Good Morning San Diego: Padres get day off before opening road series against Rockies

ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 17: Wandy Peralta #58 of the San Diego Padres delivers to the plate during the sixth inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on April 17, 2026 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images) | Getty Images

One of the San Diego Padres relievers who does not get much attention is also the elder statesman in the group. Wandy Peralta, who pitched for the Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic, has been a mainstay in the San Diego bullpen since he left the New York Yankees. The left-hander is known as a groundball pitcher and has been called upon in some tough spots to get the Padres out of a jam. Like any reliever it has not always been good for Peralta. There have been times when he did not get the out or when he surrendered a home run to tie a game, but through it all he has maintained a good relationship with his teammates and has remained a positive presence in the locker room. Peralta may be overlooked by baseball pundits and media members who like to rave about the various aspects of the San Diego ‘pen, but his value is known and recognized by the Padres players, coaches and front office.

Padres News:

  • By now, many if not all of the Friar Faithful have seen the home run-robbing catches by Jackson Merrill in center field. The rest of MLB has seen them too and decided one of the most recent was good enough for Play of the Week.

Baseball News:

Braves helped Dominic Smith through tragedy. Now he's paying them back.

WASHINGTON – For the past three years, Dominic Smith has waited for the phone to ring, for a guaranteed job to emerge, for an assurance that his baseball life will continue unfettered.

Then the winter will grow colder, the employment offers no less certain, and Smith will steel himself for the weeks ahead: A spring training invite, a job to win, perhaps an opt-out to find greener pastures, or a humbling trip to the minor leagues that would seem beneath a valued veteran first baseman.

And then Smith, now 30, returns to his mantras of faith and self-confidence to realize another team will recognize his skills, but perhaps most important his humanity that can galvanize a clubhouse over however long a team will have him around for the 162-game grind.

Through it all, Smith’s belief will not waver.

“It’s never stressful,” Smith, now the primary designated hitter for the Atlanta Braves, tells USA TODAY Sports. “It’s a blessing to play this game – whether it’s overseas, if it’s in Triple-A. This is a game. Life is way more important outside of the game to put that much stress on yourself.

“I just believe in God and believe God is always going to make things work. And look where I’m at.

“That’s why I have this mindset.”

Dominic Smith reacts after a home run in Arizona.

This spring, it has guided him not just through professional uncertainty but also personal tragedy.

Smith did not sign with the Braves until Feb. 19, a week after spring training camp opened. It was then that his mother, Yvette LaFleur, nearly perished after she was diagnosed with cancer in September. It left Smith in a near-impossible position: Aiming to make the team while balancing his mother’s diminishing time left.

He left camp for one week to be at Yvette’s side in Los Angeles, then returned to Florida to win a job. She died while he was away.

What’s transpired since says even more about Smith.

In his first start for the Braves on March 28, Smith became the first player in major league history to hit a walk-off grand slam in his debut with a club. Smith admittedly “got choked up a bunch of times” thinking about his mother amid the celebration.

And as this young season unfolds, Smith has only become more integral to the Braves’ stunning 16-7 start.

He flipped another game with a three-run double in the bottom of the eighth to beat Miami April 15. The hitter with a career .252 average and .316 on-base percentage is slashing .345/.362/.600 with four home runs and likely has a lock on the DH job – at least against right-handed pitchers – even when Sean Murphy returns from injury.

Perhaps more significant is his impact on Atlanta in just a few weeks.

“Everybody loves Dom. He’s a tremendous human being,” says first-year Braves manager Walt Weiss. “He’s been through a lot, right? He’s had to deal with DFAs, he’s had to deal with the garbage stuff that the players, if you stick around long enough, have to deal with.

“There’s a lot of experience, a lot of wisdom there. There’s also a lot of perspective, a lot of humility through it all. Just a wonderful, wonderful guy and I’m glad we have him.”

It is a common sentiment wherever Smith goes.

'He kept us alive'

He’s lived a few baseball lives since the New York Mets selected him 11th overall in the 2013 draft. Smith debuted in 2017 but by 2019, Pete Alonso arrived with a 53-homer season. Smith batted .299 with a .936 OPS across the 2019 and COVID-shortened 2020 seasons, but tumbled to below league-average production the following two seasons.

By 2022, the Mets optioned him to Class AAA for 54 games, and non-tendered him after the season. The Washington Nationals gave him his last guaranteed deal – one year, $2 million – and he spent the year a sage for a 91-loss team.

Since then? Spring invites to the Cubs and Yankees, minor league trips to Durham and Scranton, brief stints with the Red Sox and Reds in 2024 before hooking on with the San Francisco Giants last June.

It was there that he fully emerged as a glue guy, on a club that would eventually fire manager Bob Melvin and significantly alter the franchise by trading for Rafael Devers two weeks after Smith’s arrival.

The Giants went 81-81 and at times that felt like a miracle.

“He was crucial to the success we had last year. He kept us alive for a lot of it,” says Giants third baseman Matt Chapman. “He knew how to take a good at-bat, how to do what the situation calls for. You see what he’s doing right now – he has the ability to really, really swing the bat and play well.

“He’s never too high, never too low and has a knack for getting the big hit, which is why you saw him come up clutch so much.”

And for a guy who’s never hit more than 12 home runs in a season and only twice played more than 100 games, Smith has found a way to communicate what he can bring to a team.

It is challenging, within the context of making a team out of spring training, or convincing another one to carve out a major league roster spot to leapfrog organizations. Yet that is where that Dom Smith energy comes into play.

“It’s not easy to do when your back’s against the wall,” says Chapman. “A lot of people could be pissed off about not getting an opportunity or feel like they’ve been slighted. He didn’t have that energy. He always had good energy, showed up and did what he was asked to do.

“That’s very respectable and why me and him are going to be close for a long time.”

Nationals shortstop CJ Abrams says he and Smith remain close, and talk often on the phone. He learned from Smith the art of self care, the importance of diet and the concept of availability as the best ability.

