Cubs 2026 MLB Draft Tracker and discussion thread

The 2026 MLB Draft starts today! Coverage starts on NBC or Peacock with a half-hour preview show at noon followed by the first pick at 12:30 CT. The first hour (about 10 picks) will then be on NBC or Peacock when coverage switches to MLB Network, MLB.com or MLB.tv from 1:3o to 3:30. That should cover picks 11 through 40, or enough for every team to pick once.

After that, rounds 2 through 4 will be today (Saturday) on MLB.com or MLB.tv. Rounds 5 through 20 start on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. CT. Those rounds will conducted by a conference call, but you can again listen in on MLB.com or MLB.tv.

The White Sox have the first pick in the draft and as I write this, no one is sure whether they will select UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky, Fort Worth Christian HS shortstop Grady Emerson, or Georgia Tech catcher Vahn Lackey. Those three players are expected to go 1 through 3 in the draft, with the Rays and Twins taking whomever the White Sox don’t.

In my preview on Friday, I gave some possibilities for the Cubs with the 23rd pick in the first round. The Cubs could get a real great player with that pick. Some players who went 23rd in the draft this century include Christian Yelich, Jacoby Ellsbury, Phil Hughes, Gavin Williams and Jeff Francoeur. However, more often than not, the player taken with the 23rd pick either fails to reach the majors or only has a short career. So the draft is indeed a crapshoot—one with huge rewards but also one in which the odds are against every team. So keep that in mind as the Cubs select.

Throughout the draft, we’ll be updating this article with the names of every player taken by the Cubs. We’ll also be giving you separate articles welcoming the Cubs first five picks, along with the information you need to know about them.

Here is the schedule for every Cubs pick. The number in parenthesis is the overall number of that pick. After the seventh round, the Cubs have every 30th pick. The second-round comp pick is for losing Kyle Tucker.

Day 1 picks (Saturday):

Round 1 (23):Cade Townsend RHP Mississippi

Round 2 (62):Caden Sorrell OF Texas A&M

Round 2 Comp (75):Myles Bailey 1B Florida State

Round 3 (98):Carson Jasa RHP Nebraska

Round 4(126):Dylan Marrioneaux RHP Northwestern State (LA)

Day 2 picks (Sunday):

Round 5 (159):

Round 6 (188):

Round 7 (217):

Round 8:

Round 9:

Round 10:

Round 11:

Round 12:

Round 13:

Round 14:

Round 15:

Round 16:

Round 17:

Round 18:

Round 19:

Round 20:

Seattle Mariners select 3B Trevor Lucas in 4th round of 2026 MLB Draft

With their fourth and final pick on day one of the 2026 MLB Draft, the Seattle Mariners opted for UNC-Wilmington third baseman Trevor Lucas.

Lucas possesses an excellent blend of hitting ability and defensive chops that made him an attractive candidate for an M’s farm system lacking in depth at the hot corner. Comped to Ben Williamson by Scott Hunter, Lucas is a plus defender in the field and could bounce around the diamond if need be, but his arm strength and lateral movement should lend themselves well to wherever he happens to be playing. The M’s are bullish on his abilities on the dirt and view him as an asset defensively.

Offensively, Lucas posts some eye popping underlying metrics. Making a ton of contact and producing some very solid exit velocities, Lucas complements his raw batting ability with a sound approach at the plate, limiting chase and drawing a healthy amount of walks. Lucas walked more than he struck out this season, a trait that typically tends to translate to the professional ranks pretty well.

The feel to hit for Lucas is evident; he frequently barrels the baseball, and the M’s think there’s even more power to unlock once he’s in a professional development setting. The foundation for a very enticing prospect is certainly there, but proving it against a higher level of competition will be the next step for the former Seahawk infielder.

Lucas has reportedly agreed to terms with the M’s, coming in at an underslot $450,000 figure. This puts the Mariners roughly $450,000 under their allotted bonus pool entering day two, a decent chunk of change that should afford them some flexibility.

Red Sox select Jace Mataczynski with 96th pick in MLB Draft

The Red Sox draft team is done for the day and is now free to enjoy the World Cup. With the 96th overall pick, they selected Jace Mataczynski, a high school shortstop out of Hudson, Wisconsin.

With the major caveat that one of them came out of college and the other high school, there are some interesting similarities between Mataczynski and Jake Schaffner, whom the Sox selected 20th overall. Like Schaffner, Mataczynski is an outstanding athlete with speed to spare and a good defensive reputation as an infielder. And, like Schaffner, there are questions about his bat. Here’s what the evaluators at MLB Pipeline had to sayabout him:

Though Mataczynski has plenty of bat speed, his swing isn’t smooth and has some length to it. He operates out of a wide base and didn’t spend a lot of time on the showcase circuit, leading to questions about his ability to make consistent contact when he faces quality pitching. He does hit balls hard and should continue to add strength to his projectable 6-foot-3 frame, so he could have plus raw power once he matures physically.

I’m not going to even pretend to be someone who can scout a hitter’s swing. But I do know when a swing looks… interesting. And this swing does:

So the Red Sox still have not used the savings they got from going way under slot in the first round. There is still plenty of time to do that tomorrow, though. In the meantime, the Sox’ Day 1 picks followed a clear pattern: interesting athletes who need some swing tweaks.

Rays 2026 Draft: Day One Analysis

PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 11: Commissioner of Major League Baseball Robert D. Manfred announces Grady Emerson as the 2nd overall pick by the Tampa Bay Rays 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 Rays took a balanced approach with their first five picks in the 2026 MLB Draft, blending polished talent with high-upside prep prospects. Headlined by second overall pick Grady Emerson, the class is already shaping up to be another strong haul for one of baseball’s best player development organizations.

It all starts with Emerson, whose combination of a plus hit tool, defensive ability, and athleticism makes him one of the premier prospects in this year’s class. He has the actions to remain at shortstop long term and the physical projection to grow into above-average power, giving him legitimate star potential if everything comes together. Assuming he signs quickly, it shouldn’t be long before he’s making his professional debut in Charleston. He’ll immediately slot among the Rays’ top prospects and should comfortably earn a place within the top 20-30 on every major Top 100 list.

The Rays followed that selection with another prep shortstop in Taj Marchand. While he isn’t as polished as Emerson, Marchand offers many of the same athletic traits and has built a reputation for consistently finding the barrel thanks to his quick hands. His swing contains more moving parts than Emerson’s, making it interesting to see whether the Rays make mechanical adjustments early or allow him to face more advanced competition before altering his approach – a strategy they’ve often employed throughout the system. Defensively, Marchand’s plus arm gives him plenty of versatility if he eventually moves off shortstop, with third base looking like the most natural fit while second base or an outfield corner could also be possibilities.

My favorite selection of the day was Liberty RHP Ben Blair at No. 49 overall. Beyond simply liking the player, I find the pick fascinating because it’s the highest the Rays have selected a pitcher since 2020. Tampa Bay has largely prioritized position players early in recent drafts, making this a notable investment in an arm. Blair’s low-slot delivery creates exceptional deception, allowing his arsenal to play above its raw velocity in a manner reminiscent of Ty Johnson. He already throws enough strikes to project as a starter, and if the Rays can help him improve the quality of those strikes by consistently locating to optimal areas of the zone, there’s room for another step forward. I’ll also be interested to see how the organization develops his secondaries given Blair’s feel for spin and the Rays recent success in designing offspeed pitches and optimizing their usage.

The Rays then took an intriguing high school pitcher in Gavin Giese. Prep pitchers are among the riskiest draft demographics, but Giese offers the size, athleticism, and clean delivery teams covet. His fastball has steadily climbed into the low-to-mid 90s, and there could be additional velocity coming as he continues to mature physically. The standout pitch is his changeup, which features outstanding velocity separation from his fastball along with late fading action – exactly the type of offspeed profile the Rays have consistently targeted in recent years. His present projection is that of a back-end starter, but there’s plenty of developmental runway for an 18-year-old with his physical traits, strike-throwing ability, and feel for pitching.

Tampa Bay closed out Day 1 by selecting prep slugger Collin Bland, adding another high-ceiling bat to the class. The 6’3 left-handed hitter possesses some of the best raw power in the draft, generating impressive loft without sacrificing the ability to drive the ball to all fields. There is some swing-and-miss risk because of the length, grooved nature, and uppercut in his swing, but that’s a tradeoff many organizations are willing to make when the power upside is this significant. The challenge for the Rays will be refining his approach enough to maximize that power against professional pitching.

Overall, it was an impressive first day for Tampa Bay. Landing Emerson at No. 2 gives the class a potential franchise cornerstone, but the rest of the group’s construction is equally compelling. The Rays added premium athletes up the middle, invested meaningful draft capital in two pitchers whose profiles align with their development strengths, and finished the day with one of the biggest power bats in the prep class. It’s a group that combines relatively high floors with substantial upside, making it easy to see why the organization is excited about this year’s haul.

Dodgers 2026 MLB Draft tracker

PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 11: Commissioner of Major League Baseball Robert D. Manfred announces Bo Lowrance as the 40th overall pick by the Los Angeles Dodgers 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 Dodgers have 16 selections in the 20 rounds of the 2026 MLB Draft, beginning with high school shortstop/third baseman Bo Lowrance at 40th overall in the first round all the way through to pick number 613 in the 20th round, the very last pick in the draft.

