Amed Rosario crushes two home runs to charge Yankees’ comeback win over the A’s

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 07: Amed Rosario #14 of the New York Yankees hits a two run home run in the eighth inning against the Athletics at Yankee Stadium on April 07, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The life of a backup position player isn’t a fun one. Sure, you get paid a lot to spend most of the game on the bench and have relatively little blame go your way any time your team loses, but any person who’s ever played sports tells you that it’s not fun to sit on the bench.

It was for that reason that Amed Rosario decided to take less money ahead of the 2024 season to sign with the Tampa Bay Rays. The Yankees reportedly offered him a $4 million contract in their pursuit of bench depth, but Rosario took a $1.5 million deal to get more playing time with the Rays. A year and a half later, fate brought him to the Yankees at the Trade Deadline as a right-handed platoon bat off the bench, where he got some big at-bats but ultimately sat in the backup role he once shrugged off.

After hitting free agency this offseason, he elected to accept that bench role and returned to the Yankees on a small deal to fill the same role. It would be rare that he would face a right-handed pitcher, but in the wake of Ryan McMahon’s deep slump to start the year, Aaron Boone decided to give Rosario a start against a pitcher with semi-reverse splits.

That decision may go down as one of Boone’s best-ever moves, at least on an individual game basis. Rosario blasted two home runs Tuesday night. Both against righties, both gave the Yankees the lead, and both induced emphatic celebration. His pair of long homers lifted the Yanks back up off the mat, helping them come back from a 3-1 deficit to knock off the (Sacramento) Athletics, 5-3, to open a three-game set.

Cam Schlittler started his outing on the right note, retiring the first six batters he faced with a trio of strikeouts, including one over the American League’s Luis Arraez, Jacob Wilson. Against Aaron Civale, the Yankees drew a couple of walks in the first two innings and had Aaron Judge reach on catcher’s interference, but the only real damage would come on a long home run to left field by Rosario to open the scoring. Amusingly enough, it was his first regular season homer at Yankee Stadium since he walked it off for the Mets in the most 2020 game of all time.

Schlittler unraveled in the third. Max Muncy nubbed an infield single, Jeff McNeil lined a hit to right field, and Schlittler was able to jump ahead of the light-hitting Denzel Clarke, 0-2. Despite having two strikes, Clarke laid down a successful bunt, which set up slumbering slugger Nick Kurtz to break out of his rut with a two-run double. Two batters later, Tyler Soderstrom ripped a double down the right-field line to make it 3-1, A’s.

Civale went back out and worked around a two-out walk to Ben Rice to get through the third and had a 1-2-3 fourth, while Schlittler settled back in after a rough third inning. The Yankees finally got something going off Civale in the fifth with a José Caballero double and a Judge walk, but the veteran righty was able to strand the tying run in scoring position.

Schlittler wrapped up his outing with two straight clean innings, ultimately finishing with seven strikeouts and three runs allowed in five innings. While it was his worst start of the year, and his velo was down because of the blistering cold, he continued an impressive walkless streak. Once considered his biggest weakness, the 25-year-old is now up to 22 strikeouts and zero walks in 16.2 innings on the season.

Jake Bird got the sixth for the Yankees, trying to bounce back from an awful outing on Sunday. It was a mixed bag, as he gave up a smoked single to Soderstrom, but bounced back to strike out Brent Rooker and retire Wilson. Boone elected to play to a matchup with Lawrence Butler due up with Brent Headrick, but the lefty walked him, and after a throwing error by Austin Wells on a stolen base, there were runners on the corners. Fortunately, Headrick rebounded to strike out Muncy to end the frame.

Justin Sterner was first out of the bullpen for the Athletics, and he got through the sixth cleanly, striking out Giancarlo Stanton and erasing a Jazz Chisholm Jr. single with an immediate 6-4-3 double play by Rosario. Boone elected to be aggressive with the matchups again in the seventh, taking out Headrick with two outs so Fernando Cruz could get Shea Langeliers. An update on Headrick’s odd reverse splits: righties are 0-for-12 with two walks and eight strikeouts against him, while lefties are 5-for-11 with two doubles, two walks, and two strikeouts.

Wells drilled a leadoff double at 111 mph into the gap to start the bottom of the seventh, but was stranded after Caballero, Grisham, and Judge all grounded out off Sterner. Cruz walked a pair of A’s in the eighth, but tip-toed his way out of a jam with a strikeout of Muncy.

I had a very soft spot for Mark Leiter Jr. last year, almost to a fault. The Yankees played unfathomably poor defense behind him, and he ran an impossibly high BABIP all season long. I believed in his stuff, which was still very strong (along with his peripherals) until a midseason injury. He was non-tendered in the offseason and picked up by the Athletics, where he’s one of their better relievers.

Leiter was tasked with holding the lead in the eighth, which he did not do. Bellinger and Rice hit two jamshot singles to start the frame before an absolutely baffling knuckleball single by Stanton that somehow evaded Wilson at shortstop brought in a run.

Whatever curse was put on Leiter at Yankee Stadium was clearly in full effect.

After the righty narrowly avoided a fourth consecutive bloop single on a diving play by Clarke in center, he faced Rosario, and this was his night. The veteran journeyman absolutely cranked a splitter that stayed up into the second deck, prompting one of the most emphatic home run celebrations I’ve seen from a Yankee in April, to make it 5-3. It’s just his third career multi-homer game and first in nearly five years.

After Caballero’s single and stolen base were stranded to end the inning, it was time for Renegade. David Bednar got the call to face 8-9-1. He fell behind McNeil, but rebounded to strike him out in a lengthy at-bat in what would be the only time he’d have to sweat. A pinch-hitting Carlos Cortes flew out, and Kurtz did the same to end it, with Bednar picking up his fifth save of the season.

The Yankees will look to win their fourth consecutive series to start the season in the middle game of this three-game set, as Will Warren faces former Yankee Luis Severino tomorrow at 7:05pm ET on YES.

Box Score

Amed Rosario crushes two home runs to charge Yankees’ comeback win over the A’s

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 07: Amed Rosario #14 of the New York Yankees hits a two run home run in the eighth inning against the Athletics at Yankee Stadium on April 07, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The life of a backup position player isn’t a fun one. Sure, you get paid a lot to spend most of the game on the bench and have relatively little blame go your way any time your team loses, but any person who’s ever played sports tells you that it’s not fun to sit on the bench.

It was for that reason that Amed Rosario decided to take less money ahead of the 2024 season to sign with the Tampa Bay Rays. The Yankees reportedly offered him a $4 million contract in their pursuit of bench depth, but Rosario took a $1.5 million deal to get more playing time with the Rays. A year and a half later, fate brought him to the Yankees at the Trade Deadline as a right-handed platoon bat off the bench, where he got some big at-bats but ultimately sat in the backup role he once shrugged off.

After hitting free agency this offseason, he elected to accept that bench role and returned to the Yankees on a small deal to fill the same role. It would be rare that he would face a right-handed pitcher, but in the wake of Ryan McMahon’s deep slump to start the year, Aaron Boone decided to give Rosario a start against a pitcher with semi-reverse splits.

That decision may go down as one of Boone’s best-ever moves, at least on an individual game basis. Rosario blasted two home runs Tuesday night. Both against righties, both gave the Yankees the lead, and both induced emphatic celebration. His pair of long homers lifted the Yanks back up off the mat, helping them come back from a 3-1 deficit to knock off the (Sacramento) Athletics, 5-3, to open a three-game set.

Cam Schlittler started his outing on the right note, retiring the first six batters he faced with a trio of strikeouts, including one over the American League’s Luis Arraez, Jacob Wilson. Against Aaron Civale, the Yankees drew a couple of walks in the first two innings and had Aaron Judge reach on catcher’s interference, but the only real damage would come on a long home run to left field by Rosario to open the scoring. Amusingly enough, it was his first regular season homer at Yankee Stadium since he walked it off for the Mets in the most 2020 game of all time.

Schlittler unraveled in the third. Max Muncy nubbed an infield single, Jeff McNeil lined a hit to right field, and Schlittler was able to jump ahead of the light-hitting Denzel Clarke, 0-2. Despite having two strikes, Clarke laid down a successful bunt, which set up slumbering slugger Nick Kurtz to break out of his rut with a two-run double. Two batters later, Tyler Soderstrom ripped a double down the right-field line to make it 3-1, A’s.

Civale went back out and worked around a two-out walk to Ben Rice to get through the third and had a 1-2-3 fourth, while Schlittler settled back in after a rough third inning. The Yankees finally got something going off Civale in the fifth with a José Caballero double and a Judge walk, but the veteran righty was able to strand the tying run in scoring position.

Schlittler wrapped up his outing with two straight clean innings, ultimately finishing with seven strikeouts and three runs allowed in five innings. While it was his worst start of the year, and his velo was down because of the blistering cold, he continued an impressive walkless streak. Once considered his biggest weakness, the 25-year-old is now up to 22 strikeouts and zero walks in 16.2 innings on the season.

Jake Bird got the sixth for the Yankees, trying to bounce back from an awful outing on Sunday. It was a mixed bag, as he gave up a smoked single to Soderstrom, but bounced back to strike out Brent Rooker and retire Wilson. Boone elected to play to a matchup with Lawrence Butler due up with Brent Headrick, but the lefty walked him, and after a throwing error by Austin Wells on a stolen base, there were runners on the corners. Fortunately, Headrick rebounded to strike out Muncy to end the frame.

Justin Sterner was first out of the bullpen for the Athletics, and he got through the sixth cleanly, striking out Giancarlo Stanton and erasing a Jazz Chisholm Jr. single with an immediate 6-4-3 double play by Rosario. Boone elected to be aggressive with the matchups again in the seventh, taking out Headrick with two outs so Fernando Cruz could get Shea Langeliers. An update on Headrick’s odd reverse splits: righties are 0-for-12 with two walks and eight strikeouts against him, while lefties are 5-for-11 with two doubles, two walks, and two strikeouts.

Wells drilled a leadoff double at 111 mph into the gap to start the bottom of the seventh, but was stranded after Caballero, Grisham, and Judge all grounded out off Sterner. Cruz walked a pair of A’s in the eighth, but tip-toed his way out of a jam with a strikeout of Muncy.

I had a very soft spot for Mark Leiter Jr. last year, almost to a fault. The Yankees played unfathomably poor defense behind him, and he ran an impossibly high BABIP all season long. I believed in his stuff, which was still very strong (along with his peripherals) until a midseason injury. He was non-tendered in the offseason and picked up by the Athletics, where he’s one of their better relievers.

Leiter was tasked with holding the lead in the eighth, which he did not do. Bellinger and Rice hit two jamshot singles to start the frame before an absolutely baffling knuckleball single by Stanton that somehow evaded Wilson at shortstop brought in a run.

Whatever curse was put on Leiter at Yankee Stadium was clearly in full effect.

After the righty narrowly avoided a fourth consecutive bloop single on a diving play by Clarke in center, he faced Rosario, and this was his night. The veteran journeyman absolutely cranked a splitter that stayed up into the second deck, prompting one of the most emphatic home run celebrations I’ve seen from a Yankee in April, to make it 5-3. It’s just his third career multi-homer game and first in nearly five years.

After Caballero’s single and stolen base were stranded to end the inning, it was time for Renegade. David Bednar got the call to face 8-9-1. He fell behind McNeil, but rebounded to strike him out in a lengthy at-bat in what would be the only time he’d have to sweat. A pinch-hitting Carlos Cortes flew out, and Kurtz did the same to end it, with Bednar picking up his fifth save of the season.

The Yankees will look to win their fourth consecutive series to start the season in the middle game of this three-game set, as Will Warren faces former Yankee Luis Severino tomorrow at 7:05pm ET on YES.

Box Score

Amed Rosario crushes two home runs to charge Yankees’ comeback win over the A’s

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 07: Amed Rosario #14 of the New York Yankees hits a two run home run in the eighth inning against the Athletics at Yankee Stadium on April 07, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The life of a backup position player isn’t a fun one. Sure, you get paid a lot to spend most of the game on the bench and have relatively little blame go your way any time your team loses, but any person who’s ever played sports tells you that it’s not fun to sit on the bench.

It was for that reason that Amed Rosario decided to take less money ahead of the 2024 season to sign with the Tampa Bay Rays. The Yankees reportedly offered him a $4 million contract in their pursuit of bench depth, but Rosario took a $1.5 million deal to get more playing time with the Rays. A year and a half later, fate brought him to the Yankees at the Trade Deadline as a right-handed platoon bat off the bench, where he got some big at-bats but ultimately sat in the backup role he once shrugged off.

After hitting free agency this offseason, he elected to accept that bench role and returned to the Yankees on a small deal to fill the same role. It would be rare that he would face a right-handed pitcher, but in the wake of Ryan McMahon’s deep slump to start the year, Aaron Boone decided to give Rosario a start against a pitcher with semi-reverse splits.

That decision may go down as one of Boone’s best-ever moves, at least on an individual game basis. Rosario blasted two home runs Tuesday night. Both against righties, both gave the Yankees the lead, and both induced emphatic celebration. His pair of long homers lifted the Yanks back up off the mat, helping them come back from a 3-1 deficit to knock off the (Sacramento) Athletics, 5-3, to open a three-game set.

Cam Schlittler started his outing on the right note, retiring the first six batters he faced with a trio of strikeouts, including one over the American League’s Luis Arraez, Jacob Wilson. Against Aaron Civale, the Yankees drew a couple of walks in the first two innings and had Aaron Judge reach on catcher’s interference, but the only real damage would come on a long home run to left field by Rosario to open the scoring. Amusingly enough, it was his first regular season homer at Yankee Stadium since he walked it off for the Mets in the most 2020 game of all time.

Schlittler unraveled in the third. Max Muncy nubbed an infield single, Jeff McNeil lined a hit to right field, and Schlittler was able to jump ahead of the light-hitting Denzel Clarke, 0-2. Despite having two strikes, Clarke laid down a successful bunt, which set up slumbering slugger Nick Kurtz to break out of his rut with a two-run double. Two batters later, Tyler Soderstrom ripped a double down the right-field line to make it 3-1, A’s.

Civale went back out and worked around a two-out walk to Ben Rice to get through the third and had a 1-2-3 fourth, while Schlittler settled back in after a rough third inning. The Yankees finally got something going off Civale in the fifth with a José Caballero double and a Judge walk, but the veteran righty was able to strand the tying run in scoring position.

Schlittler wrapped up his outing with two straight clean innings, ultimately finishing with seven strikeouts and three runs allowed in five innings. While it was his worst start of the year, and his velo was down because of the blistering cold, he continued an impressive walkless streak. Once considered his biggest weakness, the 25-year-old is now up to 22 strikeouts and zero walks in 16.2 innings on the season.

Jake Bird got the sixth for the Yankees, trying to bounce back from an awful outing on Sunday. It was a mixed bag, as he gave up a smoked single to Soderstrom, but bounced back to strike out Brent Rooker and retire Wilson. Boone elected to play to a matchup with Lawrence Butler due up with Brent Headrick, but the lefty walked him, and after a throwing error by Austin Wells on a stolen base, there were runners on the corners. Fortunately, Headrick rebounded to strike out Muncy to end the frame.

Justin Sterner was first out of the bullpen for the Athletics, and he got through the sixth cleanly, striking out Giancarlo Stanton and erasing a Jazz Chisholm Jr. single with an immediate 6-4-3 double play by Rosario. Boone elected to be aggressive with the matchups again in the seventh, taking out Headrick with two outs so Fernando Cruz could get Shea Langeliers. An update on Headrick’s odd reverse splits: righties are 0-for-12 with two walks and eight strikeouts against him, while lefties are 5-for-11 with two doubles, two walks, and two strikeouts.

Wells drilled a leadoff double at 111 mph into the gap to start the bottom of the seventh, but was stranded after Caballero, Grisham, and Judge all grounded out off Sterner. Cruz walked a pair of A’s in the eighth, but tip-toed his way out of a jam with a strikeout of Muncy.

I had a very soft spot for Mark Leiter Jr. last year, almost to a fault. The Yankees played unfathomably poor defense behind him, and he ran an impossibly high BABIP all season long. I believed in his stuff, which was still very strong (along with his peripherals) until a midseason injury. He was non-tendered in the offseason and picked up by the Athletics, where he’s one of their better relievers.

Leiter was tasked with holding the lead in the eighth, which he did not do. Bellinger and Rice hit two jamshot singles to start the frame before an absolutely baffling knuckleball single by Stanton that somehow evaded Wilson at shortstop brought in a run.

Whatever curse was put on Leiter at Yankee Stadium was clearly in full effect.

After the righty narrowly avoided a fourth consecutive bloop single on a diving play by Clarke in center, he faced Rosario, and this was his night. The veteran journeyman absolutely cranked a splitter that stayed up into the second deck, prompting one of the most emphatic home run celebrations I’ve seen from a Yankee in April, to make it 5-3. It’s just his third career multi-homer game and first in nearly five years.

After Caballero’s single and stolen base were stranded to end the inning, it was time for Renegade. David Bednar got the call to face 8-9-1. He fell behind McNeil, but rebounded to strike him out in a lengthy at-bat in what would be the only time he’d have to sweat. A pinch-hitting Carlos Cortes flew out, and Kurtz did the same to end it, with Bednar picking up his fifth save of the season.

The Yankees will look to win their fourth consecutive series to start the season in the middle game of this three-game set, as Will Warren faces former Yankee Luis Severino tomorrow at 7:05pm ET on YES.

Box Score

Celtics’ strong 4th quarter stings Hornets, 113-102

Apr 7, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) shoots the ball against Charlotte Hornets forward Moussa Diabate (14) in the second quarter at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images | David Butler II-Imagn Images

The Boston Celtics hosted the eighth-placed Charlotte Hornets for their final matchup of the regular season. With four games to go in the regular season, the Celtics needed just two wins from the final four games to lock in the 2nd seed in the Eastern Conference. In what could be a possible playoff match up, Boston held their nerve to mount a strong comeback to start the 4th quarter after going behind multiple times against a feisty Hornet team, they hold on to win, 113-102.

Boston came into the game with the first clear injury list of the season, as Nikola Vucevic was finally cleared to play. It was Jayson Tatum bobblehead night at the TD Garden, and the C’s started Sam Hauser, Derrick White, Jaylen Brown, Jayson Tatum, and Neemias Queta. The Hornets started LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller, Kon Knueppel, Miles Bridges, and Moussa Diabate.

Jaylen Brown got the C’s on the board first with a cutting layup; Neemias Queta scored the second bucket of the night on a fast break cut to the basket. La Melo rattled home 8 of Charlotte’s first 10 points, with Sam Hauser failing to stop La Melo Ball’s score on the offensive end. A Sam Hauser three-pointer made the score 11-13, Charlotte ahead early.

Queta was dominant inside for Boston; he had 3 big scores on the interior and a pair of second-chance makes in the Charlotte key. La Melo was hot to start the game; he had 13 quick points for Charlotte after just 7 minutes of action. At the first timeout, the scores were deadlocked at 18 apiece in a frenetic start.

Nikola Vucevic had his first reps in over a month, coming off the bench alongside Payton Pritchard and Baylor Scheierman. Former Boston Celtic Grant Williams got early first minutes back on the court at TD Garden; he hit six straight points as the scoring dried up for Boston. Charlotte went 7/17 from three after the first quarter compared to Boston’s 2/11. That hot shooting gave Charlotte an eleven-point lead after one quarter, 20-31.

Boston was just 35 percent from the field after the first and scoreless for it. four minutes to end the quarter. Payton Pritchard nailed his first triple on a cross-court pass from Hauser. Tatum hit three straight free throws as the C’s raced back into the game. Just 5 points, 28-33.

Neemias Queta had 10 early points to lead the C’s as he continued to impact the game for the home team. Tatum and Diabate were whistled for a double foul after tangling on the baseline as both teams and the refs broke up the action.

Derrick White connected on his first triple of the game, Tatum hit a fade away deuce, and JB scored on a terrific spinning reverse layup to make it 37-44, Charlotte’s first-quarter lead shrinking in real time.

Apr 7, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum (0) drive the ball against Charlotte Hornets guard LaMelo Ball (1) and forward Brandon Miller (24) in the first quarter at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images | David Butler II-Imagn Images

Jaylen Brown’s free throws, followed by a transition three-pointer with four minutes to go in the half, cut the Hornets lead to just 2 points. Boston improved their efficiency and scoring output in the second quarter; the Hornets’ climbing foul count saw the home team in the bonus with a lot of time remaining in the half.

A Jordan Walsh corner triple in front of the Charlotte bench gave Boston its first lead since the opening minutes of the game. Jordan Walsh pressured LaMelo Ball into a backcourt turnover to give Boston another scoring attempt, JB converting a layup for his 18th point of the night.

Boston had 13 second chance points in the first half compared to just 6 for Charlotte. LaMelo Ball’s shot-making (23 points) was the difference between the two teams at the half, Charlotte up 55-61 at the half.

Jayson Tatum hit his first three-pointer to start the 3rd quarter. Neemias Queta found himself in rebounding position on the offensive glass; he caught a Tatum miss and went right back up to score his twelfth point. White hit a triple from up top, with Queta getting the assist. Boston down by one, 69-68.

Jaylen Brown hit on his 2,000th point of the season, becoming just the eighth Celtic all time to achieve such a feat. In an entertaining third, the Hornets and Celtics were trading leads throughout. Boston, however, recorded 4 straight turnovers in a horrible stretch as Charlotte opened back up a 7-point lead, 75-82.

Jordan Walsh was having an outstanding game for Boston; he had 9 points and 5 boards while matched up on LaMelo Ball. Baylor Sheierman had a dagger triple with Charlotte scrambling to cut it back to 4 late in the third. A JB step back over Knueppel gave Boston the lead back. JB then converted on a floater to give Boston their biggest lead of the game, 3 points, 90-87.

Vooch finally scored his first points of the game to start the fourth; he hit on a turnaround hook shot off a great Pritchard entry pass. Jaylen Brown hit the thirty point mark with 9 minutes to go in the game, he had 31 points, 8 boards and 2 assists.

Tatum had a tough step through lay up over Miller and Diabate, he had 18 points of his own. Pritchard’s three-pointer came after multiple kick outs, White with the assist, C’s go up 101-94. Boston extending it’s lead with La Melo on the bench for Charlotte, before Charles Lee went back to his high scoring guard.

In a crucial period, Boston went on a 26-7 run to start the 4th, Boston up double digits, 106-94. Vucevic showed good defensive minutes also in that stretch for Boston with Queta out after knocking heads to end the 3rd quarter. That was pretty much ball game as Tatum and Brown showed the young Hornets how to close out a tight contest.

Boston will next face the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden, Thursday night (9th April) at 7:30pm, a win would see them secure the 2nd seed.

Gamethread 4/7: Phillies at Giants

Apr 6, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; Philadelphia Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto (10) and Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Jhoan Duran (59) celebrate their victory against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob Kupbens-Imagn Images | Bob Kupbens-Imagn Images

Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:

For the Giants:

Let’s talk about it.

Gamethread 4/7: Phillies at Giants

Apr 6, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; Philadelphia Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto (10) and Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Jhoan Duran (59) celebrate their victory against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob Kupbens-Imagn Images | Bob Kupbens-Imagn Images

Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:

For the Giants:

Let’s talk about it.

Gamethread 4/7: Phillies at Giants

Apr 6, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; Philadelphia Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto (10) and Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Jhoan Duran (59) celebrate their victory against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob Kupbens-Imagn Images | Bob Kupbens-Imagn Images

Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:

For the Giants:

Let’s talk about it.

Jeremiah Fears sets a franchise rookie mark with 40 points as the Pelicans top the Jazz 156-137

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Jeremiah Fears set a Pelicans rookie record for points in a game with 40, and New Orleans snapped an eight-game losing streak on Tuesday night with a 156-137 victory over the Utah Jazz, who lost their 10th straight.

Fears, the seventh overall pick in the draft, shot 17 for 29 from the field and 1 for 7 from 3-point distance. Jordan Poole scored 34 points, including 22 in third quarter, when New Orleans set a franchise record for points in a period with 50. The Pelicans also set a franchise record for points in a game, despite playing without usual starters Zion Williamson, Trey Murphy III, Dejounte Murray, Herb Jones and Saddiq Bey.

While Murphy (right ankle) and Murray (bruised left hand) were injured, Williamson, Jones and Bey were all active, but were left on the bench for New Orleans' final home game of a second-straight non-playoff season.

Poole, who has spent more than half the season on the bench, shot 7 of 16 from 3-point range in his seventh start for New Orleans.

Rookie Micah Peavy scored a season-high 20 points, 2023 first-round draft choice Jordan Hawkins added 25 points for New Orleans and 2025 first-rounder Derek Queen (13th overall) had 17 points and 12 rebounds as the Pelicans finished with a franchise-record 90 points in the paint.

Veteran center Kevin Looney also started for just the seventh time this season and finished with 12 rebounds.

Kennedy Chandler scored 31 and Cody Williams scored 26 for Utah, which lost for the 14th time in 15 games. Brice Sensabaugh, who was averaging 25.7 points in his previous 10 games, finished with 18 points.

Bez Mbeng, a first-year player out of Yale playing in his 13th game, added a personal-best 26 points and John Konchar had 12 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists.

New Orleans' previous record for points in a game by a rookie was 37, set by Marcus Thornton in 2010. The club's previous high-scoring game was 153 points, also against Utah in January 2024.

Up next

Jazz: Host the Memphis Grizzlies on Friday.

Pelicans: At the Boston Celtics on Friday.

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

6-5 – Higgy’s homer helps Rangers to 3-2 win over M’s

Apr 7, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers catcher Kyle Higashioka (11) runs the bases after hitting a two-run home run during the fifth inning against the Seattle Mariners at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images | Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers scored three runs while the Seattle Mariners scored two runs.

I have this impression that George Kirby is one of the greatest pitchers to ever live because I’ve mostly only ever seen him pitch against the Rangers and when Kirby pitches against the Rangers, he’s one of the greatest pitchers to ever live.

Coming into tonight’s game, Kirby was 8-0 with an ERA of 1.04 in his career spanning ten starts and 60 2/3 innings against Texas. Simply put, Kirby has been one of the all-time Rangers slayers on the mound.

So imagine my not-surprise when the offensively-challenged-at-home Rangers were getting shut down by Kirby on like 30 something pitches through four scoreless frames. I was certain the Rangers were going to get shutout on a turbo Maddux on like 65 pitches by Kirby and it would have been like maybe one of his second or third best outings against them.

But a weird little thing happened . In the top of the fifth, after Texas starter Nathan Eovaldi had shrugged off a first pitch home run by Brendan Donovan to give the Mariners an immediate 1-0 lead, Eovaldi got into a spot of trouble with three consecutive two-out baserunners that scored Seattle’s second run.

Eovaldi needed a ton of pitches to get out of the inning without further damage but for as brisk as Kirby was working, it offered a moment where he had to sit and wait. This effectively worked to ice Kirby as in the bottom of the inning the Rangers ambushed the righty for three runs and a lead.

Joc Pederson singled on a ball to third base that Donovan threw away. With Pederson at second base, Evan Carter drove in his first run on the season with an RBI single and then Kyle Higashioka had the big hit with a two-run dong that gave the Rangers their lead and the game its eventual final score.

Just like that, Kirby had proved to be mortal and the Rangers have their first win against Seattle’s Rangers killer despite the fact that Kirby went on to finish an eight inning complete game.

Player of the Game: Eovaldi (6 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 7 K) bouncing back from not only two poor starts to begin the year, but also the lead off home run, was critical but there was no bigger moment than his battery mate Higashioka giving Texas the lead on the eventual game-winning two-run homer that turned what looked like another dominant Kirby start against the Rangers into a win.

Thanks to Eovaldi and Higgy, the victory guarantees Texas no worse than a series victory over Seattle in their first battle of the year and it also moved the Rangers back above .500.

Also, hat tip to the two Jac(k)obs Latz and Junis for three innings of scoreless ball with two frames from Jacob and a one-run save for a second consecutive night for Jakob.

Junis’ 9th inning was scary with the first two hitters reaching but after two flyouts, the game ended on a check swing grounder in the front of the plate off the bat of Donovan that Higgy pounced on for the out and a bit of poetry.

Up Next: The Rangers will close out this series eyeing their first sweep of the season with LHP MacKenzie Gore set to make the start for Texas opposite RHP Bryan Woo for Seattle in the latest stellar pitching matchup between these two AL West rivals.

The Wednesday afternoon finale from The Shed is scheduled for 1:35 pm CDT and will be aired on the Rangers Sports Network.

6-5 – Higgy’s homer helps Rangers to 3-2 win over M’s

Apr 7, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers catcher Kyle Higashioka (11) runs the bases after hitting a two-run home run during the fifth inning against the Seattle Mariners at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images | Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers scored three runs while the Seattle Mariners scored two runs.

I have this impression that George Kirby is one of the greatest pitchers to ever live because I’ve mostly only ever seen him pitch against the Rangers and when Kirby pitches against the Rangers, he’s one of the greatest pitchers to ever live.

Coming into tonight’s game, Kirby was 8-0 with an ERA of 1.04 in his career spanning ten starts and 60 2/3 innings against Texas. Simply put, Kirby has been one of the all-time Rangers slayers on the mound.

So imagine my not-surprise when the offensively-challenged-at-home Rangers were getting shut down by Kirby on like 30 something pitches through four scoreless frames. I was certain the Rangers were going to get shutout on a turbo Maddux on like 65 pitches by Kirby and it would have been like maybe one of his second or third best outings against them.

But a weird little thing happened . In the top of the fifth, after Texas starter Nathan Eovaldi had shrugged off a first pitch home run by Brendan Donovan to give the Mariners an immediate 1-0 lead, Eovaldi got into a spot of trouble with three consecutive two-out baserunners that scored Seattle’s second run.

Eovaldi needed a ton of pitches to get out of the inning without further damage but for as brisk as Kirby was working, it offered a moment where he had to sit and wait. This effectively worked to ice Kirby as in the bottom of the inning the Rangers ambushed the righty for three runs and a lead.

Joc Pederson singled on a ball to third base that Donovan threw away. With Pederson at second base, Evan Carter drove in his first run on the season with an RBI single and then Kyle Higashioka had the big hit with a two-run dong that gave the Rangers their lead and the game its eventual final score.

Just like that, Kirby had proved to be mortal and the Rangers have their first win against Seattle’s Rangers killer despite the fact that Kirby went on to finish an eight inning complete game.

Player of the Game: Eovaldi (6 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 7 K) bouncing back from not only two poor starts to begin the year, but also the lead off home run, was critical but there was no bigger moment than his battery mate Higashioka giving Texas the lead on the eventual game-winning two-run homer that turned what looked like another dominant Kirby start against the Rangers into a win.

Thanks to Eovaldi and Higgy, the victory guarantees Texas no worse than a series victory over Seattle in their first battle of the year and it also moved the Rangers back above .500.

Also, hat tip to the two Jac(k)obs Latz and Junis for three innings of scoreless ball with two frames from Jacob and a one-run save for a second consecutive night for Jakob.

Junis’ 9th inning was scary with the first two hitters reaching but after two flyouts, the game ended on a check swing grounder in the front of the plate off the bat of Donovan that Higgy pounced on for the out and a bit of poetry.

Up Next: The Rangers will close out this series eyeing their first sweep of the season with LHP MacKenzie Gore set to make the start for Texas opposite RHP Bryan Woo for Seattle in the latest stellar pitching matchup between these two AL West rivals.

The Wednesday afternoon finale from The Shed is scheduled for 1:35 pm CDT and will be aired on the Rangers Sports Network.

6-5 – Higgy’s homer helps Rangers to 3-2 win over M’s

Apr 7, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers catcher Kyle Higashioka (11) runs the bases after hitting a two-run home run during the fifth inning against the Seattle Mariners at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images | Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers scored three runs while the Seattle Mariners scored two runs.

I have this impression that George Kirby is one of the greatest pitchers to ever live because I’ve mostly only ever seen him pitch against the Rangers and when Kirby pitches against the Rangers, he’s one of the greatest pitchers to ever live.

Coming into tonight’s game, Kirby was 8-0 with an ERA of 1.04 in his career spanning ten starts and 60 2/3 innings against Texas. Simply put, Kirby has been one of the all-time Rangers slayers on the mound.

So imagine my not-surprise when the offensively-challenged-at-home Rangers were getting shut down by Kirby on like 30 something pitches through four scoreless frames. I was certain the Rangers were going to get shutout on a turbo Maddux on like 65 pitches by Kirby and it would have been like maybe one of his second or third best outings against them.

But a weird little thing happened . In the top of the fifth, after Texas starter Nathan Eovaldi had shrugged off a first pitch home run by Brendan Donovan to give the Mariners an immediate 1-0 lead, Eovaldi got into a spot of trouble with three consecutive two-out baserunners that scored Seattle’s second run.

Eovaldi needed a ton of pitches to get out of the inning without further damage but for as brisk as Kirby was working, it offered a moment where he had to sit and wait. This effectively worked to ice Kirby as in the bottom of the inning the Rangers ambushed the righty for three runs and a lead.

Joc Pederson singled on a ball to third base that Donovan threw away. With Pederson at second base, Evan Carter drove in his first run on the season with an RBI single and then Kyle Higashioka had the big hit with a two-run dong that gave the Rangers their lead and the game its eventual final score.

Just like that, Kirby had proved to be mortal and the Rangers have their first win against Seattle’s Rangers killer despite the fact that Kirby went on to finish an eight inning complete game.

Player of the Game: Eovaldi (6 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 7 K) bouncing back from not only two poor starts to begin the year, but also the lead off home run, was critical but there was no bigger moment than his battery mate Higashioka giving Texas the lead on the eventual game-winning two-run homer that turned what looked like another dominant Kirby start against the Rangers into a win.

Thanks to Eovaldi and Higgy, the victory guarantees Texas no worse than a series victory over Seattle in their first battle of the year and it also moved the Rangers back above .500.

Also, hat tip to the two Jac(k)obs Latz and Junis for three innings of scoreless ball with two frames from Jacob and a one-run save for a second consecutive night for Jakob.

Junis’ 9th inning was scary with the first two hitters reaching but after two flyouts, the game ended on a check swing grounder in the front of the plate off the bat of Donovan that Higgy pounced on for the out and a bit of poetry.

Up Next: The Rangers will close out this series eyeing their first sweep of the season with LHP MacKenzie Gore set to make the start for Texas opposite RHP Bryan Woo for Seattle in the latest stellar pitching matchup between these two AL West rivals.

The Wednesday afternoon finale from The Shed is scheduled for 1:35 pm CDT and will be aired on the Rangers Sports Network.

Wednesday's Time Schedule

All Times EDT

Wednesday, April 8

MLB

San Diego at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m.

Kansas City at Cleveland, 1:10 p.m.

Milwaukee at Boston, 1:35 p.m.

Baltimore at Chicago White Sox, 2:10 p.m.

Seattle at Texas, 2:35 p.m.

L.A. Dodgers at Toronto, 3:07 p.m.

Houston at Colorado, 3:10 p.m.

Philadelphia at San Francisco, 3:45 p.m.

St. Louis at Washington, 4:05 p.m.

Atlanta at L.A. Angels, 4:07 p.m.

Arizona at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m.

Chicago Cubs at Tampa Bay, 6:40 p.m.

Cincinnati at Miami, 6:40 p.m.

Athletics at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.

Detroit at Minnesota, 7:40 p.m.

NBA

Atlanta at Cleveland, 7 p.m.

Milwaukee at Detroit, 7 p.m.

Minnesota at Orlando, 7 p.m.

Memphis at Denver, 9 p.m.

Portland at San Antonio, 9:30 p.m.

Dallas at Phoenix, 10 p.m.

Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, 10 p.m.

NHL

Buffalo at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.

Washington at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.

Edmonton at San Jose, 10 p.m.

PWHL

Seattle at Ottawa, 7 p.m.

_____

Devils shellacked by surging Flyers, 5-1

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Trevor Zegras and Tyson Foerster each scored twice, Dan Vladar made 23 saves and the Philadelphia Flyers routed the New Jersey Devils 5-1 on Tuesday to bolster their playoff position with four games remaining.

The Flyers have won three straight and have six victories in their last eight contests. Their 92 points are four behind second-place Pittsburgh in the Metropolitan Division.

The Flyers have vaulted into playoff position with an 11-3-1 mark since a 6-2 home loss to the Rangers on March 9.

Zegras opened the scoring at 1:56 of the first. The 25-year-old forward scored again on the power play at 3:38 — his career-best 25th goal — with assists to JamieDrysdale and rookie Porter Martone, who scored his first NHL goal in overtime to lift the Flyers past the Bruins 2-1 on Sunday.

Cody Glass cut it to 2-1 at 11:24 of the first before Foerster scored at 2:46 of the second, then had his 13th goal of the season at 4:58. Matvei Michkov assisted both of Foerster's goals.

Zegras, who was acquired from Anaheim last June, also assisted on Foerster’s second goal and is second on the Flyers with 65 points.

Nick Seeler added an empty-net goal to complete the scoring.

Vladar improved to 27-13-7 in his first season with the Flyers. His previous high for wins in a season was 14 with Calgary in 2022-23.

Philadelphia has missed the playoffs the last five seasons and seven of the last nine campaigns. They haven’t played a home playoff series since 2018.

The Flyers have road games at Detroit and Winnipeg, followed by home contests against Carolina and Montreal.

Jacob Markstrom made 13 saves in defeat for the Devils, who will miss the playoffs for the second time in three seasons and parted ways with general manager TomFitzgerald on Monday.

Up next

Devils: Host the Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday.

Flyers: Visit the Detroit Red Wings on Thursday.

Cubs BCB After Dark: Should Jed Hoyer give Lucas Giolito a call?

BOSTON, MA - SEPTEMBER 12: Lucas Giolito #24 of the Boston Red Sox pitches during the game between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on Friday, September 12, 2025 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

It’s Tuesday night here at BCB After Dark: the grooviest gathering of night owls, early risers, new parents and Cubs fans abroad. Come on in and sit with us. We’ll waive the cover charge. The hostess will seat you now. There’s a two-drink minimum, but it’s bring your own beverage.

BCB After Dark is the place for you to talk baseball, music, movies, or anything else you need to get off your chest, as long as it is within the rules of the site. The late-nighters are encouraged to get the party started, but everyone else is invited to join in as you wake up the next morning and into the afternoon.

Last night, I asked you what was worrying you most about the Cubs. Certainly we got more to be worried about today. Obviously the bad news about Cade Horton today plays into this, but 39 percent of you said it was injuries to starting pitching that worried you the most. Thirty-one percent of you said that the hitters struggles bothered you the most.

On Tuesday night/Wednesday morning, I don’t normally do any movie stuff. But I always have time for jazz, so let’s get to that now. You’re free to skip ahead.


International Jazz Day is coming up on April 30, and here we have Herbie Hancock performing his song “Footprints” for International Jazz Day in 2023. International Jazz Day was Hancock’s idea when he was a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). The United Nations agreed to celebrate the day in 2011 and every year since.

Hancock is on piano, Ambrose Akinmusire plays trumpet, Walter Smith III in on tenor sax, Ben Williams plays bass and Mark Merella is the percussionist.


So you all know by now that Cade Horton is out for the year with elbow surgery. We don’t know whether or not it will be full Tommy John or a brace until they actually perform the operation. Horton previously had a full Tommy John operation in college at Oklahoma.

So there’s no good way to spin that except the say that there’s a solid chance that Horton will come back and be as good as ever some time in 2027. There’s always the risk that he isn’t, but the odds are in our favor.

So the Cubs need another starting pitcher. It doesn’t sound like the Matthew Boyd injury is serious, but as always, injuries to pitchers can sound minor until they aren’t. It’s another thing to worry about.

The Cubs planned for injuries to starting pitching this year with Colin Rea in the bullpen and Javier Assad down in Iowa. Neither one is as good as Boyd or Horton, but they are better-than-replacement-level pitchers who can get the Cubs into the sixth inning (or so) most times out.

The problem, however, is that the Cubs are less than two weeks into the season and they’ve already blown through their starting pitching reinforcements. Their top pitching prospect, Jaxon Wiggins, hasn’t established himself as major-league ready yet. Justin Steele should be back in six-to-eight weeks after missing almost all of last season with his elbow surgery, but “should” doesn’t mean “will.” There’s also no guarantee that Steele will return to what he was, although again, the odds are good that he will return to his former level, at least eventually.

There is one option that has been mentioned. Right-hander Lucas Giolito was a free agent this past winter who ended up not signing with anyone. Giolito had elbow surgery himself and missed all of 2024 in his first year of a two-year deal with Boston. He bounced back last year, going 10-4 with a 3.41 ERA over 26 starts. That performance turned a mutual option into a player option for one-year and $19 million for 2026. Giolito declined that option. The Cubs could certainly use that kind of performance this year.

Perhaps Giolito shouldn’t have declined the option because no one offered him a deal this winter that he thought was worth accepting. Giolito is still on the market. It seems odd that all 30 teams wouldn’t jump at a pitcher who put up such an impressive line the year before, but here’s where the advance metrics come in. Giolito succeeded last year despite not missing many bats. His swing-and-miss rates were at a career-low for him last year and his strikeout rate was down to 19.7 percent, which is way down from the 25.7 percent he had in 2023. The exit velocity on balls in play was up and the hard-hit rate was a below-average 40.9 percent. All of this says that while Giolito’s actual ERA was a good 3.41, his expected ERA, based on those metrics, was a poor 5.01.

Probably because of those concerns, no one offered Giolito a deal that he felt was worth accepting. After all, he had just turned down a $19 million player option. That was almost certainly a mistake, but one he’d like to correct.

It should be noted, however, that this was Giolito’s first season back from elbow surgery. It was a brace procedure and not full Tommy John, but pitchers do sometimes struggle in their first year back from surgery and are back to being as good as ever two years out. Giolito is also only 31 years old, so it’s not like he should be into his age-related decline quite yet.

There is one other problem. Giolito hasn’t gone through Spring Training. The Cubs can’t just sign him and plunk him into the rotation tomorrow. But I would assume that he’s staying in pitching shape as he markets himself to teams and that he wouldn’t need a full six weeks to be major league ready. I would think he would probably be ready after 2 or 3 minor league starts.

Maybe Giolito isn’t the solid mid-rotation starter that he was back in his glory days with the White Sox, but there’s a good chance that he’s still a good back-of-the-rotation pitcher. You might argue that he’s not much better than what Assad or Rea would give in the absence of Horton, but there are no guarantees that Horton is the last starting pitcher that goes down and they’ve already blown through their reserves until Justin Steele comes back. If the Cubs lose another starting pitcher, they’re looking at the possibility of Vince Velazquez being in the rotation. Velazquez hasn’t pitched in the majors since 2023 and Giolito is likely to be a lot better than Velazquez.

I have no idea what kind of deal Giolito would accept. Obviously he is trying to make up for turning down the $19 million from the Red Sox. I don’t think he gets that unless its a two-year deal. But the Cubs payroll isn’t really your concern. They’re going to be over the first luxury tax limit and under the limit where they start getting draft pick penalties. Signing Giolito won’t affect that either way.

The Cubs aren’t the only team suffering pitching injuries in the young season, however. The Braves and the Blue Jays are two other teams who are expected to contend and are in bad shape with injuries to starting pitching. So there is likely to be at least some sort of bidding war for Giolito, even if it (probably) won’t get too crazy.

So should the Cubs sign Giolito? Does he still have something left to contribute? Or are you willing to risk Boyd staying healthy, Steele coming back and Rea and Assad contributing, at least until we get closer to the trade deadline and the Cubs could conceivably pick someone up in the trade market.

Thank you for stopping by tonight. We were glad to see you. Please get home safely. Let us know if you need us to call a ride. Don’t forget any personal belongings. Tip your waistaff. And join us again tomorrow evening for more BCB After Dark.

Cubs BCB After Dark: Should Jed Hoyer give Lucas Giolito a call?

BOSTON, MA - SEPTEMBER 12: Lucas Giolito #24 of the Boston Red Sox pitches during the game between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on Friday, September 12, 2025 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

It’s Tuesday night here at BCB After Dark: the grooviest gathering of night owls, early risers, new parents and Cubs fans abroad. Come on in and sit with us. We’ll waive the cover charge. The hostess will seat you now. There’s a two-drink minimum, but it’s bring your own beverage.

BCB After Dark is the place for you to talk baseball, music, movies, or anything else you need to get off your chest, as long as it is within the rules of the site. The late-nighters are encouraged to get the party started, but everyone else is invited to join in as you wake up the next morning and into the afternoon.

Last night, I asked you what was worrying you most about the Cubs. Certainly we got more to be worried about today. Obviously the bad news about Cade Horton today plays into this, but 39 percent of you said it was injuries to starting pitching that worried you the most. Thirty-one percent of you said that the hitters struggles bothered you the most.

On Tuesday night/Wednesday morning, I don’t normally do any movie stuff. But I always have time for jazz, so let’s get to that now. You’re free to skip ahead.


International Jazz Day is coming up on April 30, and here we have Herbie Hancock performing his song “Footprints” for International Jazz Day in 2023. International Jazz Day was Hancock’s idea when he was a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). The United Nations agreed to celebrate the day in 2011 and every year since.

Hancock is on piano, Ambrose Akinmusire plays trumpet, Walter Smith III in on tenor sax, Ben Williams plays bass and Mark Merella is the percussionist.


So you all know by now that Cade Horton is out for the year with elbow surgery. We don’t know whether or not it will be full Tommy John or a brace until they actually perform the operation. Horton previously had a full Tommy John operation in college at Oklahoma.

So there’s no good way to spin that except the say that there’s a solid chance that Horton will come back and be as good as ever some time in 2027. There’s always the risk that he isn’t, but the odds are in our favor.

So the Cubs need another starting pitcher. It doesn’t sound like the Matthew Boyd injury is serious, but as always, injuries to pitchers can sound minor until they aren’t. It’s another thing to worry about.

The Cubs planned for injuries to starting pitching this year with Colin Rea in the bullpen and Javier Assad down in Iowa. Neither one is as good as Boyd or Horton, but they are better-than-replacement-level pitchers who can get the Cubs into the sixth inning (or so) most times out.

The problem, however, is that the Cubs are less than two weeks into the season and they’ve already blown through their starting pitching reinforcements. Their top pitching prospect, Jaxon Wiggins, hasn’t established himself as major-league ready yet. Justin Steele should be back in six-to-eight weeks after missing almost all of last season with his elbow surgery, but “should” doesn’t mean “will.” There’s also no guarantee that Steele will return to what he was, although again, the odds are good that he will return to his former level, at least eventually.

There is one option that has been mentioned. Right-hander Lucas Giolito was a free agent this past winter who ended up not signing with anyone. Giolito had elbow surgery himself and missed all of 2024 in his first year of a two-year deal with Boston. He bounced back last year, going 10-4 with a 3.41 ERA over 26 starts. That performance turned a mutual option into a player option for one-year and $19 million for 2026. Giolito declined that option. The Cubs could certainly use that kind of performance this year.

Perhaps Giolito shouldn’t have declined the option because no one offered him a deal this winter that he thought was worth accepting. Giolito is still on the market. It seems odd that all 30 teams wouldn’t jump at a pitcher who put up such an impressive line the year before, but here’s where the advance metrics come in. Giolito succeeded last year despite not missing many bats. His swing-and-miss rates were at a career-low for him last year and his strikeout rate was down to 19.7 percent, which is way down from the 25.7 percent he had in 2023. The exit velocity on balls in play was up and the hard-hit rate was a below-average 40.9 percent. All of this says that while Giolito’s actual ERA was a good 3.41, his expected ERA, based on those metrics, was a poor 5.01.

Probably because of those concerns, no one offered Giolito a deal that he felt was worth accepting. After all, he had just turned down a $19 million player option. That was almost certainly a mistake, but one he’d like to correct.

It should be noted, however, that this was Giolito’s first season back from elbow surgery. It was a brace procedure and not full Tommy John, but pitchers do sometimes struggle in their first year back from surgery and are back to being as good as ever two years out. Giolito is also only 31 years old, so it’s not like he should be into his age-related decline quite yet.

There is one other problem. Giolito hasn’t gone through Spring Training. The Cubs can’t just sign him and plunk him into the rotation tomorrow. But I would assume that he’s staying in pitching shape as he markets himself to teams and that he wouldn’t need a full six weeks to be major league ready. I would think he would probably be ready after 2 or 3 minor league starts.

Maybe Giolito isn’t the solid mid-rotation starter that he was back in his glory days with the White Sox, but there’s a good chance that he’s still a good back-of-the-rotation pitcher. You might argue that he’s not much better than what Assad or Rea would give in the absence of Horton, but there are no guarantees that Horton is the last starting pitcher that goes down and they’ve already blown through their reserves until Justin Steele comes back. If the Cubs lose another starting pitcher, they’re looking at the possibility of Vince Velazquez being in the rotation. Velazquez hasn’t pitched in the majors since 2023 and Giolito is likely to be a lot better than Velazquez.

I have no idea what kind of deal Giolito would accept. Obviously he is trying to make up for turning down the $19 million from the Red Sox. I don’t think he gets that unless its a two-year deal. But the Cubs payroll isn’t really your concern. They’re going to be over the first luxury tax limit and under the limit where they start getting draft pick penalties. Signing Giolito won’t affect that either way.

The Cubs aren’t the only team suffering pitching injuries in the young season, however. The Braves and the Blue Jays are two other teams who are expected to contend and are in bad shape with injuries to starting pitching. So there is likely to be at least some sort of bidding war for Giolito, even if it (probably) won’t get too crazy.

So should the Cubs sign Giolito? Does he still have something left to contribute? Or are you willing to risk Boyd staying healthy, Steele coming back and Rea and Assad contributing, at least until we get closer to the trade deadline and the Cubs could conceivably pick someone up in the trade market.

Thank you for stopping by tonight. We were glad to see you. Please get home safely. Let us know if you need us to call a ride. Don’t forget any personal belongings. Tip your waistaff. And join us again tomorrow evening for more BCB After Dark.