Bruce Bochy's endorsement was ‘surreal' for new Giants pitcher Tyler Mahle

Bruce Bochy's endorsement was ‘surreal' for new Giants pitcher Tyler Mahle originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

When a future Baseball Hall of Fame manager such as Bruce Bochy gives a player his endorsement, it should not be taken lightly. 

President of baseball operations Buster Posey took his former manager’s word, and the Giants signed pitcher Tyler Mahle to a one-year, $10 million contract this offseason in MLB free agency. 

Mahle, who played for Bochy’s Texas Rangers in the previous two seasons, had high praise for the four-time World Series champion manager in an interview with NBC Sports Bay Area’s Alex Pavlovic in Scottsdale, Arizona, for “Giants Talk.”

“It was great,” Mahle said of playing for Bochy. “He’s obviously a legend of the game; not just in San Francisco, a legend in baseball.”  

Mahle dealt with injuries over the last two seasons and only made 19 starts for the Rangers in that time frame. But, in 2025, the starting pitcher finished with a 6-4 record and an impressive 2.18 ERA. 

Bochy, a former catcher, is known for getting the best out of his pitching staff. But a career-best ERA in a season in which Mahle battled a rotator cuff strain is no fluke. 

“So, playing for a guy like that, it gives you a little bit more confidence and I think makes you a little bit better,” Mahle told Pavlovic. “It’s surreal to say that I’ve played for a guy like that and for him to say kind words about me, that’s pretty surreal to me too. 

“I’m super grateful that I got to be around him.” 

Mahle now, with Bochy’s blessing, has a chance to build on a successful 2025 as a member of the Giants.  

He, along with fellow free-agent signee Adrian Houser, will help shore up San Francisco’s starting rotation behind Logan Webb and Robbie Ray.

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Former Canadiens’ Player’s Daughter Making Canada Proud

With the 61st overall pick at the 1991 NHL draft, the Montreal Canadiens drafted left wing Yves Sarault. The Valleyfield, Quebec native wouldn’t make his NHL debut until the 1994-95 season, and he would have very limited success. He played 22 games with the Canadiens across two seasons, and he only managed to pick up one point before he was traded to the Calgary Flames alongside Craig Ferguson for a 1997 eight-round pick who would become Petr Kubos, a right-shot defenseman who played junior hockey in the WHL before returning to Czechia and never coming back.

Meanwhile, Sarault played only 106 NHL games, spent time in the AHL and IHL, and played several seasons overseas in Switzerland, Germany, and Austria before wrapping it up in the LNAH. When he played for the Grand Rapids Griffins of the IHL in 1999, his better half gave birth to a little girl, whom they named Courtney. In 2022, she competed in her first Olympic Games in Beijing but finished 11th in both individual races and lost two ranks while skating for the relay team, which led to Canada failing to make the podium—a heartbreaking experience.

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Four years later, while most hockey fans have forgotten Sarault’s name, his daughter has put the family name in the headlines in Milano-Cortina, winning three medals in speed skating. She was part of the mixed team relay, which claimed silver. She then won a bronze medal in the women’s 500m and added a silver medal in the women’s 1000m on Monday.

With three medals, the Moncton, New Brunswick resident may have done enough to be on the country’s shortlist of flagbearers for the closing ceremonies as the Olympics will come to a close on Sunday, February 22.


Follow Karine on X @KarineHains Bluesky @karinehains.bsky.social and Threads @karinehains.  

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Mariners Prospect Rankings #18, LHP Mason Peters

ARLINGTON, TX - FEBRUARY 26: Mason Peters #26 of the DBU Patriots pitches against the LSU Tigers during the 2025 Amegy Bank College Baseball Series at Globe Life Field on February 26, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Gunnar Word/Texas Rangers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When Mason Peters was selected out of Dallas Baptist in last year’s draft, the young left-hander was (perhaps fairly) overshadowed by several players capable of headlining a draft class by themselves. Kade Anderson, Nick Becker, and Luke Stevenson were all given first round grades last season, so Seattle managing to land all three was a rather remarkable feat that had fans understandably excited. This, however, did force the Mariners to save a bit of cash with their subsequent picks, and at first glance, Peters looked like little more than a lower-round guy who the M’s cut a deal with. However, upon discovering he only received a minor pay cut from his allotted slot value (saving the team roughly $67,000), it became apparent the Mariners see something in this kid. Far from merely an afterthought in a loaded 2025 draft class, Mason Peters is a name you need to know for the 2026 season.

Kicking off Day 2 of the draft with a 5’11 college reliever looks strange on the surface, but what separates Peters as a pitcher is his excellent feel for spin. Featuring a fastball, slider, cutter, and curveball, his entire arsenal gets well above-average spin that helps his offerings play up immensely. Additionally, with a 5.6ft release height, Peters launches the ball several inches below the average MLB pitcher, yet still manages to get solid carry on his heater from the left side. The curveball and slider already look like potential plus offerings and had college hitters baffled more often than not, though some additional velocity progression would help both pitches play to their peak potential in the professional ranks.

