I still have plenty of digging to do to get myself out of this home run hole, but I've hit a dinger here in four straight articles and have gone +10.71 units over those four days. Let's keep the good time rolling with some four-baggers and MLB player props.
The price on Alec Bohm is nearly 300 points higher than it has been all week, yet today's matchup might be the best one he's seen. Michael Busch is also being priced as a lefty-on-lefty matchup, but the Colorado bullpen will be forced to cover innings today and doesn't have a left-handed option available.
Finally, I need a piece of this Pirates/Athletics game because Sutter Health Park is a launching pad, and Bryan Reynolds stands out.
These are my favorite home run props for Wednesday, June 17.
UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.
Best MLB home run props today
Player to hit a HR
Odds
Alec Bohm
+940
Michael Busch
+508
Bryan Reynolds
+404
💲Today's HR parlay
+29317
Home run pick: Alec Bohm (+940)
Citizens Bank Park ranks as the second-best home run park on the board today, per Ballpark Pal. The Phillies have a home run edge against Sandy Alcantara, who owns the 18th-worst HR/9 rate among MLB starters over the last 30 days and doesn't generate many ground balls, with a 36.3% rate.
Philadelphia should get plenty of balls in the air, and somehow Alec Bohm is still paying a silly +940 to keep raking.
Bohm has been cruising at home in June with a 1.046 OPS. He has three home runs over his last 45 plate appearances and went deep again last night. Those previous home run prices were all shorter than +700. Where else are you going to find a cleanup hitter at this number?
Bohm also owns the second-best slugging percentage on the team over the last two weeks. He's seen Alcantara 32 times in his career and has hit .344 with an .851 OPS in that respectable sample.
I have this fair price closer to +650.
Time: 1:05 p.m. ET
Where to watch: NBC 10, Marlins.TV
Home run pick: Michael Busch (+508)
Here is another great price in a plus-plus matchup against the Rockies, who have a short-leashed starter with home run issues and will eventually turn things over to a depleted bullpen that gets hit harder than any unit in baseball.
Michael Busch will have the wind helping his pull-side power today at Wrigley Field, with 13-mph winds blowing out to right-center. The attractive price is largely due to the lefty-on-lefty matchup, but Colorado starter Sean Sullivan left his last outing due to illness and threw only 49 pitches. He owns a 5.76 ERA in Triple-A this season and has allowed 10 home runs in just over 54 innings.
He'll eventually hand the ball to a bullpen that has three relievers unavailable, including its only left-handed option. This isn't a true lefty-on-lefty matchup for nine innings, and Busch offers plenty of value for a hitter who owns the third-best slugging percentage on the team over the last two weeks.
The Cubs are hitting multiple dingers today, and Busch's HR price has been +330 and +375 in this series.
Time: 8:05 p.m. ET
Where to watch: Marquee Sports Network, Rockies.TV
Home run pick: Bryan Reynolds (+404)
Sutter Health Park once again projects as the best home run park on the slate today. Bryan Reynolds hit two dingers last night, and I'm backing him to add another.
Aaron Civale is starting for the Athletics and making his first start off the IL. Before going down last month, he owned one of the worst HR/9 rates in baseball, and is an extreme flyball pitcher.
He likely won't go deep and will hand things over to a bullpen that ranks fourth-worst in baseball by ERA over the last two weeks.
Time: 9:40 p.m. ET
Where to watch: SNP, NBCSCA
Josh Inglis' 2026 Transparency Record
HR picks: 16-113, -31.26 units
Today’s HR parlay
Alec Bohm
Bet Now +29317
Michael Busch
Bryan Reynolds
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 16: Nasim Nuñez #26 of the Washington Nationals celebrates with third base coach Victor Estevez #7 after hitting a triple in the fifth inning during the game between the Kansas City Royals and the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on Tuesday, June 16, 2026 in Washington, District of Columbia. (Photo by Rob Tringali/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The Nats have been a series winning machine lately, but sweeps have been hard to come by. They will look to change that against the struggling Royals. With a win today, the Nats would move to a wild 5 games over .500. Finishing off the sweep would be a big step for this group.
Blake Butera has made some tweaks at the bottom of his lineup. Jose Tena will get the start at DH. That means Jacob Young will sit and the outfield will be Daylen Lile in left, Dylan Crews in center and James Wood in right. Keibert Ruiz will be back behind the plate. Zack Littell had his first rough start in a while and is looking to bounce back.
With a righty on the mound, the Royals will add some left handers to the lineup. John Rave will make his first start of the series in right field. Lane Thomas remains in the lineup, but he is lower in the order. Catcher Carter Jensen is back in the lineup and leading off. That pushes Salvador Perez to DH. Luinder Avila gave up 8 runs and couldn’t get out of the 1st inning in his last start, but the righty throws hard.
The Nats have used late inning rallies to overcome the Royals in the first two games, and will look to finish off what would only be their second sweep of the year. Getting 5 games over .500 would be quite the accomplishment. Follow along in the comments down below and let’s go Nats.
CHICAGO — The Chicago Cubs placed right-handed pitcher Daniel Palencia on the 15-day injured list with right elbow inflammation hours after he struck out three in the ninth inning to pick up the win in a 5-4 comeback victory against the Colorado Rockies.
The Cubs recalled Gavin Hollowell from Triple-A Iowa to replace Palencia.
After Palencia walked the first batter he faced, Cubs manager Craig Counsell went to the mound with a trainer to check on Palencia, but left him in the game to finish the inning. The Cubs scored two runs in the bottom of the ninth to give Palencia (2-1, 2.70 ERA) his second win.
”I was just concerned that the body language wasn’t normal,” Counsell said. “He said he was fine but then he had symptoms afterward, the elbow didn’t feel great afterward and didn’t feel great today.”
Hollowell, 28, has made one appearance for the Cubs this season, allowing two runs in 1 2/3 innings.
Boyd to get minor league rehab
Starter Matthew Boyd (knee) is headed for a minor league rehab stint after a successful bullpen session, and Justin Steele (elbow surgery) has rejoined the team to begin a throwing program expected to last about three weeks, Counsell said.
The Cubs still hope Steele will pitch again this season despite a flexor strain that pushed back his timetable.
