Game #6: Pittsburgh Pirates vs. Cincinnati Reds

CINCINNATI, OHIO - SEPTEMBER 23: Oneil Cruz #15 of the Pittsburgh Pirates hits a home run in the second inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on September 23, 2025 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Pittsburgh Pirates vs. Cincinnati Reds, April 1, 2026, 6:40 p.m. ET

Location: Great American Ball Park, Cincinnati, OH

Broadcast: KDKA AM/FM, SportsNet Pittsburgh


The Pittsburgh Pirates are on the road today against the Cincinnati Reds looking to grab a win at Great American Ball Park.


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Wizards vs. Sixers discussion

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JANUARY 7: Tyrese Maxey #0 of the Philadelphia 76ers dribbles the ball against Bilal Coulibaly #0 of the Washington Wizards at Xfinity Mobile Arena on January 7, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Washington Wizards play the Philadelphia 76ers at 7 p.m. tonight. Watch the game on Monumental Sports Network.

Astros 6, Red Sox 4 ; Houston sinks Crochet again, completes sweep

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 31: Yordan Alvarez #44 of the Houston Astros reacts after hitting a home run in the fifth inning against the Boston Red Sox at Daikin Park on March 31, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Red Sox cannot wipe away this road trip fast enough. Fenway Park, here they come.

Another loss to the Houston Astros, a 6-4 final on Wednesday, spelled more of the same. Too many strikeouts. Too many errors. Not good enough in any phase. Not even Crochet Day could put the Red Sox back in the win column. Wilyer Abreu and Roman Anthony tried to save the day with late home runs, but Boston heads east with just their Opening Day win in Cincinnati to show. 

Here are three takeaways from Boston’s series finale in Houston. 

Shaky, not sharp for Crochet

The Astros certainly do not fear the 2025 American League Cy Young Award runner-up. In fact, they attacked him unlike any other offense since he donned the Red Sox uniform.

Houston tagged Crochet for five runs in just four innings of work last August. Wednesday at Daikin Park marked more of the same for the lefty. Crochet finished five innings, the only Red Sox pitcher of the series to do so. The Astros took flight in that span with six hits and five runs (four earned) in another offensive burst.

The southpaw struck out seven, though Carlos Correa delivered the backbreaking swing of the start. The veteran infielder walloped a 1-2 sweeper into the Crawford boxes. The Astros took the lead, knocked Crochet out following the inning and delivered another gut punch to the visitors.

Connor Wong: XBH machine?

Boston’s backup catcher was an offensive liability last season. He didn’t log his first extra-base hit until July 25. 

Well, aided by Carlos Narvaez’s mysterious scratch, Wong is as hot as any Red Sox hitter thus far. He roped his third double of the season Wednesday afternoon. Sustainable? Doubtful, but we’ll see. In any measure, a serviceable Wong would be a welcomed Red Sox surprise. 

So long, Mr. Alvarez

The good news? The Red Sox are done pitching to Yordan Alvarez (for now). 

The bad news? They’ll see him again in exactly a month. 

Alvarez is as much of a Red Sox killer as any slugger to ever face Boston. The stat ran through multiple broadcasts during the series: No qualified hitter (100 at-bats) has a higher OPS (1.280) in history against Boston than Alvarez — next in line in that stat is some guy named Babe Ruth. The 2021 ALCS MVP continued his reign with another monstrous series to the tune of a .545 average with two homers and a 1.888 OPS. He added two more hits and a pair of runs scored Wednesday, along with a staredown of Crochet after Boston’s starter plunked the Houston slugger.

Alvarez comes to Fenway Park with the Astros the first weekend of May. Beware. 

Mets struggle with runners in scoring position, lose in extras to Cardinals

The Mets dropped Wednesday's rubber match with the St. Louis Cardinals, falling 2-1 in 11 innings.

Here are the key takeaways…

-- With the game tied at 1-1, this one went to extra innings, the Mets' third such game in their first six contests. In the top of the 11th, the Mets loaded the bases with one out, but Brett Baty grounded into a force-out at the plate, and Marcus Semien flew out to end the threat. In the bottom half, with two outs and a runner on third, Masyn Winn blooped a single to right just in front of a diving attempt from Carson Benge, giving the Cardinals the win.

-- It was a pitchers’ duel through the early innings, as both Freddy Peralta and Matthew Liberatore were on point early. Peralta allowed just one hit the first time through the order, striking out five. Liberatore, meanwhile, started by retiring the Mets nine-up, nine-down, inducing six ground balls. 

