Yankees flaunt revamped offense in slugfest against Brewers: 'We love our lineup'

With Juan Soto playing across town now after his one-year stint in The Bronx, the Yankees knew they had to do something during the offseason to make up for the loss of the generational 26-year-old.

That something was bringing in a cast of characters, including Paul Goldschmidt and Cody Bellinger, in an effort to lengthen their lineup and help with their depth outside of Aaron Judge. In just New York's second game of the season, those moves paid off in a big way.

Facing former Yankee Nestor Cortes and the Milwaukee Brewers in Game 2 of the regular season, Goldschmidt, Bellinger and Judge hit three straight home runs -- on three straight pitches -- off the lefty to start the game. Before most of the 46,683 fans in attendance could even sit down and take a bite out of their hot dog, the Bronx Bombers -- true to their name -- had a 3-0 lead.

"Swing first pitch," Judge said with a laugh on what was going through his mind walking up to the plate in that first inning. "The place was rocking once I got up there. I was just trying to control [my] breathing and just get a good pitch."

Good pitch he got, indeed, sending an 88-mph cutter 468 feet to left field, the farthest and loudest of the three first-inning home runs.

But it was Goldschmidt, making his first plate appearance at the leadoff spot, who got the party started with a solo shot to lead things off, just as Austin Wells, who was as unfamiliar batting first as Goldschmidt, did in Thursday's season opener. It was the 37-year-old's first hit as a Yankee.

Overall, the first baseman went 2-for-3 with a double, a walk and three runs scored, passing his first test batting leadoff with flying colors.

"It’s tough to start better than that," Goldschmidt said. "I just tried to take my same at-bat, my same mindset. Fortunately I was able to get a good pitch to hit and get it out of there."

Congratulations, Aaron Boone, you're two for two.

Fellow newcomer Bellinger followed soon after with a blast to right center field and in the blink of an eye, New York was on top, 2-0.

"That was a really cool moment," Bellinger said. "Super unique to be a part of and it was just nice to get the party started."

After hitting his first home run in pinstripes, Bellinger noted that Saturday's win was a great way for all of the newcomers to feel comfortable with their new team and get some of those firsts out of the way. Whether it be first hit with the new club, first home run, or even just first game as it was for J.C. Escarra, who made his MLB debut by pinch-hitting in the seventh inning.

Another first almost happened, too.

Following his first-inning homer, Judge hit a second home run (this one a grand slam) in the third before going yard again in the fourth for his third three-home run game, tying him with Joe DiMaggio and Alex Rodriguez for second in Yankees history behind Lou Gehrig's four.

"It’s a special group," Judge said. "Any time you get mentioned with those guys, with what they’ve done in the game and the careers they’ve had, it’s pretty special. Our story’s not done yet, so hopefully we can keep adding to those lists."

The reigning AL MVP would have three more plate appearances to try at his first four-homer game, something accomplished by just 18 players in MLB history.

In fact, Judge came a few feet away from achieving that feat after his RBI double off the right field wall in the sixth inning. Then in the eighth, facing position-player and former Yankee Jake Bauers, Judge hit another long fly ball to left field that barely left the yard but was caught.

"Nothing’s out of reach for him," Boone said. "I wanted to give him that opportunity at least."

Judge ended his day 4-for-6 with three homers and eight RBI -- quite the contrast from his less-than-stellar spring training.

As for the rest of the lineup, Wells, Anthony Volpe, Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Oswald Peraza also went deep, giving New York a total of nine home runs on the afternoon, a franchise record.

"We like where we’re at. We love our lineup, we love our depth, we love the guys that we got in this locker room and it’s gonna be fun," Bellinger said. "This is a very difficult game, but we got a lot of guys that have been there and are gonna have some fun doing it."

Rays put OF Josh Lowe on 10-day IL with strained right oblique, a year after he had similar injury

TAMPA, Fla. — The Tampa Bay Rays put outfielder Josh Lowe on the 10-day injured list with a strained right oblique.

The Rays recalled outfielder Jake Mangum from Triple-A Durham on Saturday to take Lowe’s spot on the roster.

Lowe was hurt in Tampa Bay’s opener on Friday, a year after he missed 46 games with a similar injury.

He grounded out in his first at-bat and felt discomfort when he fouled off a pitch during his plate appearance in the fifth. Lowe hit a single on the next pitch and winced as he left the batter’s box and ran gingerly to first.

The 27-year-old Lowe hit .241 with 10 homers, 34 RBIs and 25 stolen bases in 106 games last season. He had hip inflammation during spring training in 2024. He strained his right oblique and didn’t make his season debut until May 6, then was sidelined by the ailment between May 22 and June 5.

