Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Tyler Soderstrom, Jack Leiter open season strong, streaming SP options

Welcome to Waiver Wire Watch, where I review my favorite waiver wire adds and drops for each week of the MLB season.

The premise is pretty straightforward. I’ll try to give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When I list a player, I’ll list the category where I think he’ll be helpful or the quick reason he’s listed. I hope that it will help you determine if the player is a fit for what your team needs or not.

For a player to qualify to be on this list, he needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. I understand you may say, “These players aren’t available in my league,” and I can’t help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they’re available in many places and that can hopefully satisfy readers in all league types.

Spencer Strider, Cristopher Sánchez, and Christian Yelich are on the rise while Thairo Estrada’s injury takes him off the board.

Waiver Wire Hitters

TJ Friedl – OF, CIN: 38% rostered
(RUNS, SPEED UPSIDE)

Friedl is not a sexy waiver add, but he’s the everyday centerfielder for the Reds and has been productive in that role whenever he’s been healthy. In 2023, he hit .279 with swiping 27 bases and crushing 18 home runs in 138 games. He had nine steals and 13 home runs in 85 games last year. He makes an elite amount of contact and hits leadoff which should mean a decent amount of runs in that offense. He is likely going to get hurt at some point, but that doesn’t mean you should pass up on him for a player who has less fantasy value right now. You’re in a redraft league, not a Best Ball league, so stop thinking about August and September.

Kristian Campbell – 2B, BOS: 38% rostered
(BREAKOUT POTENTIAL, EVERYDAY ROLE)

Kristian Campbell didn’t have the best spring, so he started falling in late drafts even though it was clear the Red Sox wanted him to be their starting second baseman. So far, Campbell is 5-for-10 with two walks, one home run, and two strikeouts while playing second base in two games and left field in one. He is one of the top prospects in baseball, and if he’s going to get everyday run in a good lineup, he needs to be on your roster. If you’re just looking for speed, you can add Campbell’s teammate Trevor Story – SS, BOS (33%), who stole a base in each of his first two games. People love to rag on Story because he gets hurt often, and that’s sapped a lot of his offensive juice, but he will run, and he’s been a really good defender for Boston when he’s healthy. He’s going to play almost every day, and that’s a good lineup to have pieces of.

Ivan Herrera – C, STL: 34% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, GOOD SCHEDULE)

Early in draft season, I mentioned that Ivan Herrera was a decent draft value since he hit .301/.372/.428 in 259 plate appearances last year with five home runs and five steals. The offensive upside was there, but the worry was that he was likely going to have to fight for time with Pedro Pages, which gave us some pause about him getting over 400 plate appearances. Well, Herrera started the first two games of the season, which makes me think that this could be more of a 70/30 type of split this season. That makes Herrera worth a gamble in all two-catcher formats. I also think that Alejandro Kirk – C, TOR (13% rostered) is in for a good season and has some viability in one catcher leagues, even. He is going to play almost every day in Toronto and has been an elite contact hitter his whole career.

Tyler Soderstrom – 1B, OAK: 33% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, EVERYDAY ROLE)

Soderstrom got off to a huge start to the 2025 season with a 2-5, two-home run game against Logan Gilbert and the Mariners. He’s 5-for-12 in his first three games, but this is really about him being the everyday first baseman on a team that will be playing games in a minor league ballpark. Soderstrom also struck out just five times in the spring after striking out 25% of the time last year. That hasn’t carried over in the first three days, but at just 23 years old, it’s not crazy to assume Soderstrom is continuing to evolve as a hitter and may add at least a passable batting average to his 25+ home run power. Right now I’d only be adding for power upside, but there’s some additional intrigue in here. Michael Busch – 1B, CHC (28% rostered) is another power-first first base option. The 26-year-old hit 21 home runs in 152 games for the Cubs last year and is going to be the everyday first baseman in a lineup that’s deeper than it was last year. He’s off to a slow start in 2025, but I do love that he’s taken three walks in his first five games. His 11.5% swinging strike rate last year wasn’t that high for a player with plus power, so I think we could see another step forward from Busch this year.

Victor Scott II – OF, STL: 30% rostered
(SPEED UPSIDE, BATTING AVERAGE POTENTIAL)

Last year, we were all going gaga over Scott because of his game-changing speed, but this year we seem to have forgotten about him despite him having a great spring training. That’s the unfortunate power of one bad sample of MLB data. No, Scott is not going to hit many home runs or help you much in counting stats given that he hits at the bottom of the Cardinals’ order, but the speed upside remains, and he’s stolen two bases so far through two games. If he can just hit .250 or higher, then he’s not going to hurt you in your batting average category, and he’s going to carry you in stolen bases.

Matt Wallner – OF, MIN: 27% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, GOOD LINEUP SPOT)

The Twins faced three right-handed starting pitchers this weekend, and you saw exactly what that will mean for Wallner this season with him batting lead off in each game. No, he didn’t get a hit in either of the first two games, but this is a guy with a 17% career barrel rate who tweaked his approach in the second half last season and hit .275 with 12 home runs, 34 RBI, and three steals over the final 73 games. There is some volatility in his skillset, but the power is unquestioned, and if the approach changes carry over, he’s a great add, especially in daily moves leagues. In deeper leagues, I’m also a big for of Wallner’s teammate Trevor Larnach – OF, MIN (3% rostered). Much like Wallner, Larnach will start against all right-handed pitchers, and I wrote about him as one of my favorite post-hype hitters this off-season. I should also note that Pavin Smith – 1B/OF, ARI (2% rostered) is in the same boat as an everyday guy against right-handed pitching andis somebody that I’m in onafter he hit .270/.348/.547 with nine home runs and a .896 OPS in 158 plate appearances in a part-time role last year.

