Wednesday night Orioles game thread: at Marlins, 6:40

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - APRIL 6: Brandon Young #63 of the Baltimore Orioles pitches in a game against the Chicago White Sox at Rate Field on April 6, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Matt Dirksen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Orioles found some momentum yesterday with a thrilling 9-7 victory. Baltimore bounced back from a brutal four-game sweep in New York over the weekend, and the O’s will look to take another step in the right direction with Brandon Young on the mound tonight.

Young impressed in his first two outings before hitting a wall last week against Houston. The 27-year-old will look to perform closer to the five shutout innings he delivered last month against Chicago.

Young will need his defense to deliver against a Miami team capable of taking the extra base. Gunnar Henderson will take his usual spot at shortstop with Coby Mayo playing to his right. Jeremiah Jackson (second) and Pete Alonso (first) will round out the infield. Adley Rutschman will catch Young, and Samuel Basallo will serve as the designated hitter.

Taylor Ward, Leody Taveras and Dylan Beavers will handle the outfield duties from left to right.

The Orioles will face right-handed pitcher Eury Pérez. Pérez holds a 2-3 record with a 4.46 ERA.

Orioles lineup

  1. Gunnar Henderson SS
  2. Taylor Ward LF
  3. Adley Rutschman C
  4. Pete Alonso 1B
  5. Samuel Basallo DH
  6. Leody Taveras CF
  7. Dylan Beavers RF
  8. Coby Mayo 3B
  9. Jeremiah Jackson 2B

Starter: RHP Brandon Young

Game 36 Game Day Thread – Texas Rangers @ New York Yankees

Texas Rangers @ New York Yankees

Wednesday, May 6, 2026, 6:05 PM CDT (105.3 The Fan / Rangers Sports Network)

Yankee Stadium

RHP Nathan Eovaldi vs. RHP Will Warren

Today’s Lineups

RANGERSYANKEES
Brandon Nimmo – DHTrent Grisham – CF
Ezequiel Duran – 2BAaron Judge – RF
Corey Seager – SSCody Bellinger – LF
Josh Jung – 3BJasson Dominguez – DH
Evan Carter – CFJazz Chisholm – 2B
Kyle Higashioka – CPaul Goldschmidt – 1B
Jake Burger – 1BAustin Wells – C
Alejandro Osuna – LFRyan McMahon – 3B
Andrew McCutchen – RFJose Caballero – SS
Nathan Eovaldi – RHPWill Warren – RHP

Go Rangers!

Former Canadiens Defender Has Big Playoff Game vs. Wild

The Colorado Avalanche defeated the Minnesota Wild on Tuesday night by a 5-2 final score. With this, the Avalanche now have a 2-0 series lead over Minnesota. 

Former Canadiens Brett Kulak played a role in the Avalanche's Game 2 win over the Wild, as he put together a strong performance.

Kulak recorded two assists in the Avalanche's victory over the Wild. His first assist came on Martin Necas' game-opening goal at the 2:51 mark of the first period that gave Colorado a 1-0 lead. Kulak then recorded the primary assist on Valeri Nichushkin's third-period empty-net goal that helped secure the Avalanche's victory.

With this two-assist performance, Kulak now has three points and a plus-3 rating in six games so far this post-season with the Avalanche. Overall, the former Canadiens' blueline is having a solid start to the playoffs and will be looking to keep this kind of play up from here. 

Kulak spent four seasons with the Canadiens from 2018-19 to 2021-22. In 215 games with the Habs over that span, he had 11 goals, 34 assists, 45 points, 258 hits, and a plus-45 rating. 

Golden Knights vs Ducks Game 2 Preview: Lines, How to Watch

On Wednesday, the Vegas Golden Knights host the Anaheim Ducks for Game 2 of their Second Round series. They’ve won four in a row and will look to take a commanding 2-0 series lead over their postseason opponent.

Puck drop is scheduled for 6:50 p.m. PST.

The teams last clashed on Monday for Game 1. The Golden Knights led for most of the game, but allowed the tying goal late. However, they quickly recovered, regained the lead on a controversial no-call, and won 3-1.

Carter Hart starts in goal for the Golden Knights. Hart has a record of 5-2 and an average save percentage of .910 in seven games this postseason.

Lukáš Dostál starts in goal for the Ducks. Dostál has a record of 4-3 and an average save percentage of .878 in seven games this postseason. 

Golden Knights Lines

Ivan Barbashev — Jack Eichel — Pavel Dorofeyev

Brett Howden — Mitch Marner — Mark Stone

Tomáš Hertl — William Karlsson — Keegan Kolesar

Cole Smith — Nic Dowd — Colton Sissons

Defense

Brayden McNabb — Shea Theodore

Noah Hanifin — Rasmus Andersson

Ben Hutton — Kaedan Korczak

Goaltenders: Carter Hart / Adin Hill

Ducks Lines

Chris Kreider — Leo Carlsson — Troy Terry

Alex Killorn — Mikael Granlund — Beckett Sennecke

Mason McTavish — Ryan Poehling — Cutter Gauthier

Jeffrey Viel — Tim Washe — Ian Moore

Defense

Jackson LaCombe — Jacob Trouba

Pavel Mintyukov — John Carlson

Tyson Hinds — Drew Helleson

Goaltenders: Lukáš Dostál / Ville Husso 

Special Teams

VGK power play: 18.2%, T7th

VGK penalty kill: 95.0, 2nd

Ducks power play: 40.0%, T1st

Ducks penalty kill: 75.0%, 14th

Game Notes

The Golden Knights are 10-9 in Game 2s in their franchise history.