“When the opportunity presents itself, he comes and gets the job done,” says Abrams. “As you can see right now, he’s doing his thing.”

'Understanding who you are'

As Smith adds stamps to his baseball passport, he sees the value of his accrued experiences – the compact pressure of playing in Boston, the glare of New York, and, with San Francisco and Atlanta, getting tutelage from franchise legends Barry Bonds and Chipper Jones.

All the while, knowing thyself.

“Understanding who you are,” Smith puts it. “For me, the biggest thing was being available and be able to compete at a high level. Not necessarily put up All-Star numbers, but compete. I think that’s what teams value.

“Guys that they don’t have to worry about. Guys who put together good at-bats. I’ve been around for a while now. So, I understand the value to a team so they don’t lose a beat, regardless of what happens internally.”

Sometimes, those internal developments can roil a squad. This spring, the Braves lost left fielder Jurickson Profar to a PED suspension for the second consecutive year, the multiple offenses costing Profar all 162 games of 2026.

Given they were down an entire rotation due to injury, it looked like another dark cloud that would produce the Braves’ second consecutive sub-.500 season after winning seven consecutive division titles.

Instead, the Braves are tied with the Dodgers for most wins in baseball, the clubhouse and its first-year manager seemingly in lockstep, and GM Alex Anthopoulos holding steady even as pitching injuries threatened to sink the season.

“Alex preaches having a positive attitude to the ballclub,” says Smith, who also lauds Anthopoulos for "understanding guys and understanding what being a good human means."

“That’s the biggest thing – coming in here open-minded and just help them win. It’s a great ballclub and we have World Series aspirations. We want to play meaningful games, playoff games, World Series games. It was a dream come true how it all unfolded.”

Then again, Smith has a knack for making his own breaks, even when nothing’s guaranteed, even when personal turmoil could have sidetracked him.

“To have that uncertainty held over you,” says Chapman, “and now the story’s out but he was battling things off the field with his mom. For him to be able to get to the field and do what he did just shows how special he is.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Braves' Dominic Smith overcame tragedy, uncertainty to thrive in Atlanta

Luke Fox wins Texas League pitcher of the week

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 27: Luke Fox #89 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches during the fifth inning of a spring training game against the San Francisco Giants at Scottsdale Stadium on February 27, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Jeremy Chen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Tulsa Drillers left-hander Luke Fox is off to a nice start to his 2026 season, and on Monday was named Texas League pitcher of the week for his efforts for the week of April 14-19.

Fox made two starts for Tulsa last week, and didn’t allow a run in either outing. He bookended the series against the Arkansas Travelers, a Seattle Mariners affiliate, with 5 2/3 scoreless innings and six strikeouts and two walks on Tuesday, then four strikeouts in four scoreless innings on Sunday afternoon. He only allowed one hit in each start.

The Dodgers drafted Fox in the 17th round in 2023 out of Duke, where he missed his final season after Tommy John surgery, which delayed his professional debut until May 2024. Fox finished last season with nine starts for Tulsa, and in 13 Double-A starts to date has a 2.57 ERA with 69 strikeouts and 27 walks in 63 innings.

This season, Fox has only walked five batters to go with his 23 strikeouts and 32.4-percent strikeout rate in four starts.

Fox is the third Dodgers minor leaguer to win weekly honors this season. Triple-A Oklahoma City outfielder/first baseman James Tibbs III won Pacific Coast League player of the week for March 31-April 5, and Class-A Ontario right-hander Marlon Nieves won California League pitcher of the week for April 6-12.

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: Boston, Toronto, Baltimore win while Yanks idle

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 20: Ceddanne Rafaela #3 of the Boston Red Sox reaches out to hit a two-run single against the Detroit Tigers during the seventh inning at Fenway Park on April 20, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Editor’s note: Welcome to the slightly revamped Rivalry Roundup! The American League is a bit of a muddled mess right now, even by April standards, so we’re taking a slightly different approach until the picture gets at least a little more clear. We polled the Rivarly Roundup writers to determine two teams who would get our closest focus and landed (for now) on Boston and Toronto. We will additionally have more abridged coverage—again, for now—of the Tigers, Guardians, Orioles, Rays, Mariners, Astros, and Rangers in “Other Teams.” There is sure to be some overlap in matchups; we just want to make sure we’re covering our bases. Thanks!

With the Yankees off Monday before heading to Boston, it was a great day to hate cheer against our enemies. The day got off to a shoddy start, with Boston defeating Detroit in the annual Boston Marathon morning game. Monday night, unfortunately, the Jays and Orioles followed suit with wins of their own.

The Rays at least had the decency to lose. As did the Mariners, who are off to a brutal start. Houston unfortunately won. I’m sure I’m not the only Yankees fan wondering how far that ship can sink.

Boston Red Sox (9-13) 8, Detroit Tigers (12-11) 6

It’s been rough times in Boston to start the season… you just hate to see it. After the BoSox jumped out to a 2-0 lead early, the Tigers chipped away, taking the lead in the top of the sixth and giving hope, for a brief moment, that they could hang another early season loss on the Red Sox.

Alas, Roman Anthony knotted the game back up at three in the home sixth and then Boston took over in the seventh. With the bases loaded and one out, Ceddaanne Rafaela came to the dish. His single down the right field line scored two, though former Yankee farmhand Caleb Durbin was out at the dish. Rafaela later came around to score the Sox’s sixth run. In the bottom of the eighth, former Yankee Isiah Kiner-Falefa added a two-run single of his own to make it 8-3 and put Boston on the verge of a laugher.

Needing three outs and up five, the Sox left Ryan Watson in to try and close the game out. They chose… poorly. With runners on second and third and one out, former Yankee Gleyber Torres singled in a fourth run, prompting Boston to bring closer and former Yankee (bit of a theme in this one) Aroldis Chapman in. Riley Greene doubled in two more runs to bring Detroit to within two and bring the tying run to the plate but Chapman got Dillon Dingler to ground out to end it. I’m sure Boston would have prefered to not bring Chapman in but on a day where they went through seven relievers while the Yankees relaxed before heading to Fenway, it seems par for the course.

Toronto Blue Jays (9-13) 5, Los Angeles Angels (11-13) 2

The Jays have been off to a miserable start, much like Boston. You also hate to see it. Monday night, however, they played the Angels pretty tough. Unlike the Yankees, they managed to keep Mike bleeping Trout in the yard. Lo and behold, that helped keep the Angels from racking up runs.

On the mound, offseason addition Dylan Cease was in his bag. The righty tossed five innings of two-run ball, whiffing 12 Angels hitters. Tough to score when you’re striking out constantly. The downside though, is Cease could only go five, with a pitch count at 110.

At the dish, franchise player Vladimir Guerrero, Jr. supplied the heroics. With Toronto down one early, Vladito clubbed a two-run bomb, one of three hits on the day. The Angels tied the game but the Jays managed single runs in the sixth and seventh to extend their lead to 4-2. They added a fifth run in the top of the ninth and held on for the 5-2 win.

Other Games

Houston Astros (9-15) 9, Cleveland Guardians (13-11) 2

The Astros have been a hot mess early this season but thanks to a bevy of long balls, they took down Cleveland Monday night. Christian Walker, who was abysmal in the first half of 2025 for the Astros but markedly improved down the stretch, has come out of the gates strongly in 2026 and tonight was no exception. Walker punctuated his three-hit night with a two-run home run. The Astros’ hero of the day, however, was Isaac Paredes. The former Ray mashed two round-trippers of his own as Houston ran away with this one.

Tampa Bay Rays (12-10) 1, Cincinnati Reds (15-8) 6

This one was never all that close. The Rays managed a first inning run. But they were already down two when they did. From there, Cincinnati kept adding on. The big blow for the Reds was Sal Stewart’s eighth homerun of the year, a two-run blast in the first that gave them a lead they never surrendered. In the top of the sixth, Rece Hinds hit a two-run double that put the Reds up 5-1 and put this one out of reach, as the Rays never came close after that.

Baltimore Orioles (11-12) 7, Kansas City Royals (7-16) 5 (12)

Man, the Royals are just awful. The Yankees swept them away at the Stadium this weekend and, even having returned home, they’re still down bad. God bless their hearts, they got out to an early lead, thanks to a Jac Caglianone solo home run in the first. And they even held onto it… until the ninth. Baltimore tied it in then, and the two teams traded runs in the 11th. In the 12th, Leody Taveras put the game away for the O’s with a grand slam, continuing Kansas City’s immiseration.

Seattle Mariners (10-14) 4, Athletics (12-11) 6

Seattle’s offense is going through it. The Big Dumper hit his third home run of the season… he finished the night with a .538 OPS. Josh Naylor had a three-hit night… .520 OPS. Julio, with his two hits, finished the night at .609. You can’t predict baseball, Suzyn.

To be fair, Seattle did jump out to a 3-0 lead, which must have felt really good, given their struggles at the dish. Alas, they gave it all back. A trio of long balls from the Athletics knotted the game at three. Then, in the eighth, a sacrifice fly and a two-run single put the A’s up 6-3 and they held on, handing the Mariners another April loss. You hate to see it.

Elephant Rumblings: Nothing But Grey (Jerseys)

BRONX, NY - APRIL 08: Athletics Left Fielder Tyler Soderstrom (21) and Center Fielder Denzel Clarke (1) and Right Fielder Lawrence Butler (4) celebrate the victory after the ninth inning of a Major League Baseball game between the Athletics and New York Yankees on April 8, 2026, at Yankee Stadium in The Bronx, NY. (Photo by Gregory Fisher/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

I’ve noticed that the A’s have worn strictly grey on the road this season. Last year, it was a mix between the grey, gold, and the kelly green tops but with the 2010s style gold jerseys being retired in the offseason in favor of their new “Sacramento Saturdays” jersey, we’ve seem to have lost the gold top as an option on the road. Which is strange when you think about it, given that it’s the only jersey in their collection that pays respect to the city they’re sort’ve resting in for the time being. I guess this is because they don’t want to give opposing fans the wrong impression. They are The Athletics. Not the Sacramento Athletics. Even on Sacramento Saturdays, they’re still The Athletics. Sporting “Sacramento” across their chests is simply just an act of fan service. A reason for locals to flock to the team shop in between innings.

Now why they’ve stopped wearing the kelly greens on the road, I don’t know. My working theory is that the players have grown tired of them. It’s been adopted as their spring training look in recent years and maybe because of that, it’s lost a little bit of its big league charm. In fact overall, it might be the least worn jersey this season. I can only recall it being worn once. If that continues to be the case, it would actually be so for the second consecutive year. Tim Kelly from MLB.com did a power ranking going into the season, where he broke down where every MLB club’s uniform combos stood in comparison to one another, as well as how many times they were worn throughout 2025.

The A’s came in second (easy first imo) behind the St. Louis Cardinals and this was their overall slashline:

Grey — 67; White — 59; Yellow — 23; Kelly Green — 13

At the pace we’re moving, grey will remain the dominant jersey. 67 times out of 81 opportunities is already pretty insane when you think about it. Take one more option out of the mix and grey has a real shot at cracking 75 this season.

Now if they go the whole year without ever veering from ole reliable on the road, we the fans should get some sort of pizza party…or at least a verbal commitment to bringing back the black tops from the late 2000s.

They never did get to experience a playoff game.

A’s Coverage:

MLB News and Interest:

Best of X:

So cozy right now with our half game lead and -17 run differential

JK-47 is an all time nickname. If this guy records more than 20 saves this season I demand a bobblehead

Every great championship run begins with your pitching staff not being able to locate the strike zone

After tonight’s game, JK-47 fixed the cracked head gasket on my 1989 Toyota Camry Station Wagon

FINALLY ANOTHER LEFTY BUT I MISS SEAN NEWCOMB :’(

Red Sox News & Links: Sonny Gray, Sox downplay hamstring injury

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 20: As manager Alex Cora #13 of the Boston Red Sox signals the bullpen for a pitcher, starting pitcher Sonny Gray #54 leaves the game with a trainer after being injured during the third inning against the Detroit Tigers at Fenway Park on April 20, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

If you’re in the imaging ward at Mass General today, keep an eye out for Sonny Gray (but don’t bother him; that’s weird and lame). He’ll be getting an MRI on his hamstring today after the Sox placed him on the 15-day IL and gave his spot on the roster to Tyler Samaniego — a spot that will likely go to someone else when Gray’s turn in the rotation comes around again. As of now, the Sox don’t sound too worried. “I’m not concerned it’s a long-term thing … It doesn’t [feel] as bad as it has other times where I have missed time,” said Gray. But this wouldn’t be the first time in recent years that the Red Sox have downplayed a pitching injury only for it to turn out much worse than anticipated. (Hey, how are things going, Kutter Crawford? Say hello to Johan Oviedo for us.) (Tim Healey, Boston Globe)

But at least the pitching universe is trying to balance itself out a bit. Just as Gray goes down, Greg Weissert returns to form. His incredible sixth inning yesterday was paramount in the Red Sox’ Patriots Day win. (Peter Abraham, Boston Globe)

Should some credit to Weissert’s bounce-back go to… Jarren Duran? The reliever says yes. (Christopher Smith, MassLive)

Now maybe Greg Weissert can give Duran some advice to help him turn his season at the plate around. Alex Cora points to Duran’s tendency to chase pitches outside of the zone as his big problem so far this year. (Christopher Smith, MassLive)

Chasing pitching outside the of the zone is Ceddanne Rafaela’s biggest weakness, of course. But yesterday he turned a bad swing decision into a game-winning hit. (Christopher Smith, MassLive)

Though Ceddanne wouldn’t have even been in a position to get the game-winning RBIs if Carlos Narvaez of all people hadn’t come through with a clutch stolen base the inning before. (Ian Browne, MLB.com)

After splitting the four-game series with the Tigers, the Sox will now turn their attention to the, ugh, New York Yankees. Here’s a look at where to the two teams stand as we begin the 2026 chapter of the greatest rivalry in North American sports. (Jen McCaffrey, Brendan Kuty, The Athletic)

And if you’re wondering where the rivalry itself stands, Cam Schlittler says he’s getting death threats. (Conor Ryan, Boston Globe)

Mariners News: Julio Rodriguez, Brendan Donovan, and Edwin Diaz

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - APRIL 13: Julio Rodríguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners high-fives Brendan Donovan #33 after the game against the Houston Astros at T-Mobile Park on April 13, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. The Seattle Mariners won 6-2. (Photo by Maddy Grassy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Happy Tuesday! An uncharacteristic Emerson Hancock start and unfortunate, late-game bullpen meltdown resulted in a 3-6 loss for the Mariners against the Athletics yesterday. Luis Castillo will hope to get the Mariners back in the win column today as he takes the mound at 6:40 PM against Jacob Lopez.

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

Arizona Diamondbacks News 4/21

Mar 27, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Edwin Diaz (3) delivers to the plate as he earns a save in the ninth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

Diamondbacks News

Jose Fernandez, Ildemaro Vargas still getting good use out of Carlos Santana’s Gold Glove by Alex Weiner [Arizona Sports]

Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Carlos Santana was taken off the field due to an adductor strain, but his glove is still being put to good use.

That’s because versatile infielders Ildemaro Vargas and Jose Fernandez have shared the leather while splitting reps at first base in Santana’s absence, keeping the purple Rawlings with a gold patch to honor Santana’s 2024 Gold Glove win.

Manager Torey Lovullo described it as “leave the glove at first base and run in,” like kids playing on a sandlot.

3 D-backs Prospects Getting Closer to Making Big League Debut by Alex D’Agostino [SI]

Arizona’s top overall prospect was hitting a mere .238/.396/.381 through his first 11 games at the Triple-A level. The walk ability and on-base percentage was still there, as it has been for the outfielder at every minor league level.

In the 10 games that have followed since then, Waldschmidt has raised his slash to an eye-popping .338/.448/.563. He’s hitting .375 and slugging .594 for the month of April thus far; that includes four doubles, two triples and two home runs.

Diamondbacks’ Devotion to Chaos Continues into 2026 by Jack Sommers [SI]

“We work very hard at bunting,” Lovullo said. “You can see a lot of clubs are doing it now. It’s coming back into this game. I think for a long time it was, we will accept swing and miss, let’s launch the ball into the seats, let’s create some walks and build innings.

“But over the past three or four years, I think it started somewhere in the 2023 season, we thought and figured out this part of the equation that when we can put somebody in scoring position in combination with baserunning, put the ball on the ground, it was going to create a little bit of chaos.”

Around the League

Mechanical failure forces Blue Jays to bus to Anaheim by Courtney Hollmon [MLB]

The Blue Jays’ journey from Phoenix to Anaheim on Sunday didn’t involve a chartered jet or a first-class cabin. Instead, it involved three buses, a five-hour stretch of Interstate 10, and felt a lot more like a scene from the Northwest League than the Major Leagues.

The trouble started around 4 p.m., when a mechanical failure was discovered in the plane’s joystick — the primary control for takeoffs and landings. The Blue Jays were faced with a choice: wait for a replacement aircraft to fly in from Vancouver, which wouldn’t have landed until 10 p.m., or load the 60-person traveling party onto buses for the long trek across I-10.

As often happens in sports, manager John Schneider took the decision to a team vote. The decision to bus passed by roughly 30 votes, as the majority of players preferred to get moving immediately. However, not everyone was thrilled with the outcome; Schneider joked that he was already reprimanded by veteran Max Scherzer, who issued a full-letterhead kangaroo court summons over the travel decision.

Dodgers’ Edwin Diaz out till ‘second half’ for elbow surgery [ESPN]

Los Angeles Dodgers closer Edwin Diaz is scheduled to undergo surgery Wednesday to remove loose bodies in his right elbow, the team announced. The expectation is that the reliever could sit out around three months, a source told ESPN’s Alden Gonzalez on Monday.

Los Angeles put Diaz, 32, on the 15-day injured list before the team’s series finale with the Colorado Rockies on Monday, adding in a statement that he’d be back “during the second half of the season.” In a corresponding move, the Dodgers recalled left-hander Jake Eder, 27, from Triple-A Oklahoma City.

FanGraphs Power Rankings: April 13-19 by Jake Mailhot [FanGraphs] {Ed. Note: The Diamondbacks are sandwiched between the Padres and Yankees at #4, but in the write up of Tier 2, they are completely ignored.}

Mason Miller picked up his league-leading eighth save on Sunday, though he only struck out two, pushing his FIP up a few points to -1.11. It was a return to form for Miller after he allowed just his second hit and second walk of the season in his appearance on Saturday — there was a man in scoring position against him before he shut the door! With so much elite pitching in the league these days, the idea of a reliever winning the Cy Young is farfetched, but Miller is quickly off to one of the strongest starts for a relief pitcher in history. His dominance is a big reason why the Padres are just a half-game behind the Dodgers in the NL West.

Aaron Judge isn’t leading the Yankees offense right now. That honor is currently held by Ben Rice, with his .338/.476/.800 (a 245 wRC+) slash line. He’s hit a home run in four straight games. Not to be out done, Judge cracked five homers last week, including four in a four-game series against the Angels — Mike Trout hit five of his own in that series — in a fantastic display of slugging. After a rough sweep in Tampa Bay to close out the previous week, the Yankees look like they’ve righted the ship with five wins in their last seven games.

Mets Morning News: The Mets play baseball today (Derogatory)

Apr 20, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Mets owner Steve Cohen sits court side during the first quarter of game two of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs between the New York Knicks and Atlanta Hawks at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Meet the Mets

The Mets return to action tonight and will turn to young Nolan McLean to halt their slide.

Juan Soto should be back in uniform for the Mets soon, but Max Ralph pondered the question that’s on everybody’s mind: When exactly will Soto be back on the field?

Jared Greenspan explored the history of teams that have endured long losing streaks like the Mets, and what it means for their playoff hopes.

The team is backing Carlos Mendoza amid the losing streak, which isn’t sitting right with everybody. Still, it is clear that there’s enough blame to go around here.

On This Week In Mets, Tim Britton discussed the Mets having 10 days to save their season.

Jon Heyman examined the 11 possible miscalculations that have sent the Mets’ season awry.

Pat Ragazzo looked at three possible options to replace Carlos Mendoza should the Mets choose to fire their manager.

Writing for Defector, Lauren Theisen encouraged us to “Delete the Mets”.

Around the National League East

“Ain’t no rule that says a goose can’t play baseball!” or whatever they said in Air Bud.

Despite the help of their goose friend, the Phillies lost 5-1 to the Cubs.

The Marlins held off the Cardinals 5-3.

The Braves put up a five-spot in the sixth to beat the Nationals 9-4.

Around Major League Baseball

The Pirates surged into the Top 5 in the latest MLB Power Rankings.

Did you have the NL Central as baseball’s best division? Be honest. Of course you didn’t, but it is.

Ken Rosenthal analyzed the deep problems the Mets, Phillies, and Astros face beyond their managers, who are not safe despite this not being entirely their faults.

The Yankees’ rotation might be this generation’s Murderers’ Row, explains Mike Lupica.

Cam Schlittler, who grew up a Red Sox fan in Massachucetts, says he and his family have received threats ahead of his start against the Red Sox in Fenway, but is nevertheless excited to pitch in the series.

The Royals released former first round pick Asa Lacy after six injury-riddled seasons.

Old friend Edwin Díaz will miss three month as he is set to undergo surgery to remove loose bodies in his right elbow.

The Twins placed right-hander Mick Abel on the injured list with right elbow inflammation. Abel was slated to face the Mets tonight.

Sonny Gray exited his start on Patriots’ Day with right hamstring tightness.

The Red Sox used some late-game small ball to secure an 8-6 victory over the Tigers on Patriots’ Day.

Colin Rea and a plethora of defensive gems helped Chicago top Philadelphia yesterday for their sixth straight win.

The first-place Reds won again, defeating the Rays 6-1 for their fourth straight victory. After some friendly pre-game trash talk, Elly De La Cruz robbed Junior Caminero with an incredible catch.

The Blue Jays had to take three buses from Phoenix to Anaheim, but they shook off the rust and prevailed 5-2 over the Angels for a series-opening win.

The Astros beat up the Guardians 9-2.

The Orioles edged the lowly Royals 7-5 in 12 innings.

The Mariners fell 6-4 to the Athletics, but Julio Rodríguez made a catch that people are talking about in the loss.

The Dodgers trounced the Rockies 12-3. In the win, Dave Roberts went with his gut and flipped Max Muncy and Miguel Rojas in the lineup, resulting in three homers between the two. Shohei Ohtani also extended his on-base streak to 52.

Yesterday at Amazin’ Avenue

I wrote about the decision the Mets face with Carlos Mendoza

Linus Lawrence provided a Monday Stat Party.

This Date in Mets History

Happy 69th birthday Jesse Orosco! (Nice)

Tigers’ shortstop prospects Bryce Rainer and Jordan Yost promoted

Detroit Tigers shortstop Bryce Rainer talks to reporters March 20, 2026, before the Spring Breakout game at LECOM Park in Bradenton, Florida. | Evan Petzold / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

After a really unfortunate shoulder injury that short-circuited a hot start to his pro career, the Detroit Tigers third ranked prospect, shortstop Bryce Rainer, has had a sluggish return to action in 2026. However, it’s only been 11 games, and he’s returning after 10 months away from game action, so it’s no surprise that he needed some time to get his bearings. The Tigers are unconcerned, and the 20-year-old Rainer was promoted to the High-A West Michigan Whitecaps on Monday. In his place, the Tigers have activated their 2025 first round pick in the draft, prep shortstop Jordan Yost, assigning him to Single-A Lakeland Flying Tigers for his full season debut.

Rainer was the 11th round pick out of Harvard-Westlake HS in the 2024 MLB draft. He hit the ground running in 2025 in Lakeland, showing off 70 grade raw power and a big arm that had made him more of a pitching prospect in high school until he broke out with the bat during his senior season. He immediately turned heads by hammering fastballs and going the opposite way with authority, showing good zone judgement, and displaying good defensive chops and speed on the basepaths. The left-hander hitter showed some early weakness against breaking balls, but was well on his way to a great pro debut and a rapid promotion to West Michigan when he tore his right rotator cuff diving back to first base on a pickoff attempt. So he’s really picking up about where he left off last May.

Some struggles as he faces some more advanced pitching should be expected, as with only 46 games worth of experience against pro pitching out of high school, there is bound to be some catching up to do. There’s no rush, and as long as he’s handling the level well by year’s end that’s very good progress, setting him up to tackle Double-A in his age 21 season in 2027.

Rainer missed the rest of the 25 season after the injury, and the Tigers eased him back into action throughout minor league camp in March. Since the Florida State League got underway, the Tigers have played him at shortstop in 8 of his 11 games and worked out of the DH slot in the rest. Rainer hasn’t hit the ground running offensively, but he’s continued to post some eye-popping exit velocity numbers that surpass anything a current Detroit Tigers hitter has managed, Riley Greene included.

A 477 foot blast last week that left the bat at over 116 mph made a statement that Rainer was stronger and swinging the bat even faster than last year. On the other hand, he’s been taking an awful lot of called strikes so far, and seems a little tight in the batters box. This early on it’s hard to say if the passivity is an issue here or just Rainer reacclimating himself. I would bet the latter.

As for Yost, he’s so far followed a familiar pattern since draft day. Lauded for his elite bat to ball skills and strike zone judgement, as well as the potential for Gold Glove defense at the shortstop position, the shortcoming scouts pointed to around draft day was his slender frame and low level of present power. There was some thought that Yost might never even develop good gap power. The Tigers obviously begged to differ, and they’re developing a track record of being correct on these matters. The slender, six-foot tall left-handed hitter built 13 pounds of good muscle between draft day and spring training, and immediately debuted in major league camp with a grand slam this spring in his first place appearance outside of the back fields. It wasn’t a cheap home run either.

So, some concerns about Yost’s future power potential were immediately alleviated. The 19-year-old will probably never be a big time power threat, but he’s got all the tools to develop into a really good hitting shortstop who plays high end defense, steals bases, and gives the Tigers 15 home runs a year with plenty of extra base hits. At the same time, he’s just getting started, and there’s a very long way to go.

So far, the Harris/Greenberg strategy of favoring athletic prep players with high end contact ability and worrying about power potential later is paying off already in the form of Kevin McGonigle thanks to the work of scouting chiefs Rob Metzler and Mark Conner. The long-term future of the Tigers’ infield could be really exciting. The heavy emphasis on locking up good prep pitchers in the draft, on the other hand, is not working out well at all, but there’s time for that to turn around.

It’s a positive, if not surprising, sign that Ryan Garko and Shane Ferrell decided Yost didn’t need extended spring training or work in the Complex League, which opens on May 2, to help prepare him for Florida State League action. Rainer moving up made this the move, but the timing makes sense as well, as the Flying Tigers will start a homestand against the New York Yankees affiliate, the Tampa Bay Tarpons on Tuesday evening. Fellow 2025 first rounder Michael Oliveto will probably need a little more time to refine his work at the catcher position comign out of high school, but his bat is also advanced enough that the two should unite with the Flying Tigers before too long.

As for Rainer, the Tigers wanted to give him some time to get his feet under him before what is still a pretty rapid promotion. At the same time, he’ll be 21 in July and is ready to be pushed even if he struggles along the way. The psuedo rehab assignment in Lakeland allowed him to play in decent weather as he got up to speed. With a homestand starting on Tuesday night versus the Lake County Captains and the weather turning back to spring, it’s a good week to get out to LMCU Park and catch the Whitecaps if you’re in the area. Rainer will probably need some time to adapt to more consistent breaking stuff in the Midwest League, but his defense and the crazy raw power on display are comfortably worth the price of admission alone. He’s a riskier prospect than McGonigle or Max Clark, but the upside here is tremendous.

Dodgers' Dave Roberts has pointed response to 'Ohtani rule' critics

Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts has a message for anyone who thinks his team is bending MLB's rules regarding two-way players: If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.

The Dodgers came under fire recently from Milwaukee Brewers manager Craig Counsell, who took issue with a recent game in which Shohei Ohtani served as a starting pitcher, but wasn't also in the lineup as designated hitter.

Under MLB rules, two-way players don't count against the 13-pitcher roster limit. So Ohtani effectively gives the Dodgers one more pitcher than any other team.

Before the Brewers' game on Monday, April 20, Counsell called the rule "bizarre" and suggested it gives the Dodgers an unfair advantage. "There’s not another player like that," Counsell said, "but one team gets different rules for that player."

After the Dodgers' 12-3 win over the Colorado Rockies later that night, Roberts responded.

"We're more than willing to have other teams go out and find a player that can do both (pitching and hitting)," Roberts said. "He's an exception because he's an exceptional player."

Ohtani went 1-for-4 with two walks and two runs scored in the Dodgers' win on Monday night. In the process he extended his streak of reaching base to 52 consecutive games, moving him ever closer to Duke Snider's franchise record of 58 in a row.

The Los Angeles Dodgers have a dual threat in pitcher/DH Shohei Ohtani, one that manager Dave Roberts has been more than happy to use to the team's advantage.

Counsell will have a chance to express his concerns directly to Roberts and Ohtani this weekend when the Cubs visit Dodger Stadium for a three-game series against the two-time defending World Series champions.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dave Roberts responds to Craig Counsell's 'Shohei Ohtani rule' take

Atlanta Braves News: Ronald Acuna Jr. Day to Day, Bats Deliver another Road Win, more

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 18: Ronald Acuna Jr. #13 of the Atlanta Braves waves to Phillies fans after the final out for the 3-1 win against the Philadelphia Phillies during the ninth inning at Citizens Bank Park on April 18, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Heather Barry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Monday was another fun day for the Braves offense as they won their sixth straight game in a 9-4 victory over the Nationals. Drake Baldwin and Matt Olson had big games, while the offense as a whole once again delivered. However, the story of the game was a stretch of concern after Ronald Acuna Jr. left the game after being hit by a pitch two different times. Fortunately, x-rays were negative and he is day-to-day. Despite the brief scare, it was another highly successful night for the Braves.

Braves News

The week ahead provides plenty of opportunity for the Braves to increase their lead in the NL East.

The sweep of the Phillies provided real proof of how special this team can be.

Matt Powers dives deep in the Braves International Signings over the past decade, highlighted by some notable misses along the way.

One recent international signing who is starting to deliver on his promise is Luis Guanipa.

Mark Bowman looks at how some looming roster decisions are fast approaching for the Braves as players get healthy.

MLB News

The NL Central is proving to be the best division in baseball so far.

Another tough loss for the Phillies to start the week.

Dodgers closer Edwin Diaz will have surgery on his right elbow to remove loose bodies. He could be out three months.

Mariners added Brendan Donovan to the IL.

Sonny Gray of the Red Sox is headed to the IL with a hamstring issue.

The Feed

One development to watch this week is the potential for Didier Fuentes to start Thursday’s game vs. the Nats. Walt Weiss commented that Chris Sale could be a candidate to move back on the schedule due to having a pretty thorough previous outing. If the Braves take care of business over the next few days, Fuentes could be be an option to start Thursday it seems.

Is it time for the Red Sox to worry about Garrett Crochet?

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 19: Garrett Crochet #35 of the Boston Red Sox pitches during the game between the Detroit Tigers and the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on Sunday, April 19, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Natalie Reid/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The 2025 American League Cy Young runner-up, Garrett Crochet, ranks 72nd of 73 qualified pitchers in ERA this season. Through five starts, he’s registered a 7.88 ERA in 24 innings. Over his last two starts, he’s allowed more earned runs than strikeouts, and more home runs than scoreless innings. After the worst start of his career against the Minnesota Twins, he came out and surrendered a first-inning run against the Detroit Tigers, making Red Sox Nation hold its collective breath. After cruising through the second, third, and fourth innings and allowing Red Sox fans to exhale, the Tigers jumped on him for four more runs in the fifth inning so fast that any breath would have been a gasp.

So, is it time to worry? I touched on this briefly in my game recap, but I say no. The velocity dipped in his start against Minnesota, and he paid the price for it, but it was following a 100+ pitch performance, and consistent with an early-season outing last season after a long outing, when he also temporarily lost some velo. It was back up on Sunday, and the stuff looked as sharp as it normally does. His sinkers on the armside earned strikes, while his fastballs above the zone flew by hitters in two-strike counts. He didn’t get as many strikes with his cutter, but it wasn’t so bad that he couldn’t use the pitch at all.

But there are two problems worth keeping an eye on.

The first is that he’s falling behind hitters. In 2025, Crochet threw 31.5% of his pitches ahead in the count. So far in 2026, that number is down to 25.2%. The league average is down to about 28% from 29%, potentially in part due to ABS, but Crochet went from above average to below. He’s also getting to two-strike counts against fewer hitters. In 2025, according to my janky Excel work, he got two strikes against 57% of the hitters he faced. In 2026, he’s getting to put away counts against 46% of opponents.

The second problem is his execution with two strikes, particularly with his sweeper. I’m going to focus on righties because Crochet isn’t going to see many lefties. Lefties are 4 for 13 against Crochet this season, but his sinker is still incredibly effective, and opponents will start as many righties as possible against him.

In two-strike counts against righties, his sweeper accounts for almost 35% of his offerings. That makes it his most used pitch in those counts, a year after his four-seam dominated in two-strike counts. While he’s throwing it more, it’s been less effective. The putaway rate is down from 30% to 19%, despite a nearly identical shape. When the shape is the same, and the way a pitch is deployed is the same, but the results are different, it typically comes down to location. That’s the case here.

Simply put, he’s not getting the ball to the glove side as frequently. A left-handed sweeper to a right-handed hitter will play best at the back foot, and Crochet hasn’t thrown to that spot as often this season. When it’s over the middle or up, righties can get around it and pull it to left field for hits. The good news is the stuff is still there. Maybe it’s feel, maybe it’s a mechanical issue. Let’s look at it in practice.

Here’s Spencer Torkelson in the fourth inning. His first time up, we walked on five pitches, three of them nowhere close to the strike zone.

The at-bat starts with a fastball for a called strike. It looks like he wanted it up and in, but misses on the arm side, but it’s a strike nonetheless. Good start.

At 0-1, Crochet goes to his sweeper and locates it low in the zone. It’s hard to say if Narvaez’s target is meant to be where the ball is supposed to start or finish, so he might have been looking to backdoor it for a called strike. If it is a miss, it’s not a bad one. It’s low in the zone, and Torkelson’s early swing fouls it off. Now at 0-2, Crochet can throw whatever he wants. I’d probably elevate a four-seam, or double up on the sweeper, and try to get it to the back foot.

He goes with a sinker that’s supposed to be away from Torkelson, but he spikes it for ball one. It’s a non-competitive pitch and a hard sequence off. At 1-2, I’d again look for an elevated four-seam or sweeper.

It’s the sweeper, and it’s a really good one. It doesn’t get a swing, but it’s located in an area where he will get swings if he throws it consistently. It’s maybe a little bit low, but that’s nitpicking. After spitting on a good breaking ball, hitters often look for a fastball because they feel as if they showed the pitcher they have the breaking ball covered. He also knows that Crochet doesn’t want to get to 3-2 with a runner on base and two outs. With that in mind, Crochet can double up on the sweeper in the same location to get a chase from Torkelson.

See what I mean? Torkelson is clearly looking for something hard, and he’s way out in front of this one. That’s basically it for Crochet. When he locates the sweeper, he’s going to carve up lineups. When he doesn’t, and hitters can look for one of his fastballs, things get more difficult. The ability to drop changeups in for called strikes to keep hitters honest would go a long way, but he’s never shown the willingness to commit to the pitch or the ability to throw it in the strike zone.

So that’s what it looks like when it’s going good, but what about when it’s going poorly? Here’s a look at some two-strike offerings against Matt Vierling in the first inning.

The first 0-2 pitch is a sweeper that’s fouled off. Notice the location? It’s in the zone, neither inside nor low enough to get a whiff.

He doubles up on it after the foul ball, this one misses on the arm side, where it’s never close to being a strike. Here are all the whiffs he got on the sweeper against righties last season.

There are a few away from righties, but the vast majority came down and in. Moving on.

At 1-2, Crochet goes to the cutter, and it again catches too much of the plate. Vierling fouls it down the line, and we do it again.

He tries to elevate a four-seam for his fourth two-strike pitch of the at-bat, but it’s down in the zone and fouled straight back. A straight-back foul ball typically means the hitter just missed it, so I’d avoid doubling up on that one.

He goes back to the sweeper, and it’s up in the zone. Vierling gets around it and pulls it into left field for a double. As an aside, sweepers typically benefit from velocity. This one was only 80 mph, a few ticks below his average. I know this is the forum where I’m supposed to dive into this stuff, but it’s late, and I have a deadline, so keep an eye on my Twitter for more on how his sweeper velocity could be impacting his performance.

That’s an example of Crochet not being able to put guys away, one of the issues I mentioned. The other is falling behind hitters. I won’t bore you with videos of Crochet missing with his fastball over and over again, only for the fastballs in the zone to get hit because hitters are ready for it. That’s what happened with Dillon Dingler, who blew the game wide open with his fifth-inning home run.

Long story short, I’d bet on a bounce-back from Crochet. The stuff is still there, and it’s just a matter of execution. Why he hasn’t been able to locate with two strikes, I can’t tell you. Fortunately, it likely isn’t a months-long fix. It could be as simple as throwing on the side between starts and making a tweak to get right. It’s not as if he was totally lost on Sunday, either. It’s easy to think about the run he allowed in the first inning and think that he struggled all day, but in reality, he dominated for the better part of 4.2 innings. His next start will likely come against the Orioles this weekend. I’m backing the pig to get back on track when that time comes.

Reaction to Dodgers closer Edwin Díaz having surgery

DENVER, CO - APRIL 19: Edwin Diaz #3 of the Los Angeles Dodgers looks on from the mound in the eighth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on April 19, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers are without closer Edwin Díaz for at least a few months, with arthroscopic surgery on his right elbow coming on Wednesday in Los Angeles that will sideline him until the second half of the season.

Sunday’s four-batter, no-out outing set off alarm bells for the Dodgers. From Mirjam Swanson in the Los Angeles Times:

“Obviously, we all saw the stuff [Sunday], and it sent up red flags,” Roberts said. “And so, after the game, he had a conversation with our training staff, and felt that he had some elbow discomfort. So we just wanted to be proactive, and felt that it was smart to get an MRI, get imaging, which we did do, and it showed loose bodies.”

Jack Harris at the California Post wrote about the various veteran options with closing experience the Dodgers have for the back end of games, including Tanner Scott, Alex Vesia, and Blake Treinen:

“I think we have a lot of guys capable of pitching in the ninth inning,” Gomes said. “It is a different three outs, but we also have multiple guys that have done it at a high level in the past.”

Not among those closing candidates is Roki Sasaki, which was to be expected. From Fabian Ardaya and Katie Woo at The Athletic:

Sasaki turned in sharp results, and his velocity played up in his short stint as a reliever during last year’s playoff run. But his role in the bullpen was strictly situational. The plan was always for him to return to the rotation. Gomes doubled down on that once more Monday afternoon. When he was asked if Sasaki was a candidate to move to the bullpen, the executive responded with a one-word answer: “No.”


Dodgers minor league shortstop Emil Morales, who was named to several top-100 prospect lists this offseason, is off to a solid start thus far, hitting .377/.443/.639 with a 172 wRC+ and 11 extra-base hits in 13 games for the Class-A Ontario Buzzers. The 19-year-old was among a group of prospects whose early performance stood out to Baseball America.

“He’s also making more contact this year, and his 20% strikeout rate is the lowest of his career. That’s encouraging, given the biggest question about Morales’ offensive profile is his hit tool,” wrote Ian Cundall at Baseball America. “The Dodgers have a stable of intriguing prospects on the Ontario team, but Morales might have the most upside of them all. He’s already showing present ability at the plate, and his bat could be ready for a new test soon.”

Guardians News and Notes: Messick Bump Day

CLEVELAND, OH - APRIL 16: Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Parker Messick (77) reacts after the final out of the eighth inning of the Major League Baseball game between the Baltimore Orioles and Cleveland Guardians on April 16, 2026, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

It is time for Parker Messick to pitch.

The Guardians lost a bad game, yesterday, 9-2, to the Astros. Slade Cecconi looked pretty lousy again, but at least he said the right things after the game:

Steven Kwan, Kyle Manzardo, David Fry, Bo Naylor and Juan Brito are providing next to nothing at the plate. Connor Brogdon, Shawn Armstrong and Matt Festa continue to get hit hard every time out. So, if we solve those eight issues, we’ll win a World Series. Nice to know.

AROUND MLB:

The Tigers and Royals both lost. The Mets lost their 11th straight, which is quite funny.