Do Timberwolves Fans Even Want LeBron?

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JULY 16: LeBron James speaks onstage during the mind the game panel at Fanatics Fest NYC 2026 at Jacob Javits Center on July 16, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Fanatics) | Getty Images for Fanatics

The NBA calendar has officially entered its quiet season. The draft is over. Most of the fireworks of free agency have already gone off. Las Vegas Summer League is winding down. Outside of the occasional contract signing or end-of-the-roster move, the league typically settles into a boring stretch. In other words, it’s the dead zone.

Unless, of course, you’re one of the handful of franchises still waiting on LeBron James. Ever since LeBron informed the Los Angeles Lakers that he would not be returning in purple and gold, the league has been engulfed in a second version of “The Decision.” There hasn’t been an hour-long ESPN special (at least not yet), but the speculation has reached an almost comical level. Every podcast has an opinion. Every television analyst has “sources.” Every former player has a theory. If someone has a microphone and a social media account, chances are they’ve already explained why LeBron should definitely head to their preferred destination.

By now, the list has become familiar. The Cleveland Cavaliers. The Golden State Warriors. The Miami Heat. The Philadelphia 76ers.

…and, somehow, the Minnesota Timberwolves.

The fact that Minnesota isn’t just being mentioned as a longshot but consistently appears among the five primary destinations says something about how dramatically this franchise’s reputation has changed. Ten years ago, the idea of LeBron James voluntarily choosing Minnesota would’ve been treated like satire. Fifteen years ago it would’ve been grounds for a wellness check.

Today? It’s an actual conversation. Whether it ultimately happens is another matter entirely.

The fascinating part is that nobody seems to know where James is leaning. LeBron and Rich Paul have kept this process remarkably quiet. Every day brings another report, another rumor, another anonymous executive claiming to have “heard something,” only for a contradictory report to emerge a few hours later.

At this point, even the biggest names in NBA reporting feel less like insiders and more like amateur meteorologists standing outside with their finger in the air trying to determine which way the wind is blowing. One forecast says sunny. The next says thunderstorms. Then somebody announces a tornado warning.

Meanwhile, LeBron hasn’t said a word.

What has made this saga especially interesting from a Minnesota perspective is the number of respected basketball voices who have openly connected James to the Timberwolves. This isn’t just Wolves fans talking themselves into a fantasy because it’s July and there isn’t much else happening. Max Kellerman has repeatedly argued that Minnesota makes tremendous basketball sense. On his and Rich Paul’s Game Over podcast, Kellerman laid out the basketball fit in detail, explaining why the Wolves offer one of the most complete situations available.

Even more interesting was hearing Kendrick Perkins make essentially the same case on that very show. Perkins broke down how pairing Anthony Edwards and LaMelo Ball’s offense and Rudy Gobert and Jaden McDaniels’ defense with LeBron would immediately create one of the league’s most dangerous cores and potentially give James his best opportunity to chase a fifth championship while becoming the first player in NBA history to win titles with four different franchises.

Even good ol’ Boogie Cousins added his own support during a Summer League interview. Suddenly it wasn’t just one person throwing out Minnesota as a dark horse. It became a legitimate basketball discussion.

Then franchise great and team ambassador, Kevin Garnett made a convincing argument why LeBron should absolutely choose to come to Minnesota…

…oh wait. He did the opposite.

Come on, KG.

If anyone was going to publicly campaign for LeBron to finish his career in Minnesota, you’d think it would’ve been the greatest player in franchise history. Instead, Wolves fans were left watching everyone else make the case while Garnett remained notably absent from the recruiting effort.

Still, the momentum surrounding Minnesota hasn’t disappeared. If anything, the waiting has only intensified because it sounds like this decision may finally be approaching its conclusion.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has reportedly encouraged James to make his decision sooner rather than later so the league can finalize its schedule. That’s understandable. Wherever LeBron lands instantly becomes appointment television. Opening Night, Christmas Day, and every other marquee slot on the calendar depends on knowing where the biggest star of his generation will be playing.

The schedule can’t really be completed until LeBron picks a jersey. The basketball world is essentially sitting in an airport terminal waiting for one delayed flight, and judging by the latest SB Nation Reacts poll, Wolves fans are hoping that flight lands squarely in Minneapolis.

An overwhelming 88 percent of respondents said they want LeBron to choose Minnesota.

That number honestly surprised me. Not because the basketball fit doesn’t make sense (it absolutely does), but because LeBron has never exactly been universally beloved in Timberwolves circles. Like every fan base, Wolves fans have spent years rolling their eyes at some of the theatrics. The media circus. The carefully orchestrated announcements. The endless conversation that somehow always circles back to LeBron himself. This latest free agency saga is just another example. The entire league has essentially paused while everyone waits for one player to decide where he’ll spend the twilight of his career.

That isn’t everybody’s cup of tea, but basketball has a funny way of making old grudges disappear. Because while opinions about LeBron the personality may vary, opinions about LeBron the basketball player are much harder to argue. He remains one of the two or three most influential figures the NBA has ever produced. Michael Jordan sits alone in terms of global impact, but LeBron is firmly in that next chair. His arrival instantly changes how a franchise is perceived. National television schedules shift. Free agents pay attention. Championship expectations become real rather than theoretical.

For a franchise like Minnesota, one that spent decades wandering through the NBA wilderness, that kind of validation would be impossible to ignore.

The comments LeBron himself made this week only added more fuel to the speculation. Speaking during Fanatics Fest in New York City, James hinted that the clues about his next destination have already been placed out in the open.

Read into that however you’d like. Personally? I’m choosing to believe the Instagram photo of LeBron relaxing on a boat while several Wolves emojis conveniently appeared alongside the post was exactly the clue he was talking about.

Do I know that’s true? Absolutely not.

Do I care? Also no.

It’s the middle of July. The regular season is still months away. Let us have a little fun. Because if LeBron actually chose Minnesota, it would immediately become one of the defining moments in franchise history.

It would validate everything this organization has built under Alex Rodriguez, Marc Lore, and Tim Connelly. It would represent another enormous vote of confidence in Anthony Edwards, not just as an All-NBA player, but as someone worthy of becoming the face of a championship contender alongside one of the greatest players the sport has ever seen. It would instantly elevate Minnesota from “interesting contender” to one of the premier attractions in professional basketball.

Most importantly, it would signal that the Timberwolves are no longer viewed as basketball Siberia, but rather as a destination. That would be a remarkable transformation for a franchise that spent much of its existence simply hoping competent players would want to stay.

Now, I hear the other side. The twelve percent of Wolves fans who voted “no” aren’t crazy. Some simply don’t enjoy everything that comes with LeBron: The constant spotlight, the nonstop media coverage, and the inevitable circus that follows him everywhere he goes. Those concerns are legitimate, but if James ultimately decides that Minnesota is where he wants to spend the final chapter of his career, it would be impossible to ignore what that decision represents.

It would mean one of the greatest players in basketball history looked around the NBA landscape and concluded that the Timberwolves gave him his best chance to compete. Think about how unbelievable that sentence would’ve sounded even five years ago.

So if the impossible actually becomes reality, the lingering frustrations of the past probably need to stay exactly where they belong… in the past.

Because what would matter most isn’t everything LeBron has done elsewhere. It would be what his decision says about what the Timberwolves have become.

Until then, all anyone can do is wait.

Wait for the announcement. Wait for the schedule. Wait for the notification that could completely alter the trajectory of this franchise.

For now, the NBA’s quiet season continues. But somewhere, one decision still has the power to turn a sleepy July into the biggest day in modern Timberwolves history.


The Timberwolves 2027 Championship odds still sit at +2200, at FanDuel Sportsbook – the same as last week. If you think LeBron James is coming to the Twin Cities, now is the time to get in on that action!

Sandoval takes the bump for Saturday afternoon bout vs. Rays

Jul 9, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Boston Red Sox pitcher Patrick Sandoval (43) throws the ball against the Chicago White Sox during the fifth inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images | David Banks-Imagn Images

UPDATE

We have a ballgame to play!

OLDER

And so the weather affects this one!

Patrick Sandoval makes his Fenway Park debut for the Red Sox as the squad looks to keep this thing going! If…the weather decides to cooperate.

⚾️ Time: 4:10pm — Fenway Park, Boston, MA

📺 TV: NESN

📻 Radio: WEEI

MLB Draft Recap: 2026

Oregon pitcher Cal Scolari throws a pitch as the Oregon Ducks host the USC Trojans on May 14, 2026, in Eugene, Oregon. | Ben Lonergan/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Howdy, y’all? If you weren’t aware, the MLB Draft was this past weekend, and we had a good number of players get drafted. So, I thought I’d throw together a quick little recap of our newest #ProDucks. So, without further ado, here we go!

Round 3, Pick 103: SS Ryan Cooney, selected by the Toronto Bluejays

Round 5, Pick 137: P Cal Scolari, selected by the Chicago Whitesox

Round 6, Pick 187: SS Maddox Molony, selected by the Detroit Tigers

Round 8, Pick 253, P Miles Gosztola, selected by the Los Angeles Dodgers

Round 10, Pick 313, P Devin Bell, also selected by the Los Angeles Dodgers

Round 15, Pick 448, 3B Drew Smith, selected by the San Francisco Giants

Round 19, Pick 556, OF Jack Brooks, selected by the Washington Nationals

So, there we have it. Seven new Ducks into the MLB system, adding to the four from last year, and five in 2024. Which player do you think will have the best shot at making the MLB? Let us know down in the comments!

And, as always, ‘Sco Ducks!

Kobe Bryant’s iconic Rucker Park performance celebrated on 24th anniversary

Rucker Park in Harlem, New York, has seen its fair share of iconic pickup basketball games.

Saturday marks the 24th anniversary of Lakers great Kobe Bryant showing up at Rucker Park to play pickup games against fans.

The anniversary of Bryant at Rucker Park came right after he won his third NBA title with the Lakers, cementing him and Shaquille O’Neal as one of the greatest duos to play for the franchise.

When Bryant pulled up to the park, he came with his entourage, his fist in the air, as basketball fans attending the event cheered endlessly for the reigning champion.

Twenty-four years later, Rucker Park remembered Kobe Bryant’s iconic performance. NBAE via Getty Images

Upon his arrival at the park, Bryant shouted: “Straight to the court.”

According to Ericka Goodman-Hughey and Anthony Olivieri from ESPN, Rucker Park has had many famous names play pickup games, including Allen Iverson and Kevin Garnett. The difference with their performances and Bryant’s, however, was that Bryant was much quieter about his appearance.

At the peak of pickup street basketball games during the early 2000s, Rucker Park was a staple for some of the most iconic pickup games.

Pickup basketball has been a crucial part of New York’s basketball culture, as the games were not played like traditional basketball games; the players would perform all sorts of trick shots and flashy moves against each other.

Bryant’s performance lasted only one half because the event ended up getting rained out. But still, he put on a show in which he tallied 15 points, seven assists and seven rebounds.

During the event, Bryant was seen performing all kinds of flashy plays such as bouncing the ball over opponents’ heads, making passes behind his head and alley-ooping the ball to himself off the backboard to make a dunk.

Rucker Park remembered Kobe Bryant’s iconic performance on its 24th anniversary Saturday. NBAE via Getty Images

Outside of performing plays that are considered unconventional in basketball, Bryant also performed some of his more traditional moves, such as shooting 3-pointers, performing layups, and of course, his signature step-back fadeaway shot.

When the event was over, Bryant interacted with the fans who attended and greeted them as a way to show respect.

Julio Rodríguez activated, Miles Mastrobuoni DFA’d

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JUNE 30: Julio Rodríguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates an 8-3 win over the Los Angeles Angels at T-Mobile Park on June 30, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Olivia Vanni/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mariners activated Julio Rodríguez from the 7-day IL ahead of this evening’s game against the Giants. Julio had been out since July 3, when Anaheim’s Nolan Shanuel threw the ball into the back of Julio’s head in an attempt to make a double play. Julio initially got up and sprinted to third base, looking very amped up. But it quickly became apparent that he was not alright, and he’s been recovering for the past two weeks.

There’s never a good time for a concussion, but the injury came at a particularly unfortunate time for Julio, who seemed to be regaining his timing after struggling throughout much of June. And while the injury lingered for longer than anyone would hope, it’s nice for him to have only missed one game of the second half since that’s traditionally what one might call Julio Season.

In a corresponding move, Miles Mastrobuoni was DFA’d. Among a bench full of players without options, this made the most sense because Master Bunny is the only lefty on a team that’s gotten lopsided. In addition, Mastrobuoni has already cleared waivers once this season, so there’s a reasonable chance the Mariners get to keep him again.

Julio will DH tonight as he eases back into things. Luke Raley will play centerfield because sometimes we like to have fun.

Knicks reportedly sign restricted free agent Moussa Cisse to offer sheet, Mavericks have 48 hours to match

This is about as low-stakes a restricted free agent offer sheet as you are going to see.

The New York Knicks have reportedly signed center Moussa Cisse to a two-year offer sheet, first reported by Jake Fischer of The Stein Line. Both years of the offer are at the minimum, and while the first year is partially guaranteed, the second year is non-guaranteed, ESPN reports.

Dallas has 48 hours to match.

There is not much risk in New York making this offer, they are limited in what they can pay and still stay under the second apron (which owner James Dolan has said the team will do).

Cisse went undrafted out of Memphis (he played for three colleges across five years) but signed with Dallas on an Exhibit 10 deal last season (essentially a training camp deal) and was later converted to a two-way contract. He played 38 games with the Mavericks, averaging 4.5 points and 5.7 rebounds per game. For stretches, he was a regular part of the Mavericks' frontcourt rotation.

New York, looking for an inexpensive and athletic third center, and Cisse is athletic, can finish lobs and is a rim protector. With Mitchell Robinson and Ariel Hukporti gone in free agency, New York needs another big man off the bench.

Brewers star Brandon Woodruff to undergo season-ending surgery in crushing blow

Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Brandon Woodruff walking off the mound with an injury, accompanied by a trainer.
Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Brandon Woodruff walks off the mound with an injury in the second inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Brewers pitcher Brandon Woodruff is likely to miss the rest of the season in a massive blow for his team.

Woodruff, 33, told reporters Saturday that he was set to undergo right shoulder capsule surgery.

He previously underwent the same procedure in 2023 and rehabbed the injury for 20 months in that instance before returning.

Woodruff, though, said he is going under the knife this time “with the goal in mind of pitching again.”

Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Brandon Woodruff is seen walking off the mound back in April with am injury. Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

“I’m not having a funeral or anything,” he said, via MLB.com.

Woodruff has been limited by arm and shoulder injuries this year and landed on the IL earlier in July due to his latest issue.

He’s pitched well in just nine appearances and 45 ⅓ innings this year with a 2.98 ERA.

Woodruff has spent his entire career in Milwaukee after being drafted by the team in 2014.

Brewers pitcher Brandon Woodruff stands on the field prior
to a July 18 game against the Marlins. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

The former Mississippi State star made his big league debut in 2017 and established himself as a reliable arm for Milwaukee, as he earned All-Star nods in 2019 and 2021.

Woodruff’s injury is a tough blow to a red-hot Brewers team that leads the National League Central with a 60-37 record heading into Saturday’s action

And, across all of MLB, only the Dodgers have a better record than Milwaukee with the second half of the season still to play.

The Brewers will face the Marlins on Saturday and Sunday before hosting the Mets for a three-game series.

Should the Washington Nationals trade Luis Garcia Jr. at the deadline?

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 12: Luis García Jr. #2 of the Washington Nationals at bat against the New York Yankees during the first inning at Nationals Park on July 12, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This morning an interesting report came out that the Nationals have been talking with other teams about Luis Garcia Jr. ahead of the trade deadline. Garcia’s name has not been mentioned as much in trade rumors as the likes of CJ Abrams or Foster Griffin. However, moving the first baseman at the peak of his value could make a lot of sense.

There have been no truly advanced talks yet, but it is now clear that Garcia’s name is out there. This would be an interesting move to make, and has its pros and cons. As mentioned in the Athletic article, losing Garcia could be a big blow to the clubhouse, which the front office is mindful of. 

The 26 year old Garcia has become a leader in the clubhouse despite still being a young player. After all, Garcia is the longest tenured player on the Nats, having been with the club since 2020. Obviously, losing Garcia would be more than just a loss in the clubhouse. Garcia is having a career year on the field, hitting .284 with an .871 OPS and a career high 20 home runs. 

Garcia has been on a torrid run since the start of June, with an OPS of 1.087 and 15 of his 20 homers. He has been putting the ball in the air more consistently, and it has paid off in a big way. Garcia has always had a ton of talent as a hitter, but with a better coaching staff, he is finally putting things together.

That makes the decision to trade him an interesting one. At 26, this could just be the beginning for Garcia. However, he does have a fairly long history of mediocre production before this and cannot hit left handed pitching. There is a decent chance that this is the peak of his value.

One other thing that could make it easier to stomach trading Garcia is the fact that the Nats have ready made replacements waiting in the wings. We saw Abimelec Ortiz in the last game of the first half, and he looked like he could handle big league pitching. He also hit three doubles in his first game back in AAA. If you can get assets, ideally pitchers, for Garcia and have Ortiz slide in and deliver similar production, that would be a bargain.

The Nats could target high minors or even young big league pitching in a Garcia deal. If they could get a solid starting pitching prospect and a promising but unproven young reliever, this could be a deal that could help the Nats this year. With Ortiz waiting in the wings, Garcia is a player you can trade while not losing that much production. It would be tough to ask Ortiz to be as productive as Garcia has been, but he can give you about 85% of it.

Our guy Paul made an interesting mock trade with the Red Sox, who were brought up in that article. His trade sends Garcia to the Sox for Kyson Witherspoon and Eduardo Rivera. Just like my suggestion, that brings in a nice pitching prospect and a talented but unproven reliever.

I am not totally sold that Witherspoon would be on the table for Garcia, but I suppose it is possible. Witherspoon was the Red Sox first rounder last year, but has had an uneven first pro season after Boston tried to make some tweaks to his mechanics. However, the talent is still quite large. Rivera is a relief prospect who has made his MLB debut, and has loud stuff from the left side.

Both are a bit buried in the Red Sox loaded pitching core, but would be great fits in DC. If Witherspoon is unavailable, Marcus Phillips is another name that makes sense, especially if there is a third piece coming back to the Nats. Phillips is very similar to Witherspoon, as he has big stuff but uneven results this year in his first season of pro ball. 

With Garcia, there could be a lot of interest due to his unique offensive profile. His combination of power and contact is rare. Other teams that would make sense for him include the Guardians, the D-Backs if they remain in the hunt and maybe even the Marlins. 

Garcia has one year of team control after this season, which would appeal to teams as well. He is not just a rental, and is still very young. If the Nats wanted to do a combination of buying and selling, Garcia would make a lot of sense as a piece to move. Unlike Foster Griffin or CJ Abrams, they have an in-house replacement and Garcia could help them acquire much needed pitching help. There will be a lot on Paul Toboni’s plate as we approach the deadline, and this Garcia decision will be one of many that he has to make.

Knicks sign Mavericks RFA Moussa Cisse to two-year offer sheet

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JANUARY 19: (NEW YORK DAILIES OUT) Moussa Cisse #30 of the Dallas Mavericks in action against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden on January 19, 2026 in New York City. The Mavericks defeated the Knicks 114-97. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Many have wondered aloud of late what the Knicks’ plan is for the final roster spot they are legally able to fill under the second apron.

After losing Mitchell Robinson and Ariel Hukporti to division rivals, they’ve signed Andre Drummond and shown interest in the likes of Jonas Valanciunas and Kevon Looney, but the latter two have found better deals and situations elsewhere, leading to speculation throughout the last two weeks.

Several members of the P&T community have loudly vouched for Moussa Cisse, a young big man on the Dallas Mavericks who’s currently on a two-way qualifying offer with the team. Despite his promise, his market was extremely quiet all throughout free agency.

That was until Saturday afternoon, when the Knicks boldly staked their claim and signed Cisse to a two-year offer sheet.

Cisse went undrafted in the 2025 NBA Draft out of Memphis after a complicated, five-year college career that began at Memphis, saw him transfer to Oklahoma State the year after Cade Cunningham left, saw him spend 2023-24 at Ole Miss, and saw him return to Memphis for his fifth season. In his collegiate career, he was known as an elite rim protector with limited offensive ability who split time as a starter and backup center.

Cisse inked a two-way deal with the Mavericks last October after making an impression throughout Summer League and training camp, spending much of 2025-26 in the G League, where he dominated to the tune of 14.7 points and 13.1 rebounds on 63.1% from the field in 15 games.

But with the Mavs’ season in total free fall due to their rebuild around Cooper Flagg, Cisse was able to appear in 38 games with the big league club, where he flashed his potential. A 15-point, 9-rebound, 4-block gem at the World’s Most Famous Arena on MLK Day is probably where most fans saw him for the first time:

Outside of that game and a 17-point, 20-rebound gem to close the season in a meaningless game, he flew well under the radar, averaging just 4.5 points and 5.7 rebounds on 57.4% from the field, never attempting a shot outside eight feet.

His per-36 numbers are quite impressive, averaging 11.5 points and 14.7 rebounds, showing that he’s a bang-for-your-buck big. All told, this is probably the closest you could come to a Mitchell Robinson replacement in terms of size (seven feet, 7’5” wingspan!), defense, rebounding, and impact, albeit with a lot more risk due to his youth and rawness. He mimics a rookie Mitch at times with his foul woes at times, but with all the positives as well.

The contract structure is quite odd. He’s signed to a two-year deal worth about $5 million, but only $1.1 million is guaranteed for the soon-to-be 24-year-old. The second year of the deal is completely non-guaranteed, giving the team flexibility, similar to how they structured the Jose Alvarado and Landry Shamet contracts.

And then, there’s the elephant in the room. Cisse is not a regular free agent. He’s just the second player this offseason to sign an offer sheet and the first to sign one with the Knicks since the infamous $72 million contract to Tim Hardaway Jr. in 2017, which wasn’t matched by Atlanta.

The Mavericks have the right to match, having until the end of the day on Monday to decide. At this point, it’s out of the Knicks’ hands entirely.

Cisse’s contract would fit fine in the Mavericks’ sheets, but it would be their 19th player on their roster and 16th signed to a standard deal, likely necessitating them to cut someone by the time the season begins. Only Ryan Nembhard’s contract is non-guaranteed (and they wouldn’t cut him anyway), so they would have to eat the salary of whoever they cut. It’s also important to note that Cisse’s partially guaranteed first year is fully guaranteed before preseason begins on October 1.

The big question, though, is if Dallas wants to keep him.

I’d imagine that their plan the whole time was to get him back on a two-way contract. His limited NBA experience wouldn’t give him much leverage, and prospective teams would be scared away by the RFA tender. Now needing to give him a two-year standard deal to keep him, it’ll at least be considered in the room.

Their center rotation is already a bit jammed with Daniel Gafford and Dereck Lively II, along with a mountain of power forwards in Cooper Flagg, Morez Johnson Jr., Santi Aldama, and P.J. Washington. I doubt this would stop them if they wanted to retain him, but it’s a factor.

There’s also the minutiae of offer sheets. If the Mavericks match, Cisse gets a no-trade clause for the 2026-27 season, something that could hurt Dallas’ flexibility. There’s also the factor of them having an entirely new brass from when he initially signed in Dallas last year, with both GM Nico Harrison and head coach Jason Kidd dismissed. Will Dusty May and Masai Ujiri want him?

If the contract is matched, there is no recourse for the Knicks. Teams above the first apron are prohibited from acquiring players via sign-and-trade, which kills any hopes of negotiating something afterwards. If it isn’t matched, the Knicks will likely be done for the offseason and ink Tyler Nickel and/or Jack Kayil to a two-way contract.

We just have to wait and see. I’m not confident, but I’d be ecstatic if Dallas once again undervalued a guy and allowed him to waltz to NYC.

Another Good Start to a Doubleheader

CLEVELAND, OHIO - JULY 18: Travis Bazzana #37 of the Cleveland Guardians hits an RBI triple during the third inning in game one of a doubleheader against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Progressive Field on July 18, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This will be a short recap, since nothing really of note happened.

Gavin Williams was, well, weird. 11 Ks in 6 innings, but gave up 3 HRs and 5 earned runs.

The offense did practically nothing. After Gavin gave up a 2-run homer in the 2nd, Kwan singled with two outs in the bottom of the 2nd. Jared Jones missed on a 2-2 fastball, and Bazzana laced a triple down the right-field line, scoring Kwan. For what it’s worth, it probably wouldn’t have been a triple if not for Kwan’s spectacular baserunning, getting from first to home on what was, in most cases, a routine double.

That was all.

Pirates starter Jared Jones went 5 innings, striking out 9, and giving up only that one run. The pirates bullpen pitched 4 scoreless innings, striking out 4.

The Guardians bullpen pitched 3 innings and gave up 2 runs.

The Guardians mustered up 7 baserunners today, and collected only one extra-base hit.

It’ll be Logan Allen tonight at 7:10.

As Landen Roupp nears career high in innings, Giants plan to ‘let him pitch’

SEATTLE — Landen Roupp didn’t want his night to end. But he didn’t put up a fight.

When just over two more innings represents a career high for a season, you learn to pick your battles over going back out for one more. Even in the case of Roupp, who shares the same bulldog mentality as Logan Webb and, on Friday, sure pitched like the Giants’ ace, too.

Giants pitcher Landen Roupp expects to play a big role during the second half of the season. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Roupp tossed seven shutout innings to help the Giants start the second half on the right note Friday in a 7-0 win over the Mariners. Still, he understood he had minimal leverage to persuade manager Tony Vitello to give him the chance of completing eight for a second straight start.

“He made a comment today about not fighting to go back out there in the eighth,” Vitello said.

Instead, he handed the game off to Jason Foley, who touched 97 mph while tossing a scoreless eighth in his first big-league appearance since 2024. Caleb Kilian took care of business in the ninth, and the Giants finished what they hope is a preview of what’s to come in their final stretch.

Roupp, 27, figures to be a big part of the Giants’ second-half plans, especially if Robbie Ray and/or Tyler Mahle are pitching for different teams after the Aug. 3 trade deadline.

The young right-hander has looked the part of a No. 2 his past two times out. Before allowing two hits over seven innings against the Mariners, Roupp limited the Blue Jays to one run on three hits. 

In that outing, 11 days earlier, Roupp was allowed to complete eight innings, a career high. That also put him on the doorstep of another significant milepost: He was less than 10 innings from matching his largest workload in one season — the 106 ⅔ he threw last year.

When his night was over Friday, Roupp’s inning total stood at 104.


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By the sounds of it, the Giants have no plans of lightening his load.

Vitello was asked after the game about his plans for Roupp in the second half, given the career high he is almost certain to blow past the next time he takes the mound.

“Let him pitch,” he said. “Try not to get in a fistfight in the dugout any time he comes out of the game.”

That’s music to Roupp’s ears.

“I don’t really like to take breaks,” he said. “It kind of just messes with my momentum and rhythm. … I feel good to go. I don’t really see anything stopping this.”

Roupp has tossed 104 innings this season and likely will eclipse his career high during his next start. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Roupp had plenty of downtime between his two most recent starts and said he felt a “little sluggish” when he took the mound in Seattle, even if it didn’t show. After starting 11 losses in a row, tying a franchise record, Roupp has used pretty much the same formula to correct course his past two starts.

“Just trying to pound the zone,” Roupp said. “Not really going for strikeouts much.”

For the most part, he has done a good job of generating early contact. That has allowed him to pitch deeper into games while limiting runs despite striking out less than a batter every two innings his past two starts, which could also bode well for his ability to continue to take on a larger workload.

“I think if you look at his whole body of work, he’s been great for us all year long,” Vitello said. “It’s just been a couple outings where his pitch count gets high on him because he’s not in the zone.”

The Giants opted to skip his last turn in the rotation before the All-Star break, a decision Vitello chalked up more to finding an opportunity for Carson Whisenhunt than giving Roupp a breather.

“Finding ways to get Wiz involved,” Vitello said, “is something we’re all thinking about in the back of our minds as we talk about the pitching staff.”

Soon enough, Roupp and Whisenhunt will likely be in the rotation. There should be no shortage of innings and starts to go around once the Giants’ sell-off commences.

In the meantime, Roupp found a creative setting to stay fresh during his extended layoff. While Webb was enjoying the All-Star festivities in Philadelphia and Vitello was relaxing on the beach in Cabo, Roupp stayed closer to home. He went to Santa Cruz with Casey Schmitt.

The teammates took in the boardwalk, mostly stayed away from the cold, seaweed-filled ocean water and played catch in the driveway of a friend’s house where they were staying.

“I guess it was good, in the long run, to take a break like that,” Roupp said, even though he added, “I would rather not” take another one.

St. Louis Cardinals Game Discussion vs Arizona Diamondbacks Saturday

ATLANTA, GA - JULY 02: Dustin May #3 of the St. Louis Cardinals pitches in the first inning during the game against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on July 2, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Matthew Grimes Jr./Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The St. Louis Cardinals will play game 2 in Arizona Saturday afternoon as Dustin May takes the mound for the Cardinals hoping to win the series versus the Diamondbacks. Arizona will try to foil that plan by giving the ball to RHP Brandon Pfaadt. First pitch is set for 3:10pm central time in the desert. The game TV broadcast will be available through Cardinals.tv.

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Royals vs Padres, July 18 game discussion

Randy Dobnak
Jul 8, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; Kansas City Royals relief pitcher Randy Dobnak (62) pitches in the third inning against the New York Mets at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Here’s the good news: After winning a wild game last night, the Royals have a shot to take the series with a W this afternoon. The bad news: They’re going to have to do it with Randy Dobnak taking a turn in the rotation because Stephen Kolek needs a tune-up start for Omaha (also occurring today) before he’s ready to rejoin the Royals’ rotation following an extended stay on the Family Medical Emergency list to be with his prematurely-born baby daughter.

Dobnak has danced around trouble – allowing 9 hits and 4 walks while only striking out 4 in 9.2 innings – in 2 appearances for the Royals. If he earns at least one out today, it will be the most major league innings he has thrown in a season since 2021. He didn’t pitch in the bigs at all in ‘22 or ‘23, pitched 9.2 innings in ‘24, and only 5.1 innings last year. When the Twins called him up as a 24-year-old in 2019, it seemed like he could be a swingman in their rotation and bullpen for years to come but it just didn’t work out that way for him. The Royals, of course, acquired him for cash from the Mariners when he exercised an upward-mobility clause in his contract with them earlier this year. The Royals actually just sold Rudy Martin Jr.‘s rights to the Orioles for the same reason yesterday.

The Padres will send Griffin Canning to the mound. Canning is something the opposite of last night’s starter, Michael King. His K-BB% is better, but his LOB% is worse, so he carries an unwieldy 6.47 ERA despite a SIERA of 4.57. So, he’s the opposite of King in that he’s been unlucky, but the same as King in that his true performance has been closer to mediocre than the results would seem to indicate. Don’t ask me what the Royals might do about it.

Canning has seven pitches, though he only throws four of them more than 10% of the time, with three of those – his four-seamer, slider, and changeup – accounting for almost 3/4 of his pitches thrown. He doesn’t generally get anyone to chase his pitches. His slider and cutter can generate some whiffs. Batters don’t do well when they put the knuckle-curveball or sweeper into play. The changeup grades out the best of his pitches. It’s a mish-mash of stats that only tell you that he doesn’t seem to have a clear identity as a pitcher. That can be a problem for a good offense, but I could see how it would make it difficult for a bad offense to figure out a plan against him.

Lineups

Speaking of bad offenses, the Royals will send out the same nine they used last night. I wouldn’t hate it if they did better with runners in scoring position before the tenth inning. Only time will tell if they can manage it.

Saturday afternoon Orioles game thread: at Astros, 4:10 ET

CINCINNATI, OHIO - JULY 03: Pitcher Trevor Rogers #28 of the Baltimore Orioles throws during the first inning of a baseball game against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on July 03, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jeff Dean/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Orioles are in unprecedented territory, carrying a season-best five-game winning streak into today’s game. What do you say we make it six?

The Birds’ second-half opener last night wasn’t the most crisply played affair, with nine walks by the O’s pitching staff and a nearly non-existent offensive showing, but Taylor Ward’s dramatic, eighth-inning home run turned a sure defeat into a dramatic victory. The win leapfrogged the Orioles a half game ahead of the Astros in the crowded wild card race.

If the O’s hope to stay ahead, they’ll need to win at least one of their next two games in Houston. Preferably both! Today Trevor Rogers will make his first start of the second half, hoping to continue the roll he was on before the All-Star break. Since the start of June, the lefty has a 1.73 ERA in seven outings, going 4-1 with four quality starts. He’s shaved his once sky-high 6.96 ERA to a reasonable 4.48. If Rogers can hold Yordan Alvarez in check, he’s got a good chance to lower that mark even further.

The Orioles, against Astros righty Spencer Arrighetti, have eight of the same nine guys in the lineup as last night. The one exception is at third base, where newly recalled Christian Encarnacion-Strand makes his Orioles debut in place of Coby Mayo. This will be Encarnacion-Strand’s first MLB appearance in more than a year, since July 8, 2025 with the Reds. He’s never had much success at the major league level, batting just .233/.275/.404 in parts of three seasons with Cincinnati, but he was tearing up Triple-A Norfolk with 17 homers and a .555 SLG in 61 games. If he can play a decent defensive third base and hit a few dingers for however long he’s with the Orioles, I’ll take that.

At 17 letters, Encarnacion-Strand has the longest last name in Orioles history. So he’s got that going for him.

Orioles lineup:

DH Adley Rutschman
SS Gunnar Henderson
LF Taylor Ward
1B Pete Alonso
C Samuel Basallo
RF Dylan Beavers
CF Colton Cowser
3B Christian Encarnacion-Strand
2B Jackson Holliday

LHP Trevor Rogers

Astros lineup:

SS Jeremy Peña
DH Yordan Alvarez
3B Isaac Paredes
2B Jose Altuve
1B Christian Walker
C Yainer Diaz
RF Cam Smith
LF Zach Dezenzo
CF Lucas Spence

RHP Spencer Arrighetti

D-backs vs. Cardinals Discussion

LAKE HAVASU CITY, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 30: A general view of Tinnell Memorial Skate Plaza as competitors warm up prior to the Finals of the 2021 SLS Championship Tour: Lake Havasu at Rotary Park on October 30, 2021 in Lake Havasu City, Arizona. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today’s Lineups

CARDINALSDIAMONDBACKS
JJ Wetherholt – 2BKetel Marte – 2B
Ivan Herrera – DHGeraldo Perdomo – SS
Alec Burleson – 1BCorbin Carroll – RF
Jordan Walker – RFGabriel Moreno – DH
Lars Nootbaar – LFMax Kepler – LF
Masyn Winn – SSNolan Arenado – 3B
Nathan Church – CFTim Tawa – 1B
Jose Fermin – 3BJames McCann – C
Pedro Pages – CRyan Waldschmidt – CF
Dustin May – RHPBrandon Pfaadt – RHP

Roster moves (just before going to press!)

The Arizona Diamondbacks made the following roster moves. The D-backs’ 40-man roster is at 40.

  • Recalled from Triple-A Reno: C Adrian Del Castillo
  • Placed on the 10-day injured list: OF Lourdes Gurriel Jr. (strained right adductor)
  • Selected to the Major League roster and optioned to Triple-A Reno: RHP Gerardo Carrillo

It’s rare that a Diamondbacks’ loss so thoroughly annoyed me as the one last night. It was bad enough dipping into the Gameday Thread during last night’s concert. But after we came home and I was watching the condensed version of the game to unwind… Well, it succeeded only in winding me up more. It felt, after sweeping the enemy in Dodger Stadium, that the D-backs had the chance to get on a roll, and I wondered if perhaps the All-Star break was coming at just the wrong time. For certainly, based on the evidence last night, this looked like an Arizona team which had forgotten entirely how to play the game over the four days off.

There was hardly an aspect of the Diamondbacks game which was even adequate. Sloppy defense. Poor approaches at the plate (and never mind the 0-for-9 with runners in scoring position, they seemed especially poor with a runner on third and less than two outs). Issuing free passes in key situations. Even the ABS challenges were woeful, allowing home-plate umpire Bill Miller to get away with the single most skewed pitch-calling (click on “Favor (Home)” to sort by that) of the season so far. Indeed, there just only one worse game all of last year – when there were no ABS challenges available to mitigate this level of official incompetence.

Hopefully, things will go better today. Merrill Kelly’s start was actually one of the lesser problems. While he did the five and dive, two of the three runs he allowed came courtesy of Marte’s first-inning gaffe and were unearned. So his ERA dropped to 5.20, the lowest it has been since May. We’ll see if Brandon Pfaadt can join him on the recovery train. Since returning to the rotation, he’s 3-0 with a 1.72 ERA and a FIP under three. Especially with the news about Zac Gallen, it looks like Pfaadt will be a key component of the rotation for the rest of the season. If he can pitch like it again today, we will be all the better for it.