Six run inning leads to six straight wins: Rays 10, Royals 4

Jun 30, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Tampa Bay Rays third baseman Junior Caminero (13) reacts after hitting a home run during the second inning against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Purnell-Imagn Images | William Purnell-Imagn Images

Yesterday’s off day following five straight wins wasn’t enough to slow down the Tampa Bay Rays on Tuesday night in Kansas City. The offense remained hot putting up a ten spot on the Royals as the Rays rolled to their sixth consecutive victory.

The Rays trailed early in this one as Griffin Jax surrendered a first inning homer to Carter Jensen. The solo shot, his twelfth of the year, gave the Royals a 1-0 lead. However, the Rays answered in a big way in the top of the third.

Leading off the third, Nick Fortes dropped a bunt down the third base line and reach second on a throwing error by Nick Loftin. Yandy Diaz walked and Aranda quickly followed with a RBI single to tie the game at 1-1. With runners at the corners and nobody out, the red-hot Junior Caminero sent a long fly ball over the wall in left field to give the Rays a 4-1 lead. The blast marked his 23rd of the year and it was his fifth consecutive game with a homer.

The Rays weren’t done. The very next pitch delivered by Royals starter Noah Cameron was ambushed and deposited in the seats in left center. The homer was Vilade’s sixth of the year and gave the Rays a 5-1 lead. Then DeLuca and Simpson singled. Deluca later scored on a RBI single by Ben Williamson and the Rays would end the inning with a 6-1 lead.

The six runs were all they needed tonight, but you would be foolish to turn down insurance runs. They tacked a pair of runs in both the fifth and sixth innings. Fortes drove home both runs on a single in the fifth inning and the sixth inning was, to put it lightly, a disaster for Royals pitching.

The Rays worked six walks in the sixth inning, though one was negated by a double play. Following the double play, Eric Cerantola walked five consecutive batters and allowed a run to score via a wild pitch. He walked in the other run.

On the night, the Rays totaled 10 hits, walked 11 times and only struck out twice. All 11 walks were issued in the first 5.2 innings.

Contrary to the Royals staff, Jax and the pen walked only one batter tonight and struck out seven. Jax did the heavy lifting, turning in what might be his best line of the season. Across six innings he allowed three runs on five hits, struck out five and walked none. He earned the win and gave way to Booser, Sulser, and Kimbrel. Suler allowed the only other run to score in the eighth.

Lastly, for those watching the standings in late June, the Yankees dropped their sixth straight and fell to 2/5 games back of the Rays in the division. The Rays are now four games up in the loss column on the Yankees. With a record of 49-33 , the Rays will look to continue their hot streak on Wednesday night with Shane McClanahan taking the ball after being given some extra days of rest. He will look to get back in a groove opposite Seth Lugo.

Landen Roupp matches ugly Giants record with loss to Diamondbacks

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Giants pitcher Landen Roupp reacts after being pulled from the game in the third inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field, Image 2 shows San Francisco Giants pitcher Landen Roupp reacts in the dugout after being pulled from the game in the third inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field
giants

PHOENIX — The circumstances were too overwhelming to lead to any other result.

Of course, with Landen Roupp on the mound, against the Diamondbacks, the Giants were going to fall Tuesday night. There have been no other outcomes in games involving either this particular San Francisco starting pitcher or the opponent he faced since the first month of the season.

And, as predicted in the world’s most obvious crystal ball, exactly that transpired.

Landen Roupp walks back to the dugout aferr being pulled from the game in the third inning of the Giants’ 8-2 loss to the Diamondbacks at Chase Field on June 30, 2026. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Roupp matched an ignominious franchise record by starting the 11th straight game the Giants have lost behind him, and the Giants reached a level of futility against one foe not seen in nearly 50 years.

In arguably the least effective start of his winless streak, Roupp walked six batters, served up a gargantuan three-run blast to Lourdes Gurriel Jr. and was out of the game before the third inning was over in an 8-2 loss, the Giants’ eighth in a row against the Diamondbacks.

“I’ve been pretty pathetic for the past two months,” Roupp said. “We’ve got to figure it out and get back to where I was at the beginning of the season because I’m not really giving the team even a chance to win right now.”

No matter who’s been on the mound, the Giants haven’t been able to beat the D-backs. It’s the worst start to a season against a single opponent since San Francisco also lost its first eight games of the 1977 season against the Cubs.

The positive? They finally prevailed in their ninth and final meeting of the season.

So there’s hope still.

But it wasn’t going to happen Tuesday, which quickly became apparent.

It all started, in Vitello’s eyes, on Roupp’s seventh pitch of the evening. His 1-2 sinker ran high and tight on Geraldo Perdomo but touched the inside corner at the letters. It was called a ball, and Roupp eventually lost Perdomo for his first walk of the game.

“How much of an impact it made, I don’t know … it kind of put him into a little bit of a tizzy,” Vitello said. “At least body language-wise and on the next pitch. … When he’s focused and dialed in, he’s pretty good, but one of the reasons he’s good is he’s ultra competitive and when that spills over into being distracted from the next pitch … it makes an impact.”

The Giants were in a 3-0 hole by the time he recorded the third out of the first inning. After the walk to Perdomo, he put another runner on with four straight balls to Gabriel Moreno.

His troubles finding the strike zone persisted against the next batter, falling behind 2-0 to Gurriel. The next pitch Roupp put over the plate, Gurriel deposited into the left-field seats.

Roupp issued two more walks in the second, including to the leadoff man, and got out of the inning with the only damage to his pitch count. But he wasn’t so fortunate the next time around.

Landen Roupp reacts in the dugout after being pulled from the game in the third inning. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Once again, Roupp put the first batter of the inning on base with his fifth free pass, and after a pair of singles to load the bases, walked in Arizona’s third run of the game.

Roupp’s 84th and final pitch was a 2-2 cutter to Ketel Marte, who dropped it in front of Heliot Ramos to extend the margin to 6-0 and put an early end to Roupp’s night.

“I’m just kind of moving slow right now,” Roupp said. “My lower half was not synced up pretty much at all tonight, which was allowing the sinker to go arm-side.”

Of his 84 pitches, only 44 were strikes.

“Obviously,” Vitello said, “he was not who he is tonight.”

What it means

The blowout locked in the Giants’ third losing series to the Diamondbacks this season.

They’ve been outscored 52-23 in the eight losses. Put another way, the Diamondbacks are solely responsible for more than half of the Giants’ minus-57 run differential.

Adding injury to insult, Matt Chapman left with an abdominal strain that flared up when he made a barehanded play to retire Gabriel Moreno for the final out of the sixth.

With Willy Adames (back) unavailable, the Giants had no backup infielders, so outfielder Jonah Cox was forced to enter the game at second base, only his second time playing the infield since college, while Luis Arraez took over for Chapman at third.

Who’s hot

After getting the Giants on the board in the fifth with his fourth home run of the season, Arraez spent the second half of the game on cycle watch.

Second baseman Luis Arraez celebrates after hitting a solo home run in the sixth inning of the Giants’ loss to the Diamondbacks. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

He came up once needing only a double but flew out to the warning track in the eighth.

Rafael Devers also slugged his 15th homer of the season, closing in on Casey Schmitt (16) for the team lead, but the seventh-inning solo shot only served to make up for Marte’s an inning earlier.

Marte, who led off Monday’s loss with a home run, has homered in his past four games.

Who’s not

Only one other starter in the San Francisco era has had a run of futility that matches Roupp’s.

The Giants lost the last 11 starts made by Mark Davis, a future Cy Young winner, in 1984. Over that stretch, which was split up by relief appearances, the East Bay native went 0-8 with a 6.98 ERA.

That same season, the Giants also went winless in 10 straight starts by Jeff Robinson. Pat Misch went 11 in a row without starting a win, but that stretch was split between the 2007-08 seasons.

Roupp has put up slightly better numbers, including back-to-back starts of six innings, two runs and just one walk entering this one. But it still hasn’t been pretty: This dud dropped him to 0-7 with a 5.87 ERA since the Giants’ last win in one of his starts, all the way back on April 26.

“The last outing was really good,” Vitello said. “The two prior, I wouldn’t even call them similar to this. Just a lack of inducing contact, pitch count climbing on him. Tonight was a different animal.”

Roupp’s last win was also the second-to-last start he made before the Giants traded Patrick Bailey. In seven starts with Bailey, opposing batters hit .186 with a .521 OPS. In nine starts with Eric Haase and Daniel Susac, Roupp has allowed a .280 batting average and an .806 OPS.

And if his first time throwing to Drew Cavanaugh was any indication, it’s not getting any better.

Roupp, however, placed the blame on his mechanics — not his catchers.

“The team not winning your last 11 starts is pretty bad,” he said. “So I’ve got to figure it out.”

Up next

The Giants will attempt to avoid being swept by the Diamondbacks for a third time in Wednesday’s series finale.

It pits Trevor McDonald (2-6, 4.94) against Zac Gallen, a longtime Giants nemesis in the middle of a tough season at 3-7 with a 6.15 ERA. First pitch is set for 6:40 p.m. PT.

44-43: Chart

Jun 30, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners shortstop Colt Emerson (4) hits a 2-RBI single against the Los Angeles Angels during the seventh inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images | Steven Bisig-Imagn Images

Mariners 8, Angels 3

Viva Mexico!: Bryan Woo, .31 WPA

Dutch Oven: J.P. Crawford, -.08 WPA

Game thread comment of the day:

Willson Contreras gets ejected for the second straight game after Cade Cavalli hurls racist comment from the mound

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 30: Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox reacts during a benches-clearing altercation during the fourth inning of a game against the Washington Nationals on June 30, 2026 at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Cade Cavalli pitched brilliantly tonight, striking out 13 Red Sox hitters while only allowing one hit and no walks over seven superb innings. Unfortunately, that’s not what I’ll remember most about his unwanted presence at Fenway.

Instead, it will be this comment he shouted at Willson Contreras after striking him out in the bottom of the fourth inning:

The next time somebody utters that phrase, in that tone, at a person whose heritage hails from a country near the equator and doesn’t have ill intent, will be the first. Frankly, if he would have just said “sit down bitch,” it would have been far less problematic.

But like a louse, he launched language loaded with racial undertones, and it rolled off his tongue like it came from the mouth of a suspended cop. The only thing more jarring than the junk jumping out of Cavalli’s jugular is the fact Contreras didn’t immediately try to snap it in half given everything happening in his world right now.

And as far as intent goes, you don’t need to take my word for it. Here’s somebody with a far more relevant perspective on Cavalli’s comment than me:

Cavalli claims the racial outburst stemmed from him taking exception with Contreras bumping him on the way off the base paths to end the first inning, which Contreras absolutely did. Here’s Cavalli on that incident:

“There’s a certain level of respect you have for other players. I have respect for him. But you don’t run by me and brush me going off the field. It’s just not something you do in this game.”

You know what else you don’t do? Call somebody “boy” in that tone and context and not expect blowback. If Cavalli thinks Contreras lightly brushing him is in the same zip code of disrespect as the garbage spewing out of his trap in the fourth inning, then he’s as lost as Flight MH370!

Speaking of lost, how about this umpiring crew? Last night, Nic Lentz threw Contreras out of the game for tapping his helmet following a check swing, and yet somehow what Cavalli did tonight was deemed less severe than that. I mean, what are we doing here? This is a horrendous look for them on multiple levels, and I hope both they and Cavalli are suspended by the league!

Meanwhile, Contreras, who was ejected, didn’t do himself any favors after leaving the field. He spent the next couple of innings hopping on Instagram and getting into it with idiot fans while his replacement at first base, Andruw Monasterio, was coming up short on both defense and at the plate. Here are those items juxtaposed:

At this point, it’s Chad Tracy’s job to get to Contreras and try and bring the temperature down, and I’m sure (after he was also ejected) they had a very compelling conversation down in the clubhouse during the second half of the game. (It was almost certainly more interesting than the rest of the game itself, which saw the Red Sox middle relief spiral out of control in an 8-1 defeat.)


Unfortunately, the brawl wasn’t the only disaster from this game. The other major story, which was actually unfolding around the same time, is Connelly Early leaving with “left elbow discomfort” after four shutout innings. This broke the Red Sox string of 12 consecutive quality starts (it was very likely to reach 13 the way Early was going), and could obviously lead to much bigger problems for the rotation going forward. We’ll know more tomorrow after they get some tests done.

Three Studs

Connelly Early: Four shutout innings, and well on his way to another great outing when the injury bug paid him a visit.

Anthony Seigler: Led off the game with a double and scored the only Red Sox run – A run that was holding up until Connelly left the game Early.

Chad Tracy: He absolutely had to get ejected after what Cavalli said to Contreras and the umpires allowing Cavalli to stay in the game. My only gripe is he didn’t get tossed quicker!

Three Duds

Danny Coulombe: He was the first bullpen arm into the game after Early’s exit and boy did he suck! He faced four hitters, failed to get three of them out, and the two outs he did get were from a lineout and a Wilyer Abreu assist at third base on a hit. Coulombe is rapidly turning into a guy you can’t go anywhere near in a close game.

Ceddanne Rafaela: 0-4 with two strikes outs and burned the last ABS challenge in a useless spot. He needs to show way more restraint with those!

Jarren Duran: Now hitting .196 with a .604 OPS after tonight’s 0-3 performance.

Play of the game:

It’s the brouhaha in the fourth inning:

Justin Wrobleski strikes out 11, Dave Roberts earns 1,000th career win

SACRAMENTO, CA - JUNE 30: Justin Wrobleski #70 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches during the game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on Tuesday, June 30, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Don Collier/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Justin Wrobleski had the most strikeouts by any Dodgers pitcher in a game this season, going seven innings to beat the Athletics 9-3 on Tuesday night at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento.

Wrobleski struck out a career-high 11 in seven innings on Tuesday, the most by a Dodgers pitcher this season. This was the left-hander’s sixth start of at least seven innings this season, tied with Yoshinobu Yamamoto for most on the team. Wrobleski allowed three runs, two of them in the seventh inning, but the Dodgers offense provided plenty of support made those late runs not matter much.

Tommy Edman and Miguel Rojas each homered off A’s left-hander Jeffrey Springs, who leads the majors with 24 home runs allowed. The Dodgers put up crooked numbers in three different frames, with a pair in the first inning, then three runs each in the third and seventh.

Edman had four hits and drove in four runs while getting the start at third base, continuing his hot start. Since returning from the injured list on June 16, Edman has reached base at least twice in seven of his nine starts, and overall is hitting .395/452/.579.

Notes

  • Dave Roberts picked up his 1,000th managerial win. His .626 career winning percentage is the highest of the 69 managers who’ve won at least 1,000 games in the majors.
  • Dodgers are 7-1 in the first eight games of their nine-game road trip, averaging seven runs per game. On the season, the Dodgers average 6.15 runs scored per game on the road, compared to 3.96 at home.
  • The Dodgers were 18-9 in June.

Tuesday particulars

Home runs: Tommy Edman (1), Miguel Rojas (3); Colby Thomas (4)

WP — Justin Wrobleski (10-2): 7 IP, 7 hits, 3 runs, 11 strikeouts

LP — Jeffrey Springs (3-8): 5 1/3 IP, 8 hits, 6 runs, 4 walks, 2 strikeouts

Up next

One more game in the Triple-A ballpark on Wednesday night (6:40 p.m., SportsNet LA). Dodgers are going with a bullpen game as Shohei Ohtani got kicked to Friday, while the A’s turn to former un-signed first-round Dodgers draft pick J.T. Ginn.

Walter Alston, Dave Roberts and everyone in between: The 10 managers in L.A. Dodgers history

Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts (30) at Diablo Stadium, Tempe, AZ on February 21, 2026.
Dave Roberts, during a spring training earlier this year, is in his 11th season managing the Dodgers. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

The Dodgers’ storied history has allowed many a manager to thrive. In the nearly 70 seasons since the franchise moved to Los Angeles, the Dodgers have had a losing record 13 times, the last coming in 2010. They have made the playoffs every year since 2013, and, with the best record in baseball this season, are primed to reach the postseason for a 14th straight year, tying the MLB record set by the Atlanta Braves from 1991-2005.

A lot of the Dodgers’ recent success has come under Dave Roberts, who on Tuesday night became the fourth manager in franchise history to reach 1,000 career victories. This fall, he will try to guide his team to its third consecutive World Series title, a feat last accomplished by the New York Yankees in 2000 under the tutelage of Joe Torre — who later managed the Dodgers for three seasons.

Here’s a look at how the 10 managers during the Dodgers’ time in Los Angeles have fared.

Read more:'He cares about people.' How Dodgers' Dave Roberts got to the cusp of 1,000 career wins

Walter Alston

Dodgers manager Walter Alston, left, is all smiles as pitcher Sandy Koufax at spring training in Vero Beach, Fla., 1963.
Dodgers manager Walter Alston, left, with pitcher Sandy Koufax during spring training in Vero Beach, Fla., in 1963. (Jim Kerlin / Associated Press)

Years as manager: 1954-1976

Record: 2,040-1,613, .558 win pct

Alston, who managed the team’s final four seasons in Brooklyn, is the team’s winningest manager and won four of the franchise’s nine World Series titles, the first coming in 1955. He won three more in Los Angeles in 1959, 1963 and 1965 while also guiding them to the World Series in 1966 and 1974. When he won his 2,000th career game in 1976, Alston was only the fifth manager in MLB history to reach that mark. (There are 13 now.)

A 1983 Baseball Hall of Fame inductee and six-time NL manager of the year, Alston also invited radio broadcaster Anita Martini into the clubhouse in 1974 after the Dodgers beat the Astros in Houston to clinch the NL West title — the first time a female journalist had been allowed in any professional sports locker room.

Tommy Lasorda

Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda celebrates after the Dodgers beat the Montreal Expos to win the NL pennant in 1981.
Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda celebrates after the Dodgers beat the Montreal Expos to win the NL pennant in 1981. (Associated Press)

Years as manager: 1976-1996

Record: 1,599-1,439, .526 win pct

After serving as the team’s third base coach for four seasons, Lasorda took over as manager late in the 1976 season when Alston announced his retirement. He led the Dodgers to the National League pennant in his first two full seasons, losing both times to the Yankees in the World Series. He won his first World Series in 1981, knocking off the Yankees, and rallied his team to a surprise title in 1988 in which the Dodgers beat the heavily favored Athletics. Lasorda was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1997, his first year of eligibility.

A fiery and vibrant presence who spent 71 years with the Dodgers, Lasorda managed nine players who won the NL rookie of the year award. The Dodgers also opened the Japanese player pipeline on his watch. Hideo Nomo, the first Japanese big leaguer to permanently relocate to the U.S., joined the Dodgers in 1995. Three decades later, the team features Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto on its star-studded roster.

Bill Russell

Dodgers manager Bill Russell being interviewed during spring training at Dodgertown in Vero Beach, Florida.
Bill Russell managed the Dodgers for parts of three seasons after succeeding Tommy Lasorda in 1996. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

Years as manager: 1996-1998

Record: 173-149, .537 win pct

A stalwart at shortstop for most of his 18 seasons with the Dodgers, Russell stepped in after Lasorda suffered a heart attack in June 1996 and stayed on when Lasorda resigned a month later due to health concerns. Russell was only the third Dodgers skipper in 43 seasons when he took over on an interim basis for the rest of the 1996 season. He guided the team to a wild-card berth — the team’s last postseason appearance until 2004 — and became the full-time manager after the season.

During his tenure, ownership of the team shifted from the O’Malley family to Rupert Murdoch’s Fox Entertainment Group, which completed the purchase of the Dodgers in March 1998. After winning 88 games and finishing second in the NL West in his only full season at the helm in 1997, Russell was fired 74 games into the 1998 season as part of a housecleaning that included the removal of general manager Fred Claire.

Glenn Hoffman

22 Jun 1998: Glenn Hoffman (R) speaks at the Dodgers news Conference in Los Angeles, California as Tommy Lasorda (L) listens
Glenn Hoffman, right, speaks at a news conference introducing him as the new manager of the Dodgers on June 22, 1998, as Tommy Lasorda, who'd been named interim general manager, looks on. (Jed Jacobsohn / Getty Images)

Years as manager: 1998

Record: 47-41, .534 win pct

Hoffman served as a stopgap measure more than a permanent replacement in his short tenure with the team. After nine years playing in the majors, Hoffman took up coaching in the Dodgers’ minor league farm system, splitting time between managing and coordinating field instruction for player development. However, when the Dodgers needed someone to take over for Russell in late June, Hoffman stepped up from his position managing the Dukes.

The skipper led the team to a third-place finish in the NL West, 15 games behind the eventual league champion San Diego Padres. After Davey Johnson took over before the 1999 season, Hoffman remained with the team as third-base coach for seven seasons.

Davey Johnson

Lori Shepler –– – 008651.SP.0524.dodgers2.ls––––––Dodgers manager Davey Johnson.
Dodgers manager Davey Johnson, left, during the 2000 season, his second and last with the team. (Lori Shepler / Los Angeles Times)

Years as manager: 1999-2000

Record: 163-161, .503 win pct

Johnson’s managerial history before the Dodgers was chaotic and full of front-office disputes. And, despite having won the AL manager of the year award in 1997, it took two years for another team to take a chance on him.

While in L.A., Johnson did win his 1,000th game, doing so in May 1999. But his tenure did not live up to expectations, even with a roster that included Hall of Famer Adrián Beltré, Kevin Brown and Gary Sheffield. Johnson’s only losing full season of his career was in 1999, finishing third in the NL West. The Dodgers performed better the next year, but Johnson wouldn’t return.

Jim Tracy

Manager Jim Tracy #16 of the Los Angeles Dodgers looks on from the dugout during the game against the Washington Nationals.
Jim Tracy looks on from the dugout during an August 2005 game against the Washington Nationals. Tracy managed the Dodgers for five seasons. (Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Years as manager: 2001-2005

Record: 427-383, .527 win pct

Tracy had been a minor league manager and served as a bench coach with the Montreal Expos under Felipe Alou and with the Dodgers under Johnson. Tracy posted four winning seasons, including two with more than 90 wins, and guided the Dodgers to the NL West title and a playoff appearance in 2004. The St. Louis Cardinals knocked out the Dodgers in four games in the NL Division Series in what was the team’s first postseason action since 1996.

The bottom fell out in 2005 as the team finished 71-91, the second-worst mark since the team moved from Brooklyn, with a roster revamped by general manager Paul DePodesta — who was hired after the 2003 season a few weeks after Boston real estate developer Frank McCourt purchased the team. Tracy had approached the team about a contract extension late in the 2005 season, a bold request considering the team’s record. When Tracy was let go at the end of the season, the team called it a “mutual parting of ways.” Less than four weeks later, DePodesta was fired for not adequately replacing Tracy.

Grady Little

Dodgers manager Grady Little argues with first base umpire Marvin Hudson during a 2007 game.
Dodgers manager Grady Little argues with first base umpire Marvin Hudson during a 2007 game. (Chris Carlson / Associated Press)

Years as manager: 2006-2007

Record: 170-154, .525 win pct

Little came to the Dodgers with a reputation that preceded him. The manager — the most recent soul tortured by the Curse of the Bambino — gave Pedro Martínez the nod to continue in the eighth inning of Game 7 of the 2003 ALCS matchup between the Red Sox and the Yankees, a game New York won in extra-inning, walk-off fashion.

After spending two years in the Chicago Cubs organization as a consultant and scout, Little restarted his managerial career with the Dodgers, reuniting with some of his former players, including Nomar Garciaparra and Derek Lowe. The Dodgers clinched a wild-card berth in 2006 but were swept by the Mets in the NLDS before muddling through an injury-plagued season and missing the playoffs in 2007. Little’s lack of response to a possible return that offseason resulted in general manager Ned Colletti pursuing other options.

Joe Torre

Dodgers manager Joe Torre pats starting pitcher Clayton Kershaw on the back as he relieves him in the eighth inning.
Dodgers manager Joe Torre, center, pats starting pitcher Clayton Kershaw on the back as he relieves him in the eighth inning of a game in September 2008. (Stephen Dunn / Getty Images)

Years as manager: 2008-2010

Record: 259-227, .533 win pct

Torre packed his suitcases for the West Coast rather than taking a pay cut with the Yankees, bringing future manager Don Mattingly with him. The winning started soon after the move. The Dodgers returned to the playoffs in 2008 and won a postseason series for the first time since 1988.

Though, it did not go without controversy. Manny Ramirez tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2009, leading to a 50-game suspension. And while other players — namely Clayton Kershaw — rose through the ranks on his watch, Torre’s one issue remained consistent: He couldn’t beat the Phillies. Twice, the Dodgers were downed by Philadelphia in the NLCS. After an 80-82 season in 2010, Torre passed on skipper duties to Mattingly.

Don Mattingly

Dodgers manager Don Mattingly signs autographs before the start of the game against the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium.
Dodgers manager Don Mattingly signs autographs before the start of a game against the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium on Sept. 10, 2014. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Years as manager: 2011-2015

Record: 446-363, .551 win pct

Mattingly came on board during a tumultuous time in the franchise’s history as the Dodgers filed for bankruptcy protection in June 2011 in a bid by McCourt to preserve his ownership. (He eventually agreed to sell the team, with the Guggenheim ownership group taking over in 2012.)

After two winning seasons, Mattingly was in the hot seat with the Dodgers in last place early in the 2013 campaign. But the Dodgers caught fire midseason and won the NL West and knocked out the Atlanta Braves in the NLDS before losing to the St. Louis Cardinals in the NLCS. Mattingly called out the team’s front office, asking for a multiyear contract in exchange for returning in 2014, which he eventually got. But the Dodgers couldn’t get past the NLDS in 2014 and 2015, and the team parted ways with Mattingly with one year left on his deal.

Dave Roberts

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts talks to shortstop Mookie Betts in the dugout during the sixth inning of June 7 game.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, left, talking to shortstop Mookie Betts during a game on June 7, has led the team to five World Series appearances and three championships. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

Years as manager: 2016-present

Record: 1,000-605, .623 win pct

The son of an African American father and Japanese mother, Roberts is the first minority manager in Dodgers history. After guiding the Dodgers to the NLCS in 2016, he became the first manager of Asian heritage to go to the World Series in 2017 and the first to win when the Dodgers captured the team’s first championship in 32 years in 2020.

Before Roberts led the team to back-to-back World Series championships, he earned a four-year contract extension worth a record $8.1 million annually. In addition to the three World Series titles, the Dodgers have won five NL pennants and nine division titles under Roberts. To further underscore the consistent winning the Dodgers have achieved with him: The Dodgers had two 100-win campaigns in their first 58 seasons in Los Angeles. Since Roberts took over in 2016, the franchise has had five.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Yankees Notes: Spencer Jones' near-robbery, why Cam Schlittler struggled vs. Tigers

Yankees manager Aaron Boone and some players spoke about the team's loss to the Tigers on Tuesday night...


Spencer Jones' near-robbery

One of the biggest moments of the game occurred in the first inning. With two outs and no one on, Kerry Carpenter hit a long fly ball to center field off of Cam Schlittler. Yankees prospect Spencer Jones drifted back, timed his jump and seemingly came up with the catch. But once Jones hit the outfield wall, the ball came loose and went over, giving the Tigers a 1-0 lead.

It was an unfortunate moment for Jones and the Yankees, but it would get worse. 

Instead of the inning ending, the Tigers wound up taking Schlittler deep two more times and pushed their lead to 4-0 before the Yankees came up to the plate. He also had to toss 36 pitches and almost didn't get out of the opening frame.

Boone was asked after the loss whether the first home run rattled Schlittler.

"Cam’s a dog out there," Boone said. "It’s obviously a robbed home run, ball gets jarred out a little bit by the impact of the wall. That shouldn’t have a big effect and I don’t think it did."

Why did Schlittler struggle?

Schlittler entered Tuesday's game with the AL lead in ERA (1.62) and that changed in a hurry.

The young right-hander went just four-plus innings, allowing a career-worst six earned runs on four homers. His ERA jumped to 2.08 and after such a dominant start to the 2026 season, it was jarring to see Schlittler struggle. But the Yankees believe it was simply a lack of execution.

"I thought the stuff was ok; they hit the ball out of the ballpark. Got to him, obviously," Boone said of Schlittler's night. "Missing locations…and just long at-bats that added up against him... Took advantage of mistake locations and made him pay for it." 

"Not good. Didn’t execute with two strikes to a team that likes to put the ball in the air. Just didn’t get the job done," Schlittler said. "Comes down to execution. Just didn’t make the right pitches when it mattered."

With the Yankees having lost five in a row, they were hoping Schlittler would put a stop to the losing streak. Schlittler welcomed that pressure, but lamented not being able to get it done. 

"We’re not playing good ball right now. It’s my job to stop that bleeding and I couldn’t get it done," Schlittler said. "Put our team down four against [Tarik Skubal]. Took a while to experience an outing like that. Take what I can from it and get ready for next week."

Yankees offensive struggles

The now six-game losing streak is mostly due to the Yankees' lack of offense. On Tuesday, they had four hits, the first time they eclipsed three in five games. During that span, they have scored 15 runs.

“We know we have a lot of talent. It’s such a long season," Ben Rice said after the loss. "It just so happens that right now, it’s kind of like the whole team is going through something all at once.”

Rice went 1-for-4 with his lone hit being a solo shot off of Skubal. The hit snapped an 0-for-18 stretch for the slugging first baseman. 

Anthony Volpetold The Daily News' Gary Phillips that "everyone's pissed" about the offensive slump and that the lineup is pressing.

"We're all trying to have good at-bats and put stuff together, and then when you want to do it so bad, you probably press," Volpe said. "And it feels like, as an offense, we're pressing.”

The Yankees skipper said he wouldn't go as far as to say he's seeing a lot of pressing from his players, but they have to simplify their at-bats.

"I like our preparation. Our guys are committed and dialed," Boone said. "Nothing’s changed there, but when you have a handful of guys struggling, you might start pressing a little bit. I don’t see a lot of pressing going on, but keeping it small and focusing on winning pitches, winning at-bats. And when you start doing that as a group. All of a sudden that can start to snowball."

The Yankees are in the midst of a 16-game stretch of not having a day off, with one game remaining (5-10 record in that span). They'll look to salvage a win in the series finale on Wednesday afternoon.

Yordan Slam Powers Astros to 6-4 Victory Over Twins

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JUNE 30: Yordan Alvarez #44 of the Houston Astros hits a grand slam in the fourth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Daikin Park on June 30, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This was a game the Houston Astros (43-45) needed to win if they were going to have a shot to win their 6th straight series. It didn’t start well, but it did end well.

Astros starter Mike Burrows (W, 4-8) surrendered 3 runs in the first inning on 2 hits, 2 walks and an HBP, but would settle down to only allow 1 more run over the next 4 innings. The Astros offense, and specifically Yordan Alvarez (3×4), would have his back.

The Astros offense exploded for 6 runs in the 4th off Minnesota Twins (41-46) ace Joe Ryan (L, 5-5), highlighted by a grand slam from Houston’s MVP frontrunner.

Three straight 1-out singles by Cam Smith, Taylor Trammell and Yainer Diaz in the bottom of the 4th would get the Astros on the board, with Diaz’ single driving in Smith to make it a 3-1 game. With 2 outs, Ryan walked Ray Delgado to load the bases. Ryan then walked Jose Altuve on a pitch originally called strike three, but Altuve challenged the call and won, resulting in ball 4 to drive in the Astros’ second run.

Alvarez then crushed a 1-1 pitch to right center for a grand slam, giving Houston a 6-3 lead.

Burrows would allow another run in the top of the 5th when Josh Bell doubled in Kody Clemens, but that was as close as the Twins would get.

The Astros bullpen combined for 4 perfect innings with 6 strikeouts. Josh Hader would strike out 2 in a perfect 9th for his 8th save.

The Astros are currently 2GB of Texas in the AL West and 1GB of Seattle (pending tonight’s game) in the AL Wild Card race.

Tomorrow’s rubber game at Daikin Park will match up Astros SP Tatsuya Imai (5-3, 5.36 ERA) vs. Twins SP Taj Bradley (6-3, 3.98 ERA). First pitch 7:10pm CT.

Marlins soundly trounce the Rockies, 14-3

Jun 30, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Miami Marlins starting pitcher Eury Perez (39) reacts at the end of the fifth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images | Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

In their second contest with the Miami Marlins, the Colorado Rockies had hoped to even the score after dropping the series opener. However, a persistent Marlins offense coupled with effective pitching left the Rockies mostly empty handed with catcher Brett Sullivan pitching the final 1.2 innings.

The Rockies dropped the game in a 14-3 slog, a fitting final chapter in the Marlins’ remarkable June.

The offense was stymied

The Marlins got off to a quick start with a Kyle Stowers triple. The next batter, Griffin Conine, hit a double to make the score 1-0 with just one out. However, Tanner Gordon managed to get two outs, giving the Marlins a 1-0 lead in the first.

However, it did not take long for the Rockies to catch up when Mickey Moniak hit his 13th home run of the season.

However, the Marlins would take the lead again in the second when a Cole Carrigg error (his first) allowed Javier Sanoja to get on second. After that, a Leo Jiménez single was enough to bring Sanoja home and make the score 2-1 Marlins.

In the third inning, the Marlins continued to score. This time, Sanoja hit a three-run homer to score Xavier Edwards (fielder’s choice) and Owen Caissie (HBP).

When the Marlins’ half of the third ended, they had a 5-1 lead.

Finally, in the fourth inning, the Fish failed to score.

The Rockies finally got players on base in the fifth inning when Eury Pérez walked Edouard Julien and Kyle Karros with one out. However, they were unable to capitalize.

Seth Halvorsen entered the game in the sixth inning and got two outs but struggled to get the third. After walking Jiménez, five straight hitters would reach. Liam Hicks and Stowers both singled, with the latter earning the RBI in scoring Jiménez, which made the score 6-1. Following that, Conine singled, and the Marlins grew their lead to 7-1. Keeping up with his teammates, Edwards singled, and the score ballooned to 8-1.

In the sixth inning, the Rockies again had traffic on base due to Moniak and TJ Rumfield walks. It was enough for the Marlins to pull their starter.

Still, the Rockies did not have an answer for Pérez, who gave the Marlins 5.1 solid innings. His final line was one run (earned) on two hits. He walked four and struck out eight on 86 pitches. Pérez has an ERA of 4.21

The Rockies were no better against reliever Lake Bachar who quickly snagged the final two outs and ended the sixth inning.

The seventh inning went to John Brebbia in relief of Halvorsen but fared no better, giving up a two-run, 450-foot homer to Joe Mack, his fifth. The score was 10-1.

In the Rockies half of the seventh, they once again managed to get the first two batters on base via walk. This time, the Rockies scored Julien on a Jake McCarthy ground out, giving the Rockies their first run since the first inning.

As the seventh inning closed out, the scare was 10-2 Marlins.

That changed in the eighth when Brebbia gave up a three-run homer to Caissie. With the score 13-2, Brebbia left the game, and RHP/catcher Brett Sullivan entered the game.

On a positive note, Rumfield extended his hitting streak to 13 games after getting a double in the eighth inning. (It was the Rockies first hit since the second inning.)

Sullivan allowed an RBI double in the ninth to Stowers, and the score jumped to 14-2.

The Rockies, big fans of arriving fashionably late, tacked on one more run in the ninth. Karros knocked a serious double, and Ezequiel Tovar followed with a double of his own for a final 14-3 score.

The Marlins had a season high in runs and hits. Their final line was 14 runs (all earned) on 21 hits. They walked twice and struck out five times. Only Jakob Marsee failed to record a hit.

As for the Rockies, three runs (earned) on five hits. They walked six times and had 12 strikeouts.

”You’re gonna have one of these every now and then,” manager Warren Schaeffer said, adding the team would flush it and be back tomorrow.

Tanner Gordon fought through it

There’s no other way to put it: The Marlins hit Tanner Gordon hard from the first inning. However, he still managed to give the Rockies five innings and keep the game within reach. (After all, it was not yet the seventh inning, which is when the Rockies clock in.)

He left the game after finishing the fifth inning on 74 pitches. His final line was five runs (all earned) on nine hits. Gordon did not walk a batter and struck out four.

His ERA is 6.69.

“I thought he battled,” Schaeffer said, noting that he was able to help preserve the bullpen. “A couple of elevated off-speed pitches hurt him.”

The bullpen struggled

In the sixth inning, Seth Halvorsen entered the game in relief of Gordon. The inning did not go well with the Marlins scoring three runs on his watch. Halvorsen’s final line was three runs (earned) on four hits in one inning of work. He walked one and did not tally a strikeout on 25 pitches. Halvorsen’s ERA is 4.74.

John Brebbia entered the game to pitch the seventh. It took 25 pitches for him to finish that inning, and he allowed two runs on two hits.

He came back out to handle the eighth and allowed a three-run homer. His final line was 1.1 IP, allowing five runs (all earned) on five hits. He struck out one and currently has an ERA of 10.38.

RHP/catcher Brett Sullivan handled the ninth inning as well. His final line was one run (earned) on three hits. He walked one and did not notch any strikeouts in 1.2 IP.

Coming into this game, Sullivan lacked 22 innings of pitching to be classified as a two-way player. That number has now decreased to 20 innings. Should this happen, only Sullivan and Shohei Ohtani would have this classification.

Next up

Tomorrow night, the Marlins and Rockies will continue their series with Max Meyer facing Kyle Freeland.

First pitch is at 6:40pm.

See you then.


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White Sox win first road series since May with 9-3 beat down in Baltimore

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - JUNE 30: Jacob Gonzalez #7 of the Chicago White Sox drives hits a two-run single in the third inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on June 30, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Greg Fiume/Getty Images)
Jacob Gonzalez went 3-for-4 with three RBIs, and is slashing .440/.481/.720 over his last seven games. | (Greg Fiume/Getty Images)

In back-to-back nights, the offense scored eight or more runs while the pitching staff maintained its command, as the White Sox secured their first road series win since the May 1 series in San Diego after beating the Orioles, 9-3.

His ERA didn’t improve much (4.41), but Erick Fedde was solid enough tonight to earn his third win of the season, working out of some key jams to keep himself and the Sox in the game. Fedde tossed 90 pitches across five innings and gave up three runs on five hits, walking three and striking out three, and eventually had a nice eight-run cushion to work with.

Despite leaving eight runners on base as a team, the Good Guys were efficient (3-for-9) with runners in scoring position, and every batter in the lineup reached base at least once, except for Miguel Vargas – but hey, he can’t be the hero every night. His teammates picked him up anyway, mashing 11 hits with three doubles and two homers while also drawing six walks to keep the baserunners flowing. Andrew Benintendi and Jacob Gonzalez each popped off for three hits, while three players racked up two or more RBIs: Gonzalez (three), Junior Perez (three), and Colson Montgomery (two), with the latter two each mashing a bomb.

The White Sox scored early with one run in the top of the first after Kyle Teel drew a walk to start the game, and Benintendi mashed his 12th double of the season to the right field corner. Righthander Trey Gibson stumbled through the first for the Orioles, walking three batters to load up the bases, but the Good Guys unfortunately couldn’t capitalize, and Tristan Peters grounded out to strand all three.

The South Siders’ one-run lead lasted for maybe 10 minutes, give or take. Gunnar Henderson struck from the leadoff spot once again, beginning the frame with a base hit, and Pete Alonso walked to put two runners on with two outs. Jumping on the first pitch, Samuel Basallo delivered in the clutch with a base hit in the right-field gap to erase the lead and tie the game, 1-1.

The good news is that the White Sox apparently got sick of being called a “bad road team” and exploded for seven runs in the top of the third with six hits, three walks, and two home runs: a two-run, 440-foot moon shot from Colson Montgomery, and a three-run tank from Junior Perez for his second of the year.

Since joining the team on June 18, Perez has gone 4-for-13 with two home runs and four RBIs while posting a 1.047 OPS. It’s a small sample size, and Perez has also struck out six times, but there’s been some solid production from him when he’s been called upon.

On top of that, Jacob Gonzalez drove in two during the mega rally in the third, and sent a deep RBI double to right-center the next inning that one-hopped the wall to drive in his third run of the night. Since snapping his rough cold streak, Jacob has slashed .440/.481/.720 while going 11-for-25 with a homer, four doubles, 12 RBIs, and just four strikeouts. With Tuesday’s game, Gonzalez has raised his season OPS above .700 (.738)and has been making massive strides to keep his spot on the team once Munetaka Murakami is back.

After the Perez home run, that was the end of the day for Gibson, and it’s likely one he will want to forget. To make things worse, the Baltimore coaches seemed to let him flounder out there, opting not to use another mound visit during the mayhem. Gibson ended up with his third loss after 2 2/3 frames, allowing eight runs on seven hits, two homers, six walks, and five strikeouts; and his ERA has now ballooned up to 7.36. Ouch. But thank you for your service, sir.

The Orioles added two more runs in an attempt to cut the eight-run lead down in the bottom of the fifth, but Fedde worked through the jam to complete five innings and be on the hook for the win. Back-to-back doubles from Gunnar Henderson and Dylan Beavers scored one, and an RBI single from Pete Alonso scored the third Baltimore run, but that was all she wrote from their offense tonight.

Recalled from the Triple-A Charlotte Knights just a few days ago, Tyler Schweitzer came on to relieve Fedde and ended up finishing out the game and earning his first major league save. Schweitzer looked great throughout all four innings, only surrendering four hits while striking out three. He also tossed 36 of his 46 pitches (78%) for strikes, and looked way more buttoned up this time around. Tyler’s job was to eat innings, and he did that perfectly to save the game and close out the series win.

The Cleveland Guardians just dropped their second game in a row to the Texas Rangers tonight, leaving the White Sox with a two-game division lead. Regardless of whether they sneak out of Baltimore with a sweep, this next series in Cleveland will be huge. With these big wins over the last few games, the Good Guys now have a +30 run differential, which is the third-best in the American League, and have slightly improved their road record to 17-25.

We got an early one on at Camden Yards on Wednesday, with the series finale taking place at 11:35 a.m. CT. Lefthander Noah Schultz returns from the IL and makes tomorrow’s start, not having pitched since May 24 in San Francisco. In three June rehab starts with the Knights, Schultz accumulated a 4.00 ERA across nine innings, giving up four earned runs with two homers, six walks, and 15 strikeouts, with seven Ks in his final 4 2/3 frame outing.

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33-53 chart

DENVER, COLORADO - JUNE 30: TJ Rumfield #7 of the Colorado Rockies reacts after failing to field a ground ball in the seventh inning against the Miami Marlins at Coors Field on June 30, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Marlins 14, Rockies 3

Leverage index and box score

Box Score

Win Percentage Chart

Batting Box

Pitching Box

Graphics via FanGraphs.

Eur-a good pitcher, Eury Pérez: Eury Pérez, +0.17 WPA

Not a good return for Mr. Gordon: Tanner Gordon, -0.22 WPA

Game thread comments of the day


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Mets' Nolan McLean bounces back from tough last start, recent rough stretch with 'dominant' performance

After six scoreless innings against the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday night, Mets starter Nolan McLean reminded everybody just how dominant he can be and proved that his previous start against the Chicago Cubs, where he allowed six earned runs, was a fluke.

In fact, during that start at Citi Field, McLean struck out nine batters and was really only burned on two pitches that both went for homers and accounted for five of the six runs. 

For this start, though, the right-hander took the positives of that outing, as well as his start before that in which he didn’t allow an earned run through seven innings against the Cincinnati Reds, and implemented them against the Blue Jays.

“Obviously the result of the last start wasn’t great, but outside of really two swings I felt really good last week,” McLean said. “So I tried to take the positives of what I could. Obviously it’s never fun going in and giving up six runs, but [I] tried to go in and look at the positives and bounce off of that for tonight.”

McLean now seems to be over the struggles he was going through earlier in the season when he allowed 16 runs (13 earned) in nine innings across two starts. And after bursting onto the scene late last season and getting off to a similarly hot start this season, that little stretch McLean went through was his first taste of adversity. 

Interim manager Andy Green said after Tuesday’s 3-0 win that he’s been impressed with how the 24-year-old responded to hardship.

“That’s who he is,” Green said. “It’s been fun seeing him kind of bounce back from a tougher stretch. I know last game, a little bit was made out of like a couple of home runs that skewed the line, but [today] he was just mixing his pitches incredibly well. 

“He’s got different ways to end at-bats; he was competitive the whole day, he was in the zone the whole day and that was, [from] start to finish, as just clean and dominant as he’s been all year, so it was awesome.”

Since his start on May 25, when he lasted a career-low 3.1 innings against the Cincinnati Reds and allowed seven earned runs, McLean has been on top of his game once again. 

Even with the six earned runs allowed last time out against the Cubs, McLean has a 2.79 ERA in five starts this month and has limited his opponent to two earned runs or fewer in five of his last six starts.

The best sign? Outside of the two against Chicago, McLean hasn’t allowed any home runs during that stretch and has started to walk fewer batters, two things that were beginning to plague him.

“I think [when] you go through an entire baseball season for the first time, you’re going to hit stretches where maybe your command wanes a little bit and I think it was mostly that,” Green said of McLean’s rough patch. “So he got to spots where he wasn’t getting his pitches to where he wanted it to and I think that sometimes causes you to go a little bit faster. 

“He was able to slow the game down; he’s able to step on the mound and take a deep breath and just go about executing.”

That’s what McLean did on Tuesday night against a Blue Jays team that had never faced him before.

“First off, Luis [Torrens] called a great game,” McLean said. “We had a lot of confidence in all the pitches and that was kind of the goal going in. 

“No matter what pitches I threw before, just have the confidence all the way through and trust in the adjustments throughout the game to have a feel if I didn’t have something working early, to be able to find it later. And then it just always goes back to [throwing] offspeed for strikes.”

In particular, McLean thought his sweeper worked for him very well on Tuesday and that he was able to use it to play off the sinker while also mixing in fastballs.

“I’m just trying to get better every time I go out there,” he said. “Find new things that work or old things that I kinda went away from that I should stick by and it always just goes back to landing offspeed. I think that’s a big key for me. Any time I can do that and keep guys off my fastball, it’s really good.”

Brewers ride four-run fourth inning to 7-2 win over Reds

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - JUNE 30: Jake Bauers #9 of the Milwaukee Brewers is congratulated by Sal Frelick #10 after Bauers scored in the second inning against the Cincinnati Reds at American Family Field on June 30, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Box Score

The Brewers are starting to look like themselves again. After some recent struggles with runners in scoring position, they broke out of their slump with a big fourth inning, and with another solid day from Brandon Sproat, the Brewers took a 7-2 win on Tuesday night.

The day started out looking rough for Sproat. After Elly De La Cruz hit a deep fly ball to start the game, Sal Stewart hit a home run to give the Reds an early 1-0 lead. Sproat also allowed a two-out walk to Eugenio Suárez, but he was caught stealing to end the inning.

Meanwhile, Rhett Lowder struck out the side in the first inning to start his day strong. In the second, the Brewers got their first baserunner on a Jake Bauers single. He got to second on a passed ball by Jose Trevino to get into scoring position. On the next pitch, Garrett Mitchell singled to right, and Bauers beat the throw home. That tied the game at 1-1.

Sproat recovered from the first-inning run and kept the Reds in check for the next few innings. He worked around a one-out single in the second for a clean inning. In the third, he walked leadoff batter TJ Friedl and threw a wild pitch, but stranded Friedl at second. The fourth was Sproat’s strongest inning as he struck out the side.

Lowder had a clean third inning, but the Brewers came out swinging in the fourth. They started the inning with five consecutive singles. William Contreras, Bauers, and Mitchell had the first three to load the bases. Sal Frelick hit the fourth and gave the Brewers a 2-1 lead. Joey Ortiz followed that with another single, driving in two to make it 4-1.

With no outs and two on, Hamilton went for the sacrifice bunt and moved Ortiz up to second. Christian Yelich then drew a walk to load the bases again, and Jackson Chourio added the sixth single of the inning. That pushed the lead to 5-1.

Brice Turang then (initially) drew a walk, but a challenge on ball four overturned the walk into a strikeout. Contreras followed that up with a groundout that Edwin Arroyo bobbled, but the second baseman still had time to throw out Contreras at first.

The Brewers added on another run in the fifth. Bauers led off the inning with a home run on the first pitch he saw, increasing the lead to 6-1.

A single from Ortiz three batters later ended Lowder’s day, and Caleb Ferguson entered in relief. He finished the inning with a Hamilton lineout. Lowder finished the day at 4 2/3 innings pitched and six runs allowed on 11 hits, striking out eight and allowing a walk.

Murphy stuck with Sproat at 93 pitches entering the sixth. Unfortunately, the Reds broke through, scoring a run on back-to-back doubles by De La Cruz and Stewart. After a mound visit, Sproat struck out Bleday. That was the last batter Sproat faced. He finished the day with 5 1/3 innings pitched, two runs allowed on four hits and two walks with seven strikeouts. Though the results haven’t been pretty, Sproat finished up a good month of June for him, and is hopefully putting it all together in the majors.

Chad Patrick entered in relief and kept the inherited runner at second, getting Suárez to pop out before striking out Nathaniel Lowe to end the inning.

The bullpens locked it down from there, with one exception. In the eighth inning, Chourio hit a two-out home run into the Brewers’ bullpen. It was his 12th of the season and 10th of the month, extending the lead to 7-2.

Five different Brewers had multi-hit days. Bauers and Frelick led the day with three hits each. Chourio, Mitchell, and Ortiz added on two hits apiece. Hamilton and Yelich were the two Brewers who went hitless (though Yelich drew a walk). As a team, they went 5-for-11 with runners in scoring position and had a total of 14 hits, with only three of those going for extra bases.

In the bullpen, Patrick had 1 2/3 scoreless innings with a strikeout. Jared Koenig worked around a hit for a clean eighth inning. Grant Anderson finished the game with a hit allowed and two strikeouts in the ninth.

The Brewers have secured at least a split in this series against the Reds, but need one more win for a winning series and homestand. Game three is set for tomorrow night, but it’ll start at 7:10 p.m. because of an ESPN national broadcast. Shane Drohan faces Andrew Abbott in that game.

Skubal works 6 strong innings, Tigers hit 5 homers in 9-3 win over the Yankees

NEW YORK (AP) — Tarik Skubal pitched six innings of one-hit ball and Riley Greene hit two of Detroit’s four homers off Cam Schlittler as the Tigers beat the Yankees 9-3 on Tuesday night and sent New York to its season-worst sixth straight loss.

The Tigers hit five homers overall against the Yankees for the first time since Aug. 30, 2018.

Skubal (4-4), making his fourth start since returning from elbow surgery, allowed only Ben Rice’s 23rd homer in the first inning and an unearned run in the sixth. The two-time defending AL Cy Young Award winner struck out nine and walked none after allowing four runs to the Yankees last week in Detroit.

Skubal threw 61 of 87 pitches for strikes and retired 12 straight after Rice’s homer in the first.

Greene hit a solo shot during a four-run first inning off Schlittler (8-5) and added a two-run drive in the third for a 6-1 lead. It was Greene’s eighth career multi-homer game.

Before Greene’s first homer, Kerry Carpenter hit a solo shot in which center fielder Spencer Jones could not complete a leaping catch at the right-center field fence and saw the ball pop out of his glove into the Yankees’ bullpen.

Spencer Torkelson hit a two-run homer to cap a 10-pitch at-bat in which he fouled off six pitches.

Schlittler allowed a career-high six runs runs and seven hits in four-plus innings. The hard-throwing right-hander had his ERA climb from 1.62 to 2.08.

Schlittler allowed four homers after allowing six homers in his first 17 starts. He had never allowed more than two in any start and became the first Yankees pitcher to allow four homers to the Tigers since Chuck Cary in 1989 at Tiger Stadium.

Detroit’s James Outman hit a three-run homer in the sixth off Ryan Yarbrough after second baseman José Caballero committed a throwing error on a force play.

New York has managed just 16 hits in its last five games.

Up next

Detroit RHP Troy Melton (4-1, 2.39 ERA) opposes New York RHP Will Warren (7-3, 3.75) in the series finale on Wednesday afternoon.

Cade Cavalli dominates in the chaos as the Washington Nationals win a chippy affair

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 30: Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox is held back after an altercation against the Washington Nationals during the fourth inning at Fenway Park on June 30, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This was definitely more interesting than your average Tuesday night game between teams from different leagues. Things got chippy and heated at Fenway Park. Through all of the chaos, Cade Cavalli delivered one of the most dominant starts you will ever see. He struck out 13, walked nobody, allowed one hit and got an insane 25 whiffs.

Tonight was by far the most dominant Cavalli has ever looked. His fastball, which has been a bit of an issue for him at times, was just overwhelming Red Sox hitters. He 15 of his 25 whiffs on the heater. His fastball averaged 97.3 MPH, but I suspect it was more like 98 because he mixed in some pitches that looked like cutters but were classified as 4-seamers. 

After getting in some trouble in the first inning and allowing an unearned run, Cavalli retired the last 19 hitters he faced. It was just an overwhelming display of power from a pitcher that has had to take a long path to get here. Cavalli had a very bumpy recovery from Tommy John, but his stuff still allowed fans to dream. Tonight was truly that dream becoming reality.

This is one of the most dominant starts by a Nats pitcher in the 2020’s, potentially the most dominant. The last time a Nats pitcher went at least 7 innings while striking out double digit hitters and allowing one hit or less was Max Scherzer back in 2018. Of course, those kinds of outings were par for the course for Mad Max, but we have not seen that kind of dominance since.

Cavalli really did look like Max Scherzer on that mound tonight. He was frothing from the mouth and stalking around the mound the same way Scherzer used to. Cavalli was also just blowing heaters by guys and mixing in filthy breaking balls like Max did as well.

One thing I don’t think Max ever did with the Nats was get into an all out brawl on the mound. That is what happened with Cavalli tonight. After Willson Contreras cut off Cavalli on his way off the mound, some bad blood emerged. Then Cavalli struck out Contreras in the 4th, and yelled “sit down boy” as he got off the mound.

While that was a bit out of pocket, Contreras took things over the top by charging the mound and throwing his helmet. Contreras has been in the center of a lot of dust ups in his career, so this is nothing new for him. Even last night, he had a huge bat flip and pumped his chest after a homer against former teammate Miles Mikolas. Later last night, he also got ejected. Tonight, he was in the middle of a brawl.

The way the Nats responded from that brawl was absolutely fantastic. At the time, they were down 1-0. After the dust up, the Nats outscored the Red Sox 8-0. Cavalli also channeled his emotions extremely well. It could have been easy to allow that incident to throw off his outing. In fact, it did the opposite and the big right hander thrived in the chaos and smiled as the Fenway Park crowd booed him.

Before the brawl, the Nats offense was sluggish, but between Connelly Early exiting the game and the juice from the skirmish, they got going. The bottom of the order did a lot of damage, with Daylen Lile and Keibert Ruiz each getting two hits. Ruiz had his fingerprints all over the game, for better or for worse. Despite getting thrown out on the bases again, it was mostly good though, as the Nats catcher drove in three runs.

The Nats scored 7 runs in the 7th and 8th innings. CJ Abrams put the cherry on top with a solo homer and the Nats tacked on a few more thanks to Ruiz and James Wood. The offense had not been as dynamic lately, but tonight was a good reminder of how quickly they can strike.

Between the brawl, Cavalli’s outing and the late inning offense, this was one of the best wins of the season. It sure fired me up and I bet the players are stocked as well. This could be one of those games that can really bring the team together.

Even the bullpen did a nice job in this one. It looked like Orlando Ribalta was going to make things interesting after allowing two straight hits. However, he quickly settled things down by getting a double play. In the 9th, Zak Kent, who I wrote about today, had a clean inning. That means, I did not jinx him, at least not yet. This was just a great team win, just with some added drama mixed in to spice things up.