Peoria, Ariz. - February 16: AJ Preller, San Diego Padres president of baseball operations, talks on the phone during spring training workouts at the Peoria Sports Complex on Monday, Feb. 16, 2026 in Peoria, Ariz.(Photo by Meg McLaughlin / The San Diego Union-Tribune via Getty Images)
The biggest news of the day regarding the San Diego Padres was the multi-year extension for president of baseball operations and general manager A.J. Preller. However, that was not the only news of the day as the Padres agreed to minor league deals with first baseman Ty France and starting pitcher Walker Buehler. San Diego had a quiet offseason leading up to Spring Training, but the news came early and often starting Saturday when the Padres signed Nick Castellanos, Griffin Canning and German Marquez. Preller appears to have addressed all the needs on the San Diego roster and has created a high-level of competition for coveted roster spots that should make for an exciting Spring Training in Peoria, Ariz. Cheri Bell of Gaslamp Ball compared the roster at this point last season to the current roster and believes the overall quality of the team has improved, which could make for a successful 2026.
After the announcement of the extension for Preller, Padres Chairman John Seidler and Padres CEO Erik Greupner met with the media. It was the first public comments from Seidler since the announcement of an exploration for a potential sale. He assured the media in attendance the Padres would not be moved out of San Diego and added that there is significant interest in the team from potential buyers.
New San Francisco Giants manager Tony Vitello delivered comments about his departure from the University of Tennessee clarifying when he made his decision, how the team was informed and what needed to happen for him to take the job in San Francisco.
Angels superstar Mike Trout met with the media and stated he is healthy, feels good and his sights set on a return to centerfield.
Los Angeles Dodgers utility player Tommy Edman, who is recovering from an ankle surgery, is set to miss Opening Day. The injury creates a hole in the Dodgers’ lineup and could provide an opportunity for Hyeseong Kim to make the roster as a starter out of Spring Training.
The MLB season is weeks away from opening day and one of the up and coming teams in the National League are the Pittsburgh Pirates, believe it or not. After Paul Skenes won a CY Young last year, management decided to spend a little bit of money on some bats, which was an encouraging sign and makes this squad a bet-on team in 2026. Here's how to bet on the Buccos this year with the new faces, and young talent returning.
Pittsburgh Pirates O/U 76.5 Wins
The Pittsburgh Pirates made moves this offseason! That’s not something that makes headlines very often, as Bob Nutting is known as one of the cheapest owners in all of Major League Baseball. In 2025, the Buccos’ payroll was $104,739,138, ranking 27th overall, but this year, that number is up to $117,975,000, coming in at 21st! Big Spenders!
Some of those millions were spent on improving the lineup, which superstar Paul Skenes all but demanded should happen this offseason. Pittsburgh brought in Ryan O’Hearn (Padres), Brandon Lowe (Rays), Jake Mangum (Rays), and Marcell Ozuna (Braves). That quadruplet of hitters substantially improves on the lineup and gives Pittsburgh multiple viable hitters joining Bryan Reynolds, Oneil Cruz, rookie Konnor Griffin, and Nick Gonzales. When you look at the top paid players on Pittsburgh, O’Hearn (2nd, $14 million), Lowe (4th, $11.5 million), and Ozuna (5th, $10.5 million) all crack the top five, so the Pirates ownership is making an effort to bring in talent and pay them.
Pittsburgh finished third-worst batting average last year (.231), ahead of only the Guardians and Angels, recorded the fewest home runs by a landslide (117, next was 148), plus were last in OPS (.655) and SLG (.350). O’Hearn, Lowe, Magnum, and Ozuna may not be the sexiest additions, but they were much-needed if the NL Central’s fifth-place team wants to go from last to leader (71-91). In terms of odds to win the NL Central on DraftKings, the Pirates are listed at +800 or a $10 bet wins $80, ranking fourth in the division.
NL Central Odds on DraftKings
The starting pitching rotation will be one of the best in the National League, starting with the reigning Cy Young winner, Paul Skenes, followed by Jared Jones (4.14 ERA), who is coming back from injury, Mitch Keller (4.19 ERA) following a down year, rookie sensation Bubba Chandler (4.02 ERA, 7 games played), plus Braxton Ashcraft (2.71 ERA), and Jose Urquidy (2 games played in 2025) who is coming off Tommy John Surgery.
Last season, Pittsburgh owned the seventh-best ERA (3.76), the eighth-best opponent batting average (.236), tied for the fourth-best WHIP (.122), ranked seventh in walks allowed (473), and permitted the third-fewest home runs (153). Clearly, the pitching was not a problem for the Buccos last year, well, outside of the closer spot.
Pittsburgh had to move on from David Bednar as the closer. In 2024, Bednar posted a 5.77 ERA and 27 saves to go along with a 3-8 record and seven blown saves. While Bednar’s numbers improved in 2025 (2.37 ERA, 17 saves, 0 blown saves), the writing was on the wall for the now 31-year-old. The Pirates traded Bednar to the Yankees in exchange for minor league catcher Rafael Flores (No. 8 prospect), minor league catcher Edgleen Pérez, and outfielder Brian Sánchez. Flores has a chance to make the opening day roster this season, while Pérez and Sánchez are projects in a star-studded farm system.
The Pirates’ bullpen saw acquisitions this offseason to bolster their support of Skenes and company with the signings of LHP Gregory Soto (Mets) and RHP Mason Montgomery (Rays). Dennis Santana will presume the role of closer after Bednar’s departure. Santana had 16 saves, 13 holds, and three blown saves last year, along with a 4-5 record and 2.18 ERA (60 Ks to 17 BB). Pittsburgh will need relief pitchers like Carmen Mlodzinski (3.55 ERA), Kyle Nicholas (4.74 ERA), Hunter Barco (2 games played), and a few others to step up and improve on mediocre numbers or limited action last season.
Going from last place in a division to first place isn’t unheard of. The Red Sox went from last in the AL East in 2012 and won the World Series in 2013. The 2006 Cardinals and 2005 Red Sox both finished last in their divisions the year prior and won the divisions the following season, plus the Orioles almost went from last-place to first-place in the AL East last season (75 to 91 wins, finished in second-place) after winning the AL East in 2023.
The safest bet is for the Pirates to go Over 76.5 wins up to 77.5 after totaling 71 victories last year. I truly believe this roster is at least six wins better than last season, but for a long shot, I like the Buccos to win the NL Central at +800 odds. You can call me crazy, but I believe it’s in the realm of possibility. Started from the bottom, now we here!
Picks: Pittsburgh Pirates Over 76.5 wins (3 units), Pittsburgh Pirates to win NL Central (1 unit)
MLB Futures Card
3 units: Pittsburgh Pirates Over 76.5 Wins (-115) 1 unit: Pittsburgh Pirates to win NL Central (+800) 1 unit: Paul Skenes to win NL CY Young (+250) 1 unit: Garrett Crochet to win AL CY Young (+425) 0.5 unit: Konnor Griffin to win NL Rookie of the Year (+600) 0.5 unit: Bubba Chandler to win NL Rookie of the Year (+1200)
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Tony Clark, who led the Major League Baseball Players' Association through two collective bargaining agreements and was preparing for what is expected to be a highly contentious CBA battle in 2026-27, is resigning as executive director Feb. 17, according to a baseball official with direct knowledge of the situation.
The official spoke to USA TODAY Sports on the condition of anonymity because the resignation wasn't yet official.
Clark, who held the post since 2013, brought the credibility of a former player the position, and oversaw significant union solidarity throughout his tenure after he took over for the late Michael Weiner.
But his reign has not been without conflict. The MLBPA remains under federal investigation due to its role in OneTeam Partners, a licensing company co-owned with the NFLPA and three other sports unions.
A faction within his eight-player executive sub-committee also aimed to oust lead negotiator Bruce Meyer in 2024, an insurgency led by lawyer Harry Marino, a longtime advocate for minor league players who helped integrate them into the MLBPA.
In December 2024, the three players who aimed to oust Meyer as lead negotiator – Jack Flaherty, Lucas Giolito and Ian Happ – were voted off the executive subcommittee.
The union announced in 2022 - when Clark earned $2.2 million - that Clark's contract had been extended through 2027.
His resignation comes before the highly-anticipated - or dreaded - showdown between the union and MLB upon the current CBA's expiration on Dec. 1. In 2021, commissioner Rob Manfred locked the players out in the midst of the off-season transaction frenzy, freezing all business as CBA negotiations lurched on.
The sides finally came to an accord in early March, leaving just enough time for a 162-game schedule to proceed. MLB has not missed games due to a labor dispute since the 1994 strike and subsequent impasse cancelled the World Series.
Now, one of the central figures to the next negotiation will sit this one out.
His successor will inherit the job at perhaps its most crucial moment in decades.
Manfred said Feb. 12 at MLB's owners meetings that CBA negotiations typically ramp up around Opening Day, and has said he anticipates using a lockout as a measure to move the talks along come December. A simple accord is not anticipated: MLB owners have strongly signaled, publicly and privately, their desire for a salary cap, a concept that has been a non-starter for the union.
MLB remains the only major professional sports league in North America without a cap, though inequity among ownership groups - most specifically, the huge-spending Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets - has sown discord among other franchises.
Clark, 53, played 15 years in the major leagues and was active in the union at that time. He ascended the ranks in the late 2000s, when Weiner guided the union with a very steady hand. But an inoperable brain tumor claimed Weiner's life, and Clark was elected to take over.
MLB and the union executed an on-time CBA for the 2017 season, yet the following two winters saw declines in salaries and offers for veteran players, priming the union for another fight in 2021-22. Between CBAs, Clark added to his offensive attack, hiring Meyer as deputy executive director and chief negotiator.
It proved a fruitful add: Clark and Meyer seemed to claw back some gains, most notably a modest climb in the luxury tax ceiling and additive components like a pre-arbitration salary pool for high-achieving young players. Yet a moderate rift in membership was exposed when the eight-person subcommittee recommended rejecting MLB's latest offer, only to be overruled by player representatives from each individual team.
That created a divide between highest-earning players and those closer to the rank-and-file, along with a proxy war of sorts among sports agencies, leading the the 2024 attempted removal of Meyer.
The second month of the calendar year started with a couple of convincing wins over the Clippers and Warriors for the Sixers in the midst of a West Coast swing. Since that Warriors win on Feb. 3, Philadelphia has won one game. It got blown out by Portland and New York in its final two games before the All-Star break and the team’s trade deadline certainly left fans scratching their heads to say the least.
However, as the team prepares to resume its season, there’s reason to believe it can start racking up some wins again. Three of the Sixers’ first four games out of the break are against sub-.500 teams with Atlanta, New Orleans and Indiana on the horizon. The first week of March also features a home game against Utah and another Atlanta game as well. While the last couple of weeks have been rough, it’s important to keep things in perspective as Philly prepares to resume the season with a record of 30-24.
The Sixers’ preseason win total was 42.5 at most sportsbooks entering 2025-26. Barring a cataclysmic final two months of the regular season, they’re going to go over that number. Should they finish in the neighborhood of 44-46 wins, that would likely be enough to avoid the play-in tournament as one of the top six seeds in the Eastern Conference. Who in their right mind would complain about that?
Perhaps the last couple weeks have given Sixers fans a sobering reality check that it’s the same old Sixers team that’s going to disappoint you the moment you allow yourself to get sucked back into believing they could make a deep playoff run. Frankly, for as much as the franchise has been made fun of for its countless exits in the second round of the playoffs within the last decade, just making it to the second round this spring would be an overachievement.
Whether you cared or not about the All-Star weekend festivities, the Rising Stars challenge was another nice moment in the spotlight for VJ Edgecombe who continues to look like one of the NBA’s best rookies in 2025-26. Games like Atlanta, New Orleans and Indiana offer Edgecombe and the rest of Philly’s younger players who have been seeing a lot of minutes a chance to prove they belong in the NBA. In Edgecombe’s case, these upcoming games are a chance for him to show he can thrive in the NBA.
If you check the secondary market prices for these games, you’ll notice they aren’t expensive, and why would they be? The Sixers are a slightly better than average team in the East with an exhausted fanbase that has largely tuned them out and these upcoming opponents are certainly not generating any buzz. But racking up wins against some of the NBA’s bottom feeders should at least rebuild the team’s confidence after getting whitewashed by Portland and New York prior to the All-Star break.
A lot of this probably sounds like patting a high school team on the back for beating a team that barely has enough players to even play the game should the Sixers start the second half hot. But this is the lens that we must continue to view 2025-26 through. Philadelphia is never going to be considered one of the NBA’s upper echelon title contenders. But it should still be good enough to dispose of the majority of the lottery teams on its schedule. Expectations go away by the time the playoffs come around this spring because they never were that high to begin with for this season. That’s actually kind of refreshing, and so yes, it’ll be nice to see the Sixers pick up a few wins out of the break, regardless of who the opponent is.
