White Sox 2, Tigers 1: Another early lead withers and dies

May 31, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Keider Montero (54) delivers a pitch against the Chicago White Sox during the first inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

Rinse and repeat. Keider Montero was brilliant on Sunday, but the Tigers’ offense did nothing after scoring a run in the first. An early hook and a brutal performance from Drew Anderson blew the game late, and the Tigers have now lost 21 of their last 25 games.

The kitties jumped out to a slim early lead in this one against right-hander Sean Burke. Colt Keith led off with a ground out, but Kevin McGonigle jumped on a Burke fastball and pulled a single through the right side of the infield and then scored when Spencer Torkelson doubled into the left field corner. Kerry Carpenter made his return to the Tigers’ lineup after two rehab games with the Toledo Mud Hens, but he struck out and Riley Greene flew out to center field. 1-0 Tigers but as usual, the big inning escaped them.

Still it was a lead, and Keider Montero took the mound locating his fastball really well. Sam Antonacci, Miguel Vargas, and Andrew Benintendi all quickly grounded out to end the first.

Burke struck out Matt Vierling to start the second. Wenceel Pérez grounded out and Zach McKinstry flew out to finish the frame. Montero continued to show off a particularly lively fourseam and sinker, popping up Colson Montgomery and then dusting Chase Meidroth with a perfect high sinker that he swung through awkwardly. Montero got ahead of Jacob Gonzalez as the rookie made his major league debut, and the rookie fought off a few breaking balls before lifting a drive out ball to Vierling in center.

Jake Rogers punched out to open the third. Keith grounded out to shortstop for the second out. McGonigle got a heavy dose of breaking balls and fought his way through another long at-bat and won with a walk. Burke shook his head twice in the at-bat as the Tigers rookie spat on or calmly fouled off his best stuff. McGonigle promptly stole his ninth base in nine attempts. Torkelson took a 97 mph heater right down the middle to squander the opportunity.

The fear for Montero in this one was his fly ball tendencies on a day, and in a park, where the ball tends to fly on warm summer days. He continued to defy these concerns in the bottom of the third. Triston Peters popped up a fastball and Drew Romo reached for a changeup and poopped up as well, both to Keith at third. Rikuu Nishida reached on an infield single, but Antonacci got jammed on a perfectly located heater and he popped out to Torkelson at first. Pretty good start from Montero despite the minimal whiffs.

Kerry Carpenter led off the fourth and he too got a little jammed by Burke, but flared a single into shallow right field. So the Tigers were set up with another opportunity, but Riley Greene chased a fastball away and struck out. That brought Vierling to the dish, and he popped out on a high fastball. This felt familiar, and Pérez quickly got behind 0-2, fought off a few pitches at the top of the zone, but ultimately took a fastball down and away on the corner for a called strike three as Dan Dickerson talked about Michael Brdar’s philosophy of moving baserunners and situational hitting. Implementation of said philosophy not included.

Montero carved up Vargas to start the fourth with a nasty slider down for a whiff. That bigger bending slider does draw some chase. A first pitch slider to Benintendi got a quick grounder to McKinstry at second, and Montero locked up the left-handed Montgomery with a perfect backdoor slider on the corner for strike three.

If this was all feeling familiar—the Tigers score an early run, do nothing while their starter pitches well, ultimately give up the lead, don’t get into the weak half of an opponent’s bullpen, and eventually lose—well we’re all thinking the same thing.

McKinstry and Rogers grounded out to open the fifth, and Colt Keith flicked a fly ball to Antonacci in left to send us to the bottom half.

Fortunately, Montero was conserving his energy, starting the inning at 44 pitches thrown. He quickly got Meidroth to ground out to McGonigle at shortstop. A 2-1 slider on the outer edge to Gonzalez was a strike but the umpire missed it and Rogers didn’t challenge. Montero came right back with a challnege pitch down the middle, and fortunately the rookie lifted a 3-1 fastball out to Pérez in right field for the second out. Montero fell behind against Peters, and he pulled a grounder past Torkelson for a double down the right field line. A changeup drew a chopper from Romo and Montero made a nice leaping play to snare it and fire to first to end the inning on his 56th pitch of the outing.

Burke himself was at 80 pitches to open the sixth against Kevin McGonigle. In a 3-2, Burke tried a front door sinker for a called strike three, but a smart challenge after a bit of a delay got the call corrected and McGonigle was on for the third time, here with a leadoff walk. Torkelson immediately got down 0-2, but McGonigle was dancing off first to distract Burke and while he didn’t run, Burke missed twice to even the count. It was good that he didn’t run, as Torkelson eventually lined out to Vargas at third.

The broadcast was discussing the Tigers penchant for taking an early lead and neither building on it nor holding it, noting that the Tigers are just 17-17 in games in which they have the lead. Leaguewide the win percentage is closer to 70 percent in those scenarios.

That was the end for Burke, and lefty Chris Murphy took over. That prompted Hinch to hit Jahmai Jones for Kerry Carpenter. Last year that meant the Tigers had the advantage. This year, managers can put in a lefty and get one of the Tigers bats out of the lineup in favor of Jones, who is doing nothing. This time, Jones avoided ruining the plan with a long at-bat that resulted in a walk. Instead it was Riley Greene who ripped a hot ground ball right to Meidroth to start an inning ending double play.

To the eye, Montero’s slider looked improved throughout this one, with more depth and less sweep. A check of the Statcast data showed no additional depth, but half as much horizontal sweep, and the adjustment, assuming it lasts, certainly looks like an improvement.

The Tigers’ right-hander came back out with his pitch count still in outstanding shape, and he didn’t nothing to change that. Nishida struck out on a knuckle curve to start the frame. Another slider popped up Antonacci, and Vargas grounded out sharply to Keith at third. The efficiency continued despite it being the third time through the White Sox’s order. Montero was still only at 65 pitches through six.

Murphy walked Vierling to open the seventh inning. Once again the leadoff man was on. Could the Tigers capitalize? Pérez did not, driving a fly ball to left while hitting right-handed. Murphy then picked off Vierling, who was looking to run. Spectacular. Ah well, it doesn’t matter unless someone hits outside of the top 3-4 hitters in the lineup.

McKinstry fought off a few pitches and drew a two-out walk, and Will Venable emerged from the shadows of the White Sox’s dugout to make a pitching change to another lefty, Brandon Eisert, as Jake Rogers stepped in. This move was made easy by the fact that Keith and McGonigle were due up after Rogers did whatever it is Rogers does at the plate. Dillon Dingler was getting a much needed full day off, and so the backup dug in, and eventually struck out.

Despite the minimal pitch count, Montero’s day was done as AJ Hinch went to Drew Anderson in the bottom of the seventh. Bad idea. Trying to get three scoreless innings from this bullpen when you don’t need them is madness. I wrote this, Benintendi grounded out, and then Colson Montgomery went yard to right field on a hanging changeup. 1-1 game. The third time through the order penalty is real, but so is the “Scott Harris couldn’t build a bullpen if his life depended on it,” penalty.

Chase Meidroth followed with a single to left, and Gonzalez got another floating changeup away and paddled through the left side of the infield for a single. Peters got down 0-2 and he flicked a curveball about three inches foul down the left field line. Eventually, another kick changeup that stayed up and away was paddled through the left side of the infield for an RBI single. 2-1 White Sox, and still only one out in the inning. The changeup just did not have its usual good depth and the White Sox were just serving it out there at will. Romo hit a deep drive to center field for the second out, but it was deep enough for Gonzalez to tag and take third.

That was it for Anderson, as Hinch brought in Tyler Holton to face Nishida. That got Venable to pinch hit Randal Grichuk, but he didn’t get to hit as Holton picked off Peters and McKinstry ran him down to end the inning.

Venable continued to dip into his pool of left-handers, pulling Eisert and going to lefty Bryan Hudson instead to start the eighth. Hinch then pinch-hit Hao-Yu Lee in for Colt Keith. He took a called strike three and McGonigle popped out. Torkelson grounded a single through the right side of the infield with two outs, but a drive from Jones was run down by Antonacci where the warning track and foul territory converge in the left field corner.

Brenan Hanifee took over in the bottom of the eighth, and quickly racked up three outs on contact.

Venable stuck with Hudson to face Riley Greene in the top of the ninth. He popped out on a nice play from Vargas running from third base into foul territory, tumbling over the tarp. His work done, Hudson was pulled for right-hander Tyler Davis to pick up the last two outs. He had no trouble doing so. Vierling lined out to left, and Pérez popped out.

Another fine outing from Keider Montero was wasted. 6.0 IP, 0 R, 2 H, 0 BB, 4 K. The early hook blew up Hinch’s face immediately, and once again the Tigers couldn’t add on runs and barely even threatened to do so.

The Tigers are 22-38, and officially the worst team in baseball. We’ll see if the Rockies can re-tie them for that dubious honor later on today.

Juan Soto's grand slam helps Mets cap off sweep of Marlins

The Mets completed a three-game sweep of the Miami Marlins with a 10-1 win at Citi Field on Sunday afternoon. 

Here are the takeaways...

-- While he only allowed one earned run over 5.0 innings of work, it was a tough afternoon for Nolan McLean. Right from the jump, McLean dealt with traffic on the bases, walking and hitter a batter in the first. While he danced around traffic for most of the afternoon, his command was once again off, as he hit a batter and walked five. The only run he allowed came on an Owen Caissie double in the fourth that landed just inside the left field foul line, but it was clear that McLean was not at his best. 

-- The Marlins were scheduled to start righty Janson Junk on the mound, but he was placed on the IL with shin inflammation before the game. Instead, lefty John King got things started in a bullpen game, and Carson Benge jumped on him for a leadoff home run to give the Mets a quick 1-0 lead. Benge has been terrific lately, as he's now hitting .293 over his last 30 games.

-- King pitched into the second inning as an opener, but the Marlins went to righty Anthony Bender with two outs and Marcus Semien coming to the plate. Semien greeted Bender by slamming a two-run home run on his very first pitch of the afternoon, putting the Mets up 3-0 with his fifth homer of the year.

-- With the bases loaded and two outs in the bottom of the fourth, Luis Torrens came up big in the clutch, lining a two-run single to right field to double the Mets lead from two to four runs. Torrens came into the game hitting over .400 with the bases loaded for his career, and he delivered again when it mattered. 

-- Marlins reliever Josh White made his major league debut in the sixth, and it was rough going for the young right-hander. After walking Bo Bichette to force in a run, White allowed a Juan Soto grand slam, the first of the season for the Mets and the third of Soto's career.

White walked four, threw 43 pitches, and didn't make it out of his first major league inning.

-- David Peterson, back in the bullpen after a brief stint in the rotation, came on to pitch in the sixth inning. He ended up giving the Mets exactly what they need out of him, going 4.0 shutout innings to earn the unconventional save.

Game MVP

Soto, who clubbed a grand slam and had two hits on the afternoon.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

The Mets begin the month of June by heading out west for three games with the Seattle Mariners, starting on Monday night at 9:40 p.m. on SNY.

Austin Warren will start as an opener for the Mets, while righty Emerson Hancock goes for the M's.

Ronald Acuña Jr., Michael Harris II can’t propel Braves to sweep of Reds

CINCINNATI, OHIO - MAY 31: Ronald Acuna Jr. #13 of the Atlanta Braves hits a home run against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on May 31, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Sunday’s series finale against the Cincinnati Reds couldn’t have started much better for the Atlanta Braves.

From there, though, it was a relative disappointment compared to the two strong wins to begin the weekend.

Although Ronald Acuña Jr. led off the game with a first-pitch homer — his fifth in the last four games — the Braves fell 6-4 at the Great American Ballpark Sunday afternoon, failing to come away with their first sweep since the Colorado series May 1-3.

The top of the lineup produced in a big way. Acuña homered for the fourth straight game and tacked on an RBI single in the ninth, finishing 2-for-3 with two walks.

Michael Harris II, hitting in the two-hole, also reached base with two hits and two walks, his first multi-walk game since last May.

But Matt Olson was 0-for-5 and the bottom seven hitters in the lineup had a combined three hits.

The lead off Acuña’s homer didn’t last long, as Spencer Strider allowed a JJ Bleday RBI double after Elly De La Cruz’s single one out into the bottom of the first to tie the game at 1.

The Reds then took a 2-1 lead in the third on another RBI double by Bleday — his fifth RBI of this series — and added on with Will Benson’s fourth-inning RBI double which made it 3-1.

The way the game played out from there proved frustrating for the Braves. They cut the deficit to 3-2 in the top of the fifth on Jorge Mateo’s second homer in as many days, but Cincinnati got the run right back on a Eugenio Suarez sacrifice fly in the bottom of the inning.

Atlanta again made it a one-run game, 4-3, on Austin Riley’s sacrifice fly in the top of the sixth, but that proved to be the only run the Braves got out of their bases-loaded, one-out situation.

Again, the Reds got the run right back, extending their lead to two on P.J. Higgins’ RBI double in the bottom of the inning.

Cincinnati then tacked on an insurance run in the seventh on a Suarez solo homer.

It wasn’t a bad outing by Strider (3-1) by any means. And yet, it was quite possibly his worst of the season and resulted in his first loss of the campaign. He allowed a season-high seven hits and four runs (three earned), albeit while tying his season low with two walks while striking out eight.

Didier Fuentes and Dylan Dodd didn’t help matters by allowing a run apiece in the sixth and seventh innings.

For Fuentes, Higgins’ run-scoring double snapped a streak of eight scoreless appearances and 9 2/3 innings without a run allowed.

For Dodd, Suarez’s homer was the first run he ha allowed in his five relief appearances since rejoining the major league squad.

Reynaldo Lopez worked a scoreless eighth to keep it remotely in reach for the Braves’ offense and they nearly took advantage.

After a Dom Smith walk and a Mike Yastrzemski pinch-hit single, Acuña made it a 6-4 game with an RBI single to center.

Harris then worked a walk — his second of the game along with two hits — to load the bases for Olson, who grounded out to the left side on the first pitch he saw to leave the tying run on second base.

The Braves had just five total hits and were 0-for-2 with runners in scoring position through eight innings. They were 1-for-3 with two hits in the ninth to finish with seven and 1-for-5.

Reds starter Nick Lodolo (2-1) didn’t have the flashiest line (6 2/3 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 4 BB, 4 K) but he did enough to keep the Braves at bay as his team gradually built a lead and held on in the final frame.

Reds star Elly De La Cruz exits with hamstring pain

The Cincinnati Reds announced Sunday, May 31 that shortstop Elly De La Cruz left their game against the Atlanta Braves with right hamstring tightness in the fifth inning.

De La Cruz lined a ball into right-center field for what would usually be an extra-base hit for the speedster. Instead, he seemed to pull up and hobble a bit as he neared first base and then left the game with a trainer.

The timing is concerning.

De La Cruz has a well-documented history with his hamstring. He played through a torn quad in the second half of 2025 before the Reds revealed the extent of the damage after the season. The Reds held him out of the World Baseball Classic because of concerns about the injury and to protect him for 2026.

At 24 years old, De La Cruz is the engine for the Reds. A two-time All-Star and one of the most electric players in baseball, he has 147 career stolen bases. The 6-foot-6 switch-hitting shortstop is hitting .274 with 12 home runs and nine stolen bases this season.

The team did not announce further information or a timeline. The Reds, who lost three straight heading into Sunday’s game, rely heavily on De La Cruz and any extended loss of their leader would set the already reeling team further back.

The Reds entered Sunday’s game in last place in the National League Central. They had won just nine of their last 26 games.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Reds shortstop Elly De La Cruz exits with hamstring tightness

How to watch Cubs vs. Cardinals on Sunday Night Baseball: Start time, livestream

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An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Chicago Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong (4) rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run against the Houston Astros during the sixth inning at Wrigley Field, Image 2 shows Bryan Torres #39 of the St. Louis Cardinals reacts as he rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run during the ninth inning of game one of a doubleheader against Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on May 23, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio

One of baseball’s biggest rivalries takes center stage tonight as the St. Louis Cardinals and Chicago Cubs clash for a high-stakes Sunday Night Baseball showdown on May 31.

With the weekend series locked at one win apiece, tonight’s finale is a winner-take-all battle for NL Central bragging rights.

The series opened on May 29 with a high-scoring affair that saw the Cardinals edge out a 6-5 victory.

The Cubs quickly answered back on May 30, evening the series with a dominant 6-1 win. Outfielder Pete Crow-Armstrong put on a clinic with a spectacular four-hit night, capped by a huge 444-foot home run.

Cubs vs. Cardinals: what to know
  • When: May 31, 7:20 p.m. ET
  • Where: Busch Stadium (St. Louis, Missouri)
  • Channel: NBC
  • Streaming: Peacock

Following today’s contest, the Blue Jays will begin a homestand with three against the Athletics, while the Cardinals will continue their homestand with three games against the Rangers.

Cubs vs. Cardinals start time

Tonight’s (May 31) Cubs vs. Cardinals game is scheduled to begin at 7:20 p.m. ET.

How to watch Cubs vs. Cardinals on Sunday Night Baseball

Tonight’s Cubs vs. Cardinals matchup is streaming on Peacock and airing on NBC, but if you don’t have cable, Peacock is the best way to stream the game.

Peacock currently offers two subscription types: Premium with ads and Premium Plus ad-free. Peacock Premium costs $10.99/month, while Premium Plus costs $16.99/month.

SUBSCRIBE TO PEACOCK FOR $10.99/MONTH

You can also save a bit by subscribing to one of Peacock’s annual plans, which give you 12 months for the price of 10. These cost either $109.99 with ads or $169.99 without ads.

Cubs-Cardinals probable pitchers

Jordan Wicks (0-1, 16.62 ERA) starts for the Cubs. Matthew Liberatore (2-3, 4.76 ERA) will be on the mound for St. Louis.

MLB Sunday Night Baseball 2026 schedule

MLB Sunday Night Baseball airs on NBC and Peacock this season. Check out the full season slate below.

  • May 31 at 7 p.m. — Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals (NBC and Peacock)
  • June 7 at 8 p.m. — San Francisco Giants at Chicago Cubs (NBC and Peacock)
  • June 14 at 7 p.m. — Texas Rangers at Boston Red Sox (NBC and Peacock)
  • June 21 at 7 p.m. — New York Mets at Philadelphia Phillies (NBC and Peacock)
  • June 28 at 7 p.m. — New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox (NBC and Peacock)
  • July 5 at 12:30 p.m. — New York Mets at Atlanta Braves (NBC and Peacock)
  • July 5 at 7 p.m. — San Diego Padres at Los Angeles Dodgers (NBC and Peacock)
  • July 19 at 7 p.m. — Los Angeles Dodgers at New York Yankees (NBC and Peacock)
  • July 26 at 7 p.m. — New York Yankees at Philadelphia Phillies (NBC and Peacock)
  • August 2 at 7 p.m. — Boston Red Sox at Los Angeles Dodgers (NBC and Peacock)
  • August 9 at 8 p.m. — Houston Astros at San Diego Padres (NBC and Peacock)
  • August 16 at 7 p.m. — Seattle Mariners at Houston Astros (NBC and Peacock)
  • August 23 at 3 p.m. — San Francisco Giants at Boston Red Sox (NBC and Peacock)
  • August 30 at 3 p.m. — Cincinnati Reds at Chicago Cubs (NBC and Peacock)
  • August 30 at 7 p.m. — Houston Astros at New York Mets (NBC and Peacock)
  • September 6 at 3 p.m. — Atlanta Braves at Philadelphia Phillies (NBC and Peacock)
  • September 6 at 7 p.m. — Toronto Blue Jays at Kansas City Royals (Peacock)
  • September 7 at 8 p.m. — St. Louis Cardinals at San Francisco Giants (NBC and Peacock — special Labor Day MLB presentation)
  • September 13 at 7 p.m. — San Diego Padres at San Francisco Giants (Peacock)
  • September 20 at 7 p.m. — Milwaukee Brewers at Baltimore Orioles (Peacock)
SUBSCRIBE TO PEACOCK FOR $10.99/MONTH

Pirates 9, Twins 3: Shiver me timbers

May 31, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Minnesota Twins manager Derek Shelton (left) has words with home plate umpire Jordan Baker (71) against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the first inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Before this game started, the Minnesota Twins placed SP Bailey Ober on the IL with elbow inflammation (this being just two days after the same fate befell Kendry Rojas). Byron Buxton was also not in the starting nine this afternoon in support of Zebby Matthews.

It all proved too much to overcome as the Twins were swept by the Pittsburgh Pirates today to officially lose every ounce of momentum/optimism from last weekend’s sweep of the Red Sox in Boston.

Perhaps unsurprisingly considering the mood of the morning, the Pirates struck first at PNC. In the bottom of the second inning, a Ryan O’Hearn homer started the scoring and the Buccos weren’t done yet. After a walk, a hit, and a stolen base, Jared Triolo’s base knock brought Oneil Cruz across home plate. 2-0 PIT.

As MN bats continued to be stymied by PIT SP Braxton Ashcraft, the Bucs extended their lead to 4-0 in B3 off a two-run bomb from Nick Gonzales.

The yellow and black were back in B5, with Spencer Horowitz doubling and coming home on a Brandon Lowe single. This chased Zebby from the bump and brought in new call-up Mike Paredes. After a walk to load the bases, Paredes free-passed another Buc to let the merry-go-round spin. A Mangum sac fly scored another safety, which was quickly followed by a two-run base knock from Henry Davis. 9-0 PIT.

The Twins finally dented Ashcraft in T6 when Alex Jackson singled and came around to score on a Brooks Lee bomb into the RF bleachers. 9-2 PIT.

The score wouldn’t change again until T9 when Lee again put one out of the field of play.

But it was far too little, far too late to salvage anything on the banks of the Allegheny River.

Your Final: Pittsburgh Pirates 9, Minnesota Twins 3

Hard to know what to say as the month of May comes to a close. Every time this team makes a push towards .500, injuries barge their way in and make the way forward seem impossible.

Zach’s Zealot
  • Lee: HR provided the only scoring for the visitors.
Zach’s Zombie
  • The general vibes around this club right now. Just wretched. All optimism of being one game under .500 five scant days ago has dissipated as quickly as the elbow ligaments of various MN hurlers.
Egg-cellent Elocution
  • Matt Monitto expressing a desire to have stayed amongst the windmills and obstacles of the mini-golf course instead of checking in on this contest.
Who’s Got Next
  • The longest road trip of the year finally comes to an end with the Chicago White Sox coming into Target Field for a three-game set (Mon. night, Tues. night, Wed. afternoon).

The Viva El Birdos Podcast – Episode 67: “Blogger Day” 2026 with Chaim Bloom

The St. Louis Cardinals hold an annual event for “non-traditional” media types who cover the team, including yours truly, where we have the opportunity to have access to whoever the current sitting POBO of the team is. Historically, that’s been John Mozeliak, but this year we had our first opportunity to ask Chaim Bloom about his thoughts on the current state of affairs. He did not disappoint. Chaim Bloom was very thoughtful and engaging with his style of answer, and even after his obligation concluded, he stuck around for about an hour afterwards to talk with and elaborate further on his thoughts with anyone who wished to hold court with him.

Unfortunately, this event does not allow for video recording, but we are allowed to audio record the conversation and some of the topics included: extensions, trade talk, roles of new front office personnel, and how they are providing the Cardinals with an additional edge as they continue to try and rebuild the franchise, how the team can utilize AI, the process he uses when determining a players readiness for promotion, and so much more!

I will look to finalize June’s podcast schedule this week and announce ASAP. Be on the lookout for this announcement, as I have some VIP level Cardinals guests lined up.

-Thanks for listening

Dodgers vs. Phillies game III chat

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 27: Dave Roberts #30 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates a solo home run from Shohei Ohtani #17,to take a 1-0 lead, during the first inning against the Colorado Rockies at Dodger Stadium on May 27, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Yoshinobu Yamamoto faces Andrew Painter as the Dodgers look to take two of three against the Philadelphia Phillies.

SUNDAY GAME INFO
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Phillies
  • Stadium: Dodger Stadium
  • Time: 1:10 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 (Spanish)

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Jose Siri robs grand slam, saves Rays' buffet

Fans in the left field premium seats at Tropicana Field can access a buffet right up against the wall to the field. There, they can grab a hot dog, popcorn or some wings and watch all the action up close and personal.

On Sunday, May 31, Angels outfielder Jose Siri got so close that he almost wound up with wing sauce on his glove.

The Los Angeles Angels left fielder, and former Rays center fielder, robbed his former teammate Taylor Walls of a grand slam in the bottom of the third inning. Siri, known for his athletic defense, reached well over the left field wall, just above the buffet, and pulled the home run back.

The Angels are building a reputation as the most entertaining outfield in baseball. Jo Adell robbed three home runs in a single game against the Mariners on April 4, something that had never been seen in a major league game before. He has five robberies total nearly 10 weeks into the season and made a sliding catch in the outfield to escape a bases-loaded jam on Saturday.

And then Siri made his dramatic play on Sunday, reminding everyone at Tropicana Field of what he did there for years. The 30-year-old spent parts of three seasons in Tampa Bay before the Rays traded him after the 2024 season.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Joe Siri robs ex-team Rays of grand slam right above left-field buffet

For Cal Raleigh, injury presents a new perspective on the Mariners

May 30, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh (29) stands in the dugout during the eighth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images | Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh made a cameo appearance in the dugout during last night’s 5-1 win against the Diamondbacks, marking the first time he’s been in Seattle since going to the Mariners’ facility in Arizona a week ago to rehab his injured oblique.

Despite a plan to have him at the park pregame, Raleigh was delayed getting into town and only popped up in the dugout in the sixth inning, surprising his teammates, who had been asking where Cal was all day.

“I was glad I got to come watch a good one last night, and see the boys, and hang out in the dugout,” Raleigh told the media during a pregame scrum on Sunday.

It was a brief respite for Raleigh from what he describes as “a lot of nothing” in his rehab in Arizona, getting to be close to his team again and in a game situation, even if it wasn’t one he was playing in.

“It was good to get down there and focus on what I needed to focus on, but I miss the guys. I miss being here each day. It’s tough, watching these games on TV.”

Raleigh is progressing steadily in his rehab, doing tee work and flips at moderate intensity, standing in (no swings) on bullpens and against the Trajekt machine, and even caught a bullpen while in Arizona. A complicating factor in Raleigh’s rehab is the fact that he’s a switch-hitter, so he feels the injury differently from each side: more at the beginning of the swing when hitting right-handed and more at the end of the swing when hitting lefty. Yesterday he hit off a tee, fifteen swings per side, and said it went well.

“Felt really good, really promising. Didn’t feel anything. Obviously you’re not going as hard as you can but it felt good to get in there, take some swings, and feel the ball off the bat, see where we’re at.”

Today’s plan involves mostly monitoring, checking in with the training staff and doing light rehab, before attempting to dial up the intensity tomorrow. Raleigh is hoping to have a better idea by Wednesday of what the next steps will look like, saying rehab games are “still up in the air,” but he seems optimistic that the bulk of his Arizona time is over, saying “I think for the most part I’ll probably be up here for good.” (Source: Cal Raleigh, notably not GM Justin Hollander, head athletic trainer Kyle Torgerson, or any of the other stakeholders.)

“These next two days will be pretty telling as far as how things are going. Ramping up the baseball slowly but surely, checking boxes, and from there it’ll just be communication with the staff and trying to set a plan up to get back as soon as I can.”

‘As soon as he can’ comes with caveats. For as anxious as Raleigh is to get back on the field, he’s aware of the specific nature of an oblique injury and the challenges rehabbing one can present. From talking with good friend Luke Raley, who dealt with a similar injury last year, Raleigh knows how temperamental oblique muscles can be in the rehab process.

“The hard part about it is you can’t really replicate in-game swings, having that same kind of energy and percentile and that adrenaline going, it’s hard to replicate. So everything can feel great now, and then you get into a game and you might feel it, or have a little setback. So I’m just hoping with all the work I put in it’ll get there. I’m trying to be smart about getting back as quick as I can, but making sure this thing doesn’t linger for the rest of the year. It’s definitely been a topic we’ve talked about a lot.”

So Raleigh is attempting to practice patience. He’s trying to take things day-by-day, but for a player who is used to being one of the first to the park and one of the last to leave, with every free moment tightly scheduled in between, the sudden shift in schedule has been a sudden and unwelcome adjustment, requiring Raleigh speed-run the stages of grieving his injury straight to “acceptance.”

“The first couple days didn’t feel real, didn’t feel right. And then once I got to Arizona, it was kind of like, the acceptance stage, I guess. Once I got there, I was able to accept it and realize I had to try to get back as quick as I can. Control what you can control.”

Still, that doesn’t make it fun. Raleigh dryly describes his daily schedule at the complex:

“It’s been rehabbing, rehabbing some more, and then training, lifting weights and running, trying to stay on top of that. And then more rehab stuff. So you get home early, you don’t really know what to do with yourself, just waiting for the games to come on.”

Watching the Mariners from afar for the first time has been both a pain point and a source of introspection, and even inspiration, for Raleigh.

“It’s really hard watching the games on TV. It’s weird, watching it and not being there – it’s like a Twilight Zone kind of feeling. But I think it makes you appreciate it a little more when you’re that far away and you realize you don’t get to do it every day, the thing you love. So it gave me a little more appreciation for getting to play every day, being around the guys. It’s eye-opening…Realizing how much I miss it, how much I enjoy playing the game and being with the guys, it’s very eye-opening.

And it makes me never want to go back on the IL again.”

That bird’s-eye view of the team has also allowed him to take a step back and gain a new perspective on the team: one that maybe wasn’t available to Raleigh as he was mired in his own struggles at the plate.

“The biggest thing I noticed is how talented this team really is. It’s so much fun to watch. Me not being here stinks, and I hate it, but sitting back and realizing, I’m like, oh my gosh, this is a really good team. And the team seems to be hitting a really good stride right now. It’s a lot of fun to watch when we’re doing all three facets of the game like we’re doing it – pitching, hitting, and defense.”

“Watching them do it from afar and seeing them do it without you, you kind of notice a few more things that you don’t really notice when you’re in it. Sometimes you’re so close that you don’t see certain things, or it just takes a while to notice things like that. So it’s been a different kind of perspective.”

Without being able to contribute in games, Raleigh has still found a way to impact his team from afar, even if he rolls his eyes about it.

“I feel like that relative that texts you after every game. Like if anyone hits a home run I’m like, ‘nice swing, dude.’ I feel like such a loser right now, sitting on the bench. So I’m a big cheerleader from afar. I was trying to stay in touch, trying to keep it light and be funny with the guys as much as I could.”

But praise only – any critiques Raleigh has, he’s keeping to himself for now.

“I’m not saying a word. They’re on a five-game winning streak. I don’t want to do anything to mess it up.”

New York Yankees @ The Athletics: Will Warren vs. Jacob Lopez

May 25, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; New York Yankees pitcher Will Warren (29) pitches during the first inning against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images | Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

May has been a hit-or-miss month for the Yankees, and so has this series. They dominated the Athletics on Friday, only to lose behind a trio of homers last night. With Will Warren on the hill, they stand the chance today to win a game, win a key series, and hopefully put the messiness of the last 30 days behind them.

The soon-to-be 27-year-old Warren has taken a step forward so far this year, with a solid 3.55 ERA and very impressive 3.27 FIP, built upon significant cuts to his walk and home run rate. The strikeouts are still there, to be sure, but Warren’s progress has been buoyed by him making fewer mistakes. Warren is for now the No. 5 starter in the rotation, but he’s top 40 by ERA and 27th in all of baseball. If that’s the way the supposed weakest link in your rotation is going, you’re eating pretty good. For what it’s worth, Warren had his career-best outing by Game Score last May in this very ballpark, dominating the A’s with 7.1 innings of four-hit, one-run ball with seven strikeouts.

Jacob Lopez goes for “Sacremento,” and he is exactly the kind of pitcher the Yankees should feast on. He gives up 2+ HR/9 while walking 13.5 percent of batters faced, while seeing a BABIP that’s not quite league average but isn’t far off. He’s not a victim of bad luck — he struggles to find the strike zone and when he does its hittable. That should appeal greatly to a team trained to attack mistakes and let border pitches go, but then again we’ve seen more than one 5+ ERA hurler toss blanks against this team in previous seasons.

We have a couple changes to the ordinary lineup today, with José Caballero batting fifth (and I triple-checked) and manning the hot corner, while Max Schuemann gets the start at second while he’ll hit eighth. Paul Goldschmidt is once again penciled in for a start, leading us off in front of the familiar Ben Rice-Aaron Judge-Cody Bellinger trio.

Yes, we have one more afternoon start to endure.

How to watch:

Location: Sutter Health Park — West Sacramento, CA

First pitch: 4:05 pm EDT

TV Broadcast: YES Network (NYY) | NBCSCA (ATH)

Radio Broadcast: WFAN 660/101.9 FM, WADO 1280 (NYY) | Talk 650 KSTE, KVMX 92.1/105.5, A’s Cast (ATH)

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Arizona Diamondbacks Gameday Thread, #58: 5/31 @ Mariners

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - OCTOBER 21: A general view of the Seattle skyline, Seattle Space Needle, the exterior of T-Mobile Park, home of the Major League Baseball Seattle Mariners and Lumen Field, home of the National Football League Seattle Seahawks, with Mount Rainier in the background on October 21, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today’s Lineups

DIAMONDBACKSMARINERS
Ketel Marte – DHJ.P. Crawford – SS
Corbin Carroll – RFJulio Rodriguez – CF
Geraldo Perdomo – SSJosh Naylor – 1B
Nolan Arenado – 3BRandy Arozarena – LF
Ryan Waldschmidt – CFLuke Raley – RF
Ildemaro Vargas – 2BCole Young – 2B
Jose Fernandez – 1BDominic Canzone – DH
Aramis Garcia – CJhonny Pereda – C
Tim Tawa – LFColt Emerson – 3B
Merrill Kelly – RHPLuis Castillo – RHP

This has definitely been a season which, so far, has shown spending big is no guarantee of success. If you look at the top 10 teams by cash payroll, half of them – the Mets, Phillies, Blue Jays, Astros and Giants – would not be in the playoffs, if the season ended today. All but the Phillies are below .500. Conversely, the last-placed by payroll Guardians are leading their division, while Tampa and Milwaukee are other teams on top of their division, while in the bottom half by payroll. Of course, it’s still relatively early. But we’ve seen before how, well before the one-third point, the standings become a pretty reliable guide to the post-season.

While the D-backs stand lower in total payroll, the harsh fact is that the team’s spending has not been very productive so far either. If we look at their top contracts this year (and excluding Nolan Arenado, since the Cardinals are responsible for the vast bulk of what he’s getting paid), here’s what we find.

  • Corbin Burnes, $31.7 million, zero appearances
  • Eduardo Rodriguez, $21 million, 2.3 bWAR
  • Merrill Kelly, $20 million, 0.0 bWAR
  • Zac Gallen, $16.2 million, -0.5 bWAR
  • Ketel Marte, $15 million, 1.2 bWAR
  • Lourdes Gurriel, $13 million, -0.3 bWAR, currently injured

That’s a total of almost $117 million being paid to these six players this year, for a total of 2.7 bWAR thus far. Only two are living up to their contracts this season, and E-Rod is probably still in the red overall, after getting paid $34 million in 2024-25 for half a win. Now, the math may change when Burnes returns, but he’ll also be starting in an overdraft situation, after missing most of last season. I’m trying to think of the last multi-season contract Arizona gave a free agent player, that turned out to be worth the money. It’s certainly been a while. I’m increasingly inclined to feel player development is perhaps more important than big-ticket free-agents.

And we welcome PhoenixSportsFan to the site, for his first guest recap of 2026! May it be a sweep-avoiding one…

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Just A Terrible Game, Jays Lose To Orioles

May 31, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles shortstop Gunnar Henderson (2) turns a double play past Toronto Blue Jays right fielder Jesus Sanchez (12) during the second inning at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images | Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

Orioles 9 Blue Jays 5

That was bad in so many ways.

Worst of which, Jesús Sánchez was hit in the wrist by a ball thrown from the stands. They are saying he has a contusion, which is pretty much the best possible news. It was weird. Apparently, a kid(?) or young person, thought that he could throw to Sánchez and it would be caught. But, Jesús had turned away and the ball hit his wrist. Unfortunate, but no one should be throwing things from the stands.

Spencer Miles has been so good. Today he wasn’t. He went 3 innings, allowed 5 hits, 6 earned, 3 walks with 2 strikeouts. Not his day, but John had to leave him out to get some innings, as it was our second ‘bullpen’ day in three days.

Beyond that, Hayden Juenger didn’t have a great first appearance in the majors, giving up 2 hits, 3 earned, 2 walks in his inning of work.

Adam Macko (2 innings), Yariel Rodriguez (1) and Mason Fluharty (1) all put up zeros.

We had trouble with Kyle Bradish, who went 7 innings allowing just 1 unearned runs. We did get 4 runs off reliever Tyler Wells, but it was too little too late.

We had 8 hits and 4 walks. The big hit was from Yohendrick Piñango (in the game because of Sánchez’s injury), who he a home run that went 421 feet, scoring 3 of our 5 runs. Piñango, Nathan Lukes and Ernie Clement had 2 hits each. Sánchez and Charles McAdoo had one each.

No JoD today, but lets give Lips an honourable mention.

Other Award: Miles (-0.30 WPA).

Tomorrow is an off-day, which I’m sure we can all use.

Cowser HR, 4 RBIs back solid start by Bradish in Orioles’ 9-5 victory over Toronto

BALTIMORE (AP) — Kyle Bradish pitched seven innings of four-hit ball, Colton Cowser homered and drove in four runs and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Toronto Blue Jays 9-5 Sunday.

Pete Alonso had two hits, scored twice and drove in a run for the Orioles, who mounted a 6-0 third-inning lead against rookie Spencer Miles (2-1) and coasted to the finish.

It was a complete contrast to the first three games of the series, each of which was decided by one run after the winner staged a late comeback. In earning a split, the Orioles completed an uplifting homestand in which they won seven of 10, including a three-game sweep of first-place Tampa Bay.

Bradish (3-6) allowed an unearned run, struck out four and walked three. Although it was only his second win since April 8, the right-hander has a 1.72 ERA over his past five starts.

Cowser hit a run-scoring groundout in the second inning before Baltimore took control with a five-run fifth. Alonso singled in a run and Samuel Basallo hit an RBI double before Cowser launched a three-run drive to center.

The Orioles made it 9-0 in the sixth against Hayden Juenger, making his major debut after being recalled from Triple-A Buffalo on Saturday. The right-hander walked two and gave up two hits in his only inning of work.

Yohendrick Piñango hit a three-run homer for Toronto in the eighth.

Blue Jays right fielder Jesús Sánchez left the game in the sixth inning with bruised right wrist after apparently being struck by a ball thrown from the bleachers during a stoppage in play. X-rays were negative.

Up Next

Blue Jays: After taking Monday off, Toronto sends Kevin Guzman (4-3) to the mound in Atlanta on Tuesday night.

Orioles: Following a day off Monday, Baltimore starts Shane Baz (2-5) on the road Tuesday night in Boston.

Game #59: Yankees at Athletics Game Thread

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 24: Jacob Lopez #57 of the Athletics prepares to pitch against the San Diego Padres during the sixth inning at Petco Park on May 24, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This afternoon, the Athletics and New York Yankees will match-up in the rubber-game of their three-game series at West Sacramento’s Sutter Health Park.

In the wake of dropping the series-opener 8-2, the A’s rebounded last night, evening up the series with a 6-4 victory. Home runs from left fielder Tyler Soderstrom, catcher Shea Langeliers and first baseman Nick Kurtz gave the hosts a 6-1 lead. It looked like the A’s would coast to the finish line, but the Yankees rallied for three runs in the ninth as A’s relievers Jack Perkins and Scott Barlow combined to walk five batters. Barlow replaced Perkins with the bases loaded and two outs. He proceeded to walk three straight batters before finally getting the final out. According to Associated Press writer Josh Dubow, Barlow became the first pitcher to get a save after walking three out of four batters faced in an outing.

Seeking the series win, left-hander Jacob Lopez will start for the A’s. The 28-year-old enters his 12th appearance and 10th start of the season with a 4-2 record, a 5.73 ERA, and 35 strikeouts in 48.2 innings pitched. Lopez will pitch from the outset today, a contrast to his last appearance when he followed opener Luis Medina. In that outing, he earned the win after holding the San Diego Padres to one run on six hits over 4 2/3 innings.

Lopez has struggled with his command at times this season, as reflected in his 1.77 WHIP. However, he walked just one batter against San Diego, a positive step that must continue this afternoon, especially after A’s pitchers recorded more walks than strikeouts last night. If Lopez’s command wavers and leads to free passes or mistake pitches that are driven for extra-base hits, the Athletics could find themselves in serious trouble and facing a third consecutive series loss.

The A’s lineup:

Left-handed-hitting outfielders Carlos Cortes and Lawrence Butler replace right-handed hitters Henry Bolte and Colby Thomas in the A’s starting nine. Additionally, backup catcher Jonah Heim will start behind the plate in the series-finale while Langeliers gets the day off.

With Soderstrom showing signs of heating up, the Athletics will need slumping hitters Butler, designated hitter Brent Rooker and second baseman Jeff McNeil to provide more offensive production as the calendar turns to June.

The A’s offense will face Yankees’ right-hander Will Warren, who has emerged as one of New York’s most reliable starters this season. The 26-year-old enters his 12th start with a 6-1 record, a 3.55 ERA, a 1.17 WHIP and 65 strikeouts across 58.1 innings. Warren received a no-decision when he faced the A’s at Yankee stadium in April, limiting the team to two runs on five hits over 4 2/3 innings. The A’s offense will look to make a bigger impact against the talented right-hander as the team vies for its second straight win.

The Yankees meanwhile have this lineup set for today:



New York’s lineup becomes considerably less imposing after its fearsome foursome. Further down the order, former A’s infielder Max Schuemann gets the start at second base in place of Jazz Chisholm Jr., who made the final out in yesterday’s game.

Should be a good one. Let’s go A’s!

Follow the Game:
Watch:
Athletics – NBCSCA

Listen:
Athletics – Talk 650 KSTE, A’s Cast