Historically, teams 5 that take a 2-0 series lead go on to win 87.6% of the time.

Mitch Marner is on a four-game point streak and has three goals and seven points over that stretch.

Brett Howden has a goal in four straight games and has recorded six points (5-1-6) in that stretch.

How to Watch

TV: TNT, truTV

Streaming: HBO MAX

Radio: FOX Sports Las Vegas 94.7/1340

Observations after Sixers battle without Embiid but lose Game 2 to Knicks

Observations after Sixers battle without Embiid but lose Game 2 to Knicks  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — The Sixers’ scrappy effort without Joel Embiid on Wednesday night did not yield a series-shifting win in New York.

The Knicks earned a 108-102 victory at Madison Square to take a 2-0 lead in their second-round playoff series. 

Tyrese Maxey was the Sixers’ leading scorer with 26 points.

Paul George (19 points), Kelly Oubre Jr. (19) and VJ Edgecombe (17) all had sizable roles in the Sixers’ Embiid-less offense.

Four Knicks scored at least 18 points in Jalen Brunson (26), OG Anunoby (24), Karl-Anthony Towns (20) and Mikal Bridges (18).

The Sixers dropped to 1-3 in the playoffs this year without Embiid, who was out because of right ankle and right hip injuries. Knicks center Mitchell Robinson sat with an illness. 

Game 3 will be Friday at 7 p.m. ET in Philadelphia. Here are observations on the Sixers’ Game 2 loss:

George gives Sixers immediate jolt 

George scored 11 of the Sixers’ first 13 points on 4-for-4 shooting, including two pure jumpers in a row from the left corner. 

He’s made at least one three-pointer in all of the Sixers’ nine playoff games and multiple triples in eight straight. For the postseason, George has gone a tremendous 31 for 59 (52.5 percent) beyond the arc. 

Kelly Oubre Jr. also had a hot start. He knocked down a pair of corner threes late in the first quarter to give the Sixers a 25-20 lead. 

Edgecombe opened the night playing tighter, more physical defense against Brunson higher up the floor than in Game 1. The rookie drew an early moving screen call on Towns with his effort to fight over the pick. Brunson didn’t score until he made two free throws with 3:05 left in the first quarter and missed his first three field goal attempts. 

Andre Drummond started in Embiid’s spot. Both he and Towns were whistled for two first-quarter fouls. Adem Bona returned to the Sixers’ rotation as Drummond’s backup. He had a strong offensive rebounding night, notching six offensive boards in his 16 minutes.

Maxey makes adjustments 

Towns picked up his third foul just 46 seconds into the second quarter. He subbed out and the Knicks shifted to small ball for a few minutes with 6-foot-5 Josh Hart at “center” and setting tons of ball screens. 

Maxey drained a three to put the Sixers up 41-35. He was great early in the second quarter, hitting his stride as an aggressive shotmaker after a rough Game 1. 

The Sixers got Maxey an easy basket on the first possession of the second period with a clever designed play that concluded with Maxey cutting backdoor and converting a layup. Maxey did a little bit of everything as a scorer, including successful post-ups against 6-foot Knicks guard Jose Alvarado. 

Besides simply seeking out his shot more, Maxey seemed to make some strategic tweaks when the Knicks blitzed or hard hedged ball screens. Quick passes are frequently the only viable option in those spots, but Maxey also mixed in occasionally 1. rejecting the ball screen (or screens) and 2. splitting defenders.

There’s always risk in trying to squeeze between defenders on the perimeter, but Maxey’s typically a low-turnover player and can certainly zoom downhill to the rim once he slithers through the front line of a defense.  With that said, the Sixers were inferior in the turnover department Wednesday. Maxey committed six of the team’s 18 giveaways. The Knicks ended with 13 turnovers.

Maxey couldn’t sustain his excellent run through the whole second quarter and the Sixers headed to halftime with a 62-61 edge.

Every Sixer played under 30 minutes in their blowout Game 1 defeat. Maxey logged a whopping 47 in Game 2.

Turning to Barlow at the five

Fouls were a predictable problem for the Bona-Drummond duo. 

By the 7:09 mark of the third quarter, both Drummond and Bona had four fouls. Towns became a logical focal point for the Knicks’ offense and scored very efficiently. 

With 4:53 to go in the third, Towns drew Bona’s fifth foul on a drive down the middle of the floor. Sixers head coach Nick Nurse responded sensibly by bringing in Dominick Barlow at center for his first minutes of the game.

Towns soon got his fourth foul and Knicks head coach Mike Brown slid Anunoby up to the five For the most part, offense won out in the Barlow vs. Anunoby center minutes late in the third quarter. Anunoby drilled a three to give New York an 86-84 lead.

The contest stayed close early in the fourth quarter. Considering the situation — thrown into a difficult moment in his first NBA postseason — Barlow did quite well. He was handy as a smart short roller passer and also added six points on 3-for-3 shooting and two rebounds. 

Barlow made a big defensive play when he closed out to Anunoby in the corner and blocked his three-point try. Maxey followed by sinking a go-ahead three.

Again, it’s hard to imagine Barlow entering a game with more on his plate. He often had to defend Brunson when the Sixers switched ball screens. The Knicks’ superstar guard made a mid-range jumper over Barlow to lift New York to a 101-99 advantage.

The Knicks went up six points on a long Bridges two-pointer. Down the stretch, the Sixers’ core players missed many of the jumpers they’d been hitting earlier in the night.

The Sixers eventually mobbed Brunson with blitzes and all-out double teams, but the Knicks didn’t leave the comeback door open and polished off a win that was much more testing than their 39-point Game 1 victory.

Mark Pope addresses Kentucky Basketball roster, Malachi Moreno NBA decision, and more

Nov 14, 2025; Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Kentucky Wildcats head coach Mark Pope talks to center Malachi Moreno (24) during the second half against the Eastern Illinois Panthers at Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Prather-Imagn Images | Jordan Prather-Imagn Images

Kentucky Basketball head coach Mark Pope addressed fan concerns on Wednesday, answering questions about recruiting, the transfer portal, and the Wildcats’ roster outlook heading into the 2026-27 season.

With some frustration building among the fan base following missed recruiting targets, Pope took to social media a three-minute video to provide clarity on the program’s direction. One of the topics centered around NIL and whether Kentucky is being used as leverage by recruits. Pope didn’t shy away from the question.

“Yes, we are the biggest brand in college basketball,” Pope said during the video.

Recruiting was another major focus, especially after Kentucky missed on several top prospects in the 2026 class. Pope explained that while the staff aimed to get as many elite players on campus as possible, their attention was heavily centered on 5-star forward Tyran Stokes.

“This year, we were chasing a generational talent, and we fell a little short, but we weren’t sitting on our hands. We put together a roster that we are going to love watching, crush it in Rupp Arena,” Pope said.

The center position also remains a key factor, with Malachi Moreno currently testing the NBA Draft waters. Pope emphasized that Kentucky is fully supporting Moreno through the process while continuing to build depth at the position.

“Malachi Moreno was our number 1 priority for us, going into this portal season. We think that he is going to be the best center in all of college basketball next year here at Kentucky. He is also going through the (NBA) Draft process. He had a great workout just last night for an NBA team.

“Next week, he is heading to the (NBA) Combine, and we are supporting him every step of the way. This is the place where basketball dreams come true and Malachi has two dreams, he is dreaming of hanging a banner at Kentucky and he is also dreaming of playing in the NBA, so we are supporting him chasing both of those. At the same time, we are working hard in the portal to shore up this 5 spot.

“We are going to have an unbelievable crew at the center position.”

As the offseason continues, Pope made it clear Kentucky remains active in the portal and confident in the roster being assembled for the upcoming season.

Dodgers' Andy Pages continues insane season, has first 3-homer game of MLB career

Considered a top prospect prior to his MLB debut in 2024, Los Angeles Dodgers' outfielder Andy Pages has certainly lived up to the hype through his first two seasons. The 25-year-old slashed .272/.313/.461 with 27 home runs in 2025, and operated center field almost every game in those playoffs to help the Dodgers win back-to-back championships.

Pages has already proven himself a valuable asset to the Dodgers' dynasty. But after today's performance against the Houston Astros, he might be considered a franchise cornerstone.

Pages just experienced the first three-homer game of his young career. In total, Pages went 3-for-5 with six RBIs. The Dodgers won 12-2.

That's right. On his own, Pages would've been able to defeat the Astros today. That's mighty impressive for a talent as young as Pages.

Los Angeles Dodgers center fielder Andy Pages hits a single in the second inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park.

Pages' three home runs

Pages' first home run of the night came in the third inning off starter Lance McCullers Jr. The Dodgers were already leading 3-1, but Pages' dinger cemented a five-run inning for his team.

McCullers was pulled from the game after this home run.

Pages' second homer came just two innings later, with the Dodgers leading 7-1. This two-run home run came off reliever Jason Alexander.

Pages' third and final home run came in the top of the ninth inning, with the game already well in hand. It was so well in hand, in fact, that the Astros opted to put César Salazar, normally a catcher, on the mound. Pages took the second pitch of the at-bat to deep left field.

Did Pages have any multi-homer games prior?

