Rangers Shutout Guardians and Take Series

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - JUNE 07: Joey Cantillo #54 of the Cleveland Guardians pitches during the second inning of a game against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field on June 07, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Unfortunately this will be a short one, since there isn’t much that needs recapped.

The Texas Rangers shut out the Cleveland Guardians in today’s rubber match. The Guardians scored no runs on 6 hits and no errors while the Rangers massively outscored Cleveland with 10 runs on 16 hits with no errors. Chase DeLauter, Angel Martínez, David Fry (PH for Steven Kwan), and Patrick Bailey all recorded single hits while Steven Kwan had a two-hit game. Travis Bazzana and Brayan Rocchio reached on walks.

Joey Cantillo fell to 4-3 on the season after giving up 7 runs on 9 hit sand 2 walks. In his 5.0 innings of work, Cantillo struck out 7 batters on 97 pitches. Will Dion threw 2.0 innings, allowing 1 run, 3 hits, and 1 walk. Austin Hedges came on in the eighth, saving the bullpen for tomorrow’s Yankees series, and gave up 2 runs on 4 hits.

Home runs were the bane of today with the Rangers hitting 3 off of Joey and 1 off of Dion.

The Guardians start a three game series against the New York Yankees at home tomorrow. First pitch is at 6:40PM EDT.

Big eighth inning for Yankees ruins stellar Suárez outing

Jun 7, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Ranger Suarez (55) pitches in the first inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Recap

The offense got off to a slow start; through five innings, there were only three baserunners. But a good sign was that the Sox drove up pitch counts on Cam Schlittler, who was gone after 5 2/3 innings. The bats seemingly began heating up in the sixth, when Willson Contreras smoked a double that scored Ceddanne Rafaela on a wide throw to the plate. But the Sox missed some opportunities to break the 1-1 tie in the seventh. Until all was said and done, it looked like the hitters might be able to do just enough.

That wasn’t the way it played out, though, and offensively, everyone not named Rafaela, Contreras, or Anthony Seigler has a lot to answer for. Outside of that core group, Mickey Gasper and Andruw Monasterio did manage a single each.

It was the eighth inning when everything went south, with Justin Slaten giving up a solo HR that neither he nor the Sox as a team could recover from. Gasper made two terrible throws to second in the inning. One ended up in the outfield; both resulted in steals. Joe Sorsa, in his Sox debut, piled on as soon as Slaten exited the game by allowing a three-run HR. The wind was completely out of the sails after that.

Now I’m just mad and grumpy, which is how I imagine Ranger Suárez feels. He was cruising, and it seemed as though he was pulled a little early. In the end, that probably doesn’t change the outcome of this game.

Yankees 6, Red Sox 1.

Studs

Ranger Suárez

Suárez was sharp today; his first three innings were 1-2-3. In the fourth, he gave up three singles but pitched out of the bases-loaded jam. He owned Jazz Chisholm, Jr., striking him out three times. 6.1 IP, 6H, 1 ER, 0 BB, 6 SO. If only he had the W as well.

Willson Contreras

Contreras ripped the RBI double over the head of the outfield that put the Sox on the board.

Ceddanne Rafaela

Batting second in the lineup, he singled right away and was one of only three Sox baserunners through five innings (Anthony Seigler was the only other baserunner to that point, with a walk and a double; it should be said that he had a nice day at the plate.) Rafaela went 2-4, and scored from first on Contreras’ double.

Duds

Justin Slaten

He was off to a great beginning in the eighth inning, with back-to-back strikeouts. In the next at-bat, he gave up a go-ahead home run to Bellinger—and unfortunately, that tilted him. He couldn’t get back on track after that, issuing consecutive singles—each of which turned into a steal of second base—then a walk before being pulled. 0.2 IP, 3H, 4R, 4ER, 1 BB, 1 HR. And oh yeah, 2 SO. He took the loss.

Joe La Sorsa

He immediately—and I mean immediately; it was his first pitch—gave up a three-run home run to Chisholm, who had struck out three times previously. Painful debut for the Sox.

Offense

The same story it’s been all season: it was hard to get anything going and ultimately, what they did accomplish wasn’t enough. There were too many starters who never managed to get on base: Duran, Abreu, Yoshida, Durbin, Mayer.

Play of the Game

I’m never going to credit the Yankees in this category, so we go with Contreras’ RBI.

32-33 – Rangers flip the script on Guardians to claim series

Jun 7, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; The Texas Rangers fans reach for the ball after Rangers second baseman Justin Foscue hits a two run home run against the Cleveland Guardians during the first inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers scored ten runs while the Cleveland Guardians scored zero runs.

In a total reversal of everything that went wrong yesterday, the Rangers went from a 6-0 loss to an 10-0 win to finish the weekend with a home series win over the Guardians.

Whereas yesterday the Rangers collected all of three hits to produce zero runs, today the lineup went off for 16 hits with four of those leaving the park as they scored a June-best ten runs. That output also ties their season-best total.

Whereas yesterday the Guardians hit two home runs and put together a two-out, three run rally that put Texas away, today Cleveland managed just six hits with none producing runs.

Whereas yesterday Jack Leiter cratered in the middle innings and allowed a round number-inning to bury any chance that Texas had to come back, today Jacob deGrom escaped his personal hell first inning without allowing a run and then cruised through six shutout innings on an economical 87 pitches.

Whereas yesterday the Rangers helped Tyler Bibee earn his first win of 2026 as he threatened a Maddux against them, today Cleveland’s starter Joey Cantillo was carved up for seven runs on nine hits in his five innings.

Whereas yesterday the Rangers had their long relief soak up some innings in a clear impending loss, today the Rangers got a shutout inning apiece from Peyton Gray, Tyler Alexander, and Luis Curvelo in relief of deGrom to finish off a shutout win one day after they themselves where held off the board.

Whereas yesterday the Guardians only needed one inning of relief to shut out Texas, today they had to use former Rangers postseason legend Austin Hedges to pitch the final inning to finish off the blowout loss.

Whereas yesterday the loss prevented the Rangers from guaranteeing a series victory and going for a sweep, today the win does give the Rangers the series win over AL Central-leading Cleveland and once again moves them to within a win over .500.

Player of the Game: Plenty to love today as everyone in the lineup except for Joc Pederson got at least one hit with both pinch hitters also chipping in a hit apiece. Justin Foscue, Josh Jung, Wyatt Langford, and Michael Helman each went deep in the win.

Leading the way today however was Ezequiel Duran who went 4-for-5 with a double, run scored, and a team-best three RBIs. On the year, Duran is now sporting a .293/.347/.457 slash to make himself worthy of your All-Star game considerations.

Up Next: The Rangers have the day off tomorrow again before beginning a stretch of 23 games in 24 days throughout the rest of June that starts in Kansas City on Tuesday.

Tigers walk off Mariners thanks to sloppy play, 5-4

DETROIT, MI - JUNE 7: Josh Naylor #12 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates his double that drove in Julio Rodriguez against the Detroit Tigers during the sixth inning at Comerica Park on June 7, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Duane Burleson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mariners lost a super frustrating game today, dropping the series to the Tigers and letting a winnable game slip away from them, despite getting a strong start from Luis Castillo. But once again, the bullpen couldn’t hold the lead late and the offense failed to capitalize on scoring opportunities that could have opened up the game for the Mariners.

Castillo was strong in his first non-piggyback start in a while, working deep into the sixth inning and holding the velocity on his fastball well throughout. He also leaned heavily on his changeup today, using it as his main secondary pitch as a weapon against the Tigers’ lefty batters. Castillo’s location was excellent, working the edges of the zone and avoiding the middle of the plate, eliciting weak contact – of the 15 balls put in play against him only three were hit over 100 mph – and collecting five strikeouts. Unfortunately, the rest of his team let him down.

The Mariners had opportunities to open this game up at times but failed to hang a crooked number in any inning, partly due to some bad luck and partly due to their own failings. The Mariners made some hard contact against Tigers starter Jack Flaherty in the second – back-to-back-to-back exit velocities of 104.6, 107.8, and 102.7, but two of those found gloves and Patrick Wisdom, starting again at third base while J.P. Crawford remains down with a hand injury after being hit by a pitch, struck out to end the threat.

But the Mariners were able to scratch that run across in the third thanks to a Colt Emerson leadoff double, brought home by Cole Young, who made some more hard contact on a single. However, the Mariners couldn’t add on, and an inning later, the Tigers tied it up when Castillo made his lone mistake of the day, hanging a slider to Kevin McGonigle for a no-doubt, game-tying homer.

The Mariners went back ahead in the sixth, but could have had much more. Julio Rodríguez led off with a single, advancing to second on a poor throw from Riley Greene, and then Josh Naylor went after a fastball at the top of the zone, keeping it just fair down the right-field line to bring home Julio. The Mariners were in the position of breaking this game open after Randy Arozarena walked, prompting a pitching change where Hinch attempted to get Luke Raley out of the game by bringing in lefty Drew Sommers, but Dan Wilson let Raley stay in to lay down a sacrifice bunt, which he executed well, moving the runners to second and third.

Dominic Canzone, however, wasn’t so lucky, making way for Rob Refsnyder, who struck out despite the platoon advantage. The Tigers then walked the righty Wisdom to go after lefty Colt Emerson, putting the 20-year-old rookie in a tough situation. Emerson, to his credit, hung in there with a tough at-bat, eventually letting a pitch glance off his elbow to bring in a bases-loaded free base, but it was a squandered opportunity that would come back to bite the Mariners later.

The Tigers threatened back in Castillo’s last inning of work; Castillo got two outs in the sixth but also walked McGonigle, leaving a bit of a mess for Jose A. Ferrer. Ferrer, who had issued one walk in his last 17 appearances, didn’t have a solid handle on his stuff today, walking the bases loaded, but was able to keep the Tigers out of the scoring column, getting pinch-hitter Jahmai Jones to fly out harmlessly.

Julio and Randy teamed up in the seventh to give the Mariners another run; Julio singled off Kyle Finnegan, then stole second and third, and Randy brought him home with a single into right field. The Tigers brought in lefty Tyler Holton and Raley was given another opportunity against a lefty, this time parachuting a single into right field. But with runners on the corners and two outs, Refsnyder again couldn’t take advantage of a platoon advantage, grounding out to end the threat. Refsnyder’s -.11 WPA today was the lowest for any Mariners hitter and one wonders how much longer the Mariners can continue to hope the 35-year-old will turn his season around.

With a three-run lead, Dan Wilson went to Cooper Criswell in the seventh, and suddenly, all that work the Mariners had done to build a lead disappeared as Criswell’s groundball luck came up snake eyes, with back-to-back-to-back hits that squirted past Mariners infielders, the big blow being a Wenceel Pérez triple (xBA = .380) into the deep right field corner with no outs, scoring two runs. With the Mariners lead cut down to a run, Wilson brought in Gabe Speier, forcing Hinch to pull Kerry Carpenter for pinch-hitter Matt Vierling, who grounded out, bringing up the dangerous McGonigle, but Speier was able to get him to fly out shallowly in a left-on-left battle. Speier then went right after righty Gleyber Torres, striking him out on some high heat.

The Mariners had an opportunity to give Andrés Muñoz some extra cushion for the ninth but again couldn’t capitalize despite the first two runners reaching, making two outs on the bases as Josh Naylor was caught stealing (a curious choice considering he’d just fouled a ball off his foot and looked to be in obvious pain) and Arozarena was picked off first base. The mistakes continued as Muñoz couldn’t get a handle on his stuff, walking the eight and nine-hole before giving up the walkoff hit to McGonigle. It was a disappointing, sloppy effort from everyone but Castillo, the kind of mistake-ridden game that’s easier to wave away in April than it is in June. The Mariners will now head to Baltimore for the next leg of this long road trip.

Royals 6, Twins 5: Diamond kings trump bullpen jokers

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - JUNE 7: Isaac Collins #1 of the Kansas City Royals makes a diving catch for an out against the Minnesota Twins during the first inning of the game at Target Field on June 7, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After a devastating blown-save loss yesterday afternoon, today the again Byron Buxton-less Minnesota Twins looked to at least hold serve in this four-game series with the Kansas City Royals. It didn’t happen—and somehow it didn’t happen in exactly the fashion you’d probably expect (terrible bullpen & no offense until it was too late).

The homesteaders jumped out to a slim early lead in the bottom of the second inning when Kody Clemens singled, stole second base, and was moved to third on the exceedingly-rare Bobby Witt Jr SS error. A fielder’s choice ground-out from Ryan Kreidler plated Big K for the 1-0 advantage.

For 3.2 IP, Twins SP Connor Prielipp was mowing down KC batters like MN residents out in their yards during this current heat wave. But he stumbled a bit in T4 when a two-out Vinnie Pasquantino double was brought around by an immediate Nick Loftin two-bagger. 1-1 tie.

A Maikel Garcia error at 3B allowed the Twins a few two-out baserunners in B4—but then Garcia’s magnificent pick-and-throw to nip Luke Keaschall at 1B ended the scoring threat.

Prielipp exited mid-5th with one out and one man on base—a solid opener-esque outing for the youngster. But in keeping with today’s Toy Story Day theme at Target Field, the entrance of the MN bullpen indeed proved the perfect time to panic.

As soon as Andrew Morris started hurling towards home, two singles followed to give the Royals the lead. Starling Marte then pounded a Morris pitch 441 feet over the CF wall. 5-1 Royals.

In T8, Twins reliever Cody Laweryson surrendered a single safety on a Carter Jensen sac fly, but by then the outcome was fairly academic with the Twins’ offense having fallen silent.

Or was it?! A three-run homer from Josh Bell was followed by a one-out double off the bat of Trevor Larnach. After a Keaschall fly out, Victor Caratini then singled up the middle to make it a one-run game and Tristan Gray would follow suit with a similar single (this time to LF) to provide some real hope to the Twins faithful.

Alas, this bunch is exceedingly good at extinguishing that—a Brooks Lee poke dying on the LF warning track.

Your Final: Kansas City Royals 6, Minnesota Twins 5

A squad with a below-average bullpen at least splits this series. A squad with an average bullpen takes the series against this punchless KC assemblage. Your 2026 Minnesota Twins possess neither bullpen descriptor.

Zach’s Zealot
  • Clemens: Continued to have a solid series—two hits today—getting things off on the right foot and starting the late rally.
Zach’s Zombie
  • Tom Pohlad: No, sir—your “we’re going to be competitive this year” preseason proclamation doesn’t hold water any longer. Not when two months have gone by and your club is seemingly further from a competent bullpen than on Day One.
Egg-cellent Elocution
Who’s Got Next
  • After a much-needed off day Monday—their first since May 21—the Twins hit the road to the Motor City for three games with the Detroit Tigers (Tues. night, Wed. night, Thurs. afternoon).

Yankees back in first-place tie as two-homer eighth keys win over Red Sox

NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 05: Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 of the New York Yankees high fives teammates in the dugout during the game against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium on June 5, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We had about 20-minute rain delay to begin the day on Sunday, one of those sudden summer storms that disappears as quickly as it arrives. It did seem to put a bit of a damper on the Yankee offense to start, as they went nine up, nine down to start the game. Once the sun came out a bit—and once Ranger Suárez was out of the game—the bats finally had a breakthrough inning, the kind you hope spurs things for a hot week.

While that remains to be seen, we know for a fact the Yankees took care of business Sunday, with a 6-1 win over Boston. Combined with the Rays’ 4-1 loss to the Marlins, the Bombers are back in a share of first place in the AL East for the first time since May 9th.

I think we can put to rest any present concerns about Cam Schlittler and his velo drop:

We got good Cam again, who were it not for an errant — to be generous — throw home by Anthony Volpe, probably would have completed six shutout innings. His first pitch of the game was 99 mph, and it held steady there all day. The Red Sox don’t roll out the kind of offense we’re always used to seeing from them, but it’s the third time in his young career Schlittler’s faced them, and they haven’t figured him out yet.

Indeed, the lone run the Schlittler surrendered came off the bat of Willson Contreras and uh, yeah, it may be time to give Volpe a day off (or two):

There’s just no reason to rush a throw like that, Volpe completely misjudged how much time he has and should have been able to cut Ceddane Rafaela down. Then again, Jazz Chisholm Jr. also probably needs a day off, with three strikeouts and an error of his own on the day (this is a literary device called foreshadowing). Now that I think about it, like six guys on the team probably need a day off…

That the run came as Schlittler was attempting a shutdown inning also stung, as the righty has been so good at providing those when the Yankees manage a run or two. Today, that came courtesy of Paul Goldschmidt, professional hitter:

Ironically enough the 38-year-old Goldschmidt could probably stand a day off on his own, but between his own contributions this year and the relative impotence of anyone outside the top third of the lineup, he has become pretty close to irreplaceable.

Fortunately, the team finally broke something out in the eighth, with Cody Bellinger leading the way:

I expect that we’ll see Cody starting in the All-Star Game in July, and while that may carry variable meanings to all of you, in the spirit of the event, he’s certainly earned it. Amed Rosario found grass before being brought around on a Trent Grisham single, Anthony Volpe walked, and then, just like we foreshadowed:

Perhaps more than any player on the team, Jazz needs to be the guy to step up with no Aaron Judge. A run of 130ish wRC+ goes a long way to picking up some of that slack, and a long way to earning back some of that free agency money he’s cost himself with such a slow start.

Eagle-eyed viewers might notice — or were just shown it on the YES broadcast as we went to commercial — that Jazz was using Aaron Judge’s bat there, not the first time that’s happened since he was acquired. Between that and Giancarlo Stanton’s pants, we may have a good argument for everyone on the team lending Chisholm a piece of equipment to heat him up.

David Bednar had gotten ready in a tie game, picked up his warm-up for a save situation, and ended up coming into a relative laugher. The closer did his job though, sealing up the win and a split of this improvised two-game series.

The Yankees now head out to Cleveland for a rematch with the Guardians, who took two out of three in the Bronx last week. Will Warren is scheduled to face off against the AL’s strikeout leader in Gavin Williams, with first pitch at 6:40pm ET.

Box Score

Jays Get A Comeback Win

Jun 7, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Kazuma Okamoto (7) slides home to score a run against the Baltimore Orioles in the sixth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images | Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

Orioles 4 Blue Jays 6

This had all the signs of being another one of those games.

After 5 innings, we were down 4-0. Through four innings, Kevin Gausman had allowed one base runner, then it all fell apart in the fifth. Strikeout, home run, pop out, triple, double, home run, strikeout. 13 total bases in that one inning.

We only had two hits and a walk through the first five inning.

Then, in the sixth, we scored 5 runs:

  • Yohendrick Piñango homered on the second pitch of the inning. Crushed it, 108 mph and 423 feet.
  • Vladmir Guerrero ground out.
  • Jesús Sánchez doubled, also crushed, 109.5 mph.
  • Ernie Clement reached on an error by Orioles SS Gunnar Henderson.
  • Brandon Valenzuela ground out, moving Clement to second.
  • Kazuma Okamoto singled, driving home Clement (also crushed, 104.4 mph).
  • Andrés Giménez doubled home Okamoto.
  • And Nathan Lukes ground off the pitcher, and second baseman Jackson Holliday got to the ball, but too late, then he glove flipped it to first, which gave time for Giménez to score from second.
  • George Springer ground out to end the inning.

We got one more run in the 8th, Valenzuela homered (just 103 mph), but 388 feet.

We had 10 hits. Piñango, Sánchez, and Giménez had two each. All the other starter, excepting Vlad (he had the hardest hit ball, for the Jays, a line drive up the middle but caught, 109.6 mph, with a .690 expected batting average, but when you are slumping, those get caught) and Springer had one run.

There were some moments of controversy. With Clement on first, in that sixth inning, the Orioles got a ground ball hit to second, which looked like it would be a double play, but Clement ran around the second baseman and was safe. The Orioles complained that he went outside the baseline but Jackson Holliday didn’t make any movement to tag him. If he had, they might have gotten a call for leaving the baseline.

At the end of the game Holliday ground one to the pitcher, and tried to run around him on the base path. He was tagged and the umpires called him for leaving the base path. The Orioles argued, but it didn’t help them. I think the arguing was mostly to ‘ice the pitcher’ but Varland was unaffected.


The bullpen did the job:

  • Adam Macko had a nice quick sixth, giving up a singled but getting two strikeouts.
  • Connor Seabold had a rough start to the seventh, giving up a hit and a walk. The O’s bunted, but Valenzuela got to the ball quick and got the out at third.
  • Tyler Rogers, with the Jays needing a double play, and he got it. He is a ground ball pitcher, it was a great time for him to come in. He also got the first two outs of the eighth, then gave up a walk and in came
  • Louis Varland, who got the strikeout to end the inning. In the ninth, he went single, fly out, ground out, and strikeout. Save number 11 for Louis.

Vlad also used up our last challenge, in the eighth, on a ball that was easily a strike.

Jays of the Day: Rogers (0.23 WPA), Giménez (0.22, plus the dash for home), Lukes (0.16 on a 1 for 2 night), and Varland (0.13). Let’s give Valenzuela an Honorable Mention for his homer and his throw to third on the bunt attempt.

Other Award: Gausman (-0.17), Springer (-0.10 for an 0 for 4) and Vlad (-0.09)

Tomorrow the Philles are in town for the first of three. Cristopher Sánchez (7-2, 1.46 ERA) vs. Patrick Corbin (2-2, 3.98).

Kevin McGonigle walks off the Mariners

After a tense afternoon that saw the Tigers forced to come back repeatedly to keep pace with the Mariners, they reached the ninth inning still down a run. The Mariners ran themselves into a pair of dumb outs on the bases with Will Vest on the mound, and that set the stage. The back of the Tigers’ order did a nice job waiting out a wild Andrés Muñoz to draw a pair of walks, and managed to turn the lineup over to star rookie Kevin McGonigle, who had already homered in the game. The kid delivered with a two-run, walkoff single into right field to send the home crowd home in thrilling fashion. What a game.

Jack Flaherty and Luis Castillo locked up in a duel of starters who have struggled this season to date. The Tigers’ right-hander popped up Cole Young to open the game, then dropped a curveball in on Julio Rodriguez for strike three. After Josh Naylor was announced and the crowd booed, a 2-2 fastball locked him up for strike three. It was called a ball, but Dillon Dingler challenged it successfully.

AJ Hinch had Kerry Carpenter in the leadoff spot and he worked Luis Castillo through a long at-bat but flew out. Kevin McGonigle struck out after a foul ball down the left field line that brought Randy Arozarena to the netting, where a Tigers fan offered him a snack in a moment that reminded me of Prince Fielder snatching a tortilla chip from a fan’s nachos. Gleyber Torres, getting a day as the DH, then blew a challenge contesting a called strike three, but he was wrong, striking out and burning a challenge.

Flaherty gave up some hard contact in the second inning, but other than a Luke Raley double off the left field wall, nothing dropped in, and a good fastball whiffed Patrick Wisdom to end the inning.

For all Luis Castillo’s struggles this year, we weren’t seeing any signs of them here. He couldn’t spot the changeup, but the slider was sharp and the right-hander was hitting 96-97 mph with good fastball location. Riley Greene struck out on a fourseamer up to start the bottom of the second. Dillon Dingler hammered a drive out to Rodriguez in center field and Colt Keith lifted a slider to right field but didn’t square it up, sending us to the third inning.

Colt Emerson started the third by drilling an 0-2 slider to right for a double. Jhonny Perada grounded out, moving Emerson to third. Cole Young followed with a hot ground ball into right field for an RBI single, and it was 1-0 Mariners. Flaherty tied up Rodriguez with a high fastball and got a routine fly ball to Carpenter in right field. That left it up to Naylor who popped out to Colt Keith in foul territory.

News came through prior to the game that Casey Mize would make a rehab start on Tuesday with the Single-A Lakeland Flying Tigers. Meanwhile, Tarik Skubal was getting underway in West Michigan in a High-A rehab outing against the Dayton Dragons. The left-hander struck out two in the first inning, getting a grounder for the third out. He needed just nine pitches, sitting 96-97 mph.

The Whitecaps roster was having a good day courtesy of the two-time AL Cy Young award winner.

Spencer Torkelson flew out to start the bottom of the third and Zach McKinstry struck out. Wenceel Pérez fought off a bunch of two strike pitches, including one that he chopped right back into the family jewels. That required a little time to shake off. Eventually he dug back in and drilled a single that Wisdom couldn’t handle, but Carpenter popped out to end the inning.

Jack Flaherty’s slider was coming around, and as he dialed it in the whiffs piled up. He got Arozarena swinging over the slide piece for strike three to start the fourth. Raley suffered a similar fate, and Dominic Canzone grounded out to McKinstry at second base.

Kevin McGonigle led off the bottom of the fourth, and he got a 1-0 slider up in the zone and crushed it to right field for his fourth home run of the season. Tie game.

Gleyber Torres grounded out for the first out of the fourth. Riley Greene gave the ball a ride to deep right center field, but Raley ran it down. Dingler grounded out to third, and we were onto the fifth.

Wisdom opened the fifth inning with a line drive over Colt Keith at third, positioned toward second base, for a leadoff single. A high fastball from Flaherty dusted Emerson for his sixth strikeout on the day. Perada lined out to Carpenter, and Cole Young whiffed on a high fourseamer for strike three. Nice job stranding the runner after a leadoff single.

Colt Keith grounded out and Spencer Torkelson struck out to start the bottom of the fifth. A Zach McKinstry grounder to Wisdom was thrown wide of Naylor at first and he couldn’t pick it as the ball skipped into foul territory. McKinstry never stopped running, cruising into second base. Unfortuantely, a soft liner from Pérez went right to Naylor for the final out of the inning.

Julio Rodriguez lined a single into left field to start the sixth. Riley Greene picked it up, spun, and tried to fire to second to prevent a double, but Rodriguez had actually started to hold up. The throw was wide, and so Rodriguez was handed second base on the throwing error. Naylor pulled a hot grounder off the glove of a diving Torkelson and down the right field line for an RBI double. The Tigers were down a run again. Arozarena worked a full count, and Flaherty bounced a curveball to walk him, and so his day was done with no outs, a run in, and runner on first and second in the top of the sixth.

Lefty Drew Sommers took over from Flaherty against Raley. Mariners’ manager Dan Wilson elected not to pinch-hit, and instead had Raley bunt the runners over. He did so, with Keith making the play for the first out on the inning. Sommers has shown much better command so far this year, albeit in a very small sample, and he carved up Rob Refsnyder for the second out. Hinch called for the intentional walk to the right-handed hitting Wisdom to load the bases. Wilson gave them a gift with the sac bunt, but it turned out that the intentional walk was the gift to the Mariners, as Sommers hit Colt Emerson with a 2-2 sinker, forcing in a run. 3-1 Mariners. Arrgghh.

That ended Sommers outing. Kyle Finnegan was warm and he took over to face Perada. Fortunately, he flew out to Pérez to strand the bases loaded, but the damage was done and the Mariners had re-captured the lead.

Castillo was still on the mound in the bottom half of the sixth as Jose A. Ferrer was warming up in the bullpen. Carpenter grounded out to start the inning, but McGonigle drew a one-out walk. Torres got into a 2-0 count, but popped out to Raley in foul territory down the right field line. That was the end for Castillo as Ferrer took over.

Ferrer gave up a walk to Riley Greene to put two on with two outs for the red-hot Dillon Dingler. The Tigers catcher challenged an 0-1 pitch that was called a strike. He was correct, and Ferrer eventually walked him as well to load the bases. Hinch then pinch-hit Jahmai Jones for Colt Keith against the hard-throwing lefty. Instead, Jones popped up a 99 mph sinker to shallow center field to strand three. Woof.

That move caused Zack Short to enter the game at shortstop, pushing McGonigle to third base. Finnegan got Cole Young to fly out to start the seventh. Dillon Dingler burned the Tigers last challenge against Julio Rodriguez, but was incorrect and the center fielder drew a walk. He then stole second base with ease as Naylor took ball one. Finnegan popped up Naylor on a high fastball after setting him up with a couple of splitters. That left it up to Arozarena. Finnegan wasn’t paying Rodriguez any attention, and he stole third base on him without a throw. Arozarena singled in the run, and it was 4-1 Mariners.

Tyler Holton took over to get Raley, and he failed as the outfielder flicked a sweeper into right field for a single. Arozarena went first to third, and Refsnyder dug in looking to expand the Mariners’ lead. He failed, grounding out to McGonigle at third.

So it was 4-1 and the Tigers were running out of time. They seemed to take some urgency, as Torkelson and McKinstry started the inning with singles off of right-hander Cooper Criswell. Wenceel Pérez stepped in and flicked a low changeup into the right field corner for a two-run triple, and it was 4-3 Mariners with Pérez on third and no outs. A tie seemed imminent, but we had to reckon with the Tigers bench.

Dan Wilson turned to lefty Gabe Speier to replace Criswell. Matt Vierling pinch-hit for Carpenter, who as you’ll all recall homered off of Speier in Game 5 of last year’s ALDS Game 5, and Vierling grounded out to Wisdom at third. The third baseman tried to tag Pérez as he got back to the bag, and still had just enough time to throw out Vierling anyway. McGonigle hit a routine fly ball to left field, too shallow to score Pérez. Speier climbed the ladder with a fastball against Torres in a 2-2 count and blew him away. The Tigers had scored two, but stranding Pérez at third with no outs was infuriating.

Drew Anderson took over from Holton in the top of the eighth inning. He quickly struck out Wisdom and Emerson. McGonigle couldn’t handle a chopper from Perada, and Young slapped a curveball into right field as Perada moved to third. The Tigers absolutely had to have an out here to snuff a two-out rally. They got it, as Rodriguez grounded out sharply to McKinstry.

Right-hander Eduard Bazardo entered for the Mariners in the bottom of the eighth. Greene grounded out, and Dingler was locked up by a tough backdoor sinker for strike three. That left Short hitting against a tough right-hander and he flew out to end the inning.

So the Tigers needed two runs to win, and they would have only three outs to come back. They would have Torkelson, McKinstry, and Pérez up in the bottom of the ninth before the lineup turned over, so things looked pretty bleak for a team that cannot afford to lose a series right now. First they needed to keep the Mariners from answering back.

Will Vest took the mound in the top of the inning. In a 1-2 count, Vest tried to go well above the zone, but Naylor was ready and paddled a single to left field to start the inning. Naylor tried to get a walking lead and then broke for second. Vest did a nice job holding and stepped off to fire to second base for the out. The home crowd enjoyed that, at least. Vest then turned the cheers to groans by hitting Randy Arozarena. On an 0-1 pitch for a strike, Dingler tried to backpick Arozarena and fired a strike to Torkelson. A nice swipe tag got the out, though it took a challenge to overturn the initial safe call. Nice work from Dingler and Torkelson there. Vest dropped in a slider for strike three against Raley, and it was last call for the Tigers, needing one to tie and two for a walkoff victory.

The task would be very difficult against closer Andrés Muñoz. Torkelson quickly popped out to Emerson and that did nothing for Tigers fans’ optimism. Muñoz was firing 98-99 mph heaters in there. McKinstry did a nice job taking a couple of close pitches and drew a walk. Muñoz remained a little wild, falling behind 3-0 to Pérez. The Tigers’ outfielder took a heater on the outer edge for a strike, but the next one was again quite wide of the mark and Pérez took first base. So, two on, one out for Vierling and Muñoz missed badly with two more pitches. However, the Mariners closer pulled it together with two good heaters to get back in the count and Vierling chopped one to third. Wisdom could only get the out at first, and so both runners were in scoring position for McGonigle.

Fortunately, Dan Wilson decided not to walk McGonigle. The stage was set. Muñoz missed with a slider first pitch. He came back with a triple digit heater on the inner edge, and the rookie smoked it off the tip of a leaping Emerson’s glove at second base and into right field for a walkoff two-run single. Holy cow. Kevin forever!

The Tigers really needed this one to keep some momentum going, and the rookie delivered in dramatic fashion. They’ll have an off day on Monday before welcoming in the Minnesota Twins on Tuesday. After that three game set they’ll head to Cleveland for three against the Guardians, and based on Tarik Skubal’s rehab outing in West Mchigan, they may well have their ace back on the mound in that series.

St. Louis Cardinals Come from Behind to Sweep Cincinnati Reds Sunday

Jun 6, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Cardinals second baseman Bryan Torres (39) is congratulated by teammates after scoring against the Cincinnati Reds during the second inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

With a couple of exceptions, Michael McGreevy gave the St. Louis Cardinals a good start Sunday. Fortunately, the St. Louis Cardinals woke up in time to complete the sweep of the Cincinnati Reds Sunday.

My fear is that the narrative of this game would be all of the runners the Cardinals stranded on base Sunday. Through the first several innings, St. Louis had left 11 runners on base including a bases-loaded opportunity in the bottom of the 1st inning. That combined with Michael McGreevy leaving two pitches right in the middle of the zone in the top of the 3rd inning resulting in home runs from McLain and Stephenson giving Cincinnati a 2-0 lead.

The St. Louis bats would greet the Cincinnati Reds bullpen in the bottom of the 5th inning as Alec Burleson slapped a double down the left field line followed by Jordan Walker smoking a 93 mph four-seam fastball to the left-center field wall scoring Burleson and cutting the Reds lead in half at 2-1.

Bryan Torres would eliminate that lead altogether giving the Cardinals their first lead of the game when he crushed a 92 mph four-seam fastball into the right field stands making it 3-2 Cardinals.

Michael McGreevy’s outing was a successful one. He gave St. Louis 6 solid innings allowing just 5 hits, 2 earned runs with 5 strikeouts and no walks.

George Soriano came in to take care of the 7th inning for the Cardinals. Unfortunately, McLain would connect with one of his 96 mph sinkers for his second home run of the day tying the game at 3-3. Soriano would only get 2 outs before being removed in the 7th inning as JoJo Romero came in to settle down a runners on first and second threat from the Reds which could have been worse if not for a fine defensive play from JJ Wetherholt getting a force out at 2nd base. JJ also made a leaping grab to end the inning keeping the game tied going into the bottom of the 7th. JoJo would hang in there through the first 2/3 of the 8th inning, but was removed by manager Oli Marmol after Myers singled into center. Ryne Stanek introduced himself by throwing a wild pitch to the backstop advancing Myers into scoring position at second, but he’d strike out Benson to end the Reds half of the 8th inning.

The Cardinals offense would threaten in their half of the 8th inning as José Fermín led off with a single. Instead of Nolan Gorman being allowed to change his 0-3 day, Nelson Velázquez pinch-hit instead. He ripped a single to left field to the delight of the tarps off crowd in right field giving St. Louis runners on first and second with no out. Victor Scott II, the team’s designated bunter dropped down a beauty which the Reds pitcher Moll decided to throw into left field which was a great decision (for the Cardinals) which scored Fermin giving St. Louis a 4-3 lead.

That spectacular effort was followed by a 8-pitch walk to JJ Wetherholt to load the bases. Ivan Herrera then hit a ball to McLain at short who was playing in. The ball caught him on an in-between hop and he botched it allowing Velazquez to score giving St. Louis a 5-3 lead. After 2 force-outs at home plate, Reds relief pitcher Santillan would get Lars Nootbaar to fly out to left field with the bases loaded to end the Cardinals 8th inning. Thank you again, Reds bullpen. We are going to miss you when you leave town. However, the Cardinals stranded WAY too many runners Sunday. Those extra runs would have been nice to make the 9th inning less stressful.

The St. Louis Cardinals would bring in Riley O’Brien to handle the Reds in the top of the 9th. Riley would face the 7-8-9 hitters at the bottom of the Reds lineup, but one of them was McLain who already had two homers Sunday. Unlike Saturday, O’Brien came in throwing strikes that included a 2-2 heater for the first out of the 9th. Stephenson would then double down the right field line bringing up Arroyo as the tying run because St. Louis just can’t bear winning the easy way. Fortunately, Arroyo flew out to center for the second out of the 9th bringing up Blake Dunn as the Reds final hope. That hope would be dashed as he also flew out to center for the final out of the game.

After a successful homestand against the Cincinnati Reds, the St. Louis Cardinals begin a road trip in New York Tuesday night taking on the Mets. The Cardinals starter is to be determined while the Mets are expected to start Stephen Kolek. First pitch scheduled for 6:10pm central time with the TV broadcast being handled by Cardinals.tv.

Cody Bellinger homer sparks late Yankees eruption in win over Red Sox

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Cody Bellinger, seen here hitting a single in the fourth inning, smacked a go-ahead home run the eighth against the Red Sox on June 7, 2026, Image 2 shows Yankees right fielder Jose Caballero scores on a Paul Goldschmidt single in the fifth inning against the Red Sox on June 7, 2026

A pitchers’ duel between Cam Schlittler and Ranger Suárez on Sunday afternoon eventually gave way to a battle of the bullpens.

And while that meant another good day of Yankees pitching, they were at risk of wasting it because an Aaron Judge-less lineup lacked much punch for most of the game.

Turns out it was saving its best for last.

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Cody Bellinger delivered a go-ahead blast in the bottom of the eighth inning before the Yankees piled on from there, leading to a 6-1 win over the Red Sox at a sold-out Yankee Stadium.

After Red Sox reliever Justin Slaten struck out the first two batters of the frame, Bellinger, arguably the Yankees’ most valuable all-around player so far this season, clobbered his ninth home run to break a 1-1 tie.

That marked the first of five straight batters to reach base, including an RBI single from Trent Grisham and a three-run homer from Jazz Chisholm Jr. against lefty Joe La Sorsa to give David Bednar some more breathing room in the ninth.

Cody Bellinger, seen here hitting a single in the fourth inning, smacked a go-ahead home run the eighth against the Red Sox on June 7, 2026. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Fernando Cruz, Brent Headrick, Tim Hill and Bednar combined for 3 ⅓ scoreless innings in relief of Schlittler as the Yankees (38-26) split the two-game series with the Red Sox (27-36).

Facing his hometown team that he dominated in the AL wild-card series clincher last October, Schlittler was not quite as sharp but still plenty good as he held the Red Sox to one run across 5 ⅔ innings.

The only problem for the Yankees was that Suárez was even better, holding them to one run across 6 1/3 innings before his bullpen let him down.

Yankees right fielder Jose Caballero scores on a Paul Goldschmidt single in the fifth inning against the Red Sox on June 7, 2026. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Suárez retired the first nine Yankees in order before Paul Goldschmidt led off the fourth inning with a bloop single. One out later, Bellinger added another bloop single and one out after that, Grisham lined a single to center, though Goldschmidt was held at third.

That loaded the bases for Anthony Volpe, who drew a 3-0 count before flying out on a 3-1 pitch to end the threat.

But the Yankees broke the scoreless tie the following inning, as José Caballero doubled before Goldschmidt sliced a two-out single for the 1-0 lead in the fifth.

The Red Sox quickly tied it back up, though, in the top of the sixth while knocking Schlittler out of the game. After Ceddanne Rafaela singled, Willson Contreras came up with two outs and smoked a bullet off the base of the left-field wall. The Yankees may have had a chance to nab Rafaela at the plate, but Volpe’s relay throw was well up the line, allowing him to score easily on Contreras’ double.

Cruz then relieved Schlittler and got Masataka Yoshida to fly out to strand Contreras in scoring position.

The Yankees had another chance to score in the bottom of the sixth, after Grisham drilled a two-out double, but Volpe popped out on the first pitch he saw from Suárez.

What we learned as Matt Chapman delivers Giants' game-winning hit to defeat Cubs

What we learned as Matt Chapman delivers Giants' game-winning hit to defeat Cubs originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — For a second straight day, the Giants went to extra innings at Wrigley Field. This time they were able to avoid a walk-off. 

Matt Chapman drove in the go-ahead run in the top of the 10th and right-hander Dylan Smith kept the Chicago Cubs off the board in the bottom of the inning as the Giants won 2-1, taking the three-game series and finishing with a 5-5 road trip. The road trip was their best by record since their first one, when they won two of three against the San Diego Padres.

Smith picked up his first career save in his third appearance for the Giants. He struck out Michael Conforto and then got a pair of pop-ups with the tying run on third. 

The Giants had a historic offensive day on Friday and then went down quietly Saturday. In the series finale, they didn’t waste any time getting back on the scoreboard.

A walk of Rafael Devers and single by Luis Arraez got them going in the top of the first, and Jung Hoo Lee drove Devers in with a single. The Cubs tied it up in the third, setting up a battle of two tired bullpens.

After starter Jameson Taillon left in the second with a hamstring strain, the Cubs got 6 1/3 dominant relief innings from Javier Assad, who allowed just one hit and took the ball to the top of the eighth. 

Trevor McDonald handed it over to JT Brubaker and Caleb Kilian, who took the tie game to the bottom of the eighth, which turned into a wild frame. 

Erik Miller ran into trouble right away, walking the leadoff batter and then making an errant throw on an infield single, which put runners on the corners with no outs. Alex Bregman hit a liner to first that found Devers, and pinch-runner Kevin Alcantara inexplicably broke for the plate. He was easily doubled off and the Giants escaped. 

The Cubs got the winning run to second in the bottom of the ninth, but this time Keaton Winn won the battle with Pete Crow-Armstrong. A day after hitting a game-tying homer in the ninth, the center fielder grounded out to first. 

The Giants had just one hit over the final eight innings of regular ball, but Chapman opened the 10th with a single to right that brought Jonah Cox home from second. 

He’s Going Streaking

Lee didn’t waste any time extending his hitting streak, lining a single to center in the first inning to put his hitting streak at 15 games. He finished the game with a .323 average, which is third in the National League.

Lee was batting .265 at the start of the hitting streak, but the string of multi-hit days have given him at least an outside shot to be in consideration for the 2026 MLB All-Star Game if he can stay hot. He entered the day ranked 13th among NL outfielders in wRC+ and 17th in fWAR.

Lee also stole his second base of the series — and the season. He didn’t even have an attempt until Saturday, and that’s certainly an area where the Giants hoped Lee would be much more impactful. Lee is right at league-average in sprint speed, but he stole 10 bases last year and regularly reached double-digits in the KBO.

Trevor Delivers

McDonald had allowed at least three runs in each of his previous three starts, but he went five innings Sunday night and gave up just the one early run. The rookie allowed four hits, walked three and struck out six while leaning heavily on his slider. 

McDonald got six whiffs on the pitch, and it finished off half of his strikeouts. The biggest one came in the fourth, when he loaded the bases ahead of No. 9 hitter Carson Kelly. The catcher has been an ABS master, but he expanded the zone and swung through a filthy slider that ended up well out of the zone glove-side. 

McDonald has allowed exactly one earned run in three of his seven starts. He lowered his ERA to 4.15 and his FIP to 3.51.

Everyday Bryce

Tony Vitello certainly has changed the way he’s handling Bryce Eldridge, and that helped the Giants have a huge offensive trip, even if it wasn’t a season-altering one overall. Eldridge appeared in all 10 games and started nine of them, including all three at Wrigley Field.

Eldridge was 0-for-3 with a walk on Sunday but still returns home in a much better place. He had 15 hits and four walks on the trip, raising his average to .280 and his wRC+ to 126. Most importantly, Eldridge continued to somewhat limit his strikeouts, going down eight times in 41 plate appearances.

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Pinch-hit heroics from Michael Harris II secure series sweep over Pirates

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - JUNE 7: Austin Wynns #16, Didier Fuentes #72 and Michael Harris II #23 of the Atlanta Braves celebrate following a 3-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates at Truist Park on June 7, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For the first six innings, the Atlanta Braves were looking like they were going to be denied another sweep as the Pirates did just enough to Bryce Elder to salvage a win. But a huge theme of this season is how this team continues to find different ways to win from different contributors, and the stars of this one? 1) Someone who was NOT in the starting lineup 2) bullpen arms coming up absolutely huge in high-leverage situations who aren’t our usual 7-8-9.

Elder grinded through six innings of two-run ball after being greeted rudely by a leadoff homer by Spencer Horowitz to start the afternoon. He only gave up the two hits, but Elder matched a season-high in three-ball counts and some walks came back to bite him in the third. Two walks and a pesky infield single loaded the bases with no outs. Nick Gonzales’s double play minimized the damange, but it did allow Jared Triolo to score and make it 2-0 Pirates.

And so the score would remain through six innings. The Braves had a promising first inning versus the opener Mason Montgomery with a walk from Mauricio Dubón, a double from Ozzie, and a walk from Dominic Smith to put a Brave on every base. But Austin Riley’s late swing on a 99 mph fastball would end the threat.

Scheduled starter Bubba Chandler entered in the second inning for the Pirates with Mike Yastrzemski leading off. The only damage done would be a single from Sandy León (!); the Braves were set down in order in the third, fourth, fifth, AND sixth. For someone known to walk guys and regularly only last five innings, Chandler racked up seven K’s from the Braves lineup in his 5.1 innings of work. 

But that lack of command reared its head in the bottom of the seventh, teeing up a wild sequence. Please don’t forget that all of this is happening with a light but constant little rain shower that would continue until the game concluded. The rally would begin with Dom Smith reaching on a throwing error by rookie Tyler Callihan, giving the Braves their first baserunner since Sandy’s single in the second. Yaz finally worked a walk off of Chandler, and then Jorge Mateo saw four straight balls. The bases were loaded for Sandy León. 

Except it wasn’t Sandy León, and it was never going to be. Sound operator, hit shuffle on the Michael Harris II walk-up songs playlist, please. Walt Weiss has pulled the lever.

In response, the Pirates did the most slow-walking I’ve ever seen that resulted in Chandler’s departure to give way to reliever Evan Sisk. But it didn’t matter. Pinch-hitter Money Mike is a cheat code, and he delivered by smoking the second pitch he saw 109.5 mph to right field for a bases-clearing double to give the Braves a 3-2 lead. Absolutely nuts.

Reynaldo López came out of the bullpen and worked a much-needed scoreless frame in the seventh to wash the taste of his Thursday appearance out of our mouths. But eyebrows raised across Braves Country when he was left in to pitch in the eighth with this tenuous lead. It was understandable to some extent – the bullpen has been taxed this week, particularly the big three of Dylan Lee, Robert Suarez, and Raisel Iglesias. He recorded one out, allowed a single, and walked Braves menace Horowitz. That would end his day. Tyler Kinley came in, got a lineout, walked Bryan Reynolds, and got a massive groundout to preserve the lead. No insurance runs would be added in the bottom of the eighth, so we all collectively strapped in for the top of the ninth. 

Out of the bullpen jogs Didier Fuentes, who is ten days shy of turning 21 and on for the first save opportunity of his career at any level. 

Reports of Brandon Lowe’s death (read: knee injury after yesterday’s game) were greatly exaggerated – they Michael Harris’d us right back with a pinch-hit maneuver that worked beautifully. Lowe ripped a double to right to start the inning and was replaced by pinch-runner Oneil Cruz. Cool cool, Cruz is very fast. Our collective anxiety could power a small city. Fuentes struck out Callihan for out #1. Jake Mangum’s eight-pitch at-bat resulted in an infield single, putting runners at the corners. Triolo popped out for a huge second out. But thankfully, it would end with Endy – Endy Rodríguez’s strikeout secured Didier’s first career save and the Braves officially swept the Pittsburgh Pirates. They may be a little damp at this point, but break out your brooms, y’all. It’s been a minute, which makes it all the sweeter.

Thus concludes a 5-1 homestand as the Braves now sport a 45-21 record. That, some have said, will play. After the off day tomorrow, the Braves will embark on a two-city road trip to Chicago to face the Pope’s own White Sox and then to Queens for the first series of the season vs. the New York Mets.

Cody Bellinger, Jazz Chisholm Jr. homer late to give Yankees 6-1 win over Red Sox

The Yankees scored a couple of late runs to come away with a 6-1 win over the Boston Red Sox on Sunday afternoon in the Bronx.

Here are the takeaways…

-- Cody Bellinger gave the Yankees the late lead, and they never looked back. With the game knotted 1-1 in the bottom of the eighth inning with two outs, Bellinger unloaded on a Justin Slaten pitch, demolishing a solo home run to right to give the Yankees a 2-1 edge. 

The Yankees will be without Aaron Judge for some time, so it was good to see Bellinger have a big moment. 

-- After Bellinger's bomb, the Yankees did a good job of tacking on more insurance runs. Amed Rosario singled, stole second, and came around to score on a Trent Grisham single. Grisham had three hits on the afternoon. Then, with the lead 3-1, Jazz Chisholm Jr., who had been 0-for-3 with three strikeouts, crushed a three-run homer of Joe La Sorsa, breaking the game wide open.

-- Sunday’s matinee featured a pitchers’ duel between Cam Schlittler and Ranger Suarez. Schlittler struck out four over his first three scoreless innings, while Suarez went nine-up, nine-down the first time through the order. 

-- The Yankees had a good chance to get to Suarez when they loaded the bases in the fourth, but Anthony Volpe flew out to center fielder on a 3-1 pitch to end the threat. 

Finally, the Yankees scratched across a run in the fifth inning. After a Jose Caballero double, Paul Goldschmidt came through with a two-out hit to right, giving the Yankees a 1-0 lead.

-- The Red Sox answered back in the top of the sixth on an RBI double from Willson Contreras. On the play, Ceddanne Rafaela scored from first base, but he likely would have been out at the plate if not for a poor throw from Volpe. The shortstop had plenty of time to cut down the run, but his throw was way off the mark.

That ended Schlittler's afternoon, as he went 5.2 innings allowing one earned run on four hits with five strikeouts and a walk. Suarez, meanwhile, went 6.1 innings, allowing one earned run on six hits with six strikeouts. 

-- Volpe had another tough moment in the bottom of the sixth, when he popped up on the first pitch with the potential go-ahead run in scoring position and two outs. Volpe has not a hit with two outs and a runner in scoring position since he was called up earlier this season. He went 0-for 3 with a walk at the dish.

-- The Yankees are now 2-3 since Judge went down with his rib injury.

Game MVP

Bellinger, who put the Yankees ahead for good in the eighth inning.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees start a three-game series in Cleveland against the Guardians on Tuesday night at 6:40 p.m.

Will Warren will face righty Gavin Williams.

Controversial call, bad defense sink Orioles in 6-4 defeat

Jun 7, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Baltimore Orioles second baseman Jackson Holliday (7) throws to first base but cannot turn a double play after forcing out Toronto Blue Jays second baseman Ernie Clement (22) in the second inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images | Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

The Orioles appeared to be cruising toward a series win before a missed call and some shoddy defense resulted in a five-run sixth inning. The Blue Jays rode a bizarre stretch to a come from behind 6-4 victory, leaving the O’s to return to the United States with a bad taste in their mouths.

The disaster inning started with an absolute moon shot from Yohendrick Piñango. Baz entered the inning with five zeros and less than 65 pitches, but he left a changeup up to the Blue Jays number two hitter. Piñango sent the ball 423 feet from home plate, but the Orioles still held a three-run advantage.

Baz retired Vladimir Guerrero Jr., but Jesús Sánchez lined a ball out of Tyler O’Neill’s reach in right field. Baz generated a ground ball from Ernie Clement, but Gunnar Henderson committed a fielding error to place runners on the corners with one out.

Baz, in need of a double play, induced a grounder from Brandon Valenzuela. The bouncer took Henderson to the right side of second base, and the shortstop set his sights on a tag and throw double play. Clement made a clear and obvious attempt to run away from the tag toward the outfield grass, which prompted Henderson to throw the ball to first. However, second base umpire Nic Lentz ruled that the runner did not stray from the baseline, so Clement reached safely and the second run scored.

Alonso and Baz immediately expressed their objection to the call, and Craig Albernaz left the dugout for an explanation. After a discussion, the call stood. The Blue Jays had cut the lead in half, and Clement remained at second base.

Baz, potentially still bothered by the error and controversial call, allowed a base hit to Kazuma Okamoto. Clement raced home to score the third run, and Okamoto avoided being caught straying too far from first base. Andrés Giménez followed with a double down the right field line, and suddenly the game was tied.

Despite entering the inning with a low pitch count and a four-run advantage, Baz failed to complete the sixth. Albernaz summoned Yennier Cano from the bullpen, and Baz voiced his displeasure toward the second base umpire before he entered the dugout.

Cano entered and got Nathan Lukes to put the ball on the ground, but the ball deflected off the mound and to the right side of the infield. Holliday, with no time to transfer the ball to his throwing hand, flipped the ball directly from his glove to first base. Unfortunately for Holliday, he never stood a chance with either type of play. Instead of eating the throw, his lollipop attempt allowed Giménez to break for home. Alonso bounced the ball to the plate, and Samuel Basallo aggravated his wrist on a late tag attempt. The Blue Jays stole a 5-4 advantage as Baz continued to steam in the dugout.

The Orioles should have escaped the inning with only one run allowed, but Baltimore was done in by more than just one blown call. Henderson should have made the play on Clement’s grounder, and he could have made a more aggressive effort to tag Clement to prevent a runner from reaching scoring position with a multi-run lead. Jackson Holliday never should have flipped the ball to Alonso, and a better throw home may have nailed the go-ahead runner.

The Orioles squandered a golden attempt to bounce back in the top of the seventh. Tyler O’Neill and Holliday reached on a single and walk, but the hot-hitting Blaze Alexander decided to lay down a bunt. Alexander failed to push the bunt far enough beyond home plate, and the Blue Jays got the lead runner at third base. Taylor Ward stepped in with the tying run in scoring position, but Ward bounced into a tailor-made double play to end the inning.

The Blue Jays added an insurance run when Valenzuela tagged a solo shot off of Rico Garcia.

The Orioles attempted to start a rally in the ninth when Colton Cowser reached on an infield single. Holliday bounced a ball to the right side and attempt to dodge the tag when running to first base. Holliday was called out for running outside of the basepaths, which added insult to injury to Albernaz and his squad. Blaze Alexander struck out looking to end the game.

The Orioles jumped out to their early advantage with a four-run fifth inning. Colton Cowser got the party started with a solo shot, and the Birds used some two-out lightning to extend their advantage. Holliday tripled off the wall, and Alexander drove him in with a double to right-center. Kevin Gausman left a splitter up to Taylor Ward, and Ward cleared the fence for his third homer of the season.

The Orioles will return home with a 31-35 record. The team has officially listed tomorrow’s starter as TBA. Chris Bassitt would be on turn, but he left his last start early with back tightness. Trey Gibson remains an option at Triple-A.

Weak offense and too many walks = Rays 1 Marlins 4

MIAMI, FLORIDA - JUNE 07: Cedric Mullins #31 of the Tampa Bay Rays catches a fly ball against the Miami Marlins during the second inning at loanDepot park on June 07, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today, the Marlins played a sort of game that felt familiar. Their pitching, from starter to bullpen, was outstanding. Their defense possibly robbed Cedric Mullins of a home run and was sharp across the board.

They ran the bases well, making just one mistake (Heriberto Hernandez was thrown out at second trying to stretch a single to a double) but otherwise stole four bases, including a double steal that led to two runs.

I realized, this style of play felt familiar for a reason: this had been the way the Rays were playing until about a month ago.

But now that is gone. They have lost their good luck but also lost some of their basic ability to play clean baseball.

Griffin Jax started and pitched five shutout innings, bouncing back after his last (four inning, six run) start. And the Rays got on the board early as well, piecing together a hit, a stolen base, and an RBI single for a 1-0 lead. Things were looking up!

But their offense, after that, was AWOL. They scored just one run on six singles, and managed to lose two runners who were caught stealing.

And their relievers struggled to avoid walking people (Rays pitchers gave up six walks altogether), with several of the batters they walked ultimately scoring.

Catcher Hunter Feduccia had an especially terrible day. He blew the Rays two ball/strike challenges early on. Now, I have been frustrated in the past when the Rays DON’T use their challenges — you can’t save them up for a rainy day! But if you have lost your first challenge and it’s not even the fifth inning I would be very very cautious about using another.

But his biggest error? Following that double steal, with Miami runners on second and third base, Joe Mack hit a weak grounder that was fielded by Taylor Walls. Walls fired to Feduccia and the throw was in time to get the runner out….but Feduccia muffed the catch, the ball bounced away, and not just run but two runners scored. Was it a difficult throw to corral? Sure. Should he have held on to it? Yes! Here’s the video, what do y’all think?

The Rays continue to disappoint on both sides of the ball, although at least in this series we got some decent starting pitching. Now it’s up to Boston, and it would be really nice to win that series and NOT give the Red Sox any glimmer of hope.