SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 19: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers hits a double during the eighth inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on May 19, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Yuichi Masuda/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Shohei Ohtani takes the mound (and hits) against Randy Vázquez as the Dodgers wrap things up in San Diego.
Updated lineup:
Ohtani DH Betts SS Freeman 1B Tucker RF Pages CF Muncy 3B Smith C Hernández, T. LF Kim 2B Ohtani P https://t.co/hj3DpN93hS
Yankees manager Aaron Boone took time during his news conference ahead of Wednesday night's home game against the Toronto Blue Jays to commend the performance of Anthony Volpe.
The team's starting shortstop for the grand majority of the last three seasons entering 2026, Volpe began the season in the minor leagues rehabbing a torn labrum, which required offseason surgery.
As Volpe worked his way up the farm system, Jose Caballero made the shortstop position his own. Caballero's .259/.320/.400 slash line is already respectable, but his baserunning and defense are elite for his position.
Volpe was called back up eight days ago in the stead of Caballero, who was placed on the 10-day IL with a broken right (throwing) middle finger.
Through his first seven games back in the majors with the Yankees, Volpe is batting .294 with an eye-popping .500 on-base percentage through 17 at-bats. He's also stolen two bases.
When asked what stands out about Volpe's return to the Yankees lineup, Boone pointed to his ability to work "quality at-bats."
"He's hit some balls on the screws a handful of times...the baserunning has been excellent."
The most outstanding example of Volpe's baserunning occurred during Monday night's series opener, when he acrobatically avoided the tag of rookie Blue Jays catcher Brandon Valenzuela to score a run on a shallow J.C. Escarra fly ball.
Caballero is aiming to return on Friday, when fellow injury returnee Gerrit Cole will make his return to the mound in the Bronx to kick off a pivotal three-game home stand against the AL East division-leading Tampa Bay Rays.
It will be interesting to see whether Boone makes a straight swap of Caballero in at shortstop for Volpe, or if Boone leans on Caballero's defensive versatility to swap out third baseman Ryan McMahon instead to keep Volpe in the lineup at shortstop.
Zach Thornton’s MLB career began with a touching father-son moment — but it was no ordinary one.
The Mets left-hander blew a kiss to his dad, Paul, who was watching from the stands, as the rookie took the mound to face the Nationals in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday.
The sentimental moment is all the more touching with Paul having vowed to attend the game earlier in the week — and checking out of Chicago’s Shirley Ryan AbilityLab, where he spent the last month learning how to walk again after a botched spinal surgery, according to The Athletic.
Mets rookie Zach Thornton sends a kiss to his dad, Paul, in the stands ahead of his MLB debut. SNYPaul Thornton, who checked himself out of rehab to attend his son’s first MLB start, threw a thumbs-up to Zach. SNY
“It was go and be a dad and support a young man in Zach or take care of my health,” Paul told the outlet. “The doctors at Shirley Ryan assured me that my health was in good hands and that they felt as though I could do it. So it really made my decision very easy.
“To be honest, as a dad, I’m not going to miss this,” he added.
With his dad in the stands in a wheelchair along with his mom Julie on his side, the family clapped as Zach — a wispy 6-foot-3, 170-pound hurler — struck out Washington’s Dylan Crews for his first major league K.
"The support that the Mets have provided Zach over the last couple months has been nothing short of awesome. It makes a lot more of a special thing."
Zach Thornton's father, Paul, talks with @SteveGelbs about what his son's promotion to the majors means after his recent health… pic.twitter.com/mPcSQlsGl9
It’s hard to believe because of course we’re like, ‘What? This is happening already?'” Julie told SNY’s Steve Gelbs during Wednesday’s game broadcast. “But yeah, so much pride. He’s been an underdog, and I just feel like he’s gone through so much, so it’s just so fun. Just a prideful moment.”
Paul, a track coach at the University of Kansas and a former athlete at St. Olaf, had surgery on April 2 to remove a tumor from his spine. The procedure ended early when he began to bleed and lost feeling in his lower body, per The Athletic.
The elder Thornton has documented his rehab on social media, and he’ll get an extra special update to make after the whirlwind start to the week — one the Mets have played a very big role in.
