Canadiens' Prospect Getting First Taste Of Montreal

During the Montreal Canadiens’ dressing room clear-out day, Ivan Demidov revealed that he would be training with the Habs’ second-round pick of the 2025 draft (and their first pick of that draft), his childhood friend Alexander Zharovsky. While Demidov and his significant other have been vacationing in Mexico, Zharovsky made his way to Montreal and arrived on Wednesday.

On both Thursday and Friday morning, he was seen skating on the CN Sports Complex ice in Brossard and Paul Byron, who’s now a Player Development Consultant with the Canadiens, was with him on Friday morning, closely monitoring his every move. After Dans les coulisses had exclusive images of his Thursday skating session, RDS sent a crew to Brossard on Friday morning to capture more images.

TVA Sports’ Nicolas Cloutier has obtained confirmation from Dan Milstein, Zharovsky’s agent, that the youngster will leave Montreal from June 20 to June 24 to attend the Gold Star pre-draft camp. He also attended last season when the Canadiens had an appointment with him, a clear sign that they were hoping to select him at the draft days later.

After that camp, he will come back to town and attend the Canadiens’ development camp, which he missed last year because of a visa issue. He’ll remain in Montreal until it’s time to head back to Russia in mid-July in time for Ufa’s Salavat Yualev training camp. The young Russian has one year left on his contract, which expires at the end of May 2027. Should his team miss the playoffs or be eliminated early, he could be released early, just as Demidov was by St. Petersburg’s SKA back in the spring of 2025. Until then, though, attending the Development camp in July is your best option to see what the promising winger can do.


Follow Karine on X @KarineHains Bluesky @karinehains.bsky.social and Threads @karinehains.  

Bookmark The Hockey News Canadiens' page for all the news and happenings around the Canadiens.

Join the discussion by signing up to the Canadiens' roundtable on The Hockey News.

Subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here

Canucks Sign Defenceman Jack Thompson To One-Year Contract Extension

Vancouver Canucks defenceman Jack Thompson is returning to the organization for the 2026-27 season.

The 24-year-old defenceman, who was set to become a restricted free-agent at the end of this season, signed a one-year, two-way contract extension earlier today. 

Thompson was acquired via trade for Jett Woo back at the start of March, heading to the Abbotsford Canucks from the San Jose Sharks organization. He impressed in his first few games with Abbotsford, recording two goals and three assists in his first two games. Thompson finished the 2025-26 season with three goals and 10 assists in 14 games with Abbotsford. 

A third-round pick in the 2020 NHL Draft by the Tampa Bay Lightning, Thompson parted ways with the Lightning organization in the 2023-24 season. During the 2024-25 season, he split his time with the Sharks and the San Jose Barracuda, putting up four goals and six assists in 31 games at the NHL level. In 85 career games with the Barracuda, Thompson registered seven goals and 28 assists. 

Thompson's signing comes less than 24 hours after the Canucks announced the hiring of new Abbotsford General Manager and Vancouver Assistant GM Richard Seeley. The defenceman was one of seven Canucks who were set to be restricted free agents come the 2026 off-season. 

Photo Credit: @AbbyCanucks - X
Photo Credit: @AbbyCanucks - X

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.

Latest From THN’s Vancouver Canucks Site:

Two Canucks Receive Votes For The 2026 NHL All-Rookie Team

New Abbotsford GM Richard Seeley Brings Plenty Of Experience To The Canucks Organization

The Vancouver Canucks' Seven 2026 Restricted Free Agents

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.

The Hockey News
The Hockey News

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights Prediction, Picks & Odds for Sunday's Stanley Cup Final 6

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

The Carolina Hurricanes are one win away from ending the 2026 Stanley Cup Final, and they'll look to do so in the desert on Sunday, June 14.

My Hurricanes vs. Golden Knights predictions and NHL picks expect Carolina to hoist the Cup in Game 6, with goaltender Brandon Bussi turning in another tidy performance in Game 6.

Puck drop is set for 8 p.m. ET from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, with the game airing on ABC and Sportsnet. 

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights Game 6 prediction

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights best bet: Brandon Bussi Over 21.5 saves (-110)

This total is too low for Carolina Hurricanes netminder Brandon Bussi.

In addition to winning consecutive starts, Bussi was particularly sharp in Game 5 with 23 saves and 2.84 goals saved above expected.

Meanwhile, the Vegas Golden Knights have consistently tilted the ice in their favor for stretches throughout the series:

  • 11 shots on 26 attempts in the second period of Game 1
  • 23 shots on 35 attempts in the second and third periods of Game 2
  • 23 shots on 43 attempts in the second and third periods of Game 3
  • Nine shots on 22 attempts in the third period of Game 4
  • 13 shots on 25 attempts in the third period of Game 5

The Golden Knights should place an even higher emphasis on testing Bussi early and often in Game 6, and I'd recommend playing this prop down to -125.

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights Game 6 same-game parlay

Carolina’s edge in overall depth in front of Bussi will be the difference in Game 6.

Vegas starter Carter Hart has surrendered at least four goals in all five games of the series, sporting an .856 save percentage and 5.06 goals saved below expected, and the loss of William Karlsson (wrist) is a huge blow to the Golden Knights.

The two teams have also combined for 39 goals with six or more in all five games, and with the potential for earlier empty-net situations in an elimination game, I’m anticipating another high-scoring bout.

Carolina winger Seth Jarvis has marked the scoresheet in three of the past four games and paces Carolina forwards in ice time and on-ice expected goals during the series.

I'd play this SGP down to +280.

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights SGP

  • Hurricanes moneyline
  • Over 5.5
  • Seth Jarvis Over 0.5 points

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights odds for Game 6

  • Moneyline: Hurricanes -115 | Golden Knights -105
  • Puck Line: Hurricanes -1.5 (+210) | Golden Knights +1.5 (-260)
  • Over/Under: Over 5.5 (-125) | Under 5.5 (+105)

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights trend

Carolina has won 20 of its last 25 games (+13.75 Units / 34% ROI). Find more NHL betting trends for Hurricanes vs. Golden Knights.

How to watch Hurricanes vs Golden Knights 6

LocationT-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, NV
DateSunday, June 14, 2026
Puck drop8:00 p.m. ET
TVABC, Sportsnet

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Avalanche's MacKinnon And Makar Named To NHL All-Star Teams

The NHL has announced the First and Second All-Star Teams, and Colorado Avalanche's Cale Makar has made the First Team, and Nathan MacKinnon has made the Second Team.

For Makar, this is his sixth consecutive season earning an All-Star honor; it's his third time being named to the All-Star First Team. With his nomination, he becomes the first player in Avalanche/Quebec Nordique history to earn six career postseason all-star honors and the first to be named to theNHL First All-Star Team on four occasions. 

This is MacKinnon’s fifth total selection, which tied him with Michel Goulet for the 2nd most. This is also the 11th time in Avalanche history that multiple players were named to postseason All-Star Teams in the same season, which included All-Rookie Teams as well.

Historic Performances From Both Players.

Makar finished last season with 79 points (20g/59a) in 75 games, ranking among NHL rearguards in points (3rd), assists (T-4th), goals (6th), even-strength goals (16, 3rd), and time on ice per game (24:51, 7th). He was the runner-up for the 2026 James Norris Memorial Trophy, which helped him become the second player in NHL history to be a finalist in six of the first seven full seasons.

During the season, we saw Makar score his 500th career point in his 467th game against the Winnipeg Jets on March 28th, helping him become the fourth-fastest defenseman in NHL history to reach 500 points, only behind Bobby Orr (396 GP), Paul Coffey (422 GP), and Denis Potvin (465 GP).

He also became the fastest defenseman in NHL history to reach 25 career game-winning goals (399 GP) when he notched the game-winner on Oct. 16 against the Columbus Blue Jackets. He tied his career-high in assists with four against the New Jersey Devils on Oct. 28. With the hot start of the team this season, he helped by starting the season with 10 points in his first 10 road games, which tied for the third-longest streak to start a season by a defenseman in NHL history.

MacKinnon capped off his historic season by taking home his first career Rocket Richard Trophy after leading the NHL in goals with 53, joining Milan Hejduk in 2002-03 as the only other Avalanche player to win the trophy. He also finished third in Hart Memorial Trophy voting.

Nathan MacKinnon Had The NHL Wondering If History Was About To Repeat ItselfNathan MacKinnon Had The NHL Wondering If History Was About To Repeat ItselfNathan MacKinnon’s explosive start briefly fueled rare Triple Crown conversations before he finished another dominant season with 52 goals, 74 assists, and a Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy, reaffirming his place among the NHL’s most unstoppable forces.

His 127 points in 80 games are the third most points in franchise history, only behind his own 140 he set during the 2023-24 season and Peter Stastny’s 139 in 1981-82. Of his 127 points, 97 were even-strength points (42 goals and 55 assists), the most in a single season since Wayne Gretzky's 103 (33 goals and 70 assists) back in the 1990-91 season with the Los Angeles Kings. He also paced the NHL in multi-goal games (14), three-point games (20), third-period points (56), shots (350), and rating (+57) and was tied for third in assists.

During his campaign, he surpassed Joe Sakic for the most points by an Avalanche player (1,015) in October. He became the first player in NHL history to score a game-winning goal against 32 different franchises when he scored against the Utah Mammoth on Oct. 9. 

While if you ask any Avalanche fan, or even Makar or MacKinnon, that this season would be even better with a Gold medal at the Olympics or another Stanley Cup, it's still important to look back at this season and admire the feats that these players are achieving. They put so much pressure on themselves that, yes, it's disappointing not seeing them win it, but it cements their legacy in what they are doing, not just with the team but in the NHL as a whole, and they are sure that they will look to improve even more next season.

Avalanche’s End-of-Season Media Availability: What Sakic & Kronke Had To SayAvalanche’s End-of-Season Media Availability: What Sakic & Kronke Had To SayGeneral Manager and President of Hockey Operations Joe Sakic and KSE Vice Chairman Josh Kronke spoke with the media today about the past Colorado Avalanche season and how things look for the future of the team

San Diego walks it off for first series victory of June

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 10: Fernando Tatis Jr. #23 of the San Diego Padres hits a walk-off solo home run against the Cincinnati Reds at Petco Park on June 10, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After what felt like an incredibly long wait, the San Diego Padres have finally won a series this month. After being outdueled in extras the previous night, the Friars walked off the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday afternoon thanks to a home run from Fernando Tatis Jr.

The offense looked much healthier in the series against Cincinnati, especially the San Diego stars. Tatis, Jackson Merrill and Manny Machado produced better than they have while role players like Samad Taylor and Will Wagner stepped up in the last few games. It’s been a welcome sight.

With their sights now set on a struggling Baltimore Orioles club, the Friars hope to improve on their recent lousy stretch.

Taking the mound

Shane Baz (BAL) v. Griffin Canning (SD)

Baz was traded for this offseason by Baltimore as one of the many additions the club made to their organization. The pitching staff looks much more stable for years to come after he signed an extension with the O’s.

That said, he hasn’t looked that great on the mound this year. Through 13 starts, the righty owns a 4.09 ERA and 1.38 WHIP. It’s hardly the production a club wants from someone expected to be a front-line starter. He’s looked better in his last few games, giving up just four runs in his last 19 2/3 inning pitched.

Canning has certainly struggled in his tenure with San Diego. The right-hander has been saddled with a 6.34 ERA and a 1.47 WHIP through seven starts. 

Beyond that, he hasn’t worked deep into games. Canning has average 4 2/3 innings across his starts in 2026. The Padres hope that he’ll pitch as good as he did against the New York Mets last week (1 ER, 5.0 IP).

Batter up!

It’s been easy to criticize the San Diego lineup lately. They’ve certainly struggled. But their recent turnaround has been fun to watch. It’s not like the Friar Faithful should expect a total 180, but the club seems to have sparked to life.

  1. Fernando Tatis Jr., 2B
  2. Jackson Merrill, CF
  3. Manny Machado, 3B
  4. Gavin Sheets, DH
  5. Samad Taylor, LF
  6. Ty France, 1B
  7. Jase Bowen, RF
  8. Freddy Fermin, C
  9. Sung-Mun Song, SS

Fermin’s homer streak ended at three games in spite of coming close in the 10th inning of Tuesday’s game against Cincinnati. He’s been on a tear this last week and will look to continue that.

Beyond that, Machado has been much better at making contact and putting balls in play. Apart from some tough moments in Tuesday night’s contest, he went 3-for-9 with two RBI in the Friars’ last two games.

Relief corps

Michael King did exactly what he needed to do on Wednesday. He kept the game close, giving up three runs while going 6 2/3 innings. It wasn’t a perfect outing by any means, but the bullpen needed it.

After Tuesday night’s 11 inning marathon, the Padres’ relievers had been heavily taxed. Only Ron Marinaccio and Wandy Peralta were available out of the ‘pen. They were the only two the Friars would need. The duo’s only blemish came on a solo shot that Marinaccio surrendered in the eighth. 

That said, with the off day on Thursday, mostly everyone will be available. But the high-leverage options will be out in full force. Jason Adam, Yuki Matsui, Adrian Morejon, David Morgan, Mason Miller and Bradgley Rodriguez will all be options for manager Craig Stammen to turn to.

MiLB Guardians Recap: Arias En Fuego

Columbus Clippers 6, Indianapolis Indians 11

Clippers fall to 36-29

Some old friends had some big days for the Clippers as a rehabbing Gabriel Arias went 2-for-3 with his third home run already. He has a ridiculous 1.377 OPS in his rehab assignment thus far.

Bo Naylor also blasted off for a home run, going 2-for-4 with a double and a walk while Kahlil Watson went 2-for-3 with two doubles, two walks and also stole a base.

Starting pitcher Ryan Webb got torched for six runs (three earned) on three hits with six walks and five strikeouts in 3.0 innings.

Pedro Avila attempted to be an innings eater, but he also wore it for five runs (three earned) in 4.0 innings.

Akron RubberDucks 7, Erie SeaWolves 8

RubberDucks fall to 31-29

Alex Mooney had an incredible game, going 4-for-4 with a home run and a double with two stolen bases (including home), but it wasn’t enough as Akron’s pitching had a rough day.

Jaison Chourio also continued his strong performance at Double-A, going 2-for-5 with a triple and a home run while Luke Hill also homered, his first since being promoted.

Dylan DeLucia got absolutely blistered for seven runs on eight hits with two strikeouts and two walks in 2.2 innings pitched.

Matt Jachec, Alaska Abney and Adam Tulloch were excellent out of the bullpen, combining for 5.1 shutout innings with seven strikeouts. Carter Rusted then gave up a walk-off double in the bottom of the ninth after Akron had tied it 7-7 in the top of the ninth.

Lake County Captains 6, West Michigan Whitecaps 5

Captains improve to 34-25

Lake County got some strong performances from its college bats as Dean Curley had a huge game, going 2-for-3 with a home run, a double and a walk.

Nolan Schubart also homered, going 1-for-2 with two walks and three RBIs and Jace LaViolette went 2-for-4.

Starting pitcher Melkis Hernandez was extremely hittable on the day, giving up five runs on 11 hits with one strikeout and one walk in 3.1 innings.

The bullpen dominated the rest of the way, however, as Logan McGuire, Luis Flores and Connor Zsak combined for 5.2 innings of scoreless relief with seven strikeouts.

Hill City Howlers 3, Wilson Warbirds 7

Howlers fall to 28-32

No one had a multi-hit game or an extra-base hit for Hill City on Thursday, although the team drew several walks.

Dauri Fernandez went 1-for-4 with a walk and a stolen base while Yerlin Luis and Yaikel Mijares both went 1-for-2 with two walks, with Mijares also stealing a base.

Luis De La Cruz and Jhorvic Abreus also both walked twice.

Starting pitcher Joey Oakie had a rough day, allowing five runs (four earned) on six hits with three strikeouts and three walks in 4.0 innings.

Chase Mobley was given a chance to piggyback with Oakie and he allowed two runs on two hits with two walks in just 1.0 inning of work.

Javi Torres and Eudry Alcantara were superb, both tossing 2.0 scoreless frames, but the damage had been done.

ACL Guardians 17, ACL Reds 6

Guardians improve to 19-12

The ACL Guardians are officially the most patient team I’ve ever seen. They scored 17 runs on just eight hits Thursday, largely in part to drawing a ridiculous 15 walks and getting hit by a pitch.

Alejandro Blasco continued his insanely scorching start to the season, going 2-for-3 with his third home run and a walk. He has a .600 batting average and a 2.194 OPS already through seven games.

Catching prospect Reiner Herrera also homered and walked twice while Pedro Dalmagro homered and walked.

Rodny Rosario went 1-for-2 with three whiles while Estivel Morillo went 1-for-3 with two walks, three RBIs and three runs scored. Steven Cruz went 1-for-3 with two walks and a stolen base and Angel Abreu walked twice and was hit by a pitch.

Starting pitcher Edelvis Perez was tagged for six runs (five earned) on six hits with four strikeouts and two walks in 4.0 innings. A rehabbing Zach Jacobs tossed a scoreless inning and Alejandro Rivera finished off the game with 4.0 scoreless innings with five strikeouts to earn the win.

A Dodgers fan guide to Rate Field, home of the Chicago White Sox

Adric overlooking Rate Field
Adric overlooking Rate Field. June 25, 2024 | Michael Elizondo / True Blue LA

So you have decided to heed the call to adventure. Good for you.

If you need to recall what the Guide is or who I am, please refer to the included links.

The House that Apathy Built

The Guide has the following to say about going to a game at Rate Field:

Did you lose a bet? Were you too cheap to go to Wrigley Field? In either case, do I have a ballpark for you! An avatar to giving less than your all, a totem to mediocrity, a marker for failure in novel ways one would expect in fiction rather than in reality. If there is a corner to be cut, Rate Field found a way. Prepare for the unreality, if you dare to tread here.

Rate Field stinks.

For the lazy or disinterested, you can stop right here. If you were somehow wondering whether Wrigley or Rate Field was the superior Chicago stadium, it’s Wrigley, which isn’t perfect by any means. Imagine your reaction if someone claimed that Angel Stadium was superior to Dodger Stadium, and the point is made.

Some stadiums in this Guide are not worth your time and money for various reasons. Some are the victims of terrible design decisions (Daikin Park, loanDepot Park). Some are victims of possessing a poor baseball culture (Angel Stadium, Truist Park, loanDepot Park). Some are venues that really should be put out to pasture (Angel Stadium, Chase Field, Tropicana Field). One is the Oakland Coliseum — it is this author’s opinion that anyone who likes a dive bar over the age of 25 needs to grow up. Rate Field does not even have “it’s just an average minor ballpark playing as a placeholder to everyone’s detriment” status working against it.

Rate Field somehow manages to combine all of the above demerits and adds a certain je n’sais quoi of soul-crushing apathy. At least it did, until one man sauntered in from Japan, someone whom I have been hyping for 18 months: Munetaka Murakami. Murakami-san has injected life—and he’s now hurt. Of course he is. Never mind; the rhetorical beating shall continue until morale improves.

Fans came when the Dodgers did. Rate Field. June 26, 2024

The only positive of Rate Field is the home fans, those motley, brave souls who remain. I will not criticize them, because I can think of home fans that are instantly far more annoying in their home venues (Rogers Centre, Petco Park, Oracle Park, Busch Stadium 3, Angel Stadium, loanDepot Park) than fans of the White Sox.

There was always going to be one stadium that arrived too soon for the retroclassic ballpark boom started by Oriole Park at Camden Yards, and that was this ballpark. New Comiskey Park, as it was first known, was the house that cheapness and apathy built. But while missing the retroclassic boom may have capped this venue’s potential, it just means mediocrity on paper.

There was no reason that this stadium to be this bad. Rate Field has had multiple names over its 35-year history:

  • “New” Comiskey Park: 1991-2002
  • U.S. Cellular Field: 2003–2016
  • Guaranteed Rate Field: 2016–2024
  • Rate Field: 2025–Present

At the risk of bastardizing the Bard, a corpse flower by any other name would still smell just as bad in bloom.

We often learn more from failure than success, so it’s time to rip the figurative bandage off and see what went wrong. The following is all you will need to know if you made the mistake of going to Chicago for the purpose of seeing a Dodgers/White Sox game.

The Five Questions of the Guide

1. Is it worth going to?

No — unless you are trying to visit all 30 current MLB ballparks.

Welcome to Rate Field. June 24, 2024

Establishing that Rate Field is a subpar venue is easy.

Narrowing down the why and how requires some rhetorical work. The most obvious flaw is the sheer, almost overwhelming sense of apathy that permeates the ballpark. If there was a corner to be cut to save a buck, this ballpark found a way. I visited in 2024 on a lark, which was the infamous year of failure for the organization.

This elephant in the room cannot be ignored while making or understanding this review, as the massive stench of the wafting failure was a long time coming. A fan had an infamously viral call to ESPN Chicago 1000 AM in 2023 that presaged the madness that unfolded in 2024.

Once the failure arrived, it was all-encompassing, all-consuming, a self-sustaining gravity well of terrible decisions that reinforced the failure.

But the White Sox being bad is actually good for a visiting team. Who doesn’t want to see the Dodgers win in person? When the proceedings are as drab as Rate Field, even ironic enjoyment is hard to come by because the visiting team better win. Imagine if the Harlem Globetrotters lost to the Washington Generals; that’s the level of ineptitude that was on display in 2024.

Poor performance on the field is one thing, but poor customer service in the stadium is another: disinterested, apathetic staff unable to answer basic questions. Lack of decent amenities is another, even in supposedly upscale portions of the park. The adjective “shabby” came to mind in multiple places and on multiple occasions.

Having cafeteria-level food is another. Imagine paying extra for an add-on with unlimited barbecue and drinks to hang out before the game, and then you get … cold this

Behold the Patio. Rate Field. June 26, 2024Coldish, sad looking barbecue. Rate Field. June 26, 2024

Having broken seats or other areas in need of obvious repair is another. I would call this ballpark a factory of sadness, but unfortunately, that name is already taken in Cleveland — in another sport! Rate Field is greater than the sum of its parts of collective failure in this regard.

While the White Sox are playing better in a vastly diminished American League in 2026, the memories of the poor experience from my initial review in 2024 linger. “Imagine being in a dentist’s office where a baseball game broke out or a divorced dad’s apartment, who has given up” is the primary note I left for myself. The stadium is drab, with nothing interesting to see in the distance while looking out at the field.

It’s not as if Chicago is an ugly city, far from it. If you walk around Rate Field, you can see the gorgeous Chicago skyline, which begs the question: Why is the stadium pointing away from anything interesting? PNC Park in Pittsburgh and Busch Stadium 3 in St. Louis have iconic backdrops. Imagine the view below overlooking the outfield.

Chicago Skyline. Rate Field. June 25, 2024

Rate Field was built across the street from Comiskey Park, which was at least pointing towards something.

As will be a recurring theme in this essay, the answer was ownership’s greed and skinflintry. There was a proposal to make the successor to Comiskey Park more like Wrigley Field and to integrate it into the surrounding community. Per the website This Great Game, owner Jerry Reinsdorf essentially said to hell with that idea:

Jerry Reinsdorf and the White Sox would have none of Bess’ retro idealism. Armour Field was to have a gorgeous view of downtown Chicago, but with New Comiskey the Sox strangely decided to look the other way, towards the southeast—where the distant landscape was dotted with hi-rise projects. Apparently, the team was more concerned with cheap home runs and decided to orient the ballpark so that typical winds from the southwest wouldn’t push fly balls over the outfield fence and toward Sears Tower. And rather than surround the ballpark with a neighborhood, they destroyed it—getting the backing of the city to tear down nearly 100 residences in a poor, black section that sat in the way of New Comiskey. For being in the wrong place at the wrong time, evicted homeowners were each given $25,000 to set up camp elsewhere….

…Some of Old Comiskey’s architectural touches would be retained in New Comiskey. Principal among these would be the arched openings spaced around the ballpark bowl—but unlike the old ballpark, the openings were covered with highly reflective glass which, along with beige-painted precast concrete etched with mild, abstract patterns, gave the overall structure the look of a sporty office complex. Worse, the structure—lacking embellishment at the top due to budget restraints—was largely hidden behind a series of switchback pedestrian ramps that interfered with what grace it had. 

Inside, intimacy was hard to find. So were the players on the field for those sitting towards the top of the upper deck, an arduous ascent to a height so far up, you would have thought the White Sox would advertise for sherpas over ushers to assist fans to their seats. Someone did the math and discovered that the closest seat in New Comiskey’s upper deck was farther away from the field than the last row of upper deck at Old Comiskey. And it was much, much higher. The steepness of the upper deck, combined with Chicago’s famously strong winds, at times forced the White Sox to actually close portions of the level as a safety precaution. But fans did remark how cool it was to look down on a towering pop-up….

At some point, around 2000, Reinsdorf and the White Sox finally experienced their come-to-Jesus moment and admitted that the ballpark could use some work. They hired a different architect (Dallas-based HKS, designers of the ornate Ballpark at Arlington), spent almost as much money ($118 million) as it took to build the entire venue and took seven years on a renovation that was undertaken bit by bit to keep distraction to the fans and players at a minimum. It may not have transformed the joint into Wrigley, but it was an improvement—a sorely needed one at that. 

(Emphasis added.)

But one would be remiss in omitting the potential divine providence that was not present during my initial review. The arguably most famous White Sox fan no longer resides in the Oval Office, but in the Vatican with the new Pontiff.

In 2005, then-Priest Robert Provost was literally sighted on the telecast of World Series Game 1, a sweep which was the Southsider’s last championship. The White Sox put up a mural in Section 140 after his election as pope.

While kitschy elements and touches were added around the ballpark, one would have to be blind to ignore half-measures of them. Do you like cafeteria-grade food vendors scattered throughout the ballpark with bland empty hallways between them? Rate Field has that in spades. Do you want to pay for an add-on that gets you access to what would barely pass for cafeteria food 90 minutes before a game? Rate Field has you covered.

The standout item from Rate Field was the Campfire Milkshake, a chocolate milkshake. The White Sox brought it back in 2026; they just made it bigger and doubled the price, which is laziness personified.

The original Campfire Milkshake. Rate Field. June 24, 2024

Unsurprisingly, the White Sox do not offer tours of Rate Field, but they do offer virtual tours of premium areas to rent. As for First Game Certificates, the following is just the embodiment of the Rate Field experience. You go to Customer Service to get one printed out on cardstock, so far, so good. You are then asked to write your name in block letters so the customer service representative can enter it and the date, and complete your certificate, which is placed inside a folder. All excellent so far.

I did not bother to check the certificate until I got back to California, because I was carrying food at the time and saw that it was the correct cardstock. After all, I wrote my information in large, friendly block letters. You can see for yourself where things went awry.

The White Sox misspelled my name even when I gave it to them

Words can barely express my horror when I finally opened the folder to frame the certificate. The incompetence just grabs your attention and refuses to let go. If the above is not emblematic of Rate Field, I don’t know what is.

2. How should I get there?

Across the street from Rate Field. June 24, 2024

Getting to Chicago is easy, all things considered. As we covered in “The House an Earworm Built,” getting to Chicago is pretty straightforward, as most major airlines have connections to Chicago, mostly likely Chicago O’Hare International Airport. One could make a road trip of it, driving across country, or even take major Amtrak routes from the coast. I would not recommend this last option, as American rail is infinitely inferior to Japanese rail in scope, speed, and quality.

Going to baseball games should be a fun experience. When a venue makes decisions that make it harder to have fun, considering that one of the main purposes of a ballpark is to enable fun (while getting your money in trade), one cannot help but speak out. White Sox fans deserve better, both in venue and in ownership.

Once in Chicago, unless there is a specific errand that requires a car, you can take the Chicago Transit Authority to just about anywhere. Taking the Blue Line train from O’Hare into Chicago is likely the easiest way to get into the city. For our purposes, the Red Line of Chicago’s Metro is life; it will take you just outside of Wrigley, and there is a dedicated stop for Rate Field.

A CTA Ventra 3-day pass allows unlimited use on the system after scanning your phone or card for 3 days, and is more than enough unless one is staying in Chicago for longer.

Weatherwise, it’s Chicago. It can be rainy, humid, or nice; just look at the weather report and plan accordingly. Chicago is not like San Francisco, where the temperature can vary wildly throughout the day or by neighborhood on a normal basis. Chicago can be sunny and humid, nice, rainy, or windy, or any combination thereof.

While there is parking at Rate Field, unless one is driving in from southern Illinois or Milwaukee, public transit is the best option to get to and from the ballpark, easily besting car or rideshare options. While one ultimately will walk a few hundred feet to get to the ballpark from the train station, there’s enough police presence and foot traffic for all but the most crowdphobic of fans to feel comfortable in making the transit.

3. Where should I stay?

The short answer is that any half-decent hotel near the Red Line will suit your purposes. One of the issues with Rate Field’s location is that the ballpark is near two highway interchanges, making it more car-friendly than people-friendly. As discussed above, it is not as if there is a thriving neighborhood nearby, ala Wrigleyville. Accordingly, hotel options near the Rate Field are somewhat limited.

The hotels near Rate Field

While one might be initially tempted by these choices, note that you will be walking a considerable distance and multiple city blocks. For instance, The Polo Inn Bed and Breakfast is a mile walk from Rate Field.

One can bypass this conundrum by staying at a hotel in The Loop off the Red Line. The downside to this approach is that hotels in this part of Chicago tend to be more expensive. Also, Chicago’s Metro is not the friendliest when it comes to accessibility issues, i.e., if you have trouble with stairs, you might have issues reaching your train.

Chinatown Chicago

Another option to try is staying in Chinatown, which is just to the north of Rate Field. The Jaslin Hotel is a viable option because it is close to the train station without the arduous walk required by other hotels.

4. Where should I sit?

Rate Field from the upper 500 sections

Rate Field does charge more for Dodgers games compared to standard fare, but not so much that it’s notable, or that you feel gouged. However, for field-level seats behind home plate, expect to pay north of three figures, which is bog standard for any MLB ballpark.

A seat behind home plate that would normally cost four to five digits at Dodger Stadium can be had for a few hundred dollars here. However, the positive remarks about the seating options end there.

Seating Chart Rate Field

If one attends a day game, one will be in direct sunlight unless one is either on the upper deck or sitting in the back of the sections in the stadium’s inner bowl. Outfield seating is exposed to the elements. While there are social areas in the outfield, if a traveling fan made the journey to Chicago, they can just socialize at their chosen venue or bar in downtown Chicago after the game. The White Sox do have a sports bar/restaurant adjacent to the ballpark, which is just about the only amenity outside it.

The stadium has a unique rule where if one is sitting in the upper deck (the 500s seating), they are not allowed to visit other parts of the stadium once up there. The broken seating I encountered was in this section, where not only was my assigned seat broken, but two other seats were either about to break and broke when I sat on them or already broken.

Thankfully, the upper deck was essentially empty for this game, so I eventually did find a seat comparable to the one that I paid for. Seat roulette should not be a thing and is a glaring red flag for skimping on maintenance. Yes, the seat was about $25 in 2024, but that price was dwarfed by both the almost comical lack of food options on that level and the social embarrassment of subpar seating.

Rate Field. Section 104. Row 9.

While one can get closer to the visiting bullpen by sitting in the front of sections 104 and 105, it is done at the literal expense of watching the game without magnification. That said, when I visited the bullpen, they mostly spent their time underneath the awning to avoid the sun.

Stadium Club level. Rate Field. June 24, 2024

Seating in the 300s that allows access to the then-Huntington Stadium Club, where the original Campfire Milkshake was served. The private dining area I had access to before the game gave solid views of the Dodgers bullpen, less so of the game itself. Ultimately, during the game I sat in this section, there was a rain delay, which caused a good portion of the crowd to leave, but I switched my seat from the one above to the one at the very start of the Guide entry.

Anecdotally, while the staff at Rate Field was generally apathetic to customer questions and feedback, the one aspect in which they showed an unexpectedly high level of diligence was enforcing that people sat in their assigned seats. Granted, one would expect most ushers at most stadiums to do this act, but during inclement weather, one would expect a certain relaxation, considering that the original patrons likely left. Potential hermit crab fans would likely need to be mindful and avoid drawing attention to themselves.

5. After your trip, is it worth going back?

Field level behind home plate. Rate Field. June 26, 2024

In the disclaimer to the Guide, I described the informal range of subjective outcomes that can occur after visiting a location. So far, I have attended three games at Rate Field in 2024, all of which the Dodgers won. After this visit, my rating of going to Rate Field is:

  • Hey, that was somehow NOT fun. Why did I put myself through all of this work?

The Dodgers won three largely stress-free games (when Bobby Miller wasn’t pitching) on an outing that cost very little out-of-pocket costs in weather that was largely pleasant in a venue that was easy to get to and from. In theory, considering all the positive factors that should be in play at this ballpark, I should be raving. Yet two years later, I am still spectacularly annoyed by the experience of going to a series at Rate Field.

Going to baseball games should be a fun experience. When a venue makes decisions that make it harder to have fun, considering that one of the main purposes of a ballpark is to enable fun (while getting your money in trade), one cannot help but speak out. White Sox fans deserve better, both in venue and in ownership. It’s like watching a toxic relationship from afar; you cannot intervene (and odds are, your intervention would be unwelcome), but you know that they deserve better.

Therefore, based on the above information, I can not recommend attending a Dodgers game at Rate Field. If the above 3,450 words are not enough to sway all but the most hearty Dodger chasers from going to this ballpark, then please enjoy and be well. While new ownership is eventually coming to the Southside, the cavalry has ties to private equity, which is problematic in a familiar way.

While friendship is the gravity that might cause me to return, and while I remain hopeful for the future, my mind keeps returning to the song lyrics “Meet the new Boss / same as the old Boss …

Adric signing off from Rate Field

Nationals Look To Restore The Good Vibes At Home Against Mariners

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 09: Luis Garcia Jr. #2 of the Washington Nationals celebrates with Jose Tena #8 after hitting a two-run home run in the top of the first inning against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on June 09, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Nationals’ West Coast trip was a successful one, taking 2 out of 3 in both series and bringing themselves back over .500, but the way the final game of the trip ended, it felt like a disaster. After entering the bottom of the 8th inning leading 9-1, the Nats surrendered 10 runs in the final 2 innings, capped off by a walkoff grand slam from DMV native Bryce Eldridge to give the Giants the 11-10 win. For the Giants, it was a much needed momentum swing, after being on the brink of another sweep in a lost season. For the Nats, it took the vibes around the organization from the highest they’ve been in years to a confusing middle ground.

The team the Nationals will look to get the good vibes back on track against is the Seattle Mariners, who come into this series with a record just above .500 at 36-34, but still good enough for first place in the AL West. Like most of the rest of the American League, the Mariners have stumbled somewhat out of the gate, but they still possess one of the strongest rosters in baseball, even with 2025 MVP runner-up Cal Raleigh on the Injured List.

Game One – Friday 6:45 PM EST

SEA: Bryce Miller (2-0, 1.33 ERA)

WSH: RHP Zach Littell (6-4, 4.76 ERA)

Game Two – Saturday 4:05 PM EST

SEA: RHP Luis Castillo (2-5, 5.16 ERA)

WSH: RHP Cade Cavalli (304, 3.88 ERA)

Game Three – Sunday 1:35 PM EST

SEA: RHP Emerson Hancock (5-2, 2.74 ERA)

WSH: Miles Mikolas (1-5, 5.90 ERA)

Cincinnati Reds look to unmute season at home against Arizona Diamondbacks

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - JUNE 6: Nick Lodolo #40 of the Cincinnati Reds delivers a pitch against the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium on June 6, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Dilip Vishwanat/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Not that long ago, the Cincinnati Reds were nine games over the .500 mark. Even after a burp and a hiccup, this was still a team that was 29-25 through 54 games, a club that had absorbed some punches and returned a few in good measure.

The last two weeks of baseball, though, have seen them look as dismal and disheveled as they’ve looked in years. They’ve gone 3-10 over their last 13 contests, slipped all the way down to 32-35 on the season, lost their star, forgotten how to hit, and lost in excruciating fashion almost every single time they’ve stepped on the field.

Wednesday’s series finale against the San Diego Padres was perhaps the nail in the coffin. Despite poking a pair of late homers to give them an insurance run, the bullpen once again was completely wiped, and Fernando Tatis, Jr. swatted a homer off a pitcher who, in Chase Petty, really had no business being on the mound at the time.

The Reds are firmly in throw it at the wall and hope it sticks territory already, and there are still nearly 100 games left to play this season. That’s a daunting reality that they must face, and despite the incredibly long odds at this juncture, must overcome to give a roster with Hunter Greene, Elly De La Cruz, and Emilio Pagan a chance to still play for something come July.

Through the rest of June they go, however, with the Arizona Diamondbacks next up on their list.

Lefty Eduardo Rodriguez is having a resurgent campaign, and he’ll start for the Snakes in the series opener at Great American Ball Park on Friday evening opposite fellow southpaw Nick Lodolo. It’s a dreaded Apple TV game sharing the very same time slot as the US Men’s National Team during their World Cup debut, so it’s sure to be a ratings blockbuster.

Arizona is coming into GABP on a slump of their own, fresh off a sweep at the hands of the Miami Marlins. They’ve lost 5 of 6 and, like the Reds, 10 of their last 13 overall to drop to just 34-34 on the season, and they’re surely eyeing this as a ‘get right’ series given the quality of competition and the bandbox where the games will be played. So, the Reds have that going for them, which is not nice.

First pitch for Friday’s series opener is set for 7:15 PM ET.

Here’s how the Reds will line up to begin:

Rockies to promote Sean Sullivan for Major League debut

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 12: Sean Sullivan #85 of the Colorado Rockies pitches during the the second inning of a spring training game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on March 12, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Colorado Rockies are reportedly promoting left-handed pitcher Sean Sullivan (No. 8 PuRP) to start Friday night’s game against the Athletics. The Gazette’s Kevin Henry was among the first to report on the news. The Rockies have yet to officially announce the move.

Sullivan was the Rockies’ second-round pick in the 2023 draft after pitching 69.2 innings with a 2.45 ERA in his final season with Wake Forest. His fastball typically sits in the high 80’s and he relies on a mixture of good command and deception from a low arm slot to get batters out.

Making stops at every Rockies full-season minor league affiliate, Sullivan continued to have great results until hitting a roadblock in the hitter-friendly PCL this season.

In 2024, across stops at both High-A and Double-A, Sullivan pitched 115.1 innings with a 2.11 ERA and earned the High-A Northwest League Pitcher of the Year award. He followed that up with a full season at Double-A Hartford in 2025, where, across 97.1 innings, he recorded a 3.14 ERA backed up by a 3.17 FIP and a sterling 1.09 WHIP.

Upon reaching Triple-A Albuquerque to start this season, however, some of the warning signs in his profile began to shine through. In eleven starts for the Isotopes, Sullivan sports a 5.60 ERA backed up by a 5.70 FIP. Most notably, he has not been able to control the long ball nearly as well as he had in the lower minors, and his HR/9 has jumped from 0.61 last year to 1.65 so far this season.

He will get his first major league start in a familiar stadium, as tonight’s game against the Athletics will be hosted in the Triple-A Las Vegas stadium, where Sullivan last pitched on May 19th. In that start, he lasted 4.2 innings and allowed six earned runs on twelve hits while striking out four and allowing no walks.


Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Please keep in mind our Purple Row Community Guidelines when you’re commenting. Thanks!

Three NHL Teams That Can Trade For Blues' Jordan Kyrou

Jordan Kyrou is the subject of plenty of trade chatter heading into the 2026 off-season, and it’s becoming increasingly likely that his time with the St. Louis Blues is done.

Kyrou was originally drafted by the Blues in the second round (35th overall) in the 2016 NHL draft. Since then, he’s played 488 regular-season games, scoring 168 goals and 378 points.

Signed to an eight-year, $8.125-million contract, Kyrou owns a no-trade clause, so he’ll have to sign off on any deal. Reports have indicated that, depending on the team, Kyrou is willing to sign off on a trade. 

Without further ado, here are three teams that could be great potential fits for Kyrou.

Ottawa Senators

The Ottawa Senators underwhelmed in the playoffs, losing to the Carolina Hurricanes in a sweep. The Senators didn’t generate enough offense, and Kyrou’s speed and skill could help make the Sens a competitor. 

With centers like Tim Stutzle, Dylan Cozens and Shane Pinto, Kyrou could work with any of those three centers. 

According to a recent report, Bruce Garrioch said the Senators are interested in Kyrou, as are several other teams. 

Report: Insider Believes Jordan Kyrou Won't Be With The St. Louis Blues In 2026-27Report: Insider Believes Jordan Kyrou Won't Be With The St. Louis Blues In 2026-27A new report suggests that Jordan Kyrou won't be a member of the St. Louis Blues next season.

Edmonton Oilers

The Edmonton Oilers are another team where Kyrou’s skill and speed would thrive. Whether he’s paired on the top line with Connor McDavid or the second line with Leon Draisaitl, Kyrou could put up excellent numbers in Edmonton’s top six.

The Oilers are starved for secondary scorers outside of McDavid, Draisaitl, Zach Hyman, and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins up front. Kyrou can come in and provide a major boost.

The one challenge facing the Oilers is whether they have the assets to acquire Kyrou. 

Jordan Kyrou's Underrated Two-Way Play & How He'd Fit On The IslandersJordan Kyrou's Underrated Two-Way Play & How He'd Fit On The IslandersThe Blues star offers more than elite scoring; his defensive dominance and long-term contract align perfectly with New York’s core to fix the roster’s most glaring weaknesses.

New York Islanders

The New York Islanders were linked to the 28-year-old around the trade deadline, but the Islanders decided to trade for Brayden Schenn rather than Kyrou. There is reason to believe that the Islanders and Blues can revisit trade discussions again this off-season. 

Kyrou fits the bill of what the Islanders are looking for: a two-way scoring winger to pair with Mathew Barzal or Bo Horvat. The Islanders are building their team around superstar rookie Matthew Schaefer, and adding a skilled winger like Kyrou will help improve the roster. 


Image

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.

It’s some of the worst pitching you’ll ever see

May 1, 2026; St. Petersburg, Florida, USA; San Francisco Giants pitcher Robbie Ray (38) reacts after being taken out during the seventh inning against Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field. Mandatory Credit: Pablo Robles-Imagn Images | Pablo Robles-Imagn Images

I’ve spent a lot of time this season comparing the 2026 Giants’ record to the records of bad teams throughout franchise history, but as it becomes clearer and clearer that this team, though fun, is tacking to the 2017 team’s record or thereabouts, I don’t see the point in continuing to belabor the point. So, instead, let’s look at how this is some of the worst pitching ever seen by fans of the San Francisco Giants in the long history of the franchise.

Hey, wait, come back. I’m not trying to make you feel bad or trick you. I’m trying to validate your feelings. A recent post to The Feed by a member of the McCovey Chronicles community wondered if this year’s squad featured the worst bullpen in franchise history. It’s perhaps a little difficult to quantify bullpen innings versus rotation innings over time just because of how much pitcher usage has changed, and sorting data gets tricky in these recent years because of what the opener has done, but generally speaking, the 2026 team is not (yet) the worst bullpen ever assembled by the Orange & Black. It is merely among the worst.

10. 1999, 4.21 ERA
9. 2020, 4.24
8. 2026, 4.27
7. 2017, 4.34
6. 2008, 4.45
5. 2004, 4.68
4. 1997, 4.75
3. 1996, 4.77
2. 2006, 4.77
1. 1995, 5.35

But that’s not the point of this piece! It’s not just the bullpen that stinks, it’s the rotation, too. The entire pitching staff is just a huge liability. The current staff ERA of 4.55 might go down, sure, but through the first 69 games of a season, only 12 Giants teams have run up a team ERA of 4.50 or worse:

Okay, now, if I’ve validated your feelings and you’re now mad at me instead of the Giants and have taken to tut-tutting me for bringing up a 69-game sample instead of focusing on there still being plenty of season left, I ask you to consider the following:

  • Robbie Ray is either going to be this bad or be traded
  • Logan Webb might be back to his old form and won’t be traded, but the Giants will still have innings to cover…
  • Which might mean resorting to Adrian Houser and Tyler Mahle even more down the stretch.
  • Ryan Walker is back.
  • Any prospects they’ll call up down the stretch will be susceptible to fatigue for pitching past their previous innings limits and pace of the season.

And I’ll add this final wrinkle, I suppose in order to suggest that things won’t get much better, which means that the Giants are on an unavoidable clash with history. Just 11 Giants teams in the history of the franchise have ended the season with a 4.50 or worse ERA. Not even the 100-loss 1985 team did that (3.61 team ERA). Here they are, the worst pitching staffs in Giants history:

So, as you can see, the Giants have had some really bad staffs in our lifetime. 7 of 11 seasons in living memory have been among the worst pitching performances ever seen by fans, so why couldn’t this year become #8?

Well, if I had to pitch a path for a turnaround, I suppose it would start with walking fewer batters. Pitchers shouldn’t walk hitters. This year’s team has a walk rate 4.04 BB/9 that would be the worst of this century were it not for the 2008 team (4.07). Still a chance to improve upon that, sure, but can they? In the past 6 weeks or so, things have only gotten worse:

May 1st-June 11th: 7.7 K/9, 4.11 BB/9
May 29th-June 11th: 7.85 K/9, 4.79 BB/9

A reminder that Tyler Mahle hasn’t pitched since May 26th. But also, Robbie Ray has the second-worst walk rate in the sport (4.42 per 9). Oh, but wait! Landen Roupp’s 3.88 is 7th-worst. So, it’s not just a bad apple spoiling the bunch. There are no apples here. Just walks. A bunch of walks.

So, the Giants have some work to do. The lineup is surging but Justin Meccage’s side of the ledger has been a real mecc. The front office had a publicly stated plan for the lineup that is making the naysayers like me eat crow. They did not have a publicly stated plan on the pitching side and it seems like all of our worst fears have come true, which is why it’s so difficult to envision, imagine, or even hope for a turnaround.

Dodgers on Deck: Saturday, June 13 at White Sox

Jun 10, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto (18) warms up before the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The Dodgers and Chicago White Sox continue their weekend series on Saturday afternoon at Rate Field in Chicago, with Yoshinobu Yamamoto on the mound coming off his best start of the season.

Yamamoto retired his final 22 batters faced in his eight innings to beat the Angels last Saturday at Dodger Stadium, and allowed just one run. Yamamoto has allowed only three runs over his last four starts, and has lasted at least seven innings three times during that span, with 25 strikeouts and five walks in 27 1/3 innings.

Right-hander Sean Burke starts for Chicago.

Saturday game info

  • Teams: Dodgers at White Sox
  • Ballpark: Rate Field, Chicago
  • Time: 1:10 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA, MLB Network (out of market)
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

MLB Home Run Predictions Today: Best HR Prop Bets, Picks, Parlay & Odds for Friday, June 12

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

Friday is here, and the MLB slate is loaded with hitters in prime spots to leave the yard.

My favorite looks and MLB player props this evening include Yandy Diaz, Samuel Basallo, and Kody Clemens.

  • UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.

Best MLB home run props today

Player to hit a HROdds
Rays Yandy Diaz+359
Orioles Samuel Basallo +389
Twins Kody Clemens+437
💲Today's HR parlay+11953

Home run pick: Yandy Diaz (+359)

One of my favorite home run looks this evening is Tampa Bay Rays slugger Yandy Diaz.

Diaz has been crushing the baseball lately against left-handed pitching. Over his last 30 plate appearances versus southpaws, he's produced a 56.5% hard-hit rate and 13% barrel rate while batting .400, with a .720 SLG, 1.187 OPS and 221 wRC+.

Tonight, the Rays star draws Los Angeles Angels left hander Sam Aldegheri, who has allowed a 61.9% fly-ball rate and 19% line-drive rate to right handed hitters this season. Those elevated contact numbers have been a consistent theme throughout his professional career.

Diaz also owns the highest arsenal coverage among Batters-Box elite-rated hitters tonight, covering 94.7% of Aldegheri's pitch mix. With the amount of hard contact Díaz is generating and the amount of elevation Aldegheri is allowing, this is a matchup I have to be all over.

If you're looking to add another home run sprinkle from this game, I do not hate the idea of Junior Caminero leaving the yard as well.

  • Time: 9:38 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ABTV, RAYS

Home run pick: Samuel Basallo (+389)

Baltimore Orioles young slugger Samuel Basallo is a guy I am already a fan of. His hits, runs and RBI prop looks good this evening, and when I like a hitter to have success at the dish, I am always a strong advocate for sprinkling on their home run prop as well.

The 21-year-old draws San Diego Padres right hander Griffin Canning, who enters today with the one of the worst pitcher ratings on the day, according to Batters-Box.

Canning has been getting torched by left-handed hitters all season, especially of late. Over the last 60 left-handed batters he has faced, opponents have produced a 61% hard contact rate and a 14.6% barrel rate while posting a .660 xSLG and .396 xwOBA.

To make matters worse, 52% of Canning's arsenal grades below league average, according to FanGraphs. Basallo owns a 79.1% arsenal coverage rating against Canning's pitch mix, giving him a very favorable matchup profile.

The Orioles' young stud has also been squaring up right-handed pitching over his last 30 plate appearances, posting a 1.036 OPS and .423 wOBA while generating a 19.05% barrel rate and a 47.6% hard contact rate.

With both sides pointing toward plenty of hard contact, I think this is a great spot for the young fella to leave the yard.

  • Time: 7:05 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MASN, SDPA

Home run pick: Kody Clemens (+437)

Minnesota Twins outfielder Kody Clemens has been making a ton of hard contact lately. Over his last 30 at-bats against right-handed pitching, he owns a 54.2% hard-hit rate, 16.7% barrel rate, and 66.7% elevation rate while batting .379 with an .862 SLG and 1.262 OPS.

Roger's son draws St. Louis Cardinals starter Kyle Leahy, who grades poorly in hard contact and strikeout metrics on Batters-Box.

The right-hander has struggled this season against left-handed hitters, allowing 60% hard contact and a 13.7% barrel rate. Those lefties have produced a .619 xSLG and .434 xwOBA against him.

According to FanGraphs, only 14% of Leahy’s arsenal grades above league average. On the other side, Clemens owns an 84.2% arsenal coverage rating against Leahy’s pitch mix.

After an 0-for-4 day at the dish on Thursday, Clemens should be looking to bounce back this weekend and do damage against the below-average pitches Leahy will throw his way.

  • Time: 8:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MNNT, CARD
Colby Marchio's 2026 Transparency Record
  • HR picks: 54-182-15, +12.8 units

Today’s HR parlay

Rays Yandy DiazBet Now
+11953
Orioles Samuel Basallo
Twins Kody Clemens

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

John Tortorella rips ‘stupidest question I’ve heard’ with Golden Knights in Stanley Cup hole

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Vegas Golden Knights Head Coach John Tortorella speaks at a press conference, Image 2 shows Vegas Golden Knights goalie Carter Hart (79) warms up with arms outstretched on the ice during the Stanley Cup Final

John Tortorella is in Stanley Cup form.

The Golden Knights coach lambasted a reporter who asked about the possibility of changing goaltenders with Las Vegas down 3-2 to the Hurricanes in the Stanley Cup Final.

“Oh, for Christ, that could be the stupidest question I heard,” the fiery Tortorella said Thursday night after a 4-2 road loss in Game 5.

The reason for the question, though, is rather obvious.

Carter Hart has become the first goalie in Stanley Cup history to let up four-plus goals in the first five games of the series — allowing exactly four in each.

The Golden Knights are out of rope with Carolina now one win from the Stanley Cup after back-to-back victories in Games 4 and 5.

One would think the idea of making a change could be tantalizing for Tortorella, given that their opponent has found success with the switch.

John Tortorella at the Game 5 post-game press conference NHLI via Getty Images

Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’amour pulled Frederik Anderson in the middle of Game 4 with the Hurricanes trailing 4-0. Backup Brandon Bussi held strong before giving up the game-winner in overtime.

He has since led the team to back-to-back wins.

Hart has played all 21 games this postseason for Las Vegas. He shut down one of the best offensive teams in the NHL in the Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference finals in a shocking sweep.

Carter Hart warming up for Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Finals IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Backup Aidan Hill had a somewhat uninspiring regular season with a 3.04 goals against average in 27 appearances.

For Hart, it is just his first season back after two years away due to the Canada World Juniors sexual assault case that stemmed from an incident during the 2018 World Juniors championships. 

After a lengthy trial, all players were found not guilty on July 24, 2025.

Hart then signed a one-year deal with the Golden Knights.

Game 6 returns to Vegas on Sunday at 8 p.m. ET.