Alex Cora was offered Phillies' job days after getting fired. Why did he turn it down?

Alex Cora, who was fired Saturday by the Boston Red Sox, was officially offered the Philadelphia Phillies managerial job on Monday afternoon but rejected it, two persons with direct knowledge of the decision told USA TODAY Sports, instead deciding to instead spend time with his family.

They spoke on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the situation.

Cora’s decision led the Phillies to promote bench Don Mattingly to be their manager Tuesday after firing Rob Thomson.

Cora, who’s in the second year of a three-year, $21.75 million contract, is expected to sit out now for the rest of the season. When asked if he plans to stay home the rest of the summer, Cora said in a text message to USA TODAY Sports: “Full-time dad."

Cora’s decision leads to the first father/son, GM/manager combination in baseball history with Preston Mattingly Does that make Don Mattingly the the first manager who has ever spanked his GM?

Chad Tracy, 45, who replaced Cora, and Mattingly, 65, will be given the opportunity to manage their new teams for the rest of the season before a decision is made whether they will be kept past this year.

The firings leave Carlos Mendoza of the New York Mets, Joe Espada of the Houston Astros and perhaps Matt Quatraro of the Kansas City Royals on the hot seat.

Here's a look at some of the top managerial candidates, for the rest of this season and beyond:

Alex Cora

Cora, who managed the Red Sox for eight years and led them to the 2018 World Series title, is the manager everyone wants. He’s widely considered one of the finest in the game, and since he’s being paid by the Red Sox through 2027, can be acquired at a bit of a discount.

Cora likely will be offered the Phillies’ job again at the end of the season, and perhaps the New York Mets’ job even sooner. Yet, since he informed the Phillies that he wanted to take time off, he likely would give the same answer to the Mets. This would leave the Mets likely turning to bench coach Kai Correa for the rest of the season if they part ways with Mendoza.

Brandon Hyde

He was the American League Manager of the Year in 2023 after leading the Baltimore Orioles to a 101-victory season. Yet, he was fired last year after they got off to a 15-28 start. He’s also working in Tampa as a special assistant.

Carlos Beltrán

He was actually hired to manage the Mets after the 2019 season, but fired before he managed a game because of his role with the Houston Astros’ 2017 cheating scandal. Currently a special assistant with the Mets, he could become the first manager in MLB history to have to take time off in his first year to attend his own Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

Albert Pujols

Pujols could have been the Los Angeles Angels’ manager this year, but his contract demands and request for personnel changes led the Angels to instead turning to Kurt Suzuki on a one-year contract. He also finished runner-up to Craig Stammen for the San Diego Padres’ job.

Rocco Baldelli

Baldelli, 44, who’s working as a special assistant for the Dodgets, led the Minnesota Twins to three postseason berths in seven years. He’s also a native of New England and would be a natural candidate in Boston.

David Ross

Ross, a two-time World Series champion as a player, played for the Red Sox and managed the Cubs for four years, leading the Cubs to an 83-79 record his final season. He was fired only because Craig Counsell became available. He’s working for ESPN these days but is itching to return.

Yadier Molina

Just like Pujols, another future Hall of Famer. He’s widely considered one of the greatest defensive catchers in history, with a brilliant baseball mind. The only real question with Molina is whether he would have the patience to deal with the media twice a day.

Omar López

He is currently the Astros’ bench coach, but his stock soared after leading Team Venezuela to the WBC championship. If the Astros fire Espada, he’s the natural successor.

Rob Thomson

If someone wants a veteran manager, at least for the interim, Thomson owns the highest winning percentage (.568) in Phillies franchise history and guided them to four postseason appearances in four years. He’s only the fourth manager in MLB history to reach the postseason in each of his first four seasons.

The Phillies were 9-19 when he was fired, but he shouldn’t be blamed for Phillies’ offense to go AWOL, their rotation hitting the skids, and the defense becoming erratic.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Alex Cora declined Phillies manager job after being fired by Red Sox

Alex Hoppe gets comfortable with the Mariners

Apr 27, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Seattle Mariners relief pitcher Alex Hoppe (48) delivers a pitch against the Minnesota Twins in the eighth inning at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images | Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

About the only good thing to come from last night’s 11-4 drubbing at the hands of the Minnesota Twins was the big-league debut of hard-throwing Alex Hoppe. You know we love a debut around here, and it was extra special that it was such a quiet stinker of a game that Brad Adam could easily track down Hoppe’s wife Sasha, able to be present for his big-league debut, for a fully wholesome in-game interview.

We’ve been interested in Hoppe since the Mariners traded minor-league catcher Luke Heyman for him this winter, and that interest ratcheted up during spring training, where he was hard to miss, with his cornstalk shock of white-blonde hair and loud stuff. I was able to sit down with Hoppe this spring and ask him some questions about his experience leaving the club that drafted him, and what he’s excited about in becoming a Seattle Mariner.

Hoppe reported to Mariners camp this spring in mid-January, eager to acquaint himself with his new club and a whole new part of the country. Born in Clinton, Iowa (home of the former Mariners Low-A affiliate the LumberKings) and spending his college years at UNC-Greensboro before being drafted by the Red Sox, the 27-year old, deeply polite Midwesterner had never been west of Kansas City, Missouri before coming to the Mariners organization, and was eager to get comfortable with both a new club and a new environment.

“I said, I’d like to come down early, is that allowed?”

In Arizona, Hoppe took part in “Shove Camp,” the strength-and-conditioning intensive the Mariners put their pitching prospects through prior to spring training. He spent time getting to know the coaching staff and his fellow players, as well as learning how the Mariners do things, which he felt gave him a leg up coming into the spring.

Hoppe admitted he was startled to be traded from the organization that had drafted and developed him, and concerned about moving to an unfamiliar part of the country, but the more he thought about it, the more excited he was about the idea of being a Seattle Mariner.

“I think a lot of [the shock] was location-wise. Is it going to be different? But then I started thinking. I’ve heard the Mariners are one of the best organizations in baseball at developing pitching, so this is a great step for my career, going forward.”

He prepared for his new organization by connecting with friends and acquaintances who had firsthand experience with the Mariners, who all told him the same thing:

“They said, hey, they’re going to take what you do best and try and get you to do that as much as you can, and stay true to what your strengths are and amplify those strengths. So that was what I knew before I even became a Mariners and so far, that’s held true.”

It’s easy to see what Hoppe’s strengths are in watching him pitch: his slider—the pitch that got him his first two big-league strikeouts in last night’s game—is a swing-and-miss pitch that tunnels nicely with his four-seam fastball. The four-seamer, which he describes as his favorite pitch, comes in violently, with hard downward action thanks to his higher arm angle as he aims to backspin the pitch through the zone. Hoppe says the Mariners have emphasized to him that they see him as a “north-south” pitcher who will attack the top and bottom of the zone.

