Astros star Jeremy Pena will miss WBC — and possibly Opening Day — in injury crusher

Jeremy Peña of the Dominican Republic baseball team throws the ball.
Jeremy Peña of the Dominican Republic throws the ball during the third inning of an exhibition game against the Detroit Tigers at Estadio Quisqueya.

Shortstop Jeremy Peña suffered a fracture in the tip of his right ring finger and will be reevaluated in two weeks, the Astros announced Thursday.

Peña, who is part of the Dominican Republic’s team in this year’s World Baseball Classic, will miss the tournament and could be out for Opening Day, which is 22 days away.

He sustained the injury in the third inning of Wednesday’s exhibition contest against the Tigers in the Dominican Republic after fielding a ground ball hit by Detroit outfielder Wenceel Pérez.

Jeremy Peña of the Dominican Republic throws the ball during the third inning of an exhibition game against the Detroit Tigers at Estadio Quisqueya. Getty Images

The 2022 World Series MVP could be seen inspecting his finger multiple times after recording the out, and he left the game after taking one more at-bat.

The injury paves the way for Diamondbacks All-Star Geraldo Perdomo to take over at shortstop, with Yankees utilityman Amed Rosario also an option.

Dominican Republic general manager and former MLB slugger Nelson Cruz said that an injury replacement for Peña would be announced shortly, per ESPN.

While the loss of Peña is a crusher, D.R’s star-studded squad still boasts Mets star Juan Soto, Fernando Tatis Jr., Manny Machado, Junior Caminero, Ketel Marte and Julio Rodriguez.

The Dominican Republic is set to kick off the tournament on Friday night against Nicaragua in a Pool D matchup.

Peña made his first All-Star team in 2025. Getty Images

Peña, 28, is coming off a banner year in Houston, which saw him make his first career All-Star team while finishing 10th in American League Most Valuable Player voting.

In 125 games, he slashed .304/.363/.477 with 17 home runs, 62 RBIs and 20 stolen bases despite missing time with a fractured rib.

In the interim, Peña’s injury actually eases a logjam in the Astros’ infield.

Third baseman/outfielder Isaac Paredes, who has been floated in trade rumors all offseason, could see regular playing time to open the season in Peña’s absence.

Carlos Correa, currently slotted in at the hot corner, could shift back to his familiar shortstop position, which temporarily opens a spot for Paredes.

Rece Hinds walk-off homer leads Reds past Dodgers

GOODYEAR, ARIZONA - MARCH 4: Rece Hinds #57 of the Cincinnati Reds celebrates in the dugout after scoring on a single by Leo Balcazar during the seventh inning of the World Baseball Classic exhibition game against Team Cuba at Goodyear Ballpark on March 4, 2026 in Goodyear, Arizona. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was a wild one in Goodyear Ballpark on Thursday afternoon as ESPN broadcast a ridiculous 14-13 victory by the Cincinnati Reds over the Los Angeles Dodgers that featured a combined 10 (!) homers between the two clubs.

Fortunately for the Reds, they came out victorious in this game that ultimately means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but it sure was entertaining in the process.

The Good

Cincinnati’s offense got off to a rockin’ start against LA lefty Cole Irvin. Elly De La Cruz ripped a 438 foot blast off Irvin in the Bottom of the 1st to get the Reds on the board (from the right side of the plate!), and Will Benson followed later that inning with a 2-run blast of his own (off a lefty!).

Elly’s homer came off the bat at 114.5 mph. Not bad for his less-productive side of the plate.

Cincinnati’s offense was potent throughout, with Nate Lowe (3-run tater), Matt McLain (4th tater of the spring already), and eventually Rece Hinds (a 3-run walk-off in the Bottom of the 9th) all eventually adding to the tally.

Here’s Hinds’ laser down the LF line to flip a 13-11 defecit to the final 14-13 margin.

Cincinnati also managed to walk more times (6) than they struck out on the day (5), and I’ll wager that each and every time the Reds hit as many homers as they have Ks will end up being a very, very good day for them going forward.

The Bad

The pitching today…woof!

Shoutout to Julian Aguiar, at least, who fanned 4 against nary a walk while allowing just a lone earned run (on a solo dinger) in 2.0 IP to get the late win. Hagen Danner, to his credit, also pitched a scoreless, perfect frame.

Everyone else, though got rocked through and through, and that includes projected closer Emilio Pagán. Pagán was tagged for 4 ER on 4 H in his lone frame, and that included an ugly trio of homers allowed. Meanwhile, top projected setup man Tony Santillan wasn’t much better as he allowed 3 ER on a hit and 3 walks while also yielding a homer before being pulled having recorded just a pair of outs.

The miserable spring for Connor Phillips continued too, unfortunately, as he once again had serious issues finding the zone. He was tagged for 3 ER on 2 H and 2 BB in his IP while recording nary a K, and his spring ERA now sits at 14.73.

Adding insult to injury was the way the pitching staff got knocked around. Old friends Santiago Espinal and Nick Senzel combined for 3 homers and 7 ribbies off Reds pitching on the day, though at least the arms kept Matt McLain’s brother Sean from socking one into the stands.

The Joe Nuxhall Memorial Honorary Star of the Game

That goes to Sean’s big brother Matt, who went 3 for 3 with a homer, 3 runs scored, and a pair of ribbies to push his Cactus League OPS up to a ridiculous 2.112 so far.

Hat tip to Elly (2 for 3, 2 R, 2 RBI, HR) and Lowe (2 for 3, R, 3 RBI, HR) for equally excellent play.

What’s Next

Andrew Abbott will take the mound on Friday on the road in Scottsdale as the Reds take on the San Francisco Giants. First pitch is set for the usual 3:05 PM ET, though this one sadly won’t be televised. You will be able to listen in through 700 WLW’s feed, however.

Rasmus Ristolainen In Flyers Lineup Despite Trade Rumors

Despite a bevy of trade rumors circling him, Rasmus Ristolainen will play and start for the Philadelphia Flyers against the Utah Mammoth on Thursday night.

Ristolainen, 32, is paired up with Travis Sanheim on defense and will not sit out Thursday's contest in preparation or anticipation of any kind of trade.

Defenseman Adam Ginning, who was recently called up by the Flyers, is listed as a scratch against Utah.

Previously, Scott Laughton played the day before the Flyers traded him to the Toronto Maple Leafs, and prior to that, Joel Farabee and Morgan Frost played the same night they were dealt to the Calgary Flames.

After the Buffalo Sabres missed out on St. Louis Blues defenseman Colton Parayko, who exercised his no-trade clause to block a move, they could logically pivot to an old friend in Ristolainen as their next trade target.

Flyers' Latest Signing Creates New Trade PossibilitiesFlyers' Latest Signing Creates New Trade PossibilitiesAhead of Friday's NHL trade deadline, the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a> have yet to strike any deals of substance, though their latest signing indicates that one could be coming soon.

Players like Connor Murphy, Tyler Myers, Nick Blankenburg, and MacKenzie Weegar have already addressed right-shot defense needs for contenders like Edmonton, Dallas, Utah, and Colorado, so the Ristolainen trade market is rapidly thinning.

Boston and Detroit are believed to be seeking right-shot defenders as well.

Ristolainen and the Flyers are aiming to win their fourth-straight contest.

Senators Acquire Forward Warren Foegele From Los Angeles

With the NHL Trade deadline set for Friday at 3 pm, the Senators have pulled off a trade with the Los Angeles Kings to acquire veteran forward Warren Foegele.

In return, the Senators are sending the Kings the Buffalo Sabres’ second-round pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft. That's the pick the Sens got in the Josh Norris-Dylan Cozens trade at last year's deadline. The Sens and Kings will also trade conditional third-round picks.

Foegele is an excellent penalty killer, which is huge for the Sens, who've struggled so mightily in that area. He's had 20+ goals in each of the last two seasons, a Cup final appearance in 2024 with Edmonton, but the drop-off in offence from last year to this year is startling.

The 29-year old has seven goals and nine points in 47 games with the Kings this season. He makes $3.5 million and has one more year left on his deal after this season.

Giving up a second-round draft pick this summer when the Senators already don't have their first has all the makings of a dull NHL Draft this summer.

Now let's get to all those exciting conditions on those third-round draft picks being swapped. Better buckle up...

Ottawa will get the worse of the Kings’ own third-round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft or Dallas’ third-round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft (acquired in a previous trade).

Los Angeles will get the better of Ottawa’s own third-round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft or Washington’s third-round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft (acquired in a previous trade).

However, if both Ottawa and Washington do not qualify for the 2026 NHL playoffs, then Ottawa will instead transfer to Los Angeles the worse of Ottawa’s own third-round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft or Washington’s third-round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft (acquired in a previous trade).

There will be a quiz on all that later.

More to come...

Steve Warne
The Hockey News

FA Cup fifth round: things to look out for this weekend

Garnacho gets his chance to stake a claim, a big day for Port Vale and more scheduling concerns for Guardiola

Who would have thought approaching mid-March Wolves would be the Midlands team – at least in the Premier League – with the most to cheer? Aston Villa, while fourth and still capable of securing a place in the Champions League, are wobbling. Nottingham Forest are fighting relegation. In the Championship, Coventry are at the summit but West Brom and Leicester are in danger of dropping into League One. Wolves and third-tier Mansfield are the only Midlands sides remaining in the FA Cup and, while the latter host Arsenal, the former may quietly fancy their chances when Liverpool visit Molineux for the second time in four days. Rob Edwards’s side triumphed on Tuesday and, while it got lost amid the stoppage-time drama, he made several changes with Friday’s Cup tie in mind. “Does it have to be one or the other?” Edwards said. “No, so we are going to try and win both. It is going to be a really exciting night.” Ben Fisher

Wolves v Liverpool, Friday 8pm (all kick-offs GMT)

Mansfield v Arsenal, Saturday 12.15pm

Wrexham v Chelsea, Saturday 5.45pm

Newcastle v Manchester City, Saturday 8pm

Continue reading...

Game Thread: White Sox (7-6) at Guardians (5-8)

Mar 1, 2026; Mesa, Arizona, USA; Chicago White Sox catcher Edgar Quero (7) celebrates after hitting a solo home run against the Chicago Cubs in the first inning at Sloan Park.
Edgar Quero got buff over the winter. So far this spring, the cleanup hitter’s box score lines have been buff as well. | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

For you night owls in the readership, today’s game is for you: The first night game of 2026.

For you aspiring broadcast consumers in the readership, however, this game is not at all for you, with no options beyond play-by-play on Gameday to follow the action. Yes, it’s unlikely you’re going to stay up until 10 p.m. chatting about agate type-reports of Game 14 of Spring Training. Still, I will persist with a game thread.

Sean Burke gets the ball for the third time, back by some of the hotter bats of spring:

I don’t profess to know much about the Guardians, but a lineup sans Kwan or Ramírez is advantage: White Sox in my eyes. Or alternately, a new White Sox Killer could be born in today’s game.

Tipoff is 7:05 p.m. I will try to pen a creative recap base on, dunno, exit velocity, very late tonight.


And in other news, the roster for the Spring Breakout Game on March 21. Undoubtedly, this roster consists of the most promising prospects in the White Sox system:

As we did a year ago, we’ll be carving out separate coverage for the prospects game, a couple of weeks from now.

In related news, beginning in 2027 this prospects showcase is going to expand into a tournament, which could be fun to follow — especially in a non-WBC year.

LIVE DISCUSSION: Brooklyn Nets at Miami Heat, 7:30 PM ET

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MARCH 01: Nolan Traore #88 of the Brooklyn Nets dribbles during the second half against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Barclays Center on March 01, 2026 in New York City. 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 Jordan Bank/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The tanking has been bad. Really bad. The Nets have lost nine straight entering Thursday’s home-and-home with Miami. They aren’t the only tankers… tanking. The Pacers have lost seven straight, Wizards six straight, and the Jazz seven straight. One win and it can all be thrown off. The Draft Lottery can’t come soon enough.


🏀 KEY INFO

Who: Brooklyn Nets (15-46) vs Miami Heat (33-29)
When: 7:30 PM ET
Watch:YES Network


🏓 Prospect watch

GameTimeWatchProspect
Tennessee @ South Carolina6:00 PMSEC NetworkNate Ament
Alabama @ Georgia6:30 PMESPNEWSLabaron Philon, Amari Allen
Clemson @ North Carolina7:00 PMESPNCaleb Wilson
Oregon @ Illinois9:00 PMPeacockKeaton Wagler

💬 DISCUSSION

Share your thoughts and react, but please be respectful. NetsDaily prides itself on being a safe space for Nets and basketball fans alike to have healthy conversation. Reach out to Anthony Puccio or Net Income with any issues.

Cooper Flagg in Mavericks' starting lineup vs. Magic after missing 8 games with foot injury

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Mavericks rookie Cooper Flagg is back in the starting lineup for Dallas against the Orlando Magic on Thursday night after missing eight games with a foot injury.

Flagg, the No. 1 pick in last year's NBA draft, was sidelined with a left mid-foot sprain. He last played at Phoenix on Feb. 10.

The 6-foot-9 forward out of Duke is averaging a team-leading 20.4 points, 6.6 rebounds and 4.1 assists in 49 games. He has missed a total of 12 games in his rookie season.

The 19-year-old Flagg leads all NBA rookies in scoring, and ranks fourth in rebounds and second in assists. Against the Charlotte Hornets on Jan. 29, he scored 49 points and became the youngest player to score at least 45 points in an NBA game.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Cubs 8, Diamondbacks 1: Dansby Swanson and Carson Kelly homer

MESA, Arizona — It was a windy day in the Valley of the Sun Thursday, but neither Cubs home run needed any help from the wind. Dansby Swanson homered in the third and Carson Kelly added one in the fifth and the Cubs defeated the Diamondbacks 8-1.

The Cubs put two on the board in the first. Michael Busch led off with a double and Nico Hoerner tripled him in [VIDEO].

You can’t really see it in that clip, but the ball rattled around in the right-field corner, allowing Hoerner to take third. One out later, he scored on a single by Swanson.

Colin Rea gave up a couple of hits in the first but after that retired eight of the next nine D-backs hitters. One of them was on a really nice, PCA-style diving catch in center field by Kevin Alcántara and you’re just going to have to trust me on that because there’s no video available. Rea then allowed a homer to Pavin Smith leading off the fourth, the only run he allowed. Rea struck out six and threw 57 pitches (41 strikes). Here’s more on Rea’s outing [VIDEO].

The Cubs extended their lead to 4-0 in the third. With two out, Ian Happ walked.

Swanson followed with this home run, another opposite-field shot [VIDEO].

That was a good pitch to hit and Dansby got it. It’s really good to see him take pitches like this to right field.

In the fifth, Carson Kelly went deep with two out and Michael Conforto on second [VIDEO].

Conforto, incidentally, had two hits and a walk as the DH in this game. He’s looked pretty good, yes in a very small sample size. He has a real chance to make this team, in my view.

The Cubs were up 7-1 at this point. They got good relief outings from Phil Maton, Hoby Milner, Caleb Thielbar and Corbin Martin.

You’ll notice I left out Luke Little, who threw a scoreless eighth. Sure, that’s good, but once again he got himself in trouble with walks, two of them. He’s thrown 3.2 innings this spring and walked six and yes he has talent but the walks are likely to send him back to Triple-A Iowa again. Here’s hoping he can figure things out.

Of note: Brady Counsell, Craig’s son who was Arizona’s 10th-round pick out of the University of Kansas, entered the game in the seventh and was one of the two guys Little walked in the eighth.

Attendance watch: 12,824 attended this game at Sloan Park. That makes the season total 92,201 for eight dates, or 11,525 per date.

The Cubs will play their first spring night game of 2026 Friday at Peoria against the Padres. Ben Brown will start for the Cubs and Germán Márquez will go for San Diego. Game time is 8:10 p.m. CT and there will be TV coverage via Padres TV. It’s also on MLB Network (no blackouts). There will also be a radio broadcast with the Padres announcers on KWFN 97.3.

Mariners pitching gives up three touchdowns and two field goals; lose to Padres 27-6

PEORIA, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 24: Alex Hoppe #48 of the Seattle Mariners pitches during the fifth inning of a spring training game against the Chicago White Sox at Peoria Stadium on February 24, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

If you missed today’s Mariners spring training game, well, that might have been for the best. This one got out of hand early when the Padres put up an twelve-spot in the second and didn’t improve from there. Of all the spring training games, this one was the spring trainingiest (so far).

Luis Castillo got the start today and, well, things could have gone better. Castillo worked out of a jam in the first: after allowing Jake Cronenworth to reach on a hard-hit (104 EV) single, Jackson Merrill fought off a four-seamer up in the zone for a double, putting runners at second and third with no outs. But, Houdini-like, Castillo escaped the jam, striking out Ramón Laureano swinging on a 95.7 mph four-seamer, getting Gavin Sheets to tap into an easy groundout on a changeup (the Mariners executed their second rundown of the spring, again recording the out even as the runners advanced to second and third), and ending on a sword strikeout of Nick Castellanos on a 96.3 mph fastball. Castillo’s four-seamer had some extra heat in that first inning, registering as high as 96.7.

The velocity held for Castillo in the second, but unfortunately the run suppression did not. He gave up a lot of hard contact to the Padres, including a first-pitch ambush swing for a solo home run to Sung-Mun Song followed by back-to-back doubles to make it 2-0; then some sloppy play ensued including a walk to Cronenworth and a fielding error by Ryan Bliss, which then resulted in two more runs scored on a Laureano single, making it 4-0.

Then the game got silly. Tyler Cleveland came in to try to stop the bleeding and instead allowed in another run, although he didn’t get help from Spencer Packard in left field who dropped a sun ball. Cleveland walked in a run. Luke Raley lost a ball in the sun in right field. The Padres lead doubled to 8-0. Then 10-o. The scoreboard operator made a mistake and put up 11-0. Dan Wilson was forced to get another cannon fodder arm to try to finish the inning. Stefan Raeth threw one pitch to Jake Cronenworth that he hit over the left field wall. 12-0. Laureano doubled. The third out in the second inning was proving to be as elusive as the Mariners getting their fourth win of the spring.

Finally, finally, Gavin Sheets hit a little flare to left field, headed towards the much-abused Packard. It looked like it might drop in to create a touchdown of runs for the Padres, but Packard ran in and, against all odds, made the catch. The crowd went wild.

The Mariners got a run back off Walker Buehler in the bottom of the inning. Patrick Wisdom singled, and Rhylan Thomas tripled into the right field corner. Packard small-balled the second run home with an RBI groundout. While it is probably a better long-term strategy to focus on things that would actually help win games during the regular season, it’s a little disappointing the Mariners didn’t do what the Padres hitters were doing and just put a bunch of stuff up into the swirling wind and hope for the best.

But the Padres got all those runs right back and more off Alex Hoppe, who gave up five runs on two homers to turn the game from a laugher into laughing gas, 17-2. Hoppe baffles me. His four-seamer is a great pitch, with heavy downward plane that comes in around 98-99 and creates swing-and-miss, and he can throw it for strikes. The problem seems to be that pitch’s supporting cast. Today he couldn’t land his slider, which wound up fat and juicy on the plate for hard contact; the changeup didn’t tempt swings, and the cutter location was inconsistent. There’s something there; it’s just not there yet.

Troy Taylor had the fourth and got two quick outs on his sweeper, leading me to mentally retitle this recap “the Troy Taylor Game” before he surrendered a solo home run to Andujar, who dropped the barrel on a sweeper to make it 18-2, but he rebounded to strike out Francisco Acuna looking (thanks to a savvy ABS challenge by Mitch Garver). Troy Taylor game back on!

Then it was trading solo home runs. The Mariners got two, from Patrick Wisdom and Rob Refsnyder. The Padres got two off Casey Lawrence, who gets today’s Sun Visor award for cleaning up this stinker.

But wait. There were still several more innings to play, and another three-run home run for Blas Castaño to give up. And then another two-run home run for Nick Davila to give up.

In the eighth, Jared Sundstrom – who is nicknamed “Sunny” which is one of the better baseball nicknames, especially for the blond-haired golden-skinned Sundstrom – realized that he could also, like Captain Planet, use the power of the wind for his own ends and blasted his first home run of the spring off Tristan McKenzie, who apparently is doing mop-up work in spring training games these days. Rough. Sundstrom’s calling card is his light tower power, so it was fun to see that in action.

The Padres were able to add one more run in the ninth off Reid Van Scoter just so no Mariners pitcher would post a clean line today. But Carson Taylor got that run right back on a solo shot of his own (maybe his pal Sunny clued him in about the wind trick), keeping the deficit at a solid three touchdowns’ worth of runs. The Mariners will try again to secure that elusive fourth win of the spring tomorrow in Surprise against Texas, and surprise, Kade Anderson gets the start, so don’t let today’s stinker preclude you from tuning in to that one (although sadly it is radio only).

Other bits and bobs:

-Brendan Donovan worked a walk in the first inning. His OBP this spring is currently a nice round .500.

-With Donovan on first, Luke Raley hit a hard groundball (103 mph EV) that the shortstop couldn’t handle, bobbling it before tossing it to second, and Donovan probably should have been called safe. In penance, Raley went on to steal second. Healthy Luke Raley is fun.

-Rob Refsnyder hit a solo shot off lefty JP Sears, earning that lefty-killer moniker.

-In the eighth inning Freddy from Mariners PR bought churros from the churros man and I didn’t get one. OSHA violation! Hostile workplace!

-Brock Rodden showed off a very strong arm at third base, making a surehanded play right at the line followed by a strong toss across the diamond. Good third base defense is my love language. (You will see, if you look at the box score, Rodden was given an error on a throw later. This, in my opinion, was not a fair error assignation, and it was also not considered an error by the first baseman Carson Taylor who immediately threw his glove over his mouth and shouted something unrepeatable when he didn’t field the ball cleanly.)

-Spring training games should have mercy rules.

Espinal cementing his place on the Dodgers roster

Mar 5, 2026; Goodyear, Arizona, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts (30) looks on against the Cincinnati Reds during the second inning at Goodyear Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

Process, process, process—the results of a spring training game matter most when they validate certain processes and reinforce an idea. The Dodgers scored a boatload of runs in a 14- 13 walk-off loss against the Reds; one of their expected regulars, Max Muncy, went yard, but what mattered more than anything else was the validation of Santiago Espinal’s case to make the Opening Day roster as a utility bat off the bench.

Espinal, who entered the game scorching hot this spring, having gone 8 for 14 in his first six games with a couple of extra-base hits, went yard twice, responsible for half a dozen RBI. Adding further praise to Espinal’s performance, those two home runs came against Emilio Pagán and Tony Santillan, two of the more experienced arms in the Reds bullpen.

Once upon a time, an All-Star when he played for the Blue Jays in 2022, Espinal is coming off two horrendous campaigns with the Cincinnati Reds, and perhaps a change of scenery is exactly what his career needed.

Even before the game, Dave Roberts wasn’t shy about singing the praises of Espinal’s impact on and off the field.

Equally important as his production with the bat, Espinal, who played first base in this particular affair against the Reds, earns praise for his flexibility, having experience covering second, short, third, and corner outfield. It’s worth pointing out that there is a larger need at the start of the season for this role Espinal is likely to fill, given the fact that Kiké Hernández will begin the year on the injured list. Hernández is currently recovering from elbow surgery.

On the mound, it was not a pleasant time for the veteran Cole Irvin, on the hook for six of the runs the Dodgers allowed by giving up a trio of home runs, one of them at 114.5 MPH exit velocity to the very impressive Elly De La Cruz. The Dodgers led by three in the ninth when Jordan Weems came in to close the game, but Cincinnati ambushed him for four runs, snatching victory from the jaws of defeat.

Next on the docket, the Dodgers will play an evening game against the Royals on Friday, sending out youngster Jackson Ferris to make his third spring start. Ferris has yet to allow a run in 2.2 innings of work.

Yankees Spring Training Roster Tracker: Chase Hampton optioned to Double-A Somerset

As the Yankees continue camp this spring, here are the latest moves as New York cuts their roster to 26 active players ahead of Opening Day...


March 6, 2:37 p.m.

The Yankees have reassigned RHP Adam Kloffenstein to minor league camp. 

The 25-year-old right-hander did not appear in a Grapefruit League game this spring. Kloffenstein has three major league appearances under his belt with the Blue Jays and Cardinals. He allowed two runs on five hits and two walks across 5.0 innings pitched in the bigs.

March 5, 6:30 p.m.

The Yankees announced their second wave of cuts and it includes RHP Chase Hampton.

Hampton, the team's No. 8 prospect according to MLB Pipeline, is coming off Tommy John surgery he had in February 2025. Hampton had not appeared in a Grapefruit League game this spring as he continues his recovery from elbow surgery.

In addition, the Yankees reassigned RHP Travis MacGregor and RHP Drake Fellows to minor league camp. 

Of the two, only Fellows appeared in an actual game. He threw 27 pitches, and allowed a hit and two walks in his one inning of work this spring.

Feb. 17, 4:10 p.m.

The Yankees announced they have reassigned RHP Alexander Cornielle and catcher Abrahan Gutierrez to minor league camp. This comes a day after the Yankees outrighted OF Yanquiel Fernandez off the major league roster and onto the Triple-A roster.

Fernandez had been a non-roster invitee. 

Lens survives Lyon fightback to reach the French Cup semifinals on penalties

LYON, France (AP) — Lens continued its impressive season by advancing to the semifinals of the French Cup with a penalty shootout victory over Lyon on Thursday.

Lens is second in Ligue 1 — just four points behind Paris Saint-Germain — and survived a fightback by Lyon, having led 2-0 at halftime at Groupama Stadium to draw 2-2.

Lyon forced the game to penalties with an equalizer from Remi Himbert in the fourth minute of added time after Lens had gone down to 10 men following Arthur Masuaku's red card.

Florian Thauvin scored the decisive penalty as Lens won the shootout 5-4 after Moussa Niakhate had seen an earlier effort saved.

Lens coach Pierre Sage had led Lyon to the French Cup final two years ago and is within one match of repeating that feat.

Thauvin fired Lens ahead after 23 minutes and Abdallah Sima doubled the lead in the first minute of first-half added time.

But Masuaku's red in the 64th proved a turning point.

Lyon scored through Roman Yaremchuk three minutes later to give the home team hope before its late equalizer.

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AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

How the Dodgers will look to fill out a once-crowded starting rotation

Japan's pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto participates in their practice session in Tokyo, Wednesday, March 4, 2026, ahead of their World Baseball Classic games. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae)
Yoshinobu Yamamoto participates in Team Japan's practice session in Tokyo on Wednesday. (Hiro Komae / Associated Press)

Dodgers ace Yoshinobu Yamamoto was slated to start Team Japan’s first game in the World Baseball Classic early Friday morning Pacific Time in Tokyo against Chinese Taipei, with the expectation that he would pitch three innings.

While the right-hander is away from Camelback Ranch, other pitchers vying for a spot in the Dodgers' starting rotation will be under the microscope — especially with health concerns yet again coming into play.

The Dodgers are no strangers to navigating pitching injuries over the course of a long season. Last year, Yamamoto was the only Dodgers starter to not miss a turn, making 30 starts before making five more during the postseason. But other than the now-retired Clayton Kershaw, who made 22 starts last year, no other Dodger hurler started more than 18 games.

Yamamoto, right-hander Shohei Ohtani and right-hander Tyler Glasnow are locks for the rotation. But with left-hander Blake Snell likely to open the season on injured list as he nurses a shoulder injury, and right-hander Gavin Stone forced to pause any throwing activities as he attempts a comeback from major shoulder surgery, where do other potential starters stand at this stage of spring training?

Read more:Dodgers work with Andrew Toles' family to continue supporting former outfielder

Hard-throwing right-hander Roki Sasaki, looking to make a return to starting after a successful run as a relief pitcher in last year's postseason, has allowed seven runs combined in two Cactus League starts while giving up a good deal of hard contact. While Sasaki is trying to work through things in live action, including honing a third pitch for his arsenal, there is also the practical matter of making sure Sasaki is built up to start games once the regular season gets underway.

Which is why Roberts said Thursday the team plans to have Sasaki pitch a simulated game on their backfields at Camelback Ranch in addition to making his next start in order to help with his buildup.

“We need to get him to build up,” Roberts said.

Sasaki said Tuesday after his last start — in which he gave up four runs without retiring a batter in the first inning before getting re-inserted to pitch two scoreless frames — that he felt that he was having mechanical issues. Roberts, however, disagreed.

“This last start, I don’t think it was a mechanical thing,” Roberts said. “He just wasn’t making pitches early and we have to get him to four innings. ... We gotta build up, all the while being good, too, right? We had to take him out of the game the other day, and so when you’re getting down the road, you can’t afford to not have him build up.”

Another rotation option is 26-year-old Emmet Sheehan, who made 12 starts and logged a 2.82 ERA for the Dodgers after returning from Tommy John surgery midway through the season.

After falling behind early in camp due to an illness, Sheehan made his first appearance in the Cactus League Wednesday against Team Mexico. Sheehan recorded four outs, allowing one run off three hits and two walks.

Read more:'Opportunity is present.' Alex Freeland trying to take advantage of reps at second base

“I felt good,” Sheehan said. “[My] body felt great, delivery felt good. I just think execution was obviously a little bit off, so go back to work this week, and try to figure it out. I was just doing stuff that I don’t usually do today. [I’ll] probably focus a little more on slider execution, fastball execution next week, and get back to that.”

Two other options for the Dodgers include right-hander River Ryan, attempting to come back from his own Tommy John surgery, and left-hander Justin Wrobleski, who became a reliable option out of the bullpen during the postseason last year after serving as a spot starter and middle reliever during the regular season.

Ryan also appeared in Wednesday's game, tossing two scoreless innings and registering a 0.00 ERA in two appearances. Wrobleski has also not allowed a run over three innings of work in two Cactus League appearances, including one start.

Kyle Tucker will return to Dodgers Friday

Kyle Tucker is expected to return to the team Friday after his wife, Samantha, gave birth to a boy.

“Kyle Tucker will be back tomorrow morning,” Roberts said. “He’s a daddy, so they have a healthy baby boy and so that’s been great to hear. I chatted with him briefly yesterday, so he’ll be back tomorrow morning to then hopefully be in the lineup Saturday or Sunday, so that’s great.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.