Joey Ortiz – 3B/SS, MIL: 25% rostered
(MODEST POWER/SPEED UPSIDE, GOOD BALLPARK)

Much like TJ Friedl, Ortiz is not a sexy fantasy add, and perhaps better for deeper formats, but this is a guy who hit 11 home runs and stole 11 bases in 142 games last year while making elite levels of contact. His batted ball profile in the minors suggests that there is a little more thump in his bat and while that might just mean 15 home runs, there is a good chance that he’s a 15/15 guy who can hit .250 or higher and is the everyday shortstop for a Milwaukee team that plays in a good home ballpark. Considering you’ll soon be able to play Ortiz at 3B, SS, MIF, and CIF, that is a valuable player to have on your squad.

Kyle Manzardo – 1B, CLE: 27% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, EVERYDAY ROLE)

I know Manzardo can be harder to roster in formats where he’s UT-only, but given his prospect pedigree and what we saw from him in spring, I’m surprised his roster rate is so low. He started on Opening Day against a left-handed pitcher, which makes it pretty clear that he’s an everyday guy in Cleveland now. I had the chance to talk to him this spring about his adjustment to the big leagues that led to a strong finish to the 2024 season, so I’d encourage you to read that to see why I’m in on Manzardo this year. Another option at first would be Spencer Torkelson – 1B, DET (28% rostered); although, I’d much rather have Manzardo. Torkelson is off to a better start, going 4-for-9 with a home run and a stolen base, in addition to five walks in three games. However, I have less confidence in his contact profile overall. Additionally, he was challenged a lot last year with high fastballs and it limited his power output, and I need a bit more sample size to believe that’s fixed. If you just wanted power, I think Torkelson is the better play over Manzardo, but I’d take Manzardo for everything else.

Lars Nootbaar – OF, STL: 21% rostered
(BREAKOUT POTENTIAL, EVERYDAY ROLE)

I wrote about Nootbaar in one of my off-season articles on hitters entering their peak age seasons, and said: “I feel like we’ve been waiting for the Nootbaar breakout for a few years now, but injuries limited him to just 405 plate appearances in 2024. When he was on the field, he hit .244/.342/.417 with 12 home runs and seven steals which hinted a little at what we can expect from him. His career 27.4% flyball rate suggests he might not have elite power upside. Busch Stadium is not great for left-handed power, so this might be a calculated approach from Nootbaar, but it means that even a breakout season might come with just 20 home runs. It could also have a .260 average and 12 stolen bases with an elite on-base percentage, which is great for some leagues.” Also, I know there are a lot of Cardinals on here already, but Jordan Walker – OF, STL (11% rostered) is going to play every day and he was one of the top prospects in baseball not long ago, and I wrote about him in detail for my post-hype hitters article this winter.

Ben Rice – 1B, NYY: 10% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, PLAYING TIME OPPORTUNITY)

Ben Rice is in a tough situation because we know the Yankees are going to want to use the DH spot to give days off to guys like Aaron Judge, Cody Bellinger, and Paul Goldschmidt, but I look at Rice the way I look at a starting pitcher like Jack Leiter or Max Meyer. The upside is clear, as I covered in my article on potential second-year breakout hitters. He has been hitting the cover off the ball. If we knew he was locked into a starting role, he’d be rostered in way more leagues. Those are the guys I want on my bench for the first few weeks of the season because I want to already have them if the playing time starts to shake out and people are rushing to throw huge FAAB bids on them. Think of the Colton Cowser situation from last year.

Otto Lopez – 2B/SS, MIA: 10% rostered
(SPEED UPSIDE, SOLID BATTING AVERAGE)

Lopez is a bit of an afterthought because he plays on a bad Marlins team, but I think he has some fantasy juice. The middle infielder has gone 5-for-11 with one home run, four RBI, and one steal in his first three games. Last year, he hit .270/.313/.377 in 117 games with the Marlins while stealing 20 bases. This didn’t really come out of nowhere either. In 2022, he hit .297 with 14 steals in 91 games in Triple-A for Toronto, and in 2023, he hit .258 with 13 steals in 84 games at the same level. He’s a good bet to hit .270 with 20+ steals in a full season as the second baseman in Miami, and that’s valuable in a lot of formats.

Jeimer Candelario – 1B/3B, CIN: 9% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, GOOD HOME BALLPARK)

With Spencer Steer unable to play the field, we’ve seen Candelario start as the primary third baseman in Cincinnati with Gavin Lux shifting to left field. Candelario struggled in his first season in Cincinnati last year, but this is a guy who hit .251 with 22 home runs the season before and is a career .241 hitter. Given that Cincinnati plays in the best ballpark for offense, I think expecting a .250 season from Candelario with 20-25 home runs while hitting in the middle of the Reds’ lineup is a pretty solid bet. If you need another corner infield option, Brett Baty – 3B, NYM (8% rostered) is going to be their second baseman against right-handed pitching, which will add some nice multi-position eligibility. Baty obviously tore up spring training, but remember that he has done that before. There is upside here since Baty is just 25 years old and clearly still evolving as a hitter, but he doesn’t have a lot of time to stake his claim to an every day job, and there’s not a track record of MLB success here, so I don’t think you need to rush to the wire for Baty, even after the strong spring.

Jorge Polanco – 2B, SEA: 8% rostered
(DEEP LEAGUE OPTION, COUNTING STATS UPSIDE)

Polanco is another deep league target with soon-to-be multi-position eligibility, who I wrote about this off-season in an article on undervalued hitters:“He’s a career .263/.330/.435 hitter, and while I know last year was a down season, he was also playing through a knee injury that clearly impacted him. Despite that, he posted an 8.9% barrel rate, an above-average chase rate, and slightly below-average SwStr% and contact rates. We do need to point out that his overall contact rates and swinging strike rates have been headed in the wrong direction for the last two seasons, but for the vast majority of his career, he has been a 77% contact rate guy or better. In spring training this year, he has an 85% contact rate and just a 7.2% SwStr%, so perhaps a lot of that regression was due to injury.”Gavin Lux – 2B, CIN (7% rostered) also appears to be the starting left fielder and regular clean-up hitter for the Reds right now. I’m not sure I believe in the talent or that the role will stick, but we can’t ignore a cleanup hitter in that park hitting behind Friedl, Elly De La Cruz, and Matt McLain.

Kameron Misner – OF, TB: 0% rostered
(STARTING JOB, POWER/SPEED UPSIDE)

This is only a deep-league option, but with Josh Lowe potentially out for months with an oblique injury, it seems that Misner will get the first shot to take his job in Tampa Bay. The 27-year-old was once an intriguing prospect for the Marlins, but it never quite clicked. Still, in 113 games in Triple-A for Tampa Bay last year, he hit .248 with 17 home runs and 30 steals. I don’t really trust that Misner is any different of a hitter now, but somebody who has the ability to 20/20 in a starting role is worth a look in really deep formats. So is Manuel Margot – OF, DET (1% rostered), who is going to be the everyday centerfielder in Detroit with Parker Meadows and Wenceel Perez sidelined. Margot has been around long enough that we know what he can do, but he’s a career .254 hitter who still has the speed to swipe bases in a full-time role. Detroit has also been hitting him fifth or sixth, which could lead to some chip-in RBIs as well.

Waiver Wire Pitchers

Jack Leiter – SP, TEX (38% rostered)
Leiter was one of my most-drafted pitchers this year, and I wrote about him in my article covering undrafted starting pitchers with the talent to finish inside the top 25. The biggest thing for me was command, and I felt that Leiter’s new sinker would help him pound the strike zone a bit more to set up his swing-and-miss stuff. The first start doesn’t change any of that. His fastball was still 98 mph and missed plenty of bats, but was inconsistent in the strike zone. He struggled to locate his new kick-change, and his slider was fine. I actually wasn’t super impressed by the start, but I was happy that he was able to produce a decent outing without his best stuff. The upside remains, and I’m happy to take fliers on him in all league types, but I still think volatility is ahead.

Dustin May – SP, LAD: 36% rostered
May did not pitch this weekend, which means he’s set to make his regular-season debut on Tuesday against Atlanta. We don’t love that start, even with Ronald Acuna Jr. out; however, we do love that May is locked in as the fifth starter on probably the best team in baseball. He has impressive raw stuff and is starting to miss more bats this spring as he varies his sequencing and locations. No, May is not going to pitch a full season for the Dodgers, but we don’t care about that now. It’s March. I’m happy to add May for the first couple of months, try to take advantage of solid ratios and wins and then I’ll worry about replacing him when the time comes.

Grant Holmes – SP/RP, ATL: 34% rostered
Holmes got a raw deal when the Braves reconfigured their rotation so that he could start on Monday against the Dodgers instead of Sunday against the Padres. I really don’t want that Monday start, and I probably won’t use Holmes there in daily lineup leagues. However, Holmes will also start over the weekend against the Marlins, and I absolutely want to use him there. Holmes unveiled a new changeup this spring that looks like it will be a real weapon for him. He now has potentially three plus secondaries to take the heat off of his average fastball. I think he’s being underrated right now. You could also chase upside with his teammate A.J. Smith-Shawver – SP, ATL (25% rostered), who won a roster spot and will start on Sunday against the Padres. Just remember that Spencer Strider is coming back in around three weeks, and somebody is leaving this rotation. Holmes has no minor league options, so the Braves can’t send him down, which makes me think Smith-Shawver may not have a long leash in this rotation.

Luke Jackson – RP, TEX (30% rostered)
Look, I don’t buy this, but if you’re in a desperate situation for saves, you can chase them with Jackson since Bruce Bochy went to him for save opportunities in each of the first two games. I just don’t love that Jackson essentially only uses his slider, and has never really shown the consistent ability to lock down saves. I don’t see this lasting a long time, and I’d prefer to add Blake Treinen – RP, LAD (32% rostered) because I believe he’s a good pitcher. Treinen is in a committee for the Dodgers, so he won’t get all of the saves, but he’ll get some of them and will also help with ratios and strikeouts and be far less liable to torpedo your ratio categories.

Jason Adam – RP, SD (30% rostered)
Everybody is going to chase closer specs this weekend, and I get it. However, instead of adding guys like Graham Ashcraft or Mike Clevinger, I’d rather add Adam. We know Adam is a good reliever. He’s going to help your ratios and steal a few wins, and when the Padres finally trade Robert Suarez, who has been on the trade block all off-season, I think it’ll be Adam that takes over and starts to get saves. You can add him now and not have to spend big money.

Justin Slaten- RP, BOS (24% rostered)
Red Sox manager Alex Cora said that Aroldis Chapman was the closer in Boston, but he also said that they would use him in the eighth inning if they felt they needed to. At the time, that seemed like a way for Liam Hendriks to pick up a few save chances, but then Hendriks went on the IL with elbow inflammation, and Slaten, who was pitching better anyway, got the first save chance of the season on Opening Day. If the Red Sox need to use Chapman earlier in games, it’s going to be Slaten that closes them down, and Slaten has the talent to take that job regardless.

David Peterson – SP, NYM (20% rostered)
Peterson is yet another intriguing starter who did not pitch this first weekend. He will start on Monday against Miami, which is an elite streaming situation. I wrote about why Peterson is one of my favorite late-round starting pitchers to draft,so I’d encourage you to read that if you want a detailed discussion of why I like the left-hander.

Mike Clevinger – SP/RP, CWS (15% rostered)
Clevinger is the closer for the White Sox. No, that may not lead to a bunch of save opportunities, but it could lead to a few, and he’s looked pretty solid in the role so far this spring and during the first weekend. I’m not running out to pick him up, but I don’t think he’s going to hurt your team in the same way chasing the Rockies and Marlins closer situation might.

Jose Alvarado – RP, PHI (14% rostered)
If you’re in a fine spot with saves and just want to add an elite high-leverage reliever, I would recommend Alvarado. He was lights out this spring and is the late-inning left-hander in the Philadelphia bullpen. That means he could steal a few wins in close games, but he also could emerge into a timeshare if Jordan Romano were to struggle or the Phillies wanted to be cautious with Romano’s innings coming off a shoulder injury. You could also take a gamble on Tony Santillan – RP, CIN (17% rostered), who may be the best pitcher in Cincinnati’s bullpen. I know that Emilio Pagan – RP, CIN (2% rostered) got the save on Saturday night, and you can gamble there if you want, but Santillan is the cream of the crop here and could rise to the top. You could also gamble on Graham Ashcraft – RP, CIN (8% rostered), who has plus Stuff+ numbers but never missed enough bats as a starter. He could thrive in the bullpen, but this whole situation is a mess, and I wouldn’t place big bids on any of these guys.

Max Meyer – SP, MIA (14% rostered)
I wrote about Max Meyer and Jack Leiter as two undrafted starting pitchers I think have the upside to finish inside the top-25, so you can read that article to see a more detailed breakdown of why I like taking a gamble on both pitchers in the first few weeks of the season. If you’re in deeper leagues, I also like Sean Burke – SP, CWS (16%), but I just don’t think we’re going to get tons of wins out of him. I guess that’s an issue for Meyer as well.

Brayan Bello – SP, BOS (11% rostered)
If you need an IL stash, Bello is already starting a rehab assignment in Triple-A, and optimism that the Red Sox could have him back by April 11th. I truly believe this is the year he breaks out. Bello tweaked his slider into more of a sweeper at the end of 2023, spent most of the offseason working on it, and then graded out as an above-average pitch by PLV in 2024. He started using it more against righties, and the swinging strike rate on it jumped from 10% to 16% while he also improved his zone rate as the season went on. The issue is that as his slider got better, he seemed to lose the feel for his change-up, which has always been his best pitch. Even though he doesn’t throw the changeup often to righties, Bello’s command of the pitch suffered in 2024, with a lower zone and strike rate, and it got hit much harder. It still had an 18.5% swinging strike rate to lefties, so Bello checks the boxes now of fastball for strikes and secondary for whiffs to hitters of each handedness, and if he can get the command of his changeup back to be a consistent strike pitch then he has all the things I want from a starting pitcher and we could see a big leap.

Tylor Megill – SP, NYM (9% rostered)
I wrote about Megill as one of my favorite late-round starting pitching targets this off-season (in the same article as Peterson), and said: “In 2024, Megill posted a 17.6% K-BB%, 12.8% SwStr%, and 27.6% CSW, all of which were better than the league average despite him having a fairly uneven season. He added a sinker last season, which has a 73% strike rate. He uses it primarily as a strike pitch to righties, which is crucial for him. He also added a cutter in 2024, and despite it having above-average swinging strike rate marks to righties and lefties, it’s also a pitch he can command for strikes with league-average zone and strike rates. It also allowed Megill to throw his slider less in 2024, which is good because his slider was a great out-pitch but struggled as a 20% usage pitch…He really has everything he needs to be a good MLB starter, but the consistency of that command is going to be crucial. With a full off-season under his belt to work on the cutter and sinker, we could finally see that in 2025.”

STREAMING STARTER PITCHERS

(ranked in loose order)

Week of 3/31

Strong Preference

Pitcher Roster% Opponent
Reese Olson 28% vs CWS
David Peterson 17% at MIA, vs TOR
Casey Mize 10% at SEA, vs CWS
Marcus Stroman 4% at PIT
Richard Fitts 4% vs STL

Fairly Confident

Chris Paddack 2% at CWS
Simeon Woods Richardson 1% at CWS
Zack Littell 2% vs PIT
Luis Severino 25% vc CHC
Luis L. Ortiz 5% at LAA
Martin Perez 1% vs MIN, at DET
Emerson Hancock 1% vs DET, at SF
Matthew Liberatore 2% vs LAA

Some Hesitation

Ben Lively 3% at LAA
Grant Holmes 33% at LAD, vs MIA
Jordan Hicks 3% at HOU, vs SEA
Kumar Rocker 37% at CIN, vs TB
Jack Kochanowicz 0% at STL
Davis Martin 0% at DET
Cade Povich 2% vs BOS, at KC
Ben Brown 4% at ATH, vs SD
Kris Bubic 8%% at MIL, vs BAL

Rafael Devers, after contentious move to DH, sets MLB record for most strikeouts in first 3 games

Rafael Devers was adamant in the offseason that he didn’t want to move to designated hitter after the Boston Red Sox acquired Alex Bregman to play third base. 

But he did. And he’s failing to deliver in his new role.

Devers struck out three times in Boston’s 4-3 loss to the Texas Rangers on Saturday. He now has 10 total strikeouts, the most by any player in MLB history through the first three games of the season. 

Devers struck out three times in Boston’s season-opening win against the Rangers. He struck out four times in Boston’s 4-1 loss to Texas on Friday. Now he’s carved out a spot in MLB history that he certainly would rather have not. 

Rafael Devers is having a rough start to the season. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Devers, 28, is a three-time All-Star and a senior member of the Red Sox clubhouse who’s played his entire eight-plus season MLB career in Boston. He’s spent the vast majority of that time at third base, where he’s played 951 of his 956 MLB games. 

In the offseason, the Red Sox signed Bregman as a free agent from the Houston Astros. Bregman also plays third base and is a Gold Glove winner who’s objectively better at the position than Devers. Devers is one of the worst third basemen in baseball via multiple advanced metrics, including outs above average (OAA) and fielding run value (FRV).

But Devers made clear in spring training that he had no interest in ceding third base to Bregman. Through an interpreter, Devers told reporters in February that he told Red Sox management “no” when they asked him about moving to designated hitter. 

“Like I said, my position is third base,” Devers said. “Whatever it is that they want to do is what they want to do, but I feel like my position is third base.”

After some public uncertainty about the issue from manager Alex Cora in spring training, the Red Sox made the obvious decision. Bregman is playing third base, and Devers has moved to designated hitter. 

Is it fair to draw a correlation between Devers’ displeasure over his new position and his 0-for-12 start at the plate with 10 strikeouts? Maybe not? 

But it certainly doesn’t look great. 

LeBron James, Luka Dončić recreate iconic photo as Lakers recover from Bulls meltdown with win over Grizzlies

The Los Angeles Lakers got a much-needed win Saturday, against a team suddenly trying to figure out its future.

There were no shooters left open, inbounds turnovers or Josh Giddey buzzer-beaters this time. Los Angeles recovered from its absolute howler of a loss to the Chicago Bulls with a 134-127 win over the Memphis Grizzlies, a day after Memphis stunned the basketball world by firing head coach Taylor Jenkins.

It was also Ja Morant’s first game back after missing six games with a hamstring injury. He had 22 points and 10 assists in 31 minutes.

LeBron James, Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves each posted at least 25 points, with James and Dončić recreating perhaps the most iconic photo of James’ career, his dual portrait with Dwyane Wade during his stint with the Miami Heat.

Reaves paced the team with 31 points, plus eight assists and seven rebounds.

It was all Lakers early, with a lead growing to as many as 20 points in the second quarter. Memphis runs briefly gave it the lead in the third and fourth quarters. 

The Lakers entered Saturday having lost four of their past five games and eight of their past 12. Many of those losses were attributable to injuries — James missed two weeks with a groin injury — but Los Angeles was only 1-3 since James came back. Had the Lakers not been able to beat a Grizzlies team playing its first game under interim coach Tuomas Iisalo, it would have been concerning.

Los Angeles is now tied with Memphis for fourth place in the Western Conference with a 44-29 record and nine games left on the regular-season schedule.

As for Memphis, it was playing in a state of flux between the loss of Jenkins and return of Morant. The Grizzlies cut the coach loose despite being well on track for a playoff spot, and it feels like we’re all still in the process of figuring out exactly what happened. If they fired Jenkins because they legitimately believed they were a better team without him, Saturday was a bad start.

Roki Sasaki exits early in Dodger Stadium debut. He’s up to 9 walks in less than 5 career MLB innings

The early returns on Roki Sasaki are some impressive pitches and a lot of walks. And two Dodgers wins.

The Los Angeles Dodgers rookie posted another short start in his Dodger Stadium debut Saturday, exiting after 1 2/3 innings with three hits and two earned runs allowed plus four walks and two strikeouts. He threw 61 pitches in less than two innings of work, with only 32 strikes.

Sasaki’s lack of command was apparent from the first batter. He missed the strike zone by more than a foot on his first two fastballs to Detroit Tigers leadoff hitter Zach McKinstry before allowing a single, then proceeded to load the bases before allowing runs on a single from Manuel Margot and a walk of Trey Sweeney.

He did get his first Dodger Stadium strikeout in the process, though.

The second inning wasn’t much better. Sasaki walked two more batters and was pulled with two men on and two outs, with Dodgers manager Dave Roberts bringing in another rookie in Jack Dreyer to end the inning.

Fortunately for the Dodgers, they were equipped to weather a short night from their starting pitcher. The game was tied by the end of the second inning and Los Angeles took the lead in the fifth inning on an RBI double from Teoscar Hernández.

Will Smith and Tommy Edman later homered to expand the Dodgers’ lead, while six relievers struck out nine and allowed only one run across a combined 7 1/3 innings to keep the Tigers at bay in a 7-3 win.

The Dodgers are now 5-0, the first time the defending World Series champions have won their first five games of the season since the 1985 Tigers. Meanwhile, this year’s Detroit team will likely just be happy to get out of Los Angeles after a series sweep in which they led in all three games.

The Dodgers have already had to weather multiple short and inefficient starts from their rotation this season, but their lineup and bullpen have been good enough to cover for them.

Roki Sasaki has been more than wild in his first two MLB starts. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)
Harry How via Getty Images

Through two career starts, Sasaki has now walked nine in 4 2/3 innings of work. He avoided disaster in his first start against the Chicago Cubs in the Japan Series by allowing only one hit, but the Tigers had more success putting bat to ball. With a high-90s fastball and perhaps the best splitter in the world, Sasaki has elite stuff, but so far his execution has been lacking.

Control wasn’t a significant issue for Sasaki in his Japanese career, averaging 2.0 walks per nine innings for the Chiba Lotte Marines. This is a Dodgers problem, and one that Roberts speculated could be due to overthrowing before the game Saturday:

“There were times when there was an overthrow in there. That’s when a pitcher loses a ball arm-side. It’s a little bit of coming out of your delivery, a little overthrow, so honestly, for me, I just want the ball commanded. I want the fastball commanded. If it’s 96, 97, 98, whatever it is, if it’s commanded, I just think the split will play up even better. If he can do that, he’s going to be successful.”

So far, Sasaki hasn’t been what you would call successful by Roberts’ standards.

Sasaki remains only 23 years old and he had plenty of reason to be pushing his pitches in his first two starts, playing in his home country in his MLB debut then taking the mound for his first appearance at Dodger Stadium. Still, for a player who entered the season as the favorite for NL Rookie of the Year, he is showing he already has significant work to do.

Golden State Warriors jersey history – No. 9 – Joe Graboski (1953-61)

The Golden State Warriors have had over 600 players don the more than 60 jersey numbers used by their players over the more than 75 years of existence the team has enjoyed in its rich and storied history.

Founded in 1946 during the Basketball Association of America (BAA — a precursor league of the NBA) era, the team has called home the cities of Philadelphia, San Francisco, Oakland, and even San Diego.

 To commemorate the players who wore those numbers, Warriors Wire is covering the entire history of jersey numbers and the players who sported them since the founding of the team. For this article, we begin with the first of 15 players who wore the No. 9 jersey for the Warriors.

That player would be Golden State big man alum Joe Graboski. After ending his high school career, Graboski became just the third player to make the leap directly to the NBA, signing with the (defunct) Chicago Stags.

The Chicago, Illinois native would play the first 2 seasons of his pro career with the Stags. He would also have a stint with the (defunct) Indianapolis Olympians before he’d be picked up by the (then) Philadelphia (now, Golden State) Warriors in the Olympians dispersal draft.

His stay with the team would span 8 seasons, ending when he was dealt to the (then) St. Louis (now, Atlanta) Hawks in 1961. During his time suiting up for the Warriors, Graboski wore only jersey No. 9 and put up 12.2 points, 7.9 rebounds, and 2.0 assists per game.

This article originally appeared on Warriors Wire: Warriors jersey history – No. 9 – Joe Graboski (1953-61)

Hischier has hat trick, Devils top Wild 5-2

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Nico Hischier scored three goals for his second hat trick of the season and the New Jersey Devils beat the Minnesota Wild 5-2 on Saturday.

Paul Cotter and Tomas Tatar also scored, Jesper Bratt had two assists, and Jacob Markstrom stopped 22 shots for the Devils. New Jersey won for the second time in six games (2-3-1).

Marcus Foligno and Ryan Hartman scored and Filip Gustavsson made 28 saves for the Wild, who have lost three of four.

Minnesota is tied with St. Louis for the top wild card in the Western Conference, with the teams six points ahead of Vancouver. The Blues beat Colorado 2-1 Saturday for their ninth straight win.

After New Jersey was blanked 4-0 Friday in Winnipeg, Hischier scored 29 seconds into the game and Cotter scored before six minutes elapsed for a 2-0 lead.

Hischier made it 3-1 early in the third, but Hartman answered two minutes later for the Wild. Hischier completed his first three-goal game since Nov. 25 with a power-play goal with 5:10 remaining. Hischier has a career-high 33 goals this season.

Foligno also had an assist on Hartman’s goal in the third period, and a major for fighting the Devils’ Jonathan Kovacevic for a Gordie Howe hat trick.

Takeaways

Devils: Hischier, whose first goal was the fastest to start the game for New Jersey this season, has points in 10 of his last 11 games with seven goals and six assists.

Wild: Minnesota finished 5-5-1 in a stretch in a stretch it played 10 of 11 games at home. Five of the last eight games are on the road, where the Wild are second in the NHL with 47 points (22-11-3).

Key moment

New Jersey just missed making it 3-1 with 15 seconds left in the second period. On a 3-on-1 Bratt’s shot looked to be going in, but it went off the skate of teammate Timo Meier who was crossing at the edge of the crease and the puck deflected wide.

Key stat

Per NHL Stats, Bratt’s two assists give him 15 this month, the most in a month by a Devils player since Scott Gomez had 16 in March 2004. Bratt has a career-high 66 assists this season.

Up next

Wild visit New Jersey on Monday to complete the home-and-home set.

___

AP NHL: https://www.apnews.com/hub/NHL

Balanced attack boosts Magic past Kings

ORLANDO, Fla. — When the Magic saw their 3-game winning streak come to an end against the Mavericks on Thursday, a key third quarter was what shifted the contest in favor of Dallas.

But Saturday night at Kia Center, Magic coach Jamahl Mosley‘s squad was not only able to weather the third quarter storm brought on by the Kings but actually rebuild and add onto its double-digit lead after halftime.

Behind a combined 63 points from Paolo Banchero (24), Franz Wagner (21) and Caleb Houstan (18), the Magic led by as many as 35 in a 121-91 victory against Sacramento.

Two more for the Magic scored in double figures as the group notched 16 points off 16 Sacramento turnovers handing the Kings (36-38) their fifth loss in six games.

The result is significant because the win clinches Orlando’s spot in the play-in tournament with seven games left in the regular season. Seeds 7-10 in each conference compete in the play-in for the Nos. 7 and 8 seeds in the playoffs.

The Magic (36-39) wrap up a 3-game homestand Monday against the Clippers.

Starting 5

In addition to wanting a better third quarter, Banchero aimed for a faster start after he scored only one point in the opening frame against the Mavericks.

He and the rest of the Magic got their wish when the group hit four of their first five shots from the floor to jump out to a 13-5 lead. Orlando led by 17 after the first quarter.

As Sacramento’s defense collapsed towards Banchero driving to the paint, the Magic forward dished out six assists to open teammates.

Both Banchero and Wagner, who started alongside Cory Joseph, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Carter, were able to overcome the defensive attention from the Kings and attack the basket with ease.

It was Banchero’s 16th straight game with 20-plus points and Wagner’s 43rd time this season reaching the scoring mark.

Carter hit his first triple from the left corner and later his second from the same spot. But three first-half fouls limited his time on the court. He racked up 12 points and four rebounds in 17 minutes.

Second unit

Orlando’s first five off the bench — Anthony Black, Gary Harris, Houstan, Jonathan Isaac and Goga Bitadze — found its groove and helped keep the Kings at bay.

Houstan hit his first three 3-pointers and later added three more to total 18 points in 25 minutes.

Bitadze recorded his team-leading 15th double-double by way of 12 points and 10 rebounds.

Black was feisty on the defensive end, picking off passes and pushing the pace the other direction. The second-year guard totaled eight points, four rebounds and two steals in 25 minutes.

Isaac defended well with two steals and saw significant minutes (19) for the first time in weeks.

Orlando’s bench outscored Sacramento’s 53-37.

Rookie watch

Tristan da Silva didn’t see the floor in the first half and didn’t check into the game until late the third with the Magic ahead by 30-plus points.

The No. 18 pick hit one triple but shot 1 of 5 from the floor in 12 second-half minutes.

Welcome back Markelle

During the first quarter of Saturday’s game, the Magic played a special tribute video honoring Kings guard Markelle Fultz, who spent five seasons in Orlando.

Fultz remained unsigned throughout much of the season before he signed for the rest of it with Sacramento in mid-February.

“It’s known how I feel about Markelle, how we feel about Markelle, and what he does, what he means, who he is as a young man, as a husband, as a father … All of those things about Markelle Fultz, I cannot speak more highly of a young man that I’ve ever been around,” Mosley said prior to tipoff.

Jesús Luzardo strikes out 11 in his debut for the Philadelphia Phillies

WASHINGTON (AP) — Jesús Luzardo got a handshake from Bryce Harper in the clubhouse and fist bumps or back slaps from other teammates on Saturday after striking out 11 batters in his Philadelphia Phillies debut — and his first regular-season appearance in 9 1/2 months.

About a week ago he watched his previous start, a loss for his former team, the Miami Marlins, against, coincidentally, the Washington Nationals, Saturday’s opponent.

“It just wasn’t me. At all,” the left-hander said about that June 16 outing after allowing two runs in five innings to earn the win for Philadelphia in an 11-6 victory at Nationals Park this time. “So I’m glad to get back to feeling like myself.”