“The first part that probably stands out is the velo. That’s a big part of who I am, I throw hard.”

But that big velocity – his four-seamer is between 96-99, which he rounds out with a hard slider (87-88), a two-seamer the Mariners encouraged him to add, a cutter (91-92), and an occasional changeup – hasn’t always been part of Hoppe as a pitcher.

“It’s been a progression for me. When I went into college I topped out at 88. But I’ve always been a late bloomer physically, and going into college, I was like a buck-sixty and five foot ten and I’d never been in a weight room, really. So it’s been a steady progression. As my body physically developed, I got more accustomed to throwing programs at the collegiate level, and so throughout college I was able to increase my velocity. It wasn’t until my last year in college when I was hitting upper-9s, and then it wasn’t until my first year in pro ball where I had touched 100 for the first time. It’s just always been a steady progression as I’ve matured physically. Just, I’ve always been a little bit behind on that compared to some other guys, which is perfectly fine. It’s just been a challenge to go, like, from throwing upper 80s to all of a sudden touching triple digits, learning how to harness that.”

Harnessing that big stuff has been Hoppe’s challenge as he’s worked his way up the minor-league ladder, and while he was with Boston he worked on strategies to help him do that.

“It’s about staying within yourself, not trying to do too much. A big thing I’ve been working on in my career is like, I don’t need to be at 110% to throw 100 if I stay controlled, stay within my mechanics, and don’t get rushed or anything like that. I’ll still have the velo that I want, I’ll be over the plate more. Because that’s that biggest thing for me. Yes, I can throw the hard fastball and the hard secondaries and such, but the challenge for me is like, can we consistently be over the plate? Because when I do that, I have great success.”

When Hoppe joined the Mariners, those conversations continued. Hoppe said he was impressed with how many forms communication can take in the Mariners organization.

“If you’re a visual learner, they may put up a PowerPoint. If you’re a talker, multiple conversations where we just talk. Some guys are just active, so you’ve gotta see it live. Some guys really like to dig into the data, and some guys just want to be told exactly what to do.”

“I value data. I love using it in practice. When it comes to game time, go out and compete; for me, personally, I can’t be thinking about all the data points and all the numbers and statistics and stuff when I’m out there, because at the end of the day, I’m trying to win my 0-0s and my 1-1s.”

One of the biggest things that’s helped Hoppe adjust to his new environment is the amount of positive feedback he’s received from Mariners pitching development, who he says 100% believed in him as a big-leaguer maybe even before he believed in himself as one.

“I know I have my faults and stuff, but they told me, do this and you’re gonna help us. You’ve got all the hard stuff done, just make these fine little tweaks and you’ll be right here with us competing your ass off and winning us ballgames…They’ve been very vocal about it. The staff has been like, hey, we see you as this type of player, doing this for us, helping us get to and win a World Series. That’s what we see for you. We believe in you, even if you may not believe it yet. They’ve been great at vocalizing that and making sure I know that as a player too.”

The first part of the prediction is checked off: Alex Hoppe is, as of last night, officially a big-leaguer. Now the next, and harder part: making those tweaks to stay one, and in doing so, helping the big-league club win games and get closer to the ultimate vision board entry, the World Series.

Giants-Phillies Series Preview: It could be worse!

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 24: Kyle Schwarber #12 of the Philadelphia Phillies reacts after striking out in the ninth inning against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on April 24, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Just three weeks ago, the Giants hosted the Philadelphia Phillies in a series I figured was over before it started. As you’ll recall, the Giants sent the Phillies away from Oracle Park in grand style: back to back shutouts. It didn’t exactly send Philadelphia into a tailspin, but after entering the series in San Francisco 6-4, they’ve gone 3-15. The two teams have effectively swapped positions.

Are these 9-19 Phillies firmly in “also ran” territory with five months of the season remaining? Well, they fired their manager, Rob Thomson, this morning. He was the guy who took over after Gabe Kapler. Replacing Thomson is… haha — wait, seriously? Don Mattingly!

I had forgotten he managed the Marlins for seven seasons (2016-2022) and only in the pandemic-shortened 2020 season did he have a winning record (2020).

Anyway, a manager is usually only as good as their roster, and in this Phillies roster ol’ Donnie Two Times might have found himself firmly between those Marlins teams and his Dodgers teams. There are certainly good players on this roster, but as we saw in San Francisco and as we can see by their record, the bloom is off the rose for this particular group.

You know, unless Don Mattingly energizes them for this series.

But the 10-game losing streak they’ve already suffered this season is their longest since 1999. They’ve also lost 11 of 12 heading into this series. Their 9-19 start is their worst since 2002. The vibes are nonexistent at this point.

On the other hand, there’s a chance the Giants might have actually lost some of their momentum with the travel day. Going 4-2 on a homestand that included the Dodgers was such a good time and their comeback from a 3-0 deficit in the finale against the Marlins so heartening that getting on a plane and heading east seems like it could’ve cooled off a team that was warming up.

Can the confusion and consternation of the Phillies situation make it easier for the bats to stay in a groove? We’ll find out, I suppose. The Giants faced two of the pitchers in this series back in San Francisco and got 11 hits and 4 runs against the Phillies’ ace Cristopher Sanchez. In three starts since, he’s given up 26 hits in 17.12 IP while striking out 20. He has a 4.11 FIP in that span as well.

You’ll recall that the Giants shutout the Phillies in the final two games of the series and since then, Philadelphia has mustered just 3.75 runs per game (60 runs in 16 games) and a team line of .218/.284/.370 with a 7.2 BB% and 21.7 K%. It was actually lower on the 9-game homestand they had following the Giants series (3.66).

That Phillies series really does feel like the first key turning point of this Giants season and having a rematch so soon could be tricky. The Phillies have enough dangerous talent that the Giants are better off seeing them in a state of transition than at full strength and you just hope they can get through this series before they coalesce around their new manager.

Who is Don Mattingly.

A famously not great manager.

Still, it’s Baseball, so, you never know. Maybe this is the situation that works for manager and team. But, you know, they should put it together after the Giants leave town.

Series overview

Who: San Francisco Giants (13-15) at Philadelphia Phillies (9-19)
Where: Citizens Bank Park | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
When: Tuesday & Wednesday at 3:40pm PT, Thursday at 10:05am PT
National broadcasts: MLB Network simulcast (Wednesday)

Projected starters
Tuesday: Tyler Mahle (RHP 1-3, 5.26 ERA) vs. Jesus Luzardo (LHP 1-3, 6.91 ERA)
Wednesday: Logan Webb (RHP 2-3, 4.86 ERA) vs. Cristopher Sanchez (LHP 2-2, 2.94 ERA)
Thursday: Adrian Houser (RHP 0-3, 7.36 ERA) vs. Andrew Painter (RHP 1-2, 5.25 ERA)


Players to watch

Phillies

Kyle Schwarber: Again, always keep an eye on this guy. He’s been the second-best hitter on the Phillies in the 16 games since the Giants series (135 wRC+) but with 6 homers and an 11% walk rate. On the negative side, just a .197 average and 29.6 K%.