Arizona Diamondbacks Nolan Arenado (center) during spring training workouts at Salt River Fields on Feb. 16, 2026, in Scottsdale. | Rob Schumacher/The Republic / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Diamondbacks News
The Diamondbacks’ Next Competitive Window Depends On Ryne Nelson by Michael McDermott [Mike’s Hardball Blueprint]. {Ed. Note: Loved this analysis from Michael. I’m not great with pitcher analytics but Michael does a great job here explaining the ‘nitty gritty’ on why certain pitches should or shouldn’t work to help Nelson round out his arsenal.}
For the Diamondbacks to be a contender in 2026, they need Nelson to take the next step and develop into a frontline starter. Merrill Kelly is 37 years old, Eduardo Rodríguez is 33 with an injury history, and Brandon Pfaadt has a career ERA over 5.00. So it’s incumbent on the 29-year-old to become the type of starter Arizona envisioned when they drafted him 56th overall in 2019.
Here’s a breakdown of what the Diamondbacks could do to turn Nelson into a potential ace.
Arizona Diamondbacks catcher and designated hitter Adrian Del Castillo is dealing with a left calf injury that could keep him out through Opening Day.
Manager Torey Lovullo said on Monday that Del Castillo will be out for most of spring training, and the club will reassess him closer to the start of the regular season.
“He’s doing things where he can, he’s getting on his knees and throwing but not really stressing that left calf at all,” Lovullo said.
The timeline for when Diamondbacks first baseman Tyler Locklear will return had been unclear throughout the offseason. Locklear underwent surgery on both his left shoulder and left elbow to address an injury sustained in an on-field collision in October.
Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo provided a clearer update on when the young first baseman will return to action. Lovullo told reporters, including Arizona Sports’ Alex Weiner, that Locklear is looking at mid-May to June.
More importantly, however, Gallen’s new locker is right where it should be: next to friend, golfing buddy and 2026 opening day starter Merrill Kelly. The D-backs’ long-time one-two punch were reunited against all odds this offseason.
Neither pitcher expected to see each other in the same clubhouse this year. But here they both are.
“That’s my locker-mate for the last seven years,” Kelly said. “That’s the guy I golf with on the road. … I think everybody’s happy to see him.”
“You go through things, man,” Bradley told RG in an exclusive interview. “That’s one thing non-players kind of forget. We are people, too. Ketel has been through a lot. Lost his mom, got his house broken into. Ketel even came out and apologized about the way he handled it. We all make mistakes.
“But for me, he’s in the top five for all-time D-Backs. He’s the No. 1 second baseman in the league.
Power hitter from both sides. I think you’re going to see an even better Ketel this year. Even more of a leader. I think that’s what I see the most from him. He’s one of the most tenured guys in that clubhouse. He got traded there in 2017, and we debuted together. I think it was just a little mishap. He’s good and has mended everything back there.”
Gallen was my no. 19 free agent this winter, and I’ll just reproduce the first line of my write-up here: “After looking at Gallen’s résumé for about an hour, I came to an obvious conclusion: I’m glad I’m not a major league GM.” He had a severe case of pumpkinization in 2025. He missed fewer bats, drew fewer chases, walked more batters and struck out fewer, gave up louder contact, didn’t keep the ball on the ground, and lost a bit of velocity. It was the worst season of his career by a large margin; his 4.83 ERA might have been a caricature of his performance, but all of his advanced run prevention estimators surged to career-worst marks, too.
As a platform year, it left something to be desired. But I still think Gallen was right to turn down his QO and survey the landscape. After that didn’t work out, however, he made the obvious choice: Run it back in the same place and try again. Given that he put up a 3.20 ERA (3.22 FIP, 3.47 xFIP) from 2022 through 2024, worth a whopping 12.2 WAR (14.9 rWAR), betting on at least a little bit of bounce-back before a second trip to free agency surely felt very appealing.
Gabriel Moreno spent his offseason putting in work in his native Venezuela, getting himself prepared for the upcoming season. He was there in early January when the U.S. military staged a raid and captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.
A new acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, assumed leadership of a shaky government already dealing with a collapsed economy, inflation, infrastructure failures and a general lack of basic human services.
“It’s hard, obviously, for the government,” Moreno said in Spanish. “But the world knows that Venezuelans want a good future for their country. I think most people are OK with things.”
Moreno hopes for a better future as well, starting with a healthy and productive 2026 season. He’s been limited by various injuries over the past two seasons, including thumb and groin injuries in 2024 and a broken finger on his right hand, the one with which he throws, that cost him two months in 2025.
As months passed and other teams in the American League East created headlines with big-ticket additions, Judge said he voiced his impatience with management, waiting for a headline-grabbing move in the Bronx.
“Early on, it was pretty tough to watch,” Judge said. “I’m like, ‘Man, we’re the New York Yankees. Let’s go out there and get the right people, the right pieces to go out there and finish this thing off.’”
2026 Top 100 Prospects by Eric Longenhagen, Brendan Gawlowski and James Fegan [FanGraphs] {Ed. Note: D-backs on the list: #35 Ryan Waldschmidt and #98 Tommy Troy}
Waldschmidt started his amateur career on the infield, but has played on the grass exclusively as a pro. His feel for the outfield has matured to the point where he projects above average in a corner. He’s played a handful of games in center, but isn’t really a fit there. No matter. The bat should carry Waldschmidt to a productive career, and he projects as a middle-of-the-order hitter. It’s a power-and-OBP-over-hit skill set, and at the low end of his range of outcomes, he may just strike out too much to be more than a part-time player. But Waldschmidt’s median outcome is as a regular, and there’s 30-homer upside if everything clicks. He should arrive in the desert early in the 2026 season, and the injury to Corbin Carroll could propel him onto the Opening Day roster.
San Diego continues to stockpile potential back-end starters. The Padres agreed to big league deals with Griffin Canning and Germán Márquez over the weekend. Buehler settles for a non-roster invitation, which seemingly puts him a little behind the other two veteran righties as camp gets underway. (Canning is coming back from an Achilles tear and is questionable for Opening Day). Buehler has been the most accomplished of that trio over the course of his career, though, so it’d hardly be a surprise if he pitches his way onto the roster.
The Friars have three locks for the Opening Day rotation: Nick Pivetta, Michael King and Joe Musgrove. First-year skipper Craig Stammen implied last week that righty Randy Vásquez has a leg up on the fourth starter role after a solid finish last year. Márquez, Canning (if healthy) and JP Sears are the top options on the 40-man roster for the fifth starter job. Matt Waldron also remains on the 40-man but is out of options and coming off a rough season in Triple-A. Buehler joins Triston McKenzieand Marco Gonzales among the non-roster invitees.
At the club’s spring complex in Port St. Lucie, Cohen declared that he will not allow an official “C” on anyone’s jersey while he owns the franchise. “As long as I’m owning the team, there will never be a team captain,” Cohen said to reporters, including MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo. Cohen presented the move as a philosophical choice rather than a reactionary one. In his view, the clubhouse should define its own hierarchy organically, year by year, rather than through a front-office designation.
That stance lands differently in Queens, where captaincy has historically meant something.
The Mets have named only four captains in franchise history: Keith Hernandez, Gary Carter, John Franco, and David Wright. Each represented not just on-field excellence but cultural identity. Wright, in particular, bridged eras—from the late Shea Stadium years to Citi Field—embodying stability amid turbulent seasons.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - AUGUST 29: Sean Murphy #12 of the Atlanta Braves in action during a game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on August 29, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Ah, Sean Murphy. There’s a long tradition of guys being the guy to draw the most rancor debate-wise in Braves fandom, and, well, Sean Murphy bears that mantle now. No one was complaining about Murphy shortly into the 2023 season, or in the aftermath of that season, but things haven’t gone great for him since.
Murphy got hurt on Opening Day of 2024, and seemed pretty impaired after returning, something that the bat speed data easily confirms. In 2025, Murphy didn’t even wait until Opening Day, suffering a fractured rib in Spring Training. At this point, you all know how that season ended: with Murphy finally calling it quits on trying to play through a hip labrum issue that had apparently been bugging him for much of or all of his entire Braves tenure. Oy. What happens now, with playing time far less guaranteed than before given the emergence of Drake Baldwin, is murky.
Career-to-date, status
Murphy was having a quiet-yet-monstrous career when the Braves traded for him, as he had amassed 10.5 fWAR in 1,260 PAs while playing in Oakland for parts of four seasons, including a massive 5.2 fWAR/612 PA campaign immediately before the trade. He was stellar both offensively (.343 xwOBA) and defensively (basically plus two wins per season, inclusive of positional adjustment), and if anything, his value was actually tamped down relative to his inputs because he substantially underhit his xwOBA in both 2021 and 2022.
After coming to Atlanta, the Braves seemingly gave him carte blanche to do his whole “swing incredibly hard in case you hit it” shtick, and he exploded with a .393 xwOBA while continuing to play elite defense. He earned 5.0 fWAR in just 438 PAs — that’s a nearly 7 WAR/600 rate for those that don’t want to do division and multiplication themselves. Again, Murphy substantially underhit his xwOBA despite dominating on the field.
Even before that new gear of performance in a new uniform, the Braves signed Murphy to a six-year, $73 million extension. Murphy is earning $15 million annual salaries through 2028, with a no-buyout club option for the same in 2029 as well.
Anyway, 2023 was awesome, but then the aforementioned injuries hit. In addition to coming back from those, Murphy turned 31 last October, so he’s likely in the latter half of his career at this point.
Recent performance
Nothing went right for Murphy in 2024, and it seems like he was playing hurt. He also continued to underhit his xwOBA, so while the griping about his circumstances goes beyond whether or not he gets his just deserts, there’s an undercurrent of “maybe we should be discussing if Sean Murphy has a slice or whatever like we did endlessly with Marcell Ozuna” there too. Murphy was still good defensively in 2024, but not as good as in 2023 and before. His bat speed collapsed, and his offensive profile, which was built around doing damage on contact, went with it. He tallied 0.8 fWAR in 264 PAs in 2024, though if you knock the xwOBA underperformance out, that probably would’ve doubled by my very rough math.
2025 was an improvement as he rebounded defensively, and also, he finally stopped being plagued by xwOBA underperformance. Unfortunately, his xwOBA ended up largely the same as 2024, and his bat speed collapsed even further. The rest of the offensive signs were all kind of a jumble — his contact quality actually rebounded, but he started missing pitches. It’s hard to say what was an adjustment to playing hurt, what was an adjustment to new offensive instruction the team received, what was natural variation in a small sample, and so on. It’s easier to note that Murphy had a no-complaints-here .352 wOBA / .332 xwOBA through the end of July, and then basically stopped hitting at all afterwards — even though this story, too, is made more complicated by the fact that he started swinging way harder while flailing. There are mixed signals there, but fundamentally, it was Murphy’s defense keeping him productive and valuable in 2025, especially as hit bat slipped and he called it quits down the stretch.
Forecasting
Boy, this is another toughie. You have to factor in Murphy’s health (whether for good or for ill relative to his 2024-2025 performance) but also, separately, the availability of playing time. Murphy probably shouldn’t be DHing, but he might, and how often he DHes also has meaty implications for his value due to the huge swing between his ability to rack up defensive value and the massive DH penalty to WAR.
IWAG basically thinks that Murphy will, for reasons other than season-ending hip surgery that was probably needed years ago, replicate 2025. The combination of injury-affecting-performance, persistent-ish xwOBA underperformance (look at that career .327/.345 gap in over 2,000 PAs), and the mess of signals that was his 2025 season appears to be pushing towards the system’s version of a “shrug, who knows, just stick with what happened more recently.” That’s fairly consistent with Steamer (albeit with better defense) and comes in well below ZiPS, which sees more of an offensive bounceback.
In some ways, the two humps here on the raw WAR chart are really just “Murphy is worth playing all the time” and “Murphy isn’t worth playing all the time.” It’ll be better for the team if he forces the Braves to make tough decisions about how often Drake Baldwin plays, but there’s a substantial likelihood that the combination of his availability and performance level give him useful backup levels of production and not much else.
Your turn
Alright, I’ve given you the info. Well, some info. You may have your own info. With that, I ask you:
How confident are you in your choice? Go with a scale from 1-5, where 3 is “I dunno, reasonably confident,” 5 is certain, and 1 is “I am participating but have no confidence in my choice and don’t want the fact that it will likely be incorrect to affect my place in any theoretical standings all that much.”
Rounded to the nearest fWAR, how much will Sean Murphy produce in 2026?
BALTIMORE, MD - SEPTEMBER 19: Ryan Mountcastle #6 of the Baltimore Orioles rounds the bases during the game between the New York Yankees and the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on Friday, September 19, 2025 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Alyssa Howell/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The current buzz out of Sarasota has seemingly shifted from which players the Orioles may add to the roster to who may soon be heading out the door. MLB Insider Ken Rosenthal recently reported that, after further fortifying the pitching rotation with veteran Chris Bassitt, the O’s have now turned their attention to potential trades for Ryan Mountcastle and Coby Mayo.
On the surface, it’s easy to see the logic behind shipping out one or both of Mayo and Mountcastle. Their ability to coexist on the 2026 Orioles roster always seemed tenuous at best. Both are big, right-handed power bats who offer some positional flexibility, but really fit best at 1B. Getting both of them enough at-bats in Baltimore, while also planning for Samuel Basallo to play some first, was always going to be a tough thing to achieve.
And that was before the front office made the biggest move of their offseason and signed Pete Alonso. The Orioles now have 155 million reasons to justify why Alonso will be their everyday 1B going forward. Over his last four seasons with the Mets, the Polar Bear has averaged 40 HRs per season and steps into the Orioles lineup as Baltimore’s biggest run-producing threat. And sure, he’ll probably see some time at DH this season, but not enough to facilitate significant playing time at first for Mounty, Mayo and Basallo.
With the injury to Jackson Holliday, it’s currently possible to keep all three on the roster without things getting too awkward. The likely Opening Day infield will see Alonso at first, some combination of Blaze Alexander and Jordan Westburg at second and third, with Gunnar Henderson manning short. That leaves Mayo as the backup third baseman and Mountcastle in the Ryan O’Hearn, sometimes 1B/sometimes RF, position. It’s far from a perfectly balanced roster, considering the O’s will also likely carry five outfielders and only three middle infielders.
However, just because keeping Mountcastle and Mayo presents a roster construction problem, it doesn’t mean trading them before the season starts makes the most sense for this team. Mountcastle is coming off the worst season of his MLB career. A hamstring injury limited him to 89 games, and by the time he came back in early August, the Orioles’ season was already lost. Right after coming off the injured list, it looked like Mounty was back to his best self—slashing .305/.348/.463 over 21 games in August. That production completely dried up in September, though, as RMC’s average dropped to .190, his OPS dipped to .522, and he ultimately ceded a lot of his playing time to Mayo.
Trading Mountcastle now seems unlikely to return something that would actually make the Orioles better right now. As someone coming off a down season in the last year of his contract, Mounty is not exactly at the peak of his trade value. The soon-to-be 29-year-old wouldn’t command a starting pitcher better than Dean Kremer, Zach Eflin, or Chris Bassitt. It seems unlikely that he could even get the Orioles back a reliever who would significantly improve their bullpen.
Mountcastle’s biggest asset has always been his ability to mash left-handed pitching. He’s a career .282 hitter against lefties, with a .813 OPS and a 116 OPS+. That production was nowhere to be found in 2025, though. In his limited game time last year, his OPS against lefties dropped to .598 and he failed to register a homer against LHPs for the first time since the pandemic-shortened 2020 season.
Even with Alonso, Taylor Ward and Tyler O’Neill on the roster, Mounty should still see plenty of opportunities in lineups against LHPs. If he can do damage against southpaws again, he’ll either prove himself valuable enough to stay an Oriole or valuable enough to trade at the deadline for a player that can make a difference in 2026.
With Mayo, much of his value is based on potential rather than actual production. His scouting profile and minor league production show a player with an Alonso-like ceiling. No, he’ll never come close to competing for a batting title, and he’ll always probably strike out more than you’d like, but there’s real 30+/year power in the 24-year-old’s bat as we glimpsed at the end of last season.
In his first meaningful taste of big league action, we got a tale of two Mayo’s in 2025. In 79 ABs before the All-Star break, we saw a player clearly struggling to adapt to the majors while coping with the inconsistent nature of his playing time—all of which culminated in a .203 average, .563 OPS and a 28% strikeout rate.
But as his playing time grew, so did his confidence and production. Mayo got 184 ABs after the break, and turned that opportunity into a .223 average, a .740 OPS and 10 HRs. Strikeouts were still a big problem, as his K rate grew to an alarming 34%, but the signs of a real, Major League contributor were there.
The South Florida native has plenty of things working in his favor that make him a more valuable trade chip than Mountcastle. He’s five years younger, with a higher ceiling and five additional years of team control. That alone could make him attractive to teams who are looking to build for the future, but do those teams really have players who would make the Orioles better right now?
Many have suggested the idea of trading Mayo to his hometown Marlinsto bring back pitching. However, with the recent struggles of Sandy Alcantara and the Miami unlikely to entertain a trade for Eury Pérez, it seems unlikely that Mayo would bring back a pitcher who actually makes Baltimore’s rotation better. The same could be said for teams like the Pirates or Rockies, who could certainly hold interest in Mayo but lack the pitchers to make it worth the Orioles’ while.
For years, we’ve all clamored for Mike Elias & Co. to be more aggressive in using trades to make immediate improvements to the Orioles roster. And now, it seems they have the perfect opportunity with a clear surplus in one position and needs elsewhere on the roster. And yet, if finding the ideal, “win-now” trade partner for Mountcastle or Mayo was so easy, they’d be on other teams by now. Instead, their best place (for now) is still in Baltimore, where they’ll look to carve out a role in one of the AL’s most intriguing lineups.
NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 13: Jacob deGrom looks on during the Alumni Classic prior to the game between the Texas Rangers and the New York Mets at Citi Field on Saturday, September 13, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by Michael Urakami/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Good morning.
Were the vibes just rancid without Austin Hedges? Evan Grant writes about Corey Seager facing the media to discuss the clubhouse culture for the Texas Rangers in recent years.
Kennedi Landry writes that Seager downplayed any bad blood between himself and departed former keystone partner Marcus Semien.
Jeff Wilson writes that Seager is eager to buy into the culture that new manager Skip Schumaker intends to instill.
Shawn McFarland writes that Schumaker has answered one of three questions regarding his outfield with Brandon Nimmo officially moving to right field.
Landry names Kumar Rocker as the Ranger with the most to prove this spring as he tries to graduate from prospect on the cusp to full-fledged big leaguer.
So far so good as Grant notes that Rocker impressed with a new devotion to a changeup during live batting practice in Surprise yesterday.
CINCINNATI, OHIO - AUGUST 01: Austin Riley #27 of the Atlanta Braves at bat against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on August 01, 2025 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images) | Getty Images
For once, the Braves were able to make it through a day without any further injury news (knock on wood that becomes the norm.) And while Monday was a slow news day overall, it was fun to see JR Ritchie and Didier Fuentes named in the top 100 prospects at Fangraphs. While it is surprising that Cam Caminiti was not on the list, these three young arms appear to be the best of Atlanta’s farm system currently. Their development will be a big story line this season.
Braves News
Austin Riley talks expectations for him with the Braves this year, a year in which Riley envisions his production to return to expected form.
Caleb Bonemer’s raw power has him sitting pretty in the Top 40 of FanGraphs’ latest rankings. | Diamond Images/Getty Images
The FanGraphs Top 100 list dropped yesterday, and if you’re looking for a reason to actually pay attention to the 2026 season beyond “the weather might be nice in May,” Eric Longenhagen and friends just provided a small, 50-FV-sized dose of Vitamin C for a malnourished fan base.
In a system that has spent the last few years looking like a construction site where the foreman lost the blueprints, there finally seems to be a tangible core of talent cresting the horizon.
While the Sox have been a “pitching-first” factory lately, the list features two bats that couldn’t be more different if they tried.
Caleb Bonemer (No. 33, 50 FV): He is officially the standard-bearer for the South Side’s future, that is, until Roch Cholowsky comes a callin’. Landing in the Top 40, Bonemer is the “Prove It” prospect for a front office that has historically struggled with prep bats. ETA: 2029.
Braden Montgomery (No. 100, 50 FV): The switch-hitting outfielder just barely squeezed onto the list. He’s a “boom-or-bust” archetype with massive raw power but significant swing-and-miss concerns. If he makes enough contact, he’s a 30-HR threat; if not, he’s a cautionary tale. ETA: 2027, although with a strong spring, he could get the Chase Meidroth treatment and be up by April.
The Sox have specialized in “weird” lefties lately, and this list reflects that obsession.
Noah Schultz (No. 36, 50 FV): He remains the highest-ranked arm in the system despite a “down” 2025, where his walk rate ballooned in Double-A. The 65-grade slider is still a nightmare for hitters, and FanGraphs is betting on the 6’10” frame eventually finding the zone. He’s the most likely “ace” outcome in the system. ETA: 2026.
Hagen Smith (No. 65, 50 FV): The 2024 first-rounder is the ultimate enigma. His fastball can touch triple digits, and his slider is elite, but a 6.66 BB/9 last season has Chris Getz checking his blood pressure. If the command moves from “catastrophic” to “below average,” he’s a frontline starter. ETA: 2027.
Christian Oppor (No. 95, 50 FV): A massive riser in the system, Oppor took a leap forward in 2025. He’s another southpaw with a mid-rotation ceiling who finally found a way to use his lean frame to generate consistent stuff. He’s the “sleeper” who isn’t sleeping anymore. ETA: 2027.
While technically just outside the “Top 100,” Tanner McDougal is essentially in the same tier. After a breakout in Double-A where he shaved his BB/9 to 3.89, he’s positioned himself as a potential mid-rotation stabilizer. He’s the “high-floor” counterweight to the “all-ceiling” Schultz and Smith. ETA: 2026.
The 2026 list is a sobering reminder of where the White Sox stand. While the quantity is finally there with placing five guys in the top 100 and another at 104, it’s a group defined by volatility. There are a lot of 50-FV grades here, meaning the Sox have a bunch of “solid everyday players” in the oven, but we’re still waiting for someone to leap into the 60+ FV “Superstar” tier. Again, paging Roch Cholowsky. But for today, we hang our hats on the fact that the South Side has a core to dream on. It sure is better than starving.
What do you think, Sox fans? Does seeing five names in the Top 100 make the potential for the future feel real, or are you worried that Rebuild 2.0 will end up like 1.0?
PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 16: New York Mets owner Steve Cohen speaks to press during spring training workouts at Clover Park on February 16, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Steve Cohen spoke to the media on the first official day of spring training. He spoke about being annoyed with the team’s inconsistency in recent years and declared that, as long as he is owner, there will never be a captain on the Mets. He also talked about being a “league first” owner with respect to the salary cap and will look at both sides of the argument.
A lot of folks were impressed by Christian Scott’s session yesterday, including Carlos Mendoza, who praised his cutter, and John Harper, who believes Scott will be in the rotation at some point. It’s unlikely he’ll be ready for Opening Day.
Scott represents a reminder of the team’s rotation potential as he works his way back from an elbow injury.
The Mets have a lot of questions heading into the 2026 season, but so do their NL East foes, argues Joel Sherman.
Citi Field has been once again been nominated for best stadium food in baseball. You can vote here to crown Citi Field as the top dog of selling hot dogs (and other, more fancy, ballpark eats).
Tom Seaver’s impressive collection, including his 1969 Mets World Series Ring, is heading to auction.
Around the National League East
Ex-Mets reliever Drew Smith has signed a minor league deal with the Nationals that would pay him $1.75 million if he makes the team and includes $1.25 million in performance bonuses.
Nick Tricome argued that perhaps it is best for the Phillies and Bryce Harper to be uncomfortable.
Braves’ skipper Walt Weiss described Ronald Acuña Jr. as a “bull ready for door to open”, adding that the Braves’ star is in a good place mentally and emotionally.
Is this finally the year for one of these teams with an epic title drought? Will Leitch made the case for some clubs that could finally break through in 2026.
Spring Training is an opportunity for players to show something to their teams. The MLB.com staff picked out a player on each squad with the most to prove, including Kodai Senga for the Mets.
Buster Olney listed the top ten starting pitchers in baseball right now.
Vlad Guerrero Jr. has entered spring training happier than ever.
Mike Trout is healthy heading into 2026 and looking to return to center field.
Corey Seager, ex-teammate of current Mets second baseman Marcus Semin, downplayed the rumored issues between the two as the Rangers enter a new era.
The hard-throwing Yankees’ prospect Carlos Lagrange is being thrown right into the fire in the Bronx, as he was put in to pitch against Aaron Judge.
Judge was frustrated by the Yankees’ slow winter, saying that he was waiting for the team to go out there and find the right people. However, he now believes the team is in a good spot.
Tommy Edman of the Dodgers is dealing with an ankle injury, and it sounds like he won’t be ready for Opening Day.
GLENDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 13: Alex Freeland #76 of the Los Angeles Dodgers participates in a fielding drill during spring training workouts at Camelback Ranch on February 13, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images
With confirmation on Monday from manager Dave Roberts that Tommy Edman will begin the season on the injured list, naturally conversation turned to what is now an open competition in Dodgers camp for playing time at second base.
Miguel Rojas will be in the mix, as will veteran Santiago Espinal, who signed a minor league deal on Monday. Hyeseong Kim and Alex Freeland, who each made their MLB debuts in 2025, will also vie for playing time and a potential roster spot on a team that will be without both Edman and Kiké Hernández to open the season.
He indicated Monday that the Dodgers have suggested some more changes.
“The swing changes we made last year, I would say I felt about 70% comfortable,” Kim said through an interpreter. “And then this offseason and spring training, we were able to recognize some of the other stuff that we needed to work on, so I’m working very hard to make those changes again this year.”
In case you were wondering, six different Dodgers started at second base last year between the regular season and postseason: Edman 74 starts, Rojas 38, Kim 32, Freeland 11, Hernández nine, and Chris Taylor once.
Walker Buehler’s first season after the Dodgers saw him post a 4.93 ERA and 5.41 xERA in 126 innings with the Boston Red Sox and Philadelphia Phillies. He was active during the National League Division Series against the Dodgers but did not pitch. Now, the veteran right-hander signed a minor league deal with the San Diego Padres, trying to crack their depleted starting rotation. Kevin Acee at the San Diego Union-Tribune has more on Buehler’s new deal.
Monday was legendary sportscaster Jim Hill’s 50th anniversary on the airwaves in Los Angeles.
50 YEARS AGO TODAY, Jim Hill hit the airwaves in Los Angeles for the very first time! 🏈 🎤 @Patharveynews tells Jim’s story — from the NFL to interviews with all of LA’s sports stars. What’s your favorite Jim Hill memory? #Jim50@CBSLosAngelespic.twitter.com/G7gn9GDdf6
“If you look at baseball right now, there’s a lot of really nice tailwinds. Attendance is up, ratings are up. There’s a lot of things going in the right direction. We’ve got a lot of good young stars and exciting young players, and that’s all going well.
“There are some challenges. The regional sports network model has been under pressure for the last few years. Certain teams felt it the most this offseason, and it’ll take a while for it to work out, but it’s certainly a challenge for the entire league.” — Tom Ricketts.
Marquee had a series of player interviews — here’s the playlist. (FYI, I will remove these periodically.) Lots more video below.
Brett Taylor had some words about the Ben Cowles DFA in his bullets, where he speculated that the reassignment bid might be about Cowles/Owen Miller more than Steele. I dunno. Miller’s 29 and has had enough cups of coffee to equal just about two MLB seasons. and the data isn’t prepossessing. But maybe. I think they’re just doing it now to avoid waiver claims, which are unlikely with everyone at full-40 this early. Miller isn’t better than Cowles, or Triantos, or Ramirez, which I think is the depth order behind Shaw.
As always, developments. We practice patience.
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CLEARWATER, FL - MARCH 05: Brett Pill (84) of the Tigers is congratulated in the dugout after hitting a home run during the spring training game between the Detroit Tigers and the Philadelphia Phillies on March 05, 2017 at Spectrum Field in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
The 2025 Colorado Rockies led in a number of categories that most MLB teams would prefer not to lead.
A case in point would be their Chase%, where the Rockies had an MLB-worst 31.7%. (The league average was 28.2%.) Learning to be more disciplined and discerning at the plate is a central challenge for the rebuilding Rockies.
Good news, everyone! There’s a plan.
Over the weekend, Rockies hitting coach Brett Pill explained how the Rockies intend to take on this challenge in the coming season; it involves using data, communication, and individualized instruction.
“Honestly, there’s no cookie-cutter-type approach to hitting,” Pill said. “You kind of take what the hitters do well and build on it, and then over time, closing up some of those weaknesses and things we can improve on.”
The approach varies depending on the issue and the player.
“You do that through stuff in the weight room and stuff with their swing and stuff with data,” Pill said. “So use every resource possible to help them have a solution for every type of pitcher and situation and thing they might encounter in the big leagues. It’s not always the best, sexiest answer.”
But it all starts with clear communication.
“Obviously, you’ve got to build relationships with each guy and know what makes them tick, what sports they played when they were younger. And so there’s a lot that goes into it.”
What about one of the first dragons the Rockies must slay, those unsightly chase rates? Pill sees a specialized, multi-pronged approach.
“Some guys, it could be an approach and what they’re looking for. Maybe they’re trying to hit every pitch the guy throws,” Pill said. “It could be mechanical. It could be how they’re moving at that certain point in time, which maybe we do stuff in the weight room for it.”
In addition to physical factors, players may need to address less-tangible issues.
“Obviously,” Pill said, “there’s an emotional part of chase, too. Sometimes you’re worried [the pitcher] might throw fastball middle-in, so you’re cheating. There’s an emotional-psychological aspect, too. Some guys sometimes get a little safe and actually swing and miss more. So some guys, you are are going to encourage, ‘Hey, let’s kind of let it go a little bit.’ Actually, (we’ve seen) a few different cases of that with different guys already, so it’s kind of cool to see. You try to get in there in different ways with different people, and hopefully on the whole general scale, it improves all that.”
Everything comes back to knowing players and providing personalized instruction.
“It’s not like a there’s a thing I can say on a whole team-wide scale that’s going to help the chase,” he said. “It’s you try to get in there in different ways with different people.”
Then there’s the matter of helping Rockies hitters learn to adjust to the challenges of elevation.
“I think most teams that come in see it as an advantage, so definitely need to keep that thought process at home: The ball does fly. It might move a little bit different,” Pill said. “So maybe the way we train before games, or how we visualize pitches we’re going to get will be a little different. The challenge seems to be when you leave there and then how balls are moving more.”
And he’s been working with some seasoned Rockies veterans.
“There’s a lot of good people here who went through it, like Charlie Blackmon, Matt Holliday — a lot of people who I’ve have already been been talking to and listening to the players, too, about it.”
He added, “Obviously (assistant hitting coach) Jordan Pacheco went through it. So I’m leaning on them a lot, to be honest. I think we’re going use it to our advantage at home, and then we’ll figure it out on the road.”
Pill especially enjoys the teaching component of coaching.
“It’s just constant teaching,” he said. “Even today in some of the live at-bats, it’s like, ‘Hey, what were you thinking on this pitch?’ How can we get ahead of that and give a feedback loop to it, constantly teaching and learning from them.”
Like the best teachers, Pill sees himself as a lifelong learner.
“I don’t want to sit here and say I’m going to teach them everything,” Pill said. “I’m going to learn from them — maybe things I learned from the players, I apply to other guys in the future. So that’s why I love it so much. It’s just constantly helping guys get better because I remember being like an up-down guy and trying to break in. I had a lot of good coaches, too, but sometimes, you wish you just someone was always there with you every step of the way.”
He also shares manager Warren Schaeffer’s commitment to connection and communication.
“You might have the best info ever,” Pill said, “but if they don’t really feel that connection and know that you want the best for them and know that you’re at home thinking about ways to get them better every night, it doesn’t really hit.”
Then there’s the matter of working with a young team.
“They’re all physically gifted,” Pill said. “It’s honestly kind of crazy to come in here, and I feel like I’m looking up at everyone, and they’re all really strong and fast, and so there’s a lot of really good athletes.”
Prior to joining the Rockies, Pill was a hitting coach in the Los Angeles Dodgers minor-league system.
Third baseman (and long-time denizen of the Dodgers clubhouse) Kyle Karros is happy to see Pill on the Rockies coaching staff.
“I’ve done a lot of work with [Pill], our hitting coach,” Karros said. “He’s obviously one of those guys who came over from the Dodgers, and we’ve been seeing eye-to-eye a ton. I’m hitting the ball harder than I’ve ever hit it. Things are going really well offensively for me so far. So I really like what we’re doing.”
Some of what he learned from the Dodgers, Pill’s bringing with him to Colorado.
“They obviously do some really good things on the game-planning side, preparing for pitchers, obviously really good there. So [we’ll] use some of that stuff here, in addition to what they’ve already been doing.”
Then he added, “But the main thing over there, as far as with player development, was being extremely curious and creative and, again, not just going by the standard stuff. So that’s what I hope to bring here and inspire people to do, too, is just be obsessive with trying to get people better, use every avenue possible, and just never stop grinding.”
In moving the Rockies, Pill will continue working with former Dodger and current general manager Josh Byrnes, who, as Pills puts is, “is invested in hitting and knows his stuff.”
“When I heard he wanted to bring me along over here,” Pill said, “it was definitely hard to pass up because he’s great. He remembers everything he’s ever seen on a baseball field. I pick his brain all the time.”
Schaeffer is positive about what Pill brings to the Rockies.
“He’s fantastic,” Schaeffer said. “He has a really, really solid background. He has just been fantastic so far in there in terms of his preparation and what he’s working with the guys on.”
Plus, for Schaeffer, Pill’s outside perspective plus Pacheco’s inside knowledge give the Rockies a powerful combination.
“It’s important to have a balance. (Getting) outside ideas from from Pill is going to be a huge, huge factor, in terms of everything, actually — in terms of how you teach hitting, in terms of culture, the whole thing.”
Quinton Lucas gave a State of the City address and noted his desire to keep the Royals in KCMO. John Sherman had some comments.
Word got back to Royals owner John Sherman. On Monday, Sherman addressed Lucas’ speech and offered his takeaway. “I appreciate him wanting to do that,” Sherman said. “And I appreciate that he is working very hard at that. I appreciate the work he is doing. You know, we’re not settled yet anywhere, but I would tell you, I don’t think we are that far away.”
“I’ve got a great sense of urgency on this. Time is not our friend. When the Chiefs made their announcement [to move to Kansas] in December, there was a whole new wave of enthusiasm on the Missouri side. And I don’t mean they weren’t working hard, but from the governor on down, there’s a lot of effort being put forth. We’re still evaluating Kansas, and we’re still evaluating multiple locations in Missouri, but I do appreciate the effort that’s being put forth, not only by the mayor but by the governor.”
Anne wrote about the vibes going into Spring Training as a player-led meeting took place.
“We’ve always kind of talked about it, but we’ve never really had our own kind of philosophy,” shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. said. “We just believe if everyone abides by that and comes together to do that, then I think we have the right team, players, staff, to go a long way.”
Instead of an explanation from the front office or staff, this year it was a group of players delivering the message – something they’ve wanted to do for a few years now, Witt said.
“The 2014-15 teams, they had an identity,” Witt said. “What’s our identity? What’s it going to be? We can do this because I think the team we have is special. Everyone believes it, and it’s going to go a long way.”
Jaylon Thompson talks to Bobby Witt Jr about playing in the upcoming World Baseball Classic against some of his own teammates.
“It’s always fun getting to face up against those guys,” Witt said. “You saw it whenever Kobe (Bryant) was doing it with Team USA — he (plowed through) a screen through Paul Gasol or whoever it was. When you are out there, you’re trying to win. That’s what my mantra is. They’re teammates now, and when that comes, we’re still teammates. “But for me, I always want to win.”
After 2021, the health deteriorated for Means. He underwent Tommy John Surgery in April 2022. He worked his way back, reaching the big leagues briefly in 2023 before undergoing a second Tommy John Surgery in June 2024. That would spell the end of his time in Baltimore, signing a two-year contract with Cleveland before 2025. Means worked his way back, making seven minor league starts for the Guardians a season ago. Then, in December, while training, Means ruptured his Achilles just weeks after he saw his $6 million 2026 club option declined.
For the Royals, that means Means (well, that felt weird to type) will miss all of 2026 and hope to contribute in 2027. By that point, he will be in his age-33 season and two full seasons removed from any MLB action. It will be five seasons since he had any lengthy MLB time under his belt, making him a worthwhile dart throw, but hardly someone that fans should be locking in their memory bank as a key piece of the team’s 2027 plans.
Twins pitcher Pablo López experienced soreness in his elbow and will get an MRI.
The Miami Dolphins released former Kansas City Chiefs WR Tyreek Hill on Monday.
As expected, the US women’s hockey team will face Canada for the gold medal.
Off Topic: My kid fell into the creek playing at the park yesterday. Small creek, so he’s fine, no issues, just got wet. Every kid’s gotta get wet in the creek at some point.
Your song of the day is Above & Beyond with On My Way To Heaven