Mariners’ Cole Young makes early bid for Most Improved Player

TEMPE, ARIZONA - MARCH 14: Cole Young #2 of the Seattle Mariners prepares for a pitch during the Spring Training game against the Los Angeles Angels at Tempe Diablo Stadium on March 14, 2026 in Tempe, Arizona. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When Cole Young came to big-league camp last year, the expectation was that he’d get reps with the big-league roster before returning to Tacoma to continue his development. Instead, Young was pressed into service after Ryan Bliss went down with a torn bicep muscle in April and the Mariners were unwilling to test Jorge Polanco’s surgically repaired knee in the field every day. Still battling some arm soreness that had bothered him in spring training, and facing new demands of a 162-game season, Young was forced into a position of treading water, occasionally delivering a big hit but ultimately turning in an uneven rookie campaign that saw him tail off sharply at the back end of the season and be left off the playoff roster.

Now, having just wrapped up his second big-league camp and winning the second base job outright, Young has the failures and successes of his rookie season to build on, and he came into camp ready to address those shortcomings immediately. He built an off-season conditioning and nutrition program and implemented it immediately, preparing his body for the rigors of the season from the jump, and used that as a base for his improvements both at the plate and in the field.

“From day one,” said Jerry Dipoto, “Cole showed up ready to work.”

“As soon as the season ended, it was back to work,” said Young. “Started working out right away. I knew I had to put in some work to be in a good spot for this year, so that was kind of my mindset: just put up the work and it will show up when spring comes.”

In addition to the excellent plate discipline that’s always been a hallmark of his game, Young showed last year he was capable of producing some loud contact in the batter’s box, but he wasn’t able to consistently tap into that power. This off-season, working with a Trajekt machine, he worked extensively on his timing, specifically on being on time for the fastball, and it paid dividends this spring: despite a slower start, he ended as the Mariners’ home run leader this spring, with six, and also notched four doubles while producing some of the loudest exit velocities in camp. And he didn’t leave that power in Peoria: in yesterday’s pre-Opening Day workout, he put on an impressive round of BP, lacing balls with ease deep into right field and even banging one off the glass of the Hit It Here Café.

“I think early on it was frustrating for him, just because he wasn’t seeing it pay off right away,” said manager Dan Wilson earlier this spring. “But now you’re really seeing some strong at-bats, stringing them together, and when your body’s able to handle that and you can take your best self up to the plate every time, your confidence is rolling, and that’s what we’re seeing from Cole right now.”

But the most significant change Young has made is in his fielding. Always surehanded in the minors, Young’s defense took a step back at the big-league level. Part of the culprit was the arm injury that nagged him into the regular season, but in dissecting his rookie campaign, Young realized the bigger fault lay with his footwork. Big-league infields play faster, and Young’s footwork wasn’t setting him up for success. He said he especially focused on double play feeds and turns.

“I came from shortstop, so it’s similar footwork when you’re starting the ball to first, but it changes a lot when you’re turning a double play and have to rotate the other way. The arm angle is a little different, too, so learning that, getting good at that, turning my body and making those turns, that’s what I worked on.”

The prevailing logic is that second base is a step down the defensive spectrum from shortstop; the throws are longer from shortstop, where the majority of balls are hit, and shortstops are charged with starting the double play. But shortstops also have the benefit of almost always having the play in front of them, according to Perry Hill, with an easy throwing lane to first or second base; second basemen more often have to twist their bodies to complete a double play, an adjustment that can take time. For Young, the problem was never his speed nor instincts; you can see that in this play from this spring, where he reads a bunt cover situation perfectly, reacts quickly, and puts on some afterburner speed to get to first base in time—making a barehanded snag to top it off. This is Cole Young, the shortstop, but on the right side of the infield:

And the problem wasn’t actually his arm, even though it was likely impacted by the early-season injury in at least some way. Here is a poor throw from Young that’s actually caused by bad footwork and just general lack of muscle memory for the second base position:

Granted, this ball was a rocket off Soderstrom’s bat (107.6 mph EV, with a .530 xBA). But slowing this down, you can see that Young’s footwork as he fields the ball is off: it takes him four shuffle steps to slow his momentum, and one more shuffle step to get his body turned, leading to some bizarre weight transfers and this as a throwing position:

You do not have to be an infield guru on the level of Perry Hill to know that if you are trying to throw the opposite direction of where your feet are pointed, you are not going to get great results. This position also forces Young into a wonky weight distribution where his weight is primarily on his plant leg and his back side, forcing his arm to come over top for the throw as his plant foot pivots towards first to try to deliver the ball on-target. It is not surprising when the ball instead sails towards the first base dugout.

Some of the body positioning issues might be due to Young coming up as a shortstop and having to reorient himself at second base, especially on double play chances, where he’s essentially moving in the opposite direction he would have as a shortstop, having to turn his body rather than move fluidly through the base. “On the second base side, you know, about 20% of what you do is against where you actually want to go,” points out Hill.

In Young’s 40 in 40, Ryan pointed out that Young especially struggled on plays to his right when he had to throw across his body. This tracks with Young struggling to transfer his skills from one side of second base to the other. Again, though, the footwork makes Young’s arm look weaker than it actually is as he fails to start the double play.

Again, Young takes some extra shuffle steps to funnel in the ball and then doesn’t have a strong base to throw from. As he goes to throw, he has to awkwardly transfer his weight from his front leg, which he’s used to pivot from, to his back leg, his plant leg, to try to get off the throw.

The resulting throw is flat-footed, requiring Young to heave the ball with his upper body to try to get anything on it rather than relying on his lower half for power. That’s something he might have been able to get away with in the minors, where fields are of spotty quality and runners are slower; it’s not something that will play in the big leagues.

But again, Young looks to have improved in that area. Here’s a play from this spring where he has to range extensively to his right on a grounder that came off the bat at 100 mph. Young scampers to the ball, makes a tricky snag on the bounding ball, then makes a good-faith effort at following Perry Hill’s “6 Fs”, funneling the ball in and attempting to set his feet before throwing, resulting in a mostly on-target throw to the first baseman.

“He’s under control now,” noted Dan Wilson this spring of the improvements in his second baseman. “‘Bone’ has put in so much work with him, and I think Cole has done the work and understands why, and has really put it to use out there.”

“He did a good job,” said Perry Hill of his pupil. “He came and he was so much more prepared. He worked hard this winter, and you can see the difference.”

“I learned a ton from ‘Bone’ [Hill’s nickname] last year,” said Young. “I just took everything I could from him and kept working on it extra. He does a really good job of helping me understand how important the fundamentals are. It’s not about how flashy you are, it’s about fielding the ground ball and making the play every time. I’ve always bought into that since I got drafted here, and I love it. I love the 6Fs, I’m all in on those.”

It’s worth noting, too, that growing confidence in the field can transfer into results in the box and vice-versa. This is a solid, instinctual play from a game on March 4 against the Giants – which is also the game where he said he got his fastball timing back, knocking in a clutch RBI.

A year ago, Young was restricted to a half-DH role due to his injury, unable to develop rhythm in the box or on the field, only to be pressed into a big-league regular role by late April for a team fighting for a playoff spot – something Young admitted got him out of his process at times when he was trying to show he was able to play at the big-league level. This spring, with many of his teammates missing due to injury or the WBC, Young was not only the regular second baseman, but oftentimes the anchor of the infield: a challenge he rose to thanks to the hard work he put in during this off-season.

“I think going into last year, I didn’t really know what to expect,” said Young, reflecting on his two disparate springs. “And once I got caught up, I didn’t know how hard the game actually is. So it’s nice to come into the spring and, after failing a lot last year, work on those failures this off-season and come back this year…It’s nice to be able to take those lessons and keep building on top of that.”

ZiPS projects Young as just over a two-win player, with a perfectly average wRC+ of 100; Baseball Prospectus is lower on him, projecting a .7 WARP and a DRC+ of 91. That feels like a fairly low floor for Young, and if his improvements from the spring hold, it’s not hard to see him blasting past those projections. The uptick in offense this spring was encouraging, but it’s the improved defense that will make Young a valuable everyday player for the Mariners. After nearly a decade of intermittent or subpar output at the position, the Mariners might finally have found their long-term answer at the keystone.

Rogers twirls a gem, leads O’s to 2-1 win on Opening Day

Mar 26, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles outfielder Tyler O’Neil (9) greeted by second baseman Blaze Alexander (3) after scoring a run during the eighth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Mitch Stringer-Imagn Images | Mitch Stringer-Imagn Images

The Orioles’ 2026 campaign got off to a winning start on Thursday afternoon at Camden Yards. Trevor Rogers twirled yet another gem, shutting out the Twins for seven innings, before Ryan Helsley closed out the 2-1 victory in Game 1 of the year.

Rogers picked up right where he left off last season. His velocity was up to 95 mph early in the game, though it eventually settled closer to 92-93. No matter how hard the southpaw was throwing, the Twins struggled to do much with it. He delivered seven shutout frames in which he allowed three hits, walked four, and struck out five.

It was not the sort of “dominant” performance you typically associate with seven scoreless innings. Double plays in the third, fourth, and seventh innings were key to preserving Rogers’ impressive season debut. He also loaded the bases in the second inning, but wriggled out of it unscathed. And the four walks are not something that Rogers will want to make a habit.

But all of that is secondary to the fact that Rogers did, in fact, put together seven shutout frames on Opening Day. He looked a lot like the guy that came out of absolutely nowhere to become one of the league’s best pitchers a season ago. Maybe that negative regression that felt like a certainty coming into the season is gonna take a little while longer to show up.

The Orioles offense was slow out of the gate, and it was looking like Rogers might have to settle for a hard luck no decision. They were stifled by Twins’ ace Joe Ryan for the first 5.1 innings, managing just one hit, walking twice, and striking out seven times.

Finally, in the seventh inning, the bats broke through with a pair of runs off of the Minnesota bullpen. Samuel Basallo led off with a single against Kody Funderburk. Tyler O’Neill followed with a base knock of his own off of Justin Topa. Basallo, not exactly known for his speed, was able to go from first to third on the hit. That set up Colton Cowser for a sac fly to left field, driving in Basallo for the Orioles’ first run of the season. O’Neill advanced to second as well, which positioned him to trot home on a Blaze Alexander single a few batters later and make it 2-0 to the home team.

The Twins only run came against Tyler Wells in the eighth inning. Byron Buxton smacked a rare triple to left field with one out. It was a line drive that Taylor Ward probably could have been a bit more aggressive on corralling in the corner. Instead, Buxton took advantage and scampered around to third. Luke Keaschall made it a 2-1 game with a sac fly of his own to Ward out in left before Wells wrapped up the inning with a strikeout.

The ninth inning brought the Orioles debut for Ryan Helsley, and boy was he good. The new closer did give up a single and uncorked a wild pitch, but he also struck out the side, threw six pitches at 100 mph or faster, and secured the Orioles’ first win of the season.

This game was a classic pitchers duel. Ryan probably had the better stuff between the starters, but Rogers was better prepared to go deep into the game. The Orioles bullpen was just a touch sharper, which proved to be the margin of victory.

The Orioles were fortunate that questionable outfield defense didn’t come back to bite them too badly. There was the aforementioned Ward play in left. It wasn’t an error, but it also didn’t feel like he did everything possible to hold Buxton at second base. In the sixth inning, O’Neill dropped a pop up in shallow right field as he was charging in. At the time, it felt like a potential game changer. But even though it was the lead-off hitter of the inning, Rogers was thankfully able to strand him.

It was a bad day for the top of the Orioles lineup. Ward, Gunnar Henderson, and Pete Alonso combined to go 0-for-11 with four strikeouts and a walk. Meanwhile, hitters 4-6 (Adley Rutschman, Basallo, and O’Neill) went 4-for-10 with a double, a walk, and two runs scored. Coby Mayo, batting eighth, walked and stole a base.

There will be better offensive showings for this Orioles lineup, but that may have been the peak for certain members of the pitching staff. Rogers was stellar, and Helsley looked like everything they could have hoped for. I will sign up for 162 games of that, please.

These two teams will be off on Friday before continuing the series on Saturday. Game 2 of the season gets underway at 4:05 p.m. Kyle Bradish will face off with Taj Bradley. See ya at the Yard!


Most Birdland Player

Due to some changes behind the scenes, polls don’t work on the site like they used to. So instead we will be asking for you to comment (or rec a comment you agree with) on who should be the Most Birdland Player for every victory this season.

Your nominees for Opening Day, 2026 are:

  • Trevor Rogers (win, seven shutout innings, four walks, five strikeouts)
  • Ryan Helsley (first save as an Oriole, three strikeouts, threw really, really hard)
  • Samuel Basallo (1-for-4, going first to third, scoring first run of season)
  • Blaze Alexander (1-for-3, drove in the winning run)

Let us know who you think should win it down in the comments!

Pirates' Oneil Cruz talks outfield misplays that fueled Mets' Opening Day win

No one could have predicted the way the first inning of the Mets' Opening Day win against the Pirates unfolded.

A five-spot for the home team, as the Mets chased reigning NL Cy Young winner Paul Skenes before he can complete the first frame. But it could have gone very, very differently for both teams if the outfield defense was shored up.

Pirates outfielder Oneil Cruz made two crucial misplays in center field. The first came with one out and the bases loaded. Brett Baty lined an 0-1 changeup over the heart of the plate from Skenes to deep center field. However, Cruz misread the ball, coming in off the sound of the bat, and by the time he gathered himself, it was too late. Baty's hit went over his head all the way to the Citi Field wall for a bases-clearing triple, which put the Mets up 4-1. 

"Just the sun was right in front of my face," Cruz said of his misplays after the game, via the team interpreter. "You don’t want those things to happen, but it was really uncomfortable today to have the sun right in front of my face. I tried my best, but it was kinda tough."

"Worst-case scenario, I was hoping it was going to be a sac fly," Baty said of the play. "Then I saw Cruz come in on it, so I was like, just keep running."

 

 

 

The very next batter, Marcus Semien, hit a fly ball to left center. What should have been an easy second out, turned disastrous as Cruz clearly lost the ball in the sun and let it fall for an RBI double. The Mets held a commanding 5-2 lead after that, a lead they would not relinquish.

"Not really the first one. The second one for sure. The first one was one of those low line drives and it takes a little more time for me to read it," Cruz explained when asked if the sun affected both plays. "It was a tough ball to read because you don’t know if you got to come in or go back. It got the sun a little bit at the end, but it’s something I have to get better at. I’ll get better at it for sure."

Cruz is not known for his defense. The gifted slugger made 24 errors as the team's shortstop in 2024 before they converted him to the outfield. Last season, playing exclusively at center, he made 11 errors in 120 starts. He was also a zero in outs above average a season ago, according to Statcast.

Despite the costly miscues, Cruz is motivated to improve his defense and help the Pirates this season.

"Last year had nothing to do with this year," Cruz said of his recent defensive struggles. "For sure, I don’t want to start the season the way I did. I’m just going to focus on my work and get better, that’s it.

"You learn a lot," he added. "There’s good days and bad days. No one wants to make mistakes, just gotta learn a lot and continue to work hard. That’s it."

The Mets and Pirates continue their first series of the season on Saturday before wrapping up on Sunday.

Brewers steamroll White Sox in 14-2 Opening Day victory

Mar 26, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Jacob Misiorowski (32) reacts after pitching against the Chicago White Sox at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

Well, it’s hard to imagine Opening Day having gone much better for the Brewers. Milwaukee’s bats came alive early and never let up, while Jacob Misiorowski and the bullpen shut down the White Sox to earn the Brewers a convincing victory.

Chicago was actually the first team to put a run on the board after Misiorowski threw a 99mph fastball up and in to White Sox leadoff hitter Chase Meidroth. Meidroth was ready, sending the pitch deep into the left field bleachers to give the Sox a quick 1-0 lead. Thankfully, Misiorowski then struck out the next three batters, which ended up being more indicative of how the game would go for Milwaukee.

Brice Turang led off the bottom of the first with a line drive double, but the next three batters — William Contreras, Christian Yelich, and Andrew Vaughn — all made outs to keep the Brewers scoreless. Misiorowski kept the White Sox off the board in the second inning, allowing only a walk to Munetaka Murakami. Miz picked up two more strikeouts in the frame, bringing him to a total of five through only two innings.

Milwaukee took the lead in the bottom of the second against White Sox starter Shane Smith. Smith struck out Jake Bauers to start the frame, but Sal Frelick worked a walk on a full count to give the Brewers a baserunner. David Hamilton, making his Brewers debut, reached on a catchers’ interference by Edgar Quero. Smith then issued a five-pitch walk to Garrett Mitchell, with all four balls well out of the strike zone. That loaded the bases for who else but Joey Ortiz, who looped a shallow fly ball into right field that dropped just out of reach of a sprinting Meidroth. Frelick scored to tie the game at 1.

With the bases still loaded, Turang struck out looking. Smith was just one out away from getting out of the inning relatively unscathed, but the next batter — Contreras — smoked a double down the third base line to clear the bases.

That would be it for Smith in his first Opening Day start. Sean Newcomb came in to face Christian Yelich, who grounded out to end the inning. Nevertheless, the damage was done. Milwaukee led 4-1 after 2, a lead they would never relinquish.

At this point in the game, Misiorowski was rolling. Despite needing 94 pitches to get through five innings, Miz gave up just one hit — an infield single to Austin Hays — and struck out eleven, an Opening Day franchise record. He did walk three batters, but otherwise more than looked the part of a No. 1 starter in his first season at the top of the Brewers’ rotation.

Milwaukee tacked on two more runs in the bottom of the fourth against Newcomb thanks to a rally that started with Hamilton beating out an infield hit. Garrett Mitchell advanced him to second base with a sacrifice bunt, after which Hamilton promptly stole third. Joey Ortiz then hit his second single of the day — this one much harder hit — to give the Brewers their first run of the inning. Brice Turang grounded out for the second out, advancing Ortiz to second in the meantime. Newcomb then walked Contreras in order to face Yelich with runners on first and second. Bad idea. Yelich ripped a single into centerfield. Ortiz scored, but Contreras was thrown out trying to take third base.

Milwaukee would score five more runs over the next two innings. Sal Frelick hit a two-run homer into the second deck in the fifth to give the Crew an 8-1 lead. Jordan Hicks came in for the sixth and immediately gave up a single to Turang, who was then thrown out trying to steal second. After that, Hicks promptly melted down, walking two straight batters before allowing an RBI single to Andrew Vaughn. Bauers popped up for the second out, but Hicks walked Frelick to load the bases. That brought up Hamilton, who — you guessed it — walked, scoring another run. Jedixson Paez came in for Hicks, but he was unable to get out of the inning before walking in another run, bringing the score to Brewers 11, White Sox 1.

Bauers, the Brewers’ hottest hitter this spring, hit a three run bomb (108.6 mph exit velocity) in the seventh to widen the lead even further. Chicago got a run back in the ninth off of the newest Brewer, reliever Jake Woodford, courtesy of a home run from former NPB Triple Crown winner Munetaka Murakami. That brought the game to its final score: Milwaukee 14, Chicago 2.

Every starter had a hit today except Garrett Mitchell, who walked twice and had a sacrifice bunt. Turang, Yelich, Bauers and Ortiz each had two hits. The pitching staff (Misiorowski, Aaron Ashby, Grant Anderson, DL Hall, and Woodford) combined to allow just four hits while striking out 20. Milwaukee dominated this game in essentially every way possible.

The Crew have a day off tomorrow before continuing their three-game series with the White Sox on Saturday. Chad Patrick will get the ball for Milwaukee, with right-hander Sean Burke slated to start for the visiting team. First pitch is scheduled for 6:10 p.m.

Orioles 2, Twins 1: Too many LOBs leads to sobs

BALTIMORE, MD - MARCH 26: The Baltimore Orioles and the Minnesota Twins line up before the game at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on Thursday, March 26, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Hannah Foslien/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

A few positives came from 2026 Opening Day for the Minnesota Twins: the starter was sharp, they showed some aggressiveness on the base paths, and Byron Buxton collected a big hit. But the Twins simply were not able to successfully sequence enough safeties off Baltimore Orioles hurlers to plate more than one run in a leadoff loss.

In the early portion of any Game 1-of-162, a lot of firsts need to get put out of the way. After 1-2-3 opening frames from both sides, those firsts started to fall in the second inning.

The first Twins hit of the 2026 season came from the bat of Ryan Jeffers. Immediately following that, Matt Wallner successfully turned a strike into a ball via the Twins’ first official ABS Challenge and it paid off in a walk. Alas, ultimately the rally would end on a three-pitch punch-out from ninth batter Brooks Lee.

MN bats were right back on the attack in T3 with Austin Martin singling and swiping second on the next pitch. But despite Luke Keaschall legging out an infield hit to put two on with one out, Baltimore 3B Coby Mayo made a nice stop and started an around-the-horn double play to quash the “first run” hopes again.

At the risk of sounding like a broken record, the Twins again clogged the dirt in T4 via two leadoff walks (Wallner & Josh Bell). Almost immediately: another double play initiated from Coby “Next Time Please Hold The” Mayo. A Royce Lewis fly-out slapped another goose egg on the line score.

On the pitching side of the equation, Twins SP Joe Ryan was sterling through four innings. The O’s pushed a runner to 3B with two outs in the 5th, but a nice catch at the wall from The Moose (Wallner) kept Joe’s ledger clean for another frame.

In T6, the Twins were gifted a golden opportunity when a Tyler O’Neill BAL error allowed Keaschall to scamper into second base with zero out. He never moved from that solitary station.

After recording the first out of B6, Ryan (5.1 IP, 1 H, 2 BB, 7 K, 85 pitches) departed without allowing a run.

Both squads continued not scoring runs as fans took a stretch. But seeing-eye singles from Samuel Basallo (off Kody Funderburk) & O’Neill (off Justin Topa) set the Orioles up for success—which they immediately paid off with a Colton Cowser sac fly for the 1-0 lead. Two batters later, it was 2-0 O’s on a Blaze Alexander RBI single.

Remember those firsts I was referencing earlier? Well, with one out in T8, Buxton provided the first XBH—a triple!—and touched the irregular pentagon with the first R as Keaschall collected the first RBI on a sac fly.

With old-friend-turned-new-friend Taylor Rogers keeping the Orange Birds off the board, the Twins entered T9 just down by a single digit. After whiffs from Wallner & Bell, Victor Caratini dribbled one through the infield to keep hope alive. Hope then died similarly to the ball that BAL closer Ryan Helsley put in the dirt and PH Trevor Larnach swung over for the third strike of the third out.

Your Final: Baltimore Orioles 2, Minnesota Twins 1

Some new categories this year…

Zach’s Zealot (replacing Studs)
  • Ryan: Strong Opening Day performance. The curveball was playing nicely off his usually-strong fastball
Zach’s Zombie (replacing Duds)
  • Lee: 0-3, 2 K, missed tag (leading to an extra base) on a SB attempt, two dribblers that weren’t corralled
Egg-cellent Elocution (replacing Comment of the Game)
Who’s Got Next:
  • Built-in weather off day Friday, followed by a national TV (FS1—but also TwinsTV) contest on Saturday (3:05 PM CT).

Washington Nationals powered to a 10-4 Opening Day win by unlikely heroes

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - MARCH 26: James Wood #29 of the Washington Nationals reacts with Jacob Young #30 of the Washington Nationals after hitting a two-run home run in the fourth inning of a game between the Washington Nationals and the Chicago Cubs on Opening Day at Wrigley Field on March 26, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Griffin Quinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Washington Nationals started their season off on the right foot with a statement 10-4 win over the Cubs. While the bats were quiet during Spring Training, they came to play in the season opener. However, the production came from some unexpected characters. It was also Blake Butera’s first career managerial win.

In the first inning, the Nats offense looked a lot like it did in Spring Training. Matthew Boyd fired off a 1-2-3 inning with two strikeouts in just 8 pitches. While Andres Chaparro just missed a homer, it was still an inauspicious start. A leadoff double by Michael Busch made Nats fans nervous, but Cade Cavalli worked out of that jam with a pair of strikeouts.

The Nats got the scoring started in the second, with a new face making his presence felt. Strong wind was not enough to hold Joey Wiemer in the ball park. He absolutely crushed a Matthew Boyd changeup into the left field seats. The Nats were on the board, and they did it in a big way.

Wiemer had his finger prints all over this game. He was 3/3 with a walk and was all over the field. The 27 year old made some nice plays in the outfield and was aggressive on the bases. While he did get thrown out once, it was one of those plays where you like the aggression. The Cubs had to do everything right to get Wiemer out.

Who knows if this will last, but I like what I saw from Wiemer today. He is an energetic presence on the field and can really handle left handed pitching. Wiemer only has a .638 career OPS, but that number rises to .779 against left handers. His athleticism, defense and ability to hit lefties could give Wiemer a role in the Nats outfield.

Another Nats outfielder delivered some power for the Nats, but it was not James Wood. The usually light hitting Jacob Young showed some juice with a two run home run that capped off a six run fourth inning. That was not the only well struck ball we saw from JY today either. If Young can make more noise offensively, he could be a real piece for the future of this team.

Honestly, most of the offense did well. CJ Abrams had a big hit, even though he should have run out of the box. Andres Chaparro also had two knocks and Brady House continued his Spring Training form with two hits, including a homer late in the game. The only player who did not look comfortable at the plate was James Wood, who was 0/5 with four strikeouts. We are going to have to monitor Wood, as his struggles from the second half and Spring Training bled into today.

The Nats new regime has shown they are willing to make big calls. Wood has much more history of big league and upper minors success than Dylan Crews, but he does not look right at the moment. Hopefully he can get it going before too long.

On the mound, the Cubs put pressure on the Nats, but could not come through for the most part. Cade Cavalli only made it 3.2 innings, but dealt with some bad luck and bad defense. I thought his stuff looked crisp, particularly in the first couple innings. As Cavalli’s pitch count climbed and he threw more high stress pitches, the sharpness faded. However, he limited the damage for the most part.

In that fourth inning, Blake Butera made a big call by taking Cavalli out when he did. I probably would have let Cavalli face the right handed Matt Shaw and pulled him if he could not get Shaw out. However, Butera had seen enough and went to PJ Poulin. The decision worked, as Poulin got out of the jam.

Butera’s bullpen usage was good today, though there were some risks he took. He let Brad Lord work his way out of trouble on a couple of occasions. Butera let Lord go 2.1 innings despite the Cubs putting consistent pressure on him. He also trusted Clayton Beeter to work his way out of a jam. Overall, I was impressed by his work and the bullpen doing its job. 

The bullpen only allowed one run in 5.1 innings against a solid Cubs lineup. Out of all the relievers, I only really thought Cionel Perez had his best stuff. However, the boys battled and managed to get the Opening Day win.

It is only one game, but it is great to start this new era with a Curly W. There will be bumps along the road this season but I loved the fight they showed today. All I want from this team is to be a consistently tough team to beat. That is what they did today. Cheers to a new era of Nats baseball.

Freddy Peralta felt Mets fans' energy was ‘different’ in Opening Day win over Pirates

Ask and you shall receive.

Freddy Peralta requested run support from the Mets’ offense pregame, and that’s exactly what they delivered just a half inning into Thursday’s Opening Day matchup. 

After the Pirates jumped on the righty for two runs on a Brandon Lowe homer two batters in, New York responded with a five-run bottom of the first that saw them chase reigning Cy Young award winner Paul Skenes from the ballgame.

The Mets batted around, and the big knock came on a Brett Baty bases loaded bases-clearing triple. 

“It was amazing,” Peralta said. “I asked them earlier today, I said I need some runs from you guys and I was sitting there like damn, this is crazy.”

Things got even crazier as the day went on, as New York would strike six more times over the next seven innings to help them hang on for the thrilling season-opening victory

Peralta followed Lowe's homer retiring the next eight batters he faced, but that stretch was broken when the power-hitting lefty took him deep again, this time 401 feet to right-center. 

The righty would hit another speed bump after back-to-back knocks in the fifth, but ended things with his seventh strikeout, getting Bryan Reynolds swinging on a slider in the dirt representing the tying run at the plate. 

“Other than the two mistakes, I thought he was good,” Carlos Mendoza said. “They put together some really good at-bats -- fought off pitches, laid off tough ones, ran his pitch count up, but he was able to get through five.”

Just one start into Peralta’s time at Citi Field, things already feel different.

“The energy from the first pitch to the last one, you can feel it,” he said. “It was amazing, I think personally it’s something that helps me to get better. I can’t wait to see it that same way the rest of the season.”

Misiorowski makes history, mows down White Sox, 14-2

MILWAUKEE, WI - MARCH 26: Chase Meidroth #10 of the Chicago White Sox celebrates as he rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run in the first inning during the game between the Chicago White Sox and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on Thursday, March 26, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Six pitches into the game, Chase Meidroth homered off of Milwaukee ace Jacob Misiorowski, setting a hopeful tone for the season. Then, the rest of the game happened. | (Photo by Aaron Gash/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

Six pitches into Thursday’s season opener, Chase Meidroth attempted to serve notice that this will be a different season for the Chicago White Sox:

Unfortunately for the White Sox, they managed just one hit in the first seven innings of the game, and four total.

In what would end up as virtually the only highlight of the day for the White Sox, Meidroth running it to a full count in his leadoff at-bat pushed wunderkind Brewers starter Jacob Misiorowski to 24 pitches in the first frame.

Now, there’s a flip side to that, as part of Misiorowski’s high pitch count was in part a result of him striking out White Sox at will: He whiffed the three hitters after Meidroth in the first, had five Ks through two innings, and seven through three — and that seventh K placed him within one of Milwaukee’s team record for Opening Day.

Yes, in three innings.

On the first batter of the fourth, Andrew Benintendi waved at a ball over his head and outside, giving Misiorowski a tie for the mark. After a single by Austin Hays and a second walk to Munetaka Murakami (constituting the first of two “rallies” of the game for the White Sox), Everson Pereira helped the record fall, with another strikeout. And then just to top it off, Misiorowski got his 10th — in four innings — by punching out Quero with two on to escape the frame.

Those 10 strikeouts at only age 23 helped Misiorowski match Don Drysdale and Gary Nolan as the only NL pitchers since 1901 to have 10 or more Ks on Opening Day. And with one final strikeout in the fifth inning, getting enough distance in the game to earn what at that point (6-1) appeared to be a guaranteed win, Misiorowski became the only pitcher in major league history to have 11 strikeouts and two or fewer hits on Opening Day.

By the sixth, just one Brewer had not reached base on the day: Andrew Vaughn, who wasn’t having much of a revenge game in his first meeting with the team that had drafted him. However, he took care of that business with an RBI single to push the Brew lead to 9-1.

In MLB debut news, in his first at-bat in the majors, Murakami struggled to meet Misiorowski’s velocity, but regrouped enough to work a walk on a ball an eyelash inside. On the other hand, the Brewers starter didn’t throw Mune a single strike, so his free pass shouldn’t have taken seven pitches.

Later, in the ninth and down, 14-1, Murakami got his first MLB hit, a mammoth home run to right that doubled the White Sox run total.

Jedixson Páez, straight outta Single-A, made his MLB debut with the sacks packed and two outs in the sixth inning, which seems an entirely reasonable decision by manager Will Venable. Páez walked in a run (following four walks including one walked in by Jordan Hicks, in an utterly abominable White Sox debut) to start things off, and actually managed another later in his appearance, giving him two-thirds of his entire 2025 season base on balls output in just one game.

Shane Smith tried to recover from what was at best an uneven spring, after allowing a leadoff double on his very first batter faced as an Opening Day starter but shutting things down from there. But in the second, things fell apart after two walks sandwiched around a(nother) catcher’s interference from Quero packed the sacks with one out. There, Joey Ortiz blooped a hanging slider, and the 60.1 mph jam shot, with a .280 xBA, fell into short right field to tie the score.

Smith would not survive the inning, getting the collar at 51 pitches and just four outs. As much as Quero’s CI helped fuel Milwaukee’s rally, he also was 3-for-3 on catcher challenges on Smith pitches to help save the starter’s bacon.

In the eighth inning, the White Sox loaded the bases with one out, but whiffs from Lenyn Sosa and Austin Hays snuffed the heat. In the ninth, the only highlight was Murakami’s home run, as the White Sox otherwise struck out three times, ending the game with 20. That’s the most in Brewers Opening Day history (although believe it or not, it is not a White Sox Opening Day record, as they struck out 21 times in 1996 …. over 12 innings).

But it wasn’t something in the water in Milwaukee, if the final score didn’t make that obvious. The White Sox walked just five times, while Chicago arms issued 10 free passes and struck out just three Brewers.

It’s an off-day Friday, and the White Sox get back at it on Saturday, trying to even up their season in a clear trap game for the Crew.


Walt Weiss: “Braves will be much more aggressive base runners this season”

Feb 25, 2026; North Port, Florida, USA; Atlanta Braves manager Walt Weiss (4) talks with bench coach Tony Mansolino (89) before the start of the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates during spring training at CoolToday Park. Mandatory Credit: Jonathan Dyer-Imagn Images | Jonathan Dyer-Imagn Images

Earlier today, we discussed the big news of the day from Walt Weiss’s press conference where he stated that Drake Baldwin would be the starting DH for Friday’s Opening Day game for the Atlanta Braves. I also mentioned that that wasn’t all he talked about, as he spoke at length about his thoughts on the team with the regular season opener less than 24 hours away.

Weiss was asked about moving Ronald Acuña Jr. to the leadoff spot and Weiss stated that Acuña leading off helps to “set the tone for our offense. It’s become part of his identity.” Weiss went on to compare Acuña to a former teammate of his: Rickey Henderson. “I played with Rickey Henderson for four-to-five years and I saw the impact he had at the top of the lineup and Ronald is like that in a lot of ways. He can take over a game and set the tone for us every night. We didn’t have to hit a homer to lead off a game but just getting on base and the havoc he creates right out of the gate, that’s what I like about having him lead off.”

I then asked Weiss about how he feels at this particular moment about his objective of improving the team’s base running going forward. Weiss responded by saying that he felt good about the offense and how he wants it to be more “multidimensional” in that regard. “Over the past several years, we’ve lived and died by the home run and we’ve been really good doing it. Last year was a little different and when you don’t hit the ball in the seats and you’re so reliant on that to score runs, it’s not very pretty. It makes you look flat. We need to be able to explore a variety of ways [to score] and the base running thing is going to be a big part of it.”

He then went on to talk about new first base coach Antoan Richardson’s potential impact on the base running. “[Antoan] knows how important the base running aspect is to me and we all know it’s very important to him and he’s made it important to the players.” Weiss then went on to make a cross-sport reference to how important the base running is to the success of any given offense. “I look at the base running like special teams in football. It doesn’t get all the glory that the offense and defense might but a lot of times, it’ll win you games. I’m very, very, very in tune with how we run the bases. I think you’ll see a much more aggressive team on the bases this year.

Before Walt Weiss came out to talk to us in the media, Matt Olson came in to take questions and he was asked about how the base running could potentially compliment the rest of the offense. “The thought of Antoan popped into my head,” said Olson. “He’s clearly somebody who is good at what he does and he instills confidence in the guys who are baserunners to go and get opportunities when they arrive.” I thought it was a little bit humorous that Olson referred to his teammates as “the baserunners” since I can’t imagine we’ll be seeing Olson out there stealing 50 bags this season.

Still, he feels pretty confident about how the offense is looking heading into this season. “I think we look at our lineup and you gotta like it on paper, every single day you look at it,” continued Olson. “We gotta have more than one way to win games — it’s not going to be go clip five-to-six homers in a game. I feel like spring training was great when it came to moving the line. I had some homers and there were very few throw-away bats — especially early on when you haven’t seen pitching. Getting back into the swing of things is kind of tough to do but I’m excited about it.”

One of the hottest topics surrounding the Braves is the lack of experienced (and healthy) starting pitching at the moment. We did get news that Grant Holmes will probably be starting on Sunday, with Reynaldo López presumably going on Saturday and of course Chris Sale getting the Opening Day nod. I asked Sale about whether or not he could use his experience of bouncing back from his fair share injuries to relate to his fellow starters who are currently dealing with injury woes.

“Absolutely,” responded Sale to my question. “In a weird way, I feel like I’m better at [giving advice for] that than the pitching side because some of the Xs and Os that stuff, I don’t really know the mechanical side…but I do know how to bring guys back away from the edge a little bit when they get hurt because I’ve been through it. I know what it can do to you. I know what it feels like physically to be hurt but I also know the mental side and how tough that can be as well.”

He continued on by stating that “As athletes, we don’t plan for that. We have to work, we have to compete, we have to produce and…you don’t ever really think about the bad stuff happening because you’re just so locked in on all the stuff you need to do. So it can be tough — especially when you’re young.” Sale expounded on that though by saying that he actually felt “lucky” to get hurt when he was older and that “I don’t know what it would be like trying to get your foot in the door and then having to deal with some of these injuries on top of that. I just try to be there for those guys like my teammates were for me and let them know that this is a process sometimes.”

Sale completed his thought on the matter by stating that “There’s going to be good days and there’s going to be bad days but every day is one step closer to the field so every day should be looked at as a good day.” If that’s the mindset that Sale had when he was bouncing back from his various ailments then it really does go a long way to showing how Sale was able to reach the level that he has here in the latter stages of his career and hopefully his fellow pitchers can be able to take some of that with them as they try to come back from their own injuries.

There was a workout following the presser and it was certainly nice to see the squad getting in one last piece of action before going back into the clubhouse and calling it a day before Opening Day tomorrow night. Hopefully everything comes together and we’ll see the Braves get off to a winning start in front of a home crowd, for once.

Keep Your Eye on the Ball

April 12, 2025.

I sat in the stands with my dad for a game against the Milwaukee Brewers. I was a day away from flying to Spain with my wife and children to show them a whole other half of my family for the first time. A Diamondbacks game with the man that practically raised me in this stadium felt like the perfect send off, if only for a little while.

We grew up on this team. In the early 2000s, I was at the BOB listening to the organist more than the organist at church. We sat in the left field bleachers every time; I became so used to the view that I ended up playing left field myself. Whatever the name of the stadium, the colors of the team, or the players on the field, this place was home.

The D-Backs are struggling to get anything going and it’s all thanks to some rookie we drafted named Chad Patrick. He ended up pulling a reverse snow bird by ending up in Milwaukee. My dad and I had a fairly decent amount to catch up on, but we live only a few minutes away from each other, so we talked mostly about the team.

By the 4th inning of that game, something shifted. My dad pulled out his phone and opened Facebook. For the rest of the night, the game in front of us became background noise. Every couple of minutes or so, he would show me photos of people I’d never met or some silly meme that made him chuckle. Mentally, he was somewhere else.

Physically, we were sitting in the left field bleachers.

Years of high fives after home runs, singing “Louie Louie” when Gonzo came up to bat, doing that silly little arm pump dance when the organ plays that one song (you know the one). Years of getting in line to get Baxter’s autograph in his clubhouse, eating McFlurries during the 7th inning stretch, and taking me out of class early sometimes to go to an afternoon game. Years of coaching me in Little League all the way to watching me play in high school. The strength of a bond like that was still no match to escape the gravitational pull of a 6 inch screen.

“Look, the D-Backs have an 11.8% chance of winning it says. You wanna just get out of here to beat traffic?”

These are the AnswerBacks – I’m not going anywhere till the Brewers can get three outs.

Geno grounds out, but I’m not phased. Let’s see what we got.

Gabi walks. Alek rides one to center. Garrett Hampson walks. Corbin barrels one right off the 413 sign in right center.

“That was perfect! Corbin just won me some money on a bet I made!”

Perdomo hops to first. Jake lines one right over the second baseman. Naylor doesn’t even get a chance to be the hero as he gets sent to first. Lourdes summons enough piña power to send Perdomo into home.

Ball game.

9th inning rallies like that are some of the most special memories you can have, especially if you shared it with someone. Baseball is a magical sport and it’s hard to replicate that intensity anywhere else. You’d assume I’d think back fondly on that game.

All I can think about was that damn phone.

The disconnect usually starts as a subconscious twitch. The pitcher steps off the rubber to fix his PitchCom and your hand is already in your pocket. You start hearing the Rafi Rafi jingle and you’re already three comments deep into a thread about ridiculous trade rumors. We’ve developed a compulsion to fill every silent moment with a screen.

It happens between innings. It happens between plays. I bet it even happens between pitches for some of us. Whether you’re at the stadium or at home, the phone has become the primary experience. The game is relegated as the second screen. We’ve lost the ability to just sit with the game and let the tension build naturally. Instead of soaking in the relaxed yet intense beauty that is baseball, we’re trying to figure out why some user named dodger4life could be such a boneheaded idiot.

When we do look down, we rarely find anything that makes the game better. Social media has turned fandom into a constant state of combat and a flood of insubstantial content. Instead of enjoying the glory that is Ketel Marte, we’re scrolling through the Diamondbacks subreddit, and maybe even-

shudders

Facebook Diamondbacks fan pages.

This constant stream of negativity poisons the way we see the team. It turns a hobby into another source of stress and anger. You stop seeing the Diamondbacks as a team and start seeing them as a collection of stats to argue about. You lose the ability to appreciate the season because the internet demands an immediate reaction to everything.

As our new season starts today, I challenge you, and myself, to do one thing.

Keep your eye on the ball.

Put the phone away. No one is saying anything you couldn’t enjoy after the game anyway. Yeah, it might seem a little ironic since I did create a podcast with my friends that has social media accounts all about the D-Backs with the intention that people see it. But that’s fine though. It’ll all be there waiting for you later if you really want to see. Our intention is about building a community, not creating content just to try and get paid.

Abstaining from social media during the season is a way to reclaim your own perspective, your own love of the team, and your own love of baseball. By putting the phone away, you’re giving yourself freedom to enjoy baseball the way we did back in the good ol’ days. You’re choosing to have your own thoughts about a player instead of adopting a narrative from a clip. You’re deciding that being present for the game, and the people you watch it with, is more important than the digital noise. I want to get back to the version of fandom my dad taught me before he got sucked in by all the distractions.

What’s rule number one in baseball? What did my dad teach me all those years ago?

Keep your eye on the ball.

Opening day is first look at enhanced Dodgers lineup

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 23: Kyle Tucker #23 of the Los Angeles Dodgers at bat against the Los Angeles Angels at Dodger Stadium on March 23, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

LOS ANGELES — On Thursday, we get our first real look at what an already formidable Dodgers lineup looks with perennial All-Star outfielder Kyle Tucker inserted near the top.

We saw some of it in spring training, but due to the World Baseball Classic and some early slow-playing of others in camp, there were only a scant few glimpses of the full group together in the same game. Last Friday against the San Francisco Giants at Camelback Ranch was the first time we saw at least the first eight of the expected opening day lineup. Two of the three Freeway Series games against the Angels also had those top eight, with Monday’s middle game at Dodger Stadium missing only Max Muncy, with Santiago Espinal getting the start against the left-handed Reid Detmers.

Muncy is in the lineup on Thursday, batting sixth against Arizona Diamondbacks right-hander Zac Gallen, making his eighth consecutive opening day start for the Dodgers. He’s just the ninth Los Angeles Dodger to start at least eight opening days in a row, along with John Roseboro (nine straight, 1959-67), Mike Scioscia (nine, 1984-92), Ron Cey (nine, 1974-82), Ron Fairly (1962-69), Steve Garvey (1975-82), Dusty Baker (1976-83), Andre Ethier (2007-14), and Clayton Kershaw (2011-18).

Tucker bats second, which will be his usual spot on the batting order this season, nestled after Shohei Ohtani and before Mookie Betts. Tucker in his career has six hits in 18 at-bats with two doubles, a triple, and a walk against Gallen, hitting .333/.368/.556.

First baseman Freddie Freeman bats cleanup, which will be the case on most days. But the Dodgers might also move him one slot down in the batting order against some left-handed starting pitchers, inserting Will Smith in the cleanup spot to have an extra right-handed batter to face to get to the lefty-batting Freeman.

The Dodgers plan to use a platoon at second base at the beginning of the season with Tommy Edman sidelined, with Miguel Rojas starting against left-handed pitchers and rookie switch-hitter Alex Freeland against right-handers. But on opening day, the veteran Rojas gets the nod to start to begin his final season, fresh off his game-tying home run in Game 7 of last year’s World Series. Rojas has three hits, including a double, in six career at-bats against the righty Gallen.

“I was on the bench the other night against the Angels here, and I was checking in on him during the game. I just let him know that I plan on starting him opening day. He was pretty emotional, pretty excited and reflective,” manager Dave Roberts said Thursday. “This means a lot to him, his family, and to the Dodgers fans. And also most importantly, I think he’s a great option for today.”

Rojas is the fourth different Dodger to start at second base in the last four seasons, after Tommy Edman in 2025, Gavin Lux in 2024, and Miguel Vargas in 2022. Thirteen different Dodgers have started opening day at second base in the last 18 years.

Tigers' Kevin McGonigle rips two-run double in first MLB at-bat | Watch

There will eventually be struggles for Kevin McGonigle, certainly times the Detroit Tigers might wonder if they'd gotten a little too excited by naming their top prospect to the Opening Day roster of a club with World Series aspirations.

Yet for one at-bat and one game, anyway, McGonigle showed what all the hype is about while making Opening Day history.

Baseball's consensus No. 2 prospect turned on the first pitch he saw in the big leagues and ripped a bases-loaded, two-run double off San Diego Padres right-hander Nick Pivetta, the big blow in a five-run first inning for Detroit and the start of a four-hit day for McGonigle at Petco Park in San Diego on March 26.

McGonigle, 21, was picked 37th overall out of a Pennsylvania high school in 2023. And with a rowful of family and friends looking on from shaded seats on a glorious, 74-degree day in San Diego, McGonigle exploited a Pivetta cutter that stayed up in the strike zone and ripped it down the right field line in the top of the first inning.

Kevin McGonigle connects for his first major league hit with a double off Nick Pivetta in his first major league at-bat during the first inning of Opening Day against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park.

He collected four hits in his debut, including another double in his second at-bat, as the Tigers routed the Padres 8-2 at Petco Park. He's just the sixth player since 1900 to recor four hits in his big league debut on Opening Day.

And he was just the second Tiger with four hits in his major league debut, joining outfielder Billy Bean, who accomplished the feat April 25, 1987.

McGonigle posted a .922 OPS in three minor league seasons across four levels, yet skipped Class AAA altogether. His poised and powerful spring performance – an .888 OPS and two home runs – won him a job on the Tigers infield, and he started at third in the opener with veteran Javy Baez at shortstop.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Kevin McGonigle rips double off first pitch in Tigers Opening Day debut

New-look Mets knock out Skenes in 1st inning and sink Pirates 11-7 in season opener at Citi Field

NEW YORK — Brett Baty laced a bases-loaded triple and the New York Mets chased Paul Skenes in the first inning of his worst major league start, beating the Pittsburgh Pirates 11-7 on Thursday in their season opener at Citi Field.

Carson Benge homered in his first career game, going back-to-back with Francisco Alvarez at the bottom of a new-look lineup, and Freddy Peralta (1-0) won his Mets debut as New York improved to 42-23 on opening day before a sellout crowd of 41,449.

That’s the best record of any big league team — even though the Mets lost their first eight openers from 1962-69.

Brandon Lowe homered twice and fellow Pirates newcomer Ryan O’Hearn also went deep, but Pittsburgh’s pitching and defense were dreadful in a disappointing start.

Center fielder Oneil Cruz botched consecutive plays in the first inning, helping the Mets score five runs off a surprisingly ineffective Skenes (0-1), matching his career high. Last year’s NL Cy Young Award winner was removed after getting only two outs on 37 pitches in the shortest of his 56 big league starts.

With five new hitters in the order, the Mets ran deep counts early and drew eight walks while batting around twice in the first five innings.

Leadoff man Francisco Lindor took a trio of free passes and scored each time. Luis Robert Jr. had two RBI singles in his Mets debut. Benge and Alvarez launched solo homers off reliever Justin Lawrence to make it 11-5 in the sixth.

Pirates pitchers walked nine overall, surpassing last season’s high.

Peralta, a two-time All-Star acquired from Milwaukee in January, struck out seven and walked none over five innings in his third straight opening-day start — all in New York City.

Tobias Myers, obtained from the Brewers in the same trade, followed with three innings of one-run ball.

Pittsburgh opened on the road for the 10th consecutive year in the earliest start to a season for both teams.

Up next

Following a day off, Pirates RHP Mitch Keller (6-15, 4.19 ERA) starts the middle game of the series Saturday against LHP David Peterson (9-6, 4.22).

Mets use five-run first inning to power by Pirates in 11-7 Opening Day win

The Mets knocked out NL Cy Young winner Paul Skenes in the first inning with a five-run inning and continued to add on runs from there, defeating the Pittsburgh Pirates, 11-7, on Opening Day at Citi Field.

The Mets are now 42-23 on Opening Day, the best such winning percentage in MLB.

Here are the top takeaways...

-- The Mets’ new-look offense was on full display in the season opener as they made contact in key situations, worked many deep counts in critical at-bats, and produced when it counted, going 5-for-15 with runners in scoring position.

Call it an early return on David Stearns’ offseason priority to build an offense with “more competitive at-bats 1-through-9" compared to seasons past.

With that in mind the Mets scored the first nine runs without a home run, as they had traffic on the bases all day. For the game they produced 11 hits while taking nine walks.

One of the low-key highlights was Luis Robert Jr.’s 10-pitch walk in the first inning against Skenes that loaded the bases and set up a five-run inning.

-- Freddy Peralta wasn’t great in his Mets’ debut, giving up four runs in five innings, coming out after throwing 80 pitches. But on this day it was good enough to get the win, and he showed flashes of the dominance he displayed with the Milwaukee Brewers, racking up seven strikeouts while allowing no walks.

His only major problem was Brandon Lowe, who took Peralta deep for two home runs, a two-run shot in the first inning that appeared to be wind-aided and then a no-doubter to right-center in the fourth, a solo shot.

Peralta showed off an impressive arsenal, leaning heavily on his off-speed stuff to get out of trouble in the fifth inning and leave the game with a 6-4 lead.

From there Tobias Myers, also acquired in the Peralta trade, showed why he could be an important addition as a multi-inning reliever. He threw three innings, allowing only one run on one hit, a home run by Ryan O’Hearn.

However, reliever Luis Garcia gave up two runs in the ninth, enough for Carlos Mendoza to get Devin Williams up in the pen before Garcia finished the inning.

-- In their wildest dreams the Mets probably didn’t see themselves knocking Skenes out of the game in the first inning, yet they did exactly that as they scored five runs and got his pitch count up to 37, at which point Pirates’ manager Don Kelly decided not to push his ace any further.

It was the first time in Skenes’ career that he’d been knocked out that early, and left him with an unsightly 67.50 ERA.

Skenes, the reigning NL Cy Young winner, was victimized by bad defense in center field by Oneil Cruz, who misplayed Brett Baty’s deep fly ball into a triple and then lost Marcus Semien’s fly ball in the sun as it dropped for a single.

Even so the Mets made him work hard, battling in some tough at-bats, particularly a 10-pitch at-bat by Robert Jr. that resulted in a walk, loading the bases with one out.

Baty’s triple, which Cruz misjudged, starting in for a couple of steps before retreating, was the big hit in the inning, giving the Mets a 4-1 lead.

-- Carson Benge had a memorable debut, hitting a sixth-inning solo home run off reliever Justin Lawrence, giving the Mets a 10-5 lead at the time. It was the first hit of his career after two K’s and a walk.

Mets fans responded with a curtain call as a smiling Benge popped out of the dugout to acknowledge the cheers.

In the same inning Francisco Alvarez hit a 429-foot bomb to the second deck in left that sounded like a cannon going off as it left his bat.

-- In the fifth inning Bo Bichette had a 13-pitch at-bat in which he fouled off eight straight two-strike pitches at one point. In the end he struck out with the bases loaded but the at-bat was evidence as to why he has been such an excellent clutch hitter, with a career .331 average with runners in scoring position.

With two strikes Bichette doesn’t use his big leg kick, and goes into contact mode, often looking to use the opposite field. On the eight straight foul balls, all were off to the first base side. He finally struck out when he was fooled by a high slider.

-- Alvarez was 2-for-2 as catcher challenging calls for his pitchers, getting two ball overturned to strikes via the new challenge system.

Game MVP: Luis Robert Jr.

There was no obvious choice, as the Mets spread their offense up and down the lineup, so I’ll give it to Robert for what may have been a turning point of sorts, a 10-pitch walk against Skenes in the first inning that loaded the bases and set Baty’s triple.

Robert, who could be a wild card of sorts for these Mets, fouled off or laid off some tough pitches from Skenes, no small feat against maybe the best pitcher in the NL.

Robert also had two singles on a 2-for-4 day and made a nice play in center field, getting a great jump to run down a line drive in right-center by Marcell Ozuna.

Highlights

What's Next?

The Mets are off on Friday and will face the Pirates again on Saturday at 4:10 p.m. on SNY.

David Peterson will take the mound for New York and face Pittsburgh RHP Mitch Keller.

Mets 11, Pirates 7: It was a good (Opening) Day

Mar 26, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets center fielder Luis Robert Jr. (88) follows through on an RBI single against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the fourth inning at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The Mets are the winningest team in baseball history on Opening Day. That trend continued today at Citi Field, as the Mets defeated the Pittsbirgh Pirates by a score of 11-7.

Freddy Peralta took the ball for the Mets, and ran into some early trouble. Oneil Cruz dorked a ball to right-center field to lead off the game, and then new Pirate Brandon Lowe got a wind-aided home run that barely got over the right-field wall and just missed Carson Benge’s glove. Now down 2-0, Peralta buckled down and struck out the side.

The reigning Cy Young winner Paul Skenes came to the mound in the bottom of the first and things did not go as planned. Francisco Lindor led off with a walk, and advanced to third on a lightly hit single by Juan Soto. Lindor scored on a sacrifice fly by Bo Bichette, halving the Pittsburgh lead.

Then, things got interesting.

Jorge Polanco hit a nubber up the third base line and reached first without a throw. Luis Robert, Jr. drew a ten-pitch walk to load the bases. Brett Baty then hit a ball over the head of Cruz in center field, tripling and clearing the bases. Marcus Semien then doubled on another missed ball for Cruz, scoring Baty and putting the Mets up 5-2.

After striking out Carson Benge in his first big league at-bat, Skenes then (barely) hit Francisco Alvarez. That would do it for Skenes, who was run from the game before the end of the first inning. Four hits, five earned runs, two walks, a hit by pitch and one strikeout would be his line on the day.

Johan Ramírez relieved him, and let the Pirates breathe a little bit with two and a third innings of scoreless ball.

Both teams would offensively slow down after their first inning seven total runs. In the top of the third, after the first successful ABS challenge of the season, the Pirates added a third run on a solo home run by Lowe.

In the bottom of the fourth, Mason Montgomery came in for the Pirates and instantly walked both Lindor and Soto to put two on with no out. After a Bichette strikeout and a Polanco fly out, Robert hit a ground ball that got past shortstop Jared Triolo to restore the Mets’ three-run lead.

Nick Gonzalez singled to lead off the fifth for Pittsburgh, and one pitch later, Henry Davis doubled down the left-field line for an RBI double. Peralta struck out Cruz, induced a weak ground ball from Lowe, and a strikeout to Bryan Reynolds to escape the fifth up 6-4. All told, Peralta went five innings, allowing six hits and four earned runs with seven strikeouts.

The Mets added on in the fifth, and continued to showcase their ‘all hands on deck’ offensive approach. Benge drew a one-out walk, which was followed up by an Alvarez single and a Lindor walk. Juan Soto shot a ball to left to score Benge, and the three run lead was back yet again. After a Bichette strike out, Polanco walked to drive in a run, and Robert hit a ball into no-man’s land off of first and beat out the throw with another run scoring. The Mets were now up 9-4.

Tobias Myers was first up out of the bullpen ofr the Mets, and saw Ryan O’Hearn get a jetstream assisted home run to left field to bring the lead – you guessed it – back to three for the Mets.

In the bottom of the sixth, the Mets struck again, with Benge collecting not just his first big league hit, but big league home run on a solo shot to center field. One batter later, Alvarez struck with his own homer, and the Mets were up 11-5.

Myers stayed in the game for the seventh and eighth and did not allow another baserunner after the O’Hearn homer, instantly showing his value as a long man. He would eventually give way to Luis Garcia in the ninth. O’Hearn singled to lead off the frame, and Triolo doubled one pitch later to put men on second and third with no one out. After striking out Spencer Hortiwz, Garcia gave up a two-RBI double to Nick Gonzales to cut the lead to 11-7.

However, Garcia buckled down and struck out Cruz to end the game and secure the dub.

The Mets have off tomorrow, before resuming play on Saturday with David Peterson on the mound.

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