BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA - MARCH 21: Deven Sheerin of the LSU Tigers in action against the Oklahoma Sooners at the Alex Box Stadium on March 21, 2026 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. (Photo by Mac Brod/LSU/University Images via Getty Images)
After two season in Baton Rouge, Deven Sheerin will head to professional baseball after being selected #128 overall in the 4th round of the MLB Draft by the Philadelphia Phillies. He was the first LSU pitcher to be selected and third player overall, following Derek Curiel and Jake Brown.
While Sheerin was a Tiger for multiple season, he only played for one of them. Soon after transferring to LSU in the summer of 2024, he tore his ACL and missed the entire 2025 National Championship season. This past year was his first on the field and he made up for lost time.
In 37.2 innings pitched, Sheerin held a 4.78 ERA. He struck out a whopping 58 batters, averaging over 1.5 Ks per inning. Pumping in fastballs up to 97-98 mph and following them with a wicked slider, the redshirt-sophomore’s most important quality during the 2026 season was his ability to throw strikes. LSU’s pitching staff led the SEC in walks allowed, so his command, along with his dominant stuff, led Sheerin to being LSU’s most consistent pitcher throughout the season.
With a 3/4 arm slot delivery, paired with a stretch in which he steps way across his body, he is a nightmare for right-handed hitters. He very well could become a dominant Major League bullpen arm, especially considering how fresh he is. With only 107.2 innings pitched across three seasons in college, Sheerin is delivering a massive amount of promise to the Phillies organization.
Slot value for the 128th pick is $597,400, so it will be interesting to see the final singing bonus that Philadelphia gives him.
Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:L, 2-5 (7) and L, 1-3 (7) vs. Norfolk Tides — yeah, they had a … less enjoyable doubleheader than the A-ball team
Game 1
C J.C. Escarra 0-3, BB, fielding error DH Spencer Jones 3-4, HR, RBI, K, SB — .960 OPS at Triple-A after 14th homer in 48 games (109.1 mph off the bat on a hanging slider, 412 feet to the opposite field) 2B Marco Luciano 1-4, K RF Yanquiel Fernández 0-4 3B Oswaldo Cabrera 2-3 1B Tyler Hardman 1-3, fielding error SS Jonathan Ornelas 1-2, 2B, BB, K CF Duke Ellis 0-3, K LF Kenedy Corona 1-3, HR, RBI, 2 K — actually outdrove Jones on his homer, 421 feet
Kyle Carr 4 IP, 8 H, 5 R (4 ER), 2 BB, 5 K, 2 HR, WP (loss) Yerry De los Santos 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K Eric Reyzelman 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 3 K
DH J.C. Escarra 0-4, K — hitless day in seven at-bats CF Spencer Jones 0-2, 2 BB 2B Oswaldo Cabrera 0-2, 2 K RF Yanquiel Fernández 1-3 3B Tyler Hardman 2-2, BB — only good game from the nightcap 1B Ernesto Martinez Jr. 0-3, K, GIDP SS Jonathan Ornelas 1-3, fielding error LF Cole Gabrielson 0-3 C Abrahan Gutierrez 1-2 PH Marco Luciano 0-1
Adam Kloffenstein 4.2 IP, 6 H, 3 R (2 ER), 1 BB, 5 K, HR, WP (loss) Will Brian 0.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 3 BB, 0 K Kervin Castro 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 3 K
Double-A Somerset Patriots:L, 2-5 vs. Hartford Yard Goats
LF Jackson Castillo 1-4, K CF Jace Avina 1-3, 3B, BB, RBI — triple in the first RF DJ Gladney 0-4, 3 K 3B Coby Morales 1-4, RBI, 2 K 2B Connor McGinnis 0-4, 2 K DH Miguel Palma 1-4, 2 K 1B Josh Moylan 1-4, 2 K C Manuel Palencia 0-4, K SS Owen Cobb 0-2, BB
Cade Smith 4.2 IP, 6 H, 3 R (3 ER), 2 BB, 7 K, HR, WP (loss) Kelly Austin 1.1 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 2 K, HR Matt Keating 1.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 1 K Geoffrey Gilbert 1.2 IP, 2 H, 1 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 2 K, HR
Cade Smith (@Yankees No. 16 prospect) struck out seven batters over 4.2 innings in his 15th Double-A appearance tonight!🔥 pic.twitter.com/H6tjGAYmQl
High-A Hudson Valley Renegades:W, 7-1 vs. Wilmington Blue Rocks
3B Roderick Arias 1-4, 2B, BB, 3 K, 2 SB, throwing error SS Core Jackson 1-3, BB, 2 K, SB DH Eric Genther 1-3, HR, 2 RBI, K, SF — solo shot in the third 1B Kyle West 1-4, K LF Wilson Rodriguez 1-2, 2B, 2 BB, SB 2B Enmanuel Tejeda 1-3, RBI, K, SF, CS C Josue Gonzalez 1-2, 2B, BB, RBI, SF, passed ball CF Camden Troyer 1-4, RBI, 2 K RF Luis Durango 1-4, 2B, RBI, 2 K — very egalitarian day for Tampa, everyone had at least one hit, no one had more than one
Rory Fox 5 IP, 3 H, 1 R (1 ER), 2 BB, 9 K, 2 WP, HBP (win) — personal career-high with nine strikeouts Thomas Balboni Jr. 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 1 K, HBP Wilmy Sanchez 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K Kevin Stevens 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 0 K
SS Jackson Lovich 1-3, BB, SB, CS 2B Hans Montero 1-2, HR, 2 BB, 2 RBI, 3 SB — 25-for-28 on steals C Luis Puello 1-3, 2B, BB, RBI 3B Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek 0-2, 2 BB, fielding error DH David McCann 2-4, HR, BB, 4 RBI — go-ahead three-run bomb in the fourth LF Brando Mayea 1-4, GIDP RF Willy Montero 1-4, K 1B Christofer Reyes 1-3, K CF Isael Arias 0-3, K, SB
Sabier Marte 1.2 IP, 6 H, 6 R (3 ER), 1 BB, 3 K, HR — first start above Rookie ball was tough, left in a 6-1 deficit Parker Seay 2.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K (win) Brian Hendry 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K — rehab assignment Austin Breedlove 2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K (save) — A-ball debut as well
#Tarpons C/1B David McCann (2-for-3, HR, BB, 4 RBI, R) paced the bats in DH G1 w/ 4 RBI, including this GW 3-run HR – his 8th HR (4th w/ Tampa). Now has 21 RBI in just 24 games in Low-A. #Yankeespic.twitter.com/KYPqMDNdz7
3B Jackson Lovich 3-4, 2B, HR, RBI — #atripleshy (homer went 417 feet at least, 107.8 mph off the bat) 2B Hans Montero 2-4, K, SB, throwing error SS Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek 0-2, BB, RBI, K, SF 1B David McCann 1-3, 2B, 2 RBI, K, HBP — two-run double in the fifth to make it 3-0 RF Brando Mayea 0-2, BB DH Engelth Urena 0-3, 2 K LF Gabriel Lara 1-2, 2B, BB, K C Ediel Rivera 1-3, RBI, K, throwing error CF Isael Arias 1-2, 2B, BB, SB
Tyler Boudreau 6 IP, 2 H, 1 R (1 ER), 2 BB, 4 K, HR (win) Greysen Carter 1 IP, 2 H, 2 R (2 ER), 3 BB, 1 K
#Tarpons INF @JacksonLovich (4-for-7, HR, 2B, BB, RBI, 3 R, SB) hit safely in both ends of the DH, including his league-best 16th HR – a 417 ft shot hit 107.8 mph off the bat. Lovich also leads FSL in SLG (.532), OPS (.894), XBH (34), TB (134) + 2nd in RBI (54) & H (81). #Yankeespic.twitter.com/o0RXjHHkba
Florida Complex League Yankees:W, 3-2 (7) vs. FCL Phillies
3B Richard Matic 0-2, BB LF Wilberson De Pena 1-3 C Queni Pineda 1-3, 2B, RBI, K, SB SS Leni Done 0-3, throwing error CF Jose Castro 0-3, 2 K DH Francisco Vilorio 0-2, K 2B Dexters Peralta 1-2, K RF Estivenzon Montero 1-2, HR, 2 RBI — go-ahead two-run shot in the fifth was the decisive blow 1B Justin Capellan 0-2, K
Edinzo Marquez 3.2 IP, 4 H, 1 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 7 K Alexander Almonte 2.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 1 K, HBP (win) Jorge Luna 1 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 0 K (save)
Dominican Summer League Yankees:W, 8-6 at DSL Phillies
CF Isaias Castillo 0-4, 3 K, HBP SS Stiven Marinez 2-4, BB, RBI, K, 2 SB RF Yostin Pena 0-5, RBI 2B Juan Torres 2-5, K C Juan Martinez 2-3, 2B, 2 BB, 2 RBI, 2 SB, 2 passed balls — go-ahead two-run double in the sixth 1B Jose Peralta 0-4, BB, 3 K, SB DH Abrahan Pichardo 0-5, 3 K LF Eliezer Adames 2-4, K, fielding error 3B Adrian Feliz 1-3, HBP — scored tying run on a wild pitch in the four-run sixth
Dominican Summer League Bombers:L, 5-11 vs. DSL Colorado
2B Dariel Santana 1-5, 2B, 2 K, SB, picked off SS Mani Cedeno 0-2, 2 BB, 2 K, 2 SB, fielding error 3B Alfred Ciriaco 0-1 C Alessandro Rodriguez 1-3, RBI, K, SF DH Carlos Bello 1-2, 2 BB, picked off CF David Carrera 1-4, RBI — tied game in the eighth on an RBI grounder 3B-SS Germayhoni Beltre 0-4 RF Sebastian Pinto 1-4, HR, 2 RBI, GIDP — second career homer 1B Jesus Guerrero 1-3, BB LF Eddison Charles 0-2, 2 BB, 2 K
Argenis Veloz 3 IP, 5 H, 3 R (2 ER), 2 BB, 3 K, HBP, WP — pro debut Brandy Luis 3 IP, 6 H, 2 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 2 K Ronald Tejada 2.1 IP, 4 H, 3 R (3 ER), 1 BB, 2 K (loss) Diego Carrillo 0.2 IP, 3 H, 3 R (3 ER), 1 BB, 0 K, HBP — Tejada got the loss, but Carrillo got smoked in the go-ahead six-run ninth
PHILADELPHIA — Three months and 16 days have passed since opening day, and now that the All-Star break is here, do we really know anything more now than we did back in March?
The Los Angeles Dodgers still are the best team in baseball and, with a 61-34 record entering Saturday, could realistically pop the champagne corks in August, running away from everyone in the National League West.
The Colorado Rockies, even with a new front office, still stink at 39-57, and are on their way to their fourth consecutive 100-loss season.
The Milwaukee Brewers continue to embarrass every prognosticator and algorithm that predicted this would be the year they’d be sitting home in October, and now watch them sit with a 7 ½-game lead in the NL Central entering Saturday.
And as far as everyone else, welcome to the land mediocrity, where 24 teams are within six games of a playoff berth, putting the Aug. 3 trade deadline into chaos.
While everyone has breathlessly been talking about the trade deadline since mid-April, producing tens of thousands of words on paper and on the airwaves, what if this turns out to be the dullest trade deadline in decades?
What if the Detroit Tigers, who have the American League’s best record since June 1, actually hang onto two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal?
What if the Boston Red Sox, who perhaps have the most valuable trade chips in starter Sonny Gray, closer Aroldis Chapman and first baseman Willson Contreras, believe they’re a legitimate contender after winning 12 of their past 14 games, climbing to within 1 ½ games of a wild-card berth?
What if no one is desperate enough to spend hundreds of millions to take Rafael Devers, Willy Adames or Matt Chapman off the San Francisco Giants' hands?
What if there are so many teams in the wild-card race at the trade deadline, with perhaps 84 victories getting you into the dance, no one wants to sell?
Well, after three months of gathering no clarity except for the fact that this may be the Dodgers’ best team yet in their dynasty, here are the top five story lines for the second half of the season:
Will Detroit Tigers trade Tarik Skubal?
Skubal is the difference between a glorious trade deadline and perhaps a dull one.
He’s also the one player who could be the Dodgers’ kryptonite, knowing that any team that has Skubal in the postseason has the potential to end the Dodgers’ dreams of a three-peat.
Can you imagine the Brewers with Skubal and Jacob Misiorowski in the same rotation? Or the Atlanta Braves with Chris Sale and Skubal? How about the New York Yankees with a four-headed monster of Skubal, Gerrit Cole, Cam Schlittler and Max Fried?
Or, what if the dude goes nowhere.
Skubal is back, healthy, and he also could be the one salvaging the Tigers’ season. Everyone in the AL Central had a chance to put the Tigers away when they lost 21 of 25 games and dropped to 22-38. But instead, Skubal came back and the Tigers took off. They have gone 21-12 since June 1 and are suddenly back in the race. They entered Saturday 4 ½ games out in the AL Central and 2 ½ games back in the wild-card race.
Forget the narrative that the Tigers could thread the needle and trade Skubal while also acquiring players.
Either they go all in, or all out.
If the Tigers keep Skubal, and perhaps grab another late-inning reliever, they suddenly could be awfully scary with Framber Valdez, Casey Mize, Jack Flaherty and a future Hall of Famer named Justin Verlander.
When will Aaron Judge be back, and what would it mean to Yankees?
Well, let’s put it this way: Aaron Judge better return this year from his fractured rib or the Yankees will have a long, cold winter in the Bronx.
Just in case anyone wondered how valuable Judge is to the Yankees, all you have to do is look at this season. They are a World Series contender with Judge in the lineup. They are a flawed, mediocre team with zero hopes of catching the Tampa Bay Rays without him.
Judge, who has been on the IL since June 5, will have his rib re-imaged during the All-Star break. That should provide a timeline for his return, with the Yankees hoping he’ll be back sometime in August.
"I don’t think we’re anticipating it’s coming back clean," Yankees GM Brian Cashman said. "I think we’re anticipating and hopeful that it’s showing the healing process. … The time frame that it would take to heal should allow him to be back with us this season."
Judge broke his rib diving in the outfield April 26, but he played with the injury for another month before going on the IL.
So how badly have they missed him?
Let us count the ways: The Yankees have lost 15 of their past 22 games. They’ve scored an MLB-low 73 runs since June 18. And they’ve struck out an MLB-leading 230 times since June 18.
"Clearly, you miss him," Cashman told reporters. "That’s certainly part of it. But that’s not an answer to why we’re struggling with some consistently really good players that are going into collective slumps at the same time. That has nothing to do with Aaron Judge."
Then again, it has everything to do with Judge.
They simply are a different team without him, and the quicker they get him back, the better chance they’ll have to run down the first-place Rays.
Can anyone beat Dodgers? Anyone?
The Dodgers have been a runaway freight train since the first pitch, winning 15 of their first 19 games, and now on pace to win 106 games for their best winning percentage since they won 111 games in 2021 – back in the days when they couldn’t get out of the first round.
They’re doing all of this despite Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow – who are earning $53 million – combining for 42 ⅔ innings; right fielder Kyle Tucker, who’s earning $60 million, hitting seven homers; and $23 million closer Edwin Diaz sidelined since mid-April with four saves.
So, imagine when Snell, Glasnow and Diaz return? Imagine when Tucker starts showing a semblance of himself again? Imagine when Freddie Freeman, Mookie Betts and Max Muncy get hot at the same time?
Realistically, this is why the NL teams will be more aggressive than the American League teams at the deadline, knowing they have to go through Los Angeles to be in the World Series. The Philadelphia Phillies, with Cristopher Sanchez, Zack Wheeler and Jesus Luzardo, can certainly match up with the Dodgers in a short series, but they could use another starter and certainly a right-handed hitting outfielder. The Brewers will take Misiorowski against anyone, but what if they had Skubal to go with him? Or if the Braves added Skubal or Sonny Gray to go alongside Chris Sale.
The Dodgers can be beaten, and they were awfully fortunate enough to get past the San Diego Padres two years ago and the Toronto Blue Jays a year ago. But now is the time to take your best shot.
A year from now, it wouldn’t surprise a soul if the 2027 Dodgers have Skubal in that rotation, too.
Will those fabulous Cinderella stories crash and burn or will the magic continue?
These teams opened the season in a full-scale rebuild, retool or reboot, and here they shocking the world in the first half.
Who would have imagined that the Marlins, who traded away prized young starting pitchers Edward Cabrera and Ryan Weathers during the winter, would be winning 16 of their past 20 games for their greatest 20-game stretch since 2004. They are an MLB-best 26-9 since June 1, with shortstop Otto Lopez hitting an MLB-leading .341, and have the same record as the Phillies. They have a two-game lead in the wild-card race.
The Cardinals traded away everything but the St. Louis Arch during the offseason in their first fire sale in two decades, but here they are, hanging just two games back of a wild-card berth.
The Nationals traded prized starter MacKenzie Gore and let everyone know that CJ Abrams and James Wood were available during the winter, too, but now have a winning record and are hovering in the wild-card race.
And then there are the White Sox, the team that utterly embarrassed themselves two years ago by losing an MLB-record 121 games. But even after slugger Munetaka Murakami went down with an injury for 35 games, the White Sox still are tied for first place in the AL Central.
It’s absurd. It’s insane. It’s baseball.
No one in their right mind had any of these four teams competing this year, let alone having a legitimate chance to be playing in October.
It’ll be a fascinating watch at the deadline just to see how much the front offices believe in their teams themselves.
What is the future of managers on the hot seat, particularly first-year and interim managers?
Tony Vitello: The Giants took an unprecedented gamble when they hired Vitello from the University of Tennessee, and it has badly backfired. It certainly hasn’t helped that the Giants surrounded him with a huge contingent of young and inexperienced coaches, but they are the biggest mess outside Queens.
They’ve embarrassed themselves with their performance, leaving them no choice but to place every veteran on the trade block but starter Logan Webb.
It might be too embarrassing to fire Vitello after one year, but it wouldn’t surprise a soul to see Vitello return to the college ranks if the right opening comes his way.
Craig Stammen: Remember when the Padres stunned everyone by hiring Stammen, a former reliever who had no managerial or coaching experience, to be their first-year manager, choosing him over the likes of Bruce Bochy, Albert Pujols, Brandon Hyde and Phil Nevin?
It’s not as if Stammen can be blamed for all of their offensive troubles and battered starting rotation, but someone is going to have to take the fall, and it’s not going to be general manager A.J. Preller, who has already hired six different full-time managers.
Kurt Suzuki: Suzuki, another manager with zero experience before agreeing to a one-year contract to manage the Los Angeles Angels, has yet to make a difference. No one is saying the Angels are his fault by any means, and folks believe that he has a chance to be a good manager in the future, but it’s unlikely he’ll get that chance with the Angels.
There’s a new sheriff in town in John Mozeliak, and he’s expected to hire a new GM, who surely will want his own guy. The popular choice will be Albert Pujols, who actually had the job until he wanted a five-year contract and the ability to hire his own coaching staff. We’ll see if there could be a compromise this time around, particularly with Mozeliak his former GM in St. Louis.
Andy Green: Green is just a temporary hold until the New York Mets hire a new manager after the season when he returns to the front office. New Hall of Famer Carlos Beltran should be the leading candidate after having the job pulled away from him in 2020.
Don Mattingly: Mattingly was hired to be the Phillies' interim manager after Alex Cora rejected the job when Rob Thomson was fired. It was supposed to last only until the end of the season, but Philadelphia has performed so well under Mattingly that he might win NL manager of the year. And now he says that he’d love to stay if given the opportunity.
The job is still expected to be offered again to Cora after the season, but if the Phillies win the World Series, all bets are off.
Joe Espada: This is Espada’s third year with the Houston Astros. They have yet to win a postseason game, failing to make the playoffs last year for the first time since 2016. Simply, the Astros have to at least make the playoffs, if not play deep into October, for Espada to survive.
Torey Lovullo: Just three years ago, the Arizona Diamondbacks were in the World Series. They haven’t made the playoffs since and are teetering on irrelevancy. Mike Hazen, D-backs president of baseball operations, continues to support Lovullo, but Lovullo is on the final year of his contract and there have been zero talks of an extension. It might be playoffs or bust.
Matt Quatraro: The Kansas City Royals just locked up Quatraro in January with a three-year contract extension through 2029. They certainly had no intention of considering pulling the plug after one year of the new deal. Then again, they never imagined this might be their most disappointing season in franchise history.
Aaron Boone: GM Brian Cashman once again reiterated his support for Boone, believing he’s the right man for the job, and exonerating him for their struggles this year. Yet, if the Yankees don’t win the AL East this year, if the Yankees don’t play deep into October, or if somehow the Yankees miss the playoffs altogether, Cashman might have no choice but to make a change for only the fourth time in 30 years.
Around the basepaths
The Rays, who suddenly are seeing that the AL is wide open for the taking, plan to be aggressive buyers at the deadline. They not only have their eyes on Skubal, but they have shown interest in seeing whether the Diamondbacks would move second baseman Ketel Marte and Giants All-Star second baseman Luis Arraez as a backup plan.
The Diamondbacks shopped Marte during the winter, but pulled him off the market before spring training. He now has 10-and-5 rights and is expected to veto all trades, which Arizona has told teams.
Skubal has informed friends that he badly wants to stay in Detroit the rest of the season, believing they have a legitimate shot at the World Series, and has zero appetite to be traded. "I’ve never lost faith," Skubal says.
Marlins owner Bruce Sherman is telling his employees that he wants to keep ace Sandy Alcantara, who went 6-0 with a 3.35 ERA in June, and has absolutely no intention of trading him at the deadline.
The Seattle Mariners are letting teams know that they are willing to trade one of their prized starters for a back-end reliever and right-handed hitter, most likely Luis Castillo. They not only have a surplus of starters at the big-league level with a six-man rotation, but they have the finest pitching prospect in baseball with Kade Anderson. Anderson’s numbers are mind-boggling at Class AA where he has a 1.36 ERA and .160 opponent’s batting average in 14 starts. He has 99 strikeouts with just 10 walks in 66 ⅔ innings. That’s a 41.4% strikeout rate and 3.8% walk rate. The Mariners would also be clearing payroll by dealing Castillo, who is owed $22.75 million this year and next year.
Just in case a thousand or so reporters want to ask once again, Mike Trout wants to stay with the Angels and has no interest in being traded. He also has all of the power with a full no-trade clause to go along with his 10-and-5 rights.
The Yankees are making it no secret that they want to acquire catcher Hunter Goodman of the Rockies or Minnesota Twins catcher Ryan Jeffers. Yet, the Rockies plan to keep Goodman, who has the second-most homers in the NL behind Kyle Schwarber, and the Twins have no interest in trading Jeffers unless they fall out of the mediocre AL Central race, hanging just 2 games back.
Now with the seven veteran umpires who are 59 years or older who qualified for MLB’s buyout, there will not be a single umpire 60 or older in the major leagues next season, perhaps for the first time in modern-day MLB history.
The Phillies have included Diamondbacks left fielder Lourdes Gurriel Jr. among their possible trade targets for a right-handed hitting outfielder, which also includes Angels right fielder Jo Adell. Gurriel, however, is hitting just .222 with two homers, 20 RBI and a .565 OPS in 45 games since opening the season on the IL.
The Royals will listen but have no intention of trading Michael Wacha, who not only made the All-Star team for the first time in 11 years but is considered an invaluable clubhouse leader. He also is under team control at $14 million a season through 2028.
Kudos to MLB for selecting Alan Porter, born and raised in Philadelphia, to be the crew chief and home-plate umpire at the All-Star Game.
Red Sox fans should send thank-you notes to former GM Chaim Bloom, now with the Cardinals, for sending them Cy Young candidate Sonny Gray and slugger Willson Contreras in the offseason. The Red Sox would be a disaster without them.
Remember Josh Hader? He’s back to being one of the finest closers in the game. Hader has appeared in 15 games for the Astros since debuting after opening the season on the IL, and he has given up just two hits and one run in 15 innings, striking out 24. He's perfect in all nine of his save opportunities and generating a stunning 43.8% chase rate. Hader, who is in the third year of a five-year, $95 million contract, is not available in trade talks.
The Diamondbacks, who have been mired in mediocrity, could have starters Eduardo Rodriguez, Michael Soroka, Merrill Kelly and Zac Gallen available along with closer Paul Sewald.
Chicago Cubs ace Justin Steele, who hasn’t pitched since April 7, 2025, is expected to start throwing off a mound the first week of August, but Cubs manager Craig Counsell said it will be too late in the season for him to rejoin the rotation and instead would be used in the bullpen in September.
The Astros, who have gone 26-19 since May 21, desperately want another starter. Their rotation is yielding a 5.29 ERA, second-worst in MLB.
The Dodgers’ big midseason acquisition will be two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell. He hasn’t faced a hitter since his lone start May 9, but after undergoing arthroscopic elbow surgery to remove bone chips he has started facing live hitters again. He claims this is the best he has felt in two years, with his shoulder pain gone, too. Snell has thrown only 64 innings since signing his five-year, $182 million contract, but he was invaluable in last year’s postseason – 3-0 with an 0.85 ERA the first three rounds – and has a chance to have a major impact again this October.
While the Texas Rangers could be interested in trading shortstop Corey Seager this winter, his trade value has absolutely plummeted. He has been on the IL six times in the past two years, and is owed $155 million over the next five seasons.
Rival executives are intrigued to see whether A.J. Preller trades Padres All-Star closer Mason Miller at the deadline with their team spiraling downward, but they laugh at the notion they will receive anything close to the package they surrendered to the Athletics to acquire him. Shortstop Leo De Vries, the No. 2 prospect in baseball, was featured in that swap.
The Mets’ best trade chip might not be starter Freddy Peralta, but actually reliever Luke Weaver. Peralta, who has been a disappointment with the Mets, will be strictly a rental as a pending free agent. Meanwhile, Weaver has thrived and is under control through 2027. Weaver is yielding a 1.89 ERA in 38 innings pitched, and hasn’t given up an earned run in 24 appearances since May 1.
Loved seeing Blue Jays manager John Schneider letting Dylan Cease have a chance to throw only the second no-hitter in franchise history when he entered the ninth inning having already thrown a career-high 115 pitches. "I’m a fan of baseball," Schneider said. "I think if a guy has a chance to throw a no-hitter, I think you let him do it, and you make adjustments after that."
The coolest thing for Tigers rookie shortstop Kevin McGonigle making the All-Star team? "Mike Trout texted me," McGonigle said. "Trout texted me and congratulated me. That's the one, I was like, wow, that's pretty wild." McGonigle is the first Tigers position player to make the All-Star team at 21 years old or younger since Hall of Famer Al Kaline in 1954 and 1955.
Ever since several D-backs officials and players expressed their frustration with Ketel Marte for sitting out their game against the Dodgers and starter Shohei Ohtani, Marte has since played in every game – starting all but six times this season. "He’s very driven as an athlete overall," D-backs manager Torey Lovullo said. "I think he wants to be elite and be recognized as one of the best players in the league. I know that he knows to do that, you got to play. You’ve got to play a lot and post and perform. He’s been doing that really well."
The Brewers’ urgency to acquire a starter at the deadline was heightened with the uncertainty of veteran Brandon Woodruff pitching again this season. They would also like to acquire an impact bat for the left side of their infield.
The Cincinnati Reds already are getting plenty of interest in Spencer Steer, who can play first base, third base and left field. He’ll be in high demand with so few impact bats available at the deadline.
While the Giants love having second baseman Luis Arraez, who’s willing to sign an extension, the cold-hearted truth is that they need to clear infield spots for Casey Schmitt and Bryce Eldridge, leaving Arraez out of the picture. They also already have six players earning more than $20 million this year.
You know the Pittsburgh Pirates are serious about getting into the playoffs when they traded away their Competitive Balance pick (No. 34 overall) to the White Sox for shortstop Jacob Gonzalez and left-handed pitcher Brandon Eisert. The Pirates, who have already hit more home runs than all of last season, badly needed another infielder with rookie shortstop Konnor Griffin sidelined for two months with his left ring finger injury, and they were willing to sacrifice a valuable draft pick.
You think the Dodgers wish they had kept Yordan Alvarez, the Cleveland Guardians had kept Junior Caminero, the Rays had kept Cristopher Sanchez or the Giants had kept Otto Lopez? They will be bringing back the painful memories of "what if" at the All-Star Game.
The most underrated part of the All-Star weekend is the Swingman Classic with Ken Griffey Jr., featuring HBCU programs across the country, showing their talents in front of scouts.
Hall of Famer Frank Thomas, formerly of FOX, is launching his own sports network.
Stat of the week, courtesy of @MLBRandomStats: From 1901-2015, there was not a single pitcher who had a perfect game through 6 innings and was pulled from the game. From 2016-2025: Three pitchers were pulled with perfect games through 6 innings. This week: Twice in four games.
Quote of the Week: Padres third baseman Manny Machado on their first half woes: "Obviously, you know, there’s a lot of things that haven’t really been going our way. It’s baseball, man. That’s the beauty of it. And I’ve been a part of it, and it’s a beautiful game, and we’re all stupid to be playing it. We’re all stupid to be playing it, because it’s a life of struggle."
The Hens got really pretty good pitching in this one despite a dire lack of offense considering they drew 12 walks in this game. They can split the series now with a victory on Sunday.
Max Clark led off the game with a walk and took second on a Gage Workman single. Corey Julks reached on a comebacker to the pitcher, and a Trei Cruz sac fly scored Clark. That was all they got out of the bases loaded, no outs setup, however.
Dylan File gave up a run in the bottom half, and then another one in the second inning, but managed to avoid blowing up.
In the third, Workman and Julks walked to start the inning, and Brett Callahan doubled them home for a 3-2 lead. Trei Cruz then walked, and Jace Jung as well. A Cal Stevenson sac fly scored Callahan for a 4-2 lead, but that was all they’d get out it.
File gave up a solo shot to open the bottom of the third, so it was 4-3 Hens at that point. Despite the parade of walks, the Hens couldn’t score again, going 2-for-10 with runners in scoring position.
Fortunately, Ricky Vanasco gave them 1.2 scoreless innings of relief and Tyler Mattison and Nick Sandlin took it the rest of the way.
Callahan: 1-4, R, 2 RBI, 2B, BB, 3 K, 2 SB
Clark: 0-3, R, 2 BB, K
File: 4.1 IP, 3 R, 2 ER, 5 H, 3 BB, 3 K
Coming Up Next: It’s a 1:35 p.m ET start on Sunday. The minor league calendar will result next Friday after All-Star week concludes.
The SeaWolves, in Moon Mammoths gear, got themselves into position to split this homestand on Sunday with good pitching and the offense taking advantage of seven walks issued by Harrisburg.
Hayden Minton got the start, and he was really good in a short outing. The right-hander fired four scoreless with two hits and a walk allowed against five strikeouts.
The offense was a little quiet early on but in the bottom of the third, Viandel Pena and Bennett Lee drew one-out walks. Seth Stephenson popped out, but Peyton Graham drilled a single up the middle to score Pena. Justice Bigbie went oppo for a single to score Lee, and then Bigbie stole second base. Andrew Jenkins line a single to right fielder Johnathon Thomas, scoring Graham, but Bigbie was cut down on a good throw to the plate. 3-0 Erie.
In the fourth, E.J. Exposito walked, and two batters later Pena mashed his first homer since signing with the Tigers last week. 5-0 Erie.
Tyler Owens took over from Minton after the latter walked the leadoff man in the fifth. Owens escaped that situation, and lefty Carlos Peña took over from there. He fired four scoreless and pounded the zone, avoiding walks and generally smothering the Senators.
Max Burt added a solo shot in the sixth to put this one away.
Pena: 1-3, 2 R, 2 RBI, HR, BB, 2 K
Burt: 1-3, R, RBI, HR, BB, K
Minton: 4.0 IP, 0 R, 2 H, BB, 5 K
Coming Up Next: First pitch is set for 1:35 p.m. ET on Sunday.
West Michigan Whitecaps 4, Fort Wayne TinCaps 2 (box)
Charlie Christensen spun a gem and the Whitecaps pounded out 10 hits to outlast Fort Wayne on Saturday. They took a 4-1 lead in the best of six series in the process.
Christensen’s huge extension, funky angle, and quality secondary stuff overwhelmed the TinCaps. He no-hit them for 4.2 innings, walking two and striking out five. He threw 46 of 75 pitches for strikes along the way.
Clayton Campbell got the ‘Caps offense going with a leadoff double in the bottom of the second. Juan Hernandez singled him home with two outs for an early lead. That was well as they had trouble with Fort Wayne pitching early on.
Juanmi Vasquez allowed a pair of runs in the top of the sixth as the TinCaps fought back to take the lead, but in the bottom half the Whitecaps bounced right back.
Jackson Strong greeted new reliever Nick Falter with a double down the right field line and then stole third base. Campbell singled him in and then was balked to second. Hernandez would single him in with two outs.
In the seventh, Bryce Rainer smoked an opposite field double and stole third. A Campbell sacrifice fly brought him home to make it 4-2 Whitecaps.
Bryce Rainer struck out in his first three at bats of the night, but he smokes a double to left in his fourth. And then he strikes a funny pose. @wangler_nathan on the call. pic.twitter.com/SEObQmTHjg
Jalen Evans, Eliseo Mota, and Logan Berrier each spun a scoreless inning to shut the door.
Campbell: 2-3, 2 R, 2 RBI, 2B, K
Hernandez: 3-4, 2 RBI, K
Rainer: 1-4, R, 2B, 3 K, SB
Christensen: 4.2 IP, 0 R, 0 H, 2 BB, 5 K
Coming Up Next: It’s a 2:00 p.m. ET start on Sunday at LMCU Park.
Dunedin Blue Jays 7, Lakeland Flying Tigers 3 (Gm1) (box)
The Flying Tigers bullpen crumbled in the seventh to lose this game, which was suspended on Friday due to rain.
On the plus side, Cale Wetwiska is healthy and looked great. The hard-throwing right-hander has good extension and plenty of life on his mid-90’s heater, and the Blue Jays had no luck against him. Wetwiska fired four scoreless, punching out six and allowing just two hits. His slider was sharp, and he mixed in a pretty solid changeup a couple of times to left-handed hitters.
They got him an early lead when Edian Espinal singled with one out and Jesus Pinto reached on an error. Carson Rucker walked to load the bases, but Anibal Salas grounded into a force, scoring Espinal. That was all they’d get as Jack Goodman grounded out, but they had a 1-0 lead.
The rains rolled in to stay in the fifth inning, causing a delay and cutting Wetwiska’s start short.
Marco Jimenez handled the bottom of the fifth when play eventually resumed on Saturday.
In the top of the sixth, Jude Warwick was hit by a pitch leading off the inning, and then stole second base. Beau Ankeney singled him to third and Hunter Dobbins doubled in Warwick. Somewhat frustratingly, that was all they got as Nick Dumesnil struck out, Espinal grounded into a force of Ankeney and home, and Pinto grounded out as well.
Marco Jimenez walked the leadoff man in the bottom half, and Xiomer Guacache took over, allowing a run to score after issuing a pair of walks of his own. After escaping that mess, Guacache got into trouble in the bottom half of the seventh. Yendy Gomez then gave up a grand slam. 6-2 Dunedin.
Jude Warwick stayed hot of late, mashing a solo shot to center for his seventh homer of the season. Gomez allowed a run in the bottom of the eighth, and that was all she wrote.
Warwick: 1-3, 2 R, RBI, HR, SB
Pinto: 1-4, 2B, K
Wetwiska: 4.0 IP, 0 R, 2 H, 0 BB, 6 K
Dunedin Blue Jays 6, Lakeland Flying Tigers 5 (F/8)(Gm2)(box)
Paul Wilson’s second start for Lakeland this year went poorly, and a late rally fell just short in this one, scheduled for seven innings, and the Blue Jays walked them off in the eighth.
Wilson was a little wild to start the game, but escaped the first unscathed. Not so the second inning, where he was knocked around a little but was just as much a victim of his own poor fielding in giving up four runs. The long inning cut his outing short due to pitch count concerns.
The Flying Tigers struggled early on but the bats got hotter as the game progressed. In the top of the fourth, Jordan Yost single the opposite way, and with two outs, Nick Dumesnil singled him to third. Edian Espinal sprayed an RBI single to left to make it a 4-1 game.
Win Scott took over from Wilson and got them through the fourth. Luke Hoskins took over from there and tossed two scoreless frames.
Beau Ankeney continued to mash, crushing his 15th homer in the top of the sixth to make it a 4-2 Blue Jays lead. Josue Briceño singled next, but was forced by a Dumesnil ground ball. Espinal and Pinto walked, and then Zach MacDonald was hit by a pitch to force in a run. Unfortunately, Jack Goodman struck to strand the bases loaded.
Beau Ankeney blasts a solo homer to left to pull Lakeland within two. It’s his 15th home run of the season. pic.twitter.com/SwleD34uDh
In the seventh, Yost singled with one out and Ankeney reached on an error. Briceño hammered a double to right center field, scoring Yost, but Ankeney was thrown out at the plate, and the inning ended in a 4-4 tie after Antonio Florida preserved the tie and sent it to extras with a 1-2-3 bottom of the seventh.
Josue Briceño crushes the ball to right center to tie the game for Lakeland, but Beau Ankeney gets thrown out at home. pic.twitter.com/che3EdWGRL
In the eighth, with Dumesnil starting on second, Espinal lined out to right field, allowing the runner to take third. A Pinto sacrifice fly made it 5-4, but that was all they’d get.
Florida popped up the first batter in the bottom half, but the runner on second, Angel Guzman stole third despite it looking like Espinal threw him out in time. a passed ball walked the next hitter and allowed Guzman to race home, as Espinal collected the ball and fired to Florida for the tag. He was called safe, and Florida didn’t like it, spiking the baseball and getting ejected. Then manager Salvador Paniagua took umbrage and got himself tossed as well.
Shenanigans in Dunedin! Blue Jays SS Angel Guzman appears to get thrown out at 3rd, and again at home, but he’s called safe both times. Lakeland pitcher Antonio Florido gets tossed for spiking the ball, then Flying Tigers manager Salvador Paniagua gets his money’s worth. pic.twitter.com/ZLonGrZiZI
Owen Hall couldn’t find the strikezone and was mauled for four runs as a result. The offense didn’t swing the bats too well either, and the Blue Jays pulled away to win.
PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 11: Commissioner of Major League Baseball Robert D. Manfred speaks during the 2026 MLB Draft presented by Nippon Express at Pennsylvania Convention Center on Saturday, July 11, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Good morning! If you are reading this, know that I am quite tired from a day of helping coordinate Yankees MLB Draft coverage — which was splended, in my opinion — as well as a stirring 4-2 comeback win by New York in DC. Oh and there’s always the undisclosed personal stuff too, which was fulfilling! But yes, I am tired. So that’s the vibe. By the time Day 2 of the draft begins though, I’ll be caffeinated and ready.
Today on the site, it’s a big ol’ Draft Dump Day! Rounds 5 through 20 are today, so Madison, Jake, and I will have coverage on all those picks, grouped into three different posts (Rounds 5-10, 11-15, and 16-20). Additionally, Scott will discuss erstwhile Yankees prospect Carson Coleman’s return to the organization this year after a couple years of injury as a Rule 5 Rangers pick, Peter will write up the latest Rivalry Roundup, and John will celebrate the birthday of a former Yankees reliever whose career seemingly just ended within the past couple years: lefty Chasen Shreve.
Today’s Matchup:
New York Yankees vs. Washington Nationals
Time: 1:35 p.m. EST
TV: YES Network, Nationals.TV
Venue: Nationals Park, Washington, DC
Questions/Prompts:
1. Which of the Yankees’ eighth-inning homers yesterday encouraged you the most: Ryan McMahon’s, Trent Grisham’s, or Paul Goldschmidt’s?
2. Who do you think was the best player taken on Day 1 of the MLB Draft? Was it No. 1 overall pick Roch Cholowsky, or do you think Grady Emerson or Vahn Lackey was the real prize at No. 2 or 3?
PHOENIX, AZ - JUNE 23: Coleton Brady #19 poses for a photo during the 2026 Draft Combine at Arizona Grand Resort Phoenix on Tuesday, June 23, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Aryanna Frank/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
After day 1 of the MLB Draft wrapped up, RHP Coleton Brady made the decision to join Jay Johnson in Baton Rouge.
Brady was ranked as high as #71 by The Athletic, but was generally a bit higher by most other publications. The next highest was #134 by ESPN, while MLB.com, Perfect Game, and Prep Baseball Report each had him between #173 and #183. That range falls out between the competitive balance round B (following round 2) and round 6.
Coming out of TNXL Academy in Florida, Brady is very young, not turning 18 until the fall. He stands at 6’5, 215 pounds, making for an extremely projectable frame. He deploys a 3-pitch mix, including a fastball in the low 90s, a slider, and a changeup.
That’s four members of Jay Johnson’s 2026 recruiting class that have officially announced their intentions to enroll at LSU. Brady follows Braxton Beaty, Nathaneal Davis, and Lucas Nawrocki. More are expected to follow.
TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 26: Aaron Judge #99 and George Lombard Jr. of the New York Yankees smile during a spring training game against the Minnesota Twins at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 26, 2024 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images
CBS Sports | Dayn Perry: We noted yesterday that Brian Cashman was taking a close look at the Yankees’ catching situation, the club’s catchers putting in an absolutely putrid offensive performance in 2026. New York is reportedly scouting Twins backstop Ryan Jeffers, the 29-year-old impending free agent having a career year, posting a .294/.408/.540 slash line. Jeffers recently returned from a hamate bone injury, and though teams are usually loath to add a new player to their catcher’s room midseason, the Yankees might just be the kind of team that’s desperate enough to change things up behind the plate.
New York Daily News | Gary Phillips: The Yankees’ top prospect, George Lombard Jr., is nearing a return from a hand injury. If Yankee brass is to be believed, he also could be nearing a call-up to the majors. “He’s certainly close to pushing himself into the mix, for sure,” Aaron Boone said Friday. “I’ve loved his trajectory, his development. This year, he’s continued to get better.” The 21-year-old struggled upon promotion to Triple-A this year, but was heating up before getting hurt, posting a .923 OPS in his 27 most recent games.
New York Post | Greg Joyce: Aaron Boone challenged Jasson Domínguez earlier this week. “I expect more,” Boone said. “I feel like really all year he’s giving solid at-bats every day, but hasn’t had that breakthrough yet. His on-base percentage should not be whatever it is (.276). He’s so much more than that.” Domínguez responded well on Friday night in Washington D.C., hitting a home run from the left side and a single from the right. In spite of a serious of injuries that have impacted his development the last few years, offensive expectations for Domínguez are high. Domínguez’s batting line has mostly hovered around average in the majors, with the Yankees surely hoping for a bit more from his talented, switch-hitting bat.
I’d also be remiss if I didn’t acknowledge all the excellent work that was done here yesterday regarding the Yankees’ first day of MLB Draft activity! Here’s the linked rundown from PSA:
Bo Bichette was out of the lineup for a second straight game Saturday as Mets interim manager Andy Green said the third baseman was dealing with “right ankle soreness” after taking several foul balls off his leg while the Mets were in Atlanta.
Bichette was healthy enough to pinch hit for Zack Short with two on and one out in the bottom of the seventh of Saturday’s 4-0 loss to the Red Sox at Citi Field.
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He walked to load the bases before being removed for pinch runner Tyrone Taylor.
Green said Bichette was best used simply as a pinch hitter.
He could also sit Sunday as the team heads into the All-Star break.
“It’s a day-to-day thing,’’ Green said before the game. “He’s played through a lot. The guy is a warrior.”
Bichette has had an inconsistent season with the Mets after signing with the team in the offseason, but had been heating up recently.
In Atlanta, Bichette went 8-for-18 with a double over the four-game series.
But in three games since then, Bichette was just 2-for-13 before being held out of the lineup Friday and Saturday against the Red Sox.
Still, after opening the season with a .570 OPS in his first 61 games, Bichette put up an OPS of .870 in 33 games heading into Saturday.
With Bichette on the bench, the Mets used Brett Baty at third base again Saturday. Baty went 0-for-3 with a walk to snap his career-long hitting streak at 10 games.
Bo Bichette, pictured earlier in the month, was out of the lineup for a second straight game Saturday due to “right ankle soreness.” Getty Images
Marcus Semien is “nearing a rehab assignment,” Green said before Saturday’s game. Semien has progressed well after being sidelined with a left hip-flexor strain since June 25.
Complicating matters is that the upcoming All-Star break will make minor league rehab games harder to find.
Green, who was the team’s senior vice president for player development until taking over in the dugout, said he’d be hesitant to play Semien — or any other player — in a Florida Complex League game due to the inconsistent pitching they’d see there.
Green said Semien was able to “run aggressively” and was moving around well, but might be held back by the lack of high-level rehab games.
The same could be true of Luis Robert Jr. (lumbar spine disc herniation).
He had a productive night at the plate with Double-A Binghamton in a rehab game Friday and is getting closer to being activated, according to Green.
The outfielder has been out since late April.
Robert’s return, whenever it happens, could give the Mets some decisions to make.
The team is determined to keep Ewing in center field and not move him to second base outside of emergency situations, despite his ability to play there.
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Kodai Senga has pitched himself out of almost every role with the Mets, but there were some encouraging signs from his scoreless inning in relief in Friday’s loss. Green didn’t rule out using the right-hander in that capacity again.
“It’s something he’s unaccustomed to,” Green said. “We’ll see how he responds to those types of opportunities.”
Green added Senga, with his upper-90s velocity and forkball, “can be a back-end piece” in the pen, but the Mets will determine whether he’s able to handle the role physically.
“We’ll learn that in time,’’ Green said. “Kodai has a chance to be an elite starter and an elite back-end piece.”
The Mets announced right-hander Alex Carrillo was released from the major league roster while right-hander Matt Seelinger was outrighted to Triple-A Syracuse.
The All-Star break seems to have come early for the Dodgers.
Because, based on their performances the last few days, they look like they’re already on vacation.
The latest example came in Saturday night’s 9-2 loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium.
There was more sloppy defense, continuing a trend that had already cost the Dodgers two games earlier this week. There was also an uncharacteristic collapse from All-Star pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who gave up five of his six runs in a sixth-inning meltdown that put the score out of reach.
Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who allowed six runs in six innings, adjusts his cap after getting out of the fifth inning in the Dodgers’ 9-2 blowout loss to the Diamondbacks on July 11, 2026 in Los Angeles. AP
This time, though, it was a listless offense that served as the most glaring example of their recent incompetence.
For five innings, the Dodgers did nothing against Arizona starter Brandon Pfaadt. And even after they knocked him out with a couple runs in the bottom of the sixth, they squandered a chance to keep building a rally and get themselves back into the game.
Instead, they rolled over meekly the rest of the evening, watching Landon Knack come out of the bullpen for his season debut and give up three more runs to add insult to injury.
What it means
The Dodgers might be cruising toward October already.
But that doesn’t mean they can just sleepwalk their way to continued success.
On Saturday, they were hurt by a couple of misplays at third base from Max Muncy, who committed a throwing error in the third inning and couldn’t stop a double down the line from Tim Tawa in the sixth.
On the latter occasion, Yamamoto couldn’t negate the mistake either. Instead, he followed up an intentional walk to Nolan Arenado by serving up a back-breaking, three-run homer to James McCann, giving him a season-high six runs allowed this season.
Max Muncy, who had a couple of defensive miscues earlier in the game, fields a ground ball in the eighth inning of the Dodgers’ blowout loss to the Diamondbacks. Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
Who’s hot
On Saturday? Not much of anyone in the Dodgers’ lineup.
The night started with nine consecutive outs against Pfaadt, who was making just his sixth start of the season after a move out of the bullpen. Then came several missed chances, including a two-on, no-out opportunity in the fourth and the short-lived rally in the sixth.
A double from Tommy Edman and RBI singles from Andy Pages and Mookie Betts got the Dodgers on the board in that latter frame, and forced Arizona to turn to the bullpen with Muncy and Kyle Tucker on deck.
The pitching change to left-hander Brandyn Garcia, however, worked perfectly, with Muncy taking a called third strike and Tucker frustratingly lacing a lineout to shortstop.
Mookie Betts rips an RBI single in the sixth inning of the Dodgers’ blowout loss to the Diamondbacks. William Liang-Imagn Images
On the whole, the Dodgers finished the night with just six hits and were 2-for-8 with runners in scoring position.
Who’s not
Knack made his long-awaited return to the majors on Saturday, getting activated off the injured list pregame following an elongated rehab stint in triple-A Oklahoma City.
Nevertheless, his season debut did not go well, with the right-hander giving up one quick run in the seventh and two solo home runs to Arenado and McCann (his second of the night) in the eighth.
Knack was only activated now because the Dodgers –– fresh off their bullpen game Friday night –– were in need of bullpen coverage.
Struggling right-hander Kyle Hurt was optioned in a corresponding move, but manager Dave Roberts said he expected Hurt to rejoin the team sometime during the second half.
Up next
The Dodgers will try to avoid getting swept as they round out the first half on Sunday, with Emmet Sheehan (4-6, 4.91 ERA) facing off against Arizona rookie Mitch Bratt (who is replacing the injured Zac Gallen).
Thirty years ago, the All-Star Game returned to South Philadelphia for the first time since the bicentennial.
1996 featured a much different sports world.
The Cowboys had just won a Super Bowl, their last one since. Michael Jordan, in his first full season back from baseball, had just led the Bulls to a 72-10 season and another NBA title. The Summer Olympics were headed for Atlanta.
The Eagles drafted Brian Dawkins, then the 76ers drafted Allen Iverson.
And Philadelphia was still thawing out from a winter it would not forget.
The “Blizzard of ’96” buried the city and surrounding area in nearly 31 inches of snow in January. By July, the snow was gone, but the eventual 67-95 Phillies still looked stuck in it.
They were buried in the National League East, three years removed from the 1993 World Series run and still searching for direction. The Braves had moved from the NL West into the Phillies’ division before the strike-shortened 1994 season, changing the shape of the East.
As part of that realignment, Philadelphia was given the 1996 All-Star Game.
The mighty Braves arrived as reigning World Series champions.
The lowly Phillies arrived with one All-Star.
Ricky Bottalico.
“That’s the biggest thing that everybody takes out of it,” Bottalico said. “It was a Phillies team that, let’s face it, we struggled, and to not have more than one All-Star was, it wasn’t embarrassing, but it was just one of those things where, like, we’re the home team. We got one All-Star.”
For Bottalico, now a longtime NBC Sports Philadelphia analyst and 97.5 The Fanatic host, that week was not some clean, glossy baseball memory.
It was strange. It was loud. It was hot. It was packed with Hall of Famers.
And again, he was the only one wearing Phillies red pinstripes.
Ironically, that spotlight also meant Bottalico spent the week wearing six or seven microphones while hosting one of baseball’s signature shows.
“I was actually hosting This Week in Baseball,” Bottalico said. “I was miced up like you would not believe.”
This Week in Baseball, which returned this year, had been legendary broadcaster Mel Allen’s show from its start in 1977 until Allen’s death in June 1996, less than a month before the All-Star Game. For a generation of baseball fans, it was part of the Saturday routine.
Bottalico was one of those kids.
“When I was a little kid, there were two shows on before the national game of the week,” Bottalico said. “And then, right before the game, they always had This Week in Baseball. So every Saturday, if I didn’t have a game, I was sitting down watching it.”
The TV side was not random, either. Not looking back.
Bottalico sat in front of another legend, Harry Kalas, and former pitcher Larry Andersen, still the Phillies’ radio color commentator, on team flights. Kalas saw something before Bottalico did.
“Harry used to tell me, ‘You’re gonna get into the media after you’re done,’” Bottalico said. “And I’d be like, ‘I don’t know, Harry, we’ll see.’”
Kalas had his reason.
“You got the voice for it,” Bottalico remembered him saying.
In 1996, that future had not arrived yet. Bottalico was still the Phillies’ closer, still trying to make sense of being the only player from the home team in the home All-Star Game.
That hit him inside the clubhouse, where his home-park locker had been moved.
“I walked into the clubhouse, and the first people I see in the clubhouse are all the Braves playing cards in our locker room,” Bottalico said. “I’m like, this is wild. I mean, this is nuts.”
He knew what waited after the break.
“It didn’t feel the same because you knew that in a couple days you’re going to hate these guys again,” Bottalico said.
The Home Run Derby did not make the job feel any easier.
Barry Bonds beat Mark McGwire in the final. Bottalico had a front-row view as TWIB’s wired-up host.
“It was wild,” Bottalico said. “You gotta understand, it was hot too, I remember. And it was like one of those things where these guys were just hitting monstrous home runs.”
Watching that much power up close was not exactly comforting.
“It was absolutely the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever seen,” Bottalico said. “Just to watch those guys take batting practice, it was almost like, I don’t want to watch this. I gotta pitch to these guys in a couple weeks.”
The names around him look different now than they did then.
Pedro Martinez. Future wrestling-mate Barry Bonds. Mark McGwire. Cal Ripken Jr. Ozzie Smith, playing in his final All-Star Game.
“At the time, it probably wasn’t as special because I was there,” Bottalico said. “I was already in the big leagues. But you realize how awesome that was.”
When his name was called and the roar came down, Bottalico removed his cap, as most players do, and flashed a small message tucked under the bill.
“Hi Gram.”
His family was at Veterans Stadium. His fiancée’s family was there, too. His grandmother was not in attendance.
“She was the only one that couldn’t make it down because she was older,” Bottalico said. “I just wanted her to see that.”
The introductions came with a soundtrack only Philadelphia could provide. Joe Carter was booed for his ’93 heroics over the Phillies. Ozzie Smith received a massive ovation. Bottalico knew his would be different, too.
It was deafening.
Some Phillies teammates watched it from the seats. Shortstop Kevin Stocker was there, the only game he ever attended as a player, he said.
“I know Mickey Morandini was there, too,” Bottalico said. “Quite a few guys that were actually there and that had to be strange for them. I mean, they’re watching a game that they’re normally involved in.
“It was nice to have teammates that were there.”
Once the game started, another oddity waited.
Ripken had broken his nose during team pictures after White Sox reliever Roberto Hernandez slipped and hit him with an elbow. In Iron Man fashion, Ripken still started.
Bottalico faced him in the fifth inning, fully aware of what he did not want to do.
“I definitely would have pitched him differently if it was regular season,” Bottalico said. “My whole theory was, I don’t want to be the goat that hits him here.”
The thought made sense. Ripken’s consecutive-games streak had already passed Lou Gehrig’s record.
“The guy’s playing with a broken nose, for crying out loud,” Bottalico said.
Bottalico got Ripken to pop out. He also struck out Ivan Rodriguez in a scoreless fifth.
His entrance is the part he still hears, though.
The Vet had a high wall near the bullpen that dipped lower as pitchers came toward first base. As Bottalico came in, he could see the crowd rise section by section.
“It was like a wave,” Bottalico said. “That got pretty loud.”
Someone in the bullpen, Bottalico believes it may have been Al Leiter, told him to take it in.
“I remember just kind of taking it in as I was jogging in,” Bottalico said. “It was pretty cool.”
That was Bottalico’s moment.
The night’s postcard belonged to the local kid.
Mike Piazza, the Norristown native and Dodgers catcher, turned Veterans Stadium into his stage. He caught a ceremonial first pitch from Mike Schmidt, his childhood hero, then hit a mammoth upper-deck homer and added an RBI double in the National League’s 6-0 win. The NL would not win the All-Star Game again until 2010.
Bottalico knew Piazza, another future teammate, had his own local pull that week.
“There were a lot of questions about it, because I was obviously in Philly, and he was the other one that had a connection to Philly,” Bottalico said. “It was definitely public knowledge.”
The homer stuck with him.
“That ball in the All-Star Game, he hit that, like, four rows deep, and it was more towards [left] center field in the upper deck,” Bottalico said. “This was monstrous.”
Piazza was asked afterward if he could have dreamed up that kind of homecoming.
“I don’t know about living it,” Piazza said on NBC’s postgame broadcast, “but I definitely dreamt it.”
One seat in Bottalico’s section came with its own coincidental souvenir.
“My uncle, in the seats that I got them, actually got a Mike Piazza foul ball,” Bottalico said.
Wild.
Nearly three decades later, Citizens Bank Park is finally getting its first All-Star Game. Bottalico still cannot quite believe it took this long.
“I think that’s amazing,” Bottalico said. “It is something.”
There is another difference this time.
The 1996 Phillies had one All-Star. This year’s team has six.
Bottalico’s pregame routine looks different now. The warmup comes with an IFB in an NBC Sports Philadelphia office, not a baseball in a bullpen.
But in some ways, that week foreshadowed the second act Harry Kalas once predicted for him.
The baseball part still matters most.
“For me,” Ricky Bo said, “it’s something that I was the sole representative for the Phillies.”
After a somewhat surprising (and surprisingly emphatic) win against the Doyers last night in their house thanks in large measure to Tim Tawa busting out, it seemed honestly pretty unlikely to me that we’d knock them off again, especially with Yoshinobu Yamamoto taking the mound for them and Brandon Pfaadt going for us. Don’t get me wrong, it has seemed like Pfaadt definitely worked some things out during his brief time in Reno, but his two very good starts since he’s been back have been against the Giants and the Padres, neither of whom are exactly poster children for “fierce and difficult competition” at this point in the season. The Dodgers, on the other hand, sport the best record in baseball, and Yamamoto has definitely earned his spot on the All-Star Game roster for the National League this year. So. My expectations were not high, is what I’m saying.
But you know what? I was completely wrong! Hooray! It didn’t look great to start, as Yamamoto made very short work of the top of our lineup in the first, sitting down Ketel Marte, Geraldo Perdomo, and Corbin Carroll, with only ten pitches thrown. But Pfaadt came out for the bottom of the first, and only needed five pitches to retire Shohei Ohtani, Andy Pages, and Freddie Freeman. Not too shabby.
And it pretty much continued that way through five innings—Brandon Pfaadt outpitching and outperforming the 2025 World Series MVP. Our hitters started hanging longer and more patient at bats on Yamamoto, the Dodgers hitters failed to do so with Pfaadt. Tim Tawa got the Diamondbacks’ first hit with two outs in the second with a fly ball single to center. Sadly, however, he was immediately picked off first base before Yamamoto had to throw another pitch, which was embarrassing. It broke the seal, though, at least, and we started driving Yamamoto’s pitch count up from there, with James McCann reaching on the Max Muncy throwing error with one out in the top of the third and Tommy Troy drawing a six-pitch walk. Nothing more came of that, sadly, as Marte popped out to third, and Perdomo flew out to left after a long at bat, but we made Yamamoto throw 25 pitches in the inning. Pfaadt, on the other hand, cruised through the second and third innings, retiring the Dodgers in order as he completed his first run through their lineup with only 27 pitched needed to record his first nine outs.
The Diamondbacks drew first blood as well in the top of the fourth, after Gabriel Moreno drew a six-pitch walk with one out and then got to third on a Max Kepler grounder that snuck through the right side of the infield and into right field for a single. Tim Tawa then hit a grounder to third that Max Muncy frankly made an amazing play on, but Moreno was running on contact and Muncy’s only play was to throw to first, where he just nabbed Tawa while Gabi crossed the plate for the first run of the game. 1-0 DBACKS
Pfaadt got himself into some trouble in the bottom half of the inning, as Ohtani lined a single to left and Andy Pages hit a ground ball that got between Perdomo and Nolan Arenado for another single. Freddie Freeman then hit a slow roller to Perdomo, and while he and Marte tried to turn two, they were only able to get the force on Pages at second, putting runners on the corners with only one out. But where early 2026 Brandon Pfaadt would have started nibbling and melted down to give up a big inning, July Pfaadt buckled down, induced Mookie Betts to pop out to second and then got Muncy to ground out to put up another zero and preserve the lead.
Both pitchers seemed to regain their composure a little bit in the fifth, with both Yamamoto and Pfaadt retiring their respective sides in order. Tommy Troy fouled a pitch off his knee in the top of the frame, and then had to leave the game (with Jorge Barrosa taking his place) in the bottom when he plowed into the wall in center field making a play on a long fly ball by Teoscar Hernandez. So that wasn’t great, but no damage was done, score-wise, at least.
And then the sixth inning happened.
Yamamoto came out to start the sixth with his pitch count sitting at 76 pitches thrown. He promptly walked Perdomo on four pitches, which was nice, and then struck out Carroll on four pitches, which was less nice. Moreno singled to right, advancing Gerry to third, and a Max Kepler sacrifice fly to deep center allowed Perdomo to score the second run of the ballgame. That brought Tawa to the plate again, and Tawa bounced a ball up the third base line for a double that, despite third base coach JR House putting up the stop sign, scored Gabi from third.
You can’t see it in the clip, but what I think I loved most about this play was that not only did Gabi run through the stop sign, he almost bowled over House himself as he was turning the corner around third and heading home. So that was kind of hilarious. Dave Roberts, meanwhile, apparently really wanted Yamamoto to get through the sixth inning, because he had him intentionally walk Nolan Arenado to get to James McCann, who one might have supposed would be the easier out. This turned out not to be the case, however, as McCann hammered the second pitch he saw in the at bat up and out and over the wall in left for a three-run dinger:
Barrosa flew out to left, at long last, for the third out of the inning, but we’d secured Brandon Pfaadt’s lead. 6-0 DBACKS
It turned out to be a good thing, too, as it turned out that Pfaadt didn’t have a whole lot left in the tank. He’d gotten through five innings of Dodgers with only 59 pitches thrown, but the wheels came off for him in the bottom of the sixth. Tommy Edman led off the inning with a line-drive double to right, and after recording a one-pitch out to Ohtani, Brandon surrendered three straight singles to Pages, Freeman, and Betts. Edman and Pages scored, and Pfaadt’s night was abruptly over, as Torey Lovullo pulled him for Brandyn Garcia, who was making his second relief appearance in as many days. Garcia did the business, though, striking out Max Muncy looking and getting Kyle Tucker to line out to Perdomo for the third out. 6-2 DBACKS
Landon Knack, activated today from the 60-day injured list to give Los Angeles some length after they used nearly their entire bullpen last night, came on for the top of the seventh, and promptly gave back one of the runs by loading the bases with one out. He hit Perdomo with a pitch, then walked Carroll and Perdomo. Max Kepler flew out to right, allowing Perdomo to tag from third and score. 7-2 DBACKS
And that accounts for our final score, as Juan Morillo put up a zero in the eighth and Philip Abner, recently recalled from Reno, put up a zero of his own in the bottom of the ninth.
This was kind of an interesting WPA sheet, and frankly an interesting game for the offense, as all of the meaningful offensive production came from the bottom six players in the lineup. Go figure. And Tawa, for the second game in a row, was the WPA leader for the offense—+13% today, and a whopping +23% yesterday. It’s certainly a small sample size, but I begin to wonder if, when he was called back up from Reno this last time, Timmy reached out to Christian Walker and arranged to sublet Dodger Stadium from the hand-downs historical owner of that ballpark. Could be.
Anyway, we had a lovely and lively Gameday Thread tonight, with 315 comments at time of writing. Comment of the Game, by popular acclaim and because they are certainly not wrong, goes to Webb Gemz for this observation regarding our new heir apparent at first base:
Of course, given the propensity of fans a Chavez Latrine to bat beach balls around in the stands, that could also be an explanation for the phenomenon. We’ll have to see if Timmy continues to see pitches that way once we’re back at Chase. Here’s hoping, though.
And I did not expect to be typing this sentence, but stop by with your brooms in hand tomorrow as we go for the sweep against the Doyers tomorrow in the last game of our last series before the All Star Break! Mitch Bratt takes the mound for us, replacing the apparently destined-for-the-IL Zac Gallen, while Emmet Sheehan goes for the Evil Floral Delivery Conglomerate. First pitch is scheduled for 1:10pm AZ time. Hope to see you, because if we don’t, that can only mean that you are simply the worst kind of Frankfurter (i dunno, blame Trappkory)!
As always, thanks for reading, and as always, go Diamondbacks!
Members of the Los Angeles Dodgers are expected to visit the White House to be honored for winning the World Series in 2025.
President Donald Trump will greet the Dodgers on July 23.
Los Angeles secured back-to-back titles after beating the Toronto Blue Jays in a thrilling Game 7. The Dodgers also won the title in 2024, knocking off the New York Yankees in five games.
The Dodgers also captured the Fall Classic in 2020, which was the franchise's first championship since 1988.
The Dodgers visited the White House in April 2025 to celebrate the 2024 World Series. Mookie Betts, Shohei Ohtani and Clayton Kershaw were among the players that attended.
The team will make the trip to Washington, D.C. on an off day between series against the Philadelphia Phillies and the New York Mets. It's in the midst of a demanding stretch of games for the Dodgers, playing nine games in 10 days.
Betts told the California Post on July 11 that he wasn't expected to appear at the White House. Betts plans on skipping the festivities and claimed the decision wasn’t political. He stated that he wanted to spend the day with his family, which includes his newborn daughter.
Kiké Hernández is also not expected to make the trip. He is currently on a minor league rehab assignment.
A Montgomery, Texas native, Shane Sdao attended Lake Creek High School in Montgomery, a school that opened in 2018 due to overcrowding at the city’s primary school, Montgomery High School. The left-hander helped turn the school’s fledgling baseball program into a winner. In their first year of existence, the Lions went 7-7 on the season. In 2021 and 2022, the two years that Sdao lettered and pitched for the varsity team, they went 20-12-1 and 23-6, respectively, advancing to the Texas Region III-5A quarterfinals both times. In both years, the left-hander was named to the First All-District Team, the Second All-Greater Houston Team, and was the Texas District 5A All-State honorable mention pitch in his senior year.
Despite the accolades, Sdao was far from a draft follow. The left-hander garnered very little attention from scouts and evaluators due to his relatively uninspiring repertoire and advanced age. The southpaw already had a commitment to Texas A&M in place, and after no MLB teams called his name in the 2022 MLB Draft, Sdao attended the College Station institution.
The left-hander appeared in 22 games in his freshman season with the Aggies, starting two games and coming out of the bullpen for the remaining 20. In total, the 19-year-old posted a 4.78 ERA in 43.1 innings, allowing 54 hits, walking 15, and striking out 46. He was used in a similar manner in his sophomore season, starting 5 games and coming out of the bullpen for the remaining 15. Sdao was better in virtually every regard, posting a 2.96 ERA in 48.2 innings, allowing 42 hits, walking 9, and striking out 55. The Aggies made it to the 2024 College World Series finals, losing to the University of Tennessee, but they did so without the left-hander, who injured his elbow starting against the University of Oregon in the Super Regionals.
Sdao’s injury turned out to be the worst-case scenario: a UCL tear that required Tommy John surgery to fix. The left-hander redshirted in 2025, missing the entire season. Despite being injured, Sdao received numerous financially lucrative bonus offers from multiple MLB teams who were looking to float a deal with him while he recovered from surgery. He ended up rejecting those offers and decided to return to Texas A&M in 2026.
The results were not exactly there for Sdao in his redshirt junior season. More important than anything else, he was able to take the mound and his stuff was more or less where it was before the Tommy John surgery, but the results were ugly. Appearing in 17 games, starting 13 of them, Sdao posted a 7.03 ERA in 71.2 innings, allowing 98 hits, walking 20, and striking out 83. In particular, the longball was a problem; he allowed 16 home runs over the course of the season.
The 22-year-old Sdao stands 6’3”, 185-pounds. He throws from a three-quarters arm slot, extending off the mound well and incorporating a high leg kick and a long arm action through the back. He is a strike thrower, and keeps hitters off-balance with a deep repertoire that includes a four-seam fastball, slider, curveball, cutter, and changeup. At present, none of his pitchers are better than average offerings, but as he continues recovering from Tommy John surgery, his fastball and slider stand to improve the most.
His fastball sits in the low-to-mid-90s, and in the past the left-hander has been able to ramp it up and hit the high-90s with the pitch. Even before the ligament surgery that kept him off the field in 2025, Sdao lacked consistency with the pitch and its velocity often fluctuated, more often settling into the lower end of that velocity band and rarely exceeding 95 MPH. The pitch lacks the power to be a true strikeout offering, generating below-average whiff rates, but Sdao still has had success with the pitch thanks to his ability to command it and its rising action; in the past, it has been measured possessing 2300 RPM, an average-to-above-average spin rate for a fastball.
The left-hander’s slider is his main secondary pitch, and he uses it against left-handed and right-handed batters alike. A sweeping slider in the low-80s, the pitch has a bit less horizontal movement than most sweeping sliders, but Sdao has become skilled at dropping his arm angle a bit when throwing it, telegraphing the pitch but at the same time giving it the illusion of having more lateral movement than it actually does.
Against right-handed batters, Sdao utilizes a mid-80s changeup, but the pitch has been supplanted in usefulness by an upper-70s curveball and an upper-80s cutter that he recently added to his repertoire.
In 2026, as mentioned, Sdao had a problem with home runs, but in general, he had some major issues keeping the ball down. As compared to his prior two seasons with the Aggies, where he averaged a 41.7% groundball rate, 20.9% line drive rate, and a 37.5% flyball rate, the left-hander had a 31.7% groundball rate, 24.3% line drive rate, and a 43.9% flyball rate in 2026.
Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto reacts after giving up a three-run home run to Arizona's James McCann in the sixth inning of the Dodgers' 9-2 loss Saturday night at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
The Dodgers’ 9-2 loss to the Diamondbacks on Saturday wasn’t enough to prevent them from going into the All-Star break with the best record in the majors — that much is ensured. But the uninspired all-around performance sealed a series loss on the final weekend of the season’s first half.
“It was a clunker,” manager Dave Roberts said. “The last three out of five [or] four out of five games, it just hasn’t been clean baseball. So when you give teams free bases, extra outs, it’s hard to win a game, regardless of opponent. ... We’ve got to find a way to win a game [Sunday] to feel somewhat better about going into the break.”
The Dodgers (61-35) put little pressure on the Diamondbacks pitching staff. And Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto wrapped up his first-half campaign with his highest-scoring start of the season; he surrendered six runs in six innings.
“He still had a really, really, really good first half,” Roberts said.
Dodgers' Kyle Tucker takes off his batting gloves after lining out with two runners on base in the sixth inning against the Diamondbacks on Saturday night. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Over the All-Star break, Yamamoto (2.85 ERA) will get the week to rest. Before the game Saturday, oberts confirmed Yamamoto, an All-Star for the second consecutive year, will not pitch in the game.
The timing of his start Saturday, three days before the Midsummer Classic, suggested as much. Shohei Ohtani is scheduled to have his left knee drained coming out of the All-Star break and will not travel to Philadelphia. So Justin Wrobleski, who was added to the National League roster Saturday, is the only Dodger set to pitch in the All-Star Game.
Yamamoto held the Diamondbacks (48-47) to one run through the first five innings. But his final inning quickly unraveled. It started with a leadoff walk and peaked with a three-run home run from James McCann.
The Dodgers finally rallied for two runs in the sixth and then fell quiet again. The Diamondbacks then scored three runs against Landon Knack in his three-inning season debut coming off the injured list.
Yamamoto’s uncharacteristic sixth inning ended his streak of quality starts at five, including two that lasted eight innings or more. He leads the team with 110⅔ innings pitched.
“Overall, there’s good outings,” Yamamoto said through interpreter Yoshihiro Sonoda. “And also physically, condition-wise, it’s been good. And I hope that I can carry this into the second half.”
Yamamoto’s workload, along with Wrobleski’s emergence, has helped the Dodgers weather injuries to pitchers who were expected to be major contributors.
In a promising sign for closer Edwin Díaz’s recovery timeline, he started a rehab assignment with single-A Ontario on Saturday. Díaz made just seven appearances for the Dodgers before undergoing an operation to remove loose bodies from his right elbow in late April.
“He’s been throwing pretty effortlessly, free, maybe a week after he started throwing,” pitching coach Mark Prior said.
Dodgers relief pitcher Landon Knack reacts after giving up a solo homer to Arizona's Nolan Arenado in the eighth inning Saturday. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
He estimated that Díaz would return in about three to four weeks if his progression goes smoothly.
Blake Snell — who also had loose bodies removed from his pitching elbow, undergoing a NanoNeedle Scope procedure on May 19 — threw two simulated innings to batters Saturday.
Snell is scheduled to begin a minor-league rehab assignment next weekend, Roberts said. Prior believes Snell will need at least four to five outings, likening it to a spring training buildup.
“The goal would be to get him fully built up to 90ish pitches before he comes back,” Prior said.
Tyler Glasnow, who had been sidelined for more than two months with a lingering back injury, threw a bullpen session Friday.
“It was like 95, 96 [mph] in his ‘pen, but he does that rolling out of bed when he’s healthy,” Prior said. “But it’s a good sign.”
Glasnow has had plenty of back and forth in his rehab, however. Twice he started playing catch only to be shut down when back spasms returned.
“The schedule is starting to move with a little bit more consistency than it had been,” Prior said. “So he’s in a good spot.”
Glasnow is scheduled for another bullpen session on Monday.
Jul 11, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks left fielder Tim Tawa (13) is tagged out by Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto (18) during the second inning at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images | William Liang-Imagn Images
The All-Star break all of a sudden looks more and more like something the Dodgers need, as they suffered a second blowout loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks in as many nights, 9-2 on Saturday night at Dodger Stadium.
Simply losing consecutive games has been rare for the Dodgers, as this marked just their second two-game losing streak in the last two months. But to lose consecutively in blowout fashion is even more rare, as they followed up Friday’s 9-3 loss with a defeat by seven runs on Saturday.
The Dodgers have lost by six or more runs only eight times this season — they’ve won 22 such games, for comparison — and never consecutively before now. The only other similar streak came from May 9-12, when the Dodgers lost four straight games by five, five, six, and four runs.
For a while, this looked more like a typical game, especially for Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who entered the sixth inning having allowed only one run, with the Dodgers trailing 1-0. But Arizona tacked on five runs in the frame, punctuated by a three-run home run by catcher James McCann.
Six runs allowed is a season high for Yamamoto, who will head to Philadelphia for All-Star festivities but will not pitch in the game. His four walks matched a season high.
Landon Knack, called up to eat innings after Friday’s bullpen game, soaked up the last three innings and allowed three runs of his own, including another home run by McCann.
One more game remains before the All-Star break, with Emmet Sheehan starting on the mound on Sunday (1:10 p.m., SportsNet LA), with Mitch Bratt expected to pitch for the Diamondbacks.