Mets kick off round one of Subway Series at Citi Field

Mets and Yankees tickets for sale, retail display in Costco store, Queens, New York. (Photo by: Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Fresh off a series win against the Tigers, the New York Mets (18-25) welcome the crosstown rival New York Yankees (27-17) to Citi Field for a Subway Series showdown. The two teams split their six games last year, with the road team taking two out of three in each instance. The Mets are 69-83 all-time in regular season play against the Yankees.

The Mets won their third series in four tries by sweeping the Tigers at Citi Field. They accomplished this feat by coming back to win each game, 10-2 on Tuesday, 3-2 on Wednesday, and 9-4 on Thursday. New York got a spark on Tuesday thanks to the promotion of top prospect A.J. Ewing, who had an incredibly fun debut with a triple, three walks, two runs batted in, and a stolen bases. After falling behind 2-0, the Mets poured it on, taking advantage of a ton of mistakes by the hapless Detroit defense, which bailed the Mets out with a few key errors and misplays that resulted in runs.

The offense returned to its lifeless state on Wednesday night, and trailed 2-0 from the first thanks to a Carson Benge misplay in right. The Mets finally evened things up in the seventh on a Bo Bichette run-scoring hit. Benge made up for his earlier mistake by driving Ewing home in the tenth to give the Mets a walk-off win and give Benge the first walk-off hit of his career.

The Mets completed the sweep with another comeback after falling in a 3-0 hole. After surrendering a three-run homer in the first, Nolan McLean settled down to give the Mets another solid start, and the bats, led by the young Mets, mounted the comeback. New York used the long ball to their advantage, as Ewing hit the first home run of his career, and Brett Baty tied it up with a two-run shot. After Juan Soto gave the Mets the lead with a run-scoring hit in the fifth, Mark Vientos provided some insurance with a two-run home run, and the Mets cruised from there. Detroit came in as the worst road team in all of baseball and left with an eight-game losing skid.

Despite the very impressive performance, the Mets have found themselves enduring even more injuries. For a team that has a small army on the injured list already, they learned they would be without Francisco Alvarez for about eight weeks after he tore his meniscus on a swing and had to undergo surgery. On top of that, Francisco Lindor is no closer to returning after the latest update, and Kodai Senga, despite throwing a bullpen, still seems quite a ways away from a return. On the bright side, Soto remained in the lineup after fouling a ball off his foot. Additionally, A.J. Minter continues to rehab, while Jared Young is slated to begin his own rehab assignment fairly soon.

The Mets are catching the Yankees at a bit of an opportune time. The Bronx Bombers began May on a five-gave winning streak but have hit a rough patch as of late, losing six of eight since then to fall into second place int he American League East. They also lost ace Max Fried to an injury this week, though it’s unclear if he’ll miss time as he recovers from elbow soreness.

It should surprise no one that the Yankees are led on offense by three-time AL MVP Aaron Judge, who leads the sport with 16 home runs. He got off to a bit of a slow start this year—slow by his standards—but he has come roaring back. The defending AL batting champion is hitting .268/.404/.618 (1.022 OPS) on the year with an AL-best 36 runs scored. His OPS currently ranks third in baseball, while his 179 wRC+ is tied with Yordan Alvarez for second. What may be a bit more surprising is who he trails—teammate Ben Rice, who has had an incredible start to his third season with the Yankees. On top of OPS and wRC+, he leads the AL in slugging as he enters play with a .303/.413/.667 slash line—all well above his career norms to date. He is also half-way to the 26 home runs he hit last year, entering play tonight with 13. That gives the Yankees a fearsome power duo in the middle of their lineup, though the rest of the lineup has not quite been able to match their prowess.

The Yankees rotation, more than anything has put them in the position they are today. As they await the return of Gerrit Cole, the rest of the rotation has been spectacular, posting a 3.14 ERA, which is good for third in baseball and second in the Al. Their 3.30 FIP, meanwhile, is best in the sport. They have also been better than any club at limiting home runs, as their rotation sports an MLB-best 0.75 HR/9. The bullpen has also been good, albeit not quite as good, with a 3.34 ERA and a 3.71 FIP, both top-1o in MLB.

Friday, May 15: Clay Holmes vs. Cam Schlittler, 7:15 PM EDT on Apple TV

Holmes (2026): 48.1 IP, 37 K, 16 BB, 3 HR, 1.86 ERA, 3.44 FIP, 48 ERA-

Holmes pitched well enough to win, but by his standards as he had one of his weakest starts of the as he battled through 5 2/3 innings while throwing a season-high 103 pitches. He endured a lot of high pitch count at-bats, which prevented him from completing six innings for the first time since his April 15 start against the Dodgers. Still, his final line was solid: two earned runs allowed on five hits, with six strikeouts and two walks. He saw his ERA tick up a bit from 1.69 to 1.86, but he still finds himself seventh in MLB and third in the NL in starter ERA.

Schlittler (2026): 53.1 IP, 59 K, 9 BB, 1 HR, 1.35 ERA, 1.64 FIP, 33 ERA-

Schlittler has established himself as an early AL Cy Young favorite with his incredible performance. He leads all AL starters in ERA and all MLB starters in FIP, and also has the best bWAR (2.5) among starting pitchers. He doesn’t walk a lot of batters, doesn’t surrender many homers, and strikes out a bunch of hitters, so he’s an all-around tough pitcher to face. His last performance was a prime example, as he shut out the Brewers over six innings of two-hit ball while striking out six and not issuing a single walk. Over his past five starts, he’s allowed just four runs (two earned) in 31 2/3 innings.

Saturday, May 16: TBD vs. Carlos Rodón, 7:15 PM EDT on FOX

TBD

The Mets have not announced their plans for Saturday’s game, but it’ll likely be another David Peterson bulk day with an opener. This has worked fairly well for Peterson, as he’s allowed five runs (two earned) on seven hits over his last nine innings as a bulk guy. More importantly, he hasn’t walked a batter in either start.

Rodón (2026): 4.1 IP, 4 K, 5 BB, 0 HR, 6.23 ERA, 5.41 FIP, 152 ERA-

Rodón made his first start of the season after recovering from elbow surgery. The left-hander, who finished sixth in AL Cy Young voting last year, was not sharp in his returning walking five over 4 1/3 innings. He allowed three earned runs on just two hits and settled for a no decision.

Sunday, April 26: Freddy Peralta vs. Ryan Weathers, 1:40 PM EDT on SNY

Peralta (2026): 49.1 IP, 50 K, 19 BB, 5 HR, 3.10 ERA, 3.67 FIP, 79 ERA-

Peralta navigated an early deficit in his last start against the Tigers and ended up completing six innings of work for the third time this season. He allowed just the two runs on seven hits, while striking out seven and walking one. As a result, he earned his third win as a Met and his second in as many starts. He will look to continue building on that positive momentum after struggling to go deep into starts in the early part of the year.

Weathers (2026): 45.0 IP, 54 K, 13 BB, 6 HR, 3.00 ERA, 3.31 FIP, 73 ERA-

Weathers spent the last three years with the Marlins before heading over to New York in a big offseason trade. He’s had a solid first few weeks with the Yankees and has been especially scintillating in his last four starts, where he’s posted a 1.88 ERA and a 2.77 FIP in 24 innings pitched. His last time out, he carried a no-hitter into the seventh and left with the lead, but ended up settling for a no decision as the Yankees’ bullpen surrendered the lead in the seventh.

Freddy Fermin needs to be better

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 09: Freddy Fermin #54 of the San Diego Padres warms up during a game against the St. Louis Cardinals at Petco Park on May 09, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Diego Padres have had 23 catchers since 2016 (thanks to Clark Fahrenthold on The Brown and Gold Standard podcast). Austin Hedges (2015-2019) was supposed to be the organization’s stalwart for years to come; that didn’t work out. Since then, the front office has put all its eggs in the Luis Campusano basket. That plan has been thwarted by a combination of development issues with the player and the attitudes of the previous two managers.

In 2026, manager Craig Stammen made it clear in the offseason, as soon as he was hired, that Campusano had a role on the team. It seems clear that Stammen, after pitching to Campusano while a Padres bullpen arm, was willing to follow general manager A.J. Preller’s desire to give Campusano a legitimate chance. There appeared to be no effort to acquire a backup catcher for starter Freddy Fermin before Spring Training began.

With that said, it isn’t clear that the Padres want Campusano to be their front-line starter either. The defense of Fermin, rated significantly better than Campusano, is preferred. He is a veteran catcher who caught behind a probable future Hall of Famer in Salvador Perez with Kansas City. 

Fermin has never been a primary catcher, and since coming into the league in 2022, Fermin has not played more than 111 games (2024) and has a .257 batting average. His defensive metrics are above average, with his pop times and caught stealing rates above 75 percentile.

As the Baseball Savant graph shows, all his offensive metrics rate below average, and that has been consistent since his debut in the big leagues.

So far in 2026, Fermin has started in 24 of the 41 games played, with eight appearances off the bench. He is hitting .169/.265/.490 with no home runs and three RBI. This is par for the course on this team currently, with most of the hitters under their expected performance numbers. 

Fermin’s performance is similar to the catchers on the roster in 2025, and Fermin was acquired at the trade deadline last season for that reason. The tandem of Elias Diaz and Martin Maldonado ended up hitting .204 for the Padres in 2025.

About Luis Campusano

Campusano would be a downgrade defensively; his framing skills have always been subpar, though his ABS skills are excellent (64%). While on the injured list with a broken toe, Campusano has been temporarily replaced on the roster by career minor league catcher Rodolfo Durán. 

Getting a few days in the major leagues, after toiling in the minors for 11 seasons, is a great highlight for him, but his tenure will not be long-term. 

When Campusano returns, Fermin would be well served with more time off. Starter Lucas Giolito is joining the rotation soon and could be a good match for Campusano. 

Michael King has commented on how well Campusano has caught him this season. A veteran pitcher like Walker Buehler has also complimented his work. Giolito could be another good choice, and that would make Campusano the primary catcher for three of the five starters. Fermin continuing to catch Randy Vasquez and Griffin Canning, as well as being a defensive replacement in games, could be the best strategy going forward.

Could we see Ethan Salas?

In the back of Padres fans’ minds should be the thought that we could see Ethan Salas this season. When the year began, the idea of Salas coming to the Padres in 2026 was highly unlikely. He missed an entire season due to injury in 2025 and he had not been advancing as hoped before the injury occurred. 

The first quarter of the season has shown that Salas is the player many hoped he would be; at least he is showing he is capable of being that player. If he can keep up a consistent pace and show the power that has appeared in his game this year, there is no reason to think that a second-half call-up is out of the question.

Salas is 19 years old and will be 20 on June 1. In San Antonio, the Padres Double-A affiliate, he has been catching, and serving as DH when not catching. He has a .314 average, a .388 OBP, and a .653 slug. He leads all Double-A catchers in batting average and is sixth in the Texas League in average, OPS, and slug. In 29 games, he has six homers and 20 RBI.

The 2025 season was not lost for Salas, despite being on the IL for most of the year. He worked on his size and strength while studying video and working with the hitting coaches to evaluate and adjust his swing. It appears he took all that work onto the field with him in 2026.

Assuming Preller is as determined to promote Salas as he was with Campusano, the organization should have two homegrown catchers with the team going forward. 

Freddy Fermin needs to be better, but if he struggles deep into the season, there might be an option that will give the Friar Faithful a glimpse into the future.

Braves Minor League Recap: Luis Arestigueta Ks 6

June 4, 2025; North Augusta, South Carolina, USA; Augusta GreenJacket pitcher Luis Arestigueta (16) pitches during the second game of the Augusta GreenJacket and Fayetteville series at SRP Park. Mandatory Credit: Katie Goodale - Augusta Chronicle/USA TODAY NETWORK | Katie Goodale / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

It was a tough Thursday evening for the Atlanta Braves affiliates. They all took losses and none of them looked particularly good doing it. There were still some good things going on, especially down in Augusta, but it was overall a disappointing evening for the starting pitching.

(25-17) Gwinnett Stripers 4, (17-25) Durham Bulls 5

Box Score

Statcast

  • Jim Jarvis, SS: 1-5, .310/.413/.437
  • Nacho Alvarez Jr., 3B: 1-5, .238/.324/.333
  • Rowdy Tellez, 1B: 3-5, RBI, .250/.349/.516
  • Owen Murphy, SP: 4 IP, 5 H, 4 R, 4 ER, 5 BB, 3 K, 6.59 ERA

It’s the third start in a Stripers uniform for Owen Murphy, and he has gone down, up, and now back down again as high walks rates continue to be a startling problem for him this year. Across both levels Murphy is already only five walks short of his career high for walks in a season, and a big problem has just been his inability to keep anything down in the strike zone. While his high carry fastball can play well in the upper parts of the strike zone and higher the same is not true of the slider and curveball, and both pitches have not been effective and have forced Murphy to be nearly completely reliant on fastballs to succeed. Pitchers who throw a lot of fastballs but don’t have elite velocity tend to get hit around for home runs at the upper levels and with one more today Murphy is up to four home runs allowed in three Triple-A starts and nine allowed in 34 1/3 innings this season. Some of this is due to him just overall not commanding the ball well, but finding reliable command on his secondaries to take pressure off of his fastball is imperative.

Murphy also struggled to maintain velocity in this game, averaging 93.9 mph on his fastball but watching that dip inning-over-inning until it bottomed at 90.6 mph in the fourth. Murphy has to have more stamina than running out of gas at only 72 pitches, though to be fair Murphy’s fastball was by far his best weapon this game. A home run taints the final line of the pitch overall, but it was the one he could get strikes with most consistently and wasn’t hit all that well outside of the home run. Murphy’s fastball has the ability to be effective even without elite velocity, but to hit the next level and crack into MLB conversations his slider has to be much more consistent because it is his best pitch when he can bury it. The offense lacked a standout performer and scored most of their runs in one clutch of hits in the 7th inning, putting up a three spot that brought them within a run. However there wasn’t much impact contact to match the two Bulls home runs and that made the difference in the final line. Nacho Alvarez was able to record a hit but it was not a great outing for him. His hit came on a medium contact ball that snuck through the infield and his other four at bats all looked rough including two strikeouts.

Swing and Misses

Owen Murphy – 7

Dylan Dodd – 6

(17-18) Columbus Clingstones 1, (20-16) Knoxville Smokies 5

Box Score

  • Patrick Clohisy, CF: 1-3, BB, .234/.308/.372
  • Jordan Groshans, 3B: 2-4, .246/.308/.516
  • Shay Schanaman, SP: 4 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, 5.49 ERA
  • Jhancarlos Lara, RP: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 0 K, 9.28 ERA

The Columbus pitching staff got battered, allowing three home runs that accounted for four of Knoxville’s runs, and without David McCabe and Lizandro Espinoza in the lineup the offense did not have the firepower to answer back. The offense as a whole only managed to record four hits in the game, though Jordan Groshans at least kept his hot play from yesterday rolling just a bit. He had half of the teams hits in the game, though both were singles, and so far this month has been hitting .308/.357/.718. Patrick Clohisy also had a hit and a walk, extending what has been a really solid week of play for him. Clohisy has struggled mightily this season and still isn’t producing his performance from his time in Columbus last season, but he is getting back to drawing a bunch of walks and getting on base. During his recent five game on base streak he is 4-15 with six walks and only three strikeouts, and much of the batted ball inputs are better than the numbers might suggest. Despite a low BABIP he is hitting plenty of line drives, and though his lack of raw power does cap his results he should be able to reproduce more of the results he has put up thus far in his career.

Pitching has been the achilles heel for the Clingstones this season, as in addition to leading the Southern League in home runs on offense they have also given up the most home runs and the worst ERA in the league. Shay Schanaman did a solid job for four innings, producing a ton of ground ball contact that went for outs, but the fly balls he did allow found a way to hurt him. He allowed two solo home runs in the game to account for both of the runs he did allow before departing. Schanaman has already allowed a career-high six long balls in just 19 2/3 innings of work. The Clingstones have also allowed the highest walks per nine of any Southern League team, and with guys like Elison Joseph and Jhancarlos Lara getting big innings in the bullpen it’s not hard to guess why. After a great outing two days ago Lara couldn’t get the ball around the zone in this one, though fortunately he’s so overpowering that teams often struggle to make good contact against him. The bag was a bit more mixed for Elison Joseph. His control was not good, but it was at least fringe, and he produced a ton of whiffs which has always been the case for him when he is anywhere near the zone. Unfortunately the last two seasons he hasn’t been and the two walks he allowed this game didn’t do much to improve the 29.5% walk rate he’s posted this season. The whiffs should come back based on the contact rates he is allowing so far, but that can’t make up for the fact that he has been very lucky to only have a 3.38 ERA this season.

