Shohei Ohtani was named the NL All-Star team starter at DH, while Freddie Freeman advanced to Phase 2 of the voting. (Stephen Maturen / Getty Images)
Shohei Ohtani was the first Dodger to be named a 2026 All-Star, after leading the majors in Phase 1 voting for the All-Star game on July 14 in Philadelphia. Six other Dodgers were finalists through the fan ballot, giving them a chance to claim starting spots in Phase 2 of voting.
Ohtani locked down the starting DH spot for the National League squad, with 3,341,257 votes. The top vote-getters in each league bypass Phase 2. Second baseman Ernie Clement of the Toronto Blue Jays was the top vote-getter in the American League, with 3,232,932 votes.
Ohtani was the expected choice, despite a slow offensive start. His red-hot June boosted him up the leaderboards. He entered Thursday with the second-highest OPS in the National League (.963), barely trailing Mets outfielder Juan Soto (.965).
Pitchers aren’t chosen through the fan vote — hurlers and reserves have to wait for the player ballot (which includes votes from players, coaches and managers) and commissioners picks. But Ohtani has been just as impressive on the mound this year.
He has a 1.58 ERA, the fourth-best mark among NL pitchers who have thrown at least 50 innings this season.
Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman (2,666,008 votes), third baseman Max Muncy (2,890,181) and outfielder Andy Pages (2,158,664) also led their respective NL position groups in voting. Other Dodgers finalists, who advance to voting Phase 2, include catcher Will Smith (1,871,805), shortstop Mookie Betts (1,762,343 ) and outfielder Teoscar Hernandez (1,569,932).
The vote totals reset for Phase 2, which runs from next Monday through Thursday. The remainder of the All-Star starters are set to be announced on July 4 on Fox Sports.
Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts replaced Don Mattingly in 2015. Just over a decade later, Roberts has invited his predecessor to serve as an honorary coach in the 2026 All-Star Game.
Major League Baseball released a statement announcing the coaches and staff for the Midsummer Classic in Philadelphia.
“National League manager Dave Roberts of the defending World Series Champion Los Angeles Dodgers has invited manager Oliver Marmol of the St. Louis Cardinals and interim manager Don Mattingly of the host Philadelphia Phillies to serve as honorary coaches alongside the Dodgers’ coaching staff for the NL,” the statement read.
Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts replaced Don Mattingly in 2015. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters ConnectJust over a decade later, Roberts has invited his predecessor to serve as an honorary coach in the 2026 All-Star Game. Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images
Mattingly is currently the interim manager for the Philadelphia Phillies, but he landed his first managerial role in Los Angeles.
Mattingly served as the Dodgers manager from 2011-2015 and the beginning of his tenure with LA marked a difficult time for the organization. The 2011 Dodgers season saw owner Frank McCourt’s bitter divorce battler hamper the team financially, but Mattingly led the team to a winning season alongside MVP candidate Matt Kemp and Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw.
Mattingly was the first manager in franchise history to lead the team to three consecutive playoff appearance. He was replaced by Roberts in 2015.
Roberts is in the midst of his 11th season as Dodgers manager as the back-to-back champions look to win their third straight World Series title. Roberts has won 3 World Series titles with the Dodgers and has led the team to five National League pennants.
Roberts will have a familiar face in his lineup for the All-Star Game as Shohei Ohtani was named the National League’s designated hitter. Several other Dodgers could appear in the game, including outfielder Andy Pages, catcher Will Smith, third baseman Max Muncy among others.
BOSTON — It was only one at-bat halfway through a long season.
But it won the Yankees the game and spoke loudly about Jasson Domínguez’s ability to rebound from some hiccups and impact the club the rest of the way, especially as it tries to withstand a barrage of injuries.
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The 23-year-old outfielder had looked overmatched while striking out in his first two at-bats with Tigers ace Tarik Skubal on Wednesday night, and then fell behind 0-2 in the third at-bat with the game tied in the sixth inning. That is when Domínguez went to work. He fouled off three pitches while taking three balls out of the zone to work the count full, then on the ninth pitch got a change-up down the middle and crushed it into the left field seats for a two-run shot, the switch-hitter’s first home run of the year from the right side.
“The first two at-bats, I couldn’t figure out,” Domínguez said. “[Skubal] is one of the best. His changeup, his fastball, they’re great. By the third at-bat, I had a better clue about it.
“I think it’s just mental and trying to stay in the game. He got me the first two, but there’s still more game to play, there’s still more at-bats coming. Just keep my mind right and try to help the team, trying to battle.”
Domínguez, who went 1-for-4 with an RBI in Thursday’s 6-3 loss to the Red Sox, has already impressed the Yankees with how he handled his demotion to Triple-A to begin the year, with no spot for him on the roster until injuries opened the door for him to come back up.
Jasson Dominguez of the New York Yankees hits a two-run home run against the Detroit Tigers during the sixth inning at Comerica Park on June 24, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. Getty Images
But the battle with Skubal was another example of why they continue to believe there is more in there than he has shown to date as a big leaguer.
“He’s a talented hitter,” manager Aaron Boone said. “It’s good to see a young player like that going up against a really tough matchup and it’s just why you got to keep at it. You’re going to get had sometimes by a good pitcher in certain at-bats. It didn’t hold him down and obviously that swing was the difference.”
The fact that it came from the right side made it even more notable.
Hitting righty was one of Domínguez’s biggest weaknesses last year, as he hit just .204 with a .569 OPS and one home run in 104 plate appearances, compared to .274 with a .768 OPS and nine home runs in 325 plate appearances as a left-handed hitter.
But he has simplified his approach from the right side this year and it has made a difference so far, entering Thursday batting .321 with a .893 OPS and one home run in 29 plate appearances from that side, compared to .167 with a .579 OPS and two home runs in 45 plate appearances from the left side.
“In the past, I used to have a big leg kick and all that,” Domínguez said. “Right now I’m just trying to be more simple and take good at-bats.”
New York Yankees’ Jasson Domínguez celebrates his two-run home run against the Detroit Tigers. AP Photo/Paul Sancya
Boone has maintained that Dominguez hitting better right-handed came down to experience, after he has missed large chunks of time to injury in his career. But he is getting a steady dose of it now, especially at a time when Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton and Trent Grisham are all on the injured list and playing time is up for grabs.
That said, there is clearly still room for improvement from Domínguez, particularly on defense. He started a ninth straight game in right field Thursday night, and the new position remains a work in progress, as evidenced by a fielding error there Wednesday. But the Yankees continue to believe he has the mental and physical skills to make it work.
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“Hopefully with more and more experience,” Boone said, “he continues to get better and better and becomes the player out there we think he can be.”
TORONTO, CANADA - JUNE 24: Ernie Clement #22 of the Toronto Blue Jays takes an at bat against the Houston Astros during the eighth inning in their MLB game at the Rogers Centre on June 24, 2026 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images) | Getty Images
A lengthy list of Virginia baseball alumni have been thriving in professional baseball this year, and national champion Ernie Clement sits at the very top. Following a breakout 2025 playoff run in which his record-setting 30 hits propelled the Toronto Blue Jays to game seven of the World Series, Clement has picked it right back up in the first half of 2026. As the American League leader in votes as of June 25, Clement has automatically qualified to start in the All-Star Game in Philadelphia.
Ernie Clement (AL) and Shohei Ohtani (NL) received the most votes through Phase 1 of All-Star Game voting! 🤩
As we stand, Clement is in line for career-best marks in batting average (.292) and slugging percentage (.437), and he is well under way towards his third consecutive 3+ WAR season, per Baseball Reference. That same contact-oriented approach under which he went down on strikes just 31 times in 745 UVA at bats has sustained in the big leagues, where his 10.4% strikeout rate ranks in the top three percent of MLB.
Clement’s defensive versatility has also carried over, as he has seen time in all four infield spots and even the corner outfield over the course of his six year career in Cleveland and Toronto. However, Clement has more recently settled into the every day second baseman spot, where he has spent over 75% of his innings in 2026.
In addition to his statistical output, Clement’s all-star nod comes thanks to an outpour of local support. His blue collar work-ethic and scrappy on-field play turned him into a fan favorite, even before his legendary postseason. It also helps that Clement grew up in Rochester, New York, a mere 175 miles from Toronto.
Virginia has now secured MLB All-Stars in two consecutive seasons, with Clement following Andrew Abbott, who qualified for his first Midsummer Classic in 2025. Other recent UVA alumni to earn this accolade include Chris Taylor (2021), Sean Doolittle (2014 and 2018), and Ryan Zimmerman (2009 and 2017).
Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani signed a 10-year, $700 million deal, but most of the money is deferred. Getty Images
As part of a sweeping set of suggested changes that would put term and salary limits on individual player contracts, MLB’s proposal included de facto “max contracts” for players — similar to the system that is currently in place in the NBA — of five years and $202 million for free agents changing teams, and six years and $265 million for free agents re-signing with their previous team.
As a tradeoff, the league offered to raise minimum player salaries, provide players earlier access to free agency and eliminate qualifying offers that can drag down the markets of top free agents.
The biggest issue baseball fans want solved to strengthen the game is fixing the payroll disparity that leaves too many fans without hope of their team competing for a World Series title. Every other major U.S. sport has tackled this problem, and every year more small market… pic.twitter.com/kbt2vTIGMS
It marks the latest flashpoint in what have been increasingly contentious negotiations over a new CBA, with the proposal having already been rebuked later Thursday afternoon by the players’ union.
It also marks yet another way the league is trying to eliminate some of the methods the Dodgers have used to build their current dynasty, going after the kind of long-term and heavily deferred deals that have helped them navigate record-setting payrolls the last couple seasons.
Currently, the Dodgers have six players on deals that would surpass the league’s new proposed contract maximums: Shohei Ohtani (10 years, $700 million), Mookie Betts (12 years, $365 million), Yoshinobu Yamamoto (12 years, $325 million), Will Smith (10 years, $140 million), Kyle Tucker (four years, $240 million) and Freddie Freeman (six years, $162 million).
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They also have nine players whose deals include at least some deferred money: Ohtani (who is the most extreme example, having deferred $680 million of his record-breaking salary), Betts, Smith, Freeman, Blake Snell, Teoscar Hernández, Tanner Scott, Tommy Edman and Edwin Díaz.
For the Dodgers, stretching out contracts and deferring money has preserved the team’s short-term financial flexibility, helping them maintain options each winter as they have constructed star-studded rosters over the last several years.
For their players, such deals provide long-term security and, in some cases, tax benefits and negotiation leverage.
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred is the lead negotiator and chief representative for the 30 team owners in CBA discussions. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
That’s why, as the strategy has come under scrutiny in recent years, both team executives and superstars in the clubhouse have defended it.
“There are times where [negotiating a] deal lines up in a more straightforward way. There’s times where it’s less straightforward,” president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said at Snell’s introductory news conference last winter. “Including deferrals helps as a lever to find that overlap.”
The critique of the approach, of course, is that without regulations on contract structures, the Dodgers have been able to double down on their economic advantages.
Ohtani’s deal, in particular, has proven to be transformational. While his presence has helped boost the club’s revenues by hundreds of millions per year, he is only earning $2 million per season (the other $68 million of his annual salary will be paid out a decade into the future, after the 10 seasons it covers have concluded).
Granted, Ohtani still accounts for more than $46 million annually in luxury tax calculations — a total that is based on the present-day value of his deal.
Still, it has become the calling card for factions of fans hopeful MLB will adopt a salary cap and even out financial disparities within the sport.
On Thursday, the league’s latest proposal took that exact aim.
There was a lot to like about the first six innings of Thursday’s Highway 80 Series finale for the San Francisco Giants. Then, the Giants’ terrible, horrible, no good, very bad bullpen got involved and an empowering sweep turned into an embarrassing 9-6 loss to the Sacramento A’s.
Victor Bericoto showed off his arm and his bat once again, Willy Adames went deep, and Jung Hoo Lee battled a tough lefty reliever for a three-run triple, but it was all for naught when the team’s public relations/on-field disaster of a bullpen took over.
Caleb Killian (2-4) took the loss after giving up four runs in the 9th inning, but it was a team effort to blow this game. For a group of pitchers who seem extremely homophobic, they apparently have no problem with a group of men getting together to suck, as long as it’s on a baseball field.
Rainbow Warrior Ryan Walker got the implosion going in the 7th inning, relieving Cap Buddy Landen Roupp after the Giants starter gave up two runs and struck out six in his six-inning stint. Walker gave up two singles, who both scored when Shea Langeliers hit a two-out RBI single off Erik Miller.
Dylan Smith pitched the 8th and yielded an RBI single to second baseman Jeff McNeil, who went 3-for-4 with two runs, an RBI, and a hit-by-pitch Wednesday, avenging Zach Gelof’s spiked hand from Tuesday’s game. Then, in the 9th, an ABS challenge turned a 3-2 count on Tyler Soderstrom to a walk, putting two runners on with two outs and creating an IBS challenge for the fans. Still, all he needed was one more out! That’s not so much to ask.
(Narrator: It was too much to ask.)
Jonah Heim tied the game, singling on a fastball straight down the middle. Lawrence Butler singled in the go-ahead run on a knuckle curve straight down the middle. After Butler stole second, Max “We’re Starting To Resent Him As Much As The Other One” Muncy knocked in two more runs on a fastball just slightly off the middle of the plate. That was it for Killian, the rally, and the game, though Muncy rubbed salt in the wound by stealing second, the third Athletics baserunner to take second in the inning off a shell-shocked Eric Haase.
It’s kind of amazing that answering baseball questions about this horrendous bullpen is actually considered the easier option for Giants personnel, but that’s where we are in 2026.
Rainbow integrity aficionado Roupp started off strong, escaping a two-on, one-out situation in the 3rd by striking out Nick Kurtz (say his name slowly) and Langeliers. In the 4th, Bericoto threw out a runner at second and in the 6th, Roupp bailed himself out with a nifty behind-the-back grab and double play.
The rookie outfielder nearly had another assist in the 5th on Alika Williams’ double, but Willy Adames’ relay throw pulled Daniel Susac and his sore back up the line, and McNeil scored. The A’s got their second run two batters later when Kurtz just barely beat out a double play.
Casey Schmitt crushed one off the dinger-prone Jeffrey Springs (5.1 IP, 3R, 3H, 6K) in the 5th inning, but like mail-in votes in a Los Angeles mayoral election, it swung left at the last moment and went foul. Willy Adames had no such issue when Springs left a high fastball over the plate two batters later. He made like Bill Clinton in 1992 and crushed it just left of center field for the first runs of the game. Just call him “Slick Willy.”
The Victor Bericoto Show continued Wednesday, where the Giants left fielder once again showed off his arm and his bat. Last night, he threw out Jacob Wilson at home and hit a 445-foot walkoff home run. Wednesday, he gunned down a stunned Tyler Soderstrom at second base, on a play that looked like a clear double off the bat.
In the 6th inning, he capped off the Giants’ five-run inning by hitting another 445-foot homer, this time a two-run bomb. If you’re wondering, both dingers would have been home runs in 30/30 major league ballparks.
Victor Bericoto crushed a 445-foot walk-off homer yesterday …
Bericoto is doing this in the aftermath of two devastating earthquakes that hit his native Venezuela Tuesday. Along with Jose Butto and Luiz Arraez, Bericoto is wearing a “VZ” patch on his cap, while awaiting news of his friends and relatives. If you want to help the relief efforts, a good place to donate is Global Empowerment Mission.
There’s also no truth to the rumor that the Red Cross has declared the Giants bullpen a disaster area, so do not donate to any GoFundMe’s that JT Brubaker emails you about.
Finally, we should show Lee’s commendable bases-loaded hit in the 6th inning, which followed a highly disrespectful four-pitch walk to Willy Adames, the definition of the intentional-unintentional free pass. He fought off two nasty 0-2 pitches to stay alive, then got a gift when Butler tried for an impossible diving catch of Lee’s liner and turned it into a triple.
Why are the Athletics’ hats always falling off? Kurtz loses his helmet every time he comes to the plate, and all he’s doing is swinging the bat. Clearly Drew Gilbert will be studying game tape to figure out how he can make his own cap fall off even more often.
The two-game win streak is over. The Atlanta Braves are coming to town Friday, carrying a four-game losing streak and Joey Bart, both terrible omens for the fortunes of the orange and black. And the A’s are going to receive a strongly-worded letter from Senator Josh Hawley about their unfair treatment of the Giants bullpen.
Jun 25, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; A general view of Busch Stadium during a weather delay before a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Arizona Diamondbacks. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images
The St. Louis Cardinals game vs the Arizona Diamondbacks game Thursday night has been postponed because of weather and will be made up on July 23.
ATLANTA, GA - JULY 15: Matt Olson #28 of the Atlanta Braves waves to fans during introductions prior to the 95th MLB All-Star Game presented by Mastercard at Truist Park on Tuesday, July 15, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Five Atlanta Braves positions players have advanced to the second round of 2026 All-Star Game voting. Catcher Drake Baldwin, first baseman Matt Olson, outfielders Ronald Acuña, Jr. and Michael Harris II and second baseman Ozzie Albies all moved to the next round of voting, which begins on June 29, 2026, by finishing in the top two at each position, per league, in the first round of fans voting. The top six outfielders advanced.
Those two top players per positions – and top six outfielders – will go head-to-head to gain the starting assignment in this year’s All-Star Game in Philadelphia. The exceptions are the top vote-getters in each league, who automatically advance as starters. Shohei Ohtani led the National League at the designated hitter position and Ernie Clement led the American League and draws the starting assignment at second base.
Pitchers are not part of the voting process.
Here are the match-up for each of the Braves players in the next round, which includes players from three of Atlanta’s top rivals:
Catcher: Baldwin vs. Will Smith (Dodgers)
First base: Olson vs. Freddie Freeman (Dodgers)
Second base: Albies vs. Bryson Stott (Phillies)
Outfield: Harris II and Acuña, Jr. compete with Andy Pages (Dodgers), Juan Soto (Mets), Brandon Marsh (Phillies) and Teoscar Hernández (Dodgers)
The possibility of a Major League Baseball season in 2027 could be dwindling.
MLB proposed a five-year maximum contract length for players signing with new teams via free agency during a Thursday negotiation with the MLB Players Association on the league’s next collective bargaining agreement, the league confirmed via X on Thursday afternoon.
Beginning in 2027, teams would also be able to re-sign their own players to deals of up to six years under the league’s proposed “Cornerstone Player” provision, which MLB likened to the NBA’s “Bird Rights” clause that gives teams an advantage in retaining their own free agents by allowing them to exceed the salary cap and offer larger contracts.
MLB commissioner Rob Manfred. TNS
Free agents joining a new team would be allowed to sign a maximum deal of five years, $202 million, while the “Cornerstone Player” clause would top out at six years, $265 million.
The proposal would also eliminate deferred contracts, much like the ones utilized by the Dodgers, including for stars Shohei Ohtani and Kyle Tucker.
Thursday’s meeting also saw the league accept MLBPA’s proposal to grant free agency to players who are 30 years old with five years of MLB service — marking a potential shift from the longstanding post-1976 standard that has generally granted free agency after six years — and eliminate the qualifying offer system, which effectively penalizes teams for signing certain free agents by attaching draft-pick compensation.
MLB also proposed what it called a “historic” increase to the league minimum salary, raising it from $780,000 to $1 million for players with at least two years of service and guaranteeing players with less than two years of service $1 million in total compensation if they accrue a full year of service.
“Every other major U.S. sport has tackled this problem, and every year more small-market teams in those leagues have a chance to win. The salary cap and floor proposal levels the playing field, allowing us greater flexibility to address longstanding player priorities while sharing baseball revenue with the players 50/50,” MLB spokesperson Glen Caplin said.
“Today, in addition to proposing the largest ever increase in the minimum salary, earned by over half of MLB players, we accepted two landmark changes to free agency that have been in place for 50 years. We agreed to both the MLBPA’s proposal to provide earlier access to free agency, and their proposal to eliminate the qualifying offer system, a provision players view as a drag on free agency.”
MLBPA interim executive director Bruce Meyer said Thursday “it’s highly, highly likely that they’re going to lock us out again.” AP Photo/Richard Drew
MLBPA blasted Thursday’s negotiations and proposals as “misleading” and part of an agenda that would lead to “suppressing player salaries and maximizing club profits.”
“These misleading offers are designed to look like ‘improvements’ but are of little or no value, given they are expressly conditioned on agreement to the league’s cap system which eliminates the free market, and ensures gains for one player only come at the expense of another,” the union said in a statement.
The latest round of negotiations comes a week after MLBPA ripped the league over a proposed overhaul of the draft, which would remove high school players from draft eligibility until after their sophomore year of college and cut the draft from 20 rounds to 12 while reducing the bonus pool from $358.7 million to $200 million.
Late last month, MLB formally proposed a hard salary cap that would require every MLB team to maintain a payroll between $171.2 million and $245.3 million. It would force several big market teams, including the Mets, Dodgers and Yankees, to significantly cut their spending.
The league’s push for a salary cap has been met with fierce resistance, and MLBPA interim executive director Bruce Meyer put the onus on MLB to avoid a lockout in 2027.
“As I said in the past, it’s highly, highly likely that they’re going to lock us out again,” Meyer said Thursday, noting that another meeting is expected ahead of the July All-Star break, per The Athletic.
New York Mets left fielder Juan Soto (22) two-run single during the eighth inning when the New York Mets played the Atlanta Braves Sunday, June 14, 2026 at Citi Field in Queens, NY.
The Mets had at least something go right for them, as Juan Soto avoided the injured list and was back in the lineup for the series finale against the Cubs after exiting Tuesday’s game with back tightness.
Carlos Mendoza hoped pregame that Soto — who also missed time earlier this season with a calf injury — would be able to play, prompting the Mets to release their starting lineup later than expected until they received some clarity.
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He hit third and served as the designated hitter, with MJ Melendez in left field.
Mendoza, who didn’t have any clarity on when Soto could return to the outfield, was satisfied that Soto even wanted to play — as opposed to just being available as a pinch-hitter after missing both games Wednesday.
“That’s a good sign,” Mendoza said.
A trip to the IL would’ve been another nightmare for the Mets in a season full of them.
New York Mets left fielder Juan Soto (22) hits a two-run single during the eighth inning when the New York Mets played the Atlanta Braves on Sunday, June 14, 2026 at Citi Field in Queens, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post
Soto, who entered Thursday’s game with a .299 average, .965 OPS and 17 homers, has been one of the only pieces of their lineup to produce.
Francisco Lindor just returned from his calf strain Wednesday and Luis Robert Jr. (lumbar spine disc herniation), Jorge Polanco (left Achilles bursitis, right wrist contusion) and Marcus Semien (left hip flexor strain) are all on the injured list.
And the Mets’ hope that Soto was only day-to-day turned out to be accurate.
He avoided another stint on the IL after missing 15 games in April. The Mets, for once, caught an injury break.
While the rest of this year’s All-Star rosters won’t be announced until next week, Ohtani was able to punch his ticket early on Thursday, courtesy of receiving the most overall votes in the initial round of fan balloting.
Shohei Ohtani will be the National League’s starting DH at the All-Star Game!
Ohtani earns an automatic bid after leading all NL players in Phase 1 voting. pic.twitter.com/JPjOAQNHbk
The Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani already has received more than 3.3 million votes for the All-Star Game. Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images
By garnering more than 3.3 million selections from fans, Ohtani easily outpaced all other National League players, ensuring he will be the starting DH in the Midsummer Classic.
His total was also more than 100,000 greater than Blue Jays infielder and top American League vote-getter Ernie Clement, who earned the automatic spot in the AL starting lineup.
Ohtani, a four-time MVP, has now been to the All-Star Game in all three of his seasons with the Dodgers and each of the last six going back to his first MVP season with the Angels in 2021.
The two-way star should have plenty of fellow Dodgers teammates heading with him to Philadelphia, as well.
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Ohtani will be the NL’s starting DH for the All-Star Game after receiving the most votes in the initial round of fan balloting. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
The club had six other players advance to the second round of voting: catcher Will Smith, first baseman Freddie Freeman, third baseman Max Muncy, shortstop Mookie Betts and outfielders Andy Pages and Teoscar Hernández.
They could have a couple pitchers make the team, as well, most notably Yoshinobu Yamamoto and potentially Justin Wrobleski.
Busch Stadium and City of St. Louis skyline with Gateway Arch and Mississippi River, Missouri. (Photo by: Visions of America/Joseph Sohm/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Today’s Lineups
DIAMONDBACKS
CARDINALS
Ketel Marte – 2B
JJ Wetherholt – 2B
Geraldo Perdomo – SS
Ivan Herrera – C
Corbin Carroll – RF
Alec Burleson – 1B
Adrian Del Castillo – C
Jordan Walker – DH
Max Kepler – LF
Lars Nootbaar – RF
Pavin Smith – 1B
Masyn Winn – SS
Lourdes Gurriel – DH
Nathan Church – CF
Ildemaro Vargas – 3B
Blaze Jordan – 3B
Tommy Troy – CF
Jose Fermin – LF
Zac Gallen – RHP
Michael McGreevy – RHP
Roster moves
The Arizona Diamondbacks made the following roster moves. The D-backs’ 40-man roster is at 40.
Reinstated from the restricted list and activated: OF Max Kepler (No. 22)
Recalled from Triple-A Reno: RHP Juan Burgos (No. 52)
Optioned to Triple-A Reno following last night’s game: OF Tim Tawa + LHP Mitch Bratt
Transferred to the 60-day injured list: RHP Ryne Nelson (strained right elbow)
A fair bit to unpack here, though none of the moves are a particular surprise. Interesting to see Bratt sent right back down. He won’t be eligible to come up again for a bit, so we’ll need a different arm to start Monday’s game, back at Chase against the Giants. Will that be Brandon Pfaadt? Probably not. He hasn’t pitched since the 20th, and only threw 52 pitches. There’s no time to get another start in and then have him pitch again on Monday, except on very short rest (he’s not starting tonight for the Aces either). Oh, well. That’s an issue for Mike Hazen to figure out. We just report things.
Nelson goes to the 60-day IL, confirming what we largely knew, that he won’t be back until late August at the very earliest. That opens up the 40-day spot for Kepler, who replaces Tawa on the active roster. I find myself in two minds about the new arrival. Of course, he’s a Diamondback and I want him to do well. But he’s also a convicted PED user, and doesn’t seem to have made even the token noises about it. So I also want him to go into a slump of Fernando Tatis Jr.-esque proportions. Be also get the return of Juan Burgos, who kinda sucked last year, after coming over from Seattle at the trade deadline. A 6.59 ERA this year in Reno isn’t exactly encouraging.
The weather for this one looks distinctly iffy, so may be interrupted or not completed. Jack wrote earlier, “Looking at the radar from 6:45-8:00 it looks like VERY heavy rain with more coming in behind that” Given it’s a Zac Gallen start, perhaps “pray for rain”, as the old proverb went, might be the best option. Him going three innings, and the game being called as a no-content, sounds like a plan. If it needs rescheduled, common off days for the two teams are Thursdays July 23, August 13, September 10 + 17, and Monday September 21. September 10 might work: Arizona would be coming back from Kansas City and St. Louis from San Francisco. August 13 (AZ going to Atlanta, STL at home) is another possibility.
Giants starting pitcher Landen Roupp struck out six and scattered six hits in six innings. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Roupp limited the Athletics to two runs over six innings and Jung Hoo Lee delivered a bases-clearing triple that, combined with Victor Bericoto’s two-run blast that followed, gave San Francisco a four-run lead.
The problem was that they needed the bullpen to protect it for three innings.
“Yeah, it wasn’t good,” manager Tony Vitello said a short while later. “I mean, we gave up a touchdown in the last three innings.”
Ryan Walker, Erik Miller and Dylan Smith allowed the A’s to cut into the lead in the seventh and eighth innings, and it evaporated once and for all in the ninth against closer Caleb Kilian.
The result: a 9-6 loss in the series finale that they led 6-2 when the bullpen took over. A 26th series they failed to sweep. And a 10th consecutive start in which Roupp failed to earn a win. Roupp’s winless streak is the longest the Giants have gone without winning in one pitcher’s starts since 2008.
The A’s scored in each of the final three innings, totaling seven runs against the Giants’ bullpen.
“You could talk about some balls finding the hole or a broken-bat hit, things like that,” Vitello said. “But the bottom line is we need to do better.”
Kilian, named the closer earlier this month, never recovered after speedy leadoff man Henry Bolte beat out an infield single to the opposite side that Casey Schmitt was shaded.
A wild pitch put the potential tying run on second base with nobody out, but Kilian retired Nick Kurtz and Shea Langeliers to make it through the meatiest part of the A’s order.
The Giants’ Bryce Eldridge went 0-for-3 and scored a run Thursday. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Then, he issued a two-out walk to Tyler Soderstrom and didn’t record another out.
Jonah Heim, Lawrence Butler and Max Muncy singled home four runs off Kilian before Matt Gage finally recorded the third out of the inning, with a one-run lead now a three-run deficit.
The blown save was Kilian’s second in seven chances, the Giants’ 10th as a team in 26 save opportunities and San Francisco’s fifth loss in 34 games it has led after eight innings. Their five losses when leading after eight are tied for fourth most in MLB.
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The seven runs allowed by the Giants’ relievers raised their ERA in June to 6.38. Their 5.09 mark dating back to the start of May ranks as fifth worst in the majors.
Kilian, however, hadn’t been part of the problem, boasting nine scoreless outings in a row when he emerged from the bullpen.
So much for that streak — and the Giants’ hopes of breaking out the brooms.
What it means
Roupp turned in his second consecutive quality start, limiting the A’s to two runs over six innings with six strikeouts to only one walk, but will still have to wait to get into the win column again.
The visiting Athletics rallied with four runs in the top of the ninth inning to stun the Giants. AP Photo/Jed Jacobsohn
Who’s hot
What a couple days it’s been for Bericoto.
The Giants left fielder was in the starting lineup Wednesday for the first time since June 10 and spent the entire game trying to find out if his family was OK following two massive earthquakes in his native Venezuela, also home to Luis Arraez and injured reliever Jose Butto.
That was on his mind when he fired a 93 mph laser beam to nab a runner at home plate and when he crushed the 445-foot walk-off home run in the 2-1 win.
Bericoto, it turned out, wasn’t done.
He unleashed another throw on the money from left field in the fourth inning Thursday. This one (clocked at 94.2 mph — the hardest by a Giants outfielder since 2018) went to second base, where Soderstrom was dead to rights trying to extend a single into a double leading off the inning.
Practically replicating his game from a day before, Bericoto followed up his throw with an almost identical homer — also 445 feet to center field — to drive in the final two of five runs in the sixth.
Bericoto, as well as benchmate Jonah Cox, each got rare starts the past two games because lefties were on the mound for the A’s. Maybe Vitello will try to mix in more playing time moving forward.
Who’s not
Kurtz presented the biggest threat in either lineup this series.
Turns out, there was nothing to fear.
The A’s slugging first baseman came up 13 times over the three games and didn’t record a hit. The major-league RBI leader, with 61 entering the series, drove in only one run. He beat out a would-be double play with runners on the corners in the fifth.
He struck out in his first two tries against Roupp, including with two on and one out in the third, and earned a hat trick by going down swinging with the tying run on second in the ninth.
Up next
The Giants see the Braves again after winning both games the teams played in between downpours last week in Atlanta. It will be Trevor McDonald against Reynaldo Lopez in the series opener Friday night, with first pitch set for 7:15.
BRONX, NY - MAY 03: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees and Ben Rice #22 in the dugout during the game against the Baltimore Orioles on May 3, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
This evening, MLB announced the results of the first phase of All-Star voting on MLB Network. Aaron Judge, Ben Rice, and Cody Bellinger earned enough votes to advance to Phase 2.
The top overall vote-getter in the American League was Ernie Clement (that a decent player like Clement leads the voting brings into question what exactly it is that we’re doing here, but that’s a story for another day), meaning that he has already earned a starting spot on the AL squad. The top two vote-getters at every (top six in the case of outfielders) now advance to the second phase of voting, with the exception of Clement’s position of second base. Vote totals are reset after Phase 1, so the slate will be swept clean before Phase 2 begins, and the winners at each position will go on to start the All-Star Game.
Despite the rib injury that has kept him out for a few weeks now, Judge leads the way for the Yankees, his 2,567,404 votes the most for New York and the most among AL outfielders. Mike Trout, in the midst of a resurgent season but also unfortunately injured, finished second. In third is Byron Buxton, and in fourth is Cody Bellinger, whose excellent all-around contributions have helped the Yankees thrive even without Judge. More Blue Jays, Daulton Varsho and Jesús Sánchez, round out the top six among outfielders; the top three vote-getters in Phase 2 will start across the outfield in the All-Star Game.
Also advancing to Phase 2 is Rice, who finished second at first base but should have finished first, his 2026 campaign easily outstripping that of the actual first-place finisher Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Rice has morphed into one of the game’s finest hitters, and his OPS+ dwarfs that of Vladito (167 to 98). Now, Rice has a shot to start at first if he can defeat Guerrero in Phase 2, but he has work cut out for him, with Canada doing its best to vote for their Blue Jays.
The top vote-getters across the rest of the field are as follows:
Here are your American League All-Star Ballot FINALISTS!
Phase 2 voting opens Monday, 6/29 at noon ET and closes on Thursday, 7/2. Vote totals reset.
Jazz Chisholm Jr. was on the fringes of contention, but he had little chance against the juggernaut that is Clement, ultimately finishing fourth at second base. Otherwise, the only other Yankee to finish in the top five at their position was Giancarlo Stanton, who came in fourth at DH.
Voting in Phase 2 will begin on Monday, June 29th, and lasts until noon ET on July 2nd.
Mar 27, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; A general view of the the exterior of the Rogers Centre before the Opening Day game between the Athletics and Toronto Blue Jays. Mandatory Credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images | Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images