“He’s got runway,” Counsell said. “He can’t afford any setbacks. But we’ve got time.”
Cubs general manager Jed Hoyer said the wave of injuries to pitchers — the Cubs have eight pitchers on the injured list, including starters Boyd, Steele, Caleb Horton and Jamieson Taillon —- has pushed the depth the Cubs thought they had to the limit.
“We thought we had real numbers there, and then the number of injuries took care of it,” Hoyer said. “Now we have to be creative.”
Mar 30, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers guard Sam Merrill (5) goes up for a shot against Utah Jazz guard Bez Mbeng (21) during the second half at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images | Rob Gray-Imagn Images
When the Cleveland Cavaliers signed Sam Merrill to a contract extension and let Ty Jerome walk, it raised a lot of eyebrows. It created unnecessary discourse around who they should have let walk in free agency when they could have retained both at the expense of going further over the second apron. Merrill’s 2025-26 season showed why the Cavaliers invested in one of the league’s purest three-point shooters.
All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.
Regular Season Stats
12.8 points
2.6 rebounds
2.4 assists
46.1% FG
42.1% 3PT FG
85.5% FT
Merrill is arguably one of, if not the most straightforward, grades on this Cavaliers roster. The question boils down to “how well did Merrill shoot the ball in 2025—2026?” The answer to that question is very well.
It was not only that Merrill had his highest three-point percentage since his rookie season, but also that he accomplished this feat while shooting the highest number of attempts from the perimeter in his career.
If one word could describe Merrill’s past season, it is confidence. It takes a certain mindset to blindly fire from the perimeter as Merrill did. There is a sureness with his approach, combined with the ability makes him a one-man wrecking crew to opposing defenses. I’m not saying Merrill was the Cavaliers’ version of Steph Curry, however, the way that his presence can bend a defense is a difference maker alone.
Merrill is an active shooter; he does not sit idle in the corner and wait for the primary ball-handler to generate his looks for him. When Merrill is on the floor, he is arguably the most active player, constantly forcing opposing defenses to keep their eyes on him as much as any star the Cavs have in lineups with him.
What separated Merrill’s 2025-26 season from others is that it felt like the Cavs optimized Merrill as a player. They featured him in a way that previous versions of the team didn’t. This was best shown once the Cavaliers acquired James Harden at the trade deadline.
Harden passed the ball most to Merrill of anyone on the Cavs, averaging nearly 10 passes a game. James Harden and Merrill are an intriguing example of how Merrill’s game is far from just a floor spacer. Their partnership evolved into these convoluted pick-and-roll or pop actions where their basketball IQ would stand out almost instantly.
When players like Harden immediately take note of how dynamic a player Merrill can be, it validates the investment made into Merrill at the beginning of the season. The Cavaliers made the correct choice of extending Merrill and keeping his elite skills in house. As the Cavaliers look forward, it’s safe to say that Merrill will continue to play an integral part of the offense and motion of it.
Jun 17, 2023; Omaha, NE, USA; Tennessee Volunteers helmets lined up before the game against the LSU Tigers at Charles Schwab Field Omaha. Mandatory Credit: Steven Branscombe-Imagn Images
Tennessee picked up a commitment from Wyatt Hanoian on Tuesday, a transferring second baseman from Air Force. Hanoian made his commitment public on Tuesday night.
Hanoian hit .357 for Air Force this season as a true freshman, which put him on the Mountain West All-Freshman team. The switch-hitting second baseman hit six home runs, walked 32 times, hit 14 doubles and four triples this year.
The most impressive stat for Hanoian? A staggering on-base percentage of .498. For reference, Garrett Wright, who was seemingly always on base for Tennessee this season, held a .439 mark.
Hanoian made 33 starts at second base for the Falcons, along with eight in right field, a handful at third base, along with a few as the team’s designated hitter. The class of 2025 prospect was the No. 222 player out of the state of California in the recruiting cycle.
He joins former two-way Mercer star Braydon Kersey and Northwestern State pitcher Brody Trosclair in Tennessee’s current transfer portal class.
Infielder Wyatt Hanoian, @BaseballAmerica's No. 27 transfer, is transferring to Tennessee. Switch hitter with great zone control and feel for the barrel. Hit .357/.498/.573 with six HR, 14 doubles, four triples and 32 walks to 21 strikeouts in 2026. pic.twitter.com/YWrTtZdaFe
Former San Jose Sharks goaltender Magnus Chrona is heading back to his native Sweden, but that didn't prevent him from being involved in a trade on Tuesday.
Last month, Chrona signed with Brynäs IF in the Swedish Hockey League on a contract that runs through the 2027-28 season. Then, on Tuesday, his NHL rights were traded from the Nashville Predators to the Colorado Avalanche along with two third round draft picks with Ross Colton and Isak Posch heading the other way.
Chrona, 25, was traded to Nashville as a part of the trade that brought Yaroslav Askarov to the Bay Area during the summer of 2024. After the trade, he spent the entirety of his time in the Predators organization with their American Hockey League affiliate, the Milwaukee Admirals.
The former University of Denver goaltender only appeared in nine NHL games during his time as a Shark, registering a 4.71 goals against average and an .859 save percentage.
Since Chrona moved to North America to play at the University of Denver ahead of the 2019-20 season, he has yet to make his debut in the SHL.
New York, N.Y.: San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama reacts after hitting the floor hard against the New York Knicks during the fourth quarter of Game 3 of the NBA Finals on June 8, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York, New York. (Photo by J. Conrad Williams Jr./Newsday RM via Getty Images) | Newsday via Getty Images
To get a sense of how universally beloved Victor Wembanyama was before playing a single second of NBA basketball, look at the way the best players in the world described him ahead of his first professional minutes.
“I think he’s going to be one of the best to play this game,” added Giannis Antetokounmpo.
Wembanyama had a higher approval rating than pizza and puppies when the San Antonio Spurs selected him first overall in the 2023 NBA Draft out of Le Chesnay, France. The 7-foot-4 center with an 8-foot wingspan walked into the league looking like a wacky waving inflatable tube man and became the first unanimous Rookie of the Year since 2016, averaging 21.4 points and 10.6 rebounds. Despite being a 20-year-old rookie, he led the league in blocks with 3.6 per game, finishing second in Defensive Player of the Year voting behind fellow French big man Rudy Gobert. “Let [him] win it now,” Wembanyama said. “Because after that, it’s no longer his turn.”