Swing and Misses

Elison Joseph – 10

Shay Schanaman – 7

(20-16) Rome Emperors 0, (9-26) Brooklyn Cyclones 7

Box Score

  • Isaiah Drake, CF: 1-4, .293/.369/.500
  • John Gil, SS: 0-3, .281/.385/.469
  • Jeremy Reyes, SP: 5 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 4 BB, 4 K, 4.83 ERA

The Emperors looked quite dreadful against a really bad Brooklyn team, and it’s probably best to motor past this one pretty quickly. Now, the Cyclones did run out as good of a combination of pitchers as they can muster, but it was still an ugly day for the offense. John Gil had a couple of strikeouts, and after a marvelous week in Asheville he has yet to record a hit with only one walk this series. Gil has shown a strong pattern of up-and-down play this entire season and he may be on a bit of a down swing at the moment, though there isn’t anything he is putting on the field that is worth getting concerned over. Isaiah Drake had an okay showing with a hard line drive for a single in the third inning, though nothing overly spectacular especially not compared to the crazy finish in Asheville. He broke his streak of six straight games with a stolen base by not swiping a bag today, but so far he is on a nine game on base streak and has been successful in his last nine stolen base attempts.

Every time health has been on Jeremy Reyes’s side he has shown something worth watching, and he used his fastball and slider to great effect in this game to get a bunch of whiffs. However, his command was no better than it has been this entire season and even a very free-swinging Brooklyn team learned to let him make mistakes the second time through the order. He dominated the first go around but couldn’t delivery that success consistently and allowed runs in each inning he pitches the second and third times through the order. Reyes is a bit of a tough evaluation because of how much time he has missed due to injury, but after an exciting look a couple of seasons ago it’s quickly trended towards a bullpen future for him. The injuries don’t help that at all, and neither does the lack of any progression with his command. Reyes doesn’t show the sort of athleticism or ability to repeat his arm path that would give much confidence to MLB-quality command projections, though the raw stuff is plenty good enough to succeed in a bullpen role if he does eventually make that switch. Given that he is 20 years old and doesn’t have as much competition behind him after the Braves last draft he will keep getting opportunities, but the lack of a clear line upwards is a bit frustrating for a guy who has so much room to grow.

Swing and Misses 

Jeremy Reyes – 17

Mathieu Curtis – 6

(19-17) Augusta GreenJackets 1, (17-17) Myrtle Beach Pelicans

Box Score

  • Tate Southisene, DH: 1-4, .261/.469/.391
  • Alex Lodise, SS: 1-4, .321/.387/.393
  • Luis Guanipa, CF: 1-4, .348/.400/.435
  • Landon Beidelschies, SP: 4 IP, 4 H, 4 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 2 K, 11.00 ERA
  • Luis Arestigueta, RP: 4 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 6 K, 6.87 ERA

Tate Southisene, Alex Lodise, and Luis Guanipa all had singles in this game, and that’s the point it’s best to stop talking about the offense. It was mostly a mess, though those three looked really good out there and perhaps a bit better than the lines might indicate. Southisene wasn’t really getting the ball in the air this game, but had a couple of hard hits on the ground and is putting up some good deep at-bats. I really like where Alex Lodise was in this game, at least on fastballs, and there is some improvement for him against breaking balls. He is still a bit late at recognizing and adjusting to spin but has looked better this week, and his contact has been awesome. You have the home run yesterday, but also a couple of hard hit fly balls that he was right on and hit to center field and some missiles that landed foul. Guanipa was the one that has put up great swings the past two games and I wouldn’t be surprised to see him get right back to where he was next week in the coming games. He has done a great job of controlling the inner half of the strike zone, and it’s led to hard contact and in this particular game some loud foul balls. He needs to be less aggressive up, but has a rare blend of bat speed and barrel control to be able to get to those pitches and not strike out even if it would serve him to wait for lower offerings. We know the approach is an issue and aggression is going to be the scariest part of his profile for the rest of his career, but he’s been smashing the ball when he makes contact and as he’s started to lift more the home runs should keep coming in for him. It’s a great turn around after a bad couple of seasons and now I only hope he can just stay on the field for a full season.

Landon Beidelschies didn’t have the worst of outings on Thursday, but he really couldn’t land a secondary pitch for a swing and miss. Beidelschies was heavy on his fastball usage against the Pelicans, and it led to him throwing a ton of strikes but also letting up a ton of contact that turned into runs. His home run allowed came on a curveball that looped right over the middle of the plate, but many of his hits came on well-placed fastballs that Myrtle Beach was just able to hit. That’s going to happen sometimes, especially for a guy who doesn’t have the velocity to get it past hitters, but it’s unfortunately a bit magnified when it comes from a pitcher who hasn’t managed a good outing yet this season. Beidelschies has just got to be better about landing his secondary offerings consistently or it’s going to be a continued struggle even when he is commanding his fastball well. Big time positives came from Luis Arestigueta, who carried over a good ending to his last outing to put up a phenomenal performance this Thursday. It didn’t start out so great, though. He walked the first batter he faced and was falling into the tendency of flying open early and dragging his arm behind. He was missing glove side over and over, but did well enough to reign it in and get some fly outs to end the inning. He came out again in the second inning and immediately threw three balls the exact same way, but was able to dial his mechanics in and put up his best outing since his second of the season. A missed location on a fastball turned into a two run bomb, but otherwise both his fastball and slider were missing bats. He was doing well to land the fastball up and bury the slider, and especially in the final inning he was making the Pelicans look foolish with his slider. He even mixed in a swinging strike on a changeup, a pitch that is too firm to be an effective pitch at high usage but is nice to see him at least developing.

Swing and Misses

Luis Arestigueta – 14

Landon Beidelschies – 5

Mariners News: José Suarez, George Kirby, and The Tampa Bay Rays

Mar 31, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Jose Suarez (54) throws against the Athletics in the first inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Good day folks and happy Friday!

The Mariners bounced back in a big way yesterday, rolling past the Astros in an 8-3 series finale victory.

Despite a lofty 36.1% strikeout rate, Luke Raley’s hot season with the stick continues. Do you believe in his performance so far, or do you expect him to come crashing back to earth?

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

Anders’ pick…

Orioles-Nationals series preview: The MASN Cup is no more

WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 06: CJ Abrams #5 of the Washington Nationals celebrates with James Wood #29 in the dugout after hitting a grand slam in the eighth inning during the game between the Minnesota Twins and the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on Wednesday, May 6, 2026 in Washington, District of Columbia. (Photo by Alyssa McDaniel/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

A matchup that was once known as the MASN Cup takes on a new identity this summer. The Nationals are now one of the many teams that works directly with MLB to broadcast their games locally. Meanwhile, the Orioles are back out on their own channel for the first since 2004, when they were still on Comcast SportsNet. Everything old is new again.

As for the on-field play, these two teams are in frustratingly similar places. The Nationals are 21-23, nine games back of first place in the NL East and 4.5 games back of the final wild card spot in the NL. The Orioles are 20-24, nine games back of first place in the AL East but only 1.5 games back of the final wild card spot in the AL.

Washington has one of the most productive lineups in baseball. The 236 runs they have scored is just one fewer than the league-leading Atlanta Braves. Other stats where they rank within the top five in MLB: doubles, slugging percentage, and stolen bases.

CJ Abrams and James Wood lead the attack. Abrams’ 158 wRC+ is the best on the team, as is his .292 batting average, .390 on-base, and .532 slug. Wood is the masher of the group. He has hit 12 home runs on the year and scored 36 runs, both team highs. The Rockville native is a “three true outcomes” type, as he has a 17.0% walk rate and a 31.9% strikeout rate.

Joey Wiemer (154 wRC+), Curtis Mead (126 wRC+), José Tena (122 wRC+), Daylen Lile (113 wRC+), and Luis García Jr (108 wRC+) have all done well at the plate too. Nasim Nuńez isn’t much of a threat in the box (62 wRC+), but be careful if he gets on base. His 18 steals are tied for the most in Major League Baseball, and he has only been caught twice.

Run prevention is where Washington has struggled. No one has allowed more than the 256 runs that they have, and only the Astros (5.59) have a worse ERA than the D.C.’s 5.01. The bullpen has been a bit better than the rotation. Their ERA is just 4.81, and it has come across 204 innings, the biggest workload of any bullpen in the league.

Six different Nationals pitchers have recorded saves on the year, but the team doesn’t really have a lockdown arm. Gus Varland leads the squad with four saves. He also has a 4.50 ERA and only strikes out 9.56 per nine innings. Outside of that, it’s an anonymous crew that is still figuring out roles. Old friend Cionel Pérez has tossed 16 innings for them this season, but he elected free agency earlier this month and is now in the Mets organization.

The Washington IL is full of pitchers. Noteable inclusions are Josiah Gray (right flexor strain) and Trevor Williams (right elbow sprain). Neither one will play this weekend.

Game 1: Friday, May 15th, 6:45 p.m., MASN

RHP Shane Baz (1-4, 5.48 ERA) vs. RHP Zack Littell (1-4, 6.94 ERA)

It feels fair to say that Baz has had one genuinely good start in an Orioles uniform. That came against the Astros in late April. Over his two starts since, the power righty has allowed 10 earned runs over 10.1 total innings. Walks have been an issue for him. If he can avoid the free passes, things should work out alright. That’s easier said than done, of course.

Littell was brought in to be a dependable veteran arm in a Washington rotation that needed the structure. Instead, he has struggled mightily. He is walking (3.22 BB/9) and striking out (4.21 K/9) batters at nearly an identical rate. His 8.26 FIP is even worse than his 6.94 ERA.

Game 2: Saturday, May 16th, 4:05 p.m., MASN, FS1

RHP Chris Bassitt (3-2, 5.21 ERA) vs. RHP Cade Cavalli (1-2, 4.02 ERA)

Two of the last three starts that Bassitt has made have gone well! He gave up just one run in six innings against the Athletics earlier in the week, and allowed one run over 6.2 frames against the Astros at the end of April. In between the two was a poor outing in Miami. But overall, it is improvement! The Orioles do not need perfection from Bassit. They need innings and solid quality. More recently, he has provided exactly that.

Cavalli has been a bright spot in the Nationals rotation, though he has waned recently. The 27-year-old is a hard thrower, but it’s his off-speed stuff that gets the best marks. Even still, it’s a fastball-heavy arsenal that should give the Orioles a chance to score some runs.

Game 3: Sunday, May 17th, 1:35 p.m., MASN

RHP Brandon Young (3-1, 4.15 ERA) vs. RHP Miles Mikolas (1-3, 7.00 ERA)

It’s tough to complain about what Young has come in and provided this Orioles rotation. He’s had one bad start in five attempts, and even in that one he was able to provide a little bit of length (four innings) despite an early meltdown. The Texas native has done nothing to change the perspective that he is simply a placeholder until Dean Kremer is back, but it feels like he has edged ahead of several others in the organizational depth chart when it comes to being the go-to spot starter when needed.

Mikolas allowed 11 earned runs in his second start of the year and has been fighting that in his ERA ever since. Overall, the veteran has been OK, I guess. The team doesn’t ask him for much, usually three to five innings without allowing the game to slip away. Usually he is able to accomplish that. You can expect a lot of ground balls. Mikolas is among the league leaders in that department (54.4% ground ball rate).


How many games do you think the Orioles will win in this series? Let us know in the comments.

Elephant Rumblings: A’s Add Lefty Reliever; Giants Come To Town

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 31: José Suarez #54 of the Atlanta Braves pitches in the in the second inning during the game against the Athletics at Truist Park on March 31, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Jack Casey/Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Another week in the books! Welcome to Friday A’s fans.

Yesterday morning the A’s announced the addition of some outside bullpen help, acquiring left-hander Jose Suarez from the Seattle Mariners for cash considerations:

In order to make room on the 40-man roster for Suarez, the team designated outfielder Junior Perez for assignment, meaning any of the other 29 teams in the league can claim him. The A’s will be immediately adding Suarez to the bullpen today so there will be another corresponding roster move to make immediate room on the 26-man roster.

Suarez should be a name plenty familiar to A’s fans after he spent 2019-2024 seasons down south with the division-rival Angels. The left-hander then spent a year on the other side of the country with the Braves and began this season with them before finding his way to Seattle. Split between the Braves and Mariners this year the 28-year-old has pitched in just nine games, allowing 13 runs in 18 1/3 innings of work which comes out to a 6.38 ERA. Not a great season to date.

That said, the former starting pitcher has been better in the ‘pen as a left-handed relief option and the numbers back that up. He’s got strikeout potential but also has major control issues. As of now the only lefty in Mark Kotsay’s bullpen is Hogan Harris so the need to add another lefty was clear. With Suarez getting DFA’d the A’s are taking a chance that the team can fix him and get him back to the point he was just a few years ago, when he looked like a budding backend starter for the Angels.

To bring in Suarez, the A’s needed roster space so they made the decision to designate outfield prospect Junior Perez for assignment. Widely considered a top-20 prospect in the Athletics’ organization, Perez was added to the 40-man roster this offseason to prevent him getting selected in the Rule 5 Draft. The logic was sound as he was coming off a fantastic .231/.348/.478 slash line with 26 homers and 27 steals split between Double and Triple-A. Add in the fact that many believed he was nearly as good a defender in center field as Denzel Clarke, it was clear the A’s front office liked what they were seeing from the then-23-year-old.

Things unfortunately have not gone nearly as smoothly for Perez here in 2026 as he’s limped to a .210/.273/.384 line while striking out more and walking less. He’s looked outmatched at the minor leagues’ highest level so far this season and even though he ranked as the team’s 20th-best prospect, the decision has been made to remove him off the 40-man roster and risk him getting claimed. The team will surely be hoping he slips through and remains in Las Vegas but his awesome year last season could entice another club to bring Perez aboard. Stay tuned to see how his situation unfolds.

Turning to the big league squad, we got the San Francisco Giants coming to town this weekend for a three-game set. The former Bay Area rivals have gotten off to a horrendous start this year as they sit fourth in the NL West with a 18-25 record, tied for fourth-worst in the entire sport. Almost nothing has gone right for new manager Tony Vitello in his first year as a manager in the professional ranks and many Giants fans are already beginning to wonder if he was the right pick to lead a veteran-laded squad.

Speaking of the Giants’ vets, they’ve been absolutely hamstrung by horrid seasons to date from the likes of Willy Adames, Rafael Devers and former A’s All-Star Matt Chapman. None of them have been living up to the massive contracts they are tied to and that’s been a huge reason why the Giants rank last or near last in most offensive categories. They’re last in runs scored, with the team ahead of them having scored a full 15 runs more than SF. They’ve gotten above-average production out of fourth-year infielder Casey Schmitt, and left fielder Heliot Ramos and longtime veteran Luis Arraez have provided production, but they’re big bats have slumped and are a big reason why the Giants are on track to be sellers this summer.

The pitching schedule for this weekend looks like mostly veteran-on-veteran matchups, and the A’s might be getting lucky avoiding seeing any of the Giants’ top starters in Logan Webb and Robbie Ray. Tonight’s series opener will pit Aaron Civale against Tyler Mahle. While both signed one-year deals this offseason, Civale has been far and away better as the 31-year-old Mahle has struggled in his first season in SF. Civale has been on an absolute roll as well while Mahle has surrendered nine runs in his last three starts (though one of those was a scoreless appearance).

Saturday will be the only day we see a young arm take the mound as the Giants will hope rookie right-hander Trevor McDonald can go toe-to-toe with Luis Severino. McDonald, considered a top-15 prospect in the Giants’ farm system, has gotten off to a quick start to his season as he’s made two solid starts for SF since being recalled a couple weeks ago. Not much of a track record for him to show off but the Giants are getting desperate for pitching help and he’s provided some so far. Severino, the grizzled veteran on the other hand, has had an up-and-down season so far but is on the up and up right now. Sevy has made four consecutive solid starts, allowing just five runs over his past four starts spanning 24 innings of work. With a 4.07 ERA he’ll have an excellent chance to get that number under 4 facing a struggling Giants offense.

And Sunday we wrap the series and home stand with Jeffrey Springs going up against Adrian Houser. Like Mahle, Houser was an offseason addition meant to stabilize the SF rotation while providing some possible upside. Things have gone south for him however as he got hit hard in April. Things have begun to turn around for Houser as the calendar has shifted to May though. Springs meanwhile has been the team’s best pitcher overall this year but is coming off a starting appearance that saw him allow four runs in the first inning. He grinded though and provided five full innings without allowing another run so the hope is that he can just pick up where he left off and keep up his great season against the Giants on Sunday afternoon in Sacramento.

That’s all we got this morning. First pitch tonight is at 6:40 everyone so set your alarms. And have a great weekend everyone.

A’s Coverage:

MLB News and Interest:

Best of X:

Tough break for one of the A’s top pitching prospects. On the bright side doesn’t sound too serious:

Any guesses how far Kurtz can take this streak? Is McGuire in trouble?

Bummer that Perez’s best performance at the plate came just one day before his DFA:

ICYMI:

Daily MLB Expert Picks & Baseball Predictions May 15

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We're going with a pair of moneylines to kick off our MLB picks for Friday's slate of games.

