Mets Daily Prospect Report, 5/13/26: Thirteen innings!? In this economy!?

SURPRISE, AZ - OCTOBER 24: Nick Morabito #3 of the Scottsdale Scorpions runs to first base during the game between the Scottsdale Scorpions and the Surprise Saguaros at Surprise Stadium on Friday, October 24, 2025 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Jill Weisleder/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (21-18)

SYRACUSE 7, SCRANTON/WILKES-BARRE 4 / 13 (BOX)

With nearly even records coming into this game, Syracuse held the lead for most of the early portions of the game, but it was a thin lead. Jack Wenninger went unscored upon, lowering his ERA to 1.08, but sure enough, Scranton not only tied things up but then took control after he was taken out of the ballgame. The Mets came into the ninth inning down 4-2, but Ryan Clifford and Yonny Hernandez tied things up with an RBI double and single, respectively. With the adoption of the ghost-runner-starts-at-second rule, you don’t see extra-inning games go too long, but this one made it into the thirteenth inning and since these things are not too common anymore, you gotta appreciate it.

Nick Morabito led off the thirteenth with a sac bunt to move ghost runner Matt Rudick over to third, but old friend Ali Sanchez bungled the play- considered a sure-handed catcher, he was playing first base after having been pinch hit into the game. A few batters later, Christian Arroyo drove in two more runs with a single into left. Mike Baumann, thankfully, was able to throw a 1-2-3 inning for the save, and that was that.

·  CF Nick Morabito: 0-5, R, RBI, BB, 2 K, SB (14)

·  LF Ji Hwan Bae: 2-7, 2 R, 4 K, SB (9)

·  1B Ryan Clifford: 1-6, R, 2B, RBI, BB, 4 K

·  2B Christian Arroyo: 3-7, 2 RBI

·  3B Yonny Hernández: 1-5, RBI, 2 BB, K, SB (1)

·  RF Cristian Pache: 1-6, R, 2B, 3 K, HBP

·  SS Jackson Cluff: 0-3, 4 BB, 2 K, SB (4)

·  C Hayden Senger: 1-4, R, HR (6), RBI, BB, 2 K

·  C Ben Rortvedt: 0-2

·  DH Matt Rudick: 0-5, R, K, HBP

·  RHP Jack Wenninger: 5.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 3 BB, 7 K

·  RHP Luke Jackson: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 0 K, WP, H (1)

·  LHP Nate Lavender: 1.0 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 1 K, BS (1)

·  RHP Daniel Duarte: 2.0 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 2 K

·  RHP Alex Carrillo: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K

·  LHP Anderson Severino: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 2 K, W (2-0)

·  RHP Mike Baumann: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K, S (1)

ROSTER ALERT: OF Matt Rudick assigned to Syracuse Mets from Binghamton Rumble Ponies.

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (11-23)

SOMERSET 3, BINGHAMTON 0 (BOX)

The Rumble Ponies fell to the Patriots to kick off the Double-A Subway Series, their fifth loss in a row and their second consecutive shutout. Nick Lorusso and JT Schwartz were the only Ponies to log hits, while Eli Serrano and Jacob Reimer drew a walk apiece and the indomitable Wyatt Young drew two. Brendan Girton made the start for Binghamton and was solid, allowing one run over five innings, but even if the bullpen hadn’t allowed two more, he would’ve been the losing pitcher in this contest.

·  RF Eli Serrano III: 0-3, BB

·  C Chris Suero: 0-4, 2 K

·  3B Jacob Reimer: 0-3, BB

·  CF Jose Ramos: 0-4, 3 K

·  DH Kevin Parada: 0-4, 2 K

·  2B Nick Lorusso: 1-4, 2 K

·  LF TT Bowens: 0-4, 3 K

·  1B JT Schwartz: 1-2, HBP

·  SS Wyatt Young: 0-1, 2 BB

·  RHP Brendan Girton: 5.0 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 7 K, WP, HBP, L (1-2)

·  LHP Gabriel Rodriguez: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K

·  RHP Saul Garcia: 1.0 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 1 K, WP

·  RHP Zach Peek: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K

ROSTER ALERT: RHP Bryce Conley assigned to Binghamton Rumble Ponies from Syracuse Mets.

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (8-25)

ROME 2, BROOKLYN 0 (BOX)

The Cyclones fell to Rome to kick off their series, their third loss in a row. Mitch Voit and Daiverson Gutierrez were the only Cyclones to log hits, while Ronald Hernandez drew a walk. Joel Diaz made the start for Brooklyn and was decent, allowing two runs over four innings, but even if he cut that in half, he still would’ve been the losing pitcher in this contest.

·  SS Mitch Voit: 1-4

·  2B Yonatan Henriquez: 0-4, 2 K

·  CF John Bay: 0-4, 2 K

·  DH Ronald Hernandez: 0-2, BB, 2 K

·  C Daiverson Gutierrez: 1-3, CS (1)

·  1B Corey Collins: 0-3, 3 K

·  3B Colin Houck: 0-3, K

·  LF Vincent Perozo: 0-2, K, HBP, E (3)

·  RF Yohairo Cuevas: 0-3, K

·  RHP Joel Díaz: 4.0 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 7 BB, 3 K, L (0-6)

·  RHP Felix Cepeda: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K

·  RHP Danis Correa: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K

·  RHP Hoss Brewer: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

ROSTER ALERT: Brooklyn Cyclones transferred SS Antonio Jimenez to the Development List.

ROSTER ALERT: 2B Nick Roselli assigned to Brooklyn Cyclones.

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (14-19)

POSTPONED (INCLEMENT WEATHER)

ROSTER ALERT: SS Kevin Villavicencio assigned to St. Lucie Mets from Syracuse Mets.

Rookie: FCL Mets (2-5)

NO GAME (SCHEDULE)

STAR OF THE NIGHT

Christian Arroyo

GOAT OF THE NIGHT

Binghamton/Brooklyn

Chicago Cubs history unpacked, May 13

Free of charge for the discerning reader.

Happy birthday to Eli Morgan, and a mighty host of others.

Today in baseball history is a story that is so good, so nice it shouldn’t be buried amongst the ther stories. In 1947 – Larry Miggins hits the first of his two major league home runs, going deep off Preacher Roe in the fourth inning of the Cardinals’ 14-8 loss to the Dodgers at Ebbets Field. The round-tripper hit by the Bronx-born outfielder, who had once shared his dream of playing in the big leagues during a prep school assembly with a buddy with aspirations to be a baseball broadcaster, is called by an overwhelmed Vin Scully, Brooklyn’s play-by-play announcer who had wondered that day with his friend “what the odds against that would be.” And enjoy the other stories as well.

Today in baseball history:

Cubs Birthdays:Eli Morgan,* Willson Contreras, Mychal Givens, Terry Hughes, Terry Hughes.

