Tigers Topics: Which Tigers starter do you have the most confidence in after Tarik Skubal?

DETROIT, MI - JULY 23: Casey Mize #12 (L) and Reese Olson #45 of the Detroit Tigers look on from the dugout during the game against the San Diego Padres at Comerica Park on July 23, 2023 in Detroit, Michigan. The Tigers defeated the Padres 3 to 1. (Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Picking the best starter on the Detroit Tigers roster is easy. There’s a cliff looming beyond the 2026 season when Tarik Skubal will presumably be gone to greener pastures, but for one more season the Tigers have their ace leading the way. Beyond him the question is a lot tougher.

Reese Olson continues to post the best performance by most statistical measures, but he’s also dealt with significant shoulder injuries both of the past two seasons. That makes it hard to depend on him to give the Tigers a strong 140-150 innings this year. He controls contact well and racks up a solid share of strikeouts, but he can be a little too walk prone as well. But you’re not providing value on the injured list so it’s a bit of a roll of the dice guessing how much he’ll give the Tigers in 2026.

Jack Flaherty is still punching out the most hitters, but his walk rates are a bit high and he sometimes has trouble with home runs. There are stretches where he looks great and stretches where he’s getting knocked out early, but it added up to above average performance but certainly a real drop off from his 2024 resurgent campaign.

Casey Mize controls contact and doesn’t issue many walks, but the upgraded fastball since Tommy John surgery and various attempts to dial in his splitter haven’t led him to the promised land of higher strikeout rates. Mize did strike out 22.2 percent of hitters faced in 2025, which is his first time over 20 percent for a season. However, he had his own trouble with home runs at points throughout the season.

Beyond them there’s a group with Troy Melton and Drew Anderson competing for the last rotation spot, and a host of guys from Keider Montero on down to provide depth along the way.

Maybe the Tigers still have another signing in them once Skubal’s arbitration case is resolved, but right now who is your pick for second most valuable starter on the roster in 2026?

How do Giants fans feel about Robbie Ray’s 2025 season?

Good morning, baseball fans!

Since the season ended, the McCovey Chronicles staff have been doing player reviews that go over each member of the San Francisco Giants’ 2025 season. Today, I’m going to continue our community reviews where we ask you all to weigh in on how you feel like each player did this year and what your favorite highlights were.

Today, we’re going to take a look at Robbie Ray. Steven wrote a fantastic review earlier this offseason, which I would encourage everyone to revisit. These fine folks do the hard-hitting analysis, so as usual I’m going with the vibes.

Much like the 2025 San Francisco Giants, the vibes were great! (Until they weren’t.) Ray came into the 2025 season raring to go after having previous seasons shortened due to injury. He finished the 2025 season with 2.8 bWAR, with a 3.65 ERA, 3.93 FIP, with 186 strikeouts to (a league-leading) 73 walks in 182.1 innings pitched over 32 starts.

Much like the team, he started off the season strong, with the team winning his first nine consecutive starts. Ray even earned himself an All Star appearance. But things went downhill after the break, particularly in the last month or so where he was averaging roughly 4.6 runs allowed.

That said, he was coming off of two shortened seasons. So I’m hopeful that we won’t see the same thing this season.

With all of that said, I’m giving Ray an A- for 2025. Because I’m grading on a curve, and he was absolutely one of the bright spots of the season.

How did you feel about Robbie Ray’s 2025 season? And what were your favorite highlights?

An updated Brewers roster projection

MILWAUKEE, WI - OCTOBER 02: Milwaukee Brewers general manager Matt Arnold looks on prior to Game 2 of the Wild Card Series presented by T-Mobile 5G Home Internet between the New York Mets and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on Wednesday, October 2, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Aaron Gash/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

It’s been a while since we’ve done a 26-man roster projection here at Brew Crew Ball, and in the wake of the moves of the past couple of weeks, it’s again time to take a look at the landscape.

When you start crunching the numbers, there isn’t a whole lot of mystery here, beyond who ends up with the final opening day spots on the pitching staff and maybe one or two small questions on the position player side. Let’s get to it.

Position Players

Catcher (2): William Contreras, Reese McGuire

Yes, McGuire is in camp on a minor league deal. But the only other catcher on Milwaukee’s 40-man roster is Jeferson Quero. There are a couple of spring training scenarios for Quero, and I don’t believe either of them results in him making the opening day roster: first, if Quero’s arm looks healthy and he plays well, I would expect the Brewers to send him to the minors in order to delay his service clock. Second, if he doesn’t look ready, then he’s obviously not the choice to make the team out of spring training.

McGuire isn’t fancy, but he’s a proven backup catcher at the major league level. I expect that the minor league nature of his deal came with a strong suggestion that he’d have a very good chance of making the major league roster out of spring training; if they were able to get McGuire to agree to it, it’s a smart move on the Brewers’ part, as not needing to add McGuire to the 40-man right away gives them a little extra roster flexibility throughout spring training to see how things shake out (though it should be acknowledged that, as it stands, the Brewers are using only 38 of their 40-man roster spots).

Regardless, my guess is that the only way that Quero is the opening day backup catcher is if McGuire gets hurt.

Infield (6): Andrew Vaughn, Jake Bauers, Brice Turang, Joey Ortiz, Caleb Durbin, Andruw Monasterio

Outfield (4): Sal Frelick, Jackson Chourio, Blake Perkins, Garrett Mitchell

Designated Hitter (1): Christian Yelich

I’m listing Yelich as the DH and not as an outfielder because I just don’t believe the Brewers are going to play him in the outfield more than, maybe, a handful of times. They seemed to prefer Bauers in the outfield over Yelich toward the end of last season, which tells you what you need to know. Factor in that the primary concern with Yelich going forward is going to be his ability to healthily swing a baseball bat, and I expect we’ll barely see him in the field this year, if at all.

