Cincinnati Reds vs. Colorado Rockies – Rhett Lowder vs. Tomoyuki Sugano

INDEPENDENCE PASS, CO - JUNE 13: A large sign on Highway 82 designates the official crossing of the Continental Divide on June 13, 2013, at Independence Pass, Colorado. Colorado's Rocky Mountains are part of a range that extends 3,000 miles from New Mexico all the way into Canada. (Photo by George Rose/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cincinnati Reds slugged four homers in their series opening 7-2 victory over the Colorado Rockies on Friday, with Spencer Steer responsible for a pair of them. On Saturday, they’ll look to take the series victory as they face off against righty Tomoyuki Sugano.

Sugano’s one of those rare birds who’s actually been a bit better pitching in Coors Field in 2026 than he has in other parks. He owns a 4.14 ERA at home and has held opponents to roughly 50 points lower in terms of OPS, and only 5 of the 16 dingers he has yielded have come in the high altitude of his home park. That said, lefties have slugged .581 off him so far this season, and Elly De La Cruz is red hot at the moment…

Rhett Lowder gets the ball for the Reds as their shuffled rotation takes form in the season’s second half while Nick Lodolo recovers from yet another blister problem. Lowder has pitched in long relief in each of his last trio of outings, his last start coming back on June 30th.

First pitch in this afternoon affair is set for 3:10 PM ET. Here’s how both clubs will line up to start:

Today’s Lineups

REDSROCKIES
Elly De La Cruz – SSJake McCarthy – LF
Sal Stewart – 3BMickey Moniak – DH
JJ Bleday – LFCole Carrigg – CF
Spencer Steer – 1BTJ Rumfield – 1B
Eugenio Suarez – DHWilli Castro – 3B
Noelvi Marte – RFTroy Johnston – RF
Dane Myers – CFEdouard Julien – 2B
Jose Trevino – CBrett Sullivan – C
Edwin Arroyo – 2BEzequiel Tovar – SS
Rhett Lowder – RHPTomoyuki Sugano – RHP

Mets vs Phillies Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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An eventful weekend series between the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies continues today, with first pitch moved up to 3:05 p.m. ET in advance of expected thunderstorms.

The Mets won the opener, snapping a three-game losing streak, but Philadelphia is a -169 moneyline favorite and should have the pitching edge by a wide margin.

Read on for my Mets vs. Phillies predictions and MLB picks for Saturday, July 18.

Who will win Mets vs Phillies today: Phillies -1.5 (+119)

Ideally, I'd like to keep those runs, but the moneyline is far too expensive to take the Philadelphia Phillies straight up. It's currently in the -160 range. I'd prefer -120 and would go up to the mid -130s.

The last-place New York Mets have a .377 winning percentage with a -1.2 differential per game against .500+ teams. Against current playoff teams, they're .333, -1.9. The Phillies, meanwhile, are .651 against losing teams.

The Phillies start Jesus Luzardo, who is fourth in MLB in strikeouts and is above the 80th percentile in every major pitching metric except walk rate (62nd) and chase rate (78th).

Play to +100. 

Covers COVERS INTEL: Luzardo has added almost 150 revolutions to his sweeper's spin rate from last season, and batters are now hitting .131 against it.

Mets vs Phillies Over/Under pick: Under 8.5 (-103)

The Mets' four runs on Friday matched their total for the previous three games. New York also saw Juan Soto leave in the eighth with a sore left calf, the same problem that sent him to the IL in April. He's listed as day-to-day.

The Mets start Sean Manaea, who is being showcased as a likely deadline deal to a contender. He's 2-4, 4.56, but is 4.35 with a 1.258 WHIP in his last four starts, 3.75, 1.083 in his last two. Philly has scored 3.5 runs per game in the last 10, nearly a full run lower than their season average.

Play to -110. 

Shawn Krest's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 25-35, -6.98 units
  • Over/Under bets: 35-20, +2.53 units

Mets vs Phillies weather

Humid with rain in the forecast. The winds are moderate and blowing out to center field. 

Mets vs Phillies odds

  • Moneyline: Mets +156 | Phillies -163
  • Run line: Mets +1.5 (-133) | Phillies -1.5 (+127)
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 (-108) | Under 8.5 (+104)

Mets vs Phillies trend

The Phillies have hit the F5 team total Over in nine of their last 12 games at home (+5.55 Units / 40% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Mets vs. Phillies.

How to watch Mets vs Phillies and game info

LocationCitizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
DateSaturday, July 18, 2026
First pitch3:05 p.m. ET
TVSNY, NBCSP
Mets starting pitcherSean Manaea
(2-4, 4.56 ERA)
Phillies starting pitcherJesus Luzardo
(8-4, 3.51 ERA)

Mets vs Phillies latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Free Fall 2.0 Puts The Front Office At A Crossroads

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JULY 14: Shea Langeliers #23 of the Athletics looks on during the first inning of the 2026 MLB All-Star Game at Citizens Bank Park on July 14, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Too bad the crossroads seem to overlook a cliff on all sides, but which way do you want to go? This reminds me of a trip to Europe years ago in which Siri instructed, calmly, “turn left”. Only we were driving on a mountain road and for as long as the eye could see a left turn sent you plunging off a cliff down a steep embankment. I bring this up because had I just followed Siri’s guidance I would not have had to endure this 3-18 stretch on the heels of a 1-20 free fall last season.

But here we are, alive in some technical sense and wondering which way to turn as the team faces a double-digit losing streak capped by a downright embarrassing 23-4 loss.

I think the absurdity of the A’s pitching failures are summed up by Johnny Doskow’s note on the radio last night when he said, “The 23 runs given up ties a season high for the A’s.” Ties. Not in literally the last 71 years has a team been able to say that — oh and in 1955 it was the Kansas City A’s.

