Tuesday BP: When will the Giants make a move?

Drew Gilbert and Tony Vitello walking side by side.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 10: Manager Tony Vitello #23 and Drew Gilbert #0 of the San Francisco Giants watches practice during Spring Training at Scottsdale Stadium on February 10, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Suzanna Mitchell/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants have, somewhat unconventionally, only used 27 players this year, which means they’ve only made one move involving the Major League roster. That move was forced on them, after reliever José Buttó was placed on the Injured List, and replaced by Blade Tidwell.

It’s the time of the year where teams start to tinker with their rosters. Like the Giants, the San Diego Padres and Los Angeles Dodgers have also used just one additional player; but the Colorado Rockies have used three, and the Arizona Diamondbacks four.

The Giants will likely make another pitching move before long, as relievers Sam Hentges (a lefty) and Joel Peguero (a righty) have both started rehab assignments after beginning the year on the IL. But where they really could use a move is on the offensive front. The Giants are, somewhat surprisingly, ninth in the Majors in batting average, but that’s where the good times end. San Francisco is 28th in on-base percentage, 24th in slugging percentage, dead last in walk rate, dead last in home runs, dead last in stolen bases, 29th in runs, 27th in OPS, and 27th in wRC+.

But the issue, of course, is that the Giants don’t have any quick fixes. The obvious solution to boost the offense would be to promote their top prospect, Bryce Eldridge, but even if the Giants thought he were ready (which I doubt they do), it still doesn’t really help things. Their best hitter this year has been Casey Schmitt, who has primarily been used as the DH, which is where Eldridge would need to slot in. Schmitt’s not going to displace Matt Chapman or Rafael Devers for obvious reasons, and Luis Arráez has been one of the team’s only good hitters this year, so he’s not getting displaced, either. Which means there’s no place for Eldridge.

Jesús Rodríguez is the other bat who could help the team, but similar concerns arise. The contact-heavy utility player is not going to take starts from Patrick Bailey or Arráez, and replacing Daniel “greatest hitter of all time” Susac isn’t something that needs doing.

The outfield is where the Giants really need some help, but it probably needs to come from Heliot Ramos, Jung Hoo Lee, and Harrison Bader remembering how to hit. The reinforcements there don’t seem likely to do much better: AAA Sacramento’s outfield is Grant McCray (who is in an awful slump), Will Brennan (a veteran with a large track record of being a below-average hitter in the Majors), Drew Gilbert (who isn’t lighting up the box scores and has been a very bad hitter in the Majors) and Victor Bericoto (who is still adjusting to the level).

So while most people are likely hoping for a move to come soon, it’s probably still a ways away for the Giants. But that won’t stop me from asking for your prediction of when it will occur, and who it will be.

Mets were this close to ‘disaster’ with Craig Kimbrel-Francisco Alvarez miscommunication

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Francisco Alvarez tries to hold Craig Kimbrel up from throwing a pitch in the Mets-Dodgers game on April 13, 2026, Image 2 shows Craig Kimbrel held onto the ball to avoid a potential disaster
Mets miscommunication

Craig Kimbrel is still working out the kinks with his new team.

In his second appearance with the Mets, Kimbrel and catcher Francisco Alvarez got their wires crossed during the sixth inning with two outs on a 2-2 pitch to Shohei Ohtani with the Dodgers leading 4-0.

Alvarez called for time while Kimbrel was mid-windup and the veteran reliever nearly threw the ball at the Mets catcher, who was about five steps across home plate toward the pitcher’s mound.

Ohtani and home plate umpire Nic Lentz immediately ducked to avoid what looked like a potentially dangerous situation if the ball was released.

Alvarez did not get out of the way and instead stood his ground and tried to quickly get into a stance to catch the pitch, despite the distance between him and the pitcher closing.

Kimbrel was able to hold himself back from throwing the pitch and looked away as Alvarez came to the mound — and Ohtani took a sigh of relief.

Francisco Alvarez tries to hold Craig Kimbrel up from throwing a pitch in the Mets-Dodgers game on April 13, 2026. SNY/X

“Whoa,” the Mets broadcast of Ron Darling and Gary Cohen said in unison.

“Alvarez was running out to try and beat the pitch clock, and Kimbrel was ready to throw the pitch,” Cohen said. “That could have been a disaster.”

“That was almost going to be a little league distance pitch,” Darling added. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen this before. Alvarez gets time from the umpire, but Kimbrel doesn’t know that. Wow.”

Kimbrel wound up getting Ohtani to fly out to right field to end the inning, though four runs was more than enough for LA as right-hander Justin Wrobleski shut the Mets offense down.

Craig Kimbrel held onto the ball to avoid a potential disaster. SNY/X

It’s been a brutal stretch for the Mets, who have now lost six straight with Juan Soto sidelined with a calif strain.

They will try to break free when they send ace Nolan McLean to the mound opposite Dodgers star Yoshinobu Yamamoto on Tuesday night.

MLB Player Props & Best Bets for Today, April 14

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

Gunnar Henderson and Yordan Alvarez were two of the best hitters in the majors in 2024 before underperforming last season. 

Both have rediscovered that form to start the year, creating strong value on their props in favorable matchups tonight.

Here are my best free MLB player props for Tuesday, April 14. 

Best MLB player props today

Player PickOdds
Orioles Gunnar HendersonOver 1.5 total bases+100
Braves Drake BaldwinOver 0.5 RBI+165
Astros Yordan AlvarezOver 1.5 total bases-105

Gunnar Henderson Over 1.5 total bases [+100]

After finishing fourth in the AL MVP race in 2024, Gunnar Henderson took a step back in 2025.

However, the Baltimore Orioles shortstop is swinging the bat well again, which is why my MLB picks are hammering his total bases prop. Henderson ranks in the 97th percentile in overall offensive talent according to THE BAT X, and he is slugging .691 over the last two weeks.

Henderson will have the platoon advantage at home against Arizona Diamondbacks starter Merrill Kelly, with a stiff 13 mph breeze blowing out to the outfield at hitter-friendly Camden Yards.

Kelly is making his season debut after dealing with a back ailment, and he logged a 4.16 xERA across 32 starts last year. The D-backs also have one of the worst bullpens in the majors waiting in the wings.

  • Time: 6:35 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: DBacks.TV | MASN

Drake Baldwin Over 0.5 RBI [+165]

Drake Baldwin won the NL Rookie of the Year Award last season and has been even better this year. 

The Atlanta Braves catcher ranks in the 95th percentile in xSLG (.586) and the 88th percentile in barrel rate. Baldwin leads the Braves with 17 RBI, and he’s driven in a run in nine of his last 14 games.

Baldwin will have the platoon advantage against Miami Marlins right-hander Max Meyer tonight.

Meyer owns a 3.68 ERA through three starts, though his xERA sits significantly higher at 5.42. The right-hander posted a 4.73 ERA with a 1.42 WHIP in 12 starts last season, struggling particularly on the road.

