The Rays have a closer, outfield defense has improved, and other things we’ve learned over 51 games

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 22: Bryan Baker #47 of the Tampa Bay Rays reacts after pitching during the ninth inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on May 22, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. The Tampa Bay Rays won 4-2. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Many factors have contributed to the strong start, but what have we actually learned that we didn’t already expect entering the season?

Pitching

The Rays entered the season with a much stronger pitching outlook than they had in 2025 thanks to the additions of Martinez and Matz, along with the return to the pitcher-friendly Trop. McClanahan’s return from injury has also gone about as well as the organization could have hoped – especially when considering he hasn’t pitched in a Major League game since 2023. Rasmussen continues to be as reliable as they come, and Jax’s much-anticipated transition to the rotation has gone well so far. Pepiot’s injury was surprising and disappointing, but the depth has held up and we haven’t really learned anything new about the rotation.

We also knew the bullpen had plenty depth, and that depth has already been tested with Uceta and Wilson on the 60-day IL to begin the season. IL stints from Cleavinger and now Sulser have further tested that depth. Despite those injury concerns, the bullpen has performed relatively well. They’re roughly league average in earned runs per batter faced — a useful bullpen metric because it accounts for workload — and middle of the pack in save-plus-hold conversion rate. Ben Williamson (a position player who has pitched 1 inning), Yoendrys Gomez, Chase Solesky, and Aaron Brooks have combined for a 7.48 ERA in 21.2 IP this season and are skewing the bullpen performance quite a bit.

One thing we’ve learned: the Rays have a closer, and his name is Bryan Baker. All offseason the idea was there would be a “closer by committee” approach, but that hasn’t happened, although Cash will use Baker to pitch the eighth inning if that’s when the heart of the opposing lineup is batting. There are still four relievers with multiple saves and I expect that to continue to some extent, but Baker has made the most of the opportunity given to him.

Position Players

We knew the catching group would be better on both sides of the ball compared to 2025. It has been a bit of a surprise to see Nick Fortes get so much playing time – he has appeared in 42 of the team’s 51 games so far while Feduccia has played in 29. The Rays currently have the 12th best wRC+ from their catching group and are 3rd in framing strike rate. The duo we have right now is looking good, and Dom Keegan could see some reps in the majors at some point later in the summer.

The infield (plus DH) is still the strongest group of players on this team. Aranda, Caminero, and Yandy lead the way while Williamson and Palacios have made solid contributions so far. Taylor Walls surprised everyone with a quick return from an early IL stint, and it was good timing too as the game appeared to be a little too quick for Carson Williams. The infield has converted ground balls into outs at roughly a league-average rate, but I expect that to improve a bit as Caminero continues to find his groove defensively and Williamson gets more comfortable with his transition to second base.

The outfield has been better, but that was expected. The improvement has been driven by a shift towards more plate discipline and contact profiles on the offensive side while year-over-year improvements from Cedric Mullins and Chandler Simpson have helped make this unit one of the better defensive groups in the league. The Rays convert fly balls and line drives into outs 61.8% of the time – the third highest rate in the league and well above the average of 57.7%. Unsurprisingly to some, Ryan Vilade has been impactful on both sides of the ball with his 140 wRC+ and three defensive runs saved in the outfield.

The main thing we’ve learned is that the new Rays offense works. The run environment is different than it was a few years ago, and the Rays have put together an offense that is built for it. I expected them to be a playoff team, but I didn’t expect a 108-win pace. This pace is unlikely to hold for any club over a full season, but this looks like a legitimate playoff team. It’ll be interesting to see how aggressively the Rays approach the deadline as they try to improve the roster while also managing the coming Rule 5 crunch.

Former Braves star Bob Horner passes away at age 68

ATLANTA, GA - CIRCA 1982: Bob Horner #5 of the Atlanta Braves bats during an Major League Baseball game circa 1982 at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia. Horner played for the Braves from 1978-86. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This has been a rough year when it comes to notable names in Atlanta Braves history passing away. There was the double blow of losing both Ted Turner and Bobby Cox within the same week and now a former player has passed on. The Braves somberly shared the news that former star Bob Horner has passed away at the age of 68.

As the post shared, Horner left an indelible mark on the franchise while he donned the Atlanta uniform. He was picked first overall in 1978, he didn’t play a single game in the minors before making his big league debut and just to show that he belonged, he clubbed a homer in his first game as well and eventually earned the National League Rookie of the Year honors for that season.

Horner went on to spend nine seasons with the Braves where he earned an All-Star spot in 1982, hit four homers in a game in 1986 and he finished his Braves career with a slash line of .277/.340/.499 with an OPS of .839 and a OPS+ of 127. After becoming a free agent, he spent one season with the Yakult Swallows in Japan (which ended up being the best spot for him after it came out that the owners were colluding against free agents at the time) before joining the St. Louis Cardinals for the season after that. A shoulder injury derailed Horner’s time in St. Louis and he eventually called it a career once spring training rolled around the next season.

There wasn’t a ton for Braves fans to cheer about during the 1980s but if there was something to cheer about, there was a decent chance that it involved either Dale Murphy or Bob Horner. He remained a popular figure among Braves fans who had been fans during that time and he’s still a name that comes up whenever fans from that era reminisce about those days. He’ll be missed among fans across Braves Country. May he rest in peace.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Brett Baty, Gage Jump and Daniel Lynch IV

FANTASY BASEBALL WAIVER WIRE PICKUPS

Brett Baty (1B/2B/3B/OF Mets): Rostered in 10 percent of Yahoo leagues

It took Baty longer to get going than anyone would have liked. but he does seem to have turned the corner while hitting .293 with two homers, eight RBI and six walks in his last 12 games. And he's doing that while playing regularly against lefties, not because he's succeeding against them but because the Mets just don't have any better options. Their injury issues, which have led to Baty batting fourth and fifth against righties, definitely play a role in making Baty a smart pickup at this time.

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There was some genuine optimism about Baty coming into the year after he hit .291 with nine homers in the second half of last year and improved his exit velocity numbers. He hasn't really built on any of that so far, but he's still showing 84th percentile bat speed while maintaining the improvement in his chase rate. There's still too much swing-and-miss in his game, but he has the power to make up for it, if only his 10 barrels so far had translated into more than three homers. There really ought to be more doubles and homers on the way with his groundball rate right around the league average; he's at 43 percent right now after coming into the year at 52 percent lifetime.

Also making Baty attractive is his wealth of position eligibility. He's added first base and outfield to the mix this year after starting 60 games at third base and 46 at second base last season. It's too bad for him that the Mets play in a tough ballpark and aren't providing a lot of run and RBI opportunities at the moment, but full-time at-bats from Baty as both an MI and a CI option make him worth rostering right now.

▶ Read this week’s MLB Power Rankings!

Gage Jump (SP Athletics): Rostered in 11 percent of Yahoo leagues

Two years after being drafted 73rd overall out of LSU, Jump is set to make his major league debut Tuesday against the Mariners. The 24-year-old struck out one-third of the batters he faced in nine starts for Triple-A Las Vegas, amassing a 56/20 K/BB in 38 innings. He had a 4.50 ERA, but that's fine in a very tough environment for pitchers.

Jump's short-arm delivery produces 94-98 mph fastballs and very good mid-80s sliders. His split-change lacks much movement, so he'll start his major league career leaning on his top two pitches. If the command is there, the two offerings will make him an above average starter right away. However, his walk rate is up to 11.8 percent this year after coming in at 7.4 percent at lower levels last year. Before throwing seven scoreless innings last time out, he'd topped out at 4 2/3 innings in his first eight starts for Las Vegas. Part of that was because the A's were handling him carefully, but it was also true that it was taking him about 80 pitches to get through four innings. On May 8, he threw 103 pitches to get 14 outs.

Maybe Jump actually did turn the corner after that May 8 outing against the St. Paul Saints. He'd thrown 11 scoreless innings with a 15/1 K/BB since. He's overwhelmed lefties all year, limiting them to a .118 average. Righties, though, have hit .296 off him, and one can be sure MLB teams will set their lineups accordingly. With the Athletics' temporary home in Sacramento playing as an extreme hitter's park, Jump seems too risky to try in mixed leagues right now.

Daniel Lynch IV (RP Royals): Rostered in five percent of Yahoo leagues

After giving up three runs and throwing 32 pitches against the Mariners on Sunday, Lucas Erceg should not have been back on the mound for the Royals trying to protect a one-run lead against the Yankees on Monday. But there he was, and though the Yankees did not hit the ball particularly hard against him, he gave up two more runs to take his second loss and fourth blown save of the year. He has a 5.06 ERA and a poor 18/13 K/BB in 21 1/3 innings.

Working prior to Erceg on Monday was Lynch. The left-hander threw a scoreless eighth and would have been in line for a win if Erceg had converted the save. The outing lowered Lynch's ERA to 1.59. He has a 27/7 K/BB and has allowed just one homer in 22 2/3 innings. At this point, he seems like the Royals' best option in the ninth.

Previously a weak starter and then a generic reliever, Lynch has busted out by trading four-seamers for sinkers and improving his slider. He combats righties with a trusty changeup that has always served him well. He has a 95th percentile whiff rate this year, and his strikeout rate has climbed from 16 percent last season to 30 percent right now. Maybe he shouldn't be getting all of the save chances for the Royals; especially with Matt Strahm out, he will be needed to face lefties earlier in games on occasion. But Lynch is the Royals' most trustworthy arm right now, and with Erceg looking like middle-relief material, he seems worthy of a pickup.

Waiver Wire Quick Hits

- Instead of Jump, Christian Scott (13 percent rostered), Jack Leiter (31 percent), Griffin Jax (29 percent) and Troy Melton (17 percent) are some mostly available starters worth a try in shallow leagues.

- Jake McCarthy is leading off for the Rockies and getting all of the playing time he can handle with Mickey Moniak, Brenton Doyle and Jordan Beck all on the IL for Colorado. He's a fine short-term option for teams looking to add stolen bases.

Is Nathan MacKinnon playing tonight? Latest update on Avalanche star

The Colorado Avalanche will have star Nathan MacKinnon in the lineup on Tuesday, May 26, as they try to stave off elimination against the Vegas Golden Knights.

MacKinnon was injured while blocking a shot in Game 3 of the Western Conference finals and was limited for the remainder of the game, a 5-3 loss in which the Avalanche blew a 3-0 lead.

Coach Jared Bednar told reporters on Tuesday that MacKinnon would play. However, he indicated forward Valeri Nichushkin is a game-time decision. "We'll see," he said.

Bednar is also making a goalie change, announcing Mackenzie Blackwood as the starter. Scott Wedgewood had started the first three games of the series.

"If he's loose and confident and playing his game, I think he has the ability to not only win us games, but steal us games," Bednar said of Blackwood.

The Golden Knights lead the best-of-seven series 3-0 and can clinch a spot in the Stanley Cup Final with a victory.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Nathan MacKinnon injury update: Latest news on Avalanche star

Islanders sign speedster Liam Foudy to two-way contract extension

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Islanders player Liam Foudy running a drill during practice on the ice rink, Image 2 shows New York Islanders player Liam Foudy moving the puck with Detroit Red Wings player Simon Edvinsson in pursuit during a game at UBS Arena
Islanders sign

The Islanders signed forward Liam Foudy to a one-year, two-way contract extension, the team announced Tuesday

Foudy, who has spent almost all of his time under contract with the Isles in the AHL, appeared in just one NHL game last season, the final contest of the 2025-26 campaign against the Hurricanes on April 14. 

New York Islanders Liam Foudy runs a drill during practice at the Northwell Health Ice Center, Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025, in East Meadow, NY. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“I’ve watched Foudy since junior. His speed is always the first thing that pops. And everybody’s looking for speed,” head coach Pete DeBoer said when the team called Foudy up.

“Again, there’s late bloomers all the time. There’s always guys that get it a little bit later than others. That doesn’t necessarily mean you’re gonna hit on all those guys. And it might be one out of 10. If you can get that one out of 10 guy that is that late bloomer, that took a little bit longer, that becomes a really effective NHL player, a lot of teams have them, that’s a big bonus for an organization. I think it’s important to keep those guys on your radar.”

Having played for three different NHL organizations in his career, Foudy has collected 22 points (seven goals, 15 assists) through 105 games. 

He’s played 230 contests across two AHL campaigns with Bridgeport, posting 46 goals and 46 assists. 

New York Islanders Liam Foudy moves the puck down ice as Simon Edvinsson #77 of the Detroit Red Wings gives chase during the first period at UBS Arena, Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024, in Elmont, NY. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

The 26-year-old set an AHL career high in power-play goals this past season with five, while also recording six game-winners.

His 47 points were also ranked second on Bridgeport, behind only Adam Beckman (51 points). 

Kendrick Perkins has extreme suggestion for Cavaliers after ‘embarrassing’ showing vs. Knicks

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Donovan Mitchell of the Cleveland Cavaliers looking on, Image 2 shows A commentator on ESPN discussing whether the Cavs had a problem with their effort in the East Finals after being swept by the Knicks
Perkins on Cavs effort

The lack of competitiveness of the Eastern Conference finals was offensive to Kendrick Perkins.

The ESPN analyst went off on the Cleveland Cavaliers after they lost each game by double digits to the Knicks in the four-game sweep.

“They got punked, and they got embarrassed,” Perkins said on “First Take” on Tuesday morning.

“It was an embarrassment for the league to witness that. The lack of competition to compete in between the lines at this stage.”

Donovan Mitchell and the Cavaliers got outclassed by the Knicks. Getty Images

Perkins went as far as to say that everyone in the organization should be on the chopping block, even after they were part of the final four teams in the playoffs. 

“If I’m Dan Gilbert, I’m looking at every single person on that roster, every single person on that coaching staff, and I’m saying everybody is on the chopping block. Every single one of them,” Perkins said. “We are not going to give Donovan Mitchell a pass. Those points was cute, but they weren’t powerful.”

This was the fourth straight year in which the Cavaliers made the playoffs, improving steadily and now reaching the conference finals for the first time since 2018. 

It is not just Perkins who was upset with the outcome of the latest series.

Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert made a post on X, citing how the effort displayed by his team was “nowhere near where they needed to be.”

While the sweep and the Game 1 meltdown had some calling for coach Kenny Atkinson’s job, the Cavaliers are retaining him, according to ESPN.

Kendrick Perkins went in on the Cavaliers. @awfulannouncing/X

The Cavaliers will also have important decisions to make regarding key players on the 2025 squad, which had the highest payroll in the NBA.

Firstly, their big trade deadline acquisition, James Harden, is set to be a free agent this offseason and was making $39.4 million at 36 years old.

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Fellow star guard Donovan Mitchell is eligible for a contract extension this offseason. Mitchell is making a team-high $46.4 million, tied with Evan Mobley. 

Both players have indicated that they are interested in continuing what they built in Cleveland. But that decision will ultimately come down to general manager Mike Gansey. 

He will be tasked with putting the right pieces in place for the Cavaliers to return to the NBA finals.

However, it will take a long time to get the bad taste of the recent series out of their mouth.