I could emphasize the level of quagmire the A’s are in with stats, but that would be wantonly cruel. OK fine, I will. The A’s now have a home ERA of 6.63 and have surrendered 97 HR in 48 games. They are 15-27 (.357) in West Sacramento. Their -125 run differential is the only one in negative triple digits. Over their past 15 games the A’s are 1-14. Since July 1st they have held a lead for 6 pitches.

But the question in front of the A’s right now, besides “How do we outscore our opponent for a night, or at least for 7 pitches?”, is what direction to go as a team that thought it had transitioned from “rebuild” to “ competitive” only to find itself with the 3rd worst record in the American League?

Option 1 is to attribute much of the problem to injuries, and wait for key players such as Nick Kurtz and Zack Gelof to return, and to hope some of the pitchers like Jacob Lopez, Jeffrey Springs, and maybe at some point Luis Morales, can revert back to their 2025 selves or better.

This is a naive and terrible option, as what has become glaring is that right now the A’s are not 1 starting pitcher, 1 reliever, or 1 position player away from being contenders. Getting guys back will certainly help a lot, but the A’s have gotten to the point where “much improved” would be to go 7-8 instead of 1-14, for the pitchers to give up 5 runs in a game instead of the 8+ they allow 41.6% of the time at home (yes, folks, 20 times in 48 tries).

Option 2 is not just to sell, but to try to sell pieces at the deadline that can bring back a meaningful return. The A’s are in the unfortunate position where most of their players are either essential core pieces or have little trade value due to contract or performance.

The closest thing to a possible “sweet spot” exception is Shea Langeliers, whose name has begun to be bandied about in online trade rumors — but not ones coming from reliable inside sources, just internet chat buzz at this point. There is also a prevailing sense that even if the A’s were open to trading Langeliers the best time to do it would be the off-season, not the trading deadline.

That being said, given that the A’s — still with plenty of their players healthy — are not 38-38 but rather 41-56 and sinking fast with abominable pitching, I think the A’s probably do need to listen on Langeliers especially were a deal to fall into their lap in which they could procure a decent replacement catcher and a top young pitching prospect.

It’s hard to know who is looking for what and then which players they would be willing to move, not to mention which players the A’s scouts believe in as trade targets. So it’s generally foolish for fans to sit suggesting specific deals, but I will offer examples of possible frameworks.

If the White Sox came calling ready to deal Kyle Teel and Hagen Smith (the #5 overall pick in 2024) that might be a worthwhile conversation. (Updated note: I wrote this not realizing Smith is out with a sore shoulder, which changes the landscape.) Same if the Red Sox came calling offering Carlos Narvaez and Connelly Early (whose current IL stint with elbow inflammation might make him a riskier get but also a more possible one). The Yankees could potentially make Carlos Lagrange available along with the excellent defensive catcher Austin Wells, whose bat cratered this season but was much better in 2025. So there are frameworks and specific players who could make sense — but there truly are not many.

As far as other possible trade chips that could bring back value, it doesn’t help that Henry Bolte’s fast start has been followed by a stat-wrecking funk on both sides of the ball, that Lawrence Butler continues to wade in the waters of the Mendoza line, that Jacob Wilson has not been able to stay healthy, or that Colby Thomas’ many shortcomings have been soundly exposed.

Option 3 is probably the most likely one and that is some tepid moves at the deadline that don’t move the needle unless some prospect breaks out far more than expected. Mark Leiter Jr. might draw interest, but the return is not going to be much. The same is true of Jonah Heim, whose most recent transaction was to be dealt for cash.

Option 4 probably came and went with the All-Star break, at least until the off-season, and that is to clean house of more than just one pitching coach and bring new voices and leadership to a still talented group that has veered off course like Columbus trying to find Asia with a broken compass and plays a generally undisciplined and not fundamentally sound brand of baseball.

The front office seems strangely forgiving of and committed to a band of coaches/manager who are best known for epic skids of 21 games and an ability to adjust. Perhaps a lack of sufficient talent on the field, partly due to injuries, is to blame — that seems to be the common refrain. But its mid-July and the quality of at bats, pitch selection and execution, fundamentals, and ability to stop the bleeding has not improved and this should not be summarily excused.

2026 will mark the 5th consecutive season the A’s have fallen out of contention by the All-Star break, and this year it was hard to do given that the AL West leader is 1 game over .500 while 48-48 gets you the 3rd wild card spot.

Without question the plan has been for the A’s to contend in 2027 and so the question becomes: how would you proceed in the next couple weeks in order to further that goal? And then again in the 0ff-season? The team may be at a crossroads, and every turn may take you off a cliff, but the A’s have to do something (doing nothing qualifies as something) and the next test of a chosen direction will be the August 3rd trading deadline.

Got any great ideas?

PIRATES AT GUARDIANS, GAME ONE, discussion: Williams vs. Jones

MIAMI, FLORIDA - JULY 11: Patrick Bailey #16 of the Cleveland Guardians rounds third base against the Miami Marlins in the eighth inning of the game at loanDepot park on July 11, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here’s the Guardians lineup:

Here’s the Pirates lineup:

Let’s go, Guardians!

SB Nation Reacts Results: Pirates should buy at trade deadline

PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 02: Brandon Lowe #5 of the Pittsburgh Pirates celebrates with teammates in the dugout after scoring in the seventh inning during the game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on Thursday, July 2, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Denis Kennedy/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Pittsburgh Pirates are getting underway with the second half of their season and the trade deadline is fast approaching. The Pirates currently sit at fourth in the NL Central division with a 50-47 record, but are only 1.5 games back from a Wild Card berth. The Pirates are in a prime position to add to their squad and the fans at Bucs Dugout echo that, with 90% of the fans voting that the Pirates should buy at the trade deadline this season.

For the first time in a long time it looks like the Pirates may actually add to their roster instead of doing some aggressive house cleaning. With their current record and the deadline coming on August 3, the Buccos should look to add some pieces to put them over the top as the Wild Card race starts to heat up. The Milwaukee Brewers are firmly set in first place for now, but otherwise the division is very much within striking distance for the plucky Pirates.

The question now is would the Pirates try and target in a trade. Brandon Lowe has been a piece that has been brought up in trade rumors all season, but they are especially ramping up after his All-Star snub. With the emergence of Esmerlyn Valdez and Ryan O’Hearn being key contributors, several have speculated if Spencer Horwitz could now be a piece that gets moved. Then of course there’s Carmen Mlodzinski who famously backslid after his move to the bullpen from the rotation and causing some friction in the clubhouse. Does he get moved strictly off of morale and team culture being threatened?

When it comes to who the Pirates should be targeting, a big time reliever would be nearly unanimous in wants and needs from this fanbase. A reunion with Aroldis Chapman was rumored but the Boston Red Sox are surging now and may not be willing to give up that piece like they could’ve been earlier in the year. It would take a complete package but the idea of trading for Mason Miller has circulated online recently, but again the Padres are not in a terrible position themselves. Andrew Filliponi of 93.7 The Fan suggested that the Pirates target some lefty pitching, and threw out names like Kyle Freeland and Jeffrey Springs as possible candidates. Both the Rockies and the Athletics are almost certainly going to be looking to sell at the deadline.

FanDuel SportsBook currently gives the Pirates +245 odds to make the postseason, but also has a line giving the Pirates -345 odds to miss the playoffs altogether. No need to sugarcoat it, these are the best odds for the Pirates to make the playoffs in a decade. The Pirates should be looking to buy and add at the deadline versus cleaning up shop and getting ready for next season.

Who do yinz think the Pirates should try and trade for? Let us know in the comments!

Phillies Trade Deadline Needs Power Rankings

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JULY 16: Gabriel Rincones Jr. #17 of the Philadelphia Phillies bats against the New York Mets at Citizens Bank Park on July 16, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Mets defeated the Phillies 4-1. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

As the All-Star break and MLB Draft are over, the next mission for teams is the trade deadline. Who’s actually looking to buy, sell, or even do a bit of both as the season rolls to the August second deadline.

For a Phillies team that sits 54-44, they’ve established themselves as clear buyers with aspirations for contending given their payroll and previous seasons. The deadline has been both a chance to fill in marginal upgrade or take big swings depending on what’s available. They were able to do both last year, acquiring Jhoan Duran and Harrison Bader in separate trades with the Minnesota Twins that changed the outlook of the Phillies team completely.

Will they get a deadline like that this year? Probably not, but they have some similar issues this year. So, here is a power ranking of their needs as the deadline approaches.

1. A playable outfielder and new direction

Even with Brandon Marsh becoming an all-star and Derek Hill having the best stretch of his career in red pinstripes, the outfield still ranks among the worst in baseball. As a group, they rank 28th in wRC+ at 85, 28th in fWAR at 0.9, and 20th in Outs Above Average at -4. They’re not particularly good at anything and no one should be projected to play way better moving forward.

Getting the Gabriel Rincones Jr and Edmundo Sosa platoon off the field would be a big win by default. Rincones specifically has not impressed since being called up from AAA, hitting just .171 with a .503 OPS in 74 plate appearances. Defensively, he looks more like a future first baseman with some outfield capability rather than someone that should play most days in right field.

Sosa’s .625 OPS looks worse than what is actually happening; he’s been hitting the ball normally hard but has been a victim of a career-low BABIP. However, he is still best served as someone who should stay on the infield, grading out as a plus defender at second and third base while being a negative in left field.

Acquiring some sort of playable outfielder that can remove this platoon situation is probably the bare minimum that needs to be done this deadline. If nothing else happens, try to put a band aid on this wound.

The rest of this outfield cannot carry this issue either. Justin Crawford has a .658 OPS while being a below-average defender in center field, it’s fine given he’s a rookie but he’s still been roughly replacement-level and none of the other internal options have worked either.

Two other things make acquiring a playable outfielder the most important issue to address at the deadline. One is that it’s hard to expect Brandon Marsh and Derek Hill to keep playing the way they are. Marsh has begun slumping with a .483 OPS in July, making his season totals much closer to his normal career line. Hill has been a very nice story, but he has struck out on 23 of his 55 plate appearances as a Phillie with a .538 BABIP. He is a role player, a solid one, on the biggest heater of his major league career.

Two is that the infield is not lifting this group nearly as well. Trea Turner and Alec Bohm have had bad seasons and Bryson Stott has worked up to an 86 OPS+ after a bad start, which is roughly on the low-end of what he is as a hitter. Even with Bryce Harper having a good season (not an elite one), it’s not a group that will lift the outfield’s lack of production. This doesn’t even mention JT Realmuto’s issues this season.

2. A high leverage setup man

If outfield is their biggest need, this might be the best one to shop for given how available bullpen arms tend to be. With Brad Keller’s UCL Tear, the need for it to be a left-handed reliever probably matters less.

Jhoan Duran is Jhoan Duran and they will have to extend him as much as possible in October if they want to win a World Series. That’s just the reality of having someone like him on your roster. Jonathan Bowlan has looked like a really good get this season, giving them a 2.84 ERA with elite swing and miss stuff.

At the lowest point, it would be smart to try and shop for someone that slides after them. Given their starting pitching trio of Cristopher Sanchez, Zack Wheeler, and Jesus Luzardo, it should be easier to funnel high leverage situations into two or three arms over the course of October.

Acquiring one arm would put Orion Kerkering and Jose Alvarado in roles that probably suit how their seasons are going. Kerkering has a 2.43 ERA but has pitched worse under the surface, walking 12.7% of hitters he’s faced with a very bad ground ball rate.

Alvarado is a wild card that the Phillies shouldn’t give up on yet. The 6.82 ERA is very bad, but it is simply not indicative with how he’s pitched. Alvarado is striking out over 29% of batters he’s faced, limited walks, and has been solid quality of contact. His ERA has been as high as it’s been thanks to a .440 BABIP that seems impossible to sustain moving forward.

3. Some kind of non-Alan Rangel fifth starter

This should be the least expensive of their needs given the bar. They are not looking for someone to save the rotation but having an extra starting pitcher for the stretch run would help. It almost certainly will not be what Walker Buehler provided them last year but they could just use a body.

Alan Rangel has looked fine for someone who shouldn’t face more than 18 batters a night but it could tax the bullpen over time and is probably part of why those team totals have been an issue. Aaron Nola has been a lot better his last three starts, but is still a question whether he will finish six innings during a start.

Adding another body would just make pitching plans more flexible for the stretch run. Whether that’s combining him and Rangel in a game if the bullpen has been overworked and needs a day or if they feel the need to run a six man or just something else. More flexibility is generally good to have.

While they sit only 2.5 games back of the NL East as of this writing, they still should be thinking about trying to get this pitching staff healthy and ready for a wild card series. Winning the division is always great but they sit six back of the Brewers for a top-two seed, a much more difficult goal to achieve.

There are at least 576 more innings to go in the regular season, they could use another bulk option to help them get through it.

Yankees potential trade target: Antonio Senzatela

As the Trade Deadline approaches, Yankees fans have a pretty good idea that the team will be looking to add some bullpen help at the deadline. I can, of course, cite reasons why they should — thanks in large part to Camilo Doval, Jake Bird, and (regrettably) Tim Hill, the team has a combined 15 blown saves (tied for 10th in the league), a pedestrian 22.3 strikeout percentage, and their 82 shutdowns—defined by FanGraphs as “when a reliever accumulates greater than or equal to 0.06 WPA in any individual game”—ranks definitively in the bottom half of the league.

Let’s be honest, though: it doesn’t really matter what the state of the bullpen is: a three-headed monster of Chad Green, Dellin Betances, and Aroldis Chapman didn’t stop Brian Cashman from acquiring Zack Britton in 2018, after all. In fact, in the last 10 years, the Yankees have added a whopping 16 relievers at the Trade Deadline: Tyler Clippard, Adam Warren, David Robertson, Tommy Kahnle, Britton, Lance Lynn (he was supposed to join the bullpen, before the plug was pulled on the Sonny Gray experience), Joely Rodríguez, Clay Holmes, Lou Trivino, Scott Effross, Keynan Middleton, Mark Leiter Jr., Enyel De Los Santos, David Bednar, Bird, and Doval; only in 2019 and the COVID-shortened 2020 did they fail to add one.

In that same stretch, the Yankees have also made a habit of poaching players from the Colorado Rockies, acquiring, to varying levels of success, DJ LeMahieu, Adam Ottavino, Mike Tauchman, Ryan McMahon, Angel Chivilli, and Jake Bird. Might the Bombers go to that well once more, this time for pitcher Antonio Senzatela?

2026 Statistics (Thus Far): 30 games, 49.0 IP, 9-2 W-L, 3 saves, 3.31 ERA (151 ERA+), 3.22 FIP, 4.12 xFIP, 20.8% K%, 7.9% BB%, 1.224 WHIP, 1.1 fWAR, 1.4 rWAR

2026 ZiPS Rest-of-Season Statistics: 12 games (5 games started), 38.0 IP, 2-4 W-L, 5.17 ERA, 4.69 FIP, 14.6% K%, 7.8% BB%, 0.3 fWAR

Signed as an international amateur free agent out of Venezuela, Senzatela made his MLB debut on April 6, 2017, having cracked the Opening Day roster out of spring training. His career to date has been quite a rollercoaster. Senzatela spent most of his rookie season in the starting rotation, being moved to the bullpen down the stretch in order to limit his innings, as he had missed a chunk of the 2016 minor-league season due to injuries. Further such woes and minor-league stints limited him to just 23 games (13 starts) in 2018, while the juiced ball year hit him hard, as he posted an absurd 6.71 ERA — somehow only a 77 ERA+, a sign of how inflated run totals were in that season. Following a strong 2020 and a solid 2021, the Rockies handed him a five-year extension worth $50.5 million. It turned sour in a hurry: a torn ACL ended his season in August 2022, and after just two starts in 2023, he sprained his UCL and, that July, underwent Tommy John surgery. Senzatela returned to the mound for a brief cameo in 2024, making just three starts at the end of the season.

Finally healthy for the first time in years, Senzatela opened the 2025 season in the Rockies rotation … and proceeded to be one of the worst pitchers in the league: his 6.65 ERA was the highest among pitchers with at least 130 innings, and his -0.1 fWAR topped only Jake Irvin and Erick Fedde in the same category. At the end of August, they were finally forced to send him out to the bullpen, where he finished the season strong, posting a 2.86 ERA in 22 innings across seven appearances.

Now, in the bullpen full-time for the first time in his career, Senzatela has excelled. Among the 165 relievers with at least 30 innings, his 1.1 fWAR ranks 14th, and his 2.39 road ERA would rank 35th (his 3.31 ERA is partially the result of a Coors-inflated 4.37 home ERA). He has cut down his arsenal, notably dropping the slider — the breaking ball he threw most often in 2025 — almost completely, deploying it just 21 times this season. Senzatela has also reduced his reliance on the four-seam fastball, throwing it just 38.7 percent of the time, down from 56.9.

To compensate, the two pitches Senzatela threw the least last season, the cutter and the sinker, have become his second- and third-most common pitch, respectively, with the cutter getting significantly more use (29.9 to 11.4 percent). This gives him—much like Cam Schlittler—a three-fastball arsenal to work with, all of which come out of almost identical arm angles: the fastball and sinker at 41 degrees, the cutter at 39.

Senzatela does use his heater very differently than the hard-throwing Yankees ace, though. His four-seamer and cutter are both designed to generate whiffs, especially against righties, albeit in different ways: the four-seamer is thrown up in the zone at high velocity (97 mph), while the cutter averages just under 92 mph and operates more as a fast slider. His sinker, meanwhile, is thrown at a velocity closer to the fastball (96 mph), but is designed to generate soft contact, as it generates whiffs just 2.4 percent of the time and has yet to record a strikeout this season, but boasts an average “launch” angle of -7 degrees. Occasionally, Senzatela tosses in a curveball, mostly against lefties, which has generated whiffs at a very high rate. Almost half of the 11 plate appearances in which he has thrown a curveball this season has ended with a strikeout on said curveball.

That being said, when you look under the hood, there are some areas of concern:

Despite having an above-average xERA, Senzatela doesn’t do anything particularly well besides fastball velocity, although he doesn’t do anything particularly poorly, either. He doesn’t overwhelm you with strikeouts, gets a decent amount of groundballs on the sinker, walks his fair share of batters (but not an overwhelmingly large amount), and gives up some hard contact. Very little of this, however, is barreled.

Similar to Tim Hill, a few meltdowns which have inflated his ERA (in particular, four-run appearances on June 5th and June 29th raised his June ERA to 8.18). Unlike Hill, however, he hasn’t consistently put together shutdown outings between. In fact, after five scoreless outings to start the season, Senzatela has strung together three-straight scoreless outings just once, and two in a row just three times.

In many ways, Senzatela is outperforming the sum of his parts, which makes him simultaneously a prime candidate to be traded—it seems extraordinarily unlikely the Rockies would want to exercise his 2027 player option, but while the front office has changed, it’s the same Rockies ownership, so you never quite know—and the type of player the Yankees probably should avoid. While circumstances will likely mean that he will cost less in prospect capital than someone with a more reliable track record like Luke Weaver or Adrian Morejon, the Yankees already have quite the stable of inconsistent and unreliable arms.

Senzatela probably makes more sense for a team like the Nationals, a team whose offense has been so prolific they have kept a bullpen completely lacking any competent arms in the race, than for the Yankees, who are looking to lower Aaron Boone’s blood pressure, not increase it.

Eli White gets the start in RF, with Joey Bart catching

After a crushing victory on Friday night, the Braves now have two chances to open the “second half” with a series win against the respectable Rangers.

Facing the Rangers’ lefty, MacKenzie Gore, Eli White gets the start in right field, batting sixth and just ahead of Austin Riley. Joey Bart gets the start at catcher, as Drake Baldwin and his reverse splits bats leadoff, DHing. Jim Jarvis continues to start at shortstop, even against a lefty starter, and bats ninth.

UPDATE: The Rangers lineup can be viewed below, as they are still missing their star, Corey Seager.

Game Info

Game Date/Time: Saturday, July 18, 4:10 p.m. ET

Location: Truist Park, Atlanta, GA

TV: BravesVision

Streaming: MLB.tv

Radio: 680 AM / 93.7 FM The Fan, Los Bravos

Start of Mets-Phillies game pushed up an hour with rain in the forecast

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The start of Saturday’s game between the Philadelphia Phillies and New York Mets has been pushed up one hour to 3:05 p.m. because of rain in the forecast.

Mets left-hander Sean Manaea (2-4, 4.56 ERA) is scheduled to face Philadelphia All-Star lefty Jesús Luzardo (8-4, 3.51) in the second game of the three-game series. The Mets took the opener 4-1 on Thursday.

Saturday Bantering: Little And Estrada Called Up

TORONTO, CANADA - SEPTEMBER 10: Brendon Little #54 of the Toronto Blue Jays delivers a pitch in the seventh inning during a game against the New York Mets at Rogers Centre on September 10, 2024 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Image Of Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We made it to another weekend. There are only ten of these weekends left this season

Yesterday’s game was the latest in a series of terrible games this year. I’m wondering if they can continue to go with Spencer Miles one of five starts. But then, I don’t know who the next choice is.

And it doesn’t look like we are going to get any help coming off the IL.

  • Anthony Santander isn’t going to back anytime soon, he’s just had a cortisone shot because he ‘felt something’ in his shoulder and is shut down for 7 days. I’d bet he won’t be playing this year.
  • Addison Barger still has elbow inflammation, he won’t be back until August at very best.
  • Max Scherzer is back at the ‘playing catch’ phase.
  • Yimi Garcia and Jesus Sanchez are closer to returning.
  • And Jake Bloss is injured, with a shoulder injury. They don’t know how bad it is yet, but he won’t be pitching for a while.

The team is making changes to the back end of the bullpen again:

Adam Macko and CJ Van Eyk have been send down to Buffalo. Lázaro Estrada and Brendon Little are back. We haven’t seen Little in a while. He is still walking too many. In July he’s pitched 4.2 innings with 4 walks (one intentional) and 6 in 5.2 innings in June.

Today’s lineup:

Today’s Lineups

WHITE SOXBLUE JAYS
Sam Antonacci – LFErnie Clement – 2B
Munetaka Murakami – 1BNathan Lukes – RF
Miguel Vargas – 3BVladimir Guerrero – 1B
Colson Montgomery – SSGeorge Springer – DH
Andrew Benintendi – DHKazuma Okamoto – 3B
Kyle Teel – CDaulton Varsho – CF
Braden Montgomery – RFAlejandro Kirk – C
Tristan Peters – CFAndres Gimenez – SS
Chase Meidroth – 2BJonatan Clase – LF
Davis Martin – RHPShane Bieber – RHP

Heartbreaking series opener halts San Diego momentum

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - JULY 17: Michael King of the San Diego Padres after giving up a walk against the Kansas City Royals during the third inning at Kauffman Stadium on July 17, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Reed Hoffmann/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was the San Diego Padres’ game to lose. The Friars took the lead in extra innings before Kyle Hart gave up fours runs (three earned) to the Kansas City Royals in the bottom of the 10th. It’s just the second time this season that the Padres have been walked off.

In reality, it never should have gone that far. Several pitching decisions by manager Craig Stammen fell short of success, actively losing the game for San Diego. With Adrian Morejon ahead of Salvador Perez in the eighth, Stammen issued an intentional walk that turned into the go-ahead run. That was erased by a Ty France homer in the ninth, but that should have been the go-ahead run for the Friars, not a game-tying one.

After Mason Miller pitched a thrilling ninth inning, it was surprising to not see him in the 10th. Sure, he’d worked to get out of the previous frame, but he was at just 16 pitches. It was even more surprising that Hart wasn’t taken out with the game-winning run aboard. Instead, Stammen’s poor decision-making ended in heartbreak for San Diego. Now, they’ll need to win tonight to force the rubber match.

Taking the mound

Randy Dobnak (KC) v. Griffin Canning (SD)

Former Padre Stephen Kolek will be missing his scheduled start after returning from the family medical leave list just before the All-Star break. Kolek showed signs of rust and the Royals sent him to Triple-A to make a minor league rehab start.

In his place, Dobnak will pitch his third game for Kansas City since being traded from the Seattle Mariners a month ago. He’s been used primarily as a bulk reliever and has been successful (1.86 ERA, 9.2 IP). Whether or not that success can continue when the sample size increases remains to be seen.

Canning has bounced back considerably in his last few starts. Despite a ballooned 6.47 ERA this season, the right hander has given up two runs or less in each of his last three starts. That’s good for a 3.46 ERA across Canning’s last 13 innings pitched. It’s a small sample size, but it has been inspiring.

The San Diego right-hander doesn’t have much experience against the Kansas City lineup. Salvador Perez has the most at-bats (11) with a career .273 batting average and .878 OPS. If Canning can make it through five quality innings, it’ll be the first time he’s done so since June 12.

Batter up!

The lineup looked pretty healthy Friday night. The offense put up six runs on eight hits including three from Fernando Tatis Jr. and a Ty France homer. Miguel Andujar had his second game in as many weeks where he slugged three doubles. It was a solid outing for the Friars, one that they’ll need to continue if they hope to contend.

  1. Fernando Tatis Jr., RF
  2. Jackson Merrill, CF
  3. Xander Bogaerts, SS
  4. Manny Machado, 3B
  5. Gavin Sheets, LF
  6. Ty France, 1B
  7. Miguel Andujar, DH
  8. Jake Cronenworth, 2B
  9. Freddy Fermin, C

Luis Campusano winced after swinging at a pitch last night. Fermin will likely take his place to give Campusano a rest day. The series opening loss was more due to some costly defensive errors from the San Diego infield. Those miscues halted the Friars’ momentum, leading to the unfortunate events of the 1oth inning. They’ll need to be better.

Relief corps

For the most part, the relievers nailed it down. Bradgley Rodriguez and Morejon each gave up a run over three innings after Michael King went just five innings. It’s impossible to overstate just how incredible Miller’s performance was. After loading the bases with no outs, Miller struck out the next three Royals batters to push the Padres into extra innings.

Hart imploded from there, but that shouldn’t take away from Miller’s incredible appearance. It was an unfortunate ending to an otherwise stellar performance for the Friars. If they can rebound with a win tonight, it will make all the difference for San Diego. The club will have Jhony Brito, Ron Marinaccio, Yuki Matsui, Miller and Matt Waldron available in today’s contest.

Chicago Cubs vs. Minnesota Twins preview, Saturday 7/18, 1:20 CT

SITE NOTE: Today is the annual postgame bleacher BBQ, thus today’s recap will be delayed an hour or so past the usual time.

Saturday notes…

  • SATURDAY IN THE PARK: The Cubs are 8-7 on Saturday this season. They finished 20-7 a year ago, including 9-5 at home, where they are 4-4 this year. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
  • LET THERE BE DAYLIGHT: The Cubs are 21-10 in day games so far, significantly better than their 43-32 final showing last season. They are 15-10 in sunshine at home this year. They wound up 29-20 a year ago. They also are enjoying more success in day games after night games (12-8 to 19-19 last season) and in day games at home after night games (7-3 to 7-8). (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
  • LACK OF LONG BALLS: The Cubs did not hit a home run last night and served up a decisive three-run blast. They are 14-25 when they have surrendered more homers than they have hit, 20-12 when they have hit the same number and 20-6 when they have hit more than they have allowed. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
  • TODAY IN CUBS HISTORY: After a rain delay of two hours and 30 minutes, Javier Báez and Willson Contreras homered in a four-run Cubs third inning. That led the Cubs to a 5-1 win over the Braves in Atlanta. It happened nine years ago today, Tuesday, July 18, 2017.

Cubs lineup:

Twins lineup:

Matthew Boyd, LHP vs. Taj Bradley, RHP

Matthew Boyd, four starts since returning from the knee injury: 2.86 ERA, 1.273 WHIP in 22 innings. Looks like he’s back on track to me.

Boyd did not face the Twins last year and so only four of the current Twins have ever seen him, only one for more than a handful of at-bats: Josh Bell, 4-for-14, three walks.

Taj Bradley came to the Twins in a deadline deal last year that sent Griffin Jax to the Rays.

Bradley’s had a pretty good year in Minnesota in 2026. Over his last five starts: 2.32 ERA, 0.935 WHIP, 38 strikeouts in 31 innings.

He has two career starts vs. the Cubs and in those two games combined for 12.2 innings in which he allowed three unearned runs (0.00 ERA) and struck out 19. Alex Bregman, though, is 2-for-6 against him, both the hits home runs. So maybe Bregman can stay hot against him.

Here is the weather forecast for the area around Wrigley Field.

Today’s game is on Marquee Sports Network.

Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.

MLB.com Gameday

Baseball-reference.com game preview

Please visit our SB Nation Twins site Twinkie Town. If you do go there to interact with Twins fans, please be respectful, abide by their individual site rules and serve as a good representation of Cub fans in general and BCB in particular.

The 2026 game discussion procedure has been changed, so please take note.

You’ll find the game preview, like this one, posted separately on the front page two hours before game time (90 minutes for some early day games following night games).

At the same time, a StoryStream containing the preview will also post on the front page, titled “Cubs vs. (Team) (Day of week/date) game threads.” It will contain every post related to that particular game.

The Live! (formerly “First Pitch”) thread will still post at five minutes to game time. It will also post to the front page. That will be the only live game discussion thread. After the game, the recap and Heroes and Goats will also live on the front page as separate posts.

You will also be able to find the preview, Live! thread, recap and Heroes and Goats in this section link. The StoryStream for each game can also be found in that section.

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Giants vs Mariners Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Seattle Mariners hope to break out of a funk as they host the San Francisco Giants on Saturday night at T-Mobile Park. 

The market expects Seattle (-133) to do just that with Bryan Woo on the bump, but his recent form has been shaky.

See where I'm finding value with my Giants vs. Mariners predictions & MLB picks for Saturday, June 18.

Who will win Giants vs Mariners today: Giants moneyline (+124)

The San Francisco Giants have been the higher-performing ball club lately, which isn't accurately accounted for in the pricing of this game. 

They're in fine form at the plate, with a 112 wRC+ against right-handed pitching in July, whereas the Seattle Mariners are riding the struggle bus (67 wRC). 

There's also a major discrepancy in the bullpen, where Seattle's grotesque 4.60 SIERA this month pales in comparison to San Francisco's (3.10).

Bryan Woo has a 5.88 ERA since the start of June, so he's hardly an advantage over ace Logan Webb. Play the underdog to +110.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Logan Webb's sinker is his lead offering (31.3%), and he should utilize it to great effect against a Seattle lineup that struggles against sinkers (-22.8 runs above average, 27th in the MLB).

Giants vs Mariners Over/Under pick: Over 7.5 (+119)

Don't automatically expect a very low-scoring game just because both starting pitchers have notable names.

Woo has been an overvalued asset in betting markets while he's been struggling this summer. The Mariners have played to the Over in five of his six outings since the start of June, and now there's plus money available for them to do so again with a low total of 7.5. 

Webb also hasn't been at the peak of his powers in his last two starts, surrendering 12 earned runs on 16 hits with just four strikeouts.

Seattle's bullpen has fallen apart lately, and San Francisco's has been poor overall (4.45 ERA) despite stronger underlying numbers lately. 

J.D. Yonke's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 26-28, -6.2 units
  • Over/Under bets: 35-20, +13.6 units

Giants vs Mariners weather

Giants vs Mariners odds

  • Moneyline: San Francisco +127 | Seattle -133
  • Run line: San Francisco +1.5 (-178) | Seattle -1.5 (+170)
  • Over/Under: Over 7.5 (+122) | Under 7.5 (-127)

Giants vs Mariners trend

The Mariners are 1-6 in their last seven games. Find more MLB betting trends for Giants vs. Mariners.

How to watch Giants vs Mariners and game info

LocationT-Mobile Park, Seattle, WA
DateSaturday, July 18, 2026
First pitch8:08 p.m. ET
TVFOX
Giants starting pitcherLogan Webb
(5-7, 3.86 ERA)
Mariners starting pitcherBryan Woo
(7-6, 4.23 ERA)

Giants vs Mariners latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Dodgers' prospect Mike Sirota celebrates growth despite falling short of minor league on-base record

On Friday, Dodgers' outfield prospect Mike Sirota saw his quest for the Minor League Baseball record for consecutive games on base end at 72 games. That put him two shy of the record, set by infielder Andrew Velazquez back in 2014 when he was in the Arizona Diamondbacks organization, playing at Single-A South Bend. The major league record is 84 games, set by Red Sox’s outfielder and Hall of Famer, Ted Williams, back in 1949

Fittingly for a prospect who has flown up prospect rankings like Sirota has, he put together a productive outing on Friday, despite not getting on base. The outfielder went 0-for-4, but drove in one run on a fielder’s choice and another run on a sacrifice fly. On the season, Sirota is hitting .314/.468/.554 with 14 home runs, 73 runs scored, 50 RBI, and 11 steals in 78 games split between High-A and Double-A.

Like Sirota, Velazquez was just in his second full professional season at the time he set the record. However, unlike Velazquez, Sirota was a high draft pick and is one of the top prospects in baseball. The Dodgers' outfield was the 87th overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft and is currently ranked as the 11th-best prospect in baseball, according to MLB Pipeline, which earned him an invite to this year's Futures Game in Philadelphia during the All-Star break.

"It's an honor," said Sirota about being part of the game, in which he went 0-for-1 in just one at-bat. "I'm just extremely excited, trying to take it all in. You know, meeting a bunch of new guys, talking baseball with a bunch of new guys."

Sirota also went into that game sitting on a 72-game on-base streak. He had to wait five days before he had a chance to see if he could wind up alone atop the leaderboard, but his first game back from the break saw the streak snapped. Even during the streak, it was an experience he was dealing with mostly on his own: "I don't think people want to talk about it much," he responded when asked if anybody from within the organization had reached out about tying the record.

Sirota himself barely knew there was anything to talk about until recently.

"I wasn't even aware of it until about 40 or 50 games in," he admitted. "When I first heard about it, I kind of just brushed it off. I was just trying to play my game, but obviously, more recently, I've been thinking about it a little more."

Not that the added attention from the record did anything to impact his play on the field. In June, Sirota hit .310/.477/.524 with four home runs, 14 RBI, 17 runs scored, and a 25/25 K/BB ratio. In eight games in July before the break, he went 9-for-31 (.290) with two home runs, 10 runs scored, and a 6/5 K/BB ratio. If anything, the 23-year-old thinks that closing in on the record actually helped his performance.

"I'm learning about myself from it," he said before the Futures Game. "How to deal with this kind of stuff mentally. I've never had to deal with something like this before...Each at bat means a little more, I guess you could say. But meaning a little more could be a good thing. Obviously, with the extra added pressure to it, the extra adrenaline, I think it makes me better every time I go out there...Using it to take a little bit more adrenaline in each at bat, learning how to harness that, and use it to my advantage. It's been great."

This kind of success is certainly something the Dodgers envisioned when they aggressively pursued Sirota throughout his young career. Back in 2021, the Dodgers drafted Sirota in the 16th round of the MLB Draft. At the time, Sirota was a shortstop who decided to honor his commitment and attend Northeastern University. In 2024, he was drafted in the third round by the Reds, becoming the highest Northeastern draft pick ever.

Yet, before Sirota could even make his pro debut, he was drafted. The Dodgers sought him out again and sent Gavin Lux to the Reds in exchange for Sirota and a Competitive Balance Round A Pick.

"Obviously, being wanted by an organization like the Dodgers just feels amazing," smiled Sirota. "When I got there, they had a blueprint of what they wanted me to do. It was kind of just very personalized, with my swing and things like that, just a blueprint for me to look at and learn from. I just learned a lot from it... It's just been great all around."

Sirota immediately hit the ground running, batting .333/.452/.616 in 59 games between Single-A and High-A with 13 home runs and five steals. This season, Sirota seems to be going the other way less often and spraying line drives up the middle and to the pull side. He's continued to be selective at the plate, swinging just 37% of the time, but making lots of contact and posting a walk rate (20.7%) that almost equals his strikeout rate (22.1%). While much of that success can be attributed to Sirota as a player, he also credits the lineup around him.

"I just have great hitters hitting behind me and in front of me in the lineups that we have at these affiliates," he said, "so I was getting pitched to a little bit more selectively. I think it's made me better, but a little bit more recently, I'm getting attacked a little more, so it's unique, but it's great."

The Dodgers' lineup at Double-A Tulsa includes fellow top prospect outfielders Josue De Paula (4th overall, according to MLB Pipeline) and Zyhir Hope (19th overall prospect), as well as Kendall George, who is a top 15 prospect in the Dodgers' organization.

That talent around him might also be why, at 23 years old, Sirota remains at Double-A, instead of at Triple-A or sniffing an MLB call-up.

The Dodgers' Triple-A outfield features James Tibbs III, the 13th pick in the 2024 MLB Draft, who is hitting .289/.406/.553 with 21 home runs and 71 RBI in 87 games. It also has Ryan Ward, who has hit at least 34 home runs in each of the last two minor league seasons, and former MLB regulars Alek Thomas and Jack Suwinski. That makes it hard to see how Sirota can parlay this on-base streak into a quicker path to the big leagues. Not that that enters his mind at all.

"I don't focus on [potential promotion]. I just try to go out there and do my best every day."

So far, that approach has made him better at getting on base than almost anybody in minor league baseball history. Even with the increased scrutiny and pressure to keep the streak going, Sirota wasn't ready to put the streak in the rearview mirror. When asked if he thought there would be some weight off his shoulders when/if the streak ends, he said, "I'm gonna try and just keep going with it, honestly."

Sadly, that quest ended on Friday. Yet, even without a record connected to his name, this 72-game journey may still be a stretch that propels Sirota's career to the heights the Dodgers dreamed about when they tried to acquire him twice.

All the highlights from Cincinnati’s 7-2 win over Colorado

DENVER, COLORADO - JULY 17: Spencer Steer #7 of the Cincinnati Reds runs before scoring on an eighth inning inside-the-park home run against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on July 17, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After a handful of days off to rest and regroup, the Cincinnati Reds hit the ground running on Friday as the second half of their 2026 season began. It helped that they landed in Denver to face the woeful Colorado Rockies, but they wasted little time in establishing that they were still here on business, swatting four homers behind an excellent start from Brady Singer in what became a 7-2 victory.

Elly De La Cruz immediately got the party started in the Top of the 1st with his first hit of the night, and he scored a batter later when Sal Stewart smashed a double in to the left field gap. Elly poured in a 4 for 5 night that eventually featured a 9th inning homer to wrap the scoring, while Sal drove in his customary pair of runs on the night.

It was the Top of the 6th, though, where things got fun for the Cincinnati offense. Spencer Steer hit his first of two dingers – this one a laser over the wall in LF – only for Eugenio Suarez to flip a pitching wedge over the wall in LF right behind him for back to back shots.

Not to be outdone, Steer smashed a 421 missile off the wall in the deepest part of the Coors Field outfield in the Top of the 8th, and busted it out of the batter’s box the moment he hit it. That proved prescient, as the ball ricocheted off the wall towards LF and gave Steer enough time to motor all the way around the bags for an inside-the-park dinger, his second of the game.

Steer, whose intrigue on the trade market we documented earlier in the week, now sits at .250/.330/.441 with 16 homers and 40 runs batted in, work that’s good for a 109 OPS+ and 108 wRC+ as of this morning. First and foremost, I’m saying that the Cincinnati Reds need to go on a historic, miracle run to finish this season and win some playoff series. Beyond that, though, I’m saying that now may never be a more ‘right’ time to move Steer as he’s playing quite well amid a dearth of right-handed hitting outfield options, with five of the biggest teams in the sport needing just that this trade deadline.

Anyway, the Reds toppled the Rockies and moved to just 8 games under the .500 mark on Friday evening, with a matinee in the extreme heat in Denver set for 3:10 PM ET on Saturday.