Bryce Harper: He has been the best hitter on the Phillies over the same span (150 wRC+) and has mixed in 4 homers, 2 doubles, a triple, and a home run to go with a 10.4 BB% and 20.9 K%.

Jesus Luzardo: It’s going to be tough to get to Cristopher Sanchez twice in a month, I’d think, so the series might come down to how they handle the other Phillies lefty. He’s had just one great start this season (11 strikeouts and 1 run in 6.2 innings at Coors Field), but his only other decent start was last week against the Cubs in Chicago where he allowed just 1 run in 4.2 IP to go with 4 walks and only 3 strikeouts. He’s made 6 career starts against the Giants and sports a 5.37 ERA in 31 IP. Last year, though he was 1-0 in 2 starts with a 2.19 ERA.

Giants

Adrian Houser: It’s probably not going to go well for the Giants’ well-paid pitching machine, but he’s pitched okay at Citizens Bank Park for his career. In 4 games and 2 career starts, he’s 1-1 with a 3.38 ERA and — gasp — just 1 home run allowed. Now, that count could go up right away, but on the other hand, the Giants might need him to spin a gem for them to pull out a series win.

Heliot Ramos: He appears to be sneaking back to his lefty-mashing ways (career .849 OPS vs. LHP) with a triple slash of .292/.346/.500 (.846 OPS) in 26 PA against them this season. He’s been on a roll of late, with a .932 OPS over his past 15 games (55 PA).

Matt Gage/Ryan Borucki: It’s going to come down to getting some key outs against lefties and, well, these are the non-Erik Millers available to the Giants.


Tony Vitello watch

You know what? It could be worse for Giants fans, right? The Giants could’ve dropped $10 million on the manager’s position and be in a Phillies or Mets situation right now and we’d all have to sit there and let things play out while the front office hoped like hell that things would turn around. Vitello looks less deer in the headlights just a month into the job and, well, that’s a very good thing. But if Don Mattingly is able to exact some revenge against the Giants by catching Tony Vitello doing something “first time manager”-ish, I’m gonna lose it.

The Giants were lucky that Don Mattingly was the Dodgers’ manager for all those years. Sorry, Phillies fans.


Prediction time

The Giants will figure out a way to win a game in this series… right? Don Mattingly isn’t going to turn this whole Phillies mess around in a single series… right??

The Penguins needed Sidney Crosby to do Sidney Crosby things against Philadelphia. The captain delivered

Sidney Crosby

Apr 27, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby (87) /looks on against the Philadelphia Flyers during the third period in game five of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Charles LeClaire/Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

PITTSBURGH — The sequence might as well have served as a metaphor of the Pittsburgh Penguins’ season.

There Sidney Crosby was, his left knee throbbing after absorbing a blistering shot from the point by teammate Ryan Shea, limping off the ice and disappearing down the tunnel in the second period of Game 5 against Philadelphia.

A few minutes later, with the Penguins’ longtime captain still out of sight, the Flyers tied it. Suddenly, a contest Pittsburgh had controlled for significant stretches was gone. The young Flyers, many of them experiencing the cauldron of playoff hockey for the first time, were surging. A quick playoff exit for a team that spent six months defying expectations loomed.

And just like that, Crosby’s familiar No. 87 returned to the bench. And just like that, he was over the boards and on the ice. And just like that, he was finishing off a shift by flipping the puck to Pittsburgh defenseman Kris Letang at the top of the Flyers’ zone.

Crosby’s back was to the play when Letang’s somewhat innocent shot from the point sailed wide of the Philadelphia net. Flyers goaltender Dan Vladar kept his eyes forward, expecting a big rebound. It never came.

The puck instead glanced off the back of Vladar’s left leg, then his right and trickled across the goal line to provide the goal that turned out to be the game-winner as Pittsburgh fended off elimination and forced maybe more than a little doubt into the mind of the Flyers, whose once-comfortable 3-0 lead in the best-of-seven series no longer feels quite so comfortable after Pittsburgh’s 3-2 victory.

Game 6 is in Philadelphia and the Penguins will head across the state not only with momentum, but also with their unquestioned leader starting to look like his old self after an uncommonly quiet start.

Save for his brief retreat to the trainer’s room, Crosby was everywhere. He assisted on Connor Dewar’s goal in the second period, got another primary assist on Letang’s second goal in as many games and nearly added a goal himself when his diving flick toward the Flyers’ open net in the final minutes clanged off the left post.

So much for looking every bit of 38. It was vintage Crosby.

“When things get hard and your back is against the wall, there is no doubt in my mind that he’s going to lead the charge in terms of elevating and finding a way to do everything possible to help us win this game,” first-year Penguins coach Dan Muse said.

Crosby has 21 points in 24 games in his career when facing elimination. His 100th career playoff victory looked an awful lot like the 99 that came before it, with Crosby doing a little bit of everything, including taking a wallop off his left knee, then returning a few minutes later as if nothing happened.

“I feel good,” he said. “I mean, that’s stuff that happens sometimes and you try to go to the front of the net and it’s just one of those ones that found its way. Sometimes they hit you, sometimes they go by.”

Crosby absorbed a direct hit, albeit from friendly fire, and bounced back immediately. It’s been that way all season for the Penguins, whose surprising season has been marked by righting themselves just when it looked like things were about to get sideways.

What they’re trying to pull off now would trump everything that came before it by a wide margin. The odds remain slim — only four teams have ever rallied after losing the first three games of a series — but they’re not as slim as they were when the puck dropped for Game 4.

Crosby will take it. So will his team.

“I think the last couple games we found our stride a bit,” he said. “We should feel good about that ... we’re playing good hockey and we’ve got to go in there and find a way to win again.”

Giants vs Phillies Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The San Francisco Giants and Philadelphia Phillies begin a three-game set tonight at Citizens Bank Park, with first pitch scheduled for 6:40 p.m. ET. 

My Giants vs. Phillies predictions are eyeing San Fran to keep up their winning ways behind Tyler Mahle. 

Read more in my MLB picks for Tuesday, April 28. 

Who will win Giants vs Phillies today: Giants moneyline (+145)

The San Francisco Giants are still two games below .500, but they’ve started to play better lately. The visitors have won four of their last six contests, and they just took two out of three from the Marlins. 