The concerns here are relatively straightforward. Under the assumption they view him as a potential starter, the precedent for pitchers his size is not great. Very few pitchers under six feet tall can last in the rotation, let alone pitch a high volume of innings while doing it. He got some starts in college toward the back half of last season, but even then he only had one start go beyond four innings (a remarkable 6IP, 10K, no-hitter). There’s legitimate relief risk in the profile, and the spin-centric approach may or may not run into issues with opposite-handed hitters down the line. Certainly not a flawless profile, but there’s plenty to get excited about for a player that lands in the latter half of the organizational top thirty.

If everything works out for Peters, the 93 mph heater he had last year ticks up with added weight (he was just 175 lbs last season) and he’s able to get closer to his peak of 97 mph more consistently, even if it’s just for shorter stints. A low-launch lefty with solid extension, mid-90’s heat, and big time spin is a valuable asset to invest in, and if there’s an organization that’s proven they can get the most out of those guys, it’s the Seattle Mariners. A good athlete that’s already proven he can throw strikes, the M’s are calculating that they can help get Peters up a level in the “stuff” department. Should that be the case, Peters will follow just behind his classmate Kade Anderson atop the organization’s left-handed starting pitching depth chart, potentially filling an area of relative weakness that’s gone underaddressed for years.

Twins ace Pablo López likely to miss all of 2026 with injury in club's latest blow

The Minnesota Twins' series of miserable events seemingly has no end.

Staff ace Pablo López suffered a "significant tearing to the UCL" of his right elbow, general manager Jeremy Zoll told reporters in Florida on Feb. 17. Should Lopez, as expected, opt for reconstructive surgery soon, he will miss the entire season and likely a portion of the 2027 campaign. 

It's yet another blow to a Twins club that underwent a massive teardown at the 2025 trade deadline, took the team off the market before taking on several more investors, and parted ways with longtime president of baseball operations Derek Falvey last month.

Pablo Lopez during a workout on Feb. 17.

What was left: A stripped-down roster featuring a pair of elite arms - López and fellow right-handed starter Joe Ryan. At the least, the club could entertain trade offers on them at the 2026 deadline and deepen the expected rebuild.

Instead, López won't pitch at all - for the Twins or anybody - and the club will remain further in limbo.

López is entering the third year of a four-year, $73.5 million contract. He's posted a 3.68 ERA in three seasons with the Twins, and in 2023 earned an All-Star berth and finished seventh in Cy Young Award voting.

Now, he faces a significant career hurdle.

"You keep going," he told USA TODAY Sports in 2025. "If you do something, try to do it at your very best."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Pablo Lopez injury update: Twins ace has torn UCL, likely out for 2026

Twins right-hander Pablo López has a major elbow injury that likely will need season-ending surgery

FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — The Minnesota Twins suffered a major setback during their first full-squad workout, an elbow injury that likely will sideline ace Pablo López for the entire season.

General manager Jeremy Zoll told reporters at the club's spring training facility on Tuesday that López has a “significant tear” in his right ulnar collateral ligament. He was seeking a second medical opinion but expected to need Tommy John surgery, Zoll said. López ended his bullpen session early on Monday after experiencing soreness in his throwing elbow.

The team's opening day starter in each of the last three years, López was grappling with a double disappointment with the probable loss of not only the upcoming major league season but the World Baseball Classic next month, when he was scheduled to pitch for his native Venezuela.

“I already feel I’m letting a lot of people down,” said López, who was limited to 75 2/3 innings last year because of injuries. "I’m letting myself down. I’m letting the Twins down. I’m letting my family down.”

López, who turns 30 on March 7, is making $21.75 million this season. He is signed through next year.

“We know injuries are part of the game. You're always trying to get through spring training as healthy as possible,” Zoll said. “It's definitely a blow, but we're going to just do the best we can to push forward.”

López made his major league debut with the Miami Marlins in 2018 and spent five seasons with them before being traded to the Twins. López made the All-Star team in his first year with the Twins and helped the franchise end an all-time record 18-game postseason losing streak for North American professional sports, going 2-0 with an 0.71 ERA in two starts in the 2023 playoffs.

When López was in the Seattle Mariners organization, he had Tommy John surgery that kept him out of the 2014 minor league season.

“We’re not designed to throw things that hard for an extended time,” López told reporters at the Lee Health Sports Complex. “Having done it once, I can do it again. Doesn’t mean I want to, but I’m going to have to and I know I can.”

López missed about three months last season with a shoulder injury. As the Twins were slashing payroll, he was mentioned often as a prime trade candidate, but the front office opted to keep him and right-hander Joe Ryan at the front of what was expected to be a strong rotation.

Now the Twins are missing their most important piece, with Ryan, an All-Star in 2025, now the ace and right-hander Bailey Ober under pressure to bounce back and be a reliable No. 2 starter.

Simeon Woods Richardson, Zebby Matthews and David Festa are all 25-year-old right-handers who have combined to make 98 starts over the past two seasons, with at least one or two of them likely to make the opening rotation. Taj Bradley and Mick Abel were acquired in the flurry of trades during the week leading up to the deadline last summer and also are firmly in the mix.

“In a lot of ways, we view this as a real opportunity for someone to step up and take advantage of that,” Zoll said. “We’ll pick up the pieces once we have a better handle on things.”

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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Report: Bruins Zoning In On Blues Veteran Defenseman Justin Faulk

It’s no secret that St. Louis Blues defenseman Justin Faulk is available via trade and that his market is quite large.

The expectation is that several teams will be inquiring about the veteran right-hander before the March 6 trade deadline.

