Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:
For the Reds:
Let’s talk about it.
Worldwide Sports News
Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:
For the Reds:
Let’s talk about it.
Texas Rangers lineup for May 19, 2026, against the Colorado Rockies: starting pitchers are Tyler Alexander for the Rangers and Sammy Peralta for the Rockies.
The Rangers and the Rockies face off again, with each team using a lefthanded opener to start things off. Kumar Rocker is the scheduled starter for Texas, but given his first inning struggles this year, they are apparently wanting to go with the opener strategy and let Rocker face the lower part of the lineup rather than the top of the lineup when he first takes the mound. Justin Foscue is hitting second, while Evan Carter is in the ninth spot — most likely so the Rangers can avoid him facing the lefty Peralta. Peralta has not pitched in the majors this year, and has not thrown more than 2 innings in a game in the minors this year.
The lineup:
McCutchen — DH
Foscue — 2B
Nimmo — RF
Jung — 3B
Duran — SS
Burger — 1B
Osuna — LF
Jansen — C
Carter — CF
7:40 p.m. Central start time. The game is a pick ‘em.
discuss below
The Toronto Blue Jays (21-26) take on the New York Yankees (29-19) in the second game of their series. The Yankees rallied to win 7-6 on Monday night. Scheduled starting pitchers are Dylan Cease for Toronto, with a 2.41 ERA, and Will Warren for New York, with a 3.42 ERA.
Date: Tuesday, May 19
Time: 7:05 p.m. ET / 4:05 p.m. PT
Where: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY
TV Channels: TBS, YES, Sportsnet ONE
Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports
Toronto Blue Jays: 21-26 (No. 3 in AL East)
New York Yankees: 29-19 (No. 2 in AL East)
Spread: New York Yankees -1.5
Moneyline: New York Yankees -138 (55.6%) / Toronto Blue Jays +116 (44.4%)
Over/Under: 9.0
Toronto Blue Jays: Dylan Cease (3-1, ERA: 2.41, K: 75, WHIP: 1.18)
New York Yankees: Will Warren (5-1, ERA: 3.42, K: 59, WHIP: 1.16)
Weather: 90°F at first pitch
Ballpark: Capacity: 47,309 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass
The Brewers picked up a nice win over the Cubs yesterday in the first of a three-game series on Chicago’s north side. Today, they’ll look to take the series, and to catch up to (and pass!) the Cubs in the standings.
Yesterday, the Brewers jumped out to a sizable early lead, Brandon Sproat did enough to keep Chicago at bay despite some shakiness, and Shane Drohan did the rest. (Drohan is good.) Tonight in the second game of the series, the Brewers would figure to have a pitching advantage in a matchup between Jacob Misiorowski and Chicago’s Ben Brown.
Brown, who is a 26-year-old right-hander, did not start the year in the Cubs’ rotation. His first 12 appearances this year all came out of the bullpen, but with the injuries that the rotation is dealing with, he moved back into a starting role on May 8th. Since then, he’s made two starts, and he’s done everything the Cubs could ask. Both starts went four innings, and in those eight combined innings he’s struck out ten, walked two, and allowed just one hit and no runs. The Cubs won both games, a 7-1 victory over the Rangers on May 8 and a 2-0 win over the Braves on the 14th. For the season, Brown has a sterling 1.60 ERA and 2.45 FIP in 33 2/3 innings, but it’s worth noting that last season, Brown had a 5.92 ERA in over 100 innings, so some regression is probably expected at some point or another.
Misiorowski, of course, has planted himself firmly within the NL Cy Young race, and he’s riding some serious momentum, having made two of the best starts of his young career his last two times out. Miz hasn’t allowed a run since April 25, and he’s currently riding an 18-inning scoreless streak. He’s also leading baseball in strikeouts with 80; Cristopher Sánchez matched him with his stellar 13-strikeout shutout on Saturday, but he’s made one more start than Misiorowski, and Miz will jump back into the sole lead tonight, assuming he strikes out at least one batter.
The Brewers will operate with a Jackson Chourio – Garrett Mitchell – Sal Frelick outfield from left to right tonight with Christian Yelich as the designated hitter. Jake Bauers is the first baseman, so Andrew Vaughn will be a bench weapon tonight. William Contreras is doing the catching, and David Hamilton and Luis Rengifo will man the left side of the infield. In game number 46, this is the 46th unique lineup that the Brewers have used this season.
First pitch this evening is at 6:40 p.m. on Brewers TV and the Brewers Radio Network.
Carson Benge – RF
Bo Bichette – SS
Juan Soto – DH
Mark Vientos – 1B
Marcus Semien – 2B
Tyrone Taylor – CF
Nick Morabito – LF
Brett Baty – 3B
Luis Torrens – C
SP: Nolan McLean – RHP
James Wood – RF
Luis Garcia – 1B
Jose Tena – DH
CJ Abrams – SS
Daylen Lile – LF
Dylan Crews – CF
Jorbit Vivas – 3B
Drew Millas – C
Nasim Nunez – 2B
SP: Foster Griffin – LHP
First pitch: 6:45 PM ET
TV: SNY
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App, 92.3 HD2
The Cleveland Cavaliers and New York Knicks meet in the opener of the Eastern Conference finals. The Cavaliers reached the East finals after beating the Toronto Raptors and Detroit Pistons in seven games in the first and second rounds, respectively. The Knicks beat the Atlanta Hawks in six games in the first round then swept the Philadelphia 76ers in the East semifinals.
Date: Tuesday, May 19
Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT
Where: Madison Square Garden, New York, New York
TV Channels: ESPN
Live Stream:NBA League Pass | Follow on Yahoo Sports
Spread: New York Knicks -7.5
Moneyline: New York Knicks -262 (69.4%) / Cleveland Cavaliers +213 (30.6%)
Over/Under: 217.5
Game 1: Cleveland at New York (Tuesday May 19, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN)
Game 2: Cleveland at New York (Thursday May 21, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN)
Game 3: New York at Cleveland (Saturday May 23, 8 p.m. ET, ABC)
Game 4: New York at Cleveland (Monday May 25, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN)
Game 5: Cleveland at New York (Wednesday May 27, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN)*
Game 6: New York at Cleveland (Friday May 29, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN)*
Game 7: Cleveland at New York (Sunday May 31, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN)*
*if necessary
A former head coach of the Florida Panthers is weighing in on the Brady Tkachuk rumors.
Doug MacLean was the second coach in Panthers history.
He led the team to their first two appearances in the Stanley Cup Playoffs in 1996 and 1997, including a surprising trip to the Stanley Cup Final in 1996.
On Friday, MacLean made an appearance on the Real Kyper and Bourne Show, which airs daily on Sportsnet 590.
After being asked about several topics, MacLean was wrapping up his guest hit when he quickly pivoted to include one additional conversation point regarding Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk.
“One final thing,” MacLean began. “Think about this. Everybody's trying to get in the top ten (at the NHL Draft). Florida has the ninth pick in the Draft. Where is Brady Tkachuk going to want to go? Think about this. The ninth pick of the draft, the top ten guys are great players. Florida will never have another top 10 pick for two or three years. This is the time when you've got to move on Florida. You pick up a couple of quality players, you pick up the ninth pick, and you know Brady wants to go to Florida. You know he's gonna probably go there within two years. Two years is the magic number. The two playoff series. I wouldn't be surprised that Brady Tkachuk is in Florida at the Draft."
Earlier during the offseason, it was reported that the Senators could explore trading Tkachuk sometime this summer.
The 26-year-old forward has two years remaining on his current contract that comes with an average annual value (AAV) of just over $8.2 million.
With the NHL Draft Lottery now behind us, we know that the Panthers hold the ninth overall selection at next month’s Draft.
It’s the first time Florida has held a first-round pick since 2021, when they selected Mackie Samoskevich 24th overall, and the last one they own until 2029.
If the Senators are open to trading Tkachuk, who would be in complete control of any deal as his contract includes a full no-movement clause, it makes sense that he would list Florida as a preferred destination.
Brady’s older brother, Matthew Tkachuk, is locked into a long-term deal with the Panthers, and the team is poised to contend for the Stanley Cup for the foreseeable future.
THN Florida explored the possibility of a trade earlier in the offseason.
We’ll see how things shake out in the coming days and weeks as we get closer to the NHL Draft.
The 2026 NHL Draft will take place at KeyBank Center in Buffalo on June 26 and 27.
