Kyle Karros is ready to make the Rockies his own

DENVER, COLORADO - SEPTEMBER 18: Kyle Karros #12 of the Colorado Rockies plays third base against the Miami Marlins in the first inning at Coors Field on September 18, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Scottsdale, Ariz. – After the Rockies traded Ryan McMahon at the 2025 deadline, Kyle Karros became the heir apparent at third base.

The 23-year-old made his MLB debut on August 8 against the Arizona Diamondbacks and started hot, going 4-for-11 with two doubles, three RBI, two walks and two strikeouts. He hit his first home run at Coors Field against his dad, Eric’s, former team — the Los Angeles Dodgers — on August 19.

Karros started to dip towards the end, though, finishing the season with a .226/.308/.277 slash with four doubles, one homer, nine RBI, 15 walks and 41 strikeouts in 43 games. But, like many young Rockies, 2025 was a learning year for Karros.

“I think (my biggest lesson) was just to have more trust in myself,” he said at Rockies spring training camp.

“I think that was kind of what allowed me to perform so well in the minor leagues – I believed in what I was capable of, and I really stuck with it. It didn’t matter if I went 0-for-4 in a night, I’d come back the next day to the yard and be confident going up to the plate, and wouldn’t start changing stuff.”

But he found it hard to stay consistent after being promoted.

“I know in the big leagues, I got up there and honestly started off pretty well. But then you have a couple of 0-for’s throw together when you don’t have a lot of at-bats under your name, and then you’re looking up at the scoreboard,  and you’re batting .220, and so I think that definitely affected me a little more in the big leagues than it did in the minor leagues just because there’s more at stake – more people watching and stuff. 

“But I think I kind of got to the point near the end where I said, ‘To hell with the numbers. Whatever this experience has been, just go out there and play,’” he continued, “and I thought I finished pretty strong. So I think going into this season, I know what I have works. I’ve seen it work at every level, so just being more convicted with that and staying true to myself each and every day.”

Karros hit the gym in the offseason, and is now playing “the heaviest [he’s] ever been,” as he put it.

“That was another thing I learned last year being in Denver, playing [at] altitude every day. Obviously, the big-league schedule is a bit more rigorous than the minor leagues, so I definitely made it a priority to put on some weight and get strong showing up to camp. [I’m] still moving well. I feel great – I feel strong, I feel durable, and ready to take on 162.”

Warren Schaeffer said that “getting his body right” was a priority for Karros, as well.

“With Kyle, it was his first offseason after playing in the big leagues,” Schaeffer said, “so it was important for him to know that he needed to get his body right coming into spring training because [playing in the big leagues is] a grind on your body.

“The minor league season is tough, too,” he continued, “but the big leagues offer something a little different in terms of the mental stress that it can put on you if you choose to let it, which affects your body weight and affects everything. But you can’t feel it until you go through it.”

Heading into this year, there has obviously been a lot of turnover throughout the Rockies, both players and coaches (as has been chronicled many times). But Karros is excited to see what the new coaches bring. 

“I’ve connected with everyone on board, and I think we have a great thing working here,” he said. “I think we’ve got some really good people in the right spots.”

Plus, he’s eager to work with some of the former Dodgers who’ve joined the organization.

“I think it’s pretty cool that we got a lot of people from the Dodgers,” he said.

“Obviously, they know how to do it over there, and they’ve been doing it for a couple of years. So we’ve got some people in some pretty important spots that came over from them, and I’ve heard nothing but good things about them, and now I’m experiencing those good things for myself. It’s been really pleasant to work with them throughout spring so far.”

One of the coaches that Karros has connected the most with is new hitting coach, Brett Pill, who came over from the Dodgers. 

“We’ve been seeing eye-to-eye a ton,” Karros said. “I mean, I’m hitting the ball harder than I’ve ever hit it. Things are going well offensively so far, and I really like what we’re doing. We’ve been clicking on all fronts, so I’m really excited for this year.”

“He came in looking strong,” Schaeffer said. “He looks great with the glove. He’s working on his swing with Brett Pill a lot. He looks like he’s put in a lot of good work.”

In addition to the new coaches, the Rockies have signed a number of veteran players – both pitchers and position players. One of the veterans that Karros has gravitated towards is Nicky Lopez, who was signed as a free agent in December after spending 2025 in the Angels’, Cubs’, Diamondbacks’ and Yankees’ systems.

Notably, in 2024, Lopez played for the 41-121 Chicago White Sox.

“We’ve been taking a lot of ground balls together,” Karros said. “He obviously is one of the best defenders in the game, so I’ve been picking his brain. He was part of the White Sox when they had their tough year, so he’s seen what it’s like to be on a good team and what it’s like to be on a bad team. So he’s going to definitely offer some good insight on how to get us going in the right direction.”

Looking ahead to 2026, Karros has one main goal.

“Without a doubt, my biggest priority is to make this team my own and feel like this is my team going into the year,” he said. “I know that’s kind of what I experienced last year, joining the team so late in the year after they’d already kind of gone through a season with one another. When you join in near the end, it’s a little different.

“But when you’re able to go through spring training with a team and build those relationships and earn the trust of your teammates and your coaches, that helps a lot over the course of the season,” he continued.

“So I’m looking forward to just building relationships with the guys and with the coaches.”


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Manny Machado says every team could spend like Dodgers: 'I (expletive) love it'

PEORIA, AZ — San Diego Padres All-Star third baseman Manny Machado, having watched the bitter rival Los Angeles Dodgers dominate the NL West – and enter the season with a payroll exceeding $400 million – not only declined to criticize the Dodgers’ expenditures, but praised the organization.

“I (expletive) love it," Machado said Sunday morning. “I think every team should be doing it. They’re figured out a way to do it, and the (stuff) is (expletive) great for the game honestly. I think every team has the ability to do it. So, I hope all 30 teams could learn from it."

The Dodgers will enter the season with a payroll nearly twice as much as the Padres’ payroll of about $220 million, but Machado believes that a salary cap will hurt the game.

“I think our game is very good at what we’re doing," Machado said. “There’s a lot of money being made. Look at what’s going on with the game. The last five years, it’s been great.

“So, I think a lot of teams have the ability to do what the Dodgers are doing. We started it a few years ago with [late owner] Peter [Seidler], so everyone could do it. It’s just a matter if they want to or not."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Manny Machado says every MLB team could spend like Dodgers

Can reliever Cionel Perez bounce back with the Washington Nationals?

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MAY 20: Cionel Pérez #58 of the Baltimore Orioles throws a pitch during the game against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on May 20, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Nationals finally made a free agent signing to their bullpen, bringing in Cionel Perez on a minor league deal. This is different from the other minor league deals they have signed, as Perez has a good chance of making the team. Before a disastrous 2025, Perez was a mainstay in the Orioles bullpen.

If Perez makes the team, he will make $1.9 million plus another $700,000 in potential incentives. As long as he does not look terrible this spring, Perez should make the team. From 2022-2024, Perez made at least 60 appearances in the O’s bullpen. He posted a combined 3.12 ERA in those three seasons. 

