Michael Lorenzen and Ryan Feltner on a 16-3 Rockies loss

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 12: Michael Lorenzen #24 of the Colorado Rockies looks on during a spring training bullpen at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on February 12, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Kyle Cooper/Colorado Rockies/Getty Images)

Today, the Kansas City Royals absolutely pounded a Colorado Rockies squad that issued 15 walks. (You read that correctly.)

For more details on the game, click here.

Here are Michael Lorenzen’s comments on the day, which he saw as an important learning experience:

In addition, Ryan Feltner weighed in:

That said, please enjoy this Jordan Beck home run:

And don’t overlook Charlie Condon’s third homer:

That’s baseball.

The Rockies will face the Cleveland Guardians tomorrow afternoon at 1:05.


Please keep in mind our Purple Row Community Guidelines when you’re commenting. Thanks!

Recap: Bruins stymied by Vladar in 3-1 loss to Philly

Feb 28, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Flyers right wing Travis Konecny (11) reacts with goalie Dan Vladar (80) after the game against the Boston Bruins at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images | Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

In a tightly played contest, it ended up being Dan Vladar who made a few extra saves.

The former Bruin out-dueled Jeremy Swayman, stopping 26 of 27 shots and leading the Flyers to a 3-1 win.

Vladar was at his best in the second period, when he stopped all 16 shots he faced.

This game was tied through two periods, with Travis Konecny breaking the deadlock four minutes into the third period on a fortuitous bounce.

Charlie McAvoy scored the lone goal for the Bruins, who dropped their fifth road game in a row.

Konecny’s goal came on a funky bounce off a stanchion, with Swayman caught in “should I get it or not?” land. Christian Dvorak deserves credit for a great pass too. 1-0 Flyers.

Jamie Drysdale, given approximately two years and 800 acres of space to shoot, made it 2-0 Flyers just over eight minutes later.

McAvoy got the Bruins on the board just over a minute later, deflecting a puck past Vladar to make it 2-1 Flyers.

Unfortunately for the B’s, that’s all the offense they could muster. Sean Couturier would add an empty-netter with just under a minute to play, and that was that.

Bruins lose, 3-1.

Game notes

  • The Bruins appeared to take a lead in the third period in this one, only to have a Hampus Lindholm goal called off due to goalie interference on Mikey Eyssimont. The goal was waved off on the ice, meaning it was always a longshot to get overturned and switched to a goal. It might have been worth a punt from Marco Sturm given how well Vladar was playing, but he ultimately decided against challenging.
  • While there were no goals scored, the Bruins let this game get away from them in the second period. The B’s were handed two power play opportunities just over four minutes apart, landed 16 shots on Vladar, and came up empty.
  • Swayman’s final stat line of two goals allowed on just 16 shots doesn’t look great, but he was good in this game — with a highlight reel stop of his own as well. I suppose you might like to see a bit more decisiveness on that weird bounce, but you can probably chalk that up to just one of those things that happens.
  • If you’re a fan of the rough stuff, Tanner Jeannot and Nic Deslauriers gave you quite a bout in the first period. Deslauriers landed a couple of punches early, but I’d give the edge to Jeannot — especially since Deslauriers ended up cut after the fight.
  • It was an uncharacteristically quiet afternoon for David Pastrnak, who landed just two shots on goal.

The B’s will be back in action on Tuesday night, hosting the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Iron Horse surges to a 1-length Gotham win, earning Kentucky Derby points

NEW YORK (AP) — Iron Horse won the $300,000 Gotham by a length Saturday to earn Kentucky Derby qualifying points.

Ridden by Manny Franco, Iron Horse ran a mile in 1:37.94 and paid $3.88 to win as the 4-5 favorite in the field of eight.

Iron Horse earned 50 qualifying points for the Kentucky Derby on May 2.

“He fought hard,” Franco said. “The other horse, I’ve got to give a little credit to, but I knew that my horse had enough to get it done.”

Crown the Buckeye was second and earned 25 qualifying points. Right to Party was another 6 1/2 lengths back in third and earned 15 points. Exhibition Only was fourth and earned 10 points, while Balboa got five points for finishing fifth.

Trainer Chad Brown said Iron Horse would remain in New York and be pointed toward the $750,000 Wood Memorial on April 4. The colt improved to 2-0 in his career. He is a son of 2016 Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist.

“Race by race, he’s still learning,” Franco said. "This was just his second start and I’m just happy to be on him.”

The 74th edition of the Gotham marked its final running at Aqueduct before it moves to the newly redesigned Belmont Park next year.

___

AP horse racing: https://apnews.com/hub/horse-racing

White Sox hold on to top Guardians, 7-5

Italian WBC player, aka Sam Antonacci, goes deep | Chicago White Sox

With most of the expected big hitters out of the lineup after yesterday’s split-squad games, some other sources made Tanner Bibee’s first inning of the spring a miserable one. For him.

No. 2 hitter Sam Antonacci started things off for the White Sox when he got a 2-0 cutter that had too much of the plate.

Antonacci knew that was gone from the start, all 107.1 mph, 416´worth. That shot was followed by Miguel Vargas and LaMonte Wade Jr. doubles, with Wade later scoring on a wild pitch for a 3-0 Sox lead.

Bibee settled down for two scoreless innings after that, but Shane Smith showed his weak first start had just been working out the kinks as he kept the Guardians off the board until one run in the third, although a sweet play by William Bergolla Jr. at short kept the damage from being worse.

Lousy Cleveland defense (see, other teams have that, too) helped the Sox to two more runs in the fifth, with Bergolla and Antonacci scoring after walking and getting hit by a pitch, the first of two HBPs for Antonacci in the game. Bergolla also had an RBI single in the sixth, making it 6-1, and Antonacci scored in the seventh for a 7-1 lead. Both players are making management decisions on which middle infielders to keep when camp breaks ever more difficult.

Three Sox relievers cruised their way to the seventh, when Tyler Davis decided the game was too much of a yawner and coughed up three runs on two hits and a walk in the bottom of the seventh. Cleveland added one more in the eighth and had the tying run at the plate, but Adysin Coffey got a three-pitch K to end the threat. Shane Murphy then had an easy ninth for the save.

The Sox only had seven hits for their seven runs as they ran their spring record to 6-4, but six walks and those two HBPs, along with bad Guardian fielding decisions, helped things out.

Next up is a rematch with the Cubs, first pitch at 2:05 p.m. Central tomorrow. It will be on ESPN 1000, but you won’t get to watch the game unless you’re on of those turncoats who get Cubs TV.


NBA admits Cavs were on wrong end of multiple blown calls in overtime loss to Pistons

Feb 24, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Kenny Atkinson talks to referee Suyash Mehta (82) during the second half against the New York Knicks at Rocket Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers did not have luck on their side when they took on the Detroit Pistons on Friday night. They had multiple chances to win the game, but they missed two critical free throws and weren’t able to make the one play they needed to as they fell 122-119 in overtime.

At the same time, they were on the wrong end of several critical calls that ended up costing them the game, according to the league’s Last Two Minute Report.

The league admitted that there were four incorrect calls in the last two minutes of regulation and the last two minutes of overtime. Three of the missed calls benefited Detroit and played a large role in them coming away with the win. Let’s review each of these missed calls.

First, Jaylon Tyson’s turnover with just under two minutes left that helped spur Detroit’s comeback shouldn’t have happened. A review of the play indicates that Jalen Duran fouled Jarrett Allen when he attempted to make the pass.

Here is the league’s comment for the missed call: “Duren’s (DET) hand slides off the ball and initiates contact with Allen’s (CLE) wrist, affecting his ability to make his intended pass. The illegal contact causes the errant pass.”

The Cavs were firmly in control of the game at this time, and Cade Cunningham had just fouled out. If this is called on Duran, as it should’ve been, then the game probably ends in a much more anticlimactic way.

The second incorrect call forced Allen to miss the rest of the fourth quarter and overtime. Allen was whistled for a shooting foul against Duran, which led to free throws with 48 seconds remaining.

Support us and Let ‘Em Know with HOMAGE!

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. You can buy the Jarrett Allen Fro shirt HERE. You can also shop all of Homage’s Cavs gear HERE.

The report states: “Allen (CLE) makes contact with the ball and legally blocks Duren’s (DET) shot attempt at the basket.”

This missed call cost the Cavs the most. It meant that they had to play the rest of the game without their best player that evening, and the Pistons received two points in what should’ve been an empty possession. This call was the one that the Cavs’ locker room most vocally disagreed with afterward, even though Allen took the high road.

“You know, everybody’s biased, I don’t think so,” Allen said when asked afterward if he felt the block on Duren was a foul. “But obviously the refs have different angles, so I’m not going to complain about it.”

The Cavs weren’t able to challenge this missed call since they had already won two challenges earlier in the game. However, if this play had been reviewed, the officials would’ve likely overturned the call on the floor. It was pretty clear that Allen didn’t foul Duren.

The third missed call was the only one that benefited the Cavs.

Cleveland shouldn’t have been awarded the ball when Marcus Sasser knocked the ball out of Tyson’s hand shortly after he came down with an offensive rebound off of Craig Porter Jr.’s missed free throw with under 10 seconds left in regulation.

The report states: “Sasser (DET) cleanly dislodges the ball from Tyson (CLE) and Tyson is the last player to touch the ball before it goes out of bounds. Possession should be awarded to the Pistons.”

This missed call gave Evan Mobley a chance to win the game at the line. If he made both, it would’ve been a two-possession game, but he split them, giving Detroit a chance to tie the game on their final possession.

The last errant call happened at the end of overtime. Sam Merrill should’ve been awarded three free throws after Sasser closed out too hard while trying to contest a potential game-tying three with 18 seconds in overtime.

The report states: Sasser (DET) contests Merrill’s (CLE) jump shot attempt and initiates illegal lower-body contact following the release of the shot attempt.

This was the most egregious missed call of the four. I’m not sure how this wasn’t called a shooting foul at the time. Sasser wrongly went under the screen and closed out way too hard. This is a foul at every level of basketball.

It’s worth noting that the league agreed with the call on the floor that Daniss Jenkins was attempting a half-court shot when Tyson intentionally fouled him at the end of regulation. The report says that Jenkins was in the upward shooting motion when Tyson contacted him.

The Cavs had chances to win this road game, and still should’ve even though these calls went against them. However, if any of the three missed calls that went against the Cavs were called correctly on the floor, the outcome of this game would’ve been different.


Mark scores 23 for Texas in 76-70 win over Texas A&M

COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — Tramon Mark had 23 points and Dailyn Swain added a double-double in Texas' 76-70 win over Texas A&M on Saturday afternoon.

Swain finished with 11 points and 10 rebounds in posting his seventh double-double this season for the Longhorns (18-11, 9-7 Southeastern Conference). Jordan Pope scored 16 and Matas Vokietaitis added 14.

The Aggies (19-10, 9-7) were led by Rashun Agee with 22 points and eight rebounds. Marcus Hill totaled 17 points and eight rebounds, while Pop Isaacs scored 14.

Texas shot 44% (27 of 62) from the field and 94% (15 of 16) from the free-throw line. Texas A&M shot 38% (23 of 60) from the field.

The Longhorns led early in the first half, but the Aggies responded with an 11-0 run to take their first lead of the game, 24-20 with 5:43 to play in the half, and went into the break up 30-29. Texas regained the lead off its first bucket in the second half and continued to push ahead.

Up next

Texas A&M: Hosts Kentucky on Tuesday.

Texas: Visits No. 20 Arkansas on Wednesday.

___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Yeboah's goal, Callender's heroic saves lead Minnesota United 1-0 past Cincinnati

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Kelvin Yeboah's rebound goal and Drake Callender's four saves gave Minnesota United FC a 1-0 win over Cincinnati FC on Saturday.

After a free kick was given inches outside of the 18-yard box, Tomás Chancalay's set piece bounced off a wall of Cincinnati defenders and rebounded off the right post. Yeboah followed the shot and headed it in in the 66th minute.

Callender made a host of key saves for Minnesota (1-1-0, 4 points), including a leaping save on a shot from Obinna Nwobodo in the 71st minute.

Roman Celentano also saved four shots for Cincinnati (1-0-1, 3 points), including two in the span of three minutes early in the second half.

Cincinnati had five corners in the first 25 minutes.

There were 11 added minutes after a lengthy head injury evaluation of Cincinnati captain Michael Boxall, who exited in the 77th minute for Devin Padelford.

The 2025 MLS MVP Evander, who exited the opener against Atlanta with a hamstring injury, did not play after entering Saturday as questionable.

Minnesota's star acquisition, Columbia international James Rodríguez, is yet to debut.

The 20-degree temperature at kickoff was the coldest in FC Cincinnati's MLS history.

Up next

Cincinnati: Will host Toronto FC next Sunday.

Minnesota: Travels to face Nashville SC on Saturday.

___

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

Ojediran and Herrington score 1st MLS goals, Rapids beat Timbers 2-0

COMMERCE CITY, Colo. (AP) — Hamzat Ojediran and Lucas Herrington each scored their first career MLS goal on Saturday to help the Colorado Rapids beat the Portland Timbers 2-0.

Zach Steffen stopped three shots and had his first shutout of the season for Colorado (1-1-0).

Ojediran opened the scoring in the seventh minute, when the 22-year-old midfielder ripped a straight-away shot from 35 yards that deflected off defender Finn Surman and rolled into the net.

The 18-year-old Herrington, at the back post, headed home a corner kick played in by Dante Sealy to make it 2-0 in the 53rd.

Jimer Fory was shown a straight red card in the 77th minute and Portland (1-1-0) played a man down the rest of the way.

The Rapids are 12-15-7 against Portland, 10-3-5 in Colorado.

James Pantemis had eight saves for the Timbers.

___

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

Arizona Diamondbacks 8, Los Angeles Angels 5: (Sedona) Red Scare

Sep 16, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Brandyn Garcia against the San Francisco Giants at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Record 5-4. Change on 2025: +0.5. 5-inning record: 2-7.

Whenever a pitcher is leaving the mound with a trainer after having hit two batters and walked a third, while showing sharply lower velocity… Yeah, it’s never a good thing. Such was the situation this afternoon in Tempe for Brandyn Garcia. His fifth inning appearance was sharply curtailed, and the worst was feared. Not least because, if he went down, the only left-handed reliever left on the D-backs’ 40-man roster would be Philip Abner, and the non-roster invitees wouldn’t help much either [there’s only three, and Yu-Min Lin is already reassigned] However, it appears to have been just a stomach bug for Garcia, rather than looming Tommy John surgery. Phew.

While we make our way back from the SnakePit Fainting Couch, the D-backs notched their third consecutive win, though as has become a habit this year, it required a late comeback. A five-run eighth inning proved key, with a three-run homer by Yassel Soler the big hit. Later in the inning, Wallace Clark drove in the final run with a single. I think that might be the first hit ever in a D-backs jersey by a player born in the United Kingdom, Clark being a native of London. Arizona’s other runs came on a two-run homer by Luken Baker in the fourth inning, and a Jorge Barrosa triple the next frame. Soler also walked in addition to his home-run: Baker and Aramis Garcia each had two hits.

Mitch Bratt’s start started well, with a 1-2-3 first, but he ended up lifted in the second after allowing two runs, and also gave up a homer in the third inning, after returning. His final line: 2 IP, 3 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 3 K. The D-backs ended up using ten pitchers again. The other runs came off Paul Sewald – good to see him in mid-season form already – and Jonathan Loasiga, making his Arizona debut. Bryce Jarvis got the save with a clean ninth, and Abner also appeared, loading the bases but escaping without damage thanks to a pair of strikeouts. A good day for home-plate umpire Jonathan Parra: three ABS challenges, but all confirmed his call.

Tomorrow, it’s back to Salt River Fields where the Guardians will be visiting. Michael Soroka gets his second start, with a 1:10 pm first pitch. Several members of the A-bullpen are scheduled to work behind Soroka.

Braeden Carrington buries 9 3-pointers, scores 32 points and Wisconsin dismantles Washington 90-73

SEATTLE (AP) — Braeden Carrington had career highs of nine 3-pointers and 32 points, Nick Boyd added 22 points, and Wisconsin defeated Washington 90-73 on Saturday.

Carrington, who averages 7.4 points per game, played 27 minutes off the bench, making 9 of 15 3s. He was 6 for 9 from deep in the second half when he scored 23 points.

Boyd scored eight points in the first six-plus minutes of the game and the Badgers led 14-3. Washington's Hannes Steinbach opened the scoring with a dunk but the Huskies didn't get another field goal until Quimari Peterson's layup with 12 minutes remaining made it 17-7.

Wisconsin (20-9, 12-6 Big Ten) led by double digits over the final six minutes of the half and it was 36-21 at the break. A 10-0 run in the middle of the second half put the game out of reach at 66-42.

Steinbach scored 22 points with 11 rebounds and Zoom Dialo had 21 points for Washington. Wesley Yates III scored three points on 1-for-17 shooting.

It was Steinbach's 18th double-double of his freshman season, nine of them coming when he scored 20 or more points.

Nolan Winter had 13 points and nine rebounds for Wisconsin. The Badgers average more than 30 3-point attempts per game and were 17 for 38 (45%) in this one.

Washington retired Detlef Schrempf's No. 22 jersey during a halftime ceremony.

Up next

Wisconsin: The Badgers have a home game against Maryland on Wednesday then wrap up the regular season at No. 8 Purdue on Saturday.

Washington: The Huskies stay on the West Coast to wrap up the regular season. USC visits on Wednesday before the Huskies finish at Oregon on Saturday.

Indrusaitis and Corhen each score 16, lead Pitt over Cal 72-56

BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) — Nojus Indrusaitis and Cameron Corhen each scored 16 points to lead Pittsburgh to a 72-56 victory over California on Saturday.

Pitt never trailed and built an early 10-point lead in the second half before Cal pulled within 47-44 with 13:05 remaining. Indrusaitis answered with 10 points that included two 3-pointers and a dunk during an 18-7 surge to help the Panthers pull away.

Barry Dunning Jr. added 15 points and 12 rebounds for Pitt (11-18, 4-12 Atlantic Coast Conference). Damarco Minor scored 13 points.

The Panthers have won two of their last three since ending a five-game losing streak.

Dai Dai Ames scored 11 points and Lee Dort added 10 for Cal (20-9, 8-8), which saw a three-game win streak snapped.

Dunning scored 11 points and Corhen added eight to help Pitt take a 34-26 advantage into the break. The Panthers forced 12 Cal turnovers in the first half. DeJuan Campbell scored all eight of his points in the first half for the Golden Bears. Campbell shot 0 of 2 in the second half.

Up next

Pitt: The Panthers host Florida State on Wednesday.

Cal: The Golden Bears are on the road against Georgia Tech on Wednesday.

___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Jackson Cluff pursuing big league Mets dream after putting career on pause for mission service

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Mets shortstop Jackson Cluff is on the field in the sixth inning against the St. Louis Cardinals during Spring Training at Clover Field, Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, in Port St. Lucie, Image 2 shows New York Mets infielder Jackson Cluff (l.) runs the bases during Spring Training at Clover Field, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026, in Port St. Lucie
Jackson Cluff

PORT ST. LUCIE — In the wake of the hamate injury that has sidelined Francisco Lindor for the spring, there have been more opportunities at shortstop.

While the 29-year-old career minor leaguer Jackson Cluff is expected to be minor league depth, he made perhaps the best play of the spring Friday in Jupiter, Fla., when he went deep into the hole on a grounder and fired a strong throw to first to get the out. 

Access the Mets beat like never before

Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Mike Puma about the inside buzz on the Mets.

Try it free

It’s unclear how Cluff could find a path to Queens this season, but he isn’t ruling it out after an unusual professional journey that’s so far taken him to Triple-A, but not the majors. 

Cluff, a practicing Mormon, played at BYU and following his freshman year, he took two years off from school — and baseball — to go on a mission for the church. 

So while players his age were continuing their baseball careers, Cluff was instead taking part in the voluntary mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 

“You don’t have to do it, but for people who grow up and are active in the faith, it’s an expectation if you’re asked,’’ Cluff said. “My dad did it and my little brother is on a mission right now. Most people do it.” 

After being unsure prior to BYU, Cluff said he became confident in his choice. 

New York Mets shortstop Jackson Cluff is on the field in the sixth inning against the St. Louis Cardinals during Spring Training at Clover Field, Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, in Port St. Lucie. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“I decided it was something I wanted to do and put my career on pause for two years,’’ Cluff said. “Everyone was very supportive, saying, ‘You need to do what you want to do.’ ” 

Cluff ended up spending his two years in Atlanta, not exactly the far-flung places others have gone. 

“You should have seen the look on my face when I found out where I was going,’’ Cluff said. “My dad went to Norway and learned Norwegian. My father-in-law went to Japan. I had teammates go to Mexico and Brazil. But I went to Atlanta and it was awesome.’’ 

As part of his work, Cluff focused on proselytizing and community service. 

New York Mets infielder Jackson Cluff (l.) runs the bases during Spring Training at Clover Field, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026, in Port St. Lucie. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“We knock on doors and walk around town,’’ Cluff said. “You get on a bus in Atlanta and talk to people.” 

When the two years were up, Cluff returned to BYU, this time as a 22-year-old sophomore. 

“I wanted to play one more year and it was really important to have a good season because I wanted to play professionally,’’ Cluff said. “Most college players are getting drafted as a 21-year-old junior.” 

Cluff responded with a solid season and called it a “no-brainer” to sign with the Nationals when they took him in the sixth round of the 2019 amateur draft. 

“I told every team, ‘If you pick me, I’ll go,’ ” Cluff said. 

Then, Cluff’s first full professional season was wiped out by COVID-19, before working his way up to Triple-A in 2024, where he spent all of last season. 

His goal this year is to “help this team win games at the big league level at some point this season.” 

Cluff said he knows the infield depth with the Mets will make that difficult, and despite his slow road through the minors, he’s only appreciative of his experiences. 

“The only time my religion comes up in the clubhouse is when people ask if I really took two years off,’’ Cluff said. “I don’t have any regrets. How the mission impacted me personally and helped my faith and perspective on life is much more important than baseball. It’s given me so much direction.” 

And as for his pursuit of his major league dream, Cluff said, “As long as I have a jersey on my back, anything is possible.”

Mets' Tobias Myers 'felt under control' in first spring training start: 'Body felt great'

The Mets' spring training plan of stretching Tobias Myers out as a starter continued on Saturday afternoon as the right-hander toed the rubber in the top of the first inning against the Washington Nationals for the first time in camp and ended his outing after three innings of one-run ball.

Myers allowed two hits, both in the third inning, walked one and struck out four while throwing 46 pitches (34 strikes). Through two appearances, Myers has a 1.69 ERA in 5.1 innings.

But it wasn't the results that Myers was most pleased with after the game; it was how he felt during and after the game that Myers was most pleased with.

"It felt good, definitely felt good," he said. "Body felt like it was under control, like I’m not trying to do too much out there, so I feel like when I’m in that mindset and kind of letting everything kind of take care of itself, I keep myself in a better spot than trying to go out there and do a little too much. That’s my key takeaway from today – felt under control and body felt great."

New York acquired Myers from the Milwaukee Brewers in the same deal that brought over Freddy Peralta and after proving to be a Swiss army knife in two seasons with the Brewers, the Mets are hoping the right-hander can do a little bit of everything for them this season. Saturday's start was another chance at showcasing that.

It also gave Myers and Francisco Alvarez a chance to connect in a game for the first time after Myers threw to prospect Kevin Parada in his spring training debut on Monday. While it was the first time the duo played together in a game, it was not the first time Myers had thrown to Alvarez.

"It was great. I actually got to throw to Francisco two weeks before camp started," Myers said. "He was down in South Florida, I was living down there in the offseason so me him, Freddy, couple [other] guys met up and were able to get some work in before camp started. 

"It’s really, really cool – especially this morning – like being able to communicate all morning what we wanna do. Alvy’s full of energy, he’s fun back there. I mean he’s obviously really good at framing pitches because we had like five or six overturned back there, so he’s making them all look like strikes."

While spring training offers the chance for new pitchers and catchers like Myers and Alvarez to familiarize themselves with each other, it's also the time for pitchers to work on new pitches and grips or perfect old ones. It's no different for Myers, who has added a slider to his repertoire this spring to go along with a splitter that he unveiled last season.

"The splitter is fairly new," Myers said. "Last year I started throwing it middle of the season, so trying to fine-tune that pitch and make sure it’s in a good spot when camp breaks. Same pitch, same grip [for my] slider. I’m just spiking it a little bit, so not much different there. We’re just kinda looking for a little bit more depth to get some more swing and miss, so that’s coming along pretty well. It’s been only two weeks throwing it, so it’s been pretty decent."

Whatever role the Mets end up needing out of Myers this season, he'll need his array of pitches to get outs like he did on Saturday. The next step for the 27-year-old, relayed to him by Carlos Mendoza and David Stearns, is to build up his pitch count to 60-65 pitches before re-evaluating the situation.

But no matter how New York uses Myers, he's excited for the opportunity and keeps the same mindset.

"I’m comfortable on the mound, so I feel like if you start a game, if you’re relieving, you’re closing, you still got to get three outs or whatever the case may be so for me I just try to keep that mentality and keep everything simple," he said.

Myers also trusts everybody in charge and knows they have his best interests at heart.

"I like to pride myself on [being] a coachable pitcher, so I like to put my trust in my coaches," he said. "It’s something I did [in Milwaukee] for sure, being a younger guy and kinda getting thrown into like the starting rotation over there.

"Here, very similar. I know everybody here is very, very smart. I know these guys have a great track record and it’s pretty easy to tell when you talk to them and talk to other guys that communicate with those guys, so for me it’s like put my trust in those guys and let them guide me."

Reds beat Brewers 9-7 despite rough outing by Hunter Greene

Cincinnati Reds pitching coach/director of pitching Derek Johnson (36) wraps up a bullpen session with pitcher Hunter Greene (21) at the Cincinnati Reds player development complex in Goodyear, Ariz., on Friday, Feb. 13, 2026. | Sam Greene/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The bats of the Cincinnati Reds have been alive for most of Cactus League play in the early going, and that was very much still the case on Saturday. The Reds went on the road and beat the Milwaukee Brewers 9-7 in their own ballpark, even doing so while television cameras were broadcasting their action for the first time in seemingly a millenium.

The Good

Matt McLain got the party started in the Top of the 1st with his first dinger of the spring, a solo shot that was part of an overall excellent 2 for 3 day that included a pair of runs scored. Elly De La Cruz smacked another double – every single one of his hits this spring, so far, has been of the extra-base variety – and Sal Stewart singled, stole a base, played 3B, and scored a run.

Michael Chavis – in camp as a non-roster guy – socked a homer, Dane Myers drove in a trio on a two-hit day as he angles to be a right-handed hitting option all across the outfield, and Blake Dunn drove in a trio and scored a run as he angles to be a right-handed hitting option all across the outfield.

Down in the bullpen, big offseason additions Pierce Johnson and Caleb Ferguson both fired scoreless frames, even though neither was completely clean.

The Bad

Lyon Richardson surrendered another run, something he’s done in every one of his appearances so far this spring. But because baseball is weirdly beautiful, he also picked up the win on the day.

Wins! Still a stat in 2026, for whatever reason!

At the plate, Christian Encarnacion-Strand made his own spring debut after dealing with hamstring issues, but was limited to just DH duties and went 0 for 3 with a K. I really, really hope there’s a CES redemption story somewhere in the near future, but I’m beginning to think that ship may well have sailed.

The Ugly

Hunter Greene made his spring debut and got shelled immediately.

He did not retire a single batter in the Bottom of the 1st before being pulled, though thanks to the fun rules of spring training play he returned to the mound for the Bottom of the 2nd to get in more work. His second frame was markedly better, but he was ultimately responsible for 4 ER on 5 H and a walk while fanning nobody.

The good news, though, is that he looked fine. His heater hit triple digits repeatedly, he just wasn’t putting hitters away in vintage mid-season form. Nothing looked like a problem, per se – just a lot of rust and getting his feet wet in an exhibition that didn’t mean a thing in the win column.

What’s Next

Cincinnati’s central Arizona road trip will continue on Sunday, this time at Hohokam Stadium over in Mesa against the Athletics. Andrew Abbott will toe the rubber, with first pitch set for 3:05 PM ET.

No, there’s no TV coverage of it. It’ll be on 700 WLW for your ears, though.

The Aceman Cometh: Kade Anderson dazzles in pro debut as M’s lose to Friars 7-1

Staff writer Max Ellingsen during his first visit to T-Mobile Park. He struck out three in today's pro debut. || | Getty Images

Don’t call it a debut. Since his family didn’t come to see this, Kade Anderson says his first game action as a member of the Mariners’ organization doesn’t count as a debut. But whatever noun you use to describe it, the adjective is “impressive.”

Using a fluid, repeatable delivery, Anderson sat 94-95 with his fastball, freezing up hitters while his slider looked sharp in the zone and induced whiffs outside it, all setting up a changeup that got some Matt Brash-esque swings and misses.

Anderson struck out the very first batter he saw on three pitches. Whiff on a fastball, whiff on a changeup, freeze on a fastball. The victim? Xander Bogaerts, hardly a guy off the backfields. Interrupted by an infield base hit that should have been an out and a full-count walk, Anderson completed the inning by striking out the side. That first inning featured 18 pitches, 13 for strikes, with seven whiffs on ten swings and a 100% first-pitch strike rate.

He came back out for the second, which opened with back-to-back hits. Since both of those runners scored after Anderson was pulled, his final line won’t jump off the page, but Anderson showed every bit of the potential that’s had us salivating since he fell to the Mariners with the third pick of last summer’s Draft.

Cal Raleigh was effusive: “Very impressive. So he can locate the ball, he can command it, he can throw off-speed in the zone for strikes. There’s not…I mean there’s going to be a learning curve, for sure, he was just a little picky around the zone, but for the most part I thought he threw the ball great, especially for the first time out.” (In an extremely Cal move, he used the opportunity to take a potshot at his bro to provide additional context on Anderson’s performance, “I think Logan gave up 10 runs in his first spring training game.”)

Perhaps because he didn’t consider it a debut, Anderson says he wasn’t nervous. “I think you’d be surprised. It’s just another game for me. And when you have that mindset, it makes it much easier on yourself, you don’t get as many nerves.” In the comments, please rank the BS on a scale of 1-10. I’m leaning toward a 4.

Unfortunately for those in attendance, as Anderson got pulled, someone called Houston Roth, who I have definitely heard of before, quickly let all the air out of the room that Anderson had just filled, letting the Padres score a decisive five runs.

But the game got interesting again as Emerson Hancock came out for the third and pitched a 1-2-3 inning, showing the extra velo he’d flashed in his relief appearances last summer. The Mariners plan to begin the season with Hancock as a depth starter, so whether he can hold that extra velo will be a key question. He kept it in his second inning of work, wherein he struck out the side in order, but lost it a bit in an attempt at a third inning. Even so, he was 94-96 in that third inning of work, which, while not 97s of his first inning, is still a couple ticks above where he’s been before.

More promising to me is his slider. He’s got an interesting history with the pitch. In 2023, he was averaging 87 with it, but only getting 30 inches of break. He made an adjustment that offseason and swapped some velo for movement, making it a much better whiff-generator in 2024 and 2025. But what he’s shown so far this spring has been a marriage of the 2023 velo with the 2024-2025 movement. It’s a promising development for a guy whose fastball is coming in harder, and whose sweeper was getting all the praise from Jerry Dipoto on the broadcast. To be sure, I’ve been burned too many times by Emerson Hancock seeming to improve, but Emerson Hancock seems to have improved.

Other Notes

  • In the battle for the fourth infield spot, Ryan Bliss had a bad day in the field, missing his landing on one play and showing his noodle arm in another, resulting in two infield base hits that could have been outs. He made up for it a bit with a walk at the plate. Colt Emerson was 0 for 2.
  • Luke Raley accounted for the Mariners’ sole run today with his first dinger of the spring, which went to the deep part of the park.
  • I would make fun of a new entry in the Randy Arozarena defensive canon, but it’s his birthday, so he gets a pass.
  • Cal Raleigh had an unremarkable day except that he’s the first man to play nine full innings this spring, prepping his body for the WBC, which he departs for this afternoon.
  • The first Sun Hat Award of 2026 (the award for a noteable contribution to a game I recap) goes to Hancock.