Where to watch San Antonio Spurs vs. Oklahoma City Thunder Game 5 NBA playoffs: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Tuesday, May 26

The San Antonio Spurs take on the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 5 of the Western Conference finals. The series is tied 2-2 after the Spurs’ Game 4 victory. Oklahoma City is favored with a -192 moneyline compared to San Antonio's +159. The over/under is 216.5.

  • Spread: Oklahoma City Thunder -5.5

  • Moneyline: Oklahoma City Thunder -192 (63.0%) / San Antonio Spurs +159 (37.0%)

  • Over/Under: 216.5

Game 1:Spurs 122, Thunder 115 (2OT)
Game 2:Thunder 122, Spurs 113
Game 3:Thunder 123, Spurs 108
Game 4: Spurs 103, Thunder 82
Game 5: San Antonio at Oklahoma City (Tuesday May 26, 8:30 p.m. ET, NBC/Peacock)
Game 6: Oklahoma City at San Antonio (Thursday May 28, 8:30 p.m. ET, NBC/Peacock)*
Game 7: San Antonio at Oklahoma City (Saturday May 30, 8:30 p.m. ET, NBC/Peacock)*

* if necessary

Three keys: Creativity can help Aaron Nola right ship in San Diego

Three keys: Creativity can help Aaron Nola right ship in San Diego originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

SAN DIEGO — The Phillies’ top three starters have been lights out lately.

Since Zack Wheeler returned to the rotation on April 25, Wheeler, Cristopher Sánchez and Jesús Luzardo have combined to go 10-1 in 17 starts with a 1.46 ERA and 0.88 WHIP. Opponents are slashing .192/.243/.269 against them.

Outstanding.

That kind of production has helped mask some of the inconsistency from the back end of the rotation.

The Phillies have recently gotten more from rookie right-hander Andrew Painter, who has a 2.60 ERA and 0.98 WHIP over his last three starts. The 23-year-old has made adjustments to his pitch mix and usage, which has helped him hit his stride as the Phillies continue to do the same under interim manager Don Mattingly.

The one rotation constant during their 18-8 stretch under Mattingly has been Aaron Nola’s struggles.

Nola will take the ball Tuesday night against the Padres at Petco Park. Through his first 10 starts, the Phillies’ longest-tenured player has a 6.01 ERA. He has allowed 61 hits in 50 2/3 innings. Only three of his outings have been quality starts — against the Rockies, Giants and Marlins.

Those three teams have a combined .415 winning percentage and .688 OPS this season.

San Diego may look like a tougher task at 31-22, good for the top Wild Card spot in the National League. But the Padres have produced a .657 OPS, the second worst mark in the Majors.

So, how can Nola bounce back?

THE SEQUENCE

The pitch that has hamstrung Nola in his 12th big league season has been his four-seam fastball.

Opponents are hitting .417 against it with an astronomical .958 slugging percentage. That opponent slug would be close to double his career high against the pitch.

Left-handed hitters have done the most damage, hitting .484 with a 1.065 slugging percentage and 97.2 mph average exit velocity.

It has not been a competitive pitch.

Luckily for Nola, he will face a Padres lineup with just two left-handed hitters, the fewest he has faced in a start this season. Gavin Sheets has posted a .902 OPS against righties. Jackson Merrill is batting just .194 against right-handers.

That could allow Nola to lean more heavily on his knuckle curve, which has been his most reliable weapon this year. Opponents have struggled against it from both sides. Right-handed hitters are batting .189 against the pitch. Lefties are at .229.

Nola threw the pitch on the first pitch seven times in his last start, six of them for strikes. He threw it for a strike at an 85 percent rate, a season high. If there was a positive from that outing, it was that.

The ability to throw the knuckle curve in any count helps him pitch backward. It can also open up more creativity with his changeup. Nola throws it only five percent of the time against righties, but it could become a strikeout pitch if he is ahead with two strikes.

LIMIT THE HEATER?

Nola is going to have to get creative if he moves away from the four-seamer.

It is a pitch this Padres lineup can damage.

Nola’s four-seamer averages 92.1 mph. San Diego’s hitters have slashed .289/.418/.467 against four-seamers at 92.1 mph or lower this season. Their average drops to .266 against four-seamers at 93 mph or lower and .236 at 94 mph or lower.

One pitch right-handed hitters have handled against Nola is the sinker. But the Padres have posted just a .715 OPS against sinkers and two-seamers.

Boring that pitch in on the hands of San Diego’s right-handed bats could help Nola induce softer contact, something he has struggled to do this year. According to Statcast, he is in the 32nd percentile among pitchers with a 41.9 percent hard-hit rate.

Tunneling the knuckle curve with the sinker against a mostly right-handed Padres lineup could be a key to a bounce-back outing.

STAY AHEAD

This can be said about any pitcher, but Nola’s numbers show a stark difference between pitching ahead and pitching behind.

When Nola gets ahead 0-1, hitters have a .314 on-base percentage. If the season ended today, that would still be a career high, but it has at least limited opposing bats.

When he falls behind 1-0, that OBP jumps to .388 with a .903 OPS.

And Nola cannot simply steal a first-pitch strike by catching too much plate.

Of the 25 balls put in play against Nola’s first pitch this season, he has allowed 11 hits, a .440 average and two homers. He carries a 7.71 ERA on the first pitch. That ERA has been north of seven in first-pitch situations over the past four seasons.

That circles back to pitch diversity.

Nola does not need to reinvent himself Tuesday night. But against a Padres lineup that has struggled overall and will not be stacked with left-handed bats, there is a path. It likely starts with fewer predictable four-seamers, more early-count curveballs and enough sinkers to keep righties from leaning out over the plate.

NOTES

Mattingly will go with Kyle Schwarber in the leadoff spot Tuesday. Trea Turner will bat second. The Phillies’ interim skipper will give Adolis García “a day” and play Edmundo Sosa out in left field, with Brandon Marsh in right.

Turner is batting .115 over his last seven games with three hits in 26 at-bats. Schwarber, meanwhile, has a 1.204 OPS over his last 15 games. As Mattingly put it, moving him to leadoff gives the Phillies “boom out of the gate.”

The argument against Schwarber in the leadoff spot in the past has been that it can clog the basepaths for Turner. But right now, the Phillies’ shortstop is not getting on base enough to use his legs.

Until he does, giving the club’s hottest hitter a chance to provide thump at the top of the lineup makes sense. Schwarber’s big swings have been the difference plenty of times lately, especially working hand-in-hand with their dominant pitching performances.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Picks, Predictions & Best Bets for Spurs vs Thunder Game 5 on May 26

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The Western Conference Finals are tied at two games apiece because Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is willing to move the ball, not despite the two-time MVP being forced to move the ball.

Yet, it's still an unexpected approach for the Oklahoma City Thunder.

These Shai Gilgeous-Alexander odds expect Oklahoma City’s role players to be the beneficiaries of his playmaking as he combats the San Antonio Spurs’ defense in Game 5 on Tuesday, May 26.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander prop pick for Game 5

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander best bet: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Over 7.5 assists (-130 at bet365)

As the Oklahoma City Thunder have lost Ajay Mitchell (out) and Jalen Williams (officially questionable, but proceed as if he is out), the ball has been in Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s hands even more. And that is saying something for one of the highest-usage players in the NBA.

The flip side of that is the San Antonio Spurs can devote more defenders to Gilgeous-Alexander, as well. With respect to Cason Wallace and even Jared McCain, they are not the kind of creators or ballhandlers that force San Antonio to worry about them.

Combine those thoughts, and we have a scenario where the ball is both in SGA's hands more often and needs to get out of his hands more often. It is by San Antonio’s design that the two-time MVP has dished out at least seven assists in each game of this series, with seven actually being SGA’s low-water mark thus far.

Gilgeous-Alexander may have averaged only 6.6 assists this regular season and 7.1 through the first two rounds of this postseason, but the Spurs are forcing the issue out of SGA’s hands. If his teammates can hit some shots — more likely at home than on the road — then any number below 8.5 should be quickly bet to the Over.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander same-game parlay

Not many teams in the NBA have the perimeter defenders — not to mention the rim protection provided by one Victor Wembanyama — to force the ball out of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s hands, but the Spurs do. And in doing so, they may be providing the blueprint to remember for years to come.

Gilgeous-Alexander took 23 and 24 shots in the first two games of this series, respectively. That then plummeted to 17 and 15 in Games 3 and 4, respectively. He took just one 3-pointer in Game 4.

San Antonio will not let SGA find a clear path into the lane, and he has never been a good enough 3-point shooter to thrive with volume from beyond the arc.

The Thunder need their role players to shoot better at home than they did on the road. If they do, Oklahoma City can survive with the ball away from SGA.

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The Weathers’ been just fine

May 18, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Ryan Weathers (40) pitches against the Toronto Blue Jays during the first inning at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The starting rotation has been the strength of the Yankees in the season’s first third, even as it’s dealt with its own share of chaos. Luis Gil didn’t last long in the starting five, Elmer Rodríguez has shown that he’s not quite ready for MLB, the team has had to manage the returns of Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón, and of course Max Fried has been placed on the IL. Somehow the player we had the least information on at the start of the year has had a remarkable stabilizing effect as pitchers move in and out around him, and Ryan Weathers has already surpassed his preseason fWAR projection.

Everyone pitches backwards these days — well, everyone but Cam Schlittler — with fastball usage at the lowest level it’s been in 20 years. Truth be told it’s probably at the lowest level that we have pitch tracking data for, I just went back 20 years because it was a nice round number. Pitchers have accepted that the bendy stuff is harder to hit than the straight stuff, and that’s been key to Weathers’ strong start.

Offering his four-seam just 30 percent of the time, bang on league average, Weathers mixes a pair of breaking balls and a changeup alongside a sinker, and he’s probably best off to drop the four-seam fastball entirely. It boasts an ugly .641 xSLG, nearly double the same metric for each of his “secondary” offerings. The sinker is slightly more effective, mostly against right-handed hitters with traffic. The slider, sweeper and offspeed though, all run whiff rates north of 30 percent — all while he has also been able to pitch reasonably deep into ballgames.

Normally we see a tradeoff with this kind of stuff; batters swing and miss a lot but that drives up pitch count. Weathers runs those whiff rates while making it into the sixth inning in 40 percent of his starts so far. Yes, there’s a collection of folks who will scoff at that being an impressive rate, but Weathers’ 5.71 innings per start is a step above the MLB average, 5.12.

It’s this combination that has made me rethink the perpetual discussion around which pitcher in the rotation is destined for some bullpen time. Weathers’ experience as a swingman and the power of those breaking pitches has had me thinking about an Andrew Miller-esque role out of the rotation, but then again when Andrew Miller was Andrew Miller he simply had a better fastball than Weathers boasts. Will Warren has a much better fastball, and through his 11 starts, Memorial Day inclusive, goes 5.27 innings per start.

Of course these problems eventually work themselves out — a week or so ago we were hemming and hawing about this exact dilemma, only for Max Fried to bump his elbow and need an IL stint. When Fried is ready to come back, unfortunately someone will likely have an ache or pain of their own, or performance will make the decision an obvious one. In the season’s first third though, the Ryan Weathers trade has to be considered a remarkable success. Maintenance of this pace now becomes the goal, rather than raw improvement.

Dodgers stud prospect injured after freak encounter with team bat dog

Talk about a ruff day at the ballpark.

One of the Dodgers’ top prospects suffered an injury on Monday during a freak encounter with his team’s bat dog.

The bizarre scene unfolded during the second inning of the Tulsa Drillers’ matchup with Northwest Arkansas at ONEOK Field in Oklahoma.

Kendall George, the No. 13 prospect in the Dodgers’ farm system and the Drillers’ starting center fielder, was injured during a wild scene at a game in Tulsa on Monday. Getty Images

Kendall George, the No. 13 prospect in the Dodgers’ farm system and the Drillers’ starting center fielder, scored on a line drive to right field. As he was jogging to his dugout, a Tulsa bat-retrieving dog suddenly bolted toward home plate.

In an effort to avoid a collision with the pup, George jumped into the air. But as he came down, he tweaked something.

The 21-year-old looked visibly frustrated as he was forced to leave the game.

The extent of George’s injury is not yet known, though his loss would be a big one for the Drillers. In 43 games this season, he batted .333 with 16 RBI and 52 runs scored. A first-round pick in the 2023 MLB draft, George also had 26 steals in 29 attempts.

According to MLB Pipeline, it’s anticipated the 5-foot-9, 170-pound outfielder will make his Big League debut in 2027.

Kendall George was injured as he tried to avoid a collision with a Tulsa Drillers bat dog on Monday. Drillers Baseball

Fans of the Dodgers weren’t pleased when news of George’s issue reached their computers on Tuesday, with many racing to X to call for Tulsa to ban bat dogs moving forward.

“Dogs don’t belong on the baseball field,” one app user wrote. “This is such a stupid gimmick.”

“I’m all for bat dogs,” another added, “but man, teams gotta hold them until the play is entirely over. Keep both the players and the pups safe.”

Others, however, blamed George for the situation.

“Buddy learn how to slow down,” an X user said. “Practically run into the the stands after crossing home without any pressure.”

The Drillers — who boasted about their lineup of bat dogs on Facebook before the season — haven’t yet publicly commented on the situation.

Three Diamondbacks Hitting Prospects That Have Impressed in 2026

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 14, 2025: Alberto Barriga #10 of the Arizona Diamondbacks bats during the eighth inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Kansas City Royals at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on March 14, 2025 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by David Durochik/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Introduction

Instead of talking about the named and better known prospect in the Arizona Diamondbacks farm system, today I thought I’d take a quick look at three lesser known prospects.

Jose Mejia 2B/3B

Fangraphs | Baseball-Reference

The Baltimore Orioles signed the then 17 year old Jose Mejia as international amateur free agent back in 2023, who then proceed to clobber the Dominican Summer League for 54 games across his 2023 and 2024 season with a triple slash of .307/.425/.409, a 136 wRC+ while walking (14.2 BB%) more than he was striking out (9.0%). In 2025, the Orioles had him play stateside in the complex league, where he’d play in 47 games and put up a triple slash of .274/.418/.411 with a .416 wOBA and a 132 wRC+. More importantly, he’d improve his walk percentage (16.5 BB%) while his strikeout percentage (10k%) saw only a slightly uptick. Mejia would then get a two game cup of coffee in A ball, where he’d go 1 for 5 with a pair of stolen bases thanks to the walk and hit by pitch.

The Dbacks would acquire Mejia (along with two pitchers) from the Orioles in the Blaze Alexander trade, the 20 year old Mejia was assigned to the Visalia Rawhide to begin the 2026 season. In 33 games for Visalia, Mejia hit .299/.449/.486 with a 144 wRC+, a .434 wOBA. His walk percentage an improvement to 19.9%, but he did also see his strikeout percentage jump up to 15 4%. Regardless his hot hitting earned him a promotion to Hillsboro on May 15th. In his seven games in Hillsboro, Mejia is 3 for 25 with 5 walks and two stolen bases, though he has struck out eight times and been caught stealing twice. Considering the lowest wRC+ Mejia has posted prior to his promotion to Hillsboro is a 121 wRC+, I’d expect his current 29 wRC+ not to last very long.

Unless Mejia goes on another month long hot streak, I would expect him to finish his year out at the High A level, though if he’s successful enough the Dbacks could promote him once again to the AA level Amarillo Sod Poodles finish out the last few games of the season. The Diamondbacks are absolutely stacked at second base, so Mejia will likely have to settle on another position for an easier path to the majors

Alberto Barriga C

Fangraphs | Baseball-Reference

The Diamondbacks signed Barriga as a 17 year old amateur free agent out of Mexico back in january of 2022. Barriga would put up impressive numbers in his pro debut in the DSL in 2022 (253/.342/.361, 120 wRC+) and even more eye popping numbers in the complex in 2023 (.414/.457/.586, 158 WRC+) and above average numbers in 2024 (276/.362/.432 105 wRC+), but he’d struggle after being promoted to A ball to end his 2024. In 2025, Barriga returned to A ball and put up the worst numbers of his career, hitting .199/.326/.296 with a well below average 83 wRC+ and insane 28.8 SO%. The one bright spot by far was his above average 12.9 BB%, the highest of his career since his debut.

Barriga was promoted to A+ Level Hillsboro for 2026, where he’s completely rebounded offensively, and arguably has been the team’s best hitter. Through his first 28 games, the 21 year old catcher is hitting .296/.391/.541 with a 144 wRC+. He’s improved upon his BB% to 13%, while he’s cut the strikout percent back down to an acceptable 22.6%.

The player I like to compare Barriga to is Daulton Varsho, or at least who he was as a prospect. Barriga isn’t quite as undersized as Varsho was, but they’re both undersized surprisingly nimble catchers, though Barriga in my opinion is much more likely to stick at catcher.

Manuel Pena 1B/2B/3B/LF

Fangraphs | Baseball-Reference

Manuel Pena was signed as an international amateur free agent out of the Dominican Republic by the Diamondbacks all the way back in January of 2021. He has a solid enough debut as a 17 year old in 57 games played in the Dominican Summer League, putting up a 253/.342/.361 with a .349wOBA and a 105 wRC+, with a solid 11.7 BB% and acceptable 20.7 K%. The following year, he’d come stateside and play in 32 games in the Complex, hitting 284/336/.466 with .364 wOBA and 120 wRC+, though his BB% fell to 7.8% while his K% jumped to 23.4%. Pena would spend the remaining 36 games of his 2022 season in A ball, which began a stretch of four season in a row where he’d fail to put up above average numbers as a hitter. We’ll skip ahead a few seasons, as Pena was okay enough that he did work his way up to AA by the 2025 season. In 143 games last year in Amarillo, Pena hit .288/.326/.460 with a 99 wRC+, a .356 wOBA, 5.1 BB% and 22.3 K%.

In his second go around, Pena is hitting much better. In 43 games this year Pena has 18 homeruns, compared to the 14 he hit the entire season the previous year. He’s hitting .284/.328/.634 with 123 wRc+ and a .406 wOBA. Although his 23.2 K% is a tick higher than the year before, his 6.6 BB% is as well. Interestingly, Pena has the lowest BABIP of his career at .281, which is much lower than next lowest at .310. Pena is still only 22 years old despite being in the system for so long.

Pittsburgh Penguins sign Evgeni Malkin for one more year

The Pittsburgh Penguins are keeping the Big Three together after signing center Evgeni Malkin to a one-year, $5.5 million contract.

Sidney Crosby, Malkin and Kris Letang have been together for 20 seasons, a record in professional sports. They won Stanley Cups titles in 2009, 2016 and 2017.

Crosby has another year left on his contract and Letang is signed for three more years. Malkin, who turns 40 this summer, was drafted second overall in 2004, a year before Crosby went first overall.

Malkin ranks in the top three in team history in all major statistical categories, including games played (1,269, second), goals (533, third), assists (874, third), points (1,407, third), power-play goals (187, third), game-winning goals (89, second) and overtime goals (14, second).

He dealt with injuries and a suspension last season, but was still a point-per-game player with 61 points in 56 games.

The Penguins surprisingly made the playoffs this season but were knocked out in the first round by the Philadelphia Flyers. Malkin had two goals and an assist in six games in that series.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Penguins' Evgeni Malkin signs one-year contract

Cavs make important decision on front office and coaching staff

CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 23: Kenny Atkinson of the Cleveland Cavaliers talks with the press prior to a game against the New York Knicks in Game Three of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals at Rocket Arena on May 23, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers could make drastic changes this summer. However, those moves won’t come at the expense of either the front office or the coaching staff. According to Joe Vardon of The Athletic, the Cavs are expected to retain both.

This shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise, despite how things ended on Monday night.

Koby Altman and the rest of the front office have built a sustainable winner. This team has won 50 or more games in four straight seasons and has won four playoff series during that span. They haven’t been able to reach the goal of winning a championship, but that is a major accomplishment for a small-market team that doesn’t have the built-in advantages that the coastal powerhouses do.

Altman took over for David Griffin after the 2016-17 season. During his tenure, he oversaw LeBron James’s final season with the team, a multi-year rebuild, trading for Donovan Mitchell, and the team’s recent ascent back up the Eastern Conference standings.

Head coach Kenny Atkinson will also be back next season for his third season with the team.

It’s easy to blame Atkinson for a lot of this group’s failures in the postseason. Some of the in-game adjustments came too late, and he does bear some of the blame for the team not being able to close out multiple winnable postseason games.

At the same time, Atkinson guided the Cavs through a rocky regular season, navigated the addition of James Harden, and has earned the trust of his team’s star players. This is after revolutionizing the Cavs’ offense the previous year, leading them to a 64-win season, and winning Coach of the Year.

“We’ve done something that we haven’t done since 2018,” Mitchell said after the Game 4 loss to the New York Knicks. “I love Kenny. We love Kenny. We ride with Kenny, and ultimately that’s all that matters.”

Earlier on Wednesday, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst reported that Cavs’ chairman Dan Gilbert is “heavily involved” again with the team after not being as hands-on while dealing with some health issues in previous years. Presumably, both the front office and coaching staff have earned his trust.

We’ll see what moves are made this summer. At the very least, we know that there will be continuity in decision-making and coaching.

Depth, development and where the Sixers go next

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - MAY 24: Jared McCain #3 of the Oklahoma City Thunder is defended by Julian Champagnie #30 of the San Antonio Spurs during the second quarter in Game Four of the NBA Western Conference Finals at Frost Bank Center on May 24, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In watching this year’s conference finals, it’s apparent how woefully ill-equipped the Sixers were for a deep playoff run. Sure, I will never forget the sheer euphoria of slaying the Celtics after rebounding from a 3-1 series deficit in the first round this spring, but cold water got thrown on that fun quite quickly given how dominant the Knicks were in sweeping them in the Eastern Conference Semifinals.

The Knicks did the same thing to Cleveland and are now back in the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999. In the West, the Thunder and Spurs are preparing for a Game 5 slugfest on Tuesday night in a series that’s destined to go the distance. The Sixers just aren’t able to compete with these teams as currently constructed and it’s becoming more and more clear nightly.

The problems of this Sixers season, and, really, this whole era for the franchise, predate the misfires from former president of basketball operations Daryl Morey, but the executive’s time running the show for the team did little to put them on the cutting edge of the sport. Morey’s time as an assistant in Boston’s front office and then as the lead exec in Houston had at the heart of the NBA’s analytical revolution, a figure who was on the lookout for what the future of basketball would be. The Sixers’ whole setup right now, in contrast, is outdated.

The Sixers and Morey’s quest for a “Big 3” is a relic that went out of vogue a couple presidential administrations ago. Looking at the three teams still standing this postseason in New York, Oklahoma City and San Antonio, the pieces are so different and result in an equation that has a championship answer, unlike what the Sixers are doing.

Sure, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Victor Wembanyama are poised to be MVP candidates for at least the next half-decade and Jalen Brunson is a star in his own right, but these teams are so deep and so well rounded that their bench glue guys are way better out there on the court than some actual Sixers starters and key cogs. Alex Caruso would be, what, the fourth-best player on the Sixers? Miles McBride would have a cult devoted to him here.

The Sixers haven’t prioritized depth in favor of their top-heavy roster, but, just as importantly, they haven’t prioritized the development needed in order to have a comprehensive collection of playoff talent.

No one defines that more than Jared McCain. Now with Oklahoma City, McCain looked like a legitimate building block in his limited action as a rookie in Philadelphia. Injuries derailed him, but he also just fell out of favor in head coach Nick Nurse’s rotation, as the team opted for low-ceiling players with no potential chance to be true risers in the future over McCain.

Now with the Thunder after a deadline deal that the fan base loathed and potentially on the verge of playing in the NBA Finals in his second pro season, McCain has been more than solid off the bench for Oklahoma City. He’s shooting 37.3 percent from deep in about 15 minutes of play per night. Is he going to be a star in this league? I’m doubtful there. Would he have helped the Sixers against both Boston and New York while on a cheap rookie deal with room to grow and mature as a player? The answer to that is unequivocally yes, but the organization was not willing to put him on that type of developmental path in a season where they only ended up as the No. 7 seed in the Eastern Conference.

For the more casual Sixers fan, a player in that mold who’s flown completely under the radar is the Spurs’ Julian Champagnie. The Sixers had him on a two-way contract through the middle of the 2023 season. He was waived after just playing seven total minutes as a Sixer, the Spurs scooped him up and he’s since started every playoff game for San Antonio this year. Champagnie never got a true chance to showcase himself in Philly and is now two wins away from starting in an NBA Finals game.

Under Morey, the Sixers were never good enough contenders to even make a conference finals, but tried their mightiest to do so. That’s valiant, but smart organizations across the league have illustrated that they can shoot for the Larry O’Brien Trophy with much greater accuracy than the Sixers ever could while also cultivating a base of young, cost-efficient players to counterbalance their top star. I have my doubts the next person in charge of the Sixers’ front office will rectify these issues, especially for a franchise that’s going on four-plus decades of mishaps, but here’s to hoping, I guess.