Dbacks Take the Series in New York: Dbacks 7, Mets 1

Apr 9, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks second baseman Tim Tawa (13) and center fielder Alek Thomas (5) and left fielder Jorge Barrosa (1) celebrate after defeating the New York Mets at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

On a cold blustery evening, the Arizona Diamondbacks were able to take the series against the Mets today after the bats broke out late against the Mets bullpen. The victory today is a key win for this team in the early going as the W/L record against a team like the Mets could prove to be very important down the line.

The beginning of the game was a solid pitchers duel for as it was a rematch of the World Baseball Classic championship game of Eduardo Rodriguez vs Nolan Mclean. Despite a first inning home run given up by Erod, the 2 pitchers went toe to toe inning for inning. Eduardo Rodgriguez managed to go 6 Innings of just the 1 run allowed while being the first Dbacks pitcher of the season to reach the 100 pitch mark. Although still early, he has really seemed to turn a corner in his career adapting his pitch arsenal. A historically fastball heavy pitcher, Erod continued the recent trend of throwing his changeup 32% of the time tonight while cutting his fastball usage almost in half. The early season results have been astonishing as he has pitched to a microscopic 0.50 ERA. Has to be one of the highlights of the early season so far.

On the offensive side of the ball, the Dbacks failed to score going into the 7th inning and I think every fan was thinking, “Oh great here we go again! Another wasted Erod masterpiece” Things turned around in the 7th however as Geraldo Perdomo led off the inning with a walk, Jose Fernandez notched his 2nd hit of the night moving Perdomo into scoring position, and Gabi Moreno pinch hit for James McCann and  promptly rips a double over the head of the right fielder Brett Baty tieing the game. Alek Thomas was up next and knocked in the go ahead run Jose Fernandez on a fielder’s choice and a masterful slide by the young Fernandez. His elite sprint speed was definitely a factor on that play and caused a rushed throw by the first basemen. It is really nice having that athleticism on the field! From there, the Dbacks would open this game up on a sac fly by Tim Tawa and a triple by Jorge Barrosa bringing the score to 4-1 and some much needed breathing room.

The bullpen was nails tonight as Taylor Clarke did a tremendous job of holding the score there in a quick and efficient bottom of the 7th inning. A very underrated thing for a reliver to do by maintaining all that momentum and getting the team back in the dugout quickly. Taylor Rashi came in after Clarke and had perhaps the most dominant relief outing we have seen from a Dbacks pitcher in the early going as he pitched 2 flat out filthy innings striking out 3 Mets batters. Like he was in complete control tonight and he was even smiling on the mound as he was toying with the Mets batters with his high arm slot 4 seamer, splitter, and slider combination. He even threw a slurve tonight. Is Taylor Rashi a leverage reliever all of a sudden? Would be a huge break for this team if so.

Gabi Moreno was able to notch 2 doubles in a game that he didn’t even start in and the Dbacks were able to have a nice little 7 run outburst tonight on the offense bringing the final score to 7-1. The offense though it was late to show up tonight was a welcome sight for the Dbacks and their fans given some of the early season struggles they have had in that department. All in all, the Dbacks won tonight with excellent starting pitching, and athleticism on the offensive side. A welcome sight in my opinion and certainly playing the likes of Jose Fernandez, Ildemaro Vargas, and Jose Barrosa were paramount. Hopefully we see more of this brand of Dbacks baseball. This is the type of offense that is sustainable especially considering the Dbacks once again scored all 7 runs without the benefit of the longball. Refreshing!

The Dbacks will get on the bus tonight a game over .500 and head to Philadelphia to begin the weekend series against the Phillies. Lets see if the young guns get rewarded with more playing time, and this team can keep the momentum going into Philly!

Yankees to DFA Cade Winquest to make room for Luis Gil: report

To make room for Luis Gil on the roster, the Yankees are reportedly designating right-hander Cade Winquest for assignment.

NY Post's Jon Heyman reported that the Rule 5 draft pick will be off the Yankees' roster when the transaction becomes official on Friday.

Back in Dec. 2025, the Yankees selected the 25-year-old in the Rule 5 Draft. Winquest earned the distinction of being the first player selected by the Yankees in this particular draft since 2011. 

As a Rule 5 pick, Winquest had to make and stay on the Yankees' roster for the entirety of the 2026 season, or he would be offered back to the Cardinals. The right-hander made the team out of camp after seven spring games. In that span, Winquest allowed eight runs on 13 hits, four walks and eight strikeouts across 10 innings pitched. 

Although Winquest was with the team, he did not make an appearance in the team's first 12 games. 

Winquest was originally drafted by the Cardinals in the eighth round of the 2022 MLB Draft and did not make the big league club. In 58 minor league games (38 starts) in the Cardinals system, Winquest pitched to a 4.19 ERA with 219 strikeouts in 212.2 innings.

Winquest finished the 2025 season at the Double-A level, appearing in eight games for Springfield with a 3.19 ERA in 42.1 innings. 

Gil is set to make the start for the Yankees in Friday's series opener against the Rays and the Winquest move will be made official sometime before first pitch.

Fourteen games later, the curse is gone: White Sox beat Royals 2-0

Anthony Kay bent but didn’t break, grinding through 5 2/3 scoreless to lead the Sox past Kansas City. | (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

Pitching ruled the night, and the bats did just enough to drag the White Sox across the finish line, 2-0. Raise a glass: the South Siders finally snap that 14-game Kansas City curse.

This evening’s contest was influenced a little by the ABS, with a few calls overturned on both sides. It added a bit of rhythm disruption to an otherwise crisp, low-scoring, slow-moving game. A key moment was Edgar Quero winning a challenge strike three call in the bottom of the first after a very lengthy at-bat from Vinnie Pasquantino.

Chicago finally broke the stalemate in the fourth after a quiet start by both sides. Munetaka Murakami coaxed one of two walks on the night and then hustled home on a 106.6 mph rocket RBI double from Colson Montgomery, putting the Sox ahead 1-0.

The Good Guys tacked on another tally in the seventh, capitalizing on a little chaos. Who doesn’t love a little on-field turmoil? Two free passes, a throwing error by Vinnie Pasquantino, and a sacrifice fly from Luisangel Acuña made it 2-0. It felt delightful to take advantage of the other team’s mistakes for once.

On the mound, the South Side staff was good enough, but did have to work around quite a bit of traffic. Veteran Anthony Kay set the tone with a strong start, getting key swings and misses for 5 2/3 scoreless frames. The bullpen didn’t light itself on fire and kept the Royals off the board. Grant Taylor tossed 1 1/3, and Jordan Leasure managed a drama-free inning with just one walk in the eighth. Seranthony Domínguez came out and slammed the door in the ninth.

KC had more than a few chances with baserunners everywhere. Bobby Witt Jr. provided most of the spark and did his best to play spoiler with a double, steal, and single, but thankfully for the White Sox, the Royals just weren’t able to cash it in. With the victory, Chicago snaps their three-game losing streak and improves their record to 5-8. The club will be back at it tomorrow at 6:40 p.m. CST with Davis Martin on the bump.

Royals bats remain cold as team drops third straight, 2-0

Apr 9, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Royals designated hitter Jac Caglianone (14) reacts after striking out in the fourth inning against the Chicago White Sox at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Peter Aiken-Imagn Images | Peter Aiken-Imagn Images

You can’t win if you don’t score.

For the second time this season, the Royals failed to score a run in a game. A 2-0 loss to the White Sox drops Kansas City to 5-8.

It’s the Royals’ third straight loss, and in that time, the offense has averaged a single run per game.

Tonight, the Royals faced lefty Anthony Kay, who came it having not yet reached five innings in an outing sporting a FIP near seven while not winning a Major League game since 2021.

He looked dominant tonight. Against left-handed batters, he retired all seven he faced with six strikeouts. He pitched 5-and-2/3 innings, allowing only three hits and two walks. His offense didn’t give him much against Seth Lugo, but tonight, Kay didn’t need much help.

Lugo continued his strong season with 6-and-1/3 innings while allowing two runs (only one earned) while striking out four. He allowed four hits and walked four.

He also benefited from some stellar defense from Maikel Garcia:

And from Bobby:

The White Sox scored their first run in the top of the fourth when Colson Montgomery doubled home Munetaka Murakami. Lane Thomas took a very curious route to the ball, not only failing to catch it but also allowing it to get by him and reach the wall.

The scored remained 1-0 until the seventh when Luisangel Acuna hit a sacrifice fly to right off John Schreiber, allowing Andrew Benintendi to come home.

Royals batters only managed five hits for the night, the best of them a 113-MPH line drive off the left field wall by Bobby Witt Jr. for a double. Another foot or so higher and it would’ve been a home run. Aside from that, the Royals managed four other hits—another by Bob, two by Garcia, and one by Thomas. They also managed four walks, including one to start the ninth.

In the end, the Royals stranded 11 baserunners while going 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position.

Mother Nature pending, they’ll get another crack at the White Sox tomorrow night as they look to snap their three-game skid and even up the series.

Mets waste Nolan McLean’s strong start as pen falters late in loss to Diamondbacks

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows A dejected Luke Weaver heads back to the dugout during the seventh inning of the Mets' 7-1 blowout loss to the Diamondbacks on April 9, 2026 at Citi Field, Image 2 shows Luke Weaver (back left) looks on as Alek Thomas dives safely into home on a tripe by Jorge Barrosa during the seventh inning of the Mets' loss to Diamondbacks at Citi Field

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For six-plus innings Thursday night, Nolan McLean dazzled at Citi Field. He allowed just a pair of hits and his stuff was especially filthy, as Arizona hitters were largely overmatched.

But lefty Eduardo Rodríguez was nearly as good for the Diamondbacks, and when McLean faltered in the seventh inning, Luke Weaver came in and got knocked around, as the Mets lost their second straight, 7-1.

McLean’s performance was about the only thing that went right for the Mets on another chilly night in Queens.

The right-hander faced just two batters over the minimum heading into the seventh before a leadoff walk to Geraldo Perdomo to start the inning. After a strikeout of Adrian Del Castillo, McLean’s eighth of the night, he gave up a single to Jose Fernandez and was yanked after a career-high 100 pitches.

And that’s when the game was lost, with the bullpen and defense falling apart late.

A dejected Luke Weaver heads back to the dugout during the seventh inning of the Mets’ 7-1 blowout loss to the Diamondbacks on April 9, 2026 at Citi Field. Robert Sabo for New York Post

Weaver entered having allowed just three base runners in five innings over five appearances, but he gave up a game-tying double to right to pinch-hitter Gabriel Moreno that Brett Baty couldn’t catch up to. Baty, still new to right field, pulled up short of the fence in right and the ball hit off the fence.

“I felt I got a good read on it and tried to get back there [quickly] to find the wall,’’ said Baty, who added it was the first time he’s had a play like that. “I’m still working hard to get some experience with wall balls. … I think they’re extremely hard, but I’m gonna do everything I can to catch those. I’ll run through the wall if I have to.”

Hopefully it doesn’t come to that. But in this one, the inability to come up with a catch led to a loss, as Alek Thomas then grounded to first with the infield in and Mark Vientos made a poor throw home, which allowed Fernandez to score to give Arizona the lead.

Luke Weaver (back left) looks on as Alek Thomas dives safely into home on a tripe by Jorge Barrosa during the seventh inning of the Mets’ loss to Diamondbacks at Citi Field. Robert Sabo for New York Post

A Tim Tawa sacrifice fly added another run, and Jorge Barrosa continued the rally with a triple to right to make it 4-1.

Weaver left to a chorus of boos following the four-run outburst.



Luis García was even worse, as the right-hander gave up three runs in the eighth, with the Diamondbacks putting the game away.

The lineup didn’t give the pitchers any margin for error, mostly silent outside of one swing from Luis Robert Jr. in the bottom of the first. His two-out solo homer was the first earned run scored off Rodríguez this year — and the last the Mets would score on the night.

Nolan McLean, who allowed just two runs in his start, celebrates after getting out of the sixth inning of the Mets’ loss to the Diamondbacks. Robert Sabo for New York Post

They threatened with two outs in the third when Bo Bichette singled and Robert walked. Vientos followed with a liner up the middle, but second baseman Ketel Marte was shaded that way and made the catch.

Another potential rally arose in the fifth. Tyrone Taylor opened with a double to left and moved to third on Francisco Lindor’s grounder to shortstop. After Bichette walked, Rodríguez got Robert looking and Vientos grounded out to third to keep it a one-run game.

Still, the Mets held the lead to open the seventh and had their high-leverage relievers ready to go. But Weaver and García combined to give up five runs while getting just three outs.

Luis Robert Jr. celebrates as he rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run during the first inning of the Mets’ blowout loss to the Diamondbacks. Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Weaver said his tough outing was more painful considering how well McLean pitched.

“It adds a little more sting,’’ Weaver said. “He deserved the win there.”

Austin Wells continues to slump as Yankees’ bottom of the order emerges as early problem

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Austin Wells (28) hits a double during the 7th inning on April 7th, 2026

If Wednesday’s offensive disappointment was pinned on Ryan McMahon, who heard boos on a rough day during a rough start, Austin Wells might have been the face of Thursday’s frustration.

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What amounted to the Yankees’ best rally of the game — putting two runners on base in the seventh inning, Giancarlo Stanton drawing a walk and Ben Rice connecting for the club’s first hit of the afternoon — ended with Wells flying out on an afternoon the Yankees fell 1-0 to the A’s in The Bronx.

The entire bottom of the order is an early problem for the Yankees, but the struggles of Wells stand out in part because he is not experimenting with a radically different stance (like McMahon) or serving as a fill-in until a reinforcement arrives (like José Caballero) or owning a stellar track record that suggests he will come around (like Jazz Chisholm Jr.).

Wells arrived in the majors a couple of years ago with a reputation as a strong hitter who needed to work on his catching defense. He has emerged as an excellent framer and game-caller, but his bat has only flashed the kind of hitter he can become.

Austin Wells (28) hits a double during the seventh inning on April 7, 2026. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Those flashes have not appeared in the early going this season. Since tallying two hits on Opening Day, Wells has gone 3-for-27 with two singles, a double, four walks and 11 strikeouts.

In a reminder that the season is still in its infancy, Wells shrugged off the slump and was happy with the process that he feels will yield results.



“I feel pretty good [at the plate],” said Wells, who swung through a fastball for a strikeout in the third, grounded out in the fifth and made decent contact with his seventh-inning flyout. “Swinging at the right pitches. I’m just not getting much results. So, keep going.”

His manager, too, thought Wells’ swings were improving even if they were ending similarly.

Yankees catcher Austin Wells (28) after hitting a double in the seventh inning against the Athletics on Tuesday. Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

“A little better, actually. He’s been one of those guys struggling a little bit,” Aaron Boone said after the Yankees were shut out for the first time this season. “The last AB there, where we had a couple runners on, I thought he put together a pretty good at-bat and got some good swings off.”

The Yankees are only about 7 percent of the way into their season, and early April numbers often are forgotten. Plus, the Yankees are generally winning and Wells’ mind and defense are significant factors in the club’s rotation excellence thus far.

But the Yankees also consistently praise what J.C. Escarra can become and insist that Rice could be a major league catcher. So if Wells does not hit, there are other options.

“I feel like there’s been some games where he’s had some quality at-bats,” Boone said, “but obviously we got to get it more consistent, start getting some results. Obviously, he’s a guy that drives the ball as well.”

Cubs Minor League Wrap: Jefferson Rojas leads giant Smokies comeback win

Knoxville Smokies infielder Jefferson Rojas (2) slides away from home plate after being called out during Opening Day for the Knoxville Smokies at Covenant Health Park against the Birmingham Barons on April 3, 2026. | Angelina Alcantar/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Iowa Cubs

Rained out. Doubleheader starting at 5:08 tomorrow.

Knoxville Smokies

The Knoxville Smokies knocked the Rocket City Trash Pandas (Angels) out of orbit, 8-7.

The Trash Pandas jumped all over Smokies starter Luis Martinez-Gomez with two runs in the first, one in the second and two more in the third. The final line on Martinez-Gomez was five runs on five hits over four innings. He walked two, struck out one and gave up a two-run home run in the third inning.

Vince Reilly pitched the eighth and ninth innings and got the win. He did not allow a hit or a run, although he did walk one. He faced the minimum thanks to a fantastic diving catch and double play by third baseman Karson Simas. Reilly struck out two.

The Smokies trailed this game 7-0 after five and a half innings, but they scored three in the bottom of the sixth and five in the bottom of the eighth to stage an improbably comeback.

First baseman Devin Ortiz hit a three-run double in the sixth. He also chipped in an RBI single in the eighth. His final line was 2 for 4 with the double and four RBI. He scored once.

Shortstop Jefferson Rojas hit a three-run home run in the bottom of the eighth to give the Smokies the lead. It was Rojas’ third home run this year. He was 1 for 4 with a walk.

Left fielder Jordan Nwogu went 2 for 4 with a triple.

Here’s the Rojas home run.

South Bend Cubs

The South Bend Cubs were demoted by the Peoria Chiefs (Cardinals), 5-3.

Kevin Valdez made his season debut tonight by pitching 3.2 scoreless innings to start the game. Valdez allowed three hits. He struck out five and walked two.

Ethan Flanagan’s season debut could have gone better. After Grayson Moore gave up two runs in relief and South Bend tied it back up, Flanagan gave up three runs on five hits over 2.1 innings. Two of the five hits were home runs. Flanagan walked two and struck out three.

Catcher Owen Ayers hit his first South Bend home run with the bases empty in the fourth. He also singled and scored in the eighth. Ayers went 2 for 3 with a walk and the two runs scored.

Second baseman Drew Bowser tied it up 2-2 with a solo home run in the seventh. Bowser went 1 for 4.

Third baseman Reginald Preciado went 3 for 4. He singled home Ayers in the eighth.

Here’s Ayers’ home run.

And here’s Bowser’s blast.

Myrtle Beach Pelicans

The Myrtle Beach Pelicans were hypnotized by the Columbia Fireflies (Royals), 1-0.

There were only three hits in this game, two by Columbia and only one by the Pelicans, and the one run scored without the benefit of a hit.

Starter Dominick Reid dominated the Fireflies for five scoreless innings. Reid gave up just one hit. He struck out five and walked no one.

Here are some highlights for Reid.

Rowell Arroyo came on to pitch the sixth inning and allowed a runner to go to third with one out after fielding a dribbler in front of the mound and throwing the ball down the right line. The runner would score the only run of the game on a fielder’s choice. The final line on Arroyo was one unearned run on one hit over two innings. He walked two and struck out one.

Second baseman Jose Escobar singled to lead off the sixth inning. That was the only Pelicans hit of the game. Escobar was 1 for 3.

Josiah Hartshorn had the night off, so that didn’t help the offense.

Mets’ bats remain quiet, bullpen struggles as McLean’s start goes to waste

Marcus Semien in a home Mets uniform
Marcus Semien | (Photo: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images)

It seemed like a solo home run might be enough. With Nolan McLean already having put up six zeroes, the Mets had a 1-0 lead as the seventh inning began thanks to a solo home run by Luis Robert Jr. in the bottom of the first.

McLean was dealing at the time, but he appeared to tire a bit in the top of the seventh. He issued a leadoff walk, got his eighth and final strikeout of the night, and gave up a single to put runners on first and second. Carlos Mendoza turned to Luke Weaver, who immediately gave up a game-tying double to right field. If the Mets had an experienced right fielder at the position, there’s a chance the ball would’ve been caught. But Baty didn’t come close.

With runners on second and third, Alek Thomas hit a sharp ground ball to first base with the infield in. Mark Vientos fielded it nicely, but he absolutely butchered his throw home as the go-ahead run scored. If not for a great pick by Luis Torrens on the throw, another run might have scored on the play.

But a sac fly plated the Diamondbacks’ third run of the inning, and a Jorge Barrosa triple scored Arizona’s fourth run of the frame. Two of those runs were charged to McLean, while Weaver got full credit for the other two.

The Mets’ bats remained silent from there, but Mets reliever Luis Garía dampened spirits further by serving up three runs in the top of the eighth. Richard Lovelady threw a scoreless ninth and wound up being the only Mets pitcher who appeared in the game but wasn’t charged with a run.

With that, the Mets are 7-6 to start the season, and they’re set to host the don’t-call-us-Sacramento A’s for a three-game series this weekend.

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Win Probability Added

FanGraphs WPA graph for Mets-Diamondbacks on 4/9/26

Big Mets winner: Nolan McLean, +28% WPA
Big Mets loser: Luke Weaver, -51% WPA
Mets pitchers: -28% WPA
Mets hitters:-22% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Luis Robert Jr. hits a solo home run in the first, +11% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Gabriel Moreno hits a game-tying double in the seventh, -28% WPA

Mets' bullpen, defense spoil Nolan McLean's terrific start in 7-1 loss to Diamondbacks

Nolan McLeandelivered a brilliant start, but after exiting with two runners on base in the seventh, the bullpen couldn't hold a one-run lead as the Mets fell 7-1 to the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday night at Citi Field.

The young right-hander was tremendous through six scoreless frames protecting a 1-0 lead, but was charged with two runs as part of a four-run seventh inning as Luke Weaver had his first bad outing of the season and spoiled what had been a dominant showing. McLean's final line: 6.1 innings, two runs on three hits and two walks with eight strikeouts on 100 pitches (64 strikes).

McLean lost the rematch of the WBC final in what had been a real pitchers' duel as the D-backs’ Eduardo Rodriguez took the win, allowing one run over 6.0 innings on five hits and two walks, thanks to three strikeouts and holding the Mets to 0-for-5 with runners in scoring position. And on a cold night, the Mets’ bats were colder, with just one hit (a single) over the final four innings.

New York fell to 7-6 on the year as Arizona improved to that same mark by taking the last two games of the series in Queens.

Here are the takeaways... 

- The final numbers really don't tell just how good McLean was to start the game. He got three-straight groundballs to the right side of the infield in a 12-pitch first that saw him throw 10 sinkers to good effect against the left-handed bats at the top of Arizona’s lineup. Jose Fernandez, the first righty McLean faced, got jammed on a 3-1 sinker that was off the inside corner but muscled it for a one-out double in the second. McLean stranded him, getting ex-Met James McCann fishing on a curveball and Alek Thomas to bounce out.

McLean made it five straight retired, adding a strikeout looking as he froze Jorge Barrosa on a sinker that saw the visitors lose an ABS challenge. A leadoff walk in the fourth ended that run, but was erased on a 1-6-3 double-play before McLean froze lefty Adrian Del Castillo with a sinker that moved over a foot right onto the inside corner. 

The 24-year-old added two more strikeouts in the fifth on six-straight pitches, first bambooziling McCann on a sweeper away and freezing Thomas on a sinker on the inside corner. A bloop single off the end of the bat opened the sixth and McLean dug deep as he battled and won. A flyout to center, a strikeout looking as the curveball at the knees wiped out Arizona’s last challenge, and then another nasty sinker in and at the knees got a roar from the right-hander as he bounded off the mound with his seventh strikeout on his 85th pitch of the game.

McLean’s night came to an end in the seventh as he walked the leadoff man and gave up a one-out single up the middle, a liner off the end of Fernandez’s bat. And that proved costly.

Through three starts of the season, McLean has allowed six runs (five earned) on seven hits, six walks, and one hit batter with 20 strikeouts (16.2 innings).

- Weaver fell behind pinch-hitter Gabriel Moreno, before a low-and-away changeup was driven off the wall in right field over Brett Baty's head for an RBI double. The ball was hit hard and carried on Baty might have been caught by a more experienced outfielder. The baserunners seemed surprised it got over Baty's head as both were ready to tag up on the play.

Arizona had the lead when Mark Vientos spiked his throw home after fielding a sharp grounder to first. After a sac fly, Barrosa turned on an inside fastball and yanked it into the right-field corner for an RBI triple to make it a four-run seventh.

- Luis Robert Jr. gave the Mets an early 1-0 lead, turning a 2-0 cutter on the inside corner for a towering 412-foot bomb to right field. Robert came into the game with six hits in his last 14 at-bats (all singles) before just smoking the Rodriguez offering 109.8 mph off the bat. 

After walking his second time up, his 11th free pass of the year, Robert got caught looking at a sinker at the knees with runners on the corners and one out in the fifth, losing the Mets’ first ABS challenge in the process. He finished 1-for-3 with a walk and two strikeouts.

- Francisco Lindor entered the night in a funk, 7-for-47 with three extra-base hits, zero RBI, and a 77 wRC+ through 12 games. He went hitless in three at-bats against Rodriguez before muscling a ball off his hands into right for a two-out single off reliever Taylor Clarke.

- Bo Bichette, entered the game 5-for-13 against Rodriguez with a .923 OPS, lofted a two-out single into center with two down in the third. He added a walk and finished 1-for-3.

- Marcus Semien, after striking out his first time up, lined a leadoff single into left to start the home half of the fourth, but was left out there. He finished 1-for-4.

- Baty, the lone lefty in the Mets’ lineup, hustled out an infield hit to first with two down in the second and then stole second base, but was left stranded. He was 1-for-4 with a strikeout.

- Vientos, who made a nice play at first to end the first, looked to have a two-out hit with two men on in the third, but second baseman Ketel Marte was perfectly placed to snag the liner. He stranded runners at the corners to end the fifth, with a groundout to third. He went hitless in four at-bats with a strikeout.

- Tyrone Taylor, after getting the benefit of the doubt on a close 2-2 pitch, ripped a double that one-hopped the wall in left to start the fifth. He went 1-for-2 before being lifted for pinch-hitter Jared Young in the seventh. (Young grounded out.)

- Francisco Alvarez, who was DHing, caught looking at a good Rodriguez changeup that just caught the corner low and away and flied out to the edge of the track in right on a well-struck ball in the fourth. He went 0-for-4.

- Luis Torrens went 0-for-4, including a hard-hit liner right at the left fielder.

- Luis Garcia got touched up in the eighth with a double into the right field corner and an RBI double that one-hopped the wall in left, sandwiched around a walk. After a run-scoring groundout, Moreno hammed a Garcia sweeper into the gap in left-center for his second RBI double in as many at-bats.

Richard Lovelady closed things out by getting all five batters he faced. 

Highlights

What's next

The Mets open a three-game set againstJeff McNeil and the Athletics

Clay Holmes (1.42 ERA over 12.2 innings) gets the ball against right-hander J.T. Ginn (5.14 ERA in 7.0 innings) for Friday's 7:10 p.m. first pitch.

Red Sox rookie Tyler Samaniego strikes out side in emotional MLB debut: ‘Was thinking about my dad’

Boston Red Sox pitcher Tyler Samaniego delivering a pitch.
Boston Red Sox pitcher Tyler Samaniego delivers during the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers at Fenway Park, Wednesday, April 8, 2026, in Boston.

Red Sox rookie Tyler Samaniego had one thing on his mind during his stellar MLB debut.

Samaniego, who struck out the side in the eighth inning of Boston’s 5-0 win over the Brewers on Wednesday at Fenway Park, said he was thinking about his late father during his first big-league outing.

“I was thinking about my dad,” Samaniego told MLB.com after the game. “I lost him [at 65 years old] at the end of the ‘22 season, and he’s the one that introduced me to this game.”

Tyler Samaniego throws a pitch during the eighth inning of the Red Sox’s win over the Brewers at Fenway Park, on April 8, 2026, in Boston. AP

While on the mound, Samaniego was seen sporting a glove with “Rip, Pops” stitched on its side.

“I know he was out there with me,” Samaniego said. “It was just awesome.”

The southpaw joined some rare Red Sox history in his debut, becoming the first pitcher since Don Aase in 1977 to record strikeouts for his first three career outs, ESPN reported.

“I probably can’t say it on the microphone, but he would be fired up,” Samaniego said on how his father might’ve reacted to his outing. “He would have been ready. He would have come out here behind the dugout and would have had a beer.”

Samaniego, 27, was called up from Triple-A Worcester just four hours before the Red Sox’s first pitch, and his family was unable to fly into Boston in time for his debut.

Tyler Samaniego throws a pitch during the eighth inning of the Red Sox win over the Brewers on April 8, 2026 at Fenway Park in Boston. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

“It started off as a whirlwind,” he said. “I found out about like 9:30 this morning because we had the noon game in Worcester, so packed the locker up and headed straight here. It happened fast, but it’s been awesome.”

Before being called up on Wednesday, Samaniego held a 3.38 ERA for Worcester through 5⅓ innings of work.

Samaniego, who was originally drafted by the Pirates in the 15th round of the 2021 MLB Draft, was dealt to the Red Sox this past offseason in a trade involving right-hander Johan Oviedo being shipped off to Boston in exchange for top outfield prospect Jhostynxon Garcia and pitcher Jesus Travieso.

Colorado Rockies game no. 13 thread: Jimmy Herget vs Randy Vásquez

DENVER, CO - APRIL 4: Colorado Rockies pitcher Jimmy Herget (44) pitches in the first inning during a game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on April 4, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Colorado Rockies left Coors Field on Wednesday night on top of the world. At 6-6, the Rockies are at .500 at the latest point in the season since 2022, they’re riding a league-high four-game active win streak, and their offense came alive against the Houston Astros.

Now comes the test: can the offense stay alive as they travel down to the Marine Layer to take on the San Diego Padres? The Padres, also at 6-6, are tied for second place in the National League West with the Rockies.

The Rockies will be going with an opener tonight, and the man for the job is one Jimmy Herget. The “Human Glitch” has been excellent to start the season. In five appearances over six innings of work, he’s allowed just one earned run on four hits, struck out six batters, and has yet to issue a single walk.

Herget is expected to give way to right-handed pitcher Chase Dollander for bulk innings. Dollander has now pitched in a bulk role twice this season. His last time out against the Philadelphia Phillies he worked 4.1 innings and gave up just one earned run on four hits and a walk with six strikeouts.

On the mound for the swingin’ Friars is the right-handed Randy Vásquez. Vásquez is off to a good start this season with just one earned run given up over twelve innings in his first two starts with 11 strikeouts. Against the Rockies, Vásquez has had mixed results against the Rockies. He holds a 4.30 ERA over six starts and has given up five home runs over 29.1 innings of work.

Vásquez has a hefty seven-pitch arsenal to work with. His primary pitch is a low-to-mid 90s four-seam fastball and he supplements it with a bevvy of breaking pitches. His go-to secondary for the young season is a cutter, and he also throws a sinker, a changeup, a curveball, a sweeper, and a slider.

First Pitch: 7:40pm MDT

TV: Rockies.tv

Radio: KOA 850 AM/94.1 FM; KNRV 1150 (Spanish)

Lineups:


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Game 13: Colorado Rockies at San Diego Padres

PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 08: Miguel Andujar #41 of the San Diego Padres celebrates after scoring on a two RBI double in the seventh inning against the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on April 8, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin K. Aller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Colorado Rockies (6-6) at San Diego Padres (6-6), April 9, 2026, 6:40 p.m. PST

Watch: Padres.TV

Location: Petco Park – San Diego, Calif.

Listen: 97.3 The Fan



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Twins 3, Tigers 1: Play it again, Sam

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - APRIL 09: Jack Flaherty #9 of the Detroit Tigers pitches during the game between the Detroit Tigers and the Minnesota Twins at Target Field on Thursday, April 9, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Andrew Ritter/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Looking to salvage one game of their best of four in Minnesota, the Tigers got a good start from Jack Flaherty and they wasted it. In the process, an outfield collision late in the game sent Parker Meadows to the hospital, though early signs are that he’ll be okay though likely to miss some time, and the Tigers slumped to 4-9 on the young season.

Well, if you had the Tigers, Mariners, Blue Jays, and Red Sox on your bingo card as the American League bottom feeders, you did better than most. The Tigers will finally come home for an extended stay at Comerica Park this weekend and through most of next week, with a chance to get right against the Miami Marlins and Kansas City Royals.

While the offense has drawn most of the criticism early on, it’s really been the pitching that the Tigers expect to lean on that has been the problem. That wasn’t so on Thursday. Colt Keith led off the game with a walk against young Twins starter Mick Abel, and Gleyber Torres lined a single to right field to set the table for the middle of the order. Riley Greene whiffed on a first pitch fastball and then took two called strikes, the final one earned on a Victor Caratini challenge. Kerry Carpenter followed him down on strikes, and Spencer Torkelson hammered a ball to left that James Outman ran down to turn the Tigers away.

Jack Flaherty got into trouble in the bottom half with a one-out walk to Trevor Larnach and a Josh Bell single, but Javier Báez made a great snag on a Matt Wallner hotshot up the middle, stepped on second, and while his throw was errant, Torkelson picked him up by tagging out Wallner to end the inning.

Once again, the Tigers got themselves into good scoring position as Zack McKinstry walked and Javier Báez dumped a single into center field. Parker Meadows and Jake Rogers struck out, and Colt Keith grounded out to end the inning and send steam coming out of most of our ears.

It’s not your fault though, Colt.

Flaherty worked through the second with the help of a strikeout of Royce Lewis and Jake Rogers cutting down Kody Clemens trying to steal second.

The Tigers got another runner on base in the third on a one-out double from Riley Greene. You know what comes next. Carpenter lifted a fly ball out to left, and Torkelson hit another ball hard, this time to Buxton in center field.

It just went on like this for a while. Báez doubled to center with one out in the fourth, and they stranded him too. Flaherty gave up a solo shot to Josh Bell to open the bottom of the fourth, but he rallied from there to put together a nice 5.2 inning outing with just one run allowed. He just didn’t get much help other than some early defensive work as noted. He departed in the sixth after allowing singles to Bell and Wallner, and then getting Caratini to fly out. Tyler Holton took over and Kody Clemens drilled a ball to center that Meadows hauled in to turn the Twins away.

Garrett Acton took over from Abel in the top of the seventh. He clipped Rogers with a pitch with one out, and Keith singled back through the box as Rogers hooved it to third. A Torres sacrifice fly got the run in to tie the game 1-1, but the big hit did not arrive as Greene sliced a drive down the left field line, where Outman made a nice sliding catch heading into the close wall in the corner.

Holton got into a little trouble in the seventh and you could feel this thing teetering, but he punched out Larnach to preserve the tie. Rather than taking some momentum from that, the Tigers were set down in order by Acton.

Then, in the bottom of the eighth, Will Vest took over. Bell greeted him with a drive up the left center field gap. Greene hauled it in but he and Meadows had a communication breakdown and Meadows kept coming, ultimately looking like they banged heads as they passed. Greene had it all the way and made the catch, coming through unscathed. Meadows was shaken up pretty badly and visibly bleeding a little from his mouth. The real damage came when he hit his head on the turf tumbling to the ground after contact by the look of it. He remained motionless though responsive for a long time before they finally got him up and on the cart to come off the field. It was pretty scary and the Tigers players were shook.

Báez took over in center field, while Kevin McGonigle, who had his first full off day to this point, took over at shortstop. We’ll have to wait for word on a potential concussion, but it certainly looked likely that Meadows will need a little time on the injured list.

Vest walked Wallner and Caratini singled to left. Vest settled down and punched out Clemens, but Vest was also sitting 93-94 mph with his fastball, which didn’t feel great. Lewis pulled a slow chopper to third for an infield hit, and Brooks Lee followed with a two-run single through the right side. 3-1 Twins. Lawd. Brant Hurter took over to get the final out.

Báez and McGonigle flew out to Buxton in center and Dillon Dingler struck out to end it.

Time to come home and re-group, Tigers. It’s been a bizarre start to the year so far. Only three teams in the American League have scored more runs as of this writing, and obviously the season just got underway, but the pitching has been wildly inconsistent, and they haven’t gotten it done at all in big moments in games so far.

A’s star Brent Rooker exits game vs. Yankees in middle of at-bat in injury concern

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows An Oakland Athletics baseball player in a gray uniform with the number 25, wearing a green and yellow hat and yellow batting gloves, holding a bat, Image 2 shows A baseball player being escorted into the dugout by two staff members
Brent Rooker

The A’s had some bad injury lucky during their series finale in The Bronx on Thursday. 

Star outfielder Brent Rooker left the A’s 1-0 win in the middle of his first at-bat during the opening frame with what the team is calling right flank discomfort.

Rooker, a two-time All-Star, fouled off an 0-1 pitch from the Yankees’ Ryan Weathers during the top of the first inning and immediately grabbed at his side. 

He was then replaced at the plate by Lawrence Butler. 

Rooker, 31, is a key piece in the A’s lineup, hitting 30-plus home runs in each of the last three seasons. 

In 2024, Rooker enjoyed the best season of his career, hitting 39 long balls and driving in 112 runs en route to winning a Silver Slugger award.

He was off to a slow start this season before the injury, hitting .150/.250/.300 with a pair of dingers. 

It wasn’t all bad news for the A’s on Thursday, though. 

Brent Rooker of the Athletics at bat before exiting to the dugout with an apparent injury in the first inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on April 9, 2026 in New York City. Getty Images

The A’s took the series against the American League East-leading Yankees before they head to Queens to take on the Mets. 

A’s starter Jeffrey Springs held the Bombers hitless into the seventh inning before Ben Rice spoiled the no-no with a one out single. 

That would be their only hit of the contest. 

A day earlier, the Yankees were held to zero runs from the second inning on during the A’s first win of the series

The win moved the A’s to 5-7 and dropped the Yankees to 8-4.

Game thread thirteen—White Sox at Royals

Welcome back to Thursday baseball. The game hasn’t even started and yet we’ve had our fair share of Royals news already today.

First, the Royals, among other teams, unveiled their new City Connect jerseys. Okay, then.

Next, news broke regarding a plan for a potential downtown stadium for the Royals set to open in 2030. Okay, then!

Lastly, some moves to the bullpen as two relievers are up and two are down. Fine.

Now, get ready for Game No. 13! The Royals are 5-7 after their first dozen games. Don’t fret just yet, there are still 150 of these things left. But I’d sure like to see the Royals win, if not sweep, this four-game series against the White Sox, which Max previews here.

Tonight’s game begins at 6:40 p.m.

For the Royals, Seth Lugo is on the mound. Lugo has pitched very well over two starts this young season, one against the Braves and one against the Brewers, which makes this, oddly, his first start against an American League team.

Against the Brewers in his most recent outing, he lasted only five innings as he threw 103 pitches, allowing four hits, two walks, and two earned while striking out seven. After he left the game, the Royals’ offense broke it open. The team is 2-0 in Lugo’s starts.

The Pale Hose turn to lefty Anthony Kay, who spent the last two years pitching in Japan. Already this season he’s started one game and appeared in relief in another. He’s walked (six) more than he’s struck out (five) over nine innings with a ghastly 6.96 FIP. He last won a game in the Majors in 2021.

To the lineups!

Look at that, an actual outfielder in left field!

After catching consecutive games, Carter Jensen gets the day off. Glad to see Cags in there against a lefty this early in the season. Aside from Lane Thomas starting in right, I like this lineup a lot.

Hey, look, it’s former Royal Andrew Benintendi. Cool. Great guy. I’ve never written anything about him that argues otherwise, so don’t bother looking it up.

Anyway, it cracks me up that he has the largest contract in White Sox history. Or does he? Did Murakami break it? Let’s sleuth. [Types into Google machine] Yep, still Benintendi at 5/$75m though Murakami earns more per year with a 2/$34m deal.

See you all on the other side.