Mets' Francisco Alvarez participates in receiving drills with injured left hand

Francisco Alvarez still isn't expected to make his regular-season debut until sometime in late April, but the injured Mets catcher is continuing to make strides in his recovery.

Prior to Saturday's rubber game against the Houston Astros, Mets manager Carlos Mendoza shared a positive update on Alvarez, revealing that the 23-year-old participated in receiving drills with soft baseballs while using his surgically-repaired left hand. Mendoza simply called the workout "a good sign."

Alvarez, who fractured his left hamate bone on March 8 during live at-bats in camp, had stiches removed from his hand on Monday. Mendoza mentioned on Wednesday that baseball activities were on the horizon for Alvarez once strength work began. The latest news suggests that he's still on track to return on the shorter end of the initial six-to-eight week recovery timeline.

"Maybe six weeks," Alvarez said on March 12. "My goal is to make that as quick as possible... They said after the third week, maybe I can start hitting. It's on me. If my body takes more time than normal, maybe take eight weeks. But it's very on me. If I feel comfortable, if I feel good, I can move quicker."

Due to the injury, Alvarez was limited to just nine spring training games in which he hit .227 (5-for-22) with five walks, two RBI, and 11 strikeouts. He's also dealt with a string of bad luck to his left thumb, as he tore a ligament last April against the Los Angeles Dodgers and needed surgery that kept him out of the lineup until mid-June.

Only time will tell how Alvarez's thumb responds to additional catching and hitting activities, but the Mets are counting on his production in the heart of the lineup. He wound up playing 100 games last season, slashing .237/.307/.403 with 11 home runs, 14 doubles, and 47 RBI in 342 plate appearances.

Scherzer allows two HRs, leaves Blue Jays debut after three innings because of right lat soreness

TORONTO — Three-time Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer left his debut start with the Toronto Blue Jays on Saturday because of soreness in his right lat muscle.

Facing Baltimore, Scherzer allowed two runs and three hits, including two solo home runs. He threw 45 pitches in three innings, 28 for strikes. Scherzer struck out one and walked none.

Earlier this month, the 40-year-old Scherzer had a spring training start pushed back because of thumb pain.

Baltimore’s Colton Cowser put Scherzer in an early hole with a 417-foot drive to center on the second pitch of the game.

Jordan Westburg’s two-out drive off Scherzer traveled 434 feet for the longest home run of his career.

Scherzer signed a one-year, $15.5 million contract with Toronto in February. He went 2-4 with a 3.95 ERA in nine starts for Texas last season, starting the year on the injured list while recovering from lower back surgery. He also had a stint on the IL with shoulder fatigue and didn’t pitch after Sept. 14 because of a left hamstring strain.

Right-hander Richard Lovelady replaced Scherzer in the fourth.

Red Sox prospect Kristian Campbell hits first career MLB home run

Red Sox prospect Kristian Campbell hits first career MLB home run originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Boston Red Sox prospect Kristian Campbell is making his presence felt.

The Red Sox rookie hit his first career MLB home run in the fourth inning of Saturday night’s road game against the Texas Rangers.

Campbell crushed a pitch over the middle of the plate and sent the ball 431 feet over the fence in left-center field:

Campbell went 1-for-3 in the Opening Day win over the Rangers on Thursday before going 2-for-4 at the plate in Friday’s loss.

Campbell entered the season as the Red Sox’s second-best prospect and the No. 7 ranked prospect in all of baseball, per MLB.com.

He’s a tremendous hitter and a quality defender. Don’t be surprised if Campbell plays a meaningful role in Boston’s success this season.

Yankees set franchise record with nine home runs, including three from Aaron Judge, in 20-9 win over Brewers

The Yankees hit a franchise record nine home runs to beat the Milwaukee Brewers, 20-9, on Saturday afternoon.

Here are the takeaways...

- New York started the game off with a splash, well ... four splashes, to be exact.

Paul Goldschmidt -- batting in the leadoff spot for the first time in his career -- Cody Bellinger, and Aaron Judgecrushed back-to-back-to-back home runs on three straight pitches from former Yankee Nestor Cortes in the bottom of the first inning. It was the first time in MLB history a team has hit home runs on the first three pitches they saw (h/t Sarah Langs).

Then, with two outs, Austin Wells joined in on the fun and hit his second homer of the year to give New York a 4-0 lead.

- It didn't take long for the Yanks to add to their lead, as Anthony Volpe hit a three-run homer in the bottom of the second inning to make it a 7-3 game. New York kept its foot on the gas, knocking Cortes out of the game and loading the bases in the third inning for Bellinger, who singled to drive in another run. Judge then dropped the hammer with a grand slam, pushing the lead to 12-3. Jazz Chisholm felt left out and hit a solo shot to join the party, upping the score to 13-3. The seven home runs through three innings is the most in MLB history.

- The Yanks continued the barrage in the bottom of the fourth inning. Bellinger drove in Trent Grisham on a sac fly and Judge hit his third homer of the afternoon, a two-run blast, to make it 16-4. That gave New York eight home runs in the game, tying a franchise record. The major league record for home runs in a game is 10, set by the Toronto Blue Jays on Sept. 14, 1987.

- Overlooked by the record-setting offense was Max Fried, who took the mound for the first time in pinstripes. After a quick first inning, Fried got into some trouble with two on and one out, and let up an RBI single to Vinny Capra. A throwing error by Volpe allowed another run to cross the plate, and then Fried gave up a single and made an error of his own to give the Brewers their third run. He struck out William Contreras with runners on second and third to escape the jam.

Fried got through the third inning unscathed, despite his second HBP of the day. He allowed a one-out double to Jackson Chourio in the fourth, and after a third error, surrendered an RBI single to Rhys Hoskins. Errors continued to plague the Yanks, as Pablo Reyes had his second and Chisholm had one to give Milwaukee runners on the corners. Chourio grounded out back to Fried, allowing the runner to score from third, and Christian Yelich drove in another for their sixth run, ending the lefty starter's day.

Overall, Fried allowed two earned runs on seven hits with two walks and four strikeouts across 4.2 innings (94 pitches).

- Bellinger's RBI single and Judge's RBI double made it 18-6 in the bottom of the sixth. Oswald Peraza pinch-hit forReyes in the seventh inning and hit a two-run homer to put the Yanks up 20-6, helping set a new franchise record with nine jacks in one game.

- J.C. Escarra made his MLB debut in the bottom of the seventh, pinch-hitting for Wells. The 29-year-old struck out swinging against LHP Chad Patrick. Escarra popped out to third in his second at-bat in the eighth inning. With the score out of hand, veteran Carlos Carrasco tossed the final two innings and allowed three runs on five hits, including a homer, with two strikeouts.

Game MVP: Aaron Judge

Judge recorded his third career three-homer game, tying him with Alex Rodriguez and Joe DiMaggio for second in Yankees history behind Lou Gehrig's four.

The reigning AL MVP finished 4-for-6 with three homers, a double, and a career-best eight RBI.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees and Brewers wrap up their three-game series in The Bronx on Sunday. First pitch is set for 1:05 p.m.

Marcus Stroman is set to take the mound and will go up against RHP Aaron Civale.

Aaron Judge homers three times, Yankees go deep on first three pitches vs. Brewers

NEW YORK — Aaron Judge homered three times, also combining with Paul Goldschmidt and Cody Bellinger to go deep on the first three pitches from Milwaukee’s Nestor Cortes, and the Yankees tied a team record with eight home runs in taking a 16-4 lead over the Brewers on Saturday.

Judge had seven RBIs, hitting his ninth career grand slam, a solo drive and a two-run shot for his 40th multi-homer game. He hit three homers in a game for the third time.

Goldschmidt, Bellinger and Judge homered starting the first on the unusually warm 78-degree afternoon. Major League Baseball said this was the first time a team homered on its first three pitches since tracking of pitch counts began in 1988.

Austin Wells homered later in the inning as New York hit four home runs in the first inning for the first time in its century-plus history. Anthony Volpe added a three-run drive in the second for a 7-3 lead against Cortes, who allowed a career-high five home runs.

Judge’s first homer went 468 feet and he added his ninth career slam in the fourth on a 396-foot drive to left-center off Connor Thomas, a 27-year-old left-hander making his major league debut. Jazz Chisholm Jr. followed with a home run, boosting the lead to 13-3.

Judge hit a 425-foot, two-run homer to center in the fourth against Thomas.

New York’s homers tied the team record set at the Philadelphia Athletics on June 28, 1939, and matched against the Chicago White Sox on July 31, 2007.

Batting leadoff for the first time in his 15-year major league career, Goldschmidt drove a fastball 413 feet into the Brewers bullpen in left field against Cortes, who was making his Milwaukee debut following a December trade from the Yankees.

Bellinger sent a fastball over the Yankees bullpen and into the right-field bleachers and Judge drove a cutter 468 feet into the left-field second deck.

After a mound visit by pitching coach Chris Hook, Chisholm took a called third strike, Volpe grounded out and Wells hit a fastball 372 feet into the left-field seats.

Milwaukee closed to 4-3 in the second against Max Fried, who lasted 4 2/3 innings in his Yankees debut, and Volpe hit a cutter 349 feet into the left-field seats.

Wells led off Thursday’s game with a home run off Freddy Peralta, becoming the first catcher to hit a leadoff homer on opener day. The Yankees joined the 2011 Texas Rangers as the only team to lead off with a home run in its first two games. Ian Kinsler went deep starting both those Rangers games.

Cortes, a 30-year-old left-hander who pitched for New York from 2018-24, had never before allowed more than three homers in a game. He is remembered by Yankees fans for allowing a first-pitch grand slam to Freddie Freeman in the 10th inning of last year’s World Series opener that lifted the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 6-3 win, starting them to the title.

Pitching with his hair dyed blond, Cortes gave up eight runs, six hits and five walks in two innings and left with a 36.00 ERA.

Thomas allowed his first five batters to reach and allowed eight runs, six hits and two walks in two innings.

Promising signs aplenty as Phillies throw up 11 runs in win

Promising signs aplenty as Phillies throw up 11 runs in win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

WASHINGTON — Could this be a sign of what’s to come for a healthy Bryson Stott?

A glimpse of contract year Kyle Schwarber?

A foundation for newcomer Jesus Luzardo?

The Phillies came back to beat the Nationals on Saturday for the second straight game to begin their season, surging in the middle innings after Keibert Ruiz gave Washington another early lead with a home run.

Stott, who dealt with a balky elbow for two-thirds of the 2024 season, tied the game in the fourth inning when he kept a two-run homer just inside the right-field line. He also doubled, walked twice and scored three runs. Not once last season did Stott double and homer in the same game. Both extra-base hits came with two strikes, which was a theme all throughout 2023 when he was neck-and-neck with Freddie Freeman for the most two-strike hits in the National League.

Schwarber and Brandon Marsh broke the 11-6 win wide-open with three-run homers in the top of the sixth and seventh. Both were patient frames for the Phils and examples of what can happen when the bottom of the order does its job. Nick Castellanos and Stott drew one-out walks and Marsh singled ahead of Schwarber’s three-run bomb. Castellanos and Stott walked again in the seventh ahead of Marsh’s longball.

The Phillies have derived tremendous value from the four-year, $79 million contract they signed Schwarber to before the 2022 season. Between the regular season and playoffs, he’s homered 145 times in 501 games as a Phillie while also becoming the leader of a team filled with big names.

Marsh singled twice before the homer. He and Stott are both coming off down years entering their age-27 season and their improvement will go a long way in determining how far the Phillies advance. Without much turnover in the lineup, the Phillies are relying on that sort of internal improvement.

The big sixth inning made a winner out of Luzardo, who struck out 11, tied with Jim Bunning for the second-most ever for a debuting Phillie behind only Garrett Stephenson in 1997.

Luzardo was animated walking off the mound at the end of his final inning, pumping his fist after striking out the side and stranding a runner on second base.

The Nationals whiffed on 12 of the 16 sweepers/sliders Luzardo threw and 19 of the 43 pitches they swung at overall. His velocity was up nearly two mph from last season. Luzardo averaged 97 mph with his four-seam fastball and 96 with his sinker, hitting 98 mph 11 times with 30 different fastballs of at least 97.

This was an encouraging introduction for the Phillies’ most important offseason acquisition. They acquired Luzardo from the Miami Marlins for their No. 4 prospect at the time, shortstop Starlyn Caba. Luzardo has this year and next under contract with the upside of a No. 2 starter. He was one in 2022-23 before missing ample time with a back injury in 2024.

The 2-0 Phillies look to finish off a sweep on Sunday afternoon behind Aaron Nola. It remains to be seen whether Trea Turner and J.T. Realmuto will be in the lineup. Turner was scratched an hour before Saturday’s game with a low back spasm, and Realmuto was removed for precautionary reasons with a left foot contusion in the seventh inning of a seven-run game after fouling a ball off his foot.

Promising signs aplenty as Phillies throw up 11 runs in win

Promising signs aplenty as Phillies throw up 11 runs in win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

WASHINGTON — Could this be a sign of what’s to come for a healthy Bryson Stott?

A glimpse of contract year Kyle Schwarber?

A foundation for newcomer Jesus Luzardo?

The Phillies came back to beat the Nationals on Saturday for the second straight game to begin their season, surging in the middle innings after Keibert Ruiz gave Washington another early lead with a home run.

Stott, who dealt with a balky elbow for two-thirds of the 2024 season, tied the game in the fourth inning when he kept a two-run homer just inside the right-field line. He also doubled, walked twice and scored three runs. Not once last season did Stott double and homer in the same game. Both extra-base hits came with two strikes, which was a theme all throughout 2023 when he was neck-and-neck with Freddie Freeman for the most two-strike hits in the National League.

“That was a pitch last year that I struggled with,” Stott of his homer on a low-and-in curveball, “and just to see it come to life again two days in is awesome.”

Schwarber and Brandon Marsh broke the 11-6 win wide-open with three-run homers in the top of the sixth and seventh. Both were patient frames for the Phils and examples of what can happen when the bottom of the order does its job. Nick Castellanos and Stott drew one-out walks and Marsh singled ahead of Schwarber’s three-run bomb. Castellanos and Stott walked again in the seventh ahead of Marsh’s longball.

The Phillies have derived tremendous value from the four-year, $79 million contract they signed Schwarber to before the 2022 season. Between the regular season and playoffs, he’s homered 145 times in 501 games as a Phillie while also becoming the leader of a team filled with big names.

Marsh singled twice before the homer. He and Stott are both coming off down years entering their age-27 season and their improvement will go a long way in determining how far the Phillies advance. Without much turnover in the lineup, the Phillies are relying on that sort of internal improvement.

“I was just late, trying to get both arms moving at once and kinda slowed everything down,” Stott said of the difference last year. “Losing my barrel made it even worse. But now I feel good.”

The big sixth inning made a winner out of Luzardo, who struck out 11, tied with Jim Bunning for the second-most ever for a debuting Phillie behind only Garrett Stephenson in 1997.

Luzardo was animated walking off the mound at the end of his final inning, pumping his fist after striking out the side and stranding a runner on second base.

“I knew it was my last inning, Topper had mentioned it before,” Luzardo said. “Just excited to finish off strong. After the mistake in the second, I feel like I got into a groove in the end.”

The Nationals whiffed on 12 of the 16 sweepers/sliders Luzardo threw and 19 of the 43 pitches they swung at overall. His velocity was up nearly two mph from last season. Luzardo averaged 97 mph with his four-seam fastball and 96 with his sinker, hitting 98 mph 11 times with 30 different fastballs of at least 97.

Luzardo has always had a slider, but the sweeper is a new pitch. One more thing for hitters to think about.

“Today felt really good so we leaned on it a little bit more,” he said. “I think it’s just another way of getting guys out. Different swing types, different profiles for a hitter. It just fits into the game plan in different ways than I would use my normal slider.”

This was an encouraging introduction for the Phillies’ most important offseason acquisition. They acquired Luzardo from the Miami Marlins for their No. 4 prospect at the time, shortstop Starlyn Caba. Luzardo has this year and next under contract with the upside of a No. 2 starter. He was one in 2022-23 before missing ample time with a back injury in 2024.

The 2-0 Phillies look to finish off a sweep on Sunday afternoon behind Aaron Nola. It does not sound like Trea Turner or J.T. Realmuto will be in the lineup. Turner was scratched an hour before Saturday’s game. His back locked up while fielding a grounder. Realmuto was removed for precautionary reasons with a left foot contusion in the seventh inning of a seven-run game after fouling a ball off his foot. X-rays were negative.

“We’ll check them out tomorrow but I’m not gonna put them in any type of danger at this point,” manager Rob Thomson said. “We’ll know more tomorrow but I’m gonna be really careful.”

Letters to Sports: Dodgers display depth and talent in home opener

Los Angeles, CA - March 27: Fans arrive for the Dodgers Opening Day game with the Detroit Tigers at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles Thursday, March 27, 2025. On Friday night the Dodgers will celebrate their eighth World Series title with a Ring Ceremony. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Fans arrive for the Dodgers' home opener against the Detroit Tigers on Thursday evening. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

I'm watching Blake Snell, who started the Dodgers' home opener, and later Tanner Scott, who pitched the eighth inning, and I'm thinking that maybe I'll see these pitchers in October. Jack Harris reported recently that Snell (who has made at least 20 starts in every full season of his nine-year career,) and Scott (who has racked up 275 appearances over the last four seasons) are durable pitchers.

Knowing the bad luck the Dodgers have had with injuries in recent years, I wouldn't bet on any Dodger pitcher still being available in October. It's fortunate that the Dodgers are very deep.

Vaughn Hardenberg
Westwood


What with the Dodgers and their fans confident of a World Series repeat — and assuming the team is already looking at bigger and flashier 2025 championship rings — I have a suggestion for MLB commissioner Rob Manfred. It’s simple and will keep baseball fans somewhat interested as the Dodgers strive to clinch a playoff spot before Memorial Day.

So, if (and that’s a big IF) they actually lose a few games, in addition to crediting them with a loss, subtract a win from them in the standings and place it in a third column called either “Oops” or “My Bad!” It could be both funny and entertaining, and trust me subtracting a few wins is not going to have any effect on the final outcome. But, it could save the baseball season from an absolute borefest. At least until the 2026 season, when the Dodgers' payroll is guaranteed to increase again to well over $400 million!

Richard Whorton
Studio City

White out

As a lifelong Dodgers fan (66 years old) I am sickened to hear the team is intending to visit the Trump White House. If they follow through with those plans I will never go to another Dodger game and stop rooting for the Dodgers. Manager Dave Roberts saying it’s an honor to visit Trump is offensive to me and to the fan base. I will be removing the Dodgers hat from my head.

Mark Bedol
Claremont


The team of Jackie Robinson, with the largest Hispanic fan base in the history of American professional sports, has lost this lifelong fan forever.

I will never root for or support the Dodgers again in any way, shape or fashion.

Charles L. Freeman Jr.
Baldwin Village


As a Dodger fan since 1958 I cannot give the team a pass for agreeing to visit the White House. Given what this president is doing to dismantle our government and the number of people he is hurting, I do not want my team to take any part in this “tradition.”

I have tickets for the game on Friday night when the players will be getting their World Series rings. If the team shows up at the White House on April 7, I will not attend another game this season and possibly forever. There has to be consequences for normalizing what Trump is doing to our country and our world.

Larry Weiner
Culver City

October musings

How soon they forget. A Plaschke quote: “They re-signed all of their free agent postseason heroes.” Except for perhaps one of the biggest, Walker Buehler, whose postseason performance was exceptional and who will be pitching for the Red Sox this season.

Jack Wishard
Los Angeles


Bill Plaschke opined the Dodgers must repeat as World Series champs this season if they want a dynasty.

I say Shohei Ohtani with his All-Star play will lead the way to another joyful October day in L.A.

Mark Sherwin
Los Angeles

Repeat performance

The article re: Freddie Freeman and Kirk Gibson, World Series game-winning home runs, reminds me of Jack Nicholson's Colonel Jessup diatribe in the movie “A Few Good Men.” “I did my job. I’d do it again.”

Oscar Rosalez
Diamond Bar

What the Halo?

Nothing concretizes futility like declaring “wait ‘til next year” on opening day more than the Angels using a position player to pitch in a blowout against the team a season removed from the dubious distinction of having lost the most games in Major League Baseball history.

Steve Ross
Carmel


Can the Angels be any more vindictive by DFA-ing Mickey Moniak because he beat them in arbitration? They released him over a difference of $500,000. With a team philosophy like that, it's no wonder they've not won anything in forever and likely won't. Maybe they don't deserve to.

Thomas Filip
Moorpark

Purple and fool's gold

Three weeks ago I wondered if the Lakers were the real deal or fool's gold. They had just won eight straight games and were on a roll.Since that time, they have gone 4-8. Looks like they were indeed fool's gold.

This team can't hold a lead. They get killed by the opponent's backcourt. They play the I-hope-they-miss defense. JJ Redick stands on the sideline as if he is taking advice from Darvin Ham. Luka Doncic disappears in the second half. LeBron James is showing his age. The bench is non-existent. And, oh yeah, they tied a record for giving up the most points at home in a non-overtime game in Lakers history. Lack of coaching. Lack of size. Lack of offense. How about just a lack of all around.

Geno Apicella
Placentia

March happiness

Alabama’s record-breaking three-point shooting display in its Sweet 16 victory over BYU brought back great memories of No. 11 Loyola Marymount’s 149-115 victory over defending champion and No. 3 Michigan in the 1990 NCAA tournament.

I attended that game in Long Beach. Starting with Bo Kimble taking and making his first free throw left-handed (in tribute to Hank Gathers), and continuing throughout — LMU was led Jeff Fryer’s and Kimble’s scintillating three-point shooting; they scored 41 and 37 — this was the most exciting non-championship sporting event I have ever witnessed.

Ken Feldman
Tarzana

Nothing original there

I have to admit, I did a double take when I saw in last Sunday's letters, not just one, but two USC detractors dredged up the same tired old jab, "The University of Spoiled Children." Well at least it gives credence to the old adage, " Clichéd minds think alike."

Joe Kevany
Mount Washington

Grappling with this issue

Penn State won the NCAA wrestling championship for the 12th time in the last 14 years. They scored more points than any team has ever scored. One of their wrestlers, Carter Starocci, became the first wrestler to win five Division 1 championships. It is a record that will probably never be broken as he was granted an extra year of eligibility due to COVID. Penn State became the second team to have all 10 wrestlers finish as All-Americans. To top it off, the seemingly invincible wrestler from Minnesota, Olympic gold medalist Gable Steveson, lost in the championship on a takedown in the last 30 seconds. Yet nary a word in The Times. Perhaps it is time for UCLA to resurrect its wrestling program so The Times might provide some coverage.

Mark Kaiserman
Santa Monica


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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

SEE IT: Yankees' Paul Goldschmidt, Cody Bellinger, Aaron Judge crush back-to-back-to-back HRs in first inning

It was a nightmare start for Milwaukee Brewers' Nestor Cortes in his return to Yankee Stadium on Saturday afternoon.

Sluggers Paul Goldschmidt, hitting leadoff for the first time in his career, Cody Bellinger, and Aaron Judge blasted back-to-back-to-back home runs on three straight pitches in the bottom of the first inning to give the Yanks a 3-0 lead.

The broadcast noted it was the first time a team hit three straight homers on three pitches to open a game in MLB history.

To make matters worse for Cortes, the left-hander gave up a fourth home run in the first inning to catcher Austin Wells, making it a 4-0 game.

That gave the Yankees their first four-homer first inning ever.

Verlander honestly assesses his Giants debut in loss to Reds

Verlander honestly assesses his Giants debut in loss to Reds originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

CINCINNATI — Justin Verlander has seen just about everything this game has to offer over the past 20 years, good and bad. But he probably has never before been on a team that struck out 17 times in one game and just once the next time out. 

That’s how Giants hitters have started this season, and because baseball is so often a strange game, they won the first one and lost the second. There was much better contact Saturday, but it led to just two runs of support for Verlander, who took a no-decision in his Giants debut.

After the 3-2 loss to the Cincinnati Reds, Verlander assessed his performance as “decent.” He’s happy to be healthy and throwing well, but it didn’t lead to a win Saturday. It was the kind of day that left him neither frustrated nor overly encouraged. 

“Our job is to win, I like winning. I wasn’t able to do that today,” he said. “I think if we’re a couple starts in I probably have one more inning in there. I think I had mid-eighties in my pitch count and that was about the highest I had gone in spring, so we didn’t want to have a situation where I’m out there and have to throw 100-plus or get pulled in the middle of an inning and have to leave a big situation. We didn’t win the game. Ultimately my guys kind of gave me a two-run lead and I would have liked to be able to hold that, but I usually try to take a pretty objective view of my performance, good or bad. 

“I think this was OK. It wasn’t great, it wasn’t bad. It definitely was a step forward from last season, I can say that.”

Verlander threw 83 pitches, leaning heavily on a four-seamer that had a little extra juice in big spots. It was his breaking balls, though, that led to a couple of runs. 

With a two-run lead, he hung a slider to Matt McLain in the third and gave up a solo homer. Two innings later, with a runner on second, he went up against Reds star Elly De La Cruz, who had been frozen by a perfect curve in the first inning. 

Verlander threw a curveball to get to 0-2 and tried to bait De La Cruz with another one in the dirt. A two-strike slider was just off the plate inside, and De La Cruz again watched it. When Verlander went back to the curve, it was bounced into right to tie the game.

“Elly kind of put it in the right spot,” Verlander said. “That’s baseball. You can beat yourself up as a pitcher on many things, but if you make a pitch and the guy doesn’t hit it hard and he gets it in the right spot, you’ve got to tip your cap and move on. He laid off a really good slider the pitch before that. That’s what the best players in the game do.”

With this being Verlander’s first start, there wasn’t any conversation about pushing him. Spencer Bivens took over in the sixth and gave up a go-ahead homer to Christian Encarnacion-Strand, and the Giants hit into double plays in three of their final four innings. 

Their last chance came in the eighth, when Tyler Fitzgerald led off with a single. Heliot Ramos saw eight pitches in the next at-bat but Fitzgerald didn’t take off, and Ramos bounced into a double play. The Giants wouldn’t reach base again, but Melvin said he didn’t regret the sequence. 

Fitzgerald is the fastest player on the roster and always has the green light, but reliever Graham Ashcraft was too quick to the plate for him to get a good jump. The Giants had his times around 1.2 seconds to the plate. 

“We’ve got some guys at the top of the order that are up that we feel pretty good about,” he said. “Obviously the double play balls hurt us, but I think there are times you pick your spots to go. Maybe that wasn’t one of them.”

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What we learned as Verlander's Giants debut ends with loss to Reds

What we learned as Verlander's Giants debut ends with loss to Reds originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

CINCINNATI — Before Saturday’s game, Giants manager Bob Melvin talked about how Justin Verlander is a throwback when it comes to statistics. It’s no surprise that the active wins leader is still a big fan of the pitcher win, and if all goes according to his plans, Verlander will at some point in the next few years get No. 300. 

The first in orange and black will have to wait, though. Verlander did his part, but the lineup was quiet in a 3-2 loss to the Cincinnati Reds on Saturday at Great American Ball Park. 

Verlander is the oldest player in any of the four major professional sports in the United States and the oldest to start for the Giants since 45-year-old Randy Johnson in 2009. At no point, Saturday, did he look like someone nearing the finish line.

Verlander was so intense in the morning that Melvin joked he wouldn’t say a word to him, and when Melvin pulled him after five, he leaned on the dugout rail and casually watched the sixth inning before going back for the usual treatment.

Verlander no longer can reach back for 99 mph whenever he needs it, but he had 95-96 in the back pocket on Saturday while generally looking like someone who will be a huge boost to the rotation if healthy. In five innings, Verlander allowed two runs on six hits and a walk. He struck out five. 

The Reds took the lead in the sixth on a solo shot from NorCal native Christian Encarnacion-Strand, and the Giants couldn’t take advantage of golden opportunities in the next three innings. They twice got a leadoff single and also had a one-out single, but all three times, a double play erased the runner. 

First Time Out

Verlander kicked off his day with nine straight four-seamers, including one at 94.4 mph that got TJ Friedl for his first strikeout as a Giant. He was fastball-changeup the entire inning, right up until the point when he dropped a gorgeous curve on Elly De La Cruz, who watched it go by for an inning-ending strikeout. 

With two outs in the fifth and the Giants holding a one-run lead, De La Cruz came up with a runner on second. Verlander got ahead with a 95.8 mph fastball and then went back to the curve for a second strike. When he tried it again at 2-2, De La Cruz pulled it into right to tie the game.

Verlander threw 83 pitches, half of which were fastballs. The only other run off him came when Matt McLain hit an elevated slider out to left. 

Flo Show

Thursday’s game-winning homer was a reminder that a healthy Wilmer Flores is generally a very productive Wilmer Flores. He kept it going Saturday. 

Flores got an inside fastball with one out in the second and hit a low screamer into the first row in left, where it was caught by one of the few Giants fans in a sea of red at Great American Ball Park. Flores is already halfway to last year’s home run total; he didn’t hit his second homer last season until June 5.

Looking Left

The Giants threw eight right-handed hitters out against lefty Nick Lodolo, but he gave up just a pair of runs in six innings. Flores got the Giants on the board and in the third, Heliot Ramos doubled and Jung Hoo Lee singled.

Ramos is going to lead off against lefties, and he had good at-bats against Lodolo. He led off the game with a liner to center that was caught on the edge of the track. Luis Matos got the start in right and doubled in his first at-bat of the year. He later singled off reliever Tony Santillan. Casey Schmitt started at DH and went 0-for-2 with a hit-by-pitch.

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Injured Phillies Ranger Suarez, Weston Wilson making progress

Injured Phillies Ranger Suarez, Weston Wilson making progress originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

WASHINGTON — Ranger Suarez is a safe bet to miss most of April rehabbing a back injury but he took a positive step on Saturday at Nationals Park, throwing a 26-pitch bullpen session.

“The report was really good, velocity was good,” manager Rob Thomson said before the second game of the season. “That’s a good sign. We’ll wait until tomorrow, reassess it when he comes in and figure out where we go from there.”

If Suarez’ body responds well, the next step would be an up-down bullpen session, simulating finishing one inning and beginning the next. From there, the remaining requirements would be facing hitters in live batting practice and then going on a rehab assignment since he pitched only five innings in camp. Given the weather conditions in the Northeast in April, that rehab assignment could happen in Florida.

Suarez is rehabbing lower back stiffness. The Phillies don’t seem especially concerned but this is the third time in four seasons he has missed time with a back injury. It’s a huge year for Suarez, a contract year, and he wants to show not only the Phillies but potentially 29 other suitors that he can stay healthy and withstand the rigors of a full season. Suarez set a career-high last season with 150⅔ innings but missed from late July through late August with lower back soreness.

Taijuan Walker will fill Suarez’ rotation spot in the meantime. Walker’s first start will come in the Phillies’ sixth game of the season, the finale of their first home series against the Rockies.

Wilson progressing

Weston Wilson strained his oblique five weeks ago, the day before spring training games began, and was expected to miss six weeks. On Saturday, he took batting practice on the field in Clearwater for the first time since the injury.

“He did a full workout today,” Thomson said. “Tomorrow is going to be somewhat of a recovery day and then keep building. We’ve been shooting for mid-April-ish to get him into a rehab assignment. I think he’s doing pretty well.”

Wilson is a pretty important piece of the Phillies’ roster given their lack of right-handed outfield options. He can play both infield corners, both outfield corners, potentially some center field, and he’s far from a zero at the plate. Wilson has batted .288/.375/.490 in 120 big-league plate appearances the last two seasons, hitting .333 with a 1.096 OPS vs. lefties.

He would have been on the Opening Day bench if he was healthy, but the injury opened the door for Kody Clemens, who unlike Wilson is out of minor-league options.

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