Mark Vientos finally notched the Mets’ first hit of the afternoon with a line drive double down the third base line with two outs in the fifth. Dating back to Tuesday night’s loss, the Mets had gone 0-for-22 before Vientos’ hit. He’d be left stranded there, though, as Francisco Alvarez went down swinging to end the inning. 

-- Just when the Mets looked like they caught a break in the sixth inning, as Francisco Lindor reached on an error by Nolan Gorman, Lindor was immediately caught sleeping and picked off at first base. It was the second mental error of the game for Lindor, who also forgot how many outs there were defensively earlier in the game. 

But Juan Soto picked Lindor up, blasting a high, towering solo home run to right, which hung in the air forever before glancing off the foul pole. Soto’s first home run of the season put the Mets up 1-0, and snapped a 17-inning scoreless streak.

-- Peralta ran into some trouble in the fifth, starting the inning by allowing a walk and a single. But he got out of a second-and-third, one-out jam without allowing a run.

Peralta pitched into the sixth inning, when he was pulled with a couple runners on base. Unfortunately for the Mets, Huascar Brazoban allowed one of the inherited runners to score on a Gorman RBI single, tying the game.

Peralta went 5.1 innings, allowing one earned run on three hits. He struck out seven and walked two.

-- As a team, the Mets went 0-for-11 with runners in scoring position and left 11 men on base.

GAME MVP

Liberatore, who allowed just one earned run in 6.0 innings.

Highlights

Upcoming Schedule

The Mets head out to San Francisco for a four-game series with the Giants, starting on Thursday night at 9:45 p.m. on SNY. 

David Peterson will face Robbie Ray in a battle of lefties.

Panthers Bring Up Defensemen Tobias Bjornfot, Mikulas Hovorka from AHL Charlotte

The Florida Panthers have brought up a pair of defenseman to make up for the team’s latest injuries.

On Tuesday, Florida blueliners Aaron Ekblad and Dmitry Kulikov suffered separate injuries after being hit by the puck during the Panthers’ 6-3 win over Ottawa.

While the ultimate prognosis on both has not been determined, early indications were that both would be out of the lineup in at least the short term.

As a result, Florida has brought up defenseman Tobias Bjornfot and Mikulas Hovorka from the Charlotte Checkers, according to the AHL Transactions Log.

Bjornfot has played 11 games with the Panthers this season, racking up two goals and an assist to go with a plus-4 on-ice rating.

Hovorka played his first NHL game with Florida back in February, skating to a minus-3 rating in 11:27 of ice time during a 6-1 loss to Tampa Bay.

The Panthers are back in action on Thursday night when they host the Boston Bruins at Amerant Bank Arena.

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Photo caption: Feb 2, 2026; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers defenseman Tobias Bjornfot (22) shoots the puck against the Buffalo Sabres during the first period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Philadelphia Flyers Sign New Prospect To Multi-Year Extension

The Philadelphia Flyers have announced that they have signed defenseman David Jiricek to a two-year, $3 million contract extension. Starting next season, he will have a $1.5 million average annual value.

The Flyers acquired Jiricek from the Minnesota Wild at the 2026 NHL trade deadline in exchange for forward Bobby Brink. Since then, the right-shot defenseman has played well at the AHL level with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. Now, he has landed himself a solid contract extension from Philadelphia because of it. 

In 10 games with the Phantoms since being acquired, Jiricek has recorded two goals, eight assists, and 10 points. This is after he had two goals and 10 points in 24 AHL games with the Iowa Wild before the trade.

Jiricek also played in 25 games for Minnesota before the deal, where he had zero points and 14 penalty minutes. In 84 career NHL games over four seasons, the 2022 sixth-overall pick has recorded two goals, 11 assists, and 13 points. 

Observations after red-hot George pours in 39 points, Sixers blow out Wizards

Observations after red-hot George pours in 39 points, Sixers blow out Wizards originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

WASHINGTON — Paul George exploded for his most points as a Sixer on Wednesday night and at times looked like he couldn’t miss. 

George delivered a brilliant performance in the Sixers’ 153-131 win over the lowly Wizards at Capital One Arena. He posted 39 points on 15-for-22 shooting, six assists, zero turnovers, five rebounds and three steals in 30 minutes. 

Tyrese Maxey had 28 points and nine assists for the Sixers, who improved to 42-34. Washington dropped to 17-59.

VJ Edgecombe added 23 points on 10-for-15 shooting and 10 assists.

Joel Embiid was the only unavailable Sixers regular. He was sidelined by an illness. 

The Sixers will host the Timberwolves on Friday night. Here are observations on their victory in D.C.: 

George attacks off the bat 

George continued to look quite sharp both in the flow of the Sixers’ half-court offense and in transition. He hit two mid-range jumpers for the team’s first four points and also made a strong driving layup in the early going.