Earlier in February, a report from Ansar Khan of MLive suggested that Faulk would be an ideal fit for the Detroit Red Wings. Now, a report from James Murphy of RG Media suggests that the Boston Bruins are another team that could have serious interest in Faulk.

The Bruins were reportedly in on now Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Rasmus Andersson, but the deal fell through. The Bruins were uninterested in making a deal without an extension, and although they believed Andersson would sign an extension after completing a trade, things changed within a 24-hour span. 

Without Andersson, the Bruins have to pivot, and now their sights seem to be set on Faulk. 

Similar to the situation with the Red Wings, Faulk would join the Bruins and serve as a top-four defenseman, playing behind Charlie McAvoy as the second-best right-handed defenseman.

Report Suggests Blues' Justin Faulk Could Fill A Need For The Red WingsReport Suggests Blues' Justin Faulk Could Fill A Need For The Red WingsCould St. Louis Blues defenseman Justin Faulk be a good fit for the Detroit Red Wings?

Faulk could also quarterback either the first or second power play unit and provide two-way versatility.  With 11 goals and 30 points in 57 games, the 33-year-old defenseman would rank second in points and first in goals among Bruins defenseman.

“They have been talking for a while now,” an NHL source close to the situation told RG Media. “Sweeney and Armstrong have been together a lot, and I’m told they’ve talked a lot on Faulk. He fits that void Sweeney’s been trying to fill, and you saw that with the way he went after Andersson before he was traded to Vegas.”

While the Bruins and Red Wings make a lot of sense as possible destinations for Faulk, reports indicate that the Montreal Canadiens, Dallas Stars, Buffalo Sabres, Florida Panthers, and the Utah Mammoth are also interested.

With the interest Faulk is drawing on the trade market, the package the Blues can acquire continues to grow. 

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Louisville's Mikel Brown Jr. is named the AP men's college basketball player of the week

The Associated Press national player of the week in men’s college basketball for Week 15 of the season:

Mikel Brown Jr., No. 21 Louisville

The 6-foot-5, 190-pound freshman regarded as a high-end NBA prospect had been struggling with his shot after returning from a lengthy injury absence. That was before he broke out with two huge performances in wins against N.C. State and Baylor.

The first was an Atlantic Coast Conference freshman single-game record of 45 points in a rout of N.C. State. Brown made 14 of 23 shots and 10 of 16 3-pointers to go with nine rebounds and three steals in that performance while tying the program's single-game scoring record set by Wes Unseld in December 1967. He followed with 29 points, six assists and five steals in a win against Baylor.

For the week, Brown made 22 of 37 shots (.595) and 14 of 21 3-pointers (.667) while being named ACC player and rookie of the week.

Runner-up

Nick Boyd, No. 24 Wisconsin. The 6-3 senior was Big Ten player of the week after posting 54 points in wins against then-No. 8 Illinois and then-No. 10 Michigan State. Boyd, who was AP national player of the week on Jan. 13, had 25 points and five assists in 39 minutes of the overtime road win against the Illini. He followed with 29 points against the Spartans. Those wins propelled the Badgers to No. 24 in Monday's new AP Top 25 poll after receiving no votes a week earlier.

Honorable mention

JT Toppin, No. 13 Texas Tech.

Keep an eye on

Dontae Horne, Prairie View A&M. The 6-4, 190-pound senior has been on a monthlong tear. He had 46 points on 14-for-25 shooting in a loss to Southern that stood as the highest output in Division I last week and tied for the fifth best of the season. That followed a 27-point showing in a loss to Florida A&M. Going back to a 38-point effort in a loss to Jackson State, Horne entered this week averaging a national-best 28.1 points since Jan. 17, according to SportRadar.

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Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP mobile app). AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Veteran forward Jeff Skinner, Sharks mutually agree to terminate NHL contract

Veteran forward Jeff Skinner, Sharks mutually agree to terminate NHL contract originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Sharks officially are parting ways with one of their veterans.

Sharks general manager Mike Grier announced Tuesday that the team mutually has agreed with forward Jeff Skinner to terminate his NHL contract.

“We want to thank Jeff for his contributions to the organization, and wish him all the best,” Grier said.

On Monday, San Jose placed Skinner on unconditional waivers, leading to the eventual contract termination.

The two-time NHL All-Star is set to become an unrestricted free agent, which gives him the opportunity to sign with any team.

The Sharks signed Skinner to a one-year, $3 million contract in July, but ultimately, things did not work out for the 16-year NHL veteran in San Jose.

The 33-year-old Skinner played in 32 games this season with the Sharks, tallying six total goals and 13 points with a career-low ice time average of 12:21 per game.

San Jose will look to push for a playoff spot for the remaining 27 games of the 2025-26 NHL season, with the younger forwards such as Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith leading the charge.

Download and follow the San Jose Hockey Now podcast

MLB heading for a 'bloodbath'? What stunning news means for looming lockout

PHOENIX — Just in case anyone had even the slightest flicker of optimism there won’t be a labor war shutting down baseball in December, that was extinguished quickly Tuesday morning with Tony Clark resigning as executive director of the Major League Baseball Players' Association.

The players still have to vote on Clark’s successor, but with less than 10 months remaining before the collective bargaining agreement expires, it would only make sense that Bruce Meyer, Clark’s right-hand man and the union’s lead negotiator since 2018, will be at least the interim successor.

