Tuesday Morning Texas Rangers Update

Mar 21, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Former Texas Rangers player Ivan Pudge Rodriguez looks on during the second half of the game between the Dallas Mavericks and the LA Clippers at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Good morning.

Dave Sessions writes that while the Texas Rangers were beating the Kansas City Royals in a dress rehearsal at The Shed last night, Rule 5 reliever Carter Baumler found out he made the squad while on the mound.

Evan Grant writes that Kumar Rocker was the victor of camp’s most publicized battle as he earned the final spot in the rotation.

MLB dot com’s David Adler writes that Wyatt Langford’s superlative stats were among those that stood out this spring.

Jeff Wilson notes that after signing with the club late in spring, former NL MVP Andrew McCutchen earned a spot on the roster.

Grant writes that the former Pirates star McCutchen beat out Mark Canha for the right-handed DH option on the bench.

Tim Cowlishaw writes that the key for Texas in 2026 might be hitting the 50 start mark from their two elder statesmen aces.

Sarah Langs notes that one of those aces — Jacob deGrom — is primed to reach the 2,000 strikeout milestone this season.

Shawn McFarland writes about the best offerings from Rangers pitchers by the estimations of the players on the team themselves.

Grant writes that despite overtures to make Langford the everyday center fielder, the Rangers have opted for Evan Carter to man to role with Langford still playing there on days where Carter sits against lefties.

Per Jim Bowden at The Athletic, the Rangers have one of the upper third rotations heading into the 2026 campaign.

However, per FanGraphs, the Rangers have a projected bottom third bullpen expected for 2026.

With the rotation appearing as a strength for Texas, McFarland checks out what the starting five could look like five years from now.

Grant notes that the rotation could be further bolstered as the season progresses as Cody Bradford and Jordan Montgomery continue to work their way back.

And, for the 43rd year in a row, and despite likely missing most of the 2026 season, Sebastian Walcott ranks as the Rangers’ No. 1 prospect on the DMN’s top 30 list.

Have a nice day!

Yankees at Giants: 5 things to watch and series predictions | March 25, 27-28

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Yankees open the 2026 season against the Giants in San Francisco on Wednesday...


5 things to watch

Will Max Fried's subpar spring carry over?

Fried's performance in his first year with the Yankees was so good that the loss of Gerrit Cole didn't hurt the team much. Fried was the ace of the staff and anchored arguably the best rotation in the majors. 

Entering year two, Fried will have to shoulder that burden once again, at least in the early going. That's why his mediocre spring is a bit alarming. In three spring starts, Fried allowed seven earned runs across 14.1 innings (4.40 ERA). While his strikeouts are where they usually are, opposing teams got bat to ball for 12 hits. 

In Fried's last start, he walked four batters in his five innings, which was his worst outing this spring. While Fried didn't pay too much mind to his struggles, the Yankees want to start the season on the right foot and a return-to-form for their Opening Day starter would help. 

How will the other starters do?

With Cole and Carlos Rodon on the shelf to start the season, the other starters will need to step up behind Fried. 

Schlittler will get one of the starts in San Francisco and the Yankees will lean on their playoff hero to take the next step in 2026. It's unclear who else will take the mound over the weekend, but it's likely Will Warren and Ryan Weathers. Meanwhile, the Yankees hope Luis Gil can return to the form he had in 2024. 

Can Aaron Judge put the WBC behind him?

The captain was having a nice showing in the WBC before the knockout rounds began. But when the pressure hit, Judge didn't come through in the way many hoped he would.

In the championship game against Venezuela, Judge went 0-for-4 with three strikeouts. Worse off, his at-bats came in big spots that could have flipped the game in Team USA's favor. 

New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge (99) hits a home run against the Detroit Tigers during the third inning in a Spring Training game at George M. Steinbrenner Field.
New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge (99) hits a home run against the Detroit Tigers during the third inning in a Spring Training game at George M. Steinbrenner Field. / Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images

For the tournament, Judge finished 6-for-27 (.222) with two home runs and five RBI. He walked six times and struck out seven. 

It should be made clear that it's still March and hitters usually take a bit to get going -- as evident with Judge's so-so production in spring games -- but this team goes as far as Judge takes them. If he's not producing, this lineup will be hard-pressed to put up enough runs.

Unless....

Offense elsewhere

The Yankees are putting a lot of stock in the development of Ben Rice and Austin Wells this season. They believe there's plenty of offensive production still there to be mined, especially with Rice.

The young first baseman will see the bulk of the time at that position, giving the Yanks a dynamic bat. Depending on how manager Aaron Boone draws up his lineup, Rice could be batting behind Judge. He'll need to prove that he can be that protection Judge needs to see hittable pitches.

As for Wells, his defense is major league ready, but he regressed offensively last season. Wells did have a very good WBC playing for the Dominican Republic, and perhaps that can carry over and lengthen this lineup. 

And then we have Trent Grisham. The Yankees' de facto leadoff man from a year ago, Grisham may not provide the same gaudy offensive numbers he gave them last season, but giving the team anything close to that will also help give Judge and this lineup opportunities to drive in runs.

New-look bullpen

The bullpen will have some returning faces, but there will be a lot of new ones as well.

Gone are Devin Williams and Luke Weaver, but David Bednar and Camilo Doval -- acquired last trade deadline -- are still here, and Fernando Cruz and Tim Hill have become mainstays. But what about the rest? This weekend should give us a clue as to how Boone will deploy his relievers, especially the new ones -- and who he trusts in which situations.

This will be especially crucial in Schlittler's start, as his oblique tightness earlier in camp set his progression back a bit. He won't be built up as much as the others, so we can expect Ryan Yarbrough or Paul Blackburn to help bridge the game for Schlittler. 

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Aaron Judge

Back in his home region, Judge will get off to a hot start in San Francisco.

Which Yankees pitcher will have the best start?

Max Fried

The Giants deploy a lot of left-handers, and Fried should be able to neutralize them.

Which Giants player will be a thorn in the Yankees' side?

Rafael Devers

The Yankees' old nemesis from when he was with the Red Sox. The slugger will see his first Opening Day as a Giant, but should be much more comfortable with the organization this year after being acquired midseason in 2025.

Ranking the new offerings at Chase Field

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - APRIL 25: General view of action as Zac Gallen #23 of the Arizona Diamondbacks pitches against the Atlanta Braves during the second inning of the MLB game at Chase Field on April 25, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Every spring brings the smell of grass, the sunshine at Salt River Fields, the eternal hope that only Spring Training can provide. It also inevitably brings a litany of new food offerings at Chase Field. Some are basic ballpark fare. A beer cheese hotdog, for example. Some are much needed offerings to appeal to a wider demographic of potential fans, an Impossible Burger, for example. Others… come from a dark place where the conventions of the culinary arts dare not tread. The D-bat dog. The fried chicken funnel cake sandwich. Sandwiches that are nearly two feet long and combine chicken parmesan and meatball subs. They are all equally important to me.

These crazed food items have become integral to the experience of the game itself. Far beyond the Diamondbacks, though I believe them to be pioneers in the field, teams try to one up each other and themselves with their offerings every year. The full list of additions can be found here, but indulge me to share my top five most anticipated items that were announced.

#5: Oreo Explosion Churro Dog

Look, I am a sucker for the Churro Dog. It’s one of the items that started this whole journey off, both for the Diamondbacks as well as myself as the official food critic of AZ Snakepit. They either have declined in quality over the years, I’ve gotten older, or both, but you’ll still find me trying the latest iteration on Opening Day (assuming Levy’s doesn’t run out). This year, it’s simply described as “our classic churro dog with Oreo toppings.” Sure! Sold! I’ll take two. Is it going to be good? Eh. Is the churro going to be stale and cold, and they won’t have plasticware again? Yeah probably, but such is life. Have a churro dog. Churro Dog HQ, 129 and 324

#4: Take Me Out to the Ballgame Milkshake

This is a salted caramel shake with whipped cream, peanut butter sandwich cookies, Kit Kat bars and Cracker Jack. Look at it

This is a monstrosity. How do you eat it? You can’t drink that with a straw. Honestly, I’m not sure a spoon is breaking through those chunks. It’s impossible. And the flavor profile. My god it’s like someone asked for the Diabeetus special. You won’t be able to taste anything specific, it will just be sugar. Can’t wait to have one. One of these days this job is going to kill me. Churro Dog HQ, 129 and 324

#3: Footlong Beer Cheese Hotdog

Look, I’m a simple man. Give me cheese, meat, carbs, and I’ll probably be happy. This new Beer Cheese Hotdog hits all those checkboxes. It’s exactly what it says it is, plus bacon and crispy onions. I’ll eternally be disappointed in the hotdogs they serve at Chase, but this still sounds good, even knowing it’s going to be a subpar hotdog. Grand Canyon Grill, 214. Only accessible with 200 level ticket.