Tyler Mahle takes the bump in the opener, and he was brilliant last time out, tossing seven scoreless against the powerful Los Angeles Dodgers. The righty is also very familiar with the Philadelphia Phillies lineup, holding them to a .235 average across 68 at-bats.

On the other side, Jesus Luzardo has been awful. He sports a 6.91 ERA, and that balloons to 10.69 across three home starts. He’s given up nine earned runs across his previous two outings.

While the Giants are hitting only .222 against him, they’re starting to find a rhythm offensively lately, and opponents are batting .333 against Luzardo at Citizens Bank Park.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Luzardo has allowed 19 earned runs in only 16 innings at home, and the Giants have scored 12 runs across their last two contests.

Giants vs Phillies Over/Under pick: Under 8.5 (-130)

The Under has cashed in four of the last six meetings between these two teams. Philadelphia’s offense is non-existent, ranking 28th in the big leagues in runs. While the Giants are producing lately, they’re 29th in runs scored as well. 

Luzardo’s struggles are a clear opportunity for San Fran to tag him for some runs, but Mahle is coming in confident after dominating the Dodgers, and the Phillies are truly a lost cause offensively at the moment. They’re hitting just .219 overall, and .223 at home.

I believe you’ll see the Giants generate offense against Luzardo. However, Mahle will toss another gem, and add to the Phillies’ misery. Expect a relatively low-scoring contest in the City of Brotherly Love. 

Quinn Allen's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 7-7, -3.94 units
  • Over/Under bets: 7-7, -1.19 units

Giants vs Phillies odds

  • Moneyline: Giants +142 | Phillies -168
  • Run line: Giants +1.5 | Phillies -1.5
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 | Under 8.5

Giants vs Phillies trend

The Giants have hit the Moneyline in seven of their last 10 games (+4.80 Units / 42% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Giants vs. Phillies.

How to watch Giants vs Phillies and game info

LocationCitizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
DateTuesday, April 28, 2026
First pitch6:40 p.m. ET
TVNBCSBA, NBCSP
Giants starting pitcherTyler Mahle
(1-3, 5.26 ERA)
Phillies starting pitcherJesus Luzardo
(1-3, 6.91 ERA)

Giants vs Phillies latest injuries

Giants vs Phillies weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Report: Guardians prospect Travis Bazzana, 2024 top overall pick, will be called up Tuesday

CLEVELAND — Travis Bazzana, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2024 amateur draft, will be called up by the Cleveland Guardians and could make his major-league debut during Tuesday night’s game against the Tampa Bay Rays, a person familiar with the move told The Associated Press.

The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the Guardians have not announced the roster move.

The 23-year-old second baseman is the top prospect in the Guardians’ organization. He is batting .287 with two home runs and 10 RBIs in 24 games for Triple-A Columbus.

Juan Brito, who is expected to be sent down to make away for Bazzana, only is batting .176 in 15 games and has 17 strikeouts in 51 at-bats.

Brito was called up from Columbus on April 7 after Gabriel Arias was placed on the injured list due to a strained left hamstring.

Bazzana showed his potential during the recent World Baseball Classic, when he had two hits and a home run for Australia in its 3-0 win over Chinese Taipei.

Bazzana missed two months last season due to an oblique strain. He had a .239 batting average with nine home runs, 39 RBIs and 12 stolen bases with Double-A Akron and Columbus.

Lakers' Austin Reaves reportedly optimistic about playing in Game 5 Wednesday

For the past two games, Austin Reaves has been listed as questionable due to an oblique strain, then ruled out just before game time.

For Game 5 at home Wednesday, things may be different — Reaves is optimistic about playing, reports Shams Charania of The Athletic. The Lakers, up 3-1 on the Rockets, have the chance to close out the series on Wednesday on their home court, advancing to face the Oklahoma City Thunder in the next round.

Players are notoriously poor judges of how soon they can return from an injury, but the fact that Reaves has been "questionable" for the past two games means he is near a return. The Lakers will play at least three more games this postseason, and it feels like there is a very good chance we'll see Reaves in at least one of those. Maybe starting Wednesday.

Having Reaves back on the court would be a massive lift for Los Angeles, giving it another shot creator so the entire load does not fall on the shoulders of LeBron James (who has handled that weight brilliantly through four games). Reaves was the Lakers' second-best shot creator this season, averaging a career-high 23.3 points while shooting 36% from beyond the arc, adding 5.5 assists and 4.7 rebounds per game. When Doncic was out earlier in the season, Reaves showed he could be a team's primary shot creator for a stretch (and Doncic is not yet close to returning from his hamstring strain, based on what coach JJ Redick has said to date). The return of Reaves forces the Rockets to adjust their defensive matchups — one of their elite defenders needs to be on him.

Having Reaves and LeBron as the shot creators also means Luke Kennard and Marcus Smart can return to more of an off-ball role, where they are comfortable and thrive.

Redick likely would try to keep Reaves' minutes under control in a return — he's not getting run out there for 40 minutes — but any time would be a lift for the Lakers.

On the Rockets' side, a Kevin Durant return for Game 5 seems unlikely, Charania reports. Durant is dealing with a bone bruise after rolling his ankle this series, and he has played in just one game so far. The Rockets' offense, when forced to slow down in this series, has been disjointed and just kind of a mess. Things looked better in Game 4, when the Rockets' defense held the Lakers' offense in check, forced turnovers and allowed Houston's young players to get out and run in transition. That is how the Rockets can thrive in this series.

It just will be harder to do that with Reaves back in the lineup.

Raptors vs Cavaliers Same-Game Parlay for Wednesday's NBA Playoffs Game 5

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If you bet on the last meeting between the Toronto Raptors and Cleveland Cavaliers, you likely still have a sour taste in your mouth regardless of if you won any wagers or not.

The great thing about Game 5 is there’s really nowhere to go but up after a historically bad shooting night from both teams. My same-game parlay for Toronto vs. Cleveland calls for another close contest, circling two of Toronto’s top stars to shine.

Here are my best NBA picks and predictions for Raptors vs. Cavaliers on April 29.

Our best Raptors vs Cavaliers SGP for Game 5

SGP leg #1: Raptors +8.5

The Toronto Raptors won ugly and knotted this Round 1 series at 2-2, heading back to Cleveland for Game 5. The Raptors made some defensive tweaks to take away the Cleveland Cavaliers’ off-ball action, and their length has started to slow down Cleveland’s outside threats. This isn’t the same team that got knocked around in the first two games in Cleveland, and I like Toronto to cover as sizable road dogs on Wednesday.

