Pirates vs Cubs Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Chicago Cubs will look to improve their winning streak to three games when they host the Pittsburgh Pirates in an NL Central clash at Wrigley Field on Friday, April 10.

My top Pirates vs. Cubs predictions and MLB picks expect Chicago to pull off the victory, with the total going Over the number this afternoon.

Who will win Pirates vs Cubs today: Cubs moneyline (-140)

The Chicago Cubs will receive a boost with Seiya Suzuki making his season debut this afternoon, and the Cubbies have also been on the unlucky side to start the year.

Chicago ranks second in hard-hit rate and sixth in barrel percentage, so positive regression to a 25th-ranked BABIP is coming.

Additionally, Pittsburgh Pirates righty Carmen Mlodzinski has surrendered a 68.0% hard-hit rate through two starts, and three of his five offerings have negative pitch values.

Chicago starter Shota Imanga is also eyeing statistical correction with his 4.50 ERA above his 3.03 xERA and 3.48 xFIP.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Seiya Suzuki was third in wOBA on the Cubs in 2025, and he posted a monster .467 mark during his five-game rehab stint.

Pirates vs Cubs Over/Under pick: Over 6.5 (-113)

The wind is forecasted to be blowing in at the Friendly Confines, but Chicago isn’t truly going to live up to its Windy City moniker. 

As noted, the Cubs are positioned to have a breakout day at the dish, and have scored 24 runs across their past four games.

And, while Imanga has solid underlying numbers, the Pirates can also do damage.

Pittsburgh has a deeper and more potent lineup than in years past and ranks seventh in wOBA against lefties to start the season.

Neil Parker's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 3-4, -0.99 units
  • Over/Under bets: 1-2, -1.2 units

Pirates vs Cubs odds

  • Moneyline: Pirates +133 | Cubs -138
  • Run line: Pirates +1.5 (-156) | Cubs -1.5 (+150)
  • Over/Under: Over 6.5 (-113) | Under 6.5 (+108)

Pirates vs Cubs trend

The Cubs have covered the run line in 10 of their last 14 games at home (+7.25 Units / 43% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Pirates vs. Cubs.

How to watch Pirates vs Cubs and game info

LocationWrigley Field, Chicago, IL
DateFriday, April 10, 2026
First pitch2:20 p.m. ET
TVSportsNet Pittsburgh, Marquee
Pirates starting pitcherCarmen Mlodzinski
(0-0, 4.00 ERA)
Cubs starting pitcherShota Imanaga
(0-1, 4.50 ERA)

Pirates vs Cubs latest injuries

Pirates vs Cubs weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Yankees at Rays: 5 things to watch and series predictions | April 10-12

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Yankees hit the road to take on the Rays from newly-renovated Tropicana Field.


5 things to watch

Offense looking for answers

The Yankees dropped their first series of the season, losing two of three games against the Athletics at Yankee Stadium. But it's not the fact that they lost, it's how it went down.

After Amed Rosario was the hero on Tuesday night, the offense went silent, dropping the final two games while scoring a total of two runs. After scoring two runs in the first inning of Wednesday's game, the Yanks picked up just two hits (and no runs) across the next 17 innings. 

While the players who have struggled to start the season continued to scuffle, the top of the order hasn't been great of late.

Aaron Judge was 1-for-9 with two walks and two strikeouts in the A's series. Giancarlo Stanton, Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Cody Bellinger had just four hits combined in the three games. 

Even Ben Rice, the team's hottest hitter, was just 2-for-10. As good as the pitching has been for the Yankees, they'll need more production from the hitters to achieve their goals.

Bottom of the order woes

A big part of the offensive outage has been the bottom of the order.

Ryan McMahon, Jose Caballero and Austin Wells are a combined 12-for-96 this season, including 2-for-18 in the three-game set against Oakland. That has forced manager Aaron Boone to shuffle the lineup in a number of ways. Rosario has started at third and second base recently, while McMahon and Caballero were given games off. 

McMahon even made his first MLB start at shortstop this week just to give a different look. Now, aside from Rosario's heroics on Tuesday, the lineup shuffling didn't work, but we should expect more this weekend. Boone confirmed Giancarlo Stanton will take one game off this weekend (likely Saturday) to give Judge a game at DH. 

How often will we see Rosario in the starting lineup? Can the bottom of the order improve, even a little, this weekend?

Luis Gil's season debut

After the Yankees broke camp with just four starters -- thanks to a number of off days -- the team is ready to bring Gil back.

Gil will make his season debut in the series-opener on Friday. The young right-hander was up-and-down in spring training, which resulted in him starting the season in the minors, but now it's time for him to try and reclaim his spot.

Feb 27, 2026; Fort Myers, Florida, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Luis Gil (81) throws a pitch against the Minnesota Twins in the first inning during spring training at Lee Health Sports Complex/Hammond Stadium.
Feb 27, 2026; Fort Myers, Florida, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Luis Gil (81) throws a pitch against the Minnesota Twins in the first inning during spring training at Lee Health Sports Complex/Hammond Stadium. / Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

As Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodon work toward returns, and Will Warren and Ryan Weathers -- starters who can potentially be sent down once reinforcements arrive -- pulling their weight, Gil needs to get off to a good start.

He made one minor league start and allowed three runs in 4.2 innings. He struck out six but walked four, a problem that plagued Gil in 2025. 

Can Max Fried bounce back?

Fried got off to a scorching start to the season, not allowing a run in his first 13.1 innings. That momentum came to a halt against the Marlins on Sunday when he allowed three runs across 6.2 innings on a miserable, rain-delayed outing.

While still effective, the Yanks will need Fried to help them get back on track. The Yankees don't know what they'll get from Gil on Friday, so Fried on Saturday may be what stands between New York and a four-game losing streak.

Back at the Trop

The Yankees are well-acquainted with Tropicana Field, but it's been a while since they've actually traveled to St. Petersburg to take on their division rivals.

After spending their road games against Tampa Bay at their spring training facility last season, New York will finally return with all the quirks that come with the stadium that has housed the Rays since 1998. 

As Boone said prior to Thursday's series finale against the A's, he doesn't know what to expect when the team arrives.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Aaron Judge

The Yankees will see two southpaws this weekend and Judge has 11 home runs in 53 career games at Tropicana Field. 

Which Yankees pitcher will have the best start?

Max Fried

The last time Fried allowed three or more runs in back-to-back starts, you'll have to go back to mid-August of last season. Don't anticipate that happening this weekend.

Which Rays player will be a thorn in the Yankees' side?

Junior Caminero

Caminero has gotten off to a hot start, and it's easy to see him smashing a home run or two this weekend.

José Ramírez, Ronald Acuña Jr., and echoes of October in Atlanta

On Sunday Night Baseball, the Cleveland Guardians will be in Atlanta to take on the Braves at Truist Park at 7:20 pm ET in a game that can be seen on NBC and Peacock.

That means we’ll be treated to a game featuring two of MLB’s top stars in the Braves’ Ronald Acuña, Jr. and the Guardians’ José Ramírez. Let’s talk about what makes them so great.

Among all players to debut in the Divisional Era (since 1969), Acuña is the only one (minimum 3,000 at-bats) to average at least 30 home runs and at least 30 stolen bases, per 162 games played.

Ramírez — in double the number of at-bats — has averaged 29 home runs and 29 stolen bases, per 162 games played.

In case you were wondering, only two active players with fewer than 3,000 career at-bats are averaging 30-plus homers and 30-plus steals per 162 games: Fernando Tatis, Jr. and Julio Rodriguez.

Acuña was the National League MVP in 2023, when he had a spectacular season. He was not only the MVP, but he was also unanimous, receiving all 30 first-place votes.

Because Acuña missed 1 ½ years with injuries, the 28-year-old has just over 3,700 career at-bats. He’s still on course to become one of the greatest players in franchise history.

Braves OPS leaders since 1900 (min. 3000 AB)

1.     .944 Hank Aaron
2.     .930 Chipper Jones
3.     .903 Ronald Acuña Jr.

Of course, Acuña is off to a slow start. And when I say “slow start,” the player that scored 149 runs in 2023 scored just one run through his first 11 games this season. How does a player with speed at the top of the order get seven hits and walk seven times and score just once? It makes no sense.

Now let me tell you about José Ramírez, the best third baseman in the game. As of Monday, no Cleveland player has played more games. No player in franchise history has more at-bats. He’s second to Jim Thome in home runs. He’s second to Kenny Lofton in stolen bases.

Was there another great Cleveland player from ’16-’26? Sure was. Tris Speaker was his name. Speaker played for Cleveland from 1916-1926, and here’s Ramírez one century later.

Here’s the thing about Ramírez: He’s the best mortal player in his generation. Don’t criticize him and tell me he hasn’t won an MVP. Look who has won the American League MVP the last few seasons:

Last five American League MVP winners

2025: Aaron Judge
2024: Aaron Judge
2023: Shohei Ohtani
2022: Aaron Judge
2021: Shohei Ohtani

It’s hard to win an MVP when these two mega-stars are competing in their prime! Judge may be the greatest right-handed hitter of all time. Ohtani may be the best player of all time. The fact that those two have hogged the MVP award the last half-decade doesn’t take away from anyone else. In fact, one can hit 60 homers as a catcher and still not win an A.L. MVP in this era.

Jose Ramírez is consistently one of the best players in the American League, and his MVP finishes by year prove it.

Jose Ramírez MVP finishes

2025: 3rd
2024: 5th
2023: 10th
2022: 4th
2021: 6th
2020: 2nd
2018: 3rd
2017: 3rd

That’s finishing in the top three of voting four times! The six finishes in the top five are tied (with Hall of Famer Eddie Murray) for the most top five finishes without winning.

Look at the last two players elected to the Hall of Fame. Carlos Beltran played 20 seasons and never finished in the top three in MVP voting (he was fourth in 2006). Andruw Jones played 17 seasons and had just one top three MVP season (he finished second in 2005).

The last two third basemen entered the Hall of Fame without winning an MVP. Class of 2024 Adrian Beltre (second in 2004, third in 2012) came close. Scott Rolen (Class of 2023) never had a season in which he finished as high asthird in MVP. The closest he got was fourth in 2004.

José Ramírez is one of the 10 best third basemen of all-time. Or he’s certainly on the track to be.

Corey Kluber will join the NBC broadcast booth on Sunday night. Kluber started Game 7 of the 2016 World Series for Cleveland, a game where Ramírez batted fifth and had two hits.

It’s amazing to me how many of the Game 7 starting position players of that 2016 World Series are still active and contributing in 2026.

Kyle Schwarber
Willson Contreras
Javier Baez
Carlos Santana
Francisco Lindor
Jose Ramirez

And the pitcher that blew the save (but was credited with the victory) in Game 7, Aroldis Chapman, played a huge role in that game and that series for the Cubs. He’s still active, of course.

After Chapman gave up the game-tying home run to Rajai Davis in the eighth inning, he returned to pitch the bottom of the ninth. Cleveland needed only one swing to win its first World Series since 1948. Chapman retired Santana, Jason Kipnis, and Lindor.

And Cleveland may never have a better opportunity.

Cleveland, Atlanta, and October Memories

These two franchises met 31 years ago in the 1995 World Series.

That 1995 Cleveland team should have won the Fall Classic, which would have been the franchise’s first since 1948 (when they defeated the Braves, then based in Boston). It was Cleveland’s best team since the 1954 squad which won 111 games. I know the 1997 team was good; they lost a World Series Game 7 in extra innings. The 2016 team also lost a World Series Game 7 in extra innings. But few Cleveland teams before or since can equal that 1995 squad that went 100-44 in a truncated season.

It was one of the best teams of all time. The .694 winning percentage means the team would have won 112 or 113 games in a 162-game season.

Cleveland had an outstanding young outfield that year consisting of Albert Belle in left field, Kenny Lofton in center, and Manny Ramirez in right. If you had told me that none of them would be enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame all these years later, you would have stunned me.

But it was Atlanta that won the World Series, as Tom Glavine won a pair of games, including a 1-0 deciding sixth game.

Both franchises had future first-ballot Hall of Famers playing third base that season. Cleveland had 24-year-old Jim Thome (134 of the team’s 144 games at 3B). Atlanta had 23-year-old Chipper Jones.

Now all these years later, Cleveland comes back to Atlanta with another third baseman that will one day be a first-ballot Hall of Famer.

“Back to Georgia”

The Braves won the World Series in 1995, but they were a better team in the late 90s. Every time I return to Atlanta, I’m reminded of the wildest playoff series I’ve ever covered — the 1999 NLCS.

Game 5 was a classic that lasted nearly six hours. Game 6 was a wild rollercoaster ride that took nearly 4 ½ hours to finish.

I was in the broadcast booth for NBC Sports, doing research. And every time analyst Joe Morgan said “Bobby,” I didn’t know if he was referring to his partner Costas, Mets manager Bobby Valentine, or Braves manager Bobby Cox.

In 1999, Atlanta won 103 games and were favored to defeat the New York Mets (97-66) in the NLCS. Atlanta took the first three games by scores of 4-2, 4-3, and 1-0.

The Mets stayed alive in Game 4 by a 3-2 score thanks to John Olerud, who homered in the sixth, and drove in the go-ahead runs in the eighth.

And Game 5 was one of the greatest games I’ve ever worked. The game ended with Robin Ventura’s infamous “grand-slam single” that sent the series back to Atlanta after a game that went 5:46 (at the time, the longest post-season game in history). As Ventura was racing around the bases, Bob Costas’ call was “A drive to right…back to Georgia.”

Game 6 was a doozy. The Braves started Kevin Millwood, Atlanta’s ace that season He had a 2.13 ERA in the second half of the season, including a 1.43 ERA in six September starts.

When the Braves knocked Al Leiter around in the first inning and scored five times, the game, series, and season looked over for the Mets. But New York stubbornly stayed within five runs because of a sparkling long relief appearance by Pat Mahomes. Mahomes pitched four scoreless innings, allowing just one hit.

The Mets scored three runs in the top of the sixth to cut the lead to 5-3. The Braves got those two runs back in the bottom of the sixth to up the lead to 7-3. Cox inserted Smoltz in relief, only the second time in his career he had ever come out of the pen.

Future Hall of Famer Smoltz would give up an RBI double to future Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson and then two batters later give up a game-tying, three-run homer to future Hall of Famer Mike Piazza.

Tied at 7, Piazza and the Mets hoping for Game 7,” Costas would say as Piazza rounded the bases.

The Mets took the lead in the top of the eighth, their first lead of the night. The Braves countered with a game-tying run of their own in the bottom of the eighth.

The Mets took the lead in the top of the 10th inning. The Braves held serve in the bottom of the 10th and tied the game once again.

Finally, in the bottom of the 11th inning, future Hall of Famer Andruw Jones drew a bases-loaded walk against Kenny Rogers, and Costas was able to proclaim, “Bring on the Yankees!”

I slipped Costas a note that said, “I don’t see how the Mazeroski game (Game 7 of the 1960 World Series, with a similar 10-9 final score) could have been any more dramatic.”

Atlanta was on its way to its fourth World Series in the 1990s, but that 1999 pennant was the last one the Braves would win until 2021.

The Mets would win the National League pennant the following year in 2000 but suffer a loss in the World Series to the Yankees, the same fate the Braves had the year prior.

Editors’ Note: Elliott Kalb - dubbed “Mr. Stats” decades ago by Marv Albert and Bob Costas - is the former Senior Editorial Director at MLB Network and a longtime contributor of research and information to NBC Sports’ telecasts.

New York Yankees vs. Tampa Bay Rays: Series Preview

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 31: Max Fried #54 of the New York Yankees pitches during the first inning Mariners at T-Mobile Park on March 31, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After a high-quality win opened their most recent series with the Athletics, the Yankees finished it off with tough back-to-back losses. In those two ballgames, the “Bombers” mustered just five combined hits and two runs, which included a one-hit shutout in the latter. With some of their better arms slated to start in their upcoming series against the Rays, they have to hope the bats can wake up a bit for the trip down to St. Pete.

Tampa Bay has had a so-so start to the season, and will certainly have their hands full with the Yankees paying them a visit back at Tropicana Field.

Friday: Luis Gil vs. Steven Matz (7:10 pm ET)

A strategic move had Luis Gil start the season in triple-A, but now with a need for a full five-man rotation, he’ll make his 2026 debut on Friday in the series opener. The 2024 American League Rookie of the Year missed a good chunk of his sophomore campaign last season, and was shaky when he was on the mound. Across 11 starts and 57 innings, the righty managed an improved 3.32 ERA, but his strikeout and walk rates took troubling steps backward. He looked good in the spring, however, posting a 24:5 K:BB rate in 19.1 innings, and will look to keep that version of himself rolling in his season debut.

He’ll start against Steven Matz, who has started his 12th big league season on the right foot. I remember watching him toss a gem in the 2014 Eastern League Championship game for the Binghamton Mets, and 12 years later, he’s still making it happen on the mound, now with the Rays. In 11 innings across his first two starts, the lefty has worked efficiently, and is coming off of a one-run, eight-strikeout performance against the Twins last weekend.

Saturday: Max Fried vs. Nick Martinez (6:10 pm ET)

In the series’ second game, the Yankees will flip back to the top of the rotation, giving Max Fried another go-around. In the second season of his eight-year deal with the Yankees, the lefty has been terrific on the whole. His first two starts saw him shut out the Giants and Mariners, keeping the scoreboard blank and allowing just five total hits. He is coming off his first forgettable start of the season, when he walked three and allowed as many earned runs in a start against the Marlins. He’ll look to get back on track against Florida’s other team.

Fried will square off against journeyman Nick Martinez. He has put together a solid run of respectable pitching over the last half-decade, and has done a nice job thus far for the Rays. The 35-year-old has completed six innings in each of his first two starts, and has allowed just three earned runs in those 12 innings. His latest was a one-run, one-hit performance against the Twins.

Sunday: Cam Schlittler vs. Shane McClanahan (1:40 pm ET)

If Cam Schlittler’s rookie campaign was encouraging, the start of his 2026 season has been downright thrilling. Similar to his rotation-mate Fried, he kept things scoreless through each of his first two starts, but is coming off of a start with three earned runs pinned on him against the A’s. The real highlight, however, has been his striking out of seven or more batters in all three starts this year, and even more so, the fact that he has not surrendered a walk yet. He’ll look to build on his sparkling 1.62 ERA and 0.54 FIP on Sunday’s series finale.

Schlittler will square off with Shane McClanahan, who himself was once considered one of baseball’s best pitching talents. The left-hander has fallen on hard times of late, as non-stop injury trouble kept him from throwing a single big league season in either the 2024 or 2025 seasons. He is back, however, which is good to see, and he’s done some good things thus far. He’s worked on a limited load, tossing less than five innings in each of his two starts this season. McClanahan has struck out nine in his 8.2 innings, but will need to improve on the seven walks he’s surrendered if he wants to return fully to form. This will be his first start against the Yankees sine August of 2023.

What Mets' first base situation looks like with Jorge Polanco in danger of IL stint

Jorge Polanco, a capable switch-hitter, would normally feature prominently in almost all imaginable iterations of an ideal Mets lineup against lefty Eduardo Rodriguez. Yet Polanco did not start against Rodriguez and the Diamondbacks on Thursday night.

Before the Mets’ loss to the D-backs on Wednesday afternoon, Polanco said the Achilles pain that has been limiting his time in the field “comes and goes.” Some days, he feels well enough to play a game in the field and even tries to field some ground balls early. Some days, he admitted, he feels much worse.

“Yesterday,” manager Carlos Mendoza said Thursday. “Was one of those days.”

Polanco could require a trip to the injured list to fully vanquish regular pain. But even if it doesn’t, Polanco’s bout of what the Mets are calling “Achilles tendinitis” could still shift the Mets’ first base prognosis dramatically.

Ever since the Mets introduced Polanco – and did so a few days after the Baltimore Orioles introduced Pete Alonso as their first baseman – he has felt like the heir apparent to Alonso at that position. Maybe Bo Bichette would help replace Alonso’s offense, sure. But Polanco would be the man around the bag – and maybe even better than Alonso defensively (though opinions vary on the height of that bar) -- once he got the hang of it.

But in the short-term, and perhaps even long-term in 2026, Polanco might fit best as a designated hitter more often than not.

While he continues to avoid the IL and battles regular flareups, Polanco will almost certainly make his appearances as a DH. Not only would logic prescribe less time standing on achy legs in cold weather than more, but Polanco has not had time to build stamina and experience at first defensively. Playing there regularly will require regular work. And he is not able to work regularly yet.

“I just have pain, a little. Doing everything,” Polanco said. “It’s not something that, doing this feels really bad, doing this feels really good. Some days I feel really good. Some days I have a little bit of pain.”

Polanco has only played first base in two of the Mets’ first 13 games. His inexperience showed in both of them, though so too did his adjustments from play to play.

“I was comfortable. I was getting comfortable [before the injury],” Polanco said. “I was starting to feel like a first baseman.”

The good news for the Mets is they have other first-basemen-in-training to evaluate in the meantime. Mark Vientos and Brett Baty both got extra work at the position in spring training. Vientos has started five straight games there, in part because he exploded offensively, in part because Juan Soto’s injury cleared outfield space for Baty. That pair – both of whom now have more innings there than Polanco and have looked comfortable -- could platoon there when Soto returns. Jared Young also has more experience at first.

One could argue that the best way to keep Polanco’s much-needed bat in the lineup into October would be to have him DH most of the time, rather than test his legs at first. Certainly, in the short term, the Mets have chosen that solution.

“The priority here is to keep him healthy. Health is the most important part here,” Mendoza said. “When he gets [healthy], he’ll continue to get opportunity [at first]. But we just gotta make sure he’s feeling 100 percent before we put him out there.”

Long-term, Polanco – who has played more than 500 career games at shortstop and more than 400 at second base in his career – says playing the field is important to him.

“It does matter to me. I do want to be out there. I feel like I can be out there and help the team in that aspect, too,” Polanco said. “But it’s just what’s going on right now.”

The Mets can afford to wait and see whether he will be able to play first regularly for them this year. They did not sign him for his glove.

Ben Jacobs dominates for Lakeland while Beau Ankeney launches first pro homer

Toledo Mud Hens 5, St. Paul Saints 3 (box)

The Mud Hens bounced back from an extra innings loss on Wednesday to take a 2-1 lead in this best of six, their first homestand of the season.

Ty Madden got the start for the Mud Hens, and while his velocity is still way down in the low 90’s he was very effective in this one. After both teams were blanked in the first inning, Madden allowed an Orlando Arcia double, and an Eric Wagaman single scored him before Madden punched out Alex Jackson to end the inning. Still, that was all Madden would allow, as he struck out five across five innings of one-run ball.

Corey Julks evened the score with a solo shot to left in the bottom of the third. Two innings later, a Julks single of pitcher Grant Hartwig sparked a bigger rally. Cal Stevenson singled to right, and Max Burt doubled down the left field line to score Julks. Ben Malgeri walked to load the bases, and Max Clark smoked a line drive to center for a two-run double that made it 4-1. Malgeri was cut down trying to score a third run on the play, and Gage Workman grounded out to end the threat, but the Hens had all the runs they’d need on this night.

LHP Drew Sommers took over in the sixth, and he gave up one run, but Jace Jung mashed his first homer of the year in the bottom half, and it was a 410 footer to straightaway center field.

Jack Little allowed a solo shot to Alex Jackson in the seventh, but Tyler Mattison and Burch Smith shut down the Saints the rest of the way, with the latter earning the save.

Wenceel Pérez was scratched in this one, so expect him in Detroit for Parker Meadows on Friday night.

