Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Logan Henderson is back, Andrew Vaughn is red hot

Welcome to Waiver Wire Watch, where I review my favorite waiver wire adds and drops for each week of the MLB season.

The premise is pretty straightforward. I’ll try to give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When I list a player, I’ll list the category where I think he’ll be helpful or the quick reason he’s listed. I hope it will help you determine if the player is a fit for what your team needs.

For a player to qualify for this list, he needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. I understand you may say, “These players aren’t available in my league,” and I can’t help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they’re available in many places, and that can hopefully satisfy readers who play in all league types.

Shohei Ohtani
Emmanuel Clase’s paid leave and Félix Bautista’s injury also wreak havoc with this week’s update.

Waiver Wire Hitters

Andrew Vaughn - 1B, MIL: 38% rostered
(STARTING JOB, APPROACH CHANGE)

With Rhys Hoskins landing on the IL for the next four to six weeks, Andrew Vaughn is emerging as a starting option in Milwaukee, and I'm intrigued by an approach change he made in the minors since being traded. I recorded a video two weeks ago explaining why I think Vaughn might be a decent gamble in deeper formats. He's gone 12-for-37 with three home runs and 13 RBI in his last 12 games, and the Brewers are one of the better teams in baseball, so we want exposure to their lineup.

Ramon Laureano - OF, BAL: 34% rostered
(STARTING JOB, BETTER TEAM CONTEXT)

Laureano got traded from the Orioles and still managed to land in a full-time role as the left fielder for the Padres. After hitting .290/.355/.529 with 15 homers, 46 RBI, and four steals in 290 plate appearances with the Orioles, it seemed likely Laureano would be dealt to a contender to be a small-side platoon. We don't know how long he can keep up this production, but he remains an everyday starter, which means he needs to remain in your lineups for now.

Warming Bernabel - 1B/3B, COL: 24 % rostered
(STARTING JOB, HOT STREAK)

Bernabel is going to be the regular third baseman in Colorado for a while (or at least until Ryan Ritter comes back). Bernabel is a 23-year-old who was hitting .301/.356/.450 with eight homers and five steals in 75 games at Triple-A this season. However, even with that production, I'm not sure anybody saw him going 14-for-28 in his first seven MLB games with three home runs and eight RBI. Coors Field will obviously help his numbers, and you can add him because of this hot streak, but I would be cautious about putting big bids on a player who is clearly going to regress.

Colson Montgomery - 3B/SS, CWS: 24% rostered
(HOT STREAK, PROSPECT GROWTH?)

I’m gonna preface this by saying I don’t believe in Montgomery for the remainder of 2025. This is a guy who was hitting so poorly in Triple-A that he got sent back down to the complex to fix his stance and approach. When he came back, he hit marginally better at Triple-A, but nothing like what we’re seeing at the MLB level right now. In fact, he hit .215 in 60 games at Triple-A this year and .214 in 130 games at Triple-A last year. I just can't connect that with a hitter who's hitting .276 in 18 MLB games with three home runs and 13 RBI. I can't see it lasting, but it's happening now, so maybe you want to take a gamble. You may also be tempted to add Liover Peguero - 2B/SS, PIT (1% rostered) because of his three home run game on Saturday, but I'd caution against that. He was hitting .251/.312/.373 in 72 games at Triple-A with five home runs and eight steals. His offensive profile is just not an exciting one.

Mickey Moniak - OF, COL: 23% rostered
(EVERY DAY JOB, HOT STREAK)

Moniak has been the Rockies’ best outfielder for a while now, slashing .349/.393/.699 with seven home runs, 19 RBI, and two steals since he became a regular in the lineup 25 games ago. He’s hitting like what we wanted Brenton Doyle to do with admittedly less speed. Still, the former number one overall pick may have found a home and a home environment that suits his skillset and covers up some of his contact issues. Another Rockies hitter who is worth rostering is Jordan Beck - OF, COL (19% rostered), who has come out of the break on fire, hitting .373 with three home runs, nine RBI, and two steals. The Rockies will start off next week with a three-game set at home against the Blue Jays, so we can attack these two of those Coors Field games.

Francisco Alvarez - C, NYM: 16% rostered
(CALL UP, POWER POTENTIAL)

The Mets called Alvarez back up after a brief stint in Triple-A, where he hit .299 with 11 HRs and 24 RBI in 19 games at Triple-A. In four games since coming back, he's 4-for-13 with one home run, two RBI, and four runs scored. Who knows if he can carry this over, but he was pulling the ball in the air more in the minors, and he has the power to be a big-time fantasy asset if he can keep that approach. There is also no catcher swinging a hotter bat than Kyle Higashioka - C, TEX (3% rostered). Higgy is 25-for-62 (.387) in his last 17 games with six home runs, 14 RBI, and three steals. He has started in four of the last five games because the Rangers aren't going to bench a hot bat, but just be prepared for this to go back to more of a committee when the production inevitably cools.

Lenyn Sosa- 1B/2B/3B - CWS: 15% rostered
(EVERY DAY ROLE, QUALITY UNDERLYING METRICS)

I've had Sosa on here a few times now because he pops on Process+ leaderboards and has been making quality contact. In July, Sosa hit .294 with four home runs, 10 runs scored, and 19 RBI in 23 games. He's playing every day, and the White Sox lineup is starting to wake up a little bit. He's not a bad add in deeper formats. Neither is Luis Rengifo - 2B/3B, LAA (16% rostered), who struggled to start the season while playing through injuries but has settled back into a high batting average asset who will score runs in a decent Angels lineup. The issue is that his earlier injuries have impacted how often he's running, so he won't have the same steals upside he has in the past, but if you need a deep league MIF, he's not a bad option.

Kyle Manzardo - 1B, CLE: 13% rostered
(HOT STREAK, POWER UPSIDE)

Kyle Manzardo went through a really cold stretch earlier in the summer, but we now know that his mother was going through a heart transplant. These guys are human beings too, and it's only logical that stress and emotional turmoil off the field would impact their performance and preparation on the field. In July, Manzardo hit .295 with five home runs and 14 RBI in 20 games. I think it's time to buy back in. Another 1B option is Josh Bell - 1B, WAS (6% rostered). Two weeks ago,I recorded a video on his decisionto move to a more line-drive swing at the end of May. That decision has led to a .284/.361/.469 slash line in 46 games since making the shift. Yes, that has come with just even home runs and 24 RBI, but the numbers and approach will still work in deeper formats since Bell is striking out just 12% of the time and making a lot of contact. The Nationals could also ship him off at the trade deadline, and being a .280 hitter in a good lineup could help his counting stats too.

Coby Mayo - 1B/3B: 9% rostered
(STARTING ROLE, FORMER TOP PROSPECT)

Is it finally time for Mayo? With Ryan O’Hearn out of town, Mayo could get regular starts at first base or DH for the remainder of the season. The 23-year-old has started to come around after the All-Star break, but he has not been playing regularly. We saw what Kyle Stowers was able to do when he was given regular playing time, and Mayo is a better prospect than Stowers. I’d be adding Mayo everywhere, but be careful that Ryan Mountcastle- 1B, BAL (23% rostered) is expected to come off the IL next week, and so the Orioles could go right back to playing Mayo part-time. However, what SHOULD happen is that Mountcastle and Mayo should be the 1B/DH for the rest of the season, and that would make both worth adding.

