Weird Islanders: The Podcast! – Episode 84 – Ty Wishart

Former NHL defenseman Ty Wishart calls in from an Australian beach to talk about his globe-spanning playing career and his 21 games with the Islanders in the eventful 2010-11 season.

Drafted 16th overall by the Sharks and traded to Tampa Bay in the deal for Dan Boyle, Ty Wishart got a quick education in the business of hockey. After a few years in a minors, he was traded again, this time to the Islanders for goalie Dwayne Roloson. Wishart joined what looked to be an up-and-coming squad, and what they lacked in talent, they made up for in youthful energy. He scored his first NHL goal in a wild road game, and was scratched while his new teammates got into a legendary melee with a division rival before going back to the minors. But that was just the beginning of Ty Wishart’s incredible hockey career.

Ty tells us some great stories, from throwing up in exhaustion at the NHL Combine to sharing a locker room with guys like Zenon Konopka and Trevor Gillies to playing in Romania and elsewhere. A charity tournament first took him to Australia, where he now lives and plays for the Melbourne Mustangs of the Australian Ice Hockey League. He also served as the team’s Director of Hockey Operations during their 2023 championship season. At 37, he still plays for love of the game and still carries memories and mementos from his time as an Islander. And he tells us all of this from a sunny, beautiful beach down under that made Mike and Dan very jealous.

We can’t thank Ty enough for coming on and giving us so much. It took a while and required a lot of email back-and-forth, but it was worth it. To keep up with the Mustangs and the rest of the AIHL, you can check out their website or subscribe to AIHL TV. The 2026 season starts on April 17th.

WEIRD BONUS MATERIAL

  • Before being involved in a notable trade for the Islanders, Ty Wishart was involved in a notable trade for the Sharks, one that saw fellow Weird Islander Brad Lukowich and spiritual Weird Islander Dan Boyle go from Tampa to San Jose.
  • A few years later, the Lightning needed serious goalie help and they found it in 41-year-old Dwayne Roloson. On New Years Day, 2011, Garth Snow sent Roloson to Tampa for Wishart, straight up. Although that version of the team was a mess, the trade had a lot of elements that Dom dissected here. Wishart’s numbers at the end of the season were pretty solid.
  • Wishart’s only NHL goal came in an amazing game we’ve talked about before, a wild 7-6 win in Buffalo in which Michael Grabner scored a hat trick and Al Montoya picked up the win.
  • Wishart re-signed with the Islanders that offseason but only played one game for them in 2011-12. All told, he spent three seasons in Bridgeport, occasionally scoring goals like this:
  • He was waived in 2013 and signed with the Schwenninger Wild Wings of Germany’s Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL). It was also around this time that he visited Australia with Team Canada to play in the Douglas Webber Cup games against Team USA.
  • After years traversing the globe playing hockey, Wishart decided to stay in Melbourne and make the AIHL his home. He’s been very successful there with the Mustangs, winning a Goodall Cup championship in 2023. All told, he’s played over 800 games in 10 countries.
  • His journey to Australia has been told before. He’s a cool video from 2024 that shows what a day in his life is like:
  • BONUS to the BONUSES: Here’s a snippet of the Coliseum Referendum rally featuring a live performance by the one-and-only Blue Öyster Cult:

What makes a “Weird Islander?”

We’re always open to suggestions about other Weird Islanders to discuss. Remember the criteria. Candidates must fulfill one of the two of the following:

  • Played one (1) season or less for the Islanders or very short stints over multiple seasons.
  • Be a veteran NHLer who is not generally associated with his time on Islanders.

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Royals Opening Week Reality Check, Answer Your Questions w/ Max Rieper

The Royals are underway — and the early storylines are already taking shape.

In this episode of the Royals Rundown Podcast, hosts Jacob Milham and Jeremy “Hokius” Greco, joined by Max Rieper, break down the Kansas City Royals’ recent series against the Minnesota Twins and what it reveals about the team’s early-season identity. From bullpen inconsistencies to encouraging signs in the starting rotation, the crew analyzes where the Royals stand and what needs to improve as the season unfolds.

A major focus of the discussion centers on roster construction and flexibility, particularly in light of injuries like Carlos Estevez landing on the IL. The hosts explore how Kansas City can adjust, including creative solutions involving emerging talent such as Jac Caglianone and the evolving roles of key contributors across the roster. They also examine early performances from players like Kyle Isbel and Lane Thomas, and what those trends could mean moving forward.

Looking ahead, the episode dives deep into the Royals’ farm system and top prospects for 2026, highlighting names like Dennis Colleran Jr. and Ramon Ramirez, along with broader organizational strategies for developing and integrating young talent. The conversation emphasizes the importance of depth and timing as the Royals aim to balance present competitiveness with future upside.

The episode also touches on MLB’s evolving technology, including the ABS (Automated Ball-Strike) challenge system, and how it’s impacting gameplay, strategy, and fan experience. Blending analysis, insider perspective, and personality, this episode delivers a comprehensive look at the Royals’ present and future.

Need your Royals fix? Head to royalsreview.com for news, analysis, and to engage with Royals fans around the world! Follow us online:

BlueSky
– Jeremy Greco: @hokius.fromthehawkseye.com
– Jacob Milham: @jacobmilhkc.bsky.social

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– Podcast: @RoyalRundownPod

Orioles prospect preview: De León leads group to start Chesapeake’s season

Mar 7, 2026; North Port, Florida, USA; Baltimore Orioles starting pitcher Luis de Leon (81) throws a pitch against the Atlanta Braves in the first inning during spring Training at CoolToday Park. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

As of last night, the Double-A Chesapeake season got under way. The highest-level Orioles affiliate that you don’t have to leave Maryland to watch is always a place with prospects to watch, at least as long as the Orioles farm system is well-stocked with prospects worth watching.

This affiliate had a lot going for it all through last season, starting with several players who are now in Norfolk, including pitching prospect Trey Gibson and outfielder Enrique Bradfield Jr., all the way to the end with some late-season promotions of pitchers like Luis De León and the since-traded (for Shane Baz) Michael Forret. It didn’t really translate to wins and losses for the Baysox team itself, as they ended up with a 59-77 record a year ago.

Orioles top 30 prospects

  • LHP Luis De León
  • 2B/OF Aron Estrada
  • RHP Tyson Neighbors
  • OF Thomas Sosa
  • C/1B Ethan Anderson
  • SS Griff O’Ferrall

With Samuel Basallo and Dylan Beavers graduating out of prospect status in the early days of the 2026 MLB season, the Orioles system is now down to just one player on the current MLB Pipeline Top 100 prospects list. That’s outfielder Nate George, who will be beginning the season at Frederick.

One of the key stories for the organization as this year goes along is whether they can develop some more of their talent into top prospects who will either contribute to the MLB club or headline trades for established stars. If this happens, Chesapeake will probably be a place that plays witness to it. The highest-placed prospect here, De León, is now the #2 prospect in the Orioles system, and the top pitcher in the system. Can the Orioles finally develop a homegrown player into a useful starting pitcher for the MLB team?

Estrada, my current favorite outside of the top-tier prospects, is young, having just turned 21 in January. He just keeps getting interesting results while being a young guy for the levels he’s played. This included last year when, at Aberdeen, a place that was cursed for hitters, Estrada was able to bat .284/.369/.429 before getting promoted to Chesapeake. The scouting world isn’t sure what position he’ll be able to play at higher levels and he will have to keep proving the doubters wrong by hitting at each level also.

Sometimes guys like that end up like Trey Mancini. Sometimes they end up like Connor Norby. Sometimes they end up like Frederick Bencosme, a Baysox teammate who, if you remember that you’ve heard his name before just now, you’re an Orioles prospect sicko.

Neighbors is one of the players the Orioles got in the O’Hearn/Laureano trade with the Padres last year. He is, in fact, the closest to the majors from that trade. The reliever had a 0.59 ERA in 12 games after that trade. I hope he’s in Norfolk before long. The team has generally been aggressive in moving its older prospects. This is the age 23 season for Neighbors, which is old to be at Double-A and still be much of a prospect.

The Orioles have been aggressive in promoting Sosa, who only turned 21 in January, despite Sosa never really hitting good at any of the stops lower in the minors. The outfielder with big power potential has been more in what is often described as “holding his own,” which is what you get when you have a player who’s young for the level (he’ll be close to 2.5 years below the average player at Double-A) who is able to avoid completely collapsing numbers. He hit .222/.309/.407 for Aberdeen last year. It’s not good, but it’s good enough for the team to move him up and keep waiting for the breakout at the next level.

Anderson and O’Ferrall were each part of the high picks in the 2024 draft who encountered serious struggles at High-A last year. Anderson is a first baseman/catcher with no power (four homers in 90 games last year) and O’Ferrall is a shortstop/second baseman with no power (four homers in 121 games).

Starting on the injured list

  • RHP Braxton Bragg (Tommy John)
  • RHP Juaron Watts-Brown (shoulder)
  • RHP Patrick Reilly (Tommy John)

When the break camp rosters for the minor league teams were announced, I was surprised that Watts-Brown wasn’t listed on the Chesapeake roster. Now I know why: He’s hurt. I hope he’s recovered soon and can get back to it, because I was excited for hyphenated Team Brown.

Bragg did not have his Tommy John surgery until the end of July last year, so it’s unlikely that he’ll pitch with this affiliate this year. Absolute best case scenario might be if he is able to do a rehab outing or two before Low-A Delmarva’s season ends. Reilly, on the other hand, had his surgery in the middle of May. A return to the Double-A level before this minor league season is through is more realistic, if not guaranteed. Both of these guys were showing some real promise last year before the elbow ligaments went pop. There’s a reason why the acronym TINSTAAPP – there is no such thing as a pitching prospect – is said frequently enough to be understood.

Others who may arrive later

Pretty much anybody who’s starting the year assigned to High-A Frederick, whose roster I’ll be previewing on Monday, is a possibility to make it to Chesapeake at some point during the season. That starts with the guy who is now the #1 prospect in the system, George. It also includes high 2025 draft picks Ike Irish, Wehiwa Aloy, and Joseph Dzierwa. A pitcher, Dzierwa put on a showcase in the Spring Breakout prospect game last month.

Potentially, Vance Honeycutt, who dropped off the radar after flopping at High-A last year, could make his way up a level if his spring home run prowess translates in any way to regular season improvement. Honeycutt or any of the guys from the previous paragraph advancing depends on them actually showing well in Frederick. That’s not guaranteed for anyone, but hopefully it’ll happen for at least a couple of them.

2026 Minor League Preview: Binghamton Rumble Ponies

Binghamton Rumble Ponies teammates celebrate winning the Eastern League baseball championship 8-2 over the Erie SeaWolves at UPMC Park in Erie on Sept. 24, 2025. | GREG WOHLFORD/ERIE TIMES-NEWS / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

First Half Record: 45-22 (1/6, Eastern League Northeast Division)

Second Half Record: 45-24 (1/6 Eastern League Northeast Division)

The Binghamton Rumble Ponies began the season with a higher concentration of Mets top prospects than any other team in the system, beginning the year with Jett Williams, Jonah Tong, Nolan McLean, Ryan Clifford, and Nick Morabito all rostered there. Their standout performances, combined with other farmhands stepping up, led the Rumble Ponies demolishing the division in the first half. The team won the Eastern League Northeast division by 10.0 games over the Hartford Yard Goats, their 45 wins were tied with the Erie SeaWolves for most in the league in the first half, and their .672 winning percentage was best in the Eastern League.

During the first half, and in second half, some of those players eventually were promoted and moved on, but they were replaced by other top prospects, such as Carson Benge, Jacob Reimer, Jonathan Santucci, and Will Watson. Their standout performances along with other previously unheralded players stepping up led to Binghamton making mincemeat of the competition once again. The Rumble Ponies ended the second half with a nearly identical 45-24 record, winning the second half by 7.0 games over the Somerset Patriots. Once again, their 45 wins led the Eastern League, this time the only team to win 40 or more games in the second half.

Binghamton’s 90 wins established a new season high, beating the prior record of 86, set in 2023. Their 90-46 overall record was second-best in all of minor league baseball, with only the 92-39 West Michigan Whitecaps outplaying the Ponies. Their record was the best of any Mets minor league affiliate since Capital City Bombers went 90-51 in 1998 and their .661 winning percentage was the highest of any Mets minor league team since the 1986 Columbia Mets went 90-42, good for a .682 winning percentage.

The Rumble Ponies met the Somerset Patriots in the Eastern League Division Series and swept them in the best-of-three series, 3-1 and 5-4. Facing the Erie SeaWolves in the Eastern League Finals, the Rumble Ponies lost the first game in a 14-5 blowout, but rallied in Game Two to win 5-4, and then won decisively in the clinching Game Three 8-2. With the win, Binghamton won their first Eastern League championship as the Rumble Ponies and their fourth overall, having won prior as the Binghamton Mets in 1992, 1994, and 2014.

Michael Collins will be taking the reigns as team skipper, replacing Reid Brigniac, who was hired by Tampa Bay to coach the Triple-A Durham Bulls. Joining him will be Mariano Duncan, who will be serving as bench coach, Matt Carasiti, who will be serving as pitching coach, and Rachel Folden, who will be serving as hitting coach. Duncan served as 2025 bench coach, while Carasiti will be replacing 2025 pitching coach Dan McKinney and Folden will be replacing 2025 hitting coach Nate Irving.

The 2026 season will be Michael Collins’ first in the organization. Prior to joining the Mets, he spent the last eight with the Houston Astros, acting as their catching coach. Additionally, he managed in the San Diego Padres organization, managing the DSL Padres, AZL Padres, Fort Wayne TinCaps, and Lake Elsinore Storm between 2012 and 2017. Collins, who is Australian-American and was raised in Australia, also managed the Canberra Cavalry in the 2012-2013 and 2013-2014 Australian Baseball League seasons.

Mariano Duncan will be returning for his eighth year in the Mets organization, and his fifth season serving as Binghamton Rumble Ponies bench coach. Additionally, he served as bench coach for the 2021 Brooklyn Cyclones and the 2019 Kingsport Mets.

The 2026 season will be Matt Carasiti’s first with the Mets, and his second season overall as a coach. In 2025, he served as pitching coach for the Everett AquaSox, the Seattle Mariners’ High-A affiliate.

The 2026 will also be the first season in the organization for Rachel Folden. She spent the prior five seasons with the Chicago Cubs, serving as Triple-A Iowa Cubs hitting coach in 2025, Double-A Tennessee Smokies hitting coach in 2024, minor league hitting coordinator in 2023, and Arizona Complex League hitting coach in 2021 and 2022.

The Binghamton Rumble Ponies will be opening the 2026 season against the New Hampshire Fisher Cats at Delta Dental Stadium tonight. Here’s their full Opening Day roster.

Pitchers

  • Felipe De La Cruz
  • Saul Garcia
  • Brendan Girton
  • Kevin Gowdy
  • Carlos Guzman
  • Douglas Orellana
  • Zach Peek
  • Gabriel Rodriguez
  • Jonathan Santucci
  • Ben Simon
  • Zach Thornton
  • Matt Turner
  • Will Watson
  • Jefry Yan

Catchers

  • Kevin Parada
  • Chris Suero

Infielders

  • Nick Lorusso
  • Jacob Reimer
  • JT Schwartz
  • Marco Vargas
  • Wyatt Young

Outfielders

  • A.J. Ewing
  • Jose Ramos
  • Matt Rudick
  • Eli Serrano III
  • D’Andre Smith

On The Horizon: Cubs vs. Guardians series preview

The Cubs will be part of their second home opener of 2026, after their own last Thursday, as Friday’s game will be the first 2026 game for the Guardians at Progressive Field.

For more on the Guardians, here’s Quincy Wheeler, manager of the SB Nation Guardians site Covering The Corner.

Hello Cubs fans!

Welcome to Cleveland for our home opening series. Guardians fans are excited to welcome their hometown club back after a very successful opening road trip against the Mariners and Dodgers that has seen the Guards find a way to a 4-3 record. Some things to monitor as you watch:

* Weather, as always, is the big factor. You are aware of this as residents or observers of the Great Lakes region experiencing April. Both Friday and Saturday have shower and thunderstorm chances late, at the moment. Looks like they should be able to start and possibly finish Friday’s game but Saturday’s may be more questionable. Rain clears out for Sunday – BUT it will be frigid. Such is life, but enough of meteorology for the moment.

* You will see Joey Cantillo, Slade Cecconi and Parker Messick in these three games. Cantillo had an uneven debut for 2026, but he’s a metrics darling. He’s a lefty, but actually has performed better against right-handed hitters than lefties so far. Cecconi flashed new pitch shapes and pitch mixes that had fans excited in Spring Training but he was apparently pretty ill for his first start of 2026. We will see how outing number 2 goes. Finally, Messick just finished dominating the Dodgers so that’s exciting for us. He has a magic changeup, so watch out for that. Metrics don’t love Messick as much as they do the other two, but the lefty’s got a bulldog mentality that seems to do a lot for him.

* It’s been a fitful start for the Guardians’ offense that has yet to see Jose Ramirez, Steven Kwan and Kyle Manzardo (2025’s top hitters) take off. Instead, veteran Rhys Hoskins, rookie Chase DeLauter, and utility man Daniel Schneemann were the early stars. DeLauter’s health is always a topic of conversation here and he fouled a ball off his bad foot a couple days ago, so we will see if we can get him back for Opening Day at Progressive Field. If the Guardians can manage to get SOMETHING from Manzardo, Bo Naylor and their defensive-first middle infielders (Gabriel Arias and Brayan Rocchio), they are a formidable offensive force. However, the cold, the rain and the wind may make scoring runs a challenge for everyone this weekend.

If you’re in Cleveland for the series, welcome! I always park down 4 blocks or so on Carnegie Street and walk a little bit to the games to get cheaper parking (I take my kids and have never felt unsafe doing so). I recommend the Killer Kilbane dog from Happy Dog, but there are a lot of great eating options, or, to save money, pack a soft-side cooler and bring an unopened bottle of water. Finally, the best deal in the ballpark for my money is the kid’s ice cream dish behind home plate. $5 but plenty of ice cream. Enjoy!

Fun facts

The Cubs were 3-1 at Cleveland when it mattered most, in the 2016 World Series, but they are 8-12 there in the regular season, compared to 11-8 at home. The Cubs’ 19-20 overall record is despite having outscored the Guardians by 27 runs, 186-159.

The Cubs have lost five in a row at Cleveland, two in 2021 and three in 2024. They won all three games vs. the Guardians last year at Wrigley Field.

(Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)

Probable pitching matchups

Friday: Cade Horton, RHP (1-0, 2.84 ERA, 0.789 WHIP, 4.43 FIP) vs. Joey Cantillo, LHP (0-0, 4.91 ERA, 1.909 WHIP, 2.90 FIP)

Saturday: Shōta Imanaga, LHP (0-1, 7.20 ERA, 1.600 WHIP, 4.17 FIP) vs. Slade Cecconi, RHP (0-1, 12.46 ERA, 2.077 WHIP, 7.32 FIP)

Sunday: Edward Cabrera, RHP (1-0, 0.00 ERA, 0.333 WHIP, 2.00 FIP) vs. Parker Messick, LHP (1-0, 0.00 ERA, 0.833 WHIP, 1.50 FIP)

Times & TV channels

Friday: 3:10 p.m. CT, Marquee Sports Network

Saturday: 6:15 p.m. CT, Fox-TV (regional — coverage map, scroll to the bottom of that link)

Sunday: 12:40 p.m. CT, Marquee Sports Network

Prediction

I called for two of three in each of the Cubs’ first two series and was right once.

The Guardians are a better team than either the Nationals or Angels. And as noted by John, the Cubs have lost five straight games in Cleveland.

Nevertheless, I persist. The Cubs will win two of three.

Up next

The Cubs travel to Tampa to face the Rays in a three-game series beginning Monday afternoon. The first game of the series is the Rays’ home opener and the first game back at Tropicana Field after its renovation following the damage done there by Hurricane Milton in October 2024.

Preview: Missouri seeks to bounce back in road test against Kentucky

A tough away series awaits Missouri baseball this weekend as the Tigers’ travel to Kentucky Proud Park for a three-game set against No. 24 University of Kentucky. First pitch is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. CT on Friday, followed by a 1 p.m. CT start Saturday and a noon CT finale Sunday. All three games will be streamed on SECN+.

Kentucky enters the series at 22-6 overall and 14-1 at home, while Missouri is 17-13 and 1-5 on the road. This series will set up an early April test for the Tigers, who are seeking redemption after a sudden loss to their rivals, Kansas. 

Pitching for the Tigers on Friday, April 3, will be Josh McDevitt, who is the Tigers’ most reliable pitcher, with a 3.93 ERA. McDevitt worked through three and a half innings against Texas A&M, on Friday, March 27, only allowing one run in. 

Mizzou Batters to Look Out For This Series 

Jase Woita, a Star

The most consistent hitter for the Tigers this season has been Jase Woita. He currently has a batting average of .354, with an elite OPS of 1.070 over 99 at bats. Woita has been a powerhouse for the team, with a 1.000 fielding percentage on top of his offensive play. During the first game against Auburn, Woita forced extra innings with his powerful single, keeping the game alive. 

Tyler Macon

Tyler Macon is close behind with a .360 batting average. He has a .952 OPS in 89 at-bats and has been a reliable run producer with 25 RBIs. Much of Missouri’s success this season has come from his ability to generate offense with singles and doubles.

Macon extended his hitting streak to 10 games during the series against North Dakota State and went 2 for 4 in the opener.

Cameron Benson

Cameron Benson rounds it out for the Tigers in third, as a very reliable presence for the lineup. He is batting .318, with an OPS of .933. Benson drove in four runs in the first game of the UIC series. 

Other Strong Offensive Notes 

Kam Durnin has continuously hit it off for the Tigers’, batting .319 with back-to-back singles during the first game of the Tennessee series. Juliomar Campos has only had 17 at-bats, but hit his first collegiate home run against Kansas on Tuesday, March 31, and will have lots more to show for during the remainder of the season. 

Pitching Remarks 

Javyn Pimental has been the team’s most efficient pitcher, allowing few baserunners and keeping hitters in check. His ERA stands at 3.33, and last pitched during the opener against Auburn, where he shook the crowd by allowing no runs and only three hits over six innings. 

Last but not least, Eli Skidmore has had 10 appearances this season, with his current ERA of 3.07 and a record of 2-0. Skidmore used just three pitches to get out of the eighth inning against Illinois, and will continue to shine this season. 

KU Game Highlights

A long awaited home game for the Tigers’ slipped away in a sudden loss to in-state rival Kansas on Tuesday, March 31. Missouri struggled to bring about timely hits which allowed the Jayhawks to pull through for their victory. 

The Tigers’ star player of the day was Macon, who went 2 for 4 with an RBI. Despite his efforts, Missouri was unable to bring runners home when needed most. On the mound was Pimental, who delivered a solid start and held Kansas to just three runs over six innings and struck out five batters. 

Skidmore went to battle as a reliever, but the Jayhawks’ rallied during the eighth inning. This loss was Missouri’s fifth in a row, but the upcoming series against Kentucky will hopefully provide another chance for the Tigers’ to secure a victory once again.  

Final Note

Missouri has not won in Lexington since April 28, 2018 so the Tigers’ will be looking to change that this weekend, while facing a top-25 team nationally in college baseball. 

With one of the Tigers’ best pitchers set to be on the mound for game one, this will hopefully set the tone early as they head into the next two games of the series. 

To follow along and read more about Mizzou Baseball, follow @Rock MNation,@SophBleedsLA and @Henry_C81, on twitter/x.

The Notes: New Concept and Outfield

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 1: Justin Crawford #2 of the Philadelphia Phillies celebrates with J.T. Realmuto #10, Kyle Schwarber #12, and Adolis García #53 after hitting a walk-off single in the bottom of the tenth inning against the Washington Nationals at Citizens Bank Park on April 1, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Phillies defeated the Nationals 6-5. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

To spice things up for a new season of The Notes, there will be a new dedicated section called “Sequence of the Week”. This section will break down a fun pitching or hitting sequence that happened during the week.

I’ve done some video breakdowns in the past on TheGoodPhight but this section will be weekly and a bit smaller. Maybe there are plenty of other people doing it, but I haven’t seen many, so it seems like an original idea.

Sequence of the Week: Andrew Painter’s strikeout on James Wood

There were many impressive signs with Andrew Painter’s outing against the Nationals. His fastball command was great, the changeup became a huge weapon the second time through the Nationals lineup, and his composure seemed top-notch for someone making their big league debut.

But if there was one highlight that summed up so much of what Painter did well against the Nationals, it was what he did against James Wood to finish off the fifth inning.

He missed a four-seam fastball up in the zone, an uncompetitive take from Wood. However, it does help him with dropping a steal-a-strike curveball. Painter dropped several of those against a heavy left-handed Nationals lineup but a high four-seam fastball can keep hitters slightly off balance.

The backdoor and backfoot slider played like a weapon on Tuesday night. He struck out Keibert Ruiz earlier in the game on a backfoot slider, but he mostly used the pitch to backdoor it to left-handed hitters.

Wood swung at this one because Painter tried throwing one earlier to him. The movement and late reaction because of the high heater still gets him a whiff.

Because Wood took the curveball for a strike and just saw a backdoor slider that started above the zone, he will have to respect the outside part of the plate. JT Realmuto goes back to the high fastball and Wood can’t layoff.

Best outfield ever (except for Otto Kemp)?

It’s not but the outfield showed up for the first six games in a big way. Justin Crawford flashed some solid early count swing decisions, especially on his walk-off Wednesday afternoon. Brandon Marsh has worked the best at bats overall and is hitting the ball hard.

Then there’s Adolis Garcia, who worked great at bats against the Nationals and has shown an early spike in his bat speed. It is early, and it might be hard for him maintain for him because of his age but Garcia’s average bat speed is the highest it’s been since 2023.

Through the first week of 2026, the Phillies outfield ranks 9th in wRC+ and 4th in strikeout rate. Will it hold? Probably not but still a good sign.

The defense has been more impressive than at the plate, and more sustainable. This sliding play by Garcia had a 20% catch probability, and he made it with ease. This is the kind of play Nick Castellanos was never making as a Phillie because of his very limited range and straight line speed.

Justin Crawford flashed some leather in the second game of the season and has generally looked fine in the field otherwise.

Marsh, Crawford, and Garcia have plus speed and range for their positions. This could end up being the best all-around outfield defensively the Phillies have put together under Dave Dombrowski.

Except for Otto Kemp.

Five reactions after the Yankees’ first road trip

Apr 1, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Cam Schlittler (31) pitches to the Seattle Mariners during the first inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images | Steven Bisig-Imagn Images

The New York Yankees have completed their first road trip of the 2026 season, and while it’s definitely too early to take any bit of data too seriously, these six games leave us with some important takeaways. The most important one is reflected in the standings, as the Yanks boast the best record in the American League. Still, here are five fun ones:

Cam Schlittler is the real deal

Well, we are running out of adjectives to describe Schlittler. Not only did he post a 2.96 ERA in his 73-inning cameo last year, but he also dominated in the postseason and is at 11.2 scoreless frames in the young 2026 campaign, with no walks and 15 strikeouts.

He is now throwing harder than last year, Wednesday’s start notwithstanding (it was cold in Seattle), and has developed three different fastballs with elite velocity, command, and movement profiles: a four-seamer, a cutter, and a sinker. We don’t want to use the “a” word yet, but Schlittler is well on his way to cementing his place as one of the finest young starters in the league.

The Yankees’ offense is more than just Aaron Judge

Many MLB squads have scored more runs than the Yankees’ 24 as of Thursday afternoon. However, even with Aaron Judge sporting a 52 wRC+, New York has been able to win five out of six games, and to do that, the offense has to come up with some big hits.

Granted, the pitching has been doing most of the heavy lifting, but some of the non-Judge hitters are showing up. Four of them deserve a special mention: Giancarlo Stanton, Ben Rice, Cody Bellinger, and Paul Goldschmidt. Stanton is hitting .500 and slugging .750, Rice is sporting a .765 slugging percentage and a 19 percent walk rate, Bellinger has stolen two bases already and boasts a .400 OBP, and the Yankees don’t win on Wednesday without Goldschmidt’s huge three-run jack against George Kirby.

The pitching staff has a chance to be elite

Most teams have allowed more than 20 runs by now. The Atlanta Braves, the second-best pitching staff to this point, have conceded 12 runs. The Yankees, however, lead the league with just six runs allowed.

The starters have a 0.53 ERA, a 0.68 WHIP, and 35 punchouts in 33.2 innings. Only David Bednar, Camilo Doval, and Paul Blackburn have allowed runs among relievers. A couple of pitchers on the roster bubble this spring, Jake Bird and Brent Headrick, have looked amazing. And the Yankees still have Carlos Rodón, Gerrit Cole, Luis Gil, and Clarke Schmidt due back at some point. In terms of quality and depth, the pitching staff has a chance to be elite.

Giancarlo Stanton still has it

Stanton has already hit his first home run of the season and boasts a 1.250 OPS. He might not be able to open a bag of chips, but he sure can swing a bat and murder a baseball. The veteran slugger leads the Yankees’ position players in fWAR with 0.4, and he hasn’t set a foot in the outfield. As long as he is healthy, he will be among the most productive players on the field. Staying in one piece has proven to be a challenge, though.

The Yankees know their strike zone

The Yankees, through Wednesday, rank second in baseball with 81.3 percent of ABS challenges won, only behind the Baltimore Orioles’ 85.7 percent. New York is a perfect 100 percent in challenges initiated by pitchers and catchers, and ranks fourth in MLB in challenges initiated by hitters, with a 72.7 percent success rate according to ESPN. Their 13 successful challenges overall are second behind the Minnesota Twins’ 16.

The Yankees sure do know their strike zone. They were even 5-for-5 on Monday with Mike Estabrook as the home plate umpire, the day in which manager Aaron Boone was this close to being ejected.

Cool Breeze: Mariners at Angels Series Preview

Mar 31, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Los Angeles Angels center fielder Mike Trout (27) celebrates his team’s victory over the Chicago Cubs with shortstop Zach Neto (9) at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images | Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images

Well, that series against the Yankees exposed some of the lingering issues with the Mariners roster, as currently constructed. Left-handed pitching is going to be a huge problem for this extremely lefty-heavy lineup throughout the season, and there really isn’t much relief in sight — J.P. Crawford is back from his brief IL stint but bats left-handed and newly-extended Cole Emerson does too. It’s very early days so we shouldn’t put much stock into just seven games. Anyway, I’m sure this lineup will start hitting a bit better as soon as they hit the road. Speak of the devil Angels. The Mariners embark on the first road trip of the season with stops in Anaheim and Arlington.

GameTimeMariners StarterAngels StarterMariners Win%Angels Win%
Game 1Friday, April 3 | 6:38 pmRHP Bryan WooLHP Reid Detmers55.6%44.4%
Game 2Saturday, April 4 | 6:38 pmRHP Emerson HancockRHP Jack Kochanowicz55.8%44.2%
Game 3Sunday, April 5 | 1:07 pmRHP Luis CastilloRHP Ryan Johnson55.2%44.8%
*Game odds courtesy of FanGraphs
OverviewAngelsMarinersEdge
Batting (wRC+)92 (13th in AL)113 (2nd in AL)Mariners
Fielding (FRV)-53 (15th)-29 (12th)Mariners
Starting Pitching (FIP-)115 (14th)100 (7th)Mariners
Bullpen (FIP-)110 (15th)97 (10th)Mariners
2025 stats

It’s so hard to parse who the Angels believe themselves to be. Are they trying to win? Gambling on bounce back seasons from guys like Grayson Rodriguez, Alek Manoah, and Josh Lowe isn’t a terrible idea if they’re looking to uncover some undervalued players but none of them are impact players in 2026. Are they building for the future? Signing four relievers with an average age of 36 and carrying Adam Frazier on the Opening Day roster instead of top prospect Christian Moore sends the wrong message. In an era where front office decision making has largely been homogenized by analytics, the Angels stand out as an outlier in the worst way possible. It’s easy to rag on them because things are so bleak for the franchise, but also, things are dire in Anaheim. Do you think the visitor’s clubhouse has air conditioning?

PlayerPositionBatsPAK%BB%ISOwRC+
Zach NetoSSR55426.9%6.0%0.217116
Mike TroutCFR55632.0%15.6%0.206120
Nolan Schanuel1BL56412.6%10.5%0.125109
Jorge SolerDHR31529.8%8.9%0.17288
Yoán Moncada3BS28926.0%11.1%0.214117
Jo AdellRFR57326.4%5.8%0.249112
Josh LoweLFL43525.1%7.6%0.14679
Logan O’HoppeCR45130.8%5.3%0.15872
Oswald Peraza2BR26530.2%6.4%0.21932
2025 stats

For a brief moment during the first weekend of the season, Mike Trout was leading all of baseball in fWAR. He had a fantastic opening series against Houston, blasting two home runs, collecting six hits, and even stealing a bag. Then, he went hitless in three games against the Cubs to start this week. Zach Neto and Jo Adell are two of the most important players for the Angels’ future. The former has quietly developed into one of the best young shortstops in baseball over the last few years while the latter finally broke out last season after years of stalled development. Nolan Schanuel could be a core piece of the future if he could ever figure out how to hit for just a little more power. His bat-to-ball skills give him a decent floor, but right now, he’s profiling a bit too much like Casey Kochman.

Probable Pitchers 

Updated Stuff+ Explainer 

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Reid Detmers63.230.1%9.4%12.2%44.6%3.963.12
Bryan Woo186.227.1%4.9%12.8%40.8%2.943.47
2025 stats
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam51.4%31.2%95.8114141960.300
Sinker0.1%6.9%95.6
Curveball25.2%11.4%73.610271690.286
Slider23.3%50.5%88.3126123990.294
2025 stats

Last year, the Angels moved Reid Detmers to the bullpen and he wound up seeing some high leverage work by the end of the season. Perhaps it was out of frustration with his slow development path despite possessing above average stuff, but that experiment lasted one season because a talented starter — even an inconsistent one like Detmers — is always going to be more valuable than a back-end reliever. If there’s one thing that he’ll carry forward from his time in the ‘pen, it’s a more aggressive approach that leans heavily on his two fantastic breaking balls to put batters away. He’s also added a splitter to his repertoire this spring in the hopes that it gives him a weapon to keep right-handed batters at bay.

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Jack Kochanowicz11114.1%11.3%18.4%51.9%6.816.05
Emerson Hancock9016.6%8.1%15.2%43.0%4.905.08
2025 stats
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam13.7%21.9%95.589116900.382
Sinker52.2%43.6%95.597104930.366
Changeup5.4%19.7%89.98695780.358
Slider19.4%11.6%87.390811000.379
Sweeper9.2%3.1%82.49066780.362
2025 stats

There’s a pretty serious disconnect between Jack Kochanowicz’s high velocity and extremely miniscule strikeout rate. Sure, he throws a sinker as his primary fastball, but his entire repertoire is simply too hittable. It’s really not a good thing when each of your pitches has an expected wOBA over .350. And when he pitches in the zone, batters run a contact rate over 90%, an outrageously high rate. That has forced him to start pitching out of the zone more often, but his secondary pitches just aren’t optimized to earn swings and misses. It’s a vicious cycle where his arsenal isn’t good enough to overpower batters, but not deceptive enough to get them to chase. Without those strikeouts, we’re left with a groundball specialist who doesn’t have great command and allows way too many balls in play. It’s not a great profile.

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Ryan Johnson (High-A)57.129.7%4.6%6.7%51.0%1.882.38
Luis Castillo180.221.7%6.2%10.5%41.3%3.543.88
2025 stats

Ryan Johnson is a perfect encapsulation of everything wrong with the Angels current player development philosophy. He was drafted in the second round in 2024 after dominating in college ball at Dallas Baptist. He made the Opening Day roster in 2025 as a reliever, skipping the minor leagues entirely. After a month and a half and a 7.36 ERA, the Angels pulled the plug and sent him to High-A to continue his development as a starter. He made 12 starts in the minors and looked really good. Fast forward a year and Johnson had a solid, but not outstanding, spring training and Los Angeles opted to start the season with Johnson on the big league roster again. His first start of the season did not go well; he lasted just 3.1 innings against the Cubs, allowing six runs on seven hits and four walks while striking out just two. It’s really too bad because Johnson has a really intriguing profile, and obviously has some raw talent, but the games the Angels have played with his development pathway have really hurt his ability to grow.


The Big Picture:

TeamW-LW%Games BehindRun DiffRecent Form
Astros5-20.714+13W-W-W-W-W
Rangers4-20.6670.5+5W-W-W-W-L
Mariners3-40.4292.0+3L-W-W-L-L
Angels3-40.4292.0-4L-L-L-W-L
Athletics1-50.1673.5-10L-L-L-W-L

The Astros swept the Red Sox earlier this week, pushing their early season win streak to five games. They’ll travel to Sacramento this weekend, starting a long road trip that culminates in Seattle next week. The A’s offense has started the season in a huge funk, but maybe returning to the friendly confines of Sutter Health Park will give them the spark they need. The Rangers won their series against Baltimore and will open up their home slate with a series against the Reds this weekend.

Jazz vs Rockets Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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The red-hot Houston Rockets welcome the reeling Utah Jazz to the Toyota Center tonight, with tip-off scheduled for 8 p.m. ET.

My Jazz vs. Rockets predictions are eyeing Kevin Durant to cook a struggling Utah defense.

Read more in my NBA picks for Friday, April 3.

Jazz vs Rockets prediction

Jazz vs Rockets best bet: Kevin Durant Over 23.5 points (-120)

Kevin Durant has been brilliant for the playoff-bound Houston Rockets in Year 1. He's averaging 25.8 PPG, which ranks 10th in the Association. KD is a walking bucket, and he's one of the most consistent scorers around, even at 37 years of age.

The future Hall of Famer is averaging 25 PPG this season against the Jazz across three meetings, and the Utah Jazz — sitting at 21-56 and 29th in defensive rating — is the perfect matchup. Durant is also thriving lately, cashing the Over in points in six of his last eight.

He's hit the Over in three of his previous four contests at home, where Durant is averaging 24.2 PPG. The Jazz are considered an easy matchup for opposing small forwards, allowing 26 points per night to the position.

Houston enters tonight as a 92.5% favorite, looking to extend their win streak to five games. Durant should ball out tonight against this Jazz stop unit.

Jazz vs Rockets same-game parlay

Alperen Sengun has been a brilliant playmaker for the Rockets this season, averaging 6.2 assists per game. The big man has cashed the Over in dimes in three of his last four contests.

Sengun has cooked the Jazz this season as a facilitator. Across three matchups, he’s averaging 9.3 dimes.

The Rockets have won two of the last three against Utah in 2025-26, and they cashed the Over in both of those victories. The Jazz are allowing a league-worst 125.4 PPG this season.

While Houston doesn’t typically score a ton of points, they’re up against a team that struggles immensely to contain their opponents offensively. Lock in the Over.

Jazz vs Rockets SGP

  • Kevin Durant Over 23.5 points
  • Alperen Sengun Over 6.5 assists
  • Rockets Over 124.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Reed Thin Defense!

Reed Sheppard has been scorching hot from deep lately. The guard was 9-for-14 against the Bucks, and he was also 4-for-7 from three-point range on Tuesday against the Knicks.

Amen Thompson is averaging 5.3 dimes this season and 5.0 assists against Utah. He’s cashed the Over in back-to-back games, and the Jazz are allowing 5.6 dimes per night to opposing shooting guards.

Jazz vs Rockets SGP

  • Alperen Sengun Over 6.5 assists
  • Rockets Over 124.5 points
  • Reed Sheppard Over 3.5 threes
  • Amen Thompson Over 5.5 assists

Jazz vs Rockets odds

  • Spread: Jazz +17 | Rockets -17
  • Moneyline: Jazz +979 | Rockets -1800
  • Over/Under: Over 228.5 | Under 228.5

Jazz vs Rockets betting trend to know


The Houston Rockets have hit the 2Q Moneyline in 17 of their last 24 games (+10.00 Units / 24% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Jazz vs. Rockets.

How to watch Jazz vs Rockets

LocationToyota Center, Houston, TX
DateFriday, April 3, 2026
Tip-off8:00 p.m. ET
TVKJZZ, SCHN

Jazz vs Rockets latest injuries

Not intended for use in MA.
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Two-start pitchers: Chris Sale leads a list of star-studded options for the second week of the 2026 season

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

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

While it’s only the second week of the season, it doesn’t make it any less important than any other week along the way, they all count equally. Historically though, we have done a bit better streaming somewhat sketchier options at the beginning of the season, as bats are usually slightly behind pitchers to start the season, leading to more low scoring games. The cold weather in many cities around the league doesn’t hurt either. I’d much rather take my chances rolling out an extra start or two now than in the dog days of summer.

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

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

Before we get into it, we'll start with a couple of notes on situations that may be unresolved or teams that may not have a two-start pitcher lined up for the upcoming week:

Someone is going to start twice for the Orioles next week in place of the injured Zach Eflin, but there has been no official word from the club yet on who that will be. The easy assumption is that Dean Kremer will be recalled from Triple-A Norfolk to take his place, which makes him a strong streaming option for his two-start week (at White Sox, vs. Giants). Kremer is a solid if unspectacular arm with a career 4.26 ERA and 1.29 WHIP over 671 2/3 innings at the Major League level. He’s unlikely to get blown up in either of those starts and should be able to approach double-digit strikeouts while having a decent shot at earning a victory. He should be started in all 15-team formats and I’d be more than happy to roll him out there in most 12-teamers as well.

Without further ado, let's dig into the options for the week of April 6.

Going Twice…

Note: Probable pitchers as of April 2 and are subject to change.

American League

▶ Strong Plays

Tarik Skubal, Tigers, LHP (at Twins, vs. Marlins)

You don’t need me to tell you that Tarik Skubal is a great play and needs to be started in all leagues every single week regardless of matchups. You already know that. His greatness should be amplified in a two-start week though with a pair of poor offenses doing battle against him. Skubal should once again perform as one of the most dominant pitchers in baseball this week and deliver quality results for fantasy managers who called his name in the first round of most drafts.

Cole Ragans, Royals, LHP (at Guardians, vs. White Sox)

Ragans should be considered an every-week start in all formats regardless of the matchup, so him lining up for two starts only boosts his appeal and production for the upcoming week. It’s possible that he may end up not going twice though, depending on when the Royals opt to slide Michael Wacha back into their rotation. He had his start pushed back on Friday due to illness. He could work on Monday or Tuesday, which would push Ragans’ double to the following week, or they could just skip Wacha’s turn in the rotation altogether and have him work in his normal spot again on Wednesday, which would give Ragans the ball twice. Either way, there shouldn’t be a decision for fantasy managers, as he should be locked into lineups regardless.

Hunter Brown, Astros, RHP (at Rockies, at Mariners)

Hunter Brown should be locked in as an every week start in all formats. I know that the matchup against the Rockies in Colorado can look scary on paper, but we haven’t seen any reason to be afraid of that offense yet and Coors Field in early April isn’t the same environment as Coors Field in the middle of July. Brown is an absolute stud and should be treated as such. Start him with full confidence in all leagues.

Jose Soriano, Angels, RHP (vs. Braves, at Reds)

Soriano has been among the best pitchers in all of baseball through his first two starts this season, firing 12 scoreless innings with a 0.83 WHIP and an 11/6 K/BB ratio. The matchups are tough, having to battle the Braves at home and then take on the Reds in a bandbox in Cincinnati, but you just can’t bench Soriano for a two-start week after the impeccable results that he has provided so far. He should be started in all leagues.

Tanner Bibee, Guardians, RHP (vs. Royals, at Braves)

Bibee hushed any concerns about his ailing shoulder his last time out with a strong showing in a losing effort against the Dodgers. The matchup – at least to start the week – looks much softer getting to battle the Royals at home. Bibee should be a lock for double digit strikeouts over the two starts with a decent shot at getting in the win column as well. He’s an easy start for me in all formats.

Casey Mize, Tigers, RHP (at Twins, vs. Marlins)

The former #1 overall pick from the 2018 draft class looked like the dominant ace that he was drafted to be in his first start of the season, racking up nine strikeouts over six innings of one-run baseball against the Diamondbacks. He now gets to feast on a pair of lesser offenses in the Twins and Marlins. He draws a tough opposing pitching matchup having to battle Joe Ryan on Monday in Minneapolis, but should be a favorite to earn a victory over Janson Junk and the Marlins at home to finish the week. He’s an easy start in all league sizes.

Joe Ryan, Twins, RHP (vs. Tigers, at Blue Jays)

If you drafted Joe Ryan in your fantasy league, it’s likely that it was to be your first or second starting pitcher. That’s someone that you should be starting each and every week regardless of who he’s taking on. He has struggled to a 4.82 ERA and 1.29 WHIP over 9 1/3 innings through his first two starts but that’s no reason not to continue trusting him. A matchup against the Tigers at home certainly isn’t scaring you off, though taking on the Blue Jays in Toronto at the end of the week is a tougher assignment. He should be locked and loaded in all formats though.

Cam Schlittler, Yankees, RHP (vs. Athletics, at Rays)

We aren’t seeing any shortage of strong two-start options for next week and Schlittler adds another to the list. The 25-year-old right-hander has been perhaps the best pitcher in baseball through his first two starts, firing 11 2/3 innings of shutout baseball with an unthinkable 0.26 WHIP and a ridiculous 15/0 K/BB ratio. He should be an auto start in all fantasy leagues even for his single starts right now, let alone for a two-start week that includes the Athletics and Rays. Sit back and enjoy the extra production from this one.

Logan Gilbert, Mariners, RHP (at Rangers, vs. Astros)

Gilbert was drafted to be an ace for fantasy purposes, or at the very least a strong SP2. He hasn’t performed that way yet – with a 6.75 ERA and a 1.41 WHIP over 10 2/3 innings – but we know where his numbers will ultimately settle at the end of the season. The matchups are middling this week, taking on a pair of divisional opponents, but you didn’t draft Gilbert to sit him for his first two-start week in the second full week of the regular season. He needs to be in all lineups.

Max Scherzer, Blue Jays, RHP (vs. Dodgers, vs. Twins)

I love what we saw from Mad Max in his season debut, allowing just one run over six innings against the Rockies with four punchouts and a 0.83 WHIP. He gets a tough matchup against the Dodgers to start the week before finishing up with a stronger matchup against the Twins. He’s one of those pitchers that fantasy managers should ride for as long as he’s healthy, so as long as he’s taking the mound I’m not going to let a matchup against the Dodgers scare me away. Start Scherzer with confidence in all leagues this week.

▶ Decent Plays

Shane McClanahan, Rays, LHP (vs. Cubs, vs. Yankees)

McClanahan delivered encouraging results in his first start of the season, though he lost his command in the fifth inning and was lifted before he could qualify for a win. We’re going to see dominant efforts from him this year and we’re going to see him get knocked around on occasion. That type of inconsistency should be expected in his return from Tommy John surgery. The matchups this week are both tough, but when he’s going right he can silence any lineup. If you drafted McClanahan, then you’re a believer in what he’ll ultimately provide this season and you should be starting him for all two-start weeks.

Jacob deGrom, Rangers, RHP (vs. Mariners, at Dodgers)

We have already seen deGrom have one start pushed back due to neck stiffness this season, which is discouraging for the 37-year-old right-hander. He looked decent once he finally took the mound, posting a 7/0 K/BB ratio over 4 2/3 innings against the Orioles despite allowing three runs. If you have deGrom rostered and he’s healthy enough to take the mound, you should be rolling him out there in all leagues. It’s tough sledding this week though with the Mariners coming into Arlington and then having to take on the vaunted Dodgers’ offense in Los Angeles.

Noah Cameron, Royals, RHP (at Guardians, vs. White Sox)

Cameron draws a pair of strong matchups against division rivals during the upcoming week, first battling the Guardians in Cleveland before finishing up with a juicy matchup against the White Sox at home. The 26-year-old hurler pitched very well in his first start of the season, allowing just one run over five innings against the Twins with a 5/1 K/BB ratio. He’s an easy start in all formats for next week.

Taj Bradley, Twins, RHP (vs. Tigers, at Blue Jays)

Bradley has certainly impressed through his first two starts on the season, posting a minuscule 0.87 ERA, 1.16 WHIP and a 12/4 K/BB ratio over his first 10 innings. We have seen this type of upside from Bradley before, but we have also seen a career 1.30 WHIP and the types of inconsistency that follows it. If he’s able to continue to limit the walks, the sky is the limit for him. The matchups this week aren’t scary enough to consider sitting him, so fantasy managers should be rolling him out there in all leagues and hoping that he can continue to provide the elite production that we have witnessed thus far.

Brayan Bello, Red Sox, RHP (vs. Brewers, at Cardinals)

Given the information that we have currently and what we have seen from Bello so far this season, he probably belongs down below in the riskier section. I was encouraged by the whiffs that he generated with his cutter in his first start though and truly believe that he could deliver a dominant performance in one of these starts next week. At a minimum, he should approach double digits in strikeouts and have a decent shot at earning a victory. Are you taking on some ratio risk, sure, but I think that the potential upside in these spots more than makes up for that, especially in 15-team formats. If you’re holding onto Bello and not using him for his two-start week, then why are you rostering him?

▶ At Your Own Risk

Aaron Civale, Athletics, RHP (at Yankees, at Mets)

Civale populated this same space last week as someone that wasn’t recommended, and instead of damaging your ratios over two starts he only ended up getting one as the A’s opted to keep Jacob Lopez on regular rest to pitch on Sunday. This week the matchups get even worse for Civale, having to battle the Bronx Bombers in New York before taking on the Mets at Citi Field on Sunday. There’s very little upside here and plenty of downside. Even in the deepest of leagues, you can probably do better.

Erick Fedde, White Sox, RHP (vs. Orioles, at Royals)

I’ve always been a big believer in Fedde and I’d like to be able to recommend him here, I just can’t bring myself to do it. He pitched decently in his first start, giving up three earned runs over five innings in a loss to the Marlins, but nothing under the hood during that outing inspired much confidence. If he played on a better team and had stronger win equity, maybe. I just can’t get there.

Shane Smith, White Sox, RHP (vs. Orioles, at Royals)

Smith has been brutalized through his first two starts of the season, posting a cringe-inducing 19.29 ERA and 3.21 WHIP across 4 2/3 innings. I don’t care who you are and what matchups you have, if you come in with those ratios through your first two starts, I’m not going to have any interest in streaming you until you show some signs of figuring it out. Could this be the week that he reverts to his 2025 form? Sure. He could also get clobbered again and do irreparable damage to your ratios. Hard pass.

National League

▶ Strong Plays

Chris Sale, Braves, LHP (at Angels, vs. Guardians)

Sale is a true fantasy ace and needs to be started in 100 percent of all leagues any time that he takes the mound. The fact that he’s lined up for two starts this week – both in great matchups – just means that he’ll rack up more strikeouts than usual and have better chances at earnings victory or two than he would if he were only starting once. Sale has been brilliant through his first two starts, compiling a minuscule 0.75 ERA, 0.58 WHIP and a 9/3 K/BB ratio over 12 innings while picking up a pair of wins. He could be the top overall play on the board for the upcoming week.

Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers, RHP (at Blue Jays, vs. Rangers)

Now here’s one that’s super interesting in weekly leagues where Ohtani only counts as one player. If you have him locked into your utility spot on offense, you’ll rarely, if ever, consider using him on the pitching side. The lone exception would be for weeks where he makes two starts. When you factor in that he’s off to a cold start at the plate, hitting just .167 (3-for-18) with no homers, no RBI and no stolen bases, I think the idea makes some sense. In leagues where I have that decision to make, I’m rolling with him on the pitching side. In leagues where he’s a separate player, he’s an obvious every week start on both the hitting and pitching side regardless of matchups.

Sandy Alcantara, Marlins, RHP (vs. Reds, at Tigers)

Through two starts on the season we have seen a return to dominance for Sandy Alcantara. He has yet to allow a run through his first 16 innings of work while registering a scintillating 0.56 WHIP and a 12/2 K/BB ratio. As long as he’s healthy and pitching like this, he should be started every single week in all formats, regardless of matchups. That’s especially true for two-start weeks.

Brandon Woodruff, Brewers, RHP (at Red Sox, vs. Nationals)

You know the drill with Woodruff by now. As long as he’s healthy enough to take the mound, he should be locked and loaded in all fantasy lineups. The first matchup against the Red Sox in Boston isn’t exactly ideal, but the soft landing against the Nationals at home to finish the week makes the two-step worthwhile. He’s an auto start in all leagues – especially after how sharp he looked in his debut against the Rays on Tuesday.

Freddy Peralta, Mets, RHP (vs. Diamondbacks, vs. Athletics)

The Mets’ ace has pitched well through his first two starts with the club despite an elevated 4.35 ERA, with a 1.06 WHIP and a 14/2 K/BB ratio across 10 1/3 innings. Look for him to pile up the strikeouts in a pair of strong home starts this week while bringing that ERA back down below 4.00. He should be an automatic start in all fantasy leagues.

Andrew Abbott, Reds, LHP (at Marlins, vs. Angels)

Through two starts on the season we have seen one terrific outing and one clunker from Abbott who was knocked around by the Pirates his last time out. A pair of matchups against the Marlins and Angels look like exactly what he needs to right the ship and get himself back on track. Don’t overthink it after a poor showing his last time out. Abbott should be started in all formats for this strong two-start week.

Nick Pivetta, Padres, RHP (at Pirates, vs. Rockies)

Pivetta has struggled to a 6.75 ERA and a 1.63 WHIP through his first two starts on the season despite a 12/5 K/BB ratio over his first eight innings. The veteran right-hander has a long track record of success and the matchups for the upcoming week are about as strong as you can possibly get. Don’t let the early season struggles fool you, he should be started in all leagues for the upcoming week.

▶ Decent Plays

Zac Gallen, Diamondbacks, RHP (at Mets, at Phillies)

It’s not the best possible set of matchups for Gallen, having to battle two strong offenses on the road, but after the way that he dominated the Tigers over six shutout innings his last time out we should give him the benefit of the doubt. We haven’t seen the strikeout upside yet – with just four punchouts over 10 frames through his first two starts – but Gallen has proven to be a viable mixed league option in years past and should continue to be viewed as one until he gives us a reason to think otherwise. I’d be comfortable deploying him in all league sizes for the upcoming two-start week.

Jameson Taillon, Cubs, RHP (at Rays, vs. Pirates)

After an absolutely brutal showing during the spring, Taillon looked as though nothing had happened as he fired 4 2/3 innings of scoreless baseball in his regular season debut. Perhaps we are reading too much into what we see during Cactus League play. The veteran right-hander now draws a pair of strong matchups where he should have a nice shot at securing a victory. He’s most definitely worth streaming in 15-team leagues and I’d be fine rolling him out there in 12’s as well.

Andrew Painter, Phillies, RHP (at Giants, vs. Diamondbacks)

It took longer than most fantasy managers wanted it to, but we finally got to see Andrew Painter debut this week and it was everything that we could have hoped for. The 22-year-old hurler racked up eight strikeouts over 5 1/3 innings of one-run baseball in a victory over the Nationals. It’s not always going to be that easy, and a pair of tougher matchups this week will give us a better sense of what to expect from him over the course of the season, but that doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t be using him this week. He should easily soar past 10 strikeouts in the two starts and with the backing of the Phillies’ offense he’ll always be a threat to earn a victory. I’d be starting him in all league sizes.

Adrian Houser, Giants, RHP (vs. Phillies, at Orioles)

The well-traveled right-hander pitched pretty well in his first start with the Giants, allowing just one run over 5 1/3 innings while striking out four batters. He’s never going to deliver huge strikeout totals and the matchups this week both look tough on paper, making him a tougher start than he normally would be. He’ll oppose Andrew Painter and Dean Kremer in those two starts, giving him a decent chance of securing a victory. If you need volume in 15 teamers, I could see giving him a shot. I don’t think there’s enough meat on the bone here to trust him in 12’s though.

Zack Littell, Nationals, RHP (vs. Cardinals, at Brewers)

Littell seems like the quintessential two-start pitcher that’s usually available on the waiver wire to debate about every week. He’s not going to pile up strikeouts, but he usually delivers decent enough ratios that he’s worth the gamble of trying to add a win or two to your team’s ledger. The first matchup against the Cardinals looks like a good one before having to finish the week with a tougher spot against the Brewers in Milwaukee. I especially like his chances of earning a victory against Andre Pallante and the Cardinals on Monday. That may be enough for me to try rolling him out there in 15-team formats.

▶ At Your Own Risk

Bubba Chandler, Pirates, RHP (vs. Padres, at Cubs)

This is admittedly a tough one for me to place this week. While Chandler didn’t allow a run in his season debut and racked up six strikeouts over 4 1/3 innings, he also issued six walks and had to walk the tightrope throughout. The matchups this week are both difficult and given the Pirates’ schedule, there’s a chance that they move Paul Skenes ahead of him to work against the Cubs at Wrigley on Sunday, which would leave Chandler with just one start against the Padres. Combine that with the ratio risk that I think he possesses and I’d probably be sitting him this week if I had better alternatives.

German Marquez, Padres, RHP (at Pirates, vs. Rockies)

We have only seen Marquez for one start since leaving the Rockies and it was a disaster, giving up four runs over three innings in a loss to the Giants. The schedule lines up nicely for him this week though, getting to battle the Pirates in Pittsburgh before a revenge game against the Rockies at spacious Petco Park. This one depends on your risk tolerance. I do think there’s a world where he slides through this week with a couple of quality starts and a victory. I also think it’s possible he gets lit up like a Christmas tree and loses his spot in the Padres’ rotation. My lean is to the former.

Brandon Williamson, Reds, LHP (at Marlins, vs. Angels)

Another option that I’d love to recommend here, I just can’t bring myself to do it. Williamson earned a spot in the Reds’ rotation with a strong showing during the spring, but he was lit up for six runs over 4 2/3 innings against the Pirates in his season debut while serving up three home runs. He’s got the talent to put together some good starts, but I think the inconsistency that we’re going to see in his return from Tommy John surgery invites too much ratio risk for my liking, even if the matchups look good on paper. Maybe if I was desperate for volume and couldn’t find better options in a 15-teamer, but there’s no way I’d roll him out there in anything less than that.

Ryan Feltner, Rockies, RHP (vs. Astros, at Padres)

Feltner actually looked good his first time out, firing three shutout innings against the Blue Jays before exiting when he was hit by a comebacker. He’s fine physically and ready to take the mound for two starts next week, the problem is that we should never roster Rockies’ pitchers for their two start weeks – especially when at least one of the starts comes at home. It’s possible that Feltner defies logic and twirls a pair of gems, but that’s not a gamble that I’m willing to take.

Janson Junk, Marlins, RHP (vs. Reds, at Tigers)

Perhaps in deeper leagues Junk could be worth a look as a streaming option, I’m just not buying in. He sports a 1.31 WHIP for his career, won’t be a favorite to win in either of his starts and he’s also not likely to pile up strikeouts over his two starts. There’s value in the fact that he’s unlikely to get blown up in either outing, and in deeper leagues his volume could potentially be helpful, I just think that I can find better options.

Andre Pallante, Cardinals, RHP (at Nationals, vs. Red Sox)

Some fantasy managers will see his sparkling 0.00 ERA and a matchup against the Nationals and will want to add Pallante to stream for his two starts next week. Don’t be fooled. We have seen this from Pallante before and we know that there’s a correction coming. Could he continue dancing through the raindrops and deliver viable results this week, sure it’s possible. It’s not something that I’m expecting though. There are better options on the board.

Thanks as always for reading. Let's see if we can pick up a couple of extra wins and strikeouts by streaming the right two-start pitchers instead of inflicting unnecessary ratio damage that's going to punish us for those decisions. To the top of the leaderboards!

Egor Chinakhov looks like the type of star the Penguins needed

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 31: Moritz Seider #53 of the Detroit Red Wings defends against Egor Chinakhov #59 of the Pittsburgh Penguins in the third period during the game at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 31, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It is really easy to be a prisoner of the moment in sports and overreact to things, both positively and negatively. Not every win means you are a championship team. Not every defeat means your season is over. Hot streaks happen for below average players, cold streaks happen for great players. It is a long season, and over the course of it the full body of work means a lot more than small sample sizes throughout it.

That brings me to Pittsburgh Penguins forward Egor Chinakhov. As of Friday he has only played 36 games with the Penguins, and that is by any reasonable definition a fairly small sample size of games. But it has been so impressive, and so impactful, that is really hard not to say that he looks like he has a chance to be a star going forward for this team.

In fact, he might already be one. Or at least on track to becoming one. He scored two more goals on Thursday night, bringing his total to 20 goals for the season and already 17 in 36 games with the Penguins. The overwhelming majority of those goals with the Penguins have come during 5-on-5 play, an area he has usually excelled when given an opportunity. Since the start of the 2023-24 season there have been 408 forwards to log at least 1,000 minutes of 5-on-5 ice-time. Chinakhov’s 1.26 goals per 60 minutes in this situations is seventh in the entire NHL (oddly enough, Anthony Mantha is one of the six players ahead of him) and there is little to suggest that it is unsustainable.

He does have a 17.9 percent all-situations shooting percentage, which is fairly high, but he also has one of the best shots in hockey. It is also not so high that it seems like an unsustainable number, especially when he has shot over 14.5 percent previously in his career and is over 12 percent overall. He is seeing a little bit of a boost, but it is not fraudulent. With his shot, it is not out of the question to think he can sustain something over 14 or 15 percent on a somewhat regular basis.

When the Penguins acquired Chinakhov from the Columbus Blue Jackets in late December it was always an intriguing move. They paid a steep price given what he had accomplished in his career and the way things were going with him in Columbus this season, but the talent was always there.

On Thursday night I stumbled upon this post from long-time Blue Jackets beat writer Aaron Portzline from the day of the trade

Seems accurate. Everybody knew the talent was there. The issues were always staying healthy and convincing the coaching staff and organization in Columbus that he was worthy of a real look and a bigger opportunity. He rarely got both. We are seeing the enormous potential. It also seems quite likely that the change of scenery has in fact set him free.

Chinakhov’s calling card has always been his shot and just how ridiculously hard and quick it is, and it has been consistently on display with the Penguins. Along with that, there are so many other elements of his game that stand out and are significantly better than advertised.

At the top of the list is his speed. He is lightning fast, and on so many occasions with the Penguins has simply blown by defenders to create his own chances or goals. He just seems to get on defenders so quick, catch them flat-footed, and power around them. He sort of did that on Thursday with his first goal, which then came on an incredible, perfectly placed backhand shot that beat Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy over his shoulder.

He is also a significantly better player away from the puck than we were led to believe.

I am not going to say he is going to win a Selke Trophy at any point in his career, but the way he hunts down pucks, creates turnovers, and uses that speed to overwhelm players is an extremely pleasant surprise and positive development. We saw that on display in the game against the Boston Bruins in early March when he forced a turnover in overtime that led to Tommy Novak’s game-winning goal.

He just looks like a player. A really good player. An important player. Give him some real power play time on the top unit and you might unlock even more goal-scoring potential.

As much as the Penguins prospect pool and young talent has improved over the past year-and-a-half (and it has, quite a bit) the one big knock has been the lack of a truly high-end player that can be a star. Maybe Ben Kindel has that sort of upside. Chinakhov might as well, and perhaps even more than that. The Penguins needed to find a guy like this, and they may have done it. The emergence and development of those two players has played a significant role in the Penguins push for a playoff spot. It is also a significant development for the long-term outlook of the team and organization. Whether it is good luck, good scouting, or a combination of the two it is very important and a great year for the Kyle Dubas front office.

With momentum heading into first road series, Padres turn to Boston

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 01: Nick Pivetta #27 of the San Diego Padres pitches against the San Francisco Giants during the first inning at Petco Park on April 01, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Diego Padres needed a win like Wednesday afternoon’s.

As the Padres bludgeoned the San Francisco Giants, 7-1, to salvage the series finale, they finally put together an offense that matched what it looks like on paper.

The club (after only recording nine extra-base hits going into Wednesday’s contest) had five XBH, including four doubles and Ramón Laureano’s, club-leading, second home run of the year.

In addition, starter Nick Pivetta put his Opening Day jitters behind him, striking out eight Giants batters over five innings. The scoreless performance earned him his first win of the 2026 season.

The Friar Faithful hopes that it’s a sign of things to come and not a fluke. The test of that will come in this weekend’s road series against the Boston Red Sox.

Taking the mound

Sonny Gray (BOS) v. Michael King (SD)

After being traded from the St. Louis Cardinals earlier this offseason, Gray hopes to factor as an anchor for a dominant Boston rotation. Whether or not that’s the case remains to be seen.

He struggled in his first outing with the Sox, allowing three runs on six hits across only four innings pitched. It was a rough outing, needing 80 pitches to get through it.

If Gray can’t solve a Padres’ offense that seems to have finally unlocked some slug, Boston will have trouble in a hurry.

King, on the other hand, had a memorable first outing. He pitched five vintage innings that stifled a Detroit Tigers’ lineup that was decimating Nick Pivetta only a day earlier.

If he can do the same to a Sox group that has mostly underwhelmed offensively, the Friars will easily overtake Boston.

Batter up!

With San Diego facing a right-hander in Boston starter Gray, skipper Craig Stammen will likely use a similar lineup to Wednesday’s game against San Francisco.

That being said, putting Nick Castellanos in left field over Laureano on Tuesday night showed Stammen favors career matchups against a pitcher over who has a hot bat.

With that in mind, the lineup will probably look like this:

  1. Fernando Tatis Jr., RF
  2. Xander Bogaerts, SS
  3. Jackson Merrill, CF
  4. Manny Machado, 3B
  5. Ramón Laureano, LF
  6. Miguel Andujar, DH
  7. Jake Cronenworth, 2B
  8. Nick Castellanos, 1B
  9. Luis Campusano, C

Almost all of those Padres have a batting average above .300 against Gray, with the lone exception being Campusano (no at-bats).

Machado has had a rough go of it lately and is looking for some slug. He could find it today against Gray (career .343 average against, 35 ABs).

Tatis is 3-for-3 in his career versus Gray and looks to do the same as Machado after starting the season 5-for-21.

Andujar and Castellanos will look to rack up some hits with their bench bats starting the season cold. They have a 2.334 (3 ABs) and .941 OPS (20 ABs), respectively, when facing Gray.

Relief corps

For a guy who was a relief pitcher, Stammen’s bullpen strategy has been… odd.

On Wednesday, Jeremiah Estrada came out and pitched a clean sixth inning before high-leverage lefty Adrian Morejon came in for the seventh.

Morejon wasn’t bad by any means, but he wasn’t his dominant self.

After giving up a leadoff double to former teammate Luis Arraez, he got two outs before surrendering a single to Harrison Bader, giving the Giants their lone run of the game.

He stopped the bleeding there but surprisingly returned in the eighth after not looking particularly sharp.

Normally, that eighth inning would be set-up man Jason Adam’s. But with him still rehabbing his way back, Morejon got the call.

He got two outs before allowing a walk to Rafael Devers. Stammen went to closer Mason Miller for the final four outs.

Miller dazzled, immediately flying out Heliot Ramos. He returned in the ninth and got all three outs by way of the K.

With the travel day, all of the relievers are available. But if King falters early, it’s likely Stammen turns to Ron Marinaccio or Wandy Peralta to cover multiple innings.

Where to watch Diego Padres vs. Boston Red Sox: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Friday, April 3

The San Diego Padres (2-4) open a three-game series in Boston against the Red Sox (1-4). The Red Sox have struggled to start the season, losing five in a row after winning their opener. Sonny Gray is scheduled to start for Boston while San Diego is expected to have Michael King on the mound.

  • Date: Friday, April 3

  • Time: 2:10 p.m. ET / 11:10 a.m. PT

  • Where: Fenway Park, Boston, MA

  • TV Channels: NESN, Padres.TV Presented by UC San Diego Health

  • Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • San Diego Padres: 2-4 (No. 5 in NL West)

  • Boston Red Sox: 1-5 (No. 5 in AL East)

  • Spread: Boston Red Sox +1.5

  • Moneyline: Boston Red Sox -120.0 / San Diego Padres +100

  • Over/Under: 8.5

San Diego Padres: Michael King (0-0, ERA: 0.00, K: 6, WHIP: 1.00)
Boston Red Sox: Sonny Gray (0-0, ERA: 6.75, K: 5, WHIP: 1.75)

Weather: 55°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 37,755 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

Padres’ offense remains silent to open Stammen era

San Diego Padres manager Craig Stammen (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images


San Diego Padres Craig Stammen began his managerial tenure, winning only twice during the opening six-game homestand. For all the Spring Training talk, Stammen and company had very little to celebrate in the first week of the 2026 season.

Offensive woes continue in 2026

No question, the offensive production is a bit slow out of the gate.

The Detroit Tigers staff was not going to be an easy opening series foe. But the back end of the Giants’ rotation should have been a feast for the Padres bats. 

The Friar Faithful are confused whether the Spring Training lineup experimentation has come to an end. Stammen seems content to leave Fernando Tatis Jr. in the leadoff spot, but he did shuttle Jake Cronenworth into the top of the order in three games. 

The first-year manager spent the entire time in Peoria, Ariz. promising changes to the lineup. It was baffling to see him throw out the same batting order that continued the hitting struggles from a season ago. We expected a contact-driven top of the order that would put themselves in scoring position for Manny Machado and Tatis Jr. to drive them home.

In the final game of the Giants series, the Friars’ bats may have awoken for a possible promising road trip. The hitters looked more relaxed at the plate. Collectively, the lineup had more free and easy at-bats that generated more run-scoring opportunities. Moving forward, better execution should put more runs on the scoreboard.

Unfortunately, we did not see much of that in the first homestand of the season; instead, there were too many lunging, off-balance swings for my taste.

Pitching is promising to almost dominate at times

Starting pitching was another lowlight of the homestand. Randy Vasquez outclassed the Tigers for the team’s first win. Nick Pivetta was good in his second start of the season. However, he only lasted five innings after throwing 82 pitches in the contest. Pivetta allowed only one hit and struck out eight batters. 

Early results are encouraging in how Stammen deployed the bullpen to protect a lead. It made sense for him to aggressively use the pen (Jeremiah Estrada, Adrian Morejon, and Mason Miller) to secure the win before heading out on the season’s first road trip.

A baseball season is very much like a rollercoaster ride with plenty of ups and downs before settling into a steady level of play. 

The Stammen era may have opened with a resounding dud, but the jury is still out on how he will run a major league club. From a strategic standpoint, we need more than six games to figure out if Stammen is a competent manager. 

It will be interesting to see how he keeps the momentum going from Wednesday’s victory.