Less than a week after that June game, Luzardo went on the injured list with a back problem that was expected to sideline him for up to six weeks. Instead, he missed the rest of the 2024 season and never returned to the Marlins.

He was traded to the Phillies for minor leaguers in December. And his new club was certainly pleased to see him on the mound Saturday.

“He’s awesome. Fits right in. He’s electric,” said Bryson Stott, who joined Kyle Schwarber and Brandon Marsh in homering for the visitors. “Obviously we saw him a lot (with Miami). It’s even more electric when he’s striking out 11 of a different team and not us.”

The only time a pitcher recorded more strikeouts in his first game with Philadelphia came in 1997, when Garrett Stephenson had 12 against the St. Louis Cardinals.

Luzardo gave up five hits and two runs — both on Keibert Ruiz’s second-inning homer.

“The only bad pitch he made, probably,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson said.

One key for Luzardo was his sweeper, which he threw more than 20 times and combined with his slider to generate most of his strikeouts.

That was more than he expected to go to the sweeper.

“It kind of fits in the game plan, but we go based off how it’s feeling,” said Luzardo, who was born in Peru, went to high school in Florida and originally was drafted by the Nationals in 2016. “Today, it felt really good, so we leaned on it a little bit more.”

That, along with a fastball that consistently was around 97 mph, kept the Nationals batters off-kilter.

The sweeper, Luzardo explained, is “just another way of getting guys out. Different swing types. Different profiles for a hitter. It just fits in the game plan a little bit in different ways than I would use my normal slider. Just finding different avenues of getting guys out.”

___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Myers gives Marlins their second walk-off win in 3 days with 5-4 victory in 12 innings

MIAMI (AP) — Dane Myers’ RBI single in the 12th inning drove in Otto Lopez to give Miami a 5-4 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Saturday night, the Marlins’ second walk-off victory in three days.

Myers threw out Tommy Pham at home from right field in the top of the inning, then delivered his opposite-field drive to right-center off Tim Mayza for the winning run. Kyle Stowers gave the Marlins a 5-4 win on opening day with a ninth-inning RBI.

Myers, Stowers and Lopez had three hits apiece with Derek Hill adding two. George Soriano (1-0), the seventh Marlins pitcher, got the win despite giving up two hits in the 12th.

Bryan Reynolds had two hits for the Pirates. Joey Wentz (0-1) pitched two innings before leaving in the 12th after intentionally walking Lopez to open the inning. Oneil Cruz dropped Jonah Bride’s flyball near the wall in right-center to load the bases. Xavier Edwards was forced out at home before Myers’ game-winner.

The teams were tied at 3 after seven innings and each scored in the 11th.

Key moment

Griffin Conine, who pinch hit in the seventh inning, robbed Pittsburgh’s Jack Suwinski of a home run that would have given the Pirates the lead in the eighth inning. Conine leaped far above the wall to bring the ball back.

Key stat

The Marlins added to their late-inning scoring trend. After scoring five runs over the eighth and ninth innings in their first two games, they added two more in Saturday’s extra innings. On the negative side of the ledger for Miami: It has allowed 14 steals in three games, including six Saturday.

Up next

Andrew Heaney makes his Pirates debut against Max Meyer and the Marlins in Sunday’s finale of the teams’ season-opening series.

___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Why Texas women’s basketball point guard took Lady Vols’ full-court press personally

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Texas point guard Rori Harmon spent a game-high 37 minutes on the court in the Longhorns’ Sweet 16 victory over No. 5 Tennessee on Saturday. These minutes weren’t like the typical 29.5 she averages. This game, she was in motion nearly the entire time, breaking the Lady Volunteers’ full-court press.

Tennessee uses a unique defensive strategy, full-court pressing for all 40 minutes. Head coach Kim Caldwell subs her entire court out about every two minutes, keeping them fresh to run back and forth.

“I’m gonna take that personal,” said Harmon, a senior. “You think you can press us? Then we’re gonna get layups and shove it down your throat.”

Harmon, who missed the 2023-24 season due to an ACL tear and still wears a knee brace while playing, demonstrated her court vision against the Lady Vols’ press, drawing in defenders and creating pockets of space for her own teammates. It also helped make the 37 minutes of running in the 67-59 win a little more bearable.

“If I’m able to take the eyes of the defense and bring them with me, and it allows my team to get freed up in the press like they did, it gives me a little break,” Harmon said. “It’s almost a blessing in disguise.”

At the start of the second half, Caldwell waited only 50 seconds before subbing in a new five. Eleven players appeared on the court for Tennessee, averaging 18.09 minutes.

Texas rotated in eight players, two of whom contributed less than 10 minutes.

Harmon leads the Longhorns with 6 assists per game and logged a game-high 4 against the Lady Vols, adding 8 points and 4 rebounds. A Houston native recruited by head coach Vic Schaefer in 2021, she has been his eyes and ears on the court for three seasons.

“I’m a better coach, better father, better husband because I’ve been around her every day,” Schaefer said. “There’s some comfort when you are a head coach knowing that that’s the engine, that’s who is running your group, your team.”

Olivia Noni is a student in the University of Georgia’s  Sports Media Certificate program.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Texas basketball’s Rori Harmon had this response to Lady Vols’ press