For signing free agents Edwin Díaz and Kyle Tucker in the offseason, the Dodgers forfeited their draft picks in the second, third, fifth, and sixth rounds. That thinned their total bonus pool — the amount of money they are permitted to spend — to just over $3.95 million.

The total bonus pool is derived from the total of the recommended slot value of every pick through the first 10 rounds. For any picks from the 11th through the 20th round, as well as for any undrafted free agents, any signing bonus amount over $150,000 will count toward the bonus pool.

The deadline to sign draft picks is Monday, July 27 at 2 p.m. PT.

Note: On a mobile device, this table will show up best in landscape mode.

RoundPosPlayerB/TAge*SchoolSlot value
13B/SSBo LowranceL/R18Christ Church Episcopal HS (SC)$2,504,200
4RHPRussell SandeferRHP21Florida$575,300
7$260,300
8$218,500
9$201,700
10$191,900
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
*age as of June 30, 2026

Mets select RHP Carson Wiggins, OF Aiden Robbins and LHP Shane Sdao in 2026 MLB Draft

The Mets selected right-handed pitcher Carson Wiggins with the 27th overall pick in the 2026 MLB Draft.

Wiggins, 21, did not pitch this past collegiate season after he underwent Tommy John surgery with an internal brace in May 2025, which ended his freshman year at Arkansas. 

"Thank y'all for taking a chance on me. I appreciate the Mets very much," Wiggins said in a Zoom with members of the New York media Saturday. "Excited to get things rolling for sure."

Before the season-ending elbow injury, he pitched 14 innings in 14 games out of the bullpen for the Razorbacks, allowing six runs (five earned) on seven hits and nine walks with 20 strikeouts. 

The 6-foot-5 righty is a hard-thrower, averaging 98.7 mph on his fastball and topping out at 102 mph during his lone collegiate year. Wiggins threw 15 pitches at the MLB Draft Combine in late June, with his fastball peaking at 97.4 mph and a slider averaging 85 mph. He's also featuring a curveball and a changeup.

"Velocity is back up to where it should be, no issues there," Wiggins said when asked about his rehab. "Got rid of a lot of the big misses, haven't had any hiccups, so I'm excited to just get things rolling."

Wiggins said he thought the combine appearance was "very helpful" for him, not only showing his velocity, but also "showing that I'm healthy, my stuff is good, I've added pitches, and I'm a different pitcher than I was two years ago."

He added that he improved by "thinking more like a pitcher and not just like a thrower" now than he did during his injury-shortened time in college.

Coming out of high school in Oklahoma, he was rated the No. 35 prospect by Perfect Game and the No. 10 righty prospect of the 2024 high school class.

The pick carries a slot value of $3,466,500.

"The Mets took a home run swing in drafting Arkansas right-hander Carson Wiggins with the No. 27 pick of the 2026 MLB Draft," SNY prospects writer Joe DeMayo says. "After 14 innings in the 2025 season, he underwent internal brace surgery and missed all of the 2026 season. When he is right, he has some of the best pure stuff in the entire class, headlined by two elite offerings in the best fastball in the entire class that averaged 99 mph and touched 102 and an upper-80s slider that is almost untouchable. He has also thrown a curveball, splitter and cutter.

"He is healthy now, having thrown at last month’s MLB Combine, touching 97 mph in his bullpen session there. There are some real questions with his command, as he walked 15.3 percent of the batters he faced as a freshman for the Razorbacks. If the Mets can find a way to get him to average command, he has at least No. 3 starter upside; if not, he has the type of stuff to be an elite reliever at the next level. Assuming he signs, Wiggins will be the first pitcher the Mets drafted and signed in the first round since David Peterson in 2017."

The Mets' first-round selection came at No. 27 as they received a 10-pick penalty for exceeding the second surcharge threshold of the Competitive Balance Tax, meaning their first selection came amid the Prospect Promotion Incentive Picks round.

"As we pick 27, we'll just cast a wider net, have multiple plans -- Plan A, B, C and D -- in case certain players are there, numerous options to pivot to," Kris Gross, Mets’ vice president, amateur scouting, said before the draft about not getting a shot until late in the first round. "Throughout the spring, we just kind of sent out our scouts knowing that the crop is very deep this year and we could have a wide range of outcomes. So I feel like we're in a good spot as far as coverage, and we know these players that are going to be in our range very well."

The Mets weren't the only team dinged with the 10-slot penalty, as the Yankees, Blue Jays, Dodgers, and Phillies were also penalized.

New York has two more picks on the first day of the draft: No. 92 (third round) and No. 120 (fourth round).

More Day 1 picks....

With their second pick (No. 92) in the 2026 draft, the Mets selected Texas outfielder Aiden Robbins. 

Robbins, 21, had a very strong season with the Longhorns. He slashed .333/.426/.696 with an OPS of 1.122 to go along with his 24 home runs and 64 RBI across 60 games during his third collegiate year. 

And in the fourth round, the Mets selected LHP Shane Sdao with their third selection (No. 120) of this year's draft. 

Sdao, 22, has played three seasons with Texas A&M, amassing a 13-6 record to go along with his 5.22 ERA across 59 games (20 starts). This past season, he has pitched to a 7.03 ERA, but that's after having Tommy John surgery that knocked him out for the 2025 season. 

The season prior to surgery, Sdao pitched to a 2.96 ERA across 20 games (five starts) in 2024.

 

Are Blackhawks Destined For Another Last Place Finish?

On Friday, The Hockey News named the Chicago Blackhawks as the 30th-best NHL Team On Paper. The only teams below them are the Calgary Flames and the Vancouver Canucks, both of which play in the Pacific Division. 

Does that mean the Chicago Blackhawks are destined for another last-place finish in the highly competitive Central Division? It is incredibly possible. 

The Five Worst NHL Teams On Paper After The Start To Free AgencyThe Five Worst NHL Teams On Paper After The Start To Free AgencyThe NHL's 2026 off-season started with a bang, but there are still teams severely lacking in talent and overall depth. Which five teams look like they could be in the league basement?

The Blackhawks finished 31st in 2025-26, but it was still an 11-point improvement over the year prior. Something similar could happen in 2026-27. Every other team in the Central is trying to win now, which could lead to another last-place finish, even if they do actually improve in terms of record. 

The Colorado Avalanche, Minnesota Wild, and Dallas Stars are still the three teams to beat, but the Utah Mammoth are coming. There are also the St. Louis Blues, Nashville Predators, and Winnipeg Jets, who put competitive products on the ice pretty much every year. 

We know what the floor is for the Blackhawks, who will play the first month of the season without Connor Bedard due to shoulder surgery, but the ceiling is a competitive team that is in the race until the very end, regardless of how it ends. 

We see stories like that happen every year. Nobody expected the New York Islanders, Pittsburgh Penguins, Buffalo Sabres, and Philadelphia Flyers to do anything last year, but they all had winning years unexpectedly. Not all of them made the playoffs, but they all had a competitive chance in the final few games of the season. 

The latter can only happen if multiple young Blackhawks overachieve right away. It is more likely that they will need another year or two before competing for the playoffs every year. When you're in that stage of a rebuild, it can be hard to come out of. 

With Bedard out, can Anton Frondell, Frank Nazar, and Oliver Moore amongst others step up? Can Roman Kantserov translate his goal scoring prowess to the NHL? How are the defensemen going to play? Is Spencer Knight elite? A lot will be answered during the 2026-27 season.

Chicago certainly doesn't want to think about another top-five pick, even with what is projected to be a good draft, but that could be their reality again if they do end up in the basement of the Central Division. 

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Dodgers draft pitcher Russell Sandefer in 4th round, 132nd overall

Florida pitcher Russell Sandefer (17) pitches during the 2026 NCAA Baseball Championship Gainesville Regional championship baseball game at Condron Family Ballpark in Gainesville, FL on Monday, June 1, 2026. Troy beat Florida Sunday they played a winner take all game Monday. Troy won 10-2. [Alan Youngblood/Gainesville Sun] | Alan Youngblood/Gainesville Sun / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

With their second and final pick on the first day of the 2026 MLB Draft, the Dodgers selected Florida Gators pitcher Russell Sandefer in the fourth round, with the 132nd overall pick in the draft.

The 6’1 junior right-hander had a 4.42 ERA in 19 games for Florida this season, including 12 starts, with 60 strikeouts and 22 walks in 57 innings. His season highlight was striking out 11 in seven scoreless innings against Ole Miss on April 4.

MLB Pipeline rated Sandefer as the No. 177 prospect in the draft, while Baseball America had him 182nd.

“Listed at 6-foot-1, 200 pounds, Sandefer has a deceptive look with a slingy, sidearm slot and a crossfire landing that creates some unusual angles for hitters,” said the BA scouting report. “Sandefer is typically a fastball/slider pitcher against righties, and a fastball/changeup/cutter pitcher against lefties. He’s a solid strike-thrower who might be more reliant on inducing weak contact than racking up strikeouts, but has a chance to profile as a backend starter.”

The 132nd overall pick comes with a recommended slot value of $575,300.

The first day of the draft is now complete for the Dodgers, who don’t pick again until the seventh round, having lost their second, third, fifth, and sixth-round draft picks this year for signing free agents Edwin Díaz and Kyle Tucker during the offseason. Day 2 of the draft begins on Sunday morning at 8:30 a.m. PT, streaming on MLB.com and MLB.tv.

Yankees’ homers launch another late comeback, beating Nationals again

Jul 10, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; New York Yankees pitcher Cam Schlittler (31) throws to the Washington Nationals during the first inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Brad Mills-Imagn Images | Brad Mills-Imagn Images

We might have to start calling them the cardiac kids!

After a big, ninth-inning comeback to beat the Nationals on Friday night, we got a sequel on Saturday afternoon. Starter Cam Schlittler didn’t pitch well while managing an extraordinary start, and seven-plus innings of maddening offense gave way to a trio of eighth-inning home runs. The Yankees have a win streak going, taking today’s game 4-2 over the Nationals.

Cam Schlittler is making me think about Roy Halladay a lot. I’ve told this story before here, but Halladay was the standard of baseball excellence in my home growing up; my dad would hand 10-year-old me a pocket Blue Jay schedule and have me mark off the home games that Doc was most likely to be starting, and those games became the priority options for family trips to Toronto. The day Roy was traded was a small celebration in our house, because he sure as hell wasn’t getting anything out of the late-2000s Blue Jays. At least the Phillies gave him a real shot.

But the thing that always stuck out to me about Halladay, specifically his time in Toronto where he was the best or second best pitcher in the AL depending on what Johan Santana had done lately, was that he didn’t often dominate lineups the way his counterpart in Minnesota would. Halladay ground you down, taking advantage of his formidable conditioning and his manager’s reluctance to go to anyone in the bullpen to throw 130 cutters and sinkers and shatter your bat and watch you jog 75 feet to your right on a basic groundout to second. And he would do that for eight innings every five days — sometimes more, as no less a juggernaut than the 2009 Yankees learned.

Indeed, even on days where Halladay wasn’t the best pitcher available, he seemed better than anyone at finding some way to make it work. When he was losing, and boy he was losing a lot with those teams, it seemed there was nobody on the planet more dead-set at not being the reason why we lose today.

Cam certainly did not dominate today — the first pitch he threw was deposited in the right field seats by James Wood, and a batter later another ball was launched by Curtis Mead to put the Yankees down 2-0. Dreams of that disastrous Detroit date were dancing in our heads, but while Schlittler wasn’t at his best, he was able to figure it out. His 6:4 K:BB ratio is shocking for a player of his calibre. He needed a huge double play to get out of a tricky second, and walked the bases loaded in the fourth before getting a soft fly out to end the inning.

He was not the best pitcher going on this full Saturday slate of games, but he was able to ground down the bats of the Nationals for 6.2 innings. He was dead-set at not being the reason why we lose today, and for a couple of hours on a warm Saturday afternoon, Cam Schlittler made me feel like I was 10 again.

Unfortunately for most of the game the Yankee offense was also revisiting the mid-2000s Blue Jays standard operating procedure. PJ Poulin and Miles Mikolas — yes, him — held them scoreless through the sixth inning. But hey, if you watched last night’s win, you know you just need to find a way to screw into Washington’s bullpen.

Introducing screwworm Ryan McMahon:

Yes, Washington’s relief corps is chopped, but it does feel like the Yankees have been squeezing their bats a little too tight for a while now. McMahon’s homer, like Jazz’s last night, kinda seemed to remind everyone that they can hit.

Ben Rice was walked, reaching base all four times today, and with a chance at the lead, in came Trent Grisham:

And, broadly speaking, there went Trent Grisham.

Even the old man got in on the fun. Paul Goldschmidt looked pretty bad today after snapping that long hitless streak on Friday, but unc changed all that around as we moved into the (relative) tack-on portion of the game:

There’s a reason why we play nine innings, folks.

Given the lead, Fernando Cruz and David Bednar worked an inning apiece, with Bednar allowing a single to Wood — he’s pretty good folks — but nothing else in locking up another come from behind win. Both relievers have put in excellent work over the past two days, with the duo combining for 4.2 innings of one-hit ball.

We’ve got one more game to go before the break, and the Yankees would sure rinse off a lot of the stink around them this past month by completing the sweep tomorrow. Will Warren is tapped for the start, with a 1:35pm Eastern first pitch. The Nats have not announced a starter of their own yet, though Cade Cavalli’s suspension is supposed to be over, so he is a candidate to get the ball for Washington.

Box Score

Mets' bats go silent against Red Sox in 4-0 loss

The Mets were shut out by the Boston Red Sox on Saturday, losing by a score of 4-0.

Here are the key takeaways...

-- Facing rookie pitcher Eduardo Rivera, who was making his first career start and just second career appearance in the majors – his first coming on April 22 against the Yankees, the Mets’ offense was befuddled all day.

Against Rivera, recalled from Triple-A before the game to start in place of the injured Ranger Suarez, New York mustered one hit during the lefty’s 3.2 innings. The brilliant Boston pitching didn’t stop there as four Red Sox relievers combined to pitch 5.1 scoreless innings while allowing just two hits.

-- The Mets had chances to score, though, mostly thanks to seven walks on the day. In the second, Carson Benge led off with a walk and stole second base, but was left stranded. New York loaded the bases in the seventh following two walks sandwiched in between a single, but A.J. Ewing struck out looking to end the threat. An inning later, Juan Soto and Francisco Lindor had back-to-back walks, but the Mets couldn’t score after a flyout and a double play.

-- Francisco Alvarez had two of New York’s three hits on the day, one of them an infield single in the fifth. Meanwhile, Brett Baty’s 10-game hitting streak came to an end after an 0-for-3 day, although he reached base safely with a walk.

-- Freddy Peralta’s string of short outings continued with the right-hander lasting just 4.1 innings. It’s the third consecutive start he hasn’t completed five innings and the sixth straight start he hasn’t completed six.

Peralta’s day was hamstringed by five walks, which forced his pitch count up. Aside from the walks, his only blemish came in the fourth inning when Andruw Monasterio took him deep for a two-run shot. Monasterio had a big day at the plate, adding a triple in the sixth inning.

-- After Peralta left the game, the Mets’ bullpen held the Red Sox in check and kept New York in the game. A.J. Minter did some heavy lifting in the sixth, stranding Monasterio at third base after his leadoff triple with a couple of strikeouts.

Brooks Raley pitched a clean seventh and handed it to Tobias Myers, whose struggles continued after coming in and immediately giving up a two-run shot to Masataka Yoshida that doubled Boston’s lead. Myers has been up and down between the minors and majors recently and has a 13.14 ERA in his last seven appearances. For the season, it’s at 6.26.

-- The Mets went 0-for-8 with RISP and left nine men on base.

Game MVP: Eduardo Rivera

The 6-foot-7 lefty dominated in his first major league start, even if it was just for 3.2 innings.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets close out their series against the Red Sox with a Sunday matinee starting at 1:40 p.m.

New York has yet to announce a starter, although rookie LHP Zach Thornton (0-1, 4.35 ERA) is with the team and will likely get the start, while Boston will go with LHP Payton Tolle (5-6, 3.14 ERA).

Bucks re-sign Gary Trent Jr. to lucrative deal

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - APRIL 29: Gary Trent Jr. #5 of the Milwaukee Bucks looks on during the game against the Indiana Pacers during Round 1 Game 5 of the 2025 NBA Playoffs on April 29, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. 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 Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Folks, it happened. The Milwaukee Bucks have agreed to re-sign free agent guard Gary Trent Jr. to a four-year, $64m deal, per ESPN insider Shams Charania.

According to Charania, “The Bucks and Trent’s reps worked through negotiations since the NBA Finals ended in mid-June while also sorting through sign-and-trade possibilities from interested teams over the last week. The sides moved toward completing a new deal together Saturday.”

The news shouldn’t come as a complete surprise. While reporting broke of Trent declining his player option in late June, rumour widely spread that Trent would return to the Bucks on the back end of handshake deal that kept him in Milwaukee on a team-friendly contract last season. Needless to say, Bucks fans weren’t particularly enamoured with the idea of giving him one more chance

This is obviously just “the price of doing business” with Klutch Sports. Though we will never know for sure, it certainly seems this was predetermined after Trent re-signed on another small contract following the 2024-25 season (and a terrific playoff run), presumably to gain Bird rights with the team. The issue is that his 2024-25 performance was clearly an outlier, as he averaged his second-lowest PPG since his second year last season.

Yup, this is a bad contract the moment the ink is dry—and it’s fully guaranteed. Sigh. The roster now sits at 17 standard contracts.

Royals turn to high school talent, pitching to wrap up the first day of the 2026 draft

Jun 14, 2026; Omaha, NE, USA; West Virginia Mountaineers starting pitcher Maxx Yehl (15) pitches against the North Carolina Tar Heels during the third inning at Charles Schwab Field. Mandatory Credit: Dylan Widger-Imagn Images | Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

After drafting Zion Rose and Taylor Rabe with the sixth and 30th picks, respectively, in the 2026 MLB Draft, the Royals made three additional selections to round out the first day. Kansas City chose two high schoolers and another college pitcher with those selections.

56th pick: Jack Slightom, right-handed pitcher from Lyons Township High School

With the 56th pick, the Royals drafted a player who will also get some of the signing bonus savings from picking Rose: Jack Slightom, a right-handed pitcher from a Chicago area high school. Slightom ranked as the 89th best prospect per MLB and the 60th prospect per ESPN, and was outside the top 100 from The Athletic and Fangraphs.

From Fangraphs:

This year’s Midwest pop-up arm, Slightom is a Cincinnati commit whose fastball velocity climbed from the upper 80s to the mid-90s over the last year. He is built like a human/whooping crane hybrid at a skinny 6-foot-5, and he works east/west with a tailing fastball, changeup, and lateral slider. Inconsistent mechanics and worry about fastball playability are why Slightom is viewed here as more of a dev project than a guy who comfortably projects to have multiple plus pitches.

From MLB.com:

Slightom worked with an 88-91 mph fastball as a junior, touched 95 at the World Wood Bat Association World Championship in October and has reached 98 with carry and armside run this spring. His 77-81 mph slider could use some power and lacks consistency, yet he’ll spin some solid breaking balls at times. He doesn’t use his changeup very often but shows some aptitude for the mid-80s offering, which flashes some nice tumble and fade.

Slightom works with a side-step delivery and a low arm slot that provides some deception. A Cincinnati recruit, he’s athletic and should add some needed polish once he focuses on baseball. With room to add plenty of strength to his 6-foot-5 frame, he could develop an upper-90s heater and a mid-80s slider.

91st pick: Maxx Yehl, left-handed pitcher from the University of West Virginia

Maxx Yehl dominated in the Big 12, striking out 27.9% of batters en route to a 2.13 ERA. He only walked 6.5% of batters, too. Yehl is another pitcher whose previous college time impacted by Tommy John surgery (again, this is a common thing now). Yehl ranked as the 217th best prospect per MLB and the 161st best per ESPN.

From Fangraphs:

Yehl thrives on deception. He gets on top of the ball even with a three-quarters slot, and with his back foot in the middle of the rubber, he strides at nearly a 45 degree angle toward the first base dugout. He lands clean and straight on, and is able to command the ball effectively even with the huge crossfire. Hitters, lefties in particular, looked uncomfortable. His fastball generates above-average to plus carry even with a relatively low slot, and he missed a ton of bats upstairs last year. His slider is mostly horizontal, and he has pretty good feel for spinning it. Yehl can find the back foot and back door against righties, and he likes to run it off the barrels of a lefty. He’ll flash an average curve as well. A changeup isn’t currently part of his equation but will likely need to be if he’s going to start.

I don’t know how well this will work against hitters more accustomed to outlier release points, but college bats can be rough on smoke and mirrors types, and they barely touched Yehl this year; he may just have the juice, deception wise. He isn’t particularly physically projectable, but developing a change is a potential path forward, and he looks like an intriguing early-round flier. You can dream on a backend starter.

From MLB.com:

While he only has this season as a starter on his resume, Yehl’s size and pure stuff should at least give him a chance to stick in a rotation at the next level. The 6-foot-6 lefty has shown the ability to get his fastball up to 96-97 mph, especially early in the season. As the Mountaineers were preparing for Omaha, Yehl showed some signs of fatigue and a loss of a tick or two of velocity, but that’s understandable given he’s just a year removed from elbow surgery, and he’s well beyond any innings total previously accumulated in his career. 

Yehl’s best secondary pitch is his slider, which flashes above average and has been up to 87 mph and more around 83-84 mph late. At times he’ll show signs of a distinct cutter and curve, but they do run into each other a bit. He has an upper-80s changeup that doesn’t get called much but could be solid with pro development. Even when fatigued, the 22-year-old Yehl has shown improved strike-throwing and is a plus competitor. If starting doesn’t work out, his fastball-slider combination should work out of a bullpen.

119th pick: Dominic Battista, outfielder from Oswego East High School

For the final pick of day one, the Royals selected their first high school hitter: Dominic Battista, whose high school is located just 30 miles southwest of Slightom’s. ESPN ranked Battista 119th overall, though was outside the top 250 for other outlets.

Battista is a left-handed hitter with some speed. From the Prospect Porch:

That raw power was on full display at the Super 60, where Battista posted an impressive 108.5 mph max exit velocity, while also boasting an 104.1 average mark. His max exit velocity ranked 4th out of the whole event, even more impressive considering 2 of the 3 ahead of him weighed in at north of 220 lbs, more than a 30-pound difference. To go with the raw power, Battista is an excellent runner who’s quick out of the box and has posted plus run times. Pair that with at least above-average arm strength, and you’ve got a profile some consider fit for center field long-term.

Battista will need to continue to assure scouts on the hit tool this spring, considering he doesn’t possess the same track record of hitting higher-caliber arms compared to some of his peers and has struggled with strikeout woes in the past. He struck out in 22 of his 81 plate appearances his junior spring, while also hitting for a .242 average. Though those issues have seemingly improved in his summer stints, it’s still a skeptic part of his profile, even with a fluid left-handed swing that looks quite “hitterish.”

Peyton Bonds selected in third round of 2026 MLB Draft

Rutgers Baseball continues to send players on to the next level.

On Saturday, Peyton Bonds was selected 90th overall in the third round of the 2026 MLB Draft by the San Francisco Giants. Bonds is the nephew of all-time home run leader and former Giants’ great Barry Bonds.

Bonds is the first Scarlet Knight selected in this year’s draft but makes the total number of picks 12 since 2022 for Rutgers.

The right-handed outfielder starred at Franklin High School in New Jersey before moving to the collegiate level. He hit .429 in high school before heading to Campbell. Bonds then transferred to Rutgers where he spent two years.

Bonds played in 36 games this past season. He hit .352 with six home runs and 29 RBI. He logged an on-base percentage of .436 as well. In 2025, Bonds hit .300 with the Scarlet Knights including five home runs and 40 RBI. He also showed off his ability in centerfield as well as the base paths, where he stole 13 bags in 2026.

Detroit Tigers select SS Dominic Pellegrin with pick No. 125 of 2026 MLB Draft

PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 11: Commissioner of Major League Baseball Robert D. Manfred Jr. announces Cameron Flukey as the 22nd overall pick by the Detroit Tigers during the 2026 MLB Draft presented by Nippon Express at Pennsylvania Convention Center on Saturday, July 11, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Rob Tringali/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Detroit Tigers first day of the 2026 MLB draft is in the books. With their fourth round pick, they took prep shortstop Dominic Pellegrin out of Holy Cross High School in Louisiana. We were waiting for a prep shorstop pick all through Day 1, and the Tigers delivered, finding an underviewed, though older, right-handed high school shortstop who performed well in the MLB Draft League.

Pellegrin is a twitchy defender with good speed and strong bat-to-ball skills. The Tigers love them a prep shortstop, but they changed it up this year by not reaching for one, and instead taking a player who wasn’t a big name on the junior circuit and only late in the season started getting more notice after posting well in the pre-draft league showcase.

A Tulane commit, the Louisiana native stands six-foot-one, weighing in a 175 pounds. He has developing power via a fairly prominent leg kick, but his swing is actually pretty simple and efficient, producing plenty of hard contact although his power projections top out around average. Still, the Tigers have proven themselves quite adept at developing young hitters’ batspeed, so it’s easy to have some confidence in their projections on Pellegrin.

He’s a bit older, as he just turned 19 and would technically be an eligible sophomore if he decided to go to Tulane, but at this point in the draft, signing bonus expectations are generally known and we’d be surprised if the Tigers didn’t end up landing him, especially as they can probably trim a little off the bonuses to Flukey and LeBlanc. Pellegrin’s defense and contact skills have really started to turn heads more recently, and he has a shot to be a plus shortstop with speed on the bases and a solid hit tool and power combination.

Cameron Carr plans to make the weight room his ‘second home’ this summer

LAS VEGAS, NV - JULY 10: Cameron Carr #43 of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on July 10, 2026 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada. 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 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Lakers got rave reviews for drafting Cameron Carr, and this summer has been going swimmingly with their newest rookie. Carr is overjoyed to be a part of the Lakers and has looked good during Summer League play.

While things have gone well for Carr so far, he knows improvements and development are needed. Carr has shown some good shooting ability, and while all teams want more of that, the Lakers really need him to grow into his body so he can be a top perimeter player.

“First things first, got to put on some weight,” Carr said at his introductory presser. “That’s gonna be an emphasis, being in a weight room as much as possible. It’s going to be like my second home. And then, of course, just, I mean, having great vets in front of you just to look up to and learn from and follow in their footsteps and take little things away from them and implement it into your life.

“Overall, I think it’s, it’s gonna be exciting. I know I keep saying it. It’s repetitive, but man, y’all don’t understand how much of a joy it is and a blessing to be here in this situation. So just learn and, and follow in their footsteps.”

Carr is listed at 6’5” and 184 lbs. That’s a very light frame, even for a perimeter player. He wants to be great, but he has to bulk up so he doesn’t get pushed around or bullied on the court, particularly on defense.

The good thing is that he’s well aware of these perceived weaknesses and is prioritizing addressing them. Now that he’s a pro with the Lakers, he’ll have all the resources he needs to build up his body and become a great guard.

The weight room being his new home is the quickest way to make his desired outcome a reality.

While Carr is particularly light, it’s not uncommon for rookies to start much smaller than they’ll ultimately be. With years of work and training, players typically gain weight and figure out the weight they need to be at to maximize their talent.

This is what the goal should be for Carr, and as long as his words match his actions, he’s well on his way.

You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.