#2: Pork Belly Nachos

I’m intrigued by this one. It’s described as Wonton chips, crispy pork belly, quick kimchee, gochujang cheese sauce, pickled red onions, scallions. Those are some big flavors, and not typically ones you find at an MLB stadium. You can’t go wrong with pork belly, but kimchee and gochujang are both delicious if done correctly, but its very easy to let it get out of hand and overpower the dish. I’m also not sure I’ve ever heard of using wonton chips as the base for nachos either, but again, I’m intrigued. Potentially, this could be an elite shareable at the game, bringing much needed variety to your standard choices. Available at Taste of Chase, Section 130

#1: Big Bella Sandwich

I’m genuinely excited for this one. The sandwich features mortadella, mozzarella, pistachio cream, arugula, chopped pistachio, extra virgin olive oil, sea salt. This will be available at the Jefferson Street Deli stand, where I’ve had good experiences before. The 50/50 stretch last season was surprisingly one of the best things I’ve had a Chase Field before, and I’m hoping they’ll continue the winning streak. I’m most interested in the pistachio cream they’re using as a condiment. It sounds delicious and should pair well with the mortadella. This is what I’ll be having for dinner on Opening Day. Available at the Jefferson Street Deli behind Section 120.


These are just a few of the exciting new food options coming to Chase Field this year. Stay tuned here for the occasional review of them. Also stay tuned for my new, nearly weekly series exploring food options around the stadium for before and after the games!

Mets and Yankees 2026 MLB season predictions for final record, impactful prospects, and more

Here are Mets and Yankees predictions from SNY staff and contributors for final records, team MVP, and more for the 2025 MLB season...


Chelsea Janes, SNY MLB Insider

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.85
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? First
What will Mets' final record be? 94-68

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Under
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.99
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? First
What will Yankees' final record be? 92-70

Todd Zeile, SNY Mets Analyst

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 2.97
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? First
What will Mets' final record be? 93-69

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Under
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.01
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? George Lombard Jr.
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? First
What will Yankees' final record be? 92-70

Jerry Blevins, SNY Mets Analyst

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.22
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? Second
What will Mets' final record be? 90-72

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Over
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.99
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Spencer Jones
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? Third
What will Yankees' final record be? 85-77

Jim Duquette, SNY Mets Analyst

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 2.50
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? First
What will Mets' final record be? 90-72

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Over
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.30
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Spencer Jones
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? First
What will Yankees' final record be? 92-70

Sal Licata, BNNY Host

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.41
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? First
What will Mets' final record be? 93-69

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Over
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.78
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? George Lombard Jr.
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? First
What will Yankees' final record be? 95-67

John Harper, SNY Contributor

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.08
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? First
What will Mets' final record be? 93-69

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Over
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.24
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? Second
What will Yankees' final record be? 92-70

Anthony McCarron, SNY Contributor

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.15
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? First
What will Mets' final record be? 94-68

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Over
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.95
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? Second
What will Yankees' final record be? 94-68

John Jastremski, SNY Contributor

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.10
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? Second
What will Mets' final record be? 92-70

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Under
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.44
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? First
What will Yankees' final record be? 92-70

Keith Raad, Mets Radio Broadcaster

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.13
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Ryan Lambert
Where will Mets finish in NL East? First
What will Mets' final record be? 90-72

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Under
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.49
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? Third
What will Yankees' final record be? 88-74

Joe DeMayo, The Mets Pod Co-host

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.32
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? First
What will Mets' final record be? 95-67

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Under
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.68
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? First
What will Yankees' final record be? 97-65

Matt Spendley, SNY Director, Digital Engagement

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.99
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? Second
What will Mets' final record be? 87-75

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Under
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 4.09
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? First
What will Yankees' final record be? 93-69

Danny Abriano, SNY Manager of Editorial Production

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Nolan McLean
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Over
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.27
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? First
What will Mets' final record be? 93-69

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Under
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.81
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? Second
What will Yankees' final record be? 92-70

Alex Smith, SNY Editorial Producer

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Under
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.53
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? Third
What will Mets' final record be? 83-79

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Over
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.74
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? Second
What will Yankees' final record be? 93-69

Phillip Martinez, SNY Editorial Producer

Who will the Mets' MVP be? Juan Soto
Over/under 40 home runs for Juan Soto? Under
What will Freddy Peralta's ERA be? 3.10
Which prospect will have the biggest MLB impact? Carson Benge
Where will Mets finish in NL East? Third
What will Mets' final record be? 88-74

Who will the Yankees' MVP be? Aaron Judge
Over/under 50 home runs for Aaron Judge? Under
What will Cam Schlittler's ERA be? 3.35
Which prospect will make the biggest MLB impact? Carlos Lagrange
Where will Yankees finish in AL East? First
What will Yankees' final record be? 94-68

MLB predictions for 2026 playoff teams, World Series champs, MVP and more

How will things shake out during the 2026 MLB season?

Here are predictions from SNY staff and contributors for playoff teams, World Series matchups and winners, and the major awards...


Chelsea Janes, SNY MLB Insider

NL East champ: Mets
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Phillies
2nd NL Wild Card: Diamondbacks
3rd NL Wild Card: Braves
AL East champ: Yankees
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Red Sox
2nd AL Wild Card: Blue Jays
3rd AL Wild Card: Orioles
NLCS: Dodgers over Mets
ALCS: Yankees over Mariners
World Series: Dodgers over Yankees
NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
AL MVP: Bobby Witt Jr.
NL Cy Young: Paul Skenes
AL Cy Young: Garrett Crochet
NL Rookie of the Year: JJ Wetherholt
AL Rookie of the Year: Kazuma Okamoto

Todd Zeile, SNY Mets Analyst

NL East champ: Mets
NL Central champ: Reds
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Braves
2nd NL Wild Card: Brewers
3rd NL Wild Card: Padres
AL East champ: Yankees
AL Central champ: Guardians
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Red Sox
2nd AL Wild Card: Blue Jays
3rd AL Wild Card: Rangers
NLCS: Mets over Dodgers
ALCS: Yankees over Red Sox
World Series: Mets over Yankees
NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
AL MVP: Aaron Judge
NL Cy Young: Paul Skenes
AL Cy Young: Tarik Skubal
NL Rookie of the Year: Carson Benge
AL Rookie of the Year: Trey Yesavage

Jerry Blevins, SNY Mets Analyst

NL East champ: Phillies
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Padres
1st NL Wild Card: Dodgers
2nd NL Wild Card: Mets
3rd NL Wild Card: Giants
AL East champ: Red Sox
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Yankees
2nd AL Wild Card: Orioles
3rd AL Wild Card: Guardians
NLCS: Mets over Padres
ALCS: Tigers over Mariners
World Series: Mets over Tigers
NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
AL MVP: Bobby Witt Jr.
NL Cy Young: Paul Skenes
AL Cy Young: Garrett Crochet
NL Rookie of the Year: Nolan McLean
AL Rookie of the Year: Kevin McGonigle

