A look at the Brewers’ use of ABS challenges

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JULY 05: Gary Sánchez #99 of the Milwaukee Brewers during the MLB game at Chase Field on July 05, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

At the start of the season, the Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) challenge system was officially implemented into MLB games. This uses a full automated system based on Statcast data to challenge certain calls made by umpires. Now that we’re at the All-Star break, we have more than half a season of data to analyze about how teams are using their challenges. Let’s take a look at how the Brewers have been utilizing it.

MLB Overview

Between offense and defense, the distribution of challenges has been mostly even across MLB. There have been a total of 6,040 challenges using the ABS system so far this season. Here is the breakdown of those challenges.

  • 2,810 challenges have been initiated by the batter. 1,345 (48%) of those were overturned.
  • 3,230 challenges have been initiated by the defense (catcher or pitcher). 1,872 (58%) of those were overturned.

While this has been the average across MLB, variations within teams can be drastic. The Brewers have one of the more skewed use of challenges in their team. They have challenged 215 pitches across their 96 games. Here is their breakdown.

  • Of 66 challenges that have been initiated by the batter, 28 were overturned (42% success rate). That is the fewest number of challenges of any team in MLB. Their success rate ranks 23rd.
  • Of 149 challenges that have been initiated by the defense, 80 were overturned (54% success rate). That is the second-highest number of challenges of any team in MLB. Their success rate ranks 21st.

On a team level, the Brewers have not had the most success with challenges. They have chosen to let their catchers do the bulk of challenging, with 68.8% of their challenges made by the catcher. In fact, when it comes to the batters, one player is responsible for a significant number of batter challenges. Let’s talk about that first.

Batter Stats

First, let’s take a look at the Brewers’ challenges as a team. Here is an overview of their stats.

  • They have averaged 2.2 additional overturns versus the expected outcome for an average team. However, they have lost 1.9 run value versus the expected value.
  • They have had five strikeouts overturned due to challenges, last in the league. The Orioles lead this stat with 20 strikeouts overturned.
  • They have gained three additional walks from challenges, tied for second to last in the league. The Twins lead this stat with 15 additional walks.
  • Twice this season, a challenge has resulted in a strikeout on a full count being changed into a walk.
  • Their challenge rate on “challengeable” pitches is 2.7%. That is also last in the league, with the Rockies leading at 6.6%. A challengeable pitch for a batter is a called strike when the batting team has challenges remaining. (Exceptions are when a position player pitches, which is not challengeable, and if the ABS system malfunctions.)
  • Of their 66 challenges, 47 are considered “reasonable.” That 71% rate ranks seventh in MLB. Baseball Savant has a breakdown on what is considered reasonable. On a basic level, it’s either a call that is incorrect, a call that is correct but close enough and valuable enough to challenge, or a call that any player would reasonably challenge.
  • On the opposite side, they have had 355 reasonable opportunities to challenge. They have only challenged 13% of those, also last in MLB. The Astros challenge the most on reasonable opportunities, at 28%.

Now that we’ve taken a look at the overall stats for the team, let’s take a more detailed look at the individual batters.

Gary Sánchez

  • Despite being a part-time player, Sánchez has challenged the second-most pitches of any batter in MLB with 26 challenges. The leader in challenges is Sal Stewart of the Reds with 38. He also accounts for 39.4% of the challenges by batters for the Brewers.
  • Of those 26 challenges, he has won 10 and lost 16. That’s a success rate of 38%, compared to the MLB average of 48%.
  • He has a challenge rate of 17.2%, with an expected challenge rate of 4.8%. To clarify that a little further, what that means is when a pitch is challengeable, he will challenge 17.2% of the time. That is a little more than one out of every six pitches that is a called strike, while he would be expected to challenge around one out of every 20 called strikes.
  • Of his 26 challenges, only 13 (50%) have been considered reasonable. He has had 30 reasonable opportunities and challenged 43% of those.

Rest of Team

  • No other Brewers’ batter has challenged more than seven pitches. That batter is Sal Frelick, who has won two and lost five of his challenges.
  • Two batters have six challenges: Jake Bauers (three wins, three losses) and Garrett Mitchell (two wins, four losses).
  • Despite some struggles as a catcher, William Contreras has had success with his challenges as a batter. He’s challenged five pitches and won four of those.
  • For the rest of the team, no other batter has more than three challenges.

Catcher Stats

Let’s take a look at the catcher stats now. They have accounted for significantly more challenges on the team, and appear to be the focus for challenge usage.

Note: One pitcher challenge for the Brewers is included in these numbers, as they are for the fielding team as a whole and not just the catchers. That will be discussed a little more later.

  • They have averaged 9.9 fewer overturns versus the expected outcome for an average team. That is 24th in MLB. However, they have gained 3.0 run value versus the expected value, which is fourth in MLB.
  • They have added an additional 19 strikeouts from challenges, tied for eighth most in MLB. They have also eliminated six walks, tied for 12th.
  • There have been five instances where a full-count walk was flipped into a strikeout, which contributes to a significant part of their gained run value. A flipped call in this instance can easily by worth over a half run of value.
  • Of their 149 challenges, 68% of them are considered reasonable.
  • They have had 323 reasonable pitches to challenge, and have challenged 32% of those.

Let’s take a look at each of the catchers and what their rates look like.

William Contreras

  • As the primary catcher, Contreras has most of the challenges for the Brewers on defense. He has initiated 111 challenges so far this season, challenging 3.4% of challengeable pitches.
  • Not only is that the most on the Brewers, it’s the most in MLB. The second most challenges by a catcher is from Tyler Stephenson of the Reds, who has 85 challenges.
  • Of Contreras’ 111 challenges, he has won 58 and lost 53. That is a success rate of 52%, which is well below the league average of 59%. Compared to catchers with at least 10 challenges, his success rate is 60th out of 75.
  • He also has one of the lowest value ratings on those challenges. Compared to expected overturns, he has 9.2 less than an average catcher seeing the same pitches. He has also lost 3.8 runs versus the expected rate for a catcher.
  • Of his 111 challenges, 74 have been considered reasonable, which is a 67% rate. He has also had 246 reasonable opportunities and challenged 30% of those.

Gary Sánchez

  • Sánchez has had his own set of opportunities, with 35 challenges so far this season. He’s much more reasonable with his challenges as a catcher, also challenging 3.4% of challengeable pitches.
  • His success rate has been better, with 20 won and 15 lost. That is a success rate of 57%, still below MLB average but much closer to it.
  • Overall, this season, he has 0.6 less overturns than the expected rate for a catcher seeing the same pitches. He also has 1.0 runs lost versus the expected rate for a catcher.
  • Of his 35 challenges, 26 have been considered reasonable, which is a 74% rate. He has also had 70 reasonable opportunities and challenged 27% of those.

Jeferson Quero

  • Not to be forgotten, Quero has had a few chances as well in his very limited time, He has two challenges so far this season and won both. One of those resulted in changing a call to a strikeout.
  • Both of his challenges were considered reasonable. He has had seven reasonable opportunities and challenged two.

Pitcher Challenges

When it comes to challenges by a pitcher, these are rare. Not only is it rare for the Brewers, but it’s also rare for the league as a whole. Across the entire season so for, there have been a total of 6,040 ABS challenges. Only 109 of those have been initiated by a pitcher. So far, that has been the correct call. Of those 109 challenges, only 40 of them were overturned — a 37% success rate.

The pitcher who has initiated the most challenges is former Brewer Freddy Peralta, who has challenged six pitches and has a 50% success rate. The Brewers have a grand total of one ABS challenge initiated by a pitcher. That was done by Abner Uribe, and he lost that challenge.

Triple-A Stats

Baseball Savant also has tracked the stats of ABS challenges for Triple-A teams this season. The overall data is pretty similar there, but Nashville has seen more activity than the Brewers. Here’s a quick look at their numbers.

  • Batters have initiated 105 challenges. Of those, 45 were overturned (43% success rate). That is tied for the fifth-most challenges in Triple-A. Their success rate ranks 21st.
  • Catchers have initiated 128 challenges. Of those, 73 were overturned (57% success rate). That is the tied for the fourth most challenges of any team in Triple-A. Their success rate is 14th.
  • Challenges are better distributed among the Triple-A batters. Luke Adams has challenged the most pitches with 15 (eight won, seven lost). Jett Williams is second with 14 challenges (five won, nine lost).
  • It’s also an even divide between Jeferson Quero and Ramón Rodríguez for their challenges. Quero has challenged 50 pitches (31 won, 19 lost). Rodriguez has challenged 57 (35 won, 22 lost). Both have significantly more overturns then expected (15.0 for Quero, 13.3 for Rodriguez) but have a small net run loss despite that.
  • No pitchers have challenged for Nashville.

Conclusion

The Brewers have not made the best use of the ABS challenge system so far this season. Their philosophy has been focused on using challenges to get better results for their pitchers. So far, there have been growing pains with the system. They are taking their opportunities to challenge, but it hasn’t paid off the best. It’s still the first season with the system in full usage, though. Given more time, they may figure out better timing on challenges and better ways to utilize it, which will further help the team as a whole.

Note: All stats pulled from the Baseball Savant section of MLB.com.

Devils sign Anthony Mantha to two-year $9.5 million deal after career season

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Anthony Mantha of the Pittsburgh Penguins moves the puck on the ice

Anthony Mantha made his career year count.

The 31-year-old forward signed a two-year, $9.5 million contract with the Devils, the team announced on Wednesday.

The forward will make $5.4 million next season and $4.1 million in 2027-28 with an average annual value of $4.75 million.

Pittsburgh Penguins’ Anthony Mantha (39) moves the puck against the Carolina Hurricanes during the first period. AP Photo/Karl B DeBlaker

Mantha scored a career-high 33 goals for the Penguins last season, but ended his year in disappointment recording just one assist in six games in a first-round loss to the Flyers in the NHL Playoffs.

The Penguins wanted to bring the forward back after his one-year, $2.5 million contract ran out, but on a short-term deal.

Mantha said after the season that he wanted at least a three-year deal, but ended up settling for two with New Jersey for some added pay.

The grandson of four-time Stanley Cup winner Andre Pronovost stands at 6-foot-5, 240 pounds and boasts a very nice pair of hands.

“He’s a great player,” Mantha’s ex-linemate Evgeni Malkin told the Penguins team website. “He’s fast and has a long stick. He’s physical, he can score, he can do everything.”

Anthony Mantha #39 of the Pittsburgh Penguins is greeted by his teammates on the bench after scoring a goal during the first period. Robert Sabo for NY Post

His career, however, hasn’t matched the expectations when he was taken No. 20 overall in the 2013 NHL Draft by the Red Wings.

A series of injuries and inconsistent seasons saw him hop between the Capitals, Golden Knights and Flames before landing in Pittsburgh last season.

Mantha has 179 career goals, 188 assists and a -3 plus-minus in 588 games played over his 13-year NHL career so far.

Not only did the forward record his most goals (33) and points (64) last season, but he also hit the 80-game threshold for just the second time in his career.

Mantha is just one piece of the Devils’ offseason makeover after a disappointing season that saw them falls short of the playoffs.

The team traded goalie Jacob Markstrom to the Panthers for forwards Evan Rodrigues, Jesper Boqvist and Ben Steeves.

NBA Power Rankings, offseason edition: Who has gained on the Knicks, Spurs?

LAS VEGAS — Free agency is not over and some potential difference makers are still out there — hello, LeBron James — but we've seen enough to do our NBA Power Rankings for the summer. If I were doing this in tiers, right now the top four would be true title contenders, and four through 10 would be the second circle, "if everything goes right" tier that could be contenders, but for now let's just rank the teams.

1. New York Knicks

Last season 53-29
The defending champions have spent the summer trying to get the band back together for another run at it, and they've done well outside of losing Michell Robinson (replaced by Andre Drummond, a strong rebounder but not as good a defender). With all the changes with the other teams in the East, New York is still the team I trust the most, the team that will be in the mix at the end no matter what.

2. San Antonio Spurs

Last season 62-20
A lot of fans may roll their eyes at the Tobias Harris signing, but he is an upgrade at the four (and was the Pistons' second-best player last season). They drafted some depth at the five (Jayden Quaintance, Tarris Reed), but those guys are more long-term projects. The key to the Spurs taking one last step next season is the development of Victor Wembanyama, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper (all three are still 22 or younger).

3. Oklahoma City Thunder

Last season 64-18
The best thing the Thunder could do this summer to improve their title chances was to get Jalen Williams and Ajay Mitchell healthy, and that has happened. This offseason, OKC prioritized bringing back Isaiah Hartenstein (who is needed against Wembanyama) and drafted more size with Aday Mara (7'3" out of Michigan). That said, the luxury tax aprons are coming for OKC, and it could not retain two helpful players, Isaiah Joe and Aaron Wiggins.

4. Philadelphia 76ers

Last season 45-37
The biggest winners of the offseason, the 76ers traded out an older Paul George for Jaylen Brown at the peak of his career, forming a powerful perimeter trio with Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe. They added good depth with Dean Wade and Anfernee Simons as well, plus got lucky in the draft when Labaron Philon fell to them at 22 (he has the ball on a string and showed real potential at Summer League). Ultimate success in the playoffs will come down to Joel Embiid's knees, but this team is poised to make his path to that point as easy as possible.

5. Denver Nuggets

Last season 54-28
Denver has not had a great offseason, but they have Nikola Jokic and will enter every season with a chance as long as he is in his prime. Tim Hardaway Jr. is gone (Miami), Marvin Bagley III takes over as Jokic's backup (trying to solve the non-Jokic minutes issue). Denver isn't done. Expect the Peyton Watson restricted free agent deal to be worked out, but they are looking for other moves.

6. Detroit Pistons

Last season 60-22
The Pistons had a clear top priority this offseason: Get a secondary shot creator to play next to Cade Cunningham. They have struck out. And while the Pistons will eventually get a deal done with Jalen Duren, they have unnecessarily let some bad blood develop. I think the Pistons got a little worse around Cunningham: Tobias Harris and Isaiah Stewart are out, Isaiah Joe (a good signing) and Taurean Prince are in. As long as Cunningham plays like he did last season, this is a top 10 team, but they feel a little further away from a title than they did when the playoffs ended.

7. Indiana Pacers

Last season 19-63
After a season near the bottom of these rankings (and the league standings), the Pacers return near the top because Tyrese Haliburton will be back and healthy, plus I love the trade deadline move to add Ivica Zubac to set picks and roll hard for Haliburton, and he improves their paint defense. Adding Kelly Oubre as a free agent brings depth.

8. Cleveland Cavaliers

Last season 52-30
This is a team that may be the frontrunner to land LeBron James, and they still have to re-sign James Harden (that will get done), but the only real move this offseason was losing Dean Wade (Philly) and drafting Meleek Thomas in the second round (he's looked like a scorer at Summer League). This is going to be a very good regular-season team again, whether they can be more than that is the question.

9. Los Angeles Lakers

Last season 53-29
The Lakers did what they had to do this summer (if for no other reason than to make sure Luka Doncic is happy): Start retooling the roster around Doncic's skills. LeBron is gone, and that is no small loss, but the Lakers locked up Austin Reaves and got their center in Walker Kessler. They got solid role players around them (I like Sandro Mamukelashvili as an offensive fit; the Lakers have bet on Quentin Grimes making a leap), and this should be a good regular-season team, but I worry about the perimeter defense (still). More importantly, this team is locked into the Doncic/Reaves/Kessler core — they don't have the flexibility to pivot out. This has to work or it gets messy.

10. Minnesota Timberwolves

Last season 49-33
Minnesota made a major pivot from a defensive team banking on Anthony Edwards providing enough offense to an offensive team hoping Rudy Gobert can provide enough defense. If LaMelo Ball stays healthy, this is going to be the most fun team to watch in the league, whether they are better or not remains to be seen, but credit Minnesota for not just running it back with a team they knew was not quite good enough.

11. Boston Celtics

Last season 56-26
This ranking may be too low for Boston, a team that shot its way to the No. 2 seed in the East a season ago without Jayson Tatum, and he is back. But Jaylen Brown is gone, Paul George is not as good (and a much bigger injury risk). Mitchell Robinson will be great for the Celtics in the limited minutes he plays, and Derrick White remains an analytics darling, but is this team really a threat in the East? I need to be convinced.

12. Houston Rockets

Last season 52-30
Houston may be better than this ranking, getting Fred VanVleet back to be the organizing force and glue this team clearly needed last season is huge. Re-signing Tari Eason and adding Marcus Smart fit with where this team is headed. The Rockets are essentially running it back and betting on better health, but that may be enough.

13. Miami Heat

Last season 43-39
The Heat landed Giannis Antetokounmpo and they have him and Bam Adebayo, with Bobby Portis as a backup center. Any team with Antetokounmpo is poised to win a lot of regular-season games, and when they can get stops and run in transition, watch out. But in the halfcourt it's not going to be pretty. This team lacks shooting and depth, it lost Tyler Herro, Norman Powell, Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Kel'el Ware. They did sign Tim Hardaway Jr. and kept Andrew Wiggins and Simone Fontecchio. Maybe this ranking is a little low, but I'm not sure how much I trust the Heat.

14. Toronto Raptors

Last season 46-36
We're assuming that Kawhi Leonard will eventually be a member of the Raptors and that the trade with the Clippers will go through (also, expect the Clippers to get hit hard with penalties from the Leonard/Aspiration investigation, but not Leonard himself). If Leonard stays as healthy and plays like he did last season — an All-NBA season — next to Scottie Barnes and RJ Barrett, this ranking may well end up too low, and this could be a top-six team in the East. Toronto had a strong offseason and this was a good roll of the dice.

15. Orlando Magic

Last season 45-37
Orlando is in a tier of teams in the East that could be better than their ranking but need to prove it because I don't fully trust the roster (Boston, Miami, Toronto, and Atlanta are in that boat as well). Orlando is running it back for another year with the Franz Wagner and Paolo Banchero core, along with Desmond Bane (who was fantastic last season), and betting that new coach Sean Sweeney and better health will change things. Maybe, but I need to see it.

16. Dallas Mavericks

Last season 26- 56.
The biggest addition to the Mavericks will be getting Kyrie Irving back healthy to run the point, and that, combined with the development of Cooper Flagg in his second season, makes the Mavericks poised to make one of the biggest year-over-year improvements in the league. Morez Johnson, the No. 9 pick, looks like he can help in the rotation now and Santi Aldama is a quality pickup.

17. Atlanta Hawks

Last season 46-36
The Hawks went an impressive 20-6 after the Trae Young trade last season and then took the Knicks more games in the playoffs (six) than the Spurs did. Atlanta clearly is on the right path with this roster, but was the end of last season a mirage (there were a lot of tanking teams)? How real is it? Kingston Flemmings has impressed at the point in Summer League serving more as a floor general and facilitator than the scorer we saw at Houston, he looks like a winner. If he can be that guy at the NBA level, this ranking will be too low, given Jalen Johnson's All-NBA play.

18. Washington Wizards

Last season 17-65

Another team that may prove this ranking is way too low, but I need to see it to believe it. That said, a starting group with Trae Young at the point, AJ Dybantsa (who has impressed at Summer League) on the wing, and a front line of Anthony Davis and Alex Sarr is a good team that is going to take a big step forward and give Wizards fans a team they can really get behind. If it all clicks, this is a playoff team, but I need to see it.

19. Utah Jazz

Last season 22-60

Another team poised for a huge leap and one a starved fan base can really get behind — if it clicks, this is a playoff team. No. 2 pick Darryn Peterson has impressed with his play and maturity running the show, and he, with Keyonte George, Ace Bailey, Lauri Markkanen and Jaren Jackson Jr., is going to win a lot more games. They are this low in the power rankings because I need to see it on more than just paper, but the potential is there.

20. Phoenix Suns

Last season 45-37
Phoenix largely stood pat, bringing back Collin Gillespie, Jordan Goodwin and Mark Williams, while essentially swapping out Grayson Allen with Luke Kennard. This was a good team last season, but in a league with far less tanking this season (thanks to the new lottery odds), the Suns' record may get a little worse just standing still.

21. Portland Trail Blazers

Last season 42-40
Portland made a good low-risk, high-reward roll of the dice by giving up almost nothing for Ja Morant, but whether he can really lift them up remains to be seen. Also, as much as the owner-friendly contract he was handed is an abomination, Micah Nori is a good choice to be head coach. Portland gets Damian Lillard back and maybe is much better than this ranking, but they need a few things to go right in a deep West for that to happen.

22. Chicago Bulls

Last season 31-51
Caleb Wilson showed the flashes that made him the No. 4 pick at Summer League, but he also showed why he's a bit of a project — hiring Tiago Splitter as coach to guide him is a win. Adding Norman Powell and Nic Claxton to a lineup with Josh Giddey raises this team's floor to a pretty good level, but for them to be more than that, we'll need to see it.

23. LA Clippers

Last season 42-40
The Clippers moved on from the Kawhi Leonard era (and he was still a gamble worth taking, but that's a different conversation). It was time, but this team is not better now than it was a year ago, it's poised for a retooling. Still, with Brandon Ingram, Darius Garland and a young Keaton Wagler (whose game is better suited for the NBA than the glorified pickup of Summer League), the floor for this team is still pretty good. We'll see how much Tyronn Lue can get out of them in a very deep West.

24. Golden State Warriors

Last season 37-45
The Warriors were rumored in a lot of deals, but nothing much has come of it (unless there is a LeBron surprise out there). Yaxel Lendeborg looks ready to play meaningful minutes from Day 1, he has an NBA body and more importantly processes the game really well. They need his athleticism, because otherwise the Warriors are running it back and waiting for Jimmy Butler to get healthy midseason, making this team much more threatening.

25. Memphis Grizzlies

Last season 25-57

I like what Memphis is building. Drafting Cameron Boozer — who was exactly as promised in Summer League, just fundamentally sound and plug-and-play as an NBA four — and playing him between Zach Edey and Cedric Coward, with Isaiah Stewart and Jerami Grant off the bench, gives the Grizzlies a quality front line to build on. There is still some building to do at the guard and wing spots, but Memphis is headed in the right direction.

26. New Orleans Pelicans

Last season 26-56
Maybe the most perplexing offseason of any team — the Pelicans won 26 games and decided to run it back. They switched out Willie Green as coach with Jamahl Mosley (who was in Orlando last season), but aside from that, they changed almost nothing. Does Joe Dumars believe that a new coach will suddenly make this a winning team? Trey Murphy and Herb Jones are back despite countless teams around the league having interest in them.

27. Charlotte Hornets

Last season 44-38
Trading LaMelo Ball after the team's best record in a decade may have caught fans off guard, but Charlotte is trying to build something long-term sustainable around Kon Knueppel and Brandon Miller, and they rightfully believe this is a roster they can win more with long term. Naz Reid absolutely helps along those lines. That said, expect a short-term step back for this team.

28. Brooklyn Nets

Last season 20-62
Mikel Brown Jr. has had his moments and is averaging 18 points and four assists a game in Las Vegas, but he is also turning the ball over three times a game. Picking up Julius Randle this summer is a floor raiser move for the Nets, who will win more games with him, Brown and Egor Demin (who has put up points in Las Vegas but isn't as efficient as one would hope).

29. Sacramento Kings

Last season 22-60
Darius Acuff has had his moments, but has been up and down in Las Vegas as he has struggled to create space and knock down shots — in college he was a volume scorer but he was pretty efficient. He's averaging 19 points a game in Vegas but shooting 36.5%. The Kings are going to give him a chance this season, and Acuff may turn out to be special, but there is going to be a learning curve.

30. Milwaukee Bucks

Last season 32-50
It was time for the Bucks and Giannis Antetokounmpo to part ways, and they got some good players back in the deal such as the Tyler Herro homecoming, but that is not going to make the transition any easier. It's going to be a rough couple of seasons as Milwaukee transitions to what's next. Taylor Jenkins was a good hire as coach and he will help ease that transition.

Recapping the Guardians 2026 MLB Draft

CORAL GABLES, FL - MARCH 02: Florida pitcher Liam Peterson (12) pitches in the fourth inning as the Miami Hurricanes faced the Florida Gators on March 2, 2024, at Mark Light Field at Alex Rodriguez Park in Coral Gables, Florida. (Photo by Samuel Lewis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Time to review the collection of young players the Guardians snagged in the 2026 MLB draft:

1st Round: Liam Peterson, RHP, Florida, 6’5, 225 lbs

Baseball America said:

“6-foot-5, 225 pounds and throws from a steep vertical arm slot. He throws a high-carry four-seam fastball that averages around 96 mph and has been up to 100. His fastball has clear plus traits and power, but he needs to improve his command to avoid throwing middle-middle heaters that get hit hard. All three of his secondaries are standout swing-and-miss pitches. He has obvious upside potential as a starter, but will need to make strides with his control and command to stick in that role.”

ESPN said:

“Peterson was in the mix at a lot of picks before the No. 19 spot where he was eventually selected. His physical ability — 6-foot-5, up to 101 mph, three-above average off-speed pitches — is substantial and with another tick of fastball command, he could be a frontline starter.”

Keith Law of the Athletic said: “Cleveland landed some of the best pure stuff in the draft here. …He’s 93-98 with a plus slider and 55 curveball and I think his changeup could easily end up an above-average pitch as well.”

2nd Round – Logan Schmidt, LHP, Ganesha HS, 6’4, 210 lbs

Baseball America said:

“Schmidt has a 6-foot-4, 215-pound frame and an easy, repeatable delivery that features a three-quarters slot and a consistently balanced finish. He has a starter’s operation and advanced feel to spot a three-pitch mix. After touching 97 mph on the 2025 circuit, Schmidt pushed his fastball up to 98 during his senior spring season and was consistently throwing the pitch in the mid 90s. He attacks the zone with his fastball and can locate it to both sides of the plate to get ahead in counts and set up his secondaries. Against righties, Schmidt is confident in a mid-to-upper-80s changeup that he sells with great arm speed and has above-average potential.”

Keith Law said: “Simplifying his pitch mix and cleaning up his delivery could make him a mid-rotation starter.”

3rd Round – Tre Broussard, LHH CF, Houston, 6’0, 190 lbs

Baseball America said;

“He’s a 6-foot, 190-pound outfielder with dynamic speed and one of the best center field gloves in the class. Broussard missed time early in 2026 with a hamstring injury but hit .344/.436/.472 in 44 games while stealing 25 bases. Broussard has an old-school leadoff skill set, with a hit-over-power profile and plenty of speed. He added a bit of strength and traded some contact for power in 2026 but still profiles as a 50-55 pure hitter with below-average game power. Broussard is a 70-grade runner who creates pressure on infield defenses and opposing batteries. He’s a high-volume and efficient basestealer who went 56-for-64 (88%) in two years at Houston. Broussard is one of the better center field defenders in the class.”

Fourth Round – Kade Lewis, LHH 1B/3B, Wake Forest, 6’2, 220 lbs

Baseball America said:

“He’s a 6-foot-2, 220-pound lefthanded hitter with a buttery smooth lefthanded swing and sound approach. He has a quiet setup and a low-maintenance swing with a slight uphill path but an all-fields approach and a knack for the barrel. He can drive the ball with solid power to both gaps and has gotten to consistent pullside home run power with metal bats, but his wood bat track record is more limited, and his raw power could be more conducive to a hit-over-power profile. That could make his defensive profile a challenge, as Lewis is a below-average runner and more of a first base defender than a third baseman.”

ESPN said:

Lewis (fourth round) is the most polished of the high picks from the college side. If everything works out just right, he might be a 55-grade hitter with 55-grade power who can play a decent third base, but otherwise he’ll be something like a league-average hitter at first base who can fill the most valuable side of a platoon.

5th Round – Lucas Moore, LHH OF, Louisville, 6’0, 185 lbs

Prospect Porch said:

Moore boasts elite bat to ball metrics. He put up a whiff rate of 11.8% in 2025, paired with a sub 8% strikeout rate, both some of the better in the entire draft class. It’s a slappy swing from the left side with a knack for contact and a strong ability to foul of pitches. Moore’s speed plays in a huge way. It’s comfortably 70 grade speed, and it’ll help him garner extra bases that most other wouldn’t. He’s one of the better base stealers in all of college baseball. Power hasn’t been a huge part of Moore’s game so far, it’s well below average at this point, but there could be more he could squeeze out of his lean frame further down the road. In the outfield, Moore projects as a plus glove in center field. He takes clean routes to the ball, covering a ton of ground with his double plus speed.

ESPN said: “He has elite athletic traits.”

6th Round – Deitan LaChance, RHH C, Oklahoma, 6’5, 231 lbs

MLB Pipeline said:

Lachance creates well-above-average raw power that plays to all fields with a combination of bat speed, strength and leverage in his massive 6-foot-5, 231-pound frame. He has a sound right-handed swing but his 36 percent chase rate ranked among the highest in NCAA Division I and is a cause for concern. He’s extremely vulnerable against breaking balls out of the zone but hammers curveballs and sliders that venture over the plate.

Questionable if he can stay at catcher defensively. Keith Law said: “This is a great gamble for the sixth round with an outside chance he becomes a regular.”

7th Round- Savion Sims, RHP, Texas HS, 6’8, 215 lbs

MLB.com said:

Sims has some of the highest upside in the class, and many expected him to head to Oklahoma after he wasn’t selected on Day 1. The Guardians are hoping to capitalize on the potential of the 6-foot-8 righty who touches triple digits on his fastball and still has room to fill out his frame. Getting his long limbs in sync and finding consistency on his slider and changeup remain a work in progress, but his arm speed is hard to find.

ESPN said:

Sims will regularly throw 100 mph someday, possibly soon, and is 6-foot-8 with a nice delivery, even if his pitch shapes aren’t elite.

8th Round – Matt Scott, RHP, Georgia, 6’7, 241 kbs

Perfect Game said:

Extra-large, athletic frame wiht broad shoulders and present strength throughout, additional room to grow moving forward. Right-handed pitcher, big rock step moving into a leg lift up above belt, balanced on backside over the rubber; hook to arm action through the back but plenty of quickness while working to a three-quarters release point. Fastball topped out at 93 mph and lived in the low-90s, creates big extension out front and shows sinking life to the bottom of the zone. Slider up to 84 mph with late, short bite to it and tunnels the pitch well out of the hand, playing off of fastball nicely. Flashed a changeup at 82 mph with occasional fade to arm side. Sound and under control delivery, repeats it well.

9th Round – Mario Pesca, RHP, Oklahoma State, 6’7, 241 lbs

Perfect Game said:

RHP with a 6-6 225 lb. frame from Bronx, NY who attends Cardinal Spellman. Big and strong physical build with the potential to get stronger. Pretty simple turn and throw delivery, slow paced and under control. Fastball was in the mid-80’s with good running life at times, complimented his fastball with a slurve type breaking ball that flashed good depth. Change up has similar running life to his fastball and mimics the pitch well. Has the ability to mix his pitches and keep hitters off balance.

10th Round – Ryan Bilka, RHP, Miami, 6’1, 208 lbs

Perfect Game said:

Tall and lean athletic build with plenty of room to get stronger. Two-way prospect who graded out better at this event as a right handed pitcher. Has sound mechanics on the mound with a high 3/4’s arm slot and good direction and energy to the plate, repeats his mechanics well. Steady mid-80’s fastball, showed good command to both sides of the plate and challenged hitters with the pitch. Slider was a quality second pitch with good power and sharpness from the same slot as his fastball. 

11th Round – Jake Bean, RHP, Louisville, 6’3, 190 lbs

Baseball America said:

Bean is an impressive athlete who has the delivery, control and arsenal to profile as a high-probability starter. Bean sits in the 92-94 mph range with his four-seam fastball and has been up to 97, but his velocity this spring has been a bit up and down.His secondaries include an upper-80s short slider, a low-80s curveball and a mid-80s changeup.

12th Round – Ben Cleary, RHH INF, Santa Clara, 6’0, 200 lbs

Baseball America said:

Cleary is a contact hitter through and through. He stays within the strike zone and does an excellent job putting the barrel on the ball against any pitch type or velocity, with a 90% in-zone contact rate in 2026. The few home runs he has hit in college have gone to the pull side, but Cleary’s raw power is modest and he’s unlikely to grow into significantly more in the future. Middle infield defensive value should help curb the limitations of his offensive impact.

13th Round – Eric Dessens, LHH OF, Sacramento State, 6’1, 200 lbs

Baseball America said:

Dessens is a touch aggressive and doesn’t walk much, but he hammers fastballs and makes a lot of contact against high-level velocity, with more muted production and contact skills against secondaries. Dessens hits the ball hard and should have solid in-game gap power. He’s also a solid runner, but might not have the speed required for center field

14th Round – Carson Lane, RHP, UNLV, 6’3, 210 lbs

Not a lot out there but pitched in a tough environment and still got lots of whiffs. He gets good extension which the Guardians, of course, love.

15th Round – Alejandro Garza, RHH INF, Cal Poly, 5’9, 175 lbs

Baseball America said:

He is one of the hardest hitters in the country to strike out. He’s never struck out more than 6.2% of the time in a single season and owns a career 5.4% strikeout rate, but he also expands the zone freely and offers little on-base value beyond the singles and doubles he collects when he puts the ball in play. He also has well-below-average raw power and might never hit more than five homers a season with a wood bat. Garza is a below-average runner and has started at third base for three seasons.

16th Round – Sebastian Rolon, RHP, Florida HS, 6’2, 195 lbs

Perfect Game said:

Works from a full windup with a full arm path in back, high 3/4’s arm slot, has easy arm speed and a clean release. Fastball topped out at 88 mph, lots more velocity there as he matures, gets some carry up in the zone. Curveball has downer shape and he showed very good feel for the pitch and landed it for strikes on any count.

17th Round – Travis Lutz, RHP, Lamar, 6’4, 230 lbs

Prep Baseball Report said: “Long arm action, over-the-top slot. Curveball played with 12/6 shape, showed feel for pitch.“

18th Round – Parker Dilhoff, LHP, UNLV, 6’4, 240 lbs

Not much out there but he’s from Xenia, Ohio and struck out a bunch of guys in college. Throws low 90’s with the fastball.

19th Round – Zac Cowan, LHP, LSU, 5’11, 211 lbs

Baseball America said: “Cowan throws a fastball that sits around 90 mph and will touch 93, and uses a low-80s changeup as his go-to secondary and best overall pitch.”

20th Round – Parker Coil, LHP, Arkansas, 6’3, 195 lbs

Perfect Game said:

Tall and slender frame with longer limbs and big projection. A primary pitcher, fluid and loose delivery with athletic movements that sequence well. Full and clean arm stroke with a 3/4 release and good extension at release. Good angle to the fastball and gets arm side run, works down and moves the ball around. 1-7 shape to the breaking ball with tight spin and plays off the fastball well. Confident in the changeup with similar design to the fastball.

Undrafted Free Agents Announced So Far: Tyler Albanese, RHP, San Jose State, Pablo Figueroa, RHP, Central Point Christian Academy, Kellen Montgomery, RHP, UC Santa Barbara, Heath Andrews, RHP, NCSU, Cooper Carlgren, RHP, Lamar.

CBS Sports ranked Cleveland’s draft class as one of the top five of this year’s draft. Jim Callis of MLB Pipeline ranked the Guardians’ draftees as one of the top six classes for this year.

You can read Baseball America scouting reports here and reviews of the Guardians’ draft class here. Well-worth the subscription. You can read what Kiley McDaniel of ESPN said here.

For my own part, I love that the Guardians got a lot of big, strong pitchers. I can’t wait to see what their development group can do with that kind of clay. I also like LaChance a lot, and don’t see why he couldn’t be a big RHH stick at first base if catching doesn’t work out. If I had to make one prediction, it would be that Matt Scott will become a high leverage reliever for the Guardians in fairly short order. Let me know what you think of this year’s draft class in the comments below!

Demetrio Crisantes might be the first true homegrown Arizona Diamondback

AMARILLO, TX - JUNE 03: Demetrio Crisantes #3 of the Amarillo Sod Poodles looks on during the game between the Tulsa Drillers and the Amarillo Sod Poodles at Hodgetown on Wednesday, June 3, 2026 in Amarillo, Texas. (Photo by Elisa Chavez/Minor League Baseball via Getty Images)

Introduction

In the Arizona Diamondbacks nearly 30 years of existence, only eleven players in the organizations history were born in Arizona. However. just one of those players was drafted, developed, and made their MLB debut with the Diamondbacks. That player is right handed pitcher Charles Brewer, who was born in Paradise Valley, attended school in Scottsdale at Chaparral High School, choosing to attend UCLA after being drafted by the Angels in 2006. Instead, Brewer would spend three years pitching for UCLA, and would sign his first professional contract after his home town Diamondbacks took him in 12th round of the 2009 draft. Brewer would spend four years in the minor leagues before making his MLB debut with the Dbacks in 2013. Brewer’s MLB career was brief, pitching just six innings across four games with those 2013 Diamondbacks.

Technically, since Brewer played for UCLA prior to being drafted, no native Arizonan pitcher or hitter has spent the entirety of their amateur career inside the state, before being drafted and later debuting with the Diamondbacks. As far as I could tell from the cursory bit of research I did, it does appear that no Arizona born NBA, WNBA, NHL, or NFL player has accomplished the equivalent feat in their sport either. Editor’s note: the Phoenix Suns Koa Peat was brought to my attention in the comments. He would be the only other player to qualify in this discussion.

So on that note, I think it would be more than fair to say that Arizona sports has never really had a true homegrown player that has stuck around long enough to become part of the zeitgeist. I mention all of that, because that may change on the near future thanks to a young second base prospect in the Diamondbacks farm system who’s getting very close to MLB ready status, Demetrio Crisantes. Crisantes isn’t just a fringe minor leaguer either, as we’ll discuss in this article, he might end up being the team’s top minor league prospect entering the 2027 season.

Background

Demetrio Miguel Crisantes was born on September 5, 2004 in Tucson, Arizona. He grew up a little further south of Tucson, in Nogales, just north of the US-Mexico border. Crisantes was a standout for the Nogales High Aggies at shortstop. Although he had a strong commitment to the University of Arizona, the Diamondbacks drafted Crisantes seventh round of the 2022 MLB Draft (198th overall) by signing him for $425,000, significantly higher than the $247,200 slot value.

Here’s a video about Crisantes that was published right before the 2022 draft about his draft prospects, which goes into further detail on his Amateur career.

Professional Career

Crisantes made his professional debut the following year in the 2023 season. In 29 games in the Arizona Complex League, all at designated hitter, Crisantes hit .347.417/.465 with a 126 wRC+ and .420 wOBA.

Crisantes returned to the complex for another 29 games to start off the 2024 season, where he’d hit .355/.431/.521 with 441 wOBA and 144 wRC+. That performance earned Crisantes a promotion to the A ball level Visalia Rawhide. In 63 games for Visalia, Crisantes hit .333/.429/.478 with a 146 wRC+ and .427 wOBA. Combined across the two levels, Crisantes walked 12.5% of the time while striking out only 15.7% of the time, while stealing 30 bases. (I suppose it’s also worth mentioning that although he did continue to DH, he played at first, second, and thirdbase).

Highlights of Crisantes 2024 season are in the video below:


2025 was a lost season for Crisantes, with an injury limiting him to just 34 games and 151 plate appearances for the High A level Hillsboro Hops. However, he’d still put up above average numbers in the pitcher friendly Northwestern League, hitting .252/.358/.415 with a .354 wOBA and a 111 wRC+.

Crisantes began the 2026 season on the injury list once again, thanks to a hamstring injury in spring training As a result, he wouldn’t begin his season until May 19th, when he was activated for a rehab assignment, beginning with three games with the ACL D-backs, followed by four with the Hillsboro Hops, before finally being activated on June 2nd with the AA level Amarillo Sod Poodles. In his three game stint in the Complex League, Crisantes went 1 for 7 with a double, three walks, and three strikeouts. In his four game stint in the Northwestern league, Crisantes went 4 for 13 with two doubles, two HRs, three walks, and five strikeouts.

Through his first 32 games in Amarillo, Crisantes hit .306/.393/.532 with twelve doubles doubles, a pair of triples, and four homeruns. That works out to a 121 wRC+ and a .407 wOBA. He’s walked 10.3% of the time, while striking out a very reasonable 17.2% rate. The biggest highlight of Crisantes time in AA so far has been when he hit for the cycle on June 28th, which I’ve included in a highlight video below.

Across the three levels in 2026, Crisantes has hit .299/.398/.542 with a .414 wOBA and 127 wRC+ in the 39 games played. He’s walked in 12.3 percent of his plate appearances, while striking out 19.3 percent of the time.

Scouting Reports/Prospect Rankings

Entering 2026, Baseball America had Crisantes as the Diamondbacks number three ranked prospect, and giving him the following scouting grades:

Hit: 60 | Power: 50 | Run: 45 | Field: 45 | Arm: 45

In addition, BA’s Scouting Report had the following to say:

Crisantes has a simple, repeatable swing that allows him to generate hard contact at good angles. Though the raw thump he produces isn’t plus, his tight launch angle distribution suggests a hitter who can maximize the power he has at his disposal. He rarely swings and misses and showed an improved approach in 2025 before his injury. Scouting looks were limited during his abbreviated season, but evaluators and D-backs officials said Crisantes’ defensive play at second base has improved. His arm remains below-average but most see the total defensive package as good enough—assuming that he provides above-average production at the plate. He is a fringe-average runner.


Entering 2026, MLB Pipeline had Crisantes as the Diamondbacks number four ranked prospect, with the following scouting grades, while giving him a 50 future overall.

Hit: 60 | Power: 50 | Run: 50 | Arm: 45 | Field: 45

MLB Pipeline’s scouting report:

He runs a simple operation in the box, slightly lowering his hands and lifting his leg to start his load without overcomplicating matters. The result is a lot of contact when he swings, and he barely misses on anything in the zone. Synergy had his in-zone contact rate at 93 percent in 2025. A lot of that contact is in the air too, helping him make the most of his limited raw power. How the pop responds to the shoulder and year-long layoff will be worth following in ’26. An average runner, Crisantes is expected to be a primary second baseman moving forward with enough range to work up the middle but a limited arm.


Over on the Athletic, Crisantes was ranked at #4. No scouting grades were included but Keith Law did have the following to say:

Crisantes was on the top 100 a year ago, and still has the best pure hit tool in the system, but his 2025 season ended after 34 games when he tore the labrum in his left (non-throwing) shoulder, finishing with a .252/.358/.415 line in his High-A debut. That comes on top of Tommy John surgery when he was in high school, which had to be redone because the first surgery didn’t take, so he just hasn’t played all that much over the last three years.


Finally, over on Fangraphs.com, Crisantes was ranked as the organization’s fifth ranked prospect, with the following scouting grades (future/present value):

Hit: 40/60 |Game Power: 35/45 | Raw Power: 40/45 | Speed: 50/50 |Field 45/55 |

The author of Fangraphs Dbacks 2026 top prospect list, Brendan Gawlawski had the following to say:

Crisantes has a case as the best pure hitter in the D-backs system. He’s quick to the ball with a manipulable bat path that lets him barrel pitches all over the zone. He makes a ton of contact, tends to hit it in the air, and while he doesn’t have big raw power, the quality of his contact should allow him to chip in his share of extra base hits. He’s also got a very mature approach for his age. Visually, his zone control and pitch recognition were plus in my look, and the numbers bear this out. Crisantes had one of the lowest miss rates in the org and the very lowest on pitches in the heart of the plate. The huge jump from his overall swing rate to his swing rate on pitches out over the middle is also very encouraging, and highlights the selective aggressiveness you love to see. An average runner, Crisantes is also a good defender. He doesn’t have enough arm for the left side, but his instincts and ability to make accurate throws from different positions warrants an above-average projection at second.


In terms of my own evaluations, Crisantes might be one of the best pure hitters I’ve seen come up through the Diamondbacks farm system, and I agree with the statement that he has the best hit tool in the farm system. He’s got a very quick and compact swing that’s very repeatable, with a surprising amount of power for a guy his size. His weakest tool is absolutely the throwing arm, which I would say precludes playing him at third base. On top of that, his long term health is a major concern considering his history. I expect Crisantes to be in AAA Reno by the end of the year for a few game cup of coffee, and I then would expect him to reach the major league level by the end of next season. In my own prospect rankings I likely will end up having him as the Diamondbacks top prospect entering the 2027 season, as the players who have appeared at the MLB level with the Dbacks this year should no longer qualify for the most part. After prospect graduations, I would expect Crisantes to appear at or near the top of the Dbacks top prospect rankings, and to appear on a few MLB top 100 prospects lists.

Red Wings To Face Original 6 Opponent In Home Opener

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The 2026-27 NHL Season will begin earlier than what most fans are used to thanks to a condensed exhibition schedule along with another two games added to the regular-season campaign. 

The Detroit Red Wings, who will only play four exhibition games, are set to open the regular season on Oct. 2 against the visiting New York Rangers at Little Caesars Arena.

Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest newsgame-day coverage, and player features

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The version of the Red Wings that hits the ice that day is going to look different than the roster that was met with a chorus of booing after their loss on April 11 to the New Jersey Devils, sealing their fate of not making the playoffs.

The future of Dylan Larkin, who requested a trade, has yet to be settled, especially in the wake of the recent leadership transition that saw Steve Yzerman vacate his role as GM.

Before that took place, Yzerman signed Viktor Arvidsson and Daniil Tarasov, while also acquiring Keegan Kolesar.

Veterans James Van Riemsdyk and Cam Talbot aren’t expected back, while all indications point toward Patrick Kane departing as well.

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Former Spurs assistant coach has curious explanation for NBA Finals loss to Knicks

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson being interviewed by ESPN broadcaster Ernie Johnson after the 2026 NBA Finals, Image 2 shows Two men in black shirts with San Antonio Spurs logos talking on the court
Knicks win the NBA Finals

The Spurs lost the NBA Finals in five games, and according to Sean Sweeney, the top reasons for that had nothing to do with the title-winning Knicks.

Sweeney, San Antonio’s former top assistant coach and now head coach of the Orlando Magic, offered his take on why his squad is just the runner-up.

“I think a few things,” he said on and episode “The Ryen Russillo Show” that dropped Monday. “One, I think there’s a little attrition having to go through the previous series. Two, bad luck. They told me if the games were like 46 minutes or whatever, we would’ve won 4-1.”

Sean Sweeney bolted the Spurs for the Magic head coach job but not before a few pop shots at the Knicks. NBAE via Getty Images

The first two reasons don’t give the Knicks much credit for forcing the Spurs into mistakes, as his first reason blames a grueling seven-game series against the Thunder and fails to acknowledge the Knicks’ incredible comebacks in four of those five games.

“Jalen [Brunson] obviously had a monster game in that last one. Coached him in Dallas. Happy for him – kind of. I think we just made more mistakes than we had made in the previous series,” Sweeney added. “You can maybe say something to that, but you don’t do what you did, and then all of a sudden become young.”

The Spurs led all five games of the NBA Finals by double digits, but wound up blowing them in four games — including a championship-clinching comeback from 15 points down by the Knicks in Game 5.

Sweeney added that the Spurs’ young players may have struggled to handle media responsibilities.

“The one thing I think that’s a little different in the finals than the other rounds is when you have to do media in the finals, you have to answer questions even when you’ve played poorly or struggled. And you don’t have to do that in previous rounds,” Sweeney said.

The Knicks dominated the second halves of playoff games. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

The Knicks were +40 in the second half of all five games and +26 in all fourth quarters combined as the Spurs appeared to wilt under pressure during the NBA Finals.

Coach Mitch Johnson’s group, of course, famously blew a 29-point lead in Game 4, which was essentially the end of the road as the Knicks finished the series in five games.

San Jose Sharks 2026-27 Home Opener Announced

Despite us being in the dog days of summer, hockey is just around the corner. On Wednesday morning, the San Jose Sharks' home opener for the 2026-27 was officially revealed. On October 1, the Sharks will host new-look Florida Panthers, featuring both of the Tkachuk brothers, in their first game at the SAP Center of the new campaign.

Historically, the Sharks have struggled a bit against the Panthers, as they have an overall record of 16-19-5 against the team from Sunrise, Florida. Things did change during the 2025-26 season though, as the Sharks were able to sweep the season series against Florida for the first time since the 2015-`16 season. The Sharks' win over the Panthers on November 8, 2025 was their first victory over them in general since the 2017-18 season.

It'll certainly be a tough test for the Sharks when they start the season, but considering they have playoff aspirations, it's an important one. Even though the Panthers missed the playoffs last season, they should be a powerhouse in the Eastern Conference once again this season, now that they're fully healthy. If the Sharks are truly going to be competing for a playoff spot in April, they'll need to have convincing performances against teams with proven success in recent memory. While they won't have to go through the Panthers for a playoff spot, getting one over on one of the NHL's top teams would be a great start to the new season.

Previewing the trade deadline, reviewing the draft with Mets VP Kris Gross | The Mets Pod

Joe DeMayo welcomes New York, New York's John Jastremski as guest co-host to deliver the latest episode of The Mets Pod, which looks ahead to the trade deadline and looks back on the MLB Draft with Mets VP of Amateur & International Scouting Kris Gross. 

First up, Joe and JJ dive into the Mets' recent struggles, the issues with Francisco Lindor,all kinds of potential trade possibilities, plus stories about Juan Soto and the All-Star Game. 

Later, Joe catches up with Gross for an in-depth recap of the Mets' 2026 draft class, and then the show wraps with Joe and JJ answering Mailbag questions about trades, the best rookie for the Mets this season, and undrafted free agents.

Be sure to subscribe to The Mets Pod at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

Three way too early questions about the 2026-27 Spurs

SAN ANTONIO, TX - MARCH 12: De'Aaron Fox #4 of the San Antonio Spurs and Dylan Harper #2 of the San Antonio Spurs looks on during the game against the Denver Nuggets on March 12, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. 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 (Photos by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Making the NBA Finals sure makes the time fly. The Spurs’ 2025-26 season only ended a month ago, and we’ve already gotten through the NBA Draft, the vast majority of free agency (thank goodness they aren’t caught up in the LeBron James Decision 4.0 or Kawhi Leonard trade debacle) and most of Summer League. With that in mind, it’s time to start looking ahead to the next season. Even though they are pretty much returning the same roster, plus the additions of Tobias Harris, Jayden Quaintance and Tarris Reed, there are still some questions to ponder as we enter the inevitable doldrums of the offseason.

How will the Spurs manage their guard trio this time?

This was a question going into last season after the Spurs had experienced a shocking rise in the draft lottery to 2nd overall with the chance to take Dylan Harper. They already had reigning Rookie of the Year Stephon Castle, and they had traded for De’Aaron Fox a few months prior and promised him an extension. This left some wondering if they should go for need over talent and draft someone like Kon Knueppel instead (*cough* Kevin O’Connor), but the Spurs stuck with their instincts and were rewarded with a guard rotation that almost never saw a drop in productivity when someone was injured or sat while playing a huge role in leading them the Finals.

The question now is, will the same approach work again next season? There have been unsubstantiated rumors that Harper may not be willing to accept a bench role for a second season, and whether that’s true or not, are the Spurs even considering it, or is possible they start their three-headed monster? Such a decision would likely move Devin Vassell to the bench, both for reasons we’ll get to below and because they’ll need more size in the line-up if Fox, Castle and Harper all start. Vassell would likely accept that role not only because he is unselfish, but he’d probably sub in relatively quickly since, if the trio were to start, they technically don’t have a back-up point guard, so there would be some staggering of guard the rotation.

Whatever approach they go with next season, questions will remain how long they can keep it up. They won’t be able to pay all three when all is said and done, so is Fox on borrowed time with the franchise, with Castle due an extension in 2028 and Harper in 2029 — a year before Fox’s contract ends? That part is not a question the Spurs have to answer this season or even the next, but it will keep hovering in the background for the foreseeable future.

How does the addition of Tobias Harris affect the rotation?

While everyone understood that power forward was an area the Spurs could improve this offseason, most viable options were considered out of their price range, so it was a pleasant surprise when two-way veteran Harris agreed to sign for essentially the midlevel exception. Not only that, but Harrison Barnes agreed to re-sign on a low deal despite knowing he would likely play a minimal role for the first time in his career, and Julian Champagnie re-upped on a new, team-friendly deal. Now that they’ve gone from a bit thin to stacked at the position, how does it affect the rotation?

Regardless of how or if spots 1-3 change, PF may be an open battle in training camp between Harris and Champagnie, with both featuring different strengths and weaknesses. While the Champagnie is a more reliable three-point shooter — which may be needed with the starters, especially if Vassell is moved to the bench and/or at least one of the guards don’t become more consistent — there isn’t much else to his offensive game, and his decision-making on defense can be sporadic. On the other hand, Harris has a more well-rounded game on both ends, including a midrange game that the Spurs were lacking, but is that what the starters need?

Another aspect to consider is who would fit better with a bench rotation that will include Keldon Johnson, Carter Bryant and Luke Kornet, plus a point guard or Vassell. That is a deep group but lacks outside shooting, which again begs the question if Champagnie’s shooting would be more helpful off the bench. Logic seems to point to Harris starting and Julian coming off the bench, but when it really comes down to it, both would probably be fine in either role. And if one of them gets hurt, you can’t ask for a much better fill-in plan that Barnes. As is the case with the guards, depth is a good problem to have.

What can Victor Webmanyama do next?

It’s hard to believe that Wemby is pretty much a consensus top three player at this point but still has so much room to improve. He posted career highs in points (25), rebounds (11.5) and field goal percentage (51.2%) while making the All-Star team, winning Defensive Player of the Year, coming in third in MVP voting, making the All-NBA and All-Defense First Teams and leading the league in blocks. And yet, there are plenty holes in his game to fill.

For starters, as good as he already is on offense, he could be a better three-tier scorer. He shot a league average 35% from three on a 5.5 attempts, which was back to his rookie rate after attempting almost 9 per game in his second season. While “average” is pretty good for a big man, he was wildly inconsistent at times and was sometimes a bit stubborn about moving down low when they weren’t falling. He also lacks a midrange game, which can get him in trouble when he tries to drive but gets stuck. Developing a signature move in that area could go a long way in providing an outlet when the defense swarms. It would also help him with protecting the ball better, as his attempts to drive from the perimeter resulted in turnovers too often.

Finally, perhaps his biggest focus this offeseason should be strength and stamina. While he was robbed of some chances to work on that last summer thanks to deep vein thrombosis, that is not the case this summer (although rest needs to be a priority as well). He managed some impressive big-minutes games during the playoffs, but he was drained in the fourth quarters by the Finals, which played a role in their four blown leads.

The sky is the limit for Wemby, and if he can improve his offensive game, stay healthy and play more minutes, he could be lifting the MVP trophy by the end of next season — although the ultimate goal will be the Larry O’Brien trophy.

The case for the Reds trading Spencer Steer

CINCINNATI, OHIO - JULY 10: Spencer Steer #7 of the Cincinnati Reds walks out to the field during the game against the Chicago Cubs at Great American Ball Park on July 10, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

You remember when the Cincinnati Reds hitt he rebuild button with a sledgehammer, right? Back when they shipped away Sonny Gay, Luis Castillo, Jesse Winker, & Co. in search of greener pastures and a ‘sustainable’ future?

Man, it often feels like just yesterday. It’s about to feel like tomorrow though, too.

As the last place Reds emerge from the All Star break, that rebuild is in dire need of being rebuilt again already. That 2022 season saw Cincinnati also deal away pitcher Tyler Mahle to the Minnesota Twins, a deal that commanded the since-DFA’d Christian Encarnacion-Strand as well as the infinitely versatile Spencer Steer – the latter of whom actually made his big league debut that very season.

There was initially hope that Steer would turn out to be something significant, what with his rock-solid 2023 performance. The reality, though, is that across over 2350 PA in his career, he’s the owner of an almost perfectly average 102 OPS+. Across the 2024-2026 seasons (nearly 1600 PA), that dips just a slightly below-average 98 OPS+ and 99 wRC+, numbers that are more or less in-line with what he’s doing this year (103 OPS+, 103 wRC+).

If that isn’t the definition of ‘settling into who you are as a hitter,’ I do know know what is.

He walks a bit over 9% of the time, which is good. He strikes out 21-22% of the time, which is just fine. He’s a solid baserunner, knows how to barrel a ball pretty well despite subpar bat speed, and his defense – hardly his calling card – is still somehow adaptable enough that he was a Gold Glove finalist at 1B in 2025 and found himself in CF most of last week.

Settling in as a super-utility guy is fine for a club. Most good clubs desperately need that, in fact. But the thing about ‘settling in’ when it comes to baseball is that it’s a finite experience by design – free agency inches closer, salaries jump higher, and all of a sudden teams are paying what they’d like to pay for star production for guys who are the malleable bits on the roster.

Because baseball’s arbitration process values arcane/concrete things like homers, RBI, and steals – three things that a mostly healthy Steer has compiled with aplomb despite middling rate stats over the years – he’s already making $4 million in his first arb year this year. He’ll get two raises on that in 2027 and 2028 years that he’s team-controlled, all that despite having accrued just a grand total of 3.4 fWAR/2.6 bWAR since the start of the 2024 season.

That’s hardly jumping off the page, even if it doesn’t value things like ‘you can hold your nose defensively with him at time because there’s value in him giving so many other guys a needed day-off.‘

Almost by design, the Reds have already painted over Steer. You’d almost think that if any one of the litany of hitters they acquired in the last rebuild had actually hit the ground running (i.e. CES, Noelvi Marte, Matt McLain, etc.) he might have already been traded away by now. But his work at 1B has been swallowed up by the need to play Sal Stewart there since Stewart’s ability to play 3B has been thwarted by the signing of Eugenio Suarez and the long-term acquisition of Ke’Bryan Hayes. If you can’t play a player at his best position because there’s someone better that needs to play there, well, your roster construction has hit a total snag.

TJ Friedl being horrendous, Noelvi Marte floundering again, and both Blake Dunn and Dane Myers getting hurt have opened time for Steer to be a mostly full-time OF for the time being. It’s a great showcase for ‘he’s doing it’ whether it’s actually a showcase of ‘he can do it,’ but perhaps that’s intriguing to other clubs out there. So much so that Bob Nightengale of USA Today reported earlier in the week that clubs were eyeing Steer as a potential trade target. His work against LHP this season (.333/.436/.603 in 95 PA) seems to be standing out as much as anything, as teams across the league are in desperate search for such a commodity.

Don’t believe me? Check this MLB.com preview of team needs at the deadline and search for ‘right-handed bat.’ Each of the Red Sox, Guardians, Mariners, Tigers, Marlins, and Phillies are listed with that very same need, and while each of them have openings in various places around the infield, that’s precisely what makes Steer so damn attractive right now – he can, in theory, play pretty much any of them.

Seemingly the only real case against trading him right now, barring an acceptable return, is that he’s too important to the team and he’s got two more years of team control, maybe they’ll be good by then! The latter is constantly debatable since this is the Cincinnati Reds with the same front office they’ve always had we’re talking about here. The former, though, is something of a tell – if a guy who’s the literal definition of average offensively and slightly sub-par defensively across the board is too valuable to the roster, the roster’s in a pretty damn awful state, right?

Right?

If, and only if, the Reds commit to cutting Hayes and eating that contract, if the Reds call time on Marte the way they did on CES and Rece Hinds, if the Reds non-tender TJ Friedl and concede McLain is a bench-glove, and then if they commit to spending actual good money this winter via free agency and trades to back a five-man rotation of Hunter Greene, Chase Burns, Andrew Abbott, Nick Lodolo, and Rhett Lowder heading into 2027, I will acknowledge that dealing Steer doesn’t need to happen. The only thing needy about even discussing this is that it’s the Reds we’re talking about, who won’t go spend or push in chips in trades this winter to actually try to win within the next two years – other teams with a guy like Steer at this point in his career would gladly start him 5 times a week (as many as they can against LHP) and bat him 7th or 8th and be happy about it.

That’s not the scenario in which this club operates, however. They have committed to flipping guys when they get expensive for younger ones, and Steer – who’ll turn 29 this December – has already become one of the older guys who has the league’s spotlight turned his particular way.

I don’t like advocating for it necessarily, as I do think he’s a perfectly fine complementary piece. On the Reds, though, he’s been tasked with being so much more, and that’s simply not working on a team 9 games under .500 and mired in last place. So, you move him, in my humble opinion, and begin the process of spending the ~$6 or so million you’d otherwise be spending on him next year in another way.

(For an interesting thought piece, now consider JJ Bleday, who also has two years of team control remaining after this year…)

How did the MLB Draft change the Yankees’ organizational depth?

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JULY 12: Ben Grable #39 of the New York Yankees on the American League Team signs autographs at Citizens Bank Park on July 12, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Every year, after the coffers are refilled through the draft, it is a good time to take a look at where the organization’s depth stands. Over the last few seasons, the Yankees have promoted several of their top prospects and used their farm system depth to acquire pieces at the Trade Deadline. Coming into this season, many evaluators ranked New York’s farm system in the bottom third of baseball. The system was also seen as top-heavy, with a drop-off after the first four players and then another big drop from the sixth slot down.

The draft is not going to fix those flaws over one weekend, but it is a starting point. Prior to the draft, the farm system was particularly thin at catcher and among position players in general. Other than top prospect George Lombard Jr. and the injured Dax Kilby, the Yankees desperately needed an infusion of mitts and sticks.

Brian Cashman and the rest of the front office addressed that need by using two of the team’s first five picks on catchers, adding Brendan Brock out of Oklahoma in the third round and Bear Harrison of Texas A&M, in the fifth. The Yankees do not currently have a catcher ranked among the organization’s top 30 prospects, as they’ve used their previously compiled depth in various trades over the past couple years. In the past, the team has often turned to the international signing period to add catching talent. The current lack of depth appears to have pushed the organization toward adding some domestic talent to the pipeline as well.

Other than the previously mentioned Lombard and Kilby, the only other Yankees position player prospect ranked in the organization’s MLB Pipeline top 10 is Spencer Jones. Putting it nicely, the organization is thin as a rail when it comes to hitters.

In addition to the two catchers, the Yankees added rock-solid outfielder Paul Gutierrez Contreras II from Cal State Fullerton in the fourth round. They then dipped into the high school ranks to select third baseman Andrew Gonzalez out of Americas High School in Texas in the sixth and returned to the prep ranks in the 13th and 15th round for outfielder Lee Garris and shortstop William Cutshall. Look for any draft slot value surplus go toward adding these talented young hitters and convincing them to go pro; despite the rounds where they were taken, there’s likely a higher ceiling on both than many of the collegiate players from the back half of the first 10 rounds. This is always the calculus with the modern MLB Draft. As of now, Garris and Cutshall are on the verge of signing, but Gonzalez could take time.

Luke Pettitte, a two-way player and son of former Yankees great Andy Pettitte, was selected in the eighth round out of Dallas Baptist. Many evaluators believe he projects better as a pitcher, but Pettitte performed well as a designated hitter last season while rehabbing from Tommy John surgery. It would be a surprise to see any of these position players initially crack the organization’s top 10, but a few could land in the teens, with several others potentially filling out the back end of the top 30 prospects list.

If there was one area where the Yankees already had some depth, it was on the mound. Prior to the start of the season, the Yankees had more pitchers ranked among their top 30 prospects than any other organization, with 21. That was particularly true among right-handers, who made up six of the organization’s top 10 prospects including three of the top five in Elmer Rodríguez, Carlos Lagrange, and 2024 first-rounder Ben Hess. This is not even counting Ben Grable who recently went to the Futures Game to showcase his 96.1 mph with his four-seamer that produces about 21 inches of induced vertical break.

Despite being stick-thin, literally, the Yankees opted to use their first two picks on pitchers. However, both were lefties with high ceilings who fell to the Yankees’ draft slots, at least in part, because of injury concerns.

Hunter Dietz is a big lefty out of Arkansas, while Sean Duncan is a prep arm from British Columbia. Dietz, like most first-round picks, projects to slot into the organization’s top 10 prospects and will likely be the team’s top ranked lefty , while Duncan could debut somewhere in the teens. The team also added a few right-handers in the first 10 rounds, selecting Michael Harpster out of East Tennessee State in the seventh and David Leslie from Pittsburgh in the ninth.

The back half of the draft has been fruitful for the Yankees lately, with Ben Rice serving as the most obvious example, but after the 10th round, players become much harder to project. A few names to keep an eye on over the next several years include shortstop Anthony Potestio, right-hander Garrett Ahern, and first baseman Tyce Armstrong.

When you consistently pick near the back end of the first round, it is difficult to infuse top-end talent into the farm system through the draft. It appears the Yankees focused on the best value available with their first two selections before making a somewhat-concerted effort to address organizational depth, especially at catcher. The sticks remain thin for now, but the pitching pipeline has a few more names ready to slot in and begin climbing the rankings.


In case you missed it, check out Pinstripe Alley’s full draft coverage!

As Yordan Alvarez Chases MVP, Astros Face Their Biggest Decision Yet

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JULY 14: Yordan Alvarez #44 of the Houston Astros talks to the media before the MLB All-Star Game at Citizens Bank Park on July 14, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Houston Astros/Houston Astros/Getty Images) | Getty Images

As Major League Baseball reaches the All-Star break, Astros fans have every reason to celebrate what has been another remarkable season from Yordan Alvarez.

He’s not just putting together another All-Star campaign.

He’s making a legitimate case to be the American League’s Most Valuable Player.

While much of the attention over the next few weeks will center on the trade deadline and what additions Dana Brown might make to strengthen Houston’s roster, another question is quietly looming in the background, one that could ultimately shape the future of the franchise.

Will Yordan Alvarez finish his career as a Houston Astro?

At the moment, both sides are saying all the right things.

Alvarez has repeatedly expressed his desire to spend his entire career in Houston. From the organization’s standpoint, there has been no indication that the Astros are looking to move arguably the most feared hitter in the American League.

That’s exactly what Astros fans want to hear.

But words are one thing.

Long-term commitments are another.

History tells us that Jim Crane is one of baseball’s smartest and most disciplined owners. He’s also shown time and again that he has a financial line he’s unwilling to cross, regardless of how popular or accomplished the player may be.

We’ve seen this story before.

The Astros let Gerrit Cole leave in free agency rather than match the record-setting contract he received from the Yankees. George Springer departed for Toronto. Carlos Correa eventually moved on after Houston refused to meet his long-term demands. More recently, Kyle Tucker was traded because the organization understood the type of contract he would eventually command and made the difficult decision to move him before reaching that point. Alex Bregman shuffled off to Boston with hardley a finger lifted by Crane and the team.

None of those decisions were made because the Astros didn’t value those players.

They were made because Jim Crane believed the long-term financial commitment outweighed the potential return.

That brings us back to Yordan Alvarez.

Will Crane view him differently?

Will he break from the organizational philosophy that has defined the Astros for nearly a decade and commit to the type of contract required to keep one of baseball’s premier hitters in Houston for the rest of his career?

Or will Alvarez eventually become the next franchise cornerstone to either leave in free agency or be traded before reaching that point?

It’s an uncomfortable question, but it’s one Astros fans should begin thinking about.

Emotionally, the answer is easy.

Every Astros fan wants Alvarez to retire in Houston. Players with his combination of power, patience, and ability to change a game with one swing simply don’t come along very often.

The business side, however, isn’t nearly as simple.

History has shown that massive, long-term contracts often become burdens before they become bargains.

Albert Pujols is perhaps the most obvious example. After signing one of the richest contracts in baseball history, injuries and declining production prevented him from replicating the superstar numbers that earned him the deal in the first place.

Mike Trout has remained one of the greatest players of his generation, yet injuries have dramatically limited his availability over the past several seasons.

Even Shohei Ohtani’s unprecedented contract carries risk. While he’s still an elite hitter, the Dodgers signed him expecting a two-way superstar. Injuries have significantly reduced his ability to contribute on the mound.

Aaron Judge has continued to perform at an MVP level when healthy, but even he has battled injuries that have forced the Yankees to navigate lengthy stretches without their biggest star.

That’s the challenge every front office faces.

You’re not paying for what a player has already accomplished.

You’re paying for what you believe he’ll do over the next eight, 10, or even 12 years.

Those projections rarely age as well as fans hope.

That doesn’t mean Yordan Alvarez isn’t worth keeping.

Far from it.

He’s one of the rare players capable of carrying an offense for weeks at a time and changing the trajectory of a season almost single-handedly. Players like him are incredibly difficult—if not impossible—to replace.

The question isn’t whether Astros fans want him to stay.

The question is whether Jim Crane is willing to make the kind of financial commitment he has consistently avoided throughout his ownership.

His track record suggests caution.

His heart may tell him one thing.

His business instincts have historically told him another.

As the trade deadline approaches, the Astros remain focused on chasing another championship. But once this season comes to an end, the organization’s biggest decision may not involve adding talent.

It may involve deciding whether the face of the franchise will remain in Houston for the rest of his career.

So I’ll leave Astros fans with one question.

If it requires one of the largest contracts in franchise history, do you believe Jim Crane should commit to Yordan Alvarez for the remainder of his career?

Or is history destined to repeat itself once again?

Jets to Open 2026-27 Home Schedule Against Bruins

The Winnipeg Jets now know who they'll welcome to Canada Life Centre to begin the 2026-27 season.

On Wednesday, the NHL announced each of its 32 clubs' home openers, in advance of the full 1,344 game schedule, set to drop on Thursday. 

The Jets will open their home schedule on Friday, October 2 vs. the visiting Boston Bruins. 

Photo by Eric Canha/USA Today 
Photo by Eric Canha/USA Today 

The matchup comes during the opening week of the NHL's expanded 84-game season, which begins Sept. 29 with a five-game slate highlighted by the defending Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes raising their championship banner before hosting the Florida Panthers - the previous back-to-back champs. 

For the Bruins, the game in Winnipeg will be their second road contest of the new campaign. Boston opens the season at home against the New York Rangers on Sept. 29 before traveling west to face the Jets. 

The Jets very well could start the season on the road, should a team playing on the 29th also suit up in a back-to-back to start the year, meaning Winnipeg could play on September 30 or October 1 before hosting the Bruins on October 2. 

While Winnipeg's full schedule remains under wraps until Thursday, one other notable date is already locked in. The Jets will host the Montreal Canadiens in the 2026 Tim Hortons Heritage Classic at Princess Auto Stadium on Oct. 25. 

Thursday's full schedule release will reveal Winnipeg's season opener, longest road trips, back-to-back sets and nationally televised matchups as the club prepares for its first season under the NHL's new 84-game format.

Why Steve Yzerman is out as Red Wings GM: Answering 5 big questions

The Detroit Red Wings are changing their leadership after a 10th consecutive season out of the playoffs.

Franchise legend Steve Yzerman, the executive vice president and general manager for the last seven seasons of that drought, will become senior advisor to governor and CEO Chris Ilitch. A search for a new head of hockey operations is underway.

The Red Wings said Yzerman will remain in charge of day-to-day responsibilities until his successor is named. The team added that Yzerman would be an advisor to the search committee, which will be led by Ilitch.

“Clearly, we are not where we and our fans expect to be as an organization," said Ilitch. “I’m looking forward to bringing in new leadership to build the championship-caliber organization Hockeytown deserves."

Here are answers to questions about the Red Wings' move on Wednesday, July 15:

Why is Steve Yzerman out as general manager?

The Yzerplan wasn't working.

Yzerman, the team's longtime captain, three-time Stanley Cup winner and Hall of Famer, was hired in April 2019 to oversee a rebuild. He drafted current standouts Moritz Seider and Lucas Raymond early in his tenure as the team purposely bottomed out with back-to-back seasons of fewer than 20 wins in order to build through the draft.

He began adding veteran players such as Andrew Copp, Alex DeBrincat and Patrick Kane. The Red Wings missed the playoffs on a tiebreaker in 2023, but for the most part, finished sixth or seventh in the Atlantic Division.

This past season, Yzerman addressed the goaltending by trading for John Gibson. Unlike in 2024-25, he was active at the trade deadline, bringing in Justin Faulk and David Perron. But the Red Wings had another March swoon and missed the playoffs again, ending the season with an 8-1 loss.

After the season, captain Dylan Larkin, who was born in Michigan and played at the University of Michigan, requested a trade.

How does this affect the Dylan Larkin trade request?

The Detroit Free Press, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported Larkin listed the Vegas Golden Knights, Florida Panthers and Minnesota Wild as places where he would accept a trade.

Yzerman, during the draft, confirmed the trade request but said he wouldn't make a move unless it benefited the team. The new GM also will insist on a good return because this trade will be franchise-altering. Larkin might have to expand his list of teams.

Who could be the next general manager?

Ilitch said the team would look at internal and external candidates. Assistant general manager Kris Draper would be an obvious candidate for an internal hire. Shawn Horcoff, who oversees the Grand Rapids Griffins, would be another.

The timing for external candidates is bad because the top GM candidate of the offseason, Sunny Mehta, was hired by the New Jersey Devils, while Brandon Pridham joined the Pittsburgh Penguins front office.

No timetable was given for the hire.

What's up with Patrick Kane?

Kane spent the last three seasons with the Red Wings and is an unrestricted free agent. Hall of Famer Chris Chelios told Chicago's 104.3 The Score that he spoke with Kane and the all-time leading U.S.-born scorer is deciding between returning to the Chicago Blackhawks or signing with his hometown Buffalo Sabres.

Can the Red Wings make the playoffs in 2026-27?

It will be difficult. They added Viktor Arvidsson and backup goalie Daniil Tarasov in the offseason, but the key will be what happens with Larkin.

The Atlantic Division competition is tough. The 2024 and 2025 champion Florida Panthers are a favorite to make it back because of the return of injured captain Aleksander Barkov and the trade for Brady Tkachuk. The Toronto Maple Leafs also made multiple moves that could lead to a playoff return.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Why Steve Yzerman is out as Red Wings GM: Answering 5 big questions