Today in White Sox History: January 24

SAN DIEGO, CA - SEPTEMBER 12: Ron Marinaccio #97 of the San Diego Padres pitches during the game between the Colorado Rockies and the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on Friday, September 12, 2025 in San Diego, California.
On this day one year ago, the White Sox sold Ron Marinaccio, so he could live out his dream of pitching in a Taco Bell uniform. | (Photo by Vincent Mizzoni/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

1939
It was the early years of the Hall of Fame, so voting results could still tend to be pretty weird. Case in point, Eddie Collins was voted into the Hall of Fame — on his fourth try.

Collins, by his 124.4 WAR the best second baseman in baseball history, had fallen 110 votes short of election in the inaugural Hall of Fame vote (1936), 36 votes short in 1937, and 22 short in 1938 before breaking through with … 77.7% support in 1939. Collins received 213 of 274 votes, clearing the bar for election by … seven tallies.

Joining Collins in the 1939 class was George Sisler, who endured a similar wait, and Willie Keeler, whose 207 votes made him the first Hall of Fame member to be elected by just a one-vote margin.

Collins’ 67.0 WAR as a member of the White Sox places him as the fourth-best overall and third-best position player (behind Luke Appling and Frank Thomas) in team history.


1962
Due substantially to its refusal to integrate (just one Black player had ever graced the rosters over 61 seasons), the Southern Association disbanded. The Nashville Vols and current White Sox affiliate Birmingham Barons played the entire 1901-61 run of the SA. White Sox affiliate in the 1950s the Memphis Chicks, managed by both Luke Appling and Ted Lyons during the decade and seeing the star rise of Luis Aparicio, played all but the final season.

By 1964 the Southern League had formed, giving new and permanent homes to SA teams like the Barons and Chattanooga Lookouts, which still exist and thrive in that league to this day.


2003
Sometimes luck plays a part in things … sometimes a very big part. 

On this date, Chicago White Sox general manager Ken Williams signed free agent pitcher Esteban Loaiza to a $500,000 contract, a massive discount from the $6.05 million he’d made in 2002 with the Toronto Blue Jays

Loaiza was expected to round out the back end of the rotation — but he did much more than that. By season’s end he had won 21 games, started the All-Star Game in front of his hometown White Sox fans, and led the American League in strikeouts. Loaiza could have won the Cy Young, but a pair of 1-0 losses to Detroit appeared to be the difference in doing so; he ended up second in the voting.

Even better, with Loaiza’s contract jumping to $4 million in 2004, Williams flipped the starter at close to maximum value (the righthander was also a 2004 All-Star). Loaiza was swapped to the Yankees at midseason, for pitcher José Contreras … another deal that worked out as a huge White Sox advantage!


2018
Former White Sox DH and Peoria native Jim Thome was elected to the Hall of Fame on his first try, getting 89.8% of the vote. He was joined by a healthy class: Chipper Jones, Vladimir Guerrero and Trevor Hoffman, along with Alan Trammell and Jack Morris from the Veterans’ Committee.

Thome’s Hall of Fame track was stalled by injury that ran him out of Philadelphia and into the arms of the White Sox in 2006. Thome revitalized his career and boosted the 90-win Sox with a 4.9 WAR season at DH. His full White Sox career saw him put up 12.1 WAR over three-plus seasons; Thome would also hit his 500th career homer as a member of the White Sox.


2025
The White Sox sold reliever Ron Marinaccio to the Padres. The righthander was a waiver claim in September from the the New York Yankees, and never ended up pitching a single inning, majors or minors, with the White Sox. He did have a short and successful stint with the Padres in 2025, and in his first four years managed a tidy 2.1 WAR in just 125 1/3 MLB innings.

Dodgers notes: Bob Costas, Kyle Tucker, pitcher numbers

Major League Baseball announced game times for the full 2026 schedule this week, which includes a 5:30 p.m. PT start for the Dodgers on opening day against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium. That game will be televised exclusively by NBC and streamed on Peacock.

NBC’s coverage on March 26 begins at 5 p.m. PT, and on Thursday the network announced that Bob Costas will return to NBC Sports to host that pregame show, as well as the pregame show for the network’s Sunday Night Baseball telecasts during the season.

“As appreciative as I am of other aspects of my career, especially HBO and the MLB Network, for 40 years, my true broadcasting home was NBC,” Costas said in a press release.

Links

Joshua Rodrigues at Baseball Prospectus looked at bat speed aging curves in relation to some of the bigger free agent contracts this offseason. Kyle Tucker, having just turned 29 and signed a contract that will last a maximum of four years, is less likely to decline precipitously during this deal with the Dodgers, Rodrigues argues.

“He’s still operating within a window where modest growth is reasonable before settling into a long-term plateau,” Rodrigues wrote. “From a bat speed perspective, he profiles as a player who should age into a stable, roughly league-average range rather than fall off a cliff.”

Rob Mains at Baseball Prospectus analyzed Tucker’s $240 million Dodgers contract, noting that Tucker will actually earn more than had he simply been paid $60 million per year in salary. That’s largely because Tucker got a $64 million signing bonus and $30 million in deferred salaries, which are both taxed in a player’s state of residence, and there’s no state income tax in Florida.

Blake Snell wears number seven with the Dodgers, and new closer Edwin Díaz will wear number three in Los Angeles. Michael Baumann at FanGraphs wrote about the recent upswing of single-digit numbers worn by pitchers, and he hates it aesthetically.

“The pitcher is the only player in baseball — maybe the only athlete in all of team sports — who spends most of the game with his back to the TV camera,” Baumann wrote. “And pitchers are big dudes, by and large; even a skinny two-digit number, like 11, feels inadequate for a pitcher’s broad thorax.”

Reed leads by 4 shots at Dubai Desert Classic as McIlroy's title hopes fade and Hovland surges

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Patrick Reed will take a four-stroke lead into the final round of the Dubai Desert Classic after shooting 5-under 67 on Saturday, as Rory McIlroy's chances of a record-extending fifth title virtually disappeared.

Reed, the former Masters champion who now plays on the LIV Golf circuit, tapped in at No. 18 for his seventh birdie of the third round at Emirates Golf Club to move onto 14-under 202 for the week.

Leading the chase was David Puig, another LIV player, who shot 66 to jump to second place. A further shot back was Viktor Hovland, who had a 65 that tied the lowest round of the day, and Andy Sullivan (71).

“I know it’s not going to be easy, it never is, and doesn’t matter how big of a lead you have," said Reed, who won nine times on the PGA Tour — including at Augusta National in 2018 — before joining LIV in 2022.

As a LIV player, the American won LIV Golf in Dallas last year and then in Hong Kong on the Asian Tour in 2024.

As for No. 2-ranked McIlroy, the tournament headliner started the round seven strokes behind overnight leader Reed and talking up his chances of a weekend charge on a course where he has won four times.

The Northern Irishman made par on each of his first nine holes and bogeyed the last after missing a 2-foot par putt to shoot 71, and was 11 back.

Tommy Fleetwood, ranked No. 3, has yet to break par this week after adding a 73 to rounds of 73 and 72.

Another high-profile name, Tyrrell Hatton, made six bogeys in a 76 to drop to a tie for 42nd.

Puig has already won on the European tour in the 2026 season — at the Australian PGA Championship in November — and the 24-year-old Spaniard was tied for third at the Dubai Invitational last week.

Hovland eyes second title

Hovland's last win on the European tour was at the Dubai Desert Classic in 2022, when he started the final round six back and triumphed in a playoff over Richard Bland.

The No. 14-ranked Norwegian has changed his swing in recent years and still doesn't feel entirely comfortable, despite being bogey-free on Saturday.

“Still doesn’t feel like I can stand on the tee and kind of swing for the fences and swing loosely,” said Hovland, who is playing his first event of 2026. "It’s all very contrived and manufactured, and it happened to go straight today. If I get off the tee and in a decent position, I can really do some damage.

“But I really would like to be able to stand on the tee box and swing hard and know that the ball is going to go fairly straight.”

___

AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

This Week in Purple: Rockies Fest(ivus) for the Rest of Us!

Rockies Fest is here, which is the unofficial kick off to the 2026 Rockies season. Numerous players, prospects, coaches and alumni will be attendance, and many of them will depart for Scottsdale after the festival is over. Pitchers and catchers report in just about three weeks on February 12; everyone else reports on February 17; and the first game will take place on February 20.

Notably absent, though, are Ezequiel Tovar, Brenton Doyle, Zac Veen and Adael Amador. Tovar might be held up in Venezuela, but the absence of the other three is notable. However, new faces such as Michael Lorenzen and Jake McCarthy are already on the roster for the day.

A few of our Purple Row staff will also be in attendance, and will have some takeaways in the coming weeks. But in the meantime, this will serve as a place to discuss the day’s festivities.

But before things kick off, here’s what our writers had to say this week:

To Read (Rockpiles)

To Read (PuRPs)

Full Stream

Weekend Discussion Topics

Will you be attending Rockies Fest? What are you most looking forward to? Which panels are most intriguing? Will you be playing “Rockies Family Feud” with some players? Let us know in the comments!


Please keep in mind our Purple Row Community Guidelines when you’re commenting. Thanks!

A closer look at the Tigers 2026 international free agent class

The 2026 international signing period opened a week ago (Jan. 15), and Detroit signed seven players. While prospects can sign any time between Jan. 15 and Dec. 15, the good ones come off the board almost immediately. Of course, even more so with prep picks in the amateur draft, these players are a real roll of the dice and often it’s not the biggest names who work out.

Sure, these guys are as young as 16 years old, but Tigers fans should know just how important the international market is. Some of the top stars in the game were international free agents, including Vladimir Guerrero Jr., José Ramírez, Julio Rodriguez and Juan Soto.

Perhaps the greatest Tiger in recent memory, Miguel Cabrera, signed at 16 years old for $1.8 million, not to mention Eugenio Suárez, Willy Adames, Fernando Rodney down to current top 100 prospect, Josue Briceño. The point is that these guys can become MLB players, even if they aren’t slam dunks like Cabrera.

So, without dragging out this preamble any longer, let’s look at what Detroit got in its 2026 haul.

Let’s start with the three headliners: Venezuelan catcher Manuel Bolívar, Dominican outfielder Randy Santana and Venezuelan infielder Oscar Tineo. Nearly 65% of Detroit’s $7,537,100 international signing pool went to these three players. They should have about $550,000 left to spend in this signing period. After the players with the big previously arranged deals sign, the rest of the signing period is about using the remainder to hunt underrated gems and late bloomers in the class throughout the spring and summer months. This is a business at the end of the day, so money matters.

Note: All signing values sourced from Spotrac

Here’s why the Tigers spent so much on these teenagers.

C Manuel Bolívar — $2,297,500

As a 13-year-old, Manuel Bolívar made a name for himself with the Venezuelan national team at the U-15 Baseball World Cup in 2022. He posted a 1.083 OPS over four games as the youngest player on the roster and has been on Detroit’s radar since. Now 17 — and turning 18 in September — Bolívar checks in at 6-foot-3 and 190 pounds.

He shows signs of plus power, a plus arm and strong intangibles, albeit with some swing-and-miss concerns. While he’s able to pull the ball with power, advanced breaking balls could give him trouble throughout his pro career. His blocking ability is advanced for his age, which is a plus, and he’s got the arm strength for the position. Bolívar could end up transitioning to first base down the line, but he’s a pretty good bet to make it as at least a backup catcher.

Playing a premium position helped Bolívar earn the $2.3 million signing bonus, and Detroit has faith in his ability to develop behind the plate. He’ll play in the Dominican Summer League this year.

“This kid has a tremendous set of tools,” Tigers director of Latin American operations Miguel Garcia said to the Freep. “He’s got a good body for his position, catcher, and the ability to develop some power down the road, having a plus arm and good defensive skills. We like his makeup, the way that he handles himself on and off the baseball field. We’re pretty excited about Manuel Bolivar.”

SS Oscar Tineo — $1,447,500

Defensive shortstop Oscar Tineo earned the second-highest signing bonus from Detroit, and for good reason. He’s 6-foot-2 with good range and agility, and Garcia projects him to develop a plus arm while staying at shortstop. His tools are reminiscent of Franyerber Montilla, who has come along as one of the better shortstops in Detroit’s farm system. Maybe the speed tool isn’t as sharp, but Baseball America’s Ben Badler called Tineo “an above-average runner”.

Like Montilla, Tineo has the makings of an plus defender; however, the bat is of some concern. While he is a switch-hitter, Tineo struggles as a lefty against righties and needs to develop some pop to his swing. Montilla made the jump after going through a rough patch once arriving stateside. The Venezuela native turns 17 next month, so Detroit has some time to develop him in the DSL over the next couple of years.

CF Randy Santana — $1,097,500

The last of Detroit’s “premier” signings might have the brightest future. Randy Santana has a rocket arm, plus-power potential, good speed, and a pretty swing. This is a kid who has clocked multiple 100-mph throws from the outfield at 17 years old and comes from a proven baseball academy (Niche) from the Dominican Republic — the same academy that produced Soto and Elly De La Cruz.

There’s a world where Santana switches to the mound, but he has a ton of bat speed, albeit with a somewhat reckless approach and coming from a smaller — 5-foot-11, 180-pound — frame. The combination of speed and power could make him dangerous at the plate, particularly if he can mature as a hitter and make better swing decisions.

The goal is to keep him in center field, which he has the speed for, but a transition to right field down the line wouldn’t be surprising. Santana can also affect the game on the base path as a plus runner, too. In a farm full of left-handed hitting talent, Santana pairs nicely with last year’s top international signing, Cris Rodriguez, as a right-handed slugger. It’s hard to argue with taking a young player with a lot of atheticism and an outsized toolkit. Santana has huge upside and doesn’t need to become a great pure hitter to grow into an impactful major leaguer someday.

CF Douglas Olivo — $797,500

If Santana doesn’t work out in center field, Douglas Olivo probably will. The 6-foot-3, 175-pound Venezuelan moves around the outfield with ease and reads the ball off the bat fairly well. A left-hander who can switch hit, Olivo’s better at hitting for average than power. Still, he has the frame to add plenty of weight, which could lead to more pop down the line.

“He covers a lot of ground,” Garcia said. “As we all know, it takes a lot to play center field in Comerica Park, and we all strongly believe that every time we project a kid to play center field, that’s what we think about.”

Olivo’s signing bonus is in question. While Spotrac lists him just under $800,000, Evan Petzold of the Detroit Free Press reported a $900,000 signing bonus. Either way, it’s a considerable chunk compared to everyone below him on this list.

IF Eduardo Tusen — $312,500

The final signee who reeled in a deal above $300,000 — which is an arbitrary cutoff point but suggests that he’s in the top-200 range of international prospects — is Eduardo Tusen out of the Dominican Republic. A middle infielder for now, Tusen’s arm strength leads to a natural third base projection. He’s a switch hitter with good bat speed from both sides of the plate, but he looks more natural in the right-handed batter’s box. He’s 16 going on 17 and checks in at 5-foot-11 and 194 pounds.

The rest of Detroit’s international signees are getting $275,00 or less, so we’ll do this by position. Less is known about these guys and the money says it’s more of a crap shoot than anything else.

Pitchers

Signed: RHP Yeuri Ramirez (Dominican Republic), $240,000; RHP Alexander Padilla (Dominican Republic), $160,000; RHP Jesus Miranda (Colombia), $35,500

Yeuri Ramirez is the most interesting name here. He signed with Milwaukee in the 2025 cycle, but an alleged age falsification issue voided the $300,000 deal. He ends up with the Tigers this year and is already 18 years old. Does he need to spend a year in the DSL? Probably not, but Detroit might opt to keep him overseas for a year. Ramirez has run his fastball up to 94-95 mph and is quite polished. He likes to play with timings and has some feel for his secondary stuff.

There’s not much out there on Padilla or Miranda. The latter looks raw in the videos below but has been clocked in the upper-80s while showing some feel for the breaking stuff. Refining his motion could be the ticket to success.

Catchers

Signed: Roman Silgado (Venezuela), $65,000; Yojan Coronel (Venezuela), $40,000

Two more catchers signed with Detroit, albeit for not a ton of money. Silgado shows some decent hand speed as righty and there’s some plus-power potential if he can make solid contact consistently.

There’s not a ton out there on Coronel right now.

Infielders

Signed: Steve Gutierrez (Venezuela), $70,000; Edwinyer Martinez (Venezuela), N/A

Two more infielders that don’t have much film. Gutierrez and Martinez are both shortstops for now. Martinez has a smaller build at 5-foot-9, 179 pounds, so moving to second might be in his future.

Outfielders

Signed: Santiago Ventura (Venezuela), $275,000; Diego Orro (Venezuela), $100,000

Ventura stands out as a plus runner with some feel in center field, according to Baseball America. He’s more of a defender than a hitter, but he can find a gap or two. He‘s 6-foot, 175 pounds.

Orro is a left-handed hitter who stands at 5-foot-11, 165 pounds. There’s some film on his swing linked below.

Farewell and thanks, Freddy

On Wednesday, we got news many of us have expected all offseason: after eight years in Milwaukee, Freddy Peralta has been traded. I am not here to analyze that trade (Jason both reported on the trade and looked at what the return, Brandon Sproat and Jett Williams, will offer the 2026 Brewers, and we’ll have more coming). Instead, I’m here to look back and appreciate Peralta’s career as a Milwaukee Brewer.

Peralta’s career did not start in Milwaukee. He signed as an amateur free agent out of the Dominican Republic with the Seattle Mariners way back in 2013, when he was 17 years old, and spent his first three years as a pro pitching in Seattle’s system. In December 2015, Peralta was one of three minor leaguers the Brewers acquired from the Mariners in exchange for first baseman Adam Lind, who was coming off a solid season as Milwaukee’s first baseman. Neither of the other two players acquired in that trade—Carlos Herrera and Daniel Missaki—ever made the majors.

Once he was in the Milwaukee system, Peralta started to assert himself a bit. in 2016, he started the season by going 4-1 with a 2.85 ERA in 60 innings (16 games, eight starts) at Class-A Wisconsin, where he struck out 11.6 batters per nine innings. In 2017, the 21-year-old Peralta started at High-A Carolina and earned a midseason promotion to Double-A Biloxi, where he allowed just 16 earned runs in 63 2/3 innings (a 2.26 ERA). Over the full 2017 minor league season, Peralta struck out almost 13 batters per nine innings. When he looked nearly as good after getting promoted to the offense-friendly Pacific Coast League in 2018, Peralta was on his way to the majors.

Peralta’s debut came on Mother’s Day, May 13th, 2018, and it was a day to remember. On the mound at home versus the Colorado Rockies (who were good in 2018—remember, that’s the team Milwaukee played in the divisional round of the playoffs), Freddy baffled the Colorado lineup. Throwing almost exclusively his fastball, he struck out five of the first six batters he faced, didn’t allow a baserunner until an error allowed a man to reach in the third, and didn’t allow a hit until the sixth inning, when David Dahl singled to center. Peralta struck out one more batter after Dahl’s single and was taken out of the game after 98 pitches and 5 2/3 innings: he allowed just the one hit, walked two, and struck outan astounding 13 batters, one more than the previous franchise record in a debut, held by Steve Woodard.

In that start, 90 of the 98 pitches that Peralta threw were fastballs, which set the tone for his whole rookie season, during which he earned the nickname Fastball Freddy. While the rest of that season didn’t go quite as well as his debut, Peralta made 14 starts and two relief appearances in the 2018 regular season and pitched to a 4.25 ERA while striking out 11 batters per nine innings, a massive total for a starting pitcher. He didn’t pitch much in that postseason, but he did throw three scoreless innings in game four of the NLCS after Gio Gonzalez was chased after just one inning; Milwaukee lost in extras.

After the encouraging start to his career, Peralta hit some bumps in 2019, when he made eight starts and 31 relief appearances and pitched to a 5.29 ERA. But he was still striking out a ton of batters—12.2 per nine innings—and the Brewers were clearly still encouraged, especially when he made arguably the best start of his career in his second start of the season on April 3rd: Peralta pitched eight shutout innings with 11 strikeouts, no walks, and just two hits allowed in a 1-0 victory. He wasn’t bad in 2020 and struck out everybody (14.4 per nine), but it was such a strange season that it was difficult to judge his progress. It turned out that Peralta was on the verge of a breakout.

In 2021, Peralta functioned as the third starter in the best top-three in baseball, behind Corbin Burnes and Brandon Woodruff (who finished first and fifth, respectively, in NL Cy Young voting). Peralta wasn’t in the Cy Young conversation like his teammates, but he was excellent: in 144 1/3 innings, Peralta pitched to a 2.81 ERA (147 ERA+) and 3.12 FIP, struck out 12.2 batters per nine, and made his first All-Star team.

Over the next three seasons, Peralta was one of the steadiest pitchers in baseball. While he struggled to regain the form that got him on the 2021 All-Star team, Peralta was almost always healthy (he missed some time in 2022 but made 30 starts in 2023 and 32 in 2024) and turned in consecutive seasons with a 113, 112, and 113 ERA+. There was some fluctuation in his underlying metrics—his strikeouts were a little up and down, he allowed a bunch of homers in 2023 and 2024 which hadn’t previously been a problem. But he was an extremely steady presence, and he struck out 210 batters in 2023 and 200 in 2024.

For most of his career, Peralta had operated somewhat out of the spotlight behind his star teammates, but Burnes was traded after the 2023 season and Woodruff was injured that same year, so in 2024, Peralta became the de facto ace of Milwaukee’s staff. 2024 was viewed as somewhat disappointing: Peralta was by no means bad, but he had the worst FIP of his career (aside from 2019, when he was almost a rookie and pitching out of the bullpen) and it just felt like things weren’t quite coming together. Peralta had also developed a frustrating habit where it felt like he’d get ahead of every batter 0-2 and then miss badly with three straight pitches until it was a full count; whether he got the batter out or not, Peralta’s pitch counts suffered, and he rarely worked deep into games.

Things changed in 2025. As the team coalesced around Peralta, Milwaukee enjoyed a remarkable run through the summer that earned them the best record in baseball. The Brewer ace was the constant, the thing that all the young players around him knew they could rely on. In a career-high 33 starts and 176 2/3 innings, Peralta led the National League with 17 wins, finished fourth in the league with a 2.70 ERA, and finished sixth with 204 strikeouts, the third straight season in which he’d struck out at least 200 batters.

For the first time, Peralta earned Cy Young votes, as he finished fifth in National League voting for that award, and he added his second All-Star selection. But Brewer fans knew that time with Peralta was running out. Before the 2020 season, Peralta had signed what turned out to be a very team friendly extension with Milwaukee, a five-year deal that bought out his arbitration years for just $15.5 million, which included club options for the 2025 and 2026 seasons at just $8 million each. With just one of those option years remaining before free agency, the Brewers made the decision to move him for controllable assets this week.

Peralta now relinquishes his status as the third-longest-tenured Brewer, as only Christian Yelich and Brandon Woodruff had been on the major league team longer—Yelich by just over a month, since his debut came on Opening Day during the 2018 season, and Woodruff by about three months, as he’d debuted near the end of the 2017 season. Had he returned for his ninth season as a Brewer in 2026, Peralta would’ve set a major franchise record, had he stayed healthy—as is, he leaves the club third in their history in strikeouts with 1,153, 73 behind Yovani Gallardo’s record. Among Brewers with at least 500 innings pitched, Peralta is first in franchise history in hits per nine (6.7) and strikeouts per nine (11.1).

Now, the soon-to-be 30-year-old pitcher will ply his trade for a team other than the Brewers for the first time in the major leagues. It will be tough to see him pitch for the Mets, a team who has become something of a rival over the past couple of seasons, a deep-pocketed team that is desperate to become as good—and as unlikable—as the Dodgers. But there is some poetry in that move: the Mets’ president of baseball operations, David Stearns, was the brand new general manager of the Brewers in 2015 when he made the trade for Peralta, just his third trade as the boss.

Trades like this certainly bring mixed emotions, one of which could certainly be angst. Peralta, from everything we can tell as fans, is a humble, friendly, happy guy, a leader who others in the clubhouse looked up to, exactly the type of dude that it’s fun to root for. (He is one of my favorite Brewers of all time.) He’s also a very good pitcher. To lose those things is a drag. Those sad feelings are also mixed in with the excitement of the two new players, both with tantalizing potential, that the Brewers welcome into their system this week.

But it is safe to say that Peralta will always be a hero to fans of the Milwaukee Brewers. He is, at worst, one of the ten best pitchers in franchise history, and it is exceedingly rare for players to stick with a single team for as long as Peralta did—eight years—in the modern game. Now that he’s moved on, do you know who the third-longest-tenured Brewer is, after Woodruff and Yelich? That would be Aaron Ashby, who debuted in 2021 and still hasn’t made 100 MLB appearances.

So, thank you, Freddy Peralta. You had a fastball that didn’t make sense, you were the reason that many of us Brewers fans learned what “extension” was, and you had great rapport with Sophia Minnaert (I’m having trouble tracking it down, but Minnaert traveled with Peralta to his home in the Dominican Republic for a special that aired on Brewers television a few years ago, which is worth checking out). You frustrated us, you delighted us, and you turned yourself into one of the best pitchers in team history. Good luck in the future (unless of course you’re playing the Brewers).

Chicago Cubs news and notes — Carlson, Hoerner, McCormick, Shaw

Welcome to the weekend. We can expect some winnowing around the edges, but it looks like the personnel are settled, more or less. I have some concerns about the handedness of the bench but it’ll work out. Or it won’t. Ability counts more, really. But I like balance.

Apparently I’m not alone. I understand that Dylan Carlson made a camp stop a couple of days ago.

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Food For Thought:

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Finding the next Mike Muscala: scouring the market for cheaper big man alternatives

We are two weeks from the trade deadline, and the Celtics are among a handful of teams rumored to be buyers seeking a positional upgrade to prepare for a postseason run. 

The rumor mill has swirled around Boston’s frontcourt in particular, and anyone even a little online has seen the team linked to big names like Jaren Jackson Jr. and Ivica Zubac over the past month. Both options would require a substantial trade package, likely involving draft capital and the expiring $27.6 million contract of Anfernee Simons, but what if the Celtics aren’t looking at a splashy move? 

At this point, you’re probably wondering why, in the year of 2026, the name Mike Muscala is holding any relevance to this franchise. Muscala is perhaps the quintessential modern journeyman by force, a living and breathing trade throw-in whose 11-year career featured seven teams, seven trades and a lot of perfectly fine stretch shooting off the bench. 

To some, he’s a hero (he may never buy a beer in Philadelphia again for his contributions to the selection of Tyrese Maxey); to others, he was a welcome bench piece, and to the Celtics specifically, he was a passing ship, whose 26-game pit stop started right at the trade deadline for a team in need of an additional bench big. 

Boston finds itself in a similar spot. Between Neemias Queta and Luka Garza, the Celtics have surprised many NBA pundits that predicted a league-worst frontcourt, but they’re still in search of another big man to round out that spot. The bigger names will earn all the headlines, but today we’ll be searching for low-cost, low-risk options that likely don’t push the needle significantly, but also don’t require significant trade assets to improve the position. 

Utilizing the Muscala Model (not a real thing, nor quantifiable), we’ll see if this dive into the bottom and mid-level of the NBA’s frontcourt barrel can help the Celtics in the short-term.

WASHINGTON, DC – DECEMBER 04: Neemias Queta #88 of the Boston Celtics competes for position against Marvin Bagley III #35 and Will Riley #27 of the Washington Wizards during the second half at Capital One Arena on December 4, 2025 in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images)

Marvin Bagley III

There’s a reason we’re starting with Marvin Bagley on this list. 

Bagley, in his second stop with the Washington Wizards and fourth team overall in his seven-year NBA career, may fit the Muscala Model better than anyone. 

In fact, Bagley was miraculously involved in a trade with the Moose himself, getting moved by Detroit alongside Isaiah Livers and a second round pick in a swap for Muscala and Danilo Gallinari. We all remember where we were for that Shams notification right? 

In all seriousness, Bagley, currently on a one-year minimum deal with Washington, is having a fine season off the bench for one of the league’s premier tanking organizations. 

In 36 games and under 20 minutes a night, the 6-foot-10 center is averaging 10 points on a career-best 62% efficiency, 6 rebounds and 1.5 assists. In seven starts in place of an injured Alex Sarr, he’s averaged 14 points, 8 rebounds and 2 assists. 

When it comes to Bagley, what you see is what you get. In a lot of ways, he’s exactly the player he was when he came out of Duke as one of the most hyped one-and-done freshmen in the country.

His shooting range never extended beyond the arc in a way many hoped it would out of Duke, and he’s long been considered a negative defender in his various career stops, yet he has earned a living as a capable, and still quite athletic, paint finisher. 

This year, Bagley has cut a lot of the fat out of his scoring, and focused entirely on the areas he already thrived in. He has taken shots out of the mid-range and beyond almost entirely out of his shot diet, and his current 91% shot volume from inside of 10 feet would easily mark a career-high. 

Bagley’s game is not complicated. While still a frequent post-player, something we likely see little of if he was traded to Boston, he makes his living as a putback glass-crasher, dunker spot dump-off threat and play-finishing roll man. 

Defensively, while a fine rim deterrent and solid rebounder, the expectation would be that, for a third center option, he’s fine, albeit unexceptional, if occasionally frustrating. If we were talking about him as a starter? It’d likely be a different, more concerning story.  

All to say, while it can be hard to separate the Bagley that could have been from the Bagley we see today, I think it’s safe to call him an entirely playable backup big, and on his minimum contract, it would take pennies to acquire him, with zero strings attached beyond this season. 

Washington is easy to please these days: a late draft pick in any form is a win to them, considering Bagley willingly came back after the trade that netted them Marcus Smart. Between some form of a second round pick attached to the minimum contracts of either Xavier Tillman or Chris Boucher, the Celtics could be bringing in a third center to their rotation that’s a capable rebounding and scoring threat. 

BOSTON, MA – APRIL 4: Nick Richards #2 of the Phoenix Suns drives to the basket during the game against the Boston Celtics on April 4, 2025 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images)

Nick Richards 

Keeping in trend with their current frontcourt options, obtaining the services of Nick Richards would provide the Celtics with their third big man option to have been drafted in the second round that worked their way from the G-League into an NBA rotation. 

Before last year’s deadline, Richards was the first of a few trades around the fringes for the Suns, who picked him up in a swap with Charlotte for Josh Okogie in an attempt to solve their interior defensive dilemma. 

But now, Richards has found himself low on the Phoenix pecking order behind Mark Williams, Oso Ighodaro, and the small-ball tenacity of Dillon Brooks. Add to that the lottery selection of Khaman Maluach, and it’s clear Richards really doesn’t have a place in the Suns rotation in the short or long-term once his contract expires this summer. 

The rumor mill backs that up, and it’s clear it wouldn’t take a lot to get Richards off their books to duck the tax. 

Despite falling out of Phoenix’s favor, Richards has been a proven commodity in a bench capacity during his six years in the NBA. In Charlotte and in his first season with Phoenix, Richards proved to be a physical paint deterrent and a scrappy rebounder, whose mission on offense was to screen hard and roll straight into board-crashing duties. His 5.58 defensive rebounds per game last season had him in the 93rd percentile in that category, and his 2.6 on the offensive glass had him even higher in the 95th percentile. 

While he has an interior-minded defensive game, he shows enough foot speed to defend out to the perimeter, not exclusively sticking his feet in the paint and waiting for a slasher to attack. 

Richards’ game is not complicated, and his effort in the minute details has always stood out, particularly during his final season and a half in Charlotte. He does not need to be significantly involved with the ball in his hands to make an impact, something we’ve seen from Garza this year as a screener and rebounder in his own right. 

For a Celtics team looking for additional rebounding and paint protection, Richards checks the box as a career bench big that’s willing to play his role in an effectively high-motor manner. 

It helps that Richards is also a quality rim protector. Last year’s tape shows a player whose 7-foot-4 wingspan aided a Suns team that desperately lacked shot-blocking options. It was a temporary breath of fresh air for one of the league’s worst defenses. 

Like Bagley, obtaining Richards would not require a significant haul. It’s unlikely a trade would take more than a second round pick to acquire Richards. In Boston’s case, that deal could work as is, however, they could also attach one of their veteran minimum contracts alongside the pick to also make it happen.

Jalen Smith 

This has long been a rumored low-cost center of interest for the Celtics, really up until Jalen Smith penned a 3-year, $27 million contract with the Bulls in 2024. 

Smith, a former 10th overall selection for the Suns, has carved out a respectable NBA career as a bench stretch big, ramping up his outside shooting volume this season with the Bulls. In the past four seasons to this point, he’s averaged 9 points on 50/34/75 splits in under 20 minutes, and in Chicago, he’s been heavily encouraged to shoot the rock, with 55% of his shots coming from beyond the arc. 

In this new role in Chicago, he’s been less of a pick-and-pop big, and more of a jumbo, movement-shooting compliment to Nikola Vucevic, who is the team’s primary screening operator. Chicago runs an entirely different brand of offense from Boston behind Josh Giddey and Coby White, pushing one of the fastest paces in the league and relying on first-read shooting that can often leave Smith in the corner or trailing up the floor with the intent to fire off the catch. In Boston, the role would certainly look a little different, possibly utilizing him in the screen game similar to Al Horford’s role as a stretch shooter. 

While it’s inherently intriguing to see a big man with that confidence and range, he has been a mostly below-average 3-point shooter since he shot 42% from deep in his final season with the Pacers, which played a big role in his new contract. 

So, does he provide anything else? Luckily, he is more than just an off-the-catch shooter. Smith has proven to be a strong rebounder, averaging 1.97 offensive boards per game, which places him in the 88th percentile in that category according to Basketball Index, and he is in the 98th percentile in defensive rebounding talent, a value that factors in opportunity creation and conversion on the defensive glass.

He is also a solid interior defender despite being slightly undersized at 6-foot-8, using his strength to handle business in the post while being an athletic and active help defender. The field goal percentage for opponent shots contested at the rim by Smith compared to expectations is -7.10%, and while not often a switch defender, Smith is a mobile big that displays swift foot speed in drop coverage and good instincts defending the rim. 

Of the three players listed, he probably fits the Muscala Model the least, having been traded just a single time with a price tag that’s possesses more risk/reward than your average Bagley or Richards transaction (although his lone trade was Muscala-coded with a swap of second round picks and Smith moved for Torrey Craig). 

Yet, everything outside of Matas Buzelis and Giddey seems to be on the table for the Bulls, who once again find themselves in Play-In Purgatory. 

When it comes to Smith, you’re getting a pretty intriguing stretch forward/center capable of getting Boston back into its double-big roots, but the only way a direct trade makes real sense is if it involves the contract of Sam Hauser, a championship piece currently on a fiery hot streak that’s not easy to part with, even with Boston’s wing depth being a strength area so far this season. A more expansive multi-team deal is not out of the question to get it done in a way that adds more moving parts, but if Boston was looking at this option, a hard decision would need to be made. 


Barring a trade next week that settles Boston’s trade market strategy, I’ll be back next week for another search for that Muscala-sized void the Celtics could look to fill. 

What low-cost trade options do you see as a possible boost to Boston’s rotation?

Would salary cap solve MLB impasse? Not as much as competence and care.

It’s hard to imagine nowadays, with acrimony baked into collective bargaining negotiations and the commissioner forecasting a lockout months in advance, but there was once a time when Major League Baseball and the MLB Players’ Association achieved labor peace with little incident.

In 2006, 2011 and 2016, with Donald Fehr, the late Michael Weiner and Tony Clark on the union’s side, and Rob Manfred largely on the 1s and 2s for management, CBAs got done on time and with relative equity, with ownership even coaxing a few wins out of the 2016 deal.

In the decade since, plenty has changed, even as the material conditions of baseball’s economics – major sources of revenue, large markets and mega markets, ownership groups ranging from all in to checked out - remains the same.

Yet the current agita regarding boundless spending and fiscal inequity and the need for a salary cap to rein in the clubs that are making life unfair can be traced in no small part to one development from the mid-aughts to now.

Back then, Frank McCourt and Fred Wilpon owned the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets, respectively. And now they are owned by Mark Walter and Steve Cohen, so rich and mighty that they alone can topple baseball’s economic model.

Francisco Lindor ($341 million) and Shohei Ohtani ($700 million) each signed groundbreaking deals in the past five years.

Make no mistake: This is a weird time in the game, its popularity booming based off TV ratings and global reach, yet its near-term future clouded by broadcast uncertainties both local and national. Still, the past winter’s free agent activity suggests that many franchises remain in very good health, based on the diversity of franchises engaging aggressively in a market lukewarm in talent.

So why, then, would the signing of Kyle Tucker, of all people, be the contract that broke baseball’s decades of relative labor peace?

Oh, Tucker’s four-year pact with the Dodgers guaranteeing him $60 million per season for up to four years won’t necessarily be the precipitating event forcing ownership to take a hardline on labor negotiations after this season. Heck, Manfred, now commissioner, has been telegraphing a nuclear salary cap ask for many months, even trying to sell players on it in buddy-buddy clubhouse sessions that in one case turned acrimonious.

It is funny, though, that the first “sky is falling” smoke signal came after the two-time champion Dodgers added Tucker, a very good ballplayer who has never missed the playoffs but nonetheless lacks main character energy.

No, things were much more peaceful when McCourt owned the Dodgers and used them like a piggy bank until he was forced to sell the franchise in shame – and pocket $2 billion.

There was little rancor when the Wilpon-owned Mets found new frontiers of dysfunction, reaching its depths when much of their family wealth vanished in the Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme.

You’d think it wasn’t great for the game when franchises in the game’s two biggest markets operated in dire straits. But hey, at least they weren’t trying too hard to win.

The 2026 Dodgers are drifting toward a $600 million outlay for payroll, including luxury tax penalties, according to Spotrac. The Mets will top half a billion dollars, as they’re now three-time offenders of the so-called "Cohen Tax," named for the fanboy turned hedge fund kingpin turned owner, who is aiming to replicate the Dodgers’ marriage of spending and smarts and getting a little closer each year.

Unfair? Sure. At the same time, the Dodgers and Mets paid a premium to land their properties on Park Place and Boardwalk. They got it, and they’re flaunting it.

Is this sensible in a league where competition and the hope of winning are paramount to fandom?

Yes and no.

Major League Baseball is in the entertainment business. And the 2025 World Series TV ratings are proof enough: Every gut-wrenching plot twist in the epic Dodgers-Blue Jays seven-game match showed that the Dodgers entertain.

The Mets entertained in their own little way, too: Perhaps the most dramatic 83-win season we’ve witnessed, given their hot start, their four-month collapse, the massive expectations that come with such spending only for all of it to come up one win short of the playoffs in the season’s final hour.

Both coastal elites are operating within the rules, but the rules weren’t conceived with the notion that a man with a net worth north of $20 billion would pair it with a burning desire to win. Novel, isn’t it?

The outcome isn’t ideal: The Dodgers and Mets followed by an upper middle class that’s larger than baseball would like to admit, followed by teams in less-large (no, not small) markets.

The question that will roil the industry, from now through the moment Manfred locks out the players in December until the moment labor peace is presumably achieved: Is a salary cap the answer?

A better question might be: Have MLB’s owners earned the right to find out?

Small markets: Larger than you think

The runaway popularity of the NFL – it is the monoculture, and nothing else basically exists on that level – has certainly done a number on the brains of sports fans.

Setting aside for a moment the virulent anti-labor landscape of the NFL, it is clear that its salary cap does not solve many of the problems some baseball fans claim is now endemic in their un-capped sport.

Not when just eight franchises have accounted for the past 18 trips to the Super Bowl. Or when the AFC championship has featured one or both of the Patriots and Chiefs for the past 15 seasons.

It is almost like organizational competence matters more than a flattening of the salary structure.

Oh, but the little guy has a chance in football, you say!

Perhaps nominally. Yet in that 15-season span dominated by the Chiefs and Patriots, just 12 teams reached the Super Bowl.

Wanna guess how many teams reached the World Series in that same stretch beginning with the 2011 season?

Eighteen, which means it’s easier to reel off the ones who didn’t make the Fall Classic: Baltimore, Minnesota, the Chicago White Sox, Seattle, Oakland/Yolo Countys, the Los Angeles Angels, Miami, Milwaukee, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, San Diego and Colorado.

The Padres, Orioles, Brewers and Mariners all reached a league championship series in that time. Do the remaining franchises strike you as particularly well-run? Do they have distinguished ownership groups with clear vision and a penchant for innovation? Consistently operate at a high level?

Certainly, the Twins and A’s had their moments in that span. At the same time, ownership foibles have exposed systemic issues that hindered consistent success.

The kind of thing a salary cap, say, wouldn’t help.

Here’s a question: Who, exactly, is the salary cap for?

Is it so the upper-middle class teams – your Red Sox, Phillies, Giants, Blue Jays, Yankees, Cubs – can stay within shouting distance of the Big Two?

To provide a puncher’s chance for the most bedraggled among us – your Pirates and Marlins, Royals and Reds?

This is where it gets challenging to determine if the cap would actually help – or if some of those franchises would simply continue their same aversion to serious competition, pocket their shared revenues and lock in even greater profits for every other franchise.

Funny thing about the “little guys” – market size is often the shield management hides behind. It’s interesting to look at the actual size of markets and realize just how big they are.

Poor little Pittsburgh? The Pirates have never signed a free agent for more than $39 million. Have not won their division since 1992. Yet Pittsburgh itself, at 1.16 million, ranks 27th among Nielsen markets – a few notches above No. 30 San Diego, which checks in at 1.11 million.

You know San Diego, right? Famously boxed in by Mexico to the south, the desert to the east, L.A. to the north – yet since 2021 has signed five players to contracts worth between $100 million and $340 million. And with each subsequent add, Petco Park gets a little more crowded.

How about plucky Tampa Bay, having to do things smarter than anyone, and like Pittsburgh with never more than $40 million awarded to a free agent? Well, the Tampa-St. Pete market ranks 12th nationally, with 2.22 million people – just behind that other Bay Area, in California.

Sure, the Rays have a stadium problem, most notably the difficulty reaching Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg from points north and east. They’re working on it. At the same time, they’re as close in market size to Boston (2.58 million) as they are Minneapolis-St. Paul (1.88 million)

Little wonder new owner Patrick Zalupski paid $1.7 billion to purchase the club in September. The Rays have doggedly carved out their role in the MLB pantheon – spend little, win more than they lose. A new stadium would make this an insanely profitable gambit, but it’s pretty sweet already.

A salary cap would only further burnish the franchise value, which is the real carrot for Zalupski’s cronies.

Yet would it make these franchises better, or markedly enhance their championship hopes?

We probably know the answer. The Pirates with a salary cap would simply be the New Orleans Pelicans in spikes.

Cap casualties

Beyond that, salary caps are kind of a bummer.

Baseball fans have gotten well-acquainted with luxury tax thresholds and their respective teams’ willingness or otherwise to exceed them. Certainly, the tax ceilings may cost a team a player, or prevent them from that final, crucial move down the stretch.

Yet that comes without the many problems a hard cap presents.

A favorite player becoming a “salary cap casualty.”

The tension that comes when a veteran is asked to “rework their contract for the good of the team.”

The aggravation of a team’s “win curve” suddenly running up against the cap, preventing retention or addition of talent when the time is right to strike.

The training camp holdout, a maneuver multiple NFL stars perform each summer because their leverage is virtually nil.

Certainly makes baseball’s annual rituals – the Boras Four, the soft core collusion – seem quaint.

Indeed, for all baseball’s economic travails, the transactions bring a finality that simply doesn’t exist in the NFL. The contracts are guaranteed. The players abide by the contract, even when a Bryce Harper or an Aaron Judge sign what look like watershed deals, only to get superseded within a year or two.

Naturally, owners’ efforts to form a united front for a salary cap will be fascinating. Twenty-three of the 30 must agree to it. Not hard to imagine the Mets and Dodgers, privately at least, are opposed: They are operating with impunity, so long as they consider scratching nine-figure tax checks that fund baseball’s less fortunate as the cost of doing business.

The others? Well, they are free to be as profligate or tight-fisted as they like in a given year. Too often we perceive the MLB franchise in extremes: The wild-eyed spenders, or the destitute trying to find scraps on the waiver wire.

The greater truth is that teams are more like poker players, often calling, sometimes folding but occasionally eyeing their suddenly large stack of chips and deciding to go for it.

In this century, 18 teams - Toronto, Boston, Detroit, Seattle, Texas, Anaheim, Philadelphia, the Mets, Miami, Atlanta, Washington, the Cubs, St. Louis, the Dodgers, San Diego, San Francisco, Arizona, Colorado – have had go-for-it and moribund periods alike.

All but Seattle have made a World Series, more emblematic of the game’s reality than the outliers.

Someday, should their financial situations change or their rosters are finally hamstrung by too much big-money, fading talent, the Mets and Dodgers may find themselves back on the wrong side of that line.

For now, they are the game’s pariahs, their proverbial hands slapped for trying too hard. The industrywide price, in management’s eyes, should be a salary cap.

A greater solution: A little more competence and a little more care from those who have displayed precious little of either.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Would MLB salary cap fix baseball payrolls? Not as much as competence.

Guardians News and Notes: Six Guardians Prospects in MLB Pipeline’s Top 100

Last night, MLB Pipleline released their list of Top 100 prospects, and the Cleveland Guardians landed six players in the list, second only to the Seattle Mariners’ seven prospects:

The players are:
20. Travis Bazzana
46. Chase DeLauter
66. Angel Genao
89. Ralphy Velazquez
95. Parker Messick
99. Cooper Ingle

Impressive! Now, to see if any of these five hitters will actually get an opportunity to and make good on the opportunity to hit major league pitching. We know the Guardians usually get the most out of their pitching prospects, and I think an argument can be legitimately made for both Khal Stephen and Braylon Doughty making this list.

In case you missed it, check out Tommy Pecoraro’s quick write-up of his experience of the Akron Rubber Ducks’ banquet headlined by Guardians President of Baseball Operations’ Chris Antonetti. Antonetti, again, made clear that the company line about not wanting to block young players by adding good major league hitters is going to be the Guardians’ excuse for being set to cut payroll by $20M or so. I guess we will see if they pursue some extensions in the spring to increase that number; they certainly should have the flexibility to do so if they want.

I will write more about this after Tommy gets a chance to write his full piece, but I simply don’t buy that the Guardians wouldn’t have upgraded the middle of their lineup and/or centerfield if they weren’t under some pretty severe payroll restrictions from ownership. It doesn’t pass the smell test for me. Since I can’t change that, and I also can’t even tell you how unfair or fair those restrictions are, here is the main thing I want to see in Spring Training:

-Fully open opportunities for the best Guardians’ young hitters to make the roster regardless of service time considerations. We all know that even if Bazzana comes to Spring Training and looks like a prime Chase Utley clone, he’s not making the roster for AT LEAST the convenient reasoning of missing spring training time with the World Baseball classic. Fine. But, let Juan Brito have a legitimate shot to play second over Gabriel Arias or Daniel Schneemann. Let Chase DeLauter, George Valera and, heck, Petey Halpin and Kahlil Watson have legitimate shots in the land of opportunity that is the Cleveland outfield. Do NOT simply hand centerfield to a Nolan Jones and Angel Martinez platoon for a two-week stretch to try to save a few million down the road on DeLauter. Do NOT attempt to convince us Logan Allen is a better fifth starter option than Parker Messick. If you’re going to lean on the strength of your young core in public comments, do it in private practice also.

Ok, that’s all I have to say for now. I am sure Antonetti is taking notes (where’s my sarcasm font when I need it?).

I am making an attempt as best I can to move away from Twitter links, but I could not find the following content from WEWS reporter Mason Horodyski anywhere else, so here is a clip of Antonetti talking about blocking young players:

And here is Antonetti reminding us that this organization is committed to winning a World Series at all costs (except, clearly, for the ownership group):

Columbus Blue Jackets (53 pts) vs. Tampa Bay Lightning (68 pts) Game Preview

The Columbus Blue Jackets are back home for the third game of a five-game home stand to take on the Tampa Bay Lightning at 7 PM.    

Tampa Bay Lightning - 32-13-4 - 68 Points - 9-0-1 in the last 10 - Won 2 - 2nd in the Atlantic

Columbus Blue Jackets - 23-20-7 - 51 Points - 5-4-1 in the last 10 - Won 1 - 7th in the Metro  

Team Notes Per CBJ PR

  • Columbus won for the fifth time in the last six games overall since Jan. 11 (5-1-0) and collected points in five of its past six home contests since Jan. 3 (4-1-1) with a 1-0 shutout victory over Dallas on Thursday.
  • The club continues a season-long five-game homestand on Saturday and is in a stretch of seven-of-eight games played at Nationwide Arena from Jan. 13-28 (3-1-0).
  • The Jackets scored the lone goal on Thursday in the opening period. The club has scored the first goal in 14 of the last 19 contests and 17 of the past 24 and ranks T-sixth in the NHL in games scoring first in 2025-26 (29).
  • Columbus leads the NHL in goals by defensemen and ranks fourth in points with 38-87-125 in 50 contests.
  • The Blue Jackets (9-5-1) rank fifth in the NHL in team save percentage (.912), T-eighth in goals-against per game (2.67) and 11th in points pct. (.633) since Dec. 22.

Player Notes Per CBJ PR

  • Charlie Coyle, who is one goal shy from 200 for his NHL career, became the fifth player to play in his 1,000th game while in a Blue Jackets uniform (Sergei Fedorov, Vinny Prospal, Scott Hartnell, Jakub Voracek) on Thursday.
  • Jet Greaves turned aside all 28 shots faced on Thursday for his first shutout of the season. He leads the NHL in saves and ranks fourth-T in wins and sixth-T in SV% since Dec. 22 (min. 6 GP) with a 7-3-1 record, 2.32 GAA, .922 SV% and 320 saves in 12 games.
  • Boone Jenner sits three assists from tying David Vyborny (204) for third on the club's all-time list in assists.
  • Kirill Marchenko has notched points in 11 of the last 15 contests dating back to Dec. 22 (8-7-15).
  • Mathieu Olivier combined for 26 hits in the last five contests and ranks second in the NHL with 67 hits since returning from injury on Dec. 28.
  • Zach Werenski leads NHL blueliners in goals (19) and multi-point efforts (17) and sits one goal from becoming the third American defenseman in NHL history with two-straight 20-goal seasons (Phil Housley-6, Reed Larson-5). He has points in 25 of his past 30 contests overall to lead league defensemen in goals, points and points-per-game since Nov. 13 (15-27-42, 1.40).

Blue Jackets Stats

  • Power Play - 19.4% - 19th in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 75.7% - 28th in the NHL
  • Goals For - 145 - 21st in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 163 - 24th in the NHL 

Lightning Stats

  • Power Play - 20.7% - 14th in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 84.2% - 3rd in the NHL
  • Goals For - 168 - 6th in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 119 - 2nd in the NHL

Series History vs. TheLightning   

  • Columbus is 17-29-1-6 all-time, and 12-12-1-2 at home vs. The Lightning.
  • The Blue Jackets are 6-4-2 in the last 12 games against the Bolts at home.
  • The CBJ has scored a power play goal in 4 of the last 6 games in the series against Tampa.

Who To Watch For TheLightning

  • Brandon Hagel leads the Lightning with 25 goals.
  • Nikita Kucherov leads the Bolts with 49 assists and 73 points.
  • Goalie Jonas Johansson is 10-6-1 with a SV% of .896.
  • Andrei Vasilevskiy is 21-7-3 but played on Friday night against the Blackhawks.

CBJ Player Notes vs. Stars 

  • Zach Werenski has 21 points in 25 games vs. the Lightning
  • Charlie Coyle has 16 points in 32 games.
  • Kirill Marchenko has 11 points in 9 career games against Tampa Bay.

Injured Reserve

  • Brendan Smith - Lower Body - Missed 12 Games IR - Out for the rest of the regular season.
  • Miles Wood - Lower Body - Missed 11 Games - Week to week.
  • Denton Mateychuk - Lower Body - Missed 5 Games - Day to day.

TOTAL MAN GAMES LOST: 142

How to Watch & Listen: Tonight's game will be on FANDUEL SPORTS NETWORK. Steve Mears will be on the play-by-play. The radio broadcast will be on 97.1 The Fan, with Bob McElligott behind the mic doing the play-by-play.   

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Mets Morning News for January 24, 2026

Meet the Mets

SNY broadcasts will look a little different moving forward, as John DeMarsico announced his departure from the network after seventeen years of directing Mets games.

The Mets have completely revamped their roster this offseason. Have they succeeded in improving upon the 2025 squad?

Carlos Beltrán has a lot to contemplate as he decides which hat to wear on his Hall of Fame plaque.

It’s never too early to start making predictions for what the Mets’ 26-man roster will look like on opening day.

After designating Cooper Criswell for assignment earlier this week, the Mets have dealt him to the Mariners for cash considerations.

Around the National League East

The Phillies have revealed their list of non-roster invitees to spring training, which includes top prospects Justin Crawford and Aidan Miller.

The Nationals reportedly rejected a trade proposal from the Giants that would have sent All-Star shortstop CJ Abrams to San Francisco.

Washington has added some depth by signing former Mets reliever Bryce Montes de Oca and catcher Tres Barrera to minor league deals.

Around Major League Baseball

MLB Pipeline released their updated list of the top 100 prospects in baseball last night.

One of the better remaining free agent relievers is now off the board, as the White Sox have inked Seranthony Domínguez to a two-year, $20 million deal.

ESPN’s baseball writers made some bold predictions for how the rest of the offseason will unfold.

It may still take some time for us to get used to Pete Alonso news belonging in this section of Mets Morning News, but the Polar Bear remains excited to be a Baltimore Oriole.

Max Scherzer still plans to pitch in 2026, but it’s possible he may wait and sign with a team mid-season.

Yesterday at Amazin’ Avenue

Vasilis Drimalitis examined the state of the Mets’ rotation now that they’ve added Freddy Peralta.

The Amazin’ Avenue minor league crew ranked Will Watson as the ninth best prospect in the Mets’ farm system entering the 2026 season.

This Date in Mets History

Controlling shares of the Mets were sold to Doubleday & Company—with Fred Wilpon also coming on as a minority owner—on this date in 1980.

‘Calm down, you jerk’: Djokovic admits to losing cool in Australian Open battle

  • Djokovic beats Van de Zandschulp 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (4)

  • Serb apologises after wild shot almost hits ball girl

Novak Djokovic chalked up his 400th grand slam victory with a 6-3, 6-4, 7-6(4) defeat of Botic van de Zandschulp to reach the fourth round on Saturday, but the Serb was fortunate not to receive a code violation after losing his cool.

An incident in the second set might have proved very costly, with Djokovic carelessly sending a ball flying close to the head of a ball girl at the net.

Continue reading...

Which Team Hits The Post Or Crossbar The Most Often?

It’s never fun for fans to see their favourite team hit the post of the crossbar; in fact, whichever level you play hockey at, you hate posts. Just think about Gordon Bombay’s fantastic minor hockey career coming to a grinding halt after his triple deke hit the post on a penalty shot in the Mighty Ducks. It’s drama nobody likes, but nobody escapes it.

Each fanbase feels like their team is hard done by and is undoubtedly the one who’s hitting the most posts and/or crossbars, but who’s actually hitting the most? Where do the Montreal Canadiens rank in that category?

Well, the team that has fallen victim to iron the most so far this season is the Carolina Hurricanes, with 80 occurrences as of January 23, 2026, followed by the Washington Capitals at 72, the Buffalo Sabres and the Anaheim Ducks with 69, and, in fifth place, the Canadiens with 64, just like the Detroit Red Wings.

Canadiens: Laine Is On The Trading Block
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At the other end of the spectrum, the San Jose Sharks have only been robbed by iron 29 times this season, that’s twelve fewer times than the St. Louis Blues, who have suffered that fate 41 times, and 14 fewer times than the Philadelphia Flyers, who are 30th in the category with 43 times.

Why have the Hurricanes hit the post so much? Well, they have taken the second most shots in the league so far this season, with 1649 shots, meaning that they’ve been frustrated by the goal on just five percent of their shots. As for the Capitals, they’ve taken 1487 shots, meaning they struck iron on five percent of their shots as well. The Sabres? Their percentage is five percent as well, while the Red Wings’ is also five percent. The Canadiens? Well, with 64 posts/crossbars on 1339 shots, they’ve also fallen victim to the net on five percent of their shots.

Meanwhile, with just 29 misfortunes on 1239 shots, the Sharks have only hit iron on two percent of their shots, while the Blues have done the same on three percent of theirs and the Flyers on three percent of theirs.

In other words, those who shoot less, hit iron less, and those who hit the post most often all do it 5% of the time; no one is jinxed or plagued by players with sub-par accuracy. Oh, and no, the Bell Centre ghosts can’t move the goal posts…


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