NEW YORK - JULY 5: Buddy Groom #38 of the New York Yankees pitches against the Baltimore Orioles on July 5, 2005 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, New York. The Yankees defeated the Orioles 12-3. (Photo by Nick Laham/Getty Images) | Getty Images
As we move into the summer months of our birthday series here at PSA, we are once again brought to a perhaps lesser known player in the deep history of baseball in the Bronx. Despite that less-than-household-name status, today’s entry highlights a 14-year big league career, an accomplishment in its own right, and a player with an all-time record to call his own. Buddy Groom only had a brief tenure with the Yankees, but throughout the early 1990s and early 2000s, the lefty was a staple in plenty of bullpens.
Wedsel Gary “Buddy” Groom Jr. Born: July 10, 1965 (Dallas, TX) Yankees Tenure: 2005
Wedsel Gary Groom, born in Dallas 61 years ago, did his college pitching two hours south in Belton at the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor. The left-handed hurler made enough of a name for himself there to earn selection in the 12th round of the 1987 Draft, a pick made by the White Sox.
Before he could work his way all the way through Chicago’s minor league system, he was traded to the Tigers, where he would finally break into the big leagues. He’d pitch there for three seasons, with mostly forgettable returns, and would eventually be dealt to the Marlins mid-year in ‘95, his first season with a fuller workload. Still, ERA marks above seven don’t move the needle much.
Groom signed with the Athletics prior to the 1995 season, and would pitch four full seasons with the A’s. His first year there was his best, when he posted a 3.84 ERA in a career-high 77.1 innings of work. Most notably, his tenure in Oakland established him as a durable left-handed option out of the ‘pen. His four years there marked the beginning of seven consecutive seasons in which he would make 70 or more appearances on the mound. From 1996-2002, Groom’s 511 appearances were the third most in all of baseball.
The reliever’s scenery changed for the 2000 season, when he signed with the Orioles, beginning a four-season run in Baltimore. His 2002 season with the O’s was by far the best of his career, when he posted a sparkling 1.60 ERA across 62 innings of work. One of the fun things about relief pitching, is that sometimes a guy can just find it, and clearly Groom did so during that ‘02 campaign.
The lefty pitched with Baltimore through the 2004 season, before hitting free agency once again in the following offseason. In February of 2005, Groom signed with the Yankees to pitch in the Bronx for his age-39 season.
Now in his late-30s, Groom’s stuff had diminished, and he only pitched 25.2 innings across 24 appearances for the Yankees to begin the season. Not necessarily bad, but a 4.91 ERA and an unimpressive strikeout rate makes it awfully difficult to stick around in any big-league bullpen. At the end of July, Groom was designated for assignment by the Yankees, and eventually sent off the the Diamondbacks. The 23 appearances he would make for Arizona in 2005 would be the final of his career, as it marked the end of a solid 14-year career, during which his left arm was called upon more than almost any other’s.
Despite the lack of accolades on his resume, it would be far from fair to call Groom’s career insignificant. He led the league in pitching appearances in 1999 with 76, and is the all-time leader in games played without ever taking an at-bat in the majors. Beyond all else, Groom was depended on for nearly a decade and a half as a dependable lefty out of the bullpen, an asset almost any team would sign up for.
See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.
Los Angeles, CA - May 30: Roch Cholowsky #1 of the UCLA Bruins reacts after flying out with two runners on to end the eighth inning of a NCAA Los Angeles Regional baseball game against the Virginia Tech Hokies at Jackie Robinson Stadium in Los Angeles on Saturday, May 30, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images
This is the third and final edition of the consensus rankings. If you are interested in the previous versions, the June Top 200 and the April Top 100 are linked here if you want to see how a player has been moving over the past few months.
There are some changes this time around. Obviously the most notable is going from a Top 200 to a Top 500. The next big change is the number of lists included drops from seven to six, as the Keith Law/Athletic list was very short (only Top 100) and the rankings were very different than anyone else’s, so it would throw off things both at the top and in that 75-150 range. Another small change from last time is I am cutting out the listing of player movement, as there wasn’t enough time to get that done and have this list ready for you in time for the draft due to these lists being released late.
The six lists used are Baseball America, Pipeline (Only Top 250), Perfect Game, ESPN/Kiley McDaniel (Top 250), Overslot/Mock Draft Simulator, as well as my own. The player ranked No. 1 on a list gets 500 points towards the consensus total, while the player ranked No. 500 receives one point. In total there were 695 players who received at least one point. All of these lists have been recently updated, so there is nothing old in these rankings. Two of these lists are shorter than a Top 500, so there will be heavier weight to the other four lists in the bottom half of the rankings.
Note that these rankings are a composite of all sources, and outside of my own rankings being one part of the six rankings included, this is not something I have influenced at all. For players who are tied in points for a spot, I am giving the higher ranking to the player who ranks higher on the greater number of lists, with the second tie breaker being awarded for the highest ranking on any list, followed by number of lists a player is included on, and if it’s still tied the player with the lowest ranking on any individual list loses. I will include some comments below on some of the interesting things included in the composite, and break this down into tiers solely based on how highly rated these players were in terms of points.
Tier 1
1.Roch Cholowsky, SS, UCLA – 2996 points
2.Grady Emerson, SS, Texas HS – 2995
3.Vahn Lackey, C, Georgia Tech – 2991
The original thought that Cholowsky would be a consensus top pick is out the window, as he beats Emerson by just one point. Roch was the top guy on three boards to two for Emerson. Lackey took home the other top slot and was second in another set of rankings. It’s clear that there isn’t much separating these three guys from each other and they have separated themselves from the second trio that makes up the clear Top 6.
Tier 2
4.Jackson Flora, RHP, UC Santa Barbara – 2978
5.Eric Booth Jr., OF, Mississippi HS – 2974
6.Jacob Lombard, SS, Florida HS – 2972
These three are tightly grouped as a clear second tier of the Top 6. In all six sets of rankings, these guys occupied 17 of the 18 total slots of 4/5/6 in the rankings, with only Lombard coming in at 7th.
Tier 3
7.Drew Burress, OF, Georgia Tech – 2957
8.Tyler Bell, SS, Kentucky – 2949
9.Ryder Helfrick, C, Arkansas – 2948
10.Chris Hacopian, SS, Texas A&M – 2941
11.Derek Curiel, OF, LSU – 2931
Tier 4
12.Jared Grindlinger, LHP/OF, California HS – 2922
13.Justin Lebron, SS, Alabama – 2917
14.Cameron Flukey, RHP, Coastal Carolina – 2916
15.Gio Rojas, LHP, Florida HS – 2915
16.AJ Gracia, OF, Virginia – 2909
17.Trevor Condon, OF, Georgia HS – 2897
18.Ace Reese, 3B, Mississippi State – 2894
19.Liam Peterson, RHP, Florida – 2883
20.Sawyer Strosnider, OF, TCU – 2876
Tier 5
21.Hunter Dietz, LHP, Arkansas – 2853
22.Cole Carlon, LHP, Arizona State – 2850
23.Daniel Jackson, C, Georgia – 2840
24.Mason Edwards, LHP, USC – 2840
Jackson takes the first tie, ranking with a higher slot on four of the six lists.
25.Zion Rose, OF, Louisville – 2839
26.Cade Townsend, RHP, Mississippi – 2830
27.Tegan Kuhns, RHP, Tennessee – 2827
28.Coleman Borthwick, RHP, Florida HS – 2817
29.Bo Lowrance, 3B, South Carolina HS – 2812
30.Logan Hughes, OF, Texas Tech – 2811
31.Carson Bolemon, RHP, South Carolina HS – 2808
32.Caden Sorrell, OF, Texas A&M – 2793
33.Logan Reddeman, RHP, UCLA – 2791
34.Eric Becker, SS, Virginia – 2789
35.Taylor Rabe, RHP, Mississippi – 2884
36.Cole Prosek, SS, Mississippi HS – 2780
Tier 6
37.Brody Bumila, LHP, Massachusetts HS – 2764
38.Logan Schmidt, LHP, California HS – 2762
39.Aiden Robbins, OF, Texas – 2761
40.Tyler Spangler, SS, California HS – 2759
41.Archer Horn, SS, California HS – 2756
42.Jack Radel, RHP, Notre Dame – 2754
43.Aiden Ruiz, SS, New York HS – 2751
44.Chase Brunson, OF, TCU – 2737
45.Ben Blair, RHP, Liberty – 2737
Brunson takes this tie with the second tie breaker, coming in highest of the two anywhere – 29th on the list over at Overslot.
46.Taj Marchand, SS, South Carolina HS – 2728
47.Jensen Hirschkorn, RHP, California HS – 2712
48.Ty Head, OF, NC State – 2685
49.Jarren Advincula, 2B, Georgia Tech – 2678
50.Landon Thome, SS, Illinois HS – 2672
51.Connor Comeau, SS, Texas HS – 2669
52.James Clark, SS, California HS – 2666
53.Sean Duncan, LHP, Canada HS – 2665
54.Blake Bowen, OF, California HS – 2664
55.Will Brick, C, Tennessee HS – 2664
After both coming in higher on two lists, Bowen wins the tie because he ranked highest on a list – 37th on the PG list.
After both being higher on three lists, this tie is broken by myself having Nawrocki the highest – 72nd overall.
Tier 9
107.Ryan Peterson, RHP, Sam Houston State – 2316
108.Brendan Brock, C, Oklahoma – 2316
Peterson ranks higher on four out of the six lists.
109.Kyle Jones, OF, Florida – 2315
110.Keon Johnson, SS, Georgia HS – 2314
111.Roman Martin, 3B, UCLA – 2310
112.Tommy LaPour, RHP, TCU – 2299
113.James Tronstein, SS/OF, California HS – 2297
114.Martin Shelar, OF, Georgia HS – 2297
Tronstein ranks higher on four of the six spots.
115.Cooper Sides, RHP, California HS – 2293
116.Shane Sdao, LHP, Texas A&M – 2283
117.Camden Kozeal, 2B, Arkansas – 2280
118.Caden Ferraro, OF, Texas Tech – 2269
119.Jack Slightom, RHP, Illinois HS – 2267
120.Julian Garcia, RHP, California HS – 2256
121.Ethan Norby, LHP, East Carolina – 2250
122.Jaxon Willits, SS, Oklahoma – 2228
123.Carson Wiggins, RHP, Arkansas – 2226
124.Gavin Gallagher, 2B, North Carolina – 2223
125.Eric Guevara, 3B, Auburn – 2215
126.Tre Broussard, OF, Houston – 2211
127.Denton Lord, RHP, Florida HS – 2205
128.Ryan Marohn, LHP, NC State – 2200
129.Kollin Ritchie, OF, Oklahoma State – 2195
130.Bryce Hill, RHP, Connecticut HS – 2192
Tier 10
131.Kade Lewis, 3B, Wake Forest – 2177
132.Jason Amalbert, SS, New Jersey HS – 2166
133.Maxx Yehl, LHP, West Virginia – 2150
134.Matt Ponatoski, RHP/SS, Ohio HS – 2150
Yehl takes this tie because his 102nd overall ranking on the Overslot list was the highest of either player.
135.Alex Weingartner, SS, New Jersey HS – 2145
136.Wilson Andersen, RHP, Florida HS – 2125
137.Dylan Bowen, SS, Indiana HS – 2118
138.Henry Ford, 3B, Tennessee – 2115
139.Anthony Murphy, OF, California HS – 2114
140.Alex Hernandez, 2B, Georgia Tech – 2112
141.Camden Johnson, 3B, Oklahoma – 2086
142.Jake McCoy, LHP, South Carolina – 2086
143.Hudson DeVaughan, RHP, Indiana HS – 2086
Johnson and McCoy each ranked highest on three lists, which sends DeVaughan into third in this three-way tie. Johnson takes the win because coming in at 101st on Baseball America is the highest of his and McCoy’s rankings.
144.Gannon Grant, RHP, Indiana HS – 2079
145.Robbie Lavey, C, George Washington – 2078
146.Garrett Wright, C, Tennessee – 2058
147.Tyler Putnam, RHP, Missouri HS – 2040
148.Rylan Lujo, OF, Georgia – 2039
149.Andruw Giles, OF, Nevada HS – 2035
150.Duncan Marsten, RHP, Wake Forest – 2026
151.Deiten Lachance, C, Oklahoma – 2021
152.Tre Phelps, 3B, Georgia – 1983
153.James Jorgensen, RHP, Texas HS – 1980
154.Kyle Johnson, LHP, Virginia – 1979
155.Steele Murdock, RHP, UC San Diego – 1978
156.Carson Jasa, RHP, Nebraska – 1973
157.Gary Morse, RHP, California HS – 1972
158.Ryan Cooney, 2B, Oregon – 1964
159.Trey Beard, LHP, Florida State – 1961
160.Nathan Taylor, RHP, Cincinnati – 1956
161.Cal Randall, RHP, UCLA – 1949
162.Dalton Wentz, 3B, Wake Forest – 1947
163.Eli Herst, RHP, Washington HS – 1941
164.Jake Carbaugh, RHP, Florida HS – 1937
165.Brayden Dowd, OF, Florida State – 1920
166.Deven Sheerin, RHP, LSU – 1920
Dowd takes this tie because his ESPN ranking is the highest spot either of these two was listed.
167.Trey Rangel, RHP, Texas HS – 1907
168.Logan Georges, RHP, California HS – 1904
169.Carson Bailey, RHP, Texas JUCO – 1885
Tier 11
170.Dawson Montesa, RHP, West Virginia – 1869
171.LJ Mercurius, RHP, Oklahoma – 1854
172.Luke McNeillie, RHP, Florida – 1852
173.Kolby Stringer, RHP, Mississippi HS – 1833
174.Lucas Moore, OF, Louisville – 1832
175.AJ Rice, RHP, Georgia HS – 1826
176.Landon Brown, RHP, Texas HS – 1804
177.Brady Harris, OF, Florida HS – 1788
178.Isaac Morton, RHP, Minnesota – 1778
179.Coleton Brady, RHP, Florida HS – 1773
180.Alex Conover, OF, Oklahoma State – 1772
181.Aidan Knaak, RHP, Clemson – 1761
182.Grayson Willoughby, RHP, Kentucky HS – 1756
183.Jack Dugan, SS, Tennessee HS – 1755
184.Dominic Voegele, RHP, Kansas – 1754
185.Joe Tiroly, 2B, Virginia – 1751
186.CJ Weinstein, SS, California HS – 1750
187.Jet Berry, SS, Arizona HS – 1722
188.Ryne Barker, 3B, Arizona HS – 1717
189.Dylan Vigue, RHP, Georgia – 1693
190.Bo Rhudy, RHP, Tennessee – 1693
Vigue wins because he ranks higher on five of the six lists. The reason for the tie is that Vigue was not listed on the shorter ESPN list. Had he been ranked even 300th there, plausible since he was in the Top 200 everywhere else, he would have come in at 169th on this list.
191.Brady Snow, RHP, Florida HS – 1685
192.Jorvorskie Lane Jr., C/OF, Texas HS – 1670
193.Cole Dennis, RHP, Florida HS – 1663
Tier 12
194.Braden Holcomb, OF, Vanderbilt – 1644
195.Maddox Molony, SS, Oregon – 1640
196.Noah Danza, SS, New Jersey HS – 1636
197.Gavin Giese, RHP, California HS – 1621
198.Eric Segura, RHP, Oregon State – 1612
199.Jack Brenner, C, Wisconsin HS – 1608
200.Alex Sosa, C, Miami – 1605
201.Ty Horn, RHP, Nebraska – 1586
202.Gunner Skelton, 3B, Tennessee HS – 1562
203.Sawyer Nelson, SS, Oregon HS – 1560
204.Owen Kramkowski, RHP, Arizona – 1556
205.Will Plunkett, SS, New York HS – 1542
206.Thomas Burns, RHP, Texas – 1542
Both players ranked higher on three lists, but Plunkett had the highest ranking anywhere of the two.
207.Wessley Roberson, OF, Georgia HS – 1530
208.Robert Omidi, 3B, Canada HS – 1522
209.Ethan McElvain, LHP, Arkansas – 1513
210.Nu’u Contrades, 3B, Arizona State – 1506
211.Cashel Dugger, C, UCLA – 1490
212.Justin LeGuernic, RHP, Clemson – 1485
213.Kyle Casteel, RHP, Pennsylvania HS – 1463
214.Cal Scolari, RHP, Oregon – 1463
This came down to the second tie breaker, with Casteel winning by ranking one slot higher on Pipeline’s list than Scolari came in on PG’s list.
215.Wil Libbert, LHP, Mississippi – 1457
216.Tyler Fay, RHP, Alabama – 1448
217.Michael Harpster, RHP, East Tennessee State – 1435
218.Isaiah Galason, SS, Georgia HS – 1426
219.Eric Nachtsheim, RHP, McNeese State – 1423
220.Alain Gomez-Gudino, C, Arizona HS – 1382
221.Brayden Martin, 3B, Maryland – 1382
Gomez-Gudino, who was Cam Caminiti’s high school catcher, ranked higher on four out of the six lists.
222.Shawn Sullivan, RHP, Ohio HS – 1372
223.Grant Govel, RHP, USC – 1328
224.Genson Veras, OF, Florida HS – 1322
225.Griffin Long, RHP, Georgia HS – 1320
226.Trevor Hansen, RHP, UC Irvine – 1295
227.Tyson Grulkowski, RHP, Wisconsin HS – 1276
228.Judah Ota, OF, Hawaii HS – 1267
229.Kam Durning, SS, Missouri – 1260
230.AJ Curry, OF, California HS – 1254
231.Hudson Calhoun, RHP, Mississippi – 1253
232.Russell Sandefer, RHP, Florida – 1252
233.Brandon McCraine, SS, Auburn – 1252
Sandefer ranks higher on three lists, versus two for McCraine. Neither was on the shorter ESPN list.
234.Ryan Harwood, OF, Arizona HS – 1250
235.Sherman Johnson, 3B, NC State – 1239
Tier 13
236.Hudson Barrett, LHP, Oklahoma State – 1219
237.Matthew Thomas, OF, Cal State Northridge – 1208
238.Josh McDevitt, RHP, Missouri – 1202
239.Erik Paulsen, 1B, North Carolina – 1201
240.Jack Beck, SS, Tennessee HS – 1199
241.Ricky Ojeda, LHP, UC Irvine – 1196
242.Cam Johnson, LHP, Oklahoma – 1177
243.Clayton Freshcorn, RHP, Texas A&M – 1153
244.Cody Boshell, 1B, Florida HS – 1145
245.Tate McKee, RHP, Georgia Tech – 1124
246.Jon Mora, OF, Florida HS – 1116
247.Brady Ballinger, 1B, Kansas – 1114
248.Micah Worley, LHP, Stony Brook – 1109
249.Max Bayles, RHP, Santa Clara – 1107
250.Teagan Scott, C, Oregon HS – 1107
Bayles ranks highest in four spots, with each being left off one list.
251.Ryan Piech, RHP, Xavier – 1077
252.Wyatt Clatur, RHP, Tennessee HS – 1074
253.Hunter Brown, RHP, New Jersey HS – 1074
Each ranks highest on three lists, but Clatur has the high mark of the two.
254.Chase Kiker, RHP, North Carolina HS – 1068
255.Blake Morningstar, RHP, Wake Forest – 1063
256.Jaxon Jelkin, RHP, Kentucky – 1054
257.Landon Thiel, LHP, Ohio HS – 1040
258.Ryan Kucherak, SS, Northwestern – 1037
259.Cooper Webb, RHP, Texas HS – 1036
260.Cam Jackson, SS, Georgia HS – 1034
261.Josiah Morris, SS, California HS – 1025
262.Calvin Proskey, RHP, UC Santa Barbara – 1021
263.Bear Harrison, C, Texas A&M – 1014
264.Jacob Madrid, C, California HS – 995
265.Ryan Stedman, RHP, Iowa HS – 990
266.Brandon Arvidson, LHP, Tennessee – 989
267.Nathan Aceves, RHP, UC Santa Barbara – 988
268.Donovan Thiery, RHP, Florida HS – 987
269.Spencer Evans, LHP, Florida HS – 986
270.Hunter Carns, C, Florida State – 984
271.Luke Costello, OF, Wake Forest – 978
272.Haiden Leffew, LHP, Texas – 970
273.Dominic Battista, OF, Illinois HS – 969
274.John Stowers, C, Alabama HS – 967
275.Kaleb LaFavor, RHP, Iowa HS – 966
276.Connor Fennell, RHP, Vanderbilt – 964
277.Collin Bland, 1B, Tennessee HS – 961
278.Bryson Moore, RHP, Florida State – 957
279.Graham Schlicht, RHP, California HS – 955
280.Cole Tryba, LHP, UC Santa Barbara – 950
281.Macon Winslow, C, North Carolina – 943
282.Alex Petrovic, RHP, Auburn – 936
Tier 14
283.Ethan Sutton, RHP, South Florida – 915
284.John Abraham, RHP, Florida State – 913
285.Cody New, LHP, Cal Baptist – 911
286.Declan Dahl, RHP, Louisiana Tech – 907
287.Ben Davis, RHP, Mississippi State – 892
288.Michael Addari, RHP, Illinois State – 880
289.Chris McHugh, 1B, NC State – 877
290.JJ Drennan, RHP, New Jersey HS – 871
291.Ryan Novak, OF, Miami(OH) – 862
292.Kenny Ishikawa, LHP/OF, Georgia – 838
293.Zane Adams, LHP, Alabama – 829
294.Sam Harris, 1B, Virginia – 827
295.Dustin Dunwoody, RHP, California HS – 821
296.Hayes Holton, RHP, Louisiana HS – 815
297.Colin Fisher, LHP, Arkansas – 810
298.Josiah Kemp, OF, Oklahoma HS – 810
Fisher ranked higher on three lists, versus one for Kemp.
299.Lorenzo Carrier, OF, Pitt – 807
300.Matthew Sharman, RHP, Georgia HS – 803
301.Colin White, LHP, Georgia HS – 800
302.Kyle McDaniel, 2B, Utah Tech – 799
303.Ethan Surowiec, 3B, Florida – 790
304.Carlos Martinez, RHP, Hofstra – 788
305.Jason Jutronich, LHP, California HS – 787
306.Gavin Van Kempen, RHP, East Carolina – 781
307.Matthew Kelley, SS, Nevada HS – 778
308.AJ Evasco, OF/1B, Kansas State – 776
309.Jerek Turlij, RHP, Pennsylvania HS – 772
310.Easton Autrey, 3B, Texas HS – 769
311.Alex Harrington, SS, California HS – 764
312.Jake Long, OF, Utah – 760
313.Dylan Blomker, RHP, New Mexico HS – 758
314.Keller Bradley, RHP, Pennsylvania HS – 757
315.Colin Linder, RHP, Arizona State – 751
316.Cole Stokes, RHP, Florida State – 748
317.Jaxon Matthews, OF, North Carolina HS – 733
318.Anthony Del Angel, 3B, New Mexico HS – 732
319.Rhett Britt, RHP, North Carolina HS – 731
320.Isaiah Hearn, OF, California HS – 719
321.Alejandro Garza, 3B, Cal Poly – 719
Hearn wins this tie by having the higher ranking of the two.
322.Ross Norman, RHP, Coastal Carolina – 707
323.Hunter Possehl, LHP, Florida Gulf Coast – 705
324.Colin Barczi, C, Vanderbilt – 705
Possehl ranks higher on three of the four lists that either are featured on.
325.Grayden Seuferling, RHP, Missouri HS – 692
326.Mark Quatrani, C, Notre Dame – 691
327.Ryan Tayman, C, Cal Poly – 684
328.Luke Pettitte, RHP/1B, Dallas Baptist – 680
329.Ty Burnham, RHP, Arkansas HS – 678
330.Jarren Purify, 2B, Clemson – 662
331.Paul Contreras, OF, Cal State Fullerton – 657
332.Grayson Fitzwater, 1B, VMI – 656
333.Matt Scott, RHP, Georgia – 650
334.Connor Marshburn, RHP, UNC Wilmington – 645
335.Luke Nixon, 2B, NC State – 638
336.Christian Doty, SS, Mississippi HS – 637
337.Josh Gunther, RHP, South Carolina – 629
338.Carson Turnquist, RHP, Cal Poly – 619
339.Alfredo Capacete, RHP, Cal Baptist – 617
340.Michael Malki, RHP, Cal Baptist – 616
341.Michael Anderson, 1B, Penn State – 614
342.David Hinojosa, RHP, New York HS -611
343.Ty Tillery, RHP, Georgia HS – 609
344.Beau Bryans, LHP, Jacksonville State – 607
Tier 15
345.Caden McDonald, 1B, Florida – 595
346.RJ Cope, LHP/1B, Georgia HS – 591
347.Jaxson Wood, OF, Alabama HS – 591
This one came down to the second tie breaker, with Cope winning due to a very high ranking on PG.
348.Tyler Minick, 3B, UConn – 569
349.Javar Williams, OF, Wake Forest – 560
350.Gage Peterson, RHP, Appalachian State – 555
351.Reece Moroney, SS, Rhode Island – 555
Peterson has the higher ranking on four lists.
352.Jacob Haley, RHP, South Alabama – 545
353.Tanner Marsh, SS, Liberty – 539
354.Matthew Mansbery – SS, Ohio HS – 536
355.Landon Koenig, RHP, Mississippi – 533
356.Cash Scarborough, RHP, Texas HS – 530
357.Andrew Gonzalez, 2B, Texas HS – 528
358.Selden Kolkenbeck, RHP, New Jersey HS – 527
359.Cooper Moore, RHP, LSU – 527
Kolkenbeck having the highest ranking of the two is what got him the win in this tie.
360.Aidan Weaver, RHP, Duke – 525
361.Ethan Mendoza, 2B, Texas – 518
362.Matt Conte, C, Wake Forest – 515
363.Dean West, OF, UCLA – 513
364.Aidan Keenan, RHP, Stanford – 512
365.Aidan Teel, OF, Mississippi State – 511
366.Griffin Graves, LHP, Auburn – 510
367.AJ Krodel, RHP, UC Santa Barbara – 510
Graves had the higher ranking on three lists, versus one for Krodel.
368.PJ Moutzouridis, SS, Arizona State – 506
369.Kuhio Aloy, 1B, Arkansas – 502
370.Anthony Potestio, SS, UC San Diego – 495
371.Justin Byrd, RHP, Georgia – 488
372.Clay Burdette, OF, Xavier – 486
373.Deacon Nelson, SS, Ohio HS – 479
374.Vincent Lombardo, OF, Connecticut HS – 474
375.Parker Ishee, RHP, Mississippi JUCO – 469
376.Dominic Pellegrin, SS, Louisiana HS – 465
377.Griffin Stieg, RHP, Virginia Tech – 456
378.Chase Meyer, RHP, formerly West Virginia/MLB Draft League – 454
379.Fabio Bundi, RHP, California JUCO – 454
After each player saw himself higher on two lists, Meyer got the edge due to the highest ranking in any set.
380.Mickey Gilligan, C, New Jersey HS – 452
381.Ethan Wheeler, RHP, Florida HS – 448
382.Brodie Purcell, RHP, Florida State – 448
Wheeler ranked higher on two lists to just one for Purcell.
383.Drew Titsworth, RHP, Clemson – 447
384.Jaden Jackson, OF, California HS – 445
385.Collin Jennings, OF, Illinois – 442
386.Parker Loew, SS, Florida HS – 442
With the highest ranking anywhere, this one went to Jennings.
387.Jordan Ransom, SS, Arizona HS – 441
388.Tyler Pitzer, RHP, Mississippi State – 436
389.Brett Lanman, LHP, Abilene Christian – 433
390.Isaiah James, LHP, North Carolina HS – 424
391.Ezra Liggon, OF, Wisconsin HS – 423
392.Owen Kelly, RHP, Mississippi – 415
393.Ethan Offing, SS, South Carolina HS – 413
394.Colin Driffill, RHP, Nebraska HS – 412
395.Louis Hernandez, 3B, Florida HS – 405
396.Devin Diaz, C, New York HS – 404
397.Connor Shouse, 3B, Texas Tech – 399
398.Jacob Bean, RHP, Louisville – 398
399.Erick Dessens,OF, Sacramento State – 391
Tier 16
400.Hunter Rose, LHP, Arkansas HS – 380
401.Zach Edwards, RHP, Oregon State – 377
402.Garrett Lambert, RHP, Mercer – 377
Edwards ranks higher on three lists to Lambert’s one.
403.Ryan Zuckerman, 3B, Georgia Tech – 371
404.Bryant James, SS, Virginia HS – 365
405.Colton Semmelmann, LHP, Wisconsin HS – 364
406.Jimmy Anderson, SS, Illinois JUCO – 363
407.Hayden Johnson, LHP, Coastal Carolina – 362
408.Tryston McCladdie, SS, Clemson – 361
409.Anthony Quigley, 3B, Florida JUCO – 360
410.Noah Sullivan, 1B, Mississippi State – 358
411.Matt Quintanar, C, Texas Tech – 353
412.Matt Sauser, RHP, UCF – 351
413.Eric Zdunek, OF, California HS – 340
414.Reese Chapman, OF, Tennessee – 340
Zdunek wins this because he has the highest ranking of the two.
415.Conner Griffin, RHP, Pennsylvania HS – 339
416.Jacob Johnson, 3B, Saint Mary’s – 336
417.Caden Matusak, SS, Indiana HS – 333
418.Cider Cannon, C, Duke – 332
419.Mason Eckelman, C, Ohio State – 331
420.Josh Skowronski, OF, Winthrop – 328
421.Sean Loggie, LHP, New Jersey HS – 327
422.Cole Hansen, C, Cal Baptist – 327
This one came down to Loggie having the higher peak ranking.
423.Jaden Bastian, OF, Florida – 326
424.Cameron Tarkenton, RHP, North Carolina HS – 325
425.Christian Chatterton, RHP, Auburn – 325
Tarkenton ranks higher on two lists, versus one for Chatterton.
426.Carson May, C, Kansas HS – 323
427.Parker Brosius, OF, Georgia Tech – 321
428.Brady Marconi, C, South Carolina – 319
429.Weston Moss, RHP, Texas A&M – 317
430.Logan Johnstone, OF, Vanderbilt – 316
431.Juriel Collazo, OF, Puerto Rico HS – 311
432.Harrison Ailshie, OF, North Carolina HS – 305
433.Andrew Wiggins, OF, NC State – 302
434.Garrett Luett, 3B, Iowa HS – 302
Wiggins ranked higher on three lists, while Luett only made the ESPN list.
435.Ben Cleary, SS, Santa Clara – 301
436.Colton Coates, SS, Louisiana Tech – 298
437.Julian Sabourin, RHP, Canada HS – 289
438.Taden Krogsgaard, RHP, California HS – 289
Sabourin ranked higher on two lists versus one for Krogsgaard.
439.Braylen Montgomery, OF, Louisiana HS – 288
440.Rintaro Sasaki, 1B, Stanford – 285
441.Kaleb Traylor, 3B, New York HS – 285
Sasaki ranked higher on three lists, while Traylor made just one.
442.Drew Whalen, RHP, Auburn – 284
443.Jax Robinson, C, Texas HS – 283
444.Kael Barney, 1B, Tennessee HS – 282
445.Isaiah Lane, SS, Hope International – 281
446.Michael Graziano, OF, Mercer – 281
Lane is ranked highest on two lists to one for Graziano.
447.Christian Coppola, RHP, Saint Joe’s – 280
448.Troy Southisene, SS, Nevada HS – 277
449.Brenden Olsen, OF, Michigan HS – 274
450.Daniel Kellis, RHP, Pennsylvania HS – 273
451.Brody Schumaker, 2B, California HS – 273
Kellis ranks higher on two lists to just one for Skip Schumaker’s son.
452.Trey Miller, SS, Mississippi HS – 268
453.Brady Neal, C, Alabama – 267
454.Adam Troy, RHP, USC – 267
Neal ranks higher on three lists, while Troy has the edge on one.
455.Lee Garris, 2B, Virginia HS – 266
456.Easton Kitura, 3B, Canada HS – 264
457.Amp Phillips, RHP, South Carolina -260
458.Nick Robert, RHP, Miami – 260
459.Alex Overbay, RHP, Arizona State – 260
Phillips ranks highest on two lists, while Overbay and Roberts each have one. Robert gets the second spot because he has the highest ranking.
460.Brady Murrietta, C, California HS – 258
461.Luke Ekdall, RHP, Texas JUCO – 257
462.Alex Philpott, RHP, South Carolina – 257
Ekdall claims the top spot by being higher on three lists, versus one for Philpott.
463.Cory Les, SS, Illinois HS – 255
464.Owen McMahan, LHP, Tennessee HS – 254
465.Tanner Mally, OF, Western Michigan – 253
466.TJ McQuillan, OF, Indiana HS – 246
467.Porter Buursema, RHP, Georgia Tech – 244
468.Gavin Michaels, SS, Illinois HS – 243
469.Mikey Bell, 3B, Gonzaga – 243
This tie goes to Michaels due to having the highest ranking.
470.Ned Frutchey, RHP, California JUCO – 242
471.Zane Shaw, RHP, Kansas HS – 242
472.Justin Lee, RHP, UCLA – 242
A three-way tie has Frutchey highest in two spots to one each for Lee and Shaw. Shaw gets the second spot due to the highest ranking.
473.Gunnar Alm, OF, North Carolina HS – 241
474.Max Kaufer, C, Wichita State – 236
475.Ben Tryon, 1B, Dallas Baptist – 234
476.Drew Smith, 3B, Oregon – 233
477.JP Robertson, RHP, Mississippi – 231
478.Tristan Bissetta, OF, Mississippi – 231
Robertson ranks higher on two lists, with one for Bissetta.
479.Diego Castellanos, OF, Saint Mary’s – 230
480.Deacon Avery, SS, Florida HS – 230
481.Brayden Harris, RHP, Florida HS -230
Castellanos ranks highest in two spots to one each for Avery and Harris. Avery has the highest ranking on any of the lists, so he claims the second spot.
482.Rob Czarniecki, OF, Indiana HS – 227
483.Hunter Elliott, LHP, Mississippi – 227
Czarniecki ranks higher on two lists, while Elliott has just one.
484.Hideki Prather, C, Cal – 221
485.Tommy Harrison, OF, Miami(OH) – 220
486.Dylan Alonso, RHP, Troy – 220
487.Michael Benzor, LHP, Dallas Baptist – 220
Each of these guys ranks highest on one list. So this comes down to Harrison having the highest ranking, Alonso having the second, and Benzor coming in third.
488.Yodelkis Quevedo, 3B, Florida HS – 218
489.Dillon Moss, C, California HS – 215
490.KJ Scobey, SS, South Carolina – 215
Moss ranks higher on two lists.
491.Wyatt Williams, RHP, Alabama HS – 213
492.Matthew Maxon, RHP, California HS – 212
493.Maika Niu, OF, Arkansas – 211
494.Eric Jeon, 2B, Stanford – 210
495.Ariston Veasey, RHP, Clemson – 208
496.Karson Reeder, RHP/1B, Texas HS – 208
There is no tie breaker here so I gave this tie to the guy who I personally ranked higher. Both players were each on one list, and they came in ranked at the same spot. Veasey ranked 293 on my list, while Reeder was 293 on the PG list.
Louisville outfielder Zion Rose | | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
The MLB Draft starts tomorrow (Saturday) at 12 noon CT. The Cubs have the 23 pick of the first round along with the 62nd, 75th, and 98th pick over the first three rounds. The 75th pick is a extra pick the Cubs received for losing Kyle Tucker.
After that, the draft continues with rounds 4 through 20 over Saturday and Sunday.
In case you are wondering, the Cubs’ “bonus pool,” or the money they have to give out in bonuses to picks in the first ten rounds, is $9,644,100. They can go up to five percent over that and just pay a fine. The front office does that every year. But if they go five percent or more over that figure, they lose next year’s first-round draft pick and no one wants to do that. So expect the Cubs to spend $10,126,304.99 on signing bonuses for the first 10 rounds.
Players taken after the 10th round can be given up to a $150k bonus with no penalty. Bonus money above that comes out of the bonus pool. Last year, the Cubs gave 14th round pick Kaemyn Franklin $200k and 17th-round pick Logan Poteet $180k.
If you want to follow along, MLB has some very convoluted coverage this year. Moving the start of the Draft to Saturday before the All-Star Game is a change from previous years when it started on Sunday nights. This means the draft will be happening as games are being played, which is not ideal.
The first 90 minutes of the Draft, from noon to 1:30 CT, will be on NBC and Peacock. This should only be the first 10 picks, so the Cubs’ first choice won’t happen here. Coverage then switches to MLB Network, MLB.com or MLB.tv for the rest of the first round and compensation picks. That’s supposed to last from 1:30 to 3:30 CT. Then they will pick rounds two through four from 3:30 to 6:45 CT on Saturday. That will be on-line coverage only.
On Sunday, they’re going to try to cram in rounds 5 through 20, starting at 10:30 a.m. CT and going until around 6:45 p.m. That will be a conference call, but you can listen in on MLB.com or MLB.tv.
So with all that nonsense out of the way, who will the Cubs take with their first-round pick? I’m going to confess that I don’t know and that Cubs scouting director Dan Kantrovitz doesn’t know at this point. He knows who the Cubs will take if they are available at 23, so don’t worry about that. But I don’t.
Just a warning. I’ve never had a lot of success guessing who the Cubs will take over the past 20 years. When the Cubs had the second overall pick in the draft in 2013 it was easy to predict Kris Bryant and I had a strong sense that they’d take Javier Báez two years earlier. Then I had a long streak of making poor predictions before I hit on back-to-back choices of Matt Shaw and Cam Smith. But before I got too cocky, Ethan Conrad wasn’t even on my radar last year.
But here’s a collection of possible picks for the Cubs in the first round with the 23rd pick. Some of them will be selected before pick number 23, but I think all of them have a chance to fall to 23.
Mason Edwards. LHP USC
There’s no player I’ve seen mocked to the Cubs at number 23 more than Mason Edwards, although some more recent reports have given him “helium,” meaning he’s rising on draft boards and may not be around when the Cubs pick at 23. There have been the possibility floated of either the Royals at 6 or the Angels at 12 trying to cut an underslot deal with Edwards if they don’t like anyone else available at that pick.
Edwards is a 6’2” lefty who led the nation in both strikeouts and strikeout percentage. His best pitch is his wipeout 80-85 mile per hour spike curve that gets a ton of swing and miss. He also has a very good changeup. He has an unusual “rock step” windup and a bit of a cross-body followthrough.
The biggest knock on Edwards is his fastball. While he has touched 95 with it occasionally, mostly it sits at 90-92 mph. Some organizations think they can improve Edwards’ fastball, but that might be tough to do without messing with the curve.
Edwards also struggles with control and walked a lot of batters at USC, although he did improve somewhat his control in 2026. It’s more of a yellow flag than a red one. He’s also very young for a college junior as he doesn’t turn 21 until three days after the Draft. Edwards appeals to a lot of teams because of his age.
Zion Rose OF Louisville
Keith Law of The Athletic has in particular linked the Cubs to Rose, which makes sense because he reminds me of a bigger and stronger and right-handed version of Kane Kepley, the Cubs’ second-round last year out of a different ACC school. That Rose is a Chicago native probably also figures in to the connection. His baseball talents had him leave Chicago for IMG Academy down in Florida, which is another school that the Cubs draft a lot of players out of.
Rose missed the first half of the 2026 college season with an ankle injury, but he came back with a vengeance, hitting .417/.491/.646 with six home runs and 24 steals in 36 games. Most of that was done against better ACC competition as well. Rose has a career batting average of .358 over three seasons at Louisville and also hit a productive .295 in the wooden bat Cape Cod League after his freshman season.
Rose is 6’1” with a quick swing and impressive hand-eye coordination. He makes a ton of gap-to-gap hard contact and is much faster than his 200 pound frame might indicate. Rose does have a tendency to chase pitches out of the zone, which are usually the kinds of pitches that he can make contact with but probably shouldn’t. But that tendency to swing and make contact keeps both his strikeout and walk rates low.
Rose is strong enough to hit for power, but his current swing path is more oriented towards ground balls and line drives. Barring some swing changes, his power is definitely below average for a left fielder, which is his natural position and probably the only one he should be playing in the major leagues. He doesn’t have the arm for right and despite having the speed for center, he hasn’t looked good out there in limited opportunities.
Aiden Robbins OF Texas
Robbins is a name I’ve seen connected to the Cubs more often lately and he is a player expected to go somewhere between the 20th and 30th overall pick. He had a very good performance in last summer’s Cape Cod League and the Cubs’ scouting metrics place a lot of emphasis on performance in the Cape.
Robbins’ is a big, 6’2” right-hander with easy power to all fields. When he really gets hold of one, he can send it a long way. I saw a highlight of him hitting one up onto the train tracks at Daikin Park. Last year with the Longhorns, he hit .333/.426/.696 with 24 home runs in 60 games. He hit 14 home runs in 26 games on the Cape.
Robbins tends to crush fastballs, but there’s a lot of swing-and-miss against breaking pitches. Robbins chases out of the zone too often. In college, his contact skills were good enough to drive a lot of those pitches, but he will have to make adjustments as a professional. In a perfect world, Robbins makes those adjustments and becomes a 30 HR a year outfielder. The downside is that he gets eaten up in the minors.
Robbins played center for Texas but while he’s not slow, he probably doesn’t have the pure foot speed to be an everyday center fielder in the majors. But he could be a pretty solid left or right fielder. His arm is good for left field and good enough for right.
Daniel Jackson C Georgia.
Jackson had a monster junior season with the Bulldogs, hitting .379/.473/.803 with 32 home runs in 67 games. That performance earned Jackson the Golden Spikes, Dick Howser and Buster Posey Awards.
The 6’2” right-handed-hitting Jackson has plus power to all fields right now and has a chance to grow into more. He’s also has above-average speed—not just “for a catcher” but for anyone. Jackson became the first Division I catcher in history to record a 25-25 season for home runs and stolen bases.
The good news on Jackson kind of ends there. There is a ton of swing and miss in his game. Jackson struck out 20.1 percent of his plate appearances which isn’t bad, but he struck out a lot more against better SEC pitching than he did in non-conference games. The Cubs also put a lot of stock in Cape Cod League performance and Jackson only hit .256 there last summer with a strikeout rate of 32 percent.
Beyond the very real questions about his hit tool, a lot of observers don’t think Jackson can stick behind the plate. He only moved there full-time as a junior and is still quite raw defensively. Many scouts think that he could learn the position in time, but there might be a Kyle Schwarber situation going on here. Would a team really want Jackson to spend three years or more in the minors learning to catch when his impact bat could help the major league team immediately? So a move to left field seems more likely than not. However, unlike Schwarber, Jackson has the foot speed to be at least average in left.
Cade Townsend RHP Mississippi
The 6’1” Townsend is a five-pitch pitcher with some impressive stuff. His four-seamer averages around 94-to-96 mph and has touched as high as 98. It is a big straight, however, and probably gets hit a bit more than it should. But his low-90s cutter, high-80s slider and low-80s curve ball have good spin rates and movement. All four pitches grade out as above-average and he also has a solid changeup, giving him a fifth pitch and a good option against left handers.
Townsend doesn’t have the most fluid pitching motion and that has led to control problems, although he did improve in throwing strikes this past season. But he also missed a start with shoulder soreness in March and while he did come back just fine, there are some medical concerns surrounding him.
Taylor Rabe RHP Mississippi
If the Cubs think Townsend’s upside is a little low and are willing to take a bigger gamble for more upside, his teammate Taylor Rabe may be more their style. Rabe has a plus fastball that sits 96-97 mph and has been known to touch 100. The fastball may not have as much movement on it as you’d like, but he really does locate it well and Rabe has very good control.
Rabe contrasts that four-seamer with a hard low-90s cutter that gets a lot of swings and misses. He also has a mid-80s slider that is a work-in-progress but Rabe did have more success with it late in the season. Rabe’s changeup is also under construction and he currently only throws it to left-handed hitters.
Despite his 6’5” frame, Rabe has a fairly simple delivery that he repeats well. He dominates the strike zone, striking out 105 batters and walking only 15 last year over 76 innings.
Normally a power pitcher with good control would be long gone by pick 23, but Rabe has an injury history. He missed all of his freshman season and most of his sophomore season with Tommy John surgery. He came back strong this year, but his track record should scare a lot of teams off. There’s a wide range of possible outcomes for Rabe, from ace starter to reliever to someone who can’t stay healthy enough to pitch regularly in the majors.
Hunter Dietz LHP Arkansas
Dietz is another big upside/big injury risk pitcher. The huge (6’6”, 235) lefty managed to pitch only 1.2 innings total over his first two seasons at Arkansas because of a stress fracture in his elbow that required surgery. But he bounced back healthy his junior year and struck out 131 batters over 85.2 innings. His strikeout rate was an impressive 36.2 percent and his walk rate was a solid 8.6 percent.
Dietz has a plus fastball that sits 94-96 mph that can touch 98 with very good movement. Dietz matches that with a power cutter/slider that’s in the upper-80s and also grades out as plus. Dietz also has a more conventional mid-80s slider and a low-80s curve with a two-plane break.
Again, Dietz is a player who would likely be one of the top-ten picks in the draft were it not for his injury history. If he stays healthy as a pro, a mid-rotation starter might be the most likely outcome with the possibility of even more.
AJ Gracia OF Virginia
The Cubs love guys with good strike zone judgement and good contact rates and that describes Gracia to a T. The 6’3”, 195 left-handed hitter hit .354 at Virginia last year with a .489 OBP and 14 home runs. He walked 47 times compared to just 38 strikeouts, a sign of his selectivity and bat-to-ball skills.