Jordan Lawlar - SS, ARI: 8% rostered
(STASH PLAY, PROSPECT UPSIDE)

This is Lawlar’s time, right? I mean, maybe not this very minute because he’s on the IL with a hamstring injury, but his time is coming in a few weeks now that Josh Nalor and Eugenio Suarez are out of town. Lawlar has already started taking live at-bats in the Arizona complex and is hitting .319/.410/.583 at Triple-A with 10 home runs and 18 steals in 53 games. He has little left to prove there and should be the starting third baseman in Arizona by the middle of August. Another stash play is Dylan Beavers - OF, BAL (1% rostered). Trading Ramon Laureano also seemed to open up playing time for Dylan Beavers in Baltimore, but they have opted to go with Dylan Carlson there, for now. Beavers is a 2022 first-round pick who has been swinging a hot bat in July and is now hitting .306 on the season with 14 home runs, 21 steals, 42 RBI, and a .924 OPS. He would be an immediate add in most fantasy formats if he gets called up, and I expect that to happen in the middle of the month. I should also point out that Kristian Campbell - 2B/OF, BOS (16% rostered) is heating up in Triple-A and playing a lot of first base. The Red Sox did not trade for a first baseman at the deadline, and I think they plan to use Campbell there if/when he comes back up.

Tyler Locklear - 1B, ARI: 7% rostered
(STARTING JOB, POWER UPSIDE)

Locklear came to Arizona as part of the return for Eugenio Suarez and will immediately slot in as the starting first baseman. The 24-year-old is hitting .316/.401/.542 in 98 games at Triple-A Reno with 19 home runs and 18 steals. Yes, some of that is influenced by the offensive-friendly environment of the PCL, but Locklear has a 44% hard hit rate and 90.2 mph average exit velocity while posting a respectable 13% swinging strike rate, so he has cleaned up his approach enough that he’s not as big of a swing-and-miss risk as he seemed last year. He has a clear starting role in a ballpark that is the 2nd-best park for right-handed hitters, according to Statcast Park Factors, so Locklear is worth a gamble in 12-team and 15-team fantasy leagues for his potential five-category upside.

Brooks Lee - 2B/3B/SS, MIN: 6% rostered
(STARTING JOB, MODEST PRODUCTION)

The Twins traded away everybody at the deadline, or so it seemed. Lineup spots and bullpen spots are open everywhere, but we have a good sense of who will fill them in the infield. It seems like Brooks Lee will emerge as the everyday shortstop for the final two months, and Luke Keaschall - 1B/2B/OF, MIN (24% rostered) will be the primary second baseman when he comes off the IL (maybe next week). That should also open up first base for Kody Clemens - 1B/2B/3B/OF, MIN (2% rostered), who has produced this season when given any everyday job. None of these guys are must-adds in a 12-team format, and both Lee/Keaschall are better real-life players than fantasy players. However, they are talented enough and should get enough playing time to be strong adds in 15-team leagues.

Joey Loperfido - OF, TOR: 5% rostered
(STARTING JOB, HOT STREAK)

I assumed that Loperfido would lose his job when Daulton Varsho came off the IL, but then George Springer went on the IL with a concussion, and Loperfido now has a little extra time. Since being recalled in July, he's hitting .373 with three home runs and eight RBI in 21 games. In Triple-A, he was chasing less and being more aggressive in the zone; however, his contact rates were about the same as they were in Triple-A last year for the Astros, so I'm not sure if this is anything other than a hot stretch.

Tommy Pham - OF, PIT: 4% rostered
(STARTING JOB, HOT STREAK)

For some reason, Pham was not traded at the deadline. No idea what Pittsburgh is doing here, but we will continue to get regular playing time from Pham. There is a great video from Logan Arblaster that shows Pham discussing a difficult situation with his contact lenses based on a rare eye condition that he has. The video was taken on June 23rd, and Pham mentions in the video that he has made contact lens changes throughout the year, but has "felt better the last week." If we take Pham's stats from June 16th, we see that he's hitting .375/.422/.625 in 25 games with four home runs, 11 runs scored, and 19 RBIs. That will play in any league type. A name to keep an eye on in deeper leagues is Alan Roden - OF, MIN (0% rostered), who was traded to the Twins at the deadline and is now one of FIVE left-handed outfielders on their active roster. Still, Roden has started the first two games after the deadline and figures to start against all right-handed pitchers from here on out. He hit .331/.423/.496 in 32 games at Triple-A this season, and while those numbers haven't carried over, he has tremendous plate discipline and contact ability, so it's a profile I'd bet on in deeper formats.

Wenceel Perez - OF, DET: 2% rostered
(STARTING JOB, COUNTING STAT UPSIDE)

With Parker Meadows on the IL, Perez has stepped in as the everyday center fielder in Detroit and has gone 9-for-19 in five games this week with seven runs scored, one home run, and two steals. He was productive in a stretch earlier in the season and should provide enough value across the board to be useful in 15-team leagues. Blake Perkins - OF, MIL (1% rostered) has also found himself in a starting spot with Jackson Chourio on the IL. We've seen that Perkis is more batting average than anything, but he's gone 6-for-14 in his three starts with four runs scored, two home runs, and four RBI. The Brewers are one of the better teams in baseball, and Perkins may have at least two more weeks as a regular starter for them.

Jakob Marsee- OF, MIA: 1% rostered
(RECENT CALL-UP, SPEED UPSIDE)

With Jesus Sanchez now in Houston, who is going to play right field in Miami? The easy answer is Heriberto Hernandez - OF, MIA (1% rostered), who has hit .311/.363/.505 in 38 games with five home runs. However, Hernandez is an average defender and also has a 27.4% strikeout rate and a 17.8% swinging strike rate, following a 35% strikeout rate in Triple-A. I think this all comes crashing down at some point, and I think the Marlins believe that too, which is why they called up Marsee, who was hitting .246/.379/.438 at Triple-A with 14 home runs and 47 steals in 98 games. He has a strong eye at the plate and good power/speed, which is what we love for fantasy production.

Robert Hassell III - OF, WAS: 1% rostered
(RECENT CALL-UP, PROSPECT GROWTH)

The Nationals traded Alex Call to the Dodgers and called up Hassell already, so now the only question is whether Hassell III can beat out Jacob Young for starts down the stretch. Considering the Nationals are not contending, they should see what the 24-year-old can do. Hassell III is a former first-round pick and top prospect, who is hitting .310/.383/.456 in 76 games at Triple-A with 10 home runs and 16 steals. He struggled in his first 79 MLB plate appearances, so he’d be more of a deeper league play, but he deserves another shot.. If we're just using Process+, we should note that Hassell's teammate, Daylen Lile - OF, WAS (0% rostered), has a Process+ score of 112 since June 15th, which is pretty solid work from a young rookie. He has also started to run it on of late, hitting .271/.317/.407 in July with one home run, six runs scored, seven RBI, and two steals in 17 games. That's more of a deep league play, but he's making great swing decisions, and so the hits should continue to fall.

Waiver Wire Pitchers

Shane Bieber - SP, TOR: 49% rostered
Bieber pitched on Sunday afternoon for Triple-A Buffalo, allowing two runs on five hits in five innings, while striking out six and walking one. He threw 62 pitches while posting an 18% whiff rate and 31% CSW. His fastball sat 91.5 mph, which is slightly down from what we'd want, but he's a 30-year-old on a rehab start in Triple-A, so he's not throwing at 100% speed. The Blue Jays could opt to bring him back this upcoming week or give him one more start to stretch out to 70+ pitches, but he's nearing a return, which means Eric Lauer would likely move back to the bullpen.

Spencer Arrighetti - SP, HOU: 34%
Arrighetti is set to come off the IL and open his season against the Marlins next week. It's been a really long layoff for Arrighetti, but I prefer him to Luis Gil, who is also set to come off the IL because Arrighetti was dealing with a broken thumb and not an arm/shoulder injury. I was high on Arrighetti coming into the season, and love the team context that he's coming back to, so I'd try to add him everywhere, even if you bench him next week. We should also note that his teammate, Cristian Javier, is making one more rehab start and then also coming off the IL, so he could be a stash play too.

Logan Henderson - SP, MIL: 32% rostered
With Jacob Misiorowski landing on the IL, it will be Logan Henderson getting the chance to take his place in the rotation for at least two weeks. Henderson had a 1.71 ERA, 0.95 WHIP, and 29/6 K/BB ratio in 21 innings for the Brewers earlier in the year. Keep in mind that 21 innings is a small sample size, and Henderson has pitched to a 4.34 ERA in 47.2 innings in Triple-A. He will likely be more of a high-3.00 ERA pitcher in the big leagues, but that's still worth rostering in most leagues.

Robert Garcia - RP, TEX: 30% rostered
Yes, Garcia has blown his last two saves and was diagnosed with back spasms, but Rangers manager Bruce Bochy has insisted that he remains the closer. Remember that Aroldis Chapman had back spasms last week when his velocity was down 5 mph. He missed two games and then came back fine. We can expect the same outcome for Garcia, who has been solid this season for Texas after settling into the closer's role. Since May 21st (and discounting the last outing with the back spasms) he has a 3.60 ERA and seven saves in 20 innings with a 30% strikeout rate. The issue is that it comes with a 1.55 WHIP because he has some command issues, and that could lead Texas to upgrade at the deadline now that they are firmly in the Wild Card mix.

JP Sears - SP, SD: 19% rostered
Sears was part of the Mason Miller trade and is now in a better spot. You may see his 4.97 ERA and 97/29 K/BB ratio in 111 innings and think he has no fantasy value anyway, but that would be a mistake. Yes, Sears is a left-handed pitcher who only throws 92 mph, but he’s also an extreme fly ball pitcher with a career 49% flyball rate and a 52.3% rate this season. That has led to a 13% HR/FB rate, which is 1.86 HR/9. As we just discussed with Miller, he’s moving out of a minor bandbox where the ball flies and moving to a stadium that suppresses power. He’s not going to become a fantasy stud, but it wouldn’t surprise me if he becomes more of a 4.20 ERA pitcher on a better team, which has value in deeper formats.

Jack Perkins - SP/RP, ATH: 18% rostered)
With JP Sears traded at the deadline, both Perkins and JT Ginn - SP, ATH (16% rostered) are now in the Athletics' rotation. The 25-year-old Perkins has good stats as a starter in Triple-A this season and has also posted a 2.75 ERA, 0.92 WHIP, and 19/7 K/BB ratio in 19.2 MLB innings out of the bullpen. He might have the highest upside of any A's start or the remainder of the season. Meanwhile, Ginn had a great outing before the deadline against the Rangers, allowing just one run on five hits in five innings, but then got hit hard against the Diamondbacks on Saturday. He's rocking a sinker, slider, cutter pitch mix that he can locate well, which leads to lots of weak contact. He also only needed 58 pitches to go five innings against Texas, so he could easily push to six innings or beyond with that kind of efficiency. The strikeouts aren't likely to be there, which limits his overall upside, and that will also lead to some starts where the hits fall in, like against Arizona.

Blake Treinen - RP, LAD: 15% rostered
The Dodgers were thought to be seeking a huge upgrade to the back-end of their bullpen. In the end, they wound up only adding Brock Stewart. While Stewart is a solid reliever, I don’t think he pushes Treinen out of the primary save share in Los Angeles. This should be a committee with Treinen and Alex Vesia(27% rostered) until Tanner Scott returns, so that’s a win for Treinen in fantasy.

Calvin Faucher - RP, MIA: 14% rostered
Faucher seems to have settled into the closer role on a feisty Miami team that is winning a lot of games of late. Ronny Henriquez will mix in from time to time as well, but Faucher is scoreless in his last five outings and could pick up a handful of saves the rest of the way. Miami does like to mix and match though, so if he goes cold for a bit, they may try Henriquez or Anthony Bender at the end of games.

Nestor Cortes - SP, SD: 13% rostered
Cortes now has a locked-in rotation spot on a playoff contender, so that’s a win for him. This past weekend, he struck out nine while allowing one earned run in 5 2/3 innings in what was scheduled to be his final rehab start with the Brewers, so perhaps the Padres will activate him this weekend to take Randy Vasquez’s spot in the rotation. PetCo will be a good ballpark upgrade for Cortes, who should be added in all 15-team leagues and treated as a streamer for now in 12-team leagues until we see him back on the mound in a big league game.

Bailey Falter - SP, KC: 11% rostered
With Kris Bubic and Michael Lorenzen on the IL, it seems that both Falter and Ryan Bergert (2% rostered) should join the rotation in Kansas City. At least until Cole Ragans comes back; if he comes back. That’s a win for both of them, just because Falter gets a team context and park upgrade, and Bergert moves from being a part-time starter to a full-time starter. I would treat them both as streamers in 12-team leagues but solid options in 15-team leagues.

Cade Cavalli - SP, WAS: 1% rostered
The Nationals traded Michael Soroka to the Cubs a couple of days before the deadline, and Soroka’s next spot in the rotation lines up with when Cavalli would be starting at Triple-A. Even though Cavalli is not a lock for that rotation spot, he’s the most intriguing option. The former top prospect is working his way back from Tommy John surgery, and his Triple-A results have been inconsistent, but he has flashed that same upside we saw before the injury, so it would be nice to see what he looks like against MLB arms.

Johan Oviedo - SP, PIT: 0% rostered
Oviedo struck out five and didn’t walk anybody for Triple-A Indianapolis on Tuesday while throwing 42 of 62 pitches for strikes. The 27-year-old was placed on the 60-day IL back in March after battling both lat and elbow issues in the spring. He has a 3.12 ERA and 1.04 WHIP with a 21/4 K/BB ratio across 17 1/3 innings during his rehab and could be activated this week, possibly for a two-start week. Oviedo is not overly exciting, but a pitcher with a career 4.32 ERA in 320.2 MLB innings is certainly usable in deeper formats.

Kevin Ginkel - RP, ARI: 9% rostered
JJ Romero - RP, STL: 21% rostered
Kyle Leahy, RP, STL: 3% rostered
Jose A. Ferrer - RP, WAS: 7% rostered
Dennis Santana - RP, PIT: 36% rostered
Cole Sands - RP, MIN: 7% rostered
Keegan Akin - RP, BAL: 3% rostered
Yennier Cano - RP, BAL: 3% rostered
Michael Kelly - RP, ATH: 1% rostered

All of these guys may now be their team's closer or in part of a closer committee. These situations are all fluid until we see for sure how bullpen usage plays out, but if I was ranking them for waiver adds tonight, I'd rank them as: Santana, Ginkel, Ferrer, Romero, Faucher, Sands, Akin, Cano, Kelly, Leahy (and I'd have Blake Treinen and Randy Rodriguez above all of them).

STREAMING STARTER PITCHERS

MUST BE 40% ROSTERED ON YAHOO OR UNDER (ranked in loose order)

Week of 8/4

Strong Preference

PitcherRoster%Opponent
Emmett Sheehan14%vs STL
Joey Cantillo14%at CWS
Spencer Arrighetti34%at MIA
Justin Verlander17%at PIT, vs WAS
Jacob Lopez16%at WAS
Jack Perkins18%at BAL

Fairly Confident

Nestor Cortes18%vs BOS
Jack Leiter23%vs NYY
Cade Horton25%vs CIN
Logan Henderson32%vs NYM
Logan Evans6%vs TB
Zebby Matthews22%at DET
Jose Soriano40%vs TB
Luis Severino22%at WAS, at BAL
Charlie Morton19%vs LAA
JT Ginn16%at BAL
Joey Wentz2%vs MIL, vs MIA
Cade Cavalli1%vs ATH
Joe Boyle22%at SEA
Aaron Civale13%vs CLE

Some Hesitation

Cade Povich2%at PHI, vs ATH
Frankie Montas14%at MIL
Mitchell Parker7%vs ATH
Slade Cecconi27%at NYM, at CWS
Dustin May29%vs KC
Mike Burrows4%vs SF, vs CIN
Colin Rea22%at STL
Jose Quintana25%at ATL
Adrian Houser34%at LAA, at SEA
JP Sears19%at ARI, vs BOS
Michael Soroka12%vs CIN, at STL
Taijuan Walker4%vs BAL
Cam Schlittler18%vs HOU

Desperate / Uncertain Health or Role

Eric Lauer31%at COL
Johan Oviedo0%vs SF, vs CIN
Sean Burke7%at CLE
Chris Paddack18%vs MIN
Tyler Anderson12%vs TB
Carson Whisenhunt1%vs WAS
Michael McGreevy10%vs CHC
Bailey Falter11%at BOS
Davis Martin2%at SEA, vs CLE
Anthony DeSclafani1%vs SD

Top of the Morning: Red Sox beat sloppy Astros 6-1 behind Lucas Giolito’s stellar start

BOSTON (AP) — Trevor Story and Ceddanne Rafaela had consecutive RBI singles in a six-run fourth inning filled with five Houston mistakes, Lucas Giolito pitched a season-high eight stellar innings, and the Boston Red Sox beat the Astros 6-1 on Sunday to complete a series sweep.

Connor Wong added a sacrifice fly and Wilyer Abreu was credited with a sacrifice on a safety squeeze for an RBI during the inning, sending Boston to its third straight win over the AL West leaders and fourth in a row overall.

Giolito (8-2) gave up the run on three hits with four strikeouts and a walk, eclipsing his previous season-high innings of 7 2/3 on July 4.

Carlos Correa, acquired from Minnesota at the trade deadline, hit a homer for Houston, which has lost eight of 10.

The game’s first pitch was 11:38 a.m. EDT, the third time this season the Red Sox began a game in the morning. The others: their annual Patriots’ Day game when they beat the White Sox and the Independence Day victory at the Nationals.

Framber Valdez (11-5) gave up six runs, four earned, over six innings, ending his personal 10-game winning streak. He entered 10-0 with a 1.84 ERA in his previous 14 starts.

Key moment

During the fourth, Houston missed a cutoff on Story’s run-scoring single, Valdez had a wild pitch, balked home a run and had Abreu’s bunt go under his glove for an error. Yainer Diaz had a passed ball.

Key stat

Valdez hadn’t allowed three runs in an inning since May 19.

Up next

Astros: RHP Jason Alexander (1-1, 7.36 ERA) is slated to start the opener of a three-game series at the Marlins on Monday.

Red Sox: RHP Brayan Bello (7-5, 3.19) is set to start the first of three against the Royals on Monday.

Play ball, take 2: The MLB Speedway Classic resumes at Bristol after rain suspension

BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) — A record crowd for a regular-season Major League Baseball game got to see all the pomp and pageantry with the MLB Speedway Classic before the rain washed out the game itself in the bottom of the first inning.

Fans returning Sunday only wanted to watch the Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds play ball. They enjoyed enough of star Tim McGraw and Pitbull in the rain that suspended the first MLB regular-season game in the state of Tennessee.

“We got to see all of that (Saturday), so as long as we see game today I think we’ll be good,” Cindy Lowe of Mount Airy, North Carolina, said.

Craig Morton agreed. He and his family, with three children, were ready to see baseball even if Morton is the Reds’ fan surrounded by relatives rooting for the Braves. They had a good time seeing McGraw and country singer Jake Owen.

Sunday was dry at Bristol Motor Speedway even with overcast skies.

“We’re really glad that they played the game today instead of last night because we sat here a couple hours in the rain and everybody was saturated even with rain gear,” Morton said. “The kids are happy so we’re happy.”

This MLB Speedway Classic was first announced nearly a year ago as part of Commissioner Rob Manfred’s push to take MLB to places where baseball isn’t played every day live. MLB played a game at the “Field of Dreams” movie site in Iowa in both 2021 and 2022. Alabama and North Carolina, too.

MLB didn’t try to sell every ticket inside the speedway that drew 156,990 for the Battle of Bristol college football game in 2016. The track with a racing capacity of 146,000 meant the final attendance number could reach 90,000 or more even with sections blocked off.

The previous paid attendance of 84,587 was set Sept. 12, 1954, when Cleveland Stadium hosted the New York Yankees.

Simply canceling this game wasn’t an option. The Reds are in the chase for a wild-card spot, and this is the last time these teams meet this season. Teams had police escorts to make sure they got back to Bristol on Sunday.

For fans, the commute back to Bristol Motor Speedway, billed as “The Last Great Colosseum” with its history as a half-mile bullring of a racetrack, was easier for some than others.

Steven Long of Atlanta, Georgia, was on a party bus to his hotel in Knoxville with a bunch of distributors. He drove the 110 miles back to Bristol on Sunday by himself even though he had hoped to be driving home. He couldn’t miss the first MLB game at a racetrack.

“I had to come back,” said Long, who wore his Braves jersey hoping for a win.

MLB will be announcing an attendance figure later Sunday. Officials already knew this event would draw a record crowd with 85,000 tickets sold as of Monday.

The big question Sunday was how many people would return for baseball itself after the big party that MLB and Bristol threw for fans Saturday. For Lowe and Jason Lawson, this is a moment they couldn’t miss after buying tickets in May.

“The history, the nostalgia of Bristol Motor Speedway combined with Major League Baseball all in one I think,” Lowe said.

Long was being joined by a couple of friends. He saw one benefit of returning even if others chose not to.

“We’ll have more space around us, so we won’t be on top of each other,” Long said.

Indeed. Fans had plenty of room to spread out, dance and enjoy the capping event of the MLB Speedway Classic.

Rockies closer Seth Halvorsen suffers elbow injury in win over Pirates

DENVER (AP) The Colorado Rockies' win over Pittsburgh on Saturday was dampened with an elbow injury to closer Seth Halvorsen.

The hard-throwing right-hander left after tossing five pitches in the ninth inning, and the initial outlook isn’t encouraging.

“It don’t look good,” interim manager Warren Schaeffer said. “I’ll let you know (Sunday).”

Halvorsen, who leads the Rockies with 11 saves, was facing Pirates pinch hitter Spencer Horwitz to open the ninth and Colorado leading 8-4. He was ahead 0-2 in the count and then threw three straight balls, the last one at 99 mph.

Immediately after that pitch he bent over and dangled his right arm, prompting Rockies head trainer Keith Duggar to jog to the mound to check on him. After a brief discussion Halvorsen left the game, with Dugan Darnell coming on to finish the 8-5 win.

Schaeffer said Halvorsen wasn’t experiencing problems entering Saturday’s game.

“Not recently, but he was feeling something a while back, but he’s been good for a while,” Schaeffer said.

Halvorsen has been Colorado’s main closer since the beginning of June and had converted nine of his last 10 opportunities, including his last six.

Three of those have come after the All-Star break, which has helped the Rockies post a 7-6 record. Colorado, which is 30-80, is trying to avoid setting a modern era record for losses set by the 2024 Chicago White Sox, who were 41-121.

Brewers rookie Jacob Misiorowski placed on IL with tibia contusion

Milwaukee Brewers rookie Jacob Misiorowski has been placed on the 15-day injured list with a left tibia contusion.

The team made the announcement Sunday ahead of the All-Star right-hander's scheduled start against the Washington Nationals. The designation was retroactive to Thursday, a few days after Misiorowski took a line shot to the shin in the first inning against the Chicago Cubs.

Misiorowski (4-1, 2.70 ERA) struggled to close that inning, including a play where his knee appeared to buckle as he fielded a dribbler and threw wildly to first base, but he settled down and retired 10 consecutive batters while throwing 40 pitches over the next three innings.

Misiorowski told reporters Sunday that he anticipates missing about two starts and being ready to go after the 15 days.

Right-hander Logan Henderson was recalled from Triple-A Nashville and expected to start in his place in the series finale with the Nationals.

The Women’s Open 2025: Miyū Yamashita wins at Porthcawl – as it happened

An opening bogey for Andrea Lee. Then the final pairing take to the course, with Kim A-lim and Miyū Yamashita parring the opening hole. Suddenly there’s a little bit of separation at the top of the leaderboard. Meanwhile Kim Sei-young rapidly undoes exactly half of all her good work on the front nine, with double bogey at 10. She slips back to -4, and that’s golf in a nutshell.

-9: Yamashita (1)
-8: AL Kim (1)
-6: Hull (2), Khang (2)

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Who’s Worth Bringing Back? Oilers Fans Debate 3 Forward Returns

As part of their quest to save money and get younger, the Edmonton Oilers parted ways with several forwards this offseason. Key among them were Connor Brown, Corey Perry, and Evander Kane. An interesting question popped up on social media: if the team could have kept just one, who should it have been?

Each player brought something unique to the Oilers’ recent Stanley Cup Final runs. While all three forwards got several votes in the comments section of the post, one theme seemed obvious when looking at the responses that came with an explanation.

The answer depends on what you value most—production, potential, or presence.

Evander Kane: The Difference-Maker

A polarizing player ever since he entered the NHL, Evander Kane seemed to receive the most votes. That's because of how of a difference-maker he is/was when healthy. A unicorn in today's NHL, Kane at 100 percent is a true power forward who plays with bite and scores in bunches. He's the kind of player you hate to play against, but don't mind on your team -- unless you're the Winnipeg Jets, San Jose Sharks, or Buffalo Sabres. 

He had six goals and six assists in last season's playoffs. He had four and four in the season prior. Both were down years. As was 2022-23. But, in 2021-22, when he played his first postseason hockey with the Oilers, his 13 goals in 15 games led the NHL. The San Jose Sharks had cast him off, but the Oilers took a shot on him. It paid off as he quickly reminded everyone of his value, especially when it mattered most.

He may never reach those levels again, but he'll be motivated as a part of the Vancouver Canucks and in the last year of his current contract. Many expect Kane to hit the 25+ goal mark, and for $5.25 million, that kind of production and edge is hard to replace.

  Evander Kane © Walter Tychnowicz | 2025 Jun 4 : Imagn Images

Corey Perry: The Savvy Vet

Corey Perry, despite being 40, was a travel-tested warrior. His leadership in both the regular season and playoffs will be missed. He scored clutch goals and filled in nicely for an injured Zach Hyman as part of the Oilers, but his bad luck in the Stanley Cup Final is the stuff of legend. His willingness to get under opponents’ skin was invaluable. The pesky Kings will embrace what he brings. 

Oilers fans and even outsiders agree his “heart and soul” impact won’t be easy to replace. But the concern is repeatability. Can Perry really post another near-20-goal season? He signed for more money than the Oilers were willing to pay. Now with the Kings, he is bit pricey for someone whose best days are clearly behind him.

Related: Oilers Would Be Wise to Bet Early on Vasily Podkolzin

RelatedFour Oilers Invited to Team Canada’s 2025 Olympic Orientation Camp

Connor Brown: The Two-Way Energy Guy

Connor Brown might be the most well-rounded of the three players listed. Still relatively young, he took some time to get going when he arrived in Edmonton, but once he did, became a very useful two-way forward. In the 2023-24 playoffs, he took significant steps and was quite impactful after recovering from injury.

His speed, versatility, penalty killing prowess, and overall attitude on the ice and in the locker room will be missed. Some fans in the comments section argued his skill set is replaceable, which may be true. And, but he’s arguably the best bet for long-term contribution. At $3 million for four years, he’s no longer an inexpensive option. If he scores more, he'll be worth what the New Jersey Devils are paying him. If he doesn't, that contract may wind up looking like a mistake.

So Who Is The Best Pick to Return?

Again, what you value most in a player might determine who you select here. If you're going after productivity at a low price point, it might be Perry. That said, he won't offer much beyond this season, assuming he can repeat what he did in 2024-25. If you want physicality and intimidation, it's Evander Kane. Health is a concern. Two-way play, energy, and penalty killing? It's Connor Brown all day long.

Oilers Potential New Lines For Next YearOilers Potential New Lines For Next YearEDMONTON – A new day, a new season.

For the Oilers, who are trying to get over the hump and win a Stanley Cup with this core, Kane offers the biggest potential impact. He's the most expensive of the three players, but he can be a game-breaker when motivated and healthy.

The upside of Kane in a contract year is too tempting to ignore. The feeling is he'll do well in Vancouver if he can stay on the ice. That includes avoiding injury and silly penalties or suspensions that take him out of the action. He'll be a physical presence for them, and likely get close to 20 goals.

Then again, the Oilers are going to have to play against him a few times this season since they traded him within the division. That might tell us something about how concerned they are that he'll be a problem for them.

Who would you have kept, especially if salary wasn't a factor?

Add us to your Google News favourites, and never miss a story. You can also join the Community and post about your favorite Oilers topics, ask questions and become a regular contributor. 

Damian Lillard takes on role of general manager for his alma mater Weber State basketball

Damian Lillard has followed in the footsteps of Stephen Curry (Davidson), Trae Young (Oklahoma), Patty Mills (Hawaii) and Terance Mann (Florida State).

Lillard has become the general manager of his alma mater, the Weber State men's basketball program.

While these GM roles for NBA players are often more ceremonial — the star can help with recruiting, swing by some practices and stay in touch with players, has valuable experience, but is not the one making decisions on NIL money or anything on the court — Lillard is hoping to do a little more, part of which is boosting the NIL resources for the program. Here's what he said at Weber State's annual basketball alumni game, according to Isaac Fisher of The Ogden Standard-Examiner (hat tip Hoop Rumors).

"It's something that, my relationship with coach [Eric] Duft and this program means a lot to me, and seeing the success of the program means a lot to me. I feel like I can do a lot to help the program be successful, to help the players even individually continue to grow their careers past college, that's something that I'm passionate about...

"All of the resources that I have, I've got an opportunity to be able to create for the program, while they're in the program and even after the program, it's something I'm excited about. I'm looking forward to doing that work, looking forward to continue to lift up the university, lift up the program. It's going to be fun."

Weber State went 12-22 last season, but has had 20+ wins in two of the past four seasons. It's been a decade since the Wildcats advanced out of the Big Sky to the NCAA Tournament.

Lillard was surprisingly waived-and-stretched by the Milwaukee Bucks this summer, then signed to return home to the Portland Trail Blazers. He will spend the coming season rehabbing from a torn Achilles suffered during last season's playoffs. Lillard will spend time this season mentoring the Trail Blazers' young stars such as Scoot Henderson, Toumani Camara and Yang Hansen. Now, it will have a new group to help mentor in Utah, as well.

Jeremy Brodeur Carving His Own Path in Pro Hockey – While Carrying a Legendary Name

The son of New Jersey Devils legend Martin Brodeur is forging his own path in professional hockey, and he's doing it close to home.

Jeremy Brodeur, a 28-year-old goaltender, is entering his ninth season of pro hockey. Currently, he plays for the Devils’ AHL affiliate, the Utica Comets, following in the footsteps of his Hall of Fame father.

Last season, Brodeur split time between the Utica Comets and the ECHL’s Adirondack Thunder. Across both teams during the 2024–25 campaign, he appeared in 29 games, posting a .923 save percentage in the AHL and a .905 in the ECHL.

Over the past nine seasons, Brodeur has competed in multiple leagues, including the OHL, SPHL, ECHL, and even spent time overseas with Hungary’s Erste Liga in Budapest.

Though he bears one of the most iconic names in Devils history, Jeremy is carving out a career of his own. His father, Martin Brodeur, spent 21 of his 22 NHL seasons with New Jersey, winning all three of the franchise’s Stanley Cups and five Eastern Conference titles. He holds NHL records for most career wins and games played by a goaltender. His No. 30 jersey was retired by the Devils in 2016, and he remains with the organization as an advisor on hockey operations.

Naturally, Jeremy grew up as a fan of the team his father helped define.

“I am, by default, a Devils fan,” Jeremy told NHL.com. “Doing the training camps and things like that in Jersey is always cool, looking up and seeing his name up in the rafters. And since he still works in the organization, that’s pretty awesome. It is really fun, and a true honor to be able to play for the Devils organization. I'm excited for this next year.”

Jeremy was on the Devils’ 2024 training camp roster and is expected to be back this fall, still chasing his NHL dream.

“I feel that my game is on the incline,” he said. “I feel that I have been getting better and better every year, and that is positive. It keeps me motivated. I’ll be in the same spot for a third year, so I am excited for that.”

As the 2025 season approaches, Brodeur is focused on growing his game for a chance at the big leagues. In the meantime, he's keeping sharp by competing in the 3ICE league, a fast-paced 3-on-3 summer hockey tournament. His team is awaiting final results to see if they’ve qualified for the playoff round, with games taking place at the Florida Panthers' training facility.

While the Brodeur name looms large, Jeremy is determined to make a name for himself in the crease, one save at a time.


Photo Credit: © Ed Mulholland-Imagn Images

Mets Injury Notes: Carlos Mendoza outlines next steps for Tylor Megill, Paul Blackburn

Mets skipper Carlos Mendoza shared a pair of injury updates regarding his team’s starting rotation ahead of Sunday’s series finale against the San Francisco Giants.

Here are the updates from the manager…

Tylor Megill faces live hitters

Megill, on the IL since mid-June with an elbow sprain, threw a live batting practice session off the Citi Field mound on Sunday morning. According to Mendoza, Megill had two “ups” and threw in the neighborhood of 20 pitches.

Assuming Megill feels fine coming out of this live BP session, the plan is for him to throw another two-inning session, potentially on Thursday. 

Megill has started 14 games this season, pitching to a 3.95 ERA over 68.1 innings pitched.

Next steps for Paul Blackburn

Blackburn turned in another solid rehab outing on Saturday, allowing two earned runs over 5.1 innings with Triple-A Syracuse.

According to Mendoza, the Mets will see how Blackburn feels on Sunday and Monday, and assuming all is well, the righty will then need to a throw a bullpen session, presumably on Wednesday. Then, as Mendoza likes to say, the Mets will likely have a decision to make on the 31-year-old.

Currently on the IL due to a right shoulder impingement, Blackburn has struggled at the major league level this season, pitching to a 7.71 ERA in six appearances (four starts).

Kings' Emerging Core of the Future Taking Shape

Credit © Jonathan Hui-Imagn Images

EL SEGUNDO, CA – The Los Angeles Kings of old were defined by stalwart veterans and Cup-winning experience. The team had homegrown their championship centerpieces in the form of Anze Kopitar, Drew Doughty, Dustin Brown, and Jonathan Quick, carving out a golden era in Kings hockey. Under their vigil, they delivered championships while forging an identity of defensive grit and clutch goaltending. 

While some of that grit and defensive legacy remains, the championship element remains an enigma. The team has been operating in a challenging environment, marked by limited playoff success, as it balances the integration of new core elements with its legacy components.

What should have been an outright transitional period, the Kings find themselves in an underlying and quiet transition of power. With the most recent signing, three names have emerged as the centerpiece of a new foundational young core: forward Quinton Byfield (22), winger Alex Laferriere (23), and defenseman Brandt Clarke (22). All three represent more than just draft-day wins or developmental checkboxes. They symbolize the organization's shifting identity, moving from the days of old towards one relying on a crop of homegrown, youthful players ready to take the baton.

Quinton Byfield: The Evolution of a Two-Way Force

Selected second overall in the 2020 NHL Draft, Byfield entered the league carrying heavy expectations. Comparisons to elite power forwards came quickly, but his path has been less about flashy dominance and more about steady refinement. After a developmental start to his career, which was also plagued by injury and illness, Byfield has increasingly shown he can impact games beyond the scoresheet.

At 6-foot-5 with exceptional skating ability, Byfield has grown into a viable shutdown centerman. His length and awareness make him a versatile asset in all zones, capable of absorbing top-line matchups and providing critical penalty-kill minutes. Offensively, his playmaking is blossoming, as it was his standout trait in the Ontario Hockey League. While he hasn't fully unlocked his scoring ceiling yet, given that his most regular linemates last season weren't high-end offensive weapons, his hockey IQ and vision create optimism that he will produce at a high clip.

If Kopitar represents the Kings' past at center, Byfield represents its stylistically evolved future: one rooted in responsible two-way play, modern mobility, and an expanding offensive toolkit. Byfield almost matched his complete output from a season prior in the most recent NHL session, but this time, while dedicated to a full year at center. This was enough for Team Canada to extend an invitation to him to attend Canada's Olympic camp for 2026.

Alex Laferriere: The Motor on the Wing

Laferriere may not have been a top draft pick, but he has quickly become a critical piece in the Kings' youth movement. Drafted in the third round in 2020, the Harvard product plays a relentless, high-energy game that has translated well to the NHL level. While still adjusting to the rigors of the pro schedule, Laferriere's motor, forechecking intensity, and scoring upside made him an easy choice to be re-signed recently to a three-year extension.

He may never be a 40-goal scorer, or even a 30-goal scorer, but his consistency, attitude, and offensive instincts have made him a viable top-six option. More importantly, he brings a contagious competitiveness that aligns with the Kings' long-term vision. Laferriere looks to be a key complementary piece that elevates the play of his linemates and can be trusted in tight playoff-style games. However, the young Ivy League product has yet to really make his presence felt in the playoffs, having only one goal in 11 games played. 

As he continues to develop, he will likely remain a reliable defensive forward with some offensive upside, especially if he gets more minutes in April and beyond. Three years might not shout out 'long term core piece', but his age and alignment towards the team's pursuit signals otherwise.

Brandt Clarke: The X-Factor on the Blue Line

Few prospects have drawn more buzz in Los Angeles than Clarke. A dynamic, offensively inclined defenseman with elite puck-moving capabilities, Clarke represents a stylistic departure from the stay-at-home defenders of the Kings' past and present situation. In a defensive corps that contains defense-first or defense-only players like Mikey Anderson, Joel Edmundson, Brian Dumoulin, Cody Ceci, and, of late, Drew Doughty, Clarke practically represents the team's sole source of offensive output on the backend.

His brief play in the AHL and last season's NHL showcase with Doughty out most of the season showcased his ability to quarterback a power play, transition the puck with authority, and jump into the rush when given a loose leash.

However, Clarke's challenge lies in defensive consistency. His ceiling is undeniable, but the team has exercised caution in his deployment, opting for growth through sheltered minutes and controlled environments. Warning: This same treatment and the emergence of Clarke would eventually lead to the departure of Jordan Spence, who had previously been included in this list of future core homegrown players.

Still, at the end of the day, if Clarke is appropriately developed, he has all the makings of a modern top-pairing offensively leaning defenseman. While not likely ever going to be an 'Evan Bouchard-Quinn Hughes-Cale Makar' output type of defenseman, he should easily replace the offensive void that will emerge when Doughty eventually retires. It's almost a certainty that the defensive gap between Clarke and Doughty will stay extensive for the entirety of Clarke's career.

The Goaltending Question: No Successor in Sight

Where the Kings' future core begins to blur is in the crease. For over a decade, Quick was an absolute rock, a fortress behind the Kings' defensive structure. But since his departure, the team has rotated through options like Joonas Korpisalo, Cam Talbot, and now Darcy Kuemper. While Kuemper's resurgence has been critical, as he was the first Kings Vezina finalist since Quick himself, he is 34, and the team lacks a clear and succession plan.

Erik Portillo, 24 years old, remains the most promising internal option, having performed well at the AHL level. But he is still viewed as a work-in-progress, not yet ready for the responsibilities of an NHL backup, let alone a starter. This potentially exposes the Kings should Kuemper falter or have his age/past demons in Washington catch up.

Unlike Byfield, Laferriere, or Clarke, there's no blue-chip netminding prospect clearly on the trajectory to become the next franchise goaltender. The Kings have long been able to lean on dependable goaltending, but that cushion is vanishing, raising serious long-term concerns.

The Pipeline: Once Towering, Now Tapered

Just a few seasons ago, the Kings were heralded as having the league's deepest prospect pipeline. Names like Gabriel Vilardi, Arthur Kaliyev, Rasmus Kupari, Alex Turcotte, and Tobias Bjornfot gave the fanbase hope for a prolonged window. Yet, only a few of those names have blossomed, remained with the team, or developed into prospective core contributors.

In some cases, such as Kupari and Bjornfot, trades and free agency pickups have stunted growth and blocked roster spots. Kaliyev, while one of the more intriguing prospects the Kings have drafted in this century with his pure and lethal scoring ability, struggled with consistency while suffocated in the bottom six. Turcotte, once a top-tier prospect, has battled injuries and stagnation. 

The result? A once-sprawling farm system has been trimmed to a few emerging stars and hopefuls.

More recently, there's Liam Greentree, the team's 2024 first-round pick, who could change that narrative. A big-bodied, skilled winger with scoring instincts, Greentree has the potential to complement Byfield or Laferriere in future top-six roles. But he's still years away and shouldn't be viewed as an immediate fix. It's also a clear-cut need for him to expedite his breakout sooner rather than later, playing above his expected threshold for the team to be viewed as a serious contender down the road, something of an anemic trait of these Los Angeles Kings prospects.

League Comparison: Where Does LA Stand?

In comparison to rebuilding or retooling teams, the Kings' emerging core is promising, but perhaps not elite. The Anaheim Ducks boast names like Mason McTavish, Leo Carlsson, and Olen Zellweger. Buffalo has built a core around Owen Power, Rasmus Dahlin, and Tage Thompson. Detroit is brimming with upside through Lucas Raymond and Moritz Seider.

Anaheim and Buffalo were cellar dwellers and could be again. Detroit made a surprising run for the playoffs last year with former Kings bench boss Todd McLellan, but they aren't necessarily in the same category as the Kings.

The Kings aren't relatable to these teams in their up-and-coming cores simply because they are neither rebuilding nor retooling. They are rolling the dice on championship legacy while balancing out the next generation. Their closest comparable is the Pittsburgh Penguins, who chose to stand behind an aging trio of Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang, and the ageless Sidney Crosby. That didn't fare well.

The Kings have a blend of NHL-ready youth and established elite veterans. That mix can be potent if managed correctly, but when matched up against clubs with their core talent in their primes, there's a dilemma. The challenge has been and continues to be threading the needle between competing now with aging stars like Kopitar and Doughty, and nurturing players like Byfield and Clarke without rushing them.

With the window narrowing on their Cup-winning veterans, the Kings must decide to invest in short-term competitiveness through trades and veteran additions, or double down on development and ride the wave of their emerging stars. Either approach carries risk, but also the potential to extend LA's relevance or irrelevance (see player-option UFA's/free agents/other players wanting to come to LA) into the next era.

Conclusion: The Foundation Is There

The Kings aren't short on talent; they're short on time. Byfield, Laferriere, and Clarke are legitimate pieces to build around, Greentree offers a promising addition to that future, and there's talent in the goaltending pipeline, but an unknown timeframe for readiness. Without an apparent goaltending heir and with a diminished pipeline, the pressure on this trio to succeed in the short term, surrounded by Rob Blake's legacy moves and now Ken Holland's vision, is immense.

If handled correctly, they could usher in a new era of Kings hockey—one that trades grit for glide, and age for athleticism. But if their development falters or injuries strike, the team may find itself in a more daunting next five years than expected.

For now, the future looks bright, but fragile. Los Angeles has its next core. Now they must make it count.

Yankees reinstate starter Luis Gil ahead of Sunday's season debut, place Jonathan Loaisiga on 15-day IL

The Yankees announced a pair of roster moves on Sunday morning, reinstating starter Luis Gil from the 60-day IL and placing reliever Jonathan Loáisigaon the 15-day IL with right mid back tightness.

Gil, the 2024 AL Rookie of the Year, is set to make his season debut on Sunday after being sidelined up to this point with a right lat strain.

The 27-year-old last pitched Tuesday night for Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, allowing one earned run on three hits while striking out seven over 4.1 innings. 

Overall, Gil made four rehab outings, allowing nine earned runs over 14.1 innings.

Loáisiga, meanwhile, hasn’t quite looked as effective this season after missing just about all of the 2024 campaign due to an internal brace procedure to repair the UCL in his right elbow.

In 29.2 innings this season, Loáisiga has pitched to a 4.25 ERA, having already allowed a career-high seven home runs.

Former Minnesota Wild Forward Signs Two-Year Contract With The Pittsburgh Penguins

Apr 20, 2025; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Minnesota Wild right wing Justin Brazeau (15) warms up before game one of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images.

The Minnesota Wild traded forwards Marat Khusnutdinov and Jakub Lauko, along with a 2026 sixth round pick, to the Boston Bruins for forward Justin Brazeau at the traded deadline. 

Lauko played in 18 games with the Bruins after the trade and just signed a three-year deal in the Czech Extraliga League. Khusnutdinov re-signed on a two-year deal with the Bruins after the trade. 

Brazeau, 27, played in 19 games for the Wild following the trade. He had one goal, one assist and 34 hits. He played in all six playoff games for the Wild on the fourth line with Marco Rossi and Yakov Trenin.

The 6-foot-5 forward had two assists and 22 hits in six playoff games. Trenin and Brazeau combined for 56 hits in the playoffs. 

Minnesota elected not to re-sign Brazeau so he entered free agency and signed a two-year contract worth an average annual value of $1.5 million with the Pittsburgh Penguins. He is reunited with Penguins General Manager Kyle Dubas, who signed him in 2019 with the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Other Wild News

Former Minnesota Wild Forward Signs Multi-Year Contract In Czech Extraliga LeagueFormer Minnesota Wild Forward Signs Multi-Year Contract In Czech Extraliga LeagueAfter just 139 games in the NHL, the former Minnesota Wild forward Jakub Lauko is heading to Europe to play for Dynamo Pardubice, in the Czech Extraliga League.  Wild's Marco Rossi Training With Hall Of Famer Joe Thornton Wild's Marco Rossi Training With Hall Of Famer Joe Thornton The offseason is in full swing and players have begun to start training with training camp and preseason just under two months from now.  Who's In Charge? Wild's Power Play Has Three CommandersWho's In Charge? Wild's Power Play Has Three CommandersST. PAUL, Minn - The Minnesota Wild enter the 2025-26 season with a good problem on its hands. Who runs the top power play? In previous years, the Wild never really had a sure-fire number one type of defenseman who could run the top unit. 

From The Archive: NHL Team Valuations, Nashville Predators

Jun 28, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and Nashville Predators general manager David Poile during the 2023 NHL Draft at Bridgestone Arena. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

The Hockey News has released its archive to all THN subscribers: over 2,000 issues of history, stories, and features.

Subscribe now to view the full THN Archives here.

(Note: Due to the digital quality of some older issues, articles may contain errors).

Dec 26, 2022/vol. 76, issue 08

HERB FRITCH

BY DAVID BOCLAIR

THE CURRENT SEASON marks the start of a notable transition in Nashville. Chairman Herb Fritch has sold a percentage of his majority stake in the franchise to former Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam. The deal, which the team referred to as a “multi-phased purchase transaction,” will eventually leave Haslam as majority owner. The transition reportedly will be complete ahead of the 2025-26 season.

When the local ownership group bought the team from Craig Leipold in 2007, Fritch took on a 36.7-percent share. He’d later add more shares to become majority owner. In 2019, in a long-planned and peaceful switch, he replaced Tom Cigarran as chairman.

Fritch set out to make this latest move equally easy on all involved. He personally identified “three or four” people he believed had the interest, resources and local ties to take his spot and ensure the club’s long-term success. Eventually, he settled on Haslam, whose personal fortune Forbes placed at $2.6 billion.

Fritch, a season-ticket holder dating all the way back to the Preds’ 1998-99 inaugural season, has kept a low profile throughout his ownership tenure. In fact, he and his wife, Barb, spend the majority of their time at games in their traditional seats rather than the owner’s suite. He has never conducted annual press conferences to offer his thoughts on the state of affairs on the ice. Likewise, while he signed off on coaching changes, he is not the one who spoke publicly about them when they were made.

Fritch made his fortune in the healthcare industry and uses his wealth to indulge his appreciation for wildlife. For more than two decades, he has been licensed to own exotic animals, and his suburban Nashville farm has been home to giraffes, bison, elk, wallabies and some next-level aquariums.

His eventual sale of the Preds will stuff his coffers further. His group bought the franchise for $175 million, and a recent report said the deal with Haslam is based on a current $775-million valuation.

Haslam – whose brother Jimmy owns the NFL’s Cleveland Browns – is deeply ingrained in the culture in the state of Tennessee. Bill Haslam served two terms as Tennessee governor – assuming office in 2011 and serving until 2019. His term in the governorship came after he served two terms as mayor of Knoxville, Tenn.

NHL VALUATIONS

$810M

FORBES

$775M

SPORTICO

$800M

ROUSTAN

TOP BUSINESS EXECUTIVE

SEAN HENRY

SEAN HENRY APPLIED TO become the Predators’ CEO in 2009 when the local ownership group sought someone with experience to direct the franchise’s business operations and Bridgestone Arena (then-Sommet Center).

Ultimately, he accepted an offer to be president-COO. He then laid out a plan to make annual improvements and upgrades to the arena. He also reinforced and re-energized the team’s connection to its fan base and increased the club’s focus on community involvement.

On Dec. 1, 2015, he succeeded Jeff Cogen as CEO. Henry has brought a blue-collar, everyman approach to the role – which plays well with the fan base.

More importantly, following the 2018-19 season, Henry’s business plan for the team led to a new 30-year lease with Nashville, which will keep the Predators in Bridgestone Arena until 2049. The deal relieved the city of any financial obligation toward arena maintenance and effectively made the Predators self-sufficient.

GOVERNOR AND ALTERNATE GOVERNORS

HERB FRITCH

ALTERNATE GOVERNORS: Tom Cigarran, Sean Henry, Joey Jacobs, David Poile

TOP HOCKEY EXECUTIVE

DAVID POILE

ALREADY THIS SEASON, DAVID Poile became the first GM in NHL history with 3,000 regular-season games to his credit. A short time later, he became the first to win 1,500 games in that role.

Yet there is no getting around what he has not done. Poile has never won a Stanley Cup. The closest he came was when, in 2017, the Predators lost to the Pittsburgh Penguins in six games in the Stanley Cup final.

Consistency is the hallmark of Poile’s career. He is a steady hand willing to make big trades, but he also avoids knee-jerk reactions. As the only GM in Predators history, having been hired July 9, 1997, he has had just three coaches head the bench during his tenure. And Poile has made just one in-season coaching change.

All but his last Washington Capitals team (1996-97) reached the playoffs, and Nashville has been to the post-season 15 of the past 18 years. Yet no Stanley Cup.

COMMUNITY INITIATIVE

THE PREDATORS’ MOST substantial community initiative is the 365 Pediatric Cancer Fund, which gets players, staff and fans involved to fund research and provides escapes for families dealing with pediatric cancer. Initially, D-man Shea Weber and goalie Pekka Rinne served as the fund’s faces, and “365” was an amalgamation of the numbers they wore in Nashville and a nod to the everyday quest to find a cure.

Created more than a decade ago – under the name Nashville Predators Pediatric Cancer Research Fund – it has donated more than $3.6 million to the Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt. This season’s fundraising push kicked off in November as part of the greater Hockey Fights Cancer initiative, which means that number will rise by the end of the 2022-23 season.

The franchise also has been involved with the YWCA of Nashville to create Amend Together, a five-year, $500,000 partnership designed to create educational initiatives and support programs dedicated to ending violence against women and girls. The program seeks to create and foster “healthy masculinity” so that men and boys are part of the solution.

Predators CEO Sean Henry serves as an Amend ambassador, which puts him on the front lines of the effort’s planning, fundraising and outreach.

However, franchise leadership demands that community involvement goes beyond simply raising money and distributing grants through the Nashville Predators Foundation or generating goodwill through players’ initiatives. All staff members get paid for 40 hours (or more) of work annually to be involved in service projects outside of the office. Among them are annual staff outings for playground construction and holiday initiatives, but employees are free to choose their own causes to support with their time and energy.

Carson Whisenhunt shines in second MLB start as Giants clinch series win vs Mets

Carson Whisenhunt shines in second MLB start as Giants clinch series win vs Mets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The spiraling Giants, fresh off a blowout loss, turned to their rookie starting pitcher to help them secure a much-needed series win. On the road. Against one of the best teams in baseball.

With a loss, the team would reach a new low.

Hey, no pressure.

Carson Whisenhunt (W, 5 1/3 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 4 K) toed the rubber for San Francisco (56-56) against the mighty New York Mets (63-49) on Sunday at Citi Field, and gave the Giants, with the help of an offensive outburst, exactly what they needed on the mound in a 12-4 win.

“I thought it was good,” Giants manager Bob Melvin said of Whisenhunt’s outing postgame. “To be able to go out in the sixth, [against] a lineup like that? I had to go get him, but he only gave up three hits. His fastball he spotted a lot better, which is going to be really important for him. You can feel, sometimes, teams sitting on his changeup just because it’s kind of well-advertised before he goes out there. Same thing as last outing.

“… In a game like this, it’s a big game for us to try and win a series and he was right at the forefront of it.”

Whisenhunt, the Giants’ top pitching prospect, made his MLB debut in San Francisco’s 6-5 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday, and while his overall line (5 IP, 5 H, 4 ER, 2 BB, 3 K) was nothing that impressive, fans got their first glimpse at the 24-year-old’s elite 65-grade changeup, which fooled both Mets hitters and Whisenhunt’s teammates behind him on Sunday.

“That changeup is … that thing goes backwards,” second baseman Casey Schmitt told NBC Sports Bay Area’s Laura Britt and Shawn Estes on “Giants Postgame Live.” “That thing is unbelievable. But I’ve seen him throw a lot, played with him in Sacramento. He’s got great stuff and you all saw it today. For him to go out there and do his thing like that out here in New York, it was a special game.”

Whisenhunt surrendered a solo home run to Mets slugger Francisco Lindor in the bottom of the first, and an RBI double — an unearned run due to a Giants error — to Francisco Alvarez in the bottom of the sixth before his departure with one out.

“It was a great atmosphere,” Whisenhunt told reporters postgame. “That’s probably the biggest thing, everybody was screaming, which I enjoy that. Obviously they’ve got a good lineup, but not overthinking or trying to do too much. Just enjoying the moment and trying to help the team win.”

Other than a couple of mistakes, it was a pretty clean day for the rookie, who was greeted with a postgame beer shower in the team’s clubhouse.

“Everybody was screaming, congratulating me and everything, and then the beer shower. So that was fun,” Whisenhunt said when asked about the postgame celebration. “Not too bad, so I’ll take it.

“There was some applesauce and some milk thrown in there, but no mustard or ketchup or anything. Thank the lord.”

Still gross. But earned.

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