Astros vs. Cubs Series Primer with Ryan Sweeney of Marquee Sports Network

CHICAGO, IL - JUNE 27: Ryan Sweeney #6 of the Chicago Cubs hits a two-run single in the 4th inning against the Washington Nationals at Wrigley Field on June 27, 2014 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Former Major Leaguer Ryan Sweeney, who serves as studio analyst on Chicago’s Marquee Sports Network, sits down to preview the Astros upcoming series with the Cubs at historic Wrigley Field.    

Q:  When it’s all said and done, could the Cubs have the best rotation in all of baseball this season?

A:  Cubs have had a lot of pitching injuries so to say they have the best rotation in baseball would be a stretch. With Boyd and Steele and Cade Horton out they have been piecing it together, but up until last night Shota had been pitching like a true ace. Also to think where they would be without Ben Brown and Colin Rea, they have been great.

Q:  Does something just seem “right” in the universe when the Cubs are playing a string of day games at Wrigley?

A:  Yes.  Day games at Wrigley are the best especially when you are the home team.   The Cubs had won 15 in a row at Wrigley up until Monday Night when that was halted.   I think everyone coming into town loves day games as well because Wrigley is a special place.

Q:  Astros fans miss Alex Bregman and justifiably so.  How has he made the transition to the Northside?     

A:  Alex is a great dude and I have had some interactions with him especially with the racehorses haha I own some as well . He’s just a winner and I think people respect that . That being said, with the big contract people expect him to produce.

He is a historically slow starter but has been swinging the bat better as of late, and I expect his numbers to be great by the end of the year . But I also think he loves Chicago and the team all gets along and has a good vibe together .

In The Lab: What Does BPO Say About Our Hitting Coaches?

One of the benefits of waiting until late May to look at statistics is that individual games have less of a difference on overall numbers. In April, it looked like the Astros hitting coaches were the toast of the town. The team was leading the American League in runs scoring. They were taking more pitches. They were taking more walks. It felt like there was a new message being delivered to hitters and they were listening. Of course, not we have gone most of the way through May (May 19th as of these numbers) and those gains may have slowed.

We have been looking at bases per out now for a couple of different articles. We looked at the catchers and we will look at the infield and outfield eventually, but this time we are looking at the offense as a whole. For comparisons sake, we will take a look at the 2025 numbers since those numbers were probably the numbers that got the past two hitting coaches sent out of town.

Now that the offense has seemingly come back to earth it bears asking whether there were any meaningful and lasting changes in the Astros offense. With one very notable exception, the players are basically the same. That exception is Yordan Alvarez as he spent most of 2025 on the shelf and wasn’t himself for most of the time when he was healthy. Is that enough to explain the difference?

Keep in mind that we will add BPO+ for reference sake. In case you missed our primer article, the major league BPO in 2025 was .670. The BPO so far this season is .663, Last year Daikan Park was perfectly neutral while this year it is playing one percent above average. Given that information let’s see if we have seen in real gains from 2025 to 2026.

BPOBPO+
2025.65197
2026.683103

That’s not an insignificant improvement. Of course, those gains might be short-lived as the Astros will live without Jose Altuve for a month and Carlos Correa for the remainder of the season. That doesn’t even mention any parts and pieces that will be bartered off before the August 3rd trade deadline. However, if we assume that forces will remain constant (never a good assumption) then we can note where the gains have occurred.

If we note where the gains have occurred then we can possibly isolate those gains down to either hitting talent or hitting approach. Keep in mind that the BPO formula is made up of four components. Total bases is obviously the biggest driver and one probably more dependent on hitting talent. The smaller components are walks, hit by pitches, and stolen bases. Walks are the main component tied to hitting approach.

Before we dive into the numbers, we have to acknowledge the impact of usage. This is why we will break down the infield and outfield in subsequent labs. Those numbers tell us who should play and how often they should play. Naturally, some of that is dependent on availability, but some of that is in the hands of the manager. A statistic like BPO can tell us more about damage than traditional numbers like batting average or more crude sabermetrics like OPS.

The Astros are 49 games into the season, so we will not look at the totals for these four components. Instead we will look at the per game averages to see where if any growth we see in the numbers. 30 BPO points is pretty significant, but as you will see the per game totals might be more subtle. It shows you how small tweaks can have a pretty significant impact on the numbers.

TB/GBB/GSB/GHBP/G
202513.512.910.440.44
202613.833.480.350.47

Seeing the numbers expressed this way also helps us understand the relative impact of each metric. The best team in baseball history in steals may have averaged 1.50 steals per game. So, an extra base per game is all you would get out of that exchange. However, as you can see, the 2026 is walking nearly 0.6 times more per game than the 2025 outfit. The impact of hit by pitches is also negligible.

So, the bulk of the difference will come from total bases and walks. The combined additions there equal almost one more base per game. That is the difference between a below average offense and an above average offense. Two total bases would probably take you from below average to elite. So, we aren’t really talking about huge differences this year.

The question then comes down to how we explain the improvement. It is an overall hitting approach improvement or are we talking isolated improvements in personnel. So far, Alvarez has not missed a game and has hit like expected, It turns out that 2025 might be the anomaly there. Otherwise, it looks like Christian Walker is the only significant hitter to show considerable improvement from 2025 to 2026. Can that be attributed to the hitting coaches? I suppose anything is possible.

it should be noted that Jake Meyers and Jeremy Pena have done very little and they were solid and very good respectively last season. There is still a ton of time for them to look more like they looked last year and that could further boost the numbers we are seeing. A more productive Yainer Diaz could also give a little boost to the lineup. Nothing is ever fixed in the middle of a season. So, given these numbers do you lean more on the hitting coaches being the reason for improvement or is it because of individual performances?

Good Morning San Diego: Improved Mason Miller set to take on former team

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 18: Miguel Andujar #41 of the San Diego Padres and Mason Miller #22 of the San Diego Padres celebrate after defeating the Los Angeles Dodgers at Petco Park on May 18, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Matt Thomas/San Diego Padres/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mason Miller joined the San Diego Padres at the 2025 trade deadline, and his acquisition came at a steep price. The top prospect in the San Diego organization, Leodalis De Vries, had to be in the return for Miller and left-hander JP Sears. Padres president of baseball operations and general manager A.J. Preller paid the price for one of the top closers in MLB with four-plus years of control, but the move was questioned by many. To his credit, Preller banked on MLB experience, which Miller had, and took a risk that the loss of De Vries, as vaunted a prospect as he is, may not hurt too bad in the future. He also saw an opportunity for Miller to become an even better closer under the tutelage of pitching coach Ruben Niebla. So far, Miller has made the trade a success. Prior to a throwing error on a pickoff attempt in the second game against the Los Angeles Dodgers this week, Miller coming into the game was a winning recipe for the Padres. He did not enter in a save situation, but manager Craig Stammen believed that Miller could get through the top of the ninth with the game tied, which would give San Diego a chance to win it in the home half of the inning. That opportunity was lost and so was the game, but it was not because Miller could not throw strikes, he rushed a throw to first base and Ty France could not bring it in, which put the runner at third with one out. He later scored on a sacrifice fly and that was all the Dodgers needed. Miller is looking for an opportunity to erase that memory and he may get the chance over the next three days against the Athletics. It is not a sure thing we see Miller in one of these games, but for now he is the biggest piece of the trade between the two teams that has any chance at making an impact at the MLB level. That may change when De Vries finally makes his debut, but that will not be this week or any time soon.

Padres News:

Baseball News:

  • Tigers ace Tarik Skubal, who had surgery two weeks ago, is throwing bullpens and his velocity is already near game speed.

MLB Expert Picks & Baseball Predictions May 22

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We're starting early with our favorite MLB picks for Friday, taking a side in the lone afternoon game on the MLB schedule.

Read on to see why our baseball experts like the Cubs to hold down the fort at Wrigley, while we also have plays in Dodgers/Brewers and Rockies/Diamondbacks — plus more picks coming this morning!

  • UPDATE: Added Joe Osborne's best bet for COL/ARI.

MLB expert picks for today

PickOdds
Josh Inglis Josh Inglis: LAD/MIL o8.5+100
Neil Parker Neil Parker: CHC ML-138
Joe Osborne Joe Osborne: ARI -1.5+113

Prices courtesy of Polymarket.

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Josh Inglis' expert pick: Dodgers/Brewers Over 8.5

Price: 50¢ (+100) at Polymarket

On a bad-weather slate loaded with rain concerns and heavy winds blowing in, let's target an Over 8.5 that appears as the best spot on the board. THE BAT is projecting 10.10 runs, with a fair price of -137. The pitching matchup looks appealing, if you’re only staring at the ERAs, but shaky BlastContact numbers suggest regression appears to be coming for both starters — Logan Henderson is stranding 98% of his runners over his last two starts, while Justin Wrobleski is carrying a .223 BABIP that feels due for some correction.

  • Time: 7:40 p.m. ET
  • How to watch: BREW/SNLA

Neil Parker's expert pick: Cubs moneyline

Price: 58¢ (-138) at Polymarket

Jameson Taillon is holding opposing hitters to a well-below-average .300 wOBA, leading a tidy 3.28 ERA across 250 innings at Wrigley Field since signing with the Chicago Cubs in 2023. I give the North Siders a sizable edge on both sides of the dish, especially with Astros righty Spencer Arrighetti headed to the bump, who sports a career 5.15 ERA on the road.

  • Time: 2:20 p.m. ET
  • How to watch: Apple TV

Joe Osborne's expert pick: Diamondbacks -1.5

Price: 47¢ (+113) at Polymarket

The Arizona Diamondbacks have dominated the Rockies at home, winning 10 of the last 11 meetings in the desert. Michael Soroka has been outstanding in Arizona, with a 1.59 ERA across five home starts, and allowing one earned run or fewer in four of those outings. That’s a tough matchup for a Colorado lineup sitting at 27th in OPS vs. RHP over the past two weeks. Meanwhile, Tomoyuki Sugano faces a D-backs offense that leads MLB in runs scored over the last week. Arizona also holds a major bullpen advantage, ranking sixth in bullpen ERA over the last two weeks, while Colorado is 23rd.

  • Time: 9:40 p.m. ET
  • How to watch: One national/two local

More MLB best bets for today

PickOdds
Orioles ML-126
Read analysis in our Tigers vs. Orioles predictions

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Mets at Marlins: 5 things to watch and series predictions | May 22-24

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Mets and Marlins play a three-game series in Miami starting on Friday at 7:10 p.m. on PIX11.


5 things to watch

The starting rotation is in flux

With Clay Holmes out long-term, New York is patching things together in the rotation.

Against the Nationals in Washington, D.C., the four games were started by Christian Scott, Nolan McLean, Zach Thornton (in his MLB debut), and David Peterson (without an opener in front of him, as had become routine lately).

In Miami, Tobias Myers will start on Friday night, but he is not stretched out. That means he'll likely not go much beyond 35 or 40 pitches, and that the Mets will need plenty of length behind him. That length could come in the form of Jonah Tong, who has been held out in Triple-A just in case. Or, New York could possibly turn to Sean Manaea, who has been struggling.

The plan beyond Friday is unknown, though it will almost certainly include Freddy Peralta and one of Scott or McLean. 

Bo Bichette is heating up

Bichette went off during the series against the Nats, smacking three homers and driving in nine runs.

Over his last five games, Bichette is hitting .348/.375/.783.

Despite his prolonged slump to start the season, a rebound from Bichette wasn't hard to see coming. During his struggles, Bichette's BABIP was well below his career level despite similar metrics to his career norms.

In addition to Bichette, Carson Benge has been on fire -- and his tear dates back roughly a month.

Since April 23, Benge is slashing .347/.385/.469 (.854 OPS). He has hit safely in 10 of his last 11 games, with six multi-hit games during that span.

Juan Soto is also scorching, with a 1.357 OPS and five homers over his last eight games.

How will Nolan McLean bounce back?

McLean had a rough night against the Nats on Tuesday, allowing nine runs (six earned) on eight hits in 5.2 innings.

There were some caveats, though.

May 2, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; New York Mets pitcher Nolan McLean (26) throws in the first inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Angel Stadium.
May 2, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; New York Mets pitcher Nolan McLean (26) throws in the first inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Angel Stadium. / Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Four of the six earned runs against McLean came on an inside-the-park home run by James Wood that caromed off the glove of left fielder Nick Morabito. It was a tough play, but one that could've been made.

Beyond that, there was some concern after the game that McLean was tipping his pitches. 

If McLean doesn't pitch on Sunday in Miami, he'll likely get the ball at Citi Field on Monday against the Reds. 

The Marlins have been sinking

Miami had a nice start to the year, racing out to a 5-1 record. But it's been a slog since then.

The Marlins are 6-12 since May 3, and have lost seven of their last 10 games -- including a three-game sweep at the hands of the Braves earlier this week.

Their offense has been feast or famine, with 16 runs over their last seven losses and 31 runs in their last three wins.

Miami's starting pitching remains solid, though, and will feature Eury Perez and Max Meyer this weekend, with Sunday's starter TBD. 

Otto Lopez is having a huge season

If there's one standout for the Marlins on offense, it's Lopez. 

Lopez had a .686 OPS in parts of four seasons before 2026, but a switch has flipped for him.

The infielder is leading the majors with a .342 batting average and 68 hits, getting on base at a .373 clip, and slugging .487. 

Lopez has been an extra-base hit machine, with 13 doubles, four homers, and two triples, and has also swiped eight bags.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Juan Soto

Soto has been absolutely locked in since breaking out of a mini-slump about a week ago. 

Which Mets pitcher will have the best start?

Freddy Peralta

Peralta will be looking to bounce back after an uneven start last weekend against the Yankees.

Which Marlins player will be a thorn in the Mets' side?

Jakob Marsee

Things haven't come easily for Marsee in his second season, but he's one of the most talented bats in Miami's lineup.

MLB Lineup Report: Colt Emerson joins the rookie party, Bryson Stott gets his chance against lefties

Lineup construction both matters and doesn't, and when people argue that point they're often having two different conversations. But when we step aside from what we think a team should be doing and focus on what they're actually telling us, we're better equipped to process the changes.

When a hot player moves up in the order, it tells us the team believes in it, even if only short-term. When the Marlins finally abandon Jakob Marsee as the everyday leadoff hitter against right-handers, it can signal a new direction for the depth chart.

In a chaotic summer, it's tough to keep up with every lineup every day. That's what this article is for. Below are the spots worth watching this week.

Check out this week’s Closer Report for the latest news on the saves chase in fantasy baseball!

Arizona Diamondbacks

Ryan Waldschmidt is batting ninth while playing daily. Nolan Arenado has moved up to cleanup over the past 10 days. Ildemaro Vargas remains a lineup fixture with Carlos Santana and Pavin Smith missing so much time.

Athletics

Zack Gelof has been in the lineup 17 straight, including 15 in a row at third base. Henry Bolte has played in seven of 10 since being called up. Lawrence Butler has appeared five times during that same stretch. Carlos Cortes has hit leadoff against three consecutive righties.

Atlanta Braves

Austin Riley has been hitting as low as seventh this month depending on who else is available. There's a playing time crunch between Ha-Seong Kim and Mauricio Dubón now that Ronald Acuña Jr. is back.

Baltimore Orioles

Taylor Ward has doubled his walk rate from the past few years, but he has a career-worst ISO outside of 2020. It's unclear if this is a new identity tied to his leadoff duties in Baltimore, or if he's batting first because of this skill set. Either way, it's strange.

Samuel Basallo is, at minimum, in the lineup against all right-handers in May. It's a unique co-catching situation with him and Adley Rutschman, who are both hitting well. Jackson Holliday returned this week but sat against both southpaws Baltimore faced in favor of Jeremiah Jackson. Other current platoons include Tyler O'Neill and Colton Cowser in right field, plus Blaze Alexander and Leody Taveras in center field.

Boston Red Sox

Jarren Duran has hit leadoff in every game this month. Mickey Gasper has batted second against six of the past seven righties, stealing playing time from Masataka Yoshida even with Roman Anthony (wrist) sidelined. Marcelo Mayer has appeared against one of 11 southpaws this season.

Chicago Cubs

Moisés Ballesteros has appeared against just five of the past 10 righties after consistently hitting second versus them at the beginning of May. Michael Conforto has been the one cutting into his playing time. Pete Crow-Armstrong's glove keeps him in the lineup daily, but he's still batting mostly eighth or ninth.

Chicago White Sox

Antonacci/Murakami/Vargas/Montgomery has become the consistent 1-4 against righties. Chase Meidroth gets the leadoff role against southpaws. Jarred Kelenic has taken the primary right field job with Everson Pereira (pec) sidelined.

Cincinnati Reds

Matt McLain is the newest attempt to find a consistent leadoff hitter after TJ Friedl and Will Benson were given opportunities. Elly De La Cruz was recently bumped up from third to second. JJ Bleday has played in 22 of 23 since being recalled, including against four of five southpaws. Sal Stewart is up to 34 games at first base, five at second, and seven at third.

Cleveland Guardians

Daniel Schneemann has taken the primary leadoff role from Steven Kwan, with Angel Martínez getting looks against lefties. Travis Bazzana has only sat twice since debuting on April 28, mostly batting fifth or sixth lately. Brayan Rocchio and his .366 OBP remain stuck batting ninth. Kyle Manzardo's playing time is inconsistent, even against right-handers.

Colorado Rockies

Jake McCarthy hit leadoff against the most recent righty after Edouard Julien had done so against the previous seven. Mickey Moniak has appeared against four of the past six southpaws after getting one start in his first seven opportunities.

Detroit Tigers

Dillon Dingler plays nearly every day and has hit 2-5 since early April. Kevin McGonigle mostly plays shortstop against righties and third base versus southpaws. Colt Keith continues to bat first or third versus right-handers despite still not homering.

Houston Astros

Jeremy Peña returned from the IL on Monday and immediately went back to leading off. Jake Meyers is also back and playing center field, so we'll see how that affects playing time for Brice Matthews, Cam Smith, and Zach Cole. Yordan Alvarez has appeared in every game this year.

Kansas City Royals

Vinnie Pasquantino is getting dropped in the order against southpaws, which wasn't always happening earlier this year. Lane Thomas, Starling Marte, and Nick Loftin are operating as strict weak-side platoon bats. Otherwise, plenty of consistency here as usual.

Los Angeles Angels

Vaughn Grissom has been playing more at the expense of Yoán Moncada, and he gets premium lineup spots against lefties in particular. Zach Neto spent a couple of games hitting sixth, but has been back at leadoff for the past five contests. He and Jo Adell have appeared in every game. Josh Lowe is platooning in left field with Jose Siri.

Los Angeles Dodgers

Things are consistent here. Hyeseong Kim has shifted over to second base since Mookie Betts returned, and he's in the lineup against all right-handers.

Miami Marlins

Edwards/Hicks/Lopez/Stowers is the consistent 1-4 against righties. Joe Mack has played in 13 of 17 since debuting, all behind the plate. Jakob Marsee and Owen Caissie look like strong-side platoon bats.

Milwaukee Brewers

Jackson Chourio has appeared in every game since returning from the IL. William Contreras hasn't sat since April 19. Christian Yelich avoided a second IL stint, which has relegated Andrew Vaughn to a short-side platoon role.

Minnesota Twins

Ryan Jeffers, the team's three-hitter, is on the IL, so Kody Clemens is batting cleanup. Austin Martin hit leadoff, even against righties, when Byron Buxton missed a few games recently. Trevor Larnach continues to hold down a top lineup spot against right-handers.

New York Mets

A,J. Ewing has appeared in nine of 10 since debuting, including against two of three southpaws. Carson Benge has hit leadoff in 10 straight. Mark Vientos has batted cleanup in 13 straight. Brett Baty drops to eighth against lefties but has played against the past three they've faced.

New York Yankees

Ben Rice began the season in the lineup against one of five southpaws. Since then he's been in there for nine of the past 10 when healthy. Paul Goldschmidt bats first against lefties and has been on a tear versus them. Spencer Jones has played every other game since last Friday.

Philadelphia Phillies

Bryson Stott has played against four of the past five lefties the Phillies have faced after sitting for the previous seven. Alec Bohm has regained the cleanup role after batting eighth as recently as 10 days ago.

Pittsburgh Pirates

Konnor Griffin has batted second against the past three southpaws they've faced, and he's mostly 5-6 against righties. It's only a matter of time until he's permanently up at the top of the order. "The Password" has played in two of three since being recalled from Triple-A.

San Diego Padres

Fernando Tatis Jr. is up to 31 games in right field and 16 at second base, but still with zero homers. Miguel Andujar has appeared in 19 of 20 while batting second in each of the past four. Jackson Merrill has fallen to sixth in the order in each of the past four.

San Francisco Giants

Bryce Eldridge has played in just nine of 16 since being recalled. The 3-6 is settling in as Schmitt/Devers/Adames/Chapman for the time being.

Seattle Mariners

Colt Emerson has appeared in all four since being called up, batting eighth or ninth. He has two games at shortstop and two at third base. Julio Rodríguez, Randy Arozarena, and Cole Young have played in every game.

St. Louis Cardinals

Lots of consistency all year. The 1-4 is almost always Wetherholt/Herrera/Burleson/J-Walk. Herrera has appeared in every game.

Tampa Bay Rays

Another team with a consistent 1-4 against right-handers. It's Simpson/Caminero/Aranda/Yandy. Jonny DeLuca has played five straight after Jake Fraley landed on the IL.

Texas Rangers

They faced three consecutive southpaws this week and placed Corey Seager on the IL, so they haven't gotten into a rhythm yet. The last time they faced a righty, it was Evan Carter at leadoff and Ezequiel Duran up to fifth while playing shortstop. Josh Jung is consistently third or fourth regardless of handedness.

Toronto Blue Jays

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. was recently moved up from third to second, dropping Yohendrick Piñango to fifth against righties. Ernie Clement and Lenyn Sosa hit 5-6 against southpaws. Jesús Sánchez is mostly hitting in the bottom half of the lineup when he plays against right-handers.

Washington Nationals

Luis García Jr. bats second against righties while Curtis Mead does so against southpaws. The combo of James Wood, CJ Abrams, and Daylen Lile have sat a total of three games. Dylan Crews has played three straight since being recalled.

Minor League Recap: Khal Stephen outduels Alex Clemmey, Kahlil Watson hits 9th homer

Columbus Clippers Travis Bazzana (12) throws the ball to first base during home opener at Huntington Park on Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. | Samantha Madar/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Columbus Clippers 2, Louisville Bats 4

Clippers fall to 25-23

Several top prospects had strong games, but it wasn’t enough. Cooper Ingle went 1-for-3 with two walks to reach base safely three times.

Kahlil Watson went 2-for-5 with a home run.

George Valera also reached base safely three times, going 2-for-3 with a double and a walk while Angel Genao went 1-for-3 with a double and a walk.

Starting pitcher Austin Peteson allowed four runs (three earned) on five hits with four strikeouts and two walks in 5.1 innings.

The bullpen was terrific. Daniel Espino struck out two in 0.2 scoreless innings. Will Dion pitched 2.0 scoreless frames and Jake Miller struck out two in a scoreless frame.

Akron RubberDucks 1, Harrisburg Senators 0

RubberDucks improve to 24-17

Thursday was a pitching duel between Khal Stephen and former Guardians prospect Alex Clemmey. Clemmey struck out 11 batters, but made one mistake, an RBI double to Alfonsin Rosario, who went 1-for-2 with two walks and three stolen bases. No one else reached base safely twice.

Stephen was excellent, tossing 5.0 scoreless innings with five hits allowed while striking out four and walking one.

Adam Tulloch added a scoreless inning while Carter Rustad pitched 2.0 scoreless frames out of relief and Magnus Ellerts finished off the shutout with a scoreless inning to earn his second save.

Lake County Captains 11, Lansing Lugnuts 1

Captains improve to 21-20

Lake County once again got excellent hitting and pitching in another blowout of Lansing. Something appears to be in the water east of the Captains lately.

Leading the way was Dean Curley, who went 2-for-3 with a grand slam and a walk.

Nolan Schubart also homered, going 1-for-3 with a walk.

Aaron Walton went 2-for-4 with a double while Jace LaViolette went 1-for-2 with a triple and a walk. Maick Collado went 2-for-4 with a home run.

Starting pitcher Franklin Gomez allowed one run on two hits with five strikeouts and two walks in 6.0 innings.

Cam Schuelke and Donovan Zsak combined for 3.0 scoreless innings of relief to close out the victory.

Hill City’s came was postponed due to rain.

ACL Guardians 3, ACL White Sox 2

ACL Guardians improve to 9-6

No one had an extra base hit, but Steven Cruz went 2-for-2 with a walk and a stolen base while scoring two of the three runs for the ACL Guardians on Thursday.

Starting pitcher Edelvis Perez allowed one run in 4.0 innings on three hits. He danced around five walks while striking out four.

Friday morning Rangers things

May 20, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Texas Rangers shortstop Ezequiel Duran (20) reacts with second baseman Justin Foscue (14) after the game against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images | Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

Good morning, LSB.

The Rangers were off yesterday.

Evan Grant’s off day column details the life of the meticulous Brandon Nimmo.

Grant also writes that the Rangers have a golden opportunity this weekend against the crappy Angels.

MLB Pipeline lists a pleasantly surprising prospect from every team, and I have indeed been pleasantly surprised with the Rangers pick.

And finally former Ranger Marcus Semien is the coverboy of Jim Bowden’s piece on struggling MLB veterans. Woof.

That’s all for this morning. The Rangers start up a series against the lowly Angels at the weirdly specific time of 8:38 tonight. Jacob deGrom pitches for Texas.

Happy Friday!

Are the Orioles trying to hit the ball too hard?

CLEVELAND, OHIO - APRIL 18: Colton Cowser #17 of the Baltimore Orioles looks on during the fourth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on April 18, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

You know your team’s season is going badly when … Oh, here’s a surefire one: in-organization fights start to erupt about why the team is playing badly.

One erupted this week, as beloved MASN broadcaster and former pitcher Ben McDonald unleashed an on-air rant about the O’s overreliance on analytics. Following the O’s 5-3 loss to the Tampa Bay Rays, McDonald vented as follows:

We can talk about analytics and what could happen and what should happen if you hit the ball hard. But … I don’t care if you hit it hard and you hit it to somebody. You’re out. I don’t care how hard you throw ball four. I don’t care what your spin rate was on your breaking ball if you bounce it three feet in front of home plate. I don’t care. What I care about is, do you make plays? Do you make pitches? Do you get hits when it matters? And that’s what the Orioles are struggling to do right now. … So, all this nonsense is eyewash to me about this analytical stuff. You either do or you don’t. And right now, the Orioles don’t.

It would appear Big Ben has a point. The Orioles (21-29) entered today tied for the second-highest average exit velocity in MLB (90 mph), but their offense ranked just 17th, scoring 4.3 runs per game. Adding insult to injury, the first-place Rays (33-15), who swept Baltimore this week in three games, own the sport’s lowest average exit velo, sitting at 87.6 mph.

This is not a totally new story. Last season, the Orioles were a thoroughgoing offensive disappointment, expected to contend but ultimately finishing tied for 24th in MLB in batting average (.235), 21st in OPS (.699), and 24th in runs scored (677). Injuries played a real role: Jordan Westburg, Adley Rutschman, Colton Cowser, Ryan Mountcastle, Heston Kjerstad and Tyler O’Neill each missed fifty games or more, the latter earning himself the nickname “General Soreness.”

The organization didn’t just sit and take these body blows: instead, they took action (a pun!)—namely by firing the entire hitting staff. Coaches Sherman Johnson and Tommy Joseph were shown the door, and with new manager Craig Albernaz came Dustin Lind as lead hitting coach, who brought experience building the Giants’ and Phillies’ hitting programs.

Have these showy moves made much difference? The truth is: not really, at least not yet. Last season, the Birds hit .235 with a 42.2% hard-hit rate and a 24.2% strikeout rate. This season, they’re hitting .233 with a 42.5% hard-hit rate and a 24.7% strikeout rate. (Cue the Spiderman meme here.) If anything, they’re swinging for the fences a bit more and the contact is slightly worse.

Broken down by pitch type, the pattern becomes easy to see. Against fastballs, the Orioles own a .266 average, .379 wOBA, and a hard-hit rate of nearly 50% of balls in play. All are above average. They’re better, too, than in 2025, when the Birds hit heaters to the tune of a .244 average, .334 wOBA, and 49% hard-hit rate.

The trouble, like the old saying goes, is with the curve. As of early May, pointed out a Baltimore Sports and Life piece (appropriately titled “At some point, someone’s gotta hit a curveball”), the O’s were hitting just .182 with a .250 wOBA and a 35.4% strikeout rate (league average is 29%)—among the worst numbers in baseball. (Last season, those numbers were .206, .272 and 32.1%, so the team is now appreciably worse.) That shouldn’t be surprising given some garish individual performances you already know about: Colton Cowser has two hits off a breaking ball all year; Coby Mayo boasts a 41% strikeout rate against curveballs.

Is it the exit velocities? I’m not sure. What I can say is that exit velocity does not correlate with offensive excellence—otherwise, the Mets and the Red Sox would be contenders this year. For that matter, these five teams are the best at hitting curveballs: LAD, SEA, CLE, PHI, MIL. In exit velocity, Philadelphia ranks fourth, LAD fifth, Seattle eighth, Milwaukee 28th and Cleveland 29th. I’m no statistician, but I think it seems like average exit velocity and hitting curveballs should have nothing to do with each other. I don’t know.  But I do think the Orioles should start to give press conferences explaining why they’re so bad at hitting curveballs.

One more trend that sticks out: the terrible splits against lefties. Last year the team batting average splits against lefty/righty starters were .230/.236. This year, it’s .210/.240. That’s pretty bad. The main offenders: Leody Taveras (.156 BA against LHP), Colton Cowser (.200), Gunnar Henderson (.211) and Jeremiah Jackson (.231).

Which brings us back to Ben McDonald. He’s right that hard-hit rates and spin rates don’t matter if you’re not producing. He’s right, too, to question whether there’s too much of an emphasis on hitting the ball hard, which seemingly has little to do with offensive excellence in general.

But it seems like the curveball problems are a different thing, and so are the roster construction problems that explain why this team is so outmatched by lefties, and why the young draft classes aren’t popping like other youngsters like Bobby Witt Jr., Corbin Carroll, and Konnor Griffin.

Can all the Orioles’ struggles be laid at the feet of GM Mike Elias, wondered Steve Melewski the other day. No, he said, given the bad injury luck and underperformance. Can they be laid on the coaches? I’m inclined to think that yes, in part.

But regrettably, it feels like the blame has to go around: players, coaches, scouts, management. Losing in myriad ways, in such convincing fashion, is unfortunately a team job.

How to watch Oklahoma City Thunder-San Antonio Spurs, Game 3: TV, stream info for tonight's NBA playoff game

The Western Conference Finals continue Friday night with the series tied 1-1 as the San Antonio Spurs play host to the Oklahoma City Thunder on NBC and Peacock.

When the first two games are split in a best-of-seven series, the third game often can be pivotal. The Game 3 winner has won 78.4% of the series. In the 2026 playoffs, teams up 2-1 are 4-4.

In best-of-seven conference finals tied 1-1, the Game 3 winner has won 38 of 54 times (70.4%). The Spurs have won their past two playoff series this season after being tied 1-1 and then winning Game 3.

The Thunder are 13-2 in best-of-seven series with a 2-1 lead (and 7-19 when trailing dropping two of the first three games in a series).

This marks the first time since 2022 that a conference finals series has been tied 1-1.

See below for additional information on the Spurs-Thunder game and how to watch the 2026 NBA Playoffs on NBC and Peacock.

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How to watch Thunder vs. Spurs, Game 3:

  • When: Friday, May 22
  • Where: Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas
  • Time: 8:30 p.m. ET
  • Announcing team: Mike Tirico (play by play), Reggie Miller (analyst), Jamal Crawford (analyst), Zora Stephenson (courtside reporter) and Ashley ShahAhmadi(courtside reporter).
  • TV: NBC
  • Live Stream:Peacock
  • Series: Tied 1-1

Oklahoma City Thunder vs. San Antonio Spurs game preview:

With their Game 2 win, the Thunder are now 8-0 afer a loss during the last two playoff seasons.

Oklahoma City could again be dealing without star Jalen Williams, who played only 7 minutes in Game 2 before aggravating a left hamstring injury (he missed 26 games in the regular season with an injured right hamstring).

The Thunder are 45-10 without Williams this season (6-0 in the playoffs).

After proclaiming himself healthy from missing three weeks, Williams had played 37 minutes (second most this season) and led the Thunder with 26 points in Game 1's double-overtime loss. He reportedly underwent an MRI on Thursday and is considered day-to-day.

"He's going to get checked out," Oklahoma City head coach Mark Daigneault said. "I don't deal in hypotheticals, especially when doctors are involved... We'll see where he's at. We'll update him accordingly."

Ajay Mitchell also was hurt near the end of Game 2 but is expected to play in Game 3.

The Spurs also are dealing with myriad injury woes.

Starting point guard De’Aaron Fox missed the first two games with right ankle soreness and was replaced by rookie Dylan Harper, who had 24 pts, 11 rebounds, six assists and seven steals in the Game 1 win. The 20-year-old started Game 2 but left with a right hamstring injury in the third quarter.

Spurs head coach Mitch Johnson said he had “no update” on the availability of Harper, who reportedly underwent an MRI on Thursday.

The next man up with both guards out in the second half was Jordan McLaughlin, a 5-11 guard, who stayed on the bench over the 58 minutes of Game 1. McLaughlin hasn’t played more than 10 minutes in a playoff game since 2023.


How to watch the Western Conference Finals on NBC and Peacock:

NBC Sports will present the San Antonio Spurs vs. the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference Finals. All games will be broadcast on NBC and Peacock. Here is the series schedule:

  • Game 1: Spurs 122, Thunder 115, 2OT
  • Game 2: Thunder 122, Spurs 113
  • Game 3: Friday, May 22, 8:30 p.m. ET
  • Game 4: Sunday, May 24, 8 p.m. ET
  • Game 5: Tuesday, May 26, 8:30 p.m.*
  • Game 6: Thursday, May 28: 8:30 p.m.*
  • Game 7: Saturday, May 30, 8 p.m.*

*—If necessary

RELATED:Ludacris, NBC Sports team up for ‘It’s Time’ spot promoting NBA Playoffs return to NBC

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Sid Isn't Done Yet — And Neither Is The 2,000-Point Discussion

At the juncture Pittsburgh Penguins' captain Sidney Crosby has reached in his storied NHL career, it's inevitable that he is going to be asked a whole lot about his future and how long he intends to keep playing the sport he loves. 

After all, Father Time is undefeated, right?

Well, that's the case for most athletes. Sports are a young man's game, and it's only a matter of time before the end comes calling. Legs start to give out. Basic conditioning becomes harder and harder. Performance begins to dwindle. The pace of the game suddenly starts to feel faster than you remember, with things happening at a speed you can no longer keep up with. 

Yet none of that is happening for Crosby, at least, not yet. And in an exclusive interview with The Athletic's Josh Yohe on Thursday at the IIHF World Championship in Switzerland, he made sure to clarify on his comments from locker cleanout day earlier this month about going "year-to-year" that this season - the final season of his current two-year contract - will not be his last playing in the NHL.

"It's pretty obvious why I would just go year-to-year with the contracts," Crosby told Yohe. "At the end of the day, I'm just going to do what's best for the team. It's got nothing to do with how long I want to play. It's not like that at all."

He added: "I definitely want to keep playing for as many years as possible."

Sidney Crosby isn’t close to retiring, wants to play ‘for as many years as possible’Sidney Crosby isn’t close to retiring, wants to play ‘for as many years as possible’Crosby is signed for one more year, the 22nd of his career. Only 13 players in NHL history have played more seasons.

Not only is that music straight to the ears of Penguins' fans and hockey fans everywhere, it's also a statement that Crosby believes he has a whole lot more left in the tank.

Simply put, he isn't built like other hockey players, like other athletes. When his legs start to give out, when the conditioning gets harder, when performance isn't up to par, and when the pace appears to be catching up, he always finds ways to reinvent himself and maintain the separation between he and the Hockey Reaper. 

Right now, Crosby - who will turn 39 this summer - has 654 goals and 1,761 points in 1,420 career NHL games. He is currently sitting at seventh all-time in NHL points, and assuming he is healthy in 2026-27, he should surpass both Marcel Dionne (sixth) at 1,771 and Ron Franis (fifth) at 1,798. And with at least a 90-point season, he will also surpass Gordie Howe (fourth) at 1,850. 

Wayne Gretzky is the only player in NHL history - and the guy at the top of the list - to have hit 2,000 points. 

You do the math.

Sidney Crosby Is Up To His Usual Shenanigans At The World ChampionshipsSidney Crosby Is Up To His Usual Shenanigans At The World ChampionshipsSidney Crosby is doing Sidney Crosby things at the World Championships again.

If 2026-27 is, indeed, not Crosby's final season playing in the NHL - which, he's adamant it won't be - that means with one more season above point-per-game, he'll be at 1,844 points. And it would be his 22nd consecutive season accomplishing the feat. 

In order to reach 2,000 points, Crosby would need to average 79.6 points in the next three seasons to get there. Should he remain healthy and at point-per-game or higher? He will get there sometime during that third season, which would be his age 41 season. 

And you know what? All of that sounds pretty attainable. 

The fact of the matter is that the longer Crosby keeps playing, the closer he gets to that historic mark. The longer he keeps playing, he only keeps proving that he isn't slowing down in any kind of remarkable way. He is designed for longevity, and he has delivered on that design for 21 years already. 

Plus, if the Penguins really are going to try to get better this summer and in the next couple of years as suggested by GM and POHO Kyle Dubas, there's an even better chance Crosby hits the mark. Along the way, Dubas will aim to surround Crosby with more talent and younger talent -- which, along with health, is going to be the key factor in him reaching 2,000 points at the end of the day. 

If Bryan Rust and Rickard Rakell continue to play with Crosby through at least next season, and, possibly, the last two years of their contracts, they're each good for at least 20-plus goals and 60-plus points, and that's probably on the low end of things when considering their goals-per-game and points-per-game production over the last two seasons mostly spent alongside Crosby. 

And, if they don't continue to play with Crosby, that probably means someone like Egor Chinakhov - who had 18 goals and 36 points in 43 games with the Penguins last season - would flank him, and possibly, even a new face who is younger and NHL-established

3 Big Takeaways From Dubas's End-Of-Season Press Conference3 Big Takeaways From Dubas's End-Of-Season Press ConferenceOn Tuesday, Pittsburgh Penguins' general manager and president of hockey operations Kyle Dubas met with the media to discuss the 2025-26 season and what's next for the organization this summer.

Either way, the point is that Crosby won't have any shortage of talent to play with for his final years in hockey, and that should only lend more to him being able to reach the 2,000 point milestone -- even when he starts to drop off. Because, let's face it: Crosby, like everyone, is eventually going to hit a bit of a wall. His defense has already declined quite a bit, but there will come a day when the offense is what it used to be, either.

Even still, it feels not just dirty but plain incorrect to suggest that he's all of a sudden going to see his production cut in half within the next three years. It feels like he is the type of player who is going to decline gradually rather than steeply. But in that hypothetical scenario where Crosby does fall off drastically in that second or third year?

Well, he would only need to average 59.75 points over the next four years to reach 2,000. Again, that seems attainable, even with a falloff.

So, while we sit back and enjoy what's left of Crosby's career, it's likely that we'll see him chasing a feat of all-time greatness that has only, once before, been realized. After all, he is one of the best to ever do it already -- so why put a cap on greatness?

Analyzing The Penguins' Rebuild: Are The Penguins Close To Sustainable Contention?Analyzing The Penguins' Rebuild: Are The Penguins Close To Sustainable Contention?The Pittsburgh Penguins made the playoffs for the first time in four years in 2026, and GM and POHO Kyle Dubas has emphasized that he wants his team to be a sustainable Stanley Cup contender. So, how close are Dubas and the Penguins?What Would It Take For Penguins To Land 3 'Big Fish' In Trade Market?What Would It Take For Penguins To Land 3 'Big Fish' In Trade Market?Pittsburgh Penguins' general manager and president of hockey operations Kyle Dubas made it clear that he is ready to activate in the trade market this summer. So, what would it cost for him to go after names like Auston Matthews, Robert Thomas, and Jason Robertson?

Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!  

Minor league update for 5/21/26

MINNEAPOLIS - APRIL 22: Liz Phair performs at First Avenue Nightclub in Minneapolis, Minnesota on April 22, 1995. (Photo by Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hickory starter Aidan Deakins struck out four in six innings, allowing one homer and two runs.

Paulino Santana homered. Yolfran Castillo had a hit and a stolen base. Marcos Torres was 2 for 4 with a double. Josh Springer had a hit and a walk.

Hickory box score

Hub City starter J’Briell Easley struck out seven and walked one in three shutout, no hit innings. Brock Porter struck out three and walked two in 4.1 IP, allowing one run. Joey Danielson struck out one and walked one in 1.1 scoreless innings.

Paxton Kling doubled. Gleider Figuereo had a pair of hits and a stolen base. Malcolm Moore and Yeison Morrobel each had a hit.

Hub City box score

Dalton Pence started for Frisco, allowing three runs in 5.1 IP, striking out five. Ryan Lobus struck out two and walked two in 1.1 IP, allowing one run. Bryan Magdaleno walked two and struck out one in 0.1 IP, allowing one run.

Dylan Dreiling doubled. Keith Jones II had a hit.

Frisco box score

Round Rock starter David Davalillo struggled with his command again, walking five and throwing a wild pitch in five innings, striking out four and allowing two runs. Luis Curvelo walked one, struck out one and gave up two runs in an inning. Alexis Diaz struck out one and walked one in a scoreless inning. Ryan Brasier struck out two in 1.1 scoreless innings. Emiliano Teodo struck out one in 1.2 IP without allowing a run.

Aaron Zavala doubled twice. Cam Cauley had a hit and two stolen bases.

Round Rock box score

Yankees vs. Rays: 5 things to watch and series predictions | May 22-24

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Yankees host the Rays at Yankee Stadium for a three-game series starting Friday...


5 things to watch

Cole returns

The biggest event going into this series is the return of Gerrit Cole.

This will be the first time Cole pitches in an MLB game since Game 5 of the 2024 World Series, and he can give the rotation a spark. With Max Fried on the IL and Carlos Rodon still finding his way back to form from his own IL stint, Cole can set the tone for the weekend. 

Cole made six starts in the minors between High-A, Double-A and Triple-A and has been solid. He pitched to a 4.66 ERA, but what was most encouraging was Cole's final rehab start. Pitching in Triple-A, Cole allowed one run on six hits and one walk across 5.1 innings and struck out six -- and his velocity was nearing 100 mph. 

Bottom of the order woes

This has been a persistent problem for most of the season, but especially of late with Jose Caballero on the IL.

The bottom of the Yankees order has been a black hole. Anthony Volpe, Ryan McMahon and Austin Wells are a combined 10-for-63 with one home run and six RBI in their last seven games.

Wells, especially, has struggled. He's in a 2-for-22 rut with one walk and 11 strikeouts. He is slugging just .252 this season and has only three home runs in 38 games. 

J.C. Escarra hasn't been much better as a catching option, but manager Aaron Boone may make the position a true platoon this weekend. Escarra started Thursday's series finale with the Blue Jays and two of the four games in the series. 

Jose Caballero and Anthony Volpe

Caballero is adamant that he'll need the minimum 10 days before be reactivated from the IL, and gives the club an interesting choice to make. Will the Yanks option Volpe back to the minors? Boone said that shortstop was Caballero's when he returned but Volpe's play has raised the question of whether it's worth keeping him on the roster.

Apr 13, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Jose Caballero (72) follows through on a two run home run against the Los Angeles Angels during the second inning at Yankee Stadium
Apr 13, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Jose Caballero (72) follows through on a two run home run against the Los Angeles Angels during the second inning at Yankee Stadium / John Jones-Imagn Images

Since his call-up, Volpe is slashing .217/.400/.304 with an OPS of .704. While he hasn't gone yard, his plate discipline looks much improved over last season and his defense has impressed. 

Volpe does not have the versatility that Caballero does, and if the Yankees are looking for some offense from the left side of the infield, there's a world where Volpe stays at short and Caballero starts at third base. Caballero has played 83 games at the hot corner, and could be a nice right-handed complement to the left-handed hitting McMahon.

Judge in a slump

Playing under the radar in recent days is Aaron Judge. The two-time MVP has just four hits in his last seven games with no home runs -- he hasn't homered in his last 10 games. In the four-game series against the Blue Jays, Judge went 1-for-15 with no extra-base hits and eight strikeouts.

The offense goes as Judge goes and they'll need him against a Rays staff that entered Friday's game sixth in MLB with a 3.57 ERA.

Here's who the Yankees are expected to face this weekend:

  • Nick Martinez: 1.51 ERA
  • Drew Rasmussen: 3.19 ERA
  • Shane McClanahan: 2.82 ERA

All three starters have been awesome to start the season, and Judge needs to get going to help a lineup that is not getting anything from the bottom of the order.

Clawing back into AL East contention

The Yankees enter the three-game series 4.5 games behind the Rays for first place in the AL East. 

This weekend is also important for potential tiebreaker situations later in the season. The Rays swept a three-game series in Tampa back in mid-April, so the Yanks want to try and even up the season series. Considering the head-to-head with the Blue Jays last season cost the Yankees the division, they'll want to avoid a similar fate.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Ben Rice

The young slugger continues his tear.

Which Yankees pitcher will have the best start?

Gerrit Cole

Even not knowing who the Yankees will deploy on Saturday and Sunday, Cole is rested and will be impressive against the AL East rivals.

Which Rays player will be a thorn in the Yankees' side?

Junior Caminero

Caminero is the best player on the team and it'll be difficult to get him out this weekend.

Canadiens Expose Hurricanes In A Way Islanders Fans Know All Too Well

On Thursday night, the Carolina Hurricanes suffered their first loss of these 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs, falling 6-2 to the Montreal Canadiens in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals. 

Rod Brind'Amour's team got "Caned."

When the Hurricanes dictate play, as has been more the norm, they can make every team in the league look helpless. 

Islanders fans have seen it time and time again, whether in the regular season or the playoffs. 

Back on Apr. 4, the Hurricanes outshot the Islanders 40-16 in what became Patrick Roy's final game behind their bench. 

Despite the 4-3 score, the Islanders spent most of the night on their side of the red line and blue line, getting outshot 13-4 in the first period and 18-2 in the second period before pushing in the third as they tried to erase what was a 3-2 deficit before Sebastian Aho made it 4-2 at the 24-second mark of the third period. 

But, Thursday night showed the other side of Carolina. 

The Hurricanes could not stop the relentless forechecking of Montreal, with every mistake they made ending up in the back of their net. 

Starting goaltender Frederik Andersen, who had not allowed more than two goals in a game in what was a perfect 8-0 start to the postseason for him and Carolina, allowed two goals on the first four shots he faced, allowing four goals in the opening 11:28. 

After the first period, the Hurricanes were trailing 4-1 and outshot 14-13 before a solid second-period rebound, outscoring Montreal 1-0 in the middle frame and outshooting them 11-3.

But, then came the third period. 

Juraj Slafkovsky scored twice, the last of the two into the empty net in a period in which both teams weren't shooting too much. 

While shots were 6-2 in favor of Montreal, the Hurricanes were held without a shot for 18:38. 

When the Hurricanes are humming, they are incredibly hard to beat, but they clearly weren't ready for the pace that Montreal has been playing with and paid the price.

And Islanders fans probably enjoyed every second of it.