Blue Jays Birthdays: Tony Fernandez

CHICAGO - 1988: Tony Fernandez of the Toronto Blue Jays fields during an MLB game against the Chicago White Sox at Comiskey Park in Chicago, Illinois during the 1988 season. (Photo by Ron Vesely/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | Getty Images

Tony Fernandez, widely regarded as the greatest shortstop in Blue Jays history, would have celebrated his 64th birthday today.

Fernandez still leads the franchise in games played (1,450) and hits (1,583), among other records. He also set single-season marks for singles (161) and triples (17), and is second among position players in bWAR with 37.5, narrowly behind Jose Bautista (38.4). This changes every time there is a tweak to the formula of bWAR. He was first a couple of years ago.

Fernandez had four separate stints in Toronto. He debuted at age 21 in 1983 and played shortstop until 1990, when he and Fred McGriff were dealt to San Diego for Roberto Alomar and Joe Carter—a franchise-altering trade.

In 1993, after Dick Schofield’s early-May injury, the Jays tried Alfredo Griffin and Domingo Cedeno at shortstop, but neither stuck. Toronto traded with the Mets to bring Tony back, and he delivered: hitting .306/.361/.442 in 94 games and helping the Jays win another World Series.

After the season, Fernandez signed with the Reds as a free agent. He also played for the Yankees and Cleveland before rejoining the Blue Jays before 1998 as a utility infielder. In 1998, he played extensively at second and third base. By 1999, he was the starting third baseman and posted a terrific .328/.427/.449 slash line, though his defense drew some criticism.

In 2000, he played in Japan, then signed with the Brewers for 2001. After two months, Milwaukee released him, and Toronto brought him back once more; he finished his career as a Blue Jay, mostly as a pinch hitter and DH.

Tony won four Gold Gloves and was an exceptionally athletic shortstop—always one of my favorites. His leaping jump-spin throws and sidearm deliveries to first base were iconic, and I tried to copy them as a kid. He was usually smiling on the bench, though he didn’t say much to the media. Maybe it was a language thing, or perhaps Dominican players found the press unapproachable—or vice versa.

He was the smoothest shortstop I’ve ever watched play.

Fernandez is in the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame. In a fairer world, he’d be in Cooperstown too.

Tony passed away in February 2020, and his loss hit me harder than I expected.


Bud Black turns 69 today.

The Blue Jays traded for Black on September 16, 1990, when they were one game behind the Red Sox in the AL East.

He debuted in relief on September 18 and got the win, pulling the Jays into a tie for first. Black’s first start was a loss, but he started the second-to-last game, earned another win, and kept Toronto in the race. However, a loss on the final day (while Boston won) left Toronto two games back.

After the season, Black signed with the Giants as a free agent.

Across 15 MLB seasons, Black posted a 121-116 record and a 3.84 ERA over 398 games (296 starts).

After his playing days, Black became a pitching coach, then managed the Padresin 2007. He managed the Rockies to start 2025 but was let go after 40 games (7-33 start). He’s now an advisor with the Padres.


Pat Venditte turns 41 today.

Venditte pitched eight games for the Blue Jays in 2016.

He’s famous for pitching with both hands—earning the headline “amphibious pitcher,” which is even rarer than ambidextrous.

Venditte appeared in 61 big-league games over five seasons with six teams.

It is also Kazuma Okamoto’s 30th birthday.

Happy Birthday Kazuma

Penguins Named Best Fit For Blue Jackets 6-Foot-5 UFA Forward

The start of NHL free agency is just about here. With this, we will soon see several signings around the NHL as teams look to boost their rosters.

Now, the Pittsburgh Penguins are being viewed as a prime potential fit for one of the NHL's top pending UFAs. 

In a recent article for Daily Faceoff, Matt Larkin named the Penguins as the top potential landing spot for Columbus Blue Jackets UFA forward Mason Marchment.

"Penguins GM Kyle Dubas has openly stated his biggest regret as an NHL GM was trading away Marchment from the Toronto Maple Leafs. Dubas could right that wrong by bringing Marchment to Pittsburgh," Larkin wrote.

It would make a lot of sense for the Penguins to target Marchment if he hits the free agent market on July 1. He could be a great replacement for fellow pending UFA forward Anthony Mantha if he does not re-sign with Pittsburgh. 

If the Penguins signed Marchment, he could slot well in their top six and would give them another option to work with on their power play. In 68 games during this past season split between the Seattle Kraken and Blue Jackets, he posted 19 goals, 26 assists, 45 points, and 84 hits. Adding this kind of offensive production and grit could be big for the Penguins. 

NBA free agency predictions: Experts pick landing spots for top players

Welcome to the start of a new NBA calendar year as the free agency period officially starts at 6 p.m. Tuesday, June 30.

Players, agents and front office decision-makers all have their phones on alert waiting for calls and text messages about what the future holds. Die-hard fans are refreshing their social media feeds every few minutes for the latest update.

There's already been major deals that have broken the internet.

The Milwaukee Bucks sent Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bobby Portis to the Miami Heat in a package deal. The Memphis Grizzlies moved on from Ja Morant, trading him to the Portland Trail Blazers.

It's pandemonium. Trades are happening. Players will be signing new deals. Some have opted out and chose to test the market.

Here's where our NBA experts think the biggest names in free agency will end up.

LeBron James

  • Scooby Axson: If the NBA wants to turn into the 2004 Los Angeles Lakers, then James should sign with Golden State. The most logical answer would be for him to stay put in L.A. and ride out the rest of his career there. Stranger things have happened, but with the league's most dynamic scorer by his side and complementary role players, there is no reason why a title run can't be realistic.
  • Mark Giannotto: The Lakers will be able to pay LeBron James more than any other team and he can continue playing with his son there. The flirtation with the Golden State Warriors feels more like posturing for a better deal from the Lakers at this point.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Lakers. At this stage of his career, it’s tough to see James wearing an entirely new jersey, as much as the Warriors noise does make sense. I also don’t know that a Golden State team with James is any closer to competing for a title than the Lakers are. James’ family is in Los Angeles. I get the sense he wants to make it work there, even if he needs to take less.
  • Marcus D. Smith: I know there are a bunch of legitimate talks about LeBron leaving the Lakers, maybe for the Warriors. James playing alongside Stephen Curry feels like something that you'd force on NBA 2K. We had a glimpse of their tandem in the 2024 Olympics. It was magical but I think that's where the dream ends. LeBron spent the last eight years in Los Angeles. At age 41, I couldn't imagine him leaving.

Jalen Duren

  • Scooby Axson: Duren would be going into NBA purgatory if he wants to sign with Sacramento. His value is the most in Detroit, so both sides need to stop acting like babies and get a deal done. Unless the Pistons are so worried about Duren's no-show in the playoffs that they wouldn't dare give him max dollars for which he is eligible to receive.
  • Mark Giannotto: Though Duren (and more likely, his agent) are sending signals he and the Pistons are at an impasse and he's taking meetings with other teams, Detroit has leverage since Duren is a restricted free agent. This may be a drawn-out process and it could get uncomfortable given Duren's lackluster postseason performance, but the guess here is the negotiation ends with Duren resigning with the Pistons.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Lakers. They’ve needed a defensive-minded center for some time, and are also trying to impress Luka Dončić, who will be watching what L.A. does to remain competitive. Duren is an excellent fit, and won’t be relied upon to create his own shot.
  • Marcus D. Smith: Multiple reports are saying Jalen Duren wants to be a Sacramento King. It's rare that guys actually want to play for the Kings, let alone be in Sacramento. Maybe Duren sees something brewing in California's capital, or he knows that they'll pay him. The deal could likely include Domantas Sabonis, who the Kings have been looking to sell on, so there's a possibility that Duren lands in the 916.

James Harden

  • Scooby Axson: Harden's best bet is to stay in Cleveland, as his championship window is closing every year that he gets bounced from the playoffs. His $42.3 million player option will be his last big payday, so he can opt out and come back to the team on a "hometown discount" and try for another run at a ring.
  • Mark Giannotto: Harden is going to stay with the Cavaliers on a more team-friendly deal.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Cavaliers. He may have declined his player option, but the move here was always going to be for the two sides to work toward a multi-year deal. There’s little doubt around this one.
  • Marcus D. Smith: James Harden will be back in Cleveland. He declined his $42.3 million player option for the 2026-27 season, but it's likely that he'll still be back in Cleveland next season. ESPN's Shams Charania reported that the Cavs and Harden are working through a multi-year deal. Harden expressed desire to play in Cleveland back in May, after being eliminated in the Eastern Conference finals by the New York Knicks.

Norman Powell

  • Scooby Axson: Miami makes the most sense, but we are talking about the NBA where logic rarely rules the day. Powell is 33 years old and coming off leading the Heat in scoring. That won't happen again no matter where he goes, and a team with cap space like the Washington Wizards or Los Angeles Clippers would fulfill Powell's monetary demands.
  • Mark Giannotto: The Chicago Bulls are one of the few NBA teams with legitimate salary cap space to spend this offseason and they lack a starting shooting guard. Pencil in Powell to the Bulls.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Bulls. Chicago has cap space it needs to use, and Powell could provide a solid, veteran presence (and much-needed shooting) to a roster that lacks both.
  • Marcus D. Smith: Norman Powell is likely on his way out of Miami since they can't pay him $25 to 30 million, but the Chicago Bulls can. I'd say he follows the money, plus he's a natural fit for what the Bulls lack: veteran leadership and shooting.

Tobias Harris

  • Scooby Axson: Any team that is looking for a solid veteran presence would be in line for Harris' service. The Celtics aren't changing their philosophy, so they will continue to jack up 3-pointers at every turn, and Harris, with a green light to shoot when he gets in the game, would fit right in.
  • Mark Giannotto: Where Harris ends up will likely depend on whether he's wants to take the midlevel exception to remain with the Pistons or play for a contender. Here's guessing he's willing to take a discount to play with Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs, who could use another floor spacer.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Celtics. Assuming Jaylen Brown is moved, Boston will need a forward who can shoot and score. Harris has had spurts of excellent play and stretches when he disappears. Boston would give him the green light to shoot, but he’d need to deliver consistency for coach Joe Mazzulla.
  • Marcus D. Smith: Tobias Harris is a solid veteran, role player who can score in timely fashion. I feel like he'd stay on an Eastern Conference team for sure. I'm stuck between the Charlotte Hornets, Indiana Pacers and Boston Celtics. Since Harris has always played meaningful basketball, I'd lean towards the Celtics.

Jonathan Kuminga

  • Scooby Axson: This is a tough one, as Kuminga can be an enigma at times. He wants to get paid like the star that he isn't, and can certainly act that way when things go awry. A team like the Brooklyn Nets, where expectations are nil, would be a good fit, as they have a mix of proven scorers on the roster that would go nicely with his skill set.
  • Mark Giannotto: The Clippers want to get younger and move Kawhi Leonard. Kuminga could slot into Leonard's role immediately, but they won't have enough money to get it done without trading Leonard.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Kings. They’re going in on something of a rebuild, and Kuminga is looking for a larger role — and a significant payday. Sacramento will need to get creative to make it work with the cap, but this lets Kuminga come in and be a first or second option.
  • Marcus D. Smith: I'd say somewhere like Denver, but Jonathan Kuminga wants to be a star or a key contributor wherever he goes, not just a role player. Kuminga could have a chance to prove himself on the Los Angeles Clippers, if they deal Kawhi Leonard.

Rui Hachimura

  • Scooby Axson: If Hachimura wants to win, he will stay with the Lakers. If he is looking for a big payday other than what Los Angeles can offer him, he will sign with the first team that offers him a lucrative contract. His consistent play is too much for Los Angeles to give up on, so he stays where he is at for now.
  • Mark Giannotto: This might be Hachimura's best chance at a payday the rest of his NBA career and staying with the Lakers would likely mean taking a little less to help their salary cap situation. I bet he takes the money and the Brooklyn Nets have plenty to spend.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Nets. Brooklyn has several young players who are still finding their way, and a veteran scorer who can space the floor is a huge need.
  • Marcus D. Smith: Rui Hachimura was a huge part of the Lakers' playoff success. LA can make the money work and that includes re-signing LeBron James. He's expressed desire to stay in LA since he was traded from the Washington Wizards. I expect Hachimura to return to the Lakers.

Anfernee Simons

  • Scooby Axson: Simons will be on the floor for one reason and one reason only: to put the ball in the hoop. Other times, it's basically five-on-four, so Washington can use another outside threat, and if the Heat come up with some money, he would be a nice addition down in South Beach.
  • Mark Giannotto: The Miami Heat need more shooting around Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bam Adebayo with Tyler Herro gone. Simons would be a nice fit in South Beach.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Heat. Miami desperately needs shooting and can mask Simons’ defensive weaknesses. He’s also from Central Florida and played high school hoops in Bradenton, so a homecoming would be a seamless fit.
  • Marcus D. Smith: Anfernee Simons to the Heat is ideal. He's dynamic on offense as a scorer and can provide a spark. He has the capability to provide spacing, which will be much needed for Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bam Adebayo.

Mitchell Robinson

  • Scooby Axson: The Knicks play in an arena that underwent a $1 billion facelift, have an owner with unlimited funds, and don't want to pay Robinson, who was a key cog in their championship run. So Robinson needs to make his way to the left coast and join either the Lakers or the Clippers. The Lakers would be the most beneficial.
  • Mark Giannotto: If Robinson wants a starting role, he'll go to the Nets. If he wants to chase another title, he'll go to the Lakers. I bet he stays in New York and makes the move to Brooklyn.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Nets. They have the cap space, they’re close enough to his current home, and they would give him a starter’s role. And since the Knicks are avoiding the second apron, it’s almost certain Robinson will play elsewhere.
  • Marcus D. Smith: Mitchell Robinson to the Nets has a ring to it. After winning a chip with the Knicks, you're practically forever royalty in New York. It makes sense for Robinson to play the game he loves, in a city he loves, even if its not exactly the same team that he developed that love with.

Peyton Watson

  • Scooby Axson: Not sure why Denver wouldn't match any deal that comes Watson's way, and if they don't, the Chicago Bulls should be waiting there with open arms. A sign-and-trade makes the most sense here, as it will satisfy needs on both sides.
  • Mark Giannotto: The Nuggets should match whatever deal Watson is offered and move other players to make it work. His value as a 3-and-D wing blossomed this past season.
  • Lorenzo Reyes: Spurs. This feels like such a great fit for both. Watson is a defensive player whom San Antonio coaches would love. His improvement on offense also allows him help the Spurs with their shot creation.
  • Marcus D. Smith: Peyton Watson has improved offensively, but it's his defensive capabilities that should really intrigue teams. The Lakers have needed more two-way wings, they get that in Watson. Watson would be a nice fit after seemingly losing Marcus Smart. Watson to the Lakers.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA free agency predictions: Experts pick landing spots for top players

2026 MLB Draft Preview: Chris Rembert

HOOVER, AL - MAY 23: Infielder Chris Rembert #2 of the Auburn Tigers follows through on a swing during the SEC Baseball Tournament Semifinal game between Auburn Tigers and Arkansas Razorbacks on May 23, 2026, at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama.(Photo by David Buono/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

2026 MLB Draft Preview: Chris Rembert scouting report.

The 2026 is less than two weeks away — the first round kicks off on July 11, 2026 — so its time to start offering capsule looks at players the Texas Rangers could select with their top picks. The Rangers’ first round pick is at #16, their second round pick is at #54, and their third round pick is at #89.

Leading up to draft day, we will be doing writeups of some of the players who could end up getting selected by the Rangers with one of their first three picks. Today we are looking at Auburn second baseman Chris Rembert.

Chris Rembert is a 6′, 209 lb. righthanded hitting second baseman at Auburn University. Rembert graduated high school in Pensacola, Florida, in 2024, and was not drafted. A redshirt sophomore, Rembert turns 21 in early July.

Rembert’s hit tool is his carrying tool. He has good contact ability and bat speed, though his swing is such that he doesn’t lift the ball much, resulting in a lot of ground balls and line drives. He puts up strong exit velocity numbers to go with his contact ability, with Keith Law noting that he can handle velocity. However, his power numbers are lacking due to the fact he doesn’t tend to get lift on the balls he makes hard contact on.

Rembert has mostly played second base for Auburn, and is considered average there at best. There is some question as to whether he will have the range to stick at second base going forward — however, he could play third base or a corner outfield spot if necessary. His speed is considered more or less average.

Rembert was impressive as a freshman, slashing .344/.467/.555 with 37 walks against 36 Ks in 260 plate appearances, with 10 home runs. He saw a drop in walks and power in 2026, with just four home runs in 265 plate appearances, with 19 walks against 39 Ks. He put up a .343/.399/.459 slash line.

Baseball America has Rembert at #55 on their board. MLB Pipeline has Rembert at #41 on their board. Kiley McDaniel puts Rembert at #53 on his top 150 list. Keith Law has Rembert at #27 on his board. Fangraphs has Rembert at #31 on their board. Baseball Prospectus has Rembert at #29 on their top 30 draft board.

Rembert checks quite a few Rangers boxes for a college hitter — strong contact rates, strong exit velocities, quality performance in a strong conference. He regressed from his freshman season, which likely means he’ll be picked in the second or third round, rather than being a potential first round pick, as seemed to be the case after his terrific 2025 season.

He’s another one of these guys whose future as a professional will hinge on his ability to get more value out of his hard contact, rather than there being a bunch of hard hit 6-3s. His inability to play up the middle other than at second base is an issue, but being able to potentially play the corners gives him more value as a potential bench option, even if he doesn’t hit for enough power to be a regular.

Previously:

Liam Peterson

Tyler Bell

Aiden Robbins

Jared Grindlinger

Logan Reddemann

Cooper Harris

Justin Lebron

Cameron Flukey

Derek Curiel

Hunter Dietz

Logan Hughes

Carson Wiggins

Peyton Bonds

Ace Reese

Sawyer Strosnider

Gio Rojas

2026 Phillies MLB Draft Preview: Justin Lebron, SS

Jun 7, 2026; Tuscaloosa, AL, USA; Alabama shortstop Justin Lebron (1) fields and throws to first for an out in Game 2 of the Super Regional between Alabama and St. John's at Sewell-Thomas Stadium. | Gary Cosby Jr. / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

This is my least likely preview. Before the season Baseball America projected Lebron in the top 5 and even mentioned his potential to be #1 overall. Lebron responded to this lofty praise with easily his worst season yet. This included an eye popping 18 errors (that would be a roughly 50 error pace in MLB) and a batting average 55 points lower than either of his first 2 College seasons. Will he fall all the way to 36? Probably not because there’s Gold Glove potential and easy power, but I also wouldn’t rule it out as there are equal questions about the bat and there’s those 18 errors.

Lebron is a 21 year old, 6’2″ 190lbs right handed hitter from the University of Alabama with a pretty flashy tool set: Plus speed and arm, above average to plus power and above average to plus fielding and a somewhat questionable hit tool with plus bat speed and an approach to swinging Austin Powers would be overwhelmed by. As a defender Lebron brings great range and a cannon arm. The errors are a combo of the range getting him into the occasional error, but also that great arm’s accuracy can go a bit haywire at times. His tools should allow him to stay at Short, he’ll just need to clean up the throws and focus if he can clean up those items he could end up being a plus or better defender. His speed has also made him a big threat on the basepaths and he loves stealing bases. He’s been caught stealing TWICE in 3 years. Yeah, that’ll play.

Now onto his hitting and swing. Honestly, I love the swing. A small leg kick, he maintains his eye level pretty quiet setup and that plus bat speed. No changes needed in my opinion. The pitch recognition though is another story. Lebron loves to swing and he will expand the zone. He also struggles with breaking/off speed pitches. He doesn’t miss often on Fastballs, but he misses almost half of everything else. His raw power is probably double-plus, but game power gets held back a bit by the pitch recognition and contact issues. This feels like a guy the late 2000’s front office would kill for, it also seems like the type of hitter this team has had no luck developing. In the video below you get a great mix of game action showing a little of all the good thing Lebron can do.

I have very strong doubts Lebron gets anywhere vaguely close to 36. The tools are just too exciting and someone in the top 20 is probably going to roll the dice. Some Player Development Director will be convinced he can fix the issues. I wouldn’t even be surprised if Lebron dominates in A ball. His tools are probably going to be enough to overwhelm some talent there and, as you can see in the video, he feasts on high Fastballs, which he’ll see plenty of along with breaking pitches still a bit raw and similar to College. Double-A will be where he may first get exposed. But, man, that power in Reading’s homer prone park would be blast to watch, even if he only hits the Mendoza line with a 40% K rate.

Padres Reacts Survey Results: Griffin Canning should be first out of the rotation according to fans

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 06: Griffin Canning #17 of the San Diego Padres looks on during the third inning against the New York Mets at Petco Park on June 06, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Padres fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Griffin Canning returned to the mound for the San Diego Padres in their series opener against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on Monday night and there is no doubt that most of the Friar Faithful, if not all, were wondering how long he would last and how many runs he would allow before being removed from the game. To his credit, Canning lasted 4.1 innings and allowed two runs, which was enough to put the Padres in position to win, but the offense failed to produce, and the end result was a 3-2 walk-off win for the Cubs.

Canning has struggled throughout his time in San Diego and holds a 1-5 record with an atrocious 7.09 ERA. That is definitely not what any team wants to see from a member of its starting rotation. The fact that he remains in the rotation and continues to get starts is evidence of just how bad the Padres rotation is at this time. Walker Buehler has been arguably the most reliable starter of the group with Michael King lacking consistency and Randy Vasquez floundering with his recent performances. Lucas Giolito, German Marquez and Matt Waldron all joined Nick Pivetta and Joe Musgrove on the injured list and Yu Darvish was lost for the season before it ever began.

The hope is that Pivetta and Musgrove can return some time after the All-Star break, but how long after is unknown. Whether it is their returns or a trade deadline acquisition, Canning is squarely on the chopping block based on his numbers this season. His best start came on May 25 against the Philadelphia Phillies when he threw 6.2 innings and allowed three runs on three hits with two of those hits being home runs. Canning followed that performance with three consecutive five-inning outings but has not gone longer than 4.1 innings in the three outings since.

According to the results of this week’s Padres Reacts Survey on Gaslamp Ball, the Friar Faithful who participated in the poll have seen enough from Canning and are ready to let him go. Giolito’s recent addition to the injured list may have spared him for now, but if the Padres get any rotation help, Canning will be the first to pack his bags if the fans get their way.

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Astros Minor League Hotlist: June 30th

WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA - MARCH 19, 2026: Xavier Neyens #9 of the Houston Astros scores on a single hit by Chase Call during the seventh inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Miami Marlins at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches on March 19, 2026 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Check out some prospects who have been hot in the system!

HITTERS:

Xavier Neyens – Neyens, the Astros first round pick last year, has put together a strong season so far. This week the 19-year-old hit .400 with 3 home runs and 9 walks in just 5 games. Overall this season, Neyens has a .900 OPS with 12 home runs for the Woodpeckers.

Albert Fermin – Fermin got the biggest international bonus the Astros issued out this year and is off to a really strong start in the Dominican Summer League. This week the 17-year-old hit .333 with a double, 2 home runs, 8 runs batted in and 3 stolen bases. He is hitting .368 this season.

Lucas Spence – Spence, who got off to a slow start, has really turned it on and earned a promotion to Triple-A. This week the outfielder hit .421 with 3 doubles, a home run, 7 runs batted in and a stolen bases. He’s hitting .370 over 22 games in the month of June.

Arturo Flores – Flores is a young catcher down in Fayetteville but has been doing some damage with the bat this year. After earning a spot on the list last week, he repeats here with another big week. The 20-year-old hit .438 with 2 home runs and 5 runs batted in. He has 11 home runs and a .851 OPS overall.

PITCHERS:

Ethan Pecko – After a slower start to the year, Pecko has been one of the best pitchers in minor league baseball in the month of June. This week the right-hander tossed 6 innings allowing 1 run while striking out 4. In June he has a 0.75 ERA allowing just 2 runs on 13 hits over 24 innings for Sugar Land.

Brett Gillis – Gillis has had some strong starts this season and after having his best start last week, he bested that outing this week. In his start for the Hooks, the right-hander tossed 7 scoreless innings allowing 3 hits while striking out 7. He has a 3.45 ERA this season in Double-A.

Bryce Mayer – Mayer has been solid this year and this week he turned in his longest outing of the season tossing 5.2 scoreless innings with 3 strikeouts in his start for the Hooks. Mayer has a 3.89 ERA with 62 strikeouts over 44 innings this season in Double-A.

Jackson Nezuh – Nezuh has done well racking up the strikeouts this season, though the ERA has been a little higher. This week he was great allowing just 1 hit and 1 run over 5 innings while striking out 9. Overall this season, the right-hander has 64 strikeouts over 53.1 innings.

Mets Minor League Players of the Week: Week Fourteen

Brooklyn Cyclones vs Hudson Valley Renegades

JT Benson

Week: 4 G, 16 AB, .438/.500/1.188, 7 H, 1 2B, 1 3B, 3 HR, 2 BB, 4 K, 1/1 SB (High-A)

2026 Season: 33 G, 116 AB, .276/.361/.578, 32 H, 10 2B, 5 3B, 5 HR, 11 BB, 36 K, 8/11 SB, .355 BABIP (Single-A) / 28 G, 99 AB, .283/.377/.576, 28 H, 10 2B, 5 3B, 5 HR, 11 BB, 30 K, 5/8 SB, .359 BABIP (High-A)

There are some weeks where identifying a hitter of the week is a chore, and the best of the best still feels like scraping the bottom of the barrel. Other times, there are a dearth of options and it sucks to pass over someone who had one hell of a week because someone else had an even better one. This week was the latter. Nick Lorusso hit .300/.391/.750 with three doubles and two homers. John Bay hit .333/.455/.778 with two doubles and two homers. Nick Morabito hit .364/.417/.455 with two doubles and four stolen bases. Yonatan Henriquez hit .417/.417/.542 with three doubles and three stolen bases. Yonny Hernandez hit .571/.591/.762 with four doubles and two stolen bases.

Of those players, JT Benson really turned it up a notch. Benson has been on a tear since getting signed out of the indies earlier this year, but this week was especially impressive. I normally don’t like selecting players who didn’t play a “full week” (five or six games), but it’s hard to deny what he did this week; he had a 301 wRC+!

Offense is only about half of the equation of a player, and looking at Benson’s defense, he’s solid. The 24-year-old outfielder has average-to-above average speed and not only knows how to use it on the basepaths- where he has successfully stolen 13 total bases in 19 attempts this year and 33 in 38 attempts last season in the indies- but taps into it in the outfield as well. He is smooth out there, able to read the ball off the bat well, has a quick catch and release, and a strong arm. He has the combination of defensive skills that allow him to play all three outfield positions well enough, but he profiles best at this point in either left or right field for now due to a lack of reps and experience in center.

Daviel Hurtado

Week: 1 G (1 GS), 6.0 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 6 K (Single-A)

2026 Season: 4 G (3 GS), 9.0 IP, 10 H, 6 R, 5 ER (5.00 ERA), 1 BB, 15 K, .409 BABIP (Single-A) / 6 G (6 GS), 28.1 IP, 13 H, 6 R, 6 ER (1.91 ERA), 4 BB, 24 K, .167 BABIP (High-A)

Daviel Hurtado had a solid week. Against the Fort Myers Mighty Mussels, he had a solid quality start, allowing one run in six innings pitched, scattering a pair of hits, walking one batter, and striking out six. I wouldn’t necessarily classify that kind of start as exceptional, but given the rest of the pickings for this week among the Mets minor league pitchers, that was the best individual performance. Jonah Tong is the only other starting pitcher who had a quality start, allowing two runs on four hits and two walks with three strikeouts in six innings. Everyone else? Not so much.

The 18-year-old Hurtado was signed by the Mets on January 15, 2023 after the young left-hander left Cuba. A native of Havana, he had been involved in baseball in the city for years, playing on the U-12 and U-15 Cuban National Baseball Teams. In 2022, he and his parents took up residency in the Dominican Republic and the left-hander began the vetting process by Major League Baseball to establish his eligibility to sign with an MLB club. The process went smoothly and quickly and he was granted his eligibility to sign that year, but given that most clubs had spent the majority of their international bonus pool monies, Hurtado and his representatives elected to wait to sign until 2023, giving him a better opportunity to sell his talent and maximize his signing bonus. Having agreed to an informal agreement in the months prior, Hurtado signed with the Mets and the two sides came to official terms, agreeing to a $640,000 signing bonus.

The left-hander was assigned to the Dominican Summer League for the 2023 season, but did not actually pitch, as Tommy John surgery kept him off the mound all season. He finally made his professional debut in 2024 with the FCL Mets and posted a 6.32 ERA in 15.2 innings, allowing 15 hits, walking 10, and striking out 23. He remained in the Florida Complex League to begin the 2025 season, but was promoted to Single-A St. Lucie after roughly a month, allowing a single earned run with the FCL Mets in 19.0 innings over 5 starts, scattering 8 hits, walking 5, and striking out 25. He remained with the St. Lucie Mets for the rest of the season and posted a 2.70 ERA in 46.2 innings over 13 appearances, 7 of which were starts. He allowed 45 hits, walked 19, and struck out 50.

The Mets had the 21-year-old begin the season with St. Lucie, and after posting a 5.00 ERA in 9.0 innings over 4 appearances, promoted him to High-A Brooklyn. The southpaw shrugged off the malaise he was showing in St. Lucie and has pitched well with the Cyclones. In 6 starts, Hurtado has a 1.91 ERA in 28.1 innings, allowing 13 hits, walking 4, and striking out 24.

Hurtado is listed at 6’1”, 165-pounds and is well-proportioned and lean. He stands on the far first base side of the rubber and throws from a high-three-quarters arm slot with a high leg kick and a long arm action through the back. His mechanics flow and are loose and smooth, leaving him in excellent fielding position in his follow-through.

Hurtado’s four-seam fastball sits in the mid-90s, ranging 90-96 MPH; he added a little velocity to it this season, and it is up roughly 2 MPH as compared to last season. The pitch has a low spin rate for a four-seam fastball, 2,190 RPM, giving it less ride and more sink. Overall, the pitch has been very hittable, which lowers his overall ceiling and is why he was never given serious consideration on the 2026 Top Prospect list despite posting sterling surface-level numbers- that and the fact that he bears a striking resemblance to Oliver Perez. He has been throwing the pitch a bit less this season, in favor of his breaking balls a bit more, which can only help him right now. Hurtado’s two-seam fastball is almost identical to his four-seam fastball in every way, from velocity to spin rate to induced vertical break, except it generally gets a few more inches of arm-side horizontal movement, about ten inches to his four-seam fastball’s five.

The southpaw’s curveball sits in the mid-70s-to-low-80s, featuring 55 inches of vertical drop and 5-10 inches of horizontal movement, making it a loopy, slurvy 11-5 bender. His slider sits in the mid-to-high-80s, featuring 35 inches of vertical drop and 3-5 inches of horizontal movement, giving the pitch hop. The two breaking balls tunnel well with each other, the slower curveball featuring more overall movement and the faster slider featuring less.

Hurtado was throwing a budding changeup infrequently in 2025, but he has since scrapped it, barely throwing the pitch during in-game situations this season. Despite the lack of a changeup, he has generally been slightly better against left-handed hitters over the course of his career, but has not ever exhibited extreme platoon splits one way or the other, dominating lefties or struggling against righties.

Hurtado is not only able to command all of his pitches, but the left-hander has pinpoint control. He can throw in the zone and outside of it with confidence, though gets beaten with regularity when he lives inside of it for too long. The southpaw is at his best when he is able to nip the zone with his fastball and then expand the zone with his breaking balls, getting batters to get themselves out either by inducing weak contact or swinging-and-missing. Between the sink from his fastball and weak contact from his breaking pitches, the left-hander has maintained extremely favorable batted ball splits over the course of his young career. This year, Hurtado has maintained a 22.6% line drive rate, 57.0% groundball rate, and 20.4% flyball rate in his 37.1 innings with St. Lucie and Brooklyn combined.

Players of the Week 2026

Week One/Two (March 27-April 5): Hayden Senger/Cam Tilly
Week Three (April 7-April 12): A.J. Ewing/Christian Scott
Week Four (April 14-April 18): Randy Guzman/Jose Chirinos
Week Five (April 21-April 26): A.J. Ewing/Channing Austin
Week Six (April 30-May 3): A.J. Ewing/Jonah Tong
Week Seven (May 5-May 10): Ryan Clifford/Jonathan Santucci
Week Eight: (May 12-May 17): Jacob Reimer/Zach Thornton
Week Nine: (May 19-May 24): Ryan Clifford/Channing Austin
Week Ten: (May 26-May 31): Ryan Clifford/Jose Chirinos
Week Eleven: (June 2-June 7): Vincent Perozo/Frank Camarillo
Week Twelve: (June 9-June 14): JT Benson/Nick Carreno
Week Thirteen (June 16-June 21): Nick Morabito/Jonathan Santucci

2026 Cubs Heroes and Goats: Seiya Suzuki is the Superhero vs. the Padres

I had an oh-duh moment while watching this one play out. I have to go back down the rabbit hole, because I don’t see anyone keeping the full total. I know this is 10 walk-offs. I’m pretty certain the number is three for road wins in their last at bat. But I don’t recall if there were any home wins with an eighth-inning winning run. That is technically the other way to win while scoring in your last team at-bat. 10 walk-offs already is amazing. 13 last chance wins is amazing. This team finds new ways to amaze me all the time.

I’ll probably change my opinion once or twice more, but I think I’ve decided that if the Cubs decide to only bring back one corner outfielder, it is Seiya. I love the loyalty, the longevity, the season over season consistency of Ian Happ. I love that he moved all over the field until they settled on a position for him. I love that he then won several gold gloves at that spot. Seiya is significantly improved in the field now too. He’s grown so much as a fielder and he’s quietly having a very good season there. The relationship between Seiya and Pete Crow-Armstrong feels special. I think when all of my internal ballots are counted, I’m about 53 percent in favor of Seiya. Well within the margin of error.

But yeah, the story of the game and these last three days and really this whole season is this team just finding a way to win. Just like that, they are essentially back on a 90-win pace (89.6). Will all the injuries, all of the slumps, this team somehow gets it done. Four Cub pitchers were used in this game. None of them were particularly impressive. The Cubs allowed 11 hits and two walks. It definitely felt like they were in trouble all night long. And yet, they yielded just two runs.

The Cubs couldn’t really get to Griffin Canning, finally chasing him with two runs allowed over 4.1 innings. But he’s fared so much worse lately than that. The Cubs put up 10 hits, four walks and had a batter hit. They managed three runs. Often not enough, but just enough on this night. To be fair, I’m pretty sure at least one more run would have scored had the game not ended there. I really thought that was a walk-off homer off of Seiya’s bat. It felt like he hit it pretty close to the spot where Javier Baez once reached the basket against Johnny Cueto to win a game 1-0 in the playoffs.

I said the Cubs needed to get at least one win in this series to make sure they at least split the season series with the Padres. That mission is accomplished. Now they get two shots to win this series and also the season series. Given that the two teams figure to compete for a Wild Card spot, that could matter.

This team is bonkers to cover, but I wouldn’t miss it. These three straight wins are absolutely wild. They’ve faced some really elite pitchers on good teams and countered with a bunch of scrap heap arms. And won. I’m watching potentially the ultimate collision of social media and real life. If this team wins 90 games (or more), social media will have been tap dancing all season long on Craig Counsell’s grave while he wins the NL Manager of the Year award. The Dodgers and Brewers are exactly who we thought they were. The Braves are more or less who we thought they were and the Cubs are running more of a MASH unit than a pitching staff. And every time the dust settles again, they are still standing. Still in the rear view mirror of the Brewers. Stalking like some campy 80’s horror-slasher movie villain.

This team has been so odd, winning more than half of their games either by scoring in the last inning or blowing out their opponent, that we basically haven’t nitpicked any decisions. Not at the micro level anyway. While I’m often a big fan of the aggressive fan and making the other team make a play, I hated the send of Dansby Swanson on the fly out double play in the ninth. I would have rather continued to have the bases loaded there, even though it also put PCA on third. It didn’t end up mattering, but I just wouldn’t have made that send.

What a time to be alive! Go Cubs.

Three Positives:

  • Pete Crow-Armstrong, the walking man? Two more singles, two more walks. That up to the minute on-base percentage is .370. In his age 24 season, he’s going to be a two-time All-Star, a two-time Gold Glove (first time platinum?), and will best his ninth place MVP finish of last year.
  • Shōta Imanaga. 6.1 innings, nine hits, no walks, two runs. Four strikeouts. Not his best outing, but a terrific one at that.
  • Seiya Suzuki. Two hits, one a double. Two runs driven in, one run scored. He was part of all three runs that scored. That will be one of the most well struck balls off of Mason Miller this year.

Game 85, June 29: Cubs 3, Padres 2 (47-38)

Reminder: Heroes and Goats are determined by WPA scores and are in no way subjective.

THREE HEROES:

  • Superhero: Seiya Suzuki (.305). 2-4, 2B, SF, 2 RBI, R, DP
  • Hero: Michael Conforto (.149). 1-4, RBI
  • Sidekick: Trent Thornton (.134). IP, 3 BF, H, K (W 3-2)

THREE GOATS:

  • Billy Goat: Michael Busch (-.330). 0-4, BB
  • Goat: Miguel Amaya (-.183). 0-4
  • Kid: Ian Happ (-.144). 0-4

WPA Play of the Game: Seiya Suzuki’s walk-off “single” off the top of the wall. (.367)

Brewers Play of the Game: Michael Busch one play earlier, the fly out/thrown out at home double play. (.303)

Cubs Player of the Game:

Game 84 Winner: Bryse Wilson received 123 of 235 votes.

Rizzo Award Standings: (Top 5/Bottom 5)

The award is named for Anthony Rizzo, who finished first in this category three of the first four years it was in existence and four times overall. He also recorded the highest season total ever at +65.5. The point scale is three points for a Superhero down to negative three points for a Billy Goat.

  • Pete Crow-Armstrong +17
  • Michael Busch +15
  • Ben Brown +13.5
  • Trent Thornton +12.5
  • Carson Kelly +11.5
  • Edward Cabrera -9.5
  • Phil Maton -10
  • Dansby Swanson -12
  • Caleb Thielbar -13
  • Seiya Suzuki -14.5

Up Next: Game two of this three-game set. Matthew Boyd (2-1, 5.02) starts for the Cubs. JP Sears (1-0, 3.18) makes his second start of the season for the Padres. The 30-year-old veteran lefty made 27 starts last year for the A’s and Padres with a 5.04 ERA.

Get this win.

Day’Ron Sharpe re-signs with Brooklyn Nets

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MARCH 09: Day'ron Sharpe #20 of the Brooklyn Nets reacts during the second half against the Memphis Grizzlies at Barclays Center on March 09, 2026 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. The Nets won 126-115. 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 Sarah Stier/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Late last week, we got the news that former North Carolina men’s basketball player Coby White had agreed to a new deal with the Charlotte Hornets, who he had been acquired by in a trade last season. On Monday, we got more news that another Tar Heel had come to an agreement on a new contract. Yesterday, Day’Ron Sharpe reportedly agreed to re-up with the Brooklyn Nets for two years and $20 million, staying with the only NBA team he’s played for to this point.

Sharpe played at UNC from 2020-21. In his lone season in Chapel Hill, he averaged 9.5 points and 7.6 rebounds in 19.2 minutes per game. Those equated to some pretty impressive 19.8 and 15.8 per 40 minute numbers, leading to Sharpe being named an All-ACC Freshman that season. That and his obvious potential led him to get some pro love, leading to him declaring for the 2021 NBA Draft.

The Nets selected him with the 29th pick in that year’s draft and Sharpe has been a regular for Brooklyn since. For his career, he’s averaged 7.0 points and 5.9 rebounds as a bench player for the Nets. In recent years, as Brooklyn has begun a rebuild, he’s become even more of a regular for them. He put up career best totals pretty much across the board his past season, going for 8.7 points (on over 60% field goal shooting) and 6.7 rebounds.

In all likelihood, Sharpe will not get to be on a contending team over the two years of this deal, unless he and some others take some massive leaps. The Nets went 20-62 last year, and have traded away almost anyone on their roster who is any good, including Cam Johnson, who was sent to the Denver Nuggets before this past season. However, this contract will almost certainly give him a bigger role than he would have on a currently contending team. Having that bigger role could put him at a much more advantageous position when it comes to the contract he gets after this one, whether it be with the Nets or elsewhere. Sharpe would need to continue improving for that to be the case, but he’ll certainly get the opportunity to try.

As a fan of the NBA championship-winning team across town, I can’t personally say that I wish the Nets any success as a team. However, I certainly wish the best for Sharpe for this contract and any potential future ones.

MLB Same-Game Parlay Predictions: Our Best SGP Picks for Tuesday, June 30

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Another night, another trio of MLB same-game parlay predictions for a loaded 15-game slate Tuesday, June 30.

My top MLB picks begin with Detroit Tigers ace Tarik Skubal handing the New York Yankees another loss tonight. 

Today's best MLB SGP picks

GameSGP Odds
Tigers vs Yankees+345
Nationals vs Red Sox+335
Padres vs Cubs+310

Tigers vs Yankees SGP: Detroit motors to another win

The New York Yankees have dropped eight of their past 10 games while striking out at the highest clip in the majors and ranking last in xwOBA.

They’ll face back-to-back Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal on Tuesday, and the Detroit Tigers are heating up at the dish with the sixth-ranked wOBA and xwOBA for the month of June.

I’m anticipating Skubal to cruise tonight, too.

His 2.59 xFIP is below his 2.74 mark across the past two years, and I’m anticipating statistical correction coming to his .287 BABIP and 74.3% strand rate because they’re worse than his .273 and 80.3% marks during his Cy Young campaigns.

I’d recommend this SGP down to +320.

  • Time: 7:05 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: TBS

See full analysis of this game in our Tigers vs. Yankees predictions.

Nationals vs Red Sox SGP: Washington pulls off Fenway upset

The Washington Nationalspace the majors in wOBA against lefties, and Boston Red Sox southpaw Connelly Early has surrendered the 10th-highest barrel percentage among pitchers with at least 75 innings. 

Early is also eyeing statistical correction with his 3.59 ERA well below his 4.72 FIP, in addition to his unsustainably high 85.7% strand rate.

The Boston offense doesn’t move the needle with a 27th-ranked xwOBA in June and the sixth-lowest barrel percentage for the season, either.

Still, I expect Early to pitch well enough to contribute to this total going Under the number, and Nationals righty Cade Cavalli has allowed three runs or fewer in six of his past seven starts with a solid 3.57 xFIP.

This SGP is in play down to +315.

  • Time: 7:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: NESN, NATS

Padres vs Cubs SGP: Chicago wins fourth straight

San Diego Padres lefty JP Sears posted an underwhelming 4.87 xFIP and a 12.9% strikeout-to-walk ratio across 58 2/3 innings entering 2026, so I’m anticipating him struggling against the Chicago Cubs on Tuesday.

The North Siders have won nine of 11 while averaging 7.3 runs per game and ranking seventh in wOBA, and they also rank third in wOBA against left-handed pitchers for the season.

Still, this is another inflated total at Wrigley Field, and the teams combined for just five runs in similarly favorable hitting conditions Monday.

Chicago lefty Matthew Boyd is also set up for success in his second start back from knee and shoulder injuries. The Padres are 29th in wOBA against southpaws, and they’re 24th in xwOBA across the past 30 days.

I price the breakeven point of this SGP at +300.

  • Time: 8:05 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MARQ, SDPA
Neil Parker's 2026 Transparency Record
  • SGP picks: 9-27, +4.85 units

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

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Red Sox News & Links: Are the Red Sox actually trade deadline buyers now?

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 29: (L-R) Ceddanne Rafaela #3 of the Boston Red Sox, Willson Contreras #40, and Wilyer Abreu #52 score off a three-run home run hit by Contreras in the first inning against the Washington Nationals at Fenway Park on June 29, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Jaiden Tripi/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Life comes at you fast. The Red Sox, in the midst of a five-game win streak, remain deep under .500. And in a world in which the owners hadn’t spent the last 20 years devaluing the regular season in a blatant attempt to increase postseason revenue and justify slashing payroll, a team in the Red Sox’ position wouldn’t have any playoff hopes today. But this is 2026, and it’s legitimately possible that the American League’s third Wild Card could be swiped by a team that doesn’t even reach the .500 mark. (Ken Rosenthal, The Athletic)

Thus, the Red Sox, who looked dead and buried one week ago today, are now being called potential buyers at the trade deadline. Their biggest need is obvious: middle infield help. (Mark Feinsand, MLB.com)

Right now the middle infield help is coming in the form of Anthony Seigler, who has started at second base for 10 games in a row. Seigler has bounced back and forth between AAA and the big leagues throughout his young career. What helped him get back to the majors this time was resuming something he’d quit before: switch hitting. (Tim Healey, Boston Globe)

We know where they certainly don’t need help: the starting rotation. Red Sox starters have now thrown 12 straight quality starts, two shy of the club record set in 1988. “They’ve been phenomenal,” said Chad Tracy. “It’s very similar to my initial time here when we weren’t playing that well, but the starting pitching was so good that you always felt like you were going to look up in the sixth inning and think, ‘We’ve got a chance to win this game.’ I don’t think there’s too many managers who wouldn’t sign up for that.” (Sean McAdam, MassLive)

All the starters have contributed, but Payton Tolle in particular has been a big part of the streak. In fact, he now has teammates publicly lobbying to get him to the All-Star Game. “Just being in that conversation is amazing, but that’s kind of far out of mind for me,” he said. “I guess it doesn’t mean anything until it actually happens.” (Christopher Smith, MassLive)

Unfortunately, Garrett Crochet won’t be getting a second straight All-Star nod, and he continues to be frustrated by the mysteriously slow rehab process for what was initially thought to be a minor injury. While everyone involved still says there are no structural issues, they are now looking to last year to explain the injury. “I was still kind of experiencing that hangover from last year, and once I started throwing again, maybe my mechanics just weren’t in a great spot,” said Crochet. “And then as the buildup occurred, that just continued to get further from the norm.” (Alex Speier, Boston Globe)

But the Sox could be getting back another couple of lefty pitchers soon. Jovani Moran will make another rehab appearance tomorrow and then potentially rejoin the big league bullpen. Patrick Sandoval has one more rehab start scheduled and will be reassessed by July 4, when his 30-day rehab clock expires. (Christopher Smith, MassLive)

Brewers Reacts Survey: Talking trade deadline

Matt Arnold, Milwaukee Brewers president of baseball operations and general manager, listens as principal owner Mark Attanasio speaks with reporters Tuesday, February 17, 2026, at American Family Fields of Phoenix in Phoenix, Arizona. | Dave Kallmann / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Brewers fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

We’re back with another Reacts Survey, and we’re asking fans if they’d like to see the Brewers make a splashy move or continue their “take bites of the apple” approach at this year’s trade deadline.

The Brewers’ last truly “splashy” move came way back in 2008, when the team traded four prospects to Cleveland to get CC Sabathia. Sabathia then made 17 starts in less than three months, going 11-2 with a 1.65 ERA, 2.44 FIP, and 128 strikeouts over 130 2/3 innings, including seven complete games to help the Brewers sneak into the playoffs as the Wild Card.

Since then, the Brewers have made several smaller moves at just about every deadline, including the following moves in recent seasons under David Stearns/Matt Arnold:

  • 2018: Acquired Mike Moustakas from the Royals, Joakim Soria from the White Sox, and Jonathan Schoop from the Orioles
  • 2019: Acquired Jordan Lyles from the Pirates and Drew Pomeranz and Ray Black from the Giants; traded Jesús Aguilar to the Rays for Jake Faria
  • 2020 (COVID-shortened season): Acquired David Phelps from the Phillies
  • 2021: Acquired John Curtiss from the Marlins, Daniel Norris from the Tigers, and Eduardo Escobar from the D-backs
  • 2022: Acquired Trevor Rosenthal from the Giants and Matt Bush from the Rangers; traded Josh Hader to the Padres for Taylor Rogers, Robert Gasser, Esteury Ruiz, and Dinelson Lamet
  • 2023: Acquired Andrew Chafin from the D-backs, Mark Canha from the Mets, and Carlos Santana from the Pirates; traded Luis Urías to the Red Sox for Bradley Blalock
  • 2024: Acquired Frankie Montas from the Reds, Nick Mears from the Rockies, Tyler Jay from the Mets, and Aaron Civale from the Rays
  • 2025: Acquired Shelby Miller and Jordan Montgomery from the D-backs and Danny Jansen from the Rays; traded Nestor Cortes to the Padres for Brandon Lockridge

As you can see from that list, there are no mega-deals. The closest thing would be trading Josh Hader, which was big for the other team (the Padres) and more so seemed to just upset fans and even the clubhouse. With big trade candidates like Tarik Skubal, Luis Arraez, Casey Mize, Sonny Gray, Joe Ryan, and Aroldis Chapman (to only name a few) potentially available at the deadline, would you like to see the Brewers make a big move? Or would you rather they continue their “bites of the apple” approach?

Weigh in below and stay tuned for results later this week!

Cardinals vs Braves Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Atlanta Braves own a strong 22-14 record vs. left-handed starters this season, and are -150 favorites to add to the win total today against the St. Louis Cardinals.

My Cardinals vs. Braves predictions and MLB picks see value in backing them to do just that on June 30.

Who will win Cardinals vs Braves today: Braves (-150)

St. Louis Cardinals starter Matthew Liberatore turned a corner in May, only for the wheels to fall off again in June.

He has posted a FIP of 6.3 or higher in four consecutive starts, none of which came against teams holding onto playoff spots.

Martin Perez recorded a FIP of 2.5 or better in three of his last four and should give the Atlanta Braves a clear pitching advantage.

The Braves (eighth in ISO) also have a lot more power than the Cardinals (23rd) against lefties, and that will be advantageous in hot weather.

Back Atlanta to -160.

Cardinals vs Braves Over/Under pick: Under 9.0 (+100)

This total is a little high regardless of the conditions.

The Cardinals have plated just 13 runs over their last six games, and now have to deal with Perez. 

He ranks in the 81st percentile in Pitcher Run Value and owns a 2.36 ERA over eight starts against teams outside of the Top 15 in OPS vs. left-handed pitching.

The Braves are powerful but rank only 23rd in OBP against lefties. There may not be enough traffic to score the necessary amount to push this game Over the total.

I’d play the Under to -110.

Todd Cordell's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 46-35, +1.50 units
  • Over/Under bets: 43-34-4, +4.79 units

Cardinals vs Braves weather

Temperatures could reach the 90s, with a small amount of wind blowing out. Boost to the bats.

Cardinals vs Braves odds

  • Moneyline: Cardinals +130 | Braves -150
  • Run line: Cardinals +1.5 (-150) | Braves -1.5 (+130)
  • Over/Under: Over 9.0 (-120) | Under 9.0 (+100)

Cardinals vs Braves trend

St. Louis has hit the game total Under in 27 of its last 45 games (+9.40 units, 19% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Cardinals vs. Braves.

How to watch Cardinals vs Braves and game info

LocationTruist Park, Cumberland, GA
DateTuesday, June 30, 2026
First pitch7:15 p.m. ET
TVCardinals.TV, BravesVision
Cardinals starting pitcherMatthew Liberatore
(3-5, 5.56 ERA)
Braves starting pitcherMartin Perez
(6-4, 3.00 ERA)

Cardinals vs Braves latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

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Does John Collins make sense as a free-agent target?

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 15: John Collins #20 of the LA Clippers stands for the National Anthem before the game against the Golden State Warriors on April 15, 2026 at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The NBA Draft is over. Mike Gansey and the new-look Sixers’ front office did well in selecting Alabama guard Labaron Philon Jr. 22nd overall.

There isn’t much rest for the weary as teams can begin speaking to free agents this week. On Monday, the team picked up their options on Dominick Barlow and Dalen Terry, while not picking up Trendon Watford’s. While the Sixers filled a hole on their roster by getting a backup lead ball-handler in Philon, the team has plenty of others.

“You look at our roster, we need help at every position, one through five,” Gansey said following the first round of the draft. “Obviously, we have the Big 4, but we need guys outside of them.”

As we all saw, the Sixers’ top-heavy roster was a big part of their undoing in the postseason. Tyrese Maxey, VJ Edgecombe, Paul George and Joel Embiid expended so much energy in the 3-1 comeback against the Celtics, they had nothing left — and got little help — when they got swept by the eventual champion Knicks.

One of the most obvious places they could look to upgrade is the four position. With how well George handled his wing assignments during the playoffs and the landscape of the position in free agency, it might make more sense to target a starting-caliber four than a wing. While Barlow gave the Sixers good minutes at the position last season, they could use an upgrade.

Over the last week or so, Tony Jones of The Athletic has continually brought up an interesting name: John Collins. Would that be possible? How would it look? Is it worth it? Let’s dive in.

Collins is entering his 10th NBA season, yet he’s still just 28 years old. He’s never been an All-Star, but he’s played in 541 games, starting 466 of them. He also took the floor for 29 playoff games with the Hawks (you might remember a few of those). After six years in Atlanta, he was traded to Utah in a cost-cutting move in 2023. He spent two seasons with the Jazz before going to the Clippers in the deal that sent Norman Powell to the Heat.

For his career, Collins has averaged 15.7 points, 7.7 rebounds and 1.0 blocks in 28.9 minutes per game on 54.6/36.9/78.9 shooting splits. At a minimum, he’s proven to be a starting-caliber four for almost a decade. His skillset is ideal in many ways for the Sixers. Collins will bring athleticism, rebounding, shooting and weakside rim protection.

He’s a highlight-reel dunk waiting to happen and would be an excellent pick-and-roll partner for Maxey, Edgecombe and Philon. He’s long been one of the better play finishers in the NBA and looked plenty spry this past season in Los Angeles. He’s a good cutter and has plenty of experience alongside high-usage players. Collins will also run the floor, which should make for exciting transition opportunities with the Sixers’ young guards.

His ability on the offensive glass (2.7 offensive rebounds per 36 minutes) and to sneak out to the corners for threes makes him an ideal option next to Joel Embiid. We all know of the issues Embiid has had with rebounding the last few seasons. Collins will help on the defensive glass as well (7.0 per 36 minutes), a sore spot for the Sixers, especially in the postseason. Other than one down season in Atlanta, Collins has typically been an above-average shooter from deep. He’s hit 39.1% of his triples over the last three seasons on decent volume (4.3 attempts per game).

At 6-foot-9 with a near 7-foot wingspan, Collins could even give Nick Nurse some minutes at the five depending on the matchup. It’s not a look you’d want to go to every night, but Collins’ physical profile does give Nurse a little more optionality with his lineups.

The on-court fit makes sense, but what about the financials?

It’s hard to know how Collins’ market will shake out. The deal he was previously signed to under the old CBA is unlikely to be available to him this time around. With the Sixers’ current cap sheet, they could theoretically sign Collins using the whole non-taxpayer mid-level exception ($15 million). Because the team is so top-heavy, they wouldn’t have space to do much else — which could mean Oubre and Quentin Grimes will be moving on. They’d also potentially have access to the bi-annual exception ($5.5 million), which could net them one player above the minimum. The rest of the roster would have to be filled out by vet minimums.

So, you’re looking at a starting five of Maxey, Edgecombe, George, Collins and Embiid. On paper, that’s one of the better starting groups in the NBA. On paper. The health of Embiid and George will determine how good that starting unit actually is.

The bench would be flawed but interesting.

As far as high-profile names go, the free agency market isn’t very ripe at center and the wing, but there are a few intriguing names the team could look to fill in the last few roster spots. Maybe you can throw the bi-annual exception at someone like Kenrich Williams and give a big like Nick Richards or Marvin Bagley III a minimum. Or flip that scenario and use the BAE on a big (someone like Jock Landale) and take a flyer on a minimum wing.

Hell, it’s not inconceivable for the Sixers to make the aforementioned moves while still having a little room to re-sign Oubre. He’d be coming back on a discount, and it would put the team right up against the first apron, but it would make for a fairly competitive roster in the East. Looking at all the reports this offseason, Grimes’ name has come up on more than one occasion, but there hasn’t been much regarding Oubre’s market.

So, would Collins be worth it? I’d vote yes — if the Sixers have the ability to follow a similar blueprint to what I laid out. If you can line up Collins’ contract to expire by the time Embiid and George are gone, all the better (for what it’s worth, the longest deal he can sign is four years at the NTMLE). Even if Collins gets a three- or four-year deal, it would be pretty easy to move a $15-million expiring contract when that time comes.

With this plan, you’re giving it a shot with this current group, while not using any premium future assets. It’s the best of both worlds and perhaps the best you can do while operating on two timelines.