Jazz Chisholm Jr. won’t stop wearing Yankees teammate’s pants, using another’s bat as he stays hot

Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) of the New York Yankees grounds out against the Toronto Bluejays.
Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) grounds out during the second inning against the Toronto Bluejays at Yankee Stadium, Monday, May 18, 2026.

Don’t expect Jazz Chisholm Jr. to go back to his own pants — or bat.

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The second baseman continued his recent uptick at the plate — all while wearing Giancarlo Stanton’s pants and using José Caballero’s bat.

He had two more hits with the combo in Monday’s 7-6 win, including a go-ahead, two-run homer in the bottom of the seventh that banked off the left field foul pole.

“It will always be [Stanton’s pants] and José’s bat,’’ Chisholm said.

Aaron Boone said he thought Chisholm looked “great” with the mismatched uniform but had a more traditional explanation for Chisholm’s recent improvement.

Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) grounds out during the second inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium, Monday, May 18, 2026. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“Jazz started swinging better the last few days,’’ Boone said. “He stayed on a couple [pitches Sunday] against [the] Mets where he drove the ball that way, too.”

And it’s paying off.

“He was missing pitches he usually hits,” Boone said. “Now we’re seeing him come to the level with a really good player. I don’t think he was that far off, but I don’t think he [was] swinging the bat that well.”

As for the change in attire and equipment, Boone said, “Whatever he’s got to do.”


Anthony Volpe is at least giving himself an argument to potentially stick around in The Bronx when Caballero returns from a fractured middle finger. He had two more hits and a pair of stolen bases.

“They’re not an easy club to run against,’’ Boone said of Toronto. “Anthony did a good job of getting both [stolen bases].”

And he’s looked better at the plate after struggling in his rehab assignment in the minors and his first games back in the majors.

Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe (11) reacts after he scores on a SAC fly by New York Yankees catcher J.C. Escarra (25) during the fourth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium, Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“He’s had more good at-bats,’’ Boone said. “For the most part, he’s controlling the strike zone the last four days.”

Boone said there is a chance Caballero comes off the IL when he’s eligible May 2, as the shortstop has taken ground balls and begun playing light catch after suffering a fractured right middle finger.


Yovanny Cruz, a hard-throwing right-hander, was called up from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Monday.

The 26-year-old right-hander never pitched above Double-A before the Yankees signed him to a minor league contract in the offseason, but his ability to throw 100 mph intrigued the team, and he showed positive flashes in the spring after coming back from a shoulder injury.

His recent results at SWB haven’t been as good, as Cruz allowed a run in each of his last five appearances. Overall, he struck out 23 in 18 innings at Triple-A this season.

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Boone said the Yankees “really like his upside.”

There are command concerns, and Boone noted Cruz had issues containing the running game.

To make room for Cruz on the roster, Elmer Rodríguez was optioned to SWB.

Rodríguez was coming off his most effective start with the Yankees.

“It’s a tough situation,’’ Rodríguez said of being optioned to SWB. “I’ll take the positives out of it, go down there and hope to be back.”


The Yankees began wearing a patch on their uniform Monday to commemorate John Sterling’s career after the broadcaster passed away earlier this month. Sterling’s children and ex-wife were part of a pregame ceremony in honor of Sterling.


Athletics' J.T. Ginn loses no-hitter as Angels hit walkoff homer in 9th

Former MLB commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti wrote about baseball that "it is designed to break your heart." The latest instance of that adage holding up took place on Monday, May 18 at Angel Stadium.

Athletics pitcher J.T. Ginn was flirting with throwing Major League Baseball's first no-hitter since 2024, only to allow a base hit to the first hitter he faced in the bottom of the ninth inning and then a walk-off home run to the next.

The Los Angeles Angels prevailed, 2-1, spoiling Ginn's no-no bid in an improbably thrilling way.

Ginn, who struck out 10 Angels batters through eight innings, saw Adam Frazier end the no-hit hopes with a line drive single to center field. The next batter, Zach Neto, took Ginn deep to quickly turn the tide on the Athletics.

The win ended a six-game losing streak for the Angels, who were coming off getting swept in back-to-back series by the Cleveland Guardians and Los Angeles Dodgers.

The Chicago Cubs' Shota Imanaga, Nate Pearson and Porter Hodge combined no-hitter against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sept. 4, 2024 still stands as MLB's most recent no-no.

The biggest stories, every morning. Stay up-to-date on all the key sports developments by subscribing to USA TODAY Sports' newsletter.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: A's J.T. Ginn loses no-hitter then Athletics lose game vs Angels

Holy Sheets!, Padres sweep the Mariners

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 17: Gavin Sheets #30 of the San Diego Padres reacts after hitting a two-run home run during the sixth inning against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on May 17, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jack Compton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After losing two of three to the Milwaukee Brewers on the road, the San Diego Padres arrived in Seattle with an offense that lacked thump, as well as production, from the top of the lineup. With Fernando Tatis Jr., Jackson Merrill, and Manny Machado scuffling, the rest of the roster carried the team to a sweep of the Mariners and a 28-18 record, a half-game back of the Dodgers in the NL West.

There is not much to say that is new about the problems the three faces of the franchise are experiencing. Over the 18 games from April 27 to May 16, Machado/Tatis/Merrill had a collective .164/.231/.249 batting line. The doubles that Machado and Merrill hit in Sunday’s game were the first extra-base hits they both had in the same game since April 11 (per Kevin Acee in Padres Daily newsletter).

Here is where the Padres offense stands as of the end of the Mariners series:

Batting average – .224, 30th OBP – .296, 28th SLG – .371, 26th OPS – .667, 28th

It doesn’t make sense that this team is 10 games over .500 and in second place in the NL West, but that is the case. As everyone in sports media keeps saying, this isn’t sustainable. Even manager Craig Stammen acknowledges that to be true.

Lucas Giolito

Padres president of baseball operations A.J. Preller signed right-handed starter Lucas Giolito to a $1.5 million contract for 2026 with a $1.5 million buyout for 2027 and escalators that could net him an additional $5 million. He signed on April 22 and his contract guaranteed a promotion to the major league team by May 16. He had two starts in Single-A and two starts in Double-A before debuted with the Padres on Sunday against the Mariners. After pitching five shutout innings with one hit allowed, Giolito sat for a prolonged half-inning while his teammates put up five runs in the top of the sixth inning.

In the bottom of the sixth, he was not the same guy. After walking three straight hitters, he was removed from the game and was then charged with the three runs scored by the Mariners after his departure. Giolitto got the win after his offense went on a hitting spree (especially Gavin Sheets) and put up eight runs for the game.

Giolito’s performance was all the more impressive considering he hasn’t had anything close to a normal ramp-up to the season. Going unsigned through the offseason and Spring Training, Giolito was on his own to prepare to pitch for a major league team. Staying unsigned until late April, his contract only gave him 23 days to prepare for his debut with the Padres.

His velocity was notably less than his normal 94-95 mph on his fastball (90-92), but his changeup is elite and makes the fastball a playable pitch. He throws those two pitches 85% of the time. In 145 innings pitched in 2025, Giolito threw to a 3.41 ERA, even though his underlying numbers don’t look that impressive.

With time spent working with Ruben Niebla and his staff, and building up his arm, Giolito should get better. His command through the first five innings was remarkable considering his brief amount of prep time.

Gavin Sheets

Since signing with the Padres before the 2025 season, Gavin Sheets has been the power hitter the Padres hoped he would be, in streaks. Always less effective against left-handed pitchers, Sheets has made adjustments during his time with the Padres and continues to improve against righties. Last season his batting average was almost identical between lefties and righties, but his slug against right-handed pitchers was .453 versus .369 against left-handers. He had 17 homers against righties and two versus lefties.

This season, with minimal appearances versus lefties, Sheets is continuing the trend. He is slugging. 596 versus right-handers so far this year (114 at-bats). In 12 at-bats versus lefties, he is slugging .167. Way too small a sample size, but with some of his teammates performing well against left-handed pitching (Miguel Andujar, Luis Campusano) he isn’t going to get many opportunities.

Overall, Sheets has been clutch, with “late and close” hits. He is second behind Xander Bogaerts in RBI; Bogaerts has 23 and Sheets has 21. His nine homeruns lead the team, and his 10 doubles are one behind Andujar.

Sheets was named the National League Player of the Week with these numbers over the Brewers and Mariners series.

Rodolfo Durán

Catcher Rodolfo Durán waited 11 years to get his first chance to play in a major league uniform. With the broken toe suffered by Luis Campusano in the series versus the Giants, Durán was added to the roster and made his first start on May 7 against the Cardinals. He was 0-for-10 before coming to bat in the seventh inning against Seattle on May 16. Durán lined his first hit as a major leaguer into the Padres’ bullpen for his first home run. In his last at-bat in the ninth inning, he was robbed of another home run by a leaping Julio Rodríguez in center field.

Durán will remain with the Padres in place of the injured Campusano, but it is unlikely any other moment will be as memorable as that one for the veteran of four organizations.

A Quiet Assassin

Reliever Bradgley Rodriquez, 22, graduated from the Padres prospect list this month. He appeared in seven games and 7.2 innings for the Padres in 2025 with a 1.17 ERA and nine strikeouts to three walks. In 2026, he has pitched in 19 games (was the opener for two games) and has 22.2 innings under his belt this season. He is on pace to pitch over 80 innings, which would far exceed his 61.1 innings in 2024 in the minors.

It seems likely he will get optioned at some point to give him a break, but the bullpen will be the less for it. His 1.59 ERA includes 18 strikeouts to five walks, and he has allowed no home runs. His effectiveness is only behind Mason Miller and Jason Adam.

Although he has high-leverage stuff, Rodriguez is being brought along carefully. His fastball touches 100 mph, but it is not his best pitch. He has a plus-plus-changeup that he pairs with a slider for 69% of his offerings.

Roster moves and injury updates

General manager A.J. Preller gave an update on the status of Joe Musgrove and Nick Pivetta in an interview with Ben and Woods of 97.3 The Fan on Friday, May 15. Neither is in a throwing program yet, and he suggested that they would not be until June/July.

It was reported by Kevin Acee in his daily newsletter (via manager Craig Stammen) that Luis Campusano is still unable to come off the IL. His broken toe is still too painful, although he is involved in baseball activities.

The last word on Jake Cronenworth was that he had been referred to a neurologist and is recovering from his concussion under medical care. He did not travel with the team on the latest road trip.

Matt Waldron pitched poorly in his start versus the Brewers on May 12 and then came back and pitched two innings of scoreless relief on May 14. He reportedly came in the next day with a sore upper arm and was placed on the 15-day IL when Alek Jacob was called up to provide extra help to the bullpen. Jacob was sent back down when Giolito was activated.

Jhony Brito has started his rehab from his UCL surgery of last year. He started two games with the ACL Padres and then started for Double-A San Antonio on Sunday, May 17. Brito went four innings with no earned runs allowed. He allowed two hits and had a strikeout, although two unearned runs scored.

Twins 6, Astros 3: Two hours later…

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - MAY 18: Minnesota Twins designated hitter Josh Bell (56) celebrates his solo home run during the third inning of a MLB game between the Minnesota Twins and Houston Astros on May 18, 2026, at Target Field in Minneapolis MN. (Photo by Nick Wosika/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

It was a stormy night in Minneapolis and no one from Cory Provus to the players on the field thought this game was going to go a full nine innings. The field was a mess, Astros shorstop Jeremy Peña turned the field into his personal slip-n-slide, but no one, and I mean NO ONE, was going to stop these umps from forcing the players out for four more meaningless innings.

But let’s go back to the first inning where we all were thankfully put out of our Simeon Woods Richardson-induced misery. With SWR in the midst of the worst stretch of his career, manager Derek Shelton turned to rookie Kendry Rojas, who immediately showed off why he’s a difficult prospect to figure out. Rojas hit Peña, allowed a single to Isaac Paredes, and walked Yordan Alvarez on four pitches to load the bases with no outs just nine pitches into the game. Luckily, a pop out and a weak line drive double play got the Twins out of the jam without allowing a run.

And then, Rojas was nails. He allowed one hit in the second inning but largely overpowered this veteran Astros lineup all night. Final line: 4 IP, 2 H, 1 BB, 3 K, 0 runs allowed. His hybrid reliever/starter role, combined with the organization trying to limit his workload, means he isn’t really able to throw more than 50-60 pitches per outing right now, but Rojas showcased exactly why the Twins have been hesitant to move him to relief full time.

On the offensive side, it was all Josh Bell early. Bell got a hanging changeup from Tatsuya Imai in the second that he mashed off the batter’s eye in center. Things were quiet until Bell came up again the fourth inning and went oppo-taco to put the Twins up 3-0. It would have been nice to see the lineup have a better performance against a struggling pitcher, but a win is a win.

After the two hour rain delay, the Twins came back ready to add some more runs. Six straight Twins reached base with one out in the 6th, resulting in three additional runs, but a sloppy send/late hold by third base coach Ramon Borrego resulted in Bell getting caught in no man’s land between third and home and getting nabbed on the bases.

Justin Topa came in and gave up three runs in the seventh inning, as he is wont to do, but you don’t need me to recap why a bad pitcher gave up runs. It should be expected at this point. Eric Orze got the Twins out that jam and pitched a clean eighth, but Yoendrys Gomez got the Twins right back in one in the ninth. Gomez walked notable bad hitter Christian Vazquez on four pitches, got Peña to pop out, then walked Paredes on five pitches to bring up MVP candidate Yordan Alvarez as the tying run. Shelty turned to veteran Taylor Rogers who got Alvarez looking and then got Christian Walker to ground out to end the threat and the game.

Two final notable things from this game. First, Ryan Jeffers left the game in the ninth inning after cracking his bat on a foul ball. Jeffers stayed in for two more pitches but left the game mid-AB. No word on what the potential injury is, but Jeffers is a gamer who wouldn’t leave for no reason. For a team missing Byron Buxton, Matt Wallner recently demoted, and Royce Lewis on the verge of the same, they can hardly afford to have Jeffers miss significant time.

Second, two different pitchers issued four pitch walks to Christian Vazquez. I don’t need to tell anyone around here that walking Vazquez at all, let alone on four pitches, is a demote-able offense. Simeon Woods Richardson is still adjust to reliever life, it appears.

STUDS

  • Josh Bell: 3-4, 2 HR, 2 R, 4 RBI
  • Kendry Rojas: 4 IP, 2 H, 1 BB, 4 K, 0 R

DUDS

  • NO DUDS TWINS WIN!!!!

Comment of the game goes to norff for finally making Justin Topa’s role on this team clear.

23-26: Chart

SEATTLE, WA - MAY 18: Cole Young #2 of the Seattle Mariners and Colt Emerson #4 looks on prior to the game between the Chicago White Sox and the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on Monday, May 18, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Eric Hiller/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Mariners 6, White Sox 1

Anton Chigurh: Bryan Woo, .31 WPA

Anton Chinacci: Eduard Bazardo, -.18 WPA

Game Thread Comment of the Day:

Padres show why they’re leading NL West in shutout win over Dodgers

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows San Diego Padres pitcher Mason Miller reacting after defeating the Los Angeles Dodgers, Image 2 shows Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani hitting a single against the San Diego Padres, Image 3 shows Max Muncy of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts to striking out, holding his batting helmet and with his bat flipped in the air

SAN DIEGO –– The Padres own the worst batting average in the majors. Their starting rotation is being held together by Elmer’s glue and duct tape. And they have the run differential of, at best, a .500 ball club.

After a 1-0 win over the Dodgers on Monday night, they are also in first place in the National League West.

If you’ve been watching from afar, and wondering exactly how the Padres (29-18) are winning so much with their best two players batting a combined .207 and most of their best pitchers on the injured list, then Monday’s series-opener provided a telling answer.

They’ve found ways to limit runs, riding a scoreless seven-inning start from Michael King on Monday (including a season-high nine strikeouts for him).

Mason Miller of the San Diego Padres reacts after defeating the Los Angeles Dodgers 1-0 at Petco Park on May 18, 2026. Getty Images

They’ve gotten unexpected contributions from others in their lineup, including a first-inning homer from Miguel Andujar off Yoshinobu Yamamoto (the only blemish in Yamamoto’s seven-inning, eight-strikeout start).

And once they’ve taken leads, they simply do not relinquish them, with superstar closer (and potential Cy Young candidate) Mason Miller picking up his 15th save in a scoreless ninth inning.

“When they’re ahead in the seventh inning, they don’t lose,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said.

“It’s hard to score against Mason Miller,” first baseman Freddie Freeman added.

Miller did not make life easy for himself in his save situation. He missed with eight of his first nine pitches, issuing two walks in a game for only the second time this year.

But on a night of missed chances for the Dodgers (29-19) –– who had a runner in scoring position in each of their last four trips to the plate –– they let another one go by the wayside. Will Smith flied out. Max Muncy took a called third strike. And Andy Pages hit a grounder to third that ended the game, handing the Padres the kind of win they’ve been getting all year. 

What it means

Standings might not matter much at this point in the year.

But if the first seven weeks of this season have been any indication, the Padres figure to be a thorn in the Dodgers’ side once again.

The last two years, the Padres have taken the division race down to the final weeks of the season. Last year, they held first place as late as Aug. 23, pushing the defending champions all the way to the end.

Big picture, such competition can be good for the Dodgers.

Max Muncy of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts to striking out during the fifth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on May 18, 2026. Getty Images

But right now, it’s only underscoring their uneven start to the campaign.

After appearing to turn a corner during a recent five-game winning streak, their lineup came back to earth on Monday, striking out 10 times against King and company while going 0-for-7 with a runner in scoring position.

Who’s hot

It certainly wasn’t a highlight night for Shohei Ohtani. But he continued to improve his early-season numbers by reaching base three times in a 2-for-3 performance.

Coming off a big series against the Angels over the weekend, when he finally began to emerge from a month-long slump, Ohtani drew a walk in the fourth inning, then followed a two-out single in the sixth from Hyeseong Kim with a swinging bunt that led to an errant throw, putting runners on the corners.

Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) hits a single during the eighth inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

A similar sequence played out in the eighth, when Ohtani followed Kim’s two-out walk with a single off right-handed reliever Jason Adam (and, curiously, not warmed-up left-hander Adrian Morejon in the bullpen).

Alas, on both occasions, Betts made an out behind him to end each inning.

It was all part of the Dodgers’ frustrating night at the plate.

Who’s not

The Dodgers’ baserunning, which made King’s life easier multiple times on Monday.

Through the game’s first five innings, the only two Dodgers players to reach base (Betts after a first-inning single and Ohtani after a fourth-inning walk) were both gunned down by catcher Rodolfo Durán while trying to steal second.

Then in the sixth, they didn’t take advantage of a chance to capitalize on a Padres defensive mistake.

On Ohtani’s swinging bunt, Durán’s throw to first base went up the line and allowed Kim to scurry all the way to third. Once he got there, however, third base coach Dino Ebel threw up a late stop sign –– just as second baseman Fernando Tatis Jr. was struggling to corral the ball in shallow right.

Roberts didn’t second-guess the decision afterward, pointing to the tricky timing of the sequence.

“You don’t know that he’s not going to come up with it clean,” he noted.

However, he also added, “It’s one of those that, yeah, it’s unfortunate. Two outs. If we know something different, he probably would have done something different. But that’s a hard one.”

Up next

The Dodgers will try to even this rivalry series on Tuesday, when Emmet Sheehan (3-1, 4.54 ERA) faces off against Griffin Canning (0-2, 10.64 ERA).

Mets follow Subway Series with 'resilience' and 'grit' in series-opening win at Nationals

The Mets have won three straight games, including six of their past seven, after they emerged from Monday's wild series opener at the Washington Nationals with a 16-7 win in 12 innings.

"It's huge," said Brett Baty, whose 2-for-6 night featured three RBI on a fourth-inning solo shot and his two-run single in the 12th inning when New York (21-26) scored 10 runs to pull away from Washington (23-25). "Just come in here and try to win Game 1. We've got three more here, so just came in here and tried to win Game 1, honestly."

The four-game set starts a seven-game swing that is set to continue this weekend in Miami and follows the Mets' 2-of-3 Subway Series result against the Yankees, which included Sunday's 7-6 win in 10 innings.

"I mean, the resilience, the grit -- that's a group that we came today and it's a new series, it's a new day," said Carlos Mendoza. "What happened yesterday doesn't matter, you know? And that's the mentality for tomorrow. We show up tomorrow.

"We won a very good game today. It was a back-and-forth, and we never got down. We kept punching. And even when we didn't score those couple of extra innings there, we were able to -- the pitching staff was able to give us a chance, and the guys came through.

"So, emotions -- like I said, we've got to be able to turn the page. I say that when we're losing, I'm saying the same thing when we're winning, you know? It's another important game tomorrow. We'll come here and that's what we'll do."

The Mets totaled 18 hits and used seven pitchers, including Huascar Brazobán, who earned the win after entering in the 10th inning and gave New York a chance before the bats broke out in the 11th and 12th.

"That's the team that we are," Brazobán said through an interpreter. "Whatever happened in the past happened in the past, and we go out there and compete. And now, it's favoring us. The talent that we have, the way that we're able to play -- it's turning out the right way now for us."

Nolan McLean (2-2, 2.92 ERA) gets the start next as the Mets seek a season-high-tying fourth straight win in Tuesday's 6:45 p.m. game on SNY.

"We're just doing our job -- showing up every day and trying to win games," said Bo Bichette, whose 3-for-6 night with three RBI was among New York's key contributors Monday. "And when you win games, you start to kind of feel what it feels like and you just try to keep that going. So, it's fun to win -- fun to come to the park right now."

Takeaways from Lucas Giolito’s Padres debut

San Diego Padres SP Lucas Giolito (Photo by Jack Compton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Late Sunday afternoon in Seattle was the setting for Lucas Giolito’s debut with the San Diego Padres. His emotions were high, but he channeled his energy into a decent outing. No question, there are plenty of positive takeaways from his first start of the 2026 campaign.

This season is different from others, as Giolito had to battle back from a right elbow injury that sidelined him for the entire 2025 postseason with the Boston Red Sox. He was the last starting pitcher standing on the free-agent market. 

The Padres signed him to a one-year, pro-rated contract in late April. His outstanding season with Boston fueled their interest. Giolito posted a 10-4 record with a 3.41 ERA in 26 starts. His partnership with Garrett Crochet at the top of the Red Sox rotation earned the franchise an unlikely postseason berth.

Giolito overcame season debut nerves

Giolito shook off some nerves in his debut start, allowing only one hit against the Seattle Mariners. He showed no fear in attacking the strike zone with quality pitches. His command was sharp until the bottom of the sixth inning.

Giolito struggled with his control, walking three batters before Friars manager Craig Stammen removed him from the game. Granted, he was sitting in the dugout for an extended time while the offense scored five runs in the top of the inning.

The finish should not put a bad taste in your mouth. Instead, everyone’s optimism level should be high from Giolito’s first start. You have to be impressed with his presence on the mound, as he showed flashes of his former self.

I cannot wait to see Giolito’s second start, as he should be more comfortable and have better command of his pitches.

When he is on, Giolito’s pitching repertoire is elite

Giolito has an impressive repertoire, especially when his three-pitch mix (four-seam fastball, slider, and circle changeup) is effectively dominating the strike zone. But make no mistake: he relies heavily on his four-seam fastball to get batters out.

His pitching approach is built on neutralizing right-handed hitters by throwing a heavy slider and lefty batters swinging out in front of a fading circle changeup. It allows him to throw his four-seam fastball at the top of the strike zone. 

Not too many hitters feel comfortable in an at-bat against Giolito.

Questions will linger about the Padres starting rotation until Joe Musgrove and Nick Pivetta return to action. The team is playing above .500, but there is no time to rest on their laurels as the Los Angeles Dodgers are coming to Petco Park this week.

The Friars know how to survive and compete without a full roster available. The organization is looking for Giolito to carry some of the load. It may produce his signature moment in the Brown & Gold uniform. 

The Padres, by virtue of their solid start to the season, can afford to wait for Giolito to return to 2025 form. 

