May 3, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Philadelphia Phillies center fielder Brandon Marsh (16) reacts after his double against the Miami Marlins during the seventh inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Rhona Wise-Imagn Images | Rhona Wise-Imagn Images
This whole “game on a Monday after a series should end on a Sunday” thing is just weird. Like, why couldn’t they have just scheduled a different day later this year?
May 3, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Logan Henderson (43) pitches against the Washington Nationals during the second inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images | Geoff Burke-Imagn Images
Last Week’s Results
Monday: Off Day
Tuesday: Brewers 13, D-backs 2
Wednesday: D-backs 6, Brewers 2
Thursday: Brewers 13, D-backs 1
Friday: Brewers 6, Nationals 1
Saturday: Brewers 4, Nationals 1
Sunday: Nationals 3, Brewers 2
Division Standings
Cubs: 22-12
Cardinals: 20-14
Reds: 20-14
Brewers: 18-15
Pirates: 19-16
Last Week
Cubs: 5-1
Cardinals: 6-1
Reds: 2-4
Brewers: 4-2
Pirates: 3-4
Top Pitching Performance of the Week
Jacob Misiorowski, despite having to exit fairly early, had a great outing on Friday night. He went 5 1/3 no-hit innings, allowing just two walks with eight strikeouts en route to his second win of the season.
There was no shortage of solid options this week for the pitching staff, though I’ll give specific honorable mentions to the young trio of Kyle Harrison, Logan Henderson, and Shane Drohan. Harrison went six innings with one run allowed and five strikeouts; Henderson went six innings with two runs allowed and eight strikeouts; and Drohan totaled five innings with one run allowed and five strikeouts over two appearances. Jake Woodford also totaled 4 2/3 scoreless innings over three relief appearances, striking out five and picking up a three-inning save in Milwaukee’s blowout win over the D-backs.
Top Hitting Performance of the Week
William Contreras had probably his best week of the season thus far, as he went 11-for-25 (.440 batting average) with a homer, a double, nine RBIs, and seven runs scored. He picked up four hits on both Thursday and Friday, becoming just the seventh Brewer player to achieve that feat.
Honorable mention to Tyler Black, who went 7-for-13 (.538 batting average) with three doubles and seven RBIs in limited opportunities this week.
Injury Notes & Roster Moves
The Brewers made a flurry of moves on Wednesday this week, as they placed LHP Angel Zerpa on the 15-day injured list, sent Luis Matos outright to Triple-A Nashville (he cleared waivers after being DFA’d), and selected LHP Brian Fitzpatrick for his MLB debut. Zerpa’s injury doesn’t sound promising, as Pat Murphy told reporters on Sunday that Zerpa is in the process of deciding whether or not to undergo Tommy John surgery — regardless of his decision, it sounds like a lengthy return for the lefty.
The team also sent Andrew Vaughn and Jackson Chourio on rehab assignments with Nashville on Wednesday. Both were originally slated to return later today in St. Louis, though Chourio’s return is now in question after he fouled a ball off his foot on Saturday night. While X-rays came back negative, it’s certainly possible Chourio will have to take an extra couple of days before we see him in the majors.
Brandon Woodruff exited his start early on Thursday afternoon, as he had clearly diminished velocity. After it was reported he was just dealing with fatigue, he went on the 15-day IL with right shoulder inflammation, though an MRI revealed no structural damage. It sounds like he’s hoping to miss close to the minimum amount of time.
After Woodruff’s injury, right-hander Easton McGee was recalled from Triple-A Nashville. McGee made one scoreless appearance (one inning) before being optioned back to Nashville for Logan Henderson, who made a quality start against the Nationals on Sunday afternoon.
In another injury scare for a Brewer star, ace Jacob Misiorowski exited in the sixth inning of a no-hit bid against the Nationals on Friday night. He was reportedly just dealing with cramping, and he isn’t expected to miss any sort of extended time, though his next start (originally slated for Wednesday in St. Louis) may be pushed back a couple of days.
Brice Turang was also scratched from Sunday’s lineup with an illness. The severity of the illness is unknown, but I’d expect we’ll see him at some point this week in St. Louis.
Quinn Priester made his third rehab start with Triple-A Nashville on Friday night, though he continues to deal with command issues — a common issue among players returning from thoracic outlet syndrome. He’ll likely make at least a few more rehab appearances before an expected return later this month.
The Detroit Tigers wrapped up a series win over the visiting Texas Rangers on Sunday with a 7-1 victory at Comerica Park. Spencer Torkelson went yard for the sixth time this season to give his team a lead that the bullpen would not relinquish.
On Monday, the Motor City Kitties kick off the second half of their six-game homestand against the Boston Red Sox — a team they saw not too long ago in Beantown. AJ Hinch’s squad split that four-game series last month, but did outscore their opponent, 16-12, over that stretch; consider that the tie-breaker for now.
Detroit sends left-handed ace Tarik Skubal to the mound to open things up, having thrown quality starts in five of his seven outings so far this season. His previous start against the Red Sox was among them — a six-inning effort in which he allowed one run on four hits and two walks while striking out 10 for his third and most recent win.
Boston has fellow lefty Payton Tolle taking the bump for the third start of his sophomore season. The 23-year-old faced the Tigers in his final outing of the 2025 campaign, throwing one in relief in which he allowed one hit and struck out one batter.
The Tigers are tied for first place in the American League Central with the Cleveland Guardians entering the series, while the Red Sox are the division’s basement dwellers in the AL East. It would be nice to take sole possession of the lead and a strong showing this week could create some breathing room early on.
In the meantime, take a look at how Monday night’s starters match up below.
Detroit Tigers (18-17) vs. Boston Red Sox (13-21)
Time (ET): 6:40 p.m. Place: Comerica Park, Detroit, Michigan SB Nation Site:Over the Monster Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network
Game 36: LHP Tarik Skubal (3-2, 2.70 ERA) vs. LHP Payton Tolle (0-1, 3.38 ERA)
May 3, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Baltimore Orioles starting pitcher Trey Gibson (43) waits to take the mound prior to the game against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
Happy Monday, Camden Chatters!
It was a pretty lousy weekend for baseball as the Orioles got beaten up pretty good in New York. Yesterday’s game was the latest in a string of ugly losses. Trey Gibson made his Major League debut and held his own, but the rest of the game was a bust. The offense did more against Max Fried than I expected, but they missed out on some big chances. And the bullpen fell apart big time in the late innings, leading to an 11-3 loss. You can get the full details in my game recap.
If only I could say that after the terrible weekend, the Orioles are headed to a new city to start fresh. But they have one more game in New York tonight before they can finally leave. They have one chance to get a win before their road trip takes them down to Miami for three games. Tonight, Shane Baz will do his best to stop the losing streak at four. Baz’s most recent start against the Astros was a good one, with just one run allowed in 5.2 innings. If he wants to repeat that performance tonight, that would be fine by me. Game time is 7:05 if you can bear to watch.
There isn’t one thing to point to about what is going wrong with the Orioles right now. There are lots of cries to fire Mike Elias, and at a certain point it will be hard to avoid that conclusion. I’m not there yet, but it does seem like this season should be his last chance to prove his mettle.
I do not blame Elias or the coaching/front office for the rash of injuries. The number of players who have had injuries does feel a little absurd. But injuries, especially to pitchers, are just part of the game. Some years you get more than average, some years you get fewer than average. It happens all over baseball.
But if you take the injuries out of the equation, there are still a lot of things for Elias to answer for. He failed to address the starting rotation concerns in a way that got the job done. He didn’t go after any of the biggest names available; instead going after bigger question marks while relying on the pitchers already in the organization to be better than they have been so far.
Then there is the defense. Oh my, the defense. Unlike the rotation changes, which do have potential, everyone saw the defensive issues a mile away. Specifically, the outfield. Losing a defender like Cedric Mullins puts strain on the entire outfield, especially when the corner outfielders Taylor Ward and Tyler O’Neill are known liabilities.
Finally, there are his guys. Elias has made a lot of high draft picks since coming to Baltimore. There are always busts, but his strategy was based around tanking to get the picks. And a lot of those guys just aren’t panning out.
I am not a person who thinks it’s time for Mike Elias to go. But maybe it’s time to think about what needs to happen to make it a good idea for him to stay.
Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! You have two Orioles birthday buddies. Ryan Meisinger (32) pitched in 18 games for the 2018 team, and Joe Borowski (55) kicked off his 12-season career with six games with the Orioles.
Not much Orioles history listed on this date, but here are a few general baseball fun facts:
In 1966, Willie Mays hit his 512th home run, which set a new record for most career home runs in the National League
In 1975, Bob Watson of the Astros scored the one millionth run in Major League history
In 2002, Barry Bonds hit his 400th home run
In 2018, Albert Pujols became the 32nd member of the 3,000 hit club
One year ago today, the Orioles lost to the Royals, 11-6. The two teams combined to hit 11 home runs. Unfortunately, only four of them were by the Orioles. Cedric Mullins, Jackson Holliday, and Ryan O’Hearn all went deep. Holliday did it twice. Kyle Gibson started and allowed three runs in four innings, while relief pitchers Bryan Baker, Matt Bowman, Charlie Morton, and Yennier Cano each allowed two runs in their one-inning appearances.
Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:W, 7-1 vs. Buffalo Bisons
SS George Lombard Jr. 0-2, BB — still waiting for the top prospect’s first big Triple-A game CF Spencer Jones 2-4, 2 HR, 5 RBI — hit a 117-mph solo shot and 111-mph grand slam, both against major leaguer José Berríos RF Yanquiel Fernández 0-4 3B Oswaldo Cabrera 2-4, K 1B Seth Brown 1-3, HR, 2 RBI, BB, 2 K C Payton Henry 1-3, BB, K DH Ali Sánchez 0-4 2B Jonathan Ornelas 0-2, BB, K LF Duke Ellis 0-2, BB, SB
Danny Watson 2.2 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 4 K Zach Messinger 2.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 0 K(win) Dylan Coleman 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K Rafael Montero 1.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 0 K Kervin Castro 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K Bradley Hanner 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K
It's a bad day to be a baseball. 🤯
Yankees #6 prospect Spencer Jones OBLITERATES a first-pitch homer at 117.4 mph off the bat and 422-feet to right field.#RepBXpic.twitter.com/DF788K9hH9
Spencer Jones puts an exclamation point on this Sunday afternoon with with his second homer of the game — a 111.1 mph and 406-foot GRAND SLAM.#RepBXpic.twitter.com/Pkr7B8wHTa
Double-A Somerset Patriots:L, 11-4 vs. Portland Sea Dogs
LF Jackson Castillo 2-4, RBI, K SS Anthony Volpe 0-4 — quiet game on the day he was optioned to Triple-A CF Jace Avina 1-4, 2B, 3 K, SB DH Garrett Martin 0-4, 2 K 2B Marco Luciano 1-3, HR, RBI, BB, K, SB — the former top prospect has played well at Double-A 1B Coby Morales 0-4, 2 K 3B Tyler Hardman 1-4, HR, RBI, 2 K RF Kenedy Corona 0-3, K C Manuel Palencia 1-3, K, throwing error
Chase Chaney 5 IP, 6 H, 7 R, 4 BB, 2 K, 2 HR (loss) Miguel Arias 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 1 K Eric Reyzelman 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 3 K — brushed 99 mph in the seventh Matt Keating 0.2 IP, 2 H, 4 R, 2 BB, 1 K Chris Kean 1.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K
Number 8 for No. 8 Marco Luciano to tie the team lead for homers on the season. pic.twitter.com/cLh6gg2BPt
High-A Hudson Valley Renegades:L, 7-6 at Jersey Shore BlueClaws
3B Kaeden Kent 1-5, 2B, RBI, 2 K SS Core Jackson 1-4, 2B, BB, K DH Kyle West 0-5, K C Eric Genther 0-5, K, throwing error LF Wilson Rodriguez 1-5, 2 K 1B Josh Moylan 2-4 CF Camden Troyer 2-4, HR, 3 RBI 2B Connor McGinnis 1-4, HR, RBI, 2 K RF Cole Gabrielson 0-1, 2 BB, SB
Franyer Herrera 4.2 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 4 BB, 3 K, 1 HR Jackson Fristoe 1.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K Hansel Rincon 0.1 IP 3 H, 4 R, 1 BB, 1 K (loss, hold) Chris Veach 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K (blown save) Tanner Bauman 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K
CAMDEN TROYER'S SECOND HOME RUN IN TWO DAYS IS A 3-RUN BLAST TO GIVE THE RENEGADES THE LEAD😤 pic.twitter.com/nkvnyUudxh
— Hudson Valley Renegades (@HVRenegades) May 3, 2026
Happy birthday to Joe Borowski, and a mighty host of others.He probably doesn’t like Star Wars, either.
Today in baseball history, in 1963, Bob Shaw of the Milwaukee Braves sets a major league record by committing five balks. In the third inning, Shaw walks Billy Williams and sends him home with three straight balks. The Chicago Cubs beat Milwaukee, 5 – 3. This and other stories are posted as well, including a pair of examples of stellar excellent sportswriting.
1955 – “Clemente’s Brilliant Catch in 9th Kills Rally by Braves.” So reads the New York Times headline but that’s not the whole story. Clemente’s game-ending circus catch not only secures Pittsburgh’s 5-4 victory, it also bails out the main protagonist after his errant throw puts the tying and go-ahead runs on second and third base. And who should walk to the plate at this moment but George Crowe, Clemente’s teammate and fellow Caribbean Champion with the Santurce Crabbers just three months earlier. As the Milwaukee Journal tells it: “Crowe, who had replaced the slump-ridden Joe Adcock at first base, pasted the ball against the remote grandstand not far from the right field foul line, only to have young Roberto Clemente race over and time his leap perfectly as he scraped the ball off the wall with his gloved hand.”
1967 – Roberto’s Revenge: Old Testament Style – Donn Clendenon and Roberto Clemente combine to give Don Drysdale a taste of his own medicine (perhaps taking Orlando Cepeda‘s adage – “the trick with Drysdale is to hit him before he hits you” – a tad literally). Dodger beat writer Frank Finch reports: “Before Drysdale retired, he took a physical pounding from the Pirates. Clemente’s third hit almost tore Don’s right hand off, and later in the same inning Donn Clendenon’s drive drilled Drysdale on the shins so hard that it bounced to first base, where Wes Parker made an easy put-out.”
2010 – Ernie Harwell, one of the greatest broadcasters in baseball history, dies at the age of 92 after a year-long bout with cancer. He was the radio and television voice of the Detroit Tigers for 42 years, retiring from the booth in 2002. He received the Ford Frick Award in 1981 and was a member of the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall of Fame.
2011 – Tim Lincecum has a good night in shutting out the Mets, 2-0, at Citi Field. He fans 12 batters in seven innings for the 29th double-digit strikeout game of his career. That total is the most ever by a Giants pitcher, overtaking Hall of FamerChristy Mathewson who set the previous mark back in the days the franchise played in New York.
1878 – Thomas Edison‘s phonograph is shown for the first time at the Grand Opera House in NYC
1893 – Cowboy Bill Pickett invents bulldogging, the skill of grabbing cattle by the horns and wrestling them to the ground
1904 – Charles Rolls meets Henry Royce at the Midland Hotel in Manchester, England. Go on to form the car manufacturer Rolls-Royce.
1904 – United States begins construction of the Panama Canal
1932 – Al Capone enters Atlanta Penitentiary convicted of income tax evasion
1946 – Five people die during a two-day riot at Alcatraz prison in San Francisco Bay
1953 – Pulitzer Prize for Literature awarded to Ernest Hemingway for “The Old Man and The Sea”
1957 – Alan Freed hosts “Rock n’ Roll Show” 1st prime-time network rock show, cancelled after 4 episodes
1979 – Margaret Thatcher becomes the first woman to be elected Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
1998 – A federal judge in Sacramento, California, gives “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski four life sentences plus 30 years after Kaczynski accepts a plea agreement sparing him from the death penalty.
DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 03: An interior view of Ball Arena prior to Game One of the Second Round between the Colorado Avalanche and the Minnesota Wild of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs on May 03, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The NHL couldn’t pass up a Saturday night time slot on ABC and started the Philadelphia/Carolina series before the first round ended. (Sidenote, there goes conspiracy theories about leagues tinkering in results: a Pittsburgh/Philadelphia Game 7 would have filled that spot really nicely, but alas). We went 3-1 on the East in the first round, whiffing on the Pens loss but getting the Montreal upset over Tampa right. I realized I forgot/ran out of time with the Pens’ run to write the East, would have been 3-1 in that too by missing the Ducks advancing past Edmonton but getting the rest of them.
Now it’s onto the NHL’s version of the Elite 8.
Philadelphia vs. Carolina
I don’t think anyone needed to see Game 1 to see where the wind was blowing on this matchup (pun intended), the Hurricanes have too much for the Flyers. That was on display in a 3-0 win on Saturday where the Flyers only mustered 19 shots on goal. Add in the injury to Owen Tippett and the uphill battle for the Flyers becomes all the more tougher a climb. I’m rooting for the funniest outcome where a Carolina sweep would put them into the next round before Buffalo/Montreal even play their Game 3. Thinking that happens, if not a gentleman’s sweep if the Flyers can win a home game.
Prediction: Carolina in 4
Buffalo vs. Montreal
Ahh, the Atlantic Division comes down to the Sabres and Canadiens, just as everyone suspected in the fall. Montreal is perhaps lucky to be here after playing rope-a-dope and only getting nine shots in goal in Game 7 and requiring a pair of greasy goals to dispatch Tampa. Still, they deserve credit all the same for making this far and Jakub Dobes in net is providing a huge boost to them. Buffalo is a little shakier in net, though Alex Lyon only surrendered five goals over the five games he played in and has become the man of the moment for the Sabres. The key to this series might be the power play, Buffalo advanced over Boston despite going 1-for-24 in the man advantage. That won’t cut it this time around. This series could be about coin flip odds, something about Montreal’s hot goalie and young talent is too tough to resist considering the Sabres aren’t scoring on the power play and resorting to lightning in a bottle with their goaltender situation.
Prediction: Montreal in 7
Vegas vs. Anaheim
Anaheim is perhaps the surprise team of the playoffs for the way they took care of the Oilers, weathering the best shots that Leon Draisaitl (10 points) and an injured Connor McDavid (6 points) could give. Those guys are always going to get theirs, but as usual their team’s roster weaknesses got exploited, this time by the Ducks. The Ducks’ pressure completely overwhelmed the shaky Edmonton team defense and goaltending, scoring 26 goals in the six games (4.33 average). Vegas showed some vulnerabilities against Utah (giving up 3.0 goals per game) and Carter Hart (.898 save%) hasn’t been THE guy, so much as the guy that the Golden Knights have right now. Jackson Lacombe was barely used in the Olympics and is making a star turn (nine points in six games, plus solid play defensively). Between the young talent Anaheim has, the goaltending matchup and the coaching edge of Quenneville over Tortorella to tip the scales for a slight upset (betting lines current have Anaheim +140 and Vegas at -165).
Prediction: Anaheim in 6
Colorado vs. Minnesota
The heavyweight battle! The NHL’s divisional format usually gives that one monster second round matchup where the two teams involved are very much Stanley Cup worthy, and that certainly applies in the Central Division this year. The Avalanche coasted to a pretty easy win over Los Angeles, sweeping them without even needing to come out of third gear. The Wild had a much tougher first round matchup against Dallas. It was tight (besides Game 1’s big 6-1 Minnesota win, the other five games were one-goal contests until empty netters, and featured two OT games) but the Wild came out on top in relatively convincing fashion considering the circumstances. The Avs haven’t even played since April 26th, prior to last night’s Game 1. (This is being written just as the game started, so while you’ll know the result reading it on Monday, we don’t as of now). Hopefully for hockey’s sake, it will be a long series. In the end, gotta like the star power of the Avalanche and the form they are in right now. This looks like a year where Nathan MacKinnon and company aren’t going to be denied.
Prediction: Colorado in 6
—
As of now with the way the bracket is breaking, it’s looking like the SCF could be a showdown between the top two regular season teams (Colorado and Carolina). We’re still a long way from getting there, Colorado’s path through Minnesota and Anaheim/Vegas next round is no cake walk and Carolina is known for tripping up and running out of gas in the middle rounds. Overall though, it doesn’t look like too many Cinderella teams are primed to upset the apple cart. Maybe Montreal/Buffalo or Anaheim still have something to say about that. It’s pretty rare for the top two teams to both emerge at the end of three rounds of playoff action, we’ll have to see if Round 2 has some surprising outcomes to shake up the picture.
NEWARK, NEW JERSEY - APRIL 21: New Jersey Devils introduce General Manager Sunny Mehta at Prudential Center on April 21, 2026 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Andrew Maclean/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI vis Getty Images
Here are your links for today:
Devils Links
“Unfortunately for Meier, the narrative that he has underperformed donning the red and black isn’t unique to this past season. Outside of his 2022-23 production (and even then), he has long been soured on by fans, and for good reason. After all, the three-time 30-plus goal scorer has never surpassed that mark with New Jersey, nor has his production ever matched his output from his San Jose Sharks years. And yet, as perhaps the most bullish person on him of anyone I know, I would argue that as far as bounce-back candidates go, Meier should be right at the top of the list.” [Infernal Access ($)]
“Sunny Mehta wants to focus on the process. That should make New Jersey Devils fans feel optimistic about the 2026 offseason and beyond.” [Devils on the Rush ($)]
Front office changes:
#NEWS: The New Jersey Devils announced the team will not renew the contracts of Dan MacKinnon and Chuck Fletcher.
“Even in a league with 32 teams that range from model franchises to … um, not that, everyone is good at something. In fact, every team in the league is the very best at something. You just have to be willing to dig deep enough to find it.” [The Athletic ($)]
“Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch revealed that McDavid played through a fracture in the foot and ankle area en route to losing in six games to the Anaheim Ducks in the Western Conference quarterfinals. He also said forward Jason Dickinson had a similar injury.” [ESPN]
Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.
The San Francisco Giants were aiming to try something different in hiring Tony Vitello as the first manager to transition from college baseball directly to the major leagues. Yet this was not what they had in mind.
After losing all six games on a journey to Philadelphia and Tampa Bay, the Giants have equaled their worst start in franchise history – 13-21 - at this juncture. Their first winless six-game trip since 2022 included zero home runs and three walk-off losses in sweeps by the Phillies and Rays.
And now the Giants have matched the five-week dumpster fires produced by their 1984 and 1950 brethren – the ’84 squad firing Hall of Famer Frank Robinson after a 42-64 start.
The Giants won’t do the same with Vitello, whose three-year contract guaranteeing him more than $10 million is in its infancy. Yet the grim start has certainly exposed significant flaws in roster structure – the sort of thing a managing wizard like Bruce Bochy would be challenged to solve, let alone a newbie like Vitello.
How bad has it been? Let’s explore:
Giants offense: Worst in baseball
Fewer management duos are under greater pressure than New York Mets baseball ops president David Stearns and manager Carlos Mendoza and indeed, a club with a $765 million left fielder and a $358 million payroll ranks last in the majors with a .630 OPS.
But for smallest bang for your buck, don’t sleep on Buster Posey.
The future Hall of Fame player and franchise legend has burned significant capital on a pair of hitters who have dragged the entire lineup down. Shortstop Willy Adames, signed to the biggest free agent contract in franchise history (seven years, $182 million) is now batting .195 with a .235 on-base percentage, the latter number particularly startling given that Adames served as the club’s leadoff batter 23 times, nearly six times more than the nearest teammate.
Adames, now in his second year in San Francisco, has slumped his way down to the six hole. The Giants haven’t yet taken such measures with slugger Rafael Devers, whom they ostensibly stole from the bumbling Red Sox 11 months ago but still are waiting for the three-time All-Star, not the bewildered first baseman, to show up.
The Giants assumed some $250 million in salary in the Devers deal, and he's scuffling along with a .214 average, two homers and a .257 OBP; both he and Adames haven’t been the same producers since leaving their hitter-friendly prior homes in Boston and Milwaukee. Sometimes that happens.
But that doesn’t excuse the failures of the rest of the roster.
San Francisco ranks last in the majors in home runs and runs scored (a paltry 3.1 per game), last in walks and 29th in OPS. The club ran out of some patience with Gold Glove catcher Patrick Bailey’s anemic bat (.152/.221/.190, adjusted OPS of 20) but an injury to Daniel Susac ended that time share.
Luis Arraez has not disappointed as a hits machine and has even improved his defense at second base. But Giants right fielders have hit just two home runs and their center fielders – mostly the now-injured Harrison Bader and Vitello’s former Tennessee sparkplug Drew Gilbert – have combined for a .183/.221/.287 slash.
The black holes in the lineup means the wonderfully surprising start from first baseman Casey Schmitt - .308, 13 extra-base hits, an .873 OPS – and serviceable work from Jung Hoo Lee and Matt Chapman has gone to waste.
Imagine what happens when those guys get in a slump.
The road trip from hell
It was just six games, not a three-city odyssey. Yet the psychic weight of three walk-off losses – all of them coming after the Giants blew one-run leads in the eighth or ninth innings – takes a greater, immeasurable toll.
Quasi-closer Ryan Walker blew two of the leads, almost inexplicably throwing eight straight sinkers to the Phillies’ Bryson Stott before Stott finally clocked one for a game-tying triple. And the Phillies made history, becoming the first team to sweep a doubleheader on a pair of walk-offs.
One victory was aided by third-base coach Hector Borg’s egregious non-send of Gilbert, the 10th-inning automatic runner, on a ball that leaked slowly into the outfield off Stott’s glove. In the 10-inning loss in Tampa Bay, the Giants couldn’t move the courtesy runner an inch.
The 0-6 trip was sealed when Vitello intentionally walked Rays slugger Junior Caminero to pitch to the AL’s RBI leader, and Jonathan Aranda sent them quickly to the team bus.
Tony Vitello: Trying to get comfortable
That sequence was fairly emblematic of Vitello’s tenure so far: A pick-your-poison scenario where he chose to pitch around the powerful Caminero only for the clutch Aranda to come through.
Posey didn’t exactly equip his first-year manager with a proven bullpen, but Vitello has done well to get outs from the likes of Caleb Kilian and Matt Gage, lean heavily on Keaton Winn’s nasty splitter and hope for the best from Walker, who has lost the closer’s job before.
Of course, 50-50 bullpen calls will happen with any manager. Vitello has worked to engender trust and enthusiasm from the clubhouse, yet from a distance, his presence seems proportionally diminished compared to the swaggering dude in Knoxville.
When umpires at Tampa Bay’s Tropicana Field blew a call that resulted in Heliot Ramos’s 424-foot catwalk-striking shot called a flyout instead of a home run, it was Frank Anderson – Vitello’s former pitching coach at Tennessee and now the Giants’ director of pitching – who got ejected, along with Adrian Houser, who was not pitching that day.
Far be it from us to order up a shot of eyewash from a manager, but when a run-starved club that’s about to go 0-5 on a road trip sees a home run stolen from them, it should probably be the manager, not the 67-year-old director of pitching, who gets tossed.
That fire will almost certainly emerge as the season grows longer. For now, there’s not much the Giants can do to help the guy, other than promote slugger Bryce Eldridge - he and catcher/third baseman Jesus Rodriguez are on the way from Sacramento, the San Francisco Chronicle first reported - or rearrange some furniture on the coaching staff.
The good news for the Giants? The entirety of the NL West went 6-24 this week. The bad news is they have the worst run differential in the division (minus-34), one of several vital signs that portend a grim final 128 games.
Or perhaps they’ve reached bottom now. Last week certainly looked like it.
Dec. 20, 1968: Laker coach Bill Van Breda Kolf, left, applauds play against the Warriors. From left, Elgin Baylor, Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West, Bill Hewitt, and Keith Erickson. Photo was taken during the fourth quarter with Lakers ahead by 32 points. Final score was 133-101. This photo appeared in the Dec. 22, 1969 Los Angeles Times. (Photo by Art Rogers/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
In the 1960’s, there were three great teams in the NBA: the Boston Celtics, the Los Angeles Lakers, and whoever Wilt Chamberlain was playing for at the time.
The Celtics were built around Bill Russell, while the Lakers were crafted around Jerry West and Elgin Baylor.
The Lakers never won a championship during Russell’s time in Boston, and this haunted West for life. Even after establishing himself as Boston’s Red Auerbach’s equal as a GM, he could not step foot in Boston Garden. In the new Prime documentary about him, Jerry West: The Logo, West reveals that he was going to go to a game at Boston with his son, but he was physically incapable of doing it.
Well, no one could. Russell could manage him, but he could not control him. He took a little away here, a bit there, and his teammates were typically superior, but overcome Chamberlain?
It was not possible.
In 1968, Chamberlain requested a trade from the Philadelphia 76ers, and ended up with Baylor, West, and the Lakers.
The Celtics were aging, and people generally thought they were ready to fall. But Russell wasn’t ready to let go, and he won his 11th and final championship.
West and the Lakers would finally win one in 1972, but Baylor would retire early in the season. Almost as soon as he did, L.A. went on an epic 33-game win streak and were basically unbeatable.
The National League Central has been baseball's best division, a fact that seems straight out of the upside down. The Chicago Cubs have been the division's bully, a development that seems long overdue.
The Cubs have been on an early-season rampage, winning 14 of their last 17 games, dominating their Wrigley Field stomping grounds and soaring to No. 4 in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings.
At 22-12, the Cubs have the second-best record in the NL, yet they're just two games ahead of the 20-14 Cincinnati Reds and St. Louis Cardinals. All five Central clubs are at least three games over .500, on the strength of a combined 44-28 record in interleague play.
And the Cubs improved to 14-5 at Wrigley by sweeping a decent Arizona Diamondbacks team, capped by a wind-swept 8-4 victory in which rookie Moisés Ballesteros hit a go-ahead homer. Next up: A four-game Wrigley showdown against the Reds.
It took three Game 7s and three series that ended in six, but the first round of the NBA playoffs have wrapped up, which means the conference semifinals are already upon us.
Out West, the No. 1 Oklahoma City Thunder, the only team to win their first-round series in a sweep, will battle the No. 4 Los Angeles Lakers as All-Star guard Luka Dončić continues to mend from his hamstring injury. In the other series, the No. 2 San Antonio Spurs will face another squad dealing with injury issues, the No. 6 Minnesota Timberwolves, with Anthony Edwards dealing with his left knee bone bruise.
Here’s a look at each conference semifinal series, with a prediction for each:
Eastern Conference
No. 3 New York Knicks vs. No. 7 Philadelphia 76ers
This 76ers team is not only peaking at the right moment, they actually look like legitimate threats. As long as Joel Embiid is playing the way he has since returning from his appendectomy, Philadelphia will have an argument. Embiid’s size and scoring ability makes him a nightmare to defend. It also stresses Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns and demands a big series from backup center Mitchell Robinson.
For as good as Philadelphia has been, however, New York has been even better. After the Knicks went down 2-1 in the first round against the Hawks, the Knicks used Towns as the anchor of their offense. OG Anunoby had a massive series, and New York’s trio of Anunoby, Josh Hart and Mikal Bridges make their defense versatile and tough to crack.
The pick: Knicks in 7
No. 1 Detroit Pistons vs. No. 4 Cleveland Cavaliers
Detroit, frankly, didn’t play its best series and had a few limitations exposed in its seven-game series against the Orlando Magic. For one, the Pistons struggle when their outside shots don’t drop. For another, it became clear that All-Star point guard Cade Cunningham needs more help; as the playoffs continue, he alone cannot carry Detroit. And, finally, the Pistons will need more from their other All-Star, center Jalen Duren, who struggled to impact games early in the series.
Many of the same issues above could be said about the Cavaliers, who also needed seven games to dispatch their first-round opponent, the Toronto Raptors. Cleveland struggled with turnovers for much of the series, and Donovan Mitchell had good games, but not great ones. Cleveland will need him to be stellar, especially if Mitchell is to upend the narrative that he can’t go deep in the postseason.
The pick: Pistons in 6
Western Conference
No. 2 San Antonio Spurs vs. No. 6 Minnesota Timberwolves
This might be the toughest series to project, simply because it’s unclear how much Anthony Edwards will be available with his left knee bone bruise. The Timberwolves did announce that Edwards was cleared for on-court basketball activities, so the news is positive on that front. If Edwards isn’t able to play, however, it will be tough sledding for Minnesota, even though its defense was exceptional against the Nuggets and even though role players like Jaden McDaniels stepped up in a big way.
Either way, this series will depend on the matchup between the two countrymen, Victor Wembanyama of the Spurs and Rudy Gobert of the Timberwolves. Gobert was superb against Denver Nuggets all-world center Nikola Jokić, and he’ll need to be even better against Wembanyama. Protecting the paint is essential, and San Antonio’s speed in the backcourt will be tough to navigate. One other element to watch here is San Antonio’s relative inexperience in the playoffs. The Timberwolves, meanwhile, have made consecutive conference finals appearances.
The pick: Timberwolves in 7
No. 1 Oklahoma City Thunder vs. No. 4 Los Angeles Lakers
The issue for the Lakers is the ongoing absence of All-Star guard Luka Dončić. Without him, LeBron James had to take on a massive role against the Houston Rockets. And, despite his age, he delivered. The Lakers did stumble in the middle of the Houston series, so finding ways to keep James fresh will be crucial. The return of Austin Reaves was big, and Lakers role players like Marcus Smart and Rui Hachimura played some of their best hoops of the year in the first round.
But, the tough part for the Lakers is that they’re running into an absolute buzzsaw in the Thunder. The only team to sweep in the first round, Oklahoma City is poised, focus and now has the understanding of what it takes to win a title. The Thunder are deep, explosive and play some of the most aggressive on-ball defense in the NBA. They’re balanced and have role players that would be stars on other teams.
Kentucky coach Mark Pope was seen in recent days at a Maccabi Tel Aviv game in Israel on an apparent recruiting trip. First-year LSU coach Will Wade, who has one player on his roster for next season — former Kentucky forward Mouhamed Dioubate — is also reportedly in Europe as he looks to fill out the Tigers' roster.
The Wildcats landed a pair of top-ranked lead guards in Zoom Diallo from Washington and Alex Wilkins from Furman, although questions have been raised of how the backcourt will fit together. Wilkins, a true freshman last season, averaged 17.8 points with 4.7 assists per game, but also was one of the least-efficient guards nationally, averaging 3.8 turnovers per contest. The two similar players aren't the best of shooters, either.
Both programs are likely holding out hope for Santa Clara forward Allen Graves, the No. 3 overall player of the transfer portal this offseason, per USA TODAY Sports' rankings. The Louisiana native's older brother, Marshall Graves, played four seasons at LSU under Wade during Wade's first stint with the program.
While the teams on the list have made some intriguing moves and aren't done filling their rosters, they perhaps have more question marks than normal, given some of their positions on college basketball's totem pole.
Here's a look at the high-end programs with the worst transfer portal hauls so far:
Kentucky
Kentucky lost out on the Tyran Stokes sweepstakes, which likely put a dent in its portal plans. Still, it's hard to overlook the Wildcats' apparent shortcomings as one of the most successful programs in the sport's history.
Kentucky was also unable to land BYU guard Rob Wright III, who withdrew from the portal to stay with the Cougars, and Syracuse forward Donnie Freeman, who picked St. John's.
After landing its awkward-fitting backcourt duo of Diallo and Wilkins, Kentucky and Pope also grabbed a commitment from Ousmane N'Diaye, a 22-year-old Senegalese forward that was playing in the highest tier of professional basketball in Italy. Kentucky also grabbed James Madison transfer Justin McBride, a four-time transfer who averaged 15.9 points per game last season.
Kentucky has a chance at putting its roster questions to bed, though, if it can lure Baylor transfer Tounde Yessoufou. However, the former five-star prospect is reportedly considering staying in the NBA Draft after declaring. As a true freshman, he averaged 17.8 points with 5.9 rebounds per game last season.
To make matters worse, all seven of Kentucky's transfers landed at Power Five programs, with three of them staying in the SEC. While the Wildcats grabbed some intriguing players, their roster makeup certainly has some question marks and definitely wasn't their preferred outcome.
Transfers in: Zoom Diallo (Washington), Alex Wilkins (Furman), Justin McBride (James Madison), Jerone Morton (Washington State).
Transfers out: Collin Chandler (BYU), Andrija Jelavic (Ohio State), Denzel Aberdeen (Florida), Mouhamed Dioubate (LSU), Brandon Garrison (Alabama), Jasper Johnson (Oregon), Jaland Lowe (Georgetown).
Returners: Malachi Moreno, Kam Williams, Trent Noah
LSU
LSU has one player on its roster as of May 3.
While it hasn't been ideal by any measure, the Tigers still have a few options: International recruiting, plucking a G Leaguer, convince the few uncommitted portal players or maybe even a late high school addition.
Former NC State guard Paul McNeil Jr., who played under Wade last season, could end up with the Tigers. So could Graves, who has connections to the program. But cutting it this close doesn't give much room for error, especially with Dioubate not being a go-to scoring option by any means.
Maybe LSU has an underlying plan that isn't immediately understood by the fan base. But the clock is ticking.
Transfers in: Mouhamed Dioubate (Kentucky)
Transfers out: Jalen Reece (Texas A&M), Robert Miller III, Marcus Vaughns (Arizona State), Mazi Mosley (Loyola Marymount), Mike Nwoko (Xavier), Mat Gilhool (Kansas State), Jalen Reed (Michigan), Ron Zipper, Dedan Thomas Jr. (Houston)
Returners: None
Kansas
Kansas' gamble on waiting out Stokes' decision worked out, as it landed the No. 1-ranked player out of high school who will instantly be the team's go-to scorer next season. The addition still wasn't enough to overcome some of the Jayhawks' offseason blunders, though.
Kansas lost a pair of high-end big men in Flory Bidunga and Bryson Tiller, who went to Louisville and Missouri, respectively. It replaced Bidunga with College of Charleston transfer Christian Reeves, a clear step down from USA TODAY Sports' No. 2-ranked portal player.
Kansas also grabbed Utah transfer Keanu Dawes, a solid Big 12 pickup who averaged 12.5 points with 8.8 rebounds last season, and Toledo transfer Leroy Blyden Jr., who averaged 16.4 points with four rebounds and 4.5 assists per game in 2025-26 as a true freshman in the MAC, one of the weakest non-Power Four conferences in college basketball.
The Jayhawks did, however, also sign five-star high schooler Taylen Kinney, along with three other top-150 ranked recruits. Still, they have no full-time returning starters from last season, with their top returner being Kohl Rosario, who averaged 3.4 points per game. Kansas already tried putting all its eggs in one basket last season with five-star phenom Darryn Peterson, which resulted in a second-round exit at the NCAA Tournament.
Maybe the Jayhawks will have more luck this time around?
Transfers in: Christian Reeves (College of Charleston), Leroy Blyden Jr. (Toledo), Keanu Dawes (Utah).
Transfers out: Flory Bidunga (Louisville), Bryson Tiller (Missouri), Elmarko Jackson (Georgetown), Jamari McDowell (Wake Forest), Samis Calderon (Butler), Jayden Dawson, Corbin Allen (Appalachian State).
Returners: Kohl Rosario, Paul Mbiya
Notre Dame
Micah Shrewsberry has a 41-56 record in three seasons at Notre Dame, and has yet to reach the NCAA Tournament, or any other postseason competition for that matter.
The transfer portal hasn't been kind for Shrewsberry and the Fighting Irish, as they lost their two best players in Markus Burton (Indiana) and Jalen Haralson (Tennessee). Sophomore guard Cole Certa, Notre Dame's third-leading scorer in 2025-26, left for Clemson.
It also doesn't look great that Notre Dame's only returning starter from last season is Braeden Shrewsberry, the son of its head coach.
Notre Dame added part-time starting guard Braeden Smith from Gonzaga, center Logan Duncomb from Winthrop and sharpshooting guard Ethan Roberts from Penn, although the roster's talent as of now appears to be far off last season's squad, which wasn't a good team either.
Transfers in: Bryce Dortch (Rutgers), Braeden Smith (Gonzaga), Devin Brown (Davidson), Logan Duncomb (Winthrop), Ethan Roberts (Penn).
Transfers out: Kebba Njie, Cole Certa (Clemson), Markus Burton (Indiana), Jalen Haralson (Tennessee), Ryder Frost (George Washington), Garrett Sundra (James Madison), Sir Mohammed.
TCU won nine of its last 11 games to end the regular season before taking down Ohio State in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. It also gave Duke a scare in the first half before falling apart in the second half of the second round.
The Horned Frogs were set to return four starters in 2026-27, including star forward David Punch, making them one of the most experienced teams in the Big 12. However, Punch entered the portal and left for Texas, and TCU has struggled to add to its returning group.
TCU has landed a pair of transfers in West Virginia's DJ Thomas and Long Beach State's Gavin Sykes. The true freshmen were solid last season, as Thomas averaged 6.6 points per game off the bench, while Sykes was one of the best scorers in the Big West at 19.4 points per game, although he'll have to prove his ability at a much higher level in the Big 12.
TCU also lost part-time starter Liutauras Lelevicius to Clemson and rising bench contributors Kayden Edwards to Creighton, RJ Jones to Washington State and Jace Posey, turning an intriguing team for next season into one with a much lower ceiling.
Transfers in: DJ Thomas (West Virginia), Gavin Sykes (Long Beach State)
Transfers out: Malick Diallo (Loyola Chicago), David Punch (Texas), Liutauras Lelevicius (Clemson), Ashton Simmons, Kayden Edwards (Creighton), Jace Posey, RJ Jones (Washington State).
For one last time these playoffs, the Montreal Canadiens and the Tampa Bay Lightning locked horns on Sunday night. With the stakes as high as could be, Martin St-Louis decided to insert Noah Dobson, who hadn’t played in three weeks due to an injury, in his lineup at the expense of Arber Xhekaj. A decision that raised a few eyebrows, given how physical the series had been, but the gritty defenseman’s missed coverage in OT in Game 6 ultimately cost him his spot on the roster.
Given how Dobson’s injury was on his left hand, some worried he wouldn’t be able to shoot properly, but the two slap shots he unleashed in the first frame cast all doubts aside. Even though the game was in Florida, the Bell Centre was packed to the rafters with 21,000+ fans for a watch party. The event sold out in less than an hour on Saturday morning, with fans paying $12 for the privilege.
After blanking the Canadiens in Game 6, there was a risk that Andrei Vasilevskiy had managed to get in the Habs players’ heads, making them wonder if he had suddenly become invincible, but that worry didn’t last for too long. With under two minutes to go in the first frame, Nick Suzuki tipped a Kaiden Guhle shot, the puck then deflected on J.J. Moser, past the Lightning’s supersize goalie to give the Habs the lead.
That was the captain’s first goal of the series, and it came at even strength with the Habs’ new look first line on the ice. The lamplighter was even more important, given that the team that scores first in a Game 7 wins 75% of the time, which put the odds in the Canadiens' favor.
The Dreaded Awful Second Period Came Back
For a good stretch of the regular season, the Canadiens struggled in the second period, and Sunday night, in the most important game of the year, that flaw came back with a bang. After Suzuki scored the first goal at 18:39 in the first, the Canadiens didn’t take another shot to end the period or in the second frame. It was the first time in their history that it happened.
Granted, the Bolts had a couple of power plays, but so did the Canadiens, and at the end of the day, if you cannot get a puck on the net, you certainly won’t get one in the net. It’s as simple as that. After 40 minutes, the score was tied 1-1 for one reason, and one reason only: Jakub Dobes, although he was getting some help from his blueline.
Perhaps the Habs were a bit frazzled by the enormity of the moment, but they were making mistakes you cannot make in that kind of setting. Juraj Slafkovsky’s no-look back passes were back, thankfully for him, he did that on the power play, and there was no harm done on the scoreboard. However, turning the puck over that way when your team is struggling to find something, anything to build on, is unacceptable. As is giving the puck back to the opponent with a soft pass when you cannot find a good option. Dobes is not Rocky Balboa; it’s rare that allowing your goalie to be peppered with shots while playing dead will lead to anything good.
St-Louis has shown a knack for speaking to his players and finding the right way to motivate them, and judging by how they bounced back in the third, he found the right words once again.
Feels A Little Like 2010
The Canadiens bounced back in the third after the coach told them they still had an opportunity, since it was still 1-1. The Habs took five shots on net and spent more time in the offensive zone, even though Tampa still had the upper hand. Dobes stood tall and stopped another eight shots to bring his total to 28 on the night. In this first round, the Czech netminder has looked like Jaroslav Halak back in 2010. Speaking to Sportsnet after the game, the young man was going through a rollercoaster of emotions and was absolutely beaming, as he should have been, he became the fifth rookie goaltender in Canadiens’ history to win a Game 7.
"People sometimes say that I get too emotional. But every game I play is like a Game 7."
The netminder wasn’t the only one to pull off a performance reminiscent of 2010, however. Alex Newhook showed fantastic hand-eye coordination to bat the puck out of mid-air from behind the net; it bounced off Vasilevskiy and into the net. An unusual goal, but a game-winning goal, nonetheless. As those who watched in 2010 will remember, Mike Cammalleri had also scored an important goal by batting the puck out of mid-air. In the end, Montreal only took nine shots on the night, but two of them crossed the goal line and that's all that matters.
The last part of the game was nail-biting with the Bolts attacking with an extra man, but the Canadiens managed to hang on. Ironically, at one point, what would have been an icing was stopped by Slafkovsky’s broken stick that had been left for dead in Tampa’s zone. Considering how often the Habs had their sticks fail them in the regular season, it must have felt like poetic justice for St-Louis’ men.
The win also had shades of 2021, though, with veteran Phillip Danault celebrating with a pizza and bringing Mike Matheson a slice during his post-game interview. The Habs will now fly straight to Buffalo in readiness for the start of their second-round series against the Buffalo Sabres on Wednesday at 7:00 PM.
WHAAAAAA??!
Phillip Danault brings back the pizza celebration 🍕🍕👏🏻👏🏻
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 30: Manager Aaron Boone of the New York Yankees looks on before the game against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on March 30, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images
It’s a tale as old as time at this point. The Yankees, loaded with talent and with their usual championship aspirations, roar out of the gate, looking every bit the class of the American League for the first half or so of the season. Then, the midseason swoon hits, and the team plummets in the standings, regaining their footing at some point later in the summer, just in time to stabile and make the playoffs.
The story of the 2026 Yankees is following the blueprint so far. They are playing stellar baseball, and in truth look even further ahead of the rest of their AL rivals than usual at this time of year. They’re playing remarkably well, but surely some fans are still just wait for the other shoe to drop. So let’s ask the question: is this the year the Yankees avoid their midsummer malaise?
The first time it happened, the Yankees’ midseason flop could’ve been written off as a fluke. They sprinted to a stunning 61-23 record in 2022, but floundered through July and August before getting things together for a strong September that allowed them to clinch the AL East. They weren’t so fortunate in 2023, when the Yankees had a 36-25 record after their early-June series in Los Angeles, but buckled under the weight of a copious injuries, including Aaron Judge’s devastating toe injury against the Dodgers, limping to an 82-80 finish.
2024 is when the midseason swoon narrative truly took hold in the public’s imagination, the team again playing stellar early-season ball, running out to a 45-19 record before playing sub-.500 ball through most of the summer. And in 2025, things reached another peak (nadir?), when the Yankees regressed from a 42-25 start to post an 18-29 record over the next month and a half, making a number of ugly and costly mental mistakes in the process. Their swoon was so deep that a blistering 34-14 close to the year was necessary to get back into a tie atop the AL East by season’s end.
Here we are in 2026, with the Yankees at 23-11, winners of 13 of their last 15. The pattern of the last four years is strong enough that many feel another faceplant in June or July is inevitable. Yet this roster also looks strong enough to perhaps ensure that whatever slumps the team eventually runs into will not be as deep or as prolonged as in recent years. The club’s pitching has never felt this loaded, and the lineup, with Ben Rice doing his best Juan Soto impression (get better quick Ben!) is as good as ever.
Not only that, but the way the Yankees are moving this year feels different. They didn’t hand Anthony Volpe back his starting shortstop job when he did little to earn it during his minor-league rehab, they quickly demoted Luis Gil when the right-hander proved ineffective, and they promptly cut the shenanigans with Rice sitting against lefties once it became clear that Rice is one of the league’s scariest hitters. It’s the combo of this urgency and the team’s loaded roster that forces one to consider the possibility that this is finally the year the Yankees avoid a nightmarish midseason slide.
What do you think? Will the Yankees find more consistency this year, or are they doomed to repeat the mistakes of the last few years?
On the site today, Kevin will recap a busy day of American League action, while Michael will discuss the still-looming return of Anthony Volpe and how, though many fans not think it, it should give the Yankees a boost. Later, Jeremy profiles Miguel Cairo on the occasion of the former infielder’s 52nd birthday, and John explores the origin of the ‘Bronx Bombers’ nickname, while Andrés praises Will Warren’s improvement against lefties.