“There’s just not enough time for it to be anyone else," one prominent baseball agent told USA TODAY Sports.

And Meyer, who was promoted to the union’s deputy executive director in 2022, just so happens to be Public Enemy No. 1 for MLB commissioner Rob Manfred and his executive staff.

It’s not as if Clark was golfing buddies with Manfred or grabbing drinks with team owners, but they considered him reasonable, and as a former 15-year All-Star first baseman, certainly had their respect.

Meyer is a tenacious, hard-nosed labor lawyer who MLB labor officials despise. They called him unreasonable during their last negotiations, frequently clashing, accusing him of being bad for baseball. And now MLB could be dealing directly with Meyer, who will spearhead the labor negotiations without Clark’s involvement.

“This," one club executive said, “is going to be a bloodbath."

Still, as another high-ranking agent pointed out, Meyer was going to be the lead negotiator even if Clark stayed aboard. The union’s bargaining committee remains the same, as does the union’s position on matters.

One agent was adamant in his belief that Meyer would not be the successor, and the MLBPA instead would promote another lawyer from the union office, retaining Meyer as their chief negotiator.

The agents and executive spoke on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of upcoming negotiations.

But no matter how anyone wants to spin it, the timing of Clark’s resignation, who has been under investigation into alleged financial improprieties at the union, couldn’t be much worse.

This is the time that Clark and union officials meet with every team in spring training to disseminate information and provide some cliff notes on their upcoming labor strategy, stressing the importance of being unified.

They were going to tell everyone that they won’t even discuss a salary cap, believe that the Dodgers’ $400 million payroll is good for baseball and that the sport has never been healthier. The message they wanted players to convey to the media and fans is that the owners, and not the players, who would be responsible for shutting down the game with a lockout.

The message was scheduled to be first delivered Tuesday at the Cleveland Guardians' and Chicago White Sox's camps. The meetings were postponed Monday evening, and have yet to be re-scheduled. The union had scheduled a tour visiting every team in Arizona in February and in Florida in March.

Now, everything is up in the air as players and team union representatives scrambled searching for answers.

“We’re going to have an interim [executive director] and keep everything as stable as we can here," Los Angeles reliever Brent Suter, who’s on the subcommittee, told reporters.

What does Tony Clark's exit mean for MLBPA?

San Francisco Giants player representative Logan Webb said Tuesday that he wasn’t aware of Clark’s resignation until he saw reports, while New York Mets second baseman Marcus Semien, one of eight members of the union’s subcommittee, wasn’t informed until Tuesday morning.

Semien said he wasn’t overly surprised because of the federal investigation, telling reporters in the Mets clubhouse: “You definitely don’t want things to be a distraction going into December."

It’s now up to the union to prevent the perception that it’s in disarray at a critical time when negotiations were expected to begin in early April, while also trying to determine whether Meyer should be the natural successor.

Remember, it was two years ago in spring training that player representatives expressed their frustration during a three-hour videoconference call that advocated for Meyer’s ouster. There were 21 player representatives who wanted to replace Meyer with Harry Marino, the lawyer who led the efforts of minor league players being unionized. Clark vehemently supported Meyer, and the coup failed.

Meyer was criticized by several agents and players at the time for deferring to the interests of powerful agent Scott Boras during the negotiations, which Meyer vehemently denied in an open letter to players, saying he had never met Boras before being hired.

“From the moment I was hired, if not before, MLB began demonizing me both privately and publicly," Meyer wrote. “Among other things, one of their strategies was to spread the lie that I had been somehow hired at the behest of Scott Boras and was therefore beholden to him. This lie, which has taken many forms over the years, was a calculated (and time-honored) management strategy.’’

Meyer oversaw the negotiations during the height of the pandemic in 2020, and during the 99-day lockout that began in December 2021. The eight-player executive council voted unanimously to reject MLB’s final proposal during negotiations on a new CBA in March, 2022, that included an increase in minimum salaries, a $50 million pre-arbitration pool and anti-tanking mechanisms. Yet, the rank-and-file overruled them and accepted the proposal, allowing the season to be played without any games or paychecks missed.

Now, it will be up to the players to decide whether Meyer will become the union’s seventh executive director, replacing Clark, who was in charge since 2013 after the death of Michael Weiner.

MLB would love for the union chief to be anyone but Meyer, fearing that the rancor between the two sides will only accelerate without Clark’s involvement, but they have no choice.

So buckle up, and prepare for a plethora of hostility and acrimony coming to a bargaining table near you.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB lockout looms harder with Tony Clark MLBPA departure, new CBA

Dodgers World Series hero clowns Blake Snell: ‘Weakest guy in camp’

Blake Snell suffered his first L of the season on Monday, courtesy of one of his Dodgers teammates.

During a Q and A Instagram video with Los Angeles’ social media team about the strength of Dodgers players, Miguel Rojas didn’t hesitate to say he believed Snell could do the least amount of pushups on the roster.

Blake Snell has been accused by a teammate of being able to do the least amount of pushups on the Dodgers’ roster. JASON SZENES FOR CA POST

“Least pushups?” the 2025 World Series Game 7 hero said. “Blake Snell. Hundred percent. The weakest guy in camp.”

While Rojas did admit Snell is “athletic” and a great pitcher, two-time Cy Young award-winner Snell was nonetheless clearly bothered by the remarks.

Snell hit the comments section of the vid and wrote in a playful message to Rojas, “Weakest guy in camp is crazy �� .”

Rojas tried to backtrack on his stance by explaining he “made that comment base on our conversation earlier about grip strength,” but Snell was still not having it.

“Grip strength forsure bottom 5 �� but pushups I’m not the weakest ��,” he said.

Miguel Rojas and Snell jokingly traded barbs in the comments section of the LA Dodgers video. X/@Dodgers
Rojas said the strongest player on the Dodgers was Hyeseong Kim. X/@Dodgers

Rojas then completely backpedaled — and changed his answer to another one of his pitching teammates.

“This one is on me,” he wrote. “I def think you can be @rokisasaki my bad. I apologize my brother ��.”

When it came to the strongest Dodger, players had several different answers, although Mookie Betts and Hyeseong Kim were the most popular picks.

Unsurprisingly, neither player was found in the video’s comment section refuting those responses.


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Milwaukee Bucks Poll: What are the futures of Cam Thomas and Ousmane Dieng?

Feb 11, 2026; Orlando, Florida, USA; Milwaukee Bucks guard Cam Thomas (24) is fouled by Orlando Magic guard Jase Richardson (11) during the second half at Kia Center. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn Images | Mike Watters-Imagn Images

The Bucks’ final two games before the break were a coming-out party for their only deadline trade acquisition, Ousmane Dieng. A combined 13/22 from the floor—with 8/14 from deep—resulting in 36 points over 59 minutes, plus 14 boards, 4 blocks, 6 assists, and 0 turnovers. A career-best three-point performance in the second Orlando game. Certainly something to dream on in the years ahead.

Those two weren’t a coming-out party for Cam Thomas, not because he was a meh 5/13 (12 points) in the OKC win, nor because he took over with a game-high 34 in Orlando the night before. It’s because that’s what the dude does—he apparently introduces himself as “a bucket,” after all. Well, this Bucket also appears to be the spark Milwaukee desperately needs in non-Giannis minutes, and he might be a long-term fit with the team moving forward.

But both guys are free agents this summer. Dieng will be a restricted free agent if the Bucks extend an $8.8m qualifying offer, meaning they can match any contract another team presents him with in the offseason. If they decline that QO (like they did with Ryan Rollins in summer 2025), he’ll be unrestricted and can sign anywhere. But in either case, Milwaukee owns his Bird rights, so they can pay him any amount up to the max without worrying about the salary cap, whether it’s their own contract offer or another team’s.

With Thomas, however, the Bucks only have Non-Bird rights, since he just changed teams in free agency. That means they’d have to use an exception to give him a new deal in July (since they don’t project to have cap room), and here are their options…

  • The full (non-taxpayer) midlevel exception: starting salary between $6.1m and $15.1m, up to four years
  • The taxpayer midlevel exception: starting salary of $6.1m at most, up to two years
  • The biannual exception: starting salary of $5.5m at most, up to two years
  • The Non-Bird exception: starting salary of $3.6m, up to four years

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, let’s look ahead to the summer and pick the Bucks’ best option with these two: should they re-sign them or not? If yes, how? We also have a bonus question about the All-Star game format, and of course, the debate between tanking and going for the playoffs.


As always, this poll will be open until midnight Central on Friday, and we’ll post the results later that day. Thanks for voting!

Walt Weiss talks pitching staff, Ronald Acuña Jr. and general optimism

Feb 10, 2026; North Port, FL, USA; Atlanta Braves manager coach Walt Weiss (4) looks on during spring training workouts. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

Back on Friday, Alex Anthopoulos spoke with the media and I got the chance to ask him a couple of questions, which you can check out at this link. I also promised that I’d have some thoughts from Walt Weiss coming as well, since he spoke with the media right after AA got done talking. Here’s that article now, as it was a pretty good chance to hear from the new manager of the Atlanta Braves as things begin to kick off for spring training and the year beyond.

I asked Weiss about the general feeling of the clubhouse heading into the spring training and as you would expect, optimism is in the air. “Yeah, there’s a lot of excitement,” responded Weiss to my question. “I know there’s excitement everywhere a this time of year but we got a whole new coaching staff and it’s a really good staff. There’s a great combination of youth on the staff but experienced as well. They’re all very experienced even though they’re relatively young.”

Weiss went on to bring up his relationship with the General Manager and how they’ve been trying to walk the fine line between on-field experience and analytics. “I think we’ve always done a real good job here, from Alex and his team on down,” said Weiss. “[We’re always trying to] find the sweet spot between the information that’s available to us now and the tech that’s to us now and combining that with the wisdom that comes from being in uniform for a long period of time. I think the coaching staff is representative of that and it’s a great feeling.”

The new manager concluded his thoughts by continuing to talk about how excited he was about being able to lead this team heading into the upcoming season.“ I’m excited for this year and I’m excited to go to battle with this group of guys,” exclaimed Weiss. “It’s a talented group, they show up well every day, they compete well, they work well. They prepare well. So that makes my life a little easier. A lot of good vibes right now.“

The press also asked Weiss about his feelings on the state of the pitching staff — particularly when it comes to health. At the time of this presser, the Braves had only lost Spencer Schwellenbach from the rotation due to injury. Now, Hurston Waldrep is set to miss some time due to having “loose bodies” in his pitching elbow, so the injury bug has wasted absolutely no time making its presence felt in camp so far. Weiss remained upbeat — on Friday, at least.

“I think every team in the league has their fingers crossed for their pitching health,” said Weiss. “[Spencer] Strider, [Reynaldo] López, both guys are in a really good place as we sit here today. Strider looks great, López has no restrictions so they’re full steam ahead. That’s a good thing.” It’s certainly encouraging to hear that those two are progressing nicely and should hopefully be able to continue focusing on improving instead of recovering.

With that being said, Weiss has also kept his mind open when it comes to the internal options in the squad taking advantage of any chances that may arise for them to make the starting rotation. “Like I said, everyone deals with this stuff and it usually creates some kind of opportunity for somebody else,” stated Weiss. “We don’t know what injury is going to lead to an opportunity for somebody else. They might step up and do something and they weren’t even on your radar. We had that with Schwellenbach when he came to us at the big league level. He wasn’t even in camp that year. You just never know what’s going to come of these things but I’m sure everyone’s got their fingers crossed on the pitching health.”

We did get an update about how star outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr. felt coming into spring training. there’s good news on that front, as Acuña appears to be ready and champing at the bit to get out there and compete. “I asked Ronald that same question when I first saw him when he showed up here. I asked him how he was feeling and he said ‘Amazing,’ and he looks great,” exclaimed Weiss. “That’s really exciting. I feel like Ronald’s one of the best talents in the game and [when] we have him healthy performing like he always does when he’s healthy, that really moves the needle for us. I’m really excited about the way he showed up. He’s running around the outfield really well. He looks like Ronald.”

We also got to hear from Weiss about how he feels like this stint will be different from the rocky road that he experienced as the manager of the Colorado Rockies from 2013 through the 2016 season. “I learned a lot in Colorado. The two situations are worlds apart,” explained Weiss. When I got that job in Colorado, I’d been coaching high school football for four years. I remember my first day of spring training looking at my bench coach and going like ‘Where do I go?’ It was a lot of learning on the fly but I learned so much in those four years. The record wasn’t very good but at the same time, I felt good about the changes we made culturally over there in those four years and I feel good about that. But yeah, a lot of lessons learned.”

“I was going into that one kind of blind,” continued Weiss. “This one is very different. I’ve been here for eight years, I know the core of this team very well, I know Alex very well and his team so this time, I could come to spring training and really hit the ground running.”

Even after a couple of rough seasons relative to expectations, the situation here in Atlanta is certainly a lot better than the one Weiss walked into in Denver. Obviously, the hope is that the new manager will be able to pick up where the old manager left off when it comes to hitting the ground running and making this a successful season for the Braves. While every team has reason to be optimistic around this time of year, the Braves are one of those teams that can realistically act upon that optimism and we’ll see if Weiss’s debut season as Braves manager will be one to remember or not.

Royals players and their option status

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - AUGUST 11: Bailey Falter #36 of the Kansas City Royals throws in the first inning against the Washington Nationals at Kauffman Stadium on August 11, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Royals will spend the next few weeks shaping the roster that they will carry to Atlanta for the season opener. One large factor in deciding who makes the team will be which players have options remaining. Options allow teams to send a player to the minors without exposing them to be claimed by another team off waivers, and teams have increasingly used this to shuttle players up and down. J.J. Picollo has talked a lot this offseason about his desire to have players with options, particularly on the pitching side, to give the club roster flexibility.

How do options work?

When a player is placed on the 40-man roster, they have three option years remaining. If they do not make the active 26-man roster or are placed on the Injured List, they are sent on “optional assignment” to the minors. Position players must remain in the minors at least 10 days, and pitchers must remain up to 15 days before being recalled, with exceptions made for (a) players serving as the “27th man” for a doubleheader; and (b) players recalled to replace an injured player.

Once a player has been optioned and has spent at least 20 total days in the minors that year, it counts as an option year. A player can be optioned up to five times per year – after that, to be sent to the minors, they must pass through outright assignment waivers where any team can claim them.

Once a player is out of options, they can still be sent to the minors, but they must first be designated for assignment and taken off the 40-man roster, exposing them to waivers. Players with more than three years of MLB service time, or players who have been outrighted before, can reject being outrighted to the minors and become free agents without termination pay. Players with at least five years of MLB service time can reject a minor league assignment at any time, and still retain their guaranteed salary.

Let’s start with the option status of players on the 40-man roster.

Out of options

  • Bailey Falter
  • Nick Mears
  • Drew Waters

Mears seems very likely to make the team after putting up a solid 3.49 ERA in 63 games for the Brewers last year. The Royals signed Falter to a $3.6 million contract instead of non-tendering him last fall, despite a shaky track record and a bicep injury that caused him to miss the final month of the season. The Royals acquired him last summer from the Pirates for pitching depth, so if healthy, he seems likely to make the team as a long reliever that can start if needed. However, because of his salary, he might be able to clear waivers without being claimed if the Royals decide to send him to Omaha.

Drew Waters now has 684 career MLB plate appearances, and is a career .234/.300/.369 hitter. He provides nice depth as a switch-hitter with solid defense, but the 27-year-old is probably on the outside looking in for a roster spot, and could be claimed off waivers if the Royals don’t have room for him.

