With the Celtics and Bruins done, the Red Sox take center stage… for better or worse

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MAY 02: Roman Anthony #19 of the Boston Red Sox slides back to first during a pick-off attempt in the fifth inning against the Houston Astros at Fenway Park on May 02, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Jaiden Tripi/Getty Images) | Getty Images

That week sucked, man.

Even with a couple of wins for the Red Sox here and there, I think we can go ahead and generally chalk up the recent play we’ve seen one week into the post-Cora era as “uninspiring” as this dreadful start to the season slugs along. Another series L against Houston only reinforces how bored I am with this team. It’s a shitty feeling. I need the spark to be back within my baseball-related life.

Say what you want about the dismissal of the manager and members of his coaching staff (which, believe me, we have here at OTM) but all of the warts of the 2026 team were not gonna magically disappear with them. The lineup, by and large, is still not doing enough to succeed. Most of the starting pitching staff—something that was supposed to be a strong foundation of this team—is either hurt or hasn’t met the standard. We’re staring down a pair of games in Detroit this week against two of the best left-handed pitchers in the sport—a pair of guys who already shoved against us recently—along with a series at the end of the week against a good Rays team. It could get real spooky by the time I sit down to write the next MMBB. We got outfielders throwin’ their hands up at infielders, we got hit pieces comin’ in, our pets’ heads are fallin’ off—the vibes are just putrid right now, even if I did find a pair of positive things to talk about in this edition of the Brushback. Little victories, people.

And here’s the kicker: we’re now the main show in town. The C’s and B’s biting the dust means the stage is ours. The ire in Boston will be squared directly on the Sox. Sometimes I feel that talking points like that are a bit corny, but the bad vibes could be even worse if the boys don’t turn this around fast. The old adage is that you can really start panicking by Memorial Day, right? Well, the calendar just turned to May. I don’t want this 2026 campaign to get out of hand, though it just might.

It’s Monday Morning Brushback time, y’all.

Bell-oh, No

I feel like I’ve stuck my neck out for Brayan Bello over the last few years. Whether it’s here on OTM or on Pod On Lansdowne, in person or online, I’ve given him grace. Just a few weeks ago on this very site, I wrote in a Brushback article that I still believe there’s a good pitcher in there somewhere in spite of what was (and still is) a real rough start to 2026.

Since that shout out, things have only gotten worse for Bello. In seven innings over his last two starts, he’s surrendered 19 hits (and three walks, so not as bad I guess?) and 12 runs—all of ‘em earned. His ERA has now ballooned beyond 9 and his WHIP is a ghastly 2.26. He’s gotten some more swing-and-miss in his game, sure, but that isn’t resulting in K’s. I’ll concede that hasn’t been his game in the past, but the qualities he’s shown in the past have also been mid. He’s technically keeping the ball on the ground a lot, I suppose, but is that because everyone right now knows they can tee off of him? I suppose not every ball can be barreled up (although Bello’s body of work seems to be trying to disprove that notion considering his barrel rate sits in the 7th percentile as I’m writing this), right?

I’m baffled at how bad this has been for Bello. I can’t really tell you exactly what’s causing this, because so much of the stuff under the hood looks bad. My patience is wearing thin, if it’s not completely gone already. I’ll leave it to others to dive deep on his body language when he’s being taken off of the hill and whatnot, but the fact of the matter is that he’s only made it through five full innings in one of his six starts. Hell, he’s only made it into the fifth twice! It is, simply put, unacceptable stuff from number 66. If he doesn’t want to get all pissed off, I’d suggest he stop throwing absolute cookies that are practically tailor-made for clobbering en route to another outing where he fails to qualify for a winning decision.

Interim manager Chad Tracy said they might utilize an opening pitcher for Bello’s next start. Maybe that does something; it worked for Nick Pivetta a few years ago if you recall. Or maybe it does nothing at all and it’s just window dressing. Either way, I don’t think a trip down to Worcester is out of the question for him in the near future, especially when you remember that he’s still got minor league options remaining. The issue is that the amount of MLB-caliber arms available for Boston at this point in time is thin (although it sounds like Sonny Gray could return soon), so the team might feel like they need to have Bello out there to eat more innings.

(Note: Of course, now it looks like Ranger Suarez is hurt. I’m writing this just as we’re all finding out that he got pulled after just four innings. Yikes.)

While that might be true, I think the clock’s ticking here folks. Something’s gotta change or something’s gotta give. Not to repeat myself, but Bello’s pitching has been unacceptable for a team claiming to contend for something this season. Figure it out, man.

HEY MAYERRRRRRR!!!!!!!

I know the production at the plate fell off towards the end of his cup of coffee in 2025 and it was a slow start for him to begin 2026, but infielder Marcelo Mayer has impressed me with the lumber recently. His nine-game hit streak came to a close in Saturday’s loss, sure, but his OPS climbed over .100 over that stretch (.549 to .685; gotta start somewhere, right?) while he struck out just once in that same time frame.

The strikeouts—or lack thereof—for Mayer have certainly been the most positive development in my book. His swing was always beautiful and we’ve seen flashes of the type of hard contact he can make when he’s on, but he struck out about 30% of the time across his 136 plate appearances last year. Entering play on Sunday, he’s almost slashed that K-rate in half; he had only struck out 16.3% of the time, good for the 79th percentile in the league prior to Sunday’s action.

The reasoning behind that, simply put, is that he’s not chasing at junk. For a team that has so many noncompetitive ABs over the first month-and-change of the season, Mayer’s plate approach recently has been a breath of fresh air.

Now, of course, the point about limiting strikeouts is all well and good, but it isn’t everything. Mayer’s offensive production is still subpar at the end of the day. The OPS still starts with a 6 since he’s not excelling at either component of that formula. It remains to be seen if he can continue to deliver against left-handed pitchers, though Tracy has said he wants to give him more looks against those guys (thankfully).

But the building blocks to Marcelo’s continued offensive development are showing themselves now. It’s gonna be hard for a 23-year-old to make any sort of progress with the bat if the ingredients aren’t in place. If he’s staying competitive in the box and not bailing pitchers out by chasing at stuff out of the zone, that sets the table for everything else. His swing is beautiful, he controls the bat on a good plane, and his bat speed is very good. If he’s pairing good swing decisions with his physical tools, then I believe that positive regression is in the cards for Mayer.

Maybe that Car Shield heckler motivated him to be better.

Bennett’s Beginnings

A hearty congratulations to lefty Jake Bennett on making his MLB debut Friday night and logging his first victory! He threw five innings en route to the W, as he struck out a trio of ’Stros while surrendering just one earned run. It was a perfectly cromulent debut for the 25-year-old.

Three words on what you can perhaps expect from Mr. Bennett, courtesy of the wonderful Prospect Savant resource: extension, extension, extension. CBO Craig Breslow loves pitchers who are literally letting go of the ball closer to the plate than the average bear, and Bennett’s got that in spades as evidence by his 93rd percentile extension within the Arizona Fall League. He doesn’t throw insanely hard (easy for me to say that a fastball sitting at around 95 MPH isn’t that fast, I suppose) but the location and command he’s shown has been impressive; MLB Pipeline rated him a 60-grade command guy on the 20-80 scale. The 4SFB-change-sinker triumvirate looks to be his main offerings, as he threw those three offerings 74 out of 85 times on Friday.

Pipeline writes: “He has a high floor as a No. 4 starter and Boston believes it can help him add some more strength and velocity, which could make him more than that.” I’ll take that, especially right now given the pitching injuries. Crochet and Gray, like I said earlier, won’t be on the mend terribly long (although I have no idea what the deal with Suarez is right now, TBD), but those IL stints along with the performance of the guy who I just wrote about could open the door for some more Bennett appearances.

One thing to watch the next time Bennett’s out on the bump, perhaps, is the walks. He issued two free passes on Friday, but historically that’s not been an issue for him. He walked just 6% of batters in the AFL a few months back, and again: that control is damn good.

Bennett could be a quite useful pitcher to have, and his emergence could be coming at the right time for Boston. I’m interested to see him continue to develop.

Song of the Week: “Nothin’ But The Taillights” by Clint Black

A lil’ honky-tonk action for ya to begin the week.

Same time and same place next week, friends! Go Sox.

Tarik Skubal Again? Ugh, Really?

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 18: Starting pitcher Tarik Skubal #29 of the Detroit Tigers throws in the first inning against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on April 18, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Jaiden Tripi/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hello and happy Monday, folks.

The Boston Red Sox baseball club is at it again tonight. They travel to Detroit to face the Tigers in the first of a three-game series. First pitch from the Motor City is 6:40 EST. The best lefty on the planet will be taking to the mound, as Payton Tolle faces off against Tarik Skubal. I’ll let you guess who that best lefty on Earth is.

Seriously, though, Skubal again? This soon after the last time we saw him? Man, that’s annoying. Here’s hoping he doesn’t totally carve us up again.

Can our guys do better than driving in just one run across six innings, like what happened when Tarik pitched at Fenway a few weeks back? Can we improve on the four hits and two walks we registered that time around? I’m gonna guess no, but who’s to say!

Be good to each other and go Sox.

2026 NL Central Power Rankings: Week 6

May 2, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Milwaukee Brewers right fielder Sal Frelick (10) and shortstop Joey Ortiz (3) celebrate after the game against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Brad Mills-Imagn Images | Brad Mills-Imagn Images

Welcome to week 6 of our 2026 NL Central Power Rankings — let’s rank some teams!

1. Chicago Cubs (22-12); 5-1 this week; 82.8% chance to make postseason (FanGraphs)

The Cubs had another strong week, winning five straight over the Padres and D-backs after dropping their series opener in San Diego on Monday night.

Moisés Ballesteros and Pete Crow-Armstrong each slugged a pair of homers for Chicago this week, though they certainly weren’t the Cubs’ best hitters. Ian Happ and Seiya Suzuki tied for the team lead with six hits, each adding a homer. Happ also led the team with seven runs scored, adding a pair of doubles and a triple, too.

Shota Imanaga had the best start of the week for Chicago, going seven scoreless with five strikeouts in his outing. For the bullpen, HOby Milner totaled 2 2/3 scoreless frames over three outings, striking out two and picking up a save. Jacob Webb and Ben Brown also picked up a save each.

Chicago now hosts the Reds for four games beginning Monday night before beginning a nine-game road trip this weekend, starting in Texas against the Rangers.

2. St. Louis Cardinals (20-14); 6-1 this week; 26.2% chance to make postseason

Before I go any further, I just want to say that I had a very difficult time ordering the bottom four in these rankings. I can see a case for having any of these teams in the No. 2, No. 3, No. 4, or No. 5 spot. Based on the fact that the Cardinals swept the Pirates and the Pirates swept the Reds, though, I felt I must order those three teams in that order. That just left the Brewers to slot somewhere in the pack. Continuing on…

As I just mentioned, the Cards swept the Pirates in a four-game series to begin the week, and they then stretched that win streak to six with a pair of wins over the Dodgers before dropping Sunday’s series finale.

It was a big week on the power front for St. Louis, as Alec Burleson, Nolan Gorman, Jordan Walker, and JJ Wetherholt all had two homers apiece. Burleson and Wetherholt also added three doubles each, with Burleson and Walker leading the team with 11 hits on the week (and 11 RBIs each, too). Victor Scott and Walker each swiped a pair of bags, and Iván Herrera added three doubles and eight walks for a .469 OBP this week.

Andre Pallante and Michael McGreevy turned in solid starts this week, as Pallante went six innings with one run allowed and six strikeouts, and McGreevy went six scoreless frames with three strikeouts. Riley O’Brien got two more saves, and George Soriano added a save of his own. Ryan Fernandez and Gordon Graceffo both had scoreless weeks for the bullpen, with Fernandez going two perfect innings with four strikeouts and Graceffo spanning four innings over three appearances.

St. Louis now welcomes the Brewers to twon for three games before they head west to take on the Padres and A’s over the next week.

3. Milwaukee Brewers (18-15); 4-2 this week; 41.4% chance to make postseason

The Brewers took two of three against both the D-backs and Nationals this week, moving back to three games above .500 by the end of the weekend.

Sal Frelick managed to lead the Brewers with two homers this week, though he had just five hits total. William Contreras led the offense with 11 hits on the week, including a homer and a double, as he also led the team with nine RBIs and seven runs scored. Tyler Black made the most of limited opportunities, going 7-for-13 with three doubles and seven RBIs in four games this week. Brice Turang added eight hits and seven runs over 17 at-bats.

Jacob Misiorowski went 5 1/3 no-hit innings in his start on Friday night, striking out eight and allowing just two walks. Logan Henderson took the loss on Sunday but was solid overall, striking out eight and allowing two runs on three hits and no walks. Shane Drohan, Jake Woodford, DL Hall, Easton McGee, Abner Uribe, and Trevor Megill all had solid weeks for Milwaukee’s bullpen, with Woodford and Uribe picking up a save apiece.

The Crew wraps up the road trip in St. Louis to begin the week before an off day on Thursday. They’ll then welcome the Yankees to Milwaukee for three games beginning on Friday.

4. Pittsburgh Pirates (19-16); 3-4 this week; 60.1% chance to make postseason

The Pirates had an odd week, as they were swept by the Cardinals over four games before bouncing back to sweep the Reds this weekend, finishing their homestand with a 3-4 record.

Henry Davis picked up a pair of homers this week for the Bucs, with seven other players adding a homer each. Nick Gonzales led the team with 11 hits, though he had just one extra-base hit (a double), while rookie Konnor Griffin added 10 hits, including a homer, two doubles, and a triple, slashing .370/.433/.630 for the week. Ryan O’Hearn and Bryan Reynolds each had eight hits.

Braxton Ashcraft had a really rough start against St. Louis but bounced back nicely on Sunday against the Reds, spanning 7 2/3 scoreless innings with six strikeouts on just 82 pitches. Mitch Keller also turned in a solid start, going seven innings with one run allowed and six strikeouts. Wilber Dotel, Justin Lawrence, Mason Montgomery, Cam Sanders, and Gregory Soto had scoreless weeks for the bullpen, totaling 11 2/3 innings with nine strikeouts between them.

Pittsburgh now heads to Arizona and San Francisco, as they’ll take on the D-backs and Giants for three games each beginning Tuesday night in Phoenix.

5. Cincinnati Reds (20-14); 2-4 this week; 27.1% chance to make postseason

The Reds take this final spot mostly because they took a sweep at the hands of the Pirates, even though they’re still tied for second place in the division. Prior to that sweep, they took two of three from the Rockies to begin the week.

It wasn’t a great week for the Cincinnati offense, but Will Benson led the way with a pair of homers and a double. Nathaniel Lowe and Spencer Steer each had six hits, with a homer and two doubles apiece, while Spencer Steer led the team with seven hits, including a homer.

Chase Burns made a pair of solid starts, totaling 13 innings with two runs allowed and a team-high 16 strikeouts. Andrew Abbott picked up the other win in his start, going six quality innings with two runs allowed and five strikeouts. Graham Ashcraft and Sam Moll were the only real bright spots for the bullpen, as they totaled 4 1/3 innings with five strikeouts and no runs allowed this week.

The Reds now head to Chicago to face the Cubs for four games beginning Monday night. They then return home to host the Astros and Nationals beginning Friday.

Guardians News and Notes: Movement in Guardians’ Land

TEMPE, ARIZONA - MARCH 19, 2026: Angel Genao #16 of the Cleveland Guardians in the field during the second inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Los Angeles Angels at Tempe Diablo Stadium on March 19, 2026 in Tempe, Arizona. (Photo by David Durochik/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The Guardians lost to the A’s and moved on to Kansas City while making some significant prospect moves at the same time.

Deborah had the recap. She has really drawn the short straw with Sunday recaps but she always does a good job, anyway. Chase DeLauter homered. The Guardians just couldn’t knock Aaron Civale out, which is annoying. Parker Messick had a rough game, but that’ll happen.

The Guardians promoted Angel Genao to Triple-A Columbus. Genao had a 125 wRC+ at Akron with a 17/21 K/BB%. Making it to Triple-A as a 21 year-old is super impressive. I’d like to see if he can find a little more power (.113 ISO so far) and reduce that 54% groundball rate. I would not expect him to be in Cleveland until 2027, even with this promotion.

Justin Campbell moved from Lake County to Akron. While trying to prove he has put injury concerns behind him, Campbell has put up a 2.40 ERA/1.96 FIP and a 13.2/3 K/BB/9 in High-A. Time to see if he can do the same kind of tortures to Double-A hitters. …If so, things start to get pretty exciting.

Finally, Jaison Chourio moved from Lake County to Akron as well. Chourio has opened with a 142 wRC+, .167 ISO, 18.6/17.5% K/BB. He had 10 games in center, 5 games in right and 2 games in left with the Captains. Nice to see the 20 year-old switch-hitter bouncing back after an uneven 2025.

AROUND MLB:

Tigers, Twins and Royals won, and the White Sox lost. The Tigers and Guardians are tied atop the Central.

NL West report: Piling up losses

ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - MAY 02: Manager Tony Vitello #23 of the San Francisco Giants relieves Landen Roupp #65 in the fifth inning of a game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on May 02, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was a bloodbath in the National League West last week, with all five teams in the division piling up defeats. The Dodgers, Padres, Giants, and Diamondbacks all had their longest losing streaks of the season last week, while the Rockies at four straight losses to end the week was two shy of their worst stretch in 2026.

Neither the Dodgers nor Giants hit a home run all week, and San Francisco lost all six of its games. The entire division combined to go just 6-24 for the week. Brutal.

Division notes

Ildemaro Vargas was hitless on Saturday, which was notable because that’s the first such game for him this year. The utility man, who has played all four infield positions for Arizona, had a 27-game hit streak dating back to 2025, during which he hit .400/.427/.667. Samath and Jim McLennan at AZ Snake Pit examined the longest Diamondbacks hit streak since 1999.

The Giants did not hit a home run in any of their six games last week, and have gone homerless in an MLB-high 21 of their 34 games this season. They have lost 18 of those 21 games, fueling their worst-in-baseball 3.12 runs per game. “Runs have been hard to come by for this club,” wrote Steven Kennedy at McCovey Chronicles. “Wall-clearing power, nearly impossible.”

Mason Miller on Tuesday allowed two runs to the Chicago Cubs, which snapped his scoreless streak at 34 2/3 innings. though the Padres did win that game before their losing streak. Dating back to last year’s trade deadline, Miller has allowed a run in only two of his ..37 games with San Diego.

Samantha Bradfield at Purple Row laid out the details of the Rockies cultural education and development program for their Dominican academy and summer league team.

NL West standings

Dodgers 21-13, – –
Padres 20-13, 0.5 GB
D-backs 16-17, 4.5 GB
Rockies 14-21, 7.5 GB
Giants 13-21, 8 GB

The week ahead

  • Dodgers: at Astros, vs. Braves
  • Padres: at Giants, vs. Cardinals (4 games)
  • D-backs: vs. Pirates, vs. Mets
  • Giants: vs. Padres, vs. Pirates
  • Rockies: vs. Mets, at Phillies

Anthony Edwards injury: Timberwolves give new update on status

The second round of the 2026 NBA playoffs is set to tip off, and a huge injury is looming over the Timberwolves-Spurs series.

Minnesota's All-Star guard Anthony Edwards has been dealing with a left knee hyperextension and bone bruise that he suffered in Game 4 of the first round, missing the final two games of that series against the Nuggets.

Despite that, and the ruptured Achilles tendon injury Donte DiVincenzo suffered, also in Game 4, the Timberwolves closed out Denver in six games.

Here’s everything you need to know about Anthony Edwards’ injury status headed into Game 1 against the San Antonio Spurs:

Is Anthony Edwards playing tonight vs. Spurs?

It’s still unclear, but the Timberwolves did get some significantly positive updates ahead of the game.

On Sunday, May 3, the Timberwolves announced that Edwards had been cleared for on-court basketball activities and indicated that Edwards would be listed as questionable on the injury report for Game 1 against the Spurs.

And when that first injury report was published, Minnesota indeed had listed him as questionable.

Still, that doesn’t mean that Edwards will play Monday night, and he presumably still needs to clear several hurdles to be activated. And, even if Edwards can’t go Monday night, this is a massively good sign for his eventual availability in the series.

If Edwards misses only two games with the issue, it will be a remarkably quick recovery for this type of injury.

On Dec. 29, Nuggets All-Star center Nikola Jokić similarly sustained a hyperextended left knee and bone bruise in a loss against the Miami Heat. To recover from that injury, Jokić missed 16 games, which covered the span of a month.

Anthony Edwards injury

The injury ocurred with 2:45 left in the first half, when Edwards jumped vertically to defend a Cameron Johnson layup during a fastbreak drive. When Edwards landed, his left knee appeared to hyperextend as his weight came down, and he immediately grabbed at the area, writhing in apparent discomfort. Edwards slapped the court a few times in obvious frustration.

Athletic trainers rushed over as Edwards popped up to his feet. The trainers helped Edwards hobble off the floor, as he did not put any weight on the injured leg.

The trainers helped him toward the tunnel, though they didn’t immediately usher Edwards to the locker room, momentarily examining him in the tunnel.

Anthony Edwards stats

In 61 games this season, Edwards averaged a career-high 28.8 points (which ranked third in the NBA behind only Luka Dončić and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander), 5.0 rebounds and 3.7 assists per game. His field goal percentage (48.9%) and 3-point percentage (39.9%) were also career bests.

In February, he was selected to his fourth consecutive All-Star team.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Anthony Edwards injury update: T-wolves stars' availability vs. Spurs

2026 NHL Mock Draft: First Round Projections If Blackhawks Win Lottery

The National Hockey League is going to conduct the 2026 NHL Draft Lottery on Tuesday, May 5th. This weighted lottery will select one team to pick first overall, and another to pick second. From there, the picks will go in reverse order of the standings for the non-playoff teams.

The Chicago Blackhawks have the second-best odds of winning the lottery at 13.5%. Only the Vancouver Canucks have better odds at 25.5%. Rounding out the top three is the New York Rangers at 11.5%.  

The results of this lottery will change the plans of multiple franchises that are in the mix. This mock draft is a projection of how the picks could go if the Blackhawks win the first pick and the Canucks get the second. 

1. Chicago Blackhawks - Gavin McKenna, FWD

If the Chicago Blackhawks win the draft lottery, it would be hard to pass up on Penn State forward Gavin McKenna. He had an up-and-down road to this point, but there is no doubt that he'd fit in right away with this organization. 

There is already an off-ice connection with Connor Bedard, which would make it a bit easier for him to translate to the NHL after a productive college season, especially the second half. 

If Gavin McKenna came to the Blackhawks, his boyhood team, he would have the inside track to play in the NHL as soon as next season. 

2. Vancouver Canucks - Ivar Stenberg, FWD

The Vancouver Canucks have a strong history of drafting Swedish-born players, and Ivar Stenberg could be the next in line. 

After a dominant performance in the World Junior Championships en route to the Gold Medal, Stenberg cemented himself into this top-three draft pick conversation. 

Like McKenna, he has the potential to play in the NHL as early as next season. With how poorly constructed Vancouver's lineup is right now, there is plenty of room for him to hop right in. 

3. New York Rangers - Caleb Malhotra, FWD

Caleb Malhotra has risen on the draft board as much as any player who will be selected in June. The New York Rangers weren't expecting to be in this conversation heading into the year, but Malhotra would be a great consolation prize. 

Malhotra is a forward who could come to the NHL and change the fortunes of his franchise because of his incredible two-way game. The Rangers don't have many young forwards like him, which makes him someone that they can build around. 

4. Calgary Flames - Keaton Verhoeff, D

The Calgary Flames have been very good drafters over the last handful of years while they rebuild. That includes players from the NCAA. 

Keaton Verhoeff would make a perfect addition to their organizational prospect depth as a slippery smooth offensive defenseman.

5. Toronto Maple Leafs - Chase Reid, D 

Chase Reid has more of a two-way style to his game from the back-end, which is exactly what the Toronto Maple Leafs need in their long-term plan. 

6. Seattle Kraken - Tynan Lawrence, FWD

The Seattle Kraken are dying for an offensive gamebreaker. It is unclear whether Tynan Lawrence will become that guy, but he certainly has great upside as a forward. 

7. Winnipeg Jets - Carson Carels, D

The Winnipeg Jets won the President's Trophy last season, which makes them selecting seventh overall surprising. Carson Carels, a defenseman, would join that organization and be groomed by one of the best at developing this position. 

8. Florida Panthers - Viggo Bjorck, FWD

The only thing more surprising than the reigning President's Trophy drafting in the top-ten is the defending Stanley Cup champions drafting in the top-ten. That is the reality for the Florida Panthers, who would be the perfect landing spot for Viggo Bjorck. 

9. San Jose Sharks - Daxon Rudolph, D

The San Jose Sharks had a remarkable season based on their expectations coming in. Still, one more top-ten pick will be great for them, especially if it's a defenseman. They don't have that position solidified in the long-term, but this would help. 

10. Nashville Predators - Alberts Smits, D

Like the Jets, the Nashville Predators are very good at drafting and developing defensemen. They've been a factory for multiple decades. With change coming to the organization at the top, their next big defender could be Alberts Smits. 

11. St. Louis Blues - Oliver Suvanto, FWD

The St. Louis Blues may or may not move on from some of their star forwards this summer. If they do, they might want to start stockpiling new ones in the organization. Oliver Suvanto is someone to consider for that type of role. 

12. New Jersey Devils - Oscar Hemming, FWD

Everything the New Jersey Devils do at forward starts with one question: how would they look playing alongside Jack Hughes or Nico Hischier? Oscar Hemming may have the skills necessary to at least be given a chance one day. 

13. New York Islanders - Ethan Belchetz, FWD

The New York Islanders won the draft lottery in 2025, and it changed them forever. Matthew Schaefer is a superstar in every sense of the word. Now, they are looking to continue building. A forward like Ethan Belchetz makes a lot of sense for them. 

14. Columbus Blue Jackets - Ryan Lin, D

The Columbus Blue Jackets enjoy drafting skilled defensemen in the first round. Ryan Lin is one ready to make an impact on the organization in the long-term. 

15. St. Louis Blues via Detroit Red Wings - Malte Gustafsson, D

The St. Louis Blues received this pick from the Detroit Red Wings, and they would make it count if they selected Malte Gustafsson for their defense pipeline. 

16. Washington Capitals - Nikita Kiepov, FWD

The Washington Capitals select Nikita Kiepov in this mock spot. He will attend Michigan State in 2026-27, which should prepare him for the NHL as well as any school in the United States. 

17. Los Angeles Kings - Adam Novonty, FWD

The Los Angeles Kings must start restocking their prospect farm with more talent again. A retool is necessary for them as Anze Kopitar retires. Adam Novonty is a Czech-born forward who would be a great addition. 

18. Washington Capitals via Anaheim Ducks - Ilya Morozov, FWD

The Washington Capitals may have two picks out of three late in the teens, depending on how the Anaheim Ducks finish. In this spot, forward Ilya Morozov makes perfect sense for them as they look to continue building their new forward core. 

19. Utah Mammoth - Marcus Nordmark, FWD

The Utah Mammoth had a great season, and they never moved their first-round pick, despite rumors. Now, they could go with a forward like Marcus Nordmark out of Sweden. 

20. San Jose Sharks via Edmonton Oilers - Elton Hermansson, FWD

Speaking of Swedes, Elton Hermansson may go one pick later to the San Jose Sharks. Although they need more defensemen, it never hurts to add a skilled forward as well. With the way that they've set up their draft for this year, one forward and one defenseman in the first round is a sound strategy. 

21. Philadelphia Flyers - Xavier Villenueve, D

The Philadelphia Flyers are still alive, so their pick is far from locked at 21. If it did stick, however, Xavier Villenueve would be a great future defenseman for a team that has gone forward a lot in recent first rounds. 

22. Pittsburgh Penguins - JP Hurlbert, FWD

The Pittsburgh Penguins didn't make a top-five pick last year, but one of their picks, Ben Kindle made it to the NHL right away as a teenager. They might not expect that of JP Hurlbert or anyone that they draft this year, but he is a good player nonetheless. 

23. Boston Bruins - Juho Piiparinen, D

The Bruins overachieved this season after making the 7th overall pick last year, but they can still draft a good player like Juho Piiparinen. A young first-round talent like him for their organizational blue line would be great. 

24. Vancouver Canucks via Minnesota Wild - Yegor Shilov, FWD

The Vancouver Canucks don't have Quinn Hughes anymore, but this pick is one of the many gifts that the Minnesota Wild gave them for their former captain. Yegor Shilov is a forward who may make an NHL impact perfectly in line with Vancouver's rebuild. 

25. Montreal Canadiens - Mathis Preston, FWD

The Montreal Canadiens stayed the course of their own rebuild, despite being a 100-point team that has now won a round. Keeping their first round pick in a year like this is impressive fortitude, and a prospect like Mathis Preston could be a great prize. 

26. Seattle Kraken via Tampa Bay Lightning - Wyatt Cullen, FWD

The Seattle Kraken make perfect sense for Wyatt Cullen, who is the son of former NHL forward Matt Cullen. Matt had a tremendous NHL career and was one of the best players to ever come out of Minnesota. Fittingly, his son Wyatt will play for the Golden Gophers in 2026-27. 

27. New York Rangers via Dallas Stars - Niklas Aaram-Olsen, FWD

The New York Rangers will make a first-round pick in the top five and the bottom ten, which is great for a rebuilding squad. Niklas Aaram-Olsen would help them replenish their forwards as more of their veterans could follow Artemi Panarin out the door this summer. 

28. Calgary Flames via Vegas Golden Knights - Simas Ignatavicius, FWD

The Calgary Flames, like the New York Rangers, will have an early and late pick in the first round. That will do wonders for their highly respectable prospect pool. Simas Ignatavicius is a forward who could be a diamond for them. 

29. Buffalo Sabres -  Maddox Dagenais, FWD

The Buffalo Sabres are not used to picking in the bottom third of the first round, unless it is a pick that a contender gave to them for one of their star players that they had to trade away. This year, a prospect like forward Maddox Dagenais would be going to a winning organization in Buffalo. 

30. Carolina Hurricanes - Liam Ruck, FWD

The Carolina Hurricanes thrive on getting something out of these late picks. Liam Ruck is a forward who may keep their prospect depth intact. 

31. St. Louis Blues via Colorado Avalanche - Alexander Command, FWD

The St. Louis Blues have the first-round pick of the Colorado Avalanche. They may pick late in the 20s or in the 30s, depending on how the Avalanche finish. Alexander Command is someone for them to consider regardless of where the pick lands. 

32. Ottawa Senators - William Hakansson, D

The Ottawa Senators are locked into the 32nd overall pick. At first, it was forfeited, but the NHL restored it to them in the form of the final pick in the first round.

This comes as a punishment that stemmed from an attempted Evgenii Dadonov trade between the Vegas Golden Knights and Anaheim Ducks. The Ducks were on Dadonov's "no-trade list", but the Golden Knights were not told that by the Senators, who traded Dadonov to Vegas previously. The NHL made them forfeit a first-round pick in either 2024, 2025, or 2026 before restoring it. 

William Hakansson, a defenseman, makes great sense for Ottawa as they could use another defense prospect with high upside to work on developing. 

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Morning Skate: Autopsy

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MAY 01: David Pastrnak #88 of the Boston Bruins celebrates with his teammates after scoring a goal on Alex Lyon (not pictured) #34 of the Buffalo Sabres during the second period in Game Six of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at TD Garden on May 01, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Folks, I have the unfortunate duty today to welcome you to…the offseason.

The Bruins officially checked out of the playoffs via Friday night’s loss to the Buffalo Sabres, ending a better-than-expected season sooner than we had hoped.

But the playoffs wait for no one’s sorrows, with things moving right along across the NHL: two second round series began over the weekend, and the last second round match-up was settled last night.

In last night’s “last call for the first round” game, the Montreal Canadiens eliminated the Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 7, winning 2-1 in spite of managing a remarkable nine shots on goal.

Yes, nine shots on goal for the entire game.

In fact, the Canadiens were outshot 12-0 in the second period, yet ended up winning the game. Playoffs, I guess.

Compare that to last night’s other offering, which was the second round opener out west with the Wild playing the Avalanche.

In THAT game, Colorado saw Montreal’s nine shots and raised you nine goals, while Minnesota scored six of their own. That should be an entertaining series, to say the last.

Your full list of second round match-ups:

  • Sabres vs. Canadiens (starts Wednesday)
  • Hurricanes vs. Flyers (Carolina is up 1-0)
  • Avalanche vs. Wild (Colorado is up 1-0)
  • Golden Knights vs. Anaheim (starts tonight)

Bruins injury updates

The B’s coaches and players had their break-up day media availability on Sunday, that end-of-season tradition where you find out how hurt everyone was.

In the Bruins case:

  • David Pastrnak said “throughout the playoffs, I would say I was healthy,” but also noted that he had been dealing with a groin tear for the better part of the season. He cited the groin injury as being something that was challenging to deal with mentally, as it affected his skating stride, movement, etc. He also noted that something would need to change “drastically” for him to consider going to the upcoming World Championships, which is a pretty good indicator that he is not, in fact, fully healthy.
  • Charlie McAvoy broke his hand in Game 2 of the Buffalo series. He said he has “some MRIs” coming up and will be heading in for more dental work as well.
  • Viktor Arvidsson had a broken rib and punctured lung, which is why he missed the end of the Buffalo series. He called it “a little puncture on the lung,” which is one way of putting it, I guess.
  • Elias Lindholm had an ongoing back injury, one that required injections and was just sort of a lingering thing. He cited that injury as being a blow to his confidence and belief in his ability to fully play his game, which tracks when you’re dealing with a back injury.
  • Nikita Zadorov tore his MCL at some point in Game 3, then played on it through Game 6 with a combination of a brace and tape. On the pain management aspect of things, he said “because it was fully torn, there wasn’t really much pain there,” which is…quite a nice bit of perspective, I guess? He added that the injury may not require surgery, just an injection and healing.

The walking wounded, indeed.

Odds and ends

Other items for both the B’s and from around the league:

  • The 2026 NHL Draft Lottery will be held tomorrow at 7 PM, with the draw broadcast live on ESPN. I assume the draw itself won’t take place until like 7:30, but who knows. Sky will have you covered with a primer for that process tomorrow morning.
  • The Maple Leafs ended their GM search over the weekend, officially hiring John Chayka as GM and Leafs legend Mats Sundin as Senior Executive Advisor, Hockey Operations. Chayka wasn’t exactly crushing it during his time as Coyotes GM, so…we’ll see how this goes for Toronto, I guess.

Lastly, a word of thanks to all of you fine readers for a fun season around these parts.

It wasn’t without its bumps, but overall, I think we’d all agree that this season was a lot less of a slog than last year.

We’re fortunate to have an engaged group of commenters and a good community here, something we can hopefully build on going forward.

Hopefully we’ll be right back where we started when next season rolls around, and we’ll try to keep you as entertained as possible during the summer doldrums.

If you have any suggestions on what kind of stuff you’d like to see over the summer, you know where to find me.

How a onetime top Dodgers prospect became an advisor to four U.S. presidents

The ninth in an occasional series of profiles on Southern California athletes who have flourished in their post-playing careers.

When the Dodgers drafted David Lesch in January 1980, they had visions of his fastball lighting up radar guns at Dodger Stadium.

He never made it that far.

Lesch never climbed above the lowest rung on the minor league ladder, where he pitched just 10 innings and gave up more runs, hits and walks than he got outs. Less than 18 months after he was drafted, Lesch, wracked by a rotator cuff injury, was released, his major league dream over before he was old enough to legally buy a beer.

“I went to Disney World after that,” he said.

But that wasn’t the only decision the Dodgers made that changed Lesch’s life. When he was drafted, the team gave him just a small bonus, but sweetened the deal by offering to pay for college if he ever went back to school. For the team, it seemed a safe bet.

“They probably have this algorithm saying ‘this is the No. 1 draft pick. If he doesn’t make it, he’s not going back to college. He’ll be assistant baseball coach of his high school or something,’” Lesch said.

Oops.

Lesch not only went back to college, but he also wound up getting three degrees, including a master’s and a PhD from Harvard. It was arguably the most important investment in humanity the Dodgers made since signing Jackie Robinson, because Lesch went on to become one of the world’s top experts on the Middle East, writing 18 books and more than 140 other publications while advising four presidents and a cadre of United Nations diplomats.

“That was the best deal,” Lesch, 65, said by phone from San Antonio, where he is the Ewing Halsell Distinguished Professor of History at Trinity University.

“Without that I probably could not have said yes to Harvard because of the price. The Dodgers committed to paying.”

And by doing so, the Dodgers may have altered history just a bit.

Lesch’s regular meetings with Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, which ended with Lesch facilitating an important if temporary breakthrough in U.S.-Syrian relations? The diplomatic and conflict-resolution work in Syria and the wider U.N. initiatives on regional issues throughout the Middle East? The thousands of students Lesch inspired to go on to perform important diplomatic and public-service roles of their own?

None of that happens if Lesch’s shoulder had held on or if the Dodgers had reneged on their deal.

“It was very fortunate that he hurt his rotator cuff. Baseball’s loss is academia’s gain,” said Robert Freedman, a scholar and expert on Russian and Middle Eastern politics who taught Lesch at the University of Maryland Baltimore County.

“I’ve been teaching for, I guess, 60 years now and I can tell when a student can see a complex problem and can penetrate right to the heart of the problem very quickly. He was one of those students.”

Still, it took a slightly offhand comment from Freedman, who now teaches at Johns Hopkins, to launch Lesch on his post-baseball career.

“We were having lunch and he was looking for a project and I mentioned to him ‘you know, there hasn’t been a good American scholar doing work on Syria for many, many years,’” he said.

“That struck his interest.”

Playing a child’s game and managing life-and-death Middle East politics share very little in common. But Lesch made the transition seamlessly.

“It is like he’s several different people, or has been,” said journalist and author Catherine Nixon Cooke, whose book “Dodgers to Damascus: David Lesch’s Journey from Baseball to the Middle East” traces those parallel lives.

“I’m wondering if, in a sense, it all worked out the way it was supposed to,” Cooke continued. “Even though his dream was to be a major leaguer, David certainly has reinvented himself to this really remarkable man following a completely different path.

“It was the Dodgers who paid for him to go to Harvard and so it’s kind of a weird thing. Baseball took away his dream because he got hurt, but baseball also gave him his backup plan.”


Lesch was still a teenager when, 20 minutes into his first spring training camp in Vero Beach, Fla., Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda plucked him off a minor league practice field to pitch batting practice in the main stadium.

Waiting for him were Ron Cey, Bill Russell, Steve Garvey, Davey Lopes and Reggie Smith, the heart of a lineup that would win a World Series a season later.

It was the first time — and nearly the last — that Lesch faced big-league hitters. And it didn’t start well.

Batting practice pitchers throw from behind an L-shaped screen that protects them from comebackers and Lesch had never used one. That, combined with his understandable nervousness, caused him to short-arm his first fastball, which sailed at Cey’s head, sending him sprawling into the dirt.

“He got up and gave me this mean look,” Lesch said. “I remember it so vividly right now. I really thought I was going to be released that day.”

Instead, he gathered himself and finished the session, earning pats on the back from both Garvey and Lasorda. The incident, he said, has colored the rest of his life.

Read more:How Bill Russell stayed connected to baseball, and reconnected with the Dodgers

“I’ve met with presidents, prime ministers, been in war zones, all sorts of things,” Lesch said. “Anytime I say ‘well, you know, this should make me nervous,’ I think about that episode and the fact that I made it through and did OK.”

In high school, Lesch had focused on basketball and baseball. Academics? Not so much. So after spending his freshman year of college at Western Maryland College, he transferred to Central Arizona, a junior college, so he would be eligible for the January 1980 draft, allowing him to trade his books in for a baseball.

The so-called secondary draft, which was discontinued six years later, was specifically targeted toward winter high school graduates, junior college players, college dropouts and amateurs who had been previously drafted but did not sign. As a result, the bonuses teams offered winter draft picks were just a fraction of what players taken in the June draft received.

Lesch’s was so low, he can’t even remember what it was.

“I want to say $10,000 to $15,000,” he said. “No more than $20,000.”

When it became clear the Dodgers weren’t going to budge on the money, Lesch’s father, Warren, a family physician in suburban Baltimore, pulled out the Harford County phone book and looked up the number for Baltimore Orioles coach Cal Ripken Sr. Lesch played high school ball against Ripken’s son Cal Jr., who had been a second-round draft pick of the Orioles two years earlier. So his father thought the Ripkens might have some advice on what to ask of the Dodgers.

“Ripken goes ‘does your son like school and is he smart?’” Lesch’s older brother Bob remembers. “So Ripken suggested if they offer you XYZ bonus money, take less and say ‘I’ll take this amount, but you have to cover education if he doesn’t make it.’”

Neither side thought that clause would ever be triggered; Lesch, a big, intimidating right-hander who threw bullets from behind Coke-bottle eyeglasses, wasn’t headed to a classroom, he was going to Dodger Stadium.

Until he wasn’t.

Lesch missed a couple of weeks with a back injury. By overcompensating for the sore back, he developed paralysis in the ulnar nerve in his right arm, limiting him to five appearances in his first minor league season.

He arrived healthy for his second spring in Vero Beach and threw three no-hit innings in his first outing against double-A and triple-A players, creating such a buzz that Ron Perranoski, the Dodgers’ major league pitching coach, showed up to watch his second game. By then the shoulder and back stiffness that shortened his first season had returned, and Lesch was rocked. Perranoski left early and unimpressed.

Lesch’s delivery had one major flaw: He threw directly overhand, as opposed to three-quarters or even sidearm, which can increase velocity but also places additional strain on the shoulder and elbow. As a result, his fastball could top out in the mid-90s one day, but when the stiffness and pain returned, it left him throwing in the low 80s.

The inconsistency continued to plague Lesch, and eventually the Dodgers decided they’d seen enough and released him. When he got back to Maryland, Lesch’s father sent him to see an orthopedic surgeon, who found the problem wasn’t in his back or elbow but rather the rotator cuff.

“We didn’t live in the era of pitch counts. So he just pitched,” said David Souter, a high school and college teammate who went on to develop big-league pitchers.

“He had the ability if he was developed and stayed healthy. I think he probably overthrew and tore his rotator cuff and nobody knew it.”

Read more:Loving retired farm life, Rogie Vachon reminisces about being L.A.'s first hockey star

If Lesch had come along 10 years later, when rotator cuff surgeries were common, he might have returned to the mound. But in 1981, a rotator cuff injury was a death sentence for a pitcher.

“It’s just a crapshoot based on physiology,” Lesch said. “I probably was destined. Something would have happened.”

If he could do it over again, Lesch said he would change one thing.

“I’d throw sidearm,” he said. “It’s much less stress.”

He threw to big league hitters just one more time. Following the strike that interrupted the 1981 season, Ripken Sr. phoned Lesch back and asked him to throw batting practice at Memorial Stadium to help the Orioles prepare for the resumption of play. As a reward, the Orioles let Lesch hit — he never had batted in the minors — and he drove a pitch over the left-field wall, then dropped the bat and walked away.

He never stepped on a major league field again.


The Dodgers’ investment in Lesch’s education appeared manageable when he enrolled at a satellite campus of the University of Maryland, in part because his brother Bob was the school’s sports information director.

But it was 1981 and the Middle East was at the forefront of geopolitics. Lesch became convinced the Middle East would be central to world affairs for decades to come. Inspired and encouraged by Freedman and another professor, Lou Cantori, he applied to graduate school at Harvard, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins and the University of Chicago, knowing he couldn’t afford any of those schools on his own.

“I probably could not have said yes to Harvard when they accepted me because of the price,” Lesch said. “The Dodgers had committed to paying and whatever it was, it was a lot more collectively — my undergraduate MA and PhD — than I had gotten in the bonus.”

That wasn’t the only time his baseball background worked in his favor. Years after starting at Harvard, Lesch stumbled upon written evaluations of his application and learned that his grade-point average and other factors were similar to those of other applicants, but it was his athletic career that had swung enough votes in his favor to get him accepted.

“Failure is at the core of sports. And so you have to have this resiliency,” Lesch said. “What a lot of the top colleges have found is that these young kids out of high school who somehow get a 4.6 GPA, they come in — and I’ve seen this as a professor — they get their first C and they’re distraught.

“Athletes stick with it. They say ‘how can I turn this around? How can I get better?’ Admissions departments across the board have looked at athletes much differently.”

The struggles Lesch experienced on the diamond did not follow him into academia. Yet becoming an expert on the Middle East definitely was a backup plan.

“His first passion was clearly baseball and basketball,” said Souter, the former teammate. “Every kid dreamed ... that.”

If the shoulder injury wasn’t a strong enough sign that that dream was over, the fire that destroyed Lesch’s childhood home a few years later was. The flames, which severely burned both his parents, also erased his baseball career, consuming all the photos and memorabilia he had collected, save for the championship ring from his one minor league season, which he found buried in the embers. It was the only thing to survive the blaze intact.

A post-graduate trip to Syria, the first of more than 30 visits he has made to the country, sealed the deal a few years later. The love he once had for baseball he now felt for a strange and mysterious place that was as old as history itself yet as secretive as the classical ciphers.

Soon Lesch was helping arrange high-level meetings between Syrian president Hafez al-Assad and President George H.W. Bush, a baseball fan who seemed as interested in Lesch’s Dodgers days as his Middle Eastern expertise. But his big break came during the first presidential term of Bush’s son George W. Bush, when Bashar al-Assad, who succeeded his father as Syria’s president, welcomed Lesch for the first of many interviews that informed his book, “The New Lion of Damascus: Bashar al-Assad and Modern Syria.”

“His forte is listening,” Cooke, the biographer, said of Lesch, whose polite, unassuming manner reflects an adult life spent mostly in San Antonio. “When he goes in to try to mediate something, he is a big listener. There is a side of David that doesn’t talk much. But he’s listening.”

The book humanized al-Assad and opened, for a time, the possibility of normalized relations between Syria and the West, with Lesch serving as an unofficial liaison between Damascus and Washington, as well as other Western capitals.

“He’s absolutely a critical player in what we would call two-track diplomacy,” Freedman said. “If the government wants to reach out but doesn’t want to take the political consequences, they send somebody to sound out the situation.

“It’s absolutely critical that we have people like that who can speak the language and understand the overall context, which sadly is lacking in the current administration.”

But that opening closed as quickly as it opened. Lesch’s close contacts with al-Assad raised suspicions among some in Syria, and Lesch was poisoned twice. His relationship with al-Assad was severed completely shortly afterward when he criticized al-Assad for failing to implement promised reforms and becoming a “bloodthirsty tyrant.” The Syrian civil war took nearly 700,000 lives and displace another 6.7 million people before al-Assad and his family fled into exile in Russia in 2024.

“Many governments think that they can reduce war to a calculation,” Lesch said. “What we cannot measure accurately or fully appreciate is the human element. We cannot assess a people’s sense of grievance, passion, revenge, ideological commitment and historical circumstances that shaped the nature of their response and staying power.

“This is where academics can make a contribution to policy, giving it the depth and insight gleaned from years of study and learning the culture and the people.”

Baseball’s loss wasn’t just academia’s gain. It may prove to be humanity’s as well.

“I don’t really have any regrets,” Lesch said. “My career turned out great. I could not think of doing anything else at this point and, in fact, in a way I’m glad [baseball] didn’t work out.”

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Phillies news: Jhoan Duran, Aaron Nola, Ronald Acuna, Jr.

May 3, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Philadelphia Phillies center fielder Brandon Marsh (16) reacts after his double against the Miami Marlins during the seventh inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Rhona Wise-Imagn Images | Rhona Wise-Imagn Images

This whole “game on a Monday after a series should end on a Sunday” thing is just weird. Like, why couldn’t they have just scheduled a different day later this year?

Very strange.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

2026 Brewers Week in Review: Week 6

May 3, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Logan Henderson (43) pitches against the Washington Nationals during the second inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images | Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

Last Week’s Results

  • Monday: Off Day
  • Tuesday: Brewers 13, D-backs 2
  • Wednesday: D-backs 6, Brewers 2
  • Thursday: Brewers 13, D-backs 1
  • Friday: Brewers 6, Nationals 1
  • Saturday: Brewers 4, Nationals 1
  • Sunday: Nationals 3, Brewers 2

Division Standings

  • Cubs: 22-12
  • Cardinals: 20-14
  • Reds: 20-14
  • Brewers: 18-15
  • Pirates: 19-16

Last Week

  • Cubs: 5-1
  • Cardinals: 6-1
  • Reds: 2-4
  • Brewers: 4-2
  • Pirates: 3-4

Top Pitching Performance of the Week

Jacob Misiorowski, despite having to exit fairly early, had a great outing on Friday night. He went 5 1/3 no-hit innings, allowing just two walks with eight strikeouts en route to his second win of the season.

There was no shortage of solid options this week for the pitching staff, though I’ll give specific honorable mentions to the young trio of Kyle Harrison, Logan Henderson, and Shane Drohan. Harrison went six innings with one run allowed and five strikeouts; Henderson went six innings with two runs allowed and eight strikeouts; and Drohan totaled five innings with one run allowed and five strikeouts over two appearances. Jake Woodford also totaled 4 2/3 scoreless innings over three relief appearances, striking out five and picking up a three-inning save in Milwaukee’s blowout win over the D-backs.

Top Hitting Performance of the Week

William Contreras had probably his best week of the season thus far, as he went 11-for-25 (.440 batting average) with a homer, a double, nine RBIs, and seven runs scored. He picked up four hits on both Thursday and Friday, becoming just the seventh Brewer player to achieve that feat.

Honorable mention to Tyler Black, who went 7-for-13 (.538 batting average) with three doubles and seven RBIs in limited opportunities this week.

Injury Notes & Roster Moves

  • The Brewers made a flurry of moves on Wednesday this week, as they placed LHP Angel Zerpa on the 15-day injured list, sent Luis Matos outright to Triple-A Nashville (he cleared waivers after being DFA’d), and selected LHP Brian Fitzpatrick for his MLB debut. Zerpa’s injury doesn’t sound promising, as Pat Murphy told reporters on Sunday that Zerpa is in the process of deciding whether or not to undergo Tommy John surgery — regardless of his decision, it sounds like a lengthy return for the lefty.
  • The team also sent Andrew Vaughn and Jackson Chourio on rehab assignments with Nashville on Wednesday. Both were originally slated to return later today in St. Louis, though Chourio’s return is now in question after he fouled a ball off his foot on Saturday night. While X-rays came back negative, it’s certainly possible Chourio will have to take an extra couple of days before we see him in the majors.
  • Brandon Woodruff exited his start early on Thursday afternoon, as he had clearly diminished velocity. After it was reported he was just dealing with fatigue, he went on the 15-day IL with right shoulder inflammation, though an MRI revealed no structural damage. It sounds like he’s hoping to miss close to the minimum amount of time.
  • After Woodruff’s injury, right-hander Easton McGee was recalled from Triple-A Nashville. McGee made one scoreless appearance (one inning) before being optioned back to Nashville for Logan Henderson, who made a quality start against the Nationals on Sunday afternoon.
  • In another injury scare for a Brewer star, ace Jacob Misiorowski exited in the sixth inning of a no-hit bid against the Nationals on Friday night. He was reportedly just dealing with cramping, and he isn’t expected to miss any sort of extended time, though his next start (originally slated for Wednesday in St. Louis) may be pushed back a couple of days.
  • Brice Turang was also scratched from Sunday’s lineup with an illness. The severity of the illness is unknown, but I’d expect we’ll see him at some point this week in St. Louis.
  • Quinn Priester made his third rehab start with Triple-A Nashville on Friday night, though he continues to deal with command issues — a common issue among players returning from thoracic outlet syndrome. He’ll likely make at least a few more rehab appearances before an expected return later this month.

On Deck

  • Monday: @ Cardinals (6:45 p.m.)
  • Tuesday: @ Cardinals (6:45 p.m.)
  • Wednesday: @ Cardinals (12:15 p.m.)
  • Thursday: Off Day
  • Friday: vs. Yankees (6:40 p.m.)
  • Saturday: vs. Yankees (6:10 p.m.)
  • Sunday: vs. Yankees (1:10 p.m.)

Game 36 Preview: Tigers open up second half of homestand vs Red Sox

The Detroit Tigers wrapped up a series win over the visiting Texas Rangers on Sunday with a 7-1 victory at Comerica Park. Spencer Torkelson went yard for the sixth time this season to give his team a lead that the bullpen would not relinquish.

On Monday, the Motor City Kitties kick off the second half of their six-game homestand against the Boston Red Sox — a team they saw not too long ago in Beantown. AJ Hinch’s squad split that four-game series last month, but did outscore their opponent, 16-12, over that stretch; consider that the tie-breaker for now.

Detroit sends left-handed ace Tarik Skubal to the mound to open things up, having thrown quality starts in five of his seven outings so far this season. His previous start against the Red Sox was among them — a six-inning effort in which he allowed one run on four hits and two walks while striking out 10 for his third and most recent win.

Boston has fellow lefty Payton Tolle taking the bump for the third start of his sophomore season. The 23-year-old faced the Tigers in his final outing of the 2025 campaign, throwing one in relief in which he allowed one hit and struck out one batter.

The Tigers are tied for first place in the American League Central with the Cleveland Guardians entering the series, while the Red Sox are the division’s basement dwellers in the AL East. It would be nice to take sole possession of the lead and a strong showing this week could create some breathing room early on.

In the meantime, take a look at how Monday night’s starters match up below.

Detroit Tigers (18-17) vs. Boston Red Sox (13-21)

Time (ET): 6:40 p.m.
Place: Comerica Park, Detroit, Michigan
SB Nation Site:Over the Monster
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 36: LHP Tarik Skubal (3-2, 2.70 ERA) vs. LHP Payton Tolle (0-1, 3.38 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Skubal743.127.13.645.92.161.6
Tolle210.237.511.928.62.960.3

SKUBAL

TOLLE

Orioles news: A terrible weekend in New York

May 3, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Baltimore Orioles starting pitcher Trey Gibson (43) waits to take the mound prior to the game against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Happy Monday, Camden Chatters!

It was a pretty lousy weekend for baseball as the Orioles got beaten up pretty good in New York. Yesterday’s game was the latest in a string of ugly losses. Trey Gibson made his Major League debut and held his own, but the rest of the game was a bust. The offense did more against Max Fried than I expected, but they missed out on some big chances. And the bullpen fell apart big time in the late innings, leading to an 11-3 loss. You can get the full details in my game recap.

If only I could say that after the terrible weekend, the Orioles are headed to a new city to start fresh. But they have one more game in New York tonight before they can finally leave. They have one chance to get a win before their road trip takes them down to Miami for three games. Tonight, Shane Baz will do his best to stop the losing streak at four. Baz’s most recent start against the Astros was a good one, with just one run allowed in 5.2 innings. If he wants to repeat that performance tonight, that would be fine by me. Game time is 7:05 if you can bear to watch.

There isn’t one thing to point to about what is going wrong with the Orioles right now. There are lots of cries to fire Mike Elias, and at a certain point it will be hard to avoid that conclusion. I’m not there yet, but it does seem like this season should be his last chance to prove his mettle.

I do not blame Elias or the coaching/front office for the rash of injuries. The number of players who have had injuries does feel a little absurd. But injuries, especially to pitchers, are just part of the game. Some years you get more than average, some years you get fewer than average. It happens all over baseball.

But if you take the injuries out of the equation, there are still a lot of things for Elias to answer for. He failed to address the starting rotation concerns in a way that got the job done. He didn’t go after any of the biggest names available; instead going after bigger question marks while relying on the pitchers already in the organization to be better than they have been so far.

Then there is the defense. Oh my, the defense. Unlike the rotation changes, which do have potential, everyone saw the defensive issues a mile away. Specifically, the outfield. Losing a defender like Cedric Mullins puts strain on the entire outfield, especially when the corner outfielders Taylor Ward and Tyler O’Neill are known liabilities.

Finally, there are his guys. Elias has made a lot of high draft picks since coming to Baltimore. There are always busts, but his strategy was based around tanking to get the picks. And a lot of those guys just aren’t panning out.

I am not a person who thinks it’s time for Mike Elias to go. But maybe it’s time to think about what needs to happen to make it a good idea for him to stay.

Links

For parents and high school coach, Trey Gibson’s Orioles MLB debut is ‘amazing and crazy’ – The Baltimore Banner
I love a good “how they got here” story. Here’s hoping Trey’s time in the majors is lengthy.

High-pressure setting doesn’t faze O’s Gibson in solid MLB debut – MLB.com
Three runs in 4.2 innings isn’t going to cut it in the long haul. But for an MLB debut against the Yankees? Not bad. Gibson’s grin when his manager came to get him was nice to see.

Calling the Pen: Yankees are exposing Orioles’ flaws – Baltimore Baseball
Ain’t that the truth

Birthdays and History

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! You have two Orioles birthday buddies. Ryan Meisinger (32) pitched in 18 games for the 2018 team, and Joe Borowski (55) kicked off his 12-season career with six games with the Orioles.

Not much Orioles history listed on this date, but here are a few general baseball fun facts:

  • In 1966, Willie Mays hit his 512th home run, which set a new record for most career home runs in the National League
  • In 1975, Bob Watson of the Astros scored the one millionth run in Major League history
  • In 2002, Barry Bonds hit his 400th home run
  • In 2018, Albert Pujols became the 32nd member of the 3,000 hit club

One year ago today, the Orioles lost to the Royals, 11-6. The two teams combined to hit 11 home runs. Unfortunately, only four of them were by the Orioles. Cedric Mullins, Jackson Holliday, and Ryan O’Hearn all went deep. Holliday did it twice. Kyle Gibson started and allowed three runs in four innings, while relief pitchers Bryan Baker, Matt Bowman, Charlie Morton, and Yennier Cano each allowed two runs in their one-inning appearances.

Yankees prospects: Spencer Jones hits two monster home runs

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders: W, 7-1 vs. Buffalo Bisons

SS George Lombard Jr. 0-2, BB — still waiting for the top prospect’s first big Triple-A game
CF Spencer Jones 2-4, 2 HR, 5 RBI — hit a 117-mph solo shot and 111-mph grand slam, both against major leaguer José Berríos
RF Yanquiel Fernández 0-4
3B Oswaldo Cabrera 2-4, K
1B Seth Brown 1-3, HR, 2 RBI, BB, 2 K
C Payton Henry 1-3, BB, K
DH Ali Sánchez 0-4
2B Jonathan Ornelas 0-2, BB, K
LF Duke Ellis 0-2, BB, SB

Danny Watson 2.2 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 4 K
Zach Messinger 2.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 0 K(win)
Dylan Coleman 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K
Rafael Montero 1.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 0 K
Kervin Castro 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K
Bradley Hanner 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K

Double-A Somerset Patriots: L, 11-4 vs. Portland Sea Dogs

LF Jackson Castillo 2-4, RBI, K
SS Anthony Volpe 0-4 — quiet game on the day he was optioned to Triple-A
CF Jace Avina 1-4, 2B, 3 K, SB
DH Garrett Martin 0-4, 2 K
2B Marco Luciano 1-3, HR, RBI, BB, K, SB — the former top prospect has played well at Double-A
1B Coby Morales 0-4, 2 K
3B Tyler Hardman 1-4, HR, RBI, 2 K
RF Kenedy Corona 0-3, K
C Manuel Palencia 1-3, K, throwing error

Chase Chaney 5 IP, 6 H, 7 R, 4 BB, 2 K, 2 HR (loss)
Miguel Arias 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 1 K
Eric Reyzelman 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 3 K — brushed 99 mph in the seventh
Matt Keating 0.2 IP, 2 H, 4 R, 2 BB, 1 K
Chris Kean 1.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K

High-A Hudson Valley Renegades: L, 7-6 at Jersey Shore BlueClaws

3B Kaeden Kent 1-5, 2B, RBI, 2 K
SS Core Jackson 1-4, 2B, BB, K
DH Kyle West 0-5, K
C Eric Genther 0-5, K, throwing error
LF Wilson Rodriguez 1-5, 2 K
1B Josh Moylan 2-4
CF Camden Troyer 2-4, HR, 3 RBI
2B Connor McGinnis 1-4, HR, RBI, 2 K
RF Cole Gabrielson 0-1, 2 BB, SB

Franyer Herrera 4.2 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 4 BB, 3 K, 1 HR
Jackson Fristoe 1.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K
Hansel Rincon 0.1 IP 3 H, 4 R, 1 BB, 1 K (loss, hold)
Chris Veach 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K (blown save)
Tanner Bauman 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K

Low-A Tampa Tarpons: L, 7-6 vs. St. Lucie Mets

LF Luis Durango 1-5, RBI, K, SB, CS
2B Enmanuel Tejeda 0-3, BB, K
CF Brando Mayea 0-5, 3 K
DH Engelth Urena 1-4, 2B, RBI, BB, 2 K, SB
SS Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek 1-3, 2 BB
RF Willy Montero 2-4, RBI, 2 K, SB
C Ediel Rivera 0-2, RBI, K, SF
1B Hans Montero 0-3, BB, 2 K
3B Kevin Verde 1-4, 2B, 2 RBI, K

Henry Lalane 3 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 5 K
Jose Ledesma 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 5 K
Jordarlin Mendoza 0.2 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 1 BB, 2 K
Matthew Tippie 1.1 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 0 BB, 0 K (loss, blown save)

Chicago Cubs history unpacked, May 4

Free of charge for the discerning reader.

Happy birthday to Joe Borowski, and a mighty host of others.He probably doesn’t like Star Wars, either.

Today in baseball history, in 1963, Bob Shaw of the Milwaukee Braves sets a major league record by committing five balks. In the third inning, Shaw walks Billy Williams and sends him home with three straight balks. The Chicago Cubs beat Milwaukee, 5 – 3. This and other stories are posted as well, including a pair of examples of stellar excellent sportswriting.

Today in baseball history:

Cubs Birthdays:Ryan Meisinger, Ben Grieve, Miguel Cairo, Manny Aybar, Joe Borowski,* Cy Block, Ox Miller, Ted Turner, Vic Saier, John Malarkey

Today in history:

  • 1878 – Thomas Edison‘s phonograph is shown for the first time at the Grand Opera House in NYC
  • 1893 – Cowboy Bill Pickett invents bulldogging, the skill of grabbing cattle by the horns and wrestling them to the ground
  • 1904 – Charles Rolls meets Henry Royce at the Midland Hotel in Manchester, England. Go on to form the car manufacturer Rolls-Royce.
  • 1904 – United States begins construction of the Panama Canal
  • 1932 – Al Capone enters Atlanta Penitentiary convicted of income tax evasion
  • 1946 – Five people die during a two-day riot at Alcatraz prison in San Francisco Bay
  • 1953 – Pulitzer Prize for Literature awarded to Ernest Hemingway for “The Old Man and The Sea”
  • 1957 – Alan Freed hosts “Rock n’ Roll Show” 1st prime-time network rock show, cancelled after 4 episodes
  • 1979 – Margaret Thatcher becomes the first woman to be elected Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
  • 1998 – A federal judge in Sacramento, California, gives “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski four life sentences plus 30 years after Kaczynski accepts a plea agreement sparing him from the death penalty.

*pictured.