How Mets’ Bo Bichette, Jorge Polanco fared in first crack at new positions

New York Mets first baseman Jorge Polanco makes an out on Pittsburgh Pirates Nick Gonzales.
Jorge Polanco makes a play at first base during the Mets-Pirates game on March 26, 2026.

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An overlooked aspect of the Mets’ Opening Day: For one day, their corner infield experiments did not implode. 

Veterans starting their first career games at new spots, Bo Bichette and Jorge Polanco held their own.

Bichette was wild with one throw from third base, but he was assisted by a nice save from fledgling first baseman Polanco, which presented the largest bit of Mets defensive drama during the win over the Pirates

Bichette — largely a shortstop with the Blue Jays but whose declining glove meant most clubs saw the free agent as a second baseman, while the Mets (who already had traded for Marcus Semien) signed him as a third baseman — played his first career game at the position.

His initial chance was not perfect: He handled a third-inning ground ball from Henry Davis on the run and threw off-balance, bringing Polanco off first base. 

Jorge Polanco makes a play at first base during the Mets-Pirates game on March 26, 2026. AP

But Polanco — whose big league first base experience comprised one pitch last season, shifted to the position with the Mariners just before an inning ended — looked natural, taking a step toward home plate, catching the ball and applying the tag to Davis. 

Davis was up again in the seventh and smashed a 110.3 mph one-hopper to Bichette, who went to a knee and smoothly speared the ball before making a strong throw across the diamond. 

Polanco also handled a few chances himself without incident. 

If all goes well, there will be six more months of opportunities for the pair to seize or botch.

But a casual fan watching Thursday would not have known that the Mets were asking their corner infielders to learn positions they had rarely or never played before this spring. 

“I thought they were both pretty good,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “… For them to be able to communicate from pitch to pitch, it was good to see.” 


The Mets successfully passed infielder Vidal Bruján and catcher Ben Rortvedt through waivers, both outrighted and sent to Triple-A Syracuse.

Lefty Bryan Hudson was claimed by the White Sox after losing a bullpen battle to Richard Lovelady. 


Syracuse opened its season Friday, which meant it finalized its roster and injured list.

Placed on the seven-day injured list were righties Adbert Alzolay, Dylan Ross and Justin Armbruester and lefty Nate Lavender.

Righty Craig Kimbrel, who continues to throw in Florida, and righty Mike Baumann were placed on the Development list.

Outfielder Mike Tauchman, who underwent surgery Thursday on the meniscus in his left knee, also was put on the seven-day IL.

Dodgers on Deck: Saturday, March 28 vs. Diamondbacks

Los Angeles, CA - March 15 : Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow (31) looks towards the stands while walking back to the dugout prior to the start of a MLB spring training game between the Los Angeles Angels and Los Angeles Dodgers at Angel Stadium on Sunday, March 22, 2026 in Anahiem , CA. (Photo by Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Tyler Glasnow is on the mound as the Dodgers finish off their first series of the 2026 season, starting on Saturday night against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium.

Glasnow had a relatively normal spring, unencumbered by injuries or setbacks. He pitched into the fifth inning twice before ending his spring with five full innings and 11 strikeouts against the Angels during the Freeway Series last Sunday in his final spring tuneup.

Left-hander Eduardo Rodríguez, who vetoed a deadline trade to the Dodgers in 2023, starts for Arizona in the series finale. He’s the first southpaw starter faced by the Dodgers this season.

Joe Davis will be in San Francisco on Saturday, covering the New York Yankees at San Francisco Giants for Fox, so Stephen Nelson will switch booths from radio to television to call the final game of this Dodgers series for SportsNet LA.

Saturday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Diamondbacks
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium
  • Time: 6:10 p.m.
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Jason Heyward retires from baseball

Los Angeles, CA - August 29: Former Los Angeles Dodger Jason Heyward receives his World Series ring prior to a baseball game between the Arizona Diamondbacks and Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Friday, August 29, 2025. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

LOS ANGELES — Longtime major league outfielder Jason Heyward, who played in two of his 16 major league seasons with the Dodgers, announced his retirement from baseball on Friday.

“I’d like to take one last time to show LOVE to the game of BASEBALL as a player. You’ve taken me around the world. Given me something to dream of and work towards as a kid and a professional,” Heyward said in an Instagram post. “You’ve shown me the value of sacrifice, support, family, friends, competition, winning, respect, growth and many other lessons along the way.”

The five-time Gold Glove Award winner was released by the Chicago Cubs after two injury-plagued seasons in 2021-22. Heyward signed with the Dodgers that winter at the urging of Freddie Freeman, his friend and longtime teammate with the Atlanta Braves since they were both drafted out of high school by the team in 2007 — Heyward in the first round, Freeman in the second.

“I never talked about really the baseball player Jason Heyward, I always talk about the person Jason Heyward,” Freeman told Mookie Betts on the Off Base podcast in 2023. “Because if anybody comes in contact with Jason, for me it’s a life-changing moment for a lot of people. The wisdom, the care, the love that he has for each person that he comes across.”

Heyward immediately held stature in the Dodgers clubhouse, and not just by his 6’5, 240-pound frame. Less then three weeks into his first season in Los Angeles, Heyward was tabbed by manager Dave Roberts to give a speech at the Jackie Robinson statue, delivered to both the Dodgers and Chicago Cubs ahead of their April 15, 2023 game at Dodger Stadium.

With the Dodgers, Heyward in 2023 had one of the best offensive seasons of his career, hitting .269/.340/.473 with a 119 wRC+ and 15 home runs, the latter matching his total for the previous three years combined. In 2024, Heyward hit .208/.289/.393 with a 90 wRC+, fell down the depth chart and was released in August. His last at-bat with the Dodgers was a game-winning three-run home run to beat the Seattle Mariners.

Heyward signed on with the Houston Astros to finish out 2024, and he played 34 games last season for the San Diego Padres. In 16 major league seasons, Heyward hit .255/.336/.408 with a 104 wRC+, 186 home runs, and 308 doubles in 1,824 games, totaling 41.5 bWAR and 34.8 fWAR for the Braves, St. Louis Cardinals, Cubs, Dodgers, Astros, and Padres.

“Great teammate, very, very good team leader. He was old school, in the sense of always doing nice things for young players, buying dinners, buying stuff for them, showing them how to be a big leaguer,” Roberts said of Heyward on Friday. “Worked his tail off everyday, was bought into everything we asked of him. He’s had a great career, and I’m happy we got to be teammates for a minute. That was great.”

“I hope he stays in the game in some capacity, whether it be the front office side or the coaching side,” Roberts added. “The game needs guys like Jason.”

Dodgers’ Andy Pages, with improved work ethic, on cusp of stardom

Get used to this.

The cries of joy in the stands. The stadium shaking. Andy Pages rounding the bases at Uniqlo Field.

The first Dodgers player to homer this season wasn’t Shohei Ohtani or Freddie Freeman. The distinction belonged to Pages, the third-year center fielder from Cuba.

The Dodgers’ Andy Pages celebrates with teammates after hitting a home run on Opening Day. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

And it was no mistake.

His 400-foot shot on Opening Day confirmed what manager Dave Roberts had been saying in recent weeks: Pages isn’t the same player he was last year.

“I was simply trying to pick better pitches than I did in my first at-bat,” Pages said in Spanish.

Pages struck out in his previous at-bat against Diamondbacks starter Zac Gallen.

Facing the former All-Star again in the fifth inning, Pages pounced on a curveball that stayed over the plate and golfed the pitch into the left field pavilion.

“I guess he made a mistake and left the ball where he didn’t want to leave it,” he said. “We wait for moments like that to inflict damage.”

Pages isn’t the same hitter who batted .078 in the postseason and was relegated to a reserve role in the final three games of the World Series. He’s not the free swinger who is believed to be the Dodgers player who whiffed on a pitch that was allegedly thrown out of the strike zone on purpose by Guardians reliever Emmanuel Clase to help associates with an online wager.

His transformation as an offensive player can be traced back to work he did in a 12,000-square-foot building on the Dodgers’ spring training complex that stands between the team’s clubhouse and practice fields.


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There, Pages stood in against a Trajekt Arc, a machine that can show the windup of a particular pitcher and deliver pitches as if he had thrown them. The device, which is used by players to simulate real-life at-bats, was set to throw balls near the edge of the strike zone. Pages was tasked with determining whether the pitches were balls or strikes.

“He’s learned to be a better hitter, a major-league hitter, not just a slugger,” manager Dave Roberts told reporters in spring training.

That the 25-year-old Pages treated the exercise with the seriousness that he did was evidence of his maturation.

“Right now, he looks like a veteran ballplayer,” Roberts said. “I could think back to a few years ago when he didn’t really like the weight room and really wasn’t the best worker. But now you look at him and he values the weight room, being in shape, scouting and being prepared with the pitchers.

“He has fortunately had the luxury of being around a lot of great ballplayers to learn from. I’m really proud of Andy, and I think he’s going to have an even better year [than last year], I really do.”

The Dodgers’ Andy Pages rounds the bases after hitting a home run Thursday against Arizona. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

So much so that Roberts selected Pages as his team’s “pick to click.” Roberts figured that if Pages could hit 27 homers last year, he should be able to hit even more with improved plate discipline.

“I wouldn’t be surprised to [see him] make an All-Star team,” Roberts said.

However his season unfolds, Pages will be remembered for his catch in Game 7 of the World Series. Entering the game as a defensive replacement in the bottom of the ninth inning, Pages ran over left fielder Kike Hernandez to grab a line drive by Ernie Clement at the wall for the third out. The Blue Jays had runners at second and third. If Pages hadn’t caught that ball, the World Series would have been theirs.

Pages made another critical defensive contribution Thursday, making a sliding catch to rob Gabriel Moreno of a leadoff single in the seventh inning. 

“I just think he’s getting off the ball so well,” Roberts said. “Even last year, there were questions if he could stay out and play center field at a high level. And he’s worked his tail off, he really has. Every single day, he’s putting in work, and he just keeps getting better. His jumps, his line to the ball. Obviously, the arm strength is there. So he’s a complete player, and I’m excited to see what he can do this year.”

Pages has picked up the work habits of a superstar. As a result, he could now be on the verge of becoming one himself.

Warriors star Steph Curry out for at least another week with runner’s knee

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 21: Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors looks on against the Atlanta Hawks during the fourth quarter at State Farm Arena on March 21, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. 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 Paras Griffin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Golden State Warriors will re-examine Steph Curry next week, delaying any return for the superstar point guard. While Curry has already missed 20 games, reports last week suggested that he was expected to resume scrimmaging with hopes to ramp up for a return. According to a report by Shams Charania of ESPN, however, Curry was unable to scrimmage this week and so the Warriors will wait another week to re-evaluate his injury. Curry will now be out for at least 25 games, and could very well be out for the season.

At this point, even if Curry is cleared to play, the Warriors may be hesitant to have him return with only a few games to ramp up for the intensity of the NBA Play-In Tournament. It would not be a surprise for Golden State to table Curry for the remainder of the season, effectively forfeiting their chances of reaching the playoffs, and looking ahead to next year. Of course, they would have to get Curry on board with that strategy, and the hyper competitor will likely have another idea in mind.

The Warriors have unsurprisingly collapsed in the standings without Curry anchoring an already shorthanded roster. Golden State has fallen to 35-38 on the season and is currently the 10th seed in the Western Conference standings. While they have virtually no risk of missing the play-in entirely, they will have to win back-to-back road games to reach the postseason unless they can catch the Los Angeles Clippers (37-36) and/or Portland Trail Blazers (37-37). If the Dubs want to avoid playing the top seed in the West, likely the Oklahoma City Thunder, they will have to climb above both Portland and LA.

Curry has only appeared in 39 games so far this season, averaging 27.2 points, 4.8 assists, 3.5 rebounds, and 1.1 steals in 31.3 minutes on 46.8%/39.1%/93.1% shooting. The Warriors have outscored opponents by 2.2 points per 100 possessions with Curry on the court this season (as opposed to being outscored by 0.8 points per 100 possessions).

Astros vs. Angels Game Thread. Game 2, 3/27/2026

WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 28: Jeremy Peña #3 of the Houston Astros warms up prior to a spring training game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches on February 28, 2026 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Houston Astros (0-1) continue their opening 4 game series against the Los Angeles Angels (1-0) tonight at Daikin Park.

RHP Mike Burrows will make his first regular season start for the Astros opposite former Astro LHP Yusei Kikuchi and the Angels.

TONIGHT’S ASTROS STARTER: RHP Mike Burrows was acquired from the Pirates this offseason as part of a three-team, six-player trade in which the Astros sent OF Jacob Melton and minor leaguer RHP Anderson Brito to the Rays, while the Rays sent IF Brandon Lowe, OF Jake Mangum and LHP Mason Montgomery to the Pirates.

Burrows impressed this Spring, making five starts and posting a 1.50 ERA (3ER/18IP) while allowing a .200 opponent batting average with 17 strikeouts.

IF YUSEI SO: Tonight’s Angels starter LHP Yusei Kikuchi spent a memorable two months with the Astros in 2024, making 10 starts and posting a 2.70 ERA (18ER/60IP) down the stretch.

He was acquired that season from the Blue Jays in a trade that sent OF Joey Loperfido to Toronto.

Loperfido was reacquired by the Astros this season and made yesterday’s Opening Day start in left field.

VS. THE ANGELS: The Astros open this season with a divisional series against the Angels, who the Astros went 8-5 against in 13 games last season. The Astros are 138-83 all time against the Angels and have won the season series against them in every full season dating back to 2015.

SALAZAR OUTRIGHTED: C César Salazar has cleared waivers and been outrighted to Triple A Sugar Land…Salazar was designated for assignment by the Astros on Wednesday.

Game Info

Game Date/Time: Friday, March 27, 7:15 p.m. CST

Location: Daikin Park, Houston, TX

TV: Apple TV+

Streaming: Apple TV+

Radio: KTRH 740 AM; TUDN 102.9 FM HD2

NBA moves further away from point of having a draft with latest ideas to curb tanking

Tanking has become the white whale of the NBA league office.

Stamping out tanking has become Adam Silver's quest, but that obsessive effort has the league missing the big picture. Silver runs a multi-billion-dollar business, and he has business reasons to focus on tanking. While many fans in Utah or Sacramento or Washington — or the other six cities where tanking is going on this season — will say they want their team to tank for draft potential, the reality is that there is a steep drop-off in attendance and viewership for those teams' games, according to league sources. Fans say they are okay with tanking, but they stop tuning in when the product is that bad.

The problem is that the league's obsessive quest to deal with tanking is moving it further away from the point of having a draft in the first place. It's making it harder for smaller and mid-market teams to land the players they need to get or stay good.

And, ultimately, not one of the league's new ideas will end tanking. Full stop.

NBA’s latest anti-tanking ideas

This week, the NBA presented its Board of Governors — made up of the 30 team owners — with three different conceptual ideas that drastically change the NBA Draft Lottery process. In a nutshell those are:

1) Expand the lottery to 18 teams (10 teams that miss the postseason and 10 teams in the play-in), then flatten the odds and give all 10 teams that miss the playoffs an 8% chance at the top pick. Only the top four or five draft spots would be determined by lottery, then it would fall in reverse record order.

2) Expand the lottery to 22 teams (the 18 above plus the four eliminated in the first round of the playoffs), then have those teams' lottery odds determined by their record over the past two seasons. Also, there would be a minimum win total for each team in relation to the lottery (hypothetically, if that win number is set at 22, and a team only wins 19 games that season, for the lottery it would have a 22-60 record). All 22 teams would be in the lottery, but only the top four slots would be selected, and then there might be a second lottery for the remaining spots, with limits on how far a team can fall.

3) Expand the lottery to 18 teams, but from there it pretty much follows the same system as is currently in place, except that the top five teams would get the same odds (11%, currently the top three teams have a 14% chance) and the odds would slowly decrease from there. The top five spots in the draft would be determined by the lottery, then the rest of the draft would be in reverse order of record.

These are not set proposals for the owners to choose among, league officials emphasize, they are more concepts where they can pick and choose the ideas they like. It's more of a buffet of ideas. For example, while the league is theoretically open to a lottery that selects the top 18 spots in the draft, there is no way the owners will vote for a concept where, if their team has the worst record, it might pick 18th.

Why all these ideas miss the mark

The NBA is a business, and what the teams are selling to their respective fan bases is either winning or hope. "Come see our good team with a star or two, a team that will win a lot of games and is playoff bound." Or, "Come see our promising young players as we start to build something — get in on the ground floor of what we will become in a few years."

It becomes very difficult to sell hope when the flattened lottery odds make it much more difficult for the league's struggling teams to get the good players they need to turn things around. Put simply, most bad teams will just be bad longer. Fans of tanking teams tend to be okay with it for a year or two (at least on an intellectual level), but drag that process out, and they really tune out. And don't come back. The league's lottery odds make that more likely.

This is a particularly big risk for small and middle-market teams that are not destinations for free agents or players with options — those teams rely on the draft to get their stars (either drafting those players or trading their picks to get said player). Decrease the value of those picks and the bad teams get stuck in a cycle where it's harder to improve. By extension, this is a big win for Los Angeles, New York, Miami and any other market where players want to go.

The point of any draft

These new concepts move the NBA away from the entire point of having a draft — get the worst teams the best young players so they can turn things around.

In the NFL, the Raiders, Jets, Cardinals and Titans had the worst records last season, they get the top four picks in this draft. Simple. Clean. I have written that’s what the NBA should do (with a rule that if a team gets the No. 1 pick, it can't pick in the top five the next two years). The NBA is never going to do that, in part because the draft lottery has become its own televised show and event. It's baked into the new NBA national television agreements. If there is one thing we can be certain about, it's that the league's billionaire owners are not giving up a penny of that television money, and doing away with the draft lottery would force them to do just that.

These proposals also can make things more complex for fans to understand. Particularly the second proposal, with two-year combined windows. The NBA's overly complex salary cap is something casual fans hate talking about and tune out discussions on; these new lottery options (especially the second one) have a lot of math that people just don't want to do to know where their team will pick. Simpler is better, yet the league is leaning more toward complexity and bureaucracy.

This won’t stop tanking

Ultimately, none of these proposals will completely stop tanking. The next time there is a Cade Cunningham or Anthony Edwards or Cooper Flagg — or especially a generational player like Victor Wembanyama — are in a draft, teams will do anything and everything to maximize their chances in that lottery. Because those are No. 1 picks and the kinds of players who turn franchises around — and drive up a franchise's value. Any marginal help is worth it.

At the end of the day, more than maybe any other team sport, one elite basketball player can change everything. And it's worth it to teams to do whatever it takes to get a player like that. Even if the odds are longer than they were a few years ago.

Cam Schlittler leads way in Yankees’ one-hit shutout of Giants as Aaron Judge blasts first homer

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) tosses his bat after hitting a home run against the San Francisco Giants during the sixth inning at Oracle Park, Image 2 shows Cam Schlittler #31 of the New York Yankees pitches against the San Francisco Giants in the first inning at Oracle Park on March 27, 2026 in San Francisco, California, Image 3 shows New York Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton (right) celebrates with third base/outfield coach Luis Rojas (67) while rounding the bases after hitting a home run against the San Francisco Giants during the sixth inning at Oracle Park
Yankees win

SAN FRANCISCO — The only thing that could stop Cam Schlittler on Friday afternoon was not even wearing a Giants uniform. 

Because the way he was throwing, the Yankees right-hander just might have finished off a masterpiece all by himself had he not been on a limited pitch count. Instead, he settled for pitching the first 5 ¹/₃ one-hit innings in downright dominant fashion and then watched the bullpen follow his lead — just as he followed Max Fried’s from Opening Day. 

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Schlittler and four relievers combined for a one-hit shutout, while Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton provided the offense with their first home run each, as the Yankees cruised to a 3-0 win over the Giants on a beautiful Friday afternoon at sold-out Oracle Park. 

After Fried and the bullpen combined for a three-hit shutout in the season opener Wednesday, Schlittler & Co. did them one better Friday, marking the first time in franchise history the Yankees have started the season by pitching back-to-back shutouts. 

“To see Max go out there on Opening Night and do something special and then Cam up here following it up with a one-hit performance — the boys have been putting in their work in the offseason, that’s for sure,” Judge said. 

Cam Schlittler of the New York Yankees pitches against the San Francisco Giants in the first inning at Oracle Park on March 27, 2026 in San Francisco, California. Getty Images

Fernando Cruz, Tim Hill, Camilo Doval and David Bednar finished off Friday’s gem as the Yankees became the first team ever to hold an opponent scoreless and limit them to five or fewer hits through the first two games of a season. 

“Obviously, Max was great [Wednesday], bullpen was great [Wednesday], bullpen was electric today as well,” said Schlittler, who struck out eight. “So I’m really excited for Will [Warren] to get going [Saturday] and get the sweep.” 



Schlittler was untouchable, offering a potential preview of big things to come in his sophomore season as he recorded the first 16 outs on 68 pitches. He had a pitch count of 70 because he was not fully built up leaving camp after back inflammation had slowed him early in spring training, though that did little to affect his sharpness. 

“Nothing I can do about it, it’s out of my control,” Schlittler said of the limited pitch count. “Partially my fault, dealing with that little bit of a setback. But again, keep building from this week to next week and then hopefully get up to 90 pitches in a couple starts.” 

The only Giant to reach base against Schlittler was Heliot Ramos, who slashed a two-out double the other way in the second inning. The Giants only had two more base runners the rest of the way, on a walk by Cruz in the seventh and another from Bednar in the ninth. 

New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) tosses his bat after hitting a home run against the San Francisco Giants during the sixth inning at Oracle Park. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

The 25-year-old Schlittler came out pounding the strike zone, including a 10-pitch, 10-strike first inning with an assist from Austin Wells, who had the only ball turned into strike three via an ABS challenge. That helped keep his pitch count in check and he turned on cruise control from there. 

“Just right where he left off last year,” Judge said, referring to Schlittler’s historic performance against the Red Sox in the AL wild-card series. “It’s impressive. He’s got the 100 mph fastball, but the feel for the offspeed and filling up the zone, especially with the defense we have, it’s going to be big-time for him.” 

Judge and Stanton, meanwhile, took care of the run support as the Yankees improved to 53-7 when both go deep. 

New York Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton (right) celebrates with third base/outfield coach Luis Rojas (67) while rounding the bases after hitting a home run against the San Francisco Giants during the sixth inning at Oracle Park. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Judge was the only Yankee without a hit in their 7-0 win Wednesday, and entered the sixth inning Friday 0-for-7 with five strikeouts. But after challenging Robbie Ray’s 1-0 strike and turning it into a ball, Judge worked a full count and then clobbered a moonshot down the left field line for a two-run, 405-foot shot that gave the Yankees a lead. 

Two batters later, Stanton crushed a 414-foot homer to stay hot in the early going and ensure the Yankees will go for the sweep Saturday. 

“[Judge] didn’t play the way he wanted to [Wednesday], but he looked great today,” Schlittler said. “I had no doubt that he was going to go do something like that today.”

Mets’ RISP vision for Bo Bichette already flashed exciting potential

New York Mets shortstop Bo Bichette (19) hits a sacrifice fly.
Bo Bichette hits a sacrifice fly during the Mets-Pirates game on March 26, 2026.

A promising season opener is worth virtually nothing. One out of 162 is the equivalent of about 17.8 seconds of an NBA game. The Mets will not score 11 runs per game and knock out every opposing starter in the first inning. 

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The manner in which the Mets won Thursday, though, is what the team can find encouraging. Lengthy at-bats, many against maybe the best pitcher in the world, and a deep lineup filled with a combination of stars and grinders is how David Stearns envisioned this overhauled group. 

Among the not-sustainable happenings from what became a party at Citi Field: Bo Bichette’s first four Mets at-bats came with seven runners on base. 

Among the heartening signs for the Mets: Bichette is supposed to be stepping up to the plate with runners on base. This is what he and the Mets signed up for. 

One of the most accomplished players in baseball at hitting with runners in scoring position is batting behind Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto. When Bichette landed with the Mets as a free agent, did he wonder what his RBI totals would look like? 

Bo Bichette hits a sacrifice fly during the Mets-Pirates game on March 26, 2026. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“Well, I know I’m going to have a ton of opportunities,” Bichette said with a smile. “So I just got to be ready for those opportunities.” 

In his Mets debut, Bichette authored what might be the most hopeful 0-for-4-with-three-K’s-and-a-sac-fly days in baseball history and immediately reminded everyone why the longtime Blue Jay became the immediate fallback when Kyle Tucker chose the Dodgers. 

The memorable first inning might have looked much different if Paul Skenes could have put Bichette away. After Lindor and Soto reached, the Pirates ace reached into the upper 90s to get ahead, 0-2. Bichette, protecting, fouled off a hard four-seamer. 

“Two strikes, he gets behind in the count,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “We talk about the importance of getting guys in once we get in scoring position.” 

Which is what Bichette did, staying with a diving changeup and lofting a sacrifice fly to right for the first run of the Mets season. 

Coming through in the clutch, either with hits or just putting bat to ball, is what Bichette is known for. Since he broke into the majors in 2019 through 2025, Bichette hit .330 with runners in scoring position. In the span, 360 hitters logged at least 300 plate appearances in such situations, and Bichette’s average ranked fourth. 

“I think it’s just competing,” Bichette said about his approach in those situations. “… I would love to have that focus all the time.” 

It is surely part mental but also part physical. Last season, Bichette’s average bat speed for a swing registered at 69.1 mph. With two strikes, that average tightened to 67.6 mph. He shortens up to maximize his chance at making contact. 

Which he did in the fifth inning, when he stepped to the plate with the bases loaded, one out and the Mets ahead, 7-4. At some point, Bichette’s battle with righty Isaac Mattson graduated into a melee, a 13-pitch duel in which Bichette fouled off eight consecutive pitches with two strikes. 

Bo Bichette swings during the Mets-Pirates game on Mach 26, 2026. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

“I know he probably wants a strikeout there,” Bichette said. “Trying to compete, see the ball as long as I can, try and outlast him. But I didn’t.” 

Mattson won, finally — Bichette swung through a slider — but the Mets may have won, too. 

A reliever who had expended 26 pitches already in the inning and 13 consecutive to one batter then threw four straight balls to Jorge Polanco for a bases-loaded walk. 

“I wrote that down,” Mendoza said. “Because even though [Bichette] struck out, then we see a four-pitch walk right away to Polanco, right behind him. 

“He’s going to make them work,” said Mendoza. We got a lot of guys that are going to grind at-bats, and that was the perfect example.” 

It is less a small sample size and more a speck of a sample size. But the first look at Bichette the Met hinted that his career high of 102 RBIs in a season could be in jeopardy this year.

Giants make unwanted history in shutout loss to Yankees

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows San Francisco Giants shortstop Willy Adames removes his batting glove, Image 2 shows San Francisco Giants manager Tony Vitello walking away from the dugout after a pitching change

SAN FRANCISCO — The Giants did their best to erase Opening Night and start fresh on Opening Day. They redid the pomp and circumstance under a Friday afternoon sky. The starting lineups were introduced again, sans any comedians or cable cars.

The organization even went so far as to post a graphic on social media declaring Robbie Ray its “Opening Day starter,” despite Logan Webb’s shellacking two nights earlier.

The Giants’ Willy Adames and his teammates were held in check again against the Yankees. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Manager Tony Vitello joked before the game that the day served as a “mulligan” after their 7-0 loss Wednesday. Can he get another?

The Giants’ supposedly vaunted lineup that was held to three hits in their season opener produced just one in a 3-0 loss to Cam Schlittler and the Yankees. 

The shutout loss made history: Never in the 143-year existence of the Giants franchise, from New York to San Francisco, has the team been held scoreless its first two games of the season.

What it means

Vitello joined a long line of Giants managers to lose his debut. The list of skippers to fall to 0-2 gets slightly shorter, but the former Tennessee coach still has plenty of company.

There hasn’t been a Giants manager to start 1-0 since Felipe Alou in 2003; Bruce Bochy and Gabe Kapler didn’t earn their first wins until their third games.

The Yankees’ Aaron Judge hit a home run Friday against the host Giants. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Who’s hot 

Hard contact was hard to come by against either starting pitcher, as the two lineups combined to produce two balls in play at 100 mph or harder through the first five innings.

Then Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton did their thing.

Judge, held hitless through his first seven at-bats of the season, unloaded on the third straight middle-in fastball he saw from Ray and planted it halfway up the left field bleachers.

Two batters later, Stanton found a similar landing spot for a solo shot and, just like that, the Giants were down 3-0.

Besides Judge’s homer and the double from Paul Goldschmidt that preceded it, Ray limited the Yankees to only three runners over 5 ⅓ innings in his season debut.

Stanton’s home run, off Jose Butto, represented the only run the Giants’ bullpen has surrendered in 7 ⅔ innings to start the season.

Schlittler was operating under a strict pitch count but still managed to pitch into the sixth inning while retiring all but one of the 17 Giants batters he faced.

Who’s not

Through 18 innings, the Giants have produced a total of zero runs, four hits, four walks and 19 strikeouts. Their only hit to go for extra bases was a soft double Heliot Ramos poked down the right field line in the second inning. As a team, they are batting .068 (4 for 59).

Their defense, which was a focus in the spring, continued to disappoint. A sloppy effort in their season opener was followed up by more misplays Friday.

Willy Adames should have been awarded his second error of the season on a would-be double play grounder that resulted in no outs after he had trouble transferring the ball from his glove and then misfired to Casey Schmitt at first base.

Luis Arraez didn’t have the range to stop another ground ball from Jazz Chisholm Jr. from making it into right field. And Jung Hoo Lee, new to Oracle Park’s unique right field dimensions, misjudged a hit into the corner that allowed Goldschmidt to stretch a single into a double.

The Giants were forced to bring the infield in on multiple occasions, and Arraez at least acquitted himself well in those situations, cleanly fielding two sharply hit ground balls and making accurate throws home to prevent two more runs from scoring.

Up next

The Giants will seek to salvage one win in their opening series, or at least get on the scoreboard, behind RHP Tyler Mahle, who will make his club debut against RHP Will Warren.

First pitch is scheduled for 4:35 p.m., nationally televised on Fox.

Cam Schlittler, Yankees dominate Giants for second straight shutout

Mar 27, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Cam Schlittler (31) throws a pitch against the San Francisco Giants during the first inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images | Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

The Yankees stable of arms has come out the gate hotter than the Sun. After a 7-0 victory over the Giants on Opening Night, the Bombers, led by young star Cam Schlittler, continued to post zero after zero on Friday afternoon en route to a 3-0 series-clinching victory. Schlittler combined with four relievers for a one-hit shutout against a listless San Francisco offense, and a pair of sixth-inning home runs from Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton proved to be all the firepower necessary to sew up the win.

Both starters worked brisk first innings—Schlittler collected a pair of Ks, the second of which came after a successful ABS challenge from Austin Wells. Both offenses then built rallies in the second, but both fizzled out. Giants starter Robbie Ray stranded two runners by getting new Yankee Randal Grichuk on a soft liner, then Schlittler navigated around a two-out double from Heliot Ramos.

The pitcher’s duel continued into the middle innings. Schlittler in particular was in a groove, working efficiently through four—requiring only 54 pitches. He struck out Rafael Devers and Willy Adames back-to-back to end the home fourth with six Ks. Ray responded by needing just five pitches to retire the side in order in the top of the fifth, but that just gave Schlittler the opportunity to rack up two more strikeouts in a row in a 1-2-3 bottom half.

So, don’t you think there’s a player who’s been conspicuously absent from this recap so far? A Bay Area native who tends to bring the fireworks? Well, wonder no longer: Aaron Judge has arrived in 2026. After a leadoff double from Paul Goldschmidt to start the sixth, Judge turned around an inside fastball and kept it fair down the left-field line for a towering two-run home run. His first hit and homer of the year made it 2-0 Bombers.

Ray would depart from the game a batter later, with that one blemish tarnishing what was a very strong season debut for the veteran. But the power party continued after he left the game, as Giancarlo Stanton had a mighty greeting for reliever Jose Buttó: a 414-foot moonshot to left field for a 3-0 Yankee edge.

It looked like Schlittler could have kept pitching for six more innings, but since he isn’t fully built up yet, Aaron Boone opted to lift him for Fernando Cruz just before the third time through the order. He got about as far as Boone could have hoped, finishing his season debut with a sparkling line: 5.1 innings, no runs, one hit, no walks, and eight strikeouts. He was ruthlessly efficient, with just 68 pitches and 49 strikes.

With the combined performances of Schlittler and Max Fried on Opening Day, the Yankees got scoreless outings from each of their first two starters. That matches just one other team in Yankees history: the 2003 squad with Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte.

The Giants’ offensive futility continued in the seventh, as even Tim Hill grabbed a pair of punchouts; both Devers and Adames fell by way of the K against the funky lefty. Then former Giant Camilo Doval continued his triumphant return to Oracle Park in the eighth by striking out the side amid groans from orange-and-black-clad partisans.

The Yankees threatened to expand the lead a few times in the late innings, but those attempts fell by the boards. José Caballero nearly manufactured a run by himself in the seventh, but was thrown out at home on a contact play gone awry. Then Caballero got an opportunity with the bases loaded in the eighth before rolling over to Matt Chapman at third base to end the inning.

So in a three-run game, it was up to David Bednar to grab his first save of the year. He started out with a groundball to third from Harrison Bader, then got WBC foe Luis Arráez to roll over to second. A two-out walk to Matt Chapman gave the Giants a pulse and handed an opportunity to habitual Yankee-torturer Devers, but the former Red Sock pounded a ball into the dirt for the 27th out. Bednar’s save capped off a nearly perfect pitching performance—just one hit allowed.

Tomorrow, the Yankees go for the sweep. (That’s right: they don’t play on Sunday.) Will Warren will get the ball against veteran righty Tyler Mahle, with first pitch coming at 7:15 PM. It’s another national TV game: FOX will have the call.

Box Score

Bennett Stirtz NBA mock draft projection: Where Iowa star is expected to land

The 2026 men's NCAA Tournament is down to its Sweet 16 and we'll have a Final Four by Sunday evening. For half of the college stars taking the court this weekend, it's one final opportuniy to impress NBA teams with their play at full game speed when the lights are brightest as this year's draft class comes into focus.

The 2026 NBA draft is expected to take place in late June. In USA TODAY's latest mock draft, Iowa's Bennett Stirtz  is expected to go in the first round. Here's how USA TODAY currently projects the guard's draft night will play out.

Our draft order is based on ESPN's projected records and factors in trades, including swaps and protections.

Bennett Stirtz 2026 NBA Draft prediction: Pick No. 19 overall, Toronto Raptors

Kalbrosky's Analysis:

The Raptors could use another guard and should have Bennett Stirtz on their priority list. After transferring from Division II to a mid-major and then to a high-major program, he is at the top of the class in creating his own shot off the dribble in isolation or the pick-and-roll. The All-Big Ten guard can also finish plays from dribble handoffs. The Raptors play at a slow pace, which would translate well for Stirtz, who is doing the same at Iowa. While he has not looked stellar during March Madness, he has still earned a spot in the Sweet 16.

See USA TODAY's full mock draft here

Bennett Stirtz player profile

(all stats as of March 15)

  • Position: Guard
  • Current Team: Iowa
  • 20 points per game
  • 2.5 rebounds per game
  • 4.5 assists per game
  • 49.2% field goal percentage
  • 37.6% three-point field goal percentage

Toronto Raptors 2026 projected draft picks

  • No. 17 and No. 47

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Bennett Stirtz NBA mock draft projection: Where Iowa star is expected to land

Braylon Mullins NBA mock draft projection: Where UConn star is expected to land

The 2026 men's NCAA Tournament is down to its Sweet 16 and we'll have a Final Four by Sunday evening. For half of the college stars taking the court this weekend, it's one final opportuniy to impress NBA teams with their play at full game speed when the lights are brightest as this year's draft class comes into focus.

The 2026 NBA draft is expected to take place in late June. In USA TODAY's latest mock draft, UConn's Braylon Mullins  is expected to go in the first round. Here's how USA TODAY currently projects the guard's draft night will play out.

Our draft order is based on ESPN's projected records and factors in trades, including swaps and protections.

Braylon Mullins 2026 NBA Draft prediction: Pick No. 29 overall, Cleveland Cavaliers

Kalbrosky's Analysis:

Braylon Mullins, a five-star recruit and former McDonald's All-American, missed the start of the season due to an ankle injury. But he has returned to action for the Huskies and has shown what makes him such an appealing player. He is a useful off-ball threat, which gives him an immediately practical role at the next level. The Big East All-Freshman wing shot 40.7 percent on 3-pointers during his first 18 games in the starting lineup, but it may be tough for scouts to forget his 0-for-8 performance from beyond the arc during his first game in March Madness.

See USA TODAY's full mock draft here

Braylon Mullins player profile

(all stats as of March 15)

  • Position: Guard
  • Current Team: UConn
  • 12 points per game
  • 3.5 rebounds per game
  • 1.4 assists per game
  • 43.5% field goal percentage
  • 34.5% three-point field goal percentage

Cleveland Cavaliers 2026 projected draft picks

  • No. 29 (via SA)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Braylon Mullins NBA mock draft projection: Where UConn star is expected to land

Keaton Wagler NBA mock draft projection: Where Illinois star is expected to land

The 2026 men's NCAA Tournament is down to its Sweet 16 and we'll have a Final Four by Sunday evening. For half of the college stars taking the court this weekend, it's one final opportuniy to impress NBA teams with their play at full game speed when the lights are brightest as this year's draft class comes into focus.

The 2026 NBA draft is expected to take place in late June. In USA TODAY's latest mock draft, Illinois's Keaton Wagler  is expected to go in the first round. Here's how USA TODAY currently projects the guard's draft night will play out.

Our draft order is based on ESPN's projected records and factors in trades, including swaps and protections.

Keaton Wagler 2026 NBA Draft prediction: Pick No. 8 overall, Atlanta Hawks

Kalbrosky's Analysis:

After trading away Trae Young, the Hawks could use a guard like Illinois standout Keaton Wagler using a first-round pick they received from the Pelicans. The 19-year-old guard has played a crucial role for his team to earn a spot in the Sweet 16. He projects as one of the best 3-point shooters in this class, shooting 40.8 percent from beyond the arc as a freshman while connecting on as many as nine 3-pointers in a game. The Big Ten Rookie of the Year has athletic limitations but is a cerebral basketball player who is also averaging 4.9 rebounds and 4.4 assists per game this season.

See USA TODAY's full mock draft here

Keaton Wagler player profile

(all stats as of March 15)

  • Position: Guard
  • Current Team: Illinois
  • 17.9 points per game
  • 4.8 rebounds per game
  • 4.4 assists per game
  • 44.6% field goal percentage
  • 40.2% three-point field goal percentage

Atlanta Hawks 2026 projected draft picks

  • No. 7 (via NOP), No. 22 (via CLE) and No. 57 (via BOS)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Keaton Wagler NBA mock draft projection: Where Illinois star is expected to land

Brayden Burries NBA mock draft projection: Where Arizona star is expected to land

The 2026 men's NCAA Tournament is down to its Sweet 16 and we'll have a Final Four by Sunday evening. For half of the college stars taking the court this weekend, it's one final opportuniy to impress NBA teams with their play at full game speed when the lights are brightest as this year's draft class comes into focus.

The 2026 NBA draft is expected to take place in late June. In USA TODAY's latest mock draft, Arizona's Brayden Burries  is expected to go in the first round. Here's how USA TODAY currently projects the guard's draft night will play out.

Our draft order is based on ESPN's projected records and factors in trades, including swaps and protections.

Brayden Burries 2026 NBA Draft prediction: Pick No. 9 overall, Milwaukee Bucks

Kalbrosky's Analysis:

Arizona freshman Brayden Burries had two breakout games in January, which helped solidify his draft stock. But the All-Big 12 guard has continued to display his tantalizing talent, scoring 31 points with seven rebounds and five steals against Colorado on March 7 and 20 points with 12 rebounds and five assists during a victory against No. 14 Kansas on Feb. 28. Burries has also looked like a lottery talent during March Madness, earning a spot in the Sweet 16. He has proven productivity and he is able to defend, relocate, move the ball and make 3-pointers off the dribble.

See USA TODAY's full mock draft here

Brayden Burries player profile

(all stats as of March 15)

  • Position: Guard
  • Current Team: Arizona
  • 15.9 points per game
  • 4.7 rebounds per game
  • 2.6 assists per game
  • 49.2% field goal percentage
  • 36.7% three-point field goal percentage

Milwaukee Bucks 2026 projected draft picks

  • No. 10

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Brayden Burries NBA mock draft projection: Where Arizona star is expected to land