One option year remaining

  • Mason Black
  • Maikel Garcia
  • Alex Lange
  • Nick Loftin
  • Daniel Lynch IV
  • Alec Marsh
  • James McArthur
  • Kameron Misner

Garcia is making the team, and Lange seems like a good bet to make the team if he is healthy. Marsh will begin the year on the Injured List. Daniel Lynch IV had a very solid 3.06 ERA in 57 games last year, although his strikeout and walk numbers were very underwhelming. He seems likely to make the team, although the presence of Falter may make him redundant. McArthur is working his way back from injury and may be sent to Omaha to give him a chance to ramp up and allow the Royals to stash some more “inventory.” Nick Loftin and Kameron Misner are each competing for bench roles, and Mason Black was acquired from the Giants as a depth piece and could compete for a bullpen spot.

Two or more option years remaining

  • Luinder Avila
  • Ryan Bergert
  • Dairon Blanco
  • Jac Caglianone
  • Noah Cameron
  • Eric Cerantola
  • Isaac Collins
  • Steven Cruz
  • Lucas Erceg
  • Kyle Isbel
  • Carter Jensen
  • Stephen Kolek
  • Michael Massey
  • Vinnie Pasquantino
  • Cole Ragans
  • John Rave
  • Mitch Spence
  • Tyler Tolbert
  • Bobby Witt Jr.

Bergert seems like he would make a lot of rosters, but he may be a casualty of the depth the Royals have accumulated since the team can stash him in the minors until needed. Newly acquired Mitch Spence could make the team with an impressive spring, but it seems more likely he’ll begin in Omaha and come up when a starter is needed. Stephen Kolek, Steven Cruz and Luinder Avila each has a fair shot at making the roster in the bullpen, while Eric Cerantola is a longer shot, but having options remaining could work against them. Michael Massey still has options remaining if the Royals want him to get regular reps and get his career back on track after injuries derailed his 2025 season. Tyler Tolbert and John Rave seem likely to start for Omaha, but are likely to be given chances to contribute to the Royals this summer. Dairon Blanco could be in jeopardy of being removed from the 40-man roster.

Players with more than five years of service time who can refuse assignment include catcher Salvador Perez, infielder Jonathan India, outfielder Lane Thomas, and pitchers Kris Bubic, Carlos Estévez, Seth Lugo, John Schreiber, Matt Strahm, and Michael Wacha.

Non-roster invitees

The non-roster invitees have signed minor league contracts and can be assigned to a minor league club without options or exposing them to waivers. Once their contract is purchased by the Royals and they are promoted to the active and 40-man roster, they require options to be sent back down, otherwise they are exposed to waivers.

Infielder Abraham Toro is out of options. Infielder Connor Kaiser and pitchers José Cuas, Eli Morgan, and Helcris Olivárez all have at least one option year remaining. The players with five years of service time who can refuse minor league assignment are catcher Jorge Alfaro, infielders Brandon Drury, Kevin Newman, and Josh Rojas, and pitchers John Means, Héctor Neris, and Aaron Sanchez. Some players may have opt-outs in their contracts that allow them to seek free agency if they aren’t on the MLB roster by a certain date.

Yankees 2026 Season Preview: J.C. Escarra

NEW YORK, NY - AUGUST 11: J.C. Escarra #25 of the New York Yankees looks on before the game against the Minnesota Twins at Yankee Stadium on August 11, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Every season has its feel-good story, and for the 2025 Yankees, that feel-good story was J.C. Escarra. With 2022 Platinum Glove winner Jose Trevino traded to the Cincinnati Reds over the winter, the Yankees entered spring training with an opening behind the plate. Despite having a disadvantage in the position battle because he, like starter Austin Wells, is a left-handed hitter, the veteran minor leaguer seized a roster spot with a strong spring training. After years languishing in the minors and in independent ball, Escarra finally made his Major League debut.

Although his numbers at the plate did not jump off the page, Escarra quickly became a favorite both in the clubhouse and with the fanbase. But now headed into his sophomore campaign, the son-to-be-31 year old will once again have to fight for playing time in what is a crowded Yankees catcher room.

2025 statistics: 40 games, 98 plate appearances, .202/.296/.333, 2 HR, 11 RBI, 79 wRC+, 11.2 BB%, 14.3 K%, 2 Defensive Runs Saved, 0 Outs Above Average, 0.1 rWAR, 0.5 fWAR

2026 ZiPS DC projections: 32 games, 130 plate appearances, .234/.313/.366, 3 HR, 14 RBI, 92 wRC+, 9.6 BB%, 17.0 K%, 0.5 fWAR

From a purely performance-based perspective, Escarra should end the spring as the Yankees’ backup catcher. While he was a bit below average blocking pitches and throwing out baserunners last season, he established himself as one of the league’s best pitch framers. Despite being behind the plate for just 1831 pitches last season, he accumulated 5 Framing Runs, good for eighth in the league — and tied with Carlos Narváez and Pedro Pagés, who each caught more than 7600 pitches last season. His 49.6 shadow strike percentage, meanwhile, topped the league. Austin Wells may have been one of the best defensive catchers in baseball last year, but when it came to pitch framing, he wasn’t even the best on his own team. Furthermore, although he’s not exactly a force with the bat, Escarra’s good plate discipline (his 11.2 walk percentage ranked in the top 20th percentile, while his 14.3 strikeout percentage was in the top 12th) ensures that he shouldn’t be a black hole at the plate. For a backup catcher, that’s more than acceptable.

Unfortunately for Escarra, he’s not simply competing for the backup catcher job, he’s competing against the opportunity cost of carrying three catchers on the active roster. Last season, Escarra rapidly lost playing time when Giancarlo Stanton returned from the injured list, as Ben Rice began to split time at first base and behind the plate in order to keep his bat in the lineup, and Escarra ultimately wound up back in Triple-A for the final two months of the season. With Rice now penciled in as the everyday first baseman, it would seem that the road would be clear for Escarra’s return to the Bronx…but then the Yankees brought back Paul Goldschmidt.

Of the Yankees four bench spots, one will be occupied by Goldschmidt, one by Amed Rosario, and very likely, one by Oswaldo Cabrera, thus leaving one spot open. Escarra is the obvious choice, allowing Rice to forego his catcher’s mitt except in the case of emergency — after all, he was less-than-stellar behind the plate anyway, and still needs to continue to develop his defense at the cold corner. Indeed, at the time of writing, the FanGraphs Depth Chart even lists Escarra as the fourth man on the projected active roster. But, might the Yankees consider it a better use of limited roster space to send Escarra down, let Rice serve as the backup catcher, and fill out the roster with a true fourth outfielder in Jasson Domínguez? Or perhaps a minor leaguer who is out of options such as Jorbit Vivas, or a veteran backup shortstop like Paul DeJong? It’s certainly possible.

Regardless of how the end-of-spring roster crunch ends up shaking out, though, Escarra has firmly put himself into the Yankees’ plans this season. Even if he starts the year with a ticket to Scranton, he’s just one injury to one of Wells, Rice, Goldschmidt, or Giancarlo Stanton away from earning a trip back to the Bronx — and it’s never bad to have that kind of depth.


See more of the Yankees Previews series here.

Italy pulls off a stunner in Olympic men's speedskating team pursuit, earns first gold since 2006

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — The Italian men's speedskating team is back on top in team's pursuit.

Davide Ghiotto, Andrea Giovannini and Michele Malfatti beat U.S. world record-holders Casey Dawson, Emery Lehman and Ethan Cepuran by 4 1/2 seconds to win the men’s team pursuit gold medal in speedskating on Tuesday at the Milan Cortina Olympics.

Buoyed by raucous cheering from the home crowd at the Milano Speed Skating Stadium, the Italian men finished in 3 minutes, 39.20 seconds to give their country its first Olympic title in this event since the 2006 Turin Games.

The United States started the final well and led for the early stages. But the Italians charged ahead over the closing laps, extending their advantage. When it ended, Ghiotto, Giovannini and Malfatti raised their arms and pumped their fists. On the opposite side of the track, silver medalists Dawson, Lehman and Cepuran leaned over, hands on knees.

Canada collected its second consecutive Winter Games title in women’s team pursuit when Ivanie Blondin, Valerie Maltais and Isabelle Weidemann — the same athletes who won gold four years ago in Beijing — finished in 2:55.81, nearly a full second ahead of runner-up Netherlands.

Snow postpones women's slopestyle snowboarding

The Olympic final for women’s snowboarding slopestyle was scrubbed off Tuesday’s schedule due to a heavy snowstorm in Livigno.

The slopestyle final was scheduled to start at 1 p.m. local time, but organizers said it was called off. A new date for the final has not been announced.

It delays New Zealander Zoi Sadowski-Synnott’s attempt at a repeat. She qualified first on Sunday — an opening round that was moved up a day because of the storms rolling in.

Late surge lifts France to gold in biathlon relay

France went from last place on the first leg to being first on the final lap to secure the country’s first Olympic gold medal in men’s biathlon relay.

World Cup champion Eric Perrot, skiing the final leg for France, missed two shots in his last standing shooting bout and was only seven seconds ahead of Norway’s Vetle Sjaastad Christiansen as they headed out to ski tracks packed with fresh snow.

Perrot stayed ahead of Christiansen and took his team of Fabien Claude, Emilien Jacquelin and Quentin Fillon Maillet across the line first, in a time of one hour, 19 minutes and 55.2 seconds.

Sweden was able to hang on for the bronze.

Norway's Oftebro earns second Nordic combined gold

Norway’s Jens Luraas Oftebro won his second Nordic combined gold medal in a week, taking the large hill ski jump and 10-kilometer ski race. Johannes Lamparter of Austria earned his second silver in Italy and Ilkka Herola of Finland won bronze.

The event begins with a single ski jump in the morning, where distance and style points are calculated to create a time advantage for the best jumper. The rest of the field starts the cross-country ski race behind the leader according to the ranking from their jump.

Oftebro, who finished atop the podium in the normal hill competition event last week, started 22 seconds behind in fifth place. Herola started 32 seconds back in seventh place.

Support and protest at Nordic combined

U.S. team skier Annika Malacinski attended the Nordic combined at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Tuesday to cheer for her younger brother Niklas. She came to protest, too.

Nordic combined — ski jumping and cross-country in one — remains the only Winter Olympic sport that does not include women, even though women compete on the World Cup circuit and at world championships.

“It’s heartbreaking, it really is,” Annika told The Associated Press while wrapped in a long pink and white coat, before taking her seat in the stands.

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AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics