Philasaurus Rex Breaks Out of the Paddack: Phillies 7, Marlins 2

May 3, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Philadelphia Phillies third baseman Alec Bohm (28) and center fielder Brandon Marsh (16) Phillies ait for second baseman Bryson Stott (5) at the plate after his home run against the Miami Marlins during the first inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Rhona Wise-Imagn Images | Rhona Wise-Imagn Images

Try not to move is good advice when you are trapped in a Jeep with a Tyrannosaurus rex bearing down on you. It is bad advice when you are throwing a cutter. Unfortunately, as Marlins pitcher Chris Paddack found out, the Phillies are not like T. rexes,, and they will hit you very, very hard if you (or rather, your pitches) aren’t moving well.

Trea Turner got the proceedings started with a ground rule double, the ball bouncing happily over the wall. Even more happily, Kyle Schwarber walked in his first at-bat, snapping an eight-PA strikeout streak. Bryce Harper’s subsequent walk was less dramatic, but no less welcome. Less welcome was Alec Bohm’s bases-loaded dribbler to the left side of the infield. It had little power and didn’t seem to take any odd bounces. But strangely, delightfully, the Marlins couldn’t turn it into any outs, with the throw to second arriving just after a sliding Harper, and the follow-up throw to first arriving just after a sprinting Bohm. 1-0, Phillies. It became 2-0 when Paddack walked Marsh, forcing in a run. The Marlins finally got an out in the form of J.T. Realmuto— but as it took the form of a sacrifice fly, and an extension of the Philadelphia lead to 3-0, it offered little solace.

The subsequent three-run homer from Bryson Stott felt slightly cruel to the home club. Not in the sense of poor sportsmanship, but in a sort of cosmic sense. Even more so because it slipped just past the outstretched glove of a leaping Kyle Stowers, flinging himself over the wall like his team’s namesake flings itself out of the water. The Phillies ended the first frame with a half-dozen runs, and the Marlins ended it with a need for a half-dozen anti-nausea pills.

The nausea for the Fish did not lessen in a disappointing second, where they put the first two batters aboard against Jesús Luzardo, then saw the next three trudge back to the dugout. It did not lessen in the third, when an error put Realmuto on first, a double put Felix Reyes on second, and a seeing-eye single from Justin Crawford scored one. Paddack’s unhappy Sunday thus ended.

The next few innings consisted of a holding pattern. The two teams scattered a few hits, though no more runs scored.

The Marlins’ fortunes started to change in the top of the seventh, but it didn’t seem that way at first. Bohm singled, a fly ball to right dropping right in front of the glove of a sliding Owen Caissie in right. Marsh lined a ball to left that tripped up Javier Sonoja, and the Phillies had runners on second and third, none out. But Stott flew out, too shallow to score Bohm, Marsh grounded into an unassisted putout at first, and Reyes struck out, and the threat was ended.

The Marlins then put their first runs of the game on the board, as Luzardo hit Leo Jiménez on the foot with a pitch, then tossed a four-seamer to Esteury Ruiz that got smacked into left for a two-run homer. Right after, Javier Sanoja slapped a pitch right up the third base line for a double, and Luzardo’s day (6.1 IP, 10 K, 2 ER) was done. Chase Shugart came in to replace him, and navigated his way out of the inning without allowing a run. He did the same in the eighth.

As the top of the ninth wrapped up, the Phillies wrapped up their sixth straight scoreless inning. Had it not been for the eruption in the first inning, this would have been cause for frustration. But a sixth-run first buys you a lot of leeway, and ought to.

The Marlins faced Orion Kerkering in the ninth. The game seemed to end on a nice twirling throw from Trea Turner to put Ruiz out at first. The Marlins challenged, the replay center confirmed that the game had indeed come to a close, and the Marlins’ hopes finally went the way of the dinosaurs.

The Phillies are 14-20. The final game of the series against the Marlins is tomorrow at 6:40.

Mets' A.J. Minter makes second rehab appearance in three days with scoreless inning

Mets reliever A.J. Minter cleared another hurdle in his road to recovery from lat surgery after throwing for the second time in three days following his scoreless inning for Triple-A on Sunday afternoon.

That makes four appearances in Syracuse and eight total for the left-hander who also pitched for Low-A and High-A. 

Minter has pitched well during his rehab, owning a 2.25 ERA in four innings in Triple-A and a 1.17 ERA through all minor league levels. He has struck out four in 7.2 innings and has a 0.78 WHIP.

New York said after Minter's previous outing on Friday that it would decide what's next for the southpaw after proving he can pitch twice in three days. Now that he has and left it unharmed, the Mets should certainly be pleased.

Still, Minter has yet to throw in back-to-back games during his rehab process and has not gone more than an inning in any appearance either. While Minter is not generally a candidate to pitch multiple innings with the big league club, it might be good to see that he can do it should the need ever come up with the Mets.

When the veteran reliever does return to New York, it will be interesting to see how the team deploys him after he signed a two-year, $22 million deal before the 2025 season to be the setup man. Right now, that spot belongs to Luke Weaver while Devin Williams is the closer, although both pitchers have struggled at times this year for the Mets.

Twins hold on to beat Blue Jays 4-3 after Ryan leaves with elbow soreness

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Andrew Morris pitched 3 2/3 scoreless innings in relief of starter Joe Ryan, who exited with elbow soreness, and the Minnesota Twins held on to beat the Toronto Blue Jays 4-3 on Sunday to split a four-game series.

Ryan, a 2025 All-Star, struck out Yohendrick Piñango to start the game. He then walked Kazuma Okamoto and immediately signaled to catcher Victor Caratini and the dugout before leaving.

Luke Keaschall had a pair of hits, including an RBI double in a three-run fifth inning for Minnesota, which had lost 13 of 16 entering the game. The Twins lost a night earlier as Toronto scored eight runs before an out was recorded in the eighth against Minnesota’s bullpen, which started the day with a 5.48 ERA, third-worst in the majors.

Morris (1-1) allowed just two hits and a walk, while striking out three in his sixth major league appearance. He debuted on April 12.

Okamoto hit a two-run home run in the ninth off Twins reliever Justin Topa, but Topa managed to secure his second save with two runners left on after Lenyn Sosa grounded into a game-ending double play. It was Okamoto’s third straight game with a home run.

Trey Yesavage (1-1) made his second start of the season for Toronto, surrendering one run on five hits and three walks in four innings.

Victor Caratini had an RBI double in the first for the Twins, who then got three doubles in the fifth off reliever Braydon Fisher to score three runs after Caratini had walked with one out in the inning.

Blue Jays: Toronto has not announced a starter for Monday’s game at Tampa Bay after Max Scherzer went on the injured list on April 27 with forearm tendinitis and ankle inflammation. The Rays are scheduled to start right-hander Nick Martinez (2-1, 1.70 ERA).

Twins: Right-hander Taj Bradley (3-1, 2.85) starts Tuesday at Washington, which has not announced a starter.

Game Thread: White Sox (16-17) at Padres (19-13)

Apr 29, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago White Sox shortstop Colson Montgomery (12), center, celebrates with third baseman Miguel Vargas (20) and left fielder Sam Antonacci (17) after hitting a walk off RBI single against the Los Angeles Angels during the tenth inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images | Matt Marton-Imagn Images

When I wrote the game thread for last Sunday’s eventual loss, I described the vibe of the 2026 White Sox as something akin to the “Ricky’s Boys Don’t Quit” team that, in 2019, gave fans their first glimpse of post-rebuild promise after two years of triple-digit losses. Now, after three years of triple-digit losses, I’m going to amend that statement. Perhaps it was the record-setting futility of 2024, or perhaps it was the third consecutive year of being the worst team in Major League Baseball. Whatever it is, as difficult as it might have been to believe a few weeks ago, I feel comfortable in saying that this team feels a lot better than whatever 2019 was.

The Sox have put five straight Ws in the win column since last Sunday, and now, they have a chance to display a .500 record beyond April for the first time since the end of the 2022 season. Since his promotion earlier this month, Noah Schultz has looked every part of the top-of-the-rotation starter that fans have spent years hoping he would be. Sean Burke hasn’t allowed an earned run over his last two starts, and Davis Martin seems to have learned how to leverage his deep arsenal into an All-Star caliber run on the mound to begin the season. The fact that Munetaka Murakami has lived up to every inch of his potential almost distracts from the fact that Colson Montgomery’s power surge last summer seems to have been very much not a fluke and that he remains one of the league’s best shortstops, even if the rest of baseball hasn’t quite caught up to it yet.

Whether they can turn this little run into a full-blown winning streak has yet to be seen, but a three-game sweep of a good Padres team would go a long way towards inflating the perception that the White Sox might kind of, sort of, maybe, actually be back. Here’s the lineup that Will Venable is sending out today in an attempt to do so:

This is just me, but I have a sneaking suspicious that Sam Antonacci in the leadoff spot is something we’re going to get used to for the rest of the summer. The fact that the team is approaching .500 while routinely running out lineups like this one is part of why I believe this early-season surge isn’t just a flash in the pan.

Here’s what San Diego manager Craig Stammen is sending out to counter Anthony Kay and friends:

There was a fair amount of noise linking Padres starting Griffin Canning to the White Sox this past offseason; we can only hope that the Sox will make him regret his choice in free agent destination today. First pitch is scheduled for at 3:10 p.m. CT, live from San Diego. If you want to join us, broadcasts are available on CHSN (TV) and WMVP AM 1000 (radio) like always!

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

GAME THREAD: Guardians and A’s, game 35 of 162

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 02: Travis Bazzana #37 of the Cleveland Guardians hits a two-run RBI single with the bases loaded against the Athletics in the top of the seventh inning at Sutter Health Park on May 02, 2026 in Sacramento, California. The hit and RBI's were the first Bazzana's major league career. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here’s the Guardians lineup:

Here’s the Athletics lineup:

Let’s go, Guardians!

Reds swept by Pirates despite Chase Burns’ excellence on Sunday

Apr 21, 2026; St. Petersburg, Florida, USA; Cincinnati Reds pitcher Chase Burns (26) throws a pitch against Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field. Mandatory Credit: Pablo Robles-Imagn Images | Pablo Robles-Imagn Images

The Cincinnati Reds did not have a position player pitch on Sunday in Pittsburgh. They did not get shelled 9-1, or walk seven consecutive batters in a 17-7 drubbing.

The Reds instead watched their brightest young star turn in precisely the kind of outing they needed after their starters and bullpen had been torched the previous two days by the Pirates. Chase Burns, today’s Joe Nuxhall Memorial Honorary Star of the Game, pitched into the 8th inning for the first time in his career, holding the Pirates scoreless for 7 frames to begin the game while allowing just 2 hits, a walk, and striking out 7.

Despite being at 89 pitches at the end of the 7th, Burns was sent out for the Bottom of the 8th by manager Terry Francona. It was already the longest outing of Burns career, but veteran righty Marcell Ozuna was in the batter’s box, and Burns had handled him twice already on the day. Francona was surely trying to get a quick IP out of his resident ace, wary of leaning on his bullpen yet again on Sunday, but Ozuna fought off a Burns offering for a broken-bat single that ultimately ended Burns’ day.

And, as the weekend fates would have it, reliever Tony Santillan couldn’t keep the Pirates off the board after taking the mound even after getting a roll-over double play to retire that batter. Konnor Griffin smoked a double and later came in to score on a single by Oneil Cruz, the game’s lone run plated for the Pirates, not the Reds.

Cincinnati went easily in the Top of the 9th, and the 1-0 loss wrapped up a sweep by the Pirates at the Reds expense.

Cincinnati’s offense mustered just 4 hits on the day, with Jose Trevino’s double in the Top of the 8th the lone of the extra-base variety. That actually chased Pittsburgh starter Braxton Ashcraft and the Reds had runners on 2B and 3B (Spencer Steer had singled in front of Trevino), but the Reds couldn’t get a run across the plate. The key PA came with a pair of outs in that inning and lefty Gregory Soto on the mound in relief, as Francona opted to let TJ Friedl hit instead of pinch-hitting for him with right-handed hitter Dane Myers.

Friedl struck out, and that ended Cincinnati’s lone, best chance.

The Reds head to Chicago later this evening and will take on a rolling Chicago Cubs team that now sits atop the NL Central. Buckle up!

Twins 4, Blue Jays 3: Canada vs. Andrew Morris (& Co.)

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - MAY 03: Andrew Morris #78 of the Minnesota Twins delivers a pitch against the Toronto Blue Jays in the first inning at Target Field on May 03, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Twins sent Joe Ryan to the bump this morning—the Peacock MLB Sunday Wakeup special—hoping for a series split. He lasted all of two batters before leaving with an undisclosed injury. It would be an unexpected bullpen game featuring the worst pen in baseball. My thoughts at the exact moment: how many innings will Kody Clemens need to cover today?

Fortunately, Twins’ bats were not as depressed as the fan base early on, with a Trevor Larnach single and Austin Martin BB paid off by a Victor Caratini RBI knock to put an early run on the board. 1-0 MN.

In the third inning, an in-game interview with Twins manager Derek Shelton revealed it was “right elbow soreness” that regelated Ryan to the bench. Wonderful. That same frame, the Twins loaded the bases (Martin single, Luke Keaschall double, Clemens BB) with two outs, only to see Royce Lewis not enjoy salami—or even a lesser-quality meat—after striking out against Blue Jays SP Trey Yesavage.

Remarkably, the first RP out of the pen for MN—Andrew Morris—tossed 3.2 innings of 2 H, 0 ER ball to keep the contest at the razor-thin 1-0 margin.

MIN finally changed the number in B5 when a Caratini BB was followed by doubles from Keaschall, heretofore-not-needed-on-the-mound Clemens, & Matt Wallner. 4-0 MN!

Toronto got on the board in T6 when Taylor Rogers tried to complete a second consecutive scoreless inning but could not. A Daulton Varsho drag-bunt single allowed Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to scamper home, but Rogers avoided any further damage by coaxing a “home run in an elevator shaft” fly out from Tyler Heineman. 4-1 MN.

A ticklish situation—two Jays on the pond—was mitigated in T8 by Kody Funderburk inducing a ground-out.

Justin Topa entered in T9 to try and close this one out—which of course meant clenched cheeks (and not the chewing kind). Another Kazuma Okamoto HR closed the margin to a single run, and an error from Keaschall allowed the tying and go-ahead runs to reside on the base paths. Blessedly, a Lenyn Sosa grounder went successfully from 2B to 1B for a game-ending double play!

Your Final: Minnesota Twins 4, Toronto Blue Jays 3

Seeing their best pitcher exit with injury after recording just one out, the Twins turned to a league-worst bullpen and somehow escaped with the victory. #baseball.

Zach’s Zealot
  • Morris: Coming in cold two batters into the game and keeping the defending AL champs off the board into the middle innings.
Zach’s Zombie
  • Lewis: 0-4, 2 K, now at .176 BA & .598 OPS on the season.
Egg-cellent Elocution
Who’s Got Next
  • After a travel Monday off-day, the Twins visit the Washington Nationals in D.C. (Tues. night, Wed. night, Thurs. afternoon)—and I’ll be joining them there! I’ll be back in time to cover next Sunday’s slate, but if you don’t hear from me much on the threads until then it’s because I’m seeing the sights of our Nation’s Capital!

Griffin Canning to start; Germán Márquez to IL

Peoria, AZ - February 18: Griffin Canning #17 of the San Diego Padres poses for a portrait on February 18, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by K.C. Alfred / The San Diego Union-Tribune via Getty Images)

The San Diego Padres activated right-handed starter Griffin Canning from the injured list Sunday morning to start in the final game in the series against the Chicago White Sox. Right-hander Randy Vásquez, slated to start on Sunday, will be pushed back to Monday in San Francisco.

The corresponding move for the Padres is to place right-handed starter Germán Márquez on the 15-day injured list with right forearm nerve inflammation, retroactive to May 2. Márquez started on Friday against the White Sox, allowing seven runs on five hits and five walks in five innings pitched. He also got two strikeouts while increasing his ERA to 5.76.

Canning injured his Achilles tendon while pitching for the New York Mets last season. He began the 2026 season with Triple-A El Paso and started five games. He threw 62 pitches in his last start on Tuesday, allowing three hits with no earned runs, allowing a walk with four strikeouts. It was expected that Canning would complete his rehab today with El Paso but is joining the Padres instead.

The injury to Márquez pushes his start to San Diego and Canning could go 70-80 pitches with a natural progression from his last start. Canning features six pitches with his four-seam fastball and slider being dominant. His pitching is ground-ball heavy but he has the repertoire to get swing-and-miss as well.

Márquez, who signed with the Padres in the offseason, underwent Tommy John surgery in 2024 and has struggled to return to his former effectiveness before the surgery. He has started six games for the Padres and has a 3-2 record with his 5.76 ERA. He features a knuckle curve 40% of the time and his 94 mph four-seam fastball 36% of the time. He also flashes a sinker, slider and changeup.

Márquez had two starts allowing no earned runs but allowed at least four earned runs in all the other outings before allowing the seven runs on May 1.

Mariners claim LHP José Suarez off waivers from Atlanta

ATLANTA, GA - APRIL 10: José Suarez #54 of the Atlanta Braves pitches in the eighth inning during the game against the Cleveland Guardians at Truist Park on April 10, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Matthew Grimes Jr./Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mariners, suddenly drawing from their depth a month into the season, made a waiver claim today, picking up lefty José Suarez from Atlanta.

Mariners fans likely remember Suarez from his lengthy Angels tenure, from the time he signed with the Angels as a free agent out of Venezuela to 2024. Prior to the 2025 season, the Angels traded him to Atlanta in exchange for injury-prone pitcher Ian Anderson (later DFA’d by the Angels and re-claimed by Atlanta). Atlanta transitioned the short king (listed 5’10”) to the bullpen and edited his pitch mix, dropping his sweeper and tweaking his slider to be shorter and more of a traditional gyro slider, resulting in more whiffs on the pitch.

Command remains an issue for Suarez, something that’s persisted since his days as an Angel. Although he had a solid first season as a Brave, this year has been a struggle, leading to much sturm und drang amongst the Braves fanbase, who are all too happy to see Suarez go. As for how he fits in the Mariners bullpen, that’s a bit of a puzzle; the Mariners have a third lefty (with his own command issues, even) in Josh Simpson, although Simpson has options, where Suarez does not.

However, the Mariners are well-familiar with Suarez, having seen him for so many years in the AL West, so there must be something there the pitching brain trust hopes to unlock. The other bonus Suarez brings is length; as a former starter, he can cover multiple innings if necessary, which it’s been more often than not lately as three-fifths of the Mariners rotation continue to turn in shorter outings.

In a corresponding move, OF Rhylan Thomas was designated for assignment.

Game Thread XXXIV: Royals at Mariners

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 02: Lucas Erceg #60 of the Kansas City Royals reacts after getting the final strike out of the game during the tenth inning to beat the Seattle Mariners 3-2 at T-Mobile Park on May 02, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Olivia Vanni/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Kansas City Royals are going for a road sweep today in the Pacific Northwest, yes, you read that right a ROAD sweep. Last night, the Royals once again snatched a clutch victory in extras from the Seattle Mariners, allowing the Royals to win their third series this season and their first on the road. Shades of the 2024 season is starting to come up these Royals, as they are starting to show signs of the team people projected them to be preseason.

Kris Bubic gets the start this afternoon. Bubic had a rollercoaster ride of a start in Sacramento to start the road trip. He went 5 innings allowing 4 hits, 1 run, walking 4 but striking out 6, on 96 pitches. That game was the only one the Royals won in Sacramento.

The Royals have already clinched a .500 road trip with back-to-back victories, in fact all three wins this week have been in 10 innings, it’d be nice if they could take this one in the regular nine innings.

The starters behind Bubic are the same as it has been all series. Carter Jensen catches again today, while Salvy is the designated hitter, but this is the same starting lineup as the first two games, so some consistency from Q.

On the other side, it’s been a rough go for the Mariners. They came into this series at .500 but have dropped two heartbreakers. They also lost Cal Raleigh for unknown soreness these last two games, and their closer Andrés Muñoz blew a save last night.

Anyways, righty Luis Castillo gets the ball today for Seattle. The 33-year-old is having a rough go to start the season. He has a 6.35 ERA over 28.1 innings this season. His last start in Minnesota was not great. He surrendered seven hits, seven runs and two homers in just 5 innings of work.

Behind him, is a different starting lineup than we’ve seen the first two nights in Seattle.

The Royals sit at 14-19 and winners in 6 of their last 8 games. Can they complete a road sweep today and a winning trip out west? They come into today 2 games out of the final wild card spot and 3.5 games behind the division leading Guardians, who they start a four-game series with tomorrow night at the K. First pitch is set for 3:10 p.m. CT, the game can be streamed on Royals.TV.

Mariners Game #35 Preview and Discussion

PEORIA, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 27: Jhonny Pereda #5 of the Seattle Mariners looks on during the fifth inning of the spring training game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Peoria Stadium on February 27, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Cal Raleigh will not return to the Mariners lineup Sunday.

The Mariners look to prevent a sweep against the Royals. The pitching staff blew a strong performance by the lineup on Friday, and the lineup blew a strong performance by Emerson Hancock last night. After an up and down April, they have started May on the wrong foot.

As has Raleigh, who is out of the lineup for a second straight day. Kate Preusser reported this morning that Raleigh is dealing with general soreness in his “side.” He is not on the injured list for now, and the team is simply being cautious with their top slugger in the early days of a long season.

Jhonny Pereda is up in his place and will get his first start with the Mariners in the series finale. For a primer on Pereda, Zack Mason has you covered in our preseason 40 in 40.

Rob Refsnyder leads off against Royals lefty Kris Bubic. Connor Joe is also in the lineup today; he’s been absolutely crushing the ball lately.

Luis Castillo gets the start. He got obliterated his last time out.

In other Mariners news, the team has claimed left-handed reliever José Suarez off waivers from Atlanta.

Lineups:

Game information:

Game time: 1:10

TV: Mariners TV, with Aaron Goldsmith and Dave Valle, with Angie Mentink as field reporter

Radio: 710 AM Seattle Sports, with Rick Rizzs and Gary Hill Jr.

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Blake Snell strikes out 4 in 4 innings in Triple-A start

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 30: Blake Snell #7 of the Los Angeles Dodgers warms up in the outfield during batting practice before the game against the Cleveland Guardians at Dodger Stadium on March 30, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Blake Snell completed the prescribed four innings in his third minor league rehab start on Sunday, and struck out four for Triple-A Oklahoma City against the Round Rock Express, a Texas Rangers affiliate.

Snell threw 55 pitches in those four innings, right around the expectation for his first start with Oklahoma City. Nineteen of those pitches came in the first inning, when he allowed a leadoff single, then a two-run home run on a changeup for an early deficit. But he retired his next nine batters and allowed only a walk the rest of the way.

The veteran left-hander finished off three of his four strikeouts with his curveball, and another with his four-seam fastball, which averaged 96.1 mph on Sunday. Snell induced seven swinging strikes against Round Rock, three on his fastball and two on the curve.

After the home run, Snell allowed only one hard-hit ball, but that was a 96.7-mph groundout in the third inning.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts on Friday in St. Louis, after watching Snell throw a bullpen session at Busch Stadium, told reporters that Snell would need at least one more rehab start after Sunday before getting activated off the injured list.

Snell in his first rehab start for Class-A Ontario pitched into the second inning but didn’t record any outs in the frame on April 22 in San Jose. He threw 32 pitches and allowed two runs, one earned, on three hits and a walk. The left-hander was much sharper on Tuesday in Ontario, with six strikeouts in three scoreless innings, allowing only one hit to his 10 batters faced, and induced 11 swinging strikes.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Logan Henderson shows potential, Travis Bazzana promoted

Welcome to Waiver Wire Watch, our weekly fantasy baseball waiver wire guide. We'll be doing things a little differently this season, with Eric Samulski publishing the initial waiver-wire article on Friday afternoon. Then James Schiano updates it every Sunday to make sure you get the most up-to-date information.

The premise of the article is pretty straightforward. We'll give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When we list a player, we'll list the category where we think he’ll be helpful or the quick reason he’s listed. We hope it helps you determine if the player fits what your team needs. Not every "trending" player will be a good addition for your specific roster.

To qualify for this list, a player needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. We understand you may say, “These players aren’t available in my league,” and we can’t help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they’re available in many places, and that can hopefully satisfy readers who play in all league types.

⚾️ Baseball is back on NBC: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Hitters

Travis Bazzana - 2B, CLE (31% rostered)

(EVERYDAY PLAYER, OBP LEAGUE BOOST)

The former number one overall pick was called up by the Guardians this past week to be their starting second baseman. It's taken him a few games to get going, but he notched his first career hit on Saturday and it helped ice their win over the Athletics.

He also stole his first base in that game. Expect more gap-to-gap power for Bazzana, who has good rather than great raw power plus a bit more of an opposite field approach. But his tremendous sense of the strike zone has already been on display after drawing five walks in just four games and he should get a huge boost in OBP-based leagues.

Moisés Ballesteros - C, CHC (30% rostered)

(PLAYING TIME OPPORTUNITY, POWER UPSIDE)

We covered Ballesteros last week, and not much has changed. This is a bit tricky because Ballesteros is only catcher-eligible in formats like Yahoo with lower games played thresholds. That being said, he is the Cubs’ DH against all right-handed pitchers, and his quality of contact is off the charts. If you have a UTIL spot that you can use for just a good, pure hitter, and especially if you're in a daily moves league where you can shift Ballesteros to the bench against lefties, he's worth a look.

Carlos Cortes - OF, ATH (28% rostered)

(HOT STREAK, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Cortes literally can't stop hitting. For one, he has a hit in his last 11 starts. Also, he's up to a 1.092 OPS with more walks than strikeouts through 27 games played. He's a shorter, stockier, position-less player, which hurt his prospect pedigree despite consistently producing in the upper minors. His swing is compact and helps him generate more power than his below-average bat speed would hint at. Still, his elite power metrics right now are likely to trend down, but elite bat-to-ball skills and great swing decisions give him a better floor than most would assume. Even with Brent Rooker's return to the Athletics' lineup on last weekend, Cortes is still starting in the corner outfield and hitting near the middle of their order against right-handed pitching. This week, the Athletics are scheduled to face righties in five of their six games.

Cole Young - 2B, SEA (27% rostered)

(POTENTIAL BREAKOUT, COUNTING STATS UPSIDE)

Second base is a trainwreck, so why are so few people rostering Young? He's hitting .276 on the season with a .346 on-base percentage, three home runs, two steals, 20 runs scored, and 19 RBI. He's doing a little bit of everything and was a guy Eric highlighted this offseason in his second-year hitters article.

Ryan Jeffers - C, MIN (25% rostered)

(PLAYING TIME INCREASE, POWER UPSIDE)

If you're looking for a catcher, Jeffers should really be rostered in one-catcher formats. He appeared in Eric’s article last week on hitters to buybecause he has a 50% hard-hit rate with better-than-league-average contact rates and swinging strike rates. That's a combination we love.

Samuel Basallo - C, BAL (23% rostered)

(POWER UPSIDE, HOT STREAK)

Basallo has been hot over the past few weeks. In his last 15 games, he's hit four homers of his five total homers with a .983 OPS and a league-average strikeout rate. His whiff rate has also fallen well below league average and with that swing-and-miss in check, there should be nothing stopping him from flirting with 30 home runs. Adley Rutschman's return also takes some defensive pressure off Basallo, who's struggled behind the plate defensively. Just be aware than he does not play against left-handed pitchers.

Bryan Rocchio - 2B/SS, CLE (15% rostered)

(PLAYING TIME OPPORTUNITY, MODEST SPEED UPSIDE)

We had Rocchio on here last week, and he keeps producing solid but not great results. There's nothing that jumps off the page here, but he's a young player who was a fringe prospect and could be getting better just by playing more. Over his last 26 games, he's hitting .298 with three home runs, 15 RBI, and two steals. That will help you in most league types. If you're looking for simply speed, Nasim Nunez - 2B/SS, WAS (7% rostered) is among the league leaders in steals.

Jasson Domínguez - OF, NYY (14% rostered)

(REGULAR PLAYING TIME, POWER/SPEED UPSIDE)

Domínguez was recalled last week after Giancarlo Stanton was placed on the injured list with a calf strain and has started all five games against right-handed pitchers since. On the flip side, he's been the designated hitter in four of those, only moving to the outfield in one game where Aaron Judge moved to DH. So, he looks like a direct replacement for Stanton, whose injury we don’t have a ton of details on. Regardless, Domínguez is still somehow just 23 years old and played at a near 15 HR, 20 SB pace last season working as a strong-side platoon player. He's worth an add to see if he can make good on this opportunity and the possibility that Stanton's injury winds up more serious than it seems.

Spencer Steer - 1B/OF, CIN (13% rostered)

(REGULAR PLAYING TIME, PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT)

We've seen Steer be a useful fantasy contributor before, and we like having any member of the Reds lineup who is getting regular playing time. Over his last 25 games, Steer is hitting .280 with five home runs and 13 runs scored. Somehow, he has just nine RBI with his five home runs but the Reds can't get anybody on base, but that would have to improve, right? RIGHT!?

Nick Gonzalez - 2B/3B/SS, PIT (13% rostered)

(PLAYING TIME OPPORTUNITY, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

There's nothing super sexy about Gonzalez as a fantasy option, but he has taken back the starting job in Pittsburgh, and is hitting .447 over his last 13 games and .333 on the season. That comes with 10 RBI and 10 runs, oh, and zero home runs, so there's not tons of upside across multiple categories, but if you need at-bats and batting average in a deeper format, this will play.

Hyeseong Kim - 2B/SS/LAD, LAD (10% rostered)

(BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE, STOLEN BASE UPSIDE

Kim appears like he will be the regular shortstop against right-handed pitching until Mookie Betts is back, which might be a few more weeks. Kim isn't hitting the ball overly hard, so there won't be much power here, and he's taken way more of an opposite-field approach, but he's also making far more contact in the zone and chasing outside of the zone way less than we saw last year. He seems to be focused on just driving line drives gap-to-gap and then looking to steal bases when he gets on. We're OK with that.

Anthony Volpe - SS, NYY (9% rostered)

(POWER SPEED UPSIDE, EVERY DAY PLAYING TIME)

Volpe's rehab clock is set to expire and the Yankees reportedly haven't decided whether to reinstall him as their starting shortstop, or keep him in the minor leagues and opt to stay with José Caballero there. For all of the jeers, bust accusations, and criticism he's received thus far in his career, it does appear that Volpe played injured for most of last season and at worst will be a fine power, speed option if he gets his spot back. Just don't hold your breath that it's coming right now.

Nathaniel Lowe - 1B, CIN (8% rostered)

(REGULAR PLAYING TIME, HOT STREAK)

Lowe has started pretty much every game for the Reds since Eugenio Suarez went on the IL, and is hitting .273 with five home runs and 12 RBI. He's pulling the ball more than he ever has and hitting in a hitter-friendly environment. If you're swapping out a guy like Jake Burger or Dom Smith, Lowe is a great option.

Sam Antonacci - 2B/3B/OF, CWS (6% rostered)

(REGULAR PLAYING TIME, MULTI-POSITION ELIGIBILITY)

Antonacci just keeps hitting. He has an .826 OPS through 16 games entering play on Sunday with the same number of walks as strikeouts while playing nearly every day. His raw power leaves plenty to be desired, but he's getting the most of his batted balls so far by lifting the ball a league average amount and his 11% barrel rate is very good. That plus his excellent speed has already pushed him to five extra-base hits and he should be able to run a high batting average and OBP moving forward, just don't expect much over the fence power. Think of him in the mold of a player like Brendan Donovan, just with more speed. Although, he's still yet to steal a base after swiping nearly 50 in the minors last season.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Pitchers

Jared Jones - SP, PIT (30% rostered)

Jones checked a huge box this week in his long road back from Tommy John surgery when he made his first rehab start. He was dominant in that outing too. His fastball averaged 99 mph and topped out at 101 mph as he retired all nine batters he faced. This is a good time to start thinking about stashing him. Just be aware it will likely take something close to the maximum 30 days pitchers are granted for rehab assignments before he's ready to return.

Max Meyer, SP MIA (28% rostered)

Meyer has cruised to a 2.68 ERA and 1.03 WHIP through seven starts so far this season while flying mostly under the radar. He's leaned more into throwing his sweeper, with that pitching rising to his most used against right-handed batters and third most against lefties thus far. While we don't often love sweeper-heavy approaches against opposite handed hitters, Meyer has pushed the average velocity on his just above 88 mph, making it an outlier. Being so breaking ball heavy could lead to some regression, but he's pitching too well right now to ignore.

Jacob Latz - SP/RP, TEX (27% rostered)

Latz secured the Rangers' first save in two weeks on Saturday. Jakob Junis pitched against the Athletics' five, six, and seven hitters in the eighth inning while Latz was tasked with facing Nick Kurtz and Shea Langeliers in the ninth. This still looks like a closer-by-committee despite a flurry of saves by Junis in early April.

Jack Perkins - SP/RP, ATH (25% rostered)

We were in on Perkins a few weeks ago when he came up because we thought he would eventually work himself into high-leverage innings with the Athletics. Perhaps that time is now. Perkins had a few saves earlier in the season when he was pitching multiple innings, but he converted a traditional one-inning save this week as well. He is clearly the best arm in this bullpen, so why not take a gamble on him now and assume the A's make the smart move and put him in the back-end of the bullpen full-time?

Rico Garcia - RP, BAL (21% rostered)

Ryan Helsley is yet another closer who is on the IL, as the Orioles closer hit the injured list with elbow inflammation this week. The team doesn't think it's anything serious, but they're going to need a closer for the next 2-3 weeks. Garcia has been one of the best relievers in baseball this season, so he could have plenty of value if he gets that role.

Logan Henderson - SP, MIL (18% rostered)

Henderson was promoted to start for the Brewers on Sunday in the wake of Brandon Woodruff's concerning drop in velocity and ensuing trip to the injured list. Henderson had a great season debut Sunday against the Nationals despite squandering a one run lead in the fifth inning. Nevertheless, his trusted changeup was sharp and his cutter was intriguing when he was able to bury it in on the hands of left-handed hitters. He is close to a must-add player with a potentially long term spot in this rotation, impressive short sample results in the big leagues last season, and strong track record in the upper minors.

Cade Cavalli - SP, WAS (15% rostered)

We don't necessarily think this is a true "breakout" for Cavalli. His curveball is a legit pitch, but it's basically his only one. Both of his fastballs have poor shape and get hit hard, and his sweeper grades out well on Stuff+ models, but it gets no swing-and-miss against righties, which is, you know, what you want it to do. In his starts against the Braves and Mets, Cavalli gave up tons of hard contact but was also uber efficient in two-strike counts, which helped him rack up strikeouts. We just don't fully believe it. The curve is good enough that he will have some great starts, so you can ride him now while he's pitching well, but don't expect a stud pitcher you're getting off the wire.

Connor Prielipp - SP, MIN (12% rostered)

We had Prielipp on here last week, so we'll keep him here again. Prielipp has a 96 mph four-seam fastball with poor extension but good vertical movement that he kept up in the zone really well. He also did a good job of burying his slider low in the zone to both righties and lefties. He loves that pitch, and it makes sense; it's really good. In his debut outing, his change and curve command weren’t there, but the curve is a new pitch, and it was his MLB debut, so maybe there were some nerves. We like the approach, and the pitch mix SHOULD be enough, so we'd definitely be adding him.

Jake Bennett - SP, BOS (12% rostered)

Bennett was thrust into the Red Sox's rotation this past week after Garrett Crochet became their latest starting pitcher to fall victim to an injury. The lanky lefty pitched well in his debut, going five innings and giving up just one home run against the Astros. He's not known for missing a ton of bats, but did force 10 whiffs in that game. Expect plenty of groundballs from him as a sinker-baller with an impressive changeup.

Kyle Finnegan - RP, DET (12% rostered)

No, Kyle Finnegan is not the closer in Detroit, but are we sure they can let Kenley Jansen keep getting all of those innings? Finnegan was also really good for Detroit when he came over at the end of last season.

Gus Varland - RP, WAS (10% rostered)

Are you desperate for saves? Then Varland might be your guy. He is the full-time closer for the Nationals, save opportunities have just been few and far between. He has an above average strikeout rate and swing-and-miss rate at the moment too.

Enyel De Los Santos - RP, HOU (8% rostered)

Josh Hader is probably at least three weeks away from returning, and there's also a real chance that his shoulder injury remains a problem all season. It seems like De Los Santos will get the majority of save chances when right-handed hitters are up, but he also pitched in the sixth inning on Saturday, and Bryan King wound up getting the save because Boston has tons of left-handed hitters.

Tyler Phillips - RP, MIA (7% rostered)

If you need saves in the short-term, Phillips could be your guy with Pete Fairbanks on the IL. Eric recorded a video this week discussing his thoughts on that bullpen.

Christian Scott - SP, NYM (4% rostered)

Scott was electric in his second start of the season on Friday night striking out eight Angels in five innings of work. There was a brief moment of panic — especially following his catastrophic season debut just a week and a half before — when Jorge Soler hit a first inning home run. Scott talked about he let his emotions get the better of him in that debut with it being his first major league start in nearly two years following Tommy John surgery. Yet, he settled in nicely and let his stuff dominate. His fastball has tremendous life and was electric working up in the zone. Also, his sweeper move like a frisbee and cutter had nice bite. Just pay attention to his splitter usage coming up. In the past, he's struggled with left-handed batters and developed that pitch to have another tool in his tool box for them. He only threw two here and neither were located particularly well, so be on the lookout for how he attacks a lineup that's stacked with more lefties.

Game #34: Guardians at A’s Game Thread

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 28: Aaron Civale #45 of the Athletics pitches in the top of the third inning against the Kansas City Royals at Sutter Health Park on April 28, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Justine Willard/Athletics/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Over the past several seasons, the Athletics have had trouble defeating the Cleveland Guardians, a pattern that has continued this weekend. After losing the first two games of the series, the A’s must win today to prevent a Guardians’ sweep.

The A’s fell apart last May, suffering a long losing streak that doomed any hopes they had of competing for the playoffs. Through the first couple days of May, 2026, the vibes are fairly similar as bad pitching, iffy defense and outfielder Lawrence Butler’s momentum-changing base running blunders have resulted in two-straight losses to begin the team’s second full month of the season. Nevertheless, the A’s remain in first-place in the American League West entering this afternoon’s series finale.

Before we get to the game info, the A’s made a minor roster move this morning, returning right-handed pitcher Luis Morales to Triple-A following his struggles to throw strikes and limit baserunners over the final two innings of yesterday’s game. The team recalled fellow right-hander Tyler Ferguson as the corresponding move. Last season, Ferguson went 4-2 with a 4.66 ERA in 56 relief appearances. He began this season with Triple-A Las Vegas, going 0-1 with a 6.17 ERA in 10 appearances. He is likely here to serve as a fresh arm for the team’s beleaguered bullpen, yet he will have a chance to take advantage of his opportunity like Joel Kuhnel and Jack Perkins have done.

Anyway, back to the contest at hand. Going for the A’s on the pitching side of things will be right-hander Aaron Civale, who has been one of the team’s most consistent starting pitchers so far this season. Civale enters his seventh start with a 2-1 record, 3.23 ERA and 24 strikeouts. In the wake of back-t0-back poor outings by starters J.T. Ginn and Jacob Lopez, the Athletics desperately need a quality start from Civale today if they want to salvage the final game of this home stand before traveling to the East Coast. Civale will have added motivation for this start, as it comes against the team that drafted him and where he spent the first five seasons of his career.

The A’s starting lineup this afternoon looks like this:

A’s manager Mark Kotsay is utilizing an interesting platoon-heavy lineup today. Austin Wynns gets the start behind the plate because Shea Langeliers and his wife welcomed their first child this morning. Hopefully Wynns will get a couple hits and maybe an RBI this afternoon as the longer the backup catcher struggles at the plate, the more complaints the team will receive about not protecting young catching prospect Daniel Susac from the Rule 5 Draft. Should Wynns get hurt, Tyler Soderstrom would replace him as he is the team’s emergency catcher for this game.

Right-handed hitters Colby Thomas and Zack Gelof join Soderstrom in the outfield. Look for left-handed hitters Carlos Cortes and/or Lawrence Butler to pinch-hit if Cleveland brings in a right-hander. Lastly, Darell Hernáiz is starting at third base once again instead of Brett Harris, who has sat on the bench every game since his promotion.

Those hitters are set to go up against Cleveland left-hander Parker Messick, the latest talented young pitcher to emerge from the Guardians’ vaunted pitching development pipeline. The 25-year-old is off to a fabulous start through his first six starts of the season. He is 3-0 with a 1.73 ERA, a 0.88 WHIP and a 38-to-10 strikeout-to-walk ratio. A few outings ago, Messick lost his no-hitter attempt with three outs to go, illustrating how dominant he has been. A’s hitters must be patient, punish mistakes and hope that Messick is slightly off his game. If the left-hander is dealing, it could be a long day for the Athletics’ offense.

Cleveland’s starting lineup this afternoon:

Civale must be careful when pitching to the top four hitters in Cleveland’s lineup, especially rookie right fielder Chase DeLauter, who has tormented the A’s throughout the series. The A’s deserve to get swept if they let light-hitting catcher Austin Hedges have another big offensive game.

Need to win this one as it would not be good to start May by getting swept at home. Let’s go A’s!



Game 33: Chicago White Sox at San Diego Padres

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 02: Kyle Hart #68 of the San Diego Padres pitches during the eighth inning of a game against the Chicago White Sox at Petco Park on May 02, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Chicago White Sox (16-17) at San Diego Padres (19-13), May 3, 2026, 1:10 p.m. PST

Watch: Padres.TV

Location: Petco Park – San Diego, Calif.

Listen: 97.3 The Fan



Please remember our Game Day thread guidelines.

  • Don’t troll in your comments; create conversation rather than destroying it
  • Remember Gaslamp Ball is basically a non-profanity site
  • Out of respect to broadcast partners who have paid to carry the game, no mentions of “alternative” (read: illegal) viewing methods are allowed in our threads

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!