SAN ANTONIO, TX - APRIL 28: Julian Champagnie #30 of the San Antonio Spurs smiles while talking to the media after the game against the Portland Trail Blazers during Round One Game Five of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 28, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photos by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
When the Spurs won their fourth game against the Portland Trail Blazers, fans went honking. But the fans weren’t alone. Among the hundreds on the road celebrating, a member of the San Antonio Spurs took part in the festivities.
Spurs sharp shooter Julian Champagnie, who finished the first round of the playoffs shooting over 60% from beyond the arc, joined the fans in cheering the victory.
Between when Portland left and the Minnesota Timberwolves arrived, the Spurs had nearly a week to decompress and prepare for the second round of the playoffs. While out and about shopping, they stopped to take come photos.
Jordan McLaughlin was seen in Karolina’s doing some antique shopping.
Meanwhile, Champagnie shopped at Sephora and stopped to take a photo.
It’s hard not to notice a six-foot-plus guy as he’s passing by, but the Spurs are more recognizable than ever. For some, this is their first experience in the playoffs. All eyes are on them. It’s great to see how they have handled the fame with poise and grace.
Plus, they gotta get that Mother’s Day shopping done before they head to Minneapolis for the weekend.
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SECAUCUS, NEW JERSEY - MAY 05: Detailed view of the draft board is shown following the 2026 NHL Draft Lottery at the NHL Network Studio on May 5, 2026 in Secaucus, New Jersey. (Photo by Jared Silber/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images
Should the Devils bet long-term on Arseny Gritsyuk? “Yes, committing long-term after just 66 NHL games carries risk. But there are some strong indicators Gritsyuk is a player worth betting on.” [Infernal Access ($)]
“The Devils aren’t in rebuild mode, so drafting isn’t the priority it would be if they had top-five picks from year to year. Still, they will need some young talent to complement their core in the future, something Fitzgerald failed to properly address as the Devils’ GM.” [Devils on the Rush]
Hockey Links
Calder Trophy finalists:
Introducing your finalists for the Calder Memorial Trophy! 🏆 #NHLAwards
The Trophy is presented annually to the player selected as the most proficient in their first year of competition. pic.twitter.com/FRzcWehoYl
“Jim Rutherford plans to step down as the Vancouver Canucks president of hockey operations after the 2026 Upper Deck NHL Draft, but will help hire the next general manager first.” [NHL.com]
Scott Wheeler’s latest draft rankings: “Wingers Gavin McKenna and Ivar Stenberg remain my top two prospects, which has been the case on all of my lists. They’re followed by half a dozen defensemen, a trio of centers and another pair of wingers to form a clear-cut top 13 prospects in this year’s class for me.” [The Athletic ($)]
Now that we know a good chunk of the draft order, it’s mock draft season: [Daily Faceoff] [The Athletic ($)]
“Tampa Bay Lightning captain Victor Hedman revealed Tuesday that his absence in the final weeks of the season was caused by a need to address his mental health.” [Associated Press]
Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.
May 5, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Baltimore Orioles catcher Samuel Basallo (29) celebrates after scoring a run in the fifth inning against the Miami Marlins at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images | Jim Rassol-Imagn Images
Good morning Birdland,
Our five-game nightmare is over! The Orioles got back into the win column on Tuesday night, beating the Marlins 9-7. The offense gets the credit for the win. Each time the Marlins would claw their way back into the game, the Baltimore bats would nudge it just a little further away.
Pete Alonso and Samuel Basallo combined to go 5-for-7 with three doubles, a triple, two walks, five runs, and six RBI. They were terrific. Despite that success from Basallo, who was a homer shy of the cycle, O’s manager Craig Albernaz turned to Adley Rutschman off the bench in the ninth inning. That would prove to be a wise decision! Rutschman came through with the go-ahead RBI single that put the game out of reach once and for all.
It was far from a perfect game for the offense. Colton Cowser had three more strikeouts. Coby Mayo went 0-for-4 with a strikeout. What the team does with those two is tough to say. They are trying to get them going, but nothing at the big league levels seems to be working. If there was an ideal alternate solution, it feels like the club would have pulled the trigger on it by now.
On the mound, Chris Bassitt was quite bad. His command, particularly on breaking pitches, was terrible. He was lucky to only give up the four runs in his four innings of work. His season ERA is up to 5.91. The Orioles didn’t expect Bassitt to be an ace or anything, but they need more length and quality from the veteran, especially given their current rotation makeup with Trevor Rogers, Dean Kremer, and Zach Eflin on the IL.
Negativity aside, the Orioles won a game. That is a good! Believe it or not, despite all of the awful things that have happened to them recently, at 16-20 they are just one game back of the final wild card spot in a brutal American League. There is time for them to figure things out. Beating an equally flawed Marlins squad was a good step in that direction. Hopefully they do it again tonight.
Links
Basallo flirts with cycle as O’s chase Alcantara before mounting late rally | Orioles.com Here is the MLB version of last night’s recap, which includes some quotes from within the Orioles clubhouse. Albernaz credits the team for being “locked in on every pitch” despite their recent struggles. The offense shows these sorts of glimmers on occasion. The potential is there for them to carry the team. Finding consistency is another matter.
Leftovers for breakfast | Roch Kubatko Roch shares oodles of stats, including some about the decision to pinch hit Rutschman for Basallo. The numbers don’t really back up Albernaz’s decision, but it worked. Ultimately, those are the sorts of decisions that managers’ get paid for. Credit were it’s due.
Top MLB starting pitchers who are candidates to be traded at the deadline | The Athletic This is a pretty straightforward article. Good pitchers near free agency that are on bad teams are candidates to be traded. Rogers is mentioned. Whether the Orioles trade him or not, they need him to be better than he has been. I think he will be. Most of his peripherals are better than his top line numbers.
Orioles birthdays
Is it your birthday? Happy birthday!
Yohan Ramirez turns 31 today. The journeyman reliever has played for eight different clubs across seven big league seasons. That includes a five-game stint with the Orioles in 2024.
Gerardo Parra is 39 years old. The Orioles traded for the outfielder at the 2015 deadline, sending Zach Davies to the Milwaukee Brewers in exchange. Parra would struggle in his brief time with the Birds, hitting .237/.268/.357 across 55 games.
Mike Kinkade is 53. He came to the Orioles as part of the Mike Bordick deal with the Mets in 2000, but would play in just 64 big league games as a utility bench option before being released after the 2001 season.
Tom Bolton turns 64. The southpaw tossed 23.1 innings for the Orioles in 1994.
The late Leo Burke (b. 1934, d. 2023) was born on this day. A native of Hagerstown, Maryland, Burke began his major league career with 12 games played for the Orioles between 1958 and ‘59.
This day in O’s history
2012 – The Orioles beat the Red Sox 9-6 in 17 innings. Both teams have to use position players on the mound. The Orioles opt for Chris Davis, who goes 0-for-8 at the plate but delivers two scoreless innings. The Red Sox turn to Darnell McDonald, who coughs up a three-run homer to Adam Jones.
Happy birthday to Bill Hands, and a mighty host of others.
Today in baseball history, in 1998, RookieKerry Wood ties the ML record with 20 strikeouts in a nine-inning game, pitching a one-hitter to lead the Chicago Cubs over the Houston Astros, 2-0. This and other stories are posted as well, including a trio of examples of stellar excellent sportswriting.
1941 – Hank Greenberg makes his last game before entering the U.S. military a memorable one as he hits two home runs with three RBI helping the Detroit Tigers to a 7-4 victory over the New York Yankees.
1953 – Bobo Holloman of the St. Louis Browns pitches a 6-0 no-hitter against the Philadelphia A’s, to become only the third pitcher in majors’ history to fire a no-hitter in his first start. Holloman will win only two more games during a brief one-year career and will never pitch another complete game in the majors.
1955 – Roberto Clemente crashes Willie Mays‘s birthday party at the Polo Grounds, by banging a 430-foot triple over the Mays’s head to lead to a 3-2 Pirate win over the Giants. Jesse Abramson of the New York Herald Tribune reports: “Roberto Clemente tripled so far over Mays’ head that even Willie on his charger, shedding the cap, couldn’t catch it…”
1958 – Exactly three years later, Roberto Clemente again disrupts Willie Mays‘s birthday, if not quite so dramatically. Bob Stevens of the San Francisco Chronicle reports: “Only a spectacular catch by Clemente on a 400-foot blast by Mays in the sixth with the bases loaded prevented San Francisco from making a genuine rout of the thing.” Circus catch notwithstanding, the Bucs suffered a 7-0 defeat.
1960 – As fate would have it, Roberto Clemente‘s first visit to the newly-opened Candlestick Park coincides with the 29th birthday of his one-time mentor Willie Mays, and once again Mays’ student steals the spotlight. While all three Willies – i.e. Mays, McCovey and Kirkland – go deep to power San Francisco‘s 5-1 win over Pittsburgh, it’s Clemente who gets the crowd’s attention with a shot to left center into the teeth of a vicious wind. Arnold Hano, California-based biographer of both Mays and Clemente, witnesses this moment: “Clemente’s bat hit the ball, and the result absolutely clubbed the crowd into awed silence for a long moment. Right into that wet whipping wind the ball carried. Right on through, hit 120 feet high in a long soaring majestic parabola that came down finally over 450 feet away. There is just no way of telling how far Clemente’s home run blast would have traveled had it not been for that wind. Suffice it to say partisan Giant fans suddenly broke their shell-shocked silence and let loose a gigantic roar. For two innings the stadium buzzed. For days the Giants talked about it. Even today if you slip up behind a Giant pitcher and suddenly whisper in his ear: ‘Remember the home run Clemente hit?’ he’s likely to jump as high as if he’d been caught putting spit on baseballs.”
2005 – Preserving a 6-5 win over the Cardinals, Trevor Hoffman becomes the third pitcher in ML history to save 400 games, joining Lee Smith (478) and John Franco (424) to have also reached this milestone.
2010 – The Texas Rangers manage to blow an 8-0 lead to the Royals, but come back in dramatic fashion for a wild 13-12 win. Texas scores the tying and winning runs on back-to-back solo homers by Josh Hamilton and Vladimir Guerrero off Royals closer Joakim Soria with two outs in the bottom of the 8th.
2012 – Both teams end up having to use position players on the mound when a game between the Orioles and Red Sox goes into extra innings. O’s manager Buck Showalter turns to DH Chris Davis to take the mound in the 16th inning with the score tied at 6-6. Davis gives him a pair of scoreless innings. The Sox turn to OF Darnell McDonald. However, he surrenders a three-run homer to Adam Jones; he then grounds into a double play against Davis to end the game in the bottom of the frame. It is the first time both teams use position players to pitch in the same game since October 4, 1925, when future Hall of FamersGeorge Sisler and Ty Cobb both got to pitch on the last day of the season.
2019 – Pablo Sandoval becomes the second MLB player since 1900 to throw a scoreless outing, hit a home run and steal a base in the same game in the Giants’ 12-4 loss in Cincinnati. (Also Christy Mathewson in 1905.)
1626 – Dutch colonist Peter Minuit organizes the purchase of Manhattan Island from Native Americans for 60 guilders worth of goods, believed to be the Canarsee Indians of the Lenape
1733 – First international boxing match: Local fighter Bob Whittaker beats “The Venetian Gondolier”, Tito di Carni at James Figg’s academy amphitheatre in Marylebone, London
1837 – US blacksmith John Deere creates the first steel plough in Grand Detour, Illinois
1889 – Exposition Universelle (World’s Fair) in Paris opens with the recently completed Eiffel Tower serving as the entrance arch; the lifts in the tower are not ready, so intrepid visitors have to climb 1,710 steps to reach the top
1937 – German airship Hindenburg explodes in flames at Lakehurst, New Jersey, killing 35 of the 97 on board and one on the ground
1954 – English athlete Roger Bannister becomes the first to run a sub-4-minute mile, recording 3:59.4 at Iffley Road Track in Oxford
1960 – US President Eisenhower signs Civil Rights Act of 1960
1994 – Comedian Bobcat Goldthwait sets fire to the guest chair on NBC’s “The Tonight Show”
1994 – Nelson Mandela and the ANC, finally confirmed winners in South Africa’s first post apartheid election
You might be thinking, “Didn’t we just celebrate 50 years of Brewers baseball a few years ago?”
Technically, yes. The Major League Baseball team that is the Milwaukee Brewers turned 50 in 2020. But the name, as many know, has been around for a lot longer than that. Since 1901, to be exact.
Other smaller clubs used the name Brewers, but none were on the professional level. The first professional Brewers club was a part of the inaugural season of the American League. And let’s just say it was a season to forget for Brewers fans 125 years ago — they finished dead last, 35 1/2 games back of first place, behind powerhouses like the Chicago White Stockings, Boston Americans, and the Detroit Tigers.
125 years ago today in 1901 the Milwaukee Brewers were born, facing the Chicago White Sox. The team would end up leaving to St. Louis to become the Browns and then end up becoming what we know now as the Baltimore Orioles. pic.twitter.com/f5fuYsxcu7
Before there was American Family Field and County Stadium, there was the Lloyd Street Grounds, the first home of Brewers baseball. The ballpark was constructed in 1895 on the south end of West Lloyd Street, between North 16th Street and North 18th Street. It was praised for several things, most importantly, the accessibility. Milwaukee, at the time, had a world-renowned streetcar system, which dropped off pedestrians in front of the stadium. The cost of construction was $7,400, according to sabr.org, which, in today’s dollars, would be about $291,000.
Following the conclusion of the 1901 season, the Brewers were moved to St. Louis amid financial distress. Thus, the Browns were born.
It didn’t take long for baseball to return to Milwaukee, as a new edition of the Brewers joined the American Association and played in town from 1902 through 1952. The Crew began as a Class-A ballclub before becoming a Double-A team for almost 40 years. They saw a ton of success in the American Association, winning league titles in 1913 and 1914, and then not again until 1936.
For most of their time in the American Association, they weren’t affiliated with anyone, operating as an independent ball club. However, there were a few short years they spent with some big league clubs. Their first affiliation was with the same team that left Milwaukee the first time around, the St. Louis Browns. From 1946 until their final season in the American Association, they were associated with the Boston Braves. During their time with the Braves, they won two championships, one in 1947 and another in 1951.
During this time, Borchert Field was the home of Brewers baseball, which was located between North 7th, North 8th, West Chambers, and West Burleigh Streets. This ballpark was built in 1888 and stood for nearly 70 years before being demolished after the opening of County Stadium. Today, in its place is I-43, which was built on top of it.
The 1952 season would be the last time the world saw the Brewers until the Seattle Pilots moved to Milwaukee before the 1970 season, giving the Brewers another life.
Through all the ups and downs of professional baseball in Milwaukee, the Brewers have been the mainstay, and it continues to be over 125 years later.
After last night’s rainout was announced, I scoffed and thought, what’s there to do now. Well, it just means I have more time to write about the Cardinals! That and, of course, it becomes apparent that the Cardinals aren’t meant to play many games vs their NL Central counterparts this early in the year. Today will only be the 6th game vs our own division, out of 35 games so far. Blink, and you will miss the 1/4th point of the season, coming up this weekend.
The Cardinals are 5-0 against their own division. Pretty good. Pretty, pretty, pretty good! A list of teams that have a better record than the Cardinals include only one NL Central team, the Cubs… and other first place teams like the Dodgers, Braves, and Yankees. Add to that list the Rays, who we battled with gloriously to begin the season back in late March. Our entire division is still over .500, including our current opponent, the last-place Brewers.
How are we this good? I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: I think a lot of it has to do with the defense. Since we are in a good division, how does Cardinal defense stack up with the NL Central?
The Cubs along with having probably the best offense have arguably the best defense with Pete Crow-Armstrong and Nico Hoerner being extremely valuable freaks of nature by Fielding Run Value on baseball savant. The two account for a +14 FRV! To compare to the Cardinals, that’s more than JJ Wetherholt, Pedro Pages, Nolan Gorman (+3 FRV, surprisingly), Masyn Winn, and Nathan Church put together! Now, I don’t really trust this stat completely, but that says something. The Cubs really do have an elite defense. Michael Busch is also really good on defense, and Seiya Suzuki ain’t bad either.
As for the rest of the NL Central, they cannot really hang with all of that. The Brewers are the next-best defensively, with the Reds and Pirates not-so-good on defense, outside of Ely De La Cruz.
Tiering NL Central Batters (using bat speed)
EliteDestructive Force (average bat speed over 78 mph)
Jordan Walker
Oneil Cruz (Pirates)
These two are tearing it up this year. You might be surprised to hear that Cruz is making slightly more contact than Walker. Cruz is taking more competitive swings and has a .262 BA so far this year, which for him seems quite high. These two might be a fun comparison going forward, with their similarities in extreme power hitting.
Terrible Force (ave bat speed 75-77)
Garrett Mitchell (Brewers)
Jake Bauers (Brewers)
Konor Griffin (Pirates)
The young Konor Griffin already showing off extreme bat speeds. Had no idea those two Brewers were swinging that hard!
Swinging So Very Hard (ave bat speed over 74 mph)
Ely De La Cruz (Reds)
Ivan Herrera
Pete Crow-Armstrong*
I notice the Cubs are not present here at 74+, in the top tiers of bat speed. I guess they don’t need to swing hard at Wrigley! heh heh heh. I’d like to point out here a stat called swing length, and that Walker and Herrera have the largest swings in the NL Central. The hardest swinging Cub? Pete Crow-Armstrong, who finishes at 73.9 average swing velocity, but figured I’d round up to be nice.
Ok enough of that bat speed nonsense! Swinging hard isn’t everything. Who is actually barreling the ball the most in NL Central? Rookie sensation Sal Stewart of the Reds! He is #5 in all of MLB at barrels %. Our good buddy Jordan Walker is #2 in the Central after Stewart in barrels %. More Reds players Spencer Steer and Ke’bryan Hayes are also really good at this. How about other Cardinals good at barrels/pa? Nathan Church (good sign!) and Lord Alec Burleson. And another Reds hitter Elly De La Cruz. Maybe that Reds offense is nothing to scoff at.
Are all these NL Central offenses for real? It looks like the Brewers and Pirates will stay about the same. The Reds and Cardinals could be in for some improvement, going by xwOBA, while the Cubs could come crashing down to earth a little bit. What could be a very interesting stat: the Cubs offense might not be a ton better than the Cardinals or Reds lineups. Their xwOBA is .336 with the Cardinals and Reds at .331.
So we are looking at three awesome offenses here. The Cubs and Reds are tied in home runs and the Cardinals are only two home runs behind. If you thought the Cardinals would be tied for 6th in home runs in MLB, on May 5th, you probably are Nostradamus (or related to him).
Forget the Cubs, they’re getting old. The Cardinals have the edge on the NL Central in hard hit %, and the Reds have been the team with the highest barrel % in the National League.
Most likely NL Central hitter to cool off: Seiya Suzuki
Best overall hitter in the NL Central so far: Brice Turang… so I guess I should not write off the Brewers just yet… what an interesting division
Who could end up being the best hitter in the Central: Jordan Walker ain’t far behind where Turang is at right now!
Best DH in the NL Central: Cubs’ Moises Ballesteros, so far anyways… currently the best DH in the NL
Best NL Central Hitters by Position
C Ivan Herrera (or Carson Kelly if you think he can keep up a .382 wOBA… obviously another hot start for Kelly this spring)
RF Jordan Walker (honorable mention Seiya Suzuki)
LF Ian Happ
CF Oneil Cruz
SS Ely De La Cruz
1B Sal Stewart
2B Brice Turang
3B Nick Gonzalez
DH Moises Ballesteros
So as good as some of our guys are, we are in a stacked division. JJ is of course #2 best hitting 2b in the Central, but the Pirates made a pretty good move of bringing in Lowe so Gonzalez could move over to 3b. The Pirates organization probably did just enough to keep them in the race this season. You know what’s the opposite of the NL Central? the AL Central! Their best team is at .500.
One more thing before I get to the music, I wanted to take a look at the Cardinals splits so far…
Jordan Walker and Masyn Winn have been killing left handed pitching in 2026. Vs righties? Jordan Walker hits them too, and so does Ivan Herrera and Alec Burleson. Masyn Winn is not faring too well vs RHP but not terrible at 88 wRC+. The award of worst splits goes to Alec Burleson however, who absolutely looks awful vs LHP so far.
Home Field Advantage: Jordan Walker and Nathan Church love hitting at Busch Stadium
Road Warriors: Ivan Herrera, Alec Burleson, and JJ Wetherholt have been tearing it up on the road
The big takeaway: Alec Burleson while hitting so well on the road is a below average hitter at Busch
High leverage hitters: Wetherholt, Herrera, Winn, and Gorman up their numbers in high leverage situations so far in 2026!
RBI Hog: Alec Burleson ups the ante with runners in scoring position and has 24 RBI, Clutch Burly
Walker and Gorman also have over 20 RBI, which means Gorman has been quietly productive with his +3 Fielding Run Value and RBI production when needed. JJ Wetherholt rounds out the top 4 Cardinals RBI guys.
1989
1988 set a fire in the music scenes of North America and around the world, and 1989 was the evidence of its mounting flame of change and intense rock n roll as well as advancements in musical technologies and new forms of music. I am constantly amazed at how the transitional times between decades yields so much classic, good music, but I’m here to talk about it and well, this year ended up being ridiculous in the quality finds. I usually do 20, or maybe only 10 albums, but for this year it has doubled. I bring to you, whoever is reading this blog, 40 albums of can’t miss music!
Top Tier Albums of 1989
Ministry – ‘The Mind is a Terrible Thing To Taste’ Chicago industrial scene mavens reach the beginning of their peak state and release this masterpiece, a defining sound for 1989
Cows – ‘Daddy Has A Tail’ this could very well be my favorite punk rock album of all time, it grows on me with every listen, must be listened to LOUD, and is full of catchiness, humor, and a huge wall of rock n roll barely contained by expert lo-fi production
Melvins – ‘Ozma’ I view this as sort of a sequel to Gluey Porch Treatments, its predecessor, but it’s just as good, if not better… a refining of the sound introduced a couple of years before and part of a huge year of grunge music catching fire into what would be a nationwide cultural movement a few years later
Skinny Puppy – ‘Rabies’ while grunge was starting to catch fire, industrial music was also coalescing into a near mainstream movement, and Rabies by Skinny Puppy was a close second to the genius on display with Ministry’s ‘Mind…’ album. The primary difference being Skinny Puppy was less metal/punk oriented and more goth/techno. Both albums are extremely important in understanding where music tech was at in 1989
Nirvana – ‘Bleach’ for a minute I had this as album of the year in 1989, and it is not a bad pick… the best Nirvana album, I would argue. Something about this album’s mix of lively but dirty tones and hyper-catchy song structures began to reinvent the wheel of rock music. Not to mention the amount of energy brought here… If Melvins were the spark for the grunge movement, Nirvana and the next band were the fuel for the fire…
Soundgarden – ‘Louder Than Love’ Soundgarden entered their prime years with this album, which is one of their best and defining of the pacific northwest grunge movement… Chris Cornell would become the ultimate voice of rock n roll for a while, and this is the roots of that and maybe his most powerful vocal performance! or just listening to the pure fire, subtle bass playing throughout this album
Sepultura – ‘Beneath The Remains’ thrash death metal at its best, riding that creative wave in 1989 from down in Brazil, Sepultura would become legends because of this masterpiece of an album, should be higher but this year is just absolutely stacked
Beastie Boys – ‘Paul’s Boutique’ here’s another album that should be higher on the list! one of the best hiphop albums ever made, capturing that NYC sound
Dog Faced Hermans – ‘Every Day Timebomb’ actually THIS album could be #1 on the list! How many times am I going to keep saying this about 1989? Don’t sleep on this one, they’re on to something here, something highly unique and memorable, inventive even
Morbid Angel – ‘Altars of Madness’ many would argue, the best death metal album ever made… defining masterpiece of the genre. If you like horrific sounds beyond the limits of the human world and ultra fast precision, look no further… a defining album in the heavy metal canon (honestly had this one as #1 for a minute, too!) florida metal
#11-20
Nine Inch Nails – ‘Pretty Hate Machine’ if you haven’t heard it, what are you waiting for!? Another genre-defining classic for industrial music in 1989, the ultimate soundtrack for an industrial dance club setting
Faith No More – ‘The Real Thing’ sure you have some absolute bangers in songs like “Epic” and “From Out of Nowhere” but this album is a great full album listening experience, classic rock at this point! “Zombie Eaters”, “The Morning After”, “Surprise! You’re Dead”, and “Falling To Pieces” some of the more underrated songs on the album
Vasilisk – ‘Acqua’ here is my big find of my music deep dive into 1989… the big discovery… soundtrackish
Carcass – ‘Symphonies of Sickness’ defining moment for grindcore here! Carcass re-defined the whole relatively new genre that Napalm Death started, taking it in a new “gore-grind” direction. Aside from that, this album sounds absolutely disgustingly heavy, next level, even…
Kool G Rap – ‘Road To The Riches’ while the Beastie Boys were putting out the definitive hiphop album in 1989, Kool G Rap along with other innovators was starting new sounds, is this the first gangster rap album?
Meat Beat Manifesto – ‘Storm The Studio’ speaking of sonic innovators, Jack Dangers and Meat Beat Manifesto started a new sound, melding industrial music with hip hop! Band leader and producer Jack Dangers would go on to become one of the best music producers of all time, in my opinion
Coroner – ‘No More Color’ absolute thrash masterpiece i just discovered, give me some time
Bolt Thrower – ‘Realm of Chaos’ if anyone used to play any table top RPG like Warhammer 40k, I guess this album was advertised in White Dwarf, a magazine for table top war gamers. The cover art of this album even looks like some of the art for these games. Absolutely THE soundtrack for wargames.
Pestilence – ‘Consuming Impulse’ dare I say it again, this band was ahead of their time, with their technical death metal skills right up there or ahead of Death, perhaps the godfather of technical death metal skills
Godflesh – ‘Streetcleaner’ it feels wrong to rank this here, but 1989 is just a ridiculous world… many would probably rank it higher, but then again, many wouldn’t even listen to it, so there’s that… defining industrial metal classic, at the very least; opening track “Rats” is my favorite but it’s a banger start to finish
Tim Berne – ‘Fractured Fairy Tales’ best jazz album of 1989! absolutely fantastic listening experience
#21-30
De La Soul – ‘3 Feet High and Rising’ the third defining hiphop album on the list, perhaps the first “alt-hiphop” album? My brother loves this album, it is super catchy and fun after all
NoMeansNo – ‘Wrong’ punk rock classic and peak moment for NMN! sick and tired of the same old thing? check this album out! so underrated
Terrorizer – ‘World Downfall’ an early defining moment for grindcore which just so happens to feature the rhythm section and singer of Morbid Angel, but owning the grindcore world in another band! Florida metal
The Work – ‘Rubber Cage’ avant garde rock n roll similar to This Heat ten years ago, not to compare them to another band because this is highly unique, but only band I can think of similar
Negativland – ‘Helter Stupid’ one of the greatest conceptual art pieces of all time, in the form of edited audio snippets arranged in perfect composite… this album might make you go insane, or heal all your wounds
Schizo – ‘Main Frame Collapse’ the first true obscurity on the list, if you want to enter the realms of underground metal, this is a pretty good entry point! early and defining extreme metal sounds here, black metal at its best
Bitch Magnet – ‘Umber’ classic noise rock probably a bit ahead of its time, precursor to Helmet?
Branca – ‘Symphony No. 6’ explore the album, but here’s an excerpt on the outer limits of the guitar sound
Toxik – ‘Think This’ absolutely phenomenal heavy metal thrash album, just be prepared for the old school power metal thrash vocals which are actually done pretty tastefully, an overlooked classic of the metal genre
The Cure – ‘Disintegration’ understated, beautiful sounding album that sounds like it could have been released at any time in the 1980s but just barely eclipsed the end of the decade
#31-40
Mudhoney – ‘Mudhoney’ no 1989 list talking about early grunge sounds could possibly leave this album off a listing, it’s way better than you might expect, rock n roll legends
Caspar Brötzmann Massaker – ‘Black Axis’ art rock, noise, a new form of jazz? you’ll enter new zones here
Bad Brains – ‘Quickness’ Bad Brains begin to crossover: hardcore punk to metal… perhaps their perfect blend between the two, with their best production so far in their career but not as polished as the ones after… guitarist Dr Know goes next level here with his solos and super tight rhythm playing
Tad – ‘God’s Balls’ I got to see this band live when i was in high school and it is still one of the heaviest bands I’ve ever seen, so tight… and always just as punk as it was metal, another early grunge movement gamechanger
Fugazi – ‘13 Songs’ album opener would be on my college soundtrack album, awesome live band!
Saw Throat – ‘Indestroy’ crazy primitive crust punk sounding heavy caveman metal, wild stuff! heavy psychedelic insanity proto black metal and sludge
Repulsion – ‘Horrified’ insanely fast early grindcore that sounds like it was recorded in a sewer!
Death Side – ‘Wasted Dream’ awesome Japanese hardcore punk!
Thinking Plague – ‘In This Life’ ending my 1989 list with this album because there isn’t much streaming online from it, you’ll just have to buy it but it’s well worth it, I bought a digital copy years ago, one of the best prog rock albums from the 1980s! Bandcamp with a couple more songs streaming or purchase option
BINGHAMTON, NY - MARCH 31: Will Watson #17 of the Binghamton Rumble Ponies poses for a photo during the Binghamton Rumble Ponies photo day at Mirabito Stadium on Tuesday, March 31, 2026 in Binghamton, New York. (Photo by Dave Garrett/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Ryan Clifford drove in a run in the bottom of the first to give Syracuse the initial lead, but it wouldn’t last long. In the top of the fourth, the newly signed Jack Weisenburger allowed three runs, giving the Red Wings a 3-1 lead. Christian Pache got Syracuse within a run in the sixth with an RBI single- had Nick Morabito not been thrown out trying to stretch a single into a double, he would’ve tied the game- but they quickly ran out of time. Rain began falling, and the umpiring crew decided to call things off there.
It was a disastrous start for Will Watson, who came into the season with high expectations but has fallen far, far short of them so far. The right-hander did not even get out of the first, recording just two outs. He labored, throwing 20 of his 37 pitches for strikes, and allowed four runs on three hits- one of which was a grand slam- and two walks. His replacement, Tanner Witt, did not fare much better, allowing 4 runs in 1.1 innings. Suffice to say, down by eight runs in the second inning, the Rumble Ponies failed to make this one a competitive ballgame. Of note, Wyatt Young pitched not just one, but two innings, and did not allow a run, scattering three hits. This is, unbelievably, the third game that he’s pitched this season, and has a 2.25 ERA on the year, allowing one earned run in 4.0 innings over three games. Move over, Nolan McLean!
St. Lucie already had the lead thanks to a Chase Meggers RBI in the second, but a five-run fourth gave them plenty of extra room. In the inning, JT Benson hit a two-run homer and Elian Pena a three-run homer. Tyler McLoughlin allowed a pair of runs in the bottom of the seventh, breaking up the shutout that R.J Gordon, Daviel Hurtado, and Ryan Dollar had going, but outside of that blip, the Flying Tigers never really threatened at any point.
Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:L, 7-6 at Worcester Red Sox
2B George Lombard Jr. 0-3, 2 BB SS Anthony Volpe 2-4, 2B, SB LF Spencer Jones 1-4, HR, 3 RBI, BB, K — impressive opposite-field shot RF Yanquiel Fernández 1-5, 2 K 3B Oswaldo Cabrera 1-5 DH Seth Brown 1-4, BB, 2 K 1B Ernesto Martinez Jr. 2-4, K C Payton Henry 2-3, 2B 3 RBI, BB, K CF Duke Ellis 0-4
Carlos Rodón 6.1 IP, 7 H, 6 R (5 ER), 2 BB, 4 K, 2 HR — not quite the outing he was looking to wrap up his rehab Yordanny Cruz 1.2 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 2 K (loss, blown save)
Double-A Somerset Patriots:L, 14-12 at Reading Fightin Phils — crazy game, Somerset led 12-9 in the eighth but coughed up five runs
DH Jace Avina 1-6, HR, RBI, BB, K RF Garrett Martin 2-5, BB, K, SB, CS LF Jackson Castillo 1-6, 2 K 2B Marco Luciano 3-4, 2B, HR, 3 RBI, 2 BB — got a 1.107 OPS, maybe he can get himself to Triple-A before long 1B Coby Morales 3-6, RBI, K, SB 3B Tyler Hardman 2-4, HR, 3 RBI, BB, 2 K — red hot, homers in four straight games CF DJ Gladney 3-6, 2 2B, 2 RBI, K C Manuel Palencia 2-5, BB SS Owen Cobb 2-5, 2B, 2 RBI, BB
High-A Hudson Valley Renegades:L, 6-1 vs. Winston-Salem Dash
2B Kaeden Kent 1-4, SB SS Core Jackson 0-4, 2 K 1B Kyle West 0-4, 2 K DH Eric Genther 0-3, BB, 3 K 3B Roderick Arias 1-2, HR, RBI, BB RF Wilson Rodriguez 0-3, K LF Josh Moylan 0-3, 3 K CF Camden Troyer 0-3, 3 K C Josue Gonzalez 0-3, K
Gerrit Cole 4.1 IP, 7 H, 5 R, 0 BB, 4 K, 2 HR — pounded the zone but gave up some loud contact Brandon Decker 0.2 IP, 1 H 1 R, 0 BB, 0 K, 1 HR Bryce Cunningham 3.1 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 6 K — second appearance of the year for the 2024 second rounder Wilmy Sanchez 0.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 1 K
May 5, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cristopher Sanchez (61) throws a pitch against the Athletics during the fifth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images
Death, taxes, Cristopher Sanchez pitching well at Citizens Bank Park. Makes you wonder if the mound there is perhaps different than the mounds across the game. There was always the allegations that the mound at Dodger Stadium was taller than anywhere else, so maybe there is something different.
This was just as well in the wake of manager Gabe Alvarez’s sudden firing on Tuesday. The team could probably use the time to absorb the news, as whatever his violation, Alvarez has had a reputation as a pretty popular and well-liked manager. With Mike Hessman now the interim skipper, the Hens will play two at Fifth Third Park on Wednesday, with Game 1 set for an 11:05 a.m. ET start time. With the team gutted by the Tigers needs and a setback for starter Sawyer Gipson-Long, the Tigers have moved reliever Eric Silva and lefty starter Carlos Peña up to the Triple-A level to help out.
The SeaWolves’ bullpen managed to lock down the late innings as the lineup roared to life in the seventh and eighth innings to come back and bury the Senators on Tuesday.
The SeaWolves had an early lead in this one, but couldn’t keep it. John Peck continued to swing the hot bat, leading off the top of the second with a double. Justice Bigbie was hit by a pitch, and after a pair of strikeouts, Andrew Jenkins reached on a throwing error from the Senators’ shortstop, Seaver King. That loaded the bases, and an infield hit from E.J. Exposito made it a 1-0 game. Brett Callahan pulled a grounder through the right side to score Bigbie, but unfortunately a rocket off the bat of Peyton Graham was hauled in by the center fielder, holding the SeaWolves to two runs.
A Graham throwing error allowed the leadoff man to reach in the bottom half, and Luke Taggart allowed two runs. Thayron Liranzo doubled to start the third inning, and a pair of deep fly balls brought him around to make it 3-2 SeaWolves. Unfortunately, Johan Simon and Duque Hebbert combined to give up two runs in the fourth.
So it was a 4-3 Senators lead, and that didn’t change until Callahan led off the seventh with a game tying solo blast. That was the outfielder’s fifth on the year already. Meanwhile, Hebbert settled things down through the middle innings, giving way to Tyler Owens, who threw a clean bottom of the seventh.
A six-run rally followed from the SeaWolves in the top of the eighth. Bigbie doubled and Chris Meyers was hit by a pitch. Izaac Pacheco smoked a single into center field to load the bases, and Jenkins was walked to force in the go-ahead run. 5-4 SeaWolves. The next two hitters struck out, but a catchers interference call with Graham batting forced in a second run, and then Liranzo drew a walk as well. That brought Peck to the dish with the bases still juiced, and the hot hitting shortstop delivered, dumping a two-run single into right field. Peck then stole second, drawing a throw that went wild, and Liranzo scored from third. When the smoke cleared, it was 10-4, and Trevin Michael would keep it that way over the final two frames in relief.
Peck: 2-5, R, 2 RBI, 2B, SB
Callahan: 2-4, R, 2 RBI, HR, BB, K
Liranzo: 1-4, 2 R, RBI, 2B, BB, K
Pacheco: 2-4, R, BB, K, SB
Hebbert: 2.2 IP, ER, H, K
Coming Up Next: It’s an 11:00 a.m. ET first pitch on Wednesday in Harrisburg as well.
The Whitecaps losing streak reached a shocking nine in a row as they again dropped a close game on Tuesday. In the past week and a half they’ve been walked off twice, and despite putting up solid run totals, just havent’ been able to get their pitching staff going.
Right-hander Hayden Minton got the start in this one, and true to form for much of the rotation recently, he wasn’t terrible but still leaked three runs in 3.2 innings of work. Inohan Paniagua took over to finish the fourth inning, but then he allowed a run on two hits in the fifth.
So it was a 4-0 lead for the Dragons when a leadoff single from Jackson Strong, followed by singles from Juan Hernandez and Andrew Sojka produced the ‘Caps first run. That was all they’d get but in the bottom of the fifth. Seth Chavez allowed a leadoff triple in the top of the sixth, but second baseman Samuel Gil got a ground ball and cut the runner down at the plate and Chavez escaped unscathed.
In the bottom of the sixth, Garrett Pennington singled and rode home on a two-run shot from Clayton Campbell that made it a 4-3 Dayton lead. Unfortunately, Luke Stofel allowed a run in the top of the ninth for some Dragons’ insurance.
Strong led off the bottom of the ninth with a walk and eventually scored on a Cristian Santana sacrifice fly, but that was as close as they’d get.
Campbell: 2-4, R, 2 RBI, HR, 2 K
Strong: 2-3, 2 R, BB, K
Rainer: 0-4, 3 K
Minton (L, 0-2): 3.2 IP, 3 ER, 3 H, 3 BB, 4 K
Coming Up Next: There is hope for the Whitecaps pitching staff now that Ben Jacobs has moved up from Lakeland. His first start in the Midwest League was impressive. Kelvis Salcedo and lefty Grayson Grinsell probably aren’t too many weeks from joining him there. The Whitecaps will look to end their skid at 6:05 p.m. ET on Wednesday.
Grayson Grinsell had a tough day on the mound, and the Flying Tigers’ offense didn’t do a whole lot at the plate in this first of six at home.
Beau Brieske made his first rehab appearance the spring. The Tigers could really use him back about now, so it was a positive sign seeing him toss a perfect first inning with a pair of strikeouts. He was 95-96 mph with the fastball, so a move to Toledo to complete his rehab work won’t be long. With any luck, he could rejoin the Tigers by sometime next week.
Grinsell took over in the second and had his first rough pro outing after looking great in April. He allowed a triple that turned into a run before tossing a clean third inning. However, in the fourth everything went sideways. A single and then a homer allowed with one out started things off poorly. Then a double and a Jordan Yost error on what would have been the second out set the table for a three-run shot that made it a 6-0 game.
The offense was missing in action until the seventh when Jesus Pinto led off with a double. Jude Warwick doubled Pinto home with two outs, and then scored on a Sergio Tapia single. Max Anderson went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts in his rehab assignment.
The Montreal Canadiens and the Buffalo Sabres will finally start their second-round series on Wednesday night in Buffalo. While this should be an interesting series, it promises to be different from the one we saw against the Tampa Bay Lightning, and that could be a welcome change of pace. Lindy Ruff’s men do not have the kind of defensive forwards Jon Cooper had on his roster, and that should be good news for the Habs’ top line.
That’s not to say Buffalo doesn’t have a good defense, however. Their top four defensemen are a force to be reckoned with: Rasmus Dahlin, Mattias Samuelsson, Bowen Byram, and Owen Power are a solid group. The quartet will no doubt be keeping a close eye on the Canadiens’ top forwards and aiming to make their lives harder with big hits.
On Tuesday, at practice, Martin St-Louis reunited Cole Caufield, Nick Suzuki, and Juraj Slafkovsky. Even though the line struggled to make a mark against the Tampa Bay Lightning, it’s not surprising to see the coach want to go back to the line that has provided so much offense for this team in the regular season. The bench boss had Alex Newhook, Jake Evans, and Ivan Demidov on his second line, Alexandre Texier with Phillip Danault and Josh Anderson on his third line, and Zachary Bolduc with Kirby Dach and Brendan Gallagher on his fourth line. Meaning that Joe Veleno, Oliver Kapanen, and Patrik Laine were on the outside looking in.
On the back end, Mike Matheson was still with Alexandre Carrier, Kaiden Guhle with Lane Hutson and Jayden Struble with Noah Dobson. That left Arber Xhekaj as the odd man out, since Adam Engstrom has been returned to the Laval Rocket. Given how big the Sabres’ defense is, I can’t imagine that the gritty defenseman will be sitting for the whole series.
Of course, what we saw in practice and in the warmup in the first round wasn’t always what we saw during the games, so no one should be shocked if that’s not how the Canadiens line up on Wednesday night. Still, it would be surprising if St-Louis didn't stick to his usual first line.
On Tuesday, Ruff told the media that Sam Carrick, who was originally supposed to miss the second round, was now officially considered day-to-day. No such luck for Noah Ostlund, however, as the centerman is still expected to miss the best-of-seven series. As for the Habs, with Dobson’s return in Game 7 against Tampa, they can be considered fully healthy, well aside from the bumps and bruises hockey players always play through of course.
The Sabres have a very good record in the first game of a series; they are 26-15 (.634) and 12-5 when the series starts on their own turf, for a whopping .706 winning percentage. Meanwhile, the Canadiens have improved their record to 76-50 in the first game of a series when they beat Tampa Bay to kick off these playoffs. On the road, that gives them a 14-32 record, for a measly .304 winning percentage.
Both teams won the first game of their previous series, so something will have to give when they both meet on Wednesday night. The Habs and Sabres have also split the season series evenly, with both teams winning two games each and scoring 13 goals across the four games. It’s interesting to note that Jakub Dobes was in the Canadiens’ net for both wins, the only two games he’s ever played against Buffalo.
Puck drop is scheduled for 7:00 PM and you can catch it on HBO MAX, truTV, TNT, SN, TVAS, and CBC. Pierre Lambert and Wes McCauley are set to officiate with Scott Cherrey and Jesse Marquis being the linemen.
A fourth manager of the season seemed a wild strategy but Portuguese coach has galvanised the squad and this journey could end in the Champions League
Football, it transpires, is not rocket science. If it were, Nottingham Forest would not be close to securing Premier League survival and two games from Champions League football next season. The club’s approach could hardly be described as methodical but whether by accident or design, Vítor Pereira, Forest’s fourth head coach in six months, has found the right formula.
When eight changes to the lineup were announced for Monday’s visit to Chelsea, eyebrows were raised as the second string were sent out. It allowed Pereira to rest others for Thursday’s Europa League semi-final second leg at Aston Villa. Within two minutes they were ahead and by the hour they were out of sight and a further step towards salvation thanks to a third away win in a row.
Detroit won Game 1, 111-101, versus Cleveland to give the Pistons four-straight wins overall and at home in the playoffs. Unlike the first round, Detroit is up 1-0 in the semifinals behind an all-around team effort.
Six different players scored 11 or more points for the Pistons in Game 1, with all five starters doing so. Detroit forced 19 turnovers and only committed 11 themselves, which was the biggest storyline. The Pistons and Cavaliers shot nearly identical, but Detroit attempted 35 free throws to Cleveland's 16. The turnover battle and free throw edge will be what to watch for in Game 2.
Can Cleveland get consistent scoring help outside of Donovan Mitchell (23) and James Harden (22)? Max Strus (19) and Evan Mobley (14) were the only other players to reach double figures for the Cavaliers. Cleveland is now 0-4 on the road in the playoffs and could use a victory in Detroit to settle the score before heading home where Cleveland is 4-0 during the playoffs. The home team in general, is 8-0 this postseason in Cleveland's two series.
Lets take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
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Game Details and How to Watch Live: Cavaliers vs. Pistons
Date: Thursday, May 7, 2026
Time: 7:10 PM EST
Site: Little Caesars Arena
City: Detroit, MI
Network/Streaming: Amazon Prime Video
Rotoworld has you covered with all the latest NBA Player News for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!
Game Odds: Cavaliers vs. Pistons
The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of DraftKings:
Moneyline: Detroit Pistons (-162), Cleveland Cavaliers (+136)
Spread: Pistons -3.5
Total: 215.5 points
This game opened Pistons -3.5 with the Total set at 215.5.
Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule!
Expected Starting Lineups: Cavaliers vs. Pistons
Cleveland Cavaliers
PG James Harden
SG Donovan Mitchell
SF Dean Wade
PF Evan Mobley
C Jarrett Allen
Detroit Pistons
PG Cade Cunningham
SG Duncan Robinson
SF Ausar Thompson
PF Tobias Harris
C Jalen Duren
Injury Report: Pistons vs. Cavaliers
Cleveland Cavaliers
None
Detroit Pistons
Kevin Huerter (hip) is listed as QUESTIONABLE for Game 2. He missed Game 1.
Important stats, trends and insights: Pistons vs. Magic
Detroit is 48-42 ATS and 20-20 ATS as the home favorite
Detroit is 48-41-1 to the Under
Detroit is 24-21 to the Under at home
Detroit is 21-19 to the Under as a home favorite
Detroit is 24-21 ATS as the home team
Cleveland is 36-54 ATS, ranking second-worst
Cleveland is 17-28 ATS as the road team, ranking second-worst
Cleveland is 8-6 ATS as the road underdog, ranking fifth-worst
Cleveland is 45-45 to the Over
Cleveland is 25-20 to the Over as the road team, ranking fifth-best
Cleveland is 8-6 to the Under as a road underdog
Rotoworld Best Bet
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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.
Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Thursday’s Cavaliers and Pistons’ game:
Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Cavaliers’ Moneyline
Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Cavaliers +3.5 ATS
Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 215.5
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He will be replaced by Mike Hessman, who played 1,436 games at the Triple-A level and hundreds more at lower levels. Hessman has been a hitting coach with Toledo since 2023 and worked with the Tigers before that, accepting a demotion to the minor-league staff after the 2022 season.
"I talked to Hess this morning to establish the cadence that goes on with him," Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said before Tuesday's game against the Boston Red Sox. "Obviously, I don't have a comment on the whole thing. In terms of my confidence in Hess and the transition, he's going to handle it very well. He communicates. He's got the trust of the players. He and I talked regularly already, even as he was the hitting coach. Now as the manager, the conversations change a little bit, but we have full confidence in Hess being able to continue on in making our players better and communicating to me and my staff what he needs to in order to get the players who come up here ready to play."
Alvarez was named as the Tigers manager ahead of the 2025 season after three seasons as Double-A Erie's manager before that, where he had a 232-178 record and three division titles.
"We will have no further comment," the Tigers said in a statement.
Contact Andrew Birkle via email at abirkle@freepress.com.
Free Press sports writer Evan Petzold contributed to this report.
Just when the Detroit Tigers needed someone to step up and be a presence in a sea of calamity, someone to throw them a life raft, someone to make them feel like their world isn’t collapsing around them, along comes Framber Valdez acting like a human Titanic.
Valdez is the Tigers’ new ace, their highest-paid player, the one the Tigers desperately are relying on to keep their postseason hopes alive until Tarik Skubal returns to the mound later this summer.
And on Tuesday evening, he melted down for the entire Tigers’ franchise to see, reminding everyone of the ugly warts in this talented left-handed pitcher.
Valdez’s selfish act of immaturity was so outrageous in the Tigers’ 10-3 shellacking to the Boston Red Sox that when he intentionally hit Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story with a 94.4 mph fastball in the middle of his back during his latest temper tantrum, even his own manager couldn’t stand up for him.
“We play a really good brand of baseball here,’’ Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said in his press conference after the game. “That doesn't feel like it. That's not judging intent. I have no idea.
“But when you go out on the field and end up in those confrontations, you usually feel like you're in your right.
“It didn't feel good being out there."
In other words, how are you going to actually fight for your own teammate when you feel like punching him yourself?
“I understand," Hinch said. "I understand their (Red Sox) frustration and the optics. I understand the whole thing.’’
Valdez, who gave up nine hits and 10 runs runs (seven earned) in just three innings, insisted with a straight face that he wasn’t deliberately trying to hit Story after giving up back-to-back homers, saying the pitch simply got away from him, and there’s no way he deserved to be ejected.
“Not at all," Valdez said through interpreter Carlos Guillen. “It was not on purpose. It might've looked like that but it wasn't. I was trying to throw a strike after two consecutive home runs, and the pitch just came out of my hand.
There is no chance that this same man who drilled his own teammate in the chest with a fastball last season with the Houston Astros would now intentionally hit an opponent.
No way, right?
Right?
Anyone else believe him?
Yes, just in case anyone forgot, this is the same guy who was so angry after giving up a grand slam to New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham last September, that he crossed up teammate and catcher Cesar Salazar by throwing a 92.8 mph sinker that slammed into his chest protector. Instead of apologizing, Valdez turned his back in disgust.
Valdez, summoned into Astros manager Joe Espada’s office after the game, told reporters it was simply miscommunication.
And you wonder why he was still on the free-agent market a week before spring training, signing a three-year, $115 million contract when he was expected to receive a deal close to free-agent starter Dylan Cease’s six-year, $210 million deal with the Toronto Blue Jays?
Now, with the Tigers badly needing an influx of help, with three members of their opening-day starting rotation and 14 players on the injured list, they are about to be playing one man short.
Valdez, 2-2 with a 4.57 ERA, surely will be suspended at least five days for his actions that should be announced Wednesday.
“I do not expect to get suspended,’’ said Valdez, who chose that moment to throw his first four-seam fastball of the season.
Maybe he should look around the room, and see if there’s a soul in the Tigers’ clubhouse that feels the same.
If you gave them a lie detector test, they’d probably all come to the same conclusion as Red Sox interim manager Chad Tracy.
“I thought it was weak and I thought everybody saw it,’’ Tracy told reporters. “Their side, our side, I think everybody saw it. It was weak.”
Really, once Willson Contreras and Wilyer Abreu opened the fourth inning by hitting mammoth home runs off Valdez, with Contreras flipping his bat after his 449-foot shot, Story could sense it was coming.
“I was in there ready to hit,’’ Story said, “and it showed up way behind me, off the numbers. I think we all know what’s what ... it’s pretty indisputable.’’
Story glared toward Valdez after being hit, players poured out of the dugouts, but there were no punches thrown or even shoves. Why fight when everyone is in full agreement of what happened?
“We handled it,” Story said. “We said what we said on the field, and I think that’s where it stays.”
Now, Michael Hill, senior vice president of on-field operations for MLB, will have his say.
And, perhaps behind closed doors in a meeting with Valdez, Hinch will have plenty to say, too.