SCF Open Thread: Game 6: Carolina Hurricanes at Vegas Golden Knights (6:00 p.m.)

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - JUNE 09: Goaltender Brandon Bussi #32 of the Carolina Hurricanes stands on the ice during pregame before Game Four of the Stanley Cup Final between the Carolina Hurricanes and the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena on June 09, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Brian Babineau/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Will this be the final game of the 2025-26 NHL season with the Carolina Hurricanes closing out their championship run in Game 6 or will the Vegas Golden Knights force a Wednesday night Game 7?


The theme of Game 5 was double trouble as both teams got their power play going. Vegas got on the board first from Pavel Dorofeyev but Carolina stormed back. Captain Jordan Staal scored to tie the game for Carolina, which extended his goal streak to five games. It was all Carolina from then on with Andrei Svechnikov scoring two on the power play with a Sebastian Aho tally sandwiched in between. Dorofeyev tried to spark another Vegas comeback but Brandon Bussi held the fort down and Carolina walked away with a 4-2 win, one victory away from hoisting the Stanley Cup.

Vegas Golden Knights

The Golden Knights are suddenly in an adverse position down 3-2 to Carolina and facing elimination. A concern almost as great as standing on the brink of elimination as they hope to extend the series to a Game 7 is the health of an important player in their lineup, center William Karlsson. He left the previous game after an awkward hit to the upper body and now the Swede has been ruled out for tonight’s contest and likely Game 7 if it gets to that. Hints are pointing to Reilly Smith drawing into the lineup instead.

Another concern for Vegas is that their goaltending is experiencing another valley. John Tortorella affirmed his belief snd commitment to his netminder Cater Hart but after giving up at least four goals in each game this series, Vegas needs a better outing from him if they are going to make a comeback to take the Stanley Cup.

Projected Lineup

Ivan Barbashev — Jack Eichel — Pavel Dorofeyev

Brett Howden — Reilly Smith – Mitch Marner

Tomas Hertl — Colton Sissons — Mark Stone

Cole Smith — Nic Dowd — Keegan Kolesar

Brayden McNabb — Shea Theodore

Noah Hanifin — Rasmus Andersson 

Dylan Coghlan — Jeremy Lauzon

Carter Hart

Adin Hill

Carolina Hurricanes

Speaking of goaltending, Carolina is riding the wave of random themselves, hoping Brandon Bussi has one more solid performance in him to get the Hurricanes across the finish line.

Now that Carolina is in the driver’s seat to close out the Stanley Cup victory, discussion has turned to the likely Hurricane to win the Conn Smythe. Captain Jordan Staal has the best case especially with his five-goal streak in this series.

Projected Lineup

Andrei Svechnikov — Sebastian Aho — Seth Jarvis

Taylor Hall — Logan Stankoven — Jackson Blake

Nikolaj Ehlers — Jordan Staal — Jordan Martinook

William Carrier — Mark Jankowski — Eric Robinson

Jaccob Slavin — Jalen Chatfield

K’Andre Miller — Sean Walker

Shayne Gostisbehere — Alexander Nikishin

Brandon Bussi

Pyotr Kochetkov

Follow along in the comments below!

The Latest: Trump celebrates his 80th birthday with Iran deal and UFC cage fight at the White House

President Donald Trump has confirmed a deal to end the war with Iran and allow oil traffic to begin again through the Strait of Hormuz.

The announcement on social media came just a couple of hours before the president was slated to celebrate his 80th birthday and the nation’s 250th anniversary with an unusual White House event: a UFC show featuring seven fights within an eight-sided, wire-mesh cage on the White House South Lawn.

UFC Freedom 250 has kicked off with knockouts by Diego Lopes against Steve Garcia, by Bo Nickal against Kyle Daukaus and by Mauricio Ruffy against Michael Chandler.

Next up is Sean O’Malley vs. Aiemann Zahabi.

Here's the latest:

Comedian who insulted Puerto Rico during Trump’s campaign is a VIP

Tony Hinchcliffe was one of the VIPs at the event, smiling and waving for the broadcast.

Near the end of Trump’s 2024 run for a second term, Hinchcliffe caused an uproar at a Madison Square Garden rally when he called Puerto Rico “a floating island of garbage.”

Trump’s campaign took the rare step of distancing itself from the comedian at the time, saying the joke didn’t reflect Trump’s views.

Ruffy proposes after beating Chandler

Brazilian Mauricio Ruffy got a knockout and followed it with a wedding proposal.

In the interview after his knockout of Michael Chandler, Ruffy proposed to his girlfriend, Nadine.

She gave a thumbs up.

Ruffy TKOs Chandler in first round

Brazilian Mauricio Ruffy knocked out American Michael Chandler in the first round of a middleweight fight.

Ruffy stunned Chandler with a kick and then finished him off by TKO 4:29 into the fight.

President Donald Trump pumped his first in approval after the knockout from his ringside seat.

Park Police says Strickland wasn’t arrested, advised not to return

U.S. Park Police said in a statement that UFC middleweight champion Sean Strickland’s presence at the Ellipse drew enough attention from attendees that it resulted in disorder. He wasn’t cited or arrested, they said. Instead, he was taken to his hotel and told not to come back to the venue.

Earlier in the day, Strickland was escorted barefoot out of the White House Ellipse area, where thousands of ticketed fans congregated to watch the fights.

The law enforcement agency said Strickland’s removal from the site was due to concerns for his safety and the UFC fans. U.S. Marshals Service, U.S. Park Police and other agencies were involved in escorting him out.

Sen. Graham, in the crowd at UFC, is skeptical about the Iran agreement

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham is a close ally of Trump and an Iran hawk. He expressed skepticism about the emerging deal, saying that Congress would need to review and vote on it, and said he expects Vice President JD Vance — “the architect of the deal” — to present it.

“I am somewhat concerned that Iran’s view of the agreement seems different than what the American negotiating team is claiming,” Graham said on social media.

Nickal knocks out Daukaus and then chats with Trump

Bo Nickal knocked out Kyle Daukaus in the first round in a middleweight fight.

Nickal knocked Daukaus down with a right hook, and the referee quickly stopped the second fight of the event 4:34 into the opening round.

Nickal went right over to Trump after the win and talked briefly with the president. Nickal, a three-time NCAA Division I wrestling champion at Penn State, has forged a friendly relationship with Trump after they met in 2019 at the White House during a ceremony for collegiate national champions.

UFC fighters walk out of White House with ‘heroes’

The fighters are getting impressive walkouts before each fight.

They leave the White House, one at a time, accompanied by two people described by the broadcast as “heroes.”

Bo Nickal and Kyle Daukaus were each joined by a Las Vegas police officer and a medal of honor recipient before the second fight.

Diego Lopes and Steve Garcia each walked out with two first responders before the first fight.

Lopes knocks out Garcia

Diego Lopes knocked out Steve Garcia in the second round of the first fight of the UFC Freedom 250.

Lopes connected with a left hook that knocked Garcia down and then finished him off before the referee stopped the fight.

UFC Freedom 250 at the White House begins

The UFC Freedom 250 event started with a featherweight fight between Diego Lopes and Steve Garcia.

Garcia walked out of the White House draped in an American flag and accompanied by two police officers. Lopez walked out the Mexican song “La Chona.”

Fans were chanting “USA! USA!” just before the start of the fight.

Trump arrives at the Octagon

The president and UFC chief Dana White walked together from the Oval Office to the Truman balcony, then stood for the National Anthem as fighter jets streaked overhead.

Before the anthem began, the two men shared a moment on the balcony. Trump smiled as White pointed to the Octagon and “The Claw” on the White House’s South Lawn.

After the anthem, the crowd cheered and chanted “USA! USA!”

Trump and White then put on somber expressions as they walked the rest of the way to the cage where the UFC fights will take place.

Trump has a seat very close to the Octagon.

Weather watch

Clouds are getting darker but there’s still no significant rain at the Ellipse, where a live band was still playing for fans when the broadcast’s 8 p.m. start time arrived.

Earlier, a message appeared on the video screens warning about possible bad weather and telling the crowd to be prepared to leave and take shelter.

Sean Strickland escorted away by police

UFC middleweight champion Sean Strickland was escorted out of the Ellipse event by a group of police officers and taken into a Park Police van Sunday.

Once a vocal supporter of Trump, Strickland has recently said on social media that he was not invited to participate in the event at the White House because he is an outspoken critic of Israel.

Strickland was wearing a black anorak jacket and was barefoot. It wasn’t immediately clear why law enforcement led him away.

UFC CEO Dana White has rejected Strickland’s accusation that he was banned from UFC Freedom 250 events.

“Nobody is banned. Nothing is banned,” White told reporters earlier this month.

Not everyone was able to get tickets to the big UFC event

Richard Williams doesn’t have tickets to Sunday’s fights. But he drove with a friend from Pittsburgh to attend Saturday’s Fan Festival in Washington, D.C., because he wanted to see what all the hubbub was about.

He’s never been to an MMA event before but described the show the UFC put on for fans as “pretty awesome.”

For the fights to coincide with Trump’s 80th birthday and America’s 250th year, “all of that coming together at once is really amazing,” Williams said.

It will take months for oil and gas to flow freely

Even with a deal in place, it will take months for oil and gas supplies to be flowing freely enough for the world’s needs to be met, because shipping and insurance companies will want to be confident the agreement will last, energy experts said. And countries in the Middle East who paused production may have a long road ahead to restart those oil fields.

Vance says it’s possible Trump could be at the signing ceremony

Vice President JD Vance in an interview with Fox News said the White House was still figuring out the logistics of who will attend Friday’s signing ceremony in Switzerland.

“I certainly plan to be there, but it’s possible the president himself could be there,” Vance said.

He said the deal could have a transformative impact on the Middle East.

“This region of the world has been a basket case for my entire life, and longer than that,” Vance said, explaining the deal could “eliminate the nuclear threat of Iran” as well as build prosperity.

VIPs begin arriving at the White House ahead of fights

Along with a string of Trump administration officials and lawmakers, including FBI Director Kash Patel, acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, at least one foreign dignitary was seen entering the White House campus on Sunday.

Poland’s President Karol Nawrocki was spotted heading into the White House before the UFC event on the South Lawn.

Tkachuk brothers at the Ellipse

Hockey’s Tkachuk brothers were at the Ellipse as part of pre-fight festivities. They were interviewed on the main stage.

Matthew Tkachuk offered the following hot take: “It’s going to be the under in every single fight,” he said. “I think it’s not going to last like halfway through. They’re all going to be knockouts or finishes early.”

Attendees include eager first-timers

Jake Rowe, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, traveled to Washington, D.C., with his brother for the UFC fights.

“I’ve never been to an MMA match before,” he said. He jumped at the chance when he got tickets to Sunday’s events.

He’s hoping American Justin Gaethje emerges the victor in the lightweight title bout against Spanish-Georgian lightweight champion Ilia Topuria.

The fight card has two championship bouts

In a card that has been panned by fans online as underwhelming, Alex Pereira of Brazil will meet Ciryl Gane of France for the interim UFC heavyweight title. Spanish-Georgian lightweight champion Ilia Topuria then takes on interim champ Justin Gaethje, one of just two Americans who currently hold even a share of the UFC’s 11 championship belts.

There are five other fights on the main card that include former title-fight participants Michael Chandler and Derrick Lewis and former 135-pound champion Sean O’Malley.

UFC CEO Dana White said the show will go on rain or shine. Strong thunderstorms and heavy lightning disrupted Friday’s Lincoln Memorial promotional event, and the forecast for Sunday evening also looks threatening.

Macron says G7 leaders will discuss consequences of US-Iran deal

French President Emmanuel Macron said the deal between the United States and Iran will be discussed at the G7 summit, which begins Monday in the French resort town of Evian-les-Bains and brings together leaders of the world’s major advanced economies, including President Donald Trump.

“The aim will be to assess the implications of this agreement, support for Lebanon, the long-term reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and, of course, reaching a deal on Iran’s nuclear and ballistic (missile) programs,” Macron said in a video posted on X.

Egypt, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates will join discussions in Evian on Tuesday.

The G7 includes the U.S., France, Canada, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom.

Polish visitors on hand to witness their president attend the fights

Tomasz Oracz, from south Poland, traveled from his home country to watch the seven Sunday fights.

He was spotted watching one of the many mixed martial arts fighter interviews that were taking place on the mainstage Saturday. Oracz said he was equally excited about each bout on Sunday’s fight card and couldn’t pick a favorite.

“These events are very important,” he said, especially since Poland’s president, Karol Nawrocki, is expected to attend the festivities, according to Polish media. Nawrocki has a background as an amateur boxer.

Weather woes could hit UFC show

UFC posted on social media that severe weather was expected Sunday night and fans should plan accordingly.

“We anticipate inclement weather in the area, so attendees should plan accordingly,” the UFC wrote. “We will share additional information when available.”

UFC CEO Dana White said the show will go on rain or shine. Strong thunderstorms and heavy lightning disrupted Friday’s Lincoln Memorial promotional event, and the forecast for Sunday evening also looks threatening.

Watch party o

n the Ellipse

Sunday’s event includes a watch party on the Ellipse, the expansive lawn area located between the White House and Washington Monument.

In addition to the massive video screens, there are various military-themed vehicles on display, as well as concession stands and free water that fans were lining up for under the afternoon sun.

The area is heavily secured from the outside, and there’s law enforcement presence inside as well, but as of 5 p.m. there was little sign of any unruliness.

Trump confirms US-Iran deal

Trump says “the Deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran is now complete” and says the Strait of Hormuz will open immediately.

“Congratulations to all!” he wrote Sunday on his social media site. “I hereby fully authorize the toll free opening of the Strait of Hormuz, and, simultaneously herewith, authorize the immediate removal of the United States Naval blockade.”

The president added, “Ships of the World, start your engines. Let the oil flow!”

Trump’s post came hours before a UFC event at the White House marking his 80th birthday.

Pakistan’s prime minister says Iran, U.S. have reached peace deal; accord to cover Lebanon

Pakistan says the United States and Iran have reached an agreement to end the war and open the Strait of Hormuz, offering relief to the global economy more than three months since the war began.

Full details of the deal were not immediately available. The signing will be Friday in Switzerland. It is not clear how quickly the strait might reopen to all traffic. The U.S. previously said it would ease its blockade of Iranian ports as the strait reopens, and would agree to relax sanctions to allow Iran to sell more of its oil and strengthen its battered economy.

The White House lawn is ready for Trump’s UFC birthday bash — but the weather may not cooperate

A muggy and very hot afternoon in Washington was forecast to give way to thunderstorms shortly after the evening fights in honor of Trump’s 80th birthday are set to begin.

UFC chief Dana White has insisted for days that the show will go on rain or shine.

But he’s also conceded, “I’m sick and tired of hearing about the weather” and said his league is sticking to indoor arenas going forward.

The White House is also touchy.

After the Weather Channel warned on X of a “60% chance of thunderstorms, heavy downpours, and wind gusts up to 34 mph,” the Rapid Response 47 account — which posts for the Trump administration — dismissed the post as the work of a “friendless loser” and added an expletive for emphasis.

Trump and White’s relationship spans 25 years

The Freedom 250 card marks the pinnacle of the relationship between UFC CEO Dana White and Trump, which has yielded personal, political and financial dividends for both parties. White’s first card as UFC president took place in 2001 at an event held at the Trump Taj Mahal casino.

Trump has attended four UFC cards as sitting president, walking to the cage amid rock music and patriotic chants from fans, much like the fighters themselves. White introduced Trump at two Republican National Conventions. White also attended the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner in April that was cut short by a shooting.

‘Bread and circuses’

The UFC event is an apt metaphor for Trump’s pugilistic political style. He is as big a fan of cage-match-style politics as he is of cage-fighting itself.

But Trump has also long been a master of political misdirection, purposely presenting people with something other than his presidency to focus on when things aren’t going well.

With the war in Iran grinding on despite weeks of assurances from Trump that its end is nigh, gas prices staying high, renewed concerns about inflation and plummeting job approval ratings for Trump — a White House birthday party unlike anything America has ever seen is definitely a diversion.

The apparent breakthrough in negotiations comes after Iran exchanged fire with the U.S. and Israel over three days this week, threatening to push the region into a full-scale war. U.S. Central Command late Friday said in a social media post that it intercepted several Iranian attack drones that were targeting commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz. (Produced by Luke Garratt)

“This is all distraction,” said Mike Fontaine, a classics professor at Cornell University, who likened it to the gladiatorial games of Imperial Rome, when combatants brutalized each other for public entertainment meant to bolster rulers’ popularity and quell potential unrest.

“This is a classic strategy,” Fontaine said. “In ancient Rome, the phrase would be, ‘bread and circuses.’”

Who’s paying for all this?

Trump says the UFC is paying for the event, and while its full costs haven’t been divulged, the National Park Service said in a court filing that $60-plus million and tens of thousands of hours of labor have gone into it, while seven government agencies have “allocated significant resources and manpower.”

UFC also announced on Friday that it was adding World Liberty Financial as an official partner for the event to create a special $250,000 athlete bonus pool for Sunday night’s winners. The cryptocurrency company is co-owned by the Trump family, founded with the president’s special diplomatic envoy Steve Witkoff and run by his son, Zach. The arrangement further blurs lines between the Trump family’s financial interests and the events and construction projects the president has prioritized and used government resources to pull off.

Inside the crowd drawn to Trump’s unusual UFC fight night at the White House

One by one, the burly mixed martial arts fighters made their entrance past the solemn, hulking marble statue of America’s 16th president and jogged down the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to roars from thousands of fans drawn to the unusual sporting weekend.

The news conference Friday night featured the fighters who are preparing to face off Sunday in the Octagon built outside the White House. But it was also a chance to see the UFC fans who have thronged to Washington and endured lightning, humidity and bugs for the spectacle.

Tracy Philbeck and his son Levi drove from Charlotte, North Carolina, with a group of friends to support their favorite fighter, American Justin Gaethje, in the upcoming lightweight title bout against Georgian Ilia Topuria.

“You will hear an eagle screaming when Justin Gaethje wins,” the elder Philbeck chuckled.

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Donald Trump turns 80 and celebrates with UFC cage fighting on the White House lawn

President Donald Trump turned 80 on Sunday and is set to celebrate with one of the more surreal spectacles both in sports and even in the nation’s capital: cage fighting on the White House lawn.

Against the backdrop of a 3-month-old war with Iran that’s been broadly unpopular with Americans and has rattled global oil markets and with inflation spiked to the highest level since April 2023, the White House — long known as the people’s house and a symbol of American democracy — opened its backyard Sunday night to stage a bruising UFC card on the South Lawn.

More than $60 million and tens of thousands of hours of labor have been poured into building the arena, according to a court filing from the National Park Service, which oversees the South Lawn.

UFC is staging seven fights with all male fighters under the Freedom 250 banner to celebrate Trump’s 80th birthday and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence’s signing.

Another ninth inning blast lifts Yankees over Blue Jays

Jun 14, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; New York Yankees designated hitter Ben Rice (22) hits a single in the first inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Gerry Angus-Imagn Images | Gerry Angus-Imagn Images

Yesterday we had a classic pitchers’ duel that was ultimately settled by a big two-run home run in the ninth for a Yankee victory. I wouldn’t exactly call today a pitchers’ duel — Patrick Corbin went 3.2 innings and Will Warren managed just one more out than that — but the end result was the same. Today, it was Ben Rice’s turn to play the hero, in an 8-3 Yankee win.

This felt like it was going to be a tough matchup for Will Warren. So much of what makes him good is his ability to deceive hitters into called strikes — he gets more called third strikes than any other pitcher in baseball. The problem is how aggressive the Blue Jays are in-zone, with only three teams offering at pitches in the strike zone as often as Toronto. That means a lot of those pitches other hitters might take for strikes, especially called third strikes, Jays hitters were able to make some kind of contact on.

The Jays touched 41 of 46 times they swung the bat against Warren, and while they weren’t all hits, those extended at-bats are how you end up throwing 98 pitches in just four innings. Three walks against a single strikeout, plus the eight hits he allowed even if some of them were just out of range or should have been errors — looking you dead in the eye, Amed Rosario — it really wasn’t his day. I don’t want to say that starts like this expose the problem with Warren but it does showcase the difference between a pitcher like him and say, Cam Schlittler. There’s just nothing like a whiff.

Off the pitcher’s mound, this was in many ways the Anthony Volpe game, as the much-criticized shortstop got it done at the plate and in the field, a scene we haven’t seen much of over the past two years:

I give Volpe a lot of grief, centrally around how much his offensive approach vacillates. Seemingly from month to month he will alter between focusing on pulled fly balls, to lining the ball gap to gap. I tend to think he’s better focusing on the latter, and that’s where his two RBI came today. I hope this is the positive reinforcement he needs to truly commit, but if it’s not, at least he showed up in a big, close game.

Then again, in the eighth he swung through these sliders so, maybe he has a few more steps to go.

Fast forward to the ninth, and while I haven’t been worried about Ben Rice, he’d been on a bit of a cold streak with just a 28 wRC+ over the last week, and critically, a 63 percent ground ball rate. Perhaps nobody in baseball better exemplifies the value of pulled fly balls like Benny Barrels, it’s so important that he gets the ball in the air. He hadn’t done that for a little over a week. And then, boy did he:

José Caballero was able to tack on some key insurance runs himself, taking this game from a save situation to a easy breather:

Full praise to Cabby today, he’s managed himself really well while the Yankees have insisted on putting Anthony Volpe at the 6 as much as they possibly can. He’s played every position they’ve asked him to, managed to be a league average hitter, and a five-run game is much more preferable to a two-run affair. Earlier in the day Caballero continued to back up his “you’re so damn annoying” reputation:

I love this stuff, I can understand why some fans might be annoyed, I can certainly understand why opponents get annoyed, but every time José gets rather particular about the pitch clock and rules around it, I pop.

The bottom of the ninth got a little hairy, with David Bednar allowing a single off Volpe’s glove and a double. With Vlad Guerrero Jr. looming in the on-deck circle though, Anthony redeemed himself snagging an Alejandro Kirk line drive to end the game and wrap up a series win.

The Yankees are now ten games clear of the third-place Blue Jays, and it’s only the third inning but the Rays are currently losing to the Angels, and that could push New York two full games ahead in the AL East. The team has managed themselves very well in the absence of the game’s finest hitter, and I’m curious how much, if any, credit will go to manager Aaron Boone.

Monday’s an off day, before the Yankees welcome the resurgent Chicago White Sox to town on Tuesday. Gerrit Cole is slated to get the ball with a 7:05 p.m. Eastern first pitch.

Box Score

Orioles offense falls flat in 5-2 loss to Padres in series finale

Jun 14, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles manager Craig Albernaz (55) meets at the mound with pitcher Yennier Cano (78) and the rest of the infield in the ninth inning against the San Diego Padres at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images | Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images

Any hopes that the Orioles would use the late-game plunking of Gunnar Henderson on Saturday to propel themselves to victory in the series finale went unanswered. The offense was largely impotent in a 5-2 rubber match loss on Sunday afternoon at Camden Yards.

Let’s start with the things that went well because it’s a pretty short list. In fact, it might just be one item: Trevor Rogers.

Rogers had another nice outing. Over six innings he allowed just two runs on five hits, two walks, and four strikeouts. It was the sort of start we grew accustomed to in 2025. The lefty didn’t load up on strikeouts—although his 30% whiff rate was solid—but instead induced oodles of weak contact. Over his last four starts Rogers has reduced his ERA by more than a run, from 6.96 going into May 29 to 5.86 now. Progress!

The only two runs that San Diego scored against Rogers came in the second inning. Samad Taylor led off with an infield single, moved to second on a ground out, stayed there while a teammate struck out, and then came in to score on an unorthodox Rodolfo Durán double. It was a two “bagger” in the literal sense, bouncing off of the second base bag, lofting over the second baseman Jeremiah Jackson into the shallow outfield and leaving the O’s defense scrambling. Fernando Tatis Jr. cashed in on the oddity with a normal single into center field, scoring Durán for an early 2-0 lead.

There were some good signs for the Orioles on offense. They had 10 hits—two more than the Padres—and had plenty of traffic on the bases. But much like their loss on Saturday, many of those runners were left stranded. The team went 1-for-8 with runners in scoring position and left eight runners on base.

It took until the fifth inning for the O’s to get on the board. That run came via a solo homer off Jackson’s bat, his seventh of the year and first since April 30. That’s quite a drought, but somewhat understandable given his lack of playing time since the return of Jackson Holliday.

Rico Garcia was the first name out of Craig Albernaz’s bullpen. It was an interesting choice since Garcia has often been the team’s go-to arm in the highest of leverage situations, which this seventh inning was not. But it’s possible that, in the midst of a tough stretch for Garcia, the manager was simply hoping to get him a little confidence against the bottom of the Padres order. Unfortunately, it would not work that way.

Garcia walked the first batter he faced, got a strikeout, and then allowed a two run bomb to Durán, making it a 4-1 lead for San Diego. Garcia has now allowed five runs (four earned) across his last four appearances. His ERA in June is 8.31.

The Orioles clawed one run back in the bottom of the inning with their lone hit with runners in scoring position. Blaze Alexander opened the inning with a double into left field, and then came in to score on a Henderson single to right. The score improved to 4-2 at the moment, but the O’s would get no closer.

Mason Miller came on with two outs in the eighth inning and shut down any chance of an Orioles comeback. He struck out three of the four batters he faced to wrap up a series win for the visiting Padres.

The final score would end up 5-2 because of some hideous defense on the Orioles part in the top of the ninth inning. The lead off hitter in the inning reached base on a fielding error from Henderson. After a strikeout to Jase Bowen, Durán hit a bouncer up the middle that Holliday flubbed. Henderson collected the ball and fired a wild throw wide of first base, allowing a runner to scoot over to third base. The O’s nearly got out of trouble when a line drive to right field was caught by Alexander and fired home to throw out the runner there. But a Padres challenge got the call overturned and widen the gap back to three runs.

It was a fittingly ugly end to a poor couple of days for the Orioles. The only solace may be that there were no bean balls or intentional hit by pitches. The only tense moment came when Padres starter Walker Buehler and O’s outfield Leody Taveras exchanged words after a Taveras fly out. It’s unclear what was going on there, but nothing much came of it.

This is probably just how it’s going to be for this team. They will quickly oscillate between inspiring and putrid from day to day unless some of their “stars” become more dependably amazing. Don’t hold your breath.

The Orioles now head to Seattle for a series that begins on Tuesday at 9:40. We just saw those guys! Brandon Young (5-1, 3.04 ERA) is expected start Game 1 against Logan Gilbert (4-4, 3.62 ERA). Enjoy the off day, everyone.

White Sox flip script in 6-run 6th to take series win

Jun 14, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman (5) runs the bases after hitting a home run against the Chicago White Sox during the first inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images | David Banks-Imagn Images

The Dodgers (45-27) went into the sixth inning Sunday afternoon in the Windy City with a 1-0 lead and a cruising Emmet Sheehan. The White Sox (38-32) changed the trajectory of the game and series outcome with a three-home run offensive explosion against Sheehan and Jack Dreyer in the sixth inning.

The Dodgers tried to inch their way back with a run in each of the last three innings, but the offense wasted several scoring opportunities throughout the 6-4 loss. They went 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position and left eight men on base.

Sheehan redeemed himself after his last start when Dave Roberts hooked him after only 1 1/3 innings against the Angels. The right-hander struck out eight and only allowed one hit through five innings of work. The hiccup that was his last start was mostly a thing of the past once he stepped on the mound Sunday.

Roberts celebrated his daughter’s graduation, and he wasn’t with the team for the series finale at Rate Field. Danny Lehmann, Dave’s bench coach, stepped in to be the substitute skipper on Sunday.

The first hit in the series for Freddie Freeman was a two-out solo home run off Bryan Hudson’s four-seamer.

The Dodgers continued to add to their collection of double plays. They went into Sunday’s game leading baseball with 64 GIDP on the season. Andy Pages hit into a double play in the first inning for No. 65. 

Sheehan was so locked in, he forgot how many outs were in the inning. After his two-out strike out of Drew Romo in the third inning, he started to walk back to the dugout. He returned to the mound with a small laugh and retired Sam Antonacci for the real final out of the frame.

Mookie Betts got on base on a swinging bunt hit with one out in the top of the fourth against Erick Fedde. Betts stole his first base of the year to put himself into scoring position. Kyle Tucker struck out to strand Mookie at second and keep it a 1-0 game.

Ryan Ward took a sinker away for a leadoff double against Fedde in the top of the fifth for the Dodgers. The offense couldn’t muster much else. It was the second straight inning the Dodgers stranded a runner in scoring position.

Sheehan continued to get the White Sox batters to chase balls off the plate. His changeup was wicked, and he used it to whiff Drew Romo for the second time to close out five shutout innings.

The Dodgers got their leadoff runner on four out of six innings, but they weren’t able to cash in any of them. They stranded two more in the sixth. Tucker finally made contact and got a base hit. Betts, who was on first after he erased Freeman on a force out, moved to third. Ward chased a Fedde changeup and went down on strikes to end the inning.

Antonacci reset the series finale with one swing of the bat. He crushed a hanging Sheehan changeup to right field for a leadoff home run to make it 1-1 in the bottom of the sixth.

Things unraveled quickly. The Sox put together six straight hits against Sheehan and Dryer including three home runs in a six-run attack.

Andrew Benintendi’s RBI double off Sheehan gave the White Sox a 2-1 lead. That would be it for Sheehan, but a booming two-run home run by Colson Montgomery against Dreyer gave the White Sox their third and fourth run of the inning. Chase Meidroth joined the home run party and launched a two-run shot to make it 6-1.

Grant Taylor came in to really shut down the Dodgers in the top of the seventh, but Dalton Rushing put a screw in the plans with a leadoff double. Alex Freeland’s fly ball was enough to bring in Rushing on a sac fly and get one back to make it 6-2.

Betts hit his seventh home run of the season, a solo shot against Taylor in the top of the eighth. Betts finally had his first multi-hit back-to-back games of the season.

The Dodgers once again got the lead runner on when Seranthony Domínguez walked Ward in the top of the ninth. Rushing struck out, but Freeland had the best at-bat of the night. After he fell behind 0-2, he worked the count back to 3-2, then scorched a RBI double to the right field corner to make it 6-4.

Ohtani was unintentionally intentionally walked just like old times representing the tying run. Pages grounded into a force out, but the inning continued. It was up to Freddie with first and third and two outs, but he struck out to end the game and series in favor of Chicago. It’s the first series win for the White Sox over the Dodgers since 2014.

Sunday particulars

Home run: Freddie Freeman (11), Mookie Betts (7); Sam Antonacci (2), Colson Montgomery (17), Chase Meidroth (6)

WP — Erick Fedde (2-5): 2 2/3 IP, 3 hits, no runs, 2 walks, 4 strikeouts (58 pitches)

LP — Emmet Sheehan (3-4): 5 IP, 4 hits, 3 runs, 1 walk, 8 strikeouts (85 pitches)

S— Seranthony Domínguez (12): 1 IP, 1, hit, 1 run, 2 walks, 2 strikeouts (33 pitches)

Up next

The Dodgers return home to host the Tampa Bay Rays for three games. The series opener Monday night will be televised on ESPN (7:10 p.m. PT; ESPN) and feature starters Eric Lauer (2-5, 5.47 ERA, 1.29 WHIP) for the Dodgers and Nick Martinez (6-2, 2.43 ERA, 1.159) for the Rays.

Yankees' ninth-inning home runs secure series win at Blue Jays

The Yankees broke a late-game tie with two home runs in the ninth inning for an 8-3 win at the Toronto Blue Jays to seal New York's series victory.

Takeaways

  1. Homers by Ben Rice and Jose Caballero saved the day for the Yankees (43-27), who were stuck in a 3-3 deadlock after Davis Schneider's sixth-inning home run against Jacob Bird. New York's five-run ninth set the stage for David Bednar to close the door in the inning's bottom half, allowing two hits during a scoreless frame.
  2. Will Warren allowed a season-high eight hits and lasted four innings while throwing 62 strikes on 98 pitches. He struck out one and walked three while yielding two runs, both of which came after the Yankees held a 2-0 lead following the second inning. Warren (7-1, 3.47 ERA) did not have his best stuff but limited the damage before the pitch count neared 100 through the fourth inning. He has not pitched five innings or more since May 31.
  3. Anthony Volpe was a bright spot, singling home two of the Yankees' first three runs with RBI knocks in the second and sixth innings. Volpe's second RBI single, which scored Max Schuemann, gave the Yankees a 3-2 lead entering the game's final 3.5 frames. June has not been kind to Volpe, but he posted his first game with two hits since May 31. He entered Sunday with a 2-for-24 line through his first nine games of the month.
  4. Ali Sánchez got his first two hits as a Yankee. The first, an RBI single in the second-inning that scored Volpe and doubled the Yankees' early lead to 2-0, was especially key. Sánchez is 2-for-10 through his first six games with New York.

Who's the MVP?

Rice, whose 19th home run of the season and 46th and 47th RBI made the difference.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees have Monday off before they begin their six-game homestand with this week's three-game series against the Chicago White Sox.

RHPs Gerrit Cole (1-1, 2.45 ERA) and David Martin (9-2, 2.41 ERA) are set to start Tuesday's 7:05 p.m. opener.

Once-dominant Dodgers bullpen unravels again in loss to White Sox

Dodgers reliever Jack Dreyer delivers in the sixth inning of a 6-4 loss to the Chicago White Sox.
Dodgers reliever Jack Dreyer delivers in the sixth inning of a 6-4 loss to the Chicago White Sox on Sunday. (Zoe Davis / Getty Images)

Dodgers left-hander Jack Dreyer rubbed a new baseball between his hands as he walked back to the mound, a sold-out Rate Field coming alive around him.

Fireworks crackled over the center-field scoreboard. Digital pinwheels spun. Dreyer had just surrendered his second home run of the inning, transforming a low-scoring battle into a lopsided White Sox advantage.

The Dodgers’ recent bullpen problems persisted in a 6-4 loss Sunday, overshadowing a bounce-back effort from Emmet Sheehan. The Dodgers tried to come back in the ninth, but fell short.

“We’ve gotten bit by the long ball, obviously in Pittsburgh, and here tonight,” said bench coach Danny Lehmann, filling in Sunday for manager Dave Roberts while he attended his daughter’s college graduation. “But overall, it’s more the strike throwing and just getting ahead of guys and doing what they’re supposed to do.”

The Dodgers dropped the series 2-1, marking their first series loss since May 8-10 against the Braves.

Sheehan was charged with three runs in five-plus innings, a massive turnaround coming off the second-shortest start of his career, only rivaled by a planned one-inning outing at the end of last season.

Read more:The hardest days are when calls don’t go through: Andy Pages opens up about family in Cuba

Against the Angels last week, Sheehan threw 49 pitches and recorded just four outs before being pulled.

On Sunday, he didn’t give up a hit until the fourth inning.

“He got strike one and then understood when to leave the zone when he needed to,” catcher Dalton Rushing said. “He did a great job of that. I think a couple of those guys picked up on tendencies, jumped on a pitch. I felt they were good pitches. I thought he did his job today and gave us a chance to win.”

Sheehan’s velocity has been an indicator of how synced up his delivery has been on any given start this season.

On Sunday, his 95.1-mph average fastball velocity was 0.7 mph above his season average, according to Statcast — a promising sign. Results followed.

Sheehan retired 11 of the first 12 batters he faced, just a hit batter away from perfection. With two outs in the fourth, he gave up a double to Colson Montgomery, on a low line drive up the first-base line, just out of reach of Freddie Freeman as he made a diving attempt.

Dodgers starting pitcher Emmet Sheehan delivers against the Chicago White Sox in the first inning Sunday.
Dodgers starting pitcher Emmet Sheehan delivers against the Chicago White Sox in the first inning Sunday. (Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press)

Then against Braden Montgomery, Sheehan worked back from a 2-1 count for an inning-ending strikeout.

Out of Sheehan’s hand, the pitch looked like it was going to cross the plate on the inside corner, about belt high. But as Montgomery started his swing, the firm changeup veered away from his bat at a sharp downward angle.

Montgomery swung over the pitch. A fired-up Sheehan buried his fist in his glove and shouted. With that strikeout, he preserved the Dodgers’ one-run lead.

Freeman provided that run with a solo homer in the first inning. And Sheehan gave the Dodgers plenty of time to extend that lead. In the sixth inning, however, the White Sox finally got to him.

“I definitely felt better early,” Sheehan said. “And then more of the same towards the end. Just pretty frustrating.”

Sheehan’s fastball to Sam Antonacci wasn’t in a bad spot. But in an 0-2 count, he could have put it a little higher or further inside. Antonacci drove it over the right-field fence.

Read more:Yoshinobu Yamamoto flirts with perfect game, MLB record in Dodgers' victory

A single, a stolen base and an RBI double later, Sheehan walked off the mound, the Dodgers trailing 2-1.

Just a few weeks ago, turning the ball over to the Dodgers’ bullpen was a promising move. They were still riding a franchise-record streak of 38 consecutive scoreless innings.

Lately, however, it’s been a rocky ride. The bullpen entered Sunday with a 6.71 ERA since ending that scoreless streak on May 25. Only the Giants and Rockies produced a worse mark over that stretch.

None of the Dodgers’ relievers have been dominant in recent games. Tanner Scott has been credited with three saves but also two losses. Kyle Hurt’s ERA has risen from 0.60 to 4.22. Dreyer, who went 10 straight games without giving up a run before landing on the injured list with left shoulder discomfort, has surrendered five home runs in seven appearances since returning on May 31.

Dreyer gave up three runs and three hits. Then Blake Treinen and Jonathan Hernández held the White Sox the rest of the way.

The Dodgers tacked on three more runs, on a sacrifice fly and an RBI double from Alex Freeland, and a solo homer from Mookie Betts. They stranded runners at the corners in the ninth.

Read more:Shaikin: Would Dave Roberts snub Yoshinobu Yamamoto to start Shohei Ohtani in All-Star Game?

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Meyer outduels Skenes, allows one run in six innings as Marlins top Pirates 4-2

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Max Meyer allowed one run in six innings, stranding nine runners in the Miami Marlins’ 4-2 victory over Paul Skenes and the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday.

Meyer (7-0) gave up six hits, walked three and hit a batter, but he struck out nine.

Skenes (6-6), who fell to 0-4 in six starts since last winning on May 12, gave up home runs to Heriberto Hernández and Joe Mack in the second inning. The Pirates ace set a career high with 23 swings and misses and struck out 10, including the side in the fourth and sixth. He gave up four hits with one walk in six innings.

Miami, which took two of three games from Pittsburgh, has won seven of eight and 10 of 12 in June.

Hernández opened the scoring by sending a Skenes fastball 403 feet into the left-field bleachers. Mack drove a changeup 424 feet to center, putting the Marlins ahead 2-0.

The Pirates started the fourth with three straight singles, capped by Jake Mangum driving in Nick Gonzales. Meyer retired the next three batters, including strikeouts of Jared Triolo and Spencer Horwitz.

Meyer hit Tyler Callihan with a pitch to load the bases with two outs the following inning. Mangum then sent a sharp liner to right-center, but centerfielder Jakob Marsee charged for a diving catch to rob a likely go-ahead double.

Pittsburgh had two runners in scoring position with two outs in the seventh before Calvin Faucher ended the threat with a strikeout of Callihan. It left on 11 total runners.

Kyle Stowers and Xavier Edwards pushed the lead to 4-1 with a pair of RBI singles off Brandan Bidois in the eighth.

Pete Fairbanks, who picked up his ninth save, struck out two in the ninth before surrendering a two-out homer to Bryan Reynolds.

Up next

Marlins: RHP Ryan Gusto (0-1, 6.00 ERA) takes the mound Monday to begin a three-game series in Philadelphia opposite Phillies RHP Zack Wheeler (5-1, 2.22 ERA).

Pirates: RHP Jared Jones (1-0, 4.73 ERA) starts Monday to open a three-game set at the Athletics against RHP J.T. Ginn (4-3, 3.15 ERA).

Twins 5, Cardinals 4: Ken-ough is Ken-ough!

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - JUNE 14: Victor Caratini #37 of the Minnesota Twins celebrates his two-run home run with teammate Josh Bell #56 during the fourth inning against the St. Louis Cardinals at Target Field on June 14, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Matt Krohn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On this Barbie Day afternoon at Target Field, the Minnesota Twins said “Ken-ough is Ken-ough!” and decided to take the series from the St. Louis Cardinals!

The Twins looked to do some damage off St. Louis SP Michael McGreevy right out of the gate when Byron Buxton doubled & Royce Lewis drew a walk, but a Josh Bell ground-out to second base thwarted the B1 threat. Similarly in B3, base knocks from Trevor Larnach & Kody Clemens placed two on with two outs—and again came away scoreless when an oppo-drive from Lewis died underneath the limestone overhang in RF.

Instead, it would be the Red Birds who activated the scoreboard first. After three solid innings, Twins SP Taj Bradley left a middle-middle breaking ball to Alec Burleson and the burly St. Louis slugger put it out onto the plaza. 1-0 STL.

Fortunately, it didn’t take long for the Twins to finally get into the offensive action: a B4 Bell base hit was brought home on a Victor Caratini poke to the plaza of his own! 2-1 MIN.

The long ball provided the next scoring as well, with a Taj T6 leadoff free pass to Nathan Church immediately haunting on a JJ Wetherholt whammer. 3-2 STL.

A developing Twins threat to tie the game in B6—Bell single, Caratini walk—was snuffed when a Brooks Lee liner was snagged by Cards 1B Blaze Jordan and turned into an unassisted twin killing.

Taj would hit the showers after 6.2 innings of 3-run ball—but also two Birds on base. You know the story from here: a Twins reliever—today being Anthony Banda—entered and the lead increased (bloop single from Wetherholt). At least Burleson was retired with the bases juiced. 4-2 STL.

Much like Friday night, however, Twins’ bats didn’t let a middle relief meltdown shut them down. In B7, a Luke Keaschall BB & Ryan Kreidler pinch-hit single set up Buxton at the dish. Buck of course delivered an RBI single. A Clemens single loaded the bases for Lewis—who cracked his own single to tie the game at 4-4!

Alas, a Bell whiff & a Caratini warning track fly-out prevented a lead change.

After Andrew Morris entered and K’d the STL side in T8, Keaschall’s 2-out double down the LF line set the stage for that much-anticipated lead change, with Kreidler doubling off the bullpen fence! 5-4 MIN.

Yoendrys Gomez would enter in T9 and provide that rarest of rare occurrences for the ‘26 Twins: a 1-2-3 ninth inning for the save!

Your Final: Minnesota Twins 5, St Louis Cardinals 4.

A really nice series victory over a strong St. Louis club. It wasn’t pretty Friday night or this afternoon, but the Twins battled all weekend and sent the strong contingent of Cardinals fans back down I-35 unhappy.

Zach’s Zealot
  • Buxton: Basically a perma-entry in this category right now. Three more hits today & five All-Star ballot-punches garnered from this writer. Let’s make sure Buck is under the Liberty Bell in Citizen’s Bank Park come mid-July!
Zach’s Zombie
  • Me, for reseting my Safari web browser yesterday and having an anxiety attack trying to remember how to get back into the WordPress admin dashboard (you are reading this, so man prevailed over tech—if barely).
Egg-cellent Elocution
Who’s Got Next
  • Two-stepping down to Texas for a 3-game series with the Rangers (Mon. night, Tues. night, Thurs. afternoon). Yes, a rare mid-series off day due to World Cup activity in Dallas on Wednesday.

Wetherholt, Burleson Homers Not Enough as Cardinals Lose to Twins Sunday

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - JUNE 12: JJ Wetherholt #26 of the St. Louis Cardinals bats during the game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Minnesota Twins at Target Field on Friday, June 12, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Andrew Ritter/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

After the homer-happy St. Louis Cardinals blasted past the Minnesota Twins on Saturday, the bats were relatively silent in Minneapolis on Sunday afternoon until later in the game, but it wasn’t enough to win the series against the Twins.

Both starters did their teams big favors on Sunday by going deep into the game. Michael McGreevy kept the Cardinals in the game into the 6th inning and Taj Bradley did the same (almost) for the Minnesota Twins. The early game was really just two more or less isolated blasts. In the bottom of the 4th inning, Josh Bell singled and then scored when Victor Caratini crushed a home run into the right field stands giving the Twins a 2-1 lead after Alec Burleson launched another towering home run in his flaming hot streak in the top of the 4th inning.

The Minnesota Twins lineup was making hard contact against Michael McGreevy, but they had very little to show for it which allowed the Cardinals bats to eventually wake up and make it a game. After Nathan Church walked to lead off the top of the 6th inning, JJ Wetherholt did what JJ Wetherholt does which is give the Cardinals the kind of hit exactly when they need it. In this case, it was a clutch 2-run homer to right giving the St. Louis Cardinals a 3-2 lead, his 10th of the season.

Several moments that won’t show up on many scorecards or highlight reels, but need to be shouted out. First, early in the game when Michael McGreevy got Byron Buxton out, manager Oli Marmol walked down the length of the dugout and gave the Cardinals gold Amazon home run chain to pitching coach Dusty Blaze. Classic. Another stellar defensive play in the bottom of the 6th inning when the Minnesota Twins had a runner on first base with just one out, Blaze Jordan made a diving catch on a line drive and then dove back to the base and tagged the runner out for an inning-ending double play. You’re going to be wearing those birds on the bat for a long time I predict, Mr. Jordan.

Michael McGreevy gave the Cardinals a full 6-inning quality start Sunday giving up 7 hits (some of them very loud), but only allowing 2 earned runs while striking out only 2 and walking 2. The hard hit rate from Michael can be unnerving, but the simple fact is the Cardinals tend to win games he starts and that’s really one of the best things you can say about a Major League starter.

The St. Louis Cardinals would get a valuable insurance run in the top of the 7th inning after José Fermín’s two-out single (which extends his now 8-game hitting streak). Nathan Church followed that up with another single which caused the Minnesota Twins manager Derek Shelton to remove Bradley so he wouldn’t face JJ Wetherholt again. Didn’t matter as JJ did another JJ thing by gracefully placing a single just over the shortstop scoring Fermín making it 4-2 Cardinals.

What was the Cardinals bullpen solution for the late innings after Michael McGreevy’s exit? In the 7th inning, it was JoJo Romero. The first batter he faced was Martin who not only struck out, but used the Twins final challenge of the day. The second batter was Keaschall who JoJo felt the need to walk. The third hitter was pinch-hitter Kreidler who smacked a single into left field giving Minnesota runners at first and third with just one out and Byron Buxton at the plate. (*shudder*) He lined the second pitch he saw into left field cutting the Cardinals lead in half making it 4-3 with the Twins still having runners on first and second with only one out. Clemens also singled to right which loaded the bases and inspired Oli Marmol to remove Romero from the game. George Soriano entered this hornet’s nest and gave up yet another annoying single which tied the game at 4-4 bringing up the very dangerous Josh Bell to the plate. Fortunately for St. Louis, Josh also strikes out a lot which is what he did in the Twins 7th giving St. Louis a badly-needed second out. They weren’t out of the woods yet, though, as the very hot Caratini nearly unloaded the bases flying out to very deep left field as Lars Nootbaar grabbed it before stumbling up against the left field wall. Whew.

George Soriano was also the Cardinals answer for the bottom of the 8th inning with the goal of keeping the game tied. He was almost successful. With two outs, he gave up back-to-back doubles to Keaschall and Kreidler giving the Twins a 5-4 lead. It could have been worse, but Soriano was able to strike out the fearsome Byron Buxton keeping St. Louis just one run down.

The Twins sent Yoendrys Gómez to the mound to try and lock up the series win for Minnesota. After a successful challenge of what was called an infield hit for José Fermín, it was up to Nathan Church and JJ Wetherholt. Church struck out by chasing two pitches that were very much not in the strike zone. JJ Wetherholt hit a ball deep to center, but just got under it a little too much flying out to end the game.

The St. Louis Cardinals return to Busch Stadium Monday night as they’ll host the San Diego Padres. Dustin May will make the start for the Cardinals while the starter for the Padres is to be determined. First pitch is scheduled for 6:45pm at Busch Stadium and the TV broadcast will be available on Cardinals.tv.

Royals blank Astros to take series finale

Jun 14, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Royals second baseman Michael Massey (19) throws to first base after forcing out Houston Astros first baseman Christian Walker (8) during the seventh inning at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images | Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

The Royals shut out the Astros on Sunday after allowing 18 runs the first two games. Stephen Kolek was great in the Royals 4-0 victory. The Royals record moves to 29-43 on the series after a 2-4 homestand.

The Royals got on the board early and often against Spencer Arrighetti, who is having a great start to his season. In the bottom of the first, Bobby Witt Jr. singled and stole second with one out. Maikel Garcia drove him in with a laser to left field to put the Royals up 1-0 immediately.

Witt turned 26 today and he was doing everything. On the day, he went 2-4 with two stolen bases and a run scored. Oh, and he added this diving catch to his long resume of nearly impossible plays.

The Royals tacked on 3 runs in the bottom half of the 3rd inning. Isaac Collins walked on 4 pitches to start the inning; he went to third on Carter Jensen’s single. After Witt popped out, Jac Caglianone came through, lining a single into right. Garcia just got one past the third baseman down the line (ala Salvy in 2014) to bring Jensen and Jac in on the double, 4-0 Kansas City.

That was all that Stephen Kolek needed as he was untouchable all day. Kolek went 7.1 innings, allowing 5 hits, no runs, walking 1 and striking out 4. His ERA for the season now sits at 2.68. He also made this nice play to start a huge double play to get him out of a jam.

A one out walk and single chased Kolek in the 8th inning. Steven Cruz came in and got a strike out and a weak groundout to end the inning. Cruz continues to look more and more like the 2025 version of himself after being called back up.

Daniel Lynch IV got the 9th, and it was uneventful. A quick 1-2-3 inning for the Royals most consistent reliever this season.

The Royals will take a quick road trip to the nation’s capital to play a 37-35 Nationals team. They return home for the Cardinals next weekend. First pitch for tomorrow is set for 5:45 p.m. CT.

Braves bats go silent in series loss to Mets

Jun 14, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets designated hitter Juan Soto (22) is tagged out attempting to steal second in the sixth inning by Atlanta Braves shortstop Jorge Mateo (2) at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The headline says it all.

Giving New York another reason to celebrate, the Atlanta Braves fell 8-1 to the New York Mets on Sunday.

Bryce Elder’s outing resulted in him only pitching through four innings, allowing two hits, six earned runs, two walks and only two strikeouts.

Four of the runs came in the first inning, which set the tone early against the Braves, who scored one run in the same inning on a sac-fly by Dominic Smith to bring in Michael Harris.

Which leads us to the offense. Today was a down game for Elder, but he can’t take all of the blame. Though Mets’ Freddy Peralta had a solid outing, pitching through five innings and allowing four hits and one earned run, he only accomplished two strikeouts, giving the Braves ample opportunity to take advantage, despite being down so early.

Back-to-back home runs in the bottom of the fifth by Mets’ A.J. Ewing and Marcus Semien with no outs resulted in Elder getting relieved by Dylan Dodd soon after.

Juan Soto decided to close out the bottom of the eighth inning with a two-run hit to drive in Carson Benge and Bo Bichette for a seven-point lead, 8-1, also ending the game with a series win.

The Braves have an off day tomorrow, and after coming off two disappointing series, will need to reevaluate their game plan as they return home to face the San Francisco Giants with Grant Holmes on the mound.

Mets score four runs in first inning, A.J. Ewing records three hits in 8-1 win over Braves

The Mets scored four first-inning runs and rolled to an 8-1 win over the Atlanta Braves on Sunday at Citi Field. As such they took two out of three games to win the series in this first meeting of the season with the NL East-leading Braves. 

The Mets are still seven games under .500 at 32-39 but they have played better in recent weeks, going 10-6 over their last 16 games, and 22-18 over their last 40 games. 

The Braves still have the best record in MLB at 46-25. 

Here are the top takeaways from the win...

--Freddy Peralta pitched a strong five innings to get the win, allowing one run on four singles and a walk. It was a big bounce-back start after he allowed six runs vs. the St. Louis Cardinals last Tuesday, as he got his ERA back under 4.00, to 3.90. 

The only knock was his inability to get deep into the game, which has been Peralta’s biggest flaw this season. It took him 90 pitches to get through five innings, and Carlos Mendoza apparently decided not to push him any farther. 

The right-hander didn’t seem to have his best fastball, striking out only two Braves’ hitters, but he did a good job mixing all his pitches, getting some key outs with off-speed stuff that had hitters out in front.

--The Mets got all the runs they needed in a weird first inning that saw Juan Soto attempt a sacrifice bunt after the first two runners reached base. Mendoza surely didn’t want Soto bunting there, and to make things worse, the star left fielder bunted barely in front of the plate, where catcher Sandy Leon could field the ball and throw to third for a force-out.

Yet the Mets rallied from there, as Jared Young singled home a run and A.J. Ewing doubled to the opposite field, down the left field line, driving in the second run of the inning. A third run scored when Mike Yastrzemski’s throw from the left-field corner hit the pole supporting the on-field netting and caromed toward center field. 

Finally, Brett Baty singled home Ewing to complete the rally and give the Mets a 4-1 lead. 

-Back-to-back solo home runs by Ewing and Marcus Semien knocked starter Bryce Elder out of the game in the sixth inning, giving the Mets a 6-1 lead. 

Elder came in with a 2.66 ERA, having an outstanding season for the Braves. This was the first time this season he has given up as many as six earned runs in a start, and only the second time he’s given up more than three. His ERA jumped to 3.15. 

--Ewing had a big day, going 3-for-5 with a single, double, and home run. He scored two runs and drove in two as well, while raising his batting average to .269. 

Ewing had a shot at hitting for the cycle, needing only a triple when he batted in the seventh inning, but he grounded out to first on the first pitch of the at-bat against right-hander Reynaldo Lopez. He also struck out in the eighth. 

--Bo Bichette had his sixth multi-hit game in his last 10, going 2-for-5 with a couple of singles. He’s hitting .390 over those 10 games with three HRs and 12 RBI. 

--The Mets’ bullpen continues to excel as four relievers, Cionel Perez, Daniel Duarte, AJ Minter, and Huascar Brazoban combined to deliver four scoreless innings.

Coming into the game the Mets’ pen had a 3.35 ERA, which ranked fourth in MLB. 

Game MVP: A.J. Ewing

Ewing's opposite-field double in the first inning was the key to the four-run rally that put the Mets in front for good. 

The rookie continued to show his ability to hit to all fields as contact hitters, doubling to left, singling to center, and homering to right, as he jumped on an inside slider, as part of his 3-for-5 day.

Highlights

Upcoming Schedule

The Mets hit the road for six games, starting with three in Cincinnati against the Reds. 

David Peterson is expected to pitch in some capacity for the Mets on Tuesday, with Chase Burns going for the Reds. First pitch on SNY at 7:10 p.m.

Mariners trounced by Nats 10-1

WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 14: Julio Rodríguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners reacts to a strikeout call during the ninth inning against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on June 14, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jess Rapfogel/Getty Images) | Getty Images

A lot of things went wrong in today’s 10-1 loss to the Nationals. You’d think so with a score like that. But the one I want to focus on is pitch selection.

Emerson Hancock got the start today, and while he’s been having a breakout year, some people have been arguing that while he’s improved, it’s not quite as good as it looks. Big day for those people, whoever they are. In particular, Hancock has been struggling since tossing that 14-strikeout all-timer in the Randy Johnson number-retirement game. Between then and today, he had six starts in which he kept his ERA under 3.00, but did it while riding a .200 BABIP and kicking a K%-BB% of just 12.0%, down from the 25.2% star turn in his first seven starts.

In other words, it seemed that the league had adjusted to the new Hancock. He’d have to adjust back.

He’d take that adjustment into his own hands after the debacle in Baltimore in his last start when he screamed at catcher Jhonny Pereda during a mound visit. Today, Hancock had a pitchcom on his belt, and would call his own game. I actually love that the Mariners did this rather than simply having Hancock pitch to Garver today. This managed to solve the tension while still standing behind Pereda.

But the pitches Hancock called were not the right ones.

To be sure, it worked at first. Other than leaving a cutter in the lefty loop zone to James Wood, who did what he does, Hancock was fine the first time through the order. The big change he went to was throwing his sinker to all of Washington’s lefties. On the season, Hancock had been mostly using his four-seamer and cutter to lefties while leaving his sinker and sweeper on the shelf. That makes sense as a strategy. Sinkers and sweepers, with their horizontal movement, generally have some of the biggest platoon splits.

Today though, Hancock caught the lefties off guard, throwing 10 sinkers to lefties in the first time through the order, 36% of his pitches to them. That’s double his season average.

The problem was that the Nats noticed and were not caught off guard the second time through. They stacked five hits in a row to open the bottom of the fourth. Add in an errant pick-off throw and a missed fielder’s choice, and the hometown team put up a five spot in what Aaron Goldsmith says was less than four minutes. It turns out the element of surprise only works when it’s actually surprising.

Hancock eventually got out of the inning, but did not come back for the fifth. I don’t think the understaffed and overworked bullpen needed the extra pitches. Only nine of Hancock’s 59 pitches were something other than a fastball. Maybe the Mariners could have tried seeing if doing something other than aping Bryan Woo would work before pulling the plug.

To their credit, the bullpen did mostly hold it down. The exception was Andrés Muñoz, who came in for the ninth, despite the lopsided score, just to get some work. But he gave up a walk and a double and left after the trainer came to the mound. The broadcast speculated it was just about the heat, a problem he’s had in the past, but Adam Jude reports it was back tightness. That’s a vague diagnosis, but vagueness is unfortunately all you can do for that malady, which might be fine tomorrow or linger for the rest of his life. (Josh Naylor also left the game after fouling a ball on the shin, but his x-rays were negative.)

In a game lacking in good news, at least Cole Young made a web gem in the sixth inning (tragically, no video yet). For those not following the storyline, LL’s Managing Editor Kate Preusser has committed that if Young wins a Gold Glove, she’ll get a tattoo that says, “I was so wrong about Cole Young.” So every good play gets me thinking about font choices to recommend. Young gets the Sun Hat Award today for that play and for scoring the Mariners’ lone run.

Washington Nationals cruise to a series win on the back of a masterful outing by Miles Mikolas

WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 14: Miles Mikolas #36 of the Washington Nationals pitches to the Seattle Mariners during the second inning at Nationals Park on June 14, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jess Rapfogel/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Talk about recapturing the vibes! The Nats have now fully put the San Francisco meltdown in the rear view mirror after taking the series against the Mariners with a 10-1 win. After the Mariners scored a run in the first inning, this was a comprehensive beatdown by the Nats. 

On the one year anniversary of the infamous “never on coaching” line from Davey Martinez, the Nats are now 37-35. In the past that Giants loss may have derailed the season, but not for this team and not for this coaching staff. The way this team has responded the last two games is so encouraging, and makes their success seem more real.

There were a lot of star performers in this game, but the biggest one was Miles Mikolas. Simply put, Mikolas looked cooked in his first few outings of the season. He was getting shelled and became the face of the Nats pitching woes. However, Mikolas has turned his season around. In his last 11 outings, the veteran has a 3.38 ERA and a WHIP under 1. 

He has had plenty of good performances lately, but this was the best one. Mikolas’ command was absolutely impeccable, dotting corners all day long. The velocity was also up for the right hander. His 4-seamer and sinker were both up 1.6 MPH today, with the 4-seamer averaging 94.9 MPH. This was the first time Mikolas has tossed 7 scoreless innings since 2024.

When Mikolas did that, he was used as a traditional starter. In this outing, he came in after an inning of work by opener PJ Poulin. Mikolas has done well following an opener this year, and has been totally open to the idea despite having over 200 starts under his belt. Despite being in this league for a long time, all Mikolas wants to do is pitch and help his team win.

The offense made things easier for Mikolas today by giving him plenty of run support. That run support came early and often. The Mariners struck first blood in the top of the first, but James Wood immediately answered back in the bottom of the inning. It was his second pull side homer of the series, and a majestic shot.

Wood is just on a whole different level right now and is an MVP candidate. With three hits today, Wood is now hitting .281 with a .972 OPS. Perhaps the craziest stat is that Wood has scored 66 runs on the season, and the next closest player has only scored 53. This shows you how great Wood is at getting on base, but also how prolific the Nats offense is behind him.

The big inning for the Nats came in the 4th, where things just unraveled for Mariners starter Emerson Hancock. In just 17 pitches, the Nats batted around and scored 5 runs. Nats hitters were hunting the first pitch all inning long, with 7 of the at bats that frame ending on the first pitch. One of those at bats was Daylen Lile’s RBI double, which was an absolute rope.

This whole season, or at least most of it, has been such a fun ride so far. We went into the year with zero expectations, but this team is surprising us game after game. Whenever we think this team will cool off, they just rip off another series win like they did against the Mariners today.

So many different players have stepped up this season for the Nats and today was a perfect example of that. Every Nationals hitter got at least one hit in this one. On the mound, Miles Mikolas, who was left for dead at the beginning of the season, was the hero. The Nats were at their scintillating best in this 10-1 demolition of the Mariners. 

Next up, the struggling Royals come to town. At times, the Nats have played down against weaker teams, so they will need to keep the intensity high this week. This was a great win though, and these last two games were a big statement by this young and hungry team.