So what made Perez such an effective reliever over those seasons and why did he fall off a cliff in 2025? Well, Perez is elite at generating ground balls with his heavy sinker. For his career, Perez has posted a 55.5% GB rate. Even in his horrible 2025 season, he still was great at keeping the ball on the ground, with a 58.2% GB rate.

However, Perez is not a big strikeout guy and has had control issues throughout his career. That makes him reliant on his defense and batted ball luck. Last season, he was a victim of terrible batted ball luck, with a .379 BABIP. This bad luck, combined with a 16.4% walk rate was why Perez posted an 8.31 ERA in 19 outings.

Despite some of these awful numbers, statcast was still bullish on him. Last season, his xERA was a respectable 3.93 despite his awful surface level numbers. His actual batting average against was .322 but his xBA was .213. I am not sure I have ever seen a gap that wide.

These discrepancies make him an interesting bounce back candidate for the Nats. If Perez can get his walk rate closer to 10% and he has better batted ball luck, Cionel Perez can be a solid piece in the bullpen. In a bullpen from January, he was already sitting 95-96, which is nice to see this early in the offseason.

His velocity has gone from 97 in 2022 to 95.6 last year, so hopefully he can recapture some of that old velo. There are a lot of if’s here, but Perez has the ceiling of a dependable middle reliever. On this team, that probably means looks at the back end of the bullpen. 

Honestly, Perez does a lot of the same stuff that the traded Jose A. Ferrer did. Both are left handers who throw very hard but are ground ball oriented pitchers rather than strikeout guys. The biggest difference though is that Ferrer has much better control. 

Another thing I am interested about here is if they will make any tweaks with Perez. Last season, he threw a sinker, a new slider, a slurve and a 4-seam. Despite being added before the worst year of his career, Perez’s new slider was actually very effective. It was a nice complement to his slurve, which had been his primary secondary pitch for years.

Going back to Ferrer, he featured a really nice changeup. I wonder if the Nats will want to give Perez a changeup. Perez has been much more effective against lefties in his career. Lefties have hit just .211 against Perez, while righties have hit .270. A changeup could be a good weapon for him to have against right handed hitters.

Some pitchers just never have great feel for changeups, so that could be hard. However, the invention of the kick changeup has been helpful for those pitchers. The kick change does not require pronation like other changeups. It is the grip that is doing the work. Maybe that could be something Perez could learn.

Overall, this is a low risk, medium reward move. If Perez can’t hit the broadside of a barn in Spring Training, he just won’t make the team. However, if he looks like the guy he was before last season, he will be a reliable piece in the Nats bullpen. 

Still only 29, Perez combines experience with at least some youth. He also could be a trade candidate if he performs well in the first half. This is an interesting flier that could work.

Munetaka Murakami — The Good, the Bad, and the Maybe?

Munetaka Murakami has big shoes to fill (yes, these are his). | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

Leave it to the White Sox to sully the start of Spring Training for the man who may be their best acquisition in a long time. The news should all be about Munetaka Murakami (no matter how the locker room crew spelled his name), and instead it’s about Chris Getz proving his incompetence once again.

Getz has apparently finally figured out that another newcomer, Luisangel Acuña, isn’t actually a switch-hitter, as Getz had called him. And called him again. And again. And again. And again, so many times it’s very, very hard not to believe that Getz actually thought he’d traded Luis Robert Jr., for a player who didn’t just hit right-handed (and who, incidentally, has fairly big platoon splits, .592 OPS vs. righties, .732 vs. lefties).

Now Getz being a fool isn’t exactly man bites dog, but what’s more worrisome is that if he thought Acuña was a switch-hitter, did he also think he was an outfielder? That seems to be where the Sox plan to play the young speedster, despite the fact that both the Rangers and Mets had found that he’s a very fine middle infielder but can’t hack it in center. Guess we’ll have to wait to find out.

But let’s move on to the man who should be getting the attention, and whose performance could mean the difference between White Sox losses in the high-90s or worse (as most predicting algorithms believe will be the case) or the low-90s (as PECOTA anticipates).

Murakami the Good?
Reports are that the reason contending teams didn’t cough up the nine-figure offers prognosticators expected for the Japanese slugger is pretty straightforward. While Murakami boasts immense power, he strikes out way too much, has way too much swing-and-miss, and — and this is the important part, because lots of power hitters whiff a bunch — he struggles against pitches faster than 92 mph. That wasn’t a huge deal in Japan, where most pitches don’t throw that fast, but would render him impotent in an MLB where almost everybody could just blow balls by him.

Thing is, that 92 mph-plus problem depends on why it exists. It could very well be that Murakami just hasn’t faced enough mid-90s or higher heat to get used to it and adjust, in which case live pitching, lots of hours on the Trajekt machine and maybe a tiny swing adjustment could have him ready to take on major league velocity by the start of the regular season, or shortly thereafter.

Also on the good side is that Murakami’s not apt to become depressed, playing a for a team that usually loses. His Japanese team, the Yakult Swallows, has been perennially as bad as the Sox. It’s even possible he thought playing for the White Sox instead of a good team for a couple of years will give him a chance to adjust to a new country, language and level of play without the pressure to be a star immediately, as would be the case if he’d signed for a contender.

If this is the case, we should enjoy watching Murakami swat baseballs out of The Rate at a happy rate.

Murakami the Bad?
Alternatively, the reason Murakami has struggled against pitches faster than 92 mph could be that his reflexes are only so good. Maybe his brain/body/swing combo is just a millisecond or two slower than it needs to be in the big leagues, as happens to many power hitters as they slide downhill (or fall off a cliff, like José Abreu sadly did) in their mid-30s. That’s certainly possible, given that roughly 99.999999999999999% of humanity doesn’t have reaction time anywhere close to his.

If that turns out to be the case, it could be a very long season for Mune and the Sox, especially given how terrible his fielding is expected to be.

Murakami the Maybe?
Then there’s a middle ground, where the slugger can catch faster pitches down by his knees (as is often the case for lefties) but can’t cope with high heat, or even high almost-heat. That would mean relying on pitchers to make mistakes, but a whole lot of power hitters have had long and successful careers only being able to hit mistakes, especially early on (Kyle Schwarber, anyone?)

The upper side of this seems to be where the algorithms used for projections think Murakami will land. Steamer and ZiPS are pretty close in what they see for him, and FanGraphs Depth Charts is close to both of them, with him hitting a very respectable .232/.342/.449, for a wRC+ of 120, with 30 homers and 80 RBIs. However, that only adds up to a 2.2 WAR (just barely better than the level considered major-league starter), with his WAR brought way down because of abysmal defense.

(It will be interesting to see what the Sox, who like to pretend to care about defense, will do if Murakami’s D is as bad as advertised and he’s best moved among the other DH contenders who also can’t field a lick, like Andrew Benintendi and Lenyn Sosa, plus one of the catchers. If you don’t become a good defender in Japan, where D is high art, it’s unlikely to occur here.)

But it’s spring!
Well, baseball spring, anyway. So let’s go with Murakami the Good.

And, what the heck, let’s even pretend Acuña’s a switch-hitter. And good outfielder.

Dodgers & MLB history of going for 3 in a row

LOS ANGELES CALIFORNIA NOVEMBER 3, 2025 Los Angeles Dodgers superstars Shohei Ohtani, left, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto acknowledge fans lining the streets of downtown Los Angeles for the Dodgers World Championship Parade and Celebration. The Dodgers are the first team to win back-to-back World Series titles since the Yankees did it in 1998. (Kayla Bartkowski / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

The Dodgers are in rarefied air in their long franchise history going into 2026, having won consecutive championships for the first time. What’s next on the checklist is trying to become the fifth MLB team to win at least three World Series in a row.

MLB teams winning 3+ championships in a row
  • New York Yankees 1949-53 (5)
  • New York Yankees 1936-39 (4)
  • Oakland A’s 1972-74
  • New York Yankees 1998-2000

The Yankees understandably dominate this list, with several extended periods of dominance in their storied history. These represent different eras as well. The two longest title streaks came in a league of 16 teams and no divisional play. The A’s in the 1970s were in a 24-team MLB and had to go through a best-of-5 League Championship Series. The Yankees from 1998-2000 are the only team of this group to be in our modern era, with 30 MLB teams and two extra rounds of playoffs before the World Series.

The Yankees are the only MLB team to win three titles in a row after Pat Riley trademarked the term “Three-peat” in 1989. Riley was ahead of his time, even though his Lakers team that year ran into a Pistons-sized roadblock in the NBA Finals, getting swept after an 11-0 start to their postseason. Multiple trademarks for “Three-peat” are still active under Riles & Company, Inc., which means any such marketing (shirts, hats, etc.) have to go through Riley for approval and/or compensation for use.

The Dodgers in 2026 are just the third team coming off consecutive championships and going for a third straight title in the wild card era, along with those Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays in 1994. In all there have been 21 teams prior to the Dodgers to win the previous two World Series.

YearTeamWLPctFinish
1909Cubs10449.6802nd (behind 110-win Pirates)
1912Philadelphia A’s9062.5923rd (behind 105-win Red Sox)
1917Red Sox9062.5922nd (behind 100-win White Sox)
1923NY Giants9558.621lost World Series (4-2) to NYY
1929Yankees8866.5712nd (behind 104-win A’s)
1931Philadelphia A’s10745.704lost World Series (4-3) to StL
1938Yankees9953.651won World Series (4-0) over Cubs
1939Yankees10645.702won World Series (4-0) over Reds
1940Yankees8866.5713rd
1951Yankees9856.636won World Series (4-2) over NYG
1952Yankees9559.617won World Series (4-3) over Dodgers
1953Yankees9952.656won World Series (4-2) over Dodgers
1954Yankees10351.6692nd (behind 111-win Cle)
1963Yankees10457.646lost World Series (4-0) to LA
1974Oakland A’s9072.556won World Series (4-1) over LA
1975Oakland A’s9864.605lost ALCS (3-0) at Bos
1977Reds8874.5432nd (behind 98-win LA)
1979Yankees8971.5564th
1994Blue Jays5560.4783rd
2000Yankees8774.540won World Series (4-1) over NYM
2001Yankees9565.594lost World Series (4-3) to AZ

Eleven teams, just over half of the 21, reached the World Series after winning the previous two, with seven championships. In the divisional era, four of seven teams reached the World Series, with two wins.

This is the sixth time the Dodgers have won two pennants in a row — 1952-53 and 1955-56 in Brooklyn, plus 1965-66, 1977-78, 2017-18, and 2024-25 in Los Angeles. They have yet to win three pennants in a row, and this is their only time winning consecutive championships.

The only one of the previous 21 back-to-back champs to finish under .500 in Year 3 were the 1994 Blue Jays, who were 55-60 when a strike ended that season in August.

It stands to reason that a team winning two championships in a row will still be good the next year. These 22 teams have an average .609 winning percentage, roughly 99 wins over 162 games.

The Dodgers this year are in that range, projected to have the best record in baseball by a wide margin. But like this current era of Dodgers baseball, they won’t be judged by the regular season, but rather how they do in October.

Arsenal routs Wigan 4-0 on no-surprise Sunday as Premier League teams advance to 5th round

LONDON (AP) — Arsenal enjoyed a 4-0 rout of Wigan as five Premier League teams avoided upsets to reach the fifth round of the FA Cup on Sunday.

Third-tier struggler Wigan was overwhelmed against the Premier League leader in front of a 60,000 crowd at Emirates Stadium, with all the goals coming in the first half.

Forwards Noni Madueke, Gabriel Martinelli and Gabriel Jesus were on the scoresheet along with Jack Hunt's own-goal as he tried to cut out a cross from Bukayo Saka.

Big-money summer signing Eberechi Eze set up two goals for Arsenal, which won the last of its record 14 FA Cups in 2020. Wigan won the FA Cup for the first and only time in 2013, beating Manchester City 1-0 in the final, but was relegated from the Premier League in the same season.

Premier League teams Fulham, Leeds, Sunderland and Wolverhampton joined the Gunners in the last 16.

Fulham rallied to win 2-1 at second-tier Stoke, with Harrison Reed slotting in a late winner after intercepting Stoke goalkeeper Tommy Simkin’s misjudged pass. Brazilian winger Kevin equalized for Fulham early in the second half after South Korean midfielder Bae Jun-ho's early goal for Stoke.

Midfielder Habib Diarra's penalty earned Sunderland a 1-0 win at second-tier struggler Oxford, and midfielder Santiago Bueno's goal gave Wolves a 1-0 victory at fourth-tier Grimsby at a soggy and rain-soaked Blundell Park.

Leeds needed penalty kicks to win at second-tier Birmingham after a 1-1 draw after 90 minutes and extra time.

German forward Lukas Nmecha put Leeds ahead early in the second half after being set up by Noah Okafor, but Patrick Roberts equalized in the 89th minute with a powerful shot.

In the shootout, Leeds goalkeeper Lucas Perri denied Tommy Doyle before Roberts blazed over, leaving Sean Longstaff to score and send Daniel Farke's side through 4-2.

Cup upsets

On Saturday, third-tier Mansfield pulled off an upset by knocking out Premier League Burnley to heap more pressure on coach Scott Parker.

Non-league Macclesfield caused arguably the biggest upset in the competition's history when it beat titleholder Crystal Palace in the third round last month.

Macclesfield faces Premier League Brentford on Monday. ___

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Let’s take a trip through PECOTA, pitching edition!

A 5.25 inch floppy disk is seen An Apple logo is seen in Warsaw, Poland during the Retroapple 0.2 meetup on January 28, 2018. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images) | NurPhoto via Getty Images

Yesterday, I looked a few things that were off interest to me where the PECOTA projections were concerned. For the most part, I would agree with what was said in this article that talked about the release of PECOTA and how it is pretty accurate these days.

The only downside, of course, is that PECOTA Week comes with few surprises, anymore. If you’re a fan engaged enough with the game to care about projections, you’ve probably got a rough but accurate idea of what PECOTA is going to say about most guys (and, thus, most teams) before you click through to the standings page or the spreadsheet. The model is always being honed and improved upon, but we’re two decades into this ritual now. Many of you have started to feel and roll with the projections, and even to anticipate them.

So, when it comes to the team’s pitching staff, we should more or less guess what it is going to say. The pitching staff has been pretty good the past few seasons, so the projections are likely going to be kind.

Still, there were some interesting observations.

Cristopher Sanchez: still an Ace

There was maybe a tinge of hesitancy when talking about Sanchez last year and letting him ascend into the conversation of “Top 5 starters in the game” because of his background. He struggled to get his footing as a starter for a long time before finally having it start to click in 2023. His season in 2024 was very good, but again, without the background of being a top prospect, there was at least to be some doubt he could keep it up.

Not only did he keep it up, he was the runner-up in the NL Cy Young voting last season, comfortably entered that conversation about being one of the five best pitchers in the game and if PECOTA has anything to say about it, will remain there. By WARP, PECOTA has Sanchez being the fifth best starter behind Tarik Skubal, Paul Skenes, Garrett Crochet and Bryan Woo. By DRA- (Deserved Run Average, scaled where numbers below 100 are good), Sanchez projects to be again fifth, behind the same pitchers plus Chris Sale and Cole Ragans.

If there was any doubt that Sanchez is one of the best pitchers in the game today, there should be none. His transformation is truly one of the best developmental stories in this organization in a long, long time.

We really should just devote a day to Sanchez.

Zack Wheeler’s top comps are really fun

One of the things PECOTA likes to do is draw on historical comparables to show you what each pitcher should remind you. Obviously, when you’re being compared to the greats, you’re one of the great pitchers and vice versa with being compared to the historical road apples. Wheeler’s comparables are pretty fun: Bob Gibson, Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander.

Now, this isn’t prime Bob Gibson we’re talking about. It’s 36 year old Bob Gibson. And 36 year old Bob Gibson was no slouch. Neither were Scherzer nor Verlander. In fact, these were their lines during their age 36 season:

Gibson, age 36: 34 GS, 278 IP, 7.3 H/9, 6.7 K/9, 2.8 BB/9, 139 ERA+, 7.1 bWAR
Scherzer, age 36: 30 GS, 179 1/3 IP, 6.0 H/9, 11.8 K/9, 1.8 BB/9, 167 ERA+, 6.1 bWAR
Verlander, age 36: 34 GS, 223 IP, 5.5 H/9, 12.1 K/9, 1.7 BB/9, 179 ERA+, 7.4 bWAR, 1 Cy Young award

These are all time great seasons for any pitcher, let alone ones that are already getting mail from AARP. To see that PECOTA puts Wheeler in that company is a reminder that his skillset should age well as the years continue to pile on.

However – and it’s a pretty large “however” – none of those pitchers were coming off the injury that Wheeler is coming off of. We simply have no idea, nor does PECOTA have any idea, of well Wheeler will perform once he finally steps back on a major league mound. We can make assumptions, but without a ton of players to compare him to, we just have no way of being able to know for sure how he’ll be. If PECOTA is any indicator, he’ll be just fine, but the injury is the unknown this season and the #1 storyline that will weave itself through the 2026 season.

The bullpen finally has some strikeout potential

One of the issues the Phillies have felt they have had with their bullpen is that there wasn’t much swing and miss stuff outside of one or two relievers. It seemed to be a point of emphasis in their offseason dealings this year, to make sure that they get pitchers who don’t need to depend on the defense to get out and do so, particularly, from the right side.

Now with an overhauled bullpen, PECOTA thinks they have a group that will be able to strike out hitters with some regularity. These are the projected K/9 numbers for the top seven arms that should be in the bullpen:

J. Duran: 10.39 K/9
O. Kerkering: 9.45 K/9
B. Keller: 8.40 K/9
J. Alvarado: 9.24 K/9
T. Banks: 7.64 K/9
Z. McCambley: 10.33 K/9
J. Bowlan: 9.08 K/9

The Keller number is probably a bit skewed by his just being a full time reliever for one season and most his past K/9 numbers were below seven. His 2025 season was closer to 10, so there is some built in skepticism.

And Tanner Banks isn’t really known for striking people out anyway, so that projection doesn’t really bother me.

What is fun is that they have a bunch of arms that can now get strikeouts late in games. We’ll see if a lot of this comes true, but if PECOTA is right about this, they are a lot deeper than last year.


Cubs historical sleuthing: Double play edition

The first thing I thought of — and maybe you did, too — on seeing the name “HESTER” was Devin Hester, the Hall of Fame Bears kick returner/defensive back.

Obviously, this isn’t Devin Hester.

I had no recollection of this Diamondbacks player when BCB reader Clark Addison sent me the photo, so off I went to baseball-reference.com to look him up.

John Hester played for the D-backs in 2009 and 2010, then for the Angels in 2012 and 2013. A catcher, he played a total of 93 MLB games.

Exactly two of those were at Wrigley Field.

Here, we see him sliding into second base, with a relay going to first on a double-play attempt.

One of the games Hester played in Wrigley was in early May, so the ivy couldn’t have been as thick as we see it here.

This play happened Friday, Oct. 2, 2009 in the top of the sixth. The D-backs were leading 7-0. Hester drew a walk after Eric Byrnes had led off the inning with a home run.

Billy Buckner hit into a double play, and that’s what we are looking at here. Billy Buckner? No, not the Bill Buckner who played for the Cubs. This Billy Buckner pitched for the Royals, Diamondbacks, Angels and Padres from 2007-14. Pitchers, of course, still batted back then. In 30 MLB plate appearances, this was the only GIDP of Buckner’s career.

The Cubs second baseman is Jeff Baker, who played for the team from 2009-12.

The Diamondbacks defeated the Cubs 12-3 that afternoon, seven of the runs off Tom Gorzelanny.

Unfortunately, there doesn’t appear to be any video of this game that’s survived, so all I can show you is this play, another little slice of Cubs history.

Rivals High School Baseball Top 25 Rankings – Feb. 15

Action from game 3 of a qurterfinal playoff game between Bonita Springs High School baseball and Jesuit High School at Bonita Springs on Thursday, April 24, 2025. Bonita Springs lost.

The high school boys/girls basketball seasons are still ongoing, but one of America’s favorite past times is now beginning to take center stage. One that stands out during the spring months is high school baseball, with there being many great teams all around the national scene ready to hit the diamond to break out the cleats, gloves and bats. Now it’s time to roll out the first Rivals High School Baseball Top 25 rankings of 2026.

Topping the rankings to start off the 2026 preseason for high school softball season are Florida’s Majory Stoneman Douglas, which went 31-2 and won the FHSAA Class 7A state championship a year ago. The Eagles return a bevy of starters from last year’s crew as they’re off to a 3-0 start and top the first set of rankings. Which other teams join Majory Stoneman Douglas in our first-ever Rivals High School Top 25 baseball rankings?

We dive into the best high school baseball programs around the nation and give you our take on which teams stay in the conversation.

1. Majory Stoneman Douglas Eagles (Fla.) (3-0)

Hard to argue with this choice at the very top because of the overall consistency the Eagles play at year in and year out. Majory Stoneman Douglas ended the 2025 Florida high school baseball season by winning the Class 7A state championship and boasting a 31-2 record. That’s by no coincidence they’re considered one of the best in the nation and much has to do with them being at the top because of some of the returning talent. The Eagles will feature senior left-handed pitcher Gio Rojas, who is committed to the University of Miami. Rojas is a projected first round draft pick in this summer’s MLB Draft and will be one of the country’s best on the mound after going 13-0 with a 0.73 ERA last spring.

2. St. John Bosco Braves (Calif.) (0-0)

Unlike down in the Sunshine State, the state of California has yet to see its high school baseball season’s first pitch, but that’s right around the corner and topping all of the schools out west is the St. John Bosco Braves. The Braves’ roster is stacked with returning talent from the 30-4 team from 2025, including on the pitcher’s mound. Returning with the most experience of all the hurlers is senior Gavin Cervantes, who went 8-0 with 44 strikeouts in 2025. Another up and coming arm to watch for is sophomore Brayden Krakowski, who went 5-0 with 31 strikeouts last spring.

3. Jesuit Tigers (Fla.) (2-0)

Already off to a 2-0 start to the Florida high school baseball season, the Jesuit Tigers look to be the favorites to win it all in the FHSAA’s Class 4A classification. With victories already over Wesley Chapel (9-1 win) and Berkeley Prep (5-0 win), the Tigers have already shown why they’re one of the country’s best programs once again. Leading the way for Jesuit this spring is the bat of infielder/outfielder Christian Sheffield (Florida A&M commitment), the son of former MLB star Gary Sheffield. The younger Sheffield has impressed thus far, batting .500 and driving in three runs off of two hits.

4. IMG Academy Ascenders (Fla.) (2-0)

Always lurking around the Top 5 and starting inside of it for Rivals’ first-ever Top 25 high school baseball rankings are the IMG Academy Ascenders, which are off to a sizzling 2-0 start. The Ascenders, the third Florida team among the top five, start off fairly high for us due part to the victories they have already notched on their schedule, with wins over No. 6 ranked Etowah (Ga.) and Lowndes (Ga.). IMG Academy is always going to be well stocked with baseball talent that’s preparing to head off to the next level and this spring is no different, no by the talents of Maple Mountain (UT) transfer Cry Chrisman, who hit 19 home runs in 2025.

5. Orange Lutheran Lancers (Calif.) (0-0)

Rounding out the Top 5 of the Rivals High School Baseball Rankings are the Orange Lutheran Lancers, which could make a strong argument in being higher on this list of teams. The Lancers went 23-7 last season, but with the talent the team possesses at the plate, it’s hard to not have this group in the conversation of the nation’s best. Player to watch for the Lancers on the mound is senior pitcher Gary Morse, who is already committed to the University of Tennessee. Morse led the Orange Lutheran pitching staff in 2025 with a 8-2 record and a 0.94 ERA.

Rivals High School Baseball Rankings Nos. 11-25

6. Etowah Eagles (Ga.) (3-1)
7. VeniceIndians (Fla.) (3-0)
8. GrapevineMustangs (TX) (0-0)
9. Blessed Trinity CatholicTitans (Ga.) (3-0)
10. South Walton Seahawks (Fla.) (2-1)

11. De La Salle Spartans (Calif.) (0-0)
12. TrinityShamrocks (Ky.) (0-0)
13. CoronaPanthers (Calif.) (0-0)
14. CasteelColts (Ariz.) (0-0)
15. Trinity Christian AcademyConquerors (Fla.) (1-1)

16. MemorialWarriors (TX) (0-0)
17. Huntington BeachOilers (Calif.) (0-0)
18. CalallenWildcats (TX) (0-0)
19. Magnolia Heights SchoolChiefs (MS) (0-0)
20. Mater DeiMonarchs (Calif.) (0-0)

21. St. LaurenceVikings (IL) (0-0)
22. BasicWolves (Nev.) (0-0)
23. The Stony Brook School Bears (NY) (0-0)
24. DelbartonGreen Wave (NJ) (0-0)
25. Lake TravisCavaliers (TX) (0-0)

How to Follow National High School Baseball

For national high school baseball fans looking to keep up with scores around the nation, staying updated on the action is now easier than ever with the Rivals High School Scoreboard. This comprehensive resource provides real-time updates and final scores from across the state, ensuring you never miss a moment of the high school sports scene action. From nail-biting finishes to dominant performances, the Rivals High School Scoreboard is your one-stop destination for tracking all the sports excitement across the country.

Is It Time For MLB to Recognize Larry Doby?

Larry Doby and Jackie Robinson

Three Is Just a Number

byMario Crescibene

Major League Baseball honors three players with league-wide commemorative days. Larry Doby isn’t one of them. I wanted to know why — despite integrating the American League — MLB refuses to honor Larry Doby with his own day. So I reached out to the Cleveland Guardians and Major League Baseball to find out why.

The Guardians coordinated with MLB and provided an official response:

Major League Baseball has league-wide days for three individual players – Jackie Robinson, Roberto Clemente, and Lou Gehrig.  While there are a lot of players who have made an enormous impact on the game both on and off the field, MLB has saved the significant distinction of a league-wide tribute to these three select players.  They were selected because:

  1. Jackie was the first player in all of baseball to break the color barrier
  2. Gehrig for his courageous fight against ALS which is still a degenerative disease that MLB and its clubs raise money and awareness for
  3. Clemente, who meant an enormous amount to the community of Latino players and fans.  Clemente lost his life in tragic fashion as he was bringing supplies to earthquake victims and as a result, MLB honors him each year with a special day and an award recognizing the social responsibility efforts of its players.

The league response highlighted the ways in which they do honor Doby:

After his retirement, MLB hired Doby where he worked in several capacities… for 13 years (1990-2003), making significant contributions to the office… Major League Baseball has [also] honored Larry Doby by creating the Larry Doby Award which is presented to the MVP of the Futures Game.

The response also pointed out that he is already a highly celebrated legend here in Cleveland:

The Guardians have honored Larry Doby regularly including a statue at Progressive Field, retired number #14, and establishing “Doby Day” playing home annually to honor his debut day July 5, including promotional item giveaways to fans. 

From the official response, one thing is abundantly clear: while Cleveland honors Larry Doby, the league he integrated does not. MLB says honoring three players league-wide is enough. Let’s explore Larry Doby’s impact on baseball, and see if he makes a case for a fourth.

Larry Doby integrated the American League in 1947, just eleven weeks after Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color barrier. But those eleven weeks made all the difference in how they were prepared for what was coming.

Jackie Robinson had Branch Rickey — the Dodgers executive who spent years planning integration, who counseled Robinson on what to expect, and built an institutional support system around him. Robinson spent the 1946 season in the minor leagues, learning to handle the pressure and hostility before ever stepping onto a major league field. Larry Doby had none of that. No mentorship. No institutional plan. No preparation period. He was playing in the Negro Leagues one day and in the major leagues the next.

As Doby said:

“Jackie had it better in one way. When he went to spring training in 1946, he had a whole year to get adjusted. I came up in the middle of the season. I was 23 years old, and I had to perform immediately.”

“Nobody showed me the ropes. There was nobody to talk to, nobody to explain what to expect. I was completely alone.”

And when he met his new teammates, it wasn’t with open arms. While Jackie Robinson eventually found allies in the Dodgers clubhouse — teammates like Pee Wee Reese who famously put his arm around Robinson at Crosley Field, publicly showing solidarity — Larry Doby walked into a Cleveland clubhouse that wanted nothing to do with him:

“Some of the players turned their backs on me, wouldn’t shake my hand. It was a very lonely feeling. Even when you’re on the field, you’re alone.”

“There were some players who wouldn’t room with me, who wouldn’t sit next to me on the bus or in the dugout. I had to overcome that, and it was difficult.”

He received racist treatment as the Indians traveled across the country as well. While his white teammates checked into team hotels, ate at team restaurants, and traveled together, Doby was barred from joining them. Hotels refused him rooms. Restaurants turned him away. In city after city, he had to navigate unfamiliar streets searching for Black neighborhoods where he’d be allowed to sleep and eat. After night games, exhausted from playing, he’d have to find his own lodging — sometimes miles from the ballpark — while his teammates rested comfortably at the team hotel.

“I couldn’t eat with my teammates. I couldn’t stay in the same hotels. I’d have to go find a black family to stay with, or stay in a completely different hotel across town. And then the next day, I was expected to play like nothing was wrong.”

The racist treatment continued for years, but of course, despite every obstacle thrown in his way, Doby would go on to have a Hall of Fame career. In 1948, he hit .301 and helped lead Cleveland to the World Series, where he hit .318 and became the first Black player to hit a home run in a World Series game. His performance helped propel Cleveland to their last championship. From 1949 to 1955, he was named an All-Star seven consecutive times, leading the American League in home runs in 1952 and 1954, and in RBIs in 1954. Over his thirteen-year career, Doby compiled a .283 batting average with 253 home runs, 970 RBIs, and 1,533 hits before being inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1998. His impact extended beyond his playing days as he became the second Black manager in major league history when he took over the Chicago White Sox in 1978, was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 2023, and was honored by Cleveland with a retired number 14 and a statue at Progressive Field.

And despite always being “the second African American” to play baseball, Larry Doby never let it make him bitter:

“For a while, every time they mentioned me, it was ‘Larry Doby, the second black player.’ I never worried about being second. I just wanted to be treated as a ballplayer, as a human being.”

Larry Doby just wanted to be treated as a ballplayer, as a human being. Major League Baseball should start by treating him like the legend he is. His humility, Hall of Fame career, and groundbreaking legacy demand a league-wide day celebrating his contributions to baseball. Instead, MLB honors him with a minor league award — for a man who never played in the minors. The only thing more absurd than that is claiming there’s logic to their three-player policy. Why three? Is it for three strikes? Three outs? Well there are four balls to a walk, so give Larry Doby his base.

July 5th should be Larry Doby Day league-wide. Every team, every stadium, every player wearing number 14. Because the league he integrated owes him more than a Futures Game trophy.

Mets 2026 Season Preview: Ryan Lambert might be the next great homegrown Mets reliever

Feb 12, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; New York Mets pitcher Ryan Lambert stretches during spring training. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images | Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

As an organizing principle, I don’t believe in ranking relievers highly (or at all, really) in good systems. Time and again, the efforts of the public baseball community to project reliever performance have been shown to be little more than random guess work. There are also just a higher volume of other good players in more valuable roles for us to talk about.

That’s not a universal rule though. Ryan Lambert checked in at 19 (right behind the only other reliever on the list, Dylan Ross) on our offseason top-25 and I like him a lot. We’re all familiar with the “don’t scout the statline” maxim, but man what a statline; Lambert hasn’t posted an ERA above 1.71 or a K-BB% below 21.5% at any level since being drafted out of Oklahoma in the 8th round of the 2024 draft. When he started the year at Brooklyn (for some reason), he posted a -0.48 FIP (not a typo) over 8 innings with 17 strikeouts and a single walk.

Fundamentally, Lambert is a 95-and-a-slider relief prospect. It’s a very special 95 though, an IVB-heavy offering that he consistently blows by batters at the top of the zone. The Mets organizationally place a lot of emphasis on fastball whiffs, and Lambert fits that philosophy to a T. As for the slider component, it’s a less consistent offering, stuck in a bit of a middle ground between a high-velocity breaker (it consistently sits in the mid-to-upper 80s) or a sweeper with bigger movement. There have been flashes here though, and its’ not unreasonable to project a bit more improvement with additional reps. I’d guess he eventually lands on a bit of a harder slider that pairs better with his vert-heavy 4-seam rather than a true sweeper which might be too visually distinct to fool batters.

Lambert is of course not perfect. In addition to the slider being a work in progress, his command remains a bit spotty, and his walk rate ballooned to 14.7% in Double-A last year. The impact of his fastball might be somewhat muted at higher levels by his over-the-top slot, an arm angle where this type of movement isn’t as surprising for hitters. All the usual pitching and relief prospect risks apply as well.

But when you’re building from a foundation as strong as Lambert’s primary offering in a system that has been as successful as the Mets have been recently in improving pitchers, I think you bet on this upside playing out. There’s legitimate late-inning upside here, even if most relief prospects we say that about wind up as much less. Expect Lambert to start in Triple-A this season and get a shot with the major league side before too long.

Plus he’s a metalhead who loves steak. I mean, how can you not love that.

Mariners News: Kade Anderson, Germán Márquez, and Nick Castellanos

LOS ANGELES, CA - SEPTEMBER 09: Germán Márquez #48 of the Colorado Rockies pitches during the game between the Colorado Rockies and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on Tuesday, September 9, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Tom Wilson/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

In Mariners news…

  • All eyes are on Mariners pitching prospect Kade Anderson so far this spring and he’s done nothing but impress.
  • More on Kade Anderson, according to Shannon Drayer no one in the Mariners organization is willing to rule out the possibility of him pitching for the big club in 2026.

Around the league…

NHL Odds to Win Calder Trophy 2026

The NHL season has hit the Olympic break, and New York Islanders defenseman Matthew Schaefer is -1000 on the Calder Trophy odds board. 

We still have the second half of the season, but Ivan Demidov (+900) will have to do something pretty spectacular to overcome the Isles' 18-year-old sensation. 

Odds to win 2026 Calder Trophy

PlayerBet99
Canadiens Matthew Schaefer<<-1000>>
Canadiens Ivan Demidov<<+900>>
Rangers Beckett Sennecke<<+975>>
Wild Jesper Wallstedt<<+10000>>

Odds as of 2-15.

Get a first bet encore up to $800 — no BET99 promo code neededGet a first bet encore up to $800 with BET99 bonus code COVERSNHL.
(not available in Ontario)

Understanding NHL Calder odds

Most sportsbooks will display odds in the American format as listed above. When the regular season is nearly finished and a consensus has emerged, you might see a player with a minus sign (-) ahead of his odds, like this:

  • Ivan Demidov -400

The (-) means that Demidov is the odds-on favorite, and a bettor would need to wager $400 to win $100. Other contenders in the Calder race might have plus (+) odds to win.

  • Alexander Nikishin +900

Here, a bettor stood to profit $900 for every $100 wagered. 

If American odds aren't your thing, simply use a tool like our odds converter to switch the odds to decimal or fractional format. Most online sportsbooks also give you the option to change the odds format that you see.


Popular NHL futures markets


NHL Calder Trophy trends

  • Only eight No. 1 overall picks have gone on to win the Calder Trophy.
  • Only 16 goaltenders have ever won the Calder Trophy, with Steve Mason being the last netminder to capture the award (2009).
  • In 1990, Sergei Makarov became the oldest player to win the Calder at 31 years old.

Calder Trophy history

A quick look at recent NHL Calder Trophy winners and the teams they played for.

SeasonPlayerTeam
2024-25Lane HutsonMontreal Canadiens
2023-24Connor BedardChicago Blackhawks
2022-23Matty BeniersSeattle Kraken
2021-22Moritz SeiderDetroit Red Wings
2020-21Kirill KaprizovMinnesota Wild
2019-20Cale MakarColorado Avalanche
2018-19Elias PetterssonVancouver Canucks
2017-18Mathew BarzalNew York islanders
2016-17Auston MatthewsToronto Maple Leafs
2015-16Artemi PanarinChicago Blackhawks
2014-15Aaron EkbladFlorida Panthers
2013-14Nathan MacKinnonColorado Avalanche
2012-13Jonathan HuberdeauFlorida Panthers
2011-12Gabriel LandeskogColorado Avalanche
2010-11Jeff SkinnerCarolina Hurricanes
2009-10Tyler MyersBuffalo Sabres
2008-09Steve MasonColumbus Blue Jackets
2007-08Patrick KaneChicago Blackhawks
2006-07Evgeni MalkinPittsburgh Penguins
2005-06Alex OvechkinWashington Capitals
2003-04Andrew RaycroftBoston Bruins
2002-03Barret JackmanSt. Louis Blues
2001-02Dany HeatleyAtlanta Thrashers
2000-01Evgeni NabokovSan Jose Sharks
1999-00Scott GomezNew Jersey Devils

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here

Kenley Jansen and the legend of the cut fastball

Detroit Tigers pitcher Kenley Jansen walks towards bullpen for practice during spring training at TigerTown in Lakeland, Fla. on Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026. | Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Beyond all the talk of splitters, sweepers, seam-shifted changeups, and the like, the best pitch in baseball remains the most elusive. The riding cutter, most famously the pitch that carried Yankees closer Mariano Rivera, remains one of the hardest pitches to pick up for pitchers, and one of the toughest to handle for hitters. With all-time great closer Kenley Jansen now in the fold, though in the later stages of his career, let’s take a look at his money making cut fastball.

The term “cutter” has been bastardized somewhat over the last 15 years or so, coming to refer to all kinds of pitches that are really just hard sliders. A cutter really does move gloveside without much drop, but an actual cut fastball is really a fourseam fastball with plenty of ride, but set with enough offset in either grip pressure or seam alignment, that it actually breaks late to the pitcher’s gloveside as well. Not too many pitchers, at least since these things started being tracked, have ever managed to throw a pitch like this.

Jansen got 18.8 inches of induced vertical break on the cutter in 2025. That’s better ride than most fourseam fastballs. It has enough backspin to drop 18.8 inches less than it should based on gravity alone. It also moves an average of 2.4 inches to his gloveside, making it a true cut fastball as opposed to just a straight riding fourseam fastball. That one pitch, averaging 92.8 mph, albeit with plus extension, and topping out at 96.7 mph, accounted for 81.4 percent of Jansen’s pitches in 2025. Even in it’s somewhat diminished form from his prime years, it still carried him to a 2.59 ERA last year, though his peripheral numbers were more worrisome.

Jansen will throw his slider here and there, and even less often, mix in a sinker against left-handed hitters as a change of pace, but for the most part you’re going to see cut fastball after cut fastball. That’s how he’s worked for most of his major league career, and he’s never really needed anything else.

He’s aided by crazy high spin rates for what is still essentially a fastball. He averaged 2610 rpms in 2025, which is absolutely elite by fourseamer standards. There aren’t enough pitchers capable of throwing a true cut fastball for there to even be a standard, but one of the great high spin fourseam pitchers of all time is now in-house as well in the form of Justin Verlander. The highest average fourseam spin rate Verlander has produced in the Statcast era was 2618 rpms back in 2018. Back in the days when the Tigers ace was routinely pumping 99-100+ late in games, no doubt he was averaging even higher rates, but spin wasn’t measured at the time.

The difficulty in throwing a true cut fastball is what makes it such a rarity. Casey Mize tried it early in his career, but struggled to control it. Even then, it didn’t really ride much, it mostly just had a bit of late cut. With a slider, sweeper, or curveball, all of which might move gloveside, you can hang on tighter and rip around or even on top of the ball in the case of a 12-6 curve. A cutter like Mariano or Kenley’s requires the fore and middle fingers to stay underneath the ball, while still throwing it hard and with as much spin as the top fourseam fastballs. That’s pretty hard to control. There aren’t even so many truly great riding fourseamers in the game, let alone having the wrist and finger dexterity to hold the ball slightly off-center and throwing it essentially the same way.

The true cut fastball always seems to come with a story. Mariano Rivera just started accidentally throwing the pitch in a catch session with teammate Ramiro Mendoza when he was still just a young reliever back in 1997. Rivera just throwing with his fourseam grip, but suddenly started producing a riding pitch that suddenly veered gloveside as Mendoza tried to catch it. They knew immediately that something strange was going on, but Rivera actually fought it because he was trying to throw a normal fourseamer and couldn’t stop getting that gloveside bite at the end. It took manager Joe Girardi to encourage him to just start throwing it, and the rest was history.

Jansen’s cut fastball has its own story, but it’s not too dissimilar. Jansen was signed out of Curacao by the Dodgers as an international free agent when he was 17 years old. He was a catcher at the time, even starting for Team Netherlands in the 2009 World Baseball Classic, and continued catching until well into his years in the minor leagues. Eventually, he just wasn’t hitting well enough, but his arm strength from behind the dish was impressive and the Dodgers encouraged him to convert to pitching late in the 2009 season. They saw enough to add him to the 40-man roster as a pitcher that winter, and he made his major league debut in July of 2010, only a year after his conversion. Now, 476 saves later, he’s a Detroit Tiger.

He stumbled upon the cut fastball in the same way Rivera did. In practice, his fourseam fastball was cutting late and he couldn’t figure out how to prevent it. Instead, Dodgers bullpen Mike Borzello recognized what was happening and put a stop to any attempts to straighten the fourseamer out. They began a process of refining the pitch instead, trying to tune his mechanics to maximize the spin, ride, and velocity of the pitch.

Like Rivera, Jansen doesn’t really know how he does it, and as he’s said repeatedly in interviews, it’s better not to try and understand it. He mentions that perhaps his long fingers might play a role, but clearly doesn’t want to unpack it. Guys who can do this, and it’s a small group, all seem to either want to keep it a secret, or simply don’t know why the pitch cuts. They all say they’re just trying to throw a fourseamer, and it just started cutting. Jansen mentions trying to finish through the pitch by just slightly getting around the side of it a bit more in the clip below, but earlier in his career he was still basically just shrugging and saying he didn’t know. High speed cameras and tons of data available have explained it a little, but even now I can’t really find another pitcher in the league who can do this. Plenty of guys have tried to throw this, and for the most part they just end up with a hard cutter that doesn’t ride.

I might theorize that trying to straighten out throws to second base as a catcher, rather than watching them tail back into the runner, may have something to do with his ability to do this so naturally. Still, it’s nowhere near that simple. A whole combination of elements from arm angle, finger shape and length, grip and release, to natural spin rate all come together to create a unicorn of a pitch, mastered by few. Add typically good command, a deceptive delivery, and tons of high leverage experience, and you have the ingredients of a future Hall of Famer.

Here are a few examples from the 2025 season below. Jansen will move the cutter up and down in the zone, so he’s not just trying to go up and away from right-handed hitters. The pitch doesn’t get same the amount of whiffs it did when he was sitting 94-95 mph with it, but despite the fact that he’s throwing it more than 80 percent of the time, it just doesn’t get barrelled up very often. Hitters know it’s coming,but it’s difficult to anticipate that explosive combination of ride and late, gloveside cut well enough to crush it. Opponents batted just .159 against the cutter in 2025. They also slugged a truly meager .293, though for once, his expected slugging percentage against the pitch was quite a bit higher, at .443.

Hard cutters aren’t so scarce anymore. Several teams, like the Cubs and the Brewers, are trying to teach this to guys who have the traits to potentially throw it well. But there are quite a few guys around the league who are already using a mid-90’s or faster cutter. Yet these are all just regular cutters. They’re good pitches, especially thrown with that kind of velocity, but they’re still distinct from Jansen’s in that they don’t having that induced vertical break.

Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase is the most obvious recent example of a really hard cutter for Tigers fans. But his cutter doesn’t ride either, it just cuts. That’s a really tough pitch at 98-100 mph, but it’s just a different beast than what I’m terming the true “cut fastball” that rides as well as it cuts. Corbin Burnes, now with the Orioles, developed his version with the Brewers, and they’ve worked with Brandon Woodruff on trying to throw it too. Neither has anywhere near the strange ride that Jansen produces. Former Giants closer and now Yankee, Camilo Doval, Carmen Mlodzinski, Graham Ashcraft, and Ryan Helsley are some other examples of hard cutters that are good pitches, but still don’t have that strange ride that Jansen, and formerly Rivera, had available.

The top spot on the Statcast leaderboard for vertical movement on a cutter goes to Jansen at 18.8 inches, Wander Suero of the Braves at 17.2 inches and averaging 92.1 mph and league average extension, is second and that’s really it. No one else has a cutter with more than 15.2 inches of induced vertical break. You just don’t see many outlier pitches like this in baseball.

If there was a candidate to try and develop this pitch on the Tigers, it probably would be Justin Verlander, or perhaps Troy Melton. They’re natural supinators with relatively high arm slots and high spin rate fourseamers with ride. But it just doesn’t seem teachable. They could throw a more straightforward cutter, and that could be useful instead. But trying to learn to throw one that rides would just screw up everything else they do. They have the velo, spin, and ride on their fourseam fastballs to get it done, but asking them to adjust finger pressure to push around the side of the ball a bit at release is too big and too subtle an ask at the same time. Learning to command it would take a long time if it even worked out, and in the meantime they’d potentially be a complete mess.

What the Tigers like about adding Jansen, on top of his experience and stellar track record of success, is just the fact that this is such a unique look. Like a lot of teams, the Tigers have been trying to diversify their bullpen with different arm angles and pitch types, so that opposing hitters in a series rarely see similar stuff from the pen, no matter who is on the mound. There aren’t many more unique pitchers than Kenley Jansen.

Jansen was good for the Angels last year other than a few rough outings early in the season, and with Will Vest and Kyle Finnegan in house, he doesn’t necessarily have to be the guy in the ninth inning. A.J. Hinch will probably use him to close most nights as long as it’s working. The trick is still playing matchups where applicable, and not riding Jansen too hard either. As long as his cut fastball remains intact, he should be fun to watch and a good addition to the Tigers pen.

Good Morning San Diego: Padres make flurry of signings, is extension for A.J. Preller next?

Peoria, Ariz. - February 12: San Diego Padres President of baseball operations A.J. Preller speaks to the media during spring training workouts at the Peoria Sports Complex on Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026 in Peoria, Ariz.(Photo by Meg McLaughlin / The San Diego Union-Tribune via Getty Images)

The San Diego Padres had a busy week and they ended it with a flurry of signings to bolster the roster. Spring Training opened with pitchers and catchers reporting, the rest of the big-league players reported to camp early or on time and the Padres signed Nick Castellanos, Griffin Canning and German Marquez providing the Friar Faithful with gifts on Valentine’s Day. It would appear the roster is set, but Cheri Bell of Gaslamp Ball wrote that decisions will have to be made regarding a couple players to make room on the 40-man roster to accommodate the new additions in her weekly recap. It is unknown at this time what those moves will be, but it appears the evaluation that takes place during Spring Training will be employed sooner than later. Of course, some players could be moved to the injured list, which would create room on the roster. Whatever manager Craig Stammen and general manager A.J. Preller decide, it seems the excitement that had been missing throughout the offseason is in full effect after one week of baseball activities.

Padres News:

  • Barring a trade from Preller, it appears the roster moves are seemingly complete. If that is the case, perhaps the focus will now shift to extending the architect of the roster and the most successful stretch of baseball in Padres history. Tom Krasovic of the San Diego Union-Tribune makes the case that it would be prudent for San Diego to stick with Preller now and in the future.

Baseball News:

  • The Los Angeles Dodgers added the best free agent closer available this offseason with a three-year, $69 million contract to make Edwin Diaz their closer. It was surprising that Diaz left the New York Mets considering reports that their offer was three years and $66 million. Diaz explained his reason for leaving stating the Dodgers did a good job of recruiting him.
  • When the Boston Red Sox traded for Willson Contreras to play first base it seemed to be a move that spelled the end for first baseman Triston Casas. Boston has held on to Casas throughout the offseason even though it appears there is no place for him on the roster. Casas thinks he can be a fit on any team and maybe that is what the Red Sox are thinking as well.
  • The Arizona Diamondbacks and their manager Torey Lovullo have seen enough after one week of Spring Training to name Merrill Kelly as the Opening Day starter against the Dodgers. It will be the first Opening Day start of Kelly’s career.