See why our baseball experts love the value on Colorado, Cleveland, and the Yankees — based on prices from Polymarket, to win tonight as we kick off MLB Rivalry Weekend!

MLB expert picks for today

PickOdds
Josh Inglis Josh Inglis: COL ML+113
Joe Osborne Joe Osborne: CLE ML-127
Jon Metler Jon Metler: NYY ML-144

Prices courtesy of Polymarket.

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Josh Inglis' expert pick: Rockies moneyline

Price: 47¢ (+113) at Polymarket

This game has all the makings of a slugfest with winds blowing out at Coors Field and a starting pitching matchup that’s tough on the eyes. I have Merrill Kelly ranked as the worst starter on the board today, and he sits at the bottom of the league in BlastContact%. On the other side, Kyle Freeland isn’t exactly a household name, but backing the Colorado Rockies in the first game of a series against the Diamondbacks at plus money makes sense. Arizona still has to deal with the usual Colorado adjustment and visual memory index that can impact teams arriving at Coors. The Over 12 is also in play here, and both offenses could get going early.

Joe Osborne's expert pick: Guardians moneyline

Price: 56¢ (-127) at Polymarket

The Cleveland Guardians are in a strong spot tonight behind Tanner Bibee, who has pitched like an ace at home this season, allowing one earned run or fewer in four of five starts in Cleveland. He'll face a Reds lineup that ranks in the bottom third of the league in both runs and OPS on the road, which has contributed to an eight-game road losing streak. Expect the Guardians lineup to make some noise vs. Andrew Abbott as well: Cleveland is one of the top offenses in baseball vs. LHP, which has led to an 11-3 record when facing a lefty starter. The bullpen edge is massive as well, with Cincinnati ranking dead last in both ERA and FIP since the calendar flipped to May.

Jon Metler's expert pick: Yankees moneyline

Price: 59¢ (-144) at Polymarket

The Subway Series kicks off tonight at Citi Field, and if the market is going to give me value on the New York Yankees with Cam Schlittler on the mound, I’m taking it without hesitation. The Yankees are trading around 59 cents, but I make them closer to 63-cent favorites against the Mets, leaving a solid edge on the number. The matchup also lines up well offensively for the Yankees: Clay Holmes relies heavily on a sinker and a sharp slider that plays more like a sweeper, but those pitches tend to lose effectiveness against left-handed hitters. That’s a problem against a Yankees lineup that, outside of Aaron Judge and Anthony Volpe, will predominantly hit from the left side — and I think the Yanks can generate consistent traffic on the bases against Holmes throughout the game.


Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

What to watch in the Stanley Cup Playoffs as the conference finals arrive

After the NHL's Stanley Cup Playoffs began with an infusion of new teams that hadn't experienced postseason hockey in a long time, with some even winning a series, the third round is here with some of the usual suspects left standing.

Carolina is back in the Eastern Conference final for a third time in four years and fifth time during the Hurricanes' streak of eight consecutive playoff appearances under coach Rod Brind'Amour. Next up is Buffalo or Montreal.

Vegas is back in the West final for a fourth time in the franchise’s not-even-decade-long existence. Starting Wednesday, the Golden Knights face Colorado, with the Avalanche getting this far for the first time since their Cup run in 2022.

There will be a new champion and no three-peat after the Florida Panthers were derailed by injuries following three consecutive trips to the final. Both finalists will be new after Edmonton got knocked out by the Ducks.

What’s happened so far

WESTERN CONFERENCE: The Presidents’ Trophy-winning Avalanche swept Los Angeles and beat Minnesota in five games, while Vegas got through by beating Utah and Anaheim in six.

EASTERN CONFERENCE:Carolina swept Ottawa and Philadelphia and is the only undefeated team left. Buffalo beat Boston and Montreal defeated Tampa Bay, with the Sabres and Canadiens then putting on a fun second-round series.

The matchups

The top three teams in each of the four divisions make the playoffs. The other four spots go to the next two highest-placed teams in each conference, regardless of division.

The teams with the best record in each conference open against the wild-card team with the worst record; the other wild card plays the other division winner. Teams that finish second and third in their division play each other in the bracket headed by their respective division winner, so the first-round matchups had some rivalry-style games. The second round thus carries an even higher prospect of division opponents matching up ahead of the conference finals.

All four rounds of the playoffs are best-of-seven; the first team to 16 victories wins the Stanley Cup.

East

Carolina vs. Buffalo or Montreal, Game 1 Tuesday or Thursday night

West

Colorado vs. Vegas, Game 1 Wednesday night

The favorites

Colorado is the favorite at a little over even money, followed by Carolina.

How to watch

Every playoff game will be nationally televised in the U.S on an ESPN or Turner network. The NHL schedule is here and a streaming guide is here. Much of TNT’s coverage, which includes the Stanley Cup Final, will be simulcast on truTV and available on Max’s B/R Sports Add-On. In Canada, games will be showcased on Sportsnet and CBC.

After three rounds of best-of-seven series, the final starts in early June. If the final goes the distance, Game 7 could go as late as June 21.

What to know

WEST: The Colorado Avalanche look like a wagon, after being the league's best team since October. Nathan MacKinnon has been a man on a mission, especially after missing a wide-open net in the Olympic gold-medal game when he and Canada lost to the U.S. in overtime. He's surrounded by talent, including all-world defenseman Cale Makar, and in net, career backup Scott Wedgewood has been a revelation.

Grizzled, old-school, no-nonsense John Tortorella took over coaching the Vegas Golden Knights in late March, and they've been rolling since. Mitch Marner, who was maligned for a lack of playoff success during his lengthy time in Toronto, has been arguably the best player around.

EAST: The Carolina Hurricanes are 8-0, getting dominant goaltending from 36-year-old Frederik Andersen and do-it-all play from 2018 league MVP Taylor Hall. They now hope to break through after so many disappointing playoff exits.

After snapping the NHL’s longest postseason drought at 14 years in style, the Sabres handled the Bruins in a back-and-forth series to set up a matchup with Montreal. The Canadiens are Canada's last hope to end the nation's 33-year Cup drought dating to them winning it in 1993.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

MLB Home Run Predictions Today: Best HR Prop Bets, Picks, Parlay & Odds for Friday, May 15

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The baseball gods owe me one today. I started the week in the black before back-to-back donuts, so I’m cashing in the home-run luck card on a loaded Friday slate.

The projections are finally opening up with more than two dozen +EV names and MLB player props showing value, and a long list of pitchers begging to be faded.

Tyler Mahle in Sutter Health Park is a recipe for four-baggers, and Athletics' shiny new rookie Henry Bolte is going to test that.

These are my favorite home run bets for Friday, May 15.

  • UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.

Best MLB home run props today

Player to hit a HROdds
Giants Heliot Ramos+475
Orioles Pete Alonso+353
Athletics Henry Bolte+750
💲Today's HR parlay+13850

Home run pick: Heliot Ramos (+475)

Heliot Ramos and the San Francisco Giants have a great home run matchup today at Sutter Health Park with slight winds blowing out to right field and Aaron Civale on the mound.

The Athletics starter gives up fast swings and loud contact. His expected metrics suggest that shiny ERA isn’t built to last. He also owns one of the lower ground-ball rates in baseball, and that 0.86 HR/9 feels more likely to climb toward his career mark of 1.30.

Like many pitchers, his numbers in Sacramento are also much worse than they are on the road.

Ramos projects as the best +EV home run play on the board today, according to the projections at Covers. The fair price for the middle-of-the-order bat is around +330, and he’ll also get a chance to attack an Athletics bullpen that owns the second-worst ERA in baseball over the last two weeks and has been heavily used this week.

Outside of the Coors Field game, this matchup carries the biggest total on the board. Bombs away, boys.

  • Time: 9:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: NBCSCA, NBCSBA

Home run pick: Pete Alonso (+353)

If Zack Littell doesn’t get pummeled today, I’ll be at a loss for words. He’s one of the worst starters in baseball and profiles as a perfect pitcher fade for home runs, sitting in the bottom 15 in BlastContact%, HR/FB rate, and xFIP.

It’s tough to go wrong with any Baltimore bat here, especially with one of the league’s worst bullpens likely being asked to cover four-plus innings. Littell worked as a bulk reliever last game and has thrown 69, 41, and 84 pitches over his last three outings. He’s also allowed multiple home runs in five of his eight appearances.

Pete Alonso is a buy down to +290 today, and this number is dropping quickly. Taylor Ward grades as the better +EV play according to Covers projections, but he’s launched just one longball this year and Alonso has been one of the better bats to back all season.

If you want to get really aggressive, I’d build a home run round robin with Adley Rutschman (+620) and Gunnar Henderson (+361). If you’re hunting home runs, the Orioles might be the best target on the board today.

  • Time: 6:45 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Nationals.TV, MASN

Home run pick: Henry Bolte (+750)

Henry Bolte was built for a Friday dinger. The three-game rookie who hit 12 homers in Triple-A last year in just 37 games has three hits in the big leagues, and already owns the second-fastest bat speed in the Athletics lineup.

Nick Kurtz is +265 to go deep, and there’s no way the rookie should be three times that price vs. Tyler Mahle and his awful HR/FB rate.

Every one of Bolte’s swings through two games has been classified as a fast swing (75+ mph), compared to hitters like Vladimir Guerrero Jr. sitting around 63%.

The kid has a clear home-run swing, the right matchup, and the ideal setting today. This might be the last time we see his HR price above +500, especially at Sutter Health Park.

  • Time: 9:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: NBCSCA, NBCSBA
Josh Inglis' 2026 Transparency Record
  • HR picks: 13-74, -6.94 units

Today’s HR parlay

Giants Heliot RamosBet Now
+13850
Orioles Pete Alonso
Athletics Henry Bolte

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Blue Jays vs Tigers Prediction, Odds & Home Run Pick for Today's MLB Game

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Toronto Blue Jays starter Trey Yesavage has baffled batters all season, and I expect the same result against a Detroit Tigers lineup that struggles with the splitter. 

Read on to see why with my Toronto Blue Jays vs Detroit Tigers predictions and MLB picks on Friday, May 15. 

Blue Jays vs Tigers predictions

Blue Jays vs Tigers best bet: Trey Yesavage Over 5.5 strikeouts  (-110)

Toronto Blue Jays starter Trey Yesavage has been incredible in his three starts since making his debut on April 28. 

He owns a 0.68 ERA, allowing just one run in 13.1 innings. The strikeout rate has been impressive too, going Over the number in back-to-back starts, racking up 10.15 K/9 in that stretch with a 36% chase rate

When Yesavage is pairing his fastball with that deadly splitter, he becomes nearly unhittable. 

He has a .176 batting average against this season on his splitter with a 38% whiff on the pitch. 

The splitter is Yesavage's put-away pitch, and it’s one that has troubled the Detroit Tigers' bats all season, posting a 39% strikeout rate and 41% whiff rate.

Covers COVERS INTEL:The Tigers rank in the bottom five in strikeout and whiff rate against the splitter this season.  

Blue Jays vs Tigers same-game parlay (SGP)

Tigers starter Ty Madden throws a heavy dose of the sinker to right-handed batters. That’s a pitch that Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has hit well this year with a .366 avg. I’ll bank on him bumping the slump in a plus-pitching matchup. 

For the final leg of my SGP I’ll bet on Yohendrick Pinango to go Over 0.5 hits. He’s been red hot with the bat, recording at least one hit in nine of his 13 career outings.

Blue Jays vs Tigers SGP

  • Trey Yesavage Over 5.5 strikeouts
  • Vladimir Guerrero Over 1.5 total bases
  • Yohendrick Pinango Over 0.5 hits 
img loading="lazy" width="100%" height="null" src="https://img.covers.com/editorial/2026/jaysmlcbp.jpg" alt="Canada’s best price for Jays"
Get the best Jays ML odds at BET99 — every game.

Blue Jays vs Tigers home run pick: Kazuma Okamoto (+350)

I’m making this a half-unit wager. 

Madden doesn’t throw hard, averaging just 92.7MPH on his pitches, which ranks in the 23rd percentile. 

His primary pitch to righties is a sinker, four-seamer combo. 

Enter Kazuma Okamoto, who has a team-high 10 home runs this year, while ranking in the 94th percentile in hard-hit rate.

He also owns a .596 xSLG with six homers against those two pitches this season.

Mike DiStefano's 2026 Transparency record
  • Best bets: 17-25, -4.60 units
  • SGPs: 8-34, -0.70 units
  • HR picks: 8-34, +6.15 units

Blue Jays vs Tigers odds

  • Moneyline: Toronto -125 | Detroit +113
  • Run line: Toronto -1.5 (+140) | Detroit +1.5 (-160)
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 (+105) | Under 8.5 (-125)

Blue Jays vs Tigers trend

The Toronto Blue Jays have hit the Game Total Over in 4 of their last 5 games (+2.90 Units / 53% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Blue Jays vs. Tigers.

How to watch Blue Jays vs Tigers and game info

LocationComerica Park, Detroit, MI
DateFriday, May 15, 2026
First pitch6:45 p.m. ET
TVAppleTV
Blue Jays starting pitcherTrey Yesavage
(1-1, 0.68 ERA)
Tigers starting pitcherTy Madden
(0-0, 2.45 ERA)

Blue Jays vs Tigers latest injuries

Blue Jays vs Tigers weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

What fans can expect under the Sixers’ new leadership structure

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 24: Bob Myers looks on during game three of the Eastern Conference first round playoffs between the Boston Celtics and Philadelphia 76ers at Xfinity Mobile Arena on April 24, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Celtics defeated the 76ers 108-100. 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 Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When the Sixers decided to part ways with former president of basketball operations Daryl Morey, there was plenty of debate amongst the fanbase as to whether a new front office group would really change all that much. When plenty of blame falls at the feet of ownership, it’s easy for the wires to get crossed of which specific places blame should go.

Now that Bob Myers, the president of sports for Harris Blitzer Sports and Entertainment, has made his first public appearance for the Sixers alongside governor Josh Harris, their quotes offered a little more insight into what problems will leave with Morey, and which ones might be potentially here to stay.

One of the biggest topics that came up in the press conference at the team’s practice facility Thursday, one that Harris wanted to get out in front of and address, was the luxury tax. The topic of “ducking” the luxury tax has become a hot one in Philly, with the Sixers not having paid it for their roster since 2022.

The vitriol really kicked into gear after the front office not only ignored Joel Embiid’s pleas to not duck the tax, but traded away Jared McCain for no rostered players in return. Harris was happy to field a question about this, wanting a chance to give his thoughts publicly.

“The front office absolutely has the green light to go into the luxury tax — in fact we’ve been in and out of the luxury tax,” Harris said. “It’s just not an issue.”

He went on to describe the money they’ve put into the team like a new practice facility, arena and the several max contracts they’ve shelled out since he bought the team. Myers went a step further, saying that if Harris shot down a proposed transaction because it would put them over the tax, he wouldn’t want to work for Harris.

No one should expect the Sixers to shoot up into the second apron next year, but Harris has backed up those words in the past. On top of the new facilities, he has given out max or near-max money to Embiid, Ben Simmons, Tobias Harris, Tyrese Maxey and Paul George. The Sixers did pay the luxury tax in 2021 and 2022, two years of Embiid’s MVP contention.

There of course have been some penny-pinching as well, most notably ducking the tax in the 2023 season, the best year in terms of regular season wins since Harris took over the team. There was also attaching multiple second-round picks to salary-dump KJ Martin at last year’s deadline.

What this ownership has shown over their time in charge is that they will spend the money for a team they believe to be true title contenders. Injuries likely played a major part, but it doesn’t seem like Morey was able to sell them on an idea that would do so.

The public defense of Morey for the McCain trade was that ownership forced his hand to get over the tax. It’s worth repeating again that those were not mutually exclusive ideas. Thanks to the Paul George suspension, the salary dump of Eric Gordon alone would have gotten them under the tax. Not paying the luxury tax for 2025-26 might have been a mandate from Harris, but trading McCain was Morey’s call — with ownership’s approval.

Speaking of those big contracts handed out, a criticism often given to both Morey and Harris was their proclivity to big game fishing. For Morey, this was more centered around his roster construction, as one built around Embiid, George and Maxey would indicate.

Whether the Sixers still believe in that model is for a new hire to decide.

“Well, we didn’t get it done this year, but that doesn’t mean it can’t be done,” Myers said about the Big 3 model. “Depth may be more important than it’s ever been… Not to say this model doesn’t work, but we have to look at this year and be honest about it.”

The big fish criticism has applied to Harris on more of a macro-sense. The label on him is that he will get the most well-known name available rather than leading a search to find the next new thing. Myers represents those concerns in a lot of ways for Sixers fans.

As the president of basketball operations in Golden State, he helped acquire Kevin Durant and saw the team win four titles in his time. He also missed on big draft picks that failed to bring the Warriors “two timelines” plan to fruition.

That concern over Harris’ thought process still looks valid. Several times during their press conference, Harris said something along the lines of, “that’s why you bring in the guy who’s won four championships.”

Myers’ shaky draft record was a big reason even Morey’s biggest detractors were nervous about moving on from him. If there’s any hope on that front, it’s that the Sixers’ scouting department hasn’t seen any changeover just yet.

There were several mentions made to the scouting staff currently being in Chicago for the draft combine, including general manager Elton Brand. Myers says he hopes to hire a new president before the draft in late June. Even if he’s able to do so, there is not a lot of time left to put together a strategy for this year.

It might just be a matter of timing and logistics, but the Sixers may have a lot of the same scouting infrastructure that they had under Morey. If that’s the case, that’s a reason to feel optimistic about the Sixers’ pick at No. 22 this year.

One mistake this group needs to steer clear of is not making the power structure clear. Brand’s first two seasons as general manager were notorious for being a collaborative front office without one clear vision for the team. That regime also changed after two bad contracts were handed out and they were swept out of the playoffs in 2020.

How exactly everything unfolds is still unclear after this press conference. Myers said he won’t be involved in day-to-day operations of this team, but will have a voice in big decisions. With the Sixers also retaining Brand for the moment and head coach Nick Nurse, there will already be a lot of high-paid chefs in the kitchen this new president of basketball operations will be running.

Good Morning San Diego: Griffin Canning was bad, so was the Padres offense in loss to Brewers

Milwaukee Brewers third baseman David Hamilton (6) beats the throw to San Diego Padres second baseman Fernando Tatis Jr. to steal second base during the third inning of their game Thursday, May 14, 2026 at American Family Field in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. | Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

San Diego Padres starter Griffin Canning walked the bases loaded and eventually walked in the first run of the game in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on Thursday. Canning allowed three runs in the first and three more in the second before he was taken out of the game after just 1.2 innings of work. It was obvious from the start that Canning was going to struggle. Too many pitches were uncompetitive, and the near misses were not close enough to entice the Brewers batters to swing. When Canning was forced to put the ball over the plate Milwaukee took advantage and drove in runs. San Diego was down 6-0 after two innings and as exciting as the ninth inning that led to a Padres win was the night before, there was never a feeling San Diego had a chance in the 7-1 loss to Milwaukee. The feeling that the game was over before it started was not solely on Canning, although he was a big part of it, the lineup had a lot to do with it. The top three in the order, Xander Bogaerts, Fernando Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado combined to go 1-for-11 in the game. Tatis Jr. struck out in three of his five at-bats. The four through eight batters in the San Diego lineup combined to go 6-for-19 with Nick Castellanos leading the group and the team with two hits. The Padres bullpen performed well allowing just one run over the final 6.1 innings and they gave San Diego a chance to get back in the game, but the rally never came. The Padres are on the road in Seattle today to take on the Mariners at 6:40 p.m.

Padres News:

  • Matt Waldron started the series against the Brewers on Tuesday but came out of the game after just 58 pitches due to ineffectiveness. He was given the opportunity to face Milwaukee for a second time in the series when he came out of the bullpen in the final game of the set. It is possible that was the final appearance for Waldron in a Padres uniform.

Baseball News:

  • The New York Mets beat the Detroit Tigers, 9-4 and earned their first series sweep of the season. Detroit manager A.J. Hinch was not there to see it after he was thrown out of the game for arguing a play at third base,

Spurs vs Timberwolves Props & NBA Playoffs Game 6 Best Bets

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Game 6 of this Western Conference semifinal series could be a “coming of age” contest for the San Antonio Spurs.

They need to go on the road if they want to eliminate a veteran Minnesota Timberwolves team. 

My Spurs vs. Timberwolves props and NBA picks single out three player props for Friday night, including a last stand from deep for Anthony Edwards.

Here are my best Spurs vs. Timberwolves predictions for May 15.

Best Spurs vs Timberwolves props for Game 6

PlayerPickbet365
Timberwolves Anthony EdwardsOver 2.5 threes-135
Timberwolves Julius RandleOver 10.5 rebounds + assists+110
Spurs Stephon CastleOver 5.5 rebounds+120

Game 6 Prop #1: Anthony Edwards Over 2.5 threes

-135 at bet365

Minnesota Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards appreciated the extra day off before Game 6 more than anyone.
 
He’s been playing through a painful knee injury suffered in the first round yet is still pacing the T-Wolves offense. Edwards will be the healthiest he’s been in a long time and carries that weight again with Minnesota facing elimination at home.

Edwards is coming off his quietest day beyond the arc in Game 5, making just one of his three 3-point attempts. The shooting guard had knocked down three triples in each of the past two games and is shooting much better from distance at home during the postseason (36% vs. 28.6% away).

The San Antonio Spurs’ interior defense is pushing the Timberwolves to the perimeter and game script has Minnesota playing from behind, prompting plenty of 3-point attempts.
 
Edwards’ projections all sit north of three treys with some models as high as four makes from downtown.

Game 6 Prop #2: Julius Randle Over 10.5 rebounds + assists

+110 at bet365

Julius Randle has come under a lot of fire in this series.
 
He’s been ice cold shooting the ball, firing at 36.6% from the floor in the past five games. But he’s found other ways to contribute, with 18 rebounds and four assists in the last two outings.

The T-Wolves could roll out a smaller rotation with Randle at center in hopes of drawing Victor Wembanyama away from the rim. That will open up space and make Randle a conduit for cutters.

He’s been actively passing in the series with 28 potential assists but his teammates haven’t converted those dimes into buckets, with just eight total assists from Randle the past five games. 

He’s getting after it on the glass as well, transforming 71 rebounding chances into 39 boards. If Randle draws more defensive assignments on Wemby, he’ll be stationed closer to the rim and in prime rebounding space.

Projections for Randle have a ceiling of five assists and seven rebounds, which gets up Over his combo prop of 10.5 rebounds + assists — a bar he’s topped the past two games.

Game 6 Prop #3: Stephon Castle Over 5.5 rebounds

+120 at bet365

There haven’t been too many rebounds to go around with Wembanyama cleaning the glass like a Costco-size jug of Windex. That could change in Game 6.

The Timberwolves flirted with a smaller lineup in Game 5 in an attempt to stretch the Spurs’ interior and drag Wemby away from the rim. With the 7-footer having to check Randle, Jalen McDaniels, or Naz Reid on the perimeter, Stephon Castle could see extra opportunities on the boards.

So far in the series, the Spurs' 6-foot-6 guard has been in position for 44 rebounding chances and converted those into 23 rebounds — 4.6 per game. He’s deferred seven of those rebounding chances, meaning he let Wembanyama swoop in and snatch up the miss.

His game models range from 5.1 to 6.15 rebounds tonight with the bulk of those models leaning to six boards.

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Pistons vs Cavaliers Props & NBA Playoffs Game 6 Best Bets

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It’s do-or-die for the Detroit Pistons in Game 6, while the Cleveland Cavaliers aim to advance to the Conference Finals for the first time since 2018.

My Pistons vs. Cavaliers props and NBA picks expect big performances from James Harden, Cade Cunningham, and Jarrett Allen.

Keep reading for the full breakdown and Pistons vs. Cavaliers predictions.

Best Pistons vs Cavaliers props for Game 6

PlayerPickbet365
Cavaliers James HardenOver 19.5 points-110
Pistons Cade CunninghamOver 27.5 points-110
Cavaliers Jarrett AllenOver 1.5 blocks-130

Game 6 Prop #1: James Harden Over 19.5 points

-110 at bet365

James Harden might be past his prime, but the 36-year-old still has some game.

Harden put up a postseason-high 30 points in the Cleveland Cavaliers’ Game 5 win, while chucking up a team-leading 21 field goal attempts and getting to the charity stripe 14 times.

Harden has scored Over 19.5 points in two straight games, and three of five contests against the Detroit Pistons.

He’ll be relied on heavily again in Game 6 as the Pistons continue to clamp down on Donovan Mitchell, who dropped just 21 points last time out.

Game 6 Prop #2: Cade Cunningham Over 27.5 points

-110 at bet365

Cade Cunningham delivered in Game 5 with 39 points while shooting 48% from the field and 60% from 3-point range. He’ll likely need a similar performance in Game 6 to help the Pistons avoid elimination.

The former first-overall pick clearly has the clutch gene — he scored 32+ points in all three must-win games during the Conference Quarterfinals against the Magic.

Tobias Harris is the only other Pistons player averaging more than 12 ppg, and Duncan Robinson is questionable for Game 6. Expect Cunningham to get a ton of touches — and points — tonight.

Game 6 Prop #3: Jarrett Allen Over 1.5 blocks

-130 at bet365

Jarrett Allen has been a defensive beast this postseason, ranking third on the team in defensive rating and second among all players in the NBA with 24 blocks.

Defense doesn’t always show up on the box score, but in Allen’s case it often does. The Cavs center has logged Over 1.5 blocks in three straight contests, and nine of his last 11 outings.

Detroit is averaging 86.6 field goal attempts per game in the series — third most among all teams in the Conference Semifinals. The Pistons will get their looks, but Allen will be there to shut them down in the paint.

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MLB Lineup Report: JJ Bleday at cleanup, A.J. Ewing's opportunity

The season is no longer new. Lineup patterns are emerging, early-season plans are being abandoned, and a plethora of rookies are taking center stage this week. Here's everything to know for all 30 lineups.

⚾️ Baseball is back! MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Check out this week’s Fantasy Baseball Closer Report!

Arizona Diamondbacks

Ryan Waldschmidt has started five straight games after sitting in his first contest since being called up from Triple-A. He's primarily manning center field, which is where Alek Thomas lined up before his DFA. Nolan Arenado has moved up to cleanup with Adrian Del Castillo dropping to seventh. Ildemaro Vargas has been in the lineup for 27 straight while Carlos Santana (groin) suffered a setback on his rehab assignment and Tyler Locklear is remaining in Triple-A.

Athletics

Zack Gelof has started 14 of the past 15, including eight straight at third base while Max Muncy (hand) has yet to resume baseball activities. Darell Hernaiz has filled in at shortstop with Jacob Wilson (shoulder) sidelined. Henry Bolte has drawn two consecutive nods in center field, including one against a righty that Lawrence Butler sat for.

Atlanta Braves

Drake Baldwin hits leadoff vs. righties and second against southpaws, when Mauricio Dubón bats first. Ha-Seong Kim is back and manning shortstop, shifting Dubón to left field and Mike Yastrzemski to right in the absence of Ronald Acuña Jr. (hamstring). Perhaps we see a Dubón/Yaz platoon once Acuña returns.

Baltimore Orioles

The O's have a lengthy injury list and yet Colton Cowser is barely seeing the field against right-handers. Tyler O'Neill plays more than him, but he looks like an expensive platoon bat at the moment. Adley Rutschman is settling into the three-hole in his bounce back campaign. Coby Mayo continues to get significant run compared to some of their other young hitters, but he'll need to start producing for that to continue in all likelihood.

Boston Red Sox

Roman Anthony (wrist) has yet to resume baseball activities, so Jarren Duran is in the lineup every day and leading off. Wilyer Abreu has established himself in the three-hole. Masataka Yoshida is getting the nod versus all righties with Anthony sidelined. Marcelo Mayer remains in a strong side platoon role.

Chicago Cubs

Moisés Ballesteros is up to two appearances at catcher and bats second against most right-handers. Michael Conforto has mixed in for some starts against righties, batting second occasionally while swinging a hot bat.

Chicago White Sox

Sam Antonacci is the leadoff hitter vs. all righties while Chase Meidroth fills the role against southpaws. Jarred Kelenic has taken the right field job against righties.

Cincinnati Reds

JJ Bleday has been in the lineup for all but one game since being recalled on April 26th, batting cleanup against the last righty they faced. Sal Stewart has now made 31 starts at first base, five at second, and five at third. Will Benson is beginning to receive leadoff opportunities against righties. That had previously only been TJ Friedl's role.

RELATED: Spencer Steer among fantasy baseball hitter targets

Cleveland Guardians

Travis Bazzana has hit as high as fifth in the order recently, and he's started against four of five lefties since being called up. Patrick Bailey has appeared in two of five games since joining the team. Brayan Rocchio is holding down the everyday shortstop role.

Colorado Rockies

TJ Rumfield continues to bat in the middle of the lineup while Troy Johnston is starting against most righties. Willi Castro is moving all over the infield. Edouard Julien is the leadoff hitter vs. righties and Jordan Beck against southpaws. Jake McCarthy is chipping away at more consistent at-bats against righties.

Detroit Tigers

Colt Keith is in the three-hole vs. righties. Dillon Dingler is a near-everyday middle-of-the-order bat. Zach McKinstry is at second base against righties with Gleyber Torres (oblique) sidelined, and Hao-Yu Lee fills the position vs. lefties.

Houston Astros

Jeremy Peña (hamstring, neck) looks to resume his rehab assignment on Friday, and the leadoff role is waiting for him whenever he returns to Houston. Yordan Alvarez has been in the lineup every game.

Kansas City Royals

Carter Jensen is glued into the five-hole against righties. Jac Caglianone bats behind him, and neither starts vs. lefties. Things are very consistent here otherwise.

Los Angeles Angels

Zach Neto hit sixth on Wednesday, which was the first time he wasn't at leadoff this season. Vaughn Grissom hit first against a lefty that day, and the Angels might get two southpaws vs. the Dodgers this weekend. Yoán Moncada is losing some run lately to Grissom.

Los Angeles Dodgers

Shohei Ohtani hasn't been in the lineup as a hitter in four of the Dodgers' past 15 games. That time frame is cherry picked, but at this point fantasy managers shouldn't expect max volume at the plate. Hyeseong Kim has shifted from shortstop to second base with Mookie Betts back. Alex Freeland wound up being optioned as a result.

Miami Marlins

Kyle Stowers has established himself as the current cleanup hitter vs. righties. Jakob Marsee is down to sixth while starting much less frequently vs. lefties compared to the beginning of the season.

Milwaukee Brewers

Christian Yelich is dealing with a back issue right after returning from a groin injury. In the one game he appeared in, it was Andrew Vaughn sitting against a second consecutive righty, but he should receive more regular run if Yelich winds up on the IL. Jackson Chourio is bouncing between leadoff and the two-hole since returning, as expected.

Minnesota Twins

Austin Martin began the year primarily hitting against lefties but is mixing in nods against most righties now too. More right field opportunity is freed up with the team optioning Matt Wallner to Triple-A.

New York Mets

Juan Soto is back to the three-hole after a six-game cameo as the leadoff man. A.J. Ewing has hit eighth and patrolled center field in all three games since being called up from Triple-A, including against a lefty. Carson Benge hit leadoff in all three contests against Detroit. Mark Vientos has been at first base for 20 of the team's past 23 games, primarily batting cleanup of late.

New York Yankees

Anthony Volpe is up from Triple-A, but José Caballero is expected to regain the everyday shortstop job once his finger heals. Spencer Jones has been in the lineup for five of six since his call-up, sitting versus one of two lefties. Amed Rosario only starts vs. left-handers.

Philadelphia Phillies

Brandon Marsh has gotten the nod against four straight southpaws. Otherwise, plenty of consistency.

Pittsburgh Pirates

Konnor Griffin hit second against a lefty on Wednesday and fifth vs. a righty on Thursday. His lineup ascent has begun. Marcell Ozuna was dropped to seventh against the righty.

San Diego Padres

Fernando Tatis Jr. is up to 11 appearances at second base, but with no homers. His infield work opens up more right field run for Nick Castellanos, while Sung-Mon Song has manned the keystone when he's in the outfield.

San Francisco Giants

Bryce Eldridge has logged starts in six of 10 since being recalled, all of which have been versus right-handers. Casey Schmitt and Matt Chapman have each sat twice during that stretch as a result. Jung Hoo Lee is maintaining the leadoff role against righties while Heliot Ramos has the gig vs. lefties.

Seattle Mariners

Cal Raleigh (oblique) is on the IL, which means Mitch Garver is in line for a starting role. Luke Raley and Dominic Canzone are moving up in the order vs. righties with Raleigh out. Cole Young has still appeared in every game.

St. Louis Cardinals

Nathan Church is a true everyday player at this point, which has hurt Victor Scott's run. Plenty of consistency here while Lars Nootbaar (heels) aims to begin a rehab assignment this weekend.

Tampa Bay Rays

Jake Fraley and Richie Palacios platoon with Jonny DeLuca and Ben Williamson, respectively. Cedric Mullins continues to hold onto the primary center field job, but not vs. all lefties.

Texas Rangers

Joc Pederson has hit leadoff in two straight, dropping Brandon Nimmo to second. Evan Carter is receiving plenty of run lately, having drawn 24 straight starts entering the weekend.

Toronto Blue Jays

Addison Barger was only off the IL for one game, which means Yohendrick Piñango is back from Triple-A and hitting second against righties. Things have otherwise been status quo. George Springer still hasn't appeared in the field this year.

Washington Nationals

Such a fun lineup. Daylen Lile has been on fire as an everyday player. Luis García Jr. is also hot at the plate and bats second vs. righties. Curtis Mead spells him at first base vs. lefties.