Olympics 2026 men’s hockey: How to watch Canada vs. Switzerland for free

New York Post may be compensated and/or receive an affiliate commission if you click or buy through our links. Featured pricing is subject to change.

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 12: Macklin Celebrini #17 of Team Canada in action during the Men's Ice Hockey - Group A match between Team Czech Republic and Team Canada on day six of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 12, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Xavier Laine/Getty Images)

The Olympic men’s ice hockey tournament continues this afternoon with a matchup between two teams who won their opening matches yesterday: Canada and Switzerland.

Team Canada kicked off their quest for a gold medal with a 5-0 victory against the Czech Republic. First-time Olympian and 19-year-old San Jose Sharks phenom Macklin Celebrini opened the scoring in the final seconds of the first period and Connor McDavid had three assists in the win.

olympics 2026 men's hockey: what to know
  • What: Canada vs. Switzerland
  • When: Feb. 13, 3:10 p.m. ET
  • Where: Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena (Milan, Italy)
  • Channel: streaming exclusive
  • Streaming: Peacock

Switzerland also won in a high-scoring affair, a 4-0 win over France. New Jersey Devils forward Timo Meier scored the final two goals of the game six minutes apart.

Canada vs. Switzerland start time

Canada vs. Switzerland is scheduled to start at 3:10 p.m. ET today, Feb. 13.

How to watch Canada vs. Switzerland for free

Today’s game is exclusive to the Peacock streaming service and is not airing on cable.

Peacock currently offers two subscription types: Premium with ads and Premium Plus ad-free. Peacock Premium costs $10.99/month, while Premium Plus costs $16.99/month.

You can also save a bit by subscribing to one of Peacock’s annual plans, which give you 12 months for the price of 10. These cost either $109.99 with ads or $169.99 without ads.

SUBSCRIBE TO PEACOCK FOR $10.99/MONTH

Canada and Switzerland team rosters

Below, check out the rosters for Team Canada and Czech Republic, along with each player’s NHL team.

Canada
  • Travis Sanheim (D) – Flyers
  • Devon Toews (D) – Avalanche
  • Cale Makar (D) – Avalanche
  • Thomas Harley (D) – Stars
  • Shea Theodore (D) – Golden Knights
  • Josh Morrissey (D) – Jets
  • Colton Parayko (D) – Blues
  • Drew Doughty (D) – Kings
  • Sam Bennett (F) – Panthers
  • Nick Suzuki (F) – Canadiens
  • Sam Reinhart (F) – Panthers
  • Bo Horvat (F) – Islanders
  • Macklin Celebrini (F) – Sharks
  • Seth Jarvis (F) – Hurricanes
  • Nathan MacKinnon (F) – Avalanche
  • Brandon Hagel (F) – Lightning
  • Tom Wilson (F) – Capitals
  • Mark Stone (F) – Golden Knights
  • Brad Marchand (F) – Panthers
  • Sidney Crosby (F) – Penguins
  • Mitch Marner (F) – Golden Knights
  • Connor McDavid (F) – Oilers
  • Darcy Kuemper (G) – Kings
  • Logan Thompson (G) – Capitals
  • Jordan Binnington (G) – Blues
Switzerland
  • Dean Kukan (D)
  • Andrea Glauser (D)
  • Michael Fora (D)
  • Christian Marti (D)
  • Tim Berni (D)
  • Jonas Siegenthaler (D) – Devils
  • Janis Moser (D) – Lightning
  • Roman Josi (D) – Predators
  • Simon Knak (F)
  • Damien Riat (F)
  • Nico Hischier (F) – Devils
  • Ken Jäger (F)
  • Kevin Fiala (F) – Kings
  • Nino Niederreiter (F) – Jets
  • Phillipp Kurashev (F) – Sharks
  • Timo Meier (F) – Devils
  • Pius Suter (F) – Blues
  • Denis Malgin (F)
  • Sandro Schmid (F)
  • Calvin Thürkauf (F)
  • Sven Andrighetto (F)
  • Christoph Bertschy (F)
  • Reto Berra (G)
  • Akira Schmid (G) – Golden Knights
  • Leonardo Genoni (G)

Canada Olympic hockey schedule

  • Feb. 13, 3:10 p.m. ET – vs. Switzerland
  • Feb. 15, 10:40 a.m. ET – vs. France

When do the Winter Olympics end?

The 2026 Winter Olympics end with the closing ceremony on Feb. 22 at 2:30 p.m. ET.


Why Trust Post Wanted by the New York Post

This article was written by Angela Tricarico, Commerce Streaming Reporter for Post Wanted Shopping, Page Six, and Decider.com. Angela keeps readers up to date with cord-cutter-friendly deals, and information on how to watch your favorite sports teams, TV shows, and movies on every streaming service. Not only does Angela test and compare the streaming services she writes about to ensure readers are getting the best prices, but she’s also a superfan specializing in the intersection of shopping, tech, sports, and pop culture. When she’s not writing about (or watching) TV, movies, and sports, she’s also keeping up on the underrated perfume dupes at Bath & Body Works and testing headphones. Prior to joining Decider and The New York Post in 2023, she wrote about streaming and consumer tech at Insider Reviews.


2026 Chicago Cubs player profiles: Edward Cabrera

Today we look at the Cubs’ newest rotation member, a flamethrowing righty acquired by trade from the Miami Marlins with tremendous upside.

Edward Cabrera is 6’5”, 217 lbs. That’s a tall skinny drink of water with a buggy whip for an arm. He throws as hard as anyone when he’s on the mound. But he has averaged 95.8 innings per annum so far in his MLB career, and that’s not enough to be the difference-maker he could be. His five years in Miami’s system didn’t produce the kind of numbers you’d want from a TOR type, but the Pitch Lab will get hold of him and we’ll see what they can do.

In 2025 he was 8-7, 3.53, with 150 strikeouts and 48 walks in 137.2 innings, the most he has pitched in his MLB career. His WHIP was 1.23, which is a tad high, but Cabrera tend to put more guys on via the base on balls than the average. Not really unusual for a guy that throws that hard. He also hits a guy or two and will wild pitch on occasion.

With the Cubs’ otherworldly defense behind him and a decent offense, I suspect he could add five or six wins with a full season’s work (175+ innings). He seems to be getting a little more durable — 2025 was his best year in terms of showing up for work.

Former Cubs Mike Krukow, Randy Wells, and current Cub Jameson Taillon are among his best comps according to his Baseball-Reference profile. That’s just in terms of results and not his pitch arsenal or selection. All of those men have had some pretty decent seasons, and if he wants to be a younger, harder-throwing Taillon and has the mental makeup for that kind of consistency and professionalism, I’m right there for it.

I’m sure nobody would be upset if Cabrera amassed more than the 2.8 bWAR (2.0 fWAR) he fashioned last year, and all he really needs to do it is pitch. These Cubs are way better than the Fish are.

I don’t know where Craig Counsell will slot him. My best guess is Boyd, Horton, Imanaga, Taillon, Cabrera, at least until the Cubs know what they have in him, but he could occupy any spot from 2-5. I don’t see Cabrera opening the season as the No. 1 but he could get there given the results we expect.

Most projections have him in Taillon territory, 8-9 wins/losses, 140 or so innings in 25 starts or thereabouts. Some have him as high as 14-15 quality starts. I want to see plenty of this:

Welcome to the Cubs, Edward.

NBA Power Rankings Watch: a new Mavericks era

Oct 6, 2025; Fort Worth, Texas, USA; Dallas Mavericks forward Cooper Flagg (left) and guard Kyrie Irving (right) look on during the game between the Dallas Mavericks and the Oklahoma City Thunder at Dickie's Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Dallas Mavericks, now post trade deadline and resting over the all-star break, are fully in a new era. Yes, parts of the Luka Doncic core remain. But the Anthony Davis deadline deal that sent the big man and the end of the bench to the Washington Wizards made clear that the front office is turning the page and building for Cooper Flagg’s future.

That means a focus on Flagg’s development in game, but it also means a lot of losing the rest of this season to position themselves for the NBA draft lottery. That shift in strategy does mean we’ll be hanging our Power Rankings Watch jersey for the rest of this season, as the Mavericks float around the bottom of these standings the rest of the way. We’ll keep check on some other standings from here on out, and get excited for this summer’s draft.

ESPN

Rank: 24

Last week: 22

Marvin Bagley III, who was selected right before Luka Doncic with the No. 2 pick in the 2018 draft, is on his fifth team after arriving in Dallas as part of the Anthony Davis trade. He will have a chance to get minutes the rest of the season in Dallas, and in his debut with the Mavericks, Bagley had 16 points, 12 rebounds and four blocks. — MacMahon

The Athletic

Rank: 24 (Tier 4: Not the Tier to Fear)

Last week: 23

Roster reset: SF Khris Middleton

I thought I was done cracking on these dudes for trading Luka Dončić to the Lakers. But no, let me revisit that thing one more time. Luka Dončić played 900 minutes in the 2024 postseason, a run that went through the NBA Finals. They then traded Dončić for Anthony Davis, who wound up playing a total of 892 minutes in the regular season for the Mavericks. Then, to make things funnier, the best players Dallas got back when it traded Davis away are former Jason Kidd disciple Middleton and Marvin Bagley III. That’s the same Bagley who was drafted one spot over Dončić in 2018. At least Dallas got a couple of first-round picks this time. Cooper Flagg has been killing it, but the Mavericks haven’t won a game in more than two weeks.

NBA

Rank: 22

Last week: 22

The Anthony Davis Era in Dallas is over, with the big man having played just 31 (36%) of a possible 86 games with the Mavs. Dallas went 17-14 in those 31 games and took a huge step backward when you combine the two Davis trades (the one that brought him in and the one that sent him out).

Three takeaways

  • In between the two Davis trades, the Mavs did get Cooper Flagg, who had four straight games of more than 30 points before having a relatively quiet night in San Antonio on Saturday. Now averaging over 20 per game, he’d be just the second rookie in the last 46 years (since Larry Bird in 1979-80) to average at least 20 points, six rebounds and four assists. The other, of course, was Luka Dončić.
  • Despite Flagg’s scoring streak, the Mavs have scored just 109.6 points per 100 possessions over their seven-game losing streak. Their shooters – Max Christie and Klay Thompson – have combined to shoot just 38% (including 32% from 3-point range) over the seven games.
  • The Mavs got a pair of first-round picks in the Davis trade, but they’ll both be in the 20s. As is usually the case after a team trades a star, its best asset is its own pick. The Mavs are now seventh in the upside-down standings and their 2026 pick is the only one in the next five years that they control.

Coming up: The Mavs’ loss in San Antonio on Saturday was the start of a stretch (spanning the break) of six straight road games. They’re now 5-14 (with five straight losses) against the top eight teams in the West, set to visit the Suns and Lakers this week.

Bleacher Report

Rank: 23

Last week: 22

The numbers still favor Kon Knueppel in the Rookie of the Year race, but Cooper Flagg is charging.

And with the Anthony Davis conundrum finally and fully resolved by trading him to the Washington Wizards, Flagg can have a closing kick that makes the award his.

For the entire season, when AD is off the floor, Flagg has put up 23.2 points and 4.0 assists per 75 possessions.

The “Last Man In” free agent tournament: Bryce Harper vs. Dustin McGowan

PHILADELPHIA, PA - APRIL 23: Dustin McGowan #40 of the Philadelphia Phillies walks off the field in the fourth inning after giving up two runs against the Miami Marlins at Citizens Bank Park on April 23, 2015 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Marlins won 9-1. (Photo by Drew Hallowell/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In our last matchup, in the tournament between the last free agents signed before the season, Jake Arrieta earned more votes than Ricardo Pinto and moved on to the next round.

On to the next pairing:

2. Bryce Harper, 2019

Stats with the Phillies: 858 games, .261/.357/.487, 179 HR, 530 RBIs, 26.3 bWAR

The Phillies had a lot of money to spend before the 2019 season, which put them in the mix for the two big free agents that offseason: Bryce Harper and Manny Machado. The Phillies pursued both men – there was brief speculation that they might try to sign both – but ultimately decided that Harper would be the better fit.

Harper remained unsigned into February, but eventually, the Phillies came to terms with the former National, giving the team its new franchise player.

15. Dustin McGowan, 2015

Stats with the Phillies: 14 games, 23.1 innings, 1-2 W-L, 6.24 ERA, 21K, 20 BB, -0.7 bWAR

After a failed last gasp to contend in 2014, the Phillies admitted they were in full rebuild mode heading into 2015. So, there weren’t going to be a lot of big names brought in via free agency. But the team still needed some veterans to fill out the roster, and one of those veterans was relief pitcher Dustin McGowan.

McGowan had a decent season with the Blue Jays in 2014, but he was brutal in 2015. Used mostly in low leverage situations, he still couldn’t get anyone out. His final appearance came against Baltimore on June 16th after starting pitcher Jerome Williams was knocked out of the game in the first inning. McGowan absorbed 3.1 innings, allowing five home runs. This would infamously come to be known as the “white towel” game.

Who should advance? Vote now!

JJ Redick says Luka Dončić has ‘progressed really good’ from hamstring strain, expected to return after All-Star break

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 5, 2026: Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) drive to the basket against Philadelphia 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey (0) and Philadelphia 76ers guard Kelly Oubre Jr. (9) in the first half at Crypto.com Arena on February 5, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. He left the game late in the second quarter with a hamstring injury.(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Despite entering the All-Star break injured, Luka Dončić seems to be heading towards a good place regarding his hamstring. The Laker superstar has missed the last four games due to the injury, and currently, his availability for the All-Star game is up in the air.

However, the Lakers have remained optimistic that he avoided a major injury to his right hamstring and that the ailment is mild, with the team considering him day-to-day.

Well, the days have been stacking up, but the internal concern has not. Lakers head coach JJ Redick gave another update prior to the team’s last game before the All-Star break and seems confident that he’ll be back once the Lakers return to the court on Feb. 20 against the Clippers.

“He’s progressed really good,” Redick said. “I think part of him wanted to push to get back prior to the break. But we got to be cautious with the soft tissue injuries. Obviously, we were very cautious with Austin and you just saw what happened with Jalen Williams coming back. We all feel comfortable with the decision to hold him out and should be good to go post All-Star.”

Anytime a team’s superstar misses extended time, it can cause worry, but JJ Redick calmed down most concerns with this update on Luka.

It might be overanalysis, but Redick saying “they feel comfortable with the decision to hold him out” makes it seem like they could’ve pushed him to play now. Which means that if he gets an additional week of rest when he can already play, he should be ready to go when the Clippers come to Crypto.com Arena.

Obviously, given Luka’s importance to the Lakers, the last thing he needs to do is rush back from a hamstring injury. So, if this move is LA being overly cautious, so when Luka comes back, he has no setbacks, then it’s the right decision.

Regarding his status for the All-Star Game, Redick kept things short. “It’s above my pay grade,” Redick said.

With the Lakers about to enter the most important stretch of the year, hopefully, Luka returns and never misses another game this season. LA will be fighting for playoff positioning and will need him healthy to reach their full potential.

You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.

NBA Slam Dunk Contest Odds, Rules, Picks, and Predictions: It's Showtime

The 2026 NBA All-Star Weekend Slam Dunk Contest is a far cry from the days of Vince Carter, Tracy McGrady, and Steve Francis battling it out.

This year’s field is full of lesser-known, lightly used players, so finding betting value in our Slam Dunk Contest predictions requires a closer look.

That’s exactly what I’ve done with my NBA picks for Saturday, February 14.

NBA Slam Dunk Contest odds

PlayerTeambet365
Carter BryantSpurs San Antonio Spurs<<+180>>
Jaxson HayesLakers Los Angeles Lakers<<+250>>
Keshad JohnsonHeat Miami Heat<<+320>>
Jase RichardsonMagic Orlando Magic<<+350>>

NBA Slam Dunk Contest rules

Before wagering on the Slam Dunk Contest, be sure to familiarize yourself with the latest rules for the 2026 edition:

  • Four players will compete in a two-round competition.

  • Five judges will score each dunk based on a score ranging from 40 to 50. 

  • The two dunkers with the highest combined scores from their first two dunks advance to the finals.

  • The final round will consist of two dunks by each dunker, with the highest composite score being crowned the champion.

  • In the event of a tie, there will be one additional round of dunks. If the event is still tied, then the judges will be empowered to declare a winner by majority vote.

NBA Slam Dunk Contest 

Carter Bryant (+180)

For what it’s worth, Carter Bryant is the favorite in this field of relative unknowns. The 6-foot-6 rookie wing was taken 14th overall by the San Antonio Spurs largely because of his explosive athleticism.

Bryant boasts a 39.5-inch vertical, but he hasn’t seen much playing time in San Antonio, and there isn’t much game footage of him dunking. As a result, it’s hard to see much value at his current price.

Jaxson Hayes (+250)

Jaxson Hayes is an intriguing entrant, but there are reasons for skepticism. Historically, taller players have struggled in this competition (Dwight Howard being a notable exception), and Hayes isn’t exactly positioned as a fan favorite.

The 7-footer plays for the Los Angeles Lakers and was recently suspended one game for pushing a mascot. He also dealt with a domestic violence case earlier in his career. All things considered, this is a pass for me.

Keshad Johnson (+320)

Keshad Johnson is another explosive wing who has seen limited minutes with the Miami Heat.

Still, the 6-foot-6 forward boasts a ridiculous 42-inch vertical, and some of his in-game dunks this season have been truly eye-popping...

Jase Richardson (+350)

Jase Richardson is the best storyline in the field. He carries the longest odds in this competition, even if there’s no true long shot. The 6-foot-1 rookie guard has seen limited minutes with the Orlando Magic this season.

The intrigue? He’s the son of two-time Slam Dunk champion Jason Richardson.

Richardson appears to have inherited his dad’s leaping ability, and don’t be surprised if he pays homage to some of his father’s iconic dunks. At this price, there’s legitimate value.

NBA Slam Dunk Contest pick

It was a close call between Richardson and Johnson for me, but there’s more evidence of Johnson throwing down explosive dunks in actual NBA games.

I’ve always believed that great in-game dunkers tend to translate well to this competition — think Vince Carter or, more recently, Derrick Jones Jr.

Boasting an insane vertical, I’m expecting some jaw-dropping slams from Johnson on Saturday night.

Best bet: Keshad Johnson (+320 at bet365)

Past Slam Dunk Contest winners

YearPlayer
2025Magic Mac McClung
2024Magic Mac McClung
202376ers Mac McClung
2022Knicks Obi Toppin
2021Trail Blazers Anfernee Simons
2020Heat Derrick Jones Jr.
2019Thunder Hamidou Diallo
2018Jazz Donovan Mitchell
2017Pacers Glen Robinson III
2016Timberwolves Zach LaVine
2015Timberwolves Zach LaVine

Players who have won multiple Dunk Contests

PlayerYears
Sixers Mac McClung2023, 2024, 2025
Timberwolves Zach LaVine2015, 2016
Knicks Nate Robinson2006, 2009, 2010
Warriors Jason Richardson2002, 2003
Heat Harold Miner1993, 1995
Hawks Dominique Wilkins1985, 1990
Bulls Michael Jordan1987, 1988

Slam Dunk Contest trends

  • Michael Jordan, Jason Richardson, Nate Robinson, Zach LaVine, and Mac McClung are the only players in history to win the Slam Dunk Contest in back-to-back years.

  • At age 18, Kobe Bryant is the youngest player to win the Slam Dunk Contest (1997).

  • John Wall is the last player to make an All-Star team and win the Slam Dunk Contest in the same year (2014).

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

ADP Risers and Fallers for 2026 Fantasy Baseball: Zack Wheeler trending up, hamate bone injuries run rampant

The offseason is over, spring training is here, and injury news is already flooding our news feeds. With that, we’re starting to get the first big swings in ADP data of draft season.

Here are the biggest ADP swings among the top 200 picks plus one bonus sleeper who’s beginning to nudge his way up draft boards.

Note: All ADP data courtesy of NFBC

New York Mets v. Philadelphia Phillies
Corbin Carroll, Francisco Lindor, Spencer Schwellenbach, and Jackson Holliday are among the injuries to watch in our latest update.

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

ADP Risers

Zack Wheeler, SP Philadelphia Phillies

January ADP: 148
February ADP: 123

There’s optimism surrounding Zack Wheeler’s return from a blood clot in his shoulder and ensuing thoracic outlet syndrome surgery last September.

Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski has been steadfast that Wheeler would be back near Opening Day and he stayed consistent in his messaging this week saying he’s not far behind that.

This feels like a favorable outcome given the poor history of pitchers who’ve had TOS surgery, especially those approaching their late 30s like Wheeler is. Of course we won’t know how Wheeler’s stuff or command responded to the procedure until he gets on the mound, but it’s difficult to bet against his track record outside the top 120 picks.

The Phillies offseason also hints at confidence in Wheeler's health. They watched Ranger Suárez leave to sign with the Red Sox and didn’t bring in any other veteran pitchers despite Wheeler’s uncertainty along with questionable depth. It’s fair to take that cue and have a bit more trust because of it.

Seranthony Domínguez, RP Chicago White Sox

January ADP: 358
February ADP: 199

The White Sox signed Seranthony Domínguez to a two-year, $20 million contract on January 29th and he’s expected to open the season as their closer. In fact, he’s now the fourth-highest-paid player on their team.

While flawed, he had a 3.16 ERA last year with the Orioles and Blue Jays and was relied upon during Toronto’s playoff run. He also struck out 30.3% of the batters he faced, which is elite.

The eternal struggle for Domínguez always comes back to command. His 13.8% walk rate was the sixth-highest among all qualified relievers and sometimes it genuinely feels like he has no idea where the ball is going. Orioles legend Jim Palmer agrees.

Nevertheless, his high-leverage experience will put him a rung above Jordan Leasure and Grant Taylor to open the season. Just don’t be surprised if one of those flamethrowers takes this job from Domínguez if he were to falter.

Other sleeper relievers like Clayton Beeter, Robert Garcia, Kirby Yates, and Bryan Abreu have also seen their ADPs rise as their respective chances to close have improved. They should all get legitimate consideration for save-needy teams in deeper leagues.

Robby Snelling, SP Miami Marlins

January ADP: 330
February ADP: 310

The market is responding to top prospect Robby Snelling’s golden opportunity to earn a spot in the Marlins’ rotation. Trading both Edward Cabrera and Ryan Weathers during the first half of January has made the door wide open to do so.

AfterSandy Alcantara (who remains a trade candidate himself) and Eury Pérez at the top, Max Meyer, Braxton Garrett, and Chris Paddack are projected to round out their starting five.

Pérez just came back from Tommy John surgery last June. A labral hip tear ended Meyer’s season that same month and he’s just recently fully healthy. Garrett hasn’t pitched in the big leagues since June 2024 after a flexor tendon strain, shoulder impingement, and multiple ensuing surgeries. Paddack has a 5.06 ERA in 441 innings since 2020.

After this crew, the Marlins’ depth pieces of Janson Junk, Adam Mazur, Bradley Blalock, and Ryan Gusto are similarly uninspiring.

Then, there’s Snelling who’s coming off 63 2/3 innings at Triple-A with a 1.27 ERA and 32.9% strikeout rate. That was a major resurgence after he stumbled during his second pro season in 2024 with his mid-90s velocity drifting down a few ticks.

He had a 6.01 ERA through July with fewer strikeouts and more walks than the year before when the Padres traded him to the Marlins as part of the package that netted them relievers Tanner Scott and Bryan Hoeing. He found a new groove after joining the Marlins, regaining his velocity and top prospect status.

If his fastball can hold near 95 mph like it did last season, he could hit the ground running as a big leaguer. It’s just up to the Marlins as to how early they’re willing to give him a chance. A few strong starts this spring and murmurs of him making the club could push his ADP up much further.

ADP Fallers

Corbin Carroll, Francisco Lindor, and Jackson Holliday

Carroll pre-injury ADP: 8
Carroll post-injury ADP: 18

Lindor pre-injury ADP: 17
Lindor post-injury ADP: 23

Holliday pre-injury ADP: 134
Holliday post-injury ADP: 163

The broken hamate crew have all seen their ADP fall in the wake of recent injury news.

For Corbin Carroll and Jackson Holliday, only one draft has been logged as part of the NFBC’s ADP data between their injuries being announced on Wednesday and me writing this on Thursday evening. So, perhaps their falls end up less severe as more of a sample develops.

Still, it’s fair to exhibit caution when drafting anyone from this trio, especially Holliday. His ADP before the injury baked in some expectation that he’d take a leap forward after disappointingly being the 17th-ranked second baseman in earned value last season.

His profile showed no signs of that breakout, aside from his former number one overall prospect status. It's reasonable to fear a lost season in standard 10- or 12-team formats.

Maybe there’s a path forward similar to Francisco Alvarez’s last season. He suffered from the same injury in spring training, came back quickly with no setbacks, struggled through the first half, and then erupted as a waiver claim after the All-Star break.

As for Carroll, it’s difficult not to officially put the injury-prone tag on him. Perhaps his max effort play style could be too much for his relatively small body to handle. As a rookie, he swung so hard he popped his shoulder from its socket.

He didn’t miss much time, but it zapped his power for a full year. Now, this hamate injury could do the same in the short term. Watching him play with reckless abandon is a treat; it’s just starting to get scary watching the injuries pile up.

Francisco Lindor has the best chance to shake his broken hamate off among this trio.

The bottom hand is where the hamate breaks as the hand wraps around the knob of the bat. After surgery, it’s difficult to get that strength back. As a switch-hitter, he will be able to hide his weaker left hand by hitting left-handed (with his right hand on the bottom), which will happen naturally when he faces right-handed pitchers.

Also, he’s earned his reputation as a warrior playing through a back and toe injury over the last two seasons and not allowing his counting stats to suffer.

Spencer Schwellenbach, SP Atlanta Braves

January ADP: 93
February ADP: 157

This one’s easy: Spencer Schwellenbach was placed on the 60-day injured list immediately when he reported to camp with elbow inflammation. Even more frustrating, the last update we got from the Braves on Schwellenbach was that his elbow was “pain free” in November after an elbow fracture ended his last season in July.

The best-case scenario is that bone spurs are the root cause of Schwellenbach’s elbow pain. He’s set to get a scope to remove them, and if all goes well he could be back sometime in June.

Yet, after the way last year went and this injury popping up so soon going into camp, that best-case scenario feel far-fetched. Complications are ordinary when situations like this arise in February and it’s fair to take Schwellenbach off your draft board altogether at this point.

Hurston Waldrep is a name to watch in response. He took a step forward last season as he replaced a poor fastball with a new cutter and sinker. That allowed his nasty splitter to play up and he has a genuine chance to make the Braves’ Opening Day rotation.

Blake Snell, SP Los Angeles Dodgers

January ADP: 83
February ADP: 102

In the least straightforward update I could imagine, Blake Snell is “tired” after the postseason and will ramp up slowly. That has put his status for Opening Day in question and thus, dropped his ADP a good bit.

He did throw 34 innings last October, which is a lot. He also only threw 61 1/3 during the regular season which marked the fifth time over the last six full seasons where he’s failed to reach 130 innings.

Reading between the lines and understanding where the Dodgers are at as a team, they have openly deprioritized the regular season. There is no reason to push Snell (or any of their other starting pitchers) when they have a 94.5% chance to win their division according to FanGraphs.

If anyone feels a twinge, a tickle, even an itch, they’ll let them rest until they’re 110% healthy. Once mid-August hits they’ll ramp up for the playoffs and start their real season.

This could wind up as a nice discount on Snell. Or, we should reduce our workload expectations across the board for all Dodgers pitchers.

Should the Royals give Nick Castellanos opportunities to send a drive into deep left field?

Oct 9, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Philadelphia Phillies right fielder Nick Castellanos (8) reacts after striking out in the fifth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers during game four of the NLDS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

The Kansas City Royals look to enter 2026 with a much-improved outfield over the, shall we say, less-than-stellar 2025 outfit. But they could still use another bat, preferably a right-handed hitter who could be a platoon guy as there’s a drive into deep left field by Castellanos.

Kauffman Stadium has been home to a few defining moments over recent memory that only tangentially related to the team. Miguel Cabrera hit his 3,000th career hit there. Remember Trevor Bauer losing his mind and yeeting a baseball over the fence rather than give it to Terry Francona? That was fun. It happened at Kauffman, too.

And yet Kauffman Stadium was also home to one of the weirdest and most fascinating baseball moments of the 21st century: Nick Castellanos hitting a home run off Greg Holland in the middle of Thom Brennaman apologizing for saying a slur on a hot mic earlier in the evening. In an empty stadium due to the pandemic, it is pure, hilarious performance art. And some see a connection between Castellanos home runs and other negative news incidents. I mean, how many other random home runs have a Wikipedia entry? This one does.

Castellanos had a bit of a down year in 2020 (I mean, who didn’t?) but otherwise was in the middle of a six-year stretch where he’d hit .286/.338/.515 and whack 142 home runs. That performance earned him a five-year, $100 million contract with the Philadelphia Phillies.

Well, time catches up with all of us, and Castellanos started to decline. He hit .250/.294/.400 with 17 home runs in 147 games last year, worth -0.8 rWAR. He hit just .230/.267/.367 away from Citizens Bank Ballpark. A few days ago, the Phillies released Castellanos from their service, swallowing their pride and $20 million to have the man who made it a habit of hitting home runs during somber broadcast monologues play for somewhere else.

The upshot of this all is that Castellanos can be had at the league minimum salary. As a right-handed outfield bat with some pop, it’s a low-risk move for a team like the Royals, who certainly need right-handed outfield bats with some pop. In Philadelphia, Castellanos averaged 20 homers a year and put up an even 100 OPS+. For $20 million a year? Not great. For 1/20th of that price? And considering what Kansas City had last year? Ehhhh?????

Unfortunately for Nick, he is also a Zamboni in the outfield grass. Over the last four years, Castellanos has been arguably the worst defender in Major League Baseball. In his right field home, he’s accrued -45 Statcast Fielding Run Value in right field and -41 defensive runs saved. It’s been an issue that has dogged him his whole career, but his defensive woes are accelerating as he decelerates due to age—he’ll be 34 in March. I’m 34 right now, I have certainly decelerated due to age, and the only thing I have to patrol is my basement looking for cat vomit. 

There’s also this:

Ultimately, I think the Royals have improved their outfield enough that the addition of Castellanos, as fun as it would be to reminisce about that August evening in 2020 every time he plays, would not move the needle. Castellanos had an on-base percentage of .294 last year. He is, basically, Hunter Renfroe wearing one of those old-timey mustache disguises, and that’s no fun to watch for anyone. 

Roman Anthony among 12 Red Sox players in World Baseball Classic

Roman Anthony among 12 Red Sox players in World Baseball Classic originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Roman Anthony is set to join 11 of his Boston Red Sox teammates in the 2026 World Baseball Classic.

The budding superstar outfielder will play for Team USA if he passes his physical on Saturday, according to Tim Healey of The Boston Globe. He would serve as the injury replacement for Arizona Diamondbacks outfielder Corbin Carroll, who recently suffered a broken hamate bone.

If all goes well with his physical, Anthony will represent the United States alongside Red Sox reliever Garrett Whitlock. The 21-year-old has apparently had a change of heart after ending his rookie season with an oblique injury.

“I would say that’s out of play,” Anthony said last month about playing in the WBC, per Chris Cotillo of MassLive.com. “There’s a lot of noise that I’ve heard, but for me, the goal after this year was, ‘Hey, I ended on an injury. I don’t want to rush into something.’ I think this was on both ends, not just my side. This is gonna be the first full year of a big league season. It’s important we take advantage of spring and this offseason going into spring training.”

Anthony will be one of the most exciting young players in the tournament. The former No. 1 prospect showcased his star potential through 71 games last season, slashing .292/.396/.463 with 18 doubles, eight homers, and 32 RBI.

While it’ll be fun to watch Anthony on an international stage, it’ll be nerve-racking for Sox fans as he’s one of the most important pieces of the 2026 club. The Red Sox, already lacking power in their lineup, cannot afford to lose him to injury.

Anthony will join the entire Red Sox outfield in the World Baseball Classic. Here’s the full list of players on Boston’s 40-man roster who are expected to participate:

Full list of Red Sox WBC participants

  1. Roman Anthony – USA
  2. Garrett Whitlock – USA
  3. Jarren Duran – Mexico
  4. Wilyer Abreu – Venezuela
  5. Ranger Suarez – Venezuela
  6. Willson Contreras – Venezuela
  7. Masataka Yoshida – Japan
  8. Brayan Bello – Dominican Republic
  9. Greg Weissert – Italy
  10. Ceddanne Rafaela – Netherlands
  11. Jovani Moran – Puerto Rico
  12. Nate Eaton – Great Britain

The 2026 World Baseball Classic is scheduled to run from March 5 to March 17.

Max Muncy climbing the Dodgers home run list

LOS ANGELES, CA - SEPTEMBER 15: Max Muncy #13 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates with Teoscar Hernández #37 after hitting a solo home run in the fifth inning during the game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on Monday, September 15, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Emma Sharon/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Max Muncy is one of the great success stories in Dodgers history. Signed to a minor league contract at age 26 after a pair of underwhelming seasons with the Oakland A’s, Muncy has been a productive member of a team that has won four pennants and three championships during his first eight years in Los Angeles.

The deal Muncy finalized Thursday keeps him under contract for two more seasons plus a club option for 2028 as well. That gives him a chance to add to his already prodigious totals with the Dodgers.

Muncy has two seasons with 36 home runs and two more with 35. The only other Dodger with that many seasons of at least 35 homers is Duke Snider, with five straight years of 40-plus. Muncy in June hit his 200th home run with the Dodgers, and ended the year with 209 home runs, good for seventh place in franchise history.

Most home runs, Dodgers history
  1. Duke Snider 389
  2. Gil Hodges 361
  3. Eric Karros 270
  4. Roy Campanella 242
  5. Ron Cey 228
  6. Steve Garvey 211
  7. Max Muncy 209
  8. Matt Kemp 203
  9. Carl Furillo 192
  10. Mike Piazza 177

Injuries have interrupted Muncy’s last two seasons, with 15 home runs in roughly half a season in 2024 and 19 home runs in 100 games in 2025. If Muncy hits another 19 home runs in 2026, he’ll tie Ron Cey for fifth place on the Dodgers list. At least 33 home runs gets Muncy into fourth place.

Today’s question is how many home runs will Max Muncy hit this season for the Dodgers? Give us your guesses in the comments below.

Relegated, liquidated, resurrected: Bradford Bulls are back in the big time

After hitting rock-bottom, the four-time Super League champions are finally returning to the top flight

By No Helmets Required

When Super League was cut to a dozen teams at the end of the 2014 season, it lost two of its biggest cities in Bradford and London, which followed big markets such as Paris, Tyneside and Sheffield out of the top flight, seemingly never to return. London Broncos have popped back to the party twice but only stayed for a season each time. Seeing the Broncos become a penniless and homeless part-time operation was sad; seeing Bradford do the same was shocking.

The Bulls went into financial meltdown, were liquidated, relegated to the third division and even left their famous Odsal Stadium for a while. Now, 20 years after being crowned world champions for the third time in five seasons, Bradford are back in the big time and preparing to kick off their season at Hull on Saturday.

Continue reading...

Introducing the Phoenix Suns All-Time Pyramid thought exercise

PHOENIX - OCTOBER 2: Amare Stoudemire #32, Stephon Marbury #3, and Shawn Marion #31 of the Phoenix Suns pose for a portrait during NBA Media Day at the America West Arena on October 2, 2003 in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 2003 NBAE (Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

It’s January 2, and I’m sitting in front of my computer with a Salad And Go coffee in hand. Yeah, I like their cold brew. I’m a price-for-value paid guy, and they win that race every time.

An idea has hit me that is ambitious. It is messy. It is absolutely going to take time. Probably the type of thing that belongs in the Suns’ offseason or tucked neatly into the All-Star break when the calendar finally exhales. So that’s the plan. Start it now. Let it breathe. Revisit it through the first few weeks of 2026. Poke at it. Argue with myself. Change my mind. Repeat.

The subject is the Phoenix Suns All-Time Pyramid.

So what is the Phoenix Suns All-Time Pyramid? Think Bill Simmons and the Book of Basketball. Think his Hall of Fame logic. Now drop that framework into the 58-year history of the Phoenix Suns. This is about identifying the 21 best players to ever wear a Phoenix uniform out of the 453 who have donned the purple and orange and arranging them into a six-level pyramid.

Why a pyramid? Because it forces clarity and allows movement. Players are not locked into a rigid ranking. They live in tiers. And if you know anything about SunsRank, you already know how I feel about tiers. And it makes for a nice-looking graphic.

Let’s start with the levels.

  1. The Face of the Franchise
  2. MVP Royalty
  3. Franchise Pillars
  4. Era-Defining Stars
  5. All-Star Impact
  6. Core Contributors

I think these work. As I’ve gone through my list over the past month and a half, building tiers and defining what it takes to be in each one, this is where I’ve landed. You might have a different version with different differentiators and different criteria. I look forward to hearing how you would have navigated this process. This is how I’ve navigated mine.

As I started digging into who the 21 best players actually were, I already knew I was going to run headfirst into some baseline rules. Think of them less as hard laws and more as gatekeepers. Each tier has its own bouncer. Some rules help you qualify. Others quietly escort you out the door.

It is not mandatory to have a clean statistical cutoff for every tier, but thresholds matter. Sometimes, they are the difference between getting in and being left out. Take Tier 3 of the Suns Pyramid, the ‘Franchise Pillars’. Every player in that tier lives in the Ring of Honor. More importantly, every one of them spent over a decade in Phoenix. 10+ years is the line if you want to make it into tier three. If you do not cross it, you do not get through.

But it’s not necessarily exclusive, because a player in my top two tiers (I bet you can guess who that is) wasn’t in Phoenix for 10+ years. So the tiers themselves might be gatekeepers, but it isn’t that clean. There can be exceptions to the rule if the braintrust determines it to be so. And since I am the braintrust, I’m granting a special exemption.

Another rule has to be crystal clear from the jump. This is not a lifetime achievement award for famous names passing through town. This is about impact in a Suns uniform. It’s about what you did here and how much you moved the needle while wearing purple and orange.

Gale Goodrich is a quality example. He was a five-time All-Star, NBA champion, and Hall of Famer. Quite the impressive resume for Mr. Goodrich. He also played just two seasons in Phoenix from 1968 to 1970. He made an All-Star team here, but his real imprint on the league was stamped in Los Angeles. Same conversation with Shaq. Fifteen-time All-Star. Four championships. Two scoring titles. Fourteen-time All-NBA. A walking monument to dominance. He also spent two seasons in Phoenix. One All-Star appearance. A memorable stretch, sure, but not a defining one.

And that is the point. This pyramid is not grading careers. It is grading Suns chapters. Time spent matters. Impact matters. The totality of what you did elsewhere does not.

So no, Gale Goodrich is not making the Phoenix Suns All-Time Pyramid. Neither is Shaq. Not because they were not great. Because this is about Phoenix. And only Phoenix.

To be in Tier 5 or above, you need to be an All-Star, and a multi-time All-Star at that. There have been some fun role players in Phoenix, and there’s plenty of room for them in Tier 6, but to be considered one of the greatest ever, you need to have represented Phoenix in an All-Star Game, thus serving as an ambassador of the city abroad.

You want another rule? Fine. Let’s make it a petty one. Kevin Durant played 145 games in a Suns uniform. So here it is, officially, unscientifically, and with a straight face. The KD Rule. To be eligible for the Suns Pyramid, you must have appeared in 146 or more games with the franchise. Why 146? Because that is one more than Kevin Durant. That is the line. That is the bar. Cross it and we can talk. Fall one game short and you are a footnote. Shaq played in 103 games, so he fell victim to the KD Rule as well.

Is it petty? Absolutely. Is it arbitrary? Without question. Is it also perfectly on brand for a project like this? 100%.

It’s harder than it sounds. I am not even sure why I landed on 21 players instead of 15, which would be clean and orderly and way easier to explain. But once you factor in that there are already 12 players sitting in the Ring of Honor, 15 does not leave much oxygen in the room. And honestly, I want oxygen. I want friction.

That is the point of this whole thing. I want debate. I want the back and forth. I want this to be a community exercise where people can argue tiers, move guys up or down, and make the case for who belongs or who got snubbed entirely. I know my biases are going to show. I’m not a big Deandre Ayton guy. I love Stephon Marbury. Will they make the pyramid? You’ll have to read to find out.

This is subjective by design. It is also fluid, for these things evolve. Maybe one day a player like Collin Gillespie works his way up the list. That sounds wild now, and maybe it stays that way. Time is the real author here. All I am doing is putting the framework on the page.

So that is the plan. That is the goal. With the All-Star break as the runway, we have the time to let this breathe. To roll it out slowly, one layer at a time. No need to rush it, no dumping it all in one day.

I will start by laying out the six levels of the Phoenix Suns All-Time Pyramid. From there, you can probably guess where I am headed with certain players. That part is unavoidable. But there is real debate to be had, especially in the bottom three levels.

Starting tomorrow, we will begin unveiling each level. Let this journey begin.

Yankees 2026 Season Preview: Jasson Domínguez

The 2025 season could have been a big year for Jasson Domínguez. The long-heralded next big thing in the Yankees outfield was well-positioned to earn a starting role following Juan Soto’s crosstown departure, and had finally recovered from the litany of injuries which plagued his previous two seasons. But while the 22-year old had his moments here and there, he was clearly the team’s fourth-best outfielder; merely adequate at the plate and unreliable in the field.

This offseason, in a concerted effort to run it back, the Yankees have welcomed Trent Grisham and Cody Bellinger back to the Bronx, meaning Domínguez is once again looking at a reserve role in 2026. But the dream of a dominant Martian is not yet dead. If he can find his power stroke more consistently, flatten out his stark platoon splits, and take a step forward on defense, Domínguez could finally escape the clouds and reach his galactic potential.

2025 statistics: 123 games, 429 plate appearances, .257/.331/.388 (103 wRC+), 10 HR, 47 RBI, 26.8 K%, 9.6 BB%, -9 Outs Above Average, 0.6 fWAR

2026 FanGraphs DC projections: 26 games, 118 PA, .250/.325/.404 (105 wRC+), 3 HR, 13 RBI, 25 K%, 9.6 BB%, 0.4 fWAR

I’ve wanted to discuss Jasson for a while, since he represents one of the bigger wild cards on a team loaded with veterans and known commodities. He is a flawed player, no doubt. For one thing, the prodigious power he has always possessed was in short supply last year—just 10 homers for a guy like him came as a big surprise to me. The main culprit seems to be an inability to generate lift against fastballs. A hitter like Domínguez, possessed with freakish bat speed, should be able to drive heaters a long way, but a mere .399 slugging percentage (and .364 xSLG) against the harder stuff limited his thump.

The switch-hitter was also woeful from the right side, managing a pithy .569 OPS against left-handed pitchers. This made him effectively a platoon bat for most of the year, as the Yankees had too little margin for error in the postseason race to let Domínguez figure it out down the stretch. Since his lefty production was not spectacular either—Bellinger and Grisham simply outhit Jasson from that side of the plate—his opportunities became fewer and fewer as the season progressed.

Then came the outfield lowlights. Domínguez just couldn’t seem to figure out the right angles in left field, where he played the majority of the time. His -9 Outs Above Average ranked in the third percentile among qualified outfielders. Jasson is not lacking for speed, but he takes a shockingly long time to track the baseball and make up lost ground. Of course, Yankee Stadium is not the friendliest ballpark to a left fielder, but an OAA figure that low does not suggest his troubles are limited to his home turf.

Those are three big black clouds surrounding the longtime top prospect, but of course, time and youth are still on Domínguez’s side. Having just turned 23 a few days back, it’s far too early to write him off as a Joc Pederson-lite; though I may have grumbled something to that effect a time or two in the middle of last year. And ultimately, Domínguez was still statistically above-average at the plate with all those factors weighing against him. Posting a 103 wRC+ while not playing every day is hard to do; just recall how Trent Grisham scuffled without regular playing time in 2024.

The first issue we discussed—subpar power production—feels like by far the easiest fix. It may just take one tweak to attack angle or a stance alteration to get Domínguez firing on all cylinders in the power department once again. I also think it’s not out of the question that he improves a bunch on defense—maybe not to the point of being above-average, but competence should be the goal. If he does, he’ll get more opportunities to try his hand in the other two outfield spots, which would only increase the amount of options Aaron Boone has at his disposal.

The platoon splits are going to be a tougher challenge; since the Yankees will be jockeying for position with the Blue Jays, Red Sox, and the potentially resurgent Orioles for divisional superiority, there will, like last year, be little wiggle room for Domínguez to get the live reps he might need to start to improve as a right-handed hitter. The solace is that he would be taking the majority of his PAs from the left side anyway, but it limits his ability to settle into a full starting role in the future—and was likely a driving factor behind the Yankees’ decision to bring back Bellinger and Grisham this winter.

The ultimate X-factor for Domínguez is injuries: both for himself and for his stablemates in the outfield. Jasson is the next man up if any of their starting triumvirate—who all played at least 140 games last year—hits the shelf for an extended period. The inevitable Giancarlo Stanton injury absence would create an opportunity at DH as well. The Yankees have often started seasons with little depth beyond their starters, leaving them exposed if anybody got hurt. As Michael detailed earlier today, they’ve consciously adopted a different strategy in 2026, and Jasson is a big part of that depth. Of course, if he himself gets injured, it would just be another treacherous bend in what just a few years ago seemed to be an open road to stardom.

FanGraphs’ Depth Charts projections has a very pessimistic outlook on Domínguez’s overall playing time share in 2026—supposedly because of the possibility he starts the season in Triple-A. I’ll believe that when I see it. The ZiPS projections agree, penciling Domínguez in for a more believable 471 plate appearances; while the .246/.323/.399 triple slash it prescribes would be disappointing, it’s important to remember these systems are conservative by nature. There’s not yet a precedent for Domínguez slugging higher than .400 in a full MLB season, but we humans understand that a SLG of at least .450 can be a reasonable goal for him.

With the majority of the players on this Yankees team, you know more or less what you’re going to get. But the concrete has not yet settled on this young man. As far as 2026, the Yankees just need him to be a reliable extra option in their outfield; anything extra is gravy. But if the opportunity presents itself, Domínguez has the talent to enter the stratosphere. It’s true that he has been part of the future for going on six years now, but that possibility should still excite us.


See more of the Yankees Previews series here.

Potential targets for the OTHER Braves 2026 First Round Draft Pick

FAYETTEVILLE, AR - JUNE 01: Arkansas Razorbacks pitcher Gabe Gaeckle (20) reacts after recording the final out of the NCAA Division I Regional baseball game between the Creighton Blue Jays and Arkansas Razorbacks on June 1, 2025, at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville, Arkansas. (Photo by Andy Altenburger/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The college baseball season gets underway today, or I should say is already underway with a 9:30 AM game kicking things off, and some high school seasons have already gotten underway. That means we are officially in MLB Draft season. This is an especially big draft for the Atlanta Braves, thanks to Drake Baldwin. As of today the Braves are sitting on a pair of first round picks, coming in at both No. 9 and No. 26 – though that second pick, the pick from Baldwin winning Rookie of the Year, could still be forfeited should the Braves sign a qualifying offer free agent such as Zac Gallen.

We have already gone over some of the names of the players the Braves could be taking a look at with their top pick, but now is a chance for us to focus on some of the guys they could be looking at when the No. 26 pick gets on the clock. I have picked 10 guys who as of today could be options for the Braves – though there is still an entire spring for these guys to move themselves up or down, or even other prospects to emerge.

Brady Ballinger, 1B/OF, Kansas

One of the biggest bats in this draft after a massive first year on campus, following his transfer from a JUCO. Ballinger is a middle of the order slugger with excellent data and numbers who could potentially hit for both average and power. He pretty much hits everything against everyone, though will need to show better against elite velocity this spring in order to go this high in the draft. Although he is listed as “1B/OF”, he is pretty much a first base-only prospect thanks to his 20-grade speed and struggled in the outfield during the fall.

Blake Bowen, OF, California HS

Bowen is an athletic multi-sport athlete who really saw himself rise late in the summer into the fall, and has emerged as a serious first round candidate. He’s got a bunch of plus tools in the power, speed, and arm, and could be a plus defender in right – though he has a chance to stick in center as well. The hit tool is the biggest question about his profile, though he showed growth there last year. The thing to watch with him this spring will be whether the hit tool growth continues to progress this spring, which could push him up even higher into the first round.

James Clark, SS, California HS

Although not quite the same prospect, James Clark reminds me a bit of Kayson Cunningham from last year’s draft. A high school shortstop with a very strong hit tool, plus speed, enough power, and also some questions on whether he sticks at shortstop longterm. While he has a strong hit tool, I don’t think it’s quite as good as Cunningham’s – though he could end up growing into slightly more power than Cunningham. Signability could come into play a bit here, as he is committed to Princeton along with his twin brother.

Joseph Contreras, RHP, Georgia HS

The son of Jose Contreras is a legitimate first round contender on his own. Already possessing a fastball that has touched 98 MPH with a plus forkball and both a slider and change that could become above average offerings, Contreras has the four-pitch mix with potentially average command that could make him a steal in the late part of the first round. Contreras already began his sign school season, and came out throwing fire this week.

Daniel Cuvet, 3B/1B, Miami

Cuvet is a proven college power bat with massive power. He’s got potentially double plus power to work with, but will also strike out quite a bit. Despite the strikeouts, he has shown enough ability with the hit tool to have what projects as a fringe average grade there, or enough to be able to tap into his power in games. The other real question mark is that the odds are very unlikely he sticks at third base, which likely pushes him to first and puts more pressure on his bat to produce. Still this is a potential first rounder, especially with a little growth as a hitter this spring.

Gabe Gaeckle, RHP, Arkansas

Gaeckle is an interesting case in this draft. On one hand he has the stuff to be an easy first round pick, a fastball up to 98 MPH, plus slider, solid change and curve, and potentially fringy command. On the other hand he has very little starting experience, and his time as a starter last year ended up seeing him demoted back into a bullpen role – though some of that is also on the Razorbacks being loaded with talent. This spring will go a long way to shaping his stock up or down, but based on stuff Gaeckle is a guy to watch closely. As for why he is listed here, the two guys that Pipeline compared his stuff to are current Brave Spencer Strider, and a guy the Braves were rumored to really like last year in Gage Wood.

Tegan Kuhns, RHP, Tennessee

Kuhns is a sophomore eligible pitcher who was highly touted out of high school, had a solid freshman season at Tennessee, and looked excellent for a very short time in the Cape last summer. The projectable right hander has the plus fastball and curve, though there are some concerns that he doesn’t really have a third pitch at the moment. Kuhns has used a slider, cutter, and change at times, and will need to improve at least one of them, as well as his command, but if he can do that he will put himself firmly in the mix for a first round selection.

Tommy LaPour, RHP, TCU

Tommy LaPour is likely a bit more of a project than his 2025 stat line would indicate, but the big former multi sport athlete has a lot of potential. He’s got a huge fastball, up to 101 MPH, and the makings of a plus slider, though he will need work to improve his command of it. He also has shown a solid change and in general has solid command. The big key for him will be finding a way to command that slider better, and also to a lesser extent improving his ability to miss bats with the big fastball, as it presently plays down from what the velocity reads.

Aiden Ruiz, SS, New York HS

Ruiz is not only a sure thing to stick at short, but is one of the better fielding shortstops in the class. He’s a little undersized at 5’10, 168-pounds, but he’s an excellent hitter with a real feel for taking professional at bats as a switch-hitter. The power is definitely looking like it is just below average, but he does a good job of spraying the ball into the gaps for extra base hits. The ability he has to hit, run, field, and throw to go with plenty of at least doubles power, with a polished game, makes him a strong pick later in the first round.

Savion Sims, RHP, Texas HS

A projectable 6’8, 205-pound pitcher who has already touched 100 MPH with his fastball, Savion Sims is a bit of a lottery ticket arm. That would be because he is pretty much all about the fastball right now, and the rest of his arsenal needs to be refined. Sims has at times shown flashes of at least an average slider, and will really need to improve his change. Command is also a work in progress for him, but that’s a normal thing when dealing with a young arm with such long limbs, as they are typically trickier to lock down their mechanics and delivery – which is what effects his command. Still there is a lot to work with in this package, and for an organization confident in their ability to grow pitchers, Sims has to be interesting.

40 in 40: Andrew Knizner backs it up

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 24: Andrew Knizner #21 of the San Francisco Giants smiles after he hit a triple that scored a run against the St. Louis Cardinals in the eighth inning at Oracle Park on September 24, 2025 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Upon the departure of Mitch Garver, the Mariners entered this winter with a hole in their catching corps.

Wait, what?

I don’t need to get into how magnificent Cal Raleigh’s historic 2025 was here. You know it. I know it. The girl reading this knows it. What may have fallen through in his charge to sixty (sixty! still boggles the mind) homers last year was the workload behind the plate that he’s shouldered; since 2022, his 499 games at catcher lead all of baseball, with his 4149 innings and 457 starts in that span trailing only J.T. Realmuto. Throw in 38 games as Seattle’s DH last year, and Cal crossed the 700 plate appearance threshold – nigh-unheard of for a backstop.

Catching is famously tough on the human body, and many teams in the modern era opt for a more balanced job share rather than the traditional starter/backup model to keep both players healthy. But when your MVP runner-up and newfound face of the franchise crouches behind the plate nearly every day? Whoever plays second fiddle isn’t exactly a top priority.

Andrew Knizner is no stranger to being the irreplaceable’s replacement. Drafted in the 7th round in 2016 by the St. Louis Cardinals out of North Carolina State, he broke into the bigs in 2019, making his debut in early June after franchise legend and Yadier Molina hit the injured list due to a thumb strain. He was sent back down after just two games, but came back up after Yadi again hit the IL with a thumb injury, getting into eleven games – and hitting his first big league homer – before heading back to Triple-A Memphis, returning after September roster expansion.

Buried behind an established – if aging – duo of Molina and Matt Wieters, Knizner struggled to find consistent playing time in MLB, stepping to the plate just 75 times over 26 games in 2019-20. After Wieters retired following the 2020 season, though, backup catcher was wide open for the Cards, and Knizner seized his chance, spending all of 2021 on a Major League roster while playing in 63 games and collecting 185 plate appearances. The results weren’t exactly pretty, as he turned in a paltry 48 wRC+ and subpar defensive marks, but a double-digit walk rate and a deflated BABIP of .223 suggested that more could be unlocked from his bat.

With Molina entering his final season in 2022 – and missing about six weeks with knee inflammation – Knizner faced the unenviable scenario of both suddenly becoming important at work and stepping in for a franchise legend. Starting 78 games behind the plate, enough to be listed as St. Louis’s primary catcher per Baseball-Reference, his 77 wRC+ doesn’t jump off the page, but it represented a jump of nearly 30 points. He continued to receive not-great marks for his framing and pop time, but graded out well as a blocker, and St. Louis opted to keep him on after signing Willson Contreras as Yadi’s long-term successor.

Knizner enjoyed his best season in 2023, finally finding some game power in popping ten homers en route to a 92 wRC+ over 241 plate appearances. While the power was great to see, the tradeoff was a downward trend in both his strikeout and walk rates, with each of them moving about four points in the wrong direction. It wasn’t enough for the Cardinals, and they non-tendered Knizner that winter. He quickly found a new home with the Rangers, acting as Jonah Heim’s backup, but if you thought his 2021 was rough? Don’t look at his 2024 numbers. Texas DFA’d him in August after bringing aboard Carson Kelly, and he finished off the year in the Diamondbacks’ org before signing a minor league deal with the Nationals that winter.

His time with the Nats was short-lived. Despite a fiery start in Triple-A Rochester, he was released in mid-May, but was quickly scooped up by the Giants, who promoted him to the big league roster in early June and kept him there for the rest of the season. Behind all-world defender Patrick Bailey, Knizner only got into 33 games with San Francisco, and his triple slash of .221/.299/.299 and 73 wRC+ were in line with his career numbers, but something had changed in his process at the plate. Through 2024, Knizner struck out at a clip of 23%; not terrible in this day and age, but higher than you’d like for a hitter without much thump. In 2025, though, he cut that in half, going down on strikes at a rate of just 11.4%, and the walks stayed at around his career marks. He also had his share of clutch moments, racking up a cumulative +.163 WPA, and none was bigger than an eighth-inning go-ahead triple against his former club on September 27th.

The obvious caveat here is that we’re talking about just 88 trips to the plate, and his chase rate was largely unchanged, but any time someone bucks a trend like Knizner did last year, it’s worth keeping an eye on. His defensive marks showed improvement, too, particularly in the framing department, though with the ABS challenge system on the horizon, it remains to be seen how impactful those gains will be.

The M’s signed Knizner to a one-year, $1 million deal in mid-December; just barely over league minimum. Although Seattle claimed a third catcher in Jhonny Pereda on the in late January, Knizner’s lack of options and more substantial big league track record of 323 games all but ascertain he’ll be breaking camp as the Big Dumper’s backup. Expectations for him both at and behind the plate will be tempered; most expectations for second-string backstops are. If he can show that his contact gains were for real, though, he should once again settle in nicely as a replacement for the irreplaceable – and give Cal Raleigh’s knees some more well-earned rest.