What Royals pitcher had your favorite pitch?

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 08, 2024: A closeup view of an official Major League Baseball being held in a pitching grip prior to a game between the Detroit Tigers and the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on April 08, 2024 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Chris Bernacchi/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Careers are made on a signature pitch. Nolan Ryan’s fastball. Sandy Koufax’s curve. Mariano Rivera’s cutter. Over the years, the Kansas City Royals have had plenty of pitchers with a signature offering that defined their style on the mound.

What Royals pitcher had your favorite pitch? Here are some of my favorites:

  • Dan Quisenberry’s sinker
  • Mark Gubicza’s sinker
  • Tom Gordon’s curveball
  • Kevin Appier’s forkball
  • Zack Greinke’s slow curve
  • Joakim Soria’s curveball
  • Jason Vargas’ change-up
  • Wade Davis’ cutter
  • Greg Holland’s slider

Tell me your favorite pitch from a Royals pitcher!

St. Louis Cardinals 2026 Spring Training Observations on the ABS system

A challenged strike is over-ruled

Introduction

This short article continues my effort to articulate some of the observations I made during my visit to Spring Training, 2026.

Short Topic of the Day

I will start out with showing my bias. I’m a fan of the system. Although I’m an old guy, I tend to like new technology. I’m not a leading-edge adapter, but more the fast-follower type. This tech I like.

Since many of you haven’t seen it, I’ll describe it in hopefully not so many words.

All MLB stadiums are equipped with Hawkeye technology that tracks (in very small increments, it turns out) the flight of the ball. It is tuned to register if the ball passes through the strike zone. In days of yore, when mortal humans calling balls and strikes, the strike zone was an amorphous cube, where umpires would judge if a ball crossed any part of the plate (front or back) while in between the players knees and the letters. Each of these positions is open to some interpretation and judgement.

But now, Hawkeye evaluates 0n a two-dimensional plane. It looks to see if the ball crosses the plate only along a line that runs between the two back corners of the plate. Ergo, a pitch that might look a tad high to the hitter in the strike point (out near the front of the plate) could actually drop in the zone 8.5” later and be viewed by Hawkeye as a strike. The second dimension eliminates knees and letters and now just uses 53.5% of the player height as the top of the zone and the bottom is 27% of the same measurement. So the judgement of strike or ball by the ABS system is two-dimensional, whereas I suspect umpires will still tend more toward a 3-dimensional view that will naturally look more like an egg than a rectangle.

A pitcher, catcher or hitter may challenge, but must do so immediately, without assistance or encouragement from anyone else. They are to tap their head AND verbalize their challenge. Each team gets (theoretically) unlimited challenges during a game but loses the right to challenge if they have challenged unsuccessfully on two occasions during the game. The right to challenge is restored in any extra innings.

The actual challenge is quite interesting and seems to engage the fans a fair bit. The player taps their head, the umpire announces the challenge and all eyes turn toward the scoreboard. The strike zone and the ball location are displayed, along with a measurement of how far into or out of the zone the ball was. I didn’t time it, but I’d guess it takes in the area of 5 seconds or so. Pretty quick. The umpire announces the impact of the ruling (upheld, changed to ball or strike, and revised count). Then play resumes. The fans seem to really get into it. The umpires? If body language means anything, not so much.

For folks who watch the game on their chosen video device, I understand that the strike zone displayed during the broadcast will be one and the same with the two-dimensional Hawkeye view presented on the scoreboard.

I saw one game this past week where CB Bucknor was challenged multiple times and proven right more than not. Wouldn’t it be ironic if ABS informed us that CB is a better umpire than we had imagined? Another umpire went 0-6 on challenges, finally breaking the streak on, ironically enough, the last pitch of the game.

The Cardinals are encouraging their players to challenge during ST. It seems like it will be a good tool for them to learn the edges of the strike zone in real time. I am sure in regular season there will be less freedom to challenge. It would not shock me if only a few hitters are allowed (Nootbaar, for one). Otherwise, the onus might rest mostly on the catcher. I can see hitters having some freedom in crucial points of the game. I forget who, but we saw a hitter challenge a 3-1 call, in the rain, in the midst of a 10-2 game. That probably won’t reach the “crucial” threshold during regular season.

Most of the pitches that got challenged were truly borderline pitches that in the human umpire world could go either way. Several strikes were called on balls that were measures as “less that .1 inches” outside the strike zone. Likewise, you see some balls that get reversed to strikes as they just nick the zone. .1 inches. Wow! Our past time is no longer a game of inches, it is a game of millimeters.

I don’t get the sense that framing will be altered a lot by ABS. Seems like only 4-5 calls per game get challenged, whereas framing can affect the outcome of quite a few more pitches. That is my estimation, but we will have to wait and see.

For those that haven’t seen it, Baseball Savant has an ABS leaderboard page at www.baseballsavant.com/ABS. Take a look.

Cubs vs. White Sox at Glendale preview, Friday 3/13, 3:05 CT

Friday notes…

  • FORMER CUBS IN MARINERS CAMP: Anthony Kay, Tyson Miller.
  • DYLAN CARLSON: The non-roster outfielder is making his case for the Opening Day roster. In 12 games this spring he’s batting .360/.529/.440 (9-for-25) with two doubles and seven walks. He’s played well in the field, too.

Here are today’s particulars.

Cubs lineup:

White Sox lineup:

It’s an all-Martin day!

Riley Martin will start for the Cubs. The Cubs are having another bullpen game. The list of other Cubs pitchers scheduled today was not available at posting time.

Davis Martin will start for the White Sox. Other White Sox pitchers scheduled today: Sean Newcomb, Jordan Hicks and Jordan Leasure. The White Sox are a split squad today.

Today’s game will be televised by the White Sox channel CHSN. There will also be a radio broadcast via the Sox flagship station, WMVP/ESPN 1000.

MLB.com Gameday

Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.

Please visit our SB Nation White Sox site South Side Sox. If you do go there to interact with Sox fans, please be respectful, abide by their individual site rules and serve as a good representation of Cub fans in general and BCB in particular.

As we have done in the past, we’ll have a first pitch thread at five minutes to game time and one overflow thread, 90 minutes after game time. For today, that will be 3 p.m. CT and 4:35 p.m. CT.

These threads will not post individually onto the front page; instead, you can find links to them in the box marked ”Chicago Cubs Game Threads” at the bottom of the front page. There will also be a StoryStream on the front page with all the game thread links, as well as the recap after the game is over. The pitcher photos and regular-season stats will return on Opening Day.

Discuss amongst yourselves.

Kristaps Porziņģis eager to play with a healthy Stephen Curry

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 7: Kristaps Porzingis #7 and Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors smile before the game against the Los Angeles Lakers on February 7, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jim Poorten/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In today’s Dub Hub:

The Golden State Warriors are still waiting to see what they look like at full strength, but Kristaps Porziņģis already knows that one pairing in particular could change the team completely: sharing the floor with Stephen Curry.

Following Golden State’s 130-124 loss to the Chicago Bulls on Tuesday night, Porziņģis expressed how he is looking forward to eventually playing alongside the team’s franchise star.

Curry has now missed 15 games due to runner’s knee and is on track to miss at least 10 more days, which could mean another five-to-six game absence. The Warriors have gone 5–10 during that stretch, with Curry’s injury playing a major role in the team slipping to the ninth seed in the Western Conference standings.

Despite the slide, it remains unlikely that the Warriors fall out of the play-in entirely. The Memphis Grizzlies, who currently hold the 11th seed in the West, are nine games behind Golden State with just 17 games remaining in the regular season.

That’s what makes Porziņģis’ comments feel encouraging. Even as the losses have piled up, there is still reason to believe the Warriors have another level they can reach just in time for the postseason. Much of that hinges on the team finally getting healthy, but if that happens, a Curry–Porziņģis pairing — along with the added depth from the rest of the roster — could give Golden State a rare combination of elite spacing, defense, and size that they haven’t had in recent seasons.

For more on this and other news around the NBA, here is our latest news round-up for Friday, March 13th:

Warriors News:

Steve Kerr: No conversation of drop-dead date for shutting Steph Curry down for season | The Athletic

The Warriors said Wednesday that Curry, who hasn’t played since Jan. 30 because of a lingering runner’s knee injury, was making “good progress” in his rehab, but would be out for at least another 10 days before being re-evaluated again. Curry, who turns 38 Saturday, has missed the last 15 games and is now on track to miss at least six more.

Kerr sounded hopeful Thursday that Curry was putting together solid workouts in his rehab process, but it remains unclear when, or if, Curry will play again this season. Kerr said Curry has only done individual on-court workouts with VP of player health and performance Rick Celebrini and assistant coach Bruce Fraser, and has yet to do work with the team.

“He did get on the court today, which is good,” Kerr said.

Kurtenbach: This Warriors season looks irredeemable. Why not embrace it? | The Mercury News

There’s plenty to glean from this final month of basketball. But without Curry in the lineup, absolutely nothing is truly applicable to this season. It’s a sunk cost. The organization’s entire focus should be squarely on setting the table for the next one.

And wouldn’t a nice, shiny, early draft pick help soothe the sting?

I’m being told this upcoming draft is arguably the most loaded in years. I’ll take those folks’ word for it. But adding premium, young talent (and in that 8-to-12 range, there will be some exceptional prospects) is the only way to insulate against that grim, post-Curry future we’ve been getting an early, unwanted glimpse of lately.

And the idea of pride being in the way is absurd. What pride could possibly be left to save after Tuesday?

Moses Moody shooting left-handed during practice as he nurses a right wrist injury 

NBA News:

Gilgeous-Alexander eclipses Wilt for NBA’s longest 20-point streak | ESPN

“We’ve won throughout the streak, most importantly,” said Gilgeous-Alexander, who finished with 35 points and nine assists in the Thunder’s 104-102 win. “I just had so much fun playing the last year and a half, probably because I’ve done a lot of winning. … If you stay in the right mind frame, when you stay together, when you’re connected as a unit and just have fun throughout the whole process, you get the best out of things.”

Bam Adebayo responds to people calling his 83-point night unethical

In case you missed it at Golden State of Mind:

Warriors Reacts: Should the Warriors re-sign Kristaps Porziņģis?

But staying on the court has been an issue. He’s appeared in just three games in his month-plus with the team, and has now had an issue suiting up every year for the last decade. The talent is tantalizing, and there’s no doubt that he’s an excellent fit with the team. But is he worth committing to beyond this year, especially if his All-Star talent drives up his price? Let us know how you feel!

A post to end the week:

Follow @unstoppablebaby on X for all the latest news on the Golden State Warriors.

Tigers Talk: Who are your final three relievers on the Opening Day roster?

Detroit Tigers assistant pitching coach Juan Nieves watches practice during spring training at TigerTown in Lakeland, Fla. on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026. | Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

In a sense, spring warm up is just ending now and something like the actual competition for the final roster spots ramping up over the final two weeks of Grapefruit League action. The first weeks are mainly just stretching out into game shape and getting rhythm and timing going, both at the plate and on the mound. For players assured a roster spot, there’s really no rush and the trick is to conserve energy and avoid injury while slowly getting up to game speed just in time for Opening Day.

We’ve talked about the position side quite a bit. The main questions haven’t changed. Kevin McGonigle is going to see a lot fewer fastballs to hit over the next two weeks as the big league regulars stretch out and there are fewer minor leaguers getting reps on the mound. He’s done everything the Tigers could’ve asked to prove he’s ready for the starting shortstop job so far, but the big test is seeing a lot more spin and offspeed, from pitchers who can throw strikes without making too many big mistakes. His track record says this won’t be a problem, but it may be an adjustment.

So we’ll be watching him closely like everyone else, with the center field job really the other main positional question to answer.

The rotation is set. Will Vest, Kenley Jansen, Kyle Finnegan, Tyler Holton, and Drew Anderson are all locks for the bullpen. That’s five of the eight man bullpen locked in. Three spots remaining.

The Tigers picking up Enmanuel de Jesus’ contract suggests he’ll be in the Opening Day bullpen, though it’s not certain. The club may prefer to take Brant Hurter as the second lefty, or to take both.

Brenan Hanifee is on the 40-man roster already. So is Beau Brieske, whose rib cage discomfort has abated and should return to action soon. Sawyer Gipson-Long and lefty Bailey Horn are on the 40-man but dealing with hopefully minor injuries. Troy Melton is on the 60-day IL. Dylan Smith and lefty Drew Sommers are on the 40-man but already optioned to minor league camp along with Keider Montero, who is still with Team Venezuela currently.

Anyone else in camp, whether Tanner Rainey, Burch Smith, Jack Little, Sean Guenther, Ricky Vanasco, or players already moved to minor league camp like Tyler Mattison, Cole Waites, or Tyler Owens, will require a 40-man roster move.

In theory there are three spots. One of them will go to a left-hander, whether De Jesus, Hurter, Sean Guenther, or some combination of them. If you’re A.J. Hinch, which three relievers in camp are you taking?

Process is progress as Scotland seek Six Nations title eliminator triumph

After 11 straight defeats against Ireland, victory in Dublin would vindicate Gregor Townsend’s faith in his players

Trusting the process. It sounds like a fine idea in principle: although it really depends if your process was any good in the first place.

Gregor Townsend faced down a familiar cacophony of criticism after Scotland’s opening defeat by Italy last month. The same old shortcomings had been exposed, it was said, and another year of disappointment beckoned. Townsend had insisted the embarrassing capitulation against Argentina in November, from 21-0 ahead, was a “line in the sand moment” – only to see that line swiftly washed away in the sheeting Roman rain.

Continue reading...

The three regulars in the Cincinnati Reds lineup

DETROIT, MI - JUNE 14: Tyler Stephenson #37 of the Cincinnati Reds celebrates with TJ Friedl #29 and Elly De La Cruz #44 after hitting a grand slam against the Detroit Tigers during the fifth inning at Comerica Park on June 14, 2025 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Duane Burleson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Trying to jump into the mind of Terry Francona might actually be a little easier than those of many Major League Baseball managers. To be clear, that’s no knock on the intellect of the future Hall of Famer – rather, it’s an admission that the man speaks pretty openly about what it is he would really like to accomplish with his club.

He’s sold on TJ Friedl as his leadoff guy. He’s going to hit Elly De La Cruz in the #3 spot almost every single day, though he’s on record all over the place saying he’s going to get him some more breaks this season.

Despite the former 1st rounders struggles with injuries and underperformance the last two seasons, Matt McLain is a Tito favorite. He’s drawn Dustin Pedroia comps before, and the manager still seems more than willing to bat him 2nd in the lineup once again.

Those three things sure appear to be the fixed tenets on this otherwise malleable, flexible roster. So, it’s not a surprise that when I asked you earlier this week how many Cincinnati Reds hitters would top the 600 PA mark in 2026, you overwhelmingly responded with 3…or more.

The 600 PA threshold may seem arbitrary, but it’s a pretty decent measure of what a player who bats atop his team’s order almost every single day should cross. Those are numbers of a ‘regular,’ and in 2025 only two players – Elly and Friedl – cleared that mark.

They cleared it by a ton, too, as Elly finished with 699 and Friedl with 685. It was actually that kind of blowing past the 600 mark that made me consider the question in the first place, as last year – despite a lot of flexibility up and down the roster – injuries, trades, and positional rotation caused a lot of players to get PA often, but not exactly be ‘regular.’

McLain (577 PA) didn’t get there due to getting dropped in the order and sat here and there amid his struggles. Spencer Steer (568) sure felt like a regular all year, but didn’t get there, either.

This year, it sure feels like Steer, and Sal Stewart, and Eugenio Suárez should be regulars, but someone in this exercise is going to have to hit 6th, and that just simply doesn’t stack the PA the way hitting up top does. There’s also Ke’Bryan Hayes in there siphoning PA while hitting 9th for most of every game before getting pinch-hit for late, and Noelvi Marte still assumed to be the everyday RF at this point of the spring despite some recent struggles (and quality depth behind him).

The 2025 Seattle Mariners had four players with more than 600 PA (including a trio with more than 700), with the New York Mets sporting the exact same. The Texas Rangers and St. Louis Cardinals, meanwhile, had zero, for reference.

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The Washington Nationals are aiming to be more versatile in 2026

WEST PALM BEACH, FL - MARCH 11: Washington Nationals shortstop Nasim Nunez (26) tries to tag out St. Louis Cardinals second baseman JJ Wetherholt (77) in a pick off move on March 11, 2026, at the CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

One thing that has been noticeable this spring is that Blake Butera wants his players to be versatile. A number of Nats players have been playing multiple positions this spring. Between James Wood playing right field and Nasim Nunez playing third base, players are being exposed to new spots. 

Blake Butera admitted that the team is still working out how they will align their plethora of outfielders. However, he said that “I don’t see ourselves pigeon-holing either guy. That is the goal, to have flexibility on the roster”. The Nats want their players to be able to play multiple spots. We may have to view James Wood as just a corner outfielder, rather than a right or left fielder.

I like this idea, and think it will be important this season. Having positional flexibility allows managers to build the best possible lineups. For the Nats to over-achieve this year, they will have to win on the margins. Having guys who can play at multiple different spots is a way to do that.

The outfield is not the only place where we are seeing this push for versatility. Nasim Nunez and Luis Garcia Jr. are examples of infielders who have played multiple spots this spring. Garcia has played first and second base, while Nunez has played shortstop, second base and third base. 

Before this spring, Nunez had never played third base. While Nunez is a great defensive infielder, third base has its own nuances. Blake Butera mentioned that Nunez was working with Victor Estevez on his positioning. As a utility man off the bench, the more positions Nunez can play, the better.

Despite being a smaller guy, Nunez easily has the arm strength to play at the hot corner. He has a comfortably plus arm, and that is part of what makes him such a good defender at shortstop. I like that Nunez can be an option at third. While Brady House has been red hot this spring, he is unproven. Jose Tena is also more comfortable at second base than third.  That makes Nunez a strong candidate to get some reps at third this season.

However, it is not just the hitters that will be versatile this season. The pitching staff will have more fluid roles as well, especially in the bullpen. Butera did point out that it is “Important for a handful of our guys to have some clarity about what they are going to do every night”. 

However, I would not expect the Nats to have a true closer. Butera said he likes to view bullpen roles as “Leverage vs non-leverage rather than having specific innings for guys”. This is a very modern view, and it has some merit. There are times where the highest pressure spot comes in the 7th or 8th against the heart of a lineup, rather than the 9th inning.

The Nats relievers will have roles, but it will be more about leverage rather than innings. For the non-leverage relievers, it will be important for them to go multiple innings. The Nats have guys who can do that, most notably Brad Lord. One great thing about Lord though is that he has the stuff to slide into higher leverage spots if needed.

Versatility will be something that is a big theme this year. Whether that is where you play on the field, or what inning you pitch, roles are going to be more fluid this year. This is not a huge surprise given Blake Butera’s background. The Tampa Bay Rays have been on the cutting edge of all this stuff, and that is where Butera got his baseball education.

Some of the mixing and matching may seem whacky at first, but I think there is a method behind the madness. The Nats are going to have to find every small edge they can this season, and this is one way to do it. Blake Butera is going to mix things up, and Nats fans are going to have to be prepared for that.

Spring Training Game Thread #19: Milwaukee Brewers (8-10) vs. Athletics (9-11)

Milwaukee Brewers
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 20: Kyle Harrison #52 of the Milwaukee Brewers poses for a portrait during photo day at American Family Fields of Phoenix on February 20, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Jeremy Chen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Milwaukee Brewers are back in action today against the nomad Athletics. It’ll be their first day game after a night game this spring following a 1-0 loss to the Guardians last night.

On the bump today the Brewers will have Kyle Harrison continuing to build up. Harrison is in a strong position to land a spot in the initial starting rotation, especially with the news that Quinn Priester will start the year on the IL. Following Harrison will be Craig Yoho, Trevor Megill, and Carlos Rodriguez. This will be Rodriguez’s first Cactus League action in a while as he was with Team Nicaragua in the WBC. Gage Jump gets the start for the A’s.

In the lineup today the Brewers continue to plug in a bunch of their regular starters with less than two weeks to Opening Day. Sal Frelick is leading off, followed by Blake Perkins, Jake Bauers, and Andrew Vaughn. Garrett Mitchell is the DH today batting fifth followed by Luis Rengifo. The bottom of the order is rounded out with David Hamilton, Reese McGuire, and Cooper Pratt who is at second base.

First pitch is at 3:10 p.m. CT and the game will be broadcast in Milwaukee on 620 WTMJ and the Brewers Radio Network.

Will the Toronto Raptors fight back against the Phoenix Suns?

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - MARCH 05: Head coach Darko Rajakovic of the Toronto Raptors looks on against the Minnesota Timberwolves in the first quarter at Target Center on March 05, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

What happened against the New Orleans Pelicans can’t be swept under the rug.

In what was arguably the most embarrassing moment of the season, the Toronto Raptors allowed the Pelicans’ Dejounte Murray to punk Jamal Shead.

But despite the Raptors moving on to their next game against the Phoenix Suns on Friday, the rest of the NBA world, and especially Raptors fans, are justifiably stuck on this viral moment that perfectly captures the essence of this iteration of the team.

Always have your teammates’ backs.

It’s a rule in sports, both at the professional and amateur levels. It’s actually written in bold.

With tip-off scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on TSN, the Raptors have an opportunity to silence the deafening criticism with a win over a Suns team on a four-game winning streak.

Warming up the hot seat

There’s a complexity to coaching in the NBA that only those lucky enough to experience it can truly understand. For Raptors head coach Darko Rajakovic, it’s difficult to gauge his coaching acumen. The organization has hidden behind a marketing strategy centred on it being the second year of a rebuild. There’s also the argument that Rajakovic doesn’t have the players to fit his pass-heavy and quick-decision-making system. It’s also easy to spot flaws in this roster, particularly the spacing issues.

All of these narratives make sense.

But for Rajakovic, there has to be a breaking point of some sort. If there isn’t, then what’s the point of playing out the rest of the season?

The Raptors’ commitment to Rajakovic’s system was obliterated when the front office traded for Brandon Ingram. There were earlier signs of a disconnect when Toronto traded for a guard more suited to play off-ball in Immanuel Quickley, and a bully-ball type of wing in RJ Barrett.

Adding rookie Collin Murray-Boyles and free-agent Sandro Mamukelashvili was an attempt to course-correct, but the core of the team is counterintuitive to what Rajakovic wants to do.

If the season still matters, the Raptors must commit to a play style that properly weaponizes the team’s best players, and that’s on Rajakovic. Scottie Barnes needs to spend less time in the corner. The Raptors shouldn’t exhaust a majority of the shot-clock trying to force-feed a specific look.

On the defensive end, something needs to change too.

The Raptors are a poorly constructed offensive team, but it was supposed to even out on the other side of the court. That’s why it’s depressing when the Raptors give up 122 points on 51 per cent shooting to a lowly-Pelicans offence.

Something has to change, especially if the Raptors aren’t going to show fight when opposing teams aren’t afraid to bully them.

The blame doesn’t fall exclusively on Rajakovic and the coaching staff. As the faces of the franchise, the change must begin with Ingram and Barnes. There has to be a level of takeover from the two All-Stars, especially if the game-planning approach remains the same. It’s not fair to compare Ingram and Barnes to the NBA’s upper echelon, but players like Kawhi Leonard and Lebron James have boiling points. When it’s reached, those types of players veto play calls, put the teams on their back, and live with the consequences.

The next two games at home will likely serve as valuable insight into what the rest of the season could look like.

Players to Watch

Expect a gritty game from Shead. The home crowd is well aware of what happened to the backup point guard. If Shead can leverage the crowd’s appreciation for him, it could lead to one of the better moments of the season.

For Phoenix, Jalen Green has seemingly figured something out during their winning streak. Green is averaging 27.5 points on 50.1 per cent shooting in the last four contests. The explosive guard is getting the All-Star type of volume that fits his chaotic offence, and the Suns are benefiting from it.

2025 Season in Review: Tucker Barnhart

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 21: Tucker Barnhart #18 of the Texas Rangers in action against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on May 21, 2025 in New York City. The Yankees defeated the Rangers 4-3. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With the 2025 Texas Rangers season having come to an end, we shall be, over the course of the offseason, taking a look at every player who appeared in a major league game for the Texas Rangers in 2025.

Today we are looking at catcher Tucker Barnhart.

It says Tucker Barnhart…

But have you ever considered…

Bucker Tarnhart?

It has a certain ring to it, doesn’t it?

Bucker Tarnhart sounds like the name of a hobbit, someone who attended Bilbo Baggins’ eleventy-first birthday party and drank beer and ate and had a merry old time before diving under the table when the dragon fireworks went off.

Just like every team needs more than five starting pitchers to make it through the season, every team needs more than two catchers to make it through the season. Catchers get banged up, they hurt things, they start just not playing well. They go on paternity or bereavement leave.

And when that happens, a team is going to summon a catcher up from AAA to fill in. Sometimes the filling in is just for a day or two. Sometimes it is for a week or ten days. Sometimes it is multiple weeks. You never know with these catchers. You might even have a situation where the catcher called up from AAA to replace the unavailable catcher temporarily gets hurt, and then you have to find a fill-in for the fill-in.

So if you are a catcher with a modicum of ability, you can hang around for a long time. Not necessarily in the majors, of course. At least, not for a full season, or necessarily even if a definitive period of time. But every team needs a lot of catchers to catch pitchers in spring training, and every team needs players at AAA who, if not exactly capable, are not so inept that they can’t be called upon to be a band-aid for a bit in the bigs.

Which brings us to Tucker Barnhart. Barnhart was, once upon a time, a starting catcher. He was the Reds’ regular catcher from 2016 through 2021, won a couple of Gold Gloves, had a random 3.6 bWAR season fueled by a National League leading 3.1 dWAR, never had a bWAR as high as 1.0 in a season otherwise.

After catching 116 major league games for the Reds in 2021, he was traded to the Detroit Tigers after the season, with the Tigers picking up the $7.5 million club option for 2022 that the Reds were passing on. I remember there being carping from certain circles when that happened, the Reds being ripped for being cheap and just dumping salary, but, well, its Tucker Barnhart we are talking about. Not wanting to have to pay a 31 year old Tucker Barnhart $7.5 million to play for you in the year of 2 thousand and 22 seemed fairly reasonable at the time.

Barnhart promptly put up a 554 OPS in 94 games for the Tigers, went to the Cubs for 2023, only played 43 games, and saw his OPS drop to 541. Games played and OPS dropped again in 2024, with the D-backs, to 31 and 497, respectively.

So last year, Texas brought him to camp, and he was sent to Round Rock to be the catcher behind the glass that you break in case of emergency. Emergency struck at the end of April, when Kyle Higashioka’s hamstring issue necessitated getting a functional catcher on the active roster. Barnhart managed to stick around until the end of May, even once Higashioka and Jonah Heim were both healthy, though he only played in eight games — three as the starting catcher, four as a mid-game replacement at catcher, and one as a relief pitcher.

Barnhart was DFA’d at the beginning of June when Nathan Eovaldi’s injury resulting in Codi Heuer being summoned, with Barnhart being the 40 man roster casualty. He was released, re-signed, spent June in Round Rock, and then retired. His final season in the majors saw him slash .231/.333/.231 in 15 plate appearances.

Given that inoffensive veteran catchers are always needed for the purpose of stashing in the minors, Barnhart could have hung around a while longer, I imagine. However, per B-R, he has earned over $30 million in his major league playing career. I can see why a guy who was a regular for a number of years, who made a lot of money in his career, and who is playing out the string might decide going home and spending time with his family was preferable to trying to hang on as a AAA journeyman.

Previously:

Gerson Garabito

Tyler Mahle

Kyle Higashioka

Adolis Garcia

Luis Curvelo

Alejandro Osuna

Blaine Crim

Jake Burger

Jacob Webb

Nick Ahmed

Jon Gray

Carl Edwards Jr.

Josh Jung

Leody Taveras

Dustin Harris

Marc Church

Luke Jackson

Danny Coulombe

Wyatt Langford

Dylan Moore

Michael Helman

Evan Carter

Cole Winn

Rowdy Tellez

Dane Dunning

Marcus Semien

Billy McKinney

Jose Corniell

Jonah Heim

Cody Freeman

Sam Haggerty

Jacob deGrom

Merrill Kelly

Caleb Boushley

Justin Foscue

Nathan Eovaldi

Chris Martin

Patrick Corbin

Joc Pederson

Phil Maton

Corey Seager

Kansas State hires Belmont's Casey Alexander as next men's basketball coach

The first major-conference job to come open on this year’s men’s college basketball coaching carousel has officially been filled.

Kansas State has hired Belmont’s Casey Alexander to be its next head coach, the university announced March 13.

Alexander has signed a five-year contract, which will pay him $3.3 million during the 2026-27 season before he receives a $50,000 base salary increase each remaining year on his deal.

After taking over for his former coach, Rick Byrd, Alexander went 166-60 in seven seasons at his alma mater. The Bruins won at least 20 games in each of his seven seasons there and won three conference regular-season championships.

This past season, Belmont went 26-6 and won the Missouri Valley regular-season title before being upset by Drake 100-79 in the quarterfinals of the conference tournament, almost certainly denying it a shot at the NCAA tournament. The Bruins never played in the NCAA tournament under Alexander, though they qualified for the 68-team field in 2020 before the event was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 53-year-old Alexander was previously the head coach at Lipscomb and Stetson, where he combined to go 137-120 in eight seasons.

Alexander’s teams have been known for their up-tempo style and offensive explosiveness. Six of Alexander’s seven Belmont squads finished among the top 100 teams in adjusted offensive efficiency, according to KenPom, an impressive feat from a small-conference program. He became known for his excellent player evaluation, which allowed Belmont to sign the likes of Wil Richard, Ja'Kobi Gillespie and Cade Tyson before each player transferred to a power-conference program.

"I'm incredibly excited to join the team at K-State and can't wait to get the journey started," Alexander said in a statement. "K-State has such a rich tradition and a wildly passionate fan base and I'm grateful for the opportunity provided by (Kansas State athletic director) Gene Taylor to be a part of it."

The 53-year-old Alexander replaces Jerome Tang, who was fired on Feb. 15 after four seasons at the school. The university fired him for cause, which Tang plans to fight in court.

Kansas State made the NCAA tournament nine times over a 12-season stretch from 2008-19, which included two Elite Eight appearances, but it has missed the tournament in five of the past six seasons in which it was held.

The Wildcats went just 28-37 over the past two seasons despite high-priced additions out of the transfer portal like P.J. Haggerty and Coleman Hawkins.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Casey Alexander hired as Kansas State men's basketball coach

The Phillies weren't letting Kyle Schwarber get away and Pete Alonso knows it

The Phillies weren't letting Kyle Schwarber get away and Pete Alonso knows it originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CLEARWATER, Fla. – Shortly after the Phillies re-signed Kyle Schwarber in December, a team official was asked what Plan B was if the slugger had taken his talents elsewhere.

“There was none,” the official said. “We weren’t letting him get away.”

Pete Alonso, who would have made a lot of sense if the Phillies needed a Plan B for a slugging designated hitter, has no trouble believing that.

“There was a little bit of dialogue, very, very early, more of a ‘Hey, how you doing?’ type of thing,” said Alonso, who was also a free agent this winter. “But they were like, ‘All our eggs are with Schwarbs.’

“And they should have been. Kyle means a lot to that franchise and that clubhouse and I’m really happy for him because he’s in the right spot. He just fits really well with that group and that clubhouse. The Phillies got a good one in Schwarbs.”

Schwarber was pursued by the Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and Baltimore Orioles. He returned to the Phillies on a five-year, $150 million deal. Twenty-four hours later, the Orioles signed Alonso to a five-year, $155 million contract. He will play first base for the O’s and bring a slugging bat to their lineup, just like he did for seven seasons with the New York Mets.

Alonso visited Clearwater with his new team Friday. He had a pair of singles against Phillies prospect Andrew Painter. He was booed like a Met. Phillies fans remember those 18 home runs and 62 RBIs he produced against their team in 104 games with the Mets.

“I love playing in Philly,” Alonso said. “The Bank is a fun place to hit. The ball flies. The fans are rowdy. They bring a lot of energy. And the Phillies always have a great team. They’re super talented. You’ve got to bring it when you play them.”

Alonso hit a majors-leading 53 homers as a rookie with the Mets in 2019, Zack Wheeler’s last season with that club. The Mets made little attempt to retain Wheeler when he became a free agent and signed with the Phillies before the 2020 season. Alonso can empathize. He averaged 41 homers and 113 RBIs in his six full seasons (minus the 2020 COVID season) with the Mets, and never played in less than 152 games in a full season. Despite this, the Mets were reluctant to give Alonso more than a three-year contract this winter. He turned 31 in December.

If Alonso’s time in Baltimore is as successful as Wheeler’s has been in Philadelphia, the Orioles will have made a good signing.

“I can’t think of Wheels as anything else other than a Phillie,” Alonso said. “Just like Schwarbs. As soon as he came over, it’s like, this is the best place for him, not just contractually, but the fit is right. He’s unlocked his true potential with the Phillies. He’s a top contender for the Cy Young every year. He’s been an absolute stud.

“As a player, I knew he was nasty because facing him in live at-bats in spring was never fun. I’m happy for him and his family. This is the best version of himself. They’ve been able to get the most out of him.”

Alonso also had high praise for Cristopher Sanchez, who has blossomed into an ace the last couple of seasons.

“The first time I faced him was in ’22,” Alonso said. “Obviously, him throwing harder makes his off-speed stuff play better. The changeup is up there with the best.”

Starting pitching is a Phillies strength. The club led the majors with 84 quality starts last season. The starting staff’s 3.53 ERA was second-best in the majors. As a frequent opponent during his time in New York, Alonso believes catcher J.T. Realmuto has a lot to do with that.

“If you look at what he means to the pitching staff, he’s really an unbelievable asset to have,” Alonso said. “He’s managing games. He posts every day. His 145 games as a catcher are like a position player’s 190 games. What he does is incredible, how he manages the staff. Not just pitch-calling and game management, but he’s won Silver Sluggers and Gold Gloves. He’s the whole package, everything you want in a catcher.”

Alonso said he will miss the 13 meetings per year against the Phillies in the National League East, but he’s eager to feel the intensity of the American League East.

“I’m stoked for where I’m at,” he said.

That’s Baltimore.

But if the Phillies hadn’t been able to re-up Kyle Schwarber — who knows? Pete Alonso would have been a good Plan B, even if the Phillies never really had one.

Avalanche Dominate Kraken in 5-1 Road Victory

After a frustrating loss to the Edmonton Oilers on Tuesday, the Colorado Avalanche rebounded emphatically on the road tonight, defeating the Seattle Kraken 5-1 to kick off a two-game road trip. The visitors set the tone early, scoring consistently throughout the game to secure a commanding victory.

First Period

Colorado struck first as Martin Necas opened the scoring with his 30th goal of the season. Nathan MacKinnon orchestrated the play with a perfectly timed cross-ice pass, leaving Necas wide open for a clean finish past Joey Daccord.

MacKinnon would add to the lead shortly thereafter. Necas returned the favor with a cross-ice setup, allowing MacKinnon to maneuver behind the Kraken net. Attempting a backdoor pass to Nazem Kadri, the puck deflected off a Seattle defender and into the net, giving the Avalanche a 2-0 advantage.

The period concluded with Nic Roy extending Colorado’s lead to 3-0 on the power play. Positioned right in front of the crease, Roy capitalized on a loose puck, finishing with precision just over a minute before the first intermission.

Second Period

Seattle managed to break through on the penalty kill, as Ryker Evans scored a shorthanded goal past Scott Wedgewood, narrowing the deficit to 3-1.

However, Colorado responded swiftly. Nazem Kadri recorded his first goal since returning to the Avalanche, restoring a three-goal lead with a tally that made it 4-1 heading into the third period. How about that for a dagger?

Third Period

The Avalanche sealed the victory early in the final frame when Joel Kiviranta deflected a shot from Josh Manson past Seattle goaltender Philipp Grubauer, bringing the final score to 5-1.

Looking Ahead

Colorado (44-11-9) concludes this two-game road trip on Saturday, traveling to Winnipeg to face the Jets (26-28-10). Puck drop is scheduled for 2:00 p.m. MT.

Stay tuned with The Hockey News for the latest.