“Being called up is one thing, and that’s a special thing,” Paul told Gelbs.
“But given a situation which we have had, and the support that the Mets have provided Zach over the last couple months has been nothing short of awesome. It makes a lot more of a special thing.”
Chase Meidroth races around second after Tristan Peters lodged a double in the wall during the sixth inning. Moments later, the Sox watched another scoring chance vanish. | (Connor Jalbert/Getty Images)
The White Sox spent the afternoon tripping over their own shoelaces. They outhit Seattle 11-7 but still dropped the rubber match. Eleven strikeouts, 2-for-9 with runners in scoring position, nine left on base. All that traffic, and nothing to show for it.
It was the kind of game that keeps rebuilding clubs awake at night — enough traffic to win, not enough execution to finish the job.
The omens were bad from the jump. In the top of the second, the Mariners practically handed the Sox a gift when Colson Montgomery, Chase Meidroth, and Jarred Kelenic drew three straight walks to open the inning. Bases loaded, nobody out, and a golden opportunity to seize momentum. Instead, Tristan Peters whiffs, and Drew Romo rolled into an inning-killing double play. Just like that, the Good Guys come away with a big fat zero.
Seattle immediately made them pay.
After Randy Arozarena got plunked in the bottom of the frame and swiped second, Dominic Canzone smacked a double down the first base line to plate the game’s first run and put the Mariners ahead, 1-0.
The Sox answered in the third. Sam Antonacci punched a one-out single, then stole second after Munetaka Murakami flew out. Andrew Benintendi followed with an RBI single to center to knot things up at 1-1.
But Seattle kept the screws on Sean Burke, whose rough stretch continued. In the fourth, Arozarena worked a leadoff walk, stole second again, and eventually came around when Patrick Wisdom ripped a two-out double to left, giving the Mariners a 2-1 lead.
Chicago clawed back once more in the fifth. Luisangel Acuña and Antonacci opened the inning with back-to-back singles, and Murakami delivered with an RBI knock to plate Acuña and tie the game at 2-2.
Burke’s afternoon ended shortly after. He walked Jhonny Pereda to begin the bottom of the fifth, then hit Cole Young before Julio Rodríguez packed the sacks with a single. Antonacci bailed him out with a nice play on a Josh Naylor fly, and then Arozarena popped up, but Will Venable had seen enough and pulled the plug anyway.
Sean Newcomb came on and cleaned up his mess, preserving the tie and salvaging Burke’s line: 4 2⁄3 innings, four hits, two runs, three walks, five strikeouts.
However, it was the sixth inning that may have been the game’s defining moment. Meidroth led off with a single, and after Kelenic struck out, Peters ripped a ground-rule double that got lodged in the wall down the line. Runners at second and third, one out, another massive chance. Then came the kind of mistake that young, agressive teams make: Meidroth got caught in a rundown breaking toward home during Romo’s at-bat, erasing the lead runner before González grounded out harmlessly. Another golden ticket, shredded.
Seattle finally broke things open in the seventh. Pereda ambushed a Newcomb pitch for a leadoff solo shot to make it 3-2, and after Rodríguez doubled, Venable waved in Jordan Hicks to face Arozarena.
It did not go well.
After getting ahead with strike one, Hicks grooved one over the plate, and Arozarena didn’t miss. Two-run bomb, 5-2 Seattle, just like that.
But the Sox still had chances.
Eighth inning, Sox still breathing. Meidroth and Kelenic single, Peters reaches on a throwing error, and Meidroth scores. Miguel Vargas drew a pinch-hit walk, two on, two out. Edgar Quero, hero last Sunday, comes up as the tying run — swings through strike three — threat over.
Brandon Eisert handled the eighth at least, kept things tidy in the bottom half, tossing a quick inning and even picking off Emerson after issuing him a walk.
Ninth inning, last gasp. Randal Grichuk jumps the first pitch for a pinch-hit homer to right. Sox within one, and the dugout has a flicker of life.
Then, poof, the bats disappeared.
Three straight strikeouts. Ballgame.
So went the afternoon for the South Siders: traffic everywhere, timely hits nowhere.
Even after the loss, the Sox are 25-24, still above water and 2 1/2 games back, depending on what Cleveland does against Detroit. Off day Thursday, then they’ll head to San Francisco for three. Time to forget this one ever happened.
GLENDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 16: Justin Wrobleski #70 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws on the field prior to a Spring Training game against the Milwaukee Brewers at Camelback Ranch on March 16, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Dodgers go from playing one recent postseason opponent to battling another recent playoff foe, heading from San Diego to play the Brewers beginning Friday night in Milwaukee, in a rematch of last year’s National League Championship Series.
In 2025 the Dodgers and Brewers faced off in two different times. They played two series over two weeks surrounding the All-Star break, and Milwaukee swept all six games, winning by a combined score of 31-16. Then came the NLCS when Dodgers pitching was on a heater, holding the Brewers to exactly one run in all four games. Los Angeles only scored 15 total runs in the series, but that was enough for a pennant-winning sweep.
Justin Wrobleski gets the ball in the series opener on Friday night, rookie right-hander Logan Henderson on the mound for Milwaukee making his 10th major league start.
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 19: Alex Call #12 of the Los Angeles Dodgers scores a run ahead of the tag by Freddy Fermin #54 of the San Diego Padres during the ninth inning at Petco Park on May 19, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Los Angeles Dodgers (30-19) at San Diego Padres (29-19), May 20, 2026, 5:40 p.m. PST
Watch: Padres.TV
Location: Petco Park – San Diego, Calif.
Listen: 97.3 The Fan
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The addition of some thump in the offseason hasn’t helped the Orioles avoid a dud early this season.
And one of their television broadcasters put his feelings about the state of the last-place team on full display after Baltimore’s third straight loss to the rival Rays on Wednesday afternoon.
MASN analyst Ben McDonald used the postgame show after a 5-3 loss — one in which the Orioles allowed four runs in the bottom of the eighth inning — to discuss what he believes is wrong with the team.
In short, he couldn’t care less about any expected stats or analytics, but that at the end of the day, the team is 21-29 and in the basement of the American League East.
Shane Baz f the Baltimore Orioles walks back to the dugout in the middle of the third inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on May 20, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. Getty Images
“We can talk about analytics and what could happen and what should happen if you hit the ball hard. But I don’t care if you hit the ball hard. Like, I don’t care if you hit it hard and you hit it to somebody. You’re out. I don’t care how hard you throw ball four. I don’t care what your spin rate was on your breaking ball if you bounce it three feet in front of home plate. I don’t care,” McDonald said, via the Baltimore Banner.
“What I care about is, do you make plays? Do you make pitches? Do you get hits when it matters? And that’s what the Orioles are struggling to do right now. They are struggling to complete ball games. They are struggling to have all phases of the game go right at the same time. That’s where the struggle is. So, all this nonsense is eyewash to me about all this analytical stuff. You either do or you don’t. And right now, the Orioles don’t. They are not doing it and they’re not playing well right now. That’s the bottom line.”
Alonso, who went deep Wednesday, now has nine homers through May 20, but his .744 OPS is well below his career norms and over 100 points lower than his total (.871) from last year in New York. Baz had one of his best starts of the year on Wednesday (six innings, one run), but has a 4.87 ERA and 1.45 WHIP this year.
As a team, the Orioles offense ranks 18th in OPS (.700) while the pitching staff is 26th in ERA (4.97).
Baltimore Orioles first baseman Pete Alonso (25) returns to the dugout after driving in a run and being caught in a rundown during the third inning against the New York Yankees at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mitch Stringer-Imagn Images
In the three-game sweep at the hands of the Rays, the Orioles were outscored 25-10. Manager Craig Albernaz didn’t mince words about the latest loss.
“It’s a big-time gut punch, for sure,” Albernaz told reporters after Baltimore lost for the fifth time in six games.
The latest defeat was particularly crushing after the Orioles brought a 3-1 lead into the eighth before reliever Anthony Nunez imploded, allowing four earned runs to score. Closer Ryan Helsley is out with an elbow injury.
McDonald said he doesn’t even know what the Orioles’ next move is.
“They are having trouble finishing ball games. Where do they go from here?” the analyst said. “I can’t tell you where they go from here. I don’t know where the Orioles go from here other than that they have to start playing more consistent baseball. That’s the bottom line.”
Roughly 60 days into the MLB season, the Dodgers still look like the team baseball expected them to be. They remain near the top of the National League standings, project as a World Series favorite, and continue operating with one of the deepest rosters in baseball.
But beneath the standings, another market has been moving just as aggressively.
Inside the sports card world, the Dodgers are no longer functioning as one team. They are multiple collectible economies operating simultaneously. Some players are accelerating rapidly. Some are flattening despite elite production. Some are being repriced downward because uncertainty became visible. Others have evolved into historical assets that now trade more on legacy and scarcity than week-to-week statistics.
That distinction matters because baseball and sports card markets reward different things. Baseball rewards wins. The card market rewards belief, visibility, and future demand.
Shohei Ohtani’s market has moved beyond the traditional superstar cycle.
His offensive production remains elite, but the larger shift has come from the possibility of meaningful pitching innings returning later this season. Once Cy Young conversations re-entered the picture, collectors stopped evaluating Ohtani as simply the best hitter in baseball and started evaluating the possibility of another historically unprecedented two-way season.
That distinction changes the market entirely.
An MVP-caliber hitter is valuable. An MVP-caliber hitter who can simultaneously compete for Cy Young consideration becomes historically scarce. Ohtani’s OPS, power production, and hard-hit profile continue reinforcing elite offensive consistency, but the card market is reacting less to the baseline numbers themselves and more to the expanding ceiling around them.
That change is visible directly in pricing behavior. Ohtani’s market has risen more than 53% over the last 90 days, with demand concentrating into BBM rookies, Japanese-exclusive releases, low-population PSA 10s, and high-end autos. His buyer pool has also expanded globally, pulling in traditional collectors, Japanese buyers, and alternative asset participants simultaneously.
The market is no longer pricing short-term production alone. It is pricing historical significance.
Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Roki Sasaki Are Moving in Opposite Directions
Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s market has spent the first two months of the season moving from projection toward validation.
Entering the year, collectors were still pricing upside tied to his transition from Japan to MLB. But despite stretches of early ERA volatility, Yamamoto’s strikeout-to-walk profile, command metrics, and pitch efficiency remained strong beneath the surface. Just as importantly, the Dodgers continued treating him like a frontline postseason arm, signaling organizational trust before the broader market fully caught up.
That combination matters because the card market tends to follow visible role stability almost as much as raw production. Once collectors believe a player’s role is secure, confidence begins consolidating into fewer, more liquid assets.
His market has responded accordingly, climbing roughly 27% as demand concentrates into PSA 10 rookies, Topps Chrome parallels, and autograph formats.
Roki Sasaki’s market has moved in the opposite direction.
Sasaki entered the season carrying one of the most aggressively priced projection markets in baseball. Velocity, strikeout upside, and international hype created enormous demand before sustained MLB production had fully materialized. But uneven command, fluctuating velocity consistency, and workload caution introduced visible instability into what had previously been a pure upside narrative.
His market has fallen roughly 18% during the same stretch the broader baseball card market rose more than 12%.
That divergence reveals one of the central realities of modern sports card pricing: the market loves projection while uncertainty remains abstract. Once instability becomes measurable instead of theoretical, repricing happens quickly.
Andy Pages and Hyeseong Kim Show How Visibility Creates Demand
The Dodgers have also produced one of the clearest examples of how opportunity converts into card market demand.
Andy Pages has become one of the fastest-rising baseball card markets in the sport, with prices climbing more than 70% over the last 90 days. Increased lineup trust, improving offensive production, and everyday at-bats pushed him into national visibility, but the market move started before the highlights became constant.
The signals appeared earlier through playing time, lineup confidence, and improving production quality. The narrative formed afterward.
That sequencing sits at the center of how modern sports card markets operate. Visibility accelerates once performance becomes easy for the broader market to recognize and simplify.
Hyeseong Kim represents a similar dynamic. Mookie Betts landing on the injured list created immediate opportunity on baseball’s most visible roster, accelerating Kim’s relevance almost overnight. Increased playing time, defensive versatility, and growing visibility helped push his market higher as Korean collector demand expanded alongside mainstream hobby attention.
Performance created the opening. Exposure amplified the demand.
Mookie Betts Illustrates the Problem With Established Greatness
Mookie Betts presents the opposite dynamic.
Despite recently returning from the injured list, his market has remained relatively flat compared to other Dodgers stars. That is not because the market doubts him. It is because the market already fully understands him.
His greatness is efficiently priced.
Championship pedigree, Hall of Fame trajectory, elite production, and long-term consistency are already embedded into his market structure. There is very little discovery left. Modern sports card markets reward acceleration more aggressively than stability because emerging narratives create urgency while established greatness creates consistency.
For Betts’ market to materially accelerate again, it likely requires another MVP-level stretch, postseason dominance, or historically significant milestones. Sustained excellence alone rarely creates explosive repricing once a player becomes fully understood.
Blake Snell and Edwin Díaz Reflect the Volatility of Pitcher Markets
Pitchers continue to operate at a structural disadvantage inside the sports card market.
Blake Snell’s injuries and interrupted workload softened demand because pitcher markets rely heavily on continuity and visibility to maintain momentum. Edwin Díaz reflects a different version of the same issue. Despite elite stretches as a closer and a massive contract, his hobby market has remained relatively thin outside a handful of recognizable releases like Topps Heritage. Recent controversy tied to cockfighting allegations in Puerto Rico only complicated the narrative further.
Even elite pitchers often struggle to sustain hitter-level demand because they generate fewer culturally dominant moments, carry greater injury volatility, and rely more heavily on sustained performance to maintain visibility.
What the Dodgers Reveal About the Modern Sports Card Market
The Dodgers are not simply one of baseball’s best rosters. They are one of the clearest real-time demonstrations of how modern sports card markets actually function.
Inside one team, the market is simultaneously pricing historical legacy, breakout acceleration, international demand, uncertainty, narrative momentum, and long-term preservation.
Shohei Ohtani trades like a global historical asset. Yoshinobu Yamamoto is moving from projection toward validation. Roki Sasaki shows how quickly uncertainty can reprice upside. Andy Pages and Hyeseong Kim demonstrate how visibility accelerates demand. Mookie Betts reflects the ceiling of established greatness, where consistency matters less than new narrative momentum.
The standings measure wins. The card market measures future attention.
That difference explains why some players rise faster than their statistics suggest, while others remain flat despite elite production. The market is not reacting to performance alone. It is reacting to how performance gets interpreted, amplified, and believed.
For the Dodgers, the opportunity is obvious. Another postseason run, continued growth from Pages and Kim, and full validation from Yamamoto could push multiple segments of the Dodgers card market substantially higher by October.
But the risks are equally visible. Pitching volatility, injuries, workload concerns, and the pressure of sustaining expectations over a full season can quickly reshape both narrative and demand.
Sixty days into the season, the Dodgers are still winning games.
The card market is now trying to determine which players, and which assets tied to them, will still look undervalued by the time October arrives.
What team should we look at next. Let us know on Mantel.
ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - MAY 2: Michael McGreevy #36 of the St. Louis Cardinals delivers against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Busch Stadium on May 2, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Jeff Le/Getty Images) | Getty Images
It’s game 2 of the St. Louis Cardinals barrage of games against NL Central rivals Wednesday as Michael McGreevy will try to dominate the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Bucs will counter with Carmen Mlodzinski on the mound for Pittsburgh. First pitch scheduled for 6:45pm at Busch Stadium and game viewable on Cardinals.tv.
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 20: Jhonny Pereda #5 of the Seattle Mariners tags out Chase Meidroth #10 of the Chicago White Sox as Meidroth attempts to steal home during the sixth inning at T-Mobile Park on May 20, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jack Compton/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Mariners 5, White Sox 4
Enjoying a baseball game with your family: Jhonny Pereda, +0.24 WPA A drunk 20-something whipping you in the back of his head with a sweaty shirt: Josh Naylor, -0.15 WPA
DENVER, CO - MAY 20: Starting pitcher Kyle Freeland #21 of the Colorado Rockies hands the baseball to Manager Warren Schaeffer as he exits the game while catcher Brett Sullivan #26 stands near by in the fifth inning against the Texas Rangers at Coors Field on May 20, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The weather changed throughout Wednesday afternoon at Coors Field, and the game kept moving with it.
One day after being shut out in a 10-0 loss to the Texas Rangers, the Colorado Rockies gave themselves a chance to take the series. They grabbed an early lead, lost it when Texas went back-to-back in the fourth, then fought back with pressure, patience, and timely contact to carry a one-run lead into the ninth.
But when Texas played its late hand, Colorado could not match it and lost the third game, 5-4.
Homers hurt Freeland before traffic ends his day
Kyle Freeland is still searching for consistency since returning from the IL, and Wednesday brought more of the same: traffic on the bases and hard contact in key spots.
He handled it early.
Freeland worked a clean first inning and faced the minimum through two after Josh Jung’s leadoff single in the second was erased by a Kyle Karros-to-Edouard Julien-to-TJ Rumfield double play. In the third, he gave up a two-out double to Sam Haggerty and walked Andrew McCutchen, but got Justin Foscue looking to keep the Rangers off the board.
The fourth inning brought the damage.
After Jung singled with one out, Ezequiel Duran jumped a knuckle curve and sent it 373 feet at 106.2 mph for a two-run homer. One batter later, Jake Burger crushed a changeup 409 feet at 108.4 mph to give Texas back-to-back home runs and a 3-1 lead.
Freeland came back out for the fifth and got the first two outs, but he could not finish the inning. Foscue singled, Brandon Nimmo followed with a hard-hit single, and Freeland walked Jung to load the bases. His afternoon was done.
Jaden Hill entered and got Duran to ground out, stranding all three inherited runners.
Freeland finished with three runs allowed on seven hits over 4.2 innings. He walked two, struck out four, and threw 89 pitches, 56 for strikes.
Rockies make Leiter work
The Rockies did not match Texas’ power, but they did enough against Jack Leiter.
Leiter had velocity, with his four-seam fastball averaging 95.4 mph, but Colorado made him work in the fourth and fifth innings. The Rockies put the ball in play, forced traffic, and took advantage when his command slipped.
The key at-bat came in the fourth.
With two outs and the bases loaded, Karros was called out on strikes. He challenged the pitch, the call was overturned, and the Rockies had a bases-loaded walk instead of an inning-ending strikeout. That made it 3-2.
Colorado took the lead in the fifth. Jake McCarthy tripled to center, Tyler Freeman singled him home, and Troy Johnston added a two-out RBI single to put the Rockies ahead.
The Rockies did not homer against Leiter, but they found runs through McCarthy’s speed, Karros’ plate discipline, Freeman’s contact, and Johnston’s two-out hit. Leiter finished with four runs allowed on seven hits over five innings. He walked two, struck out five, and threw 83 pitches, 55 for strikes.
Bullpen holds until the ninth
After stranding the bases loaded in the fifth, Hill stayed in for the sixth and worked around a two-out single to post another zero. He finished with 1.1 scoreless innings, allowing one hit with no walks, and was helped by a nice play from Rumfield, one of several solid defensive plays by the Rockies on the day.
Antonio Senzatela followed with two scoreless innings in the seventh and eighth. He allowed two hits, struck out one, and lowered his season ERA to 1.19 while getting the Rockies to the ninth with a 4-3 lead.
Then Texas went all in . . . .
Brennan Bernardino got the first out in the ninth, but Joc Pederson reached on catcher interference, Justin Foscue singled, and Alejandro Osuna loaded the bases with an infield single. Juan Mejia entered, but a passed ball tied the game before Jung singled through the left side to put Texas ahead.
Bernardino was charged with two runs, one earned, over one-third of an inning. Mejia kept the deficit at one by striking out Duran and getting Burger to hit a hard grounder to Willi Castro at second.
Can’t ante up
With the rain coming down in the bottom of the ninth, the Rockies had a chance to answer but went in order. Karros flew out, Braxton Fulford struck out as a pinch-hitter, and McCarthy grounded out to end a 5-4 loss after Colorado had led entering the ninth.
The loss dropped the Rockies to 19-31, while Texas improved to 24-25. Colorado gave itself a real chance to win, but folded in the ninth and let the game slip away.
Up Next
The Rockies head to Phoenix to open a series against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday at Chase Field. First pitch is scheduled for 7:40 p.m. MDT.
Colorado has not announced a starter. Arizona is scheduled to start left-hander Eduardo Rodriguez, who enters at 4-1 with a 2.53 ERA and 39 strikeouts.
NEW YORK - JULY 23: The grounds crew at Yankee Stadium roll out the tarp during the rain delay between the Texas Rangers and the New York Yankees on July 23, 2014 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Rob Tringali/SportsChrome/Getty Images) | Getty Images
A scintillating starting pitching matchup is on tap in the Bronx tonight, as young phenoms Cam Schlittler and Trey Yesavage are supposed to go toe-to-toe. Both right-handers broke out late in 2025, with Schlittler earning a rotation spot down the stretch for the Yankees and then dominating the Red Sox in his playoff debut to help New York punch its ticket to an ALDS matchup against Toronto … who had their own sensation in Yesavage. Despite just three regular-season starts to his name, the 22-year-old no-hit the Yankees over 5.1 innings in Game 2 to help the Blue Jays establish a 2-0 series lead that proved to be insurmountable. It was the beginning of a magical postseason for Yesavage and the Jays, who fell two outs shy of a World Series title.
Needless to say, there was a lot of hype for this Wednesday rumble at Yankee Stadium, as they had not previously squared off against each other. The Yankees have scrapped out the first two contests of this four-game set against a Jays team they struggled against last year, and they were hoping to nail down the series win tonight behind Schlittler, who has been arguably the best pitcher in baseball early on in 2026. Yesavage began the year on the IL with a right shoulder impingement, but he’s posted a 1.40 ERA through four starts since returning.
Alas, an ugly weather forecast is forcing us to wait. At 6:17pm ET, the Yankees announced that they do not expect to begin the game on time. There’s a severe thunderstorm watch in the Bronx, and we could be waiting awhile for baseball — if indeed we get it at all. Because Schlittler and Yesavage are so important to their teams, neither club wants to risk having a game begin, only to quickly enter a rain delay that might render each arm unable to return. So we’re getting it early and seeing what happens.
AccuWeather indicates that the storms should begin to subside sometime after 9pm ET. Hang in there and we’ll see if we get baseball tonight!
NEW YORK, NY - MAY 06: A detailed photo of Yankee Stadium before the game between the Texas Rangers and the New York Yankees on May 6, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images
We talked about today’s new already, so all I have to say is please win.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 08: Carmen Mlodzinski #50 of the Pittsburgh Pirates pitches against the in the bottom of the fouth inning of a major league baseball game at Oracle Park on May 08, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Pitching Matchup: Carmen Mlodzinski (3-3, 4.40 ERA) vs. Michael McGreevy (3-2, 2.10 ERA)
The Pittsburgh Pirates are on the road today against the St. Louis Cardinals looking to grab a win.
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KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - AUGUST 18: Starting pitcher Michael Wacha #52 of the Kansas City Royals pitches during the first inning of the game against the Texas Rangers at Kauffman Stadium on August 18, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Stop me if you have heard this one before. The Royals are going into the game tonight looking to avoid getting swept. For the third series in a row, Kansas City is just hoping to salvage one win going into the third game. They cannot fix all of their problems in one game on a Wednesday night, but it would be nice to see them get one from a Boston team that has mostly struggled their way through 2026 as well.
The Royals will send Michael Wacha to the mound to try and get the job done. The 4-2 record and 2.83 ERA are easily the best of any Royals starter so far this season. With all of the pitching injuries that the team has sustained, they need him to have continued success.
Unfortunately, Kansas City is facing yet another left handed starter tonight in Connelly Early. He is a 24 year old rookie with a solid ERA, but peripheral statistics that say he is more a back-end starter. Over his minor league career and last season’s cup of coffee, he routinely had very high strike out rates that have not shown up in early 2026 and are making him more pedestrian. Let’s hope that continues tonight.
The solution to the lineup issues is evidently to give Vinnie Pasquantino a day off and move Salvador Perez up to the three hole? Elias Diaz will be behind the dish with Perez at first.