Nine concerns the Dodgers should have about facing the Phillies in the NLDS

LOS ANGELES, CA - SEPTEMBER 16, 2025: Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Brandon Marsh (16), left, celebrates his three-run homer with Philadelphia Phillies first base Bryce Harper (3) against Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Justin Wrobleski (70) in the sixth inning at Dodger Stadium on September 16, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Phillies outfielder Brandon Marsh, left, celebrates his three-run homer with first baseman Bryce Harper against the Dodgers on Sept. 16. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

All due respect to the Cincinnati Reds.

But the Dodgers' first real test of their World Series title defense is about to begin this weekend.

After advancing past the plucky Reds and their 83-win roster in a best-of-three wild card series this week, the Dodgers will now face a true powerhouse in the best-of-five National League Division Series, matched up against a Philadelphia Phillies team facing unfinished business in the postseason.

For years, the Phillies have been building toward contention. In each of the last four years, they’ve reached the playoffs while increasing their regular-season win total.

Read more:Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Dodgers defeat Reds in Game 2 to advance to NLDS

However, the club’s recent October history has been filled with one disappointment after another: A loss to the Houston Astros in the World Series in 2022. An upset defeat at the hands of the Arizona Diamondbacks in the 2023 NL Championship Series. A four-game elimination to the rival New York Mets in last year’s NLDS.

The hope this year, coming off a 96-win regular season that gave the Phillies a first-round bye and home-field advantage in this NLDS, is that they finally have the path and the pieces to get over the hump. That, almost two decades removed from the franchise’s last World Series, they can climb to baseball’s mountaintop once again.

That was evident during the bye week, when the Phillies sold more than 25,000 tickets for fans to come watch a practice. It will be obvious Saturday night, when the series begins at what will be a raucous Citizens Bank Park.

Ahead of Game 1, here are nine things to know about the Phillies, and the concerns they present to the Dodgers in this NLDS:

A rotation of southpaws

The Phillies are not entering the postseason at full strength. Their staff ace, three-time All-Star right-hander Zack Wheeler, was lost for the season in late August because of a blood clot in his arm.

Their rotation, however, remains daunting nonetheless. And against the Dodgers, it might match up particularly well.

The Phillies' projected rotation for the NLDS includes three left-handed pitchers: Cy Young candidate Cristopher Sánchez (13-5, 2.50 ERA), former All-Star Ranger Suárez (12-8, 3.20 ERA) and talented 27-year-old Jesús Luzardo (15-7, 3.92 ERA).

The Dodgers’ record against left-handed pitchers this year: 24-23 (compared to a 69-46 mark against righties).

Granted, most teams have a harder time with lefties (the Phillies themselves are only 23-25). The Dodgers still ranked third in the majors in OPS and seventh in batting average against them. But for a team that could use as many runs as possible given the problems in the bullpen, getting three left-handed starters could make life tough.

Cristopher Sánchez in Game 1

Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Cristopher Sánchez throws against the Atlanta Braves on Sept. 19, 2023.
Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Cristopher Sánchez throws against the Atlanta Braves on Sept. 19, 2023. (John Bazemore / Associated Press)

Sánchez is lined up to pitch Saturday’s opener for the Phillies, which means he could be in play for a potential Game 4 start as well.

And while he might not replicate the dominance of Wheeler, who has a 2.18 ERA in his postseason career, the fifth-year southpaw could certainly come close.

In 32 starts this year, the 6-foot-6 sinker-ball specialist had 212 strikeouts in 202 innings, led all major league pitchers in Baseball Reference’s version of wins-above-replacement and finished the regular season allowing just total seven runs in his last six starts.

His postseason track record is limited, with a 3.68 ERA in two previous starts over the last two Octobers. But his arsenal profiles as premium, playoff-caliber stuff, featuring his mid-90s mph two-seamer (which helped him rack up one of the best ground-ball rates in the majors), a changeup to neutralize right-handed hitters (it had a .170 batting average against and 45% whiff rate) and a slider that, when on, adds another layer of unpredictability.

If it weren’t for Paul Skenes, Sánchez likely would have been the NL’s Cy Young frontrunner.

A potent offense

Few MLB lineups can rival the Dodgers’ combination of talent and production.

The Phillies might be the most potent exception.

This season, the team ranked eighth in scoring (the Dodgers were third), second in batting average (the Dodgers were sixth), fourth in slugging percentage (the Dodgers were second) and fourth in OPS (the Dodgers were second).

Read more:Shaikin: Why the Dodgers don't need to worry about rested starting pitchers for NLDS

They have the NL batting champion in former Dodgers shortstop Trea Turner. They have the league’s home run king in Kyle Schwarber, whose 56 long balls edged out Shohei Ohtani by one. And they have one of the game’s biggest stars in two-time MVP Bryce Harper.

The offense is also coming into the playoffs hot. In September, the Phillies posted their best team batting average and OPS of any month this season. That included a 15-run outburst in two games at Dodger Stadium that effectively ensured the Phillies would get a top-two seed in the NL playoff bracket.

The batting champion

Dodgers fans will need no introduction to Turner, who played with the club in 2021 and 2022 before signing an 11-year, $300 million contract with the Phillies (after the Dodgers failed to even make him a contract offer).

Turner’s Philadelphia tenure didn’t get off to the smoothest start. He missed the All-Star Game in 2023, and slumped so mightily at one point Phillies fans organized a stadium-wide ovation. His numbers were better last season, but he missed a month with a hamstring strain and then went just three-for-15 in the playoffs.

This season, on the other hand, has been a revival, as Turner won his second career batting title with a .304 average, stole his most bases (36) since 2018, and ranked fourth among MLB shortstop in outs above average.

And while he did miss three weeks in September with a hamstring strain, he returned in time for the club’s regular-season finale last Sunday.

The home run king

Philadelphia Phillies designated hitter Kyle Schwarber watches the ball after hitting a solo home run on Sept. 23.
Philadelphia Phillies designated hitter Kyle Schwarber watches the ball after hitting a solo home run against the Miami Marlins on Sept. 23. (Laurence Kesterson / Associated Press)

For the first time since 2022, Ohtani did not lead his league in home runs in this year.

Despite setting a personal high and breaking his previous franchise record, Ohtani’s 55 long balls still trailed Schwarber.

A longtime slugging threat now in his 11th MLB campaign, Schwarber had arguably his best career season this year, coupling his 56 homers with an MLB-most 132 RBIs, a .928 OPS that tied his career high, and a third consecutive 100-walk season.

He still strikes out a lot (197 this year). He still doesn’t hit for the best average (.240 this year, .231 in his career). But no one in the sport hits the ball so hard, so consistently. No one presents such a unique threat.

The two-time MVP

By Harper’s likely Hall of Fame standards, 2025 has been a bit of a disappointment.

The 32-year-old battled a wrist issue early in the year, was not selected for the All-Star at the halfway point, and finished the campaign with his lowest batting (.261) since 2019 and worst OPS (.844) since 2016.

But it’s still Bryce Harper.

He hit 27 home runs and 32 doubles. His slugging percentage jumped nearly 70 points in the second half. And over the last three years, no one has a higher postseason OPS (minimum 50 plate appearances) than Harper’s 1.153 mark. Only Schwarber has matched his 12 playoff home runs in this time.

The deadline acquisitions

Unlike the Dodgers, the Phillies were aggressive at the trade deadline. And because of it, they added what are now two key pieces.

In the outfield, Harrison Bader (who was also a Dodgers target this year) has been a revelation with a .305 batting average and .824 OPS in 50 games with the Phillies.

Even more important, however, has been the addition of hard-throwing closer (and another player linked to the Dodgers at the deadline) Jhoan Duran in a new-look bullpen.

Read more:Hernández: Can the Dodgers win a World Series with such an unreliable bullpen?

Early this season, the Phillies’ original closer, José Alvarado, received an 80-game PED that also made him ineligible for this year’s postseason. Thus, the Phillies acquired Duran from the Minnesota Twins, and have since watched him flourish.

Duran had a 2.18 ERA with the Phillies while converting 16 of his 19 save opportunities. He has devastating stuff, headlined by a 100-mph fastball and a whopping 98-mph splitter.

The only good news for the Dodgers: They’ve had success against him. In Duran’s three outings against the team this year, he yielded three runs (more than any other team scored off him) and gave up two homers (he only gave up one other all year).

Bullpen depth

Beyond Duran, the Phillies have a relatively set bullpen hierarchy.

David Robertson (the 40-year-old veteran who signed with the club midseason) and Matt Strahm (a lockdown lefty) are the primary set-up men. Tanner Banks (another lefty) and Orion Kerkering provide further middle relief depth.

With that unit in place, the Phillies’ bullpen excelled down the stretch. After the deadline, the group led the majors in saves (20), was charged with the fewest losses (four) and ranked 11th in ERA.

Walker Buehler’s new gig

Phillies pitcher Walker Buehler acknowledges the Dodger Stadium crowd during a game on Sept. 15.
Phillies pitcher Walker Buehler acknowledges the Dodger Stadium crowd during a game on Sept. 15. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

One other pitcher that could be in the Phillies’ NLDS bullpen: Walker Buehler, the former Dodgers star and 2024 World Series hero who finished this season in Philadelphia.

After signing with the Boston Red Sox in the offseason, then being released with a 5.45 ERA in August, Buehler found some late-season success with the Phillies, giving up just one run in 13 ⅔ innings over three outings (two starts and a long relief appearance) at the end of the year.

Buehler is unlikely to play a pivotal role this postseason. But he is in contention to be on the club’s postseason roster, likely as an option against right-handed hitters.

It means, a year after closing out the Dodgers' World Series championship, he will be part of the club trying to end their title defense. As if the team didn’t have enough else to worry about.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Austin Wells' timely hit, Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s speed fuel Yankees' 'scrappy' win over Red Sox

The Yankees needed everyone to pull out the Game 2 win over the Red Sox on Wednesday night, and that included catcher Austin Wells.

Wells, who has had a down sophomore season, delivered the go-ahead hit in the eighth inning of a tense contest with the Yankees' eternal rivals. In the eighth inning of a 3-3 game, Wells came up with two outs and Jazz Chisholm Jr. on first base. The Yankees backstop battled right-hander Garrett Whitlock -- who had already retired five of the seven batters he faced before facing Wells -- and worked him to a full count. On the seventh pitch of the inning, Wells lined a single down the right field line that scored the speedy Chisholm from first base.

The run was enough for the Yankees to stave off elimination and win, 4-3.

"Just got a pitch to put in play," Wells said of his at-bat after the game. "[Whitlock] was making some tough pitches throughout. Felt like I made a decent swing on one of his best pitches."

After going hitless in Game 1 of the Wild Card series, Wells showed why he is the regular catcher with his defense and ability at the plate. He made some crucial stops when Fernando Cruz made his daring escape in the seventh, and went 2-for-3 with the go-ahead hit. Although the 26-year-old had his first go-ahead hit of his postseason career (16 games) on Wednesday, he gave Chisholm his flowers for giving him the opportunity.

"That was a huge at-bat, allowed me to come up there with a guy on base," Wells said of Chisholm's at-bat. "That at-bat, that was one of the best I’ve seen from him all year."

More impressive was Chisholm's speed. He told Wells before he came up that anything hit to right field and he was going home, and the infielder made it ahead of the impressive throw from Nate Eaton in right. It took Chisholm Jr. 9.16 second to run from first to home on Wells' single, which is the third-fastsest time a player has done that in the postseason the Statcast Era (via Chris Kirschner).

That extra bit of speed helped propel the Yankees to a Game 2 win, and it took all the team had to even up the series.

"Took everybody. The defense was unbelievable tonight, great at-bats, great pitching on the mound," Wells said of the win. "This was a scrappy win. Literally took everything."

The Yankees will look to win back-to-back games when they take on the Red Sox in a win-or-go-home Game 3 on Thursday.

Frustrated no more, Jazz Chisholm Jr. is Yankees' 'game-changer' in season-saving win over Red Sox

Here’s how Jazz Chisholm Jr. coped with not playing in Game 1 of the Yankees’ Wild Card series with the Red Sox: He went home afterward and played MLB The Show, the baseball video game, online.

“I mercy-ruled someone,” Chisholm said, shrugging and smiling, as he sat in the interview room following the Yanks’ 4-3 Game 2 victory over the Red Sox on Wednesday night, a must-win that evened up the series at one game apiece and set up a corker of a deciding game for Thursday.

“That’s how I get my stress off.”

The team in the game that he created, the New York Aliens, has a few ringers, including himself.

Ken Griffey Jr., Jimmy Rollins,” Chisholm added. “It’s kinda like a cheat code. ... It’s a lot of fun.”

Honestly, it sounds like a blast. And Chisholm was clearly enjoying himself while talking about it. It was all perhaps an indication of the effervescence and spirit he brings to the Yankees, who, you may have heard, sometimes come off as a little too buttoned-up.

Chisholm plays flashy. He can be emotional. He likes, as Aaron Boone put it, “the stage.” It’s all OK.

As stress relief, his wind-down plan clearly worked. There were no signs of unhappiness in Game 2.

“All that was clear before I came to the field (Wednesday),” Chisholm said. “It’s all about winning.”

And Chisholm helped make the Game 2 victory happen. He was in on several of the biggest moments of the night, from starting a key double play in the third inning after the Red Sox had scored twice, to keeping a ball in the infield that prevented Boston from scoring in the seventh to, ultimately, the deciding play.

In the bottom of the eighth, Chisholm drew a two-out, seven-pitch walk and then scored the winning run, sprinting from first to home on Austin Wells' single down the right-field line. He was running on the pitch and knew the outfielder had to chase the ball toward the stands, and kept running. He slid headfirst to beat the throw.

“What do you expect?” Aaron Judge said. “Guy is a game-changer.”

A possible controversy bloomed late Tuesday night when Chisholm admitted he wasn’t happy he hadn’t started Game 1. The Yankees had just lost, were already facing elimination, and certainly didn’t need distractions in the cauldron of the playoffs. Boone had wanted to match up righties against Boston ace Garrett Crochet, an elite lefty, so Chisholm was out, though he subbed in late.

Asked if everything was OK between him and Boone, Chisholm responded:

“There is never a problem between me and Aaron Boone. He’s been my manager all year, and I’ve stood behind him all year. We always have disagreements. I mean, I played third base this year, and we had a little bit of a disagreement in that. But at the end of the day, I always stand with Boonie because he understands where I come from.

“He knows I’m a passionate player, and he knows I wear my feelings on my sleeve. He knows that I’m here to compete.”

For his part, Boone said before the game he expected Chisholm to “play his butt off for us tonight.” That’s exactly what happened, culminating in Chisholm’s sprint home with the eventual winning run.

“Obviously, moving on the pitch gave him a little bit of a head start there,” Boone said. “And his speed comes into play big-time there. Obviously, an exciting, big play.” 

Chisholm will be in the lineup for Game 3, Boone said, even though Boston is starting another lefty -- Connelly Early. Early is not Crochet, however -- who is? -- and when Boone makes lineup choices, “It’s not just ‘a lefty.’ It’s ‘what lefty?’” the manager said.

So Chisholm could have more big moments coming just at the right time -- no team has ever lost the opener of a Wild Card and won the series since the playoff format changed. Boone knows Chisholm wants those moments, too.

“He loves to play,” the manager added. “He feels a responsibility to us, his teammates. He and I have always been good, despite what you think may have happened (Tuesday). He’s a gamer.”

Major League Baseball games, video games, it doesn’t matter. Chisholm is on a roll in either category -- the other night, Chisholm said, his New York Aliens won that stress-buster game, 12-1.

Can he keep it all going in Game 3 of this AL Wild Card Series?

Ben Rice: 'I know my role' in Yankees' Wild Card series against Red Sox

Yankees manager Aaron Boone said after Wednesday's 4-3 Game 2 win over the Boston Red Sox that he had not yet "decided on" his starting catcher or first baseman for Thursday's winner-take-all Game 3, but Ben Rice's return to the lineup upon sitting Tuesday's 3-1 Game 1 loss "makes it tough."

"I haven't decided on my catcher, first base, all of that -- sit on that," Boone said when he was asked about his plan for Rice with Boston set to start left-handed pitcher Connelly Early next. "Early's pretty neutral, a little different than the first guy we faced, so we'll sit and talk about it and make that decision tonight."

Boone started first baseman Paul Goldschmidt and catcher Austin Wells while sitting Rice in Tuesday's seven-hit loss. Goldschmidt was 2-for-4 with leadoff singles in the first and ninth innings.

Rice started at first base and batted cleanup while Goldschmidt sat in Wednesday's 10-hit win, which included Rice's tone-setting home run -- a two-out, two-run shot that put the Yankees up 2-0.

"Obviously, Benny's playing at such a, such a (high level), swinging the bat so well, especially here down the stretch, so, yeah, he makes it tough," Boone said, referencing Boston starting southpaw Garrett Crochet in Game 1 and being set to start Early for Game 3 after going with right-handed pitcher Brayan Bello Wednesday.

"Again, it's not just, 'It's a lefty,' it's, 'What lefty? Is that guy going to be out there for six or seven innings?' I want to leverage a spot for, whoever my bench guys are, to have a good matchup and not three bad matchups that I can guarantee. So, all those things factor into it."

Rice cashed in on Cody Bellinger's two-out single after Trent Grisham and Aaron Judge went down to start the bottom of the first inning, taking Bello deep on his plate appearance's first pitch.

"It was great," Judge said. "The boys were locked in from the jump, but for us to get a two-run lead like that early was huge -- and especially to knock out a guy like Bello, who's kind of had our number over the years, was huge and it was kind of a bullpen game after that. But it was great for Ricey to get a start -- first pitch he sees in the postseason, to do that? Impressive."

Rice's 2-for-4 performance included a leadoff single in the sixth inning.

"I know my role, and yesterday my role was to be ready for a big at-bat off the bench and today I was starting," Rice said. "So, the approach doesn't change. I've just got to be prepared for every at-bat I get and every chance I get."

The 26-year-old slashed .255/.337/.499 with 26 home runs and 65 RBI in 138 regular-season games this year, his first full MLB campaign.

"Hits the ball hard every single time gets up there," Judge said. "Just great at-bats. Calculated. Knows what he's looking for. When he gets it, he usually doesn't miss. It's been fun to see his growth in the last season to this season."

Whatever Boone decides, Rice seems ready.

"It helps make you feel like you're in a good spot and, of course, I was able to help the team win today," Rice said. "So, just gives myself and the team a lot of confidence going into tomorrow."

Yankees edge rival Red Sox 4-3 to send AL Wild Card Series to decisive Game 3

NEW YORK (AP) — Jazz Chisholm Jr. zipped all the way home from first base on Austin Wells’ tiebreaking single in the eighth inning, and the New York Yankees extended their season Wednesday night with a 4-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox in Game 2 of their AL Wild Card Series.

Unhappy he was left out of the starting lineup in the opener, Chisholm also made a couple of critical defensive plays at second base that helped the Yankees send the best-of-three playoff to a decisive Game 3 on Thursday night in the Bronx.

In the latest chapter of baseball’s most storied rivalry, the winner advances to face AL East champion Toronto in a best-of-five Division Series beginning Saturday.

Ben Rice hit an early two-run homer and Aaron Judge had an RBI single for the Yankees, who got three innings of scoreless relief from their shaky bullpen after starter Carlos Rodón put the first two batters on in the seventh.

Devin Williams worked a one-hit eighth for the win, and David Bednar got three outs for his first postseason save. Judge pumped his fist when he caught Ceddanne Rafaela’s flyball on the right-field warning track to end it.

Trevor Story homered and drove in all three runs for the Red Sox, who won the series opener 3-1 on Tuesday night behind ace lefty Garrett Crochet.

With the score tied in the seventh, Chisholm saved a run with a diving stop of an infield single by pinch-hitter Masataka Yoshida. Story then flied out with the bases loaded to the edge of the center-field warning track to end the inning, and fired-up reliever Fernando Cruz waved his arms wildly to pump up the crowd.

Chisholm also made a tough play to start an inning-ending double play with two on in the third — the first of three timely double plays turned by the Yankees.

There were two outs in the eighth when Chisholm drew a walk from losing pitcher Garrett Whitlock. Chisholm was running on a full-count pitch when Wells pulled a line drive that landed just inside the right-field line and caromed off the low retaining wall in foul territory.

Right fielder Nate Eaton made a strong, accurate throw to the plate, but the speedy Chisholm barely beat it with a headfirst slide as Wells pumped his arms at first base.

New York took a 3-2 lead in the fifth when Judge’s sinking looper went off the glove of diving left fielder Jarren Duran for a run-scoring single. Trent Grisham scored from second after drawing a two-out walk and advancing on a wild pitch.

Story connected on Rodón’s third pitch of the sixth to tie it again with his second career postseason homer.

Rodón then issued a four-pitch walk to Alex Bregman. But after a mound visit from manager Aaron Boone, the left-hander avoided further damage when he got Carlos Narváez to ground into an inning-ending double play.

New York jumped ahead early when Cody Bellinger singled with two outs in the first and Rice, also left out of the lineup Tuesday against Crochet, lined the first postseason pitch he saw to right field for a two-run homer.

Story tied it with a two-run single in the third off Rodón, who prevented further damage by getting Bregman to ground into an inning-ending double play.

With the Yankees threatening in the third, Boston manager Alex Cora lifted starter Brayan Bello from his first postseason outing and handed the game to a parade of relievers who held New York in check until the eighth.

Up next

Hard-throwing rookie Cam Schlittler (4-3, 2.96 ERA) starts Game 3 for New York. The 24-year-old right-hander grew up in Boston, where he attended Northeastern University, but has said he always wanted to play for the Yankees.

Rookie left-hander Connelly Early (1-2, 2.33 ERA) will pitch for Boston in place of injured Lucas Giolito. Early has made four major league starts since his debut on Sept. 9.

Cam Schlittler ‘ready to roll’ as Yankees' Game 3 starter against Red Sox

The Yankees are turning to Cam Schlittler, the 24-year-old rookie right-hander, to climb the hill in Game 3 of the Wild Card series as they look to advance past the Boston Red Sox on Thursday night in The Bronx.

“He’ll handle it well,” manager Aaron Boone said about Schlittler ahead of Game 2. “I don't think it will be too big for him, and he will be ready to roll.”

Schlittler, a Massachusetts native, said he knew from public reports before Boone had the chance to tell him he’d be the starter, but that the way the last few days were setting up, he was expecting the nod.

“It’s important for them to put faith in me,” he said before the Yanks’ 4-3 win on Wednesday to keep their season alive. “I’m just making sure I’m taking this as another game, going to do my job.”

After making his big league debut just before the All-Star break, Schlittler posted a 2.96 ERA (3.74 FIP) and 1.219 WHIP in 73 innings over 14 starts with 84 strikeouts to 31 walks. 

The skipper called the right-hander “super coachable, accountable” and, after his call-up, gave the club a “shot in the arm when he became another stabilizing force in our rotation."

“Like how he has handled every situation he has found himself in this year," Boone said, “Starting with coming over and pitching a big spring training game for us late in spring, and, I thought, handled it and navigated it.

“And man, you saw the right competitive edge to him."

He saved his best outing for his last, allowing just two hits, two hit batters, and a walk over seven shutout innings against Baltimore while striking out nine on the regular season’s penultimate day.

“Been super impressed with, first and foremost, his stuff,” Boone said. “I mean, he's got… big stuff. It’s a big fastball. The cutter and this curveball are really good pitches for him. Really good competitor.”

Carlos Rodon said he’s excited to see the rookie go to work.

“Everybody knows the kinda stuff that Cam has, he’s equipped well with a pretty impressive arsenal,” the Game 2 starter said. “I’m excited to see how the energy and the crowd and how he interacts with that. It’s gonna be really good for him, he needs to experience this. 

“I’m looking forward to seeing him dominate tomorrow.”

Boston is countering with a rookie of their own in left-hander ConnellyEarly, the 23-year-old who pitched to a 2.33 ERA in just 19.1 innings over four starts since making his MLB debut on Sept. 9.

The heater, with a 98 mph average velocity, puts him in the 95th percentile in the majors. And that pitch, which he's using 54.8 percent of the time, has helped him tally a 27.6 strikeout rate (82nd percentile).

The right-hander will face a different lineup after the Yanks started back-to-back lefties, but Schlittler still believes there was something to gain from watching Boston’s hitters these past two games.

“It’s more of the mentality and the mental side of the game, as well,” Schlittler said. “Being able to listen in to what they’re doing and the adjustments they’re making is gonna make things a little bit easier for me.

“And it’s all learning points, so for me to experience playoff baseball for two days before I get throwing is definitely a good experience.”

While one game a career does not make, Boone was asked if Schlittler’s debut season has made it seem like the Yanks have a rotation piece for years to come? “It does feel that way.”

Austin Wells' go-ahead hit helps Yankees stave off elimination in 4-3 win over Red Sox in Game 2 of Wild Card series

The 2025 edition of the Yankee-Red Sox rivalry will have one more installment – a winner-advances, loser-goes-home Game 3 after the Yanks evened their Wild Card Series Wednesday night with a dramatic 4-3 victory. 

Jazz Chisholm Jr., who had been unhappy that he did not start in Game 1, made perhaps the biggest play of Game 2, scoring all the way from first base on a single down the right-field line by Austin Wells with two outs in the eighth inning. Chisholm, running on the pitch, slid headfirst to beat the throw, sending the Yankee Stadium crowd into a frenzy.

The Yankees scored the winning run off reliever Garrett Whitlock, whom the Red Sox took from the Yankees in the Rule 5 draft in December of 2020. 

Here are the takeaways...

-Yankees closer David Bednar, who had allowed a run in Game 1, preserved the lead with a spotless ninth, striking out Wilyer Abreu and Jarren Duran and getting Ceddane Rafaela on a scary fly ball to deep right.

-Ben Rice gave the Yankees a quick 2-0 lead, slamming the first postseason pitch he ever saw for a two-run homer in the first inning. There’s a nice rivalry footnote to the homer, too, considering Rice is a Massachusetts native who nonetheless rooted for the Yankees as a kid. Cody Bellinger set the whole thing up with a two-out single to bring Rice to the plate. Rice became the first Yankee to hit a home run in his first career postseason at-bat since Shane Spencer in 1998, according to ace MLB researcher Sarah Langs. 

-Rice was not in the Game 1 lineup against Garrett Crochet, just like fellow lefties Chisholm and Ryan McMahon. But all three were back as starters against Boston righty Brayan Bello, who had a 1.44 ERA in his five previous starts at Yankee Stadium. Bello allowed two runs and four hits in 2.1 innings, getting a quick hook from Red Sox manager Alex Cora. With two on and one out in the third, Cora called for lefty Justin Wilson to face Bellinger and Rice, and Wilson wriggled free of trouble. First, he got Bellinger on a fly to left that was so short it prevented Trent Grisham from trying to score. Then he retired Rice on a hard-hit liner that was whacked at right fielder Nate Eaton. The Red Sox had six left-handed relievers listed on the scorecard given out to the media. 

-The Red Sox tied the score at 2 in the third inning on a rally started by their 7-8-9 hitters. Duran led off with a single and Rafaela walked on a 3-2 pitch. No. 9 hitter Nick Sogard bunted and Carlos Rodón pounced on it, but he bounced his throw to Chisholm covering at first. The throwing error loaded the bases with none out. Rodón struck out Rob Refsnyder, but Trevor Story, who had been ill earlier in the series, smacked a two-run single into center field. The inning could’ve been worse, but Rodón got Alex Bregman to hit into a double-play to end it. 

-Aaron Judge, who had two hits in Game 1, gave the Yanks a temporary 3-2 lead with an RBI single in the fifth inning, set up by Grisham’s two-out walk. Judge looped a fly into left field off reliever Justin Slaten that Duran charged and dove for, but the ball glanced off his glove as Grisham scampered around third and scored. 

-The Red Sox quickly answered, however, when Story led off the sixth with a homer to left off Rodón, knotting the score at 3. It was a mistake pitch, 95 miles per hour, right down the middle. After Rodón walked Alex Bregman, Aaron Boone visited the mound as reliever Fernando Cruz started to warm up. Rodón remained in the game and it was the right call – he retired Romy Gonzalez on a pop-up and got Carlos Narváez, the ex-Yankee catcher who’s had several tough at-bats in the series, to hit into a 5-4-3 double play. 

-Boston mounted a big threat in the seventh when Rodón walked Eaton on four pitches leading off and then threw three straight balls, including a wild pitch, to Duran, before plunking him. The HBP was the last pitch Rodón threw – Boone emerged from the dugout to bring in Cruz. Rafaela tried to sacrifice, but his bunt was a disaster, a pop right to Cruz for the first out. One out later, pinch-hitter Masataka Yoshida hit a grounder toward the middle that Chisholm dove for and stopped. But he couldn’t get much on the throw, which bounced twice, and Yoshida had an infield hit. Eaton might have scored from third on the play had he kept running. Then Story smashed a deep fly to center that had the crowd gasping, but Grisham flashed back to catch it, ending the threat. 

-Rodón threw six-plus innings and allowed three runs and four hits. He struck out six and walked three. Rodón, who had a terrific regular season with 18 wins and a 3.09 ERA, lowered his career postseason ERA from 6.64 to 6.15.

-Devin Williams threw a scoreless eighth for the Yanks, pitching around a leadoff single by Bregman. Williams started a 1-6-3 double play with a shaky throw to second, but Anthony Volpe leapt to snare it, landed on the bag and threw to first to complete the DP. Then Williams struck out Narváez, fooling him so badly with his “Airbender” changeup that Narváez’s bat flew out of his hands and actually hit Eaton, who was prepping to bat next. 

Game MVP: Austin Wells

Let’s not overthink this – Wells got the winning hit, he’s the star of the game. He finished 2-for-3 with a walk.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees and Red Sox play a win-or-go-home Game 3 on Thursday night. First pitch is set for 6:08 p.m. or 8 p.m., depending on the result of Game 2 of the Cincinnati - Los Angeles series.

New York will send rookie Cam Schlittler on the mound while the Red Sox are sending out rookie left-hander Connelly Early.

What to know for the ALDS, NLDS: Matchups, schedule, format and how to watch

What to know for the ALDS, NLDS: Matchups, schedule, format and how to watch originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The 2025 MLB playoffs are moving to the Division Series.

The American League’s No. 4-seeded New York Yankees and No. 6 Detroit Tigers along with the National League’s No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers and No. 4 Chicago Cubs have survived the Wild Card Series and advanced to the second round of the postseason.

The Division Series will see the introduction of the top two seeds in each league to the postseason. The AL’s No. 1 Toronto Blue Jays and No. 2 Seattle Mariners, and the NL’s No. 1 Milwaukee Brewers and No. 2 Philadelphia Phillies earned byes past the Wild Card Series and into the Division Series.

The defending World Series champion Dodgers were the only team to record a Wild Card Series sweep, outscoring the No. 6 Cincinnati Reds 18-9 over two games. The Dodgers have reached the NLDS for a staggering 13th straight season, as they try to become the first back-to-back champion since the Yankees pulled off a three-peat from 1998-2000.

The Cubs were among three teams to emerge victorious in winner-take-all Game 3s. Chicago, after dropping Game 2 to the No. 5 San Diego Padres, booked its first trip to the NLDS since 2017 with a 3-1 Game 3 victory.

Over in the AL, the Tigers took quite the route to their second straight ALDS appearance. Detroit blew a 12.5-game lead for first in the AL Central over the final month-plus of the regular season, as the Cleveland Guardians snatched the division crown. But the Tigers got the last laugh over their division rivals, eliminating the No. 3 Guardians with a 6-3 Game 3 win.

The final Wild Card Series matchup featured baseball’s most bitter rivalry between the No. 4 Yankees and No. 5 Boston Red Sox. After losing Game 1, the Yankees outlasted the Red Sox in Game 2 before bouncing Boston with a 4-0 win in Game 3. Yankees rookie right-hander Cam Schlittler starred in the series-clincher, striking out 12 over eight shutout innings in his playoff debut. New York is looking to go from runners-up to champions after losing in last year’s Fall Classic.

So, what are the ALDS and NLDS matchups? And when does the Division Series begin? Here’s what we know:

Are teams reseeded in the MLB playoffs?

There isn’t any reseeding in the MLB postseason, which follows a bracket format.

What are the 2025 ALDS, NLDS matchups?

The Dodgers will next put their title defense on the line against the NL East champion Phillies, while the Cubs will take on the MLB-best Brewers in an NL Central battle.

The AL side of the bracket will also have a divisional showdown, as the Yankees go from facing one AL East foe to another in the league-best Blue Jays. The Tigers, meanwhile, will square off against the AL West champion Mariners.

Here’s a full look at the bracket:

American League

  • No. 2 Seattle Mariners vs. No. 6 Detroit Tigers
  • No. 1 Toronto Blue Jays vs. No. 4 New York Yankees

National League

  • No. 2 Philadelphia Phillies vs. No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers
  • No. 1 Milwaukee Brewers vs. No. 4 Chicago Cubs

When do the 2025 ALDS, NLDS start?

All four Division Series begin Saturday, Oct. 4.

How many games are in the ALDS, NLDS?

Following best-of-three Wild Card Series, the postseason moves to a best-of-five format for the Division Series. The higher seed hosts Games 1, 2 and, if necessary, 5.

What is the 2025 ALDS, NLDS schedule?

Here’s a series-by-series look at the Division Series schedule (this section will be updated as details are announced):

American League

No. 1 Toronto Blue Jays vs. No. 4 New York Yankees

  • Game 1: Yankees at Blue Jays — Saturday, Oct. 4, 4:08 p.m. ET, Fox
  • Game 2: Yankees at Blue Jays — Sunday, Oct. 5, 4:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 3: Blue Jays at Yankees — Tuesday, Oct. 7, 8:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Blue Jays at Yankees — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 7:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Yankees at Blue Jays — Friday, Oct. 10, 8:08 p.m. ET, Fox

No. 2 Seattle Mariners vs. No. 6 Detroit Tigers

  • Game 1: Tigers at Mariners — Saturday, Oct. 4, 8:38 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 2: Tigers at Mariners — Sunday, Oct. 5, 8:03 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 3: Mariners at Tigers — Tuesday, Oct. 7, 4:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Mariners at Tigers — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 3:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Tigers at Mariners — Friday, Oct. 10, 4:40 p.m. ET, FS1

National League

No. 1 Milwaukee Brewers vs. No. 4 Chicago Cubs

  • Game 1: Cubs at Brewers — Saturday, Oct. 4, 2:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 2: Cubs at Brewers — Monday, Oct. 6, 9:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 3: Brewers at Cubs — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 5:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Brewers at Cubs— Thursday, Oct. 9, 9:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Cubs at Brewers — Saturday, Oct. 11, 4:38 p.m. ET, TBS

No. 2 Philadelphia Phillies vs. No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers

  • Game 1: Dodgers at Phillies — Saturday, Oct. 4, 6:38 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 2: Dodgers at Phillies — Monday, Oct. 6, 6:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 3: Phillies at Dodgers — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 9:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Phillies at Dodgers — Thursday, Oct. 9, 6:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Dodgers at Phillies — Saturday, Oct. 11, 8:08 p.m. ET, TBS

What TV channels are the ALDS, NLDS on?

ALDS games will air across Fox and FS1.

TBS will broadcast the NLDS games.

How to stream the ALDS, NLDS live online

The ALDS action can be streamed on FoxSports.com and the Fox Sports app.

NLDS games can be streamed on TBS.com, the TBS app and HBO Max.

What to know for the ALDS, NLDS: Matchups, schedule, format and how to watch

What to know for the ALDS, NLDS: Matchups, schedule, format and how to watch originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The 2025 MLB playoffs are moving to the Division Series.

The American League’s No. 4-seeded New York Yankees and No. 6 Detroit Tigers along with the National League’s No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers and No. 4 Chicago Cubs have survived the Wild Card Series and advanced to the second round of the postseason.

The Division Series will see the introduction of the top two seeds in each league to the postseason. The AL’s No. 1 Toronto Blue Jays and No. 2 Seattle Mariners, and the NL’s No. 1 Milwaukee Brewers and No. 2 Philadelphia Phillies earned byes past the Wild Card Series and into the Division Series.

The defending World Series champion Dodgers were the only team to record a Wild Card Series sweep, outscoring the No. 6 Cincinnati Reds 18-9 over two games. The Dodgers have reached the NLDS for a staggering 13th straight season, as they try to become the first back-to-back champion since the Yankees pulled off a three-peat from 1998-2000.

The Cubs were among three teams to emerge victorious in winner-take-all Game 3s. Chicago, after dropping Game 2 to the No. 5 San Diego Padres, booked its first trip to the NLDS since 2017 with a 3-1 Game 3 victory.

Over in the AL, the Tigers took quite the route to their second straight ALDS appearance. Detroit blew a 12.5-game lead for first in the AL Central over the final month-plus of the regular season, as the Cleveland Guardians snatched the division crown. But the Tigers got the last laugh over their division rivals, eliminating the No. 3 Guardians with a 6-3 Game 3 win.

The final Wild Card Series matchup featured baseball’s most bitter rivalry between the No. 4 Yankees and No. 5 Boston Red Sox. After losing Game 1, the Yankees outlasted the Red Sox in Game 2 before bouncing Boston with a 4-0 win in Game 3. Yankees rookie right-hander Cam Schlittler starred in the series-clincher, striking out 12 over eight shutout innings in his playoff debut. New York is looking to go from runners-up to champions after losing in last year’s Fall Classic.

So, what are the ALDS and NLDS matchups? And when does the Division Series begin? Here’s what we know:

Are teams reseeded in the MLB playoffs?

There isn’t any reseeding in the MLB postseason, which follows a bracket format.

What are the 2025 ALDS, NLDS matchups?

The Dodgers will next put their title defense on the line against the NL East champion Phillies, while the Cubs will take on the MLB-best Brewers in an NL Central battle.

The AL side of the bracket will also have a divisional showdown, as the Yankees go from facing one AL East foe to another in the league-best Blue Jays. The Tigers, meanwhile, will square off against the AL West champion Mariners.

Here’s a full look at the bracket:

American League

  • No. 2 Seattle Mariners vs. No. 6 Detroit Tigers
  • No. 1 Toronto Blue Jays vs. No. 4 New York Yankees

National League

  • No. 2 Philadelphia Phillies vs. No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers
  • No. 1 Milwaukee Brewers vs. No. 4 Chicago Cubs

When do the 2025 ALDS, NLDS start?

All four Division Series begin Saturday, Oct. 4.

How many games are in the ALDS, NLDS?

Following best-of-three Wild Card Series, the postseason moves to a best-of-five format for the Division Series. The higher seed hosts Games 1, 2 and, if necessary, 5.

What is the 2025 ALDS, NLDS schedule?

Here’s a series-by-series look at the Division Series schedule (this section will be updated as details are announced):

American League

No. 1 Toronto Blue Jays vs. No. 4 New York Yankees

  • Game 1: Yankees at Blue Jays — Saturday, Oct. 4, 4:08 p.m. ET, Fox
  • Game 2: Yankees at Blue Jays — Sunday, Oct. 5, 4:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 3: Blue Jays at Yankees — Tuesday, Oct. 7, 8:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Blue Jays at Yankees — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 7:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Yankees at Blue Jays — Friday, Oct. 10, 8:08 p.m. ET, Fox

No. 2 Seattle Mariners vs. No. 6 Detroit Tigers

  • Game 1: Tigers at Mariners — Saturday, Oct. 4, 8:38 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 2: Tigers at Mariners — Sunday, Oct. 5, 8:03 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 3: Mariners at Tigers — Tuesday, Oct. 7, 4:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Mariners at Tigers — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 3:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Tigers at Mariners — Friday, Oct. 10, 4:40 p.m. ET, FS1

National League

No. 1 Milwaukee Brewers vs. No. 4 Chicago Cubs

  • Game 1: Cubs at Brewers — Saturday, Oct. 4, 2:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 2: Cubs at Brewers — Monday, Oct. 6, 9:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 3: Brewers at Cubs — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 5:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Brewers at Cubs— Thursday, Oct. 9, 9:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Cubs at Brewers — Saturday, Oct. 11, 4:38 p.m. ET, TBS

No. 2 Philadelphia Phillies vs. No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers

  • Game 1: Dodgers at Phillies — Saturday, Oct. 4, 6:38 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 2: Dodgers at Phillies — Monday, Oct. 6, 6:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 3: Phillies at Dodgers — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 9:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Phillies at Dodgers — Thursday, Oct. 9, 6:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Dodgers at Phillies — Saturday, Oct. 11, 8:08 p.m. ET, TBS

What TV channels are the ALDS, NLDS on?

ALDS games will air across Fox and FS1.

TBS will broadcast the NLDS games.

How to stream the ALDS, NLDS live online

The ALDS action can be streamed on FoxSports.com and the Fox Sports app.

NLDS games can be streamed on TBS.com, the TBS app and HBO Max.

What we learned in Red Sox' Game 2 loss: Critical mistakes from Duran, Rafaela

What we learned in Red Sox' Game 2 loss: Critical mistakes from Duran, Rafaela originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Red Sox let a very winnable game get away from them on Wednesday night. And now, their season will be hanging in the balance on Thursday night.

The whiplash of consequences in the Wild Card Round is just that severe.

And while Alex Cora’s bold decision to yank Brayan Bello with one out in the third inning may be the headline coming out of New York’s 4-3 win, the game was lost in the smaller moments of the game.

To wit: Top of the seventh inning, tie game, two on, nobody out after an absolute gift from Aaron Boone to leave Carlos Rodon in the game after the starter’s tank had clearly hit E. Ceddanne Rafaela digs in against reliever Fernando Cruz with one of the most basic assignments in sports: Bunt the baseball.

Rafaela couldn’t do it.

After reaching out and fouling off a splitter that was well off the plate, Rafaela … did it again. This time he popped it up to pitcher Fernando Cruz, returning the favor for Boone’s managerial mistake by gifting the Yankees a free out.

Cruz, with the help of a Jazz Chisholm diving stop and the helping hands of baseball’s BABIP gods, pitched out of the inning without allowing the Red Sox to take a lead after the Rafaela mishap.

Rafaela, who did walk in his first plate appearance after his 11-pitch walk in Game 1, also chased a pitch two feet off the plate with two outs in the ninth inning to put himself in an 0-2 hole against David Bednar.

Yet that bad baseball may pale in comparison to what Jarren Duran did — or didn’t do — in the fifth inning. Because all Duran had to do was catch the baseball. He did not.

Despite the dive, and despite the official scorer’s ruling that it was a hit, that was a routine play at any level of baseball, let alone the majors. Yet Duran kicked it, allowing the Yankees to take a 3-2 lead in the fifth.

Duran is 1-for-7 at the plate over the first two games of the series, too, making for a frustrating series thus far.

Getting a bunt down. Making a routine catch. These are plays that have to be made for a team to win playoff games and playoff series. Yet they weren’t in Game 2, and they’re major reasons why the Red Sox will be facing elimination on Thursday night in the Bronx.

Here’s more of what we learned from what was another postseason classic played by the Red Sox and Yankees.

Alex Cora is a madman

Point-blank, period. Alex Cora is crazy.

How often does a manager, in a game where his team can’t be eliminated, pull his No. 2 starter after just 28 pitches in a 2-2 game? The answer, dear reader, is NEVER. Yet Cora, who simply carries himself differently in October, didn’t hesitate to make the move in the third.

And you know what? It worked. Barely. Justin Wilson entered in relief and, after getting Cody Bellinger to fly out harmlessly to left, served up an absolute cookie to Ben Rice.

Rice, who homered in his first at-bat, actually hit this one harder, but the 109.4 mph liner was hit directly at right fielder Nate Eaton, who made the catch to end the threat.

But technically, it worked. And after the bullpen essentially got Monday and Tuesday off (except for closer Aroldis Chapman), Cora knew he had everybody at his disposal in this one. The quartet of Wilson, Justin Slaten, Steven Matz and Zack Kelly would have given him three scoreless inning, if not for Duran’s gaffe in left. And Garrett Whitlock giving up the game-winning run in the eighth certainly wasn’t the manager’s fault.

While the Yankees had only scored on Rice’s first-inning homer, Cora watched Bello and didn’t like what he saw. He made an executive decision that came with tremendous risk, and it proved to be a good one.

Double plays were a killer

Nothing kills momentum in the playoffs more than an ill-timed double play. The Red Sox had three of them.

Top of the third, tie game, two on, one out: After Trevor Story singled home two runs to tie the game at 2-2, Alex Bregman had the chance to open the floodgates. Instead, he sent a 1-1 changeup to second base, starting a routine 4-6-3 double play.

Top of the sixth, tie game, one on, one out: After Trevor Story homered to tie the game (sensing a theme there) to lead off the inning, Bregman walked. Aaron Boone visited the mound but kept Carlos Rodon in the game. The starter was vulnerable. Romy Gonzalez, though, popped out, before Carlos Narvaez grounded to third base for a 5-4-3 double play, on the first pitch of his at-bat. That could have been the inning that Boston won the game. Instead, the threat was quickly extinguished.

Top of the eighth, tie game, one on, nobody out: After Bregman put in a professional at-bat and led off with a single against Devin Williams, Nathaniel Lowe entered as a pinch hitter with the go-ahead run on base. Lowe, though, chased a changeup well off the plate, weakly grounding back to the mound to start a 1-6-3 double play. Another rally ended before it could even begin.

Obviously, they’re not trying to ground into double plays, but the results are what they are. In Game 2, they were devastating for the Boston offense.

Red Sox infield defense: Strong

Nick Sogard made a very nice play in the third inning, moving to his left, going into a slide, fielding the ball, and pivoting to make a strong throw to second base to gun down the lead runner.

(Sogard can also execute a sacrifice bunt, by the way.)

Alex Bregman also made a few plus-level plays at third, though that’s nothing new at this point. His night included inning-ending assists in the second (5-4-3 double play), fourth and sixth. Trevor Story looks to have moved past his late-season throwing issues, too.

It didn’t help win them this game, but it’s been sharp, and it will be a factor if they are able to advance with a win on Thursday.

Nate Eaton should have scored

I actually changed my mind on this, because it’s absurd to have expected Nate Eaton to busting it around third base on a ground ball behind second base with the hopes of scoring on an infield hit and errant throw to first base. Lots of premonition would have been necessary for Eaton to have pulled that off and scored the go-ahead run in the seventh inning.

Yet after looking at it again, there are some very simply reasons for thinking Eaton should have scored.

This took place, of course, when Masataka Yoshida delivered a pinch-hit, infield single. Jazz Chisholm made a diving stop, which prevented runs from crossing the plate, but his throw to first skipped away from first baseman Ben Rice, opening the door for one of baseball’s fastest players to make a run for home.

Initially, I felt Eaton should not have been expected to score, as everything took place behind him. If a throw to first base was simply late but not errant, then Eaton would have been a dead duck whipping around third and heading to home. The tag play at the plate would have been deflating for the Red Sox and sent Yankee Stadium into a delirium.

But watching the high-home camera, it’s clear that Eaton and third base coach Kyle Hudson should have been more prepared to pounce on the opportunity.

Eaton was at third base and looking at Chisholm when the second baseman made the throw. Meanwhile, third baseman Ryan McMahon was almost standing in the shortstop position, paying no attention to Eaton. With speed and base running being major factors of Eaton’s game, he should have known that he had plenty of room to get frisky by bouncing off third base toward home plate, knowing that there was nobody at the bag to tag him out if a throw came that way.

Yet instead of aggressively bouncing down the line, Eaton stopped and watched the throw, and he was actually moving back to third base when the ball skipped away from Rice.

Eaton should have been 20-25 feet down the line when the ball skipped away, but he lacked awareness of where the third baseman was, and he didn’t innately sense the opportunity to put himself in position to make a game-changing play on the bases.

Cora didn’t appreciate hearing such a suggestion in his postgame press conference.

“That’s their opinion,” Cora said when told the broadcast suggested Eaton could have scored. “I think it’s easy from up there to say that he could score. They’re not down there with us.”

They’re not … but they’re right. That was a major missed opportunity.

Fernando Cruz used up his World Series celebration

In the unlikely event that Fernando Cruz finds himself in the position to close out the World Series, and in the just-as-unlikely event that he pulls it off, the 35-year-old won’t be able to debut his top-level celebration. He used that one up in Game 2 of the Wild Card Series after giving up a 100-plus mph line drive that managed to find some leather on the warning track in center field.

It was A LOT.

Trevor Story came up about 15 feet shy of making this, officially, The Trevor Story Game™. A grand slam, after already driving in the first three runs of the game, to eliminate the Yankees in their stadium would’ve been one for the ages. But not on this night.

It’s just a shame that the broadcast didn’t have the WHOOP heart rate monitors that we saw in the Ryder Cup for Cruz. He might’ve made that thing shatter.

Reliever Fernando Cruz celebrates after the last out of the seventh inning in Game 2 of the Wild Card Series between the Red Sox and Yankees in New York. Photo: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

(It was a cool moment. But celebrating Trent Grisham for making a great play instead of celebrating yourself for giving up a laser would have been the better move.)

Garrett Whitlock getting ‘tired’ isn’t great news for Boston

From June 29 until Sept. 26, Garrett Whitlock allowed two earned runs across 32 innings in 33 appearances. He had a 0.875 WHIP and a 0.56 ERA in that span. He was as lights-out as light-out gets for a long time.

And for the first six batters he faced, he looked like that guy. He did surrender a double but also struck out three batters and welcomed weak contact. With two outs in the eighth, this thing was going to the ninth tied.

But then … Whitlock got “tired.”

“Felt good. Got tired towards the end, but thought I made some good pitches, and they did a good job,” Whitlock said. “I definitely lost command. And unfortunately that happened.”

“That” was a seven-pitch walk to Jazz Chisholm, an at-bat where none of the four balls was anywhere close to the strike zone, followed by the game-winning double by Austin Wells.

That ball getting swallowed up by the angled fence in foul ground was a stroke of bad luck for Whitlock, but that’s baseball. From there, Whitlock gave up another single and then a truly wild walk, ending his night after 47 pitches.

Whitlock indicated he wants to pitch if needed in Game 3, but if he was tired in Game 2, a trip back to the mound one night later doesn’t seem to be in the cards.

Sometimes, you’ve got to appreciate a great photograph

And this is one of them.

Jazz ChisholmBrad Penner-Imagn Images
Jazz Chisholm dives into home to score the winning run in Game 2 of the Wild Card Series between the Red Sox and Yankees. Photo: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

It probably won’t end up hanging in any Boston bars, but hey: Art is art.

Unknowns abound in Game 3

Connelly Early made his MLB debut in a minor league park in West Sacramento less than a month ago. On Thursday night, he’ll be given the ball and asked to keep the Red Sox’ season alive in a raucous Yankee Stadium.

No pressure there.

Cam Schlittler may be an old veteran by comparison, having made his MLB debut all the way back on July 9, but the rookie is every bit of the wild card that Early is for Boston.

Schlittler is from Walpole and pitched at Northeastern (as well as Harwich in the Cape League), so get ready for plenty of that from the broadcast. But as for his performance, he’s been great in his 14 big league starts, posting a 2.96 ERA and 1.219 WHIP, striking out 84 batters in 74 innings.

Early posted a 2.33 ERA and a 1.086 in his four big league starts, but obviously, none of those compare to the one that awaits him on Thursday night.

As was the case in Game 1 and again in Game 2, the Red Sox will have the advantage at the manager spot in Game 3. That one’s a blowout in favor of Alex Cora over Aaron Boone.

Everything else, though? None of it can properly be predicted — though, based on the first two games of this series, chaos and tension feel like safe bets to show up at Yankee Stadium for the finale.

Rocchio, Naylor power 5-run eighth inning as Guardians beat Tigers 6-1 to even AL Wild Card Series

CLEVELAND (AP) — Rocctober has returned to Cleveland.

Brayan Rocchio came up with another clutch hit in the postseason with the go-ahead homer in the eighth inning as the Cleveland Guardians evened their AL Wild Card Series against the Detroit Tigers with a 6-1 victory in Game 2 on Wednesday.

“It was huge, an 0-2 count and he was ready to fire,” manager Stephen Vogt said of Rocchio’s blast. “For us, it was a frustrating day offensively for us. Two hits leading into the 8th. For our guys to explode and get separation felt good.”

Bo Naylor also went deep in the eighth as the Guardians put up five runs to take control of the game.

George Valera also homered to force a deciding game in the best-of-three series.

The winner Thursday faces the Seattle Mariners in a Division Series. No team has lost Game 1 of a Wild Card Series and advanced since the expanded round began in 2022.

Javier Báez had two hits and an RBI for the Tigers, who were 1 for 15 with runners in scoring position and stranded 15 runners.

Detroit had the bases loaded with two out in the ninth inning, but Cade Smith got Dillon Dingler to line out to first baseman C.J. Kayfus.

“They made the most of their opportunities and we left 15 guys on. I think that paints the picture that it was today,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. “The score doesn’t really indicate how the game was. But we kept giving ourselves a chance.”

The game was tied 1-1 with one out in the eighth inning when Rocchio connected on a 99.9 mph fastball from losing pitcher Troy Melton and drove it 379 feet into the right-field stands for his second homer in three games. He had a three-run drive in the 10th inning on Sunday to give the Guardians a 9-8 victory over Texas in the regular-season finale.

“I’d been lucky to face him a couple times in Triple-A. In these situations, you have to tone it down a little bit and keep it simple. José’s recommendation was look for the fastball. That’s what I was trying to do,” Rocchio said through an interpreter.

The 24-year-old Venezuelan infielder has a .308 batting average (12 for 39) in 12 postseason games with two homers, two doubles and three RBIs, hitting .333 in last year’s playoffs.

Guardians teammates have referred to it as “Playoff Rocchio” mode.

“It speaks to his confidence. It doesn’t matter what the regular season holds, he comes out in these moments and he’s really confident and puts off a great swing. And you saw what happened,” outfielder Steven Kwan said,

Rocchio’s .257 batting average since being recalled from Triple-A Columbus on July 1 was second on the team to José Ramírez (.258). Rocchio also was third on the club in RBIs (36) and doubles (15).

“Like I said in a couple interviews, I don’t think about it. I try to keep my mind focused and competing. This is competing time. There’s no self-awareness. It’s being competitive as you can,” Rocchio said of the postseason.

Daniel Schneemann added an RBI double before Naylor golfed a sweeper from Brant Hurter over the right-field wall for a five-run lead.

Jakob Junis got the win as the Guardians bullpen held Detroit scoreless over 5 1/3 innings.

Cleveland took the lead in the first when Valera drove a 94.1 mph fastball on the upper half of the strike zone from starter Casey Mize over the wall in center field. The homer came on a full count and the seventh pitch of the at-bat.

Detroit tied it in the fourth and nearly took the lead. Báez had a base hit up the middle to drive in Riley Greene and Dingler after Zach McKinstry appeared to beat José Ramírez’s tag at third on a great throw by Chase DeLauter, who was making his big league debut. A video review overturned the safe call by umpire Stu Scheurwater and Dingler’s run came off the board.

The Tigers had runners at the corners with no outs in the seventh after Gleyber Torres was hit by a pitch and advanced to third on Kerry Carpenter’s hit. Hunter Gaddis retired Spencer Torkelson on a shallow flyout, and Tim Herrin struck out Jahmai Jones and Wenceel Pérez.

Up Next

Detroit RHP Jack Flaherty (8-15, 4.64 ERA) makes his eighth postseason start Thursday and Cleveland RHP Slade Cecconi (7-7, 4.30 ERA) gets his first playoff start.

Machado and Miller star as the Padres beat the Cubs 3-0 in Game 2 of their NL Wild Card Series

CHICAGO (AP) — Manny Machado hit a two-run homer, Mason Miller dominated again, and the San Diego Padres beat the Chicago Cubs 3-0 on Wednesday, sending their NL Wild Card Series to a decisive third game.

Jackson Merrill hit an early sacrifice fly as San Diego avoided elimination after losing 3-1 on Tuesday. Dylan Cease struck out five in 3 2/3 innings before handing the ball to his team’s hard-throwing bullpen.

The finale of the best-of-three series is back at Wrigley Field on Thursday.

The playoff-tested Padres are looking for a repeat of 2020, when they dropped Game 1 in the special pandemic wild-card round before advancing with two straight victories against St. Louis. Machado also homered in Game 2 of that series.

Chicago finished with four hits. The franchise is making its first appearance in the playoffs in five years, and it hasn’t advanced since it eliminated Washington in a 2017 NL Division Series.

San Diego jumped in front on Merrill’s flyball to right off Andrew Kittredge in the first, driving in Fernando Tatis Jr. Kittredge started for Chicago as an opener, and the right-hander was replaced by left-hander Shota Imanaga in the second.

The Cubs threatened in the fourth, putting runners on first and second with two down. Adrian Morejon then came in and retired Pete Crow-Armstrong on a bouncer to first.

The Padres added two more runs on Machado’s 404-foot drive to left off Imanaga in the fifth. Tatis reached on a leadoff walk and advanced on a sacrifice ahead of Machado’s 12th career playoff homer.

The three runs were more than enough for San Diego’s bullpen, with Miller and Robert Suarez combining for 14 pitches of over 100 mph.

Morejon pitched 2 1/3 perfect innings before Miller showed off his electric stuff while striking out five consecutive batters. The 6-foot-5 right-hander reached 104.5 mph on a called third strike to Carson Kelly in the seventh that was the fastest pitch in the postseason since Statcast started tracking in 2008.

Miller, who was acquired in a trade with the Athletics on July 31, struck out the side in the seventh in his postseason debut on Tuesday. The eight straight Ks tied the postseason record set by Josh Hader in 2022.

Miller was pulled from Game 2 after he hit Michael Busch with a slider with two oust in the eighth. Suarez retired Nico Hoerner on a liner to right before a one-hit ninth for the save.

Up Next

Yu Darvish will get the ball for San Diego on Thursday. There was no immediate word on Chicago’s starter.

Darvish played for the Cubs for three seasons before he was traded to the Padres in December 2020. The right-hander said he enjoys pitching at Wrigley.

“Yeah, this place did me good,” he said through a translator. “The organization, the fans did me good, too.”

What to know for the ALDS, NLDS: Matchups, schedule, format and how to watch

What to know for the ALDS, NLDS: Matchups, schedule, format and how to watch originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The 2025 MLB playoffs are moving to the Division Series.

The American League’s No. 4-seeded New York Yankees and No. 6 Detroit Tigers along with the National League’s No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers and No. 4 Chicago Cubs have survived the Wild Card Series and advanced to the second round of the postseason.

The Division Series will see the introduction of the top two seeds in each league to the postseason. The AL’s No. 1 Toronto Blue Jays and No. 2 Seattle Mariners, and the NL’s No. 1 Milwaukee Brewers and No. 2 Philadelphia Phillies earned byes past the Wild Card Series and into the Division Series.

The defending World Series champion Dodgers were the only team to record a Wild Card Series sweep, outscoring the No. 6 Cincinnati Reds 18-9 over two games. The Dodgers have reached the NLDS for a staggering 13th straight season, as they try to become the first back-to-back champion since the Yankees pulled off a three-peat from 1998-2000.

The Cubs were among three teams to emerge victorious in winner-take-all Game 3s. Chicago, after dropping Game 2 to the No. 5 San Diego Padres, booked its first trip to the NLDS since 2017 with a 3-1 Game 3 victory.

Over in the AL, the Tigers took quite the route to their second straight ALDS appearance. Detroit blew a 12.5-game lead for first in the AL Central over the final month-plus of the regular season, as the Cleveland Guardians snatched the division crown. But the Tigers got the last laugh over their division rivals, eliminating the No. 3 Guardians with a 6-3 Game 3 win.

The final Wild Card Series matchup featured baseball’s most bitter rivalry between the No. 4 Yankees and No. 5 Boston Red Sox. After losing Game 1, the Yankees outlasted the Red Sox in Game 2 before bouncing Boston with a 4-0 win in Game 3. Yankees rookie right-hander Cam Schlittler starred in the series-clincher, striking out 12 over eight shutout innings in his playoff debut. New York is looking to go from runners-up to champions after losing in last year’s Fall Classic.

So, what are the ALDS and NLDS matchups? And when does the Division Series begin? Here’s what we know:

Are teams reseeded in the MLB playoffs?

There isn’t any reseeding in the MLB postseason, which follows a bracket format.

What are the 2025 ALDS, NLDS matchups?

The Dodgers will next put their title defense on the line against the NL East champion Phillies, while the Cubs will take on the MLB-best Brewers in an NL Central battle.

The AL side of the bracket will also have a divisional showdown, as the Yankees go from facing one AL East foe to another in the league-best Blue Jays. The Tigers, meanwhile, will square off against the AL West champion Mariners.

Here’s a full look at the bracket:

American League

  • No. 2 Seattle Mariners vs. No. 6 Detroit Tigers
  • No. 1 Toronto Blue Jays vs. No. 4 New York Yankees

National League

  • No. 2 Philadelphia Phillies vs. No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers
  • No. 1 Milwaukee Brewers vs. No. 4 Chicago Cubs

When do the 2025 ALDS, NLDS start?

All four Division Series begin Saturday, Oct. 4.

How many games are in the ALDS, NLDS?

Following best-of-three Wild Card Series, the postseason moves to a best-of-five format for the Division Series. The higher seed hosts Games 1, 2 and, if necessary, 5.

What is the 2025 ALDS, NLDS schedule?

Here’s a series-by-series look at the Division Series schedule (this section will be updated as details are announced):

American League

No. 1 Toronto Blue Jays vs. No. 4 New York Yankees

  • Game 1: Yankees at Blue Jays — Saturday, Oct. 4, 4:08 p.m. ET, Fox
  • Game 2: Yankees at Blue Jays — Sunday, Oct. 5, 4:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 3: Blue Jays at Yankees — Tuesday, Oct. 7, 8:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Blue Jays at Yankees — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 7:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Yankees at Blue Jays — Friday, Oct. 10, 8:08 p.m. ET, Fox

No. 2 Seattle Mariners vs. No. 6 Detroit Tigers

  • Game 1: Tigers at Mariners — Saturday, Oct. 4, 8:38 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 2: Tigers at Mariners — Sunday, Oct. 5, 8:03 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 3: Mariners at Tigers — Tuesday, Oct. 7, 4:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Mariners at Tigers — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 3:08 p.m. ET, FS1
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Tigers at Mariners — Friday, Oct. 10, 4:40 p.m. ET, FS1

National League

No. 1 Milwaukee Brewers vs. No. 4 Chicago Cubs

  • Game 1: Cubs at Brewers — Saturday, Oct. 4, 2:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 2: Cubs at Brewers — Monday, Oct. 6, 9:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 3: Brewers at Cubs — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 5:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Brewers at Cubs— Thursday, Oct. 9, 9:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Cubs at Brewers — Saturday, Oct. 11, 4:38 p.m. ET, TBS

No. 2 Philadelphia Phillies vs. No. 3 Los Angeles Dodgers

  • Game 1: Dodgers at Phillies — Saturday, Oct. 4, 6:38 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 2: Dodgers at Phillies — Monday, Oct. 6, 6:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 3: Phillies at Dodgers — Wednesday, Oct. 8, 9:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 4 (if necessary): Phillies at Dodgers — Thursday, Oct. 9, 6:08 p.m. ET, TBS
  • Game 5 (if necessary): Dodgers at Phillies — Saturday, Oct. 11, 8:08 p.m. ET, TBS

What TV channels are the ALDS, NLDS on?

ALDS games will air across Fox and FS1.

TBS will broadcast the NLDS games.

How to stream the ALDS, NLDS live online

The ALDS action can be streamed on FoxSports.com and the Fox Sports app.

NLDS games can be streamed on TBS.com, the TBS app and HBO Max.

Doctor explains A's second baseman Zack Gelof's shoulder injury, recovery path

Doctor explains A's second baseman Zack Gelof's shoulder injury, recovery path originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Zack Gelof should be good to go for the Athletics ahead of the 2026 MLB season after the second baseman underwent successful surgery to address the dislocated left shoulder he suffered when diving for a ground ball in the Athletics’ win at the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sept. 19.

Stanford Medicine’s Marc R. Safran, M.D., explained what Gelof’s recovery should look like in an exclusive interview with NBC Sports California’s Tristi Rodriguez on Thursday.

“Usually in a sling for about four to six weeks, just letting things kind of heal up — just doing some mild range-of-motion exercises,” Safran told Rodriguez. “Then, after six weeks, you start to work on increasing the range of motion. Usually around three months, you start to strengthen the shoulder. 

“Usually by four months, they can do most things; with him, it’s his non-throwing shoulder, so [throwing] wouldn’t be a problem. But also probably wouldn’t have him do any diving yet, til about six months after the surgery.”

Gelof appears to be on the right road to recovery.

Keep in mind, this is the second major injury he suffered in 2025, as he underwent surgery to repair a hook of the hamate fracture in his right hand during spring training and didn’t play with the Green and Gold until July 4.

Fortunately for Gelof, given the current situation, he won’t have to miss any games, as the Athletics missed the MLB playoffs and have a long offseason ahead of them.

“It’s just really about trying to protect the shoulder while the soft tissues are healing, and then gradually increasing the strengthening, and then increasing the load to that area as it continues to get stronger and stronger,” Safran said.

“He’s not going to be catching any balls until probably a few months after the surgery, and he probably also will not do any batting. And when he does, he’ll probably start off batting a little bit of fungo and those types of things before he tries to take a full swing.”

Gelof hit .174 with two home runs and seven RBI over 30 games this year. Perhaps an offseason of recovery will help him return to the electric up-and-comer he was in 2024.

Buster Posey doesn’t consider former manager Bruce Bochy a candidate to fill San Francisco’s vacancy

SAN FRANCISCO — Giants executive Buster Posey doesn’t consider his former manager Bruce Bochy a candidate to fill the vacant position again for San Francisco.

Posey, the club’s president of baseball operations, said he had spoken to Bochy and mentioned there could be a position for the 70-year-old in the organization — just not the managerial job.

“The door’s always open here for some sort of role,” Posey said during a news conference at Oracle Park. “I don’t see us going that route with Boch.”

The Giants fired Bob Melvin after his second season ended with an 81-81 record — one more victory than last year — and a fourth straight missed playoff opportunity.

The Texas Rangers announced a mutual parting with Bochy after three seasons that featured the organization’s first World Series championship in 2023.

Posey expressed the hope of finding someone who could provide stability for years to come on the dugout’s top step as the club tries to become a regular contender again, but he didn’t provide any details about the process except that interviews are happening this week. Under Bochy, the Giants won biennial World Series championships in 2010, ‘12 and ’14.

“We had a pretty consistent stretch of not playing good baseball,” Posey said. “... There’s a lot of good things in place, but ultimately we did not achieve our goal this year.”

When Posey took over in his current job at this time last year to replace Farhan Zaidi, the Giants’ longtime catcher committed to three seasons. And he is still planning to fulfill that agreement.

“I’m fully committed, but I think the focus has to be on the present,” the 38-year-old Posey said. “That’s the way I try to look at it. Would I like to do it longer, sure, but I think the focus has to be in the moment.”