MLB Mock Draft projects Pirates taking top pitcher

UC Santa Barbara Gauchos right-handed pitcher Jackson Flora (2) pitches during the game against the Southern Miss Golden Eagles at Pete Taylor Park in Hattiesburg, Miss., on Friday, Feb. 13, 2026. | Matt Bush/Special to the Clarion Ledger / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The first official mock draft has been released by MLB.com and reporter Jim Callis is predicting that the Pittsburgh Pirates will select the best pitcher in the class.

With the fifth overall pick, the Pirates are projected to draft right handed pitcher Jackson Flora out of UC Santa Barbara. This year Flora has been looked at as the consensus best pitcher in the class. The Junior righty has a 9-0 record in 2026 and leads NCAA Division I in earned run average with a 0.73 ERA this year.

Flora is ranked as the fourth overall prospect in this year’s class and has clearly separated himself from the rest of the arms that will be featured during the draft. At 6’5” Flora possesses an athletic build that helps him pack a punch with his fastballs. His heaters are on average in the mid-90’s range and regularly touch triple digits. His mid-80’s slider has developed as another strong pitch in his repertoire, while his changeup has become a solid second pitch in his arsenal.

The California native has enjoyed a solid three-year career at UC Santa Barbara. Flora’s freshman season saw him used mostly as a relief pitcher out of the pen, but he exploded onto the scene as a sophomore in 2025. As a second year player, Flora helped lead the Gauchos to a 36-18 record, and compiled 86 strikeouts with a 3.60 ERA and a 6-3 record as a starter. As the top pitcher in the country Flora and the Gauchos currently have a 32-15 record.

Flora fits the mold of pitchers that the Pirates have liked to bring in over the past couple of years. The tall athletic build coupled with a strong fastball first approach is the blueprint used for most of Pittsburgh’s starters, and Flora could be a great addition to that group if he’s still available fifth overall.

The MLB Draft starts on July 11 during the All-Star break in Philadelphia.

Vagabond Athletics look ready for MLB spotlight, even in a temporary home

BALTIMORE – There are still a few maxims about playing for the Athletics – late of Oakland, currently of West Sacramento, perhaps soon of Las Vegas – that remain true in this period of franchise limbo.

Best to rent, not buy, as owner John Fisher’s cozy luxury-geared dream ballpark goes up in Las Vegas and the club makes do in what should be the second of three seasons in Yolo County.

Life remains more luxe on the road, with 10,000-seat Sutter Health Park still geared for a Class AAA ballclub despite upgrades to satisfy the big league squatters. And while the roster is no longer an homage to the major league minimum salary, the club’s $91.8 million opening-day payroll still ranks 25th out of 30 teams.

 Yet it’s undeniable that something has changed as a core of largely homegrown players coalesces. Players can glance around the clubhouse and see not a stopgap or trade fodder, but rather a dude they came up with.

And in some cases, envision playing alongside for many more years.

“When there’s a level of comfort, a level of familiarity with each other, and camaraderie and a good culture in the clubhouse, it makes it easy to go out and have fun and perform at a high level on the field,” All-Star DH and veteran sage Brent Rooker tells USA TODAY Sports.

“We’ve got all those things.”

Brent Rooker was an All-Star in 2025 and Nick Kurtz won AL Rookie o the Year.

Forty games into the season, they’ve got something else: The third-best record in the American League and a tenuous hold on first place in the AL West.

At 21-19, the A’s are by no means popping bottles. After all, they reached the one-quarter mark last season with an identical record – and proceeded to lose 19 of their next 21 games on the way to a 76-86 finish.

As if on cue, the club lost All-Star shortstop Jacob Wilson to a sprained left shoulder on Sunday, May 11; initial imaging was not definitive but Wilson figures to go on the injured list before the club takes on St. Louis at home Tuesday.

Still, the team at large has an extra year under its belt, a greater familiarity with its temporary home and a stronger conviction in doing its job.

“I feel like last year, all the guys were feeling everything – getting their feet wet in Sacramento, seeing how the ball flies, all that stuff,” says right-hander Luis Severino, whose $67 million contract signed before 2025 marked a capital investment unforeseen when the roster went to pot in the club’s dying days in Oakland. “Now we have a different mentality to go out there and compete.

“We showed the world last year what we can do and this year we just continue to do that.”

'The belief in myself is truly there'

Indeed, certain metrics show a level of confidence perhaps unseen in past years. The team is 13-11 on the road, splitting six games in Philadelphia and Baltimore last week. They’re 8-5 in one-run games, which shows either resolve or unsustainability, depending on how you view it.

Regardless of how the next quarter plays out, there’s an undeniable not-our-first-rodeo vibe with the squad.

“Once you’ve established yourself and have multiple years in the big leagues, there’s a feeling that you belong,” manager Mark Kotsay tells USA TODAY Sports, “and a feeling that, even if you’re off to a rough start, you’ve had enough time here, with enough at-bats and enough history, to know you’ll get to where you need to be.

“I think that’s the biggest contributing factor to lasting success.”

Shea Langeliers has certainly seen it. Now the longest-tenured Athletic, he was acquired from Atlanta for All-Star catcher Sean Murphy and tossed into the mix in 2022, Kotsay’s first season, a 102-loss campaign.

They’d lose 112 games a year later, say goodbye to Oakland, decamp to Gold Country and stack top 10 draft picks. Those turned into Wilson and first baseman Nick Kurtz in 2023 and 2024.

And in 2025, Kurtz, the 6-foot-5 power-hitting savant, socked 36 home runs in 117 games, while Wilson banged out 151 hits in 125 games; they finished 1-2 in AL Rookie of the Year voting.

Suddenly, Langeliers felt surrounded.

“These young kinds now – they don’t spend much time in the minors,” says Langeliers, 28, a first-round pick of Atlanta in 2019. “They get up here and it’s like getting thrown to the wolves, but you get guys like Kurtz and Willy who immediately have success. Up until this point, nobody really did that.

“To be 1-2 in Rookie of the Year voting, to see (Zack) Gelof back and doing his thing, it’s been awesome to watch them grow as men and as players.”

Perhaps no one’s grown as much as Langeliers, whose progress has been steady and almost linear. He struck out 29% of the time and batted .215 over his first three seasons, yet upped his average to .276 while hitting 31 homers and 32 doubles in 2025.

This year, he is leading the AL in batting (.336) and has a 1.017 OPS, his 11 homers putting him on a 40-homer pace.

“The trust in myself and belief in myself now is truly there,” says Langeliers.

Should he remain healthy, Langeliers will be an All-Star this season, his stock steadily going up, to his mates’ delight.

“Every day, week, month, year it seems like he’s making improvements to get where he is now – which is one of the premier hitters in baseball,” says Rooker. “And he has been for a while.

“It’s been a blast to watch.”

Langeliers and Kurtz – currently on a 34-game on-base streak - are among the A’s few premier talents who aren’t bolted down.

With pressure from Major League Baseball to spend its revenue-sharing money and internal desires to present a serviceable product to Las Vegas, the A’s went on a commitment spree from December 2024 – when they committed to Severino for three seasons – to February 2026.

Rooker: Signed in January 2025 to a $60 million deal through 2029.

Center fielder Lawrence Butler: Signed in March 2025 to a $65.5 million deal through 2031.

Slugger Tyler Soderstrom: Signed in December 2025 to an $86 million deal through 2032.

Wilson: Signed in February to a $70 million deal through 2032.

Langeliers missed the long-term extension train in one sense: He was stacking up service time while figuring things out at the big league level. Now, he’ll have four years of service and be just two seasons from hitting the market, his near-league minimum years long since past.

“I love this organization. I love this staff. I love my teammates. I love playing here,” says Langeliers. “Stuff like that, I know it will work out the way it’s supposed to so I’m not really worried about it.”

Athletics 'journey' continues

If nothing else, the A’s are assured of having Kurtz, Wilson and others around well into their projected time in Las Vegas. The club is gradually trying to get one foot firmly down in the desert, holding Wilson’s contract extension press conference there in February and sharing frequent updates on the ballpark’s construction.

While Fisher has pledged $1 billion to the ballpark project and said in March the stadium is “on time and on budget,” it remains to be seen whether he will tap new investors or a grander portion of his family’s fortune to fund that portion of the $2 billion project.

Skeptics have seen the club’s vision of the stadium change right in front of their eyes.

When the club released initial renderings of their 33,000-seat Strip ballpark in 2024, the message board displayed Gelof’s very encouraging batting average on the screen.

Injuries and ineffectiveness limited Gelof, then a second baseman, to 30 big league games in 2025. When the most recent renderings were released that year, the video board had a new player to tout: Rooker.

Now, in a full circle kind of moment, Gelof is back in the majors, recast as a highly useful utility guy who can play second, third and center field – nearly robbing Bryce Harper of a home run despite not possessing an outfielder’s glove until days earlier.

“It’s been a journey,” says Gelof. “I feel like I’m still on it and my best baseball is ahead of me. Coming up and having success and battling through life – it’s been a lot of learning experiences.

“I’m going to try and continue to learn and be the best person and player I can be.”

Not unlike their Oakland predecessors, the A’s have their share of scrap heap success stories. Outfielder Carlos Cortes’s career was revived after he left the Mets as a seven-year free agent in 2024.

Now, he’s batting .355 with a .978 OPS in 103 plate appearances.

“Carlos didn’t get an opportunity with the Mets,” says Kotsay of Cortes’s last days with New York in which he averaged 325 at-bats his past two minor league seasons. “He’s always been a professional hitter.”

Says Cortes, who signed a minor league contract with the A’s the first day he was a free agent in 2024: “It was really refreshing to go somewhere and almost feel like you’re valued. It kind of felt like at the end I wasn’t valued there.”

The A’s are hoping this year brings more mutual appreciation in West Sacramento. The region has just enough to keep the big leaguer happy; as one veteran put it, there are two Ruth’s Chris steakhouses and a handful of excellent breakfast venues, which is a significant part of the battle.

For what it’s worth, crowds are up at Sutter Health Park. This weekend, the club can paint a stark difference between their success and the failings of their former Bay Area neighbors when the San Francisco Giants visit the 916.

More reinforcements may be coming. Outfielder Henry Bolte went on a batting rampage for their Class AAA team this past weekend, recording hits in 12 consecutive at-bats; he had back-to-back 5-for-5 nights that included eight extra-base hits.

Whenever Bolte or top prospect Leo De Vries reach the majors, a nucleus will await  to greet them.

“More and more guys are getting to be a part of it,” says Langeliers. “It feels like we’ve been building toward this for a couple of years now. We’re starting to put it all together – one unit, one big family.”

Says Rooker: “We’ve got a lot of talent. And we’re playing our hearts out.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Athletics in Sacramento look ready for run in AL West standings

Pitiful Mets show no signs of life with time running out: 'This game eats you up'

PHOENIX — The New York Mets sat in dead silence Sunday afternoon. No music. No TV. No conversation.

The only sound was chop sticks snatching sushi off plates, the packing of bags, and the shuffling of feet out of the visiting clubhouse, down the corridor and towards the team buses.

The Mets, after spending 10 days on the beaches of Southern California, the snow-capped mountains in Colorado and the desert in Arizona, are finally going home.

And they return to New York the same miserable, underachieving team that left.

Their only dignity leaving Phoenix was that they didn’t suffer the humiliation of being no-hit, losing to the Arizona Diamondbacks, 5-1, producing a combined total of nine hits and three runs in regulation during the three games at Chase Field. Their three hits and two runs in the 10th inning in their 3-1 Friday victory saved their weekend from being a complete disaster.

Juan Soto went 0-for-10 in a three-game series against Arizona.

They managed to make Diamondbacks starter Eduardo Rodriguez, Merrill Kelly and Ryne Nelson look like Randy Johnson, Curt Schilling and Brandon Webb of D-backs’ lore. The D-backs trio, who entered the weekend with a 5.50 ERA, yielded a 1.23 ERA in the series, yielding just nine hits and three runs in 22 innings. Rodriguez, who has pitched 11 years in the major leagues, making 243 career starts, pitched 8 ⅓ innings Sunday for the longest stint of his career.

“We’re better than that," said a visibly frustrated Mets manager Carlos Mendoza, “especially the past couple of days. We needed to be better."

The Mets’ offense was not only awful Sunday, but for their entire trip. The Mets hit .209 on the nine-game journey, averaging 3.6 runs a game.

Juan Soto and Bo Bichette, who are earning $103.875 million this year, highlighted the Mets’ woes, going 0-for-20 in the three games in Arizona.

“I mean, there’s no issues right here," Soto said. “We’re all professionals. We all can handle this stuff. But definitely, we’re struggling a little bit right now.

“But I think it’s going to pass."

Clock is ticking on these Mets

The Mets managed to go 5-4 on the trip, thanks to their staff producing a 3.05 ERA, but they also were facing three teams with a cumulative 51-70 record: the Los Angeles Angels, Colorado Rockies and Diamondbacks.

At 15-25, the Mets haven’t had a worse 40-game start since 1993 and are actually are in worst position now than when they departed Queens. They are a season-equalling high 12 ½ games out of first place in the NL East behind Atlanta.

Their only silver lining is that they knocked off their third West Coast trip off the schedule with one last one remaining the first week of June.

“No excuses, but we’ve had a crazy schedule with these West Coast swings," Mets reliever Luke Weaver told USA TODAY Sports, “so maybe when we get settled in here, we can be the best team in baseball."

Weaver smiled sheepishly.

But didn’t laugh.

It was a year ago when the Mets actually did have the best record in baseball. They were 45-24 on June 12. Then, they went into an epic collapse.

So, hey, why not dream of a flip-flop?

“I think everybody’s on the notion that it’s a long season, there are a lot of games to be played," Weaver said. “Our game has that ability to just go through stretches as a team, and as individuals, and so we’ve always kept the faith.

“We’re not clicking fully, but were stringing things together. It’s about getting hot. And when the hot comes, we ride that pretty hard.’’

And until that winning streak happens, if it happens, the Mets will be mocked and ridiculed throughout the baseball world as the Worst Team Money can buy.

“I think at this point we’re definitely tired of talking about it,’’ Weaver said, “... so we’re going to continue to have to talk about it until we prove to them that we don’t need to talk about it.

“We get it. I get it. As a pro, we’ve got to do our job, but the best way to quiet people is to go out and just win.

“It’s that simple."

Certainly, it has to start with their stars doing star-type things.

Mets' offseason acquisitions struggle

The Mets spent $765 million for Soto to be their aircraft carrier. He went hitless in the D-backs series, and hit .121 with one homer and two RBI on the road trip.

“I’ve just been missing a lot of balls," said Soto, who’s hitting .264 with four homers and 10 RBI this season. “They’ve been throwing the pitches right there, and I have just been a little under, definitely. I’ve been working with my hitting coaches, swinging the bat, like doing my routines, working on mechanics.

“We’re at the point where you just got to stop missing it."

They gave Bo Bichette a three-year, $126 million contract, including a staggering $40 million signing bonus with opt-outs after each season. He hit .194 on the trip and is hitting .222 with two homers, 16 RBIs and a .559 OPS this season.

“We have to live in the present moment," Bichette said. “I mean, what has happened has happened. You can’t change that. We’re paid to figure it out and get better."

They traded outfielder Brandon Nimmo for infielder Marcus Semien, who’s earning $26 million in the fifth year of a $175 million contract. Semien hitting .225 with two homers and 13 RBI, hitting .250 with one homer and four RBIs on the trip.

“We just need to stick to playing the game hard," Semien said, “playing the game hard, playing the game the right way. That’s what it always comes down to. That’s the attitude I’m going to take into a major league game.

“We’re all going through this together. We know how to handle it together. Obviously, we didn’t play our best baseball the first month, but everybody’s positive and ready to turn it around."

The Mets are hoping that at some point the calvary will come in the way of reinforcements.

All-Star shortstop Francisco Lindor, who hit .226 with two homers in 24 games before injuring his calf, is scheduled to be re-examined this week with hopes he can return in June.

Jorge Polanco, who was given a two-year, $40 million contract to replace fan favorite Pete Alonso at first base, is hitting .179 with one home run. He has played just 14 games and is on the IL with Achilles bursitis, but took batting practice Saturday in limited workouts.

“Some days good," Mendoza said, “some days when it’s not as good."

Center fielder Luis Robert Jr. was acquired from the Chicago White Sox for his fine defensive skills and power, but played only 24 games before going on the IL with a lumbar spine disc herniation. He has not resumed baseball activities, Mendoza said, with no timetable for a rehab assignment.

The Mets have no choice but to stay patient. They’re not going to start dumping players. They’re not going to start making aggressive trades. And they said they’re not going to start firing folks either, with David Stearns, president of baseball operations, letting it be known that manager Carlos Mendoza’s job is safe.

At least for now.

“I’ve respected him mightily for how he’s handled things and who he is as a manger," Weaver said. “He’s transparent, communicative and look, we’re trying to right the ship and we’re trying to do it for him.

“There’s only so much we can do. We’ve just got to go out there and do our part. He can only best serve us that way. So he’s doing everything he can. And David is very strong in what he believes and re-assuring us."

'Ready to turn it around'

The Mets insist that even with all of their new players, the clubhouse chemistry is strong. There’s certainly an adjustment getting acclimated to their new surroundings, Semien, Bichette and Weaver say, but they understand they’re into this together.

“We used the first month to kind of understand each other, spend time off the field, and do all of the little things we can to get to know one another," Semien said. “So when we go out to battle, and things maybe don’t go our way, we know how to react. We know how to handle it together.

“But everybody’s positive and ready to turn it around."

Still, it’s only human nature to want to make a huge first impression, meeting new teammates playing in front of a new fanbase. Wgen it doesn’t immediately happen, there can be self-inflicted pressure.

“You come over, and you’re trying to prove your value," Weaver said. “You want to make an impact. You want to be yourself as quickly as you can. I think those things on a relationship level have been really seamless. I think on the field there comes moments like trying to be a hero.

“Our game is not really built like that. Our game is built collectively for nine innings, playing sound baseball. And adding pressure I don’t think it’s ever really worked for anybody. Some people can thrive. We have outliers in our game. But no one’s been asked to carry the burden of 26 guys for a team. So, we’re doing everything we can, except just consistently winning games at our expectation level.

“We have to do that collectively. Individually, we can’t carry the burden all the time. So we have to find a way to do it as a team. We’ve got to put our worst baseball behind us and our best baseball in front of us.’’

Can the Mets, who lost 12 consecutive games, possibly do that and turn it around?

Sure, it’s baseball.

The landscape is filled with crazy momentum swings over the course of a long season.

If it does, and the Mets are playing deep into October, they could become a sequel to the ’69 Miracle Mets.

“This game eats you up, spits you out," Weaver says. “It also gives you a lot of cool, rewarding moments. So, we’re hoping to lean more on the right side of that, and maybe stop jumping on the left scale. Put on some good weight, some good muscle, and put the bad fat over to the side."

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NY Mets sinking further in NL East standings with time running out

Yankees news: Spencer Jones gets first career hit and RBI

New York Yankees outfielder Spencer Jones hits an RBI single during the second inning of their game against the Milwaukee Brewers Sunday, May 10, 2026 at American Family Field in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. | Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

MLB.com | Casey Drottar: Although the Yankees suffered a second straight walk-off loss and a series sweep on Sunday, at least one Yankee enjoyed a nice moment. After going hitless with four strikeouts in his first two games, Spencer Jones got his first major league hit in the second inning against Logan Henderson, a 106.4 mph single up the middle that scored José Caballero. Fittingly for Mother’s Day, his mom (along with the rest of his family) was there to cheer him on. Hard to top that in terms of presents, I imagine. Congratulations, Spencer, and I hope the hits keep coming for you.

NY Daily News | Gary Phillips: Camilo Doval was trusted with the eighth inning of the Yankees’ Saturday extra inning loss to Milwaukee, and Doval played his part in getting the game to extras by allowing Brice Turang to get aboard, steal second, and score on a William Contreras hit. Doval has managed to cut back on issuing walks, his previous Achilles heel, and yet he’s allowed 10 runs in his last 12.1 innings of work largely due to the 15 hits he’s allowed over that span, three of which were long balls. The former Giants closer doesn’t look like he can be trusted with high leverage outings at this point, leaving a gap in the team’s bullpen hierarchy that needs to be filled sooner rather than later.

MLB.com | Casey Drottar: Another Yankee who achieved an important milestone on Sunday was Carlos Rodón, who made his first start of 2026 after missing the first month of the season while recovering from offseason surgery to remove a bone spur from his left elbow. While his overall line was forgettable – 3 earned runs, 5 strikeouts and 5 walks over 4.1 innings – Drottar points to one undeniably positive sign; Rodón averaged 95.7 mph on his heater during the start, 1.6 mph faster than his 2025 average. If nothing else, this suggests that his elbow is indeed in better shape. If he can improve his control, Rodón might be able to recapture his excellent 2025 form, or maybe even surpass it.

FanGraphs | David Laurila: If you’re a fan of the splitter, you’ll enjoy this interview with Spencer Medick, currently the pitching coach for the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders, on the various shapes and properties that splitters can have. According to Medick, by generating less spin on their splitters, pitchers can make the pitch “dance” in a way akin to knuckleballs from the batter’s viewpoint. The erstwhile Driveline coach cites Fernando Cruz as an example of a low-spin splitter, while naming Yovanny Cruz and Brendan Beck as current Triple-A hurlers that have the pitch in their arsenal (though their spin rates vary).

ESPN | Bradford Doolittle: You might’ve taken a look at the AL standings at large lately and become perplexed at how bunched up most of the field is. Outside of New York and Tampa Bay, everyone else is either under .500 or skirting around it. While the standard deviation between the teams in the league is currently 14.4 wins, it’s projected to dive back down towards a final number of 8.8, by far the lowest amount since the turn of the decade and a sharp nosedive from the drastic disparity that 2019 displayed with three 100 win teams and three 100 loss teams in the league. Whether this can hold up or not remains to be seen, but the huge clump that has formed at the start of the year should give us a race where most teams are in the running for a long time.

MLB.com: There are flaws to be spotted on each and every team after more than a month of play, and the Yankees have their fair share of them. One of the areas they can reasonably improve on is their leadoff production, and their biggest culprit can lead the charge to fixing the problem. Trent Grisham has received the lion’s share of starts atop the lineup but struggled out of the gate. Grisham’s peripherals have looked amazing, however, and he’s starting to see more of the hits that he’s deserved based off of how hard he’s been ripping the ball setting the table quite nicely for the Yankees’ sluggers behind him.

The Athletic | Amy Cuddy: ($) Baseball players are a superstitious bunch, and there’s no shortage of stories of weird rituals that escape the confines of the clubhouse — like, for example, Jason Giambi’s lucky gold thong. Here, Cuddy, a social psychologist, sheds some light on why baseball’s characteristics make the sport uniquely conducive to ritualistic behavior, and argues based on neuroscience that rituals may actually help hitters perform.

MLB power rankings: Braves steal top spot from Dodgers with statement in LA

The Los Angeles Dodgers won't go wire-to-wire in the National League West - nor will they in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings.

The preseason No. 1 club may very well win a third consecutive championship this autumn but for now, they've been dislodged from the top spot for the first time this season by the Atlanta Braves.

The passing of the torch came head-to-head, as Atlanta won two of three games at Dodger Stadium and improve to a major league-best 28-13. Their plus-87 run differential is also tops in the majors, and they also lead in OPS and ERA.

Uh, any questions?

The Braves' newfound position will be tested immediately, as they return home for a three-game series against the No. 3 Chicago Cubs, beginning Tuesday, May 10 at Truist Field.

A look at our updated rankings:

Ozzie Albies and Matt Olson are off to red-hot starts in 2026.

1. Atlanta Braves (+1)

  • Spencer Strider punches out eight Dodgers in second start of year.

2. Los Angeles Dodgers (-1)

  • Mookie Betts is back this week, not a moment too soon for flaccid offense.

3. Chicago Cubs (+1)

  • Have the Cubs rescued Michael Conforto? Batting .364 with 1.132 OPS in 55 plate appearances.

4. Tampa Bay Rays (+2)

  • Nick Martinez's 1.70 ERA is best in club history through eight games for a starter.

5. New York Yankees (-2)

  • Carlos Rodón makes season debut, but can't prevent unsettling sweep at Milwaukee.

6. San Diego Padres (-1)

  • A quarter through the season, Fernando Tatis Jr. at 0.0 WAR and zero home runs.

7. Milwaukee Brewers (+3)

  • Sweep the Yankees for first time since they were an AL team - in 1989.

8. Pittsburgh Pirates (-)

  • Oneil Cruz on a 40-homer pace.

9. Cincinnati Reds (-2)

  • Elly De La Cruz's 135 adjusted OPS 16% higher than previous career best.

10. Cleveland Guardians (+1)

  • A Patrick Bailey-Austin Hedges catching duo won't make anyone forget Johnny Bench.

11. Toronto Blue Jays (+1)

  • Addison Barger finally returns and now he needs an elbow MRI.

12. Athletics (+3)

  • Can Shea Langeliers bring a batting title back to Yolo County?

13. St. Louis Cardinals (+3)

  • Jordan Walker up to 11 home runs.

14. Arizona Diamondbacks (-1)

  • Eduardo Rodriguez averaging six innings per start, which he hasn't done since 2019.

15. Detroit Tigers (-6)

  • Not exactly a "Win one for the Gipper" response after Tarik Skubal's injury.

16. Philadelphia Phillies (+3)

  • Kyle Schwarber homers in four straight games for second time in his career.

17. Texas Rangers (-3)

  • Jacob de Grom is 5-0 with a 1.22 ERA when pitching decisive game of series for Rangers.

18. Seattle Mariners (-1)

  • Getting ugly: Cal Raleigh in an 0-for-32 hole, average down to .161.

19. Miami Marlins (-1)

  • "We're trying to win. We're trying to win this year," GM Peter Bendix says after flurry of roster moves.

20. Baltimore Orioles (-)

  • After getting outclassed in four-game sweep in Bronx, they get another shot at Yankees.

21. Kansas City Royals (+2)

  • Cole Ragans heads to IL with left elbow impingement.

22. Washington Nationals (-1)

  • Nasim Nuñez leads majors with 17 steals.

23. Chicago White Sox (+3)

  • Davis Martin, All-Star Game starting pitcher? Stranger things have happened.

24. New York Mets (-2)

  • Well, looks like Clay Holmes could fetch a nice haul at trade deadline, at least.

25. Minnesota Twins (-1)

  • Series win at Cleveland their first since April 15.

26. Houston Astros (-1)

  • After injury reset, Tatsuya Imai will start Tuesday.

27. Boston Red Sox (-)

  • Only Texas has scored fewer runs in AL.

28. San Francisco Giants (-)

  • Pragmatic or desperate? Dumping Gold Glove catcher Andrew Bailey is definitely something.

29. Los Angeles Angels (-)

  • Alek Manoah experience will begin with a "bulk guy" appearance.

30. Colorado Rockies (-)

  • Ethan Holliday with a three-homer week in A ball.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB power rankings: Braves overtake Dodgers for top spot

Yankees news: Camilo Doval struggling in late-inning role

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 04: Camilo Doval #75 of the New York Yankees pitches during the game against the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium on May 4, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

NY Daily News | Gary Phillips: Camilo Doval was trusted with the eighth inning of the Yankees’ Saturday extra inning loss to Milwaukee, and Doval played his part in getting the game to extras by allowing Bryce Turang to get aboard, steal second, and score on a William Contreras hit. Doval has managed to cut back on issuing walks, his previous Achilles heel, and yet he’s allowed 10 runs in his last 12.1 innings of work largely due to the 15 hits he’s allowed over that span, three of which were long balls. The former Giants closer doesn’t look like he can be trusted with high leverage outings at this point, leaving a gap in the team’s bullpen hierarchy that needs to be filled sooner rather than later.

NY Post | Greg Joyce: Spencer Jones recorded the first hit of his MLB career on Sunday, lining a single up the middle to drive in a run in the second inning. It was an extra special moment for Jones, playing on Mother’s Day with his mom and family members in attendance sitting just next to the Yankee dugout. Jones got a trial by fire in his first series of play, going 1-for-9 with five strikeouts and a walk against Milwaukee’s pitching staff, but Jones thinks he’s gotten to settle in having faced the challenge head on.

ESPN | Bradford Doolittle: You might’ve taken a look at the AL standings at large lately and become perplexed at how bunched up most of the field is. Outside of New York and Tampa Bay, everyone else is either under .500 or skirting around it. While the standard deviation between the teams in the league is currently 14.4 wins, it’s projected to dive back down towards a final number of 8.8, by far the lowest amount since the turn of the decade and a sharp nosedive from the drastic disparity that 2019 displayed with three 100 win teams and three 100 loss teams in the league. Whether this can hold up or not remains to be seen, but the huge clump that has formed at the start of the year should give us a race where most teams are in the running for a long time.

MLB.com: There are flaws to be spotted on each and every team after more than a month of play, and the Yankees have their fair share of them. One of the areas they can reasonably improve on is their leadoff production, and their biggest culprit can lead the charge to fixing the problem. Trent Grisham’s gotten the lion’s share of starts atop the lineup but struggled out of the gate. Grisham’s peripherals have looked amazing, however, and he’s starting to see more of the hits that he’s deserved based off of how hard he’s been ripping the ball setting the table quite nicely for the Yankees’ sluggers behind him.

Yankees’ Spencer Jones caps off tough opening weekend with first big-league knock

Spencer Jones was thrown right into the fire in his Yankees debut. 

The 24-year-old slugger had to face a tough Milwaukee staff headlined by ace right-hander Jacob Misiorowski over his first three games at the big-league level. 

Jones looked a bit overmatched, striking out four times in his six at-bats Friday and Saturday, but he finally delivered the elusive first knock and RBI early on Sunday. 

After Jose Caballero opened the top of the second with a double, he ripped the first pitch he saw from Brewers right-hander Logan Henderson right back up the middle for a single.

The liner left the bat at a whopping 106.4 mph. 

Jones celebrated at first base then pointed towards his teammates and fired-up family, sitting in the front row behind the Yankees’ dugout. 

“It was super exciting,” Jones said. “I’m glad that my family was here to share that with me, my teammates were rooting me on, I got a lot of congratulations, and I was excited to be able to get a run across for the guys -- just a special moment.”

He finished the day hitless across his other three at-bats. 

Despite reached base just two times in his first weekend up with the club, Aaron Boone actually liked what he saw from the free-swinger at the plate. 

“He had a lot of good at-bats,” the skipper said. “Was able to get the first one today which everyone was excited about, got some decent swings off, was recognizing the zone well, wasn’t chasing, but also ran into some tough matchups.”

Despite those tough matchups, the youngster feels he’s adjusting well. 

“Trial by fire is the best way to do it,” Jones said. “Getting exposed to a lot of really good arms is the best way to get your feet wet -- as the days have gone I’ve settled in more, I’m starting to feel comfortable and do what I do, and moving forward I’ll be in a good spot.”

Spencer Jones’ first career hit was ‘pretty special’ Yankees Mother’s Day moment

New York Yankees right fielder Spencer Jones (78) hits a single.
Spencer Jones singles during the Yankees' May 10 loss to the Brewers.

MILWAUKEE — Spencer Jones’ first series as a big leaguer is in the books, but not before collecting his first career hit.

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The Yankees top prospect got that out of the way Sunday, in the third game of his major league career, smoking an RBI single to center field off Brewers righty Logan Henderson in the second inning of a 4-3 loss at American Family Field.

Henderson threw a first-pitch slider and Jones pounced on it, drilling it 106.4 mph off the bat to score José Caballero from second for the 2-0 lead.

The milestone hit came on Mother’s Day, with Jones’ mom and family sitting next to the Yankees dugout, as they did all weekend, including his MLB debut Friday night.

“It was super exciting,” said Jones, who had the ball in a case sitting in his locker after the game. “I’m glad my family was here to share that with me. Teammates rooting me on, a lot of congratulations. I was excited to get a run across too for the guys. It was a pretty special moment.”

Spencer Jones singles during the Yankees’ May 10 loss to the Brewers. Imagn Images

Jones’ new teammates were equally excited.

“Ecstatic,” said Aaron Judge, who was impressed by how “composed” Jones was throughout the series. “Everybody was kind of waiting for it. Just happy his family could be here for him.”

Jones finished the game 1-for-4 with a strikeout and the series 1-for-9 with five strikeouts and a walk, getting a stiff test from a challenging Brewers pitching staff that shut down most of the Yankees all weekend.

“As the days have gone, I’ve settled in more and starting to feel more comfortable, doing what I can do,” Jones said. “I think moving forward, going to be in a good spot.”



The 24-year-old (who turns 25 on Thursday) started in right field Sunday, with Judge getting a DH day, after starting in center Saturday and DH on Friday.

Spencer Jones singles for his first MLB hit during the Yankees’ May 10 game. USA TODAY Network via Imagn Images

“I thought he had some good at-bats,” manager Aaron Boone said. “I thought got some decent swings off, was recognizing the zone. I don’t think he was chasing a lot, but also ran into some tough matchups there for him, too.”


Cam Schlittler was still “pretty sore” Sunday morning, Boone said, the day after taking a 108.5 mph comebacker off his left calf in the first inning of his six-inning gem.

The right-hander, who had a sizable welt and the imprint of the ball on his calf Saturday night, was expected to be getting treatment on it in the coming days ahead of his next scheduled start Friday against the Mets.

“I hope not, but I don’t know,” Boone said when asked if it could be an issue for his next start. “I’m sure he’ll be working overtime with the trainers and just trying to get that flushed out this week.”


Gerrit Cole made his fifth rehab start Sunday with Double-A Somerset, building up to 77 pitches across five innings while striking out eight, walking one and giving up two earned runs.

He is expected to need at least one or two more rehab starts before he could rejoin the Yankees.


To make room for Carlos Rodón on the active roster, the Yankees optioned reliever Kervin Castro back to Triple-A.

Orioles pitcher delivers ‘most creative’ gender reveal during broadcast in sweet Mother’s Day moment

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Baltimore Orioles pitcher Anthony Nunez (66) throws a pitch, Image 2 shows A man in a Baltimore Orioles baseball uniform with a pink ribbon pin

It was the best Mother’s Day gift that Orioles pitcher Anthony Nunez could have given his sister-in-law on Sunday. 

Nunez appeared to randomly mouth the words “it’s a boy” when he came off the mound after the top of the eighth inning.

However, it wasn’t random at all, and as MASN broadcaster Kevin Brown explained during the broadcast, there was a reason why he did it. 

“Anthony is mouthing ‘it’s a boy’ for some family members,” Brown explained on air. “His brother and sister-in-law, Danny and Makayla Delgado, are expecting child No. 3. And that, folks, is one of the most creative gender reveals you’ll ever see. Anthony had the answer. Danny and Makayla did not know, and I hope that you two are watching.”

The special moment came during Sunday’s Mother’s Day win for the Orioles, who defeated the Athletics 2-1 at Camden Yards to avoid getting swept by the A’s in their three-game set in Baltimore. 

Danny and Makayla Delgado are expecting their third child, and the couple only revealed the fact that they were about to welcome another member to the family on Sunday, Nunez told reporters after the game. 

“They were all together for Mother’s Day. My brother wanted to surprise everybody,” Nunez said, according to the Baltimore Sun. “He just announced to them today that they were having their third kid, and he wanted to do the gender reveal.” 

Nunez was able to get out of the top of the eighth unscathed and with the Orioles’ one-run lead intact after walking two batters during the inning. 

Anthony Nunez throws a pitch during the Orioles’ May 10 game. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

He managed to get a flyout to right field to end the inning, and after he revealed the gender of his brother’s next kid. 

“To be able to get three outs without giving up a run for her is awesome. Happy Mother’s Day for that, too,” Nunez said.

Carlos Rodon battles, but walks the ‘bugaboo’ in return to Yankees' rotation

Carlos Rodon spent most of last season pitching with a bone spur in his left elbow. 

After a lengthy recovery following offseason surgery, the left-hander was eager to make his way back into the Yankees’ rotation fully healthy once again. 

That chance finally came on Sunday afternoon in Milwaukee

Rodon showed some positives signs, but was ultimately hurt by struggles with command, as he allowed three runs on two hits and five walks over 4.1 innings of work. 

He issued a free pass to the leadoff man in all but two of those innings. 

“That was the bugaboo,” Aaron Boone said. “Overall his stuff was good -- fastball ticked up being here, I thought he had a really good changeup and some solid sliders to get swing-and-misses, but the three leadoff walks hurt.”

Rodon was able to dance his way around it in both the first and second innings, but Milwaukee finally made him pay in the bottom of the fourth. 

After two walks and a hit-by-pitch loaded the bases, the Brewers got on the board with a sacrifice fly then took the lead with their first hit of the day, a two-out two-run single. 

“He just lost the zone there,” Boone said. “It’s a really good job getting out of the first two innings, walking the leadoff batter usually isn’t a recipe for success -- a couple more they come back to haunt him a bit.”

The skipper pointed towards rust as a potential source of some of the left-hander's struggles finding the zone, but Rodon didn't have any sort of explanation himself. 

Rodon was trying to adjust on the fly over the course of the outing, but simply could not get himself into a groove. 

He'll look to turn thing around in his next outing, opening this year's Subway Series. 

“It’s frustrating,” Rodon said. “Obviously I need to be better in that aspect of just attacking the zone and getting ahead in the count quick, just some stuff to work on for the next time out.”

Mets’ Sean Manaea tosses scoreless inning, sees positive sign as he works to fix glaring struggles

New York Mets relief pitcher Sean Manaea (59) delivers a pitch.
May 6, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; New York Mets relief pitcher Sean Manaea (59) delivers a pitch in the ninth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit:...

PHOENIX — On a day of few positives for the Mets, a displaced starting pitcher finally took a step forward.

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Sean Manaea pitched a scoreless eighth inning with two strikeouts in the Mets’ 5-1 loss to the Diamondbacks at Chase Field.

The result was the lefty’s best in several weeks, but the most encouraging sign might have been his velocity.

Manaea, whose fastball has lagged all season, averaged 91.3 mph with his four-seamer.

He was averaging 89.7 mph with that pitch when the day began.

In his relief appearance in Colorado on Wednesday he recorded only one out in the ninth, allowing three hits and plunking a batter.

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

That letdown forced manager Carlos Mendoza to use Devin Williams for the final two outs with the bases loaded and the Mets ahead by five runs.

“[Manaea] has been working really hard, you have to give him credit,” Mendoza said. “This is a guy that is not going to put his head down and it’s good to see the fastball, the life and for him to get those three outs hopefully it gets him going.”


Jorge Polanco’s right wrist contusion, for which he was originally placed on the injured list, is “in a good place,” according to Mendoza.

But the first baseman remains on the injured list because of a recurrence of the left Achilles bursitis that limited his mobility earlier in the season.

“There’s some good days and other days when it’s not so good,” Mendoza said.


Luis Robert Jr. is receiving treatment, but has not resumed baseball activity.

Robert has been on the IL since April 27 with lumbar spine disc herniation.




Kodai Senga threw from a bullpen mound for the first time in his rehab from lumbar spine inflammation.

The right-hander has spent the last two weeks on the injured list.


A.J. Minter, whose rehab was terminated on Wednesday because of left hip discomfort, threw a bullpen session on Saturday, according to Mendoza.

The lefty reliever will throw at least two additional bullpens before he’s considered for minor league rehab games.


Joey Gerber was removed from the injured list and optioned to Triple-A Syracuse.

Eric Wagaman was outrighted to Syracuse after clearing waivers.

Royals drop finale 6-3 to Detroit

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MAY 10: Maikel Garcia #11 of the Kansas City Royals slides into second base against Zack Short #15 of the Detroit Tigers during the first inning at Kauffman Stadium on May 10, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jay Biggerstaff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Well, you felt good about a sweep going in. All you had to do was best the Tigers bullpen, and after overcoming a 3-0 deficit to tie it after 4 innings, the Royals looked primed to sweep their divisional foe.

However, Gage Workman, who literally got recalled this afternoon from AAA hit his first career MLB homer off Nick Mears, it was worth two runs, and the Royals dropped the series finale 6-3.

It was another lackluster start for Noah Cameron. He went just 4 innings allowing 5 hits, 3 runs, walking 3 and striking out 4 batters. It took him 95 pitches to get just 12 outs.

John Schreiber threw a scoreless 5th. It’s still scary every time he takes the hill, but he has looked better after a very tough beginning of the season. Mears gave up a leadoff single ahead of the two-run homer.

Daniel Lynch IV finally looked human, struggling in his 2/3 of an inning. He allowed a run on two hits and a walk. Alex Lange pitched a scoreless inning, and two thirds and Steven Cruz threw a scoreless 9th inning for the second consecutive night.

Offensively, it looked like the April Royals. They were 3-11 with runners in scoring position and squandered an opportunity right out of the gate. After back-to-back singles in the bottom of the first, Vinnie Pasquantino weakly flew out to left, Isaac Collins fouled out to third and Carter Jensen fouled out to the catcher. Scoring right of the gate would’ve been the gut punch to the Tigers bullpen game plan and put a lot of pressure on the visitors, but the missed opportunity swung the momentum.

The Royals got a pair of runs back in the third after Garcia doubled and Witt singled. Vinnie came through this time with an RBI single and Jensen just missed a three-run homer with a sac fly to deep right field.

Garcia bailed out Elias Diaz and Kyle Isbel in the bottom of the 4th after Jac Caglianone led off the inning with a double, Garcia smacked a 2-out single to center to tie it at 3. Garcia was 3-3 after the first four innings of the game.

The Royals threatened in the 7th and 8th but hit into double plays that ended the threat. They went down 1-2-3 in the 9th.

The Royals finish the homestand 4-3. On the season, they are 3-4 against Cleveland, who they don’t play again until August and 2-4 against Detroit, who they don’t play again until July. A couple of key head-to-head tiebreakers as the season progresses.

The Royals are 19-22 on the season, just like the Tigers, and a game and a half back of the 21-21 Guardians for the division. The Royals are off tomorrow after 13 straight days of baseball. They have a three-game series against the White Sox in Chicago, and then next weekend are in St. Louis to take on the Cardinals. It’s a big trip and week for the Royals who are still trying to climb out of the hole they dug for themselves.

First pitch on Tuesday is at 6:40 p.m. CT, the game can be watched on Royals.TV. Stephen Kolek is expected to start.

Mets prospects A.J. Ewing, Ryan Clifford enjoy big days at the plate with Syracuse

The Syracuse Mets suffered their third straight loss to the Rochester Red Wings on Sunday afternoon, but some of the organizations top young talents enjoyed another big day.

Both A.J. Ewing and Ryan Clifford accounted for a bulk of the team’s offense. 

Ewing continued his strong start at the new level, picking up two more hits and driving in a run across four at-bats. 

One of those knocks was a double and he also stole a base.

The 22-year-old surging prospect is now hitting .333 with four extra base-hits, four RBI, five stolen bases, and a .844 OPS in 13 games since joining Syracuse. 

Clifford reached three times with a walk and a pair of extra base-hits. 

He helped Syracuse even things up with a 400 foot solo homer to deep right in the fourth, then ripped a triple down the right-field line before scoring on Christian Arroyo’s sacrifice fly in the sixth. 

The slugger is now hitting .252 with a triple, six doubles, seven home runs, 21 RBI, and an even .800 OPS after a bit of a slow start to the season. 

Not much went right for Syracuse on the pitching side of things, but Dylan Ross did strike out two as he worked around a pair of walks in a scoreless inning of work.

He was able to reach up to 99 mph on his fastball. 

27-year-old starter Xavien Curry and veteran lefty reliever Cionel Pérez made their first appearances with the organization after signing on minor league deals last week. 

Mets’ David Peterson ‘getting back to who I am’ with promising relief outing

New York Mets pitcher David Peterson mid-pitch.
David Peterson throws a pitch during his May 4 outing against the Rockies.

PHOENIX — David Peterson received no love from his defense, particularly third baseman Andy Ibáñez, but he did his part to give the Mets an opportunity to win Sunday.

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The lefty, who has been placed in the bullpen to work as a bulk reliever, pitched five innings without allowing an earned run in the team’s 5-1 loss to the Diamondbacks.

All three runs that scored with Peterson on the mound followed Ibáñez’s second throwing error of the day, in the sixth inning.

“I think it’s just getting back to who I am as a pitcher, getting the sinker down, and using the four-seamer,” said Peterson, who owns a 5.49 ERA. “I feel like I have had better feel the last couple of outings with the changeup and the sliders continue to be good.”

David Peterson throws a pitch during his May 4 outing against the Rockies. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Peterson surrendered two earned runs over four innings in relief on Monday in Colorado, both scoring after Carson Benge tripped chasing a fly ball in the outfield.

Peterson has been less successful as a starter.

In each of his last four appearances as a starter Peterson has surrendered at least four earned runs.

That included a seven-run meltdown over 3 ²/₃ innings against the Nationals in his last start, on April 29.

“I thought he was really good today,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “He got ground balls, made pitches, we didn’t make a couple of plays and it ended up costing us runs. But overall, I thought he threw the ball very well.”

David Peterson commits a throwing error during his May 10 appearance. AP

Mendoza utilized Huascar Brazobán as the opener, sticking with him into the second inning and got burned when the right-hander walked two batters to begin the frame.

Tobias Myers got two outs before Ryan Waldschmidt delivered a two-run double for the game’s first scoring.

“Overall, [Brazobán] had a hard time throwing strikes today,” Mendoza said.

Mendoza said he didn’t consider using Myers to start the second inning because of the right-hander’s recent workload.

“Toby was short today,” Mendoza said. “We knew we were going to try to get through the first time through the lineup with the two of them, it just didn’t work.”

Mets close road trip 5-4 after another poor offensive showing: 'We're better than that'

Things were looking a bit better for the struggling Mets

Despite falling to the Rockies on a late-inning grand slam on Thursday afternoon, they showed some positives and took the first two series of their nine-game road trip. 

This weekend in Arizona, though, all of that was quickly erased. 

The Mets were able to salvage the series opener on Friday night thanks to Mark Vientos and some late-inning heroics, but otherwise the shorthanded offense wasted more strong pitching. 

Clay Holmes followed that by put together 5.2 innings of two-run ball on Saturday, only to be handed his second loss of the season as the bats managed just a run on three hits.

Despite facing struggling right-hander Merrill Kelly, who came into the night with a 9.95 ERA on the season, they didn’t record a baserunner after the top of the fifth. 

That stretch would carry into the fourth inning on Sunday afternoon, as 22 consecutive Mets were set down in order before Juan Soto drew a leadoff walk, which tied their season-high drought. 

While the perfect game was broken up, Arizona southpaw Eduardo Rodriguez kept his no-hit bid intact until Carson Benge laced a single with one out in the top of the sixth. 

Luis Torrens followed that with a double to breakup the shutout as well, but the D-backs answered back with three unearned runs in the bottom-half to put this one away for good. 

Rodriguez finished just two outs shy of his first career complete game, allowing just three walks and four hits. 

“He was hitting his spots,” Soto said. “He was throwing the ball well, he was being careful with the big guys and being aggressive with guys he thought he could be aggressive to.”

That's been the case of late for the extremely shorthanded Mets, as both Soto and Bo Bichette haven't nearly look like themselves with a lack of big threats behind them. 

Soto has just three hits in 33 at-bats this month, Bichette has seven in 36. 

New York dropped three of the final four games of the nine-game road trip, scoring just seven times over that span, after starting with four wins over the first six games. 

"We’re better than that,” Carlos Mendoza said. “Especially the past couple of days, we needed to be better.”