A’s roster moves: Muncy to IL, Harris recalled

MESA, ARIZONA - MARCH 08, 2026: Brett Harris #11 of the Athletics covers first base on a pickoff attempt during the seventh inning of a spring training game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Hohokam Stadium on March 08, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by David Durochik/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The A’s announced on Tuesday afternoon that the team was placing third baseman Max Muncy on the IL with a broken bone in his left hand. The team recalled fellow third baseman Brett Harris from Triple-A to take his roster spot.

It’s a tough break for Muncy after his solid start to the season. The former first-round pick is hitting .239/.308/.402 with two home runs and two stolen bases. The strikeouts (37) are still an issue as is the glove at third base but Muncy at least was providing some offense from the hot corner, something the A’s sorely lacked last year. It seemed like Muncy’s HBP last week was a bullet dodged but in the end the team eventually discovered the fracture and now he’ll be out for a while.

The team hasn’t addressed how long Muncy will be on the shelf for but his absence will be measured in weeks, not months. While Muncy is down the team will likely split third base duties between Darell Hernaiz and Harris. Hernaiz is hitting .222/.323/.421 with just one long ball in 15 games this year. Harris meanwhile has spent the beginning of the season with the Aviators and is hitting .274/.408/.419 with the Las Vegas. He hasn’t had much success in the big leagues up to this point and was getting some playing time at first base recently but this could be an opportunity for him back at the hot corner while Muncy is down.

Where to watch New York Yankees vs. Texas Rangers: Live stream, TV channel, odds for Tuesday, April 28

The New York Yankees (19-10) face the Texas Rangers(14-15) in the second game of their series. The Yankees won Monday’s opener 4-2. The scheduled starting pitchers are Cam Schlittler for the New York Yankees, with a 1.77 ERA, and Jacob deGrom for the Texas Rangers, with a 2.13 ERA.

  • Date: Tuesday, April 28

  • Time: 8:05 p.m. ET / 5:05 p.m. PT

  • Where: Globe Life Field, Arlington, TX

  • TV Channels: Rangers Sports Network, Amazon Prime Video

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

  • New York Yankees: 19-10 (No. 1 in AL East)

  • Texas Rangers: 14-15 (No. 2 in AL West)

  • Spread: Texas Rangers +1.5

  • Moneyline: Texas Rangers +105 (46.8%) / New York Yankees -125 (53.2%)

  • Over/Under: 7.5

New York Yankees: Cam Schlittler (3-1, ERA: 1.77, K: 41, WHIP: 0.73)
Texas Rangers: Jacob deGrom (2-0, ERA: 2.13, K: 35, WHIP: 1.07)

Weather: 61°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 40,000 | Roof: Retractable | Surface: Artificial Turf

José Caballero did exactly what was asked of him in Anthony Volpe’s absence

Apr 25, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Jose Caballero (72) hits a single during the seventh inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images | Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

We don’t know exactly when, but Anthony Volpe is nearing a return to the Yankees. Once the team ends his rehab assignment and brings him back to the big leagues, the expectation is that Volpe will resume his duties as the starting shortstop or, at the very least, play the majority of games there going forward. That means José Caballero, who has filled in for the former first-round pick as he recovered from his offseason shoulder surgery, will be pushed off shortstop.

The Yankees trusted Caballero to handle shortstop duties in Volpe’s absence, and the talented, speedy infielder managed to overcome a slow start to become everything the organization wanted him to be while the starter was gone.

Before taking the field on Monday, Caballero was slashing a solid .271/.314/.417 with a 104 wRC+, three home runs, 11 stolen bases, and 0.7 fWAR, third on the Yankees among position players. That fWAR output is higher than that of established stars such as Jazz Chisholm Jr., Trent Grisham, and Giancarlo Stanton.

It’s important to point out, however, that things weren’t always going this smoothly for Caballero in the still-young 2026 campaign. From the start of the season until April 14, he was actually hitting a disappointing .179/.220/.286 with a 39 wRC+ and a 28.8 percent strikeout rate in 59 plate appearances. Some criticized the Yankees for not having a better plan to replace Volpe.

Patience proved to be a virtue. The Yanks didn’t have much of a choice, but they stuck with Caballero and were rewarded. In 43 trips to the plate from April 15 until Sunday, the utilityman slashed .400/.442/.600 with two doubles, two home runs, five stolen bases, and a 192 wRC+. His strikeout rate over that span is at a solid 16.3 percent.

Defensively, Caballero has also been an asset. In 238.2 innings at shortstop before Monday’s game, he racked up five Defensive Runs Saved, or DRS. He is also tied for the American League lead in steals with Cleveland’s Jose Ramirez, through Sunday’s games. In other words, Caballero has been a net positive in all three facets of the game for position players: hitting, fielding, and baserunning.

Now that his playing time at shortstop will be cut due to Volpe’s presence later this week, the Yankees will have to find creative ways to keep one of their hottest players in the lineup. In the last two years alone, Caballero has played second base, third base, shortstop, and the three outfield positions. He could potentially find playing time at all those spots, but things could get crowded for him once Volpe returns.

The main takeaway for Caballero and the Yankees is that he rose to the occasion when the team needed him. He had a month to impress and managed to achieve his goal, even if the road wasn’t always smooth. Perhaps he isn’t the most willing walker, and he sure can be streaky, but Caballero has been a very solid addition to the Yankees ever since he came before last year’s deadline. The team asked for league-average offense, strong defense, and bold baserunning from the shortstop position during Volpe’s absence, and it ended up getting all three. Acquired at last year’s deadline and under team control through 2029, Caballero looks like he should be a more than fine super utilityman for years to come.

If everybody’s healthy, Caballero is probably not an everyday player. Still, manager Aaron Boone knows he has a capable Swiss Army knife ready to cover almost any position on the field capably. It may not always be pretty, but Caballero usually finds ways to contribute, and he managed to produce in all facets of the game these last few weeks.

Mets' Luis Robert Jr. day-to-day with lower back tightness, Jorge Polanco making progress

Early-season injuries are beginning to pile up for the Mets

On the same day that the club placed starting pitcher Kodai Senga on the IL with lumbar spine inflammation, manager Carlos Mendoza explained that outfielderLuis Robert Jr.is day-to-day with lower back tightness that popped up during Sunday's doubleheader against the Colorado Rockies.

"That’s why he only played one game [on Sunday]," Mendoza said. "It didn’t get better, so he’s getting treatment. As of right now, he’s day-to-day, but he’s dealing with the low back tightness there."

The good news is that, as of now, it doesn't seem like Robert will need to undergo any further testing for his back. But that could change if the outlook doesn't improve soon.

"They [our training staff] think the next couple of days they can kind of just treat it, but we’ll see," Mendoza said. "If in the next 48 hours he doesn’t get better, obviously we’ll have to move forward, but as of right now they’re not considering [further testing]."

Robert, who has dealt with a handful of other injury issues throughout his career, is hitting .224 this season with two home runs and eight RBI in 24 games.

On a better note, Mendoza said that 1B/DH Jorge Polanco continues to improve as he recovers from Achilles and wrist issues.

"He actually was running out there today, up to like 80 percent. So he's improving, feeling a lot better," Mendoza said. "Today they went through a series of exercises where they were kind of testing him pretty good and he responded well."

That being said, there's still no exact timeline on when Polanco, who landed on the 10-day IL on April 18, will be back on the field.

"No, but he's now continuing to do more baseball activity," Mendoza said. "He played catch, he's going to hit in the cages now. But like the running part today was pretty encouraging."

To add on, Mendoza also said that Juan Soto had an MRI for forearm tightness that he first felt on Friday, but everything was structurally clean, so he should be able to play in the outfield in the next few days. Soto is in the lineup on Monday as DH.

Meet Travis Bazzana, the Newest Guardian

Feb 24, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Cleveland Guardians second baseman Travis Bazzana against the Los Angeles Dodgers during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Travis Bazzana will make his debut at second base for the Cleveland Guardians tonight in Cleveland.

Bazzana is, as you may have heard from Australia. He was also, you may have heard, the first overall pick in the 2024 MLB draft. He played college ball at Oregon State, and has put up a 138 wRC, 24/17 K/BB%, 25/29 in stolen base attempts, with a .252/.391/.435 slashline.

His batted ball data and plate discipline metrics are very good, as outlined by Eli Ben-Porat on Twitter:

Thomas Nestico also has an excellent breakdown of Bazzana’s underlying metrics in the minors here:

Coming into this season, Bazzana was ranked 16th in MLB by MLB Pipeline, 22nd by Baseball America, 24th by Baseball Prospectus, 50th by the Athletic, 23rd by ESPN and 54th by FanGraphs. I hope Pipeline was the winner here, because then we will be, also.

I would say that having watched a lot of Bazzana, fans need to be patient as he adjusts to the big leagues. Be prepared for him to be too passive at the plate, initially, as he gets his feet under him. Be prepared for teams to attack him outside ALL the time until he proves he can lay off balls thrown out there and serve enough of the strikes into the opposite field with authority to earn himself some inside pitches to pull. Expect his defense to still be a little shaky, but hopefully a notable step up from what Juan Brito provided. Expect him to display a Jose Ramirez-type motor and enthusiasm for playing the game, as well as a good dose of competitive fire.

Welcome to the big leagues, Travis Bazzana! Everyone, prepare your Bluey catchphrases for home run calls when he hits one (“And that’s a nice parking spot, Rita!” “He gave that one a Whack-a-doo!” “That one will keepy uppy and outta here!”).

Mets place Kodai Senga on IL, recall Christian Scott

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 26: Pitcher Kodai Senga #34 of the New York Mets throws during the first inning of game two of a doubleheader against the Colorado Rockies at Citi Field on April 26, 2026 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Heather Khalifa/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ahead of their series opener against the Nationals on Tuesday, the Mets placed Kodai Senga on the 15-day injured list with lumbar spine inflammation and recalled Christian Scott from Triple-A Syracuse.

Senga came out of the gate strong this season. In his first two starts, the 33-year-old pitched 11.2 innings, allowing four runs (3.09 ERA) and striking out 16. But over his next three starts, Senga allowed 16 earned runs in just 8.1 innings (17.28 ERA). His average fastball velocity also dropped noticeably over the course of the season’s first month, falling from 97.4 mph on March 31 to 95.1 mph in his most recent start against the Rockies on Sunday. Senga’s IL stint is retroactive to April 27.

Scott started for the Mets on April 23 against the Twins, marking his first appearance in the majors since July 21, 2024. Scott did not fare well against Minnesota, lasting 1.1 innings while allowing a run on five walks and a hit-by-pitch. He was optioned back to Triple-A the following day, but is already back with the big league club before making another start in Syracuse.

The Mets are effectively operating with four starting pitchers — Freddy Peralta, Nolan McLean, Clay Holmes, and now Scott — while Sean Manaea and David Peterson provide multi-inning relief out of the bullpen. It remains to be seen if one of those two left-handers will assume the role of full-time starter in the near future.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Bryce Miller, Travis Bazzana and Christian Scott

FANTASY BASEBALL WAIVER WIRE PICKUPS

Bryce Miller (SP Mariners) - Rostered in 28 percent of Yahoo leagues

Few seemed especially excited about Miller this year after a 2025 season in which he was twice on the IL with elbow problems and amassed a 5.68 ERA in his 18 starts, but it's hard to write off a Mariners starter getting to pitch half of his games in T-Mobile Park. Plus, Miller was fantastic in 2024, posting a 2.94 ERA with a 171/45 K/BB in 180 1/3 innings. Alas, after just one spring start, Miller went down with an oblique injury. He's since made two rehab starts, and though the second didn't go well, it still seems like a good idea to pick him up in leagues in which he's available.

⚾️ Baseball is back! MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

It's worth grabbing him now because Miller unlocked something over the winter that has him throwing harder than ever. His handful of fastballs in his first spring start averaged 97.3 mph. In his first Triple-A rehab start, he came in at 97.1 mph. Miller averaged 95.2 mph during his big 2024 season and 94.8 mph last year, so it's quite the significant gain. His slider was up even more in his last rehab start, averaging 88.6 mph. That's four mph harder than he threw it previously.

Miller is probably still an injury risk, but he's one with a great deal of fantasy upside in arguably the league's best situation for pitchers. Even if he were still averaging 95 mph with his heater, he might rate as a top-50 SP when healthy. At 97 mph, he could be a big difference maker, for however long it lasts.

Travis Bazzana (2B Guardians): Rostered in 20 percent of Yahoo leagues

With Bazzana having a mediocre first week in Triple-A, Juan Brito was the Guardians' pick to replace the injured Gabriel Arias in the Cleveland infield earlier this month. Three weeks later, the Guardians have now deemed Bazzana ready; the 2024 No. 1 overall pick was officially added to the team's roster on Tuesday and should serve as the primary second baseman for now and, ideally, for several years to come.

Bazzana had batted .328 with nine doubles, two homers and 16 walks in 16 games since being bypassed. He's a patient, disciplined hitter, but he struggled to hit for average while also missing time due to injuries in his first year and a half as a pro. This year, he has his average exit velocity up to 90.5 mph, which would currently put him in the 68th percentile of major league hitters. He's also upped his steal game, going 8-for-10 in 24 games for Columbus. He was 12-for-14 in 84 games last year.

Whether or not Bazzana is a mixed-league asset right away could hinge on whether he's platooned against lefties. The Guardians have been treating Daniel Schneeman like a full-timer of later, and even though he's left-handed, he could get the nod over Bazzana at second base against lefties. Or maybe not, since the Guardians only have four righty bench players for the six lefties that are potentially in need of platoon partners. If Bazzana plays against most lefties and keeps up with the steal attempts, he'll probably prove of use in shallow leagues. He's not ready to crush a bunch of homers, but he could pretty easily wind up hitting first, second or even fourth for Cleveland in short order.

Christian Scott (SP Mets): Rostered in three percent of Yahoo leagues

Scott's first big-league start since 2024 was quite the disaster; he walked five of the 10 batters he faced and hit another while totaling four outs last Thursday against the Twins. Incredibly, though, he was only charged with one run. Scott was sent down after the game, but he'll get another chance now with Kodai Senga landing on the IL due to a back issue. Hopefully, this time, he'll make the most of it.

Scott debuted with the Mets in 2024, posting a 4.56 ERA in nine starts before requiring elbow surgery. He missed all of 2025 before returning this spring. In three Triple-A starts this year, he had a 5.27 ERA, but he struck out 17 and walked just two in 13 2/3 innings. That's typical of his old minor league numbers; Scott has an incredible 149/22 K/BB over 118 career innings between Double- and Triple-A. His slider and splitter are both quality swing-and-miss pitches, and he's gained one mph on his fastball since surgery, putting him at 95.3 mph on average this year.

Scott might give up more homers than most, but he's probably not going to lose the strike zone again like he did against the Twins. He'll sport a fine strikeout rate, and he should prove especially strong in WHIP over the long run. There's always the chance that he'll wind up back in the minors in a few weeks anyway, but given time, he could resemble peak Bailey Ober as a fantasy starter.

