PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JUNE 02: Gavin Sheets #30 of the San Diego Padres celebrates his two-run home run in the third inning with Fernando Tatis Jr. #23 during a game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on June 02, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images
San Diego Padres (32-27) at Philadelphia Phillies (31-29), June 3, 2026, 3:40 p.m. PST
Watch: Padres.TV
Location: Citizens Bank Park – Philadelphia, Penn.
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The Good Guys’ offense ran on Sam Antonacci energy, as the rookie spark plug went 4-for-4 in a dominant win over the Twins. | (David Berding/Getty Images)
After two frustrating losses to begin the series, the White Sox responded exactly how good teams are supposed to: They punched back.
Erick Fedde spun five shutout innings, the offense piled on 12 hits and eight walks, and the Sox steamrolled the Twins. Sure, they lost the series, but they leave Minnesota with a +11 run differential and at least a little dignity restored.
The Sox jumped all over Taj Bradley from pitch one. Sam Antonacci singled, Miguel Vargas walked, and Andrew Benintendi slapped a base hit, and suddenly the sacks were packed with nobody out. Colson Montgomery, who had a rough game, whiffed on three pitches, but Chase Meidroth worked an eight-pitch walk to push home the first run and keep his on-base streak alive at 17.
Rookie Jacob Gonzalez delivered the big blow of the frame, slapping a single the other way to plate two more.
The Twins then gift-wrapped another run on a soft Tristan Peters grounder and some classic Minnesota bumbling. The Good guys were up 4-0.
Fedde could have pitched in slippers with that early cushion. The righthander, finally in the win column, was on cruise control. He mowed down the first 11 Twinkies and breezed through three innings on just 30 pitches. Minnesota didn’t sniff a baserunner until he walked Trevor Larnach with two outs in the fourth, and didn’t surrender a base hit until Luke Keaschall finally broke up the party with two gone in the fifth. The veteran’s final line: five scoreless, two hits, a walk, two Ks. Efficient, effective, and with 61 pitches, he barely broke a sweat.
The Sox kept loading the bases and then leaving them there, stranding runners in the second, third, and fourth. Montgomery had a day to forget with four strikeouts, seven left in scoring position, and a golden sombrero for his troubles.
The South Siders finally broke it open in the sixth, thanks to some generous Twins defense. Rikuu Nishida reached on an error, took second on another, and Antonacci cashed him in with a double for 5-0.
The bullpen relieved Fedde after five frames and ensured there would be no drama. Grant Taylor took care of the sixth and seventh, mowing down six of seven and picking up three Ks. Chris Murphy cleaned up the last two, dodging a couple of late baserunners to lock down the shutout.
The bats added some finishing touches in the eighth. Antonacci doubled again, Vargas singled him home, and Benintendi put the cherry on top with a two-run Benny Bomb to right-center. 8-0, let’s go!
Antonacci, Vargas, and Benintendi did the heavy lifting at the top, combining to go 7-for-10 and reaching base 13 times. The offense also did exactly what was discussed in our game thread: they were patient and worked the free passes. Eight walks later, Minnesota’s pitchers were begging for mercy.
Despite the big lead, the Sox went just 5-for-18 with runners in scoring position and left a pile of runs on the table, but after the first two games, nobody in the clubhouse was about to gripe. The guys gets a breather on Thursday, then it’s off to Philly for the weekend.
PHILADELPHIA, PA - MAY 29: AJ Smith-Shawver #32 of the Atlanta Braves pitches during the game between the Atlanta Braves and the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on Thursday, May 29, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Abdoul Sow/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Not to fear, Braves fans, the starting rotation’s depth is soon to get stronger.
AJ Smith-Shawver will be facing hitters soon, the final step before beginning a rehab assignment. He is throwing high intensity bullpen sessions currently and is not too far behind Hurston Waldrep (who made his first rehab start Monday) according to #Braves MGR Walt Weiss.
While we are waiting for the return of some more helpful hands like Spencer Schwellenbach and Hurston Waldrep, Smith-Shawver is another young dominant arm that is expected to make an impact in Atlanta’s rotation.
After suffering a torn UCL that cut his strong stint (3.86 ERA) short last May, he’s making significant progress in his high-intensity bullpen sessions and looking to take the final step in facing live hitters before he’s assigned to rehab and find his way back in Atlanta’s clubhouse.
Waldrep started his rehab stint this past Monday, so the two are not far behind in each other in terms of progression.
It isn’t often that a pitcher gives up a game-tying run and receives a long and loud standing ovation.
But it isn’t often that a pitcher accomplishes what Cristopher Sanchez did over the last month plus.
The gifted Phillies left-hander saw his scoreless streak rise to 50 2/3 innings – fifth-best of all-time – in the team’s 3-2 win over the San Diego Padres on Wednesday night.
Sanchez, who did not allow a run in five starts in the month of May, began the game with six scoreless innings before allowing a pair of two-out hits and a run in the top of the seventh inning. Ty France doubled down the left field line and scored on a base hit by Jackson Merrill. That hit tied the game at 1-1 but J.T. Realmuto and Kyle Schwarber had Sanchez’ back. They both clubbed solo homers in the bottom of the inning to put the Phillies ahead and get Sanchez the win.
Sanchez, who leads the majors with a 1.46 ERA, passed Hall of Famer Bob Gibson (47 consecutive scoreless innings in 1968) on his way to fifth place on the all-time list. Sanchez walked just one and struck out eight in seven innings of work. He appeared frustrated with himself after giving up the two hits and losing his scoreless innings streak in the seventh, but the Citizens Bank Park crowd of 40,453 sure appreciated him. As France reached home plate, the entire ballpark rose to its feet and saluted Sanchez with hearty applause.
Earlier on Wednesday, Sanchez had been named National League Pitcher of the Month for May. He pitched 39 scoreless innings over five starts in the month. He struck out 45 and walked just three.
While impressed with Sanchez’ streak, teammates have come to expect greatness from him. The 29-year-old Dominican finished second in the NL Cy Young voting last season.
“To tell you the truth, I don’t think a lot of us are talking about it,” Bryce Harper said of the streak before the game. “It seems simple and normal for him to go out and there and pitch and do his thing, so we’re not thinking about it too much.
“He’s a super special pitcher and person, as well. Nothing against the streak or anything, but he’s been doing it for so long, it feels like he’s been on a streak the last couple of years. It’s just all come together for him and it’s a lot of fun to be part of. It’s really cool.”
After the Phils went up, 3-1, in the bottom of the seventh, the Padres cut the lead to one with a run against reliever Brad Keller in the eighth. Jhoan Duran protected the one-run lead in the ninth for his 14th save.
Sanchez improved to 7-2 on the season and the Phillies improved to 32-29. They are now 16-16 at home, heading into Thursday afternoon’s series finale. The Phils and Padres have played five times over the last week with the Phillies winning all of them. Three have been one-run victories.
The Los Angeles Dodgers, first in the NL West with a 39-22 record, face the Arizona Diamondbacks, who are third at 32-28 record in a key divisional matchup. The Dodgers are favored with a -193 moneyline compared to the Diamondbacks' +160. Starting pitchers are scheduled to be Shohei Ohtani for Los Angeles, with a 0.82 ERA, and Zac Gallen for Arizona, with a 5.16 ERA.
How to watch Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Arizona Diamondbacks
CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 31: José Ramírez #11 of the Cleveland Guardians celebrates after reaching second base on a sharp fly ball to left field to tie the game 3-3 in the fifth inning against the Boston Red Sox at Progressive Field on May 31, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Russell Lee Verlinger/Cleveland Guardians/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Athletics, third in the AL West with a 29-31 record, face the Chicago Cubs, who are fourth in the NL Central at 32-29. The Chicago Cubs are favored with a -125 moneyline compared to the Athletics' +105. Starting pitchers are Jeffrey Springs for the Athletics, with a 4.07 ERA, and Colin Rea for the Chicago Cubs (4.70 ERA).
Don't rule out the Los Angeles Dodgers adding more firepower at next month's trade deadline.
Despite their gaudy payroll, NL West leaders are down two major pieces of the rotation with Blake Snell (loose bodies in left elbow) and Tyler Glasnow (lower back spasms) both on the IL for the foreseeable future.
One name that the Dodgers have been attached to on the rumor mill for some time now is Detroit Tigers ace Tarik Skubal, and as manager Dave Roberts joked to USA TODAY Sports' Bob Nightengale, Los Angeles may be the only team with a strong enough farm system to pull off a hypothetical deal for the back-to-back Cy Young winner.
"They would go ballistic," Roberts told USA TODAY, laughing. "But we would have the prospect capital to do that. We are one of the teams that could do that with the Tigers."
Armed with the No. 2-ranked farm system in the league and five top-100 prospects according to MLB Pipeline, there's no shortage of options the Dodgers could use to entice Detroit to part ways with Skubal, if the TIgers were to deal him.
The Dodgers' top prospects include Josue De Paula, who's hitting .320 with a .958 OPS and eight home runs in 49 games with Double-A Tulsa, Zyhir Hope (.296 with 11 homers and .871 OPS), Eduardo Quintero (their 2025 Minor League Player of the Year) or Mike Sirota, who's hitting .349 with a 1.035 OPS in 12 games since being called up to Double-A.
Skubal's currently on the IL with loose bodies in his throwing elbow, an injury the Dodgers are all too familiar with right now with both Snell and closer Edwin Díaz. Skubal, however, is closest to a return out of all three. According to MLB.com's Jason Beck, he threw 64 pitches in a four-inning simulated game at Tropicana Field on Monday and could go on a rehab assignment as soon as this weekend.
PHILADELPHIA, PA - JUNE 02: A detail shot of the Philadelphia Phillies jersey with a patch commemorating Lou Gehrig Day worn by Bryce Harper #3 during the game between the San Diego Padres and the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on Tuesday, June 2, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Denis Kennedy/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The Baltimore Orioles, ranked third in the AL East with a 29-32 record, face the Boston Red Sox, who are fifth in the division at 25-3. Boston is favored with a -148 moneyline compared to Baltimore's +123. Starting pitchers are Chris Bassitt for Baltimore, with a 5.06 ERA, and Payton Tolle for Boston, with a 2.61 ERA.
DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 29: Matt Gage #93 of the San Francisco Giants celebrates after an outfield play to end the fifth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on May 29, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The San Francisco Giants are making yet another move, as it seems they have a daily quota to fulfill. This one, unfortunately, was mandated by injuries. Before their Wednesday game against the Milwaukee Brewers, the Giants announced that left-handed reliever Matt Gage had been placed on the 15-Day Injured List, while right-handed reliever Dylan Smith had been recalled from AAA Sacramento to take his place.
It’s a hit to a bullpen that is already struggling, as Gage has been one of their most reliable arms. The veteran southpaw, whose IL stint is for right knee inflammation, and is retroactive to June 2, has a 2.63 ERA on the season, third on the team (minimum: 10 innings pitched) behind only Joel Peguero (2.38) and Keaton Winn (2.45). That said, it hasn’t been the prettiest low ERA, as Gage has just 19 strikeouts in 24 innings, with 13 walks and three home runs allowed. That’s resulted in a fairly ugly FIP (4.76), which suggests the ERA could be primed for some regression.
Still, he’s been a trustworthy arm out of the ‘pen for Tony Vitello, and that’s more than most players have been able to say this year. Gage pitched during Monday’s blowout loss, and it seems the injury flared up then, and was likely partially responsible for the five baserunners that he allowed in an inning of work.
Replacing him is Smith, who returns to the roster after a very brief stint earlier in the year. A 3rd-round pick in 2021, Smith was sent to the Giants right before the start of the season in a DFA/cash trade with the Detroit Tigers. He’s pitched decently in Sacramento, with a 3.98 ERA, a 4.43 FIP, and 23 strikeouts to 10 walks in 20.1 innings. Smith, who turned 26 last week, has pitched once for the Giants this year, and faced three batters while getting two outs and walking a hitter during an extra-innings victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on May 10.
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 01: Nasim Nunez #26 of the Washington Nationals is caught trying to steal second base by Xavier Edwards at Nationals Park on June 01, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jamie Sabau/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Well that was certainly a gut punch. The Nats just got swept at home by a Marlins team that had lost five straight entering the series. For whatever reason, the Fish just seem to have our number. That is especially true of Marlins pitchers who have contained this offense better than any other team.
In this series, the Nats only scored 7 runs in the three games. Today, they only managed 1 run on 3 hits. The one run they did score was due to Otto Lopez booting what could have been an inning ending double play. That elite offense which has been so consistent all season long was nowhere to be found in this series.
Part of that is due to the Marlins pitching staff. The Marlins threw the ball well in all three games, and saved their best performance for last. Emerging ace Max Meyer just carved up this Nats lineup with elite breaking balls. The sweeper and slider were both working well for the 27 year old, who has pitched like an All-Star this year. He struck out 7 and also got 7 ground outs.
There were a couple missed opportunities for the Nats offense, but for most of the day, they were just being dominated. Keibert Ruiz, Jacob Young and Luis Garcia Jr. were the only ones who looked like they had a chance for most of this series. Young hit the only Nats home run of the series, while the contact oriented Marlins hit 8 homers.
While the depth pieces have been solid for this Nats offense, this group really goes as CJ Abrams and James Wood go. When the big guns are rolling, this offense is elite. However, when they go quiet, the house of cards begins to fold. In this series, the duo went 3/23 with 9 strikeouts. Today it felt like Wood and Abrams were both trying to do too much to spark the struggling offense.
Daylen Lile had a good game yesterday, but he has been in an extended slump since his massive series against the Reds with his family in the house. Lile’s increased chase rate is alarming. Last season, he chased 26.7% of the time, which is slightly less than the average hitter. Impressively, he was able to do this while being very aggressive in the zone. This season, Lile’s chase rate is up 10% to 36.7% which is in the 14th percentile.
We are going to do a deeper dive on Lile, but the Nats need him to step up. He was a big part of this offense at the end of last season, and has gone on some very impressive runs this season as well. However, his season has been slightly underwhelming so far, especially offensively.
On the mound, the Nats were lucky to only allow 4 runs. The Marlins were putting constant pressure on Nats pitchers. Nationals pitchers were constantly falling behind hitters and nibbling as well. They walked 8 and gave up 10 hits. Usually when that happens, you are allowing at least 6 runs. However, the Marlins were not great with runners in scoring position. Fortunately for them, the Nats offense was in no mood to make them pay.
Final: Marlins 4, Nationals 1
The Nats continue to have some trouble hitting in day games. The pitching staff has reverted to some old habits, falling behind in counts. They are swept by the Marlins and fall back under .500.
Sweeps happen in baseball, but this stings. However, what happens next is what will truly define this season. The Nats are at a crossroads right now. They can either bounce back and keep their exciting season rolling on this west coast trip, or this could be where everything goes off the rails.
Last season, the Nats entered June only two games under .500 before everything unraveled. Another June swoon would be so discouraging for a Nats fanbase that was beginning to see light at the end of the tunnel. It could also have major implications on CJ Abrams’ future. If the Nats fold again in June, it makes it much easier for Paul Toboni to stick to his original timeline and trade CJ Abrams.
However, if the Nats prove that this was just a blip, we could push forward with Abrams and try to maximize his window. It may sound melodramatic, but how the Nats respond to this sweep could legitimately decide the future direction of this franchise for years to come.
The Cleveland Guardians, ranked first in the AL Central with a 35-27 record, face the New York Yankees, who are second in the AL East with a 36-24 record. The New York Yankees are favored with a -160 moneyline compared to the Cleveland Guardians' +134. Starting pitchers are Gavin Williams for Cleveland, with a 3.07 ERA, and Gerrit Cole for New York, with a 0.00 ERA.
How to watch Cleveland Guardians vs. New York Yankees
Date: Wednesday, June 3
Time: 7:05 p.m. ET / 4:05 p.m. PT
Where: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY
TV Channels: Amazon Prime Video, Guardians.TV Presented by Progressive
CINCINNATI, OH - MAY 31: Ha-Seong Kim #7 of the Atlanta Braves bats during the game between the Atlanta Braves and the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on Sunday, May 31, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Colten Strauss/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The Atlanta Braves have a similar look to yesterday’s lineup against the Toronto Blue Jays, with a few additions to spice it up a bit with a new game plan to secure tonight’s win.
Ha-Seong Kim will be taking Jorge Mateo’s spot at shortstop in hopes of turning his slump around after a mediocre showing since his mid-May return.
On both offense and defense, his performance has taken a decline, currently averaging a .089 at the plate and a .269 OPS. It is necessary to put Kim in every other rotation, not only to give him extra opportunity to improve, but also rest Mateo and focus on fixing what mechanics aren’t working.
You’ll also notice Mauricio Dubón, Eli White and Chadwick Tromp are set to join Atlanta to help secure a series win early-on. Ronald Acuña Jr. will continue to lead off and take over DH.
Now, we hinted at this in the pitching preview, but the majority of the Braves’ lineup finds success in reaching base and knocking in RBIs against Toronto’s Patrick Corbin.
Even Kim has nine RBIs and a homer with a .977 OPS against him in his 17 total at-bats.
Austin Riley and Ozzie Albies are two major concerns for Corbin, as both have three solo shots apiece against him and over 10 RBIs.
If the rest of the Braves offense takes advantage of finding their perfect pitch against Corbin’s six-pitch arsenal early on, this matchup is a winnable one, though they’ll need to set the tone early with Grant Holmes on the mound.
Since the Blue Jays are missing some key pieces, they’ll fight to the finish and try to make it as close as they did in game one to rattle the team and shift the momentum.
With an absent George Springer from Toronto’s lineup, Nathan Lukes is taking the lead off spot, with Jesús Sánchez taking over as DH and batting fourth in the lineup. In his seven plate appearances against Holmes, Sánchez averages a .286 but also gets comfortable taking his base when facing him with a .946 OPS.
The Blue Jays might not have been looking like the team that faced the Dodgers in last year’s finals matchup, but that doesn’t mean they won’t play like they have something to prove. And the Braves, well, they just need to beat them to it and start off hot.
Starting at 7:15 p.m EDT. Tune in to watch how tonight pans out.
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MAY 28: Payton Tolle #70 of the Boston Red Sox takes the mound for the first inning of a game against the Atlanta Braves on May 28, 2026 at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images
TV: NESN
First Pitch: 6:45 p.m. ET
The Red Sox still cannot figure out ways to win at Fenway Park. Boston dropped the series opener against the Baltimore Orioles and remains the only club in baseball to not win 10 games at home so far.
Payton Tolle looks to get the Red Sox there after a short but solid outing last time out against the Atlanta Braves.
Here’s who the Red Sox will send to the plate Wednesday night.
The Orioles counter with Chris Bassitt. The right-hander has given the Red Sox problems for years to the tune of a 3.59 ERA in his career against them. With that said, Boston chased him after allowing eight runs in two innings last June for the Toronto Blue Jays.