MLB Player Props & Best Bets for Today, March 27

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There are eight games on the diamond today, and I’ve got a trio of MLB player props to cover you through the night.

My top MLB picks start with Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Daulton Varsho, and Los Angeles Angels first baseman Nolan Schanuel rounds out the betting card for Friday, March 27.

Best MLB player props today

Player PickOdds
Blue Jays Daulton VarshoOver 1.5 hits + runs + RBI-135
Marlins Heriberto HernandezOver 1.5 hits + runs + RBI-125
Angels Nolan SchanuelOver 1.5 hits + runs + RBI-105

Daulton Varsho Over 1.5 hits + runs + RBI (-130)

Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Daulton Varsho posted a rock-solid .355 wOBA and .865 OPS against righties last season, and Athletics starter Luis Severino finished the year with a 4.80 xFIP against left-handed hitters.

Varsho has been on a heater during Spring Training, racking up 19 hits, 12 runs, and 14 RBI while posting a mammoth 1.246 OPS across 53 plate appearances.

  • Time: 7:07 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MLBN, Sportsnet

Heriberto Hernandez Over 1.5 hits + runs + RBI (-125)

Miami Marlins outfielder Heriberto Hernandez posted a .976 OPS this spring after recording a respectable .782 mark against lefties last season.

Hernandez is projected to hit in the middle of the lineup and also draws a favorable matchup against Colorado Rockies southpaw Kyle Freeland tonight.

Freeland has allowed a .361 wOBA to right-handed hitters, posting a 4.98 ERA and 4.78 xFIP over the past three years.

  • Time: 7:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MIAM, COLR

Nolan Schanuel Over 1.5 hits + runs + RBI (-105)

Los Angeles Angels first baseman Nolan Schanuel went deep in the season opener yesterday, and the 2023 first-round pick projects to return to the middle of the lineup again in a neutral matchup against Houston Astros right-handed pitcher Mike Burrows (career 3.90 ERA and 3.95 xFIP across 99 1/3 MLB innings). 

In addition to being positioned to rack up counting stats, Schanuel has worked on adding bat speed during the offseason. Expect another big performance from the Halos’ youngster at Daikin Park. 

  • Time: 8:15 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Apple TV
2026 Transparency record
  • Prop picks: 3-1, +1.9 units

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

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

Where to watch Arizona Diamondbacks vs. Los Angeles Dodgers: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Friday, March 27

The Los Angeles Dodgers (1-0) face the Arizona Diamondbacks (0-1) in the second game of their series, with the Dodgers favored by a 1.5-run spread and a moneyline of -250. Starting pitchers are Ryne Nelson for Arizona, who had a 3.39 ERA in 2025, and Emmet Sheehan for Los Angeles, whose 2025 ERA was 2.82.

  • Arizona Diamondbacks: 0-1 (#3 in NL West)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers: 1-0 (#1 in NL West)

  • Spread: Los Angeles Dodgers -1.5

  • Moneyline: Los Angeles Dodgers -250 / Arizona Diamondbacks +200

  • Over/Under: 8.5

  • Arizona Diamondbacks: Ryne Nelson (2025 stats: 7-3, ERA: 3.39, K: 132, WHIP: 1.07, BB: 41)

  • Los Angeles Dodgers: Emmet Sheehan (2025 stats: 6-3, ERA: 2.82, K: 89, WHIP: 0.97, BB: 22)

Weather: 72°F at first pitch

Jason Heyward announces retirement

Baseball: Atlanta Braves Jason Heyward (22) in action, at bat vs Chicago Cubs. Atlanta, GA 4/5/2010 CREDIT: Bob Rosato (Photo by Bob Rosato /Sports Illustrated via Getty Images) (Set Number: X84007 TK1 R1 F20 )

Opening Day is often thought of as a beginning for, well, obvious reasons. But, sometimes, I guess it’s an ending as well. Jason Heyward has announced his retirement after a 16-season MLB career:

For many of us, Heyward’s career was a big part of Braves fandom. His hype, amazing first MLB game, and overall awesome rookie season dovetailed with me going from a guy who largely just watched all the games to being really interested in how everything in baseball worked. His Braves tenure overlapped with a resurgence in the team’s fortunes after a few years wandering in the wilderness after the division title streak ended, though he also had to endure the disappointing conclusions to the 2011 and 2014 seasons. And, of course, his trade to the Cardinals heralded the first (and perhaps only, if we’re lucky) demonstrative Atlanta Braves rebuild.

Heyward put up nearly 20 fWAR in his five seasons as a Brave, matching his rookie season’s 4.7 with another 4.7 in his final season pre-trade. His best season actually came immediately after he was dealt to the Cardinals — 5.6 fWAR. He he actually hit better as a rookie, which was his best offensive season overall (134 wRC+). However, his defense didn’t rate highly that year as compared to the next decade-plus of his career, hence the higher overall performace in 2015. His career included five Gold Gloves, an All-Star selection in his rookie season, and a World Series title in 2016 with the Cubs — despite his lackluster performance that year for his third team.

His career descended into more a role player/clubhouse guy vein from 2021-onward, though he did have a nice half-season while outhitting his xwOBA a bunch for the Dodgers in 2023. He’ll now put some of those experiences to work in mentoring the next generation of athletes at his eponymous academy.

Thanks for the memories, Jason Heyward. We’ll always have that amazing debut game against the Cubs in 2010. I know it’s a baseball moment I won’t ever forget.

Kristian Campbell hopes to spark Red Sox career revival in AAA

WORCESTER, Mass. – The Boston Red Sox paid Kristian Campbell early last April because the organization believed in the 2023 fourth-rounder after his meteoric minor league rise. 

His MLB experiment came crashing down after just 11 weeks in the show last season. Campbell struggled defensively at second base and hit just .223 in 67 games. The Red Sox sent him to Triple-A Worcester to reset his environment and allow the young talent to refine his offensive approach and find his defensive strengths.

Entering 2026, Campbell returns to Worcester with a settled field to convince the big league club that he can contribute again at a high level. 

