MLB Starting Pitcher News: Brandon Woodruff is back, is Joe Boyle fixed?

It's Wednesday, which means it's time for us to visit the bump on Hump Day and discuss starting pitcher news. Each week in this article, I'll be taking a deeper look at a few trending/surging starting pitchers to see what, if anything, is changing and whether or not we should be investing in this hot stretch.

The article will be similar to the series I ran for a few years called Mixing It Up (previously Pitchers With New Pitches and Should We Care?), where I broke down new pitches to see if there were truly meaningful additions that changed a pitcher's outlook. Only now, I won't just look at new pitches, I can also cover velocity bumps, new usage patterns, or new roles. However, the premise will remain the same: trying to determine if the recent results are connected to any meaningful changes that make them worth investing in or if they're just mirages.

Each week, I'll try to cover change for at least four starters and give my clear take on whether I would add them, trade for them, or invest fully in their success. Hopefully you'll find it useful, so let's get started.

Most of the charts you see below are courtesy of Kyle Bland over at Pitcher List. He created a great spring training app (which he's now carried over into the regular season) that tracks changes in velocity, usage, and pitch movement. It also features a great strike zone plot, which allows you to see how the entire arsenal plays together.I'll also use Alex Chamberlain's awesome work with his Pitch Leaderboard.

MLB: Milwaukee Brewers at Detroit Tigers
Corbin Carroll’s return and José Ramírez’s slump further shake up the top 10 this week.

Brandon Woodruff - Milwaukee Brewers (Season debut, New Cutter, New Sweeper)

After almost two years away due to injury, Woodruff made his first start of the season on Sunday. (If you'd like to read more about Woodruff's recovery and his mindset going into the start,I wrote an article after speaking with him at Citi Field last week.) His debut went better than many people expected, with Woodruff allowing just one run on two hits in six innings while striking out eight. Let's dig into his pitch mix data to see how close to vintage Brandon Woodruff this start was.

Brandon Woodruff Pitch Mix.jpg

Pitcher List

Well, for starters, his four-seam velocity is down. Not that we should be surprised by that, coming off shoulder capsule surgery. However, the numbers are a bit misleading. He sat at 93.2 mph, which is down from 95.8 in 2023; however, he threw harder as the game went on. Many of his fastballs in the third and fourth and fifth innings were around 94 mph and he even humped some up to 96 mph, so perhaps his true average was closer to 94 mph, which is a bit better. The four-seam fastball still had elite command and tremendous 18.6 inches of Induced Vertical Break (iVB), which makes the pitch seem to "rise" as it approaches the plate. That helped it generate a handful of called strikes and whiffs. We do like to see that as a foundational pitch.

Woodruff also commanded his sinker well, locating it not just inside to righties but also getting tons of called strikes on backdoor sinkers that looked like four-seamers off the plate away and then broke back in. It's not a pitch that's going to get tons of whiffs, but having multiple fastball variations is important in baseball today since hitters are all trained to crush high velocity four-seam fastballs.

Which leads us to yet another pitch, since Woodruff added a third fastball type with a new cutter. In my article from last week, I mentioned that Woodruff had split his old slider into a cutter and a sweeper. He used the cutter more often on Sunday, throwing it 90 mph with 2.4 inches of glove-side movement and 14.2 inches of vertical movement, which means that it only dropped 19.7 inches when also factoring in gravity.That’s above-average from a movement standpoint; although, the cutter was not totally effective on Sunday with no whiffs and a 15% CSW. It might be nice as a piece to keep batters from sitting on any one of his fastball variations, but it's not going to be a plus pitch in its own right. Still, with Woodruff battling back from a shoulder injury, having multiple pitches to keep hitters off balance and the barrel of the bat is a good thing.

Woodruff only threw his sweeper five times on Sunday, but it was 81.2 mph with nearly four inches of vertical break (38.3 inches when factoring in gravity) and 10.2 inches of horizontal sweep. He had a 60% zone rate, which is nice, inducing one whiff and two foul balls. He only threw the pitch to righties, which makes sense, throwing three of them in an 0-0 count and two of them in two-strike counts. Perhaps he's still getting comfortable with the feel of the pitch and will work it in more in the coming starts, but it seems like he'll focus on the four-seam, sinker, and cutter to righties and mix in the sweeper to keep hitters off balance.

At the end of the day, I think this start is a solid case for Woodruff's floor. He's a veteran starter who knows how to pitch and now has a deeper arsenal to work with. His stuff is still good, but it's not what it was before his injury, so he can use that deeper arsenal to sequence effectively, keep hitters guessing, and induce weak contact. I don't think the strikeout numbers will carry over against teams that are not the Marlins, but this start made me more optimistic about Woodruff as a streamer in shallow leagues and a solid hold in deeper formats, where he should at least avoid many true blow-up outings.

Charlie Morton - Baltimore Orioles (Curveball usage, Sinker locations)

It was a pretty brutal start to the season for Charlie Morton. He posted a 10.36 ERA and 2.22 WHIP in his first six starts of the year and was moved to the bullpen by the beginning of May. However, with Baltimore battling myriad injuries, Morton was back into the rotation on May 26th, and since then, has posted a 2.97 ERA, 1.32 WHIP, and 44/11 K/BB ratio across 36.1 innings. That has ranked him 15th in K-BB%, 16th in SIERA, and 18th in xFIP among qualified starters over that span.

So what is he doing that's any different?

Charlie Morton Pitch Mix

Four-SeamSinkerCutterCurveChange
First 6 starts32.30%12.00%11.20%33.70%10.80%
Since May 26th26.70%13.70%5.80%42.50%11.30%

The most immediate change you can see is a nearly 10% increase in curveball usage at the expense of both his four-seam fastball and cutter. We know where this is going since Morton's curveball has been his bread and butter for his entire career. Morton leaning on his best pitch more is certainly something we can get behind. You can also see in Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard below that the specs on Morton's curveball in April were off.

Charlie Morton Pitch Mix.jpg

Alex Chamberlain Pitch Leaderboard

As the season has gone on, Morton's curveball has gotten closer to the 82.3 mph velocity it was back in his strong 2023 campaign. He has also reduced the horizontal movement and gotten it closer to the 14.3 inches that he had back in the same 2023 season.

Morton has also improved the locations of his curveball in this most recent stretch. In his first stint in the Orioles' rotation, Morton threw his curve low in the zone 79% to righties but just 61% to lefties. He also kept the ball gloveside to lefties, so inside, 34% of the time. Over the last seven starts, he's kept his curveball low in the zone against lefties 70% of the time and thrown it gloveside 45% of the time. That's a 9% increase in low location and an 11% increase in gloveside curves to lefties. It should not surprise you that the curve saw a massive jump in swinging strike rate (SwStr%) and PutAway Rate, which measures how often a two-strike pitch leads to a strikeout. Morton's curve had a 12% PutAway rate to lefties in his first stint in the rotation, but that has exploded to 26.6% in his last seven starts.

His curve locations have improved to righties as well. Morton did a good job of keeping the pitch low to righties earlier in the year, but he's now spreading the ball around the strike zone more. He was exclusively using the curve on the outer third in his first stint in the rotation, but he's now attacking righties with the curve on the inside as well, which has also led to a big increase in swinging strike rate and PutAway Rate. Morton has been successful throughout his career when his curve is working, so it's not a surprise that finding his curve again has led to another level of success.

We should highlight one other change from Morton: using his sinker down in the zone more often to righties. We saw above that his sinker usage is up a bit, while his cutter and four-seam usage has dropped, but he has also thrown his sinker low in the zone to righties 10% more often in this second stint in the rotation and gone inside 5% more often as well. That has been a big reason why the Ideal Contact Rate (ICR) allowed on the sinker fell from 47% early in the season to 37% in the last seven starts while keeping the SwStr% the same. Morton has been using the sinker more early in the count to righties, which has helped him get ahead or get weak contact, and then he's able to go to the curve for strikeouts.

All of this feels earned. It's all on the back of the curveball, but that means that Morton will remain a viable streamer in fantasy leagues as long as his curveball is humming. We've seen the veteran have that pitch working for entire seasons, so it's not crazy to assume he can keep this going for a while. However, as soon as you see that curveball command start to falter or the swings and misses on it dry up, you should cut bait. There's just not enough else in the arsenal to keep him fantasy relevant.

Joe Boyle - Tampa Bay Rays (New Splitter, New Slider shape, New Role)

There might not be a trendier starting pitcher in fantasy baseball right now than Joe Boyle. He intrigued people with the Athletics last year due to his plus raw stuff, but he could never find the strike zone. The Rays traded for him and revamped his pitch mix, which led to a dominant season in Triple-A, with a 1.85 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, and 96/31 K/BB ratio in 73 innings. We had been waiting for him to get another chance in the rotation, and it seems like that is happening now as he returned on Sunday to piggy-back with Drew Rasmussen and threw five shutout innings with two hits, one walk, and seven strikeouts.

So, what is this new version of Joe Boyle, and is it useful in fantasy leagues?

Joe Boyle Pitch Mix.jpg

Pitcher List

Well, for starters, Boyle has ditched his curve and his sweeper and added in a "splinker," which is the split-finger/sinker hybrid that you see show up above as a splitter. This was part of the larger change the Rays made with Boyle, where they removed some of his biggest moving pitches due to his inability to find the strike zone. They added the sprinkler because it has less movement than the typical split-finger fastball and is easier to command. Boyle's splinker is 92.8 mph with nearly 16 inches of arm-side movement (dive) and only 29 inches of drop when you also account for gravity. Most importantly, Boyle throws it in the zone 33% of the time with a 53% strike rate, which are both about average for a splitter.

Given that it moves down and away from lefties, it makes sense that Boyle uses that pitch more often to lefties (24.5% usage) rather than righties (12% usage). Against lefties, the splinker has even higher zone rates and strike rates while also posting a 26% SwStr%. It's a pitch he throws 58% of the time in two-strike counts to lefties and has a 36% PutAway Rate, which is tremendous. However, as you can see from the pitch chart below (light blue dots), he's a little less consistent with the pitch against righties. Given its action, Boyle is likely concerned about hitting right-handed hitters if the splinker bites too hard inside, so he spiked more than a couple of them into the dirt on Sunday.

Joe Boyle Pitch Chart.jpg

Pitcher List

However, it doesn't matter much if Boyle's splinker is not as impactful to righties because his slider carves them up. This season, his slider is two mph harder, up to 90.3 mph, with one inch less horizontal break and three inches less drop. When you add in gravity, his slider has only 31 inches of vertical break, down from nearly 37 inches last year. His zone rates aren't much better on the pitch this year as opposed to last year; however, the harder and tighter slider is a pitch that can be more successful anywhere in the strike zone, which is what the Rays wanted for Boyle, who still has inconsistent command. With his old slider, he needed to be more careful to keep it low in the zone, but this new slider is a pitch that Boyle is throwing up in the zone more often to righties and using inside and outside, likely because he doesn't have to be as precise with his command.

He throws his slider 37.4% of the time to righties, as opposed to 10% of the time to lefties. The slider has a nearly 21% SwStr% to righties, so it's no surprise that it's his primary two-strike pitch, using it 47% of the time in two-strike counts to righties, with a 31% chase rate and 44% PutAway rate in those situations. That's elite. However, those usages mean that he's basically a two-pitch pitcher to righties and a two-pitch pitcher to lefties, with a third pitch to each that is inconsistent, and he'll throw 10% of the time. That's not a huge margin for error.

The last change, as you can see from Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard, is that Joy Boyle dropped his arm angle this year. Like, A LOT.

Boyle Arm Angle.jpg

Alex Chamberlain’s Pitch Leaderboard

That's a nearly 13-degree drop in arm angle (closer to sidearm), which is a huge amount. That may have been just a more comfortable slot for Boyle, but it also could be Tampa Bay trying to create more manageable shapes on his pitches. We talked about his two secondaries, but the lower arm slot has also led to far more horizontal movement (inside to righties) on his four-seam fastball and less vertical movement. Given his lowered release point, even with the decrease in iVB, Boyle's attack angle has become even flatter, which makes the fastball seem to rise more as it approaches home plate. That has helped him create a nearly 4% increase in SwStr% on his four-seam fastball.

However, more importantly, the zone rate on his four-seam fastball has gone from 45% last year to 55% this year, which is slightly above average, and his overall strike rate has improved from 54% to 65%. Boyle only has three pitches, so he uses the four-seamer 57% of the time to righties and 64% of the time to lefties. He needs to be able to command that pitch in the zone because he has nothing else he throws consistently for strikes. It seems like this arm angle change has helped him with the four-seam fastball, and if you look at the pitch plot above, you can see that most of the four-seamers (red dots) are right around the strike zone. That's crucial for him.

All of this has me excited about Boyle, as does his role as a follower. He now doesn't need to go five innings or dominate to secure a win. If Drew Rasmussen has 2-3 good innings to start the game, Boyle will be in a good spot to only have to pitch four solid innings to get a win. That's the perfect role for him because he is still a three-pitch pitcher (really two pitches to hitters of each handedness) with average command of his fastball and inconsistent command of his secondaries. We need to keep that in mind. Boyle is better; there's no doubt about that, but he is not all of a sudden a pitcher with good command. He's a pitcher with a narrow arsenal of elite swing-and-miss stuff and average command. That's going to work a lot of the time, but there will be performances where he can't get ahead as consistently with the fastball, and the overall results will be less exciting.

Eric Lauer - Toronto Blue Jays (Cutter Shape/Usage, Slider Usage)

Eric Lauer is an interesting story. He's been a solid MLB pitcher during his career, posting a 4.17 ERA and 22% strikeout rate in 647.2 career innings. However, he was out of MLB last year, pitching 34 2/3 innings in Korea with a pedestrian 4.93 ERA in seven starts. You would be forgiven for assuming that was the end of Lauer's MLB relevance, but since June 1st, Lauer is 26th in baseball in K-BB% among starters with at least 20 innings pitched. Over those five starts, he has a 3.24 ERA (3.47 SIERA), 1.16 WHIP, and 20.2% K-BB%. Since Lauer has only made seven starts this season, I decided to compare what he's doing this year to what we saw from him in Milwaukee back in 2023, before leaving for Korea.

Eric Lauer Pitch Mix change

Alex Chamberlain Pitch Leaderboard

What immediately stands out is the shift in cutter usage. Lauer was using the cutter far more often before heading to Korea and has now dialed back on the cutter while increasing his slider and changeup usage. The cutter itself is slightly different, with over three inches more horizontal movement and slightly more drop. He's using it to both righties and lefties this year and doing a good job of keeping the pitch up in the zone while also keeping it on the outer-third of the strike zone against lefties. The pitch is more successful against righties, with a higher SwStr% and lower ICR while also acting as a good two-strike pitch. He throws it 23% of the time in two-strike counts to righties, and it has a 30% chase rate and 25% PutAway Rate in those counts, both of which are well above-average.

This is a better version of his cutter to righties, and even though he's throwing it less often, it's more successful than his previous cutter against right-handed hitters. This version of the cutter has been far less successful against lefties, but that's likely why he's turning to the slider more often. He's using the slider 22.4% of the time against lefties this year after throwing it just 8% in 2023. The pitch is 1.1 mph harder this year, with less drop, but Lauer has far better command of it, and that's the key to its usage. Right now, Lauer is throwing his slider early in counts 76% of the time to lefties. He's pounding the zone with it and registering just a 36% ICR allowed.

He has then turned to the curveball more against lefties later in counts. Back in 2023, he used his curve 11% of the time in two-strike counts to lefties. Now he's using it 22% of the time in those counts. It also has a 33% chase rate in those counts and an 18.5% SwStr% overall to lefties. That gives him a profile of four-seam, cutter, slider, and curve to lefties, with the curve and cutter as the primary two-strike pitches.

Against righties, he uses the four-seam and curve early in the count and tries to use the cutter and slider with two strikes. That slider has actually been successful with two-strikes to righties, posting a 29% PutAway rate and a nearly 20% SwStr% overall. It gives him two pitches he can turn to when he gets ahead in the count, and he will also occasionally turn to his new changeup, but that pitch has yet to record a swinging strike in a two-strike count against righties and has just a 7.5% SwStr% overall with a nearly 73% ICR. It's just not a good pitch.

At the end of the day, Lauer is better against righties because of his multiple two-strike offerings and the use of both the curve and fastball early in counts. That will keep him on the streaming radar since most of the hitters he sees will be righties. He's been fine against lefties, but the swinging strikes aren't as prevalent. I believe in Lauer's contact impression to a certain extent with this new pitch mix, but I think he's more of a 4.00 ERA pitcher with average strikeout upside who I'd rather use as a streamer against right-handed-heavy teams coming up. Yet, with Bowden Francis hurt and Max Scherzer battling this thumb injury, Lauer could continue to get chances in the rotation.

Ryne Nelson - Arizona Diamondbacks (Move to Rotation, Cutter Usage)

Ryne Nelson's arc with the Diamondbacks over the last year has been a wild one. He was the team's best starter in the second half of last season, posting a 3.23 ERA, 1.03 WHIP, and 67/14 K/BB ratio in 64 innings in the second half of the season. However, he was forced out of the starting rotation at the beginning of this season with the addition of Corbin Burnes and the presence of Eduardo Rodriguez. However, injuries opened up a spot in the starting rotation for Nelson and, since June 7th, he's been a full-time starter in Arizona, posting a 3.34 ERA, 0.96 WHIP, and 29/10 K/BB ratio in 32.1 innings over six starts.

Over that stretch, he ranks 16th among qualified starters in WHIP, 42nd in ERA, 42nd in K-BB%, and 45th in SIERA. While those are eye-popping metrics, they are good enough for him to be locked onto fantasy rosters in all types of leagues. So what is he doing to earn this, and is it sustainable?

Ryne Nelson Starter splits.jpg

Alex Chamberlain Pitch Leaderboard

I used Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard to show Nelson's pitch mix splits from when he's starting versus when he's relieving. My thought was to see if he's utilizing his mix any differently as a starter, and it doesn't seem like he has been, except for a decrease in his cutter usage and an increasing reliance on his four-seamer. This shouldn't surprise us since he threw multiple innings at a time as a reliever anyway, but it's worth digging into.

Nelson lives and dies with his four-seam fastball, which makes some sense since it's his best pitch. It's 95.6 mph with over 18 inches of iVB and a flat Height Adjusted Vertical Approach Angle that allows it to thrive up in the zone. Since he joined the rotation, he's been using the four-seamer up in the zone 52% of the time, and it's posted a 55% zone rate, 55% strike rate, and 13.6% SwStr%, with a 42% ICR. He uses the pitch as both an early count strike pitch and also a two-strike swing-and-miss pitch; however, it's far more successful as a two-strike pitch to lefties. Since he moved into the starting rotation, Nelson has a 17% PutAway Rate on the four-seam to righties but a 25.5% mark to lefties.

Nelson should theoretically be able to compensate for that against righties because he throws his slider almost exclusively to righties, but that pitch is more of an early called strike pitch. Nelson has thrown his slider early in the count 67% of the time to righties since joining the rotation, with a 79% first pitch strike rate and just a 6% PutAway Rate when he does use it in two-strike counts. He'll also mix in a curve to righties 10% of the time and that pitch has been more successful in two-strike counts with a nearly 16% PutAwray Rate; however, you're seeing a bit of the weakness here since Nelson has just a 22% strikeout rate to righties in his six starts in the rotation.

His strikeout rate isn't that much better against lefties, with a 24% mark, but I think his four-seam fastball misses more bats to lefties because he can use it off of the cutter he throws12% of the time to lefties. He uses it 81% of the time early in the count, and it's not a pitch he commands well against lefties, but much of that is because he misses up and out of the strike zone or inside off the plate. By missing in those spots, he forces lefties to back up off the plate or look for the cutter up, and then they get a four-seamer that's six mph faster and are unable to catch up.

He will also throw the curve to lefties, but he throws it early in the count 73% of the time and has a poor 4% SwStr% on it against lefties in his last six starts. His changeup is another afterthought pitch that he has pretty much fazed out against lefties over the last few starts, which means he's really just four-seam, cutter, and curve to lefties.

In short, Nelson kind of only has a four-seam fastball. The good thing for him is that it's a really good four-seam fastball. He also has a deep enough arsenal where he can attack hitters of each handedness with at least three pitches. Those secondaries are inconsistent and don't miss many bats, which will limit his fantasy upside, but they also prevent hitters from simply sitting on his fastball. I think that profile will keep Nelson as a high-floor, low-ceiling fantasy option who can dominate weaker lineups who won't be able to handle his four-seam fastball. I like adding him in most league types, but this isn't "league-winning" upside, if that's what you're after.

Giants DH Wilmer Flores reveals when he realized he could pursue MLB career

Giants DH Wilmer Flores reveals when he realized he could pursue MLB career originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

In some cases, it takes time to know you’re really good at something.

Speaking with NBC Sports Bay Area’s Laura Britt on “BP with Britt,” Giants designated hitter Wilmer Flores recalled when he realized he had the skills to pursue a professional baseball career.

“Probably when I was 12, 13,” Flores told Britt. “When you play Little League, you just don’t know, right? You just play for fun, and you just don’t know if you’re going to have it or not. 

“When I turned 13, people would say I was good at it. I started seeing it as something that I could do [for] a living.” 

Flores, who has had plenty of big moments throughout his five-plus seasons with the Giants, has experienced one of the best starts of his 13-year MLB career in 2025 under San Francisco’s new leadership. 

Notably, Flores registered his career-best performance this season in the Giants’ 9-1 win over the Athletics in May, hitting three home runs and driving in eight runs in the game.

But even as one of the Giants’ proven sluggers, Flores admits his pathway to baseball — and eventually MLB — could differ a lot from those seen today.

“Today’s day is different,” Flores concluded. “I can tell you. I have a 2-year-old, and all he wants to do is swing a bat because he’s watching me and he’s watching the team. But I think in today’s day, young guys are a little bit more cultured. They know baseball a little bit more. 

“I didn’t know baseball until my mom and dad took me to the field so I had something to do after school. It wasn’t that I wanted to play baseball. It just happened.” 

Considering his professional baseball career wasn’t much of a thought growing up, it’s safe to say Flores has done very well for himself.

Download and follow the Giants Talk Podcast

Dodgers at Brewers Prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats for July 9

It's Wednesday, July 9 and the Dodgers (56-37) are in Milwaukee to take on the Brewers (52-40). Tyler Glasnow is slated to take the mound for Los Angeles against Jose Quintana for Milwaukee.

Milwaukee won the second game of the series 3-1 to extend Los Angeles' losing streak to a season long five games. Jacob Misiorowski earned another win and a career-high 12 strikeouts as the Dodgers have been held to two runs in this series.

Glasnow gets his first start since April 27 as the Dodgers attempt to avoid being swept in back to back series. Glasnow allowed two or fewer earned runs in four out of five starts this year.

Let's dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two. We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Dodgers at Brewers

  • Date: Wednesday, July 9, 2025
  • Time: 2:10PM EST
  • Site: American Family Field
  • City: Milwaukee, WI
  • Network/Streaming: SNLA, FDSNWI, MLBN

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Dodgers at the Brewers

The latest odds as of Wednesday:

  • Moneyline: Dodgers (-159), Brewers (+134)
  • Spread:  Dodgers -1.5
  • Total: 8.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Dodgers at Brewers

  • Pitching matchup for July 9, 2025: Tyler Glasnow vs. Jose Quintana
    • Dodgers: Tyler Glasnow, (1-0, 4.50 ERA)
      Last outing: 1.0 Innings Pitched, 2 Earned Runs Allowed, 2 Hits Allowed, 1 Walk, and 0 Strikeouts
    • Brewers: Jose Quintana, (6-3, 3.44 ERA)
      Last outing: 5.1 Innings Pitched, 3 Earned Runs Allowed, 6 Hits Allowed, 0 Walks, and 3 Strikeouts

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Dodgers and the Brewers

Rotoworld Best Bet

Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.

Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Wednesday’s game between the Dodgers and the Brewers:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Milwaukee Brewers at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play on the over on the Game Total of 8.0.

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC.

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Dodgers at Brewers

  • The Dodgers are 3-2 in Glasnow's starts
  • The Dodgers have lost five consecutive games, which is a season long
  • The Brewers have won 4 of their last 5 home games against National League teams
  • The Over is 50-40-3 in Dodgers' games this season
  • The Brewers are showing a profit of 1.89 units on the Run Line in their last 5 games at American Family Field

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper)
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
  • Brad Thomas (@MrBradThomas)

ICYMI in Mets Land: Promising Starling Marte update; top prospect buzz

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Tuesday, in case you missed it...


State of Origin 2025 Game 3: Qld Maroons beat NSW Blues 24-12 – as it happened

Now it’s Billy Slater’s turn in front of the mic.

It’s going to take our best that’s for sure. I think both teams have been working towards a better performance, so I’m expecting something pretty special from the opposition and hopefully we can deliver as well.

It’s a courageous and brave effort isn’t it? And we all admire him for that. It goes to show you how much this footy team, this state means to him, and this game means to him. So I know his dad would be pretty proud of him.

I think our preparation has been first class. I can’t fault it. Boys are pretty dialled in. Obviously they know what’s at stake tonight and I reckon we’ll give our best performance of the three game series.

The plan with Payne [Haas] was always to get ready for tonight, rather than getting ready for a training session on a on a Monday or a Tuesday. So look, he’s ready to go. And Brian [To’o] probably surprised us with what he did on the on the Monday night. So no no concerns at all.

Continue reading...

Warriors star Jimmy Butler bringing BIGFACE coffee pop-up to San Francisco

Warriors star Jimmy Butler bringing BIGFACE coffee pop-up to San Francisco originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Full steam ahead.

Warriors star Jimmy Butler III is bringing his famed BIGFACE coffee brand to San Francisco, EATER SF’s Paolo Bicchieri revealed in an article published Tuesday.

The six-time NBA All-Star is partnering with digital point-of-sale company Square to bring his iconic flavor to a pop-up at Square’s temporary Corner Store in the Mission District. BIGFACE will be open from July 10 to 27 at 22nd and Valencia streets with hours spanning from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

“San Francisco’s coffee culture is legendary, making the city an ideal fit for BIGFACE,” Butler shared in BIGFACE’s press release. “Coffee brings people from all different backgrounds together, so partnering with Square to bring BIGFACE to the Mission is the perfect way to connect more deeply with the Bay Area and show love to a community that’s embraced me.”

“The menu will include espresso drinks, cold brew, pour-over, and bags of the hard-to-find coffee, and exclusive merch will be available to purchase,” Bicchieri added. “BIGFACE infusions for the drinks include vanilla, salted caramel, and strawberry.”

Butler has become a fan favorite in the Bay after being traded to Golden State from the Miami Heat on Feb. 6. He surely will be loved even more after Dub Nation gets a taste of his coffee.

Butler launched BIGFACE in 2020 during the NBA’s historical bubble era in Orlando. Then, making his first of two finals appearances with the Heat, Butler sold coffee from his hotel rooms to fellow players and staffers who were desperate for a yummy taste of normalcy during the Coronavirus pandemic.

Perhaps BIGFACE’s pop-up in San Francisco will evolve into a brick-and-mortar location, if local Bay Area coffee connoisseurs crave the brew-tiful beverages as the NBA players in the legendary bubble did.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Harvard-Westlake grads Max Fried, Pete Crow-Armstrong could face off at All-Star Game

New York Yankees pitcher Max Fried throws against the Detroit Tigers in the first inning during a baseball game, Wednesday, April 9, 2025, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)
New York Yankees pitcher Max Fried is a Harvard-Westlake grad selected to play in the All-Star Game. He could face off against Pete Crow-Armstrong, another Harvard-Westlake grad. (Paul Sancya / Associated Press)

When Harvard-Westlake grads Max Fried of the New York Yankees and Pete Crow-Armstrong of the Chicago Cubs are introduced on July 15 at the MLB All-Star Game in Atlanta, their former high school coaches, Matt LaCour and Jared Halpert, will be in the stands celebrating the historic moment.

“We’re all proud on campus,” said LaCour, now the school’s athletic director and former coach of Fried.

“It’s kind of everyone wins if Max faces Pete,” Halpert said.

Harvard-Westlake has received attention for its success sending pitchers to the majors with Fried, Lucas Giolito and Jack Flaherty, all of whom were members of the 2012 team and first-round draft picks.

Chicago Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong.
Chicago Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong. (Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press)

Crow-Armstrong, a first-round draft pick in 2020 who was selected by the fans to start in center field, is a breakthrough hitter for the Cubs.

“We’ve got a couple hitters coming through, so maybe we’ll change the pitching narrative,” LaCour said.

But who will the coaches root for if Fried is on the mound and Crow-Armstrong is at the plate?

“That definitely would be cool,” LaCour said. “I’ll root for Max and Jared will root for Pete.”

LaCour is in Atlanta this week coaching a youth team and will stay an extra two days to watch the All-Star Game. Halpert is flying out next Tuesday morning, then taking a rideshare to the ballpark.

They shouldn't have any trouble getting tickets because they know an all-star.

Sign up for the L.A. Times SoCal high school sports newsletter to get scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Chicago Sky star Angel Reese named NBA 2K26 WNBA Edition cover athlete

Chicago Sky star Angel Reese named NBA 2K26 WNBA Edition cover athlete originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Angel Reese isn’t just a WNBA All-Star — she’s a NBA 2K cover star.

The Chicago Sky forward was named the cover athlete for the NBA 2K26 WNBA Edition video game coming out in September.

Reese joins NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder and future Basketball Hall of Famer Carmelo Anthony as cover stars for this year’s NBA 2K slate. Gilgeous-Alexander is the cover athlete for the Standard Edition of the game, while Anthony is the face of the Superstar Edition. Reese, Gilgeous-Alexander and Anthony stand together on the Leave No Doubt Edition.

2K
Standard, WNBA, Superstar and Leave No Doubt Editions of the NBA 2K26 video game. (2K Games)

As part of the announcement, Reese also announced her first signature shoe with Reebok, the Reese 1.

“Being on the cover of NBA 2K26 and debuting my first-ever signature shoe with Reebok on that cover, the Angel Reese 1, is more than a milestone — it’s a statement,” Reese said in a press release. “It’s about representation and showing young girls they can be confident, bold, and take up space unapologetically.

Reese, now a two-time WNBA All-Star in just her second season, joins a list of illustrious WNBA players to be featured on an NBA 2K cover.

NBA 2K20 was the first edition of the game to include the full list of WNBA teams. Two-time WNBA MVP and three-time champion Candace Parker was the first woman to grace an NBA 2K cover with the NBA 2K22 WNBA 25th Anniversary Edition. Diana Taurasi (NBA 2K23), Sue Bird (NBA 2K23), Sabrina Ionescu (NBA 2K24) and A’ja Wilson (NBA 2K25) have since starred on the WNBA Edition covers.

“To be cemented in NBA 2K history is a special honor that reflects not only my journey, but also all the veteran WNBA players who have paved the way before me and the growing impact of the league as a whole,” Reese said. “I’m proud to be part of a game that continues to elevate women’s basketball and can’t wait for fans to see how NBA 2K26 brings our game to life like never before.”

2K Games announced that NBA 2K26 will be released on Sept. 5. The Standard Edition will be available on PC, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch and Nintendo Switch 2. The other editions will be exclusive to PC, PS5 and Xbox Series X|S.

The WNBA Edition will be exclusively available at GameStop in the U.S.

Chicago Sky star Angel Reese named NBA 2K26 WNBA Edition cover athlete

Chicago Sky star Angel Reese named NBA 2K26 WNBA Edition cover athlete originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Angel Reese isn’t just a WNBA All-Star — she’s a NBA 2K cover star.

The Chicago Sky forward was named the cover athlete for the NBA 2K26 WNBA Edition video game coming out in September.

Reese joins NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder and future Basketball Hall of Famer Carmelo Anthony as cover stars for this year’s NBA 2K slate. Gilgeous-Alexander is the cover athlete for the Standard Edition of the game, while Anthony is the face of the Superstar Edition. Reese, Gilgeous-Alexander and Anthony stand together on the Leave No Doubt Edition.

2K
Standard, WNBA, Superstar and Leave No Doubt Editions of the NBA 2K26 video game. (2K Games)

As part of the announcement, Reese also announced her first signature shoe with Reebok, the Reese 1.

“Being on the cover of NBA 2K26 and debuting my first-ever signature shoe with Reebok on that cover, the Angel Reese 1, is more than a milestone — it’s a statement,” Reese said in a press release. “It’s about representation and showing young girls they can be confident, bold, and take up space unapologetically.

Reese, now a two-time WNBA All-Star in just her second season, joins a list of illustrious WNBA players to be featured on an NBA 2K cover.

NBA 2K20 was the first edition of the game to include the full list of WNBA teams. Two-time WNBA MVP and three-time champion Candace Parker was the first woman to grace an NBA 2K cover with the NBA 2K22 WNBA 25th Anniversary Edition. Diana Taurasi (NBA 2K23), Sue Bird (NBA 2K23), Sabrina Ionescu (NBA 2K24) and A’ja Wilson (NBA 2K25) have since starred on the WNBA Edition covers.

“To be cemented in NBA 2K history is a special honor that reflects not only my journey, but also all the veteran WNBA players who have paved the way before me and the growing impact of the league as a whole,” Reese said. “I’m proud to be part of a game that continues to elevate women’s basketball and can’t wait for fans to see how NBA 2K26 brings our game to life like never before.”

2K Games announced that NBA 2K26 will be released on Sept. 5. The Standard Edition will be available on PC, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch and Nintendo Switch 2. The other editions will be exclusive to PC, PS5 and Xbox Series X|S.

The WNBA Edition will be exclusively available at GameStop in the U.S.

‘It’s useless’: how Wimbledon reacted to electronic line calls … in 1980

Tennis players have been sceptical about AI line judges – like they were when Cyclops was introduced 45 years ago

By That 1980s Sports Blog

There was never a dull moment with Ilie Nastase. Walking across Centre Court before his first-round match at Wimbledon in 1980, the Romanian had his eyes firmly set on a box at the side of the court. He bent down to look at the device, the crowd tittering as he examined it. This was no ordinary box. It was a £2,000 machine installed to improve officiating and eliminate controversial decisions. But, just like the move away from line judges this year, not everyone was impressed.

Now for the science bit. Invented by Bill Carlton and Margaret Parnis in the late 1970s, the machines – for ever known as Cyclops – were only used on service line calls. Two boxes were set up either side of the service box backline on both sides of the net, one sending infrared lines across to the other. If any beams on the “out” side of the line were broken, a red light would show and a bleep would sound to the line judge, who sat beside the box wearing headphones. The official would shout “fault” as usual and everyone would happily accept the decision and move on. Well, that was the plan.

Continue reading...

Despite Juan Soto's snub for NL squad, the Mets insist 'he's an All-Star for us'

BALTIMORE — The New York Mets consider Juan Soto to be a bona fide All-Star, despite the snub he received from those who selected the National League squad for the Midsummer Classic on July 15.

Soto, in his first year with the Mets, has performed well enough to earn the respect of his manager and teammates. In their opinion, he's deserving of a place in the All-Star Game next week in Atlanta.

“He’s an All-Star for us,” manager Carlos Mendoza said Tuesday night after the Mets beat Baltimore 7-6. “It’s frustrating, but I'm hoping in the next couple of days we hear something and he makes it.”

Soto drove in the winning run with a sharp single on the first pitch of the 10th inning. That capped a night in which he went 3 for 5 to raise his batting average to .269 with 21 homers and 52 RBIs.

Soto has walked 72 times, by far the most in the majors, but he can also lash out at a pitcher when necessary.

“He’s got a pretty good understanding of what the pitchers are trying to do to him,” Mendoza said. “There is his awareness of the game, he’s going to see pitchers. There are times when he’s going to be aggressive. Tonight was one of those nights. First pitch in the 10th, he’s attacking.”

Soto made the All-Star team as a member of the Nationals, Padres and Yankees each year since 2021.

The streak appears to be over. But his teammates believe he deserves to go.

“What he done all year is just incredible, and the results are good enough,” Mets starting pitcher Clay Holmes said. “The consistency he's showed up with, at the at-bats he's taken, is more than an All-Star. He's one of the best in the game and a big part of our lineup.”

Soto seems rather philosophical about the snub.

“Sometimes you’re gonna make it and sometimes you don’t,” he told reporters after Sunday's loss to the Yankees. “It’s just part of baseball.”

MLB to use automated ball-strike challenge system for 2025 All-Star Game

MLB to use automated ball-strike challenge system for 2025 All-Star Game originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The future could be on display at the MLB All-Star Game next week.

MLB officials confirmed to ESPN on Wednesday that the automated ball-strike challenge system will be used for the July 15 contest in Atlanta.

The ABS system, which has been used in spring training and minor leagues, could be a permanent part of the major league as early as next year, according to ESPN’s Jesse Rogers.

Here’s how the ABS system works:

  • Each team gets two challenges with the ability to retain them, if successful.
  • Only a pitcher, catcher or hitter can signal for a challenge and it has to happen almost immediately after the pitch is thrown and the umpire makes the call.
  • The player can tap his helmet to ask for a challenge, and the pitch is immediately reviewed and called correctly as a ball or a strike within seconds.
  • When the review is initiated, an animated replay of the pitch will be shown on the scoreboard and the home plate umpire will either uphold the call or overturn it.
  • ABS uses Hawk-Eye system technology to track pitch trajectory and location in relation to the strike zone.

The MLB competition committee will meet later this summer to determine the future of the ABS system. While this way wouldn’t ensure that every pitch is called correctly, it would maintain the human element of an umpire behind the plate with the ability to fix blatantly incorrect calls — especially in critical moments.

The 2025 All-Star Game will be played at Truist Park, home of the Braves, next Tuesday at 5 p.m. PT on FOX.

Ex-Maple Leafs Assistant Dave Hakstol Lands New NHL Coaching Job

Dave Hakstol is back behind an NHL bench.

The Colorado Avalanche announced on Tuesday that Hakstol was hired by the club as their new assistant coach.

Hakstol served as an assistant coach with the Toronto Maple Leafs under then-head coach Sheldon Keefe during the 2019-20 and 2020-21 seasons. During his time in Toronto, Hakstol was a key part of Sheldon Keefe's coaching staff, focusing heavily on the team's defensive systems and penalty kill. His analytical approach was a significant asset as the Maple Leafs navigated those two seasons.

He departed after being hired by the Seattle Kraken as their first head coach in franchise history. It was there that Hakstol led the club to their first postseason berth in 2023 after posting a 46-28-8 record. Hakstol was also a finalist for the Jack Adams Award, handed out annually to the NHL’s top coach. However, the Kraken failed to make the playoffs in his third season with the club, and he was dismissed in the weeks that followed.

During his year away from the NHL, Hakstol served as an assistant with Team Canada at the annual Spengler Cup hockey tournament.

It’s Hakstol’s fourth stop behind an NHL bench. He made the jump to an NHL head coach when he was hired by the Philadelphia Flyers in 2015. Before that, he spent the previous 15 years coaching the men’s University of North Dakota team, the last 11 as head coach. He also spent three years as a player for that college team, serving the last two as team captain.

The defensive-minded coach should be an excellent fit for an Avalanche team that is regularly in contention in the postseason. If Hakstol’s second go-around as an NHL assistant is anything like his second go-around as a head coach, he should be able to help a team improve from a defensive standpoint in a very competitive Central Division.

(Photo credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images)

'I Know I'm A Better Player Than I Was In Utah': Matias Maccelli Believes He's Ready For Top-Six Role With Maple Leafs'I Know I'm A Better Player Than I Was In Utah': Matias Maccelli Believes He's Ready For Top-Six Role With Maple LeafsMatias Maccelli was attempting to make a putt when his friend began yelling about a trade to the Toronto Maple Leafs. Marlies Sign Five Players, Including Four Players From Past Maple Leafs Development CampsMarlies Sign Five Players, Including Four Players From Past Maple Leafs Development CampsThe Toronto Marlies have made more additions to their club ahead of next season. Marc Johnstone Re-Joins Maple Leafs Organization With Two-Year Marlies Contract, Goaltender Ken Appleby And Reese Johnston To One-Year DealsMarc Johnstone Re-Joins Maple Leafs Organization With Two-Year Marlies Contract, Goaltender Ken Appleby And Reese Johnston To One-Year DealsThe Toronto Marlies are beginning the process of filling out their roster beyond players signed to NHL contracts, and they have signed three players, including a familiar face up front.

Anton Frondell Would Fit In On 2025-26 Chicago Blackhawks

With the 3rd pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, the Chicago Blackhawks selected Swedish forward Anton Frondell. This came after the New York Islanders selected Matthew Schaefer and the San Jose Sharks took Michael Misa.

Due to Chicago's overwhelming depth on defense and the prominent forward draft class, it was always certain that they'd end up taking a forward. A lot of factors went into Frondell being the guy. 

Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar are seen as the catalysts up front for the Blackhawks at this time. Each of them is there to create offense. Both of them are undersized but widely talented with the puck. Kyle Davidson wanted to make sure to balance things out with his forwards selected in 2025.

Frondell, a 200-foot center, is exactly the type of player that the Blackhawks needed. He can provide offense, but you know you're getting an honest two-way effort from him on every shift. 

Everything that makes Frondell a high-end prospect is what makes him a great fit for Chicago's roster in 2025-26. He isn't going to be a star right away, but he has the tools to help the team as soon as he touches NHL ice. 

If the Blackhawks are up a goal late and need to protect the lead, Frondell may be someone tapped to go out there and defend it. 

Frondell compared himself to Aleksander Barkov after he was drafted. Well, being one of the greatest two-way players of all time is a stretch. However, that play style is welcomed by every team in the league. 

Cam Robinson (@Hockey_Robinson) on XCam Robinson (@Hockey_Robinson) on XAnton Frondell (2025) out here breaking ankles at the 5 Nations

Anything can happen, and there are things in Frondell's game that need work, but he declared that his goal is to make the team out of camp. The current state of the franchise makes that goal attainable. 

If the Blackhawks had Bedard, Nazar, and Frondell as a three-headed monster down the middle, they'd have three lines that bring something different. 

Frondell is also the perfect age for this group. Most of the roster is going to be under 24 years old in 2025-26, so they can grow up together. 

At first, it seemed like Frondell was destined to go back to Sweden for one season. Now, there is a very real chance that he begins in the NHL right away. 

Visit The Hockey News Chicago Blackhawks team site to stay updated on the latest news, game-day coverage, player features, and more.