Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:
For the Reds:
Let’s talk about it.
Baseball News
Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:
For the Reds:
Let’s talk about it.
Tonight’s game between the Red Sox and Royals has already been moved up by 30 minutes, and for good reason. Originally scheduled for a 7:40pm (eastern time) first pitch, we’re not set to go at 7:10pm eastern.
Why you ask? Well, let’s just say Mother Nature is cooking up a whopper in the central Great Plains. By late afternoon, conditions will support numerous severe thunderstorms firing across Kansas and southern Nebraska. And, as you might expect, severe weather in this part of the country in the spring isn’t to be trifled with.
These supercells will be capable of producing large hail, strong winds, frequent lightning, and even some destructive, long-track tornadoes. As the evening progresses, these cells will likely merge into a large squall line that races into northwest Missouri where the Red Sox will be playing the Royals and probably have just fallen to 0-18 with runners in scoring position.
Below is a simulated radar from the HRRR model showing the projected conditions each hour between 6:00pm and Midnight eastern time:
Now, here’s the good news: Kauffman Stadium is located on the southeast side of Kansas City, which should buy a little bit more time before the terrible tempest arrives.
However, the exact speed of the storm is going to depend partially on how fast / if the individual supercells in Kansas and Nebraska form into a solid line as shown on the simulated radar above. If they do, they will move quicker, arrive faster, and of course be a bigger threat to cut the game short.
On the other hand, if the supercells stay separate and don’t form into a big line, they will move slower. But here’s the catch, the separated supercells scenario is also more capable of producing larger hail, and yes, one of those destructive, long-track tornadoes.
In other words, if we get that scenario and this games goes extra innings, somebody might be visiting the land of Oz.
Carson Benge – RF
Bo Bichette – SS
Juan Soto – DH
Mark Vientos – 1B
Brett Baty – 3B
Marcus Semien – 2B
A.J. Ewing – CF
Tyrone Taylor – LF
Luis Torrens – C
SP: Christian Scott (RHP)
James Wood – RF
Luis Garcia – 1B
Brady House – 3B
CJ Abrams – SS
Daylen Lile – LF
Jacob Young – CF
Jose Tena – DH
Jorbit Vivas – 2B
Drew Millas – C
SP: Jake Irvin (RHP)
First pitch: 6:45 PM EDT
TV: SNY
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App, 92.3 HD2
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Yankees manager Aaron Boone hit on several topics on Monday ahead of the first game of a three-game series against the Toronto Blue Jays in The Bronx...
With Elmer Rodriguez being optioned to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre following his start Sunday and Yovanny Cruz’s promotion, the focus turns to what that means for Cole’s return from Tommy John surgery and his 2026 season debut.
“We’ll see, we’re kinda talking about that here today and tomorrow,” Boone said about Cole. “And we’ll make a call one way or the other.”
Boone added that they are going to talk with Cole to see what “makes the most sense” with him moving forward and if his next outing is another rehab start at Triple-A or with the Yanks.
“Just kinda everyone that’s involved from the training staff, Gerrit, just wanting to do the right thing, what’s the right timing?” Boone said. “Again, whatever we do, it’s with the long game in mind. A need doesn't necessarily mean we're bringing him back.
“If we feel like he’s absolutely ready to go and checked all the boxes, then we’ll make that call.”
With that said, he added that Cole’s next start being with the Yankees is "on the table.”
Cole last pitched on Saturday for Scranton, when he allowed one run on six hits and a walk with six strikeouts, which Boone called “mostly excellent.”
“Good, he looks really good,” Boone said of Cole’s start. “I think this outing was a little more with competition in mind, going to get guys out and stepping on it stuff-wise. I think he threw 85, 86 pitches. Finished really strong. I think I’ve watched every single pitch he’s made in rehab. I think it’s gone really well.”
On Cruz’s promotion, the manager said they “felt like we needed the extra arm in [the bullpen] today.”
“We really like the upside, obviously,” Boone said of Cruz. “Really kinda caught our eye at the end of [spring training] with some really strong outings. Obviously, it is the big arm, 100 mph, good slider, has had some success down there, has had some struggles down there.
“Just felt like we needed the extra coverage today, felt like he was the guy in line.”
For the second-straight day, Wells is not in the Yankees lineup as the catcher is going through it at the plate, batting .164 (10-for-61) with 20 strikeouts to eight walks for a .519 OPS in his last 19 games. The skipper is giving the backstop the day, but it doesn’t seem like this will be a long-term absence.
"Obviously been scuffling this trip,” Boone said of Wells, who is 2-for-14 with seven strikeouts in his last four games. “[Sunday’s] game, the way it turned out with him getting in there for half the game, I just felt like today with the lefty, another good day to have him down."
"It's terrible,” Wells told reporters on Monday. “You can read the numbers. So it's not good."
Boone believes that despite Wells’ struggles of late, he will return to form.
“He’s always been a hitter, and he’s had some inconsistencies certainly at this level, but he’s also hit at this level,” the manager said. “He’s hit 20 homers a couple times, has shown stretches of where he’s a really tough out, there’s some power there, obviously.”
Boone noted that Wells, who won’t turn 27 until July, is “still a fairly young player in the league” and is dealing with a famously difficult position to balance hitting and defense.
“When you’re a front-line catcher, too, and there’s a lot of responsibilities on your plate, as we talk about with a lot of guys, it doesn’t just happen overnight,” Boone said, adding later, "He's catching really well, which is the No. 1 job, right?
“… He’s certainly, I think, established himself as an outstanding defensive catcher and a leader of our staff. So he’s been able to separate the two, which is very important, but I expect more out of him offensively, and we gotta keep working to try and get him on track."
Wells' biggest strength behind the plate is his framing, and he's in the 95th percentile in stealing calls in MLB.
Ben Rice could catch, but with him offering such great production at the plate – leading the league in OPS at 1.077 with 15 home runs in 42 games – and having a hand injury earlier in the month, it doesn’t appear the Yanks want to risk him behind the plate.
Asked if he expects Wells to be back in the lineup Tuesday against Blue Jays right-hander Dylan Cease, Boone said, “We’ll see.”
In the meantime, J.C. Escarra again starts in Wells' place, but his hitting isn't much to write home about either, with a .174/.224/.283 slash line for a .507 OPS in 16 games this year.
Caballero played catch ahead of the game in the first bit of baseball activities since landing on the IL with a broken finger.
“He’ll play some light catch today,” Boone said, adding he’d been taking grounders earlier. “Seems like he’s been improving every day.”
Boone said it “feels like” Caballero’s IL stint will be for the minimum of 10 days, but that is contingent on him continuing to improve.
The Mets have pitched a lot better lately. The high-leverage relievers are in an excellent run of form as a group and with Christian Scott settling in, the rotation seemed to have found some stability. But then the injury bug bit again of course and things will soon be launched back into chaos. But on the whole, this meter is a positive one.
| Player | Last week | This week |
|---|---|---|
| Huascar Brazobán, RHP | ||
| Clay Holmes, RHP | ||
| Craig Kimbrel, RHP | ||
| Sean Manaea, LHP | ||
| Nolan McLean, RHP | ||
| Tobias Myers, RHP | ||
| Freddy Peralta, RHP | ||
| David Peterson, RHP | ||
| Brooks Raley, LHP | ||
| Christian Scott, RHP | ||
| Austin Warren, RHP | ||
| Luke Weaver, RHP | ||
| Devin Williams, RHP |
Clay Holmes had been the Mets’ ace for the first month and a half of the season, but the Mets will now be without him for quite some time, as he was hit with a comebacker on Friday night and fractured his fibula. When the injury happened, he was in the midst of his first start in which he gave up three runs or more all season (which resulted in the Mets’ only loss in the past two series), which speaks to how good he has been. It’s an absolutely massive blow for the Mets.
On the flip side, David Peterson has shown a massive improvement since the Mets have started using an opener ahead of him. Peterson holds a 2.77 ERA in May across three outings and he earned the win in two of those three outings. The third one in Arizona was a game in which he gave up three runs in five innings of work, but none of them were earned. Huascar Brazobán has served as the opener most days when Peterson is slated to pitch and it has worked out well for the most part, but the game in Arizona was not kind to him either. After a clean first inning, he walked two batters to lead off the second and both of them eventually came around to score, charging him with two runs. Brazobán has otherwise been brilliant though with his most impressive outing coming against the Tigers on Wednesday in which he pitched 2 1/3 scoreless frames in a game the Mets would go on to win in extras.
Christian Scott started that game on Wednesday and needed Brazobán to record the final out of the fifth inning. Other than not going deeper into games, Scott has been solid since his horrific first start back from Tommy John surgery. But it makes sense that Carlos Mendoza is not pushing Scott too much in the early going. He’s been perfectly cromulent for what the Mets need him to do, which is help hold the rotation together as the Mets ride out this storm of injuries.
The same can’t be said for Sean Manaea; it’s hard to say what the Mets can do about him at this point because, even though his velocity keeps rising and is getting closer to his average from last season, he has not been effective in any role. The Mets pretty much only use him in low leverage and they were forced into a situation yesterday where they were down, but within striking distance, but because they had used their high leverage guys the day before, Manaea had to come in to pitch the middle innings. He gave up three additional runs (only two of them earned because of the whacky miscommunication between Tyrone Taylor and Bo Bichette in shallow left field) and almost put the game out of reach for the Mets, who were luckily able to come back, but Manaea gave them a much steeper hill to climb. That was the first time Manaea had pitched in a week and he had only thrown 1 1/3 innings in the month of May before that—a scoreless inning in Arizona and a poor, but ultimately inconsequential outing in Colorado in a game where the Mets were up big.
But ultimately the Mets did win yesterday and a gutsy performance from Devin Williams, who has been excellent, helped make it happen. He struck out the first batter he faced and then issued a walk, but then induced a double play grounder off the bat of Austin Wells to strand the ghost runner and set up the walk-off, for which Williams earned the win. That capped off a run of 5 2/3 innings over six games in the past two weeks in which Williams has gone unscored upon. Over those 5 2/3 innings, Williams has struck out seven, walked two, and earned three saves and two wins.
Williams isn’t the only one with a sparkly 0.00 ERA for this meter. Luke Weaver holds that distinction as well and earns a fireball for his incredibly clutch performance on Saturday, in which he inherited a bases loaded, nobody out jam and stranded all three Yankees runners by striking out two consecutive batters and then inducing a groundout to end the inning. He then went on to pitch a scoreless eighth inning as well. Weaver pitched a scoreless inning apiece across three other appearances in the past two weeks.
Weaver inherited that jam from Brooks Raley, who helped David Peterson navigate his way out of the sixth but then had the seventh inning get away from him a bit. But because of Weaver’s heroics, Raley’s 0.00 ERA for this meter was preserved. It was Raley who earned the win in the Mets’ other walk-off victory in the past week, which took place on Wednesday. Like Williams yesterday, Raley stranded the ghost runner in the tenth to set the stage for the walk-off in the bottom of the inning. In total, Raley pitched five innings across five games in the past two weeks and was unscored upon in all five outings. He has been the Mets’ most reliable reliever this season and his season ERA is down to 1.02.
Freddy Peralta was the starter in yesterday’s thrilling come from behind win and battled through not having his best control, limiting the damage to three runs in five innings despite issuing six walks. Peralta has not been flawless, but he has been quite good, as advertised—a pitcher who does not often go deep into the game, but almost always keeps his team in the game. Yesterday’s outing was the worst of the three he’s had so far in May. He pitched five scoreless innings in the Mets’ lopsided win against the Rockies—an impressive feat in Coors Field. He was the beneficiary of a lot of run support again on May 12 in the series opener against the Tigers in which he provided a quality start, giving up just two runs on seven hits in six innings of work while striking out seven batters, earning his third win of the season.
Austin Warren pitched the final two innings in that game against the Tigers and allowed only one hit in the appearance, striking out three batters. Warren is also part of the 0.00 ERA club this time around and what is even more impressive is that all five of his outings over the past two weeks were more than one inning. Though Warren has been ping-ponged back and forth due to the fact that he has options, he has demonstrated that he deserves to stay in the big league bullpen.
