2026 Minor League Preview: St. Lucie Mets

PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - MARCH 20, 2026: A view of the stadium prior to a spring training game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the New York Mets at Clover Park on March 20, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

2025 First Half Record: 34-31 (1/4, Florida State League East Division)

2025 Second Half Record: 43-22 (1/4 Florida State League East Division)

Over the last few years, the St. Lucie Mets weren’t a particularly great team. That changed last season, as the team won the Florida State League East Division with a not-exactly-dominant 34-31 record, benefiting from an extremely weak division; St. Lucie was the only team in the FSL East to finish the first half over .500. The team had a much better second half, going 43-22, steamrolling through the rest of the Florida State League and once again winning the division.

The St. Lucie Mets played the Daytona Tortugas in the FSL East Divisional Series, but fell two games to one in the best-of-three series, ending their season. St. Lucie had a 20-10 record against them during the season, but Daytona’s pitchers stepped up, not allowing more than two runs in any of the three contests and shutting out the Mets in the clincher.

Luis Rivera will be returning as his second year as the St. Lucie Mets manager. Joining him will be Jonathon Cramman, who will be serving as bench coach, David Mervis, who will be serving as pitching coach, and Bryan Muniz, who will be serving as hitting coach. Cramman will be replacing 2025 bench coach Jonathan Jones, Mervis will be replacing 2025 pitching coach Luis Alvarado, and Muniz will be replacing 2025 hitting coach Devin DeYoung.

The 2026 season will be the first season that Cramman is employed by the Mets. Prior to joining the organization, Cramman was involved in various aspects of baseball in Great Britain, where he was a former player who transitioned to coaching in 2019 and has found himself in multiple roles since.

The 2026 season will also be the first season that Mervis is employed by the Mets. Prior to joining the organization, he was the assistant coach/pitching coach for the University of North Alabama from 2023-2025 and a pitching development coordinator at the University of Delaware in 2022.

The 2026 season will be the second season that Muniz is employed by the Mets; he was the Brooklyn Cyclones hitting coach in 2025. Prior to joining the Mets, he was a coach in the Houston Astros organization from 2020-2024, an assistant coach at the King’s Way Academy in West Palm Beach, Florida from 2019-2020 and an assistant coach at Suncoast Community High School in Riviera Beach, Florida, from 2017-2019.

The St. Lucie Mets will be opening the 2026 season against the Palm Beach Cardinals at Roger Dean Stadium tonight. Here’s their Opening Day roster.

Pitchers

  • Luis Álvarez
  • Frank Camarillo
  • Nicolas Carreño
  • Felix Cepeda
  • Joe Charles
  • José Chirinos
  • Jorge De Leon
  • Ryan Dollar
  • Joel Lara
  • Tyler McLoughlin
  • Ernesto Mercedes
  • Elwis Mijares
  • Christian Rodríguez
  • Joe Scarborough
  • Cam Tilly
  • Omar Victorino
  • Conner Ware
  • Caden Wooster

Catchers

  • Chase Meggers
  • Francisco Toledo
  • Julio Zayas

Infielders

  • Randy Guzman
  • Eddinson Paulino
  • Elian Peña
  • Sam Robertson
  • Kevin Villavicencio

Outfielders

  • JT Benson
  • Sam Biller
  • Simon Juan
  • AJ Salgado

Phillies All-Star One and Dones: The 1950s

Philadelphia's Dick Sisler trots home in the top of the tenth inning of the game against Brooklyn, Oct.1, and teammate Del Ennis steps up to make with the congratulatory handshake. Up to this pint it was a 1-1 tie. Phils took the game, 4-1, after making 3 runs in this frame. Dodger catcher Roy Campanella, umpire Larry Goetz, Phils' centerfielder Richie Ashburn, (1) and Phils' first sacker Eddie Waitkus (4) are at the plate. Philly batboy is unidentified.

In honor of the Philadelphia Phillies playing host to the 2026 Major League Baseball All-Star Game at Citizens Bank Park, we here at The Good Phight are launching a yearlong series that focuses on the history of the Phillies and the All-Star Game. Check back regularly for posts about the Phillies participation (or lack thereof) in the Midsummer Classic over its history.

It’s time to move on to the 1950s in our look at all of the one and done All-Stars in Phillies history. The fifties started off strong for the Phillies with achieving their first pennant in 35 years, but they promptly slid back into mediocrity not long after and eventually back to last place. But hey, if you’ve been following along with the rest of this seriesso far, mediocrity was an upgrade!

Jim Konstanty, 1950

We’ll start off with a player that was a member of those 1950 pennant winning Whiz Kids, even if by that time he was a bit of an elder statesman. Casimir James Konstanty was a multi-talented athlete. He was named captain of the basketball, baseball, and football teams his senior year at Arcade High School in upstate New York. Konstanty especially excelled at baseball, being named team MVP in both his junior and senior years while playing all over the diamond. All of this helped earn Konstanty a partial scholarship to Syracuse University.

Following his graduation in 1939, Konstanty went into semi-pro ball, eventually converting to pitching full-time in 1940 at the recommendation of his manager, fellow Syracuse alumnus George Minor. Not long after, Konstanty was signed to the Syracuse Chiefs, the Double-A affiliate of the Cincinnati Reds. By 1943, Konstanty was considering quitting baseball and teaching full-time but was convinced to stick around with the possibility of a chance to play for the Reds on the table. Sure enough, Konstanty pitched well enough to earn a spot with the Reds in June of 1944 at the age of 27. He had a modest rookie season, pitching in 20 games with 12 starts and sporting a 2.80 ERA across 112.2 IP.

But Konstanty’s career then went on hold in 1945 when he was drafted into the Navy. He continued pitching for his base team and was discharged in early 1946 but was traded to the Boston Braves soon after opening day. Konstanty appeared in just 10 games with Boston though, as he struggled early and the Braves decided to send him to the Toronto Maple Leafs in Triple-A to make room for a young up-and comer named Warren Spahn. During the offseason after an uneven year at Triple-A, Konstanty went for a ride with his neighbor and local undertaker Andy Skinner. As it turned out, Skinner was also an avid bowler who was able to help Konstanty improve his slider and changeup thanks to his knowledge of spins. This partnership would last the rest of Konstanty’s baseball career.

Konstanty remained with Toronto for the next two years, but his manager Eddie Sawyer opted to move the righty to the bullpen in 1948. Later that season when Sawyer was hired as manager of the Phillies, he convinced the team to acquire Konstanty, and the latter made his return to the Majors with the Phillies on September 14th, 1948. He entered in the eighth with the Phillies down 8-0 to the Cardinals and two men on with no outs. Konstanty escaped that jam by inducing two pop-ups and nabbing the runner on first in a run down. He went on to appear in six games for Philadelphia and allow only one run across 9.2 IP.

Konstanty emerged as a bullpen anchor for the Phillies in 1949, appearing in 53 games and posting a 9-5 record with a 3.25 ERA in 97 innings. He even added a walk-off hit to finish off a sweep of the Cubs on June 16th. Manager Sawyer allowed Konstanty to hit in the ninth following a late Phillies rally to tie the game at 3-3 in the eighth. Konstanty collected a one-out, two strike single just over the second baseman’s head, allowing the winning run to score.

But the soft tossing reliever’s finest work would come in 1950. The now 33-year-old slammed the door on Phillies win after Phillies win, as the team began to surge into the pennant race by May. Konstanty, who was 7-3 with a 3.21 ERA through 36 appearances, was named to the 1950 All-Star roster along with teammates Robin Roberts, Willie “Puddin’ Head” Jones, and Dick Sisler. Roberts started the game for the NL on the mound at Comiskey Park, but Konstanty came on in relief in the sixth and retired all three hitters he faced, including strikeouts of Detroit’s Hoot Evers and Cleveland’s Jim Hegan. The game ultimately went 14 innings before the Cardinals’ Red Schoendienst homered off of Ted Gray to give the NL the winning run.

Konstanty returned to the Phillies and had an incredible second half following another meeting with his old bowler friend. He appeared in 38 games in the second half and owned a 2.02 ERA across an astounding 84.2 innings in relief, including a 22 1/3 inning scoreless streak. He lost the scoreless streak when he allowed a tying home run to the Pirates’ Ralph Kiner in the bottom of the 10thh inning on August 25th. But Konstanty remained in the game to pitch a full nine innings in relief and added an RBI single in the 15th in a 9-7 win.

The Phillies would ride Konstanty and the rest of a fantastic pitching staff to the pennant. Konstanty was a surprise starter for Game 1 of the World Series and completed eight innings while allowing just one run in his first start since 1946. But that one run was all the Yankees needed, as the Phillies bats could only muster two hits off of Vic Raschi. Ultimately, the Yankees finished off the sweep and dispatched the surprising Phillies team. But Konstanty was awarded a consolation prize after the season, as he was named the National League MVP, becoming the first relief pitcher in history to win the award in either league. He was a near unanimous winner, receiving 18 of out of 24 first place votes and 85% of the overall vote. Stan Musial, who finished second, only received one first place vote.

But much like the rest of the Phillies, Konstanty took a step back in 1951 with a 4.05 ERA in 58 games. He would remain in Philadelphia until being acquired off waivers in 1954 by those very Yankees that defeated him in the World Series. Konstanty reached the World Series again with New York in 1955, but this time he did not appear in the series as the Yankees lost in seven games to the Brooklyn Dodgers. Konstanty was later released by the Yankees in 1956 and signed with the Cardinals with whom he appeared in 27 games. St. Louis also released Konstanty after 1956, and he ultimately retired in 1957 after a brief stint with the San Francisco Seals in the Pacific Coast League. He then went into coaching where he mentored a young Steve Carlton in the Cardinals farm system.

Dick Sisler, 1950

Like his teammate Konstanty, Dick Sisler was another of the elder statesman of the Whiz Kids who made it onto the 1950 All-Star roster. But before that, he was born as the son of Major Leaguer George Sisler, a star of the dead ball era and Hall of Famer whose 41-game hitting streak in 1922 was the longest in American League history until it was surpassed by Joe DiMaggio in 1941. Dick was actually born during one of his father’s finest seasons in 1920, when the elder Sisler collected his first of two batting titles with a .407 average and set the then MLB record for hits in a season with 257.

Baseball was a dominant force in the family, much to the chagrin of Frances Sisler, the only daughter of the clan. Some of Dick’s earliest memories include seeing legends like Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig on the field up close or going for ice cream with Rogers Hornsby. He signed his first professional contract with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1939 despite only being in college for barely over a year. Dick would spend the next four years in the Cardinals’ farm system before enlisting in the Navy in 1942 and serving three years as a physical instructor at Bainbridge Naval Training Center. Sisler got back to baseball in late 1945 by playing winter ball in Havana, Cuba where he became known as “the Babe Ruth of Cuba” and even earned an invite to a house party held by a fan known as Ernest Hemingway.

Despite his own success, Sisler was constantly compared to his father. He remarked to the Wisconsin State Journal on the eve of his MLB debut in 1946 that being George Sisler’s son was a “handicap” and that it was unfair to be compared to his father because “players like him come very seldom and never in one family.” For his part though, Sisler did acknowledge in the same interview how his family name gave him advantages, saying “I don’t suppose I’d have been signed by a big-league club as soon as I was had I not been a Sisler.”

Sisler made his MLB debut on April 16th against the Pirates, going 1-3 with a double. He would continue to start at first for the Cardinals until a hand injury in June forced him out of the lineup. Sisler wouldn’t get his everyday 1B job back, as Stan Musial shifted there from left field and took over the regular starting gig. Sisler would head out to left after his return and was utilized in a platoon. He’d finish his rookie season with an underwhelming .260 average and 3 home runs in 83 games. Sisler would play just 46 games with the Cardinals in 1947 before being traded to the Phillies in 1948.

In Philadelphia, Sisler was able to slide back into being an everyday first baseman, and he thrived with his new team. He finished his first year with the Phillies hitting .274 with 11 home runs in 121 games. However, his starting job once again appeared to be in jeopardy to start 1949, as the Phillies acquired first baseman Eddie Waitkus in a trade with the Cubs. Sisler was once again sent back to the outfield but struggled to find playing time amongst a group that included Richie Ashburn, Del Ennis, and Bill Nicholson.

But that all changed the night of June 14th, 1949, when Waitkus was shot in the chest by a mentally unstable woman in his Chicago hotel room in what became one of the first widely publicized cases of stalking. He would survive and go on to play six more years in the Majors, but Waitkus was lost for the rest of the 1949 season. Sisler would then be tasked with playing first base the rest of the season and finished the year hitting .289 with 7 home runs.

Waitkus was given the starting first base job back in 1950, forcing Sisler once again to fight for time in the outfield. But this time, determined to improve himself as an outfielder in the spring, Sisler won a starting job in left field and went on to have the best season of his career. He was hitting .325 with nine home runs by early July and was named to the NL All-Star team. Sisler didn’t have as much of an impact on the game as his teammates Robin Roberts and Jim Konstanty did, but he did appear as a pinch hitter for Don Newcombe in the top of the sixth and singled off of Bob Lemon before being replaced by pinch runner Pee Wee Reese.

Sisler returned to the Phillies and cooled off some, but the team was surging towards the NL pennant. However, despite having a seven-game lead over the Dodgers in late September, losses in the Phillies rotation led to that lead narrowing to just one game with one game left on the schedule. That game just so happened to be against the Dodgers in Brooklyn. Robin Roberts started on two days’ rest and pitched into the tenth inning of a 1-1 game. In the top of the tenth batting for himself, Roberts singled before Waitkus added a base hit of his own. Richie Ashburn then attempted to bunt the runners over, but Roberts was out at third. Nevertheless, two men were on with one out when Sisler came up to the plate.

That’s when the son who couldn’t escape his father’s shadow finally emerged with a legendary moment of his own. Sisler blasted a three-run homer to left off of Newcombe, the man he pinch hit for in the All-Star game, to give the Phillies a 4-1 lead and ultimately their first National League pennant since 1915. It was arguably the most impactful home run in Phillies history until perhaps being matched when Bryce Harper accomplished a similar pennant-clinching feat in 2022. Alas, just like Harper’s Phillies in 2022, Sisler’s Phillies in 1950 were not able to finish the job in the World Series. But at least Sisler got a shout out from his old friend Hemingway in The Old Man and the Sea, a novella the famed writer began working on just three months after Sisler’s famous home run.

Sisler had a decent year in 1951, but the Phillies were not able to recapture the magic of the previous season and finished under .500. He was then traded to the Reds following the season before being traded to the Cardinals merely one month into the 1952 season. All in all, Sisler hit .256 with 13 home runs in 130 games split between the two teams in 1952. But in 1953, he once again lost his starting job at first base, this time to 24-year-old phenom Steve Bilko. Sisler would appear in only 32 games with the Cardinals in 1953 before being sent to the Columbus Red Birds in Triple-A. He’d bounce around the minors for six more years before retiring from playing in 1960, never again to play a game in the Majors. Sisler did make it back to the Majors as a coach however, becoming the Reds hitting coach in 1961 and taking over as interim manager in 1962 when manager Fred Hutchinson was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer. Sisler was officially named manager in 1965, joining his father once again as the first father-son manager combination in MLB history.

Jack Sanford, 1957

Sometimes all you need is a chip on your shoulder to succeed. People underestimated Jack Sanford for much of his life, starting in high school when he wasn’t even the number one pitcher on his team. When the Boston Braves expressed interest in signing the Massachusetts native out of high school, his own manager, who was also a scout for the Braves, advised them against it, declaring that Sanford wasn’t much of a prospect.

But that didn’t deter Nancy Sanford, Jack’s sister who played on a local softball team. She encouraged him to go try out for the Red Sox and made sure to pack him a bag and see him on to the trolley to ensure he would go. The Red Sox declined to sign Sanford, believing he was too small, but a scout for the Phillies that was in attendance had his interest piqued. The Phillies then moved to sign Sanford in 1947, but they did not offer him a bonus in the deal like they did with pitchers Curt Simmons and Robin Roberts in the same signing class.

Sanford then experienced a growth spurt his first few seasons in the minors to bring him to just around six feet tall and 190 pounds. He performed well enough to earn an invitation to big league camp in 1954, but he was not given a spot on the major league team. Sanford, who had already earned a reputation of having a very short-fused temper, did not take it too well. He was issued a suspension during the 1954 season when pitching for Syracuse when he refused to come out of a game despite his manager trying to take him out.

But that didn’t deter Sanford’s desire to prove everyone wrong, as he continued to work in Triple-A to earn a spot with the Phillies. However, he quickly found out that there’s at least one entity that doesn’t much care what your desires are when he was drafted into the U.S. Army in October 1954. Sanford was trained as a missile tactician but mostly spent his service time playing for the baseball team at Fort Bliss, Texas. That time in the Army seemingly convinced the Phillies to give him a shot at the Majors, as they decided to bring him up for the last month of the 1956 season. Manager Mayo Smith had to look up records to even know who Sanford was but that didn’t deter him from using Sanford as a starter in the second game of a doubleheader against the Cubs on September 16th.

Sanford pitched seven innings in his MLB debut, allowing one run on four hits with four strikeouts despite walking eight batters. Nevertheless, the performance was enough to make his manager ask why the Phillies didn’t claim his services before the Army did and to declare that Sanford will be on the Phillies to begin 1957 no matter what, saying “someone will have to chop off his arm or something to convince me he can’t pitch in the majors.”

Despite finally accomplishing his goal, Sanford still had a roadblock in his way with an injury in his pitching hand he suffered in a fight while in the Army. His hand would occasionally go numb, and at first surgery was recommended but ultimately Sanford was given medication to treat the injury. But throughout the rest of his career his hand would sometimes go numb in cold weather and he was forced to use a hand warmer on the bench.

Smith was true to his word and Sanford made the 1957 Phillies out of training camp. He rewarded his manager’s faith by winning five of his first six starts and sporting a 10-2 record with a 3.20 ERA and a league-best 96 strikeouts by the All-Star break. Sanford was named to the 1957 All-Star team along with teammate Curt Simmons, becoming the only rookie pitcher named to the NL’s squad. Simmons started the game at St, Louis’ Busch Stadium, but Sanford did get to make an appearance in the top of the sixth.

Sanford entered to replace Milwaukee’s Lew Burdette with the AL up 2-0. He got Ted Williams to fly out for the first out but then ran into trouble, allowing a double to the Yankees’ Bill Skowron before a wild pitch with Yogi Berra at the plate moved Skowron to third. Berra promptly singled to left to bring in Skowron, pushing the AL’s lead to 3-0. But Sanford was able to get the Red Sox’ Frank Malzone and the Orioles’ Billy Loes to groundout to escape the inning. The AL would go on to win 6-5 after a pushing their lead to 6-2 heading into the ninth and barely staving off a late NL rally while sixteen suspected ticket scalpers were arrested outside of the stadium.

Sanford returned to the Phillies and continued his strong season, pitching to a 2.98 ERA in his final 18 starts but was saddled with a 9-8 record as the Phillies went 38-36 and sagged out of contention, finishing third in the NL. Sanford led all of baseball in strikeouts by the end of the season and finished with a 19-8 record and a 3.08 ERA in 236.2 innings. He was named NL Rookie of the Year, becoming the first in the history of the Phillies. He received 16 of 24 first place votes and finished ahead of teammate Ed Bouchee who finished in second place with four first place votes. Sanford joked to the Inquirer that he “must’ve been the oldest in history” to win the award, as he was 28 years old in 1957. He was actually the second oldest to that point, as the Boston Braves’ Sam Jethroe won at age 30 in 1950.

1958 was a disappointment for both Sanford and the Phillies, as he pitched to a 4.44 ERA in 186.1 innings. That was enough to convince the Phillies that Sanford would never replicate his rookie season, and they shipped him off to the Giants in the winter for pitcher Ruben Gomez and backup catcher Valmy Thomas. Phillies owner Robert Carpenter later called it the worst trade he ever made, as Sanford went on to have a good career with the Giants, compiling a record of 85-62 and a 3.59 ERA across six full seasons with the Giants before a mid-season trade sent him to the Angels in 1965.

But Sanford’s career as a starter was nearing its end at that point, and he was converted to a reliever in 1966. He was once again traded mind-season in 1967, this time going to the Kansas City Athletics. But he would appear in only 10 games with Kansas City and sported a 6.55 ERA before being released in August. His former manager in Kansas City brought Sanford along to his new job as manager in Cleveland as a pitching coach, but Sanford quit after two seasons to go work at a golf club in Florida where he eventually worked as a director.

Sources

Baseball-Reference.com

C. Paul Rogers III, Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) Biography for Jim Konstanty

Stan Baumgartner, The Philadelphia Inquirer, September 15th, 1948

Stan Baumgartner, The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 17th, 1949

Art Morrow, The Philadelphia Inquirer, October 5th, 1950

The Philadelphia Inquirer, November 3rd, 1950

Greg Erion, Society for American Baseball research (SABR) Biography for Dick Sisler

C. Paul Rogers III, Society for American Baseball Research (SABR), October 1, 1950: Dick Sisler’s 10th-inning home run clinches Phillies’ pennant on the last day of the season

Henry J. McCormick, Wisconsin State Journal, April 17th, 1946

Jefferson City Post-Tribune, April 8th, 1948

The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 15th, 1949

Stan Baumgartner, The Philadelphia Inquirer, October 2nd, 1950

Warren Corbett, Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) Biography for Jack Sanford

Art Morrow, The Philadelphia Inquirer, September 17th, 1956

The Philadelphia Inquirer, July 4th, 1957

Robert L. Burnes, St. Louis Globe-Democrat, July 10th, 1957

The Philadelphia Inquirer, November 8th, 1957

Astros Prospect Report: April 1st

WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 12: Shay Whitcomb #10 of the Houston Astros bats during spring training workouts at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches on February 12, 2026 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Houston Astros/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Another day of minor league baseball is in the books. See the results below.

AAA: Sugar Land Space Cowboys (4-1) won 10-3 (BOX SCORE)

Sugar Land jumped out to an early lead scoring 5 runs in the 2nd inning on a Trammell 2 run double and Whitcomb 3 run HR. J. Alexander got the start but struggled a bit allowing 3 runs over 3.2 innings. The offense would rally again in the 6th inning scoring 5 runs on a Trammell sac bunt, Whitcomb 2 run HR and then Alexander 2 run HR. The bullpen was great with JP France tossing 2.1 scoreless innings and then Santa, Cosgrove and Knorr all throwing scoreless innings as they closed out the 10-3 win.

Note: Whitcomb is hitting .364 this season.


AA: Corpus Christi Hooks (—) 

A+: Asheville Tourists (—

A: Fayetteville Woodpeckers (—) 

Today’s minor league starters:

SL: Colton Gordon – 6:05 CT

CC: OPENING DAY APRIL 2

AV: OPENING DAY APRIL 2

FV: OPENING DAY APRIL 3

Rangers Reacts Survey: First Man Up (Reliever Edition)

ARLINGTON, TX - MAY 15: Cody Bradford #61 of the Texas Rangers warms up in the bullpen prior to his Major League debut game against the Atlanta Braves at Globe Life Field on May 15, 2023 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Ben Ludeman/Texas Rangers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

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

It is an off day for Your Texas Rangers, who just completed a 4-2 road trip to start the season.

So far the Rangers have not had to make any roster moves, which is a good thing a week into the season. Eventually, though, whether due to injury or ineffectiveness, there will be a need to summon reinforcements from the minors, and the bullpen is usually the area that sees the most churn.

Our question today — the first time the Rangers have to summon a reliever from AAA, who do you think they will turn to? Who will be the first reliever called up to the majors?

Cast your vote below…

Pirates call up Konnor Griffin ahead of PNC Park Opening Day

Konnor Griffin is going to the show.

The Pittsburgh Pirates announced on their social media account that Griffin, the league’s number one prospect, will be making his debut on Friday when the team hosts the Baltimore Orioles.

Griffin was a strong candidate to make the team out of spring training, but the Pirates opted against it; however, the organization could not keep the 19-year-old shortstop down for long. Griffin was chosen with the number nine overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft out of high school, and he has tore his way through the minor leagues in his brief time as a professional. In five games with AAA-Indianapolis this season, he has seven hits in 16 at-bats, proving that he belongs with the big league club.

BD Community, what do you think of Griffin’s promotion? How excited are you to see him with the Bucs? Chime in the comment section below.

Gerrard's regret over Rangers exit

Steven Gerrard "regrets" leaving Rangers for Aston Villa but says he was unimpressed with the Ibrox club's ambition after winning the league.

The Liverpool legend guided Rangers to their first top-flight title in 10 years in 2021, an unbeaten league campaign in which they finished 25 points ahead of Celtic.

Just six months later Gerrard departed to join English Premier League side Villa, where he lasted less than a year before being sacked.

"The level was a big jump," Gerrard admitted on The Overlap.

"I probably didn't realise at the time when I made that decision. In hindsight I would have stayed at Rangers longer and got more experience. Now, sitting here, I regret [leaving when I did].

"The conversations with Rangers after we won [the league], the recruitment and finance chats we were having, it didn't feel like Rangers were ready to go again.

"It was a bit more like, 'Oh, let's settle this and fix that and do that.' The promises weren't as strong as what I thought they would be.

"Then the Premier League offer and opportunity comes in, it's tough. It's tough to say no to Villa, a great club. I have nothing bad to say about them."

Pirates promoting 19-year-old Konnor Griffin, MLB's top prospect

The Pittsburgh Pirates are promoting 19-year-old shortstop Konnor Griffin, the consensus top prospect in baseball, the team revealed on Thursday morning.

Griffin was named USA TODAY Sports' Minor League Player of the Year in 2025, batting .333 with 21 homers, 94 RBIs, a .941 OPS and 65 stolen bases across 122 games in his first full pro season.

The ninth overall pick in the 2024 draft, Griffin was already off to a blazing start in 2026, going 7-for-16 in five games with Class AAA Indianapolis.

The Pirates play their home opener at PNC Park on Friday, April 3, against the Baltimore Orioles.

Griffin made some early noise in spring training, crushing a pair of long home runs against the Boston Red Sox in one of the Pirates' first exhibition games.

However, he cooled off considerably as the spring progressed and finished with seven hits in 41 at-bats (.171). He also had trouble making consistent contact with 13 strikeouts and only two walks.

That was presumably the reason the Pirates chose to send him to the minors to start the 2026 season. However, his performance at Indianapolis − and just maybe the fact that the Pirates play their home opener on Friday − was enough to convince the front office Griffin is ready to make his MLB debut.

Konnor Griffin an MLB rarity

When he makes his major league debut, Griffin will do so exactly three weeks before his 20th birthday.

According to MLB researcher Sarah Langs, he will become the first teenage position player to appear in the majors since Juan Soto did in 2018 for the Washington Nationals.

At 19 years and 344 days, he will be the youngest position player to appear in an MLB team's first seven games of the season since Andruw Jones did with the Atlanta Braves in 1997 (just barely edging out Adrian Beltre in 1999).

New contract next for Griffin?

The next burning question is whether or not the Pirates will sign Griffin to a long-term contract, as several other MLB teams have done with their top prospects in the past week.

The Seattle Mariners reached an agreement on March 31 with shortstop Colt Emerson, 20, on an eight-year, $96 million contract without him ever taking an at-bat in a major league game.

One day earlier, the Milwaukee Brewers locked up shortstop prospect Cooper Pratt, 21, with an eight-year, $50.75 million contract after he'd played just four games at Class AAA.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Pirates' Konnor Griffin promoted: 19-year-old MLB top prospect to PIttsburgh

Leading off Kyle Schwarber could give Phillies' offense a boost

Leading off Kyle Schwarber could give Phillies' offense a boost originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

It’s early. Don’t get it twisted.

Still, the Phillies are hitting .220 as a club. Their top four hitters — Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber, Bryce Harper and Alec Bohm — are batting .149 with a .557 OPS.

That’s the lowest combined average from the one-through-four spots through the first six games in club history, worse than the 1939 Phillies.

That group will figure it out. It’s too star-studded not to, and it’s also April 2. But the slow start does invite a fair question about the top of the order, especially when the bottom has been more productive.

Rookie Justin Crawford, hitting ninth, has been locked in thus far. The 22-year-old is 7-for-17, batting .412 through the first week. His natural ability to slap the ball around the field, especially the other way, has stood out immediately.

He’s also difficult to defend. Texas and Washington both adjusted for him already, bringing the third baseman in and shading the right fielder toward right-center.

That matters because consistent production from the nine-hole is rare. Last season, the spot produced a .246 average for the Phillies. Crawford is a much better hitter than that.

So what does it mean?

The Phillies don’t need the double-leadoff setup between Crawford and Turner. If Crawford keeps reaching, there will be traffic on the bases when the lineup turns over.

A change can be made in the leadoff spot.

Kyle Schwarber to the leadoff spot.

HERE’S WHY

That would not be new territory for the Phillies’ slugger. From 2022-24, Schwarber put together three straight seasons with 34 or more home runs, then tallied 104 runs batted in across 2024, all while hitting leadoff.

Only two players ever have driven in more runs as a leadoff hitter in a single season. Jimmy Rollins is the only other Phillie to collect more than 80 RBIs.

That year, Schwarber broke the all-time single-season record for the most leadoff home runs with 15.

The argument against Schwarber batting first has always been simple: if he’s leading off, his homers won’t drive in many runs. But this year, the Phillies have Crawford. A tougher at-bat at the bottom changes that equation.

Schwarber has slugged to begin the season. He’s hit two homers already and laced an RBI double in Wednesday’s contest.

He’s also a great four-seam fastball hitter. He mashes sinkers and cutters too. Out of the spot where he’s already been phenomenal for the Phils, he’d likely see even more pitches to damage.

There is one question worth asking.

Would moving Schwarber back to leadoff create a lefty-lefty issue at the top and bottom of the order?

The easy answer is no.

Crawford hit .376 against lefties last season at Triple-A. Schwarber posted a .964 OPS against southpaws in 2025. He’s been historically good in same-sided matchups and launched 23 homers in 234 at-bats against lefties last year.

Neither of them are overwhelmed by that look. They thrive.

TO FOLLOW

Moving Turner to the two-hole, ahead of Harper, would be something different.

Although, when Turner last hit there regularly in 2024, he drove the ball out of the yard (21 HR), hit .295 and posted an .807 OPS.

The move also makes sense because Turner has long excelled with runners on base.

Last season, among National League hitters with runners on base (minimum 250 plate appearances), Turner ranked fourth in batting average at .321.

He won the NL batting title at .304 and constantly put the ball in play. He’s exactly the kind of hitter you want up with traffic on the bases. Schwarber creates more of that traffic at the top, especially with his innate ability to walk.

Despite the early struggles, Turner has squared the ball up over the last few games, even if he doesn’t have much to show for it yet. He’ll come around.

He’s still a leadoff-type hitter, mind you, but Crawford can provide some of that same table-setting once the lineup turns over two to three times a game.

And for Harper, Wednesday was a great sign.

It’s been a rough start. He hasn’t quite looked like himself, and his bat speed is down a tick from last season. But he got to trot around the bases and feel the energy of the home crowd. He crushed his first homer of the year off Nationals lefty Cionel Pérez.

The cleanup spot has been part of the conversation, too. Bohm has had some of the same bad luck as Turner in that he’s made good contact, without much to show outside of his Opening Day homer. Adolis García has since moved to fifth, and he could play himself into the clean-up spot as a more traditional power bat.

His hard-hit numbers have jumped off the page already, but the bigger early sign is that he’s making more contact. That has been the biggest knock on the Phillies’ new right fielder the last few seasons.

THE CHANGE

Again, it’s early. That has to stay front of mind, but this topic can remain prominent as the season moves along.

Even after Wednesday’s electrifying win, the Phillies could still use a jolt at the top.

They got one in Tuesday’s win, when the offense again looked like it was starting to scuffle. Schwarber put them on the board with a solo homer.

For so long, Schwarber injected energy into Citizens Bank Park from the leadoff spot. The same could be true again this year if Rob Thomson is willing to tweak a top three he hasn’t touched yet.

Thomson originally moved Schwarber out of the leadoff spot prior to last year to split up the lefties. This year, Schwarber at the top could actually help break up the lineup in a more natural way. Crawford and Schwarber can both hold their own if opponents counter with a southpaw.

The Phillies have that flexibility in 2026.

Now they head to Colorado and then San Francisco for a six-game road trip. The ball flies at Coors Field in Denver, and that could be the right place to test a new order and, more importantly, find another offensive spark.

Where to watch Minnesota Twins vs. Kansas City Royals: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Thursday, April 2

The Kansas City Royals (3-2) are looking to complete a three-game sweep of the Minnesota Twins (1-4). Kansas City won a wild 13-9 game on Monday in which the Royals led 12-1 heading into the seventh inning. The starting pitchers are scheduled to be Taj Bradley for Minnesota and Cole Ragans for Kansas City.

  • Date: Thursday, April 2

  • Time: 2:10 p.m. ET / 11:10 a.m. PT

  • Where: Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City, MO

  • TV Channels: Royals.TV, Twins.TV Presented by Progressive

  • Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • Minnesota Twins: 1-4 (No. 4 in AL Central)

  • Kansas City Royals: 3-2 (No. 1 in AL Central)

  • Spread: Kansas City Royals -1.5

  • Moneyline: Kansas City Royals -160.0 / Minnesota Twins 135

  • Over/Under: 9.5

Minnesota Twins: Taj Bradley (0-0, ERA: 2.08, K: 9, WHIP: 1.38)
Kansas City Royals: Cole Ragans (0-1, ERA: 9.00, K: 5, WHIP: 2.50)

Weather: 77°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 38,427 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

Thursday Morning Links

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 29: Andrew McCutchen #4 of the Texas Rangers is congratulated by teammates in the dugout after hitting a three-run home run in the fourth inning during a game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on March 29, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Hunter Martin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Morning, all!

Chris Martin has made a lot of appearances so far this season but says that he ““feels great.”

The Ranger hitters have yet to use an ABS challenge despite many called strikes out of the strike zone, which Skip Schumaker attributes to being good teammates.

Baltimore ended last night’s game against the Rangers with a successful ABS challenge during Evan Carter’s at bat in the ninth.

Mackenzie Gore will start in Friday’s home opener against Cincinnati, with Kumar Rocker starting in the following game.

The beat writers are all talking up how much fun the Rangers are having and how loose the clubhouse is, which is a definite change from previous seasons.

No Game Today

Sep 21, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; A general wide view during the ninth inning during a game betweenn the Chicago White Sox and the San Diego Padres at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images | Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images

In case you missed the news yesterday, the White Sox have postponed today’s game, their home opener. It’s going to be decently warm in Chicago today, 19 degrees, but there are apparently high winds and the risk that a rainstorm is going to blow through around game time. Here in Calgary it’s blizzarding sideways, but, sure, I’m sure some warm rain is uncomfortable too.

Not much for news today. The Jays have officially sent Angel Bastardo back to the Red Sox. That was always the most likely outcome when he didn’t make the team, although there was a chance someone could trade for him. His rough spring probably foreclosed that opportunity, so now he’s back in Boston’s system.

Bonus pools for the 2026 draft were announced. The Jays have the second smallest pool, ahead of only the Dodgers. Their first selection gets knocked back 10 places for trying too hard to win exceeding the second luxury tax threshold. That means they don’t go until 39th overall. eight teams will pick twice before they get to go, and the Rockies will be on the clock three times. They got a compensation pick after the fourth round for the Mets signing Bo Bichette after he rejected the Jays’ Qualifying Offer, but lose that pick and their second rounder for signing Dylan Cease after he rejected the Padres’ QO. After their ‘first rounder’, then, they pick in the third (103rd overall), 4th (131st), 5th (164th), 6th (193rd), 7th (222nd), and every 30 picks thereafter. So they’re going to have a hard time infusing any premium talent into the system this winter, although there’s plenty of gold to be panned in the later picks.

Finally, it’s opening day for all the leagues below AAA (which opened the same day the Majors did). Only the A ball Dunedin Blue Jays actually play today, though, at 4:30pm ET. They haven’t announced a starter yet, but top prospects Jojo Parker and Blaine Bullard should be in the lineup. They’ll face sixth overall pick Seth Hernandez, so it’ll be a good test from the jump. The AA New Hampshire Fisher Cats and A+ Vancouver Canadians open their seasons tomorrow night.

Scenes from a big league clubhouse

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MARCH 30: Shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. #7 of the Kansas City Royals celebrates with teammates after the Royals defeated the Minnesota Twins 3-1 to win the opening day game at Kauffman Stadium on March 30, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Do you think your office is interesting? Most people probably would disagree. Maybe parts of your job are interesting, but the office-y parts? The ones where you’re answering emails or getting a Gatorade from the fridge or politely asking your coworker if they had a good weekend while you pass each other in the hallway? Probably not.

I would argue that the clubhouse is the baseball office. It shouldn’t be interesting. And it’s really not. But there is some intrigue in the mundane. The following are some scenes from the Royals clubhouse. Some of them important. Some less so.


Sam Mellinger, VP of communication, waves at the reporters and TV camera operators in the room: Stephen Cruz is ready for his interview. We crowd around Cruz, the cameras turn on, and questions are sent his way, taking a short detour through a translator. Cruz answers in Spanish, the translator responding to the rest of us in English. Cruz threw all of one (1) inning in Triple-A Omaha before being summoned to Kansas City, Cruz ostensibly making the trip down the well-trod I-29 thoroughfare like so many before—including himself.

Cruz is excited about his slider, which he worked on in the offseason. He wasn’t worried about getting called up, because that was outside his control. He was just ready to pitch, and pitch he did, and pitch he will in Kansas City. Maybe even that night. Cruz seems ready.


That Cruz is here at all is because the Royals decided to send Carlos Estevez to the injured list due to his foot bruise. Er, “contusion,” manager Matt Quatraro clarifies a little later in his daily dugout interview. But Q used “bruise” first, and this is one of those situations where the technical term removes some of the teeth of what actually happens. A contusion is clinical, specific. A bruise is that nasty purplish-orange-green thing that happens when you accidentally slam your knee into the corner of the table and try to say every curse word you personally know all at once.

Estevez seemed to be in good spirits. He was walking around without much of a limp and without a boot. But, man, he has to be going through it. Imagine if you had a bad day at work and then someone threw a 90-something mile per hour fastball at your foot.


I’ve been in the clubhouse when the Royals have been blasting music before. Today is quiet. There’s some muffled sound coming from a few of the televisions, which are playing sports shows and varying baseball-related content.

But there was one TV that is just playing, you know, Bluey, as you do. The press gets clubhouse access for 45 minutes to an hour, give or take. And during that whole time, just like, constant Disney Jr., a marathon of children’s television. It’s the sort of thing I’d do as a joke, just to see how long it would stay on before someone did a double-take. No one did.


As I walked in, my eyes narrowed and I wonder what’s different about the room. I’m only there a dozen times a year, but something is different. I compile my memory and eventually ask Jake Eisenberg, who I know won’t mock me for asking a potentially dumb question: “New carpet?” “Yes, new carpet,” he replies. It’s got a new blue pattern in it and two very large Royals logos that weren’t there before.

Also new: some locker locations. Jac Caglianone and Carter Jensen, besties, are now together on the right side. Tyler Tolbert is now by Vinnie Pasquantino. And Maikel Garcia got an upgrade, moving by one of the empty lockers in the back by his Team Venezuela teammate Salvador Perez.

It’s an upgrade because having an empty locker next to yours means more space, and that privilege is granted to the best players. Which two Royals have an empty locker on either side? You can probably guess: Bobby Witt Jr. and Salvador Perez.


Boredom can strike anywhere. For Carter Jensen and Lane Thomas, they decide to pass the time by doing something as old as time: playing cards.

Now, what kind of cards? I don’t know, I prefer not to loom over players who are doing something in their own space, in which I am a guest. But Noah Cameron looms. He is invested in the card game, which is funny because he will start on the mound of a Major League Baseball game in a few hours. Some pitchers keep to themselves during their starting day. But not Cameron, who seems lose—an embrace of the doldrums of work that even baseball players go through.

Matt Chapman has vulgar reprimand for Giants teammate in viral mound moment

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Baseball players on the San Francisco Giants, including pitcher Houser, in a discussion on the field, Image 2 shows A baseball player on second base attempting to steal third base while a player in red holds a glove near him
Giants issues

There seems to be some tension in the Giants infield.

In Wednesday’s 7-1 road loss to the Padres, San Francisco third baseman Matt Chapman fielded a slow grounder off the bat of Xander Bogaerts.

Chapman collected and fired on the run to first baseman Casey Schmitt, but the ball ticked off Schmitt’s glove and rolled to the wall on what would be ruled a throwing error by Chapman.

The play came with runners on first and third and two outs, so it led to a run that could’ve been prevented with a clean throw and catch.

Instead, Gavin Sheets scampered home to make it 2-0 Padres in the fifth.

During a mound visit a few minutes later, Chapman had some harsh words for Schmitt.

“Hey, catch the f—cking ball,” Chapman said twice.

Matt Chapman telling Schmitt to catch the (expletive) ball. @TalkinBaseball_/X

After the game, Chapman and Schmitt both said they’d made up. Chapman said it was just a “heat of the moment” incident.” Schmitt added that he stretched too early on the play.

“I’ve already talked to Casey. It’s all good,” Chapman said. “I figured that people would try to make that a big deal, but it’s baseball. Stuff happens. We all learn from it. We’ll move on.”

“I’m not mad about it or anything. It’s baseball,” Schmitt added. “Those are things I should have done and didn’t. At the end of the day, we wake up tomorrow, we play another game and we get back at it. We’re trying to win games. That’s the bottom line. Sometimes things happen. I just messed up.”

No other runs scored in the inning despite the blunder, but the Giants were still beaten 7-1 by San Diego.

Giants starter Adrian Houser gave up just one run over 5 ⅓ innings, but Jose Butto allowed four runs in the bottom of the eighth to stretch the Padres’ lead to six.

The Giants had just four hits in the affair to the Padres’ 10 and struck out 14 times.

Casey Schmitt can’t catch the ball at first base. @TalkinBaseball_/X

Chapman, known for his stellar defense at the hot corner, is in the second year of a six-year, $151 million extension he signed in September 2024.

Last year, he appeared in 128 games and slashed .231/.340/.430 with a .770 OPS, a letdown after the massive deal. He also hit 21 homers and had 61 RBIs.

He spent the first five years of his career in Oakland and the next two in Toronto before moving to the Giants on a three-year contract in 2024 that would ultimately be extended.

Chapman won four Gold Gloves across his first eight seasons, a reason why Wednesday’s mishap was uncharacteristic.

Matt Chapman has won four Gold Gloves across his MLB career. Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

Of course, it doesn’t help that Schmitt isn’t playing his natural position. Before this season, he’d only played a total of 18 games at first base at the MLB level, playing every other infield position instead.

San Francisco is now 2-4 through the first six games of the season after being swept by the Yankees in its opening series and winning two of three against the Padres.

The Giants are looking to make the playoffs for the first time since 2021. They’ve finished within the 79-81 win range in the last four campaigns, a consistently mediocre squad.

Brett Wisely clears waivers and is assigned to Triple-A Gwinnett

TAMPA, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 26: Brett Wisely #0 of the Atlanta Braves hits a single in the fifth inning against the New York Yankees during a Grapefruit League spring training game at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 26, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We’ve got a roster move that fell through the cracks a little bit but still needs to be talked about since it affects the depth of this squad. Back around Opening Day, infielder Brett Wisely was designated for assignment once it was clear that he wouldn’t be making the team. That was all the way back on March 25 when that particular move was made. Now, he’s cleared waivers and has been subsequently assigned to the Gwinnett Stripers.

As DJourn mentions above, this should help the depth when it comes to the infield (and the outfield as well since Wisely can play out there, too) and it’s something that the Braves have learned over the past couple of seasons that you can never have too much of. Meanwhile, this ends a wacky offseason journey for Wisely — one that saw him get picked up off waivers by the Braves last September, traded to the Rays in January and then brought back from the Rays before settling into the Braves Triple-A club.

Wisely made four appearances for the Atlanta Braves and didn’t record a hit in nine plate appearances. With that being said, he’ll probably be used as a defensive substitute if (and hopefully not when) he’s needed to return to the Braves any time soon. For now, he’ll be plying his trade in Gwinnett where he will surely play in more than two games for the Stripers like he did last season.

Cam Schlittler continues Yankees’ dominant stretch with second nearly unhittable start

Cam Schlittler was outstanding again taking the ball on Wednesday against the Mariners.

After allowing just one hit in his season debut last week in San Francisco, the young right-hander was nearly unhittable again as he continued the Yankees' dominant stretch of pitching.

Schlittler found himself in trouble from the first pitch he threw, as Brendan Donovan led off the game with a double, but he was quickly able to escape the threat with help from two strikeouts.

He allowed a one-out knock to Luke Raley in the bottom of the second, but that also proved to be no bother, as he set down the next two he faced on just seven pitches. 

The righty was in complete control from there, going on a stretch of 15 straight retired before Aaron Boone came to pull him with one out in the bottom of the seventh. 

“It was exciting to see just how dominant his stuff is,” the skipper said, via YES Network. “He was ahead in counts, got early outs which allowed him to get deep in the game with a pitch count -- he’s just throwing the ball incredibly well.”

Schlittler finished the day with just the two hits while striking out seven on an efficient 79 pitches over 6.1 innings. 

He’s the first pitcher in Yankee history with zero walks, zero runs, and 15+ K's in any two-game span. 

“It was just like last start,” Schlittler said. “Just being in the zone making good pitches, defense was great behind me, so just having the confidence to go out there attack and do what I can to get as far as I can with a limited amount of pitches.”

Seattle struck three times over the last two innings against the Yankees’ bullpen, but they were able to hang on to close the season-opening road trip 5-1. 

Schlittler wasn't the only arm to deliver for New York on the road trip, as their starters have the lowest ERA in MLB history through six games (0.53) and they've allowed the third-fewest runs as a team over that span (six). 

“I think the staff is dominant, the bullpen has been great, as well,” the young righty said. “The team as a whole we’re just feeding off of each other and just taking it each game and each start and just keep rolling with it.”