Brewers come out swinging in 9-3 rout of Cubs

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - MAY 18: Jake Bauers #9 and Andrew Vaughn #28 of the Milwaukee Brewers high five after Bauers's three-run home run in the fifth inning of the game against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on May 18, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Zoe Davis/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In the first of 13 meetings between the Brewers and Cubs this season, the Brewers set the tone for these matchups. Though the Cubs were riding a 15-game home winning streak and had their ace on the mound, it didn’t faze the Brewers at all. They scored eight runs off of Shota Imanaga as they rolled to a 9-3 victory in the season opener.

Early on, Imanaga looked strong for the Cubs. He got through the first with just eight pitches. Jackson Chourio flew out on the first pitch of the game, Brice Turang struck out on four pitches, and William Contreras grounded out. Meanwhile, Brandon Sproat had an opposite start. Eight of his first 11 pitches were balls as he walked the first two batters. He recovered, but not without a little tension. Two fly balls were deep on a windy day but remained in the ballpark and were easy fly outs. They were sandwiched with a strikeout of Alex Bregman, and the game remained scoreless.

Christian Yelich put the Brewers ahead with the first pitch of the second inning. With the wind blowing out, Yelich hit a no-doubt home run. It had an exit velocity of 109.3 mph and hit off the right field scoreboard. The Brewers took the early 1-0 lead.

The bottom of the second inning began with an odd sequence. On the first pitch of the at-bat to Michael Conforto, Contreras challenged the ball call. The ABS replay on the TV broadcast showed that it was barely a strike —it just clipped the tip of the corner of the strike zone — but it was never shown in the ballpark. The umpire said that the call was upheld, but the Brewers retained their challenge. This led to some confusion on if the Brewers had 1 or 2 ABS challenges. Sproat finished the at-bat by striking out Conforto, and it was confirmed later by MLB that the Brewers retained both challenges. It was a nice recovery for Sproat, who retired the side in order in the second, and struck out two.

After both starters traded mostly clean third innings, the Brewers unleashed their offense in the fourth. Contreras led off the inning with a single, then advanced to second on a Yelich ground ball that Nico Hoerner made a great play on. That didn’t deter the offense as Andrew Vaughn hit an infield single to put runners at the corners. Bauers cashed in the first run of the inning with a single up the inning, increasing the lead to 2-0.

Imanaga still had a chance to limit the damage after striking out Luis Rengifo. Sal Frelick didn’t let that happen, hitting a double into the left field corner to score both Vaughn and Bauers, increasing the lead to 4-0.

Joey Ortiz kept the inning going by drawing a walk, and Jackson Chourio brought in another run with another single up the middle, and the lead was up to 5-0.

Imanaga remained in the game to start the fifth inning, but the Brewers kept piling on. Yelich drew a one-out walk, and Vaughn hit a double into the left-field corner that put runners at second and third. Bauers then ended Imanaga’s day with another no-doubt home run off the right-field scoreboard, and the rout was on at 8-0. It had a slightly slower exit velocity of 106.2 mph, but a longer distance at 419 feet. Imanaga finished the day at 4 1/3 innings pitched with eight runs, nine hits, and three walks allowed. He only struck out two in the game.

Meanwhile, Sproat had recovered from a long first inning with three quicker innings, and had not allowed a hit going into the fifth inning. He also had a healthy 55-pitch count. He couldn’t keep the Cubs down, though. After Carson Kelly singled to lead off the inning, Dansby Swanson hit one out to left field and the Cubs were on the board, 8-2. Hoerner followed that with a walk, and Busch hit a double to deep center to score him. Sproat recovered by getting Bregman to ground out, but that was the end of his day. Unfortunately, the fifth destroyed his final line for the day. He allowed three runs in 4 2/3 innings, with three hits and three walks while striking out five. Shane Drohan finished the fifth with a strikeout of Happ.

The Brewers got one back in the next inning. After Turang drew a walk and Contreras singled (both with two outs), Yelich hit a fly ball down the left field line that fell just fair in front of Happ. The bounce let Yelich reach second, pushing the lead back to 9-3.

From there, the Brewers brought in Blake Perkins to tighten up the defense — with Chourio moving to left and Bauers moving to first base. The bullpens took over, and while they did bend, they did not break. Drohan pitched the remaining 4 1/3 innings of the game, allowing four hits but no runs while striking out five. He earned the win instead of a save since he finished the fifth for Sproat. For the Cubs, Ethan Roberts allowed the run and three hits in the sixth inning, but that was all in 1 2/3 innings of work. Ty Blach limited the Brewers’ offense to one hit in the final three innings of the game, striking out two.

Overall, it was a balanced day for the Brewers’ offense. Eight of the nine starters recorded a hit, with only Turang going hitless — though he did draw a walk and score a run. Chourio, Contreras, Yelich, Vaughn, and Bauers all had two-hit days, and Yelich and Vaughn also drew walks to reach base three times. Bauers drove in four of the nine runs as he extended his on-base streak to 19 games. The Brewers went 6-for-9 with runners in scoring position, compared to an 0-for-9 day for the Cubs.

With the win, the Brewers move within a half-game of the Cubs for first place in the division, and hold a one-game lead in the loss column. They also head into tomorrow’s game with Jacob Misiorowski on the mound, who will face Ben Brown of the Cubs. First pitch is at 6:40 p.m.

Another Frustrating Loss For The Jays

May 18, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Toronto Blue Jays second baseman Lenyn Sosa (50) forces out New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) at second base on a throw from Blue Jays shortstop Ernie Clement (22) and throws to first base to attempt a double play on a ball hit by Yankees left fielder Max Schuemann (not pictured) during the sixth inning at Yankee Stadium. Schuemann was safe at first on the play. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Jays 6 Yankees 7

The Jays turned in one inning. Going into the seventh, the Jays were up 5-3. Adam Macko is in and gets the first two outs of the inning, but, with Aaron Judge coming up, John Schneider goes with a right-hander, Yariel Rodriguez. Understandable, Judge is much better vs lefties. And I like getting Macko out while he can feel really good about himself. Faced three batters, got three outs. A great start to a career. Rodriguez had faced eight batters and allowed one hit since coming up.

But he had nothing tonight:

  • Judge single.
  • Bellinger home run. Tie game.
  • Trent Grisham walks and steals. Now would have been a good moment to pull Yariel.
  • Jazz Chisholm homers and we are down by two,
  • Then he got the last out. Some about horse and barn doors.

I am understanding that we have a bullpen day tomorrow. Hopefully with Spencer Miles doing 3-4 innings, but still we are going to use 5 or more pitchers tomorrow. But, Yariel didn’t have it and, well, tomorrow is tomorrow’s problem.


We had a shot in the ninth. David Bednar in for the Yankees and he does the near impossible, he walks Ernie Clement. Jesús Sánchez, pinch-hitting for Myles Straw, doubles on the sixth pitch of the at bat, to score Clement and become the tying run at second.

Brandon Valenzuela struck out on four pitches.

Yohendrick Piñango walks on six pitches.

George Springer takes three straight balls and swings at a pitch low and inside. 3-0 count, he should have been taking. Next pitch, very low, swings. Next pitch, even lower, swings. George’s job is to be the calm veteran. It was just an awful at bat,

Vladimir Guerrero up. Takes two balls. Swings at a pitch on the outside edge. Gameday has it as a strike, but he should be waiting for a middle middle strike. Pitch five was well outside, he swung. I mean, it was likely smart to be looking for something off the plate, the way Bednar is throwing, but no need to chase that far out. Pitch six was at the top of the zone, a strike, Vlad grounds it to second.


Beyond that, Patrick Corbin wasn’t sharp, 4 innings, 6 hits, 3 earned, three walks, 3 strikeouts. We were pretty lucky that he only gave up the 3 runs.

Braydon Fisher got five outs, giving up one it. Macko three straight outs. Hoffman finished the game, giving up just a hit in the inning.

We did score some:

  • Three in the fourth: Vlad and Kazuma Okamoto singled. Two outs later, Clement homered. He had a day.
  • One in the fifth: Springer homered.
  • One in the sixth: One out singles from Lenyn Sosa and Daulton Varsho puts runners on the corners (Sosa just beat out Judge’s throw). Clement ground out 6-4, to pick up his fourth RBI of the day,

And, of course, the one in the ninth.

We had nine his and three walks. Springer had two (but two and a walk would have been better). Straw and Schneider had 0 fors (of the starters).

Jays of the Day: Clement (0.42 WPA), Sanchez (0.21), Fisher (0.11), and Macko (0.10, getting a JoD in his first game).

Other Award: Rodriguez (-0.72), Corbin (-0.17), and Valenzuela (-0.17). Springer, despite the homer, and Vlad get honorary ‘Other Awards’ for those terrible ninth inning at bats.

Former Canucks In The 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs: Pearson, Schenn & Buffalo Eliminated By Montréal

Two former members of the Vancouver Canucks have officially been eliminated after the Montréal Canadiens won Game 7 of their second-round series against the Buffalo Sabres by a score of 3–2 in overtime. With ex-Canucks Tanner Pearson and Luke Schenn eliminated by the Canadiens, Jalen Chatfield of the Carolina Hurricanes and Nic Dowd and Ben Hutton of the Vegas Golden Knights are now the only former Canucks who currently remain in the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs. 

Buffalo and Montréal made their second-round series an exciting one, being the only duo in the bracket to play in seven games — the Colorado Avalanche and Golden Knights advanced in five and six games respectively, while the Hurricanes completed their second sweep of the post-season. There was never a point in their series in which Buffalo or Montréal led by more than a game. 

The Canadiens made things close in Game 6, looking as though they would eliminate the Sabres after putting three goals past Buffalo goaltender Alex Lyon during the first period. However, the Sabres roared back to win by a score of 8–3, forcing the series back to Buffalo. Montréal took a quick 2–0 lead in the first period of Game 7, though Buffalo stormed back to tie things at two apiece. During overtime, however, it was Canadiens forward Alex Newhook who beat Sabres goaltender Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen to win the series for his team.  

The only former Canuck to take part in this series was Luke Schenn, who the Sabres acquired at the trade deadline alongside fellow defenceman Logan Stanley. Schenn, who has now taken part in eight different post-season and won two Stanley Cups, skated in two games for Buffalo against Montréal. Throughout this span, he averaged 7:33 minutes played per game. 

May 18, 2026; Buffalo, New York, USA; Montréal Canadiens goaltender Jakub Dobes (75) makes a save on Buffalo Sabres left wing Jason Zucker (17) during the second period in game seven of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at KeyBank Center. Mandatory Credit: Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images
May 18, 2026; Buffalo, New York, USA; Montréal Canadiens goaltender Jakub Dobes (75) makes a save on Buffalo Sabres left wing Jason Zucker (17) during the second period in game seven of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at KeyBank Center. Mandatory Credit: Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

While Schenn was the only former Canuck to actually play in this series, he’s not the only one listed to Buffalo’s roster. Tanner Pearson, who spent nearly five seasons with the Canucks, was also acquired by the Sabres at this year’s trade deadline. Though he did skate in four regular-season games with Buffalo, he didn’t end up making his playoff debut for the Sabres. 

With their series win, the Canadiens will now face a high-powered Hurricanes team that has swept both of their past two opponents — the Ottawa Senators in the first-round, and the Philadelphia Flyers in the second. Carolina, despite often impressing in the first two rounds of the post-season, has not made it past the Eastern Conference Final since winning the Stanley Cup back in 2006. 

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Another Good Night for Cleveland in Detroit

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - MAY 18: José Ramírez #11 of the Cleveland Guardians high-fives teammates after hitting a solo home run against the Detroit Tigers during the top of the ninth inning at Comerica Park on May 18, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Guardians dominated the Tigers tonight, winning 8-2.

The game began inauspiciously with a Riley Greene double giving Detroit an early 1-0 lead. But, Cleveland went to work on Tigers’ starter Framber Valdez in the 3rd. Brayan Rocchio tripled

Angel Martinez grounded out, then Jose walked… the Chase DeLauter grounded out just softly enough to score Angel and force Jose out at second. Then Rhys Hoskins stepped in to deliver the go-ahead double:

Of course, when playing Framber Valdez, you have to be careful not to hurt his fragile ego by scoring too many runs.

Slade Cecconi continued to get Tigers out quickly, while the Guardians played with fire and scored another couple runs off Valdez in the fifth on a Rocchio walk, an Angel Martinez single, and a Jose single… followed by a DeLauter grounder and a Hoskins sacrifice fly. Goodbye, Framber. See ya later.

Speaking of Angel, no one told the Tigers not to throw him pitches a foot outside the zone:

Leading up to this pitch, Bazzana bunt singled:

Steven Kwan drew one of his three walks on the night, and Hedges sacrificed them over. Martinez’s single followed his AL player of the week award today:

Then, José doubled and followed his double with a homer in the 8th inning:

Slade ended up going 7 and 1/3rd, giving up two runs. It made him very happy:

Matt Festa closed the 8th out and then Peyton Pallette limped his way through the 9th, walking a batter and hitting another, forcing Stephen Vogt to warm up Cade Smith. I just don’t know how long they will continue to carry Pallette. He is very similar to what 2021 Trevor Stephan was. The problem is that this is not the 2021 Guardians. This group is a clear playoff contender. But, that’s a concern for another day. A big win and no inner circle of trust relievers used!

The Guardians are now five games over .500 and Travis Bazzana looks so real, folks. Let’s sleep well tonight

Yankees outlast Blue Jays in stressful rollercoaster win

May 18, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe (11) scores a run ahead of the tag by Toronto Blue Jays catcher Brandon Valenzuela (59) on a sacrifice fly by Yankees catcher J.C. Escarra (not pictured) during the fourth inning at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The Yankees desperately needed something positive Monday night and, the offense delivered. After a brutal 2-7 road trip that ended with another frustrating series loss in Queens, the Yankees returned to the Bronx looking for any sign of life.

Behind a huge night from Paul Goldschmidt, timely power from Cody Bellinger and Jazz Chisholm Jr., and a stressful but successful finish from David Bednar, the Yankees managed to hold off Toronto 7-6 to open an important four-game series against the Blue Jays.

Paul Goldschmidt wasted no time giving the Yankees life Monday night, launching a leadoff home run into right-center field to open the game. Goldschmidt’s fifth homer of the season immediately gave the Yankees a 1-0 lead and some early juice.

Ryan Weathers cruised through the early innings before the game suddenly flipped in the fourth. After Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Kazuma Okamoto reached on singles, Ernie Clement got just enough of a two-out, three-run homer into left-center field that gave Toronto a 3-1 lead.

The Yankees answered immediately in the bottom half of the inning, showing some fight. Anthony Volpe reached on a double after an out call was overturned and later scored using a nifty slide on a sacrifice fly from J.C. Escarra. That trimmed the deficit to one before Goldschmidt delivered again with two outs. The veteran first baseman lined a game-tying double into center field that scored Max Schuemann and tied the game at 3-3.

Unfortunately for the Yankees, the tie did not survive long. George Springer jumped on a Weathers offering in the fifth inning and launched a solo homer into left-center field to put Toronto back ahead 4-3.

Toronto added another run in the sixth inning after Lenyn Sosa and Daulton Varsho singled to chase Weathers from the game. Paul Blackburn relieved the left-hander and allowed Sosa to score on a Clement fielder’s choice.

Weathers’ final line was 5.1 innings of 5-run ball with 7 strikeouts and no walks. Outside of the two big mistakes, Weathers’ stuff otherwise looked impressive throughout the night.

The score held at 5-3 until the seventh inning. In the bottom of the frame, the Yankees offense decided it was not going quietly into the night. Yariel Rodríguez replaced Adam Macko, who looked sharp in his Major League debut.

The Yankees quickly lit Rodríguez up like a Coney Island booth. Aaron Judge singled before Cody Bellinger launched a ball 402 feet into the Yankees bullpen, tying the game at 5-5. However, the Yankees were not done there.

Trent Grisham worked a walk while pinch hitting for Amed Rosario before Jazz Chisholm Jr. lofted a ball down the left field line that provided a little music off the foul pole. Chisholm’s fifth home run of the season gave the Yankees a 7-5 lead and had the dugout, crowd, and several living rooms around the country rocking.

The bullpen must prefer the water in the Bronx. In relief of Weathers, Paul Blackburn worked 1.2 scoreless innings before Fernando Cruz struck out the side in the eighth inning. Aaron Boone then handed the ball to closer David Bednar for a chance at redemption, hoping the veteran right-hander would have a short memory.

Bednar walked the leadoff hitter and a collective tightening could immediately be felt throughout Yankee Stadium. Pinch hitter Jesús Sánchez then doubled into right field, scoring Ernie Clement all the way from first base and trimming the lead to 7-6. Groans could be heard, but overall the boos held.

With no outs, the Blue Jays attempted to advance the runner, but after a few failed tries Bednar finally got Brandon Valenzuela swinging on a nasty splitter. A long battle with Yohendrick Piñango then resulted in a walk and a mound visit from pitching coach Matt Blake before George Springer stepped to the plate.

Needing a strikeout or ground ball, Bednar quickly found himself in a 3-0 count with his pitch count already climbing. After getting Springer to swing through two splitters, Bednar went back to the pitch one more time and got the veteran outfielder swinging again for a massive second out.

With two outs, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. stepped to the plate representing the tying run. Bednar again fell behind 2-0 before battling back to even the count at 2-2. After the at-bat eventually ran full, Guerrero rolled a ground ball to Jazz Chisholm Jr. that resulted in a routine 4-3 putout and finally slammed the door shut.

It was a gutsy and badly needed win for the Yankees and, for one night at least, all was right in Yankee land. Blackburn picked up the win and Bednar gets his 11th save as the Yankees improved to 1-0 against Toronto in the series.

The Yankees will send Will Warren to the mound tomorrow night as he faces Blue Jays ace Dylan Cease. First pitch is once again scheduled for 7:05 p.m. Eastern in the Bronx.

Box Score

Cavaliers’ dynamic stars pose a daunting Knicks task they might be better equipped to handle

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Donovan Mitchell of the Cleveland Cavaliers dribbles the ball against the Detroit Pistons, Image 2 shows James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers handles the ball during Game Seven against the Detroit Pistons, Image 3 shows 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey drives to the basket with Knicks guard Mikal Bridges defending during an NBA playoff game
The Knicks will be tasked with stopping Donovan Mitchell and James Harden.

The roles have reversed.

The Knicks enter their second straight Eastern Conference finals as favorites against the Cavaliers, looking to make their first trip to the NBA Finals since 1999.

Three years ago, the Knicks entered the postseason as underdogs in Cleveland, looking to win their first playoff series in a decade.

“Obviously that being my first playoff series with this team was special, but we’re far removed from that,” Jalen Brunson said of the Knicks’ gentleman’s sweep. “I think both teams are different.”

In that first-round matchup, the Knicks held the Cavaliers to 18 points below their season average, as Donovan Mitchell shot 28.9 percent on 3-pointers and averaged 3.8 turnovers per game.

Mitchell scored 38 points in the Game 1 loss before Josh Hart helped limit the Cavs’ star to 19.5 points for the rest of the series.

Donovan Mitchell drives with the ball during the Cavaliers’ May 11 game against the Pistons. NBAE via Getty Images

“I don’t think I learned anything about myself,” Hart said Monday. “I’m a good player. I’m a good defender. And as a competitor, you want to have tough matchups like that to compete against the best.

“He’s an extremely talented offensive player. He takes tough shots, but he has the talent and the ability to make those tough shots.”

Now, the Knicks — who didn’t have OG Anunoby or Mikal Bridges in 2023 — may be even better equipped to slow the engines of Cleveland’s attack.

Hart and Bridges have been brick walls on wheels during the Knicks’ dominant postseason run.

In the first round, Bridges helped force Nickeil Alexander-Walker — the NBA’s Most Improved Player — into 38 percent shooting from the field, while Hart smothered CJ McCollum into 11.3 points on 39.5 percent shooting with 3.3 turnovers per game.

In the sweep of the 76ers, Bridges bothered Tyrese Maxey with his length, holding the league’s fifth-leading scorer 10 points below his scoring average. Maxey shot 15.8 percent on 3-pointers and committed 3.5 turnovers per game.

Bridges, who is four inches taller than Mitchell, could also make it tough for Cleveland’s go-to scorer to develop a rhythm in his first conference finals appearance.

James Harden drives with the ball during the Cavaliers’ May 17 game. NBAE via Getty Images
Mikal Bridges defends Tyrese Maxey during the Knicks’ May 6 game against the 76ers. Charles Wenzelberg

Mitchell has averaged 25.6 points during the postseason, shooting just 31.1 percent on 3-pointers.

But he is not alone.

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Cleveland’s Feb. 7 trade for James Harden added another future Hall of Famer to the backcourt, and the Cavs responded with the third-best clutch rating in the league, the fifth-best offensive rating and a 109-94 win over the Knicks — the only meeting featuring Harden — on Feb. 24 in Cleveland.

The deal raised the ceiling of the Cavs’ season, but the red flags that haunted Harden in his previous 16 postseason appearances have followed him, too.

Harden — who trails Karl Malone by six games for the most playoff games by any player without a championship — is averaging 20.1 points and 6.2 assists through the first two rounds of this postseason, but he is shooting 41.5 percent from the field and averaging the second-most turnovers per game (4.8) in the playoffs.

Still, the Knicks are preparing for a former MVP.

“He’s able to create a lot of offense for them,” Brunson said. “It’s like a pressure release for Donovan, as well. Donovan does so much for the team and then you have James in there and you have a whole other person you have to worry about, so they have so many different weapons, so many different options and ways they can beat you. They’re really dynamic.”

Mets score ten runs in twelfth inning to beat Nationals

Brett Baty celebrates with teammates in the dugout after hitting a home run in the fourth inning during the game between the New York Mets and the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on Monday, May 18, 2026 in Washington, District of Columbia.

The Mets and Nationals played an absolute slog of a game that lasted a little over four hours, but the Mets won 16-7 in the end. And hey, that beats the alternative.

The Mets got on the board first when Luis Torrens doubled on a ball that just passed over third base as it made its way down the left field line, driving in Tyrone Taylor in the process. But the Nationals answered with a pair of runs off Mets starter Christian Scott in the bottom of the inning. Jose Tena drove in a run with a double to tie the game, and later in the inning, he scored on a Drew Millas single to give the Nationals a 2-1 lead.

Washington added a run in the bottom of the third and really should’ve scored another. Joey Wiemer, who entered the game in place of Jacob Young after the latter took a fastball from Scott to the ribs, doubled in a run to extend the lead. Daylen Lile looked like he would’ve scored a fourth run for the Nationals, but he stumbled as he rounded third base and had to retreat. Scott escaped the inning without further damage.

Brett Baty hit an absolute shot of a solo home run in the top of the fourth to cut the Nationals’ lead in half, and a two-run single from Juan Soto put the Mets back in front in the top of the fifth.

While Scott only went four innings, Austin Warren threw a pair of scoreless innings, and Bo Bichette finally notched his first extra-base hit in forever with a solo home run to left-center in the top of the seventh. The Mets had a 5-3 lead.

Unfortunately, that wasn’t enough. Brooks Raley had his worst appearance of the season—and one of his worst as a Met—in the bottom of the inning. He served up a leadoff double to James Wood, issued back-to-back walks to load the bases, and gave up a sacrifice fly that got the Nationals within one.

Tobias Myers took over for Raley and go out of the inning with the lead intact, but Myers gave up a run of his own in the bottom of the eighth when Curtis Mead doubled to tie the game.

Luke Weaver got into trouble in the bottom of the ninth, too, but he managed to get through the inning and send the game to extra innings. And after the Mets failed to score with the free runner in the top of the tenth, thanks largely to Mark Vientos grounding into an inning-ending double play, Huascar Brazobán kept with the late-inning bullpen theme. He loaded the bases with one out, but he induced a weak ground ball for a force out at home plate for the second out before getting a strikeout to end the inning and send the game to the eleventh.

Marcus Semien gave the Mets the lead with a one-out sacrifice fly just a few feet shy of the left field fence in fair territory, as pinch runner Vidal Bruján, who entered the game as the free runner for a massive baserunning upgrade from Vientos, had advanced to third when Brett Baty lined out to center to begin the inning.

Once again, that was unfortunately not enough. Brazobán came back out for the bottom of the eleventh, and the cheapness of the Manfred runner was really apparent. The Nationals’ free runner advanced to third base on a soft tapper, and another weak ground ball allowed him to score the tying run.

Brazobán got the second out of the inning on a fielder’s choice grounder to first that Baty, who moved over to first after Vientos was lifted in the top of the inning, turned into an out at second base. Jorbit Vivas doubled, though, to put runners on second and third with two outs. Brazobán managed to keep the game alive again, though, when he induced a 6-3 ground ball to get the game to the twelfth.

And then the Mets scored ten runs in the top of the twelfth, as they scored five against Nationals reliever Paxton Schultz before Washington decided to give up on the game and put a position player on the mound. There was confusion among the umpires about whether or not that was allowed, which delayed the inning for a few minutes. But the Mets scored five more as they teed up on position player-turned pitcher Vivas.

That was—thank goodness—finally enough. Craig Kimbrel pitched the bottom of the twelfth and gave up a run, but he managed to finish the game without allowing more.

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Win Probability Added

FanGraphs WPA graph for Mets/Nationals on May 18, 2026

Big Mets winner: Bo Bichette, +29% WPA
Big Mets loser: Mark Vientos, -42% WPA
Mets pitchers: -24% WPA
Mets hitters: +74% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Nasim Nuñez grounds into a force out in the tenth, +18% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Curtis Mead doubles in a run in the eighth, -35% WPA
What’s WPA?

Mets score 10 runs in 12th for wild 16-7 extra-inning win over Nationals

The Mets couldn't hold a late two-run lead, but timely pitching in extra innings kept them alive before scoring 10 runs in the top half of the 12th for a 16-7 win over the Nationals in Washington on Monday.

The top of the 12th was the highest-scoring single inning of extra-inning baseball for a National League team in 107 years. For the Mets, it meant a sixth win in seven games and a third straight to see them improve to 21-26 on the season. Washington fell to 23-25.

Here are the takeaways...

- The Mets entered the game with the 11th-worst average with RISP (.242) and sixth-worst OPS with RISP (.679). They went down swinging in their first two chances in the first inning as Mark Vientos flailed at a 0-2 low-and-away breaking pitch and Brett Baty fanned on a 1-2 fastball above the zone.

Luis Torrens came through pulling a double down the third base line to score Tyrone Taylor from third on a 3-2 sweeper that stayed over the plate.

Bo Bichette got a chance with runners on first and second and nobody down in the fifth against Nats lefty reliever PJ Poulin, but hit a can of corn to right. Torrens and Carson Benge were aggressive to move up to put two in scoring position for Juan Soto, who shot the first pitch through the left side of the infield for a two-RBI single to give the Mets a 4-3 lead.

Bichette got the instant RBI chance to start the 10th and lined one down the line in right that James Wood tracked down in foul ground, advancing the runner to third. After Soto was walked intentionally, Vientos sharply hit into a 4-6-3 inning-ender.

Baty got the chance in the 11th with Vidal Brujan in as a pinch-runner at second, but his sharp liner to center only advanced the runner to third. Marcus Semien, 0-for-4 with two strikeouts to that point, plated the run with a sac fly to the wall in the left field corner to give them a one-run edge.

Hayden Senger, batting for the first time and Taylor on second in the 12th, laid down a perfect sacrifice bunt and Benge bounced an infield hit off pitcher Paxton Schultz's glove (98 mph off the bat) for the go-ahead RBI. After a single and a Soto intentional walk, Brujan got his first at-bat with the bases loaded and dropped down a bunt that just found the grass for an RBI and his first hit as a Met. Baty lined a 3-2 pitch through the right side of the infield to plate two, and with hustle put two in scoring position. Semien added an RBI single to right to make it a five-run inning off Schultz.

Nats manager Blake Butera then tried to bring in a position player to wave the white flag. The umpires at first tried to stop the change, but after checking with the league on the rules, they allowed the change as Jorbit Vivas entered. A.J. Ewing greeted the infielder on the hill with an RBI single to left on the first pitch. Against Vivas: Taylor flied out to the warning track in left, Senger loaded them with a single to right, Benge clobbered a ball to center to plate two more runs, Bichette scored two more with a double, and Soto popped out in foul ground. 

The Mets finished the day 9-for-20 with RISP and eight men left on base. Of course, with four hits in six chances against Vivas, who started the day as Washington's second baseman. 

Meanwhile, the Nats, baseball’s highest-scoring team, who entered batting .243 with RISP, went 4-for-16 in scoring chances with 19 left on base.

- Baty made up for his strikeout in his first at-bat, taking the first pitch of the fourth inning and hitting it a ton: 451 feet to center field (111.2 mph) for a solo home run off Nats' starter Jake Irvin. He finished 2-for-6 with three strikeouts.

- Taylor, Sunday's hero, got the start against a righty and got in scoring position in the second when he dropped a single to right before Wood made a pair of errors on the play, allowing him to reach third with two down in the second. (Wood’s miscue gave the Nats 45 errors on the year, most in baseball.) Taylor dropped in an opposite-field double that just stayed fair with two down in the fifth off lefty Mitchell Parker, but was left stranded. He finished 2-for-6.

- Bichette, who was hitless and got picked off at first after leading off the third with a walk, broke out of his homer slump by clobbering a high, hanging Parker curveball 409 feet into the Mets' bullpen in left. It was his first extra-base hit in 71 at-bats since his last homer 17 games ago against the Nats. He finished 3-for-6 with a walk, adding a 12th-inning single and then later a double.

- Austin Warren was first out of the Mets’ bullpen that was handed a lead and delivered a 1-2-3 fifth and got around a leadoff walk for a clean sixth, lowering his ERA to 0.61 on the year. 

Things didn’t start well for Brooks Raley in the seventh: A sweeper over the plate that Wood went for a double into the right field corner and back-to-back walks put the go-ahead run on first and brought pitching coach Justin Willard to the mound. Raley traded two outs for a run, with CJ Abrams lining a sac fly line to the edge of the track in center and Daylen Lile popping out on the infield. 

Tobias Myers got the call to put out the fire, and after issuing the Mets’ seventh walk of the night to load the bases, he blew a high fastball past Jose Tena to preserve the lead. Myers couldn't hold the lead in the eighth: Wood smoked a two-out single to right and came around to score when Curtis Mead got a fastball in and shot it into the right-center gap for a game-tying double. 

Luke Weaver, looking to extend the game in the ninth, allowed a single through the right side of the infield to Abrams and hit Joey Wiemer to put two on with one out. But a strikeout and a pop-out on the infield sent the game to the 10th.

Huascar Brazobán cleanly fielded the bunt to start the 10th and got the out at first. After walking Wood to put runners on the corners, Carlos Mendoza came out to talk strategy. Brazobán would walk the bases loaded, forcing the infield to come in against the speedy Nasim Nuñez. But the Mets escaped: Vientos fielded a hard-hit grounder to cut down the runner at the plate and Brazobán got Abrams to swing through at a pitch off the outside corner to leave the bases loaded.

It would be Brazobán, who threw just 11 pitches in the eventful previous inning to try and get the win, but he was burned by soft contact as a comebacker advanced the runner and an infield single tied the game. After a fielder's choice on a heads-up play by Baty cut down the runner at second, Vivas ripped a double to put two in scoring position. A bouncer to Brujan at short ended the threat.

Craig Kimbrel had to wait around a while to pitch the bottom of the 12th and allowed an RBI single to Wood and then a two-out double, but got the final out, closing the game in a breezy 4:08 and stranding two more in scoring position for good measure. 

- Christian Scott, who tossed a 13-pitch, 1-2-3, first inning, struck out the first two batters in the second before drilling Jacob Young with a 2-2 93 mph heater in the ribs, forcing Washington’s center fielder and Scott's teammate at Florida out of the game. Scott would for that mistake: He left a 0-2 cutter over the plate to Tena, who grooved it for an RBI double into the left-center gap, walked Vivas, and, after a mound visit, gave up an RBI single to center when Tena. A third strikeout ended the frame with New York down 2-1.

Scott got stung with two down again in the third, after a one-out single and a two-out walk, the starter left a heater up and away to Wiemer, who slammed it for an RBI double to right. Scott would strand two in scoring position (thanks to Lile tumbling around third on the double, preventing him from scoring) to limit the damage.

After throwing 52 pitches to get the last six outs, Scott surrendered a one-out walk but got a scoreless fourth with another strikeout to close his day. His final line 4.0 innings, three runs on four hits and three walks with five strikeouts on 81 pitches (49 strikes). His ERA stands at 4.12 for the year.

- Benge fell behind 0-2 but stuck with it to rip a fastball up in the zone the other way for a single to lead off the game. He smashed a liner his second time up (97.7 mph off the bat), but right at the first baseman to end the second. The rookie finished 3-for-6 with a walk and three runs batted in.

- Soto took what the Nats defense gave him: dropping a bunt down the third base line for a one-out single to put two men on, but was left standing. He finished 2-for-5 with a strikeout and two intentional walks.

- Torrens bounced a ball to first to start the fifth and saw it bounce under Luis Garcia Jr.’s glove for an error, the Nats' 46th of the year and third of the night. He ended up 1-for-3 with an RBI. MJ Melendez pinch-hit for the catcher in the ninth and weakly grounded out to the pitcher.

- Ewing was a tough-luck strikeout victim his first time up when third base umpire Chris Segal called him out on a check swing. He got himself a single the other way with two down in the 11th to finish 2-for-6 with a pair of strikeouts.

- Vientos was hitless in five times up with a strikeout.

Highlights 

Upcoming schedule

The Mets and Nats are back in action again for a 6:45 p.m. first pitch on Tuesday night.

Nolan McLean (2.92 ERA, 0.955 WHIP in 52.1 innings) gets the start for the visitors. Left-hander Foster Griffin (3.53 ERA, 1.137 WHIP in 51.0 innings) starts for Washington

Yankees grind out 7-6 win over Blue Jays as Paul Goldschmidt, Cody Bellinger, Jazz Chisholm Jr. homer

The Yankees avoided a would-be skid after consecutive Subway Series losses on Monday when they opened their four-game series against the Toronto Blue Jays with a 7-5 win in Monday's opener at Yankee Stadium.

Takeaways

  1. Ryan Weathers allowed a season-high-tying seven hits, including two home runs that surrendered the Yankees' early lead, leaving mixed feelings about his start. The southpaw followed three shutout frames by serving up a three-run homer against Ernie Clements that put the Blue Jays up 3-1 and, after New York scrapped in the bottom half to tie the game, got taken deep on George Springer's fifth-inning solo shot as Toronto pushed ahead 4-3. Weathers (3.58 ERA) flashed his stuff, striking out seven and walking none while throwing 59 strikes on 90 pitches in 5.1 IP, but he was not his best. Will he stay in the rotation as the Yankees look to welcome back ace Gerrit Cole?
  2. Paul Goldschmidt owns Patrick Corbin. As New York's leadoff-batting first baseman with Ben Rice hitting second and getting the start as the Yankees' designated hitter, Goldschmidt took the Blue Jays' southpaw into the short porch in right field for a first-pitch home run that set the tone. Goldschmidt, who improved to 7-for-15 with two homers in his career against Corbin, went year for the fifth time -- and third as New York's leadoff man -- this season. He added a game-tying double in the fourth inning for his third time with multiple hits over his past four games, proving his worth as a veteran option behind Rice on the Yankees' bench this year.
  3. Two-run home runs by Cody Bellinger and Jazz Chisholm Jr. in the seventh inning pushed New York ahead as the big-time swings that Aaron Boone's team needed after coming up short across both of the past two losses at the Mets. The four-run frame proved vital when the Blue Jays scored a run in the ninth inning and the Yankees had enough cushion to ultimately survive.
  4. Anthony Volpe, whom New York called up last Wednesday and debuted with a 0-for-6 start across his first three games back, is heating up. He followed Sunday's 2-for-3, three-RBI effort at the Mets with a 2-for-4 game against Toronto. Volpe, who stole two bases and hustled to score a run on J.C. Escarra's sacrifice fly in the fourth inning that kept the Yankees within 3-2 of the Blue Jays, is trending up at a time when the Yankees (29-19) need a spark.

Who's the MVP?

Goldschmidt, whose leadoff homer in the first and two-out RBI with the Yankees trailing 3-1 three frames later went a long way for New York before Bellinger and Chisholm stepped up with clutch long balls later on.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees and Blue Jays continue their four-game series with Tuesday's 7:05 p.m. matchup in the Bronx.

New York RHP Will Warren (5-1, 3.42 ERA) and Toronto RHP Dylan Cease (3-1, 2.41 ERA) are set to start the game.

NHL overtime rules explained: Longest games, 2026 OT results

The NHL's Stanley Cup playoffs mean a major change in the overtime format.

Unlike the Olympics, where 3-on-3 overtime is played even in the gold medal game, the NHL switches things up in the postseason when the games matter more.

There won't be any more 3-on-3 play. It is 5-on-5 instead, just like in regulation play. There won't be any more shootouts after five minutes of scoreless overtime play. There is sudden death, and it could last a very long time.

This postseason, there have been 18 overtime games, including three double-overtime games. Game 7 of the Montreal-Buffalo series was the 18th.

Here's what to know about playoff hockey overtime, including the format, longest games and 2026 results.

How does OT work in NHL playoffs?

If the score is tied after three periods, the teams go to the dressing rooms for 15 minutes while the ice is resurfaced. Overtime periods last 20 minutes or until someone scores. It's 5-on-5 play (barring penalties). If no one scores in the first overtime, the process repeats and continues until someone scores. The teams change sides for each overtime period. The first overtime is the long change to get back to the bench.

The NHL Situation Room reviews all goals to make sure they are legally scored, such as the goal that ended Game 4 of the Anaheim-Edmonton series or the overturned goal in Game 4 of the Vegas-Utah series.

2026 NHL playoff overtime games

May 18:Canadiens 3, Sabres 2: Alex Newhook scored the winner at 11:22 of the first overtime as Montreal ousted Buffalo in Game 7.

May 13:Avalanche 4, Wild 3: Brett Kulak scored the winner at 3:52 of the first overtime as Colorado ousted Minnesota in Game 5.

May 12:Golden Knights 3, Ducks 2: Pavel Dorofeyev scored the winning goal just over four minutes into the first overtime period to give Vegas a 3-2 series lead over Anaheim.

May 9:Hurricanes 3, Flyers 2: Jackson Blake scored at 5:31 of the first overtime to sweep the Flyers.

May 4:Hurricanes 3, Flyers 2: Taylor Hall scored at 18:54 of the first overtime for a 2-0 series lead.

May 1:Lightning 1, Canadiens 0: Gage Goncalves scored at 9:03 of the first overtime to tie the series.

April 29:Golden Knights 5, Mammoth 4 (2OT): Brett Howden scored at 5:28 of the second overtime as Vegas took a 3-2 lead on Utah.

April 29Flyers 1, Penguins 0: Cam York scored at 17:32 of the first overtime as the Flyers ousted the Penguins in Game 6.

April 28: Bruins 2, Sabres 1 (OT). David Pastrnak scored at 9:14 of the first overtime to cut the Bruins' series deficit to 3-2.

April 27: Golden Knights 5, Mammoth 4 (OT). Shea Theodore scored at 19:08 of the first overtime to tie the series at two games apiece.

April 26: Ducks 4, Oilers 3 (OT). Ryan Poehling scored 2:29 into the first overtime to give Anaheim a 3-1 series lead.

April 25: Wild 3, Stars 2. Matt Boldy scored at 19:31 of the first overtime as the Wild tie the series 2-2.

April 24: Canadiens 3, Lightning 2. Lane Hutson scored at 2:09 of the first overtime, giving Montreal a 2-1 series lead.

April 22: Stars 4, Wild 3. Wyatt Johnston scored at 12:10 of the second overtime, giving Dallas a 2-1 series lead.

April 21: Avalanche 2, Kings 1: Nicolas Roy scored the winning goal at the 12:16 mark of the first overtime, giving Colorado a 2-0 series lead.

April 21: Lightning 3, Canadiens 2: J.J. Moser scored at 7:12 in the first overtime to tie up the series at a game apiece. It was Moser's first career NHL playoff goal.

April 20: Hurricanes 3, Senators 2: Jordan Martinook scored at 13:53 of the second overtime. He was stopped on a penalty shot in the first overtime.

April 19: Canadiens 4, Lightning 3: Juraj Slafkovsky scored at 1:22 of the first overtime, completing a hat trick.

What are the longest NHL playoff overtime games?

  • 1 - Six overtimes (116 minutes, 30 seconds of overtime) in the 1936 semifinals. March 24, 1935. Detroit 1, Montreal Maroons 0. Mud Bruneteau scored the winner.
  • 2 - Six overtimes (104 minutes, 46 seconds of overtime) in the 1933 semifinals. April 3, 1933. Toronto 1, Boston 0. Ken Doraty scored the winner.
  • 3 - Five overtimes (92 minutes, 1 second of overtime) in the 2000 conference semifinals. May 4, 2000. Philadelphia 2, Pittsburgh 1. Keith Primeau scored the winner.
  • 4 - Five overtimes (90 minutes, 27 seconds of overtime) in the 2020 first round. Aug. 11, 2020. Tampa Bay 3, Columbus 2. Brayden Point scored the winner.
  • 5 - Five overtimes (80 minutes, 48 seconds of overtime) in the 2003 conference semifinals. April 24, 2003. Anaheim 4, Dallas 3. Petr Sykora scored the winner.
  • 6 - Four overtimes (79 minutes, 47 seconds of overtime) in the 2023 conference finals. May 18, 2023. Florida 3, Carolina 2. Matthew Tkachuk scored the winner.

Longest Stanley Cup Final games

Eight Stanley Cup Final games have gone to the third overtime. The Edmonton Oilers were part of the longest game when Petr Klima scored at 15:13 of the third overtime for a 3-2 win against the Boston Bruins in the 1990 Final.

Which players in 2026 postseason have the most playoff overtime goals?

  • 5 - Corey Perry, Lightning
  • 4 - Leon Draisaitl, Oilers (all in 2025 playoffs, an NHL record for one postseason)
  • 3 - Brayden Point, Lightning; Jordan Staal, Hurricanes; Anze Kopitar, Kings; Artemi Panarin, Kings; Matt Duchene, Stars

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NHL playoff bracket overtime rules, 2026 results and longest games

Guardians 8, Tigers 2: Silent bats and sluggish defense stymie Tigers

May 18, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers catcher Dillon Dingler (13) slides safely into home plate ahead of the throw to Cleveland Guardians catcher Austin Hedges (27) in the first inning at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images | Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images

Happy Monday, everyone. The Tigers lost their weekend series against the Jays, but it’s a new week, so perhaps new opportunities lie ahead. The Tigers will start trying that today as they open their four-game home series against the Cleveland Guardians. The Guardians currently hold a tenuous lead in the AL Central, so these next four games could really shake up the division standings. For game one, the Tigers were leaning on Framber Valdez, while the Guardians had Slade Cecconi on the mound.

After a 45-minute weather delay, the game got underway. The Tigers got the Guardians out in order, which is precisely how you’d like to see the game start. In the home half, Kevin McGonigle got a one-out single. Dillon Dingler then hit into a force out, eliminating McGonigle and finding Dingler safely on first. Riley Greene then doubled, and Dingler was able to get all the way from first to home, putting the Tigers on the board nice and early. They’d have to settle for the one run, but it was a good start for the struggling team.

With two outs in the top of the second, Travis Bazzana singled. Hot on his heels, Steven Kwan walked, to put two runners on. A lineout ended the inning, though, and nipped the threat in the bud. In the home half, the Tigers went 1-2-3.

Bryan Rocchio started the third inning with a leadoff triple. With one out, Angel Martinez walked. Chase DeLauter then hit into a force out, eliminating Martinez, but bringing Rocchio home to tie up the game. Rhys Hoskins then doubled, which scored DeLauter and put the Guardians in the lead. The Tigers made an effort in the bottom of the inning, with a single by Colt Keith, followed by a Kevin McGonigle walk, but a double play swiftly put to bed any hopes of a comeback.

In the top of the fourth, Kwan took a one-out walk, his second free bag of the day. But he was eliminated in a double-play off the bat of Austin Hedges. At least this game had equal opportunity double plays. Heading into the home half, Riley Greene got things going with a leadoff single. With two outs, Riley Greene was snagged before he could get back to first, and while he was initially called safe, Cleveland asked for a review, and the call was overturned.

Rocchio was once again the one to get things going for the Guardians, as he took a leadoff walk in the fifth. Martinez singled, followed by a single from Jose Ramirez to load the bases. DeLauter grounded into a force out that eliminated Ramirez, but scored Rocchio, pretty similar to how they scored the first run of the game, honestly. After a very lengthy at-bat from Rhys Hoskins, a sac fly brought Martinez in. A groundout ended the inning, but the Tigers’ early lead was now starting to look pretty laughable. They did little to help themselves in the home half, going three-up, three-down.

Valdez was done after five innings, with an elevated pitch count and a pretty rough overall outing. His final line for the game was 5.0 IP, 5 H, 4 R, 4 ER, 4 BB, 3 K on 89 pitches. He was replaced by Brant Hurter. Bazzana got a leadoff single, then Kwan walked for the third time in the game. A Hedges sac bunt advanced both of the baserunners into scoring position. Rocchio walked, and that was it for Hurter, who gave way to Connor Seabold. Martinez then singled to bring another run in. Ramirez doubled into deep right and it almost looked like it would clear the bases, but two runs got in before the Guardians held up. Seabold was able to turn it around long enough to get the final outs of the inning, but the score was looking pretty ugly. In the bottom of the inning, the Tigers went 1-2-3.

The Tigers managed to get a rare 1-2-3 inning against the Guardians to start the seventh. They certainly needed it. Riley Greene got a leadoff walk in the home half, but he was swiftly eliminated in a double play, and then a McKinstry flyout ended the inning. Props to Greene, though, for being the one guy on the team with some consistent hustle.

The Guardians once again went down in order in the eighth. In the home half, the Tigers were finally able to get something done, thanks to a leadoff home run from Matt Vierling. With one out in the inning, Cecconi’s night was done. (Just a moment pause here, but Johnny Kane and Jason Benetti had a lengthy conversation about the Tropicana Field rays in this inning and mentioned “the ones that survived” the hurricane. For those who worry about animals and their welfare, please know that all 7 of the rays that lived at Tropicana Field during Hurricane Milton survived the hurricane without issue and were moved to an aquarium while the stadium was rebuilt. The phrasing made it sound like some of them died, and they definitely didn’t. Sincerely, a person who needs to check if animals die before watching a movie.) Matt Festa replaced Cecconi and got the final two outs of the inning.

Enmanuel De Jesus came in for the ninth and promptly gave up a home run to Ramirez. DeLauter then walked. Three outs in a row, including one that looked dangerously close to being a home run but got snagged on the warning track, ended the inning and sent the Tigers to their last chance to make something happen. Peyton Pallette came in from the Guardians’ bullpen and gave up a one-out walk to Dingler. Riley Greene was then hit by a pitch. Torkelson lined out to first but advanced both baserunners into scoring position. A groundout ended the inning and the game, though, and the Tigers would have to hope for better things tomorrow.

Final: Guardians 8, Tigers 2

Dodgers vs. Padres preview: NL West up for grabs in San Diego

The Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres meet for the first time this season on Monday, May 18 at Petco Park and with just half a game separating these two teams, it could make for some intense baseball in this early season NL West showdown.

The Dodgers are back in the top spot in the divisional standings after briefly being surpassed by their rivals to the south after a five-game winning streak. The Dodgers bats woke up from a slump over the final two games of their home rivalry series against the San Francisco Giants and throughout a three-game sweep of the Los Angeles Angels in Anaheim over the weekend with Shohei Ohtani seemingly turning a corner at the plate, but San Diego presents a different challenge than either of those teams.

The Padres also have gotten off to a slow start offensively. Fernando Tatis Jr. notably has yet to hit a single home run in 193 plate appearances this season and has a .581 OPS, almost 200 points under his career low of .771 in 2023. Manny Machado and Jackson Merrill, two of the Padres' other most impactful bats, have yet to provide said impact yet, either, with Machado slugging .327 — he's never slugged below .400 in his 15 big league seasons — and Merrill's .206 batting average down significantly from when he hit .292 in his All-Star rookie season in 2024.

Both of these teams have been able to stay atop the standings due to their pitching, but in different ways. For the Padres, Michael King and Randy Vásquez have been two stabilizing presences in a rotation that has been decimated by injuries all season long. Both of them are due to pitch in this series. The Dodgers, meanwhile, relied on their starters in the first few weeks of the season, but that's changed as IL stints to Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell have depleted their depth. But with Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Emmet Sheehan and Ohtani (and his MLB-leading 0.82 ERA) all set to go in San Diego.

The matchups are set. The stakes in the long run aren't all that high in May, but it'll be an opportunity for each side to get a look at how they match up in an NL West race that could stay this close down the stretch.

How to watch the Dodgers vs. Padres series this week

Monday, May 18

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. PT
  • Location: Petco Park, San Diego, California
  • TV/streaming: Spectrum SportsNet LA (Dodgers), Padres.TV (Padres)

Tuesday, May 19

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. PT
  • Location: Petco Park, San Diego, California
  • TV/streaming: Spectrum SportsNet LA (Dodgers), Padres.TV (Padres)

Wednesday, May 20

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. PT
  • Location: Petco Park, San Diego, California
  • TV/streaming: Spectrum SportsNet LA (Dodgers), Padres.TV (Padres)

Dodgers vs. Padres pitching matchups

  • Monday, May 18: Yoshinobu Yamamoto vs. Michael King
  • Tuesday, May 19: Emmet Sheehan vs. Griffin Canning
  • Wednesday, May 20: Shohei Ohtani vs. Randy Vásquez

Dodgers vs. Padres lineups

Here's the lineup for each team ahead of the series opener between the Dodgers and Padres on May 18:

Dodgers lineup

  • Shohei Ohtani, DH
  • Mookie Betts, SS
  • Freddie Freeman, 1B
  • Kyle Tucker, RF
  • Will Smith, C
  • Max Muncy, 3B
  • Andy Pages, CF
  • Teoscar Hernández, LF
  • Hyeseong Kim, 2B

Padres lineup

  • Fernando Tatis Jr., 2B
  • Miguel Andujar, DH
  • Gavin Sheets, 1B
  • Manny Machado, 3B
  • Xander Bogaerts, SS
  • Jackson Merrill, CF
  • Nick Castellanos, RF
  • Ramón Laureano, LF
  • Rodolfo Durán, C

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers vs. Padres preview, lineups, pitching matchups

Gray outjunks Lugo in 3-1 loss to Red Sox

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MAY 18: Michael Massey #19 of the Kansas City Royals is tagged out by Connor Wong #12 of the Boston Red Sox as he tries to score in the fifth inning at Kauffman Stadium on May 18, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In a matchup of kitchen sink junkballers, only one team was able to make anything happen in a low-scoring 3-1 Royals loss. Seth Lugo gave up a two-run home run to Willson Contreras in the sixth inning, his 10th homer of the season, and that was 50% of the runs scored from either team the whole game. That home run now also represents 50% of the home runs given up by Lugo all season. Coincidences!

That’s not to say Lugo was bad. He wasn’t. Both these guys were throwing all their junk. MLB Statcast picked up 8 different pitch types from Lugo and 6 from Sonny Gray. Gray’s was much more effective, though. His top pitch thrown was his four-seam fastball, but the sweeper was just behind it. He got 13 swings against the sweeper and 7 whiffs!

Gray had the entire Royals offense fooled (especially Isaac Collins), except for Jac Caglianone. Cags hit a couple missiles, including a double that brought in Carter Jensen in the 7th for the Royals’ first, and only, run of the night. The Royals threatened in the fifth too, with Michael Massey on second base. On a grounder through the hole between third base and shortstop, Massey was waved home (in what seemed to me like a late signal). The play at the plate was close, but Masataka Yoshida made a good throw that beat Massey to the plate. The slide looked very awkward, and it was the kind of slide that could tweak a bad back. Massey has a bad back. Oof.

Gray finished with 6 innings pitched and a season-high 9 strikeouts among 5 hits, 1 walk, and 1 run. It was easily his best start of 2026.

Lugo did not strike out as many guys as Gray (5), but he similarly limited any scoring threats by preventing hard contact, with the one exception involving Contreras. Lugo pitched 6 innings and gave up 5 hits, 2 runs, and 2 walks amid those 5 strikeouts.

Not that it ended up mattering, but Alex Lange gave up the third run in the 7th. He gave up a leadoff double, and then Nick Sogard put down a nice bunt that was just far enough that Lange couldn’t get it. Too short for Garcia to get it in time – Sogard was safe at first. Jarren Duran hit a can of corn fly ball to left field that was deep enough to score the runner on a sac fly.

Aroldis Chapman set down the Royals in order in the ninth inning. Quietly. The game started early due to the threat of bad weather, and both teams played like they wanted to be in bed reading a book by the time the weather hit. I guess I can’t blame them. As I type this, I do see tornado warnings on the front end of the storm.

Of note: Salvy had two ABS challenges on consecutive pitches that were overturned. A 2-0 count switched to 0-2. Salvy’s pretty good at this. That and Cags’ hard contact might be the only high points for the Royals from this game. Oof.

The Royals move to 20-28. The Red Sox are now 20-27. They play each other again tomorrow at 6:40pm US Central.

Five things to know about the Cavaliers heading into Eastern Conference finals matchup with Knicks

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows James Harden of the Cleveland Cavaliers shoots a three-point basket while a Detroit Pistons player defends during a game, Image 2 shows Donovan Mitchell and coach Kenny Atkinson speaking during an NBA game

With the Knicks and Cavaliers set to kick off Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday, here are five key things to know about fourth-seeded Cleveland.

1. The Cavaliers have lost each of their four previous postseason matchups against the Knicks (1978, 1995, 1996, 2023), winning just two of 14 games. The Knicks won the first two meetings between the teams this season, but the Cavs won the only matchup that included James Harden, 109-94, on Feb. 24 in Cleveland.

2. Former Nets coach and Long Island native Kenny Atkinson is in his second season with Cleveland, which is making its first conference finals appearance since 2018. Atkinson, 58, was named NBA Coach of the Year last season and won an NBA title as an assistant with the Warriors in 2022, alongside current Knicks coach Mike Brown.

Donovan Mitchell and head coach Kenny Atkinson of the Cleveland Cavaliers speak during the second quarter against the Detroit Pistons in Game 7. Getty Images

3. The Cavaliers have only three meaningful contributors (Donovan Mitchell, Evan Mobley, Jarrett Allen) returning from their 2023 five-game, first-round series loss to the Knicks. Cleveland was held to 94.2 points per game in that series — 18 fewer than it averaged during the season — as Mitchell shot 28.9 percent on 3-pointers, and both Mobley and Allen scored fewer than 10 points per game. The Knicks will also see familiar postseason foes in Cavs reserve Dennis Schröder — who shot 47.6 percent on 3-pointers in last year’s first-round matchup with the Pistons — and Max Strus, who averaged nearly 15 points while helping the Heat eliminate the Knicks in 2023.

4. James Harden is the fourth player in NBA history (Karl Malone, John Stockton, Tony Parker) to make the playoffs in each of his first 17 seasons. Harden’s 185 postseason games — with six teams — are the second most by any player without a championship, eight fewer than Malone. The 36-year-old — who made his Cavaliers debut Feb. 7, following a trade from the Clippers — hasn’t been to the NBA Finals since he was the Sixth Man of the Year with Oklahoma City in 2012.

James Harden of the Cleveland Cavaliers shoots a 3-pointer during the game against the Detroit Pistons in Game 7. NBAE via Getty Images

5.  Westchester native Donovan Mitchell — whose father, Donovan Sr., works for the Mets — was nearly dealt to the Knicks in the summer of 2022, shortly after the signing of Jalen Brunson. When the Knicks showed reluctance to meet Utah’s trade demands, Cleveland swooped in, landing a superstar who will soon earn his third All-NBA selection with the team. Mitchell will be making his first appearance in a conference finals.

Trevor Rogers and the Orioles demolished by Rays, 16-6

ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - MAY 18: Trevor Rogers #28 of the Baltimore Orioles is relieved by manager Craig Albernaz #55 in the fourth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on May 18, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Imagine I told you that the Orioles went into Tropicana Field tonight and got to starting pitcher Shane McClanahan for four runs in five innings. You’d be excited, right? McClanahan is one of the best lefties in baseball this year, and the Orioles are terrible against lefties. He came into this game on a 21.2-inning scoreless streak. Four runs in five innings is pretty darn good!

Well….it is. But let me tell about the rest of the game. Because spoiler: the Orioles got their butts kicked.

Trevor Rogers continued to make the case that 2025 was not a case of him figuring things out, but rather a fluke. After getting knocked out of the game after four innings and six runs in his last start, Rogers got even worse. Tonight, he was knocked out after 3.2 innings and eight runs.

I guess let’s start at the beginning or whatever. Rogers allowed one unearned run in the first inning, and he honestly had a pretty good start to things. He did give up a leadoff double that was almost a homer to Yandy Díaz, who feasted on Orioles pitching tonight. But Díaz would have been stranded if not for an error made by Gunnar Henderson. Instead, he came in to score on a sac fly.

In the second inning, Rogers really had no one to blame but himself. The frustrating thing is that he looked like he was almost out of trouble before things exploded. The speedy Chandler Simpson started the inning with a double, but was thrown out at third on a ground ball to shortstop. A Taylor Walls double put runners on the corners, but Rogers got a big strikeout for the second out.

Instead of getting the third out, Rogers let the next five batters reach base, starting with Díaz. Single, single, single, walk, double. The double, by Jonny DeLuca, would have been a single but took a weird deflection off Jeremiah Jackson’s glove as it went into the outfield. Regardless, after that DeLuca hit, the Rays had scored six runs.

After a 1-2-3 third inning, Rogers started, but did not finish, the fourth inning. The defense gave him some trouble as Blaze Alexander couldn’t get to a hit from Ryan Vilade that turned into a triple. That knocked in Junior Caminero, who had walked. It also drove Rogers from the game. He was replaced by Cameron Foster, who seemingly got an inning-ending groundout. But DeLuca was too fast and beat out the throw. Vilade scored to close the book on Rogers, and Cameron ended the inning without further damage.

The final pitching line on Trevor Rogers: 3.2 IP, 8 H, 8 R, 7 ER, 2 BB, 3 K. He threw 88 pitches, and his ERA went up to 6.87. What are they gonna do with this guy? The Orioles aren’t exactly flush with starting rotation options.

When Rogers exited the game, the bullpen picked up right where he left off. Foster came back out for the fifth inning and allowed four runs of his own. He loaded the bases with no outs on a double, walk, and a single. A groundout knocked in the Rays’ ninth run of the game, then Caminero cleared the bases with his 13th home run of the year.

Dietrich Enns followed Foster. He was also terrible. Three hits and three walks resulted in four more runs for the Rays. That made 16, if you’re still bothering to keep count.

Should we go back to the offense for a bit? It didn’t make a difference in the end, but the O’s had a pretty good game at the plate. As I said earlier, they got to McClanahan for four runs in five innings. They got on the board in the third inning on a Taylor Ward double followed by an RBI single from Adley Rutschman.

They added three more in the fifth, after the game was already out of hand. Weston Wilson got his first home run of the year. McClanahan walked Alexander and Rutschman, who both came in on a double from Pete Alonso. In the middle of all that, Henderson struck out. He was hitless in the game.

The Orioles continued to score after McClanahan left the game. Rutschman hit his seventh home run in the seventh. And in the eighth inning, they added on one more run before Alonso struck out with the bases loaded.

It’s a shame that the Orioles scored six runs in the game and it was still never even close. Rutschman had two hits, a walk, and reached on an error. Alonso had his first three-hit game as an Oriole. Wilson and Jackson had two-hit nights. Ward, Alonso, Jackson, and Alexander had doubles.

The Orioles were down by 10 going into the bottom of the 8th, which meant it was position player pitching time. Wilson made his third pitching appearance of the year. The first two batters reached via hit, then Jonathan Aranda hit a ground ball back to the pitcher. Wilson went to second for the first out and Aranda basically walked to first base to give plenty of time for the double play. He got the final out on a fly ball to lower his season ERA from 27.00 to 15.83.

There was a moment of panic (by me, and hopefully only me) when Rutschman got hit on a backswing in the eighth inning. He was down for a few moments but finished the inning. Knowing the Orioles’ luck, he’d get hurt in a meaningless moment.

Down by 10 in the ninth, the Orioles were retired 1-2-3. Thanks for putting us out of our misery there, guys.

Orioles lose, 16-6. Tomorrow they have Kyle Bradish on the mound so maybe they can avoid a second straight night of this foolishness.