Jim Duquette, SNY Mets Analyst

NL East champ: Mets
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Phillies
2nd NL Wild Card: Brewers
3rd NL Wild Card: Giants
AL East champ: Yankees
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Red Sox
2nd AL Wild Card: Blue Jays
3rd AL Wild Card: Orioles
NLCS: Cubs over Mets
ALCS: Yankees over Tigers
World Series: Cubs over Yankees
NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
AL MVP: Aaron Judge
NL Cy Young: Freddy Peralta
AL Cy Young: Garrett Crochet
NL Rookie of the Year: Nolan McLean
AL Rookie of the Year: Kevin McGonigle

Sal Licata, BNNY Host

NL East champ: Mets
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Braves
2nd NL Wild Card: Phillies
3rd NL Wild Card: Giants
AL East champ: Yankees
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Astros
1st AL Wild Card: Mariners
2nd AL Wild Card: Red Sox
3rd AL Wild Card: Blue Jays
NLCS: Mets over Braves
ALCS: Yankees over Astros
World Series: Mets over Yankees
NL MVP: Juan Soto
AL MVP: Aaron Judge
NL Cy Young: Paul Skenes
AL Cy Young: Bryan Woo
NL Rookie of the Year: Carson Benge
AL Rookie of the Year: Chase DeLauter

John Harper, SNY Contributor

NL East champ: Mets
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Phillies
2nd NL Wild Card: Padres
3rd NL Wild Card: Pirates
AL East champ: Blue Jays
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Yankees
2nd AL Wild Card: Red Sox
3rd AL Wild Card: Rangers
NLCS: Dodgers over Mets
ALCS: Tigers over Blue Jays
World Series: Dodgers over Tigers
NL MVP: Juan Soto
AL MVP: Aaron Judge
NL Cy Young: Paul Skenes
AL Cy Young: Tarik Skubal
NL Rookie of the Year: Nolan McLean
AL Rookie of the Year: Kazuma Okamoto

Anthony McCarron, SNY Contributor

NL East champ: Mets
NL Central champ: Brewers
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Cubs
2nd NL Wild Card: Phillies
3rd NL Wild Card: Diamondbacks
AL East champ: Red Sox
AL Central champ: Royals
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Yankees
2nd AL Wild Card: Orioles
3rd AL Wild Card: Rangers
NLCS: Dodgers over Mets
ALCS: Yankees over Red Sox
World Series: Dodgers over Yankees
NL MVP: Juan Soto
AL MVP: Bobby Witt Jr.
NL Cy Young: Logan Webb
AL Cy Young: Garrett Crochet
NL Rookie of the Year: JJ Wetherholt
AL Rookie of the Year: Kevin McGonigle

John Jastremski, SNY Contributor

NL East champ: Braves
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Mets
2nd NL Wild Card: Phillies
3rd NL Wild Card: Pirates
AL East champ: Yankees
AL Central champ: Royals
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Blue Jays
2nd AL Wild Card: Tigers
3rd AL Wild Card: Orioles
NLCS: Dodgers over Braves
ALCS: Mariners over Yankees
World Series: Dodgers over Mariners
NL MVP: Ronald Acuña Jr.
AL MVP: Bobby Witt Jr.
NL Cy Young: Yoshinobu Yamamoto
AL Cy Young: Bryan Woo
NL Rookie of the Year: Nolan McLean
AL Rookie of the Year: Kazuma Okamoto

Keith Raad, Mets Radio Broadcaster

NL East champ: Mets
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Braves
2nd NL Wild Card: Padres
3rd NL Wild Card: Phillies
AL East champ: Blue Jays
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Red Sox
2nd AL Wild Card: Yankees
3rd AL Wild Card: Astros
NLCS: Dodgers over Phillies
ALCS: Red Sox over Tigers
World Series: Dodgers over Red Sox
NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
AL MVP: Aaron Judge
NL Cy Young: Cristopher Sanchez
AL Cy Young: Bryan Woo
NL Rookie of the Year: Nolan McLean
AL Rookie of the Year: Kazuma Okamoto

Joe DeMayo, The Mets Pod co-host

NL East champ: Mets
NL Central champ: Brewers
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Phillies
2nd NL Wild Card: Padres
3rd NL Wild Card: Cubs
AL East champ: Yankees
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Blue Jays
2nd AL Wild Card: Red Sox
3rd AL Wild Card: Guardians
NLCS: Dodgers over Mets
ALCS: Mariners over Yankees
World Series: Dodgers over Mariners
NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
AL MVP: Aaron Judge
NL Cy Young: Yoshinobu Yamamoto
AL Cy Young: Tarik Skubal
NL Rookie of the Year: Nolan McLean
AL Rookie of the Year: Kevin McGonigle

Matt Spendley, SNY Director, Digital Engagement

NL East champ: Phillies
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Brewers
2nd NL Wild Card: Mets
3rd NL Wild Card: Pirates
AL East champ: Yankees
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Blue Jays
2nd AL Wild Card: Orioles
3rd AL Wild Card: Astros
NLCS: Cubs over Dodgers
ALCS: Mariners over Yankees
World Series: Cubs over Mariners
NL MVP: Juan Soto
AL MVP: Bobby Witt Jr.
NL Cy Young: Paul Skenes
AL Cy Young: Garrett Crochet
NL Rookie of the Year: Konnor Griffin
AL Rookie of the Year: Munetaka Murakami

Danny Abriano, SNY Manager of Editorial Production

NL East champ: Mets
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Phillies
2nd NL Wild Card: Padres
3rd NL Wild Card: Braves
AL East champ: Red Sox
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Yankees
2nd AL Wild Card: Blue Jays
3rd AL Wild Card: Rangers
NLCS: Mets over Padres
ALCS: Mariners over Red Sox
World Series: Mariners over Mets
NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
AL MVP: Bobby Witt Jr.
NL Cy Young: Yoshinobu Yamamoto
AL Cy Young: Garrett Crochet
NL Rookie of the Year: Nolan McLean
AL Rookie of the Year: Carter Jensen

Alex Smith, SNY Editorial Producer

NL East champ: Phillies
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Padres
2nd NL Wild Card: Braves
3rd NL Wild Card: Mets
AL East champ: Blue Jays
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Yankees
2nd AL Wild Card: Guardians
3rd AL Wild Card: Red Sox
NLCS: Dodgers over Cubs
ALCS: Red Sox over Yankees
World Series: Red Sox over Dodgers
NL MVP: Fernando Tatis Jr.
AL MVP: Roman Anthony
NL Cy Young: Cristopher Sanchez
AL Cy Young: Bryan Woo
NL Rookie of the Year: Nolan McLean
AL Rookie of the Year: Kevin McGonigle

Phillip Martinez, SNY Editorial Producer

NL East champ: Braves
NL Central champ: Cubs
NL West champ: Dodgers
1st NL Wild Card: Phillies
2nd NL Wild Card: Brewers
3rd NL Wild Card: Mets
AL East champ: Yankees
AL Central champ: Tigers
AL West champ: Mariners
1st AL Wild Card: Blue Jays
2nd AL Wild Card: Red Sox
3rd AL Wild Card: Royals
NLCS: Dodgers over Cubs
ALCS: Blue Jays over Yankees
World Series: Blue Jays over Dodgers
NL MVP: Ronald Acuña Jr.
AL MVP: Bobby Witt Jr.
NL Cy Young: Paul Skenes
AL Cy Young: Garrett Crochet
NL Rookie of the Year: Nolan McLean
AL Rookie of the Year: Kazuma Okamoto

4 things to look forward to in the first month of the Orioles season

SARASOTA, FLORIDA - MARCH 11: Kyle Bradish #38 of the Baltimore Orioles pitches during the first inning against the Pittsburgh Pirates in a spring training game at Ed Smith Stadium on March 11, 2026 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Jay Biggerstaff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Congratulations to all of Birdland. Opening Day is just two days away. We made it to the start of 2026.

As our Tyler Young outlined yesterday, the Orioles’ time in Sarasota gave us plenty of clarity about some things. And yet, there are plenty of aspects of this Orioles roster that we want to see put to the test in the games that actually matter.

The Orioles are one of the most changed teams in the American League as they look to bounce back from the profound disappointment of the 2025 season. In comes new manager Craig Albernaz, new star 1B Pete Alonso and other big veteran additions in Taylor Ward, Shane Baz, Chris Bassitt and Ryan Helsley.

The first month of the 2026 season will give us the first glimpses as to whether this team is ready to return to contention or if this roster’s holes will again prove insurmountable. And yet, the beginning of a new season is supposed to offer hope and a chance to learn about the newest iteration of the O’s. With that in mind, here are four things to look forward to in the upcoming first month of Baltimore baseball.

1. A hot start from the Orioles

The Orioles want a chance to prove that the disastrous start to the 2025 season was a complete anomaly. The schedule makers gave them the opportunity to do just that with a favorable opening slate of games across March and April.

The first series of the season sees the Orioles welcome the Twins to Camden Yards, as the two biggest sellers at the 2025 trade deadline square off in Baltimore. Minnesota is entering the early stages of a rebuild, and FanGraphs projects the Twins to finish fourth in the AL Central with a 23.8% chance of making the playoffs. In terms of easy opening series, only a few teams present less of a threat than the Twins.

Things don’t get all that much tougher across the rest of the Orioles’ first 1o series of the year. FanGraphs gives the O’s a 52.1% chance to make the postseason. Of their first ten opponents, only the Red Sox (60%) head into the new season with better odds to play October baseball. Next highest is the Pirates at 47.3%, though the schedule lines up such that the Orioles shouldn’t have to face reigning NL Cy Young winner Paul Skenes.

Most of the Orioles’ early opponents fall in the category of “fighting to get above .500,” as the O’s will welcome the Rangers, Giants, Astros and Diamondbacks to Baltimore while traveling to face the Guardians and Royals. The Orioles also get an early trip to the South Side of Chicago to take on a White Sox team most assume to be the worst in the AL.

A winning record in April won’t guarantee a winning season, but a slow start can doom a team—as we saw last season. In the Orioles’ two most recent playoff seasons, they combined to go 38-19 (.667). Last year, the O’s opened the season 12-18 on their way to a losing record. This year, Baltimore should get back to winning ways early thanks to a favorable schedule.

2. The new look rotation in action

The Orioles may not have added an ace in the offseason, but there’s little doubt that this rotation is significantly better than what they had last season. After all, Zach Eflin was the Opening Day starter last year; this year, he’s the O’s No. 5 starter.

This Orioles rotation has been hailed as the best ever assembled under Mike Elias. However, this group still has something to prove. Trevor Rogers will look to prove that he can sustain his excellent 2025 performance over a whole season. Kyle Bradish will want to show that he’s fully back to his 2023 form after returning from Tommy John surgery with a strong, six-start cameo last year. Shane Baz and Chris Bassitt will look to prove they were the right depth additions to round out the rotation.

This group should be day and night compared to the Charlie Morton, Tomoyuki Sugano days of yesteryear. The favorable early schedule should give this rotation the stage to show how far this pitching staff has come in the span of a year.

3. How Alby manages the 1B, DH and C at-bats

The signing of Alonso and the long-term financial commitment to Samuel Basallo created a potential logjam at 1B and C. Albernaz now has the pleasure of trying to figure out how Alonso, Basallo, Ryan Mountcastle and Adley Rutschman can all help the Orioles play winning baseball in 2026.

Part of this headache was “solved” as a side effect of the Jordan Westburg injury. With Westburg out until at least May, Coby Mayo spent all of spring training earning the Opening Day start at 3B—and in turn taking him out of the equation at 1B. That still leaves four players vying for playing time at three spots.

Common sense says that Alonso will get the Opening Day start at first, with Rutschman behind the plate and Basallo at DH, leaving RMC as a bench bat and late inning defensive replacement. Then, against LHPs, Alonso will slide to DH, Mountcastle will step in at 1B and Basallo will assume a traditional backup catcher role in the dugout.

However, if managing a team were as simple as following common sense, you wouldn’t need 10+ years of major league coaching experience to land in the first-base dugout at Camden Yards. Will Alby prioritize getting RMC’s better glove in the lineup against more than just lefties? Will the lack of a third catcher influence how often Basallo and Rutschman start together? These are the questions Alby will look to answer over his first 10 series as Orioles manager.

4. Alby’s return to Cleveland

At every opportunity this offseason, the Orioles’ new manager has spoken glowingly about friend and former boss, Stephen Vogt. Albernaz will get the chance to square off against the reigning two-time AL Manager of the Year and his former employer, the Guardians, when the O’s visit Cleveland in mid-April.

While the matchup will certainly be emotional for the Orioles new skipper, it also gives him and his new team a chance to prove they can win the type of games that playoff teams win. On paper, the O’s are more talented than the reigning AL Central champions. However, Vogt has made his name as a manager through exceeding expectations and minimizing his team’s perceived shortcomings. Albernaz has a similar task with the Orioles; beating his friend and mentor would be a strong early sign that he’s up for the challenge.

Do you buy in to Bryson Stott’s improvement?

Mar 15, 2026; Clearwater, Florida, USA; Philadelphia Phillies second baseman Bryson Stott (5) singles against the Atlanta Braves in the second inning during spring training at BayCare Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Bryson Stott had himself a productive spring this year. The Phillies second baseman hit .366 with a 1.072 OPS across 16 Grapefruit League appearances. Spring training stats are not a surefire precursor to a successful season, but in this particular case, Stott’s success continues a trend of improved hitting dating back to last season.

Stott hit .294 with an .855 OPS in 60 games after the All-Star break in 2025, and that’s including a brutal month of July where he hit just .194 in 20 games. If you look from August through the end of the season, Stott was hitting .310 with an .880 OPS.

There are more reasons to believe the improvement is real in addition to those traditional back of the baseball card numbers too. Stott’s weighted on-base average (wOBA) improved on both fastballs and breaking balls from August on, and in the case of fastballs it was a significant increase.

Stott’s expected batting average on both pitch types also hit their season highs in August and September, offering dramatic increases from the early season months.

What this means is that Stott began impacting the ball more and at a higher rate of occurrence, leading to more well hit balls and base hits in general. He credits lowering his hands and understanding his limitations to the opposite field as major reasons for his success as he described to the Athletic’s Charlotte Varnes.

That ability to impact the ball has carried over so far into 2026, as Stott’s average exit velocity in spring training was 92.5 MPH, which if it happened over the course of a full season, would be the first time he had an average exit velocity that started with a 9. Stott has routinely been among the bottom of the league when it comes to hitting the ball hard with a career average exit velocity of 87.7.

Now of course, this is spring training and we’re only talking about 16 games and 48 plate appearances. It’s hardly reasonable to conclude anything for certain from such a small sample size. Even with Stott’s second half improvements last season, he still only had average exit velocities under 90 in his two months of greatest improvement. But Stott doesn’t need to be someone who rips the ball all the time either, as his skill set leads to being more of a contact hitter who sprays the ball over the field rather than swinging for the fences. That said however, he still needs to be better at impacting the ball, something he’s been able to accomplish since the end of last season.

Time will tell whether Stott is truly a new hitter or not. Once again, this spring isn’t a confirmation, but rather a continuation of a trend that started in August. It will be interesting to see if Stott’s improvements hold up as the league will no doubt adjust back at him as the regular season gets under way.

So, do you buy in to Bryson Stott’s improvement? Has he finally found the secret to unlocking more of his offensive potential? Or will all of this prove to be a mirage once pitchers find a new weakness to exploit?

Should the Braves be interested in Lucas Giolito?

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - SEPTEMBER 12: Lucas Giolito #54 of the Boston Red Sox reacts after being taken out of the game during the sixth inning against the New York Yankees at Fenway Park on September 12, 2025 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I had a mild heart attack after searching for Lucas Giolito news. Not going to repeat it, but the robots believe a signing has occurred already. There’s no reason to feed the algorithms any further. If content farms are going to wish something into existence, then let me tell you about Shohei Ohtani opting out of his contract to join the Braves on a league minimum deal. There, let some Dodger fan do a double take.

The Braves have lost a fourth starting pitching option before Opening Day. This may bring Martin Perez back into the picture. It also might have the Braves scrambling for more bodies. So let’s take a brief look at what Lucas Giolito brings to the table.

Last year he avoided the HR/FB monster in Boston to a 3.41/4.17/4.39 (80/99/110) line. He got 2.15 strikeouts per walk. He has a 93 MPH fastball at 33 years old. Projections have him in the 0.7-1.5 WAR range. He throws fastballs around 48 percent of the time, and breaking stuff around 30 percent. There may be more there, but those are some top-line numbers.

You know who he sounds like? An older, luckier Bryce Elder. Bryce was devoured by the HR/FB monster in Atlanta to a 5.30/4.55/4.04 (125/112/98) line. He got more strikeouts at a 2.56 strikeouts per each walk. He has a 93 MPH fastball at 27 years old. Projections have him in the 0.8-1.7 WAR range. The pitch selection is slightly fewer changeups etc. but you get the idea. MLB Trade Rumors has Giolito getting 2 years at 32 million. He’s not getting that from the Braves, even in the state they’re in. It would probably be closer to 5-10 million per year.

So should the Braves be interested in an older, perhaps luckier Bryce Elder? Can they afford not to, though? Pitchers are dropping like flies here. The Braves have a somewhat light schedule (as far as competition, not volume) in March and April. Maybe they bump along the best they can, pick up a marginal-type starter and see what’s available for trade in June. Or they can sign Giolito, warts and all, and still see what’s out there in June.

There aren’t good choices when you lose four starting pitcher options (and maybe a fifth with Lopez) before the season starts. They may have to hold their nose at some point and bring in someone. Only question now is which one.

Campbell comes to town for Tuesday showdown

GREENVILLE, NC - JUNE 02: Campbell Camels Matthew Barefoot (28) is congratulated by the team after scoring during a game between the Quinnipiac Bobcats and the Campbell Camels on June 2, 2109 at Clark-LeClair Stadium in Greenville, NC. (Photo by Greg Thompson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Campbell @ NC State | Tues, Mar 24 @ 6:00pm | ACCNX | Live Stats

A red-hot Campbell squad that has won 10 of their last 12 games, including back-to-back midweek victories over Duke and Coastal Carolina last week, comes to Raleigh on Tuesday evening for a 6:00pm matchup with NC State.

The Camels (14-9, 8-1 CAA, RPI #119) struggled out of the gate with a 4-7 mark, which included a pair of at-the-time nice looking victories over East Carolina and Troy, but those wins have diminished since as both the Pirates and Trojans have scuttled compared to preseason expectations. Following a series loss to Wright State and former Wolfpack pitcher Alex Sogard, Campbell has put it together and is playing excellent baseball of late.

Collectively, the lineup is hitting .283/.397/.486, 46 2B, 30 HR, 12.1 BB%, 20.2 K%, 69-76 SB, presenting a much more aggressive approach on the bases (3.0 SB/gm) than the program has displayed in recent memory. The adjusted approach has resulted in an offensive boon of late, with the Camels posting double-digit runs in six of their last eight games. It’s a deep lineup with up to ten productive bats, led by rSR 3B Jonah Oster (.341/.386/.659, 7 2B, 6 HR, 5.9 BB%, 12.7 K%, 1-2 SB), JR SS Logan Chapman (.364/.411/.591, 4 2B, 3 HR, 4.0 BB%, 12.0 K%, 5-5 SB), rSR LF Joe Simpson (.306/.444/.361, 4 2B, 0 HR, 17.4 BB%, 23.9 K%, 23-24 SB), FR RF Carlos Lugo (.325/.386/.425, 5 2B, 1 HR, 6.8 BB%, 5.7 K%, 6-7 SB), and JR CF Mike Murphy (.315/.422/.574, 2 2B, 2 HR, 10.9 BB%, 23.4 K%, 8-9 SB).

Redshirt-sophomore RHP Cooper Clark (2-3, 5.20 ERA, 27.2 IP, 4.3 BB%, 23.1 K%) and David Rossow (4-1, 3.42 ERA, 26.1 IP, 8.5 BB%, 26.5 K%) have been relative mainstays of the weekend rotation, but settling on that Sunday arm will be key to continuing to sit atop the CAA standings. NC State transfer JR RHP Camden Wimbish (0-1, 4.26 ERA, 25.1 IP, 5.7 BB%, 25.5 K%) appears to have the current grip on the job. The staff as a whole has a 5.14 ERA with a 9.1 BB% and 24.4 K%. The ERA is higher than ideal, but this is a group that has some talented arms and can get it done. SO RHP/OF Jett Music (0-1, 3 SV, 4.35 ERA, 10.1 IP, 8.9 BB%, 33.3 K%) and rJR RHP Mason Smith (1-0, 1 SV, 5.09 ERA, 23.0 IP, 8.9 BB%, 28.7 K%) lead the bullpen.

The team has a .967 collective fielding percentage, but 14 of their 27 errors have come from two players (Oster and 2B Elijah Clayton), but Clayton has been error-free for seven straight games (Oster, not so much), so if things get better there this team is going to be hell for a CAA that is already looking up at them. Granted, the meat of the conference slate for the Camels is still to come, and while they avoid perennial CAA heavyweight Northeastern, they do have a pair of conference series each with UNCW and Charleston.

2026 Texas Rangers Opening Day Roster set

SURPRISE, ARIZONA - MARCH 18: Josh Smith #8 of the Texas Rangers waits for a pitch during a Spring Training game against the Kansas City Royals at Surprise Stadium on March 18, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The 2026 Texas Rangers Opening Day roster appears to be set after the announcements made by the club last night. The 26 players who will start the season on the active roster are as follows:

Rotation

Nathan Eovaldi

Jacob deGrom

MacKenzie Gore

Jack Leiter

Kumar Rocker

Bullpen

Chris Martin

Robert Garcia

Jakob Junis

Jalen Beeks

Cole Winn

Tyler Alexander

Jacob Latz

Carter Baumler

Catcher

Danny Jansen

Kyle Higashioka

Infielders

Jake Burger

Josh Smith

Corey Seager

Josh Jung

Ezequiel Duran

Outfielder

Wyatt Langford

Evan Carter

Brandon Nimmo

Sam Haggerty

DH

Joc Pederson

Andrew McCutchen

This was more or less what we would have expected two weeks ago, with the only real questions being whether Kumar Rocker or Jacob Latz would be the team’s fifth starter, and who would get the final two spots in the bullpen.

The team announced prior to last night’s game that Rocker would be the fifth starter, Latz would be in the bullpen, and McCutchen and Duran would round out the position player group.

We wondered at the time why there was no announcement as to who the final spot in the bullpen was going to. Rule 5 pick Carter Baumler had an excellent spring, and seemed to have earned a job, but there was no announcement as to whether he would be making the squad, or if it would be someone else.

As it turns out, that’s because the team was doing something special with Baumler, who came into last night’s exhibition game to start the fifth inning. After recording the first two outs of the inning, manager Skip Schumaker came out to the mound, along with catcher Danny Jansen and the infielders. Schumaker told Baumler then that he had made the team:

A pretty neat moment for Baumler, a 2020 5th round pick of the Baltimore Orioles who due to injuries had pitched just 88 innings over 49 appearances, with just six games above A ball, prior to the Rangers acquiring him as a Rule 5 selection this winter. Baumler understandably got a little emotional talking about it during the broadcast.

Procedurally, the Rangers will need to place Cody Freeman and Cody Bradford on the injured list before Thursday’s season opener in Philadelphia, and will need to create a 40 man roster spot for Andrew McCutchen. Its possible Bradford will go on the 60 day injured list, but he is expected to start a rehab assignment soon after Round Rock’s season starts on March 27, but given the organization has said they hope to have Bradford back in May, it seems more likely that Bradford would be placed on the 15 day injured list. Dairon Blanco and Michel Otanez would appear to be the guys on the 40 man bubble.