The others feel quite predictable. Is there a chance that Brandon Lockridge or Akil Baddoo sneaks in ahead of Garrett Mitchell? I’m not going to rule it out, but I think Mitchell gets one more shot. If everyone is healthy, I’d predict this is who the Brewers go with. (Note that Baddoo’s contract is for $1.25 million if he’s in the majors and $845,000 if he’s in the minors, so this is not a situation where he’ll opt out if he doesn’t make the major league team out of spring training.)

One last position player note: I don’t expect Jett Williams to make the Brewers out of spring training, but if he looks like he’s ready to play, I think he’d be the first guy up with a significant injury to essentially anybody anywhere on the field other than catcher (with service time considerations).

Pitchers

Starters (5): Brandon Woodruff, Jacob Misiorowski, Quinn Priester, Chad Patrick, Robert Gasser

Relievers (8): Trevor Megill, Abner Uribe, Jared Koenig, Aaron Ashby, Ángel Zerpa, Grant Anderson, DL Hall, Craig Yoho

A bit more intrigue here. First things first: there are two notable absentees who I believe will have big roles on the 2026 Brewers: Brandon Sproat and Logan Henderson. I wouldn’t be at all surprised if either breaks camp with the team, but a few thoughts: I referenced service time in regards to Quero earlier, and I think the same applies to Sproat. He needs to stay in the minors for something like 6-8 weeks to ensure that the Brewers get an extra year of service, and I think they’re going to do that if they can find an excuse.

For Henderson, it’s a simple numbers game. There are a couple of different versions of this starting group. We could see Patrick move back into the relief role that he thrived in last postseason, or we could see Henderson snag one of those last two rotation spots. I sort of think Gasser gets a chance if only because he’s left-handed; the only other potential left-handed starters are all guys I expect will pitch in relief, and that’s Ashby, Hall, and Zerpa. Personally, I don’t think the Brewers need to use a lefty in the rotation, especially with how many options there are in the bullpen, but I think Gasser sort of has an “I got here first” advantage over Henderson (who probably has better stuff) and, I’m not sure, my gut just tells me that this is how they go.

I did mention that the ‘pen is heavy on lefties (the three mentioned above plus Koenig), which is why I opted for Craig Yoho in the last spot rather than someone like Rob Zastryzny (who, I will say over and over again, has done nothing but get outs for the Brewers in his limited time with the club). Yoho certainly hasn’t earned Pat Murphy’s trust yet, but he’s 26 now, and it’s getting to be make-or-break time with him. I’m banking on a strong spring that earns him a spot.

If there’s one thing that we know about the Brewers, it’s that they’ll be constantly shifting pitchers between the injured list, Triple-A Nashville, and the major leagues. In addition to Sproat and Henderson, I expect we’ll see Coleman Crow at some point, and maybe Carlos Rodriguez. Zastryzny will surely get a shot, and we’ll probably see some of Easton McGee and Sammy Peralta, too. That’s all the pitchers currently on the Brewers’ 40-man roster, but don’t be surprised if some others make appearances, too.

Recap

Position players: Contreras, McGuire, Vaughn, Bauers, Turang, Ortiz, Durbin, Monasterio, Frelick, Chourio, Perkins, Yelich, Mitchell

Position players to keep an eye on: Williams, Quero

Pitchers: Woodruff, Priester, Misiorowski, Patrick, Gasser, Megill, Uribe, Koenig, Ashby, Zerpa, Hall, Anderson, Yoho

Pitchers to keep an eye on: Henderson, Sproat, Crow

The spots I feel least confident about: Yoho, Hall, Mitchell

Kansas City Royals news: Vinnie Pasquantino gets paid

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - SEPTEMBER 06: Salvador Perez #13 of the Kansas City Royals celebrates his three-run home run with Vinnie Pasquantino #9 of the Kansas City Royals in the first inning against the Minnesota Twins at Kauffman Stadium on September 06, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jaylon Thompson gets the word from Vinnie Pasquantino about his new deal at Royals Rally.

“Happy to be here, and I’m glad we got that done,” Pasquantino said. “They didn’t have to do that, and I think the negotiations went pretty well. I’m glad that it’s over. This would’ve been an interesting two-week span here — I think just because of the lack of contact — which is weird for me to not be talking to people. I think it’s good for both sides and I think both sides are taking on some risk. I think both sides understand the value there, and I’m happy we got it done.”

J.J. Picollo is also glad a deal got done.

“Vinnie is a premier run producer, a huge part of our team and someone our fans have really connected with,” Royals general manager J.J. Picollo said in a news release. “We’re proud of the player he’s become, and that he’s earned this contract. We are happy as an organization and for Vinnie personally to have stability moving forward.”

Anne Rogers writes that the team could still make some moves.

“I know J.J. [has] a couple of objectives,” CEO/chairman John Sherman said Saturday. “I can’t tell you, depending upon the day, whether those opportunities are narrower or wider. If he could add another bat, I think he’d do it. We have a surplus of pitching talent, particularly starting pitching talent, that’s valuable. … I think we have some opportunities.

“By the same token, if this is where we are, the good news is that the pitching talent will be deeper. And I think we feel like we’re going to compete for the division. That we’ll be right in this thing. We had some regression last year, but we also think there are some areas that we’re going to fix. I can’t predict whether he’s done or not. But if the opportunity was there, I think we would still add to our team.”

John Sherman didn’t totally close the door on staying at the K.

Even remaining at Kauffman Stadium beyond the current lease that expires after the 2030 season, undesirable as it might be, remains a possibility.

“That’s always a fallback position, we have that option,” Sherman said. “But that’s not something we intend to happen. That would be, from my perspective, kicking the can down the road relative to making sure we settle the Royals into their next generation.”

But the preference is downtown.

“Just like in any business, you have to be willing to adapt and be flexible to achieve that ultimate goal that we talked about,” Sherman said. “But I think if you have your druthers, I would love to see us in the heart of the city and cultural part of the city, where we can enhance some other things already going on and make it better. That’s probably a soft spot, but I also have to be open to other ideas to make sure we accomplish that goal.”

Salt Lake City leaders say they cannot comment on the Royals.

Royals executive Cullen Maxey says the team would prefer to stay with FanDuel Sports Network if they can.

“Our plan with them is to stick with our partners, as long as they can convince us that there will not be a risk of an interruption during our season on bringing our games to our fans. That’s the most important thing,” Maxey said. “They have actually done a great job, and I think it’s documented, of expanding our reach and throughout our television territory.

“They’ve also had a successful launch of our direct-to-consumer product, and that has been very well received as things continue to go in that direction and in the way people consume our games. So we would like to stick with them, but we do need to feel very stable that there will be no interruptions during the season, and that decision will come soon. If we do pivot from FanDuel Sports Network, we’ll be going to Major League Baseball.”

The Clay County presiding commissioner says “the process continues” despite the Royals not meeting a deadline to get a measure on the ballot there.

Local businesses seem supportive of the possibility of the Royals putting a ballpark at Washington Square Park.

Dan Szymborski at Fangraphs projects the Royals and Tigers atop the division with 83 wins apiece.

The Reds sign third baseman Eugenio Suárez to a one-year, $15 million deal.

The Giants sign Luis Arraez to a one-year, $12 million contract to play second base.

The Angels sign outfielder Jose Siri to a minor league deal.

The White Sox acquire pitcher Jordan Hicks and former Royals prospect David Sandlin from the Red Sox.

Padres GM AJ Preller says the team’s impending sale isn’t impeding his offseason.

Longtime reliever David Robertson announces his retirement.

Puerto Rico is considering withdrawing from the World Baseball Classic because they can’t get their players insured.

Shohei Ohtani will hit, but he won’t pitch in the World Baseball Classic.

What are the oldest ballparks in the minor leagues?

The Mariners will wear Seattle Steeleheads uniforms from the West Coast Negro Baseball League every Sunday.

Formerly suspended Braves GM John Coppolella is writing for Baseball America now.

The Raiders will hire Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak as their next head coach.

The Kansas City Kangaroos will hire Mark Turgeon as their next men’s basketball coach.

Southwest Airlines has its last flight with open seating.

A look back at all the penises shown on HBO.

Steven Spielberg wins a Grammy, earning “EGOT” status.

Your song of the day is Jeff Rosenstock with 9/10.

Which Mets loss, trade, or season bothers you the most?

03 OCT 2008: Scott Kazmir of the Rays delivers a pitch to the plate during the game between the Chicago White Sox and the Tampa Bay Rays in Game #2 of the American League Division Series at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida. | Location: St. Petersbuerg, Florida, USA. (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon SMI/Icon Sport Media via Getty Images)

This post is part of a series of daily questions that we’ll ask the community here at Amazin’ Avenue throughout the month of February. We hope you find the questions engaging and that our prompts can spark some fun conversations in the comments. We’ll see you there and plan to have staff chiming in, too.

Which Mets loss, trade, or season bothers you the most?

Orioles news: Questions for the upcoming season

Apr 16, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles mascot waves a flag before the game between the Baltimore Orioles and the Cleveland Guardians at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Reggie Hildred-Imagn Images | Reggie Hildred-Imagn Images

Happy Monday, Camden Chatters! We start another day without any news from the Orioles. After a flurry of activity in the early offseason, things have come to a halt. If you think the Orioles still need changes to be successful this season, it is frustrating for sure. But as each day passes, with or without a move from Orioles, we get one day closer to the 2026 baseball season.

The Orioles pitchers and catchers report on February 11th and the first full-squad workout is February 16th. The team’s first Grapefruit League game is on the 20th vs the Yankees. There will be a month of spring games, along with the World Baseball Classic from March 5-17. Then, finally, the Orioles will host Opening Day on Thursday, March 26th. Spring training games aren’t too exciting, but the WBC should be a good time.

But speaking of the WBC, news broke over the weekend that Puerto Rico may pull out of the game over insurance issues. A league-approved insurer would cover a player’s salary if he is hurt in the WBC, and the insurer is declining to insure at least eight players scheduled to play for Puerto Rico. That includes superstar Francisco Lindor, who has had multiple surgeries in the recent past.

It would be a real blow to the tournament if Team Puerto Rico has to pull out. They are one of the powerhouse teams in the tournament, and the first round of the tournament is being hosted in San Juan. Talk about awkward. I am actually traveling to Puerto Rico to attend two WBC games, but don’t have tickets to Puerto Rico’s games. They sold out too quickly.

In former Orioles news, there have been a pair of signings. Austin Hays signed a one-year, $5 million deal with the Chicago White Sox. The contract comes with a mutual option for 2027. And the Dodgers agreed with a minor league deal with pitcher Cole Irvin. The deal includes an invitation to big league camp at spring training. Irvin spent 2025 in Korea with the Doosan Bears. He made 28 starts with a 4.48 ERA.

Links

Bunch of questions for the 2026 season – MASN Sports
Roch Kubatko’s post from yesterday morning raises many questions about the upcoming season. For his question about who will hit the most home runs, I am going to go out on a limb and say Pete Alonso.

Top candidates for Orioles’ utility role – Baltimore Baseball
While the rest of Birdland waits to see if the Orioles sign Framber Valdez, Rich Dubroff is ready to talk utility guys.

More Orioles played through injuries last year than we knew. How might things change in 2026? – The Baltimore Banner
In case you missed this over the weekend, Jon Meoli took a look at how this year could be different when it comes to injury.

Birthdays and History

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! You have six Orioles birthday buddies, including two Orioles Hall of Famers. Today is Don Buford’s 89th birthday, so happy birthday to him! Buford played for the Orioles from 1968-1972. For the first four of those years, Buford played All-Star caliber baseball, though he made the All-Star team just once. He excelled in the postseason as well, with an .851 OPS over 22 games. In 1970, when the Orioles won the World Series, Buford reached base 12 times in six games with two home runs.

The second Orioles Hall of Famer celebrating today is Melvin Mora (54). Mora was a late bloomer who didn’t make his major league debut until age 27. He came to the Orioles in 2000 as part of the Syd Thrift fire sale and spent a decade with the team. He was a bright spot on a bad baseball team, with single-season bWARs over 4 in each of 2002-2005. In 2003 and 2004, his OBP topped .400, which was unheard of on those mid-aughts teams.

The other former Orioles born on this day in history are Travis Snider (38), Scott Erickson (58), Pat Clements (64), and Paul Kilgus (64).

On this day in 2005, the Orioles trade for Sammy Sosa was made official. The Orioles sent Jerry Hairston, Jr. to the Cubs for Sosa. Sosa was awful for the Orioles in a painful season for the team.

In 2009, the Orioles sent cash to the Cubs for Rich Hill. Hill had a 7.80 ERA in 14 games that year at age 29, his only season in Baltimore. He went on to pitch for 16 more seasons. That’s right, he appeared in two games with the Royals last season at age 45. Hill announced just a couple weeks ago that he will not attempt to pitch in MLB in 2026.

In 2021, the Orioles traded Alex Cobb to the Angels for Jahmai Jones. Cobb had 2.5 disappointing seasons with the Orioles, but bounced back for a bit with the Angels and later the Giants.

Phillies news: bullpen, WBC, Shohei Ohtani

PHILADELPHIA, PA - AUGUST 20: Eugenio Suárez #28 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates while rounding the bases after hitting a solo home run in the seventh inning during the game between the Seattle Mariners and the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on Wednesday, August 20, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Denis Kennedy/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

There is no such thing as a bad one year contract. This is something that I have been told and come to believe. There are bad one year contracts insomuch as players turn into pumpkins during that one year, but there is nothing tethering them to the team long term. That’s what makes it a good contract.

Luis Arraez going to the Giants seems like a big waste of money.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Chicago Cubs history unpacked — February 2

On Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, Bleed Cubbie Blue is pleased to present a Cubs-centric look at baseball’s colorful past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow the various narrative paths.

“Maybe I called it wrong, but it’s official.” — Tom Connolly, HoF Umpire.

Happy birthdayRonny Cedeno*,the Cubs go back to flannel,and other stories.

Today in baseball history:

Cubs Birthdays:Pat TablerWarren BrusstarPaul KilgusRonny Cedeno*, Scott Maine, Dan Winkler. Also notable: Red Schoendienst HoF

Today in History:

  • 1536 – Pedro de Mendoza founds Argentine city of Buenos Aires.
  • 1653 – New Amsterdam becomes a city (later renamed New York)
  • 1709 – British sailor Alexander Selkirk is rescued by William Dampier after being marooned on a desert island for five years, his story inspires “Robinson Crusoe.”
  • 1848 – Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ends the Mexican–American War: US acquires Texas, California, New Mexico and Arizona for $15 million
  • 1901 – Queen Victoria’s funeral takes place in St. George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle, England
  • 1922 – James Joyce’s “Ulysses” published in Paris (1,000 copies)
  • 1971 – Idi Amin ousts Milton Obote and appoints himself President (dictator) of Uganda

Common sources:

*pictured.

Some of these items spread from site to site without being fact-checked, and that is why we ask for verifiable sources, in order to help correct the record.

Pirates lose out on Eugenio Suarez to division rival

Oct 20, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Seattle Mariners third baseman Eugenio Suarez (28) throws out Toronto Blue Jays right fielder George Springer (4) at first base in the second inning during game seven of the ALCS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images | John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

The Pittsburgh Pirates came up empty once again in their search for a marquee third baseman with Eugenio Suarez signing with the division rival Cincinnati Reds.

According to ESPN’s Jeff Passan, Suarez signed to a one-year deal worth $15 million that includes a mutual option for 2027 with the Reds on Sunday. Suarez previously played with Cincinnati from 2015-2021.

Suarez was a name that was reportedly on the Pirates’ radar for the entire offseason. Following the team’s trade of Ke’Bryan Hayes the club has been pursuing another strong corner infielder that can also add a quality bat to their lineup. Suarez was one of the best power threats in baseball in 2025 as he finished with 49 homers, 118 RBIs and a .526 slug rate. Only five other players have hit more home runs than Suarez since 2018.

Pittsburgh Pirates beat reporter, Alex Stumpf, reported that the Buccos offered the same AAV to Suarez in their pitches that the Reds did and were even willing to do a multi-year deal. Stumpf cited that the familiarity Suarez had with the club and the favorable hitting venue of Great American Ball Park played a factor as Suarez signing with Cincinnati. Given that this kind of player is not often on the market for that price, the Pirates should have done more than just match the Red’s offer and went all in on signing the best bat left on the free-agent market.

Because of how late in the offseason that Suarez signed with a team, it leaves the Pirates very little options left in free-agency, especially considering the fact that pitchers and catchers are going to be reporting for Spring Training in about a week. The clock is not on the Pirates’ side, nor is the shrinking market.

General Manager Ben Cherington has been aggressive in the trade market but the organization is running out of pieces that they can move without sacrificing too much from the core of the team. Pittsburgh may have arguably already traded away too much from their pitching stock this offseason so that will be off the table, and all of their top position players are still prospects. These factors will make it difficult for Cherington and company to find many trade partners.

With Spring Training coming quickly, all signs are pointing to Jared Triolo being the Pirates’ starter at third base. As a defender Triolo is world class. In the past he’s been primarily used as a utility player, but he has shined in that role and won a Gold Glove Award in 2024 when MLB started recognizing utility fielders for nomination. There were many times when Triolo filled in for an injured Hayes and excelled defensively.

Triolo’s offense has been largely underwhelming, which is a big reason why Pittsburgh was looking to add a power bat at their hot corner. Triolo’s numbers last year were average at best, but perhaps with a more consistent role in the lineup he will show more improvements in 2026. Triolo appeared in 107 games in 2025, slashing .227/.311/.356 with seven home runs and 24 RBIs.

Pittsburgh’s offseason is far from over though they are running out of time. Management has hinted at wanting to add another arm to their rotation, preferably a lefty, as well as adding a depth piece to their outfield. With that being said it is not looking likely that the Pirates will be getting their next third baseman of the future this winter.

MLB power rankings: Can anybody stop Dodgers' quest for a three-peat?

We're less than two months from non-fake baseball. And almost every gain to be had over the winter has been spoken for.

With that, USA TODAY Sports rolls out its first power rankings for 2026, an alignment with many nods to the year that passed, yet allowances for all that transpired since the Los Angeles Dodgers converged in a disbelieving dogpile on the Rogers Centre infield, their consecutive World Series championships narrowly secured.

No, nobody "wins the winter," but it's impossible to ignore the many seismic shifts that unfolded. Check back around Opening Day, but for now, here's how Major League Baseball's 30 title hopefuls (well many have such hope) stack up:

1. Los Angeles Dodgers

  • If you think a threepeat is a fait accompli, keep in mind: These guys finished fifth in these here power rankings at the end of last season.

2. Philadelphia Phillies

  • A tentative bet on contributions from Aidan Miller and Justin Crawford.

3. Toronto Blue Jays

  • A very different look in 2026 - but perhaps an even more consistent one.

4. Seattle Mariners

  • They gotta hope the conviction gained from best season ever outweighs ALCS Game 7 hangover.

5. New York Yankees

  • Assuming the winter rehabs of Cole, Rodón, Judge and Volpe continue apace.

6. Chicago Cubs

  • Not much boom, more bust potential for pitching staff.

7. Boston Red Sox

  • Wilyer Abreu set for All-Star campaign. And these guys probably need that.

8. New York Mets

  • Not often a team with a half-billion dollar luxury tax payroll also has a "so crazy, it just might work!" vibe.

9. Detroit Tigers

  • Tarik Skubal arbitration hearing not the sort of preseason spice a fan hopes for.

10. Milwaukee Brewers

  • Famous Wisconsinite Harry Houdini would be impressed if the Brewers can pull off their next trick.

11. San Diego Padres

  • Wild to see how long they can keep this going.

12. Houston Astros

  • The Framber Valdez-Tatsuya Imai de facto swap will be fascinating to track.

13. San Francisco Giants

  • Harrison Bader and Luis Arráez fill highly specific needs at little commitment beyond this year.

14. Texas Rangers

  • Some aggressive and potentially strong moves (hello, MacKenzie Gore), but '24 additions Joc Pederson and Jake Burger need to get going.

15. Cincinnati Reds

  • Almost like they expected an "At Least You Tried" cake for pursuing Kyle Schwarber.

16. Baltimore Orioles

  • Gunnar Henderson getting over a shoulder impingement a significant winter development.

17. Kansas City Royals

  • If Tigers underachieve again, they can take advantage.

18. Arizona Diamondbacks

  • Seemed inevitable they'd wind up with Nolan Arenado.

19. Cleveland Guardians

  • The Jose Ramírez track record: Six division titles, six Silver Sluggers, seven All-Star selections.

20. Tampa Bay Rays

  • Shane McClanahan aiming once again to get to the starting line.

21. Atlanta Braves

  • Still expecting a pitching addition before that Grapefruit League tipoff.

22. Miami Marlins

  • Swapping a mid-rotation starter for Owen Caissie's upside is wise.

23. St. Louis Cardinals

  • Arrival of the J.J. Wetherholt train worthy of excitement.

24. Pittsburgh Pirates

  • Crazy experiment they got going, aiming to pair a great pitching staff with a potentially league-average offense.

25. Athletics

  • Jacob Wilson joins Tyler Soderstrom, Lawrence Butler Jr. and Brent Rooker in the group of Yolo County survivors bound for Las Vegas.

26. Los Angeles Angels

  • Yoan Moncada is back, in case you were waiting on that decision.

27. Minnesota Twins

  • Manager fired. New ownership control person. President of baseball operations nudged out. Your basic slow drip of news.

28. Chicago White Sox

  • Raise your hand if you'll miss all the Luis Robert Jr. trade rumors. Anybody?

29. Washington Nationals

  • There does appear to be a framework of a plan, but this year? Avert the eyes, perhaps.

30. Colorado Rockies

  • (Hands keys to No. 30 to Paul DePodesta) "Not much to it, but we can get you two hots and a cot. Try not to stay here too long."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB power rankings 2026: Dodgers reign, can Phillies or Jays stop LA?

Which Twins Player Could Surprise Us With a 3-4 Win Season in 2026?

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - SEPTEMBER 26: Brooks Lee #2 of the Minnesota Twins makes a throw to first base during the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on September 26, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Isaiah Vazquez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hello everyone! Welcome to our new Daily Question series for the month of February. With Spring Training around the corner, we want to hear what you think 2026 holds for your Minnesota Twins. Let’s get excited for baseball!


If the Twins are going to compete for a division title in 2026, they’re going to need some young players step up and take the reigns. We all know what Byron Buxton, Joe Ryan, and Pablo Lopez can do, but a big part of Minnesota’s underperformance in recent seasons came due to the lack of development from the young bats in particular.

In fact, the Twins’ two best seasons in recent memory came on the backs of those breakouts. 2019 saw Mitch Garver (3.9 fWAR), Max Kepler (3.9), Jorge Polanco (3.3), and Jake Odorizzi (4.3) emerge for the best seasons of their careers in their mid-to-late twenties. 2023 saw the same from Edouard Julien (2.7) and Willi Castro (2.5), while Lopez (4.6) and Sonny Gray (5.4) took a massive leap from mid-rotation arms to All-Stars.

The obvious candidates are ones who have shown flashes but need to be consistent. Ryan Jeffers is in line to get there with his projected increased workload. Matt Wallner, Luke Keaschall, and Zebby Matthews should reach the 3.0 fWAR threshold if they can stay on the field. Royce Lewis made big strides in the health and defense departments in 2025, but he hasn’t hit well since before the 2024 trade deadline. Brooks Lee is in line to play shortstop every day and, without a clear backup, will get every opportunity in the world to prove he can stick.

Or perhaps an advanced prospect will come up and surprise us like Julien, Lewis, and Wallner did in 2023. Consensus top 20 prospect Walker Jenkins is on the doorstep should any of the regular outfield starters miss extended time. The same can be said for Emmanuel Rodriguez, though he’s much more in the Wallner feast-or-famine mold and won’t have as much runway.

Personally, my money is on Lee who has a chance to settle into the position he’s played his whole life and has shown great bat control already. If he can improve his eye at the plate and take a few more walks, his big frame should allow him to tap more into his power as he’s more selective with the pitches he attacks. But which Twin do you see taking a leap in 2026?

Brew Crew Ball Daily Question: Which trade still bothers you the most?

Jul 13, 2022; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Milwaukee Brewers relief pitcher Josh Hader (71) throws to the Minnesota Twins in the ninth inning at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images

Continuing our February Daily Question series, we’re beginning today’s conversation with the question, “Which trade still bothers you the most?”

The Brewers haven’t had many terrible trades, at least in recent memory. But every fan seems to have at least one lingering trade that haunts them from time to time.

Whether it be the Josh Hader trade (remember, though, it ultimately netted Milwaukee William Contreras), sending Nelson Cruz and Carlos Lee to the Rangers, or a straight-up Kevin Reimer-for-Dante Bichette swap back in 1993, there’s sure to be at least one deal you’d like to talk about.

My personal least favorite Brewer trade? Sending Khris Davis to Oakland for Jacob Nottingham and Bubba Derby. Davis would go on to put together consecutive solid seasons with the A’s, slugging 133 homers over three seasons and 159 homers over six seasons. The return in that deal? Derby reached Triple-A Nashville in 2021, but never made it to the majors, while Nottingham played in 43 games across four seasons with Milwaukee, hitting .205/.293/.477 with seven homers, 21 RBIs, and 13 runs scored to total just 0.7 bWAR (Davis, just for comparison, had 2.4 bWAR in his first season in Oakland and 7.4 over the six seasons).

Not as dismal as some other teams’ worst trades (looking at you, Miami Marlins), but you can’t win them all. So what’s your white whale? Is it a guy (or guys) who ended up with great careers, or just a trade that left you with a bad taste?

Weigh in in the comments, and join us throughout the month as we keep these conversations rolling into spring training.

Can Cody Bellinger repeat after a great first season with the Yankees?

NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 30: Cody Bellinger #35 of the New York Yankees jogs back to the dugout in the third inning during Game One of the American League Wild Card Series between the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on Tuesday, September 30, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Good morning everyone, we’re one day closer to actual, bonafide MLB baseball being played. As we draw nearer, we’ll be using our first posts of the day to ask One Big Question about the Yankees. Today, let’s focus on Cody Bellinger. The offseason saga of Bellinger and the Yankees was a slog, but after months of posturing, the two sides managed to reunite, as was expected after the partnership proved so fruitful in Bellinger’s first year in the Bronx.

Bellinger may have been the Yankees’ best position player not named Aaron Judge in 2025, hitting 29 homers and providing capable defense across the field. His 4.9 fWAR trailed only Judge on the Yankees, and indeed was a top-ten figure among all American League hitters. Suffice to say, Bellinger’s contributions were vital last year, and the Yankees will expect something close to a repeat as they pencil him in as their starting left fielder.

So, will Bellinger be able to repeat his superlative 2025? Bellinger certainly did enough in his Yankee debut to make one optimistic. At age-30, he’s not at the point on the aging curve where decline feels inevitable, and Bellinger’s athleticism looked, at least to the naked eye, to still be largely intact last year. Moreover, even though Bellinger’s been inconsistent throughout his big-league tenure, his strong 2025 came in right around his career averages, with his .813 OPS last year in line with his career .817 OPS. Why shouldn’t we expect Bellinger to continue trucking right along near that mark?

On the other hand, the unfeeling projections forecast some regression, with FanGraphs pegging him for a solid yet unspectacular 3.3 fWAR. Plus, Bellinger arguably ran a little hot last year, his expected wOBA of .322 lagging behind his actual mark of .347. Where will he ultimately land in 2026? Lay out your case in the comments below.


And today on the site, gear up for the 2026 season with the start of our season preview series! Leading off, Jeremy will preview David Bednar’s upcoming campaign. Also, Matt will celebrate George Halas as part of our Yankee Birthday series, Josh will look back at a tense negotiation between Derek Jeter and the Yankees during The Captain’s first foray into free agency, and Madison will put out the call for this week’s mailbag.

Phils 'pen built on different looks — why the relief mix works

Phils 'pen built on different looks — why the relief mix works originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies bullpen has long lacked identity. And commitment.

It starts with the ninth inning. The last Phillie to post multiple 30-save seasons with the club was Jonathan Papelbon in 2012 and 2014. The last 30-save season, period, came from Jeanmar Gómez in 2016.

The Phillies tried to change that narrative two seasons ago when they acquired closer Carlos Estévez from the Angels at the trade deadline. At the time, he had 20 saves paired with a 2.38 ERA. Pairing him with a group that included Matt Strahm and Jeff Hoffman gave Philadelphia its deepest relief unit in years.

Estévez was solid across 20 regular-season appearances, but his season ended with a series-clinching grand slam allowed to Francisco Lindor in the NLDS. The right-hander then left for Kansas City that offseason, and the late-inning picture quickly returned to feeling fluid.

Until now.

Dombrowski and the front office made another deadline move last season, this time targeting a lockdown reliever with years of team control. The Phillies sent two of their top five prospects — catcher Eduardo Tait and pitcher Mick Abel — to Minnesota for Jhoan Duran.

Duran’s routine triple-digit fastball and closer entrance immediately played at Citizens Bank Park. The production matched the buzz: a 2.18 ERA in 23 appearances and 16 saves — the same total he recorded in 49 games with the Twins.

Bolstering the back end remained a priority into the winter. The Phillies signed Brad Keller to a two-year, $22 million deal, a move that reads as a setup-man investment. It also stood out historically as the first multi-year, double-digit annual value deal the Phillies handed out since the 2011–12 offseason, when they landed Papelbon.

The organization still views pitching as a strength. The difference now is how much of that responsibility sits in the bullpen.

Over the past two seasons, Phillies relievers have posted a 4.06 ERA, ranking 19th in baseball.

What makes this group more compelling, however, is how the pieces fit together. This unit can win matchups without being locked into a single lane because the looks are genuinely different.

Two lefties, two different profiles

The bullpen still begins with two southpaws, but the approach has shifted. With Strahm traded, the Phillies are leaning further into matchup usage — and the two left-handers who remain offer entirely different problems.

José Alvarado is coming off a turbulent 2025, but the raw traits remain intact. His sinker averaged 99.1 mph and ranked in the 99th percentile in fastball velocity. It wasn’t even his most effective pitch.

Alvarado leaned heavily on his cutter, which has long been a foundation of his success. Excluding the COVID-shortened 2020 season, opponents have hit .181 or lower against the pitch. It’s not a finesse approach — it’s built on tunneling the two kinds of fastballs.

Tanner Banks offers the contrast. The softer thrower of the pair, Banks made his biggest leap in 2025 by limiting free passes. He leaned into his strengths, mixing a slider/sweeper and four-seamer as part of his five-pitch mix, with the sweeper continuing to improve year over year.

Among left-handers who faced at least 110 left-handed hitters last season, Banks allowed the fewest earned runs in the majors (five) and posted a 1.47 ERA. There may be another layer coming. His changeup averaged 36.6 inches of vertical drop, giving it the shape to develop into a late-count swing-and-miss option if he leans on it more in 2026.

Why Keller’s 2025 relief jump sticks out

Part of what fueled the 30-year-old’s breakout in relief in 2025 — a 2.07 ERA across 68 appearances — was nearly a four-mph jump in his average four-seam fastball, which sat at 97.2 mph. Keller also used the pitch the most since 2018. He became a Statcast standout for a reason.

That fastball success (opponents slugged .295 against it) allowed the rest of his arsenal to play up. His sweeper–sinker–changeup combination produced significant soft contact, contributing to a 30.6 percent hard-hit rate (99th percentile) and a groundball rate that ranked in the top five percent of the league.

Strahm’s calling card in Philadelphia was neutralizing right-handed hitters. Keller did that even better last season, which helps explain why the Phillies felt comfortable dealing Strahm to Kansas City.

Against righties, Keller held opponents to a .466 OPS. The usage tells the story: despite the fastball’s overall effectiveness, he primarily threw it to left-handers (57 percent usage). Against righties, his sinker–sweeper combination accounted for 50 percent of his pitches and allowed just two extra-base hits combined.

If the Phillies are serious about building a bullpen that thrives in multi-dimensional matchups, Keller is central to that vision. He can absorb leverage innings without needing a narrowly defined pocket of hitters.

Kerkering’s look still plays

The end of Orion Kerkering’s season is easy to remember — for the wrong reasons. But he’s 24 years old and has just over two years of major league service time. Across three seasons with the Phillies, he owns a 2.79 ERA.

In 2025, Kerkering leaned less on his most trusted pitch, the sweeper. The result was a groundball rate that dipped by roughly 10 percent, but the quality of contact held steady. His look continues to disrupt swings, largely because of his arm slot.

Kerkering’s arm angle sits at 31 degrees. Paired with the arm-side run on his sinker and four-seam fastball, it creates a shape no other right-hander in the bullpen offers.

Assuming the NLDS ending is behind him, Kerkering should remain a key matchup piece, particularly in right-on-right situations alongside Keller.

Duran ties it together

Duran is the connective piece. His 100.6 mph average fastball — in the 100th percentile leaguewide — grabs attention, but it isn’t even his most-used pitch. He leaned more heavily on his split-finger last season, and that pitch led all of baseball in run value (12).

While it’s tempting to credit his swing-and-miss profile solely to velocity, the curveball is where most of the empty swings come from. Among pitchers who threw at least 200 curveballs, Duran’s 41.8 percent whiff rate ranked seventh among relievers.

Even then, there’s more ceiling. His 2025 swing-and-miss rate on the curveball was a career low, underscoring how effective he remains regardless of usage patterns.

A 30-save season for the “Durantula” is well within reach in 2026. More importantly, his presence finally gives the bullpen a defined end point — and the rest of the roles stop feeling like monthly experiments.

Under-the-radar names

A quieter but important part of the Phillies’ bullpen construction has been how they’ve filled out the 40-man roster, setting the stage for real competition in Spring Training.

That group includes optional arms and veterans with big-league experience, such as right-hander Zach Pop. Two trade acquisitions, however, add real intrigue.

Jonathan Bowlan, acquired in the Strahm deal, features a five-pitch mix highlighted by a four-seam fastball that is exceptionally difficult to square up. In 2025, among 357 pitchers who threw at least 200 four-seamers, Bowlan generated the highest swing-and-miss rate on the pitch (43.5 percent).

The next closest was Oakland’s Elvis Alvarado at 39.6 percent — nearly four points lower. That rate would have also led all 362 qualified pitchers in 2024 by a similar margin.

Bowlan’s sinker could also take on a larger role in 2026. Among pitchers who threw at least 100 sinkers last season, he ranked third in opponents’ hard-hit rate (10.7 percent). Keller ranked second, and the two new Phillies produced identical run values on the pitch (five).

Another acquisition, left-hander Kyle Backhus, brings a completely different look. The 6-foot-4 southpaw features a low-velocity, three-pitch mix and delivers from the fourth-lowest arm angle among left-handed pitchers. What separates him from others near that slot is extension.

Backhus releases the ball 7.2 feet from the rubber, ranking in the 96th percentile leaguewide. That extension can make his 91 mph sinker play quicker than the radar gun suggests. Despite a 4.62 ERA with Arizona in 2025, he profiles as a potential matchup left-hander capable of limiting barrels and disrupting timing with his sidearm delivery.

The identity isn’t tied to one arm or one role. It’s built on contrast and different looks. For the first time in a while, the pieces connect without having to force matchups.

A look at who could round out the Astros rotation

Joe Espada has been upfront about wanting to start the season with a six-man rotation. Hunter Brown, Cristian Javier, Mike Burrows and Tatsuya Imai appear to have four of those spots locked up, but what about the other two?


Here’s a list of contenders to watch with the start of spring training just a week away.

Spencer Arrighetti

Arrighetti was limited to just seven starts and 35.1 innings last season. He missed four months after suffering a fractured thumb when he was struck by an errant ball during batting practice. He made five starts in August, but was shut down in September due to elbow inflammation.

The good news is that Arrighetti didn’t need elbow surgery, and told reporters at FanFest on Saturday that he’s thrown seven bullpens, which would seem to mean he’s on track to hit the ground running when spring training begins. 

The 26-year old has an 87 ERA+ through his first two Major League seasons, but the Astros would be over the moon if he could find a way to come close to replicating the 3.18 ERA he posted in the second half of 2024 with a 29 percent strikeout rate and a 7.9 percent walk rate.

Lance McCullers Jr

It’s now or never for McCullers, who is in the final year of the five-year, $85 million extension he signed before the 2021 season. McCullers returned after missing more than two seasons due to flexor tendon surgery and posted a 6.51 ERA over 55.1 innings in between three separate IL stints, though none were arm-related.

If you’re looking for signs of optimism for the 32-year old in 2026, you can point to a few starts early in his return. He struck out 12 while allowing three runs over six innings against the A’s on May 28, tossed six shutout innings against the Pirates six days later, and limited the Dodgers to one run over six innings on July 4, but compiled an 8.10 ERA over his final seven games.

Despite the IL time, McCullers was healthy when the season ended, which should’ve given him a normal offseason ramp-up for the first time in a long time, but it’s hard to think he recaptures the form that earned him a top-10 Cy Young finish, the season before his extension kicked in.

Jason Alexander

Claimed off waivers from the A’s in May, Alexander saved an Astros rotation ravaged by injuries. The 32-year old journeyman put up a 3.66 ERA and the Astros won 10 of his first 11 before losing his last two. 

Whether or not Alexander can repeat that success remains to be determined. His FIP with the Astros was a run higher than his ERA, and there is a lot of blue in his Baseball Savant profile, and a good portion of that blue is dark. His 22 percent chase rate was in the bottom 1 percent in all of baseball. That’s a tough way to make a living.

Ryan Weiss

The Astros thought enough of Weiss that they gave him $2.6 million after compiling a 2.87 ERA with a 28.6 percent strikeout rate in 178.2 innings last season in the KBO. Last season marked a major improvement for the former fourth-round pick, who posted a 3.77 ERA in the second half of 2024 after beginning the year in the Atlantic League.

Weiss shows average fastball velocity, though Astros GM Dana Brown said he was able to touch 97 mph in Korea, and his command and control, which were strengths for him during his first stateside stint, improved in the KBO.

Whether or not Weiss’ improvements last season carry over is still to be determined. He pitched parts of three seasons in Triple-A for the Diamondbacks and Royals, posting a 6.72 ERA over 89.2 innings, and his numbers in Double-A were not much better.

AJ Blubaugh

Blubaugh made his Major League debut April 30, allowing two runs over four innings against the Tigers, and did not return to the big leagues until August, when he pitched well every time Joe Espada gave him the ball. Blubaugh finished last season with a 1.69 ERA over 32 innings, mostly working out of the bullpen as a long reliever.

The 26-year old showed average fastball velocity and relied on a sweeper against right-handers, but opponents went 0-for-29 against his changeup, which he could throw effectively to both lefties and righties. While the sample size was small, Blubaugh’s FIP was almost three runs higher than his ERA, indicating some good fortune, though his strikeout numbers suggest his low ERA wasn’t entirely a mirage.

Possibly the biggest question moving forward is whether the Astros view Blubaugh as a starter. He made only three starts, and he was never asked to turn a lineup over twice, topping out at 19 batters faced in his first two Major League outings.

Colton Gordon

Gordon compiled a 5.34 ERA over 86 innings in his first taste of Major League action last season. The 27-year old had one of baseball’s lowest walk rates, but he did not miss bats and allowed too much hard contact. Opponents batted .298 against his four-seam fastball with a .645 slugging percentage. That pitch posted a -10 run value, per Baseball Savant, and his sweeper—against which opponents slugged .515—carried a -7 run value.

Unless he improves his fastball velocity, which is well below average, or develops another weapon, it’s hard to see Gordon surviving as a Major League starter.

Nate Pearson

The Astros signed Pearson to a one-year, $1.35 million contract in October, a month after he was released by the Cubs. Once one of baseball’s top prospects, the 29-year old has a 5.17 ERA in 123 major league games, almost entirely out of the bullpen, but represents an intriguing reclamation project for a team with a strong track record of fixing pitchers.

While major league success has eluded Pearson, elite velocity has not. The right-hander’s four-seam fastball averaged 97.6 mph last season, and he has a slider that generated a 37.5 percent whiff rate in 2024. He probably profiles more as a reliever, but a starter with elite velocity is a hot commodity, and Pearson reunites with Brown, who was part of the Blue Jays’ front office when he was drafted in the first round nine years ago.

Miguel Ullola

Rated as the Astros’ best pitching prospect by MLB.com, Ullola finished 2025 with a 3.88 ERA while appearing in 28 games (23 starts) and logging 113.2 innings for Triple-A Sugar Land. He posted a 26.6% strikeout rate, but also walked nearly 16% of the hitters he faced. It’s hard to see him finding consistent success at the major league level if he doesn’t throw more strikes.

The good news is that his ERA dropped to 3.00 in Sugar Land, where conditions more closely resemble big league parks, but that did nothing to rein in his walk rate, which actually ticked up slightly.