When Dodgers will visit Trump White House for World Series win

The Los Angeles Dodgers are going back to the White House.

The Dodgers will visit President Donald Trump on July 23 to celebrate their second straight World Series championship, the California Post reported on Thursday, July 9, citing a White House official. The team found a window on an off day during an East Coast swing.

For a while it looked like the trip might not happen. The Dodgers' only scheduled visit to Washington came in April against the Nationals, and the game schedule left no room for the traditional ceremony.

"As was the case one year ago, the Dodgers upcoming visits to the White House and Capitol Hill follow the longtime tradition of visits by other World Series champions," the Dodgers' statement to the California Post read.

Manager Dave Roberts never wavered on it publicly. He said he was "going to continue to try to do what tradition says."

The tradition has gotten complicated in recent years. The Golden State Warriors saw their 2017 invitation pulled after Stephen Curry said he didn't want to go and celebrate with a president whose rhetoric and values he disagreed with. Trump canceled the Philadelphia Eagles' celebration a year later when most of the roster planned to skip it, and several Boston Red Sox players, along with Alex Cora, skipped the team's 2019 visit.

The Dodgers have gone twice before. They went in 2021 and again in April 2025 after the first title of this run. Clayton Kershaw, the former Dodger ace, made no apologies for it. He said that the team could not lose sight of the fact it was a chance to meet the president of the United States and see the Oval Office "no matter what you believe."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: When Dodgers will visit Trump White House for World Series win

Yankees’ bats finally break out against nemesis pitcher in needed win over Rays

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Austin Wells hits a home run during the fourth inning of the Yankees' win over the Rays on July 9, 2026, Image 2 shows Ben Rice celebrates his three-run home run during the sixth inning of the Yankees' win over the Rays on July 9, 2026, Image 3 shows Ryan McMahon hits an RBI double during the third inning of the Yankees' win over the Rays on July 9, 2026

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The kind of inning that only existed in the Yankees’ hopes and dreams over the last three weeks finally happened in the flesh Thursday afternoon.

That it came against one of the best pitchers in baseball who had shut them out in two starts earlier this season, well, “That’s baseball, Suzyn,” Aaron Boone said from his office as music blared in the winning clubhouse next door.

Whatever the Yankees offered up as a sacrifice during their hitters meeting Thursday morning, it worked, as their bats finally broke out of an extended slumber for a six-run third against Drew Rasmussen that fueled a 12-4 win over the Rays to salvage a series split at Tropicana Field.

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The six runs the Yankees (51-42) scored in the third inning were more than they had scored in any full game since June 17, after which they began what was a 5-15 tailspin entering Thursday. But at least for a day they made good use of their bats to finish the four-game set on a high note and get back within four games of the Rays (54-37) for first place in the AL East.

“We needed a good one like that,” said Ryan McMahon, who delivered a pair of RBI doubles, including one on the game-changing at-bat with a 12-pitch battle in the third inning. “We needed a good one like that where we stacked good at-bats, had good energy against a really good baseball team. That team over there, they’re definitely a tough squad. To do it against them definitely feels good.”

On a day that began with Brian Cashman acknowledging that “the storm is upon us right now,” and giving votes of confidence to both Boone and hitting coach James Rowson, the Yankees snapped out of their offensive malaise with 14 hits while piecing together a bullpen game, as seven relievers did enough to get by.

Ben Rice celebrates his three-run home run during the sixth inning of the Yankees’ win over the Rays on July 9, 2026. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Ben Rice clubbed a pair of home runs — giving him six in his last nine games and 28 on the year — and drove in five runs while Austin Wells added his first homer since May 22, finally showing signs of life in the midst of a brutal offensive season.

“The great thing about it was, it was everyone,” Boone said. “When they would answer, I feel like we had an answer to come back, too, to add on and protect the lead. Really good day for us, obviously with what we’ve been through, and hopefully one that gets some guys settled and we can continue it on this weekend.”

Max Schuemann, who went 2-for-4 and delivered a spark with a double that led off the decisive third inning, credited Jazz Chisholm Jr. for speaking up during the pregame hitters meeting and providing some energy that set the tone for the day.

Ryan McMahon hits an RBI double during the third inning of the Yankees’ win over the Rays on July 9, 2026. AP Photo/Jason Behnken

“[The message was] just that we’re obviously better than how we’ve been playing,” Schuemann said. “Stacking good at-bats together and not folding. … Feel like it really brought the guys together. I think it needed to be said.”

Rasmussen, the Rays All-Star who had thrown 13 shutout innings against the Yankees this season before Thursday, retired the first six batters on 26 pitches before Schuemann led off the third inning with a double.

McMahon then entered a battle with Rasmussen, including fouling off seven pitches on the way to a full count before roping a double down the right field line to tie the game at 1-1.

Austin Wells hits a home run during the fourth inning of the Yankees’ win over the Rays on July 9, 2026. Getty Images

“As you’re fouling more pitches off, you’re gaining more and more confidence,” McMahon said.

Wells followed by flying out to move McMahon to third, but the next five Yankees all reached on hits to knock Rasmussen out of the game in improbable fashion. Trent Grisham doubled, Rice clubbed a two-run shot, Jasson Domínguez and the badly slumping Cody Bellinger hit back-to-back infield singles and José Caballero added a single through the open right side on a hit-and-run for the 5-1 lead.

After Rasmussen hit the showers, Chisholm — the only starter without a hit, but who delivered some strong defense at second base — capped off the inning with a sacrifice fly to make it 6-1.

Of course, given how things have gone for the Yankees lately, it did not all come easy from there. But unlike most games over the past three weeks, any time the Rays answered, the Yankees did, too, to put together a feel-good win.

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“It definitely boosts our morale heading into the next series,” Rice said. “We just got to keep that momentum going, keep that energy going and hopefully we can continue what we need to do.”

Mark Vientos to miss time with fractured hand

Jul 4, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; New York Mets first baseman Mark Vientos (27) hits a two-run home run against the Atlanta Braves in the sixth inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Colin Hubbard-Imagn Images | Colin Hubbard-Imagn Images

Mark Vientos, who was hit by a pitch on the hand in the second inning of today’s win over the Kansas City Royals, is set to miss a chunk of time. Interim manager Andy Green announced in his post-game press conference that he suffered a hand fracture, and he will be placed on the injured list.

Vientos has hardly had a season to write home about, and this is another roadblock for the right handed hitter. He will hit the injured list with a slash line of .211/.256/.388, good for a 77 wRC+ on the year. He also has struggled in the field throughout the season, earning a stunning -8 outs above average on the year (-9 at first base, and +1 at third base). Overall, it has been a season to forget for him.

The Mets have a fair few options to recall someone in Vientos’s place. The Syracuse Mets infield has options such as Christian Arroyo, Vidal Bruján, Ronny Maruicio, Christopher Morel, Zach Short and Ryan Clifford, all players who have Major League experience or, in Clifford’s case, are interesting but perhaps not quite ready prospect. Or they could go a more DH focused route, and recall M.J. Melendez.

As for the current Mets roster, the injury opens up Jared Young and Eric Wagaman to platoon at first base, with Jorge Polanco taking the lion’s share of the reps at designated hitter.

Guardians 5, Twins 2: Two out of three ain’t bad (but a sweep would’ve been nicer)

Jul 9, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Bailey Ober (17) throws to the Cleveland Guardians in the second inning at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images | Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images

The Minnesota Twins were looking to sweep the Cleveland Guardians out of Minneapolis today. Doing so meant pulling alongside the Spiders for second place in the American League Central, getting back to .500 for the first time since mid-April, and extending their winning streak to five games.

It was pretty quiet for the first four-plus innings of the game today with the only blemish on either side being a solo home run by Spiders third-baseman Gabriel Arias off of fresh-off-the-injured-list Bailey Ober. The home run is the only run that Ober allowed, turning in great five innings of work and allowing two additional hits, a walk, and striking out five. Derek Shelton called it a day for Ober after 74 pitches.

On the other side of the coin, Spiders starter Gavin Williams took a perfect game into the fifth inning, where he got himself into a jam. With one out, Royce Lewis singled, Alan Roden walked, and Luke Keaschall was hit by a pitch to load the bases for Tristan Gray. Gray, who has been in a rut lately, slapped a single through the infield, tying the baby up at one run apiece. As we are all unfortunately too familiar with such situations, the Twins couldn’t pile on more; Alex Jackson grounded into a fielder’s choice to home plate and Trevor Larnach was called out on strikes to end the threat.

Ober gave way to southpaw Kendrys Rojas, called up today to take the roster spot of Connor Prielipp, who went on the injured list due to a blister on one of his fingers. His two innings led to a 2026 Minnesota Twins bullpen tradition of coughing up the tie or lead. Chase DeLauter hit a homer to right field in the top of the sixth while Rojas walked the number eight and nine batters in the order in the top of the seventh. “Walks will haunt” is the old adage, and Brayan Rocchio smooshed that in Minnesota’s face with a double to left field, plating both runners and giving Cleveland a 4-1 advantage.

Lewis clawed back one run with a home of his own in the bottom of the seventh, but the Twins couldn’t get anything else off of Williams. He held Minnesota batters to three hits, two runs, a walk, and 11 strikeouts. After Rojas, Kody Funderburk turned in a scoreless eighth while Woo-Sok Go made his major-league debut in the ninth, giving up a moonshot to Patrick Bailey – making it a 5-2 score – and also notching his first big-league strikeout.

Cleveland turned to Hunter Gaddis and Cade Smith to shut the door, and they did so to solidify the 5-2 score and a Minnesota loss. The Twins stay two games back from the second-place Spiders and also two games back from .500. They also lose their winning streak. Sad day.

W: Gavin Williams (10-4)
L: Kendrys Rojas (1-1)
S: Cade Smith (27)

STUDS

  • Royce Lewis: 2-4, 2 R, RBI, 2 K
  • Bailey Ober: 5 IP, 3 H, ER, BB, 5 K – why not? It’s a good outing coming off the IL.

duds

  • Top of the Twins’ lineup (1-4): 0-16, 8 K
  • Kendrys Rojas: 2 IP, 3 ER, 3 BB, 3 K

COTG

The Cleveland Spiders are off to face the hot Miami Marlins in south Florida while the Minnesota Twins will stay put at Target Field and host the not-hot Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, California, United States of America, for a three-game weekend series to close out the first half of the 2026 campaign. The Angels will send the oft-used TBD to the mound while the Twins call upon Zebby Matthews. Have a #blessed night!

Yankees bust out of offensive slump with 12-4 rout of Rays to split series

The Yankees split their four-game series with the Tampa Bay Rays after winning 12-4 on Thursday afternoon.

Here are the key takeaways...

-- Following a shutout loss on Wednesday which culminated a rough stretch for New York, the offense finally broke out in a big way with six players having multiple hits, including Ben Rice’s two-homer and five-RBI day. 

-- The Yanks scored 12 runs on 14 hits – their biggest inning coming in the third when they put up a six-spot on Rays starter Drew Rasmussen

-- The onslaught began with a double by Max Schuemann, followed by another double by Ryan McMahon to tie the game at one. After a flyout, Trent Grisham singled home the go-ahead run before Rice hit a two-run shot that just got over the right-field wall.

-- A new rally began immediately following the home run when Jasson Dominguez singled and stole second, Cody Bellinger hit an infield single and Jose Caballero drove in the fifth run of the inning with a third consecutive single that knocked Rasmussen out of the game. Jazz Chisholm Jr. hit a sacrifice fly to close out the scoring barrage.

-- Tampa Bay got two runs right back in the bottom half of the inning, but New York tacked on a run in the fourth on Austin Wells solo homer.

-- Despite constant traffic on the basepaths on both sides after that, the scoring settled down until the sixth when Rice made the Rays bullpen pay after reliever Casey Legumina walked Wells and allowed a double to Grisham to start the inning. 

On the second pitch of the at-bat, Rice launched a no-doubter to straightaway center field for a three-run bomb for his second of the game and his 28th of the season as he gets ready to participate in his first Home Run Derby over the All-Star Break.

-- New York added a run in the seventh and eighth innings on a double by McMahon that scored Schuemann, who singled and stole second, and then a single by Bellinger following a leadoff walk to Rice and a single by Dominguez.

-- Every hitter except Chisholm had at least one hit. The top four hitters in the order (Grisham, Rice, Dominguez, Bellinger) went 8-for-18 with seven RBI, seven runs scored and two walks. The bottom three in the lineup (Schuemann, McMahon, Wells) went 5-for-13 with three RBI, runs scored and a walk.

-- The offense went 7-for-14 with RISP.

-- In what was a bullpen game for the Yanks, Paul Blackburn got the start and pitched two effective innings, allowing a run on a solo shot by Junior Caminero while striking out three. 

