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Image credit: Marvel Television The new logo for Marvel Studios’ next TV show, Wonder Man, was recently unveiled in an Instagram post by actor Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. The mini-series will be part of the MCU and is co-created by Destin Daniel Cretton, who is currently also working on Spider-Man: Brand New Day with Tom Holland. The expected release date window for Wonder Man is December 2025. Yahya Abdul-Mateen II shares Wonder Man’s potential logo Actor Yahya Abdul-Mateen II recently delighted Marvel fans by posting an image showing what appears to be the brand-new logo for the upcoming TV show Wonder Man. The image features a blue-colored cap with what seems to be a logo for the mini-series on it, alongside the Marvel logo. Additionally, fans believe the image might hint at an expected trailer release that could take place at the 2025 New York Comic-Con. Previously, a glimpse at Wonder Man was released, featuring Abdul-Mateen II as the superhero protagonist Simon Williams. The mini-series will also witness the return of actor Ben Kingsley as Trevor Slattery. It will have a total of eight episodes. While speaking about the show with Collider in February 2025, Marvel’s Head of TV and Streaming, Brad Winderbaum, described the show as “a very new flavor for Marvel” and said it’s “one of my favorite things ever.” Winderbaum noted that “it’s the best show no one’s ever seen” and conveyed that he is very excited to see how the audience will receive it. He described the show as a “love letter” to all the franchise’s filmmakers and the work they do. Winderbaum added that Wonder Man is a “sincere, beautiful show.” He also noted that the episode lengths will vary throughout the show, stating, “There’s a little bit of some streaming leeway in the episode runtimes, so I think our shortest episode is 20-something, and our longest is, like, 40-something.” Originally reported by Ishita Verma on SuperHeroHype. The post Next MCU TV Show Logo Shared by Lead Star appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images Hilaria Baldwin recently put divorce rumors to rest after she posted a new reel clarifying that things are going well with her husband, Alec Baldwin. In recent weeks, rumors had circulated about the couple splitting up due to an observation that the Dancing With the Stars alum addressed in the new reel. Hilaria Baldwin debunks divorce with Alec Baldwin The divorce rumors began after fans noticed something peculiar about Hilaria Baldwin. Many spotted her without a wedding ring during her Dancing With the Stars rehearsals. Fans saw her again in the next rehearsal without the ring. This quickly sparked speculation of tension and a possible future split. However, it seems that the ring was missing for an entirely different reason. Hilaria Baldwin explained the situation on her social media profile, where she posted a reel featuring herself with a plush toy of Alec’s Beetlejuice character. She also showcased her ring prominently in the video. In the caption, she wrote, “Don’t worry Cammy, got my Alec stand in here while he is gone working ?. And ring is right here (tho I don’t wear to practice because it hurts with the crazy stuff we are doing ?).” It appears that Hilaria chooses not to wear her ring during rehearsals simply for convenience. The large ring causes discomfort during choreography, which is why she skipped wearing it during the past two sessions. There seems to be no trouble between Hilaria and Alec Baldwin. Alec is away for work at the moment, but he still managed to support his wife in the dance studio. According to reports, Alec visited one of her early rehearsals. Moreover, some sources suggested he was a bit too involved (via Rob Shuter). Fans can rest assured that Hilaria and Alec Baldwin’s marriage of 12 years remains intact. Alec Baldwin will reportedly appear in Hollywood Heist and Kid Santa soon. The post Hilaria Baldwin Clears the Air on Alec Baldwin Divorce Rumors appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: HBO Max A photo of John Cena posing with Earth X Peacemaker‘s decapitated head was shared on social media. This photo comes ahead of the second season finale, dropping this Thursday. The stakes for Chris Smith and his lovable crew have gotten higher with each passing episode. Now, with the finale approaching, fans can expect an explosive conclusion to storylines established in the premiere. John Cena holds Earth X Peacemaker’s decapitated head in new photo James Gunn shared a photo of John Cena holding Earth X Peacemaker’s decapitated head on both X (formerly Twitter) and Instagram. In the picture, the wrestler-actor put up a facial expression mimicking the decapitated head’s. The picture, evidenced by the background, was taken at the Quantum Unfolding Chamber, a key location in Peacemaker Season 2 used by individuals from across the multiverse. The picture was accompanied by a caption encouraging fans to tune into the finale, which will air on Thursday, October 9, 2025. “Wink if you’re an 11the Street Kid,” the caption reads. #Peacemaker Finale this Thursday on @StreamOnMax.” The Peacemaker Season 2 finale, titled “Full Nelson,” will drop on HBO Max at 9 p.m. Eastern Time. The upcoming episode will pick up from where the previous one left off. At the end of the previous episode, Chris Smith managed to escape from the dystopian Nazi universe. He then turned himself in to the authorities for possessing a device serving as a doorway for the aforementioned Quantum Unfolding Chamber. As of writing, much is unknown about the upcoming episode. However, a brief teaser was released, offering a glimpse of what viewers can expect. The official synopsis mentioned on the description of the teaser’s YouTube video reads: “Rick Flag Sr. tasks his team with searching the Quantum Unfolding Chamber for another dimension where he can carry out his plan.” James Gunn created Peacemaker Season 2 and wrote all episodes. He also directed three episodes of the second season. Season 2’s other directors are Greg Mottola, Peter Sollett, and Alethea Jones. The main cast includes John Cena, Danielle Brooks, Freddie Stroma, Jennifer Holland, Steve Agee, Robert Patrick, and Dee Bradley Baker. The post John Cena Poses With Peacemaker’s Decapitated Head in New Photo appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo by Amanda Edwards/Getty Images Katherine LaNasa, known for her role as Dana Evans in The Pitt, recently talked about her experience being a judge at the Best in Drag pageant. She described the experience as “just fun as hell,” while also explaining what it means to be a drag queen. Katherine LaNasa says being a Best in Drag show judge was ‘fun as hell’ During an interview with Variety on the Best in Drag pageant’s pink carpet, the Emmy-winning actress shared her thoughts on judging the pageant. “Best in Drag is just fun as hell, and it’s about accepting everybody where they are, celebrating people as they are,” LaNasa shared. “I hope that this event teaches people that drag queens don’t kill, and there’s nothing to be afraid of here.” LaNasa and her husband, Grant Show, joined a star-studded panel of judges. The panel included Cheri Oteri, Judy Greer, Dan Bucatinsky, Kathy Kinney, Camryn Manheim, and Variety’s Marc Malkin. Best in Drag celebrated 30 years of supporting and raising money for APLA Health’s Alliance for Housing and Healing. The organization provides housing and emergency financial assistance to individuals with HIV/AIDS who are homeless in Los Angeles. This year, casting director Patrick Rush hosted the event and successfully raised $250,000 for the cause. By the end, the judges named the circus-inspired bearded Miss Wisconsin, Bailey Barnum, as the winner. Back in 2024, the Best in Drag pageant was also the focus of a documentary titled The Little Pageant That Could. It showed the event’s creation and growth over three decades. Cheri Oteri, another panel member, stated that the documentary inspired her to support the pageant. “I really was taken by the documentary, which made me want to come [to support],” Oteri shared. “I’d say to let your freak flag fly, because it’s so fun to watch and to be an audience member. It’s wonderful for every gay young person to learn that there are all different types of ways to be gay.” The post The Pitt’s Katherine LaNasa on What It Is To Be a Drag Queen Pageant Judge appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: @TaylorSwift / YouTube It seems like The Summer I Turned Pretty fever has gotten to Taylor Swift. The romantic drama series, adored worldwide for its emotional storytelling and love triangle, has captivated not only fans but also celebrities—including the global pop icon herself. Recently, Swift was asked to pick a side between Team Conrad and Team Jeremiah, sparking excitement among fans of the hit series. Taylor Swift discloses if she is on Team Conrad or Team Jeremiah on The Summer I Turned Pretty During her October 7 appearance on On Air with Ryan Seacrest, Taylor Swift gracefully avoided taking sides in the heated The Summer I Turned Pretty debate. When asked whether she supports Team Conrad or Team Jeremiah, the singer humorously responded that she’s “Team Summer I Turned Pretty.” Swift, however, beautifully backed her unexpected neutral stance. The singer explained how the show has utilised her music in the most thoughtful ways to highlight the significant moments in Belly’s life. Swift said, “I’m just, I’m here for whatever is next. I support your choices, girl.” Showing her emotional attachment to the female lead, the singer expressed that she feels her music comes from Belly’s mind. Swift added that she will forever be Team Belly no matter who she ends up with. Following Swift’s heartfelt comments, series creator Jenny Han reposted her clip on Instagram Stories. During her appearance on Jenna Bush Hager’s podcast, Open Book, Han highlighted the importance of Swift’s songs in the series, especially “The Way I Loved You”. Han had written a handwritten note to Swift explaining that it would mean the world to her to be using her songs for the series. She believed it would be the greatest gift to her and the fans of The Summer I Turned Pretty. “She really — I felt like she is someone who bets on women. And I felt like she bet on me”, the author added. Be it “Lover,” “Cruel Summer to this Love,” or “Cardigan,” Swift’s songs have beautifully elevated the emotional scenes of The Summer I Turned Pretty. The feature of “Dress” and “Out of the Woods” (Swift’s Version) in the series finale further cemented the connection of her music with Belly. The post Taylor Swift Reveals Which Summer I Turned Pretty Team She Supports appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: ABC Robert Irwin is an Australian actor, television presenter, conservationist, wildlife photographer, and zookeeper, and the son of Steve Irwin. He recently joined the cast of Dancing With The Stars Season 34 with dance partner Witney Carson. In a recent interview after DWTS’ Disney night, he opened up about declining an interesting offer from the Chippendales dance troupe. Here are all the details about Robert Irwin declining an offer from Chippendales. Robert Irwin speaks on turning down offer from Chippendales In a recent interview after his DWTS Disney night performance, ET‘s confronted Robert Irwin about his offer from Chippendales to host a show. Directo brought up the topic by praising the duo’s hip movement during their recent DWTS performances. When asked if they “feel like Shakira tonight,” Irwin responded, “The hips don’t lie, oh yeah,” as he burst out into a sudden showcase of his newly learned fluid hip movement. Following that, he was asked if it was true that he was approached by Chippendales to host a show and if it was something he was considering. He responded, “That is true,” and went on to reveal, “I also… The Aussie boys as well, Thunder Down Under also reached out.” Responding to the latter half of the question, he then stated, “All power to them… just not for me. Not right now… you know… I’ll take the shirt off every now and again… but I’m gonna draw the line there.” “I’m all about… you know… anything to push the conservation message,” he continued. “Yeah… Chippendales, sorry… not quite, not quite,” Irwin said, once again politely declining the offer. Indian American entrepreneur Somen Banerjee originally founded Chippendales, now a popular touring male striptease dance troupe. Authorities later arrested Banerjee for multiple felonies, including murder for hire and attempted arson. The troupe is currently on its European tour. The troupe is currently on its European tour. The post DWTS Star Robert Irwin on Why He Declined Chippendales Offer appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: 20th Century Fox Nicholas Hoult has confirmed that he won’t be joining his former X-Men co-stars at the upcoming NYCC reunion panel. Expressing his regret to fans, the actor revealed that he is recovering from a recent surgery. Though disappointed, Hoult expressed that he hopes to make it to a future event once he has fully recovered. Nicholas Hoult will miss X-Men reunion at NYCC 2025 due to knee surgery Nicholas Hoult will be absent from this year’s New York Comic Con. He was slated to appear at an X-Men reunion panel alongside James McAvoy and Elliot Page. The actor revealed that he is recovering from knee surgery and has been advised not to travel while he recovers. In a heartfelt video message shared on NYCC’s Instagram account, Hoult said, “I’m so sorry to tell you that I won’t be able to join you this time.” He explained, “Unfortunately, I had knee surgery a couple of weeks ago and I can’t walk or fly yet, so I’m not going to be able to make it.” The actor went on to express his disappointment and apologized for the situation. He added, “I hope you have a wonderful weekend and hopefully I’ll be joining you in the near future and get to see you all soon.” NYCC also extended their well-wishes to the actor in the caption. They wrote, “We’re wishing a speedy recovery to Nicholas Hoult, who can no longer make it to NYCC. Rest up Nicholas, we hope to see you next time.” They also added that refunds would be issued for pre-purchased autographs and photo ops. Best known to fans as Hank McCoy/Beast, Hoult made his first appearance in 2011’s X-Men: First Class. Since then, he has continued the role throughout the series. Most recently, he has also drawn significant attention for his role as Lex Luthor in James Gunn’s Superman. The post Nicholas Hoult on Why He Won’t Appear at NYCC X-Men Reunion appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: ABC Elizabeth Webber seems to have turned into a character that General Hospital fans are more than annoyed with at this moment. The granddaughter of the show’s original lead has often left fans unimpressed with her self-righteousness. Fans also find her habit of meddling in affairs she has no part in distasteful. Multiple threads on fan pages complained about this character in recent weeks. General Hospital fans think Elizabeth is annoying General Hospital Fans-Official, a Facebook page dedicated to discussing the famed soap opera, has seen more than one complaint about Elizabeth’s character. With other fans agreeing with the posts, it seems quite clear where the character stands at the moment. One such post on the page read, “Do y’all think Elizabeth is annoying sometimes?” There were many responses to this. “Absolutely, she needs a storyline of her own, so maybe she won’t have time to judge others,” one fan replied, while another said, “All the time. I actually haven’t cared for her since her teen years.” While there were many comments justifying the character, it seems the majority are talking about how annoying she can be. Another post on the same page read, “Elizabeth needs to get a life and stay out of everyone’s business?” Fans also had a strong reaction to this post. “Oh yes,” one fan responded. Another fan added, “She has been getting on my nerves lately.” Yet another user commented, “I so agree Liz is sticking her nose in everyone’s business.” So, General Hospital fans remain divided about the iconic character who has been a part of the show for a long time. As most know, Elizabeth’s actions are usually well-intentioned, but she has often been a victim of poor writing. This has been an issue for years now, developing a certain disdain for her among the fanbase. Either way, there could be developments that finally give Elizabeth more to do with her own arc. Perhaps that will leave fewer fans annoyed. The post General Hospital Fans Are Really Annoyed With Elizabeth appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: Revolution Films Apple’s upcoming psychological thriller reunites Idris Elba with a new ensemble for one of its most anticipated original films. The project adds several fresh faces to its cast, including Charlie Cox, in a story that explores shifting power, perception, and identity within a tense modern setting. Charlie Cox cast in This is How it Goes with Idris Elba Apple Original Films’ adaptation of Neil LaBute’s psychological thriller This Is How It Goes has expanded its cast, according to Blexmedia on October 7, 2025. The update confirms that Wunmi Mosaku, Charlie Cox, and Elliott Heffernan have joined Idris Elba in the upcoming project. Elba will both direct and star in the feature, produced by 22Summers and Gaumont. Nathaniel Price, known for Mr. Loverman and The Outlaws, wrote the screenplay. Production is expected to begin this month across the U.K. and Accra, Ghana, making it the first Apple Original Films project to film in Ghana. The milestone supports Elba’s ongoing work to expand international film partnerships and invest in Africa’s creative sector. Adapted from LaBute’s 2005 play, This Is How It Goes, follows an interracial love triangle in small-town America. The story explores identity, along with manipulation, when a couple decides to help an old acquaintance. Their reunion sparks a series of tense confrontations and moral dilemmas that challenge each of their beliefs. Elba previously played Cody in the West End production with Ben Chaplin and Megan Dodds, though his film role remains unconfirmed. Gina Carter and Alison Jackson produce the film for 22Summers and Gaumont, respectively. T D Afrique oversees production in Ghana, with Sidonie Dumas serving as the Gaumont executive producer. The project extends Elba’s partnership with Apple after Hijack. He is also working on Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite for Netflix and Above the Below for Lionsgate, which he both co-directs and stars in. Originally reported by Vritti Johar on SuperHeroHype. The post Charlie Cox Joins Idris Elba in Apple’s New Thriller Movie Cast appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo by Jose Perez/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images New The Devil Wears Prada 2 set photos have surfaced online, which showcase Anne Hathaway and Emily Blunt sharing a lighthearted moment. The two leading ladies are reprising their roles as Andy Sachs and Emily Charlton, respectively. Anne Hathaway and Emily Blunt laugh together in new Devil Wears Prada set photos The Devil Wears Prada 2 is currently being filmed in Milan. Anne Hathaway and Emily Blunt were spotted sharing a laugh in their movie outfits (via ET). In the photos, Blunt is wearing a green corset under a bomber jacket, while Hathaway is donning a glittering black jumper with a red leather trench coat. These are just a few of the many photos taken from the sets over the past few months. In one particular instance, Hathaway was spotted in a different look while filming a scene with Meryl Streep, who is reprising her role as Miranda Priestly. Additionally, the photo featured Simone Ashley alongside the two actresses. There is speculation that Ashley may be playing Miranda’s new assistant. Later, Streep made an appearance at the Dolce & Gabbana fashion show in her iconic Miranda Priestly look. She was accompanied by Stanley Tucci, another actor reprising his role. The Devil Wears Prada 2 serves as the sequel to the 2006 classic The Devil Wears Prada. In addition to the original stars, director David Franke is also returning for the second one. New cast members include Lucy Liu, Patrick Brammall, and Kenneth Branagh. The movie is expected to loosely adapt the second book in Lauren Weisberger’s series, Revenge Wears Prada: The Devil Returns. Although based on a book, the first film made some significant changes, giving it its own identity. If the second movie follows the same pattern, the writers will make adjustments to fit the narrative, taking only key plot points from the book. The follow-up movie debuts in theaters on May 1, 2026, 20 years after the original. The post New Devil Wears Prada 2 Set Photos Catch Anne Hathaway & Emily Blunt in Fun Moment appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Ant-Man’s David Dastmalchian Wants To Play a New Marvel Antihero
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Photo Credit: Marvel Studios An Ant-Man and The Suicide Squad star recently shared thoughts on the kind of Marvel role he’d like to take on next. Known for portraying eccentric and complex characters, he discussed his fascination with darker, horror-driven roles. Speaking at a recent convention, he revealed his dream of playing Morbius in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. David Dastmalchian wants to be Morbius in the MCU While talking with The Direct, David Dastmalchian revealed that he has “always wanted to take a crack at Morbius, the living vampire,” expressing his enthusiasm for the darker, horror-inspired side of Marvel storytelling. The actor, who previously played Kurt in Ant-Man and Ant-Man and the Wasp as well as Veb in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, said, “I would love the opportunity to play Dr. Michael Morbius. Oh, my God. There’s so many great characters in the MCU, and I’ve always been a fan of the horror and the weirder characters.” He added that his fascination extends to Marvel’s supernatural roster, saying, “I love the idea of the Marvel version of Dracula, which I always loved. I thought that any of the monster stuff, the Midnight Suns, the stuff that was part of the old Defenders, would be cool.” Dastmalchian’s interest aligns with Marvel Studios’ growing focus on horror-inspired storytelling. The studio has explored this through Werewolf by Night, Moon Knight, and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Sony released Morbius in 2022 with Jared Leto in the lead role. The character remains outside the MCU continuity, leaving room for potential reinterpretations in future projects. Beyond Marvel, Dastmalchian has appeared in The Suicide Squad, Dune: Part One, Oppenheimer, Teacher, The Boogeyman, and Boston Strangler. His comments highlight his enthusiasm for returning to the superhero genre from a darker, more monstrous perspective. They also reflect the actor’s long-standing passion for supernatural and unconventional characters in comic adaptations. Originally reported by Anubhav Chaudhry on SuperHeroHype. The post Ant-Man’s David Dastmalchian Wants To Play a New Marvel Antihero appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article -
http://blogs.fangraphs.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/USATSI_27269558.jpgRick Osentoski-Imagn Images Water falling from the skies over Comerica Park delayed the start of a pivotal ALDS Game 3 between the Tigers and the Mariners by close to three hours. Once things dried out, Seattle’s batters rained on Detroit’s parade. Eugenio Suárez, J.P. Crawford, and Cal Raleigh all homered, and that was more than enough to support the pitching of Logan Gilbert and four Mariners relievers. When all was said and done, Seattle had an 8-4 win and a 2-1 edge in the best-of-five series. The game started with a successful challenge. Randy Arozarena was initially ruled safe after Gleyber Torres threw to first to field a comebacker that glanced off of Jack Flaherty’s glove, but replay review reversed the call. Seattle’s leadoff hitter was out by an eyelash. A few swings later, Detroit’s starter had retired the side on just eight pitches. It was to be his only easy inning. The Mariners made the right-hander work in the second. Josh Naylor had an 11-pitch at-bat, finally grounding out on Flaherty’s first changeup of the evening. Three other batters saw six pitches apiece. Suárez walked, Jorge Polanco and Dominic Canzone fanned, and Flaherty walked off the mound having thrown 29 in the frame, and 37 overall. It was apparent early that the Tigers bullpen would be well-worked by game’s end. A Dillon Dingler single gave Detroit a runner in the bottom half, but as had happened in the first, Gilbert ended the mini-threat with a strikeout, leaving a Tiger stranded. Never really in trouble over the course of his outing, the tall right-hander nonetheless squelched every semblance of a Detroit rally. Victor Robles gave the visitors a more serious threat to start the third. Seattle’s eight-hole hitter doubled down the left field line, with the contest’s second video replay challenge quickly following. Crawford lofted a single to left, with Robles stopping at third… only to have the throw to the infield get away from Dingler, allowing him to scoot home. This time, the eyelash went Seattle’s way. Riley Greene was charged with the error, and the Mariners had a 1-0 lead. Two pitches later it was 2-0. Arozarena swatted a slider for a single that scored Crawford, bringing up Raleigh, who walked. With Julio Rodríguez settling into the batter’s box, Seattle was seemingly on the verge of forging a formidable lead. Flaherty was on the ropes. Somehow he survived. Rodríguez swung through a 3-1 heater, then did the home side a favor by chasing a breaking ball well off the plate. One out. Polanco — he of the two home runs off of Tarik Skubal in Game 2 — proceeded to fan on a curveball. Two out. Naylor then launched a ball 394 feet, but fortunately for Flaherty, it was to a pitcher-friendly part of the park. Parker Meadows corralled the long fly, keeping Detroit’s deficit to a mere two runs. But not for long. After the Tigers stranded a baserunner for the third straight frame, Suárez led off the fourth by hammering a heater deep into the Detroit night. When it landed, 422 feet from home plate, Seattle led 3-0. Two walks and a Raleigh RBI single later — Flaherty had been lifted for Tommy Kahnle by the time Big Dumper stepped into the box — it was 4-0. If not for a sliding catch by Greene on a ball hit by Rodríguez, it would have been even worse for the Tabbies. Given their offensive doldrums over the past three-plus weeks, it was already a steep hill to climb. They did their best to do so in the fifth inning, although they ultimately crossed the plate just once. Dingler was hit by a pitch, and after Meadows bunted for a hit only to be thrown out on a nice play by Suárez, Javier Báez dumped a single into right to put runners on the corners. A Mariners’ miscue then resulted in a Tigers tally. Gilbert induced what would have been a double-play ball, but Kerry Carpenter was safe at first when Naylor couldn’t scoop a poor throw from Crawford. An inning-ending ground out followed, with the Tigers settling for just the one run. The Mariners offense wasn’t done. Turning a three-run edge back into four, Crawford took Brant Hurter yard to make it 5-1 in the sixth. It was the shortstop’s second hit of the game, and his third time on base in as many plate appearances. He would later hit a sacrifice fly. Gilbert’s effort was impressive. Lifted after six innings, Seattle’s starter allowed just four hits and one run, with no walks and seven strikeouts. He was slider-heavy throughout, throwing his best breaker 37 times out of 85 pitches. Augmenting the offering were 24 four-seamers, 20 splitters, and six curveballs. Making his second career postseason start –his first was in the 2022 ALDS against Houston — he was stellar from his first pitch to his last. With a strong bullpen and a four-run lead, the Mariners were nine outs away from a 2-1 lead in the series when Matt Brash strolled in from the ‘pen to work the seventh. He got each of Zach McKinstry, Dingler and Meadows to ground out. Eighth-inning ineptitude helped put things further out of reach for the Tigers. Luke Raley reached on a one-out hit by pitch, then went to third when Carpenter had a Robles fly ball pop out of his glove for an error. Greene proceeded to corral a fly ball from Crawford, but it was deep enough to score Seattle’s sixth run. An inning later, the Mariners had eight. Raleigh went deep in the top of the ninth, giving Seattle a lead that was seemingly quite safe. At 8-1, there was little left to do but close out Detroit in what had trended toward a ho-hum ninth. That didn’t happen. Putting a scare into the Mariners, the Tigers began their last gasp with a Jake Rogers single. Then came a walk, followed by a two-run double by Spencer Torkelson and a run-scoring single by Andy Ibáñez. Five batters in, the score was suddenly 8-4 and Seattle manager Dan Wilson was forced to lift Caleb Ferguson and go his closer. Andrés Muñoz was able to shut the door, but only with a bit of good fortune at the end. After Dingler flew out, Meadows roped a .560 xBA line drive directly into the glove of Naylor, who proceeded to step on first to double up Ibáñez to end the game. The two teams will meet again tomorrow at a time yet to be determined — good weather is forecast — with the Tigers needing a win to extend the series. If the Mariners prevail, they will advance to the ALCS for the first time since 2001. Detroit’s last ALCS appearance came in 2013. Source View the full article
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The Red Sox are in offseason mode after being bounced by the Yankees last week. Chief baseball officer Craig Breslow met with reporters on Monday to discuss the upcoming winter (links via Tim Healey of The Boston Globe and Jen McCaffrey of The Athletic). Like many baseball operations leaders, Breslow spoke mostly in generalities but provided a few hints to the front office’s plans. Starting pitching should be a focus for a second straight offseason. The Sox pulled off the most impactful rotation move of last winter, trading four prospects for Garrett Crochet and signing him to a six-year extension just after Opening Day. Crochet was everything the team could have hoped for and should land a top two finish in Cy Young balloting. “Every team gets better if you can bring in a starter or develop a starting pitcher who can pitch at Garrett Crochet’s level,” Breslow said. “We will be as aggressive as we can when trying to chase that down while also ensuring we are doing everything we can to develop our players internally.” Crochet can go toe to toe with any other pitcher in MLB during Game 1 of a playoff series, but the Sox are arguably lacking a true #2 starter. Brayan Bello and Lucas Giolito were their second and third best starters this past season. Bello turned in a career-best 3.35 ERA across 166 2/3 innings. He has a ground-ball heavy approach and posted personal lows in both strikeout rate (17.7%) and swinging strike percentage (8.6%). Bello overcame that to post a sub-3.00 ERA each month between June and August. The lack of whiffs seemed to catch up to him at the end of the season, as he allowed a 5.40 ERA with a 16:12 strikeout-to-walk ratio over his five starts in September. Bello surrendered two runs on four hits without escaping the third inning in his lone playoff start. Giolito didn’t factor into the playoffs at all and might not be back in 2026. The veteran righty went down with a season-ending elbow injury during the waning days of the regular season. That came shortly after he’d reached the 140-inning vesting threshold to convert what had been a $14MM club option into a $19MM mutual provision. Giolito was trending towards a three- or four-year deal had he finished the season healthy. The elbow issue clouds his future, but he recently told Chris Cotillo of MassLive there’s nothing structurally amiss with his UCL. He’ll probably decline his end of the mutual option and look for a multi-year deal, and if the elbow injury were more serious than initially expected, the Sox would have passed on their side of the option either way. A few of remaining in-house options are injured or coming back from significant issues. Patrick Sandoval should be in the mix after spending this season rehabbing last summer’s UCL surgery. Kutter Crawford missed the whole year due to knee and wrist injuries, undergoing season-ending surgery for the latter in June. Tanner Houck underwent Tommy John surgery in August; the Sox could non-tender him in lieu of a projected $3.95MM arbitration salary. Hunter Dobbins tore his ACL around the All-Star Break. He’s unlikely to be ready for Opening Day. Dustin May will be a free agent and didn’t pitch well after being acquired as part of a bizarrely quiet trade deadline. Richard Fitts had an even 5.00 ERA over 11 appearances. Internally, that’d place a lot of pressure on the Sox’s younger arms. Connelly Early and Payton Tolle each had breakout minor league seasons and were pressed into late-season MLB action. Early was very impressive over his first few starts; Tolle had a rockier first impression. Both have plus stuff from the left side and can compete for rotation spots in Spring Training, but they have a combined eight MLB starts (postseason included) between them. Kyle Harrison will be in the mix as well, yet the Sox kept him in Triple-A until they’d essentially run out of other healthy starting pitchers. Framber Valdez, NPB righty Tatsuya Imai and Dylan Cease are among the top free agent starters available. Trade candidates include MacKenzie Gore, Joe Ryan, Pablo López and Sandy Alcantara. The Red Sox were linked to Ryan more frequently than any other team at the trade deadline. It’d be a surprise if they didn’t reengage with the Twins (though Minnesota will of course hear from plenty of teams about the talented right-hander). Breslow also alluded to a couple goals on the position player side: adding power and improving the defense. The Sox ranked 15th in MLB with 186 home runs. Breslow noted that the longball can take on greater importance in the postseason, where it becomes more challenging to string together hits against higher-level pitching. He didn’t say the Sox were going to sell out for power bats, of course, but called the tougher October scoring environment a “consideration” when building the roster. Free agency features a few sluggers. Kyle Schwarber, Pete Alonso and Eugenio Suárez are all hitting the market and have at least 40-homer potential (quite a bit more in Schwarber’s case). Japanese corner infielder Munetaka Murakami will be available via the posting system. He’s strikeout prone and not a great defender, but he has a 56-homer season in NPB under his belt. He drilled 22 homers and hit .273/.379/.663 over 56 games despite battling an oblique injury this year. None of those players would provide any kind of defensive value. Boston led the majors with 116 errors. An outfield featuring Jarren Duran, Ceddanne Rafaela, Roman Anthony and Wilyer Abreu should be strong defensively. The infield wasn’t nearly as good. Trevor Story’s range has declined sharply at shortstop. It doesn’t seem out of the question that the Sox could look to move him to second base in deference to Marcelo Mayer at some point (assuming Story doesn’t opt out of the remaining two years and $55MM on his deal). Kristian Campbell struggled on both sides of the ball as a rookie and doesn’t have a clear season-opening role despite signing an eight-year extension last spring. Suárez and Murakami could play third base, but they’d be defensive downgrades compared to Alex Bregman — who’ll almost certainly opt out in search of a six or seven-year deal. Schwarber and Alonso have even less positional flexibility. The Sox already have their glut of outfielders that’ll lead to more trade rumors involving Duran and Abreu. Masataka Yoshida is a bat-only player in left field or at DH. First baseman Triston Casas is coming off a major knee injury. Breslow dodged a question about the roles for any of those players, especially Casas. “I don’t think it makes a ton of sense on October 6 to say someone is or isn’t our first baseman. We’ll see how things play out,” he said (via Healey). View the full article
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Photo Credit: Marvel Studios Marvel’s multiverse saga has once again sparked speculation about potential character returns. Recent convention remarks from a familiar Ant-Man star have reignited curiosity about how certain supporting heroes could fit into Avengers: Doomsday and beyond, though no official confirmation has been made by the studio. David Dastmalchian on how he can return as Veb and Kurt in the MCU David Dastmalchian discussed how his Marvel characters, Veb and Kurt, could return in future MCU projects during a recent interview with The Direct. The actor said it “makes no sense” for Avengers: Doomsday to exclude his linguistic alien, Veb, given the film’s rumored multiversal storyline. He suggested Veb could help bridge communication across universes, similar to his role in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. “I tell you what, I think that it makes no sense that the Fantastic Four are going to be traipsing around all the different universes within the galaxies and all these different realities and all these different beings and creatures from other places. They need a Veb to help interpret all the language barriers,” Dastmalchian said, calling on Marvel to make Veb part of the “Fantastic Five.” Dastmalchian also proposed that his other MCU role, Kurt—the hacker from the first two Ant-Man films and What If…?—could return to “fix all the computers at Avengers HQ.” He remarked, “So, I’m putting out the call right now. Marvel, if you’re listening, I think Veb needs to come and be part of the ‘Fantastic Five.’ And Kurt could fix all the computers at Avengers HQ. So, that needs to happen.” Both characters, while comedic side figures, have become fan favorites in the Ant-Man trilogy. Dastmalchian’s comments come as Marvel expands its multiverse saga with Avengers: Doomsday and Avengers: Secret Wars. His remarks highlight how supporting characters like Veb and Kurt could fit into larger ensemble projects. These could explore different universes, technologies, and cosmic languages within the MCU. Originally reported by Vritti Johar on SuperHeroHype. The post Ant-Man Actor on Why His Character Should Join Fantastic Four in Avengers: Doomsday appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: @bravo | YouTube Following the highly anticipated 15th season of The Real Housewives of New York City, series star Jessel Taank provided an intriguing update about the upcoming season 16. This comes shortly after Andy Cohen shared that the show was between seasons. Here’s what Jessel Taank revealed about The Real Housewives of New York City Season 16. Jessel Taank says Real Housewives of New York City Season 16 is ‘definitely in the works’ Almost five months after Andy Cohen confirmed that the series was simply between seasons, effectively confirming its return, Jessel Taank has delivered some interesting updates about the series. “It’s definitely in the works,” Taank told E! news in an interview at the Diwali at Maxwell Social celebration on October 3, 2025. “There will be several announcements coming soon,” she added. The New York-based fashion publicist and brand consultant also revealed that Bravo was making several changes to the show. Therefore, there will be new elements in season 16. “They’ve never done anything like this before. Sometimes they’re going to get it right on the first try. Sometimes they won’t,” she said. Taank did acknowledge that a lot does come down to the cast despite changes. “It’s really a balance of personalities. You can never predict how that’s going to unfold,” she said. Few can forget the massive fallout between Ubah Hassan and Brynn Whitfield in the 15th season, which became the talking point of the series. But for Taank, the 16th season would be another opportunity to prove what it really means to dip into the lavish New York City lifestyle. ” I really want to show the true DNA of New York, fashion, a little bit of drama woven in there, but a window into six women’s lives that are doing it all,” she added. Brynn will not return for the upcoming season, and neither will Rebecca. In this interview, Taank also spoke about the love she had for Brynn. So, as per the recent comments, The Real Housewives of New York City Season 16 is definitely on its way, and with a lot of exciting changes. The post Real Housewives of New York City Season 16 Gets Exciting Update From Jessel Taank appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: Christine Bartolucci | Disney via Getty Images General Hospital’s October 7 episode revealed Portia’s pregnancy, but that also comes with a twist. After all, either her estranged husband, Curtis, or her colleague, Dr. Isaiah, could be the father. So how will Portia deal with this? Actor Brook Kerr shares insight. Brook Kerr on Portia’s reaction to her pregnancy on General Hospital The latest pregnancy twist came as a surprise to both Portia and the actress who plays her. Brook Kerr revealed to Soap Opera Digest that she learned about the pregnancy storyline directly from General Hospital’s executive producer, Frank Valentini. “He goes, ‘Don’t tell anybody, but Portia’s gonna have a baby,’” Kerr recalled. “I was just kind of in shock. It’s such a weighty thing; it’s so beautiful to have a child on a show. It’s all these new things to play… flooding through my mind.” The pregnancy couldn’t have come at a more complicated time for Portia. She’s still recovering from her fractured marriage with Curtis. Meanwhile, her connection with colleague Isaiah offers a fresh start but also uncertainty. “Kind of a scary feeling… figuring things out on her own,” Kerr explained. “She’s a little trepidatious, but… empowered to go for the next step — and the next step seems to be this baby.” Portia’s initial reaction to the positive test was disbelief. “Her first thought: ‘I just couldn’t handle this!’” Kerr said. “It’s one of those happy problems — a shock at the beginning, especially because Portia has always been so responsible. It’s like, ‘All of this crazy stuff has become a part of my life, and now pregnancy?! I’m already overwhelmed!’” Adding to it is the question of paternity. Portia doesn’t know whether Curtis or Isaiah is the father. “She’s… disappointed in herself,” Kerr admitted. “Like, ‘How could I get myself in this kind of situation?!’” For now, Portia plans to keep the pregnancy private as she processes what it means for her family and career. “She knows this is going to affect a lot of lives,” Kerr said. “She’s just trying to take it one step at a time.” The post General Hospital’s Brook Kerr on How Portia Will Deal With Pregnancy Twist appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: Netflix Netflix has released the official trailer for Season 4 of The Witcher, confirming Liam Hemsworth’s debut as Geralt of Rivia following Henry Cavill’s exit in 2022. The trailer immediately sparked fan reactions across X (formerly Twitter), with viewers comparing the two actors’ portrayals through memes and side-by-side edits. The fantasy series returns on October 30, 2025, with Hemsworth leading the show through its penultimate season and into its planned finale in Season 5. Fans compare Henry Cavill and Liam Hemsworth after The Witcher Season 4 trailer The trailer opens with Hemsworth’s Geralt assembling a new band of adventurers to locate his former apprentice, Ciri (Freya Allan). Alongside Yennefer (Anya Chalotra), Jaskier (Joey Batey), and newcomer Regis (Laurence Fishburne), Geralt faces Vilgefortz’s (Mahesh Jadu) dark forces across the Continent. The footage shows sword fights with soldiers, a towering ogre-like monster, and a wraith. A voice-over states, “The Witcher is in a state of flux. You are becoming something new,” followed by another asking, “How will you be reborn?” Viewers on X (formerly Twitter) highlighted these lines as a symbolic nod to the actor change from Cavill to Hemsworth. Multiple posts compared their portrayals using memes and screenshots. One user captioned an image “Geralt of Rivia / Geralt of IKEA,” while another used a Drake posting meme contrasting Hemsworth’s and Cavill’s versions. Others shared GIFs such as “look how they massacred my boy” and “when you aim for Geralt and hit Nicepool.” The Season 4 logline reads, “After the Continent-altering events of Season 3, Geralt, Yennefer, and Ciri find themselves separated by a raging war and countless enemies. As their paths diverge, and their goals sharpen, they stumble on unexpected allies eager to join their journeys.” Season 4’s cast includes Eamon Farren, Mimî M. Khayisa, Anna Shaffer, Meng’er Zhang, and Cassie Clare. The lineup also features Graham McTavish and several returning and new supporting characters across the Continent. Originally reported by Anubhav Chaudhry on SuperHeroHype. The post Henry Cavill Fans Wish for His Return After The Witcher’s New Trailer appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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The Rangers are signing free agent reliever Declan Cronin to a two-year minor league contract, reports Bob Nightengale of USA Today. Cronin underwent Tommy John surgery last month and will miss next season, so this is about adding bullpen depth for 2027. Cronin reunites with former Marlins manager Skip Schumaker, who’ll take over the Texas dugout next season. He led Miami relief pitchers with 70 1/3 innings in 2024, Schumaker’s final season in South Florida. Cronin turned in a 4.35 ERA with solid strikeout and walk rates while getting ground-balls at a 58% clip and looked like a nice find after the Fish grabbed him off waivers the preceding offseason. The righty began this season on the 15-day injured list after suffering a Spring Training hip strain. Miami optioned him to Triple-A Jacksonville when he returned from that injury. Cronin was pitching with diminished velocity, averaging 91.8 MPH on his sinker in the minors after sitting at 93.4 during his MLB work last year. Six weeks later, Cronin went on the minor league injured list. He briefly returned in August before getting shut back down with the elbow injury that required surgery. Miami released him to open a spot on the 40-man roster. They could have placed him on the MLB injured list, but they would’ve needed to carry him on the 40-man throughout the offseason. They decided not to do that and cut him loose instead. The 28-year-old Cronin has just over a year of MLB service time. He’ll presumably get a look in Spring Training two years from now, where he’ll try to earn a middle relief spot. Cronin still has a pair of options remaining. View the full article
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Photo Credit: Netflix Charlie Hunnam, the actor who played Ed Gein in Monster: The Ed Gein Story, revealed that his girlfriend, Morgana McNelis, has a rule set for him. The couple has been together since 2005. However, Charlie revealed that he showed up as “a bit of a shell after doing a role.” This does not sit right with his girlfriend, and thus, they have a whole routine to cope with it. Charlie Hunnam admits his girlfriend was supportive of him playing Ed Gein in Monster Season 3 Monster Season 3, starring Charlie Hunnam, recently premiered on Netflix, showcasing Ed Gein’s story. Gein was convicted of murdering two women. Given how intense this role was, Hunnam admitted that his girlfriend was supportive of him, but he had to follow one rule. He revealed: “So, she said to me, probably about 10 years ago, ‘Here’s the rules of engagement: Go do your work. Be as selfish as you need to be, but then take some time, because when you get back, you better be ready to see me.’ Which is completely fair and really lovely” (via E! Online). Hunnam said that he followed the rule once again after shooting Monster Season 3 and playing the role of a criminal. In order to decompress, he drove up to Ed Gein’s grave and spent some time there. It was convenient because he was in Chicago at the time, and Gein was buried in Wisconsin. As for Morgana, she was on board with the entire process and encouraged Hunnam to go through with it. He said: “My partner had incredible conviction that this was an important thing to do. She’s a great fan of the psychoanalysts, so she understands shadow work and the value of staring into the abyss and confronting the darkness much more than I do. So she was an amazing support to me, saying, ‘You just got to go do this thing, you got to enter the cave and face the dragon.’” Hunnam further added that he tried to understand the “why” aspect behind Ed Gein’s murders to fully embody the role he was given. Fans can watch Monster: The Ed Gein Story now on Netflix. The post Monster’s Charlie Hunnam Reveals His Girlfriend Let Him Play Ed Gein on 1 Condition appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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Photo Credit: CBS Betrayal and heartbreak are ahead for Electra — at least that’s what the latest Bold & Beautiful spoilers suggest. After spending weeks parading Will as the perfect boyfriend, she’s in for a devastating blow. A revelation that could shake the foundation of Will and Electra’s relationship is on the horizon. Can Will and Electra be over for good after Luna’s revelation on The Bold and the Beautiful? According to spoilers, once Electra learns what happened between Will and Luna on the night of his promotion party, all hell breaks loose. The fact that Luna deliberately got Will drunk and assaulted him while he was inebriated does little to calm Electra’s fury. Further adding cracks to their relationship, Luna claims she is pregnant with his child. This leaves Will distraught and Electra in tears. Pleased with her manipulation, Luna lounges on the couch at Will’s estate, smiling to herself as she rubs her belly. While Will demands an abortion, his mother, Katie, insists on a DNA test to determine if the baby is truly his. To prevent any tampering, Katie brings in her niece, Bridget, who collects the samples in front of everyone. However, Luna and the baby she’s carrying may not be the real long-term threat to Will and Electra’s relationship. The person Electra should truly be worried about is Lainey — the stunning Forrester Creations employee who has her eye on Will. What could bring Will and Lainey closer? It’s clear that Will remains deeply in love with Electra, but her cold and insensitive reaction to his revelation might be the final nail in the coffin. Though Will understands the pain he has caused her, he himself was the victim of sexual assault. Electra’s continued disregard for his trauma and emotional struggle could become the deal-breaker that finally clears the path for Lainey. The post Bold & Beautiful: What’s the Latest on Will & Electra’s Relationship? appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
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The Cardinals officially have a new head of baseball operations for the first time in nearly two decades. As announced at the beginning of last offseason, longtime president of baseball ops John Mozeliak has stepped aside and passed the torch to former Rays and Red Sox executive Chaim Bloom, who'd previously been a senior advisor with the Cardinals. Bloom's end-of-season press conference spelled out what had already become abundantly clear over the past 12 months: this will be an offseason unlike any the Cardinals have experienced in recent memory -- the onset of what's likely to be a yearslong rebuild. Guaranteed Contracts Nolan Arenado, 3B: $42MM through 2027 (Rockies paying $5MM) Willson Contreras, 1B: $41MM through 2027 (includes buyout of 2028 club option) Sonny Gray, RHP: $40MM through 2026 (includes buyout of 2027 club option) 2026 guarantees: $75MM Total long-term guarantees: $117.5MM through 2027 Option Decisions None Arbitration-Eligible Players (service time in parentheses; salary projections via MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz) Jorge Alcala (5.165): $2.1MM JoJo Romero (5.045): $4.4MM John King (4.148): $2.1MM Lars Nootbaar (4.076): $5.7MM Brendan Donovan (4.000): $5.4MM Andre Pallante (3.145): $3.4MM Nolan Gorman (3.114): $2.9MM Alec Burleson (3.029): $3.5MM Matthew Liberatore (2.144): $2.8MM Non-tender candidates: Alcala, King Free Agents Miles Mikolas For the early portion of last offseason, it seemed quite possible that the Cardinals would embark on the very type of rebuild that now seems far likelier. Instead, no-trade clauses in the contracts of veterans Sonny Gray, Nolan Arenado and Willson Contreras threw a wrench into those plans. Gray and Contreras seemed unfazed by the idea of a youth movement and quickly let the team know they were content to remain in St. Louis. Arenado was open to trade scenarios but to a limited number of clubs. He wound up vetoing a trade to the Astros and remaining in St. Louis. This time around, it seems overwhelmingly likely that at least one of those veterans will change hands. Gray candidly said after his final start that he has to consider trade scenarios this winter after talking to Bloom about the direction of the team. Contreras has said his preference is still to remain in St. Louis but he'll consider waiving his no-trade protection in the right scenario. Arenado has voiced his intent to be more open to a wider array of teams this time around. That said, there are prominent hurdles when it comes to trading everyone from the group, and there's ample reason to wonder just how much -- if anything at all -- the Cardinals can get back in return for any of those pricey veterans. They're reportedly open to paying down some of the remaining salary (which will be a necessity), but if they really want to extract meaningful prospect value, there are more notable trade avenues to explore. Unlock Subscriber-Exclusive Articles Like This One With a Trade Rumors Front Office Subscription BENEFITS Access weekly subscriber-only articles by Tim Dierkes, Steve Adams, and Anthony Franco. Join exclusive weekly live chats with Anthony. Remove ads and support our writers. Access GM-caliber tools like our MLB Contract Tracker View the full article
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Roki Sasaki will operate as the Dodgers’ “primary option” in save situations, manager Dave Roberts told reporters this evening (relayed by Jack Harris of The Los Angeles Times). Roberts hedged on calling the rookie righty his full-time closer, noting that they can’t ask Sasaki to pitch in every game. The Dodgers tried to avoid using Sasaki last night in Philadelphia. L.A. took a 4-1 lead into the bottom of the ninth inning with a chance to take a 2-0 series advantage. Roberts called upon Blake Treinen to handle the ninth. Treinen promptly surrendered hits to Alec Bohm, J.T. Realmuto and Nick Castellanos to put the tying run on second without recording an out. Roberts then turned to southpaw Alex Vesia with left-handed hitting Bryson Stott, Brandon Marsh and Max Kepler due up. Vesia recorded two outs, including a force play on Castellanos at third when the Phils called for Stott to sacrifice. Roberts finally turned to Sasaki to face Trea Turner with runners on the corners and two away in a 4-3 game. He got a grounder to second to earn the save. It was the first time in his MLB career that he was called upon in the middle of an inning. Sasaki has now finished three of the Dodgers’ four postseason games. He wrapped up the Wild Card Series by tossing a scoreless ninth inning to complete a 8-4 win over the Reds. That wasn’t a save situation but was essentially treated as such with a chance to lock down the series and get two off days before the start of the Philly series. Sasaki got his first save in Game 1 of the NLDS, tossing a scoreless ninth to close a 5-3 victory. The bullpen is the biggest question as the Dodgers try to repeat as World Series winners. Vesia is their only traditional reliever who has been a lockdown presence this year. Treinen allowed 10 earned runs across 9 1/3 innings in September and certainly looked beatable in Game 2. Tanner Scott, the primary closer for most of the year, allowed a 4.74 ERA over 61 regular season appearances. The Dodgers haven’t used him in the playoffs yet. Converted starters Sasaki and Emmet Sheehan have gotten high-leverage work. Roberts also called on Tyler Glasnow for an inning and two thirds out of the bullpen in Game 1 of the NLDS. Glasnow would start Game 4 if the Phils can stave off elimination tomorrow night. View the full article
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The Orioles saw their 2025 season more or less end before it started due to a brutal 15-32 record in their first 47 games. That start to the season saw manager Brandon Hyde get fired in mid May, while third base coach Tony Mansolino took over as the club’s interim manager. The Pirates decided to stick with Don Kelly long-term after he took over for Derek Shelton earlier this year. The Angels opted against keeping Ray Montgomery in the manager’s chair after he took up the mantle due to Ron Washington’s illness. Mansolino has neither been extended nor dismissed, and Mike Elias remains in place as the club’s president of baseball operations, leaving no uncertainty in the front office to delay the club’s decision. Instead, Mansolino remains in limbo. Mansolino is set to be a candidate for the manager job in Baltimore, but he’s far from guaranteed to remain in the role and a wide-ranging search is expected. That makes some sense. With a young core that was in the playoffs in both 2023 and ’24, the Orioles are still in the middle of their contention window even despite this year’s disastrous 87-loss campaign. A quick turnaround is not only possible, but perhaps even expected given their collection of young hitting talent. That could attract plenty of interesting candidates to the role, and the allure of hiring a big-name manager is obvious. After all, the Reds’ decision to hire Terry Francona last offseason got them to the playoffs in a 162-game season for the first time since 2013. The Rangers’ decision to hire Bruce Bochy a few years ago got the franchise its first ever World Series championship that same year. Joe Maddon’s second year as manager in Chicago ended the club’s infamous World Series drought. For a franchise like Baltimore that last won the World Series in 1983 and is still in the early years since emerging from a lengthy rebuilding period, it would be understandable if those success stories held some appeal. Mansolino managed Baltimore to a 60-59 record after taking over for Hyde in spite of one of the weakest rotations in baseball, an offense that suffered from injuries and under-performance, and a sell-off at the trade deadline that shipped out valuable pieces like Ramon Laureano and Ryan O’Hearn. The Orioles had a 35-30 record under Mansolino through the day of the trade deadline, a 94-win pace that would actually represent an improvement not only over this season, but also the club’s 2024 record if maintained over a full season. Of course, evaluating managerial performance is difficult to do from the outside of an organization. In a sample of just 65 games, it’s easy for one hot streak to change the perception of the stretch. Even Mansolino’s 119 games on the job can be looked at with something of an asterisk. After all, most teams would look a great deal better if you simply ignored their worst 43-game stretch of the year. How do MLBTR readers think the Elias and the Orioles should approach their managerial vacancy? Did Mansolino do enough in his time managing the team this year to earn a longer opportunity, or should the team pivot to a fresh voice? Have your say in the poll below: Take Our Poll View the full article
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The Marlins didn’t make the playoffs in 2025 but are entering the winter with a bit more optimism compared to a year ago. Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald took a look at the Miami position player mix and provided some details on the club’s aspirations for the winter. Jackson had previously reported that the club was likely going to be targeting a veteran bat this winter. In today’s reporting, he adds that first base is the most likely place for them to make that addition, though third base and the outfield corners are mentioned as other possibilities. First base is a sensible spot to target, as the Fish don’t really have anyone locked in there. Seven different players spent some time at that spot in 2025, though Eric Wagaman got the bulk of the action. Wagaman hit just .237/.281/.375 for a wRC+ of 79. That indicates he was 21% below league average at the plate. Teams generally hope to get above-average offense out of the first base spot, so that’s a natural spot to look for more production. The free agent class is headlined by guys like Pete Alonso, Josh Naylor and Ryan O’Hearn. The Marlins have occasionally thrown out notable multi-year deals but president of baseball operations Peter Bendix has largely kept his wallet in his pocket since getting his job. Two offseasons ago, his big signing was one year and $5MM for Tim Anderson. Last winter, it was $3.5MM for Cal Quantrill. Perhaps he will get more aggressive with the Marlins coming off a respectable 2025 season, though it may be more likely he goes for guys who can be had on short-term deals such as Rhys Hoskins or Paul Goldschmidt. The non-tender deadline will shake loose a few more guys, with Nathaniel Lowe and Ryan Mountcastle some of the possibilities there. Christian Walker and Alec Burleson are speculative trade candidates. Signing a third baseman is also a possibility but Jackson reports that the most likely scenario is Connor Norby and Graham Pauley battling for the job, or perhaps even forming a platoon. Pauley seems to have a decent floor as a strong defender. In 390 innings at the hot corner this year, he was credited with three Defensive Runs Saved and six Outs Above Average. Offensively, he slashed .224/.311/.366 for a wRC+ of 90. Perhaps there’s more to come with the bat. His 11.4% walk rate and 19.6% strikeout rate were both above average and he may have been held back by an unfortunate .262 batting average on balls in play. But even with offense close to average, he could be a valuable player thanks to the glove. Norby, on the other hand, received grades of -5 DRS and -4 OAA at third this year. He didn’t make up for that with the bat, as he slashed .251/.300/.389 for a wRC+ of 90. However, he has slashed .293/.369/.493 at the Triple-A level going back to the start of 2023, which translates to a 123 wRC+. Bringing that kind of production to the majors would be great but he’ll be a bit of a question mark until that happens. As for the platoon possibility Jackson mentions, Norby is right-handed and Pauley left-handed. Both players have reverse splits in their big league careers thus far but the sample size is still pretty small for both. Neither had huge splits in the minors but major league pitching might be a different story in the long run. In the outfield, Jackson suggests the investment is likely to be small, suggesting it could be similar to the club signing Heriberto Hernández to a minor league deal last winter. They should have Kyle Stowers and Jakob Marsee in two spots, with room for guys like Hernández, Griffin Conine, Dane Myers, Joey Wiemer and others. Behind the plate, Bendix already gave a public vote of confidence to Agustín Ramírez, despite his poor defensive metrics. If he is going to get another shot behind the plate next year, that could leave Joe Mack in Triple-A. Jackson reports that the club would prefer Mack to start the year in Jacksonville, but he will have a chance to earn a job in spring training. Mack is one of the top catching prospects in the league. He’s not yet on the 40-man roster but would be eligible for this winter’s Rule 5 draft if not added, so the Fish will surely give him a spot in order to protect him from being selected. He’s considered a strong defender and he slashed .250/.320/.459 for a 108 wRC+ in 99 Triple-A games this year. Promoting him to the majors seems justified at this point, but if Ramírez is going to get the bulk of the playing time as the Marlins continue to give him a shot to improve defensively, then perhaps Mack would be better served staying in Triple-A to get regular playing time. It seems like there’s even less chance of a move up the middle, as Jackson reports the club is happy with the Otto López and Xavier Edwards tandem. López has produced subpar offense but the move to shortstop has worked well. He was credited with 7 DRS and 4 OAA at that spot this year. He can also steal 15-20 bases a year, adding to his value. Edwards got poor grades at short but has been great since kicking over to the other side of the bag. He tallied 12 DRS and 9 OAA at the keystone this year, with 27 steals and roughly average offense. Photo courtesy of Eric Hartline, Imagn Images View the full article
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http://blogs.fangraphs.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/USATSI_24403084.jpgMegan Mendoza/The Republic/USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images The 33rd Arizona Fall League season opened last night with a single game in Scottsdale. There are future stars in the Fall League every year, as well as many more workmanlike players who are competing for a 40-man roster spot on next year’s club. It’s a wonderful league for teams to develop and scout prospects because of the cross section of talent it tends to include (there are usually lots of good position player prospects), its timing (which allows players who were injured during the regular season to catch up on reps), and its structure (which allows for six weeks of steady looks). Teams almost always take the AFL seriously and send players here who they want to see more of, or who they want to test. Being on the roster is, on its own, a flare. It’s an indication that a player is worth paying attention to from a scouting standpoint even if I didn’t know the guy’s name until I saw a roster. Previewing this league with prospects’ scouting reports risks putting the cart before the horse because the scouting part has yet to happen. I want to give you the reports I already have, to play the hits and make sure you have Kevin McGonigle and Josue De Paula reports and tool grades in front of you (don’t worry, you will), but a huge part of the pro scouting exercise that is the Arizona Fall League is mining for the deeper cut prospects, and I can’t tell you who those guys are going to be just yet. But I can show you the initial steps I take to prepare to go to the field and try to systematically unearth these guys, give you the tools to do so on your own, and, in the process, let know you who it is I’m most curious and excited to learn more about for the next six weeks. The players who become scouting “targets” tend to fall into a handful of categories, namely: Famous Players, Potential Dudes, Surface-Level Statistical Performers, TrackMan Performers, Players Who’ve Walked a Unique Path, and Players in a Key Roster Situation. The Famous Players are Top 100 prospects somewhere if not at FanGraphs; they were high-bonus guys when they signed or have already broken out, and you probably know who they are. Potential Dudes are prospects with burgeoning talent who might soon join the ranks of the famous as the industry becomes more confident that the player indeed profiles as an everyday big leaguer. This is arguably the most important subset of player in the entire league. I’m going to list and touch on the Famous Players and Potential Dudes for each Arizona Fall League roster below, but for in-depth scouting reports, tool grades, and video on these guys, you’re going to want to bookmark the 2025 Arizona Fall League tab on The Board, which Sean Dolinar and I have assembled for your convenience. These are pre-existing reports that I’ll add to and update throughout the next six weeks. The Surface-Level Statistical Performers are the guys who had impressive back-of-the-baseball-card stats this season. You can use the custom features on our Minor League Leaderboards to isolate the players on rosters and even create your own statistical categories of interest, just as I’ve done in the leaderboards linked just below this paragraph. Again, I’ll touch on the players who stood out in this regard for each Fall League squad below, but now you have the ability to access all of that data very easily. I’ll be referencing these on my laptop or phone throughout the fall (especially early on) as a way of familiarizing myself with how the deeper cut players did the during regular season. Remember, once you open the links, you can play with the leaderboards yourself, even if it’s just to isolate who your favorite team sent: 2025 Arizona Fall League Pitchers Stat Leaderboards 2025 Arizona Fall League Hitters Stat Leaderboard TrackMan Performers are players who stand out because of a different type of measurable. Rather than their batting average or stolen base totals, here we’re looking at what I’ll call “talent assessment metrics,” data that illustrates physical prowess instead of on-field performance. Who throws hard? Whose pitches move a lot? Who has a funky release point? Who hits the ball the hardest? These are integral aspects of contemporary player evaluation, but there’s no comprehensive public leaderboard for this stuff; it’s just a thing you have to find a way to access as a pseudo-journalistic analyst. The data of this sort that my friends and sources might send me can be vast. At the bottom of this post, I have assembled tables with what I consider to be the most basic, relevant subset of this type of data, and of course I touch on some standouts in the team sections below. The last two player categories are subjective in nature. Players in Key Roster Situations might include guys who are potentially being showcased for trade because of a logjam at their position, de-facto rehabbers who need innings in preparation for a big league role next year, players who’ll be exposed to other teams via the Rule 5 Draft this offseason if they aren’t added to the 40-man roster, or players who have been sent to Arizona to stay active in the event that their ring-chasing parent club suddenly needs them due to injuries. They’re players who a pro scouting department would care about more than they would in a vacuum because of these particulars. Unique Path players might include older guys signed out of Indy ball, or guys who are kind of a black box because they’ve been injured a lot, or have recently switched positions or sports. Basically, something related to their personal background indicates that they still have developmental ceiling. Other Stuff For Your Toolkit The Fall League rosters are here and are changing all the time. Even in the brief window between when I started writing this piece and published it, the rosters changed and some of the tables below have a superfluous guy or two. Unfortunately, we don’t have Arizona Fall League stats available on FanGraphs. For those you should go to the AFL’s website, which has other cool stuff like pitching probables and links to their live streams so you can watch the games. Now let’s touch on players from each AFL squad who fall into one of these categories. Please note that some players appear across multiple categories. Glendale Desert Dogs (Braves, White Sox, Dodgers, Cardinals, Blue Jays) Famous Players Josue De Paula, OF, Los Angeles Dodgers Hagen Smith, LHP, Chicago White Sox Braden Montgomery, OF, Chicago White Sox De Paula is a statuesque 20-year-old outfield prospect with elite plate discipline and exciting long-term power projection. This month I’ll be scrutinizing his plate coverage (most of his good contact comes on pitches right down the middle) and defense, which has been shaky for me in the past. Smith was a top five draft pick out of Arkansas in 2024. He has a killer fastball/slider combo, but he struggled with walks and injury in 2025. Is he improving in this regard, or is it time to project him as a reliever (William Shatner In the UnXplained dot GIF)? You’ll find more on Montgomery below. Potential Dude(s) Chen-Wei Lin, RHP, St. Louis Cardinals Lin, 23, was a notable Taiwanese college pitcher who gained stateside exposure via the Northwoods and MLB Draft Leagues before he signed with the Cardinals for $500,000 in 2023. He’s a sky-scraping 6-foot-7 righty who’ll touch 100 and has a great splitter, but his strike throwing really backed up this year. He has mid-rotation stuff and is a feasible late bloomer as a strike-thrower because of his size. Surface-Level Statistical Performers Venezuelan Blue Jays righty Yondrei Rojas, 22, missed nearly three months with injury this year, but he posted a 0.88 WHIP and 1.43 ERA in the 37.2 innings he threw, and wrapped his season at Double-A New Hampshire. His fastball sits about 96, and Rojas’ super long arms help him generate six-and-a-half feet of extension even though he’s only 5-foot-10. His slider isn’t great, and he needs a good second pitch. Whether one can be developed here might dictate whether he ends up rostered by Toronto this winter. Braden Montgomery led all AFL hitters in regular season doubles with 34. Blue Jays infielder Cutter Coffey slashed .273/.359/.427 during the year, while White Sox 1B/OF Caden Connor (6%) and Cardinals outfielder Travis Honeyman (7%) had low swinging strike rates. White Sox infielder Sam Antonacci had nearly as many walks as strikeouts and a 155 wRC+ in a season split between High- and Double-A; he also stole 48 bases. Braves outfielder Patrick Clohisy stole 79 bases this year, 20 more than any other Fall Leaguer. TrackMan Performer Braves infielder Jim Jarvis has a notable contact (80%, above average) and power (40% hard-hit, just below average) combo. Atlanta right-hander LJ McDonough is generating seven feet of extension and also has a release height just under five feet, and I’m really excited for an in-person peek at what his delivery looks like from the side. Key Roster Situation The promotion pace of hard-throwing Cardinals righty Randel Clemente was accelerated this season, as he climbed three levels to Double-A in his 40-man platform year. He has huge stuff, loud enough that he might be of interest to teams in the Rule 5 Draft if he shoves for six weeks and is left unprotected, but he struggles with command to the point where he may not stick on a roster even if he’s taken. Blue Jays infielder Josh Kasevich, one of the better pure contact hitters in the minors, is looking to rebound after a bad season and put himself in the Blue Jays infield mix for next year in the event Bo Bichette moves on in free agency. Unique Path Braden Montgomery, a White Sox Top 100 prospect, was arguably the top unsigned high school prospect from his graduating class. He was an exciting two-way player at Stanford who eventually transferred to Texas A&M, where he focused on hitting and cut his strikeouts enough to solidify his early-first round status. He became Boston’s first round pick, then was quickly a key aspect of the Garrett Crochet trade. He’s a switch-hitting outfielder with plus power and a show-stopping arm, but Montgomery strikes out a lot, and I hope to use the next six weeks to better understand whether this issue will worsen against big league velocity. Mesa Solar Sox (Athletics, Cubs, Marlins, Yankees, Rays) Famous Players PJ Morlando, OF, Miami Marlins Brailer Guerrero, OF, Tampa Bay Rays Aidan Smith, OF, Tampa Bay Rays Morlando had the best present power among the high schoolers in the 2024 draft, absurd BP pop for a hitter his age that allowed him to make big league parks look small with a wood bat. He signed for $3.4 million rather than go to South Carolina, and so far his pro career has been beset by injuries. A stress reaction in his back ended his short pro debut in 2024, then Morlando needed ulnar nerve transposition surgery in the spring of 2025 before straining his hamstring in May. Let’s see how he looks the further he gets away from those injuries. Both of the Rays outfielders have either been on my Top 100 (in Guerrero’s case) or on others’ in the past. Both have big tools (Guerrero is built like an NFL prospect and has big power, while Smith is sinewy and long-levered with plus speed and long-term power projection), but their swings are so long that I’m worried both are going to strike out a ton. You could just as easily include them in the next group. Potential Dude(s) Karson Milbrandt, RHP, Miami Marlins Bryce Cunningham, RHP, New York Yankees Milbrandt signed for just shy of $1.5 million in the 2022 third round rather than head to Vanderbilt. His development hasn’t been linear, but the now-21-year-old set a career best for innings (90) and K% (29%) this year and reached Double-A. Do his mechanics and feel for location look starter-y? Cunningham was the Yankees’ second rounder in 2024 but failed to exceed his junior year innings total this season due to injury. His changeup played like a plus-plus pitch this year. Does he have enough of a breaking ball to be considered a mid-rotation starter prospect? Surface-Level Statistical Performers Infield prospect Joshua Kuroda-Grauer, 22, was the Athletics’ 2024 third rounder out of Rutgers and K’d just 9% of the time this year. Assessing his potential defensive versatility will be key this Fall League, as he may not have the power to profile as an everyday second baseman. Cubs catcher Owen Ayers, a 24-year-old out of Marshall, has among both the highest pull rates (55%) and lowest groundball rates (37%) in the AFL. Yankees righty Hueston Morrill had a 0.76 ERA on the season. TrackMan Performers Rays righty Jadon Bercovich has a fastball with nearly 19 inches of induced vertical break and it’s coming from a lower-than-average release point, if only by a little bit. Brailer Guerrero had a 50% hard-hit rate but averaged just two degrees of launch because of the nature of his swing. Marlins outfielder Fenwick Trimble hovered around the big league average in both contact rate and his power metrics. Key Roster Situation Athletics infielder Max Muncy was added to the roster on Opening Day. With Jacob Wilson slated to handle everyday shortstop duties for the A’s, Muncy is slated to compete with Darell Hernaiz and Brett Harris for playing time at second and third base. The industry will be watching him this fall with that in mind. He’s on the mend from a hand injury and might not have his typical power just yet. Unique Path Rays righty Mason Auer was a two-way prospect who had a nomadic amateur career (Missouri State, San Jacinto) and became a 40+ FV prospect as an outfielder after a breakout 2022 season. The following year he really started to struggle making any kind of contact, and toward the end of 2024, the Rays moved him back to the mound. He threw just shy of six innings this year, a pitch sample so small that it doesn’t meet the minimum threshold for inclusion on the TrackMan data I pulled to prep. This guy is a black box for me right now. I put a 70 on his outfield arm in high school and want to see how he looks airing it out an inning at a time as a reliever. Peoria Javelinas (Orioles, Reds, Twins, Padres, Mariners) Famous Players Rhett Lowder, RHP, Cincinnati Reds Alfredo Duno, C, Cincinnati Reds Enrique Bradfield Jr., Baltimore Orioles Jonny Farmelo, OF, Seattle Mariners Lowder, the seventh overall pick in 2023, is picking up innings after missing time with forearm and oblique strains this season. Duno is a toolshed teenage catcher who is coming off a great Low-A season during which he was finally healthy and productive. The Reds didn’t promote him to High-A toward the end of the year, so this is a de facto promotion and will be a test of Duno’s plate discipline. Bradfield is a classic leadoff hitting center field prospect who became a household name during his days at Vanderbilt. With Cedric Mullins gone, could he compete for time in center field next year? Farmelo is only 21 and is quite young for this league both in terms of his age and minor league experience, as injuries have limited him to 75 games since he was drafted in 2023. He has a rare combination of power and speed, but his bat-to-ball ability has been tough to nail down because he’s missed so much time. Are his struggles with strikeouts actually a talent issue, or are they a small sample anomaly or perhaps the result of yet unshaken rust? Potential Dude(s) Brandon Winokur, UTIL, Minnesota Twins Cam Collier, 3B, Cincinnati Reds Luis De León, LHP, Baltimore Orioles Winokur is a 6-foot-6, 20-year-old shortstop and center fielder who hit 17 bombs this year. He still hasn’t totally grown into his body, and should add both strength and coordination as he matures. Hopefully with that will come fewer strikeouts. His K% has slowly been trending down each season. He’s a long-term project with big ceiling. Collier signed for $5 million in 2022 and has special lefty raw power, but it hasn’t been actualized in games and he hit just four dingers this year even though his underlying TrackMan power data (115 mph max, 48% hard-hit rate) are excellent. De León is a high-ceiling’d 22-year-old lefty with a very projectable 6-foot-3 frame who was sitting in the 95-97 mph range during the spring of 2025 before he was shut down at the start of the season with an elbow impingement. His fastball has uphill angle and tail, but De León has very little feel for locating it or his plus-plus slider. Though he has a ton of relief risk, in part because his arm stroke is so long, the way De León is built and moves is indicative of a starting pitcher. He has the ceiling of a mid-rotation arm with rare lefty starter velo and two plus secondaries, while his floor looks like Génesis Cabrera. Surface-Level Statistical Performers Alfredo Duno had a 164 wRC+ on the season and hit .287/.430/.518 with 52 extra-base hits. Billy Amick, the Twins’ 2024 second rounder, had a 150 wRC+ and hit .307 in 54 games at Cedar Rapids. Outfielder Hendry Mendez (traded from Milwaukee to Philly, then later to Minnesota) posted a 5.9% swinging strike rate this year, among the best of all Fall Leaguers. Orioles pitcher Tanner Smith generated a ridiculous 67% groundball rate in 37 innings. TrackMan Performers Cam Collier hit a ball 115 this year and had a 48% hard-hit rate even though he only hit four homers; continuing to understand what’s going on there and how it might get fixed is a big deal. Hendry Mendez had a 91% zone contact rate this season. Righty Johan Moreno’s slider generated a 52% miss rate. Key Roster Situation The Mariners have a host of pitchers on the 40-man fringe here. Marcelo Perez is a strike-throwing 25-year-old out of TCU whose curveball and cutter spearhead a backend starter profile. Stefan Raeth is a deceptive, slider-heavy reliever who throws a ton of strikes. Tyler Cleveland is a funky, submarine relief righty with a big sweeper. Any of them could move the needle with a dominant fall. Unique Path Orioles lefty Sayer Diederich began his college career as a pitcher at Nebraska, then became a two-way guy at Southern Nevada for a season before transferring to LSU Shreveport (NAIA) for his final collegiate season. He went undrafted and played Indy ball for a year before the Orioles signed him. He’s 24 but only made his affiliated debut this year, striking out 43 in 33.2 innings thanks to a good slider. Salt River Rafters (D-backs, Red Sox, Rockies, Angels, Pirates) Famous Players Charlie Condon, 3B/OF, Colorado Rockies Condon had one of the best college seasons ever in 2024 and was the third overall pick in that draft, signing for over $9 million. I was somewhat skeptical of Condon’s bat-to-ball ability before the draft and he struggled so badly immediately after he signed that he slid out of my Top 100. That fallow period was explained away due to injury, and while Condon was much better in 2025, he still K’d at a 28% clip at Double-A, and I still think he has a volatile offensive forecast even though he clearly has big power. Potential Dude(s) Tony Blanco Jr., 1B, Pittsburgh Pirates Jansel Luis, SS, Arizona Diamondbacks David Hagaman, RHP, Arizona Diamondbacks Blanco has some of the best raw power in all of pro baseball even though he’s only 20 years old. He’s already hit a ball 120 mph and had a 113 mph EV90 in 2025, second in pro baseball behind Oneil Cruz. Will he be Aaron Judge? Chris Carter? Or will Blanco make so little contact that he turns into a Franmil Reyes type of fringe big leaguer? Luis is a projectable switch-hitting 20-year-old infielder with awesome hand speed, but his Epicurean approach at the dish has tended to impact his production. Hagaman came to Arizona in the Merrill Kelly trade. He fell in his draft year due to TJ and only returned to affiliated ball a few weeks before he was traded. He is both built like and moves like a big league starter, will flash three good pitches, and threw strikes in a relatively small sample after he was back from surgery. Surface-Level Statistical Performers Angels righty Benny Thompson, an undrafted free agent from 2023, had a ridiculous 39% K% in 61.1 innings this year. Granted, he’s an older guy who spent the year in A-ball and he walked a ton of dudes. To my recollection, I’ve never seen Thompson, so I have no idea how he’s doing this. His age and wildness make him a lower-priority target, but a target nonetheless. Angels outfielder Raudi Rodriguez had an amazing 14 triples in 125 games and stole 38 bases in 44 attempts. Pirates outfielder Esmerlyn Valdez hit 26 homers this year, most among Fall Leaguers. TrackMan Performers Angels righty Najer Victor had a 60% miss rate on his slider this year, while the sliders of Ryan Costeiu, another Angels reliever, and D-backs rehabber Drey Jameson had slider miss rates just shy of 50%. Salt River doesn’t have anyone on the roster with a contact rate over 76%, a mark owned by Jansel Luis. And of course, I mentioned Tony Blanco Jr. Key Roster Situation Drey Jameson, a former Top 100 prospect, graduated from rookie status in 2023, but his career has been beset by injuries since then. The vacuum created by injuries to Corbin Burnes, A.J. Puk and Justin Martinez, plus the looming potential turnover in Arizona’s rotation due to Zac Gallen’s free agency, makes it particularly important for Jameson to hit the ground running and play a key role on the pitching staff of an otherwise competitive D-backs roster. His look in Arizona will help determine what kind of role — Starter? Long reliever? Late-inning guy? — he might compete for when camp kicks off next spring. Red Sox righty Luis Perales is in a similar situation after returning from surgery late in the year. He might be a big part of Boston’s 2026 bullpen. Unique Path Pirates outfielder Will Taylor comes from a family of decorated athletes in South Carolina and has one of the nuttier high school athletics résumés you’ll ever see. He lettered five times in baseball, five times in track & field, four times in football and four times in wrestling, he was a three-time state champion in wrestling, and he won state titles in football and track. He went to Clemson as a two-sport athlete and became the first football and baseball player at the university since Lions defensive lineman D.J. Reader, but he tore his ACL in 2021 and had just one productive baseball season. He was drafted in the 2024 fifth round and had a big power output uptick in 2025. Scottsdale Scorpions (Tigers, Astros, Mets, Giants, Nationals) Famous Players Kevin McGonigle, 2B, Detroit Tigers You’re no doubt familiar with McGonigle, who is one of the very best prospects in baseball thanks to his elite feel for contact. A great Fall League would tee him up to replace Gleyber Torres as the Tigers’ everyday second baseman next year should Torres leave in free agency. Potential Dudes Jake Bennett, LHP, Washington Nationals Walker Janek, C, Houston Astros Bennett is a 6-foot-6, 24-year-old lefty who throws a ton of strikes and has a great changeup. He doesn’t throw especially hard, but lefties with great command of great changeups tend to outperform their projections. We could see Bennett in the bigs next year. Janek is a super athletic catcher with rare pull power for his position. He strikes out a good bit, but he’s a small school player from Sam Houston State who might just need more time to adjust to pro pitching. Surface-Level Statistical Performers Sean Paul Liñan, a 20-year-old righty who came over from the Dodgers in the Alex Call trade, is not only one of the youngest couple of pitchers in the league, but he K’d 33% of opposing hitters this year, second most among AFL pitchers who threw at least 70 innings during the season. TrackMan Performers Kevin McGonigle checks every box in at least an average capacity. Astros outfielder Joseph Sullivan had a microscopic 13% chase rate. Sean Paul Liñan’s changeup features 2,600 rpm and generated an elite miss rate this year. Tigers pitcher Kenny Serwa has a splitter with a triple-digit spin rate. Key Roster Situation Tigers lefty Jake Miller looked great in last year’s Fall League, but he spent most of 2025 on the IL and only threw 20 innings. The Tigers’ big league roster is absolutely stacked with good pitching, and it might crowd out Miller to the point where he generates trade or Rule 5 Draft interest this offseason. Unique Path Giants infielder Parks Harber began his college career at Georgia, then transferred to North Carolina and was eventually an undrafted senior sign by the Yankees in 2024. He was off to a hot start in 2025, then got injured a few weeks before he was traded to the Giants as part of the Camilo Doval deal. He hit .323 this year in limited action and has the overt physicality of a big league 3B/1B, but how real is the hit tool? Surprise Saguaros (Guardians, Royals, Brewers, Phillies, Rangers) Famous Players Daniel Espino, RHP, Cleveland Guardians Blake Mitchell, C, Kansas City Royals Sebastian Walcott, SS, Texas Rangers Espino looked like the next Gerrit Cole before multiple full-season injuries derailed his career. He’s been back for a bit, and touched 102 on the backfields before he was briefly sent to an affiliate during the regular season. He looks a lot like Ryan Helsley now; let’s see how he and his stuff hold up (or maybe progress) through the fall. Mitchell has been famous since he was a high school sophomore, a lefty-hitting catcher prospect with big power and arm strength. Poor plate discipline threatens to turn him into a lefty-hitting Jorge Alfaro, useful but flawed. Walcott has maybe the best long-term power projection in the minors. He’s a strapping 6-foot-4 and has performed as a young-for-the-level player with each assignment. Potential Dudes Josh Adamczewski, 2B/LF, Milwaukee Brewers Dylan Dreiling, OF, Texas Rangers Adamczewski has plus lefty bat speed but really struggles on defense. It’s plausible he’ll hit enough to be a good left fielder, a position where he saw increased reps during Instructional League and likely will again in the AFL. The Rangers have totally overhauled Dreiling’s swing. His angle of attack has changed — his bat is pointed more vertically when his hands load — and he’s been given a bigger leg kick. He made a plus rate of contact in 2025, and this fall will be used to determine how well he can time fastballs. Surface-Level Statistical Performers Phillies prospect Dante Nori (52) and Royals prospect Carson Roccaforte (43) were near the top of the stolen base leaderboard across all of the minors. Brewers 1B/3B Luke Adams has a career .423 OBP in four seasons. Royals right-hander A.J. Causey had a 0.88 WHIP and 1.72 ERA this year. TrackMan Performers Guardians outfielder Wuilfredo Antunez doesn’t have big top-end power, but he’s averaging an absolutely wild 23 degrees of launch, which might be too extreme for him to be productive. Marco Dinges (who you’ll read about shortly) is pacing this group with a 107 mph EV90. Rangers pitcher Joey Danielson generated an absurd 42% miss rate on his 95-96 mph fastball. Key Roster Situation The Rangers have three pitchers in Arizona who could conceivably play key roles on next year’s big league team. Winston Santos is an athletic, strike-throwing 23-year-old righty with a 94-97 mph fastball. He missed time in 2025 with a stress reaction in his back. I wrote about Jose Corniell in August. And finally, righty Emiliano Teodo will exceed triple digits with his fastball, but its shape and movement aren’t conducive to missing bats. Unique Path Marco Dinges began his college career at Tallahassee Community College where, during his sophomore year, he developed Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis, a potentially fatal autoimmune disease where white blood cells are produced in excess and attack healthy tissues and organs rather than an actual invader, like a virus. For weeks, Dinges had a fever of 105 or so and was literally fighting for his life, in and out of different hospitals before he was properly diagnosed and treated by a pediatric rheumatologist and professor at the University of Florida. Ironically, after Dinges recovered and was ready to resume his baseball career, he transferred to Florida State for his junior year. He’s a really toolsy (bat speed, arm strength) if undersized catcher coming off a year with an OPS over .900. Arizona Fall League Hitters’ Contact Data Player Pos Age Org AFL ContactRate InZoneMiss Chase 2K Chase Nacho Alvarez Jr. 3B 22 ATL Glendale 78% 17% 25% 40% Patrick Clohisy CF 23 ATL Glendale 74% 16% 28% 34% Jim Jarvis SS 24 ATL Glendale 81% 15% 24% 38% Sam Antonacci 2B 22 CWS Glendale 86% 11% 17% 34% Ryan Galanie 1B 25 CWS Glendale 76% 17% 23% 28% Caden Connor LF 25 CWS Glendale 85% 10% 26% 39% Braden Montgomery CF 22 CWS Glendale 67% 23% 24% 34% Josue De Paula LF 20 LAD Glendale 76% 20% 14% 23% Logan Wagner 3B 21 LAD Glendale 67% 25% 23% 29% Nico Perez 2B 21 LAD Glendale 76% 17% 28% 35% Graysen Tarlow C 24 STL Glendale 77% 19% 20% 42% Travis Honeyman CF 23 STL Glendale 81% 15% 24% 39% Miguel Ugueto RF 23 STL Glendale 78% 12% 40% 58% Cutter Coffey 3B 21 TOR Glendale 72% 23% 25% 35% Edward Duran C 21 TOR Glendale 75% 18% 27% 42% Josh Kasevich SS 24 TOR Glendale 85% 12% 19% 33% Joshua Kuroda-Grauer SS 22 ATH Mesa 86% 7% 29% 58% Ryan Lasko CF 23 ATH Mesa 66% 24% 23% 29% Tommy White 3B 22 ATH Mesa 80% 14% 34% 50% Cole Mathis DH 22 CHC Mesa 76% 19% 20% 32% Ed Howard SS 23 CHC Mesa 54% 31% 33% 39% Owen Ayers C 24 CHC Mesa 72% 20% 22% 29% Fenwick Trimble CF 23 MIA Mesa 76% 17% 21% 37% Starlyn Caba SS 19 MIA Mesa 84% 12% 19% 36% PJ Morlando LF 20 MIA Mesa 69% 22% 21% 35% Enmanuel Tejeda 2B 20 NYY Mesa 79% 16% 21% 29% Manuel Palencia C 23 NYY Mesa 79% 16% 30% 56% Coby Morales 1B 23 NYY Mesa 71% 23% 27% 42% Aidan Smith CF 21 TB Mesa 67% 25% 25% 37% Brailer Guerrero RF 19 TB Mesa 64% 25% 27% 27% Brayden Taylor 3B 23 TB Mesa 72% 21% 19% 26% Thomas Sosa RF 20 BAL Peoria 70% 25% 29% 37% Enrique Bradfield Jr. CF 23 BAL Peoria 79% 16% 17% 25% Ethan Anderson C 22 BAL Peoria 80% 16% 21% 37% Alfredo Duno C 19 CIN Peoria 69% 26% 15% 19% Cam Collier 1B 20 CIN Peoria 71% 21% 23% 33% Leo Balcazar SS 21 CIN Peoria 79% 14% 28% 39% Billy Amick 1B 22 MIN Peoria 68% 24% 23% 29% Hendry Mendez LF 21 MIN Peoria 85% 9% 19% 26% Brandon Winokur CF 20 MIN Peoria 66% 26% 34% 36% Ryan Jackson SS 23 SD Peoria 77% 16% 21% 37% Braedon Karpathios RF 22 SD Peoria 71% 25% 19% 24% Lamar King Jr. C 21 SD Peoria 74% 16% 27% 33% Charlie Pagliarini 2B 24 SEA Peoria 67% 25% 23% 31% Jonny Farmelo CF 21 SEA Peoria 65% 26% 21% 33% Brock Rodden SS 25 SEA Peoria 69% 20% 28% 50% Jansel Luis 2B 20 AZ Salt River 76% 15% 34% 47% Kenny Castillo C 21 AZ Salt River 75% 18% 36% 41% Jack Hurley CF 23 AZ Salt River 58% 35% 33% 42% Johanfran Garcia C 20 BOS Salt River 65% 26% 33% 40% Nelly Taylor CF 22 BOS Salt River 67% 25% 18% 33% Charlie Condon 1B 22 COL Salt River 69% 21% 23% 27% Jared Thomas LF 22 COL Salt River 69% 22% 25% 40% Braylen Wimmer LF 24 COL Salt River 73% 18% 32% 42% Raudi Rodriguez RF 22 LAA Salt River 68% 24% 27% 34% David Mershon SS 22 LAA Salt River 70% 23% 20% 24% Juan Flores C 19 LAA Salt River 66% 21% 38% 43% Esmerlyn Valdez RF 21 PIT Salt River 70% 24% 21% 30% Tony Blanco Jr. DH 20 PIT Salt River 56% 34% 33% 44% Will Taylor CF 22 PIT Salt River 66% 26% 20% 26% Kevin McGonigle SS 21 DET Scottsdale 81% 14% 20% 34% Max Anderson 2B 23 DET Scottsdale 76% 18% 31% 42% Jack Penney 2B 23 DET Scottsdale 76% 16% 17% 27% Joseph Sullivan CF 23 HOU Scottsdale 72% 20% 13% 22% Walker Janek C 23 HOU Scottsdale 68% 23% 31% 42% Jeron Williams SS 24 HOU Scottsdale 80% 11% 32% 35% Chris Suero C 21 NYM Scottsdale 68% 25% 24% 31% D’Andre Smith RF 24 NYM Scottsdale 77% 15% 33% 48% Nick Morabito CF 22 NYM Scottsdale 77% 18% 24% 33% Axiel Plaz C 20 PIT Scottsdale 72% 19% 36% 49% Parks Harber 3B 23 SF Scottsdale 72% 17% 23% 34% Walker Martin 3B 21 SF Scottsdale 64% 26% 22% 33% Maui Ahuna SS 23 SF Scottsdale 66% 23% 24% 34% Sam Petersen CF 22 WSH Scottsdale 69% 27% 25% 25% Ethan Petry LF 21 WSH Scottsdale 64% 30% 23% 33% Seaver King SS 22 WSH Scottsdale 77% 17% 37% 54% Wuilfredo Antunez RF 23 CLE Surprise 74% 20% 31% 44% Juan Benjamin 3B 22 CLE Surprise 77% 14% 27% 42% Joe Lampe LF 24 CLE Surprise 76% 18% 24% 33% Carson Roccaforte CF 23 KC Surprise 67% 25% 19% 30% Blake Mitchell C 21 KC Surprise 64% 31% 18% 25% Daniel Vazquez SS 21 KC Surprise 72% 17% 28% 35% Luke Adams 1B 21 MIL Surprise 77% 17% 15% 28% Marco Dinges C 22 MIL Surprise 71% 21% 24% 36% Josh Adamczewski 2B 20 MIL Surprise 73% 19% 22% 30% Aidan Miller SS 21 PHI Surprise 76% 17% 17% 27% Dante Nori CF 20 PHI Surprise 80% 13% 24% 29% Carson DeMartini 3B 22 PHI Surprise 67% 24% 23% 32% Sebastian Walcott SS 19 TEX Surprise 72% 19% 25% 36% Malcolm Moore C 22 TEX Surprise 74% 16% 26% 38% Ben Hartl C 22 TEX Surprise 74% 20% 21% 29% Dylan Dreiling CF 22 TEX Surprise 83% 12% 24% 40% Arizona Fall League Hitters’ Power Data Player Pos Age Org AFL EV90 MaxEV HardHit AvgLaunch Nacho Alvarez Jr. 3B 22 ATL Glendale 101.3 108.2 27% 17 Patrick Clohisy CF 23 ATL Glendale 102.2 111.0 30% 11 Jim Jarvis SS 24 ATL Glendale 104.7 110.0 40% 9 Sam Antonacci 2B 22 CWS Glendale 102.7 109.8 39% 11 Ryan Galanie 1B 25 CWS Glendale 102.6 113.4 42% 14 Caden Connor LF 25 CWS Glendale 102.4 109.1 37% 6 Braden Montgomery CF 22 CWS Glendale 106.8 111.4 47% 7 Josue De Paula LF 20 LAD Glendale 105.3 111.9 42% 12 Logan Wagner 3B 21 LAD Glendale 104.2 110.3 41% 17 Nico Perez 2B 21 LAD Glendale 103.1 108.8 33% 18 Graysen Tarlow C 24 STL Glendale 99.0 103.2 31% 9 Travis Honeyman CF 23 STL Glendale 100.9 108.6 27% 9 Miguel Ugueto RF 23 STL Glendale 103.6 108.8 36% 2 Cutter Coffey 3B 21 TOR Glendale 102.1 113.7 38% 13 Edward Duran C 21 TOR Glendale 101.7 109.1 37% 7 Josh Kasevich SS 24 TOR Glendale 100.2 109.5 40% 16 Joshua Kuroda-Grauer SS 22 ATH Mesa 100.3 113.3 28% 6 Ryan Lasko CF 23 ATH Mesa 102.9 111.1 38% 10 Tommy White 3B 22 ATH Mesa 103.3 114.1 35% 9 Cole Mathis DH 22 CHC Mesa 102.7 108.7 33% 21 Ed Howard SS 23 CHC Mesa 103.6 105.0 41% 9 Owen Ayers C 24 CHC Mesa 104.5 113.3 44% 15 Fenwick Trimble CF 23 MIA Mesa 104.3 109.6 41% 8 Starlyn Caba SS 19 MIA Mesa 98.4 104.8 30% 9 PJ Morlando LF 20 MIA Mesa 102.2 109.0 28% 8 Enmanuel Tejeda 2B 20 NYY Mesa 100.6 110.0 37% 10 Manuel Palencia C 23 NYY Mesa 102.0 111.0 37% 9 Coby Morales 1B 23 NYY Mesa 103.8 111.2 45% 11 Aidan Smith CF 21 TB Mesa 104.1 111.7 39% 16 Brailer Guerrero RF 19 TB Mesa 108.8 115.9 50% 2 Brayden Taylor 3B 23 TB Mesa 101.7 112.8 39% 25 Thomas Sosa RF 20 BAL Peoria 106.7 111.8 41% 14 Enrique Bradfield Jr. CF 23 BAL Peoria 101.2 108.0 32% 14 Ethan Anderson C 22 BAL Peoria 102.9 109.1 38% 13 Alfredo Duno C 19 CIN Peoria 105.5 123.9 48% 14 Cam Collier 1B 20 CIN Peoria 105.6 115.2 48% 8 Leo Balcazar SS 21 CIN Peoria 102.5 113.6 37% 11 Billy Amick 1B 22 MIN Peoria 103.9 111.6 41% 14 Hendry Mendez LF 21 MIN Peoria 104.8 113.0 42% 3 Brandon Winokur CF 20 MIN Peoria 106.0 113.5 41% 10 Ryan Jackson SS 23 SD Peoria 100.8 110.3 32% 10 Braedon Karpathios RF 22 SD Peoria 105.6 111.3 52% 9 Lamar King Jr. C 21 SD Peoria 103.0 109.9 41% 13 Charlie Pagliarini 2B 24 SEA Peoria 108.1 125.9 43% 14 Jonny Farmelo CF 21 SEA Peoria 103.6 108.6 28% 15 Brock Rodden SS 25 SEA Peoria 104.5 110.6 41% 19 Jansel Luis 2B 20 AZ Salt River 101.1 111.5 27% 8 Kenny Castillo C 21 AZ Salt River 103.3 109.0 35% 16 Jack Hurley CF 23 AZ Salt River 105.0 111.4 42% 9 Johanfran Garcia C 20 BOS Salt River 104.3 109.4 41% 20 Nelly Taylor CF 22 BOS Salt River 105.4 111.9 48% 18 Charlie Condon 1B 22 COL Salt River 105.7 112.1 44% 14 Jared Thomas LF 22 COL Salt River 104.6 109.9 48% 14 Braylen Wimmer LF 24 COL Salt River 103.8 128.9 38% 9 Raudi Rodriguez RF 22 LAA Salt River 106.6 111.8 45% 9 David Mershon SS 22 LAA Salt River 99.1 109.0 28% 7 Juan Flores C 19 LAA Salt River 102.9 112.9 34% 19 Esmerlyn Valdez RF 21 PIT Salt River 107.8 115.2 45% 16 Tony Blanco Jr. DH 20 PIT Salt River 113.5 119.8 54% 10 Will Taylor CF 22 PIT Salt River 103.5 108.2 40% 18 Kevin McGonigle SS 21 DET Scottsdale 105.3 113.3 47% 19 Max Anderson 2B 23 DET Scottsdale 104.7 111.3 47% 10 Jack Penney 2B 23 DET Scottsdale 104.5 110.2 45% 8 Joseph Sullivan CF 23 HOU Scottsdale 106.9 111.6 50% 10 Walker Janek C 23 HOU Scottsdale 104.4 111.6 36% 17 Jeron Williams SS 24 HOU Scottsdale 101.1 109.5 33% 7 Chris Suero C 21 NYM Scottsdale 105.4 112.7 42% 14 D’Andre Smith RF 24 NYM Scottsdale 103.5 110.6 40% 10 Nick Morabito CF 22 NYM Scottsdale 103.2 110.2 38% 4 Axiel Plaz C 20 PIT Scottsdale 108.0 113.9 53% 8 Parks Harber 3B 23 SF Scottsdale 107.7 112.4 56% 11 Walker Martin 3B 21 SF Scottsdale 106.7 114.2 48% 13 Maui Ahuna SS 23 SF Scottsdale 105.2 113.7 49% 4 Sam Petersen CF 22 WSH Scottsdale 103.3 110.1 44% 13 Ethan Petry LF 21 WSH Scottsdale 107.1 111.0 47% 2 Seaver King SS 22 WSH Scottsdale 104.8 110.9 40% 6 Wuilfredo Antunez RF 23 CLE Surprise 102.0 113.8 33% 23 Juan Benjamin 3B 22 CLE Surprise 100.6 110.1 29% 10 Joe Lampe LF 24 CLE Surprise 103.3 109.6 36% 10 Carson Roccaforte CF 23 KC Surprise 103.6 110.1 43% 18 Blake Mitchell C 21 KC Surprise 104.3 109.1 41% 16 Daniel Vazquez SS 21 KC Surprise 101.7 111.1 31% 9 Luke Adams 1B 21 MIL Surprise 104.2 109.9 34% 17 Marco Dinges C 22 MIL Surprise 107.2 111.5 48% 13 Josh Adamczewski 2B 20 MIL Surprise 103.9 110.5 39% 14 Aidan Miller SS 21 PHI Surprise 106.3 114.5 43% 14 Dante Nori CF 20 PHI Surprise 101.0 109.2 32% 11 Carson DeMartini 3B 22 PHI Surprise 104.2 111.4 42% 21 Sebastian Walcott SS 19 TEX Surprise 106.8 113.3 40% 8 Malcolm Moore C 22 TEX Surprise 101.2 110.7 27% 19 Ben Hartl C 22 TEX Surprise 100.4 105.9 31% 12 Dylan Dreiling CF 22 TEX Surprise 103.9 111.2 40% 16 Arizona Fall League Pitchers’ Movement Data Pitcher Org Arm FV Pitch Avg IVB Horiz Miss Chase Cory Wall ATL R Glendale 4SM 92.6 18.8 8.5 24% 25% Cory Wall ATL R Glendale SL 83.7 1.6 -1.4 32% 36% Cory Wall ATL R Glendale CH 81.0 3.4 12.8 41% 31% LJ McDonough ATL R Glendale 4SM 95.0 15.8 8.1 27% 17% LJ McDonough ATL R Glendale 2SM 95.0 14.0 11.9 39% 29% LJ McDonough ATL R Glendale CT 88.4 2.9 -4.3 31% 32% LJ McDonough ATL R Glendale SL 87.5 1.1 -4.8 43% 42% Luke Sinnard ATL R Glendale 4SM 93.4 18.0 8.6 30% 22% Luke Sinnard ATL R Glendale CT 88.4 5.3 0.1 35% 30% Luke Sinnard ATL R Glendale SL 84.1 5.3 1.3 36% 32% Trent Buchanan ATL R Glendale 2SM 93.5 13.6 13.6 32% 24% Trent Buchanan ATL R Glendale CT 86.4 6.3 0.2 31% 13% Trent Buchanan ATL R Glendale SL 84.7 5.0 0.6 27% 29% Trent Buchanan ATL R Glendale CH 84.8 5.4 8.6 33% 36% Carson Jacobs CWS R Glendale 4SM 95.6 20.1 5.0 32% 26% Carson Jacobs CWS R Glendale CT 88.4 6.7 -2.5 52% 29% Carson Jacobs CWS R Glendale SL 87.4 4.6 -3.4 55% 23% Connor McCullough CWS R Glendale 2SM 90.9 9.1 14.4 25% 27% Hagen Smith CWS L Glendale 4SM 93.9 16.0 -10.6 43% 16% Hagen Smith CWS L Glendale 2SM 93.8 15.2 -12.0 27% 18% Hagen Smith CWS L Glendale SL 81.7 -2.2 4.9 48% 28% Jarold Rosado CWS R Glendale 4SM 92.9 18.5 10.0 22% 35% Jarold Rosado CWS R Glendale 2SM 93.1 16.6 14.5 26% 35% Jarold Rosado CWS R Glendale CB/SLV 78.9 -5.5 -8.7 42% 40% Jarold Rosado CWS R Glendale CH 83.7 8.0 13.4 41% 17% Tyler Davis CWS R Glendale 4SM 94.9 18.9 9.0 29% 24% Tyler Davis CWS R Glendale SL 84.1 -0.6 -8.1 23% 25% Tyler Davis CWS R Glendale CH 84.2 4.8 14.3 46% 22% Alex Makarewich LAD R Glendale 4SM 97.0 19.1 8.4 45% 17% Alex Makarewich LAD R Glendale CT 90.4 5.3 -4.1 39% 21% Alex Makarewich LAD R Glendale SL 87.6 -5.8 -6.6 63% 38% Alex Makarewich LAD R Glendale CB/SLV 84.6 -14.6 -11.1 48% 30% Hyun-Seok Jang LAD R Glendale 4SM 94.1 18.0 5.2 21% 18% Hyun-Seok Jang LAD R Glendale 2SM 89.9 10.7 17.5 57% 25% Hyun-Seok Jang LAD R Glendale SL 87.9 2.0 -3.4 46% 28% Hyun-Seok Jang LAD R Glendale CB/SLV 78.2 -22.1 -5.2 86% 14% Jakob Wright LAD L Glendale 4SM 94.7 14.2 -7.7 25% 28% Jakob Wright LAD L Glendale 2SM 92.8 6.1 -14.5 12% 18% Jakob Wright LAD L Glendale SWP 85.4 -1.2 14.2 53% 42% Justin Chambers LAD L Glendale 2SM 92.7 5.9 -15.8 34% 30% Justin Chambers LAD L Glendale SWP 79.0 -5.7 14.7 79% 42% Payton Martin LAD R Glendale 4SM 94.1 17.5 5.9 16% 18% Payton Martin LAD R Glendale CT 88.2 6.2 -2.9 36% 33% Payton Martin LAD R Glendale SL 84.3 2.1 -7.0 40% 48% Payton Martin LAD R Glendale CB/SLV 80.1 -5.9 -10.7 42% 34% Payton Martin LAD R Glendale CH 86.7 6.6 12.1 43% 20% D.J. Carpenter STL R Glendale 4SM 94.9 18.3 4.9 12% 14% D.J. Carpenter STL R Glendale CT 87.0 2.8 -8.7 52% 68% D.J. Carpenter STL R Glendale SL 86.2 1.0 -8.8 34% 25% Darlin Saladin STL R Glendale 4SM 92.6 15.4 8.5 17% 15% Darlin Saladin STL R Glendale 2SM 92.3 12.1 13.5 9% 32% Darlin Saladin STL R Glendale SL 81.9 0.5 0.2 41% 32% Darlin Saladin STL R Glendale CB/SLV 79.8 -7.0 -1.6 37% 33% Darlin Saladin STL R Glendale CH 85.6 4.5 14.6 36% 22% Randel Clemente STL R Glendale 4SM 96.0 17.9 11.2 21% 26% Randel Clemente STL R Glendale 2SM 96.2 16.1 14.1 22% 17% Randel Clemente STL R Glendale CT 87.6 1.0 0.0 54% 32% Randel Clemente STL R Glendale SL 86.6 -0.4 -0.5 70% 46% Tyler Bradt STL R Glendale 4SM 95.4 17.3 11.2 30% 18% Tyler Bradt STL R Glendale 2SM 94.1 13.2 13.9 25% 14% Tyler Bradt STL R Glendale SL 85.4 -2.9 -7.8 42% 33% Tyler Bradt STL R Glendale CB/SLV 84.4 -7.6 -8.8 30% 21% Alex Amalfi TOR R Glendale 4SM 93.7 19.6 8.1 33% 25% Alex Amalfi TOR R Glendale CT 86.7 6.0 -2.6 31% 28% Alex Amalfi TOR R Glendale SL 85.5 3.8 -3.6 46% 23% Alex Amalfi TOR R Glendale CB/SLV 77.3 -13.3 -9.9 24% 8% Chay Yeager TOR R Glendale 4SM 96.5 18.8 6.0 32% 28% Chay Yeager TOR R Glendale CT 91.1 5.6 -1.7 55% 39% Chay Yeager TOR R Glendale SL 89.7 2.2 -2.4 39% 33% Kai Peterson TOR L Glendale 2SM 92.0 12.0 -17.8 28% 29% Kai Peterson TOR L Glendale SL 83.4 1.8 0.7 26% 22% Yondrei Rojas TOR R Glendale 4SM 95.9 14.7 6.7 33% 18% Yondrei Rojas TOR R Glendale 2SM 93.9 8.4 15.6 27% 29% Yondrei Rojas TOR R Glendale SL 86.9 4.4 -5.4 26% 32% Blaze Pontes ATH R Mesa 4SM 93.0 17.9 7.7 13% 22% Blaze Pontes ATH R Mesa 2SM 92.0 13.3 15.1 26% 6% Blaze Pontes ATH R Mesa SL 85.9 1.1 -2.2 35% 38% Blaze Pontes ATH R Mesa CH 84.6 4.3 11.9 15% 27% Corey Avant ATH R Mesa 4SM 94.7 18.7 10.0 21% 27% Corey Avant ATH R Mesa 2SM 91.8 10.2 13.6 20% 29% Corey Avant ATH R Mesa SL 85.3 -3.5 -3.5 39% 30% Corey Avant ATH R Mesa CB/SLV 79.6 -13.3 -9.6 40% 19% Mark Adamiak ATH R Mesa 4SM 94.7 15.2 7.3 19% 26% Mark Adamiak ATH R Mesa CT 89.5 8.6 -2.4 34% 15% Mark Adamiak ATH R Mesa SL 83.5 4.8 -10.4 34% 30% Nathan Dettmer ATH R Mesa 2SM 91.8 9.2 16.4 13% 21% Nathan Dettmer ATH R Mesa SL 83.0 1.9 -11.9 26% 33% Nathan Dettmer ATH R Mesa CB/SLV 80.6 -2.2 -15.4 35% 24% Nathan Dettmer ATH R Mesa CH 84.7 6.5 15.7 31% 21% Will Johnston ATH L Mesa 4SM 91.3 16.4 -6.6 11% 13% Will Johnston ATH L Mesa SL 81.9 0.0 -3.0 58% 33% Will Johnston ATH L Mesa CB/SLV 81.9 -3.6 -1.3 56% 44% Will Johnston ATH L Mesa CH 81.4 5.3 -8.9 47% 33% JP Wheat CHC R Mesa 4SM 97.5 16.0 8.8 37% 17% JP Wheat CHC R Mesa 2SM 97.4 13.4 14.2 28% 21% JP Wheat CHC R Mesa CT 89.0 6.1 -3.4 51% 23% Luis Martinez-Gomez CHC R Mesa 4SM 94.9 16.2 11.5 44% 30% Luis Martinez-Gomez CHC R Mesa 2SM 93.8 10.9 15.6 26% 23% Luis Martinez-Gomez CHC R Mesa SL 81.9 2.3 -9.3 44% 27% Mathew Peters CHC R Mesa 4SM 95.2 14.7 8.3 26% 20% Mathew Peters CHC R Mesa 2SM 95.1 13.5 12.2 19% 24% Mathew Peters CHC R Mesa CT 88.2 6.8 -1.4 27% 23% Mathew Peters CHC R Mesa SL 85.9 3.6 -3.7 39% 39% Thomas Mangus CHC R Mesa 4SM 94.9 17.5 6.3 15% 28% Holt Jones MIA R Mesa 4SM 95.9 14.3 9.6 27% 21% Holt Jones MIA R Mesa 2SM 95.9 13.0 12.4 23% 26% Holt Jones MIA R Mesa CT 87.9 4.1 -1.4 48% 25% Holt Jones MIA R Mesa SL 84.2 4.7 -9.6 39% 33% Jack Sellinger MIA L Mesa 4SM 92.5 12.4 -6.2 17% 22% Jack Sellinger MIA L Mesa 2SM 92.7 10.2 -13.3 15% 14% Jack Sellinger MIA L Mesa SWP 83.4 -2.7 14.7 35% 21% Jack Sellinger MIA L Mesa CH 85.6 5.6 -8.1 41% 52% Karson Milbrandt MIA R Mesa 4SM 95.0 17.3 8.4 33% 23% Karson Milbrandt MIA R Mesa 2SM 94.4 14.0 13.1 28% 19% Karson Milbrandt MIA R Mesa CT 88.2 3.8 -1.3 36% 40% Karson Milbrandt MIA R Mesa SL 85.3 0.5 -6.0 30% 38% Karson Milbrandt MIA R Mesa CB/SLV 82.1 -9.3 -6.9 38% 24% Brady Kirtner NYY R Mesa 4SM 93.1 14.1 3.3 19% 25% Brady Kirtner NYY R Mesa CT 92.0 12.4 -1.0 23% 17% Brady Kirtner NYY R Mesa SWP 83.1 -0.8 -17.2 48% 32% Brady Kirtner NYY R Mesa CB/SLV 81.6 -7.7 -15.3 27% 23% Bryce Cunningham NYY R Mesa 4SM 94.1 17.5 4.7 26% 24% Bryce Cunningham NYY R Mesa 2SM 88.9 13.4 17.6 33% 33% Bryce Cunningham NYY R Mesa SL 83.1 -0.9 -5.4 36% 32% Bryce Cunningham NYY R Mesa CB/SLV 79.7 -8.1 -6.1 36% 22% Hueston Morrill NYY R Mesa 4SM 93.5 15.1 8.4 22% 21% Hueston Morrill NYY R Mesa 2SM 93.5 14.0 12.7 25% 25% Hueston Morrill NYY R Mesa CT 90.1 7.9 -2.4 24% 25% Hueston Morrill NYY R Mesa SL 85.3 5.7 -5.9 56% 50% Andrew Lindsey TB R Mesa 2SM 95.0 5.8 15.3 13% 8% Jackson Baumeister TB R Mesa 4SM 94.3 17.5 8.6 30% 31% Jackson Baumeister TB R Mesa 2SM 94.1 15.9 13.5 20% 30% Jackson Baumeister TB R Mesa CT 88.6 7.3 -1.5 21% 22% Jackson Baumeister TB R Mesa CB/SLV 79.3 -11.7 -8.6 39% 26% Jackson Baumeister TB R Mesa CH 86.8 4.3 14.8 39% 29% Jadon Bercovich TB R Mesa 4SM 94.2 18.7 8.3 28% 20% Jadon Bercovich TB R Mesa SL 83.7 1.3 -7.3 88% 38% Jonathan Russell TB R Mesa 4SM 94.7 16.5 7.3 41% 33% Jonathan Russell TB R Mesa 2SM 95.0 15.1 13.1 20% 21% Jonathan Russell TB R Mesa CT 88.0 4.6 -3.6 18% 21% Jonathan Russell TB R Mesa SL 85.3 0.0 -5.3 0% 7% Carson Dorsey BAL L Peoria 4SM 92.5 18.3 -5.5 31% 26% Carson Dorsey BAL L Peoria SL 81.9 -0.9 6.1 44% 43% Carson Dorsey BAL L Peoria CH 82.2 5.9 -11.6 50% 31% Luis De León BAL L Peoria 4SM 96.1 13.7 -12.3 7% 5% Luis De León BAL L Peoria 2SM 95.4 11.9 -14.5 15% 22% Luis De León BAL L Peoria SL 84.9 1.2 4.3 45% 35% Luis De León BAL L Peoria CH 87.3 5.9 -15.2 42% 29% Sayer Diederich BAL L Peoria 2SM 89.4 9.5 -16.8 25% 36% Sayer Diederich BAL L Peoria SL 82.9 0.4 7.0 35% 34% Sayer Diederich BAL L Peoria CH 87.4 7.4 -15.1 16% 34% Luke Hayden CIN R Peoria 4SM 94.4 16.0 5.5 15% 12% Luke Hayden CIN R Peoria CT 88.0 4.2 -2.6 35% 12% Luke Hayden CIN R Peoria SL 84.1 -0.8 -7.6 41% 28% Luke Hayden CIN R Peoria CB/SLV 82.2 -5.3 -11.1 32% 24% Rhett Lowder CIN R Peoria 2SM 93.0 6.4 16.7 9% 23% Rhett Lowder CIN R Peoria SL 85.5 -1.9 -3.6 50% 43% Trevor Kuncl CIN R Peoria 4SM 94.8 14.6 3.6 16% 19% Trevor Kuncl CIN R Peoria CT 88.0 0.6 -7.9 24% 25% Trevor Kuncl CIN R Peoria SL 84.9 -1.9 -10.0 36% 39% Trevor Kuncl CIN R Peoria CH 86.4 7.3 9.5 50% 58% Dylan Questad MIN R Peoria 4SM 92.7 17.1 7.7 17% 18% Dylan Questad MIN R Peoria CT 86.2 7.4 -3.0 33% 37% Dylan Questad MIN R Peoria SL 84.1 3.6 -4.4 32% 11% Dylan Questad MIN R Peoria CB/SLV 77.2 -7.9 -3.3 27% 16% Dylan Questad MIN R Peoria SPL 83.3 2.4 8.4 50% 27% Hunter Hoopes MIN R Peoria 4SM 93.6 19.1 8.0 29% 26% Hunter Hoopes MIN R Peoria SL 84.0 2.3 -1.5 36% 25% Hunter Hoopes MIN R Peoria CH 80.1 4.7 12.4 63% 36% Jakob Hall MIN R Peoria 4SM 91.5 16.6 10.5 3% 17% Jakob Hall MIN R Peoria 2SM 91.4 15.0 13.3 15% 22% Jakob Hall MIN R Peoria CT 85.9 8.4 -1.4 31% 29% Jakob Hall MIN R Peoria SL 84.4 5.1 -1.6 30% 39% Jakob Hall MIN R Peoria CB/SLV 77.4 -10.4 -10.5 37% 17% Jakob Hall MIN R Peoria CH 82.5 3.6 10.6 30% 31% Zander Sechrist MIN L Peoria 2SM 85.9 12.2 -18.1 21% 23% Zander Sechrist MIN L Peoria CT 77.5 8.2 -0.6 15% 19% Zander Sechrist MIN L Peoria SL 70.7 1.3 8.2 27% 33% Zander Sechrist MIN L Peoria CH 76.5 4.3 -9.2 18% 31% Johan Moreno SD R Peoria 4SM 92.7 17.5 5.8 20% 14% Johan Moreno SD R Peoria SL 83.2 0.6 -3.8 52% 30% Kannon Kemp SD R Peoria 4SM 93.8 12.3 4.6 13% 19% Kannon Kemp SD R Peoria CT 92.1 9.6 -1.0 23% 27% Kannon Kemp SD R Peoria SL 84.2 0.2 -3.6 34% 24% Kannon Kemp SD R Peoria CH 86.8 6.2 15.5 29% 25% Maikel Miralles SD R Peoria 4SM 92.8 16.3 6.2 26% 18% Maikel Miralles SD R Peoria 2SM 90.0 9.6 14.3 17% 10% Maikel Miralles SD R Peoria CT 86.8 3.2 -0.8 52% 37% Maikel Miralles SD R Peoria SL 85.7 0.7 -2.5 40% 35% Maikel Miralles SD R Peoria CH 87.5 7.9 12.3 24% 24% Tanner Smith BAL R Peoria 4SM 94.0 14.8 7.6 17% 15% Tanner Smith BAL R Peoria 2SM 93.2 7.6 12.8 30% 29% Tanner Smith BAL R Peoria CB/SLV 84.1 -12.1 -7.9 40% 36% Tucker Musgrove SD R Peoria 4SM 95.7 17.6 9.0 48% 26% Tucker Musgrove SD R Peoria SL 84.9 0.8 -8.8 35% 40% Tucker Musgrove SD R Peoria CB/SLV 81.4 -8.2 -5.7 70% 50% Jimmy Kingsbury SEA R Peoria 4SM 90.5 12.1 6.9 29% 22% Jimmy Kingsbury SEA R Peoria 2SM 90.3 6.0 15.9 15% 16% Jimmy Kingsbury SEA R Peoria SL 81.9 2.4 -10.4 13% 27% Jimmy Kingsbury SEA R Peoria CB/SLV 77.4 -0.6 -17.4 23% 21% Jimmy Kingsbury SEA R Peoria CH 84.0 1.1 14.9 22% 31% Marcelo Perez SEA R Peoria 4SM 92.4 15.7 5.9 12% 22% Marcelo Perez SEA R Peoria CT 87.9 4.0 -4.5 37% 32% Marcelo Perez SEA R Peoria SL 84.1 0.6 -11.0 29% 35% Ryan Hawks SEA R Peoria 2SM 92.0 7.3 20.2 12% 25% Ryan Hawks SEA R Peoria SL 83.2 0.7 -5.0 28% 36% Ryan Hawks SEA R Peoria CB/SLV 81.3 -4.8 -5.7 29% 24% Ryan Hawks SEA R Peoria CH 83.4 0.6 18.8 26% 32% Stefan Raeth SEA R Peoria 4SM 92.7 18.1 10.9 22% 28% Stefan Raeth SEA R Peoria 2SM 91.4 12.6 16.2 15% 35% Stefan Raeth SEA R Peoria CT 88.1 8.4 -1.4 42% 39% Stefan Raeth SEA R Peoria SL 82.7 6.2 -12.8 40% 33% Stefan Raeth SEA R Peoria CH 87.4 4.1 9.5 28% 52% Tyler Cleveland SEA R Peoria 2SM 87.4 3.6 19.8 38% 39% Tyler Cleveland SEA R Peoria SL 76.0 8.9 -11.3 27% 30% Tyler Cleveland SEA R Peoria CB/SLV 72.9 7.4 -14.8 41% 28% Tyler Cleveland SEA R Peoria CH 84.8 4.3 19.8 24% 30% Drey Jameson AZ R Salt 4SM 98.0 13.4 8.4 11% 12% Drey Jameson AZ R Salt 2SM 94.8 4.9 15.4 19% 32% Drey Jameson AZ R Salt SL 87.1 1.2 -2.2 48% 36% Kyle Amendt AZ R Salt 4SM 91.7 16.2 -0.7 35% 20% Kyle Amendt AZ R Salt SL 86.1 1.5 -4.4 33% 28% Kyle Amendt AZ R Salt CB/SLV 79.8 -10.0 0.7 45% 31% Yordin Chalas AZ R Salt 4SM 95.4 14.8 10.3 25% 23% Yordin Chalas AZ R Salt 2SM 94.9 10.9 14.1 18% 24% Yordin Chalas AZ R Salt SL 84.4 2.2 -4.4 29% 24% Yordin Chalas AZ R Salt CH 87.8 4.8 11.2 16% 20% Isaac Stebens BOS R Salt 2SM 92.6 11.9 13.8 36% 15% Isaac Stebens BOS R Salt SL 82.1 2.6 -4.4 26% 24% Isaac Stebens BOS R Salt CB/SLV 79.1 1.1 -10.1 25% 28% Isaac Stebens BOS R Salt CH 85.1 -0.7 15.2 5% 17% Jay Allmer BOS R Salt 2SM 91.4 6.2 15.2 10% 15% Jay Allmer BOS R Salt SL 81.7 5.7 -7.1 20% 21% Jay Allmer BOS R Salt CH 84.7 4.5 15.6 25% 27% Jojo Ingrassia BOS L Salt 2SM 93.0 13.9 -15.2 14% 31% Jojo Ingrassia BOS L Salt SL 84.6 2.1 5.3 34% 39% Jojo Ingrassia BOS L Salt CH 85.9 0.7 -14.2 42% 57% Austin Smith COL R Salt 4SM 96.6 16.5 7.8 32% 19% Austin Smith COL R Salt SL 84.6 -0.4 -6.0 35% 31% Ben Shields COL L Salt 2SM 92.9 15.5 -13.4 31% 22% Ben Shields COL L Salt SL 81.2 -1.3 10.1 37% 25% Ben Shields COL L Salt CB/SLV 80.8 -11.2 10.9 50% 46% Cade Denton COL R Salt 4SM 93.9 14.1 12.9 33% 9% Cade Denton COL R Salt 2SM 93.8 10.8 16.1 20% 22% Cade Denton COL R Salt SL 82.5 -2.0 -4.5 32% 20% Jack Mahoney COL R Salt 4SM 94.8 15.1 8.6 18% 26% Jack Mahoney COL R Salt 2SM 95.1 11.2 15.2 12% 27% Jack Mahoney COL R Salt CT 86.9 4.5 -3.5 27% 28% Jack Mahoney COL R Salt SL 85.3 0.0 -4.9 47% 30% Jack Mahoney COL R Salt CB/SLV 82.2 -9.0 -7.4 31% 15% Jack Mahoney COL R Salt CH 87.8 9.2 11.6 32% 14% Welinton Herrera COL L Salt 4SM 96.5 17.7 -12.2 36% 29% Welinton Herrera COL L Salt 2SM 95.7 17.6 -12.8 39% 28% Welinton Herrera COL L Salt SL 85.7 0.7 0.5 57% 34% Benny Thompson LAA R Salt 4SM 94.3 19.7 8.4 32% 23% Benny Thompson LAA R Salt SL 84.7 3.3 -4.0 28% 18% Benny Thompson LAA R Salt CH 80.9 8.6 16.2 56% 29% Brandon Dufault LAA R Salt 4SM 95.7 15.1 12.2 15% 13% Brandon Dufault LAA R Salt 2SM 93.6 10.4 16.7 20% 19% Brandon Dufault LAA R Salt SL 89.2 6.1 0.2 36% 28% Fulton Lockhart LAA R Salt 4SM 97.0 15.9 12.1 31% 19% Fulton Lockhart LAA R Salt 2SM 96.2 11.4 17.1 18% 19% Fulton Lockhart LAA R Salt SWP 81.6 -2.9 -14.1 77% 20% Fulton Lockhart LAA R Salt CB/SLV 80.3 -9.2 -16.5 63% 27% Najer Victor LAA R Salt 4SM 96.5 17.2 12.8 34% 22% Najer Victor LAA R Salt 2SM 95.9 13.3 16.7 17% 23% Najer Victor LAA R Salt SL 84.1 3.8 -4.9 61% 32% Ryan Costeiu LAA R Salt 4SM 92.7 20.2 10.1 20% 23% Ryan Costeiu LAA R Salt CT 88.0 5.6 -2.8 47% 27% Ryan Costeiu LAA R Salt SL 86.7 4.1 -2.5 22% 23% Ryan Costeiu LAA R Salt CB/SLV 79.7 -14.8 -7.1 32% 27% Ryan Costeiu LAA R Salt CH 82.7 10.7 16.5 38% 34% Carlson Reed PIT R Salt 4SM 91.8 14.3 5.5 20% 16% Carlson Reed PIT R Salt 2SM 89.6 9.2 13.9 28% 25% Carlson Reed PIT R Salt SL 82.9 3.2 -9.6 35% 23% Carlson Reed PIT R Salt CH 84.0 9.3 11.7 38% 32% Derek Diamond PIT R Salt 4SM 93.5 17.0 8.9 17% 19% Derek Diamond PIT R Salt 2SM 94.0 15.4 13.1 28% 20% Dominic Perachi PIT L Salt 4SM 90.7 16.5 -4.5 41% 24% Jaden Woods PIT L Salt 2SM 92.3 17.0 -13.7 20% 26% Jaden Woods PIT L Salt SL 82.8 2.5 0.1 28% 21% Joshua Loeschorn PIT R Salt 2SM 89.6 14.1 17.0 8% 31% Joshua Loeschorn PIT R Salt SL 82.2 7.5 -4.4 28% 28% David Hagaman TEX R Salt 4SM 94.1 17.5 10.5 23% 33% Juan Sanchez SF R Scotts 4SM 93.8 13.2 8.4 15% 19% Juan Sanchez SF R Scotts 2SM 94.2 12.6 12.8 9% 13% Juan Sanchez SF R Scotts SL 84.0 -0.7 -3.8 59% 33% Carlos Lequerica DET R Scotts 4SM 91.2 17.1 9.4 22% 24% Carlos Lequerica DET R Scotts 2SM 91.2 14.2 14.0 14% 33% Carlos Lequerica DET R Scotts SL 83.1 4.6 -4.4 21% 25% Carlos Lequerica DET R Scotts CH 83.5 8.6 16.2 38% 30% Dariel Fregio DET R Scotts 4SM 93.1 15.6 14.1 29% 14% Dariel Fregio DET R Scotts 2SM 92.7 13.9 15.6 19% 20% Dariel Fregio DET R Scotts CH 86.4 0.0 12.1 27% 38% Jake Miller DET L Scotts 4SM 92.4 18.0 -6.5 22% 23% Jake Miller DET L Scotts 2SM 92.1 17.4 -10.7 32% 10% Jake Miller DET L Scotts SL 82.5 2.1 7.2 39% 40% Kenny Serwa DET R Scotts 4SM 90.7 14.6 8.7 15% 21% Kenny Serwa DET R Scotts 2SM 90.5 10.8 12.5 15% 20% Kenny Serwa DET R Scotts CT 86.2 4.9 0.7 23% 40% Kenny Serwa DET R Scotts SL 82.1 3.8 -1.3 26% 23% Kenny Serwa DET R Scotts CB/SLV 79.2 -2.6 -0.9 26% 16% Kenny Serwa DET R Scotts CH 82.3 4.5 9.3 32% 9% Anderson Brito HOU R Scotts 4SM 96.1 17.1 4.3 30% 26% Anderson Brito HOU R Scotts CT 90.1 5.9 -1.8 25% 18% Anderson Brito HOU R Scotts SL 84.6 -1.7 -10.1 33% 21% Anderson Brito HOU R Scotts CB/SLV 83.6 -11.7 -8.2 37% 20% Anderson Brito HOU R Scotts CH 86.5 4.7 10.4 38% 26% Brett Gillis HOU R Scotts 4SM 91.6 18.0 9.8 21% 28% Brett Gillis HOU R Scotts 2SM 91.9 16.7 13.6 13% 32% Brett Gillis HOU R Scotts CT 87.6 8.8 0.0 31% 29% Brett Gillis HOU R Scotts SL 83.5 2.2 -1.2 35% 24% Brett Gillis HOU R Scotts CB/SLV 78.9 -10.6 -6.3 36% 21% Brett Gillis HOU R Scotts CH 85.0 6.9 9.2 28% 25% Derek True HOU R Scotts 4SM 93.3 17.0 8.4 19% 24% Derek True HOU R Scotts 2SM 92.5 13.4 13.0 17% 38% Derek True HOU R Scotts CT 89.0 7.9 -0.6 14% 13% Derek True HOU R Scotts SL 82.9 2.1 -10.2 28% 13% Derek True HOU R Scotts CB/SLV 79.7 -8.3 -6.7 29% 27% Derek True HOU R Scotts CH 86.6 6.2 11.6 36% 30% Hudson Leach HOU R Scotts 4SM 95.7 17.4 8.5 31% 21% Hudson Leach HOU R Scotts CT 89.8 5.1 -4.3 47% 29% James Hicks HOU R Scotts 2SM 92.0 9.7 14.1 22% 46% James Hicks HOU R Scotts CB/SLV 79.9 -8.8 -12.7 32% 24% James Hicks HOU R Scotts CH 85.6 3.6 16.4 5% 32% Nate Wohlgemuth HOU R Scotts 2SM 93.6 15.7 16.2 32% 20% Sean Paul Liñan LAD R Scotts 4SM 92.3 15.6 12.0 28% 18% Sean Paul Liñan LAD R Scotts 2SM 92.1 13.2 15.1 20% 17% Sean Paul Liñan LAD R Scotts CT 86.4 7.5 0.2 14% 7% Sean Paul Liñan LAD R Scotts SL 84.1 6.1 -1.9 25% 21% Sean Paul Liñan LAD R Scotts CH 81.0 0.9 16.4 65% 45% Austin Troesser NYM R Scotts 4SM 93.8 19.6 5.0 25% 19% Brett Banks NYM R Scotts 4SM 94.9 16.6 7.2 17% 19% Brett Banks NYM R Scotts SL 83.5 4.3 -10.3 29% 33% Jose T. Perez SF R Scotts 4SM 94.5 17.1 6.3 29% 27% Ricardo Estrada SF L Scotts 4SM 91.8 16.4 -5.8 28% 22% Ricardo Estrada SF L Scotts 2SM 91.4 12.4 -11.8 22% 32% Ricardo Estrada SF L Scotts SL 81.3 -1.9 5.5 43% 35% Ricardo Estrada SF L Scotts CH 86.7 6.5 -13.2 36% 36% Austin Amaral WSH R Scotts 4SM 92.9 18.0 9.3 25% 31% Austin Amaral WSH R Scotts 2SM 91.8 11.8 13.0 16% 24% Austin Amaral WSH R Scotts CT 87.2 6.6 -3.1 42% 36% Austin Amaral WSH R Scotts SL 84.0 2.4 -5.1 42% 35% Austin Amaral WSH R Scotts CH 87.4 4.9 10.3 44% 13% Jake Bennett WSH L Scotts 2SM 92.9 11.4 -14.0 28% 31% Jake Bennett WSH L Scotts SL 81.8 -0.4 4.5 26% 28% Jake Bennett WSH L Scotts CH 86.2 8.5 -14.3 39% 35% Jared Simpson WSH L Scotts 2SM 93.4 15.1 -14.3 29% 21% Jared Simpson WSH L Scotts SL 82.7 -0.6 1.2 46% 22% Jared Simpson WSH L Scotts CH 86.0 2.5 -12.0 3% 0% Pablo Aldonis WSH L Scotts 4SM 91.1 17.5 -9.3 38% 30% Pablo Aldonis WSH L Scotts 2SM 91.2 17.4 -11.9 20% 18% Pablo Aldonis WSH L Scotts SL 81.2 4.1 4.7 43% 47% Pablo Aldonis WSH L Scotts CH 84.6 13.3 -12.3 18% 28% Matt Jachec CLE R Surp 2SM 93.1 8.7 15.5 3% 32% Matt Jachec CLE R Surp SL 83.0 1.9 -9.2 46% 36% Rorik Maltrud CLE R Surp 4SM 92.2 16.1 4.9 28% 27% Rorik Maltrud CLE R Surp SL 82.8 2.6 -6.9 31% 28% Rorik Maltrud CLE R Surp CB/SLV 77.5 -7.7 -11.0 41% 13% Trenton Denholm CLE R Surp 4SM 91.2 18.2 8.2 18% 32% Trenton Denholm CLE R Surp CT 86.0 7.0 0.0 16% 25% Trenton Denholm CLE R Surp SL 84.7 5.8 0.5 41% 36% Trenton Denholm CLE R Surp CB/SLV 78.4 -10.3 -4.8 26% 22% Trenton Denholm CLE R Surp CH 81.2 8.5 14.9 40% 30% Zane Morehouse CLE R Surp 4SM 94.7 12.5 3.2 19% 18% Zane Morehouse CLE R Surp CT 89.2 5.3 -3.0 32% 24% Zane Morehouse CLE R Surp SL 85.6 0.9 -4.9 50% 35% A.J. Causey KC R Surp 2SM 90.2 1.2 18.0 17% 25% A.J. Causey KC R Surp CB/SLV 76.4 0.5 -13.3 42% 29% A.J. Causey KC R Surp CH 82.0 1.3 19.9 42% 26% Dennis Colleran KC R Surp 4SM 97.5 13.2 9.5 35% 18% Dennis Colleran KC R Surp 2SM 97.8 10.0 13.7 26% 21% Dennis Colleran KC R Surp CT 90.6 6.3 -3.9 43% 33% Dennis Colleran KC R Surp SL 87.2 4.1 -8.2 31% 19% Hunter Owen KC L Surp 4SM 92.2 18.3 -6.8 28% 24% Hunter Owen KC L Surp SL 85.2 4.1 5.3 32% 23% Hunter Owen KC L Surp CB/SLV 75.4 -13.4 9.2 42% 22% Hunter Owen KC L Surp CH 84.9 9.7 -11.0 31% 31% L.P. Langevin KC R Surp 2SM 94.5 11.6 18.5 33% 16% Logan Martin KC R Surp 4SM 94.3 18.2 9.9 17% 29% Logan Martin KC R Surp 2SM 94.2 16.1 13.5 21% 22% Logan Martin KC R Surp CT 87.1 6.3 -2.9 46% 30% Logan Martin KC R Surp SL 84.4 3.4 -5.8 20% 25% Logan Martin KC R Surp CH 85.5 8.1 15.1 38% 20% Anthony Flores MIL L Surp 4SM 88.6 10.6 -3.9 18% 18% Anthony Flores MIL L Surp SL 83.5 0.1 8.1 29% 30% Anthony Flores MIL L Surp CH 88.4 9.5 -9.1 14% 10% Brett Wichrowski MIL R Surp 4SM 94.3 13.9 4.8 17% 18% Brett Wichrowski MIL R Surp 2SM 92.8 9.7 13.0 15% 18% Brett Wichrowski MIL R Surp CT 88.8 4.4 -3.6 24% 30% Brett Wichrowski MIL R Surp SL 83.0 2.0 -12.3 34% 35% Brett Wichrowski MIL R Surp CB/SLV 80.2 -5.2 -12.3 28% 27% Jesus Broca MIL L Surp 4SM 92.8 14.5 -4.8 20% 18% Jesus Broca MIL L Surp 2SM 93.5 9.2 -12.0 15% 27% Jesus Broca MIL L Surp SL 78.9 -1.8 7.6 34% 13% Jesus Broca MIL L Surp CH 84.4 6.9 -12.3 29% 37% Nate Peterson MIL L Surp 4SM 90.9 17.6 -3.8 22% 24% Nate Peterson MIL L Surp SL 82.9 0.7 5.5 27% 32% Nate Peterson MIL L Surp CB/SLV 77.0 -9.1 6.5 32% 26% Nate Peterson MIL L Surp CH 84.9 3.2 -10.6 21% 20% Daniel Harper PHI R Surp 4SM 95.3 17.4 10.2 26% 35% Daniel Harper PHI R Surp 2SM 94.5 14.9 13.7 21% 31% Daniel Harper PHI R Surp CT 89.1 6.9 0.4 26% 24% Eiberson Castellano PHI R Surp 4SM 94.8 16.6 6.4 16% 24% Eiberson Castellano PHI R Surp 2SM 93.3 11.7 14.4 15% 22% Eiberson Castellano PHI R Surp CB/SLV 82.6 -11.8 -7.7 28% 21% Jack Dallas PHI R Surp 4SM 91.6 17.1 6.3 22% 17% Jack Dallas PHI R Surp CT 86.4 5.9 -4.2 13% 32% Jack Dallas PHI R Surp SL 82.7 0.7 -12.5 33% 46% Jack Dallas PHI R Surp CB/SLV 80.3 -3.6 -15.5 24% 28% Jack Dallas PHI R Surp CH 83.6 0.8 13.8 33% 30% Jaydenn Estanista PHI R Surp 4SM 95.5 19.8 7.1 27% 23% Jaydenn Estanista PHI R Surp CT 86.7 6.3 -4.1 46% 28% Jaydenn Estanista PHI R Surp SL 83.6 2.8 -3.9 38% 20% Tommy McCollum PHI R Surp 4SM 93.4 18.7 8.4 33% 39% Tommy McCollum PHI R Surp CT 88.6 9.2 1.6 29% 28% Tommy McCollum PHI R Surp CH 86.7 3.0 11.0 45% 38% Emiliano Teodo TEX R Surp 4SM 98.1 10.1 14.5 16% 19% Emiliano Teodo TEX R Surp 2SM 96.8 7.6 15.6 21% 11% Emiliano Teodo TEX R Surp SL 86.1 0.5 -0.9 62% 30% Joey Danielson TEX R Surp 4SM 95.5 17.4 10.0 42% 28% Joey Danielson TEX R Surp 2SM 93.6 6.4 17.5 21% 24% Joey Danielson TEX R Surp CT 89.6 8.9 -0.7 31% 37% Joey Danielson TEX R Surp SL 83.9 1.8 -9.3 30% 19% Jose Corniell TEX R Surp 4SM 95.8 15.5 10.5 33% 33% Kolton Curtis TEX R Surp 4SM 92.8 15.6 8.7 23% 14% Kolton Curtis TEX R Surp 2SM 92.9 12.0 14.6 21% 18% Kolton Curtis TEX R Surp CT 86.4 3.9 -4.1 35% 29% Kolton Curtis TEX R Surp SL 84.8 1.1 -5.5 43% 28% Kolton Curtis TEX R Surp CB/SLV 78.2 -9.4 -10.3 48% 37% Kolton Curtis TEX R Surp CH 79.2 1.6 17.4 53% 30% Winston Santos TEX R Surp 4SM 94.2 17.3 9.3 35% 43% Arizona Fall League Pitchers’ Release Data Pitcher Org Arm AFL Ext RelHt RelSd Cory Wall ATL R Glendale 6.4 69.7 -22 LJ McDonough ATL R Glendale 7.1 59.9 -18 Luke Sinnard ATL R Glendale 6.5 81.6 -23 Trent Buchanan ATL R Glendale 5.9 61.3 -27 Carson Jacobs CWS R Glendale 6.5 82.6 -13 Connor McCullough CWS R Glendale 5.8 63.5 -25 Hagen Smith CWS L Glendale 6.7 65.0 33 Jarold Rosado CWS R Glendale 6.5 77.3 -22 Tyler Davis CWS R Glendale 6.6 68.2 -16 Alex Makarewich LAD R Glendale 6.2 66.3 -27 Hyun-Seok Jang LAD R Glendale 6.4 71.6 -15 Jakob Wright LAD L Glendale 6.0 63.5 25 Justin Chambers LAD L Glendale 6.1 64.0 17 Payton Martin LAD R Glendale 6.8 69.5 -14 D.J. Carpenter STL R Glendale 6.5 82.5 -13 Darlin Saladin STL R Glendale 5.8 68.3 -15 Randel Clemente STL R Glendale 6.4 70.2 -13 Tyler Bradt STL R Glendale 5.4 68.9 -18 Alex Amalfi TOR R Glendale 6.9 72.0 -29 Chay Yeager TOR R Glendale 6.0 69.3 -18 Kai Peterson TOR L Glendale 5.9 56.6 23 Yondrei Rojas TOR R Glendale 6.4 66.0 -38 Blaze Pontes ATH R Mesa 5.9 71.1 -15 Corey Avant ATH R Mesa 6.2 73.9 -22 Mark Adamiak ATH R Mesa 6.4 73.7 -31 Nathan Dettmer ATH R Mesa 5.9 75.2 -11 Will Johnston ATH L Mesa 6.0 81.1 3 JP Wheat CHC R Mesa 6.3 75.2 -25 Luis Martinez-Gomez CHC R Mesa 6.2 64.3 -33 Mathew Peters CHC R Mesa 5.8 62.4 -13 Thomas Mangus CHC R Mesa 5.8 75.0 -16 Holt Jones MIA R Mesa 7.2 68.9 -26 Jack Sellinger MIA L Mesa 6.0 74.6 20 Karson Milbrandt MIA R Mesa 6.0 69.3 -28 Brady Kirtner NYY R Mesa 5.8 71.5 -16 Bryce Cunningham NYY R Mesa 7.0 71.3 -18 Hueston Morrill NYY R Mesa 6.1 63.2 -19 Andrew Lindsey TB R Mesa 6.2 60.1 -21 Jackson Baumeister TB R Mesa 7.0 67.4 -20 Jadon Bercovich TB R Mesa 6.2 69.1 -19 Jonathan Russell TB R Mesa 6.1 68.7 -21 Carson Dorsey BAL L Peoria 6.8 72.5 18 Luis De León BAL L Peoria 5.9 75.0 19 Sayer Diederich BAL L Peoria 5.6 67.9 18 Luke Hayden CIN R Peoria 6.5 68.9 -18 Rhett Lowder CIN R Peoria 6.1 66.4 -30 Dylan Questad MIN R Peoria 6.6 69.4 -15 Hunter Hoopes MIN R Peoria 7.1 69.9 -16 Jakob Hall MIN R Peoria 6.2 68.3 -24 Jakob Hall MIN R Peoria 6.2 68.8 -21 Zander Sechrist MIN L Peoria 6.0 60.0 31 Johan Moreno SD R Peoria 5.8 76.3 -14 Kannon Kemp SD R Peoria 6.0 72.4 -14 Maikel Miralles SD R Peoria 6.0 70.6 -14 Tanner Smith BAL R Peoria 6.5 69.5 -17 Tucker Musgrove SD R Peoria 6.9 66.9 -17 Jimmy Kingsbury SEA R Peoria 5.9 58.5 -9 Marcelo Perez SEA R Peoria 5.8 66.7 -28 Ryan Hawks SEA R Peoria 6.3 59.6 -19 Stefan Raeth SEA R Peoria 6.1 68.8 -10 Tyler Cleveland SEA R Peoria 5.9 39.4 -51 Drey Jameson AZ R Salt River 5.5 71.0 -23 Kyle Amendt AZ R Salt River 7.2 80.2 7 Yordin Chalas AZ R Salt River 6.7 65.2 -23 Isaac Stebens BOS R Salt River 5.6 55.4 -23 Jay Allmer BOS R Salt River 6.0 64.9 -21 Jojo Ingrassia BOS L Salt River 6.6 66.2 40 Austin Smith COL R Salt River 7.1 67.5 -16 Ben Shields COL L Salt River 6.7 66.1 19 Cade Denton COL R Salt River 6.0 62.3 -27 Jack Mahoney COL R Salt River 6.1 67.9 -30 Welinton Herrera COL L Salt River 6.1 70.5 11 Benny Thompson LAA R Salt River 5.3 74.8 1 Brandon Dufault LAA R Salt River 6.1 65.0 -21 Fulton Lockhart LAA R Salt River 5.6 74.1 -12 Najer Victor LAA R Salt River 6.5 70.2 -25 Ryan Costeiu LAA R Salt River 5.9 71.4 -7 Carlson Reed PIT R Salt River 6.7 75.2 -20 Derek Diamond PIT R Salt River 6.7 68.4 -28 Dominic Perachi PIT L Salt River 6.0 74.9 24 Jaden Woods PIT L Salt River 6.9 68.2 25 Joshua Loeschorn PIT R Salt River 6.7 65.0 -18 David Hagaman TEX R Salt River 6.9 70.0 -15 Juan Sanchez SF R Scottsdale 5.9 61.1 -23 Carlos Lequerica DET R Scottsdale 6.6 72.3 -15 Dariel Fregio DET R Scottsdale 6.1 65.7 -24 Jake Miller DET L Scottsdale 6.1 68.2 29 Kenny Serwa DET R Scottsdale 6.3 66.1 -16 Anderson Brito HOU R Scottsdale 6.5 70.2 -12 Brett Gillis HOU R Scottsdale 6.6 70.1 -21 Derek True HOU R Scottsdale 6.5 73.9 -19 Hudson Leach HOU R Scottsdale 6.0 72.0 -21 James Hicks HOU R Scottsdale 5.7 66.1 -28 Nate Wohlgemuth HOU R Scottsdale 5.4 69.0 -17 Sean Paul Liñan LAD R Scottsdale 6.3 60.8 -26 Austin Troesser NYM R Scottsdale 6.7 73.8 -17 Brett Banks NYM R Scottsdale 6.3 70.7 -19 Jose T. Perez SF R Scottsdale 6.2 67.5 -16 Ricardo Estrada SF L Scottsdale 5.9 67.1 9 Austin Amaral WSH R Scottsdale 6.7 67.6 -16 Jake Bennett WSH L Scottsdale 7.1 67.4 31 Jared Simpson WSH L Scottsdale 6.1 68.3 12 Pablo Aldonis WSH L Scottsdale 6.1 68.7 19 Matt Jachec CLE R Surprise 6.2 68.5 -30 Rorik Maltrud CLE R Surprise 6.8 70.3 -17 Trenton Denholm CLE R Surprise 6.1 66.6 -5 Zane Morehouse CLE R Surprise 6.6 65.1 -23 A.J. Causey KC R Surprise 5.7 54.8 -15 Dennis Colleran KC R Surprise 6.6 59.5 -28 Hunter Owen KC L Surprise 6.6 78.8 14 L.P. Langevin KC R Surprise 5.3 62.2 -29 Logan Martin KC R Surprise 6.4 72.8 -22 Anthony Flores MIL L Surprise 5.9 61.8 22 Brett Wichrowski MIL R Surprise 6.7 68.7 -24 Jesus Broca MIL L Surprise 5.5 68.7 18 Nate Peterson MIL L Surprise 5.8 69.3 13 Daniel Harper PHI R Surprise 5.7 72.4 -19 Eiberson Castellano PHI R Surprise 6.8 73.7 -19 Jack Dallas PHI R Surprise 5.9 68.2 -36 Jaydenn Estanista PHI R Surprise 6.4 77.8 -14 Tommy McCollum PHI R Surprise 7.3 73.4 -13 Emiliano Teodo TEX R Surprise 5.5 70.7 -14 Joey Danielson TEX R Surprise 6.1 72.6 -27 Jose Corniell TEX R Surprise 6.1 69.7 -19 Kolton Curtis TEX R Surprise 6.7 68.1 -19 Winston Santos TEX R Surprise 6.6 69.7 -25 Data is from each pitcher’s most used fastball. Extension in feet (so 6.3 = 6’4″), release data in inches. Source View the full article