Gracia has decent power, but he seemingly trades contact for some of that power. There are some observers who feel that Gracia could add some more strength and hit the ball harder for more power in the future.
Gracia’s speed and arm are below average, so he’ll probably be limited to left field. The ceiling on Gracia isn’t high, but he has a solid chance to be an everyday left fielder with solid on-base and power numbers.
Some of these players will be taken before the Cubs’ first pick, but I’m fairly confident several of them will still be available at 23. Some other players whom the Cubs might pounce on if they somehow fall to 23 are Coastal Carolina RHP Cameron Flukey, Texas A&M second baseman Chris Hacopian and Florida right-hander Liam Peterson. I think all three of them will be gone by pick 23, but it’s something to keep an eye on.
The Philadelphia Phillies (52-42) close out the first half of their season with a three-game series at Comerica Park tonight against the Detroit Tigers (43-50).
The Phillies arrive in Detroit after taking two of three in Cincinnati against the Reds including yesterday’s finale. Jesús Luzardo was dominant last night, striking out 11 over seven scoreless innings, and Philadelphia won 1-0, scratching across the game's lone run in the eighth inning on a Justin Crawford single that scored pinch runner Derek Hill. The win keeps the Phillies tied for second in the NL East with the Marlins, three games behind the Atlanta Braves.
Detroit also enters the weekend with a little momentum pushing their current winning streak to five following a sweep of the A’s. Yesterday they knocked off the Athletics, 4-1. Framber Valdez was elite allowing just three hits and a single run while striking out nine over seven innings. Zach McKinstry, Eduardo Valencia, and Jake Rogers each went yard for the Tigers to account for their offense in the series finale. Detroit outscored the A’s 16-4 in the series and have now won eight of their last ten to pull within 4.5 games of first in the AL Central and 3.5 of the final Wild Card spot.
Tonight's pitching matchup features right-handers Aaron Nola (3-6, 5.87 ERA) and Jack Flaherty (2-8, 4.60 ERA). The veteran Nola is the weak link on Philly’s elite staff. His numbers are disappointing to date this season, but his most recent outing offers hope. On July 5 in Kansas City, Nola worked seven innings, allowing three runs on seven hits while striking out seven and walking none. He threw 98 pitches and completed seven innings for the first time since September of last season. After a dreadful first couple of months this season, Flaherty has been good. Since June 1, he has thrown 23.2 innings over five starts and allowed just five earned runs. Yes, the Tigers need more length from him, but the production has been really good for the last near six weeks. Flaherty's most recent start came on July 4 against Texas, when he turned in 5.2 scoreless innings, allowing just three hits while striking out five and walking none in a 3-0 Tigers victory.
Lets dive into tonight’s matchup and find a sweat or two.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.
Game Details and How to Watch: Phillies vs. Tigers
Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.
The Latest Odds: Phillies vs. Tigers
The latest odds as of Friday courtesy of DraftKings:
Moneyline: Philadelphia Phillies (+104), Detroit Tigers (-125)
Spread: Phillies +1.5 (-194), Tigers -1.5 (+159)
Total: 9.0 runs
Probable Starting Pitchers and their Stats: Phillies vs. Tigers for July 10
Phillies: Aaron Nola Season Totals: 92.0 IP, 3-6, 5.87 ERA, 1.46 WHIP, 94K, 29 BB
Tigers: Jack Flaherty Season Totals: 76.1 IP, 2-8, 4.60 ERA, 1.45 WHIP, 92K, 37 BB
Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Phillies vs. Tigers
Matt Vierling is 4-11 (.364) in his career against Jesus Luzardo
Kyle Schwarber is 2-26 (.077) in his career against Jack Flaherty
Trea Turner is 1-14 (.071) in his career against Flaherty
Riley Greene was 2-11 in the series against the A’s
Zach McKinstry is 3-13 over his last 4 games
Brandon Marsh was 3-8 over the last 2 games against the Reds
Bryce Harper is 0-16 over his last 5 games with 5 BBs and 8 Ks
Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!
Top Betting Trends & Insights: Phillies vs. Tigers
The Tigers are 49-44 on the Run Line this season
The Phillies are an MLB-worst 35-59 on the Run Line this season
The OVER has cashed 40 times in Philadelphia’s 94 games this season (40-49-5)
The OVER has cashed 40 times in Detroit’s 93 games this season (40-49-4)
Expert picks & predictions: Phillies vs. Tigers
Rotoworld Bet Best Bet
Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.
Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.
Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s game between the Phillies and the Tigers:
Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Tigers on the Run Line.
Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total UNDER 9.0
Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:
As the Astros approach the all-star break, there are a few positions that are potentially intriguing and could spell the difference between sneaking into the playoffs and falling short. Catching is one of those positions. There can be no doubt that Yainer Diaz has disappointed up to this point, but could a hot second half make a bigger difference? Plus, there is a significant difference between league wide expectations and positional expectations.
One of the more fascinating debates in baseball is the notion of how one chooses the MVP. Last season, there was a significant debate between Cal Raleigh and Aaron Judge. By most conventional and sabermetric yardsticks, Judge was the better player and deserving of the award. However, even if jettison WAR and other similar indicators, there is a compelling argument that Raleigh was extremely productive at a position where it is rare to get that kind of production.
My favorite stat when it comes to production is bases per out. Simply put, the out is the blood currency of the sport. Each team gets 27 of them and the goal is cause as much damage as you can for every out you generate. This is why sacrificing has gone by the wayside. It is one thing to look at league averages and those can be very instructive, but league averages don’t tell the whole story.
When I compare players for the Hall of Fame, I always look at only the position. It makes no sense to compare a catcher with a first baseman. The demands of the position are different and the comparative performances are different. I ran through the semi-regular to regular catchers in the American League. In order to qualify you had to have at least 120 outs. That usually corresponds to about 200 plate appearances. Comparing the likes of Yainer Diaz and Christian Vazquez to the league average is depressing.
The major league average bases per out sits at .676 through the last weekend. A few days of numbers aren;t going to change that much once you are 90 games into the season. We can look at both catchers and come away underwhelmed when looking at the big league average. Of course, the same would be true for most of the AL catchers. Below is a table of the catchers in the AL minus Diaz and Vazquez. What we are essentially looking for is a positional mean and median.
This is a reminder that bases per out is calculated by adding total bases, walks, stolen bases, and hit by pitches and dividing it into total outs. I love this stat because it encompasses everything a player does offensively into one number. It is more accurate than OPS and actually tracks pretty well with rOBA and wOBA. Below is a look at the AL catching universe through the weekend.
Outs
TB
BB
SB
HBP
BPO
Dillon Dingler
243
163
23
0
7
.794
Shea Langeliers
249
163
28
2
4
.791
Samuel Basallo
193
117
25
0
0
.736
Adley Rutschman
178
101
24
0
1
.708
Carter Jensen
224
127
27
1
1
.696
Victor Caratini
172
78
25
0
9
.651
Kyle Higoshiako
120
49
17
0
1
.558
Cal Raleigh
192
68
31
2
0
.526
Logan O’Hoppe
154
64
14
0
3
.526
Nick Fortes
152
67
5
0
7
.520
Salvador Perez
273
106
12
0
6
.454
Carlos Narvaez
130
40
11
1
3
.423
Austin Wells
156
41
23
1
0
.417
Patrick Bailey
142
42
12
2
0
.394
Edgae Quero
134
35
12
1
3
.381
Mean
2712
1261
289
10
45
.592
Median
164
68
20
1
2
.526
Remember, we are looking at regular catchers in the American League minus Diaz and Vazquez. We do that to give us an idea of what the competitors are doing and to look at something to shoot for. If you are adept at math, you will notice that the median row does not add up. Somehow, the components of bases per out do not equal what the players are actually doing. The mathematical median of the row would actually equal .5548 or .555 rounded to the thousands place.
What does this mean effectively? In short, there are five really good offensive catchers that are driving the numerical average up. If you are looking for the actual 8th or 9th best catcher here (there are 16 in the table) then you would get your .526 mark. What that means is that asking a catcher to be overall league average is a hard ask. Victor Caratini is the sixth best offensive catcher in the AL and he doesn’t come particularly close to the overall major league average. So, when we look at the numbers for Diaz and Vazquez below (through Wednesday’s game) we need to look at their numbers through that context.
Outs
TB
BB
SB
HBP
BPO
Yainer Diaz
127
61
5
0
1
.528
Christian Vazquez
137
55
12
1
0
.496
Diaz is a statistical enigma wrapped in a riddle. Conventional wisdom and simple mathematics would tell us these numbers are simply not good. They are not good compared to MLB norms and they are not good for him historically. However, recent play and the table above tells us something different. Officially, he is right in line with the median catchers in the American League. Obviously, that would look different in a MLB universe and all numbers have their caveats and exceptions. We could look at his total career numbers and look at what expectations he had coming into the season.
Outs
TB
BB
SB
HBP
BPO
Yainer Diaz Career
1267
738
61
3
10
.641
The 64,000 dollar question is whether Diaz can ever be this catcher again. My guess is no. The 2023 power numbers are driving this up and he hasn’t been THAT Diaz since. He would obviously need to become THAT Diaz again for his 2026 numbers to approach his career average. The more logical question is whether he could a .600 guy from this day forward. That seems like a doable thing and it could be a huge key at the bottom of the order.
Keep in mind that the Astros wouldn’t be asking Diaz to be an average big league hitter. They would be asking him to be an average offensive catcher. Those are two entirely different things. There are inevitable questions about whether he is a long-term solution at the position. Given his defensive struggles and the inability to draw walks the answer is likely no. Yet, when you are looking for players that haven’t performed well that could in the second half, he is at the top of the list.
The next logical question is how the time share between Diaz and Vazquez should work. Offensive production is only part of the equation. Diaz currently sits at -6 defensive runs saved and -5 in fielding run value. Vazquez sits at +5 defensive runs saved and +2 fielding run value. So, they are separated by approximately one win with the glove. We could also break down catcher ERA and reach the same conclusion. Without getting into commentary on the manager, this decision will be one of the keys after the all-star break.
ARLINGTON, TEXAS - JULY 9: Wyatt Langford #36 of the Texas Rangers celebrates after hitting a walk-off single in the bottom of the ninth inning to win the game over the Los Angeles Angels at Globe Life Field on July 9, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Ron Jenkins/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Rangers 7, Angels 6
This win — more exciting than it has to be.
This should have been a blowout, based on the first two-thirds of the game.
Texas jumped on Reid Detmers early. Nathan Eovaldi was cruising. It was 6-1 after six innings, and you felt like it should’ve been a bigger margin than that.
Look, let’s not talk about the top of the seventh, okay? Let’s pretend it didn’t happen. Or ignore it.
Because ultimately the Rangers won. And the rest of the game was quite magnificent.
For six innings, Nathan Eovaldi was mowing fools down.
Eovaldi only allowed one run in the first six innings, and even that shouldn’t have happened. After a Wade Meckler single, Zach Neto hit a ball hard down to third that Josh Jung couldn’t handle. It wasn’t an easy play, but it was a makeable play, and could’ve been a double play. Jung had the ball carom off his glove, though, for a single, and when the dust settled, Meckler was at third, and Neto had advanced to second on the throw to third.
Still, damage limited. Just one run scored. Eovaldi was doing work.
Eovaldi fanned 10 batters in the game, allowing him to pass Ken Holtzman, Jim Maloney, and Jose Rijo on the all-time strikeouts list. He’s now at #196 all time, with Hoyt Wilhelm, Scott Sanderson and Claude Osteen in his sights.
He also generated 23 swings and misses, 10 of which came on his splitter, but 9 of which came on his curveball, which was working extremely well.
So let’s just pretend that he left the game after the sixth. Ignore the catcher’s interference, the walk, and the single to start the seventh that resulted in more runs marring his line.
And let’s also pretend Peyton Gray was home sick or something. Ditto Tyler Alexander. Let’s move on from their participate in that seventh inning.
Let’s instead praise the work of Jacob Latz, who recorded outs 22 through 26 of the game for the Rangers. Let’s praise Cole Winn, brought in to face Jo Adell with two on and two out in the ninth, after an 11 pitch walk of Vaughn Grissom by Latz pushed his pitch count north of 40.
I’m happy to see Adell leave town, by the way. He had a pair of hits on Tuesday, a pair of homers on Wednesday, had a pinch hit single in that seventh inning we won’t speak of to tie the game, and crushed a line drive off of Winn that, fortunately, was right at Evan Carter.
Brandon Nimmo and his non-existent platoon splits got things started for Texas against Detmers with a weird, opposite-field, line drive home run that seemed like it would be a double but just kept carrying. A Josh Jung double and Jake Burger single made it 2-0.
Its nice to be the team that scores multiple runs in the first, rather than being the team that is giving up multiple runs in the first.
Ezequiel Duran added a two run homer in the third. Justin Foscue followed with a solo shot in the fourth, then chipped in a sixth inning RBI ground rule double that would have accounted for two RBIs had the ball not bounded into the stands. The Shed, it is playing less pitcher-friendly of late.
Justin Foscue is now slashing .367/.466/.796 off of lefties this season. Amazing!
Not only is Justin Foscue rocking a .398 wOBA this season, he’s got a .371 xwOBA that indicates its not all just random variation and luck dragons.
Its still a small sample — Foscue has 113 plate appearances, total, for the Rangers this year — but it is encouraging and makes me hopeful the righthanded platoon bat the Rangers have been longing for for so long may have arrived.
This game was also the return of Wyatt Langford, back off the injured list, starting at DH, and spending the bulk of the game making fans think he should’ve stayed on the i.l. for another day or two, as he was hitless with three strikeouts when he came up to the plate in the ninth inning for his fifth plate appearance of the night.
Alejandro Osuna had singled to start the inning. Offensive catalyst Nicky Lopez, pinch hitting for Foscue, bunted him over to second.
And Wyatt Langford, in his return to action, launched a ball to left field that went off the base of the fence. He only gets credit for a single, rather than a double, because Osuna was the winning run, but he’ll take that tradeoff, I’m thinking.
A game that felt like it was going to be given away late, but that instead resulted in a double-you. The Rangers back in first place by a half game. I’m feeling fine.
Nathan Eovaldi topped out at 97.9 mph with his fastball, averaging 95.7 mph, a full 1.1 mph over his season average. Peyton Gray hit 93.6 mph with his fastball. Tyler Alexander topped out at 92.8 mph with his fastball. Jacob Latz’s fastball touched 96.8 mph. Cole Winn threw one fastball at 96.6 mph.
Jake Burger had a 112.6 mph fly out, a 105.5 mph fly out, and a 101.3 mph single. Josh Jung had a 106.7 mph fly out, a 106.7 mph double and a 102.5 mph fly out.. Brandon Nimmo had a 106.0 mph ground out, a 104.4 mph homer and a 104.2 mph single. Alejandro Osuna had a 104.5 mph single. Justin Foscue had a 104.0 mph home run. Ezequiel Duran had a 104.0 mph home run. Kyle Higashioka had a 101.3 mph single.
Three games against Houston, and then the All Star Break.
Vahn Lackey would bring an elite defensive reputation and advanced bat to the White Sox if selected No. 1 overall in the 2026 MLB draft. | (Ken Ruinard /USA Today Network )
The White Sox kick off the 2026 MLB draft by making the No. 1 overall selection at noon CT on Saturday, and will choose among three plum prospects: UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky, Georgia Tech catcher Vahn Lackey and shortstop Grady Emerson from Fort Worth Christian (Texas) H.S. We’re digging deeper into all three players in anticipation of the third No. 1 overall pick in White Sox history.
Vahn Lackey wasn’t even close to being the favorite to go No. 1 when the spring began. Four months later, after one of the best seasons in college baseball, the Georgia Tech catcher capped one of the biggest rises in the 2026 draft. That’s placed him on the White Sox radar, with word going around that he is the preference of the White Sox brain trust in the front office.
Chicago entered draft day linked to several legitimate candidates for the top pick, and bucking the shortstop trend and grabbing Lackey lands it on the player the team believes could make the biggest long-term impact at one of baseball’s most demanding positions. Lackey combines an advanced offensive approach, standout defense behind the plate and uncommon athleticism, giving Chicago another premium talent to build around.
Taking a catcher with the first overall pick isn’t a move organizations make lightly. But when teams identify the right one, the payoff can be enormous. That’s exactly how the White Sox see Lackey — a player capable of changing a franchise at one of baseball’s most valuable positions.
For an organization that has prioritized athleticism, premium defensive positions, and high baseball IQ throughout its rebuild, the selection would make perfect sense. The White Sox wouldn’t be drafting a mere catcher, but one of the best all-around athletes in the class. Despite spending his collegiate career behind the plate, many evaluators believe Lackey has the athleticism to play elsewhere if needed. To wit, he not only routinely fields balls throughout the infield flawlessly in pregame drills and shags flies in the outfield, but played all eight positions besides pitcher in a March 10 game against West Georgia. Oh, and he didn’t lay his bat down while picking a bunch of different fielding gloves up on that day, as he went 3-for-4 with a double, triple and homer in the win.
Lackey’s path to becoming the nation’s top catcher wasn’t a typical one. He didn’t receive his first Division I scholarship offer until his senior year of high school, after a late growth spurt transformed both his body and his long-term outlook. That development continued at Georgia Tech, where he had a mediocre freshman season but quickly established himself as one of college baseball’s premier backstops from there. By entering the draft after his junior season, Lackey will become the fifth Georgia Tech catcher selected in the first round.
The 6´2´´, 215-pound junior put together a remarkable 2026 season, slashing .397/.519/.772 with a 1.291 OPS, 20 home runs and 78 RBIs, with 50 walks against just 38 strikeouts. He’s also got the wheels of a middle infielder, swiping 15-of-16 bases in 2026 (and 34-of-38 in his college career).
What sets Lackey apart isn’t one standout trait — it’s the complete package. MLB Pipeline graded his hit, power, and arm as 60-grade tools, resulting in a 60 overall grade, and FanGraphs sees his cannon as a 70 grade. Lackey controls the strike zone, drives the baseball with authority and continues to add power without sacrificing the disciplined approach that made him one of the NCAA’s best hitters in 2026. If that profile sounds familiar, it should. It’s become the blueprint for the type of player GM Chris Getz and his front office have prioritized throughout the rebuild.
Defensively, Lackey has developed into one of college baseball’s premier catchers. He paired a .993 fielding percentage with Atlantic Coast Conference Defensive Player of the Year honors and the Johnny Bench Award for catching, while earning praise from scouts for his receiving, leadership, game management and above-average arm. It’s the type of defensive foundation the White Sox value as they continue shaping their roster.
Lackey would join an emerging young core that already includes Colson Montgomery, Kyle Teel, Braden Montgomery, Noah Schultz and Grant Taylor, giving Chicago another premium talent to build around. Despite the White Sox having two blue-chip catchers on the 40-man roster in Kyle Teel and Edgar Quero, the franchise doesn’t have a true defensive presence behind the plate and could well use a fast-moving Lackey in the majors ASAP.
Although Lackey is foregoing his senior season to begin his professional career, catchers traditionally require more development time than players at other positions because of the demands behind the plate. Even so, his advanced offensive approach, defensive polish and athleticism have some evaluators believing he could move through the White Sox system faster than the typical college catcher.
Lackey would arrive in Chicago with one of the most complete résumés in the 2026 draft class. If his all-around game translates to professional baseball, he could storm to the fore as the de facto captain of the next great White Sox team.
Carson Benge has reached base safely in 20 of his last 21 games, including multi-hit games in each of his last four. During this 21-game span, Benge is hitting .322/.385/.517 with four homers, three doubles, and one triple in 96 plate appearances
A.J. Ewing is hitting .310/.389/.583 (.973 OPS) with six homers, five doubles, 14 runs scored, and 17 RBI in 95 plate appearances over his last 24 games
Juan Soto is leading the National League in OBP (.414), slugging percentage (.579), and OPS+ (175)
Luke Weaver hasn't allowed an earned run since April 30. In 26.0 innings over 24 appearances since then, he has given up just 11 hits while walking seven and striking out 3
Today's Lineups
RED SOX
METS
Anthony Seigler, 2B
A.J. Ewing, CF
Ceddanne Rafaela, CF
Juan Soto, LF
Wilyer Abreu, RF
Francisco Lindor, SS
Romy Gonzalez, 1B
Carson Benge, RF
Masataka Yoshida, DH
Jorge Polanco, DH
Caleb Durbin, 3B
Jared Young, 1B
Jared Duran, LF
Francisco Alvarez, C
Connor Wong, C
Brett Baty, 3B
Tsung-Che Cheng, SS
Zack Short, 2B
Sonny Gray, SP
Nolan McLean, SP
How can I watch Mets vs. Red Sox online?
To watch Mets games online via Apple TV+ and MLB's "Friday Night Baseball," you will need a subscription to Apple TV+. This will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet, or via the Apple TV app.
PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - MARCH 15, 2024: Yohandy Morales #35 of the Washington Nationals warms up prior to a spring training Spring Breakout game against the New York Mets at Clover Park on March 15, 2024 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
If you have been following the Nats farm system at all this season, you would know Yohandy Morales is having a monster year. The corner infielder is hitting .303 with 21 homers and a .930 OPS on the season in AAA. He has been one of the most productive hitters in the system, but Paul Toboni has been hesitant to call him up.
When you look at some of the underlying data, Toboni’s reasons make some sense. Morales has a very low in zone contact rate and was hitting the ball on the ground over 50% of the time for most of the season. Despite the big surface level stats, that profile is tough to make work in the MLB.
For those wondering why we haven’t seen a Yohandy Morales callup, here are the only 2 MLB hitters with a lower Z-Contact rate than YoYo in 2026:
M. Murakami (157 wRC+, 16% PullAir) R. Devers (92 wRC+, 10.2% PullAir)
However, I think the time is right for Morales to get the call to the big leagues. Morales has been striking out less and elevating the ball more lately. As I said, his GB rate has been over 50% for most of the season, but that is starting to come down. Right now, his season GB rate is 49.3%. I remember checking a couple months ago, and that number was closer to 54%.
Morales is also striking out a lot less so far in July. He only has 6 strikeouts in 30 at bats so far this month. It is a small sample, but it really does feel like Morales is starting to make the changes necessary for him to get a big league call-up.
One thing that Morales has done in July that is not a new phenomenon is mash homers. He already has four homers this month, including a two homer game the other day. Morales has the most homers of any Nats prospect, and just has highly impressive raw power.
— Nationals Player Development (@Nats_PlayerDev) July 8, 2026
Morales has high end power to all fields. Despite not pulling the ball in the air that much, he is still able to access his pop. The 6’3 225 pound slugger consistently posts excellent exit velocities. With Morales getting the ball off the ground more, this recent power surge makes a ton of sense.
With these improvements to his process, the time is right for a call up. There is not an everyday role for Morales, but I think there are ways to create regular enough playing time. Calling up Morales and sending down Andres Chaparro just feels like a pretty straightforward move right now.
Yohandy Morales homered for the second time in the game. Can we please call him up. I mostly get the reasons why they aren’t but he would just be a monster upgrade on Chaparro in that role and could get some 3B and DH reps too
I get that the front office will want Morales to be playing more than Chaparro has, but it is not like Morales is some top 50 prospect who needs everyday reps. He can be Luis Garcia Jr’s platoon partner while also getting some starts at third base and DH every once in a while.
Blake Butera has shown he can get creative to give guys playing time. He can do the same for Morales. Right now Andres Chaparro and his .157 batting average stick out like a sore thumb. Chaparro is getting pinch hit opportunities in big spots for the red hot Garcia and just not coming through.
I understand that Garcia is not great against lefties, but despite his reputation as a lefty masher, Chaparro has not hit them well either. It would be much easier to stomach taking Garcia out of games if Morales was the guy pinch hitting instead.
There is not a whole lot that Morales needs to prove at the AAA level. One potential reason they might be holding off on this move is that they would have to find a 40-man roster spot for Morales. However, the slugger is Rule-5 eligible this offseason, so they will have to put him on the 40-man soon anyways. There is also no shortage of potential DFA candidates on this roster.
With how Morales has hit all season, it only feels right to give him an opportunity. His surface level numbers are outstanding, and now he is improving some of the underlying stuff that may have been holding him back. It is time for Paul Toboni to give Yohandy Morales a shot, and I hope it happens as soon as possible. The young man has earned it in every possible way.
FORT WORTH, TX - JULY 14: Cam Caminiti takes the stage after being drafted by the Atlanta Braves with the 24th pick of the first round during the 2024 MLB Draft presented by Nike at Cowtown Coliseum on Sunday, July 14, 2024 in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Seriously, does anyone think this is weird? When the Draft was moved to align with the All-Star Break, it seemed like a no-brainer to actually put the draft during the All-Star Break. Instead, this weekend, the Draft will begin while teams are still playing their final games heading into the Break. It’s just so weird, like cannibalizing your own viewership. I guess it’s somewhat consistent with MLB’s overall contempt for the regular season, and the idea that no one is going to revolt in terms of local viewership just because a couple of games coincide with something else… but it still feels suboptimal.
Like, the Draft itself is from 1pm to 7:45 pm ET on Saturday, and from 11:30am to 7:30 pm ET on Sunday. You could have everyone play day games and push it into the night. Or, more duh-ingly, just push it into Monday and Tuesday. I understand that MLB might want to have the Draft be more of a hoopla/spectacle like the drafts in other sports, but come on: Day 1 will feature 135 picks in nearly seven hours, a rate of about 20 picks an hour. One pick every three minutes is an awful, interminable “pace of play” as far as viewership goes, and the fact that it’s going four rounds and teams can play underslot games really dents the wide audience viewing interest of it all. If you want to hype up the first few picks, start the Saturday games earlier, put Round 1 on weekend primetime and let the rest go after, trailing into the night. Day 2 is more rapid-fire but also not much to watch live, so they could even put Day 1 on Sunday where all games are over before evening primetime anyway, and burn off Day 2 when there are no games.
In the end, this doesn’t matter, it’s just… weird. I guess like, “Still trying to make the All-Star Game a thing in 2026,” weird, so that tracks.
The wait is almost over, as Philadelphia is set to host the 96th edition of the MLB All-Star game on Tuesday. July 14th. It will be the fifth time the City of Brotherly Love has played host to the event and the first time since 1996 when the game was held at Veteran’s Stadium. The actual All-Star Game serves as a wrap-up to an almost weeks’ worth of festivities celebrating baseball. First, let’s break down the schedule for All-Star weekend before we dive into how the Phillies themselves will factor into everything taking place.
What’s the schedule?
Friday, July 10th: HBCU Swingman Classic presented by USA Baseball
This game that features the best Division-1 college athletes from Historically Black Colleges and Universities will be the first to take place at Citizens Bank Park this weekend. It will begin at 7 pm and will be broadcast live on MLB.com and MLB Network.
Saturday, July 11th-Tuesday, July 14th: Capital One All-Star Village
This is a four-day event that will be held at the Pennsylvania Convention Center where fans can come together and celebrate baseball with legends meet-and-greets, interactive exhibits, contests, and samplings of ballpark concessions.
Saturday, July 11th: 2026 MLB Draft
Also at the PA Convention Center, the first few rounds of the MLB Draft will take place starting at 1 pm and will be broadcast live on NBC and Peacock.
Sunday, July 12th: All-Star Sunday featuring the MLB All-Star Futures Game and the MLBx All-Star 3-on-3
Sunday will prove to be a busy day, as the Futures Game featuring the top prospects from across the minor leagues will kick off the day at noon at Citizens Bank Park. then following the conclusion of that game, the new 3-on-3 baseball competition will begin, featuring Phillies legends Jimmy Rollins, Shane Victorino, and Ryan Howard, AUSL All-Stars, and other Philadelphia athletes from past and present including DeVonta Smith and Terell Owens.
Monday, July 13th: Home Run Derby
The first of the two marquee All-Star events will take place Monday night, as eight sluggers from around baseball will look to capture the title of derby champion as the rules shift back to the old swing-based format with no clock. The derby will begin at 8pm and will be the first to be broadcast live on Netflix.
Tuesday, July 14th: 96th MLB All-Star Game
Finally, the All-Star game itself will conclude the celebration as the NL looks to repeat as winners over the AL after last season’s thrilling swing-off in extra innings to decide a winner. The All-Stars will arrive to Independence Mall at 2pm for the red carpet before the game begins at 8pm at Citizens Bank Park
Who are the Phillies’ All-Stars?
The hometown team will be well represented this year, as the Phillies will be sending six of their players to represent them on their own field.
Brandon Marsh
Marsh has been arguably the Phillies’ most consistent hitter on the season, as he has taken the leap from solid platoon player into everyday All-Star. His meteoric rise dates back to last season after he returned from injury following a brutal month of April where he hit .095 across 16 games. Since returning from a rehab assignment on May 3rd of last year, Marsh has a batting line of .304/.350/.489 in 198 games entering Thursday. This season, he is hitting .305 and is sixth in batting average for the National League. He’s been rewarded for his consistently excellent performance with his first career All-Star selection, receiving enough votes to where he will be in the outfield in the NL’s starting lineup when they take the field.
Jhoan Duran
Speaking of first time All-Stars, Marsh will be joined in that regard by his teammate Jhoan Duran. The Phillies closer has been an anchor in an otherwise shaky bullpen this season with a 1.47 ERA and 22 saves, including 16 straight saves to begin his season. Duran seems a lock to appear in the game at some point, as MLB will no doubt want to feature his electrifying entrance out of the bullpen to a national audience.
Cristopher Sánchez
Sánchez was one of the biggest snubs from the All-Star roster last season, and now he’s a candidate to start the game for the NL on his home mound. The lefty already set the Major League record for the longest scoreless streak ever by a left-handed pitcher back in May when he tossed 50.2 consecutive scoreless innings. It will be the second career All-Star nod for Sánchez with his first coming in 2024.
Jesús Luzardo
Luzardo was a bit of a surprise when he was named as a replacement for Jacob Misiorowski, but he also isn’t entirely undeserving of his first All-Star nod. His traditional numbers may not seem flashy, as Luzardo was 7-4 with a 3.75 ERA at the time he was named to the roster. But if you dig deeper, Luzardo has been better than those numbers may suggest. His 2.9 fWAR has him third behind Sánchez and Misiorowski for the highest among while his 28.6% strikeout rate is seventh best.
Kyle Schwarber
The only thing keeping Schwarber from being a starter in the game like Marsh is that he unfortunately plays the same position (DH) as Shohei Ohtani. Nevertheless, the current MLB home run leader will make his third All-Star appearance with the Phillies and fourth overall. Fresh off of a new five year, $150M extension signed with the Phillies in free agency, Schwarber has continued to cement himself as one of if not the best power hitters in the game, as he is on pace for a second straight season with 50+ home runs. Don’t forget, he was also named All-Star Game MVP last season when he won the first ever swing-off to decide the result of an All-Star Game.
Bryce Harper
The face of the Phillies franchise will make his third All-Star appearance as a Phillie and his ninth overall after being added to the roster with the commissioner’s “legend” pick. However, Harper had a strong case to make the team on his own merit despite finishing third in the voting among NL first baseman, as his .880 OPS entering play on Thursday is tied for the second best among all NL first basemen and his 20 home runs is also second. In any case, Harper will look to live up to his “Showman” reputation once again at All-Star week in his home ballpark like he did when he won the 2018 Home Run Derby at Nationals Park.
Will the Phillies have anyone in the Home Run Derby?
Outside of the Phillies, we know for sure at least five other participants as of this writing. They will be Junior Caminero of the Rays, Ben Rice of the Yankees, Willson Contreras of the Red Sox, Jac Caglianone of the Royals, and Jordan Walker of the Cardinals.
Will the Phillies have any prospects in the Futures Game?
In fact, they’ll have two, as Gage Wood of the Reading Fightin’ Phils and Wen-Hui Pan of the Jersey Shore Blue Claws will represent the Phillies organization at the Futures Game. Wood was the Phillies first round pick (26th) in the 2025 draft, and the former Arkansas Razorback who threw a 19-strikeout no-hitter in the College World Series has continued to thrive in his professional career. Coming into the season as the Phillies #5 prospect and 69th prospect overall according to Baseball America, the right hander started the year at Class-A Clearwater but quickly made the jump to Double-A Reading after posting a 3.42 ERA in eight starts with 40 strikeouts in 26.1 innings.
Pan meanwhile was an international prospect signing by the Phillies out of Taiwan in 2023 as a 20-year-old. The 6’3, 220-pound right hander who profiles as a reliever excelled at Low-A Clearwater in his first real taste of professional ball and ended the year with a promotion to High-A Jersey Shore. The ensuing year was not as kind to Pan, as injuries limited him to just 29.1 total innings in 2024 before ultimately undergoing Tommy John surgery in November that cost him all of 2025. But he has rebounded in 2026, working his way to Double-A after rehabbing with Clearwater and Jersey Shore.
In addition to those two players, the Phillies will also be represented in both dugouts, as former Phillies greats and World Series champions Shane Victorino and Larry Bowa have been selected as managers for the Futures Game.
What will the Phillies do in the draft?
This year the Phillies first selection will be 36th overall, as they will incur a 10-pick penalty from their original spot (26th) for exceeding the second Competitive Balance Tax Threshold.
They had a bit of an unorthodox method in last year’s draft, as they selected pitchers with their first eight picks and 14 of their 20 selections overall. It’s a safe bet that they may lean heavier onto the hitting side this year, but really, they should have no preferences. Drafting for need in MLB is foolhardy with the timelines for prospects, but it would be especially foolish from a Phillies standpoint to draft anything other than best player available.
Baseball America has ranked the Phillies with the second worst farm system in their latest updated rankings, placing them 29th with Wood (69th) and the injured Aidan Miller (80th) as their highest Top 100 prospects. Philadelphia is almost barren of anything resembling high end talent and frankly will have a hard time swinging any trades of substance at this year’s deadline. They need a talent influx and cannot afford to be picky in which side of the ball that talent plays on.
Our own Dan Cormican has been profiling some options for the Phillies in the draft, and you can read those previews here.
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - APRIL 19, 2025: Jackson Holliday #7 of the Baltimore Orioles gets back to first base on a pickoff attempt during the sixth inning of an interleague game against the Cincinnati Reds at Oriole Park on April 19, 2025 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
About a week ago, Sports Illustrated’s Jason La Canfora went looking for evidence to back up a hunch that’s been circulating in Baltimore for three straight seasons now: this team can’t run the bases. His July 1 piece on the Orioles’ fielding and baserunning woes laid out a bunch of metrics, and the picture wasn’t pretty. In actual point of fact, the Orioles are not the literal worst, but it feels bad anyway because, as La Canfora put it, the skipper “keeps begging for clean games and smart baseball but it’s doubtful this team delivers.”
Running has been definitely one of the areas of stupidest baseball for the Orioles in 2026. By FanGraphs’ Base Running Runs, Baltimore sits at -1, ranked 19th in the majors. That’s below average, not catastrophic, but also a waste when you have good foot speed in players like Gunnar Henderson, Jackson Holiday, Leody Taveras, Dylan Beavers, and so forth. Our utility infielder is named Blaze Alexander, for crying out loud! So why does it feel like the Orioles are the sport’s running joke (pun intended) on the base paths?
Well, look closer at several other baserunning metrics, and the Orioles’ efforts look considerably worse. Their stolen-base success rate of 71.6% is 25th in baseball. Only the White Sox, the Tigers, the Rockies, the Twins and the hopeless Mets are doing it worse. Most analytics departments consider 75-78% a threshold where it’s break-even for the risk to be worth it, so the team is clearly adding negative value. Add to that, the Orioles’ steal value at second base (how often they effectively steal second base) is -1, ranked 27th. Extra-bases taken puts them at -4, or 20th in the league, meaning they’re consistently failing to advance from first to third on singles or score from second on doubles at a league-average clip.
You could go beyond that and look at individual “caught stealings” to get a fuller picture of poorly-done risk-reward calculations. The team poster child for this right now is Gunnar Henderson, a massively talented player with both power and foot speed, but whose baserunning instincts are being attacked every other night, it feels like. Getting picked off twice in a single game isn’t just an unlucky night; it’s kind of a routine occurrence for the O’s shortstop this season. Henderson has all of seven steals on the season, a shockingly low number for a player with his athletic profile, and especially considering he’s been caught stealing four times.
There are several players, in fact, whose aggression on the basepaths is currently costing Baltimore more than it’s earning. Even though scouts still project Jackson Holliday as a 25-steal threat one day, he’s nabbing bases at just a 68% clip on his career (again, a league-average benchmark is about 78%). The same is true for a lot of players, it looks like. Colton Cowser has been caught stealing twice, and safely stolen a bag just four times. Dylan Beavers, even worse: two caught stealing to just three bags swiped. Blaze Alexander is fast, but he’s gotten thrown out three times in twelve attempts, so just below average. In fact, it’s Leody Taveras, a fourth outfielder by midseason, who leads the team in stolen bases with just 10. When your team leader in steals is a bench piece, that tells you the top of the roster isn’t running.
Then there’s the part of the game that doesn’t show up in a box score line as cleanly: the Orioles’ inability to execute the contact play in advancing from first to third. La Canfora’s description rates the O’s “a Little League team with the contact play trying to score runners from third with the ball hit in the grass.” That may be harsh, but it points to a real problem. Too many outs are being made at third base and at home plate on plays that should be simple two-out productive outs or sacrifice situations. Blaze Alexander has been guilty of this a lot, judging by the eyeball test. He has the speed and agility to be a weapon on the bases, but keeps making outs at third because he isn’t reading the ball off the bat well. Or he isn’t listening to the third-base coach? Whether it’s talent, speed, judgment or what, it’s supposed to be a problem area that the staff can actually fix in-season through repetition and coaching.
So, are the Orioles the worst baserunning team in baseball? Statistically, no, not quite. Nineteenth place in baserunning value (twenty-fifth in success rate) is unglamorous, albeit not historic. But we could fill in the picture with subsidiary data—pickoffs at first base, botched double steals, times getting thrown out at third or at home (there were three alone in an extra-innings loss to Seattle back in June)—to capture the picture of a team which, if not slow of foot or short on talent, feels, well, just kind of chaotic and messy. Combined with a defense that ranks in the bottom five in outs above average, runs prevented, and defensive runs saved, the Orioles are bleeding runs on both sides of the ball in ways that don’t require a brand-new roster to fix—just better decisions.
Is this, to keep asking the same question (but we have to keep asking it) a Mike Elias problem? La Canfora thinks so, brutally comparing this season to the last one: “Remember, Elias got promotions for himself and 16 other people after years of utter failure here, and now we get to watch an even worse product, with an even more befuddled skipper at the wheel, careen toward the All Star break and another inevitable firesale at the trade deadline with 1983 feeling like 1963 to those of us old enough to remember that last World Series parade.” Ouch. I’m not sure. But for a coaching staff supposed to be on the cutting edge of analytics, and a front office that allegedly drafts for athleticism, the results kind of speak for themselves.
WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 08: James Wood #29 of the Washington Nationals celebrates with teammates in the dugout after scoring on a hit by CJ Abrams #5 during the third inning against the Houston Astros at Nationals Park on July 08, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jess Rapfogel/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Yankees wrapped up a trip to Tropicana Field on Thursday with a much needed win and a breakout from the still Aaron Judge-less lineup. The double digit runs allowed them to salvage a series split after the two middle games of the series were a struggle. As a result, the Yankees ended the visit to the Trop four games back in the AL East, which is right where they began it.
Now, the Yankees are set to continue their road trip with a visit to the nation’s capital. At 48-46, the Washington Nationals are a somewhat surprising team over .500 and still in the playoff running. Ahead of Thursday’s games they were 3.5 games back of the last NL Wild Card spot and 6.5 back in the NL East. With a .948 OPS, James Wood is turning into a star in his third MLB season, while CJ Abrams, Luis García Jr., and Curtis Mead have also been pretty stellar in the Nats’ lineup. Their pitching has been less good, allowing one of the highest runs per game averages in the league, but the offense has been enough to cover some of that up so far.
Before the series gets going later tonight, let’s have a look at the pitching matchups we’ll see over the next couple days.
Friday: Ryan Weathers vs. Carson Palmquist (6:45 pm ET)
Weathers has been notably shaky of late, and that continued in his last start, as he gave up four runs in four innings against the Twins on Sunday. After seven shutout innings against the Rays back on May 24th, Weathers had a 3.14 ERA and 3.50 FIP. Those numbers now sit at 4.29 and 4.06, as he’s only had one game that you can categorize as good in that time.
We all know the meme about how the Yankees struggle against pitchers they’ve never seen before, and this will be their first game against the former Rockie and now National Palmquist. That being said, Palmquist has not had a good start to his MLB career. Last year in Colorado, he put up a 8.91 ERA in 34.1 innings. Getting away from the high altitude hasn’t done much to improve those numbers so far in 2026. He’s only pitched 6.1 innings in the bigs this year after moving to Washington, but he has a 7.11 ERA so far. That being said, he has a high strikeout rate in that time, and that’s something the Yankees have been prone to do a lot lately.
Saturday: Cam Schlittler vs. Miles Mikolas (4:05 pm ET)
With Judge on the shelf and the Yankees’ offense sputtering, Schlittler has been one of few things you can almost 100% count on for the Bombers. He continued that by allowing just one run in eight innings in a win over the Rays last time out, picking up the win before the rest of that series got annoying.
The veteran Mikolas has been, to put it politely, “butt.” He’s made 19 appearances this year, with eight coming as the Nats’ starter. In 90.1 total innings, he has a 5.78 ERA and a 5.52 FIP and has allowed 20 home runs. Over 5% of the batters Mikolas has faced have hit a home run off him. The offense truly needs to be able to do something in this game.
Sunday: Will Warren vs. TBD (1:35 pm ET)
Warren is another Yankee starter that’s been in a massive slump after a good start to the season. Since May 1st, he has a 5.34 ERA and his overall season total has gone up by nearly two whole runs, going over four for the first time this season in his last start. Even when Warren was doing well, he could be a bit of a tedious watch, but he’s been walking nearly 9% of batters over that stretch.
At time of writing, the Nationals have not announced a starter for Sunday’s series finale. They have one regular starter — Jake Irvin — on the IL, and another — Cade Cavalli — has been serving a suspension for playing a part in a brawl the Nats had with the Red Sox. Cavalli will have completely served said suspension by this game and would be on more than normal rest, so he would probably be the logical option to go in this game, but we shall see.
Jul 9, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Atlanta Braves shortstop Jim Jarvis (74) circles the bases on a two run home run against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the fourth inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images
Happy Friday, everyone. We’ll start off today with a bit of baseball talk. The MLB Draft starts tomorrow, and SS Justin Lebron looks to become Alabama’s first top 15 selection in 35 years. Keith Law has Justin mocked to the Arizona Diamondbacks with the 15th pick, while ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel thinks the Angels will snag him at 12.
Lebron’s predecessor is in the majors, and he had a whale of a game yesterday.
Jarvis went 3-for-5 with a two-run homer and a double in Thursday’s 10-5 win over the Pirates
Jarvis extended Atlanta’s lead to 5-2 in the fourth inning with his two-run, 397-foot blast off Cam Sanders, the first homer of his big-league career. Jarvis has seen regular playing time at shortstop since he was recalled from Triple-A in early July. He’s gone 6-for-19 across five games after slashing .313/.406/.461 with six homers across 348 plate appearances in the minors this year.
Jarvis didn’t just get it done at the plate, either.
The question on Jim has been whether he could be a serviceable hitter at the big league level. His glove and athleticism are elite, and he has earned himself a chance to prove that he can stick in the lineup.
Moving on to football, Katie Windham notes that year three has been good to Alabama head coaches.
Dating back to Billy Curry in 1989, every Crimson Tide head coach has reached double-digit wins during his third season. Sometimes those seasons with at least 10 wins led to national championships that season or the next, and sometimes it created expectations that the coach could not live up to the following year.
Winning at least 10 games this year is a minimum expectation for DeBoer in 2026. How far past that can he get? Will he be like Saban and Gene Stallings and win a national title in Year 3? Will he be like Ray Perkins or Mike DuBose with a strong third season that just creates even higher expectations for Year 4?
Ten wins doesn’t mean what it did for most of those, but may the trend continue.
Dre Kirkpatrick is the latest in the “50 players” series.
Kirkpatrick remained suspended for the rest of the season but has since rejoined the team. The exact legal resolution is unknown, but his case and charges are no longer listed in the online court system.
Kirkpatrick was back practicing with Alabama this spring and now moves toward his junior season where he will be part of one of, if not the best, secondaries in the country.
“Yeah, he had consequences for what he did and the things he’s gone through,” Crimson Tide coach Kalen DeBoer said after Alabama’s second spring practice. “There’s still pieces to that that he’s taking care of when it comes to those consequences with the team.
“He met those requirements and has a great attitude about him. He loves ball. He’s got to build the trust up with his teammates out there every day. He’ll do the things not just on the field, but off it as well to meet the standard our program expects.”
Dre probably won’t have a huge role on this year’s team, but it’s good to see him getting his life together.
“I think the thing that stood out the most was the consistency from day one,” Diaz’s father said. “There were times where I would get a phone call that (Alabama) was at Overtime Elite just to check on him. I thought that was really cool. Every time they rolled through Atlanta and had time, they would go see him for a practice. They stood really consistent with him from the beginning. They made him a priority.”
Diaz’s father shared a story during the recruitment when Diaz went through a little bit of a slump while competing out in Memphis (TN) during the contact period. (Nate) Oats and assistant Preston Murphy gave him a call after one of the games.
“It wasn’t like ‘he did this and he did that’,” he explained. “It was more of ‘we can fix that, he just needs to do this and do that’ and that fits him to me.”