The same can’t necessarily be said for Craig Kimbrel, who remains mostly because the Mets have very few other options and they do not want to expose the future Hall of Famer to waivers despite the fact that his best days are long behind him. Kimbrel hasn’t been awful for the Mets, but he’s been inconsistent. Things began on a high note in the series opener in Colorado when Kimbrel pitched a scoreless eighth inning in a close game to set things up for Devin Williams and earned his first hold of the season. But then a few days later in the series finale he gave up a go-ahead grand slam off the bat of Jake McCarthy and took the loss. He bounced back after that and had consecutive scoreless outings in Arizona and against the Tigers on Thursday. But then he yielded an insurance run to the Yankees on Friday in the form of a Ben Rice solo homer.
To be fair to Kimbrel, he wasn’t the only one who fell victim to Coors Field. Tobias Myers had arguably his worst outing of the season in Denver, giving up four runs in the sixth inning before he was pulled after just 2/3 of an inning of work. It didn’t end up costing the Mets the game, but it forced the Mets to use their higher leverage arms in a game they planned to have Myers pitch multiple innings, which had negative downstream effects. Myers redeemed himself after that though. He pitched a scoreless inning in two of the games in Arizona, including a scoreless tenth last Friday to earn the first save of his career. He gave up an inconsequential solo homer but nothing more in Thursday’s victory that secured the Mets’ sweep of the Tigers. He then delivered two scoreless innings of work in Friday’s game to keep the Mets in it.
Myers’ outing on Thursday came in relief of Nolan McLean, who notched a quality start and earned his second win of the season. He gave up six hits across seven innings of work, but limited the damage to just three runs, striking out seven batters and walking three. McLean also delivered a quality start in Arizona in the only game the Mets won in that series—the extra-inning game that Myers saved. In that start McLean gave up just one run on three hits, striking out six and walking just one batter. With Holmes sidelined for a considerable length of time, McLean is now the undisputed ace of the staff and the Mets are going to need him to keep this brilliance up if they can hope to continue clawing their way back to .500, even as the injuries pile up.
Monday notes…
Cubs lineup:
Brewers lineup:
As you’ll recall, Shōta Imanaga’s second half was so bad that the Cubs didn’t use him in the deciding game of the division series in 2025.
Things have changed. Imanaga is 100 percent healthy again and in three starts this month he has been lights-out: 1.35 ERA, 0.950 WHIP, 21 strikeouts and only four walks in 20 innings.
Current Brewers, though, are hitting .329 (25-for-76) against Shōta. In particular, William Contreras has owned him — 5-for-12 with three home runs. Imanaga has been stingy with the long ball this year, just five in 54.1 innings. Keep that up and that’s a recipe for success.
With the wind blowing out tonight, this is a good test for ShĹŤta to keep the ball in the yard.
Brandon Sproat came to the Brewers from the Mets in the Freddy Peralta deal over the offseason.
He’s had some good outings and some rough ones and has issued a lot of walks — 20 in 36 innings, an overall 13 percent walk rate, which is pretty bad. Hopefully the patient Cubs can make something out of that.
Sproat has never faced the Cubs or anyone on their active roster.
Here is the weather forecast for the area around Wrigley Field.
Today’s game is on Marquee Sports Network.
Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.
Baseball-reference.com game preview
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Join us and discuss game 1 of 4 in Miami in the comments below, as JR Ritchie takes the mound for the Braves and the Marlins counter with Max Meyer.
Game Date/Time: Monday, May 18, 6:40 p.m. EDT
Location: loanDepot Park, Miami, FL
TV: BravesVision, Gray TV
Streaming: MLB.tv
Radio: 680 AM / 93.7 FM The Fan
Gerrit Cole’s return to the New York Yankees rotation could be coming sooner than expected. Aaron Boone said that the idea of Cole making his next start Friday at Yankee Stadium was “on the table.”
Cole, 35, is returning to the big league after March 2025 Tommy John surgery. He threw 86 pitches over 5 1/3 innings for Triple-A Scranton on Saturday. The original plan had Cole making one more minor-league rehab start.
The Yankees have likely lost Max Fried for a month or two due to a bone bruise. Carlos Rodon struggled after beginning the season on the injured list.
Still, Boone told reporters they would not rush Cole back because of holes in the rotation.
“A need doesn’t necessarily mean we’re bringing him back,” Boone said, while also acknowledging it is something that the Yankees have “on the table.”
Cole will return to a significantly different rotation. The Yankees have managed fairly well without him because of the emergence of Cam Schlittler, who has a 1.35 ERA this season, and Will Warren, who has a 2.49 ERA. Fried was pitching to a 2.09 ERA before he got hurt. The Yankees' rotation has a 3.10 ERA, the best in the majors.
He has not pitched in the big leagues in nearly 17 months, not since Game 5 of the 2024 World Series. He had elbow surgery on March 11, 2025.
The right-hander was limited to 17 starts and 95 innings in the regular season in 2024 because of a nerve issue that the team said was unrelated to the torn UCL that shut him down for 2025.
Cole was the unanimous 2023 American League Cy Young Award winner with 15 wins, a 2.63 ERA and 222 strikeouts in 209 innings.
Over 12 major league seasons, Cole has a 3.18 ERA and 2,251 strikeouts with the Pirates, Astros and Yankees.
Cole signed a $324-million, nine-year contract with New York in December 2019. He is making $36 million a year through 2028.
The Yankees host the first-place Tampa Bay Rays on Friday.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Gerrit Cole injury update: Latest as return to the Yankees nears
Hoowee, folks. We have a lot of roster moves this afternoon, five to be exact, so let’s get right into it. We’re putting the basics here for now: expect updates throughout the afternoon as we write up these moves.
Called Up:
Robinson Ortiz, LHP:
Ortiz is a 26-year-old leftie reliever who so far has been luckier than he has been good. A 1.69 ERA with no XBHs given up in Tacoma this year is certainly eye-popping, but a .216 BABIP, 17.6 BB% and a 4.09 FIP bely a more complicated profile. He was acquired in the Gough trade last November.
Ortiz will join Ferrer as the only lefties in the bullpen. He will be making his deubt when he appears.
Optioned to Tacoma:
Domingo González, RHP:
González made four appearances in his first turn in the bigs, sporting an unsightly WHIP of 1.412 but giving up no runs across his first 5.2 innings of work. He has pitched in three of the last four games, so this move is less tied to results and more to needing a fresh arm. He’s one I’d expect to see a couple more times this year.
Leo Rivas, INF
Oh, Leo. While his flexibility in the infield has been greatly appreciated with various players taking their turn on the Injured List, his .131/.263/.172 line has not been. With Colt Emerson up for good, the Mariners no longer have need for a Leo Rivas. Ranking in the bottom 1% in the league for xwOBA, xBA, xSLG, and Hard-Hit%, the bat is beyond unplayable.
Reinstated from Injured List:
Patrick Wisdom, INF (left oblique strain)
The 34-year-old infielder has appeared in one game this year with the Mariners, a pinch-hit strikeout back on April 14 before hitting the IL with a left oblique strain. During an 8-game rehab stint in Tacoma, he hit .304 with 3 home runs. He likely will be a back-up third-baseman to potentially spell Colt Emerson against tough lefties until Brendon Donovan returns.
Selected to the 40-man:
Brennen Davis, OF:
The 26-year-old outfielder was a 2nd-round pick for the Cubs in 2018. He seemed to have a promising trajectory, winning MVP in the 2021 Futures Game and twice was chosen as the Cubs’ Minor League Player of the Year. A series of injuries derailed his career. Back surgery, an ankle fracture and re-injuring his back meant that he averaged just 57 games per season from 2022-2025. Losing four prime developmental seasons surely set him back, but his performance in Tacoma has been more than solid so far. He ranks near the top of the league in exit velocity, Barrel%, and xwOBA, showing more pop than he’s been known for in the past with a .948 OPS.
The Cincinnati Reds take their tattered pitching staff further on their road show on Monday, this time to the City of Brotherly Love. That’s where they’ll find the Philadelphia Phillies, who so hot right now they’re shucking popcorn.
Seriously, they were once 9-19 and fired their manager, yet since Don Mattingly took the helm they’ve just started destroying everything in their path and now boast the exact same 24-23 record on the season as the Cincinnati Reds. That’s good enough for 2nd place in the NL East right now, and the Reds can thank them for company in the cellar of the NL Central as the Phillies enter tonight’s game fresh off a three-game sweep of the Pittsburgh Pirates to park them also at 24-23 on the season.
One-time almost-Red Kyle Schwarber has been leading the charge for the Phillies, his 20 dingers so far this season the most in all of baseball. The Reds, who do not have Kyle Schwarber on their roster despite him hailing from Middletown, will try to pick up the pieces against him this evening, with hopes that Nick Lodolo can finally lock-in after missing over a month on the shelf with blister issues and return to the excellent form he flashed back in 2025.
The exhausted bullpen sure could use the rest.
First pitch on Monday will be chucked by righty Andrew Painter at 6:40 PM ET, and Terry Francona has shuffled his lineup once again to feature Matt McLain as the Reds leadoff man for the evening. TJ Friedl and Ke’Bryan Hayes will bat back to back at the bottom of the order, with both currently ranking among the 9 worst hitters of the 223 with at least 120 PA this season.
Here’s the full lineup for the start. Go Reds!
The Mets will call up Zach Thornton to pitch in Wednesday’s game against the Nationals, according to Carlos Mendoza. It is unclear whether he will get the start or pitch behind an opener, but he will be used in some capacity.
Thornton will pitch in place of the injured Clay Holmes, who suffered a fractured fibula after taking a line drive off the bat of Spencer Jones in his last start against the Yankees. Holmes is expected to miss significant time and not return until well into the summer, leaving the team in need of a new arm. Other options under consideration including using Tobias Myers (in a potential bullpen game) or calling up another prospect, such as Jack Wenninger or Jonah Tong.
Thornton started the year in Double-A Binghamton, posting a 3.60 ERA in five starts for the Rumble Ponies before being promoted to Triple-A Syracuse. In two starts there, he posted a 2.25 ERA, allowing three earned runs across 12 innings pitched. He has struck out 40 batters across 37 innings this year between Double-A and Triple-A.
Thornton entered the year ranked No. 13 in the Mets’ farm system by MLB Pipeline, and No. 14 by Amazin’ Avenue. In his preview of the left-hander, Steve Sypa wrote:
The 6’3”, 170-pound left-hander throws from a high-three-quarter arm slot and has plenty of deception in his delivery with a funky, up-tempo delivery that incorporates an extremely long arm action through the back and a slingy, crossfire release. Despite all of the movement in his delivery, Thornton has above-average command of all of his pitches. He can pound the zone with pitches, throw borderline pitches to get batters to chase, and work to all quadrants of the zone with all of his pitches. While no one pitch that the left-hander throws is more than an average offering, his large repertoire keeps batters guessing and his impeccable command helps all of those pitches play up to their greatest potential. Coming into the 2025 season, he made attacking batters and putting them in pitcher’s counts earlier a goal, a strategy that paid major dividends for him.
Thornton throws a four-seam fastball and a two-seam fastball, and while the two pitches bleed into each other a great deal, they remain two distinct pitches and two distinct grips that the left-hander uses. Coming into the 2025 season, his fastball generally sat in the high-80s-to-low-90s, topping out as high as 95 MPH, but after doing off-season weight and strength training, his fastball has more consistently sat in the low-to-mid-90s. When thrown up in the zone, his four-seam fastball has averaged a slightly above-average induced vertical break a bit over 15 inches, while his two-seam fastball has roughly MLB average downward and horizontal movement.
The left-hander’s slider generally has been his most effective strikeout pitch. Like his fastball, off-season weight training during the winter of 2024-2025 gave his slider a little extra velocity, and the pitch now sits comfortably in the mid-to-high-80s, previously sitting more in the low-to-mid-80s. The pitch has slurvy two-plane break, and like his other breaking balls, works best down in the zone thanks to its vertical drop.
Rounding out his arsenal is a curveball and changeup. His curveball sits in the mid-70s and has big 11-5 break, while his changeup sits in the low-80s with late fade and tumble. Both pitches generally induce more weak ground balls or lazy fly balls than strikeouts; In 2024, the left-hander had a 49.5% groundball rate and 25.0% flyball rate, and while both have regressed, the 43.2% and 35.2% rates he posted, respectively, still make Thornton an effective pitcher.
It is worth noting that Thornton is not on the 40-man roster, so the team will have to make a move to make room for his return. There are several players who could be options to be transferred to the 60-day IL, including Jorge Polanco and Luis Robert Jr., neither of whom appears close to returning to big league action. Earlier today, the team transferred A.J. Minter to the 60-day IL to make room for Daniel Duarte, whom they recalled from Triple-A (while optioning Joey Gerber to Triple-A).
While the Yankees’ bullpen wasn’t a real problem statistically over the first several weeks of the season, its weakness and relative lack of depth have reared their ugly head over the last week or two, blowing multiple inherited leads during a 2-7 road trip that saw the Yanks lose ground to the Rays in the early divisional race.
Well, after overworking said bullpen in the final two days of the Subway Series at Citi Field, the Yankees are adding another arm to the fray, selecting the contract of right-handed reliever Yovanny Cruz and optioning fill-in fifth-starter Elmer RodrĂguez back to Triple-A ahead of Monday’s series opener against the rival Blue Jays.
This move is the culmination of a tremendous rise for Cruz, whose MLB dreams seemed as far away as ever as recently as this offseason. He originally signed with the Chicago Cubs out of the Dominican Republic in August 2016 and slowly rose through their system, but stagnated after the COVID-19 pandemic due to injuries and struggles with command. He elected free agency after 2023 and bounced from the Padres’ system in 2024 to the Red Sox’s Double-A squad in 2025, pitching to a 3.54 ERA in 89 innings across both seasons, but walking 60 as he struggled to command a high-90s fastball.
After allowing just one run in 18.2 innings with Gigantes del Cibao in the Dominican Winter League, he was invited to Yankees’ spring training this February and lit up the radar gun, turning heads in the stands and in the clubhouse. Aaron Boone suggested he was seriously considered to break camp with the team, but was ultimately assigned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, where he’s pitched to a 3.00 ERA in 18 innings with 23 strikeouts to just nine walks.
Cruz’s arsenal is centered around his truly electric fastball, which has touched 102 mph down in Scranton and consistently sits 99, while he complements it with a high-80s slider/cutter and the occasional splitter. His performance has actually waned a bit over the last two weeks after an incredible start, but the Yankees clearly don’t see it as inhibitive towards their belief that he can contribute in the bullpen.
The demotion of RodrĂguez is interesting, as he allowed one run in 4.1 innings on Sunday in his third major league start. With no off days in the foreseeable future, the Yankees will need a fifth starter again on Friday against the AL East-leading Rays, and he cannot be recalled without an injury.
Could this be an indication that they’re willing to end Gerrit Cole’s rehab one start earlier than anticipated to make his long-awaited season debut? It doesn’t seem to be getting ruled out.
For the second time this season, the San Diego Padres swept the Seattle Mariners. They did so in terrific fashion, outscoring their opponents 17-7. It was production the Friars desperately needed before heading into tonight’s series against the division-rival Los Angeles Dodgers.
Lucas Giolito had an encouraging debut. He pitched five innings of one-hit ball before emerging for the sixth and failing to record an out. And, to be honest, it wasn’t totally his fault. Colt Emerson was walked on a ball four call that caught some of the plate. But, after that, the command fell off a bit and Giolito loaded the bases on three walks.
Yuki Matsui limited the damage, but not by much. The lefty gave up a walk to force in a run before allowing consecutive sacrifice flys to make the score, 7-3. He finally got out of the inning by striking out Cole Young.
But the story of the game (and the series) was Gavin Sheets’ incredible offense. That was apparent more so in this game than anywhere else, as the slugger went 3-for-3 with two walks, two homers and four RBIs. The Friars will need him to keep that up if they hope to beat the rival Los Angeles Dodgers this week.
Yamamoto pitched great at the beginning of the year but has looked slightly worse for wear in his recent starts. He’s given up 15 runs in his last four outings. That’s still good for a 3.60 ERA, but he’ll be looking to right the ship after surrendering a season-high five runs to the San Francisco Giants in his last outing.
Limiting hard contact has been the biggest problem for Yamamoto. He allowed five home runs in that four-game span. In his last start he gave up three to the Giants. The Padres have faced him before and struggled but could take advantage of his recent trouble tonight.
King, on the other hand, has been fantastic this season. It’s been a return to normalcy after an injury-plagued 2025 season. He boasts a 2.63 ERA across nine starts.
Ironically, the name of the game has been limiting hard contact. King has only allowed four homers all year. It will be interesting to watch what happens when the slug-happy Dodgers lineup faces him tonight.
The lineup has worked well the last few days, and it seems likely that manager Craig Stammen will stick with it. Fernando Tatis Jr. has played a ton of second base. But the club may want him in the outfield for his defense against L.A.
Sheets had himself a fantastic road trip, batting .625/.739/1.438 with a 2.177 OPS. Those almost feel fictional, but he’s really been that elite. The breakout is hopefully here to stay for this series.
Machado has swung a cold bat lately, but could return tonight against Yamamoto. The third baseman owns a .375 batting average and 1.194 OPS in his career against the right-hander (8 at-bats).
With Giolito’s debut going just about as well as it could have, the Friars only needed to use two of their relievers. Matsui and Bradgley Rodriguez covered the final four innings (two apiece), not allowing a hit and striking out five.
That leaves plenty available for game on against the Dodgers, with Jason Adam, Jeremiah Estrada, Ron Marinaccio, Adrian Morejon, Wandy Peralta and closer Mason Miller all fresh. All but Marinaccio and Peralta are high-leverage options that will likely be used tonight if the game is close.
In need of a starter following Clay Holmes’ fibula fracture, the Mets are calling up left-hander Zach Thornton from Triple-A Syracuse.
According to manager Carlos Mendoza, Thornton could start on Wednesday against the Nationals, but there also could be an opener in front of him.
The 24-year-old Thornton is ranked by Joe DeMayo as the No. 13 overall prospect in the Mets’ system, with DeMayo writing that Thornton “has the best control and command in the system and is among the best in all of minor league baseball.”
After making five starts with Double-A Binghamton to start the 2026 season, Thornton moved up to Triple-A Syracuse, where he’s made two starts and pitched to a 2.25 ERA.
"He earned it," Mendoza said. "The way he’s been throwing the ball, especially at the Triple-A level. We like him as a lefty against this lineup. His ability to throw strikes, his pitchability.
"There were a lot of names, Jonah [Tong]was one of them obviously, but in the end we decided to go with Zach."
With Kodai Senga and Holmes on the IL, the Mets needed to fill a spot in the rotation. For now, the five-man group includes Freddy Peralta, McLean, Christian Scott, Thornton [potentially with an opener], and David Peterson, who has been pitching in a bulk reliever role with an opener in front of him.
Mendoza said that the Mets will take things "one outing at a time" with Thornton before deciding whether or not he stays in the majors.
Two days after calling right-handed pitcher Joey Gerber up from Triple-A Syracuse, the Mets have optioned him back to Syracuse and called up fellow right-handed reliever Daniel Duarte to replace him on the team’s active roster. Gerber did not get into either of the two games for which he was with the big league club, and Duarte exercised an upward mobility clause in his contract that forced the Mets to either call him up or risk losing him to another organization.
To make room for Duarte on the 40-man roster, the Mets transferred left-handed reliever A.J. Minter to the 60-day injured list, a distinction that won’t have any effect on the veteran’s ability to return to the team if and when he proves to be healthy and effective.
Duarte last pitched in the big leagues in 2024 with the Twins, and he’s thrown a total of 38.1 innings as a major league player, the vast majority of which came with the Reds in 2023. In total, he has a 3.99 ERA and a 6.11 FIP as a major league pitcher, as he’s walked nearly as many batters as he’s struck out while surrendering too many home runs.
In 17.1 innings with Syracuse so far this year, Duarte has a 2.60 ERA and a 4.21 FIP with a 19.7 percent strikeout rate and a 12.7 percent walk rate. Given the Mets’ reluctance to remove Craig Kimbrel or Sean Manaea from their active roster to this point, it certainly wouldn’t be surprising to see Duarte removed from the roster within the next day or two as the Mets continue to churn fringe pitchers.