Confident quips like that one — along with various philosophical ruminations — only worked to further endear Wembanyama to the basketball world and beyond. Legions of new fans from all over fell in love with his rare combination of brash competitiveness, raw vulnerability, confidence, calculation, and, of course, his one-of-a-kind style of play. One couldn’t help but stare in wonder at the way he dominated the game on the defensive end, where the biggest, fastest athletes in the world veered away from him at all costs.
Off the court, Wembanyama was unafraid to stand out in historically unmasculine ways. “Personally, I refuse to carry the burden of having to hide my emotion,” he said after crying on the court following a big Spurs win. In a league full of guarded superstars who would rather act tough than stand out, Wembanyama’s vulnerability was a breath of fresh air. “He has a spine, guts, and heart,” NBA journalist Michael Pina wrote. “To soberly possess such authenticity at that age, in front of the world, is special. It makes him such an easy player to bet on. He cares deeply.” The recognition only continued to build as Wembanyama won the 2026 Defensive Player of the Year award and finished third in MVP voting after leading the upstart Spurs to 62 wins and a spot in the NBA Finals this June.
However, over the past few weeks, people have started to turn on Wembanyama. Though it started with Oklahoma City Thunder and New York Knicks fans, it wasn’t just egg-gate — basketball fans everywhere are suddenly turning on the NBA’s golden child. “I cannot stand this guy,” basketball podcaster David Jacoby said on “The Zach Lowe Show.” “I hate his outfits. I hate his face. I hate his hair. I hate everything about him.”
The question is, why?
Is it because Wembanyama is a frontrunner — a rare exception in being considered the world’s best basketball player before winning a title? Is it because he’s a bully, throwing elbows and jabs at opposing players without facing repercussions from the NBA? Or because he’s too full of himself? Too corny? Too calculated? Or is it simply because he has the conviction to parade around with his dogs out in the Garden?
Wembanyama the frontrunner
On May 18, despite coming into Game 1 of the Western Conference finals as significant underdogs to the reigning NBA Champion Thunder, Wembanyama became just the fifth player in NBA history to drop 41-points and 24-rebounds in a playoff game. The Spurs won the double-overtime classic, 122-115, with Wembanyama looking like the best player on the floor over two-time NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.
Typically, an athlete isn’t crowned as the best player alive until they win the big one, especially in basketball, where one player can affect the game in so many different ways. But Wembanyama is different. “The best player in the (expletive) world,” Spurs guard Stephon Castle announced for all the world to hear in a postgame interview on NBC. And it wasn’t just him: basketball analysts and former players were equally loud about Wembanyama now having the claim to basketball’s throne.
It was clear to anyone watching that he was on his way there. But now? At age 22? For some, he was being punctually recognized. For others, it was too much praise too fast, resulting in him becoming overrated. “Wemby ain’t the one, yo. Y’all crowning Wemby too fast,” radio host and culture critic Charlamagne tha God said on “Breakfast Club Power 105.1.” “I don’t see the dominance yet.”
Wembanyama the bully
Wembanyama’s frustration had been mounting throughout the postseason, where he was subjected to more contact than anyone since prime Shaquille O’Neal. And it boiled over during the opening minutes of Game 3 of the NBA Finals, when Wembanyama shoved Knicks star Jalen Brunson to the floor despite the ball not being anywhere in their vicinity.
“I hate him. He’s a bully,” Knicks fan and head of content at The Ringer, Sean Fennessey, said on the “Bill Simmons Podcast.” “He’s dirty, like it’s very obvious; you can watch clips from the game, he plays like a bully, and he’s not being officiated like a bully, and it’s annoying. So, it’s hard to watch the series.”
Knicks fans like Fennessey had a legitimate gripe: Wembanyama already accumulated two flagrant fouls earlier in the postseason, most notably for losing his temper and elbowing Minnesota Timberwolves forward Naz Reid in the head during their second-round series, which resulted in an ejection but not a suspension. A third flagrant would have put him one short of a one-game suspension in the NBA Finals — a death knell as far as the NBA’s surging ratings were concerned. And while the league had an opportunity to retroactively upgrade the clear violation to a flagrant foul, they chose not to. “It’s just better for the league if there’s six games or seven games instead of four games, and so it’s hard not to think that when you’re watching the game,” Fennessey added.
The tinfoil hats came out, and anyone rooting against the Spurs was quick to point out that the NBA was protecting their golden child, who brought so many new, global eyeballs to the game that he could do no wrong. The animosity only grew from there.
Wembanyama the tryhard
After missing a buzzer-beating jump shot that would have won Game 2 of the NBA Finals for the Spurs, Wembanyama needed to decompress. “The Playoffs, it’s like… a whirlwind. It’s hard to put your head out of the water,” he said. “I need some time off, let my brain cool down, recover. Recover as much for the body as for the mind.”
Last Sunday, in between Games 2 and 3, he went to Gramercy Park in lower Manhattan with his sister, Éve, to sketch. All of a sudden, his park rendezvous became the main storyline, with hilariously inaccurate hypotheses flying about regarding the calculated, pretentious superstar. “He’s corny as fuck,” one Knicks fan said to the Channel 5 YouTube channel. “And he’s just trying way too hard to make a storyline for himself.”
Finally, after the Knicks won Game 5 of the NBA Finals and put an end to their 53-year championship drought on Saturday, Wembanyama returned to the Spurs locker room without shaking hands with his opponents. It drew the ire of fans and players alike, with four-time NBA Champion Draymond Green saying, “Look your killer in the face. You got to look them in they face… and so to see them walk off the court, it was disheartening.”
But isn’t Wembanyama supposed to be different? Isn’t that what people liked about him in the first place?
Wembanyama the product of the internet age
It’s clear that people are turning on Wembanyama for the same reasons they originally fell in love with him, from his awe-inspiring feats of athleticism to his brash competitiveness to his quirky hobbies. These characteristics endeared him to people until they didn’t. It begs the question: Is it possible that Wembanyama changed during the postseason, behaving in a more distasteful way? Or is there something about the postseason spotlight that changed the way we think about him?
One could argue that he brought the villain narrative onto himself, going out of his way to provoke Knicks players and fans. There’s no doubt that Wembanyama enjoys being an agitator at the center of the basketball universe, growing increasingly disdainful of the media as the postseason went along before saying “see y’all… never” at his final press conference of the season. But it’s not so simple as to say Wembanyama chose villainy for himself.
Wembanyama isn’t the modern NBA’s first villain, and he won’t be the last. Just a few weeks ago, Gilgeous-Alexander had a similar fall from grace. After ethically working his way up the basketball ranks from an undersized underdog in Hamilton, Ontario to the best player on earth, he was framed as an unskilled flop-artist who was ruining basketball (and the future of the sport). What do Wembanyama and Gilgeous-Alexander have in common, other than the fact that they are both foreigners?
They are both products of the internet.
An unfortunate truth of the modern world is that people increasingly encounter reality through “algorithmic feeds built to warp reality, on platforms with every commercial incentive to keep users scrolling,” culture and technology writer Lane Brown writes in a Vulture story titled “The Feed is Fake.” Now that everything an athlete says or does can be recorded, cut up, aggregated, and misrepresented online through bad-faith actors who understand that extreme content gets rewarded, celebrity athletes like Gilgeous-Alexander and Wemby are subjected to the internet and its hot-take machinery finding something they don’t like about them and drumming it up until it becomes a story.
“On social media, popular opinion is being formed, measured, and manipulated all at once,” Brown continues. “And every signal the platforms produce — a trending song, a backlash, a talking point, the feeling that ‘everybody’ is suddenly talking about the same thing — can now be fabricated by unseen actors with hidden agendas.” As hateful content gets drummed up by the algorithm, trust in journalism declines and good reporting disappears behind paywalls, the average fan and media member are forced to look towards the comment sections for a sense of what’s being said. Talking heads pick up on that and bam! You got a snowball of negativity becoming too big to stop because on the internet, hate rises to the top.
It happened to Gilgeous-Alexander. And now it is happening to Wembanyama — and it will only get worse. Next season, the French Freak will be back in San Antonio with more tricks in his bag and more haters magnifying and criticizing his every move. Because in the modern NBA, the true sign of superstardom isn’t rings or MVP trophies: it’s hate and villainy. Get used to it.
The Tampa Bay Rays, ranked second in the AL East with a 41-29 record, face the Los Angeles Dodgers, who are first in the NL West with a 47-27 record. The Los Angeles Dodgers are favored with a -160 moneyline compared to the Tampa Bay Rays' +135. Starting pitchers are Shane McClanahan for Tampa Bay, with a 3.23 ERA, and Shohei Ohtani for Los Angeles, with a 1.06 ERA.
How to watch Tampa Bay Rays vs. Los Angeles Dodgers
The New York Mets, ranked fifth in the NL East with a 32-41 record, face the Cincinnati Reds, who are fifth in the NL Central with a 35-37 record. The New York Mets are favored with a -135 moneyline compared to the Cincinnati Reds' +110. Starting pitchers are Nolan McLean for the Mets, with a 4.01 ERA, and Nick Lodolo for the Reds, with a 5.21 ERA.
We got a big ol' slate in front of us, and there are quite a few MLB pitcher props that have me absolutely giddy today.
I will be fading an all-time great, while backing another to do what he does best. There is plenty to like on the MLB player props board, so let's cash some tickets and have a day!
*Editor's note* Max Scherzer has been scratched from tonight's start*
Best MLB strikeout props and starting pitcher picks today
Player
Pick
Odds
Shohei Ohtani
Over 6.5 Strikeouts
+117
Max Scherzer
Under 3.5 Strikeouts
-112
Gavin Williams
Over 2.5 Earned Runs
+108
Strikeout prop: Shohei Ohtani Over 6.5 strikeouts (+117)
It is about time my MLB picks back the great one on the bump.
Shohei Ohtani looks determined to make a serious run at the NL Cy Young Award, and he finds himself in another strong spot to clear 6.5 strikeouts against a scrappy Tampa Bay Rays lineup that has been a bit swing-happy lately.
Over their last 10 games, six Rays hitters own a strikeout rate of at least 24.3%. Those numbers remain fairly consistent away from home as well, with five hitters carrying a strikeout rate of 23.3% or higher across their last 60 road plate appearances.
Ohtani has been dealing at Dodger Stadium this season, posting a 33.1% strikeout rate at home. He has also generated a 31.5% called strike plus whiff rate, a 14.1% swinging strike rate, and a 30.5% whiff rate in home starts.
The superstar also owns the No. 1 pitcher rating in both timeframes on Batters-Box. In 14 elite-rated pitching matchups, Ohtani has recorded six or more strikeouts in 71.43% of those starts and has gone Over this 6.5 strikeout number 50% of the time.
While the sample size is still relatively small, his performances this season suggest he is hunting hardware, and that hardware is the Cy Young Award.
I would play this down to +105 and gladly take the value on the 6.5 number. If you prefer the safer route at over 5.5 strikeouts, I would look to pair it with another prop from today's card.
Time: 3:10 p.m. ET
Where to watch: SNLA, RAYS
Earned runs prop: Gavin Williams Over 2.5 earned runs (+108)
I found it very hard to pass up backing one of the best lineups in baseball to score at least three runs against one of the worst-rated pitchers on today's slate.
That is especially true when you consider how dominant the Milwaukee Brewers have been at American Family Field, where they are averaging more than three first five innings runs per game this season.
Milwaukee's offense has been seeing the ball exceptionally well over its last 12 games, ranking second in wOBA, third in both wRC+ and OPS, and fourth in contact rate.
The Brewers also feature five elite-rated bats in Batters-Box's current season ratings as they draw Cleveland Guardians right-hander Gavin Williams, who owns the second-worst pitcher rating over that same span.
Williams brings in poorly rated ISO and hard-contact metrics for this matchup. On the road this season, he has allowed 47.1% hard contact along with a 54.8% elevation rate.
The Cleveland starter also owns a 5.00 xERA and has surrendered 57.6% hard contact with an 18.6% barrel rate across his last 90 road batters faced. During that stretch, opponents have posted a .394 xBA, .747 xSLG, and .361 xwOBA.
Asking the seventh-highest scoring first five-inning offense in baseball to push across three runs against a pitcher allowing this much quality contact feels well worth a sprinkle.
If the earned-run aspect gives you any concern, the Brewers' first five-team total over is a perfectly viable alternative.
Time: 7:40 p.m. ET
Where to watch: BREW, CLEG
Colby Marchio's 2026 Transparency Record
Prop picks: 225-387-35, +10.54 units
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
Have a day, Mikey Romero… and about five other guys! The former first rounder had three hits off of the Iron Pigs (Phillies AAA), two of which being RBI knocks in vital spots. One opened scoring in the third with two outs, and the other added a huge cushion run in the top of the ninth to score Anthony Seigler, who himself had just broken a tie with a single of his own that carried a .278 WPA. Finally, Vinny Capra’s had two hits, Tsung-Che Cheng notched his sixth home run of the season and Tyler Uberstine had a solid four innings in relief.
The Sea Dogs may have been the beneficiary of four defensive errors by the Patriots (Yankees AA) and that may have been extremely important in what would become a walkoff win, with an ending sequence must have been exhilarating to be a part of. With Portland’s chances of winning hovering around 10 percent to start the 9th inning, Marvin Alcantara hit a home run to tie things up. After Abhram Liendo reached on a single, Franklin Arias was then intentionally walked, and new arrival Stanley Tucker made them pay for advancing Liendo with a walk-off double. Tucker is right at home with his new team: in addition to pinch hitting for a rehabbing Romy Gonzalez, who himself had a two-run homer as he works his way back up to Boston, he also swiped his first two bags in Double-A. Good day to be a second baseman for the Sea Dogs!
Besides a 3-for-3 performance by Newton-native Jack Winnay, who’s slashing .343/.465/.629 in the month of June so far and who also boasted a double and a walk Tuesday night in Jersey Shore (Phillies High-A), the Drive had just three more hits and stranded eight. But, it didn’t matter that Winnay and Enddy Azocar were the only batters really seeing the ball well last night, because former Vanderbilt Commodore Devin Futrell had a fantastic outing. He pitched seven scoreless innings, striking out five and allowing just two hits. Steven Brooks would allow a solo shot, but that was the closest the Drive would come to letting that caliber of start slip into obscurity.
As the RidgeYaks head into their third series of June, they still have won just one game on the month. This one wasn’t particularly close despite the pitching staff striking 13 Nationals out in Fredericksburg. This game looked like it may have been close for the first few innings, but the RidgeYaks had no answer for the relief staff Fredericksburg trotted out, having just one baserunner after the fourth; meanwhile, Salem kept letting runs through.
With rain possibly on the horizon, please do not have a wet Wednesday.
GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA - MARCH 19: Henri Veesaar #13 of the North Carolina Tar Heels reacts in the second half against the VCU Rams during the first round of the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Bon Secours Wellness Arena on March 19, 2026 in Greenville, South Carolina. (Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Depending on how the board falls, North Carolina big man Henri Veesaar could be available when New York is on the clock on draft night next week. Should the Knicks consider him with their 24th or 31st selection?
Projected Draft Range: Late first to early second round
The Numbers
Veesaar turned himself into a legitimate NBA Draft prospect after transferring from Arizona to North Carolina. He started all 31 games for the Tar Heels, averaged 17 points and 8.7 rebounds, and earned second-team All-ACC honors.
The most interesting numbers in Veesaar’s sheet are linked to his shooting. Veesaar made 42.6% of his 94 three-point attempts, showing real catch-and-shoot touch for a 7-footer. He hit spot-up threes, trailer threes, and pick-and-pop looks, giving scouts the stuff of their dreams heading into the NBA in what looks like a smooth transition to the pro game.
Veesaar was also extremely efficient near the rim, converting more than 75% of his half-court attempts at the basket. He added 2.1 assists per game against 1.7 turnovers, showing enough passing feel to operate as more than a standstill stretch big.
That mix of shooting, touch, passing, and size explains why ESPN’s mock draft has Veesaar going to New York with the No. 24 overall pick as a late first-round selection.
What Does He Do Well?
Floor Spacing: Veesaar’s jumper is his cleanest NBA skill. He shot 42.6% from three at North Carolina and looked comfortable on catch-and-shoot attempts, especially above the break and in pick-and-pop situations. For a 7-footer, that kind of shooting would do wonders for spacing his team’s offense.
Pick-And-Roll Versatility: He can roll, pop, slip screens, and make quick reads after catching the ball. Veesaar already understands timing and angles, which helps him find soft spots in the defense instead of relying only on power.
Touch Around the Rim: Veesaar is not an explosive athlete, but he has soft hands and comes with reliable finishing. He can do it all in the paint from hooks, layups, floaters, and quick catches around the basket, but not so much flashy dunking.
Passing Feel: Veesaar showed strong high-low chemistry with phenom Caleb Wilson at UNC and made smart reads from the short roll, post, and perimeter. He is not a hub-style creator, but he can move the ball quickly and punish rotations.
Rebounding: At 227 pounds, he is not built like a traditional bruiser, but he averaged 8.7 rebounds and showed solid fundamentals on the defensive glass. He reads the ball well and uses his reach effectively.
What Are the Concerns?
Strength and Physicality: This is the biggest negative factor to considering using a pick, let alone if the Knicks move one of their selections, on Veesaar. He needs to add 15 to 20 pounds without losing mobility, which is never guaranteed to happen smoothly. Right now, stronger NBA centers could move him off spots, seal him deep, or knock him off balance on rolls and post touches.
Defensive Translation: Veesaar is not an elite rim protector. He blocked 1.2 shots per game, but his impact comes more from length and positioning than verticality in the paint. NBA teams may question whether he can anchor a defense.
Ball-Screen Defense: He struggled at times when switching onto guards and was not always active enough in drop coverage. He can play too upright, which creates problems against quicker ball-handlers.
Free Throw Shooting: His three-point shooting was excellent, but the 61.5% free-throw mark is a small concern. It does not erase the jumper, but it does make the shooting projection slightly less automatic. And it’s not that the Knicks haven’t already had their fair share of Mitch’s issues there…
The Knicks Fit
The Knicks enter the 2026 NBA Draft with picks No. 24, No. 31, and No. 55. Veesaar makes sense if New York wants a frontcourt piece who can give the second unit a different offensive look than the one built around Mitchell Robinson.
In fact, Veesaar is the total opposite to Mitch: not a vertical lob threat or solid defensive anchor. Veesaar is closer to the other side of the Robinson archetype: a skilled stretch big who can space the floor, pass from the middle, finish with touch, and keep offensive possessions moving.
That matters for a team built around Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, however, as Veesaar could function as a backup center who keeps the floor open, gives guards room to attack, and allows the Knicks to run more five-out or pick-and-pop actions with the bench.
The concern is whether New York can live with the defensive questions. Would Mike Brown trust a young big who cannot hold up physically, communicate in coverage, or survive playoff matchups? Veesaar would need strength development and probably would not be a finished product as a rookie.
Still, if the Knicks believe their strength staff can add functional weight to his frame, the offensive upside is obvious. Skilled 7-footers who shoot, pass, and finish efficiently are not easy to find late in the first round.
NBA Comparison
Best-Case Comparison: Kelly Olynyk (Skilled stretch big who shoots, passes, plays from the elbows, and survives despite his subpar defense)
Median Outcome: Mike Musical (Foor-spacing backup big whose shooting and offensive feel keep him useful, but whose defense limits his role)
Low-End Outcome: Frank Kaminsky (A skilled college big whose shooting, touch, and passing flashes at times, but whose defense and strength cap his NBA career and end up cutting it short)
The Verdict
Think about it at 24. If a higher-upside wing or guard is still available, the Knicks may be better off prioritizing athleticism, defense, or shot creation. Veesaar’s defensive questions are real, and the Knicks should not ignore them if they want a plug-and-play prospect to bolster next year’s rotation.
Draft him at 31. Veesaar is worth serious consideration if he reaches the Knicks’ second selection, especially if New York wants a cost-controlled stretch big with real offensive skill. The value here is obvious, and the Knicks should pounce, as Veesaar is the next-bext 7-footer in the whole draft after lottery-bound Aday Mara. Veesaar has the size, shooting, passing and touch to appeal a pro franchise, and is coming off a productive high-major season. He may never become a defensive anchor, but he could develop into a useful rotation center who gives New York a different kind of frontcourt option.
James Brown, the fabulous soul singer, was known as the Hardest Working Man in Show Business due to his constant touring, tireless work ethic, and electric live performances.
I’ve already told my family that I want Brown’s I Feel Good as my exit song at my funeral. I figure it’s good to send everyone out on a high note.
Who was the hardest-working man in baseball history? I’m going with Satchel Paige. Paige pitched for more than 40 years in locales as diverse as Bismarck, North Dakota, and the Caribbean. He pitched in small-town sandlots and before crowds of more than 78,000 at Cleveland Stadium. If there was a paycheck and a crowd, Satchel found a mound.
Paige always seemed to have a little something extra. When he was a child lugging bags at the train station, he brilliantly devised a pole-and-rope contraption that allowed him to carry more than one bag at a time. At a dime per bag, it added up. A coworker said Satch, who was born Leroy Robert Page, looked like a satchel tree. The name stuck. Credit his parents with the change from Page to Paige, which sounded more high class. So Satchel Paige it was.
Just barely 12, Satch was sentenced to six years at the Alabama Reform School for skipping school and petty theft. It seems like a stiff sentence, but Satchel came out of the school knowing how to pitch, courtesy of the Reverend Moses Davis, a trustee of the school and its baseball coach.
After his release from reform school, Paige joined the semi-pro Mobile Tigers. By 1926, he was pitching for the Chattanooga White Sox of the Negro Southern League.
One of the interesting things about Paige is that he was one of the few Negro League players to have played in almost every year of the league’s existence. The Negro Leagues started in 1920 and ran through 1948. Yes, there were a few teams that continued to play after 1948, mostly on a barnstorming basis, but the league was never the same after integration. Paige pitched for the Kansas City Monarchs from 1939 to 1942 and led the team to four consecutive Negro American League pennants, including a four-game sweep of Josh Gibson and the Homestead Grays in the 1942 Negro League World Series.
Today we throw around words like epic and legendary far too casually. Bo Jackson throwing Harold Reynolds out at home plate was epic and legendary. The wedding dance you went to last weekend? Probably neither. Satchel Paige was a living legend. He was often epic and legendary.
Bob Feller, one of the all-time greats, spent many offseasons barnstorming with Paige. Feller was a man who considered himself one of the greatest pitchers ever, yet when pressed, he admitted that Paige was the greatest he had ever seen.
Joe DiMaggio, who knew a thing or two about pitchers, said Paige was the “best and fastest” he’d ever faced. I love this description from Hall of Fame catcher Biz Mackey, who said Paige’s fastball could pound steak into hamburger. Paige did have a legendary fastball, and he gave different pitches colorful names: Bee Ball, Midnight Rider, Trouble Ball, Long Tom, and Jump Ball. He also had a hesitation pitch that drove hitters crazy.
When Paige worked out for the Cleveland Indians, owner Bill Veeck said Paige threw four of his five pitches directly over a cigarette.
With someone like Paige, whose career spanned six decades, how does one rank his legendary moments? You don’t. These, however, are my favorite Satchel moments, in no particular order.
Striking out Josh Gibson
The setting was Game Two of the 1942 Negro League World Series between the Kansas City Monarchs and the Homestead Grays. The great Buck O’Neil was playing first base for the Monarchs that day. This story was one of Buck’s favorite stories to tell, and no one could tell a story better than Buck O’Neil.
Buck said Paige came on in the seventh inning in relief of Hilton Smith. With two outs and a man on third and the Monarchs clinging to a 2-0 lead, Satch called Buck to the mound and said, “Nancy, you know what I’m fixin’ to do?”
Buck: “Yes, you’re fixin’ to get these other guys out.”
Satch: “No, I’m going to walk these next two guys so I can pitch to Josh.”
O’Neil promptly called time and motioned manager Frank Duncan to the mound. Duncan listened to the story, then agreed with Satch, saying, in effect, that the people in the crowd wanted to see Satch pitch to Josh. Paige promptly walked the next two hitters. Gibson stepped in, looking like a baseball version of Paul Bunyan.
Gibson, a fearsome slugger, was baseball’s most feared power hitter.
The loquacious Paige then told Gibson what he was going to throw him. Ballsy.
“Josh, I’m going to throw you a fastball.” Boom, strike one.
“Josh, I’m going to throw you another fastball, in about the same location, only faster!” Boom, strike two.
“Now Josh, I’m ahead 0-2 and I’m supposed to brush you off the plate. But I’m not going to throw smoke at yo yoke. I’m going to throw a pea at yo knee.”
Fastball at the knees. Strike three.
Three blazing fastballs, and Josh Gibson, arguably the greatest hitter in Negro Leagues history, never moved the bat off his shoulder.
The story is now nearly 84 years old, and everyone involved is long gone. But isn’t that one of the things that makes baseball such a romantic game?
The tales passed down from generation to generation. Is it 100 percent factual? Who knows? There are several versions of this story floating around. I don’t care if it is 100 percent factual. I like the story just as it is.
The Nancy Story
This is one of the most famous Paige stories and has several variations. My favorite comes from a description by Buck O’Neil, as quoted by Joe Posnanski in his terrific book, The Soul of Baseball. According to Buck, Satchel was barnstorming through North Dakota (who knew North Dakota was such a baseball hotbed?) when a beautiful young woman named Nancy took a seat close to the dugout. Satchel always had a weakness for a beautiful woman, and he possessed the necessary game to interact with them.
After a night on the town, Satchel invited Nancy to join them at their next stop in Chicago. Ever the gentleman, Satch gave Nancy cash for the train fare and instructions to meet them at the Evans Hotel. True to her word, Nancy showed up at the Evans and retired to Satchel’s room.
Buck was sitting in the lobby enjoying an iced tea when Satchel’s fiancée, Lahoma, unexpectedly arrived. Buck, ever the alert wingman, ran interference and instructed the bellman to put Lahoma in a vacant room next to his and to alert Satch.
The surprised Paige climbed down the fire escape, then walked around to the front of the hotel where Buck and Lahoma were waiting.
“Lahoma! What a pleasant surprise to see you!”
Later that evening, Buck knew Satchel would have to make amends with Nancy, so he kept his ears open.
Sure enough, Buck could hear Satchel lightly rapping on Nancy’s door, followed by, “Nancy. Nancy. NANCY!”
This brought a suspicious Lahoma out of her room.
Once again, Buck, being a gold-medal wingman, opened his door and said, “Satch, are you looking for me?”
Paige: “Yes, Nancy, what time is the game tomorrow?”
From that point on, Buck’s new nickname was Nancy.
Making His First Cleveland Start
Revolutionary owner Bill Veeck signed Paige to a major-league contract with the Cleveland Indians in early July 1948. On July 9, 1948, the 42-year-old Paige made his major-league debut, throwing two scoreless innings of relief. He brought the crowd of almost 35,000 to its feet with his hesitation pitch. Paige made seven more relief appearances, throwing a total of 18 innings, striking out 10 while allowing only four runs.
American League president, and resident killjoy, Will Harridge eventually declared the hesitation pitch illegal, saying that if Paige threw it again, it would be called a balk.
Finally, on August 3, the Indians gave Paige his first start. A crowd of 72,562 fans—an attendance record for a night baseball game—packed Cleveland Stadium to witness the event. Paige went seven innings, scattering seven hits. The Washington Senators nicked him for two runs in the first before Paige settled down. He surrendered only one more run before yielding to Ed Klieman, who closed out the 5-3 Cleveland victory.
Paige went 6-1 with a 2.48 ERA down the stretch for the eventual World Series champions and drew huge crowds whenever he pitched.
A crowd of 51,013 packed Comiskey Park for his August 13 start, a five-hit complete-game shutout.
Another 78,382 showed up for his August 20 start in Cleveland, where he threw a three-hit complete-game shutout.
Paige drew 201,829 fans for those three starts, which is astounding.
It’s also worth noting that 1948 was the last time Cleveland won the World Series.
In doing so, Paige became the first Black pitcher to appear in the World Series when he made a relief appearance in Game Five.
Paige played for the Indians in 1949, then followed Veeck to the St. Louis Browns, where he pitched from 1951 to 1953.
Even more astounding, Paige made the American League All-Star team in both 1952 and 1953 at the ages of 45 and 46.
Once his contract with the Browns expired, Paige returned to barnstorming.
Which brings us to our next segment…
Pitching for the Kansas City Athletics at the Age of 59
Kansas City Athletics owner Charlie Finley declared that September 25, 1965, would be Satchel Paige Day. In addition to honoring Paige, Finley signed the 59-year-old pitching legend and announced that Paige would start against the powerful Boston Red Sox.
By 1965, Paige was more than a star in Kansas City. He was a living legend.
His night began in pure Satchel fashion, with Paige sitting in a rocking chair, a blanket draped over his legs, and a pretty nurse rubbing liniment on his famed pitching arm. When the game started, the rocker was moved to the A’s dugout, which was below field level. Paige rocked away while the A’s batted.
When asked about the rocker, Paige delivered this pearl:
“At my age, I’m close enough to being below ground as it is.”
Finley asked Paige if he could pitch three innings.
Paige replied, “That depends. How many times a day?”
For this promotion, Finley did it right. He invited former stars of the Monarchs and the Kansas City Blues to a luncheon honoring Paige and even hosted a three-inning exhibition before the game, which featured Buck O’Neil, Hilton Smith, Cool Papa Bell, and Bullet Rogan.
It had been 12 years since Paige had pitched in the majors. He ran into a little trouble in the first, giving up a two-out double to Carl “bleeping” Yastrzemski before retiring Tony Conigliaro on a fly ball to left to escape the jam.
Paige sailed through the second and third innings while Kansas City squeezed across a run to give him the lead.
Paige came to the mound in the fourth, but after throwing his warm-up pitches, manager Haywood Sullivan emerged from the dugout and, to thunderous boos, removed him from the game.
As Satchel approached the dugout, the fans erupted in a standing ovation, prompting Paige to doff his cap twice and bow to the adoring crowd. The stadium lights were then turned off, matches were lit, and the crowd of 9,289 sang “The Old Gray Mare.”
In attendance that night was a nine-year-old from Independence named Rick Sutcliffe.
Sutcliffe later said, “I’m quite sure that game had something to do with me wanting to be a baseball player.”
Home plate umpire Bill Valentine said that Paige was really pitching and that Boston was doing its best to hit him.
“He kept the ball down, kept it moving below their knees,” Valentine recalled. “I’ll bet he wasn’t throwing 80 mph, and they’d swing and say, ‘Son of a bitch, that pitch was right there.'”
Jim Gosger, who later played for Kansas City and made both the first and last outs against Paige that night, later said:
“My two biggest thrills in baseball were batting against Satchel Paige and hitting a home run against Whitey Ford the only time I faced him. As far as I’m concerned, Satchel was a prince.”
Indeed.
Paige even came to the plate in the second inning and struck out to end the frame.
Kansas City led 2-0 after six innings, but Boston, sparked by a two-run inside-the-park home run by Conigliaro in the eighth, won the game 5-2.
Also playing in the game were José Tartabull (father of future Royal slugger Danny Tartabull) and Diego Seguí (father of David Seguí).
Paige was paid $3,500 for his three innings of work and needed only 28 pitches to retire 10 batters.
Truly amazing stuff for a 59-year-old.
But as Satchel so often said:
“How old would you be if you didn’t know how old you were? Age is a question of mind over matter. If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.”
Post-baseball, Paige continued to live an interesting life. He even had his six rules for living:
Avoid fried meats, which angry up the blood.
If your stomach disputes you, lie down and pacify it with cool thoughts.
Keep the juices flowing by jangling around gently as you move.
Go light on the vices, such as carrying on in society. The social ramble ain’t restful.
Avoid running at all times.
Don’t look back. Something might be gaining on you.
One more Satchel story. September 14th, 1951. Fenway Park. The Red Sox are having a good year, sitting at 84 and 54. St. Louis is well, the St. Louis Browns. They’re playing out the string at 43 and 95. Satchel comes in to pitch the 9th inning of what is a 9 to 6 Boston win. He gets Johnny Pesky on a groundout to the second baseman. The second batter is Ted Williams. Williams will soon be off to Korea to fight in his second war. This is a huge matchup for both men. The greatest hitter who ever lived against the greatest pitcher who ever lived. Satch was 44 at the time, while Williams was still in his long prime. 1951 was like a lot of summers for Williams. He led the league in multiple offensive categories, walks, slugging percentage, on base percentage and total bases and yet somehow only finished 13th in the MVP vote. He was far and away the best player in the American League, except in the eyes of the voters.
Paige got a couple of quick strikes on Williams on breaking pitches before somehow slipping a fastball by the Splinter for strike three. Understand, Williams did not strike out a lot. in 1951, he struck out 45 times in 675 plate appearances. Yet somehow, someway, Paige dug into his bag of tricks and got Williams. Ted was so disgusted with himself that upon returning to the dugout, he smashed his bat against the wall until it shattered into several pieces. After the game, Williams took the remnants of that bat to the St. Louis clubhouse and asked Paige to sign it. Today that bat is in the possession of the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
The respect between those two men was great. When Williams was inducted into the Hall of Fame, he used his speech to shame and implore the Hall to start accepting some of the great Negro League players into the Hall. In 1971, Paige became the first black player elected to the Hall.
In 1968, he became a deputy sheriff with Jackson County, Missouri, a job that didn’t require him to show up. He later tried running for political office.
In August 1968, he joined the Atlanta Braves as an advisor, in an attempt to qualify for his major league pension.
In 1973, Paige joined the AAA Tulsa Oilers as a pitching coach.
Paige suffered a fatal heart attack at his home in Kansas City on June 8, 1982. He was 75. Paige is interred at Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery, on the city’s south side.
Mar 26, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Fans stand under a 2026 All Star Game sign during a game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Texas Rangers at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images
Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Rangers fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.
All Star voting is underway, and so our Rangers Reacts survey this week asks, which Texas Rangers player do you think is most deserving of an All Star nod?
MILWAUKEE — Guardians All-Star third baseman José Ramírez had surgery to remove the hook of the broken hamate bone in his left hand.
The team said in a statement that the procedure was performed in Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania, by Dr. Thomas Graham.
“We knew he was going to need surgery, so earlier today he was able to get it done,” Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said.
Ramírez suffered the injury during the fifth inning of a 3-1 win over the Detroit Tigers when he fouled out on a pop up to Tigers catcher Dillon Dingler.
It only is the second time in Ramírez’s 14 big league seasons that he has been placed on the injured list.
The seven-time All-Star also broke the hamate bone in his right hand in 2019 and only missed a month. The normal recovery time post-surgery is five to seven weeks.
“That’s part of life. Those are things that are going to happen, so I’m not upset. It’s just part of the game and just got to keep going,” Ramírez said about the injury.
The 33-year-old native of the Dominican Republic has played in a franchise-record 1,681 games. He is also the only player in Cleveland’s 125-year history to have at least 300 stolen bases and 250 home runs.
In other moves
Cleveland also placed outfielder Angel Martínez on the 10-day injured list due to a nondisplaced fracture in his left foot. Martínez’s injury occurred after fouling off a pitch.
Martínez, who leads the Guardians with 11 homers, could be out four to six weeks, Vogt said.
“He walked in Monday probably knowing that we’d probably get some testing done on Monday if he wasn’t feeling better and he wasn’t,” Vogt said. “MRI and CT scan both revealed a fracture in the foot, so it will be four to six weeks for Angel.”
Outfielder Chase DeLauter sustained a rib injury when he collided with the outfield wall. Tests show bone bruising and a small fracture, but DeLauter was not headed to the injured list, Vogt said.
“It’s very, very, very small, something that’s day to day,” Vogt said. “We’ll see how it feels. Definitely something to tolerate, he can play through. We just have to weight out day-to-day how it’s feeling, kind of gradually see it.”