Yankees' season ends after offense shut down in 5-2 loss to Blue Jays in Game 4 of ALDS

The Yankees’ run of wins in elimination games came to an end Wednesday night and so did their season. They dropped Game 4 of the ALDS to the Blue Jays, 5-2, at Yankee Stadium. 

Toronto won the best-of-five series, three games to one, and took the deciding tilt by throwing a bullpen game against Cam Schlittler. Schlittler, the Yankee youngster who was a revelation in his first postseason start last week against Boston, was good again, though not quite as good as he was against the Red Sox. But it wasn’t enough. 

The Yankees were outhit, 12-6, and missed on several late chances. Jazz Chisholm Jr. made a key error in the seventh inning that led to two crucial insurance runs. In the series, the Jays outscored the Yankees, 34-19.

Before Wednesday, the Yanks had won three consecutive elimination games this October.

The Jays now head to the ALCS while the Yankees head into the winter wondering what might have been. And what might happen now.

Here are the main takeaways...

-- The Jays scored in the first inning of every game of the series and took a 1-0 lead in this one on an RBI single by Vlad Guerrero Jr. Guerrero knocked in George Springer, who had led off the game with a double off Schlittler. Addison Barger followed with a single and the inning couldn’t become worse trouble, but Schlittler rebounded with help from Cody Bellinger. First, Schlittler retired Alejandro Kirk on a foul pop and then Bellinger raced over to catch a bloop by Daulton Varsho down the left-field line, sliding to make the grab. 

-- In the second inning, Anthony Volpe made a terrific running catch, one so good it might make some Yankee fans forget his defensive woes earlier in the season. With his back to the plate, he sprinted into left field to snare a flare, catching it over-the-shoulder style. A few fans chanted Volep’s name in appreciation, though he also got booed later after striking out for the third time in the game. Volpe was 5-for-26 with 16 strikeouts this postseason.

-- Ryan McMahon connected for his first career postseason home run in the third inning, knotting the score at 1 after a terrific at-bat. McMahon, who hit 20 home runs during the regular season (16 for the Rockies, four for the Yanks), fell behind 0-2 against lefty Mason Fluharty, but worked the count full. On the seventh pitch of the at-bat, he swatted a sweeper on the outside corner over the right-field wall. The Stadium crowd, a tad sleepy early, got back into the game after the home run. 

-- Schlittler retired eight straight hitters before Barger led off the fourth with a double. But then he got three consecutive outs, stranding Barger at third. In the fifth, the Blue Jays got consecutive singles to start the inning from Ernie Clement, who came into the game batting .636 in the series, and Andrés Giménez to put runners on first and third. 

Springer hit a sac fly to give Toronto a 2-1 lead, but Schlittler got the next two outs, including catching Guerrero looking at a 3-2 sinker on the outside corner, to end the frame. His whiff of Guerrero was just his second strikeout of the game, sort of illustrating the different way he got outs against the Blue Jays after striking out 12 in eight scoreless innings against Boston in the Wild Card series. 

-- Schlittler started the sixth with 67 pitches and got through the inning with only 10 more, which perhaps put him in line to at least start the seventh. He threw 107 against Boston, his season high, in his last start. Barger started the sixth with a 47.2-mph squibber down the third-base line that went for an infield single because McMahon was positioned way toward second base. 

Aaron Boone went to the mound and some fans booed, thinking the manager was going to yank the pitcher, but Boone spoke for a few moments and then headed back to the dugout. The crowd cheered then. Schlittler coaxed a double-play grounder out of Varsho to end the inning and the righty then got to start the seventh inning, too. 

-- The Yankees had cleaned up some of their defensive issues over the last few months of the season, but an error by Chisholm hurt them in the seventh inning. The first out of the inning came on a remarkable catch of a foul pop by McMahon, who appeared to slip while pursuing the ball, but reached for it and caught it anyway. 

Then, after another single by Clement, Giménez hit a grounder to Chisholm that could have turned into an inning-ending double play. But Chisholm couldn’t handle the bouncer and the Jays had runners at first and third. That ended Schlittler’s night. Devin Williams came in and struck out Springer, though Giménez stole second on the play. And then Nathan Lukes stroked a two-run single to increase Toronto’s lead to 4-1. 

-- Schlittler was charged with two unearned runs in the seventh, so his final line was 6.1 innings, four runs (two earned) and eight hits. He struck out two and walked none, throwing 88 pitches, 69 for strikes. It was another impressive outing for the rookie, who, through two postseason starts, had a 1.26 ERA over 14.1 innings. He did not walk a single batter.

-- The Yanks left two runners on base in both the sixth and seventh innings and stranded the bases loaded in the eighth. The Jays intentionally walked Judge with one out in the sixth and, one out after that, Giancarlo Stanton worked a walk. But Chisholm grounded out. In the seventh, Paul Goldschmidt drew a leadoff walk and pinch-hitter Amed Rosario hit a two-out single. But Trent Grisham popped out to end the threat. 

With two out in the eighth, Stanton singled and Chisholm and pinch-hitter Ben Rice walked. But Austin Wells flew out against Jays closer Jeff Hoffman. Overall, the Yankees were 1-for-6 with runners in scoring position.

-- The Jays piled on an additional run in the eighth when Kirk led off with a double and scored on a single to right by defensive replacement Myles Straw for a 5-1 lead. 

-- Judge went 2-for-4 in Game 4 with two singles, an RBI and an intentional walk. He finished his playoff run with some gaudy numbers, going 13-for-26 (.500) with seven RBI in seven games. 

Game MVP: Toronto's bullpen

Seven relievers allowed two runs over 7.2 innings. You can extrapolate it to two runs over nine innings if you want to include reliever Louis Varland, who started as an opener and got the first four outs. 

Highlights

Cubs use 4-run 1st inning to top the Brewers 4-3 and avoid NL Division Series sweep

CHICAGO (AP) — Pete Crow-Armstrong hit a tiebreaking two-run single and the Chicago Cubs avoided a sweep by holding off the Milwaukee Brewers for a 4-3 victory in Game 3 of their NL Division Series on Wednesday.

Crow-Armstrong’s two-out swing was part of a four-run first inning for Chicago — continuing a wild trend. Michael Busch kicked off the rally by becoming the first player in major league history with multiple leadoff homers in a single postseason series.

The matchup of NL Central rivals is the first postseason series in which both teams scored in the first in each of the first three games.

Jake Bauers rallied Milwaukee with an RBI single in the fourth and a leadoff drive in the seventh. He started at first base in place of Andrew Vaughn, who hit a three-run homer in the Brewers’ 7-3 victory in Game 2 on Monday night.

Milwaukee loaded the bases in the eighth, but Brad Keller escaped the jam when he struck out Bauers swinging. Keller then retired the side in order in the ninth for the save.

Game 4 of the best-of-five series is on Thursday night.

Instant Observations after Phillies' offense finally wakes up to force Game 4

Instant Observations after Phillies' offense finally wakes up to force Game 4 originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

LOS ANGELES — The Phillies needed to fight to see another day and packed so much punch, it sucked the life out of Dodger Stadium.

They’re not done yet and an offensive explosion reinstated the Phillies’ confidence for an 8-2 win over the Dodgers to force a Game 4 Thursday.

A change of scenery. An early pitching change. A home run that still hasn’t landed. They’re not done yet.

That was apparently the recipe to finally come out on top. Let’s see if they have at least two more wins in them. Or 10 … but let’s not get ahead of ourselves here.

Here are a few instant observations off the win.

•It’s hard to not be amazed every time Kyle Schwarber demolishes a baseball. In the fourth inning, he squashed a 455 foot home run and it nearly left Dodger Stadium. It may not have even landed at this point. Schwarber now has five 450+ foot home runs in the playoffs during the statcast era. No other player has more than two. That one swing might’ve reminded the Phillies of the damage they’re capable of offensively. Heck, it reminded Schwarber of it so much, he hit another home run in the eighth inning. It’s his second-career multi-home run game in the playoffs. Good things happen when Schwarber goes yard.

•Aaron Nola pitched two scoreless innings but Rob Thomson saw enough to pull him for Ranger Suarez. The whole Game 3 starter situation has been a bizarre one, having Suarez available from the pen for the first two games and then handing the ball to Nola when the series turned to Los Angeles. We’ve seen preemptive pitching changes from Thomson in the past that have come back to bite him in the playoffs. And after Suarez gave up a first-pitch home run to Tommy Edman, the immediate thought was “Oh boy, here we go again.” Luckily, for all parties involved, they got through it.

•Not only did Ranger get through it, he completely dominated. The Phillies’ starters have been phenomenal in this series and it’s unfortunate to look back at the first two games knowing they couldn’t squeak out a win with Cristopher Sanchez and Jesus Luzardo on the mound.

•Confidence on the base paths goes a long way. A double steal getting runners to second and third with no outs was a huge opportunity to swing the momentum even more in favor of the Phillies. Even up the two runs, you want to add against the Dodgers because you never know when they’ll wake up. Kyle Schwarber wound up getting picked off at first base in the seventh inning. Base running can change the trajectory of a game. Thankfully, it didn’t come back to bite the Phillies. This time.

•The bunt heard round the tri-state area in the ninth inning of Game 2 can probably be put to rest now. Was it a decision loved by many or most?

•Harrison Bader really has quickly made his mark on the Phillies. There’s been a hole in the lineup since he was pulled from Game 1 with a hamstring injury. Alec Bohm was intentionally walked twice to have Brandon Marsh face off against left-handed pitchers. It ended in the Dodgers’ favor both times, with Marsh striking out and lining out to right field. Bader was available to pinch hit but wouldn’t have stayed in the game, so the decision wouldn’t have just been for one at-bat, but also shifting the defense in the outfield. Thomson opted for the defense.

•Citizens Bank Park brings an energy unlike any other, especially in the postseason. But with it also comes undeniable pressure to perform well. A change of scenery might’ve been what the club needed. If the Phillies fight to bring this series back to Philadelphia for a Game 5, expect a different energy. Not from the fans, from the players.

•Only 10 teams have crawled back from a League Division Series down 0-2. The Phillies dealt with numerous injuries up and down the lineup and lost their ace in Zack Wheeler and still went on to win the division. Even though the Dodgers took the first two games of this series, now it’s a first to three. Crazier things have happened.

Backs against the wall, Phillies must be patient and produce in elimination game

Backs against the wall, Phillies must be patient and produce in elimination game originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

LOS ANGELES – The plan is to slow down, be in the moment and go out and win a baseball game.

That’s the mindset that the team, the manager and everyone has around the Phillies organization as they prepared to stave off elimination in Game Three of the National League Division Series at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday.

Everyone said the right thing, believes in it, and now must execute. Patience being a key part of it all.

“I think it’s just seeing pitches,” said Rob Thomson. “Stay as long as you can. We want to be aggressive in the zone. You just can’t be over aggressive where we’re chasing. Instead of trying harder you trust harder in this situation. You trust that your teammates are going to get it done so you pass the baton. Just keep the line moving as best you can.”

That hasn’t been easy, especially at the top of the order where Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper have combined to go 2-for-21 with 11 strikeouts. There has to be something done there in order for the Phillies to last another day.

“Like I said before the series started, nothing matters other than winning and losing,” said Turner. “You have to find ways, even on your worst day or you don’t feel your best, to compete, add value and make plays. I think we have a lineup of those guys.”

Perhaps, but they certainly haven’t shown much in this series yet. Thomson decided on going with Aaron Nola to start in Los Angeles, a surprising move being that Ranger Suárez hasn’t been called upon yet in the first two games. Suárez will be ready to come out of the bullpen whenever Thomson sees fit.

“He knows what the plan is,” Thomson said of Nola.  As for Suárez, the manager said: “He is healthy. It’s been a couple days (since he’s been on the mound). I don’t even concern myself with rest for him. I think he’s been fine. His numbers the last month aren’t Ranger- type numbers, but I don’t think that’s from fatigue. I’d love him to start a clean inning, but I would never say never (as for Suárez coming in during an inning).”

Thomson also had to adjust his lineup as centerfielder Harrison Bader just wasn’t feeling well enough from his hamstring strain to man the outfield. He is available to pinch-hit, but whether he can run the bases is a game-time decision.

“Same situation,” Thomson said. “He is getting better but he doesn’t feel like he can cover the gap. “

Still, with all that, it comes down to what has been stated over and over since Monday’s loss – stay in the moment and win one pitch at a time.

“Because I’ve been through this a couple of times, I think you really have to focus, stay in the moment,” Thomson reiterated. “Focus on today. We don’t need to win three games; we need to win one. If you focus so much on the result, you forget what’s going on in the moment. Just stay calm and loose and be yourselves.

With the top of the order searching for something to get the team started offensively, had Thomson thought of tinkering, as he has with the bottom of the order throughout the season?

“I don’t think so, just because at any moment those guys can just break out,” he said. “We’ve seen it too many times. I trust that they’re going to do it.”

In Dodger starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Thomson sees similarities to another starter for Los Angeles.

“I would say if he’s similar to anybody it would be Ohtani because it’s power fastball, it’s really good split, uses the cutter against the lefties,” Thomson said. “We just got to keep him in the strike zone.

“You’ve got to try and stay positive and just try and push the right buttons and have the team prepared and I think we have. We’ve had a couple of tight games here. Hopefully, we can score a bunch of runs tonight and we shut them down.”

We’ll see.

NBC Sports Philadelphia’s Red October content is sponsored by Toyota.

Answering all your Mets offseason questions with a Mega-Mailbag episode | The Mets Pod

On the latest episode of The Mets Pod presented by Tri-State Cadillac, Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo officially kick off their coverage of the Mets offseason by turning the show over to the fans and opening up a Mega-Mailbag

The guys take on questions about coaching staff changes, free agent targets, trade possibilities, the future of Pete Alonso (again), Edwin Diaz’s opt-out options, dealing away prospects, position changes, the Japanese market, and so much more.

Be sure to subscribe to The Mets Pod at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

Phillies vs. Dodgers NLDS Game 3 betting guide: Best bets and props

Phillies vs. Dodgers NLDS Game 3 betting guide: Best bets and props originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

It’s do-or-die for the Phillies in Game 3, down two games to none in the National League Division Series. With their backs against the wall in Los Angeles, here’s what looks favorable on the slate.

Odds as of 3:30 PM ET on FanDuel

Game 3 Odds

Philadelphia Phillies (+154): +1.5 (-137)

Los Angeles Dodgers (-184): -1.5 (+114)

O/U: 7.5

The Phils will turn to veteran Aaron Nola to make his 11th career postseason start in this must-win spot. Nola battled injuries and inconsistency during the regular season, posting a 6.01 ERA in 17 starts, but has looked sharper of late. Philadelphia will also have Ranger Suárez (12-8, 3.20 ERA) available out of the bullpen — giving them length and helping avoid their struggling middle relief.

For Los Angeles, it’s Yoshinobu Yamamoto — and he’s been as dominant as anyone. The right-hander finished with the fourth-lowest ERA in the Majors (2.49) over 30 starts, and he’s been untouchable down the stretch. Including his Wild Card Series start, Yamamoto owns a 0.53 ERA, 0.71 WHIP, and 43 strikeouts over his last five outings. He hasn’t allowed a run in his past 24 innings.

Very rarely do the Phillies enter a game exceeding 3-2 odds on the moneyline, but the momentum makes this a unique opportunity. For the first time this series, they’re not starting a left-hander too. It’s hard to imagine a 96-win team getting swept — maybe it’s a gut feeling, maybe it’s variance — but I’m confident Philadelphia pulls this one out.

My suggestion: Phillies moneyline (+154)

My favorite props (57% accuracy in NLDS)

Each Team to Hit 1+ Home Runs (-165)

The ball hasn’t been flying much in this series — small ball and pitching have been the key. Outside of Teoscar Hernández’s Game 1 homer, no other ball has left the yard. Still, Yamamoto has shown some vulnerability at home (7 HR in 68 IP), and Nola has allowed a 1.7 HR/9 rate this year after leading the league in homers allowed in 2024.

Nick Castellanos to record a hit (-145)

Castellanos has faced Yamamoto twice — and he’s picked up a hit. At home, the Dodgers ace is far more hittable for right-handed batters, posting a 4.09 ERA and .701 OPS against (compared to .539 overall). Castellanos is coming off a big Game 2 two-run double, and he feels due for another — possibly with an RBI (+260) if you’re looking for more value.

Aaron Nola under 2.5 strikeouts (+128)

Despite the decision to start Nola over Suárez, expect Rob Thomson to keep him on a short leash. His outs-recorded line (8.5) backs that up. If Nola runs into early traffic, the bullpen will be ready. This is a low total, but the key for Nola will be weak contact, not strikeouts. The value here makes this one of the stronger plays on the board.

My parlay

Two legs: Bryce Harper & Kyle Schwarber to record a hit (+138)

It’s not flashy value, but both lefty bats need to get right. If you use get a profit boost, this play clears +200. Harper is 1-for-7 and Schwarber is hitless in the series, but after the off-day reset, they’re the two most likely to break through. If you’re feeling aggressive, Harper & Schwarber each to record 2+ total bases is +362.

My long shot

Brandon Marsh to hit a home run (+800)

Yes, Marsh has struck out twice in his only two ABs against Yamamoto — but there’s something about him vs. right-handers. During the regular season, the Phillies outfielder slashed .300/.356/.482 against them, with 35 extra-base hits (nine homers). He’s one of the few bats capable of sparking the bottom of the lineup. If you like him for extra-bases, 2+ total bases at +210 is a smart secondary play.

Fantasy Baseball 2025 First Base Breakdown: Nick Kurtz's emergence and 2026 rankings

With the 2025 MLB regular season behind us, it’s time to review what we learned from a fantasy perspective and how we can apply it to next year.

In the coming days throughout October, we’ll be breaking down the standout seasons, the breakout candidates, the prospects to know, and our early 2026 rankings. We started with catcher last week, and now we'll head over to first base.

MLB: Washington Nationals at Atlanta Braves
Aaron Judge or Shohei Ohtani at the top? Our early 2026 Top 300 rankings highlight key fantasy storylines heading into the MLB offseason.

2025 POSITION BREAKDOWN: FIRST BASE

STATE OF THE POSITION

There were 17 first basemen who earned at least $10 of value this season, according to Fangraph's Player Rater. That was the most for any infield position, which hints at the depth we have at the first base position. Some of that is the old stalwarts like Freddie Freeman, Matt Olson, Bryce Harper, Vladimir Guerrero, Pete Alonso, and Yandy Diaz. However, we also had young players like Nick Kurtz, Vinnie Pasquantino, Michael Busch, and Tyler Soderstrom emerge as consistent producers this season. Whenyou add to that, players like Rafael Devers and Willson Contreras gaining first base eligibility, this is probably the deepest the position has ever been, and we haven't yet talked about Christian Walker, who is coming off of a down year, Spencer Torkelson, who made the most of his second chance, and Ben Rice, who may actually get a chance to be the every day first baseman next year if the Yankees move on from Paul Goldschmidt.

As it stands, all is well with the first base landscape, and while it's tempting to try and lock in one of the elite bats at the position, this might be the best position to wait on in drafts and still find value with a middle-round starter.

2025’s Top Ten First Basemen

1. Pete Alonso (Free Agent)

.272/.347/.524, 38 HR, 87 R, 126 RBI, 1 SB

The Polar Bear had his best season yet after signing a two-year deal to return to the Mets, and played so well that he will almost certainly opt out of the final year of his contract and test the free agent waters again. Alonso set career highs in batting average, plate appearances, and barrel rate while posting his sixth straight full season with at least 34 home runs. In non-COVID seasons, Alonso averages 41.3 home runs per game, which is tremendous consistency and value from a power standpoint. The big reason why his fantasy value jumped this year, in addition to hitting behind Juan Soto and driving in 126 runs, was that Alonso went to a more all-fields approach and trusted his power to play regardless. He had the lowest pull rate of his career and the lowest fly ball rate of his career, instead focusing on hard line drives. He was also more aggressive in the zone than he had been since 2022, which allowed him to improve his quality of contact overall despite swinging and missing a bit more. Oh, and he also set the Mets franchise record for home runs. Not a bad season.

2. Josh Naylor (Free Agent)

.295.353/.462, 20 HR, 81 R, 92 RBI, 30 SB

What a wild season for Josh Naylor. We kinda knew his 31 home run season in 2024 was a bit of a fluke, but he found new ways to produce fantasy value by improving his batting average and shattering his career-high in stolen bases. Without making a drastic change in approach, Naylor saw a huge increase in his batting average, which sounded a few alarm bells. He was a bit more aggressive outside of the zone, but his contact rate was identical to last year. He did see more pitches in the zone, so perhaps being in a deeper lineup helped him, but his pull rates and fly ball rates were all pretty similar to 2024, while he also posted his lowest full-season barrel rate since his rookie year. It's hard to see Naylor keeping up this .290-plus batting average, and his previous career-high in steals was 10, so stealing 19 bases in just 54 games with the Mariners is doing a lot of heavy lifting with his fantasy value this year. He seems like a clear regression candidate, but we'll have to see where he signs.

3. Cody Bellinger (Yankees)

.272/.334/.480, 29 HR, 89 R, 98 RBI, 13 SB

Sadly, Bellinger will not be first base eligible in 2026 because he only played seven games there for the Yankees this season. However, the park was as good for him as everybody expected. Bellinger's barrel rate was only 7.5% and his 38% hard hit rate was the highest he's had since 2022, but still below most first basemen. Still, he increased his pull rate by 3% and his flyball rate by 2% and that helped lead to 29 home runs. He also made some adjustments to the pitches he was swinging at on the fringes of the strike zone, cutting his chase rate marginally but increasing his contact outside of the zone by a significant amount. That led to a solid batting average and the lowest strikeout rate of his career. All of this feels repeatable for Bellinger, but he'll just be doing it as an OF-only fantasy player.

4. Nick Kurtz (Athletics)

.290/.383/.61936 HR, 90 R, 86 RBI, 2 SB

Kurtz was the fourth overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft and had played just 12 minor league games before the Athletics sent him to Triple-A to begin the 2025 season. It seemed like an incredibly aggressive promotion, but Kurtz responded by crushing Triple-A pitching for 20 games and forcing his way into a promotion. He didn't adjust to MLB pitching that quickly. Up until June 1st, he was hitting .245/.315/.447 with five home runs and a 33.3% strikeout rate in 28 games. It wasn't a terrible start, but it certainly didn't indicate that he would catch fire as quickly as he did. From June 1st on, Kurtz hit .304/.403/.669 with 31 home runs and 71 RBI in 89 games. Yes, he did still strike out 30% of the time, but that's always going to be a little bit a part of his game. He's still just 22 years old and will play another season in hitter-friendly Sacramento with a young and improving lineup around him. It's hard not to get excited about his future.

5. Rafael Devers (Giants)

.252/.372/.479 35 HR, 99 R, 109 RBI, 1 SB

Yes, after all that drama, Devers is now first base eligible. The veteran took issue with the way the Red Sox handled signing Alex Bregman this offseason and then had no desire to patch things up with the front office, so he was shipped out of town mid-season to San Francisco where he slowly worked himself into a role as the team's first baseman. That's a role he figures to occupy for much of the 2026 season, but the bigger question is what impact Oracle Park will have on him. Devers was somebody who went to the opposite field often in Boston, using the Green Monster to his advantage, so he struggled initially when he had to change his approach in San Francisco. Overall, Devers hit .236/.347/.460 with 20 home runs in 90 games with the Giants, striking out 29.4% of the time and pulling the ball 45% of the time, which is 8% higher than his career average. He did make tons of hard contact, but there are some questions about whether or not the 29-year-old can shift his approach so drastically and maintain his .276 career batting average while playing in San Francisco.

6.Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (Blue Jays):.292, 23 HR, 96 R, 84 RBI, 6 SB

7. Matt Olson (Braves): .272, 29 HR, 98 R, 95 RBI, 1 SB

8. Freddie Freeman (Dodgers): .295, 24 HR, 81 R, 90 RBI, 6 SB

9. Yandy Diaz (Rays): .300, 25 HR, 79 R, 83 RBI, 3 SB

10. Vinnie Pasquantino (Royals): .264, 32 HR, 72 R, 113 RBI, 1 SB

2026 Breakouts

Ben Rice (Yankees)

Matthew Pouliot covered Rice in his catcher's article, so check that out here. I will just add that, from June 1st on, Ben Rice had the third-best Process+ score in all of baseball, behind only Aaron Judge and Juan Soto. That's certainly the company you want, and the Yankees need to just give this kid at-bats.

Andrew Vaughn (Brewers)

I don't know if the Brewers are going to let Vaughn be their starting first baseman in 2026, but they should. In 64 games with Milwaukee, he hit .308/.375/.493 with nine home runs, 46 RBI, and a 14.6% strikeout rate. He had an 11.1% barrel rate and 91.7 mph average exit velocity over that span, but also put up a Process+ score of 126, when 100 is league average. From July 7th on, when Vaughn was called up by the Brewers, his Process+ score was in line with Roman Anthony, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Kyle Stowers, and Julio Rodriguez. So we have the results and we have the metrics to suggest that his approach and process support the results. I'm excited to see what a full season can bring.

Kyle Manzardo (Guardians)

With Carlos Santana out of town, Kyle Manzardo should head into the 2026 season as the everyday first baseman in Cleveland. The 25-year-old dealt with some off-season hardship this season, with his mother undergoing major surgery in the middle of the year, which also led to him missing a few games. Baseball players are human too, so that undoubtedly weighed on his mind, but Manzardo seemed to turn a corner on the field in the second half of the season. He hit .256/.338/.473 with 12 home runs and 33 RBI in 60 games to end the season. That's in line with the player we think Manzardo can be. He's just 25 years old and has an MLB career barrel rate of 11.2%, so there is plenty of quality contact being made. In a full season, could he hit .260 with 25+ home runs while batting in the middle of Cleveland's lineup? That could bring lots of fantasy value.

Troy Johnston (Marlins)

Johnston is a 28-year-old who just made his MLB debut this season, so think of this as a late-career breakout. Still, he hit .277/.331/.420 in 28 games with the Marlins with four home runs, a 9.3% barrel rate, and a 21% strikeout rate. He also stole 31 bases in 84 games at Triple-A this season and has another 24-steal campaign on his resume from back in 2023. So we have a guy with solid 15 home run power who can also steal 20 bases and hit .281 in his career in the minor leagues. Johnston also posted a solid 114 Process+ score during his time in the big leagues, which was the same as Kerry Carpenter, Bo Bichette, Ian Happ, and Vinnie Pasquantino. That means the swing decisions and contact metrics also support the results we got. Johnston is going to be 1B/OF eligible next season, and getting late shares of him seems like a solid plan.

2026 Prospects To Know

Bryce Eldridge (Giants)

Bryce Eldridge was called up by the Giants at the end of the season and struggled in his 37 MLB plate appearances; however, he showed legit power in the minors with 25 home runs in 102 games. He did have a 14.6% swinging strike rate in the minors, so swing-and-miss will always be part of his game, but the quality of contact is elite, and he posted a 95.6 mph average exit velocity in his very brief MLB sample size, but also a 95.7 mph average exit velocity in his 66 games at Triple-A. I expect Eldridge and Rafael Devers to split 1B/DH reps in San Francisco next season, and Eldridge could prove to be a great source of power.

Charlie Condon (Rockies)

We say the Rockies hate to promote their prospects, but the Rockies are also finally going to hire a general manager from outside of their organization this offseason, so maybe that all changes. Condon is the 61st-ranked prospect in baseball, according to MLB Pipeline, but is 14th on Keith Law's list. He struggled a bit in 55 games at Double-A this season, but he has impressive tools that helped make him the 3rd overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft. He showed great contact ability in college and flashed that same ability at High-A to start the season. I expect Condon to begin 2026 at Double-A, but a hot start to the season will move him to Triple-A, at least. The Rockies have nobody really blocking him at first base, so if Condon were to get hot, they could give him a shot at big league at-bats, where his power would be tantalizing in Coors Field.

Abimelec Ortiz (Rangers)

A little bit off the radar here, but Ortiz had a great season in 2025, hitting .257/.356/.479 with 25 home runs and 89 RBU in 130 games. Oddly enough, his batting average was actually much better in his 41 games at Triple-A, hitting .283/.388/.565. The 22-year-old is only 5'10" but 230 pounds and swings the hell out of the bat. He has elite bat speed and began to make more contact as he quieted his approach. He's an average defender at first base, so he's not a DH-only, but Texas was playing Rowdy Tellez at the end of the season because Jake Burger couldn't stay healthy. With a DH spot likely opening and Joc Pederson leaving, the Rangers could keep Burger as the primary DH and give Ortiz a chance to claim reps at 1B, or the two could switch off. The upper levels of the Rangers' farm system are not deep with first base options, so if they don't make a big splash in free agency, expect Ortiz to be in the mix.

2026 Top 12 First Baseman

1. Nick Kurtz: Given his home park and the growth we saw. He has the highest upside of this group.
2. Pete Alonso: A lot is going to depend on where he ends up, but I believe in the approach shift and the consistency.
3. Matt Olson: This Braves offense is going to be better in 2026, and Olson has continued to produce.
4. Vladimir Guerrero Jr.: An elite hitter, but I think we can expect him to hit around 25 home runs, which limits his ceiling a bit at a position where you need power.
5. Freddie Freeman: Will age ever catch up with him? The team context is great, and the results have been there.
6. Rafael Devers: He's been one of the best, but what will the new park do to his batting average and power upside?
7. Bryce Harper: Are we seeing a moderate decline? Will be 33, and his batting average has fallen each of the last three years.
8. Vinnie Pasquantino: We finally saw some power come with the batting average. I'm buying into it being repeatable.
9. Josh Naylor: Where he signs will be huge. So much of his value came from those late steals. Will they return?
10. Michael Busch: Put together a great season in Chicago, and has gotten his strikeout rate under control. Power is very real.
11. Tyler Soderstrom: A bit of a rollercoaster, but the results were there. Power is great, and the home ballpark is tremendous.
12. Willson Contreras: Aging but safe. He's probably a 20 HR bat with a .260 average on a decent team, but you know you're getting his consistency.

Aaron Judge does it all and rescues Yankees with ‘amazing swing’ against Blue Jays

NEW YORK — When the New York Yankees needed someone to save them, Aaron Judge practically put on a cape.

Captain clutch, indeed.

In a do-it-all effort for the ages, Judge hit a tying homer and drove in four runs as the Yankees staved off elimination by rallying past the Toronto Blue Jays 9-6 in Game 3 of their AL Division Series.

“Just an awesome, MVP-like performance,” New York manager Aaron Boone said. “A pretty incredible night for the captain.”

Judge went 3 for 4 with an intentional walk and scored three times, also making pivotal plays with his glove and legs as Yankee Stadium fans chanted “MVP! MVP!”

Down by five early, New York scored eight unanswered runs to prevent a three-game sweep and push the best-of-five playoff series to Game 4 in the Bronx.

“Hopefully he gets a bad night’s sleep and has some bad food tonight or something like that,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said.

After struggling at the plate in previous postseasons, Judge is 7 for 11 in this series (.636) with five RBIs and three walks.

That makes him 11 for 22 (.500) with six RBIs, five runs and a 1.304 OPS in six playoff games this year as the two-time AL MVP and seven-time All-Star chases his first World Series ring at 33 years old.

Long way to go this October. But if not for Judge and 6 2/3 scoreless innings from the New York bullpen, the season already would be over.

“Tonight was special, but there’s still more work to be done,” he said. “Hopefully we have some more cool moments like this the rest of the postseason.”

Jazz Chisholm Jr. launched a go-ahead solo homer in the fifth, and New York improved to 3-0 in elimination games during these playoffs with the franchise’s largest comeback ever in those situations.

The only time the Yankees overcame a bigger deficit in the postseason was when they climbed out of a 6-0 hole in Game 4 of the 1996 World Series at Atlanta.

Toronto, which committed a couple of costly errors that led to a pair of unearned runs, hadn’t lost all season when leading by at least four.

With the Yankees trailing 6-1, consecutive doubles by Trent Grisham and Judge to start the third began the comeback. Later in the inning, Judge stayed in a rundown between third base and home plate long enough to allow Cody Bellinger to reach third. That became important when Bellinger scored on Giancarlo Stanton’s sacrifice fly.

New York was still down 6-3 in the fourth with two runners aboard when right-hander Louis Varland was brought in to face Judge, who sought out Stanton in the dugout for a scouting report.

Varland struck out Stanton in a key spot during Game 1.

“Big G saw him in Toronto. I asked him, I hadn’t seen Louis since he was with the Twins and was a starter. I wanted a brush up. I’ve seen all the videos, seen all the appearances, but it’s a difference when you step in the box and see him live. So I was talking to him about what certain pitches were like, what it felt like,” Judge said.

“Any info you can get like that kind of helps you sharpen your game plan a little bit and kind of gets you locked in a little bit better.”

Judge turned on an 0-2 fastball clocked at 100 mph off the inside corner and somehow kept it fair, launching a three-run drive that clanged high off the left-field foul pole for his 17th postseason homer.

“I guess a couple ghosts out there helped kind of keep that fair,” he said.

Schneider called it “a ridiculous swing.”

“He made a really good pitch look really bad,” Varland said.

Judge tossed his bat aside and gestured to teammates on the bench as the sellout crowd of 47,399 burst into a frenzy.

“It’s an amazing swing,” Boone said. “That’s shades of Edgar Martínez right there, taking that high-and-tight one and keeping it fair down the line. Manny Ramirez used to do that really well, too. But just a great swing on a pretty nasty pitch, obviously.”

At 99.7 mph, it was the fastest pitch Judge has ever homered on. And it was the first home run by any big leaguer on a pitch 99 mph or faster 1.2 feet inside from the center of the strike zone since pitch tracking started in 2008, according to MLB Statcast.

“I don’t know. I get yelled at for swinging at them out of the zone, but now I’m getting praised for it,” said Judge, who also went deep against Varland in the pitcher’s major league debut with Minnesota in September 2022. “I don’t care what the numbers say or where something was at, I’m just up there trying to put a good swing on a good pitch, and it looked good to me.

“After he blew my doors off on the pitch before, I said just get ready, see a good pitch, and drive it.”

The right fielder then made a diving catch with a runner at second in the fifth, drawing more “MVP” chants.

And in the sixth, Judge scored on Ben Rice’s sacrifice fly after being intentionally walked with one out and nobody on base.

Call it a sign of respect. Or perhaps, fear.

“He’s had a good postseason. He’s had a pretty good career,” Schneider said. “There’s times where you just don’t want him to swing.”

Up 5 runs, Blue Jays let AL Division Series sweep of Yankees slip out of their gloves

NEW YORK — Up five runs, the Toronto Blue Jays were headed to a three-game sweep of the New York Yankees and their first trip to the AL Championship Series in nine years.

And then it slipped out of their gloves.

A pair of errors by Isiah Kiner-Falefa and Addison Barger revived the Yankees, who then rode home runs by Aaron Judge and Jazz Chisholm Jr. off Louis Varland to a 9-6 victory.

“Sloppy brand of baseball,” Kiner-Falefa said.

Instead of preparing to host Seattle or Detroit at Rogers Centre this weekend, the Blue Jays’ lead in the best-of-five series was cut to 2-1 heading into Game 4 at Yankee Stadium.

“You’re talking about giving a really good team extra outs.” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. “Walks and errors will kill you against this team.”

Varland gave up a homer to Judge while making his major league debut for Minnesota on Sept. 7, 2022. This one was a three-run drive that tied the score 6-6 in the fourth.

Judge’s homer was the first on a 99 mph or faster pitch 1.2 feet inside from the center of the strike zone since pitch tracking started in 2008, according to MLB Statcast.

“He made a really good pitch look really bad,” said Varland, who will start Game 4 as an opener.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit a two-run, first-inning homer off Carlos Rodón and is batting .693 (8 for 13) with three homers and eight RBIs in the series. The Blue Jays lost after leading by five runs for the first time since Sept. 3, 2024, against Philadelphia, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

“Flush it tonight. That’s all you can do, and bounce back tomorrow and come out and win a series,” said Toronto starter Shane Bieber, who lasted just 2 2/3 innings.

Kiner-Falefa, a 2020 Gold Glove winner at third, allowed Ben Rice’s two-out grounder in the bottom of the first to kick off the heel of his glove. The ball bounced off his chest and fell to the dirt, and Kiner-Falefa inadvertently kicked it as Rice reached. Giancarlo Stanton followed with an RBI single that cut the lead in half.

“Big error by me right there,” Kiner-Falefa said. “It just took a high hop. I was expecting a lower-hit ball. I felt like I did a good job knocking it down, just wasn’t able to stop the spin on the ground.”

With the Blue Jays ahead 6-3 in the fourth, one out and no one on, Austin Wells lofted a pop to left. Third baseman Barger, who had entered as a pinch hitter in the third, settled under the ball in short left only for the wind to blow the ball toward the seats. The ball hit off his glove and bounced into foul territory as Wells reached second.

“The wind was kind of weird all night. You could see early on that it was kind of swirling up top,” Barger said. “I thought I was camped under it.”

Trent Grisham walked, and Varland relieved and got ahead of Judge 0-2. The 27-year-old right-hander, acquired from the Twins at the trade deadline, threw a 99.7 mph fastball that the two-time AL MVP drove high down the left-field line.

Varland craned his neck, tried to wish the ball foul and watched it clang high off the foul pole. Judge made a rare bat flip.

“I guess a couple ghosts out there helped kind of keep that fair,” Judge said.

Then in the fifth, Varland left a 99.4 mph fastball low and inside for Chisholm, rarely a good pitch to a left-handed hitter in Yankee Stadium. Varland crouched and bowed his head even before Chisholm’s no-doubt drive bounced out of the second deck in right for a 7-6 lead.

Anthony Santander, in an image fitting of Toronto’s night, was prone in right, face in the grass, after he failed to come up with a backhand catch on Cody Bellinger’s liner in the sixth, which bounced to the warning track for a double.

In a quiet Blue Jays clubhouse after midnight, players looked ahead to Game 4 and another chance to close out the series and avoid a Game 5 in Toronto.

“Hopefully do what we did the first two games,” Kiner-Falefa said, “and if it doesn’t work out, we get to go home.”

Tigers need to find offense before time runs out in the AL Division Series

DETROIT — The Detroit Tigers have less than 24 hours to find an offense that can save their season.

Unfortunately for their chances in the American League Division Series, the Tigers have been looking for the last month without any success.

Detroit only managed one run on five hits in the first eight innings of their 8-4 loss to the Seattle Mariners, leaving them down 2-1 in the series and facing elimination.

“Tonight wasn’t easy,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. “Especially with what (Logan) Gilbert was throwing up there. Not many fastballs and a lot of sliders and splits. We were swinging more and more as the game went on, and we had trouble putting together back-to-back at-bats that were productive.”

Gilbert allowed one run on four hits in six innings, striking out seven without issuing a walk.

“That was vintage Logan,” Mariners manager Dan Wilson said. “He attacked the zone, he got into good counts and he let the split and the slider do his work for him.”

The Tigers scored three runs off Caleb Ferguson in the ninth to narrow the margin to four runs, but Wilson brought in closer Andrés Muñoz. He only needed to face two batters, getting a flyout and a game-ending double play.

“We’re facing really good arms and we haven’t strung together as many great at-bats as we would like,” Tigers leadoff hitter Kerry Carpenter said. “We have to tip our hat to some great pitching. We’ve got at least one more game to turn it around.”

That’s easier said than done for a team that is averaging fewer than three runs a game in the last four weeks.

The problems started with 16 games left in the regular season. On Sept. 11, having outscored the Yankees 23-3 in the previous two days, the Tigers lost 9-3.

They went 3-13 down the stretch, blowing what seemed like a safe AL Central lead to the Cleveland Guardians and only getting the final wild-card berth on a tiebreaker over the Houston Astros.

Things haven’t changed in October. The Tigers hit .218 in the AL Wild Card Series against the Guardians, scoring nine runs in three games but getting out of the series when Cleveland hit .178.

They only scored six runs in the first 28 innings against the Mariners before the meaningless late rally in Game 3.

“This is the hardest time of the year to hit,” Hinch said. “When you are facing high-end pitching in October, it is a grind. Obviously, their guys are talented and are exposing a little bit of the zone control we talk about all the time.”

The Tigers have struck out 68 times in six postseason games, and eight of their nine everyday hitters are averaging at least one strikeout a game.

That’s been a problem all year, though.

Riley Greene and Spencer Torkelson, Detroit’s most dangerous hitters, have struck out 385 times between the regular season and playoffs. In the regular season, they combined for 67 homers and 189 RBIs, but they haven’t homered in the postseason and Torkelson has six of their seven RBIs.

The Tigers are starting to look timid at the plate. In the eighth inning, desperately needing a rally, Javier Báez and Carpenter took five straight strikes from Eduard Bazardo before Carpenter weakly waved at a third strike.

Bryce Miller, who went 4-6 with a 5.68 ERA in 18 starts, will be on the mound for Seattle. If the Tigers can’t take advantage of him, a once-promising season might be over.

Reporting on Yankees and Blue Jays ALDS Game 4 strategies

The Yankees were prepared for the possibility that a reliever like Louis Varland would serve as an opener for Toronto in Game 4 of the Division Series. That much was obvious in advance of a bullpen game.

In the wee hours on Wednesday, the Jays indeed named Varland -- who throws 100 mph gas but allowed home runs Tuesday night to Aaron Judge and Jazz Chisholm Jr. --  their starter.

The Yankees are also aware that starter Kevin Gausman has not yet thrown his standard between-starts bullpen session. That means that he is still fresh to provide bulk innings on three days rest on Wednesday, rather than start a potential Game 5 on Friday with an extra day rest.

Gausman has experience as a reliever earlier in his career, but has lately said that an extra day’s rest makes him more effective. The Jays might not be eager to burn him on Wednesday, but by holding him back from his bullpen, they have at least created the option for him.

It is also worth nothing that Wednesday would probably be Trey Yesavage’s throw day.

“Everyone is available tomorrow,” Jays manager John Schneider said after Game 3.

With or without Gausman pitching Wednesday night, manager Aaron Boone will counter the pen game strategy with lefty/righty balance.

“I'll probably lean towards a little more true balance in the order … [to] try and make them make some tough decisions throughout,” Boone said after Game 3.

More concretely, this means that the Yanks will use a lineup of five left-handed hitters and four righties, in alternating order, I’m told. That will make it more challenging for Schneider to stick with a given reliever for long stretches.

Phillies’ Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber in postseason slump as team faces elimination against Dodgers

LOS ANGELES — Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber are mired in the same kind of postseason slump that wrecked the Los Angeles Dodgers two years ago.

Back then, Freddie Freeman and Mookie Betts were a combined 1 for 21 as the Dodgers were swept by the Arizona Diamondbacks in the 2023 NL Division Series. Their lone hit was an infield single by Freeman.

Harper and Schwarber are 1 for 15 with eight strikeouts, putting the Philadelphia Phillies on the brink of elimination. They trail 2-0 in the best-of-five NLDS with Game 3 at Dodger Stadium.

“I think the postseason you’ve got to flush as quick as possible because any at-bat can change the course of a game or change the course of a series,” Harper said.

Betts remembers the frustration he felt knowing how much the Dodgers were counting on him and Freeman, but nothing they tried made a difference.

“When you get in that rut and it seems like it’s quicksand, it’s tough,” Betts said. “Hell, I didn’t get out of it, so I have no advice or anything. Good luck to those guys and we’ll see if they have the answer.”

Only two teams have ever come back from a 2-0 deficit in the NLDS.

Phillies manager Rob Thomson was bench coach for the New York Yankees in 2017, when they rallied from a 2-0 deficit against the Cleveland Guardians in the ALDS to win and advance to the AL Championship Series.

“You’ve got to slow things down — one inning at a time, really, and come out and relax and be yourselves,” Thomson said. “Don’t try to do too much.”

Betts is not discounting the Phillies.

“They got on the plane with full intentions of going back for a Game 5,” he said. “We’ve got to be able to withstand the punches that they’re going to throw and be able to throw some back.”

Wheel play

The Dodgers successfully executed a defensive wheel play in the bottom of the ninth in Game 2.

With Nick Castellanos on second, third baseman Max Muncy rushed home plate to field a bunt by Bryson Stott, turned and perfectly threw to shortstop Betts, who was covering third. Betts got the out while being upended by a sliding Castellanos.

“It’s such a basic play,” Betts said. “It would be like the Lakers. They won the NBA championship running the 2-3 zone. That’s how I view it. It’s just we ran it in a big spot and we were able to do it right. We executed it really perfectly myself, just the timing of it.”

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts wasn’t surprised at Betts’ execution of the play named for the wheel-like rotation of the infielders.

“I think that especially as an outfielder for the most part of his career to then come into the infield, he’s got a lot of feel,” the manager said. “He’s got a lot of belief in his ability. He made a great play, a really, really great play.”

Even Thomson had to concede the Dodgers’ aggression paid off.

“Mookie Betts did a heck of a job by breaking very late so the hitter can’t adjust to the slash,” he said. “It’s tough for Nick to get a proper secondary or bigger secondary because Betts is sitting right behind him. It was a good play.”

Injury updates

Phillies center fielder Harrison Bader will be a game-time decision.

He left Game 1 early with a groin injury and came off the bench in Game 2 to deliver a pinch-hit single during the Phillies’ ninth-inning rally.

“He said he feels a little bit better today,” Thomson said.

Dodgers catcher Will Smith also is a game-time decision, although Roberts said he feels “more confident” that Smith will be able to start. Smith came off the bench in Game 2 and hit a crucial two-run single in the seventh. He’s been nursing a hand injury since last month.

Dodgers backup shortstop Miguel Rojas left Game 2 with hamstring tightness, aggravating an injury that had been bothering him recently. He won’t be in the lineup.

Bryce Harper understands boos from Phillies fans as NL Division Series moves to LA

LOS ANGELES — The loud booing by angry Philadelphia Phillies fans at their home ballpark likely drowned out similar noise Bryce Harper was making.

The Phillies slugger has a single and three strikeouts in the NL Division Series, which Philadelphia trails 2-0 against the defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.

“I love our fans. I boo myself when I get out,” Harper said.

Game 3 is at Dodger Stadium, with the Phillies facing elimination in the best-of-five series.

“I will probably get booed tomorrow night, too,” Harper said.

He didn’t agree that a change of venue — away from their frustrated fan base — is a good thing for the slumping Phillies.

“We’ve got some of the best fans in baseball and they make me play better, so I enjoy it,” Harper said. “They show up for us every day. They spend their hard-earned dollar to come watch us play; they expect greatness out of us and I expect greatness out of myself and my teammates as well.”

Third baseman Nick Castellanos came up big in a wild ninth inning that nearly saw the Phillies steal a win. The fan reaction whipsawed between huge cheers and deafening boos in the 4-3 loss.

“I think that the stadium is alive on both sides, right?” Castellanos said. “When the game is going good, it’s wind at our back, but when the game is not going good, it’s wind in our face. The environment can be with us, and the environment can be against us.”

Harper was glad to be in sunny Los Angeles, not far from his hometown of Las Vegas where he was a Dodgers fan.

He became a father for the fourth time when his wife, Kayla, gave birth to a son.

“I’ve got an incredible wife, man. She pushed that thing out in three pushes and 30 seconds,” Harper said. “She’s an absolute monster doing it. Women. Man, what a breed. I’m serious, it’s an incredible thing. Being able to hold your son for the first time is something. It’s one of the greatest moments of my life.”

The couple now has two boys, Krew and Hayes, and two girls, Brooklyn and Kamryn, all of whom are age 6 and under.

Harper said he loves baseball but his family means the most.

“I definitely miss them right now,” he said.

Brewers at Cubs – NLDS Game 3 prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats

The Milwaukee Brewers have clearly been the superior team through the first two games of their National League Division series against the Chicago Cubs. Jackson Chourio and co. have outscored the Cubbies 16-6. After a day off for travel, the scene shifts today to Wrigley Field as Chicago looks to stay alive and keep their championship hopes alive. Quinn Priester is slated to take the mound for Milwaukee against Jameson Taillon for Chicago.

Offense has not been a problem for the Brew Crew. The aforementioned Chourio is hitting .714 through the first two games of the series going 5-7 with nine total bases. Christian Yelich is batting .500 (4-8) and William Contreras is 4-9 (.444).

While Milwaukee seems to be hitting everything thrown at them, the Cubs are struggling to make contact at the plate. Through five playoff games, Chicago has struck out 58 times. Pete Crow-Armstrong is hitting .222 and Kyle Tucker just .176 in the postseason.

Perhaps the friendly confines of Wrigley Field will wake up the bats for the hometown team but lets dive into Game 3 and see what the numbers forecast.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch the first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Brewers at Cubs - NLDS Game 3

  • Date: Wednesday, October 8, 2025
  • Time: 5:08PM EST
  • Site: Wrigley Field
  • City: Chicago, IL
  • Network/Streaming: TBS

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Brewers at the Cubs - NLDS Game 3

The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Milwaukee Brewers (-102), Chicago Cubs (-119)
  • Spread: Brewers -1.5 (+172)
  • Total: 6.5 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Brewers at Cubs - NLDS Game 3

  • Pitching matchup for October 8, 2025: Quinn Priester vs. Jameson Taillon
    • Brewers: Quinn Priester (Regular Season: 13-3, 3.32 ERA)
      Last outing: 9/26 vs. Cincinnati - 5IP, 3 ER, 9H, 1BB, and 4Ks
    • Cubs: Jameson Taillon (Regular Season: 11-7, 3.68 ERA)
      Last outing: 10/2 vs. San Diego - 4IP, 0 ER, 2H, 0BB, and 4Ks

Rotoworld has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Brewers at Cubs - NLDS Game 3

  • Jackson Chourio is 7-13 (.538) in his career against Jameson Taillon
  • Christian Yelich is 13-37 (.351) in his career against Taillon
  • Nico Hoerner is 4-10 (.400) in his career against Quinn Priester
  • Michael Busch is 2-8 with 4 RBIs in his career against Priester

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Expert picks & predictions for today’s NLDS Game 3 between the Brewers and the Cubs

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Wednesday’s game between the Brewers and the Cubs:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Milwaukee Brewers at -1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 6.5.

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Cubs once again turn to Jameson Taillon to avoid postseason elimination

CHICAGO — For the second time in a week, the Chicago Cubs play a win-or-go-home game, this time against the Milwaukee Brewers in Game 3 in their best-of-five NL Division Series.

Once again, the Cubs will turn to Jameson Taillon.

Taillon tossed four scoreless, two-hit innings against the San Diego Padres and Chicago went on to take the deciding Game 3 of their Wild Card Series 3-1. The right-hander was focused, striking out four and walking none before five relievers wrapped it up.

This time, the Cubs need to prevail in three straight elimination contests to keep their season alive. The Brewers have a 2-0 lead in the series following 9-3 and 7-3 wins in Milwaukee when they ambushed Chicago’s thinned pitching staff and limited the Cubs to 10 total hits.

“I mean, look, we’ve had experience with it,” manager Craig Counsell said. “We just did it on Thursday. And now we’re going to have to do it three times.”

Teams falling behind 2-0 in a best-of-five postseason series have won just 10 out of 90 times. Any Cubs recovery starts with the 6-foot-5, 230-pound Taillon.

“It starts tomorrow, and obviously being a starting pitcher, hopefully I can do my job and set the tone and see where that can take us,” Taillon said.

“So how that pertains to me is just doing my job, going out there and setting the tone, preparing the right way, taking notes, watching video, going about my process the right way, and making sure I’m buttoned up and ready to go. “

Taillon was 11-7 with a 3.68 ERA in the regular season, his ninth in the majors. He was on the injured list twice, in July with a right calf strain and in August with a groin strain.

The 33-year-old must hold Milwaukee in check early. The Brewers scored nine runs the first two innings in Game 1 and seven on three homers in the first four innings of Game 2.

Taillon hopes to channel energy from Wrigley Field fans, even if he won’t show it on the mound.

“I think it’s a good lesson to myself when the crowd is that electric and the moment is that big and the pressure is that big and important, an executed pitch is still the best pitch,” he said. “I don’t need to be out there pounding my chest.

“If I gain a mile an hour from adrenaline, that is not really going to matter. What is going to matter is whether I sequence right and execute pitches the right way. I kind of plan on just doubling down with that again.”

Counsell is banking on it.

“I think what you want from all your players is just the best version of themselves and to, as much as you can, be yourself and kind of let the moment elevate you,” Counsell said. “I think that’s what (Taillon) did. He pitched like he pitches, didn’t try to do something different than he’s good at.

“I think he did let, kind of, the moment take him to another place and that’s exactly what you want.”

Meanwhile, Cubs hitters have to bust out of their funk.

At the All-Star break, Chicago was 57-39 and second in the majors in runs scored with 512. In the second half, the Cubs went 35-31 and scored 281 times as marquee players — most notably All-Stars Pete Crow-Armstrong and Kyle Tucker — slumped for long stretches. Tucker still seems to be dealing with a left calf strain that sidelined him most of September.

But Chicago has no more room for error.

“But part of being great at this is responding to the bad stuff and running towards it, man,” Counsell said. “That’s part of this. You can’t be afraid of it. We put ourselves in a hole this series; no question about it. We get to decide how the story ends.”