When he saw Wizards center Tristan Vukcevic switched on him, George blew past to the rim, drew two free throws and knocked them down. He sunk a step-back three-pointer over Vukcevic in the first quarter, too.

George’s directness has been a major positive in the four games since he came back from his 25-game suspension. More often than not, he’s read the game well, recognized where his advantage lies and gone right to work. The best answer’s frequently been simple for George — a catch-and-shoot three; a comfortable pull-up jumper; a no-nonsense downhill drive. 

It’s notable that Wednesday’s performance came against the team with the Eastern Conference’s worst defensive rating, but the Sixers have to be very pleased with how George has played post-suspension. He had 14 points on 5-for-7 shooting, two rebounds, two assists and two steals in the first quarter. 

Defense far from its best 

Adem Bona started in Embiid’s place. His and-one layup gave the Sixers an 18-8 lead. 

On the other end, Vukcevic had a hot start. He reached 15 points when he drilled a three over Andre Drummond with 9:36 left in the second quarter, although he picked up his third foul shortly after and had to sub out. 

Washington’s second unit outplayed the Sixers’ early in the second quarter. Jaden Hardy leaked free for an easy fast-break dunk to put the Wizards up 45-42. Sixers head coach Nick Nurse called timeout and brought George and Maxey back in. 

The Sixers’ defense did not offer a great degree of resistance in the first half. When the Sixers briefly moved to a zone, Bub Carrington drained a three. A Justin Champagnie second-chance basket inside extended the Wizards’ lead to 10 points.

Maxey’s crafty, speedy driving helped the Sixers stay close and eventually find some momentum despite their defensive problems. He shot 8 for 11 inside the arc in the first half and just 0 for 1 from three-point range. The Sixers entered halftime with a 73-71 lead thanks to a George triple with 2.9 seconds to go in the second quarter. 

So close to 40 

George didn’t turn cold at halftime.

He added two more three-pointers and a driving lay-in early in the third quarter. By that stage, George had already notched his sixth game as a Sixer with at least 30 points. 

A Maxey three bumped the Sixers’ lead up to double digits. The game soon entered blowout territory and the main lingering question was just how many points George would score. 

The nine-time All-Star exited one point shy of 40 at the 3:38 mark of the third quarter. The Wizards never threatened a comeback, but Nurse subbed George in for a final stint with 6:55 to go in the fourth.

George didn’t force the issue. He missed an open three and a contested runner, and Nurse ultimately pulled the plug with a little under three minutes left. George couldn’t crack 40 for the first time since the 2023-24 season, but he obviously still gave the Sixers a tremendous outing Wednesday night. 

Jays squander Gausman’s brilliance, fall 2-1 in 10

TORONTO, CANADA - APRIL 1: Kevin Gausman #34 of the Toronto Blue Jays pitches during the first inning of their MLB game against the Colorado Rockies at Rogers Centre on April 1, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Rockies 1 at Blue Jays 2 (10)

It was one of those games where the starting pitcher was going to have to be almost flawless for his team to win. Kevin Gausman was up to the task and did his damnedest in holding the Rockies at bay for six innings, a but bullpen wobbles and a lack of hitting, first timely and then outright, undermined the effort as the Blue Jays fell in 10 innings.

Gausman was especially dominant over the first four innings, almost perfect really as he set the first 12 batters in order. The fastball was popping and well located, the splitter diving off the plate as he struck out six of those and a liner to third the only time the Rockies got close to touching him. Hunter Goodman had a particularly rough time, befuddled as Gausman dispatched him.

He was more human the last couple ininngs, as Ezequiel Tovar battled him for a long at-bat and lined a single up the middle to start the 5th. Hesitation on a roller allowed Tovar to beat the throw the second and create a real jam, though Gausman extricated himself with a couple strikeouts. After another hard hit in the 6th, he got another pair of strikeouts to end the inning in double digits for the second time, finishing 6 shutout innings with 10 strikeouts.

The bats were able to create opportunities early against Kyle Freeland, but couldn’t land decisive blows and largely squandered the chance to build a substantial lead:

  • A lead off single in the 2nd from Okamotot was erased by a Kirk GIDP sanchwiched around another single
  • Myles Straw blooped a single leading off the 3rd, scoring on a one-out Davis Schneider single after a Springer walk. Vladdy was (barely) hit by a pitch to load the bases with one out and really set up a big inning, but Okamoto struck out and Kirk flared out.
  • Another Straw single in the 4th put two one after a HBP, but advanced no further.

From that moment in fact, the bats were essentially shut down, managing just two singles over the last 6.2 innings, after eight of the first 17 batters reached over the first 3.1 innings.

So Gausman exited clinging to a slim 1-0 lead. Tyler Rogers was first out and uncharacteristically fallible, allowing a pair of hard singles. In fact, only Addison Barger’s arm (or the threat thereof) kept a run off the board as TJ Rumfield held up at first after smashing a ball to the wall and would likely have scored from second with two out on the latter single.

The highwire act could onyl last so long however. Tommy Nance was next for the 8th, and it wasn’t his day either . Nine hitter Kyle Karros walked leading off, yielding to Jake McCarthy who stole scored in quick order on a single. Another walk, wild pitch, and stolen base created a real mess but John Schneider inflicted a little dose of the Flu(harty), whose two strikeouts prevented the Rockies from taking the lead.

Jeff Hoffman was equally as on point in the 9th, sharp sliders dispatching the Rockies to strikeout the side in order. With Braydon Fisher and Louis Varland down from previous heavy use, that left Brendon Little, and well….

Honestly, he wasn’t even terrible, but a sharp ground ball up the middle plated the do ahead run. For their part, Springer popped out on the second pitch in the bottom of the 10th before Nathan Lukes battled Jimmy Herget to 12 pitches before ultimately rolling one over. Vladdy cracked a ball, but to dead CF where it was easily caught and so it goes.

Jays of the Day: Gausman (+.36 WPA), Fluharty (+0.25), Hoffman (+0.14), Davis Schneider (+0.12)

Boo Jays: Nance (-0.40) , Vlad (-0.22), Kirk (-0.14), Jimenez (-0.13). Lukes (-0.13) had the number but not giving him one for that 10th inning AB.

Tomorrow, the Jays are now off, with the White Sox home opener now scheduled for 2:10 EDT with Dylan Cease taking the hill against his former team.

The Washington Nationals lose a heartbreaker in Philly as the defense and bullpen collapse

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 31: CJ Abrams #5 of the Washington Nationals celebrates a single with Corey Ray #23 in the sixth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on March 31, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Washington Nationals suffered their first truly heartbreaking loss of the season. They had a 5-1 lead in the 7th inning, but could not finish off the Phillies. The veteran laden Phillies took advantage of the young Nats issuing walks and making mistakes in the field. Blake Butera’s bunch fought, but they could not finish.

It was a bit of a pitchers duel in the first five innings. The Nats made Cristopher Sanchez work, but did not take advantage of most of their opportunities. You could say the same thing for the Phillies offense. Cade Cavalli was not at his best the first four innings, but he survived and only allowed one run.

However, Cavalli turned up the heat in his last two frames, retiring the last six hitters he faced. It was a successful outing for Cavalli, and if we were deeper in the season, he probably would have gone out for the seventh. In hindsight, Blake Butera probably should have stuck with his righty instead of going to Andre Granillo.

After manufacturing two runs in the first six innings, the Nats had a big seventh against Brad Keller. It actually started with two quick outs. However, after Daylen Lile got a hustle base hit, the rally was on. The red hot Joey Wiemer got yet another hit and then CJ Abrams delivered with a massive 3 run homer. 

At that point, the game seemed out of reach for the Phillies and the home crowd was shocked. However, the wily vets chipped away. It started with a JT Realmuto homer in the 7th. The Nats got out of that inning with just one run though. They still felt in command of the game.

That control began to slip away in the 8th. Bryce Harper homered and then Luis Garcia Jr. was unable to pick the ball on back to back plays at first base. Between Andres Chaparro and Luis Garcia Jr., first base defense has been a big problem for the Nats. Paul Toboni has done a lot of great things, but not picking up a veteran first baseman is a questionable move.

The Nats ended up surviving that inning while keeping things a 3-2 game. However, they used Clayton Beeter to get out of the inning. Beeter came out for the 9th, but he only faced two batters. He allowed a ground out and a single. The Nats ended up pulling him for PJ Poulin.

Blake Butera has pushed most of the right buttons this season, but I think he overmanaged here. I understand the platoon matchup, but Beeter is just a better, more powerful arm than Poulin. The top guys in the Phillies lineup had also seen Poulin yesterday.

Poulin could not stop the bleeding, getting one out, but issuing two walks. That led to another pitching change, with Cole Henry coming in to face Edmundo Sosa. Henry executed very well on his first two pitches, but hung a sweeper on an 0-2 count. Sosa took advantage and drove it into left to tie the game.

After the Nats were unable to score a run in the top of the 10th, the game just felt over. Blake Butera seemed to think so too, as he just kept Henry in the game rather than burning another reliever. The Phillies eventually put the Nats out of their misery with a walkoff single from Justin Crawford.

The Nats fought their tails off this series, but their immaturity and flaws showed. I still come away from this series happy with the effort and the overall performance. However, you can see the flaws in this team. With James Wood just not being the same player since last July, the Nats don’t have a consistent home run threat to either get back in games or put them away.

They also do not have a singular lock down closer like the Phillies do with Jhoan Duran. The Nats have some solid bullpen arms, but none of them are dominant. In many ways the Nats outplayed the Phillies this series. However, the Phillies showed why they have made the playoffs in recent years and the Nats showed why they are a rebuilding team.

White Sox get steamrolled by Marlins 10-0, as season’s ugly start rolls on

Zach Bove makes an early trip to the mound as Shane Smith works through a first inning that unraveled in a hurry. | (Jim Rassol/Imagn Images)

The weather may have been warm in Miami, but Chicago’s bats? Ice cold. The pitching? Somewhere south of that. The White Sox dropped to 1-5 on the young season after getting thoroughly flattened, 10-0, by the Miami Marlins in a game that somehow felt over before most people had finished their first bite of lunch.


If you were hoping for a clean slate after a rough Opening Day for Shane Smith, well, that hope didn’t last long. The righthander put together a first inning that can only be described as a full-blown tire fire. Four runs crossed the plate before he could even record a second out, thanks to four hits, a walk, and a throwing error that gifted Miami an extra run. Three earned, one unearned, all ugly. And no, it didn’t get better.

Smith came back out for the second and promptly made things worse. A single set the table for a two-run blast by Liam Hicks, pushing the score to 6-0 and effectively turning this one into a glorified bullpen game before the Sox even had much of a chance to battle back.

Manager Will Venable let Smith wear it into the third, where the Marlins tacked on two more runs via the usual suspects — a walk, a double, a single. By the time it was over, the damage was done, the game was out of reach, and the Sox were left staring at yet another early-game crater.

However, in a contest devoid of many positives, the bullpen at least avoided making things exponentially worse. Lucas Sims, freshly called up, tossed two solid innings with just one hit allowed. Chris Murphy added two frames of his own, though he did surrender the ninth run. And Jordan Leasure, well, he did Jordan Leasure things, giving up the final run in the eighth on a solo shot by Otto Lopez.

Can you call it progress? Technically.

Meanwhile, on the other side, Sandy Alcántara was everything the White Sox were not: dominant, efficient, and completely in control. The Marlins’ ace carved through the lineup with a complete game shutout, allowing just three singles from Chase Meidroth, Tristan Peters, and Luisangel Acuña. Seven strikeouts, zero walks, and not a hint of trouble. Whether that says more about Alcántara’s brilliance or the Sox’s current state is … not a particularly fun debate.


Due to the weather, the Sox will have to wait a bit longer for their Home Opener, now scheduled for Friday at 1:10 p.m. CST. Sean Burke will take the ball for the South Siders, while old friend Dylan Cease will be on the mound for the Toronto Blue Jays, because of course he is.

Strap it in, Sox fans. It’s April, the team is already 1-5, and if this one was any indication, it’s shaping up to be another long, grinding ride on the South Side.


Justin Crawford and Edmundo Sosa lead Phillies past Nationals in 10 innings

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Rookie Justin Crawford had an RBI single in the 10th inning after the Philadelphia Phillies rallied from a four-run deficit for a 6-5 victory over the Washington Nationals on Wednesday.

The Nationals led 5-1 in the seventh. J.T. Realmuto and Bryce Harper hit solo home runs to get the Phillies within 5-3. Edmundo Sosa hit a two-run single with the bases loaded and two outs in the ninth to tie the game.

With runners on the corners in the bottom of the 10th, Crawford singled to right off Cole Henry (0-1). It was the third hit for Crawford, a first-round amateur draft pick in 2022 who made his major league debut on opening day.

Sosa ended the top of the 10th with a leaping catch of a CJ Abrams line drive, doubling the automatic runner off second base for winning pitcher Jhoan Duran (1-1).

Washington starter Cade Cavalli went six innings, allowing one run, five hits and two walks and striking out three.

Abrams hit a three-run home run in the seventh inning. Daylen Lile, Brady House and Joey Wiemer each had two hits. Wiemer, who entered leading the majors with a .615 average, scored twice.

Cristopher Sánchez pitched 5 1/3 innings for the Phillies, allowing one run, four hits and four walks and striking out seven.

The Phillies took a lead in the first inning when Trea Turner scored on Kyle Schwarber’s double.

The Nationals scored in the second on an infield single and two walks. With the bases loaded, Sánchez struck out Drew Millas on a pitch in the dirt, and Realmuto threw to first base trying to pick off Jacob Young, allowing Wiemer to score. Millas hit an RBI single in the sixth.

The homers were the first of the season for Realmuto and Harper.

Up next

Both teams are off Thursday. The Nationals prepare for their home opener against the World Series champion Dodgers on Friday. Their starting pitcher is to be announced.

The Phillies begin a road trip in Colorado. Aaron Nola (0-0, 5.40 ERA) will take the mound against former teammate Michael Lorenzen (0-0, 6.23) for the Rockies.

___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/mlb

Braves vs. Athletics series recap: A business-like start to the season

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 31: Drake Baldwin #30 of the Atlanta Braves celebrates hitting a home run during the first inning against the Athletics at Truist Park on March 31, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Kevin D. Liles/Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

4-2 sure beats the crap out of 0-7, right? Indeed, the Atlanta Braves have gotten their season off on the right foot following a successful homestand to get things going. Atlanta took the opening series with two straight wins over the Royals to start things off and now they’ve kept things going in the right direction by picking up another series win over the Athletics.

Now granted, the Athletics always seemed like a pretty favorable opponent and that was especially the case after they spent most of their opening series in Toronto whiffing left and right. Still, the A’s are the type of team that the Braves have to take care of business against if they plan on playing meaningful baseball later on this year and as far as the early test goes, the Braves have passed it in fine fashion. So let’s take a look at how the final series of this first homestand for the Braves.


Monday, March 30

Braves 4, Athletics 0

Well, would you look at that? Two shutouts in four games for the Braves pitching staff — just like all of us predicted, right? Indeed, Bryce Elder got his season off to a fantastic start as he delivered six shutout innings while dancing around even the slightest bit of trouble that the A’s tried to cause him.

On the offensive side of things, the Braves did most of their damage in the first inning as they rudely welcomed Jacob Lopez to Atlanta with three runs to start things off. Thanks to Elder and the rest of the staff being on point, this was more than enough for the Braves to end up taking the win. Mauricio Dubón ended up with three RBI on the night, which was impressive considering that he had a less-than-stellar night in the field with the glove. That’s baseball for you.

Tuesday, March 31

Athletics 5, Braves 2

Atlanta’s first crack at winning this series went awry as one bad inning from Jose Suarez and a lack of opportune hitting from the Braves doomed them to defeat in this one. Drake Baldwin did homer in the first inning (on his own bobblehead night, no less) and that seemed like an auspicious sign but instead, Suarez gave up three runs to the A’s in the second inning and then eventually staked themselves out to a 5-1 lead once the top of the fifth inning was done.

Braves hitters couldn’t do much with Aaron Civale, as his offspeed offerings were too tricky for a lot of Atlanta’s lineup on the night. The main positive for the Braves in this one was that Martin Pérez was able to follow in Didier Fuentes’ footsteps by helping to give the rest of the bullpen a day of rest. Pérez entered the game in the middle of the fifth inning in relief of Joel Payamps and went the rest of the way.

In the postgame press conference, Walt Weiss described Pérez’s performance as as much of a “game-saver as you could get in a loss” and Pérez himself stated that he felt very good about his approach when it came to attacking the batters in this one. He also stated that he’s feeling fully healthy for the first time since 2024, so there’s another positive to look at when it comes to one of the pitchers on this staff at the moment. The loss sure stunk but the overall outlook wasn’t horrible.

Wednesday, April 1

Braves 5, Athletics 1

Despite the offensive effort from the A’s in the middle game, the Braves had to have felt good about their chances of bouncing back on the mound with Chris Sale going for the Wednesday matinee. Sure enough, Sale’s performance was too tough for the A’s to deal with on this day as he finished with six innings and just one hit and three strikeouts allowed. The one run came off of a home run from Shea Langeliers, which at this point you’ll take a solo shot from him because he’s come out of the gates swinging a bat that’s on fire. Outside of that blemish, Sale got some excellent results while not even looking particularly dominant, himself.

A’s starter Luis Severino looked extremely shaky to start out this contest and while the Braves let a scoring chance go by the wayside in the first inning, Drake Baldwin made sure that they didn’t waste the next chance. His two-RBI single put the Braves in front in the second inning and Atlanta was able to run Severino from the game after just 3.1 innings and four earned runs. Drake Baldwin collected all four of those RBI that Severino allowed, as his double off of Elvis Alvarado was the blow that eventually put the Braves too far ahead for the A’s to catch on this day. Matt Olson tacked on an RBI single to make it 5-1 and then the bullpen arms of Robert Suarez, Dylan Lee and Raisel Iglesias finished things of to give the Braves their first rubber game victory of the season.


Well, the first homestand of the season is over and the Braves made sure that it was a winning homestand, to boot. Even with the weirdness that is the fact that Atlanta’s gotten picked off four times in six games this season (they got picked off 10 times across all 162 games last season), that didn’t take away from the business-like performance that we saw from the Braves over the course of these six games. This was an A’s lineup that was coming into this series struggling at the plate and whiffing a ton. Outside of one bad inning from Suarez in the middle game, Atlanta’s pitching was on point and continued to make life very tough for the A’s at the plate.

Meanwhile, the star of the show at the plate so far has to be Drake Baldwin. Last season’s NL Rookie of the Year has gotten off to a blazing start — sure, Shea Langeliers may be on fire right now but Baldwin is certainly keeping stride with him, as he’s clubbed seven hits (three of those hits being homers) with seven RBI as well. The rest of the veterans in the lineup have gotten off to a bit of a fitful start at the plate but Baldwin’s great performance is helping to lift the whole team up while those guys continue to get their feet up under them to get this season going.

All-in-all, it’s hard to find fault with a 4-2 start to the season — beggars can’t be choosers, either, especially when you consider the calamitous start to the 2025 season. They’ll have an early test on their hands with another early-season road trip but a trip to Arizona and Anaheim seems a lot more reasonable than visiting San Diego and Los Angeles this early on. It’s still baseball and the Braves will have to take care of business on the road in order to make sure that this good start keeps moving into the future but for now, the foundation-laying of this season is going smoothly with two series wins right out of the gate.

C.B. Bucknor's week gets worse: Umpire leaves game with injury days after ABS and replay reversed his calls

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - APRIL 01: Umpire CB Bucknor #54 is injured in the second inning on a foul ball and leaves during the game between Milwaukee Brewers vs Tampa Bay Rays at American Family Field on April 01, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images)
Umpire C.B. Bucknor was injured by a foul ball in the second inning and left the game between Milwaukee Brewers and Tampa Bay Rays on Wednesday in Milwaukee. (John Fisher / Getty Images)

Umpire C.B. Bucknor's difficult week continued on Wednesday when he left a game between the Tampa Bay Rays and Milwaukee Brewers after a foul ball hit him flush in the face mask.

Tampa Bay's Nick Fortes fouled a 100-mph fastball from Milwaukee's Jacob Misiorowski straight back. The ball struck Bucknor, who immediately turned and dropped to his knees.

The Brewers' training staff checked on Bucknor before he left American Family Field. Chad Fairchild, who had been working as the first base umpire, took over behind the plate.

Bucknor's troubles began Saturday when the Cincinnati Reds and Boston Red Sox challenged eight of his six ball/strike calls. Six were overturned by Major League Baseball's new ABS challenge system, including back-to-back strike three challenges by Reds slugger Eugenio Suárez that delighted the crowd. At one point, Bucknor's chin dropped to his chest.

Bucknor, who has been an MLB umpire since 1996, ejected Red Sox manager Alex Cora after calling Trevor Story out on a check swing. The call ended the eighth inning with two runners on base and the Red Sox trailing by one run.

"He has one job to do. It wasn't his best day," Cora said about Bucknor after the game.

Read more:What to expect with MLB's ABS system, and how Dodgers will navigate it

Bucknor, 63, found himself in another swirl of controversy as the first base umpire on Tuesday. Jake Bauers of the Brewers reached base after Rays shortstop Ben Williamson made a throwing error, and Bucknor called Bauers out for failing to touch first base.

The replay clearly showed that Bauers had stepped on the bag, and the call was reversed.

"Yeah, grateful for that," Bauers told reporters about the replay review. "I don't know what happened. Just thankful to get on base and thankful to come around and score."

While it is unclear why Bucknor missed the call at first base, the rash of overturned ball/strike calls is emblematic of the adjustments umpires and players are making to the automated ball/strike challenge system.

Read more:Shohei Ohtani battles through the rain to throw a one-hit gem in Dodgers' win

From 1995 to 2005, the MLB rule book defined strikes as the area over home plate from the midpoint between the shoulders and the top of the pants, down to the bottom of the knees. ABS, however, defines the top of the zone as 53.5% of a player’s height, and the bottom of the zone is 27% of the player’s height.

ABS uses tracking technology — 12 Hawk-Eye cameras — to determine the precise location of a pitch relative to a batter’s specific strike zone. The cameras measure balls and strikes from a two-dimensional plane set in the middle of home plate.

Challenges can be made by the catcher or batter, who tap their head to indicate they want an ABS verdict. In the first few days of the 2026 season, catchers turned 59 of 92 challenges (64.1%) into favorable rulings. Batters were less successful, turning 33 of 78 challenges into favorable rulings.

In 2003 and 2006, Sports Illustrated surveys of active MLB players declared Bucknor as the worst umpire in MLB. A 2010 survey of players by ESPN also ranked Bucknor last.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

The kids are alright: Phillies 6, Nationals 5

Apr 1, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies center fielder Justin Crawford (2) is doused with water after his walk off game winning RBI single during the tenth inning against the Washington Nationals at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

First, Andrew Painter had a highly successful debut.

Now, Justin Crawford has himself a walkoff hit, giving the Phillies a much needed victory at home, evening their record at 3-3.

One would have thought it was going to be a lot easier the way the game started. Trea Turner walked, stole a base and scored on a Kyle Schwarber double.

However, the second inning saw Cristopher Sanchez struggle with his command a bit and the Nationals continue their series trend of barely getting the ball out of the infield to scrape across a run and tie the game at one. The Phillies had a chance to untie it in their half of the second, loading the bases for Trea Turner, but a line drive to center field and the threat was over.

The chance would find Turner again in the fourth when he had two in scoring position and two out, but a meek fly ball and the feeling of “here we go again” started washing over everyone watching it. The game stayed that way until the sixth when the Nationals pushed a run across with two outs to take a 2-1 lead. In the seventh, Washington added on when Brad Keller, on in relief for another day, got two outs and induced a groundball for a potential third out, only to be overturned by replay. Two batters later…

Sigh…

However, the fight to gain ground started in the seventh. J.T. Realmuto finally got on the board with a home run to cut the lead to three.

In the eighth, Bryce Harper decided to have a pulse by homering and narrowing the lead yet again.

The ninth is when the real fireworks began. Turner and Schwarber got one with one out, Harper flied out with two outs and Alec Bohm was walked to load the bases. Edmundo Sosa, brought in as a substitute earlier in the game, delivered with an RBI to tie the game at five.

It stayed this way into extra innings with Jhoan Duran on the mound to preserve the tie ballgame. He got the first out, then was aided by a sparkling defensive play by Sosa to keep the game tied.

With the chance to win it in the tenth, Realmuto singled ghost runner Brandon Marsh to third, meaning Justin Crawford had a chance to make his first stamp on the team. He delivered in a big way.

Good for the kid.

The team heads to Colorado to begin a three game series on Friday.

Milwaukee Brewers use 6-run 8th inning to power past Tampa Bay Rays 8-2

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Christian Yelich hit a go-ahead, two-run single in a six-run eighth inning and the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Tampa Bay Rays 8-2 on Wednesday.

Garrett Mitchell added a two-run double during the decisive rally, Blake Perkins drove in a run with a groundout and David Hamilton capped the inning with an RBI single as Milwaukee (5-1) broke open a 2-2 game.

Brice Turang tied it earlier with a two-run homer in the third after the Rays took the lead on Yandy Díaz’s two-run shot in the top half of the inning.

Milwaukee starter Jacob Misiorowski (1-0) struck out seven and allowed four hits and two runs in six innings. The right-hander walked two before handing the game to the bullpen. Grant Anderson, Aaron Ashby and DL Hall combined for three scoreless innings, with Hall striking out three in the ninth.

Tampa Bay (2-4) starter Drew Rasmussen allowed one run and two hits while striking out eight in five innings.

The Brewers’ eighth-inning surge opened after Joey Ortiz reached on a fielding error by shortstop Carson Williams. Turang’s sacrifice bunt was mishandled at first base, putting runners on first and second. William Contreras then singled to load the bases.

Yelich followed with a ground-ball single to right field that scored Ortiz and Turang for a 4-2 lead. Mitchell’s double to right brought home two more runs before Perkins’ RBI groundout and Hamilton’s single extended the lead to 8-2. Milwaukee went 5 for 9 with runners in scoring position.

Griffin Jax (0-2) took the loss after allowing five runs in the eighth inning.

Umpire C.B. Bucknor left the game in the second inning after being struck in the mask by a foul ball off Nick Fortes’ bat on a 100.2 mph fastball from Misiorowski.

Up next

Chad Patrick (0-0, 2.08 ERA) will make his second start of the season against the Kansas City Royals on Friday, while Joe Boyle (0-0, 3.00 ERA) takes the mound for Tampa Bay on Friday against the Minnesota Twins.

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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb