Twins 5, Cubs 2: Jeffers bomb and some Ober luck get Minnesota to .500

Punching a guy on the elbow is acceptable in baseball. (Photo by Michael Hirschuber/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Both teams missed out on some offensive opportunities, but the Cubs’ misses ended up hurting more. Some nice defense by the Twins tonight helped Bailey Ober escape some jams, and Ryan Jeffers’s bomba proved to be enough offense.

Inning-by-inning notes:

1: Colin Rea, whose name sounds Irish but who’s actually from Iowa, walks leadoff hitter Trevor Larnach, whose name sounds more Scottish. Two fielder’s choice outs and a strikeout means no runs for the Twins, who would be called “Efeilliaid” if they were Welsh.

A leadoff walk issued by Bailey Ober, too, except this one actually comes back to haunt. Selya Suzuki walks, and Michael Busch knocks the lead runner in. Wrongly, Twins RF Alan Roden tries throwing home, and that lets Suzuki scamper to third. But Alex Bregman strikes out, and Ian Happ grounds into a 3-6 DP, nicely started by Royce Lewis. So Ober escapes without any more damage. Cubs 1-0

2: The Twins don’t do anything, and Roden loses one of the teams’ ABS challenges. The dude’s got an OPS of .494 — buddy, your problems go deeper than ump calls.

With Bailey Ober throwing that mighty 87-MPH stuff, the Cubs begin with two singles, the second advancing the runner to third. And then —-the same thing happens! Strikeout followed by DP! Wow, that’s some real BAbip luck right there.

3: Luke Keaschall with a leadoff infield hit. Then Tristan Gray hits it to first, and 1B Michael Busch makes a wonky throw that glances off Keaschall and hits Dansby Swanson right in the mouth; radio said he was bleeding pretty visibly, ouch!

Then, bam-bam, Larnach single and Ryan Jeffers dinger!

Followed by a single, DP, and flyout, but we’ll take it.

And Ober, still throwing 87, strikes out the side. Crazy! Twins 4-1

4: Two-out single by Keaschall, he’d have stolen second if Gray hadn’t struck out on the same pitch.

A two-out single by Nico Hoerner that becomes a double when Kody Clemens airmails the throw, but Ober gets the next guy to harmlessly pop up.

5: Twins down in order, Rea at 82 pitches. Same for Cubs; Ober at 78. Nice diving/rolling play by Brooks Lee for the second out.

6: Leadoff double into the LF corner by Suzuki. A FC advances Suzuki to third and chases Ober. Recent acquisition Tommy Nance comes in. He throws a wild pitch that bounces off the backstop and allows Suzuki to score. Then Nance walks Bregman. Then Happ singles. Finally Nance gets a groundout and a deep flyout to end the inning. Lake Superior 4 Lake Michigan 2

7: RP Drew Pomeranz in for Chicago; he does not start well. Two walks and an RBI to PH Ryan Kriedler; second and third with no outs!

IT’S A TRAP. Trevor Larnach hits one out of the ballpark, but it’s a foul ball; then he lines out to first. Gavin Pomerall comes in and strikes out Jeffers, then Josh Bell. Hope leaving those RISP doesn’t come back to bite our boys on the butt.

Nance still in there. He gets the first two guys, and Taylor Rogers enters to face LH Pete Crow-Armstrong, who is the son of Sheryl Crow and Lance Armstrong except I am lying about one or both of those. Pete C-A pops out on the second pitch, ‘cause every day is a winding road or something. Non-windy city 5-2

8: Ryan Rolison in to pitch; Brooks Lee gets a two-out single and tries stealing. He’s thrown out, and starts walking off the field; the Twins challenge the call. When even the guy called out thinks he was out, he was probably out; that’s the case here.

Andrew Morris for side Us, working on a 16-inning scoreless streak. Suzuki smacks one to left-center but Keaschall is able to run it down. Then two less-dramatic groundouts. Make it 17 innings.

9: Tyler Fergusfalls Ferguson pitching; the Twins go down quickly.

And it’s Yoendrys Gómez for the Twins; he walks the leadoff guy. Lewis ALMOST turns a nifty DP; still, gets the lead runner. Michael Conforto strikes out; Carson Kelly hits one deep, but there’s Keaschall again to grab it before crashing into the ivy. Twims wim! (We spell it wrong here sometimes.)

That brings the Twins to 49-49; it’s the first time they’re at .500 since April 22nd.

Studs of the game: Ober, lucky or not; Jeffers for the bomba and Keaschall for the defense. Duds: no duds, Twins win, but we’re sorry about Dansby Swanson’s mouth, hope his teeth are okay. I’ve had someone break one of my teeth and it SUCKS.

COTG to sandwiches for a great story about family and co-workers, and BobbyDarwinFanClub for mishearing a famous KISS song: “‘(At one point) I literally thought the lyrics were “Rock and Roll all night and part of every day.” I believe in moderation in all things, especially moderation.’” Thanks to everybody who joined in a pretty fun thread.

Tomorrow’s game is at 1:20, featuring lefty Matthew Boyd against our own Taj Bradley. Catch ya next time!

Two-start pitchers: Dylan Cease fronts a smattering of strong options as we roll into the second half

Hello and welcome to the 16th installment of our weekly two-start pitcher article for the 2026 MLB season.

I will continue to be here every Friday to highlight some of the best two-start pitcher options in fantasy baseball leagues for the upcoming week providing my insights and recommendations on which options should be started or benched.

It’s crazy to think that we’re already 17 weeks into a 27-week season. With the uncertainty surrounding the labor dispute between Major League Baseball and the Player’s Association, we can’t be sure that the 2027 season is going to begin on time. Just make sure to take some time, appreciate and enjoy the second half of the 2026 season, as we aren’t sure what the 2027 campaign will bring.

As fantasy managers start to turn the page to football, there are opportunities to creep up in the standings where others aren’t giving their teams the full attention that they still deserve. Keep putting in the work and plugging away, striving to improve each week, and you’ll reap rewards at the end of this season.

This is a living document, so we'll update the options below as the weekend moves along.

Before we get into it, we'll start with a couple of notes on situations that may be unresolved or teams that may not have a two-start pitcher lined up for the upcoming week. With teams still trying to get their rotations lined up for the second half, there’s more uncertainty than usual for a Friday afternoon:

⚾️ Baseball is back! MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

The Braves have yet to announce their starting rotation beyond the weekend as of Friday afternoon. Reynaldo Lopez is very likely to make a start on either Monday or Tuesday, so we have gone ahead and written him up below. Who makes that second start though, remains to be seen. Hurston Waldrep remains in the mix. Bryce Elder has really struggled as of late, but he could get the call. AJ Smith-Shawver is nearing a return from the injured list and it’s possible that he could be ready by early next week, though that’s more of a longshot. We’ll update here if we get any additional information over the weekend.

We still aren’t sure yet what the Cubs are planning on doing beyond the first series coming out of the All-Star break. Colin Rea, Matthew Boyd and Shota Imanaga are working in those three games. That leaves David Peterson and Javier Assad as options to pitch on Monday. It’s also possible that Jameson Taillon is cleared to return from the injured list and replaces one of them in the Cubs’ rotation. Whoever takes the ball on Monday – provided the Cubs don’t go with a six-man rotation this time through – would line up for two starts (vs. Tigers, at Pirates) – and could make for a viable streaming option.

While we know that Jack Flaherty is going to start twice for the Tigers next week, we aren’t quite sure who else (if anyone) will. Framber Valdez is currently away on bereavement leave and when he returns will dictate when he’s slotted back into the rotation. It’s also possible that they go with a six-man alignment once through and give Keider Montero a start, which would mean that only Flaherty will go twice. We’ll monitor the situation through the weekend and keep you updated here as always.

With six games on the schedule for next week and the expectation that Shohei Ohtani will pitch at some point during that week, no one on the Dodgers will likely line up for two starts. If Ohtani doesn’t pitch and someone does make two starts, it would be whichever of Justin Wrobleski or Eric Lauer take the ball on Monday against the Phillies in Philadelphia.

Someone will make two starts for the Brewers (vs. Mets, vs. Rockies), but we still don’t have clarification on who that will be just yet. Jacob Misiorowski is expected to return to the rotation at some point during that series against the Mets, but if it’s not Monday he’ll only go once. Nothing to take away from that though as he should be locked into lineups regardless. If it’s not Misiorowski on Monday, it’ll probably be Brandon Sproat, in which case he makes for an intriguing streaming option on a two-start week with a revenge game against the Mets and the lowly Rockies on tap.

The Mariners have yet to confirm their rotation for next week yet, but the expectation is that each one of their six starters are going to make at least one start coming out of the break, meaning with six games on the schedule, no one is going to start twice. If they decide to piggyback somewhere and someone does get to make two starts (vs. Reds, at Rangers), it would be whichever of George Kirby, Luis Castillo or Emerson Hancock gets the ball on Monday.

Going Twice…

Note: Probable pitchers as of July 17 and are subject to change.

American League

▶ Strong Plays

Dylan Cease, Blue Jays, RHP (vs. Rays, at Red Sox)

Cease wrapped up an unbelievable first half of the season with a 2.56 ERA, 1.13 WHIP and a mighty impressive 148/44 K/BB ratio over 98 1/3 innings through his first 17 starts. He then showed out against the National League in the All-Star Game. He’ll look to carry over those good vibes and continue charging toward 200 strikeouts in a pair of matchups against these familiar divisional foes. He’s easily one of the best options on the entire board once again this week.

Parker Messick, Guardians, LHP (vs. Twins, at Rays)

Coming off a brilliant first half that led to his first All-Star appearance, Messick gets a nice draw out of the gate with a home tilt against the Twins before having to take on the Rays in Tampa Bay. The left-hander has been remarkably consistent this season, allowing four earned runs or fewer in every start and two runs or less in 14 of his 19 starts. He should be locked in as an every week starter in all leagues, so just sit back and enjoy the added production from a pair of starts in the first full week of the second half.

Joe Ryan, Twins, RHP (at Guardians, vs. Athletics)

Ryan is somewhat quietly having an unbelievable season for the Twins, posting a 2.85 ERA, 1.05 WHIP and a 128/25 K/BB ratio over 110 1/3 innings while being a workhorse and making 20 starts for the Twins in the first half of the season. That’s absolutely ace-level production. He needs to be started every week in all fantasy formats without question, so there’s no real takeaway here, other than to mention that he’s one of the top overall options on the board for this week. Expect quality ratios, a good chance at a win and a pile of strikeouts.

Drew Rasmussen, Rays, RHP (at Blue Jays, vs. Guardians)

Rasmussen is in the midst of another incredible season, compiling a 3.26 ERA, 0.95 WHIP and a 98/17 K/BB ratio across 99 1/3 frames through his first 18 starts. He’s among the most consistent starters in all of baseball and likely to deliver elite results each and every time he takes the mound. As long as he’s healthy, he should be locked into fantasy lineups for every week of the season.

Payton Tolle, Red Sox, LHP (vs. Orioles, vs. Blue Jays)

The 23-year-old southpaw is enjoying a terrific rookie campaign, compiling a 3.11 ERA, 1.07 WHIP and an 87/25 K/BB ratio over 84 innings through his first 15 starts. Now he gets to make two starts at home against familiar divisional foes and should be in a position to have continued success. He should be an automatic start in all leagues this week.

Jacob deGrom, Rangers, RHP (vs. White Sox, vs. Mariners)

As always, whenever deGrom is healthy enough to take the mound, he should be an automatic start in all fantasy leagues, no questions asked. That’s especially true for a two-start week. While he hasn’t been vintage deGrom this season, the 38-year-old right-hander still boasts a strong 3.49 ERA, 1.01 WHIP and a 122/22 K/BB ratio over 100 2/3 innings through his first 18 starts. Sit back and enjoy the greatness while it lasts.

▶ Decent Plays

Jack Flaherty, Tigers, RHP (at Cubs, vs. Royals)

Flaherty has finally started to turn things around following a trip to the injured list, allowing just two runs over 16 2/3 innings in his last three starts with a 20/6 K/BB ratio. It’s a small sample size, sure, but his velocity is up as well which is at least an encouraging indicator that this trend could continue. We have seen Flaherty function as a viable mixed league asset before and it looks like it could be happening again. I’d feel comfortable starting him in leagues of all sizes for this two-start week.

Nick Martinez, Rays, RHP (at Blue Jays, vs. Guardians)

Martinez has been an unbelievable addition to the Rays’ rotation this season. The 35-year-old hurler finished the first half with an 8-2 record, a minuscule 2.65 ERA and 1.12 WHIP despite striking out just 62 batters over 105 1/3 innings. If it’s not broke, don’t fix it. He has earned the respect of fantasy managers and should be an easy start in all leagues for a juicy two-start week. Don’t overthink it.

Michael Wacha, Royals, RHP (vs. Giants, at Tigers)

Wacha has always been a guy that makes for a nice streaming option when he’s lined up for two starts in decent matchups. That’s certainly the case here this week. Coming off of a terrific first half where he posted a 3.77 ERA, 1.19 WHIP and a 96/34 K/BB ratio across 119 1/3 innings, Wacha should be started without hesitation in all leagues for the upcoming week.

Kevin Gausman, Blue Jays, RHP (vs. Rays, at Red Sox)

After a strong start to the season, Gausman has fallen on hard times recently, with a 6.23 ERA and 1.43 WHIP over 43 1/3 innings in eight starts since the start of June. He hasn’t won a game since May 22. On the bright side, he has seven or more strikeouts in five of those eight rough outings, making it seem plausible that he can still get back on track. I’d still have a hard time sitting him for a two-start week and will be using him in all leagues where I have him rostered.

Jose Soriano, Angels, RHP (vs. Cardinals, at Giants)

After an unbelievable start to the season, Soriano has come back to the pack with a 5.14 ERA, 1.51 WHIP and a 66/37 K/BB ratio over 68 1/3 innings of work. He’s not the every week lock that most fantasy managers have probably been utilizing him as. That doesn’t mean he’s not a decent play this week though, with a pair of strong matchups on tap. I’d expect him to approach double digit strikeouts while having a nice shot at earning a victory, making him a worthwhile play in all leagues.

Will Warren, Yankees, RHP (vs. Pirates, at Phillies)

Warren was roughed up a couple of times in his last four starts to finish the first half with a 4.03 ERA, 1.36 WHIP and a 96/33 K/BB ratio over 98 1/3 innings. This should be a good week for him to get back on track with a home start against the Pirates before traveling to Philadelphia to battle the Phillies. Even when he struggles, the strikeouts are there and he’s always a threat to earn a victory with the Yankees’ offense backing him. He looks like a solid start in all formats this week.

Shane Baz, Orioles, RHP (at Red Sox, vs. Braves)

Baz has been a bit of a disappointment for the Orioles and for fantasy managers this season, registering a middling 4.19 ERA, miserable 1.39 WHIP and a 99/42 K/BB ratio across 111 2/3 innings through his first 19 starts. He has allowed three earned runs or fewer in 10 of his last 11 starts though and in a two-start week he should be able to eclipse double digits in strikeouts. That should be enough to roll with him in all mixed leagues.

Luinder Avila, Royals, RHP (vs. Giants, at Tigers)

If you glanced at his overall numbers, you’d think that Avila has really struggled in his transition to the Royals’ rotation, with a 5.09 ERA, 1.50 WHIP and a 30/22 K/BB ratio over 35 1/3 innings through his first eight starts. Most of that damage though came in one disaster start against the Astros where he was tagged for eight runs in 2/3 of an inning. Aside from that, he has allowed more than one earned run in just two of those remaining seven starts. With a pair of solid matchups on tap, he makes for a sneaky streaming option in deeper mixed leagues.

▶ At Your Own Risk

Erick Fedde, White Sox, RHP (at Rangers, vs. Astros)

While he hasn’t been helpful for fantasy purposes, Fedde has done a decent enough job for the White Sox this season, putting together a 4.15 ERA, 1.42 WHIP and a 60/35 K/BB ratio over 89 innings. His limited strikeout rate is boosted by him drawing two starts for the week and the matchup against the Rangers in Arlington looks particularly favorable. He’s also being used behind an opener in most starts these days, which increases his likelihood of earning a victory. If you’re looking to gain ground in wins and strikeouts in deeper formats, I could see a case for rolling the dice here.

Tatsuya Imai, Astros, RHP (vs. Marlins, at White Sox)

Imai has been pretty much all or nothing since returning from the injured list on May 12. In those 10 starts he holds a 5.82 ERA and a 50/22 K/BB ratio over 43 1/3 innings. That’s obviously not helpful for fantasy purposes. He has given up three earned runs or fewer in seven of those starts though, while getting absolutely shellacked in the other three. There’s really no rhyme or reason to when those blowup starts have come though, so it’s really up to your risk tolerance whether you think he can navigate these two starts or not. For me, that start against the White Sox in Chicago over the weekend looks a bit scary.

Jeffrey Springs, Athletics, LHP (at Diamondbacks, at Twins)

Springs is in the midst of an unshakeable funk at the moment and shouldn’t be anywhere near fantasy lineups until he gives us a reason to believe that he can work himself out of it. Over his last 15 starts dating back to April 19, Springs holds a cringe-inducing 7.64 ERA, 1.64 WHIP and a 64/29 K/BB ratio while serving up 26 home runs over 73 innings. Getting to make both starts on the road this week is actually a benefit for him, but it’s not enough to consider rolling him out there. If you care about your ratios, stay away from this one.

National League

▶ Strong Plays

Cristopher Sanchez, Phillies, LHP (vs. Dodgers, vs. Yankees)

It doesn’t get much tougher than a two-start week against the Dodgers and the Yankees coming out of the All-Star break, but that’s no reason to shy away from one of the best left-handed pitchers in all of baseball. Coming off of a tough loss against the American League in the Mid-Summer Classic, look for Sanchez to have extra motivation to start off the second half on a high note. Even with the difficult matchups, he’s one of the top plays on the board this week.

Andrew Abbott, Reds, LHP (at Mariners, at Cardinals)

The 27-year-old southpaw has really turned things around since a rough start to the season, registering a 3.18 ERA, 1.28 WHIP and a 65/35 K/BB ratio over 76 1/3 innings over his last 14 starts. He gets a pair of quality matchups this week, both in pitcher’s parks, so expect that terrific run to continue for Abbott. He makes for a strong start in all league sizes.

▶ Decent Plays

Freddy Peralta, Brewers, RHP (at Brewers, vs. Dodgers)

Peralta hasn’t quite performed as the ace the Mets were hoping for when they acquired him over the winter. The 30-year-old righty holds a disappointing 4.66 ERA, 1.44 WHIP and a 104/44 K/BB ratio over 104 1/3 innings through his first 20 starts. He starts off this week with a return to Milwaukee, which could give him extra motivation to succeed, or could go completely the other way and turn into a disaster. He then has to battle the Dodgers at home to finish the week. Certainly not a cake walk. If you have started Peralta for his bad starts this season, you probably have to stay the course and keep running him out there and hope that the results improve, though I don’t feel great about it.

Reynaldo Lopez, Braves, RHP (vs. Padres, at Orioles)

Lopez has done a nice job in 22 appearances (nine starts) for the Braves on the season, posting a 3.50 ERA, 1.27 WHIP and a 54/25 K/BB ratio across 61 2/3 innings of work. The matchups this week aren’t overly imposing and he makes for a solid streaming option in all formats – provided he indeed is scheduled to take the ball twice. The Braves have yet to announce their starters for Monday and Tuesday.

Kyle Leahy, Cardinals, RHP (at Angels, vs. Reds)

Leahy has really settled in after a slow start to the season, posting a 2.85 ERA, 1.28 WHIP and a 53/22 K/BB ratio over 60 innings in 12 starts since the calendar flipped to May. The matchups this week fall in his favor as well, making Leahy a much stronger start than most fantasy managers probably consider him to be. I’d be comfortable using him in all leagues and would be looking to add him if he’s available in shallower formats.

Tyler Mahle, Giants, RHP (at Royals, vs. Angels)

For most of his career, whenever Mahle has been healthy enough to take the mound, he has been a viable fantasy option. That has not been the case in 2026. Through 15 starts he holds a miserable 5.31 ERA, 1.46 WHIP and a 73/32 K/BB ratio over 78 innings. The talent is still there to succeed though, which makes Mahle’s ceiling much higher than a lot of the similar names that may be floating on the waiver wire. The matchups fall nicely in his favor as well, getting to battle the Royals in Kansas City and the Angels at home, both in extreme pitcher’s parks. I know that I’ve been burned already this season by doing so, but I’m willing to use Mahle in all leagues this week.

Tyler Phillips, Marlins, RHP (at Astros, vs. Padres)

Phillips has done a nice job overall in his transition to the Marlins’ rotation, but he has only made it through five innings once in his last three starts. The matchups this week are middling at best and his overall strikeout upside is very limited. Combine all of that together, and he’s fine if you need a last arm to fill out your rotation, but ideally I’d be looking for someone with a higher ceiling.

JP Sears, Padres, LHP (at Braves, at Marlins)

Sears has been mediocre in his first four starts since joining the Padres’ rotation, posting a 5.03 ERA, 1.42 WHIP and a 17/8 K/BB ratio over 19 2/3 innings of work. In better matchups, I may be willing to take a shot one the 30-year-old southpaw, but I have a difficult time recommending him against the Braves in Atlanta to start the week. There’s also no guarantee that he sticks around long enough to make that second start over the weekend. I get trying to go here if you need to chase wins and strikeouts, but you’re accepting plenty of ratio risk by doing so.

Mitch Keller, Pirates, RHP (at Yankees, vs. Cubs)

Keller had a very disappointing first half after a strong start to the season, finishing with a 5.14 ERA, 1.33 WHIP and a 77/35 K/BB ratio over 103 1/3 innings through his first 19 starts. His limited strikeout rate makes him a better option in two-start weeks, though the matchups aren’t particularly encouraging for the Pirates’ right-hander this time around. There’s probably enough meat on the bone to try it in 15-team leagues, but I may try to find better alternatives in 12’s if possible.

▶ At Your Own Risk

Jose Cabrera, Diamondbacks, RHP (vs. Athletics, at Nationals)

While it hasn’t been confirmed yet, the expectation is that Jose Cabrera will return from Triple-A Reno to start on Tuesday, giving him a two-start week. The 24-year-old hurler has been very inconsistent through his first four starts, registering a 5.60 ERA, 1.53 WHIP and a 12/7 K/BB ratio across 17 2/3 innings. There’s upside there, and the matchups give him a decent chance at sneaking out a victory in one of those starts, but there’s also plenty of risk. He’s not guaranteed to pitch at all, and if Michael Soroka is ready by next weekend, he could get bumped from that second start. Overall, he’s nothing more than a volume play for those that are desperate and chasing wins and strikeouts in deeper mixed and NL-only formats.

Matthew Liberatore, Cardinals, LHP (at Angels, vs. Reds)

It has been a rough season through 19 starts for the Cardinals’ southpaw, posting an uninspiring 5.00 ERA, 1.48 WHIP and an 88/36 K/BB ratio over 93 2/3 innings. The matchups aren’t terribly imposing and if you’re grasping at straws he did fire six scoreless innings with six strikeouts against the Braves to finish the first half on a high note. If you’re going to take a gamble with your ratios, at least betting on a guy with talent makes some sense.

Mitch Bratt, Diamondbacks, LHP (vs. Athletics, at Nationals)

The Diamondbacks’ rotation is in flux at the moment with Zac Gallen on the injured list and Michael Soroka not quite ready to return just yet. That makes it likely that Mitch Bratt will get another start, though it’s hard to see much upside from a fantasy perspective. He has only gone three innings in each of his two starts with the big league club this season, posting an uninspiring 6.00 ERA and 1.67 WHIP with only three strikeouts in the process. There’s really just no justification for trying to go here this week.

Andrew Alvarez, Nationals, LHP (at Rockies, vs. Diamondbacks)

Alvarez has been serviceable in 13 appearances (six starts) for the Nationals this season, posting a 4.04 ERA, 1.45 WHIP and a 53/22 K/BB ratio over 49 innings. In neutral matchups, I’d be all for rolling the dice here and taking a shot on him. Pitching at Coors Field is anything but a neutral matchup though. The Diamondbacks aren’t a fun lineup to tango with either. I think you’d be better served just sitting this one out.

Walker Buehler, Padres, RHP (at Braves, at Marlins)

It wasn’t quite vintage Walker Buehler, but the 31-year-old right-hander had been pitching pretty well for the Padres – posting a 3.12 ERA and 1.19 WHIP over an 11-start stretch from April 28 through June 26. Then, something went awry. Over his last three starts, Buehler has allowed 20 runs in 11 innings and watched his ERA balloon from 3.81 to 5.36. Yikes. There’s just no way that you can trust rolling him out there for two starts in his current form, especially having to take on the Braves in Atlanta. Hard pass.

Kyle Freeland, Rockies, LHP (vs.Nationals, at Brewers)

You know the drill by now. Never Rockies. One of these starts is at Coors Field and the other is against the Brewers in Milwaukee. That’s a gauntlet that you’d sit most decent pitchers against, let alone a 33-year-old southpaw with a 7.36 ERA and 1.57 WHIP on the season. You don’t need starts that badly at this stage of the season. There’s no reason to ever go here. Just say no.

Red Sox wagon keeps rolling as win streak hits 11 with doubleheader victories

Jul 17, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; The Boston Red Sox celebrate after defeating the Tampa Bay Rays in game 2 of a double header at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images | Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

The Boston Red Sox are 48-48, even for the first time since March 28th—the second game of the entire season. They got there by sweeping a doubleheader against the Tampa Bay Rays, 10-0 and 5-3, on a Friday afternoon and evening at Fenway Park. Jake Bennett went six innings and gave up one hit in the opener. The offense went bonkers enough to bring in a position player pitching (which feels illegal if you have a 27th man). Wilyer Abreu hit two homers in Game 2 against right-handed pitching, which has been a problem all year. Willson Contreras went yabo in his first game back from suspension. The bullpen held a two-run lead for five frames. Aroldis Chapman closed it with a perfect ninth for his 20th save.

There are 66 games left. Nobody knows what that means yet. But this team has won eleven in a row and the conversation has changed.

GAME ONE: Red Sox 10, Rays 0

There are days where the starting pitcher is the whole story. Friday’s opener was one of them.

Jake Bennett went six innings and allowed one hit. One. Against a Rays lineup with Junior Caminero and Yandy Diaz. He walked one, struck out three, hit a batter, and otherwise quietly dismantled them—65 pitches, none of the drama, all of the results. The offense did plenty of damage behind him, but Bennett’s afternoon set the tone for everything that followed.

The big frame on offense was the sixth. The Red Sox were already up 3-0 heading in, Griffin Jax having already suffered enough damage with Yoshida taking him deep in the fourth—yeah, the wheels came all the way off. And they came off in the most fitting way possible: the Red Sox beat the Rays at their own game. Before this, Jarren Duran brought home two runs with a bases-loaded single, chasing Jax from the game. Now, with runners on the corners, Carlos Narváez laid down a sacrifice bunt that forced a bad throw to first from catcher Nick Fortes, turning a routine sacrifice out into another opportunity for a run. Then Tsung-Che Cheng dropped one so perfectly up the third base line that nobody wanted to touch it. The Rays jawed about this being foul but it wasn’t. Just perfect small ball baseball. Two bunts, two problems for Tampa’s defense, six runs before the inning was done. Chris Roycroft inherited a mess and made it worse. Jarren Duran drove in three total on the day. Caleb Durbin went 3-for-4 with two runs scored. This was an all-team effort.

Then in the seventh, Carlos Narváez sealed it. His solo shot off Roycroft went 412 feet at 106.9 exit velocity. Soo wee, was that a spectacular shot.

Luis Gamboa handled the final three innings. He was the extra arm up for the doubleheader—going back down when it’s over—which meant Tracey could burn him freely without touching anyone else in the pen. Kind of like a coupon that expires at midnight. Bennett’s 65 pitches and Gamboa’s presence made the whole thing cleaner than it had any right to be. It worked out really well knowing there was a second game to be had.

Final: 10-0. Red Sox with 15 hits and no errors.

Studs

Jake Bennett (6.0 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 3 K)

One hit in six innings against the best record in the AL East. Bennett has been one of the more reliable arms in this rotation all year and this was his best outing of the season. The command was there, the Rays never got comfortable, and he handed things to Gamboa with a 10-0 lead and nothing to worry about. Exactly what a doubleheader opener needs to be. Over his last 5 starts—a 4-0 record, 0.82 ERA, 4 walks to 25 Ks, a .64 WHIP in 33 total frames. Kudos to Breslow on this, this was a shrewd pickup from the Nationals.

Carlos Narváez (3-for-4, HR, 3 RBI, 2 R)

Three hits and a 412-foot shot in the seventh to close the scoring. Narváez is batting .203, which isn’t a number that makes you feel great, but the power is real—this was his third homer—and today he was right there from the first bunt to the last swing.

Masataka Yoshida (3-for-5, HR, 2B, 1 RBI, 3 R)

Three hits, three runs scored, a homer, and a double. The Macho Man was on base all afternoon and driving the offense. Frankly, he’s been one of the hottest players as of late. It so helps round this lineup out. How about coming within a triple of the cycle too?

Caleb Durbin (3-for-4, 1 RBI, 2 R)

On base all afternoon and scored twice to go with his three hits. What else can you say about one of the most changed players in baseball?

Duds

It’s a 10-0 win, so let’s keep this section brief.

Anthony Seigler (2-for-5, 0 RBI, GIDP)

Two hits, but grounded into a double play in a game that scored 10 runs. Fine afternoon overall—the GIDP earns the spot.

Wilyer Abreu (1-for-4, 0 RBI, 2 K)

Two strikeouts and an intentional walk. He’d fix this in Game 2.

Play of the Game

Narváez’s seventh-inning bomb. 412 feet, 106.9 exit velocity, dead pull to left. For a hitter who’s been grinding all year, that one had some feeling behind it.

GAME TWO: Red Sox 5, Rays 3

If Game 1 was about pitching and small ball, Game 2 was about a team that’s learned not to crumble.

Jarren Duran made a throwing error in the top of the first that let two Rays runs score on a Jonny DeLuca single. Rays 2, Red Sox 0 before Boston had even come to bat. This early 2026 version of the Red Sox might have absorbed that kind of start and gone quiet the rest of the night. This isn’t that team.

Wilyer Abreu stepped up and hit a two-run homer to right-center. Tied. Bam. Then Willson Contreras—in his first game back from suspension—hit one to left-center right behind him. Back-to-back. Bam. Bam. Sox lead. Fenway was RAUCOUS.

The Rays tied it in the third. Junior Caminero—who has been a nightmare for this team all series and one of the preeminent power hitters in all of baseball—hit his 29th homer of the season down the left field line to make it 3-3. The Sox responded yet again in the bottom half: Abreu, his second homer of the game, a solo shot to retake the lead at 4-3. He hit both against right-handed pitching, which matters because Abreu has genuinely struggled against righties this season. He didn’t look like it today.

Anthony Seigler added an RBI double in the fourth to make it 5-3, and that’s where the score stayed. Eduardo Rivera gave up all three Tampa runs in 2.1 innings, but the bullpen that took over was extraordinary: Weissert, Morán, Guerrero, Whitlock, Slaten, and Chapman combined for 6.2 scoreless innings. Chapman closed it with a perfect ninth—his 20th save—and the Red Sox had swept the doubleheader.

48-48. Eleven wins in a row. Back to .500 for the first time since the second game of the season.

Studs

Wilyer Abreu (2-for-4, 2 HR, 3 RBI, 2 R)

Two home runs against right-handed pitching in a game that needed both of them. The first one tied it immediately and made Contreras’s back-to-back shot possible. The second came right after the Rays tied it in the third—Abreu responded before anyone had a chance to feel queasy about this. He’s been squaring the ball up differently over the last few weeks, which the Sox sorely need.

Willson Contreras (1-for-4, HR, 1 RBI, 3 K)

He’s back, and he homered in his first at-bat of his first game back from suspension. The three strikeouts are an afterthought. Bowser can’t do much wrong.

The Bullpen (6.2 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 5 K)

Weissert, Morán, Guerrero, Whitlock, Slaten, Chapman. Six pitchers, 6.2 scoreless innings after Rivera handed them a 5-3 lead that needed protecting. They protected it. Chapman’s 20th save closed it out.

Duds

Jarren Duran (0-for-4, 1 K, E)

The throwing error in the first put them behind before they had a chance to hit. The Sox answered immediately, so it didn’t cost them, but in a tighter game that’s a different conversation. Quiet at the plate too—the sac fly and three RBI from Game 1 feel like a long time ago with a batting average as low as his.

Eduardo Rivera (2.1 IP, 3 H, 3 ER, 2 BB, 3 K)

Responsible for all three Rays runs. The bullpen bailed him out completely. He’s not an opener but not a true deep starter? I don’t know what to make of it.

Play of the Game

Contreras and Abreu, back-to-back. Down 2-0 in the first inning, Abreu ties it with one swing, then Contreras takes the lead with the very next pitch. The whole game changed in about 90 seconds.

Shaikin: With Will Smith out indefinitely, Dodgers need to trade for a catcher

Dodgers catcher Will Smith holds the ball during a game.
Dodgers catcher Will Smith has been on the injured list since June 11. (Harry How / Getty Images)

Lost amid the headlines about Tarik Skubal, the Dodgers face this unexpected reality as the trade deadline looms: They would like to add a starting pitcher, but they need to add a catcher.

Will Smith has not played in six weeks. In a “best case” scenario, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Friday, Smith would miss another month.

That left Roberts to make a jolting admission, when I asked him if the team really can count on Smith returning this season.

“We don’t know,” Roberts said, “but we certainly are counting on it.”

Would it be nice for the Dodgers to get their three-time All-Star catcher back in time for October? Of course.

Should the Dodgers count on it? Of course not.

Read more:Dodgers expect Shohei Ohtani to pitch next week as they manage his knee ailment

The Dodgers won’t know where Smith stands by the Aug. 3 trade deadline. That means now is the time to acquire a catching option they may or may not need later.

Dalton Rushing, the primary catcher in Smith’s absence, has a .799 OPS. Among the 24 major league catchers with at least 200 plate appearances entering play Friday, Rushing ranked fifth in OPS.

He is hitless in his last 13 at-bats. His batting average: .266 before Smith’s injury, .233 since then.

On defense, Rushing ranks next-to-last in defensive runs saved among major league catchers, ahead of only the Angels’ Logan O’Hoppe. On Friday, in the Dodgers’ 2-1 victory at Yankee Stadium, the Yankees scored their only run on Rushing’s passed ball.

In past Octobers, the Dodgers have prioritized defense at catcher. In the 2020 World Series, Austin Barnes caught ahead of Smith in four of the six games, including the final two.

In 2025, with Smith recovering from a hand injury, Ben Rortvedt started ahead of Rushing in the Dodgers’ first four postseason games. Rortvedt was a trade deadline acquisition last summer, picked up with pitcher Paul Gervase from the Tampa Bay Rays for catcher Hunter Feduccia.

Will Smith bats for the Dodgers against the San Francisco Giants on April 22.
Will Smith bats for the Dodgers against the San Francisco Giants on April 22. (Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

Rortvedt, currently playing in triple-A for the New York Mets, fits the profile of what the Dodgers need now: a defense-first catcher with major league readiness. With Smith injured, the Dodgers first tried and then cut minor league journeyman Chuckie Robinson at backup catcher. Their current backup, Eliezer Alfonso, made his major league debut in his ninth professional season; he is hitless in nine at-bats.

Could the Dodgers pursue an established catcher, say Ryan Jeffers of the Minnesota Twins or Francisco Alvarez or Luis Torrens of the New York Mets? Possible, but probably not necessary.

Rushing could be their guy. Smith could be back.

Smith has started and re-started baseball activities, only to find out that the inflamed disk in his neck flares up.

“He hasn’t been able to get over the hump,” Roberts said.

The Dodgers are trying another round of complete rest before asking him to try hitting or throwing again.

“We felt that, if he’s inactive, it gives it a good chance to get all the inflammation out, the soreness out, the pain, increase flexibility, all of it,” Roberts said. “Then he has a fighting chance to work his way back. Trying to do everything — even at a lesser dosage — just wasn’t feasible.”

Trying to trade for Skubal might not be feasible, at least so long as his Detroit Tigers remain in the American League wild-card race. The Tigers won seven of their final 10 games in the first half, and they face teams with losing records in 13 of their 16 second-half games ahead of the trade deadline, starting with the Angels this weekend in Anaheim.

The Dodgers do not need a depth starter. However, they might do well to find someone they would feel comfortable starting the third or fourth game of a playoff series, lest they count on Blake Snell (elbow) and Tyler Glasnow (back) and Shohei Ohtani (knee) all returning to the mound healthy and effective.

Important, yes. As important as another catcher, no.

For a team that will spend almost half a billion dollars on its player payroll and luxury tax this season, its most important trade deadline pickup could be a catcher making maybe $1 million.

Read more:Max Muncy makes Yankees pay for keeping Gerrit Cole on mound in Dodgers' win

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Yankees’ questionable decisions, quiet offense lead to Dodgers win

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JULY 17: Max Muncy #13 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates with Chris Woodward #84 at first base after hitting a home run during the seventh inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on July 17, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Caleb Bowlin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Gerrit Cole never threw a pitch trailing in this game. Yet he was on the hook for a fifth loss—wasting what was a magnificent outing—because the Yankees offense failed to score more than one (unearned) run against Roki Sasaki and the Dodgers bullpen to prevent a 2-1 defeat. One mistake by the Yankees starter against Max Muncy, who hit a two-run blast in the seventh inning, accounted for all of the opposition’s scoring in this low-scoring affair. Cole’s pitching line before then was six scoreless innings with three hits, eight strikeouts, and no walks. Alas, that was not how it ended.

Anyone who came into this game with thoughts of a slugfest, given the recent hiccups of both starters, was left somewhat surprised by the efficiency of both of them. Neither allowed a single hit with a runner in scoring position, not that there were even that many types of chances for each team.

It’s a given that with the quality of these offenses, an opportunity or two will arise, but when it did, both Cole and Sasaki handled it reasonably well. Ryan McMahon began the third inning with an automatic double, and a couple of batters later the Yankees had two on and one out as Trent Grisham worked a hard-fought walk. The excitement of this scenario ended as quickly as it came to fruition, with Ben Rice hitting into a double play on the first pitch of his at-bat. One inning earlier, the Dodgers had been the team wasting their chance with a runner in scoring position as Dalton Rushing stranded a pair with a strikeout swinging.

Unable to put rallies together, each team had to get creative about getting on the board. They both took advantage of opposition mistakes but went about it very differently. The Yankees pounced on defensive miscues to open the scoring in the bottom of the fourth. Andy Pages misplayed a two-out double from Jasson Domínguez, allowing the Martian to move to third on the error. Sasaki would retire the following hitter, but not before a wild pitch allowed Domínguez to come across and score.

The Yankees could’ve given Cole some cushion in the sixth, when once again they put two men on against Sasaki. Seeing what Domínguez had done against the Dodgers starter earlier in the game, Dave Roberts went to the left-hander Jack Dreyer, who punched out Domínguez looking on a curve.

That moment would loom large in the following frame because that’s when the Dodgers pounced on a different kind of mistake: a mistake pitch. Cole had given Aaron Boone every reason to try to push him for one more frame, a move that did not ultimately work out. Mookie Betts worked a leadoff walk to start the seventh (Cole’s first free pass of the night), and for any other Yankee starter, that would’ve been the end of the line, but not for Cole. Boone walked to the mound and only talked to his starter, letting the veteran keep going—in a tiring at-bat, after three Muncy foul balls, Cole fed him a slider with far too much off the plate, leading to a no-doubt shot, well over 400 feet out to right field.

One subplot of this game was Ohtani’s continued struggles at Yankee Stadium. He came into the game hitting .136 in the Bronx and delivered yet another oh-fer, which included stranding a runner in the eighth, wasting a chance to pad the Dodgers’ lead.

Dreyer stayed in the game after retiring Domínguez, and once again managerial decisions came into play, as Boone opted not to pinch-hit for McMahon with two outs in the seventh and a lefty-lefty matchup. McMahon was 1-for-2, and the Yankees had three lefties following him; McMahon popped out. It turns out that Boone was saving Amed Rosario for the eighth, as he then pinch-hit for Austin Wells against another lefty, Alex Vesia.

It was in that eighth inning that the Yankees had and wasted their best chance to get back in the game. The same defensive impact that handed the Yankees a run earlier in the game came on the opposite side to take one away from them. Grisham worked his second great walk of the game, this one against Vesia, and this time Ben Rice delivered with a ball in the gap that looked like it’d tie things up.

Grisham, however, did not get the best of jumps on it, and he was nailed at the plate with Pages linking up with Mookie Betts to nab the Yankee’ center fielder.

One could quibble with Yankees third-base coach Luis Rojas’ decision to send Grisham despite the poor jump and 32nd-percentile sprint speed, even with Mookie perfectly executing a hard play to coordinate the brilliant relay throw home. Would Paul Goldschmidt or Cody Bellinger have stranded him on third with one out anyway? We’ll never know, though Bellinger had a chance to plate a run anyway after an intentional walk to Goldschmidt; he hit a lazy fly to center.

Tanner Scott tossed a clean ninth, and that was the ballgame.

The Yankees’ hitters better wake up with a better mindset tomorrow, as they face Emmet Sheehan before being tasked with Yoshinobu Yamamoto on Sunday. They’ll also need Ryan Weathers to put in a good effort as well against Sheehan, and it might very well be Weathers’ toughest test yet as a Yankee. Assuming the weather holds off, first pitch will be at 8:08pm ET on Fox.

Box Score

One pitch sinks Gerrit Cole and Yankees in tough loss to Dodgers that snaps four-game win streak

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole (45) reacts to Los Angeles Dodgers' Max Muncy (13) hitting a two-run home run in the seventh inning on Friday, July 17, 2026, Image 2 shows Max Muncy, Image 3 shows New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham (C) is tagged out at home plate by Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Dalton Rushing in the eighth inning

Gerrit Cole had the magic words, or look, to convince Aaron Boone to leave him in the game during a mound visit in the seventh inning Friday night. 

But that is just about where his sorcery ran out. 

Access the Yankees beat like never before

Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Greg Joyce about the inside buzz on the Yankees.

Try it free

With the tying run on first and no outs, Cole remained in the game to face Max Muncy and on his season-high 103rd pitch of the night left a slider over the heart of the plate that ended up in the second deck in right field. 

Muncy’s two-run shot off Cole flipped the game and dealt the Yankees a crushing 2-1 loss to the Dodgers in front of a sold-out crowd of 46,450 in The Bronx, snapping the four-game winning streak with which they finished the first half. 

“Obviously in hindsight, I probably should have grabbed him there,” Boone said. “That’s on me. … I said, ‘You got one more in you?’ [He said], ‘Yeah.’ Sometimes you got to take it out of their hands.” 

New York Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole (45) reacts to Los Angeles Dodgers’ Max Muncy (13) hitting a two-run home run in the seventh inning on Friday, July 17, 2026. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

The Yankees (54-43), continuing life without Aaron Judge for the foreseeable future after his reimaging during the All-Star break did not show enough healing to allow him to start baseball activities, could not provide enough run support to make Cole’s only mistake of the night sting less. They mustered just one run against Roki Sasaki and the Dodgers bullpen, coming in the fourth inning when Jasson Domínguez scored on a passed ball. 

They had a chance to tie it in the eighth inning, but Trent Grisham was thrown out at the plate trying to score from first base on Ben Rice’s double with an aggressive send from third-base coach Luis Rojas. Grisham did not immediately bust it from first base, which came back to cost him as the Dodgers (62-36) made the relay from center fielder Andy Pages to shortstop Mookie Betts, who backed up an overthrow to second base and made a throw on the run to catcher Dalton Rushing. 

“You’ve got to push the envelope a little bit with one out,” Boone said. “I thought it was a decisive decision where he was probably holding him but read the throw properly. … You’d hate to leave that run on the table with the guy running off-balance. He made a play. But I don’t have an issue with the send.” 

With the Red Sox sweeping a doubleheader against the Rays on Friday, the Yankees had a chance to pick up a game and a half in the division, but settled for just a half-game, now trailing the Rays by 2 ¹/₂ games for first place. 

Max Muncy crushed a home run in the seventh inning. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Cole had been dominant for six shutout innings before issuing his first walk of the night to Betts to lead off the seventh. Boone had lefty Brent Headrick ready in the bullpen, but after a brief chat with Cole on the mound, decided to leave him in against the left-handed hitting Muncy. 

Cole quickly got ahead 0-2 and then thought he had strike three on a slider that appeared to clip the top corner of the zone, but was called a ball and Austin Wells did not use the Yankees’ remaining challenge. 

“My mindset is I can always make another pitch,” said Cole, who struck out eight. “It’s just one more pitch. You can figure out how to make one more.” 

Three pitches later, though, another slider caught too much of the plate and Muncy clobbered it 416 feet to turn a 1-0 deficit into a 2-1 Dodgers lead. 

“I looked at the pitch, it’s not where I wanted it,” Cole said. “But I looked at the swing, it was pretty excellent. It just stinks.” 

New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham is tagged out at home plate by
Dodgers catcher Dalton Rushing in the eighth inning. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST
Yankees Merch Shop
  • WinCraft insulated can coolers
  • Team Effort driver head cover
  • 47 Brand adjustable cap
  • Customizable jersey
  • Logo fleece blanket
  • 14-ounce sculpted relief coffee mug
New York Post receives revenue from affiliate and advertising partnerships for sharing this content and when you make a purchase.

In the Dodgers’ first trip to Yankee Stadium since winning the World Series here in 2024 — Cole, of course, was on the mound for the fateful Game 5 in his last start before undergoing Tommy John surgery — they threw three lefty relievers after Sasaki lit up the radar gun for 5 ²/₃ innings. 

In the fourth inning, Domínguez laced a double to the gap, took third on the play as Pages bobbled the ball on the warning track and then scored on Sasaki’s forkball that got past Rushing for the 1-0 lead. 

But that was all they could get. 

New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) reacts after he strikes out in the ninth inning. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“[Sasaki] has got offspeed pitches with some good depth to them and velo separation when he’s got a 100-plus mile an hour fastball in his back pocket,” Rice said. “He was getting some early contact, getting some miss, just keeping us off-balance.”

Braves shut down Rangers in dominant series opener

Jul 17, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves catcher Drake Baldwin (30) celebrates with shortstop Jim Jarvis (74) after a three-run home run against the Texas Rangers in the fourth inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

The title says it all.

Sometimes a break does the body good. And that’s exactly what the Atlanta Braves have shown in their series opener against the Texas Rangers in a 15-1 win.

Starting off with a Drake Baldwin single to bring in Dominic Smith, the Braves didn’t let up from the bottom of the second inning.

Baldwin would also come back in the bottom of the fourth to feature the play of the night. A three-run homer to drive in Jim Jarvis and Brewer Hicklen would put the Braves up by five runs.

Jarvis knocked in a hit of his own by doubling in the bottom of the fifth to drive in Smith to give the Braves a 7-0 lead. The two took turns driving in another run on the board with a Baldwin single to bring Jarvis in for the eighth run (8-0).

Michael Harris put on a show soon after in the bottom of the seventh, where he hit an RBI double to bring in Baldwin, Ozzie Albies, and Matt Olson for an 11-0 lead.

The Rangers avoided a shutout by getting a run in the top of the eighth inning after a single from Rangers’ Nicky Lopez to drive in Cam Cauley for the team’s first and only run of the night.

Sealing the deal was an RBI single to drive in Hicklen and Jorge Mateo for the final two runs to cap off a run-heavy win where the bats were wide awake.

And for Chris Sale, it comes as no surprise that he pitched through seven innings and only allowed two hits, no earned runs and six strikeouts in his outing. And with the run production on his side, it’s safe to say that both sides did their job well to finish with a win.

49-48 – Rangers forget to return from All-Star break, lose 15-1

ATLANTA, GA - JULY 17: Braves live mascot Blooper was all decked out for Christmas in July during the Friday evening MLB game between the Atlanta Braves and the Texas Rangers on July 17, 2026 at Truist Park in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Texas Rangers scored one run but the Atlanta Braves scored 15 runs.

When the probables were released and it showed that the Rangers would be facing Chris Sale to open the second half, while countering with Cal Quantrill, the best you could hope for was that they would do what they had been doing through the final weeks of the first half.

Sure, it was kind of embarrassing that Quantrill was all that the Rangers could muster after taking nearly a full turn of the rotation’s worth of days off, but they’d been MacGyvering games into wins on their way to topping their division. Why not tonight too?

Instead, the smoke dissipated and the mirrors shattered. You won’t find many more thorough ass beatings than this game. Sale has dominated the Rangers to a near George Kirby-ian clip throughout his career and he was never really challenged in this one. Heck, at just 89 pitches, Sale probably only exited after seven innings because they game had already gotten so out of hand.

The Rangers collected two hits total off Sale. They got their lone run of the night when the game was already 12-0 in the top of the eighth. The Braves, meanwhile, after two outs to start the game, had already collected six hits off Quantrill in the next nine at-bats.

Remarkably, the Braves only scored two runs during that barrage but they were far from done. By the time Quantrill’s day finished, he had allowed six runs on 11 hits in just four innings of work. Quantrill provided some much-needed innings in spot starts while ramping up from long relief duties following Jack Leiter’s ankle surgery, but he was probably due for a dud.

After Quantrill exited, the Braves added on another nine runs off the Texas bullpen. It took until Ben Peoples’ one batter outing to end the seventh for a Rangers hurler to make it through an appearance unscathed. He was the only one to do so out of five pitchers. For the final inning, the Rangers turned to Kyle Higashioka to be one of those pitchers. He allowed a home run to the first batter he faced and a couple more runs for good measure.

For a good while now, due to injuries and roster deficiencies, it hasn’t seemed like the Rangers were putting a team with much big league quality on the field each night. That’s why it’s been kind of funny to see them atop the AL West. They’d been getting away with it with some wins over the last month or so.

They did not get away with it tonight.

Player of the Game: So despite not exactly kicking down the door in the minors this year, Emiliano Teodo finally made his MLB debut tonight. On one hand, that’s cool for Teodo. On the other, he’s now sporting an 10.80 big league ERA and has been cursed to remember this particular game for the rest of his life.

Up Next: Good news! The All-Star break ends and the second half of the season begins with a brief two-game series with the Atlanta Braves. In the series opener, LHP MacKenzie Gore will take the bump for Texas opposite RHP Owen Murphy for Atlanta.

The Saturday afternoon first pitch from Truist Park is scheduled for 3:10 pm CDT and you can catch it wherever you get your Rangers Sports Network which has become increasingly difficult to discern.

Max Muncy punishes Yankees’ strategic mistake in Dodgers’ comeback win

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Max Muncy batting for the Dodgers, Image 2 shows Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers looking into the camera

NEW YORK — Gerrit Cole talked Aaron Boone into letting him face one batter in the seventh inning Friday night.

Max Muncy said thank you very much.

The Dodgers’ Max Muncy homered to rally Los Angeles to a 2-1 win over the host Yankees on Friday night. AP Photo/Adam Hunger

In the Dodgers’ 2-1 win over the Yankees, Muncy delivered the most important swing of the night after Boone made the most consequential decision of the night, with the Yankees manager leaving Cole in only to watch Muncy take him deep for a go-ahead two-run home run that landed in the second deck.

Before that pivotal at-bat, Cole’s leadoff walk to Mookie Betts had dragged Boone out of the dugout.

Muncy, the left-handed slugger, was due up next. Brent Headrick, a Yankees lefty with a 1.58 ERA this year, was warming in the bullpen.

However, after a brief conversation on the mound, Cole convinced Boone to keep him in the game. Having already pitched six scoreless innings to that point, the former Cy Young winner then even got Muncy in an 0-2 hole. 

But once Muncy worked the count even, Cole threw a slider that hung over the middle of the plate.

Muncy didn’t miss it, launching his 18th home run of the year — and first since June 29 — on a no-doubt trajectory of 416 feet.

Just like that, the Dodgers had erased a 1-0 deficit, backing up an impressive 5 ⅔-inning, one-unearned-run start from Roki Sasaki.

And then in the eighth, they denied the Yankees their best chance to rally, throwing out a runner at the plate on an impressive relay play between Andy Pages, Betts and Dalton Rushing.


Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters

California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn
California Post SportsFacebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X
California Post Opinion
California Post Newsletters: Sign up here!
California Post App: Download here!
Home delivery: Sign up here!Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!


What it means

After getting swept going into the All-Star break, the Dodgers kicked off the second half with a marquee win in this 2024 World Series rematch.

They continue to hold the best record in the majors (62-36) and improved to 31-23 against opponents with winning records.

The Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani went 0-for-4 against the Yankees on Friday night. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Who’s hot

Sasaki embraced the Yankee Stadium spotlight, not only by turning in a strong start but doing so with an extremely encouraging uptick in stuff.

In the first, the right-hander punctuated a 1-2-3 inning with a tantalizing strikeout of Paul Goldschmidt, getting ahead with fastballs of 101.8 and 101.7 mph (the hardest of his MLB career) before putting him away with a slider in the dirt.

From there, Sasaki remained on the attack, throwing 21 fastballs at 100+ mph (he only had 14 previously as a starter in his MLB career) and averaging over 100 with the pitch for his first time in an MLB start.

Sasaki’s only blemish came in the fourth, when he got little help from his defense. Pages dropped the ball on the transfer after fielding a two-out Jasson Domínguez double, allowing Domínguez to take third. Then Rushing whiffed on a forkball behind the plate, resulting in a passed ball that scored a run.

Outside of that, Sasaki was nearly flawless. He allowed only five hits. He walked only one batter. He struck out five while finding the zone on 58 of 94 pitches. 

His ERA might still be 4.98. But never before had he looked so dominant as an MLB starter.

Who’s not

This was going to be the Dodgers’ defense, especially after the blunders from Pages and Rushing in the fourth led to Sasaki’s lone run.

But in the eighth, the previously scuffling unit redeemed itself, preserving the lead with one of its best plays of the season.

Following a one-out walk to Trent Grisham, reliever Alex Vesia gave up a double to Ben Rice that banged off the top of the wall in right-center. Immediately, Grisham got the wave home from his third base coach. But behind him, the Dodgers whipped the ball back in just quickly enough to mow him down at the plate.

The relay started with a strong, albeit slightly off-target, throw from Pages, forcing Betts to adjust from his cutoff position. Betts then also fired off-line to Rushing, forcing him to reach across his body to secure the ball, before sprawling back across the plate to apply the tag.

Nonetheless, Rushing got there a split-second before Grisham slid across the dish, with the call being confirmed after the Yankees challenged.

Up next

The Dodgers and Yankees continue this series Saturday, when Emmet Sheehan (4-6, 4.81 ERA) will face Yankees left-hander Ryan Weathers (3-7, 4.15 ERA).

Roki Sasaki shines and defense makes amends

Jul 17, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy (13) follows through on a two run home run against the New York Yankees during the seventh inning at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The Dodgers (62-36) opened the second half of the season with a hard-fought 2-1 win over the Yankees (54-43) at Yankee Stadium Friday night.

Roki Sasaki impressed with one of his best starts of the year. Sasaki limited a potent Yankees lineup to just five hits and one walk while striking out five batters. The only run surrendered on his watch was of the unearned variety.

The Dodgers committed nine errors over their last five games before the All-Star break, and it looked as if the shaky defense spilled into the second half. The defense finally came together to make a spectacular relay play to maintain a one-run lead in the bottom of the eighth.

Sasaki used all three of his pitches to induce swings and misses all night from the Yankees batters. His fastball reached more than 100-mph with location, and his nasty splitter was nearly unhittable.

Kyle Tucker and Teoscar Hernandez collected consecutive two-out singles against Cole in the second inning. Dalton Rushing wasn’t able to take advantage, striking out against Cole to strand both runners.

In the third, Andy Pages also managed a two-out single off Cole. Freddie Freeman struck out on a slider to strand another runner.

A Ryan McMahon double and walk to Trent Grisham in the bottom of the third were erased after Ben Rice grounded into a timely double play.

Poor defense reared his ugly ahead again in the bottom of the fourth for the Dodgers. A bobbling fielding error by Pages in center field allowed Jasson Domínguez to reach third base on what should have been contained to a double. Then a passed ball by Rushing allowed the first run of the game to score, giving the Yankees a 1-0 lead.

Jack Dreyer got the job done in relief of Sasaki when he struck out Domínguez with two runners on base in the bottom of the sixth.

Cole was cruising through the game, but it was also the first time he ventured into the 100-plus pitch mark since returning from injury.

The turning point in the game came when Max Muncy crushed a no-doubt two-run home run against Cole to flip the script and give the Dodgers a 2-1 lead.

Ben Rice hit a booming double to the center field gap with an out in the bottom of the eighth. Mookie Betts made a spectacular throw home to Dalton to tag out the sliding Grisham. It was a fantastic relay all around. Pages recovered the ball, hit deep to the gap. Betts skillfully snatched the relay throw to send it across his body to home plate. Dalton also made an incredible grab on the other side of the plate. He brought the ball back around to tag Grisham and preserve the one-run lead.

It was a satisfying way for the defense to make amends for the earlier miscue which led to the unearned New York run.

Tanner Scott shut down the Yankees in order in the ninth to pick up the save and help the Dodgers start off the second half with a win.

Friday particulars

Home runs: Max Muncy (18)

WP — Jack Dreyer (4-1): 1 1/3 IP, 2 strikeouts

LP — Gerrit Cole (3-5): 6 IP, 4 hits, 2 runs, 1 walk, 8 strikeouts (103 pitches)

Sv — Tanner Scott (14): 1 IP, 1 strikeout

Up next

The Dodgers and Yankees battle again on Saturday when Emmet Sheehan (4-6, 4.81 ERA, 1.24 WHIP) takes on Ryan Weathers (3-7, 4.15 ERA, 1.24 WHIP) at (5:08 p.m. PT, Fox).

Max Muncy makes Yankees pay for keeping Gerrit Cole on mound in Dodgers' win

Max Muncy hits a two-run home run in the seventh inning of the Dodgers' 2-1 win over the New York Yankees.
Max Muncy hits a two-run home run in the seventh inning of the Dodgers' 2-1 win over the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on Friday night. (Caleb Bowlin / Getty Images)

Dodgers All-Star third baseman Max Muncy didn’t get a break this week, traveling to Philadelphia to compete in the Midsummer Classic. But even without the extra rest, he put a charge into his go-ahead swing Friday.

The Dodgers struggled against veteran Yankees starter Gerrit Cole — until he hung a slider to Muncy in the seventh inning. Muncy launched it for a two-run blast to carry the Dodgers to a 2-1 victory.

“Anytime you can find a way to win a game when Gerrit Cole’s pitching, it’s a good thing,” manager Dave Roberts said.

Between the come-from-behind win, a strong showing from Dodgers starter Roki Sasaki and a defensive turnaround, the Dodgers (62-36) came out of the All-Star break on a positive note.

It was clear early on that Sasaki, who didn’t give up an earned run in 5 ⅔ innings, had something a little extra.

Pitching at Yankee Stadium for the first time, he punctuated a clean first inning by getting ahead of Paul Goldschmidt with 101.8- and 101.7-mph fastballs, en route to a five-pitch strikeout.

“I got a big smile on my face when I saw 102,” Roberts said.

It was the first time Sasaki topped 101 mph in a regular-season game, according to Statcast. He threw 21 pitches at 100 mph or harder, the most of any Dodger since pitch tracking began in 2008. Sasaki pointed to the rest he got over the All-Star break and a delivery tweak for his increase in velocity.

“I kind of changed the way I use my lower body,” Sasaki said. “So I’m really happy to get that velo up.”

The Yankees (54-43) scored their only run against Sasaki by taking advantage of a pair of defensive mistakes.

Read more:Dodgers expect Shohei Ohtani to pitch next week as they manage his knee ailment

With two outs in the fourth, center fielder Andy Pages bobbled Jasson Domínguez’s double in right-center field, giving him time to get to third. The next pitch, a forkball, got past catcher Dalton Rushing, and Domínguez raced home.

Pages later found some redemption with a defensive gem to end the fifth. He made a full-speed tumbling catch in the right-field gap to rob Austin Wells of an extra-base hit.

Cole held the Dodgers to just four hits in six-plus innings. Before the seventh, only one Dodgers runner reached second base, when Kyle Tucker and Teoscar Hernández hit back-to-back singles in the second.

Cole came back out for the seventh and walked Mookie Betts to lead off the inning. After a mound visit, he stayed in to face Muncy.

“It was a tough decision for [Yankees manager Aaron Boone],” Roberts said. “You’re thinking about going to the ‘pen, or do you let your ace go after Max and Tucker. And Max spoiled some good pitches and then got a pitch in his wheelhouse and put a good swing on it.”

Muncy fell into a two-strike count, but he kept battling. On the seventh pitch, he saw something he could drive — 416 feet at a 30-degree launch angle, to be exact.

Read more:Shaikin: With Will Smith out indefinitely, Dodgers need to trade for a catcher

“The swing felt great,” Muncy said on the Spectrum SportsNet LA broadcast. “The result was better and it gave us a chance to win.”

Dodgers relievers Jack Dreyer, Alex Vesia and Tanner Scott chipped in a combined 3⅓ scoreless innings to secure the win. The Yankees came inches away from tying the score in the eighth, but the Dodgers, shaking off their pre-All-Star break rough patch, delivered on defense.

With Trent Grisham on first after a walk, Ben Rice hit a double into the right-field gap off Vesia. Pages chased down the ball and quickly fired to shortstop Betts, who threw it home. Rushing’s sweeping tag beat Grisham to the plate.

“I think it was huge,” Betts said. “We still had a couple mishaps in this game. We’ve got to clean that up for sure. You can’t win a World Series doing what we did today. But we’ll keep working and try to clean it up.”

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Yankees' offense starts second half flat, spoils Gerrit Cole's gem in 2-1 loss to Dodgers

The Yankees' offense mustered just one run and spoiled Gerrit Cole's best start since returning from surgery in New York's 2-1 loss to the Dodgers on Friday night.

The Yankees picked up six hits but were 0-for-4 with runners in scoring position and left six on base.

Here are the takeaways...

-The first best chance the Yankees offense had against Roki Sasaki came in the third. Ryan McMahon led off with an opposite-field ground-rule double. Austin Wells struck out swinging before Trent Grisham walked. Ben Rice grounded into an inning-ending double play to end the threat.

The Yankees would finally break through on some bad fundies by the Dodgers. Jasson Domínguez hit a two-out double, but Andy Pages bobbled the ball in center, allowing Domínguez to go to third. With Jazz Chisholm Jr. up, Sasaski threw a forkball that Dalton Rushing could not handle, and the pitch went to the backstop, allowing Dominguez to score.

-In the sixth, the Yankees chased Sasaki after Rice and Cody Bellinger singled to put a runner in scoring position with two outs for Domínguez. Going up against a southpaw, Dominguez struck out looking. 

Down 2-1 in the eighth, Rice lined a double in right-center field with Grisham trying to score from first, but a great relay by the Dodgers got the Yankees outfielder at home. After Paul Goldschmidt was intentionally walked, Bellinger flew out. 

-Cole was masterful, even when the Dodgers peppered him with singles in the early innings. The right-hander retired 10 straight as he took the mound in the seventh. Mookie Betts drew a six-pitch walk to lead off and manager Aaron Boone came out. He spoke to Cole and instead of pulling his starter, he let him face Max Muncy, but the left-handed hitting slugger took Cole deep, smashing a 90 mph slider over the heart of the plate 416 feet into the left field seats. 

Cole's night ended with a loud womp. He allowed two runs on just four hits and one walk, and struck out eight batters through six-plus innings. He threw a season-high 103 pitches.

It was Cole's best start since returning from elbow surgery, but he left on the long side of this one.  

-In relief of Cole, Brent Headrick got the Dodgers 1-2-3 to finish the seventh before giving way to Fernando Cruz in the eighth. Tommy Edman led off with a double but Cruz bounced back, getting Ohtani to pop out and striking out Pages. Freddie Freeman flew out to center to come up empty in the inning. 

Paul Blackburn allowed a walk in a scoreless ninth inning to give the Yankees a chance in the bottom of the frame. Dominguez (lineout), Chisholm (strikeout) and Jose Caballero (flyout) went down in order to end the game. 

Game MVP: Max Muncy

Muncy's two-run blast put the Dodgers ahead for good.

What's next

The Yankees and Dodgers continue their three-game set on Saturday evening. First pitch is set for 8:08 p.m., weather permitting.

Ryan Weathers (3-7, 4.15 ERA) will take the mound. The Dodgers will send Emmett Sheehan (4-6, 4.81 ERA) to the bump.

 

Do they know the break is over? Rays 3 Red Sox 5

Jul 17, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Tampa Bay Rays third baseman Junior Caminero (13) hits a home run during the third inning against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images | Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

This game was a tease.

Each time the Rays made a little headway on offense, they quickly gave it back on defense. Well, let me be clearer: Mason Englert, the Rays starter, promptly gave it back, because when the other team is hitting dingers it’s not the fielders who are letting us down.

The Rays started the game taking advantage of Edward Rivera’s poor control. In the first inning, the first two Rays batters made outs but Junior Caminero singled, and then both Vilade and Mullins walked. There was a moment of hope when DeLuca drove a 2-2 single, an impressive clutch hit, that scored two runs.

But alas.

Englert got the start, and he gave up a double to Rafaela and then a home run to Abreu and before we even had time to think “ooh a lead,” the game was tied. And then Contreras hit a home run and the score was 3-2. Even the next batter smoked a ball, but Williamson was able to make a great play to turn it into an out.

That’s OK though, because in the top of the third inning, our man Junior tied it up with this shot (111.6 mph by the way):

But the tie didn’t last long; in the next inning the Red Sox hit another home run to retake the lead, and then an inning later they scored again on a long double. At the end of four innings the Rays were down 5-3.

And that’s where it stayed. I guess the good news was that the Rays bullpen – Kimbrel, Sulser and Booser — all pitched scoreless innings, which would have put the Rays in a position to come back had they actually gotten on base. But after Junior’s home run the Rays could muster only two singles, one of which was erased on a double play.

All in all, a disappointing and low energy performance today.

How to watch San Francisco Giants vs. Seattle Mariners

PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 13: A general view of Citizens Bank Park during the 2026 T-Mobile Home Run Derby on Monday, July 13, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Brian Garfinkel/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants begin a three-game road series against the Seattle Mariners tonight.

Taking the mound for the Giants will be right-hander Landen Roupp, who enters tonight’s game with a 4.27 ERA, 3.28 FIP, with 104 strikeouts to 42 walks in 97 innings pitched. His last start was in the Giants’ 10-1 win over the Toronto Blue Jays on July 6th, in which he allowed one run on three hits with five strikeouts and two walks in eight innings.

He’ll be facing off against Mariners right-hander Bryce Miller, who enters tonight’s game with a 2.18 ERA, 3.12 FIP, with 65 strikeouts to nine walks in 57.2 innings pitched. His last start was in the Mariners’ 8-4 loss to the Miami Marlins on July 9th, in which he allowed six runs (four earned) on nine hits with three strikeouts and four walks in five innings.

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Game #97

Who: San Francisco Giants (41-55) vs. Seattle Mariners (48-49)

Where: T-Mobile Park, Seattle, Washington

When: 7:10 p.m. PT

Regional broadcast: NBC Sports Bay Area

National broadcast: n/a

Radio: KNBR 680 AM/104.5 FM, KSFN 1510 AM

Mariners Game #98 Preview and Discussion, 7/17/26: SEA vs SFG

ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - JULY 12: J.P. Crawford #3 of the Seattle Mariners looks on during a game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on July 12, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Knock knock, rise and shine, let’s get moving and grooving.

The Mariners are back from their horrible, dreamless slumber, with only a groggy recollection of the night before, and an instinct — call it hangxiety — that it’s best to get up before any memory can sneak through their pounding head. Thankfully, their first appointment has it even worse this morning. Long before the Mariners ended their evening by rattling off grievances with the state of Florida, the Giants were shirtless, pissing outdoors, and singing Morgan Wallen to the downward-glancing eyes of the clothed. We might find it within ourselves to forgive the Mariners, their flaws subtle, inward, universal. The Giants are just assholes.

Speaking of which, Landen Roupp is on the mound tonight. He’s been excellent this year, though a step forward (or to the side) on the mound won’t be what we remember about his season. Facing Roupp is Bryce Miller. He’s been the Mariners best pitcher this year, with a 26% K-BB and 3.12 FIP in 10 outings. After five days off, this turn in the rotation could have gone to anyone, and I’m taking note that it’s Miller who gets the first nod.

The Mariners lineup is just as they left it. All-Star Randy Arozarena is batting second. Former All-Star Cal Raleigh is batting fourth. J.P. Crawford is batting first and playing third; Colt Emerson is batting last and playing short. Luke Raley AND Dominic Canzone are in the lineup. No, Julio Rodríguez is not here tonight. Neither is Brendan Donovan.

Lineups

Game Info

First Pitch: 7:10 p.m.

TV: Mariners.TV and KING-5

Radio: Ol’ Reliable

News

Justin Hollander met the with the media today to give some injury updates.

  • Julio worked out on the field today but is not playing. The plan is for him to return to the lineup tomorrow.
  • Brendan Donovan’s rehab assignment continues in Tacoma.
  • Rob Refsnyder will join Donovan in Tacoma tomorrow for a rehab assignment of his own.