  • Time: 7:15 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: BravesVision | Marlins.TV

Yordan Alvarez Over 1.5 total bases [-105]

After an injury-plagued campaign in 2025, Yordan Alvarez is healthy and playing like an MVP candidate. The Houston Astros slugger is fourth in the majors in slugging percentage (.714), and his expected xSLG is even higher at an incredible .821.

He'll have the platoon advantage against struggling Colorado Rockies hurler Michael Lorenzen, who sports an ugly 6.09 xERA through three starts, ranking in the 11th percentile in hard-hit rate and the sixth percentile in xBA (.323).

Alvarez will also benefit from 15 mph winds blowing out to the outfield at Daikin Park.

  • Time: 8:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Rockies.TV | Space City Home Network

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Justin Wrobleski did the maximum by facing nearly the minimum

Los Angeles, CA - April 13:Dodgers pitcher Justin Wrobleski (70) pitched through 8 innings against the Mets at Dodger Stadium on Monday, April 13, 2026. The LA Dodgers defeated the NY Mets 4-0 in first of a 3 game series. (Photo by David Crane/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

Justin Wrobleski had the best start of the Dodgers season to date and the best outing of his career in Monday night’s win over the New York Mets.

Wrobleski was so efficient in his eight scoreless innings that some of the talk afterwards was about why he didn’t get a chance to finish the game. After all, he was only at 90 pitches through eight innings, during which he allowed only two singles and nothing else.

“He certainly earned the opportunity to go back out for the ninth. He pitched a heck of a ballgame,” manager Dave Roberts told reporters Monday night at Dodger Stadium. “The decision was, he hasn’t more than five innings in a long time, so now you’re talking about the health of the player. There’s more to that than pitch counts.”

In his first two outings this season, Wrobleski pitched four innings in bulk relief on March 30 against the Cleveland Guardians, then pitched five innings in a start and win over the Toronto Blue Jays last week. He last pitched more than five innings last July 19, with Triple-A Oklahoma City, and his professional career high was seven innings, done on June 16, 2024 with Double-A Tulsa and again on May 10, 2025 with Oklahoma City.

The top three in the Dodgers rotation — Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow, and Shohei Ohtani — have pitched six innings in every start so far, and Emmet Sheehan pitched six in his last start as well. Yamamoto faced two batters in the seventh inning last week in Toronto but didn’t retire either one. No Dodgers starter had gotten an out beyond the sixth inning before Monday night, when Wrobleski completed eight innings.

Jorge Polanco broke up the perfect game bid with a single in the fifth inning, but was erased on a double play. Francisco Alvarez singled in the eighth inning, the only other Met to reach base against Wrobleski. None reached scoring position.

Wrobleski got an 80 game score for his effort, the best by a Dodgers starter this season, topping Shohei Ohtani’s 73 game score on March 31 against Cleveland, with six strikeouts over six scoreless innings.

With only two strikeouts, Wrobleski wasn’t dominant, but he was efficient, getting 10 outs on two or fewer pitches. He gave up some hard-hit balls but almost all were on the ground. Most notably, shortstop Miguel Rojas robbed Bo Bichette of a hit with a diving stab and throw up the middle in the second inning.

“Those guys are very, very aggressive. If they’re going to put the ball in play, there’s only so much a pitcher can do outside of trying to get behind and make them chase out of the strike zone,” Roberts told reporters. “We want outs. He’ll get his strikeouts. With two strikeouts and no walks, I love the no walks. The two strikeouts isn’t a second thought. It was a great, great major league outing.”

Wrobleski faced only 25 batters to get through his eight innings, one over the minimum. He’s the first Dodgers starter to complete eight innings in 25 or fewer batters since Clayton Kershaw on July 15, 2022 in Anaheim, the second of his two flirtations with perfection that season.

Tanner Scott relieved Wrobleski and needed only eight pitches to finish the game, putting the Dodgers total at 98 pitches. It’s only the second MLB game this season with a team throwing fewer than 100 pitches. Miami Marlins ace Sandy Alcantara needed only 93 pitches to shut out the Chicago White Sox on April 1. The previous time the Dodgers threw fewer than 100 pitches was September 12, 2021, when Max Scherzer threw 92 pitches in eight innings, followed by Justin Bruihl’s six-pitch ninth to finish off the San Diego Padres.

Alive: Mariners at Padres Series Preview

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 12: Manny Machado #13 and Fernando Tatis Jr. #23 of the San Diego Padres celebrate on the field after defeating the Colorado Rockies at Petco Park on April 12, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was great to see the Mariners finally play up to their potential for an entire weekend. That it came at the expense of the Astros makes it all the more sweet. Between the odd fourth game against Houston on Monday, the quick three-game road trip to San Diego in the middle of this week, and a quick second series against the Rangers back at home this weekend, I’m not sure what the MLB schedule makers were thinking with this week. 

GameTimeMariners StarterPadres StarterMariners Win%Padres Win%
Game 1Tuesday, April 14 | 6:40 pmRHP Bryan WooRHP Michael King51.3%48.7%
Game 2Wednesday, April 15 | 6:40 pmRHP Emerson HancockRHP Randy Vásquez48.8%51.2%
Game 3Thursday, April 16 | 5:40 pmRHP Luis CastilloRHP Walker Buehler51.8%48.2%
*Game odds courtesy of FanGraphs

OverviewPadresMarinersEdge
Batting (wRC+)102 (7th in NL)113 (2nd in AL)Mariners
Fielding (FRV)-2 (10th)-29 (12th)Padres
Starting Pitching (FIP-)107 (12th)100 (7th)Mariners
Bullpen (FIP-)86 (1st)97 (10th)Padres
2025 stats

The Mariners won the inaugural “official” version of the Vedder Cup last year, taking five of six games against the Padres. The last time San Diego won this regional rivalry was back in 2021.

The Padres have been one of the most entertaining teams over the last few years. They’ve got tons of superstar talent on the big league roster and haven’t been afraid to make aggressive moves to stay competitive. Years of those win-now moves have depleted the depth in San Diego’s organization, which makes this roster pretty top heavy and potentially very fragile. When everyone is healthy and things are working as they should be, this team is as good as any other in the National League. 

PlayerPositionBatsPAK%BB%ISOwRC+
Ramón LaureanoLFR48824.4%7.2%0.231138
Fernando Tatis Jr.RFR69118.7%12.9%0.178131
Jackson MerrillCFL48322.4%6.8%0.193116
Manny Machado3BR67819.3%8.1%0.185123
Xander BogaertsSSR55217.0%8.7%0.128104
Gavin Sheets1BL54519.6%8.1%0.177111
Nick CastellanosDHR58922.6%5.4%0.15090
Freddy FerminCR34718.7%5.5%0.08877
Jake Cronenworth2BL51520.8%13.4%0.131117
2025 stats

While the Padres’ pitching staff isn’t currently at full strength, the lineup is firing on all cylinders. Built around a quartet of stars, the offense mirrors the construction of the entire roster: extremely top heavy. Fernando Tatis Jr. hasn’t been able to replicate the MVP-type production from earlier in his career before his motorcycle accident in 2021, but he’s still been one of the best players in baseball over the last three years. Manny Machado is the iron man of the group; he’s played in less than 150 games in a season just three times in his 12-year career and one of those times was his rookie year when he was called up midseason. He’s been one of the most consistent producers in baseball as well, the metronome in the heart of the Padres lineup. I’m not sure Xander Bogaerts will ever get back to the level of production he enjoyed in Boston, but he plays excellent defense at a premium position. The star with the biggest question marks is Jackson Merrill; he took a step back last year after a fantastic debut in 2024, though he’s still only 23 years old and still has an extremely high ceiling.

Probable Pitchers 

Updated Stuff+ Explainer 

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Michael King73.124.7%8.4%13.2%38.3%3.444.42
Bryan Woo186.227.1%4.9%12.8%40.8%2.943.47
2025 stats
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam18.2%29.1%93.799137800.502
Sinker38.0%23.0%92.7107109990.294
Changeup7.9%31.9%86.883931270.252
Slider10.9%1.6%83.8110
Sweeper25.0%14.4%82.3110941260.306
2025 stats

Michael King looked like an ace in his one lone full season in the starting rotation back in 2024. He had made the switch from the bullpen during the year prior, but his follow up campaign after his breakout was filled with injuries. He missed about two and half months of the season last year with a shoulder injury and another two weeks in August with knee inflammation. He never really looked settled last year and his ERA and FIP really suffered. He’s got a couple of solid pitch pairs to attack batters on both sides of the plate; four-seam-changeup against left-handers and sinker-sweeper against right-handers. With his low-slot delivery, he gets a ton of horizontal movement on his secondary pitches, while still staying pretty vertical with his fastballs. 

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Randy Vásquez133.213.7%9.1%8.3%40.1%3.844.85
Emerson Hancock9016.6%8.1%15.2%43.0%4.905.08
2025 stats
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam13.2%28.6%93.58973940.329
Sinker34.4%4.2%93.193461220.372
Cutter24.3%25.5%90.291761110.376
Changeup1.2%12.4%86.984491460.365
Curveball4.8%20.6%81.292501040.355
Slider3.1%1.2%85.8111
Sweeper19.0%7.4%82.1111761250.313
2025 stats

Randy Vásquez has spent the last few seasons as a reliable, innings-eating back-end starter for the Padres. Between 2023 and ‘24, he had the lowest strikeout rate among all qualified starters, though his ERA was a decent 4.27. All of a sudden, he’s throwing two ticks harder this year and he’s more than doubled his strikeout rate. The extra oomph on his pitches is obviously great, but it’s particularly helpful for Vásquez because of his seven-pitch repertoire. Discerning which of those seven pitches is heading towards the plate is a lot easier when you only have to worry about a 93 mph fastball rather than 95 mph heat. With the threat of a true, bat-missing heater in his back pocket, his entire arsenal becomes more effective because he has so many looks he can present to the batter.

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Walker Buehler12616.3%10.8%15.8%42.7%4.935.66
Luis Castillo180.221.7%6.2%10.5%41.3%3.543.88
2025 stats
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam28.2%26.6%94.09468970.435
Sinker27.0%11.7%93.899541040.352
Cutter16.2%19.4%90.69283990.421
Changeup0.8%11.5%89.777701020.204
Curveball4.3%19.8%77.411078690.285
Slider23.5%11.0%87.59764940.358
Sweeper19.2%0.0%80.9971051090.262
2025 stats

I can only assume that Walker Buehler’s 2019 and ‘21 seasons are doing a lot of heavy lifting for his reputation as he’s bounced between three different teams over the last two seasons. He put up 5.1 and 5.6 fWAR in those two campaigns but underwent Tommy John surgery in 2022. He hasn’t been the same since and he was legitimately one of the worst pitchers in baseball last year. His four-seam fastball was one of the best in baseball at his peak but it’s lost a ton of its carry and just isn’t an effective pitch anymore. He’s tried to adjust by deepening his repertoire and mixing in all of his secondary pitches a lot more often. It didn’t work in Boston last year, but the Padres desperately needed starting pitchers this spring, so they’re giving Buehler another shot to see if he can figure things out.


The Big Picture:

TeamW-LW%Games BehindRun DiffRecent Form
Rangers9-70.563+11W-L-L-W-W
Athletics8-80.5001.0-9W-W-W-W-L
Mariners8-90.4711.5+11L-W-W-W-W
Angels8-90.4711.5-5L-W-L-W-L
Astros6-110.3533.5-12L-L-L-L-L

Haha, Lastros.

How loyal should managers be to their players?

Salvador Perez squinting
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - APRIL 12: Salvador Perez #13 of the Kansas City Royals watches from the dugout during the 6th inning of the game against the Chicago White Soxat Kauffman Stadium on April 12, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Managers are hired to be fired. This is not news to anyone who has watched baseball for a significant period of time. It is exceedingly rare for a baseball manager to ever retire on his own terms. Heck, even some recent Hall of Fame-caliber managers who retired found themselves managing other teams in relatively short order, suggesting that their retirement may not have been entirely voluntary.

Some day, Matt Quatraro’s term as the Royals manager will come to an end. It will almost certainly be because he has been fired. Not because he’s a bad manager, though, but because that’s a fate that awaits almost everyone who has ever taken on the role. That day is hopefully a long way off, though, because he’s one of the very best managers in the league.

It’s actually pretty rare to see a manager fired just because his team is losing. Usually, a managerial firing is accompanied by one of three other criteria. First, if a general manager feels like he’s on the hot seat. He can attempt to keep his job by persuading the people above him, whether that’s the owner or the president of baseball operations or whatever, that the problem isn’t the players he acquired, but how they’re being managed. Second, if a team severely underperforms their expectations, this often goes hand-in-hand with the first one. Third, a manager can be fired if he loses the support of the clubhouse.

One of the surest signs a manager is about to be fired is when you see a lack of effort from the players on the field or you start hearing about discontent in the clubhouse. The manager role is named that because they manage the game, but in modern MLB, it’s about managing the people in the clubhouse as much as it is about deciding on-field strategy.

It’s easy for all of us sitting on our couches to see that John Schreiber shouldn’t be pitching in high-leverage situations anymore. Not only has his ability seemed to decline since last season, but the bullpen has added arms and seen other arms improve since last season, too. If it’s easy for us to see, you have to know Q has seen it, too. However, if Q summarily dropped a respected veteran reliever from his position without cause, it would make everyone wonder how safe their own roles on the team were.

Think about your own job for a moment. I know that playing baseball is different, but this part isn’t. If you knew someone who had been with the company for a while and had done a pretty good job for years, suddenly demoted or laid off after the company hired some more people, you’d wonder about your own job security, too, wouldn’t you? It might motivate some people, but other people – especially high performers who know they have options elsewhere if things don’t work out here – could very well decide it isn’t worth trying to please a manager who seemingly can’t be pleased and start job hunting.

So, in the name of giving people a sense of security, knowing they won’t be demoted or cut for a bad performance or two, Quatraro has given Schreiber multiple opportunities to get the job done. This also applies to Carlos Estévez getting the first save opportunity at the start of the year. The difference between the two, even beyond Estévez’s injury, is that Schreiber’s struggles haven’t obviously affected games until this week.

That brings us to the flip side of that loyalty coin. If you leave low-performers in prestigious positions while people who are playing better are relegated to less important roles, you run the risk of demoralizing the team that way, too. That was something previous leaders such as Dayton Moore and Mike Matheny struggled with and at least partially led to their dismissal. The good news is that we have years of evidence that Matt Quatraro can handle those situations pretty well.

In 2024, he entered the season with Will Smith, the respected veteran, as his closer. It didn’t take him long to remove Smith from the position and promote James McArthur to the role when the former faltered while the latter pitched well. By April 5, Quatraro gave Smith a save situation but had McArthur warmed up and replaced him before he could blow the game. Later that year, when McArthur struggled, Quatraro removed him and promoted the newly acquired Lucas Erceg to the role instead.

Also in 2024, when MJ Melendez was being counted on to keep getting better, and Hunter Renfroe was added to the team, they started the year batting fifth and sixth, respectively. A week into the season, Renfroe was batting eighth more often. By the end of April, Melendez had been demoted to batting seventh. Renfroe was easier to demote with Nelson Velázquez hitting well to start the year, and Melendez was moved down when Michael Massey got hot.

It’s very en vogue to criticize how Quatraro has handled the bullpen and lineup, but the truth of the matter is, he rapidly makes changes when he has options. One of the reasons I was so optimistic about this season is that I felt like the Royals had given him more options to work with than ever before. And, to that end, I expect him to make changes soon. He’s given Schreiber, Vinnie Pasquantino, and Salvador Perez 10% of the season to show they can do better than they have. They earned that with their veteran performance in years prior. But they didn’t do it, and so change has to come.

To that end, I would be very surprised if we see Schreiber pitching in high leverage again for a while, at least. And if we get to the end of the week and Vinnie and Salvy are still killing rallies while batting third and fourth, I’ll be both amazed and upset. Changes are coming, not drastic ones, we’re not cutting guys after 16 games, but significant changes all the same.

Running a team means remembering that players are people. That means that some deference to veterans is not just warranted, but required. I know many of you are snake-bitten by how Ned Yost, Mike Matheny, and Dayton Moore seemed to constantly defer to veterans for weeks, months, and even years after they had shown they couldn’t get the job done anymore. But the team has operated differently under J.J. Picollo and Quatraro. Veterans get chances to keep their old jobs, but they aren’t unlimited anymore. And that’s just good people management.

Angels vs Yankees Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

After a thrilling affair yesterday, the Los Angeles Angels and New York Yankees will play their second game of the series tonight.

I think the Angels have a pitching advantage here, and thus see value in backing them.

My Yankees vs. Angels predictions and MLB picks for Tuesday, April 14 break it all down below.

Who will win Angels vs Yankees today: Angels +1.5 (-130)

Los Angeles Angels SP Reid Detmers' 2.53 xERA ranks in the Top 15% of baseball through three starts, and that’s just a massive gap compared to New York Yankees hurler Ryan Weathers' 5.12 xERA (Bottom 25th percentile).

This is effectively the difference between a top-third starter, and a guy who is a bridge to the rest of the rotation being healthy. 

Detmers generates chases at a 95th percentile rate this year, which is consistent with what he’s been in his career.

Although New York has shown more patience at the plate this season, they still have plenty of hitters who carry a lot of swing and miss, which is always going to make them vulnerable to this pitching archetype.

I don’t think Detmers needs to be stellar for the Halos to hang here. Weathers is on borrowed time relative to his actual performances compared to the underlying metrics.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Ryan Weathers' 2.81 ERA masks a 5.12 xERA, which is the largest gap between actual and xERA among Yankees starters this season.

Angels vs Yankees Over/Under pick: Over 8.5 (-120)

Weathers’ pending negative regression certainly plays an influential role here. I set the total at the same number as the market, but metrics such as favorable matchups and both teams’ offensive tendencies lean me towards the Over.

Mike Trout, Zach Neto, and Jo Adell have all had good success against Weathers historically. All three have over 40 plate appearances against him, and all three have posted a Top 20% wOBA against him over that sample.

If that trio has success, we can roughly estimate the Angels scoring 4-5 runs. That should be enough.

Although Detmers' chase creation gives him an edge, his fastball-heavy approach also makes him a candidate to give up runs against the best fastball-hitting team in baseball YTD.

Chris Hatfield's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 5-5, -0.08 units
  • Over/Under bets: 7-4, +2.90 units

Angels vs Yankees odds

  • Moneyline: Angels +150 | Yankees -180
  • Run line: Angels +1.5 | Yankees -1.5
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 | Under 8.5

Angels vs Yankees trend

The Angels have won three of the last five head-to-head matchups with the Yankees. Find more MLB betting trends for Angels vs. Yankees.

How to watch Angels vs Yankees and game info

LocationYankee Stadium, Bronx, NY
DateTuesday, April 14, 2026
First pitch7:05 p.m. ET
TVFDSN-W, YES
Angels starting pitcherReid Detmers
(0-1, 4.60 ERA)
Yankees starting pitcherRyan Weathers
(0-1, 2.81 ERA)

Angels vs Yankees latest injuries

Angels vs Yankees weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Aaron Judge vs. Mike Trout turns into starry slugfest of 3-time MVPs as Yankees edge Angels 11-10

NEW YORK — Mike Trout and Aaron Judge turned their baseball game into a heavyweight slugfest.

Trout’s second home run of the game bounced off the back wall behind the Angels bullpen in left-center, giving Los Angeles a two-run lead in the eighth inning on a night when Judge already had homered twice to put the New York Yankees ahead.

And there was more drama to come — after two three-time MVPs both homered twice in the same game for the first time in 70 years.

Trent Grisham hit his second homer of the evening (and season) to tie the score in the ninth. Moments later, José Caballero trotted home on Jordan Romano’s game-ending wild pitch to give the Yankees a pulsating 11-10 win that stopped a five-game losing streak.

“It was great. That’s baseball for you,” Trout marveled. “It’s what fans want, and to be able to see something like that, pretty cool.”

Only once before had a pair of players already three-time MVPs each homered twice in the same game, according to STATS Perform.

After Stan Musial had gone deep twice, Roy Campanella hit a tying, three-run drive in the ninth for his second of the game and Don Zimmer followed with a walk-off single to lead the Brooklyn Dodgers over the St. Louis Cardinals 9-8 at Ebbets Field on June 21, 1956.

Trout nearly hit a third. He flied out to Cody Bellinger in front of the center-field wall, leaving the bases loaded in the fourth after the Angels tied the score 4-all with four unearned runs following Caballero’s error on Trout’s leadoff grounder to shortstop.

Judge had looked forward to crossing paths with Trout in a Yankee Stadium weight room.