Pages had recorded two multi-homer games prior to today's performance, both coming in 2025:

  • June 17 vs. San Diego Padres: Pages goes 4-for-4 with two home runs and three RBIs; Dodgers win 8-6
  • August 25 vs. Cincinnati Reds: Pages goes 2-for-4 with two home runs and four RBIs; Dodgers win 7-0

So far in 2026, the Dodgers are 6-0 in games where Pages homers.

Andy Pages stats

Pages is enjoying the best season of his career thus far. Not only is he on-pace to set new career highs in batting average (.336) and OPS (.938), but he's also nearly on pace for a 30-30 season.

As it stands, Pages is on trajectory for 35 home runs and 26 stolen bases. If he can reach that 30-30 threshold, Pages would become just the fourth Dodger in franchise history to accomplish that feat — Shohei Ohtani (2024), Matt Kemp (2011), Raul Mondesi (1997, 1999).

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Andy Pages stays hot, logs first 3-home run game in win over Astros

Lakers’ Jarred Vanderbilt ‘day to day’ after gruesome finger injury

OKLAHOMA CITY — Despite the gruesome nature of Jarred Vanderbilt’s dislocated right pinky injury, the Lakers forward’s status is day to day.

Medical personnel were able “to put his finger back together” after Vanderbilt suffered an open dislocation to the pinky during the second quarter of Tuesday’s Game 1 loss to the Thunder, Lakers coach JJ Redick said Wednesday.

The Lakers’ Jarred Vanderbilt is day to day after dislocating his right pinky Tuesday against the Thunder. Getty Images

“Obviously a tough-minded player and person,” Redick said. “I mean, he had a full dislocation. So they just put the stuff back together. He’ll be day to day.”

Redick added: “It’s called a reduction, apparently. He took some pictures for me, which I passed along to [my wife] Chelsea, because she was very curious, and she wishes I had not sent those photos.”

Sources told The California Post on Tuesday that a bone in Vanderbilt’s pinky broke through the skin after he attempted to block an alley-oop for Chet Holmgren, with Vanderbilt’s pinky hitting the backboard as he swiped for the ball. 

The 6-foot-8 forward immediately went to the ground in pain, holding his right hand near the Thunder bench, with Oklahoma City players reacting when they saw Vanderbilt’s hand. 

He immediately went back to the locker room at the 5:51 mark of the second quarter.

The Lakers ruled Vanderbilt out for the remainder of the game at halftime.

Vanderbilt was injured trying to block an alley-oop against the Thunder. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

“It was disgusting! Bro’s whole bone was out of his skin,” Jaxson Hayes said. “You never want to see one of your teammates go down, but that was gross. That was really gross.”

Hayes added: “I’ve dislocated many fingers. That was definitely the worst. That was definitely the worst dislocation I’ve ever seen in my life. I have a picture right here; I’m not gonna show it, though. But, yeah, that was the most disgusting dislocation ever.”


Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters

California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn
California Post SportsFacebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X
California Post Opinion
California Post Newsletters: Sign up here!
California Post App: Download here!
Home delivery: Sign up here!Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!


Adam Ottavino calls Framber Valdez incident nefarious before ESPN debut

Adam Ottavino has not worked a game in the ESPN booth yet, but the veteran of 15 years in the big leagues is not going to be nervous to call it as he sees it.  

Just a year removed from the clubhouse, Ottavino made that clear on Wednesday, a day before his analyst debut with ESPN for the St. Louis Cardinals-San Diego Padres game. He didn’t hedge when asked about the controversy of the day: Detroit Tigers pitcher Framber Valdez drilling Trevor Story up and in with a 94-mile an hour fastball on Tuesday night, one pitch after the Tigers’ lefty surrendered back-to-back home runs to the Boston Red Sox. Benches cleared. Valdez was ejected and on Wednesday afternoon MLB suspended him six games. Tigers manager A.J. Hinch, who was clearly unhappy with Valdez’s stunt, was suspended one game.  

Ottavino, who has been hosting his own podcast since leaving the game, did not hedge.  

“Did I think it was intentional? Yes. Do I think it’s a horrible look? Yes? Do I know for sure? No,” Ottavino said in an interview with USA TODAY. “Whether this is intentional or not, it certainly looks awfully nefarious. It’s no wonder the Red Sox reacted the way they did. I think they were justified.” 

That is the kind of candor that Ottavino said he will bring to the booth.  

“My goal is always to tell the truth,” the former Yankees and Mets reliever said. “I don’t make it personal, but I will let you know the truth of how things will be received.” 

The 40-year-old Ottavino will work alongside Todd Frazier and play-by-play man Mike Monaco on Thursday, May 7 for the second game of ESPN’s doubleheader. He said preparing for a game in the booth as an analyst isn’t all that different from preparing as a pitcher: build a plan and be ready to pivot when the game demands it.  

He also has strong opinions and insight on the automated ball-strike system and how it is reshaping how pitchers need to think. Ottavino said he sees it changing behavior on both sides of the plate.  

“Walks are up, and it’s not because of net challenges favoring the offense,” he said. “Batters have more trust that the strike zone is the strike zone. They can challenge if need be. We’ve seen guys chase less on borderline pitches knowing they have a challenge in their back pocket.” 

 The practical implication for pitchers is significant, he said. The ABS pickup point sits 8 ½ inches behind the front of the plate, which renders a whole category of previously productive pitches far less effective. Pitches that start in the zone and trend out, which hitters would chase, are far less effective. Under ABS, Ottavino sees an opportunity for pitches that start off the plate and trend back.  

He said if he were still pitching, he would be using a high curveball more.  

“A ball that appears high and drops into the zone midway over the plate, that is going to clip the ABS zone and be called a strike pretty often,” he said. "You might see more people attempt that.” 

Former New York Mets relief pitcher Adam Ottavino throws against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on Sept. 24, 2024.

Ottavino said he loves ABS and favors keeping the challenge system as is and not moving to the fully automated calls.  

“I love that players and umpires alike are getting humbled at times with their knowledge of the zone,” Ottavino said. “In a world where usually the more technology you add the more color you strip out of the game, I think this one actually added a little bit of that. “ 

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Adam Ottavino comments on Framber Valdez incident ahead of ESPN debut

Premier League CEO Masters earned £2.6m including £1.1m bonus in 2024-25

  • Accounts for year ending July 2025 show improved salary

  • Richard Masters had earned £1.9m the previous year

The latest accounts filed by the Premier League show the chief executive, Richard Masters, received £1m in a performance-related bonus.

Accounts by the Premier League for the year ending 31 July 2025 were published on Companies House on Tuesday and revealed Masters’ improved salary.

Continue reading...

Chicago Cubs vs. Cincinnati Reds preview, Wednesday 5/6, 6:40 CT

Wednesday notes…

  • STREAKING, PART 1: In each of the Cubs’ seven consecutive wins, their opponent has had a winning record going into the game. This is the Cubs’ 109th winning streak of at least seven games since 1901. It is only the fifth in any of those streaks during which they won seven in a row against teams that were above .500. Wins tonight and tomorrow would tie their all-time record of nine in a row, Sept. 16-27, 1935. Those were the final nine of 21 straight wins, still the National League record. They have won seven in a row vs. teams with winning records four previous times: May 7-16, 1920; June 28-July 3, 1967; May 2-8, 2016; and April 27-May 5, 2019. During their recent 10-game winning streak, the Cubs won only one game vs. an opponent that was above .500: the last game, at Los Angeles vs. the Dodgers. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
  • STREAKING, PART 2: The Cubs have won 13 straight games at home. It is their 19th double-digit home winning streak of the Modern Era, which began in 1901, and their 15th at Wrigley Field, their home since 1916. This is their first such streak since they won 14 in a row, May 18-June 22, 2008. A 13-game streak in 2001 and a 10-game streak in 1998 are their only others of the kind since 1970. Their record is 18 straight, Sept. 4-22, 1935, during a surge that lifted them to the pennant. The 2008 streak was one of five of 14 games. The 2001 streak was the only one of 13. The 2001 streak was ended when the Brewers scored a ninth-inning run off Kerry Wood and held on to win, 2-1. The 14th win in 2008 was by 7-1, completing a three-game sweep of the White Sox at home. The Cubs’ seven runs came on eight hits and seven walks. Eric Patterson and Aramis Ramirez smacked solo homers. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
  • STREAKING, PART 3: The Cubs are 17-3 in their last 20 games, their best 20-game record since they also were 17-3 from July 28-Aug. 18, 2016. They also were 17-3 from July 27-Aug. 17. They were 17-3 from May 19-June 12, 2001 and from June 16-July 3, 1967. Those are their only 17-3 spans after 1945. They had 77, many overlapping, in 1903-45. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
  • CUBS vs. REDS: This is the Cubs’ 83rd series vs. the Reds at Wrigley Field since 1994, first season of the Central Division. It is only the 17th of the 83 that was scheduled to be more than three games. The Cubs’ wins Monday and yesterday made this series just the second of the 17 in which the Cubs won the first two games. They went on to sweep four games in 2018. They went 3-1 in four series, including the most recent before the current one, in 2023. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)

Cubs lineup:

Reds lineup:

Colin Rea, RHP vs. Brady Singer, RHP

Apart from one rough start vs. the Dodgers, Colin Rea has been rock-solid in the Cubs rotation after sliding in following the season-ending injury to Cade Horton.

Last year Rea had a rough time vs. the Reds: Three starts, 6.62 ERA, four home runs allowed in 17.2 innings. All of that damage came in his first two starts against them, though. The last one, Sept. 18, 2025 in Cincinnati, was excellent: seven innings, four hits, one run, 11 strikeouts.

Do that again, Colin.

Despite the Cubs playing four series and 13 games against the Reds last year, Brady Singer did not face the Cubs at all in 2025. His last start vs. the Cubs was July 26, 2024 in Kansas City, where he threw seven shutout innings.

Singer is not having a good year in 2026, though. He’s already allowed seven home runs in just 29.2 innings. Perhaps one (or more) Cubs can take him deep tonight.

Here is the weather forecast for the area around Wrigley Field.

Today’s game is on Marquee Sports Network.

Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.

MLB.com Gameday

Baseball-reference.com game preview

Please visit our SB Nation Reds site Red Reporter. If you do go there to interact with Reds fans, please be respectful, abide by their individual site rules and serve as a good representation of Cub fans in general and BCB in particular.

The 2026 game discussion procedure has been changed, so please take note.

You’ll find the game preview, like this one, posted separately on the front page two hours before game time (90 minutes for some early day games following night games).

At the same time, a StoryStream containing the preview will also post on the front page, titled “Cubs vs. (Team) (Day of week/date) game threads.” It will contain every post related to that particular game.

The Live! (formerly “First Pitch”) thread will still post at five minutes to game time. It will also post to the front page. That will be the only live game discussion thread. After the game, the recap and Heroes and Goats will also live on the front page as separate posts.

You will also be able to find the preview, Live! thread, recap and Heroes and Goats in this section link. The StoryStream for each game can also be found in that section.

Discuss amongst yourselves.

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Ball bounces Phillies' way, snap southpaw skid against Athletics

Ball bounces Phillies' way, snap southpaw skid against Athletics originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

For most of Wednesday night, it felt like the Phillies were slipping back into a familiar trap.

Another left-handed starter. Another slow start offensively. Another reminder of one of the clearest issues that has followed them all season.

Then the eighth inning changed it, with some good fortune coming their way.

Down a run, the Phillies put together a late rally against Oakland’s bullpen and came back for a 6-3 win over the Athletics at Citizens Bank Park, their eighth victory in their last nine games.

Kyle Schwarber walked. Athletics second baseman Jeff McNeil made a throwing error on what could have been a Bryce Harper forceout. That opened the door. The Phillies had caught a break.

Adolis García singled to load the bases. Then Edmundo Sosa came through again, punching a two-run single to give the Phillies a 4-3 lead.

Sosa battled through a long at-bat and stayed with a sweeper long enough to shoot it through.

“I just wanted to be aggressive at the plate,” Sosa said through Phillies translator Diego D’Aniello. “That was my mindset at the moment. I wanted to put the ball in play.”

He did exactly that, and the Phillies kept going. With one out, Brandon Marsh lined his third hit of the night to push the lead to two. Justin Crawford then brought in another run on a groundout.

That was enough to finish off the first Phillies win in a game started by a left-hander this season. They had been 0-10 in those games, their longest losing streak against left-handed starters by a National League club since at least 2000.

It did not erase the concern. It did change the ending.

A’s southpaw Jeffrey Springs was solid, allowing two runs over 5 1/3 innings. The Phillies had to chip away. Marsh tripled the other way in a left-on-left matchup in the fifth and came around to score. García homered in the sixth. But the bigger damage came after Springs left.

That was the difference from so many of their earlier losses to left-handed starters.

The Phillies did not solve everything against Springs. They made sure the game did not end with him.

“The middle of the order tonight kept pressure on them all night,” interim manager Don Mattingly said. “And we finally broke through again late.”

Marsh has been one of the biggest reasons the offense has looked different lately. He finished with three hits for the second straight game and is now batting .336, fourth in the Majors. Over his last 15 games, he is hitting .400/.424/.600 with 22 hits.

The Phillies’ outfielder laced two hits against lefties on the night. Those matchups for Marsh have been a talking point around him for years.

“You just got to treat it just like it’s a right-hander,” Marsh said. “That’s the best advice that I was given coming up. It’s tough. It’s a tough situation, but it’s part of it. It makes it more beautiful when you succeed.”

The Phillies still have a larger issue against left-handed pitching, especially with their right-handed bats. They had six right-handed hitters in the lineup Wednesday, and that group has not done enough in those matchups this season.

Entering the night, Phillies right-handed hitters against southpaws had the lowest batting average and OPS by any team in those matchups dating back to 1920.

Sosa has become one of the exceptions. He has quietly hit .333 with an .889 OPS against right-handers, too, which has given the Phillies more confidence leaving him in spots where a pinch-hitter might otherwise seem possible. He could play his way into more at-bats with Alec Bohm continuing to struggle at third.

That preparation is not accidental.

“I’m a firm believer in my routine,” Sosa said. “My routine is a big part of it. It builds confidence for me before every single game.”

The Phillies needed that kind of at-bat because Zack Wheeler kept them close.

In his first home start since Aug. 2 of last year, Wheeler allowed three earned runs over 6 1/3 innings and 98 pitches. He left to a loud standing ovation and now has a 3.12 ERA through three starts.

His velocity continued to tick up. His four-seamer averaged 95 mph, up from 94.3 mph through his first two starts. His sinker, splitter and cutter were all up about a mile per hour, too.

Wheeler, humbly, was not fully satisfied.

“Honestly, I felt a little off,” Wheeler said. “The ball was coming out well, but just a little off, especially with the sweeper, curveball a little bit.”

Mattingly saw enough to feel encouraged.

“I felt like the ball jumped out of his hand a little better today,” Mattingly said. “He’s been good every time now, so I don’t want to make it sound like he hasn’t been good, but for me, just watching from the side, you felt like there was a little more finish to his stuff.”

Wheeler did not get the same swing-and-miss he had in his first two outings, but his four-seamer remains a weapon. Opponents are 1-for-16 against it this season with six strikeouts.

More importantly, he gave the Phillies a chance to win on a night when the offense needed time.

“All that matters is we won,” Wheeler said.

That has become the theme lately. The Phillies are not playing perfect baseball, but they are playing better baseball. They are finding different ways to win.

Marsh credited the pitching staff for keeping them in position Wednesday.

“Hats off to our pitching staff,” Marsh said. “The pitching kept us in a position to do what we did tonight.”

The lefty issue is not gone. One late rally does not wipe away the first 10 losses against opposing southpaw starters or the season-long struggles in those matchups.

But Wednesday was different. And under Mattingly, the Phillies are still riding the wave.

“You want to ride this wave as long as possible,” Mattingly said. “There are storms out there coming at some point. But when you’re catching some breaks and getting some big hits, you just want to ride this as long as you can.”

Tigers’ Framber Valdez suspended six games for ‘intentionally throwing’ at Red Sox’s Trevor Story

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Tigers starter Framber Valdez reacts after being ejected on May 5, 2026, Image 2 shows Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story (10) is restrained by home plate umpire Adam Beck (38) after Story was hit by a pitch from the Tigers' Framber Valdez during the fourth inning on May 5, 2026

Tigers pitcher Framber Valdez was suspended six games by MLB for “intentionally throwing” at Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story on Tuesday, the league announced.

He was also fined an undisclosed amount.

Manager A.J. Hinch was also suspended for one game and fined an undisclosed amount due to Valdez’s actions, and he won’t manage the series finale against Boston on Wednesday.

Valdez, 32, was ejected during the fourth inning Tuesday after plunking Story on the first pitch of an at-bat following back-to-back Boston home runs that put them up 10-2.

The Red Sox were furious and the benches cleared after Story was hit.

Valdez claimed after the game that he did not intentionally hit Story, but it seems even Hinch wasn’t buying his pitcher’s denial.

Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story (10) is restrained by home plate umpire Adam Beck (38) after Story was hit by a pitch from the Tigers’ Framber Valdez during the fourth inning on May 5, 2026. Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images
Tigers starter Framber Valdez reacts after being ejected on May 5, 2026. Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images

“I understand their frustration, I understand the optics, I understand the whole thing. We play a really good brand of baseball here, that didn’t feel like it,” Hinch said after the game. “That’s not judging intent, I have no idea, but I know when you go out on the field and you end up sort of in those confrontations you usually feel like you’re in your right. It didn’t feel good being out there, so I understand their frustrations, I understand the moment and it was a low moment of a frustrating night.”

The Tigers signed Valdez to a three-year, $115 million contract in the offseason.

A two-time All-Star, Valdez has a disappointing 4.57 ERA and 1.41 WHIP through three starts due to a pair of clunkers. His seven earned runs allowed Tuesday inflated his ERA from 3.35, and he gave up eight earned runs in five innings to the Twins on April 8.

He has five quality starts for Detroit.

Brewers cruise to 6-2 victory over Cardinals

MILWAUKEE, WI - MARCH 26: Andrew Vaughn #28 of the Milwaukee Brewers celebrates after hitting a single in the sixth inning during the game between the Chicago White Sox and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on Thursday, March 26, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Aaron Gash/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Box Score

The Brewers took control early and never looked back, cruising to a 6-2 win behind a four-run first inning on Wednesday afternoon. They will get a well-earned day off tomorrow before returning home to face the 25-11 Yankees, who currently hold the second-best record in baseball.

Milwaukee did all of their damage in the first with two outs. Brice Turang ripped a two-out single into right field, and Cardinals starter Andre Pallante hit William Contreras with a sinker. Jake Bauers, who has a .983 OPS with runners in scoring position after today’s game, sliced a single of his own into left. Turang slid home well ahead of the throw to give the Brewers a 1-0 lead.

Up next was Andrew Vaughn, who went 0-for-4 in his return from injury on Monday. Apparently one game was all Vaughn needed to get acclimated, as he worked Pallante to seven pitches before sending a fastball over the wall in left-center field for a three-run homer. All of a sudden, the Brewers were up four runs before Brandon Sproat even touched the mound.

Sproat gave up a first-inning double to Iván Herrera that easily could have been ruled an error on third baseman David Hamilton, but it was the only hit he allowed across four innings.

The rookie right-hander is still far from a finished product. He walked three batters and hit Cardinals outfielder Nathan Church while trying to field a bunt attempt, and he needed 76 pitches to get through four innings. Still, the flashes are obvious. At times, Sproat looks borderline untouchable before suddenly losing the handle for a couple batters, or an inning. It’s hard to complain about one hit over four shutout innings from a pitcher who is still developing.

While Sproat kept the Cardinals scoreless through four, Milwaukee got an insurance run in the top of the fifth. The rally started with a one-out infield hit by Joey Ortiz, who eventually scored on a wild pitch by Pallante.

DL Hall and Aaron Ashby continued what Sproat had started by shutting the Cardinals down through the seventh inning. At this point, St. Louis still had just one hit — Herrera’s first-inning double — but Trevor Megill, who hadn’t allowed a run in his previous seven appearances, surrendered a pair of hard-hit singles and a run in the eighth.

Both teams scored a run in the ninth to bring the game to its final score of Brewers 6, Cardinals 2. The top of the ninth started with Hamilton and Ortiz both striking out looking, but the Brewers mounted another two-out rally. Frelick kept the inning alive with a single, and Jackson Chourio — who’d already singled earlier in the game — hit a 108.7-mph rocket over the head of Walker in right field and off the wall. Frelick scored without a throw to give Chourio his first RBI of the season.

The Cardinals got their second and final run off of Abner Uribe, who allowed a leadoff double in the ninth to Nolan Gorman. Gorman would come around to score on a pretty uncharacteristic error by Ortiz, who couldn’t come up with a soft grounder from Alec Burleson.

With Chourio and Vaughn back in the lineup, the Brewers’ offense looks different. Chourio, Vaughn, Frelick, and Bauers all recorded multi-hit games, while the pitching staff held the Cardinals to just four hits. Milwaukee is now three games over .500 as they welcome the Yankees on Friday. Jacob Misiorowski is on the hill for the Crew, with the first pitch scheduled for 6:40 p.m.

Keep Jays together, or make a push for Giannis? Forsberg and Giles discuss

Keep Jays together, or make a push for Giannis? Forsberg and Giles discuss originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

An intriguing offseason lies ahead for the Boston Celtics after their stunning first-round playoff exit.

The Celtics blew a 3-1 series lead for the first time in franchise history, falling in Game 7 in front of their home crowd. Their lack of a strong frontcourt presence, as well as an over-reliance on 3-pointers, may have cost them another run at a championship.

C’s president of basketball operations Brad Stevens addressed those issues during his end-of-season press conference on Wednesday. He also answered a question about star Jaylen Brown’s rumored “frustration” with the organization, stating that Brown “has not expressed those frustrations to me.”

Nonetheless, Brown’s future with the team has become a hot topic as offseason trade rumors begin to swirl. The Celtics have recently been linked to Milwaukee Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo, with NBA insider Marc Stein advising to “keep an eye on” the C’s in the Giannis sweepstakes.

While Antetokounmpo would help their frontcourt dilemma, the Celtics almost certainly would have to part ways with Brown to pry him from Milwaukee. That may seem like a non-starter, but given Antetokounmpo’s status as one of the NBA’s elite talents, it’s something Stevens must at least consider if the offer is on the table.

So, should the Celtics stick with the Jayson Tatum/Jaylen Brown tandem on their quest for Banner 19, or should they split them up to acquire Giannis? NBC Sports Boston’s Chris Forsberg and Tom Giles discussed the topic on the latest episode of the Celtics Talk Podcast.

“I would rather have Jaylen Brown than Giannis,” Giles said. “But if Jaylen Brown says, ‘I want to be traded,’ that’s where the conversation changes. That’s kind of where I’ve been for a while. If you can have those two guys (Tatum and Brown), that gives you the best chance of winning. If you kind of get nudged into it, that changes the conversation.”

As of now, it seems highly unlikely that Brown will request a trade. During his Twitch stream on Wednesday night, Brown stated, “If it was up to me, I would play in Boston for the next 10 years.”

But as he acknowledges, his future in Boston isn’t up to him. It’ll be up to Stevens to decide which path to take, and although it would hurt to break up the Jays, the opportunity to add an elite talent like Antetokounmpo would be enticing.

“As much as I’m leery of the Giannis stuff, I get why it has to at least be a conversation,” Forsberg said. “I’m hopeful that whatever comes next involves the Jays and figuring out the best way to accentuate their talents and giving them the best opportunity to make another run. …

“Giannis is great in a vacuum, but you’re introducing whole new factors into your locker room. There’s a chance it works really great, there’s also a chance it doesn’t work. He wasn’t always happy in Milwaukee when they weren’t winning. …

“How does Tatum feel about that? All of a sudden, just having another guy who’s very much part of the elite universe. It’s one thing when you’ve done it with Jaylen and Jayson for all these years, it’s just another when you introduce someone new. There’s a whole bunch of variables that go into it.”

Antetokounmpo is a 10-time All-Star, two-time MVP, nine-time All-NBA selection, and NBA Finals MVP. That said, trading a lucrative package centered around Brown to acquire him would be risky. The 31-year-old played in only 36 games last season due to multiple injuries, and as Forsberg notes, it’s possible he wouldn’t be the best fit in the C’s locker room.

The questions surrounding Antetokounmpo’s future could be answered before the new league year begins in July. Bucks owner Jimmy Haslam said Wednesday that he’d like a decision to be made before the NBA Draft, which is set for June 23.

Also in the episode: