Open Thread: Sean Elliott surprises H-E-B shoppers with free groceries

SAN ANTONIO, TX - MARCH 28: San Antonio Spurs TV Analyst Sean Elliot gives a speech during Manu Ginobili's Jersey Retirement Ceremony on March 28, 2018 at the AT&T Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2018 NBAE (Photos by Mark Sobhani/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In anticipation of Memorial Day, Sean Elliott — the Memorial Day Miracle Man himself — made a surprise appearance at the McCreless H-E-B near South New Braunfels Avenue and I-37.

Elliott treated shoppers to free groceries. And a few patrons walked away with Spurs playoff tickets.

Elliott spoke about the community and how Spurs fans are everywhere supporting the team.

“People got emotional over us paying their groceries, and it was great too,” stated the Spurs color analyst. “You know a lot of people are out there struggling right now, it’s not easy. For us to take that burden off of them just for a day or two, or for the week, or for the month means a lot.”

Fans also received tickets to Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals, the first time the Spurs had hosted at home since 2017.

“People bond over the Spurs, we’ve seen it over the years,” Elliott mused. “When our teams were making deep runs in the playoffs and winning championships, how it galvanizes the city.”

The store was full of fans decked out in Spurs gear. many stopped and talked basketball with Elliott during his stint at the store.

Spurs are back in action tonight as they host the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 4.


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Phillies news: Zack Wheeler, Chan-min Park, Trea Turner

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 23: Zack Wheeler #45 of the Philadelphia Phillies walks onto the field to start the top of the first inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Citizens Bank Park on May 23, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Phillies defeated the Guardians 3-0. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I’d be surprised if the team does not get today’s game in with the rain being a bit more sporadic compared to yesterday. They’ll wait forever, of course, to try and get it started if they have to, but it should get played eventually.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Orioles news: Doubleheader with Tigers awaits

Jun 13, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; The Baltimore Orioles grounds crew puts down the tarp during a rain delay before a game against the Los Angeles Angels at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images | Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

Hello, friends.

Weather robbed us of the Orioles getting to play yesterday. Given their all-too-frequent play this season, it may be that nothing was lost to the fan in not seeing the Orioles. As Zagreus is frequently reminded in the video game Hades, there is no escape. There will be two O’s games today, whether anyone likes it or not.

Maybe we will like it. The Tigers are not very good this year, and they are particularly reeling recently. Detroit is in the middle of a stretch where it’s lost seven in a row and 15 out of 17 dating back to May 4. We got one demonstration of that on Friday night. Even the Orioles for all of their problems dispatched those guys.

This is going to be a split doubleheader, with games scheduled for 12:35 and 6:05. I think it’s an absolute shame that the Orioles are not just putting those together as a traditional two-for-one doubleheader. I don’t believe that there are enough seats sold across both of these games to make it impossible to smash everybody together for one gate. They should do it.

My suspicion is that the reason that they aren’t doing it like that is because the postponed Saturday game was the Samuel Basallo bobblehead giveaway. The bobblehead-industrial complex must be fed. There are people who will whine if they do not get a separate gate to get their precious bobbles. Now, the Orioles should not cater to this mindset, just for starters. But even if they must, just make some more bobbles and give out vouchers if there won’t be enough for the one gate. They can get away with not doing this because it doesn’t ultimately matter, the only people who are going to complain are weirdos like me and even then not for long. Still, it sucks.

Hopefully the doubleheader itself doesn’t suck. The Orioles have the potential for a nice momentum swing here, if they can play well enough to accomplish it. Taking both games today doesn’t solve all of their problems, but it does put them farther down the path of solving their problems. Even a split at least gives them a series win for people to feel good about, if they want to feel good about that. This all may be a temporary reprieve if the O’s just go and get dunked on by the Rays again starting tomorrow.

That’s a problem for tomorrow. A problem for today is that the 2026 version of Trevor Rogers is pitching one of the games. What’s going on with him? I don’t know. Whatever is wrong probably wasn’t fixed since the last time he pitched. Maybe he will surprise me. Sooner or later I would figure he’ll start pitching at least like a 4.50 ERA guy. That would be better than the disaster we’re getting.

Brandon Young is pitching the first game, with Framber Valdez going for Detroit. The Tigers had TBD for Sunday listed even before it turned into a doubleheader and they’re still TBD. Your guess is as good as mine.

Orioles stuff you might have missed

Albernaz defends Orioles use of analytics (Baltimore Baseball)
Ahead of Friday’s win over the Tigers, the manager indirectly responded to some of the postgame comments that Ben McDonald made on MASN after the sweep at the hands of the Rays.

The Orioles must restore their self-belief this homestand, if they have any left (The Baltimore Banner)
Not believing in themselves hasn’t really seemed to be their problem to me. I might even say that believing in what they’re doing too much is a greater issue.

Last, there’s this update on the starting rotation coming out of yesterday’s rainout:

Since the Orioles have both yesterday’s and today’s originally scheduled starting pitchers going today, and they don’t get an off day until June 1, that means there will be no one on regular rest on Thursday. What will they do about it? That’s a problem they can worry about until Thursday, since they’ve got five starts to get through before then. This year, you can’t take for granted that the current five guys will make the five starts. Or count on more than two of them at most to pitch a decent game.

Birthdays and Orioles anniversaries

The Orioles have now played 51 games. In their 51st game last year, Trevor Rogers made his first start of the season and the O’s beat the Red Sox, 2-1, in the second game of a doubleheader, giving the team an 18-34 record. Heading into today, the Orioles are four wins better than that. It’s not enough! Games 52 and 53 were wins as well, so it would take a sweep by the O’s today to stay four games ahead of the 2025 Orioles.

One lone former Oriole was born on this day. Exactly 100 years ago, infielder Willy Miranda was born in Cuba. Miranda played for the team from 1955-59 and died in Baltimore in 1996.

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday to you! Your birthday buddies for today include: physicist Daniel Fahrenheit (1686), England’s Queen Victoria (1819), actor Tommy Chong (1938), and rapper Heavy D (1967).

On this day in history…

In 1626, Dutch colonial governor Peter Minuit purchased the island of Manhattan for his budding colony, New Amsterdam, from an adjacent native settlement of the Lenape people.

In 1844, Samuel Morse sent a telegram message from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore. The message quoted the Bible, “What hath God wrought,” as it inaugurated commercial telegraph lines.

In 1935, the Cincinnati Reds hosted the first ever night game in MLB history, winning a 2-1 contest against the Philadelphia Phillies.

**

And that’s the way it is in Birdland on May 24. Have a safe Sunday. Go O’s!

MLB Predictions and Moneyline Picks for Sunday, May 24

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Memorial Day weekend is in full swing, and I have you covered on the diamond, with 15 MLB games gracing the schedule today!

Headlined by an NLCS rematch between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Milwaukee Brewers, let's dive right into my MLB picks for Sunday, May 24.

MLB moneyline picks for May 24

MatchupPick
PiratesPirates
vs
Blue JaysBlue Jays
Blue Jays
-144
RaysRays
vs
YankeesYankees
Rays
+122
TwinsTwins
vs
Red SoxRed Sox
Twins
+144
GuardiansGuardians
vs
PhilliesPhillies
Guardians
-122
TigersTigers
vs
OriolesOrioles
Orioles
-127
CardinalsCardinals
vs
RedsReds
Cardinals
+108
MetsMets
vs
MarlinsMarlins
Marlins
+104
SEA logoMariners
vs
Kansas City logoRoyals
Kansas City logo
+127
DodgersDodgers
vs
BrewersBrewers
Dodgers
-163
AstrosAstros
vs
CubsCubs
Cubs
-156
White SoxWhite Sox
vs
GiantsGiants
Giants
-104
RockiesRockies
vs
DiamondbacksDiamondbacks
Rockies
+170
NationalsNationals
vs
BravesBraves
Nationals
+150
AthleticsA's
vs
PadresPadres
Padres
-150
RangersRangers
vs
AngelsAngels
Rangers
-117

Prices courtesy of Polymarket as of 5-24.

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Expert MLB moneyline picks for May 24

Pirates vs Blue Jays: Blue Jays Blue Jays (-144)

Blue Jays win probability: 59%

Toronto is starting to hit a groove as winners of four straight, and Dylan Cease should only add to that momentum as the AL strikeout leader takes the mound.

Pittsburgh’s offense is currently without All-Star right fielder Ryan O’Hearn, making this the perfect opportunity for the Jays to keep rolling.

Rays vs Yankees: Rays Rays (+122)

Rays win probability: 45%

It’s 2026, and the Rays are still doing Rays things, defying everyone’s expectations by boasting the best record in the AL at 34-15.

I’ll take Shane McClanahan over Ryan Weathers, so give me the Rays at plus money.

Twins vs Red Sox: Twins (+144)

Twins win probability: 41%

It’s hard to go on X without seeing some type of Red Sox fan meltdown. Even if Sonny Gray is posting encouraging numbers on the season, I much prefer the Twins’ offense over whatever Boston is running out.

(Why is Jarren Duran still leading off?!)

Guardians vs Phillies: GuardiansGuardians (-122)

Guardians win probability: 55%

While Andrew Painter has endured some rookie blemishes, Parker Messick is a nice sleeper in the Cy Young odds, dealing with a 167 ERA+ and a K% that sits in the 87th percentile at Baseball Savant.

Give me the Guardians in the City of Brotherly Love.

Tigers vs Orioles: Orioles Orioles (-127)

Orioles win probability: 56%

My pre-season World Series pick is looking like an abject disaster right now, as the Tigers are 1–9 over their last 10 contests.

I’d like to think they’ll turn things around when Tarik Skubal, Gleyber Torres, and Kerry Carpenter return, but until further notice, I’m fading Detroit.

Cardinals vs Reds: CardinalsCardinals (+108)

Cardinals win probability: 48%

Matthew Liberatore has consistently kept Cincinnati hitters in check throughout his career, holding them to a .176/.236/.392 slash line.

With Brady Singer carrying a bloated 6.26 ERA, I’m backing the Cardinals in this NL Central clash.

Mets vs Marlins: MarlinsMarlins (+104)

Marlins win probability: 49%

Say what you want about the Marlins, but they continue to play hard under skipper Clayton McCullough.

Miami is also notably better at LoanDepot Park, sporting a 17–15 record at home compared to 7–14 on the highway.

Mariners vs Royals: Kansas City logoRoyals (+127)

Royals win probability: 44%

Seth Lugo has dominated current Mariners hitters, holding them to a lifetime .564 OPS across 70 at-bats.

Listed as plus money at home, I’ll take a shot on Kansas City against Bryan Woo and Seattle.

Dodgers vs Brewers: Dodgers Dodgers (-163)

Dodgers win probability: 62%

The last time Yoshinobu Yamamoto faced Milwaukee, the Japanese ace tossed a complete game in Game 2 of the NLCS, surrendering just one run.

With Los Angeles finally fully healthy on offense, expect the defending champs to crush Brandon Sproat inside American Family Field.

Astros vs Cubs: CubsCubs (-156)

Cubs win probability: 61%

Yordan Alvarez is currently day-to-day, and with Carlos Correa and Jose Altuve already on the IL, I’ll ride with the Cubbies at home while the Astros’ offense is compromised.

White Sox vs Giants: GiantsGiants (-104)

Giants win probability: 51%

San Francisco ranks dead last in runs per game, so I like the upstart White Sox to stay hot in the Bay Area.

The way the Giants are going, get ready for an absolute fire sale at the trade deadline.

Rockies vs Diamondbacks: RockiesRockies (+170)

Rockies win probability: 37%

Jose Quintana continues to be an ageless wonder, and the Diamondbacks are batting just .202 against the veteran southpaw.

Meanwhile, Ryne Nelson has failed to reach the sixth inning in seven consecutive starts, so I’m all over the Rockies in this desert duel.

Nationals vs Braves: Nationals Nationals (+150)

Nationals win probability: 40%

Both of these offenses are crushing the ball, but it’s the Nationals sporting a league-best 124 wRC+ against lefties that has me backing them against Martin Perez. 

Athletics vs Padres: PadresPadres (-150)

Padres win probability: 60%

While the Padres have one of the deepest bullpens in baseball, the A’s kryptonite is their relief staff, ranking 23rd in bullpen ERA.

How good would Mason Miller be going 1-2-3 on his former team?

Rangers vs Angels: RangersRangers (-117)

Rangers win probability: 54%

The Halos are mired in another disastrous campaign, wasting another year of Mike Trout’s Hall of Fame career. Vibes are an absolute mess in Anaheim, with owner Arte Moreno hearing the latest brunt of Angels fans’ frustration.

Head across the street to Disneyland if you want to see something magical. The Rangers roll on Sunday Night Baseball against Reid Detmers, who carries an ugly 1-5 record and 5.07 ERA into this matchup.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Mets Daily Prospect Report, 5/23/26: Rainy days

PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - MARCH 19, 2026: Nicolas Carreno #60 of the New York Mets throws a pitch during the fourth inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Clover Park on March 19, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (26-22)

POSTPONED (RAIN)

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (15-29)

RICHMOND 5, BINGHAMTON 1 (BOX)

Seven walks in less than three innings is impressive work, just not in the way that Brendan Girton is probably looking for. Saul Garcia looks good though, so that’s something.

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (12-31)

POSTPONED (RAIN)

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (19-25)

ST LUCIE 4, PALM BEACH 2 (BOX)

Fun win here for St. Lucie. Nicolas Carreno had made a nice four inning start and is emerging as a new arm in the system. The bullpen then gave up a couple of unearned runs, but the offense was equal to the task; homers from AJ Salgado and Branny De Oleo proved to be the day. The latter is another name to monitor as a potentially interesting bat.

Rookie: FCL Mets (7-8)

FCL METS 14, FCL NATIONALS 5 (BOX)

STAR OF THE NIGHT

Nicolas Carreno

GOAT OF THE NIGHT

Brendan Girton

Making the case for Cody Bellinger to hit leadoff

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 20: Cody Bellinger #35 of the New York Yankees doubles during the ninth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on May 20, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. The Blue Jays won 2-1. (Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images) | Getty Images

One of the curses of such a long season, and this is true for all levels of teams, is the incessant tinkering one might be prone to do, trying to optimize a team’s performance. As we comb through the Yankees’ offense and potential avenues of improvement, one that inevitably stands out is the improved production at the top of the order. Trent Grisham hasn’t yet been able to match his performance of last season, and his outstanding walk rate while befitting the role is mostly keeping his head above water as a worthwhile regular thanks to how he’s struggled with his batted balls.

Part of why Grisham ended up entrenched in the leadoff role the moment he found success as a Yankee last season is that this team doesn’t really have a traditional leadoff bat. What that term means exactly has changed a great deal over the years, but when we say they lack this option, it’s both in terms of what we consider an ideal name for the role and of any player who has had consistent success there. Ronald Acuña Jr., Brandon Nimmo, and Kyle Schwarber are all unique hitters, but they share the similarity of having filled this role consistently and successfully over a long period in recent campaigns. The Yankees’ hitters can’t say the same.

If Grisham is unable to improve his numbers, there will come a time when a new option is required, and while he may not represent the easiest of fits, Cody Bellinger could be that player. First things first, the cons of this decision are all pretty transparent, and chief among them is the fear of disrupting the routine of a veteran. Bellinger has built himself an outstanding career without featuring in conversations such as these — in fact, he’s only started a game in the leadoff spot three times. It could very well be the case that moving to the leadoff spot disrupts him. While potentially real, this is just a speculative point.

Forget for a second all of our preconceived notions of what Bellinger is, the profile he’s built over the years, and everything that comes with it — who is Bellinger right now?

While there is real pop in that bat (.202 ISO), one of the key factors in making Bellinger the great hitter he has been since joining the Yankees is an outstanding plate discipline that sees him walk (34) more times than he strikes out (27) in 2026. Bellinger’s .382 OBP is neck-and-neck with Ben Rice’s .383 for the team lead. While he doesn’t have the stolen base numbers of Jose Caballero or Jazz Chisholm Jr., he has enough speed to be a threat at the top of the order, certainly more than Grisham does.

One benefit of having Bellinger lead off would be to split the two most dangerous lefties of this team on either side of Aaron Judge. Suddenly, especially without Giancarlo Stanton’s presence as he’s currently sidelined with an injury, opposing managers would think a bit more before bringing on a southpaw to handle these two. Yes, this hasn’t been a problem because Rice and Bellinger are both mashing lefties, but in the long run, you’d naturally expect those numbers to regress some. The idea of having a righty splitting the two is quite appealing — and not just any righty, but the two-time reigning AL MVP.

Sure, Bellinger’s walk rate is miles off his career and recent norm, but even if you account for a more reasonable figure, he’s a player who has hit .270 over the last three years with a low standard deviation. Bellinger’s ability to get on base at a fine clip has been well established. Overall, it doesn’t require a lot of squinting for one to see why it could make sense to move Bellinger to the top of the order.

Grades for all 30 MLB teams at Memorial Day: So many Fs to hand out

They spent all winter training for this grueling race, and now that they’ve reached the first true milestone marker of the season at Memorial Day Weekend, we’re about to find out who has the endurance to keep going and who plans to stop and call an Uber.

Mathematically, everyone is still alive with these expanded playoffs.

Realistically, a handful of teams already are dead, with vultures hovering above looking to snatch up pieces at the trade deadline.

It’s too early to call the playoff picture, with a reminder that a year ago at this time, the New York Mets were cruising along with the best record in baseball.

But at the one-third marker, let’s take a look at the report card for all 30 teams, with just nine weeks remaining before the Aug. 3 trade deadline:

The Brewers landed Kyle Harrison in an offseason trade with the Red Sox.

Milwaukee Brewers: A+

They’re making everyone look stupid with their pre-season predictions once again.

Just when you think they can’t possibly win the NL Central again after trading away ace Freddy Peralta and rookie star third baseman Caleb Durbin, with the oddsmakers forecasting an 83-win season after winning an MLB-leading 97 a year ago – look who has the third-best record in baseball.

Yep, those lovable Brewers, who are off to the best start in franchise history, winning 15 of their last 19 games.

The Brewers are doing it the ol’ fashioned way. They’ve hit the fewest homers in MLB with just 34. They have the fewest extra-base hits in MLB with 86. Yet, they are hitting an MLB-leading .279, averaging 5.04 runs a game, ranking fourth in MLB. They also have a filthy rotation that can terrify anyone in the postseason with a terrifying 1-2 punch of Jacob Misiorowski and Kyle Harrison.

Look out, these Brewers are coming to an October ballpark near you.

Tampa Bay Rays: A+

This was supposed to be a season they just re-tooled, building for 2027, or perhaps even 2028.

They traded away starter Shane Baz to the Baltimore Orioles and second baseman Brandon Lowe to the Pirates for prospects, with Rays president of baseball operations Erik Neander fully acknowledging the trades were for the future.

Well, here they are, with the best record in baseball, 34-15, and winners of 29 of their last 37 games, scoring an MLB-leading 5.21 runs a game this month. They have Junior Caminero, Jonathan Aranda and Yandy Diaz providing the power, Chandler Simpson with the speed, and Shane McClanahan, Drew Rasmussen and Nick Martinez with the pitching.

They don’t hit many homers (41, 4th-lowest), but they put the ball in play with an 86% contact rate that’s best in MLB, and an 18.7% strikeout rate that’s the lowest in baseball.

“They’re the cream of the crop right now in the American League,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone says, “and all of Major League Baseball.”

If this is the present with an $107 million payroll, can you imagine their future?

Atlanta: A

They lost three of their projected opening day starters, their starting catcher, their starting shortstop and their starting left fielder in spring training.

And they are running away with the NL East in May.

Alex Anthopolous, president of baseball operations, never cried, never whined, and simply relied on the deep roster he created.

First baseman Matt Olson is an MVP candidate. Chris Sale could win another Cy Young. Michael Harris is having a comeback year. Catcher Drake Baldwin is a star. Relievers Robert Suarez and Raisel Iglesias have been lights out. And infielder Mauricio Dubon and DH Dom Smith, cheap offseason pickups, are unsung heroes.

See y'all in October.

Cleveland Guardians: A

The Guardians spent a grand total of $11.5 million during the winter, did nothing to improve their meager offense that hit a franchise-worst .226 last season, and went into the season with a $76 million payroll and forecasts of 75 to 80 victories in the air.

The Guardians sat back, leaned on their pitching staff_led by lefties Parker Messick and Joey Cantillo, along with Gavin Williams and Tanner Bibee – called up prized rookies Chase DeLauter and Travis Bazzana, implored their offense to be more patient at the plate, and voila!

They’re running away with the AL Central.

The rookies have played like stars, the Guardians’ 11.6% walk rate is the third-highest in MLB, and they have the third-best record in the American League.

“We know the division runs through Cleveland," Tigers manager A.J. Hinch conceded, “as much as we want to say otherwise.”

St. Louis Cardinals: A

These guys waved the white flag with a massive teardown before they reported to Jupiter for spring training.

They obliterated their payroll.

They traded their ace, Sonny Gray, and first baseman Willson Contreras to Boston. Their dumped 10-time Gold Glove winner and likely Hall of Fame third baseman Nolan Arenado to Arizona. They traded infielder Brendan Donovan to the Seattle Mariners for more prospects.

And they have a handful of other players they’d love to trade at the deadline to complete their firesale.

But, oh, a funny thing is happening.

Right fielder Jordan Walker is turning into a star with 13 homers, second baseman J.J. Wetherholt is a strong Rookie of the Year candidate, Michael McGreevy has become a top-tiered starter, and closer Riley O’Brien has been sensational.

They’re certainly not going to be buyers at the deadline, but if they remain in the hunt, may have no choice but to stay pat, knowing their future could be a lot sooner than anyone anticipated.

Los Angeles Dodgers: A-

What, the Dodgers haven’t won 100 games yet? They haven’t sprayed each other with champagne clinching the NL West?

The reality is that they’ve been a .500 team since opening the season with a 15-4 record, but even with starters Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow back on the injured list once again, $69 million closer Edwin Diaz out until the All-Star break, and $60 million-a-year outfielder Kyle Tucker performing like a $600,000 player, the Dodgers are sitting in first place.

They once again are in cruise control with no plans to step on that accelerator until October.

So, keep that champagne on ice, the Dodgers will be gulping it down soon enough.

New York Yankees: A-

Ben Rice and Aaron Judge.

Oh, if they only had the checkbook like the Rays.

Who would ever have imagined that the Yankees would not only be looking up at the Rays in the standings, but hoping to stay in Tampa Bay's rear-view mirror?

The Yankees have Aaron Judge and Ben Rice doing their version of the "M&M Boys" of the Mickey Mantle-Roger Maris days, combining for 32 homers, but they have gaping holes in their offense, patiently waiting for second baseman Jazz Chisholm, third baseman Ryan McMahon and center fielder Trent Grisham to start hitting.

They trust closer David Bednar, but would prefer not to hold their breath every time he takes the mound, and want another late-inning reliever as a safety net.

Their starting rotation has them dreaming of a World Series, with ace Gerrit Cole returning Friday and looking like the Cy Young candidate of old after 569 days, and Carlos Rodon making his 2026 debut earlier in the week.

Considering how weak the American League is this year, this could be the Yankees’ easiest path in decades to capture their first World Series title since 2009.

Chicago White Sox: A-

OK, so maybe you don’t celebrate the fact you’re not going to lose 100 games for the first time since 2022.

Maybe you don’t become delusional believing you can win the AL Centra this year, no matter that it’s the weakest division in North America. Yet, for the first time since 2021, when they won the AL Central only to start a rebuild two years later, there now is legitimate hope, and optimism.

Munetaka Murakami (17 homers, 36 RBIs), Colson Montgomery (13 homers, 31 RBIs) and Miguel Vargas (11 homers, 29 RBI)s are on pace to become only the fourth trio of Whtie Sox sluggers to hit at least 30 homers in a season in franchise history. Their offense is averaging 5.16  runs a game, second-most in MLB, and Davis Martin (7-1, 2.04 ERA) has been a legitimate ace. And they have learned to win close games, going 10-6 (.625 winning percentage) in one-run games this season after going 47-95 (.331) the previous three years.

The White Sox aren’t quite ready to be considered a serious contender, hovering just above .500, but it’s certainly cool to be excited on the Southside, especially after losing 324 games the past three horrific seasons.

San Diego Padres: B+

The Padres (30-20) should be nothing more than a .500 team considering they have outscored their opposition by just seven runs.

Their offense stinks, hitting a woeful .222 with a .666 OPS.

Fernando Tatis Jr. has as many home runs as the team batboys: 0.

Manny Machado is hitting .179, the lowest batting average in the National League. All-Star center fielder Jackson Merrill is hitting .203 with a .595 OPS.

But they have Michael King (4-2, 2.31 ERA) and Randy Vasquez (5-2, 2.96 ERA) pitching like All-Stars atop the rotation. They have the nastiest bullpen in baseball led by Mason Miller, who has been perfect in 15 save opportunities. And they have plenty of fire with 15 comeback victories this year.

Can you imagine if this team had Tarik Skubal atop the rotation?

Athletics: B

OK, if no one else wants the AL West, the Athletics will take it.

The A’s still are woefully short in pitching, but, oh, that offense.

Nick Kurtz (.281, 8 homers, 37 RBIs and .932 OPS) and Shea Langeliers (.314, 12 homers, 27 RBIs, .951 OPS) already are stars, and the team is waiting for Brent Rooker, Tyler Soderstrom and Lawrence Butler to heat up.

Realistically, the A’s are still one year away from being a potential power, but who knew that a .500 record could make you a legitimate threat to win a division title?

They are expected to be major players in free agency this winter, and plan to heavily recruit pitchers with the sales pitch that they’ll be in the minor-league bandbox in Sacramento just one more year, and then it’s off to the beautiful confines on the Vegas Strip with no state taxes.

This is a team that’s becoming awfully scary.

Chicago Cubs: B

Just two weeks ago, this team was a runaway train that had World Series dreams dancing in their heads, with a 27-12 record, and threatening to run away with the NL Central.

Then, the White Sox came along and knocked the aura out of them. The Brewers came to town and methodically drained their confidence with a three-game sweep at Wrigley Field.

Just like that, a team that produced two 10-game winning streaks in a 24-day stretch, has lost six games in a row, 10 of 12 games, and plummeted to third place.

The Cubs still are in fine position for the postseason, but if they’re going to make any kind of run, they badly need to acquire another impact starter. Tarik Skubal may be too rich for their blood, but Sandy Alcantara, Robbie Ray and Freddy Peralta will be on their bucket list.

Washington Nationals: B-

The Nationals, who traded ace Mackenzie Gore to the Texas Rangers for five prospects in January, along with closer Josse Ferrer to the Seattle Marins for catching prospect Harry Ford, were open for business all winter. They shopped shortstop C.J. Abrams, too, only to never get the offer they desired.

They entered the season still in the sale mode, simply hoping to show some improvement for a team that has averaged 96 defeats a season since 2021.

While no one is calling the Nationals a contender, they’re no longer an embarrassment.

They are hovering around .500, the latest they’ve been at this juncture since 2021. And for the first time since they won the World Series in 2019, may actually win more than 71 games.

Abrams is hitting .299 with 11 homers, 45 RBIs and a .947 OPS and James Wood is establishing himself as one of the game’s premier power hitters.

The future is bright, and they could be a contender much earlier than anyone expected.

Pittsburgh Pirates: B-

The Pirates finally decided to do something about their offense, acquiring Ryan O’Hearn and Brandon Lowe, and bringing up rookie Konnor Griffin, for instant respectability.

They have a nasty trio of starters in Paul Skenes. Braxton Ashcraft and Mitch Keller, and could soon be adding Jared Jones.

Yet, with the NL Central being much stronger than expected, they’re going to need even more offensive help if they’re going to be hanging in the playoff race by July.

Realistically, they’re still a year away.

Philadelphia Phillies: C+

The Phillies certainly should be better than a .500 team, but it sure beats where they were headed in the early-going with their 9-19 start. They dumped manager Rob Thomson, and became the fifth team in the last century to go from at least 10 games under .500 to one game over within the first 47 games of a season.

Their resurgence kicked in when Zack Wheeler was activated from his thoracic outlet surgery, giving them a fearsome trio with Cristopher Sánchez and Jesús Luzardo. There may be no pitcher in baseball than Sanchez, who has pitched 37 ⅔ scoreless inning streak, the longest in franchise history since 1911. Their offense also has awoken with Bryce Harper and Brandon Marsh, with Trea Turner, Bryson Stott and Alec Bohm recovering from dreadful starts.

There’s no reason they won’t be back playing in October, but they could sure use a right-handed bat to assure they get there.

Arizona Diamondbacks: C+

The Diamondbacks are playing their best baseball of the season, but then again, they’re also playing the weakest part of their schedule. They just ripped off a 6-2 stretch against the Colorado Rockies and San Francisco Giants, to climb back into the playoff race.

Their pitching, led by Eduardo Rodriguez, has drastically improved of late. Infielders Ketel Marte and Geraldo Perdomo are returning to normal after dreadful starts. Third baseman Nolan Arenado is playing like an All-Star again. And journeyman Ildemaro Vargas is having the greatest season of his life.

Their bullpen still is unstable, and if they’re going to have a shot at the playoffs, they’ll need to add veteran relievers at the deadline. If they fade, they’ll be a top seller’s destination for pitchers at the deadline, highlighted by Rodriguez, Michael Soroka, Zac Gallen and Merrill Kelly.

Cincinnati Reds: C

Chase Burns is 6-1 with a 1.83 ERA in 10 starts.

They reel you in one minute, believing this team is legitimate after opening the season with a 16-9 record, and then break your heart, going 10-15, making you wonder if they’re nothing but mediocre.

They are in the middle of the pack offensively in runs scored despite the exploits of rookie sensation Sal Stewart, Elly De La Cruz, and JJ Bleday but the rest of the offense is mired in a quagmire.

The pitching is talented, led by Cy Young candidate Chase Burns, but with injuries to starters Hunter Greene, Nick Lodolo and Rhett Lowder, along with closer Emilio Pagan, they have the third-worst ERA (4.71) in the National League. Their bullpen has collapsed in Pagan’s absence, yielding an MLB-worst 7.41 ERA in the last 25 games.

They should stay in contention all season, but they need help at the deadline if they’re going to make a serious push.

Texas Rangers: C-

They moved on from future Hall of Fame manager Bruce Bochy last season and hired Skip Schumaker, believing they were underachieving. Yet, here they are, mired in mediocrity.

They have a fabulous rotation with Jacob deGrom, Nathan Eovaldi, MacKenzie Gore, Jack Leiter and Kumar Rocker, but all have been inconsistent.

The lineup has simply been consistently bad with Corey Seager and Evan Carter grossly underachieving, Wyatt Langford back on the IL, and Joc Pederson a $37 million bust.

If the Rangers were in another division, they’d be dead and buried, but with the AL West being so dreadful, there’s no reason why they can’t hang around and be in the mix for the division title in September.

Miami Marlins: C-

They are slowly improving, but for them to go where they really want to go, they need Sandy Alcantara to pitch better to move him for prized prospects at the trade deadline.

Their pitching needs help, but their middle infielder of Xavier Edwards and Otto Lopez have been tremendous, and outfielder Kyle Stowers, who opened the year on the IL, is starting to resemble his All-Star form of a year ago.

Really, their key to the future is Alcantara, and getting the parts they need to return to contention.

Minnesota Twins: C-

They made a shrewd deal landing starter Taj Bradley, and starters Joe Ryan and Bailey Ober have been solid, but outside of center fielder Byron Buxton’s season, little else has gone right.

They are expected to shop Ryan and demand a heavy price tag at the trade deadline, but catcher Ryan Jeffers, who they also planned to move, is now out for two months with a broken left hamate bone.

The center of attention will once again be on Buxton, who will be asked for the millionth time at the All-Star Game if he is willing to waive his no-trade clause. And for the millionth time, is expected to say he’s perfectly in Minnesota and wants to stay.

Toronto Blue Jays: D+

They certainly don’t look a team that will return to the World Series, but then again, they also don’t have a team that can stay on the field.

They’ve been hammered with injuries from catcher Alejandro Kirk to outfielders Addison Barger and Nathan Lukes to DH George Springer, as well as pitchers Trey Yesavage, Max Scherzer and Shane Bieber.

The injuries have decimated the offense with the Blue Jays ranking 26th in slugging percentage (. 370) and on-base percentage (.306) and 22nd in home runs (45).

Yet, they’ve hung in there, and with ace Dylan Cease has lived up to expectations with his $210 million deal, and they sure look fortunate that outfielder Kyle Tucker didn’t accept their 10-year, $350 million offer.

The Blue Jays should be fine in time, and rivals expect them to be aggressive at the trade deadline.

Seattle Mariners: D

This team was supposed to run away and hide in the AL West after coming within one game of their first World Series a year ago.

Then again, who would have thought that MVP runner-up Cal Raleigh would disappear, starting shortstop J.P. Crawford would be offering to switch positions just to stay on the team, and their big acquisition, Brendan Donovan, would be spending most of the season on the IL.

That vaunted starting rotation also has been wildly erratic behind George Kirby and Emerson Hancock, with Logan Gilbert and Bryan Woo looking nothing like themselves at times, and Luis Castillo barely hanging onto his job.

The Mariners have no choice but to get help at the deadline to prevent this season from being a disaster.

Colorado Rockies: D-

Yes, the Rockies stink once again, with the worst record in baseball. But while they are losing at a record pace, they at least are staying in games now, and looking good losing.

They found a tremendous reclamation project in Mickey Moniak, catcher Hunter Goodman is a star, Chase Dollander is a future ace, and reliever Antonio Senzatela is a fabulous trade piece.

It still will take time, but there are at least encouraging signs that things will finally turn around.

Houston Astros: F+

Yes, they’ve had their injuries, with 15 players going on the IL already this season.

They’ve had 13 pitchers start for them through the first 50 games, with four of their opening-day starters going on the IL, including ace Hunter Brown. They had a 6.08 ERA in April, and now that they’ve improved in May, can’t hit, averaging just 2.7 runs a game, the second-lowest in MLB, with stars Jose Altuve and Carlos Correa on the IL.

The Astros’ offense has collapsed since Correa suffered a ruptured peroneus brevis tendon on May 5 that sidelined him for the year. They have scored two or fewer runs in 10 of 15 games since, and more than four runs just once.

The only suspense left in their season may be how long manager Joe Espada and GM Dana Brown stay employed if they are sitting home in October a second consecutive season.

Kansas City Royals: F

The Royals were supposed to be all-in this year, believing they’d bounce right back after missing out on the postseason with an 82-80 record in 2025.

It has turned into a disaster, with the Royals sitting at 20-31 entering Saturday, with only the Angels winning fewer games in MLB.

All-Star shortstop Bobby Witt has been great as usual, leading MLB in WAR, but that’s about it. Vinnie Pasquantino, Salvador Perez, Maikel Garcia and Jac Caglianone have all badly struggled.

The season has badly unraveled, and unless their fate dramatically changes, they could have no choice but to trade starters Michael Wacha and Seth Lugo at the deadline. And rebuild. Once again.

Los Angeles Angels: F

Yes, it’s been ugly once again in Anaheim, with the biggest bright spot being Mike Trout.

He is healthy.

Finally.

He will never again be the same player that won three MVP awards, but he’s having an All-Star caliber season (.239, 12 homers, 25 RBIs, .888 OPS), resurrecting those age-old questions.

No, Trout will not be traded. He has zero interest in waiving his no-trade clause. The reality is that with about $160 million remaining on his contract through 2030, no team would even touch him unless the Angels ate nearly three-quarters of the contract. And that’s not happening.

Their most pleasant surprise has been José Soriano, who is pitching like an All-Star, 6-3, 2.44 ERA, and is under team control through 2029.

San Francisco Giants: F

This is the only team in the last dozen years that stopped the Dodgers from winning the NL West, winning 107 games in 2021. It’s true. Look it up.

These days, despite a $200 million payroll littered with stars, they’ve been a dysfunctional disaster, en route to one of the worst seasons in franchise history.

The Giants are 20-31 with a -57 run differential, which had happened only once in franchise history since 1902.

And never in franchise history have they ever been more than four games under .500 at any juncture of a season and still reached the postseason.

Their stars are underperforming, their young players are underachieving, and their offense has been a mess.

They soon will be entertaining offers for veteran starter Robbie Ray, and perhaps homegrown star Logan Webb, too, with all of their high-prized stars available to anyone and everyone.

Boston Red Sox: F

Advice to chief baseball officer Craig Breslow: Do not trade with the Brewers.

The Red Sox, who gave the Brewers starter Quinn Priester a year ago, this time doubled down and watched another trade with the Brewers blow up in their face.

They panicked when they lost third baseman Alex Bregman in free agency, and turned to the Brewers, acquiring young third baseman Caleb Durbin. They gave up starter Kyle Harrison, left-hander Shane Drohan and third baseman David Hamilton.

Well, while Durbin is sitting on the bench with his .166 batting average, Harrison is 5-1 with a 1.77 ERA and has become one of the most feared lefties in the game. Drohan has been invaluable out of the Brewers’ pen and Hamilton has provided infield depth.

Their woes just got worse when shortstop Trevor Story went on the IL with a sports hernia surgery that will sideline him two months. The Red Sox should sell at the deadline, offering outfielder Jarren Duran and closer Aroldis Chapman, and start over this winter.

Baltimore Orioles: F

The Orioles, after their painful rebuild in which they lost 115, 108 and 110 games in three consecutive full seasons, appeared to be ready to launch a dynasty when they won 101 games in 2023, and made the postseason again in 2024 with 91 victories.

They have since collapsed, proving that last year’s last-place finish wasn’t a fluke. They are sitting in last again, with the heat now on Mike Elias, president of baseball operations, for failing to land a marquee starter. They instead decided to trade for Shane Baz and sign free agents Chris Bassitt and Zach Eflin. It has been a disastrous result with last year’s ace, Trevor Rogers, now looking like a fifth starter.

Oh, they can rave about four players being listed among Baseball America’s top 100 prospects, but there’s not a parade in sight.

Most terrifying, their window to contend is starting to close unless they quickly get some help.

Detroit Tigers: F-

Remember when the Tigers couldn’t wait to get two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal back on the mound to keep their World Series aspirations alive?

The question no longer is when will he return (likely in June), but how long will he stay?

The Tigers have lost 14 of 16 games since Skubal’s arthroscopic elbow surgery, and have dropped out of sight in the AL Central race. Their offense has been putrid, scoring three or fewer runs in seven consecutive games, and more than four runs once since May 3.

There have been only three teams in the 30-year history of the wild-card era who have made the postseason with 20 or fewer victories in their first 50 games.

The Tigers, who have the third-worst record in MLB the past 81 games – trailing only the Rockies and Angels – probably won’t be one of them.

New York Mets: F-

They were pieced together like a mad lab scientist, putting players out of position, acquiring players with injury histories, and watching them melt down before everyone’s eyes with a 22-29 record.

The acquisitions of Bo Bichette, Jorge Polanco and Luis Robert, have been disastrous, and with Bichette finally starting to hit, all that means is that he’ll definitely be exercising his opt-out, leaving the Mets paying him $47 million for one year.

They’ve already turned to an all-rookie outfield with Carson Benge, A.J. Ewing and Nick Morabito in this lost season. They’ll have no choice but to wave the white flag at the deadline, and unload starter Freddy Peralta, and perhaps infielders Brett Baty and Mark Vientos, too.

Around the basepaths

– Now that it’s becoming inevitable that the free-falling Detroit Tigers may have no choice but to trade two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal at the deadline, rival executives believe the bidding will come down to four finalists that not only can afford the remainder of his $32 million contract, but will also be willing to give up prized prospects:

The Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees, Toronto Blue Jays and San Diego Padres.

– The San Francisco Giants are making no secret that they have targeted UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky as their No. 1 choice in the July amateur draft.

Buster Posey, Giants president of baseballl operations, not only met privately with Cholowsky, but the Giants also had former Giants shortstop great Brandon Crawford meet with Cholowsky. Cholowsky idolized Crawford growing up, and actually sought his advice before attending UCLA.

The Giants have the No. 4 pick, and would have no qualms exceeding the slot value if Cholowsky’s signing bonus demands scare off the White Sox, Rays and Twins, who pick ahead of them.

– The San Diego Padres are looking for more bullpen help and have their eyes on Aroldis Chapman of the Boston Red Sox and Antonio Senzatela of the Colorado Rockies.

– While cities like Portland and Sacramento are preparing their bids for potential MLB expansion sites in 2031 or later, they might be wasting their time.

If MLB indeed expands, Salt Lake City and Nashville are the heavy favorits.

– While the Los Angeles Angels have been criticized for not trading Shohei Ohtani at the trade deadline in 2023, remember they still wanted to re-sign him as a free agent, knowing that if they moved him, he wouldn’t come back.

Ohtani stayed, and those close to him insist he badly wanted to return.

The Angels were given the opportunity to match the $700 million offer with $680 million deferred, and Ohtani would have returned if the Angels agreed. Yet, owner Arte Moreno passed, with Ohtani’s price tag exceeding expectations.

– Veteran reliever Craig Kimbrel’s bid for the Hall of Fame likely ended when he was dumped by the New York Mets, his 10th different team, after yielding a 6.00 ERA and 1.467 WHIP. Unless another team picks him up, his career saves total stalls at 440 with a 22.5 WAR, short of Cooperstown standards.

Former Mets great John Franco had a 23.4 WAR, and 424 saves while pitching 409 more innings than Kimbrel, but was off the Hall of Fame ballot after only one year, receiving 4.7% of the vote in 2011.

– Phillies first baseman Bryce Harper, who won the Home Run Derby with the Nationals when Washington hosted the All-Star Game in 2018 and hasn’t appeared since, says he likely will enter this year’s Home Run Derby at the All-Star Game in Philadelphia – provided he makes the team.

“I won’t do [the Derby] if I’m not an All-Star," Harper told the Philadelphia Inquirer. “I just want to be an All-Star, first and foremost. And I want to be healthy. I’m going to take health into consideration, big time, because I feel great right now and I don’t want to screw that up. So, we’ll see.”

It would be quite the hometown show with Harper and teammate Kyle Schwarber in the derby.

_Cool moment over the weekend when Boston Red Sox great Roger Clemens threw the ceremonial first pitch to his son, Minnesota Twins outfielder Kody Clemens for the first time, before his bobblehead night at Fenway Park.

The entire Clemens family was in attendance.

– Minnesota Twins infielder Royce Lewis is the latest No. 1 overall draft pick to struggle in the major leagues, just like Mickey Moniak, the No. 1 pick in 2016, before rejuvenating his career with the Colorado Rockies.

Lewis, selected with the first pick ahead of Hunter Greene in the 2017 draft, looked like a star in his first 70 career games, hitting .307 with 17 home runs, 57 RBI and a .913 OPS, including four grand slams.

Since 2023, he is hitting .225 with 191 strikeouts in 219 games.

– Seattle Mariners shortstop J.P. Crawford, their longest-tenured players wants to remain in Seattle so badly that he informed the front office that he’s willing to move to third base to accommodate top 20-year-old top prospect Colt Emerson.

“I want to be a Mariner for life,” Crawford told reporters, “and I think that’s the best way to do it.”

– Excuse me, has anyone seen Fernando Tatis Jr.?

He has now gone 215 plate appearances this season without a home run, and has come close only twice. The dude last homered Sept. 27, 2025.

And of his past 74 plate appearances, 42 of his outs have resulted in a groundout or strikeout.

– Quote of the week: Baltimore Orioles color commentator Ben McDonald, their former No. 1 pick, on the over-reliance on analytics across MLB:

“We can talk about analytics and what could happen and what should happen if you hit the ball hard. But I don’t care if you hit the ball hard. I don’t care if you hit it hard and you hit it to somebody. You’re out. I don’t care how hard you throw ball four. I don’t care what your spin rate was on your breaking ball if you bounce it three feet in front of home plate. I don’t care.

“What I care about is, do you make plays? Do you make pitches? Do you get hits when it matters? And that’s what the Orioles are struggling to do right now. They are struggling to have all phases of the game …So, all this nonsense is eyewash to me about this analytical stuff. You either do or you don’t. And right now, the Orioles don’t.’’

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB 2026 grades for all 30 teams: Which teams get an F in standings?

5 Players Outside Top 5 For Blackhawks To Consider Trading Down For

The Chicago Blackhawks have the fourth overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft. There are a lot of players for them to consider there, depending on what the three teams ahead of them (Toronto Maple Leafs, San Jose Sharks, & Vancouver Canucks) decide to do. 

If all of the players that the Blackhawks truly want within that top four are already off the board, there is a different direction they can take. Plenty of prospects with similar ceilings will be available in the back half of the top ten. The Blackhawks could gain another asset by trading down 5-8 slots. 

There will be a handful of players drafted later in the first round who end up being standouts. Are the Blackhawks willing to take a risk like that to gain in the long term? One of these five players may be worth the gamble: 

Viggo Bjork

Viggo Bjork is one of those players who may end up being drafted higher than anyone thought, but he is not touted the way that his countryman, Ivar Stenberg, is. Perhaps he should be. At best, he’s still likely to be just the fourth or fifth forward selected, and there are a handful of defensemen to go in the top ten as well. If the Blackhawks wanted Bjork after seeing his SHL, World Junior, and World Championships performances, they probably can’t go down too far. 

Ethan Belchetz

Ethan Belchetz had a strong point per game type of season with the Windsor Spitfires in 2025-26, which set him up to be a mid-first round pick in the NHL Draft. He will challenge himself by playing college hockey with Michigan State in 2026-27, which will be great for his development as a winger with aspirations of making it to the NHL. If Chicago moved back to draft a player like him, you’d think that they vision him playing wing alongside one of their current young centers. 

Oscar Hemming

Oscar Hemming is a highly skilled Finnish-born player who had an interesting season. He came over during the 2025-26 season to play 19 games with Boston College, and he’s set to play the full season there next year. Should the Blackhawks select a player like Hemming, they’d be getting a forward who may end up being a center one day. It’s always good to have forwards who can play multiple positions in the organization. 

Wyatt Cullen

Wyatt Cullen is the son of former NHL player Matt Cullen, who had a long career playing big roles on good teams. The younger Wyatt may be even more skilled at this stage of the development. After playing a significant role in the United States National Team Development Program, Cullen is ready for the next stage. For him, it will be the University of Minnesota after being drafted somewhere in the middle of the NHL Draft’s first round. By adding him, the Blackhawks would continue their run of drafting fast players who can create offense at will with their speed. 

Tynan Lawrence

For a while, Tynan Lawrence of Boston University was in the conversation for the second overall pick. His stock has recently fallen just a little bit, but he will still be selected in the top-15. With the Blackhawks looking for more scoring down the middle, Lawrence is someone to think about if trading down is their mindset.

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Erie splits double header, Toledo loses in extras

(F/10) Indianapolis Indians 5, Toledo Mud Hens 4 (box)

Toledo overcame another rough outing from Carl Edwards Jr., forcing the game into extra innings, but Indianapolis still came out on top in the 10th.

Edwards, working as a spot starter, gave up a run in the first with two outs, and then back-to-back homers in the third made it 4-0. He walked the batter after the home runs and came out of the game after that. Edwards’ stuff isn’t deceiving. Despite drawing nine whiffs, the result is more often a ball or contact. His fastball stays above the zone, and plenty of his curveballs find the dirt — albeit his most effective pitch (44% CSW).

The Mud Hens battled back, starting with a solo home run in the fourth from Eduardo Valencia.

The problem was with runners in scoring position, as Toledo went just 1-for-9 in that category. That one hit came courtesy of Max Anderson in the fifth with Luke Ritter on third and Andrew Navigato. Anderson put one through the left side, driving in both runners. He also moved Ben Malgeri up to second, but Jace Jung and Valencia stranded the tying and go-ahead runs.

Anderson came up big again in the seventh with one out and Navigato on third. He did his job and sent a sacrifice fly out to right field, tying up the game at four runs apiece.

Toledo’s bullpen was good all-around in relief of Edwards. Scott Effross worked around a pair of hits to get through the fourth, and Cole Waites, back from rehab work in Lakeland, struck out a pair in the fifth. Jack Little got the sixth and seventh, giving the Mud Hens two frames of no-hit ball, and Nick Sandlin worked around a pair of walks while getting five outs.

Tanner Rainey took the loss. He got the third out in the ninth and a sacrifice bunt to start the tenth, but a base hit allowed the winning run to come in. Rainey struck out the next two batters he faced, but Toledo went down 1-2-3 in the home half of the inning.

Anderson: 1-3, 3 RBI, BB, K

Valencia: 1-5, HR (8), R, RBI, K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 5:35 p.m. ET start on Sunday. Toledo trails in the series 3-2.

Game 1 (F/7): Erie SeaWolves 8, Altoona Curve 0 (box)

Erie took the first game of Saturday’s doubleheader against Altoona, 8-0, behind a two-hit performance from the pitching staff.

Carlos Pena got the start and is responsible for both hits allowed by the SeaWolves — doubles in the second and fourth. He also walked a batter in the third. Other than that, Pena was excellent, striking out four and working the outer edge of the zone against righties well.

Wandisson Charles took over for Pena in the fifth. Altoona had a tough time catching up to his 97-mph fastball, and he drew a couple of whiffs on the slider. Tanner Kohlhepp closed things out, striking out the side on 11 pitches. Kohlhepp’s pitches all move a lot, and the Curve didn’t seem to have a handle on any of them.

The offense got going right away, scoring two runs in the first inning. Seth Stephenson scored from first base on a Brett Callahan double that snuck down the right-field line. Stephenson is lightning on the base paths, so there wasn’t even a throw in. Callahan scored on a strike ’em out, throw ’em out double play with Thayron Liranzo at the plate. Altoona was content to give up the run for a second out.

The sixth and seventh innings were big for Erie. The SeaWolves scored three runs in each frame on a combined four extra-base hits. The first was a solo home run from Liranzo, and it was absolutely crushed — 422 feet, 110 mph exit velocity. The switch-hitting catcher has caught fire after taking time to find his footing after returning from injury. He came into the day slashing .263/.378/475 with 4 homers and a 127 wRC+ in 24 games back with Erie.

Izaac Pacheco and Andrew Jenkins both doubled in runs later in the inning. Pacheco went down the line into right field, and Jenkins went into left field — a major-league outfielder might grab that one, though. Regardless, that’s 19 straight games on base for Jenkins.

In the seventh, Altoona loaded the bases without giving up a hit: Stephenson got hit by a pitch, stole second and third, while Callahan and Bigbie both drew walks. Chris Meyers cleared the bases with a triple.

Liranzo: 2-4, HR (5), R, RBI, K

Meyers: 3-4, 3B (1), 3 RBI

Callahan: 1-3, 2B (8), 2 R, RBI, BB

Pena: 4.0 IP, 2 H, 0 R, BB, 4 K

Game 2 (F/7): Altoona Curve 3, Erie SeaWolves 1 (box)

Erie dropped the second game of Saturday’s doubleheader against the Altoona Curve, 3-1, despite both teams finishing the game with four hits apiece.

Four of Erie’s nine baserunners in the game came in the first. Brett Callahan led off the game being hit by a pitch, Peyton Graham and John Peck walked, and Justice Bigbie singled in the lone SeaWolves run of the game.

Kenny Serwa got the start for Erie and gave 4 2/3 innings of two-run ball, despite walking five batters. He worked through his first walk with a double play in the first, but things were rough in the second. The leadoff man reached on an error by Graham, and a sacrifice bunt moved him over to second. A passed ball and walk set up another sacrifice bunt, which scored the tying run this time.

Callahan had a double in the second, and Bigbie did the same in the third. Neither ended up advancing from second, though. E.J. Exposito made it three innings in a row with a double and nothing to show for Erie in the fourth, and that was it until the seventh. The SeaWolves went 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position in this one.

Serwa gave up back-to-back singles in the third, which cost him another run. The runner scored from first and juked catcher Bennet Lee on what looked like a throw that had him dead to rights, albeit up the line a bit.

Eric Silva replaced Serwa in the fifth with two outs. Silva walked a batter but got out of the inning with the score still 2-1. He had a bit of a mini meltdown in the bottom of the sixth with two outs, though. A walk and two singles made it 3-1, and that’s where the game ended.

Exposito led off the seventh by reaching on an error, and Callahan walked before Graham and Peck stranded both of them.

Callahan: 1-2, 2B (9), R, BB

Bigbie: 2-3, 2B (10), RBI, K

Serwa (L, 1-5): 4.2 Ip, 2 H, 2 R, ER, 5 BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 1 p.m. ET start on Sunday. Erie trails in the series 2-3.

South Bend Cubs 5, West Michigan Whitecaps 3 (box)

West Michigan couldn’t survive Rayner Castillo’s shortest outing of the season and fell to South Bend, 5-3, on Saturday. The pain continues for the Whitecaps.

Castillo has given up five or more runs twice already this season, but he at least made it into the third inning in those starts. This time, Castillo only recorded five outs and gave up four earned runs on as many hits and two walks. What’s odd is that Castillo looked really good in the first. He struck out three and got a ground out before blowing up with one out in the second.

Things tend to snowball for Castillo when they go bad, and this was no exception. After the first out, the inning went: single, RBI double, walk, RBI single, fielder’s choice, walk, two-run single. There was a defensive interference call on a pickoff mixed in there, but the runner would have reached second anyway. The fielder’s choice to home did prevent a run from scoring, though.

That was the end of the road for Castillo. Logan Berrier took over, and it became a bullpen game.

The Whitecaps tried to fight back in the bottom half of the second. Luke Shliger led off with a single into right, stole second and moved to third on a wild pitch. Juan Hernandez traded a groundout for an RBI, getting West Michigan on the board.

Caleb Shpur had a chance with the bases loaded in the third — after South Bend walked in a run — but he grounded into a double play to kill the threat. West Michigan also left the bases loaded in the first, so this game was very winnable. The Whitecaps went 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position on the day.

Berrier pitched through the third, working around a pair of base hits. Luke Stofel took over in the fourth and gave West Michigan two perfect innings. Stofel struck out the side in the fifth.

Rainer had an 111-mph exit velocity single in the bottom of the fifth that he came up lame on at first. It turned out to be nothing, but a replay shows him swinging his front leg out while making contact. He had a smile and didn’t see a trainer, so it looks like everything is fine.

Duque Hebbert was next on the mound for West Michigan. He gave up a bomb in the sixth but was otherwise good through two innings. Dariel Fregio got the final two innings of work and worked around a pair of hits for a scoreless outing. This was Fregio’s season debut with West Michigan after throwing 22 innings for Erie.

The Whitecaps didn’t do much at the plate after the fourth. Andrew Sojka hit a solo homer to open the seventh, but that’s all the action.

Rainer: 2-4

Sojka: 1-4, HR (3), R, RBI, 2 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:35 p.m. ET start on Sunday. West Michigan trails in the series 1-4

Lakeland Flying Tigers vs. Bradenton Marauders (postponed)

Weather delayed and eventually postponed this game. Bradenton and Lakeland will play a doubleheader on Sunday.

Coming Up Next: It’s a noon ET start on Sunday. Lakeland leads the series 3-1.

FCL Blue Jays 5, FCL Tigers 4 (box)

Cris Rodriguez: 2-3, R, RBI, HR, CS

Santiago Pinto: 1-4, R, 2 RBI, HR, K

Owen Hall: 3.2 IP, 3 ER, 5 H, 0 BB, 3 K

10 Takeaways from Cavs Game 3 loss to Knicks: The gap between these two teams has never felt wider

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 23: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers looks on during the game against the New York Knicks during Game Three of the 2026 Eastern Conference Finals on May 23, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. 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 David L. Nemec/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Cavaliers are a vastly different team now than they were three years ago. Yet, here they are in a similar spot they were then: Losing to the New York Knicks in the playoffs in humiliating fashion. Just this time, it’s in the Eastern Conference Finals instead of the first round.

And somehow, the gap feels wider now. Or at least it has through three games.

The Knicks outclassed the Cavs in nearly every area, as they came away with a 121-108 Game 3 victory in a contest they never trailed in. They now have a 3-0 lead with a chance of ending Cleveland’s season on Monday.

It’s clear who’s been better through three games. The Knicks are just a complete basketball team in a way that the Cavs aren’t.

Offensively, they have a better understanding of how they want to attack their opponent. They’re lethal at all three levels. That variety means they aren’t overly reliant on the three-ball or getting to the free-throw line.

Each starter can pass, dribble, and shoot at an average level or better. If you sell out to stop one, there’s someone behind them capable of making you pay for it.

They aren’t without deficiencies defensively. Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns are both below-average defenders for their position, but the team compensates for that well.

The Knicks know how to keep both from being on an island defensively. The player they’re trying to hide is comfortable hedging and then recovering back to his man, while the more adept defender fights through the screen. That’s something you need to be proficient at if you know your opponent is going to try to single someone out.

But more than that, they have principles that guide them defensively. They’ve relentlessly tagged the roller and have sold out to stop interior passes and easy looks around the rim. That can make them susceptible to outside shots, but hasn’t thus far this postseason.

This stands in stark contrast with the Cavs.

Cleveland doesn’t have those same guiding principles on either end. They’re too willing to take the path of least resistance. That has allowed the Knicks to bait the Cavs into taking the shots they want them to offensively (threes) and attacking the guys they want to defensively (James Harden).

The Knicks are surrendering open threes, and the Cavs still can’t make them pay.

Before the game, both coaches talked about the open three-point looks the Cavs generated through the first two games.

Cavs head coach Kenny Atkinson preached wanting his team to stick to the process. “Keep taking them,” Atkinson said after mentioning the three-point looks his team took in Game 2 were in the 93rd percentile.

Meanwhile, Knicks head coach Mike Brown said that his team needed to “do a better job” of contesting open looks. “We’ve gotten a little lucky. They’ve missed some shots.”

That luck continued. The Cavs overall went just 12-41 (29.3%) from three. On the series, they’ve now missed 89 triples and are shooting below 30%.

It’d be one thing if this were a normal defensive game plan, but the Knicks are simply daring the Cavs best shooters to beat them, and they inexplicably aren’t. That includes Harden and Donovan Mitchell who combined to go 4-17 from beyond the arc.

“We gotta make shots,” Harden said. “We haven’t really made a shot since the first quarters in Game 1.”

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Fatigue may have something to do with the missed shots. The Cavs haven’t had consecutive off days for three-and-a-half weeks now. Tired legs inevitably make it more difficult to shoot. But that isn’t an excuse that you could really use, considering what came before.

Cleveland had golden opportunities to win Games 4 and 6 against the Toronto Raptors, and didn’t come out with the force needed in Game 6 against the Detroit Pistons. Taking care of a few of those winnable games would’ve given them more rest, so this wouldn’t have been an issue.

“We did it to ourselves, we can’t be mad now,” Mitchell said.

You pay for every mistake that you make in the playoffs, either in the moment or in the future. Cleveland’s previous errors are catching up to them now against a team they need to be playing at or near the top of their game to beat.

You aren’t going to win many playoff games when your best player has the worst plus/minus in the game.

The Cavs lost the minutes Mitchell played by 22. This is the fourth time he’s been a -10 or worse this postseason, and they’ve lost each of those games.

The holes in Mitchell’s games are showing through in this postseason, but particularly in this series. When the outside shot isn’t falling, his only counter is to get to the basket. That has allowed him to still put up respectable scoring numbers. Although the impact on the game isn’t what it needs to be.

There’s more to basketball than just scoring. He hasn’t made consistent enough efforts at defending, rebounding, or playmaking for others to be a positive contributor in those areas. That’s part of why he hasn’t been able to carry lineups without Harden (-7.3 net rating, 23rd percentile).

Mitchell is being outplayed by Brunson for the third time in the postseason dating back to their time in the Western Conference. Both are similar from a talent perspective as undersized scoring guards. But Brunson is better at all the little things that show through in the postseason.

Brunson’s ability to set up his teammates (14 assists in Game 2), compete defensively, and attack in the midrange are all things that Mitchell doesn’t consistently have in his game. That versatility has allowed him to elevate his groups on days he doesn’t have it going as a scorer.

It was easy to see where the Cavs went wrong when they fell on their face three years ago. That group was inexperienced and didn’t have enough outside shooting to be functional in the postseason.

This team is considerably better. You don’t luck your way into being a conference finalist. However, figuring out the next step forward is more difficult, especially for the most expensive roster in the league that doesn’t have many additional levers to pull.

There’s no simple solution to this. LeBron James deciding to come back home and signing for far below market value would help, but it doesn’t necessarily fix everything given he’ll be 42 at this time next year. There would still be holes defensively, and the offense wouldn’t be smooth with multiple ball-dominant players.

Pivoting further by moving more integral pieces is easier said than done. Would you really want to trade Evan Mobley, one of the few Cavaliers who’s elevated his game in the playoffs? Does it make sense to further break up the nucleus of one of the most successful eras in franchise?

At the same time, it’s dangerous to continue betting on a group that has shown the same flaws in multiple postseason runs. That includes deciding whether or not to give Mitchell a further extension this summer.

Firing Atkinson would be the simplist solution. It’s easier to get rid of the coach than it is the team. But I’m not sure this is a coaching issue when we saw this group go seven games with the previous fall guy.

The gap between who the Cavs are and who they want to be is wider than it’s been since Mitchell was traded over. And there’s no easy answer for any of this.

The Cavaliers are one loss away from what could be an unpredictable summer.

LeBron James 2026 free agency: 6 potential landing spots for 'The King'

LeBron James will be an unrestricted free agent beginning this July.

He will have his say in where he wants to play during the 2026-27 NBA season, if he chooses to play another year, which would be his 24th, extending his NBA record.

James provided a timeline on which a decision could be made, but speculations are leaning that he'll play another season.

ESPN senior insider Shams Charania joined the Rich Eisen Show and shared what he knew about James' potential decision.

"Lebron is 41 years old, just finished his 23rd season, (and is) gonna take the next few weeks to figure out exactly how he wants potentially his final year to play out," Charania said. "All the indications I've gotten over the course of year is that he's going to play one more season."

So, say James does opt for a 24th and final NBA season, or maybe beyond 24, there's expected to be a number of teams clamoring for his services.

"The one thing I do know is that multiple contenders are already kind of sort of circling here," Charania said. "If LeBron is really going to hit the open market and decide and have a true free agency, he's not going to have a shortage of teams that feel like, 'Listen, we'll go get LeBron, we'll plug him in as their starting power forward or small forward, and, like, "Let's go try to win a ring.'"

Here are potential contenders and landing spots for James if he leans towards that decision in the upcoming months:

LeBron James 2026 free agency: Potential landing spots

Here are possible teams that James could land with for the 2026-27 NBA season.

Los Angeles Lakers

The Los Angeles Lakers are the obvious team James signs with. He's spent his previous seven NBA seasons with the Lakers and in that stint has won an NBA championship, Finals MVP, and helped the franchise back to being a perennial postseason contender.

Whether James feels that the team has enough to get to the mountaintop of another championship is probably what he's waiting to see, Charania said.

"The where, the how much of it all, like that, that's all obviously going to be a factor. Is it going to be LA? That's got to be probably his preference if he wants to be home, and you know, as far as where his home base is now," Charania said. "And the Lakers have made it clear that they want him back, and so we'll see how that mutual potential interest culminates over the next month or so."

Family has a big impact. His wife and kids will want him close. His son, Bryce, is at Arizona and James will want to be close to attend games in the winter. His eldest son and teammate, Bronny, surely has enjoyed his pops being alongside his young NBA journey.

All signs lead to the Lakers, but there are other contenders that make sense.

Los Angeles Clippers

The next-door neighbor, who happens to be "little bro," would like a word with Mr. James. The LA Clippers would be a viable option for James; playing for the team in Inglewood means he and his family wouldn't have to leave Southern California.

He can enjoy all the perks of SoCal, while remaining home. Legacy-wise, winning a championship for the Clippers would be unheard of.

The Clippers do have interesting pieces to combine with Darius Garland, Benedict Mathurin, Kris Dunn and maybe Bradley Beal is back healthy. Add James into the mix and they might make noise. They will need depth at the center position but Yanic Konan Niederhauser is due for a breakout year, a pick-and-roll game between him and James would accelerate his development.

Golden State Warriors

Ah, yes. The dream duo of Stephen Curry and LeBron James. We've seen glimpses of what that would look like throughout All-Star games but it was on its best display during the 2024 Paris Olympics.

The Golden State Warriors have actually contacted the Lakers multiple times regarding James' availability, obviously to no avail. Now that James has the power to exercise his preferred destination, if he wanted to play with Curry in the Bay Area, he could. But it might come with a drastic pay cut.

San Francisco is an hour flight away. While joining forces may draw scrutiny, the bigger issue is the Warriors being a borderline playoff team.

Hypothetically, think about whether a combination of James, Curry, with Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green would be the start of a team ready to contend with the likes of San Antonio or Oklahoma City.

Cleveland Cavaliers

This would be a nice touch to end his career, where it all began as a kid from Akron, Ohio, who lived his NBA dreams for his nearby team, the Cleveland Cavaliers. It would be a fairytale ending to get the Cavs back to another championship. James wants to be on a contender, well Cleveland is in the Eastern Conference Finals, something that hasn't happened since James was leading them.

Now, they have Donovan Mitchell, James Harden, Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. It seems they're missing a small forward, power forward type of player. Plug in James, and you legitimately have an unstoppable force in the East.

The only thing is that Cleveland is not Los Angeles.

"I'm 41 years old. It's two cities I do not like playing in right now. That's Milwaukee and that's Memphis. What is the problem?" James said. "I don't like going home either. [...] And I'm from there...people are ridiculous."

Safe to say that Cleveland is off the table, but 2016 will always serve a special place in James' heart.

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 5/24/26

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 21: (L-R) Ben Rice #22, Trent Grisham #12, Cody Bellinger #35, Anthony Volpe #11, Aaron Judge #99 and Ryan McMahon #19 of the New York Yankees look on during the final out of the ninth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on May 21, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. The Toronto Blue Jays won 2-0. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We received a small blessing in not seeing the Yankees blowing another game yesterday, as they were rained out before it could even get underway. Now facing a two-game set with the postponed game pushed way out to September, they’ll look to lock down a split with Ryan Weathers on the mound (and ideally, the offense showing up).

Before the series finale gets underway (assuming the rain doesn’t come back to mess with them), we’ve got a full lineup for ya. Estevão leads off with a pitch to have Cody Bellinger do the same for the Yankees, and then I’ll pop back in to cover the Rivalry Roundup. Jeff wishes Big Sexy himself, Bartolo Colon well on his birthday, and then Scott goes over Zach Messinger’s transformation into a reliever for the RailRiders and his big bounceback in May. After the game, John will be around to give us the latest social media spotlight with a side of Knicks content as they make their charge to the Finals and the team shows them some love.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Tampa Bay Rays

Time: 1:35 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, Rays.TV

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

Questions/Prompts:

1. Who will be the catalyst to spark the Yankee offense?

2. How crazy has this Knicks run been now that they’re a game away from the finals? Is this the best Knicks squad you’ve ever seen?

Yankees news: Gerrit Cole gets ideal return start

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 22: Gerrit Cole #45 of the New York Yankees looks on during the first inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium on May 22, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

FOX Sports | Deesha Thosar: Gerrit Cole made his triumphant return to the mound on Friday. After missing all of last season and the start of this one as he recovered from Tommy John surgery, the former Cy Young Award winner needed only 72 pitches to keep the AL-best Rays off the board through six innings. “It was almost like a second debut kind of situation,” Cole said after the game. “It was an enjoyable moment. It was nice to get back in the fire.” Perhaps most encouragingly, he dialed his fastball up to 99 mph in the first while showcasing a new windup he adopted during the rehab process.

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: Saturday’s scheduled game against the Rays was postponed due to a forecast of inclement weather. The game will be made up as part of a split-admission doubleheader on September 22nd. Fans with tickets to Saturday’s game can use them for the first game of that doubleheader or exchange them per the Yankees’ rain check policy. The postponement turns this weekend’s three-game series into a two-game set.

MLB Trade Rumors | Mary Polishuk: The Yankees have signed Peter Strzelecki, assigning the right-hander to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Strzelecki appeared in 77 games, all in relief, with three teams between 2022-2024, posting a 3.44 ERA. He was briefly called up by the Brewers last week, but ended up designated for assignment before he could appear in a game. The 31-year-old Queens native will serve as bullpen depth in the minors for a Yankees relief corps which has been inconsistent to start the year.

New York Post | Dan Martin: The Yankees’ bullpen — including David Bednar, Camilo Doval, and Jake Bird, the three relievers acquired at last year’s trade deadline — have had their share of struggles to start the season. Reinforcements could be on the way, with fireballer Carlos Lagrange waiting down at Triple A alongside fellow right-hander Eric Reyzelman, who was recently promoted from Double-A, and Strzelecki. Another avenue for reinforcements could be the team’s big-league rotation if the current five remain healthy until Max Fried returns from the IL.

Brand Risk 14 live blog: Michael Beasley vs. Lance Stephenson

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - MARCH 28: Lance Stephenson #6 of the Indiana Pacers and Trae Young #11 of the Atlanta Hawks battle for a loose ball in the fourth quarter at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on March 28, 2022 in Indianapolis, Indiana. 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 Dylan Buell/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This is the Brand Risk 14 live blog for Michael Beasley vs. Lance Stephenson, the influencer MMA fight on Saturday night at the UFC APEX in Las Vegas.

Drafted second overall in the 2008 NBA draft, Beasley is a longtime professional basketball player, playing 11 years in the NBA, and several more years in international leagues. Beasley last played in 2022 for the Shanghai Sharks, and now turns his attention to the combat sports world, taking on a former NBA rival in the process. The two have some history, competing against each other in Big3 basketball and playing a game of 1-on-1 against each other for $100,000 last year.

Chosen in the second round of the 2010 NBA draft, Stephenson followed a similar career path to Beasley, playing over 10 years in the league, bouncing among different teams, with some international stints as well. Known for his chaotic and pestering playstyle, Stephenson looks to bring that same sort of energy to his first MMA fight.

Check out the live blog for Michael Beasley vs. Lance Stephenson below.

Preamble

This event sure has been something. A lot of weirdness, and Ray J even acting real weird after losing his fight, like they were trying to do something.

Anyway, let’s watch some former NBA players fight.

Pre Fight

If nothing else, at least both Stephenson and Beasley are former professional athletes and in good shape. That has not been the case for many of the bouts tonight. And both men look like they’re ready to actually get into a fight. But we will see.

Round 1

Beasley looks much taller but already the difference can be seen between these two. Beasley is feinting a lot and then lands a sharp left hand at range. But Stephenson charges in gets a body lock, lifts and takes Beasely down. Beasley going for a guillotine choke but he definitely doesn’t know how to do that.

Stephenson breaks free and Beasley rolls and Stephenson to the back as Beasley rolls! He grabs the rear-naked choke! Stephenson doesn’t have any sort of control here, but Beasley has no clue what he’s doing and Stephenson has a choke in! He squeezes and there’s the tap!!

Official Decision

Lance Stephenson def. Michael Beasley via submission (rear-naked choke) — 1:26, Round 1.

Post Fight

“Practicing getting choked and getting choked ain’t the same!” – Michael Beasley.

Beasley then says he’ll box but he’s not playing with “that choking shit” again.

Stephenson then says he’s from the hood, and they joke around with Beasley fake punching him.

Then Stephenson says Beasley beat him in 1-on-1, he won the fight, so “next time we’ll do something he wants to do.”

That was silly but kinda fun.

Diamondbacks 5, Rockies 4: Good Enough!

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 23: Ketel Marte #4 of the Arizona Diamondbacks celebrates after hitting a two run home run against the Colorado Rockies during the fourth inning at Chase Field on May 23, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ah, Zac Gallen. Our one-time ace, more recently our collective repository of remarkably persistent hopes and dreams and aspirations of the “he just needs to get his mojo back and he’ll be an ace again!” variety, our late-breaking $25 Million Dollar Man (with some money deferred, of course) as we got ready to set sail for the 2026 season. Yes. Zac. I’m never thrilled, and always nervous, when I pull a Gallen start for a Saturday recap. I would say that it’s because you never know what you’re going to get with Zac these days, but I don’t actually think that’s true at this point. The truer way of putting it is that we’re going to get the same thing we always get—a handful of really stellar innings which remind us of the sort of pitcher he once was on a consistent basis, but punctuated (and punctured) by at least one complete loss of focus and competence that leads to some quantity, often a substantial quantity, of runs crossing the plate for the opponent. It’s sad, and it’s a bummer, but at this point it simply is what it is, and who Gallen is as a pitcher at this stage in his career.

To be fair, tonight was one of his better outings in 2026, though a big part of that may be that Torey Lovullo kept the leash short. Gallen was up against Michael Lorenzen tonight, who came into the game sporting an ERA above 7, while Zac’s was in the mid-5 range, so I wasn’t terribly worried. And for the first three innings, Gallen did the business, and did it admirably. He pitched around a one-out single in the top of the first to retire the side with only nine pitches thrown. In the second, he retired the Rockies in order with only eight pitches thrown. He needed a whopping 19 pitches in the top of the third, but that was mainly because, rather than recording quick outs he struck out the side in order instead, and strikeouts are always more pitch-count-intensive.

Lorenzen, meanwhile, looked shaky at the start, surrendering a Ketel Marte single and a Corbin Carroll double to put our first two batters in scoring position with nobody out to begin the bottom of the first, but managed to wriggle off the hook thanks to a Geraldo Perdomo grounder to first, a Nolan Arenado grounder to third that allowed the Rockies to throw Marte out at the plate, and then a weak Ildemaro pop-up into shallow center for the third out. In the second, he retired the Diamondbacks in order, which made me wonder if he was starting to settle in.

He wasn’t. Ryan Waldschmidt led off the bottom of the third with s line-drive single to left, flipping the lineup over for Ketel Marte, who then walked. Corbin Carroll struck out for the first out of the inning, but Perdomo lined a single to left of his own that scored Waldschmidt, and Nolan Arenado followed with a double into the gap in left center that brought home both Perdomo and Arenado:

Neither Vargas or Gabriel Moreno could do anything to get Nolan around, but we’d drawn first blood, and put up a crooked number at that. 3-0 D-BACKS

As often seems to the case these days with Gallen, though, the offense staking him a lead seemed to mess up his mojo and throw him off-kilter, and while he still seemed to be throwing the same sort of stuff and taking the same approach as he had through the first three innings, the Rockies greeted him with rather different results to open the fourth. The first four batters of the inning reached against Zac, thanks to a single to left, a single to right, a walk to load the bases, and then a single to right-center that scored Hunter Goodman, who had led off the inning. Ezequiel Tovar then grounded to short, but Perdomo’s only play was to get the force at second base, allowing another Rockie to cross the plate. Gallen then walked his second batter of the inning to reload the bases, but thankfully pulled himself together enough that he was able to end things without further damage with a strikeout and a pop-up to Perdomo. 3-2 D-BACKS

In a happy turn of events, though, our offense came back out in the bottom of the fourth and immediately got back the two runs Gallen had just coughed up. With one out, Tim Tawa, who was playing left field tonight with Lourdes Gurriel, Jr. hitting the IL this afternoon, grounded a single into left, and one out later Ketel Marte continued his offensive resurgence by hitting the first pitch he saw in his third time facing Lorenzen for an absolute moonshot that just about reached the concourse behind the right field bleachers:

So the lead was back into safer territory again. 5-2 D-BACKS

Gallen, for his part, took what was given to him this time and put up a zero in the top of the fifth, pitching around a two-out walk. Brandon Pfaadt, however, got up and started warming in the bullpen around this point, which was likely just as well because after Lorenzen put up a zero of his own in the bottom of the fifth, Zac surrendered a leadoff single to Colorado left fielder Troy Johnston to kick off the sixth inning. Johnston promptly stole second and was then advanced to third on a Tovar grounder to first, and that earned Gallen the hook as Torey went to the bullpen and brought in Pfaadt. And Pfaadt did his job, recording the final two outs, though Johnston did score from third to narrow the lead again. 5-3 D-BACKS

Lorenzen’s night was done, so the amusingly named (for Snakepit members of a certain vintage, anyway) Keegan Thompson came out of the Rockies’ bullpen and proceeded to pitch two and two thirds innings. They weren’t the cleanest you’ve ever seen, as he dealt with multiple baserunners in each inning that he worked, but he put up zeroes, which is of course what matters. Pfaadt did the same in his half of the seventh, but surrendered a leadoff home run to start the eighth, followed by a single that sent him to the showers and brought in Kevin Ginkel to once again clean up someone else’s mess. Ginkel did so admirably and with a minimum of drama, thankfully. 5-4 D-BACKS

And that was pretty much that. Our offense did nothing of significance in the bottom of the eighth, and Paul Sewald came out to pitch the top of the ninth for us in a one-run game, and shut things down by inducing a flyout to center and a flyout to right before finishing with style and panache by striking out Hunter Goodman, arguably Colorado’s best hitter, on five pitches to put this one win the books, and the win column, for the good guys.

Win Probability Added, courtesy of FanGraphs

The Majestic Redwood: Ketel Marte (4 AB, 3 H, 2 R, 2 RBI, 1 HR, 1 BB, +23% WPA), Kevin Ginkel (1 IP, 0 ER, 1 BB, +21% WPA)
The Mighty Sequoia: Paul Sewald (1 IP, 0 ER, 1 K, +16% WPA)

We had a very lively and well-attended Gameday Thread tonight, with an impressive 337 comments at time of writing. Many comments went Sedona Salmon, but none attracted enough comments to truly run away with it, so I’m more than pleased to bestow tonight’s Comment of the Game on gzimmerm, for this simple statement that actually I think goes a long way toward explaining some of the recent positive change in the team’s fortunes:

You are not wrong, and I for one have been enjoying seeing the young Baron prove that day after day after day as he embarks upon his young career.

So tomorrow we go for the series victory, and our sixth win in the seven games of this homestand. The Rockies are bringing lefthander Jose Quintana to the party, and we are countering with the inimitably Ryne Nelson. First pitch is scheduled for 1:10pm AZ time. I hope you can join us!

As always, thanks for reading, and as always, go Diamondbacks!