“I was going to talk some smack to him after the one he hit all the way to the warning track,” Judge said, “but I didn’t get a chance to and then he answers right back with two big homers for him. You put that guy in a clutch situation, a big moment and he’s going to show up every single time, so it’s fun going back and forth with a guy like that, especially in New York and the Bronx.”

New York had lost five straight after an 8-2 start and had been 0-6 in one-run games.

There were seven home runs that traveled a total of 2,846 feet — more than half a mile — with the Yankees hitting five. Judge’s first went 456 feet deep into the left-field bleachers and left the bat at 116.2 mph, the hardest-hit home run of the season.

Grisham and Trout each had five RBIs, and Judge had three.

Baseball’s top four active home run leaders were all in the game. Judge, with 374, moved one ahead of teammate Paul Goldschmidt. New York slugger Giancarlo Stanton, who leads active players with 454, missed by about a foot with a double off the center-field wall in the fifth. Trout has 408 homers.

Trout, 34, won AL MVPs in 2014, ’16 and ’19 but has struggled with injuries for much of the past five seasons.

“He’s the greatest of all time. It’s been fun to watch his whole career, coming up at such a young age and instantly just putting yourself at the top of the list. It’s special,” Judge said.

Judge, who turns 34 on April 26, won AL MVPs in 2022, ‘24 and ’25.

“Those are two of the greats, so it’s really fun to watch,” Yankees starter Will Warren said.

Judge and Caballero each hit a two-run homer off Yusei Kikuchi for a 4-0 second-inning lead on an unseasonably warm 77-degree night. After Caballero’s error led to the unearned runs off Warren, Grisham pinch hit in the fifth and connected for a three-run drive against Shaun Anderson for a 7-4 lead.

Trout countered with a three-run homer in the sixth against Jake Bird, who was demoted to Triple-A after the game.

Judge’s homer off Anderson leading off the bottom half gave him 47 multi-homer games, one more than Mickey Mantle and trailing only Babe Ruth’s 68 among Yankees.

“To be surrounded by some greats like that, it’s special,” Judge said.

Josh Lowe knotted the score at 8 with a seventh-inning sacrifice fly, and Trout’s two-run drive in the eighth off Camilo Doval put the Angels ahead 10-8 with his 31st multi-homer game. Judge, watching from right field, shook his head.

“Every time he comes to the Bronx, man, he puts on a show,” Judge said. “I hate to see it, but it’s fun competing against a guy like that.”

Jazz Chisholm Jr. singled to start the ninth against Romano, and Grisham reached down and pulled a slider into the right-field seats as the closer put both hands on his head.

Caballero doubled and stole third without a throw. And after Austin Wells walked, Caballero scored when Romano bounced a full-count slider to Ryan McMahon to the backstop on the ninth pitch of the plate appearance.

New York had not won a game while allowing double-digit runs since beating Minnesota 14-12 on July 23, 2019.

Yankees manager Aaron Boone described his own feelings as “tough ... for the belly.”

Then he switched his thoughts to his players.

“You get a lead, then you get another lead, and then it’s gone,” he said. “For the guys, maybe it was good to have a game like that where it was a little messy.”

Should Red Sox be worried by ace Garrett Crochet's worst start ever?

Boston Red Sox ace Garrett Crochet had the worst game of his career on Monday night, getting lit up for 11 runs (10 earned) while recording just five outs in his team's 13-6 loss to the Minnesota Twins.

Last year's AL Cy Young runner-up, the 27-year-old's velocity and spin rate were down in the start, according to MassLive, but Crochet told reporters "I don’t think that’s anything to fret over."

An All-Star each of the past two seasons, the left-hander acknowledged that he hasn't been at his best in the opening weeks of the season.

"Command as a whole has been spotty. Gotten away with it a little this early in the year," Crochet told reporters, "but tonight they made me pay. It was weak contact, hard contact, walks, hit by pitch, a little bit of everything.”

The Twins scored four runs in the first inning against Crochet but blew it open in the second, plating seven runs – including home runs by Victor Caratini and Ryan Kreidler before the left-hander was yanked before making it through the second inning.

Garrett Crochet gave up 10 earned runs in 1.2 innings on Monday against the Twins.

Is Garrett Crochet hurt?

Crochet told reporters he's fine physically and manager Alex Cora said that his ace is "healthy, so that's the most important thing."

Crochet pitched a career-high 205 ⅓ innings in 2025, up from 146 in 2024, his final year with the Chicago White Sox. He had his workload limited with the White Sox after Tommy John surgery and the team transitioning him to a starting role.

“It’s a little eye-opening, obviously,” Red Sox pitching coach Andrew Bailey said. “I think there’s a little frustration and curiosity, but like for me, there’s a couple balls on the line, jam shot to the left, a couple walks mixed there and then obviously they were able to step on some pitches in zone and hit him out of the yard. And it happened really quickly. So just got to move past it.”

Garrett Crochet stats 2026

  • Four starts, 19 innings pitched
  • 7.58 ERA – 16 earned runs
  • 22 strikeouts, seven walks

Garrett Crochet college

The White Sox selected Crochet with the 11th overall pick out of Tennessee in the 2020 draft. He made his big-league debut just a few months later in the COVID-shortened season, pitching five regular-season games before also participating in the postseason.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Red Sox Garrett Crochet lit up vs. Twins. Should Boston be worried?

Paul Skenes had to be almost perfect last year for the Pirates to have a chance. Times have changed

PITTSBURGH — Paul Skenes spent last season pitching on a razor’s edge, aware that one mistake could tilt the balance of a game, no matter how masterful the Pittsburgh Pirates ace might be.

Not anymore.

The offense that struggled to score whenever Skenes took the hill in 2025 — the main reason he had a 10-10 record alongside the 1.97 ERA that won him the National League Cy Young Award — has been transformed, both in personnel and in production, in 2026.

It reached the point during a 16-5 victory over Washington that Skenes was sort of hoping the Pirates would stop hitting during a 10-run sixth, if only so he could get back to work.

No such luck. By the time the inning was over, 14 batters had come to the plate, the Nationals had switched pitchers twice, and the clock for Skenes (3-1) to return to the mound had run out after six innings of brilliance.

“It just took forever, which is what you want,” Skenes said. “I feel like that inning everybody (was) just pulling the rope and passing it off to the next guy. It was cool to watch.”

A year ago, the worst offense in the majors produced three runs or fewer 18 times in Skenes’ 32 starts. The 23-year-old challenged the organization to get serious about winning in 2026, and the normally stingy Pirates made a series of aggressive moves intended to upgrade their lineup and help arguably the best young pitching staff in the majors.

The early returns are promising.

Pittsburgh, which was last in runs, home runs and RBIs in 2025, is in the top 10 in all three categories. Second baseman Brandon Lowe — acquired in a trade with Tampa Bay in December — became the first player in franchise history to have back-to-back five-RBI games when he hit a two-run single in the second and added a three-run homer to cap off Pittsburgh’s first 10-run inning at PNC Park in nearly 17 years.

Lowe, a two-time All-Star with the Rays, has six home runs. First baseman/outfielder Ryan O’Hearn, signed to a two-year deal in free agency, has 13 RBIs. Outfielder/designated hitter Bryan Reynolds, surrounded by the deepest lineup of his seven-year tenure in Pittsburgh, is thriving.

Perhaps the biggest sign of hope is the performance of Oneil Cruz, the Pirates’ talented but inconsistent center fielder. The 6-foot-7 Cruz extended his hitting streak to 12 games by going 2 for 3 with three RBIs, one of them coming on a 114 mph rope off the fence in right field.

“It’s pretty fun to hit after a guy hits a ball (that hard),” Lowe said. “Gets the crowd a little loud. To watch his at-bats, to see the maturity that he has with the power and everything else he has going for him, he’s going to be a lot of fun to hit behind this year.”

And the Pirates could be dangerous for the first time in a long time. Skenes already is seeing the difference. Pittsburgh has scored 38 runs across his first four starts in 2026 after needing 11 starts to hit that total in 2025.

“I told the guys after the game it makes it easy to pitch,” Skenes said.

It also lets him take chances and evolve. He became the fifth-fastest pitcher in major league history to reach 400 strikeouts when he fanned Luis Garcia Jr. just two batters into his 59th start.

Save for a 100 mph heater that Washington’s CJ Abrams sent into the seats over the 21-foot-high Clemente Wall in right in the first, Skenes was nearly perfect as he mixed his fastball with reliable offspeed stuff.

“I mean we might go out next outing and only throw changeups,” Skenes said, joking he might throw “100 in a row” when he makes his next start against the Rays.

Probably not. But having another pitch he can trust is hardly a bad thing. Neither is the freedom that comes with knowing he doesn’t have to be flawless for the Pirates to have a shot.

The victory over the Nationals came just over 24 hours after Pittsburgh allowed the host Chicago Cubs to rally and avoid a sweep. The Pirates responded with their best offensive performance of the season and offered a glimpse of the resilience it will take if they want to get to where they want to go.

“I’ve seen it now for a couple years with the Brewers, the Cubs, the Reds last year made the playoffs,” Skenes said. “That’s what NL Central teams do really well, and so now we’re doing that. It’s really fun to watch.”

Where to watch Chicago Cubs vs. Philadelphia Phillies: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Tuesday, April 14

The Philadelphia Phillies (8-8) face the Chicago Cubs (7-9) in the second game of their three-game series. Kyle Schwarber hit two homers as the Phillies beat the Cubs 13-7 in the series’ opener. The scheduled starting pitchers are Aaron Nola for the Phillies and Riley Martin for the Cubs.

  • Date: Tuesday, April 14

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET / 3:40 p.m. PT

  • Where: Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA

  • TV Channels: TBS, NBCSP+, Marquee Sports Network

  • Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • Chicago Cubs: 7-9 (No. 5 in NL Central)

  • Philadelphia Phillies: 8-8 (No. 3 in NL East)

  • Spread: Philadelphia Phillies -1.5

  • Moneyline: Philadelphia Phillies -145 (56.6%) / Chicago Cubs +120 (43.4%)

  • Over/Under: 9.5

Where to watch Los Angeles Angels vs. New York Yankees: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Tuesday, April 14

The New York Yankees (9-7) face the Los Angeles Angels (8-9) in the second game of their four-game series. The Yankees won a wild 11-10 game in Monday’s opener with the winning run scoring on a wild pitch in the bottom of the ninth inning. Aaron Judge and Mike Trout each hit two home runs in the game. The Yankees' Ryan Weber (0-1, 2.81 ERA) is scheduled to face the Angels' Reid Detmers (0-1, 4.60 ERA).

  • Date: Tuesday, April 14

  • Time: 7:05 p.m. ET / 4:05 p.m. PT

  • Where: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

  • TV Channels: YES, FanDuel Sports Network West

  • Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • Los Angeles Angels: 8-9 (No. 3 in AL West)

  • New York Yankees: 9-7 (No. 2 in AL East)

  • Spread: New York Yankees -1.5

  • Moneyline: New York Yankees -185 (61.9%) / Los Angeles Angels +150 (38.1%)

  • Over/Under: 8.5

Los Angeles Angels: Reid Detmers (0-1, ERA: 4.60, K: 17, WHIP: 1.28)
New York Yankees: Ryan Weathers (0-1, ERA: 2.81, K: 18, WHIP: 1.38)

Weather: 76°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 47,309 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

Dynasty Baseball Stock Watch: Franklin Arias, Joseph Dzierwa, Theo Gillen rising quickly

It’s still extremely early, and the sample sizes we’re analyzing and dissecting in the lower minors barely qualify as meaningful. However, that doesn’t mean everything should be dismissed as noise. A handful of early-season performances have stood out, not just for the on-field results, but for the broader developmental changes they may be signaling.

This week’s Rotoworld Dynasty Stock Watch examines 12 prospects on the rise with varying trajectories and timelines to the big leagues that fantasy managers should be prioritizing in trade discussions and on waiver wires.

Baseball is back! 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.

RELATED: Check out this week’s MLB Power Rankings!

Franklin Arias, SS, Red Sox

There are hot starts, then there's the heater Arias is on as the fourth-youngest position player at the Double-A level this season behind only Jesús Made, Leo De Vries and Ethan Salas. The 20-year-old shortstop has been a known commodity in dynasty formats for a couple of years, but he’s opened the 2026 campaign as arguably the hottest hitters in the entire minors, batting .588 (10-for-17) with two doubles, two walks and just two strikeouts through six games for Double-A Portland.

He boasts some of the best bat-to-ball skills in the minors, evidenced by a minuscule 10.1 percent strikeout rate across 110 games over three levels last year, which was the fifth-lowest mark among all minor leaguers with at least 500 plate appearances. There’s still some physical projection remaining, as Arias figures to add strength as he matures, making it easy to envision a leap into the upper echelon of fantasy prospects given his already elite contact ability. It’s possible this is merely the starting point, with Arias positioning himself to be one of the top prospects in the entire fantasy landscape by the end of the year.

Joseph Dzierwa, SP, Orioles

Dzierwa recorded nine strikeouts over six shutout innings with an eye-popping 17 swinging strikes in his professional debut earlier this month, which he followed up by allowing two runs over seven innings last week. The early returns include a sparkling 1.38 ERA and a 12/1 K/BB ratio across 13 innings for High-A Frederick. The towering six-foot-eight left-hander was Baltimore’s second-round selection in last year’s MLB Draft and appears to be on a trajectory towards becoming one of the more intriguing pitching prospects in the fantasy landscape.

The 21-year-old has continued to add fastball velocity, touching 96.2 mph on his sinker during last month’s Spring Breakout game. He pairs it with an above-average changeup and a developing slider that remains a work in progress. The sinker/changeup combination alone gives him a chance to succeed at the highest level, provided he can throw strikes consistently. His dynasty stock should continue to rise as he racks up strikeouts in the lower minors, making this an ideal window to acquire Dzierwa before he potentially becomes untouchable as one of the game’s top pitching prospects.

Theo Gillen, OF, Rays

It’s hard to find a more intriguing early-season dynasty storyline than Gillen’s unexpected power surge. The 20-year-old former first-round pick from the 2024 MLB Draft recorded consecutive two-homer games over the weekend and is hitting .333 (9-for-27) with four homers and three steals in eight games for High-A Bowling Green. It’s important to not overreact to extremely small sample sizes, but Gillen is clearly making much more consistent hard contact this season after managing just five round-trippers in 324 plate appearances at Low-A Charleston last year when he missed time with calf and finger injuries.

What’s even more impressive is that Bowling Green grades out as one of the more pitcher-friendly venues in the entire Midwest League, according to Baseball America’s park factors. Gillen’s early-season metamorphosis from more of a hit tool and speed profile to more of a well-rounded offensive threat is a development worth monitoring in the coming weeks because it would make him an upper-echelon dynasty prospect in short order.

Luis Peña, 2B/SS, Brewers

Peña blossomed into an upper-echelon prospect from a fantasy standpoint last year when he batted .270/.335/.422 with nine homers and 44 steals between Low-A Carolina and High-A Wisconsin at just 18 years old during a highly impressive stateside debut. He’ll continue to understandably be overshadowed by Jesús Made, who looks like a future franchise cornerstone hitting .359 (14-for-39) as the youngest everyday player in Double-A this season, but he possesses a plethora of fantasy-relevant skills including an above-average hit tool and massive stolen base upside.

He’s off to a fast start back at High-A Wisconsin, hitting .500 (10-for-20) with a pair of extra-base hits and five steals through six games. There’s a chance he becomes an elite fantasy contributor down the road if he continues to fill out physically and grows into some additional over-the-fence pop.

Gage Wood, SP, Phillies

The biggest question facing Wood coming out of last year’s MLB Draft, when he was selected 26th overall following a standout collegiate career at Arkansas that included the third no-hitter in College World Series history, was whether he would ultimately stick as a starter.

The 22-year-old right-hander is beginning to answer those concerns, posting a 1.23 ERA with a 15/2 K/BB ratio across 7 1/3 innings in his professional debut at Low-A Clearwater. While it’s not uncommon for polished collegiate arms to dominate at the lower levels, Wood appears on track to reach the upper minors quickly thanks to an upper-90s fastball and a strong curveball. He carries more risk than some of his lower-minors pitching peers, but the strikeout potential is undeniable, and the fantasy upside is significant if he can put everything together and stay healthy long-term.

Jhonny Level, SS, Giants

Level has gotten off to a sizzling-hot start with multiple hits in five of six games and is batting an astronomical .519 (14-for-27) with two homers and three steals at Low-A San Jose this season. The 19-year-old switch-hitting shortstop was one of last year's biggest risers as he rocketed through a couple levels in San Francisco's system to finish at Low-A. He manages to hit for a ton of power considering his smaller frame and his hit tool is one of the strongest of any teenage prospect in the minors. He’s hit wherever the Giants have sent him over the last three seasons and his fantasy stock will reach stratospheric levels if he’s producing in the upper minors by the end of the year.

Anthony Eyanson, SP, Red Sox

Eyanson paired with Mariners top pitching prospect Kade Anderson to form a one-two punch for eventual national champion LSU last spring and has looked like a potential breakout arm through his first two starts at High-A Greenville in his professional debut, compiling a microscopic 1.23 ERA, 0.41 WHIP and 13/0 K/BB ratio across 7 1/3 innings. Those early performances are enough to put him firmly on dynasty radars, but the buzz began earlier this spring when he flashed increased velocity on the backfields.

The Boston Globe’s Alex Speier wrote for Baseball America earlier this month that Eyanson, a third-round pick in last year’s MLB Draft, touched triple digits for the first time in his career during Boston’s spring breakout game against the Orioles and is now routinely sitting in the upper-90s with his fastball. He fits the mold of a fast-moving pitching prospect and should be rostered in all dynasty formats.

Caleb Bonemer, SS, White Sox

Bonemer drew rave reviews during his professional debut last year when he hit .281/.400/.458 with 10 homers and 27 steals for Low-A Kannapolis before going deep twice in 11 games at High-A Winston-Salem to close out the year. The 20-year-old shortstop, who was Chicago’s second-round pick in the 2024 MLB Draft, has picked up right where he left off in the low minors, slashing .303/.385/.667 with two homers and seven RBI through nine contests at High-A this season. It’s early, but with all of the graduations at the top of dynasty prospect lists, Bonemer has a chance to be near the top when the dust settles in a couple weeks.

Kayson Cunningham, SS, Diamondbacks

Cunningham was widely regarded as the top pure hitter in last year’s MLB Draft when he was gobbled up by Arizona with the 18th overall selection, and he’s done nothing to dispel that notion, hitting .385 (10-for-26) with more walks (nine) than strikeouts (four) through eight games at Low-A Visalia this season. The 19-year-old’s advanced hit tool should make him an on-base machine and enable him to move quickly through the hitter-friendly environments in the Diamondbacks’ system.

He’s basically a complete zero in the power department at this early stage of his development, but it’s easy to forecast some growth there as he matures physically. He projects as a high-floor contact-oriented prospect with the upside to develop into a complete five-category fantasy contributor if he reaches his ceiling. His dynasty stock is going to skyrocket over the next few months if he keeps tearing the cover off the ball and reaches High-A by midseason.

Cam Caminiti, SP, Braves

Caminiti has been somewhat overlooked with Didier Fuentes and JR Ritchie making noise on the doorstep of the majors, but he has a chance to emerge as the most impactful arm in Atlanta’s system over the long term. The 19-year-old left-hander was selected 24th overall in the 2024 MLB Draft as one of the top prep arms in his class and has already shown an ability to consistently miss bats in the lower minors.

He’s still a long way from the big leagues, but his dynasty stock could soar over the next few months if he continues to deliver strong performances and reaches Double-A Mississippi before his 20th birthday in early August.

Marek Houston, SS, Twins

Houston, the 16th-overall selection in last year's MLB Draft, has gotten off to a nice start in the lower minors after a 15-homer effort during his final collegiate season at Wake Forrest. The fact that he’s adding some additional pop isn’t a surprise given his six-foot-three frame, but two homers in eight games is a noticeable uptick considering the Midwest League isn’t exactly a hitter’s paradise.

The 21-year-old is a phenomenal defensive shortstop, so any additional gains in the power department without sacrificing his athleticism will make him extremely interesting from a fantasy standpoint over the next few years. He's a name to watch in all dynasty formats.

Santiago Suarez, SP, Rays

Suarez has been a known quantity for dynasty managers in recent years, but a shoulder injury sidelined him for three months last season and likely pushed him off some radar screens. The 21-year-old right-hander has looked sharp through a pair of early-season starts at Double-A Montgomery, compiling a pristine 15/2 K/BB ratio across 11 innings.

The strong performances are even more notable considering he’s the fourth-youngest player in the entire Southern League this season. While he may not project as a prototypical front-of-the-rotation arm, Suarez features a deep arsenal built around a mid-90s fastball and solid secondary offerings. Perhaps most importantly, he’s shown the ability to command his entire repertoire and consistently fill the strike zone, which tends to be a key ingredient for sustained success at the highest level.

Bonus: Bryce Rainer, SS, Tigers

Rainer has been ice-cold, hitting .120 (3-for-25) through seven games this season at Low-A Lakeland, but he connected for a gargantuan 477-foot home run last Friday, showcasing the type of elite raw power that made him one of the fastest-rising prospects in the dynasty landscape before undergoing shoulder surgery last July. It’s going to take the 20-year-old power-hitting shortstop some time to knock off the rust, which is why this is the perfect time to target him in dynasty leagues. He could join Kevin McGonigle and Max Clark as core building blocks for Detroit at some point in the next few years.

Where to watch New York Mets vs. Los Angeles Dodgers: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Tuesday, April 14

The New York Mets (7-10) will try to stop a six-game losing streak when they take on the Los Angeles Dodgers (12-4) on Tuesday. The Dodgers shut out the Mets 4-0 in the series’ opener on Monday. The Dodgers are scheduled to start Yoshinobu Yamamoto (ERA: 2.50) against the Mets’ Nolan McLean (ERA: 2.70).

  • Date: Tuesday, April 14

  • Time: 10:10 p.m. ET / 7:10 p.m. PT

  • Where: Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, CA

  • TV Channels: SportsNet LA, SNY

  • Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • New York Mets: 7-10 (No. 5 in NL East)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers: 12-4 (No. 1 in NL West)

  • Spread: Los Angeles Dodgers -1.5

  • Moneyline: Los Angeles Dodgers -190 (62.6%) / New York Mets +155 (37.4%)

  • Over/Under: 7.5

New York Mets: Nolan McLean (1-1, ERA: 2.70, K: 20, WHIP: 0.84)
Los Angeles Dodgers: Yoshinobu Yamamoto (2-1, ERA: 2.50, K: 14, WHIP: 0.89)

Weather: 65°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 56,000 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

Mets Minor League Players of the Week: Week Three

A.J. Ewing

Week: 5 G, 17 AB, .353/.522/.529, 6 H, 3 2B, 0 3B, 0 HR, 6 BB, 4 K, 2/3 SB (Double-A)

2026 Season: 7 G, 26 AB, .385/.529/.538, 10 H, 4 2B, 0 3B, 0 HR, 8 BB, 5 K, 4/5 SB, .476 BABIP (Double-A)

A.J. Ewing has picked up right where he left off last season, adding six more hits to his season ledger, three of which were doubles. Combine that with Binghamton’s first season of the year, where Ewing appeared in two games and logged 4 hits- one double- and he is currently hitting .385/.529/.538 on the young season. He currently has a seven-game hitting streak going, getting on base at least twice in six of those seven games thanks to either multiple hits or a combination of hits and walks.

Ewing has arguably been the Mets’ highest-rising hitting prospect over the past calendar year; whereas Carson Benge has been just as good, if not better, he came with a bit more draft pedigree than Ewing and more was expected of him. Ewing was not exactly a nobody coming into the 2025 season- Lukas had him ranked 30 on his portion of the Amazin’ Avenue 2024 Mets Top 25 Prospect List, and on the Amazin’ Avenue 2025 Mets Top 25 Prospect List, I had him ranked 23 on my portion of the, Ken had him ranked 27, and Thomas had him ranked 29- but only the truly prescient could have seen him developing into one of the top prospects in all of baseball.

As Carson Benge’s performance so far this season, and Jonah Tong’s last year, highlights, the major leagues are a very different beast from the minors, and truly only the best of the best can hang. As such, I think it is important that we pump the breaks on Ewing a little bit; it’s not that I don’t think he will eventually crack a major league roster, whether it be with the Mets or elsewhere, but there is still some work to be done and he is just 21-years-old. Hopefully Ewing is allowed to maturate and develop at his own pace and get his time in the sun when he is ready, not because the team needs a Hail Mary to stem the bleeding of a floundering team or want to potentially cash in on organizational bonuses from letting the kids play.

Christian Scott

Week: 1 G (1 GS), 5.0 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 7 K (Triple-A)

2026 Season: 2 G (2 GS), 8.1 IP, 11 H, 7 R, 6 ER (6.48 ERA), 1 BB, 12 K, .429 BABIP (Double-A)

After missing all of 2025 due to undergo a combined Tommy John surgery and internal brace procedure, Christian Scott finally returned to the mound (albeit in Toledo, while pitching for Syracuse) on April 3rd and proceeded to put up a stinker, arguably the worst game he ever pitched since turning pro after being drafted out of the University of Florida back in 2021. Obviously, there were plenty of extenuating circumstances to not really be bummed out about his performance, from his lengthy absence to the weather, but the right-hander recovered nicely this past week, blanking the Buffalo Bison for five innings, scattering a pair of hits, walking one, and striking out seven.

Prior to his surgery, Scott relied on a four-pitch mix consisting of a four-seam fastball, a change-up-like splitter, slider, and sweeper. He used his fastball a little over 50% of the time, gyro slider and sweeping slider at roughly 20% apiece, and his splitter about 10%. In his two starts in 2026 so far, he has recorded almost identical ratios, throwing his four-seam fastball a bit over 50%, his two sliders at roughly 20%, and his splitter a bit over 10%.

Scott’s fastball has averaged 95.3 MPH so far this season, in line with the 94.2 MPH it averaged in his 47.1 MLB innings in 2024. It has shown a similar amount of movement, and still thrown from the slingy, deceptive low-three-quarters arm slot that Scott throws from, giving it a flat vertical approach angle.

His splitter is still sitting in the mid-80s and still has miniscule rotation, averaging 1,130 RPM so far this season. The pitch still has the sudden vertical drop and armside run that made it so effective in 2024.

His gyro slider is still sitting in the upper-80s and still has minimal spin for a slider, averaging 2,370 RPM so far this year, roughly the same as the 2,390 RPM it averaged in 2024. The 30 inches of vertical drop and 3 inches of horizontal movement are virtually identical to the 32 inches of vertical drop and 3 inches of horizontal movement is featured in 2024.

His sweeping slider is still sitting in the low-80s, averaging roughly 2,500 RPM. The pitch has featured a bit more vertical drop than it did in 2024, 36 inches to 33, and just as much sweep, with 12 inches of horizontal movement as compared to 13.

Tying his arsenal together, as it did back in 2024, Scott so far has showed excellent command of all of his pitches and pinpoint control of the strike zone, walking just one batter in 8.1 innings to 12 strikeouts.

It’s not often that I’m looking at the pitch metrics of players who have returned from injury, but I’m struck by just how similar most if all of them are given Scott’s layover in 2025 as he recovered from Tommy John surgery. The sample size here is extremely small to be sure, and there is still risk for regression and/or exposure, as Scott had all of 47.1 major league innings under his belt, but it is extremely encouraging given that the right-hander was emerging as a more-than-solid option in 2024.

Players of the Week 2025

Week One/Two (March 27-April 5): Hayden Senger/Cam Tilly