Yankees 2026 Season Preview: Randal Grichuk

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 15, 2026: Randal Grichuk #34 of the New York Yankees bats during the first inning of a game against the Detroit Tigers at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 15, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. The Tigers beat the Yankees, 12-1. (Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Heading into the spring, Jasson Domínguez was the consensus pick for the Yankees’ fourth outfielder spot, as the former top prospect, now headed into his sophomore season, would be the team’s number one option in the event one of Cody Bellinger, Trent Grisham, Giancarlo Stanton, or — baseball gods forbid — Aaron Judge had to miss significant time. As the roster currently stands, the Martian, despite being optioned to Triple-A Scranton, remains in that role, and in truth, it would be very surprising if he did not receive a call to the Show at for some extended run at some point this year; injuries are just a fact of life in baseball, after all.

But, as our very own Estevão wrote earlier this month, “Organizational depth and a quality bench…don’t necessarily mean the same thing.” Ever since the Yankees signed Randal Grichuk to a minor league deal with an invitation to spring training late last month, it immediately became the expectation that he would be given the fourth outfielder job out of spring training, and that the Martian would return to Scranton to start the season — an expectation that became reality this week.

2025 Stats (Arizona, Kansas City): 113 games, 293 plate appearances, .228/.273/.401, 9 HR, 27 RBI, 18 doubles, 82 wRC+, 20.8 K%, 5.8 BB%, -2 Defensive Runs Saved, -2 Outs Above Average, -0.4 fWAR, -0.8 rWAR

2026 Projections: 32 games, 140 plate appearances, .242/.295/.419, 5 HR, 17 RBI, 98 wRC+, 0.3 fWAR

Just a few short weeks ago, Estevão broke down the decision to sign Grichuk, and in the process of that piece he discussed reasons to both be optimistic about the veteran this season (such as his 92.4 mph exit velo last season) and to be, well, not so optimistic about him (such as his “predictable unpredictability”). Rather than treading over that same ground again, I’d instead like to talk about what the thought process behind the decision is, what the exact role Grichuk is expected to fill, and what are the possible ways his time in pinstripes may go.

The decision to option Domínguez and roster Grichuk has been met with skepticism around the Yankees online community, and for good reason. The organization has, in recent years, oscillated between playing the kids too much (see: Volpe, Anthony) and running out clearly washed veterans in lieu of letting the kids play (see: Verdugo, Alex and Kiner-Falefa, Isiah). Viewed from that vantage point, this move seems to be just the latest in a long line of overcorrections by the front office.

In this instance, though, there’s one variable that separates Grichuk from Verdugo and IKF: Grichuk is not in line to start, and is a platoon bat at best. Unlike Oswald Peraza and Volpe in 2022 and Domínguez himself in 2024, the young kid is not being blocked; there isn’t a starting job available. A much better comparandum would be 2012, when the Yankees optioned Francisco Cervelli to the minors and had Chris Stewart serve as their backup catcher, in order to have the young catcher receive regular reps. Had starting catcher Russell Martin been injured for an extended period of time, however, it would have been Cervelli filling in as the starter, not the career backup in Stewart. When/if an outfield or DH spot opens up due to injury, Domínguez is certainly slotting into that spot in the lineup.

So why is Grichuk here, rather than having the #NextManUp on the active roster to begin with? Because Grichuk, at least in theory, brings something that Domínguez has not yet shown in practice: the ability to hit left-handed pitching. As of today, the FanGraphs Depth Chart lists Trent Grisham as the Yankees’ starting center fielder, putting him in a platoon with Grichuk. According to their projection, against left-handed pitching, Grisham will sit, Bellinger will slide over to center, and Grichuk will man left. This tracks with the Yankees’ stated intention to factor in platoon matchups more this season — and it is something that, the way this roster is currently constructed, does not benefit Domínguez, as his platoon splits to date are comparable with Grisham’s. Grichuk, at least in theory, brings something different to the Yankees’ bench and gives Aaron Boone some flexibility.

Of course, what if it doesn’t work out? At this stage, it’s hard to say for certain, as despite having a reputation for holding onto aging vets for too long (e.g., DJ LeMahieu and Aaron Hicks), the Yankees have in recent years been willing to pull the plug on an experiment that clearly wasn’t working (e.g., Jay Bruce, Opening Day first baseman, and Enyel De Los Santos, trade deadline bullpen acquisition). The Yankees only have $2.5 million invested in Grichuk, and no sentimental attachments (in fact, given his performance against the Yankees over his career, they might have negative sentimentality). If Father Time has indeed caught up to the 34-year-old, it shouldn’t be too painful for the Bombers to move on.

Hopefully, though, it won’t come to that, and Grichuk quiets those disappointed in his arrival.


See more of the Yankees Previews series here.

Mets Morning News: Welcome to the show, Carson Benge

PORT ST. LUCIE, FL - MARCH 09: Carson Benge (93) of the New York Mets looks on while waiting to bat during a spring training game against the Miami Marlins on March 09, 2026 at Clover Park in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Meet the Mets

The Mets finally announced that Carson Benge will be on the team’s Opening Day roster, which felt like an inevitability after his incredible spring training performance.

Anthony DiComo offered some predictions for the team heading into the season.

Writing for SNY, John Harper made his predictions for the Mets’ season.

Tim Britton talked about the Mets’ easy early season schedule, which he says the team should not waste.

Craig Kimbrel will remain with the Mets after missing out on the Opening Day roster, saying, “I am going to stay down here in Florida and stay ready.”

Around the National League East

Todd Zolecki made his predictions for the Phillies’ season.

Spencer Strider will begin the season on the IL with an oblique injury.

Spencer Nusbaum took us inside the Nationals’ vision for fans and the future.

Around Major League Baseball

The MLB.com staff highlighted the most important thing we learned from each team’s camp this spring.

Will Leitch shared the Power Rankings heading into Opening Day.

Experts predicted the stats leaders across MLB this season.

Theo DeRosa explored who might be the top award winners in MLB in 2026.

Sarah Langs identified some players how are on the precipice of reaching career milestones during the upcoming MLB season.

A jersey Shohei Ohtani worn during the WBC sold for a boat load of money.

The Cubs and Pete Crow-Armstrong have agreed to a contract extension.

The Blue Jays and GM Ross Adkins have also agreed on a five-year extension.

Ben Rice has landed an endorsement deal with…Ben’s Rice, the endorsement deal he was born to have.

Cardinals top prospect JJ Wetherholt made the Opening Day roster.

Andrew McCutchen made the Opening Day roster for the Rangers as he prepares for his 18th season.

Rangers manager Skip Schumaker let reliever Carter Baumler know he had made the major league roster during a mound visit.

Yesterday at Amazin’ Avenue

Grace Carbone explained why 2026 is of the utmost importance for David Peterson in her season preview.

Thomas Henderson previewed Bo Bichette’s 2026 campaign, which could see the Mets and Bichette turning a marriage of convenience into something special.

Chris McShane looked at how Sean Manaea may be able to bounce back during the 2026 season as he previewed what is hopefully a comeback season for the left-hander.

Linus Lawrence brought us Mets Madness: Elite Eight.

This Date in Mets History

You can trace the birth of Shea Stadium back to this date in 1961, when the New York State Senate approved $55 million in funding to build what would become the new home of the Mets in Queens, New York.

Atlanta Braves News: Spencer Strider Injury, Matt Olson Stays Hot, More

NORTH PORT, FL - MARCH 11: Spencer Strider #99 of the Atlanta Braves pitches during the game between the Tampa Bay Rays and the Atlanta Braves at CoolToday Park on Wednesday, March 11, 2026 in North Port, Florida. (Photo by Cole Carter/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Once again, the Braves were dealt some bad news Monday. Spencer Strider will be out to the start the season with an oblique injury. While the Braves hope he misses just a few weeks, oblique injuries could take a month or more to come back from plus rehab time. Jose Suarez and Martin Perez could he options to internally fill Strider’s role. Didier Fuentes and JR Ritchie are other obvious candidates.

The unfortunate is now injuries have clearly impacted the start of the Braves season. “Weathering the Storm” successfully is certainly an option if the offense starts off strong. But the quality of the rotation has significantly decreased before the season has even begun.

Braves News

The Braves bested the Pirates, as Matt Olson hit home runs 5 and 6 on the Spring, showing that he is locked in to start the season. Fuentes also delivered another strong outing on the mound.

Mark Bowman looked closer at what Strider’s injury means for the Braves.

MLB News

The Cubs and Pete Crow Armstrong agreed to a long-term contract.

MLB.com looks at Spring Training stats that have some meaning, including some positive takes on Drake Baldwin.

JJ Weatherholt will make the Cardinals Opening Day roster.

Carson Benge will make the Mets Opening Day roster.

Seiya Suzuki will start the season on the IL for the Cubs.

2026 MLB Opening Day Power Rankings: Who can stop the Dodgers from a three-peat?

As Opening Day of the 2026 MLB season approaches, it’s time to take a look at how these teams stack up coming out of spring training.

My methodology is no formula, all vibes. These are the teams I think are the best right now, separated into tiers. I would love to be wrong. It would be pretty boring to have a baseball season without surprises. So bring it on, Rockies.

This will be a weekly column moving forward, starting Monday, April 6. Until then, enjoy the pageantry and optimism of Opening Day and the inevitable questioning of your manager’s bullpen decisions.

⚾️ Coming soon: 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.

The Elite

1) Los Angeles Dodgers

Many said this time last year that the Dodgers could threaten the 2001 Mariners (116-46) for the most regular season wins in the modern era. It didn’t happen. In fact, they had to play in the Wild Card round on the way to their second straight World Series title. With the additions of Kyle Tucker and Edwín Diaz, as well as Shohei Ohtani’s return to the mound for a full season, it’s tempting to think this could be the best version of the team during their current dominant run. However, baseball has a way of surprising us over a long season. The Dodgers already have their share of questions, including Roki Sasaki’s spring struggles and Blake Snell working his way back from a shoulder injury. Still, they are the easy No. 1 here.

2) New York Yankees

This is where things start to get interesting. The Yankees won 93 games last season and we didn’t see major changes with the roster this offseason. While Aaron Judge admitted some frustration at the lack of action at one point, Brian Cashman eventually re-signed Cody Bellinger and acquired Ryan Weathers for their rotation. Gerrit Cole is already pitching in games and should be back by the end of April, while Carlos Rodon isn’t too far behind as he returns from arthroscopic surgery on his elbow. As Aaron Judge pushes for his third-straight MVP Award, the Yankees have the potential to be the strongest team in a wide open American League field.

3) Seattle Mariners

Coming off a Game 7 exit against the Blue Jays in the ALCS, the Mariners also have a strong case as the AL pennant favorites. Yes, Julio Rodriguez and Cal Raleigh get most of the attention nationally, but starting pitching remains the strength of this team, even with Bryce Miller slated to begin the year on the injured list with an oblique injury. The Mariners kept midseason acquisition Josh Naylor on a five-year, $92.5 million contract before adding new leadoff man Brendan Donovan in a trade with the Cardinals. There’s even more help on the way with top prospect Colt Emerson close to the majors.

4) Philadelphia Phillies

The Phillies have failed to make it out of the NLDS in each of the last two years, but they remain the strongest team not named the Dodgers in the National League. The newly-extended Cristopher Sanchez arrived as one of the game’s best pitchers last season, an important development with Zack Wheeler returning from surgery for thoracic outlet syndrome. While Dave Dombrowski unintentionally created a kerfuffle over whether Bryce Harper is still “elite,” the lineup remains potent with Kyle Schwarber staying in the fold for five years. J.T. Realmuto is also sticking around, but there’s a much-needed infusion of youth on this team with Justin Crawford and Andrew Painter on the Opening Day roster.

5) Detroit Tigers

With Tarik Skubal on the verge of free agency, can the Tigers finally make a run at the World Series? It was a frustrating offseason at times, including Skubal’s arbitration situation, but the outlook changed significantly with the Framber Valdez addition as well as a reunion with longtime ace Justin Verlander. Verlander led the way the last time the Tigers even made it out of the ALDS in 2013. Top prospect infielder Kevin McGonigle was nine years old when that happened.

6) Toronto Blue Jays

The Blue Jays came oh-so-close to winning the World Series. Was it just a magical run or the start of sustained success? While the club said goodbye to homegrown shortstop Bo Bichette, they brought in the likes of Dylan Cease, Kazuma Okamoto, Tyler Rogers, and Cody Ponce. The Blue Jays remain a serious threat in the AL, but there are already some issues in the rotation with postseason sensation Trey Yesavage set to start the season on the IL and Shane Bieber without a clear timetable to return.

In the Hunt

7) Chicago Cubs

Alex Bregman and Edward Cabrera were the big additions this offseason, but the Cubs’ fortunes may ultimately hinge on consistency and growth from some of their young players, including Pete-Crow Armstrong (.634 OPS in second half), Cade Horton, Daniel Palencia, Moises Ballesteros, and Matt Shaw as he takes on a utility role.

8) Boston Red Sox

Boston’s starting rotation looks strong and deep, but will they hit enough? Craig Breslow tried for Kyle Schwarber and Pete Alonso this offseason before ultimately settling for Willson Contreras at first base and Caleb Durbin to fill the void left by Alex Bregman at the hot corner. It’s not exactly what fans had in mind, but it will help to get a full year out of Roman Anthony.

9) Milwaukee Brewers

It might feel disrespectful to have the Brewers at No. 9 after they posted the best record in MLB last season, but it’s a brand-new year. Can young fireballer Jacob Misiorowski take a step forward as a true ace? He certainly has the stuff for it. This team needs it with Freddy Peralta in New York and Quinn Priester a question mark to begin the year.

10) New York Mets

It’s safe to say that Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns has officially put his stamp on this roster. After an embarrassing finish which kept the Mets out of last year’s postseason, Bo Bichette, Freddy Peralta, Marcus Semien, and Devin Williams are among the new faces to complement a couple of future Hall of Famers in Juan Soto and Francisco Lindor. Perhaps the best sign for the Mets this spring is that Kodai Senga looks healthy and dominant.

11) Baltimore Orioles

The Orioles have also undergone a host of changes, including a new manager (Craig Albernaz) and big additions like Pete Alonso, Taylor Ward, Shane Baz, Chris Bassitt, and Ryan Helsley. With some progress from their younger players, including top prospect catcher Samuel Basallo, this could make for a fun summer in Charm City.

12) Cleveland Guardians

Similar to the Brewers, the Guardians just keep finding a way. At one point last July, the Guardians were 15.5 games behind the Tigers in the AL Central. Then came the historic turnaround. The big question for this team, as it always is, is if they’ll score enough runs. Chase DeLauter breaking through as a rookie would be a huge help.

13) San Diego Padres

While the Padres’ starting rotation has a lot of volatility and a troubling lack of quality depth, the same can’t be said for their bullpen. Mason Miller leads the way, but there’s also Jason Adam, Jeremiah Estrada, and Adrian Morejon among the bridge options. Even with Robert Suarez leaving via free agency, this group of relievers is the best in baseball. That will help keep them in a lot of ballgames.

14) Texas Rangers

The Rangers have missed the playoffs in back-to-back years since their surprise World Series run in 2023 and the range of outcomes remains wide here. That’s the way it goes when your team is built around Corey Seager and Jacob deGrom, two of the best players of their era who have also seen injuries interrupt their peaks. While we’re on the topic of peaks, 2026 could be the year that Wyatt Langford knocks on the door of stardom.

The Maybes

15) San Francisco Giants

You can’t say Buster Posey isn’t afraid of making bold choices. Tony Vitello will make a major-league leap in Wednesday’s season opener against the Yankees, becoming the first college coach with no professional experience to manage an MLB team in more than 100 years. With a roster featuring Rafael Devers, Matt Chapman, Willy Adames, and Logan Webb, Vitello isn’t getting eased in during a rebuild job. Expectations will be there right away.

16) Kansas City Royals

The Royals quietly have the potential for one of the best lineups in the American League this season. Jac Caglianone and Carter Jensen are expected to be with the club from the start, but the Royals also changed the dimensions at Kauffman Stadium this offseason. The fences were moved in by about 10 feet and also lowered. Can Vinny Pasquantino and Jac Caglianone bring their espresso machine from Team Italy with them? Because we’re about to see a lot of homers from those two.

17) Atlanta Braves

The Braves endured some awful luck with injuries last season and so far, 2026 isn’t being kind to them either. In addition to Jurickson Profar’s 162-game PED suspension, the Braves will be without Spencer Schwellenbach, Spencer Strider, Ha-Seong Kim, Sean Murphy, and Hurston Waldrep to begin the year. Maybe they should burn some sage in the clubhouse. Anything to shake the bad vibes.

18) Arizona Diamondbacks

The Diamondbacks are waiting on help for their rotation and bullpen, but the lineup features a bunch of high-end talent. Most baseball fans know Corbin Carroll and Ketel Marte by now, but did you know that only six players had a higher bWAR than shortstop Geraldo Perdomo last season?

19) Houston Astros

After missing the playoffs for the first time since 2016, this feels like the end of an era for the Astros, even though some familiar faces remain. Houston desperately needs a healthy season from slugger Yordan Alvarez. The other big question is how much they’ll get from Japanese right-hander Tatsuya Imai with Framber Valdez no longer in the fold.

20) Cincinnati Reds

This is a really fun lineup, with Eugenio Suarez making his return to Cincy, and a full year coming from rookie Sal Stewart. The question is whether there will be enough pitching to carry them back to the postseason. Hunter Greene is expected to be out until July after undergoing surgery to fix a bone spur in his elbow, so that’s not a great start.

The Dreamers

21) Tampa Bay Rays

The Rays are getting the least hype of any team in the AL East and that’s probably for good reason from a personnel perspective. This organization has a long track record of making the most of what they have, though, and a return to The Trop could be exactly what they need. Win or lose, at least we get to see Junior Caminero mash baseballs.

22) Miami Marlins

It’s easy to overlook the fact that the Marlins finished just four games under .500 last season. There’s momentum with this group, but it’s a shame that 2025 breakout Kyle Stowers is expected to miss the first few weeks of the season with an oblique strain.

23) Pittsburgh Pirates

Paul Skenes is ridiculously great, but what about everyone else? The good news is that the Pirates picked up Ryan O’Hearn and Brandon Lowe to strengthen their lineup. If Oneil Cruz bounces back and highly-touted youngsters like Konnor Griffin and Bubba Chandler make an impact, this could be a pesky bunch. Still, a lot will need to go right.

24) Athletics

The Athletics remain in Sacramento for the foreseeable future, which should continue to mean great things for hitters. Sorry, Luis Severino. Sutter Health Park had the second-highest run factor in MLB last season, checking in at 26 percent above the league average for offense. Could we see a 50-homer season from Nick Kurtz before long?

25) Los Angeles Angels

The Angels seem to have a type, specifically if you were once good or a former top prospect. Grayson Rodriguez was added this offseason in a trade with the Orioles, but he’s slated to miss the start of the season due to arm soreness. Josh Lowe (acquired as part of a three-team trade with the Rays) dealt with an oblique injury during spring training, but he should be out there on Opening Day.

26) St. Louis Cardinals

It’s officially the Chaim Bloom Era in St. Louis, as established veterans like Nolan Arenado, Willson Contreras, Sonny Gray, and Brendan Donovan were shown the door this offseason. How quickly can they turn things around?

It’s Brutal Out Here

27) Minnesota Twins

The Twins aren’t without upside, but after a teardown at the trade deadline last year and a lack of offseason activity, they’ve already lost Pablo Lopez due to Tommy John surgery.

28) Chicago White Sox

This isn’t likely to be a winning team yet, but they should be fun to watch. The White Sox are the perfect place to see how slugger Munetaka Murakami fares against MLB pitching.

29) Washington Nationals

Can you shift from a rebuild into another rebuild? Asking for a friend. The Nationals’ plan is actually pretty fascinating, as their manager (Blake Butera), president of baseball operations (Paul Toboni), and general manager (Ani Kilambi) are all in their 30s. They might lose 100 games, but they should have no problem setting up your parent’s WI-FI network.

30) Colorado Rockies

The Rockies have lost 100 games in three straight seasons and have a completely new front office structure with Paul DePodesta making his return to baseball after a stint with the Cleveland Browns. At least they’re trying something different. Whoever turns this franchise around will be a legend.

The Yankees and ABS strategy — for now

Mar 13, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Detailed view of the scoreboard showing an ABS ball and strike challenge call being overturned to a strikeout during the Chicago White Sox against the Chicago Cubs during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

I’ve written a couple posts in spring training about the ABS challenge system and how teams are going to react to it. It seems like an element tailor-built for the Yankees; the team preaches control over the strike zone at the plate and was the first to really lean into pitch-framing almost two decades ago. Knowing the 17” that is home plate is doctrine for the organization, and it shouldn’t surprise us then how good the Yankees have been at challenging so far this spring.

Headed into play against the Cubs yesterday, Yankees hitters had challenged 48 calls, getting 24 (50 percent) correct. That’s more reviews and more wins than any other team, and the ninth-highest “win rate”. Perhaps most important for a team that has at times generated criticism for strikeouts, the Yankees have cut the sixth-most strikeouts because of their talent for overturning calls. On the defensive side, it’s more of the same — the most challenges, the most wins, but more at the league median rate of 59 percent win rate. Five pitchers have also issued challenges, with only two of them successful and just a single review per hurler.

There’s that old rule of thumb that a 75 percent success rate is the breakeven point for stolen bases, if you can’t be successful 75 percent of the time the gains of an extra 90 feet are undercut by how many outs you freely give out. However, the flip side of that rule is that if you’re stealing at a 90 percent rate or so, you’re probably not trying as often as you should — you’re leaving runs on the table by being too cautious.

It seems the Yankees have the same philosophy when it comes to challenging umpire’s calls. They’re OK with having some losses on the ledger as long as they also get the most wins. It’s interesting that the three potential catchers the club will carry on Opening Day (Austin Wells, J.C. Escarra, and Ben Rice) went a combined 15-for-23 in challenges this spring, a sterling 65 percent success rate. Many of the team’s missed challenges on defense came from camp invitees like Miguel Palma and Ali Sánchez. The guys making the calls at the MLB level seem to be pretty on point with what is and isn’t a strike.

This trend is echoed, perhaps unsurprisingly, by the hitting group. That 50 percent success rate mentioned above grows to 56 percent when we only include the players that will be in the dugout on Wednesday in San Francisco — also, I tend to think Aaron Judge will be very good at this kind of thing, and a long World Baseball Classic for him meant he only issued one failed challenge in Grapefruit League play. Just as with the catchers, the success in the review system seems to come mostly from the guys already good enough to be on an MLB roster.

That five pitchers got nominal challenges also should inform us of the April challenge policy. I remember seeing Fernando Cruz working in the back half of a game a couple weeks ago, challenge a ball that was clearly low and with the Yankees having a challenge in hand he seemed to ask for a review just to get some personal experience with the system. It doesn’t seem like the club is particularly interested in letting pitchers challenge much, trusting the much more stable catcher to evaluate.

It looks like the strategy for the start of the year is a very liberal approach to who can challenge calls at the plate or behind it, but not from the rubber, and that the team is not afraid of burning a challenge. Contrast this with the Tigers or Mets, who in spring were extremely controlled with who was allowed to ask for a review, and both clubs ended many games with a challenge still in hand.

If there’s one critique of the Yankees over the last ten years that I have, it’s that they don’t always seem to lean into the urgency of a skid or speedbump. 162 games is a long season, water needs time to find it’s level and all that, but I worry that that attitude is too pervasive within the organizational culture. They seem to be breaking from that philosophy in how they approach challenges — if you can overturn a call in the third inning, and that leads to an early advantage, do it rather than wait for a call in the eighth that may never come.

I’ve been waiting for the ABS system at the MLB level for a long time, and I tend to agree with the strategy the Yankees appear to be taking in how to use it. That approach may change as the season goes on, and I suspect umpiring will get even better than it is once they re-learn the strike zone, but for the first round of real baseball, the Yankees are getting it right when it comes to reviews.