How do the Red Sox boot Brayan Bello from the rotation before he does any more damage?

TORONTO, CANADA - APRIL 29: Brayan Bello #66 of the Boston Red Sox leaves the mound as he's pulled from the game in the fourth inning of their MLB game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on April 29, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I’ve always been fascinated by disasters: Hurricanes, tornadoes, the Hindenburg, Titanic, 9/11, wars, engineering failures, the list goes on. The bigger this disaster, the more I’m drawn to it. They’re compelling not only because of the long list of factors that usually have to line up to cause the catastrophe, but also because they provide a blueprint into how to prepare for the next one, or even outright prevent it.

So I guess it’s rather perfect that I’m a fan of the Boston Red Sox. Few organizations in sports do disaster quite like this one. Even after four World Series titles in the John Henry era, this team still has that thing in their DNA that when they start going bad, things explode in spectacular and catastrophic fashion.

This April has been a special level of disaster across the board, and one of the disasters within the disaster has been Brayan Bello. I mean, what the hell is going on with this guy? He was a competent starter just last summer, and now he’s a straight up arsonist on the mound.

Yesterday, he went into the game against the Blue Jays with a 9.00 ERA, and it went UP! And if that wasn’t enough to raise your blood pressure, he pouted all the way off the mound when Chad Tracy went to go get him in an attempt to keep the game in hand (although some would argue that with this offense the score was already insurmountable).

There have been so many hideous surprises with the Sox this year that I don’t think we’ve really gotten enough time to fully digest how insanely terrible Brayan Bello has been out of the gate. It’s been one gutless performance after the next, and it usually comes attached with an attitude that’s been almost as lousy as the pitching.

In six starts, he has the second highest ERA of any Red Sox starter through that many games in a season in franchise history. He’s failed to make it through the five innings in all but one outing, he completely lost track of the count in the game in Houston, and the team has a run differential of negative 20 in his starts.

If you want to go back even further, this garbage started in his outing in the postseason last October against the Yankees when he was bounced after just 2.1 innings in a sneaky bleak and borderline abysmal performance. As I wrote in January about that game when I wanted to trade him:

Bello faced just 11 batters, failed to get five of them out, didn’t strike out a soul, couldn’t keep Ben Rice in the ballpark, and was largely saved from complete disaster by an Anthony Volpe double play in the second inning, and Alex Cora’s quick hook in the third.

This is crazy to think about when you consider Bello had a 3.32 ERA last year and made it through at least five innings in 23 of his 28 starts. Now he’s so terrible and unreliable, the Sox need to find a way to get him out of the rotation as soon as possible before he can do any more damage. He’s not just losing games, he’s making them completely unwinnable even if most of the rest of the roster would happen to do their job.

But of course, because this is Red Sox baseball and they’re prone to disasters, they pretty much have to let Brayan Bello make his next start with Garrett Crochet going on IL. Since the rotation is also without Johan Oviedo, Patrick Sandoval, Kutter Crawford, Tanner Houck, and Tyler Uberstine and has to wait until May 6th before Sonny Gray is eligible to come off the IL, it creates this really annoying dynamic over the next five games if you want to get Brayan Bello out of the rotation.

If you assume Jake Bennett makes his major league debut on Friday at Fenway and then the other three healthy starters just follow suit, it leaves you one game short of getting back to Gray’s date. Here’s how it breaks down with Bello having to fill that May 5th game in Detroit.

This is really annoying because with the off day today, it feels like there should be some way to manipulate things and get Bello off the carousel, but short of a rainout, there’s just one too many games to cover.

So it would seem the only other option here would be to go with a bullpen game since Bello pretty much makes every game he starts a mini bullpen game anyway, right?

Well, not exactly. If you take a look at the how opposing starters are lining up for the next handful of games, the Red Sox are once again likely to catch reigning Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal on the Monday, May 4th game. This presents Boston with a unique opportunity to pull off an Art of War trick by using today’s off day to move up Brayan Bello’s next start to Monday where he’d still be on normal rest. (And really, rest should be no problem because he only lasted 63 pitches in Wednesday’s atrocious outing anyway.)

I mean, if you likely to lose any game of that Detroit series where Skubal or Bello starts, why not put them on the same day? If your opponent has an Ace of Spades on the table, you might as well throw out your two of clubs if you have that option. Wouldn’t you much rather lose that Monday game 13-1 and reset things for the rest of the series instead of losing 3-2 on Monday and then something like 12-5 on Tuesday?

Also, Brayan Bello kind of deserves to be fed to the lions — Or I guess Tigers in this case. You put your teammates in a horrible situation time and time again? How about we put you in a horrible situation and make you face Skubal?

After that, if he stinks again and Jake Bennett and Payton Tolle look decent (with both guys going on extra rest in this proposed pitching plan), you can use one of the two options Bello has left and send his unreliable butt down the Mass Pike to Worcester.

Dodgers notes – wherefore art thou offense?

After playing 13 straight games, the Dodgers off day couldn’t come at a better time. The offense specifically needs time to regroup. After scoring a total of 22 runs against the Chicago Cubs over the weekend, the Dodgers manages just eight runs total against the Miami Marlins, in which the Fish won 2-of-3 games at Dodger Stadium for the first time since 2018.

“I don’t think we’re collectively swinging the bats the way we were early,” Roberts said. “Sort of started in Colorado, I think. It’s one of those things where hitting is definitely cyclical. In total, we we’re at the top, near the top. The last 10 days, it just hasn’t been synced up. We just haven’t got those hits when we needed them.”

Cyclical is one way to put it. The Dodgers seemed like maybe they got their bats going in the hour game series at Coors Field, only to have them go cold again in San Francisco. Then they erupted again against the Cubs, and went flat against the Marlins.

Taking into account the pitchers they were facing, the Dodgers just haven’t had consistent, patient at bats. That is one of the tactics the Marlins deployed against the Dodgers, patience and working their at bats.

Even as the Marlins did their best to styme the Dodgers pitching staff, they only scored nine runs total over the series. An offense as high powered as the Dodgers’ should have had no problem scoring more than them in at least two if not all of the games.

Doug Padilla of the OC Register covers many of the ways the Dodgers are currently slumping at the plate.

Freddie Freeman is one of the Dodgers currently most Going Through It. In his last seven games, Freeman has as many strikeouts as he has hits. He also owns a .138 BA over that same time span.

“I would have fixed it by now if I knew,” he said through gritted teeth when asked what the problem was. “I had pitches to hit. I just didn’t hit ’em. I mean, I had strikes, I swung at the strikes, I didn’t hit the strikes, so…”

Freeman’s at bat in the bottom of the ninth resulted in a bizarre double play which ended the game in the Marlins’ favor. Just another, albeit odd, example of the Dodgers leaving multiple men in scoring position.

Kevin Baxter of the L.A. Times details other players that are also slumping, which unfortunately right now seems to be most of the lineup.

The Dodgers are hoping that the upcoming road trip to St. Louis and Houston will help their offense get back on track, and back up their pitching staff who has been holding up their end of the bargain.

Mets Morning News: Mets embarrassed by Nationals

New York Mets manager Carlos Mendoza (64) walks off the field after making a pitching change in a blue Mets jacket and hat.

Meet the Mets

The Mets got blown out by the Nationals behind duel stinkers by David Peterson and Sean Manaea. The loss drops them to 10-20, which is the worst record in all of baseball.

Choose your recap:Amazin’ Avenue, Daily News, Faith and Fear in Flushing, MLB.com, Newsday, NY Post

Luis Robert Jr.’s back is not getting any better, and an IL stint is a possibility for the outfielder.

The Mets lost Pete Alonso and have not effectively replaced him with the rotating cast of characters at first base.

The team’s offense is still a disaster, so where does the coaching staff even begin to try and fix it?

The Mets will need more than just Juan Soto if they want to get back on track.

Kodai Senga has no timetable for his return with the back issue that put him on the IL after his last start.

Around the National League East

The Braves took down the Tigers with a 4-3 walk-off win.

The Marlins squeaked out a win against the Dodgers with an unassisted double play to end the game.

The Phillies have dug themselves a deep hole, but Don Mattingly could the right person to get them out of it.

Around Major League Baseball

The Red Sox placed ace Garrett Crochet on the IL with shoulder inflammation.

Yankees outfielder Jasson Dominguez exited the game early after getting hit by a pitch on the elbow and will undergo further testing to get it evaluated.

The Tigers placed both Casey Mize and Javier Baez on the IL before their game against the Braves.

Paul Skenes and Tarik Skubal are once again the favorites to win the Cy Young award.

Labor talks between MLB and the player’s union are due to get underway in the coming weeks in what could be a contentious battle between the two sides

This Date in Mets History

On this date in 2002, Al Leiter defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks which made him the first pitcher to defeat all 30 teams in the major leagues.

Marcus Smart says Lakers must 'be willing to run through a wall' in Game 6

Los Angeles, CA - April 29: Los Angeles Lakers guard Marcus Smart (36) grimaces after losing the ball as Houston Rockets forward Jabari Smith Jr. (10) celebrates in game 5 of the first round, of the NBA playoffs. Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, CA on Wednesday, April 29, 2026. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)
Lakers guard Marcus Smart, left, grimaces after turning the ball over against the Rockets during Game 5. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Marcus Smart knows what it feels like to be on the other side. The last time the Lakers guard was in the playoffs, he was helping the Boston Celtics storm back from a three-game deficit in the Eastern Conference finals to force a near-historic Game 7.

Now he’s watched the Lakers’ seemingly insurmountable three-games-to-none series lead dwindle to 3-2 after a 99-93 loss to the Houston Rockets on Wednesday at Crypto.com Arena. Smart isn't flinching.

Whether defending a three-game lead or coming back from one, Smart knows the mindset is the same.

“We really got to literally go out there and be ready to die,” Smart said Wednesday after the Lakers failed to close out the Rockets for the second consecutive game. “... When I was on the other end, that was our motto: be willing to run through a wall and sacrifice your body for the betterment of the team. And that's what we're going to do now.”

Lakers guard Marcus Smart knocks the ball away from Rockets guard Amen Thompson during Game 5 at Crypto.Com Arena.
Lakers guard Marcus Smart knocks the ball away from Rockets guard Amen Thompson during Game 5 at Crypto.Com Arena on Wednesday. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

NBA teams are 159-0 with a 3-0 lead in a best-of-seven playoff series. Only four have even pushed it to the decisive Game 7. Smart’s 2023 Boston Celtics, when they clawed back against the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference Finals, lost Game 7 at home after star Jayson Tatum turned his ankle on the first play of the game.

Hoping to avoid joining the historic list, the Lakers get a third try at vanquishing the Rockets for good in Game 6 on Friday at 6:30 p.m. PDT at Houston’s Toyota Center.

“Once we get on that plane and head down to Houston, we got to forget about it and understand what we are going for,” said LeBron James, who had 25 points and seven assists Friday. “It’s going to be even harder. Every game is hard. It’s so hard to close out a team in the postseason, to win a series, and this is our first time doing it as a unit.”

The Lakers built a three-game lead in the series despite playing without leading scorers Luka Doncic (hamstring) and Austin Reaves in the first four games. Reaves returned from a Grade 2 left oblique muscle strain Wednesday, scoring 22 points on four-of-16 shooting with six assists, but his presence couldn’t stop the gradual decline of the Lakers offense.

Read more:Plaschke: Danger ahead! Lakers loss to the Rockets pushes them closer to the worst kind of history

The Lakers have failed to reach 100 points in each of the last two games. From shooting 53.9% from the field and 51.7% from three in the first 10 quarters of the series, they have shot just 44.6% from the field and 29.2% from three in the last 10, excluding overtime of Game 3.

Luke Kennard, a flamethrower who scored 50 points in the first two games, has scored just eight in the last two. He was scoreless from the field Wednesday, including two missed three-pointers. A 91.2% free-throw shooter, Kennard even missed a free throw.

On the other hand, Houston has found its rhythm. The Rockets made 38.7% of their shots in the first 10 quarters — Games 1 and 2 and the first half of Game 3 — and have shot 46.3% in the 10 quarters since, excluding the Game 3 overtime period. Their three-point shooting has jumped from 30.9% to 34.1%.

“We just got to make shots,” Smart said of the offense's struggles. “... And we're not giving ourselves a chance by turning the ball over, which we can't get a shot up on the rim because of that.”

The Lakers had 15 turnovers that resulted in 18 Rockets points Wednesday. The game started slipping away in the second quarter when they had five turnovers with the Rockets scoring nine points off the miscues. The Lakers let their 11-point first-quarter lead turn into a four-point halftime deficit.

Smart, who was asked to handle more ball-handling responsibilities while Doncic and Reaves were injured, had six turnovers and just two assists Friday. He called them “unacceptable.”

Rockets center Alperen Sengun yells out for the ball while Lakers guard Marcus Smart pressures the Houston ball hander.
Rockets center Alperen Sengun yells out for the ball while Lakers guard Marcus Smart pressures the ball hander during Game 5 at Crypto.com Arena on Wednesday. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

“The turnovers come in all shapes and sizes, and it's about limiting them,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said. “And you certainly have to give your guys freedom to make basketball plays. I would say in general though, turnovers of aggression are OK; turnovers of passivity are not.”

The Rockets only averaged 8.5 steals per game during the regular season, but had two players in the NBA's top 10 in total steals with guards Reed Sheppard (sixth, 122 total steals) and Amen Thompson (eighth, 119). They had three and four steals, respectively, in Game 5.

A defensive play from Sheppard stifled the Lakers’ late comeback. The Lakers trimmed a 13-point lead to three in less than three minutes. The cheer from the sold-out crowd at Crypto.com Arena was deafening when James kissed a left handed layup off the glass to pull the Lakers to within one possession with 2:59 left.

Sheppard immediately responded with a midrange jumper then picked James’ pocket on the next Lakers possession, going coast-to-coast for a two-handed dunk that pushed the lead back to seven with 2:20 remaining.

Read more:Lakers can’t close out Rockets series despite Austin Reaves' 22 points in return

The crowd went silent.

The Lakers had that same stunning effect on a road crowd already this series when they stormed back from a six-point deficit in less than 30 seconds in Game 3. The prospect of doing it again with even larger stakes brought an excited smirk to Smart’s face.

“We knew this was going to be a tough series,” Smart said. “I think everybody knew that, and it's turning out to be exactly what we expected. And now the fun begins.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Dereck Lively’s lost season

CHARLOTTE, NC - MARCH 3: Dereck Lively II #2 of the Dallas Mavericks and Grant Williams #2 of the Charlotte Hornets talk after the game on March 3, 2026 at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Be honest wth me: do you remember Dereck Lively II playing a single game? I don’t. Or I didn’t. Not until I started looking way back into the season. In my memory, Lively played several games into January 2025, hurt his ankle/foot, and we haven’t seen him since. That, of course, is not true. He returned for a few games at the end of last season, played a few games to start this season, then shut it down and sought out medical opinions for another surgery.

Thus goes the story of Lively’s career today. Some bright, bright flashes, marred by deserts of missed games. In fact, through three NBA seasons, Lively has yet to play 100 regular-season games.

Season in Review

“It’s all about health for Dereck Lively II heading into his third NBA season.” That was the opening line of Matt Martinez’s Dereck Lively’s season preview way back in October.

In some respects Lively’s season was over before it began; he played just 10 minutes in the opening game against the San Antonio Spurs, where Dallas was run off the floor in the opening half. Lively would play the next two games, helping notch the first Dallas win over Toronto. He popped up on the injury report after, didn’t travel to Mexico City for the following game and wouldn’t play again until November 14th. Including that contest, he played just four more games all season, a total of seven for the 2025-26 season. He’d be shut down soon after to seek additional opinions on his previously injured foot/ankle, got surgery in December, and has just recently been seen without his walking boot.

In seven games, he averaged 4.3 points and 5.3 rebounds in just over 16 minutes a game.

Best game

Given minimal options, Lively’s best game was the wild and foreboding loss to the Washington Wizards in game two. He was one of the team’s few bright spots in his limited minutes, scoring eight on 4 of 5 from the floor, grabbing six rebounds, stealing the ball twice, and notching a block.

Contract status

Lively is entering the final year of his rookie contract, where he will make just over $7.2 million. He is eligible for a contract extension, but given his injury issues the Mavericks have likely only engaged in surface-level discussions.

Looking ahead

There is a lengthy and frustrating history of promising big men seeing their careers derailed by lower body injuries. Feet, in particular, are troublesome. What Dereck Lively is attempting to come back from is as much the weight of history as well as his own body on a troublesome foot. The Mavericks drafted Lively as their big man of the future and that future far too cloudy at present moment.

In short, what Dallas needs first is to see Lively play 60 games in the 2026-27 season. He’ll have both his games and minutes within games managed tightly, but at a certain point medical science can only do so much. He has to stay healthy first, and from that, we can then consider his effectiveness.

Outside of the run from All Star break to the NBA Finals in 2024, Lively has shown very little consistency. He fouls too much on the defensive end and hasn’t played enough without Luka Doncic on the offensive end to show what he’s capable of. The talent is there, of that there’s no doubt. But I believe the key development years for players come largely between 16 and 22 years old. Lively has now missed a huge chunk of that time due to injury.

This coming year is pivotal in what comes next for Lively.

Grade: F

Incomplete would probably be more fair here, but it’s a cruel world. Lively missed well over two seasons of his career to date due to a variety of reasons. This was an important year for Lively and he wasn’t able to perform. Hopefully, next year is a massive change.

Why the Suns’ 2026 offseason must be defined by patience, progression, and responsibility

The ink has barely dried on the 2025–26 Suns season. Hell, I published my season synopsis just yesterday. It’s only been a couple of days since they were eliminated from the 2026 postseason. And still, my mind is already moving forward.

So much is running through my hyperactive brain right now. The decisions that lie ahead, the conversations we’ll collectively have, the thought exercises that are coming, and the determination of what this Phoenix Suns team should look like come October. It’s too early to fine-tune specifics, the players to pursue, the players to draft, and the trades to make. That part will come.

For now, I want to lay out my initial thought process. How the Suns should approach the short term, how they should think about roster construction, and what this could look like long term. It will be interesting to revisit this at the end of the offseason. To see if they followed the roadmap I think they should. To see if I still believe it’s the right path.

I expect I will change my mind as the summer progresses. For now? This is how I see it.

It begins with patience with the process. Ah yes, patience. A word I’ve talked myself into since the beginning of 2025-26. A word I’ve had to remind myself of at times. Going from the largest bankroll the NBA has ever seen to a respectable cap sheet is a process, and maintaining that moving forward is a challenge. Shiny objects tempt us, but we should not fall for their fallacy.

I’ll start at the 50,000-foot view, looking across the landscape of the NBA. It might be 2026, but it feels eerily similar to 2016. Back then, the Golden State Warriors were evicerating the league, and any hope of stealing a Western Conference title from them felt unrealistic. Not from a Suns perspective alone, from anyone in the conference. Phoenix was deep in a rebuild, with no illusions of grandeur when it came to competing for the West.

Ten years later, the Warriors’ sun has set, and now two youthful juggernauts are sitting at the top. We just experienced who and what the Oklahoma City Thunder are. A team full of assassins, a defense with connective tissue that’s hard to replicate, and a pipeline of draft capital that keeps the machine moving as players get priced out. Add in their track record for scouting and development, and there’s no reason to think they won’t be a viable contender for the next half-decade.

Then there are the San Antonio Spurs. A team with a generational type player, surrounded by youth that fits. We don’t fully know what they are yet, as this is their first run through the postseason. But the trajectory is obvious. They’re ascending, and they create another blockade at the top of the Western Conference for the foreseeable future.

I’m not saying that because OKC and San Antonio are poised to own the next half-decade that the Suns should roll over and play dead. Quite the contrary. Those teams are where they are due to the processes they had in place, the strategy they deployed, some luck (a lot of luck in the Spurs’ case), and their willingness to stick to the plan. They allowed progression to occur and fostered the environment to grow. They took risks along the way it paid off. Yes, their stories are more complex than those four lines of text, but they exercised patience, and that is the foundational aspect that the Suns should follow.

But I am noting that due to their existence in the Western Conference, expectations must be adjusted accordingly. How far do you think the Suns will go next season? Or the season after that? Or the season after that? Defining expectations allows for an understanding of how the team should operate this offseason with the next half-decade in mind as well.

I bring up that half-decade timeline because it matters for the Phoenix Suns. Five years. It goes by in a snap; in NBA terms, it can feel like an eternity. For perspective, it’s been five years since the Phoenix Suns were in the Finals. When you look forward through that same lens, some timelines start to line up for Phoenix. The question becomes how they operate until those timelines come to fruition.

2030. Four years from now. That’s a big year for this franchise. At the end of the 2029-30 season, Devin Booker will be an unrestricted free agent. That same offseason, the Bradley Beal money comes off the books. His $19.4 million is no longer sitting there on the cap sheet. In 2030, the Suns will have a first round pick. The final destination is still up in the air since it has already been swapped, but the pick exists. And by that point, Phoenix could have a treasure chest of draft capital at its disposal if they choose to hold onto those assets over the next four years.

And that’s where I start thinking about the short term and the long term for the Phoenix Suns as we enter the 2026 offseason. All of these timelines run together, and the goal of this offseason and the ones that follow is patience, progression, and responsibility. I know that’s not what anyone wants to hear or experience. It’s not fun or exciting. But the long pathway to success rarely is. The goal needs to be stacking small wins over the next few offseasons rather than swinging for the fences, putting yourself in position to take advantage of where you are and where the NBA is five years from now.

There are a million things that can happen between now and then. Blockbuster trades, season-ending injuries, paths we can’t even see yet. For an organization and an ownership group that came in and initially operated irresponsibly fiscally, the next four seasons have to be about maintaining the ability to be responsible.

That starts with understanding who and what Devin Booker is.

There is a finite ceiling tied to Booker’s skill set, and age will start to show up sooner than later. His contract is going to feel heavy relative to production in a couple of seasons unless something shifts. That’s part of it. And within the context of this offseason, that’s okay. Trading him now and going full reset will not net the return you want. The picks won’t be premium. The players won’t be foundational. You are not building something better in a landscape where the Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs are sitting there for the next half-decade.

While he might be a depreciating asset, there is value in his presence and abilities. He is the stabilizing force that this team and organization need right now, in this moment. He assists in putting you in a position to win. That is valuable for the young players on this team. To win. We don’t need to go back to 2015, when the Suns had all of the picks but none of the foundation, and therefore, none of the wins.

So lean into it. Embrace the player who defines your culture. Booker is here, he is in his prime, and you should ride that out in an attempt to get better year after year. Next year? You make the best decision at the time, weighing the short-term and long-term health of your franchise.

One reality that we have to face is that this team did not hit its ceiling. Booker missed 18 games. Jalen Green missed 50. Dillon Brooks missed 26 and Mark Williams missed 22. That is a combined 116 missed games from just your starting lineup alone. And they still won 45 games. So it is not outside of the realm of possibility, knowing that the top tier of the NBA elite is unattainable, for this team to run it back again next season. That gives them more data points, more understanding of who is valuable and who exemplifies what being a Phoenix Sun is about.

With continuity comes a stronger culture, a clearer identity, and a sustainable path to winning. Those are organizational traits you need as you look toward 2030. You need to know what it means to be a Phoenix Sun, the same way players understand what it means to be a Spur. That doesn’t happen overnight. It starts with continuity.

I know nobody wants to hear that the team should be looking at 2030 as a pivotal point. But looking long-term is the right way to approach any decision. Mat Ishbia has said he plans to own this team for 50 years, and that comes with responsibility. There is still a path to being competitive and engaging over the next few seasons. There is still room for this team to get better.

You have young players like Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming. If one of them pops, your ceiling rises. You have a 2027 first round pick. It’s a swap, the worst of three teams, but still a chance for that player to hit. That’s the bet. That’s what you’re leaning on.

It comes back to development. That’s part of your culture, too. Identifying the right talent, bringing them in, and developing them the right way so they can succeed and maybe exceed expectations. When 2030 arrives, that foundation matters. It shapes what the Phoenix Suns can be and how successful they can become.

I go back a decade, when the Golden State Warriors were stomping the league. The Phoenix Suns at that time had draft capital. They had chances to improve, and eventually they did. They reached the 2021 NBA Finals. But man, it was a long, arduous path. The culture wasn’t right, and the development system wasn’t right. That’s where the focus needs to be over the next few years. Get it right. Set the standards. And still strategically find that balance between fiscal responsibility and progression in the standings.

The foundation is set. The goal now is progression. Progression in development. Progression in scouting. Progression in management. Progression in culture and identity. Progression doesn’t mean burning all of your assets for a name like Giannis or trading Booker in an attempt to bottom out with late-round draft picks. Progression is patience, strategy, continuity, and fortifying the ideals you introduced an offseason ago.

I get it, everyone loves the home run. The big trades. The idea of moving Booker for a pile of assets sounds exciting. This past offseason showed that exciting doesn’t get it done. Being responsible, being smart, being patient, and sticking to a plan. That’s the path. They followed that approach last offseason, identifying pieces that pushed those areas forward. No chasing dingers. They played for doubles. They bunted the runner over. And we got 45 wins out of it.

That’s where they need to live now. This offseason and the ones that follow. So keep it simple. Stack some base hits. Build a roster that makes sense, a culture that holds, and a system that develops. Stay competitive, stay disciplined, and protect what 2030 can be. That’s the window. Don’t close it early. 

This is how I feel today, in late April, following the end of the 2025-26 season. It will be interesting to see how I feel in just a few short months. Suns basketball is just a summer away.

Guardians News and Notes – Back to .500

CLEVELAND, OHIO - APRIL 29: Cade Smith #36 and Bo Naylor #23 of the Cleveland Guardians celebrate the team's 3-1 win over the Tampa Bay Rays at Progressive Field on April 29, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With yesterday’s victory over the Tampa Bay Rays, the Cleveland Guardians are back to a .500 record and back to the top of the AL Central. Gavin Williams pitched a phenomenal game yesterday in the 3-1 victory on 4 days of rest. The recap can be read here.

The Guardians are off today as the team travels out west to face off against the Oakland Athletics in a 3 game weekend series.

Nick and Quincy are exploring the questions we’ve all been asking; What’s wrong with Steven Kwan/Chase DeLauter.

Guardians beat reporter, Tim Stebbins, put out a piece looking at where the team is at in regards to the offense after a month of baseball.

Around the League:

The Braves walked it off against the Tigers. The Tigers are now 1 game under .500 and 0.5 games back in the AL Central.

The Marlins took a series from the Dodgers.

Chicago Cubs news and notes, Hoerner, Bregman, PCA

Today’s Reflections

Today’s Reflections are a bit here and there, but it all comes together in the end.

A few years ago, I was on one of my mini-MiLB baseball trip/music festival combos through southern Mississippi and the Florida panhandle (Biloxi Shuckers — 3.5 (giant casino in the outfield annoying); Pensacola Blue Wahoos — 4.25 (while Biloxi is on the water, Pensacola is almost in the water — the first base line/RF has a curved walkway that almost draws you from the game (hard for anything to make me do that)) both docked 0.5 for Biloxi having NO shade, and Pensacola minimal — glad we went in early May).

I knew I was passing through Crystal Springs, MS and that that was where Robert Johnson was from (our featured bluesman today). Saw there was a museum, so I stopped. The large room made the displays look limited, but it just gave you plenty of room to look everything over (surprise, we were the only visitors). I asked if they had any souvenirs or T-shirts. The lady said that they had a bunch left over from a festival they tried having several years before, and the vendor brought one size of T-shirts: 5X. I went ahead and bought one as a donation.

As we were leaving, the lady asked we liked music-related locations. I kind of was skeptical, but said sure and she sent us an hour down the road, luckily in the direction we were going. It was at Gillsburg, MS — the Lynyrd Skynyrd Monument Site. To say it was of such amazing detail and quality and just flat-out beautiful isn’t enough. SO highly recommended if you are in the middle of nowhere Mississippi.


  • Justin Bonhard (Sporting News): The Chicago Cubs are amongst the league’s best, and they have not reached their full potential yet. “The Cubs have gotten it done with their bats, as they have the third-best batting average in all of baseball at. 263 as a team. To go along with the contact, they have made the most of their hits with some power, as their 37 homers as a team are the sixth-most in MLB. When (PCA catches fire), the possibilities for this team are endless, and their true potential will be revealed.”
  • Max Ralph (MLB.com): Suzuki offers hilarious BP impressions of Ballesteros, Swanson: “Suzuki (a righty) did an over-the-top impression of Ballesteros’ unique left-handed swing, featuring a sizable leg kick with his hands held high, for teammates during pregame batting practice. The slugger also took his shot at Cubs shortstop Dansby Swanson, who recognizably puts the bat on his shoulder and leans back a bit before digging into his stance. Swanson also tends to fall toward home plate after a swing and miss, which Suzuki displayed perfectly, before mocking Swanson’s wide-legged gait back toward the dugout. (VIDEO enclosed);

(BONUS!) Suzuki’s imitation of Ian Happ:

  • Matt Sullivan (Sporting News): Cubs have a huge Pete Crow-Armstrong hitting problem. “So far this season (prior to Tuesday), Crow-Armstrong is hitting .241 with one home run, which is thanks in large part to how he’s struggling to barrel up any baseballs this season. He had 59 barrels last year, but this season he’s barreled up just four baseballs. His offensive presence has been minimal at best this season, with his 82 OPS+ showing just how far below league-average he is offensively.”

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Food For Thought:

More than 100 years ago, a child was born in Mississippi – a dirt-poor, African-American who would grow up, learn to sing and play the blues, and eventually achieve worldwide renown. In the decades after his death, he has become known as the King of the Delta Blues Singers, his music expanding in influence to the point that rock stars of the greatest magnitude – the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, the Allman Brothers – all sing his praise and have recorded his songs.

That child was Robert Johnson, an itinerant blues singer and guitarist who lived from 1911 to 1938. He recorded 29 songs between 1936 and ‘37 for the American Record Corporation, which released eleven 78rpm records on their Vocalion label during Johnson¹s lifetime, and one after his death.

Like many bluesmen of his day, Johnson plied his craft on street corners and in juke joints, ever rambling and ever lonely – and writing songs that romanticized that existence. But Johnson accomplished this with such an unprecedented intensity, marrying his starkly expressive vocals with a guitar mastery, that his music has endured long after the heyday of country blues and his own short life.

Odd News

Wisconsin recycling center posts 17.3 mph speed limit sign (VIDEO)

USA/World Travel

12 Wow Destinations to add to your Bucket List (VIDEO)

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How much will a 2027 work stoppage affect the White Sox?

BROOKLINE, MA - APRIL 08: A "locked out" padlock and chains over the MLB logo are configured to represent a potential lockout between Major League Baseball (MLB) and the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) for the 2027 MLB season, as photographed on April 08, 2026 in Brookline, MA. (Photo by Erica Denhoff/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Not open for business? The threat of a 2027 stoppage hangs over MLB. | (Icon Sportswire/Getty Images)

The high likelihood of a 2027 work stoppage has been floating in the background for a while now, tied to the upcoming expiration of the current collective bargaining agreement.

How will this affect our Sox?

The easy answer is that it depends a lot on where they are in their timeline. The more honest answer is that uncertainty alone is part of the problem.

If the South Siders are still in a rebuild, a work stoppage could be a real gut punch. Lost time means fewer reps for prospects, fewer opportunities to evaluate talent at the major league level, and a disrupted rhythm for Chris Getz and the front office that’s trying to figure out what it actually has. We know how important development is, especially for teams like the Sox, leaning on young players to take that next step.

On the other hand, if 2027 is supposed to be part of a competitive window, the stakes are even higher. A shortened season or delayed start compresses everything. Hot starts matter more. Slumps hurt more. Depth gets tested differently. And for a team that’s trying to prove it belongs, losing even a part of a season can feel like losing an entire opportunity.

Then there’s the financial side. We know that the White Sox aren’t a team that operates at the very top of the spending scale, and uncertainty tends to make cautious teams even more cautious. A looming or ongoing work stoppage could impact free-agent decisions, extensions (Munetaka Murakami), or even mid-tier signings — the exact types of moves that often shape how competitive this team can realistically be.

There’s also a lingering memory factor here. The 2021–22 MLB lockout didn’t just delay the season — it froze pretty much the entire offseason and created a weird, rushed sprint once things resumed. Teams that were prepared adapted. Others looked like they were playing catch-up from day one. It’s not hard to imagine a similar dynamic playing out again.

And maybe the biggest thing? Momentum.

Baseball is a sport that thrives on routine and rhythm. For an organization like the White Sox, which has spent the last few years trying to develop a new clubhouse identity, that kind of interruption could hit harder than it would for a more established contender.

At the same time, there’s an argument that a stoppage could level the playing field a bit. Every team deals with the same pause. Every roster gets thrown off schedule. In theory, it creates a reset button. But resets aren’t always neutral. Some teams need continuity more than others.

So the question isn’t just will a 2027 work stoppage affect the White Sox — it’s how it would hit them.

If it lands during another transitional year, it could slow everything down. If it lands right as they’re turning the corner, it could derail something meaningful. If it lands when they’re already struggling well, then it might just blend into the background noise.

That’s the unfortunate part of all this. The impact of something like a work stoppage isn’t just about the league; it’s about timing, and the White Sox haven’t exactly given anyone a clear sense yet of where that timing will fall.

How much do you think a potential 2027 work stoppage would impact the White Sox specifically, or is it just one of those league-wide issues that ends up affecting everyone the same?

SF Giants News: Oracle Park removes popular/controversial concession package

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - AUGUST 27: A view of the San Francisco Giants Clubhouse Store before a MLB game between the San Francisco Giants and the Chicago Cubs on August 27, 2025 at Oracle Park in San Francisco, CA. (Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

According to reporting from Gabe Fernandez of SFGate, the San Francisco Giants have removed a food item that was both popular and controversial from availability at Oracle Park.

The Giants were among a handful of teams who had released a “9-9-9 challenge” concession package earlier this season. The challenge is essentially to eat nine hot dogs and drink nine beers over nine innings. I think you’re technically supposed to do one of each per inning.

The package was, ostensibly, quite a steal at $54.99 for nine of each item. Or at least it would have been if they were full size. But the package apparently included miniature sized hot dogs and beers. Which might be a gimmicky version of the challenge, and probably better for the health of anyone adventurous enough to try it, but it didn’t exactly live up to expectations that many fans may have had.

But I guess that’s okay, because according to Fernandez’ reporting, the park quietly stopped selling the packages earlier this month. Whether that was more to do with the fan reaction, lack of inventory, or if they’ve just decided it’s probably not a good idea on the whole. Who can say. They certainly didn’t, because they did not respond to SFGate’s request for a comment.

Question of the day: Would you be willing to try the “9-9-9 challenge” if they become available again?

Personally, I don’t think I would be interested, even if they increased the sizes to match the actual spirit of the challenge. There are some things best done in moderation, especially at my age. But if any of you young whippersnappers ever get a chance to try it, you’ll have to let us know how it goes.

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants wrap up their three-game road series against the Philadelphia Phillies later this morning at 10:05 a.m. PT.

Nolan Gorman’s defense, “protecting” Jordan Walker

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - APRIL 13: Nolan Gorman #16 of the St. Louis Cardinals fields the ball against the Cleveland Guardians at Busch Stadium on April 13, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Dilip Vishwanat/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In the comments, when discussing Jordan Walker, Memphis Myke wondered if it mattered that Jordan Walker had minimal protection in the lineup, since he’s followed by Nolan Gorman. Who hasn’t really hit at all this year. Gorman does have a surprisingly high number of RBIs though considering his poor hitting thus far. He has 18 RBIs in 29 games. And not that he’d play in 162 games, but that’s 100 RBIs over a full season.

Breaking news: RBIs don’t tell you how good a hitter is. Also Gorman driving in runs has not a lot to do with protection as it pertains to Jordan Walker. Pitchers don’t see Gorman on deck and see the RBIs and think “well now I have to pitch to Jordan Walker.” They see the .214 average, the .357 slugging, and the 79 wRC+. You’d rather face him than Jordan Walker.

I instinctively said that protection is a myth. I read an article years ago on this very site that looked at the performance of the #2 hitters in front of Albert Pujols, and they didn’t really play much differently in that spot than in other parts of the lineup. I could not find that article. I did find an article by Tom Tango, however, talking about protection.

And his conclusions were indeed that pitchers pitched a little differently to hitters if there was a strong hitter behind them versus not. If you have a weak hitter behind you, they will probably pitch around you. Both BB% and K% increase with a weak hitter. Interestingly though, if you actually make contact with the ball, there’s no difference. What he terms a protected hitter is not seeing better pitches to hit. Pitchers still don’t want to give a good hitter a pitch to hit, and it doesn’t matter how good the hitter is behind him.

The entire point of protecting a batter is to improve his offensive output (wOBA) by forcing the opposing pitcher to pitch to him. And indeed, we saw above that opposing pitchers pitch to protected hitters, something that is evidenced by the fewer walks. However, when the ball is put into play, we see no significant difference between how the two sets of hitters perform. The unprotected hitters have a wOBA of .395 (counting only balls that are hit), compared with .391 for protected hitters. The difference of .004 is not statistically significant. 

…..

However, what we hoped to find was that, when pitchers pitch around the corners, batters tend to make worse contact (if they make contact at all). And we don’t see this. Instead, we again find that, if walks are ignored, the two types of hitters perform equivalently in wOBA. (The slight increase in strikeouts is compensated by a slight increase in the fraction of balls hit well when contact is made.) In short, we simply cannot find any evidence to suggest that the pitcher’s approach has any significant impact on the batter’s stats, aside from the obvious changes in walks and strikeouts.

So a couple of interesting takeaways here. The good news is that it doesn’t seem like the hitter behind him matters at all when it comes to contact quality. His batted ball data should not be affected. His overall performance should be the same. But it could also explain the strikeouts and the higher walk rate this season. Again though, pitchers saw what Jordan Walker was doing, and then adjusted the way they pitched to him. This had nothing to do with a weaker hitter behind him. If prime Albert Pujols was behind him, they’d try their best to avoid Walker hitting the ball.

Nolan Gorman’s defense

In an interesting twist, the early returns on Nolan Gorman’s defense are very, very good. Unsustainably good certainly. But if he’s good on defense at 3B, then he’ll have an MLB job for quite a while, even if it doesn’t end up being on the Cards. A defense-first 3B who once jacked 27 homers? Yeah that guy would get lots of chances. Of course, we don’t know if he’s actually a good defender. Way too small of a sample size.

But, just to illustrate the importance of him being a good defender, I wanted to present what a +5 defender at 3B looks like with different offensive outcomes. Last year for example, it could have been the yips, but he was -6 OAA in 410 innings. The offensive bar is quite high if your defense is that bad. It would take a lot of faith in Nolan Gorman the hitter that I just don’t think people have.

But maybe he can reach a much lower bar and maybe if he does reach that, he still has a frustrating way to be an average overall player. Hey these are the kinds of things that we need to find out. Prior to last season, he had a combined 126 innings at 3B in the majors. Then, like I said, I think something mental was going on, because he kept throwing it wildly off, and that’s not been an issue this season. He has pretty much passed the eye test, and certainly it’s obvious how much better he is than last year. It’s not like we’re seeing the same thing and getting wildly different results.

So I will present a few different outcomes just to illustrate the importance of him actually being good on defense. I’ll show you Gorman as 85 wRC+ hitter, which would be a career low, as a 95 wRC+ hitter, a 105 wRC+ hitter, and just for fun a 120 wRC+ hitter. And we’ll see how each of those hitting lines work with a -5 defender at 3B, a neutral defender at 3B, and a +5 defender at 3B. We’ll start with more or less worst case scenario:

85 wRC+, -5 defender = 0.5 WAR (per 600 PAs)

95 wRC+, -5 defender = 1.2 WAR

105 wRC+, -5 defender = 2 WAR

120 wRC+, -5 defender = 3 WAR

Not ideal, although I will point out he doesn’t need to be an especially good hitter to still be average here. My faith in Nolan Gorman the batter is not very high, but a 105 wRC+ isn’t crazy to imagine for me. He’s done it twice in his career. That said, not a super appealing profile here. Gorman won’t get 600 PAs if he’s a 105 wRC+ hitter and a bad defender, so he wouldn’t reach 2 WAR. Let’s take the conservative approach, probably what we’re “supposed” to do in this situation, assume an average defender:

85 wRC+, 0 defender = 1 WAR

95 wRC+, 0 defender = 1.8 WAR

105 wRC+, 0 defender = 2.5 WAR

120 wRC+, 0 defender = 3.6 WAR

Again, remember where Gorman was at last year. I would have for sure taken it if you could guarantee me Gorman was an average defensive 3B. With this version, predictably, his offense dictates how good he is. Below average hitter, he’s more of a bench player. Average or better and he’s a starting caliber player.

85 wRC+, +5 defender = 1.6 WAR

95 wRC+, +5 defender = 2.3 WAR

105 wRC+, +5 defender = 3 WAR

120 wRC+, +5 defender = 4.1 WAR

And the best case scenario is he’s a genuinely good defender, because even the career low wRC+ is a solid sub, if not necessarily someone you want as your starter. If he gets close to average offensively, he is solidly in above average player territory. And if we combine that with good hitting, then he’s either a great trade candidate or someone you hold onto.

My approach to Gorman turned into “trade him even if he breaks out” because I didn’t trust him to maintain his production. If he’s a good defender, this does change somewhat. He goes from fool’s gold to a high floor guy who might hit 40 homers one year. If I have to bank on him being a good hitter, I’m not a fan. If being a good hitter is just a bonus, then I can roll with that. Doesn’t even matter if it’s unlikely he becomes a good hitter.

Why don’t we relive this Matt Olson walkoff homer again?

Apr 29, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves first baseman Matt Olson (28) does an interview with reporter Wiley Ballard after a walk-off two-run home run against the Detroit Tigers in the ninth inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

In case you weren’t watching, the NL East leading Braves won yet another baseball game last night. They will end April without losing a series. And Matt Olson won it in the ninth. In case you haven’t seen it, where have you been?

Oh my word.

Here’s the longer clip.

Here it is from CJ Nitkowski’s seat

Let’s take it all in again. There aren’t a lot of pictures in the CMS for this, but the ones in there are great. I’ll add a few screengrabs. First, watch the usher/support staff guy. He was the second one to know it was gone.

These blurry images of the guy beside him in the Clemson/Auburn themed Braves hat.

This one goes straight into the Louvre.

Here’s Olson, about as animated as you will see him.

The bullpen enjoyed it just a little.

Here’s Olson, still pumped.

Arrival at the plate

Michael Harris II with the bubble gum shower.

Ronnie with the chest bump

Wiley Ballard thinking “oh no they’re screaming in my ear to grab Matt but they’re gonna take him right into the clubhouse”

Celebratory Gatorade bath (forgive the weird MSPaint cropping and stretching)

Forgive me, but you have to enjoy the little things. For one moment yesterday, this was everyone.

Thursday Rockpile: For Ezequiel Tovar, plate appearances might as well start 0-1

HOUSTON, TEXAS - APRIL 16: Ezequiel Tovar #14 of the Colorado Rockies in action during an at bat in the fourth inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on April 16, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Colorado Rockies are off to a strong start.

The pitching has been surprisingly solid as a whole, and the lineup has seen good performances from Hunter Goodman, Mickey Moniak, and Edouard Julien.

It hasn’t all been perfect, however. Tyler Freeman, TJ Rumfield, and Kyle Karros have shown some good signs amongst their overall mixed start, but the list of outright disappointments for this team so far is astonishingly small.

Given his track record the biggest underperformance so far for the 2026 Rockies is probably Ezequiel Tovar and the .193/.228/.294 triple slash line he had heading into Wednesday.

The obvious answer as to what is holding Tovar’s offensive potential back is easy to diagnose: He chases too many pitches outside the zone. So far this season, he leads the league in terms of swinging at pitches outside the zone with a mind boggling 48.7% chase rate.

That’s right, Tovar is swinging at just under half of the would-be balls he sees.

The thing is, that’s not really too different from his career averages.

Swinging at pitches he shouldn’t be has been Tovar’s most obvious flaw for his entire career. During his 3.7 fWAR season in 2024, he had a 44.1% Chase %, which was second in MLB behind only Ceddanne Rafaela of the Red Sox. It has been worse in 2026, but not by a significant margin that would explain the stark difference in productivity between the two seasons.

What’s interesting is that Tovar is actually making contact with pitches outside the zone more than he ever has. His chase contact rate has ballooned from being in the 46-48% range each of the past three seasons all the way up to 57.9% so far this year.

That sounds like a good thing. However, simply making contact with the ball does not necessarily mean it’s just a matter of time before his BABIP luck evens out. That may be some of it — as his overall BABIP is noticeably lower than his career average — but the quality of the contact also needs to be addressed.

In 2026, he is fouling off 25.1% of all pitches he sees while all of his previous seasons were in the 22% range. To go along with that spike in foul balls, his hard hit % has dropped nearly 3%, his average exit velocity has decreased nearly 2 mph, and his line drive percentage has dropped nearly 7%.

The biggest year-over-year change in Tovar’s stat line is his first-pitch swing percentage. In 2024, Tovar began 68.2% of his plate appearances with a strike, in 2025 he did so on 66.4%, and so far in 2026, it has been a truly wild 77.2%. That is a substantial increase, and all of it is accounted for by his 12.9% increase in first-pitch swings up to 59.6%.

Essentially, Tovar seems to be firing at the first pitch, finding himself behind in the count, and quickly adopting a two-strike mentality where he tries to fight off all the borderline pitches. This is a recipe for lots of contact without any productive results to show for it.

The solution is clearly for him to get better plate discipline, see the ball better, and make better swing decisions.

That’s much easier said than done.

We’ve now got over three seasons worth of data on Tovar, and it’s safe to say his poor plate discipline is part of his game and here to stay. He’s not suddenly going to become a patient hitter.

With all of that being said, the place to start is probably trying to get him to agree to simply not swing at the first pitch unless it’s a meatball right down the middle. This would likely give him some breathing room later in the count and reduce the strikeout pressure on every pitch. That one simple change is likely not a magic bullet to solve all of his problems but it absolutely would help.


On the Farm

Triple-A:Albuquerque Isotopes 6, El Paso Chihuahuas 7

A close game in which the Isotopes fell just short of catching up to the early runs from the Chihuahuas. Parker Mushinkski did not perform well as the opener and was pulled after only two outs and three runs. Gabriel Hughes pitched the bulk of the innings and allowed another four runs alongside eight strikeouts. The offensive side was more favorable with both Sterlin Thompson and Cole Carrigg reaching base three times and Carrigg even stole three bags.

Double-A:Hartford Yard Goats 6, Reading Fightin Phils 2

Pitching and the long ball was the story of the night in Reading. The Yard Goats scored six runs on only six hits and five walks thanks to home runs from all of Bryant Betancourt, Aidan Longwell, and Roc Riggio. On the mound Konnor Eaton, Carlos Torres, Austin Smith, and Sam Weatherly completed the nine inning relay race only allowing two runs while striking out twelve despite none of them pitching more than four innings.

High-A:Spokane Indians 1, Eugene Emeralds 3

Jeff Criswell made his first official appearance on a rehab assignment after undergoing Tommy John surgery early last year. Given that it was his first appearance back, the two runs allowed were less important a measure than simply the fact that he was able to get through a full inning. He was followed by six great innings from Jackson Cox who struck out nine and only allowed one more run. At the plate, the best performance was from Tevin Tucker who had a walk, double, and stolen base.

Low-A:Fresno Grizzlies 9, Stockton Ports 8

This wasn’t quite a pitchers duel. JB Middleton walked six in 2.2 innings to start off the game for the Yard Goats but Seth Clausen did record a perfect two inning save to preserve the lineup’s hard work. At the plate there were more good performances than not: Clayton Gray was on base four times, Clayton Fossum had two doubles, Roldy Brito had a couple hits including a double. The thing you really want to see, however, is Ethan Holliday at the plate with the bases loaded in the second inning.


Rockies Already Seeing Immediate Returns From Edouard Julien Trade | SI.com

Seth Dowdle takes a quick look at Edouard Julien’s career leading up to his trade to Colorado this offseason and how that has led into his hot start with the Rockies. Dowdle gives credit to the Paul DePodesta-led front office for identifying Julien as exactly the type of bat this team needed.

Strike 2: Former No. 1 overall draft pick Moniak might become an All-Star for the Rockies | Mile High Sports

Mark Knudson, on the other hand, gives credit where it’s due to the Bill Schmidt-led front office for having taken a chance on Mickey Moniak after a poor start to his career. Knudson makes the case that Moniak could end up being the Rockies representative at the All-Star game this year, which is only really in question because of how many other players are also off to hot starts.

Feltner begins throwing program, hoping to avoid Minor League rehab | MLB.com

Thomas Harding talked with Ryan Feltner about being placed on the Injured List and his next steps. Feltner does not make his injury sound overly serious and appears to be attempting to follow in the footsteps of José Quintana and Kyle Freeland with a minimum stay on the IL.


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Orioles minor league recap 4/30: Irish and Aloy homer in Frederick win

CLEARWATER, FL - MARCH 13: Baltimore Orioles Outfielder Ike Irish (97) and Infielder Wehiwa Aloy (95) walk back to the dugout before the spring training game between the New York Yankees and the Philadelphia Phillies on March 13, 2026 at BayCare Ballpark in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Triple-A: Nashville Sounds (Brewers) 7, Norfolk Tides 4

It’s almost impressive that the Tides lineup managed to go 0-for-12 with runners in scoring position, largely squandering their nine hits and five walks. Jud Fabian drove in two of the runs with his sixth home run of the year. He also walked once and scored twice. Creed Willems and Jhonkensy Noel had one RBI apiece. Jonathan Rodríguez and Christian Encarnacion-Strand each had two hits. Encarancion-Strand added a walk and now has a .905 OPS on the year.

There was some good and some bad on the mound. Nestor German started and deliver four mixed innings. He only allowed one run on three hits and two strikeouts, but also issued six walks. Dietrich Enns coughed up a run over two innings while striking out three. Alex Pham also allowed one run in his two frames. But it was Josh Walker that really struggled, recording just two outs and allowing four runs, which included a walk-off three-run shot.

Double-A: Erie SeaWolves (Tigers) 7, Chesapeake Baysox 3

Chesapeake had just four hits. One of them was a home run by Aron Estrada, his third of the year. Adam Retzbach and Ethan Anderson contributed one double and one run apiece. Thomas Sosa had the team’s only other RBI.

Five different Baysox took the mound in this one. Luis De León started and went 3.1 innings, allowing five runs (four earned) on four hits, three walks, four strikeouts, and two home runs. His ERA is up to 6.52 on the year. Micah Ashman had the most impressive outing of the day, striking out three over 1.2 shutout innings. Yaqui Rivera followed with a perfect frame, setting down all three batters he faced on strikes. Eric Torres gave up two runs (one earned) over 1.2 innings before Carlos Tavera recorded the final out of the eighth inning.

High-A: Frederick Keys 5, Brooklyn Cyclones (Mets) 0

All but one Frederick hitter reached based at least once in the winning effort. Ike Irish and Wehiwa Aloy both hit their four home runs of the season. Irish’s was a two-run shot while Aloy’s was just a solo. Colin Tuft had two hits, a walk, two stolen bases, and a run scored. Victor Figueroa doubled and drove in a run. Braylin Tavera went 1-for-4 with an RBI and two stolen bases. Leandro Arias walked twice and stole a bag.

The Keys pitchers had a great day. JT Quinn delivered five shutout innings, giving up just three hits and two walks while striking out five. Michael Caldon worked 2.2 shutout innings in relief. Joe Glassey wrapped up the game by recording the final four outs, which included three strikeouts.

Low-A: Hill City Howlers (Guardians) 4, Delmarva Shorebirds 0

The Shorebirds’ tough season continued here. Their lineup collected just two hits, both of which were singles. Joshua Liranzo and Andrés Nolaya had one each. DJ Layton, the team’s lead-off hitter, did walk twice, but he was also picked off and caught stealing after one of them. The team went hitless in the five at-bats they had with a runner in scoring position.

Brayan Orrantia allowed four runs in his 4.2 innings of work, but only two of the runs were earned due to the three errors that the Delmarva defense made behind him. Orrantia made one of the errors himself. Adrian Heredia allowed one of the runners he inherited to score but then worked 1.1 shutout innings of his own. Riley Cooper struck out four over two perfect frames. Kenny Leiner came on in the ninth to pitch and allowed the two batters he faced to reach base before rain ended the game right there.

Box Scores

Thursday’s Schedule

Norfolk: at Nashville, Game 1, 6:35 pm. Starter: Levi Wells (1-2, 4.84 ERA)

Norfolk: at Nashville, Game 2, TBD. Starter: Cameron Weston (0-0, 3.38 ERA)

Chesapeake: at Erie, 6:05 pm. Starter: Sebastian Gongora (0-0, 3.18 ERA)

Frederick: vs Brooklyn, 6:40 pm. Starter: Boston Bateman (0-2, 9.82 ERA)

Delmarva: vs Hill City, 7:05 pm. Starter: Esteban Mejia (0-2, 7.15 ERA)

Tigers vs Braves Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Detroit Tigers hope to avoid the series broom when they meet the Atlanta Braves this afternoon at Truist Park.

While their offense has been relatively quiet during this series, my Tigers vs. Braves predictions expect the visitors' bats to boom today. 

Read on for my MLB picks for Wednesday, April 30. 

Who will win Tigers vs Braves today: Tigers moneyline (+115)

The market is overvaluing Atlanta Braves starter Bryce Elder’s 1.95 ERA while ignoring a 3.77 xFIP that signals massive regression. 

Elder’s 16th-percentile velocity (91.8 mph) and 28th-percentile whiff rate are a death sentence against a Detroit Tigers "heart of the order" that is currently nuclear. 

Over the last week, Spencer Torkelson (323 wRC+) and Riley Greene (219 wRC+) have punished mistakes, and their elite plate discipline (10% BB rate) will force Elder into the zone. 

Getting plus-money on an overpriced pitcher primed for regression is the ultimate value play.

Covers COVERS INTEL:The Detroit offense ranks fifth with a 133 wRC+ across their last seven games. 

Tigers vs Braves Over/Under pick: Over 8.5 (+100)


While the bullpens remain relatively fresh after Wednesday’s efficient relief outings, this getaway-day total is still too low. 

Elder’s lucky .238 BABIP faces a Detroit offense featuring three hitters with wRC+ marks north of 190 this week

On the other side, Framber Valdez faces an Atlanta lineup that has historically punished him, highlighted by Ozzie Albies' career 1.300 OPS in the matchup. 

With 65% humidity and the wind blowing out at Truist Park and two starters who rely heavily on contact management, expect the "expected" power metrics to finally manifest in a high-scoring finale.

Phil Naessens' 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 4-9, -4.20 units
  • Over/Under bets: 5-7, -2.16 units

Tigers vs Braves odds

  • Moneyline: Tigers +108 | Braves -113
  • Run line: Tigers -1.5 (+144) | Braves +1.5 (-194)
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 (-100) | Under 8.5 (-117)

Tigers vs Braves trend

The Detroit Tigers have hit the 1st Five Innings (F5) Moneyline in 10 of their last 18 games (+4.40 Units / 17% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Tigers vs. Braves.

How to watch Tigers vs Braves and game info

LocationTruist Park, Atlanta, GA
DateThursday, April 30, 2026
First pitch12:15 p.m. ET
TVDSN, BravesVision
Tigers starting pitcherFramber Valdez
(2-1, 3.41 ERA)
Braves starting pitcherBryce Elder
(3-1, 1.95 ERA)

Tigers vs Braves latest injuries

Tigers vs Braves weather

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