Phillies end three-game losing skid, ride all-weather Wheels to win in the rain

Phillies end three-game losing skid, ride all-weather Wheels to win in the rain originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

If you were wondering whether Zack Wheeler would still be Zack Wheeler post-surgery, your question has been answered over the last month.

He is.

Wheeler has made six starts since his recovery from surgery to address thoracic outlet syndrome. The Phillies have won all of them.

The latest came Saturday night when he pitched six scoreless innings in a 3-0 win over the Cleveland Guardians at Citizens Bank Park. 

Wheeler gave up just two hits, walked one and struck out six. He threw a first-pitch strike to 17 of 21 hitters. He generated 15 swings and misses, seven on his four-seam fastball and six on his splitter. That pitch was sharp early and catcher J.T. Realmuto rode it.

“I threw 22 splitters,” Wheeler said. “That’s probably a record for me.”

Wheeler said he had trouble harnessing the movement on some of his pitches early, but “J.T. got me through it.”  

His fastball was down a tad from its 95-mph season average. It sat at 94.4 mph but topped out at 95.9.

Still, manager Don Mattingly was impressed with the way Wheeler was able to “bully” hitters with his heater.

“It’s a pretty amazing pitch,” Mattingly said.

Wheeler has registered a quality start in five of his six outings. The right-hander, who has two second-place finishes in NL Cy Young voting during his time with the Phillies, has yet to qualify for a spot among the league leaders in ERA, but his mark of 1.67 is impressive, just the same.

Wheeler’s Saturday Night Special followed Cristopher Sanchez’ Fantastic Friday. Sanchez pitched eight shutout innings, running his scoreless innings streak to 37 2/3 innings, second-best in franchise history, and lowering his ERA to a league-best 1.63. The Phillies, however, lost that game, 1-0.

While Sanchez received zero offensive support, Wheeler got two runs in the fourth and another in the sixth as the Phillies snapped a three-game losing streak and got back to .500 (26-26), heading into Sunday afternoon’s series finale against Cleveland.

Orion Kerkering, Brad Keller and Jhoan Duran completed the shutout.

“Those guys are a weapon,” Mattingly said of Wheeler and Sanchez. “You get outings like that, it helps keep your bullpen fresh and allows you to use guys where they’re supposed to be used.”

The start of the game was delayed one hour, 56 minutes by rain. The cold, wet weather continued throughout the night, but the teams played through it. With more bad weather forecast for Sunday and a flight scheduled to San Diego, followed by a day game Monday, the Phillies were eager to get the game in, even if it meant playing in icky weather.

Wheeler returned from the injured list on April 25 as the Phillies were struggling to win games. They dropped to 9-19 a day later, leading to Rob Thomson’s firing. Mattingly took over as skipper. The Phils are 17-7 under Mattingly. Since Wheeler’s return, the team is 10-1 in games started by Wheeler and Sanchez. The duo has combined for a 1.06 ERA in those 11 starts.

“I don’t know if there’s a better 1-2 punch in the game right now,” Bryce Harper said. “I don’t know. I really don’t think there is one.

“It’s been fun to watch. On any given night, when you can go (almost) 38 scoreless innings with Sanchy, then Wheels. It’s tough coming to the ballpark knowing you’re going to face those guys. And when (Jesus) Luzardo is going right and (Aaron) Nola is going right, it’s even tougher.”

Over the years, Wheeler has often talked about how the members of a rotation feed off each other and compete with each other. Cole Hamels used to talk about the same stuff. Intrastaff competition is real and it’s good for a team.

“You always try to beat the guy the day before you,” Wheeler said. “Sanchy is pretty hard to beat right now, but you’ve got to go out there and try. We always say that. We have a good group of guys to do that little competition within ourselves. But what a run (Sanchez) has been on. It’s pretty special. Almost unmatchable.”

Offensively, the Phillies were led by Harper, who had three hits and scored a pair of runs. Bryson Stott drove home two runs with a two-out single against Cleveland starter Slade Cecconi in the fourth. Adolis Garcia, dropped to eighth in the batting order, drew a bases-loaded walk in the sixth inning for the Phillies’ third run.

The pitching did the rest. Particularly Wheeler.

“Zack’s been amazing,” Mattingly said. “Getting to see this firsthand is fun to watch. Where he’s come from. Everything.”

Andrew Painter starts Sunday as the Phillies try to win a series.

Walker Homers Twice as Teng, Astros Blank Cubs 3-0

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - MAY 23: Christian Walker #8 of the Houston Astros hits a two-run home run in the first inning against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on May 23, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Sage Zipeto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Christian Walker homered in both of his first two ABs to drive in all 3 Astros runs, backing 6 shutout innings by Kai-Wei Teng as the Houston Astros (22-31) shut out the Chicago Cubs (29-23) 3-0 at Wrigley Field.

The Astros have now won 3 of their last 4 games, and 5 of their last 8. Houston sent Chicago to its 7th straight loss, and the Northsiders have now dropped 11 of their last 13 games since posting a 10 game win streak.

Teng (W, 3-3) allowed only 2 hits, walked 3, and struck out 6 while lowering his ERA to 2.19. He threw 56 of his 89 pitches for strikes. He got an incredible 23 called strikes, while also generating 10 swings and misses.

Walker drove a 1-0 slider from Cubs starter Colin Rea (L, 4-3) 376 ft to left center for a 2-run home run in the first. The blast was 105.5 MPH off the bat as Walker’s shot cut through the wind at Wrigley for his 12th HR of the season. Walker would then connect for his 13th HR in the 4th, a solo shot 369 ft to left center off a 3-2 sinker. The 105.6 MPH blast cut through the wind as sharply as the first one.

Steven Okert, Enyel De Los Santos, and Bryan King would finish off the 3-hit shutout, with King collecting his 6th Save.

In the top of the 6th, Yordan Alvarez had to be removed from the game mid-AB. Alvarez led off the inning, and before his AB he and manager Joe Espada had a long conversation, which was eventually joined by the team trainer. Yordan was allowed to take his AB.

After swinging and missing an 0-1 pitch, Alvarez took a long time to get in the batter’s box again and seemed to be in discomfort. Espada and the trainer came out again, and Alvarez was lifted for PH Zach Dezenzo. The Astros would later announce Alvarez left the game with a back spasm.

The Astros certainly hope Alvarez won’t be out long, as their injury-depleted roster has already been stretched past it’s limits and the team can ill-afford to lose it’s best hitter for a prolonged stretch.

Houston will go for the series sweep Sunday at 1:20 pm behind RHP Peter Lambert (2-4, 3.57), while the Cubs have not yet announced their starter for tomorrow’s game.

Astros slugger Yordan Alvarez leaves game against Cubs in 6th inning because of back spasms

CHICAGO (AP) — Houston Astros slugger Yordan Alvarez left Saturday’s game against the Chicago Cubs in the middle of an at-bat in the sixth inning because of back spasms.

After fouling off a pitch from Colin Rea to fall behind 0-2, Alvarez appeared to be in discomfort. Zach Dezenzo stepped in as a pinch-hitter, and swung and missed on the next pitch to complete the strikeout.

Alvarez was chatting with the training staff in the on-deck circle before the at-bat, his third of the game. The three-time All-Star is batting .300 with 15 homers and 31 RBIs.

Braves and Nationals Rain Delay Updates, May 23

ATLANTA, GA - MAY 22: Atlanta catcher Chadwick Tromp (39) celebrates after hitting an 11th-inning walk off single during the MLB game between the Washington Nationals and the Atlanta Braves on May 22nd, 2026 at Truist Park in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Rich von Biberstein/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The rain came down in the middle of the second inning after threatening to do so since before the game started. Hang out here while we wait for the Braves and Nationals to re-start.

No updates yet on the restart time.

The tarps is still on the field, but not in the stands.

Looks like this will get started again at 5:15PM.

Yankees sign RHP Peter Strzelecki to minor league deal

The Yankees have signed RHP Peter Strzelecki to a minor league and assigned him to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre on Saturday.

Strzelecki, 31, has pitched in 77 big league games over his career with the Brewers, Diamondbacks and Guardians, but has not thrown a pitch in the majors since 2024. 

In 11 appearances with the Guardians that season, Strzelecki pitched to a 2.31 ERA while striking out nine batters across 11.2 innings. For his career, Strzelecki pitched to a 3.44 ERA with a 1.22 WHIP and 86 strikeouts across 83.2 innings with one career save. 

This year, Strzelecki was pitching in the Brewers' system before he was designated for assignment on May 17, and once he cleared waivers, he elected free agency. 

With Triple-A Nashville, Strzelecki appeared in 16 games, pitching to a 4.12 ERA after allowing 10 runs (nine earned) across 19.2 innings. 

Verdugo Hills claims City Section Division I baseball title

Verdugo Hills, the fourth-place finisher in the Valley Mission League with a 10-18 record entering the City Section Division I playoffs, completed a remarkable turnaround on Saturday, winning its fourth consecutive playoff game to take home the Division I title with a 3-1 victory over Taft at Dodger Stadium.

No one was picking the Dons in this one. They had used their two best pitchers in a 10-inning semifinal win over top-seeded Sylmar. But coach Angel Espindola had a plan.

“I’ve got tricks up my sleeve,” he said.

Anthony Velasquez threw a complete-game one-hitter while relying on his defense to make the routine plays and deal with six walks and only one strikeout. At the plate, the hero was first baseman Cutlor Fannon. He had an RBI double in the first inning and an RBI single in the seventh.

But there was drama in the bottom of the seventh inning. The Toreadors’ Victor Jara represented the tying run at the plate with two outs. He hit probably the hardest ball of the day to deep left field.

“The last one scared me,” Velasquez said as he watched left fielder Moises Rodriguez stick out his glove running to catch it and start a victory celebration.

Rodriguez said he “felt all my emotions running through me” as he chased down the fly ball.

“It was surreal,” he said.

Espindola’s best coaching moment came in the bottom of the sixth inning. Taft drew consecutive walks from Velasquez with one out. Espindola went to the mound for a pitcher conference.

“Relax,” is what he told Velasquez.

Then Taft hit into an inning-ending double play.

Verdugo Hills’ fielders more than handled the Dodger Stadium environment. Catcher Miguel Wong threw out a runner trying to steal second. Outfielders Rodriguez, Jack Iafrate and Jessie Olmos combined to catch seven fly balls. And third baseman D’Angelo Duran and shortstop Ethan Sanchez were flawless on ground balls.

As for what happened in the playoffs, Rodriguez said, “We changed our perspective to playing baseball instead of doing baseball. It was let’s have fun.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

GameThread: Tigers vs. Orioles, 4:05 p.m.

Detroit Tigers vs. Baltimore Orioles

Time (ET): 4:05 p.m.
Place: Camden Yards, Baltimore, Maryland
SB Nation Site:Camden Chat
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 53: LHP Framber Valdez (2-3, 4.58 ERA) vs. RHP Brandon Young (3-1, 4.25 ERA)

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Bryan Torres Homers in MLB Debut as Cardinals Slam Reds 8-1 in Game 1 of Doubleheader

May 23, 2026; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Bryan Torres (39) draws a walk against the Cincinnati Reds in the second inning at Great American Ball Park. Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-Imagn Images | Aaron Doster-Imagn Images

There were several feel good moments for the St. Louis Cardinals in game 1 of a day/night doubleheader Saturday. Bryan Torres made his Major League debut and collected his first hit and home run while Andre Pallante was sharp and Jordan Walker hit his first Great American Ball Park home run as the Cardinals beat the Reds 8-1. There was even a “tarps off” Cardinals group that grew as the game progressed.

The dastardly Cincinnati Reds were the first to score as Nathaniel Lowe crushed a 398 foot home run into the right field seats in the bottom of the 2nd inning giving the Reds a 1-0 lead. Fortunately for Andre Pallante and the St. Louis Cardinals, that was one of only two hits they would get off of him. Pallante was a little shaky in the first couple of innings, but overall it ended up being one of Andre’s best starts of the year. He was stellar. He gave the Cardinals six strong innings allowing just 2 hits and that lone earned run.

The St. Louis Cardinals bats would not let that lead stand for long as they took advantage of Reds pitcher Chris Paddack suddenly being unable to find the strike zone as JJ Wetherholt and Ivan Herrera both drew 1-out walks. Alec Burleson made sure that the phrase “walks come back to haunt you” came true as he ripped a single to right field tying the game 1-1. Jordan Walker hit into a fielder’s choice avoiding the double play after Alec’s single giving St. Louis a 2-1 lead.

The Cardinals would add to their lead in the top of the 4th inning, but it could have been so much better. Masyn Winn led off with a single followed by Bryan Torres who made his MLB debut today after 10 years in the minor leagues. He was rewarded for all those years of hard work and perseverance with his first Major League hit.

After Prieto struck out, JJ Wetherholt ripped a ball down the right field line glancing off of the first baseman’s glove and trickling into short right field giving the Cardinals a 3-1 lead.

Bryan Torres was held at third base on JJ Wetherholt’s hit which would come back to bite the Cardinals as Ivan Herrera grounded into an inning-ending double play to end the top of the 4th inning with St. Louis only getting 1 run out of a bases loaded with one out opportunity.

Jordan Walker would not miss his opportunity in the top of the 7th inning, though. After Ivan Herrera walked, Jordan would unload on a 1-1 pitch off of reliever Connor Phillips and send it 389 feet into the right field seats for his 14th home run of the year padding the Cardinals lead to 5-1. It was Jordan’s first home run in Cincinnati’s Great American Ball Park meaning he has homered in all NL Central opponent parks now.

Ryne Stanek was brought in for some late innings relief and he had a drama-free 7th inning with the exception of a two-out walk to Suarez, but it led to nothing for the Reds which is the way we like it. George Soriano followed Stanek’s lead and tossed a relaxing bottom of the 8th inning for St. Louis, too.

The Cardinals would continue to pile on the Reds in the late innings as Victor Scott II ripped another hit (3 for 4 today just like I predicted) and then Ivan Herrera hit a triple into deep right center which the Reds could not handle scoring Victor making it 6-1 Cardinals in the top of the 8th inning. It would get even better in the top of the 9th as Masyn Winn walked and then Bryan Torres put a pretty swing on a 2-1 pitch and planted it in the right field stands for a no-doubt home run giving the Cardinals their final score lead of 8-1.

Matt Svanson finished off the Reds in the bottom of the 9th inning giving Riley O’Brien rest so he’s ready for duty in game 2 Saturday night if needed.

St. Louis will try for a doubleheader sweep in Game 2 as they’ll start Kyle Leahy. He’ll go up against Chase Petty who will be the Reds game 2 starter. First pitch is scheduled for 6:15pm central time and will be a national TV broadcast on Fox.

Where to watch New York Mets vs. Miami Marlins: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Saturday, May 23

The New York Mets, last in the NL East with a 22-29 record, face the Miami Marlins, who are fourth in the division at 23-29. The game is essentially a pick'em, with the Marlins at -115 and the Mets at -104. Scheduled starting pitchers are Freddy Peralta for the Mets, with a 3.31 ERA, and Max Meyer for the Marlins, with a 2.85 ERA.

  • Date: Saturday, May 23

  • Time: 4:10 p.m. ET / 1:10 p.m. PT

  • Where: loanDepot park, Miami, FL

  • TV Channels: Marlins.TV presented by Werner, Hoffman, Greig & Garcia, SNY

  • Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • New York Mets: 22-29 (No. 5 in NL East)

  • Miami Marlins: 23-29 (No. 4 in NL East)

  • Spread: Miami Marlins +1.5

  • Moneyline: Miami Marlins -115 (51.2%) / New York Mets -104 (48.8%)

  • Over/Under: 7.5

New York Mets: Freddy Peralta (3-3, ERA: 3.31, K: 54, WHIP: 1.25)
Miami Marlins: Max Meyer (4-0, ERA: 2.85, K: 60, WHIP: 1.12)

Weather: 85°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 37,446 | Roof: Retractable | Surface: Artificial Turf

Mariners Game #53 Preview: Mariners (25-27) at Royals (20-31)

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 17: George Kirby #68 of the Seattle Mariners prepares to deliver a pitch during the first inning against the San Diego Padres at T-Mobile Park on May 17, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jack Compton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mariners will look to make it back-to-back series wins Saturday.

George Kirby takes the mound for the Mariners. He’s looking to bounce back after a shelling against the Padres last week. Kirby has been good overall this year with a 3.54 FIP, but he’s done it in a weird way, with a career-low strikeout rate and a career-high groundball rate. The Padres were able to elevate against him last week, with a pair of homers. Kirby will try to keep the Royals on the ground today.

J.P. Crawford is leading off and still playing shortstop. He and the Mariners have been doing all sorts of press about their plans to move him to third base, but I guess he isn’t ready yet. Colt Emerson plays third and bats ninth.

Jhonny Pereda will start behind the plate. The last time we saw him he hit his first big league homer in what was a great game for him all around. He has five caught stealings already this year on defense.

Lineups

Game Information

First Pitch: 1:10 pm PST

Radio: Seattle Sports (710 AM) and Mariners.com

TV: Mariners TV

Washington Nationals vs Atlanta Braves Game Thread

ATLANTA, GA - MAY 22: Washington third baseman Curtis Mead (45) is congratulated by third base coach Victor Estevez (7) after hitting a solo home run during the MLB game between the Washington Nationals and the Atlanta Braves on May 22nd, 2026 at Truist Park in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Rich von Biberstein/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

These last two losses have been agonizingly close to being wins for the Nats. They will have to get back on the horse in Atlanta and look to overcome last night’s draining defeat. The offense has been a little quiet these past couple of games, so hopefully the boys can start raking again.

Blake Butera is making a few changes to the lineup. Jorbit Vivas and Jose Tena will both be back in the lineup today. Dylan Crews will move to center and James Wood will play right field. Keibert Ruiz will be back behind the plate, as he looks to keep up his hot hitting. With a taxed bullpen, Jake Irvin needs to give the Nats length this afternoon.

The Braves are making a couple changes as well. Michael Harris II will move up to the 2 spot. Mike Yastrzemski and walk off hero Chadwick Tromp will both make their first starts of the series. Mauricio Dubon will move from the outfield to shortstop. Grant Holmes will get the nod on the mound for the Braves.

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Game Info:

Stadium: Truist Park

Time: 4:10 PM EST

TV: Nationals.TV

Radio: 106.7 The Fan

Last night was a tough game to drop, but the Nats showed they could compete with the big boys. This afternoon they will look to get that one extra clutch hit to get them over the top. Let’s find a way to get a curly W! Follow along in the comments down below and let’s go Nats!

Game thread LII – Mariners at Royals

Vinnie Pasquantino follows through on a swing
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MAY 22: Vinnie Pasquantino #9 of the Kansas City Royals hits a single against the Seattle Mariners in the first inning at Kauffman Stadium on May 22, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Well, the Royals won’t be getting a series sweep against the Mariners this time. But perhaps they could still win the series and begin to right the ship that is their rapidly sinking season. If they can do it, a lot will depend on the offense finally getting going again. But it will also depend on Stephen Kolek pitching to his highest Royals potential for the eighth time in nine starts.

In his last start out against the Cardinals, he once again became the guy the Royals had seen in six straight starts before the disastrous White Sox series. He didn’t generate swing and miss, but he just kept getting outs. What would be even better is if he could take a page out of last year’s efforts and pitch deep into the game, allowing an inconsistent bullpen that has suffered injuries to some of its best to cover as little of the game as possible. Kolek made a start against the Mariners last year and went 7.1 innings of 2-run ball with 8 strikeouts and only 1 walk. Outside the complete game shutout against the Rockies in his second career start, it was the best he’s ever pitched. The Royals might need him to be even better.

The Mariners will counter with George Kirby. Kirby’s strikeouts are down considerably this year, and his walks are at the highest they’ve ever been, though still not high. Still, none of that has prevented him from pitching quite effectively for the Mariners in his fifth big league season. Kirby throws seven different pitches, none more than 31% of the time, so he can be difficult to pigeonhole. He doesn’t get a lot of swing and miss, but he also doesn’t give up much hard contact. A lot of his success comes on convincing hitters to chase outside the zone to generate that weaker contact. The Royals hitters will need to be disciplined and identify pitches quickly if they want to succeed against him today.

Kirby didn’t pitch in the earlier series this season, but he did face them last June 30. He picked up the win that day with six shutout innings on five strikeouts.

Lineups

Same lineup, different day. They can’t lose EVERY game like this, though, can they?

Braves vs Nationals Chat & Discussion: Grant Holmes vs Jake Irvin

ATLANTA, GA - MAY 17: Overall view in the seventh inning during the game between the Atlanta Braves and the Boston Red Sox at Truist Park on May 17, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Matthew Grimes Jr./Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Game two is underway, with the Washington Nationals looking to bounce back after being walked off in yesterday’s matchup in extras. The Atlanta Braves are expecting to win the series with Grant Holmes on the mound today.

Check back in for a recap on how it all unravels at Truist.

First pitch is set for 4:10 p.m.

Lineups

Preview

Red Sox Sweep Royals and the Questions Are Getting Harder to Ignore

The Kansas City Royals sit at 20-30 with nine losses in their last ten games, and Jacob Milham and Jeremy Greco are not here to sugarcoat it. This episode of the Royals Rundown Podcast takes an unflinching look at a team that has the talent to compete but has struggled to put it together consistently when it matters most.

The episode opens with a full breakdown of the sweep against the Boston Red Sox, a result that crystallizes the disconnect between what this roster is capable of and what it has actually delivered. Pitching inconsistencies, injuries, and an offense that has gone quiet at the wrong times are all examined in detail, alongside a candid discussion of the managerial decisions and organizational choices that continue to generate debate among the fanbase.

The playoff picture gets honest treatment as well. With the AL wild card race remaining competitive, Jacob and Jeremy assess what a realistic path forward looks like and what would need to change for this team to claw back into contention before the trade deadline forces the front office’s hand.

The back half of the episode shifts to the farm system, and it is one of the more comprehensive prospect breakdowns the show has delivered in recent memory thanks to Preston Farr. Carson Roccaforte’s development draws significant attention, and the hosts work through the depth at Omaha alongside evaluations of Shields, Lamkin, Lombardi, and several of the exciting names emerging at the lower levels of the system. International signings and recent draft trends also factor into a conversation about what the next wave of Royals talent could look like.

The episode closes with a preview of the upcoming series against the Seattle Mariners, some reflection on fan sentiment and media narratives surrounding the club, and the kind of honest but grounded optimism that has defined this podcast through the tough stretches.

Need your Royals fix? Head to royalsreview.com for news, analysis, and to engage with Royals fans around the world! Follow us online:

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– Jeremy Greco: @hokius.fromthehawkseye.com
– Jacob Milham: @jacobmilhkc.bsky.social

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– Podcast: @RoyalRundownPod

Mets Notes: Upcoming pitching plan; 'good chance' Jared Young rejoins team on next homestand

Prior to Saturday's game against the Marlins in Miami, Mets manager Carlos Mendoza spoke with reporters about a variety of topics...


Scott, McLean next in line to start

Mendoza confirmed the team's pitching plans over the next two games, saying that Christian Scott will go on Sunday in the series finale against the Marlins and Nolan McLean will start Monday's series opener back home vs. the Reds. 

David Peterson and Jonah Tong would be the next in order for Tuesday and Wednesday's games against Cincinnati. Although Mendoza said the team could also go with an opener, like they did with Tobias Myers, and is taking it "day-by-day."

"We got some of the guys here. We got Freddy tomorrow, got Scotty tomorrow, Nolan's going to go Monday," Mendoza said. "Obviously, Peterson and Jonah are going to play a part. We just got to decide whether if we're going to go openers, kind of like day-by-day. We feel good with them starting, but we'll get creative if we need to."

Tong pitched well in his season debut against the Marlins, throwing three "very encouraging" scoreless innings of relief. It was reported on Friday that Tong will stay with the team and pitch during the Reds series after they optioned Zach Thornton to Triple-A, and Mendoza said that while they don't have a long-term decision,  the right-hander will likely get another chance in the coming days.

"We haven't talked about it. He's a big part of this team and this organization," Mendoza said. "We're going to continue to give him opportunities. He's got to continue to throw the ball well. What we saw yesterday was very encouraging and that's what we expect from him. 

"Again, we'll see how it goes turn-by-turn, but we expect a lot from him."

Young, Minter nearing returns

Jared Young last played on April 12 due to a meniscus tear and is just about ready to make his return to New York. He is currently rehabbing with Triple-A Syracuse, but their game was rained out Saturday. Mendoza said it's probable he will rejoin the team during the upcoming six-game homestand against the Reds and Marlins again.

"There's a chance, there's a chance. But again, they got rained out today," Mendoza said. "But there's a good chance we'll see him in the next homestand."

Like Young in Syracuse, A.J. Minter was set to pitch again on Saturday as his final hurdle before returning, but Mendoza said the team will now make a decision on his next steps after he throws Sunday.

Minter will likely fill the void of recently DFA'd Craig Kimbrel in the bullpen, as RHP Jonathan Pintaro was promoted Saturday to help in the meantime.

Senga progressing

Trying to work his way back to the bigs, Kodai Senga threw 58 pitches into the fourth inning on Friday in his first rehab appearance for St. Lucie. Mendoza mentioned he's unsure if the righty will pitch again for St. Lucie, but they will determine the next steps when they see him back in New York on Monday.

"Feels good, I haven't heard much to be honest with you. So no news is good news, Mendoza said. "But I watched the outing, as long as he continues to feel good, that's what matters here."

Mendoza added: "He's going to go to New York now. We'll probably see him when we get back on Monday and then we'll go from there on what's the next step."

Senga had gone 0-4 with a 9.00 ERA over five starts prior to hitting the IL on April 28 due to lumbar spine inflammation. His velocity was noticeably down during that early-season stretch, but now it appears to be heading in the right direction.

"Whenever he's throwing mid-90s, it's a sign that he's feeling healthy," Mendoza said. "We saw I think it was 96 [mph] yesterday. So yeah, I mean obviously the velo's important for him, especially when the forkball's in play. But again, he's got a lot of weapons, but the velo is part of it."