Three things to watch for in the Washington Nationals home opener against the Dodgers

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 30: Luis García Jr. #2 of the Washington Nationals celebrates with CJ Abrams #5 after the game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on March 30, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Nationals defeated the Phillies 13-2. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Nats are going to be tested right out of the gates in their home opening series. There is no bigger challenge than facing the back to back World Series champions. That is what the Nats will do when they square off with the Dodgers. Here are three things I will be watching.

Can the Nats Continue Their Surprising Success Against the Dodgers?

The Nats and Dodgers have been on two different ends of the MLB food chain. While the Dodgers have been the kings of baseball, the Nats have been stuck near the basement of the National League. However, the Nats have had a surprising amount of success against the Dodgers lately, especially at home.

The Nats have won their home series against the Dodgers in each of the last two seasons.It is a weird phenomenon, but the Nats have tended to give the Dodgers a tough time. I have a feeling the mighty Dodgers may have a tough time getting up for an April matchup across the country against a bad team. They know they can coast through the regular season.

Regardless of why it is, the Nats have given the Dodgers a tough time. Last season, James Wood had a huge series against them. He hit a few towering home runs on cold April nights. Seeing the big man get going would be huge for the Nats.

Wood has continued his struggles from the second half of last season. The strikeouts are still out of control and his swing just does not look totally right at the moment. However, we know what he is capable of, and this would be quite the time for him to snap out of his slump.

Will Joey Wiemer Keep The Good Times Rolling?

Joey Wiemer has been the story of the first week of the Nats season. The waiver claim came out of the gates like a house on fire. He got on base in each of his first 10 plate appearances. Now he is “only” hitting .588 with a .682 on base percentage. Wiemer has been a joy to watch, not only at the plate, but also in the field and on the bases.

It would be really cool if he could stay hot in front of the home crowd. Wiemer has been DFA’d three times in the last year, but now he seems to have found a home. Eventually, he is likely to cool off and settle in as a lefty killing 4th outfielder. However, the Nats are going to ride the hot hand as long as they can.

Wiemer is only 27 and was a former top 100 prospect. So, there is a chance that something just clicked for him and he can be a late bloomer. That is pretty unlikely, but it is why Paul Toboni has been taking a lot of shots on waiver claims like Wiemer.

Can The Starting Pitching Hold Up?

One big worry I have for this series against the Dodgers is the Nats starting pitching. On paper, the matchup is not great for the Nats. They have Miles Mikolas, Jake Irvin and Foster Griffin lined up. Against a ferocious lineup like the Dodgers, that could be trouble.

However, Irvin and Griffin looked solid in their first starts of the season. Irvin was particularly impressive, showing much improved stuff. He is still a guy who posted an ERA that was well over five last year.

Mikolas will be taking the ball today, and he looked really shaky in his first start. Granted, his defense did not do him any favors, but Mikolas is not a guy who misses many bats. The Nats defense will have to be on their toes today, and Mikolas will have to avoid mistakes to keep the ball in the yard.

Luckily for the Nats, they are avoiding Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Shohei Ohtani. They are also missing Blake Snell, who is out with injury. However, the Dodgers have an embarrassment of riches, so they will still be facing good arms. Tyler Glasnow, Emmet Sheehan and Roki Sasaki are all very talented. 

I am interested to see what Sasaki looks like in particular. He has not had the easiest transition since coming over from Japan. However, he still has amazing stuff when he is on. Seeing him matchup with Foster Griffin will be cool. That could have been a matchup NPB fans saw a couple years ago.

Overall, the Nats have a tall task this weekend. However, they have not backed down from the Dodgers in the past. Over the first week, they also showed they can go toe to toe with some of the NL’s best. They competed with the Phillies and Cubs, so why can’t this group take a series from the mighty Dodgers.

The Detroit Tigers 2026 draft bonus pool is announced

ATLANTA, GA - JULY 13: Major League Baseball Robert D. Manfred announces Michael Oliveto as the thirty-fourth overall pick by the Detroit Tigers during the 2025 MLB Draft presented by Nike at Coca-Cola Roxy on Sunday, July 13, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

After three pretty successful drafts, the Detroit Tigers enter the 2026 edition of the amateur draft picking way down the board for the second straight year. It’s too early to go crazy over their last three first round picks, but so far Bryce Rainer, Jordan Yost, and Michael Oliveto look like one heck of a good group. That’s especially true considering that they’ve held the 11th and 24th overall picks the past two years rather than picking near the top of the draft. Oliveto was 34th overall last year as the Tigers used their biannual competitive balance round A selection on the sweet swinging catcher from Long Island.

On the other hand, the heavy emphasis on overslot bonuses to prep pitchers has not gone well at all. Rapidly the Tigers farm system has found itself in the unfamiliar position of being stacked with position player talent, while the upper minors lack any high end pitching prospects. Most of the prep pitchers they’ve taken are still 20 years old or younger, and they certainly have talent, so things could turn drastically in the Tigers favor over the next few years on the pitching side. Still, part of the reason more conservative teams favor college pitching is because the heavily injury prone young pitchers tend to be winnowed out in college ball. We’ll have to wait and see if the high risk, high upside strategy ultimately pays off or not. What has paid off is the emphasis on taking athletic, up the middle position players with demonstrated plate discipine and contact ability, out of the prep ranks. No doub that will continue to be the foundation to their draft strategy with their top picks.

On Wednesday, MLB release the 2026 amateur draft bonus pools. The Pirates will lead the way with $19,130,700 to spend, picking fifth overall. The Chicago White Sox hold the first overall pick and the third biggest bonus pool at $17,592,100.

The top ten picks, with slot values for each pick, are listed below.

1. White Sox: $11,350,600
2. Rays: $10,507,000
3. Twins: $9,740,100
4. Giants: $8,988,400
5. Pirates: $8,336,500
6. Royals: $7,746,100
7. Orioles: $7,327,200
8. Athletics: $6,982,600
9. Braves: $6,675,300
10. Rockies: $6,393,100

The Detroit Tigers will pick 22nd overall, two slots higher than last year. However, this year their competitive balance pick will come in the B round following the normal second round of the draft. They’ll also be working with a bonus pool of just $9,165,100. Last year they had $10,990,800 to work with, mainly as a result of the higher CB round selection.

The slot values for the Tigers first three picks are as follows.

22. $4,082,700

61. $1,523,600

69. $1,254,200

In theory, the Tigers could burn all but $2,304,600 on those first three picks, leaving them with little enough to spread around on prep pitchers the way they have the past three drafts. That’s obviously not how they’ve done business to date, but this is going to be their toughest draft to date. Perhaps this is the year they actually do take a college player with their first pick on an underslot deal in order to be better able to spread money around to multiple prep players they like later on. Mixing in their usual selection of a few college pitchers and cheap, athletic speed players with some contact ability from smaller schools on minimum bonuses would allow them to round things out. John Peck, their 2023 seventh rounder, signed for $222,500, $72,500 over the minimum, as a fairly light hitting college shortstop out of Pepperdine, but has buit himself up to at least average pop to go along with good defensive ability, to cite a prime example of this type of pick.

We’ll get into the latest mock drafts from Baseball America, FanGraphs, and MLB Pipeline in the weeks ahead as the college season turns toward their own stretch drive in late April and the beginning of May.

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: Twins avoid the sweep on a light day

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - APRIL 02: Second baseman Kody Clemens #2 of the Minnesota Twins is congratulated by first baseman Josh Bell #56 after a home run during the 9th inning of the game against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on April 02, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Thursdays can obviously be light days on the major league schedule, but this one was a particularly short slate. As far as relevance to the Yankees goes, the Blue Jays were set to take on the White Sox in Chicago’s home opener, but it was pushed back due to inclement weather. So, American League action was limited to just one contest, an AL Central battle between the Twins and Royals. Kansas City is a formidable contender in the Junior Circuit, so why not give them the ol’ Rivalry Roundup treatment?

Action resumes on Friday with the Jays and Sox, Boston heads to San Diego, the Tigers match up with the Cardinals, and the Mariners and Astros both face off against other AL West squads.

Minnesota Twins 5 (2-4), Kansas City Royals 1 (3-3)

Good pitching and timely home runs. It may come as a shock, but they lead to wins on the baseball field. While the Twins have had a rough start and are poised for a disappointing 2026 campaign, they put those two together quite well on Thursday in Kansas City.

Taj Bradley was on the bump for the Twins, making his second start of the year, and it was his second straight good one. While the line was a little funky in his first start (4.1 IP, 1 ER, 9 K against Baltimore), he was effective, and he put together a real good one on Thursday. Completing six innings of shutout ball, the right-hander kept the baserunners limited while striking out three, maintaining what was a narrow 1-0 lead for the Twins. All said, Bradley has begun the ‘26 season on the right foot.

Minnesota gained that lead early on, in what can be called non-conventional fashion. With Kody Clemens on second base, Royals catcher Salvador Perez made an errant pickoff that sailed into center field, which allowed the Tigers first baseman to trot home to open scoring.

From the other dugout, Cole Ragans was just as good as Bradley on the mound. The always-fun-to-watch lefty allowed only the unearned run across his six innings of work, striking out eight Twins along the way. Baserunners were limited too, as he gave up just four hits and a walk, though the Twins clearly did what they could with them.

With the score remaining 1-0 for much of this one, both lineups mustered something up in the eighth inning. Both the Twins and the Royals managed sacrifice flies in the innings, coming off the bats of Byron Buxton and Vinnie Pasquantino. Minnesota headed into their half of the ninth looking for some insurance.

They would receive just what the doctor ordered, in a rather explosive fashion. Matt Wallner started the fun with a slicing line drive solo homer over the recently shortened wall in left-center, his second on the season. Two batters later, Clemens played a little copycat with a opposite field homer into the Twins bullpen in left. If the now 4-1 lead wasn’t enough, Josh Bell got in on the action two pitches later, when he turned on a ball and sent it scorching into the opposite ‘pen in right field. Three solo shots certainly counts as a viable insurance plan, and the Twins coasted on that to victory.

Four Minnesota relievers allowed just the one run in the final three innings of this one, with veteran Justin Topa closing things down on the non-save situation. Despite the tough start, it was a good win for the Twins as the Royals’ loss puts them back to .500 at 3-3.

Friday morning Rangers things

ARLINGTON, TX - SEPTEMBER 25: Marcus Semien #2 of the Texas Rangers looks on during a game against the Minnesota Twins at Globe Life Field on September 25, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Bailey Orr/Texas Rangers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, LSB.

There is baseball in Arlington today.

The DMN has everything you need to know if you’re heading to the ballpark.

Shawn McFarland has 5 numbers that highlight the Rangers strong offensive start to the season.

Kevin Sherrington is here to throw cold water on the Rangers’ hot opening week.

Cody Bradford is set for a rehab start.

Jim Callis has a list of where every Rangers top prospect will start the season.

On the home opener front, Jake Oettinger will throw out the first pitch this afternoon. Fresh off a shutout!

Some guy named RJ Coyle has a list of all the Ranger batters’ walkup songs for the start of the season.

And finally Evan Grant and Sarah Blaskovich did their annual Rangers new food menu taste test that culminated in Evan wearing the giant Homer Simpson nacho hat.

That’s all for this morning. First pitch at the GLF is set for 3:05 today with MacKenzie Gore on the mound for Texas.

Happy baseball, and go Rangers!

What are your first impressions of Adolis Garcia?

Mar 31, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Adolis Garcia (53) hits a home run against the Washington Nationals in the fourth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images | Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

The Phillies signing of Adolis Garcia this offseason was met with at best a shrug and at worst rightful comparisons to former one year deal outfielders past. Garcia hadn’t been an average or above hitter since 2023 and was non-tendered by the Rangers after a 2025 campaign that saw him hit .227 with a .665 OPS. But the Phillies and Dave Dombrowski elected to sign Garcia to be their starting right fielder, believing that he could rebound into being a productive right fielder at best and a defensive upgrade over Nick Castellanos at worst.

So far in 2026, that bet is looking good. Garcia is 7-22 (.318) with a home run and one walk to five strikeouts. The metrics also back up the eye test, with a 96.8 MPH average exit velocity, .314 xBA, and .460 xSLG all suggesting that Garcia is putting good swings on the ball. He’s routinely hit the ball hard, but some of them have been line drives right into gloves. One of the biggest things the Phillies worked on with Garcia this offseason was a change in his batting stance. That led to Garcia being late on some balls this spring, but it seems he is starting to get his timing down in the season’s early going.

The other thing the Phillies worked on with Garcia was plate discipline. He has always been a free swinger, but the Phillies wanted him to cut down on his contact on pitches outside the zone, as he made contact on 58% of the pitches he saw outside the strike zone in 2025. Entering Wednesday’s game, Garcia’s outside the zone contact was down to 46.2% while his contact rate on pitches in the zone was 84.6%. He was still swinging and chasing at his normal levels, but he was also making contact on better pitches to hit at a higher rate.

Garcia hasn’t exactly stood out in a major positive way on defense yet however, as he misplayed a fly ball on Sunday and had an errant throw skip into the dugout on Tuesday. But he did have an impressive sliding grab on Saturday that likely saved at least one run from scoring.

Of course, this is all in a ludicrously small sample size. After all, some of these things could have been said about Max Kepler at this point last season. This could just be an early hot streak for Garcia rather than a harbinger of a good season. So, what are your first impressions of Adolis Garcia?

So far, the Orioles’ offense is showing its colors

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MARCH 31: Taylor Ward #3 of the Baltimore Orioles bats against the Texas Rangers at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on March 31, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Bill Streicher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In 2025, the Orioles were supposed to be contenders to make a run at the AL East and deep into the postseason. Instead, they finished 75-87, in last place, with ineffectiveness a big problem on offense. Baltimore’s hitters batted a collective .235 (tied for 24th in MLB) and posted a .699 OPS (21st). Injuries shredded the pitching staff, but the position players were mostly healthy and still couldn’t hit. The organization knew it had a problem.

So the Orioles did some rebuilding on the offensive side. First-year manager Craig Albernaz brought in an entirely new coaching staff on the hitting side: Dustin Lind as hitting coach, Brady North as assistant hitting coach, and Donnie Ecker in the bench coach role. On the position player side, the team’s biggest move was signing Pete Alonso, the longtime Mets slugger who piled up 264 home runs in Queens and cashed in on a five-year, $155 million deal, to anchor the middle of the order. Dylan Beavers emerged as regular lineup options, and veterans Leody Taveras and Taylor Ward joined to provide steady bats on the corners.

On paper, the offense looked rejuvenated. But of course, following a busy offseason, the million-dollar question is: can they actually hit?

After the first week of the 2026 season, the answer is complicated—although this is at least better than bad.

On the downside, this team is slow. Baltimore is near the bottom of the league in stolen bases, and third to last in foot speed by Statcast measures. This is a little surprising considering the outfield got faster, and Blaze Alexander is, according to Statcast, true to his name.

They’re also sitting in the bottom ten in home runs, with just five through their opening games compared to the Los Angeles Angels’ league-leading ten. For a lineup built around adding a slug­ger and improving the overall quality of at-bats, the early power numbers are conspicuous, though it’s too soon for any real inferences. Moreover, the Orioles are hitting copious doubles (they’re seventh in in two-baggers). That hints at a team making contact and driving the ball into the gaps, even if they haven’t found the elevation yet to turn those into home runs.

Otherwise, the contact looks pretty good. The team batting average sits at .255 (ninth in the league), their on-base percentage is .332 (seventh), and they’ve scored 26 runs (thirteenth). These are not catastrophic numbers; they suggest, instead, a lineup with potential that hasn’t quite unlocked it yet.

As for the individual performances, the early standouts are Taylor Ward, Dylan Beavers, and Pete Alonso. Ward is batting .333 through the opening stretch, offering the consistent contact the club is looking for from the outfield corners. Beavers is hitting .286 with a homer, three RBI, and three runs scored. His three-hit game in Baltimore’s 8-3 win over the Rangers, capped by a solo shot in the sixth inning, was a showy and exciting showing by the rookie.

The player drawing the most scrutiny, Alonso himself, is also looking good in an early-season sample, even if he’s not slugging homers in bunches. He’s already reaching base with abandon, hitting .304 with seven hits and three walks in 23 ABs. Blaze Alexander and Adley Rutschman are also starting the year off hot, too.     

On the cold side of things, Gunnar Henderson, despite an early homer, is 4-for-28, but the foot speed and athleticism are still on display. Coby Mayo, despite a hot spring, is 2-for-20. Tyler O’Neill isn’t rushing out of the gate, either.

This is just illustrative, and not meant to be predictive of anything. This season, the Orioles have the pieces. The new coaches have a philosophy. The new faces are hitting. The early returns are, well, early, but they suggest a lineup that’s more than capable of making noise—even if they’re not mashing taters just not over the fence yet. We’ll have to give them time.

Are the Mavs the most ethical, tanking team?

Mar 30, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; The Dallas Mavericks players look on from the team bench during the second half against the Minnesota Timberwolves at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

There are those of you who might say that the Dallas Mavericks are just plain bad, and that’s why they’re losing. And good for them, because working hard every night to try your best to win has a multitude of underrated payoffs, which will benefit both the players and the team down the line. 

The Dallas Mavericks have put up a real fight in almost every game. Sure, it gets hard when you’re losing or keep losing, but head coach Jason Kidd keeps getting the team to go out there and work hard every night. That’s how he operates, and that’s a really good thing for the team.

What it does, is basically eliminating the issue of potentially creating bad habits during a tanking season, and that’s important because it is in the struggle that we find our identity and strength for adversity in the future. 

Not in manipulation, pretense and stat-padding. No one ever reached greatness – or an NBA championship – by cutting corners. And that is what tanking is.

We cannot talk about this without acknowledging that tanking is offensive to sports as a whole. From the point of view of a European, it’s hard not to feel that the theatrics and manipulation around this whole thing is a sham. Losing in order to win is an inherent antithesis to the competitive nature of sports. 

Not only are we teaching kids and fans that manipulating is a criteria for success, we’re also teaching them – along with players – that not putting your best effort forward could prove beneficial. 

It’s all an artificial game of make believe. We pretend it’s normal and convince each other that rooting for a team to lose is a good thing. 

But trying to lose in a competitive environment is not normal, especially for the people involved. Players, who have been brought up to focus on one thing and one thing only – winning – now have to pretend to be satisfied with being part of an organization that encourages not putting your best foot forward. 

Players who have been encouraged to have tunnel vision focus can lose their perspective. It takes a special athlete mentality to make it to the NBA, and for that to become misaligned can prove detrimental, set careers back and in the worst case ruin them. 

We call it bad habits, but it’s more than that. Players are not robots who you can just tell how to think, act and play. Do you think the best players ever become the greatest of all time by tanking? Do you think football players like Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo or Zlatan Ibrahimovic would ever be part of an organization who “had” to lose? 

No. And that’s why they’re among the best that ever played. They would not allow themselves to be distracted by the politics of tanking. By manipulating a system to get the biggest reward. They would want to play through adversity to prove that they are the best and deserve to be called the greatest. 

But since the rules still are in place, teams have to play along – but there are ways to do it more gracefully and with less of the negative effect to the players especially. And luckily, that’s exactly what we’re seeing from the Dallas Mavericks right now. 

Good habits can be formed while losing, character is shaped during adversity and all that. But it’s not until we take ourselves seriously, as fans, players, leaders and people in the world, that we can improve. Let’s not get blindsided and pretend tanking is a natural part of sports. It should be reformed, rethought and updated, because it provides nothing positive to sports, the NBA or basketball. 

But at least we have finally found something the Mavs are winning at: being the most ethical tankers around. 

Find more Beyond Basketball pieces here.

Milwaukee Bucks vs. Boston Celtics Preview & Game Thread: Two teams rowing in different directions

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 02: Payton Pritchard #11 of the Boston Celtics dribbles the ball against Ousmane Dieng #21 of the Milwaukee Bucks during the fourth quarter at Fiserv Forum on March 02, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 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 Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Following their inspired effort against the Rockets, the Milwaukee Bucks face the red-hot Boston Celtics tonight as they try to replicate that effort. As fans, that’s really all we can ask for at this point in the season. Play hard, play together, and let the chips fall where they may.

Where We’re At

Look, the Bucks have lost a bunch of games recently, but as I alluded to in the intro, that Houston game should be what the team aims to be going forward. Play with purpose and confidence as a unit, and you can be proud of your game, whatever the result is. We just saw career highs from Ousmane Dieng, Pete Nance, and the newly signed Cormac Ryan. Ryan, in particular, is a guy I’d like to see play 25-30 minutes per game from here on out; they need to determine whether the shooting is real, and they’re running out of time to do that.

With Jayson Tatum now back in the fold and getting more and more comfortable, the Celtics may just be the odds-on favorite to get out of the East and into the NBA Finals, which is crazy to say when you consider that this year was considered to be a “gap year” for them. As a Bucks fan, I hate to say it, but this Celtics organization just oozes competence at every level. For instance, they grab castaways from other teams and morph them into serviceable role players, such as Luka Garza and Neemias Queta. Obviously, they are extremely well-coached too. This could be a rough one for Milwaukee.

Injury Report

For the Bucks, Giannis (knee), Kevin Porter Jr. (knee), and Bobby Portis (wrist) are out. Gary Trent Jr. (hip) and Thanasis (calf) are questionable, while Ryan Rollins (hip flexor) and Jericho Sims (knee) are both probable. For the Celtics, Nikola Vucevic (finger) is out.

Player to Watch

Let’s go with Jayson Tatum. Tatum has shot ineffectively since returning (40.2%), but his minutes are ramping up, and by all accounts, his movement has been very encouraging as of late. Tonight should be a good chance for him to test some stuff out against lesser competition (sorry, Bucks), so he’ll be a good one to monitor.

How To Watch

Tune in at 7:00 p.m. CDT on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.



Two starts in, how do you feel about Reynaldo Lopez?

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - APRIL 02: Starter Reynaldo López #40 of the Atlanta Braves pitches against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the fourth inning at Chase Field on April 02, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Braves defeated the Diamondbacks 17-2. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It probably goes without saying that our collective enjoyment of the Braves would be higher the last few seasons if we didn’t have so many “the [player name] saga,” but, unfortunately, we do. The Reynaldo Lopez saga is definitely a saga, at that, and it’s one that’s had a number of developments lately, what with the low velocity in his final Spring Training start, the amusing-but-wait-you-were-serious? mechanics messaging afterwards, and then the regained velocity once the regular season started.

But, his two starts themselves have been… part of the Reynaldo Lopez saga, basically. The results have been good in that the team has won both starts, but:

  • First start: 41/141/140 (ERA-/FIP-/xFIP-); 4.49 xERA
  • Second start: 49/137/127, xERA TBD

Remember, when Lopez was great in 2024, he had a 48/74/85 line: legitimately good but with a hilarious gap between his ERA and everything else. It also wasn’t a contact management thing, and his xERA was actually much higher in 2024 than his FIP and xFIP. There’s a discussion to be had about how the way in which Lopez pitches means he can actually outperform his FIP and xFIP and I guess his xERA too, but even if he can, it’s not gonna be to the tune of “awful, unplayable FIP and xFIP but teeny-tiny ERA.”

His command has been a mess, with his fastball generally having a preferred location (armside and up) but missing often enough all the way across the plate without maintaining its verticality that it almost looks like it’s deliberate (but I’m not sure I’d go there yet). The slider has good shape but is currently landing such that batters could just lay off of it and walk, though that hasn’t happened yet.

But, you could argue, I guess, that this is all an artifact of batters swinging early in the count and making ineffectual contact, often in the air. That’s one way to get a high xFIP with low runs charged to your tally, though it doesn’t tend to work for the long haul.

Anyway, I’ll stop babbling. What do you think of Lopez now, compared to before the season began?

Mets prospect Elian Peña doubles, reaches three times in strong stateside debut

The Mets were aggressive with their placement of Elian Peña this season, elevating him to Low-A to begin the year. 

Peña enjoyed a strong spring after his stellar debut in the Dominican Summer League, and now he’s one of the youngest players at his new level at just 18. 

That proved to be no problem on Thursday, as he started the season on a high note. 

The young slugger was thrown right into the fire, batting leadoff for St. Lucie on Opening Day, and he made the most of the opportunity by reaching base three different times. 

Peña showed off his patience, leading off the game with a four-pitch walk. 

He lined out to left in his second at-bat but was able to do some damage his next time up, lacing a double that short hopped the wall in right for his first hit of the season. 

The young slugger then ended his night with a single in the top of the ninth, giving him two hits and a walk in St. Lucie’s 6-3 season-opening loss. 

The Mets certainly hope this is a sign of things to come from Peña this season. 

As SNY’s Joe DeMayo pointed out in his recent mailbag, it wouldn’t be a shock to see him on top 100 prospects lists and competing for the system’s top spot by the end of the season. 

Peña, the No. 7 prospect on DeMayo's Top 30, had 24 XBH's and a .949 OPS in 55 DSL games last season. 

Rockets may be discovering their offensive identity

What good is an advantage if you don’t use it?

Being fluid in Sanskrit is only so employable. Spending nine grand on an Alienware Area-51 Ultra 9 RTX gaming computer to play solitaire would be foolish. Having a playmaking center in the NBA is redundant if you’re not going to run a motion offense.

Come again?

That’s a slightly reductive way to frame the Udoka-era Houston Rockets. Alperen Sengun has had an impressive NBA career thus far, but he hasn’t accomplished enough to justify designing the entire offense in his image.

Yet, that’s not what’s being advocated for here, either.

Rockets need to find themselves

Much of this also boils down to who Amen Thompson is going to be.

If he’s the point guard, some of this is moot. If he’s a wing (which he should be), the Rockets are getting plus positional passing at the five as well as the two or three (or four at times). If Reed Sheppard is the long-term point guard, the Rockets are cooking with motion-offense gas. No matter who eventually replaces Kevin Durant, the Rockets have the passers to do something interesting on offense.

This year’s offense has been interesting, but in an entirely different way. It’s been interesting in the sense that it’s strikingly rudimentary and buoyed far too much by offensive rebounding. Chucking up any old shot because you’ve got a relatively high probability of getting another one does not make for sustainable offense.

Luckily, the Rockets seem to be figuring that out.

The Rockets are moving the ball

For the 2025-26 NBA season, the Rockets have a 59.4 Assist Percentage (AST%). That ranks 26th in the NBA.

Over their last ten games, they have a 67.9 AST%. That ranks 8th in the league. The results have been tangible. During that stretch, the Rockets’ 119.2 Offensive Rating is a meaningful upgrade over their season-long 116.8 mark.

Beyond the numbers, you can see the difference, right? (PS: I’m watching games again. I needed a sabbatical). The ball is just moving. The Rockets have been significantly more fun to watch.

It makes one wonder what the Rockets have been doing. Why would they struggle to hunt mismatches and score in isolation when, outside of the 37-year-old, they’re not a strong isolation team? Yes, Sengun is a great isolation scorer on the standards of a five, but the Rockets need to have a strong offense on the standards of an NBA team. Why hasn’t Udoka leaned into their strengths?

Unless…

The Rockets are finding their stride

Could this be a case of Organic Learning?

(Shout out, Drew. If you know, you know).

Could this have been Udoka’s master plan? Instill toughness and defensive effort in the team. Let them figure out the offense on their own. It’s a high feel roster, and they’ll come up with something eventually.

Alternatively, it could be an unintentional benefit. Udoka’s laissez-faire approach to offensive coaching may have been a gamble on Sengun and Thompson’s development in isolation. By letting the boys figure it out, they independently decided to play the way they play best.

Ultimately, it doesn’t matter. The Rockets will be lucky to win a playoff series this year. They’d shock the world by winning two. Beneficial long-term developments are what matter for now, and the Rockets’ sudden improvement in offensive approach has to carry over into 2026-27, barring a blockbuster trade.

Otherwise, they aren’t making the most of their advantages.

Box Grades: Sans Wemby, Spurs log 11th straight win in commanding fashion

Apr 2, 2026; Inglewood, California, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard De'aaron Fox (4) drives the ball while under pressure from Los Angeles Clippers guard Jordan Miller (22) during the second half at Intuit Dome. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images | William Liang-Imagn Images

I’m not going to lie, I came into this game a bit disgruntled. First, I found out that Victor wouldn’t be playing in the team’s first contest against a competent opponent in some time. Second, the OKC-Lakers game had started, and it was already abundantly clear that the Spurs weren’t going to be gaining any ground in the standings via this game. Put simply, I found myself reflecting on the real possibility that San Antonio could lose against the Clippers, which – together with OKC’s win over the Lakers – would have just about slammed the door on any chance of the Spurs securing the #1 seed.

Thankfully, this iteration of the Silver and Black is exceptionally deep came to play last night despite their best player being out. As a result, San Antonio mostly cruised to yet another blowout victory. On top of that, they managed to produce a box score with a number of interesting gems:

  • The Spurs failed to win several potentially critical battles in this game, as evidenced by their +6 turnover differential, +3 foul differential, and +0 offensive board margin. Since the start of 2012-2013, this is just the 46th time in 16,817 regular season games that a team has won by 19+ points while recording margins as bad or worse in all of these three areas.
  • Largely due to the extra fouls and turnovers, San Antonio also faced deficits in FGA (-5) and FTA (-4). While these are not severe disadvantages, they certainly don’t tend to produce easy wins either.
  • However, all of these deficiencies were swept away by the Spurs’ dominance in shooting efficiency, including FG%, 3P%, and FT% differentials of +10.4, +20.19, and +7.94 percentage points, respectively. 208 other regular season winners have met or surpassed all three of these differentials since the start of 2012-2013, and the average margin of victory in those games was nearly 29 points.
  • The three-point battle in this game deserves some more attention. First, the total volume of threes attempted (58 across both teams) was quite low by modern standards. In fact, only 69 other regular season games have had a 3PA total at least that low in 2025-2026 (that’s about 6% of games played in the season to date). As you might expect, you don’t have to go too far back for this story to change dramatically. As recently as the 2017-2018 season, an absolute majority of regular season games had a 3PA total of no more than 58, and just a few years prior to that 58+ 3PA totals in individual games were relatively rare.
  • The second interesting thing about the three-point battle is how comically bad Los Angeles was. In going 5-of-27 from distance, the Clippers allowed the Spurs to earn a +7 3PM margin on just 31 three-point attempts. Winning teams have achieved this combination in 695 other regular season games since the start of 2012-2013, but the vast majority of those cases came in the earlier part of the period. So far this season, it has only happened four other times.

What are Team Graded Box Scores?

Very briefly, these box scores grade winner-loser differentials for basic box score statistics, with the grade being based on the winning team’s differential relative to other NBA winners during a defined reference period. Think of it like a report card for understanding how a given winner performed relative to other winners. The reference period used runs from the start of the 2012-2013 season to the latest date of play, including only games in the same season category (i.e., regular season and playoff games are not compared to each other).

Data Source: The underlying data used to create these box scores was collected from Basketball Reference. In all cases, the data are collected the morning after the game is played. Although rare, postgame statistical revisions after data collection do occur and may affect the results after the fact.

Minor league update for 4/2/26

The 7 Metre yacht 'Ithnan' (K2) sailing with spinnaker, 1912. The 7 Metre class was used as an Olympic Class during the 1908 and 1920 Olympics. About 200 boats were built. Artist Kirk & Sons of Cowes. (Photo by Kirk and Sons of Cowes/Heritage Images/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hickory and Frisco had their first games on Thursday. Hub City kicks off Friday.

Evan Siary, the Rangers’ 8th round pick last year out of Mississippi State, got the start for Hickory, striking out 8 and walking no one in four innings, allowing one run.

Paulino Santana doubled, walked and stole a base. Yolfran Castillo had a single and a double. Marcos Torres had a hit and a walk. Josh Springer had a pair of hits.

Hickory box score

Frisco starter Leandro Lopez struck out six and walked four in 4.2 shutout innings. Ryan Lobus threw two shutout innings, striking out two and walking one. Wilian Bormie struck out one in a shutout inning.

Dylan Dreiling had a hit and a walk. Keith Jones II had a pair of hits.

Frisco box score

Cody Bradford made his return to the mound for Round Rock. In two innings he threw 27 pitches, 17 for strikes, didn’t strike out or walk anyone, and allowed three hits, including two solo homers. He averaged 90.0 mph on his fastball, topping out at 91.5 mph, which is right about where his velocity was in 2024.

Luis Curvelo allowed two runs in an inning, walking one and striking out one. Josh Sborz struck out one in a scoreless inning. Ryan Brasier struck out two in a scoreless inning.

Cam Cauley homered and drew a pair of walks. Alejandro Osuna homered. Justin Foscue had a hit and a walk.

Round Rock box score

Astros – A’s Series Preview with Athletics Broadcaster Ken Korach

OAKLAND, CA - APRIL 12: Team Announcer Ken Korach of the Oakland Athletics during the game against the Toronto Blue Jays at McAfee Coliseum on April 12, 2005 in Oakland, California. The Blue Jays defeated the A's 5-2. (Photo by Michael Zagaris /MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Tonight marks the first of thirteen contests this season with the division rival A’s.  Ken Korach, who’s a staple in the A’s booth serving as lead announcer since 2006, joins The Crawfish Boxes for an in-depth series preview: 

Q: What’s the ceiling for Nick Kurtz?  How dominant can he be? 

A: I think his ceiling is as high as it could be.  There are several reasons.

His 36 home runs came in 117 games and his first was in his 17th game.  So even if he doesn’t keep up that pace, at least 40 this year seems likely.  Now, if you look at the numbers, his walk rate increased significantly after his 4-homer game.  He’s going to get that kind of treatment, but there is plenty of protection in the lineup.  This is as deep a lineup as the A’s have had since their post-season days. 

A couple of other things.  Often young power hitters get jumpy with their stride and swing and become too pull conscious.  Half of his homers last year were to left center and left. He has a very mature approach.

Even though the ballpark in Sacramento is certainly a hitter’s park, his numbers—barrel rate, exit velocity, bat speed—were elite.  He can hit anywhere.  And, he’s a hitter, not just a power hitter.  

Q: Give our readers an idea, who are the leaders in the clubhouse for the A’s and how and what can we expect this weekend with attendance and overall fan support in the stands?    

A; Brent Rooker is the unquestioned leader in the clubhouse.  He has a backstory that enables him to relate to everyone.  Yes, he’s a two-time all-star who’s hit 99 homers in 3 years with the A’s, but after being a high draft choice, he drifted through 3 organizations before joining the A’s and started to wonder if he’d ever make it. He’s a student of the game and not afraid to speak up. 

Regarding fan support, that’s not an easy question to answer since the situation is unique.  Leaving Oakland, now entering the 2nd of 3 years in Sacramento, and much of the focus is on Vegas in 2028.  I think momentum is building in Vegas, especially with the announcements of two more contract extensions (Wilson and Soderstrom) in the off-season, and the stadium being on schedule.  They are starting the process of selling tickets and the response has been good.  

They drew about 9,500 per game in Sacramento last season.  I thought the attendance was fine.  There are around 10,500 permanent seats in the ballpark and another 2,000-2,500 on the lawn areas beyond the outfield fence.  It’s a minor league ballpark. That’s the reality for two more years.  

Q: From the outside looking in, it feels like the pitching has lots of talent and arms that are in between AAA and the Majors. Perkins & Morales come to mind.   What can you tell us about them and maybe some other young players?

A: Yes, Perkins and Morales.  Morales has opened the season in the rotation.  He had a really nice couple of months last year.  Perkins will be in the PCL.  He’s probably going to be either a starting or bullpen option this year.  He did both in the spring.

A couple of guys to keep an eye on:  Gage Jump and Kade Morris.  Wouldn’t surprise me if both were with the A’s this year.  Morris might be considered more of a sleeper, but he’s gaining a lot of traction in the organization.  Has the ceiling to be a legitimate MLB starter.  Everybody knows Jump from his time at LSU, His velocity has increased and he has a chance to make an impact this year.  

Q: Finally, thoughts on facing the Astros this weekend?   

A: I think the Astros will probably be better this year.  The A’s certainly know them well.  Look at the end of last season’s schedule as an indication that the A’s think they can go toe-to-toe with them.  The A’s swept 4 games in Houston in July and took 2 out of 3 in late September in Sac.   One thing to keep an eye on.  The schedule is challenging to say the least.   We started in Toronto, went to Atlanta and after these three games with the Astros, we then turn back around and go to New York for the Yankees and Mets.  Crazy. 12 of 15 on the road to start the season in the east, and all 15 contests against contenders.

The White Sox believe baseball games are only three innings long

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MARCH 31: Munetaka Murakami #5 of the Chicago White Sox looks on against the Miami Marlins in the fifth inning of the game at loanDepot park on March 31, 2026 in Miami, Florida.
First, Munetaka Murakami had to educate the White Sox on the value of bidets. Now, he has to remind them that games last nine innings. | (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images)

Fun fact: Originally, baseball games did not have a set length. The early Knickerbockers matches were “first-to-21,” like pickup basketball. The decision to switch to a set length was made at the 1857 national base ball (two words) convention. The convention initially decided on seven innings, but thanks to the efforts of Gothams/Knickerbockers slugger and convention delegate Lew Wadsworth, seven innings were rejected in favor of nine.

Before this season, I had assumed every Major League Baseball team knew how many innings were in a standard baseball game. However, it’s become clear to me that the White Sox think baseball games are only three innings, and the entire organization is operating under this falsehood. To the best of my knowledge, the standard length for baseball games has never been three innings.

Tuesday’s 9-2 loss to the Marlins proved my point. The Sox went up, 2-0, in the top of the third, thanks to a string of hits from Edgar Quero through Munetaka Murakami. The Marlins were held scoreless in the bottom half of the frame. That’s when the confusion appeared to set in.

Somebody must have informed the White Sox that there were six more innings to play. Despite this clearly being a regular occurrence, CHSN has never aired this as it happens. I can only guess who it always falls on to relay this information. Is it the umpiring crew? A bat boy? Maybe Murakami has already had to bring it up this year, sheepishly, as his new teammates grab their bats and gloves and turn to walk toward the showers (my research has shown that Japanese baseball is also nine innings.)

Our poor White Sox, for whatever reason, are always taken aback by this. Maybe it’s coaching; as best I can tell, Will Venable has not confirmed on the record that he knows a baseball game lasts nine innings. Or perhaps everybody on the Sox has that “Momento” disease.

No matter the cause, the effects are obvious: The news of a fourth inning clearly disoriented both Luisangel Acuña and Tristian Peters, as they collectively forgot how to call for a fly ball. Erick Fedde, having just learned minutes earlier that he did not throw a complete game, was unable to get back into a competitive mindset. White Sox strikers were held hitless for the last six innings while being outscored, 9-0. 

This has been a consistent problem already in 2026. Here are their hitting splits so far:

Innings 1-3: .302/.371/.571
Innings 4-6: .173/.267/.327
Innings 7-9: .125/.208/.208

… and their pitching splits:

Innings 1-3: 4.80 ERA
Innings 4-6: 9.00 ERA
Innings 7-9: 12.27 ERA

It’s the bullpen that confuses me the most. Before the fourth inning, why do relievers think they’re there? Do they ever ask one another why the team needs 13 arms when the team is liable to play, at most, 21 innings per week? It must be terrifying to warm up for an innings you previously didn’t know existed, by a bullpen coach who is just as surprised and frightened.

Worse yet, this is an issue that dates back at least a year. Conventional wisdom holds that the more often you see a pitcher, the better you’ll perform. Here is the league average last season for each time a starting pitcher goes through the batting order:

First time: .241/.307/.400
Second time: .249/.311/.416
Third time: .258/.324/.432

And here are the ’25 White Sox:

First time: .246/.305/.419
Second time: .231/.299/.371
Third time: .238/.295/.369

The evidence is clear: The White Sox offense only prepares for one at-bat per game. So, if you or someone you know could please relay the standard length of a baseball game to the White Sox clubhouse before their next game, things just might turn around yet!