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Photo captions: Jan 12, 2026; Buffalo, New York, USA; Florida Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky (72) looks for the puck during the second period against the Buffalo Sabres at KeyBank Center. (Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images)
The San Diego Padres kept the good times rolling, winning their fourth straight and besting their rivals in a true pitcher’s duel.
Michael King and Yoshinobu Yamamoto both dealt, each pitching seven brilliant innings. But King won out, shutting out the Los Angeles Dodgers’ lineup while Yamamoto made only one mistake that ended up being the difference maker. He threw a splitter that didn’t quite split and Miguel Andujar launched it into left-center field.
That was the only run the Friars would need, with the bullpen working around some tough jams. They’ll need to hope for a little more offense if they want to take the series tonight.
Sheehan had a breakthrough season in 2025 with the Dodgers. In 12 starts he pitched to a career-best 2.82 ERA while limiting opponents to a .185 batting average.
He’s come back down a bit this season, owning a 4.54 ERA in a back-end role with L.A. His last two starts were solid, surrendering only three runs between his outings versus the Atlanta Braves and the San Francisco Giants. The Dodgers will hope he can do the same against the Friars’ offense tonight.
Similarly, Canning had a breakout season with the New York Mets before falling to injury midway through the season. He looked fantastic in his return from injury, but has since struggled immensely. Across his last two starts Canning’s surrendered 12 runs.
The first six of those were mostly bad luck, with the St. Louis Cardinals scoring four on a costly error by Fernando Tatis Jr. But, since then, it’s been Canning’s inability to miss bats that has been the source of struggle. He’ll either need to rediscover that ability or get some help from the offense if San Diego is to win.
The Dodgers actually outhit the Padres, 5-4, in yesterday’s contest. But the only hit that mattered was Andujar’s homer in the first inning.
The Friars have been using Tatis at second base a ton lately. That’s been in order to give Miguel Andujar Nick Castellanos more regular time in the starting lineup. It worked out well this weekend in Seattle but didn’t as much last night. They’ll likely do the same tonight in hopes of slugging against Sheehan.
The lineup doesn’t have much history against Sheehan, so they’ll have to learn on the fly a bit. Sheets has swung a hot bat lately but didn’t reach base in last night’s game. He’ll hope to return to the overpowering slugger that just won him National League Player of the Week.
With King pitching the masterpiece that was his seven innings against L.A., the Friars only needed to use two of their relievers to get the job done. They made it scarier than it should have been.
Jason Adam worked around a two-out jam. He gave up a walk to Hyeseong Kim to flip the order over to Shohei Ohtani who promptly singled to put runners on the corners. Thankfully, Mookie Betts grounded into a harmless force out to end the trouble.
Mason Miller closed out the ninth for his MLB-leading 15th save. He worked around even more tense conditions, issuing back-to-back walks. With runners on first and second and no outs, Miller had thrown 10 pitches, only one of which was a strike. He threw a pitch that barely caught plate and would have been a ball had it not been challenged and overturned for strike one. After that, he was back to himself.
He got ahead, 1-2, on Will Smith before getting the backstop to fly out harmlessly. Miller then struck out Max Muncy on three pitches for the second out before grounding out Andy Pages to end any worries of a Los Angeles comeback.
That leaves plenty of relievers available for what may be a San Diego bullpen game, if Canning can’t deliver. Jeremiah Estrada, Ron Marinaccio, Yuki Matsui, Adrian Morejon, Wandy Peralta and Bradgley Rodriguez are all readily available, though Matsui and Rodriguez combined for four innings on Sunday so the others will likely be leaned on first.
With a need in their starting rotation following Clay Holmes’ broken leg against the Yankees on Friday night, the Mets decided to call up left-handed pitcher Zach Thornton to pitch on Wednesday.
Thornton, who was only promoted from Double-A to Triple-A a couple of weeks ago, met with the media for the first time before Tuesday’s game against the Washington Nationals and expressed his emotions about his rapid ascent.
“I’m super surprised. I mean, after only two Triple-A starts, I thought I had a little bit more work to do up there,” Thornton said. “But try to win some games here now.”
Thornton, 24, pitched well in those two starts for Syracuse, owning a 2.25 ERA (0.92 WHIP) in 12 innings. In seven starts overall this season, the left-hander has a 3.16 ERA and 40 strikeouts to 12 walks in 37 IP.
With a reputation for not being afraid while pitching, Thornton spoke about his control and attitude on the mound.
“I treat every game the same: I want to go out and compete,” he said. “I’m the ultimate competitor, I’m a strike thrower, so I’m gonna do my best to just compete here.”
“I’m not the biggest guy in the world, so I need to have something good about me, so that’s where my brain comes into play,” Thornton added, referring to his fearlessness.
To go along with his lack of fear, Thornton says he takes a bit of a mathematical approach to pitching – playing the percentages, as he put it. As long as he throws the ball in the zone, he’ll take his chances with whatever happens next as hitters “aren’t hitting .700 these days.”
“I’ll take the .250 percentages,” he said.
It’s safe to say Thornton will be pounding the strike zone in his debut on Wednesday. The left-hander has a 1.11 WHIP in 41 games (33 starts) in his minor league career and mentioned he’s “always hated walking people.”
“I hate giving up free bases, hit by pitches. I hate walking people,” he said. “Same with Carson [Benge] striking out, I hate walking people.”
I thought about highlighting Steer here in those first couple of weeks after Noelvi Marte went down. That’s not because I thought he was good, but because he was locked back into regular playing time in a great situation in Cincinnati. But I didn’t. And now something kind of odd has happened… Spencer Steer actually has been quite good.
⚾️ Baseball is back! MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.
The 28-year-old Steer was very fortunate to still be in the Reds’ plans for 2026 after three straight mediocre seasons, each a little worse than the one before. It seemed like he might fall into a part-time role against lefties after the Reds signed Eugenio Suárez and decided to keep non-roster first baseman Nathaniel Lowe, but manager Terry Francona still believed in him enough to make him the regular left fielder. A poor first three weeks followed, but Steer is hitting .320/.404/.500 with four homers in 28 games since Apr. 18, and Statcast thinks he’s been quite unlucky, giving him a .550 xSLG way ahead of his actual .454 mark. In fact, Steer is currently 16th in the majors with a .393 xwOBA.
Aside from the 19 barrels, Steer’s exit velocity numbers are more good than great. He hasn’t stunned like J.J. Bleday. But everything is a little better than usual, and that should make him fairly valuable going forward. The Reds play in one of baseball's best ballparks for right-handed hitters, and Steer rarely finds himself hitting lower than sixth in the Reds lineup (he's hit fifth or higher the last eight games in a row). He's still not a particularly exciting pickup, but he's useful.
Potentially more exciting is Crews, who is back in the majors after hitting .258/.345/.432 with five homers and seven steals in 41 games for Triple-A Rochester. More importantly for the Nationals, he spent enough time in Triple-A to ensure that he'll finish this season with less than two years of service time, pushing his free agency back by a year.
Crews' Triple-A stint saw him hit the ball harder than ever before but also whiff more than usual. He averaged 94.7 mph off the bat for Rochester, a huge improvement on his MLB average of 89.5 mph. However, that came with a 24.9 percent strikeout rate, which is worse than his MLB average of 22.5 percent. He struck out in just 17.3 percent of his plate appearances during his Triple-A stints in 2024 and '25. If he continues to chase as many pitches in the majors as he was in the minors, it's not going to work out well for him.
Dylan Crews with a missile for a 2-run homer pic.twitter.com/uFQG1Au3hP
— Rochester Red Wings (@RocRedWings) May 13, 2026
Still, Crews rates as an instant pickup in mixed leagues. He's stolen 29 bases in just 116 games as a major leaguer, and it seems like he'll hit for more power now, even if it comes at the expense of batting average. His total of five homers for Rochester wasn't stellar, but he had 10 doubles and was pulling the ball in the air more often of late. He'll probably wind up as the Nationals' No. 3 hitter in short order, partly because they need one right-hander there to break up their string of lefties (Brady House was mostly hitting in the spot before his demotion Monday night). It's probably not going to happen this year, but it's still easy to see him blossoming into a top-20 fantasy outfielder in time.
One of 2024's biggest breakthrough prospects, Ryan required Tommy John surgery that August just four starts after debuting for the Dodgers. Back this year, he impressed this spring before suffering a hamstring injury with Triple-A Oklahoma City in April and missing a month. Returning to the mound Friday, he touched 100.9 mph on the gun while pitching four innings of one-run ball for the Comets, leading to speculation he might soon join a Dodgers rotation that's lost Blake Snell (elbow) and Tyler Glasnow (back).
Welcome back River Ryan!
— Oklahoma City Comets (@OKC_comets) May 16, 2026
4.0 IP | 2 H | 1 ER | 1 BB | 4 K
Six pitches over 100 mph pic.twitter.com/ezM9lWGR4e
Before that happens, though, Ryan still needs to be stretched out a little more. He threw 53 pitches in Friday's outing. He's pitched a total of 11 innings in his three starts for Oklahoma City this season, maxing out at 63 pitches. Encouraging is that he's walked only three batters, since control often lags behind stuff as pitchers return from Tommy John. Ryan is 27, so he might not be treated quite as carefully here as a 23-year-old returning from Tommy John. However, a late bloomer who focused more on hitting than pitching in college, he's never thrown more than 104 innings, and the Dodgers would surely like to see him contribute in October, even if it's as a reliever.
So, Ryan probably will have some mixed-league value this season, but it might be for only a couple of months as the Dodgers try to manage his workload. It's not a bad idea to stash him now in the hopes that he's up in early June. There's no telling whether he'll stay healthy in the long run, but he's an elite talent with multiple strikeout pitches and a strong groundball rate.
- Austin Martin is playing regularly for the Twins following Matt Wallner's demotion, and he's looked like a legitimate leadoff option while hitting .303/.425/.387 through 146 plate appearances. There's no power on the way, but he has had some luck on the basepaths lately, converting three straight steal attempts since May 8 after opening the season 4-for-8. He's a decent enough short-term outfield option in leagues in which Steer and Crews are unavailable.
- First baseman Kyle Manzardo seemed like a candidate for a Triple-A demotion last month, but the Guardians chose to stick with him, and after Sunday's two-homer game, he's hitting .295/.367/.591 this month. His .428 xwOBA backs it up, too. His bat speed is up a little, and his average exit velocity has jumped from 87.0 mph in April to 92.2 mph this month.
DENVER — The Colorado Avalanche are one game away from reclaiming the summit of the Western Conference, but they may have to take the first step without their best defenseman.
Cale Makar did not take the ice Tuesday, one day before Colorado opens the Western Conference Final against the Vegas Golden Knights at Ball Arena — and in a sport where practices before pivotal games carry outsized meaning, his absence was impossible to ignore.
He was the only Avalanche player who didn't skate. Head coach Jared Bednar, appearing alongside general manager Chris MacFarland at a joint news conference, tried to tamp down concern. "No, not yet," he said when asked whether Makar's absence worried him.
Jared Bednar was asked if he was concerned about Cale Makar not being on the ice today for practice.
— Ryan O'Hara (@OHaraSports) May 19, 2026
“No. Not yet.”#goavsgo@thehockeynews
The qualification "not yet" did just enough to keep the door open on uncertainty.
Makar has been listed day-to-day since missing Saturday and Sunday practices, nursing what appears to be a shoulder ailment he sustained during the second-round series against Minnesota. The moment of injury was hard to miss: midway through the third period of Game 5 against the Wild, Makar absorbed a check, immediately grabbed his right arm, and skated straight to the locker room.
He'd been reaching for that same spot and consulting trainers throughout the game before that. He did return to the ice a few minutes later, but the image lingered. A hip issue has also factored into his availability this spring, a detail that only muddies the picture further. Through nine playoff games, Makar has posted five points — numbers that undersell how thoroughly he controls games from the back end.
Wednesday morning's skate will be the real tell.
The injury report elsewhere was decidedly more encouraging. Defensemen Brent Burns, Sam Malinski and Josh Manson — along with forward Artturi Lehkonen — all returned to the ice Tuesday after missing time during the layoff between rounds, per Denver Sports reporter Will Petersen. Bednar stopped short of formally clearing any of them, but their presence at practice speaks for itself.
That depth will matter regardless of Makar's status. Colorado has been nearly flawless through two rounds — going 8-1 with a sweep of the Los Angeles Kings and a brisk five-game dismissal of the Wild.
The NHL's best regular-season team is back in the conference final for the first time since hoisting the Stanley Cup in 2022, and Wednesday night at Ball Arena feels like the beginning of something. Puck drop is at 6 p.m.
Today’s roster move: Here
Tuesday notes…
Cubs lineup:
Brewers lineup:
Ben Brown has stepped up after being asked to slot into the rotation when Matthew Boyd was injured.
In two starts: eight innings, one hit, two walks, 10 strikeouts.
That’s really good! Brown also has thrown well in long relief this year. After throwing 65 pitches in his last start against the Braves, Brown is likely going to be asked to go 75-80 pitches and hopefully six innings, as the bullpen has been a bit overworked lately (and not good).
Historically, he’s done very well vs. the Brewers: three starts, 18 innings, 1.00 ERA, 0.778 WHIP, 19 strikeouts. Current Brewers are 8-for-53 (.151) against Ben with 18 strikeouts.
Brown will need to be on his best game tonight because Jacob Misiorowski has been striking out pretty much everyone in sight this year. He has faced 202 batters and struck out 80 (MLB leader). That’s a 39.6 percent strikeout rate which is just ridiculous. He’s also thrown more 100 mile per hour pitches (233) than all other starters in MLB combined (144).
He made two starts against the Cubs last year and allowed six runs (five earned) in eight innings, largely because he issued five walks. He’s cut down on the walks this year, so this will not be an easy game. At all.
Here is the weather forecast for the area around Wrigley Field.
Today’s game is on Marquee Sports Network.
Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.
Baseball-reference.com game preview
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You’ll find the game preview, like this one, posted separately on the front page two hours before game time (90 minutes for some early day games following night games).
At the same time, a StoryStream containing the preview will also post on the front page, titled “Cubs vs. (Team) (Day of week/date) game threads.” It will contain every post related to that particular game.
The Live! (formerly “First Pitch”) thread will still post at five minutes to game time. It will also post to the front page. That will be the only live game discussion thread. After the game, the recap and Heroes and Goats will also live on the front page as separate posts.
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Tottenham’s woes in this corner of London are well-documented and long-established. When they made this latest trip to Stamford Bridge, the statistics showed they had won just once since 1990 – a sequence of 40 matches in all competitions.
Never mind. They needed only a point to effectively ensure their Premier League survival, to send West Ham down and draw a veil over this most wretched of seasons. It was a night when the hope pulsed until the last. Chelsea led through goals from the outstanding Enzo Fernández and Andrey Santos and yet Spurs rallied in the closing stages, refusing to accept it was their destiny to prolong the agony into the final round of matches.
Continue reading...Until last night’s win over the White Sox featuring Colt Emerson’s first MLB hit and home run, the vibes were pretty bad in Mariners-ville. And that was before Cal Raleigh hit the Injured List. As Cal himself and many others have said, “Obliques are tricky.” What should the Mariners do while Cal is out? Mitch Garver and Jhonny Peredia, with all due respect, do not inspire a great amount of confidence. Peredia is clearly a great defensive catcher, but has yet to hit much. GarvField is the ABS Challenge guru and is good for one dinger per fiscal quarter, but other than that it’s pretty rough. So I asked THE FEED for some alternative ideas and the FEED responded with some pretty good ideas and takes. Once again, here’s my patented and very scientific Mariners Hot Take Ranking System:
Let’s get into it.
Poster BeHappy1 says, “Is Harry Ford available?
This was a fairly common response/joke around Mariners-ville and honestly…..kinda tempting? (/looks at Ford’s AAA stats so far this season) Okay, well, maybe not. This take is deceptive. It seems inflammatory, BRASH even, but the more you pull it apart, you realize you’ve been BEAVAN’d.
Poster RidiculousNonsense says, “Dan was a catcher! It’s like riding a bike, right? Bring Dan back!”
Obviously a joke take, but a pretty good one just for the mental image alone. Giving this one a BOSIO. Has there ever been a player-manager who was the catcher? Could be the move….
Poster and Staff Writer Connor Donovan says, “I, for one, would love to find a way to grab Bo Naylor from the Guardians.”
Ding ding ding! This is what I want. I don’t care what prospect capital it takes to make this happen, we deserve it. Two Naylors, too furious. We’ve been treated to 26 years of highlights from Griffey Sr. and Jr. played together, right? Think of the brotherly teammates content the Mariners could create with this move! So much potential. Plus, they’ve already been teammates in Cleveland, so it’d be a reunion in more than one way. Give this one a BRASH ranking.
That’s all for this week. Hopefully the Mariners can keep the good vibes going and, I dunno, win some more games? Would be cool, to be quite honest.