Waiver Wire Quick Hits

- The Pirates' Gregory Soto (25 percent rostered) probably gets a boost after Dennis Santana's miserable game Monday against the Cardinals. He's been unusually steady to start the season, giving up runs in just two of 15 appearances and striking out 20 in 14 2/3 innings.

- Elmer Rodriguez, who is serving as Luis Gil's replacement, would be quite interesting in the Bronx if the Yankees had a permanent spot for him, but with Carlos Rodón and Gerrit Cole both set to return in the coming weeks, disaster would have to strike to keep Rodriguez in the rotation.

- Injuries have left Gus Varland (five percent rostered) as pretty clearly the primary ninth-inning option in Washington. He should be worth rostering for at least the next few weeks.

Michael Harris back at CF and Dominic Smith at DH against Detroit Tigers

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 24: Dominic Smith #8 of the Atlanta Braves bats in the second inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Truist Park on April 24, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Atlanta Braves and their league leading offense are facing the Detroit Tigers having just won twenty games before the month of May for the first time in franchise history.

The Braves lead MLB with 5.72 runs scored per game. To put that in perspective, if they continue to score this many runs per game it would be the second most in franchise history since MLB started playing 162 games. It would be more than the historic 2003 high octane offense, and just below the 2023 season where the Braves tied the record for most HRs in a season by a team.

This offense will be tested in this series because the Braves are projected to face Casey Mize (2.51 ERA), two-time reigning Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal (2.72 ERA), and new Tiger Framber Valdez (3.41 ERA). The Braves have already faced tough pitching this season, but not a gauntlet like this.

The key for the offense will likely be to work counts and get to the bullpen as early as possible because the Tigers’ bullpen currently ranks in the bottom half of MLB in ERA, even with Kenley Jansen anchoring the back end.

With Mize being a righty, the biggest question mark was whether Michael Harris would get the start in CF so that Dominic Smith could slot in at DH again. With the day off, it would make sense that Harris may be rested up enough and that Drake Baldwin would be rested to be behind the dish. On paper, tonight’s game is the one the Braves could do the most damage offensively, and they may need it with Martin Pérez showing signs of upcoming regression to the mean, the offense may need to step up tonight.

As predicted, Harris back at CF means Smith is at DH. Another interesting note is that Riley is still below Harris and Albies in the order.

No player on the Braves has more at-bats against Mize than six. Matt Olson leads the team in at-bats and has made good of them with a HR, .500 average, and 1.625 OPS. Outside of Olson the rest of the team is pretty much a question mark.

Martin Pérez has spent a decent amount of time in the AL Central in his career so it should come as no surprise that a few of the Tigers have a decent number of at-bats against him. Four players have fourteen or more at-bats against him, and none have done more damage than Gleyber Torres. Torres has three HRs in his twenty-two at-bats against Martin Pérez which has resulted in a 1.087 OPS.

Good news for the Braves is that their bullpen is the polar opposite of the Tigers, so if Martin Pérez can suppress the Tigers’ league average offense, then the Braves have a decent chance of pulling out a game one victory.

First pitch is at 7:15 EDT.

Which Mariner are you worried won’t bounce back?

CLEVELAND, OHIO - AUGUST 29: Bryce Miller #50 of the Seattle Mariners talks with Logan Gilbert #36 and Bryan Woo #22 prior to a game against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on August 29, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

I asked y’all in the FEED for a bumper crop of hot takes on this subject and the LL hive mind did not disappoint! Thanks to everyone who weighed in. Since there were many similar answers, I’m going to start with the top three players that were named and then I’ll break it down a bit more with my Trademarked Mariners Hot Take Ranking System:

Okay let’s break it down by the numbers here.

Your third most popular response for which Mariner won’t bounce back this season is….

A 3-way tie between Victor Robles, Luis Castillo, and….THE ENTIRE BULLPEN.

I honestly give this one a Bosio. A good and hot take, not absurd. Not many lies detected here, although throwing the entire bullpen in is a bit a cop-out answer. I will go on record once again, though, and insist that Castillo is not yet washed, even after whatever the hell happened yesterday in the frigid Twin Cities.

Moving right along.

Your second most popular response for which Mariner won’t bounce back this season is…..

Logan Gilbert

Logan looking like how that take makes me feel. This one is an Iwakuma because…..yeah, I’m worried about our boy. He has simply not looked like himself and watching his starts has felt particularly frustrating because we know he’s better than this. He is too young to be this rinsed. I firmly believe he can bounce back, but the struggles have been real and not fun.

And finally, your most popular response for which Mariner won’t bounce back this season is…..

An impossible 3-way tie between Josh Naylor, Andrés Muñoz, and Bryce Miller!

^That’s Naylz responding to his doubters. Y’all, Josh will be FINE. He is a menace. He is a baseball sicko. He has only begun to fight. Also, the disrespect to Muñoz! Audacious. That and Naylor gives this take a scorching hot Brash ranking. These are some fighting words. Our cat-loving flamethrower will be fine. You know what would help him be fine? The Mariners offense not producing so many one-run games. That would be cool. The only one here that is very justified is Bryce Miller, sadly. We just don’t know what’s going to happen if and when he returns to the rotation. The AquaSox start was fairly encouraging, but that’s High A batters. I hope he proves us all wrong.

Now to highlight a few other choice takes!

Poster YaSureYaBetcha says: “Dan. Look, he’s managed better than expected. Someday he may even get a World Series win, hopefully will the M’s. But all of pinch hitting and batting order oddness reeks of inexperience. Dan was called up too early. Send him to Tacoma to manage for a couple of years, and get all of those youthful managing mistakes out of his system. Spicy take: hire Don Mattingly off the Phillies bench as a replacement.”

Yowza! Betraying their mild Midwestern handle there with this extremely BRASH take. Listen, Dan Wilson has the room. He has the players. Unless he loses them, he’s doing a fine job as a manager. The in-game decisions, as has been documented elsewhere, do not seem to be entirely his doing. Some pinch-hitting choices have been very questionable, but it’s April and I think he/the FO need to shake out the roster as much as possible to evaluate what they truly have. On the subject of Donnie Baseball, obviously that ship has sailed as of this morning, but I also think Mattingly would not fit in here with the Mariners at all. He comes from just a different baseball world and wouldn’t understand how we do things here in the quaint Pacific Northwest. Also, every time he fucked up, we’d all accuse him of being a Yankees sleeper agent seeking revenge for 1995. Only kind-of kidding.

Poster ASURay says: “Naylor and to a slightly less extent Cal. Neither of those guys have ‘I’m going to age gracefully’ physiques and both have recently gotten paid. Neither seem like the ‘cash checks and take it easy’ types, but you never know. At least Cal should have at least a couple more years as an average+ defender in him, so that sets his floor pretty high. I’m always worried about Julio as I have never liked his hitting profile — slow starter, doesn’t always seem to have a plan at the plate, etc. — but his speed/defense at least make him useful even when he isn’t hitting. Not sure how long that will be the case, though. The things he is best right now tend to age like cottage cheese.”

Giving this one an Iwakuma as ASURay managed to doubt all three main cornerstones of this Mariners roster in highly questionable ways. ASURay hit ‘em with that Contra “spread gun” power-up. First of all, Naylor does stand the most risk of falling off the steepest age cliff, but at 28 years old, I really don’t worry about an significant drop off in skills until the fifth year of this contract. But, if we get four seasons of roughly career average performance, then the fifth year is house money. Whatever. (it’s all house money, it’s not mine).

Cal……c’mon now. He’s gonna be fine. He’s not going to catch forever, but I feel pretty confident that when he transitions to full time DH, he will still slug. He will not fade like Joe Mauer did. Joe Mauer is also notably in the Hall of Fame, so there’s that.

Julio is 25. Twenty-five! At worst, we have at least 3 more seasons of him playing an above replacement to elite center field. After that, yeah he will certainly start to decline in terms of speed and injury-prone-ness. Look at Mike Trout. Yeah, he has no business playing CF anymore, but that no-neck mf can still slug! I firmly believe that Julio will not hit the career stats peaks of Trout, but will have a longer career and have his production more evenly spread about his 20 seasons or so. Oooh yeah that’s right, I’m dropping my own fairly BRASH take here.

ChicagoMariner says: “The Game Thread commentariat has been struggling since spring training, with truly witty comments well below the Mendoza line. Some will clap back by pointing out that key commenters are currently underperforming their expected wittiness, and that we’re just waiting for a few excellent LLurkers to earn their promotion to everyday commentary, but I remain skeptical. This might just be a lost year for us.”

Oh this is HOT. This is SCALDING. This is PERSONA(LL). Yeah, this gets a CLIFF LEE rating right here. I believe the LL Commentariat is in Peak Posting Form (PPF). Why? Because we’ve weathered an influx of new posters given the team’s success, which is something that always happens here at LL following a fairly successful Mariners season or whenever hype builds from big free agent acquisitions. But, LLers have persevered. The Mods have put in more OT than we can ever hope to pay them for (check’s in the mail, babes). And the result has been bustling, vibrant, and most importantly FUN game threads. Most of the time, anyways. There will always be a few stinkers here and there. Overall, though, I see the veterans out there guiding the new posters, I see staff participating in levels not seen since the Sullivan days, and I see a lot of thoughtful and intelligent discussions being had in the non-GT comment sections, as well. So what we need here, is a new name for posting above the Mendoza line. Let’s leave poor Mario Mendoza alone finally. Do we call it the Corco Line? The Chris from Bothell Line? The old wisdom line? Who is out there putting the work every day on quality posting? Sound off in the comments.

All right, thanks for all the participation, friends! I’ll be back with another prompt in the FEED soon. Go Mariners.

Pirates tied for third-most blown saves in MLB

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 17: Dennis Santana #60 of the Pittsburgh Pirates celebrates after a 5-1 win over the Tampa Bay Rays at PNC Park on April 17, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Monday night at PNC park the Pirates had a 2-0 lead going into the top of the 9th vs the St. Louis Cardinals. Dennis Santana came in for the save with the 2 run lead and struggled.

Santana allowed a solo home run to Pedro Pages and allowed another solo shot to the very next batter JJ Wetherhold  to tie the game. Jose Fermin hit a tie-breaking two-run double to give the Cardinals the lead and then eventually the win.

The blown save by Santana is the eighth blown save of the season for the Bucs which is tied for third in the league with the Chicago White Sox and the Athletics. The Washington Nationals have the most with 10.

The bullpen has been an issue to start the season for the Pirates and Monday night just proved it even more. Dennis Santana was a reliable guy for the first couple of weeks of the season but we are starting to see him struggle and not be a dependable closer anymore.

The starting pitching once again continues to be one of the strengths in Pittsburgh. Monday night was a bullpen game for the Bucs, with Mason Montgomery starting and only pitching one inning. Wilber Dotel pitched four innings and threw well allowing no hits and three strikeouts. 

For as good as the starting pitching has been, the Pirates bullpen needs to be better. With how tough the NL Central is, Pittsburgh can’t afford blowing division games like that. Every team in the NL Central is above .500, so every time there is an opportunity to beat a divisional opponent, the Pirates have to take advantage. 

If the Pirates want to be a legit playoff team this year, the bullpen has to get close to the level of the starting pitching. If the bullpen cannot improve and become dominant, then it will be another disappointing season for the fans in Pittsburgh. 

Mets place Kodai Senga on IL, promote Christian Scott from Triple-A

The Mets have placed right-handed pitcherKodai Senga on the 15-day IL due to lumbar spine inflammation.

In a corresponding move, right-hander Christian Scott was recalled from Triple-A Syracuse.

Speaking before Tuesday's game, manager Carlos Mendoza said Senga complained about the back issue after his last start. Following an MRI, Senga was given an epidural. He will not throw for seven-to-10 days. 

The situation with Senga in the rotation had become untenable, with him being unable to pitch more than 3.1 innings in any of his last three starts.

After Sunday's game, Senga acknowledged his poor performance but was non-committal when asked if he would accept an assignment to Triple-A Syracuse.

With Senga to the IL and Scott up, it stands to reason that Scott will slide into Senga's rotation spot.

What happens when Senga returns remains complicated, though.

The Mets could theoretically move Senga to the bullpen, but that seems like a very poor fit given his routines. 

Beyond that, the Mets already have three starting pitchers working in relief roles -- David Peterson, Sean Manaea, and Carl Edwards, Jr. They also have Tobias Myers in the bullpen, and he is often relied on for multiple innings at a time.

It has been an up-and-down tenure for Senga in New York.

He burst on the scene with a 2.98 ERA in 166.1 innings in 2023, but missed all but 5.1 innings of the 2024 regular season due to injury.

In 2025, Senga got off to a hot start before suffering a hamstring injury. After returning, Senga struggled, which resulted in a demotion to Triple-A. Senga was unable to right the ship in the minors, and did not return to the majors late in the season, as had been expected. 

Senga, with more zip on his fastball than he had last season, was strong in his first two starts of 2026. But he was hit hard in his last three, ballooning his ERA to 9.00.

The 33-year-old has one more guaranteed year remaining on his deal, and is owed $15 million for the 2027 season. There is a conditional club option for 2028 that the Mets will have the ability to exercise if Senga has Tommy John surgery or a right elbow injury that keeps him on the IL for 130 or more days. 

Jays Roster Move: Yesavage In, Lee Out

MLB Toronto Blue Jays starter Trey Yesavage | Mike Watters-Imagn Images

We knew this was happening but it is official. Trey Yesavage has been added to the active roster and will start tonight. Chase Lee was sent back to Buffalo. I’m sorry for Lee, he looked pretty good yesterday, but we knew he was only up for the day. I’m sure we’ll see him again this year, they can send him down 5 times and I’d bet he’ll get there this year.

Yesavage hasn’t been great in his rehab starts, 4 games, 12 innings, 15 hits, 10 earned, 7 walks and 16 strikeouts, but the fastball is where it was last year. He wasn’t going to throw 200 innings this year, so having him miss the first month isn’t a bad thing for the club.f

He was rather amazing in the playoffs, with an ERA of 3.48 over 6 games, 5 starts. In 27.2 innings he allowed 18 hits, 2 home runs, 4 walks and 17 strikeouts. Let’s hope he picks up right where he jumped off.

No pressure Trey. Just that our season is balancing on your right arm.


Shi Davidi tells us that the Jays hitters have seen the fewest pitches per at bat in baseball this year. Whether that is a good or bad thing is up for debate. There are a few of the guys who could do with being a little more selective at the plate. But then some of the more selective hitters are on the IL

It is a tough balance, you don’t want the pitcher to get ahead on the count, but then we have guys swinging at pitches well off the plate. And it isn’t like the guys with great strikezone judgement are tearing things up either. Davis Schneider takes a lot of pitches and he’s hitting roughly what you or I would, so for this season. Well, more you. The only way I’d reach base is if a pitch hit me.

The Mets are on the edge, can Carlos Mendoza and crew steady the ship? | The Mets Pod

Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo diagnose more losing baseball on the latest episode of The Mets Pod. The guys go long on all of the Mets' problems, from the front office, through the coaching staff, to the entire roster. 

Who is to blame, why is it happening, what can be done, and will changes soon be made? 

Connor and Joe also go Down on the Farm to check in on the literal ups and downs of Christian Scott, and the recent promotion of top prospect A.J. Ewing to Triple-A Syracuse.

The show wraps up with a Mailbag to answer questions about lack of hitting development, signing veterans to short-term deals, and a fun but also sad scenario for first base.

Be sure to subscribe to The Mets Pod at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

So, who on the Yankees is allowed to challenge balls and strikes?

ST. PETERSBURG, FL - APRIL 10: A general view of the video board during a ABS challenge against Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 of the New York Yankees in the fourth inning during the game between the New York Yankees and the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on Friday, April 10, 2026 in St. Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Mary Holt/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

I’m writing this before the Yankees take on the Rangers Monday night, so it’s subject to change, but at this moment Jazz Chisholm Jr. is the worst player in baseball when it comes to the ABS challenge system. His 14 percent success rate is the lowest in the sport, and this weekend against the Astros we saw two dreadful examples.

The first one annoyed me — it’s an eight-run game in the ninth inning, this is about as close to stat-padding as you get in baseball. The second failed challenge is somewhat offset by the fact that Jazz notched a single a couple of pitches later, but challenges are limited; once you fail you can’t use it again. Chisholm took away a potential review from another player on a call that wasn’t close.

I think Jazz is a pretty good player but it is perhaps time to concede that a guy with a near-20 percent career K-BB rate doesn’t have a great understanding of the zone. Chisholm makes his money by getting his A-swing off and hitting the ball into the gap, not by owning the strike zone the way a Juan Soto-type would. Suffice it to say, Jazz doesn’t get to challenge except in the most obvious of circumstances.

Chisholm isn’t the only guy that’s hurting the team on the review side of things though. The Yankees sit a tick below league average (47 percent) at hitter-induced challenges at 44 percent, and bang on league average on fielder-induced at 59 percent. For a team that has preached strike zone ownership for about as long as I’ve been alive, they’re sure not making any gains in this part of the game.

Four players have been a net positive in the challenge system, with Aaron Judge of course leading the way. The Yankee captain is 3-for-4 with reviews this year, and you could argue that the three-time MVP has been more cautious than he should be. Then again, he has won three MVPs without the challenge system, so while I’m sure he has the greenlight to review any pitch he deems necessary, it might just end up not being a part of his game.

Ryan McMahon and Trent Grisham have gone a combined 5-for-7 so far this year, and if Aaron Judge has a big, emerald-green flag, they have something that’s slightly paler but still very clearly a go. In general, I think challenges should be reserved for times there are men on base, the first pitch of the at-bat, or a potential final pitch. McMahon and Grisham can go outside that band slightly, but not wildly.

Then we have a middle grouping, of guys that have been neutral to slightly bad — the yellow lights. This includes Paul Goldschmidt, Giancarlo Stanton, and José Caballero, the latter of which has called for 10 reviews, the most on the team. I tend to think that Cabby does this as a bit of gamesmanship, in the same way that he refuses to engage the pitcher until the eight-second required mark. Still, these three guys have to sit within tight parameters like discussed above, but as long as they stick to ‘em, they can tap their helmets.

Then there’s the dunce caps. Ben Rice, Austin Wells, Cody Bellinger, and Chisholm have actively cost the team runs with their challenge attempts. They’ve combined to go 3-for-13, which would be a pretty cold weekend series at the plate, and is even worse off when it comes to challenging balls and strikes. For now, unless there’s a deeply egregious call or the entire game can change on the result — a Rob Refsnyder-esque situation — these guys should focus on getting the bat on the ball more than anything else.

The Cubs are really good at ABS challenges

I had it in my mind to write this article a day or so ago after hearing the rankings of MLB teams on successful ABS challenges.

So you’ll forgive me for writing it the day after the Cubs failed on two of three challenges in their loss to the Padres, including one by Matthew Boyd in the first inning, that he later said he shouldn’t have made.

Here is that challenge [VIDEO].

Yeah, that’s a bad one. Not only because it was pretty clearly a ball, but that’s only the fourth pitch of the game! Perhaps a bit rattled, Boyd wound up walking Ramon Laureano, helping trigger a three-run Padres inning.

But in general, the Cubs have done well in ABS challenges. A new site called Tap to Challenge has taken data that’s been made available by Baseball Savant and sliced and diced it in a number of ways.

This chart shows the Cubs as the sixth-best team overall in challenges at a 60.3 percent success rate (through Monday’s games), just behind the Tigers at 60.4 percent and Mariners at 60.6 percent. The Royals top the leaderboard at 62.3 percent.

Breaking this down further, Cubs batters rank 17th at 46.2 percent (the D-backs lead at 52.6 percent) and Cubs catchers rank second with a 73.3 percent success rate (the Tigers lead at 85 percent).

Just 41 challenges have been made by pitchers, with 17 being successful (41.4 percent). Boyd’s challenge was the second made by a Cubs pitcher so far this year. The other, which was successful, was by Edward Cabrera on April 11 against the Pirates [VIDEO].

The most challenges by a team’s pitchers is five, by the Yankees. Yankees pitchers have been correct three times. Eight teams (Twins, Royals, Padres, Reds, Blue Jays, Rays, Diamondbacks and Brewers) have not had any challenges by pitchers, and in general, teams are telling pitchers not to challenge. The 41 pitcher challenges are just 2.3 percent of the total of 1,767 challenges made in total by all players.

There’s been some discussion here about whether MLB should eventually go to a full ABS system. Personally, I like the challenge system. It creates some strategy — obviously, losing a challenge in the first inning and both challenges by the third hurt the Cubs Monday night. It gets fans involved, you’ve certainly heard the cheering by home fans when their player is correct.

Last week at The Athletic, Jayson Stark wrote an article that detailed more of the things I’ve mentioned here, headlined “When will MLB go ‘full ABS,’ let robot umps take over? Maybe never.” I know that’s going to make some of you unhappy, but here’s some of the reasoning:

Do we really want ABS to tell us whether 700,000 pitches a year are balls and strikes? That’s a momentous question because it would be such a momentous change.

“You should only make changes if it makes the game better,” former Cubs/Red Sox/MLB rules visionary Theo Epstein said, as far back as 2023, in an appearance on the Starkville podcast with me and my co-host, Doug Glanville. “You have to figure out exactly what you’re solving for. With ABS, you don’t want to force a solution without a problem.”

Theo is correct, in my view. What if MLB went to a system like this, with umpires no longer used to calling balls and strikes, and the technology went down? Then you’re asking for trouble, in asking people who wouldn’t be doing this important thing to suddenly have to do it accurately.

The article says that for a time in 2023 and 2024, they experimented with full ABS in Triple-A, then surveyed players and fans on the system. The results might surprise you:

Check out the results from this survey, conducted in August 2024. Players and coaches were asked: Which ABS format do you prefer? You might want to look away because “full ABS” is about to take a hellacious drubbing.

Challenge system — 54 percent
Full ABS — 8 percent
Human umps — 38 percent

(Source: Major League Baseball)

Eight percent? They were being offered a chance to get every call right, and not even one in 10 wanted that? I think they were trying to tell us something.

Fans in Triple A weren’t quite that vociferous. But it was still more than a 2-to-1 runaway win for the challenge system over full ABS.

Challenge system — 47 percent
Full ABS — 23 percent
Human umps 30 percent

(Source: Major League Baseball)

Personally, I think that as the challenge system in MLB gets better because players get better at it, the percentage answering “human umps” in a survey like that would get smaller. And don’t take it only from me, take it from a former player who’s now a Triple-A manager:

Take it from Morgan Ensberg, manager of the Rays’ Triple-A Durham team. He lived through more than 100 games of the full-robot experience. He described those games as having “no color, no spirit.”

“It’s just weird, man,” said Ensberg, a longtime challenge-system fan. “Like, a robotic voice is saying, strike or ball, and you’re going to have problems with that, because you kind of want humans. You know, we all have our brains. And you want to have humans hitting, and humans pitching, and humans calling the games, because we’re going to see things more similarly.”

So that is the “human element” you want. Humans playing and calling the plays, with the technology backing them up. I think that’s a good match. And also, remember this:

Is ABS improving the game?

The answer, from fans who attended games between March 26 and April 19:

Yes — 92 percent
No — 8 percent

(Source: Major League Baseball)

We eagerly await the results of independent polling on this topic. But if you’ve spent even one night in a big-league ballpark during the past few weeks, it couldn’t be more obvious. The buzz that accompanies every challenge cartoon on the scoreboard is telling us that the people paying to sit in those seats are gobbling up this stuff.

“I think that one of the virtues of baseball is, we have things that we can argue about in a bar as we’re watching a game,” the same official said. “So one of the things that makes ABS challenge interesting is, you’re sitting there and it’s a 3-2 count, and a guy gets rung up on a called strike in the third inning with a runner on second. And you say: ‘Why the hell didn’t he challenge?’ I think that’s an interesting aspect of the game.”

Remember: If you let those robot umps call every pitch, you lose all of that.

Because in the end, baseball is entertainment. And in my view, the challenge system definitely provides entertainment.

Stark’s article concludes with some thoughts about where the system might go from here. Maybe you add a third challenge, he cites an unnamed baseball executive, and I could see that happening. The whole article is definitely worth reading, if you haven’t seen it yet.

One last thing and then I’ll let you have at it. Going back to the charts from Tap To Challenge (a fantastic site worth your time), the site also has data on umpires. That’s also worth a look — you’ll find that quite a few umpires have been overturned more than CB Bucknor. Baseball Savant also has quite a bit of ABS data you can peruse.