Dodgers solve offensive problems but another issue emerges

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Shohei Ohtani follows through on his swing after hitting a sacrifice fly, Image 2 shows Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Emmet Sheehan throws a baseball during a game

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Shohei Ohtani homered and the game turned into something resembling a piranha feeding at the Los Angeles Zoo, the Dodgers feasting on soft-tossing Miles Mikolas with the voracity expected of a $415-million team.

Their week-long nightmare was over. 

The Dodgers hadn’t forgotten how to score runs. They were noticeably relieved, and they deserved to be, but their debaucherous offensive display in their 13-6 victory over the Washington Nationals on Friday obscured another potential problem.

The two-time defending World Series champions might have a starting-pitching problem.

Shohei Ohtani homered and the game turned into something resembling a piranha feeding. AP

Again.

Whether they actually have an issue depends on back-end-of-the-rotation pitchers such as Emmet Sheehan. 

Regarding Sheehan specifically, the pertinent question is which was more reflective of the pitcher he will be this season: The one who was rocked early in his start or the one who put up zeroes late?

Sheehan gave up three runs in the first inning and another one in the third. By the fourth inning, he was on his third time through the Nationals’ order. In a more important game, he might not have finished that frame.

Sheehan regrouped and gave the Dodgers 5 ⅔ innings, but the team still had to be uncertain of what it had in the 26-year-old right-hander. Sheehan lasted just 3 ⅓ innings in his previous start, which followed an uninspiring spring.

Whether they actually have an issue depends on back-end-of-the-rotation pitchers such as Emmet Sheehan.  AP

Already, the Dodgers are playing with a stick of dynamite in the combustible Roki Sasaki, who is scheduled to start on Sunday in the series finale against the Nationals. 

Sasaki pitched only four innings in his first start, and he failed to make it out of the first inning in his final game of a brutal exhibition season. The Dodgers are bracing themselves for the worst-case scenario. Justin Wrobleski is scheduled to move into the rotation on Monday for their series opener against the Toronto Blue Jays, but manager Dave Roberts said they had him throw his bullpen a day earlier than usual in case he has to pitch in relief of Sasaki on Sunday.

The Dodgers have three legitimate Cy Young Award contenders on their active roster in Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Tyler Glasnow, and that’s with Blake Snell sidelined with shoulder fatigue. But they have no idea what they will get out of Sheehan, Sasaki and Wrobleski on any particular day.

Carrying one starter incapable of consistently taking down innings can exhaust a bullpen that has to pick up the slack. Carrying two of them is tantamount to asking for late-game Chernobyl-level meltdowns. Carrying three? Hoo boy.

“Obviously, ideally, you’d like to carry none,” Roberts said. “Truth be told, I don’t want any of those (types of) guys. When you’re a starter, part of the deal is you’ve got to log innings. It’s part of the hallmark of starters, and Emmet and Roki have got to graduate to that point.”

Is it sustainable to have a rotation that includes two inconsistent starters?

Is it sustainable to have a rotation that includes two inconsistent starters? AP

“It’s not sustainable, no,” Roberts said.

The Dodgers found that out last season. With their rotation ravaged by injuries – Yamamoto was the only starter who pitched the entire season – Dodgers relievers combined to pitch major-league-leading 657 ⅔ innings. Their bullpen earned-run average of 4.27 was fifth-worst in the National League, contributing to an underwhelming regular-season win total of 93.

Snell isn’t expected to return until the end of next month, and the onus will be on Sheehan, Sasaki and Wrobleski to pitch deep enough into games to ensure the bullpen remains relatively fresh.


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Sheehan acknowledged he had to do better than he did on Thursday.

“Obviously, it’s still a work in progress,” he said. “The stuff is not really where it should be right now. There’s more in the tank.”

Sheehan’s average fastball velocity was 95.6 mph last season, and that number has dropped significantly this year. The average speed of his fastball was 93.8 mph against the Nationals.

Sheehan’s average fastball velocity was 95.6 mph last season, and that number has dropped significantly this year. AP

Sheehan blamed the decline in velocity to mechanics and not health. That claim was supported by how his two fastest pitches – clocked at 95.7 and 95.4 mph respectively – were thrown in the sixth inning.

The ever-upbeat Roberts said he put more stock in the second half of Sheehan’s start than the first.

“I think today was a step in the right direction,” he said. “I think we talked about (how) he has to give us length, and he did that today, touching six (innings). 

“He looked like a major league starter and not a guy that’s cutting his teeth.”

The Dodgers will need more of that, especially with Sasaki pitching just days after him.

Guardians 4, Cubs 1: Cade Horton injured and Cubs lose. How was your Friday?

The Cubs lost to the Guardians 4-1 Friday afternoon in Cleveland, but that’s not the big story of the day.

That, of course, is the apparent injury to Cade Horton in the second inning.

Here’s what happened [VIDEO].

It’s really hard to tell what actually went on there. There was no obvious sign of any sort of pain from Horton, but he immediately signaled for the dugout and left the game.

Later, it was announced by the Cubs via the Marquee Sports Network broadcast that Horton left due to “right forearm discomfort.” Which… isn’t good. That sort of thing is sometimes a precursor to Tommy John surgery. Or maybe it’s not. We just don’t know at this time. Hopefully, the Cubs will have an update later this evening, or tomorrow. For now all we, and the Cubs, can do is hope for the best.

Horton faced only four batters. From BCB’s JohnW53:

Before today, the last Cubs starter, excluding “openers,” to exit after facing no more than four batters was Alec Mills, on July 2, 2022, at home against the Red Sox. He struck out the leadoff man on a 2-2 count, then gave up a double on an 0-1 count. He injured his back, went on the Injured List and was lost for the season.

Colin Rea, who did such a good job last year filling into the rotation when Justin Steele was injured, did a great job in this one as well. He threw 3.1 innings, allowed four hits and a run and struck out four. If Rea needs to fill in, there’s at least a competent replacement for Horton, though obviously not at the same talent level.

Here’s a breakdown of Rea’s 57-pitch outing [VIDEO].

The Cubs took a 1-0 lead in the top of the third. Pete Crow-Armstrong led off with a double and stole third. Miguel Amaya then doubled, with PCA scoring [VIDEO].

Amaya was serving as the DH in this one with Carson Kelly catching. He’s been doing that vs. left-handed starters. I continue to think that Amaya is primed to have a big offensive season, presuming he can stay healthy.

Hoby Milner relieved Rea in the fifth and allowed one inherited runner to score on a single by hotshot rookie Chase DeLauter, but four-time Gold Glover Ian Happ threw out the trailing runner at the plate [VIDEO].

Happ’s going to win another Gold Glove this year. That has value. I think it’d be worth keeping him around for a while longer.

Hunter Harvey relieved Milner in the seventh and served up a solo homer to Gabriel Arias that gave Cleveland a 2-1 lead. A walk to Steven Kwan followed and then DeLauter smashed a two-run shot, his fifth of the young season. (The Cubs have just six home runs as a team so far this year.) Not a good outing for Harvey, who faced just five batters, two of whom went deep.

Happ decided to challenge a strike three call leading off the ninth [VIDEO].

That was pretty obviously in the zone, but I suppose with two challenges left and three outs to go, it was worth using one.

This was yet another game where the offense simply didn’t produce — four hits and two walks isn’t going to score too many runs, and it didn’t. Can’t use the weather as an excuse here, the temp was in the 70s. The Cubs bats are simply going to have to do better.

The game was the fifth loss in a row for the Cubs in Cleveland dating to 2021, though the Cubs did sweep the Guardians at Wrigley Field last year. Hopefully, the result will be better tomorrow, and we’ll get good news about Horton. Fingers crossed.

The Cubs and Guardians will play the second game of this series Saturday evening at Progressive Field. Shōta Imanaga will start for the Cubs and Slade Cecconi goes for Cleveland. Game time is 6:15 p.m. CT and TV coverage will be via Fox-TV (regional — coverage map, scroll to the bottom of that link).

In season full of potential, Aaron Judge made sure to set the tone in Yankees' home-opening win

Aaron Judge perhaps set the tone for the Yankees’ 124th home opener Friday afternoon long before the first pitch or his key home run in the first inning. The night before the Yanks met the Marlins at Yankee Stadium, Judge sent a team-wide text:

“Suits tomorrow.”

So the Yankees showed up decked out in their finery, perhaps a sartorial declaration of a kind.

“That’s Cap…so everybody was fired up,” Ben Rice said.

Aaron Boone was grinning over the snazzy threads in the morning, hours before the Yankees beat the Marlins, 8-2. Seeing his players so nattily dressed, the manager said, helped show the importance of the first game of the year at Yankee Stadium.

“When they’re rolling in in suits today, I know that’s meaningful,” Boone said.

It’s been a remarkable season for the Yankees so far (caveat: it’s early). But the 6-1 Yanks ooze talent and potential. It all starts with Judge, just like, basically, their seventh game of the season did.

After the Marlins grabbed a 1-0 lead in the first inning on Xavier Edwards’ solo homer – the first home run allowed by a Yankee pitcher this season – Judge immediately responded. Trent Grisham led off with a walk and then Judge pounded a two-run homer for an instant lead. They never trailed again.

“They came out swinging, got a run on us,” Judge said. “Grish had a great at-bat in front of me. I'm just trying to do my job, which is to try to get him over, to get a good pitch and drive it. So, just happy to answer back.”

There is always outsized attention on Judge because he’s one of today’s great stars, probably the best hitter in baseball. It’s never too early – in some folks’ minds, anyway – to fret over his numbers if they are not Judge-ian. He entered Friday batting .125, not the sort of thing that goes unnoticed in the Yankee fishbowl, even if he had already hit two home runs so far, too.

If you are frantic over Judge’s start, maybe take a deep breath. It’ll be OK. Promise. Heck, he’s on pace for around 69 home runs right now.

Friday, his third homer put the Yankees ahead for good and was the highlight of what turned into a big game for both star and team. Judge reached base four times and was 2-for-3, scored twice, drove in three runs, walked and even stole a base. He was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded – more on that in a moment – to force in a run.

Beyond thumbing out texts to the boys, Judge has long been good at establishing something early in games. Friday’s homer was the 86th of his career in the first inning. Last year, he smacked 20 first-inning home runs, an MLB record, for a 94-win team.

Only two other Yankees had more first-inning homers in their careers – Babe Ruth (126) and Mickey Mantle (103). Those two sure played on a lot of winning teams, didn’t they? (Yes, we know they piled up championships, too, while Judge and these Yankees have not won the World Series. Yet).

It’s what they yearn to do. And their top tone-setter will surely play an enormous role in that pursuit. He authors some of the most meaningful swings among the current Yanks – since 2019, 138 of Judge’s 288 home runs have either tied the score or given the Yanks the lead, the team said.

That, in part, is why it’s “never a surprise,” Boone said, when Judge delivers like he did in the first inning. “Really good answer to them putting a run up on the board,” Boone said. “And, you know, I think it allowed Will (Warren, the starting pitcher) to get in a good rhythm, too.”

The Yanks got a jolt in the second inning when Judge was hit on the arm by an errant pitch from Marlins starter Eury Pérez with the bases full. Judge seemed fine and remained in the game, not that it wasn’t scary, too.

“Felt like he was probably OK, but I tend to jump up a little quicker when it’s him,” Boone said. “Yeah, you always hold your breath there a little bit, any time it’s running up and in there like that. I think it got him on the forearm, kind of the meaty part, so you knew in short order, we’re all right.”

Added Judge: “I've broken my wrist like that, so that's always your main concern. But once you feel like everything's intact, you should take it to first.”

The Yanks scored twice in the second inning without a hit, thanks to Pérez’s wildness and their own speed. They kept adding on, too. Rice homered in the seventh and smashed a two-run double in the eighth.

But Judge set the tone, stylistically and otherwise.

“That’s what he does best,” Rice said, referring to Judge’s vital homer.

“He’s so good at that.”

Another gutpunch extra innings loss for the Blue Jays

Apr 3, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago White Sox center fielder Derek Hill (25) celebrates after scoring against the Toronto Blue Jays during the 10th inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

Blue Jays 4 at White Sox 5 (10)

A few weeks ago, I came across a humourous yet apt video describing this time of year as sucker punch spring for the swings in the weather. Apparently it also applies to the beginning of the season for the Blue Jays, as for the second successive game they took a tough extra inning loss that they even more painful than Wednesday’s.

Facing his former team, Dylan Cease was not particularly sharp, racking up 93 pitches without finishing the 5th inning, finishing with a final line of 3 runs on 5 hits in 4.1 innings. 3 walks against 6 strikeouts. He got into trouble right from the start, walking leadoff hitter Chase Meidroth before Munetaka Murakami drilled a single so hard he had to hold up at first to put runners on the corners.

Cease did limit the damage to one run, but another walk in the 3rd got him into more trouble in the 3rd. An infield single put two on, followed by a double steal which allowed Austin’s Hay single to plate two runs. The last walk with one out in the 5th inning ended his afternoon. Braydon Fisher held the line in retiring the next two hitters and working around back-to-back singles to start the 6th with a couple of strikeouts sandwiched around a pickoff. Brandon Little and Louis Varland followed with good shutout innings.

It looked like enough damage might already have been done however, as the Jays bats were largely asleep. Opener Grant Taylor dispatched them in order in the first. Sean Burke was welcomed rudely with a pair of doubles by Addison Barger and Alejandro Kirk to tie the game, but then he largely shut them down for the next 6 innings, working around a few hits here and there.

Just when it looked like the Jays might be going down as quietly as they did Wednesday afternoon, the White Sox went back to the bullpen for Jordan Leasure and once again the first two batters struck. Ernie Clement singled before Andres Gimenez resurrected the Jays’ hopes with a drive down the right field line for a game tying home run.

Skipping forward to extras, the Clement moved the Manfred Man over to third with one out but Gimenez struck out. The Jays caught a huge break when what should have been an inning ending roller to third pulled Murakami off the first base bag to plate the run.

It looked like that might be the decisive break, as Jeff Hoffman came out of the save. Despite the White Sox too moving their runner over with out, Hoffman too got a strikeout to leave them one out away. However, a foul tip off his wrist caused Kirk to depart (hopefully, that’s not the decisive break of the game). Derek Hill immediately challenged replacement Tyler Heineman by dropping down a bunt. Heineman not only didn’t get the out, allowing the tying run to cross, but threw it up the line to put the winning run in scoring position. Setting up former Ray (of course) Tristan Peters to line the game winning single to right field.

Jays of the Day: The extra inning Manfred Man confounds the raw WPA, as both Ernie Clement (+0.19 WPA) and George Springer (+0.39) have big numbers that are largely undeserved. So instead we’ll go with Gimenez (+0.07) for the critical HR, Varland (+0.11) and Rogers (+0.14) for important shutout relief innings, with hat tips to Fisher (+0.06) and Little (+0.02).

Boo Jays: By the numbers, Hoffman with the brutal -.800, but that neither accounts for the nature of the runners in extras nor how things happened. Instead, we’ll stick with Okamoto (-0.18) for the 0/4 golden sombrero, Cease (-0.15), Sanchez (-0.15) with the 0/5 sombrero, and I think Heineman for the wild throw though coming in cold.

Tomorrow, weather permitting, the Jays will look to even the series when they’ll send, well, someone to the mound in Cody Ponce’s spot to face old friend Anthony Kay

4-3 – Rangers a dud as Reds bring fireworks to 2026 Shed opener

Apr 3, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; The Budweiser Clydesdales circles the field before the baseball game between the Texas Rangers and Cincinnati Reds at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jim Cowsert-Imagn Images | Jim Cowsert-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers scored three runs but the Cincinnati Reds scored five runs runs.

The Reds hit three home runs and the Rangers had a bunch of hard-hit balls that went for outs and after a tied game through eight innings, Chris Martin allowed two, two-strike extra base hits — including Cincy’s third dong of the game — and the Rangers are now 0-1 at The Shed in 2026.

Player of the Game: Other than a couple of poorly located pitches, a three-run outing with nine Ks and zero walks over six innings is something you’d happily take from your starter. No victory today for Mackenzie Gore, however, but he’s been a bright spot through two starts so far this season.

Up Next: The Rangers and Reds are right back at it tomorrow evening with RHP Kumar Rocker making his 2026 debut at last opposite RHP Rhett Lowder for Cincinnati.

Saturday’s first pitch from The Shed is scheduled for 6:05 pm CDT and you can watch it on the Rangers Sports Network.

Yankees' Cody Bellinger 'definitely got lucky' on highlight-reel catch in ninth inning of home-opening win over Marlins

Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger had a highlight-reel catch in the ninth inning of Friday's home-opening win over the Miami Marlins.

With none out and a 1-1 count for left-hander Ryan Yarbrough, Xavier Edwards laced an 85 mph cutter over Bellinger's shoulder and to the warning track.

Leaping near the wall, Bellinger initially missed off the heel of his glove before swiping down and snagging the ball for the catch.

"Well, I definitely thought I had it from the jump," Bellinger said. "I should've caught it the first time. I don't even know. I think I squeezed the glove too early, and it just kind of dropped in front of me and I just got lucky. I definitely got lucky. I threw my glove out there."

Upon making the play, Bellinger spun and raised his arms with a smile while Yarbrough applauded from the mound.

"I genuinely thought I caught it the first time," Bellinger said. "I feel like I had a good beat on it the whole way, and I don't know -- I think I caught it off my wrist. I don't really know exactly what happened there. So, I'm just glad I came down with it then and there."

Bellinger's afternoon at Yankee Stadium included a 1-for-4 day offensively, hitting a ground-rule double to lead off the fifth inning before working an eighth-inning walk and subsequently scoring on Ben Rice's two-out double, polishing off the 8-2 final for New York (6-1) against Miami (5-2).

"We've been doing a great job," Bellinger said. "We're playing great baseball. We love each other in here. I think we have a pretty good idea, plan of who we are and what we want to do, and it's a tough competitor on the mound -- he's got really good stuff. So, ultimately, we did a really good job of controlling the zone, doing some damage there -- Ben Rice came through with a few big hits -- and, overall, just a really good game."

Jonah Heim back behind the plate for Game 2 of Braves’ series in Arizona

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 27: Jonah Heim #20 of the Atlanta Braves walks to the bullpen before the game against the Kansas City Royals at Truist Park on March 27, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Matthew Grimes Jr./Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After last night’s offensive explosion which saw the Braves score nearly as many runs (17) as they had in their first six games combined (24), a left-handed starter on the mound for Arizona is forcing Atlanta to switch things up in the lineup.

With Eduardo Rodriguez (0-0, 0.00 ERA) taking the mound for the Diamondbacks, Ozzie Albies is up in the three-hole spot he’s consistently batted in against lefty starters this season. In a small sample size this season, the average splits have not been drastic for the switch-hitter (.300 vs. lefties, .294 vs. righties). But the slugging hits have been drastic, as he’s slugging .600 vs. lefties and .294 vs. righties with five hits, all of them singles.

Additionally, Eli White is back in the lineup hitting sixth and Jonah Heim will make his third appearance of the season behind the plate hitting ninth. It could have been an opportunity to give Baldwin an off night with Kyle Farmer 4-for-7 with a homer in his career vs. Rodriguez, but that would have denied Baldwin the opportunity to break the franchise record he tied last night when he scored a run for the seventh straight game to start a season.

Matt Olson is the only other Brave with a career homer against Rodriguez. Ronald Acuña Jr. is 2-for-6 with a double and three strikeouts, while Albies and Mauricio Dubon, who is back in the lineup batting seventh, are each 2-for-4.

The top four of Arizona’s lineup will remain the same for Thursday’s game, although Corbin Carroll will now be in right after DHing Game 1 while Gabriel Moreno will DH Friday after catching the series opener. James McCann, who pitched the ninth of Thursday’s blowout loss, will catch and bat seventh on Friday.

The drastic (and unfortunate) change for Arizona is promising young outfielder Jordan Lawlar being pulled from the lineup after it was revealed that he sustained a fractured wrist on a hit-by-pitch after hitting his first career homer earlier in the game. He’s been replaced by Tim Tawa (.204 career hitter in 206 career at-bats), who will hit ninth in the D-Backs order.

No Arizona hitter has faced Braves starter Grant Holmes more than five times. Moreno (2-for-5) and Alek Thomas (2-for-4) are the only player with multiple hits against him.

Miles Mikolas takes a historic drubbing as the Dodgers overpower the Washington Nationals

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 03: Miles Mikolas #36 of the Washington Nationals pitches in the first inning during the game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on Friday, April 3, 2026 in Washington, District of Columbia. (Photo by Hannah Foslien/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

It all started so well, but the Nats dreams of winning the home opener collapsed quickly, as the Dodgers lineup showed why they are elite. The Nats were up 3-0 after two innings thanks to a CJ Abrams homer, but the Dodgers turned that into an 11-4 deficit in what felt like a blink of an eye. While the Nats have competed with the Cubs and Phillies, the Dodgers showed them levels today.

In this game, one thing stuck out like a sore thumb, and it was the performance of starting pitcher Miles Mikolas. He re-wrote Nationals history today, but not in a good way. The veteran right hander allowed 11 earned runs, the most in team history. Both of Mikolas’ starts with the Nats have been shaky at best, and he has not given the team a chance to win.

The craziest part is how fast things got out of control. Through the first two innings, Mikolas was cruising, getting the first six Dodgers hitters out. However, when you don’t have elite stuff, things can get ugly if you make mistakes. That is exactly what happened for Mikolas. 

Blake Butera was in awe of the Dodgers lineup, saying Mikolas “had to be almost perfect against these guys”. He was perfect in the first two innings, but when he stopped being perfect, disaster struck. From the third inning on, it felt like the Dodgers were taking batting practice. Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman and Andy Pages all took Mikolas deep.

He was facing a tough lineup, but it just feels like Mikolas is a guy at the end of the line. The veteran will not be going anywhere, at least for now. Butera said they will watch the video, then Mikolas and the staff will work on how to make adjustments. It would feel a bit unfair to only give Mikolas two starts, but he is going to have to put together some competitive outings, and fast.

Between the third and fifth inning, the Dodgers scored 11 runs. This avalanche just drowned the Nats, even though their offense was solid today. Later in the game, Kyle Tucker hit the Dodgers fifth home run. It was his first one with the club, and it was the cherry on top for the defending champs.

While the Mikolas disaster will rightfully take up the headlines, the Nats offense looked promising once again. Everyone in the lineup actually got a hit. You do not see that often in a game you lose by 7. I guess that just shows the might of the Dodgers lineup. 

One guy I want to highlight is the man who got the party started and sent Nats fans into a frenzy in the first. That would be CJ Abrams, who hit his second home run in as many games. Both of his homers were quite similar. He has a unique ability to pull outside pitches for homers. That is what he did for both of his three run shots in the last couple games. 

Hot starts are nothing new for Abrams. He has had tremendous first half numbers each of the last two seasons before tailing off at the end. For his part, Blake Butera does not really think Abrams is off to a hot start. He said, “I am not really sure I would call this a hot start, this is just CJ”. 

He acknowledged that Abrams does need to put a full season together, but is confident that will happen. Butera talked about how if CJ can stick to his process, take things day to day and not get too wrapped up in small samples one way or the other, the consistency will come.

I am pretty bullish on Abrams keeping things up. With the new coaching staff and technology, he will have more tools to lean on when he inevitably goes through a rough stretch. The big thing for Abrams is preventing those rough weeks from turning into rough months.

Another hitter that has impressed me, really since Spring Training is Brady House. He looks like a completely different hitter this season. The confidence looks way higher and he is much more in control of his at bats. 

House taking two walks today felt really notable. He already has four walks in seven games. Last season, he only had 8 walks in 73 games. This is not a fluke, House just looks way more comfortable. 

House has a history of starting slow at a new level before solving it. We saw that in Triple-A, where he really struggled in 2024, before mashing his way to a big league call up in 2025. Now, it looks like he is figuring things out at the MLB level. Big league pitchers will adjust back, so he will have to be constantly evolving. However, House feels like he has found his footing in the box.

Obviously, today was a very discouraging home opener, but you could still find some silver linings. Jake Irvin will take the mound tomorrow, and hopefully his new look arsenal will play against the Dodgers. He was impressive in his first start of the season, but the homer prone righty is going up against an unforgiving Dodgers lineup.

Hopefully, the Dodgers got all the runs out of their system today and the Nats can bounce back these next two games. It was not the result anyone wanted, but it was nice to be back at Nationals Park and covering the home opener for the first time in the press booth.

POSTPONED: Game Thread #7: Milwaukee Brewers (5-1) @ Kansas City Royals (3-3)

Mar 28, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Chad Patrick (39) throws a pitch in the first inning against the Chicago White Sox at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

UPDATE: Tonight’s game has been postponed due to expected inclement weather. The game will be made up tomorrow, when the Royals and Brewers will play a double header with games at 1:10 and 6:10. Good news for those without Apple TV access; both games tomorrow will be on Brewers TV.


The Milwaukee Brewers, coming off a 5-1 homestand to kick off the season, take their show on the road for the first time tonight when they take on the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium. (Check out Harrison’s series preview here.) Chad Patrick is scheduled to pitch for the Brewers, while Luinder Avila will make his first career start after debuting with 13 (effective) relief outings down the stretch last seasonAv. There is weather in the area, though, so keep an eye out for delays.

Milwaukee swept the White Sox in their first series of the season and then took two of three from the Rays, and there was no shortage of dramatics along the way. Kansas City opened the season by losing two of three in Atlanta, but took two in a three-game series with the Twins to open their home schedule.

Patrick is coming off a start in which his final line wasn’t bad, but in which he didn’t seem to have his best stuff. He allowed just one run in 4 1/3 innings, but the White Sox made some hard, tough-luck contact toward the end of the outing. Still, he walked only one batter compared to four strikeouts, and his pitch count (74 in 4 1/3 innings) wasn’t disastrous.

Avila, a righty, counts as a rookie, though, as mentioned, he made 13 appearances and threw 14 effective innings (1.29 ERA, 2.14 FIP) last season, all but one in September. Avila isn’t a complete non-prospect (he ranked 19th on MLB Pipeline’s Royals list going into 2025 and 9th in 2026), but he’s never been a top 100 prospect. Avila does through pretty hard (he features a four-seam fastball and a sinker which sit at about 96 mph) but intriguingly he threw his curveball more than any other pitch last season, a whopping 43% of the time. We’ll see if that persists into this season, when he’ll presumably take a slightly different approach as a starter. He has struggled with control in the minors, and even when he was so good at the end of last season, he walked almost four batters per nine innings. Avila also made two scoreless appearances totaling four innings for the champions from Venezuela in the World Baseball Classic this spring, though he walked as many guys as he struck out and was perhaps fortunate to get through unscathed.

The Brewers’ lineup is, unsurprisingly, packed with lefties (their clearly stronger side, with Jackson Chourio and Andrew Vaughn out) against the right-handed Avila. Of note, David Hamilton is getting the start at shortstop, while Luis Rengifo slides into the starting lineup at third base. Joey Ortiz will start the game on the bench tonight. One right-handed surprise, though, is Brandon Lockridge in left-field, who gets a start versus the right-hander over the switch-hitter, Blake Perkins.

An old friend is in the Kansas City lineup tonight; Isaac Collins, who has warmed up a bit after a tough start, is in left field for the Royals. The main attraction, of course, is superstar shortstop Bobby Witt Jr., batting second, who might be almost as good as Brice Turang.

There’s also Brewers news that doesn’t directly involve the major-league team: Cooper Pratt’s extension has been finalized, and he’s been added to the 40-man roster (and optioned to Triple-A Nashville, where he played last weekend). Steward Berroa has been designated for assignment to open that roster spot.

Tonight’s game, scheduled for 6:45 (but again, watch the weather), is exclusively on Apple TV. If you’re not an Apple TV subscriber, the game will, as usual, be on the Brewers Radio Network.

Mets’ Christian Scott touched up in first start at Triple-A Syracuse

Christian Scott’s first start of the season at Triple-A Syracuse did not go as planned, as the Mets’ right-hander was roughed up for seven runs in 3.1 innings.

The 26-year-old, who is coming off Tommy John surgery that cost him nearly two years of baseball, surrendered those seven runs (six earned) on nine hits and one hit batter before being pulled in the fourth after throwing 65 pitches. 

On the positive side of things, Scott tallied five strikeouts and was around the zone a lot, throwing 46 strikes. He posted a 37 percent called-strike plus whiff rate and his fastball velocity stayed rather consistent from inning to inning, averaging 95.7 mph, which is up 1.5 mph. 

However, he allowed a lot of really solid contact, with the visiting Toledo Mud Hens cracking five balls with an exit velocity over 102 mph. 

The first inning was the lone inning the righty didn’t allow a hard-hit ball, but he was stung for a run due to a bit of tough luck when Max Clark’s bloop down the left-field line just stayed fair and MJ Melendez’s errant throw to second base allowed Clark – who wasn’t even attempting to advance – to reach third on a two-base error. On the next pitch, Scott was called for a balk by the home plate umpire, apparently after not coming to a full set, plating the run. 

The righty rebounded with two strikeouts to end the frame, getting Trei Cruz looking at a 98 mph heater up in the zone and Jace Jung swinging through an up-and-away slider.

After Melendez atoned for his mistake with a solo shot in the home half of the first, Scott gave the runs right back, surrendering an opposite-field solo homer to right by Eduardo Valencia (103.5 mph off the bat) on a slider and Gage Workman pulling a shot to right-center (109.3 mph) on a down-and-in slider.

Scott then threw six-straight fastballs to get ex-Met Tomas Nido and Ben Malgeri swinging after the homers as he looked to settle back into things.

However, three straight singles started the third, scoring a fourth run off Scott. But that was all, as he got Jung swinging on an offspeed pitch and Valencia to line into a double-play to second on a sharply hit ball (102.7 mph) to end the frame.

After getting a flyout to start the fourth, the wheels came off. Nido got a measure of revenge, lacing a double (107.1 mph) to left on a first-pitch middle-middle fastball. Scott left another fastball middle-middle, and Malgeri got his revenge, rocketing it to the right-center gap for a double (109.1 mph).

After hitting a batter and a mound visit, Scott left another fastball in the middle of the plate, and Wenceel Perez drove it over Melendez's head for an RBI double, and that ended the right-hander’s afternoon.

White Sox grind out win in extras, 5-4

Apr 3, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago White Sox right fielder Tristan Peters (29) hits a walk-off single against the Toronto Blue Jays during the 10th inning at Rate Field.
Tristan Peters turned from goat to hero, in his very first home game he’s ever played in the majors. | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

On the day it was announced that Ozzie Guillén would be honored with a number retirement ceremony in August, the White Sox responded by grinding out a 5-4 win in 10 innings.

In the 10th, the White Sox lost the lead for the first time in the game after a careless error — then rallied in the bottom half by forcing Toronto in a careless error themselves. Newcomers Derek Hill and Tristan Peters (who both faced key setbacks earlier in the game) were the key to the win, perhaps truly signalling a real difference in the 2026 team.

The pilot of 2005’s famed “grinders” who went wire-to-wire as division leaders and ran off 11 wins in 12 games to capture the title would have been proud. Right after the live announcement after the top of the third inning, the White Sox rallied to take a 3-1 lead over Toronto, buoyed by a double-steal of second and third.

With one out, Miguel Vargas walked and Colson Montgomery singled softly to third base, before triggering the double steal, one that caught Jays third baseman Kazuma Okamoto on his heels for a pair of easy swipes. From there, Austin Hays turned a full-count inside fastball burning at 98 mph for the lead safety:

And just for extra measure, Chase Meidroth saw Okamoto laying back and dropped a deliciously perfect bunt single in the fourth.

But just like the 2005 White Sox, whose supposed grindiness belied immaculate pitching from 1-12, today’s story was the buff arms on the Chicago side. Reliever Grant Taylor got the start as opener, and threw nine pitches, all strikes. He worked a fast and fearsome first frame.

Taylor gave way to bulk pitcher Sean Burke, and aside from an initial hiccup in the second that saw back-to-back doubles tie the game, 1-1, the righthander carried on what Taylor began. Burke was sharp, aggressive, and efficient enough to take the game through the seventh. Those six innings of four-hit, one-run, seven-K ball represented the longest White Sox outing of the season.

In the other dugout, it was veteran and former White Sox Dylan Cease who seemed to be pitching through some nerves and fighting with his focus and command. His error covering first base on a grounder to Vlad Guerrero Jr. allowed Meidroth to scamper home with the first White Sox run. Always durable but not always efficient, Cease got the collar after 93 pitches with one out in the fourth, and was in line for the loss.

Why just in line for the loss? Well, as is its wont, the White Sox bullpen caved. Two batters after Burke left the game, Andrés Giménez clobbered a first-pitch fastball out to right, and just like that the score was knotted at three.

But let’s not drop this at Leasure’s spikes only; the White Sox shut down their offense just three innings once again, striking out eight times (12 total in the game) and stumbling on the basepaths (Peters was picked off of second base in the sixth inning, and the eighth ended on a strike-’em-out, throw-’em-out of Hill).

With the game still tied heading into the bottom of the ninth, the White Sox hoped to improve on their mere three sayonara wins all year in 2025, but despite getting leadoff man Edgar Quero on with a single (four hard hits for Edgar on the day, two dropping for hits) and sacrificing pinch-runner Lenyn Sosa to second, they fell short.

In the 10th, Toronto took its first lead of the game after Vargas pulled Munetaka Murakami off of the bag for an error that allowed Manfred Man David Schneider to score.

A productive out pushed Manfred Man Vargas to third to start the White Sox 10th, and thus commenced a crazy sequence to finish the game. After Austin Hays caught a break on a third strike he did not check on but got a generous call from the first-base ump, catcher Alejandro Kirk then saved the lead with an incredible stop on a wild split-fingered pitch. On the very next toss, Hays fouled the ball off and sent Kirk from the game with an injured thumb.

Hays ended up striking out, but Hill stepped right out with a gutsy bunt, challenging new catcher Tyler Heineman and succeeding, as Heineman threw the ball past first base and allowing Vargas to tie the game.

Two pitches later, Peters stroked a single to right for the game-winner.

“There’s a ton of fight here,” Peters said postgame, after being doused by ice water in 50° weather. “We’re just going to move forward on every game.”


Yankees Mailbag: Immediate impressions on the roster

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MARCH 25: Ryan McMahon #19 and Ben Rice #22 of the New York Yankees celebrate after defeating the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Good afternoon everyone, it’s time to dive back into the mailbag and answer some of your questions. Remember to send in your questions for our weekly call by e-mail to pinstripealleyblog [at] gmail [dot] com.

The idiot that said, “Harper is coming” asks:What are your general thoughts about the team as currently constructed?Good enough as is? Need a big splash at the deadline? Few tweaks to get the job done? Not good enough?

We’ll give the obvious caveat that things are early, injuries can and will pop up at some point, and that can affect how the trade deadline looks for the Yankees down the line. However, out of the gate it looks like the Yankees are getting vindicated in their choice to run it back with largely the same roster as last year. Things aren’t perfect — I’m not expecting much from Ryan McMahon’s bat, for instance, but starting off ice cold isn’t going to do him any favors — and so minor tweaks looks like the soundest option of the bunch, but the pieces are there to make a charge at the best record in the AL again. The rotation firing on all cylinders right off the bat is a massively encouraging sign, as we all know the cavalry is coming to reinforce their ranks over the next month or so and if the likes of Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodón, and Clarke Schmidt start off close to form they’ll have one of the most dominant pitching staffs we’ve seen in a minute.

The question of how they actually improve the roster when it comes time to scan the market in the summer is a curious one, and might prove to be one of the more challenging midseason revamps Brian Cashman has had to navigate with this core. There’s a lot of money locked down to the contracts and starters that they have, so on top of getting any additions they’d have to weigh what they do with the players getting replaced. The cost of game-changing deadline acquisitions is always pricy, and the Yankees have rarely waded in those waters unless it was for a need rather than a want, but even dealing with more of the mid-tier pickups like they tend to browse through will still come at a cost if they’re shipping off contracts in exchange/in separate deals. For now, it’s just speculation, but I could see this being a quieter July much like the winter was unless something drastically changes.

OLDY MOLDY asks:Will MLB start seeing the tanking problems like the NBA?

The sport isn’t set up the same way to enable tanking, so no. There’s the rare uber prospect that jumps straight through the minor leagues and reaches the majors within a year or so, but you’re just as likely to see that happen from the 30th overall pick as you are the 3rd. Most prospects instead follow the similar pattern of needing multiple years of seasoning down on the farm before ever making an impact with their big league club, and crucially the success of a franchise is dependent on how well they hit across a draft class as a whole rather than who’s available with their first-round pick. Sure, the earlier picks have a clearer road to the majors overall, but more than any other sport baseball has rosters filled with players picked late in the draft — and that’s without even touching the separate system they have for international prospects that is unique to them. Add onto that the multiple roads to professional baseball allowing players to make the jump straight from high school ball or wait out almost all of their college years provides a stark difference in how classes can differ — one year can skew heavily towards prep players that showcase high ceilings but their floors have sunk into the basement, while others can provide consistency with a depth of college stars. Which way organizations lean can allow them to drastically outdraft their rivals regardless of where they sit on the draft boards, and the top teams in MLB are certainly not scared to sacrifice draft positioning to secure top-tier talent in free agency.

MSP Giant asks: It is a reasonable guess that Grisham is not the Yankees CF next year. IMHO he will find it hard to duplicate 2025 numbers again. I could be wrong, but… Riddle me this. That being the case, if Spencer has a good season, cuts down on his SOs and still hits well and Domínguez has a solid season. Does acceptably well from both sides of the plate and improves his D…. Who joins Judge in the starting OF next year?

In a world where both of these things align simultaneously, the Yankees would have a difficult choice on their hands, but I think they’d ultimately side with the younger player in Domínguez. Yes, the clock has already started on his service time, but a near-two year gap feels significant and Domínguez has already shown them something in the majors while Jones would still be an unknown at this level. However, if you asked which one of them feels more likely to find that adaptation, I’d lean towards Jones figuring out the hole in his swing faster than Domínguez manages to fix whatever has gone wrong with him in the outfield. Add onto that Domínguez’s secondary issue with his lefty-right splits (which, to his credit, looked better in spring than they did last year) and there’s less of an impediment for Jones to cross. Still, it won’t be as easy as hand-waving the strikeouts away — he swings and misses a lot, and that would be exposed just as much as Domínguez’s defense was in the majors.

Giants manager Tony Vitello too candid with media, baseball experts say

The San Francisco Giants are trying to get rolling early in the Tony Vitello era, having won three of their last four games after a 0-3 start to the season.

Vitello has shown excitement, passion and a willingness to share the ins and outs during his first year as a MLB manager, but some want him to tone it down.

Sports personality Chris Rose compared the Giants' skipper to Team USA manager Mark DeRosa in how open he was with the media during a radio appearance on The Morning Roast with Joe Spadoni and Joe Shasky on 95.7 The Game, the Bay Area's sports station.

"I think he's got a little bit of Mark DeRosa syndrome," Rose said on the radio show. "What I mean by that is D-Ro, who's a buddy of mine, I worked with him for a decade at Major League Baseball Network. To me, his biggest issue with Team USA was that he kind of let us in a little too much."

He added: "I know that's fun for us as people who are consuming and talking about content, but like, when D-Ro goes, 'yeah, the players, they invited all the coaches in to have a beer, and then the next day, some guys were hurting a little bit.' Like, that's okay to do, it's okay for the coaches to have a beer with their players and tell stories, and it's okay for players to be hurting a little bit the next day. Don't let everybody know."

Vitello has a knack for painting a picture when fielded questions from reporters. Rose is absolutely right, in a sense that it makes better for hits and clicks. But Vitello is seemingly comfortable with it and being himself.

The first-year skipper told media members how the team celebrated his first major league win as manager with a beer shower and other beverages.

"There was adult beverages, but there was other stuff mixed in too. So at some point I'll be plotting my revenge," Vitello joked with reporters after the team's first win and the first of his baseball managerial career. "I really get a sense like, no matter what happens, this group is going to get a lot closer together as the year goes on."

Rose supports Vitello and the Giants' hire. However, if there was one piece of advice he'd give him, it's to not give the people too much, but just enough.

"So you can't tell everything that's on your brain and have it come out of your mouth," Rose said. "And I would say, if there's one word of advice ... You don't have to make everything a story, I would say. But I find him fascinating, and I'm on board with him."

What are people saying about Tony Vitello?

Baseball experts are predicting the Giants and Tony Vitello to be just about average this season.

Baseball legend Dusty Baker told USA TODAY Sports on MLB Opening Day that Vitello needs time but should be alright.

"You just gotta give him a chance. That's the thing," Baker said. "You know, just give him a chance and then you got to give him more than a year to make the adjustment."

Yahoo Sports senior MLB analysts Jordan Shusterman and Jake Mintz said on an episode of their "Baseball Bar-B-Cast" podcast that they appreciate how candid Vitello is but admitted he might have to switch things up after being swept in the New York Yankees series.

"I do appreciate Tony's authenticity, it's so refreshing, and his willingness to just be like, "This is how I feel," and he, this is how he felt after the second game. That transparency and honesty is refreshing for us," Mintz said. "But for the purpose of the job and for keeping things steady as the unofficial spokesperson of the baseball team, that is the part of his job that is just so different now, and the part that he's gonna have to figure out how to manage."

He added: "It doesn't mean I want Tony Vitello to suddenly become boring, and I don't think that's ever really going to happen. But for his own sake, we're gonna have to kind of keep it, keep it a little bit more even keeled."

Bay Area sports radio host Markus Boucher of KNBR said he likes how Vitello watches the game and makes adjustments off of feel and what he sees on the mound.

"I love the fact that Tony Vitello went with the EYE-alitics, not the analytics," Boucher said. "You gotta watch the damn game, Tony Vitello felt that."

The Giants host the New York Mets at 10:15 ET on April 3.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Is Tony Vitello too candid with reporters? Baseball experts say yes

Aaron Judge, Ben Rice power Yankees’ home opener win over Marlins

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 03: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees hits a two run home run in the first inning against the Miami Marlins during the home opener at Yankee Stadium on April 03, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Everything’s been coming up Yankees for the first week or so of the 2026 season. After a 5-1 West Coast trip to open the season that went about as good as anyone could’ve asked for, the Bronx Bombers came home to face an equally hot Miami Marlins team that was feeling good about themselves after a 5-1 start of their own, all at home.

Although the Marlins struck first off Will Warren early, the 26-year-old settled in and delivered a solid outing that would be more than enough for the Yankees. Aaron Judge set the tone with an early home run and had his first multi-hit game of the season, while Ben Rice shook off three strikeouts to start the game by adding much-appreciated insurance late to continue his blisteringly hot start, as the Yankees took the series opener on Friday afternoon, 8-2.

The very start of the game didn’t go so hot for the Yankees, as the first roll call of the season was rudely interrupted by an Xavier Edwards solo home run to right field to give Miami a near-immedaite 1-0 lead. It was remarkably the first dinger allowed all year by the Yankees’ pitching staff through seven games. Warren, unfazed by the quick deficit he faced, rebounded to get the next two hitters.

Of course, that lead didn’t last too long. Trent Grisham worked a leadoff walk off 22-year-old fireballer Eury Pérez, and just three pitches later, the captain rang in 2026 at Yankee Stadium with a monstrous two-run shot to left to flip the scoreboard and make it 2-1 Yankees. Statcast says it only went 378 feet, but it sure didn’t look like it.

Warren settled in and pitched a clean second with a pair of strikeouts. In the bottom half, the Yankees struck for another two runs without recording a hit. Jazz Chisholm Jr., José Caballero, Ryan McMahon, and Grisham all worked walks, with Chisholm and Caballero contributing to Pérez’s meltdown by stealing three bases between them.

Already allowing one run to score, Pérez plunked Judge on the first pitch to make it 4-1. With the bases juiced and only one out, the young righty finally found his composure and retired the next two to get out of trouble.

Miami went down in order in both the third and fourth innings against Warren, who looked composed on the mound even when Liam Hicks almost took his head off with a hard liner that ended in a 6-3 groundout. Chisholm doubled in the third and got to third on a long fly out from Austin Wells, but was stranded when a push bunt by Caballero was snuffed out by the Marlins’ defense.

The Fish were finally able to take a chunk off of Warren in the fifth, as Owen Caissie, the centerpiece of the Edward Cabrera trade, smashed his second home run of the season to right-center to cut it to 4-2. While Warren sat down the last two hitters to get through the fifth, it marked the first time that a Yankees starter had allowed multiple runs in a game. As a reminder, this is the seventh game of the year.

The Yankees weren’t very good at ABS today, as Cody Bellinger’s narrow miss in the fifth had the team out of challenges for the first time all year. He made up for it with a double off new Marlins’ pitcher Tyler Phillips, but he was stranded.

Warren got the first two outs of the sixth before a pair of ground ball singles ended his day, with the finishing blow being a swinging bunt by former Yankees prospect Agustin Ramírez. It was a solid day for Warren, who was a split-second from a quality start but went 5.2 good innings without walking a batter. Tim Hill came on to face the lefty and did Tim Hill things, quickly inducing an inning-ending groundout.

A very similar rally to the one in the second started in the sixth. Wells walked, Caballero reached on an E5, and some good baserunning set the team up with second and third with one out and the top of the order up. Of course, they didn’t get a hit, but they got a run. After Judge walked, Phillips spiked a pitch in the dirt for a run-scoring wild pitch to make it 5-2.

Jake Bird got the seventh for the Yankees and continued an impressive start to the season with a powerful 1-2-3 inning.

The Marlins went to Michael Petersen after our first “God Bless America” of the season and were rudely greeted by Rice, who bounced back after striking out in his first three at-bats by thumping a hard liner into the short porch for his second homer of the season. 110.9 mph and 353 feet later, it was 6-2, Yanks.

Brent Headrick and his curious reverse splits pitched the eighth and tore through 8-9-1 in the Marlins order with a pair of strikeouts. We then got a pretty awkward bottom of the eighth, where Grisham walked, and Judge singled him to third, but a bizarre collision led to Grisham’s foot briefly coming off the bag and allowed Leo Jiménez to tag him in the ankle, ruling him out.

There was no need to worry though, as Bellinger walked and Rice finally got the Yankees’ first hit with runners in scoring position by drilling a two-run double off the right-field wall to make it 8-2. They finished the day 1-for-13 in such situations, despite scoring eight runs.

Unfortunately for Rule 5 pick Cade Winquest, we still didn’t get to see his MLB debut, so it was Ryan Yarbrough who made his season debut in the ninth. Edwards made a bid for his second extra-base-hit of the day to start the inning, only to be robbed by an acrobatic catch from Bellinger that even shocked him.

After plunking Ramírez, Yarbrough made up for it by picking him off second base to get the second out, before inducing a game-ending flyout to lock down the win.

The Yankees will look for their fourth consecutive win and another series victory in the middle game against the Marlins tomorrow. Southpaw Ryan Weathers faces off against his former teammate in Miami, righty Max Meyer, tomorrow at 7:05pm ET on YES.

Box Score

Braves acquire RHP Victor Mederos from Angels and move AJ Smith-Shawver to 60-Day IL

ANAHEIM, CA - AUGUST 23: Los Angeles Angels pitcher Victor Mederos (58) pitching during an MLB baseball game against the Chicago Cubs played on August 23, 2025 at Angel Stadium in Anaheim, CA. (Photo by John Cordes/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

We have a trade to talk about, folks — it’s not a big one but it’s a trade, nonetheless! In fact, the Braves have gone back to one of their most frequent trade partners (or at least it feels that way, as ComeBackTedTurner mentioned in the linked Feed post) for another deal: The Los Angeles Angels. The Braves have picked up another pitcher from the Angels, as they have acquired Victor Mederos in exchange for international bonus pool considerations.

Mederos is heading to Triple-A Gwinnett, where he’ll likely serve as roster depth in case the current big league pitching gets exhausted to the point where they need to dip into those particular reserves. Mederos pitched 17 big league innings last season and recorded a 7.41 ERA (179 ERA-) and a 7.19 FIP (171 FIP-). He has a career 8.53 ERA (206 ERA-) and a 6.95 FIP (166 FIP-), so it’s safe to say that the Braves aren’t exactly getting an ace here. Again, if he shows up in the bigs this season then the Braves will have to be suffering an injury crisis similar to what happened last season. I know things have gotten bad already in terms of missing starters but for now, it’s still not nearly as bad as how it was last season, so there’s that.

Speaking of the injury situation, AJ Smith-Shawver is now on the 60-Day IL in order to make room for Mederos on the 40-man roster. As a reminder, AJSS underwent Tommy John surgery back in back in June 2025 so he’s still a few months away from even considering a serious comeback since that’s a 12-month turnaround to begin with. The Braves weren’t getting Smith-Shawver back any time soon so this just confirms the situation while making room for some more depth to take his place.