-- After that, New York used six relievers: Jake Bird (0.2 IP, 2 H, 2 ER, 1 BB), Ryan Yarbrough (1.0 IP, 2 H), Camilo Doval (0.2 IP, 1 BB), Brent Headrick (1.2 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 3 K), Angel Chivilli (2.0 IP, 3 K) and Tim Hill (1 IP, 1 H). Yarbrough got the win.

Game MVP: Ben Rice

His first home run extended the Yanks' lead from one run to three and got things going from there for New York's offense. His second homer was just for good measure and got the Yankees to double-digits in runs for the first time since June 17.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees continue their road strip with a three-game set against the Washington Nationals starting on Friday night at 6:45 p.m.

LHP Ryan Weathers (3-7, 4.29 ERA) will face off against RHP Zack Littell (7-6, 5.02 ERA).

Game Discussion: Milwaukee Brewers (57-34) @ St. Louis Cardinals (48-42)

Jul 8, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Milwaukee Brewers right fielder Luis Lara (18) leaps at the wall but is unable to catch a double hit by St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Masyn Winn (not pictured) during the first inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

The Milwaukee Brewers will go for their fourth win in their five-game series with the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday night. Last night, with a struggling Kyle Harrison on the mound, the Brewer offense was only able to muster one run across the plate, their fewest run total since June 3 against the San Francisco Giants.

The Brewers will be getting a much-needed arm back in their rotation as Logan Henderson gets handed the ball for tonight’s series finale. Henderson last pitched on May 22 against the Los Angeles Dodgers, where he didn’t allow any runs on two hits and three walks. Right-hander Garrett Stallings was optioned to Triple-A Nashville to open up his spot.

As the Brewers seek to put the dagger in the series, the Cardinals will try to salvage the final game of the series. Andre Pallante will be the man who gets handed the rock this evening as his impressive streak of 18 straight starts continues. Through 17 starts, Pallante has a 3.60 ERA with a 10-5 record. Pallante will be making his 23rd appearance against the Brewers in his career, with his most recent outing coming back in May, where he allowed five runs on eight hits.

Despite the wins racking up, the Brewers offense has been a bit hit or miss, but with Pallante on the mound, this lineup has seen quite a bit of success. The lone two players who haven’t faced him are rookies Luis Lara and Cooper Pratt, but outside of the two, you’ll find over half of the lineup has over a .300 batting average against him.

Tonight’s first pitch will be at 6:45 p.m., and you can find it on Brewers.TV and WTMJ 620.

Yankees resurrect offense behind Ben Rice’s two homers, split series with Rays

ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - JULY 06: Ben Rice #22 of the New York Yankees celebrates with teammates in the dugout after hitting a home run in the ninth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on July 06, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Even in the most difficult of times, this Yankees team has had Ben Rice to count on, and here, needing a win, it saw its first baseman completely take over a game with two homers to lead a blowout 12-4 win over the Rays. Neither one of Rice’s homers represented the go-ahead hit or even came in moments where the game was close, but seeing how difficult each inning was for the Yankees’ bullpen, the impact of that performance cannot be understated.

In order to put up such lofty numbers, the Yankees offense had to handle one of its biggest foes in Drew Rasmussen. And in one half-inning, the Yankees managed to match all the runs they had scored against Rasmussen in the previous nine matchups versus the right-hander. When Junior Caminero hit a 438-foot solo shot in the first to give the Rays the lead, given the path of recent games, a certain level of skepticism was warranted about the team’s chances. However, the game is played on the field, and the Yankees overcame their negative momentum to score six runs in a third-inning rally. For context, the last time the Yankees scored at least six runs in a single half-inning was nearly a month ago, beating the White Sox on the road.

Although it wasn’t with a particularly hard-hit ball, the decision to start Max Schuemann in the outfield paid off for the Yankees, with his leadoff double starting the rally in the third. Speaking of unlikely hits, Ryan McMahon drove him in with a double of his own to put the Yankees on the scoreboard. It was a much-welcome (if unexpected) conclusion to a 12-pitch battle with Rasmussen. Then, Trent Grisham made do on his solid numbers against Rasmussen with a single, eventually driven in by Rice, who hit the first of his two homers in this game.

Unable to retire the following three hitters, Rasmussen didn’t even complete three full innings in his worst career start versus the Yankees. Reliever Cam Booser came in to try and strike out Jazz Chisholm Jr. on a lefty-lefty matchup with runners at the corners and only one out, but the Yankees’ second baseman played smart baseball and drove in his team’s sixth run on a sac fly, his third of the year.

Under normal circumstances, particularly with the quality of starting pitching the Yankees have had this year, a 6-1 lead would feel rather safe, even with a lot of baseball to be played. This bullpen game had a slightly different path, and right after the Yankees opened up this lead, the Rays started to chip away, even if it came with a bitter taste for the home team. Tampa loaded the bases ahead of Caminero against Jake Bird, and against all odds, the Yankees reliever induced a rally-killing double play. The scoring could’ve stopped at one, but Ryan Yarbrough, who came in for the lefty matchup, allowed a double to make it 6-3. Still, keeping it to just two runs when you loaded the bases before recording an out in the inning, it’s not half bad.

The Yankees got one back in the fourth on an Austin Wells solo shot of all ways—his first since the Knicks were in the middle of the NBA Finals, per our own John Griffin—but the theme of close calls would carry on for the Yankees bullpen throughout most of this matchup. Chandler Simpson led off that fifth inning with a triple, and Yarbrough, with a lending hand from Camilo Doval and the Yankees defense, would manage to strand him. Doval came in with two outs, and Nick Fortes hit a grounder to second that wasn’t easy to handle, but Jazz made the play and kept the game at 7-3. So often we’ve seen the game get away from Doval, but here he kept things in check, even if momentarily.

It was the same story all over again in the fifth as Doval was toying with fire by handing out a free pass and a hit-by-pitch in back-to-back at-bats with one out. The next in line of firemen out of the bullpen was Brent Headrick, punching out two straight hitters to strand a couple.

Finally, Rice had enough of these tense moments and gave the Yankees a bigger cushion with a three-run shot in the sixth to make it 10-3, but that didn’t stop the following innings from being entertaining.

Simpson hit his second triple of the game in the sixth, and this time he came around to score; later, Jasson Domínguez misplayed a fly ball in right, opening up room for a Rays big inning, but once again Headrick prevailed with multiple baserunners, stranding both.

With McMahon and Bellinger driving in runs in the seventh and eighth—and more importantly, Angel Chivilli being the only reliever to toss clean innings out of the Yankees bullpen—the final frames of this game came stress-free for Aaron Boone’s club. Leaving the Trop with a series split, the Yankees will face a strong Nationals offense to end the first half ahead of the All-Star break. First pitch from DC will be at 6:45pm ET with southpaws Ryan Weathers and Carson Palmquist squaring off.

Box Score

Manaea, offense, lead Mets to win

Jul 9, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets right fielder Carson Benge (3) reacts after hitting an RBI single against the Kansas City Royals during the fifth inning at Citi Field. Benge ended up on third base after a Royals error on the play. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The Mets played a rather complete game against the Royals; arguably one of the more complete wins on the season.

Sean Manaea was the standard bearer for the team, throwing seven excellent innings. He was, however, treated quite rudely to start, as Lane Thomas took the very first pitch of the game and deposited it into the seats. The Mets did not let that 1-0 deficit stand for long, as Birthday Boy Jared Young doubled home Carson Benge to tie the game in the second inning. The Royals took the lead back in the fourth, when Bobby Witt hit a no-doubter to make it 2-1.

The 2-1 deficit held until the fifth inning, where the Mets took control of the game for good. Tyrone Taylor, who entered the game as a Mark Vientos replacement, after Vientos took a painful looking hit by pitch off the hand and was forced to exit, led off the fifth with a homer to tie the game at two. Brett Baty followed that up with a single, stole second, and was pushed to third on an A.J. Ewing single (Ewing, by the way, saw his first professional innings at second base in this one, as he moved from center field to second following the Vientos’s exit). Juan Soto worked a walk, which loaded the bases for Bo Bichette. Bichette flew out to center in a sacrificial fashion, chasing Ewing home and giving the Mets a 3-2 lead. Back to back singles by Benge and Francisco Alvarez pushed the lead to 6-2.

The game was mostly in cruise control from there. Manaea did not surrender an earned run after the Witt homer, going seven innings in the process. The third Royals run was largely due to an two out error by Soto in the seventh, as he overran a single and allowed Nick Loftin to get into scoring position. Jac Caglianone doubled him home, which put Manaea in a bit of a pickle. He walked Isaac Collins, putting the tying run at the plate, but a bizarre bunt attempt by Tyler Tobert gifted the Mets a reprieve from the jam.

Soto made up for his gaffe in left field, leading off the seventh inning with an absolutely mammoth home run (435 ft. to be exact). The rest of the game was elementary. Huascar Brazobán and Devin Williams threw a scoreless eighth and ninth, respectively, striking out three and allowing one hit (a two out single in the ninth) combined, giving the Mets a series win over the Royals.

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Box scores

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Win Probability Added

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Carson Benge, +19% WPA
Big Mets loser: Luis Torrens, -9% WPA
Mets pitchers: +7%WPA
Mets hitters: +43% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Carson Benge’s RBI single in the fifth, +18.1% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Bobby Witt Jr.’s solo home run, -13.0% WPA

Tigers DFA Jahmai Jones, Eduardo Valencia promoted from Triple-A

Detroit Tigers Jahmai Jones (18) looks out at the scoreboard during his game against the Chicago White Sox at Comerica Park in Detroit on Sunday, June 21, 2026. | David Rodriguez-Munoz / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Well, the day was bound to come. Pinch-hit specialist Jahmai Jones has struggled mightily all season long, and while the Detroit Tigers were more patient than most liked, he just hasn’t been able to turn things around. Dillon Dingler’s hand contusion isn’t going to put him on the injured list, but it did precipitate a move to make sure the Tigers have the catching depth and another right-handed power bat on hand. As a result, catcher and first baseman Eduardo Valencia has been promoted from Triple-A Toledo to make his major league debut.

Manager A.J Hinch told reporters on Thursday that his All-Star catcher was day-to-day, with hopes that he’d be able to play in the Philadelphia Phillies series at Comerica Park this weekend. Dingler was clipped by a foul tip that struck his hand between the base of his right thumb and forefinger on Wednesday against the Athletics. The area swelled up on him, but x-rays revealed that there was no underlying damage. That will coax a sigh of relief out of Tigers fans as Dingler is currently playing like one of the top handful of players in baseball. Hopefully he can get right and pick up where he left off.

As for Jones, well you can’t say the Tigers weren’t patient. For a veteran with a long track record, three months to try and get jump-started would be a fairly long leash but not unusual. For a limited player with one specific role and only a partial season’s worth of success in the major leagues in his late 20’s, the Tigers weren pretty generous here, but the issue has mainly been a lack of an obvious replacement. The club already promoted right-handed hitting outfielder Ben Malgeri to help carry some of the load in the outfield, and Dingler and Spencer Torkelson have been the designated destroyers of left-handed pitching instead over the past five weeks.

Maybe Jones will catch on somewhere else for a brief look, but probably the best move for him is to just accept a Triple-A assignment with the Tigers and give himself some time to try and get it going at the plate again.

The 26-year-old Valencia was added to the 40-man roster last fall to protect him from the Rule 5 draft. The right-handed hitter broke out in a big way last year, hitting 24 home runs between the Double-A Erie SeaWolves and the Triple-A Toledo Mud Hens in 2025. After years of injuries and stagnant development in the farm system, it all finally started to come together for him. He got out to a slow start this season, but heated up into May and June. He now holds a 122 wRC+ with 16 home runs, a 10 percent walk rate, and a solid 20.8 percent strikeout rate. Much of that production came in June where he posted a 1.078 OPS with five home runs, six doubles, and a declining strikeout rate on the month.

The Venezuelan born Valencia has a balanced enough approach that he’s pretty good against right-handed pitching, but he does thrive against lefties. He holds an .892 OPS against southpaws this season, with a strikeout rate below 20 percent. He’s hit six home runs in 89 plate appearances, whereas he has 10 homers against right-handed pitching in 242 plate appearances.

The slow playing of Valencia was likely as much about his defensive role as his bat. The Tigers continue to work hard with him on his defensive progression, while mixing him in at first base more and more to open up another possibility for him positionally. He’s caught 47 games and played first base 23 times this season to date. That work was required before the Tigers were going to be comfortable with him in the field at the major league level. Valencia is decently capable behind the plate, but just doesn’t have the advanced framing, blocking, and throwing the Tigers demand from their catchers at the major league level. Learning first base has been a challenge for him too, and right now he’s mostly, like Jones, a bat without a home. However, he’s a much better bet than Jones to actually do some damage and give the Tigers some consistent at-bats. At the same time he’ll get to work with the major league staff on his defense and he has been improving at the first base position this spring.

With Jones DFA’d, however, it does mean that there’s at least a temporary role available for Valencia here if he’s productive at the plate. It’s not necessarily a quick stay until the Tigers are sure Dingler is good to go. Congratulations to Eduardo Valencia on his major league debut.

Royals meekly lose to Mets, drop series finale

Jul 9, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets left fielder Juan Soto (22) follows through on a solo home run against the Kansas City Royals during the seventh inning at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The Royals failed to capitalize on the chance to take two straight series as they fell to the Mets, 7-3, Thursday afternoon.

Kansas City led the game going into the bottom of the fifth, but for the third straight game, they allowed New York to score at least four runs in an inning, this time giving up five in the fifth. When the offense is plating 16 runs, that may not matter, but it certainly does when the lineup slumbers through an afternoon, like it did today.

The Royals led at two different points. Lane Thomas led off the game with a home run, his seventh of the season. After the Mets tied it in the bottom of the second, the Royals regained the lead in the top of the fourth when Bobby Witt Jr. hit his 13th home run. Not so lucky, that odd number.

Michael Wacha started for the Royals, yet couldn’t make it out of that forsaken fifth inning. Over 4-and-2/3 innings pitched, he allowed six hits, walked three, struck out five, and allowed one homer. In all, he surrendered six runs, all earned. He took the loss, dropping to 5-7.

The Mets took their first lead of the game in the fifth, then padded it, and never gave it up. Tyrone Taylor led off the inning with his sixth home run of the year, tying the game at 2-2. The Mets soon loaded the bases with just one out before Bo Bichette hit a sacrifice fly to give them the 3-2 lead. Carson Benge followed with a two-run bloop single. Before Wacha exited, he allowed one final hit, this time an RBI single by Francisco Alvarez that made it 6-2.

In the top of the seventh, the Royals thought about coming back, but ultimately reversed course. After the first two batters went down, Nick Loftin singled before scoring on Jac Caglianone’s RBI double. 6-3, Mets. Isaac Collins followed with a walk to bring up the potential tying run in the form of Tyler 12-for-12 Tolbert.

Naturally, with two outs, Tolbert bunted. The ball didn’t go all that far before Luis Torrens, the Mets catcher, scooped it up and fired to first for the third and final out of the inning. Once again, a bunt kills the comeback. I’m starting to think that bunts, not home runs, are the true rally killers.

The Mets almost immediately got that run back when Juan Soto uncorked his 21st home of the year in the bottom half of the frame to make it 7-3, Mets. And that ended up being the final score.

Loftin added a single in the ninth, so he ended the day as the only Royal with a multi-hit game. Congrats, Nick. Outside of Soto’s home run off reliever Beck Way, the bullpen didn’t allow any damage. Of course, Wacha had already taken care of that issue.

Sean Manaea, the Mets starting pitcher, finished the day with seven innings pitched, allowing six hits and a single walk while striking out six. He allowed two home runs.

With the loss, the Royals fall to 38-56. They continue their East Coast trip tomorrow as they travel to Baltimore to take on the Orioles. I’ll have that series preview for everyone early tomorrow afternoon.

Mets' Mark Vientos heading to IL after suffering fractured hand on HBP

It appears the Mets are going to be without Mark Vientos for quite some time. 

While interim manager Andy Green didn't want to go into specifics, he did confirm that Vientos fractured a bone in his right hand on the HBP that forced him out of Thursday's game in the bottom of the second. 

Vientos immediately turned and went down in a heap of pain after the Michael Wacha offering struck him on the hand, but he was able to make his way down to first after being checked out by trainers. 

He remained in the game to run the bases, but was pulled when the Mets took the field in the top half.  

It's unclear exactly how much time Vientos will miss, but he'll certainly require a lengthy IL stint. 

"Disappointed for what he's going through," Green said. "I popped in in the middle of the game to check on him when I had a quick minute, and it's just really disappointing."

Disappointing is the perfect way to sum up Vientos' season to this point. 

The 26-year-old brought over his struggles from last season into spring training and the beginning of this year, as he's been unable to regain his 2024 breakout form on both sides of the ball. 

Vientos was hitting just .211 with nine doubles, 11 homers, and a .641 OPS entering play on Thursday. 

He also slumped mightily with the glove as he made the transition over to first base full-time this year, sitting among the league's worst at the position in errors (7) and OAA (-9).

Jared Young ultimately took over the bulk of the playing time over the past few weeks. 

With Vientos sidelined, the Mets will likely continue to lean on Young as their everyday 1B until Jorge Polanco is eventually ready to work his way back into the field following his return from injury.

Is Chase Rate Always Bad

Premise of article

Important context that chase rate alone is not bad. "I think that goes back to knowing who you are," said Jake Burger. "For me, if I get passive and my chase rate goes down, I'm also probably not doing as much damage. I think a big thing is just knowing thyself. You know, there are certain guys in here who have an elite eye and disciplined approach, and certain guys in here who are like, "Hey, I'm getting mine off, and if it's out of the zone, it's out of the zone, but eventually [the pitcher is] gonna make a mistake. So I think it's definitely knowing thyself." - Burger

"That's probably true. In my experience, chasing pitches outside the zone has to do with a failure of being prepared for that at-bat and understanding what the pitcher is going to do. If you're fully bought into what your approach should be off of a certain guy when he throws certain pitches, you should be checking down on them anyways, regardless of where they're at, even if they're in the zone. So, for me and my experience, you know that doesn't change. It only changes if you're unprepared." - Max Muncy

"If I'm going off my career, like nothing's changed. I've critiqued some things, but I'm not up there thinking about if I'm gonna swing at a bad pitch. I'm swinging a good pitch, like, starts in my window that I want to swing. I'm swinging like, It's simple for me. I'm not trying to go up there and make sure it's a strike. It's too late for that. You know, like, pitchers are too good now, balls move way more." - Buxton

"If I chase, I chase. It's as simple as that."

"Early my career, I was chasing sliders like crazy, and it was like, All right, how are we gonna stop chasing? I was actually with James Ralston, the hidden coach for the Yankees. I was trying to find my foundation. Because growing up, I was good, but we didn't have no hitting coaches in my area. We didn't have all this technology like you played to figure it out. And when I got to the big leagues, I knew a little bit, but it wasn't nothing that I knew I needed to stay here. So it was like finding my foundation. And once I found a foundation, which is my base of my swing, and that changed my whole career, because now it was like, Oh, I can sit back on a breaking ball. Now I can sit back on a change up."

"That switches your mind to I'm a dangerous hitter. That's literally how I think when I go up there. I'm not worried about chasing; I'm worried about doing damage to you. For us in here, that's what we focus on."

"How you supposed to cover both [sides of the plate]? That's the hard part of the game. Like you pick a side, and when they start in that tunnel, you go for it. For me, it ain't no such thing as like, oh, you swung at a bad pitch. Yeah, but you got to throw me two more of them things for me to swing at."

Thanks to Kyle Bland

wRC+ and chase rate

Kyle Bland of Pitcher List

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Chase Rate Year over Year

Kyle Bland of Pitcher List

Statistically, hitters can't really improve their chase rate.

Chase rate and age

Kyle Bland of Pitcher List

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Which hitters are due for a summer power surge? Jo Adell, Wilyer Abreu, more

We know that home runs tend to increase in the summer months.A 2025 article by Garrett Heyd pointed out that warm air means the air molecules are farther apart, which makes the air less dense and allows the ball to travel farther. The article has far more scientific detail, but, for our purposes, warm and more humid weather means the ball travels farther, which is why we tend to see more home runs in the summer.

However, there's another element here as well. As I covered in my MLB notebook last week, the baseball has changed since the start of the season (because of a manufacturing issue), and that has led to less drag on the baseball, which means batted balls are now flying about five feet farther than they were in the early months of the season. So with warmer weather and a baseball that gets less drag, we should see far more home runs hit over the next couple of months. But which hitters would that impact the most?

In the hopes of trying to get the best sense of current batted ball quality, I limited my search to hitters' performances from May 20th on. That gave us about a 40-game sample size for most of the hitters, but I set the minimum plate appearances at 40. I then looked at hitters who had been barreling the ball more than league average, pulling the ball in the air around league average, and producing a lower HR/FB rate than average. The thought being that these hitters will naturally run into some more home run luck, but could also see an even bigger spike with the humid weather and the change in the ball.

Hitters Who Are Due to Hit More Home Runs

THE LEAGUE AVERAGE FROM MAY 20TH TO JULY 8TH IS A 7.6% BARREL RATE, 18,7% PULL AIR RATE, AND A 12.6% HR/FB RATE

NameBarrel%HRHR/FBPull Air%
Jackson Merrill0.1008460.12521
Max Muncy0.0850.12529
Corbin Carroll0.08593860.12244922.7
Jorge Soler0.11111130.1231.7
Tyler Stephenson0.08571430.1232.9
Dylan Crews0.09243760.1215.1
Royce Lewis0.12658250.11904838
Luke Raley0.09859240.11764729.6
Jesús Sánchez0.20754720.11111122.6
Dalton Rushing0.12162230.10344828.4
Matt McLain0.13559330.10344820.3
Cal Raleigh0.10256420.133.3
Mookie Betts0.08163370.09459521.1
Bobby Witt Jr.0.12550.0943418.3
Logan O'Hoppe0.1298730.08571419.5
Trevor Larnach0.0776740.08510626.2
Salvador Perez0.10743840.08333325.6

A few of these guys may see slight increases in home run production in the second half, but have already hit a decent amount since May 20th and have league average (or close to it) HR/FB numbers. Guys like Jackson Merrill, Bobby Witt Jr., Max Muncy, Corbin Carroll, and Dylan Crews aren't likely to increase their home run pace, but it is worth noting that Merrill and Crews each have six home runs in 42 games since May 20th. That's about a 22 home run pace over a full season (assuming they don't play a full 162 games). Those aren't exceptional numbers, but I think they're better numbers than most people assume you're getting from those two. In fact, Crews also has a 47.1% hard-hit rate over that stretch, which is 36th out of 163 qualified hitters. His .262 xBA and .461 xSLG are also much higher than what he has actually produced, and I think Crews could be in for a really nice second half.

Jorge Soler and Luke Raley are also power hitters who we know hit big flys in spurts. They both have been continuing to pull the ball in the air far more than average and barrel the ball well above league average as well. Hot stretches are going to come for both of them at some point. Dalton Rushing may also not play enough games when Will Smith is back, so I'm not going to go into detail on him, bu the does have a 12.2% barrel rate since May 20th and is getting the ball to the pull side in the air, so he likely should not have a below-average HR/FB ratio.

Cal Raleigh - Mariners

It's probably not a shock that I think Raleigh will hit more than the nine home runs he has through 61 games so far this season. Not just because he had 60 home runs last season, but because he has proven himself to be a consistent 30-plus home run hitter. Now, Raleigh's 61.5% pull rate since May 20th could be a touch too high. He was at 55.5% last season, so he has always been incredibly pull-focused but is perhaps a bit more so now as he tries to hit his way out of the slump. The injuries could also be taking a toll on his quality of contact, but he has a 10.2% barrel rate in this timeframe, and while that's low for him, it should amount to more than two home runs, especially when he is getting the ball to the pull side in the air so often.

Mookie Betts - Dodgers

Your buy-low window on Mookie Betts has slammed closed. The veteran was limited by injury early in the season and hit .194/.259/.408 in 25 games by the end of May. From June 1st on, he's hit .269/.326/.446 with five home runs and 14 RBI. His barrel rate is just above league average, and he's pulling the ball less than average; however, he is still getting it in the air to the pull side more than most. His exit velocities are not elite, but they're good enough that he should have a better than 9.4% HR/FB rate over this stretch. The only time he's been below 9.8% was in his injury-plagued season last year, and he's up at 10.9% this season, so more home runs should be coming.

Tyler Stephenson - Reds

Stephenson is an interesting name on here. His 8.5% barrel rate and 42.8% pull rate since May 20th are just above league average, but he's pulling the ball less than normal. Yet, his nearly 33% Pull Air Rate is far above the league average, so even if he's not pull-centric overall, he is doing a good job of elevating to the pull side. He's perhaps just elevating too much. His 19.7 degree launch angle this season is well above his 11 degree career mark, and his HR/FB rate is the lowest it's ever been. I like that he's trying to elevate the ball to the pull side more than before, and we clearly like his home park, so if he can get his launch angle back just a bit closer to his career norms, we could see a nice power stretch.

Royce Lewis - Twins

Since Royce Lewis came back to the big leagues on June 6th, he's hitting .255/.320/.455 with five home runs, 13 RBI, and a 12% barrel rate. He's also pulling the ball over 50% of the time and has the highest Pull Air% on this list at 38%. Now, we know that a high Pull Air% doesn't automatically mean more home runs, but we also know that more pulled fly balls leave the yard than any other type of contact. With Lewis hitting the ball hard and elevating it to the pull side, it's a bit surprising to see his HR/FB rate come in at a below-average mark. I'd expect that to change in the hot summer months.

Matt McLain - Reds

Matt McLain could lose his playing time when Ke'Bryan Hayes comes back, so we need to keep that in mind. From May 20th on, he's hitting .147/.250/.284 with three home runs and a 34% strikeout rate. That's not very good. He also has a 13.6% barrel rate and has a 17.5% blast rate per contact. Blasts are a Statcast metric that measures when a batter squares up a ball and does so at a high bat speed. According to Statcast research, blasts lead to a .563 batting average, 1.182 slugging percentage, and a +34 Run Value. Non-blasted batted balls average out to a .231 batting average, .295 slugging percentage, and -5 Run Value. So, pretty clearly, Blasts are usually balls that result in impactful contact. Well, McLain has 17.5% blasts/contact since May 20th, which is 52nd among 214 qualified hitters. That type of batted ball quality should not lead to such poor results, which is probably why his .397 xSLG since May 20th is well above his .284 actual slugging percentage. I know McLain is tough to hold onto right now, but there are some encouraging signs in his batted ball data.

Logan O’Hoppe - Angels

O'Hoppe is another fringe one-catcher league catcher that we were hoping to get more production from in drafts. Since May 20th, he's hitting .243/.264/.383 with three home runs and 15 RBI. That comes with a 24% strikeout rate, which is actually pretty good for O'Hoppe, and a 13.6% barrel rate. He's pulling the ball in the air just 19.5% of the time over that stretch, but that's still above league average, and his pull rate and fly ball rate individually suggest that he should be getting to the pull side in the air a bit more often. His 18.1% blasts per contact rate is also well above the 13.3% league average and puts him 47th out of 214 qualified hitters. His 8.6% HR/FB rate just feels too low for a guy with a 15% career rate. The big flys should be coming.

Trevor Larnach - Twins

Larnach is flying a bit under the radar this year because the Twins aren't particularly good, and Larnach doesn't really play against lefties, but he has been good. Since May 20th, he's hitting .310/.378/.481 with four home runs. He does have just a 7.6% barrel rate and 38% hard-hit rate, so he's not knocking the cover off of the ball, but he has a 26.2% Pull Air rate, so he is getting the ball in the air to the pull side far more often than league average. He also has a 17.4% blast per contact rate, so he's making damaging contact despite the average barrel rates. Given that and his pull air rate, I think he's likely deserving of better than an 8.5% HR/FB rate. He's still going to be more valuable in daily moves leagues, but he can be rostered in more formats.

Hitters Who Need to Pull More to See a Power Spike

THE LEAGUE AVERAGE PULL RATE FROM MAY 20TH TO JULY 8TH IS 41.2%

NameBarrel%HRHR/FBPull Air%Pull%
Fernando Tatis Jr.0.11034550.11363610.30.344828
Blaze Alexander0.10638330.111111140.354839
Lars Nootbaar0.10144920.09090911.60.405797
Kahlil Watson0.10526310.062515.80.342105
Wilyer Abreu0.11764740.06153818.60.338983
Jo Adell0.08461550.0943414.60.376923
Andy Pages0.09154960.08450718.30.352113
Austin Riley0.1098920.04651215.40.32967

All of these are hitters who are barreling the ball enough to hit for more power but might need to pull the ball more often. Now, we should note that hitters don't NEED to pull the ball to hit home runs. Many hitters have enough power to drive the ball out of the park no matter where they hit it. However, we do know that pulled fly balls leave the yard more regularly than any other type of contact, so these hitters looking to pull the ball a bit more often would likely help them to rack up more home runs. Andy Pages may be one of those guys, since he has six home runs in this stretch despite posting a 35.2% pull rate and a league-average Pull Air%. However, his 8.4% HR/FB rate suggests that there is some positive regression coming his way, and there could be more if he looked to get the ball in the air to the pull side more often.

I've been a big Blaze Alexander fan for much of the year, and I still think he should be used in many fantasy formats, but I'm not sure we're going to see a major power bump. He's hitting the ball harder than he has in years, but his barrel rate is down to 6.7%, and he's using the whole field more often, so he's not pulling the ball in the air that often. His approach works for his overall stat line, but not really for home run production. Similarly, Khalil Watson has become a full-time player for the Guardians of late and has a 10.3% barrel rate and above-average blasts per contact. That said, he doesn't really pull the ball much and has a 16% swinging strike rate, which means he may not make enough contact to really hit enough home runs. Lars Nootbaar also has the second-lowest Pull Air% of anybody on this list at 11.6%. His blast per contact rate is an elite 19.8%, and he has a 10.1% barrel rate, but we're going to need to see him elevate the ball in the air more often if power is going to come.

Fernando Tatis Jr. - Padres

We knew Tatis was going to see a bit of a power surge after it took him so long to hit his first home run, but I think his pace should continue to increase as the summer goes on. Since May 20th, he has an 11% barrel rate and has 25% blasts per contact, which is the 3rd-best mark in all of baseball. Yet, he has just a 30.5% flyball rate and a 34.5% pull rate, both of which are well below average. That has also led to a below-average 10.3% Pull Air rate; yet, despite that, he still has only a slightly below-average HR/FB rate. So he doesn't NEED to pull the ball to hit more home runs because he hits the ball so hard, but even a slight uptick in pull rate, with the warm weather supporting him, should lead to plenty more power production.

Wilyer Abreu - Red Sox

Wilyer hit 22 home runs for the Red Sox last season with a 15.2% HR/FB rate, so it's a bit surprising to see him sitting at just 10 home runs and an 8.1% HR/FB rate on the season despite still posting an above-average barrel rate and hard-hit rate. Since May 20th, he's actually 11th among qualified hitters in barrel rate and has a 55.6% fly ball rate. Yet, he's not pulling the ball enough or pulling the ball in the air enough. That's been a bit of an issue for him all season, with his pull rate down 9% from last year. He's not making more contact in the zone, so we can't point to an approach shift that is prioritizing contact over power. I have to think that Wilyer will get back to pulling the ball at his career-norm levels, which should see that HR/FB rate rise back up.

Jo Adell - Angels

You won't believe me when I say this article was drafted before Wednesday night's two-homer barrage, but you can see that the stats above don't reflect Adell's numbers after Wednesday. Now, I could just say "See what he did on Wednesday" and close the argument for why Adell should hit for more power in the second half, but I should probably give you the spiel I had drafted. Adell has an 8.4% barrel rate since May 20th, which is above average but not great for him. His bat speed remains elite, but I think his swing is a bit steeper than normal, which has led to fewer fly balls and more infield pop-ups when he does elevate the ball. A 14.6% Pull Air rate is not a great mark, but Adell hits the ball hard enough that a 9.4% HR/FB rate just feels wholly unsustainable for a hitter who has a 16.1% career rate.

Austin Riley - Braves

I know, you don't trust Austin Riley. I get it, but hear me out. Since May 20th, he has a 10.9% barrel rate and is lifting the ball 47% of the time. The issue is that he's still battling that indecision that led to less contact and just a 32.9% pull rate and 15.4% Pull Air rate over this timeframe. That's not the Riley we know. It's also part of the reason he has just a 4.7% HR/FB rate since May 20th. I can't tell you that Riley will definitely start pulling the ball more, but I can tell you that he's still hitting the ball hard and trying to elevate it. I can tell you that, on the season, his pull rates aren't that much different from what we've seen from him during his career. An 8.9% HR/FB rate from a career 17.5% hitter just doesn't seem like something that will withstand the warmer months.

Sean Manaea sharp, Mets' bats potent in 7-3 win over Royals

The Mets beat the Royals, 7-3, on Thursday afternoon at Citi Field in the finale of a three-game series.


Here are the takeaways...

- With the Mets trailing, 2-1, in the bottom of the fifth inning, their offense erupted against Royals starter Michael Wacha.

After Tyrone Taylor led things off with a homer to left field, Brett Baty singled. Following a line out by Luis Torrens, A.J. Ewing singled to bring in Baty (who had stolen second base), Juan Soto walked after working the count full, Bo Bichette delivered a sacrifice fly, and Carson Benge lofted a single to center field to bring home a pair -- on the play, an error on Royals center fielder Lane Thomas allowed Soto to come all the way around from first base. 

New York didn't stop there, with Francisco Alvarez ripping a single to left field to drive in another and Jared Young doubling as the Mets batted around.

All told, the Mets scored five runs on six hits in the frame to take a 6-2 lead.

After the Royals scratched out an unearned run in the top of the seventh, the Mets added on in the bottom half when Soto walloped a 435-foot homer to right center to increase New York's advantage to 7-3.

- On the first pitch of the game, Sean Manaea tried to sneak a 90.6 mph fastball past Thomas, but the pitch caught too much plate and Thomas blasted it over the left field fence for a leadoff homer and immediate Royals lead.

After retiring seven of the next eight batters (a Starling Marte infield single was the only blip during the stretch), Manaea was victimized again by the long ball to open the fourth inning, with Bobby Witt Jr. drilling a leadoff homer to left field to give Kansas City a 2-1 lead.

Manaea was economical, with his pitch count at 63 to start the sixth inning, and was able to make it through seven innings for the first time this season.

Overall, he allowed three runs (two earned) on six hits while walking one and striking out six. 

- The Mets made Wacha work hard early, including a nine-pitch at-bat by Bichette that resulted in a groundout to end the first inning. In the second,Benge led off with a walk and stole second base, eventually coming around to score on a Jared Young double into the right field corner that tied things, 1-1. 

After all the traffic on the bases in the second inning (on a double, walk, and hit by pitch), the Mets went down meekly for a while, with Wacha retiring eight straight batters.

- Devin Williams pitched a scoreless ninth inning to nail down the game, working around a two-out single.

- Mark Vientos exited the game ahead of the third inning after being hit by a pitch in the hand. With the Mets shuffling things around to deal with Vientos' absence at third base, A.J. Ewing slid from center field to second base -- getting his first taste at the position since making his big league debut in May. Ewing has plenty of minor league experience at second base, making 52 starts there over four seasons.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets open a three-game series against the Red Sox on Friday at 7:10 p.m.

Nolan McLean gets the start for New York, opposed by Sonny Gray for Boston.

Foster Griffin’s intriguing situation with trade deadline looming

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - JUNE 27: Foster Griffin #22 of the Washington Nationals pitches against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on June 27, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When the Nationals signed Foster Griffin in December of 2025, he was labeled as a low-upside reclamation project. The southpaw hadn’t thrown an MLB pitch since September of 2022, a season in which he posted an 8.33 ERA across 6.1 innings with the Kansas City Royals and Toronto Blue Jays. His prestige as a 2014 1st-round MLB Draft selection had long worn off, and he was forced to play in Japan for 3 seasons before earning another chance at the big leagues.

In need of pitching, Washington’s front office gave him that chance, likely hoping that the lefty, who had thrown only 8.0 MLB innings in his career, would be an arm who could provide some innings at the back end of the rotation. 110.1 innings and 19 starts later, Griffin has become the most effective pitcher in the Nats’ rotation and has picked up 10 wins before the All-Star break.

Looking even further ahead, the entire MLB media saw Washington as nothing more than a rebuilding team, with aspirations of a playoff berth multiple years away at best. 94 games into the 2026 season, the Nats remain above .500 as a team and are still very much in the mix for a Wild Card spot.

A high-end outcome for Griffin when he signed his 1-year, $5.5 million contract was seen as him becoming a decent trade candidate who could potentially net a prospect or two at the trade deadline. Now, the conversation surrounding the 30-year-old has grown increasingly complicated. There still isn’t a definitive answer as to how the Washington brass will approach the deadline, with the decision of whether to sell and stick to the rebuild or buy and believe in the youth movement far from a simple one.

If they were to go with the former, the reasons why he would be an attractive trade candidate are plentiful. His ERA ranks in the top 20 lowest marks in baseball, he continues to generate whiffs and work deeper into games, and his contract is incredibly cheap, especially compared to his production thus far. Griffin’s status as a 1-year rental and his lack of extended MLB success will give teams at least some level of pause, so moving him would bring back a good return but nothing overwhelmingly substantial.

Choosing to keep him and buy at the deadline in hopes of making a “Cinderella-esque” run in October is the aggressive, high-risk, high-reward move, and his pitching style has proven to be valuable in the postseason. The downside there, however, is obvious. Keeping your best trade piece could prove costly if the team fades in the second half, with deciding to pass on receiving possibly rebuild-accelerating prospects an occurrence that could hurt the club’s long-term outlook.

There are some saving graces in that scenario, though, with the main one being the option to begin extension talks with Griffin’s camp to lock him up for the foreseeable future. If nothing can get done on that front, extending the Qualifying Offer to him in free agency could give the Nats another draft pick if he signs elsewhere.

A final decision on Griffin’s future with Washington doesn’t have to come for a couple more weeks and will likely be heavily influenced by how the team performs after the All-Star break. Whichever way the front office goes, the Nats will have either a reliable starter for a playoff push or one of the most sought-after arms at the deadline.