Texas Rangers lineup for May 19, 2026

DENVER, CO - MAY 18: Justin Foscue #14 of the Texas Rangers celebrates after hitting a double in the second inning during the game between the Texas Rangers and the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on Monday, May 18, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Casey Paul/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Texas Rangers lineup for May 19, 2026, against the Colorado Rockies: starting pitchers are Tyler Alexander for the Rangers and Sammy Peralta for the Rockies.

The Rangers and the Rockies face off again, with each team using a lefthanded opener to start things off. Kumar Rocker is the scheduled starter for Texas, but given his first inning struggles this year, they are apparently wanting to go with the opener strategy and let Rocker face the lower part of the lineup rather than the top of the lineup when he first takes the mound. Justin Foscue is hitting second, while Evan Carter is in the ninth spot — most likely so the Rangers can avoid him facing the lefty Peralta. Peralta has not pitched in the majors this year, and has not thrown more than 2 innings in a game in the minors this year.

The lineup:

McCutchen — DH

Foscue — 2B

Nimmo — RF

Jung — 3B

Duran — SS

Burger — 1B

Osuna — LF

Jansen — C

Carter — CF

7:40 p.m. Central start time. The game is a pick ‘em.

GAME THREAD: Guardians vs Tigers, game 50 of 162

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 17: Cleveland Guardians right fielder Chase DeLauter (24) rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the first inning of the Major League Baseball interleague game between the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Guardians on May 17, 2026, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

discuss below

Where to watch Toronto Blue Jays vs. New York Yankees: Live stream, TV channel, odds for Tuesday, May 19

The Toronto Blue Jays (21-26) take on the New York Yankees (29-19) in the second game of their series. The Yankees rallied to win 7-6 on Monday night. Scheduled starting pitchers are Dylan Cease for Toronto, with a 2.41 ERA, and Will Warren for New York, with a 3.42 ERA.

  • Toronto Blue Jays: 21-26 (No. 3 in AL East)

  • New York Yankees: 29-19 (No. 2 in AL East)

  • Spread: New York Yankees -1.5

  • Moneyline: New York Yankees -138 (55.6%) / Toronto Blue Jays +116 (44.4%)

  • Over/Under: 9.0

Toronto Blue Jays: Dylan Cease (3-1, ERA: 2.41, K: 75, WHIP: 1.18)
New York Yankees: Will Warren (5-1, ERA: 3.42, K: 59, WHIP: 1.16)

Weather: 90°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 47,309 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

Game Thread #46: Milwaukee Brewers (27-18) @ Chicago Cubs (29-19)

Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Jacob Misiorowski (32) throws during the first inning of their game against the San Diego Padres Wednesday, May 13, 2026 at American Family Field in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. | Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Brewers picked up a nice win over the Cubs yesterday in the first of a three-game series on Chicago’s north side. Today, they’ll look to take the series, and to catch up to (and pass!) the Cubs in the standings.

Yesterday, the Brewers jumped out to a sizable early lead, Brandon Sproat did enough to keep Chicago at bay despite some shakiness, and Shane Drohan did the rest. (Drohan is good.) Tonight in the second game of the series, the Brewers would figure to have a pitching advantage in a matchup between Jacob Misiorowski and Chicago’s Ben Brown.

Brown, who is a 26-year-old right-hander, did not start the year in the Cubs’ rotation. His first 12 appearances this year all came out of the bullpen, but with the injuries that the rotation is dealing with, he moved back into a starting role on May 8th. Since then, he’s made two starts, and he’s done everything the Cubs could ask. Both starts went four innings, and in those eight combined innings he’s struck out ten, walked two, and allowed just one hit and no runs. The Cubs won both games, a 7-1 victory over the Rangers on May 8 and a 2-0 win over the Braves on the 14th. For the season, Brown has a sterling 1.60 ERA and 2.45 FIP in 33 2/3 innings, but it’s worth noting that last season, Brown had a 5.92 ERA in over 100 innings, so some regression is probably expected at some point or another.

Misiorowski, of course, has planted himself firmly within the NL Cy Young race, and he’s riding some serious momentum, having made two of the best starts of his young career his last two times out. Miz hasn’t allowed a run since April 25, and he’s currently riding an 18-inning scoreless streak. He’s also leading baseball in strikeouts with 80; Cristopher Sánchez matched him with his stellar 13-strikeout shutout on Saturday, but he’s made one more start than Misiorowski, and Miz will jump back into the sole lead tonight, assuming he strikes out at least one batter.

The Brewers will operate with a Jackson Chourio – Garrett Mitchell – Sal Frelick outfield from left to right tonight with Christian Yelich as the designated hitter. Jake Bauers is the first baseman, so Andrew Vaughn will be a bench weapon tonight. William Contreras is doing the catching, and David Hamilton and Luis Rengifo will man the left side of the infield. In game number 46, this is the 46th unique lineup that the Brewers have used this season.

First pitch this evening is at 6:40 p.m. on Brewers TV and the Brewers Radio Network.

Mets vs. Nationals: Lineups, broadcast info, and open thread, 5/19/26

MESA, AZ - NOVEMBER 04: Nick Morabito #3 of the Scottsdale Scorpions warms up prior to the game between the Scottsdale Scorpions and the Mesa Solar Sox at Sloan Park on Tuesday, November 4, 2025 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Mets lineup

Carson Benge – RF
Bo Bichette – SS
Juan Soto – DH
Mark Vientos – 1B
Marcus Semien – 2B
Tyrone Taylor – CF
Nick Morabito – LF
Brett Baty – 3B
Luis Torrens – C

SP: Nolan McLean – RHP

Nationals lineup

James Wood – RF
Luis Garcia – 1B
Jose Tena – DH
CJ Abrams – SS
Daylen Lile – LF
Dylan Crews – CF
Jorbit Vivas – 3B
Drew Millas – C
Nasim Nunez – 2B

SP: Foster Griffin – LHP

Broadcast info

First pitch: 6:45 PM ET
TV: SNY
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App, 92.3 HD2

Padres finally back Michael King’s gem, blank rivals in shutout win

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 18: Third base coach Bob Henley #20 congratulates Miguel Andujar #41 of the San Diego Padres after his solo homerun during the first inning of a game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Petco Park on May 18, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Diego Padres kept the good times rolling, winning their fourth straight and besting their rivals in a true pitcher’s duel.

Michael King and Yoshinobu Yamamoto both dealt, each pitching seven brilliant innings. But King won out, shutting out the Los Angeles Dodgers’ lineup while Yamamoto made only one mistake that ended up being the difference maker. He threw a splitter that didn’t quite split and Miguel Andujar launched it into left-center field.

That was the only run the Friars would need, with the bullpen working around some tough jams. They’ll need to hope for a little more offense if they want to take the series tonight.

Taking the mound

Emmet Sheehan (LAD) v. Griffin Canning (SD)

Sheehan had a breakthrough season in 2025 with the Dodgers. In 12 starts he pitched to a career-best 2.82 ERA while limiting opponents to a .185 batting average.

He’s come back down a bit this season, owning a 4.54 ERA in a back-end role with L.A. His last two starts were solid, surrendering only three runs between his outings versus the Atlanta Braves and the San Francisco Giants. The Dodgers will hope he can do the same against the Friars’ offense tonight.

Similarly, Canning had a breakout season with the New York Mets before falling to injury midway through the season. He looked fantastic in his return from injury, but has since struggled immensely. Across his last two starts Canning’s surrendered 12 runs.

The first six of those were mostly bad luck, with the St. Louis Cardinals scoring four on a costly error by Fernando Tatis Jr. But, since then, it’s been Canning’s inability to miss bats that has been the source of struggle. He’ll either need to rediscover that ability or get some help from the offense if San Diego is to win.

Batter up!

The Dodgers actually outhit the Padres, 5-4, in yesterday’s contest. But the only hit that mattered was Andujar’s homer in the first inning.

The Friars have been using Tatis at second base a ton lately. That’s been in order to give Miguel Andujar Nick Castellanos more regular time in the starting lineup. It worked out well this weekend in Seattle but didn’t as much last night. They’ll likely do the same tonight in hopes of slugging against Sheehan.

  1. Fernando Tatis Jr., 2B
  2. Miguel Andujar, DH
  3. Gavin Sheets, 1B
  4. Manny Machado, 3B
  5. Xander Bogaerts, SS
  6. Jackson Merrill, CF
  7. Ramón Laureano, LF
  8. Nick Castellanos, RF
  9. Freddy Fermin, C

The lineup doesn’t have much history against Sheehan, so they’ll have to learn on the fly a bit. Sheets has swung a hot bat lately but didn’t reach base in last night’s game. He’ll hope to return to the overpowering slugger that just won him National League Player of the Week.

Relief corps

With King pitching the masterpiece that was his seven innings against L.A., the Friars only needed to use two of their relievers to get the job done. They made it scarier than it should have been.

Jason Adam worked around a two-out jam. He gave up a walk to Hyeseong Kim to flip the order over to Shohei Ohtani who promptly singled to put runners on the corners. Thankfully, Mookie Betts grounded into a harmless force out to end the trouble.

Mason Miller closed out the ninth for his MLB-leading 15th save. He worked around even more tense conditions, issuing back-to-back walks. With runners on first and second and no outs, Miller had thrown 10 pitches, only one of which was a strike. He threw a pitch that barely caught plate and would have been a ball had it not been challenged and overturned for strike one. After that, he was back to himself.

He got ahead, 1-2, on Will Smith before getting the backstop to fly out harmlessly. Miller then struck out Max Muncy on three pitches for the second out before grounding out Andy Pages to end any worries of a Los Angeles comeback.

That leaves plenty of relievers available for what may be a San Diego bullpen game, if Canning can’t deliver. Jeremiah Estrada, Ron Marinaccio, Yuki Matsui, Adrian Morejon, Wandy Peralta and Bradgley Rodriguez are all readily available, though Matsui and Rodriguez combined for four innings on Sunday so the others will likely be leaned on first.

Mets' Zach Thornton 'super surprised' by MLB promotion after brief tenure in Triple-A

With a need in their starting rotation following Clay Holmes’ broken leg against the Yankees on Friday night, the Mets decided to call up left-handed pitcher Zach Thornton to pitch on Wednesday.

Thornton, who was only promoted from Double-A to Triple-A a couple of weeks ago, met with the media for the first time before Tuesday’s game against the Washington Nationals and expressed his emotions about his rapid ascent.

“I’m super surprised. I mean, after only two Triple-A starts, I thought I had a little bit more work to do up there,” Thornton said. “But try to win some games here now.”

Thornton, 24, pitched well in those two starts for Syracuse, owning a 2.25 ERA (0.92 WHIP) in 12 innings. In seven starts overall this season, the left-hander has a 3.16 ERA and 40 strikeouts to 12 walks in 37 IP.

With a reputation for not being afraid while pitching, Thornton spoke about his control and attitude on the mound.

“I treat every game the same: I want to go out and compete,” he said. “I’m the ultimate competitor, I’m a strike thrower, so I’m gonna do my best to just compete here.”

“I’m not the biggest guy in the world, so I need to have something good about me, so that’s where my brain comes into play,” Thornton added, referring to his fearlessness.

To go along with his lack of fear, Thornton says he takes a bit of a mathematical approach to pitching – playing the percentages, as he put it. As long as he throws the ball in the zone, he’ll take his chances with whatever happens next as hitters “aren’t hitting .700 these days.”

“I’ll take the .250 percentages,” he said.

It’s safe to say Thornton will be pounding the strike zone in his debut on Wednesday. The left-hander has a 1.11 WHIP in 41 games (33 starts) in his minor league career and mentioned he’s “always hated walking people.”

“I hate giving up free bases, hit by pitches. I hate walking people,” he said. “Same with Carson [Benge] striking out, I hate walking people.”

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Spencer Steer, Dylan Crews and River Ryan

FANTASY BASEBALL WAIVER WIRE PICKUPS

Spencer Steer (1B/OF Reds): Rostered in 34 percent of Yahoo leagues

I thought about highlighting Steer here in those first couple of weeks after Noelvi Marte went down. That’s not because I thought he was good, but because he was locked back into regular playing time in a great situation in Cincinnati. But I didn’t. And now something kind of odd has happened… Spencer Steer actually has been quite good.

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The 28-year-old Steer was very fortunate to still be in the Reds’ plans for 2026 after three straight mediocre seasons, each a little worse than the one before. It seemed like he might fall into a part-time role against lefties after the Reds signed Eugenio Suárez and decided to keep non-roster first baseman Nathaniel Lowe, but manager Terry Francona still believed in him enough to make him the regular left fielder. A poor first three weeks followed, but Steer is hitting .320/.404/.500 with four homers in 28 games since Apr. 18, and Statcast thinks he’s been quite unlucky, giving him a .550 xSLG way ahead of his actual .454 mark. In fact, Steer is currently 16th in the majors with a .393 xwOBA.

Aside from the 19 barrels, Steer’s exit velocity numbers are more good than great. He hasn’t stunned like J.J. Bleday. But everything is a little better than usual, and that should make him fairly valuable going forward. The Reds play in one of baseball's best ballparks for right-handed hitters, and Steer rarely finds himself hitting lower than sixth in the Reds lineup (he's hit fifth or higher the last eight games in a row). He's still not a particularly exciting pickup, but he's useful.

Dylan Crews (OF Nationals): Rostered in 32 percent of Yahoo leagues

Potentially more exciting is Crews, who is back in the majors after hitting .258/.345/.432 with five homers and seven steals in 41 games for Triple-A Rochester. More importantly for the Nationals, he spent enough time in Triple-A to ensure that he'll finish this season with less than two years of service time, pushing his free agency back by a year.

Crews' Triple-A stint saw him hit the ball harder than ever before but also whiff more than usual. He averaged 94.7 mph off the bat for Rochester, a huge improvement on his MLB average of 89.5 mph. However, that came with a 24.9 percent strikeout rate, which is worse than his MLB average of 22.5 percent. He struck out in just 17.3 percent of his plate appearances during his Triple-A stints in 2024 and '25. If he continues to chase as many pitches in the majors as he was in the minors, it's not going to work out well for him.

Still, Crews rates as an instant pickup in mixed leagues. He's stolen 29 bases in just 116 games as a major leaguer, and it seems like he'll hit for more power now, even if it comes at the expense of batting average. His total of five homers for Rochester wasn't stellar, but he had 10 doubles and was pulling the ball in the air more often of late. He'll probably wind up as the Nationals' No. 3 hitter in short order, partly because they need one right-hander there to break up their string of lefties (Brady House was mostly hitting in the spot before his demotion Monday night). It's probably not going to happen this year, but it's still easy to see him blossoming into a top-20 fantasy outfielder in time.

River Ryan (SP Dodgers): Rostered in 11 percent of Yahoo leagues

One of 2024's biggest breakthrough prospects, Ryan required Tommy John surgery that August just four starts after debuting for the Dodgers. Back this year, he impressed this spring before suffering a hamstring injury with Triple-A Oklahoma City in April and missing a month. Returning to the mound Friday, he touched 100.9 mph on the gun while pitching four innings of one-run ball for the Comets, leading to speculation he might soon join a Dodgers rotation that's lost Blake Snell (elbow) and Tyler Glasnow (back).

Before that happens, though, Ryan still needs to be stretched out a little more. He threw 53 pitches in Friday's outing. He's pitched a total of 11 innings in his three starts for Oklahoma City this season, maxing out at 63 pitches. Encouraging is that he's walked only three batters, since control often lags behind stuff as pitchers return from Tommy John. Ryan is 27, so he might not be treated quite as carefully here as a 23-year-old returning from Tommy John. However, a late bloomer who focused more on hitting than pitching in college, he's never thrown more than 104 innings, and the Dodgers would surely like to see him contribute in October, even if it's as a reliever.

So, Ryan probably will have some mixed-league value this season, but it might be for only a couple of months as the Dodgers try to manage his workload. It's not a bad idea to stash him now in the hopes that he's up in early June. There's no telling whether he'll stay healthy in the long run, but he's an elite talent with multiple strikeout pitches and a strong groundball rate.

Waiver Wire Quick Hits

- Austin Martin is playing regularly for the Twins following Matt Wallner's demotion, and he's looked like a legitimate leadoff option while hitting .303/.425/.387 through 146 plate appearances. There's no power on the way, but he has had some luck on the basepaths lately, converting three straight steal attempts since May 8 after opening the season 4-for-8. He's a decent enough short-term outfield option in leagues in which Steer and Crews are unavailable.

- First baseman Kyle Manzardo seemed like a candidate for a Triple-A demotion last month, but the Guardians chose to stick with him, and after Sunday's two-homer game, he's hitting .295/.367/.591 this month. His .428 xwOBA backs it up, too. His bat speed is up a little, and his average exit velocity has jumped from 87.0 mph in April to 92.2 mph this month.

Chicago Cubs vs. Milwaukee Brewers preview, Tuesday 5/19, 6:40 CT

Today’s roster move: Here

Tuesday notes…

  • 10 STRAIGHT WINS. THE NEXT 10, NOT SO MUCH: Tonight’s game will be the Cubs’ 10th since the last of their 10 straight wins on May 8 at Texas. They are 2-7 since then. A loss tonight would tie for their worst record in the 10 games following any of their 22 previous double-digit winning streaks in which they played 10 subsequent games. They were 2-8 after winning 11 in a row in 1944. They have gone 3-7 following five double-digit streaks: in 1917 (after 10 wins), 1927 (12), 1953 (10), 1970 (11) and 1998 (10). Following their earlier 10-game streak this season, the Cubs went 7-3 in their next 10 games, tying for their third-best such record. They were 9-1 twice in 1906. They had been 7-3 four times since then, but not since 1945, after 11 wins. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
  • CUBS vs. BREWERS: The Cubs are 36-35 in second games of series at home vs. the Brewers. They are 18-13 after having lost first games. In all games, the Cubs are 119-111. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
  • THE BUSCH LEAGUE: Michael Busch, 17 games in May: .339/.493/.607 (19-for-56) with seven doubles, a triple, two home runs, 17 walks and 16 RBI.
  • TODAY IN CUBS HISTORY: Kerry Wood threw six solid innings and the Cubs defeated the Diamondbacks 6-2 at Wrigley Field. It was the first win of what would become a 12-game winning streak, the team’s longest since a 14-game streak in 1936. It happened 25 years ago today, Saturday, May 19, 2001.

Cubs lineup:

Brewers lineup:

Ben Brown, RHP vs. Jacob Misiorowski, RHP

Ben Brown has stepped up after being asked to slot into the rotation when Matthew Boyd was injured.

In two starts: eight innings, one hit, two walks, 10 strikeouts.

That’s really good! Brown also has thrown well in long relief this year. After throwing 65 pitches in his last start against the Braves, Brown is likely going to be asked to go 75-80 pitches and hopefully six innings, as the bullpen has been a bit overworked lately (and not good).

Historically, he’s done very well vs. the Brewers: three starts, 18 innings, 1.00 ERA, 0.778 WHIP, 19 strikeouts. Current Brewers are 8-for-53 (.151) against Ben with 18 strikeouts.

Brown will need to be on his best game tonight because Jacob Misiorowski has been striking out pretty much everyone in sight this year. He has faced 202 batters and struck out 80 (MLB leader). That’s a 39.6 percent strikeout rate which is just ridiculous. He’s also thrown more 100 mile per hour pitches (233) than all other starters in MLB combined (144).

He made two starts against the Cubs last year and allowed six runs (five earned) in eight innings, largely because he issued five walks. He’s cut down on the walks this year, so this will not be an easy game. At all.

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.

MLB.com Gameday

Baseball-reference.com game preview

Please visit our SB Nation Brewers site Brew Crew Ball. If you do go there to interact with Brewers fans, please be respectful, abide by their individual site rules and serve as a good representation of Cub fans in general and BCB in particular.

The 2026 game discussion procedure has been changed, so please take note.

You’ll find the game preview, like this one, posted separately on the front page two hours before game time (90 minutes for some early day games following night games).

At the same time, a StoryStream containing the preview will also post on the front page, titled “Cubs vs. (Team) (Day of week/date) game threads.” It will contain every post related to that particular game.

The Live! (formerly “First Pitch”) thread will still post at five minutes to game time. It will also post to the front page. That will be the only live game discussion thread. After the game, the recap and Heroes and Goats will also live on the front page as separate posts.

You will also be able to find the preview, Live! thread, recap and Heroes and Goats in this section link. The StoryStream for each game can also be found in that section.

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What moves should the Mariners make while Cal Raleigh is on IL?

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - AUGUST 25: Cal Raleigh #29 and Mitch Garver #18 of the Seattle Mariners react after beating the San Diego Padres at T-Mobile Park on August 25, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Until last night’s win over the White Sox featuring Colt Emerson’s first MLB hit and home run, the vibes were pretty bad in Mariners-ville. And that was before Cal Raleigh hit the Injured List. As Cal himself and many others have said, “Obliques are tricky.” What should the Mariners do while Cal is out? Mitch Garver and Jhonny Peredia, with all due respect, do not inspire a great amount of confidence. Peredia is clearly a great defensive catcher, but has yet to hit much. GarvField is the ABS Challenge guru and is good for one dinger per fiscal quarter, but other than that it’s pretty rough. So I asked THE FEED for some alternative ideas and the FEED responded with some pretty good ideas and takes. Once again, here’s my patented and very scientific Mariners Hot Take Ranking System:

Let’s get into it.

Poster BeHappy1 says, “Is Harry Ford available?

This was a fairly common response/joke around Mariners-ville and honestly…..kinda tempting? (/looks at Ford’s AAA stats so far this season) Okay, well, maybe not. This take is deceptive. It seems inflammatory, BRASH even, but the more you pull it apart, you realize you’ve been BEAVAN’d.

Poster RidiculousNonsense says, “Dan was a catcher! It’s like riding a bike, right? Bring Dan back!”

Obviously a joke take, but a pretty good one just for the mental image alone. Giving this one a BOSIO. Has there ever been a player-manager who was the catcher? Could be the move….

BBA-MARINERS-JAYS-WILSON CATCH

Poster and Staff Writer Connor Donovan says, “I, for one, would love to find a way to grab Bo Naylor from the Guardians.”

Ding ding ding! This is what I want. I don’t care what prospect capital it takes to make this happen, we deserve it. Two Naylors, too furious. We’ve been treated to 26 years of highlights from Griffey Sr. and Jr. played together, right? Think of the brotherly teammates content the Mariners could create with this move! So much potential. Plus, they’ve already been teammates in Cleveland, so it’d be a reunion in more than one way. Give this one a BRASH ranking.

That’s all for this week. Hopefully the Mariners can keep the good vibes going and, I dunno, win some more games? Would be cool, to be quite honest.

Kyle Schwarber remains out of Phillies lineup vs. Reds due to illness

PHILADELPHIA — Kyle Schwarber remains out of the Philadelphia Phillies lineup for the second game of a three-game series against the Cincinnati Reds.

Phillies interim manager Don Mattingly told reporters at Citizens Bank Park on Tuesday that Schwarber is feeling "a little better" but "not good enough" to be in the lineup for the back-to-back National League East Division champions.

"He seems a little better, but not good enough (to) obviously be in there. We'll see how it goes as the day goes on," Mattingly said. "Yesterday really was no shot. Today, maybe. ... He may have a shot to hit."

Tuesday's absence from the lineup marks the second straight game that the MLB home run leader could miss due to illness. Trea Turner will serve as the designated hitter on Tuesday against Reds right-handed pitcher Chase Burns in Schwarber's absence, giving Edmundo Sosa the start at shortstop.

Schwarber is in the midst of a historic home run tear, as he has nine home runs in his last 10 games. With his multi-home run game against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Friday, May 15 at PNC Park, Schwarber became the first player in baseball to reach 20 home runs this season, and the first player since 2006 to hit at least 20 home runs in the first 45 games of a season, and only the 10th in history to do so.

He's hitting .239 in the month of May with 16 RBIs. He holds a .230 batting average on the season, which is fifth-best among Phillies hitters, and is second in MLB in slugging with a .624 slugging percentage.

"It's almost indescribable to do what he's doing," former Phillies shortstop and five-time All-Star Larry Bowa told USA TODAY Sports.

The Phillies moved to two games above .500 with a 5-4, come-from-behind win against the Reds on Monday night, thanks to a two-run, go-ahead home run from Bryson Stott in the bottom of the eighth inning.

A win for the Phillies Tuesday would give them their seventh straight series win since Mattingly took over on April 28 for Rob Thomson, who was fired after four seasons. It would also make them the second team in Major League Baseball since 1990 to win seven straight series after losing six straight series.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Is Kyle Schwarber playing for Phillies tonight? MLB HR leader out of Phillies lineup

Yankees announce Gerrit Cole to make season debut Friday night

Aug 19, 2020; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Gerrit Cole (45) warms up in the bullpen before his start against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Once Max Fried hit the IL with an elbow issue last week, the Yankees were in a bit of an awkward spot. They had a former Cy Young award winner nearing the very end of a lengthy rehab process, yet it seemed like he might not be quite ready to fill in now that his co-ace was injured.

But after seeing their erstwhile ace brush 100 mph in his most recent start for Scranton, the Yankees decided they’d seen enough. Gerrit Cole is back.

Aaron Boone announced today that Cole will make his first start at the major-league level this year on Friday night against the Tampa Bay Rays. The right-hander is set to throw his first meaningful pitch for the Yankees in over a year and a half.

He looks ready. Cole topped out at 99.6 mph over the weekend and sat 97 mph on his four-seam fastball, higher than his average fastball velocity in both 2023 and 2024. After a gradual ramp-up over the course of his minor-league rehab assignment, Cole ran his pitch count up to 86 in his last start, suggesting he’s close to fully built-up. He also threw a bullpen session at Yankee Stadium earlier this afternoon that, after Cole came out of it well, likely sealed the Yankees’ decision.

Cole seemed like an obvious option once the Yankees sent Elmer Rodríguez, who made one spot start in place of Fried, back down to Triple-A. Having Cole make one last rehab start in which he pushed his pitch count past 90 might’ve been a nice luxury in a world in which the Yankees led the AL East and had a rotation full of high-level starters. Now, Fried is recovering and the Rays are coming to town with the division lead in hand. Rather than cobble together some sort of bullpen game, Boone will hand the ball to Cole to face Tampa.

It’s been a shaky stretch for the Yankees the last week or two, but they have a chance this week to demonstrably turn the tide. They play host to division rivals all week, and now get their former ace back looking ready to go. It’s time for them to make a move and close the gap with the Rays in the AL East.

Cubs roster move: Caleb Thielbar activated from IL, Ty Blach DFA

Caleb Thielbar suffered a mild hamstring strain April 23 in a game against the Phillies. Here’s how that happened [VIDEO].

So Thielbar has missed almost four weeks. He threw an inning of scoreless relief for High-A South Bend on Saturday, striking out two and throwing 23 pitches.

Today, the Cubs activated Thielbar from the 15-day injured list.

To make room for Thielbar on the 26-man active roster, left-hander Ty Blach, who was just added to the 40-man and 26-man rosters Sunday and threw three scoreless innings against the Brewers on Monday, was designated for assignment. He will likely clear waivers and return to Iowa. This move leaves an open spot on the 40-man roster.

Thielbar will be available for tonight’s game at Wrigley Field against the Brewers. This should be a boost to the bullpen. As always, we await developments.

The Mets are looking to the future to help win games in the present

Nothing about this season is going as planned for the New York Mets. They enter play on Tuesday at five games under .500 despite having the second-highest payroll in baseball. Even while being in the midst of a hot streak, it's not the high-priced stars who are driving the turnaround, but an infusion of young talent that wasn't meant to be relied on so much in 2026.

When Carson Benge made the Mets roster out of spring training, it wasn't a major surprise. He was the 19th overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft and the second-ranked prospect in the Mets' system. Coming into spring training, he was the 13th-ranked prospect in all of baseball, according to MLB Pipeline, and the 19th-ranked one, according to Baseball America. He was a highly-regarded young player.

He was just supposed to be an ancillary piece of the puzzle in 2026.

Benge had played just 24 games above Double-A in his professional career, and had only played 32 games at Double-A, so he didn't have a long track record of at-bats in the upper minors. What's more, he struggled in his time at Triple-A, slashing .178/.272/.311 in 103 plate appearances. Even after winning the starting right field job out of spring training, he hit either eighth or ninth for the Mets in the first 12 games of the season. This was Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto's team, and Benge was just one of a handful of players who could help the team win with defense, baserunning, or contact rates that would support the superstars.

Until injuries changed everything.

First, Juan Soto missed 15 games with a right calf strain. On the day he came back, Francisco Lindor strained his calf and has now been sidelined for 23 games. Newly-acquired center fielder Luis Robert has also missed 20 games with a lumbar spine disc herniation, and new first baseman Jorge Polanco has missed 31 games with wrist and Achilles injuries.

Somebody else was going to need to step up.

Early on, it didn't seem like that would be Benge. The rookie slashed .179/.247/.282 in his first 25 MLB games with two home runs and six steals, but also a 22.4% strikeout rate and a well-below-average 53 wRC+. It would be natural for a young hitter to feel overwhelmed by that kind of early struggle.

"It's tough when you first get here and start off slow," said Mets second baseman Marcus Semien, who hit .234/.300/.372 with six home runs and a 27.5% strikeout rate in 64 games as a 23-year-old in 2014 with the White Sox. "They gave [Carson] the starting outfield job right away as a guy who spent a lot of time in Double-A last year, a little bit in Triple-A. That's a tall task for him, but we're all going to go through ups and downs. The talent will eventually get you out of it. While you have all that talent, while you're here, you're going to learn more and more, so you're only going to get better."

That's certainly been the case for Benge, who, despite his early struggles, never deviated from his approach: 'I don't feel like anything changed. Just coming out here, playing the same game, staying steady in my work, and I feel like things just started to turn the corner." They turned the corner in a big way.

Over his last 25 games, Benge is hitting .333 with two home runs, 18 runs scored, 14 RBI, and three steals. The Mets moved him into the lead-off spot seven games ago, and he has responded by hitting .412 with six RBI, eight runs scored, and a .915 OPS in those seven games entering Tuesday. Not that where he hits in the order matters to Benge at all.

"Not at all," he said one day after delivering a game-winning hit against the Tigers on May 12th. "It's always hit the ball hard, have a quality AB, get on base. That's all I'm thinking about every time I go up there."

That business-like approach seems to be a common thread among the Mets' young talent. Despite both Benge and fellow rookie outfielder A.J. Ewing being dynamic athletes who are capable of making explosive plays on the field, they both seem methodical and measured in their approach to the game: "I'm just coming out here and competing every day," said Benge. "Having fun, not taking it too seriously, treating it like a kid's game, but also having that professional approach to it."

"Professional approach" may also be the best way to describe Ewing.

The 21-year-old has shot through the Mets system this year. He started the season at Double-A but was promoted to Triple-A after just 18 games. Then, after 12 solid games in Triple-A, the Mets promoted Ewing to the big league roster to help fill the void left in the wake of Luis Robert's injury. Some on the outside may have viewed that promotion as rash or desperate, but the Mets knew what they were getting in Ewing, who stole 70 bases in the minors in 2025. The 21-year-old has hit the ground running, going 7-for-23 in his first seven games with one triple, one home run, six runs scored, two steals, and a 7/7 K/BB ratio.

It's that advanced approach at the plate that has fueled much of Ewing's early success.

"I think I'm a patient hitter at the plate," he said just two days after his MLB call-up. "I see a lot of pitches. I also put the ball in play a lot, and I'm just not going to stray away from that, spray line drives everywhere, and just keep doing that."

He did that in his MLB debut against the Tigers on May 12th, going 1-for-2 with two walks, two RBI, a stolen base, and two runs scored.

"You look at the game A.J. had, getting on base four times, using his speed," explained Semien. "That added a spark to us immediately with 10 runs."

Yet, despite evidence to the contrary, neither Ewing nor Benge sees themselves as a spark plug. Or they won't admit it.

"I feel like everybody in this clubhouse can help. That's why we're all here," said Benge. "We're all here for a reason, so anyone can be the spark plug that can get us going at any time." In a similarly muted fashion, Ewing mentioned that, "Every game, there are nine guys who go out there and try to win a ball game. No matter who's out there, we're going to do our best to do it."

That level-headed approach has helped the rookies handle the added scrutiny of their expanded roles on this Mets team. Being in your first big league season and having an everyday job on a team with World Series aspirations is pressure enough. Having to do that in a media market like New York, during a season in which much of the focus has been on your team's early-season struggles, is a level of pressure not many athletes face. Yet neither Benge nor Ewing is running from it.

"You can't shy away from anything," stated Benge. "You just got to attack it head-on."

"It still feels [surreal], and I think it's gonna feel that way for a while," said Ewing of his current role on this Mets team. "I mean, this is a dream I've had since I started playing the game, and it's awesome to be here... The atmosphere is a lot of fun, and it's a great time, but when you're out there, it's tunnel vision. I'm just trying to win a ball game."

Winning ballgames is exactly what the Mets have started doing. The team is 6-1 since Ewing was recalled and Benge was moved to the lead-off spot. That could be a coincidence, but it could also be because of the focus and strong will of two young players who have risen through the minor league system together and know how much this moment means.

"You know, [Ewing] is the first one I've played with to be able to come up here with me, besides Nolan [McLean]," said Benge. "It's definitely cool to see."

For his part, Ewing is also happy to see his former teammate in a high-profile role with the big league club: "It's awesome to see Benge in that situation, just because I went through the system with him...Everyone here has been a great help to me, but I think he's one of the guys that I gravitate to, just because we're super comfortable with each other."

They're not only comfortable with each other, but they're comfortable with themselves. Benge trusted that he would start to see some results on the field by sticking true to his approach, while Ewing has been convinced that his stellar track record of production will continue, no matter what level he's at.

"There are good pitchers at every single level," he said about the transition to the big leagues. "Obviously, everyone here is gonna have really good stuff, and they're here for a reason, but at the same time, I'm good in my own regard too, and I'm just gonna stick to what I do....Not changing in the box and just doing exactly what I did in Low-A, High-A, Double-A, and Triple-A, and just sticking to that."

It's a steadfastness and a self-belief that the Mets needed amidst their early-season struggles. Maybe that, more than their vibrant, youthful energy, is how the two youngest stars are helping to turn fortunes around in Citi Field.

Yankees' Gerrit Cole to make 2026 debut on Friday against Rays

Gerrit Cole will make his 2026 season debut in the Bronx on Friday against the Tampa Bay Rays. 

When Elmer Rodriguez was optioned following Sunday’s Subway Series loss to the Mets, it opened the door for Cole potentially getting the nod. 

And Yankees manager Aaron Boone made it official on Tuesday afternoon, telling reporters that Cole will start on Friday. 

Cole, who had Tommy John surgery in March 2024, has made six rehab appearances, pitching to a 4.66 ERA with 28 strikeouts and three walks in 29.0 innings. 

The Yankees were considering having Cole make one more rehab start, but it appears that the former Cy Young winner is ready to go.