SGP leg #2: RJ Barrett Over 19.5 points

RJ Barrett shot the ball 22 times with a spike in usage in Game 4. Unfortunately, he was among the many throwing up bricks. He finished with 18 points — in part to a 1-for-4 night from the stripe — but was Toronto’s most consistent threat in the three games prior. He opened the series shooting better than 64% and topped 20 points in each of the first three outings. He’s projected for as many as 22 points in Game 5.

SGP leg #3: Scottie Barnes Over 7.5 assists

With point guard Immanuel Quickley sidelined for the series, Scottie Barnes is Toronto’s primary ball handler. His assist production spiked when the PG was out at the end of the season, and he’s primed for another big passing performance, as the Cavs' defense tries to take the ball out of his hands. Bad shooting spoiled 16.0 potential assists in Game 4, but Toronto won’t stay cold, and Barnes will dish out eight or more dimes in Game 5.


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See our full Raptors vs Cavaliers Game 5 preview

Get Jason Logan's full breakdown of this game, including his best bet, plus the latest NBA odds, injuries, and betting trends, in his Raptors vs Cavaliers predictions for Game 5.

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Former NBA player Damon Jones pleads guilty in federal gambling probe

Former NBA player and assistant coach Damon Jones pleaded guilty in a Brooklyn federal court on Tuesday, April 28, admitting he took part in a widespread illegal gambling probe in which inside information was shared about players' injuries, and also that he took part in rigged poker games.

Jones pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud during the first of his plea change hearings. According to sentencing guidelines, Jones is expected to receive a sentence of 21 to 27 months and is scheduled for sentencing on Jan. 6. Jones is prohibited from gambling or being involved with members of organized crime.

The 49-year-old Jones, who played 11 seasons in the NBA, earning nearly $22 million in salary, remained free on bail after his arrest in October, and is the first of the 30 people to enter a plea in the case. He originally pleaded not guilty on Nov. 6 to wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering, which carry a maximum punishment of 20 years in prison.

"I would like to sincerely apologize to the court, my family, my peers, and also the National Basketball Association," Jones said in a prepared statement during his court appearance.

According to prosecutors, Jones gave NBA lineup decisions and pre-released medical information to his co-conspirators, who then placed significant wagers based on the tips. The medical information allegedly involved LeBron James and Anthony Davis, who were playing for the Los Angeles Lakers at the time.

Before a Lakers game against the Milwaukee Bucks on Feb. 9, 2023, authorities say Jones texted a co-conspirator, alerting them to bet on the Bucks before the injury statuses of both teams were released. James ended up not playing in the game because of a lower-body injury, and Los Angeles went on to lose the game 115-105.

Jones and James were teammates with the Cleveland Cavaliers from 2005 to 2008, and he was an assistant with the team from 2016 to 2018.

Jones was also accused of using his notoriety to get people to poker games rigged by organized crime figures in order to steal money from them, sometimes using technology, including poker chip trays with hidden cameras, and rigged shuffling machines with the ability to read the cards in the deck.

During one game, prosecutors said, Jones was paid $2,500 for his participation in a game in Hamptons, a swanky New York resort on Long Island.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Damon Jones, ex-NBA player, pleads guilty in federal gambling probe

Dodgers won 20th game before losing 10th

Apr 24, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts (30) speaks in the dugout before the game against the Chicago Cubs at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images | William Liang-Imagn Images

Monday night against the Miami Marlins came awfully close to a series-opening loss for the Dodgers, trailing by two runs since the fifth inning before three walks, a ground-rule double and Kyle Tucker’s walk-off two-run single delivered the 5-4 win in the ninth.

Instead of losing their 10th game of the season, the Dodgers won their 20th. They are tied with the Atlanta Braves for the best record in baseball at 20-9. The Dodgers have outscored their opponents by 68 runs thus far, the best run differential in baseball, three ahead of Atlanta. It’s the seventh-best run differential through 29 games in franchise history.

During the Dodgers’ streak of 13 consecutive playoff appearances and counting, only twice did they get to 20 wins this quickly. In 2020 they started 21-8 en route to a 43-17 (.717) record in the shortened season and their first championship in 32 years. In 2022, the Dodgers were 20-9 on their way to 111-51 (.685), the most wins in the National League in 116 years. That year did not lead to postseason success, however.

In all, 18 Dodgers teams have won at least 20 of their first 29 games. Here’s how they did in those seasons:

  • 25-4 — 1955 Brooklyn (98-55, won World Series)
  • 23-6 — 1977 Los Angeles (98-64, lost World Series)
  • 22-7 — 1941 Brooklyn, 22-7 (100-54, lost World Series)
  • 22-7 — 1952 Brooklyn (96-57, lost World Series)
  • 21-8 — 1940 Brooklyn (88-65, 2nd in NL)
  • 21-8 — 1942 Brooklyn (104-50, 2nd in NL)
  • 21-8 — 1983 Los Angeles (91-71, 2nd in NL West)
  • 21-8 — 2009 Los Angeles (95-67, lost NLCS)
  • 21-8 — 2020 Los Angeles (43-17, won World Series)
  • 20-9 — 1888 Brooklyn (88-52, 2nd in American Association)
  • 20-9 — 1892 Brooklyn (95-59, 3rd in NL)
  • 20-9 — 1899 Brooklyn (101-47, 1st in NL)
  • 20-9 — 1943 Brooklyn (81-72, 3rd in NL)
  • 20-9 — 1965 Los Angeles (97-65, won World Series)
  • 20-9 — 1974 Los Angeles (102-60, lost World Series)
  • 20-9 — 1981 Los Angeles (63-47, won World Series)
  • 20-9 — 2022 Los Angeles (111-51, lost NLDS)
  • 20-9 — 2026 Los Angeles (TBD)

Of those first 17 starts this good, eight Dodgers teams reached the World Series, plus the 1899 Brooklyn Bridegrooms who had the best record in the National League but had no postseason in which to participate.

The cumulative winning percentage of those teams on the season was .619, which translates to 100 wins in 162 games. The worst winning percentage among those 17 teams was by Brooklyn in 1943 at .529, which translates to 86-76 over 162 games. The median wins per 162 games of this group was 102 (really 101.6) wins, by the 1952 Brooklyn team that went to the World Series.

Way back in February, we asked you to predict how many games the Dodgers would win in 2026, Now a little over a month into the season, we’re asking again: How many regular season games will the Dodgers win this year?

Sabres are on the verge of a long-awaited series win, and the Ducks are too

Buffalo Sabres

Apr 26, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; The Boston Bruins and Buffalo Sabres fight along the boards during the third period in game four of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

Bob DeChiara/Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

The Buffalo Sabres have shed the burden of a 14-year absence from the Stanley Cup playoffs that set a dubious NHL record and surged toward their next big thing.

Beat the Boston Bruins at home in Game 5 and the Sabres will skate in the second round for the first time since 2007.

