through all the awesome things with the offense, it’s time to talk about the elephant in the room. Slade Cecconi had another rough start today. His ERA is up to 6.56 on the season and it’s hard to find any positives with him right now. How long can they keep running him out there every 5 days? Do they think Logan Allen can give them a better chance to win right now? Allen is not exactly lighting it up in AAA either. Cecconi does have an option, so they could always send him down to AAA and have him work on some stuff there. If it were my decision, that is likely what I’d do as he seems like someone who just needs a reset.

Tim Herrin might be the most underappreciated member of the team right now, he’s been phenomenal this season. He has yet to allow an earned run and the advanced metrics support that. Hunter Gaddis had another rough performance, but I am still not worried about him. I think he just needs some time and he’ll be fine.

The Guardians will look for the sweep tomorrow. It will be Parker Messick vs…checks notes…Aaron Civale at 4:05 pm ET.!

Mets' Ronny Mauricio fractures thumb against Angels, to be placed on IL

Mets shortstop Ronny Mauricio is headed to the injured list after he fractured his left thumb on a head-first slide to first base against the Los Angeles Angels on Saturday night, manager Carlos Mendoza said after the game.

The injury occurred in the seventh inning after Mauricio hit a slow roller to first baseman Nolan Schanuel and tried beating it out by diving to first base. After initially called an out, the Mets immediately challenged the call which was overturned, but at great cost.

"I’m gonna have to talk to David [Stearns]," Mendoza said when asked about a possible replacement. "We need a player here tomorrow so it’s a quick turnaround."

Mauricio looked shaken up after the play, but stayed in to run the bases. He was taken out of the game in the bottom half of the inning when Brett Baty came in at third base, moving Bo Bichette to shortstop. 

Who will play shortstop in Sunday's series finale and beyond is now the question, although moving Bichette back to his natural position is an option.

"I gotta wait and see who the player is that’s gonna come up," Mendoza said. "Pretty sure Bo is gonna be in the conversation, but again we just got done with the game."

With Mauricio starting due to the calf injury of Francisco Lindor, this is just the latest blow to a team that has been decimated by injuries early this season. It's also Mauricio's second significant injury after he tore his ACL before the 2024 season and comes at a time where he was finally going to get a long look in the majors.

"It’s tough, obviously," Mendoza said. "You lose your everyday shortstop and the guy that comes up and is getting the everyday opportunity here now is hurt – somebody else is gonna have an opportunity."

Mets fail in the clutch once more, fall to Angels 4-3 in extras

May 2, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels designated hitter Jorge Soler (12) is congratulated by manager Kurt Suzuki, center fielder Mike Trout (27) and catcher Sebastian Rivero (38) after scoring in the fourth inning against the New York Mets at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

April was a terrible month for the Mets. But April is over, and they won yesterday on May 1st. Surely May was destined to be much better. The 2026 season can now officially begin, right?

Yeah, no. Tonight we had another game where the Mets didn’t come through enough in the clutch—just like every other game in April. The result was an extra inning 4-3 loss.

Following a quiet first inning for the Mets, the Angels got off to an early lead against Nolan McLean. The rookie ace retired the first two batters with ease, but then surrendered three straight singles (one of them being a little squeaker to an empty spot on the right side of the infield). The third single was hit to right fielder Austin Slater, who unleashed a good throw to nab Jorge Soler trying to get to third to end the inning. Replay showed that the out at third beat the runner scoring at home, but the umpires did not see this, and Carlos Mendoza did not challenge the play, so the run counted and the Mets were quickly behind 1-0. That missed call/non-challenge would prove to be quite impactful.

However, after another quiet inning in the second, the Amazins finally pushed a run home in the third against Angels starter Reid Detmers. Following his impressive defensive play in the first, Slater—in the lineup against the lefty pitcher—socked a one-out double to left field, and after Ronny Mauricio struck out for the second out of the inning, Bo Bichette knocked a single to right to tie up the game.

They failed to add any additional runs on the board, though, and the Angels would retake the lead in the bottom of the fourth. After recording the first out, McLean surrendered a walk and a single to put runners on first and second, and both runners would subsequently advance on a wild pitch. A strikeout of Josh Lowe got the Mets one out away from getting out of the inning, but Vaughn Grissom then blooped a single to center to bring both runs home and put the Angels up 3-1. Another single extended the inning and further contributed to the high pitch count which would end McLean’s night after just four innings (the first time in his young career that he had an outing that short), but he did strike out former Met Travis d’Arnaud swinging to keep the deficit at just two.

Tobias Myers came on for the bottom of the fifth for some long relief and managed to work out of a jam after allowing the first two baserunners on. He followed that with a scoreless second inning, and it was at this point when the Mets’ bats decided to wake up against Detmers. Mark Vientos led off the inning with a double to left field, and Marcus Semien followed with a single to put runners on first and third with no outs. Andy Ibáñez—making his first start as a Met—then hit a ball to deep center to score the runner from third on a sacrifice fly, cutting the lead to just one run. Semien then swiped second base to put the tying run in scoring position, and Tyrone Taylor quickly took advantage by socking a single to center to even it up at three runs apiece.

Two infield singles (one from Ronny Mauricio, who slid into first base and would subsequently have to come out of the game in the bottom of the inning after hurting himself on the play) knocked Detmers out of the game and gave the Mets an opportunity with the bases loaded, one out, and the top of the order up against an Angels bullpen that has struggled mightily in recent times. Alas, Sam Bachman came on and retired Bichette (on a groundout to third base in which Taylor was thrown out at home) and Juan Soto (on a strikeout). Thus, following another scoreless frame from the Angels in the bottom of the inning (started by Myers in his third inning of work, and finished by Huascar Brazobán when Mendoza turned to him with two outs and a runner on), the score remained tie after seven.

Anyway, remember that beleaguered Angels bullpen we just remembered? Well, it should surprise absolutely no one that against the Mets, they suddenly looked like prime Mariano Rivera, as Bachman retired three straight batters in the top of the eighth with two more strikeouts and Ryan Zeferjohn followed with an easy 1-2-3 inning as well. For his part, Brazobán also pitched his own 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the eighth, and Craig Kimbrel then came on for the ninth to try to bring the game into extra innings. After retiring the first batter, Yoan Moncada hit a line drive to first that Vientos inexplicably failed to catch, resulting in a double down the line to put the winning run in scoring position. But the future Hall of Fame reliever bore down, striking out Zack Neto for the second out and then—following an intentional walk to Mike Trout—inducing a groundout to second to end the game and send it to the tenth.

The Mets got a gift in the beginning of the top of the tenth, as Brett Baty—who entered the game when Bichette moved to shortstop following Mauricio’s exit—reached on a catcher’s interference, putting runners on first and second with nobody out and the top of the order coming up. As was the case in the seventh inning, however, the top of the order failed to come through. Bichette grounded into a double play, Soto was intentionally walked with the go-ahead run on third, and Francisco Alvarez weakly flied out to shallow center to end the inning without a single run coming home. Austin Warren then came on with the unenviable task of needing to prevent the ghost runner from scoring to keep the game going. But, well, you already knew that wasn’t going to happen. Jorge Soler led off the inning with a walk, and Jo Adell then lined a sharp single to right to load the bases. Warren, to his credit, did bear down to record two straight outs and get to within a strike of getting out of the inning unscathed. But Oswald Peraza dunked a single into left field to end it.

The Mets are now 11-22. On the bright side, they’re still 1-1 in May. That’s .500! Progress!

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Box scores

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Win Probability Added

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Brett Baty, +20% WPA
Big Mets loser: Austin Warren, -36% WPA
Mets pitchers: -11% WPA
Mets hitters: -39% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Brett Baty reaching on catcher’s interference in the 10th, +19.8% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Oswald Peraza walk-off single in the 10th, -34% WPA

Mets walked off by Oswald Peraza, fall to Angels, 4-3, in extra innings

The Mets went to extra innings and lost to the Los Angeles Angels on Saturday night by a score of 4-3.

Here are the takeaways...

-- After striking out the first two batters he faced, Nolan McLean couldn't put the opening inning to bed and allowed three straight singles, two of which came with two strikes. The third hit of the inning produced an out as right fielder Austin Slater gunned down Jorge Soler at third base, but not before Nolan Schanuel crossed home plate to put the Angels up 1-0... or so the Mets thought.

As it turned out, thanks to replay, Soler was tagged out before Schanuel touched home plate which should've canceled the run from counting. However, New York either didn't see it or caught it too late because nobody in the dugout challenged the call, which is a reviewable play, on the field. The mental lapse cost McLean and the Mets a run. Would it come back to bite them?

-- New York would get the run back in the third inning. After Slater, in the Mets' starting lineup for the first time because of lefty Reid Detmers on the mound, doubled with one out, Bo Bichette drove him in with a two-out single. Slater had a good game and finished 2-for-3 alongside his outfield assist at third base from right field.

-- McLean followed up the missed call in the first inning by retiring the next seven hitters in a row before issuing a one-out walk in the fourth. The inning began innocently, but a single and a wild pitch, the right-hander's first of the season, put runners on second and third with one out. McLean managed to strike out Josh Lowe for a path out of the inning, but after getting ahead in the count 0-2 to Vaughn Grissom, he left a sweeper in the zone that Grissom lined into center field for a two-run single. McLean lost Oswald Peraza to a single after getting to two strikes as well before finally ending the inning with a strikeout.

Not only were the three earned runs the most allowed by the rookie in the first four innings of his career, it was also the shortest outing of his career after he was not given the fifth as Tobias Myers took over to start the fifth inning. McLean's final line: 4 IP, 6 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 6 K. His season ERA rose to 2.97.

While it wasn't the right-hander's best performance, the decision by manager Carlos Mendoza to pull him after just 78 pitches (51 strikes) was certainly interesting.

-- As for Myers, he found himself in trouble immediately after the first two hitters he faced reached base. He managed to escape without allowing a run and ended up going 2.2 scoreless innings.

-- Thanks to Myers' efforts, the Mets were able to hang around before tying the game in the seventh. Still facing Detmers, who had been cruising right along, Mark Vientos began the seventh with a double down the left field line. Marcus Semien followed with a single to put runners at the corners with nobody out and Andy Ibañez, in his Mets debut, drove in a run with a sacrifice fly.

New York continued to play solid baseball after Semien stole a crucial base with one out to advance to second in front of Tyrone Taylor who knocked him in with a game-tying single. The Mets would end up loading the bases, knocking Detmers out of the game in the process, but were unable to push across the go-ahead run against the Angels bullpen after Bichette grounded into a force play and Juan Soto struck out to leave them loaded.

-- Things stayed tied through the bottom of the ninth inning where Craig Kimbrel was tasked with sending the game to extra innings. Things got dicey after pinch-hitter Yoan Moncada doubled with one out to bring up the top of the order, but Kimbrel struck out Zach Neto for the second out and New York wisely intentionally walked Mike Trout, already 2-for-4 on the night, to pitch to Schanuel who grounded out to end the inning. 

-- In the top of the 10th inning, after the Mets got the first batter to reach, Bichette grounded into a double play and Los Angeles returned the favor by intentionally walking Soto to face Francisco Alvarez who popped out to end the frame. In the bottom half of the inning, Austin Warren came in and walked the first batter he faced before allowing a single to load the bases. 

After Warren nearly escaped the jam by retiring the next two hitters, Peraza stroked a two-strike single into left field for the game-winner. Mets pitchers not being able to put away hitters with two strikes was a theme for most of the night and the miscall in the first inning that New York failed to review cost them dearly in the end.

Game MVP: Oswald Peraza

He finished 3-for-5 with the game-winning hit in the bottom of the 10th inning.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets close out their series with the Angels on Sunday afternoon starting at 4:07 p.m. on SNY.

RHP Clay Holmes (3-2, 1.75 ERA) looks to keep his fantastic beginning to the season going and will face off against RHP Jack Kochanowicz (2-0, 3.09 ERA).

How to watch Rangers vs. Tigers on Peacock and NBCSN: TV/streaming info, schedule, preview, starting pitchers

Sunday Night Baseball on Peacock and NBCSN is headlined by the Detroit Tigers hosting the Texas Rangers at Comerica Park to close out a three-game set.

Both teams split the first two game of the series after Texas has lost three of their last four series and Detroit has lost two series in a row.

Texas (16-17) sits in the middle of a tight AL West with little separation between division leaders Athletics and last-place Los Angeles Angels.

Meanwhile, Detroit (17-17) is one game back from the Cleveland Guardians in an even tighter AL Central with just four games separating the top from the bottom.

See below for additional information on how to watch the Braves vs. Phillies and a breakdown of the game. Also check out the schedule for the MLB on NBC and Peacock. There will be 27 prime-time MLB games featured across NBC, Peacock and NBCSN in 2026. NBC Sports will also stream one out-of-market game each day of the 2026 MLB season nationally on Peacock.

Click here to sign up for Peacock!


How to watch Texas Rangers vs. Detroit Tigers:

  • When: Sunday, May 5
  • Where: Comerica Park in Detroit, Michigan
  • Time: 7 p.m. ET (7:20 p.m. first pitch)
  • TV: NBCSN
  • Live Stream: Peacock

Who are the announcers for Rangers-Tigers?

Jason Benetti is on the call alongside 1984 World Series Champion Pitcher Dan Petry and Former Major League Pitcher Mike Bacsik.

Ahmed Fareed will host the pregame show alongside Anthony Rizzo, who will also provide “Inside the Pitch” commentary from the batter’s perspective during the game.

Who are the probable pitchers for Rangers vs. Tigers?

  • Rangers: Jack Leiter (1-2, 5.17 ERA, 33 K)
  • Tigers: Tyler Holton (0-1, 5.54 ERA, 9 K)

Texas Rangers Preview

Texas has not posted a winning season in the two seasons after winning the World Series in 2023. In manager Skip Schumaker's first season, the Rangers are again posting a middling record through the first handful of weeks of 2026.

The lineup is struggling up and down with the fourth lowest total runs in the MLB while sitting in the bottom half in team AVG, OBP and SLG. Bright spots have been Josh Jung with four homeruns and 19 RBIs with a .931 OPS and free agent acquisition Brandon Nimmo with a team-leading 38 hits.

The strength of this Texas team is the pitching with a 3.48 combined ERA, the second-best in the AL, and 278 strikeouts, which is the sixth-best in the league. Jacob deGrom is mowing down hitters with 40 punchouts in 31.1 innings with just six walks and a 2.01 ERA. The Rangers bullpen has four pitchers with a 2.10 ERA or less and double-digit innings pitched.

Detroit Tigers Preview

Detroit has gotten off to a somewhat slow start looking to build off two consecutive ALDS appearances with manager A.J Hinch. The Tigers rank second in the American League in hits (274), third in batting average (.249), and sixth in ERA (3.99). Rookie shortstop Kevin McGonigle leads Detroit with a .310 batting average with 39 hits, 11 doubles. and 23 runs scored.

Catcher Dillon Dingler is tied for lead in home runs with six and leads in RBIs with 23. Three other Tigers including Dingler have a 1.0 or higher WAR alongside McGonigle.

How to watch MLB on NBC and Peacock

Following its debut on March 29 with Guardians vs. Mariners, you can find the full Sunday Night Baseball schedule here. The 18-game MLB Sunday Leadoff schedule will begin May 3, with the defending AL champion Toronto Blue Jays visiting the Twins in Minnesota. On Sunday, July 5, all 15 MLB games will be presented nationally across Peacock and NBC as part of a special all-day “Star-Spangled Sunday” showcase.

NBC Sports will also stream one out-of-market game each day of the 2026 MLB season nationally on Peacock. Telemundo Deportes will present all NBCUniversal-produced MLB games in Spanish, with Universo televising all games broadcast on NBC.

MLB: World Series-Los Angeles Dodgers at Toronto Blue Jays
From an MLB Opening Day doubleheader on March 26 to the Wild Card round of the playoffs, NBC Sports’ 2026 schedule delivers wall-to-wall coverage.

How to sign up for Peacock

Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You’ll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC and Bravo hits for whatever suits your mood.

MLB on NBC 2026 schedule

Click here to see the full list of MLB games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.

What devices does Peacock support?

You can enjoy Peacock on a variety of devices. View the full list of supported devices here.

Braves News: Ronald Acuna hamstring injury, Alex Anthopoulos speaks, more

DENVER, CO - May 1: Atlanta Braves Ronald Acuña Jr. (13) looks on from the dugout during a game between the Atlanta Braves and the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on May 1, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Matt Olson has been absolutely crushing the ball this season. Through roughly 20% of the season, he is on pace for 55 homers and 65 doubles. He has a monster 171 wRC+, plays elite defense at the first base position, and is leading the NL in fWAR. With Olson leading the way, Drake Baldwin, Michael Harris, and Ozzie Albies have been premium offensive contributors as well. With Ronald Acuna seeming likely to miss at least some time with a hamstring injury, the Braves could really use Austin Riley stepping up and producing like he is paid to fill in some of that production for the time being. Austin has put together two nice nights at the plate in Coors, punctuated by a huge homer Saturday night. Here’s hoping that could be a turning point for Austin, because while the team has started this season incredibly well, some of this offensive production seems likely to come back to Earth, at least some, and especially without Ronald Acuna in the lineup.

Braves News

Ronald Acuna exited Saturday’s game with a hamstring injury, with details presumably coming soon, as he is set to receive an MRI.

Alex Anthopoulos had an interesting conversation with 92.9 The Game, covering a few notable topics.

Chris Sale and Drake Baldwin led the way to a 9-1 blowout of the Rockies.

The Braves optioned Anthony Molina, re-signing Carlos Carrasco to the major league roster.

Grant McAuley took a look at Bryce Elder’s strong season so far.

MLB News

Cardinals’ Lars Nootbar is set to begin his rehab assignment in the next couple weeks.

The Mets extended catcher Luis Torrens for another two years to the tune of $11.5 million.

JT Realmuto returned from injury for the Phillies after 10 days, DFAing Dylan Moore.