Today in history:

  • 1607 – English colonists led by John Smith establish Jamestown at a second landing near the James River in Virginia – first permanent English settlement in North America.
  • 1846 – US Congress votes in favor of President James K. Polk’s request to declare war on Mexico over border disputes.
  • 1878 – Danvers State Hospital, a psychiatric hospital in Massachusetts, opens and later serves as inspiration for Arkham Sanitorium in the work of H.P. Lovecraft, which in turn inspires Arkham Asylum of the D.C. Batman universe.
  • 1905 – World heavyweight boxing champion James J. Jeffries retires undefeated after 7 title defences; returns in 1910 to be beaten by Jack Johnson.
  • 1940 – Winston Churchill says “I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat” in his first speech as Prime Minister to the British House of Commons.
  • 1966 – The Rolling Stones release “Paint it Black” single in the UK.
  • 1977 – Howard Stern begins his professional broadcasting career at WRNW radio in Briarcliff Manor, New York.
  • 1981 Pope John Paul II is shot and critically wounded by Turkish gunman Mehmet Ali Ağca in St Peter’s Square, Vatican City.
  • 1989 – After weeks of unsuccessful attempts between the demonstrators and the Chinese government to find a peaceful resolution, the Chinese government initiated martial law in late May and deployed troops to occupy the square on the night of 3 June in what is referred to as the Tiananmen Square massacre.

*pictured.

Game 43 Preview: Tigers try to even series at Mets on Wednesday night

The struggles continue for the Detroit Tigers, who opened up their three-game road series at the New York Mets on Tuesday night with a miserable 10-2 loss. Jack Flaherty only lasted 3 2/3 innings and gave up three runs, which was all it took to overtake the visitors’ anemic offense.

The good news is that the Motor City Kitties get their No. 2 starter, left-hander Framber Valdez, back from suspension with a chance to even up the midweek series. The 32-year-old had one of the worst outings of the season, allowing 10 runs (seven earned) on nine hits (three home runs) and a walk while striking out three before the bean-ball incident that led to his five-game stint in the penalty box.

Last time Valdez faced the Mets was with the Houston Astros on opening day 2025, when he threw seven frames of shutout ball while allowing four hits and two walks while striking out four to earn the win. He did, however, hit a batter in that game.

For New York, right-hander Christian Scott takes the mound for the fourth time this season. His season debut only lasted 1 1/3 innings after issuing five walks, plunking a batter and balking before he was pulled in that one. The 26-year-old’s next two outings saw him throw five and 4 2/3 innings, respectively, putting up a 2.79 and a 2.50 FIP while striking out 14 over that stretch.

Scott has only pitched a dozen games in his major league career, but none of them came against the Tigers.

Take a look below at an overview of the two starters in Wednesday night’s clay diamond duel.

Detroit Tigers (19-23) vs. New York Mets (16-25)

Time (ET): 7:10 p.m.
Place: Citi Field, Queens, New York
SB Nation Site:Amazin’ Avenue
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 43: LHP Framber Valdez (2-2, 4.57 ERA) vs. RHP Christian Scott (0-0, 3.27 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Valdez843.117.97.752.54.320.4
Scott311.031.314.622.74.030.1

VALDEZ

SCOTT

Phillies news: Cristopher Sanchez, Dylan Carlson, Anthony Volpe

Mar 17, 2026; Mesa, Arizona, USA; Chicago Cubs outfielder Dylan Carlson against the Los Angeles Angels during a spring training game at Sloan Park. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Truly, I am not looking forward to the takes that will be coming out of the woodwork about Thursday’s game. The much anticipated Jesus Luzardo-Ranger Suarez dustup is going to bring the hottest of hot takes.

Not looking forward to that.

At. All.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Orioles news: Rogers pummelled in return, O’s injury crisis continues

BALTIMORE, MD - MAY 12: Catcher Adley Rutschman #35 of the Baltimore Orioles drops a foul ball in the ninth inning against the New York Yankees at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 12, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Jamie Sabau/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning Birdland,

Those two back-to-back wins the Orioles had on Sunday and Monday were cool, huh? But yesterday felt like a slap back to reality.

The 6-2 loss to the Yankees is easy enough to swallow. Losses happen in baseball. But the fact that Trevor Rogers got hit around does not instill much confidence that his IL stint allowed him to reset in any meaningful way. His pitch velocity was up, but so were the Yankees’ exit velocities.

On top of that, the O’s got some bad injury news. Grant Wolfram was placed on the IL just before the game with a low back strain. It doesn’t seem super serious. The team was trying to wait it out, but it got to the point where they just needed the fresh arm. Possibly more concerning was the late scratch of Dylan Beavers with right oblique discomfort. O’s manager Craig Albernaz said that Beavers felt it in the batting cage while preparing for the game. No IL stint was said to be imminent, but obliques do tend to linger.

Beavers has not been a star for the Orioles this year. He has a .243/331/.369 batting line after all. But he has at least been competent in the box, and had been putting together some nice at-bats lately. Missing him for any length of time does weaken the team’s outfield.

This team can’t really absorb the loss of any sort of offense contributor. It has been one week since the Orioles last scored more than three runs in a game. They have scored more than four runs in a game just twice in the month of May, both against the Marlins. You aren’t going to win many games consistently scoring four runs or fewer, especially with the O’s rotation in its current state.

Maybe an earlier game time wakes them up! The Orioles and Yankees will wrap up their series at 1:05 p.m. today, a late change to the schedule due to expected rain in the area. That might make it hard for some of us to take this game in. Depending on your feelings regarding this team, that could be construed as a positive.

Links

Ahead of her final game, Nicole Sherry reflects on two decades as Orioles head groundskeeper | The Baltimore Banner
Sherry is an iconic figure in Orioles history and a trailblazer in professional sports. She is part of what has made Camden Yards such an incredible place to take in a game. Now she moves on to another role that sounds like a great opportunity. But it will be odd to see someone else taking charge of the grounds crew.

Lou Trivino Elects Free Agency | MLB Trade Rumors
The Trivino era of Orioles baseball has come to end, at least for now. He pitched in two games and was worth -0.2 bWAR. Thanks for the memories, Lou.

Beavers (oblique) scratched as injuries continue to plague struggling O’s | MLB.com
Here’s more on the latest injuries that the Orioles are dealing with. It’s just one thing after another with this club. Their fortune has to turn around at some point, right?

More this, that and the other | Roch Kubatko
Lots of notes from Roch, including about the rotation. In short: it’s been a disaster but the Orioles are trying to keep their cool. What else can they do? It’s not as if Norfolk is frothing with top prospects. There’s one Trey Gibson and more than one questionable spot in the rotation at the moment.

Orioles birthdays

Is it your birthday? Happy birthday!

  • Mychal Givens turns 36 today. The sidearming reliever had two stints in Baltimore. The first, from 2015 through 2020 went well. The second, which lasted just six games in 2023, did not.
  • David Hernández is 41 years old. He pitched in a total of 61 games for the Orioles between 2009 and 2010, as both a starter and reliever. the club then included him in a deal that landed slugging third baseman Mark Reynolds in Baltimore.
  • Ryan Bukvich is 48. He pitched in four games for the 2008 O’s.
  • Lyle Mouton turns 57. In 1998 he was an outfield option for the Orioles, playing in 18 games for the club.
  • Juan Beníquez is 76 today. He spent 17 seasons in Major League Baseball, including the 1986 campaign in Baltimore.

This day in O’s history

2007 – The Orioles fall apart right at the end of a game that they were leading 5-0. Dubbed the “Mother’s Day Miracle” in Boston, the Red Sox rally for six runs in the bottom of the ninth inning against a combination of starter Jeremy Guthrie and relievers Danys Báez and Chris Ray, winning in walk-off fashion.

2011 – Rays rookie Jeremy Hellickson throws his first career complete game and shutout, leading his team to a 3-0 win over the Orioles.

2018 – Fresh off of a call-up from Triple-A, Joey Rickard hits two home runs and drives in four as part of the Orioles 17-1 romp of the Rays. Danny Valencia and Trey Mancini also homer in support of Dylan Bundy’s seven scoreless innings on the mound.

The Brewers’ bullpen is working its magic again

May 6, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Aaron Ashby (26) pitches against the St. Louis Cardinals during the sixth inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

Note: All statistics are as of May 11

At some point every season, the Brewers’ bullpen stops making sense.

Not bad, necessarily. Just… different.

There’s no clean seventh-eighth-ninth progression. There’s no “this is the closer, this is the setup guy, everyone else fall in line.” Instead, it’s a constant shuffle of arms, innings, and situations that feel like they’re being decided on the fly.

And yet, more often than not, it works.

This year, a big part of that weirdness — and a big part of why it’s working — comes down to Aaron Ashby and DL Hall.

If you’ve watched even a handful of Brewers games this year, you’ve probably felt it. The most stressful inning is almost never the ninth. It’s the fifth when the starter runs out of gas with two on and one out. It’s the sixth when the lineup turns over and the middle of the order is coming up. It’s that one stretch where the game can flip, even if there are still 12 outs left to get.

That’s where Ashby has lived.

He leads the bullpen in plenty of stats, as he’s already up to 19 appearances and 26 innings with a 2.08 ERA, a perfect 7-0 record (those seven wins lead the majors), and 41 strikeouts. That alone stands out, but it’s how those innings are coming that really matters. These aren’t clean innings with nobody on and the bottom of the order due up. Ashby is getting the “this could unravel quickly” moments, and more often than not, he’s shutting them down.

He’ll give you multiple innings. He’ll come in mid-inning. He’ll face righties, lefties, whoever. There’s no clean label for it, but it’s pretty clear what the Brewers think of him: when things start getting dicey, he’s one of the first calls. That’s not a middle reliever or a setup guy. That’s just one of your most important pitchers.

Hall’s role isn’t identical, but it’s cut from the same cloth.

He’s been one of the more reliable arms in the bullpen so far, and like Ashby, he’s not being boxed into a traditional role. Some outings are longer, some are shorter, some are clearly matchup-driven, and some feel like pure feel. The Brewers aren’t asking him to be a one-inning specialist. They’re asking him to take whatever inning is available and turn it into something manageable.

Between Hall and Ashby, they’ve essentially created two malleable pieces that can plug into almost any situation. Starter exits early? They can cover it. Bullpen is taxed? They can stretch out. Tough pocket of hitters coming up? They can take that too.

If you’re trying to map out the Brewers’ bullpen by role, you’re going to drive yourself crazy. There isn’t a traditional structure here. Instead, it’s more about coverage. Ashby and Hall handle the messy middle innings and the multi-inning work, and the rest of the staff combines to get them to the finish line. Even that shifts from game to game.

The Brewers aren’t really managing innings as much as they’re managing problems, and Ashby and Hall are the guys solving the biggest ones.

Here’s the thing: even when it’s working, it doesn’t feel comfortable. You don’t get that sense of “OK, just three outs left.” Instead, you get Ashby coming in with traffic and throwing upper-90s with movement all over the place. You get Hall bouncing between roles. You get Abner Uribe hitting triple digits and occasionally losing the zone. Same with Trevor Megill. You get pitching changes that don’t follow a script.

It feels like the game is constantly on the edge.

And maybe that’s why Brewers fans never fully trust the bullpen, no matter how good the numbers look, because it doesn’t look stable.

But it works because of guys like this.

Take Ashby and Hall out of the equation, and everything gets thinner, fast. Suddenly you’re asking more of the traditional relievers. You’re exposing the lower-leverage arms. You’re burning through pitchers just to get from the fifth to the eighth.

Instead, the Brewers have built in some margin. Not through defined roles, but through flexibility. Ashby and Hall don’t just fill innings — they absorb chaos. They turn messy situations into manageable ones and keep games from getting away before the late innings even arrive.

No two games look the same. No bullpen usage pattern repeats cleanly. And no lead ever feels totally safe.

But somehow, Pat Murphy and this bullpen make it work.

That’s not happening by accident. It’s happening because in the middle innings — the ones that actually decide games — guys like Aaron Ashby and DL Hall are quietly doing the hardest work on the staff, even if it never really feels that way while you’re watching it.

Canadiens Fall 3-2 To Sabres As Bad Bounce Proves Key

After two emphatic wins over the Buffalo Sabres, the Montreal Canadiens were hosting the fourth game of the series on Tuesday night with an opportunity to take a stranglehold on the series with a 3-1 win. Despite telling the press that the loss wasn’t on Alex Lyon on Tuesday, Lindy Ruff opted to bring Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen back between the posts, despite his last game dating back to April 21 and the fact that he allowed seven goals on 40 shots against the Boston Bruins.

Clearly looking for both a spark and some experience, Ruff also scratched Logan Stanley for Luke Schenn and Sam Carrick (who might still have been feeling the effects of that Xhekaj punch) for Konsta Helenius. Meanwhile, Martin St-Louis opted to stay the course, which was hardly surprising given his team’s performance in the last two games.

Canadiens: It Doesn’t Happen To Every Guy, And It Is A Big Deal
Canadiens’ Dach Has Flipped The Script
Xhekaj And Malenstyn Fined, Expect More Bad Blood

After the last game, Tage Thompson told the media that the crowd noise made it hard to communicate, and those words didn’t fall on deaf ears, judging by how electric the atmosphere once more was in the Bell Centre. This time around, though, it didn’t make a difference as the Sabres got a 3-2 win to regain home-ice advantage.

Weathering The Storm

Unsurprisingly, the Sabres came out with the energy of a team that doesn’t want to go down 3-1 in a series. They looked like the faster side and completely dominated the start of the game, scoring within the first 7 minutes. They then thought they had a second goal less than two minutes later when Jakub Dobes gloved a shot in the net, but the goal was eventually waved off for goaltender interference on an astute challenge by St-Louis.

That 10-minute video review break helped the Canadiens shake off the Sabres’ dominant start, and they found their way back into the game from there. Alex Newhook scored the equalizer before Cole Caufield, who still can’t score at even strength, found the back of the net on the power play with seconds left in the period. A real gut-punch to the Sabres, who had just played their best period of hockey and still went back to the room trailing 2-1.

After the game, St-Louis spoke about his team’s start:

Our start was not good, but I feel like after the goal was disallowed, you know, the challenge? I feel like we took the game over from that point on. Lots of good stuff from that point on. It doesn’t guarantee anything, but I liked our game.
-

Slafkovsky’s Bad Habits

Occasionally, Juraj Slafkovsky has games in which he tries to do too much and sprinkles no-look back passes into his play. That was the case on Tuesday night; there was no harm done, but he really needs to take unnecessary risks outside of his game, especially when there’s a better and easier play available.

He also struggled to maintain puck possession on the power play a few times. He was either getting pinned on the boards or skating too close to the blue line, being forced to take the puck out. That forced the Canadiens to retreat to the defensive zone and eased the pressure on the Sabres a few times, while also killing the momentum the man-advantage was building.

A Game Of Inches

It’s often said that hockey is a game of inches, and that certainly rang true tonight. Buffalo got a big break when Tage Thompson was able to score the equalizer by bouncing the puck off the Zamboni exit door before it bounced off Dobes and in. A couple of inches further up on the boards, and that puck doesn’t go to the net the way it did. When the coach was asked about that play and his team’s reaction to it, he said:

We played a darn good second frame, so I can’t say that the bounce shook us up. […] We talk about it [the risk of bounces in that corner], but it’s funny, we talked about it, and once he [Dobes] got caught because he came out of his net, so he doesn’t go out anymore, but I think tonight, if he had gone out, he wouldn’t have been caught.

The Gamble Paid Off

Ruff’s decision to give the net to Luukkonen paid off in the end. The Finnish netminder was on point tonight; he made quite a few big saves, including a pair on the penalty kill off Caufield's one-timers. In the final frame, as the Habs were attacking relentlessly to try and find an equalizer, he stopped all 12 shots he faced. There’s no doubt that he will be back in the net for Game 5.

Despite the loss, St-Louis didn’t seem worried at all:

We’re really confident; we had our chances. I think we had 75 attempts on net. If people watch the Canadiens, they’ll know it’s rare that we get that kind of number. As I said, aside from the start, it’s hard not to like that game.
-

The Canadiens find themselves in familiar territory since they also failed to capitalize on their 2-1 lead in the first round. The series will now return to Buffalo, where Game 5 will be played on Thursday at 7:00 PM.


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Max Anderson rakes in Hens rout of Omaha, Jhonan Coba shines in FCL outing

Toledo Mud Hens 19, Omaha Storm Chasers 1 (box)

The Mud Hens got a solid start out of Dylan File, but they didn’t need any help as they piled up the runs early and put it to Storm Chasers’ pitching all game long.

Ben Malgeri doubled to start the game, and Max Clark dropped down a bunt single. A soft tapper from Paul DeJong was booted by Omaha pitcher Ryan Ramsey, scoring Malgeri. Eduardo Valencia flew out, and Max Anderson singled in Clark. That’s all they’d get, but Tyler Gentry led off the second with a single and Andrew Navigato walked. Malgeri stepped up and launched his sixth home run of the season. 5-0 Hens.

An error gave the Hens another run in the third. In the fourth, Anderson singled and rode home on a Jace Jung two-run shot. Walks set up the Hens in the fifth, and Valencia doubled in Clark and rode home on Anderson’s first homer of the year as he only just returned from the injury list. That blast made it 12-0.

Tyler Gentry cracked a two-run homer in the sixth, and you get the picture. This was a full-on beatdown of the Twins’ Triple-A squad.

File allowed a run in the fifth before wrapping up his outing with five strikeout, three walks allowed, and just one run allowed over five innings of work.

Beau Brieske’s rehab work progressed to Toledo in this one. The struck out two, allowing one hit in the sixth inning. Connor Seabold also moved form Lakeland to Toledo for his rehab and spun a scoreless seventh. Woo-Suk Go continues to be the Tigers’ best upper level reliever this spring, and he tossed a scoreless eighth and ninth with three punchouts, maintaining his sub-2.00 ERA on the year, with a strikeout rate approaching 40 percent, though most of that work came at the Double-A level.

Malgeri: 2-6, 3 R, 4 RBI, 2B, HR, BB, K

Anderson: 5-6, 3 R, 4 RBI, HR, K

Jung: 3-6, 3 R, 2 RBI, HR

File (W, ): 5.0 IP, ER, 4 H, 3 BB, 5 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 1:05 p.m. ET start on Wednesday.

Richmond Flying Squirrels 7, Erie SeaWolves 1 (b0x)

A couple of bad innings from Zack Lee and Yosber Sanchez on a bullpen day spelled doom for the Erie SeaWolves. Richmond is now 26-7 and running away with the first half divisional lead.

This was just a tough day for the offense all around. Zack Lee took over from Trevin Michael, who gave Erie two scoreless inning, but Lee allowed three in the third. Yosber Sanchez was knocked around for a four-run seventh.

In the bottom of the seventh, a single from Chris Meyers was followed by a walk to Izaac Pacheco. Andrew Jenkins lined a shallow single to center that loaded the bases. The SeaWolves needed a big knock, but Aaron Antonini grounded into a double play, scoring Meyers, but that was all they’d get.

John Peck, Peyton Graham, and especially Brett Callahan have been swinging hot bats the past few weeks, but they were quiet in this one.

Jenkins: 2-3, 2B

Lee (L, 0-1): 3.0 IP, 3 ER, 3 H, 2 BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next: It’s an 11:05 a.m. ET start on Wednesday.

West Michigan Whitecaps 4, Great Lakes Loons 3 (box)

Good defense, solid starting pitching, and homers from Garrett Pennington and Ricardo Hurtado helped the Whitecaps finally break their 14-game losing streak on Tuesday.

Hayden Minton gave the ‘Caps his best start of the year. The right-hander had his breaking stuff working, punching out six, and allowing just a solo shot over five innings of work.

Pennington got the ‘Caps started when he cracked his seventh home in the top of the first inning. In the third, Andrew Sojka and Cristian Santana walked and performed the double steal. A wild pitch eventually scored Sojka to make it 2-0 ‘Caps, but Minton allowed a solo shot to Nico Perez in the bottom half. In the fifth, Bryce Rainer singled in Santana to make it 3-1 Whitecaps.

Hurtado launched a solo shot in the top of the seventh, and it was well that he did. Both Donye Evans and Ryan Harvey allowed a run in relief, but Luke Stofel held things down in the ninth to collect the save.

The Whitecaps still only managed three hits in this one, to the Loons 10.

Pennington: 1-3, R, RBI, HR, 2 BB, K

Rainer: 1-4, RBI, BB, K

Minton (W, 1-2): 5.0 IP, ER, BB, 6 K

Coming Up Next: The Whitecaps will look to keep it going at 6:05 p.m. ET on Wednesday.

Lakeland Flying Tigers 5, Clearwater Threshers 4 (box)

Grayson Grinsell was a bit wild but gave the Flying Tigers a good start anyway, and the top of the order pieced together enough runs to win on Tuesday.

The left-handed Grinsell has been pretty good so far, but still a bit erratic, and that showed up as he walked four and struck out five over five innings of one run ball in this one.

The Flying Tigers jumped out to a quick lead in the top of the first. Jude Warwick singled and Jordan Yost was hit by a pitch. Zach MacDonald singled in Warwick, and a sacrifice fly from Carson Rucker got Yost in from third for a 2-0 lead. Warwick doubled home Sergio Tapia in the second, and is suddenly swinging a pretty hot bat.

Grinsell allowed a run in the third, but in the fifth, Anibal Salas led off with a walk, Warwick was hit by a pitch, and Yost drew a walk to load the bases with no outs. Single-A baseball, folks. MacDonald pulled a grounder to third, and Salas was cut down at the plate. A run was balked in before Rucker struck out and Beau Ankeney popped out. So it was 4-1 at that point.

In the seventh, Warwick singled, and Yost doubled him to third. A MacDonald sacrifice fly made it 5-1.

Preston Howey’s rehab outing in relief did not go well at all. The right-hander was wild, allowing three runs in the bottom of the seventh to make it 5-4 Flying Tigers. Luke Hoskins and Yendry Gomez handled the last two innings with no issues to secure the win.

Warwick: 3-4, 3 R, RBI, 2B

Yost: 1-3, R, 2B, BB, K

Grinsell (W, 3-1): 5.0 IP, ER, 2 H, 4 BB, 5 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:30 p.m. ET start on Wednesday.

FCL Tigers 6, FCL Yankees 4 (b0x)

The Complex Leagues are development ball, so no one cares a lot about their records, but no doubt manager Brayan Pena was happy to get off the schneid with a good start from budding pitching prospect Jhonan Coba on Tuesday. Coba has really good stuff with plenty of projection, and he no-hit the Yankees rookies with six strikeouts and just two walks allowed. Cris Rodriguez cranked a two-run homer at 104 mph in the second inning to help lead the offense.

Rodriguez: 2-3, 2 R, 2 RBI, HR, BB, K

Ramirez: 2-2, R, RBI, 3B, BB

Coba: 4.0 IP, 0 R, 0 H, 2 BB, 6 K

Here's how the 76ers can get back to top of the East

How far are the Philadelphia 76ers away from competing for an Eastern Conference title?

Far enough that they fired firmer president of basketball operations Daryl Morey on Tuesday, May 12, a move that came two days after the New York Knicks unceremoniously dispatched them in a sweep with an average margin of defeat of 22.3 points.

On the surface, the Sixers have some elite pieces that make them competitive in any given game. But the roster has some serious holes and there are a pair of cumbersome contracts that restrict the team’s flexibility.

So as Bob Myers, the architect of the Golden State Warriors’ four most recent NBA titles, conducts a search for Morey’s replacement, there are clear steps that need to be taken to return Philadelphia to the top of the East. Frankly, many of those steps require undoing some of the mistakes Morey made.

Joel Embiid and Paul George are expensive

The largest problems are the contracts of center Joel Embiid and forward Paul George.

Embiid’s three-year, $192.9 million extension, signed in September 2024, kicks in at the start of the new league year. It carries a player option for 2028-29 and essentially pays Embiid, who will be 35 by the time the deal expires, an average of $62.6 million each season.

That’s just the going rate for a former Most Valuable Player and seven-time All-Star. The issue is that Embiid, as hard as he might have worked on his body and health, simply has not been available; over the last three seasons, Embiid has played just 96 of a possible 246 games, or 39%.

When Embiid is healthy and on the floor, he continues to be a matchup nightmare with his strength, shooting and ability to get to the line. But it’s difficult for a team to maximize its roster when so much of the salary cap is devoted to a player who misses as much time as Embiid.

It gets worse with George. He just turned 36 and is under contract for next season, with a $56.6 million player option for 2027-28. And although George had a decent stretch in the postseason, it’s simply too rich a deal for a player with that level of production.

The best course of action would be for the next president of basketball operations to try to offload one of those contracts, with George being the most favorable to move; despite his health issues and lack of consistent availability, Embiid is simply a more proven difference maker.

Focus on depth and development

Then there’s the issue of depth. Coach Nick Nurse shrunk his rotation down to eight men, and part of it was out of necessity. Some of Morey’s moves — trading second-year guard Jared McCain to the Thunder for three second-round picks; cutting Julian Champagnie to make room for Mac McClung; cutting Isaiah Joe to clear a spot for Dwayne Dedmon — robbed Philadelphia of young (read: cheaper) players who can fill out a roster and contribute.

This postseason, McCain and Joe are playing key reserve roles for Oklahoma City and Champagnie has been a steady starter for the Spurs.

The McCain move is particularly painful, as he had flashed promise in his rookie year before injury derailed his season. Would McCain, Joe and Champagnie won the Sixers the series against the Knicks? That’s extremely unlikely, but developing incumbent players and getting them to produce is the sign of a healthy organization. Put another way: the next president of basketball ops needs to restock the bench.

The 76ers' VJ Edgecombe (77), Tyrese Maxey (0) and Dominick Barlow (25) celebrate after defeating the Boston Celtics, 117-116,  at TD Garden on Oct. 22, 2025.

Tyrese Maxey, VJ Edgecombe are valuable building blocks

It’s not all bad news. Guard Tyrese Maxey, a two-time All-Star, is one of the game’s premier shooters and scorers. Rookie VJ Edgecombe has all the makings of a stellar two-guard.

The 76ers, however, should try to find a point guard to facilitate offense for Maxey, who struggled against New York when the Knicks were able to blitz him when he had the ball in his hands. Allowing Maxey to play off the ball more should open up his game, and the offense, overall.

The 76ers are in that wasteland in the middle of the East, the purgatory of being good but obviously not good enough. The positive is that they have a path forward.

Now all they have to do is hire the right person to lead the franchise.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: What's next for Philadelphia 76ers after firing Daryl Morey?

Rockets 2025-2026 season in review: Clint Capela

HOUSTON, TEXAS - APRIL 12: Clint Capela #30 of the Houston Rockets dunks the ball against the Memphis Grizzlies during the second half at Toyota Center on April 12, 2026 in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The story of Clint Capela returning to the Rockets begins, as most tragic stories do, with Steven Adams. Steven Adams over the past four regular seasons has played in 138 of 328 possible games. His last fully healthy season was 2022-23 with the Memphis Grizzlies. While Adams has been undeniably effective in the ways he’s always been effective, grabbing tons of rebounds, especially offensive rebounds, controlling the paint, and setting crushing screens, he’s also spent his most recent years not doing that, sidelined with serious injury. So it proved this season, as Steven Adams played in 32 games before going out for the season with an ankle injury requiring surgery.

Obviously knowing this history, during the off season of 2025, the Rockets signed Clint Capela as a free agent, as his time with the Atlanta Hawks had clearly come to an end. It appeared the Hawks weren’t happy with Capela, and Capela wasn’t especially happy with the Hawks.

For the Rockets purposes, though, Capela might have appeared to be an ideal third center. Capela’s athleticism had diminished considerably from his Baby Deer heyday with the Rockets and James Harden, where he seemed to smash down at least five lobs per game, averaging just under 20pts per game, while grabbing a baker’s dozen rebounds and blocking a couple of shots every game. At the time I thought he was one of the more underrated centers in the NBA.

Even in decline, though, Clint’s rate stats have held up pretty well. His per36 in his last healthy season in Atlanta saw him at 16pts/15rbs/2blk with a staggering 18.7% offensive rebounding percentage. (For bench players with lower, and sometimes sporadic minutes, I think per36 gives a better idea of what they’ve done.) Given Capela’s salary, the Rockets evident plan of trying to boost their offensive output via offensive rebounding, and Steven Adams’ typically fragile health, the signing seemed a sensible one. A third center who approached Adams in rebounding skills, particularly on the offensive glass might be handy.

On a per36 basis last season, Capela did the business. He averaged 11pts/13.4rbs/2.4blks. His shot attempts were down to about 8.5 from 12, so there’s a fairly easy explanation for the drop in points. His offensive rebounding rate was the highest of his career at 19.4%, a number that would have lead the NBA in many seasons. Capela has always been good at that, in fact he’s 5th all time, in NBA history, in offensive rebounding rate.

This all would have been fine, and demonstrative of good planning, except for two things. The first is, Capela hardly played, even after Adams was lost for the season after 32 games. The second was that signing Capela hard capped the Rockets, making acquisitions and further signings difficult to achieve. Perhaps so difficult that none, in fact, occurred.

Initially it was easy to see why Capela wasn’t playing much. Adams was playing as well as he ever had, and Capela came into the season looking out of shape, and far less mobile that even in his recent past. But Capela began to find his way back. He looked lighter, more mobile, especially by late winter to early spring. The springiness that characterized his early career was gone, but seemed to be replaced with a real savvy about positioning for blocks, and grabbing boards. He was moving far better than early on, and it would seem the Rockets could use that.

Use it they did not.

It’s hard to say it was because Capela was ineffective when he played, especially later in the season. Although his early minutes were not encouraging, he improved under the care of the Rockets training staff, it would seem. But still he didn’t play. It was as if the Rockets bought a spare car, that very much like their unreliable main car, but when the main car broke once again, they refused to drive the back up car more than around the block twice a week. Ime Udoka’s idiosyncratic approach to the Rockets roster, rotations, substitutions, really, almost anything you care to name, lead to Clint Capela, with the Rockets primary backup center lost for the season, averaging 12 minutes per game, about the least he could play, given typical NBA center minutes for Sengun. This would be the lowest average of his career since he was a 20 year old 25th pick back in 2014.

Even in a playoff series where Alperen Sengun struggled with a re-engaged Deandre Ayton, Capela barely played. The Rockets often struggled to rebound, and were sometimes beaten on the offensive glass, an area where, again, Capela still excels. He didn’t play a single minute after game three.

The cost in roster options was even higher, of course. The Rockets desperately needed another guard or two after Fred VanVleet went out for the season. They wouldn’t get one, and the deal for Capela and subsequent lack of guards, proved to be the key enabler of Udoka’s preferred All Forwards, One Center, attack. An approach that made the Rockets 2025-26 offense so very distinctive.

Given the opportunity cost, and Udoka’s unwillingness to play him, Capela turned out to be a bad signing, through no real fault of his own.

How much does run differential mean to the St Louis Cardinals?

It might come as a surprise, but negative run differential teams sometimes make the postseason. I am not saying that the 2026 Cardinals will finish with a minus in runs, but I’m not saying they are going to make the playoffs, either. Anyhow, I thought I might go all the way back to 1981, let’s take a journey back into time.

The 1981 Cardinals outperformed their pythagorean record (what their record should be assuming a normal balance according to run differential) by only three games. That is because of a positive run differential. But, in 1983 they also had a positive run differential and finished 4 games below .500.

In 1984, the Cardinals were 6 games above .500 but with a run differential barely above zero. They should’ve been just over .500, according to their pythagorean record. The 1986 Cardinals did the right thing and absolutely nailed their pythagorean record, finishing at 79-82 with a -10 run differential.

The 1991 Cardinals should have finished at .500 but were a few games over .500. We could talk about the 2006 Cardinals, but they had a positive run differential and barely finished over their pythagorean record. And yet somehow won the World Series, of course. It doesn’t happen often, but a +19 run team can go all the way. But could a team with a negative run differential have possibly pulled that off?

The 2007 Cardinals really paid the piper for that one, finishing with a -104 run differential. That team should’ve been much, much worse though, interestingly enough. So maybe they never paid the piper! Should’ve been 20 games under! Finished 6 games under .500! So strangely enough, that was a team that didn’t give two turds about their run differential.

The 2008 Cardinals were another team to absolutely nail their pythagorean record, just as the 1986 Cardinals did. The Cardinals finished 10 games over in 2008, winning 86 games.

In 2010, the Cardinals underperformed by quite a bit, +95, & should’ve won 91 games but won 86, ten games over just like the 2008 team.

The incredible 2011 team barely overperformed their pythagorean record but was still destined for the postseason. They did have a +70 run differential, however.

Then, something happened to the 2012 Cardinals… they had a +100 run differential, but finished 5 games lower than their pythagorean record, making a team that would seemingly be a good postseason team into a third place team.

The 2013 Cardinals scored so many runs that them underperforming their pythagorean record didn’t matter. That team should’ve won over 100 games! But 97 wins was enough. It is noted that that team didn’t fare too well in close games.

2014 Cardinals won a lot more than they should’ve. They didn’t overperform their run differential like the 2007 Cardinals did, but they were certainly another outlier finishing at 90 wins with a +11 run differential.

The 2018 squad which was lead by both Mike Matheny and Mike Shildt, is the third team that hit their pythagorean record spot on (since 1981). That team actually won 88 games! But somehow finished in 3rd place. And also the Covid shortened 2020 season would make it four.

The 2021 Cardinals were another team that really overperformed their pythagorean record, finishing at 90 wins when they had a +34 run differential. Impressive.

The 2023 Cardinals are our fifth Cardinals team since 1981 to hit their pythagorean record. This team finished 20 games below .500! Far worse than the 2007 squad.

Most fans remember the 2024 team as being a lot better than expected. This is because that team should’ve finished ten games below .500, but Oliver Marmol coaxed a winning record out of a team with a negative run differential. However, an 83 win Cardinals team usually isn’t going to make the postseason. So it’s possible for the Cardinals to have a winning season with a negative run differential, but it would take some opportune circumstances for a team of that caliber to sneak into the postseason. The are however the best example I have come across with success as a negative run differential season performance by the Cardinals.

Last year’s team won 4 more games than their pythagorean record, so maybe the Cardinals are pretty good at overperforming their run differential nowadays. They were still under .500, but what about this season?

Baseball reference has the Cardinals as a pythagorean record .500 ballclub. I’ve always thought this is about what this team would be, give or take 5 games. Fangraphs has them finishing just below .500 now. Certainly much better than the Las Vegas odds we saw at the beginning of the season. Instead, this season the team is 7 games over .500. But what’s most impressive: they are only +3 runs. And have been a minus for much of the season!

There is of course a correlation with run differential, but it’s also much more random than you might think. It’s about as effective as a weather vane. A rather general barometer for the season. But there’s a history to it, and pythagorean records have been around for a while. How meaningful it is for Cardinals fans, I must shrug it off a bit. And there have been teams with a really good run differential in the first half and not so good in the second half, barely over. All sorts of scenarios and situations.

Here is a much snarkier article about it that I ran across: https://www.mlb.com/news/mike-bauman-run-differential-far-from-perfect/c-132583912

It’s hit and miss, but not a bad indicator, really. There are more advanced predictors out there, but it sticks around. It’s fun to look at, simple. But I have to admit, teams that beat their run differential are often more interesting than teams that just crush it. How do they do it? It’s often good bullpens and defense, and we have one of those, at least! At least a good closer helps, too.

It looks like I will have to go outside the Cardinals world to find a really good negative run differential team. Do they have those?

  • 1981 and 1984 Royals were both negative run differential teams that had some success
  • the (expletive) 1987 Twins had a -20 run differential and, you know… sigh.
  • 1997 Giants had a -7 run differential… and won 90 games! but ended up being swept by the Marlins in the NLDS. This particular team was driven by a 11-3 extra innings record resulting from an offense that lead the league in late and close situations. Clearly one of those “devil magic” Giants teams.
  • the 2005 Padres were some sort of unbelievable… they won their division only 2 games over .500 and scored -42 runs… the Cardinals swept them in the NLDS!
  • 2007 Diamondbacks were a -20 run differential squad that somehow won 90 games, swept the Cubs, then got swept by the Rockies in the NLCS
  • 2023 Diamondbacks made it all the way to the World Series with a -15 run differential, but lost
  • the phenomenon might actually be happening more often, and more egregiously than ever… the 2023 Marlins finished with a -57 run differential, 6 games over .500 and good enough for a wild card
  • last year’s Guardians had a negative run differential and won the AL Central with 88 wins

What did I learn? Successful teams with a negative run differential are rare. They often come from the NL West. The 2007 Cardinals weren’t as bad as I remember. And only two teams have made it to the World Series with a negative run differential in modern times… of course the Cardinals had to lose the championship to one of those two teams. So yeah, the only team to ever win the World Series with a negative run differential beat us.

Music section will be back next week, 1990 was a monster year! And I didn’t have as much time to research this week, being out of town then starting a new job.

Ok, last minute change of subject, where does our pitching stand? Our three best pitchers by BB/9 are Riley O’Brien, Michael McGreevy, and Dustin May. I think those guys will be all right. I would like to see Liberatore, Leahy, Pallante, and Graceffo improve their control. The problem is a big one though: Soriano, Svanson, Bruihl, and Stanek are all walking over 5 batters per 9 innings. That’s bad. Bruihl and Stanek in particular need to control their stuff, although Stanek can get away with it more than Bruihl with his 12 K/9.

I think I trust in Michael McGreevy more than any of our starting rotation, even though I’m a big fan of Dustin May, I just think McG is going to be the most reliable guy out there. I like that he has his walks under control. I like his xFIP. The xERA is worrisome but, whatever, I gotta trust somebody in the rotation. Maybe I’ll trust May more if he strikes out more batters.

Liberatore on the mound tonight, we will have to wait until 8:40 at night again. JT Ginn takes the rubber for the Athletics. Fangraphs gives a 41.7% chance of winning to the Cardinals. We’ll take it. I think I don’t mind Liberatore in this particular matchup, especially if he pitches like he has in the month of May as opposed to how he pitched in April.

Today on Pinstripe Alley — 5/13/26

BALTIMORE, MD - JUNE 28: Storm clouds linger over the field before the Baltimore Orioles play the New York Yankees at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on June 28, 2013 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hey folks, it was a quick turnaround last night on a weeknight and I was at the game, so we’re going to just do a classic “Today on Pinstripe Alley” post today rather than doing a full question exercise. Thanks for understanding! We’ll still have two rapid-fire questions for folks to talk about if they so desire, as we do on the weekends.

Today on the site, we have a shorter schedule, partially due to the changes in the timing of the Yankees’ series finale in Baltimore. (It was supposed to be a night game but it was bumped up to 1:05 p.m. because it’s supposed to pour tonight.) So Scott will Triple-A Scranton’s big week ahead in Syracuse, Madison will run through the Rivalry Roundup, and Jonathan will salute 2010s Yankees catcher and all-time quote producer John Ryan Murphy on his 35th birthday.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees at Baltimore Orioles

Time: 1:05 p.m. EST (moved up due to the weather)

Video: Amazon Prime Video, MASN

Venue: Oriole Park at Camden Yards, Baltimore, MD

Questions/Prompts:

1. Would you rather see Anthony Volpe or Max Schuemann at shortstop in José Caballero’s absence? (No, George Lombard Jr. is not an option here because he is at Triple-A.)

2. How much of the Stanley Cup playoffs do you typically watch?

2025-26 Season in Review: Rickard Rakell

PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 27: Rickard Rakell #67 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates against the Philadelphia Flyers in Game Five of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at PPG PAINTS Arena on April 27, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Vitals

Player: Rickard Rakell
Born: May 5, 1993 (33 years old)
Height: 6-foot-1
Weight: 194 pounds
Hometown: Sundbyberg, Sweden
Shoots: Right
Draft: 2011 first round (30th overall) by the Anaheim Ducks
2025-26 Statistics: 60 games played, 24 goals, 24 assists, 48 points
Contract Status: Rakell has two seasons remaining on his contract with a $5 million AAV through 2027-28.
History2024-252023-242022-232021-22

Monthly Splits

via Yahoo!

Story of the Season

Rickard Rakell entered 2025-26 coming off the best season of his professional career, and the biggest question was whether he could sustain it. The answer ended up being mostly yes.

While he did not quite replicate the career highs he posted during the previous season, Rakell remained a major offensive piece for Pittsburgh and continued to thrive alongside Sidney Crosby. Even through stretches where the Penguins battled injuries and inconsistency, Rakell found ways to produce offense.

Early on, Rakell looked like a perfect fit on Sidney Crosby’s wing once again, registering eight points through nine October games and building on the chemistry previously established alongside Bryan Rust on the opposite wing.

By midseason, things became more complicated. A hand injury that required surgery cost Rakell several weeks and disrupted some of the momentum he had built.

Rakell and fellow Swede Erik Karlsson became two of the biggest drivers of play post-Olympic break, however. And it couldn’t have come at a better time.

His March surge became one of the biggest reasons Pittsburgh stayed competitive late in the year. Rakell piled up 19 points in 17 games, generating offense at five-on-five, and even filled in at center while Crosby was rehabbing an injury, despite being a natural winger.

Regular season 5v5 advanced stats

Data via Natural Stat Trick. Ranking is out of 18 forwards on the team who qualified by playing a minimum of 150 minutes.

Corsi For%: 49.91 (9th)
Goals For%: 55.00 (10th)
xGF%: 42.97 (6th)
Scoring Chance %: 49.32 (12th)
High Danger Scoring Chance%: 52.43 (7th)
5v5 on-ice shooting%: 11.43 (11th)
On-ice save%: 90.32 (7th)
Goals/60: 0.94
Assist/60: 0.94
Points/60: 1.87

Rakell’s underlying numbers continued to paint the picture of a strong offensive winger, even if his defensive impacts fluctuated. Then again, the 2025-26 Penguins weren’t exactly known for their defensive prowess.

Playing major minutes with Crosby naturally inflated some offensive opportunities, but his ability to finish and complement Crosby makes him difficult to replace.

Charts n’at

Via Advanced Hockey Stats and NHL Edge

Rakell followed up a career-best year in 2024-25 by having an almost identical season in 2025-26 via a lot of the WAR-driven outlooks. That’s very impressive for a 30+ year old player to string together quality, especially considering Rakell was asked to play a variety of roles between being on the Sidney Crosby line as a winger and at times having to center his own line- despite not playing that position in many years. Rakell handled anything asked of him in what looked like an effortless fashion and excelled.

Rakell’s microstats are those of an offensively gifted player. Once the puck gets into the offensive zone, he is going to create a lot via his in-zone shots, chances, and goals. At this point in his career, he is not going to add much in the neutral zone via exiting or entering zones. That’s what makes him more of a complementary support player, which is a valuable role that he can maximize with his offensive talent.

If a player is on a line with Sidney Crosby frequently, he’d better be comfortable and successful at getting to the net and getting shots away. Rakell did that in spades. Ninety shots from high danger spots on the ice (in just the 60 games) is a great stat to see, demonstrating effectiveness in that area. Rakell is going to work his way in close, and when that happens, the offense will follow from a player with good hands.

When Rakell needs to get on his horse, it’s still there as far as the burst goes. Part of the reason why he is aging well and able to put up some of the best seasons of his career this deep into it is due to his skating ability remaining strong. The two years remaining on his contract don’t look very daunting as far as how his legs are holding up to this point.

Highlights

Questions to ponder

Questions swirled last summer (as they might again in 2026) about whether Rakell, now 33, has a future in Pittsburgh as the team still aims to get younger.

The Penguins have to decide how aggressively they want to reshape the roster around younger talent over the next two years.

This season showed the Penguins are not yet in the same tier as the Hurricanes or the Avalanche; the rebuild is far from over. Those contenders will always value a productive top-six winger at $5 million, especially because the salary cap continues to rise.

After another strong season, moving him now would not be about freeing up cap space. Put the tinfoil hat on and throw Rakell into a hypothetical trade proposal for, say, Chicago’s fourth overall pick?

Kyle Dubas has no problem taking a few big swings to improve his team. Trading up in this draft to further accelerate the rebuild and also get younger might be too good of an opportunity to pass up if it presents itself.

But it would mean giving up one of the few reliable finishers on the roster.

Ideal 2026-27

Assuming Rakell remains a Penguin, he most likely continues to see time as a top-line winger. The Penguins don’t have any wingers in the system (in the short-term) that Rakell would be blocking with his presence.

You can pretty comfortably pencil 6-7 in for 20 goals and 50 points, assuming he’s healthy and deployed as he has been in the past.

Bottom line

Rakell followed up his breakout 2024-25 campaign with another highly productive season and further solidified himself as a valuable piece of Pittsburgh’s core.

After the uncertainty surrounding him in 2024, that represents a massive turnaround, a win for the player and team.

Final Grade: B

Equalling or surpassing the career marks he had in 2024-25 would have been the dream scenario, and even though he had 22 fewer points this go-around, Rakell remains a dependable top-six veteran.

What did you think of Rakell’s season? Share your thoughts below.

Islanders & Playoff News: Super Schaefer, tight series

Looking out for the kids. | NHLI via Getty Images

Colorado has a chance to clinch their spot in the conference final tonight, but the other two remaining series continue to provide good drama.

Islanders News

  • Mat Barzal has withdrawn from the Worlds due to precautionary pre-existing “minor” injury reasons, so Canada has to settle for some Sidney Crosby guy instead. [Isles | TSN] Andrew Gross says Barzal is expected to have a normal offseason and training camp.
  • Matthew Schaefer has a new partnership to help families dealing with cancer, a cause that’s obviously close to his heart. [Newsday | Isles]
  • Prospect Report: Luca Romano is winning the battle, but Kashawn Aitcheson has done his part in forcing OT in consecutive games. [Isles]

Elsewhere

  • Vegas pulled back ahead of the Ducks with an OT win in Game 5. [NHL]
  • The Sabres looked like they were screwed by a dubious goalie interference call, but they got an insanely fortunate Tage Thompson carom off the glass to tie it on their way to a win to even the series, 2-2. [NHL]
  • Vegas is also in the news because they apparently will not allow Edmonton — who still have a head coach they haven’t fired — to speak with fired coach Bruce Cassidy. [Sportsnet]
  • It’s not me, it’s you (Toronto): Apparently Mitch Marner is having his best playoff evah. [NHL]
  • Injuries continue to haunt the Wild as they try to stave off the inevitable. [NHL]
  • Making sense of the big decision facing the Stars and Jason Robertson this summer. [Stars]
  • The NHL took its sweet time to announce a six-game suspension for Charlie McAvoy after his wild slash on Zach Benson in the first round. [TSN]
  • Columbus signs Charlie Coyle to a six-year extension at age 34. [NHL]
  • And Son of Manson, Apple Not Far From Tree, was fined $5,000 for butt-ending, his latest dirty move. [TSN]
  • Matvei Michkov exit interview on his trying season and hopes for better next year. [Crossing Broad]
  • The Penguins “would love” to have Evgeni Malkin back, says Kyle Dubas. [TSN | NHL]

Pirates Prospect Update: Edward Florentino is on fire at the plate

CLEARWATER, MEXICO - MARCH 14: Edward Florentino #19 of the Pittsburgh Pirates bats during the game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Philadelphia Phillies at BayCare Ballpark on Friday, March 14, 2025 in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Pittsburgh Pirates third highest ranked prospect, Edward Florentino, is off to a hot start in 2026 and is looking like one of the best hitters in minor league baseball.

Florentino is currently with High-A Greensboro and since his debut with the Grasshoppers on May 1, he has been tearing the covers off of baseballs. In the club’s most recent series against Greenville Florentino made a huge impression in the final two games. The 19-year-old centerfielder had homers in back to back contests against the Drive, making it his third with the club sixth on the year.

Fast starts are nothing new for Florentino. The Pirates originally signed him as an international free-agent in 2024, and he was quickly turning heads for Pittsburgh. Florentino started his journey in professional baseball in the Dominican Summer League as a 17-year-old, but just a year later was already playing full-time minor league ball after hitting his way through the Florida Complex League and ended up playing in 54 contests with Low-A Bradenton.

Now in 2026, Florentino is off to yet another hot in 2026. The Dominican native was a non-roster invitee to the Pirates’ big league Spring Training in Bradenton and represented the club in the Spring Breakout. From there Florentino returned to Low-A Bradenton but only played in nine games with the Marauders. In those nine games, Florentino left with a slash line of .321/.500/.750 with a 1.250 OPS and three homers.

With Greensboro Florentino has continued his hot streak, adding the three more homers to bring his season total to six and has been just as efficient at the plate as well. With the Grasshoppers, he is slashing .290/.303/.581 and has 8 RBIs and two steals. Overall Florentino has a .305 batting average with 18 hits, 18 RBIs and a .411 on base percentage in 16 games.

At just 18-years-old the Pirates may have found another solid star in Florentino. As a power threat he has been able to capitalize on his discipline at the plate coupled with his raw strength and hitting IQ will benefit him as he continues to advance in his career. He’s continued to add muscle to his 6’4” frame since signing and many believe this could just be the beginning of his hitting prowess, given the raw power that he already possesses. He’s athletic in the outfield and is showing a further understanding of navigating centerfield and tracking fly balls.

Florentino has a Major League ETA of 2028.