“You can expect this to be the hardest game that we’re going to have to play short-term here, because they’re in the nothing-to-lose-and-everything-to-gain category,” said Sabres coach Lindy Ruff, whose first stint with the team was a 15-year run that included the most recent postseason appearance and series victory — plus four trips to the conference finals and one Stanley Cup finals berth.

The Bruins, behind first-year coach Marco Sturm, are reeling from a 6-1 drubbing they took to fall behind 3-1.

“They know that if they don’t put whatever they can put into the game,” Ruff said, “they’re done.”

Across the Canadian border, and more than 2,000 miles away, another team that has far exceeded external expectations is on the verge of a clinch. The Anaheim Ducks must do so on the road against the Edmonton Oilers, but they’re a fearless young group that’s hungry to give the franchise its first series victory in nine years.

“We just believe in ourselves,” center Ryan Poehling said, reflecting on the overtime win in Game 4 for a 3-1 lead after facing a two-goal deficit. “We’ve done it all year, and I think it just teaches you throughout a season that you’re never out of it. The belief on the bench is something that you truly feel when you go out there for offensive play. It’s a great way to play hockey for us.”

In Dallas, there will be a Game 5, too, but no clinching celebration after Minnesota evened the series.

Boston Bruins at Buffalo Sabres

When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. EDT (TNT).

Series: Sabres lead 3-1.

The Bruins lost their cool during their Game 4 meltdown. Defenseman Nikita Zadorov received a $5,000 fine from the league for cross-checking Sabres defenseman Rasmus Dahlin. Goalie Jeremy Swayman shouted at his own bench as he skated off after being pulled from the game.

“We have an extremely high competitive group. We all have a standard that we all carry ourselves to, and it wasn’t met. So that was just emotion,” Swayman told reporters. “It’s moved on now, and we have a job to do going into Buffalo.”

The Sabres can’t wait to take the ice in front of a fired-up crowd.

“When I came in last season, there was lots of talk of, ‘This is a hockey city, not a football city,’ and that was pretty hard to believe as an outsider coming in. You can see the passion for the Bills and just everything around that,” Sabres left wing Beck Malenstyn said. “But then I think throughout this year, we’ve slowly grown to see just how supportive and passionate this fan base is.”

Minnesota Wild at Dallas Stars

When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Tuesday, 8 p.m. EDT (ESPN2).

Series: Tied 2-2.

The snapshot of this rugged series between these well-built teams that comfortably finished second and third in the Western Conference during the regular season varies sharply by how many men are on the ice. The Wild have had the upper hand in even-strength play, with a 10-3 scoring advantage. The Stars power play has been dominant, with eight goals in 19 opportunities, and their penalty kill has been scored on only three times in 19 situations.

As the Stars prepared for yet another pivotal game, they expressed confidence in their 5-on-5 performance by virtue of a steady shot volume. They lead the league this postseason with 141 attempts on target, including 102 during even-strength play, which ranks fifth-most among playoff teams.

“We just have to take the next step and get some loose pucks, get some tips,” Stars coach Glen Gulutzan said.

Only one Stars player has a plus-rating during even-strength situations in this series: defenseman Nils Lundqvist. Unfortunately, he won’t play in Game 5 after taking an inadvertent skate to the face from a collision in Game 4. Gulutzan said he hoped Lundqvist would return in the series.

“Sometimes the puck goes in. Sometimes it doesn’t. It’s hockey,” Stars captain Jamie Benn said.

The Wild power play has clearly missed right wing Mats Zuccarello, who hasn’t played since an upper-body injury suffered during Game 1, but his return to practice was an encouraging sign.

“We’ll see how he felt and what his response is from that,” coach John Hynes said. “But it is definitely a step in the right direction.”

Anaheim Ducks at Edmonton Oilers

When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Tuesday, 10 p.m. EDT (TNT).

Series: Ducks lead 3-1.

While both teams were on flights back to Canada, the hockey world was still rehashing the chaotic ending to Game 4 and the unusual way in which the officials reached what almost certainly was the correct ruling on Poehling’s squeaker of an overtime goal for Anaheim.

But that wild finish didn’t alter the overall trajectory of this series: The aggressive Ducks appear to be capable of erasing any trouble caused by their mediocre defensive play, while the Oilers look ever wearier while they attempt to mount their fifth consecutive long playoff run.

“We just believe in each other, and kind of no matter the score, we just continue to compete,” said Ducks defenseman Jackson LaCombe, the top scorer in the entire Stanley Cup playoffs with eight points. “It’s something that’s been huge for us all year, and it’s something nice to have in your back pocket right now.”

Edmonton is down to its last chance after blowing two leads in Game 4 despite a solid performance by new goalie Tristan Jarry. Anaheim has made the most multi-goal comebacks in the sport this season under coach Joel Quenneville, who passed Al Arbour for the second-most postseason coaching victories in NHL history in Game 4.

The Ducks have won three straight in this series, and they’ve scored 20 goals in four games as they attempt to secure their team’s first playoff series victory since 2017. But this tired Oilers core has been in big postseason jams before. They played their best defensive game of the series on Sunday, so there’s no outward panic as they attempt to bring the series back to Southern California for Game 6.

Let Jac Caglianone play

KANSAS CITY, MO - APRIL 26: Jac Caglianone #14 of the Kansas City Royals hits a home run in the ninth inning during the game between the Los Angeles Angels and the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on Sunday, April 26, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Sydney Schneider/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Some highly-touted draft prospects struggle when they hit professional baseball. That…was not true about Jac Caglianone, the Kansas City Royals’ sixth overall selection in the 2024 MLB draft. Jac handled his brief High-A cameo well enough considering he started there less than a month after cashing his signing bonus, but his skill was on full display in 2025. Across 304 plate appearances in Double-A and Triple-A, Caglianone hit .337 and smacked 20 home runs, striking out less than 20% of the time.

Royals fans hoped for Caglianone to save last year’s squad, a team that struggled mightily to score runs. Unfortunately for Caglianone, he became part of the problem, hitting .157 and showing a tiny fraction of his power. And that’s to say nothing of his right field defense, where he looked every bit the stereotype of a lumbering first baseman stuck in the grass because he’s got to play somewhere and first base was taken.

So when the Royals entered this season, some temperance for Caglianone was warranted. At the same time, it was clear that Cags was uniquely talented. His exit velocities in Spring Training and the minors rivaled other gigantic sluggers like Giancarlo Stanton and Aaron Judge. And in the World Baseball Classic, Cags played well for Team Italy in big moments. Considering the lack of offensive talent on the roster and the Royals’ difficulties with scoring runs last year, surely you’d he’d be in the lineup above, like, Lane Thomas, Starling Marte, and Isaac Collins, right? Let alone all three?

To be fair, Opening Day’s lineup was specifically constructed to counter lefty Chris Sale, and Cags did pinch hit for Marte later in the game. But it was the start of a trend, a trend that involved Caglianone riding the bench way more than you’d think would happen for a core player.

The Royals have played 28 games, but Caglianone has only started and finished a game 17 times. On four occasions, Caglianone never entered the game. Five times, Caglianone was lifted from the game, either on defense or on the basepaths. He has also entered the game twice as pinch hitter.

Look, I get that Caglianone struggled last year. I get that platoons are an advantage. And I get that he’s a prime candidate for a defensive replacement or pinch runner in close games. But I just think the Royals are playing it too cute with Caglianone: he is a core player on this team, and one of only a precious handful of hitters with All-Star potential. To only use him fully in 60% of your games—putting other less talented and less impactful players in his place otherwise—is just a waste.

Perhaps the most annoying thing to me is the Royals going out of their way to keep Caglianone away from left-handed pitching. In part, that’s because Cags has actually been better against lefties as a pro than righties. In the big leagues so far, Caglianone had a .653 OPS against left-handed pitchers and a .576 against right-handed pitchers. In his 2025 Minor League Destruction tour, Cags posted an .841 OPS against lefties and a .795 OPS against righties. While we can assume that Caglianone will likely be worse against lefties in the long run, his professional career does not support the claim that he’s useless in the platoon disadvantage.

The other reason why this process irks me is because I think the confidence that the Royals show in a player like Caglianone after such a frustrating season is very important. Cags has been an amazing baseball player all throughout high school, college, and in the minors. His 2025 was probably the only time in his whole athletic life he was bad at something. I turn to the wisdom savant Ned Yost, actually, in part of his famed 2014 “dome” rant about showing confidence in Alcides Escobar:

“Guys are allowed to have off years,” [Ned Yost] said. “It doesn’t mean that they’re going to be terrible for the rest of their career.” Yost added, “We’re hoping that [Alcides Escobar] bounces back this year, and you don’t start jacking with them mentally. It’s hard for people to understand that, fans to understand it. But that plays a big part in it, them having confidence in knowing that the manager has confidence in them in those situations.”

Notably, under Yost, both Eric Hosmer and Mike Moustakas fully played in 88% of possible games that season. And notably for Caglianone, he’s been legitimately good this year—both at the plate and on the field. He’s in the top 2% of average exit velo and max exit velo among all MLB players. Who else is going to eclipse that talent on this roster? Let him play everyday. Let him play against lefties. Let him hit tanks to tie it up with two outs in the ninth inning.

If the Royals make the playoffs, it will be in part because of Caglianone and not in spite of him. They should use him as such.

The Mets try (again) to kickstart their season against the Nationals

Apr 22, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Nationals infielder CJ Abrams (5) warms up to bat in the seventh inning against the Atlanta Braves at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images | Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images

The New York Mets (9-19) welcome the Washington Nationals (13-16) to Citi Field for their first meeting of the season, as well as the first in-division series of the year for the Mets.

There isn’t too much to say about the Mets’ season at this point that hasn’t been said already here, on WFAN, in every sports column in the tri-state area, every bar that shows baseball games, as well as shouted by passersby who see me still wearing a Mets cap. This is a terrible, terrible season thus far by just about every available metric.

The Mets have played the bulk of their games without one of their two biggest stars, the bats have been as silent as Marcel Marceau, the pitching performances from the folks who need to be good have been disappointing, and almost every player has underperformed in some capacity. I won’t quite say that everything that could’ve gone wrong has, because there is always something worse that could come around the corner. But looking at even the measured, modest expectations some put on this team versus where they are now, it’s stark.

After their twelve game losing streak, the Mets won two against the Twins and things looked like they might get back on some sort of track. But then, the Mets were swept by the Rockies, scoring just four runs across three games and looking like a warmed over Double-A offense against a last place club.

Without Francisco Lindor, without stronger performances from Kodai Senga and David Peterson, without some sort of solution to the black hole that is the bottom of the Mets’ lineup, there doesn’t appear to be many options for getting this team back on track. A healthy Jorge Polanco in the lineup would help, but last we heard, he was ‘week to week’ with his dual achilles and wrist injuries. If Polanco returns, it seems unlikely that he will immediately slot into the first base slot, rather taking a bulk of the DH at bats. Both Brett Baty and Mark Vientos have struggled at first, so that is a position that needs to be sorted. Bo Bichette needs to have better at-bats. Juan Soto and Francisco Alvarez need to heat up.

Some of those things—namely Soto, Alvy and Bichette—seem likely to happen, just based on talent and track record. It also seems likely that the Mets’ starting pitching situation will begin to sort itself out after another turn or two in the rotation. If Senga continues to struggle, it seems likely that he’ll be demoted to the bullpen and, perhaps, David Peterson will get his rotation spot back. With Christian Scott unable to return for another week or so, the only other option in Triple-A that looks like more than a one-start fill in would be Jonah Tong. But Tong could really use some more time on the farm to develop, so Wednesday’s “TBD” may see any number of possibilities taking the ball.

If there’s good news for the Mets, it is that, aside from the Braves, the rest of the NL East isn’t looking so hot either. The Nationals are three games under .500, which the Mets can only dream of at this point in the season, but the Mets aren’t exactly facing a powerhouse this week. The Mets are also lucking out in that they are missing both Foster Griffin and Jake Irvin, and so this seems like a perfect opportunity for the bats to get some work in against two pitchers with atrocious ERA-s (186 and 209, respectively).

The Nats are arriving in Queens after taking two of three from the White Sox, another team that isn’t exactly lighting the world on fire. The last Mets/Nats series at the end of 2025 saw Washington take two of three, a result that directly led to the Mets missing the playoffs, so there is some residual animosity here, in addition to the usual divisional heat. However, so much of the Mets’ team has turned over since then, who knows if there’s any juice left there.

If we are being optimistic – an if the size of an ocean – this is the perfect team for the Mets to buck up against and attempt to right the shit-ship before May begins. If we’re being pessimistic, if the Mets can’t beat the Nats, this might be an early sign that things won’t get any better any time soon.

Tuesday, April 28: Clay Holmes vs. Zack Littell, 7:10pm on SNY

Holmes (2026): 30.0 IP, 19 K, 10 BB, 3 HR, 2.10 ERA, 4.26 FIP, 53 ERA-

Clay Holmes is not an exciting starting pitcher to watch most of the time, but it is hard to argue with the results he’s been getting since converting to starting. In five starts this season, he hasn’t allowed more than two earned runs in a start and has lasted at least five innings. That’s a solid early season performance, and a good person to have opening this series.

Littell (2026): 25.0 IP, 15 K, 8 BB, 11 HR, 7.56 ERA, 8.61 FIP, 186 ERA-

You’re not reading that wrong, Littell has given up 11 home runs in five starts. That’s a 4.00 HR/9. Again, if the Mets’ bats are going to wake up, this would be a very convenient game for that to happen.

Wednesday, April 29: TBD vs Cade Cavalli, 7:10pm on SNY

Cade Cavalli (2026): 24.2 IP, 28 K, 12 BB, 0 HR, 4.01 ERA, 2.80 FIP, 99 ERA-

Cavalli is having a decent start to his season, striking out 10.2/9 and limiting dingers. However, he’s only had one start where he recorded an out in the sixth inning and that was his first start of the year. A disastrous one and a third innings performance against the Pirates sullied his line heavily in this young season, but overall he’s been a perfectly cromulent start for the Nats.

Thursday, April 30: Freddy Peralta vs Miles Mikolas, 1:10pm on SNY

Peralta (2026): 32.1 IP, 36 K,  13 BB, 4 HR, 3.90 ERA, 3.90 FIP, 99 ERA-

Peralta being second only to Nolan McLean in terms of innings pitched is one of the few positive surprises of 2026 so far. While not quite looking like the ace the Mets hoped he would be, Peralta has been solid, if unspectacular thus far. If Carlos Mendoza was a little quicker with the trigger in terms of pulling him from games, his ERA would benefit, but you can’t really blame Mendy for wanting him to go more than five innings. However, if he keeps struggling in the sixth and beyond, that may just be a pill we need to swallow.

Mikolas (2026): 23.1 IP, 16 K, 10 BB, 7 HR, 8.49 ERA, 6.94 FIP, 209 ERA-

A 209 ERA-. That’s really all you need to know.

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Yankees to call up top prospect Elmer Rodríguez

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 26: Elmer Rodríguez #76 of the New York Yankees warms up before the game against the Atlanta Braves at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 26, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In a bit of surprising news, the Yankees will be calling up one of their top pitching prospects, Elmer Rodríguez, to make a spot start this week. Aaron Boone confirmed today that Rodríguez would start tomorrow afternoon’s series finale with the Rangers. Will Warren was originally scheduled to start, but will instead see his outing pushed back beyond Thursday’s off-day, lining the Yankee rotation up as Warren, Ryan Weathers, and Max Fried for this weekend’s series against the Orioles.

It’s an exciting development, Rodríguez slated to become the youngest player to pitch for the Yankees since Deivi Garcia in 2021:

Rodríguez may not be around for long this time around, but it’ll still be fascinating to see one of the Yankees’ best prospects take his first shot at major league hitters. The right-hander broke out last year after coming to the Yankees via trade from the Red Sox, posting a 2.58 ERA across 150 innings in the high minors. In 2026, he’s picked up right where he left off, flashing impressive stuff in spring training, pitching three scoreless innings for Puerto Rico in the WBC, and maintaining a 1.27 ERA over his first 21.2 innings in Triple-A, with 20 strikeouts against seven walks.

The Rodríguez call-up comes as part of a broader roster shuffle, with the Yankees reportedly set to send Giancarlo Stanton to the IL and call up Max Schuemann today. The infielder spent parts of the 2024 and 2025 seasons with the Athletics and joined the Yankees over the winter as a Triple-A depth option.

It’s unclear as of now exactly how this puzzle will sort out. Stanton hitting the injured list will clear only one active roster spot, meaning either Schuemann is ticketed to head right back to Scranton when Rodríguez comes up tomorrow, or that the Yankees will option another player—perhaps reliever Jake Bird—to make room for Rodríguez, with Schuemann sticking around until Anthony Volpe’s return.

Whichever way the Yankees piece this together, Wednesday’s matinee in Texas suddenly becomes must-see TV (coming on the heels of tonight’s Cam Schlittler vs. Jacob deGrom showdown, no less). It’s been a fun time to be a Yankee fan the last couple of weeks, and this week looks to be no different.

Marlins vs Dodgers Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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Fresh off a Kyle Tucker walk-off in the series opener, the Los Angeles Dodgers come in ready for Game 2 with the Miami Marlins on Tuesday night.

Shohei Ohtani is on the bump, so I’m backing the Boys in Blue with my Marlins vs. Dodgers predictions and MLB picks for Tuesday, April 28.

Who will win Marlins vs Dodgers today: Dodgers (-285)

Shohei Ohtani has been one of the best pitchers in the league through four starts, sporting a sterling 0.38 ERA.

While it won’t be possible to maintain a number that low, his underlying metrics (2.01 xERA, 1.92 FIP) are tremendous. He notches strikeouts (27.2% K rate) and ground balls (55%) while limiting walks (6.5% BB rate) and hard contact (87th percentile barrel rate).

He’ll give the Los Angeles Dodgers a leg up against a Miami Marlins team that has a 3-10 record on the road, including three consecutive losses.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Miami starter Janson Junk’s 3.51 xERA looks solid, but his weak 9.1% K-BB% raises sustainability concerns. A low .265 BABIP is helping, and with a sixth-percentile hard-hit rate last year, that contact profile may not hold.

Marlins vs Dodgers Over/Under pick: Under 7.5 (+105)

Ohtani has been dominant on the mound, allowing a single earned run in 24 innings while striking out 25 and allowing 12 hits. L.A. has played to the Under in three of his four starts.

Both squads rank within the top eight in bullpen FIP, so a low-scoring game could be in store for a game with temperatures in the low 60s at Chavez Ravine.

Ohtani won’t feature in today’s lineup. The Dodgers are still potent, but will be without their best hitter, and both starting middle infielders, Mookie Betts & Tommy Edman, who are still on the IL.

JD Yonke's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets:9-5, +5.94 units
  • Over/Under bets:10-5, +4.82 units

Marlins vs Dodgers odds

  • Moneyline: Miami +238 | Los Angeles -265
  • Run line: Miami +1.5 (+105) | Los Angeles -1.5 (-132)
  • Over/Under: Over 7.5 (-111) | Under 7.5 (-108)

Marlins vs Dodgers trend

The Dodgers are 9-0 in their last nine home games against the Marlins. Find more MLB betting trends for Marlins vs. Dodgers.

How to watch Marlins vs Dodgers and game info

LocationDodger Stadium, Los Angeles, CA
DateTuesday, April 28
First pitch10:10 p.m. ET
TVPeacock
Marlins starting pitcherJanson Junk
(1-2, 3.67 ERA)
Dodgers starting pitcherShohei Ohtani
(2-0, 0.38 ERA)

Marlins vs Dodgers latest injuries

Marlins vs Dodgers weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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