DENVER –– After seven years of waiting for his shot, Ryan Ward is on the verge of his first big-league opportunity.
The Dodgers are bringing Ward to Denver on Saturday and are expected to officially activate him later in this weekend’s series against the Colorado Rockies, sources confirmed, marking what will be a first career call-up to the majors for the 28-year-old outfielder.
While it wasn’t immediately clear what the corresponding roster move will be, the choreographed nature of Ward’s promotion –– he will be on the taxi squad Saturday, a source said –– could suggest a non-injury-related maneuver, such as another player going on the paternity list.
Dodgers outfielder Ryan Ward, who is getting his first MLB call-up at age 28, hits an RBI double during a spring training game against the A’s on March 8, 2025. Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images
Ward was originally an eighth-round draft pick in 2019 who has slowly climbed up the Dodgers’ farm system. Last year, he was the Pacific Coast League MVP with triple-A Oklahoma City, hitting .290 with 36 home runs and 122 RBIs.
This season, he was batting .324 in his first 18 triple-A games, adding four more home runs and 14 RBIs to a distinguished minor-league resume.
Despite those gaudy numbers, Ward has had to wait –– and wait, and wait –– for a chance at the MLB level.
He was added to the club’s 40-man roster at the end of last season, but did not make the big-league team after a poor spring training performance.
Still, over seven career seasons in the minors, the left-handed hitter has a .266 average, 154 home runs, 139 doubles and 520 RBIs.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts Getty Images
The Massachusetts native and Bryant University product has received rave reviews from Dodgers personnel about his growth in recent seasons, specifically with the way he has improved his plate discipline.
Since the start of last year, he has 95 walks against 141 strikeouts.
He is a corner outfielder by trade, but can also contribute at first base.
“The thing I like about Ryan is he’s performed,” manager Dave Roberts said this spring. “We’ve asked him to do certain things, whether it’s positional versatility or cutting back on the strikeouts, hit for a little more power. He’s done all that.”
Roberts said then he expected Ward to get an opportunity in the majors at some point this year.
“For him to not get a shot (yet), I’m sure he’s frustrated and understandably so,” Roberts said. “But the message for him is to keep putting up numbers and knock the door down and hopefully the opportunity comes for him.”
That’s exactly what Ward has done, ranking seventh in the PCL so far this season in OPS. And now, his long wait is almost up, with a promotion to the majors having finally arrived.
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - APRIL 17: Josh Naylor #12 of the Seattle Mariners is tagged out at home plate by Danny Jansen #9 of the Texas Rangers during the sixth inning at T-Mobile Park on April 17, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images
I have to get this off my chest: the Mariners “fanny pack hat” promotional giveaway item tonight makes absolutely no sense. I get that they’re leaning into the 70s this weekend as part of their 50th anniversary season celebration, with future weekends leaning on the 80s, 90s, and so forth. But, look, the fanny pack is so called because it is worn on your fanny. When you remove the placement, it ceases to be a fanny pack. What the Mariners have created here instead is simply a hat with a bag on it. A hat sack.
The only way this thing is a fanny pack is if you loop your belt through the snapback and wear it around your waist. But of course, at that point, it has ceased to be a hat, except as a hat for your fanny. You know, an asshat.
Speaking of asshats, the Mariners played nine innings of what can loosely be described as baseball tonight. It didn’t have to be so bad. With one out in the first, the Mariners loaded the bases on a four-pitch walk to Cal Raleigh, a scorched double from Julio Rodríguez, and a ten-pitch walk—the only thing better than a four-pitch walk—to Josh Naylor. But those runners would be left on those bases, a fact that would haunt the Mariners throughout the rest of the game.
The Mariners chased Rangers’ starter Jacob deGrom after just four innings, but then they had to face Gavin Collyer, who looks like he’s going to be a giant problem for the next half-decade, slinging 100-mph heaters out of a funky arm slot. Josh Naylor did manage to get a hit off of him (one of two hits to go with two walks). But he was later thrown out at the plate on the worst send since the Zimmermann Telegram. Wyatt Langford had the ball in shallow left field before Naylor had even touched third base. For getting hung out to dry despite finally having a good night at the plate, Naylor wins a second-consecutive Sun Hat Award. Cole Young might have won it for getting two four-pitch walks in the same game, but he gave it back with a miscommunication with Julio in the triangle that resulted in Julio ripping a divot in the field and scraping his hand.
I’d like to look at Logan Gilbert’s line of 5.1 IP, 2 ER, 7 H, 1 BB, 7 K, and say at least Gilbert had another good performance. But it really wasn’t great. He was all over the place in his first three innings: fastball velocity up and down, over-relying on his worst pitches while the splitter and slider sat on the shelf. A fastball right down Broadway to Brandon Nimmo resulted in a leadoff home run and set the tone. In Logan’s defense, just like Ryon Healy in the booth, he did get better once he started being himself in the fourth inning. But the damage had been done—to his pitch count if not the score. After a 2024-esque start on Monday, tonight he looked a lot more like his 2025 self, with a bunch of strikeouts hiding his inefficiency and ineffectiveness. Although he left the game with a surmountable two-run deficit, the bats and bullpen only made it worse.
That marks 22 innings since the Mariners last scored against the Rangers. But don’t worry. They face Nathan Eovaldi tomorrow. I’m sure it’ll be fine.
Munetaka Murakami admires his first MLB grand slam! | (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)
I don’t want to take ALL the credit, but the White Sox put on a show for their first game out west this season and my first game back with South Side Sox. Let’s break it down because the scoring, taking advantage of the Athletics mistakes and making the plays on defense started early and often.
The White Sox came out swinging and put the A’s on their heels early in the ballgame. Leading off the evening, Andrew Benintendi hit a bloop to center field that scooted by Denzel Clarke. As soon as I saw the ball roll deeper into center field, I couldn’t believe Benintendi was going to record his third triple of this early season. Alas, the ball lost its momentum, and Andrew held up at second. With two quick outs to follow, Colson Montgomery shot a ball down the right field line, bringing Andrew home to open up the night’s scoring, 1-0.
In the bottom half of the opening frame and against the 2025 AL Rookie of the Year, Chase Meidroth robbed Nick Kurtz of a two-out hit as he activated his inner Superman to stop the ball and laser it to Munetaka Murakami at first base. As Gordon Beckham said on the broadcast, “We have a man there!”
With back-to-back singles from Murakami and Miguel Vargas to begin the third inning, the third “M” for “Montgomery” brought home Mune for his second RBI of the game, and Vargas took to some aggressive baserunning to go first to third on Colson’s single. He would have been out too, if the ball hadn’t hit him and trickled away. Edgar Quero would later bring home Miguel with an RBI ground out for a 3-0 Sox lead.
While the offense broke out early, Davis Martin was dealing alongside it. Through three innings, Martin used just 20 pitches for the first nine outs in nine-up, nine-down fashion. As per his early trends of the season, he was mixing up his pitches: slider (six), sinker (five), changeup (four), 4-seamer (three), curveball (one) and cutter (one).
It would take until the fourth inning for the A’s to score, as they caught a break of their own. With one out, Luisangel Acuña lost what appeared to be a routine fly ball to the twilight sky, allowing Shea Langeliers a double. Kurtz would then step up to the plate and work a 12-pitch at-bat to rip a ball past Meidroth, who brought out the Superman dive once more but unsuccessful this go-around.
Luckily, it’s all about short-term memory in baseball. In the top of the fifth, with Meidroth on first with two outs, Acuña doubled to right-center to pick up a run for a net zero impact and a 4-1 Sox lead. At 103 pitches, Aaron Civale did not make it through the fifth inning, as predicted and hoped for in the game thread.
First out of the pen, Elvis Alvarado replaced Civale, and Benintendi immediately capitalized with a second-pitch RBI double, extending the Sox lead even further, 5-1.
Looking to put this game out of reach in the seventh and Alvarado still on the bump, Murakami stepped up to the plate with the sacks packed and two out. He worked the count full, and BOOM! He launched a 98.2 mph fastball 431 feet to straightaway center field with a 114.1 mph exit velocity for his first career MLB grand slam, and team-leading sixth home run. The ball cleared the tall batter’s eye in center field, eliciting more than a few gasps. That’ll do!
That was the Sox’s third grand slam on the year, and they lead MLB in that department.
Other than the one run allowed in the fourth, Davis kept dealing and was purely dominant tonight! In back-to-back starts, Martin has gone seven innings and has now notched three straight quality starts. Martin ended his night in the same way it began, mixing and matching all six of his pitches to ultimately keep the A’s off-balanced and guessing. Here’s how his economical 89 pitches this evening broke down: 4-seamer (22), sinker (20), slider (16), cutter (12), changeup (11) and curveball (eight). He struck out four, walked two and only allowed three hits. Skill > luck.
Doug Nikhazy, fresh from Charlotte, replaced Davis in the eighth. The southpaw allowed leadoff man Max Muncy to walk and eventually score on Andy Ibáñez’s RBI ground out to make the score just a smidge closer, 9-2. However, that would be it for the A’s and their quiet offense this evening, as Nikhazy remained in the game for the ninth and wrapped it up. Not too shabby to record the last six outs in your third career MLB game
The Good Guys improve to 7-13, and it’ll be a quick turnaround into a day game tomorrow afternoon! Erick Fedde (0-3, 3.38 ERA) and Luis Severino (0-2, 5.59 ERA) will clash on the mound as the Sox look to take the series at 3:10 p.m. CT on CHSN.
Apr 17, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Texas Rangers catcher Danny Jansen (9) waits to tag Seattle Mariners first baseman Josh Naylor (12) at home plate during the sixth inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images | Steven Bisig-Imagn Images
The Texas Rangers scored five runs while the Seattle Mariners scored zero runs.
For the second time this season the Rangers and Mariners opened up a series with Jacob deGrom matching up against Logan Gilbert in a battle between former Stetson University right-handers turned AL rotation-toppers.
Like the game back in Arlington earlier this month, there was a first inning home run. This time, however, it was the Rangers getting out on top early with Brandon Nimmo homering to leadoff the game on the game’s third pitch. Little did we know, despite three hours of baseball to follow, that would be all the runs Texas would need.
In fact, the Rangers made a habit of getting on for extra bases in the early going against Gilbert as they led off with an extra base hit in each of the first three innings.
However, Texas had trouble bringing in runs throughout most of the game despite piling up base runners. On the night, the Rangers had 17 opportunities with runners in scoring position and though they collected five hits in those situations, only three of those hits brought in runs.
Wyatt Langford singled in a run in the top of the third. Jake Burger provided an insurance run with an RBI single in the top of the seventh. After a sac fly by Andrew McCutchen in the top of the ninth, Josh Jung doubled in Texas’ fifth and final run on their seventh extra base hit on the night.
Meanwhile, while the bats were doing everything but making this game a blowout for most of the night, the Mariners were doing anything but being particularly threatening despite the relatively close contest.
With deGrom lacking his usual swing-and-miss stuff, and still on a short leash in the season’s first month, the Mariners fouled off a ton of two-strike deGrom offerings and had him out of the game after four innings and 88 pitches.
Nevertheless, deGrom wasn’t especially hittable either as Seattle mustered four hits and worked two walks against deGrom with their best chance of the game coming with the bases loaded and one out in the bottom of the first when deGrom buckled down and collected two of his three Ks on the night to end the threat.
deGrom’s short outing meant the bullpen had to do a lot of the heavy lifting, certainly an early trend so far this season. Answering the call, a fivesome of Gavin Collyer, Tyler Alexander, Jalen Beeks, Cole Winn, and Jacob Latz combined to toss five innings of two-hit, scoreless relief.
The Mariners nearly broke through to get on the board in the bottom of the sixth in what was then still a 2-0 game when J.P. Crawford singled to shallow left with Josh Naylor at second base but an aggressive send had Naylor out by like ten feet at home thanks to a nice and easy throw from Langford.
Ultimately the Rangers were in charge of this game practically from pitch No. 1, even with the score close until late and with the Mariners opting for a gameplan of trying to get deGrom out as quickly as possible by working the count.
With the win, the Rangers are now 4-0 against the Mariners this season and have evened up their record on this current long road trip.
Player of the Game: Jung collected three of Texas’ seven extra base hits, all doubles, and drove in a run as the oft-maligned third baseman from a season ago continues to heat up on this road trip.
Also, congrats to Gavin Collyer for picking up his first big league win with 1.1 innings of scoreless relief.
Up Next: The Rangers and Mariners will take to primetime for the second game of this weekend three-game set. RHP Nathan Eovaldi is next up for Texas opposite RHP George Kirby for Seattle.
The Saturday evening first pitch from T-Mobile Park is scheduled for scheduled for 6:15 pm CDT and will be aired nationally on FOX.
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - APRIL 17: Rob Refsnyder #90 of the Seattle Mariners reacts after lining out during the eighth inning against the Texas Rangers at T-Mobile Park on April 17, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Rangers 5, Mariners 0
The miracle of pasteurization: Josh Naylor, +0.11 WPA A jar full of farts: Randy Arozarena, -0.16 WPA
BILOXI, MS - JUNE 21: Grant Kipp #34 of the Knoxville Smokies pitches during the game between the Knoxville Smokies and the Biloxi Shuckers at Keesler Federal Park on Saturday, June 21, 2025 in Biloxi, Mississippi. (Photo by Demetrius Hill/Minor League Baseball)
Vince Velasquez gave the I-Cubs a solid start as he allowed just one run on five hits over 4.2 innings. Velasquez walked four and struck out seven.
Yacksel Rios pitched the bottom of the ninth, gave up a two-run home run and got the loss. Rios allowed one hit, one walk and struck out one in the one inning of work.
First baseman BJ Murray went 2 for 4 with an RBI single in the sixth inning. Murray also scored on an Owen Miller sacrifice fly in the second inning. He was 0 for 3.
Grant Kipp and Luis Martinez-Gomez combined on the shutout. Kipp was terrific, allowing just one walk over five innings. He struck out seven and walked no one,
Martinez-Gomez got the four-inning save after allowing four hits but walking no one and striking out four.
Right fielder Alex Ramírez was 2 for 4 with an RBI single in the second inning. He also stole two bases, including stealing home in the first inning as part of a double steal of second and home.
Left fielder Jordan Nwogu was 1 for 3 with two walks and an RBI single in the second inning.
Starter Cole Reynolds gave up two runs on just one hit over four innings. Reynolds walked three and struck out three.
Kenton Egbert pitched the next three innings and took the loss. He surrendered two runs on two hits and a walk. Egbert struck out four.
South Bend trailed the Sky Carp 6-2 heading to the bottom of the ninth. They scored three times but were unable to get the fourth run home from second base when center fielder Kane Kepley grounded out. But Kepley scored the first run of the game when he walked to lead off the bottom of the first, stole second, stole third and scored on a sacrifice fly. Kepley went 0 for 3 with two walks and the two steals.
Third baseman Reginald Preciado was 2 for 4 with an RBI single in the fourth. Preciado also scored a run in the ninth on an error.
Here’s Kepley getting his uniform dirty in the first inning.
The Birds got three strong innings from starter Edwardo Melendez, who allowed only one hit. Unfortunately, it was a solo home run to lead off the second inning. But the only other baserunner Melendez allowed was a hit batsman and he immediately removed that baserunner with a 4-6-3 double play. Melendez struck out five.
Jordan Henriquez pitched the top of the tenth and took the loss. Henriquez gave up three runs, two earned, on two hits. He struck out one and did not walk anyone.
Third baseman Derniche Valdez hit his first Pelicans home run with the bases empty in the second inning. Valdez went 1 for 4.
Rhett Stokes scores the winning run and the celebration begins!
Unbelievable!
This Nebraska Cornhusker team has fought and scratched all season when they are down and have treated their fans to some incredible wins, including some walk-off wins that have made the drive home quite a bit happier. None of them compare to what happened tonight!
Total pandemonium broke out in the bottom of the tenth inning when Mac Moyer laid down a picture-perfect bunch that pitcher Sax Matson threw past first baseman Adrian Lopez toward the rightfield corner. Rhett Stokes, who previously, reached on a walk, never slowed down once he saw the bunt down and charged all the way around the bases to score the winning run. Oh, what a ballgame! Nebraska 8, USC 7.
I’m too embarrassed to tell you how many times I’ve watched this clip in the last hour. https://t.co/RiJU4IyX7e
It didn’t start out that way. In fact, casual fans may have left the game before Nebraska got back in the game on this chilly night. Those who have followed the team all season knew they didn’t dare!
Southern Cal’s Mason Edwards is one of the premier pitchers in college baseball this season. He had a 6-0 record and a 1.35 ERA coming into the game. That went along with 95 strikeouts in 53.1 innings pitched. He was every bit as good as advertised tonight against the Nebraska Cornhuskers. Fortunately for the boys from Lincoln and their dedicated fans, his night was done after seven innings.
In fairness to the Cornhuskers, they roughed up Edwards more than he had been up to this point in the season. The eight hits they got off him was the most he had given up all season, and they got a couple of runs in the sixth inning when Case Sanderson led off the inning with a single and scored two batters later on a Jett Buck double. Drew Grego also doubled to score Buck and after six innings it was 5-2 SC.
The Trojans grabbed those two runs back quickly as scored twice off Kevin Mannell in the top of the seventh on a two RBI single by Kevin Takeuchi.
Edwards’ night was over after seven complete innings having struck out 12 Cornhuskers and throwing a total of 105 pitches. Down 7-2, there was a window now for the Cornhuskers, but it was pretty narrow as it was just two innings. Fortunately, Nebraska crashed through that window thanks to some timely hitting, some incredible bounces, and USC errors.
After Drew Carey struck out for the third straight time in the game to open the bottom of the eighth, Jett Buck smoked his second double of the game off freshman reliever Gavin Lauridsen. The rookie seemed a little rattled and walked designated hitter Will Jesske. Drew Grego then reached on a fielder’s choice to put two on with two out. Up came a resurgent Joshua Overbeek who smashed a three-run homer to the right-centerfield berm. That cut the lead to 7-5.
Ty Horn came on to pitch the top of the ninth and sat the Trojans down in order with a strikeout and two ground outs to Carey at shortstop. His fire gave the fans, and his teammates hope for a big ninth inning.
Coach Andy Stankiewicz had gone to his closer, Adam Troy, to get the last out of the eighth inning striking out Jeter Worthley. He was set to face the heart of the Nebraska lineup in the ninth, writing the perfect script for the drama that had unfolded.
For Case Sanderson and Drew Carey, it was time for the dudes to be dudes. Both of them were 1-4 on the night and both of them had struck out three times. Both of them are very capable of hitting balls to the gap or over the wall. What happened over the course of the next nine pitches had to be seen to be believed.
Sanderson hit a hard grounder back up the middle that skipped off the mound and then hopped into centerfield as SC’s shortstop tried to field it. He then advanced to second on a wild pitch by Troy. Carey then hit one that the second baseman booted for an error, sending Sanderson to third. They didn’t have big hits, but they put the bat on the ball and Carey represented the tying run.
With runners on the corners and no outs, Jett Buck muscled a fly ball to right field that was deep enough to allow Sanderson to tag and score. 7-6 Trojans.
Preston Freeman came in to hit in Jesske’s spot and walked. Freeman, the winning run, was on first base and Carey stood on third. Troy was definitely feeling the pressure at this point and threw yet another wild pitch. Carey crossed the plate and the game was tied! Freeman hustled all the way to third on the wild pitch and got around the tag to put the winning run 90-feet from the plate.
That brought up Overbeek, who had homered the previous inning, to face Troy. Stankiewicz saw his closer struggling and in the middle of the at-bat, and brought in a lefty to face Overbeek. Overbeek switched to the other batter’s box, but Sax Matson got him looking on two pitches. The damage was done though, and the game was tied 7-7.
In came J’Shawn Unger for the tenth inning. He did not disappoint the raucous crowd as he struck out all three Trojans he faced and let out a roar on the last one to match the crowd!
That set the table for the Stokes walk, Moyer bunt and Matson’s wild throw, resulting in the Nebraska dugout emptying to chase down Stokes and Moyer to celebrate in centerfield. Ball game!
While this year’s version of the Southern Cal Trojans is not known for its offense, they tried to put the game out of reach early on. With the wind blowing out to leftfield, they took advantage of a struggling Cooper Katskee, making his first Friday appearance of the season. With one out in the top of the first, catcher Isaac Cardena sent a blast over the wall near the party porch to put his team up 1-0.
Even though he’s a slow starter, Katskee was not himself tonight as he missed big and left pitches over the plate where the Trojans put the barrel on the ball. They scored two in the second inning when they started off with three straight hits, a couple of singles wrapped around a double and increased their lead to 3-0 and sending seven batters to the plate.
Edwards used a successful recipe, throwing a first pitch strike and then moving breaking pitches around the strike zone. In one stretch, he struck out six consecutive Cornhuskers, with none of the Cornhuskers taking a swing at the first strike.
That's 100 K's for Mase 🤯
He's the first player in Division I to eclipse the 100 K mark this season and the first Trojan since Ian Kennedy in 2006 with 100 strikeouts in a season ✌️#FightOn x @MasonJEdwardspic.twitter.com/DKL9s1kPZX
He was good, but he didn’t go the distance and Nebraska made the bullpen pay. What’s wild is that those relievers from Southern Cal are very good as well. And, the coaching staff used their three best, so hopefully that bodes well for the Cornhuskers for the remainder of the weekend.
The job done by Jalen Worthley in the middle three innings cannot be lost in everything else that happened tonight. He shut down the Trojan offense facing only ten batters and took the momentum away from the boys from SoCal to give the Cornhuskers a chance to get on course. To see him pitching well in recent weeks is a good sign as the team continues the second half of the season.
It is yet to be seen how the teams will respond to the result tonight, but with the weather improving over the course of the next couple of days, Nebraska fans should pour into Haymarket Park to find out. This is the second heavyweight bout for Nebraska in as many weekends and after tonight, they have picked themselves up off the mat. You can bet that round two will be a battle as well.
Carson Jasa will take the mound for the Big Red at 2:00 tomorrow against Grant Govel. Both pitchers are carrying a 7-0 record and both have a 2.13 ERA. Looks like it will be another good one!
It sounds like Ty Horn will be in the bullpen the rest of the season. He may also be that guy that starts a game in a long tournament run if needed. He has been very effective in this new role the last two games, and having only thrown 11 pitches tonight, he will be available again this weekend.
Mac Moyer and Jett Buck both had three hits tonight against tough pitching. Moyer’s bunt was a beauty in the tenth inning. Buck also had a pair of doubles and two RBI.
After getting six hits off Cooper Katskee, USC only got three more hits in the game. Jalen Worthley, Ty Horn, and J’Shawn Unger did not give up a hit.
While tonight’s win was huge, Nebraska has to win at least one more this weekend to keep hope alive to host a regional. Nearly as important is to stay at toward the top of the conference standings as with a new tournament format there is a huge advantage to finish the season in the top four.
Daniel Palencia, who enjoyed a breakout season in 2025, is headed to the Injured List with an oblique strain.
The Cubs injury list now includes their closer.
Daniel Palencia was added to the 15-day injured list with an oblique strain on Friday.
Palencia, who wasn’t needed in the Cubs’ 12-4 thrashing of the Mets, aided Venezuela to the World Baseball Classic championship before the regular season, and entered the 2026 campaign riding high.
The 26-year-old now joins a long Cubs IL that includes fellow pitchers Matthew Boyd, Phil Maton, Porter Hodge, Hunter Harvey, Jordan Wicks, Ethan Roberts, Justin Steele, Shelby Miller and Cade Horton, along with first baseman Tyler Austin.
Daniel Palencia, who enjoyed a breakout season in 2025, is headed to the IL with an oblique strain. Getty Images
“I felt something weird there,” Palencia said following a bullpen session early Friday. “It got a little tight. Just trying to be smart. Hopefully, I’ll be ready soon.”
Cubs manager Craig Counsell hinted at further testing to determine the exact seriousness of the injury.
“If it lingers, yes, we will,” Counsell said of potential imaging for Palenica. “The fact that his bullpen went well, gives us some optimism. I don’t think he’d be able to do that with a high-grade strain, but we’ll know more in the coming days.”
Daniel Palencia celebrates the final out of Venezuela’s 3-2 WBC title-clinching victory over Team USA on March 17, 2026 in Miami. Getty Images
Palencia became the team’s closer last season, logging 22 saves with 61 strikeouts in 52 2/3 innings with a 2.91 ERA.
He began this season with similar ferocity, having yet to allow a run through five innings, recording one save and five strikeouts against two walks.
During the WBC, Palencia pitched five perfect innings with three saves and nine strikeouts to just one walk.
Apr 17, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks third baseman Nolan Arenado (28) reacts after hitting an RBI single during the seventh inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images
Game Summary
After a long and successful road trip, the Diamondbacks kicked off this six game homestand with a nearly drama-free victory over the defending AL Champs. It felt like a downright walk in the park to have a 3-run lead going into the 9th inning. What sorcery is this?! The Snakes didn’t play mistake-free ball, but they didn’t allow the Jays to capitalize on the mistakes they did make and they fully exploited the mistakes made by the opposition. We used to find ourselves on the other side of these; nice to be on the good side for a change!
Michael Soroka made his first start as an official member of the D-backs top-5 rotation after he beat out Brandon Pfaadt for the final slot once Merrill returned and it was good to see the good results didn’t disappear into thin air. Soroka cruised through his 7 innings of work, only allowing multiple baserunners in 1 of those innings. His strikeout numbers weren’t where he had been over the first few starts, but he was dialing up groundballs early in the count which allowed him to complete the 6th inning for the first time this year and then complete the 7th for good measure.
The defense was mostly wonderful, with the highlight being Geraldo Perdomo’s fantastic ‘tip drill’ double play to pour some water on a late Jays’ rally, but there were a couple miscues. Tim Tawa lost a routine fly ball in the open roof sky resulting in a 1-out double (stranded by Soroka), but the most egregious error of the night came by someone not even wearing an MLB jersey. One of the Golden Glovers down the right field line tried to glove a line drive that had just stayed fair, he knocked it down, which may or may not have helped him out as it rolled slowly to the fence. When Corbin made it to the ball, he grabbed and threw directly to the cutoff man Ildemaro who was playing second base on the night and then Vargas turned and threw a perfect strike from short right field to third base to nab Gimenez at third. Alas, it didn’t count due to the interference from the Golden Glover, but it was a great play to know that we’re capable of and it deserves a second look. Soroka once again was able to strand this double, picking up his defense just like his defense has mostly picked him up throughout the year.
The bullpen did it’s part, taking over a 5-2 advantage and only allowing 1-run. Jonny Lasagna wasn’t quite fully baked, allowing the lone run, but Paul Sewald continues to stack outs, getting a 1-2-3 9th with a strikeout. I’m still fully convinced the wheels will fall of Sewald at some point this year, but I’m really enjoying the display of competence he’s been having currently.
The offense was the final piece of this puzzle tonight and they did a good job capitalizing on opportunities and regularly keeping the pressure on the Jays’ pitchers. The biggest blow came in the 7th when young Jose Fernandez came up with runners at 2nd and 3rd and 2 outs. Fernandez hit a squibber up the first base line and hustled his way to the bag. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. fielded the ball cleanly, but either lost concentration or rushed his toss with Fernandez busting it down the line and lost control of the ball in the transfer. The Jays’ pitcher was hustling over himself and found himself in nearly perfect position to pick up the ball and step directly onto the first base bag, but he, too, rushed the whole thing and swatted the ball with his glove instead of picking it up. Fernandez ended up safe at first and 1 run scored on the play. Then Arenado got another big base hit, on top of the homer he hit earlier in the game, by lining a ball to center to score the runner from third and give the bullpen a 3-run lead to play with, a luxury they aren’t accustomed to.
The Blue Jays are hurting right now with many key players on the injured list (which is the only possible reason Joe Mantiply could be on the Jays’ active roster and multiplying runs for us instead of against us now) and possibly another joining that unit is old friend Daulton Varsho who left the game in the second inning with “knee discomfort”. I hope Varsho gets well soon, but the Diamondbacks capitalized on a team that’s not playing good baseball right now and they need to keep that up the rest of the weekend.
Win Probability and Box Score
Comment of the Game
The GameDay Thread was a little slow to get going, and finished with a total of 143 comments at time of publishing. Tonight’s COTG goes to Snake_Bitten concerning longtime dreams coming true:
Coming Up
The Diamondbacks face the defending AL champions for the second game of this 3-game set tomorrow afternoon with a 5:10pm first pitch. Max Scherzer (1-2, 9.58 ERA) will take the mound for Toronto and Zac Gallen (1-1, 3.60 ERA) takes the ball for the good guys.
Apr 17, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Toronto Blue Jays manager John Schneider (14) looks on against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the seventh inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images
Stop me if you’ve heard this one: the Jays lost and suffered an injury. Daulton Varsho left the game in the third with what’s being described as knee discomfort. It’s not clear what happened, he hadn’t had any particularly awkward plays in the field and he struck out looking in his one at bat. Vladimir Guerrero jr. also jammed a finger recieving a throw at first and had to call time and speak with the trainers. He stayed in the game but was clearly favouring his glove hand. Other than that things went fine, assuming you also ignore the three fielding errors.
The offence continued to sputter. The first baserunner came on an Ernie Clement double with one out in the third. They got creative to manufacture a run in the fourth inning. Myles Straw and Jesus Sanchez singled to put runners on the corners with one out. John Schneider put on the squeeze play with Lenyn Sosa at the plate. He laid down the bunt perfectly, allowing Straw to score but being thrown out at first. After a 1-2-3 fifth inning they added on a second run the old fashioned way, as Straw wrapped a solo home run around the foul pole in left field. In all, they managed two runs on five hits off Michael Soroka, who went seven innings.
Braydon Fisher did a bit of a high wire act as the opener for Toronto. Geraldo Perdomo hit a two out ground rule double and advanced to third when Fisher botched a pickoff throw. A ground out avoided damage, though.
Eric Lauer looked better tonight, sitting more in the 90-92 zone that’s his norm than the 87-89 we saw the last couple of outings as he dealt with illness. He cruised through his first two innings of work before giving up a solo home run to Nolan Arenado in the fourth. He struggled a bit more in the fifth. A walk and a couple of line singles manufactured a second run for the Diamondbacks, and Jose Fernandez snuck a grounder up the middle for a third, making it 3-1.
Arizona picked up another in the seventh. Spencer Miles struck out his first batter but then gave up a single and a walk. A ground out advanced the runners. Miles go Fernandez to tap to first, but Guerrero fumbled the ball trying to make the toss to Miles at the bag, allowing a run to score and prolonging the inning. Arenado lined a single to plate another, making it 5-2.
The Jays got what looked like a rally going in the top of eight, but some tough luck put a damper on it. Heineman and Lukes lead off with back to back singles. Straw hit a soft grounder to second base that bounced off the heel of second baseman Ildemaro Vargas’ glove but right into shortstop perdomo’s hands, allowing him to turn an error into a double play. Vlad managed a broken bat single that at least plated Heineman to cut the gap to 5-3 before Sanchez struck out to end the inning. Joe Mantiply gave the run buack in the bottom half. James McCann singled on a grounder up the middle, and Tim Tawa lined a double to make it 6-3.
Paul Sewald retired the Jays in order to end the inning.
Jays of the Day: No.
Less so: Lauer (-0.13), Miles (-0.14), Okamoto (-0.13)
Game two is at 8:10pm ET tomorrow evening. Zac Gallen (1-1, 3.60) will go for the Diamondbacks, while Max Scherzer (1-2, 9.58) will try to better his dismal recent efforts as he battles forearm tendinitis.
DENVER, COLORADO - APRIL 17: Starting pitcher Tomoyuki Sugano of the Colorado Rockies throws against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the first inning at Coors Field on April 17, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Snow flurries rolled through Coors Field earlier in the day, but once the game began, it was the Los Angeles Dodgers who brought the heat as they defeated the Colorado Rockies 7-1.
First pitch pressure
Shohei Ohtani set the tone immediately with a leadoff double, and from there, the Dodgers settled into a rhythm that never really broke.
They worked counts, didn’t chase out of the zone, and when they got pitches to hit, they did damage — often in the air. It wasn’t one big inning; it was steady, controlled pressure that built throughout the night.
Tomoyuki Sugano spent his outing trying to manage that pressure. He battled early and even flashed some resilience, striking out Teoscar Hernández to escape the first inning with limited damage, but the traffic never stopped. The Dodgers consistently forced him into deep counts and hitter’s counts, and the contact followed.
Max Muncy delivered the loudest swings, turning a misplaced cutter into a home run in the top of the second. But the story wasn’t just Muncy — it was the entire lineup. There were no empty at-bats, no easy outs, and very few mistakes that went unpunished.
Sugano’s final line reflected that grind: 4.0 innings, 9 hits, 5 runs, 5 earned, 2 walks, 3 strikeouts, 1 home run. He took the loss, falling to 1–1 with a 3.92 ERA, worn down more than blown up.
One side in control
The contrast was just as clear on the other side.
Tyler Glasnow was in complete control, delivering 7.0 innings of two-hit, one-run baseball with 2 walks and 7 strikeouts. He worked efficiently, stayed ahead, and never allowed the Rockies to build momentum. Even when Colorado made contact, it rarely turned into anything sustained.
The Rockies didn’t strike out excessively, but they were just a bit off — unable to consistently extend counts, unable to string together quality contact, and unable to turn opportunities into runs. Where the Dodgers were deliberate and punishing, Colorado was reactive and scattered.
The Rockies lone run reflected that. Mickey Moniak doubled, advanced on a groundout, and scored on another ground ball from Troy Johnston. It was a manufactured run — clean, efficient, but isolated.
Zach Agnos provided one of the more important positives for Colorado. Entering after Sugano, Agnos immediately gave up a homer to Muncy — his second of the game.
But ultimately, Agnos settled in and worked 4.0 innings, allowing 3 hits and 2 runs (both earned) with 1 walk and 4 strikeouts, stabilizing a game that had the potential to get out of hand. He attacked the zone, limited traffic, and gave the Rockies length. Agnos didn’t stop the Dodgers, but he did steady the game.
Brennan Bernardino handled the ninth, allowing one hit and striking out a batter. Colorado used just three pitchers on the night — a quiet but meaningful positive given recent bullpen usage. (There was a brief moment in the third inning where I was wondering if we would see a position player on the mound tonight.)
No late rally
The problem was that the gap had already been established.
Jack Dreyer worked the eighth and ninth for Los Angeles, and the Rockies never mounted a serious threat. A leadoff walk in the ninth provided a brief opening, but it quickly disappeared — a force out, a failed ABS challenge, a strikeout, and a flyout to end it.
The 7–1 final score felt less about one moment and more about the accumulation of many, well-executed ones — on one side.
Up Next
The Colorado Rockies will continue their series against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday at Coors Field.
Right-hander Ryan Feltner (0–2, 5.40 ERA) is expected to take the mound for Colorado, while the Dodgers are slated to counter with right-hander Emmet Sheehan (1–0, 3.27 ERA). First pitch is scheduled for 6:10 p.m. MT. Colorado will look for a better result against a Dodgers team that has shown few weaknesses early this season.
New York Yankees pitcher Camilo Doval (75) reacts as Kansas City Royals' Vinnie Pasquantino runs the bases after hitting a home run during the eighth inning of a baseball game Friday, April 17, 2026, in New York.
Brent Headrick was solid in getting out of a jam he inherited in the seventh and David Bednar picked up his sixth save of the season in a 4-2 win over Kansas City on Friday in The Bronx.
But even on a night when the bullpen was mostly good, Camilo Doval nearly spoiled it for the Yankees.
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The right-hander gave up a game-tying homer to Kansas City’s Vinnie Pasquantino, the latest chapter in another poor stretch from Doval — who also gave up a home run to Mike Trout in a loss to the Angels in his previous outing Monday.
He’s allowed seven runs in six innings over his last seven appearances.
Aaron Boone said Doval has been “really good, sharp [and] the strike-throwing is there.”
But the manager acknowledged he’s made mistakes to Trout and then to Pasquantino, who got Doval with two out and no one on in a one-run game.
“He missed in the slug zone, but the three outs around that were really good,” Boone said. “I know he’s gotten hurt with a couple of long balls. He’s close to being dialed in.”
Boone and the Yankees have little choice but to keep going to Doval, who was expected to be the setup man.
New York Yankees pitcher Camilo Doval (75) reacts as Kansas City Royals’ Vinnie Pasquantino runs the bases after hitting a home run during the eighth inning on April 17, 2026, in New York. AP
“He’s gonna be in the fire,” Boone said. “The good thing is he’s got all the equipment to get it done. If he can just get the last layer of consistency, the stuff and way of throwing is there.”
When the Yankees acquired Caballero last year from Tampa Bay, he was expected to be a utility player with great speed and defensive versatility — and not the everyday shortstop. He appeared in games at short, second and third last year, as well as left and right field.
Caballero said he’s fine returning to that role whenever Volpe gets back to the majors following offseason surgery to repair a torn labrum in his left shoulder.
New York Yankees shortstop José Caballero strikes out swinging during the second inning. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST
“I wish him the best,” Caballero said prior to Friday’s game. “I hope he’s healthy as soon as he can be.”
I try to focus on myself and the team and help as much as I can.”
Boone wanted clarity on the play where first base umpire Ryan Additon called left-hander Ryan Yarbrough for a balk when he attempted a pickoff at first with runners on first and second.
On the play, first baseman Ben Rice was away from the bag and the play involved him going over to the base as Yarbrough threw to the bag — which was more of a challenge with Rice being “a moving target.”
Boone said he was told the issue was that Yarbrough’s throw didn’t go directly to first base.
“The reality is you’ve got to get it to the base when it’s unoccupied,” Boone said. “It definitely didn’t get to the base. My contention was intent and vicinity should have mattered. We were trying to throw to first base. It was a little behind and [Rice] had to adjust. So I understand the call. I certainly accept that. We’ve got to do a better job on a play like that.”
He added that despite their problem with the play, the Yankees won’t hesitate to try it again.
The Yankees entered Friday tied for 11th in their success rate for challenging pitches at the plate, according to Statcast.
Cody Bellinger challenged successfully Friday, but they lost both challenges in Thursday’s loss and Boone wasn’t thrilled with either attempt, as Trent Grisham and Jazz Chisholm Jr. missed.
“I thought our two challenges [Thursday] weren’t great,’’ Boone said before Friday’s game.
But he doesn’t want them to stop challenging.
“We’re trying to learn from all of them,’’ Boone said of the ABS system.
Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow throws against the Rockies at Coors Field on Friday in Denver. (Matthew Stockman / Getty Images)
The hottest team in baseball, the coldest game in franchise history.
And a California kid on the mound, battling the inclement elements, this time beating the 35-degree chill.
Last April, a deluge in Philadelphia derailed the Dodgers and Tyler Glasnow in a frustrating defeat against the Phillies.
On Friday, in his first game at Coors Field, the Dodgers’ towering right-hander proved his manager Dave Roberts right: “He’s grown exponentially. I don’t see that these conditions are going to affect him today.”
Dodger Max Muncy follows the flight of his solo home run off Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Tomoyuki Sugano Friday in Denver. (David Zalubowski/AP)
Indeed not. The former Santa Clarita Hart High standout got the better of the weather and the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. And his Dodgers teammates put runs on the board like they were logs in the fireplace, scoring at least one run every inning until the sixth inning en route to a breezy 7-1 victory.
Sparked by Max Muncy’s leadoff home runs in the second and fifth innings, the hot hitters up and down the Dodgers’ lineup sapped the suspense from the first of a four-game wraparound series.
Most of the crowd of 28,783 loved to see it. Thousands of dutifully bundled Dodgers supporters chanted and cheered as their boys in blue notched their 15th victory in 19 games, maintaining momentum in the first game of a 13-consecutive-game stretch.
Colorado right-hander Tomoyuki Sugano took the loss after leaving the game after the fourth inning with the Rockies trailing 5-0, having given up five runs on nine hits and thrown 91 pitches (just 51 of them for strikes).
As the grounds crew works to clear snow while Dodgers third baseman Santiago Espinal tosses a snowball at a coach before the team played the Rockies Friday in Denver. (David Zalubowski / Associated Press)
Conversely, Glasnow (2-0) got the win, going seven innings and yielding just one run and two hits, striking out seven and walking two on 92 pitches. The Rockies (7-13) scored only in the fourth inning, when Troy Johnston’s groundout pushed across Mickey Moniak to make it 5-1.
The Dodgers’ first run came on much more quickly, when Will Smith’s one-out sacrifice fly brought home Shohei Ohtani, who’d led off the game with a double — he went two for three off Sugano on Friday, making the Dodgers’ superstar six for seven all time against his countryman.
Smith’s first RBI was his ninth this season, in his 35th game at the famously hitter-friendly park, though he still had another in him.
Muncy’s 434-foot home run in the second made it 2-0 and his double down the line in the third drove in Smith, who’d reached on a broken-bat single that sent Roberts scurrying in the dugout. That gave the Dodgers their third run before Andy Pages’ sacrifice brought home Freddie Freeman to make it 4-0.
The Dodgers pushed it to 5-0 in the fourth inning when Smith singled to left to score Kyle Tucker, who’d doubled off the center field wall.
And then Muncy led off the fifth with his second solo shot, giving him his 21st career multi-homer game, and his fourth at Coors Field. After Alex Freeland hit a sacrifice fly to left to bring home Pages, the Dodgers led 7-1.
Hyeseong Kim was one of three Dodgers who didn’t score, but the speedy South Korean reached on a single and a walk and twice stole second.
For all the contributors keeping warm up and down the Dodgers’ lineup, the members of the Rockies’ ground crew were the real heroes of Friday’s game. They plowed the outfield grass and shoveled away the couple inches of snow that piled up between 11 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. to prepare a playable field by gametime at 6:40 p.m.
In the second game of the four-game series Saturday, Dodgers right-hander Emmet Sheehan (2-0, 6.60) is expected to face the Rockies’ right-hander Ryan Feltner (1-1, 7.30).
DENVER –– As snow fell from the sky and temperatures plunged into 30s outside, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts sat in his office at Coors Field on Friday afternoon and reminisced on the coldest game he ever played.
“I think I recall in Buffalo, I played in April in 2000,” Roberts said, thinking all the way back to his minor-league days. “Snow, wind, cold. I mean, it was in the 20s. Miserable.”
The kind of conditions, he added, that make for a “mindset game.”
The Dodgers’ series-opener against the Colorado Rockies later that night wasn’t quite as bad. The snow let up a few hours before first pitch. The grounds crew was able to clear the field of its thick white coating. And while the 35-degree reading at first pitch was the lowest on record in Dodgers history, it was a “dry cold,” Roberts joked, after the skies finally cleared.
In a relentless offensive onslaught, the Dodgers (15-4) scored in each of the first five innings to jump out to a big early lead. APIn a seven-inning, one-run gem, Tyler Glasnow preserved the advantage against the Rockies (7-13) and their woeful lineup, striking out seven batters despite the frigid weather. Getty Images
Still, such a setting posed a challenge, almost “testing your soul a little bit,” as Roberts quipped.
Then, during a 7-1 win, his team passed in every phase.
“You can’t complain about it,” third baseman Max Muncy said. “You got to go out there. They have to play through it also.”
In a relentless offensive onslaught, the Dodgers (15-4) scored in each of the first five innings to jump out to a big early lead.
In a seven-inning, one-run gem, Tyler Glasnow preserved the advantage against the Rockies (7-13) and their woeful lineup, striking out seven batters despite the frigid weather.
Muncy led the way at the plate, going 3-for-4 with two home runs and an RBI double after entering the game in a 1-for-17 skid.
Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman and Will Smith also had two hits, while Andy Pages and Hyeseong Kim each reached base twice.
Shohei Ohtani and Will Smith also had two hits, while Freddie Freeman, Andy Pages and Hyeseong Kim each reached base twice. Getty Images
It was everything Roberts was hoping to see pregame, when he challenged his hitters to “overcome the cold.”
“It’s gonna be uncomfortable. Your hands are gonna hurt,” he said. “This is one of those days you’ve just got to kind of hunker down and lock in for three hours and lock in for your four at-bats or five at-bats and give the best effort.”
The same went for Glasnow, who turned in his best start of the season while showing further growth and maturation –– especially compared to this time last year, when he came unglued during another bad weather day in the rain in Philadelphia.
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For him and the rest of the team, it was mind over matter.
What it means
The Dodgers just keep on rolling during this opening month.
They’ve now won four in a row, 11 of the last 13 and are the first team in the majors to reach the 15-win mark.
Glasnow’s performance continued a particularly strong run from the starting rotation, marking the third time in this four-game winning streak the Dodgers have gotten at least seven innings from their pitcher.
Glasnow’s performance continued a particularly strong run from the starting rotation. Getty Images
“I’m usually super hot and sweaty, so it was almost nice,” Glasnow said. “My body temperature is so high to where I went out there and didn’t feel cold, didn’t sweat a ton … I think just feeling good was helpful.”
Who’s hot
Muncy had been in a cold spell following his three-run homer game last week.
All it took was the cold Colorado temps, apparently, to heat his bat back up.
In the second inning, he jumped on a down-the-middle cutter from Tomoyuki Sugano and slugged a 452-foot solo blast deep to center. In the fifth, he turned on an inside cutter from reliever Zach Angos and pulled another solo drive 419 feet.
In between that, Muncy also accomplished a quirky season-first, when he lined an RBI double into the right-field corner to key a two-run rally.
Before that, all five of Muncy’s RBIs on the season had come via solo homers. When Smith crossed the plate on his double, he became the first batter other than Muncy himself that the third baseman had driven in this year.
“I really like the things that I’m working on,” Muncy said, after raising his batting average back up to .254. “I just need to get it to take hold in the game and once that happens, I feel like things are really going to start taking off.”
All it took was the cold Colorado temps, apparently, to heat his bat back up. AP
Who’s not
Sugano.Especially when he faces Ohtani.
Entering Friday, Ohtani had faced his fellow Japanese countryman twice in their careers: Going 2-for-2 in a Nippon Professional Baseball league game in Japan before Ohtani came over to the majors, then going 2-for-2 again with two home runs during Sugano’s debut MLB season with the Baltimore Orioles last year.
Now a member of the Rockies, Sugano didn’t have much better luck when Ohtani and the Dodgers arrived at Coors Field.
Ohtani led the game off with a double, extending his on-base streak to 49 games before scoring on a sacrifice fly from Smith later in the inning. In the second, Ohtani then singled, adding to an eventual total of nine hits that the Dodgers collected off Sugano in his four-inning, five-run, 91-pitch grind of an outing.
The good news for Sugano: He finally retired Ohtani on a ground ball in the fourth.
By then, however, the Dodgers were already putting the game out of reach.
Up next
The Dodgers and Rockies continue their series on Saturday, and this time there’s no snow in the forecast. Emmet Sheehan (2-0, 6.60 ERA) will square off against Ryan Feltner (1-1, 7.30) for the 5:10 p.m. PT first pitch.
DENVER, COLORADO - APRIL 17: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates on second base after hitting a double against the Colorado Rockies during the first inning at Coors Field on April 17, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The temperature in Denver was a frigid 35 degrees at first pitch, but the bats of the Dodgers stayed red hot. Max Muncy led the Los Angeles Dodgers’ offense with two solo home runs in their 7–1 victory over the Colorado Rockies on a snowy Friday night at Coors Field.
Baseball was ready to be played at Coors Field after five hours of snow removal and field preparation by the impressive Rockies grounds crew before first pitch.
The cold never bothered Max Muncy anyway.
The Dodgers slugger went 3-for-4 with two home runs, a double, two runs, and three RBI. Every hitter in the lineup sans Teoscar Hernandez had a base hit on the night.
After a day off at the plate, but not the mound, Shohei Ohtani collected his first base hit since Sunday to extend his on-base streak to 49 games. The lead-off double was scorched down the right field line on two strikes.
The Dodgers got on the board first thanks to a Will Smith sac fly.
Muncy, bundled up under his jersey for warmth, doubled the score in the next inning with a huge home run 435-feet over the center field wall.
The hit parade continued as Andy Pages and Hyeseong Kim both singled. Pages scored on a Freeland sac fly which looked like it should have been an out for anyone but the Rockies.
Hernandez was the only one without a hit in the Dodgers lineup. Hernandez struck out to end the sixth and break the string of five straight innings of runs scored. He ended up going 0-for-5 with three strikeouts.
Jake Dreyer pitched two scoreless innings out of the Dodgers bullpen and struck out three to shut the door on the Rockies for the series opener win.
Notes: Hyeseong Kim stole multiple bases (2) for the first time this season. Max Muncy has second multi-homer game of the season.
Up next
Emmet Sheehan (2-0, 6.60 ERA, 1.47 WHIP) looks for his third straight win for the Dodgers when he starts Saturday night (5:10 p.m.; SportsNet LA). Ryan Feltner (1-1, 7.30 ERA, 1.70 WHIP) takes the ball for the Rockies.