Cubs 3, Royals 2: Jefferson Rojas homers in the Cubs’ first spring win

This is going to be an old-school recap, because I do not have any video of the Cubs’ 3-2 win over the Royals to show you.

So you’ll have to deal with descriptions, and a few MLB Gameday graphics.

Ben Brown threw the first two innings for the Cubs. It was a good outing. He allowed two hits, no runs and struck out three.

Here is one of the strikeouts, of Salvador Perez. Brown stuck with his fastball and curve, and check out some of the velocity:

Hopefully, Brown will begin to mix in some of the other pitches he says he’s been working on. He threw 30 pitches (20 strikes).

Javier Assad threw 1.1 innings and didn’t allow a run, throwing 20 strikes among his 29 pitches, a good first outing of the spring.

In the fourth, Jefferson Rojas gave the Cubs a 1-0 lead with his first home run of the spring. This is an excellent location for a pitch to hit and Rojas did not miss:

The Cubs scored two more runs in the fifth off former Cubs No. 1 draft pick (2017) Alex Lange, thanks in part to an error from the usually sure-handed Royals shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. James Triantos singled in both runs. Triantos and Scott Kingery also stole bases in that inning.

There were a number of ABS challenges in this game and here’s one made by Royals center fielder Kyle Isbel. The call on the field was strike three and it was confirmed. As you can see, it was close, but a strike:

For the Cubs, Ariel Armas and Justin Dean both challenged and the calls were confirmed, so by the sixth inning the Cubs had no challenges left. That’s fine for a spring game where guys are testing out the system, but in a regular season game you probably won’t see two challenges like that, that early.

Porter Hodge had a much better outing this time than his first time out, striking out a pair in a scoreless inning, with just one walk. I’d think Hodge still has a chance at the Opening Day roster, if he can put together more innings like this.

Ryan Rolison and Collin Snider, both of whom could wind up on the Iowa Shuttle this year, threw scoreless innings against mostly Royals minor leaguers. Josh Rojas homered off Cubs minor leaguer Tyler Ras for KC’s only run.

That’s about all I’ve got from this one, without any video to show you.

The Cubs will return to Sloan Park Tuesday afternoon to face the Padres. Shōta Imanaga will start for the Cubs and Marco Gonzales will go for San Diego. Game time Tuesday is again 2:05 p.m. CT. No TV again Tuesday, and there will be a radio broadcast online via SD Audio.

Ask Pinstripe Alley: Yankees mailbag questions request

Ask Pinstripe Alley

Yankees baseball is back, and even though it’s only been a handful of games it feels like a turning point in the year to see the boys put on pinstripes and take the field at last. We’ve got a loaded schedule this year for spring with the World Baseball Classic right around the corner, and several Yankees participating in the competition means they’ve got to be in game shape quite quickly. To his credit, Aaron Judge certainly appears so after he made his spring debut memorable with a pair of homers already on his soon-to-be-wiped stat line.

With all this going on, there’s plenty to react to and look forward to as spring begins to unfold. Will we see a dark horse emerge from the spring hopefuls to make the roster? Will any of the regular starters stand out with a particularly hot spring, and does it matter if they do? Who has the deepest roster heading into the WBC? If you have questions like these, or anything else on your mind, send ‘em in for a chance to be featured in our Yankees mailbag.

Answers will run on Friday afternoon. All questions received by the night of February 19th will be considered. You can leave your submissions in the comment section below or by e-mail to pinstripealleyblog [at] gmail [dot] com.

Mets’ Clay Holmes, Tobias Myers using early spring outing to build up, experiment

While New York was dealing with close to 2 feet of snow, Mets pitchers Clay Holmes and Tobias Myers had to deal with the challenges of cool temperatures on the west coast of Florida during their outings on Monday in Dunedin against the Blue Jays.

“It was one of those days where it was a little chilly, it was dry, windy. Typically, these are the days [weather-wise] that are tough for sinkerballers,” Holmes said after dealing 3.2 innings in the Mets' win. “It was just good to get that experience and that challenge and to be back into the game action and figure out how to make pitches and see swings and feel the game speed.” 

And that is what the early spring outings come down to: coming out feeling physically strong and tinkering with the adjustments to new and existing pitches they have been working on this offseason.

“This is the time to kinda still play around with some of the things, get reactions, kinda go to this pitch, that pitch,” Holmes said of experimenting with the pitch arsenal. “You’re always finding ways to get better and what you can tinker here and there before things really start to matter.”  

Holmes said he entered the spring feeling strong after pitching 165.2 innings as a starter last year (after pitching 189.2 innings over the previous three seasons combined as a reliever), and is looking to avoid some of the issues he had in the second half of last season when his ERA went from 2.99 to 4.23.

“There were some stretches there, I feel like I could have been better. And I think being able to look back and learn from those moments will be big for this year,” he said, adding that it “wasn’t just one thing” during those spells when maybe the added innings caught up to him. 

“Maybe the delivery wasn’t quite the same,” he said. “I think it boils down to: I gotta find a way to stay in the zone and attack hitters, especially the lefties. That’s what kinda hurt me at times.”

Holmes said that he’s been focusing on that aspect, and during Monday’s outing, when the conditions are tough for getting a good grip and his bread-and-butter sinker, the cutter “got me back into some good counts. Last year, I felt like it got me into worse counts.”

“To me, that was a big positive for today,” he continued. “And that goes to some of the stretches of the command’s not totally there, finding a way to stay in good counts.”

Manager Carlos Mendoza said it was “overall a good day of work for Holmes” and that the cutter stood out.

“The cutter was a pitch that is the one he’s working on the most this spring training, and I felt like he got back in counts with that pitch, especially against lefties,” the skipper said. “I thought the sweeper was good, and the fact that he got up to the fourth up at 60 pitches and was like, ‘Physically. ‘I can keep going.’ That’s a really good sign.”

Holmes said he changed the grip on his cutter, but the success of the pitch will come down to his comfort with it. “I think just having that pitch in the zone will help the other pitches,” he said.  

Of course, not everything worked out so well. Holmes threw four curveballs, a pitch he last threw in a game in 2021. And while he did get one whiff on three swings, Kazuma Okamoto launched a 1-2 curve 431 feet to center for a two-run homer.

“It’s probably not something I’ll throw a ton to right-handed batters,” he said of the curveball. “Threw one today and got hurt on it, so it was a good learning experience.”

For Myers, coming off making 31 starts and 18 relief appearances over the past two years with Milwaukee, he said that while his destination of rotation or bullpen isn’t set, his build-up is the same.

“There’s some new pitches in there,” he said after pitching 2.1 scoreless innings against Toronto. “We’re definitely working on them. The slider I threw a lot today, you probably think it’s a curveball, pretty big. We’re trying to get that velo up on that a little bit. And the split, been throwing the split for half a season now, trying to fine-tune that pitch.”  

Myers, who threw six splitters according to Statcast's tracking, said it is more of a split-change that he feels he can "execute a lot better” than the previous changeup he was throwing.

“If I can go out there and use it consistently, throw it whenever I want any count, righty, lefty, I think that opens up a lot of doors for me instead of just going up there and trying to rely on the fastball,” he said.

He credited Mets pitching coach Justin Willard for coming up with the “little baby spike” slider less than two weeks ago in the hopes of getting more swing-and-miss.

“If I can throw that pitch north of 82 mph, with the right metrics and everything,” he said, “I think that can definitely open up some doors for some swing-and-miss.”

What pitch do you want to come along first? “You hope it’s the fastball,” Myers said. “You hope the fastball kinda comes first and then you can just kinda work on things from there. 

“For me, that’s always my main goal, especially in the offseason, the first couple bullpens: lotta fastballs, kinda get that location right."

Mendoza said the fastball has “got life.”

“Even though it was like 92 [mph] today, we know he can get to the mid-90’s. It’s just the life on the fastball, the change is always gonna be good, and we saw it today,” the skipper said before speaking complimentarily of the rest of the right-hander’s pitches. “And I like that cutter/slider that he’s got going for him now. It’s a pitch that he’s going to need, and he’s working on that one, and I thought he threw some good ones today.” 

Myers, who was glad to get in three ups after going for two in his past two live outings this spring, says coming out feeling good is still the most important part of this time of year.

“Body feels good, body’s healthy, I think that’s the only thing looking for this time, just check that box off and keep building up,” he said.

Myers said that while he doesn’t know his role, how he deploys his pitches won’t change either. 

“The usage might change a little bit, but I think that’s gonna come from the staff and the catchers and reading hitters, reading swings,” he said. “Visually, watching the game, I think hitters come out a little bit more aggressive when they get a bullpen arm in there. So that might change [it] a little bit. But as far as pitches, no, everything will kinda be the same.”

Tarik Skubal reveals surprising WBC role for Team USA as free agency looms

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Tarik Skubal of the Detroit Tigers throws a baseball during spring training

Team USA’s one-two punch of Paul Skenes and Tarik Skubal will be short-lived.

Skubal, the reigning back-to-back American League Cy Young winner, announced Monday that he plans to make just one start in the 2026 World Baseball Classic before returning to Tigers camp, according to The Athletic.

The 29-year-old’s lone appearance is expected to be an abbreviated start during pool play on March 7 against Great Britain.

Tarik Skubal will make just one start with Team USA. AP

“I’m trying to do both things, trying to pitch for Team USA but I understand the need to be here with these guys and get ready for the season,” Skubal said. “I think it’s kind of the best of both worlds in that aspect, and I’m grateful they took me in that capacity.”

Skubal added that he will push to rejoin the squad as a spectator should the team reach the tournament finals.

“If they go to the finals, I think I’m going to try and lobby to just go watch and be with the guys,” he added.

Skubal’s one-and-done plan dampens what was expected to be a dominant rotation fronted by him and Skenes, a fellow 2025 Cy Young winner.

Skubal told 97.1 The Ticket in February that he “bought in” on joining the roster after extended talks with agent Scott Boras, Tigers manager AJ Hinch and Skenes.

“It was pretty easy to convince me because I was already kind of bought-in on it, and he confirmed everything that I thought,” Skubal said. “I think it’s great for the game of baseball, too. Just from a fan perspective, when you get to watch something with that kind of atmosphere and electricity in March, I think it’s going to bring a lot of eyes onto our sport in April and May. I think the game of baseball’s in a really good spot, and I think this really helps elevate it.

“For me, I take a ton of pride in being able to wear the USA across the chest,” Skubal added. “It’s something I’ve never had the opportunity to do, and I take a ton of pride in the United States of America. It’s the best country in the world.”

Skubal, 29, has won the last two AL Cy Young awards. AP

The decision comes just weeks after Skubal secured a record-breaking $32 million salary for 2026 in arbitration with the Tigers.

Detroit countered at $19 million, intensifying speculation that Skubal — slated for free agency after the season — could be dealt.

In November, The Post’s Jon Heyman reported a staggering $250 million gap in extension talks between Skubal and the Tigers.

Over the past two seasons, Skubal has cemented himself as arguably the game’s best pitcher, going 31-10 with a 2.30 ERA and 469 strikeouts in 387 ⅓ innings across 62 outings.

Despite losing the arbitration case to Skubal, Detroit responded by opening the checkbook to bolster the starting rotation.

The Tigers signed star left-hander Framber Valdez and reunited with franchise icon Justin Verlander.

With the Tigers expected to compete for the postseason and Skubal’s looming free agency, Team USA will get a brief cameo instead of a full commitment.

Rice and Domínguez power Yanks’ win over Pirates.

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 18: New York Yankees Infielder Ben Rice (22) smiles as he warms up during the spring training workout on February 18, 2026 at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, FL. (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The thing about spring training is that, in the first couple weeks, most of the action involves players that you will not see in the regular season. The first few innings might be something fun, but after that it’s only for those who really crave baseball or are overtly interested in the team’s prospects.

Today, the Yankees got most of their damage done early and by the regulars, as four second-inning walks chased Bubba Chandler and both Ben Rice and Jasson Domínguez delivered clutch run-scoring hits that set the tone for a 6-2 win down in Bradenton. Despite traffic on the bases all day, the Yanks mostly kept the Pirates’ offense at bay, with former first-round pick Ben Hess turning the most heads with a strong outing late in the game.

Chandler got things started with a quick 1-2-3 first, which saw Domínguez strike out, sandwiched by both Ben Rice and Ryan McMahon popping out in foul territory.

Ryan Yarbrough gave up a leadoff single to Oneil Cruz, struck out Nick Gonzales, and jumped ahead of Bryan Reynolds 0-2 before walking him. That would prove to be costly, as after a flyout moved Cruz to third, Marcell Ozuna punched one through the right side for a go-ahead RBI single in the first for the Pirates.

Paul DeJong and Spencer Jones led off the second with walks off the usually frugal Chandler, who battled back to get the next two outs before walking both Zack Short and Payton Henry to force in a run, ending his day. After walking just four batters in 31.1 innings last year, he had four in 1.2 innings today.

Former Yankee farmhand Tyrone Yulie came in to face Rice, who smoked a 100.4 mph, two-run single through the right side. Domínguez joined the party a few pitches later, lofting an RBI double into right field to finish off a four-run second.

Yarbrough settled in after a challenging first, giving up a two-out double to Alika Williams between a pair of strikeouts. The second strikeout of the inning was ABS-assisted, as home plate umpire Macon Hammond originally called ball four to put Cruz on first, but the Yankees challenged, and it was overturned to strike three. Overall, not a bad day for Yarbrough, who struck out four in two innings.

Another former Yankee, Dennis Santana, tossed a scoreless third around an infield single by Max Schuemann and a walk by Short. Paul Blackburn took over for Yarbrough in the third and got into immediate trouble with an infield single and a walk. After threatening to walk the bases loaded with nobody out, Blackburn induced a 3-2 forceout before a clear 5-4-3 double play ended the third.

Gregory Soto pitched a 1-2-3 fourth for the Pirates. Blackburn got into more trouble with back-to-back singles in the bottom half. Fortunately, he pulled out another Houdini act, retiring three straight batters, capping it off with a filthy 2-2 curveball to Cruz to end the inning.

Kyle Nicolas retired the middle of the Yankees’ order quickly, including a strikeout of Spencer Jones, in the fifth. Dylan Coleman continued his bullpen audition in the bottom half and got into trouble, but the Pirates stranded two for the third straight inning.

The Yankees threatened to break the game open in the sixth off of Hunter Barco with two walks and a hit by pitch to load the bases, but Domínguez (batting from the right side) struck out, and McMahon slapped a liner the other way that was snagged by new third baseman Jhonny Severino.

Hess made his first appearance of the spring in the sixth as the regulars were removed from the game, and he was impressive, striking out Nick Cimillo and Omar Alfonzo in a quick, nine-pitch inning. Hess got up to 95 mph on his fastball and got three whiffs, including one on a looping curveball to retire Alfonzo.

The Yankees got an extra run in the seventh. Yanquiel Fernandez walked and stole second, Marco Luciano walked against pitcher Kyle Larsen (no, not the NASCAR driver), and Ali Sanchez reached on a throwing error by Severino that allowed Fernandez to score, making it 5-1 into the seventh inning stretch. Hess went back to work and flirted with trouble with a walk and a single allowed, but he struck out the side around it in the seventh.

Miguel Palma, a soft-hitting depth catcher signed away from the Astros this offseason, smacked a leadoff homer off of former Tigers reliever Beau Burrows in the eighth. George Lombard Jr. got his first at-bat of the game later that inning and walked, but was stranded.

After two strong innings, Hess faltered to start the bottom of the eighth, plunking Severino, allowing an RBI double to Cimillo to cut it to 6-2, and walking Alfonzo. He settled down with a 6-4-3 double play and got out of the inning by retiring former Yankee farmhand Brian Sanchez. That wrapped up a three-inning outing from Hess, who impressive on the whole.

Luciano’s leadoff walk in the ninth was stranded by Brandan Bidois, while Geoff Gilbert came on for the Yanks and got the final three outs, improving the spring record to 2-2.

The Yankees are back in action tomorrow, taking on the Blue Jays in Dunedin at 1:07. Will Warren is scheduled to make his first spring start, while Toronto’s starter is to be determined. The game will be available on the Gotham Sports App and MLB Network (out-of-market only).

Box Score

Question Time: Mad Max

Oct 27, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer (31) reacts in the dugout after being relieved in the fifth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers during game three of the 2025 MLB World Series at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

The birds are singing, the snow is melting, and pitchers are getting hurt. Spring is here. The Jays have already lost Bowden Francis for the season. Shane Bieber is delayed, and now it sounds like Yimi Garcia will be as well. The Jays wisely invested in depth this winter. Cody Ponce was an interesting signing to shore up the back of the rotation, and Jose Berrios is still here after a winter of trade speculation. Eric Lauer is here too, and wants a starting job. He’s not in the top 5 right now, but he has a case and he’d crack most rotations in the league. The depth in AAA looks thin if you don’t think Ricky Tiedemann is a starter in 2026 (we’ll see about long term), but Jake Bloss should be working his way back by June. All of which is to say that the Jays have some shuffling to do but right now look set to field a very good five man rotation with some depth.

Enter Max Scherzer. The last time the future first ballot hall of famer walked off a mound, he’d held the fearsome Dodgers offence to one run over four and a third to start game 7 of the World Series, leaving with a lead and having out-dueled Shohei Ohtani. If the Jays had held on, it would be the crowning moment of one of the best pitching careers of his generation. But they didn’t, and so Scherzer wants to give the storybook ending one more try. It seems like if he pitches in 2026 it will be for the Blue Jays, and repots are that the talks are heating up.

For all his past greatness, he had a 5.19 ERA in the regular season last year and while the stats suggest he deserved a little better he’s firmly a #5 in 2026. As it is, he probably doesn’t crack the starting five even before Shane Bieber’s slow ramp up is completed. It’s hard to imagine him accepting a bullpen role. On the other hand, you never have enough pitching, and he brings a ton of leadership and (arguably psychotic) intensity to the clubhouse. My questions are: will the Blue Jays end up signing Scherzer, and should they?

Braves pitching keeps strong Orioles starting lineup quiet in spring action

ATLANTA, GA - SEPTEMBER 22: José Suarez #54 of the Atlanta Braves pitches during the game between the Washington Nationals and the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on Monday, September 22, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kathryn Skeean/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Atlanta Braves didn’t send a particularly imposing group of players to Sarasota to face off against the Baltimore Orioles but that didn’t matter too much in the end. The first two hurlers for the Braves helped make sure that the Orioles were unable to set off too many fireworks at their own spring training ballpark as they kept a strong Baltimore lineup quiet over four innings of clean work.

Despite the fact that the Orioles were putting to a pretty strong lineup for this one, both Garrett Baumann and José Suarez combined to make sure that Baltimore’s group of regulars largely remained quiet in this one. Baumann pitched two innings and struck out a batter while retiring the O’s six-up-and-six-down. Drake Baldwin was already pretty impressed with Baumann before the game had even started, per this post from Atlanta Journal-Constitution Braves beat writer Chad Bishop.

Rotation hopeful José Suarez then entered the game in the third inning and while he wasn’t perfect during his two innings of work, he still did enough to make sure that the Orioles didn’t make any additions to the run column while he was out there. Suarez did walk two batters but he also struck out three Orioles hitters and came away from his two innings of work without giving up any runs, either. One of those strikeouts came at the expense of Pete Alonso, which is no small feat considering that Alonso already has two homers to his name here in the early goings of spring training.

Fortunes did change a bit for the pitching staff once those two left the game. Hunter Stratton had a rough one as he got tagged for two hits and three runs — two of those runs came off of an RBI double from Luis Vázquez and the third run was walked in by Elison Joseph after Stratton exited the game. This certainly qualified for a rough outing for Stratton.

Late-game rough outings aside, the first two pitchers for the Braves were in pretty solid form this afternoon and it was especially encouraging to see Baumann and Suarez accomplish what they did against a lineup that is very close to what could feasibly be Baltimore’s Opening Day lineup.

Meanwhile at the plate, a mix of both new and old faces did a lot of the damage for the Braves in this one. Both Eli White and Dominic Smith delivered RBI knocks in the third inning in order to put Atlanta ahead and that was part of what was a very good day at the plate for Smith. Smith ended up racking up two hits and three appearances on-base in this one and he came around to score once as well. He was also pretty reliable with the glove as well, so this was a solid day from an all-around standpoint for a guy who’s trying to make the Opening Day roster any way he can. Eli White also delivered a pair of hits as he’s looking to fortify his hold on a bench spot for the Braves.

Once the Orioles subbed out most of their starters in the sixth inning, that was when the dam broke offensively for the Braves. Atlanta ended up scoring eight runs in this frame — it started with Nacho Alvarez Jr. delivering a go-ahead double off of Enoli Paredes and it finished with former Orioles infielder Jorge Mateo crushing a grand slam in order to break the game wide open. The only real blemish during this frame was that Chadwick Tromp got hit by a pitch and exited the game as a precaution. Injuries are always the absolute last thing you want to see at any given point but especially during spring training and even more especially when we’re dealing with a hit to the helmet.

The Orioles found themselves in a bases-loaded, one-out situation but Jim Jarvis made a great play to pick up the second out and then a strikeout ended the threat right there. As a non-roster invitee, Jarvis figures to be a long shot to break camp on the Opening Day roster but defense like that could turn the right heads.

The Braves ended up closing out the Grapefruit League win after all — even if this was supposed to be Spencer Strider’s turn to start. There doesn’t appear to be anything wrong but the radio crew did mention that he got most of his work done on the back fields today, so hopefully that was a productive session for him. He’s currently scheduled to start on Saturday (that’s coming from the radio crew as well), so there’s that.

Meanwhile, all eyes will be on Reynaldo López tomorrow at CoolToday Park in North Port as the Braves will take on the Tigers with first pitch scheduled for 1:05 p.m. ET. Here’s hoping for a performance that looks more like what we saw from Garrett Baumann and José Suarez today rather than the concerningly-diminished results that the Braves were getting from López during last season’s spring training.

Ben Rice drives in a pair in Yankees' 6-2 spring training win over Pirates

The Yankees defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates by a score of 6-2 in spring training action on Monday afternoon.

Here are the takeaways... 

-- Ben Rice served as the DH and led off. After popping out in his first at-bat, Rice came up with the bases loaded and two outs his second time up, and ripped a two-run single up the middle to give Yanks a 3-1 lead in the second inning. He added another hit with a single in the fourth, and walked in his final plate appearance, reaching base three times in total. Rice and Paul Goldschmidt figure to split time at first base this season in the Bronx.

-- Jasson Dominguez got the start in left field, hitting second in the order, and he followed Rice by lining a two-out RBI double to extend the Yankees' lead to 4-1 in the second. He ended his day 1-for-4 with three strikeouts. Dominguez could be the odd man out in the outfield, but he's already put together a couple of hits this spring.

-- Spencer Jones, playing center and batting fifth, walked on four pitches in his first at-bat, coming around to score as part of that four-run second inning. But he ended up going 0-for-2 with a pair of strikeouts, something that has plagued him throughout his minor league career.

-- The Yankees' lone home run of the day came off the bat of minor league catcher Miguel Palma, who hit a solo shot in the eighth inning. Palma was signed in December. 

-- Lefty Ryan Yarbrough allowed one run on pair of singles in the first inning, but he settled in and had a decent outing overall. The southpaw went 2.0 innings, allowing one earned run on three hits while striking out four and walking one.

Paul Blackburn followed Yarbrough on the bump, and he pitched around three hits to give the Yankees two scoreless innings.

-- Bubba Chandler, ranked by MLB Pipeline as the No. 11 prospect in all of baseball, was the starter on the mound for the Pirates, but the young right-hander struggled mightily with his command. He recorded just five outs while walking four, including walking Payton Henry to force in a run. 

Highlights

Up Next

The Yankees stay on the road and face the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday at 1:07 p.m.

Tarik Skubal to pitch one game in World Baseball Classic ahead of contract year

The USA pitching staff at the 2026 World Baseball Classic will have an extremely different look from the 2023 iteration. After throwing Merrill Kelly, Lance Lynn, and Adam Wainwright in 2023, the upcoming World Baseball Classic will have a loaded rotation with the likes of Paul Skenes, Garrett Whitlock, and Tarik Skubal, among others.

However, at least one of those pitchers is going to be extremely limited. Skubal, who is about to enter a contract year with the Detroit Tigers and is represented by Scott Boras, told reporters on Feb. 23 he will only throw a start in pools and be shut down after, possibly returning to watch the finals is the USA makes it — but even then only as a "fan."

"I'm trying to do both things, trying to pitch for Team USA but I understand the need to be here with these guys and get ready for the season," Skubal said, per The Athletic. "I think it’s kind of the best of both worlds in that aspect, and I’m grateful they took me in that capacity."

Of a potential finals run, Skubal said: "If they go to the finals, I think I'm going to try and lobby to just go watch and be with the guys."

The finals will be held in Miami, about a four-and-a-half hour drive from Lakeland, where the Tigers hold their spring training.

Where losing a pitcher of Skubal's caliber shortens any rotation, the United States has a bevy of options to choose from behind him.

USA 2026 World Baseball Classic pitchers

Here's a look at the pitching staff for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic.

Starting pitchers

  • RHP Paul Skenes - Pittsburgh Pirates
  • LHP Tarik Skubal - Detroit Tigers
  • LHP Matthew Boyd - Chicago Cubs
  • RHP Clay Holmes - New York Mets
  • RHP Nolan McLean - New York Mets
  • RHP Joe Ryan - Minnesota Twins
  • RHP Michael Wacha - Kansas City Royals
  • RHP Logan Webb - San Francisco Giants
  • LHP Clayton Kershaw - Retired

Bullpen

  • RHP David Bednar - New York Yankees
  • LHP Garrett Cleavinger - Tampa Bay Rays
  • RHP Garrett Whitlock - Boston Red Sox
  • RHP Griffin Jax - Minnesota Twins
  • RHP Brad Keller - Philadelphia Phillies
  • RHP Mason Miller - San Diego Padres
  • LHP Gabe Speier - Seattle Mariners

Obviously rotation won't be an issue for the USA. But with Kershaw occupying a roster spot and now Skubal freeing one after he leaves, it's still a blow for what is expected to be the best rotation top to bottom in the WBC.

Tarik Skubal contract

Skubal is entering the final season of team control this year, which is undoubtedly influencing his decision to limit himself in the WBC.

He is playing on a one-year, $32 million deal he won in arbitration after the Tigers filed for a $19 million. The back-to-back AL Cy Young winner is expected to command a record-breaking contract as a free agent in the coming offseason. His $32 million number is already encroaching upon Gerrit Cole's $36 million AAV from the Yankees.

Agent Scott Boras has made no bones about Skubal's prospects on the market. After he won his arbitration case, Boras told The Detroit Free Press:

"Cy-squared is exponentially valued – a critical and crushing distinction that separates Skubal from one-time Cy Young winners. How rare is Skubal's back-to-back Cy performance? It's over the moon. Only 12 in MLB history – the same number of men who have walked on the moon."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tarik Skubal to pitch one game in 2026 World Baseball Classic

Dodgers' Kyle Tucker not bothered by fuss over contract; signing is win-win

PHOENIX — Kyle Tucker slipped into the Los Angeles Dodgers clubhouse early Monday morning, quietly dressed in front of his locker and was virtually unnoticed.

This is the highest-paid player in baseball this season.

This was the most sought-after free agent all winter.

And this is the player who’ll be blamed for Major League Baseball’s lockout on Dec. 1.

Tucker, the Dodgers’ new right fielder, hears it, smiles uneasily at the mere mention of the notion, and shakes his head.

What did he ever do to deserve this unwanted attention except sign a contract like thousands of free agents before him?

The difference, of course, is that he not only signed a four-year, $240 million contract that pays him $60 million a year - the greatest present-day annual salary in baseball history - but it’s with the mighty Dodgers.

The rich gets richer, the powerful get more powerful and the angry fans get angrier.

Welcome to life as a Dodger.

“It doesn’t bother me, it really doesn’t,’’ Tucker tells USA TODAY Sports. “I’m sure it would have probably happened in some aspect regardless of where I would have went. But I think with this team, winning the last two years, probably made it bigger.’’

You think?

The moment Tucker signed his stunning deal Armageddon sirens screamed throughout Major League Baseball. Owners immediately decried that his signing is Exhibit 1-A why a salary cap is needed. And the union argued that this is why a salary cap would completely ruin the fair market.

Tucker is a four-time All Star, two-time Silver Slugger and World Series champion, but he has only one top 10 MVP finish (fifth in 2023) in his career.

The Dodgers, who just won two World Series without him, are paying $119.9 million alone this season for Tucker’s services when you consider the 110% penalty for signing him while being over the highest luxury tax threshold.

That expenditure just so happens to be equal or greater than the entire payroll for nine of the 30 MLB teams.

Really.

If Tucker had just signed the 10-year, $350 million contract that the Toronto Blue Jays offered, no one would have blinked. If he had accepted the New York Mets’ four-year, $220 million deal, there would have been angst among owners, but not a seismic uproar.

The Dodgers were the only team that could trigger a reaction so furious that the signing could threaten to shut down the game once the collective bargaining agreement expires in December.

“I just happen to be on the team this front office assembled,’’ Tucker says. “I mean, obviously, every team would want to get the best players on their own team, but it doesn’t always work out like that. But this team does a pretty good job trying to put the best product out on the field for the fans.

“They’ve done that the last couple of years, putting themselves in a position to win a World Series.’’

And succeeding.

Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Kyle Tucker plays against the San Diego Padres during a spring training game at Peoria Sports Complex.

For Tucker, it’s a colossal win-win.

He not only joins the best team in the land, becoming the highest-paid player in the game, but he also can squeeze in quietly, and ever so comfortably, in a sea of All-Stars, MVPs and future Hall of Famers. The Dodgers’ clubhouse attendants and batboys may get more air time and exposure than Tucker this season, which perfectly fits his personality.

“They make it pretty easy to come into this clubhouse and just be yourself and enjoy baseball,’’ Tucker said. “This organization is first class. We do have some really great players and great people on this team, so I’ve felt comfortable ever since I got here. I’m just going to do my thing regardless of where I’m at.’’

It’s the ideal scenario for Tucker and his low-key personality where he could go hitless for a week as the Dodgers’ starting right fielder and perhaps no one would even notice.

“When you come to a new team like this, you don’t have to be the main guy,’’ said Dodgers outfielder Teoscar Hernandez, who moved from right field to left field to accommodate Tucker. “So it will be great him because he won’t have that extra pressure on him. He can just be himself.’’

The Dodgers couldn’t care less if he makes the media’s job easier with quotes and sound bites as long as his bat does the talking for him. He averaged 30 homers and 104 RBI for three consecutive seasons before enduring calf, shin and hand injuries the last two years with the Houston Astros and Chicago Cubs, but still has a career .865 OPS - 40 points above the league average.

“I love guys who just come to work and value playing and love playing and competing," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts says. “He just wants to win. He’s not a self-promoter. He’s not going to give you guys a lot of great sound bites. He wants to play to win.

“I love guys like that.’’

While four-time MVP Shohei Ohtani left the Dodgers’ camp Sunday night for the WBC, with about a dozen reporters departing too and leaving perhaps the fewest reporters in the Dodgers’ camp since 2003, Tucker went about his business as usual.

No one bothered him. Perhaps no one really noticed him. And in about a week, there won’t be a single reporter stopping their Dodgers coverage with his absence.

Tucker’s wife, Samantha, is expecting their first child in a week.

Samantha’s pregnancy is the reason Tucker declined Team USA’s offer to play in the World Baseball Classic beginning March 6. He hopes to play in the international tournament one day, but this is not the time to be away from the birth of his son.

“I’m going to miss out on this WBC experience,’’ Tucker said, “but for good reason. Believe me, I wanted to do it. So hopefully, if something pops again next time, I’ll do it for sure.’’

For now, he has a World Series championship to win.

“It’ll be cool watching those guys get their World Series rings this year,’’ Tucker said of the scheduled March 27 ceremony. “These guys deserve it. They worked their asses off to be in the position they are. So, it’s going to be fun to watch and hopefully be part of the [ring] ceremony next year.’’

Well, whenever that likely lockout ends and the 2027 season begins.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers' Kyle Tucker isn't bothered by fuss over record contract

Gamethread 2/23: Phillies at Nationals

Feb 21, 2026; Dunedin, Florida, USA; Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Justin Crawford (80) doubles during the first inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at TD Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:

For the Nationals:

Let’s talk about it.

The surprise case for Randy Vásquez’s breakout

PEORIA, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 22: Randy Vasquez #98 of the San Diego Padres prepares to deliver a pitch against the Los Angeles Dodgers during a spring training game at Peoria Stadium on February 22, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In the seven-player trade that sent Juan Soto to the New York Yankees, a young 25-year-old named Randy Vásquez went from being the No. 13 prospect in the Yankees’ system to a backend starter in San Diego. 

Now, after achieving surprisingly good results last season, Vásquez is projected to occupy the Padres’ fourth spot in the starting rotation. But what’s his ceiling? Is what we saw from him last year permanent or was it just a flash in the pan?

Early struggles seemed to stay

Vásquez began as a starter in the minor leagues for New York, but saw minimal starting opportunities with the big-league club, being used more as a reliever who covered multiple innings. That system worked well in 2023, a year that saw him finish with a 2.87 ERA across 37 ⅔ innings.

However, when Vásquez transitioned to a full-time starting role in San Diego he struggled mightily. He had a career high WHIP in 2024 (1.51) and, when his pitches did find the zone, they were crushed (.304 opponent batting average). 

The combination of these two factors made it seem like Vásquez would be more of a depth option in 2025 than a regular starter. But when Joe Musgrove underwent Tommy John surgery in October ‘24, the Padres needed someone to fill innings. They gave the ball to Vásquez and, boy, did he outperform expectations.

A unicorn of a year

2025 was the best year of Vásquez’s career and it’s not even close. He finished with a 3.84 ERA in 26 starts and brought his WHIP down to 1.32 and opponent batting average to (a much more respectable) .247. 

Plus, he offered something that San Diego desperately needed down the stretch: durability. Amidst injuries from Michael King and inconsistency from Dylan Cease, Vásquez managed to cover a career-high 133 ⅔ innings for the club. 

Strangely enough, that didn’t stop Vásquez from being pulled from games early by former manager Mike Shildt. The club never seemed to trust him to get out of difficult situations, taking him out of more than a few games the moment he encountered trouble. 

Hopefully he’ll get a longer leash from new skipper Craig Stammen than he did with Shildt.

So what’s the problem?

All of this sounds great. Why would Vásquez be unable to capitalize on his success? The problem is that his expected stats in ‘25 were all much worse than his actual ones (5.37 xERA compared to 3.84 ERA). 

To put it simply, Vásquez was lucky. But he also wasn’t. He had a career-high ground ball percentage of 40.1%, making sure that any contact he allowed resulted in an easy out at first base. 

Vásquez’s start to spring

Stammen has publicly stated that Vásquez has a small edge over the competition in the battle for back end rotation spots. But all of that is still dependent on Vásquez’s performance in Cactus League play.

Which brings us to Sunday’s start against the Los Angeles Dodgers. In the Padres 5-1 loss, Vásquez shined – only giving up a single to Will Smith in the first inning and a walk in the second. He also threw 23 of 31 pitches for strikes across eight batters faced.

Vásquez started to make the case that what he began to unlock in 2025 wasn’t just a fluke, it was building to something more. If he continues to capitalize on that this spring, we could see him blossom into a quality starter the Friars can depend on to go out and dominate each time he takes the mound. 

Grapefruit Juice: Mets 4, Blue Jays 3

Feb 23, 2026; Dunedin, Florida, USA; New York Mets second baseman Jackson Cluff (85) celebrates with teammates after scoring in the third inning against the Toronto Blue Jays during spring training at TD Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Jonathan Dyer-Imagn Images | Jonathan Dyer-Imagn Images

The New York Mets (2-1) defeated the Toronto Blue Jays (1-2) by a score of 4-3 today at TD Bank Park in Dunedin.

  • Clay Holmes started the game for the Mets, and threw 57 pitches over three and two-thirds innings. Holmes surrendered a long two-run home run to Kazuma Okamoto for the only runs against him. Holmes struck out three, walked two, and allowed just the one hit. As Holmes is playing for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic, he is likely a little ahead of the pack in terms of stamina.
  • Nick Morabito, the lone Mets’ prospect added to the 40-Man Roster ahead of the Rule 5 Draft late last year, drove drove in Jackson Cluff for the Mets’ first run and then scored on a MJ Melendez double to tie the game in the third inning.
  • In the sixth, Ronny Mauricio led off with a bloop double. Jacob Reimer replaced him on the base paths and scored the Mets’ third run when Vidal Bruján stole second and the ball got away from Toronto, allowing Reimer to round third.
  • Bruján left the game after injuring himself sliding into second on that same play. It appears to be a hand injury, the extend of which is not known as of publication time.
  • Tobias Myers threw two and a third innings of scoreless ball, allowing three hits and striking out three.
  • Cristian Pache hit a towering solo home run in the seventh to put the Mets up 4-2.
  • Ryan Lambert, who our Lukas Vlahos wrote a glowing season preview of, was impressive in his one inning of work, hitting 99 MPH on the radar gun, and striking out three and allowing just one hit to Carlos Mendoza (not the Mets’ manager).
  • The Mets were up 4-2 heading into the bottom of the ninth, but Trey McGough gve up a walk, a double, a single to lead to a run scoring. McGough struck out veteran Eloy Jiménez before Jay Harry hit into a 3-3-2 double play to end the ballgame.

The Mets play the Astros tomorrow at Clover Park at 1:10pm. The game will be broadcast on SNY.

Mets' fireballing relief prospect Ryan Lambert dominant, Clay Holmes solid in win over Blue Jays

The Mets beat the Blue Jays, 4-3, on Monday as their spring training slate continued.


Here are the takeaways...

-Clay Holmes, who is a bit ahead workload-wise as he prepares to pitch for the United States in the World Baseball Classic in March, allowed two runs in 3.2 innings.

Holmes' sinker was up to 96 mph in the first inning, and he also mixed in his sweeper, changeup, and cutter. He got Andres Gimenez to strike out swinging on the sweeper to start the game and worked around a hit-by-pitch by getting Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to tap into a 1-6-3 double play. 

In the second inning, Kazuma Okamoto took Holmes deep to dead center field for a two-run homer on a curveball that caught too much of the plate. Holmes hasn't thrown a curve in a regular season big league game since 2021.

Overall, Holmes gave up one hit, walked two, and struck out three while throwing 57 pitches (30 strikes).

-Tobias Myers fired 2.1 scoreless innings, allowing three hits (all singles), walking none, and striking out three. 

Myers, who is stretching out as a starting pitcher, excelled in relief last season for the Brewers -- with a 1.91 ERA and 0.91 WHIP across 28.1 innings over 16 appearances as hitters slashed just .219/.245/.295 against him (.541 OPS). Manager Carlos Mendoza said last week that Myers will be on the Opening Day roster if healthy, with his role TBD.

-Carson Benge entered the game in the fifth inning. Benge struck out swinging his first time up after fouling off a pair of two-strike pitches. In his second and final at-bat, Benge hit a hard ground out (99 mph exit velocity) to first base.

- Hard-throwing relief prospect Ryan Lambert was dominant in his inning of work, striking out three -- two on his slider and one on his fastball, which was up to 99 mph. Lambert's only blemish was a soft two-out single. 

Lambert is in the mix for one of the final spots in the bullpen.

- Outfield prospect Nick Morabito laced an RBI single to center field in his first time up, and followed that up by swiping second base. Morabito, whose big league ETA is 2027, stole 49 bases in 118 minor league games last season. He then swiped 16 more bags in 17 Arizona Fall League games.

Morabito, who went 1-for-3 with an RBI and run scored, also flashed the leather. To open the fifth inning, he charged in from left field to foul territory before snagging a fly ball right up against the protective netting.

- Mark Vientos was hit by a pitch in his first time up. He finished 0-for-2 with a strikeout. 

- MJ Melendez, who is in the right field/bench competition, looped an RBI double the other way his second time up. He went 1-for-3.

- Vidal Brujan finished 0-for-2 with a walk and a stolen base. Brujan is battling for one of the final spots on the bench.

- Ronny Mauricio finished 1-for-2 with a pop fly double and a walk. Mauricio could be part of the Mets' Opening Day plans at shortstop in the event Francisco Lindor isn't ready after having hamate surgery. The expectation has been that Lindor will be back in time. 

Highlights

What's next

The Mets host the Astros on Tuesday at 1:10 p.m. on SNY. 

Monday Morning Minnesota: The “PabNo” Edition

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - SEPTEMBER 19: Pablo Lopez #49 of the Minnesota Twins walks to the dugout after pitching against the Cleveland Guardians in the third inning of the game at Target Field on September 19, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It is truly just my luck that right after I published last week’s Monday Morning Minnesota, we started getting reports about Pablo Lopez having a potential elbow issue. Now, Pablo is out for the season after undergoing Tommy John surgery, and Joe Ryan was diagnosed with lower back inflammation, which might jeopardize his ability to pitch in the World Baseball Classic. Anyways, keep an eye out for the injury report today for the Twins; I apologize in advance for any misfortune this article may cause.

The Past Week on Twinkie Town:

Elsewhere in Twins Territory:

In the World of Baseball:

  • The MLBPA’s prep for the upcoming labor negotiations hit a snag as executive director Tony Clark resigned after an internal investigation. Jeff Passan at ESPN examines the fallout from Clark’s resignation and what the union should do in this new chapter.
  • The MLB.com beat writers get together and provide one dark horse candidate for each team’s Opening Day roster.
  • David Adler at MLB.com gives us 11 players to watch out for at the World Baseball Classic.