James Karinchak and Rowdy Tellez, what’s happening here?

NORTH PORT, FL - MARCH 14: James Karinchak #00 of the Atlanta Braves delivers a pitch during the spring training game between the Boston Red Sox and the Atlanta Braves on March 14, 2026 at CoolToday Park in North Port, FL. (Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Braves have released 11.5 million dollars of bullpen funds that were committed to Aaron Bummer and Joel Payamps. A few relievers, like Carlos Carrasco, Ian Hamilton, and Osvaldo Bido, have come and gone (and/or come and gone in a circular pattern). Meanwhile, James Karinchak has been silencing Triple-A batters in obscurity. I know he might have some questions around him, but he has a 2.84/3.14/3.24 line and a 36.0% strikeout rate in Gwinnett and the Braves won’t leave the country anyway. Does his absence have anything to do with his velocity dropping from 94.8 to 93.0 MPH? Probably, but also who cares? If he grabbed an inning or two here and there, it may help out the Braves. He could join the Cookie Carrasco Caravan, which I imagine consists of a rented Escalade that Carrasco drives to the next city after he gets designated for assignment.

Rowdy Tellez was a signing late in March. Tellez did not complete Spring Training but did play in the World Baseball Classic. The first few weeks looked very much like a Spring for Rowdy, but even with that slow start he has an .876 OPS and a 124 wRC+ in Triple-A overall. I imagine the issue here is that Matt Olson mans his primary position. Ronald Acuña Jr, the thermonuclear Dominic Smith, and when available Drake Baldwin hold down the designated hitter spot. So I think he’s currently depth for Olson, and may be third on the depth chart because Smith may be ahead of him. He would definitely be a great option in that 28th man roster spot in September and pinch hitting option in October, should the Braves somehow manage to get there.

The Pope, magical thinking, and why the White Sox are fun again

Mike Vasil proudly displays his wand. | mlb.com

On May 8, 2025, Chicago native and Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost became Pope Leo XIV. Soon after the announcement, news broke that the newest Holy Man was a lifelong White Sox fan who was in the crowd for Game 1 of the 2005 World Series. Because Chicago can’t be chill about anything, and the White Sox needed something good to cling to, the team took the news and ran with it. In August, they are even doing a Pope Hat night where everyone in attendance receives a White Sox-themed mitre.

Fresh off a 121-loss season, the South Siders were determined to only climb up from rock-bottom. There was a new manager and front office changes after a slew of firings — and now, a direct line with God. They still finished in last place, losing 102 games, but progress toward rebuilding was made, as several rookies debuted and gave fans something to be excited about. 

Colson Montgomery, who was previously sent to Arizona to fix his issues at the plate, came up to the big leagues on July 4, 2025. He recorded his first MLB hit the next day, an RBI triple, and finished the game 3-for-5. On July 22, Montgomery hit his first career home run, and a month later he hit his first career grand slam. Montgomery finished his rookie year having appeared in 71 games and hitting .239 with 21 home runs and 55 RBIs. Finally, we could see signs of life in the dugout!

While the Pope still looms large, driving the narrative again in 2026, His Holiness can’t be the only guy getting credit (although he just got a signed Paul Konerko jersey!).

There seem to be other forms of magical thinking helping the White Sox on their surprisingly good start. 

Enter Munetaka Murakami. Mune has been a force behind the plate, hitting .246 with 17 home runs (second in the league behind Kyle Schwarber) and 36 RBIs at the time of me writing this. He had the key hit in Friday’s win in San Francisco, a beautiful three-run double down the right-field line, as the White Sox put up nine runs in the fourth inning against the Giants. Yes, NINE RUNS IN ONE INNING. No other team prioritized Murakami on their radar, fearing the Japanese slugger would struggle at the plate. While the fear could’ve been credible, 29 teams passed on Mune before Chris Getz stepped in.

But two other hitters have been great this season alongside Murakami. Miguel Vargas has really come out of his shell and proven to be quite the slugger. Not far behind his Japanese teammate, Vargas is sitting at .237 with 11 home runs, 29 RBIs, and 41 hits.

Montgomery has been carving out quite the sophomore season as well, with an average of .222, 13 home runs, 31 RBIs, and 40 hits.

The team as a whole seems to be having a blast. Sure, wins help, but so does a little silliness and establishing new traditions. Word broke that Murakami took Montgomery and his teammates out to a sushi dinner, resulting in a new sushi celebration.

In late April, before his demotion, Jordan Leasure went on Amazon and purchased a $20 Harry Potter wand for Mike Vasil. What happened next has been non-stop entertainment. Despite his TJS setback from Spring Training, Vasil is such an important member of the White Sox clubhouse that he’s remained with the team for both home and road games, casting spells and waving his magic wand to help not only with morale, but perhaps wins as well.

So what’s the sorcery behind the wand? Does the magic stem from the power of friendship? Is Vasil secretly a warlock? As a Stevie Nicks wannabe/witchy woman/recovering Catholic, this question keeps me up at night. Quite literally, as it’s nearly midnight on Friday and I had to get my thoughts out on this.

Whatever it is, Mune is buying into it, and no one can prove that it wasn’t the reason behind his home run on against the Cubs on May 16.

As previously mentioned, I can be a little witchy. Not the wicked witch you see in the movies (though I used to watch the 1996 classic The Craft to help me sleep), but someone who believes in good vibes and manifesting. Manifestation, for those unsure, is the practice of using thoughts, beliefs, and emotions to turn intangible goals and desires into physical reality. At the beginning of the season, I felt the shift with this team. I was very high on the rebuild, claimed Davis Martin as my star pitcher, and predicted they would win more than 70 games this season. Yes, you read that right: 70+ games. All things I wrote down in a manifestation ritual back in January. It felt right.

As we reach the end of May, the White Sox are playing better than .500 and sitting in second place in the American League Central. Martin is 7-1 with an ERA of just 2.04 and is being recognized as one of the top pitchers in baseball. Baseball writers who would otherwise turn a blind eye to the team that just lost a record-breaking 121 games two seasons ago are starting to see what the White Sox are quietly building. Suddenly, taking two of three games in the Crosstown series is nothing. Who cares about those North Siders, or that center fielder? Can he catch the ball like Tristan Peters?

Not to mention the tape on the helmets — first from Sam Antonacci and also now Andrew Benintendi — that has helped with hitting the ball and getting on base.

There are plenty of factors at play for the 2026 White Sox. Taking a chance on a player, creating a fun environment, new traditions, a magic wand, some pseudoscience, and the holiest man in the world on your side. All of these can certainly create the perfect storm and allow people to believe again, even if it’s because of some higher power.

But I’m here to tell you, it’s time to believe in the players, too. They are putting in the work day-to-day, and making baseball fun on the South Side again.

MLB Moneyline Parlay Today: Expert Baseball Bets for Saturday, May 23

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My favorite MLB moneyline parlay for today features the surging Tampa Bay Rays, winners of nine of 10, and the Pittsburgh Pirates' Paul Skenes touching down in Toronto for the first time. 

It also includes the MLB-leading Atlanta Braves, who always feel like a good bet to throw into a parlay.

This one pays out at a nice +935.

Looking for more moneyline plays for today? Check out our full MLB moneyline picks for today's slate.

Today’s MLB moneyline parlay

ParlayOdds

RaysRays moneyline

PiratesPirates moneyline

OriolesOrioles moneyline

BravesBraves moneyline

DraftKings
+877
FanDuel
+935
BetMGM
+871
bet365
+895
Bet99
+907

Expert MLB moneyline parlay for May 23

MLB moneyline parlay leg 1: Rays (vs Yankees, 1:35 p.m. ET)

Win probability: 45.5%

I’m having a hard time understanding how the Tampa Bay Rays, who are 8-2 in their last 10 and starting Drew Rasmussen, find themselves as underdogs against the Yankees.

Rasmussen blanketed New York on April 12, pitching six scoreless innings of one-hit ball and striking out seven.

New York has lost three straight, and Yankees starter Ryan Weathers just got torched for five runs on seven hits last time out.

MLB moneyline parlay leg 2: Pirates (vs Blue Jays, 3:07 p.m. ET)

Win probability: 60.8%

Pittsburgh Pirates SP Paul Skenes is coming off an outlier performance where he was tagged for five runs in a loss to the Phillies.

He’s bounced back from two other starts where he’s allowed at least three runs this year, giving up a total of five hits, one earned run, and 12 strikeouts in that scenario.

The Jays are a light-hitting team at the moment, ranking 26th or worse in on-base, slugging and OPS, and 22nd in runs per game.

MLB moneyline parlay leg 3: Orioles (vs Tigers, 4:05 p.m. ET)

Win probability: 54.5%

The Tigers are a mess, with seven straight losses and just two wins in their last 15 overall.

Over the last week, their offense has been abysmal, ranking last in slugging percentage and OPS, and Bottom-3 in runs scored, on-base percentage and batting average — spoiling what’s been a serviceable 3.66 ERA over that span.

The Baltimore Orioles have won five of six Brandon Young starts on the year, and the righty has allowed just two earned runs in each of his last two outings.

MLB moneyline parlay leg 4: Braves (vs Nationals, 4:10 p.m. ET)

Win probability: 66.7%

The Atlanta Braves keep churning out wins, looking for their fifth straight as they visit the nation’s capital.

Grant Holmes is coming off a dynamite start, pitching six scoreless innings.

The Braves have dominated this head-to-head, going 8-2 in the last 10 and putting up at least five runs in seven of those wins.

Jake Irvin has already been beat up by the Braves once this season, taking the loss after allowing four runs on three hits, including a home run in a 9-4 defeat.

How much does this MLB moneyline parlay pay out?

The best price on today's MLB moneyline parlay, from our top-ranked baseball betting sites, sits around the +900 range, with a max payout of +935.

That means that a $10 wager on this four-leg parlay returns $103.50 ($93.50 + your original $10 stake).

MLB parlay betting FAQs & tips

Can you add player props to an MLB moneyline parlay?

Yes, you can add player props (or Over/Unders, team totals, etc.), but your wager changes from a traditional multi-game parlay to a modified same-game parlay (depending on the bet, called a SGP+, SGPx, or super parlay) that blends a standard parlay with a same/single-game parlay.

What happens to an MLB moneyline parlay if a game gets rained out?

In the event one of your parlay legs gets postponed, most sportsbook with just remove that leg from the parlay and recalculate the odds of the bet without that game (reducing the total odds).

What are the main types of parlays I can make?

  • Traditional parlays: Each leg of the parlay comes from a different game
  • Same-game parlays (SGPs): Every leg of the parlay comes from the same game.
  • SGPx/SGP+/super parlays: At least two legs of the parlay are from the same game, with the rest of the legs from different games.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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How Chad Tracy has rewritten the Red Sox lineup — and what comes next

May 16, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Boston Red Sox interim manager Chad Tracy (17) in the dugout before a game against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Chad Tracy stepped into this role with an interesting résumé. Years developing hitters in the Red Sox minor league system, building lineups with pieces that weren’t quite ready for prime time. Now he’s doing it in the majors, where the margin for error is different and the stakes are real. The early returns: 23 games, a 12-11 record so far.

That record doesn’t tell the whole story, though. The offense hasn’t improved. Not even close. Boston is only averaging 3.14 runs per game under Tracy vs. 4.15 under Alex Cora in the 2026 season. The team hasn’t gotten better at scoring. It’s gotten better at not giving games away, and the pitching deserves most of that credit.

But lineup construction is more of a story here than it might look at first. A lot of what Tracy has done looks similar to what Cora was doing—but the things that are actually different have fundamentally changed how this team operates on a nightly basis.

To understand the difference, I scraped every Red Sox game from Baseball Reference and ran the data through some pretty intense Python. A little caveat; the following analysis covers 49 games through May 21st, just before the start of the Twins series last night.

The clearest finding isn’t about who Tracy puts in the lineup. It’s about what they do once they’re in there.

Both managers shuffle the lineup constantly. Tracy has written 21 different lineups in 22 games. Cora wrote 26 in 27. Neither of them was the stability guy: something changed almost every night.

What’s different is how they shuffle. Under Cora, the same group of players appeared in wildly different spots in the order from game to game. A guy who hit fifth on Tuesday might hit second on Wednesday and seventh on Friday. Under Tracy—when a player is in the lineup, he tends to know where he’s hitting. Tracy changes who’sin the lineup more than he changes where his regulars hit. For some players, that consistency has made a real difference. For others, the consistency is the problem.

Re-Establishing The Top Of The Lineup

No player’s deployment tells the Tracy story more clearly than Jarren Duran’s.

Under Cora, Duran bounced around—second, third, fourth, fifth, and only four games in the lead-off slot. To measure how scattered that was, we calculated a consistency score for each player: a number that captures how all-over-the-place a player’s lineup spot has been across the season. A score of zero means they’ve batted in the exact same spot every single game. The higher the number, the more random their placement has been. Duran’s score under Cora was 2.4. That’s high. Cora never really made up his mind about where Duran fit.

Tracy made up his mind on day one. Duran has batted leadoff in virtually every game since Tracy took over, and his consistency score has dropped to 0.27—basically as close to zero as you’ll see from any player on any team mid-season. Genuinely—with the exception of one game in late April where Duran was put seventh in the order and a sporadic off day here and there—Tracy has looked at Duran, put him first, and hasn’t blinked.

Duran’s overall OPS is .562 on the year. That’s not great for a leadoff hitter. Tracy isn’t rewarding performance here; he’s making a bet. Get your most disruptive presence on base first, let him cause problems at the top, and build from there. Lately, that bet is looking smarter. Duran has started to find his groove over the recent stretch of games, looking more like the hitter who earned this role in the first place. Whether you agree with Tracy’s reasoning or not, it’s a real, committed decision. Cora never quite got there.

Pushing The Problems Down

Under Cora, Durbin averaged the six-hole in the lineup and was a regular presence across 24 starts. Under Tracy, he’s been sliding steadily toward the bottom of the order. He’s now averaging closer to the 8-hole, and the movement has been consistent enough over several weeks that it’s clearly not random. His OPS is .372. That number tells you everything about why. I wrote earlier this season about Durbin’s bat speed being akin to rolling up a newspaper to swat a fly. That hasn’t exactly changed and Tracy is putting him in a position that feels a lot more comfortable for the shape of this team and hopefully for Durbin’s development.

Trevor Story is a different kind of story. Under Cora he was a middle-of-the-order fixture around the cleanup spot. Story was clearly relied upon under Cora to be a leader and was depended on for his slot in the order—regardless of what ownership seems to think. Under Tracy, he’s floated between fourth and eighth: still in the lineup when healthy, but clearly no longer trusted with the big RBI spot he occupied earlier in the season. Story’s Win Probability Added has been the worst on the roster by a significant margin. He’s cost this team more in high-stakes moments than any other hitter. Story last started on May 14 and is now on the injured list until at least July. How much of his previous poor form is due to this sports hernia? Who’s to say.

The bottom of the order under Tracy is where problems go to do the least possible damage. That’s not an insult — it’s just how you manage a roster when you don’t have the depth to hide anything. Durbin gets buried. Story floated downward. And the guys who can actually hit get pushed up.

He Actually Thinks About Matchups

Here’s something that doesn’t show up in the box score: Tracy has written a noticeably different lineup depending on who’s starting on the mound for the other team.

The sample is small, just five games against left-handed starters under Tracy versus seventeen against righties; treat these as trends to watch rather than definitive patterns. Still, the direction is clear enough to be worth discussing.

The biggest mover is Andruw Monasterio. Against RHPs, Monasterio has averaged the sixth or seventh spot in the lineup. Against lefties, he jumps up more than two full spots, closer to the cleanup area. Tracy is using him more as a lefty specialist, recognizing that a right-handed hitter with that kind of flexibility is most valuable when the matchup actually calls for it. See his start on Friday night as DH against southpaw Connor Prielipp as some good evidence there.

The flip side is Isiah Kiner-Falefa. Against righties, he bats around sixth. Against lefties, Tracy buries him ninth. If you know the splits, the reason is obvious. Tracy clearly knows his splits.

Ceddanne Rafaela also bumps up in the order against left-handed starters on average, though the signal is softer than Monasterio’s. Tracy is thinking about the opposing arm when he writes the card.

The One He Still Hasn’t Figured Out

Rafaela’s overall deployment is the honest counterpoint to all of this.

He’s starting almost every game—19 of 22 starts under Tracy—which tells you Tracy values what he brings. But the lineup keeps moving him around without a clear pattern beyond the broad lefty-righty adjustment above. He’s batted fifth, seventh, sixth, eighth, and third. There’s no real home. His consistency score is the second-highest on the roster, meaning he’s more unpredictably placed than almost anyone else in the lineup. He started in the two-hole on Friday in Boston, the first time under Tracy and the fourth time this season. His chaos read in the lineup is all over the place. If Tracy is starting to think of him as a top-of-the-order option against lefties, that’s something to keep an eye on.

Some of that is the nature of who Rafaela is — his defense in center field is good enough that he earns his spot regardless, and Tracy probably has more freedom to move him around because of it. But you get the sense Tracy hasn’t fully decided what offensive role he wants Rafaela in. A consistency score that high doesn’t lie. It means no one knows where he’s batting tomorrow, including the manager.

Mickey Gasper is a footnote worth mentioning in all of this. He didn’t exist in Cora’s lineup—every one of his eight starts has come under Tracy, and he’s been one of the more interesting stories of this stretch. He’s slotting mainly into the 2-hole and posting over a 1.000 OPS. If that holds, Tracy’s going to have to account for him when the roster gets more crowded. Again, is this a product of Tracy coming from Worcester, knowing these AAA regulars better, and having faith about their usage in Boston? Still not enough sample size there to know for sure.

The Lineup Is About To Get A Lot More Complicated

The lineup Chad Tracy will write in July is going to look almost nothing like the one he’s been writing in May. And the decisions waiting for him are legitimately hard ones.

Roman Anthony is the most pressing. He hasn’t started since May 4—14 straight Tracy games missed with his wrist injury—but he’s expected to be the first of the big injured pieces to return. Before this, in the eight starts Anthony made under the new skipper, he batted third seven times and first once. That’s a clear answer about how Tracy sees him. Under Cora, Anthony was essentially the leadoff hitter. That role belongs to Duran now, and it’s not changing when Anthony comes back. The realistic lineup when Anthony is healthy: Duran leading off, maybe Rafaela or a platoon hitting second (we’ll see if Micky Gasper isn’t the first send down back to Worcester at that point in time), Anthony third, Abreu fourth. That’s a real top of the order — and it could come together before the end of June.

Trevor Story is more of a July problem. He’s out until at least then, and honestly, the lineup has been fine enough in his absence given where his numbers were. Whoever fills that spot in the meantime isn’t going to match Story’s name value. They might match his actual production without too much trouble. The more interesting question is what Tracy does with Story when he comes back healthy. Does he reclaim a middle-of-the-order spot on reputation? Or does the data — and Tracy — say otherwise?

And then there’s Triston Casas, who hasn’t appeared in a single game this season. More setbacks in his recovery but he is still contractually obligated to this team. If and when Casas comes back, Tracy has a real decision at first base. Contreras has been the team’s best run-producer this season—10 home runs, solid OPS, 1,000th career RBI, and he’s been doing it at first. You can’t just bench Contreras. But you also can’t ignore what Casas is when healthy. Of the three injured pieces, Casas likely comes back last, which at least gives Tracy some runway before he has to make that call. Even for Conteras, the return of Anthony puts him in a pickle. Is he the five hole man, does he get starts at the two spot, does he shuffle everyone else and stay as the cleanup hitter he’s been in the past week? These are good problems to have, but still hard ones to make.

Chad Tracy has spent 23 games making real decisions and mostly making smart ones. He committed to Duran at the top, buried his problems at the bottom, and genuinely understands his roster enough to make the right tweaks facing lefty vs. righty starters. He responds to what’s in front of him. That’s a coherent approach and the record reflects it.

But the roster he’ll manage in July won’t be exactly the roster he has today. And the decisions he makes when the pieces come back will tell us a lot more about what kind of manager he actually is.

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: A night teeming with great pitching

TORONTO, ON - MAY 22: Yohendrick Pinango #24 of the Toronto Blue Jays hits a two-run double in the third inning during a game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Rogers Centre on May 22, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Not an ideal night. The Yankees’ main rival, at least in terms of the standings, won. Worse, they beat the Yankees. But hey, Gerrit Cole is back and looked great in his return. Unfortunately, he can’t do anything about a putrid Yankee offense.

So on a pretty blah night of baseball, we have to take our pleasure where we can… by savoring the losses of our rivals. Unfortunately, entirely too many of them won Friday. Why can’t we have nice things?

Toronto Blue Jays (24-27) 6, Pittsburgh Pirates (26-25) 2

This one was closer than the score suggests. At least until the bottom of the eighth inning. Kevin Gausman got the start for the Jays, fresh off a series split with the Yanks. Other than a first inning sacrifice fly, Gausman completely stymied the Bucs’ bats.

Offensively, the Jays got all they actually needed in the home third. After Daulton Varsho, who had a great series against New York, drove in the game-tying run, Yohendrick Piñango doubled in a pair, giving Toronto a 3-1 lead.

Gausman got Toronto through 6.2 frames before handing off to the ‘pen. In the top of the eighth, with the Jays up two, manager John Schneider decided not to screw around and brought in closer Louis Varland for what ended up a six-out save. Varland allowed a second Pirates’ run in the eighth but the Jays offense, led by a two-run George Springer double, put up another three spot in the home half. Varland locked down Pittsburgh in the ninth and the Jays took the series opener 6-2.

Other Games

Boston Red Sox (22-28) 6, Minnesota Twins (24-27) 8: At least Boston lost, though for most of this one it looked like they were headed to victory. Up 6-3 through six, however, Red Sox reliever Justin Slaten imploded, enabling the Twinkies to take a lead they’d never surrender. A pair of two-run jacks, one from Byron Buxton and the other off the bat of Austin Martin, turned said 6-3 deficit into a 7-6 Minnesota lead. The Twins added an insurance run in the top of the ninth and former Yankee Anthony Banda retired Boston in the bottom of the ninth to seal the win, and his first save of the season.

Cleveland Guardians (31-22) 1, Philadelphia Phillies (25-26) 0: Cleveland starter Gavin Williams was the story Friday night in Philly. Matched up against Phillies’ ace Christoper Sánchez, who hurled eight frames of one-run ball, Williams was even better. He stifled the Philly lineup, allowing a mere four hits, only one (a Bryce Harper double) for extra bases. Meanwhile, he whiffed 11 while refusing to surrender a free pass. The result was a ton of zeroes in the run column and, thanks to a clutch Kyle Manzardo solo home run in the top of the ninth, Williams’ seventh win of the season and Cleveland’s 31st.

Seattle Mariners (25-27) 2, Kansas City Royals (20-31) 0: Speaking of great pitching, the Mariners were another beneficiary Friday night. First, starter Logan Gilbert went 5.2, allowing nary a run. From there, the bullpen took over and hurled another 3.1 shutout innings. Eduard Bazardo, responsible for 1.1 of those, was the pitcher of record when Mitch Garver’s second home run of the season, a two-run blast, gave Seattle all the offense they needed (and all the offense they’d get).

Texas Rangers (24-26) 6, Los Angeles Angels (18-34) 9: On a night teeming with pitching, you’d be forgiven for assuming Jacob deGrom, one of the greatest hurlers of his generation, was one of the stars of the evening. You’d also be wrong. The Angels hung a four-spot on deGrom in the first, thanks to home runs from Zach Neto (solo) and Wade Meckler (three-run). All told, deGrom gave up six runs in three innings, putting Texas in quite the hole. Texas fought back, getting as close as 6-5, before the Angels extended the lead to 9-5, thanks in part to another solo shot from Neto. Texas managed one more in the ninth but came up far short.

MLB Predictions and Moneyline Picks for Saturday, May 23

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There is no shortage of action today with 15 games on the MLB schedule.

To help you build your card, we’re breaking down our favorite moneyline locks and value plays for every matchup—headlined by a massive Saturday night showdown on FOX between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the red-hot Milwaukee Brewers.

Read on as I break down all of my top MLB picks for May 23.

MLB moneyline picks for May 23

MatchupPick
CardinalsCardinals
vs
RedsReds
Cardinals
+105
RaysRays
vs
YankeesYankees

Rays
+119

(Postponed)

AstrosAstros
vs
CubsCubs
Astros
+129
PiratesPirates
vs
Blue JaysBlue Jays
Pirates
-142
TigersTigers
vs
OriolesOrioles
Orioles
-112
GuardiansGuardians
vs
PhilliesPhillies
Phillies
-183
White SoxWhite Sox
vs
GiantsGiants
White Sox
+109
MarinersMariners
vs
RoyalsRoyals
Mariners
-126
TwinsTwins
vs
Red SoxRed Sox
Red Sox
-112
NationalsNationals
vs
BravesBraves
Braves
-183
MetsMets
vs
MarlinsMarlins
Marlins
-107
CardinalsCardinals
vs
RedsReds
Reds
-103
DodgersDodgers
vs
BrewersBrewers
Dodgers
-116
AthleticsA's
vs
PadresPadres
Athletics
-107
RangersRangers
vs
AngelsAngels
Rangers
-131
RockiesRockies
vs
DiamondbacksDiamondbacks
Diamondbacks
-168

Prices courtesy of Polymarket as of 5-23.

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Expert MLB moneyline picks for May 23

Cardinals vs Reds: Cardinals (+105)

Cardinals win probability: 50%

The St. Louis Cardinals head into Cincinnati seeking an NL Central bounce-back series win, and they have the perfect weapon on the mound. Andre Pallante dominates the Reds historically, carrying a 6-4 record, a 2.49 ERA, and 49 strikeouts across 19 career appearances. Take the Cardinals moneyline to cash in Game 1 of the doubleheader.

Rays vs Yankees: Rays (+119) — POSTPONED

Rays win probability: 45%

Drew Rasmussen vs. the New York Yankees is a mismatch on paper — the righty is 4-1 with a 1.03 ERA and 51 punchouts in eight career games against New York. Coming off a thrilling comeback win on Friday, the division-leading Rays are primed to keep the foot on the gas behind their dynamic arm.

Astros vs Cubs: Astros (+129)

Astros win probability: 43%

After dropping the series opener to the Astros, the Cubs try to even the score on Saturday. They’ll have to do it against the teeth of Houston's rotation, starting with Kai-Wei Teng (2-3, 2.61 ERA). With Colin Rea taking the mound for Chicago amid a recent rough patch (4.98 ERA), the pitching matchup favors an otherwise banged-up Houston squad.

Pirates vs Blue Jays: Pirates (-142)

Pirates win probability: 57%

The Pittsburgh Pirates send ace Paul Skenes to the mound on Saturday afternoon looking to rebound from a series-opening loss. Facing a Toronto Blue Jays lineup hitting just .248 against righties this season, expect Skenes to control the tempo and help the Bucs bounce back.

Tigers vs Orioles: Orioles (-112)

Orioles win probability: 52%

The Baltimore Orioles have a prime opportunity to pick up a win on Saturday against Framber Valdez. The left-handed starter owns a mediocre 4.17 career ERA in seven outings against the Orioles, making him vulnerable to an O's lineup featuring Sam Huff, who leads the team with a blistering .400 batting average against southpaws this year.

Guardians vs Phillies: Phillies (-183)

Phillies win probability: 64%

Zack Wheeler is living up to his nickname, wheeling and dealing his way to a 1.99 ERA and a perfect 3-0 record for the Philadelphia Phillies. Up next are the Guardians, whose .222 team batting average against righties is bound to tank even further against Philadelphia's elite right-hander.

White Sox vs Giants: White Sox (+109)

White Sox win probability: 47%

Erick Fedde has a prime opportunity to hand the White Sox a road win today. He faces a San Francisco lineup hitting just .240 against righties with a sluggish .290 OBP. With Chicago boasting a significantly sharper .323 OBP to spark their own offense, backing the White Sox as road underdogs offers great value.

Mariners vs Royals: Mariners (-126)

Mariners win probability: 55%

This matchup features two middle-of-the-pack teams in their respective divisions, but the Seattle Mariners have a massive situational edge on the mound. George Kirby has been a certified cheat code against the Kansas City Royals, boasting a flawless 2-0 record, a 2.08 ERA, and 17 punchouts in four career games. Back the Mariners on the road to shut down the KC offense.

Twins vs Red Sox: Red Sox (-112)

Red Sox win probability: 52%

With Taj Bradley expected to show some rust in his first start back on the mound, the Boston Red Sox are in a prime bounce-back spot. After letting Friday night's game slip away late, the Boston offense should find plenty of success early against the right-hander.

Nationals vs Braves: Braves (-183)

Braves win probability: 64%

The red-hot Atlanta Braves look to continue their dominant run today, and a matchup against Jake Irvin gives them a massive upper hand. Irvin has struggled out of the gate this season with a bloated 5.79 ERA, and his lifetime numbers versus Atlanta — a 2-3 record and 3.98 ERA in eight games — aren't reassuring. Back the Braves moneyline to take care of business at home.

Mets vs Marlins: Marlins (-107)

Marlins win probability: 51%

Max Meyer has been delivering massive value for the Marlins, boasting a spotless record and a sharp 2.85 ERA. This afternoon, Miami looks to add to the Mets' divisional misery. Look for the Marlins to exploit a struggling New York team and cash as a lively home underdog.

Cardinals vs Reds: Reds (-103)

Reds win probability: 50%

Back on the mound against the team that ruined his big-league debut a year ago, Chase Petty is looking for ultimate redemption. With a full season of developmental adjustments under his belt, expect the Cincinnati Reds' prospect to bounce back with a much cleaner start and help salvage a split in today's doubleheader.

Dodgers vs Brewers: Dodgers (-116)

Dodgers win probability: 53%

Roki Sasaki is on the bump for the Los Angeles Dodgers as they look to rebound from a Game 1 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers in this series. His 5.09 ERA is a bit inflated, but his electric strikeout stuff means he can dominate any lineup when he's on. Expect a strong response from L.A. behind their young right-hander.

A's vs Padres: A's (-107)

Padres win probability: 51%

The San Diego Padres are tough at home, but J.T. Ginn gives the Athletics a serious edge to pull off Saturday's upset. The AL West-leading A's have a great weapon on the bump today, as Ginn brings a stellar 2.98 ERA and 44 strikeouts into this matchup. Grab the visitors to steal a big road win.

Rangers vs Angels: Rangers (-131)

Rangers win probability: 56%

Laying it with the Texas Rangers looks like an even sweeter deal on Saturday night thanks to their edge on the bump. Texas hands the ball to Nathan Eovaldi, who has absolutely owned the Los Angeles Angels throughout his career, boasting a 7-3 record, a 3.04 ERA, and 77 punchouts in 16 career outings against them.

Rockies vs Diamondbacks: Diamondbacks (-168)

Diamondbacks win probability: 62%

Zac Gallen has been an absolute cash machine when facing the Colorado Rockies. Over 18 career outings against the Rockies, the righty has pitched his way to a 9-1 record, a 3.41 ERA, and 121 strikeouts. Lock in the Arizona Diamondbacks tonight as Gallen looks to maintain his historical mastery over his division rivals.

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Dodgers notes: Prospect ranking changes, James Loney in radio booth

TULSA, OKLAHOMA - APRIL 19: Josue de Paula #55 of the Tulsa Drillers runs to third base in the sixth inning during a game against the Arkansas Travelers at ONEOK Field on April 19, 2026 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Kiley McDaniel at ESPN updated his top 50 prospects this week, with four Dodgers in the top 50.

Outfielder Josue De Paula is now 18th, up from 21st in January. River Ryan made the largest jump, now ranked 49th after No. 125 in the offseason, due to the fact that he’s now healthy after missing all of last season after Tommy John surgery, and is also back from a four-week stint on the Triple-A injured list with a hamstring strain.

Also updating their prospect rankings in the last few weeks were Baseball Americaand MLB Pipeline, with new top 100s for both.

PlayerBaseball AmericaMLB PipelineESPN
Josue De Paula24 to 1115 to 921 to 18
Zyhir Hope63 to 4627 to 2040 to 34
Eduardo Quintero20 to 2330 to 3837 to 45
Mike Sirota45 to 3560 to 4255 preseason
Emil Moralesunranked to 6192 to 5765 preseason
River Ryanunranked to 80125 to 49
Chuck Davalanunranked to 97

New voice in the booth

Joe Davis and Orel Hershiser are calling Friday and Sunday’s games in Milwaukee on SportsNet LA, with Davis calling Saturday’s game for Fox. In the Dodgers radio booth this weekend is Tim Neverett and James Loney.

Rick Monday called the first 50 games of the season on radio, but he’s in Cooperstown this weekend, with the American flag he saved on April 25, 1976 at Dodger Stadium on display at the Hall of Fame from this weekend through Labor Day. Monday will also take part in the Hall of Fame Military Classic baseball game on Saturday at Doubleday Field in Cooperstown.

Monday will also be honored at the Hall of Fame during induction weekend on July 25.

Loney filled in last year for two games on radio, both at home, coincidentally also against the Brewers. These are his first time calling games on the road.

Who do Giants fans think was the Player of the Week?

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 20: Casey Schmitt #10 of the San Francisco Giants gets a high fives in the dugout after a home run at Chase Field on May 20, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Andy Kuno/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

Another week of San Francisco Giants baseball is drawing to a close this weekend, which means it’s time to make our picks for Player of the Week!

This week, I’m going with Casey Schmitt! The man is on a streak that we love to see. As of the time this is being written, he’s got at least one hit in every game this week. He even had a four-hit game in last Saturday’s 6-4 win over the Athletics, which included two home runs.

Who is your pick for Player of the Week?

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants continue this three-game series against the Chicago White Sox this afternoon at 1:05 p.m. PT.

Chicago Cubs news and notes — Ramirez, Alcantara, PCA

Today’s Reflections

Pedro Ramirez has been called up to replace Matt Shaw, who is on the 10-day injured list with back soreness. Ramirez will fill in the super-sub role, but with Nicky Lopez who can fill the infield portion of the role, Ramirez would be free for the outfield (if ready). He could have been the one that was called up to give PCA a couple of days break (even with his home run on Friday). If it wasn’t Ramirez, it could have been ……

Kevin Alcántara, who Jake Misener wrote about below. I won’t rehash it, but maybe since Alcantara has already had some time in the majors, this was Ramirez’s time. Alcantara’s will have to wait.

I could write some more about runners LOB or RISP, but I believe Al addresses that in his recap.

Jameson Taillon will be needing to go to the IL before too long as his whiplash watching every fly ball go to (or beyond) the outfield wall is becoming as painful as watching them.

And the PCA links start with some rare good news these days.


*means autoplay on, (directions to remove for Firefox and Chrome). {$} means paywall. {$} means limited views. Italics are often used on this page as sarcasm font. The powers that be have enabled real sarcasm font in the comments.


Slump? What slump? I sure would like to hear some more about this supposed slump ……


The angels are pensively singing:

  • Jordan Campbell (Cubbies Crib): Craig Counsell finally caves with change Cubs fans have been begging for. “After the Cubs lost 4-2 on Friday to the Houston Astros, extending their losing streak to six games, Counsell confirmed there will be changes to the starting lineup for Saturday’s game. ….. Perhaps the door is open for Pedro Ramirez to get a start or two in the coming days, but right now, the correct lever to pull is making the change with the starting lineup.”
  • Michael Cerami (Bleacher Report): At Long Last, Lineup Changes Are Coming for the Chicago Cubs. “After yet another day of offensive futility at Wrigley Field — complete with their patented ability to get a lot of guys on base and unique inability to drive literally any of them … in no matter the situation or who’s up (0-9 with RISP today + 11 runners left on base) — lineup changes are coming for the Chicago Cubs.”

The Daily PCA Report

  • First, the good news:

Food For Thought:

According to Albert King, he was five when his father left the family and eight when he moved with his mother, Mary Blevins, and two sisters to the Forrest City, Arkansas, area. King said his family had also lived in Arcola, Mississippi, at one time. He made his first guitar out of a cigar box, a piece of a bush, and a strand of broom wire, and later bought a real guitar for $1.25. As a southpaw learning guitar on his own, he turned his guitar upside down. King picked cotton, drove a bulldozer, did construction, and worked other jobs until he was finally able to support himself as a musician.

John Mayall, the “Godfather of British Blues,” was a major influence on post-’60s rock & roll. His band the Bluesbreakers sired Eric Clapton, Mick Taylor, Peter Green and Fleetwood Mac’s rhythm section, among others. His version of blues incorporated rock elements, while keeping the core and the spirit authentically gritty and lowdown. Through his stewardship, the global audience for blues, and the palette for rock, expanded considerably.

Concrete-covered owl returns to the wild after feather surgery (the after-surgery is at 1:30)

A great horned owl found covered in concrete was released back into the wild after undergoing surgery to replace its damaged feathers. The owl underwent several days of care involving 20-minute baths to slowly remove the concrete. The process left the owl with damage to its feathers that prevented it from flying silently, a necessary feature for great horned owls to survive in the wild.

They ended up replacing 10 primary and one secondary feather on the owl’s right wing. The bird’s left wing did not require any replacement feathers. “The first few feathers were extremely nerve-wracking, but as we got into the groove, the imping became more comfortable, and everything went smoothly,” Richwalski said.

Please be reminded that Cub Tracks and Bleed Cubbie Blue do not necessarily endorse the content of articles, podcasts, or videos that are linked to in this series.

Is Matthew Liberatore Close to Turning It Around?

ST. LOUIS, MO - MARCH 26: Matthew Liberatore #32 of the St. Louis Cardinals pitches during the game between the Tampa Bay Rays and the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium on Thursday, March 26, 2026 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Matthew Liberatore has had an uninspiring start to his season. He has not been horrible, but many fans, myself included, were expecting him to improve or possibly ascend to a top-of-the-rotation type pitcher. Today I want to do a little meandering investigation into what has gone wrong with Libby and what we should expect moving forward.

Before we get to present-day Liberatore, it’s important to remember how he got here. On this date last year, he had also completed 10 starts but ranked 14th in baseball with a 1.7 fWAR. Through June, Liberatore was maintaining his impressive trajectory pitching to a 3.70 ERA and ranking in the top 20 in starting pitcher WAR in all of baseball. It is an easy narrative to follow. A former top prospect that has bounced between starting and relieving for a couple of years moves into the rotation in his age-25 season and pitches like an All-Star for the first half of the year. Then came July and August. Liberatore had a nine-start stretch where his velocity dropped, home run rate ballooned, and his ERA jumped close to 6. For his final act, Libby put together a solid September pitching to a 3.54 ERA with FIP and xFIP around 4. 

That brings us to 2026. Libby is the Opening Day starter and undisputed leader of the pitching staff… and things have just not gone well. His walk rate has jumped over one per nine to 3.48. While this isn’t an awful number, it is not good enough for a command-first pitcher. Libby’s home runs per nine have also jumped from an acceptable 1.13 to a bloated 1.57. I wanted to take a closer look at Liberatore and see if there were any glaring issues in his underlying metrics or reasons for optimism. 

Liberatore’s home run rate is elevated, but is that just because of his career-high 14.5% HR/FB ratio? We often talk about batters and their ability to pull the ball in the air to access power. Liberatore was solid at preventing this in 2025, allowing batters to pull only 15.4% of balls in the air. This season, that number has increased to 23.4%, one of the worst marks in the league, 12th worst out of 129 pitchers who have had at least 100 balls put in play against them. Liberatore’s velocity and underlying stuff metrics are similar to last season, if not a tick better, so what gives? With his elevated walk rate, could the home runs be up because he is falling behind more frequently and being forced to throw more pitches in hitters’ counts? To check this, I looked at the total percentage of pitches he has thrown in each count this year and last. 

There is nothing alarming here. If anything, Libby is actually getting into slightly more favorable counts than last season. So, where are the walks coming from? Last season, in three-ball counts, Liberatore threw pitches in the zone 65% of the time. This season, his zone rate is down to 53% in three-ball counts. While this is hurting his performance thus far, it is better than a pitcher who has just lost control of the zone. This strikes me as more of an execution problem or even just small-sample-size variance than some kind of systemic issue with his approach. 

Ok, I am satisfied that the increased walk-rate is a minor blip that is likely to even out as the season goes on. Unfortunately, I do not think count control is the culprit for Liberatore’s other issues, so we must forge ahead. Pitch mix has always been a hot topic when it comes to Liberatore because he has always had excellent breaking pitches and has had to navigate a pedestrian fastball. The narrative has been that if his fastball velocity dips at all, it won’t play at the major league level. Velocity has not been the problem, as both of Liberatore’s fastballs are up ~0.5 MPH. Perhaps his modest velocity increase has driven Libby mad with power and he is altering his pitch mix as a result? Here is the breakdown between 2025 and 2026. 

Liberatore has reduced his sinker usage by a couple of percentage points, but is throwing his four-seam fastball much more this year, up 5%. The results have been even worse this year. His xwOBA against on four-seamers has increased from a bad .370 to a downright horrific .455. Interestingly, most of the additional damage is coming from lefties. You can see in the chart above that Liberatore has increased his usage to lefties from 17% to 27%. The pitch has been battered to the tune of a .694 xwOBA. Lefties are basically better than peak Barry Bonds against Liberatore’s four-seam. Not to overly simplify things, but that really is the story of Liberatore’s year so far. He is throwing his worst pitch more frequently than ever and getting absolutely punished for it. On his offspeed and breaking pitches, his results have been right in line with last season. 

To look at this data from a more optimistic lens, Liberatore almost can’t do anything but get better. His fastball isn’t great, but it likely will not continue to get blasted around the yard at quite this rate, even if he doesn’t make any changes. With that said, it seems like the obvious answer is to dial back on the fastball usage a few notches while upping the breaking balls. Liberatore’s curveball and slider are both excellent pitches, both by pitch models and results. I don’t think it is as simple as throwing them 80% of the time, but he could bump them up from the 37% frequency with which he is now deploying them. 

There were some big positives in Libby’s nine-strikeout performance against the Pirates in his last start. Not only were the results better (until the fifth-inning blowup), but he seemed to have a better plan of attack. His curveball was his most frequently used pitch (23%) and his fastballs were only used 28% of the time. Not only did Liberatore throw his curveball more frequently, he threw it harder than he has the last two years, averaging 81 MPH with the pitch (up two MPH). He also had a two-year high in RPMs on the pitch with an average spin rate of 3,116 compared to a season average of 2,960. The extra sharpness helped Liberatore strike out five batters with the pitch while generating six swings and misses. In addition to the increased curves, Libby also threw nine cutters (12%). This utilization is closer to his 2025 mix and up from the 3% he has used it so far in 2026. 

I will be following Liberatore’s pitch mix closely the next couple of starts to see if he is making a concerted effort to minimize his fastball usage and rely more on the breakers, or if the Pittsburgh game was just a one-off day where he was spinning the ball particularly well. 

After looking a bit more closely at Liberatore’s pitch data, I am convinced he will at minimum return to the solid version of him we saw in 2025. It seems he is just not getting away with any mistakes thus far and has failed to execute at his normal level in three-ball counts. The problem is, fairly or not, the Cardinals really need Liberatore to be better than he was last year if they plan to keep pace with the rest of the NL Central. To do this, Libby needs to find a way to steer clear of his fastballs as much as possible. He has abandoned the splitter that he worked on over the offseason after throwing only seven of them (all in the month of April). The pitch grades well from a movement profile, so hopefully he is still working on it in the background.

Going forward, I would like to see Liberatore increase his curveball usage to above 20% and stop relying so much on his four-seam fastball, especially when behind in the count. If he can find a third pitch, whether it is the cutter, the splitter, or the changeup, to give hitters something else to think about, he could be the catalyst that keeps this Cardinals train on the tracks a little longer. 

Hoping to sell: An early look at the Rockies’ fastest path to roster churn

DENVER, CO - MAY 16: Antonio Senzatela #49 of the Colorado Rockies and teammate Mickey Moniak #22 celebrate after the Colorado Rockies defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks at Coors Field on Saturday, May 16, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Casey Paul/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Colorado Rockies’ roster needs churn, and the trade deadline on Monday, August 3, 2026, is the first real chance to create it. 

They are in a better place than they were last year. A more functional front office and coaching staff, a more coherent roster, and a few useful veteran additions have moved them away from historically bad and closer to ordinary bad. That is progress.

It also should not be treated like something too precious to disturb. 

The Chicago White Sox are a useful reference point here. They were bad, churned the roster, found some useful players, and now look much more functional. The Rockies are not the White Sox, and their path will not look exactly the same. But the basic idea still applies: Bad rosters do not improve by standing still. 

Given their place in the standings, the Rockies should be thinking like sellers. That does not mean trading everyone. It does not mean moving useful players just to get younger. It means identifying which current players have more value to another club than they do to Colorado’s next competitive roster. 

The Rockies need more talent, more options, and more information. Some of that can come through promotions and waiver claims, and the MLB Draft is upcoming on July 11-12, 2026.

The most immediate path, though, is trading from the parts of the roster that actually have value. 

With that in mind, here is a way-too-early look at the trade board. 

Obvious value

Antonio Senzatela is the premium trade chip at the moment, and that is not just local speculation. Bob Nightengale of USA Today recently reported that rival executives see Senzatela as one of the potential hot commodities of the deadline, which tracks with both the results and the shape of the profile.

His move to the bullpen has worked: 1.19 ERA, 0.824 WHIP, 2.61 FIP, 26 strikeouts, eight walks, and 1.9 WAR through 30.1 innings. His guaranteed deal expires after this season, with a 2027 club option attached. That should create a real market.

The underlying numbers make the case even stronger. Senzatela is in the 86th percentile in fastball velocity at 96.9 mph, the 72nd percentile in walk rate, and he is not allowing much hard contact.

That does not make him risk-free, but it suggests the new role and the success are real enough for contenders to take seriously. If he keeps pitching this way, the Rockies should be looking for a premium return.

Mickey Moniak is the clearest position-player trade chip. He has a 148 OPS+, a .280/.335/.607 line, 12 home runs, and 0.9 WAR in 164 plate appearances. The overall line is boosted by Coors, but he also has a .772 OPS, a 115 wRC+ away from home — one of the better road offensive lines on the roster.

The underlying quality of contact supports a lot of the breakout, too: 80th-percentile expected slugging, 82nd-percentile barrel rate, and 74th-percentile bat speed. There is still approach risk, especially with the strikeouts and chase, but the damage is real.

The question is how other teams value the shape of the profile. Maybe he is not a .942 OPS superstar. Maybe he is not an everyday starter against righties. But a left-handed outfielder with real power, improving fielding metrics, and road production that holds up is still a useful trade chip. The Rockies do not need to move him just because he has value, but if another team buys the damage, he should bring back a strong return.

Hunter Goodman is the bolder position-player question. He has an extreme profile — a power bat who can stay behind the plate, and elite ABS skill at a position where that could matter more over time. The production is not theoretical, either. Since the start of 2025, Goodman has 42 home runs and a .500-plus slugging percentage, including 11 homers and a .472 slugging percentage this season.

That could bring back a pretty decent return, especially because catchers with that kind of power are hard to find. But Goodman is also only 26 and will not reach free agency until 2030, so this is not a player the Rockies need to move.

Skill-set and role value

Jake McCarthy, Troy Johnston, and Willi Castro also offer value, but probably in smaller, skill-based deals. McCarthy brings 98th-percentile sprint speed, a .277 expected batting average, playable defense, and enough offense to fit a bench role. Johnston is batting .367/.429/.525 against lefties, which gives him a clearer bench-bat case. Castro brings experience, switch-hitting, and the ability to cover multiple spots. Those players can help contenders, but the returns are more likely to be modest than headline-grabbing.

José Quintana and Tomoyuki Sugano fit the veteran innings bucket. Neither is likely to bring back a major piece, but back-end starters still move in July. If a contender needs rotation depth, the Rockies should be willing to turn short-term innings into future inventory.

The bullpen is the wild card. Relievers are volatile, but Senzatela is not the only Rockies arm who could have a market. Victor Vodnik, Juan Mejia, and Seth Halvorsen are all in the 90th percentile or higher for fastball velocity, giving the Rockies a few more arms with traits another club might want to buy.

No value — right now 

Edouard Julien is moving toward more of a roster decision than a trade-value situation. He has a 67 OPS+, a .216/.310/.304 line, and -0.7 WAR in 142 plate appearances. The plate discipline was the point of the acquisition, but the rest of the profile has to support it. Right now, the defense gives him very little margin for error. If the offense keeps slipping, he becomes harder to carry. There may still be a team interested in the approach, but the value is limited unless the bat rebounds. 

Michael Lorenzen is the clearest example of a player whose contract and timeline say trade candidate, but whose performance limits the market. He has a 7.03 ERA, 1.911 WHIP, 5.26 FIP, and -1.0 WAR in 48.2 innings. If another team sees a fix or just needs depth, the Rockies can listen, but right now he is closer to a money-clearing move or flyer return than a meaningful trade chip. 

Ezequiel Tovar, Jordan Beck, and Brenton Doyle all have traits another team might like, but the current value is not there. Tovar has a solid glove, contract control, and plays a premium position, but the offense has been terrible. Beck still has power and athleticism, but the offense has not shown enough in sparse playing time. Doyle is an elite defender with good speed, but without the bat, the trade return probably would not match the talent. 

Getting worse to get better

That is the trade board in broad strokes, at least for now. 

The Rockies do have some actual value to move. Senzatela and Moniak could bring real returns. Goodman could bring a strong one if the Rockies want to get bold. Castro, McCarthy, Johnston, Quintana, Sugano, and maybe another reliever are more modest trade pieces, but they still serve a purpose.  

The caveat is that selling will not automatically clear space for a finished wave of prospects. The realistic post-deadline evaluation group is still narrow — Adael Amador, Ryan Ritter, maybe Zac Veen (No. 9 PuRP) or Sterlin Thompson (No. 13 PuRP) — and the top of the system is not knocking down the major-league door yet. 

So yes, the Rockies might get worse than ordinary bad if they move the value they actually have. A Senzatela trade makes the bullpen thinner. A Quintana or Sugano trade makes the rotation less stable. Moving Moniak, Castro, Goodman, or McCarthy takes real production, depth, or flexibility out of the lineup. 

That is still okay. 

This is a way-too-early look. The names will change. The value will change. But given where the Rockies are in the rebuild, and given how much parity there is around the league, it is worth watching early. 

The Rockies do not need to force it yet. But this roster needs churn, and the deadline is the first real place to find it. 

So who should the Rockies be looking to move, and for what?

On the Farm

Triple-A: Albuquerque Isotopes 7, Las Vegas Aviators 2

The Albuquerque Isotopes improved to 27-22 with a 7-2 win over the Las Vegas Aviators, jumping out to a 7-0 lead by the third inning and holding it from there. Zac Veen (No. 9 PuRP) drove in three runs, going 1-for-3 with a walk and lifting his OPS to .817, while Nic Kent added the big swing with a two-run homer, his third of the season. Andrew Knizner went 2-for-4 with an RBI double and an .825 OPS. On the mound, Domingo Acevedo earned the win with five scoreless innings, allowing three hits and one walk while striking out nine.

Double-A: Hartford Yard Goats 8, New Hampshire Fisher Cats 1

The Hartford Yard Goats improved to 22-20 with an 8-1 win over the New Hampshire Fisher Cats, using a three-run fifth and a three-run sixth to pull away. Roc Riggio (No. 14 PuRP) led the offense, going 1-for-2 with a three-run homer, a sacrifice fly, four RBI, and two walks; he now has a .908 OPS on the season. Aidan Longwell added a two-run double, his 14th of the season, and now has a .772 OPS. On the mound, Connor Staine earned the win after allowing one run on one hit and four walks over five innings, striking out four and lowering his ERA to 4.46. The bullpen handled the rest, with Davison Palermo striking out six over three scoreless innings and Fidel Ulloa finishing the ninth with two strikeouts.

High-A: Vancouver Canadians 15, Spokane Indians 0

The Canadians (18-25) routed the Indians (17-26) 15–0, breaking the game open early and never letting Spokane get back in. Vancouver scored in four of the first five innings, including four-run rallies in the fourth and fifth, then added two more in the eighth. Daniel Guerrero got the win, while Spokane’s staff struggled with command and defense behind it, issuing 10 walks and committing four errors. The big swing came from Alexis Hernandez, who hit a grand slam in the third and finished with five RBI.

Single-A: Rancho Cucamonga Quakes 12, Fresno Grizzlies 7

Fresno (24-19) had enough offense to make this competitive, but Rancho Cucamonga’s (24-19) six-run second inning set the tone in a 12–7 Quakes win. The Grizzlies answered with three runs in the second and kept chipping away, including a sixth-inning homer from Clayton Gray. Jesus Freitez had Fresno’s biggest run-producing night, driving in three. Fresno finished with nine hits and seven walks, but the Grizzlies struck out 11 times, left eight on base, and committed three errors. Rancho made the most of its chances, scoring in four different innings and adding a four-run bottom of the sixth to pull away for good.


Agnos thrilled — and dialed in — during 1st start since high school | MLB.com

Over at MLB.com, Thomas Harding highlights one of the Rockies’ recent silver linings: Zach Agnos stepped into his first true start since high school and delivered five scoreless innings — a sharp, composed outing wasted in a 2–1 walk-off loss.

The Free Agency Signing the Rockies Should Be Quietly Celebrating | SI.com

Miguel Mike Medina from Sports Illustrated spotlights a Rockies move that may not grab headlines, but deserves attention: Tomoyuki Sugano has quietly been one of Colorado’s steadier offseason additions.

Rockies place OF Mickey Moniak on IL, recall Sterlin Thompson | purplerow.com

Here on Purple Row, Evan breaks down the Rockies’ newest roster moves: Moniak heads to the IL, Thompson gets the call back to the show, and the club makes a minor trade to keep reshuffling its depth.


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Orioles news: O’s begin long homestand with impressive win

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MAY 22: Gunnar Henderson #2 of the Baltimore Orioles fields a hit for an out against the Detroit Tigers during the fifth inning at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 22, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning Birdland,

Those of you that have Apple TV+ were treated to quite the game on Friday night. The Orioles beat the Tigers 7-4 thanks to several exciting performances from throughout the roster.

Jackson Holliday had his first two hits of the season, including an important home run that just squeaked over the shortest part of the left field wall. Pete Alonso also went deep as part of a four-RBI night. Gunnar Henderson was the spark plug with three hits, a double, two runs scored, and constant pressure on the Detroit defense. And all six pitchers that were used basically did their job, though Keegan Akin did allow a solo home run on the very first pitch of the game.

It was the kind of game that gives you some sliver of hope that this team can claw their way back into contention. They demonstrated exactly what they are capable of on a baseball field. Of course, it came against a Tigers team that has been even more disappointing, but you can only play the teams on your schedule.

Speaking of, the Orioles desperately need to make the most of this lengthy homestand that began on Friday. After these Tigers, they play three against the Rays and four with the Blue Jays. Labeling anything as “must win” in May feels silly, but the team has dug themselves such a hole that wiggle room is limited.

Weather in the area looks dicey today. The worst of the storm is to our north, but it’s going to be chilly all day with a chance of rain throughout. Will the O’s and Tigers actually play the second game of their series today? Maybe. It seemed unlikely they would play all nine innings on Friday, and yet they made it through. Both teams will want to do all they can to avoid playing a double-header on a Sunday.

Links

Eflin: “I didn’t expect to feel this good so quickly after surgery” | Roch Kubatko
It’s nice to hear from Zach Eflin. It would have been even better to get more innings from him. But that’s the life of a big league pitcher. His time pitching for the Orioles is likely over, unless he and the team can agree to a much lower salary in 2027 than the $25 million on his mutual option. That kind of money just isn’t going to happen after two consecutive season-ending injuries.

With Nolan Arenado’s help — kind of — Orioles’ Jackson Holliday adapts to third base | The Baltimore Banner
This story is not as interesting as the headline would suggest. Holliday has a glove from Arenado, which makes sense since his dad, Matt, is a Rockies legend. It doesn’t sound like Holliday plans to actually use the mitt in game, but maybe it gives off some good vibes.

What has contributed to the Orioles’ latest May swoon? | Orioles.com
Um, everyone has been terrible? That’s not totally fair, but it’s also not really wrong. Almost the entire roster has underperformed their expectations. When that happens, you lose games. It gets even worse when some of the guys that were actually playing well falter. Maybe some positive regression is due to hit the Orioles now.

Orioles birthdays

Is it your birthday? Happy birthday!

  • Logan Allen turns 29 today. The southpaw appeared in three games for the Orioles in 2022. He is currently in the Dodgers organization.
  • Mike González is 48 years old. He was brought in to be the team’s closer in 2010, but early struggles followed by an injury put an end to that. He stuck around through 2011, compiling a 4.18 ERA over 78 total appearances for the Birds in those two seasons.

This day in O’s history

1999 – The Orioles beat the Rangers 15-6. Brady Anderson sets an American League record and ties an MLB record by being hit by a pitch twice in the first inning. Only two other batters in MLB history have ever “achieved” that outcome.

2000 – Despite Rickey Henderson drawing his 2,000th career walk, the Orioles beat the Mariners 4-2

2006 – O’s catcher Ramón Hernandez leads the Orioles to a 14-4 win over the M’s by going 3-for-5 with two home runs, one being a three-run bomb and the other a grand slam.

2015 – Brian Matusz is ejected for having a foreign substance on him, becoming the second player in the league to be accused of breaking the rules that week. The Brewers’ Will Smith had been ejected from a different game a few days earlier. Matusz receives an eight-game suspension.

Mets Morning News: Tong is back, bats are not

May 22, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; New York Mets relief pitcher Jonah Tong (21) delivers a pitch against the Miami Marlins during the seventh inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Meet the Mets

In the series opener against the Marlins, the Mets got some fairly strong pitching performances from the trio of Tobias Myers, Sean Manaea, and Jonah Tong (who tossed three scoreless innings in his first major league outing of 2026). Unfortunately, aside from a very impressive solo homer from Juan Soto in the first, the bats couldn’t get anything working against the Miami pitching staff, leading to a 2-1 loss.

Choose your recap: Amazin’ Avenue, NY Post, Daily News, MLB.com

Tong’s return meant that another pitcher had to get cut from the active roster, and it was veteran Craig Kimbrel who ended up getting the boot.

Carlos Mendoza expressed admiration for Kimbrel following the decision, but his lengthy track record was not enough to save him.

The loss was disappointing, but Tong’s outing was nevertheless encouraging.

After last night’s game, The Athletic reported that Tong would be getting another outing for the Mets, and that they would also be calling up reliever Jonathan Pintaro shortly.

Kodai Senga made a rehab outing last night as he seeks to return to the major league pitching staff.

The Baby Mets continue to get opportunities, as all three of the team’s rookie outfielders started last night.

While the team may have lost last night, they may also be beginning to find their identity.

Howie Rose got to accomplish one of his dreams. No, not calling a Mets World Series victory, but meeting Paul McCartney.

Around the National League East

The Braves and Nationals went eleven innings before a two-out walk-off single from Chadwick Tromp gave Atlanta a 5-4 victory.

Christoper Sánchez continued his impressive run with eight scoreless innings, but the Phillies bats could not score, and a solo homer from Kyle Manzardo doomed Philadelphia to a 1-0 loss against the Guardians.

Federal Baseball examined three young pitchers with team-control that could be options for the Nationals to acquire to improve their pitching staff.

Around Major League Baseball

Major League Baseball revealed their plans for celebrating Memorial Day, including a National Moment of Remembrance and a special patch on uniforms.

Gerrit Cole pitched six scoreless innings in his return from Tommy John surgery.

Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story underwent surgery for a sports hernia and will be out for an extended period.

As if the Dodgers don’t have enough fortunes to boast over other teams, their farm system also has more outfield talent than anybody else.

While many April surprises tend to fade as the season goes on, several players and teams that turned heads in the beginning of the season are continuing along the same path.

Tired: ballpark proposals. Wired: ballpark weddings. Inspired: nine weddings in nine innings at a Durham Bulls game.

Bradford William Davis examined Major League Baseball’s attempts to investigate players accused of domestic violence, going back to their investigation of José Reyes in 2016.

Yesterday at Amazin’ Avenue

Vasilis Drimalitis previewed the weekend series in Miami, AKA the place where the Mets got eliminated last year.

Chris McShane reminded us all how good Huascar Brazobán has been for the Mets this year.

Joe Sokolowski provided the latest edition of This Week in Knicks Mets Quotes.

This Date in Mets History

Mike Piazza suited up for the Mets for the very first time on this date in 1998 (oh, and Al Leiter threw a four-hit shutout, by the way).

Today in White Sox History: May 23

On this day 115 years ago, Shano Collins hit the first three-run homer in Comiskey Park history. | (Photo by TPLP/Getty Images)

1911
Shano Collins hit the first three-run homer in Comiskey Park history — almost a year after the park opened! While that fact is fluky enough, Collins’ blow didn’t even leave the park: It was an inside-the-park smash to the deep center field of the park.

Collins’ milestone homer came at the expense of the New York Highlanders, and put Chicago up, 3-1, in the bottom of the fourth inning. However, the visitors rallied to tie with two runs in the top of the seventh, and won the game with a run-scoring single with two outs in the top of the 12th.

Ed Walsh went all 12 innings for the White Sox, taking the hard-luck loss. He walked seven, struck out seven — and picked off three runners in the game!


1928
One day after White Sox center fielder Johnny Mostil tied an AL record with 12 chances in a 4-3 win over Cleveland at Comiskey Park, the White Sox won again, 4-3. And in this game, there were more defensive heroics — but this time, by Cleveland.

The end of the game was positively crazy. In the bottom of the ninth, the White Sox rallied with an error, single and walk to load the bases, whereupon Mostil walked to tie the game, 3-3. But with the bases full and nobody out, first baseman Bud Clancy popped out to left field, and Cleveland’s Charlie Jamieson threw out Johnny Mann at home plate for a double play. Cleveland catcher Luke Sewell then threw to second base and caught Ray Schalk in a pickle, to be thrown out at third for a triple play.

Schalk was benched for the boner, and White Sox ace Ted Lyons came on to pitch the 10th inning. He ended up vulturing a win, as the White Sox rallied in the 10th: Bill Hunnefield walked, beat the throw to second base on Bill Barrett’s sacrifice bunt, moved to third on a walk to Alex Metzler, and scored on a Willie Kamm single.

Just two weeks later, on June 9, Jamieson initiated another triple play, against the Yankees.


1954
The White Sox quest to find a competent third baseman appeared to be at an end, as GM Frank Lane sent infielder Grady Hatton and $100,000 to Boston for All-Star George Kell. It was the first time the Red Sox had sold a player outright since the Babe Ruth transaction more than 25 years earlier. 

Kell’s best year for the White Sox was 1955, when he hit .312 with 81 RBIs. However, he had a bad back, which limited his playing time, and he was traded to the Orioles early in 1956 as part of a six-player deal.


2003
The Kannapolis Intimidators, in just their third season as a White Sox Low-A affiliate, were witness to a bizarre ejection during a road game against the Lakewood BlueClaws. With the BlueClaws up, 3-0, in the seventh, a huge storm begins and Lakewood groundskeeper Bill Butler rushed onto the field to prep it for the tarp. However, umpires Brandon Cooney and Steve Cummings hadn’t actually announced a game delay yet, and ejected Butler from the contest. It was believed to be the first-ever baseball ejection of a groundskeeper.

The game was unable to resume, and Kannapolis lost, 3-0. Among the future White Sox on the Intimidators roster in 2003 was pitcher Ehren Wasserman.


2024
Over the decades when the White Sox faced the Orioles you could almost count on something strange, bizarre or unusual taking place at some point, with the result usually costing the Sox an opportunity to win.

On this night at Guaranteed Rate Field, the Sox had scored four runs in the ninth inning and had the tying runs on base, trailing 8-6 … when the game ended in one of the strangest ways possible.

Andrew Benintendi hit a pop-up in the infield. As Orioles shortstop Gunnar Henderson drifted over to make the play base runner Andrew Vaughn was called for interference, even though Henderson had plenty of time to make the catch.

That ended the game, as Henderson was credited with an unassisted double play!

Phillies news: J.T. Realmuto, Bryce Harper, Robby Snelling

Apr 12, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; A view of the helmet of Philadelphia Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto (10) displaying the City Connect logo before the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

There is almost no chance that today or Sunday’s games get played, right? The forecast for these games is beyond poor, so methinks this gets made up as a doubleheader on some random August day.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news: