The Padres (43-39) are coming off a 4-2 loss to the Dodgers (54-30) and now travel across the country for a road trip that starts in Chicago. The Cubs (46-38) are heating up over the past week, but they have struggled at home altogether on the month going 5-6 over 11 games.
Chicago is 6-1 in the last seven games and coming off a 4-3 win over Milwaukee in extra innings Sunday. Chicago has now tied or won five straight series but are still 6.5 games back of Milwaukee for first place in the NL. After losing four straight starts by Shota Imanaga, the Cubs have won three of the last four with three of those games being decided by one run.
San Diego has yet to announce a pitcher for this game and will likely roll with a starter and use relief pitchers a majority of the way. The Padres have had 11 road games this month and have come away with four wins. San Diego is hitting .226 on the road this season (28th) with bottom 10 ranks in OBP, SLG, and OPS. Over the last seven days, Manny Machado has two walk off winners and is hitting .300, which is a pleasant sign for San Diego fans.
Let’s dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two.
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Game details & how to watch Padres at Cubs
Date: Monday, June 29, 2026
Time: 8:05 PM EST
Site: Wrigley Field
City: Chicago, IL
Network/Streaming: MLB TV
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Odds for the Padres at the Cubs
The latest odds as of Monday:
Moneyline: Chicago Cubs (-149), San Diego Padres (+123)
Spread: Padres +1.5 (-149), Cubs -1.5 (+124)
Total: 11.5
Probable starting pitchers for Padres at Cubs
Monday's pitching matchup (June 29): Shota Imanaga vs. Griffin Canning
The Cubs’ Pete Crow-Armstrong is hitting .278 with 88 hits, 17 home runs and 45 RBI over 317 at-bats
The Cubs’ Ian Happ is hitting .224 with 67 hits and 112 strikeouts over 299 at-bats
The Padres’ Fernando Tatis Jr. is hitting .283 with 89 hits, 3 home runs, and 30 RBI over 314 at-bats
The Padres’ Jackson Merrill is hitting .212 with 65 hits and 84 strikeouts over 306 at-bats
Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!
Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Padres at Cubs
The Cubs are 34-50 ATS, ranking third-worst
The Padres are 45-37 ATS, ranking seventh-best
The Cubs are 45-38-1 to the Over, ranking eighth-best
The Padres are 45-36-1 to the Under, ranking second-best
The Cubs are an MLB-worst 14-26 ATS as the home team
The Padres are 20-16 ATS as the road team, ranking eighth-best
Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Cubs and the Padres
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Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Monday's game between the Padres and the Cubs:
Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Cubs on the Moneyline.
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ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 16: Moritz Wagner #21 of the Orlando Magic goes up for a shot against Jock Landale #31 of the Atlanta Hawks during the second quarter at State Farm Arena on March 16, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Over the past 48 hours, the Sixers have been linked to both John Collins and Dean Wade as possible free-agent targets. That strongly suggests they’re considering using the $15.0 million non-taxpayer mid-level exception, which does not bode well for Quentin Grimes and Kelly Oubre Jr.’s chances of returning to Philadelphia next season.
If the Sixers use the non-taxpayer MLE, they’d be hard-capped at the roughly $209 million first apron through next June. With more than $172 million in guaranteed salary already on their books, they’d have a tough time spending the full non-taxpayer MLE and re-signing either Grimes or Oubre while staying under the hard cap, much less both.
If they strike out on Collins, Wade and their other non-taxpayer MLE targets, the Sixers could always pivot toward using the smaller $6.1 million taxpayer MLE instead. That would hard-cap them at the $222 million second apron, but they might be able to re-sign Oubre, Grimes and/or Andre Drummond while still adding an impact free agent.
With that in mind, let’s run through a handful of free agents whom the Sixers could potentially target with the taxpayer MLE.
Based on the current $165 million projection for the 2026-27 salary cap, the taxpayer MLE is projected to start at $6.065 million. Teams can only offer one- or two-year contracts with the taxpayer MLE, so the most that the Sixers could offer is a two-year, $12.4 million deal.
Jock Landale, C
The Sixers could have acquired Jock Landale essentially for free ahead of the February trade deadline. Two days after the Memphis Grizzlies shipped him to the Utah Jazz, the Jazz sent him to the Atlanta Hawks for cash considerations.
The Sixers didn’t pursue him at the deadline because doing so would have pushed them back into luxury-tax territory. It’s not too late for them to rectify that mistake, but it’ll be more costly now.
Between Memphis and Atlanta this past season, Landale averaged a career-high 10.6 points and 5.7 rebounds in only 22.1 minutes per game. He also shot 38.3 percent on a career-high 2.8 three-point attempts per game (193 in total). While Landale might not be as prolific of a rebounder as Drummond, he’d still be an upgrade at backup center behind Joel Embiid.
The Sixers are reportedly interested in Landale, according to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype, although he’s “expected to have a strong market” with interest from at least a half-dozen teams. Scotto warned that Landale is expected to “command offer north of the bi-annual exception in free agency” as well.
The good news is that the $6.1 million taxpayer MLE is slightly north of the $5.5 million bi-annual exception. But with this many suitors after him—Scotto specifically mentioned the Hawks, Chicago Bulls, Los Angeles Lakers, Los Angeles Clippers and Cleveland Cavaliers—the Sixers might have a tough time outbidding all of them.
Ziaire Williams, SF
To maximize their financial flexibility this offseason, the Brooklyn Nets declined their $6.25 million team option on Ziaire Williams on Sunday, making him an unrestricted free agent.
The soon-to-be 25-year-old averaged 10.2 points and shot a career-best 34.3 percent from deep this past season with Brooklyn, although he hasn’t shot above 43.0 percent from the floor since his rookie campaign in 2021-22. The Grizzlies originally traded up to the No. 10 pick to select him, but he has yet to live up to his predraft hype.
Williams is the exact type of reclamation project that the Sixers should be willing to gamble on. He doesn’t turn 25 until September, so he could become a part of their long-term future if he popped in Philly. However, the Sixers could face competition from the Los Angeles Lakers if they do decide to pursue Williams, according to Dan Woike of The Athletic.
“The bet for the Lakers would be that at 6-9 with a nearly 40-inch vertical leap, that Williams could be an impact defensive player with room for growth on the offensive side of the ball. He has fans inside the Lakers’ facility.
“There are local connections too — Williams was a teammate of Bronny James at Sierra Canyon.”
The Sixers took swings on a bunch of recent former first-round picks as “second-draft” candidates under former team president Daryl Morey, including Dalen Terry and MarJon Beauchamp last year alone. Could new team president Mike Gansey pursue the same strategy with Williams?
Tim Hardaway Jr., SG
The Denver Nuggets appear to be in cost-cutting mode as they look to reorient around Nikola Jokić. Tim Hardaway Jr. could wind up being a cap casualty for them.
Hardaway finished third in the Sixth Man of the Year race this past season after averaging 13.5 points while shooting 44.7 percent overall and a career-best 40.7 percent from three-point range in only 26.6 minutes per game. He played in 80 games this season but started only six of them, making him a very worthy 6MOY candidate.
More than half of Hardaway’s field-goal attempts have come from long range in each of the past seven seasons, and he’s shot above 38 percent from deep four times in that span. The Maxey + Embiid + shooters formula has historically worked wonders for the Sixers, and Hardaway is among the best available shooters on the free-agent market this offseason.
According to Marc Stein and Jake Fischer of The Stein Line, the Miami Heat are expected to “have strong interest” in both Hardaway and Minnesota Timberwolves guard Mike Conley, as they look to corner the market on over-the-hill veterans to pair with Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bam Adebayo. However, the Heat are hard-capped at the first apron and could have a tough time filling out their roster as is without clearing additional salary.
The 34-year-old Hardaway might not be a long-term piece of the puzzle for the Sixers, but he’d be a welcome addition to maximize their win-now chances.
Khris Middleton, SF
In honor of Morey, we had to include one washed veteran here, right?
Middleton played in 63 games this past season split between the Washington Wizards and Dallas Mavericks, and he averaged 10.2 points, 3.7 rebounds and 2.8 assists in only 22.8 minutes per game. He shot a respectable 36.0 percent from three-point range, too. However, the days of him threatening to join the 50-40-90 club are long gone.
Injuries have hampered Middleton in recent years, which is why the Milwaukee Bucks traded him to the Wizards for Kyle Kuzma at the 2025 trade deadline. The Wizards kept his minutes in check because they had zero interest in winning games this past season, but the Sixers presumably wouldn’t ask Middleton to play more than 20-25 minutes per game off the bench, either.
Given his age (34) and recent injury history, Middleton would be a risky signing even with the taxpayer MLE. But in terms of pure talent, the three-time All-Star might be the best player available in this price range.
Unfortunately, he’s already been “strongly linked” to Antetokounmpo and the Heat, according to Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald. At this point, it’d be surprising if Middleton didn’t end up reuniting with Antetokounmpo on South Beach, but one can dream for now.
Moe Wagner, C
Although Franz Wagner still has four years left on his max contract with the Orlando Magic, his older brother, Moe, might be moving on from Orlando this summer.
Moe has been with the Magic since he signed a rest-of-season contract with them in April 2021. He averaged 11.1 points on 56.0 percent shooting in only 18.5 minutes per game with them between the 2022-23 and 2024-25 campaigns, but he suffered a torn ACL in late December 2024 that caused him to miss the remainder of that season and the beginning of the 2025-26 season as well.
With both Wendell Carter Jr. and Goga Bitadze under contract for next season, Wagner may be a luxury that the Magic can no longer afford. Stein and Fischer reported Saturday that he’s projected “to have multiple suitors in free agency” and has “a willingness to play elsewhere” even though his brother doesn’t seem likely to leave Orlando anytime soon.
If the Sixers whiff on Landale, Wagner would also be a solid backup-center addition to compete with Adem Bona for minutes behind Embiid.
Marvin Bagley III PF/C
Marvin Bagley III will always be known as the player whom the Sacramento Kings chose instead of Luka Dončić or Trae Young, which is a reputation that’s tough to shake.
While Bagley will never become an MVP candidate like Dončić or a multi-time All-Star like Young, he quietly resurrected his NBA career last season after looking like he might be in danger of falling out of the league entirely.
Bagley split 60 games between the Wizards and Dallas Mavericks last season and averaged 10.5 points, 6.1 rebounds and 0.7 blocks in only 20.0 minutes per game. He also shot a scorching 61.8 percent overall and 46.2 percent from deep, albeit on only 52 total three-point attempts.
The 6’10”, 235-pound Bagley logged a majority of his time at power forward earlier in his career, but he’s largely slid over to center over the past few seasons. His teams’ net rating has largely been abysmal with him on the floor over that span, but he’s also largely played for abysmal teams in recent years.
Landale and Wagner should be higher on the Sixers’ free-agent big board than Bagley, but he’d be a reasonable backup plan in case they strike out on their top frontcourt targets.
Jun 28, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Texas Rangers pinch runner Jarred Kelenic (25) scores on a wild pitch against the Toronto Blue Jays during the ninth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images | John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images
Kennedi Landry writes that, with Texas in need of innings, Kumar Rocker produced the best road start of his career on Sunday as the Rangers swept the Toronto Blue Jays.
McFarland writes that the Rangers are playing their best baseball during a difficult stretch with the hopes for consistency to follow.
MLB dot com’s Brent Maguire notes that Tyler Alexander can make history tonight as the first player to ever make a start immediately after saving the previous two games.
McFarland writes that Evan Carter is back and hoping to show that he’s more than just an excellent center fielder.
Mike Axisa’s latest mock MLB draft has the Rangers selecting Alabama shortstop Justin Lebron. Now the question becomes, how will this impact LeBron’s legacy?
Jun 4, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto (10) and pitcher Jose Alvarado (46) high five after a victory against the San Diego Padres at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images
In yesterday’s game, the Phillies had taken the lead thanks to Kyle Schwarber’s 30th home run of the season. The team had the lead and needed a fresh reliever, bringing in Jose Alvarado. His first pitch was 96 miles per hour….and went straight to the backstop. He ended up having the typical Alvarado appearance: striking out the first two hitters, hitting the next one, taking a bunt single and throwing it into right field to put runners in scoring position, then getting the third out on weak contact.
At some point, the Phillies will need Alvarado to settle into something a little more consistent. He had started to do so last season, but then, well, you know what happened there. It threw his then consistency into question as to whether it was artificial or not, making this season feel a bit more of the “same old, same old” when he enters a game. The question today is: do you have any trust in him when he enters a game any longer? Personally, if a left handed reliever is needed, I’d just as soon see Kyle Backhus on the mound than Alvarado, but the latter’s velocity with his stuff does help mitigate whatever platoon advantage a right handed batter might have.
It also throws into the spotlight the need this team has for another left handed reliever, but that’s a separate question for another day.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 24: Coby Mayo #16 of the Baltimore Orioles looks on during the second inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on June 24, 2026 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The optimism that surrounded the Orioles a few years ago was the result of a well-stocked farm system that had already begun producing big league talent. Adley Rutschman and Gunnar Henderson debuted in 2022 on an Orioles team that over-performed expectations. The 2023 campaign brought the debut of Jordan Westburg, a Cy Young-calber season from Kyle Bradish, and 101 wins for the Orioles. The upward trajectory of the franchise was clear. But something has been off since the second half of 2024, and that includes a stunting of the team’s homegrown players.
These struggles are not specific to any one player. Rutschman was bad at the plate for a stretch that lasted an entire season and then some. Henderson has been a below-average hitter throughout 2026. Jackson Holliday has had flashes, though is yet to look like the former top overall prospect that he was. Colton Cowser may be the streakiest player in baseball with the deepest troughs and electric peaks. But there may be no player that has fans more divided than Coby Mayo.
Unlike many of his highly-regarded peers that came up through the Orioles system, Mayo was not an especially high draft pick. The O’s plucked him out of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida with their fourth-round selection in 2020, though he did get a signing bonus more aligned with that of a second-round pick. There were warts on his profile that had many scouts worried about his unconventional swing and lack of an obvious defensive position, plus a belief that he was destined for college. The Orioles were able to talk him out of that committment.
Mayo mashed in the minors, including a .973 OPS across Double-A and Triple-A in 2023. That success catapulted him up the prospecting ranking charts. Heading into the 2024 season he was considered a top 30 prospect by each of Baseball America, Baseball Prospectus, and MLB Pipeline. It seemed as though the Orioles had their next star on deck.
Unfortunately, it hasn’t turned out that way. Mayo debuted in Baltimore at the tail end of the 2024 season, but struggled mightily. Over 17 games he hit .098/.196/.098. He returned in 2025, this time often as a first baseman. There was progress. Mayo hit .217/.299/.388 with 11 home runs overall and really seemed to be turning a corner late in the season when he had a .941 OPS in September.
Whatever was working for Mayo at the end of 2025 hasn’t really carried into ’26. He has been on the big league squad all year, mostly at third base in place of an injured Westburg. But he hasn’t exactly taken the position as his own. On the year, Mayo has an underwhelming .190/.260/.376 batting line with 10 home runs. That unevenness at the plate has often driven manager Craig Albernaz to rotate other members of the roster onto the hot corner.
Defense has also been an issue for Mayo this year. No matter which stat you look at, glovework is not Mayo’s specialty. He has been worth -4 outs above average overall, according to Baseball Savant, which is near the bottom of the league. FanGraphs lists Mayo has worth -8 defensive runs saved. But he wasn’t exactly set up to succeed in that regard.
It seemed like Mayo had almost entirely made the transition to being a first baseman in 2025. He played 605.1 major league defensive innings last year; 586.1 of them were played at first base. Then, the Orioles went and signed Pete Alonso in the offseason and held onto Mayo. Overnight, he was back to being a third baseman, a position that had already struggled with and where most scouts have long said he didn’t fit.
You can understand the Orioles perspective on this. They wanted to upgrade the lineup and inject power. Positional fit was secondary, and it’s not as if Mayo had done enough to become a player worth carving out an everyday spot for. The decision to sign Alonso is one that the Orioles front office can be proud of. He is one of the few members of the lineup that has continually carried his own weight. It’s up to Mayo to perform and prove himself. That hasn’t happened, at least not on an everyday basis.
An area where Mayo has shown quite well is facing left-handed pitching. Among players with at least 60 plate appearances against southpaws this year, Mayo’s 196 wRC+ ranks third in MLB, and he is tied for sixth in home runs (seven). When the Orioles do face a lefty, Albernaz is often pushing Mayo higher up in the order, and it usually works out.
The ability to mash left-handed pitching to that level is enough to keep Mayo in the big leagues for a long time. But the glove is not going to work at third base in any capacity, perhaps beyond the occasional fill in. Maybe the Orioles can keep working with him on positioning and footwork, but there was a reason they moved him off the position last year, and the only reason he is back is because Westburg is hurt and there are seemingly no suitable replacements.
A move to right field, as many prospects folks have long speculated, probably does make the most sense. And it could fit for the future Orioles too. The team seems likely to have some outfield innings up for grabs going int0 2027. Taylor Ward and Leody Taveras will be free agents. Tyler O’Neill, who is signed through next season, is on pace to have himself and his .552 OPS this year released early. Heston Kjerstad probably needs to have something click this year, or move on to another organization. Mayo could fit as a platoon bat in right with the left-handed hitting Dylan Beavers while still mixing in the occasional game on the infield or DH, or being deployed in pinch hit spots late in games.
A change like that is unlikely to happen in-season unless the Orioles fall completely out of contention. At that point, they may as well try something. The idea that Mayo is an attractive trade chip to land the Orioles some sort of big league contributor is probably over. He does have plenty of team control since he won’t hit free agency until after the 2031 season, and many organizations would be open to getting his talent through their doors. But he has also seen his many flaws exposed on the big league stage. Potential trade partners will understand that risk and any sort of return is likely to be underwhelming.
ATLANTA, GA - APRIL 12: Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Spencer Strider #99 rests in the dugout between innings during the MLB game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Atlanta Braves on April 12, 2023 at Truist Park in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Nothing caps off misery even better than immediately wheeling your approach around to something completely different to try to win a series, only to get destroyed by bloop hits, swinging bunts, and your own defensive miscues. I won’t dwell on it.
This is not a great week for me, so I’ll probably do stuff like this for the weekdays. I have a big thing about what specifically killed the team’s offense in June and it’s somewhat complicated, but it’ll take me a bit to get that into useful shape because the biweekly recap will need to happen after tomorrow, too.
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MAY 06: General manager Jon Horst of the Milwaukee Bucks looks on during a press conference to introduce Taylor Jenkins as the new head coach of the Bucks at Milwaukee Art Museum on May 06, 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
In the final hours of the Bucks’ self-imposed deadline to deal Giannis, Jon Horst and Milwaukee’s entire brass had to make a franchise-altering decision—the ramifications of which would span the next decade. After weeks of scouring the marketplace and listening to offers, Miami and Boston emerged as the two leading horses in the race, with Antetokounmpo reportedly happy to join either team.
It had seemed like GA-to-Miami was a foregone conclusion for weeks. After all, their offer of picks, young pieces, and established players was what Jon Horst was looking for. They are also in the East, so that got Giannis’ tick of approval, as he reportedly wanted to remain in the conference on his next team. So, what was the hold-up? Well, while the Heat’s offer was good, it definitely wasn’t great. Horst had his bird in hand, and he knew it wasn’t going to fly away.
But although Miami’s offer was never going to be completely off the table, the Bucks GM ran the risk of biting off more than he could chew by waiting. What if Miami got intel that other teams had dropped out, leaving them as the only dog in the fight? They could have begun to pull assets, and although Horst would have been pissed off, that’s the game he played by banking on shaky leverage.
In any event, the initial offer from Miami in the weeks leading up to the draft sounded something like Tyler Herro, Kel’el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., pick 13, and two future firsts. Now, that’s a solid offer, but the Heat were still holding back on some of their assets. What Horst needed was a way to place more pressure on Pat Riley to squeeze those final assets. He needed another suitor.
Enter, the Boston Celtics.
After weeks of sources from inside Boston insisting to every and any reporter that—while they would love to get their hands on Giannis—there was no way they would ever (ever!) consider trading Jaylen Brown to do so, the façade fell by the wayside. Two days before the draft, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst appeared on Get Up to declare that the Celtics were indeed offering Brown for Antetokounmpo. Checkmate, Pat Riley.
As those final 48 hours wound down, various insiders began reporting that Boston had, in the 11th hour, taken the lead in the two-horse race for Giannis, an absolute gut punch for the front office down in South Beach, I presume, who probably thought they had this, him, in the bag. Now, who knows if that was ever true: that the Celtics had “taken the lead.” Who knows where that reporting came from. What I do know is that the Bucks greatly benefited from that information getting out there…
Regardless, at that moment, Horst had masterfully engineered exactly what he needed: a bidding war. The Celtics—who reportedly intended to only offer Brown for Antetokounmpo in a one-for-one swap originally—added two firsts on top of the five-time All-Star, but apparently stopped short of including young guns Hugo Gonzales and/or Baylor Scheierman. The Heat responded by all but emptying their cupboard, relenting on Kasparas Jakucionis, a 2030 first-round pick swap, and a 2033 second-round pick.
So that was that. The final two offers were on the table, both improved and as good as they were going to get. There was smoke that the Bucks’ owners wanted a bona fide star back in the trade, which meant the Celtics were their preferred deal. It’s my stance that accepting such a deal—keeping a possibly (probably) disgruntled Brown in Milwaukee against his will just to sell tickets and stay relevant—would have been a bad choice, so I’m glad they chose the Heat deal. They made the correct, smart decision, in my opinion.
That said, my personal preference was going with the Celtics’ offer, but not keeping Brown. Instead, I wanted to to send him to Portland in a three-way trade that would have sent Milwaukee’s picks (that they traded for Dame) back, along with more players and draft capital; who knows if that was truly an option (recent reporting of the Blazers’ continued interest in Brown indicates that it probably would have been).
Nevertheless, it’s really “six of one, half a dozen of the other” between that sort of theoretical transaction and the deal they accepted from the Heat. Given the circumstances, the Bucks got a solid return for a 31-year-old who, while certainly a generational superstar when he’s on the court, has dealt with mounting injury concerns.
This is where I need to give Jon Horst his flowers. All the flowers. As Zac so eloquently outlined in his own experience, the days leading up to the transaction were hell for me too (and, I can only assume, many other fans). My anxiety was through the roof as I woke up every day only to find out that they still had not struck a deal. I just wanted it all to be over. But Horst had a plan and executed it to a tee, remaining patient until he got what he wanted. Salute.
And not for nothing, but the Bucks GM also deserves major kudos for keeping Giannis off the court amid his pressure campaign to play late in the season. As I wrote about back in March, this trade package would have been significantly reduced if Horst had given in to Antetokounmpo and the two-time MVP had sustained a long-term injury.
I’ve also written about the other packages Milwaukee could have taken—from the trade deadline, and even what would have happened if Horst initiated talks last offseason—but I’ll leave that for a separate story.
CLEVELAND, OHIO - OCTOBER 30: Rui Hachimura #28 of the Los Angeles Lakers shoots over Dean Wade #32 of the Cleveland Cavaliers during the third quarter at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on October 30, 2024 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cavaliers defeated the Lakers 134-110. 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 Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The start of free agency is just hours away. While teams won’t be able to actually sign contracts until July 6th, they can start negotiating on June 30th, and there are a lot of interesting names both in the free agency pool and on the trade block. We’ve already had the massive Giannis Antetokounmpo to Miami move, and there could be more coming.
The Spurs, coming off a Finals appearance in their return to the playoffs, might not go for a big splash, but they do have some roster spots to fill and some roles where they could use an upgrade or more experience. So let’s see what San Antonio needs, how it can get it, and what would make for a successful offseason.
Do the Spurs have cap space? How can they sign free agents?
The Spurs could technically carve up some minimal cap space, but in reality, they’ll act as an over-the-cap team. So what does that mean? Well, they’ll have the non-taxpayer’s mid-level exception worth around $15 million at their disposal, as well as the bi-annual exception worth around $5.5 million since they didn’t use it last year. It should be enough to add some talent.
They will also be able to re-sign their own free agents if they have Bird rights to them without much concern, since they are well below the second apron. Whether they’ll have an interest in bringing most of them back is a different story, but there have been reports that they might try to keep Harrison Barnes. Currently, they have nine players under standard contracts, but that number will move to 11 once they sign their two first-round draft picks.
What about trades? Can the Spurs make something big happen?
The Spurs have young players, draft picks, and contracts large and small to make a big trade, but not without losing key contributors in the process. They had expendable expiring contracts last season, like Kelly Olynyk’s and Harrison Barnes’, to match salaries easily, but now to make a big move for an expensive player, they would have to include guys like Keldon Johnson, Devin Vassell, and/or Luke Kornet, all of whom were in the rotation last year.
Does that mean there’s no chance a trade happens? Not really. Johnson and Kornet struggled in the playoffs, and despite their contributions in the regular season, the front office might consider them expendable. De’Aaron Fox also wasn’t at his best in the postseason, but Brian Wright has said the team remains committed to him. He’s also said he expects most of this group to be back, which likely means that while possible, a big move is unlikely.
What are the Spurs’ needs?
The Spurs have a strong foundation, but there’s one type of player that they are missing: a big forward who can shoot and also spend time as a small-ball center. Now, that type of player is extremely hard to find, and every team that doesn’t have one wants one, so there are not many available. Especially not proven playoff performers who could be had with the mid-level exception.
That said, San Antonio could still use someone who can fill one of the two roles. Among the available big forwards who can shoot, there are names like Tobias Harris, Sandro Mamukelashvili, John Collins, Saddiq Bey, and Rui Hachimura, among others, who will likely sign for mid-level exception money. The Spurs could also retain Barnes to fill that role or rely on the development of Carter Bryant.
Are there any Spurs-related rumors out there?
Unsurprisingly, the Spurs have been linked to a bunch of forwards, but there’s nothing concrete. They are reportedly “expected” to be interested in John Collins and Dean Wade, according to The Stein Line Mark Stein($) and HoopsHype Michael Scotto, respectively. Now, expected to be doesn’t mean they are, but they could be. Stein did say the Spurs are interested in Rui Hachimura, so that seems more of a report than speculation.
The Spurs were also linked to Kawhi Leonard by ESPN’s Bobby Marks and are reportedly one of the two franchises with which Leonard would sign an extension, with the other being the Raptors, according to Stein($). But while Toronto is reportedly interested in a reunion, there has been no news about whether San Antonio is. The answer, considering how badly things ended between franchise and player, is likely “no” even before considering the Clippers’ potentially high asking price.
What’s a realistic scenario for the Spurs in free agency?
Anything can happen in the NBA. We’ve seen signings and trades no one was expecting. But considering how good the Spurs were last season, the tools they have at their disposal to add talent and the few holes on the roster, it wouldn’t be surprising if this offseason is a quiet one for San Antonio.
As mentioned, getting a forward with size who can shoot is the biggest need for the Spurs. They will likely try to find someone using part of the entirety of the mid-level exception. Before the draft, getting a quality third big man seemed like a need, but after selecting two centers, including a seemingly NBA-ready big man in Tarris Reed Jr., it now seems like more of a luxury. Still, it wouldn’t be a bad idea to secure the services of either a shooting big man or a rim protector. If someone who can play is available, either with part of the mid-level exception or the bi-annual exception, it would be smart to secure their services.
It’s hard to name the targets when there haven’t been many reports about who the Spurs want, but a successful offseason would be to get, say, Rui Hachimura and Larry Nance Jr., or John Collins and Simone Fontecchio, for example. While those specific players might not be available, as long as the Spurs add some shooting and size, the offseason would be a success. If they retain Barnes, adding a big man or a guard for cheap to round out their roster would likely be the play.
When does free agency start again? And how can I remain informed?
Teams can start negotiating with free agents on Tuesday, June 30th, at 5 p.m. CT. Make sure to visit Pounding the Rock for all your Spurs-related news and discussion.
Nov 15, 2024; Houston, Texas, USA; A Houston Rockets fan holds a sign before the game against the Los Angeles Clippers at Toyota Center. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images | Troy Taormina-Imagn Images
Lately I have had several ideas about what piece I wanted to write next. For instance, is Ime Udoka this current Rockets’ version of Don Cheaney, Del Harris, Mark Jackson, or Tom Thibodeau? All guys who changed the trajectory of teams that would eventually become champions under the next head coach that took their place. Or is he Rudy Tomjanovich, Phil Jackson, Steve Kerr, or Mike Brown… the coach who will see the Rockets through to the promised land? While I’d still love to debate that with you all in the comment section, I am saddened by the fact that this will be a different type of article. I am bidding you all farewell as a staff writer.
Two years ago, when former staff writer Lachard Binkley called me and asked if I would be interested in writing for The Dream Shake, I couldn’t believe it. At that time, I had been hosting my own Houston sports podcast for less than a year, and I had invited Lachard onto my show very early on and to my surprise he accepted. I had reached out to so many writers, radio hosts, podcasters, and content creators who all said no if they didn’t just flat put ignore me. Lachard however, responded to the very first message I sent him and was happy to come talk Rockets basketball with anyone who loves this team as much as he does. It felt so amazing for someone I had been looking up to and admiring his work from afar, to see me as his equal.
In my wildest dream I figured that Lachard would just become a regular guest on my show up until the point he moved on to bigger and better things. One day in July 2024 he called me and told me that he had gotten a gig writing for SI.com. Here is where I figured he’d be telling me that he no longer had time to make guest appearances on my show. But no… instead he asked me if I would be interested in replacing him on the writing staff at TDS. There was no way he was serious, not in my mind. Of all the people this man knows and has come across in the course of his career, he’s asking me? Why?
I’ll be honest. I’ve never actually asked Lachard that question. I did however thank him profusely and said, “Hell yeah I wanna write for The Dream Shake!” He encouraged me to slow my roll and informed me I’d still have to apply and get accepted, but he gave me Darren Yuvan’s number and said to give him a call. I immediately hung up and did just that. I left Darren a voicemail and told him that Lachard Binkley gave me his number. In my opinion other than perhaps Kelly Iko respectively… there is no bigger name drop for TDS. I was still in shock. Honestly, I wasn’t convinced that I would hear back from Darren for no other reason than as a show of respect for Lachard who contributed so much to this website. Perhaps Darren wasn’t too optimistic himself. After all, I had zero experience nor any formal training in writing. However, he did call me back and asked that I’d write something Rockets related and send it to him so he could better gauge my ability.
Earlier that month, the great Gene Peterson had just passed, and for my submission to Darren I chose to write a tribute to the man who helped me fall in love with Rockets basketball. I told the story of how when I was a kid, I wasn’t allowed to watch West Coast games because my bedtime was 9:00 pm. So, I would go in my room and hide under my bed with my clock radio turned down very low with my ear to the speaker and listen to Gene and Jim Foley call the games. From that little boy who would literally cry himself to sleep whenever the Rockets lost, to potentially writing for the iconic website named after my favorite players signature move. Talk about full circle.
You can guess the rest… but for the Spurs and Mavs fans who may stumble across this and have a hard time putting two and two together… I got the gig.
It has been a blast covering the Rockets these past two years, and even more fun to engage with my fellow Rockets fans and TDS faithful. Even the ones who think my takes suck and that I have no clue what I’m talking about. Those are actually my favorite! I wish I could continue but due to some health complications I’m dealing with I’ve decided that if I cannot give my all to make sure every piece of work I put out is the absolute best I can do, then I’d be cheating myself and more importantly it would be cheating all of you. Instead, I’m going to revert to being a part of this community as a fan, but I want to thank every one of you who took the time out of your day to give me a voice.
To Lachard Binkley, thank you so much for presenting me with the opportunity of a lifetime and thank you for always being just one of the guys despite your success. To my colleagues Xiane, Holly, Armin, Anthony, and James, you are all so very talented and your love for this team and this website jumps off of every piece you write. It’s been an honor to be in your company. Last but certainly not least to Darren Yuvan… sending you the message of my resignation is one of the toughest things I’ve done in some time. I hope you understand that I love this team and this website too much to let my pride get in the way. You, this site, and the fans deserve my best and I just haven’t been able to give that lately. I thank you from the bottom of my heart for the opportunity of a lifetime. This isn’t goodbye, just farewell.
If this is how it ends — the shock over its suddenness and the divisiveness already emerging between fans ahead of the seemingly inevitable Jaylen Brown trade this summer could spark decades of debate.
Some of that could become resolved with answers in the near and long-term. But for now we’re left with: why?
A Jaylen Brown-for-Giannis Antetokounmpo swap, while itself an agonizing decision, would’ve at least garnered some understanding and patience from fans. Let’s see how it goes. For the die-hard Celtics fans, no Brown departure would come without enormous pain. For those more focused on the team’s success and appreciating Antetokounmpo’s all-time credentials, a trade would’ve symbolized new hope after a disappointing playoff loss.
But Giannis never came and, by most accounts, Brown will still leave this offseason. Brad Stevens, at times, spoke in the past tense about his gratitude toward the superstar he coached and helped develop from 2016-2021. When asked if Brown will be on the team next fall, Stevens left the door open to anything happening. And since, reports of the Celtics and numerous teams engaging in trade talks followed with limited push-back from the team. Brian Windhorst went as far as to state it plainly: the Celtics will trade Brown this offs.
“Jaylen Brown is a big part of us,” Stevens said last week. “The one thing I want to make very clear is how valued he’s always been. He’s been amazing. He’s been an amazing teammate. Great person to be around. Whether that run ends 10 years from now when he retires or before, there’s a lot to celebrate. We have a great relationship and an open relationship where we talk about everything. But I don’t want to predict the future.”
It’s unclear for what, exactly. As of Sunday, Michael Scotto cited the Nets, Blazers, Nuggets, Clippers, Hornets, Hornets and Hawks as teams that expressed interest. Many moved on. The Timberwolves and Celtics reportedly discussed a deal that would’ve sent Naz Reid and Rudy Gobert to Boston. Minnesota went with LaMelo Ball. Shams Charania pointed toward a Portland team I’ve also heard has had interest in Brown going back to the first Damian Lillard era there. Yet MassLive indicated Deni Avdija, Toumani Camara and Donovan Clingan are off the table, to varying degrees. The Cavs haven’t shown interest in the Evan Mobley swap that Chris Mannix proposed.
Really? Jaylen’s available and the Celtics can’t dream of Clingan, Reid, or a Jalen Duren sign-and-trade? And Boston, given that market, hasn’t settled on simply retaining Brown with three years left on his contract?
We don’t know what’s going on behind the scenes, and it’s clear the Antetokounmpo letdown and the perception of a disgruntled Brown following his near-ousting opened the floodgates of suitors hoping to land him for a minimal price. The Celtics counteracted that with their demand of four first-rounders, conveyed by Charania. Even if they land that, however, it’s hard to imagine the Celtics standing in a better position today with the players discussed and attainable in all these hypothetical deals. I thought someone put it well last week — Brown and Tatum have at least a punter’s chance at a title in this parity era. The returns we’re talking about would give Boston no chance.
Yet, again, we haven’t heard strong indication that Boston could simply settle to reuniting Brown and Tatum for 2026-27, a combination Stevens has long believed gives the Celtics a shot. Beyond that, Brown’s efficiency scoring inside the arc and getting to the free throw line more often would fit into Stevens’ desire to see more rim pressure from his offense.
The roster around them certainly deteriorated in recent years, to the point where Brown and Derrick White are the only paths to upgrading, or acquiring the assets to do so in the near future. That’s where the team deserves some criticism for a string of roster moves aimed at recovering the maximum salary and luxury tax relief, rather than the best basketball return. The Celtics have nothing to show for Kristaps Porziņģis, Jrue Holiday and Anfernee Simons, while Al Horford and Luke Kornet left in free agency.
Brown becoming the best option left to upgrade isn’t a good reason to trade him.
That’s where the Celtics stand, in a bad position of leverage despite Brown’s heroics in 2025-26. His MVP-caliber season should have positioned him at the peak of his value, whether to Boston or others. Nobody appears fixated on building around him. His exorbitant contract and new restrictive cap penalties certainly play a role in that. Even Antetokounmpo didn’t return one of the league’s most promising young players, depending on your feelings about Kel’el Ware and Kasparas Jakučionis. Teams don’t want to move cost-controlled ascending players who could become stars in the near future. Especially with extension talks opening for Brown on July 26, potentially worth two-years and more than $140 million beginning in his mid-30s.
That’s a possible factor here, especially if the Celtics want to get ahead of that. ClutchPoints reported last week that Brown did not ask out of Boston, and Brown’s made no indication as much through limited-to-no commentary throughout the saga. In fact, shortly after the Celtics lost in the playoffs, Brown expressed a desire to play in Boston for the next decade. He’s made his love for the city known. Though, it’s certainly possible that all sides, through the candid talks between Brown, his agent and Boston last week, reached the conclusion of a break-up as the best path forward. That would tie together some of the questions we have regarding how this unfolded.
Many still wonder why, according to reports, Hugo González, Baylor Scheierman and more first-round picks became the hang-up in an Antetokounmpo deal. That headline put all of the team’s young players in a difficult position following promising steps in their careers. Could Boston at least have parted with some of them, especially knowing what uncertainty would follow with Brown? They also could’ve never entered Antetokounmpo talks knowing that Milwaukee could ask for that much.
If the Celtics simply pursued Antetokounmpo as one of numerous outlets to just move on from Brown, not additional players, that outcome becomes more understandable. It’s unclear, in that case, how they didn’t have alternative Brown trades prepared.
The Celtics might have misjudged Brown’s market, at least relative to their perceived value of him. And thus the increasingly toxic conversation surrounding him reached a new high following Bobby Marks’ note of where one analytics guy ranked Brown. Perhaps that debate yesterday, and the struggle to find value for Brown, serves as some reminder that Brown’s skillset, however flawed, might fit the Boston Celtics best. Through his ability to share responsibilities with Tatum, the knowledge of Boston’s staff to get the best out of him and his own motivation that he’s admitted has stemmed, in part, from slights he’s felt right within the building.
This could be the next one in an everlasting cycle if no trade pans out this offseason, certainly a possibility if low-ball offers continue. Still, this feels different from past Brown trade sagas. The Celtics, at least according to the reporting, have moved with more urgency to find the next possible destination than they have to indicate that they’re focused on moving forward in tandem with Brown. Of course, they might’ve already decided they’re past that point, which would leave a Brown departure all the more hard to swallow. And difficult to understand.
The question we’ll all ask, regardless of the outcome into July: how did it get to this point with one of the greatest players in franchise history? From Finals MVP to proof of performance as a top option to the centerpiece of an Antetokounmpo trade to … bring back whatever the best combination of future assets is?
I’ve never been more perplexed across my years covering this franchise.
“I’ll always keep our conversations private,” Stevens said. “Regardless of what the content of those conversations are like. I don’t love the fact anytime it’s a big public thing. As you know, we try to keep things as close the vest and quiet as possible, at the same time, knowing that the rumor mill is the rumor mill, and there is going to be a lot of noise out there. That’s why you also try to meet and be as upfront as possible. I can’t say enough good things about Jaylen, but I certainly am empathetic toward what that’s probably felt like.”
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 28: Ronny Mauricio #0 of the New York Mets can't come up with a foul ball during the seventh inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citi Field on June 28, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Meet the Mets
The Mets lost two of three to Philadelphia over the weekend, but have no fear, things will surely get better when they head to Toronto and Atlanta this week.
In the minor leagues since 2015, Cardinals’ Bryan Torres is now living the major league dream, including hitting a go-ahead home run to beat the Marlins, 2-1.
The Mets open a three-game series against the Blue Jays in Toronto on Monday night at 7:07 on SNY.
Mets Notes
A.J. Ewing is hitting .325/.398/.519 (.917 OPS) with three homers, six doubles, and four stolen bases in 88 plate appearances over his last 23 games dating back to June 3.
Juan Soto is leading the National League with a .972 OPS
Luke Weaver hasn't allowed a run since April 30. In 23.0 innings over 21 appearances since then, he has given up just 10 hits while walking five and striking out 31
Today's Lineups
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BLUE JAYS
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Jun 27, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Chicago Cubs third baseman Matt Shaw (6) rounds second base agasint the Milwaukee Brewers in the seventh inning at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Michael McLoone-Imagn Images | Michael McLoone-Imagn Images
Welcome to week 14 of our 2026 NL Central Power Rankings — let’s rank some teams!
1. Milwaukee Brewers (50-31); 4-2 this week; 97.0% chance to make postseason (FanGraphs)
The Brewers went 4-2 this week, sweeping the Reds before dropping two of three to the Cubs in Milwaukee over the weekend.
William Contreras slugged a pair of homers as part of a six-hit week for the Brewers, while Jackson Chourio and Brice Turang had seven hits each. Sal Frelick added a four-hit week, and Jake Bauers, Garrett Mitchell, and Gary Sánchez each added a homer.
Brandon Woodruff totaled 11 2/3 scoreless innings over his two starts, striking out 16, though he had no wins to show for it. Brandon Sproat went six scoreless with 10 strikeouts, while Jacob Misiorowski went six innings with one run allowed, and Kyle Harrison went five innings with two runs allowed. Shane Drohan also worked 4 1/3 scoreless innings in his start. Trevor Megill and Abner Uribe both had solid weeks for the bullpen, totaling 8 2/3 scoreless innings with seven strikeouts.
Milwaukee plays host to the Reds for the second matchup between the two teams in as many weeks, and they’ll then head to Arizona to take on the Diamondbacks over the weekend.
2. Chicago Cubs (46-38); 6-1 this week; 66.8% chance to make postseason
The Cubs enjoyed a strong bounce-back week, sweeping the Mets in four games before taking two of three from the Brewers in Milwaukee.
Dansby Swanson had a huge week (primarily in New York), with seven hits, including three homers, driving in 15. Seiya Suzuki added a pair of homers, while Michael Busch, Michael Conforto, Pete Crow-Armstrong, and Ian Happ added a homer apiece. Nico Hoerner led the team with nine hits, including five doubles.
Matthew Boyd had a scoreless outing in his return to the mound, tossing 4 2/3 innings with four strikeouts. Colin Rea and David Peterson also turned in solid outings, while Tyler Ferguson, Caleb Thielbar, Trent Thornton, Vince Velasquez, Jacob Webb, Jordan Wicks, and Bryse Wilson combined for 19 1/3 scoreless innings in a strong week for the bullpen.
Chicago now returns to Wrigley, where they’ll host the Padres and Cardinals this week.
3. St. Louis Cardinals (43-38); 2-4 this week; 33.3% chance to make postseason
The Cardinals had a bit of a down week, as they lost two of three to both the D-backs and Marlins in St. Louis, with their finale against the Diamondbacks scheduled for Thursday postponed until late July.
José Fermín and Bryan Torres had the Cards’ only homers this week, while Lars Nootbaar and JJ Wetherholt set the pace with six hits apiece in what was a down week overall for St. Louis offensively.
Michael McGreevy continues to impress, as he went six scoreless innings with four strikeouts in his start this week. Kyle Leahy made a pair of solid starts, totaling 11 1/3 innings with one run allowed and eight strikeouts. Riley O’Brien was a perfect 2-for-2 in save chances, and JoJo Romero added 3 1/3 scoreless innings across three appearances.
The Cardinals now head on the road, as they’ll visit the Braves and Cubs this holiday weekend.
4. Pittsburgh Pirates (42-42); 3-3 this week; 35.5% chance to make postseason
The Pirates continue to stay afloat with .500 baseball, as they took two of three against the Mariners but dropped two of three against the Reds over the weekend.
Esmerlyn Valdez set the pace offensively for Pittsburgh, as he went 8-for-15 with three homers, two doubles, and five RBIs. Brandon Lowe and Ryan O’Hearn added two homers each, with O’Hearn leading the team with 10 hits and nine RBIs. Nick Gonzales added seven hits, while Jake Mangum and Bryan Reynolds had six hits each.
Braxton Ashcraft turned in a quality start, allowing one run over six innings with 10 strikeouts, while Bubba Chandler allowed one run over 5 1/3 innings with four strikeouts. Dennis Santana, Yohan Ramírez, Carmen Mlodzinski, Isaac Mattson, and Brandan Bidois combined for 14 2/3 scoreless innings for the bullpen, striking out 15.
Pittsburgh now heads across the state to face the Phillies for four games this week before they head to D.C. to take on the Nationals over the weekend.
5. Cincinnati Reds (39-43); 2-4 this week; 4.8% chance to make postseason
The Reds were swept at the hands of the Brewers this week, but they bounced back to take two of three in Pittsburgh over the weekend.
Eugenio Suárez, Sal Stewart, Spencer Steer, and Noelvi Marte each homered this week for Cincy, with Stewart also leading the offense with seven hits over 25 at-bats. Tyler Stephenson added five hits in just 11 at-bats (.455 batting average), and Jose Trevino went 4-for-8 in what was a strong week for the Reds’ backstops.
Nick Lodolo had a shortened start as he was hit by a comebacker against the Brewers, but he worked a solid four innings with no runs allowed and six strikeouts before his exit. Brock Burke and Tejay Antone led the bullpen, combining for seven scoreless innings over eight appearances, striking out eight.
Cincinnati ends their road trip in Milwaukee with four games against the Brewers before they return home to host the Orioles this weekend.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 04: Cam Schlittler #31 of the New York Yankees pitches during the first inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium on May 04, 2026 in New York City, New York. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Three close games, none with more than eight runs scored total.
That is how last week’s series in Detroit between the Yankees and Tigers went—it is almost as if the Tigers were a better team than their incredibly poor record would indicate, and that the Yankees were not at full strength, given current key absences. Now at home, the Yankees get a second crack at imposing their superiority over one of the worst teams in the American League in a more aggressive manner than narrowly taking two out of three as they previously did. More than anything else though, they’ll be looking to put the memories of this past weekend behind them, as the Yankees haven’t won since beating the Tigers on Wednesday, dropping four in a row to a Red Sox team that entered Thursday with the worst record in the American League. Brutal.
Back on the subject of Detroit however, since my colleague Sam nicely summarized the Tigers’ offense just last week, we can just refresh some facts to give you the skinny:
They’re currently missing two All-Stars from their 2026 club, Javier Báez and old friend Gleyber Torres, who are both on the IL. But rookie shortstop Kevin McGonigle is back on track in June with an .852 OPS following a bumpy second month in the big leagues. Riley Greene and Dillon Dingler are building their own cases for the Midsummer Classic, too. Detroit can absolutely punch a team in the nose, so the Yankees must be on their guard.
Monday: Ryan Weathers vs. Casey Mize(7:05 pm ET)
For a pitcher who recently beat Tarik Skubal, getting the better of Casey Mize might feel like a cakewalk (though he was a 2025 All-Star as well). As much as we’d like to believe that, the reality is not nearly as simple, so Ryan Weathers will look to avoid the usual pitfalls when facing the same lineup in back-to-back performances. The left-hander last pitched against this same Detroit team on Wednesday, covering six innings of two-run ball in a 4-2 win for the Yankees—that game that put an end to a losing streak of four games for the Yankees when Weathers was on the mound.
As effective as he was, Weathers probably got away with one there, given the sheer number of line drives the left-hander allowed: 10 total, more than he had allowed in his previous three starts combined. The Tigers’ quality of contact warranted a better output than the two runs they managed off Weathers, who now looks to accumulate three quality starts in a row for the first time this season;
Since Detroit is momentarily rolling with a six-man rotation, the specific matchups of last week’s series won’t be repeated, but Casey Mize will be facing the Yanks for a second time. In his last start, Mize’s 17 induced whiffs were for naught as a go-ahead two-run shot by Jazz Chisholm Jr. led the Yankees to a 4-3 win. Bittersweet performances have been the norm as few pitchers know the cruel nature of a starter’s record as well as Mize, whose 2-5 campaign is a testament to his offense’s failings, considering the former number one pick has a sub-3.00 ERA.
Tuesday: Cam Schlittler vs. Tarik Skubal (7:05 pm ET)
Pinch me now because I want to know if this is for real or not. The entire baseball world should turn its attention to Yankee Stadium on Tuesday night as the reigning back-to-back American League Cy Young winner will square off against the cross-your-fingers future AL Cy Young winner as Tarik Skubal and Cam Schlittler square off. Whatever individual accomplishments may or may not come, this represents as magnificent a pitching matchup as one could hope for; the only shame is that the Tigers’ disappointing campaign works slightly against the appeal of it.
What the Yankees achieved the last time they faced Skubal was of such rarity that no team had ever accomplished it since his last start of the 2021 season: to hit not one, not two, but three home runs against the talented southpaw. And even then, four hits on six innings with no walks and nine strikeouts tell you just how dominant Skubal is. On a broader look, the home runs allowed to the Yankees weren’t necessarily an isolated incident—Skubal comes into this game having allowed at least one long ball in each of his last four starts (three of which came after his “Skubal scope” elbow procedure), the longest sequence he’s had since starting this run in which he’s won two AL Cy Young awards.
Cam Schlittler reached 100 innings this season in his last start but didn’t have a lot to celebrate beyond that. Four unearned runs scored by the Red Sox in a single inning led to a Yankees loss in the opening game of that best-forgotten four-game set against Boston.
Wednesday: Will Warren vs. Troy Melton (1:35 pm ET)
The only one of the three pitching matchups with no repeat performers from last week’s series, this duel between Will Warren and Troy Melton pits a pair of young arms against each other, both in different stages of truly establishing themselves as important pieces of these rotations. Melton is only about to make his seventh start of the season, but up until this point, the Tigers could not have asked any more from the 25-year-old righty. In fact, Melton has only allowed three hits in his past two starts, totaling 12 innings and a pair of quality starts against the Red Sox and, most recently, the Astros.
Particularly in contrast with Warren, what Melton did against the Red Sox looks even better considering Boston just handed the Yankees’ starter his second straight blowup outing, elevating his ERA to 3.75—a number that would be even higher if not for four of the six runs he allowed against the Reds being unearned. Back to Melton, though, as effective as he has been throughout this short sample, the home runs have still been a bit of a bother, and much like with Skubal, if the Yankees are going to get to the young righty, it is most likely via the long ball. Melton has allowed at least one homer in each of his previous four starts.
According to Spotrac, Barlow’s 2026-27 salary is approximately $3.4 million and Terry’s is approximately $2.6 million.
Initially signed to a two-way contract last summer, Barlow inked a standard NBA deal in February. He appeared in 71 games, started 59, and averaged 7.7 points, 4.8 rebounds, 1.2 assists, 0.9 steals and 0.7 blocks in 23.8 minutes per contest.
“Super impactful,” Sixers head coach Nick Nurse said of Barlow after his team’s April 1 win over the Wizards. “Again, just tremendous effort at all times. Just doesn’t really make many mistakes. … You just don’t see him blowing too many switches. You don’t see him missing block-outs. He’s really reliable with the ball. … Just hard play and high IQ.”
Barlow shifted to the bench for his first NBA playoffs and played in nine of the Sixers’ 11 postseason games. The 23-year-old’s best personal moment was a good small-ball center stint in Game 2 of the Sixers’ second-round series with the Knicks. Over 16 minutes, Barlow posted six points on 3-for-3 shooting, two rebounds, two blocks and a steal in a tight loss without Joel Embiid at Madison Square Garden.
The 23-year-old wing played 14 times for the Sixers in the regular season and averaged 4.1 points, 1.6 assists and 1.6 rebounds in 12.4 minutes per game. He was not part of the Sixers’ playoff rotation.
That means the 25-year-old forward is set to hit unrestricted free agency. Teams can officially begin negotiations with all free agents starting Tuesday at 6 p.m. ET.