Dodgers' top MLB draft pick Bo Lowrance eager to emulate Freddie Freeman, Corey Seager

Bo Lowrance bats during the 2026 MLB draft combine at Chase Field on June 23 in Phoenix.
Bo Lowrance bats during the 2026 MLB draft combine at Chase Field on June 23 in Phoenix. (Jill Weisleder/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

Bo Lowrance models his game after Freddie Freeman. So, it’s fitting that the Dodgers selected the 6-foot-5, 200-pound high school infielder — ranked the No. 21 overall prospect by MLB.com — with the 40th pick in the MLB amateur draft on Saturday.

“He’s obviously a first baseman, and I’m on the left side, so defensively a little different,” Lowrance said of Freeman during a conference call with media. “But he’s still unbelievably athletic, and a big thing that I’ve watched for years is his approach and how he uses the whole field. … [Freeman is] somebody that I’m always trying to emulate.”

Lowrance hit .435 with 12 home runs last season at Christ Church Episcopal School in Greenville, S.C.

A left-handed batter and right-handed thrower like Freeman, Lowrance is expected to develop as a shortstop — noting former Dodger Corey Seager has a “super smooth” defense at 6-4 he hopes to replicate — with a potential role at third, depending on how the prep star grows into his frame.

Read more:Chicago White Sox select UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky with No. 1 pick in MLB draft

“Yeah, definitely want to be a shortstop,” Lowrance said. “I believe I’m capable of it. I think I have the glove skills and the athleticism. I think it’s just going to turn into who I want to become at the plate in terms of my overall size and frame. Like, if I ultimately put on a bunch of weight and kind of grow out of the shortstop position, then maybe that’s where that’ll change.”

Lowrance hit it off with the Dodgers’ front office in June at the draft combine in Phoenix.

And even though the Dodgers didn’t exactly see the Freeman comparison Lowrance mentioned, they would be thrilled if he turned out anything like the 10-time All-Star.

“Bo was definitely our main target coming into the day,” Dodgers amateur scouting director Zach Fitzpatrick said. “Probably would have said there’s a pretty low chance we were able to acquire him, had you asked me in the morning. So as the picks start coming off the board and realizing there’s a little bit more opportunity to get him, our excitement level climbed. And then to actually be able to call his name was a home run for us.”

Read more:Why 2026 MLB draft will be special for Dodgers coach Dino Ebel’s family

“I’ve been in communication with them for a while,” Lowrance added. “I’ve loved their scouting staff. I have a great relationship with them.”

The Dodgers entered the draft with the smallest bonus pool at $3,951,900; the White Sox had the most cash to work with, boasting $20,489,500.

Fitzpatrick, though, said the Dodgers’ strategy centered around taking the best player available.

The approach carried over into the Dodgers’ second and final pick on the day — Florida right-handed pitcher Russell Sandefer at No. 132.

Sandefer posted a 3-2 record as a junior in 2026 with a 4.42 ERA over 19 games and 12 starts. The Dodgers were intrigued by his repertoire and heat.

“As we dove into Russell throughout the spring, kind of all departments — from scouting and what we saw at the park to our player development group and our analytics group — kind of flagged Russell as very intriguing and then having a lot of upside left,” Fitzpatrick said.

Read more:Dodgers pitcher Justin Wrobleski added to National League roster for All-Star Game

“A starter at Florida, threw a lot of strikes; there’s obviously velocity, there’s a deep mix, and he performed and had some pretty stellar outings along the way that helped us believe in his upside and different ways we can help him access it more consistently.”

Lowrance was happy to be part of the Dodgers’ draft class.

“Just a whole wave of emotions,” he said. “I’m extremely grateful, first off, and couldn’t be more excited. I mean, yeah, I’ve said it already: It’s the best team in baseball, and nobody else that I want to be a part of.

“Couldn’t have drawn it up any better.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Brewers ace Jacob Misiorowski scratched from scheduled start on Sunday, will miss the All-Star Game

PITTSBURGH — Milwaukee Brewers right-hander Jacob Misiorowski has been scratched from his scheduled start against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday because of arm fatigue and will also miss the All-Star Game on Tuesday night in Philadelphia.

Brewers manager Pat Murphy announced the decision Saturday after the NL Central leaders were swept by the Pirates in a doubleheader.

“He didn’t recover well from his last start, and his throwing program was clunky today, so we’re just going to give him some extra rest,” Murphy said.

Misiorowski said he will not require a stint on the injured list and should be ready to pitch after next week’s All-Star break. Milwaukee has 12 pitchers on the IL.

“It (stinks) to miss a start and the All-Star Game, but I know it’s the right thing to do in this situation,” Misiorowski said. “My arm is a little tired.”

Misiorowski has a 10-4 record and a 1.62 ERA in 18 starts, with 167 strikeouts over 111 innings. The 24-year-old leads MLB starting pitchers with a 100.5 mph average four-seam fastball velocity and has thrown a big-league high of 670 pitches at 100 mph or higher.

Misiorowski was scheduled to face fellow All-Star Paul Skenes in the series finale. Left-hander Robert Gasser will instead start for the Brewers.

Brewers’ Jacob Misiorowski missing All-Star Game as ace deals with arm fatigue

Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Jacob Misiorowski looking at the field after giving up a home run.
Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Jacob Misiorowski (32) looks on after giving up a solo home run to St. Louis Cardinals designated hitter Ivan Herrera (48) during the third inning at Busch Stadium.

Milwaukee Brewers right-hander Jacob Misiorowski has been scratched from his scheduled start against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday because of arm fatigue and will also miss the All-Star Game on Tuesday night in Philadelphia.

Brewers manager Pat Murphy announced the decision Saturday after the NL Central leaders were swept by the Pirates in a doubleheader.

“He didn’t recover well from his last start, and his throwing program was clunky today, so we’re just going to give him some extra rest,” Murphy said.

Jacob Misiorowski delivers a pitch in the seventh inning of Game 1 of the Brewers’ doubleheader sweep at Busch Stadium on July 7, 2026 in St Louis. Getty Images

Misiorowski said he will not require a stint on the injured list and should be ready to pitch after next week’s All-Star break.

Milwaukee has 12 pitchers on the IL.

Jacob Misiorowski looks on after giving up a solo home run to Ivan Herrera (48, background) during the third inning of the Brewers’ Game f1 win over their doubleheader sweep at Busch Stadium earlier this month. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

“It (stinks) to miss a start and the All-Star Game, but I know it’s the right thing to do in this situation,” Misiorowski said. “My arm is a little tired.”

Misiorowski has a 10-4 record and a 1.62 ERA in 18 starts, with 167 strikeouts over 111 innings.

The 24-year-old leads MLB starting pitchers with a 100.5 mph average four-seam fastball velocity and has thrown a big-league high of 670 pitches at 100 mph or higher.

Misiorowski was scheduled to face fellow All-Star Paul Skenes in the series finale.

Left-hander Robert Gasser will instead start for the Brewers.

Batting 3rd, playing 3rd…: Tampa Bay 6, Seattle 1

Jul 11, 2026; St. Petersburg, Florida, USA; Tampa Bay Rays Hall of Fame inductee Evan Longoria (3) reacts during the ceremony at Tropicana Field. Mandatory Credit: Pablo Robles-Imagn Images | Pablo Robles-Imagn Images

On the celebration weekend dedicated to the greatest Rays player of all time, retiring his number 3 and entering him into the Rays Hall of Fame, the current iteration of the Rays has an All Star 3rd baseman leading the team to first place and another series win under the Trop.

The more things change, the more things stay the same.

With emotions running high pregame with a fantastic ceremony to celebrate the franchise’s first great home grown legend, the Rays were able to put on a show for Longo.

For those that missed the ceremony, please do yourself a favor and check it out and then come back to read the rest of what happened in the game.

The current face the of Rays, batting 3rd playing 3rd, Junior Caminero did not hit a HR (it’s actively worth mentioning when he doesn’t because that’s becoming a rarity) but did have the hardest hit ball of the day, a 115 MPH double. He would also reach base twice more on free passes. For as much as we Rays fans might lament the long and less than storied search for long term answers at SS or Catcher, 3B has been a rock since the Rays selected Longo. It’s quite something to feel pride in knowing that the Rays now have a 3B well worth the legacy of the hot corner that Longo left behind.

The game today was quite the pitcher’s duel. Griffin Jax continued his conversion to starter as most starts: some high wire acts (1st inning escape act after loading the bases), super efficient pitching (ended the game completing 5 innings at just 69 nice pitches), and mostly kept the the Mariners bats frustrated unable to produce that one big inning.

Facing off against Logan Gilbert, you knew that runs would be at a premium. In fact, during a game of such ceremony Gilbert recorded his 1,000 career K. However, the Rays bats made him work for everything he got. Despite a game leading 15 whiffs, Rays hitters were able to only strike out 5 times vs Gilbert. Putting it in play can get results, and Ben Williamson in the 2nd inning (after the Mariners jumped to an early lead in the top of the 2nd) was able to lace a double down the 3rd base line like so many Longo doubles of yore.

Chandler Simpson sped around scoring from first after a less than full speed Randy Arozarena jogged over to the 162 landing to get the ball back in.

After another houdini act from Jax in the 3rd, the Rays were able to take the after back-to-back doubles from Yandy and Aranda.

Cam Booser would get the first call out of the pen starting in the 6th inning to hold that 1 run lead, and got to immediately face the heart of the Mariner order: Cal Raliegh, Josh Naylor, and Luke Raley. Booser would mow them down striking out both Cal and Naylor. Booser would then get the next inning too and would add 3 more Ks (with a little double inbetween, but we won’t worry about that little guy). Rays have needed some answers from this pen and Booser has been a stopper for them in the middle innings.

In the 7th, after recording the first two outs, Aranda was able to knock a double off Gilbert, and after an intentional pass to Caminero, M’s manager Dan Wilson to come get Gilbert out of the game.

Wilson chose to go get lefty specialist Gabe Speir to face Cedric Mullins due up. Kevin Cash countered with a call to the bench for Ryan Vilade to pinch hit. Oh boy did that move work out well for Cash and the Rays.

2 outs, runners at 1st and 2nd, still a 1 run game, Vilade delivered the back breaking 3-run bomb to all but secure the Rays the series win.

Rays will look to complete the sweep and conclude the Longo celebration weekend in spectaular fashion Sunday morning.

Now crank the Tantric.

Austin Wells showing signs of life after Brian Cashman calls catcher position a Yankees ‘issue’

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees catcher Austin Wells (28) hits a solo home run against the Washington Nationals, Image 2 shows New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman and starting pitcher Gerrit Cole stand on the field during batting practice
Austin Wells has struggled for most of the season.

WASHINGTON — On Thursday morning, Brian Cashman acknowledged the obvious when asked about the Yankees catcher position.

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“It’s an issue, clearly,” he said.

Since then, Austin Wells homered in back-to-back games after having just one in his previous 38 games dating to May 1.

And while that does not change the fact that the Yankees still need catching help at the deadline, the two swings sorely were needed signs of life from the backstop who has still been one of the league’s worst hitters approaching the All-Star break.

“Hopefully, it’s something that he continues to build on,” manager Aaron Boone said before the Yankees’ 4-2 win over the Nationals on Saturday night in which Wells went 0-for-2 after coming into the game to replace starter Ali Sanchez. “We need him to, and he needs to build on that, because he needs to be a factor for us offensively.”

Austin Wells hits a home run during the Yankees’ July 10 win. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

The lefty-hitting catcher crushed a home run against Rays lefty Cam Booser in Thursday’s offensive outburst and then delivered an even more important blow in the ninth inning Friday night, belting a solo shot off Nationals righty Justin Lawrence to provide breathing room after Jazz Chisholm Jr.’s go-ahead blast.

They were reminders of the kind of offensive potential Wells, flashed more often over his first three years in the big leagues before it mostly disappeared this season.

He entered play batting just .153 with a .504 OPS and six home runs.

His batting average (now at .151) and OPS both were the lowest among 255 hitters with at least 200 plate appearances, while his WRC+ of 42 (100 being league average) was the second lowest.

Austin Wells rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the Yankees’ July 11 win. AP Photo

“On the defensive side, I think we’re thriving there,” Cashman said Thursday. “On the offensive side, it’s been a struggle, and it’s a surprise. We feel like we have players capable of a lot more. I recognize and acknowledge how difficult this game can be, and so it’s become an area of concern, clearly, when it wasn’t expected to be. I know [Wells] is doing everything he can, and they are doing everything they can to improve in that category. I know that they’re capable of that, but at the same time, it’s been a struggle.”

Brian Cashman is pictured in October 2025. Jason Szenes for the NY Post

While Wells was on the injured list in June for cervical headaches, he went to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and worked with some minor league hitting coaches on refining his mechanics.

Boone has continued to insist he sees a difference in Wells’ movement in the box since his June 21 return, even though he had little to show for it until Thursday and Friday.



“I haven’t been making it up,” Boone said. “I do feel like since coming back [from the IL], I’ve noticed him moving the needle, as far as his move and stuff, that’s a little more in line, just from my eye, with what he’s been in the past. So that’s absolutely in there. What we saw [Friday] night and the day before, from a move standpoint, is a lot different than a few weeks ago, maybe not to the naked eye, but me watching him, I see a significant difference.”

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Part of the reason the Yankees have continued to stick with Wells behind the plate — besides not having many viable internal options to replace him — is because of how much they value his work with the pitching staff.

The club believes that is more important than offensive production from its catchers, and Wells was continuing to do that despite his brutal slide at the plate.

Asked Thursday about whether there was any consideration being given to optioning Wells to Triple-A to work on his offense, Cashman declined to say, other than acknowledging, “We have those levers at our disposal.”

While it remains to be seen whether Wells’ production over the last few days is a sign of real progress or just a tease, it should at least let him breathe a little easier for now.

“I haven’t sensed a drag in there,” Boone said. “But anytime you struggle like he has offensively, on some level, it’s going to affect you. I’ve been there. But again, it’s one of those things that you got to deal with as a competitor, as a big leaguer. I’m sure getting some results and impacting the baseball a few times here in the past couple days is at least a little bit settling for him.”

Braves bats lifeless again as they drop second series to St. Louis

Jul 11, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Atlanta Braves first baseman Matt Olson (28) is out at second base as St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Masyn Winn (0) turns a double play in the sixth inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joe Puetz-Imagn Images | Joe Puetz-Imagn Images

The Braves once again made Matthew Liberatore look like Cy Young reincarnated for the second time in the span of two weeks. 

Reynaldo López gritted out five innings, but ended his streak of four consecutive starts only giving up an earned run. The first inning has been the challenge in most of his starts since he returned to the rotation, and tonight was no different. After getting two outs, an Iván Herrera slow-roller hit to Jorge Mateo and a single by Jordan Walker set the table for a Lars Nootbar three-run shot to make it 3-0 Cardinals. Ballgame in the first inning? More likely than you’d think, unfortunately.

López bounced back a bit in the second (working around a leadoff triple) and third, but Nootbar’s leadoff walk and stolen base would create another run after a Blaze Jordan single to make it 4-0.

The hope of getting to Liberatore early was mounting with a Ozzie Albies walk and wild pitch to get a runner in scoring position, but it wasn’t to be. Liberatore then held the Braves hitless until a Drake Baldwin single in the fourth. The Braves did not and could not cash in on consecutive innings with leadoff singles in the fifth and sixth by Austin Riley (!) and Michael Harris II, respectively. Matt Olson’s single in the sixth put runners at the corners with one out, but Baldwin grounded into a double play to end the threat. 

Liberatore only needed 71 pitches for his six scoreless innings of work, but he did not come back out. Mauricio Dubón greeted new pitcher Luis Gastelum rudely with a first-pitch leadoff homer to finally get the Braves on the board. Thank you, Dubie. A truly awful PA from Riley followed. Eli White doubled, but was stranded after a groundout by Joey Bart and a strikeout by pinch-hitter Jim Jarvis.

Freshly recalled from Gwinnett, Owen Murphy entered to pitch scoreless frames in the sixth, seventh, and eighth.

The Braves went down in order against George Soriano in the eighth and did their patented “false hope finale” in the ninth against reliever Riley O’Brien. A Drake leadoff walk, two quick outs, and Dominic Smith HBP brought Joey Bart up to the plate as the tying run. The pride of Georgia Tech couldn’t muster up a miraculous homer here and stared at strike three to seal this one for the Cardinals.

I don’t know who needs this All-Star break more, us or the team. Either way, some much-needed space and time to reflect is on deck after tomorrow’s series finale at 2:15 pm ET.

Paul DePodesta and Tommy Tanous discuss Day 1 of the Rockies MLB Draft

Colorado Rockies president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta
Colorado Rockies president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta | Kyle Cooper | Colorado Rockies

As Day 1 of the 2026 MLB Draft concluded, Colorado Rockies president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta and assistant general manager Tommy Tanous took questions from media about the day’s work.

Below are highlights from that conversation, which has been lightly edited for clarity.

On drafting Tyler Bell

Tommy Tanous: There was a lot to like about him. First of all, it’s an SEC shortstop — a switch-hitting shortstop with elite on-base ability, brings power, defensive value, strong baseball instincts to the game every day. One of the remarkable things about Tyler, he played through a significant shoulder injury this year, lost a little bit of time, came back, and really ended up having an extremely productive year. Super talented kid to find a shortstop this productive that can that we feel can stay at shortstop.

Tanous: There’s definitely a chip on his shoulder when he plays. There is no mistaking his intensity out there, his focus in games, and also what he does on the practice field. We spoke with numerous coaches, summer coaches, his current coaches. This is a very very intense, serious player with a very strong need to succeed.

On who will play shortstop, Bell or Ethan Holliday

Tanous: Both will stay on that. We have plenty of teams, and we need plenty of shortstop. Look, I think a lot of players in this organization going forward are going to move around a little bit, and we’re going to build some versatility. That does not mean they are not shortstops when you put them at in center field for a day or second base. But both of those players are going to get the majority of their time developing at shortstop.

On drafting Daniel Jackson and Jack Natili

Paul DePodesta: Again, not necessarily the plan we laid out going into the day in terms of ‘Hey, we’re going to get two catchers here.’ But those were both players that we had very high on our board that we felt if we had access to, we wanted to wanted to jump on that opportunity. We think both of them have a chance to have very long careers in in the big leagues. I mean, they’re both right-handed hitters, both have power, both can really catch. Maybe I’m showing a little bit of my bias here in terms of where I think a team is built from the start, but these these are two really, really good ones, and they’re both going to get plenty of opportunity with us.

Tanous: Both of those players have unique characteristics. I mean, Daniel Jackson — Golden Spikes Award winner, first catcher in history to in Division I history to have 25 home runs and 25 stolen bases. So really super, super talented and obviously Jack Natili — big, big power. Both have reasonable decision-making ability that we can build on and hone in on. Both have enormous amounts of power that come easy. The focus when we develop these players is always to be aware of their strike zone ability and how we build on that. Both are two really, really good athletes. That’ll be one of the keys that that we talk about with them because they certainly have a lot of other offensive aspects already in their bag of tricks.

DePodesta:When we visited last Saturday, I think we were talking about the draft. I talked about the trade-offs that you have to make between players, and that it’s not necessarily going to look cookie-cutter, and that each player is going to look look a little different. In this case, I think we’re really, really excited about the total package for all three (Bell, Jackson, and Natili), and I mean that both defensively and offensively. Defensively, all three premium position players — two catchers and a shortstop — and then offensively, I think all of them actually are good decision makers. A couple of them have really big power. Now, are you going to take some swing and miss with that? Yeah, you probably are. But given the balance here, as we looked at these players, this was that was sort of a trade well worth making. So, like I said, not not every player is going to look exactly the same, but I think these guys certainly get bang for their buck when they when they’re attacking pitches.

On drafting Logan Reddemann

Tanous: He not only developed more velocity, he developed more pitches themselves. This is one of the bigger arsenals you’ll see. It’s incredibly impressive. It’s almost a professional arsenal when he’ll throw a cutter, sweeper, more traditional curveball, changeup. The last six or seven games, he really came on. On top of that, he’s throwing 95-96 (mph). He was the college pitcher of the year, and really what stands out is the ability to throw that arsenal and throw it for strikes. So, kind of a unique guy, especially in today’s college game, where a lot of the pitchers are two-pitch guys throwing very hard, but maybe with a limited arsenal. This this is a much, much bigger pitch arsenal.

On drafting Ben Davis

Tanous: This is a big horse. You watch him, and you do not want to be in the batter’s box against him. It’s a big moving fastball that we feel like we can actually develop even more. It’s swing-and-miss cutter and slider. So he has three pitches that he can go to, but it’s really high-octane stuff.

On what both pitchers bring

DePodesta: I would add on both guys, (they are) very, very good strike throwers. In fact, both spent time as position players. I think Reddemann was a middle infielder. Ben Davis was a catcher, so maybe we took three catchers today. You know, he was a converted catcher when he went to college. So I think both are just very athletic guys. Reddemann has sort of elite repeatability and really good feel for the baseball. As Tommy noted with Ben Davis, I think he has an unusual fastball that we really think is going to play well in our environment.

DePodesta: We’ve obviously talked about pitchers with a deep mix, which Reddemann certainly has. I do think cutters actually have become more and more prevalent in college, so we saw it with a lot of guys this year. So I wouldn’t say that was something that we were targeting in particular. But it’s not surprising that each of these guys have thrown it and thrown it successfully. We do have a vision in our mind about different pitches that may play better at Coors than others, but that that wasn’t necessarily a strong consideration with these two selections because we also think both these guys have real facility with the baseball in their hands. So I wouldn’t be surprised as they move forward that we make some tweaks to their to their repertoire in order to optimize them.

On the first MLB draft for the Rockies new front office

DePodesta: I think we were thrilled with the way it went. You never know exactly how the board’s going to fall, but we were very excited about the players that we had access to. So certainly Tyler in the first round, and then both Daniel and Logan in the comp and second round area. I think we were we were thrilled with those opportunities. And then even Jackson and Ben Davis. I mean, all these guys were significant players on our board. We had a lot of attention focused on these players throughout the entire spring, and then certainly even throughout this past week, I don’t think any of us woke up this morning expecting that we would have gotten all those guys. So I think we’re we’re thrilled with how it went.

DePodesta: I think it’s hard to say (if there were any surprises) because we never really know, right? We have our own board. We know there are 29 other boards out there, and we hear a lot of rumors and talk to folks. We see all the mock drafts like everyone else does. So I think you at least get a sense of where you think guys might be going. But then the draft plays out in real time, and it’s one of many, many possible iterations that actually happens. But that’s the one you roll with. So I think there were scenarios in which we thought, ‘Hey, there’s a chance one of these guys could get there,‘ so we had to be prepared for that. But we did our work on all these guys, and we’re very prepared for those opportunities. When it came down to it, and both those guys were available at 37, 38, we were ready to jump on.

On returning to the MLB Draft

DePodesta: I couldn’t trade picks. I was sort of jonesing to trade picks! No, it was great. It was great to be back in there with all the guys, and our whole group, I think, really did a tremendous job, not only through the course of the spring and this past week, but even into today in staying organized, staying focused, and like I said earlier, being ready for opportunities. So it was fun to be back in there. I’m looking forward to tomorrow. We get 16 more tomorrow, so I’m excited for that, too.

Final thoughts

What are your thoughts after the first day of the Rockies 2026 draft? How do you think Paul DePodesta et al did? Let us know!


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Lars Nootbaar & Matthew Liberatore Lead Cardinals Past Braves Saturday

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - JULY 11: Lars Nootbaar #21 of the St. Louis Cardinals hits a three-run home run in the first inning against the Atlanta Braves at Busch Stadium on July 11, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Michael B. Thomas/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The St. Louis Cardinals received one of the strongest starts of the year from Matthew Liberatore as they faced the NL East-leading Atlanta Braves Saturday night at Busch Stadium. Lars Nootbaar provided the necessary power to give the Cardinals one for the win column.

The St. Louis Cardinals offense got off to a fast start Saturday night scoring in the top of the 1st inning. After JJ Wetherholt grounded out, Iván Herrera reached on an infield single to second. After Alec Burleson lined out to center for the second out, Jordan Walker hammered a single into right field giving the Cardinals two on with two outs. Lars Nootbaar did not miss a 76 mph curveball from Braves starter Lopez crushing a no-doubt 435-foot no doubt home run into the right-center field stands giving the Cardinals an early 3-0 lead. Noot-bomb indeed!

Lars would be involved in the Cardinals scoring in the bottom of the 4th inning, too. He drew a leadoff walk and then two batters later scored on a RBI single by Blaze Jordan right up the middle upping the Cardinals lead to 4-0.

When’s the last time I can provide a backstory about a start by Matthew Liberatore without any drama for the first 6 innings? I honestly can’t remember, but happy to report that was the story Saturday night at Busch Stadium. Through the first 6 innings, Matthew only allowed one Braves runner in scoring position and that was only because Ozzie Albies advanced to second on a wild pitch in the top of the 1st inning. The Braves were unable to do anything against Liberatore – at all.

St. Louis Cardinals reliever Luis Gastelum was greeted in the most unfriendly way as Mauricio Dubon crushed his first pitch which was an 80 mph sweeper 401 feet into the visitor’s bullpen in left field cutting the Cardinals lead down to 4-1. Luis also gave up a one out double to left by White, but did not surrender any more runs. George Soriano came in to handle the top of the 8th inning and he set the Braves down 1-2-3.

The Cardinals bats wouldn’t score after the 4th inning, but it fortunately didn’t matter. Riley O’Brien was handed the ball to close out the Braves in the top of the 9th and did so without major issues other than a leadoff walk and one hit-by-pitch that amounted to nothing.

The Cardinals will go for the series sweep Sunday as Dustin May will get the start for St. Louis. RHP JR Ritchie will take the mound for the Braves. First pitch scheduled for 1:15pm central time and the game TV broadcast will be available through Cardinals.tv.

Texas signees in the MLB Draft: Three prospects selected, three withdraw

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JULY 11: MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred announces the Tampa Bay Rays selection of Grady Emerson second overall during the 2026 MLB Draft at Pennsylvania Convention Center on July 11, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Texas baseball fans have been forced to sit on the edges of their seats as they await news on the status of commits who are eligible for the MLB Draft’s first four rounds underway today, plus news of Ethan Mendoza’s 2027 plans.

Catch your updates here throughout the weekend-long draft.

Breaking early on…

Grady Emerson selected No. 2 overall by the Tampa Bay Rays

“We are adding a player with a premium hit tool and an excellent amateur pedigree. Grady’s work ethic and makeup are a perfect fit with our already strong culture,” amateur scouting director Chuck Ricci said in a statement following the Fort Worth Christian School shortstop’s selection on Saturday. “Getting to know his family only solidified that he is our guy. I can’t thank area scout Chris Hom enough for his excellent work with Grady over the last 12 months. We are looking forward to seeing Grady in a Rays uniform.”

At No. 89, theTexas Rangers grab Massachusetts prep pitcher Brody Bumila

The Rangers’ selection comes less than a week after news broke about Bumila’s UCL injury. Lone Star Ball recently said this of the young gunslinger: “Bumila is a 6’9”, 255 lb. lefthanded pitcher … who turns 19 in January. He has a big time fastball that has topped 100 mph, and delivers it with a ton of extension and from a relatively low angle that makes him hard to pick up. His control is good for a prep pitcher who throws this hard, but reports indicate that he needs to tighten up his command, as well as improve his slider and changeup.“

Trey Rangel withdraws from the MLB Draft

Flower Mound High School star Cooper Harris goes to Washington Nationals at No. 106 overall

Lake Travis product Cooper Webb withdraws from MLB Draft

Houston Astros choose Texas commit Beau Peterson with 133rd pick

The big third baseman from Kansas is a top-20 prospect in his high school class who may demand an above-sl0t bonus to sign with the Astros.

Barry Bonds’ bloodline lives on with Giants after drafting nephew Peyton

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Harold Reynolds talks with Peyton Bonds as Bonds prepares to bat during the 2026 Draft Combine, Image 2 shows Barry Bonds in a Giants uniform watches a hit with a catcher behind him

SAN FRANCISCO — There’s a new Bonds around these parts.

The name’s Peyton. Peyton Bonds.

Tony Vitello was still years away from guiding Tennessee to a national title, let alone managing in the dugout Barry used to occupy, when the most famous Bonds played his last game in 2007.

But the name needs no introduction.

The name’s Peyton. Peyton Bonds. MLB Photos via Getty Images
Tony Vitello was still years away from guiding Tennessee to a national title, let alone managing in the dugout Barry used to occupy, when the most famous Bonds played his last game in 2007. REUTERS

“Anytime you get a guy named Bonds,” Vitello said, “you’re crazy if you don’t get excited.”

The last name is no coincidence. Barry Bonds’ bloodline will live on in the same organization he became baseball’s most-feared slugger and the all-time home run king.

His nephew, the son of his brother Bobby Jr., has made the most of his genes and developed into an outfield prospect that merited the 90th overall selection in Saturday’s amateur draft.

And it was none other than the Giants who called his name.

The 6-foot-5 center fielder, who bats right-handed, was the only position player selected by the Giants out of the five picks they made on the first day of the draft.

“I think the physical stature and skillset will stick out to everybody,” Vitello said, though his only exposure so far has been from a few videos. “In my limited knowledge, just from watching a little bit, he seems to have incredible instincts for the game. So it will be exciting to see that as well.”

His nephew, the son of his brother Bobby Jr., has made the most of his genes and developed into an outfield prospect that merited the 90th overall selection in Saturday’s amateur draft. MLB Photos via Getty Images

It’s no mystery the source of those instincts and natural ability, coming from a family that has put one member into the record books, another into the big leagues and even more into pro ball.

Peyton will attempt to become the third generation of Bonds boys to reach the big leagues, following in the footsteps of Barry and his grandfather, Bobby. Peyton’s dad was drafted, too, and climbed the ranks of the Giants’ farm system but topped out at Triple-A in 1998.

The family connection wasn’t what put Peyton onto the Giants’ radar, though.


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“We drafted him because of his ability and what we believe in him,” amateur scouting director Michael Holmes said. “He’s a Giant because of Peyton Bonds.”

Barry, actually, has no current formal relationship with the organization. The fearsome lefty had been a regular around the batting cage up until last year, but his appearance on the set of Netflix’s Opening Night broadcast was the only time he has stepped foot in the park this year.

Bonds had a contract with the organization as a special advisor, akin to other franchise legends, but it lapsed after last season and hasn’t been renewed. It remains to be seen if the prospect of his nephew wearing black and orange rekindles the relationship.

Barry, actually, has no current formal relationship with the organization AP

Holmes said Peyton Bonds had been on their radar since last spring, when the Giants drafted his Rutgers teammate and fellow outfielder Trevor Cohen with their second pick.

In 36 games as a junior this past season, Bonds hit .352 with a .535 slugging percentage. His on-base percentage — .436 — would put him right in line with his uncle’s career figure (.444).

If Peyton makes it to Oracle Park, he’ll have a daily reminder of Barry’s most notable career number — 762, displayed out in right field with the franchise’s other three all-time home run leaders, including Barry’s godfather, Willie Mays.

Holmes called him a “real unique talent.” Only six of his hits went over the fence, but the Giants believe his exit velocities will allow him to access more power with some mechanical tweaks.

“You get an athlete in the middle of the diamond, center field, hits the ball hard,” Holmes said. “It’s a real good starter kit.”

Padres select high school pitcher in first round of draft

PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 11: Commissioner of Major League Baseball Robert D. Manfred announces Coleman Borthwick as the 21st overall pick by the San Diego Padres during the 2026 MLB Draft presented by Nippon Express at Pennsylvania Convention Center on Saturday, July 11, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The MLB draft for 2026 features multiple talented position players at the top of the draft board. The debate over who would be drafted first centered around the philosophy of the two teams drafting in the first two slots.

Roch Cholowsky, shortstop out of UCLA, and Grady Emerson, prep shortstop from Fort Worth, were both graded as superior athletes with high upside. The discussion concerned which would edge out the other. Emerson is the scouts’ pick, assessed as having better tools than Cholowsky. The college bat is more advanced, so the choice was considered to be upside versus distance from the major league roster.

Roch Cholowsky was the No. 1 pick by the Chicago White Sox, with Emerson going second to the Tampa Bay Rays. Both infielders are felt to be able to stick in their positions.

The third pick, to the Minnesota Twins, was Georgia Tech catcher Vahn Lackey. The San Francisco Giants drafted fourth and picked UC Santa Barbara RHP Jackson Flora, considered the best pitcher in the college class. Flora has the honor of being the first pitcher selected in 2026.

The first surprise of the draft was the selection of Zion Rose, outfielder from Louisville, by the Kansas City Royals at No. 6. Rose was projected to be picked in the late teens or early twenties, with MLB Pipeline having him at No. 22 in their last mock draft.

The first 10 picks of the draft featured three shortstops, one catcher, one pitcher, and five outfielders. There were only two high school players selected in the top 10, despite the evaluators believing at least two more prep athletes could be picked. 

Padres first-round pick

With the 21st pick in the first round of the MLB draft, the San Diego Padres selected prep pitcher Coleman Borthwick, a graduate of South Walton High School in Florida. Borthwick has a power arm with a mid-90’s fastball that can touch 100 mph. He also has a plus slider and flashes a changeup. He has good command of his pitches.

At 6-ft-6 and 245 pounds, Borthwick, a right-handed pitcher, also excelled as a third baseman in high school. Although a power hitter, the 18-year-old will be developed as a pitcher for the Padres. He is the 43rd rated prospect on MLB.com

In his senior year, Borthwick posted a 0.21 ERA and a 10-0 record over 65.2 innings, striking out 121 batters to seven walks. His fastball and slider both grade out to 60 (20-80 scale). His developing changeup has a 45 rating, and his command is graded at 60. 

With the multiple scouting sites assessing Borthwick as the top prep righty in the draft, the pitcher won the Gatorade High School Pitcher of the Year in Florida in 2026.

Borthwick joins LHP Kruz Schoolcraft (2025), LHP Kash Mayfield (2024), RHP Dylan Lesko (2022), LHP Ryan Weathers (2018), and LHP MacKenzie Gore (2017) as prep pitchers drafted in the first round by the Padres.

Padres second-round pick

In the second round of the 2026 MLB draft, the Padres had the 60th pick. They selected prep shortstop Elliot Lascelles out of Upper Canada College HS (Ontario). A bat-first player who has questions regarding his defensive ability at shortstop, Lascelles impressed during the spring when he went against professional pitchers in Arizona and Florida. In 54 at-bats against minor league pitchers, Lascelles hit .389 with four extra-base hits. His arm and power are question marks but his contact ability stands out as does his penchant for middle-of -the-field drives.

The 6-ft-1, 181-pound lefty-hitting infielder also ran track in high school and is considered a plus base runner. If he doesn’t stick at shortstop, then second base could be where he profiles in the future. Listed by MLB as the 158th prospect, Lascelles must be lured away from his Yale commitment.

Padres third-round pick

In the third round of the draft, the Padres had the 97th pick. In that spot, the organization chose RHP Ryan Lynch out of North Carolina. The 6-ft-4, 216-pound starter features a 94-96 mph sinker (tops out at 99) that rates as a 60 grade on MLB.com. He also throws a changeup and a slider. He has average control and has good deception in his delivery. There are questions among scouts about whether he can stick as a starter, but he has a projectable frame for the role. 

If he is unable to develop a starter repertoire, closing in the bullpen is an option with his pitch mix. He is rated as the 98th best player in the MLB.com rankings.

He left his start in the College World Series game with an oblique injury.

Padres fourth-round pick

In the fourth round of the draft, the Padres picked 124th. They chose George Washington University catcher Robbie Lavey, the No. 188 ranked prospect on MLB.com.

The lefty-hitting backstop has a plus arm and could be a plus defender with some pro instruction. He has a solid bat with more walks than strikeouts and has good whiff and chase rates. His plus arm delivers a below two second pop time. His bat delivers good exit velocity and at 6-foot-2 and 215 pounds, he has the potential to develop more power. With work at the pro level, he could develop into a better-than-average catcher.

Padres Compensatory pick

In exchange for the loss of free agent pitcher Dylan Cease, the Padres had the 134th pick in the compensatory round after rounds 1-4 were completed. With that pick the Padres chose Oklahoma State outfielder Alex Conover, a lefty with a 50 grade on his tools across the board who projects as a corner outfielder.

He is known for his plus makeup and has also showcased his ability to catch as well as playing left field. His whiff rate and chase rate are low, but his power could be improved with an adjustment to his swing that could also decrease his groundball rate.

Although not a speedy runner, Conover has good baserunning skills and is able to take extra bags on the basepaths.

Rounds 5-20 will take place Sunday beginning at 8:30 a.m. PST. It can be streamed on MLB.com, MLBTV, MLB+, and on the MLB app.

Noah Cameron sets good and bad career marks as Royals fall to Orioles again

Noah Cameron stands on the mound
Jul 11, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Kansas City Royals pitcher Noah Cameron (65) during the third inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images | Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

If I told you that Noah Cameron was going to pitch 7 innings, strike out a career high 9 batters, and only allow 7 total baserunners, you’d probably imagine he had a pretty good game. What I didn’t tell you, though, was that three of the five hits he allowed were long home runs (tying a career worst), another was a double, and the last one was a single off the wall that saw Samuel Basallo cut down at second by an excellent Jac Caglianone throw. I also didn’t tell you that Orioles starter Kyle Bradish carried a no-hitter into the seventh inning. So, yeah, the Royals lost 6-1.

As the broadcast remarked multiple times, every time Noah gave up a run, he’d buckle down and get some impressive strikeouts. Perhaps that bodes well for the rest of the season, but for today, it just meant he gave up a lot of runs before pitching quite well. Along with the hits and strikeouts, Cameron gave up a lot of hard contact, so the Orioles were seeing him well. Or perhaps knew where the pitches were going to be. One particularly funny moment happened as Royals’ announcer Eric Hosmer was saying Cameron needed to avoid throwing a fastball to Coby Mayo until he proved he could hit something else. Cameron threw a pretty good slider that was in off the plate, and Mayo still launched it 440 (or more) feet down the left field line for a home run.

Eli Morgan got the eighth inning, pitching for the Royals for the first time in nearly a month, since June 12. It was like he never left, giving up a home run to Henderson on the first pitch he threw.

The Royals scored their lone run in the seventh inning as Bradish was attempting to continue his pursuit of the second no-hitter in MLB this season. Jac Caglianone led off with a single lined over Gunnar Henderson’s head into left. He advanced to second on a groundout by Lane Thomas and to third on a wild pitch ball four to Vinnie Pasquantino. He scored on a sacrifice fly by Salvador Perez.

The Royals only play one more game before the All-Star Break, where three of their players will feature despite the fact that the team has the worst record in baseball. That certainly says something about how the rest of the team has played. Seth Lugo will face off against Shane Baz tomorrow. The game will start at 12:35 Central. Or you could watch Blake Mitchell and Kendry Chourio play in the Futures Game at 11 AM Central. Or the rest of the draft starting at 10:30 AM. Baseball sure knows how to get you excited about the sport!

During 'difficult' stretch, Mets encouraged by Freddy Peralta's latest start

Freddy Peralta’s first season in Queens, after coming over in a blockbuster offseason trade with the expectation of immediately becoming the Mets’ ace, has not lived up to those expectations so far.

After failing to complete five innings on Saturday against the Boston Red Sox for the third consecutive start in his final outing of the first half, Peralta enters the break 5-8 with a 4.66 ERA (1.44 WHIP) in 20 starts.

It’s not at all what New York thought it was trading for after the right-hander had his best season in Milwaukee last season, going 17-6 with a 2.70 ERA (1.08 WHIP). 

“It’s a terrible feeling coming out before the fifth inning,” Peralta said after the 4-0 loss. “I’ve been struggling and I’m just working on trying to navigate through this. It’s been difficult, but not impossible for me. 

“I never lose the hope. Just keep working; that’s what I keep telling myself and at some point I’m gonna navigate through it.”

Despite the short outing, Peralta only allowed two earned runs on three hits, with both of the runs coming on a two-run homer in the fourth inning. He also struck out six and had interim manager Andy Green encouraged with his performance because of the electricity on his fastball and the swing-and-misses he garnered.

What plagued Peralta were the walks – he had five of them, which has been a problem that comes and goes for the 30-year-old this season. In 104.1 innings this year, Peralta has issued 44 walks, nine of which have come in three starts this month.

Peralta spoke about the free passes after the game, saying he felt “a little bit out of balance” with his legs today after feeling good in the first two innings.

“If he’s able to pump the zone full of strikes with that fastball, he’s going to pitch really deep into the game,” Green said about his right-hander. “It wasn’t a lot of damage [today], the one swing got a fastball kinda down and in… outside of that there was just his pitch count getting deep, [and the] walks. 

“I thought it was very encouraging to see real life on his heater and seeing so many swings and misses on his fastball.”

Green continued, regarding Peralta’s fastball: “That is a pathway to getting away from the walks going forward, so we’re encouraged with that. To me, it’s just keep attacking the zone, keep trusting the stuff, the fastball really plays and beat a lot of guys up today.”

With the trust of his manager, Peralta will continue to work on the things he needs to work on to get back to last year’s dominance, something the Mets have only seen in flashes this season. And with New York out of contention with the trade deadline looming, Peralta knows that he’s not only pitching for the Mets, but possibly for another team that is looking to acquire a starting pitcher for their own playoff push. 

While he’s not looking ahead at something like that happening, instead focused on his own results and how to get better, he knows things can change quickly.

“I think so far I haven’t done what I’m supposed to do,” Peralta said. “I’m working on it. It’s crazy because at the end of the day, everything can change, talking about myself and my season. I’m just focused on that and I trust myself, and I know that I can turn it around.”

Dodgers vs. Diamondbacks game chat

Jul 2, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy (13) throws for an out at the top of the sixth inning against the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Navarro-Imagn Images | William Navarro-Imagn Images

After seeing the error of their ways on Friday night — three errors in the series-opening loss to the Diamondbacks, six errors over the last three games — the Dodgers try to get back on track on Saturday night, with All-Star Yoshinobu Yamamoto on the mound.

Saturday game info

  • Teams: Dodgers vs. D-backs
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium
  • Start time: 6:10 p.m.
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

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Peyton Bonds Takes Next Step To Continue Family Legacy, Drafted by Giants in Third Round

PISCATAWAY, NEW JERSEY - APRIL 10, 2026: Peyton Bonds #25 of the Rutgers Scarlet Knights bats during the third inning against the UCLA Bruins at Bainton Field on April 10, 2026 in Piscataway, New Jersey. (Photo by Chris Bernacchi/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Peyton Bonds has been drafted in the third round of the MLB draft by the team that two of his ancestors played for, the San Francisco Giants. With his drafting, Bonds will have the opportunity to continue his family’s legacy not just in MLB but in the Bay Area, as both his father, Bobby Bonds II, and his uncle, Barry Bonds, spent much of their careers playing for the Giants. Barry currently holds the MLB record for home runs in a career.

Bonds was taken with the 90th overall pick.

Last season for Rutgers, Bonds recorded 50 hits in 142 at-bats along with 6 home runs. He also recorded 31 total runs and 29 RBI’s last season.

Many scouting reports say that he has a good power-hitting build at 6-foot-5, 230 pounds, and that he has a good bat speed and good exit velocity, likely just needing a few tweaks to be a good power hitter at the major league level.

However, many reports also talk about his good skill in the field. Last season, Bonds recorded 80 put-outs and a .976 fielding percentage.

Bonds will join a familiar face when he gets to the Bay Area. Last year, in the same round, former Rutgers baseball player Trevor Cohen was selected by the Giants. Both of them played on the same Rutgers roster two years ago.

Rutgers baseball has seen success in having players drafted to the MLB under current head coach Steve Owens. Since Owens took over in 2019, 12 Rutgers players have been drafted to the major leagues.