“It’s really comfortable because this is my second time, second season being in that environment,” Campbell said at WooSox Media Day on Thursday. “My first season, I was kind of all over the place between three levels. Last year, I debuted with all new guys. This year I’m with the guys that I was with the very first year again. So I’m really in a comfortable spot to compete, get better, to work on things I need to work on.” 

“Everybody comes to Boston to win. Nobody really comes to Boston to mess around.”

Part of his growth will include more time in the outfield, an area he gained some minor league experience in before, and where he could excel given the way his Georgia Tech coaches raved about his athleticism. The 23-year-old must find his true home defensively, so he’s more than willing to move around in the best interests of the Red Sox. 

“I really love the outfield,” Campbell said. “Obviously, I don’t really have that much time out there considering I started out in the infield, but being able to play everything. Obviously, I would like to focus on the outfield right now because that’s what I’ve been working on the most. And I really like the outfield to be honest. You know, if they need me or want me to play the infield, I can always go back to it if they want me to. But I like the outfield. So that’s what I’ve been working on the most right now.”

Whether he eventually finds his way as an infielder or outfielder, he finds himself pretty far down the depth chart right now, fighting a roster logjam. With that in mind, Campbell might be a trade candidate. He spoke to the “scary” realities of moving organizations at the trade deadline in 2025. But he stuck around this offseason and can now shift his focus to performing at Polar Park. 

“You don’t really have to worry about anything right now,” Campbell added. “Just worry about competing every day, putting up good at bats, playing good defense, doing the little things right. Whenever the season keeps going, you gotta play all 162 games. You look back and if you do everything right in the beginning, you’re gonna have a good season to look back on.”

Offensively, Campbell ran into trouble when he strayed from his natural profile that ignited his fantastic 2024 run. In 2025, he chased too much. He didn’t pull the ball. He didn’t make enough hard contact. Now, restoring his roots at the plate and on the bases shapes his expectations for 2026. 

“Not trying to do too much, just going back to my hit and running game,” Campbell explained. “Kind of like a throwback to what I did in college and kind of what I did when I first got into the system a couple years ago. Just seeing the ball deep, hitting it, keeping the ball low, not really trying to force too many home runs or try to force too much in general. Just let it happen naturally. Don’t try to force it out or do anything crazy. So just be simple and let the accidents be home runs like I grew up.”

Campbell continued: “That’s pretty much my approach going into it. And I’ve been working on it and trying to get my head around it. But that’s what I want to do. I mean, obviously getting bigger and stronger. You want to show how much power we have sometimes, but sometimes it can play against you. And I feel like it plays against me sometimes when I try to force something to happen versus letting it happen naturally. You know, like three years ago, I wasn’t as big and I wasn’t even trying to hit a home run because I knew I probably couldn’t. So I was always just trying to keep the ball low, get my hits, get my singles and doubles. Really doubles, try to get a bunch of doubles and let the home runs happen if they happen. And I’m just trying to get back to that approach and not try to do too much too fast. That’s the main thing.”

Campbell knows the expectations and the pressure of winning in Boston that will meet him when he eventually finds his way back to the big leagues. He appreciated that aspect of the Red Sox clubhouse the last few weeks in Fort Myers and knows what’s at stake in 2026 and beyond. 

“People take it really serious,” Campbell shared. “Everybody comes to Boston to win. Nobody really comes to Boston to mess around. I feel like I really realized that last year and this year too, that all the guys that came in know what it’s like playing against Boston because they weren’t on the team before. And they take it really serious and they really enjoy being around and being in a new environment. So it’s really easy to connect with them and for them to jump in and be a part of the plan immediately is big. So it’s really exciting and the guys we’ve got, all the new guys we’ve got are really cool. So I’m excited to watch them start this season out strong and watch the team start off strong [on Opening Day]. So yeah, it’ll be fun.”

Campbell and the WooSox start the 2026 season Friday against the Syracuse Mets. 

SB Nation Reacts: Jed Hoyer had a really good offseason

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Cubs fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.


Earlier this week in the SB Nation Reacts survey, I asked you to grade Cubs President of Baseball Operations Jed Hoyer’s offseason.

Hoyer made two significant acquisitions, signing free-agent third baseman Alex Bregman and trading for starting pitcher Edward Cabrera. He also added some veteran relievers and upgraded the bench.

The overwhelming majority of voters gave Hoyer at least a “B” grade:

A slight majority, 51 percent, graded Hoyer “B” — but a full 38 percent (myself included) gave him an “A” grade. The rest were split between “C,” “D,” and “F.” Honestly, I don’t understand the failing grade, even if it’s only one percent of all respondents. I’ve never been a big fan of Hoyer but this offseason he clearly upgraded the team.

Yes, we did not see the results too well in Thursday’s opener. Of course, that’s just one of 162 games and every team’s going to have a few clunkers in a long season. The Cubs still can take two of three from the Nationals, and that’s what I called for in the series preview. Do that and they’ll be off to a good start. For one thing, the weather Saturday and Sunday is supposed to be better than Thursday’s windy, cold opener.

Here are the results of the two national survey questions asked this week.

The Dodgers certainly got off to a good start Thursday evening, thrashing the Diamondbacks 8-2. Former Cub Kyle Tucker had his first Dodgers hit and RBI.

The Blue Jays, of course, came within inches of unseating the Dodgers last fall. Toronto has returned a powerful team with strong pitching and they could easily make the World Series again. It’s good to see that at least some fans think the Cubs have a chance to win the World Series this year. That’s what I called for in my season predictions. I’ll stand by that call.


This edition of SB Nation Reacts is sponsored by FanDuel.

Yankees sign former Astros RHP Luis Garcia to minor league deal

The Yankees are taking a shot on a veteran arm, bringing in Luis Garcia on a minor league deal.

The pact is for two years, and is worth a base salary of $2.25M in 2027, according to ESPN's Jorge Castillo.

New York likely won't see Garcia until then, as he is set to miss this entire season working his way back from the second Tommy John surgery of his career.

The 29-year-old completed the long road to recovery for the first time last year, but he was limited to just two Sept. starts with the Astros before returning to the IL with elbow discomfort.

He found himself landing back on the surgery table just two months later.

It's unknown exactly where Garcia is in his recovery at this point.

The right-hander has been a relatively steady middle of the rotation arm when healthy, but he's been limited to just eight big-league games over the past three seasons.

Garcia has pitched to a 3.60 ERA and 1.14 WHIP over his career.

A's vs Blue Jays Prediction, Odds & Home Run Pick for Today's MLB Game

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The Toronto Blue Jays return to the field for the first time since coming as close as a team can to winning the World Series without doing it.

Tonight, they begin their quest for unfinished business when they open the 2026 MLB season at home against the Athletics.

My Blue Jays vs. Athletics predictions and MLB picks are backing the Toronto sticks to pick up right where they left off last season by jumping all over starter Luis Severino. 

A's vs Blue Jays predictions

A's vs Blue Jays best bet: Luis Severino Over 5.5 hits allowed (-110)

The Toronto Blue Jays' lineup became famous during their World Series run for their relentless ability to make contact and frustrate opposing pitchers, and that won’t change on Opening Night.

The Blue Jays led the majors in batting average and were fifth in wRC+ vs. right-handed pitchers last season, with the only big change being Kazuma Okamoto replacing Bo Bichette.

The Athletics hand the ball to right-hander Luis Severino on Friday night. Despite looking good in the WBC, Severino ranked in the 14th percentile in expected batting average. 

The Jays will rack up the hits on Opening Day.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Severino allowed seven hits in just 4 2/3 innings in his lone start against the Blue Jays last season.

A's vs Blue Jays same-game parlay (SGP)

The Blue Jays batter who’s arguably had the most success against Severino is catcher Alejandro Kirk

Kirk just sees the ball extremely well out of Severino’s hand. He’s 4-for-6 with six walks in 12 career plate appearances against Severino. That’s good for a .341 expected batting average.

Then let’s look at the newest Blue Jay in Okamoto. The Japanese star was a production monster in the NBP, racking up 827 RBIs. 

He’s projected to be hitting in the six spot in the Jays lineup and should have plenty of opportunities to drive in runs tonight, meaning this price on his RBI is a steal.

A's vs Blue Jays SGP

  • Luis Severino Over 5.5 hits allowed
  • Alejandro Kirk Over 1.5 total bases
  • Kazuma Okamoto Over 0.5 RBIs

A's vs Blue Jays home run pick: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (+425)

While people were wondering about his power during the regular season, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. made everyone forget about that with one of the great postseason runs of all time. 

Vladdy hit eight home runs during the Blue Jays' run to the World Series with a 1.289 OPS.

Guerrero is also a solid 5-for-14 in his career vs. Severino with one home run, good for a .437 expected slugging. So, while it may seem a little on the nose to take Vladdy to go deep in Game 1, I love the value with him in this spot.

2026 Transparency record
  • Best bets: 1-0, +1.36 units
  • SGPs: 0-1, -1 units
  • HR picks: 0-1, -1 units

A's vs Blue Jays odds

  • Moneyline: A's +150 | Toronto -175
  • Run line: A's +1.5 (-135) | Toronto -1.5 (+115)
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 | Under 8.5

A's vs Blue Jays trend

The Blue Jays have hit the Team Total Over in 76 of their last 125 games for +21.35 Units and a 15% ROI. Find more MLB betting trends for A's vs. Blue Jays.

How to watch A's vs Blue Jays and game info

LocationRogers Centre, Toronto, ON
DateFriday, March 27, 2026
First pitch7:07 p.m. ET
TVNBC Sports California, Sportsnet
A's starting pitcherLuis Severino
(2025: 8-11, 4.54 ERA)
Blue Jays starting pitcherKevin Gausman
(2025: 10-11, 3.59 ERA)

A's vs Blue Jays latest injuries

A's vs Blue Jays weather

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

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

Former Astros SP Bud Norris Discusses New Ace Hunter Brown

HOUSTON, TX - MARCH 26: Hunter Brown #58 of the Houston Astros reacts in the fourth inning during the game between the Los Angeles Angels and the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on Thursday, March 26, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kevin M. Cox/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Norris, the Opening Day starter for the Astros in their inaugural American League campaign in 2013, shared his thoughts on Houston’s Opening Day starter this year, new staff ace Hunter Brown.

Bud Norris can relate. He had his moment of glory with the Astros as a number one starter in 2013. That day, he’d pave the way for Houston’s inaugural win as a member of the American League. Bud’s excitement bubbled over in a recent conversation with us at the Crawfish Boxes.    

Q:      How special is going out there as the ace of a staff?

A:      It goes without saying, that it’s a huge honor. You can only nominate one guy for Opening Day and there’s only 30 teams in baseball. It’s an opportunity to showcase yourself to your team and the fans. Hunter has earned that. It’s an entire body of work. It’s the years of high school ball, college, the minor leagues, all of that. They all accumulate to that moment and a special day. It’s also about being consistent for 30 starts and getting this club back into the postseason.    

Q:      What makes Hunter’s stuff so good?     We saw moments yesterday where he dominated but also moments where he went deep into counts, running up his total pitch count.    

A:       He’s a big figure out there. He’s 6’5”, has an over-the-top motion and he gets really good angles which makes his breaking pitches that much better. His curve ball has a lot of bite to it and guys don’t really get good looks at it. I like the way he attacks the strike zone. He might have been trying to be a little too perfect in spots.    

Q:      He really grew up last year did he not?

A:      Every time he went out there last season, he gave his team five, six, seven, eight innings or more, he was always pitching deep into ballgames and had a work horse mentality. And so now, when you’re the front-line starter, this is exactly what it entails. You have to be durable, reliable, consistent and try to eclipse 200 innings and 30 starts. He’s the right guy to do that and lead the younger rotation this year. He’s going to have a really big year. I wouldn’t dwell on the walks, I would focus on the nine K’s.     

Norris would start 30 games in 2013 for Houston, and finish his career with 67 wins and 1,153 strikeouts.

2025 Bluebird Banter Top 40 Blue Jays Prospects: 33-36

Approaching the top of the list and getting to prospects with more impact potential, we have lefty and righty high school pitchers with plus pitches, a faraway infielder with a sky high ceiling contrasted against a skills over tools outfielder on the cusp of the majors.

12. Juan Sanchez, SS, age 18 (DOB: 9/27/2007), grade: 40, 2025: unranked

Sanchez received the second largest bonus in the Blue Jays’ 2025 international class at just a hair under $1-million, so while he wasn’t one of the very top ranked prospects there was certainly some pedigree there. He more than put himself on the map last summer with a LOUD debut at .341/.439/.565, more than 50% abover league average.

Hot for average? Check. Power? Check. An idea at the plate? Check. There’s plenty he’ll have to show against much better pitching of course, but everything looks good so far. In the Spring Breakout game, Sanchez smashed a hanging slider from the Phillies 4th rounder last year off the fence with a short swing that exploded off his bat. It’s but one data point, but a heck of an impression.

Defensively, he split his time between short and third, and at 6’3” is not expected to stay a shortstop despite good athleticism. Regardless, this is about the potential for an impact bat, and it that works out it’s be no trouble to find him a home elsewhere on the infield, or even potentially in the outfield. Would he ideally rank this highly in a better system? No. There’s still an incredible amount of risk here.


11. Gage Stanifer, RHP, age 22 (DOB: 11/18/2003), grade: 40+, 2025: unranked/just missed

I really wish I had got around to publishing my just missed/pref list last year, because Stanifer was at the head of it (you’ll have to take to my word for it). The Blue Jays’ 19th rounder out of an Indianapolis high school in 2022, the Jays landed Stanifer for the $125,000 limit that doesn’t count against the draft pool. I’m always intrigued by these late round picks who clearly have a strong preference to play professionally rather than in college, and amount to essentially a free lottery ticket for the team if scouts can turn up a diamond in the rough.

So while Stanifer’s complex league debut wasn’t remarkable, I had tucked the name away and when he went up to Dunedin in the wake of several injuries to the rotation in early 2024 it was a priority follow for me. Again, while the results didn’t standout (6.34 ERA with 50 walks in 59.2 innings), there were some promising building blocks. He shows good fastball velocity, holding low-90s velocity, paired with the ability to spin a breaking ball that flashed plus. It’s just consistent strike throwing was his undoing, but nonetheless there was plenty to like.

Sometimes young pitchers never progress beyond that, and sometimes something clicks. And click it did for Stanifer in 2025. Piggybacked behind Trey Yesavage for the first half of the season, Stanifer blew away low-A hitters (0.69 ERA with 38 in 26 innings over seven starts). There were a few bumps initially at Vancouver, mostly control wobbles, but really hit his strike down the stretch in the rotation (60K in 37 IP in his last seven high-A starts) before a late season cameo up to AA.

Stanifer’s fastball was firmed up towards the mid-90s, and he misses plenty of bats with, but his best pitch is a mid-80s slider with big depth that can look like a power curve (and he mixes in either a slower variant or what is actually more of a power curve with more depth). His change-up is distinctly a third pitch, but encouragingly for a development perspective he used it plenty and would flash some good fade. Physically, he’s pretty already pretty maxxed out.

It’s going to come down to throwing enough strikes for Stanifer because the stuff is plenty good. That was an issue in his Spring Training appearances this year. Between the tenuous control and the change-up being a work in progress, my gut is he ultimately ends up in the bullpen (I’d put it at something like 75/25). He’s touched the upper 90s with his fastball and potentially could tick up to that consistently in short stints. And there’s not insignificant risk that the basic strikethrowing undermines him short of the majors.


10. Johnny King, LHP, age 19 (DOB: 7/26/2006), grade: 40+, 2025: 23th

One of the youngest players drafted in the 2024 Draft, King received a well overslot $1.25 million bonus to forgo his commitment to Miami as the Jays’ third rounder. The prototypical day two high school arm, King had a loose, whippy delivery from a low three quarters arm slot from a 6’4”/185 frame with room to add weight as he fills out.

Promoted to low-A Dunedin at midseason after bullying hitters on the complex (41K in 24 innings), King had a broadly successful 11 appearance run, with a 3.35 ERA in 37.1 innings, with a ridiculous 64 strikeouts amounting to just under 40%. The one drawback was 30 walks (18%), though it wasn’t a huge issue of not being able to throw strikes so much as running a lot of deep counts and losing hitters. A little overboard on the two true outcomes.

King did this principally with two pitches. His fastball sat in the low-90s with some run to his arm side, presenting a tough angle especially for young pitchers unfamiliar with that from the left side. He’s young enough that it could tick up as he matures and gets stronger. That’s paired with a big two-plane curve in the mid-70s that piled up swings and misses, albeit against hitters who were largely befuddled and completely eaten up by it. He used his changeup some, but more often and then he’d go away from it and rely on his others.

Though there is plenty of risk remaining, the successful debut has already somewhat derisked King’s profile in that the stuff clearly translated to full season ball. A solid athlete, he could project to have good command but it’s still well a work in progress. While he’s very young, there’s a lot of reliever traits and absent steps forward in command or to a viable third pitch, my gut would have him ultimately landing in the bullpen, with the distribution above reflecting that.


9. RJ Schreck, OF, age 25 (DOB: 7/12/2000), grade: 40+, 2025: 32nd

After four years at Duke and one season with Vanderbilt, Schreck was a priority senior sign by the Mariners in the 9th round of the 2023 Draft. After an unremarkable post draft debut, he put himself on the map at high-A Everett in the first half of 2024 with 12 home runs and .404 OBP. Traded to the Jays for Justin Turner, the power carried over to New Hampshire finishing the season at .251/.388/.462 (138 wRC+) and 17 HR.

I was the low guy on Schreck last year, skepticism stemming from both home parks having extreme short porches to right field thereby exaggerating his production (.240 home ISO, .188 road ISO). Beyond that, the production was driven by plate discipline outcomes, which for an experienced ACC/SEC hitter can be just waiting out wild young pitchers rather than true excellence (and his strikeout rate increased significantly at AA).

Schreck’s 2025 went a long way to dispelling at at least allaying that. After replicating his AA production, he moved up to Buffalo and had the profile hold up at AAA in posting a .242/.392/.435 line good for a 129 wRC+. He walked 16% while holding the strikeouts to 21%, and added 9 HR in half a season in a neutral environment.

While Schreck does not standout tools wise, added strength in the past few years has enhanced his power potential and he makes excellent swing decisions. Defensively, he’s been used in all three positions. While he doesn’t embarrass himself in CF and would be serviceable in a pinch, his future is in a corner where good reads and routes and an average arm acquit him well.

As a corner outfielder without above average power (or a standout hit tool), Schreck’s profile remains risky in terms of projecting a regular role. That said, he’s already shown improvements beyond his pre-draft profile with secondary skills that buffer shortcomings in raw tools. Until the profile and production shows signs of cracking, there’s reason to believe a late blooming diamond in the rough who could profile as an OBP-oriented everyday regular.

Yankees Birthday of the Day: Miller Huggins

(Original Caption) Miller Huggins, manager of the New York American League baseball team, smiling. And the sporting page will tell you why, with the Yankees so far in the lead that they have only to three games out of their six to win the pennant. Sure looks as if there would be another "All New York" World Series this year. (Photo by George Rinhart/Corbis via Getty Images) | Corbis via Getty Images

What comes to mind when you hear Miller Huggins’ name? The 1920s Yankees, surely. He is remembered primarily as the man who managed that legendary core of Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Tony Lazzeri, Herb Pennock and company, capturing six AL pennants and three World Series titles during his twelve-year tenure. 

Some might point to the sheer amount of talent on those squads and claim that Huggins was simply along for the ride. However, nothing could be further from the truth. Huggins played an instrumental role in shaping those juggernaut Yankees. He deserves to be remembered not as a manager of great teams, but a great manager.

Miller James Huggins
Born: March 27, 1878 (Cincinnati, OH)
Died: September 25, 1929 (New York City, NY)
Yankees Tenure: (as manager) 1918-1929

Even before he became the manager of the New York Yankees, Huggins had already established a name for himself in the world of baseball, first and foremost as a fine second baseman. He broke into the major leagues with his hometown Reds in 1904 at the age of 26, immediately posting a 3.1 WAR season on the back of a .377 OBP and a reliable glove. Though he was quite a small man, even for his time — Baseball Reference lists him at 5-f00t-6 and 140 pounds — he used patience at the plate, speed on the bases, and guile on the field to outplay his opponents, earning him nicknames like “Mighty Mite” and “Little Everywhere”. Over a 13-year career, the first six of which he spent with the Reds and the rest with the St. Louis Cardinals, Huggins hit .265/.382/.314 over 1586 games and 6800 plate appearances, good for a 111 wRC+, and accumulated 39 WAR.

Huggins’ managerial career began while he was still a player, when Cardinals team owner Helene Hathaway Britton named him as player-manager in the 1912-13 offseason. His first season at the helm was quite inauspicious, as the Redbirds struggled to a 51-99 finish, last place in the National League by 12.5 games. However, Huggins was able to right the ship very quickly, leading the Cards to a third-place finish just the following year with a 81-72 record.

During Huggins’ St. Louis tenure, the team experienced significant financial difficulties. Britton sold the team over the 1916-17 offseason to a new ownership group, who hired some guy called Branch Rickey to be the president of the club. While Huggins remained at the helm in 1917, the last year of his contract, the Cardinals did not offer him a new one at season’s end. Yankees owner Jacob Ruppert seized this opportunity to sign Huggins to a two-year deal, and the rest, as they say, is history.

Or not. The start of Huggins’ 12-year Yankees tenure was far from smooth sailing, as he failed to lead the still-building team to a pennant in each of his first two seasons. Even after a certain Babe Ruth came over from Boston and proceeded to revolutionize baseball, it would take until 1921 for Huggins to capture his first pennant, and 1923 to win his, and the franchise’s, first World Series.

Huggins faced myriad difficulties as the Yankees’ manager. Not only was he faced with a hostile New York press, he had to handle a team that had no shortage of big personalities. And no personality was bigger than the biggest man in the game, both figuratively and literally — George Herman Ruth. Initially, Huggins took a laissez-faire approach, turning a blind eye to the slugger’s drinking and partying. However, this understandably had a negative impact on both Huggins’ leadership and team morale. Moreover, even when Huggins did try to reprimand Ruth for crossing a line, he was sabotaged by team co-owner Til Huston (full name Tillinghast L’Hommedieu Huston, which is probably the best name I’ve had the honor of typing), who was Ruth’s drinking buddy, and did not take Huggins’ side when he came into conflict with the Babe.

All this strife and pressure took a steep toll on Huggins’ health. After the 1920 season saw the Yankees lose a close pennant race, Huggins suffered a nervous breakdown, later revealing that he seriously considered quitting at the time. The following year, Huggins missed time to a case of blood poisoning. Later that year, when the Yankees momentarily relinquished first place following a heartbreaking September loss, Huggins submitted his letter of resignation to co-owner Ruppert. However, Ruppert refused to accept it, and his faith in Huggins would be well rewarded in the coming years.

Although 1923 was the first triumph of Huggins’ Yankees, the true turning point came in 1925. It was August 25th of that year, which saw the Yankees go 69-85 and finish 28.5 games out of first place, that Huggins finally earned the respect of Babe Ruth. That day, Huggins fined Ruth $5,000 and suspended him indefinitely for his conduct off of the field. Ruth reportedly scoffed at Huggins’ sentence, claiming that Ruppert would surely rescind it and side with him over Huggins. However, Ruppert stood by his manager, telling Ruth that he would be suspended for as long as Huggins liked. After apologizing to both Huggins and Ruppert, Ruth returned to the field on September 5th. He would never cross Huggins ever again.

This marked the beginning of a golden era for Huggins and the Yankees, as they won three pennants and two World Series in the next three years. Front and center was Ruth and Lou Gehrig, who Huggins elected to play over Wally Pipp amid the Yankees’ 1925 collapse. However, Huggins’ fingerprints were evident throughout those squads. Pitchers Herb Pennock and Waite Hoyt, who were the anchors of the pitching staff, were both players that Huggins had sought to acquire from the Red Sox despite lackluster results in their Boston tenure. Perhaps the sheer talent of his club required less of Huggins as an in-game tactician. However, by that same coin, one must give Huggins his due credit for having acquired, developed, appraised, and managed those talents.

Sadly, Huggins was not able to enjoy his accomplishments for long, if at all. In August of 1929, as the Yankees fell to second place behind the Philadelphia Athletics, Huggins began to feel ill, and players and staff noticed that he was visibly exhausted. In mid-September, he discovered a painful skin infection on his left cheek, later found to be erysipelas. On September 20th, he was checked in to St. Vincent’s Hospital in Greenwich Village. Five days later, he passed away due to pyaemia. He was just 51 years old.

Although he died an untimely death, at least it can be said that Huggins and his accomplishments are well recognized and commemorated. On May 30, 1932, the Yankees unveiled a monument dedicated to him in center field at the original Yankee Stadium, eventually to be joined by Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig.

When the Stadium was remodeled in the mid-70s, his was relocated to what came to be called “Monument Park.” Huggins also received support for election to the Hall of Fame on many occasions, ultimately being voted in by the Veterans’ Committee in 1964. And as long as the Yankees exist, Miller Huggins will be remembered by fans as the man who was the first to make the team a winner.


See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.

Mariners Prospect Ratings: #7, Luke Stevenson

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - SEPTEMBER 09: The 2025 35th overall pick of the MLB Draft, Luke Stevenson of the Seattle Mariners smiles before the game between the Seattle Mariners and the St. Louis Cardinals at T-Mobile Park on September 09, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Alika Jenner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

At the time of his drafting, the sentiment surrounding Luke Stevenson as a Mariner was polarized. On one hand, landing a first round catching talent with a pick they essentially received for free felt like a massive gift. On the other hand, Stevenson had an unprecedentedly low contact rate for someone getting drafted as early as he did and understandably left fans hesitant to buy in on him as a player. How would a player that struggled with his bat-to-ball skills in college fare against increasingly advanced competition?

Though it’s still incredibly early in the grand scheme of things, the start of Stevenson’s professional career has been remarkable. Through his first 100 PA’s, Stevenson has hit .280 with more walks than strikeouts, a somewhat unexpected style of offense that greatly improved his overall outlook as a prospect. Even if the contact numbers slide given a bigger sample size, the plate discipline has been unreal thus far and there should absolutely be more power on the way. His gaudy .460 OBP isn’t a realistic benchmark for him to hold over the course of a season, but if he’s anywhere near the .400 mark, Mariner fans should be thrilled.

The defense, however, surprised no one. Walking into Modesto having already caught 58 games for the Tarheels, Stevenson immediately took on the role of starting catcher for the Nuts and did so seamlessly. Playing stellar defense behind the dish and showing off an impressively accurate throwing arm, Stevenson gave us a glimpse as to why the Mariners believe in him so strongly. It’s historically atypical to call a player with his offensive skillset a “high floor” player, but in his own roundabout way, that’s exactly the label that fits him best.

The bet on Stevenson boils down to some fairly basic calculus by Scott Hunter and company: If Stevenson is able to hit even just a little bit, the path to him being a four-win player is crystal clear. Good defensive catchers make it to the big leagues, and good defensive catchers that have 25+ homer power in the big leagues make All-Star games. It’s far from a guarantee that he reaches that level of production, but the blueprint is there. A glove-first backup feels like a pretty safe fallback option for Stevenson in his current form, but if everything clicks, we’re looking at a potential starting caliber catching prospect that could take over starting catching duties if Cal Raleigh ever decides catching 200 games a season might not be best for his body. Again, no guarantees, but the limited sample is promising.

A successful 2026 for Stevenson looks a lot like his first 100 PA’s as a professional. If he can prove the contact ability he’s shown isn’t a fluke, it’s going to be tough not to move him up these ranks come mid-season. There’s little doubt he’s got the power to step on one and send it a mile out to right field, but if he’s able to avoid selling out for that and continues to work the entire scope of the field while drawing a healthy number of walks, there just won’t be a ton to his game to poke holes in. He’s a high motor, high character leader of a team that wants to “be a servant to his staff” and has enough raw talent to be just about as good as anybody in his class. Proving it on the field is the next step, but whatever his ceiling ends up looking like, his internal drive and dedication to his craft should all but assure he reaches it.

Yankees vs Giants Predictions, Best Bets & Home Run Pick for Today's MLB Game

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The San Francisco Giants host the New York Yankees in MLB action today, with first pitch scheduled for 4:35 p.m. ET.

New York took Wednesday's season-opener in a 7-0 blowout, and my Yankees vs. Giants predictions expect the visitors to win again.

Here are my best free MLB picks for March 27.

Yankees vs Giants predictions

Yankees vs Giants best bet: Yankees moneyline (-130)

The San Francisco Giants have a potent lineup featuring Rafael Devers and Willy Adames. That said, they're still not on the same level as the New York Yankees

The Yankees had the most productive offense in the majors last year, and that lineup returns intact. They'll light up Robbie Ray, who is coming off a solid season but had worrying underlying metrics. Ray was in the Bottom 10th percentile in average exit velocity, and the bottom 20th percentile in hard-hit rate

Meanwhile, Yankees hurler Cam Schlittler should build on an impressive rookie campaign by mixing in more breaking pitches.

Covers COVERS INTEL: The Yankees led the majors in barrel rate, hard-hit rate, and exit velocity last year. Ray was in the Bottom 26th percentile in all three categories.

Yankees vs Giants same-game parlay (SGP)

Schlittler fanned 11 batters in 9 2/3 frames during spring training. He averages 98 mph on his four-seamer and sinker, with his cutter now at 94.7 mph  — nearly 3 mph higher than last year. He averaged 10.4 K/9 last season and will be even more overpowering in 2026.

Aaron Judge is the best hitter in the world, and over the last two years, he's posted an incredible .457 OBP while plating 259 runs in 310 games.

Not only does Ray give up too much hard contact, but San Fran's bullpen sits near the bottom of the majors in most preseason rankings. This could be a game where the Yankees win by multiple runs, especially if Judge and Schlittler play well.

Yankees vs Giants SGP

  • Cam Schlittler Over 4.5 strikeouts
  • Aaron Judge Over 0.5 runs
  • Yankees -1.5

Yankees vs Giants home run pick: Aaron Judge (+240)

Judge went 0-for-5 with four strikeouts on opening night. That said, the three-time AL MVP is a proven slugger who has mashed more than 50 dingers in three of the last four seasons.

He should bounce back and this is a great matchup for him. Judge has jacked three dingers in four career games at Oracle Park. The towering right-hander also has the platoon advantage against Ray and has gone 3-for-8 with three homers in his career against him.

2026 MLB Transparency record
  • Best bets: 1-0, +1 units
  • SGPs: 0-1, -1 units
  • HR picks: 0-1, -1 units

Yankees vs Giants odds

  • Moneyline: Yankees -134 | Giants +114
  • Run line: Yankees -1.5 (+122) | Giants +1.5 (-146)
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 (-102) | Under 8.5 (-120)

How to watch Yankees vs Giants and game info

LocationOracle Park, San Francisco, CA
DateFriday, March 27, 2026
First pitch4:35 p.m. ET
TVYES, NBC Sports Bay Area
Yankees starting pitcherCam Schlittler
(2025: 4-3, 2.96 ERA)
Giants starting pitcherRobbie Ray
(2025: 11-8, 3.65 ERA)

Yankees vs Giants latest injuries

Yankees vs Giants weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Brewers Reacts Survey Results: A plethora of young arms

Sep 26, 2025; Miami, Florida, USA; New York Mets starting pitcher Brandon Sproat (40) delivers a pitch against the Miami Marlins during the first inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Brewers fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

In this week’s Reacts survey, we asked fans which young pitcher they’re most looking forward to seeing play with the Brewers this season. The results were a bit more split than I honestly expected. I’m not surprised at the order, though.

Brandon Sproat finished atop the voting at 39%, followed by Kyle Harrison (27%), Logan Henderson (23%), and Robert Gasser (11%). Sproat and Harrison, two of the newest Brewers, are also the only two of the group in the majors right now. Both Henderson and Gasser are at Triple-A, though they’re certainly among the “first men up” in the event of an injury or bad performance.

While we haven’t yet gotten a glimpse at Sproat or Harrison, both are slated to pitch in the next few days; Sproat gets the start on Sunday against the White Sox, and Harrison will follow against the Rays on Monday.

In a quick cup of coffee with the Mets last year, Sproat made four starts, pitching to a 4.79 ERA, 2.80 FIP, and 17 strikeouts over 20 2/3 innings. Harrison, still only 24, is the most experienced of the group, as he’s made 42 appearances (37 starts) over three seasons with the Giants and Red Sox. In 2025, he appeared in 11 games (six starts) between the two teams, pitching to a 4.04 ERA, 3.72 FIP, and 38 strikeouts over 35 2/3 innings.

Gasser and Henderson each had cameos with Milwaukee the last two seasons, as Gasser has made seven starts with a 2.67 ERA, 3.96 FIP, and 21 strikeouts over 33 2/3 innings with a Tommy John surgery in the middle. Henderson made five starts with a 1.78 ERA, 3.02 FIP, and 33 strikeouts over 25 1/3 innings in 2025 but dealt with elbow injuries in the second half of the season. Elbow soreness lingered this spring, but the team sounds hopeful that it’ll clear up with some extra rest.

It should be a fun season with so much young talent in the rotation! Thanks for participating in our Reacts survey, and be sure to use FanDuel Sportsbook for all of your sports betting needs.


Brought to you by FanDuel Sportsbook, the official sportsbook partner of SB Nation.

Harper Says Walk This Way

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 6: Bryce Harper #3 of the Philadelphia Phillies draws a walk in the eighth inning during a game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Citizens Bank Park on April 6, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

You can’t step into the same batter’s box twice. Well, you can— the rulebook is rather stringent about what qualities a batter’s box has to have. But we’re talking in a Heraclitean sense here. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say that the batter’s box remains the same, but the batter himself does not.

Bryce Harper is going to try to challenge Heraclitus’ opinion in the same way that he challenged Dave Dombrowski’s (though it is doubtful that he will accompany this challenge with a custom t-shirt). Recently, Harper stated that he wanted to walk more in 2026. A lot more. He was one of MLB’s better walk-drawers in 2025, with his 12.1% rate ranking 23rd league-wide. Only 28 players had more free passes than Harper’s 70. But he wants to draw 140 to 150 in 2026. That would be a career-high for him. The closest he’s gotten is 130 in 2018, his final season as a National. Since then, he’s changed his approach at the plate to a somewhat more free-swinging style. It’s brought him success in Philadelphia. But now he’s looking to go back to the past. Can Harper find a way to return to being the Bryce of 2018?

Before we can answer that, we have to ask a different question: who was the Bryce of 2018, anyway? This pre-Philly Bryce was a superstar, albeit one who had not yet discovered the sartorial flair of a good Phanatic headband. But he was a star with a rather different approach at the plate as compared to the Harper of today. 2018-Harper swung 45.7% of the time, as compared to 2025-Harper’s 54.2%. He was significantly more patient than his older self, swinging at the first pitch of an at-bat 40.4% of the time as compared to his current self’s 54.1%. And most of that bygone reluctance to swing was concentrated on pitches outside the zone: 2018-Bryce’s 25.3% chase rate ballooned to 35.6% by 2025. Interestingly enough, the more conservative 2018 Harper was slightly more likely to whiff than the swing-happy 2025 edition (31.4% vs. 30.7%).

Harper getting back to to drawing walks like it was 2018 would take significant effort and focus, though Harper’s determination is not to be doubted. But Harper can only control what he can control. And while he can control what pitches he swings at, he can’t control what pitches he gets. The Bryce Harper of 2018 was seeing a very different pitch mix than the Harper of today. In 2018, just about a quarter of the pitches he saw were breaking balls. In 2025, it was 41.3%. How might that impact his efforts to return to the past?

Here’s Harper’s swings on pitches outside the zone (O-Swing%), by pitch type, in 2018 and 2025, using FanGraphs’ pitch definitions.

Pitch TypeO-Swing %, 2018O-Swing, % 2025
Four-Seam27.80%26.30%
Slider25.60%39.10%
Curveball27.30%49.70%

In 2018, Harper was just about as likely to chase a breaking ball as he was a heater. His chase rate on four-seamers hasn’t changed much since then. But his chase rate for breaking balls has exploded — which, of course, is why pitchers are so eager to show him more of them. That’s good news for his efforts: if his chase rates on fastballs and breaking balls were similar in 2018, then the change in the pitch mix he’s being shown shouldn’t be a problem, as long as he returns to swinging like he did in 2018.

Easier said than done, of course. And while the passes are free, pursuing more of them comes at a cost. We know what Harper stands to gain by taking more BBs. But we have to look at what he stands to lose as well.

Harper’s increased willingness to chase diminished his walk rate, but it helped him build production in some areas. Here’s his wOBA by zone in 2018 and 2025. The third image shows the difference between the two.

The 2025 version of Harper produced more on pitches inside. All that chasing generally hurt his production outside the zone, but it dramatically improved it on pitches he chased up and inside. The difference may not be as much as it seems, though— note that the gap between his expected wOBAs in 2025 and 2018 in that same quadrant was .104; less than half as much. Still, he really did produce more on those pitches with his 2025 style. He’d potentially be giving that up if he returns to his old approach.

Is that worth it? Well, nostalgia can’t be quantified, but run value can. And we can say that 2018-Harper was more productive than 2025-Harper by that measure.

2025-Harper was more productive on pitches in that upper right quadrant. But looking at the whole, he produced 37 runs in 2018, and only 24 in 2025. The gains he made with the new approach were offset by the costs. Granted, his run values in 2023 and 2024, when he was about as chase-happy as he was this past season, were quite similar to his 2018 run value. So perhaps the gap between 2018 and 2025 isn’t as much about the chasing as it was something else. The comparison between 2018 and 2025 is meaningful, but a little narrowly-sliced; there’s plenty of variance within the results of two given seasons. Still, given Harper’s underwhelming 2025, it’s not hard to see why he felt that it was time to return to the old ways.

You can’t really go home again, though. Maybe that’s an odd thing to say in the context of baseball, the sport in where the whole point is to reach home. But it’s true. Even if Harper could perfectly replicate the mentality and approach of his 2018 self, he can’t replicate the body he had 8 years ago. At 33 years old, he’s far from washed up, but certainly at the point where age is being felt. Unfortunately, we only have bat speed data dating back to 2023. But it is probably fair to assume that he cannot swing the bat in 2026 as fast as he did in 2018. That may mean that the exact same approach at the plate would produce different results. Even if he can replicate the walk rate he had in 2018, he may end up with a very different stat line overall. If swinging less doesn’t produce the change he’s hoping to see, Harper will have to look to alternate strategies for reasserting his eliteness. We don’t know exactly what form he’ll settle into by the end of the 2026. We know it won’t really be 25-year old Harper again. But we can be sure he’s hellbent on finding the best version of 33-year old Harper that can be.

FriarWatch: March 27

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 26: Jake Cronenworth #9 congratulates Ramón Laureano #5 of the San Diego Padres after his solo homerun during the seventh inning of a game against the Detroit Tigers on Opening Day at Petco Park on March 26, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After the San Diego Padres dropped Opening Day against the Detroit Tigers, 8-2, they’re not off to nearly as auspicious a start as the 2025 season, to say the least.

There’s plenty to be excited about: Xander Bogaerts’ two hits off Tigers ace Tarik Skubal, Ramón Laureano’s home run, the bullpen (more or less) locking it down and only using one high-leverage reliever.

But the starting pitching took a hit.

In a game that was already going to be difficult with Skubal on the mound for the opposition, Nick Pivetta struggled to get out of the first inning.

After striking out leadoff man Kerry Carpenter, he couldn’t find the zone and issued two walks and a single to the load the bases before walking in a run.

He ended the inning having given up four runs but was mostly solid for the rest of his outing (3 innings).

San Diego knew it wasn’t going to get much against Skubal but managed to put up two runs against a dominant Tigers pitching staff. But if they want to stay in games the pitching will need to be a lot stronger moving forward.

Taking the mound

Framber Valdez (DET) v. Michael King (SD)

Enter Michael King.

King was an ace for the Padres in 2024, pitching to a 2.95 ERA across a career-high 30 starts. But in ‘25 he suffered an injury-plagued campaign that saw him miss half the season.

If King can return to form, San Diego’s rotation will go a long way toward being as elite as it can be.

Today, the Friars will have their work cut out for them against ground ball extraordinaire Framber Valdez. After spending his whole career with the Houston Astros, he inked a three-year, $115 million deal with Detroit to serve as a co-ace with Skubal.

Batter up!

San Diego will likely use a very similar lineup as they did on Opening Day. Skubal and Valdez pitch quite similarly, with them being two of the most dominant southpaws in the game.

Despite Fernando Tatis Jr. hitting leadoff yesterday, it seems possible that manager Craig Stammen could shake things up and go back to his lineup from earlier this spring:

  1. Xander Bogaerts, SS
  2. Jackson Merrill, CF
  3. Manny Machado, 3B
  4. Fernando Tatis Jr., RF
  5. Ramón Laureano, LF
  6. Miguel Andujar, DH
  7. Nick Castellanos, 1B
  8. Freddy Fermin, C
  9. Jake Cronenworth, 2B

The case for Bogaerts leading off is in large part due to the fact that he’s raked against Valdez (and went on a tear yesterday against Skubal). In 11 career at-bats against him, he has a .364 batting average and a .917 OPS.

It’s possible they use the same lineup as yesterday, putting Tatis at leadoff and bumping Bogaerts down to second again. It seems likely that Castellanos will get the start at first base after coming in to pinch-hit for Gavin Sheets in the eighth inning.

Relief corps

Stammen gave Pivetta quite the leash in spite of his difficult first inning, letting him work out of the jam. But after three innings, San Diego turned to its relievers.

Ron Marinaccio surrendered the only bullpen runs on a two-run homer in the fifth inning, but was spotless across two innings outside of that.

Top prospect Bradgley Rodriguez and David Morgan racked up four strikeouts across a combined three scoreless innings, and the Padres brought in Wandy Peralta to close out the game in the ninth.

With the game so out of hand before the seventh-inning stretch, most of the high-leverage options stayed in the ‘pen. Hopefully San Diego can get to Valdez today and they’ll get to have Mason Miller close out his first game of 2026.