The Giants’ top 10 trade chips

The San Francisco Giants will be sellers at this year’s trade deadline and while they have some obvious “chips,” “chits,” or “pieces,” I figured it’d be a better conversation starter to rank them, as the perception of a player’s value will surely not be uniform across the fandom or even just those who read this post.

Now, it was only yesterday that I joined the community here by saying that the Giants should not rebuild, and while being sellers at the trade deadline doesn’t necessarily follow a philosophical shift from “trying to sneak into the postseason by accidentally getting the third Wild Card” to TANKING, I want to be ideologically consistent. This post isn’t to say that the Giants should be willing to move anybody on the roster, it’s just to rank the value *I* perceive players to have should the Giants decide to move them.

So, here are the 10 most valuable players the Giants could move before this year’s trade deadline.

10. Tyler Mahle

Look, I’m with you. He’s been terrible. The 1-7 record and 6.04 ERA gets the season ticketholders riled up, but it’s that 4.86 FIP (tied for 8th-worst in MLB with Zac Gallen) that really underscores how terrible he’s been. His 10.0 hits per 9 innings is explained away by the Giants being bad on defense, but the 1.7 HR/9 and 3.8 BB/9 are much closer to his career averages when the small sample size of 56.2 innings and context of his situation (being on one of the worst Giants teams in the long history of the franchise) are taken into account.

And I’ll add that Aaron Civale, he of the 4.91 ERA and 5.59 FIP in just 22 MLB innings last season, wound up being traded around this time last season by the Milwaukee Brewers — who had acquired him the previous season from the Tampa Bay Rays — to the Chicago White Sox for… Andrew Vaughn, one of the key figures in Milwaukee’s lineup these days.

Of course, Buster Posey isn’t the savvy operator that Brewers’ POBO Matt Arnold is nor are the Giants a big unlocker of hitting talent. Milwaukee really isn’t, either, but they are such a well run organization by comparison that simply getting Vaughn off a struggling team like the White Sox and onto a good team like the Brewers really did seem to reset his talent. It’s an interesting situation to note because the White Sox also had current Giant Adrian Houser on their roster last year and seemed to help him revitalize his career (2.10 ERA in 68.2 IP) to the point that they were able to trade him to Tampa Bay.

Mahle would have some value to teams because of his strikeouts (9.1 K/9 is right in line with his career average) and all of the under the hood numbers indicate that he’s still the same guy when healthy — he’s just never healthy. But he would also be more valuable than Houser in a trade scenario because he doesn’t have the extra year attached to him, unlike Houser. That fact might be moot if there’s a lockout, but Houser hasn’t pitched much better than Mahle to merit extra consideration, I think.

The Giants might not be able to get a middle of the lineup tarnished figure a la Vaughn for him, but there’s some dinged up value to be exchanged for dinged up value here.

9. Jung Hoo Lee

There are 64 hitters currently hitting 20% or better than the league average and one of them is Jung Hoo Lee. But to put it another, better way: there are 32 hitters aged 27 or younger currently hitting 20% or better than the league average and one of them is Jung Hoo Lee.

His age plus position plus hitting ability makes him valuable. Weighted against him are some big negatives:

  • An extensive injury history
  • An $18.833 CBT number through 2029, as he’s unlikely to opt out after this next season
  • Average defense, no stolen bases

And did I mention that he has an $18.833 CBT number through 2029? Oh, I did. Well, it’s even worse than that. Because of the structure of his deal, he’s owed $64.25 million after this season, $79.75 million if you factor in what’s left of his contract this season.

That’s a lot of money for a player who could still go either way in his career. That’s right, there’s still a good chance that he winds up hitting his way into a 3-win player over the next few years as the Giants hoped when they signed him. Another team might be able to unlock more consistency with better coaching and scouting, but with such an extensive cost attached to him, the Giants might not be able to get too much back in return, making him less valuable to trade.

On the other hand, here are the worst hitting outfields in MLB right now:

30. Brewers, 79 wRC+
29. Phillies, 80 wRC+
28. Rays, 80 wRC+
27. White Sox, 82 wRC+
26. Padres, 84 wRC+
25. Marlins, 84 wRC+
24. Astros, 87 wRC+
23. Giants, 89 wRC+
22. Reds, 91 wRC+
21. Athletics, 92 wRC+

Milwaukee, Tampa Bay, and San Diego are almost certainly locks for the postseason, while the Phillies, White Sox, Astros, and Reds are extremely in the mix. With a looming lockout plus salary cap on the horizon, I’m not sure what the risk appetite will be, but if there’s a cap then there’s going to be a floor, and you could envision a scenario where the Rays, Reds, or Marlins add Lee just to help get them to a theoretical floor sooner… with the Giants kicking in some money to get back a decent prospect or two.

A bad example that still might apply. Back in 2024, the Mariners acquired Randy Arozarena (2.5 years on deal) from the Rays in exchange for their #12 and #22 prospects plus a player to be named later. Another bad example might be when the Marlins traded Jazz Chisholm (2.5 years on deal) to the Yankees back in 2024. They received the Yankees’ #19 & #20 prospects plus an infielder.

A player with 3.5 years remaining on his deal with a nonzero possibility of opting out next offseason (if there is one!) certainly limits a potential return, but given that he’s not one of Buster’s guys and the Giants needing to create some payroll flexibility, I’d say there’s a version of reality where a deal is possible and the Giants would get something in return that might be useful but would certainly be extra money they’ll need in the future.

8. Rafael Devers

In this morning’s Power Alley on SiriusXM radio, Jim Duquette and Jim Bowden talked about the Milwaukee Brewers and how the NL Central is theirs. They also pointed out that as good as they are in terms of winning a division, they’re going to struggle against the Dodgers and Atlanta come the postseason, suggesting they’re one starting pitcher short after Jacob Misioroski and Kyle Harrison and need a middle of the order bat, too. Bowden said something to the effect of “Now, they can’t afford it, but imagine them trading for Rafael Devers and dropping him into the middle of their lineup.”

Would the Giants trade Rafael Devers? I think so. He would be a great near-term value add for a lot of teams out there. I think there might be a behind the scenes scenario where the Giants, in trying to impress their new investors with their fiscal responsibility, might be looking to cut costs on a dead season as quickly as possible. Devers is owed a lot of money for a long time, so, this would be another situation where the Giants would probably need to eat some of the contract, which might be a problem unto itself, or it might be a situation where they get back another team’s problem contract just to balance the books in the near-term; but in any case, I can see another team wanting to make Buster Posey look bad by trading for Devers for even less than what the Giants gave up to get him.

I can also see the Giants figuring they need to hold on to Devers because his bat is meaningfully better than what they have on hand for the time being, and if they’re going to be good again next season or the season after, they’ll probably need him to stick around. So, moving him might hurt the team more than it helps, but I’ll put him low on this list because I think he should be on it. Just in case!

7. Keaton Winn

The Giants should try to move a 28-year old with an injury track record but who’s having a great start to a season (2.45 ERA / 2.80 FIP in 25.2 IP) in a new role as quickly as possible. Including him along with another player on the list might help boost a return, too. Just take a look at last year’s trades to see the reliever duos traded.

6. Robbie Ray

Before the start of the season, he absolutely would’ve been #1 or #2 on this list, but he has pitched so poorly this season that it’s clear the haul will be quite minimal. His 4.45 BB/9 is worst in the National League for starting pitchers (3rd in all of MLB) and his 5.37 FIP is third-worst in MLB behind Jamison Taillon and Ryne Nelson.

He’ll also be owed about $12.5 million the rest of the season, so, a team acquiring him would really need pitching and Ray will have had to string together some starts reminiscent of his best work. Last year, the Padres acquired Nestor Cortes from the Brewers in exchange for backup outfielder Brandon Lockridge. Now, Lockridge is hitting .294/.368/.341 for Milwaukee this season, so it’s not like they got nothing back for Cortes (who was by that point a journeyman several seasons removed from being an All-Star). I’m not sure Ray’s value has tumbled that low, but I’m putting him so low on this list because it feels like that might be more true than not.

5. Erik Miller

Lefty relievers who throw hard are always valuable and especially around trade deadlines. Look, Erik Miller is not is not is not Tanner Scott, but Tanner Scott has been traded twice in his career. After 156 innings of 4.73 ERA ball, the Orioles traded him to the Marlins for three minor leaguers (none of whom panned out). With the Marlins, he had ERAs of 4.31, 2.31, and 1.75 across 212.2 IP and wound up being traded to the Padres along with another pitching prospect for the Padres’ #2, #4, and #5 prospects.

The 28-year old miller is, again, NOT Tanner Scott, and has an extensive injury history that chews into the remaining value, but if the Giants were to dangle him, they’d get a really good return for him. He is a strikeout machine, and you would think an acquiring team would be able to help him tone down that walk rate, especially since they’d have him for three arbitration years after 2026. But even somebody like 34-year old Andrew Chafin netted the Tigers the Rangers’ #24 prospect and a major league reliever back in 2024.

Now, could the Giants use him in, like, 2030 when they might be an 83-win team, fighting for the fourth Wild Card? Sure. But his best value today is as a trade chip.

4. Landen Roupp

He’s got to be high on the list because he would be a tremendously valuable addition to an acquiring team which would mean that the Giants would get a lot for him. On the other hand, the hit to their starting rotation would probably be pretty steep, so, I can’t put him so high on the list. There also aren’t many comparisons to be made here and it would depend on what the industry thinks of him. Moving Roupp seems more like a move to make in the offseason, but if the lockout worries pickup, I wonder if that will change the calculation for teams hoping to compete in 2026. Roupp is also an injury risk who might only be sticking around for another 50-60 innings this season; but, really, I don’t think the Giants would be able to find equivalent value in a trade.

Still, you never know.

3. Luis Arraez

One could argue that the Giants signed him specifically to trade him at the deadline, regardless of their win-loss record. That they were able to Wash him and make him an above average defender at second base makes this whole gambit an absolute miracle, and it’s reasonable to believe that the Giants will do very well in trading him.

He is the 23rd most valuable position player in Major League Baseball as I write this. I bolded that because it is still hard to process. Buster Posey found Joe Panik? Found Marco Scutaro? in free agency for $12 million.

It’s very hard to find a comparison here because teams don’t typically trade players with this much value. He’ll be a free agent at the end of the year, so, it’s not like there will be a lot of value to be had in a trade scenario anyway, but on the other hand, we’ve seen teams really go all out to acquire exactly what they need. But just to give an example of value: last year, here were the position players around the 23rd-most valuable on June 1st:

  • Steven Kwan, 2.1 fWAR
  • Brendan Donovan, 2.0
  • Rafael Devers, 1.9
  • Ryan O’Hearn, 2.1

Remarkably, all of these players were traded at some point or, in the case of Kwan, rumored to be on the trade block. Only O’Hearn was a free agent at year’s end.

In his case, the Orioles traded him along with outfielder Ramon Laureano along with cash to the Padres in exchange for their #6, #8, and #16 prospects along with two more position player prospects and a pitching prospect. Laureano had an extra year on his deal and the Padres were in terrible need of help in their outfield, so, it’s not a true comparison to the Arraez situation.

Then there’s the factor of what teams value more: offense or defense. Only 11 of the 30 teams have positive defense and offense at second base. The rest

Plus, the teams that could use a boost at second base aren’t playoff teams for the most part, and the ones that could be are actually . Only the Rays (+0.3 fWAR, 100 wRC+), but 20 of the 30 teams have at least average defense there. So, how many of those teams would seek an upgrade at the position?

The Giants’ 113 wRC+ is 7th in MLB for the second base position, top third in the sport. Their +6.3 Defensive Runs Above Average is #2. Would Philadelphia want to improve over Bryson Stott (67 wRC+, +3.6 Def, +0.5 fWAR)? Or the Reds over Spencer Steer & Edwin Arroyo (78 wRC+, +2.4 Def, +0.3 fWAR)? Or Tampa Bay get better than Richie Palacios (100 wRC+, -5.4 Def, +0.3 fWAR)?

This is almost certainly the one big trade the Giants will be involved in this deadline and it’s a situation where they might get a big return if they are able to drum up enough interest or move him in June when the acquiring team would get to have him longer.

2. Logan Webb

From December: The “best time to trade Logan Webb is after the 2026 season, provided the Giants are still a .500 at best team.” The Giants are no longer a .500 team at best. They are back to the Bobby Evans era of 2017 in terms of their ceiling. It’s time to move Logan Webb. Problem is, he might not be the same pitcher everyone planned for him to be at the start of the season and the ABS Challenge System might’ve further eroded his value by taking away the shadow strike zone.

Still! There are plenty of comps to be made for a Webb deal. Back in December, I briefly mentioned the Padres trade for Dylan Cease before pivoting to more realistic-looking deals that fit Webb’s contract & age:

– The Orioles gave up INF Joey Ortiz (#8 prospect, #63 on Pipeline’s Top 100), LHP DL Hall, and a Competitive Balance Round A pick for one year of Corbin Burnes (then 29) two offseasons ago.

– The Rangers got the #4, #17, and #27 prospects in the Dodgers’ system at the 2017 trade deadline in exchange for Yu Darvish (age 30).

– In 2014, the Rays traded away David Price at the deadline for Willy Adames, Drew Smyly, and Nick Franklin (Seattle’s #4 prospect)

Now, here’s where things get really interesting. Ken Rosenthal wrote in The Athletic this morning that the trade deadline is about to be dominated by talk of Tarik Skubal being on the move, provided he can establish he’s healthy. I would never suggest that Logan Webb is on Skubal’s level, but he’s right there on the tier beneath and he, too, needs to demonstrate that he’s healthy, not just for the Giants, but for any team that might have interest. Such times might include those that miss out on acquiring Skubal or come to find that Skubal isn’t healthy and not worth acquiring in-season. Logan Webb could very quickly become The Best Pitcher Available, and that’s why I’m sneaking him past Luis Arraez. Not because he’s more likely to move, but because he’d be a more valuable player to move, given the probable return.

It’d be a big hit to the rotation, of course, but this season is so bad that moving Webb might be met by the season ticketholders and general fans with more of a “Well, Buster had to do something to shake things up.“ Because the possible return is lower and the pain for the Giants much greater, I can’t put Logan Webb #1. No Giants fan should want the Giants to trade away Logan Webb. But, you know, if it happens, it will be a logical decision.

1. Casey Schmitt

Now, why would the Giants move their best hitter right now? Well, because they have Matt Chapman, and chances are they won’t be able to trade Matt Chapman. Now, if they trade Luis Arraez, I’d think that would put Schmitt there or even shortstop if they want to slide Adames over to second in-season. There are certainly scenarios where a trade makes him more valuable to the Giants on the Giants, but just imagine what a player who is having his breakout season with three years of team control remaining could fetch in the trade market.

The Red Sox didn’t want to pay Alex Bregman to continue playing third base, so they let him walk and traded for Caleb Durbin (.183/.250/.280). Let Casey Schmitt aim his bat at the Green Monster and have some fun. The Red Sox have not only some interesting outfielders, but interesting arms who could really help the Giants, and with Schmitt in the lineup, Boston might be able to make a run at the AL Wild Card.

The Brewers could improve upon the 71 wRC+ they’re getting from the position and improve upon the defense, too. Cincinnati is dead last in offense from the position. The Phillies are 24th (71 wRC+).

Yes, this would be a big hit to the current Giants lineup, but with Schmitt out of position and a lot of the prospect depth being on the infield, it stands to reason that selling high on him would be a wise decision, particularly if it’s one of only a few moves they’d make around the deadline. It wouldn’t need to be a part of a total teardown, and it wouldn’t be the first time the team traded a popular third baseman to get better fast.


Sure, the Giants should make virtually their entire roster available for trade, but I didn’t include these players for the following reasons:

  • Adrian Houser: that extra guaranteed year. I don’t think he’s pitched well enough for a team to acquire him with that commitment. Then again, a team might be certain there won’t be a 2027 and change their mind, but I couldn’t conjure value there other than a salary dump for the Giants.
  • Matt Chapman: Yesterday, I wrote about how he’s not washed, cooked, or finished, but he’s still far enough along the aging curve with enough time left on his deal (plus a no trade clause!) that I don’t think he’d be one of the 10 most valuable trade pieces the Giants would have to offer at the deadline.
  • Willy Adames: Too much money owed, and not enough upside, especially with the bad defense this season.
  • Heliot Ramos: I did consider adding him to the list, but I think the Giants would want to hold on to him in the event that they do make other trades because he will be an important bat for them to have in the lineup when he comes back. If he doesn’t come back soon (and it doesn’t seem like he will), then teams won’t want him in-season.
  • Bryce Eldridge: Since the Giants wouldn’t be trying to acquire a player to remarkably improve their in-season chances I think he’ll stay put. But, wow, I wonder if Zack Minasian has even briefly reconsidered not moving him for CJ Abrams. Ultimately, of course, it all worked out at second base, but the situation is… interesting.
  • Caleb Kilian, Matt Gage, Joel Peguero, Ryan Walker: The relievers I put on the list would bring back more of a return than any of these guys.

Here’s my opinion of my own list: I’d like to see how the Giants could remake themselves for next year (or a post-lockout 2028) by trading Schmitt, Arraez, Webb, Robbie Ray, and Erik Miller. That would hurt, but it wouldn’t set them back very much going forward with the upside of bringing in prospects from the outside to pair with the ones they’ve been developing internally. The internal processes seem to be going well, so maybe now is the time to lean on the potential strength of player development and set themselves up nicely or a good, long future.

The Knicks are back in the Finals and the whole city is coming along

New Yorkers argue about everything. The best pizza, the best bagel, the best borough. Yankees fans won’t sit next to Mets fans at the Subway Series. Giants fans can tolerate Jets fans only because they have the same home — in New Jersey. Rangers and Islander fans split households.

But the Knicks? They make a run in the playoffs and suddenly this big city feels like they are all one big, loud New York family.  

That is what's happening now. The Knicks are in the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999, opening Game 1 on Wednesday, June 3 against the San Antonio Spurs after sweeping Cleveland and reeling off 11 straight playoff wins.

The city hasn’t had a moment like this in 27 years. And it shows.

“The Knicks are the one team that makes New York feel like a small town,” Mike Greenberg, host of ESPN’s Get Up, told USA Today Sports. He's a Greenwich Village kid and lifelong Knicks fan. “You always feel like you’re in the biggest city in the work, like you are in the center of the universe. And the Knicks are the one team that makes New York feel like a small town, because everyone is wearing their Knicks shirts and everyone is yelling ‘Go Knicks’ in the street. There is just a vibe.”

Greenberg has spent decades thinking about this. In 2014, when Super Bowl XLVII was New York, Greenberg said it was different than any of the other Super Bowls.

“I’d come to Midtown every morning and do my show, and it felt very Super Bowl,” Greenberg said of his Mike and Mike ESPN radio show. “But the moment I went down to the Village to visit my parents, you would not have been aware the Super Bowl was in New York. I’ve covered 30 Super Bowls. In every city, the moment you get off the plane, you never escape it. In New York, you would have never known it was in town.”

But right now, Greenberg said, you cannot walk a block in any borough without knowing what’s going on.

“The Knicks being in the Finals is bigger in New York than the Super Bowl,” Greenberg said.

Suzyn Waldman, the voice of the Yankees who covered the Knicks at WFAN for a decade before moving to baseball, has a theory why the Knicks resonate in New York.

“Every other sport has more than one team,” Waldman told USA Today Sports. “For a long time, it was just the Knicks. It’s the city’s sport. All you need is a basketball court and a ball. You rarely see an empty basketball court anywhere in the five boroughs. And for generations, the people running, coaching and playing pro ball were from New York. Everyone in the stands when I covered the Knicks for a decade knew a coach, a scout, a guy they played with or again, someone on one of the teams playing.”

Waldman’s point is made by scanning the Spurs roster. Julian Champagnie grew up in Brooklyn and played at Bishop Loughlin in Fort Greene before starring at St. John’s. Even Dylan Harper, the son of five-time NBA champion Ron Harper, is something of a local, having grown up over the George Washington bridge in New Jersey.

Harvey Araton, the longtime New York Times columnist who wrote When the Garden Was Eden, has been thinking about the same question for 40 years. He agrees with Waldman that the Knicks place in the city’s heart is from being the only NBA game in town for so long before the Nets moved to Brooklyn.

But he also thinks it is partly location.

“Football is divided. Baseball is divided. Hockey is more of niche sport,” Araton said. “But basketball is the city game. The Yankees play in the South Bronx. The Mets are out in Flushing. The Knicks play literally in the heart of New York. Penn Station runs right underneath the Garden. It connects everyone to this arena.”

After the Knicks swept the Cavaliers to clinch their spot in the NBA Finals, fans flooded Seventh Avenue. Mayor Zohran Mamdani is planning sanctioned watch parties around the city for every Finals game.

ESPN personality Mike Greenberg is interviewed on radio row at the George R. Brown Convention Center in preparation for Super Bowl LI.

For fans like Greenberg, what’s at stake isn’t just a championship. It’s a generational story. He sat next to his father at hundreds of Knicks games growing up. He took his daughter to a game earlier in this playoff run. He’ll take his son to a game in the Finals this week.

“I’ve waited essentially my entire life to see one of my teams win a title,” he said. “I have no idea how I’ll react, because it’s never happened to me before. I think a lot of Knicks fans probably feel that way."

Araton thinks New York City will get a chance to find out. He has the Knicks in six.

“The feeling over the next two weeks in New York is going to be pretty overwhelming,” he said. “People are just so hungry.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Knicks vs. Spurs NBA Finals 2026: Why New York City is all in

Zaza Pachulia recounts best decision of life to sign with Warriors, find a home

Zaza Pachulia recounts best decision of life to sign with Warriors, find a home originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The doors to NBA free agency swing open this month, and dozens of players will be on the market. Some have the status to choose their next team. Others accept the only offer available. Some go overseas. A few retire.

For fans glued to the NBA’s summer news cycle, it’s a fascinating time. For players and team executives, there can be enough uncertainty to redline stress levels.

Former Warriors center Zaza Pachulia, a guest on the latest episode of the “Dubs Talk” podcast, has been there. He endured multiple summers in free agency during his 16-year NBA career.

One foray stands so far above all others that he enjoys reliving it. That would be joining the Warriors in 2016.

“That was one of the best decisions I’ve made in my life,” Pachulia told NBC Sports Bay Area.

Pachulia, then 32, was coming off a solid season with the Dallas Mavericks, starting 69 games at center, playing alongside the likes of Dirk Nowitzki, Deron Williams, Chandler Parsons and Wesley Matthews. His two-year contract, signed with the Milwaukee Bucks in 2014, had expired and he was home in Eastern Europe, preparing to play with Georgia’s national team.

“My agent calls me, and he goes, like, ‘I got a couple options for you,’ ” Pachulia recalled. “But this is probably the most important decision you’re going to face, the most important decision you’ll ever face. Option 1 is Dallas wants you back. And then there was another team. And there’s another team. And the last option is the Golden State Warriors.”

The Warriors, featuring All-Stars Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Klay Thompson, 11 weeks earlier finished the regular season with an NBA-record 73 wins. They were 16 days removed from losing to the Cleveland Cavaliers in a searing seven-game NBA Finals.

Golden State also was two days removed from signing Oklahoma City superstar Kevin Durant, one of the most coveted free agents to ever grace the market.

And now his agent, Mark Bartelstein of Priority Sports, was on the phone sending a grand opportunity through Pachulia’s ears.

“He said they’re looking at you as a starting center,” Pachulia said. “I was obviously . . . I was already thinking about it. This was Steph, Klay, KD and Draymond. And they needed a center. And I said, ‘Wow, these kinds of calls don’t happen.’ This is a lifetime opportunity. We’re like these are generational players.”

Zaza’s mind was racing. Visions he had not imagined were becoming clear in his mind. Pachulia and his wife, Tika, had two sons and a daughter, all between 3 and 7 years old. His NBA career had taken him from Orlando, where he was drafted in 2003, to Milwaukee, to Atlanta, back to Milwaukee and then to Dallas.

There had been a few trips to the playoffs, but none of those steps had offered anything close to an NBA championship. Nothing like this.

“This is generational, a once-in-a-lifetime call, this opportunity,” Pachulia recalled. “It was not about the numbers. It was unique. And that was special summer. It was not about which team is offering how much money and how many years, and what other bonuses. There was none of that. 

“It was the Warriors’ offer, and it was everything else. And once I was thinking about the Warriors offer, once I was thinking about that I was going to be part of something special, something unique, I couldn’t focus on other offers.”

Pachulia had one request before accepting Golden State’s offer. He wanted to speak with head coach Steve Kerr.

Kerr talked about his coaching influences, Phil Jackson and Gregg Popovich. He explained his general coaching philosophy and how he wanted to deploy Pachulia. About 20 minutes later, the big man was sold.

Less than a year later, Pachulia and his teammates were celebrating with a championship parade through the streets of Oakland.

“Everything he said, that’s how the season went,” Pachulia recalled. “But honestly, that was one of the best decisions I’ve made in my life. At the end of the day, life is beautiful, because it’s just kind of either you make the right decision or you learn from it, right?

“That was one of those moments where I think I made the right decision, and the reason why I’m still here, because of that right decision, it’s kind of building on it, and still part of this amazing community is amazing organization, and this became home.”

Pachulia, two years later, signed a free-agent deal with Detroit, staying with the Pistons for one year before retiring and returning to the Warriors in a consulting capacity. He and his family had found a home.

Which is what most NBA free agents will be seeking in the weeks to come.

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How ya like them apples?: Mets vs. Mariners Series Preview

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 29: The New York Mets Home Run Apple is seen after the New York Mets defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks 8-3 in the game at Citi Field on April 29, 2025 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Dustin Satloff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Fresh off back-to-back sweeps of the A’s and the Arizona Diamondbacks, the Mariners enter June in first place in their division, with a 31-29 record. Never a doubt, right? 

GameTimeMariners StarterMets StarterMariners Win%Mets Win%
Game 1Monday, June 1 | 6:40 pmRHP Emerson HancockRHP Austin Warren / LHP Sean Manaea52.6%47.4%
Game 2Tuesday, June 2 | 6:40 pmRHP Logan GilbertRHP Jonah Tong56.3%43.7%
Game 3Wednesday, June 3 | 12:40 pmRHP George KirbyRHP Freddy Peralta55.5%44.5%
*Game odds courtesy of FanGraphs
OverviewMarinersMetsEdge
Batting (wRC+)108 (2nd in AL)88 (13th in NL)Mariners
Fielding (FRV)-15 (14th)-6 (12th)Mets
Starting Pitching (FIP-)90 (5th)94 (5th)Mariners
Bullpen (FIP-)90 (2nd)84 (5th)Mets

Let’s set the scene together, shall we? Think back to the early (and then not-so-early) days of this Mariners season, when everything felt chaotic in all the worst ways. Players were dropping like flies, former stalwarts looked awful and the vibes were all around bad. Take all that, stuff it into the New York media megaphone and then add many more millions of dollars of salary and stress. Ta da! You’ve got the 2026 Mets. Carlos Mendoza is treating every day like a gift (and by gift, we mean a package left on your doorstep, shoddily wrapped and disconcertingly lumpy, with no return label or other markings). But, credit to ‘em, they’re riding a nice little win streak of their own and could be in the midst of turning things around. Regardless of how the series transpires, it seems Mets fans are overwhelmingly unbothered by us PNWers.

PlayerPositionBatsPAK%BB%ISOwRC+
Carson BengeRFL21721.2%7.4%0.10697
Bo BichetteSSR25816.3%7.4%0.08969
Juan SotoLFL18014.4%13.3%0.292175
Jared YoungDHL3920.5%12.8%0.152140
A.J. EwingCFL7432.4%12.2%0.07994
Mark Vientos1BR19220.8%3.6%0.16583
Brett Baty3BL19528.2%9.2%0.11087
Marcus Semien2BR23319.7%6.9%0.10876
Luis TorrensCR10320.4%4.9%0.07566

If you’re looking at this lineup wondering “Hey, this is a weird list of players. I thought [insert names including Francisco Lindor, Jorge Polanco, Kodai Senga and more] was on the Mets this year?” you’re absolutely correct. They’re supposed to be on the Mets, but they are instead, unfortunately, hurt. It’s been part of their whole issue. Other components to the Mets’ issues include Bo Bichette being what some physicians might diagnose as “refried ass,” Marcus Semien being old and Luis Torrens, sweetie pie that he is, being their everyday catcher. The outfield is Juan Soto and a duo of babies with promising upside, and former Doosan Bear Jared Young is having the season of his life. They’re an offense that’s been trending positively of late, but whether that’s because they set the bar so low at the start or because they’ve truly turned things around remains to be seen.

Probable Pitchers 

Updated Stuff+ Explainer 

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Sean Manaea3423.8%9.4%7.5%34.7%5.563.65
Emerson Hancock64.225.1%6.0%12.1%43.5%2.783.56
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam60.9%50.0%90.29790790.356
Sinker19.2%43.8%89.793591040.394
Cutter9.4%3.9%83.996
Changeup10.4%2.3%83.085
Sweeper44.0%60.2%74.5119941280.264

Sean Manaea enjoyed a resurgence in his first season with the Mets back in 2024, keyed by a new arm slot and a new sweeper. He struggled with injuries and ineffectiveness last year and was relegated to the bullpen to start this season. With David Peterson limping to a 5.18 ERA in 13 appearances, the Mets have opted to move Manaea back into the rotation. The team will use Austin Warren as an opener and then turn to Manaea for the bulk of the middle innings. He’s still reliant on his fastball-sweeper combo but he’s widened his arsenal by reintroducing a sinker and cutter into his repertoire. Those two pitches have helped him manage his platoon split a bit better this year.

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Jonah Tong (MiLB)3832.7%14.3%27.6%42.2%5.685.42
Logan Gilbert68.125.0%5.8%13.4%35.3%3.693.97

Jonah Tong flew through the Mets’ minor league system after being drafted in the seventh round in the 2022 draft. He made his big league debut late last year after posting a 1.43 ERA across 22 minor league starts. Tong’s success rides on a plus plus fastball that has a ton of carry at the top of the zone. His secondary pitches are a little less developed; his changeup is the best of the lot but his cutter and curveball look decidedly average right now. Tong started the year in the minors but the Mets recalled him a few weeks ago when Clay Holmes went down with his leg injury. He’s worked behind an opener in his two outings and I’d expect the Mets to continue that strategy to protect Tong from over exposure.

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Freddy Peralta6623.9%9.8%11.9%41.3%3.553.94
George Kirby7419.7%5.7%10.0%52.7%3.773.47
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam55.9%52.7%93.9961021030.323
Changeup20.2%25.5%87.387871040.249
Curveball9.4%16.2%79.1111103810.291
Slider14.5%5.6%83.0971471330.429

Freddy Peralta was one of the Mets’ headlining acquisitions this offseason. Acquired in a trade from the Brewers, Peralta was expected to give New York an ace to lead the starting rotation. His fastball is his best pitch; he gets a ton of extension down the mound and his short stature produces a flat approach angle that really fools hitters. He’s got a trio of above average secondary pitches, though the effectiveness of each has waned a bit this year. He can be a little wild with his command, but has enough deception to generate high chase rates out of the zone. At times, that wildness can lead to a bunch of walks, but he’s usually able to overcome those extra base runners with a ton of strikeouts.


The Big Picture:

TeamW-LW%Games BehindRun DiffRecent Form
Mariners31-290.517+30W-W-W-W-W
Athletics28-310.4752.5-34L-L-L-W-L
Rangers28-310.4752.5+7L-L-W-W-W
Astros27-340.4434.5-33W-W-L-W-L
Angels23-370.3838.0-51L-W-L-W-L

The Mariners have a two and a half game lead in their division and are currently the only team above .500. If that feels fragile to you, how about this: Only five teams in the American League have a record over .500. If the playoffs began today, the 29-31 Toronto Blue Jays would have the third Wild Card spot. Everyone in the West embarks on interleague play this week, which should be varying levels of entertaining. Me personally? I’ll be tuning in to Rockies vs Angels. As the towering pile of laundry I promised myself I’d do yesterday but eschewed in favor of attending the M’s game can attest, sometimes a little mess can feel good. 

Elly De La Cruz injury status: Reds put star shortstop on IL with hamstring strain

The Cincinnati Redsplaced shortstop Elly De La Cruz on the injured list with a strained hamstring on Monday, June 1.

De La Cruz suffered the injury in Sunday's game when he hit a booming fly ball off the outfield wall but could only limp to first base with a single.

"He feels like he caught it before it did anything worse," Reds manager Terry Francona said after the game. "Saying that, we're gonna get him scanned at nine in the morning and we'll know more. ... Let's kind of hope. He's a pretty miraculous kid. Let's wait and see what happens."

An MRI revealed a right hamstring strain and resulted in a trip to the IL.

The injury will end De La Cruz's run of 276 consecutive games played, the third-longest active streak in the majors.

To take De La Cruz's place on the active roster, the Reds are calling up top infield prospect Edwin Arroyo from Class AAA Louisville.

Arroyo, 22, was hitting .323/.383/.562 with 11 home runs and nine stolen bases in 53 games.

He had been playing multiple positions in the minors to increase his versatility when he eventually made his MLB debut. However, the Reds had hoped Arroyo would come up to play alongside De La Cruz, not in place of him.

Reds general manager Brad Meador told The Cincinnati Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network, that Arroyo was most prepared to play shortstop, so the organization will at least have a chance to further evaluate him there.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Elly De La Cruz injury update: Reds star shortstop put on IL

Cincinnati Reds minor leaguers who crushed the month of May

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 19, 2026: Steele Hall #3 of the Cincinnati Reds in the field during the sixth inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the San Francisco Giants at Scottsdale Stadium on March 19, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Bernacchi/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The month of May is in the rearview mirror, and a handful of select Cincinnati Reds farmhands are going to look back on it fondly for quite some time.

Here are four minor leaguers who absolutely smashed the ball during the most recent month:

Carlos Jorge, OF (AA Chattanooga Lookouts)

We’ve seen decent power from Jorge before, as he swatted 9 homers in 86 games with Daytona of the Florida State League as a 19 year old, slugging .483 in a league where power goes to die. We’ve seen ample speed with him, too – he’s swiped 169 bags in 439 minor league games across his career. We’ve also seen pretty elite control of the strike zone, as he reached base at a .400 clip in that Daytona stint and owns a .361 OBP for his minor league career.

This year, we’re seeing all of that – and some very well regarded defense in CF, where he’s finally found a home after playing all over early in his career. He also escaped Dayton for the first time in years, and is showing out at the AA level down in Southern League play.

Jorge poured in a rock-solid May hitting .337/.416/.483 (.899) with 11 walks, 10 steals, and 4 homers in 23 games played. The 22 year old is doing very little to suggest he’s anything other than Cincinnati’s CF of the future right now.

Jay Allen, OF (AA Chattanooga Lookouts)

The Reds once used a 1st round pick to pluck Allen out of high school, drafting him 30th overall out of high school in Florida. But while he’s shown, at times, an ability to take walks and control the zone, he’s never really hit much (.231 average in 1694 MiLB PA) or for much power (.351 SLG in those PA). He’s still just 23, though, and is finally putting together a more complete run for AA Chattanooga.

May saw Allen hit .309/.398/.519 (.916 OPS) with 4 dingers of his own in 23 games, a blistering run of form that helped pick up the slack from Austin Hendrick’s promotion to AAA and Cam Collier’s relative struggles from the left side of the plate.

Alfredo Duno, C (A+ Dayton Dragons)

If this entire blurb reads as if I were chuckling to myself while writing it, well, that’s because I was chuckling to myself while writing it. And, as it turns out, I was chuckling to myself while writing it because I had to make sure I didn’t accidentally put too many numbers in when listing what Alfredo Duno has been up to of late.

Duno, who’s still just 20 years old, is mauling the Midwest League in even more devastating fashion than he mauled the FSL last year. He’s one of the most elite hitting prospects on the planet, plays catcher, and I can’t imagine the Reds really wanting anyone else to be their top overall prospect right now than him.

In May, he did things only Duno does. He hit .338/.475/.713 (1.188 OPS) with 8 homers and nearly as many walks (20) as Ks (22). That even includes an 0 for 4 game on the first day of the month, but it also includes a ridiculous seven game stretch in which he homered in six games (and seven times overall), spreading that damage across games against the West Michigan Whitecaps, Lake County Captains, and Fort Wayne TinCaps.

Duno’s damage plays no favorites. I think he’ll be destroying Southern League pitching staffs very, very soon.

Steele Hall, SS (Arizona Complex League)

Steele Hall’s pro career finally got going in the month of May, and he promptly went 0 for 7 across his first two games played. That said, he homered in the third game he played and hasn’t blinked since.

In 20 games in May, he hit .297/.436/.608 (1.044 OPS) with 4 homers, 9 doubles, and 9 steals already under his belt. Cincinnati’s most recent 1st round pick is doing all this still at the fresh age of 18, and his 9 doubles currently sit tied for the most in all of Arizona Complex League play.

Rangers sign Kelenic to minor league deal

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 18: Jarred Kelenic #24 of the Chicago White Sox warms up before the game against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on May 18, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Maddy Grassy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Texas Rangers have signed outfielder Jarred Kelenic to a minor league contract, per the beats. He will be joining Round Rock.

Kelenic, 26, is a lefthanded hitting corner outfielder was the sixth overall pick in the 2018 MLB Draft by the New York Mets, and was traded to the Seattle Mariners as part of the Robinson Cano/Edwin Diaz trade. He was a consensus top 10 prospect heading into the 2021 season, but struggled mightily that first year, and ended up being sent back down to AAA for a month. After another down year in 2022, splitting the year between AAA and the majors, but had a solid 2023 season for Seattle.

Kelenic was sent to Atlanta that offseason, along with Marco Gonzalez and Evan White, in exchange for Cole Phillips and Jackson Kowar. The deal was essentially dumping the ugly contracts that White and Gonzalez had on the Braves, while sending them Kelenic to make it worth Atlanta’s while. Gonzalez and White were shipped off within a couple of days by Atlanta, leaving them with Kelenic as their prize.

Kelenic didn’t hit well in 2024, however, and spent most of 2025 in AAA, where he didn’t hit, either. He was released at the end of 2025, and signed with the Chicago White Sox in January of this year. He started the year in AAA, but was called up in late April. After putting up a .226/.305/.321 slash line in the majors, he was designated for assignment a few days ago, cleared waivers, and became a free agent.

Kelenic was once seen as a future star with a tremendous potential at the plate. At this point, he’s AAA depth for the Rangers, though I imagine they hope to try to get him back on track offensively, at least to performing the way he was in 2023.

What Warriors star Steph Curry failed to prove to Kendrick Perkins until 2022

What Warriors star Steph Curry failed to prove to Kendrick Perkins until 2022 originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Steph Curry is widely considered the best shooter in NBA history and is often credited with altering the trajectory of basketball with his unlimited 3-point range.

While this is a common stance around the NBA, ESPN’s Kendrick Perkins shredded the accolades of the four-time NBA champion and future Hall of Famer on Monday’s episode of “Get Up.” When discussing comments made by WNBA coach Becky Hammon and Warriors star Draymond Green, who both believed that the New York Knicks needed a “1A” player because Jalen Brunson is too small to fit that role, Perkins ended up firing a stray at Curry.

As he addressed Green’s comments that denounced the Knicks’ success because they are in a weakly perceived Eastern Conference, Perkins fired off the take that Curry wasn’t a “1A” kind of player until after the team’s 2022 title.

“Let me end on this, Steph Curry didn’t prove he was a 1A until he actually won his fourth NBA championship,” Perkins said. “That’s when he got his Finals MVP as being the 1A. If you want to keep it real, that’s why they had to go get Kevin Durant. That’s why they had to go get Kevin Durant for the other two after that.”

Perkins also wanted to make sure Green didn’t discredit the Knicks’ path to the NBA Finals, citing the fact that the Warriors benefited from Chris Paul and Kyrie Irving injuries during their first title run in 2015.

“To win a championship, it takes luck,” Perkins said. “Last time I checked, Draymond Green, when he was facing the Houston Rockets, didn’t Chris Paul when they had control over that series pull his hamstring? Didn’t they get to the NBA Finals and Kyrie Irving got injured, I believe it was in Game 1, for their first championship?”

While Perkins might have a point in the sense that plenty of teams have won titles as a result of injuries plaguing another, it does seem odd that he went after Curry for this particular discourse.

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Flame-throwing Washington Nationals prospect Miguel Sime Jr. gets promoted to High-A

JUPITER, FLORIDA - MARCH 19, 2026: Miguel Sime Jr. #55 of the Washington Nationals throws a pitch during the second inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the St. Louis Cardinals at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium on March 19, 2026 in Jupiter, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The Washington Nationals just promoted arguably their best healthy pitching prospect. Miguel Sime Jr. is headed from the Fred Nats to High-A Wilmington to join a stacked roster including Devin Fitz-Gerald and Ronny Cruz. The 19 year old Sime was a strikeout machine in Low-A, but will need to work on his control moving forward.

Sime’s stint with the Fred Nats showed the good and the bad. When Sime was in the zone, he totally overwhelmed hitters. He struck out 54 batters in 26.1 innings, more than two per frame. However, he also walked 25 batters in that time, showing that he needs to work on his strike throwing.

Sime has absolutely electric stuff. His fastball sits at 99 MPH and can get up to 102. He combines that with a high 80’s slider he just learned this offseason that is a filthy offering that has plus-plus potential. Sime often threw the slider more than his fastball because he had a better feel for that pitch. Finally, he throws a low 80’s curveball with a ton of movement. He usually throws that to finish hitters off.

Sime’s 18.5 K/9 is the highest in the entire minor leagues. Honestly, there was not much of a purpose in keeping him in Low-A, despite the walks and an era over 4. Sime will have to learn to keep the ball in the zone and get quick outs. It is tough to do that when batters can’t make any contact against you.

High-A is going to be a serious test for the youngster, and I would expect some early hiccups. His walk rate in Low-A was over 20%, and that is not going to fly at higher levels. Sime is going to have to find a way to consistently throw strikes. High-A hitters will have better approaches and won’t be as overwhelmed by his stuff.

However, if Sime is in the zone and throwing quality strikes semi-consistently, he will be fine. The hitters are not Miguel Sime’s biggest issue. His own command is usually his worst enemy. High-A hitters may not be quite as overwhelmed, but Sime still has the stuff to dominate them.

Outside of the walks, Sime has just about everything you want to see. He obviously gets a ton of whiffs, but when batters do make contact, it is usually on the ground. His GB% is over 60%, which is elite. I am curious to see how that translates to higher levels.

This is a very interesting and gutsy promotion by the Nats. Sime is still so young and has a very clear control problem. However, the Nats new front office clearly believes he will be able to hold his own in High-A, and the promotion is what is best for his development. 
I think part of the calculus is knowing Sime as a person. If you listen to Sime speak, you can tell that this is a bright young man with a good head on his shoulders. He seems like the kind of character that can handle failing and take the right lessons from it. I am very excited to see what Sime can do in High-A because his ceiling is absolutely massive.

White Sox Weekly: May 25-31, 2026

The White Sox continue to make a splash in the AL Central. | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

It may have been a short week for some with Memorial Day, but for the White Sox it was a full week without an off-day. And that busy week proved fruitful: For the first time since May 2023, the Chicago club enjoyed a winning month — a month that was capped with a 6-1 week.

For the first two months of the season, the South Siders only had to play seven games against the AL Central, all against the Kansas City Royals. That is, until this week, when a seven-game home stand saw two divisional foes come to town.

Minnesota arrived in Chicago having lost the last six games they had played against the White Sox. Monday, they would drop their seventh. Anthony Kay continued his fantastic May, giving up just a solo home run to Brooks Lee in his six innings of work. He earned the win and lowered his ERA below four. Munetaka Murakami and Drew Romo provided the three RBIs needed to win the ballgame via the home run. Given Mune is now on the 10-day injured list, please enjoy his first inning dinger that tied the game at one:

The Twins finally snapped their losing streak against the White Sox on Tuesday evening, handing Chicago a 5-3 loss. Sean Burke pitched seven strong innings of two-run baseball, striking out eight and walking two. With Rikuu Nishida on base in the bottom of the eighth inning, Murakami launched his 19th homer of the season to tie the game and take it to extras. Ultimately, Minnesota would edge out the White Sox in 11 innings. An extra-inning loss as the only loss of the week is something I will not complain about.

Wednesday was Illini night at the ballpark. Orange and blue flooded the stadium to celebrate Chicagoland University of Illinois students, alumni and fans. David Sandlin, who did not go to U of I, put on a show for the block I faithful. The second pitch of his outing was taken out of the ballpark by Byron Buxton, but the rest of his 61 pitches were spotless: The 25-year-old righty sat down 18 in a row over his six innings of work, striking out four and walking none.

It did not hurt that during this debut, Sandlin’s offense scored 15 runs. The 15-2 final is the largest victory by the White Sox since a 2020 game against the Tigers. There were a total of 18 hits and seven walks for the offense. Chase Meidroth led the effort with four RBIs, coming via his first career grand slam:

Also on Wednesday, Murakami hit his 20th home run of the season, becoming the first rookie in baseball history to hit 20 or more before June. I am very glad he reached this mark before straining his hamstring on Friday.

Davis Martin took the mound for the series finale against Minnesota and did what he has done all season. The righthander picked up his fourth quality start of the month and eighth of the season, going six innings, giving up one run, and striking out five. His season ERA is now at an even two and his WHIP is just shy of one. If you haven’t started considering that Martin might be on a Cy Young run, you might want to start thinking about it.

A special mid-weekly recap shout-out goes to Sam Antonacci, who is naturally an infielder but has been making a name for himself in left field. The diving catch he made on Thursday is just one in many of the impressive grabs supporting the pitching staff.

After the Twins were taken care of, it was time to deal with Detroit. Last season the White Sox were 5-8 against the Tigers. This season, each team is respectively having a opposite experience from 2025. The weekend sweep began with a seemingly boring game. The Tigers scored two runs in the top of the third inning and the White Sox only scored one.

The boredom stopped in the bottom of the ninth, when Nishida executed an RBI sacrifice bunt to tie the game and take it to extras. Zack Short put the Tigers in front 3-2 in the top of the 10th inning. The first two outs of the bottom of the 10th were quite quick.

Enter Miguel Vargas on a 0-1 count:

In Saturday’s 7-1 rout Edgar Quero, Colson Montgomery and Andrew Benintendi all got in on the long ball. This, plus Kay and the bullpen’s effort kept the White Sox in control the entire game. Credit where credit is due to Kay: The starter had a 6.64 ERA in the month of April but has since turned it around. In his six starts in May, the southpaw went 4-0 over 32 1/3 innings of work. His ERA this month was a stunning 1.95, which helped lower his season ERA to a more respectable 3.77.

Sunday’s series finale against Detroit was another game Chicago spent mostly trailing. The Tigers scored a run in the top of the first inning and it was all zeroes until the bottom of the seventh inning. That White Sox rally started with Montgomery’s 15th home run of the season to tie the game at one apiece. The dinger was followed by three one-out singles. The second was knocked by Jacob Gonzalez, giving him his first MLB hit in his debut. Tristan Peters’ RBI single brought Meidroth around to score the winning run ,which capped off the rally and lifted the South Side to a 2-1 victory. Southpaw, the White Sox mascot, truly enjoyed the gift of a sweep on his 22nd birthday.

This month was a good month. Highlights include tying the Seattle Mariners for the MLB home run lead with 42, ranking fifth in the league in scoring with 146 runs, improving the run differential to +8, and converting eight of 10 save opportunities.

As of today, the White Sox are just one game back from the division leading Guardians and have a better record than the Chicago Cubs. It may feel surreal, but this is the reality of the baseball season so far. The month of June is shaping up to be a tough one. The divisional games continue to flow, and the month includes games against the Phillies, Braves, Dodgers and Yankees.

For now, I will be soaking in the fact that my team won 30 games before the month of June for the first time in a long while.

Should Winnipeg Target Caleb Malhotra With Eighth Overall Pick?

The Winnipeg Jets are staring down one of the more consequential off-seasons in recent franchise memory. After missing the playoffs and enduring a difficult year, the pressure is on general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff to reshape a roster that needs to get back into the postseason conversation quickly. 

Central to those decisions will be what the Jets do with the eighth overall pick in the upcoming NHL Draft, with insider reports suggesting Winnipeg could look to move the selection for immediate help rather than banking on a prospect's development timeline.

But if Cheveldayoff opts to stay put and let the board come to him, there are some genuinely exciting possibilities. One of the most talked-about names in this year's class and a player who continues to climb draft rankings heading into the summer is Caleb Malhotra, the 17-year-old center and son of former longtime NHL forward Manny Malhotra.

Malhotra just wrapped up a remarkable debut season in the Ontario Hockey League with the Brantford Bulldogs, helping guide the club to a first-place finish in the regular season while posting 29 goals and 55 assists for 84 points across 67 games. 

For a first-year OHL player, that kind of production is notable on its own. In the postseason, Malhotra elevated his game entirely, recording 13 goals and 13 assists for 26 points in 15 playoff games as Brantford pushed all the way to the OHL Western Conference Finals before falling to the Barrie Colts in seven games.

The rankings reflect the growing consensus around his talent. Sportsnet's Jason Bukala has him as high as third overall, while Elite Prospects, The Hockey News' Ryan Kennedy, Daily Faceoff, McKeen's Hockey and Sportsnet's Sam Cosentino all have the center slotting inside the top five. 

There is a scenario, however, where Malhotra slides. Dobber Prospects and The Hockey News' Tony Ferrari both have him outside the top 15, reflecting some disagreement in the scouting community about where exactly his ceiling sits and how quickly he can translate his junior success to the professional level.

That uncertainty is actually what makes the conversation interesting for Winnipeg. If the Jets hold at eight and Malhotra is still on the board, it would represent genuine value on a player many expect to go considerably earlier. 

At six feet two and 183 pounds, he already has the frame NHL teams covet at center, and while he is committed to Boston University next season, the trajectory he is on could see him pushing for meaningful NHL time sooner than a typical college development path might suggest.

For a Jets team that needs to win now but cannot afford to ignore the future entirely, a player of Malhotra's caliber offers a compelling middle ground. Whether Cheveldayoff ultimately deals the pick or uses it, the eighth overall selection figures to shape the direction of this franchise for years to come.

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Reds place Elly De La Cruz on IL, call up Edwin Arroyo

CINCINNATI, OHIO - MAY 31: Elly De La Cruz #44 of the Cincinnati Reds takes to the field against the Atlanta Braves at Great American Ball Park on May 31, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Sunday afternoon in Great American Ball Park brought out the full range of emotions for the Cincinnati Reds. They picked up a win to stave off a would-be sweep by the Atlanta Braves, but watched as superstar Elly De La Cruz pulled up lame rounding 1B on a ball he hit to the wall in RF.

Our hearts sunk when Elly exited immediately. Our hearts woke up when, after the game, Elly said he felt pretty good and had hopefully avoided anything serious by pulling up when he did.

On Monday, we got the real news, though – Elly is going to hit the 10-day IL to rest this hamstring, and the Reds are going to turn to top prospect Edwin Arroyo to replace him on the active roster.

Also noted here is the promotion of LHP Brandon Liebrandt back to the big leagues and the DFA of Yunior Marte, who was only just promoted this weekend during the spate of injuries the Reds faced in their bullpen crisis.

The big news, though, is the Elly/Arroyo swap. The former has obviously established himself as one of the elite talents in the game, but what Arroyo has managed to accomplish to this point is pretty damn impressive, too. While this hammy is the first injury that has shipped Elly to the sidelines in his career, Arroyo has the experience of having to overcome a major shoulder injury, surgery, and lost year that came with it. And though he rebounded in 2025 to show he was still a competent baseball player, his 2026 (so far) has shown that he’s once again one of the better regarded shortstops on the planet for his age.

He was a consensus Top 100 prospect when the Reds acquired him in the trade that sent Luis Castillo to Seattle. He’s also a former 2nd round pick out of Puerto Rico that received a full-slot bonus to buy him out of his commitment to powerhouse Florida State University, too. Outside of the shoulder years, he’s been elite just about every step of the way – defensively, if nothing else – but his bat has woken up at AAA Louisville this year to round out his prospect status. It’s been so good that he vaulted all the way to the #23 spot on Keith Law’s mid-season Top 50 overall prospect list last week, and now he’ll get a shot to show his chops in the Cincinnati infield.

It will be interesting to see how the Reds rotate their infield since Arroyo, like Matt McLain, is a shortstop by trade who’s spent plenty of time at 2B given the presence of Elly within the organization. Maybe Terry Francona will rotate the two between those two spots (with some Sal Stewart and Spencer Steer sprinkled in at 2B), or maybe, just maybe, the Reds will let the switch-hitting shortstop prospect simply go play shortstop in Elly’s absence and keep as few of the other moving parts from having to move, too.

It’s obviously a bummer that Elly will join Hunter Greene, Emilio Pagan, Ke’Bryan Hayes, Brandon Williamons, Rhett Lowder, Pierce Johnson, Graham Ashcraft, you, me, them, and those other guys on the list of injured players on the Reds roster, but having Arroyo to promote – when he’s done so much to prove he’s ready at AAA this year – is about as good an insurance policy as there could be. Now, we just have to hope he hits the ground running.

Monday Morning Minnesota: The “Fun While It Lasted” Edition

PITTSBURGH, PA - MAY 29: Tristan Gray #4 of the Minnesota Twins hits a single in the second inning during the game between the Minnesota Twins and the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on Friday, May 29, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Fails/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

After the good vibes from the previous week, reality hit the Twins like a semi truck, and now they are looking at a five-game losing streak. On the injury front, promising rookie Kendrys Rojas and Bailey Ober are hitting the 15-day IL. At the same time, Simeon Woods-Richardson was DFA’d earlier this week, so it remains to be seen whether he sticks with the team. The team is now 27-33, and has another full week of games, facing off against the White Sox and the Royals at home. It’s an opportunity to remain relevant in the AL Central, but with injury and personnel decisions plaguing the Twins, a turnaround seems unlikely.

The Past Week on Twinkie Town:

  • Check out The Feed, where you can add your discussions about the Twins!
  • We’re starting a new segment called Daily Questions! Provide your opinion on the Twins and debate with the community!
  • Game threads and recaps are back! Commiserate with your fellow fans as we experience the season together.
  • Zach Koenig reminisces about the good times – just three years ago in 2023.

Elsewhere in Twins Territory:

In the World of Baseball:

  • The Rays now only have a 1.5-game lead over the Yankees. The Guardians and White Sox sit third and fourth in the race, and the Mariners have taken over the AL West lead. There is quite a bit of parity though; there’s only a three-game separation between the sixth-place Blue Jays and the 12th-place Boston Red Sox.
  • The National League has remained the same, with Atlanta becoming the first team, this season to hit the 40-win mark. The Dodgers are 1.5 games back of Atlanta and the Brewers still lead the NL Central.
  • The labor battle has begun, as both the MLBPA and the owners swapped initial proposals. Evan Drellich at The Athletic breaks down the owners’ first offer and the implications of a hard salary cap.
  • Jorge Castillo at ESPN looks at the MLBPA’s first offer and what the union is hoping to achieve this time around.

The Mariners’ May, by the numbers

May 29, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners center fielder Julio Rodriguez (44) and shortstop J.P. Crawford (3) celebrate after Crawford hit a home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the first inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images | Steven Bisig-Imagn Images

Rick Rizzs Happy Totals: 15
Dan Wilson Tough One Tonights: 13
Run Differential: +23

wRC+: 110 (8th)
Rotation ERA-/FIP-: 89/80 (10th/4th)
Bullpen ERA-/FIP-: 75/93 (8th/10th)
OAA: -5
BsR: 0.1 (15th)

Mariners fWAR leader: Bryan Woo, 1.4

Beef Boy Bombs: 0
Josh Naylor SB: 8 for 8
Julio HR-SB: 10-2
Ty France Memorial HBP Counter: Randy Arozarena, 5

Luke Raley wOBA: .475 (1st in MLB)
Mitch Garver hard-hit rate: 52.2%
Cal Raleigh games played: 9
Cole Young wRC+: 66
J.P. Crawford HR: 7 (tied for most of his career (Sept./Oct. 2023))
Julio Rodríguez HR: 10 (most of his career)
Leo Rivas PA: 32
Rob Refsnyder K%: 40.9%

Piggyback Starts: 3
Combined runs allowed across 3 piggyback starts: 6
Bryan Woo sinker%: 13.5% (lowest of his career by 7.1%)
Logan Gilbert HR: 7 (second most of his career)
George Kirby Whiff%: 20.6% (third lowest of his career)
Emerson Hancock FIP: 2.44 (17th in MLB)

Combined games missed by Matt Brash and Gabe Speier: 38
Andrés Muñoz xwOBAcon: .439 (4th highest of his career)
Jose A. Ferrer ERA/xERA: 1.64/1.93
Cooper Criswell hard-hit rate: 17.9% (3rd best in MLB, min. 10 IP)

Your favorite May stat not listed here: In the comments

Playoff position: 1st place in AL West, +2.5 games

Current overall record and run differential: 31-29, +30
On this date in 2025: 31-26, +7
2024: 32-27, -6
2023: 29-27, +24
2022: 21-28, -9

Randy Johnson: Luke Raley, +1.06 WPA
Rob Johnson: Andrés Muñoz, -0.85 WPA

Phillies' Cristopher Sánchez closes in on Orel Hershiser’s MLB record with 44 2/3 straight shutout innings

PHILADELPHIA — Cristopher Sánchez is friends with fellow Dominican Republic native Marcell Ozuna, so it was only natural they trash talked each other before their most recent game.

The Pirates’ designated hitter told Sánchez he would take him deep.

Sánchez instead struck him out — four times, and the Phillies’ ace struck out 13 overall in the May 16 shutout victory.

“That wasn’t a very good idea to piss him off,” Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto said with a laugh.

Using an elite sinker-slider-changeup mix that has made him one of the best pitchers in baseball, Sánchez had his way with just about every batter in a sensational scoreless May.

Sánchez went 4-0 and struck out 45 — with only three walks — over 39 innings in May and broke a 115-year-old franchise record along the way. Sánchez has pitched 44 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings headed into his next start against San Diego to top the mark of 41 innings set in 1911 by Grover Cleveland Alexander.

Up ahead, a shot at the major league record held by former Los Angeles Dodgers great Orel Hershiser, who threw 59 consecutive scoreless innings for the World Series champions from Aug. 30 to Sept. 28, 1988.

“I’m pulling for anybody to have a life-changing moment,” Hershiser said. “’88 and the 59 scoreless changed my life. The only time I’m not going to root for him is when he’s pitching against the Dodgers.”

Sánchez missed the Dodgers’ series during the Phillies 4-2 road trip, and they now are 21-10 under interim manager Don Mattingly.

He hasn’t missed much else, except maybe a lot of bats.

“It’s something special,” Sánchez said through an interpreter. “Something really important. I never imagined something like this. So, I’m really happy and proud of myself.”

Sánchez has thrown at least seven shutout innings in five straight starts — he would need to reach that minimum in two more starts, plus one inning to top Hershiser — and only six other pitchers are ahead of him on the consecutive shutout innings list dating back to the start of the Live Ball Era in 1920.

Arizona pitcher Zac Gallen is the only other active pitcher who understands what Sánchez is feeling on the mound over a lengthy scoreless streak. Gallen — just passed by Sánchez — had six straight scoreless starts of six-plus innings and finished at 44 1/3 innings overall in 2022.

“When you’re on a streak like that, it’s fun,” Gallen said. “It’s kind of like walking around, I wouldn’t say on eggshells of, ‘Oh man, you never know when this thing’s going to end.’ But it’s fun when you’re out there and you’re in flow state and the zeros start to stack up. So, it’s awesome for him. I hope he can take down the record.”

Sánchez is 6-2 with an MLB-low 1.47 ERA overall headed into his start against a Padres team he just beat with seven brilliant innings. Should Sánchez start the game with three scoreless innings, he would pass Sal Maglie, Carl Hubbell, Zack Greinke, and Bob Gibson on the scoreless streak list.

Only Don Drysdale and Hershiser would be left.

“What I do watch, he’s very, very special,” Hershiser said. “His changeup, his athleticism, his ability to change speeds to both sides of the plate. I just think he’s a real special pitcher. You can’t do what he’s doing without repeating your mechanics and having some deception and making a lot of good pitches. He’s putting it all together.”

Each of Sánchez’s last 28.2 innings at Citizens Bank Park have been scoreless and he has the third-longest scoreless streak in ballpark history, trailing only Roy Halladay in 2010 (33 innings) and Cliff Lee in 2011 (29).

The 29-year-old Sánchez has inched toward greatness each of the last two seasons.

He was the NL Cy Young Award runner-up in 2025 when he went 13-5 with a 2.50 ERA and struck out 212 in 202 innings. Sánchez was rewarded in March with a guaranteed $104 million over a six-year contract through the 2032 season in a deal that contains $20 million in deferred money payable from 2035-44.

The Phillies put a lot of financial faith in Sánchez, and the early returns have been significant — he made his first opening day start and could lead to the lanky lefty earning an All Star start in July on his home mound.

Sánchez signed with the Tampa Bay Rays as an international free agent in 2013 and was traded to the Phillies six years later for infielder Curtis Mead in a few-cared winter transaction. Mead never caught on as an everyday player and is batting .242 in 45 games this season with the Washington Nationals.

Sánchez — throwing a changeup that averages 86.5 mph and holding hitters to a .153 average — and Zack Wheeler have formed a formidable 1-2 punch in the rotation and helped the Phillies play their way out of a 9-19 start to get back into wild card contention.

Sánchez largely has pitched to weak contact, and the scoreless streak has never been in any serious jeopardy since he last allowed two runs in the first inning of a 3-2 Phillies win over the Giants on April 30.

The defensive highlight of his run came in his last start when centerfielder Justin Crawford raced after Manny Machado’s deep drive and crashed into the wall to make the catch.

Sánchez stood on the mound and applauded the effort.

And if Sánchez gets to 60 scoreless, so too, will Hershiser.

“If Cristopher would break it, that would be an honor to be mentioned and I would treat him the same (respectful) way that Don Drysdale treated me,” he said.