Rockies 7, Rangers 6: A wet and wild win

May 18, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Rockies shortstop Ezequiel Tovar (14) runs to second on a two RBI double in the first inning against the Texas Rangers at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images | Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

It wasn’t a sure thing this game would be played to conclusion as the rain fell hard during Bark at the Park night. However, the Colorado Rockies and the Texas Rangers played a full nine innings of soggy baseball with plenty of slips, slides, and runs scored.

“I love it,” said TJ Rumfield of the conditions. “Anything that makes the [opposing] pitcher uncomfortable.”

Nearly-Quality Quintana

Left-handed veteran José Quintana wasn’t flashy, but got the job done on a wet night in Denver. He pitched 5.2 innings while giving up three earned runs—just the third time he’s given up more than two earned runs this season—on seven hits. Quintana’s control was strong despite a slick baseball. He walked just one Rangers hitter while striking out four, which is the second-most he’s recorded this season.

Quintana wasn’t without help, however. Incredibly solid defense from the Rockies despite the wet conditions helped him on multiple occasions. You had Rumfield corralling the ball as he fell into the first base dugout, multiple slick plays by Ezequiel Tovar, and a sliding catch in the outfield by Jake McCarthy.

His toughest inning was the top of the fifth. After giving up a solo home run to Justin Foscue, Quintana loaded the bases with two outs via back-to-back singles and a walk. A ground ball fielded by Tovar got him out of the inning. Quintana then looked like he could make it through six innings for just the second time this season—and net the Rockies a rare Quality Start—but after giving up a single and a double with two outs and an elevated pitch count he was relieved by Jaden Hill. Hill finished the inning on the aforementioned McCarthy catch.

Too close for comfort

After Hill pitched 1.1 scoreless innings with three strikeouts, Victor Vodnik entered the game for the eighth inning. Vodnik has been struggling this season, entering today’s game with a 6.50 ERA in 17 appearances. His struggles continued tonight as he issued a double and two walks without recording an out to load the bases. Vodnik was pulled for lefty Brennan Bernardino.

Bernardino gave up a two run single as soon as he entered the game, and a third run would score when Kyle Karros fielded a grounder and decided to throw to first instead of home while attempting to turn a double play. Bernardino would eventually navigate out of the inning, but all three runs scored would be charged to Vodnik. Vodnik now has an ERA of 8.00 this season.

Juan Mejia closed out the game with a scoreless ninth inning, giving up one hit and striking out one batter for his third save of the season.

Rain falls, runs score

The Rockies had a relatively complete offensive performance against the Rangers, scoring seven runs (five earned) on seven hits. They struck out just six times while drawing four walks.

They cracked things open early in the first inning with a Willi Castro double and back-to-back walks drawn by Brenton Doyle and Rumfield to load the bases with no outs against starting pitcher MacKenzie Gore. Tovar, finally showing signs of emerging from his slump, plated two runs with a double of his own deep to left field. McCarthy re-loaded the bases with a swinging bunt single, but the Rockies were unable to further capitalize on the opportunity.

With slick conditions in the rain, the Rockies were able to plate another two runs in the third inning thanks to two errors by the Rangers’ infield defense. Hunter Goodman reached via error and Tovar drew a walk on an ABS challenge. A fielding error by third baseman Josh Jung allowed both Goodman and Tovar to score, though Karros—who hit the ball—was thrown out between first and second to end the inning.

The Rockies scored another two runs in the fourth with some small ball. Sterlin Thompson recorded his first big league hit, though was out after Braxton Fulford grounded into a forceout. However, Fulford then stole second and scored on a Doyle single. Doyle then stole second himself and scored on a Rumfield single.

Fulford, who was called up today to replace an injured Jordan Beck on the roster, drew a walk in the sixth inning and once again stole second base. He was driven home on Castro’s second double of the evening.

Up Next

There’s more rain in the forecast as the Rockies are slated for their second game against the rangers tomorrow night. Right-handed former top prospect Kumar Rocker is the scheduled starter for the Rangers, while the Rockies have yet to announce their own. First pitch is set for 6:40 PM MDT.


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King beats Yamamoto in an old-fashioned pitchers’ duel

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 18: Yoshinobu Yamamoto #18 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches during the second inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on May 18, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Who would have thought that when Miguel Andujar scored a run in the first on a solo homer, he’d be scoring the only one in this game as the Padres won it 1-0? Seldom throughout the course of the 2026 season did Yoshinobu Yamamoto find an opponent capable and effective in going toe-to-toe with him through a start—Michael King had something to say about that, as the Padres’ ace outdueled him, shutting down an offense that was just coming off scoring a whopping 31 runs in three games against the Angels, sweeping their way through the first of three straight series away from home. With seven scoreless innings, King was able to maintain the smallest of leads, and the Padres’ bullpen closed the door despite some late scares.

For those of you who weren’t following the Padres all that closely as of yet, considering this is the first meeting between these clubs in 2026, King is at the core of these successful first few months that have the Padres battling the Dodgers for the NL West lead. The Padres’ starter, who came into this game having allowed no more than two earned runs in seven of his nine starts, faced the minimum through his first five innings, seeing the two base runners he allowed thrown out trying to steal second. Interestingly, a similar pattern took place in the sixth, this time with a lead-off base runner erased following a double play. At least the Dodgers managed to work up King’s pitch count, which was surprisingly in check for a starter who recorded nine strikeouts in his first five innings, even if they failed to do damage by stranding two base runners in the sixth.

Unfazed by seeing Mookie Betts and Shohei Ohtani thrown out on the basepaths earlier in the game—also somewhat pressed to create action with how well King was pitching—Kyle Tucker stole second with two outs in the seventh. Unfortunately, Max Muncy couldn’t drive him in with a dangerous fly ball caught in right-center. That at-bat wrapped up seven scoreless for King on an even 100 pitches. It should be noted that Tucker only had that opportunity due to a Freddie Freeman walk on a 3-2 overturned strike call, winning his challenge by the thinnest of margins. Tucker replaced Freeman on the basepaths following a forceout.

With both starters completing seven magnificent innings, it was up to the Dodgers to make something happen late to avoid a frustrating 1-0 defeat, having last been shut out nearly a month ago. For a game with dominant pitching, though, the Dodgers sure did their part in wasting opportunities. Once again in the eighth, they put a couple of players on base, this time in front of Betts with two outs, and the shortstop couldn’t drive them in, instead grounding out.

Even against the imposing figure of Mason Miller as the closer, it’d be in line with this game for the Dodgers to threaten and not score, and that’s exactly what they did. Miller walked the first two hitters with spotty command, to say the least, but settled in after that, retiring the following three in order.

This represented the first 1-0 loss for the Dodgers at San Diego since 2008, and while Andujar’s home run will take a lot of the attention, Rodolfo Durán’s work behind the plate shouldn’t go overlooked. The Padres catcher threw out two of three base runners and won all three of his challenges.

Game particulars
  • Home run— Miguel Andujar (4)
  • WP— Michael King (4-2): 7 IP, 4 hits, 0 runs, 2 walks, 9 strikeouts
  • LP— Yoshinobu Yamamoto (3-4): 7 IP, 3 hits, 1 run, 2 walks, 8 strikeouts
  • SV – Mason Miller (15): 1 IP, 2 walks, 1 strikeout
Up next

A couple of days removed from facing the Angels, the Dodgers will meet a starting pitcher who spent the bulk of his career in Anaheim in Griffin Canning. He’ll have to contend with Emmet Sheehan’s effort on the other side of this duel that starts at 6:40 p.m. (PT).

22-25 – Miserable night in Colorado goes miserably for Rangers

May 18, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Texas Rangers shortstop Ezequiel Duran (20) reacts after a play in the fourth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images | Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers scored six runs but the Colorado Rockies scored seven runs.

Let’s see here…

The Rangers fielded one of the least impressive lineups I’ve maybe ever seen.

Their starting pitcher MacKenzie Gore left injured after only an inning of work in which he was lucky to have allowed just two runs.

The defense committed a couple of errors among several more miscues, one of which allowed two runs to score despite Colorado not having a hit in the inning.

The Rangers out-hit the Rockies 10-7. Five of Colorado’s hits were with RISP to just one for Texas.

The Rangers had four pinch hitters. They went 0-for-6 on the night.

The team trailed 2-0, 4-1, 6-1, and 7-3 before still very nearly Coors Field-ing their way back to a win late only to fall 7-6 anyway despite several chances to at least tie the game.

Maybe it’ll be warmer tomorrow.

Player of the Game: Justin Foscue is probably wishing he’d been drafted by the Rockies so he could play every day at Coors Field. Tonight Foscue entered the game with six career extra base hits and left with nine as he homered, doubled twice, and drove in each of Texas’ first three runs.

Foscue’s career night concluded with a walk during a three-run eighth inning rally, as the former first-rounder reached in each of his plate appearances.

Up Next: The Rangers will be asking for innings from RHP Kumar Rocker tomorrow after another quasi-bullpen game tonight. The Rockies, meanwhile, don’t have a starting pitcher listed yet.

The Wednesday evening first pitch from Coors Field is scheduled for 7:40 pm CDT and will be aired once more on the Rangers Sports Network.

Brewers come out swinging in 9-3 rout of Cubs

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - MAY 18: Jake Bauers #9 and Andrew Vaughn #28 of the Milwaukee Brewers high five after Bauers's three-run home run in the fifth inning of the game against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on May 18, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Zoe Davis/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In the first of 13 meetings between the Brewers and Cubs this season, the Brewers set the tone for these matchups. Though the Cubs were riding a 15-game home winning streak and had their ace on the mound, it didn’t faze the Brewers at all. They scored eight runs off of Shota Imanaga as they rolled to a 9-3 victory in the season opener.

Early on, Imanaga looked strong for the Cubs. He got through the first with just eight pitches. Jackson Chourio flew out on the first pitch of the game, Brice Turang struck out on four pitches, and William Contreras grounded out. Meanwhile, Brandon Sproat had an opposite start. Eight of his first 11 pitches were balls as he walked the first two batters. He recovered, but not without a little tension. Two fly balls were deep on a windy day but remained in the ballpark and were easy fly outs. They were sandwiched with a strikeout of Alex Bregman, and the game remained scoreless.

Christian Yelich put the Brewers ahead with the first pitch of the second inning. With the wind blowing out, Yelich hit a no-doubt home run. It had an exit velocity of 109.3 mph and hit off the right field scoreboard. The Brewers took the early 1-0 lead.

The bottom of the second inning began with an odd sequence. On the first pitch of the at-bat to Michael Conforto, Contreras challenged the ball call. The ABS replay on the TV broadcast showed that it was barely a strike —it just clipped the tip of the corner of the strike zone — but it was never shown in the ballpark. The umpire said that the call was upheld, but the Brewers retained their challenge. This led to some confusion on if the Brewers had 1 or 2 ABS challenges. Sproat finished the at-bat by striking out Conforto, and it was confirmed later by MLB that the Brewers retained both challenges. It was a nice recovery for Sproat, who retired the side in order in the second, and struck out two.

After both starters traded mostly clean third innings, the Brewers unleashed their offense in the fourth. Contreras led off the inning with a single, then advanced to second on a Yelich ground ball that Nico Hoerner made a great play on. That didn’t deter the offense as Andrew Vaughn hit an infield single to put runners at the corners. Bauers cashed in the first run of the inning with a single up the inning, increasing the lead to 2-0.

Imanaga still had a chance to limit the damage after striking out Luis Rengifo. Sal Frelick didn’t let that happen, hitting a double into the left field corner to score both Vaughn and Bauers, increasing the lead to 4-0.

Joey Ortiz kept the inning going by drawing a walk, and Jackson Chourio brought in another run with another single up the middle, and the lead was up to 5-0.

Imanaga remained in the game to start the fifth inning, but the Brewers kept piling on. Yelich drew a one-out walk, and Vaughn hit a double into the left-field corner that put runners at second and third. Bauers then ended Imanaga’s day with another no-doubt home run off the right-field scoreboard, and the rout was on at 8-0. It had a slightly slower exit velocity of 106.2 mph, but a longer distance at 419 feet. Imanaga finished the day at 4 1/3 innings pitched with eight runs, nine hits, and three walks allowed. He only struck out two in the game.

Meanwhile, Sproat had recovered from a long first inning with three quicker innings, and had not allowed a hit going into the fifth inning. He also had a healthy 55-pitch count. He couldn’t keep the Cubs down, though. After Carson Kelly singled to lead off the inning, Dansby Swanson hit one out to left field and the Cubs were on the board, 8-2. Hoerner followed that with a walk, and Busch hit a double to deep center to score him. Sproat recovered by getting Bregman to ground out, but that was the end of his day. Unfortunately, the fifth destroyed his final line for the day. He allowed three runs in 4 2/3 innings, with three hits and three walks while striking out five. Shane Drohan finished the fifth with a strikeout of Happ.

The Brewers got one back in the next inning. After Turang drew a walk and Contreras singled (both with two outs), Yelich hit a fly ball down the left field line that fell just fair in front of Happ. The bounce let Yelich reach second, pushing the lead back to 9-3.

From there, the Brewers brought in Blake Perkins to tighten up the defense — with Chourio moving to left and Bauers moving to first base. The bullpens took over, and while they did bend, they did not break. Drohan pitched the remaining 4 1/3 innings of the game, allowing four hits but no runs while striking out five. He earned the win instead of a save since he finished the fifth for Sproat. For the Cubs, Ethan Roberts allowed the run and three hits in the sixth inning, but that was all in 1 2/3 innings of work. Ty Blach limited the Brewers’ offense to one hit in the final three innings of the game, striking out two.

Overall, it was a balanced day for the Brewers’ offense. Eight of the nine starters recorded a hit, with only Turang going hitless — though he did draw a walk and score a run. Chourio, Contreras, Yelich, Vaughn, and Bauers all had two-hit days, and Yelich and Vaughn also drew walks to reach base three times. Bauers drove in four of the nine runs as he extended his on-base streak to 19 games. The Brewers went 6-for-9 with runners in scoring position, compared to an 0-for-9 day for the Cubs.

With the win, the Brewers move within a half-game of the Cubs for first place in the division, and hold a one-game lead in the loss column. They also head into tomorrow’s game with Jacob Misiorowski on the mound, who will face Ben Brown of the Cubs. First pitch is at 6:40 p.m.

Another Frustrating Loss For The Jays

May 18, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Toronto Blue Jays second baseman Lenyn Sosa (50) forces out New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) at second base on a throw from Blue Jays shortstop Ernie Clement (22) and throws to first base to attempt a double play on a ball hit by Yankees left fielder Max Schuemann (not pictured) during the sixth inning at Yankee Stadium. Schuemann was safe at first on the play. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Jays 6 Yankees 7

The Jays turned in one inning. Going into the seventh, the Jays were up 5-3. Adam Macko is in and gets the first two outs of the inning, but, with Aaron Judge coming up, John Schneider goes with a right-hander, Yariel Rodriguez. Understandable, Judge is much better vs lefties. And I like getting Macko out while he can feel really good about himself. Faced three batters, got three outs. A great start to a career. Rodriguez had faced eight batters and allowed one hit since coming up.

But he had nothing tonight:

  • Judge single.
  • Bellinger home run. Tie game.
  • Trent Grisham walks and steals. Now would have been a good moment to pull Yariel.
  • Jazz Chisholm homers and we are down by two,
  • Then he got the last out. Some about horse and barn doors.

I am understanding that we have a bullpen day tomorrow. Hopefully with Spencer Miles doing 3-4 innings, but still we are going to use 5 or more pitchers tomorrow. But, Yariel didn’t have it and, well, tomorrow is tomorrow’s problem.


We had a shot in the ninth. David Bednar in for the Yankees and he does the near impossible, he walks Ernie Clement. Jesús Sánchez, pinch-hitting for Myles Straw, doubles on the sixth pitch of the at bat, to score Clement and become the tying run at second.

Brandon Valenzuela struck out on four pitches.

Yohendrick Piñango walks on six pitches.

George Springer takes three straight balls and swings at a pitch low and inside. 3-0 count, he should have been taking. Next pitch, very low, swings. Next pitch, even lower, swings. George’s job is to be the calm veteran. It was just an awful at bat,

Vladimir Guerrero up. Takes two balls. Swings at a pitch on the outside edge. Gameday has it as a strike, but he should be waiting for a middle middle strike. Pitch five was well outside, he swung. I mean, it was likely smart to be looking for something off the plate, the way Bednar is throwing, but no need to chase that far out. Pitch six was at the top of the zone, a strike, Vlad grounds it to second.


Beyond that, Patrick Corbin wasn’t sharp, 4 innings, 6 hits, 3 earned, three walks, 3 strikeouts. We were pretty lucky that he only gave up the 3 runs.

Braydon Fisher got five outs, giving up one it. Macko three straight outs. Hoffman finished the game, giving up just a hit in the inning.

We did score some:

  • Three in the fourth: Vlad and Kazuma Okamoto singled. Two outs later, Clement homered. He had a day.
  • One in the fifth: Springer homered.
  • One in the sixth: One out singles from Lenyn Sosa and Daulton Varsho puts runners on the corners (Sosa just beat out Judge’s throw). Clement ground out 6-4, to pick up his fourth RBI of the day,

And, of course, the one in the ninth.

We had nine his and three walks. Springer had two (but two and a walk would have been better). Straw and Schneider had 0 fors (of the starters).

Jays of the Day: Clement (0.42 WPA), Sanchez (0.21), Fisher (0.11), and Macko (0.10, getting a JoD in his first game).

Other Award: Rodriguez (-0.72), Corbin (-0.17), and Valenzuela (-0.17). Springer, despite the homer, and Vlad get honorary ‘Other Awards’ for those terrible ninth inning at bats.

Surging Mets erupt for 10 runs in 12th for wild win over Nationals

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Carson Benge follows through his swing after hitting a two-RBI double, Image 2 shows Marcus Semien, wearing a New York Mets uniform, hitting an RBI single
The Mets defeated the Nationals in 12 innings Monday.

WASHINGTON — The opponents on this road trip aren’t particularly daunting, giving the Mets a wide opening to continue their recent surge.

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Monday night they avoided a letdown following the euphoria of winning the Subway Series, attacking throughout against the Nationals.

‘The Mets won 16-7 in 12 innings for a sixth victory in seven games.

The Mets scored 10 runs in the final inning, piling on against Jorbit Vivas, a position player, after they had built a comfortable cushion.

“When you win games, you start to kind of feel what it feels like, and you just try to keep that going,” Bo Bichette said. “It’s fun to win. It’s fun to come to the park right now.”

Carson Benge hits a double during the 10th inning of the Mets’ May 18 win. AP Photo

Carson Benge’s RBI single in the 12th inning brought in the go-ahead run after Hayden Senger’s sacrifice bunt had advanced the automatic runner.

Vidal Bruján’s suicide squeeze brought in Benge for an insurance run.

Brett Baty delivered the dagger with a two-run single.

But the Mets kept going. Marcus Semien, A.J. Ewing, Benge and Bichette all had hits that brought in runs to complete the onslaught in the inning.

“It was back and forth, and we never got down,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “We kept punching, and even when we didn’t score in a couple of extra innings there, the pitching staff gave us a chance and the guys came through.”

Huascar Brazobán survived the 10th and 11th innings.

After Joey Wiemer’s infield hit in the 11th brought in a run to tie it 6-6, Baty at first base executed a tight throw on a grounder to nail the lead runner Wiemer at second.

Marcus Semien connects on a single during the Mets’ May 18 win. AP Photo

The ensuing batter, Vivas, doubled, but the Nationals never scored the winning run.

“I was just trying to turn a double play there and [the throw] snuck by Wiemer,” Baty said. “I was just trying to get two outs there.”

Home runs by Baty and Bichette were the hits that resonated the loudest, but Tyrone Taylor, Juan Soto, Benge and Luis Torrens all were instrumental offensively on a night the Mets rallied from a 3-2 deficit in the middle innings.

Tyrone Taylor reacts during the Mets’ May 18 win. Imagn Images

The Mets carried a 5-3 lead into the seventh, but couldn’t hold it.

After Brooks Raley surrendered a run in the seventh, Tobias Myers allowed an RBI double to Curtis Mead in the eighth that tied it.

Myers had recorded a big out an inning earlier, entering with the bases loaded to strike out José Tena.

The Mets (21-26) play another three games against the Nats before heading to Miami for three this weekend.

Christian Scott had a third straight start in which he failed to pitch at least five innings.

The right-hander was removed after allowing three earned runs on four hits and three walks with five strikeouts over four innings.

He threw 81 pitches.

“In order to get deeper in games, I have to get ahead and stay ahead,” Scott said.

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Torrens’ RBI double in the second gave the Mets a 1-0 lead.

The run was unearned after Taylor singled and advanced two bases on James Wood’s double error.

Wood misplayed the ball and then overthrew second attempting to nail Taylor.

Scott got two fast outs in the bottom of the frame before drilling Jacob Young in the ribs (Young departed the game).

Carson Benge singles during the Mets’ May 18 game. Brad Mills-Imagn Images

Tena’s RBI double tied it, and Drew Millas’ single — following a walk to Vivas — put the Nats ahead 2-1.

Scott encountered additional heavy traffic in the third and allowed another run on Wiemer’s RBI double.

Brady House singled to begin the rally and Daylen Lile walked with two outs.

Lile stumbled rounding third base on Wiemer’s double and had to retreat, potentially costing the Nats a run as Scott retired the ensuing batter, Tena, for the third out.

Baty’s homer leading off the fourth pulled the Mets to within 3-2.

It was the third homer this season for Baty, who crushed Jake Irvin’s first-pitch sinker 451 feet to center field.

The Mets rallied in the fifth to take a 4-3 lead.

Torrens reached on an error by first baseman Luis García Jr. and Benge walked — both runners advanced on Bichette’s flyout — before Soto stroked a two-run single.

Bichette’s homer in the seventh widened the Mets lead to 5-3.

It was a needed contribution for Bichette, who began the day with a paltry .531 OPS.

“I’m pretty sure he’s going to get going here,” Mendoza said. “And he’s going to carry us for quite a bit.”

Another Good Night for Cleveland in Detroit

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - MAY 18: José Ramírez #11 of the Cleveland Guardians high-fives teammates after hitting a solo home run against the Detroit Tigers during the top of the ninth inning at Comerica Park on May 18, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Guardians dominated the Tigers tonight, winning 8-2.

The game began inauspiciously with a Riley Greene double giving Detroit an early 1-0 lead. But, Cleveland went to work on Tigers’ starter Framber Valdez in the 3rd. Brayan Rocchio tripled

Angel Martinez grounded out, then Jose walked… the Chase DeLauter grounded out just softly enough to score Angel and force Jose out at second. Then Rhys Hoskins stepped in to deliver the go-ahead double:

Of course, when playing Framber Valdez, you have to be careful not to hurt his fragile ego by scoring too many runs.

Slade Cecconi continued to get Tigers out quickly, while the Guardians played with fire and scored another couple runs off Valdez in the fifth on a Rocchio walk, an Angel Martinez single, and a Jose single… followed by a DeLauter grounder and a Hoskins sacrifice fly. Goodbye, Framber. See ya later.

Speaking of Angel, no one told the Tigers not to throw him pitches a foot outside the zone:

Leading up to this pitch, Bazzana bunt singled:

Steven Kwan drew one of his three walks on the night, and Hedges sacrificed them over. Martinez’s single followed his AL player of the week award today:

Then, José doubled and followed his double with a homer in the 8th inning:

Slade ended up going 7 and 1/3rd, giving up two runs. It made him very happy:

Matt Festa closed the 8th out and then Peyton Pallette limped his way through the 9th, walking a batter and hitting another, forcing Stephen Vogt to warm up Cade Smith. I just don’t know how long they will continue to carry Pallette. He is very similar to what 2021 Trevor Stephan was. The problem is that this is not the 2021 Guardians. This group is a clear playoff contender. But, that’s a concern for another day. A big win and no inner circle of trust relievers used!

The Guardians are now five games over .500 and Travis Bazzana looks so real, folks. Let’s sleep well tonight