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DiamondCentric

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  1. Jays Centre is counting down the top 50 Blue Jays in franchise history. Check out prior entries in the series here: Introduction 50 to 46 45 to 41 40 to 36 35 to 31 30 to 26 25 to 21 20 to 16 15 to 11 10 to 6 As you might expect for the top of this list, we’re talking about guys that had an extended Blue Jays career, each with over a decade in Toronto. With their time spent here (4000+ combined games) and the impact they each had on this franchise, it may be surprising to think that each of them also has a signature game, one the majority of fans think of first when hearing their name. No. 5: José Bautista 2008-2017 6x All-Star, 3x Silver Slugger Franchise All-Time #1: position player bWAR (38.4), position player fWAR (36.2) Single Season #1: position player bWAR (8.3), offensive bWAR (8.4), home runs (54), walks (132), AB per HR (10.5), win probability added (8.0), wRC+ (180), isolated power (.357) The Career: Bautista was famously acquired by the Blue Jays for the always popular “player to be named later,” and it would only be with the power of hindsight that we came to recognize this as perhaps the most valuable trade in Toronto history. In 2010, he set the franchise record for home runs in a single season and led the league with 54. He would lead the league again the following year with 43 home runs, and his 132 walks in 2011 (including 24 intentional ones) would also be league leaders, making the continued power all the more impressive. From 2010 to 2015, no one would hit more homers than Bautista’s 227, and he was rewarded with an All-Star appearance each of those seasons. Bautista was easily one of the most feared batters of his time. The Game: There might not be a more iconic moment in the top five than the bat flip game. In 2015, the Blue Jays were playing in the playoffs for the first time since winning the World Series in ‘93 – it was a long drought. The seventh inning of Game 5 of the ALDS had about 10 wild moments before Bautista even came to the plate, but once he did and sent the ball 431 feet to left center – and his bat 40 feet straight up – he cemented himself into Toronto sports history. No. 4: Tony Fernández 1983-1990, 1993, 1998-1999, 2001 4x All-Star, 4x Gold Glover Franchise All-Time #1: Games played (1450), defensive bWAR (12.3), hits (1583), singles (1160), triples (72) Single Season #1: Games played (163), at-bats (687), singles (161), triples (17) The Career: Tony Fernández, the player so nice they acquired him twice, three times, four times! Signed as an amateur free agent, reacquired by trade and then signed as a free agent twice. Fernández spent 12 of his 17 major league seasons in Toronto and has played more games for the Blue Jays (1450) than any other player to wear the Toronto uniform. His four Gold Gloves came in consecutive seasons from ‘86 to '89. He missed out on the award in 1990 and was subsequently (possibly unrelatedly) traded in the offseason, along with Fred McGriff, in the biggest trade the franchise has seen. During the ‘93 season, the defending champion Jays would reach an agreement with the Mets to reacquire Fernández. His postseason performance was a major reason for the second championship. He would leave and return twice more as a free agent, most impressively representing Toronto at the 1999 All-Star game at age 37. The Game: Perhaps he was fueled by missing out on the ‘92 series, or perhaps he was just born to hit the ball and so that’s what he did. In Game 4 of the ‘93 World Series, Fernández put together three hits and knocked in five runs to help lead Toronto to victory, earning almost 30% of the win probability generated in the game. A pair of singles into shallow right field, a hard hit grounder into left and a chopper with the bases loaded that Fernández came within a quarter-of-a-step from beating out combined for five RBI and propelled Fernández to his first (and only) World Series trophy. No. 3: Carlos Delgado 1993-2004 2x All-Star, 3x Silver Slugger Franchise All-Time #1: Offensive bWAR (39.4), slugging percentage (.556), OPS (.949), plate appearances (6018), runs (889), total bases (2786), doubles (343), home runs (336), RBI (1059), walks (827), extra base hits (690), HBP (122), intentional walks (128), AB per HR (14.9), win probability added (28.9) Single Season #1: Slugging % (.664), OPS (1.134), total bases (378), doubles (57), RBI (145), wOBA (.471), runs created (186), extra base hits (99), times on base (334) The Career: Delgado made his debut with three games remaining in the 1993 season. He came into the game in the bottom of the sixth inning as a replacement for catcher Randy Knorr and drew a walk in his only AB, marking his first time on base. He would go on to reach base 2361 more times, a mark that no other Jay can match. The fact that he came up as a catcher and made that one appearance also makes him a sneaky Immaculate Grid pull. Delgado’s timing in Toronto seems almost cruel. In the system, but not on the team when they won the back-to-backs and then gone a decade before the Jays would see the playoffs again. Delgado never got a playoff moment like Bautista or Joe Carter, but that didn’t stop him from putting in work every regular season. Only one player in franchise history has played more games than Delgado, and that's Fernández. Delgado finished second in MVP voting in 2003 while leading the league in RBI and OPS. Once he established a full-time role, he averaged 36 home runs per season for nine years. The best homegrown power source the Jays have ever had. The Game: Towards the end of that 2003 season, Delgado put on one of the most impressive hitting displays ever seen in Toronto. In the bottom of the first inning, he hit a three-run homer to right field. In the fourth inning, it was a leadoff solo shot. The sixth inning? Another leadoff solo shot marked the fifth time in Delgado’s Blue Jays career that he had a three-homer game. Then, in the eighth inning, Delgado made history. Absolutely crushing a ball for his fourth home run of the day, becoming the first (and still only) Blue Jay to have a four-home run game. View the full article
  2. In the style of Effectively Wild's annual preseason prediction game, we've come up with three bold predictions, or hot takes if you will, for the 2026 New York Mets. Presented here in order of confidence. 3 Bold New York Mets Predictions for 2026 Season Kodai Senga will be the Mets' best starting pitcher I'm a big fan of Kodai Senga, and I think the Mets have been both under-appreciative of him, and have sabotaged him a little bit too. In 2026. I think everything comes together for Senga's best season as a Met. This isn't a doom-and-gloom prediction—I'm not down on Freddy Peralta or David Peterson or anyone else. We're going to do this by FanGraphs WAR, and currently Senga is listed fifth in projected fWAR at 1.5, behind Peralta at 2.6. Senga faded last year, after missing most of 2024, which was a common theme for the Mets rotation. With Senga though, the Mets optioned him to AAA in favor of September ERAs of 9.88 for Jonah Tong, 9.72 for David Peterson, and 8.10 for Sean Manaea. Up until the All-Star Break, the Japanese right-hander had a 1.39 ERA through 14 starts with 74 strikeouts, but in his final seven starts, he had a 6.10 ERA. He had one bad start and one good start in the minors after that to end his season. Clearly, the Mets had little faith in him at that point, but overall his numbers in MLB have been good, and I've seen or heard nothing from the Mets to suggest last year was anything more than an anomaly, perhaps from ramping up innings after missing most of 2024. This year, he's starting healthy and ready to go, after having thrown 126 2/3 innings last year. The Mets, and Jeremy Hefner, had him learn the slider last year, and he used it about 6% of the time. Now Hefner is gone, and it's a fresh season. He's got a year of growth with the new pitch, and more data to use about how to mix pitches, maybe with some different input from the dugout. Senga's a real talented pitcher, with lots of weapons, and that Ghost Fork still flummoxes hitters. Of all the Mets' top six starting options, Senga's got the second lowest ERA over the last three years, behind only Nolan McLean's much smaller sample. I think McLean and Peralta will both have excellent seasons, and maybe even better stretches of games, but when the dust settles, it will be Kodai Senga who has created the most value out of that rotation. Brett Baty will get the most starts at second base This one's potentially a bit more pessimistic, because I'm not sold on Marcus Semien, but ultimately I think it works out for the Mets. Currently. FanGraphs has Semien getting 637 PA at second, and Baty only 35, but with Bichette at third, and Vientos the primary backup there and at first, it seems likely Baty would be the one to replace Semien if it isn't working (barring another position switch from Jorge Polanco). Semien is projected for a .310 wOBA, which is higher than either of his last two years. If he bounces back, great, but if he continues to decline, it's going to be harder and harder to carry him for the defense, especially if the decline there last year was age and not just fuzziness in defensive metrics. Baty, meanwhile, put up a .324 wOBA last year and a 111 wRC+. He got 432 PA and contributed 2.3 fWAR. A lot of that came from increased power, really driving the ball with authority. More of that will earn him more starts, which could come at Semien's expense (or, alternatively, the Bichette experiment failing could open up starts at both second and third for Baty). Francisco Alvarez will hit 30 home runs This is the year Alvarez puts it all together. This is his age-24 season, and his four as the regular catcher. The 2025 campaign was his best year so far, and if there's improvement that sticks, he could be even better. ZiPS projects him for 21 HR, which is the most optimistic, but that's over 118 games. If he can get to 130 or 140 starts with some DH time, 30 homers might be in the cards, and that extra power in the Mets would really lengthen the bottom of the lineup. His Statcast metrics have been trending up in that he's hitting the ball harder, with more exit velocity and a better launch angle. He's swinging at meatballs more often, and swinging at first pitches and out of the zone pitches less. In general, it seems like he might actually have a little bit of a plan up there as compared to previous years, and there's no reason to think he can't display even more improvement in 2026. What are your hot takes for the Mets' 2026 season? Let us know in the comments below! View the full article
  3. In the style of Effectively Wild's annual preseason prediction game, we've come up with three bold predictions, or hot takes if you will, for the 2026 New York Mets. Presented here in order of confidence. 3 Bold New York Mets Predictions for 2026 Season Kodai Senga will be the Mets' best starting pitcher I'm a big fan of Kodai Senga, and I think the Mets have been both under-appreciative of him, and have sabotaged him a little bit too. In 2026. I think everything comes together for Senga's best season as a Met. This isn't a doom-and-gloom prediction—I'm not down on Freddy Peralta or David Peterson or anyone else. We're going to do this by FanGraphs WAR, and currently Senga is listed fifth in projected fWAR at 1.5, behind Peralta at 2.6. Senga faded last year, after missing most of 2024, which was a common theme for the Mets rotation. With Senga though, the Mets optioned him to AAA in favor of September ERAs of 9.88 for Jonah Tong, 9.72 for David Peterson, and 8.10 for Sean Manaea. Up until the All-Star Break, the Japanese right-hander had a 1.39 ERA through 14 starts with 74 strikeouts, but in his final seven starts, he had a 6.10 ERA. He had one bad start and one good start in the minors after that to end his season. Clearly, the Mets had little faith in him at that point, but overall his numbers in MLB have been good, and I've seen or heard nothing from the Mets to suggest last year was anything more than an anomaly, perhaps from ramping up innings after missing most of 2024. This year, he's starting healthy and ready to go, after having thrown 126 2/3 innings last year. The Mets, and Jeremy Hefner, had him learn the slider last year, and he used it about 6% of the time. Now Hefner is gone, and it's a fresh season. He's got a year of growth with the new pitch, and more data to use about how to mix pitches, maybe with some different input from the dugout. Senga's a real talented pitcher, with lots of weapons, and that Ghost Fork still flummoxes hitters. Of all the Mets' top six starting options, Senga's got the second lowest ERA over the last three years, behind only Nolan McLean's much smaller sample. I think McLean and Peralta will both have excellent seasons, and maybe even better stretches of games, but when the dust settles, it will be Kodai Senga who has created the most value out of that rotation. Brett Baty will get the most starts at second base This one's potentially a bit more pessimistic, because I'm not sold on Marcus Semien, but ultimately I think it works out for the Mets. Currently. FanGraphs has Semien getting 637 PA at second, and Baty only 35, but with Bichette at third, and Vientos the primary backup there and at first, it seems likely Baty would be the one to replace Semien if it isn't working (barring another position switch from Jorge Polanco). Semien is projected for a .310 wOBA, which is higher than either of his last two years. If he bounces back, great, but if he continues to decline, it's going to be harder and harder to carry him for the defense, especially if the decline there last year was age and not just fuzziness in defensive metrics. Baty, meanwhile, put up a .324 wOBA last year and a 111 wRC+. He got 432 PA and contributed 2.3 fWAR. A lot of that came from increased power, really driving the ball with authority. More of that will earn him more starts, which could come at Semien's expense (or, alternatively, the Bichette experiment failing could open up starts at both second and third for Baty). Francisco Alvarez will hit 30 home runs This is the year Alvarez puts it all together. This is his age-24 season, and his four as the regular catcher. The 2025 campaign was his best year so far, and if there's improvement that sticks, he could be even better. ZiPS projects him for 21 HR, which is the most optimistic, but that's over 118 games. If he can get to 130 or 140 starts with some DH time, 30 homers might be in the cards, and that extra power in the Mets would really lengthen the bottom of the lineup. His Statcast metrics have been trending up in that he's hitting the ball harder, with more exit velocity and a better launch angle. He's swinging at meatballs more often, and swinging at first pitches and out of the zone pitches less. In general, it seems like he might actually have a little bit of a plan up there as compared to previous years, and there's no reason to think he can't display even more improvement in 2026. What are your hot takes for the Mets' 2026 season? Let us know in the comments below! View the full article
  4. It is hard to argue that this spring has created a lot of optimism towards Mark Vientos. Fans continue to wonder where the 2024 version of the Mets' young star went. Coming off a disappointing 2025 campaign, Vientos has yet to prove this spring that the 2024 Vientos will be making a comeback this season. Vientos had only two hits this spring, going 2-for-37 (.057) and 3-for-19 (.158) during his time with Team Nicaragua in the World Baseball Classic. With the strong 2025 campaign of Brett Baty and acquisitions of Bo Bichette and Jorge Polanco, playing time could be few and far between for Vientos. However, it is not all that hard to find optimism in a positive 2026 campaign for Vientos. One thing you can be certain about Vientos is that he is going to hit the ball hard. According to Baseball Savant, Vientos finished in the 89th percentile in hard hit rate and 82nd percentile in average exit velocity, the exact same as he was in 2024. Vientos raised his Hard Hit% from 46.6 to 50.5 in 2025, a positive that went under the radar. With his increase in hard-hit metrics and his batting average being .013 under his expected batting average, you can say luck did not fall his way in 2025. This spring, Vientos has increased his average exit velocity, average launch angle, and barrel rate. So while the batting average can look ugly, it may not be telling the full story. In these games, Vientos has had exit velocities of 107.5, 106.4, 105, and 103; all resulting in very loud outs. In a game vs the Washington Nationals, Vientos went one for three without posting an exit velocity under 103. It is hard to believe that the ball won't start falling at some point for Vientos. One man who has never lost faith in Vientos is Mets manager Carlos Mendoza. “He’s going to be a big player for us,” he said. “He’s going to be a big bat, and we’re counting on him. I’m pretty confident that we’re going to get a really good version of Mark Vientos.” Mendoza reminded Vientos that the quality of at-bats in the spring is what they really care about, and he believes he has been doing so. Vientos last year was coming off a breakout year in 2024, where his 14 RBIs are the most in a single postseason in Mets history, and posted a 132 WRC+. Expectations were through the roof for Vientos, so any season below that expectation would have the Mets community questioning if his 2024 season was a fluke. The advanced metrics did not reflect that idea. Vientos cut his strikeout rate down from 29% to 24%, a major positive. Vientos also raised his batting average vs breaking balls from .170 to .225 in 2025. There are times when batters do everything right, and the ball simply does not fall. You saw this at the beginning of 2025 with Juan Soto. Soto was hitting the ball hard but could only muster up batting averages of .232 and .219 in the months of April and May. As the season went on, the results started to fall, and we saw the real Juan Soto. There is reason to believe the same could be happening for Vientos. In a disappointing season in 2025 for the New York Mets, Vientos’s season went down as a reason why. Will luck fall his way in 2026? Still to be seen. However, what can be seen is a spring training batting average of .040 does not define Vientos and he is doing everything in his power to hit the ball harder, which he hopes will provide better results. View the full article
  5. There is a new name in the bidding to purchase the San Diego Padres. Tom Gores, the owner of the NBA's Detroit Pistons and minority owner of the NFL's Los Angeles Chargers, is leading a previously unreported group to purchase San Diego's MLB team, according to a report by The Athletic. The same report confirmed the leaders of the other three groups that are among the four finalists and matched previous speculation: Jose E. Feliciano, Dan Friedkin and Joe Lacob. The Athletic also confirmed previous reports that the Padres, owned by the Seidler family, are likely to fetch at least $3.5 billion in the sale, which would be a MLB record. Steve Cohen bought the New York Mets in 2020 for $2.42 billion, the current record for an baseball team. The report said a second round of bidding was due in mid-April. It is expected a decision on who the Seidler family will sell to will be made following those bids. Feliciano is the co-founder of Clearlake Capital, based in Santa Monica, and has ownership of the men's soccer team Chelsea in the English Premier League; Friedkin was born in San Diego and is the CEO of The Friedkin Group as well as ownership in two men's soccer teams (Everton in the EPL and Roma in Serie A); while Lacob is owner of the NBA's Golden State Warriors and the WNBA's Golden State Valkyries. But Gores jumps into the fray with the second-largest net worth of the four. The founder of Platinum Equity, a private-equity firm headquartered in Beverly Hills, has a net worth of $10.1 billion, according to Forbes, behind Friedkin's $10.7 billion. Gores became the Pistons' owner in 2011 and self-funded a new $90 million headquarters and training center. Gores and Platinum Equity bought the Pistons for $395 million, with Gores buying out his firm's share four years later to have 100% ownership. Platinum Equity oversees more than $50 billion in assets from 60 companies. Gores also pursued bringing a Major League Soccer team to Detroit, but that effort failed, at least for the moment. He purchased a 27% stake in the Chargers in 2024. In 2009, Gores purchased the San Diego Union-Tribune for a reported $30 million, then sold it two years later for $110 million. Gores lives in Beverly Hills, which would be key as the Seidler family is seeking someone who is local to sell the team to. All four finalists have SoCal ties, with some currently stronger than others. Peter Seidler, who died in November 2024, and Ron Fowler led the group that purchased the Padres in 2012 for $800 million. View the full article
  6. Little can be considered a surprise after perhaps the most aggressive year-to-year makeover in Mets history, so one has to place room for a little drama at the end of camp and the addition of Carson Benge makes that complete. More on that below as we spread the table for a new season. Get to know them now, kids. With players brought in at that end of their deals, other players arriving on short-term agreements, and a third class that has opt-outs at their disposal, a lot of these guys may be gone before you have had a chance to have them over to dinner. This is a team built to contend, but also a team built to get the hell out of the way if other prospects assert themselves. Transactions, 3/24/2026 GOING Released Starting Pitchers Aaron Rozek L/L DoB: 34931 High Level: AAA (2025) Aaron Rozek had been a AA and AAA Twins dude that the Mets grabbed in the minor-league phase of the December Rule V Draft. Minor-league picks don't have to be kept on a roster or offered back like MLB picks, but the Mets obviously had seen enough. Maybe he returns to Minnesota, or maybe points beyond. He had been ticketed for the Syracuse rotation this year, so his jettisoning could mean a big opportunity for Bryce Conley, or possibly lefty Zach Thornton — the latter of whom looked terrific when floated up to big-league camp this spring, so please don't confuse him with former Mets prospect Zack (with a K) Thornton, who peaked at AAA in 2016 Transactions, 3/25/2026 GOING GOING GOING GOING GOING Designated for Assignment Transferred to Minor-League Camp, Projected for Syracuse Placed on 15-Day Injured List, Retroactive to 2026-03-22, Recovering from Left Lat Surgery Designated for Assignment Designated for Assignment Relief Pitchers Relief Pitchers Relief Pitchers Catchers Infielders Bryan Hudson Craig Kimbrel A.J. Minter Ben Rortvedt Vidal Brujan L/L DoB: 1997-05-08 High Level: MLB (2025) R/R DoB: 1988-05-28 High Level: MLB (2025) L/L DoB: 1993-09-02 High Level: MLB (2025) L/R DoB: 1997-09-25 High Level: MLB (2025) S/R DoB: 1998-02-09 High Level: MLB (2025) GOING GOING NEUTRAL COMING COMING Transferred to Minor-League Camp, Projected for Syracuse Transferred to Minor-League Camp, Projected for Syracuse IL with Right Knee Meniscus Tear Transferred from Outfield Added to Roster Added to 40-Player Roster and Promoted from Syracuse Outfielders Outfielders Infielders Relief Pitchers Outfielders Cristian Pache Mike Tauchman Brett Baty Richard Lovelady Carson Benge R/R DoB: 1998-11-19 High Level: MLB (2025) L/L DoB: 1990-12-03 High Level: MLB (2025) L/R DoB: 1999-11-13 High Level: MLB (2025) L/L DoB: 1995-07-07 High Level: AAA (2025) L/R DoB: 2003-01-20 High Level: MLB (2024) Here come the final roster maneuvers! Bryan Hudson, purchased from the White Sox back in February, had the inside track for the second-lefty position most of spring, but also spent most of the spring pitching poorly. The Mets had been playing waiver-claim-tug-o-war with the Nats over Richard Lovelady for a couple of months, so being out of options wasn't going to save Hudson, as Lovelady was OoO too, and at least one team had shown a disposition to claim him if he went through another one of those interminable DFAs that his life is full of. So congratulations to Dicky on stealing Hudson's bacon and making the Opening Day squadron. There was never an official announcement of Craig Kimbrel going to minor-league camp (or Christian Pache or Mike Tauchman for that matter), but we've hit you-don't-have-to-go-home-but-you-can't-stay-here territory. Kimbrell, to his credit, has decided to stay with the organization. Whether that means working on his act in extended spring training or accepting a AAA assignment isn't clear, but apparently he feels his best bet is staying with the team and building on whatever goodwill he has established this spring. We all know about Tauchman's injury, but no IL assignment has been announced. His meniscus was first torn back in September, leading to his non-tender by Chicago (A), so maybe he is doing some thinking before consenting to going under the knife. The news about Carson Benge has repercussions all through the system. As much of a top prospect and a comer as the guy was, he had to pass about 10 guys this spring to get where he has gotten. Congratulations to Gwreck for calling Vidal Brujan cutting when the entire stubborn Mets Roster Central staff had him in the fold. We don't know if they saw him jettisoned in favor of keeping Jared Young around despite the Benge addition, but that's how it shakes out. And that means, since Benge (being the rookie who needs reps) and Juan Soto (being the man) Brett Baty has no room in the outfield, and most non-DH work he gets will be at first, second, and third. Mets Roster Central was late to declare him an outfielder, and now has been late to declare him once again an infielder. Stubborn we are. But damn it, we have a roster. Get to know them while they are still here. Your Mets Coaching Staff Manager Bench Coach Pitching Coach Hitting Coordinator Third Base Coach First Base Coach Bullpen Coach Ass't Pitching Coach Carlos Mendoza Kai Correa Justin Willard Jeff Albert Tim Leiper Gilbert Gomez José Rosado Dan McKinney DoB: 1979-11-27 DoB: 1989-07-14 DoB: 1990-09-09 DoB: 1992-08-16 DoB: 1996-07-19 DoB: 1992-03-08 DoB: 1974-11-09 DoB: 1989-06-06 Hitting Coach Strategy Coach Catching Coach Coaching Assistant Bat'g Practice Pitcher Equipment Manager Bullpen Catchers Bullpen Catchers Troy Snitker Danny Barnes J.P. Arencibia Rafael Fernandez Kevin Mahoney Kevin Kierst Eric Langill Dave Racaniello DoB: 1988-12-05 DoB: 1989-10021 DoB: 1986-01-05 DoB: 1988-08-03 DoB: 1987-05-11 DoB: 1964-07-09 DoB: 1979-04-09 DoB: 1978-06-03 Your Mets Training Staff Director of Player Health Head Athletic Trainer Assistant Athletic Trainer Reconditioning Coordinator Reconditioning Therapist Head Performance Coach Assistant Performance Coach Performance Coordinator Brian Chicklo Joseph Golia Bryan Baca Sean Bardanett Josh Bickel Dustin Clarke Tanner Miracle Jeremy Chiang DoB: 1972-07-17 DoB: 1978-??-?? DoB: Circa 1980 DoB: 1988-06-23 DoB: 1996-??-?? DoB: 1987-??-?? DoB: 1991-??-?? DoB: ????-??-?? Your 2026 New York Mets Starting Pitchers Clay Holmes Nolan McLean Freddy Peralta David Peterson Kodai Senga R/R DoB: 1993-03-27 R/R DoB: 2001-07-24 R/R DoB: 2996-06-04 L/L DoB: 1995-09-03 L/R DoB: 1993-01-30 Relief Pitchers Huascar Brazobán Luis Garcia Richard Lovelady Sean Manaea Tobias Myers Brooks Raley Luke Weaver R/R DoB: 1989-10-15 R/R DoB: 1987-01-30 L/L DoB: 1995-07-07 R/L DoB: 1992-02-01 R/R DoB: 1998-08-05 L/L DoB: 1988-06-29 R/R DoB: 1993-08-21 Relief Pitchers Catchers Infielders Devin Williams Francisco Alvarez Luís Torrens Brett Baty Bo Bichette Francisco Lindor Jorge Polanco R/R DoB: 1994-09-21 R/R DoB: 2001-11-01 R/R DoB: 1996-05-02 L/R DoB: 1999-11-13 R/R DoB: 1998-03-05 S/R DoB: 1993-11-14 S/R DoB: 1999-11-13 Infielders Outfielders Marcus Semien Mark Vientos Carson Benge Luis Robert, Jr. Juan Soto Tyrone Taylor Jared Young R/R DoB: 1990-09-17 R/R DoB: 1993-12-11 L/R DoB: 2003-01-20 R/R DoB: 1997-08-03 L/L DoB: 36093 R/R DoB: 34356 L/R DoB: 1995-07-09 Also on 40-Player Roster Starting Pitchers Relief Pitchers Tylor Megill Christian Scott Jonah Tong Alex Carrillo Reed Garrett Joey Gerber Justin Hagenman R/R DoB: 1995-07-28 R/R DoB: 1999-06-15 R/R DoB: 2003-06-19 R/R DoB: 1997-06-06 R/R DoB: 1993-01-02 R/R DoB: 1997-05-03 R/R DoB: 1996-10-07 On 60-Day Injured List with torn right UCL. In minor-league camp. Projected for Syracuse. In minor-league camp. Projected for Syracuse. In minor-league camp. Projected for St. Lucie. On 60-Day Injured List — right UCL surgery and nerve relocation surgery. In minor-league camp. Projected for St. Lucie. On 60 Day Injured List with fractured rib. Relief Pitchers Catchers Infielders A.J. Minter Dedniel Núñez Jonathan Pintaro Dylan Ross Austin Warren Hayden Senger Ronny Mauricio L/L DoB: 1993-09-02 R/R DoB: 1996-06-05 R/R DoB: 1997-11-07 R/R DoB: 2000-09-01 R/R DoB: 1996-02-05 R/R DoB: 1997-04-03 S/R DoB: 2001-04-04 On 15-Day Injured List — Left Lat Surgery On 60-Day Injured List — right UCL surgery. In minor-league camp. Projected for Binghamton. In minor-league camp. Projected for St. Lucie. In minor-league camp. Projected for St. Lucie. In minor-league camp. Projected for Binghamton. In minor-league camp. Projected for Syracuse. Outfielders MJ Melendez Nick Morabito L/R DoB: 1993-11-29 R/R DoB: 2003-05-07 In minor-league camp. Projected for Syracuse. In minor-league camp. Projected for Binghamton. Designated for Assignment Relief Pitchers Catchers Infielders Bryan Hudson Ben Rortvedt Vidal Brujan L/L DoB: 1997-05-08 L/R DoB: 1997-09-25 S/R DoB: 1998-02-09 DfA'd, 2026-03-25. DfA'd, 2026-03-25. DfA'd, 2026-03-25. View the full article
  7. In the inaugural episode of the MiLB podcast, Nick introduces the show along with the second-ever Spring Breakout game. Highlighting players who performed well in it and those who may have performed well despite what the box score showed. He also discusses the organization's great pitching depth before talking about players that he's excited about entering the 2026 season. He then concludes by looking over potential season-opening rosters for the affiliate teams. Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-talk-sox-podcast/id1783204104 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3qPrPXEngu0CxgTmlf0ynm Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-talk-sox-podcast-244591331/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/4tmd121v Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@talksox View the full article
  8. After a full offseason of hemming and hawing over who was and wasn't being acquired, the San Diego Padres have revealed their 26-man roster for Opening Day. While there, the starting rotation and the position players were set; the remaining decisions to be made had to deal with the bullpen. In order to get down to the final 26, the Friars had to make numerous moves, including adding two players to the major-league roster. One of those moves included putting right-handed starter Yu Darvish on the restricted list. Darvish had offseason elbow surgery and is expected to retire. Here is a list of what the Padres did: Selected the contract of right-handed starter Walker Buehler from Triple-A El Paso. Selected the contract of infielder Ty France from Triple-A El Paso. Placed right-handed starter Yu Darvish on the restricted list. Placed right-handed starter Joe Musgrove (right elbow inflammation) on the 15-day injured list. Placed right-handed starter Griffin Canning (surgery on left Achilles) on the 15-day injured list. Placed right-handed starter Matt Waldron (hemorrhoid surgery) on the 15-day injured list. Placed right-handed reliever Jason Adam (surgery on left quad) on the 15-day injured list. Placed left-handed reliever Yuki Matsui (strained left groin) on the 15-day injured list. Placed right-handed reliever Bryan Hoeing (right flexor tendon surgery) on the 15-day injured list. Placed infielder Sung Mun Song (strained right oblique) on the 10-day injured list. Placed infielder Will Wagner (strained right oblique) on the 10-day injured list. Starting rotation (5) Nick Pivetta, RH Michael King, RH Randy Vasquez, RH German Marquez, RH Walker Buehler, RH Buehler, the former Los Angeles Dodgers star, earned a spot in the rotation with a good spring. Vasquez was a surprising standout and could play a vital role throughout the season. Marquez had a bumpy Cactus League and, like Buehler, will need to prove himself as the season goes along, as there is a minimal financial investment. Bullpen (8) Mason Miller, RH Adrian Morejon, LH Jeremiah Estrada, RH David Morgan, RH Wandy Peralta, LH Kyle Hart, LH Bradgley Rodriguez, RH Ron Marinaccio, RH A unit that was one of the best in MLB last season returns virtually intact, with last year's closer, Robert Suarez, leaving via free agency (Atlanta). But Miller is more than a suitable replacement. Miller's profile, already pretty strong, should rise now that he is no longer with the A's. Rodriguez made his MLB debut last season and could work his way into important innings. Rodriguez and Marinaccio earned the final two bullpen spots. Catcher (2) Freddy Fermin Luis Campusano Fermin enters his first season as a starting catcher. While his defense isn't a question, his offense could be, although he had a terrific spring with the bat. Conversely, Campusano struggled this spring at the plate, which is by far the stronger part of his game. Infield (6) Gavin Sheets, 1B Jake Cronenworth, 2B Manny Machado, 3B Xander Bogaerts, SS Nick Castellanos, 1B-OF Ty France, 1B-2B-3B-LF France benefited from Song's injury to make the team as a non-roster player out of spring training. He hit well and showed he can play second and third base, positions he hasn't played much in recent MLB seasons. He did win the AL Gold Glove at first base last year. Castellanos was the headline acquisition in this group following his fallout in Philadelphia. He should get a lot of time between designated hitter and first base. Otherwise, Machado, Bogaerts, and Cronenworth as back as starters. Outfield (5) Ramon Laureano, LF Jackson Merrill, CF Fernando Tatis Jr., RF Miguel Andujar, LF-3B-1B Bryce Johnson, OF Tatis will be the key to how this offense clicks, regardless of where he hits in the order. Tatis had a nice World Baseball Classic, which could ignite him to start the season. With no starting jobs available due to the presence of Laureano, Merrill, and Tatis, Andujar was a free-agent addition meant to bolster the bench. While he doesn't hit many homers anymore, he does hit the ball well, especially against left-handers. Merrill is looking to bounce back from an injury-filled 2025. View the full article
  9. New Marlins outfielder Austin Slater and manager Clayton McCullough talk with the media about Slater's one-year free agent deal and roster fit. View the full article
  10. Coming off a franchise-record win total and an NLCS loss to the Dodgers, the 2019 Brewers turned toward youth in the rotation. That sentence applies again in 2026, too. Back then, it made perfect sense, with a trio of high-upside arms in Corbin Burnes, Freddy Peralta and Brandon Woodruff leading the young staff. The parallels are obvious, but the Brewers hope for a smoother start this time. While 2019 ended with a crushing Wild Card loss to eventual champion Washington, the early returns from two-thirds of the young group were rocky. Milwaukee’s front office had bet on the trio’s potential based on performance, development and skill sets. None had contributed much as starters the year prior, but their relief work—particularly in the postseason—showed flashes of real brilliance in 2018. Burnes (24 years old, 38 IP pre-2019): 2.61 ERA, 1.00 WHIP in 2018 2.00 ERA, 0.56 WHIP in nine postseason games Baseball America No. 46 overall prospect (pre-2018) and top Brewers farmhand Peralta (23 years old, 78.1 IP pre-2019): 2.65 ERA, 0.96 WHIP in first half of 2018 Three shutout innings in NLCS Game 4 Sub-2.70 ERA in 141 minor-league innings Woodruff (26 years old, 85.1 IP pre-2019): 2.03 ERA in 26.2 relief innings 20 K, 3 BB, 2.19 ERA (1.13 FIP) in four playoff outings Baseball America No. 61 prospect (pre-2018) with big minor-league performances You can see the vision. With a full offseason and spring to develop them, the Brewers hoped the upside would outweigh the risk. But the plan unraveled early—because baseball is hard, and development is never linear. Particularly for young pitchers, there is an ebb and flow to finding your way. With Peralta as the most experienced of the three at the big-league level (he had only 153 service days), maybe the organization was a little too confident. Burnes’s first four starts yielded 11 home runs in 17.2 innings and a 10.70 ERA. He spent most of the year shuttling between Milwaukee and the minors, posting a 7.70 ERA in 31.1 relief innings with the Brewers. Peralta fared only slightly better, sporting an 8.31 ERA in his first five starts before settling into a relief role (4.01 ERA in 49.1 IP). He didn't allow an earned run over his final five outings (6.1 IP), all in September, with 12 strikeouts, two wins, a hold and just one walk. Woodruff was the lone bright spot as a starter. He wasn’t dominant, but his May (1.36 ERA, 0.73 WHIP) was phenomenal, and he battled admirably in June and July to earn a 3.75 ERA to that point in the season. An oblique injury slowed him, but he returned to deliver four critical innings in the Wild Card Game. We know what these three became, but 2019 remains a reminder: expectations should stay realistic, and pitching development isn’t linear. The Brewers quickly turned to their depth that year, and they’ve built similar coverage for 2026. So how do the new arms compare? Milwaukee will open the season with four relatively young and inexperienced starters: Jacob Misiorowski (24 years old), Kyle Harrison (24), Brandon Sproat (25) and Chad Patrick (27). Some have more big-league innings than the 2019 group entering that season, and Patrick is the oldest. Harrison, despite his age, has nearly 200 MLB innings and probably doesn’t fit the “inexperienced” label. But the loose comparisons still line up: a Brandon (Sproat vs. Woodruff), a No. 39 with a nasty cutter (Patrick vs. Burnes), and an excitable youngster coming off a postseason breakout (Misiorowski vs. Peralta). Of course, the optimism for this group has concrete support, not just a comparison to the trio of the past. Misiorowski is one of baseball’s most electric young arms. His small 2025 sample included a dazzling postseason: 1.50 ERA (2.30 FIP) in 12 innings with 16 strikeouts and just three walks—highlighted by five dominant frames against the Dodgers. Patrick impressed early last year, with a 2.62 ERA (3.09 FIP) in his first 68.2 innings as a starter. After a midseason stumble, he stabilized in the bullpen and shined in October, striking out 11 with one walk in nine playoff innings—including five massive outs in NLDS Game 5. Sproat, Baseball America’s No. 81 prospect, is the least experienced, with just 22 service days. But his stuff is real, and despite a 4.79 ERA in his four MLB starts, his 2.80 FIP suggests more to come—especially with Milwaukee’s defense behind him. As usual, the Brewers’ season will hinge on youth and pitching. The talent is undeniable, but expecting no growing pains on their way to great heights is unfair. Maybe these guys are different. Maybe Milwaukee’s modern pitching infrastructure helps smooth the bumps. Or maybe it gets messy, and the depth gets tested. That’s not inherently bad—just uncertain. So, do these young starters follow a path similar to Woodruff, Peralta and Burnes? Or do they carve their own track—be it better or worse? The team's chances to win the pennant this time around depend heavily on the answer to that question. View the full article
  11. Coming off a franchise-record win total and an NLCS loss to the Dodgers, the 2019 Brewers turned toward youth in the rotation. That sentence applies again in 2026, too. Back then, it made perfect sense, with a trio of high-upside arms in Corbin Burnes, Freddy Peralta and Brandon Woodruff leading the young staff. The parallels are obvious, but the Brewers hope for a smoother start this time. While 2019 ended with a crushing Wild Card loss to eventual champion Washington, the early returns from two-thirds of the young group were rocky. Milwaukee’s front office had bet on the trio’s potential based on performance, development and skill sets. None had contributed much as starters the year prior, but their relief work—particularly in the postseason—showed flashes of real brilliance in 2018. Burnes (24 years old, 38 IP pre-2019): 2.61 ERA, 1.00 WHIP in 2018 2.00 ERA, 0.56 WHIP in nine postseason games Baseball America No. 46 overall prospect (pre-2018) and top Brewers farmhand Peralta (23 years old, 78.1 IP pre-2019): 2.65 ERA, 0.96 WHIP in first half of 2018 Three shutout innings in NLCS Game 4 Sub-2.70 ERA in 141 minor-league innings Woodruff (26 years old, 85.1 IP pre-2019): 2.03 ERA in 26.2 relief innings 20 K, 3 BB, 2.19 ERA (1.13 FIP) in four playoff outings Baseball America No. 61 prospect (pre-2018) with big minor-league performances You can see the vision. With a full offseason and spring to develop them, the Brewers hoped the upside would outweigh the risk. But the plan unraveled early—because baseball is hard, and development is never linear. Particularly for young pitchers, there is an ebb and flow to finding your way. With Peralta as the most experienced of the three at the big-league level (he had only 153 service days), maybe the organization was a little too confident. Burnes’s first four starts yielded 11 home runs in 17.2 innings and a 10.70 ERA. He spent most of the year shuttling between Milwaukee and the minors, posting a 7.70 ERA in 31.1 relief innings with the Brewers. Peralta fared only slightly better, sporting an 8.31 ERA in his first five starts before settling into a relief role (4.01 ERA in 49.1 IP). He didn't allow an earned run over his final five outings (6.1 IP), all in September, with 12 strikeouts, two wins, a hold and just one walk. Woodruff was the lone bright spot as a starter. He wasn’t dominant, but his May (1.36 ERA, 0.73 WHIP) was phenomenal, and he battled admirably in June and July to earn a 3.75 ERA to that point in the season. An oblique injury slowed him, but he returned to deliver four critical innings in the Wild Card Game. We know what these three became, but 2019 remains a reminder: expectations should stay realistic, and pitching development isn’t linear. The Brewers quickly turned to their depth that year, and they’ve built similar coverage for 2026. So how do the new arms compare? Milwaukee will open the season with four relatively young and inexperienced starters: Jacob Misiorowski (24 years old), Kyle Harrison (24), Brandon Sproat (25) and Chad Patrick (27). Some have more big-league innings than the 2019 group entering that season, and Patrick is the oldest. Harrison, despite his age, has nearly 200 MLB innings and probably doesn’t fit the “inexperienced” label. But the loose comparisons still line up: a Brandon (Sproat vs. Woodruff), a No. 39 with a nasty cutter (Patrick vs. Burnes), and an excitable youngster coming off a postseason breakout (Misiorowski vs. Peralta). Of course, the optimism for this group has concrete support, not just a comparison to the trio of the past. Misiorowski is one of baseball’s most electric young arms. His small 2025 sample included a dazzling postseason: 1.50 ERA (2.30 FIP) in 12 innings with 16 strikeouts and just three walks—highlighted by five dominant frames against the Dodgers. Patrick impressed early last year, with a 2.62 ERA (3.09 FIP) in his first 68.2 innings as a starter. After a midseason stumble, he stabilized in the bullpen and shined in October, striking out 11 with one walk in nine playoff innings—including five massive outs in NLDS Game 5. Sproat, Baseball America’s No. 81 prospect, is the least experienced, with just 22 service days. But his stuff is real, and despite a 4.79 ERA in his four MLB starts, his 2.80 FIP suggests more to come—especially with Milwaukee’s defense behind him. As usual, the Brewers’ season will hinge on youth and pitching. The talent is undeniable, but expecting no growing pains on their way to great heights is unfair. Maybe these guys are different. Maybe Milwaukee’s modern pitching infrastructure helps smooth the bumps. Or maybe it gets messy, and the depth gets tested. That’s not inherently bad—just uncertain. So, do these young starters follow a path similar to Woodruff, Peralta and Burnes? Or do they carve their own track—be it better or worse? The team's chances to win the pennant this time around depend heavily on the answer to that question. View the full article
  12. Opening Day arrives with all the usual pomp and circumstance, and in 2026, it carries a familiar mix of optimism and uncertainty for the Minnesota Twins—albeit, perhaps, with a bit more desperation tinging the optimism and a bit more dread mixed into the uncertainty. The roster is finalized. The long grind of spring training is over. Now comes the part that counts. There is something different about Opening Day. The pageantry feels bigger, the expectations feel sharper, and every roster decision suddenly matters more. Over the course of 162 games, this group will evolve, fracture, and reshape itself. But for now, these are the 26 players entrusted with carrying the Twins into a new season. Each one comes with a question. Catchers Ryan Jeffers: Can his body withstand the rigors of catching 100-plus games? Minnesota is committed to Jeffers taking on a heavier workload behind the plate. That is easier said than done. Catching is unforgiving, and durability has always been part of the evaluation. In his final year of team control, how his body holds up could directly impact both his performance and his future. Victor Caratini: How much will he be used at DH or first base? Caratini is more than just a backup. The Twins want his bat in the lineup, which means time away from the catcher position. How often they find those opportunities could determine how valuable he becomes. Infielders Josh Bell: Can the Twins help him improve below-average defense at first base? Minnesota has turned first base defense into a strength with recent Gold Glove winners in Carlos Santana and Ty France. Bell is not likely to continue that trend, but he doesn't need to. If he can simply be playable, his bat will carry the value. Luke Keaschall: Can he avoid a sophomore slump? There weren't many bright spots in 2025, but Keaschall was one of them. Now the league adjusts. The question is whether he can adjust back and meet rising expectations. Brooks Lee: Can he finally lock in the bat-to-ball skills he showed as a top prospect? Lee needs to solidify himself. That starts with steady defense at shortstop and continues with contact skills that once defined his profile. The margin for error is shrinking. Royce Lewis: Were his offensive struggles this spring a sign of a larger issue? A revamped swing led to a rough spring. Small samples can be misleading, but timing matters. If those struggles carry over, it raises real concern for one of the lineup’s most important hitters. Kody Clemens: Can he establish a regular role? Clemens has shown flashes, especially when given consistent at-bats. The problem is opportunity. With multiple left-handed options ahead of him, he must force the issue. Tristan Gray: Is his defense strong enough to back up at shortstop? The Twins chose Gray over other options like Orlando Arcia and Ryan Kreidler. That decision now puts pressure on his glove. If he can't handle the position, the roster math changes quickly. Outfielders Byron Buxton: Can he replicate his 2025 campaign? Last season was a reminder of what Buxton can be at his best. Health, production, and impact are all aligned. Doing it again is the challenge. Matt Wallner: Is 35+ home runs out of the question? Wallner’s role is clear. Hit for power. The Twins need it, and the time to prove he can deliver consistently is now. Austin Martin: Can he build off his strong finish to 2025? Martin earned trust late last season. Now, he steps into a key bench role as the primary right-handed option. Sustaining that momentum is critical. James Outman: Does he provide enough value to stick on the roster? Outman won the job over other options, such as Alan Roden. The tools are intriguing, but consistency has always been the hurdle. Trevor Larnach: Why is he still on the roster? It's a fair question. The roster leans heavily left-handed, and Larnach has yet to fully separate himself. He will need to produce quickly to justify his spot. Starting Pitchers Joe Ryan: Can he be the ace of the staff? An All-Star season set the stage, but back concerns this spring add uncertainty. If Ryan takes another step, he anchors the rotation. Either way, though, his future could become a trade deadline storyline. Bailey Ober: Will his velocity concerns follow him all season? Velocity trends have been a lingering concern. If this is the new normal, Ober will need to adapt in other ways to remain effective. Taj Bradley: Can he finally break out at the big-league level? After years of prospect hype and extended big-league exposure, the time has come. The flashes are there. Now it's about consistency, and consolidating some of the improvements he's made since coming to Minnesota at the deadline last year. Simeon Woods Richardson: Is there another level to his performance? He has been a steady contributor, but the Twins need more than steady. A jump toward mid-rotation reliability from Woods Richardson would change the outlook for the entire staff, but he seems to be working at the boundaries of his ability already. Mick Abel: Can he show enough control to become a playoff-caliber starter? Abel forced his way onto the roster with a strong spring. The stuff is undeniable. The command will determine everything—and that means both good location and consistent execution. Relief Pitchers Justin Topa: Can he show enough to be the team’s second-best right-handed option? Acquired in the Jorge Polanco trade, Topa was brought in to stabilize the bullpen. Late-inning trust must be earned quickly, and last year, he didn't look like a high-leverage arm. Cole Sands: Which version shows up in 2026? In 2024, Sands was a revelation. In 2025, he regressed. The gap between those versions is significant, and the Twins need the better one—one who throws harder, handles lefties better and misses more bats than he did last season. Eric Orze: Can he prove the Rays made a mistake? The Tampa Bay Rays rarely miss on bullpen evaluations. Orze has a chance to challenge that reputation, and his splitter suits the Twins' predilections nicely. Zak Kent: Can his strikeout numbers translate? An 11.8 strikeouts per nine rate in Triple-A is impressive. The question is whether major-league hitters will chase the same way minor-league ones did, or whether Kent can still miss bats while being forced into the zone more often. Cody Laweryson: How long does he stick on the roster? The last bullpen spot is always fluid. Laweryson enters as the most vulnerable arm, and will need immediate results to avoid a quick trip back to St. Paul. Taylor Rogers: What does he have left in the tank? Rogers is likely to open the season in the closer role. Experience matters, but performance will dictate how long that lasts. He's become such a low-intensity sinker-sweeper guy that the strikeout rate will be an important gauge of his utility. Anthony Banda: Can he get right-handed hitters out? Left-on-left matchups are not enough anymore. Without success against righties, his role becomes limited; that's why he was available this spring. Kody Funderburk: Can he establish himself as a late-inning option? A strong finish last season earned confidence. Now comes the test of sustaining that performance in meaningful situations, and of being consistent in a role that probably won't be. Opening Day rosters feel permanent in the moment, but they never are. By the end of the first weekend, there is a real chance this group already looks different. Injuries happen. Roles shift. Performances force decisions. That is the nature of a 162-game season. For now, these 26 players carry (seemingly) 206 questions into the year. The answers will define not only their individual paths, but the direction of the Twins season as a whole. What questions do you have regarding the players on the Opening Day roster? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View the full article
  13. Brandon Neely is a right-handed pitching prospect for the Boston Red Sox and is ranked among the organization's top 30 prospects. After a solid career at the University of Florida, he was selected in the third round of the 2024 MLB Draft. Red Sox are working him as a reliever turned starter; however, he has the fixings to become an elite bullpen piece of the future. View the full article
  14. The Blue Jays have named the 26 players who will make up their active roster when their season starts on Friday, March 27. The biggest surprise, if you can call it that, is that Rule 5 draft pick Spencer Miles has earned a spot in the bullpen over the more experienced Chase Lee. Meanwhile, the other notable (though even less surprising) piece of news is that Leo Jiménez failed to earn a spot on the 26-man roster and thus was designated for assignment. As expected, Angel Bastardo, another Rule 5 pick, was also DFA'd. Here is Toronto's official Opening Day roster, listed by position and in alphabetical order: Pitchers Dylan Cease Braydon Fisher Mason Fluharty Kevin Gausman Jeff Hoffman Eric Lauer Brendon Little Spencer Miles Tommy Nance Cody Ponce Tyler Rogers Max Scherzer Louis Varland Catchers Tyler Heineman Alejandro Kirk Infielders Ernie Clement Andres Gimenez Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Kazuma Okamoto Outfielders Addison Barger Nathan Lukes Jesus Sanchez Davis Schneider George Springer Myles Straw Daulton Varsho Rehabbing pitchers Shane Bieber, Yimi García, José Berríos, and Trey Yesavage have all been placed on the 15-day IL, while injured outfielder Anthony Santander has been placed on the 10-day IL (retroactive to March 22). They join Bowden Francis, who landed on the 60-day IL back in February. View the full article
  15. Jed Hoyer has been in charge of building the Chicago Cubs roster since late 2020, when Theo Epstein resigned and Hoyer was promoted to president of baseball operations. The 2026 campaign, then, will be his sixth as the architect of the club. He's 0-for-6, so far, when it comes to building a solid bench. This year, the glaring, flashing beacon of Hoyer's annual failure is Scott Kingery. Set to turn 32 next month, Kingery has 1,156 career plate appearances and a .227/.278/.382 batting line. He's a solid but unremarkable defender at any of a handful of positions. He is, by any definition, below the replacement level for a team with any semblance of developmental competence or resources to spend. By now, though, Cubs fans have become accustomed to having someone essentially unplayable keeping a portion of the bench warm each spring. In 2021, Eric Sogard played 78 games for the Cubs, despite batting .249/.283/.314 and being unimpressive at each position where David Ross played him. In 2022, the team tried out Jonathan Villar, Michael Hermosillo, and Clint Frazier in stints of varying lengths. Those were rebuilding years, but those weren't players who came in via July trades; they were the team's Plan A for bench spots. Nor did things improve as (in theory) the Cubs pivoted toward contention in 2023. That was the year of Trey Mancini, Eric Hosmer and Edwin Rios, Though the 2023 Cubs' failures of depth were responsible for their missing the postseason, Hoyer learned nothing. In 2024, he brought back all three of Patrick Wisdom, Miles Mastrobuoni, and Nick Madrigal, when even a generous assessment and an optimistic vision would only have justified keeping two of them. He also sought a mulligan on his repeated failures at first base by signing Garrett Cooper. In 2025, having failed spectacularly again, he invested more resources in addressing the bench—but came up just as empty, because Justin Turner, Gage Workman and Vidal Bruján were uncannily, unaccountably similar to the players who had flopped in their very roles over the previous three years. This winter, though, Hoyer did nothing better to deepen his positional roster. He's falling into a pattern that stretches across his tenure as the leader of the team: paying strict attention to detail in choosing big moves and mostly getting them right, but neglecting the bench or making the same mistakes there over and over. In fact, his approach to the bench has been very similar to the one he takes with the bullpen. It's worked like a charm for the relief corps, which might be giving the team false confidence about applying the same plan to the bench—where they've had no success whatsoever. Under Hoyer, the Cubs have signed major free agents (Seiya Suzuki, Dansby Swanson, Cody Bellinger and Alex Bregman) and extended key contributors (Ian Happ, Nico Hoerner, Pete Crow-Armstrong). They've done well with those moves, and they build a solid starting lineup almost every year. But their lower-level moves have missed much more often than they've hit; the only mild exceptions are catchers Yan Gomes and Carson Kelly. This winter, Hoyer signed veteran slugger Tyler Austin, who was penciled into one spot on the bench. After he was hurt early in camp, though, the team scrambled a bit. They scooped up Michael Conforto, to complement the winner of a competition between minor-league signees Dylan Carlson and Chas McCormick for the fourth outfield spot. If Austin had been the team's only spring loss, they might have slotted Matt Shaw in as their backup infielder, but once Suzuki went down with a sprained PCL, the path opened for an extra infielder, with Shaw getting more time in right field. Thus, Kingery will sponge up a spot on a team with playoff aspirations, for the first time in his entire career. He was once a moderately hyped prospect, but he was a bust, and his only significant playing time since the pandemic came with last year's Angels. It's a galling error in team-building to have Kingery on the roster, even if it's only for a fortnight. It's a stark reminder of Hoyer's consistent inability to keep up with (among others) the rival Milwaukee Brewers, who perennially find lots of value at the bottom of their roster and with low-level pickups. That's why the Brewers have run circles around the Cubs for the last half-decade, and if they beat Chicago out for a fourth straight division title in 2026, it will be for the same reason. Kingery didn't even play well this spring, except by drawing a fistful of walks and stealing some bases once he got on. He's on the roster solely because, when two players were hurt in the preseason, Hoyer's creaky construction of the roster was immediately exposed. It shouldn't be long before Kingery is pushed out, but even once he is, Conforto and Carlson will have relatively safe jobs—and neither is an especially good bet to have a good 2026. The Cubs must do better at this, but they extended Hoyer last summer, so the decision-maker will remain the same. Hoyer needs to do some serious self-evaluation and improve as a reinforcer of his positional core, but it's already too late to put the pieces in place as well as he should have for this year. View the full article
  16. Jays Centre is taking a close look at every position on the Toronto Blue Jays heading into the 2026 season. Check out prior entries in the series here: Catcher First Base Second Base Shortstop Third Base Left Field Right Field Toronto Blue Jays Designated Hitters at a Glance Starter: George Springer Backup: Anthony Santander Just Passing Through: Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Alejandro Kirk, anyone rehabbing an injury First Man Up: Eloy Jiménez George Springer won the Silver Slugger Award last season behind a resurgent campaign at age 35. He was hot out of the gates and stayed that way until the season ended. In his ‘slumpiest’ month (June), he still put up a 108 wRC+ (indicating he was 8% better than the league average). In each of July, August, September and October, he was over 200. He led all Blue Jays in Wins Above Replacement (both the Baseball Reference and FanGraphs versions), hit more homers (32) than anyone on the team, and led the club in stolen bases (18) and OPS+ (161). I say if he repeats a season like that, we let him rename the position to whatever he wants. Springer was at his best when hitting in the DH spot, but he only played about half of the Jays’ games there. He also made appearances in all three outfield spots. While the bat stayed hot when Springer was in the field, his time on the defensive side of the ball was below average. He made 57 appearances across the outfield, and you can choose your favourite metric or the good ol’ eye test – it seems pretty clear Springer’s best spot in the lineup is at the DH. The second most DH appearances on the team went to the newly acquired Anthony Santander, who played 30 games at DH (plus an additional 23 in the field). Santander never looked right at the plate, and a (practically) season-ending trip to the IL in May suggests he was probably playing hurt from the beginning (with his outfield wall collision being the proverbial camel’s straw). Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Alejandro Kirk made 23 and seven appearances at DH, respectively, mainly as maintenance days from their usual position. No one else remaining on the team made more than one. The real question around the DH spot this season will be: Can Springer do it again? Before the news broke that Santander would be missing the majority of this season, both Springer and the Jays as an organization talked about rotating players through the field and DH spots. Springer has continually expressed a desire to play the field, and it will be up to manager John Schnieder to find the right balance of keeping one of his star players happy, fresh and productive. Based on last season, I’d say that can be accomplished. Outside of something happening to another player that necessitates an extended stay at DH, there isn’t anyone healthy on the roster that would threaten Springer’s hold on the position. If Springer went down, however, there also isn’t a clear successor. The Jays have plenty of capable players who could be comfortably rotated through the DH spot if Springer needs a few maintenance days. If he were to see an extended absence from the lineup, one interesting name to consider is Eloy Jiménez. Bryan Jaeger covered how Jiménez could fit on the roster, and Jiménez had more plate appearances at DH in spring training than any other Blue Jay (43 vs Springer’s 41; no other Jay had more than five). That still doesn’t necessarily put him first in line for the call-up, but if he starts the year hot in Buffalo and Springer struggles, there might be some temptation to shake things up. The DH, or OP if you prefer, is Springer’s to lose, and there’s nothing to suggest that this will be the year that it happens. View the full article
  17. As many managers and front-office leaders will say, the Opening Day roster is good for exactly one day. But it is also a significant achievement for players who have never started a season on an MLB roster. The Milwaukee Brewers on Wednesday revealed the 26 players who will line up along the baselines and be introduced to the American Family Field sellout crowd on Thursday before taking on the Chicago White Sox (1:10 p.m. CT first pitch). As part of that, the Crew had to make several moves to get down to that number. Here is what the Brewers did (all 15-day injured list moves are retroactive to Sunday): Optioned right-handed reliever Easton McGee to Triple-A Nashville. Right-handed starter Quinn Priester (right thoracic outlet syndrome) was placed on the 15-day IL. Right-handed reliever Craig Yoho (strained right calf) was placed on the 15-day IL. Left-handed Rob Zastryzny (strained left shoulder) on the 15-day IL. Outfielder Steward Berroa (strained right shoulder) was placed on the 15-day IL. Confirmed the previously announced move of outfielder Akil Baddoo (strained left quad) to the 60-day IL. That is the bad news. Here is the good news: Making their first Opening Day roster are Jacob Misiorowski, Brandon Sproat, and Grant Anderson. Starting rotation (5) Jacob Misiorowski, RH Chad Patrick, RH Brandon Sproat, RH Kyle Harrison, LH Brandon Woodruff, RH The only question was if Woodruff would be healthy enough to begin the season or have to go on the IL for a brief time. Worries cropped up with a big drop in velocity in the fourth inning of this last spring start, but he will continue his comeback from a lat injury in the majors. Expect short outings to begin the season. Misiorowski starts Opening Day after making his MLB debut in June. There is plenty of talent here, but also lots of inexperience outside of Woodruff. Sproat is the Freddy Peralta replacement, coming over in the trade with the New York Mets. Bullpen (8) Trevor Megill, RH Abner Uribe, RH Angel Zerpa Aaron Ashby, LH Jared Koenig, LH DL Hall, LH Grant Anderson, RH Jake Woodford, RH Woodford joined the team on Tuesday in a trade with the Tampa Bay Rays, which cost McGee a spot on the Opening Day roster. Megill and Uribe are a terrific 1-2 punch at the back end, and now get support from Zerpa, who came over from the Kansas City Royals via trade. The depth is very good here. Catcher (2) William Contreras Gary Sanchez Contreras had offseason surgery on the middle finger of his catching hand, an injury that happened late in the 2024 season and plagued him throughout 2025. He could be an MVP candidate as he begins the season healthy. Infield (6) Andrew Vaughn, 1B Brice Turang, 2B Luis Rengifo, 3B Joey Ortiz, SS Jake Bauers, 1B-OF David Hamilton, IF Rengifo takes over at third base following the trade of Caleb Durbin to the Boston Red Sox. Can he get back to his pre-injury 2024 form? Vaughn begins his first full season with the Crew after making a splash following his trade from the White Sox during the 2025 season. Ortiz has a fresh start after a frustrating offensive showing in 2025, his first as the Brewers' starting shortstop. Outfield (5) Christian Yelich, LF Jackson Chourio, LF Garrett Mitchell, CF Sal Frelick, RF Brandon Lockridge, CF Mitchell is looking to stay healthy and showcase the skills that led the Brewers to draft him in the first round in 2020. If he can, this could be a pretty productive group offensively, with Yelich at designated hitter. Chourio, just two weeks after turning 22, has shown the floor to his game is 20 homers and 20 stolen bases. He is the youngest player in MLB history to have back-to-back 20-20 seasons. This will be a standout defensive group regardless. View the full article
  18. When Royce Lewis was selected first overall in the 2017 MLB Draft, the expectation was simple. He was supposed to be a future superstar and the face of the Twins franchise. Alas, his journey in professional baseball has been anything but a smooth ascent to the firmament. Multiple ACL tears and a lengthy injury history have interrupted his development at nearly every turn, forcing him to spend more time rehabbing than refining his game. Even so, the flashes have always been there. The moments that remind you exactly why he went No. 1 overall have not been hard to find, especially when the lights were brightest. That's the version of Lewis everyone has been waiting to see over a full season, which is why this spring has drawn some attention for the wrong reasons. In 45 at-bats this spring, Lewis batted .133/.160/.289, with 2 home runs, 2 stolen bases, 2 walks and 11 strikeouts. The surface-level production was rough, and even when you look a little deeper, the contact quality offered little reassurance. Lewis did post a reasonably strong 107.4 MPH 90th-percentile exit velocity, but his average exit velocity was just 88.7 MPH and he hit just over 35% of his balls in play at 95 MPH or higher. For a player whose value comes from the damage he can do when he connects, that lack of consistent authority stands out. It's also worth noting that this has not come against top-tier pitching. According to Baseball Reference’s opponent quality metric, Lewis faced a 7.9 out of 10 level of competition this spring, with 10 representing a typical major-league pitcher. In simple terms, much of his playing time came against minor-league arms, rather than big leaguers, which only adds to the concern one feels at first glance. That's really where this conversation starts. It's fair to ask whether these struggles are simply a rough stretch or something more meaningful, but the answer depends on how much weight you want to give a handful of spring at-bats. There are several reasons to believe this was basically a fluke. The most obvious place to start is his batting average on balls in play, which was an atrocious .114. That number isn't just low; it's essentially impossible to sustain. Even hitters who are consistently overmatched don't run a mark that low over time, which means some level of correction is inevitable as the sample grows. Beyond that, there are still signs that the underlying impact ability has not disappeared. Lewis produced a 13.5% barrel rate this spring, according to Statcast, which tells us that his high EV90 wasn't fueled by hammering the ball into the ground. That figure would have placed him comfortably above the league average last season, and suggests that when he does square the ball up, the quality of contact is still there. The disconnect comes from the inconsistency in getting to that contact. His overall exit velocity and strikeout rate point to a hitter who is not consistently on time or fully comfortable in the box. That would not be unusual, given the context of his offseason. Lewis made adjustments to both his stance and approach over the winter, and that type of change often comes with an adjustment period. Even established hitters can look out of sync in spring training when they are working through mechanical tweaks, especially when the focus is on process, rather than immediate results. Pile the question of sample size on top of these considerations, and it's easy to downplay the problem. Lewis has already shown that he can perform at a high level against major-league pitching, and he has done it in meaningful moments. The raw talent that made him the top pick in the draft is still present, and the underlying metrics suggest that his ability to impact the baseball has not disappeared. As we've already documented, though, there are reasons beyond the stat line to be concerned, too. What matters more is how he looks once the games begin to count, when the focus shifts from adjustments to execution. For now, the results are not pretty, but they're also not especially predictive. It is fair to acknowledge the slow start, and it's reasonable to monitor how he looks early in the season. At the same time, the combination of a tiny sample, an unsustainably low BABIP, and ongoing adjustments makes it difficult to treat this as anything more than a temporary lull. If you have to choose between the two, view this as an unimportant (though not strictly encouraging) spring blip. As the season begins, though, he sure hasn't answered the questions that hung over him all winter. View the full article
  19. One quirk of the 2026 Miami Marlins schedule is that the organization's first minor league game begins before its major league opener. The Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp host the Rochester Red Wings this Friday at 7:05 p.m. ET, while first pitch of Opening Day in Miami will be approximately five minutes later. The Jumbo Shrimp announced their initial 30-man active roster on Wednesday afternoon. Don't get too attached to this group, though, as Triple-A rosters tend to churn constantly throughout the course of the season. Seven of our Fish On First Top 30 prospects have been assigned to Jacksonville as indicated in parentheses below. That's without including Maximo Acosta (FOF #15), who will likely be optioned to Triple-A once he recovers from his left oblique strain. Pitchers (15): Garrett Acton, Bradley Blalock, Josh Ekness (FOF #27), Dax Fulton, Braxton Garrett, Cade Gibson, Ryan Gusto, William Kempner, Zach McCambley, Patrick Monteverde, Jack Ralston, Robby Snelling (FOF #3), Jake Walkinshaw, Josh White (FOF #25), Tyler Zuber Catchers (3): Bennett Hostetler, Joe Mack (FOF #2), Brian Navarreto Infielders (7): Jesús Bastidas, Jacob Berry, Deyvison De Los Santos (FOF #28), Nathan Martorella, Cody Morissette, Johnny Olmstead, Jared Serna Outfielders (5): Kemp Alderman (FOF #10), Matthew Etzel, Daniel Johnson, Ethan O’Donnell, Andrew Pintar 7-day IL: Evan McKendry, Jesús Tinoco, Thomas White (FOF #1) Notable prospects who finished the 2025 season with the Shrimp but didn't crack this roster include right-hander Nigel Belgrave and left-hander Dale Stanavich. Expect them to start off with Double-A Pensacola. Pensacola's full roster will be announced next week. View the full article
  20. Spring training is a time for timing to return, for mechanics to sharpen, and for everyone around the game to find their rhythm again. That does not just apply to hitters and pitchers. Broadcasters are shaking off rust too, and sometimes that leads to moments that take on a life of their own. That is exactly what happened in the Twins television booth when Glen Perkins and Cory Provus found themselves tangled in an exchange about Byron Buxton and his uniform style. It started innocently enough. Or at least it was supposed to. Perkins attempted to describe Buxton’s preference for wearing his baseball pants all the way down rather than pulled up to show high socks. Instead, he delivered a question that immediately veered off course. Perkins (GP): “You ever seen Buck with his pants down?” Provus, caught off guard, tried to clarify. Provus (CP): “Uh, no. Like in shorts?” GP: “No, like he’s got…he doesn’t have his,... no socks showing.” CP: “Ah, I see what you’re saying.” From there, the moment snowballed. Perkins tried to explain. Provus tried to recover. The booth never quite found its footing again, and within hours, the clip was circulating far beyond the usual Twins audience. It is the kind of exchange that lives in the uncomfortable middle ground between confusion and comedy. No one involved meant anything beyond a simple observation about uniform style, but the phrasing turned it into something else entirely. That disconnect is exactly why it spread. To their credit, Perkins and Provus leaned into it. During the spring training finale against the Boston Red Sox, they revisited the moment with a level of self awareness that made it even better. CP: “Take a look at that sharp uniform today, and just because we are thorough, the baseball pants the baseball pants are down at the bottom.” Perkins followed with a line that perfectly captured the absurdity of the entire situation. GP: “He has got his pants up around his waist, but also down around his ankles at the same time.” CP: “Baseball pants” GP: “Baseball pants” CP: “Baseball pants. Well that became a thing” At that point, everyone was in on the joke. Even Derek Shelton, who joined the broadcast, admitted the moment had taken on a life of its own. He said his phone lit up with messages from fellow parents in his volleyball circles, all reacting to what they had heard. His reaction was about what you would expect from someone trying to process the unexpected. "The first time I heard it, I was like, 'Good God, I don't know how to comment on this or think about it.' So, yeah, I don't know," Shelton said. "I was actually going to say last inning that Buck looks good with his pants down, not his pants on." Shelton even joked about nearly adding his own line to the chaos, saying he considered pointing out that Buxton looked good with his pants down, before wisely thinking better of it. Most importantly, he recognized what the moment had become. DS: “You guys definitely caught people’s attention. And the one thing about it is no one got canceled, which is the most important thing. And number two, you guys decided that you were going to bring the Twins to the forefront of the viral universe for about four or five hours.” That might be the most accurate summary of all. For his part, Buxton handled it exactly how you would expect from a veteran who has seen just about everything at this point. According to Perkins, the center fielder could not do anything but laugh when the two crossed paths afterward. Spring training can feel long. The games do not count. The repetitions can blur together. But every now and then, something breaks through the routine and reminds everyone that baseball is still a game, and the people around it are still human. This was one of those moments. It was awkward. It was unintentionally hilarious. It was completely harmless. And in a sport that often takes itself very seriously, it was a reminder that sometimes the best content is the kind no one plans. All it took was one question, one misunderstanding, and one pair of baseball pants to give the Twins their most unexpected viral moment of the spring. View the full article
  21. With the emergence of Maikel Garcia as an everyday starter at third base in 2025, Garcia has locked down the position for 2026, barring injury. If Garcia needs a day off, there are a few options in the Royals system to give him a break. Royals Centerfielders At A Glance Starter: Maikel Garcia Backups: Nick Loftin Depth: Tyler Tolbert Prospects: Peyton Wilson, Colton Becker, Sam Ruta, Austin Charles Non-Roster Invites: Josh Rojas, Brandon Drury, Kevin Newman Royals fWAR Ranking Last Year: 2nd out of 30 Royals fWAR Projection This Year: 7th out of 30 The Good Garcia is coming off a career year in which he posted 5.6 fWAR and slashed .286/.351/.449 with a 121 wRC+. In 2025, Garcia earned his first career All-Star selection, won a Gold Glove at third base, and finished 14th in AL MVP voting. Following his stellar season, the Royals rewarded him with a five-year contract extension that will keep him in Kansas City until 2030 with an option for 2031. Garcia carried that production into the World Baseball Classic. Representing his home country, Garcia led Venezuela to win its first-ever WBC championship in 2026. In seven games, Garcia slashed .385/.393/.577, earning tournament MVP honors. Following his contributions to the Venezuelan national team, the Royals will hope he can carry the momentum into the 2026 regular season. Garcia excels at getting on base, posting a wOBA of .345 last season. His plate discipline was borderline elite with chase, whiff, strikeout, and walk rates all grading in the 91st percentile or better. While he does not swing at a very high rate, he excels at getting contact when he does swing, with a zone contact rate of 90.5% (90th percentile). Near the end of 2025, Garcia began spending more time in the leadoff spot and has been hitting there often during his spring training games. After the Royals had struggled to find a consistent threat in the leadoff spot in 2025, Garcia looks to be the leading contender to fill that role and combine with Bobby Witt Jr. at the top of the order. With his on-base abilities combined with his elite plate discipline, Garcia and Witt could become one of the most dangerous one-two punches in the league. The Bad If Garcia can repeat his production from 2025 and remain healthy, the Royals will not have too much to worry about at third base. With the 7th best projection from Fangraphs going into 2026, there’s reason to remain optimistic. If there was an area where Garcia could improve, it is his power profile. barrel rate, max exit velocity, and pull-air percentage are all below league average, which limits his power potential. This is a minor nitpick, and if Garcia can maintain his production in other areas, it will not be a concern. While the backups would offer a sizable drop-off in production, there are a few players whom the Royals could turn to if needed. Nick Loftin will be the primary backup at third base. While his production during spring training has been good, slashing .282/.364/.513 with a 131 wRC+, projections are not as high on him going into 2026. Projections range his wRC+ between 75 and 98, and his projected fWAR ranges from 0.0 to 0.8. The other depth option, Tyler Tolbert, has even lower projections. There have been a couple of standout non-roster invitees in Kevin Newman and Josh Rojas, but they are both looking to bounce back from disappointing 2025 seasons of their own. The Royals will certainly hope that they do not need to rely on either for meaningful innings in 2026, if they even make the final roster. The Bottom Line Maikel Garcia looks like he could be a star in the making following his 2025 and WBC performances and is now a foundational piece for the Royals. If he can remain healthy in 2026, Garcia looks to be poised to continue his stellar form. The Royals do have MLB experience to back up Garcia, should the need occur, but they will offer a noticeable decline in production if called upon. Previous Installments: Second Base Position Analysis Catcher Position Analysis First Base Position Analysis Corner Outfield Position Analysis Center Field Position Analysis View the full article
  22. The initial field for the 2026 National League Rookie of the Year award is crowded. One of the entrants is Chicago Cubs catcher-designated hitter Moisés Ballesteros. The 22-year-old made his debut in 2025 but kept his rookie status, as he stayed below the thresholds of 130 at-bats and 45 days on an active roster. Ballesteros's competitors include New York Mets right-hander Nolan McLean, Cincinnati Reds first baseman Sal Stewart, Miami Marlins outfielder Owen Caissie (hey, we know him), Mets outfielder Carson Benge and St. Louis Cardinals second baseman J.J. Wetherholt. Pittsburgh Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin will join this group as soon as he's promoted from the minor leagues, but the head start the others will have is sure to make things tougher on the teenaged Griffin. If Ballesteros bests his competition, he will become the seventh Cub in franchise history to be voted Rookie of the Year. Previous winners include a Baseball Hall of Famer and a franchise icon. Three Hall of Famers got votes, but fell short. The Rookie of the Year award, which is voted on by members of the Baseball Writers' Association of America, was first given out in 1947. Jackie Robinson was the first recipient, for both leagues. Awards for each league began in 1949. North Side Baseball went through club and Rookie of the Year history to determine the Cubs' 10 best rookie seasons since the award's inception. Results are ranked based on season stats, excitement surrounding the player, and the players who finished behind or ahead of them in the voting. The player's finish in the voting is listed in parentheses. Chicago Cubs 10 Best Rookie Seasons Since 1947 10. Ken Hubbs, 1962 (Rookie of the Year) Hubbs pulled off a huge feat in his ROY season: he beat out Bill Mazeroski for the National League Gold Glove at second base. Mazeroski had won the award the previous two years and would take home the next six. Teammates saw star potential in Hubbs, but tragedy kept it from being realized. Hubbs died on Feb. 13, 1964, when the single-engine Cessna 172 plane he was piloting crashed into Utah Lake in Provo, Utah. He was 22 years old. 9. Randy Hundley, 1966 (4th in voting) The Cubs acquired Hundley in a trade with the San Francisco Giants in December 1965 and named him their No. 1 catcher the following spring. He ran with the opportunity, taking 144 starts behind the plate; hitting 19 home runs; and nabbing a major league-leading 51 baserunners. In hindsight, he deserved better than fourth in the voting. He finished behind middling middle infielders Tommy Helms, Sonny Jackson and Tito Fuentes. 8. Jerome Walton, 1989 (Rookie of the Year) Walton had two things going for him in the voting: he played center field for a division winner, and he set a modern (since 1900) franchise record with a 30-game hitting streak that began in July after the All-Star break. (He still holds that record.) His main competition in the balloting was teammate Dwight Smith, but Walton won comfortably, receiving 22 of the 24 first-place votes. Smith received the other two. Walton also finished 13th in MVP voting. 7. Geovany Soto, 2008 (Rookie of the Year) Soto was a September callup in 2005, 2006 and 2007, so he already knew his way around Wrigley when the club anointed him its No. 1 catcher in 2008. At the plate, Soto delivered premium production: a 120 wRC+, an .868 OPS and 23 homers in 583 plate appearances. Behind the plate, he was a workhorse, making 131 starts. He was an All-Star and he finished 13th in MVP voting. Oh, and he also beat out a fellow named Joey Votto for ROY (probably indefensibly, because Votto batted .297/.368/.506, already flashing his Hall of Fame talent), garnering 31 of 32 first-place votes. 6. Shota Imanaga, 2024 (Fourth in voting) Imanaga joined Kosuke Fukudome and Seiya Suzuki as Japanese stars who had big rookie seasons for the Cubs. The left-hander put up a 2.91 ERA, a 3.72 FIP, a 25.1% strikeout rate and a 4.0% walk rate in 173 1/3 innings; made the NL All-Star team; and finished fifth in NL Cy Young Award voting. He just ran into a loaded rookie class, finishing behind Pittsburgh Pirates ace Paul Skenes, San Diego Padres center fielder Jackson Merrill and Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Jackson Chourio in the voting. 5. Mark Grace, 1988 (Second in voting) Grace gave Cubs fans a preview of what he would bring to the field during his entire 13-year run in Chicago: elite line-drive hitting and bat control, and Gold Glove-caliber defense at first base. That combination wasn't enough for him to beat out Cincinnati Reds third baseman Spuds McKenzie—er, Chris Sabo (as always, Google it)—for Rookie of the Year. In the end, however, Grace had, by far, the better career. Between Sabo beating out Grace and Soto beating out Votto, we can call it even between the Cubs and Reds. 4. Ernie Banks, 1954 (Second in voting) Banks made history the previous September when he, along with fellow infielder Gene Baker, integrated the Cubs. In 1954, he established himself as the franchise's long-term answer at shortstop. Banks played in all 154 games, hitting 19 home runs and a posting a 7.7% strikeout rate. Curiously, he finished 16th in NL MVP voting but second in Rookie of the Year voting to St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Wally Moon, who received no points in the MVP balloting. 3. Billy Williams, 1961 (Rookie of the Year) The sweet-swinging Williams was still eligible for the award in '61 after being up with the Cubs in both 1959 and 1960. He broke camp as the starting right fielder, and then he made the most of the chance: 25 home runs and a .278/.338/.484 slash line in 147 games. The '61 season launched Williams's Hall of Fame career, which ended with him collecting 2,711 hits and 426 home runs. He is, beyond debate, the greatest living Cub, and the proudest remaining symbol of the team's long history. 2. Kris Bryant, 2015 (Rookie of the Year) Imagine how good his rookie season would have been if he had debuted on Opening Day, instead of 12 days later. (That's for the people who are still salty about the service time manipulation). The delay did not affect Bryant. He posted a 136 wRC+, an .858 OPS, 26 home runs and 13 stolen bases in 151 games. He snagged an All-Star berth and finished 11th in MVP voting. Maybe the club was right about his defense at third base, though. Manager Joe Maddon played Bryant at third, first and all three outfield positions, and didn't always play stellar defense at the hot corner. 1. Kerry Wood, 1998 (Rookie of the Year) Wood became a rookie legend in his fifth career outing. On a damp May afternoon at Wrigley Field, the 20-year-old right-hander tied Roger Clemens' nine-inning MLB record with 20 strikeouts in a one-hit, no-walk shutout of the Houston Astros. Wood's feat would be overshadowed that summer by Sammy Sosa's pursuit of Roger Maris' home run record, but the kid from Texas kept putting up strikeouts in the background (33.3% strikeout rate in 166 2/3 innings). He edged out a future Hall of Famer, Colorado Rockies first baseman Todd Helton, for ROY. View the full article
  23. Manny Machado has held down the hot corner for the San Diego Padres since signing a 10-year, $300 million contract before the 2019 season. He has played third base well and, for the most part, been the player Friars fans expected when he left the Los Angeles Dodgers. He hasn't hit fewer than 27 homers, his 2025 total, in any of the full seasons since, being either the No. 1 or No. 2 item on the checklist for opposing pitchers to be aware of in the Padres lineup. There is veteran depth to give Machado some rest and keep his bat fresh, but there is nothing imminent in the prospect pipeline. Padres Third Basemen At A Glance Starter: Manny Machado Backup: Sung Mun Song, Miguel Andujar Depth: Jose Miranda Prospects: Jorge Quintana, Deivid Coronil Padres fWAR ranking last year: Ninth out of 30. Padres fWAR projection this year: Ninth out of 30. The Good One of the anchors of the Padres' offense, Machado bounced back from a subpar, by his standards, 2023 season due to a constant pain in his right elbow to put together similar campaigns in 2024 (.275/.325/.472 slash line) and 2025 (.275/.335/.460). Even the home runs (29 and 27) we nearly identical, while he drove in 105 runs in 2024 to 2025's 95, while reversing that trend when it came to runs scored (77 and 91). He earned down-ballot NL MVP votes each of those seasons. Machado enters 2026 as a 33-year-old, meaning the right-handed hitter should still be producing as the elite hitter that he has been in his career. While he might have lost a little from his 7.1 fWAR season of 2022, when he finished second in NL MVP voting following a .298/.366/.531 slash line with 32 homers and 102 RBIs, he still is an impact bat in the middle of the Padres' order. Part of the reason new manager Craig Stammen is tinkering with the top four in his lineup during spring training is to make sure that not only is the offense maximized, but that Machado has the protection he deserves. Defensively, Machado remains solid. He makes a lot of plays seem routine and never panics. Every throw seems to be a perfect chest-high toss to the first baseman. He also posts every day, having played in 150 or more games every full season (except 2023 with the ailing elbow) since 2014, when a knee injury ended his year early. With reinforcements brought in to play third base in Song and Andujar in particular, Machado could get some time off his feet and still remain in the lineup as the designated hitter, not only keeping him at the top of his game defensively, but more importantly offensively as well. The Bad Machado turns 34 in July. He signed an 11-year, $350 million contract that began in 2023, which means he is on the books through 2033. That deal is light on the front end, with Machado having earned $17.09 million each of the last two years, increasing to $25.09 million this year and jumping to a franchise-record $39.09 million next season, the figure he will make until the deal expires when he is 41 years old. The Padres certainly won't be getting MVP-caliber performances for the final eight years of that contract, but he has also been underpaid the last three seasons and will be this year, too. The Friars are hoping to get another three or four good seasons out of Machado offensively before any decline starts to take place. He struck out 131 times in 2025, two shy off his career worst in 2022. How that affects him defensively is something else to consider seeing as his metrics have slipped in recent years, but that is a discussion to be had down the road. For now, Machado is easily the best defensive option at the hot corner on the roster. The Bottom Line Machado is the present and the future at third base until he proves he can't handle the position, at which time he either moves to first base, left field, or DH. But again, that is at least a few years away. Machado's fewest games at third base with the Padres and playing for a full season was the 100 he played in 2023, when he served as the DH 51 times. He'll be expected to take the majority of starts in 2026, though his backups will determine how much rest he can really get. View the full article
  24. The final days of spring training include plenty of roster movement across baseball, as non-roster invitees exercise the opt-out and upward mobility clauses in their minor-league contracts. The Brewers are not strangers to adding some of those newly available players to their roster shortly before Opening Day. They did it again on Tuesday afternoon, acquiring right-hander Jake Woodford from the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for minor-league pitcher K.C. Hunt and cash considerations. Woodford, 29, has pitched in parts of six big-league seasons for the St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago White Sox, Pittsburgh Pirates, and Arizona Diamondbacks. He spent the spring in Rays camp, where he recently exercised his upward mobility clause after they reassigned him to minor-league camp. He'll get a big-league opportunity in Milwaukee, which added him to its 40-man roster while placing outfielder Akil Baddoo on the 60-day injured list with a left quad strain. Woodford, who has primarily started in the minor leagues but has made 86 of his 111 big-league appearances out of the bullpen, is expected to fill a multi-inning relief role. "I think he's built up to 40-plus pitches," manager Pat Murphy said. "He definitely has a history, and obviously, we're excited about acquiring him." "We have some history with him," president of baseball operations Matt Arnold said, referring to Woodford's time in St. Louis. "He's an interesting arm that can play a valuable role in a number of different spots in our bullpen, or potentially even at the front of games." A former first-round pick by the Cardinals in the 2015 draft, Woodford showed flashes of his potential during his first few big-league seasons, but he has since struggled while working as a low-leverage innings eater. In 256 career innings, he's pitched to a 5.10 ERA, 4.84 FIP, and 111 DRA-, according to Baseball Prospectus. Woodford has reinvented himself over the last couple of years, lowering his arm slot and modifying his arsenal. Now working from a low-three-quarters delivery, his sinker has more depth, and his four-seamer plays better at the top of the zone as a flat, upshoot fastball. A few years ago, he replaced his slider with a cutter and ditched his curveball, and he developed what appears to be a kick changeup last season. Finally, Woodford averaged a career-best 93.2 mph with his sinker and four-seamer in 2025. After those changes, Woodford profiles as a platoon-neutral reliever whose stuff may be closer to clicking than last year's 6.44 ERA suggests. The Brewers seem to believe he'll be more than a temporary mop-up reliever, as they parted with Hunt—who had an unremarkable showing in Double-A last year but was the organization's co-Minor League Pitcher of the Year in 2024—to acquire him. "We like the platoon flexibility there," Arnold said. "Obviously, being right-handed, with us having a few more lefties, makes some sense. And his ability to be built up and pitch multiple innings is also something we value." The Brewers do not make sweeping changes to a pitcher's arsenal or identity during the season, and that need not be the case for Woodford. All that's left for his development is plugging him into the right run-prevention unit and finding the best way to sequence his pitches. The Rays already had him on the right track this spring. Woodford excelled at missing barrels last year, allowing just a 6.9% barrel rate, 33.6% hard-hit rate, and an average exit velocity of 86.1 mph. His .365 expected wOBA on contact was slightly lower than the league average of .369. His sinker flashed potential to eat up right-handed hitters, yielding an average launch angle of -3 degrees and inducing plenty of chases inside. The issue was that Woodford allowed too much contact, in front of a Diamondbacks defense that ranked 23rd in baseball with -4 Defensive Runs Saved and posted -2 Outs Above Average while he was on the mound. His stuff was difficult to square up, but it wasn't deceptive. Except for those inside sinkers to righties, none of his other pitches to other locations generated truly uncomfortable swings. Woodford's 16.4% whiff rate ranked in the 2nd percentile among all pitchers, and his 24.4% chase rate ranked in the 12th percentile. Throwing more cutters could help alleviate that problem. It produced a decent 24.0% whiff rate last season, held hitters to a .276 xwOBA, and was one of the two pitches in Woodford's arsenal with a positive run value. Baseball Prospectus's pitch tunneling metrics estimated that hitters only had a 48.1% chance of recognizing it as a cutter by the time they had to decide whether to swing, meaning it was also his most difficult pitch to identify. That was because it spun very similarly to his other fastballs before separating from them with slight glove-side movement. The cutter was Woodford's least-used pitch last year, but throwing it more could make pitch recognition tougher for hitters, potentially leading to fewer comfortable swings and more chases against his other pitches. Woodford doubled his cutter usage with the Rays this spring, even making it his primary pitch against left-handed hitters. Peripherals from small spring training samples are hardly a reliable measure of improvement, but there are signs that throwing more cutters is making Woodford more effective. His chase rate jumped to an above-average 31.6% in his 7 1/3 Grapefruit League innings. To account somewhat for facing lower-level hitters in exhibition games, it was still a better mark than his 27.5% chase rate in Triple-A last season. The Brewers could still make a few more tweaks after Woodford arrives in Milwaukee, including throwing more high four-seamers to introduce more swing-and-miss into his game. Knowing how they usually operate, though, they'll likely lean into his sinker and cutter to induce batted balls that their defense can turn into outs. Because he is out of options, Woodford will join the big-league roster, but he may not be active on Opening Day. Traded players get a 72-hour grace period to travel to their new club. "It's a possibility," Arnold said of Woodford being active by Thursday afternoon. "The logistics around getting him here are something we're still working through." If he doesn't arrive in time, it seems the Brewers will begin the year with the current group of 26 players they have left on the active roster, with Easton McGee occupying the final spot in the bullpen. McGee looks like the obvious candidate to be optioned to Triple-A once Woodford joins the team, but with Arnold emphasizing adding a right-hander to balance a lefty-heavy relief corps, the club could feasibly option DL Hall instead. Either way, the front office still has a few moving parts to navigate with the start of the regular season one day away. View the full article
  25. Another Twins spring training has come and gone, and although every spring brings new storylines, a select few tend to reappear again and again. It’s time to hand out Twins Daily’s Golden Grapefruit Awards, presented by Greggory T. Masterson of the Twins Off-Daily Podcast, a Twins Daily subsidiary, sponsored by No One, Are You Insane?. Miguel Sanó Memorial "Best Shape of His Life" Award: Brooks Lee If you close your eyes and look up spring training clichés in the dictionary, this is what you see—er, after you open your eyes again. Every spring, one guy or another shows up 15 pounds lighter or with an alleged 40 pounds of muscle. It’s such a cliché that Twins manager Derek Shelton actually requested that no one use the words “best shape of his life.” Well, too bad for Shelton, we provide unbiased, independent coverage, and we’re not afraid to ruffle some feathers, awarding Brooks Lee the Best Shape of his Life Award. Lee showed up weighing the same amount as last season, but the weight has been “better proportioned” as he has tried to improve his lateral foot speed and quickness in hopes of improving his defense at shortstop. Congratulations, Brooks! Previous winners: Jhoan Duran (2025), Byron Buxton (2024), José Miranda (2023) "Newest Pitch" Award: Connor Prielipp This spring, there was little news of new pitches among Twins pitchers. Maybe it’s because everyone was more concerned with who was pitching (or who wasn’t pitching) than they were about what those pitchers were throwing. There was no big story about six guys learning a splitter at Driveline or anything. There was one notable pitch added, though: Connor Prielipp added a curveball. Prielipp, who is fighting to remain a starter, has been working on adding a fourth pitch to complement his fastball, slider, and changeup. He’s already tried mixing in a sinker, and it looks like the Twins are also working with him on a curveball with more depth and glove-side movement than his gyro slider. Here’s hoping it helps him remain a rotation option! Previous winners: Jorge Alcala (2025), Joe Ryan (2024, 2023), Griffin Jax (2023) "Most Revamped Swing" Award: Matt Wallner Matt Wallner was probably the Twin most fans were convinced needed a swing overhaul this offseason, even after his 110 OPS+ last season. One of the biggest issues Wallner dealt with last season was his performance against fastballs in the upper third of the zone. This offseason, he made an effort to simplify his swing, working to expand the range of pitches he can damage without sacrificing the power his offensive profile is built on. To date, none of the Most Revamped Swing winners have turned around their offensive performance, but none of them have had the floor Wallner established last season. Previous winners: Ty France (2025), Brooks Lee (2024), Max Kepler (2023) "Weirdest Injury" Award: Pablo López For some reason, it seems like every spring some very stupid injury occurs, like Byron Buxton chipping his tooth eating steak or Jordan Balazovic being sucker-punched at a Fort Myers bar. Sadly, there were no ha-ha funny injuries this spring. There was an existentially funny injury, though. Just hours into spring training, Pablo López exited the mound with soreness in his arm. Within days, it would be determined that the Twins’ ace had a torn ulnar collateral ligament and would miss the entire season. Really. The first day, the first practice, just hours into camp. Not funny, but pretty funny. Previous winners: Mickey Gasper (stepped on playing second base, 2025), Pete Maki (ruptured bicep doing pullups, 2024), Jordan Balazovic (broken jaw, bar fight, 2023) "Honey, Grab My Program" Award: Kyler Fedko Somewhere between the 4th and 7th inning in nearly every spring training game, a wave of players wearing number 87 with no name on the back of their jersey take over for the big-leaguers. Every year, there are a couple of guys who do so in almost every game. Sometimes it’s for positional flexibility, other times they’re top prospects. And other times, the team doesn’t really have any other center fielders to play instead of them. Only players who have never appeared in MLB and are not on the 40-man roster qualify for this award. Both Kyler Fedko and Tanner Schobel appeared in 18 games, tied for the most on the team, including big leaguers. Fedko amassed 25 plate appearances, though, and had a few starts, so he wins this year. Fedko played all three outfield spots and first base, providing real coverage. He may have been the biggest surprise last season, nearly accumulating a 30-30 season in the minors, but he struggled in his opportunities this spring, batting just .130. Already 26, he may debut this season, though none of the other winners of this award were still in the organization the following season. Previous winners: Jeferson Morales (2025), Chris Williams (2024), Andrew Bechtold (2023) "First Cliché Statement" Award: Bailey Ober We’d like to take a moment of silence to mourn the trade of Carlos Correa, who (if he were still in a Twins jersey) would have surely been the betting favorite for this award. Alas, Correa had no opportunity to avenge his 2025 loss. Instead, this award goes to an unlikely winner, one Bailey Ober. As far as I can tell, Ober was among the first, if not the first, player to be interviewed this spring. When asked if he needed to win a rotation job, he said, “I always enjoy proving to myself that I'm here and that I every single day continue to try and get better and not necessarily be complacent with what I have. I'm always pushing myself and trying to be the best I can be, do whatever means necessary to accomplish that.” Everyone’s always excited to do the work on February 12. We’ll see if it paid off. Previous winners: Rocco Baldelli (2025), Carlos Correa (2024, 2023) "Grainiest Video" Award: Josh Norris Finally, my favorite award—the media can’t help themselves, and we, as fans, will eat up whatever they give us. When baseball’s back, we need proof. Grainy videos taken through a fence at the beginning of camp are a spring training staple. Dan Hayes tried to defend his crown, but I simply think phone cameras are too good. There wasn’t much to choose from this season. Instead of a beat writer, this year’s award goes to Josh Norris of Baseball America, who posted a video of Twins prospect Marek Houston with about a third of the frame obscured by a chain link fence. You can still see most of the swing, and the video is of good quality, but it doesn’t get more spring training than a slow-motion video obscured by a fence on a back field. Previous winners: Dan Hayes (2025, 2024), Do-Hyoung Park (2023) View the full article
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