Julks: 2-3, 2 R, RBI, HR, BB

Workman: 2-4, K, SB

Jung: 1-3, R, RBI, HR, BB, K

Clark: 1-4, 2 RBI, 2B

Madden (W, 1-0): 5.0 IP, ER, 3 H, BB, 5 K

Coming Up Next: The two clubs meet up at 7:05 p.m. ET on Friday night.

Chesapeake Baysox 2, Erie SeaWolves 1 (box)

The Baysox walked off an otherwise close, well pitched game on Thursday, taking a 2-1 lead in the series.

LHP Joe Miller was very good again, as was the Baysox’s Evan Yates. Each went 4 1/3 innings, allowing one earned run while punching out five.

The SeaWolves had a chance to score in the first and missed it. Peyton Graham singled with one out and Brett Callahan reached on a throwing error, but Andrew Jenkins and E.J. Exposito struck out to end the threat.

In the top of the second, Joe Campagna walked with one out, moving to third on a Bennett Lee double. Seth Stephenson bounced a groundout to first, scoring Campagna, but that was all they’d get. 1-0 Erie.

Miller dodged a little traffic in the middle innings, but a pair of singles and a walk loaded the bases in the fifth. Aron Estrada reached on an infield single to score one run, and Miller punched out the next hitter before lefty Johan Simon took over, getting a strikeout and a flyout to escape the jam.

The SeaWolves threatened in the seventh but didn’t score. RHP Woo-Suk Go took over in the bottom half and he gave up a two-out double but punched out Ethan Anderson to keep the score 1-1. The SeaWolves just couldn’t string anything else together.

RHP Wandisson Charles took over in the bottom of the ninth, and he got the first two outs before plunking Brandon Butterworth, who then stole second base, and then scored on a walkoff single from Estrada.

Graham: 2-4, SB

Lee: 2-3, 2B

Miller: 4.1 IP, ER, 5 H, 3 BB, 5 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 7:05 p.m. ET start on Friday.

Great Lakes Loons 5, West Michigan Whitecaps 2 (box)

Hayden Minton struggled with his command a bit, while the ‘Caps offense struggled in general on Thursday.

The right-hander gave up back-to-back doubles in the top of the first, and Logan Wagner followed with a two-run shot to make it 3-0 while people were still trying to find their seats. Minton got the next three outs in order to end the half inning with help from a great diving grab by Patrick Lee in left, but after a clean second, he got in trouble again in the third. He walked Mike Sirota with one out, and with two outs hit Jose Meza. A wind blown pop-up to right field dropped in as both runners scored and it was 5-0 without really a hard hit ball or a bunch of walks even involved.

The Whitecaps got on the board in the fifth. Cristian Santana was hit by a pitch to lead off the inning, and Clayton Campbell doubled him to third. Junior Tilien lined out, but Patrick Lee walked to load the bases. Woody Hadeen lifted a fly ball to right deep enough for Santana to tag and score, and then Lee stole second. Sterling Patrick walked Samuel Gil to load the bases. Justin Chambers took over from Patrick and walked in a run before Roberto Campos flew out to end the inning. 5-2 Loons.

Ryan Harvey and Luke Stofel did a nice job in relief in the late innings, but the Whitecaps never mounted another threat, managing just two hits on the night.

Gil: 1-3, BB, K

Campbell: 1-4, R, 2B, K

Hurtado: 0-2, RBI, 2 BB, 2 K

Minton (L, 0-1): 3.1 IP, 5 ER, 4 H, BB, K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:35 p.m. ET start on Friday night.

Lakeland Flying Tigers 10, Daytona Tortugas 2 (box)

Lefty Ben Jacobs outdid his excellent pro debut last week with a pretty spectacular outing as the Flying Tigers crushed Daytona to remain undefeated through six games.

Jacobs averaged 94 mph in this one with slightly above average induced vertical break. His good vertical attack angle and advanced fastball command helps that to play up, as the fastball and slider generated most of the swing and miss. The Tortugas had little chance as Jacobs racked up 18 whiffs and seven strikeouts in 3 2/3 innings of work. He did walk two, and had some long at-bats that stretched his pitch count up early on, but the Tortugas only managed a pair of singles against him. He’s not going to stay in Lakeland too long as an advanced college pitcher, but the Tigers’ 2025 third rounder is certainly off to a good start.

The Flying Tigers’ offense threatened in the first, and they broke through in the second when Sergio Tapia led off with a single. A one-out Anibal Salas single got Tapia to third and Jude Warwick singled him home for a 1-0 lead.

The Flying Tigers pushed across another run in the third, but it was in the sixth where they blew the Tortugas up for good. With Nelfri Payano taking over on the mound for Daytona, Salas drew a leadoff walk and Jesus Pinto singled through the right side to get Salas to third. A balk scored him, and after Warwick flew out, Jack Goodman walked and Beau Ankeney reached on an error to load the bases. Hernandez followed with a double that cleared the bases.

That made it 6-0, but they weren’t done. Nolan McCarthy drew a walk to put runners on first and second as the Tortugas went back to the bullpen. Bryce Archie took over and got Tapia to fly out, but then walked Newremberg Rondon to load the bases. A two-run double from Salas made it an 8-0 game.

Ankeney added on with a two-run shot in the fifth for his first professional home run, and the strapping first baseman looks built to hit plenty of them. 10-0 Lakeland.

Pedro Garcia took over from Jacobs, while Andrew Pogue took over for the sixth and seventh innings, racking up four strikeouts. Yendry Gomez allowed a pair of runs in the eighth to get Daytona on the board, but this one was long over by then.

Ankeney: 2-5, 2 R, 2 RBI, HR, K

Pinto: 3-6, R, K

Hernandez: 2-4, 2 R, 3 RBI, 2B, BB, K

Jacobs: 3.2 IP, 0 R, 2 H, 2 BB, 7 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:30 p.m. ET start in Lakeland on Friday evening.

Dodgers notes: Alex Vesia, Andy Pages, stadium name change

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 05: Alex Vesia #51 of the Los Angeles Dodgers looks on after pitching against the Washington Nationals during the sixth inning at Nationals Park on April 5, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Last season the Dodgers were able to complete their quest of two straight titles without the help of their best left-handed relief option in the World Series.

Alex Vesia was away from the Dodgers during last year’s Fall Classic as he and his wife were grieving the sudden loss of their newborn daughter, Sterling, and both Dodgers and Blue Jays relievers alike sported Vesia’s no. 51 on the side of their caps. Back in Toronto for the first time since the epic seven-game series, Vesia came into a tough situation on Tuesday as he dealt with a bases loaded situation in the bottom of the seventh inning, with the Dodgers holding a slim lead. He was able to get the Dodgers out of the inning, and the team eventually sealed a series win over Toronto.

Vesia recounted that the past few days had been hard for him emotionally, as noted by Sonja Chen of MLB.com, and remarked that he was able to feed off of the energy from the crowd to get out of the bases-loaded jam.

“The past two days have been hard,” Vesia said Tuesday night. “It’s nice, though, to have my wife in the stands. She was right behind the dugout tonight. I definitely was looking at her, especially after the outing.

“But honestly, during it, that was awesome. I really — the adrenaline, the crowd, I feed off that. It was definitely a great outing. One pitch at a time. That was a great, great win all in all.”

Links

Despite an ugly 0-4 performance with four strikeouts, Andy Pages continues to sport some of the best numbers in all of baseball. Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register that Pages routinely takes simulated at-bats using the Trajekt machine, using Paul Skenes’ pitch mix to help give him a better feel as to how the ball moves.

“I focused a lot on the pitches that Paul Skenes was throwing, just because his ball moves so much,” Pages said. “I start with him (on game days), but then I zone in on the starting pitcher for that evening.”

Dodger Stadium had been the name of the iconic home of the Dodgers for 64 seasons. Beginning March 25, the traditional name was no more, as the era of UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium is upon us.

So far the rebranding has produced some very mixed results, per Sam Blum of The Athletic.

MLB News Outside The Confines: Konnor Griffin gets a lot of Pirates booty

Good morning.

How are Giants fans feeling about the season thus far?

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 27: A general view of the New York Yankees playing against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on March 27, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

We are officially two weeks into the San Francisco Giants season, so I thought now would be a good time to check in and see how folks are feeling so far. We already have a standing feature for Friday BPs when the team is at home, so I’m thinking we can take stock of the overall season on Fridays when the team is traveling.

So, how are we feeling?

We’ve seen some highs, and many lows, and the team has only played four series. The good news is I get to write this right after they won two in a row against the Philadelphia Phillies. That’s exciting, and seemingly a little less likely to involve any of you throwing yourselves down the stairs, as we are wont to do.

But with that said, I don’t have a ton of great feelings about the season thus far. Sure, the two wins against the Phillies this week was a much needed shot of adrenaline, and I really hope they can transform that into some momentum going forward.

But that came on the heels of losing four in a row, three of which were to the New York Mets. You never want to out-Mets the Mets.

I’m also a little nervous about manager Tony Vitello and how he is handling the start of the season so far. On one hand, I kind of dig his willingness to share things with the public that maybe shouldn’t have been shared with the public. It certainly makes my job more interesting. But I do wonder if that openness comes at a cost. That cost being the trust of the players.

Overall, I’m trying not to let the last couple of games give me a false sense of optimism. Sure, it’s always nice to see them score seemingly a month’s worth of runs in two games. But now the month goes on, and we’ll just have to wait and see if the offense marches on with it.

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants begin their series against the Baltimore Orioles this afternoon at 4:15 p.m. PT.

Kansas City Royals news: Royals have scored 47% of their runs in 2 games

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - AUGUST 21: Bobby Witt Jr. #7 of the Kansas City Royals runs home to score on a Salvador Perez single in the third inning against the Texas Rangers at Kauffman Stadium on August 21, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Not ideal:

Busy day yesterday, but Royals Review had you covered!

First, the Royals revealed the new City Connect jerseys. Anne Rogers also wrote about them. As did Pete Grathoff at The Star. Jaylon Thompson talked to players about them:

“It definitely adds character to the game,” Royals second baseman Jonathan India said. “It makes you feel a little swaggy out there. It gives you a confidence edge. You just kind of feel that.”

Then, there were some roster moves ahead of the game last night. Jaylon Thompson also wrote about them.

Finally, Kansas City mayor Quinton Lucas talked about downtown ballpark plans. The Star had /a lot/ to say about that.

Sam McDowell and Kacen Bayless had the “just the facts” article:

“What I would say to folks is that today is a very material step in the delivery of a downtown baseball stadium that the Royals and the city are interested in opening by Opening Day of 2030,” Lucas said in an exclusive interview with The Star.

Eleanor Nash writes about the Washington Square Park location. Pete Grathoff linked to some renderings. The Kansas City Star Editorial Board claims “Kansas City leaders sprang another Royals stadium surprise on us”.

And last, but certainly not least, Chris Higgins and Dylan Lysen wrote an article entitled “How would KC cover $600M for Royals stadium? Why proposal doesn’t require a vote”:

“This is a baseball stadium footprint that is actually helping fund the development and surrounding development,” Lucas said. “This is a lot like incentives that we do each and every day, as compared to the old votes that we had on full county sales taxes.”

Similarly, public agencies like the Port Authority of Kansas City stags hearings but have not needed voter permission to consider incentives for new apartment buildings and other projects. And recently, the city of Independence staged public hearings but did not need voter permission to sign a deal granting $6 billion-plus in tax breaks for a $150 billion dollar data center.

Good news, everyone!

Oh, wait, that’s the opposite of

Want good news via BlueSky instead?

Listicles?

At The Athletic ($), Jim Bowden’s mailbag mentions the Royals:

What level of production should Royals fans realistically expect from Carter Jensen and Jac Caglianone this season? — Lloyd W.

I expect Jensen to be in the conversation with the Tigers’ Kevin McGonigle and the White Sox’s Munetaka Murakami for AL Rookie of the Year. I think Caglianone will hit at minimum between 20 and 25 homers when all is said and done. They are both going to develop into All-Star caliber players over the next three years.

There was a lot of talk about the City Connects so I’ll post it in this section, too:

Blogs!

Yesterday, David Lesky ($) had one called “Two Not So Fun Days in Cleveland for the Royals” while Craig Brown’s was “A painful afternoon in Cleveland”. I’m sure they’re well written and with a wealth of good information that I’m not going to read. I just want to get past this unfun week of baseball.

At Royals Keep, Kevin O’Brien asks if Bobby is “on the verge of breaking out”:

The bat speed isn’t bad, as it’s mostly been above-average this year. However, he’s touched 75 MPH far less than a year ago, and he’s hovered around or below the MLB average bat speed. It’s only a 74 swing sample, which is why I don’t think it’s something to panic about. However, if there’s not an uptick in bat speed, it will be interesting to see how his power will respond with the current swing path-tilt.

Blog Roundup:


It’s that time of year again! Actually, it’s a little past that time of year. It’s time for our Asian Baseball previews. I think last year’s schedule worked pretty well: Three weeks of previews, one week of midseason fun, and then three weeks of wrap-up. Not too much or too little.

Here’s the schedule for this year:

  • This week: CPBL
  • April 17: KBO
  • April 24th: NPB

Here are links to old articles:

For a reminder about competition level, here what Baseball America said in 2020:

Overall, here is the hierarchy of how MLB front office officials and evaluators generally view the quality of the various Asian leagues compared to MLB and the minor leagues.

MLB

NPB (Japan)

AAA

KBO (Korea)

AA

High A

CPBL (Taiwan)

Low A


CPBL Chinese Professional Baseball League

Country: Taiwan

Opening Day:March 28

International Players: Not a lot of (any?) big name former players in the CPBL but this section will be more populated for the KBO and NPB; Full list from CPBLStats

Former Royals: Royals farmhands have drifted in and out of the league. There are four currently: Pedro Fernandez (Monkeys), Marcelo Martinez (Dragons), John Gant (Dragons), and Eric Stout (Hawks).

Last Season: In 2024, the Uni-Lions won the first half, the CTBC Brothers won the second half, and our Rakuten Monkeys were the wild card team. In 2025, the same thing happened. In 2024, the Lions defeated the Monkeys in the playoff and lost to the Brothers in the Taiwan Series. 2025 looked like history was going to repeat itself. The Uni-Lions had a 2-0 lead in the playoff but lost a game where they led 6-2 in the 6th, were pounded 9-3, and blew a 3-0 game in the 9th. The Monkeys then defeated the Brothers 4-1 in the Taiwan Series to win their first championship since 2019, when they were the Lamigo Monkeys.

Rooting Interest: The Rakuten Monkeys are our squad here at RR. As noted in a previous preview: “they had the first English broadcasts and were the inspiration for my first article”. The red-clad simians won it all last year and are looking to repeat. However, Martinez went to the Dragons in the offseason after the Monkeys spent a lot of their foreign player budget on retaining Fernandez. Sadly, my favorite, Chu Yu Hsien, moved on to the Dragons last season and Father Time may be catching up with the slugger. He has 184 home runs coming into the season and it would be nice to see him get to 200. Making it tougher to cheer on the team is that Rakuten keeps making their own PR nightmares. CPBL Stats describes them as “a lazy organisation that has been running its CPBL team half-heartedly over the past few years” when talking about their food scandal last year and then wrote about not paying for surgery for a player.

World Baseball Classic: Reminder: Taiwan competes under the laughable “Chinese Taipei” moniker because China threatens to use their international clout to exclude them from any international competition if they compete as “Taiwan”. In the opening game of the WBC, they were blanked by a trio of Australian pitchers, losing 3-0. Then they were pummelled 13-0 by Japan. They returned the favor by thumping the Czech Republic 14-0. In their final game in Group C play, thousands of fans flew from Taiwan to Tokyo to watch the team’s first-ever WBC win against Korea:

More than 40,000 fans – mostly from Taiwan – filled Tokyo Dome at noon on Sunday as Chinese Taipei’s cheerleaders danced atop the dugouts and its band blasted music and led chants. Fans were then treated to a dinger-filled, heavyweight spectacle, with Chinese Taipei emerging with an incredible 5-4 victory, the players walking off the field as tears streamed down their faces.

However, the extra-inning win was not enough. Korea, Australia, and Taiwan all finished at 2-2 but Korea advanced based on the tiebreakers. Despite participating in all 6 WBCs, Taiwan has only advanced once from pool play, in 2013.

Random Nuggets:

  • Spoiler: The Monkeys won on Opening Day in front of a “sold-out crowd of 40,000 at Taipei Dome”. They defeated the Brothers in historic fashion: “the first-ever game-ending hit-by-pitch in CPBL’s opening game history”.
  • Stadium musical chairs may be on the horizon in the CPBL. “Taiwan Life, a subsidiary of CTBC Financial, which also owns the CTBC Brothers baseball team, has secured a 10-year operating right for Chengcing Lake Baseball Stadium, along with a 12.43-hectare land development project surrounding the stadium”. The TSG Hawks, an expansion team from 2024, currently play there. The Uni-President 7-Eleven Lions (yes, that’s their full name) christened a new stadium at the Asia-Pacific International Baseball Training Center. They don’t own the stadium and are in a short-term lease but it could turn into a long-term home.
  • If you think home run celebrations are still in MLB, they also happen around the world. Here’s one from the TSG Hawks. Hype videos? How about this one for the Uni-Lions? Or this lava-filled one from the CTBC Brothers? Theme nights? The Brothers have a Peanuts theme night coming up. Last one, I promise: Closer intro for the Fubon Guardians.

Links:


How about some 8-bit awesome? We haven’t revisited Mega Man in years! Seriously: it was 2018. My favorite track from that game was Magnet Man’s but there are a lot of killer themes. This week, we’ll use Hard Man’s music:

Friday Rockpile: ‘Golden’ Sugano fitting in nicely in Colorado

DENVER, CO - APRIL 5: Starting pitcher Tomoyuki Sugano #11 of the Colorado Rockies smiles as he walks off the field in the fifth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Coors Field on April 5, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Whether it was via free agency or through trade, Coors Field isn’t usually an ideal landing spot for veteran starting pitchers. There are success stories, of course, but even those usually come with few wins and a ballooned ERA.

That’s why having three new veterans in the Rockies starting rotation this year was quite a surprise. An even better surprise is the promising performance of Tomoyuki Sugano 菅野 智之. While the sample size is small, Sugano is shaping up to be a good addition to the Rockies roster. 

Sugano played and starred in Nippon Professional Baseball. During his 12-year career there, he was a three-time Central League MVP before coming to MLB in 2025. Sugano’s reasoning for coming to MLB is simple.

“Obviously, I wanted to play in the best place,” Sagano said last weekend through his interpreter Yuto Sakura. “Also, I wanted to test out how my skills translate.”

His 2025 season in Baltimore didn’t go as well as he’d hoped, as he went 10-10 in 30 starts with a 4.64 ERA and gave up an American League-leading 33 homers.

It’s been a different story for Sugano so far in 2026 with the Rockies, who signed the 36-year-old RHP in February to a one-year, $5.1 million deal. In two starts, Sugano is 1-0 with a 1.69 ERA, nine strikeouts and only three walks in 10.2 innings. 

That includes a quality start in his first appearance at Coors Field when he held the Phillies to one run on four hits with five strikeouts and a walk in six innings. True to his KPop Demon Hunters anthem walk-up song, Sugano was ‘Golden.’

Prior to his start, he wasn’t too worried about pitching at elevation. He also said his brief time at a higher altitude hadn’t disrupted his sleep or taxed his body, but he did admit it had only been three days.

“I’m actually quite excited. I tested some of my offspeed stuff in the bullpen,” Sugano said. “I know it drops a little bit more than other stadiums, and we’ve been having good conversations with the pitching coaches and staff, so I’m quite excited.”

That excitement turned into the Rockies first quality start of the season and prevented a home opening weekend sweep at the hands of the Phillies. He surrendered only one run on four hits with one walk and five strikeouts to earn the win.

He threw 78 pitches in the outing: 23 four-seam fastballs, 21 sliders/sweepers, 13 cutters, 12 splitters, five curveballs and four sinkers. 

Due to his versatility and pitch mix, Sugano was able to overcome not having his best splitter.

“He was great. He mixed extremely well. He threw strikes. He did all the things we were talking about and looking for when we signed him,” manager Warren Schaeffer said after the Rockies 4-1 victory on April 5. “He did not have his split, which is one of his best pitches, today. He didn’t have the best feel for it, so he used the slider a lot, used the heater late, and just a good, solid mix that kept them off balance.”

A key factor in Sugano’s success is his 51.7% ground ball rate. He got eight groundouts against the Phillies in Denver, when he also threw 51 of his 78 pitches for strikes.

“The mix of pitch selection is definitely my strength, so I’m glad it worked out that way. But towards the end of the outing, my splitter was working, so that was also good,” Sugano said. “I wasn’t thinking too much about the environment, per se. I was trying to keep the ball down, get groundouts and get punchouts when I can. [I know] offspeed pitches move differently here, so I try to take advantage of that.”

While he’d never pitched at high altitude before (Sugano had faced the Rockies once, but it was in Baltimore last season), Sugano did bring experience playing at a hitter-friendly venue.

“The Tokyo Dome was definitely hitter-friendly. It’s a smaller stadium to begin with, and the ball flies. It has a tendency to fly in the Dome,” Sugano said. “For Japanese players, it’s well known that it’s a hitter-friendly ballpark.”

Sugano, the Rockies’ first Japanese pitcher since Mac Suzuki in 2001, had a busy spring. Outside of joining the Rockies in Scottsdale, he also pitched for Japan in the World Baseball Classic. In his lone start, he threw four scoreless innings with four hits, two strikeouts and no walks in a 4-3 win over Australia. Despite being new to the Rockies, he said he’s learning from his coaches and teammate Kyle Freeland, who he sought out for advice.

“He’s been here a very long time. He’s given me some advice on how to pitch here,” Sugano said. “Also, Alon [Leichman, the Rockies pitching coach], he’s been communicative throughout this process, and he’s been giving really good advice.”

Leichman believes Sugano has been a great addition to the team, especially since he and Sugano are both 36 years old.

“He’s my age, so I think it’s fun to have a guy like him around. You know, he sees a lot of things that most guys don’t, and he likes to express that. So it’s been good,” Leichman said. “He’s been a great clubhouse guy, he’s always super prepared, and what he did in Toronto really set an example for the rest of the team, too.”

While he wasn’t credited with the win, Sugano gave up one solo homer, with two hits, two walks and four strikeouts in a solid start of 4.2 innings in the Rockies first victory of the season, a 14-5 win over the Blue Jays on March 30.

In addition to learning to pitch at altitude, Sugano is also new to Leichman’s pitch suggesting. Like the other Rockies pitchers and catchers, he likes it.

“I’ve never experienced pitch calling from the dugout with my previous teams,” Sugano said. “But we have really good communication before the game and leading into the game, so I feel pretty confident about what we’re doing.”

Sugano is seeing early success, despite facing some heavy-hitting lineups in the Blue Jays and Phillies. That will be the case again today when Sugano will get his third start of the season tonight against Manny Machado, Fernando Tatis, Xander Bogaerts and the rest of the Padres.


On the Farm

Triple-A: Albuquerque Isotopes 6, El Paso Chihuahuas 1

Vimael Machín hit a grand slam in a six-run sixth inning to carry the Isotopes to victory on Thursday. Nicky Lopez added an RBI single and came around to score on a wild pitch in the sixth. Five pitchers combined to hold the Chihuahuas in check with Sammy Peralta picking up the win after giving up one run in two innings. Keegan Thompson started the game with four scoreless innings, while Collin Baumgartner, Seth Halvorsen and TJ Shook each added a scoreless frame. Zac Veen, Lopez and Chad Stevens posted two hits apiece.

Double-A: Reading Fightin’ Phils 3, Hartford Yard Goats 2, 10 innings

Austin Murr hit a walk-off, two-run homer to defeat the Yard Goats on Thursday night in Reading. Hartford took the lead in the first inning when Aidan Longwell hit a sac grounder to go up 1-0. Jake Brooks had an outstanding start, giving up just one run on a solo homer with 11 strikeouts in six innings. When it went to extra innings, Roc Riggio hit an RBI double to put the Yard Goats up 2-1. Unfortunately, the lead was short-lived. Benny Montgomery and Connor Capel each recorded two-hit nights.

High-A: Hillsboro Hops 6, Spokane Indians 4, 10 innings

Despite having a 4-1 lead, Spokane couldn’t hold it and the Hops completed the comeback with a walk-off, two-run homer in the bottom of the 10th. Alan Espinal hit an RBI triple, Ethan Hedges connected on a run-scoring double and Robert Calaz and Royneir Hernandez each drove in a run on singles to account for Spokane’s offense. Justin Loer earned a blown save when he gave up two runs in the bottom of the ninth. Hedges and Jacob Humphrey both had two-hit nights.

Low-A: Stockton Ports 5, Fresno Grizzlies 1

Stockton jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the first inning, continued to add to it throughout the game and came away with the victory. Roldy Brito hit an RBI double in the third inning to score Cameron Nelson for Fresno’s only run. The Grizzlies were held to four hits on the night and struck out eight times.


Colorado Rockies 2026 walk-up songs | Purple Row

Thanks to Renee Dechert for putting this together. It’s a great way to learn new music and get a glimpse into the taste, or lack thereof — Troy Johnston, I am talking to you — of the 2026 Rockies.

TJ Rumfield’s start giving Rockies edge in trade with Yankees | New York Post ($)

Jon Heyman dives into the early returns on the Rockies trade that sent Angel Chivilli to the Yankees and TJ Rumfield to Colorado. Rumfield is hitting .368/.432/.605 with two homers, eight RBI, a double and a single. He’s been a welcome surprise at first base.

Here is a potential impact callup for each team | MLB.com

Surprising no one, the MLB.com crew picked Charlie Condon. The 1B/OF is tearing things up with the Triple-A Isotopes, proving he’s the No. 1 PuRP for a reason.


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Mets Morning News: Run prevention!

Luke Weaver appears frustrated in a home white Mets uniform
Luke Weaver | (Photo: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images)

Meet the Mets

Nolan McLean was great, but the Mets’ lineup and bullpen very much were not as the team dropped the rubber game of its series with the Diamondbacks last night at Citi Field.

Choose your recap: Amazin’ Avenue, Newsday, New York Daily News, New York Post, The Athletic

Before the game, Carlos Mendoza told reporters that Jorge Polanco was getting the night off because his Achilles continues to bother him, and he didn’t rule out an IL stint if the situation doesn’t improve.

Anthony DiComo looks at three not-so-obvious effects of Juan Soto’s injury and wrote that the Mets continue to pay for having multiple players learning new positions on the fly.

Around the National League East

The Marlins improved to 8-5 on the season with a resounding 8-1 win over the Reds.

Here are the Braves’ new City Connect uniforms.

Zack Wheeler’s third rehab outing shows there’s still work to be done.

Federal Baseball considers what would make this Nationals season fun.

Around Major League Baseball

The Twins, projected to be the worst team in the American League Central this year, completed a four-game sweep of the Tigers with a 3-1 win.

The A’s, who begin a three-game series against the Mets tonight, shut out the Yankees in a 1-0 win as they took two of three games in the series in The Bronx.

It took until extra innings, but the Padres walked off the Rockies.

The White Sox got a much-needed win over the Royals.

Eight teams unveiled their new City Connect uniforms.

The Blue Jays raised the issue of how long it takes Shohei Ohtani to warm up when he’s pitching.

Dusty Baker, who won the World Series as a player in 1981 and as a manager in 2022 as a manager, has penned an autobiography.

This Date in Mets History

Tommie Agee hit a home run into the upper deck at Shea Stadium on this date in 1969.

Bogey goes boom, Padres walk-off Rockies in extras

Apr 9, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego Padres shortstop Xander Bogaerts (2) hits a walk-off grand slam home run against Colorado Rockies relief pitcher Valente Bellozo (not pictured) to win the game in the twelfth inning at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images | Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

The San Diego Padres played their first extra-innings game of the 2026 season and the first under new manager Craig Stammen. It took 12 innings for the Padres to top the Colorado Rockies in their series opener at Petco Park on Thursday night, giving them and Stammen the win.

The game was settled in the bottom of the 12th inning when Xander Bogaerts blasted a grand slam home run deep into the left field bleachers for a walk-off 7-3 win. The San Diego shortstop made Colorado pay for issuing intentional walks to Jackson Merrill and Manny Machado with Jake Cronenworth on third base after a Fernando Tatis Jr. sacrifice bunt to load the bases. Bogaerts delivered the game winning drive on a 1-0 pitch on the inside part of the plate that sent the Friar Faithful home happy.  

The game-winning heroics by Bogaerts required Cronenworth to make a game-saving throw to the plate on a two-hopper on the infield to give San Diego a chance to win the game in extras. With one out in the top of the 12th inning, Cronenworth fielded a ground ball off the bat of Brenton Doyle and threw quickly to Luis Campusano at home plate who applied a tag to Willi Castro to keep the game tied, 3-3. Reliever David Morgan got the Padres out of the inning two batters later when Kyle Karros grounded out to Bogaerts at shortstop, sending Tatis Jr., Merrill and Machado to the plate with a chance to win the game.

The end of the game got the headlines and overshadowed another fabulous start from Randy Vasquez, who pitched 5.2 innings, allowing just one run on seven hits with eight strikeouts and no walks allowed. Vasquez worked in and out of trouble throughout the game but the one blemish on his start was a solo home run allowed to Doyle in the top of the third inning.

The San Diego offense matched the one run scored by Colorado in the bottom half of the inning when Freddy Fermin and Cronenworth hit back-to-back one out singles to put runners at the corners for Tatis Jr. The Padres right fielder lifted an 0-1 pitch into left field that allowed Fermin to tag up and score from third base.

Neither offense could do much against the opposing pitchers and the game remained tied into the 10th inning. Both teams scored runs in the 10th and 11th innings and the game was decided in the 12th.

San Diego and Colorado play Friday at 6:40 p.m. and the Padres will wear their City Connect 2.0 uniforms, which were officially unveiled on Thursday.

Padres 7, Rockies 3: A late-night, hard-fought loss (F/12)

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 09: Willi Castro #3 of the Colorado Rockies reacts after being tagged out at home during the 12th inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on April 09, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Colorado Rockies fought and fought, pushing the San Diego Padres into extras. Unfortunately, they came out on the losing end of a crooked loss, but they showed some absolute heart. The loss snapped a four-game winning streak, and also marked the longest game (by innings) in 2026.

Jimmy Herget opened with a clear inning

Herget played the role of “opener” today. He said on the broadcast that last year he made an appearance in every inning except the first, so today he got his chance. Herget set the tone with an excellent first inning, going 1-2-3 to Jake Cronenworth, Fernando Tatís Jr., and Jackson Merrill. None of the outs were strikeouts, but outs are outs and Herget only threw 10 pitches (six for strikes).

Go Do(llander)

As expected, Chase Dollander took over in the second and ended up going 4.1 innings. He allowed just one earned run with one walk and three strikeouts. He started laboring in the sixth, but was able to get a huge strikeout of Tatís Jr.

Extra (extra) bases

Ezequiel Tovar reached twice again tonight, knocking two doubles.

Brenton Doyle also got to don the purple coat, which did make the trip. The center fielder hit his first home run of the year in the third inning to put the Rockies up 1-0.

Stop hitting Hunter!

In the sixth inning, Hunter Goodman got hit on the right hand for the second day in a row. Randy Vásquez threw a pitch up and in, and it caught Goodman’s hand wrapped around the bat. He walked to first and was met by Warren Schaeffer and Andy Stover. They immediately wrapped his middle finger and it looked like he would attempt to carry on, but he then started bleeding under the bandage. He went into the dugout to get it wrapped and more deeply examined, but then tore off his helmet and threw it down in frustration — Brett Sullivan would then enter the game in his place.

Luckily, it appears that x-rays were negative and Goodman just suffered a right finger laceration. Schaeffer said after the game that Goodman is “day to day.”

Defensive unraveling

The Rockies have had impeccable defense for most of the season, but when it rains, it pours sometimes…

In the bottom of the sixth, the Rox had plenty of opportunities to make outs but couldn’t hold onto the ball. First, Manny Machado reached on a throwing error by Edouard Julien, who tossed the ball into the dirt and Troy Johnston couldn’t smother it. Then, Dollander had Machado picked off but Johnston couldn’t keep it in his glove to record the out. And then, Xander Bogaerts hit a tailor-made double play ball, but Tovar bungled the transfer and rather than record three easy outs, the Rockies then had first and second with one out.

Bullpen wizardry

Luckily, Jaden Hill came in and quickly struck out Gavin Sheets, but then a double steal put men on second and third. Sullivan attempted to pick off Machado at third, but Willi Castro wasn’t quite at the bag. But Hill struck out Nick Castellanos and the Rockies escaped what could’ve been a very bad inning.

Hill stayed in for the seventh inning and got Ty France, Freddy Fermin, and Cronenworth 1-2-3.

Juan Mejia came in for the eighth and was outstanding. He battled against Tatís Jr., who did end up walking. They nearly got him at second after Merrill flied out to center, but Castro was once again slightly behind the bag. However, he was picked off on this excellent play:

Machado singled again, but Mejia struck out Bogaerts to end the inning.

Extra, extra, extra innings!

The 10th inning started with Castro on second as the ghost runner. Jake McCarthy hit a (weird) sacrifice bunt to move him over, and then Doyle walked.

Tyler Freeman hit another clutch single like he did in Toronto to put the Rockies up 2-1 in extras. Unfortunately, he slid early and was nearly leveled by Bogaerts — and that ended up being called interference to end the inning.

In the Padres’ half, Tovar kept Luis Campusano close at second, but then when Cronenworth hit a sacrifice bunt, Victor Vodnik was able to field and pick him off at third base. Unfortunately, Tatís singled and then Merrill walked to load the bases. Machado then hit a sac fly to score Cronenworth.

In the 11th, Sullivan led off with a double down the right field line to score Kyle Karros and put the Rockies up 3-2.

Johnston then walked, but then TJ Rumfield struck out swinging. Tovar grounded into a force out to get Johnston at second, and then Castro gathered a platinum sombrero with an inning-ending fifth strikeout.

Brennan Bernardino came in to pitch the bottom half of the 11th and gave up a single to Sheets. He got Castellanos to line out on a spectacular glove save by Karros followed by a strikeout of Ramón Laureano. But then Campusano doubled to score Sheets and then Cronenworth popped out to Karros to send things to the bottom half.

In the bottom half, Valente Bellozo came on to try to hold the the Padres’ best hitters off the board. Tatís Jr. laid down a bunt to move over Cronenworth. Then, Schaffer elected to intentionally walk Merrill and Machado. Unfortunately, Bogaerts belted one over the left field wall for a walk-off grand slam, and the Rockies lost 7-3 after battling back all through extras.

Up Next

Luckily, tomorrow is another night game.

Tomoyuki Sugano will take on Walker Buehler at 6:40pm MT.

See you then!


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Luke Weaver, Brett Baty can't come through in game-changing inning of Mets' loss to Diamondbacks

The Mets' bullpen has been extra sharp to start the season, and Luke Weaver has been a big part of that.

Entering Thursday's game against the Diamondbacks, Weaver had allowed just one hit and no walks across five scoreless innings. That would change at an inopportune time for the Mets.

After young right-hander Nolan McLean exited the game with a 1-0 lead and two runners on with one out, Weaver was called on to get out of the jam. Arizona catcher Gabriel Moreno stepped into the box as a pinch-hitter and got ahead 2-1 on Weaver. On the fourth pitch of the at-bat, Weaver threw a changeup that was down and away from the right-handed backstop, but Moreno went down and got the barrel of the bat on the ball. 

The ball carried to right field, where Brett Baty was. However, Baty could not come up with the ball and a run scored to tie the game. A run-scoring fielder's choice, a sac fly and a triple later, and the Diamondbacks put up a four-spot in the seventh en route to a 7-1 loss for the Mets. 

Weaver would get the two outs needed to end the seventh, but the damage was done. Four runs scored -- two counted against Weaver -- on two hits.

After the game, Weaver was asked about the inning and gave credit to the team for executing against him.

"They’re a good team. Good lineup, put the ball in play," Weaver said. "At the end of the day, there’s only one way to look at it, and it’s if you do your job or you don't. Today was not one of those outcomes. They earned it, but I don’t want to be discouraged. I want to continue doing what I’m doing. Feel like I’m in a good spot. Just got to wrap it up to that."

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said Weaver got in trouble after getting behind 2-0 to Moreno, but gave the Arizona catcher all the credit for putting the barrel to the ball on an executed changeup.

Interestingly enough, Weaver disagreed on whether he executed the pitch.

"There was some indecision on what I wanted to do there," Weaver explained. "Pitch clock got involved there. It was a backed-up moment and just didn’t get to the right end of what I needed to do. [Moreno] did a good job of staying on the pitch. Just on the wrong side of it."

Thursday was Weaver's first blown save of the season and it came at the expense of McLean's gem. Again, Weaver was upbeat about the situation -- all thing's considered -- and is confident he'll get the job done for McLean in the future.

"Adds more of a sting for sure," Weaver said of blowing the save for McLean. "He deserves to walk out of that with his head high. Rely on us to get the job done in crunchtime. He deserved the win there. I hated to be that guy for him, but I’ll pick him up at some point and he’ll continue to do a great job for us."

About that Baty play in the OF

The Moreno at-bat was the catalyst for the Diamondbacks' win on Thursday, but could the game-tying double have been avoided?

Including Thursday, Baty has made just five starts in right field -- facilitated by Juan Soto's IL stint -- and is an infielder by trade. Moreno's double had an exit velocity of 99.3 mph and had a hit probability of 45 percent, according to Statcast. But Baty didn't seem to have a bead on it or know where he was in relation to the right field wall. The ball wound up sailing out of the reach of Baty and bounced off the wall.

Mendoza was asked if he felt Baty could have made the play.

"I don’t think so. He was a little shallow there," Mendoza said. "Moreno got a good piece on that one. I don’t think Baty had a chance on that one there."

When asked if the play was catchable, the Mets skipper spoke confidently that Baty wouldn't have made the play.

"We’ll have to go back and look. But especially with Moreno, he uses the whole field, have to give him credit," Mendoza said. "Where [Baty] was positioned, which is the right positioning, I don’t think he’ll make that play."

One batter later, Alek Thomas hit a sharp grounder to Mark Vientos at first base. Vientos grabbed it and squared his body, but bounced the throw wide of the plate, allowing the Diamondbacks to take the lead on the fielder's choice.

Mendoza said the ball was to his left and it's a tough play for any infielder to make. He also gave credit to Jose Fernandez, the runner on third, for his execution of getting down the line quickly. 

With Soto out and Jorge Polanco potentially joining him on the IL, Baty and Vientos are asked to play positions they haven't done much of in their careers. Despite that, Mendoza has liked what he's seen from both despite them learning on the fly.

“I think they’ve been playing the positions very well,” Mendoza said. “Even today, that ball in right field, that’s a tough play. And the one at the plate with Vientos, when you execute the way they did it -- hell of a job from the runner on third base going on contact. Anytime an infielder’s got to go to his right, to his left, you’re going to have to make a really good play to get the guy at home plate. But they've been good.”