Recap: Zacha’s OT goal lifts Bruins to 4-3 win over Buffalo

BUFFALO, NEW YORK - MARCH 25: The Boston Bruins celebrate after winning an NHL game in overtime against the Buffalo Sabres on March 25, 2026 at KeyBank Center in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Bjorn Franke/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Former Sabre Casey Mittelstadt tied the game late in the third period and Pavel Zacha scored just 38 seconds into overtime to give the Bruins a 4-3 win over the Sabres in Buffalo.

Zacha’s goal, his 24th of the season, capped a back-and-forth game and gave the B’s a much needed win after a disappointing effort against Toronto on Tuesday.

David Pastrnak and Viktor Arvidsson scored the other goals for the Bruins, while Pastrnak also added two assists.

Joonas Korpisalo made 22 saves in the win.

After a slow start to the first period for both teams, Pastrnak got the scoring started 11 minutes in off of a great pass from Fraser Minten. 1-0 Bruins.

The lead wouldn’t last long, as Jason Zucker scored on the power play just four minutes later to make it a 1-1 game.

Arvidsson got on the board with a “right place, right time” goal midway through the second period, making it 2-1 Bruins.

The B’s would take that lead into the third period, when a nightmare sequence from Mason Lohrei tilted things in Buffalo’s favor.

First, Lohrei lost a puck in the neutral zone, leading to a breakaway for Zach Benson, who cashed in to make it a 2-2 game.

To make matters worse, he was given a penalty for that cross-check on Benson after the goal, leading to a Buffalo power play.

Zucker would get his second of the game, making it 3-2 Buffalo via two goals in 33 seconds.

Mittelstadt would take advantage of a loose puck in the slot with just six minutes left in the third period, making it a 3-3 game.

That set the stage for Zacha, who took a nice pass from Pastrnak and beat Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen five-hole to end the game.

Bruins win, 4-3!

Game notes

  • Mittelstadt spent the majority of his NHL career in Buffalo, so it was fitting that his big, game-tying goal came in a milestone game: last night’s was the 500th of his NHL career.
  • We all remember the earlier days of the season, when penalties seemed to sink the Bruins on a nightly basis, and that was nearly the case again tonight. Buffalo went 2-for-3 on the man advantage, and two of those three penalties were tripping calls.
  • It’s probably silly to harp on Lohrei at this point, but that really was a brutal sequence in the third period. Mistakes/giveaways happen, but to compound it with a cross-checking penalty just can’t happen.
  • The Bruins deserve a lot of credit for sticking with it after Zucker’s go-ahead goal. Playing your second game in two night’s in a hostile building isn’t easy regardless, and it would have been relatively easy to pack it in after giving up two goals in 30 seconds in the third period.
  • Pastrnak is up to 3G-6A-9PTS totals in his last five games, as he continues to shoulder the load for the Bruins. His assist on Zacha’s goal was his 60th of the season. That’s two off of his career high of 63, which he has reached for the past two seasons.
  • To make Wednesday night even bright, the Maple Leafs won again last night, so it was an all-around good night for the Bruins.

The B’s will now enjoy a rarity this season (aside from the Olympic break): three consecutive days without a game, as they’re off until hosting Minnesota on Saturday night.

Game Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins @ Ottawa Senators 3/26/2026

OTTAWA, CANADA - DECEMBER 18: Rickard Rakell #67 of the Pittsburgh Penguins battles for position against Artem Zub #2 of the Ottawa Senators in front of goalie Linus Ullmark #35 during the second period on December 18, 2025 at Canadian Tire Centre in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Tim Austen/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Who:Pittsburgh Penguins (35-20-16, 86 points, 3rd place Metropolitan Division) @ Ottawa Seantors (38-24-9, 85 points, 5th place Atlantic Division)

When: 7:00 p.m. eastern

How to Watch: Locally broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh, TSN5 and RDS2 up in Canada, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: The games keep on coming, the Pens head back to Pittsburgh to face Dallas on Saturday (clock the unusual 5:00pm eastern start). Then next week comes a pair of massive games against the Islanders on Monday on the road, followed by a home game against Detroit on Tuesday.

Opponent Track: Hot opponent alert! The Sens have won four-straight games, six of their last seven and eight of their last 10. Ottawa defeated Detroit 3-2 on Tuesday night in their most recent game, a huge victory to propel them above the Red Wings in the standings.

Season Series: Ottawa is 2-0 against Pittsburgh this year, winning 4-0 back on December 18th and then 3-2 in regulation in Steel City back on February 2nd.

Hidden Stat: The Pens have lost nine out of their last 11 games against Ottawa (2-5-4) since the start of the 2022-23 season. Pittsburgh is also 1-5-3 since March 2023 and lost their last five games (0-1-4) on the road in Ottawa.

Getting to know the Senators

Projected lines

FORWARDS

Drake Batherson – Tim Stutzle – Claude Giroux

Brady Tkachuk – Dylan Cozens – Ridly Greig

Nick Cousins – Shane Pinto – Michael Amadio

Warren Foegele – Lars Eller – Fabian Zetterlund

DEFENSEMEN

Tyler Kleven / Artem Zub

Nicolas Matinpalo / Jordan Spence

Jorian Donovan / Carter Yakemchuk

Goalies: Linus Ullmark and James Reimer

Potential scratches: Thomas Chabot (injured), Kurtis MacDermid, Stephen Halliday, Lassi Thomson, Dennis Gilbert

Injured Reserve: Jake Sanderson, Nick Jensen

  • Ottawa’s recent run has been all the more impressive considering the injuries they’re dealing with on the blueline. USA Olympian Sanderson has been out since March 7th (he’s expected back next week). Chabot just went down with injury over the weekend. It looks bare bones on paper with an assortment of names but they’ve been making it work.
  • As a result of the injuries, 21-year old Jorian Donovan and 20-year old Carter Yakemchuk both made their NHL debuts last game. Donovan, a fifth round pick in 2023, is the son of former Penguin (and Senator) Shean Donovan. Yakemchuk was the seventh overall pick in 2024, scoring a goal and adding an assist to have a part in two of the three goals the Senators scored on Tuesday.
  • Foegele (4G+1A in his last six games) has found some scoring touch lately. He doesn’t get paid by the hour, averaging only 11:25 per game in this stretch but has been able to step up and chip in key goals for the team.

Season stats
via hockeydb

  • Goaltending has been a major issue for Ottawa and huge reason that they underperformed in the first half of the season. That led the club to add 38-year old James Reimer as a free agent in a desperation move to patch things up. Results are mixed (that 2.32 GAA will sure take care of business) and he’s been a moderate upgrade over Leevi Merilainen who couldn’t keep the puck out of the net this season.
  • Ullmark has been all over the place but is starting to get the arrow pointed in the right direction. He’s 9-2-2 with a .902 save% and 2.31 GAA since the turn of the calendar year, compared to being 14-8-5 with a .881 save% and 2.95 GAA in the 2025 portion of the 2025-26 season. Even more recently, Ullmark has a .908% and 2.20 GAA in his last six outings. Nothing dominant but certainly an improvement from the start of the year and the Sens are finding ways to keep the goals against down.
  • Claude Giroux will keep on annoying the Penguins until he retires. Giroux has 12 points (2G+10A) in eight career games against Pittsburgh as a member of the Senators, including the go-ahead goal with 5:08 to play in the third period last game.
  • Tim Stutzle usually confounds the Pens as well (three points in the first two meetings this season) but by his standards he’s been quiet lately with just three points (2G+1A) in his last seven games.

Key Matchup: A strong test for the Penguin defense

The Senators have been a solid team process-wise, they generate a lot of shot attempts, which helps on the other end where they are also No. 1 in the league in xGA due to staying out of their own end and keeping puck control. They also have shown an ability to finish well on all these shots and have a decent power play.

Ottawa is 10-2-2 since the Olympic break, outscoring their opponents on aggregate by a 48-32 margin. The split between shots per game (6th in NHL at a 30.9 average) to shots allowed (2nd in NHL at 22.1) is very impressive.

On the other side, the Penguins have had their share of significant struggles at limiting the opposition recently. Coach Dan Muse summed up the issues after the 6-2 loss to Colorado:

“The quality is too high,” Muse said of opposing scoring chances lately. “It’s just too loud.”

“It’s not chances where it’s to the outside,” Muse said. “It’s plays into the slot. Guys are open there. Some of them are odd-man rushes, whether it’s a breakaway, or some of the other ones that we’re giving. We’ve got to do a better job there in terms of cleaning that up.”

That better job is going to have to start tonight against a very capable opponent who plays in an uptempo style that has given them fits in recent matchups.

And now for the Pens

Projected lines 

FORWARDS

Rickard Rakell – Sidney Crosby – Bryan Rust

Egor Chinakhov – Tommy Novak – Anthony Mantha*

Ville Koivunen – Ben Kindel – Justin Brazeau

Elmer Soderblom – Connor Dewar – Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Sam Girard / Kris Letang

Ryan Shea / Connor Clifton

Goalies:  Stuart Skinner and Arturs Silovs

Potential Scratches: Evgeni Malkin (injured), Ilya Solovyov, Blake Lizotte (injured), Kevin Hayes, Ryan Graves

IR: Filip Hallander, Jack St. Ivany

  • No sign of Malkin on the ice for the Pens at practice yesterday, which afterwards Muse confirmed Malkin won’t travel with the team on their quick trip to Ottawa. Even worse Mantha was out with a day-to-day injury, but will at least be with the team and seemingly have a chance to play today.
  • Mantha’s performance bonus adds an additional $250,000 for every 10-games played. He hasn’t missed a game all season so far. He could only miss two games over the course of the year to still pick up the full bonus money by getting to 80 total games, so here’s betting whatever injury he has will be one that he won’t let keep him out of the lineup for too long, or if it does you know it will be painful in more ways than one if Mantha has to be out for three games over the rest of the season. Whether or not that first absence will happen tonight remains to be seen, Kevin Hayes took Mantha’s spot in practice yesterday in perhaps a hopeful sign that lines weren’t disrupted for early plans to adjust.
  • In the FWIW category, Pens PR points out that Stuart Skinner has a 6-1-0 record in seven games played against Ottawa and he has a .903 save percentage and 2.71 goals against average. 
  • Also, somewhat interestingly, Erik Karlsson has no goals and only seven points in 15 career games against the Ottawa franchise where he played from 2009-18.

Crosby nearing 1,100 assists

Sidney Crosby has 1,098 career assists and figures to become the third fastest player via games played to get to the 1,100 mark once he gets two more helpers. There’s more history is soon to come, with 1,751 points Crosby enters the night four points behind Steve Yzerman’s 1,755. Yzerman currently sits seventh place in all-time league scoring and sixth place Marcel Dionne (1,771) isn’t too far ahead either.

Malkin to miss second straight game with upper-body injury

Mar 22, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Evgeni Malkin (71) skates up ice with the puck against the Carolina Hurricanes during the first period at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Evgeni Malkin will not be in the lineup tonight when the Pittsburgh Penguins face the Ottawa Senators.

The veteran Penguins center will miss his second straight game with an upper-body injury after head coach Dan Muse said that Malkin wouldn’t be traveling with the team to face Ottawa.

Malkin missed the Penguins’ game earlier this week against the Colorado Avalanche and it remains unclear how long he might be sidelined.

The injury was considered ‘day-to-day’ earlier in the week and the specific nature of his injury hasn’t been divulged by the team.

Malkin returned to the lineup earlier this month, scoring two goals and three assists in four games after being suspended for five games for slashing Rasmus Dahlin during a game against the Buffalo Sabres.

The Penguins will take the ice tonight in Ottawa with playoff implications at stake.

Heading into tonight’s game, the Penguins sit third in the Metropolitan Division with 86 points and the Senators sit in the Eastern Conference’s second wild card spot with 85 points.

Orioles news: It’s Opening Day!

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MARCH 31: The Baltimore Orioles are introduced before playing against the Boston Red Sox play during their Opening Day game at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on March 31, 2025 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, Camden Chatters.

Does it feel like the air is a little bit sweeter today? That there’s an extra pep in your step? Of course it does. Because IT’S OPENING DAY, y’all!

The 2026 Orioles season has arrived at last. This afternoon a huge, raucous crowd of O’s fans will converge at the newly renovated Camden Yards to welcome a new-look — and hopefully vastly improved — Orioles team.

Prize offseason signing Pete Alonso will debut in the orange and black and, with any luck, will sock a dinger or two. Surprise 2025 breakout hurler Trevor Rogers, who last year at this time was an injured afterthought, will take the mound for the Opening Day assignment. Rookie slugger Samuel Basallo and six other Orioles will be experiencing Opening Day for the first time. And rookie skipper Craig Albernaz will manage his first major league game that counts. Of course, plenty of familiar faces will be there too, as Gunnar Henderson, Adley Rutschman, and other fan favorites will hope to lead a bounceback from that dud of a 2025 season.

It’s going to be fun times at Oriole Park today. The pre-game introductions begin at 2:30, with first pitch scheduled for 3:05. The weather is supposed to be beautiful — a high of 77 degrees around game time and no rain in the forecast. For my money, Opening Day is the best holiday of the year. Don’t miss it!

So how are you feeling about the season to come, Camden Chatters? Are you excited to see how it all plays out, or do you have an uneasy feeling in your stomach? Feel free to give your predictions for the season, and while you’re at it, let us know your thoughts about the Orioles’ Opening Day roster.

For better or worse, we’ve got 162 games ahead of us, folks. It all starts today.

Links

Opening Day FAQ: Twins vs. Orioles (Thurs., 3 p.m. ET) – MLB.com

Here’s everything you need to know about the Orioles’ opener. The biggest question, of course, is: will Tyler O’Neill hit another Opening Day homer? It’s kind of his thing.

Get sprayed by the new Ravens head coach, and more opening day festivities – The Baltimore Banner

Albernaz isn’t the only new head coach in Baltimore who will be on site today, as Jesse Minter will serve as guest splasher in the second inning. I like this guy already.

Orioles Opening Day workout notes on Nunez and Jackson making the club, Suárez staying in organization, Beavers avoiding IL and more – School of Roch

Anthony Nunez definitely qualifies as the most surprising inclusion in the Opening Day bullpen, considering he was sent to the minors two weeks ago. Not to mention that he was an infielder two years ago.

All-new Truist Club, redesigned club level, massive video board and new sound system highlight what’s new at Camden Yards – Steve Melewski

It’s hard not to be excited about the upgrades to the ballpark. Look at that scoreboard!

2026 MLB season predictions: Forecasting the division races and postseason results – The Athletic

Keith Law not only picks the Orioles to grab the top wild card spot, but even has them winning a postseason series. I did not expect Keith Law to be the pie-in-the-sky Orioles optimist, but here we are.

Orioles birthdays and history

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! And happy 26th to Jeremiah Jackson, who got a wonderful birthday gift by making the first Opening Day roster of his career. He’ll be a bench guy, likely making starts at second and third and perhaps occasionally in the outfield, and hopefully swinging the bat as well as he did last year. Former Orioles born on March 26 include outfielders Jesús Tavárez (55) and Jarvis Brown (59), right-hander Mickey Weston (65), and lefty Dan Morogiello (71).

On this date in 1979, the Orioles released catcher Elrod Hendricks, who had spent a decade playing with the Birds over three different stints. The O’s brought Hendricks back that September to get one final MLB at-bat, but it was far from the end of his time in Baltimore. He became the Orioles’ bullpen coach and served in that role for 28 years, making him the longest tenured coach in O’s history.

And on this day two years ago, the O’s made a last-minute signing of veteran second baseman Tony Kemp to complete their Opening Day roster. Giving $1 million to Kemp was a curious decision at the time, made even more so by the fact that he lasted only five games in Baltimore before the O’s released him to make room for Jackson Holliday. It was the end of Kemp’s nine-year MLB career.

MLB Predictions 2026: Who will win pennants, World Series and awards

The Detroit Tigers open up their 2026 campaign on Thursday in San Diego against the Padres, and the excitement for the team’s opening day can be felt from Lakeland all the way to the Motor City.

AJ Hinch’s roster looks like a beefed-up version of last year’s — one that started hot, bringing the best record in baseball into the All-Star break, only to go ice-cold in the second half. The Tigers still made it to the playoffs, but their epic collapse allowed the Cleveland Indians to snatch the American League Central crown from them in embarrassing fashion.

Detroit fell in the wild-card round to the Seattle Mariners in a series that took all five games, ultimately succumbing in a 15-inning affair. That elimination game was the longest winner-take-all game in MLB history.

Now, it is a new season with a few new — and one notably old — faces, and as they say, hope springs eternal before the first pitch is thrown. As is our custom, the Bless You Boys staff came together in roundtable fashion to discuss our predictions for the boys of summer, using the following format.

  • AL Division Winners
  • NL Division Winners
  • World Series
  • League MVP
  • League ROY
  • League Cy Young

Many of our responses are pretty much what you would expect from this group, but as always, there were a few spicy submissions as well. Take a look at what we have to offer ahead of the first pitch on Thursday.


Patrick O’Kennedy:

  • AL ROY- McGonigle
  • AL Cy Young- Skubal
  • AL MVP- Witt Jr
  • AL MOY- Hinch
  • NL ROY- Konor Griffin
  • NL MVP- Ohtani
  • NL Cy Young- Yamomoto
  • NL MOY- Don Kelly

Playoffs

  • NL East- Phillies
  • NL Central- Cubs
  • NL West- Dodgers
  • NL Wild Card- Padres, Pirates  (okay, just kidding, Padres and Mets)
  • AL Pennant- Tigers over Jays
  • NL Pennant- Dodgers over Phillies
  • WS- Dodgers over Tigers

Ashley MacLennan:

AL Division Winners: Detroit Tigers. Why not? Let’s go optimistic. Otherwise, I’d have to pick the Blue Jays and people will think I’m doing it because I’m Canadian.

NL Division Winners: Sigh. The Dodgers.

World Series: I have to pick the Tigers because — historically speaking — when I say anything else I curse the team.

League MVP: Nothing is new or fun under the sun, so it’ll be Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani, unless someone gets hurt or Bobby Witt Jr makes another wish on his monkey paw.

League ROY: Kevin McGonigle AL/Konnor Griffin NL

League Cy Young: Tarik Skubal threepete! and Paul Skenes. Nothing inventive here, friends.

Cannon at the Hot Corner: I’m pretty sure you get to pick a winner for each division (AL/NL West, Central, East), not just an AL/NL champion if you’d like.

MacLennan: No, I’m tired and lazy. (Tigers, Blue Jays, Mariners… Dodgers, Cubs, Phillies, I guess. Battle Royale for who wins what)

Cannon:

Division winners:

  • AL: Tigers, Red Sox, Mariners
  • NL: Brewers, Mets, Dodgers
  • WS: Red Sox over Dodgers. Them some freaky good pitching staffs, folks
  • MVPs: Bobby Witt Jr and Juan Soto
  • Cy Youngs: Tarik Skubal and Paul Skenes
  • ROYs: Kevin McGonigle and Nolan McLean

Zane Harding:

  • AL Division Winners —
    • AL East: Red Sox
    • AL Central: Tigers
    • AL West: Mariners
  • NL Division Winners —
    • NL East: Phillies
    • NL Central: Ohhh, I don’t know, the Brewers seem to know what they’re doing (I seriously considered the Pirates; this division feels weaker than usual!)
    • NL West: Dodgers
  • World Series: I imagine we hear a lot of Dodgers and a lot of Tigers. The last time the Tigers won, my 63-year-old father was younger than I am today… by a good margin. Dodgers
  • League MVPs — gets easier every year
    • AL: Judge
    • NL: Ohtani
  • League ROY —
    • AL: Kevin McGonigle
    • NL: Konnor Griffin
  • League Cy Young —
    • AL: TARIK SKUBAL (three trophy emojis) BOTTOM TEXT
    • NL: Paul Skenes. Skenes is the best, Webb is about equal because he gets more IP, but we vote FLASHY

Peter Kwasniak:

I’m just throwing things at the wall:

 AL Division Winners

  •  AL East: Skankees
  •  AL Central: Tigers
  •  AL West: Mariners

 NL Division Winners

  • NL East: Phillies
  • NL Central: Reds
  • NL West: Dodgers
  • World Series: Dodgers

 League MVPs (BORING)

  • AL: Judge
  • NL: Ohtani

 League ROY

  •  AL: Kevin McGonigle
  •  NL: Konnor Griffin

 League Cy Young (EXCITING BUT BORING)

  •  AL: Tarik Skubal
  •  NL: Paul Skenes

Cam Kaiser:

AL Division Winners

  • AL East: Red Sox
  • AL Central: Guardians
  • AL West: Mariners

NL Division Winners

  • NL East: Phillies
  • NL Central: Cubs
  • NL West: Dodgers

World Series: Dodgers

League MVPs

  • AL: Julio Rodriguez
  • NL: Shohei Ohtani

League ROY

  • AL: Chase DeLauter
  • NL: Sal Stewart

League Cy Young

  • AL: Garrett Crochet
  • NL: Paul Skenes

The Tigers are better than Cleveland on paper, but paper didn’t seem to matter at all last year, considering the Guardians, despite a paltry Pythagorean record, pulled off the largest comeback in AL division history to win the Central.

Until I see the Guardians falter, I’m going to continue to believe that the horseshoe the size of the moon stuck up their bum will propel them and any player they touch to success when it matters.

Jay Markle:

  • AL East winner: New York Yankees
  • AL Central winner: Detroit
  • AL West winner: Seattle
  • NL East winner: Philadelphia
  • NL Central winner: Chicago Cubs
  • NL West winner: Los Angeles Dodgers
  • World Series: Philadelphia
  • AL MVP: Aaron Judge
  • NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
  • AL ROY: Kevin McGonigle
  • NL ROY: JJ Wetherholt
  • AL Cy: Tarik Skubal
  • NL Cy: Paul Skenes

Brandon Day:

  • AL East winner: Boston Red Sox
  • AL Central winner: Detroit Tigers
  • AL West winner: Seattle Mariners
  • NL East winner: New York Mets
  • NL Central winner: Milwaukee Brewers
  • NL West winner: Los Angeles Dodgers
  • World Series: Los Angeles Dodgers
  • AL MVP: Bobby Witt Jr.
  • NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
  • AL ROY: Kevin McGonigle
  • NL ROY: Nolan McLean
  • AL Cy: Garrett Crochet
  • NL Cy: Paul Skenes

Mr. Sunshine: Uh, Tigers win World Series, MVP is Gleyber Torres, ROY is McG, CY is Skubal.

That’s right, I’m on the feel-good meds at the moment. NL stuff, who cares?

Fielder’s Choice:

  • AL East: Blue Jays
  • AL Central: Tigers
  • AL West: Astros
  • NL East: Marlins YEAH I SAID IT
  • NL Central: Cubs
  • NL West: Dodgers
  • World Series: Not The Dodgers
  • AL MVP: Nick Kurtz
  • NL MVP: Corbin Carroll
  • AL ROY: Carter Jensen
  • NL ROY: Carson Benge
  • AL CY: Hunter Brown
  • NL CY: Eury Perez

David Rosenberg:

  • AL East winner: New York Yankees
  • AL Central winner: Detroit Tigers
  • AL West winner: Seattle Mariners
  • NL East winner: New York Mets
  • NL Central winner: Milwaukee Brewers
  • NL West winner: Los Angeles Dodgers
  • World Series: Detroit Tigers (YOLO)
  • AL MVP: Roman Anthony
  • NL MVP: Shohei Ohtani
  • AL ROY: Kevin McGonigle
  • NL ROY: Nolan McLean
  • AL Cy: Tarik Skubal
  • NL Cy: Paul Skenes

Adam Dubbin:

  • AL East: Rays
  • AL Central: Kansas City
  • AL West: Astros
  • NL East: Mets
  • NL Central: Cubs
  • NL West: Dodgers
  • World Series: Tigers
  • AL MVP: Bobby Witt Jr.
  • NL MVP: Juan Soto
  • AL ROY: Tatsuya Imai
  • NL ROY: Bubba Chandler
  • AL CY: Garrett Crochet
  • NL CY: Logan Webb

The Tigers once again fail to secure the AL Central title after some significant regular-season underperformances, but make a 2006-esque run to the World Series, where they finish the job that the previous teams since 1984 could not.


Now that you know where the Bless You Boys staff stands entering the 2026 campaign, give us your takes in the comments below!

Opening Day: Shohei Ohtani and the numbers that really matter

Opening Day is more than a designation on a calendar. It is a feeling, a mantra, a phrase you can repeat during meditation to promote relaxation and shift mindset. Summer is coming. Baseball is back.

The experience of becoming a baseball fan hasn’t changed much over generations. People care about their teams, their players, and classic stats like home runs. Fans love their local announcers. They love going to their home ballpark, and when traveling, going to a stadium that a different set of fans calls home.

There are certain aspects that have changed considerably. I’m old enough to have become a baseball fan when no one knew or cared how much any of the players earned.

Salaries and payrolls weren’t public knowledge, and even MLB players didn’t know what other players earned. Not saying it was a good thing for players to be unaware. It wasn’t. It was just different for media covering the sport and fans that enjoy the game.

Now, young fans who have zero knowledge of banking and financial terms can rattle off their favorite team’s players whose contracts have a mutual or vesting option. They probably know how much of Shohei Ohtani’s 10-year, $700 million contract is deferred.

They know that Framber Valdez and Bo Bichette turned down qualifying offers in the offseason, while Trent Grisham accepted his Q.O. and returned to the Yankees.

Is it just one more aspect of the game for rabid fans to know? There’s an endless supply of information available to baseball fans today. I understand the appeal of learning analytics. Having data to show Max Fried not allowing hard contact, or Paul Skenes’ fastball velocity, makes perfect sense. But knowing and caring how much they earn?

When I was growing up, there was little or no attention to the general manager, which has morphed into a department headed by the “president of baseball operations.” Now, young fans want to work in front offices as their dream job.

Does knowing about the salaries enhance the fan experience, or take away from it? Does the fact that the Dodgers have a payroll of around $400 million lessen their achievement of winning the World Series?

The salary information just isn’t why I love baseball. I love baseball numbers. Here are the numbers that just sing to me.

Shohei Ohtani scored 146 runs last season.

a)    Ohtani scored 146, and no one else in the National League scored more than 120 (Juan Soto).

b)    Those 146 runs mean Ohtani scored 146 of the Dodgers’ 825 runs. Since the start of baseball’s integration in 1947, of players with 140+ runs scored in a season, only two player seasons have scored a higher percentage of their team’s runs than Ohtani’s 2025 season of 17.7% (Craig Biggio in 1997 and Sammy Sosa in 2001 both scored 146, each accounting for 18.8% of their teams’ 777 total runs).

c)     Ohtani’s 146 runs in a season are the third most since 2000 (Jeff Bagwell scored 152 runs in 2000, Ronald Acuña, Jr. scored 149 runs in 2023).

d)    Ohtani has scored 280 runs in the last two seasons. In the last 80 years (since 1946) only one player has scored more (Bagwell scored 295 runs in 1999 and 2000 seasons).

e)     Ohtani scored 159 runs last season (including postseason) and only Aaron Judge (142) scored more than 120 besides the great Ohtani when you count playoffs.

f)     The only players in the modern era of baseball history (since 1900) to score more than 159 runs in one season (regular plus postseason) are Babe Ruth (3 times), Lou Gehrig (2 times), and Rogers Hornsby (160 runs in 1929).

g)    Shohei Ohtani led the majors in 2024 with 134 runs scored (next most: 128 by Soto), and 148 runs including postseason. Ohtani scored 14 runs in 16 playoff games.

h)    Shohei Ohtani has scored 307 runs the last two years including postseason. Do you have any idea how outrageous that is?

Most Runs in Two Consecutive Seasons including postseason

1.     338    Babe Ruth (1920,21)
2.     314    Lou Gehrig (1936,37)
3.     307    Shohei Ohtani (2024, 25)

Now, I know that Ohtani plays in an era which allowed him to accumulate 33 postseason games in the last two years. And Ruth and Gehrig played in the era with 154 games, not 162. Ohtani scored those 307 runs in 350 games, more than Ruth (300 games) and Gehrig (314). But no one else in history -- not DiMaggio or Williams or Pujols or Bagwell or Jeter -- no other player scored 300 times in consecutive seasons.

Ohtani’s run-scoring ability makes him one of the greatest leadoff batters ever. He’s a natural in the No. 1 spot in the order, but it wasn’t always the case. In his six seasons with the Angels, he batted in the No. 1 spot just 63 times. In his first year with the Dodgers, Mookie Betts batted in the No. 1 spot in 72 of the first 73 games. Beginning on June 17, 2024, it became Shohei at the top of the order and Dave Roberts’ easiest decision.

That sent me down a rabbit hole wondering how and why Ohtani didn’t bat leadoff for, say, the 2023 Angels. Ohtani batted leadoff just five (of the 135 games he played) in 2023. Who did the Angels’ manager Phil Nevin bat leadoff that season? The answer is: NOT Mike Trout.

Most games out of leadoff spot for the 2023 Angels (73-89)

52 starts           Taylor Ward
28 starts           Nolan Schanuel
27 starts           Mickey Moniak
25 starts           Luis Rengifo
17 starts           Zach Neto
7 starts            Randal Grichuk

Should I say it was Goofyto bat Mickey (Moniak) ahead of Ohtani and Trout in all those games in Anaheim? Maybe. But the real issue is this: You want to give as many chances to your best hitters as possible.

Moniak batted .250/.277/.509 and scored 12 runs out of the leadoff spot in 2023. Taylor Ward batted .236/.308/.373 in 55 games (52 starts) hitting leadoff.

I know that over a season, it’s only about 15-18 more plate appearances that the No. 1 spot gets over the No. 2 spot in the lineup. Still, you want to load up as many plate appearances as possible for the MVP. Seems simple enough, but as you can see, it hasn’t always played out that way.

There are so many numbers that get thrown around when people discuss Ohtani. They are entranced by the home runs, the stolen bases, his strikeouts and velocity on the mound, and so much more. They discuss aspects of his massive and historic contract. I prefer looking at his runs total. In the end, baseball is a game made up of which side can score the most runs.

Editors' Note: Elliott Kalb - dubbed "Mr. Stats" decades ago by Marv Albert and Bob Costas - is the former Senior Editorial Director at MLB Network and a longtime contributor of research and information to NBC Sports' telecasts.

Phillies News: Opening Day, roster, ABS system

Mar 31, 2025; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Opening Day ceremonies before game between Philadelphia Phillies and Colorado Rockies at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

We’ve finally made it to Opening Day everyone. No, we’re not counting whatever happened on Netflix last night. Sit back and get ready for a full slate of games today and for baseball to be on your television every day (except the All-Star break) until early November.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Atlanta Braves 2026 Regular Season Schedule

ATLANTA, GA - MAY 04: Overall view of Truist Park in the seventh inning during the game between the Atlanta Braves and the Los Angeles Dodgers on May 4, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Matthew Grimes Jr./Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

All games can be listened to on the radio on 680 The Fan/93.7 FM or in the 680 The Fan App.

DateOpponentTime (ET)TVStreaming
Friday, March 27vs. Royals7:15 PMBravesVision, Gray TVBraves.TV
Saturday, March 28vs. Royals7:15 PMFOXFOX
Sunday, March 29vs. Royals1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, March 30vs. Athletics7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, March 31vs. Athletics7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, April 1vs. Athletics12:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday. April 2at Diamondbacks9:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, April 3at Diamondbacks9:40 PMApple TV
Saturday, April 4at Diamondbacks7:15 PMFOXFOX
Sunday, April 5at Diamondbacks4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, April 6at Angels9:38 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, April 7at Angels9:38 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, April 8at Angels4:07 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, April 9OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Friday, April 10vs. Guardians7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, April 11vs. Guardians7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, April 12vs. Guardians7:20 PMNBCPeacock
Monday, April 13vs. Guardians7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, April 14vs. Marlins7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, April 15vs. Marlins (Jackie Robinson Day)7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, April 16OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Friday, April 17at Phillies6:04 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, April 18at Phillies7:15 PMFOXBraves.TV
Sunday, April 19at Phillies7:20 PMBravesVisionPeacock
Monday, April 20at Nationals6:45 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, April 21at Nationals6:45 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, April 22at Nationals6:45 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, April 23at Nationals6:45 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, April 24vs. Phillies7:15 PMApple TV
Saturday, April 25vs. Phillies7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, April 26vs. Phillies1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, April 27OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, April 28vs. Tigers7:15 PMBravesVision, TBSBraves.TV
Wednesday, April 29vs. Tigers7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, April 30vs. Tigers12:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, May 1at Rockies8:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, May 2at Rockies8:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, May 3at Rockies3:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, May 4at Mariners9:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, May 5at Mariners9:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, May 6at Mariners4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, May 7OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Friday, May 8at Dodgers10:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, May 9at Dodgers9:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, May 10at Dodgers4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, May 11OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, May 12vs. Cubs7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, May 13vs. Cubs7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, May 14vs. Cubs7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, May 15vs. Red Sox7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, May 16vs. Red Sox7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, May 17vs. Red Sox1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, May 18at Marlins6:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, May 19at Marlins4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, May 20at Marlins6:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, May 21at Marlins6:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, May 22vs. Nationals7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, May 23vs. Nationals4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, May 24vs. Nationals4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, May 25OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, May 26at Red Sox6:45 PMTBSBraves.TV
Wednesday, May 27at Red Sox6:45 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, May 28at Red Sox4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, May 29at Reds6:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, May 30at Reds7:15 PMFOXFOX
Sunday, May 31at Reds1:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, June 1OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, June 2vs. Blue Jays (Lou Gehrig Day)7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, June 3vs. Blue Jays7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, June 4vs. Blue Jays7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, June 5vs. Pirates7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, June 6vs. Pirates4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, June 7vs. Pirates1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, June 8OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, June 9at White Sox7:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, June 10at White Sox7:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, June 11at White Sox7:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, June 12at Mets7:10 PMApple TV
Saturday, June 13at Mets4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, June 14at Mets1:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, June 15OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, June 16vs. Giants7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, June 17vs. Giants7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, June 18vs. Giants7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, June 19vs. Brewers7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, June 20vs. Brewers4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, June 21vs. Brewers1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, June 22at Padres10:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, June 23at Padres9:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, June 24at Padres8:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, June 25OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Friday, June 26at Giants10:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, June 27at Giants9:05 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, June 28at Giants4:05 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, June 29OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, June 30vs. Cardinals7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, July 1vs. Cardinals7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, July 2vs. Cardinals7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, July 3vs. Mets7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, July 4vs. Mets8:08 PMFOXFOX
Sunday, July 5vs. Mets12:30 PMNBCPeacock
Monday, July 6vs. Mets7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, July 7at Pirates6:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, July 8at Pirates6:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, July 9at Pirates12:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, July 10at Cardinals8:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, July 11at Cardinals7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, July 12at Cardinals2:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, July 13MLB Home Run Derby8:00 PMNetflix
Tuesday, July 14MLB All-Star Game8:00 PMFOXFOX
Wednesday, July 15OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Thursday, July 16OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Friday, July 17vs. Rangers7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, July 18vs. Rangers4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, July 19vs. Rangers1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, July 20vs. Padres7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, July 21vs. Padres7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, July 22vs. Padres7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, July 23vs. Padres12:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, July 24at Orioles7:05 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, July 25at Orioles7:05 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, July 26at Orioles1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, July 27at Mets7:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, July 28at Mets7:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, July 29at Mets1:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, July 30vs. Nationals7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, July 31vs. Nationals7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, August 1vs. Nationals7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, August 2vs. Nationals1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, August 3OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, August 4vs. Marlins7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, August 5vs. Marlins7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, August 6vs. Marlins7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, August 7at Yankees7:05 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, August 8at Yankees1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, August 9at Yankees1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, August 10vs. Mets7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, August 11vs. Mets7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, August 12vs. Mets7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, August 13OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Friday, August 14vs. Diamondbacks7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, August 15vs. Diamondbacks7:15 PMFOXFOX
Sunday, August 16vs. Diamondbacks1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, August 17OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, August 18at Twins7:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, August 19at Twins7:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, August 20at Twins1:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, August 21at Brewers4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, August 22at Brewers2:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, August 23at Brewers (Little League Classic)7:10 PMESPNWatchESPN
Monday, August 24OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, August 25vs. Dodgers7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, August 26vs. Dodgers7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, August 27vs. Dodgers7:15 PMFS1FOX
Friday, August 28vs. Rockies7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, August 29vs. Rockies4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, August 30vs. Rockies1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, August 31OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, September 1at Nationals6:45 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, September 2at Nationals1:05 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, September 3OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Friday, September 4at Phillies6:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, September 5at Phillies6:05 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, September 6at Phillies3:10 PMNBCPeacock
Monday, September 7at Phillies1:05 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, September 8vs. Rays7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, September 9vs. Rays7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, September 10vs. Rays12:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Friday, September 11vs. Phillies7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, September 12vs. Phillies7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, September 13vs. Phillies1:35 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, September 14at Cubs7:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Tuesday, September 15at Cubs (Roberto Clemente Day)7:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, September 16at Cubs7:40 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, September 17OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Friday, September 18at Astros8:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, September 19at Astros7:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, September 20at Astros2:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Monday, September 21OFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAYOFF DAY
Tuesday, September 22vs. Reds7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Wednesday, September 23vs. Reds7:15 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Thursday, September 24vs. Reds7:15 PMFS1FOX
Friday, September 25vs. Marlins7:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Saturday, September 26vs. Marlins4:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV
Sunday, September 27vs. Marlins3:10 PMBravesVisionBraves.TV

What is your favorite Opening Day memory?

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 4: Dwight Evans reacts after a pre-game ceremony honoring the 1975 American League Champions 50th Anniversary Reunion before the 2025 Opening Day game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Boston Red Sox on April 4, 2025 at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Well folks, we made it! The offseason is over and Red Sox baseball is about to begin anew this afternoon in Cincinnati.

While we wait through the final few hours between the last Red Sox out of 2025 and the first pitch of 2026, let’s take a few moments to talk about our favorite Opening Day memories. It can be a game, an experience you had at the ballpark, or just a tradition you might have with friends and family. Personally, I find Opening Day a good opportunity to keep certain baseball loving people in your life by texting them “Happy Opening Day!” when you otherwise haven’t been in contact with them for a while. After all, this is pretty much our Christmas morning.

Talk about this and whatever else you like, and as always, be good to one another.

Happy Opening Day to all who celebrate!

How much are Dodgers tickets? Where to buy last minute for Opening Day

It's time for Dodger baseball.

The Los Angeles Dodgers are set to host the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday, March 26 to ring in Opening Day and officially begin their quest for a three-peat.

Dodger Stadium is expected to be filled to the brim with more than 50,000 fans, with several more vying to score tickets last minute to see Yoshinobu Yamamoto take the mound behind a star-studded offense led by Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman and Kyle Tucker.

Here's everything you need to know about where to buy Dodger tickets for Opening Day, and how much you can expect to pay:

Where to buy Dodgers tickets on Opening Day

The official way to buy tickets to any big league game is through the MLB Ballpark app, or through the Dodgers official ticket website if you're on a computer. Tickets are also available on the secondary market through apps such as Ticketmaster, Gametime, SeatGeek, Stubhub and TickPick.

It's worth noting that even if you buy from the secondary market, you'll still need the MLB Ballpark app as your tickets will be automatically transferred over to there after purchasing.

For fans wanting to go a more old school route and avoid buying online, tickets can be bought in person at the box office at Dodger Stadium, which opens three hours before first pitch. Tickets sold at the box office are available on a first-come, first-served basis.

How much are Dodgers Opening Day tickets?

While the Dodgers have traditionally been one of the more affordable tickets in town, that's begun to change in recent years as demand — and the team's payroll — has skyrocketed. You can expect to spend quite a bit for Opening Day especially, though the prices tend to come down the closer it gets to first pitch.

As of 7:30 p.m. Pacific Time on Wednesday, the get-in price on the Dodgers website is $155.60 — including fees — for a single ticket in the right field reserve level. The most expensive ticket is going for $3,137.10 behind home plate.

Tickets are going for around the same prices on most of the secondary apps, with the average somewhere around the $200-$400 range.

And don't forget parking; the price of general admission is going up to $45 this season.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Los Angeles Dodgers ticket prices, where to buy

MLB's youngest manager Blake Butera is first of his kind. Are Blakes the future?

When Blake Butera scrawls out his Opening Day lineup – he’s gone through “seven or eight” iterations already – and heads out to the Wrigley Field first-base line March 26, managerial history will be made.

Sure, at 33, he’ll be the youngest major league manager since 1972, a fact he and his Washington Nationals charges would prefer fade into the background. Yet there’s another bit of managerial minutiae that symbolically indicates the game is moving firmly into the Millennial era, with Gen Z coming up quickly, as well.

Butera will be the first big league manager named Blake.

He was mildly tickled when learning this factoid, though perhaps an oversize check or, better yet, a proven bullpen and a full-time first baseman might have been more thrilling.

“Anytime you’re the first of something,” he muses to USA TODAY Sports, “it’s kind of a cool opportunity.”

Blake Butera enters his first season as Nationals manager.

Opportunity is what the Nationals sold to Butera, a highly valued member of the Tampa Bay Rays who wore many hats in the organization – from Carolina League manager to senior director of player development – and now finds himself in a big league manager’s office.

And while names and labels aren’t everything, a Blake planting his flag in one of the game’s most coveted positions isn’t exactly nothing.

Out with the Bruces, in with the Blakes

Butera, you see, was born in an era of Peak Blake: The name did not appear on the Social Security Administration’s top 200 names for baby boys through the 1960s and ‘70s. But the Blakes broke through in the ‘80s, landing at No. 116 and reaching their apex in the 1990s at No. 84.

And in the state of Louisiana, where Blake Matthew Butera was born on Aug. 7, 1992, the Blakes outkicked their national average, landing at No. 36 in popularity in the Bayou State.

The Blake buzz has faded a bit, as it slid to No. 86 and No. 95 nationally in subsequent decades. Yet all the while you’ve likely heard the name far more often, perhaps at a child’s preschool, or on a youth sports team, the Blakes growing older and older until now – where Butera is a new father himself, his daughter Blair born Oct. 29.

That was the same day it was first reported that new Nationals president of baseball operations Paul Toboni – himself a 36-year-old father of four – was making Butera his first manager.

It was one of eight jobs that needed to be filled last fall and almost the most surprising, aside from San Francisco hiring Tony Vitello to jump from college baseball to the Giants dugout. And while many of 2025’s ex-managers may manage again – Derek Shelton’s already been hired by Minnesota after Pittsburgh fired him – it’s worth noting who’s likely headed for retirement.

Bruce Bochy and Brian Snitker were born six months apart in 1955, won World Series as managers and likely left the managerial chair for good after 2025. Speaking of which, have you seen any babies lately named Bruce?

When Bochy was born, you sure did.

“Bruce” ranked No. 32 for boys in the 1950s, held steady at No. 47 in the ’60, fell all the way to No. 185 in the ‘80s and hasn’t been seen since. (“Brian” is a different story, staying in the rankings all the way, along with Michael, Christopher and Matthew. Tough to beat those Irish Celtic roots, along with saints, archangels and disciples).

Bochy is one of the greatest managers of all-time, winning four World Series titles with two franchises. Beloved for his gameday chops and old school demeanor, he was a master communicator.

And perhaps that’s one trait that’s lasted from the Bruces to the Blakes.

No time like the present

The Nationals just got done with their first training camp under an almost entirely new regime following the July firings of club president Mike Rizzo and manager Dave Martinez. Butera urged his very young team to take chances early in camp, to try to stretch the limits of their potential and do “uncomfortable” things.

“Everything’s been good work,” shortstop CJ Abrams, an All-Star in 2024, tells USA TODAY Sports. “A lot of productive stuff. A lot of information and technology we’re putting to use. I think we’re ready.

“He’s the skip, and anything we need, communication has been good. We’re ready to go.”

Butera won’t be the first manager to be younger than some of his players; most recently, Rocco Baldelli, then 37, managed 39-year-old Nelson Cruz for the 2019 Minnesota Twins.

Somewhat remarkably, the Nationals are so young that only veteran starter Miles Mikolas, 37, is older than Butera, with 28-year-old catcher Keibert Ruiz the oldest regular. While the Nationals downplay the notion that their skipper’s age aids his relatability, Butera has proven he can appear well in any company.

“Blake is even-keeled and I admire that in him – how he can really regulate his emotions,’ says first-year Baltimore Orioles manager Craig Albernaz, who worked alongside Butera in the Rays’ organization. “He’s someone that could’ve stayed the front office route and been a GM someday, and now he’s a big league manager.

“It shows his versatility and how impactful he is and a lot of that stems from being able to navigate different conversations with different people – front office, players, coaches.”

Butera figures his youth sets an ambitious example, one that could resonate through what could be a lengthy rebuild: If you’re ready to achieve, why wait?

“My job is to work my butt off, make sure all these guys are fully prepared to play and we’ve set them up to have success,” he says. “I know I’m younger, and if it helps someone feel like they can accomplish something at a young age, I hope I can be that person to help them.”

'Treat people the right way'

You might say that as a young manager, Butera’s goal is to one day be an old manager. Should that come to pass, an entire wave of groundbreaking names will have inhabited the dugout.

Get ready for a Kai: Mets bench coach Kai Correa, born in 1989, should lock down a top job in coming years, perhaps ahead of the curve for a name that didn’t rank until the 2010s.

There are Jakes, Codys and Connors dispersed throughout major league staffs, and even two more Blakes on the Marlins staff – third base coach Blake Lalli and infield coach Blake Butler, the latter born a year after Butera.

Looking way down the road, the Liams, Masons and Logans who dominated maternity wards in the 2010s should one day get their due.

But for now, there’s just one Blake, just 33 yet offering advice that would play in any era.

“At the end of the day,” he says, “I’ll just tell anybody regardless of age, work your butt off, treat people the right way and care about people. And the rest is out of your control.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Nationals' Blake Butera is MLB youngest manager for Opening Day vs Cubs

Dodgers Opening Day vs. Diamondbacks: TV, time, stream, potential lineup

Shohei Ohtani and the Los Angeles Dodgers are back for another season as defending World Series champions.

The Dodgers start the season against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday, March 26, at Dodger Stadium.

The team has one primary goal: Winning a third consecutive World Series.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto played a key role during the playoff run for Los Angeles and earned the nod from manager Dave Roberts as the starting pitcher in the season opener.

Here’s what else you need to know for the Dodgers on Opening Day:

How to watch Dodgers vs. Diamondbacks

  • When: Thursday, March 26, 5:30 p.m. PT (8:30 p.m. ET)
  • Where: Dodger Stadium (Los Angeles)
  • TV: NBC
  • Streaming: Peacock, Fubo

Dodgers projected starting lineup:

P: Yoshinobu Yamamoto

C: Will Smith

1B: Freddie Freeman

2B: Miguel Rojas

3B:  Max Muncy

SS: Mookie Betts

LF: Teoscar Hernandez

CF: Andy Pages

RF: Kyle Tucker

DH: Shohei Ohtani

Diamondbacks projected starting lineup:

P: Zac Gallen

C: Gabriel Moreno

1B: Carlos Santana

2B: Ketel Marte

3B: Nolan Arenado

SS: Geraldo Perdomo

LF: Jordan Lawlar

CF: Alek Thomas

RF: Corbin Carroll

DH: Pavin Smith

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers Opening Day: How to watch, potential lineup vs. Diamondbacks

Nebraska's Sweet 16 rise seeded by Hoiberg twins' basement battles, 5-year-old fistfight

HOUSTON — It’s been almost 20 years, but Nebraska basketball coach Fred Hoiberg can still remember receiving a frantic phone call from his wife, Carol.

Between tears, Carol relayed that the couple’s two youngest sons, twins Charlie and Sam, were involved in a fight during a basketball game. Against each other.

“They were on the same team. Sam took a shot Charlie didn't like, and he went over and punched him and they squared up,” Fred Hoiberg said. “They were five years old.”

Sam and Charlie Hoiberg still possess that same fire – but instead of aiming their flamethrowers at each other, they’re channeling their competitiveness toward a common goal and making history together with their father.

In his seventh season as Nebraska’s head coach, Fred Hoiberg has the Cornhuskers in the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 for the first time ever, where they’ll play Big Ten Conference rival Iowa March 25 in Houston.  

Wearing No. 1 in the starting lineup will be Sam Hoiberg, who walked on at Nebraska to play for his dad and is now a fifth-year senior who has played every game of the last three seasons. On the sideline will be Charlie Hoiberg, who joined the Huskers’ staff as a graduate assistant this season after serving the last two years as a men’s basketball student manager at TCU.

The backdrop for their fateful family reunion is Nebraska’s winningest season in program history. The Huskers enter the Sweet 16 with a 28-6 record. Their 49 wins over the last two seasons are the program’s most in a two-year span, a transformation that seemed unfathomable when Fred Hoiberg was hired to resurrect the program in 2019.

This March, 10 days before Hoiberg coached Nebraska to its first-ever NCAA Tournament win in the opening round over Troy, he signed a three-year contract extension with the Huskers.

The twins turned 23 on March 21, the same day Nebraska beat Vanderbilt in a thrilling second-round NCAA Tournament game that became an instant classic. After the win, Hoiberg joked that he didn’t need to get his sons a birthday gift anymore. That was fine with them.

“We had hopes for it to be a good year, but for it to turn out this way has been not only great for the fan base and for the team, it is special for our family,” Charlie Hoiberg said. “It’s just been fun to be around them every single day and for it to have worked out like this has been pretty rewarding.”

Hoibergs grow from basement battles to Sweet 16

For most of their childhood, Sam and Charlie Hoiberg’s well-worn basketball battleground was a Nerf basketball hoop in the basement of the family home in Ames, Iowa. Sometimes the twins played each other one-on-one, and other times teamed up against their older brother, Jack. They’d play for hours, sometimes up to 200 points.

The games ended when somebody started fighting.  

“A lot of it came from Sam and I just wanting to be better than the other one,” Charlie Hoiberg said. “When you have someone that you’re that close with, and you’re pretty similar in skill level in everything we did, we just wanted to win. The competitiveness between each other doesn’t come out as much anymore because we’re not facing each other and we’re on the same side. We just both want to win so bad and I think a lot of that’s fueled by our relationship growing up.”

Jack Hoiberg describes Charlie as outgoing and stubborn, the type of person who will argue until he wins. Sam is always smiling, a positive person whose sunny exterior shields a tough interior. They butted heads constantly but were inseparable, sharing a room until high school.

Basketball was all they knew. Fred Hoiberg coached at Iowa State, his alma mater, from 2010-15, and all four of his kids grew up massive Cyclone fans. Paige, the oldest, played basketball through high school. Jack played two seasons of college hoops as a walk-on at Michigan State, transferred to play his final two seasons at UT Arlington, and is now an assistant video coordinator with the NBA’s San Antonio Spurs.

The twins were barely teenagers when they helped their dad cut down the nets after Hoiberg’s Iowa State teams won back-to-back Big 12 tournament titles in 2014 and 2015.

Sam wanted to play basketball in college, but the COVID-19 pandemic limited his opportunities to be seen by college scouts and he ended high school with no Division I scholarship offers. By then, Fred Hoiberg was at Nebraska, and Sam asked if he could walk on.

Sam didn’t intend to stay long, maybe a couple seasons and then move on to get more playing time at another school. He certainly didn’t anticipate being a starter on a Sweet 16 team. But basketball has a funny way of giving you what you didn’t expect and just what you need.  

Sam Hoiberg of the Nebraska Cornhuskers reacts during the final minute of the second half against the Vanderbilt Commodores in the second round of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Paycom Center on March 21, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

“You see tales all the time about the coach’s kid just riding the bench, and so we kind of thought that would be Sam,” Paige Hoiberg said. “We all kind of thought it was just a stepping stone for him, and then he would eventually transfer somewhere else. But the way it’s turned out has been a dream.”

Although Fred Hoiberg gave his kids pointers here and there when they were in the gym together, he’d never coached any of them in an official capacity until Sam joined the Huskers.

“I think we've done a great job of keeping it very player-coach relationship in practices,” Sam Hoiberg said. “I don't think you would be able to tell if you came to a practice that I was his kid. We probably have grown a little bit closer bond from it all, but in general, just still had an amazing relationship growing up and it's maintained that way.”

Charlie Hoiberg didn’t see basketball in his future at all. He took what he called “the Paige route,” followed in his sister’s footsteps and went to college as a regular student. He enrolled at TCU, joined a fraternity and started studying on a pre-law track.

Jack Hoiberg, 17 (from left) and twins Sam and Charlie Hoiberg, 12, cheer on Iowa State from behind the players bench Thursday, March 17, 2016, during their first round game at the NCAA men's basketball tournament at the Pepsi Center in Denver.

Two years in, he missed basketball and became a student manager for the Horned Frogs, which made him realize that he wanted to explore coaching as a career path. To his family’s surprise, he elected to join his brother and father at Nebraska as a graduate assistant.  

“The big reason why I wanted to come back was I felt that even if I don’t follow through with coaching for the rest of my life, I’m never going to regret being home with my parents, with my brother, every single day,” Charlie Hoiberg said. “Being with them was going to be special no matter what – and then how it’s worked out has obviously been a big payoff.”

Hoibergs' homecoming a catalyst for Nebraska basketball

When Fred Hoiberg first told his wife about the opportunity at Nebraska, she had concerns.

“I was kind of like, ‘Gosh, I don’t know,’ because it seemed like a tough job,” Carol Hoiberg said. “But Fred felt very compelled to go back to Lincoln, where he was born and where his grandfather coached, and really wanted to turn it around and bring basketball back to Nebraska and to where we are today.”

It took a little while. In Hoiberg’s first three seasons at the helm, the Huskers went a combined 24-67 and won just nine Big Ten Conference games. Those years, Jack Hoiberg said, “felt like a black hole.”

In 2022-23, it looked like Nebraska was doomed again when two key players, Emmanuel Bandoumel and Juwan Gary, went down with injuries in January. Sam Hoiberg, then a redshirt freshman, was forced into action. He called his older brother Jack Hoiberg, a former college walk-on, for advice.

“I just kept telling him, ‘You belong and you’re good enough,’” Jack Hoiberg said. “Which is not easy as a walk-on, because you’re expected to be perfect when you’re in there – and if you’re not, you have a very short leash.”

Sam Hoiberg seized the opportunity. Going forward, he never missed another game. The Huskers ended the season 16-16 and the next season made the NCAA Tournament for the first time in Fred Hoiberg’s tenure.

Sam Hoiberg’s 160 career steals rank him seventh in school history. This season, he made the Big Ten All-Defensive Team and ranked second in the conference in steals. He’s started every game for the Huskers, averages career highs in points (9.4) and rebounds (5.3), and leads the team in average assists (4.4) and steals (2.0).

Sam credits his twin brother with helping him develop the offensive part of his game.

“He can get in Sam's head a heck of a lot better than I can just with the whole twin telepathy thing, and he's able to be there for him and really be as supportive as anybody that he's going to ever be around,” Fred Hoiberg said.

Nebraska Cornhuskers guard Sam Hoiberg (1) and head coach Fred Hoiberg talk during the second half against the Michigan State Spartans at Pinnacle Bank Arena on Dec. 10, 2023, in Lincoln, Nebraska.

Charlie Hoiberg thought back to high school, when Sam Hoiberg was one of their team’s leading scorers and dove on the floor for loose balls. To him, that was all the evidence he needed that his brother could embrace a larger role on the Huskers.

“A lot of it’s just been helping him with his confidence,” Charlie Hoiberg said. “Sam’s always been a good offensive player his whole life and when he came to college is when he became more of a defensive specialist. And I just wanted to help him realize that he can do more than that and he’s an extremely skilled person who has worked extremely hard.”

Anxiety, resolve, joy mark Hoibergs' Huskers run

In many ways, Fred Hoiberg being the architect of Nebraska’s rebuild feels like destiny.

 His grandfather, Jerry Bush, was Nebraska’s head basketball coach for nine seasons from 1954 to 1963. His other grandfather, Otto Hoiberg, was a sociology professor at the university for 30 years. Both of Hoiberg’s parents graduated from Nebraska, and he was born in Lincoln.

Charlie recalled when he went to Lincoln to play in an AAU basketball tournament and his grandmother showed him the house she grew up in. He saw his great grandfather’s name on a plaque in front of Memorial Stadium. When the twins were 11, they and their parents attended a ceremony at a Huskers football game, honoring Bush’s legacy.

However, Hoiberg’s four children didn’t fully realize how deep-rooted their family ties to Nebraska were until he took the Cornhuskers job ahead of the 2019-20 season. The twins finished high school in Lincoln, and helping guide the basketball program’s resurgence has made them feel even more connected to Nebraska.

“Nebraska has fully emerged into home for us,” Charlie said.

For Hoiberg’s entire coaching career, ever since he was at Iowa State, his entire family has been emotionally invested in his teams. Adding Sam and Charlie to the mix only ratcheted up the intensity.

Carol is always a nervous wreck watching games. Paige makes family members switch seats if the Huskers are losing, in hopes that musical chairs will reverse the team’s fortunes. Jack feels more anxiety before Nebraska games than he ever did before his own college games or Spurs games.   

In contrast, Fred Hoiberg is well-practiced in the coaching art of unflappability. Whether it’s a preseason exhibition or a conference tournament matchup, he attacks every game the same. His even-keel persona is consistent on the court and off. But after Nebraska beat Troy in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament, Hoiberg’s daughter observed the coach beset by an unusual reaction: relief.

“Just like, ‘Oh my gosh, we finally did it. The monkey’s off our back,’” Paige Hoiberg said. “After the Vanderbilt game, too, he felt so loose and relaxed. And now I feel like they’re just having fun at this point, like no pressure anymore, just enjoying the season.”

Against Vanderbilt, after Braden Frager made a go-ahead basket for Nebraska with 2.2 seconds remaining and the Commodores’ heave rimmed out at the buzzer, Fred Hoiberg couldn’t stop his emotions from spilling out. None of them could.

“To be able to share that moment with these guys, you get so caught up in the coaching part of it that you really don't think about it, but when that game was over and all the emotions were flooding out, to be able to share that with those two guys has been great,” he said.

The Hoibergs expect to have more than a dozen family members in the stands at Toyota Center March 26 to watch Nebraska attempt to advance to the Elite Eight.

No matter what happens, they can relish the improbable journeys taken by a father and his sons. Three paths re-converged into one jubilant road that runs through Lincoln.

“Just the amount of joy that it’s brought to this Husker fan base, you can feel it,” Carol Hoiberg said. “It’s just electric. And you know, we’ve been waiting a long time to have these feelings. It’s certainly been worth the wait.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Nebraska basketball's Sweet 16 run led by Fred Hoiberg, sons Sam, Charlie

Can the Dodgers three-peat as World Series champions? Season preview

The Los Angeles Dodgers have been here before.

At Dodger Stadium on Opening Day, they'll raise their World Series banner as they embark on another chase for history.

It's a history that suggests the odds are against them: only four teams have won three consecutive World Series in MLB history. Three of them have been the New York Yankees, and none has since the turn of the century. But then again, no team had even repeated as champions since then until the Dodgers successfully did so last October.

And with uncertainty looming over baseball in 2027, Andrew Friedman and Co. weren't content with just running it back. They went out in free agency this winter and added even more firepower to what was already considered a superteam by adding two of the top players on the market in Kyle Tucker and Edwin Díaz.

It's time for Dodger baseball yet again.

Dodgers storylines heading into Opening Day

Miguel Rojas entering final season after World Series heroics

Miguel Rojas has been established as one of the Dodgers' leaders in the clubhouse ever since his return to the team in 2023. He's served as a mentor to several younger players on the roster and notably helped Mookie Betts in his transition from right field to becoming a Gold Glove finalist at shortstop last season. One thing he's never been in his 12-year career, however, is a power hitter.

Which made it all the more shocking in Game 7 of the World Series when Rojas, down to the Dodgers' final two outs and with Shohei Ohtani on deck, worked the count full before launching a slider from Toronto Blue Jays closer Jeff Hoffman into the left field seats at Rogers Centre to tie it up before the Dodgers eventually went on to win it 5-4 in 11 innings for their second consecutive World Series championship.

He was equal parts an unlikely hero and the perfect person for the moment.

But even before then, Rojas has made it known that 2026 would be his last before retirement. He re-signed with the Dodgers in December on a one-year $5.5 million deal and transition into a player development role assisting the front office in 2027.

He's made it clear however, that he doesn't want to be treated as an elder statesman in his final season.

"This year, I have a different perspective because I'm not afraid to empty the tank anymore," Rojas told Jomboy Media's Jack Oliver. "... I want to take every single opportunity, every single at-bat that I can and help the team in any capacity.

"Kind of the same mentality that Kersh had last season."

Roki Sasaki's spring training struggles

Speaking of postseason heroes, Roki Sasaki's transition back into a starting role after returning from a right shoulder impingement and becoming one of Roberts' go-to arms out of the bullpen last October hasn't exactly inspired much confidence.

In his 8.2 innings pitched across four starts, Sasaki gave up 15 runs on nine hits and two homers and walked 15 batters to 12 strikeouts for an abysmal 2.77 WHIP. And while spring training isn't about results or even productivity, his performance has led to the re-emergence of doubts that plagued much of his rookie season pre-injury.

Nevertheless, Roberts is sticking by Sasaki. Some of that is due to necessity — Blake Snell and Gavin Stone both starting the season on the injured list leaves little room for flexibility in the rotation — but the Dodgers are committed to Sasaki as a starter regardless.

"It hasn't been great. It really hasn't," Roberts told reporters on Monday. "We know that the standard needs to be better. He knows that. We know that. And then now it's go time and see how he can perform when the lights come on."

Bold predictions for 2026

Shohei Ohtani will be in the Cy Young conversation

For everything Ohtani has already accomplished in his first two years as a Dodger, it's hard to fathom that 2026 will be his first as a full-time two-way player with the team. Since undergoing his second right elbow surgery in September 2023, Ohtani was a full-time DH in his 50/50 season in 2024 and made 14 starts on the mound last season, posting a 2.87 ERA over 47 innings while striking out 62 batters and walking just nine before throwing another 20 1/3 innings in October.

This year the Dodgers weren't sure where Ohtani would be in his throwing progression after returning from the World Baseball Classic, but in true Ohtani fashion, he silenced any doubts by punching out 11 through the first four innings on 79 pitches in his final spring training tune-up on Tuesday.

The Dodgers want Ohtani to go wire-to-wire as a starter this season, a need further exacerbated by the injuries to Snell and Stone that has depleted the rotation's depth. It's a big ask, but Ohtani's track record speaks for itself.

"Regardless of my expectations for him, his are going to exceed those," Roberts told reporters at the beginning of spring training. "I think it's fair to say he expects to be in the Cy Young conversation. But we just want him to be healthy and make starts. All the numbers and statistics will take care of themselves."

One thing working in Ohtani's favor is the fact that this has been his first "normal" offseason with no injury rehab in three years. Out of all the awards he's won in his storied career, the Cy Young has been elusive. The closest he's come was 2022, when he finished fourth in the voting after he started a career-high 28 games and posted a 2.33 ERA with 219 strikeouts to 44 walks and a 1.01 WHIP.

FanGraphs projects Ohtani to make 23 starts this season, which would be his most since 2023.

Teoscar Hernández has a bounce-back season

When Hernández first arrived in Los Angeles two years ago, his big bat and big personality quickly made him a fan favorite. It helped that he had one of the most productive seasons of his career in 2024, finishing top 10 in the NL in home runs (a career-high 33), RBI (99), slugging percentage (.501) and OPS (.820) and was selected as an All-Star for the second time in his 10 years in the big leagues.

But he regressed in 2025. His SLG dipped to .454 and his .738 OPS was his worst since his rookie season with the Houston Astros in 2016, when he played just 41 games. He also drew plenty criticism, at times publicly from Roberts himself, for his defense in right field and was the subject of trade rumors over the winter.

With Kyle Tucker slotting in at right field, Hernández has a bit less pressure on him defensively as he slides over to left. He also reportedly showed up to spring training 10 pounds trimmer, and the early results seem promising. His five home runs this spring led the Dodgers. In his 19 games played, Hernández posted an eye-popping .449/.491/.837 slash line for an OPS of 1.328.

Again, spring training is more about working through mechanics than results, but it's clear that Hernández is playing with some kind of newfound drive or motivation. The Dodgers' lineup is already incredibly deep as it is, but if Hernández can return to his 2024 form they'd be as close to unstoppable as a lineup can get.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Los Angeles Dodgers 2026 storylines, predictions, season preview

Ranking the five most underrated moves of the MLB offseason

The MLB season got underway on Wednesday, which means the time that teams had to improve their rosters has come and gone. The offseason is behind us, and whether or not your favorite team did enough to contend for a World Series championship is about to be seen.

Some fanbases may be thinking, "Absolutely not. There's no way my team did enough. They only signed [insert surprisingly valuable player here] and [insert other player with no big-name notoriety] here." But it is exactly those moves that build division winners. They may not win the World Series. Let's be honest, that will always and forever be the Los Angeles Dodgers, but competitors are built on underappreciated contracts and value.

Here are five offseason moves that could wind up being more impactful than we'd initially thought.

Most underrated moves of the 2025-26 MLB offseason

5) Mike Burrows traded to the Houston Astros

Despite many fans believing the Houston Astros were going to take a step back last year, the team nearly reached the postseason with an 87-75 record. That record came despite the team's back-end of the starting rotation posting a 4.69 ERA.

One of the team's top starters, Framber Valdez, left in free agency, joining the Detroit Tigers. Thusly, many experts believed the Astros would be trotting into 2026 with one of the worst rotations in baseball. But the team made some sneaky good moves this offseason, including the acquisition of Japanese pitcher Tatsuya Imai and the trade for the Pirates' Mike Burrows.

Burrows isn't a name with a ton of notoriety, but he is a solid middle-of-the-rotation arm, which is exactly what Houston needs. The 26-year-old posted a 3.96 ERA in 96 innings a season ago, but more importantly, he boasted one of the best changeups in baseball, per Baseball Savant.

This is a guy who has great stuff. He may not be an elite talent that wins a championship, but he isn't expected to be that. He is expected to be a No. 3 or 4 starter, and Burrows provides potential for more. He also has six years of team control under his belt.

4) Harrison Bader to the San Francisco Giants (2 years, $20.5 million)

Bader may be entering his age-32 season, but he hasn't slowed down, it seems. Last year was the best season of his career offensively, and it doesn't appear to be a fluke. Skeptics might point out that most of his projected stats say that he exceeded expectations a season ago, with just a .220 expected batting average and .295 xWOBA, putting him on pace with his prior seasons.

However, some underlying metrics point to a potential resurgence for Bader. Most notably, his bat speed. The 32-year-old increased his swing speed by nearly two ticks a season ago, pushing him from the 38th percentile in MLB to the 71st percentile in just one year. It's no shock that that coincides with his 17 home runs, the most of his career for a single season.

The Giants have long struggled to find consistency in their outfield. However, their starting trio of Jung Hoo Lee, Heliot Ramos, and now Harrison Bader has the potential to be one of the most complete in baseball.

3) Sonny Gray traded to the Boston Red Sox

People look at Boston, notice they lost Lucas Giolito and gained Sonny Gray and think they are in a worse position than they are now. It is easy to think that. It makes sense, but there is a lot to like about Sonny Gray despite him losing nearly a mile per hour on his fastball a season ago and entering his age-36 season.

The first positive note is that Sonny Gray's expected stats were nearly a full tick lower than what his ERA ended up being (4.28). His FIP (3.39) and xERA (3.88) were both better than what Giolito produced a season ago. Not only that, but Gray also posted a 5.29 strikeout-to-walk ratio, the best in the National League. Combine those two statements and Gray is someone primed for a bounce-back.

But the most obvious positive for Gray is that he likely won't get as unlucky as he did last year. In 2025, Gray had six starts in which he gave up at least six runs in the first inning. Prior to 2025, he only had three such starts in 2024, and only one such start in 2023, 2022, and 2021. Even if, in 2025, Gray matched his mark from 2024, his ERA likely would've been easily under 4.0 last season.

Keep in mind, Gray is still very good at getting hitters to chase outside the zone, posting a 31.2% chase rate last year. He's also very good at creating ground balls, ranking in the 66th percentile with a 45.1% rate in 2025. There's a lot to like about Gray going into next year.

2) Cody Ponce to the Toronto Blue Jays (3 years, $30 million)

If the World Baseball Classic has shown us anything, it's that Japanese and Korean baseball are not to be taken lightly. The NPB and KBO have produced some very impactful MLB players over the years.

Ponce was KBO MVP last season, with a 1.89 ERA across 180.2 innings while striking out 252 batters. Let those numbers speak for themselves.

Sure, Ponce has never found success in the United States, but this time feels different. Most notably, his fastball has increased in velocity substantially from his 2021 stint with the Pirates. Back then, he was only hitting 93. Now, he's routinely touching 97.

The Blue Jays certainly made their splash in the rotation when they added Dylan Cease, but Ponce is someone who is coming into the year with back-end expectations and could provide much more for a rather team-friendly price.

1) Brad Keller to the Philadelphia Phillies (2 years, $22 million)

No one ever gets giddy over signing a middle reliever, but Phillies fans should be ecstatic at the addition of Keller. Last year, the 29-year-old had a staggering increase in fastball velocity, adding nearly 3.5 mph to his fastball from 93.8 to 97.2 in just one season. That velo was a major factor in Keller's career year, in which he posted a 2.07 ERA.

Oh, but it's not just his fastball you should be excited about. Keller's sweeper produced an incredible .067 batting average against with a 45.8% whiff rate. Yes, those numbers are even better than they sound.

He was absolutely lights out against right-handed batters and still very serviceable against lefties. He'll be a tremendous addition to the Phillies bullpen, making it that much easier for the team to get to Jhoan Duran in the ninth innings with the lead intact. Given that Philadelphia's bullpen ranked 20th in baseball with a 4.25 ERA last year, Keller is a steal at $11 million a year, helping fix Philadelphia's biggest weakness from a season ago.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: The five most underrated moves of the MLB offseason ranked