Ranking every MLB team by their Mets rivalry

Apr 30, 2021; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; The benches clear after Philadelphia Phillies relief pitcher Jos Alvarado (46) struck out New York Mets left fielder Dominic Smith (2) during the eighth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kam Nedd-Imagn Images

Earlier this month, MLB held its second annual “Rivalry Weekend,” primarily pairing teams with inter-league geographic rivals. The Mets played the Yankees, the Dodgers played the Angels, the Cubs played the White Sox, the Orioles played the Nationals, and so on and so forth. The Mets will likely face the Yankees during every Rivalry Weekend until the end of time, yet one might begin to wonder…are the Yankees actually the Mets’ biggest rivals?

It’s in the spirit of this question that I’ve attempted to rank all 29 other major league clubs according to the intensity of their rivalry with the Mets, beginning with the most friendly relationships and ending with the most heated. The following countdown is entirely subjective and by no means an exact science, with factors like geographic proximity, postseason history, and regular season competition all playing some role.

Without further ado, here is the list…

TIER 1: Rivalry? We might as well be friends!

29. Mariners
The Mariners are like the New York Mets of baseball, as A-Rod might say.

28. Angels
The historically less successful, lower-payroll, mishap-prone team in a two-franchise city, with some of the best players in recent memory but not much to show for it? The Angels and the Mets are basically cousins from across the country.

TIER 2: A gentleman’s rivalry for a gentleman’s game

27. White Sox
Similar situation to that of the Angels, except comparisons between the Mets and White Sox feel more oriented towards geographic circumstance than team identity.

26. Twins
The Twins took a jab at the Mets after beating them at Citi Field in April. That’s about as heated as this match-up has gotten over the years.

25. Guardians
Did the Francisco Lindor trade start any sort of rivalry? Not really.

24. Tigers
The Mets almost played the Tigers in the 2006 World Series…see entry No. 5 for more.

23. Rays
There’s no hint of a rivalry here, but the Rays have to be above the rest of the relatively neutral AL Central because at least one person in the Citi Field stands can reliably be overheard complaining about Tampa Bay and their “analytics” during a given game.

TIER 3: I guess there’s something there

22. Blue Jays
The Mets and Blue Jays swapped enough players in the 2010s that their match-ups were certainly intriguing (though not necessarily heated) since someone seemed to always be facing their former team, whether José Reyes or Noah Syndergaard or R.A. Dickey or Marcus Stroman.

21. Rockies
One of two out-of-divsion National League teams the Mets have never faced in a postseason series. The Rockies lost both their first game and their first home game to the Mets within the span of one week in 1993, but got their revenge by winning the first game at Coors Field in walk-off fashion against the Amazins’ in 1995.

20. Pirates
The Pirates are the other out-of-divsion National League team the Mets have never faced in a postseason series, though the two teams did compete for division titles in the old NL East back in 1973 and 1990.

19. Diamondbacks
The Mets eliminated the Diamondbacks in their first-ever postseason series in 1999, but Arizona quickly got over that defeat with a World Series title two years later.

18. Padres
A rivalry that briefly sizzled when Buck Showalter approached a shiny-eared Joe Musgrove. If the Mets and Padres were to meet in another postseason series sometime soon, especially with Juan Soto facing his ex-teammates, this one could move up the list.

17. Rangers
Between Brandon Nimmo and Jacob deGrom (and Kumar Rocker?), the Rangers have a healthy collection of former Mets. That’s sure to make things somewhat intriguing for at least the next several years.

TIER 4: Memories of a Fall Classic

16. Royals
Even as they were ripping apart the Mets’ championship hopes with speed, defense, and an unhittable bullpen, it was difficult to root too hard against the scrappy 2015 Royals.

15. Athletics
The A’s ended the 82-win 1973 Mets’ incredible run to the World Series, though the Amazins’ put up a valiant seven-game fight.

14. Orioles
“They can take our Polar Bear, but they still can’t hit Jerry Koosman” – some nostalgic Mets fan, moments before their mind dissolves into a psychedelic dream-state with indiscernible technicolor images flashing by. Ron Swoboda parallel to the ground in mid-air. Don Buford running out of room at the fence. Gil Hodges holding a shoe-polished baseball in front of the home plate umpire. Cleon Jones kneeling in the outfield. “Those were the days” – that Mets fan, probably.

TIER 5: Things can get tense

13. Astros
It seems like these days every team’s fanbase fashions themselves something of a rival to the Astros, but this ranking is more a result of the tense 1986 NLCS, which concluded with two marathon extra-inning games. Speaking of 1986…

12. Red Sox
The enemy of my enemy is my 13th-biggest rival — at least according to this placement, anyway. The Fenway Faithful might not be so kind-hearted after the 1986 World Series, but I still believe Mets fans primarily feel a strange kinship with the staunchest anti-Yankee fanbase. Though they’re still a team from Boston, this is about as friendly as a New York-Boston relationship can get.

11. Brewers
Until 2024, the Brewers would have been ranked back in Tier 3 with the Rockies, Pirates, D-backs, and Padres. Things began to change when David Stearns made the switch from Milwaukee to New York. On Opening Day 2024 — the first game of Stearns’ tenure — the Brewers were promptly involved in a benches-clearing incident at Citi Field, and on the Crew’s last day of the 2024 season, Pete Alonso hit a backbreaking home run to eliminate them from postseason contention with two outs left to go before sealing the Wild Card Series. 

10. Giants
The orange in the Mets’ color scheme and the inspiration behind their “NY” cap logo, the Giants are barely hated in their old home of New York. Sure, the Mets eliminated them in 2000 and got eliminated by them in 2016, but there’s been no prolonged period of drama. Still, the New York history makes these franchises natural competitors for the same reason it makes them natural allies.

TIER 6: Bad Blood

9. Reds
If a franchise’s all-time WAR leader punches Bud Harrelson, they can’t be listed any lower than this. Punching Bud Harrelson is an automatic trip to Tier 6.

8. Cubs
Between the wild Black Cat division chase in 1969 and the NLCS sweep in 2015, the Mets have upended the Cubs in some pretty pivotal moments over the years.

7. Nationals
Ah, the 2010s. A decade when the Mets seemed to get their lunch money stolen by the Nationals every year…except for 2015, when they pulled off memorable win after memorable win against Washington to win the NL East. Even in 2019, a year when neither team won the division, each managed to pull off an absurd comeback against the other down the stretch. Whether it was Yoenis Céspedes and Lucas Duda mashing in 2015 or Daniel Murphy and Bryce Harper treating Citi Field like Coors Field in the following years, the Nats and Mets certainly know how to make fools of one another.

6. Marlins
Roses are red, violets are blue, the Marlins will win in Game 162. Three legendary Mets collapses — 2007, 2008, and 2025 — each made complete with a devastating loss to the Fish on the final day of the regular season. The Mets may have bigger rivals, but no one has been a bigger crimp in their plans.

5. Cardinals
This pair of superteams battled in the NL East during the mid-1980s, with the Cardinals outpacing the Mets by three games in both 1985 and 1987. But the ultimate dagger came two decades later, when the young duo of Yadier Molina and Adam Wainwright combined to shock Shea Stadium in Game 7 of the 2006 NLCS. Even 20 years later, I’m not sure Mets fans have come to terms with that night’s events.

TIER 7: All-Out Rivals

4. Dodgers
In some ways, the Mets are more of a brother to the Dodgers than the Yankees. So many elements of their identity trace back to the Brooklyn Dodgers, from Citi Field’s Ebbets-esque design to the Mets’ Dodger-blue primary color to the core tenet that fans will stand proud even while enduring disappointment after disappointment. The Flushing Faithful were born from the Flatbush Faithful. But that brotherly cross-country relationship has grown increasingly fraught over the years as the Mets and Dodgers have faced each other in a number of high-octane postseason series, with L.A. keeping a pair of beloved Mets teams away from the World Series in 1988 and 2024 and the Mets eliminating the Dodgers in the 2006 and 2015 NLDS (the latter intensified by Chase Utley’s hard slide into Ruben Tejada). Throw in the newly-cited mantra of becoming the “East Coast Dodgers,” and the big-budget Mets have practically declared open war on the franchise that once called New York City home.

3. Braves
It takes a special type of rivalry for an opposing team’s star player to name their kid after your team’s stadium. The Mets and Braves have had a contentious relationship since being re-aligned into the same division in 1995, with the Braves winning the first 11 titles in the new NL East as the Mets fought and failed (at least until 2006) to overcome Atlanta’s dynasty. The ferocity of the rivalry was renewed in 2022, when the Braves broke the Mets’ hearts with a late September sweep, eventually matching New York’s 101-win record and earning the tiebreaker to advance to the Division Series. It’s also been well documented that the Braves’ ballparks, whether the old Turner Field or the new Truist Park, have tended to be a house of horrors in both climate and outcome for the Mets.

2. Yankees
There’s just something about New York baseball. Whether it was the Dodgers and Giants battling for pennants or both National League squads attempting to knock off the mighty Yankees in the World Series, the baseball world revolved around New York for the first half of the 20th century (especially in the decade of Willie, Mickey, and the Duke). The Mets and Yankees rivalry is all that remains from that rich history of intra-city competition. It undeniably peaked in 2000 with the first all-New York World Series since 1956, but it proves itself alive and well with every season’s Subway Series games, which manage to produce a playoff atmosphere no matter each team’s respective record. Sure, it’s a one-sided hatred, with more fire and fury coming from the Mets’ side. Sure, it’s interleague play, and most of the games are early-season contests with little larger consequence. Sure, up until the Juan Soto signing the Mets never had a particularly resounding victory over the Bronx Bombers (and even that one played out in a bidding war rather than on the field). But still…there’s just something about New York baseball.

1. Phillies
The only rivalry that seems to regularly produce legitimate loathing between players and fans alike. Tension had been bubbling up for decades, with the Phillies barraging the Mets throughout the late 1970s and the Mets handling the Phillies throughout the 1980s. Then, in the mid-2000s, both teams weren’t just competitive at the same time — they were simultaneously elite. Jimmy Rollins called the Phillies the team to beat in the wake of the Mets’ 2006 division title (kicking off a chain reaction of trash talk) and Philadelphia lived up to the title, stunning the Mets after a late-season collapse in 2007 and edging them out in the NL East en route to a World Series championship in 2008. Plus, from Dwight Gooden to Hansel Robles (twice) to Rhys Hoskins to José Alvarado, this match-up has seen its fair share of bad blood over the years. In the words of David Wright: “I love the rivalry. I don’t necessarily love the city or the people. Or the players.”

How Valuable is Jesús Luzardo?

May 19, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Jesús Luzardo (44) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

Quick: name the most valuable Phillies pitcher by Wins Above Replacement.

Well, that wasn’t very difficult, was it? You said Cristopher Sánchez so quick I barely had time to take a sip of my tea. That’s okay. The first question is the warm-up. Now name the second-most valuable.

Did you say Jesús Luzardo? Good/bad news: you’re right/wrong. He’s the second-most/fourth-most valuable pitcher on the Phillies by WAR. Actually, he’s the second-most/only the seventh-most valuable Phillie overall by WAR. Zack Wheeler has been on fire since he returned, but Luzardo still has produced more value/less than half as much value than him.

Don’t adjust your monitor: nothing is wrong with the above paragraph. All of those statements are true, simultaneously. And this isn’t some sort of Schrödinger’s Phillie, where Luzardo is both extremely valuable and somewhat less so until you open the box.

See, there’s two main types of WAR: FanGraphs WAR, or fWAR, and Baseball Reference WAR, or bWAR (sometimes rWAR). And they disagree on Luzardo. The fine folks at FanGraphs have Luzardo at 1.7 fWAR, trailing only Sánchez’s 2.8, and a bit ahead of Wheeler’s 1.4. Meanwhile, the renowned recorders at Baseball Reference have Luzardo at 1.0 bWAR, far behind Sánchez’s 3.7 and Wheeler’s 2.1. A difference of 0.7 WAR in the evaluation of Luzardo may not sound like a lot, but fWAR has him as more valuable than Wheeler so far, and bWAR has him as just about half as valuable. That’s a pretty sizable difference. So what’s going on here?

First, to level-set: this is not a case where either formulation of WAR is wrong. fWAR and bWAR, as we’ll get into shortly, are both setting out to measure the same thing— how valuable a given player is—, but through decidedly different approaches. Neither one is incorrect on Luzardo; they’re just defining value differently. Despite the title of this piece (lamentably straightforward, I was fresh out of puns), we’re not really going to be determining how valuable Luzardo is here. Rather, by taking a look at how the two main forms of WAR ended up disagreeing on Luzardo’s value, we’re going to get a more holistic sense of how he’s performed so far.

So, why do fWAR and bWAR diverge when it comes to Luzardo? It comes down to what inputs they use for assessing pitchers. fWAR for pitchers is based on Fielding Independent Pitching (FIP). FIP tries to eliminate the impact of defense by taking only the plays that are determined solely by the actions of the pitcher and the batter into account: strikeouts, walks, home runs, and hit by pitches (to be technical, FanGraphs treats infield flies as strikeouts when calculating FIP for fWAR purposes, whereas standard FIP doesn’t). bWAR, on the other hand, is based on runs allowed, and innings pitched. There’s more to the calculations than just that, of course. But that information is all we need to explain the variance on Luzardo.

Luzardo has been good to great at most of the things that go into FIP. His 27.7 K% is in the 84th percentile. His walk rate of 6.5% is in the 81st. His 0.73 HR/9 is tied for 21st among qualified pitchers, and the total number of gopher balls he’s allowed (5) doesn’t pop any eyes. He’s hit four batters so far, which is more than most pitchers, but that doesn’t seem to be dragging his FIP down (or up, rather) much. His FIP of 2.82 is ninth-best in baseball, and so it’s no surprise that he’s doing well in the FIP-based fWAR.

But you can see the caveat coming: FIP, and thus fWAR, doesn’t take into account batted balls other than homers. And you can’t tell the story of Luzardo’s season without discussing those. Luzardo has been solid at avoiding homers, but he’s too often been sent into spirals by balls in play. Of all the pitchers in baseball who’ve pitched enough to be deemed qualified for the leaderboards, only one has suffered a worse BABIP than Luzardo: pity the suffering (and wonderfully alliterative) Cade Cavalli. That alone can’t explain Luzardo’s performance so far; Sánchez has the fifth-highest BABIP against in baseball, and he’s doing things that are giving us cause to bring up Grover Cleveland Alexander and Carl Hubbell (not that it’s ever a bad time to discuss the old greats). But hits aren’t the statistic that goes into bWAR. Runs allowed are. Luzardo has stranded 67.1% of the baserunners who reached against him. That puts him at 66 of 76 qualified pitchers; no Phillies pitcher allows a greater proportion of his baserunners to score.

On the whole, Luzardo has allowed 32 runs across 61.2 innings pitched. Hence the relatively unenthusiastic rating of Luzardo by bWAR. Wheeler’s allowed 7 runs in 37.2 innings pitched, and that’s how he surpasses Luzardo in bWAR, even as he posts a lower K% and an only slightly lower BB%.

So, which WAR variant represents the real Luzardo? They both do. Luzardo is a pitcher who strikes out tons of batters and hands out walks like a dentist hands out Halloween candy. He’s also, at least in this campaign, a pitcher who’s prone to allowing runs, who lets a large proportion of his base runners pass Go, collecting their $200 along the way. That run-proneness may not last—his xERA of 3.15 is far lower than his actual ERA of 4.38, suggesting some bad luck—, but if we’re evaluating how he’s done so far, we have to take what actually happened into account.

To focus only on the runs allowed would be to ignore the excellent peripherals that showcase Luzardo’s obvious talent. To ignore them would be to ignore something that is quite obviously rather important to his job performance. “I’ve looked at life from both sides now”, sang Joni Mitchell. She certainly wasn’t referring to bWAR and fWAR. But you ought to follow her example when evaluating Luzardo.

Zach Ehrhard maintains on-base streak

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 24: Zach Ehrhard #99 of the Los Angeles Dodgers during a spring training game at Dodger Stadium on March 24, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

No wins for the Dodgers’ minor league affiliates; outscored 21-10. The Drillers saw their matchup with the Naturals postponed and will instead play a doubleheader today.

Player of the day

The job of a leadoff hitter is to set the table, and Zach Ehrhard did that as well as anyone could’ve hoped for in a 5-3 Comets loss. While the four hitters right behind him all went hitless, Ehrhard reached base safely four times and had one of the Comets’ three RBI.

It’s been an outstanding month of May for Ehrhard, who has reached base safely in every single one of his games, including recording a hit in nine of the last 10.

Triple-A Oklahoma City

Colton Gordon came into last night’s game having allowed 16 runs in just three starts this month, but for six innings against the Comets, he was phenomenal. The left-handed starter for the Space Cowboys completely shut down an offense that had just gotten into the double digits the day prior.

Trailing 2-0 at the top of the seventh, the Comets looked to Chuckie Robison to even the score with a two-run bomb against the first reliever out of the Space Cowboys’ bullpen. But Chayce McDermott ran into plenty of issues in the eighth, allowing three runs, making OKC’s comeback effort an unsuccessful one.

Although Robinson had the big hit, one ought to look at leadoff hitter Ehrhard as the Comets’ most productive batter. The center fielder finished the game with nearly half of the Comets’ nine hits, continuously stranded by the heart of the order, unable to score a single run.

Double-A Tulsa

The game was postponed

High-A Great Lakes

Although they led from the top of the second inning all the way through the start of the bottom of the ninth, the Loons came out on the losing end of a 3-2 score despite outhitting their opponent 8-3. One day after a slugfest, this offense let down a terrific effort from its pitching staff, one that saw them induce 18 strikeouts, nine of them by starter Zach Root.

Neither team managed more than a single hit with runners in scoring position, but the Dragons did enough for a rally against Nicolas Cruz in the ninth, an inning that saw the Comets commit an error and a balk and allow multiple hitters to reach base without a hit, including a walk and a hit-by-pitch.

Outfielder Kole Myers had the best performance among Loons hitters, reaching base in all four of his plate appearances with a pair of knocks and a couple of walks as well.

Single-A Ontario

There isn’t a whole lot a manager or even an offense can do when every pitcher that this team keeps sending out there simply fails to record outs consistently. This was the challenge faced by the Tower Buzzers in what ended up a 13-5 defeat at home, allowing nine of those 13 runs unanswered through the game’s first three innings. Starter Hyuk-Seok Jang couldn’t get out of the first, and the first three relievers who came in for him all allowed multiple earned runs.

Offensively, the Tower Buzzers didn’t make it close, as that’d be unreasonable to ask, but they put up enough of a fight by scoring all five of those runs in the back half of this game. Center fielder Jaron Elkins had a four-hit day, just a home run short of the cycle. Speaking of homers, Ontario’s only one came from third baseman Chase Harlan in the eighth, his sixth of the season.

Transactions

The Great Lakes Loons placed catcher Gio Cueta on the injured list and activated righty Josellyn Gonzalez. The Comets activated catcher Zeby Savala and left-handed pitcher Jackson Ferris as Alex Freeland was recalled to the big league club. Meanwhile, the Tower Buzzers activated outfielder Jaron Elkins.

Wednesday’s scores

  • Sugar Land 5, Oklahoma City 3
  • Double-A game postponed
  • Dayton 3, Great Lakes 2
  • Ontario 5, Visalia 13

Thursday’s schedule

  • 2:30 p.m. PT: Tulsa (Adam Serwinowski) vs. NW Arkansas (Hunter Patteson)
  • Game 2: Tulsa (Payton Martin) vs. NW Arkansas (TBD)
  • 4:05 p.m. PT: Great Lakes (Jakob Wright) at Dayton (Jose Montero)
  • 5:05 p.m. PT: Oklahoma City (River Ryan) at Sugar Land (Ethan Pecko)
  • 6:35 p.m. PT: Ontario (TBD) vs. Visalia (Jesus Escobar)

Thursday Morning Links

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - MAY 26: Evan Carter #32 of the Texas Rangers is congratulated by Ezequiel Duran #20 after hitting a solo home run during the third inning against the Houston Astros at Globe Life Field on May 26, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Morning, all!

Evan Grant remembers Bob Horner, who was the first overall pick by the Atlanta Braves in 1978, slipped the minor leagues entirely, posted over an .800 OPS in 8 of his 10 pro seasons, and had his career cut short due to a bad shoulder.

With the Rangers now on their third year of offensive futility, could the answer be pivoting to contact and small ball?

Last night was a poor showing all around, so the offense doesn’t have to shoulder all the blame.

The Rangers have designated Andrew McCutcheon for assignment and signed utility infielder Nicky Lopez after infield injuries depeleted their infield depth and McCutcheon appeared to not have much left in the tank.

The Royals need a course correction, but leadership is asleep at the wheel

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - JUNE 29: JJ Picollo General Manager of the Kansas City Royals talks with John Sherman Chairman and CEO of the Kansas City Royals prior to a game Kauffman Stadium on June 29, 2024 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ever wondered what it’s like inside a big league clubhouse like after a blowout loss? I can tell you: it’s quiet.

At least, that’s what it was in the Kansas City Royals clubhouse after getting stomped 15-1 by the New York Yankees on Tuesday evening. Half a dozen or so players sat around a table, silently eating their postgame dinner. The faint sounds of the shower echoed through the hallway. Some players in street clothes, heads down, scrolled on their phones at their locker. 

Wading through the foglike weariness politely trudged a small parade of reporters and writers. Three players were offered as a tribute to the ever-churning machine of sports media, as was manager Matt Quatraro in the media room a few minutes prior. The responses were pretty consistent.

“We were getting our brains beat in and nobody feels good,” Quatraro said.

“I’m extremely frustrated,” pitcher Bailey Falter said.

“It’s wearing on me,” first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino said.

Sometimes blowouts like these happen. But this particular loss had teeth. It’s the team’s 13th consecutive loss to the Yankees, two of which happened in the 2024 playoffs. More importantly, it sunk the Royals to 11 games below .500 and was their 14th loss in their last 19 games. Three weeks ago, the Royals were second in the American League Central with a 42.5% chance to make the playoffs, per Fangraphs. That figure has sunk to a lean 13.4%, a figure that feels too high and is only in the double-digits because pretty much everybody in the AL is having a rough go of it. 

While the Royals won’t go on losing 75% of their games for the rest of the year like they have for the last two weeks, the players are stuck right now. Losing isn’t fun for anyone, let alone hypercompetitive athletes. “Nobody wants to stand there and watch that,” Quatraro said about the blowout against New York. “But that’s the reality of what happened in the game. There’s nowhere to go.”

Pasquantino echoed that thought. “We just got to keep moving forward and we don’t have a choice,” he said from his locker. “We’re not doing our jobs so we’ve got to get better. We’ve got to keep working hard and we’re going to do that. Like I said, we’ve got faith in this team. Just got to keep pushing forward.” 

Vinnie’s thought process is a healthy one. Individual athletes can only really affect two things: their own performance and how good of a teammate they are. He’s committed to getting better to the best of his ability, and he’s tired of losing, but it’s a job and it’s important to keep things in perspective. 

But there is a natural silhouette around those words about what athletes can’t do, what they are not employed to do. It is not their job to construct a roster or decide on strategy. It is not their job to evaluate the performance of the team or organization. When things go bad, it’s the players who have to go out there the day after getting blown out and compete in an incredibly difficult league against some of the best athletes in the world, in front of fans who could boo and heckle them. It’s the players putting their bodies on the line and risking damage that could impact the rest of their lives.

Earlier, Quatraro was asked how difficult it was to stay the course when things weren’t going their way during the course of the season. After the question, Q took a short but noticeable pause before answering. “I mean, there’s no alternative but to stay the course,” he said. “We’re not going to blow things up. These guys are working their butts off. We talk about it all the time. You got to trust in the people and the processes that you have and we got to go out there and play better.”

Ah, ‘the course.’ It is one thing to stay the course when the course is a proven path of success. The Royals simply haven’t established that. Yes, the team made the playoffs in 2024. But everything is clearer in hindsight: the further we get away from the season, the uncomfortable truth seems to be that they squeaked into the playoffs mainly through a combination of an incandescent Bobby Witt Jr. masterpiece of a season and the nearby presence of a historically bad, 121-loss Chicago White Sox club floundering about in Kansas City’s division.  Without what amounted to a minor league team to beat up on and with a merely great-but-not-otherworldy Witt, the Royals’ course has been mediocre at best.

Vital to this discussion is the longevity of mediocrity going on: the Royals are now 114-132 over their last 244 regular season games, and it took them winning their last two games of 2025 to claw their way out from a losing season. This year, they’re on pace for 98 losses. I don’t need to tell you that this performance is unacceptable for a team that thinks of itself as a good team. They are going backwards.

But is it unacceptable? The players think so. I’m not sure team leadership does, at least not in a way that is impactful. See, there are a wide variety of moves that a team like this can do. Some of them are minor, like taking some creative approaches to lineup construction. Some are maybe a little more involved, like making a change at hitting coach or pitching coach or sending a struggling player back to the minors for a reset. Some of them are somewhat major or even organization-shaking, like making a change at manager or general manager. There are legitimate reasons to make or not make each of these moves, but if the Royals thought that they were a playoff team going into this year, something should have happened by now. We’ve gotten, well, nothing.

Quatraro has gotten a lot of heat lately, but JJ Picollo and John Sherman should be getting more than they are because it’s really their job to evaluate the performance of the entire baseball operations department. The players are giving it all they’ve got. It’s the team leadership that ought to be evaluating if the right players are in the right spots with the right coaching. It’s clearly evident that’s not happening. 

The Royals were, of course, swept by the Yankees. They were, naturally, shut out in Wednesday’s game. They’re off on a 10-game road trip. Things might get worse before they get better. But to get better, Royals brass will have to set aside their egos and pay attention.

Mariners News: Andrew McCutchen, Abner Uribe, and Cristopher Sánchez

May 12, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh (29) hits a single during the seventh inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images | Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

Good morning everyone! Your Seattle Mariners get to enjoy this off-day in sole possession of first place in the American League West after confidently toppling the A’s last night 9-1.

The squad will now head back home for a pair of interleague battles against the Diamondbacks and Mets. What are you most looking forward to during this homestand?

In Mariners news…

  • Dan Wilson and Jerry Dipoto each privately met with pitchers Bryce Miller and Luis Castillo to smooth over any potential issues revolving around the piggyback situation. The club reiterated that it plans to continue with the setup for the foreseeable future.

Around the league…

Astros Prospect Report: May 27th

NORTH LITTLE ROCK, AR - APRIL 22: Bryce Mayer #6 of the Corpus Christi Hooks pitches during the game between the Corpus Christi Hooks and the Arkansas Travelers at Dickey-Stephens Park on Wednesday, April 22, 2026 in North Little Rock, Arkansas. (Photo by Braeden Botts/Minor League Baseball via Getty Images)

Another day of minor league baseball is in the books. See the results below. Check out the previous day’s recap here.

AAA: Sugar Land Space Cowboys (23-30) won 5-3 (BOX SCORE)

Sugar Land got on the board in the 3rd inning on a Cole RBI single. They scored another run in the 6th on a Loperfido groundout. Gordon got the start and was great tossing 6 scoreless innings with 4 strikeouts. Hader pitched in relief but allowed a 2 run home run, though both runs were unearned, over one inning. Sugar Land took the lead in the 8th on a Biggio RBI single and Winkler 2 run home run. Murray allowed a run in the 9th but held on for the save as Sugar Land won 5-3.

Note: Biggio is hitting .328 in May.


AA: Corpus Christi Hooks (22-25) won 11-3 (BOX SCORE)

The Hooks got on the board in the first inning on a Sullivan 2 run home run. They got another run in the third inning on an Austin RBI triple. Mayer got the start and pitched well allowing 1 run over 4.2 innings while striking out 9 batters. The offense added more runs with a Holy RBI single in the 6th and Ferreras 2 run single in the 7th. The offense added more runs in the 9th on a Bruthcer 2 run single, Guillemette 2 run single and Holy sac fly.

Note: Mayer has 46 K in 29 innings this season.


A+: Asheville Tourists (9-37lost 11-5 (BOX SCORE)

Rodriguez got the start for Asheville but struggled allowing 6 runs over 3.2 innings. The offense got 4 runs back in the third inning on a Frey 2 run double, Call RBI double and Lytle sac fly. The offense got another in the 7th on a Frey RBI double but the pen allowed another 5 runs. The offense was unable to score again as Asheville fell 11-5.

Note: Frey is hitting .274 in May.


A: Fayetteville Woodpeckers (20-27) won 3-2 (BOX SCORE)

The Woodpeckers got on the board in the first inning scoring 2 runs on a Wakefield solo home run and Huezo RBI single. Potter got the start and was pitching well tossing 3 scoreless innings but a rain delay caused his start to end early. The Woodpeckers got another run in the 8th inning on a passed ball. Oakes pitched well in relief allowing 2 runs, 1 earned, over 5 innings. Cassedy tossed a scoreless 9th inning as he closed out the 3-2 win.

Note: Potter has a 2.55 ERA this season.


Today’s minor league starters:

SL: Ethan Pecko – 7:05 CT

CC: James Hicks – 7:05 CT

AV: TBD – 5:45 CT

FV: TBD – 5:30 CT

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: O’s complete sweep of Rays with blowout win

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MAY 27: Anthony Nunez #66 and Adley Rutschman #35 of the Baltimore Orioles celebrate after defeating the Tampa Bay Rays at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 27, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Once upon a time, Kansas City was effectively the farm team of the Yankees despite being a fellow major league franchise. They were the Athletics back then, but flash forward to modern times and Kansas City felt like a home away from home as the Yankees demolished the Royals. After sweeping them to open up their road trip, New York has given themselves a chance to charge right back in the AL East race provided they could get a bit of help from an unlikely source. As it turns out, the O’s were up to the challenge.

Baltimore Orioles (26-30) 11, Tampa Bay Rays (34-19) 2

Baltimore has gotten a win in just about every way possible in this series against Tampa Bay, opening with a barnburner 13-inning win before getting a dominant performance from Shane Baz against his former team. Wednesday saw them mix the two, getting an outing from Trey Gibson that could’ve easily gone sideways as he allowed 10 baserunners yet only one crossed home plate in 5.2 innings. That was more than enough to put him in line for the win, thanks to his lineup gifting him a 5-0 lead after the first inning.

The Orioles couldn’t have asked for a better start, with their first six batters reaching base. Gunnar Henderson launched a two-run shot to start the scoring, and after a Pete Alonso single (which was his 1,000th career hit) and a pair of walks loaded the bases, Leody Taveras poked a single out to right to score a third. Tyler O’Neill made the first out on a strikeout, but Blaze Alexander lined another to right to cash in the next two runs before Steven Matz finally got out of the inning.

O’Neill made up for dropping the hit baton earlier by driving in a run in the third to make it 6-0, and Alexander doubled in two more in the fifth to make it a whopping 8-0 Orioles lead. After Tampa scratched across one in the sixth to chase Gibson at last, Henderson got it right back with his second homer of the game. Alexander completed an incredible day at the plate for himself with a two-run shot in the seventh, giving him six RBI on the night. The Rays worked a bases-loaded walk in the eighth to give them their second run, but an actual rally was denied as Andrew Kittridge struck out the next three batters and Anthony Nunez retired the Rays in order in the ninth.

The Orioles exacted revenge after getting swept by Tampa a week ago down in the Trop by sweeping them in Camden, and with the Yankees’ sweep of the Royals the top two teams in the East are tied with 34 wins. Tampa’s played less than New York at the moment though, so they still have a crucial 1.5 game lead built up off of having three less losses, but after a split washed out their chance to gain ground against them directly they got as good of an immediate result as they could’ve asked for.

Other Games

Toronto Blue Jays (27-29) 2, Miami Marlins (26-31) 1: The Jays continue to try and claw their way back to .500, and they narrowly made progress in that quest with a nail-biter against Miami. Kevin Gausman coughed up a run in the first inning after a leadoff double got cashed in, but wound up going five innings with just that one blemish on his record. Toronto couldn’t get anything going against Eury Perez, but he left the game after just four innings of work and they tied the game in the very next frame on a Nathan Lukes RBI double before taking the lead for good on Kazuma Okamoto’s solo shot in the sixth. Miami couldn’t come up with an answer, running into an out in the seventh and a strike-‘em-out, throw-’em-out double play in the eighth to end any threat of scoring.

Cleveland Guardians (33-25) 3, Washington Nationals (29-28) 2: Gavin Williams did more than enough to keep the Guardians in this game long enough for their offense to wake up, tossing seven innings and scattering enough weak contact to allow just one run despite only getting four strikeouts. His endurance paid off, as the Guardians cashed in for three runs in the fifth inning, benefitting from a leadoff error to start the frame. Travis Bazzana hit a one-out double and a sac fly tied the game at one, before Chase DeLauter and Angel Martínez knocked in runs on RBI singles to tip the needle.

The extra run was needed as the Nats had a ninth inning rally, both Curtis Mead and CJ Abrams singling to put the tying run on base ahead of a sac fly to cut the deficit to one. Abrams stole second to put himself in scoring position, but Cade Smith hunkered down and struck out the next two Nationals to secure the save.

Seattle Mariners (28-29) 9, Athletics (27-29) 1: At long last, the defending AL West champs have taken back first place. The West has been a mess throughout the first third of the season with the Athletics leading it for most of this run thanks in large part to the expected competitors tripping all over themselves, but the Mariners have charged back thanks to a sweep bookended by nine-run eruptions by the offense.

Rob Refsnyder got them off to a good start with a three-run homer in the first inning, and Colt Emerson made it a sizeable lead with a two-run triple in the fourth. Emerson tacked on one more in the sixth on an RBI groundout, and Julio Rodríguez got in on the action with a three-run home run in the eighth to put the game well out of reach. The A’s broke the shutout in the ninth inning, but it took a double-play to do so effectively ending their chance of chaining enough hits together to make things interesting.

Houston Astros (25-32) 4, Texas Rangers (25-30) 3: Jacob deGrom and Mike Burrows handed in solid starts for their respective teams, giving six and seven innings respectively with two runs allowed each. The difference-maker came after their exits, with the eighth inning wrapping up our scoring: Yordan Alvarez hit a solo shot to break the tie, and after Christian Walker lived up to his last name and walked Taylor Trammell dropped a sacrifice bunt that got real goofy when pitcher Tyler Alexander fielded it and chucked it past his first baseman. Walker scored all the way from first, and that run proved pivotal as Joc Pederson crushed his second homer of the night to leadoff the bottom half. The rest of the Rangers managed just a walk after that though, giving Houston the W.

Phillies on the Pharm: 5/28/2026

READING, PA - APRIL 22: Raylin Heredia #23 of the Reading Fightin Phils takes the field prior to the game between the New Hampshire Fisher Cats and the Reading Fightin Phils at FirstEnergy Stadium on Wednesday, April 22, 2026 in Reading, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Cade Burdette/Minor League Baseball via Getty Images)

Wednesday was the night of offense for the Phillies prospects. There were quite a few hitters to make note of on the evening, including one that might just might force his way back into the major league picture.

Lehigh Valley 7, Buffalo 6

Felix Reyes just continues to hit minor league pitching. This time, he goes three for five with two home runs and four runs batted in.

This time, joining in on the fun, was Gabriel Rincones, Jr., who also had three hits on the day. At least there were some outfielders in the Phillies organization able to hit the ball.

Harrisburg 8, Reading 4

The Jean Cabrera downfall continues as the right hander allowed five runs on six hits and a walk over 4 2/3 innings. He did strike out seven, but he still continues to struggle this season. Wonder if there is a hidden injury. On a lighter, more positive note, Raylin Heredia had two hits for the Fightin’ Phils, one being a home run.

For me and my limited prospecting knowledge, Heredia is still one to watch as he continues climbing the minor league ladder.

But hey, it’s Thursday and that means it’s Gage Wood Day for Reading!

Jersey Shore 5, Frederick 4

Kodey Shojinaga had three hits for the Blue Claws, leading the offense. Luke Davis chipped in with two hits of his own. On the pitching side, maybe the biggest news was the continued rehab of Wen-Hui Pan. He threw another scoreless inning as he continues working his way back from Tommy John surgery. While he likely won’t impact the big league team this season, this is something to watch in the future as they continue to try and develop relief arms from within.

Clearwater 16, Dunedin 6

The pitching? Eh.

The hitting? Well that’s a horse of a different color. Matthew Ferrera had three hits on the night. Griffin Burkholder had two, Alirio Ferrebus had one. Heck, Robert Phelps and Jonathan Hogart had four runs scored a piece. It was a veritable explosion from the Thresher offense. What’s nice though is that it was some of the team’s more prominent prospects in Ferrera, Burkholder and Ferrebus that were doing the damage. Would be nice if some of them made themselves a little more attractive to other teams.

Orioles-Blue Jays series preview: Searching for another series win

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MAY 27: Leody Taveras #30 of the Baltimore Orioles runs the bases against the Tampa Bay Rays during the first inning at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 27, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Heading into last week’s series against Detroit, our fearless leader Mark Brown proclaimed that the Orioles were “at another crisis point.” Believe it or not, this team actually responded. Baltimore secured back-to-back series victories over the Tigers and Rays to inch closer to .500. The team exploded for five runs in the first inning and completed the sweep last night at Camden Yards. Don’t let the O’s get hot!

The Orioles will have an opportunity to make up more ground against another AL East opponent that has struggled to start the season. The Blue Jays entered 2026 as the reining American League champs, but they will enter this series at a disappointing 27-29. Similar to Baltimore, the Jays hold consecutive series victories over Pittsburgh and Miami. Toronto squeaked out a 2-1 win over the Marlins yesterday afternoon.

The Jays have been trying to overcome early injuries to several key players. The team lost Dylan Cease, José Berríos, Shane Bieber, and Max Scherzer from its rotation. Alejandro Kirk is out with a left thumb fracture, and our old pal Anthony Santander has yet to make an impact for his new team after undergoing left shoulder labral surgery.

Former international free agent Kazuma Okamoto leads the team with 11 home runs. Vlad Guerrero Jr., George Springer, Daulton Varsho, and Jesús Sánchez remain offensive threats. Louis Varland (2-1, 0.31 ERA) has taken over the closer job from near Orioles Jeff Hoffman (3-3, 4.81 ERA). I can’t imagine Hoffman will find much pity in the comment section.

The Orioles have a long way to go, but the team appears to be clicking at the right time. Another series win would go a long way toward getting this season back on track.

Game 1: Thursday, May 28, 6:35 PM

RHP Chris Bassitt (4-3, 5.51 ERA) vs. LHP Patrick Corbin (2-1, 3.86 ERA)

The Orioles provided Chris Bassitt an extra day of rest by sending out rookie Trey Gibson last night. Bassitt allowed three earned over 4.1 innings his last time out against Detroit. The veteran has fallen short of expectations so far this season, but the 37-year-old still has a chance to get things right. He displayed glimpses of past success with six innings of one-run ball against the Athletics and 6.1 innings of one-run ball against the Astros.

Patrick Corbin joined Toronto after spending 2025 with the Rangers. The former National routinely earned “credit” on the Tony Kornheiser Show for going out there and pitching every five days despite struggling at the end of his tenure in Washington. Corbin led the league in earned runs allowed in 2021, 2022 and 2024, but he eclipsed 150 innings over each of the last five seasons. He’s off to a decent start up north with a 2-1 record and 3.86 ERA.

It will be interesting to see if the Orioles send out Samuel Basallo and Jackson Holliday against Corbin. Both sat against a left-handed starter on Wednesday.

Game 2: Friday, May 29, 7:05 PM

LHP Trevor Rogers (2-6, 6.96 ERA) vs. TBD

Speaking of players that have fallen short of expectations, Trevor Rogers has entered the chat. Rogers has struggled to put away hitters over the last month and has allowed a crazy amount of damage with two strikes and two outs. Rogers failed to complete five innings and allowed four earned runs last week. He’s provided some candid and emotional post game remarks but does not believe he’s tipping his pitches.

Can the Orioles accomplish any of their goals without getting Rogers back to form? The lefty earned a long leash after an absolutely dominant 2025. The Orioles gave Rogers a 15-day breather when he went down with the flu, but he obviously still needs a reset. The team will continue to give the free-agent-to-be opportunities, but the leash will only grow shorter with time.

The Blue Jays had yet to list starters for Game 2 or Game 4 as of Wednesday evening.

Game 3: Saturday, May 30, 4:05 PM

RHP Brandon Young (3-1, 3.47 ERA) vs. RHP Trey Yesavage (2-1, 2.25 ERA)

I spent some time giving Brandon Young his flowers earlier this week. Nobody expected Young to play this big of a role this early in the season. The 27-year-old was reassigned to minor league camp on March 7 with 67 players still on the roster. The Orioles turned to Young after losing several starting pitchers to injury, and the Big Texan has outperformed projections up to this point.

Trey Yesavage made quite the impact down the stretch last season. Yesavage capped an impressive debut with 5.1 scoreless innings against the Yankees in the ALDS. Yesavage still has his rookie status intact, and he’s right in the mix for AL Rookie of the Year with Munetaka Murakami, Kevin McGonigle and Samuel Basallo.

Game 4: Sunday, May 31, 12: 15 PM

RHP Kyle Bradish (2-6, 3.86 ERA) vs. TBD

Kyle Bradish appears to be back on track after hitting a few speed bumps. Bradish shutdown the Rays in his last two appearances and has his ERA back in the threes. The Orioles could not afford to have Bradish and Rogers struggling at the same time. The righty has looked the part of a rotation leader over his last five outings. Maybe he can provide Rogers a template to follow.

It’s tough to win a four-game series against another talented team, but the Orioles can do it if they play liked they did against Tampa. How many games do you expect Baltimore to win in this four-game set against Toronto? Let us know in the comments below!

Revisiting the Juan Soto trade as the Washington Nationals face the San Diego Padres

WASHINGTON, DC - AUGUST 20: Juan Soto #22 of the New York Mets talks with James Wood #29 of the Washington Nationals before the game at Nationals Park on August 20, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Greg Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Diego Padres are coming to town, which means one thing, it is time to re-examine the Juan Soto trade. Back in 2022, Mike Rizzo and AJ Preller swung arguably the biggest trade of the 21st century. With the Nats in full rebuild mode, and in need of help on the farm, they traded their crown jewel Juan Soto to the Padres for an historic prospect return.

As we all know, this trade will define the next decade of Nats baseball. Usually, when you are trading a top 5 player in the sport at 23 years old, it is tough to win that deal. However, to Mike Rizzo’s credit, he hit this out of the park. The foundation of the Nationals is built around the pieces from this Juan Soto deal.

At the time, people debated who the true headliner of the deal was. That was not because there was a lack of blue chip talent coming back. It was quite the opposite, with the Nats getting 4 high end young players in the swap. CJ Abrams, MacKenzie Gore, Robert Hassell III, and James Wood all had arguments at the time to be the best piece.

Abrams and Gore were former top 10 picks who had already reached the big leagues. Tough MLB debuts had dropped their stock ever so slightly, but they were still ultra-valuable pieces. Robert Hassell was yet another top 10 pick who was doing great things in High-A at the time. He seemed like such a safe profile due to his great hit tool. However, James Wood was seen as having the most upside. He was still years away, but his freakish size, power and athleticism immediately stood out in pro ball.

As someone who values upside, I was probably most excited about Wood. I had never seen him play, but I heard tales of his freak athleticism. He was not a top 25 prospect in baseball yet, but it only felt like a matter of time before he got there.

As it turns out, Wood became the prize of the deal. He raced through the minor leagues in 2023 and 2024, making his debut in July on ‘24. His stock kept exploding, even becoming Baseball America’s number one prospect and getting compared to Dave Winfield. 

There have been some swing and miss issues, but Wood has turned into one of the best young hitters in the sport. So far in 2026, he has taken his game to another level. His 175 OPS+ is historic for a player his age. Last season, he tailed off in the second half, but if he avoids doing that again, he is well on his way to being an MVP candidate one day.

Usually when you trade a generational talent, you don’t get another guy with nearly as much upside in return. The Nats did just that when they got Wood. While Wood is not the pure hitter that Soto is, he has even more raw power and is a better athlete. He is such a special player and is only 23 years old.

However, Wood is not the only player from the Soto trade performing at a star level this season. CJ Abrams is playing the best baseball of his career, with a 162 OPS+ and a .937 OPS. While Abrams has gotten off to hot starts in the past, he has never been this good for this long. Wood and Abrams lead all of baseball in offensive WAR this season.

The Nats have shockingly been the best offense in baseball through two months, with Wood and Abrams being the catalysts. Meanwhile, the Padres are bottom five in runs scored and Soto has been off the team for years now. The Padres still have a solid record, but it is because of their pitching staff. If they had Wood and Abrams, the Padres would arguably be the World Series favorites.

It has not been totally smooth sailing for the Soto return though. The previously mentioned Robert Hassell has seen his development stall out. He had some time in the big leagues last year, but he has been passed by a lot of outfielders in the organization. Hassell’s hit tool simply was not as good as advertised. That sunk the profile, but this did not really hurt the Nats that much.

The other big piece in the Soto deal was MacKenzie Gore. At the time, Gore was injured, so he did not pitch in 2022. However, he became a fixture at the top of the Nats rotation from 2023 to 2025. Gore showed flashes of ace level upside, but never was able to put it together. Like a lot of these guys, Gore had a tendency to fade down the stretch.

In Paul Toboni’s first offseason, he traded the enigmatic lefty to the Texas Rangers for a prospect haul that looks really good so far. Devin Fitz-Gerald, Yeremy Cabrera and Abimelec Ortiz have all looked great. Headliner Gavin Fien has spent a lot of time injured, but he still has a lot of promise. These youngsters just add to the Soto trade legacy and make the tree even larger.

Speaking of the Soto trade tree, the Padres eventually realized they would not be able to re-sign Soto. The wheeling and dealing AJ Preller decided to trade Soto to the Yankees, in a deal that worked out well for them. Michael King and Randy Vasquez are both in the Padres rotation. They also sent Drew Thorpe, who they got in that deal to the White Sox in the Dylan Cease deal. While Cease is gone now, he had two solid years with the Padres.

That trade and its after-effects are still so big for both teams. I have not even mentioned Jarlin Susana yet either. He was the last piece of the deal, but he has turned into a flame throwing pitching prospect with electric stuff. Susana is hurt right now, but he will be pitching for the Nats at some point.

The Juan Soto trade will forever connect these two franchises. It is one of the biggest trades in baseball history. As you guys know, I get on Mike Rizzo a lot, but he absolutely hit this deal out of the park. It takes guts to trade a player the caliber of Soto, who was still only 23 years old. Rizzo knew it was the best move for the team, and I think he took the best package he could have possibly gotten.

With the Nats on the upswing now, hopefully Wood and Abrams will be making impacts in playoff games before too long. A lot has gone wrong for the Nats in the 2020’s, but the Juan Soto trade was not one of those things. It is a shame Soto was not a National for life, but this trade set up the Nats very well for the future. Hopefully James Wood can be the Nat for life that Soto could not be.

Yankees at Athletics: 5 things to watch and series predictions | May 29-31

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Yankees head West to take on the Athletics in a three-game set starting Friday...


5 things to watch

Rodon looking to get on track

The Yankees rotation is almost whole again with the returns of Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodon

And while Cole has looked like his Cy Young self, Rodon has scuffled a bit. In three starts since coming off the IL, the southpaw has a 4.15 ERA. He's pitched five innings just once so far, which was his first start back, and has progressively allowed more runs in each start. 

His last start saw him allow three runs on five walks across 4.1 innings against the Brewers. 

Now, the Athletics are not the NL Central-leading Brewers, but they can hit -- and they play in a minor league ballpark. It could be tough for Rodon, but seeing him get through a quality start on Friday could give the veteran starter some confidence moving forward.

Hitting in the minors

Yes, the Athletics play in West Sacramento in a ballpark meant for a minor league club. It's a bandbox, as we saw last season when 230 long balls were hit out of Sutter Health Park -- second most in MLB. The A's have hit 26 homers at their home ballpark already this year, and with the hot starts from catcher Shea Langeliers and 2025 AL Rookie of the Year Nick Kurtz, those numbers will continue to climb as the season goes on.

Yankees hitters need to take advantage of the park as well. Last season, they hit eight bombs in Sacramento -- the same series that saw Jasson Dominguez have a three-homer game -- and they should be able to do it again. 

Volpe rising?

Anthony Volpe continues to produce at the plate and manager Aaron Boone continues to reward his shortstop by starting him every game.

Volpe is 7-for-26 (.269) over his last seven games but he's gotten on base in all but three of his games since he was called up (11 games).

Sep 19, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe (11) runs off of the field before a game against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
Sep 19, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe (11) runs off of the field before a game against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. / Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

With Volpe at shortstop, Boone has been creative with Jose Caballero. He's started at third base and in the outfield. Continuing to monitor that situation will be interesting. Two right-handers are slated to pitch for the A's this weekend, so Ryan McMahon and Trent Grisham could get starts on Friday and Saturday.

Let the lineup juggling continue. 

Getting their wins back

When the Athletics came to the Bronx in early April, they took two of three from the Yankees. After the Yanks won 5-3 in the series opener, David Bednar allowed the go-ahead run to cross in the ninth in their 3-2 loss in the middle game of the series. Then the bats went quiet in the series finale as New York was no-hit into the seventh inning in their 1-0 loss.

It was not a great series for the Yankees, but with the weather warmer and the team a little more rounded into form, this is the time to try and get those wins back as they look to continue their climb up the AL East standings.

Early scoreboard watching

Yes, it's way too early to be scoreboard watching for the division, but with the way the Rays were playing this season, any lull for Tampa needs to be taken advantage of.

The Rays have lost four straight and are 5-5 in their last 10 games as the Yankees have pulled within 1.5 games of them after their four-game winning streak. 

Now, the Rays will take on the 21-35 Angels this weekend, but Tampa was just swept by the Orioles -- who were 23-30 heading into their series. So who's to say what will happen. The Yanks need to take care of business in Sacramento, and perhaps they'll find themselves atop the division by the time Sunday is over.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Ben Rice

Rice will take on two right-handed starters and will be hitting in a band box. 

Which Yankees pitcher will have the best start?

Will Warren

Warren continues to be solid and although there are some scary hitters in the A's lineup, I believe he'll get the job done.

Which Athletics player will be a thorn in the Yankees' side?

Shea Langeliers

Langeliers is tied with Atlanta's Drake Baldwin for most home runs by a catcher this season (13) and with Rodon and Ryan Weathers (both lefties) on the mound this weekend, the backstop could do a lot of damage. 

Good Morning San Diego: Padres lose fourth consecutive game, get swept by Phillies

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 25: Manny Machado #13 of the San Diego Padres tosses his batting equipment after striking out to end the eighth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Petco Park on May 25, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Diego Padres came into the final game of the three-game series against the Philadelphia Phillies hoping that Walker Buehler would hold the Philly offense down enough that San Diego could score a couple of runs and avoid the sweep. Buehler did his part, but the Padres offense failed to provide any run support. San Diego was shutout and swept by Philadelphia with one final 3-0 loss before they go on the road to face the Washington Nationals.

Buehler made through 5.1 innings, allowing two runs on three hits with no walks and two strikeouts. His counterpart for the Phillies, Christopher Sanchez, pitched seven scoreless innings. He allowed six hits with no walks and nine strikeouts. The seven-shutout innings from Sanchez pushed his scoreless innings streak to 44 2/3 innings, surpassing Grover Alexander’s 41 innings for the most ever by a Philadelphia pitcher.

The Padres had their chances to score runs and get in the game. They outhit the Phillies, 7-6 but once again San Diego was unable to come up with hits with runners in scoring position. The Padres were 0-for-8 in those situations while the Phillies were 1-for-3. Fernando Tatis Jr. and Jackson Merrill each had two hits, while Xander Bogaerts, Ramon Laureano and Nick Castellanos each added a hit.

San Diego travels to Washington, D.C. for three games against the Nationals before they head to Philadelphia for three more against the Phillies. If the offense continues to do what it has been doing — or not doing — it could be a long six-game road trip. The Padres and Nationals open their series, Friday at 3:45 p.m.

Padres News:

  • The San Diego farm system did not get much attention prior to the season, and it is still not among the best in baseball according to experts, but there are plenty of players making news and Cheri Bell of Gaslamp Ball provides insight as to who they are.
  • The Padres have been one of the best teams in MLB if you just look at their win/loss record. They have also been one of the worst teams in MLB if you look at their offensive statistics. Dennis Lin of The Athletic asks if San Diego is the best worst team or the worst best team.

Baseball News:

Braves vs Red Sox Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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After getting blown out Wednesday night, the Atlanta Braves will look for a series win in their rubber match with the Boston Red Sox.

My Braves vs. Red Sox predictions lean on the visitors, who bring baseball’s best road record to Fenway Park, and start one of the league’s nastiest lefties in Chris Sale.

That should be plenty to cover their -1.5 run line at +127 for my MLB picks on Thursday, May 28.

Who will win Braves vs Red Sox today: Braves -1.5 (+125)

Chris Sale is the perfect starter to expose a Boston Red Sox lineup ranking second in batting average over the last week.

Batters are hitting .181 against him, and he’s allowing 5.8 hits per 9 innings — both Top-2 ranks in the majors.

Sale relies on a fastball-slider combo that has stymied opponents even into the advanced stages of his career, as evidenced by a 98th-percentile chase rate and a 93rd-percentile strikeout rate.

Sale’s backed by a lineup that knows how to rebound: in the four previous times they’ve lost by at least six runs, they’ve averaged 8.8 runs the next game.

I’d take the Atlanta Braves' run line up to -2.5 at +215.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Boston’s MLB-worst .118 ISO against four-seamers sets up perfectly for Sale. Play Braves Run Line -1.5 (+127)

Braves vs Red Sox Over/Under pick: Over 7.5 (+112)

Even with Sale pitching, it doesn’t always mean a low-scoring affair. In his last seven starts, the Braves and their opponent have combined to top 7.5 runs four times.

Boston starter Payton Tolle was dinged up in his last start, surrendering three runs on four hits in six innings against the Twins. A 10th-percentile ground ball rate means he could be more susceptible to home runs than he has been. 

He’ll be in tough with an Atlanta lineup that puts up 6.04 runs per game on the road, which is tops in MLB.

That’s a big part of the reason the Braves’ Over record on the road is 10-5-0 over the last 15 away games. I'd take the Over down to +105 or avoid the market if it goes any shorter than that because Sale can put up zeroes.

Eric Rosales' 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 8-8, -0.01 units
  • Over/Under bets: 11-4, +6.62 units

Braves vs Red Sox odds

  • Moneyline: Braves -138 | Red Sox +133
  • Run line: Braves -1.5 (+127) | Red Sox +1.5 (-133)
  • Over/Under: Over 7.5 (+127) | Under 7.5 (-133)

Braves vs Red Sox trend

Boston lost seven straight home games following a win. Find more MLB betting trends for Braves vs. Red Sox.

How to watch Braves vs Red Sox and game info

LocationFenway Park, Boston, MA
DateThursday, May 28, 2026
First pitch4:10 p.m. ET
TVBravesVsn, NESN
Braves starting pitcherChris Sale
(7-3, 1.89 ERA)
Red Sox starting pitcherPayton Tolle
(2-2, 2.45 ERA)

Braves vs Red Sox latest injuries

Braves vs Red Sox weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Twins vs White Sox Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Chicago White Sox will be looking to keep it rolling offensively this afternoon at 2:10 p.m. ET against the Minnesota Twins after scoring 15 runs on Wednesday. 

With their ace Davis Martin on the mound, my Twins vs. White Sox predictions are targeting Chicago to grab another win in the finale. 

Find out more in my MLB picks for Thursday, May 28. 

Who will win Twins vs White Sox today: White Sox moneyline (-140)

The Chicago White Sox exploded offensively in the second game of the series, winning 15-2. They've been solid at the dish all year, ranking seventh in runs scored.

The hosts typically give Davis Martin run support as well, as he owns a 7-1 record and 2.04 ERA. 

Martin has been lights-out at home this season, compiling a 1.14 ERA. 

Minnesota Twins reliever Kendry Rojas will "open" the rubber match. Although he's been solid with a 1.26 ERA across five outings, he's still a reliever, and won't be in there long,. Minnesota's bullpen is poor overall, posting a 4.94 ERA

I'd play this to -150.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Martin has collected a very impressive 2.29 FIP this season, the lowest mark of his career. 

Twins vs White Sox Over/Under pick: Under 8.5 (-138)

Three of the last five meetings have cashed the Under, and with Martin taking the hill, I expect most of the offense to come from Chicago. He's practically unhittable at home, and the Twins have only scored a total of eight runs so far in this series.

Minnesota enters this game ranked 15th overall in OPS.

It will be a relatively one-sided offensive affair, but don't expect another 10+ runs. I'll play the Under to -140. 

Quinn Allen's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 19-13, +5.50 units
  • Over/Under bets: 19-12, +3.68 units

Twins vs White Sox odds

  • Moneyline: Twins +133 | White Sox -138
  • Run line: Twins +1.5 (-170) | White Sox -1.5 (+163)
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 (+122) | Under 8.5 (-133)

Twins vs White Sox trend

The White Sox have hit the moneyline in 12 of their last 15 games at home (+9.60 Units / 61% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Twins vs. White Sox.

How to watch Twins vs White Sox and game info

LocationRate Field, Chicago, IL
DateThursday, May 28, 2026
First pitch2:10 p.m. ET
TVTwins.TV, CHSN
Twins starting pitcherKendry Rojas
(1-0, 1.26 ERA)
White Sox starting pitcherDavis Martin
(7-1, 2.04 ERA)

Twins vs White Sox latest injuries

Twins vs White Sox weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.