Los Angeles Dodgers lose to Cleveland Guardians after bullpen gives up 5 runs in 8th inning

The Los Angeles Dodgers lost to the Cleveland Guardians on Wednesday after a brutal eighth-inning collapse. 

Behind Clayton Kershaw’s brilliance on the mound, the Dodgers finished the seventh inning with a 4-2 lead. However, the bullpen gave up five runs in the eighth as the Guardians rallied for a 7-4 win.

The game was tied 4-4 in the bottom of the eighth when Angel Martinez blasted a three-run homer to put Cleveland ahead.

Martinez had two hits, including the go-ahead home run. Nolan Jones, Jose Ramirez and Carlos Santana each had three hits in the victory. 

Wednesday’s defeat denied Kershaw his 213th victory, despite allowing one run in a career-high five innings. On the other end, Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani went 0 for 3 with a walk against Cleveland. 

Ohtani leads MLB with 20 home runs and had hit one in each of the Dodgers’ previous three games.  

The loss moved the reigning World Series champions to 34-22. Los Angeles was on its way to sweeping the series against Cleveland before Tuesday’s loss.

Despite the loss, the Dodgers still lead the National League West. Cleveland improved to 30-25 to stay second in the AL Central. 

The Dodgers now head to New York for a World Series rematch against the Yankees, who lead the AL East with a 34-20 record.

Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA Draft, will return to Auburn after Final Four run

Bruce Pearl has a key piece returning next fall after all.

Auburn guard Tahaad Pettiford will withdraw from the NBA Draft and return to the Tigers next season instead, he told ESPN’s Jonathan Givony on Tuesday.

“I was happy to go through the process, getting feedback from NBA teams,” Pettiford told ESPN. “Going back to Auburn is a better situation for me. I see myself being a higher pick next year. It wasn’t 100% this year, so I didn’t want to take that chance. Being a short guard, it won’t be easy to play in the league, but I know I can do it. It’s maybe not the right time.”

Pettiford shined at the draft combine and worked out with six different teams while testing the waters. The goal, though, was reportedly to ensure that he’d be a first-round pick. Yahoo Sports’ Kevin O’Connor had Pettiford going No. 30 overall to the Los Angeles Clippers in his latest mock draft, so that didn’t leave Pettiford any room for error whatsoever.

So instead, Pettiford will return to Auburn for his sophomore season, where a “robust” NIL package is waiting for him, according to CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander. Specifics of that deal aren’t known. Pettiford will then be a projected first-round pick in the 2026 draft.

Pettiford, who will turn 20 this summer, averaged 11.6 points and three assists in nearly 23 minutes per game last season with the Tigers. He earned a spot on the SEC’s All-Freshman Team, and he helped lead the team to the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA tournament. The Tigers went 32-6 last season and reached the Final Four, though they fell to eventual national champion Florida in the semifinal.

Pettiford is the only key player from last year’s group to return to Auburn. The school has landed several notable pieces in the transfer portal, including UCF forward Keyshawn Hall, Mississippi State forward KeShawn Murphy and Texas Tech guard Kevin Overton. Auburn also landed forward Filip Jovic out of Serbia on Wednesday, too.

The first round of the NBA Draft is set for June 25. The deadline for players to withdraw from the draft and return to college is on Wednesday night.

Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA Draft, will return to Auburn after Final Four run

Bruce Pearl has a key piece returning next fall after all.

Auburn guard Tahaad Pettiford will withdraw from the NBA Draft and return to the Tigers next season instead, he told ESPN’s Jonathan Givony on Tuesday.

“I was happy to go through the process, getting feedback from NBA teams,” Pettiford told ESPN. “Going back to Auburn is a better situation for me. I see myself being a higher pick next year. It wasn’t 100% this year, so I didn’t want to take that chance. Being a short guard, it won’t be easy to play in the league, but I know I can do it. It’s maybe not the right time.”

Pettiford shined at the draft combine and worked out with six different teams while testing the waters. The goal, though, was reportedly to ensure that he’d be a first-round pick. Yahoo Sports’ Kevin O’Connor had Pettiford going No. 30 overall to the Los Angeles Clippers in his latest mock draft, so that didn’t leave Pettiford any room for error whatsoever.

So instead, Pettiford will return to Auburn for his sophomore season, where a “robust” NIL package is waiting for him, according to CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander. Specifics of that deal aren’t known. Pettiford will then be a projected first-round pick in the 2026 draft.

Pettiford, who will turn 20 this summer, averaged 11.6 points and three assists in nearly 23 minutes per game last season with the Tigers. He earned a spot on the SEC’s All-Freshman Team, and he helped lead the team to the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA tournament. The Tigers went 32-6 last season and reached the Final Four, though they fell to eventual national champion Florida in the semifinal.

Pettiford is the only key player from last year’s group to return to Auburn. The school has landed several notable pieces in the transfer portal, including UCF forward Keyshawn Hall, Mississippi State forward KeShawn Murphy and Texas Tech guard Kevin Overton. Auburn also landed forward Filip Jovic out of Serbia on Wednesday, too.

The first round of the NBA Draft is set for June 25. The deadline for players to withdraw from the draft and return to college is on Wednesday night.

Five Ways to Get Better Battery Life From Your Steam Deck

After the Nintendo Switch, the Steam Deck might be the most impressive gaming handheld of the last decade. It brings Steam games—most of which were initially designed to run on Windows PCs—to a remarkably designed portable device. The only problem? Battery life can be rough on some games. If you’re struggling to stay charged, here are some tips to help you out.

When it comes to your Steam Deck’s battery life, you’re going to notice a lot of variability, even from one game to another. AAA games that rely on high-end GPUs will typically guzzle power. On laptops or desktops, that’s usually not as much of a concern, but on the Steam Deck—when those games run at all—they can burn through the battery quickly.

So, while we have plenty of tips to get the best battery life, it’s important to keep in mind some games will simply burn through your power no matter what. Fortunately, SteamOS is already pretty power efficient (at least compared to other operating systems), and there are several handy tools to help.

First, learn what, exactly, is draining your battery

There are a few common culprits for battery drain in games, and it’s helpful to understand them before diving into solutions. This is because what works for one game with minimal performance impact, could make another game unplayable. With that in mind, here are a few key things that drain your battery:

  • Your hardware settings. The display on your Steam Deck is always a pretty big battery drain, and turning down the brightness can help. Wireless radios like wifi or Bluetooth are always sipping power, even if you’re not using them, so you can sometimes turn these off if you don’t need them.

  • Your refresh rate and FPS. Your Steam Deck has to update the screen dozens of times every second, and for some games it might be way more than necessary. 60 to 90 frames per second might be necessary for a fast-paced game like Doom Eternal, but it’s overkill for Stardew Valley.

  • Your processor’s TDP. Thermal Design Power (or TDP) is a complicated metric, but it serves as a shorthand for how much power your processor is using. On the Steam Deck, you can limit this directly, which is a blunt way of saving battery, but it can help sometimes.

The most useful tool to help you diagnose your biggest battery drains is the Performance Overlay. Press the three-dot menu button while in a game and navigate to the Performance section and you’ll see an option to enable this overlay. There are several levels of detail, ranging from a simple frame rate counter, to real-time power consumption and temperature readouts. The Performance tab is also where you’ll find several useful features we’ll discuss (under Advanced View), so it’s good to make friends with this tab.

Dive into your game’s display settings

While the Steam Deck has a lot of useful features for managing battery life, you’re still going to find some of your best options in your game’s settings. Most games have presets to lower graphics settings with one quick toggle—like switching from Ultra to Medium—and some have even more advanced settings.

This is particularly important to keep in mind if you play Steam games on multiple devices. Some games will try to sync settings between them, which can lead to your game rendering at a higher resolution or frame rate than the Steam Deck is even capable of displaying.

In general, here are a few settings you should take a look at:

  • Resolution: The Steam Deck has a 1280×800 resolution, so unless you’re using an external monitor, there’s no reason to set your game to a higher resolution. Most games won’t let you go higher anyway, but it’s worth it to double check. You can also go lower for some games, if you don’t need as much detail.

  • Frame rate: Many games offer the ability to cap how many frames the game generates, even if your display is capable of showing more. This can have a substantial impact on your battery life, especially for games that need to perform a lot of complex calculations (like graphics-heavy shooters) for every new frame.

  • Graphical presets: If your game has a preset slider, try starting on the lowest preset and working your way up to see how the game performs. The Performance Overlay can be a huge help here, to see how much power your system is drawing on different presets. If your eye can’t tell the difference, but your battery can, drop the settings.

You can play around to find the right balance for you, and it will vary greatly by game. In some games, you might want more graphical detail, but fewer frames per second, while others would benefit from the exact opposite. Try a few options to see what works best.

Adjust your refresh rate and FPS in tandem with the Frame Limit slider

As mentioned above, the number of times your game updates the screen per second can be a huge factor in battery drain. This is affected by both the screen’s refresh rate (how many times the display physically updates the pixel you see) and your game’s frames per second (or FPS, the number of times the GPU generates a new frame per second). To complicate matters further, your refresh rate can have an effect on your input latency, meaning it’s important to strike a delicate balance.

To simplify this, the Steam Deck has a slider called Frame Limit that can impose a limit on how many frames your game displays and strike that balance for you. It automatically adjusts your refresh rate to be evenly divisible by the FPS limit, avoiding unnecessary (and asynchronous) refreshes, while still maintaining the highest refresh rate possible to reduce input lag.

It’s a workaround that’s placed somewhat late in the pipeline, and it’s sometimes better to adjust your game’s settings directly, but it simplifies a complicated process. If you’d rather adjust your display’s refresh rate directly, you can toggle Disable Frame Limit and adjust the refresh rate from 45Hz to 90Hz directly. Keep in mind, though, you might still need to adjust some game settings to avoid generating frames your display will just throw out.

Put a cap on your Thermal Design Power (TDP), if you must

Tweaking your game’s graphics settings can adjust your power consumption with scalpel-like precision. By comparison, the TDP limit is a hammer. But even hammers have their uses. By design, the TDP slider on the Steam Deck will put a hard limit on how much power the CPU/GPU can draw from the battery. You can’t get much more direct battery savings than that.

The problem is that games typically, you know, need power. And even games with really fine-grain settings don’t generally ask the user to decide how much electricity to draw. For some, especially graphics-heavy games, putting a hard limit on TDP can cause massive performance drops or even game crashes.

Less demanding games, though, can benefit from playing with this setting. A useful rule of thumb is that if the game you’re playing is already struggling to maintain a consistent frame rate, try something else before touching TDP. But for games like Stardew Valley, where you’re never really concerned with frame rate, you can experiment with lowering the TDP limit to 10W or even 5W to see how well the game performs.

Of course, setting a TDP limit only matters if it’s below what your game was using in the first place. This is another area where the performance overlay comes in handy. You can get a sense of how much power your system is drawing during your games, and use that to gauge how low you want your TDP limit to be.

Don’t forget per-game battery setting profiles

On top of all these settings, you can also set game-specific profiles to change your battery settings automatically based on the title you’re playing. I can’t recommend this feature enough, especially if you tend to play games with very different power demands. Few things are more annoying than forgetting you set a low TDP limit for a simple game, then launching a more demanding game that strains against that limit.

To use this, it’s one simple toggle on the Performance tab. Enable “Use per-game profile” and the Steam Deck will automatically create a profile for every game you use. You can disable this toggle to switch back to the default, if you ever decide you prefer one consistent profile.

Keep in mind the profiles only account for the Steam Deck’s settings itself, not any game-specific settings. But it’s still a handy tool. It can be overwhelming to keep track of all the different buttons and knobs you can fiddle with to get extra battery life, but the Steam Deck manages to balance a ton of customization options with the simplicity of straight-forward, user-friendly tools so you can game longer.

Here’s why Rockies’ free fall is worse than historically bad 2024 White Sox

The Rockies are on pace to win only 26 games this season, 15 short of the White Sox’s epic face-plant of 2024. (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)

If you can’t stand the sight of bad baseball, shield your eyes from the 2025 Colorado Rockies.

Just one season after the Chicago White Sox set the modern MLB record for worst season in MLB history, a new contender for the infamous claim to baseball infamy has risen. The Rockies are swiftly heading down a tumultuous path to top what the White Sox did and they’re on pace to obliterate the not even year-old record.

Colorado’s 9-46 record entering Wednesday is the worst in baseball. They lost in extra innings to the Chicago Cubs on Tuesday, 4-3, marking the 18th series this season they’ve failed to win. 

Aside from having single-digit victories just a few days from the beginning of June, the Rockies’ slow and grueling drift to the doldrums of baseball’s worst teams somehow feels worse than the White Sox’s free-fall last season.

When comparing the two abysmal seasons, Colorado’s outlook looks even more bleak.

The manager of the worst team in baseball has a tall task. It’s his job to keep things together despite plenty of losing, and there’s always the question of if/when it will be his last day in the dugout. For the 2024 White Sox and 2025 Rockies, both Pedro Grifol and Bud Black, were fired for their respective teams’ poor performances.

Grifol was a dark cloud over the White Sox. Even before the losing, there was a disconnect between him, his players and the media. His firing last August after going 28-89 that season was addition by subtraction. It also opened up the path for the hiring of new manager Will Venable, considered around baseball to be one of the bright young minds in the sport. General manager Chris Getz is the running mate to help steer the ship of the rebuild.

Black, who had been in Colorado since 2017, always felt right for the Rockies, and the beginning of his tenure felt much different than the bitter end. Colorado made the postseason each of his first two seasons, but after that, with the departure of franchise staples like Nolan Arenado and Trevor Story, things began to snowball.

Back-to-back 100-loss seasons is usually a recipe for a manager to get fired. In the case of Black, unlike Grifol, his firing was falling on the sword for an incompetent organization that is more of a rudderless ship than a baseball team.

While the team’s third-base coach, Warren Schaeffer, has taken over on an interim basis, it’s not a job that is going to be highly sought after this offseason. And while there’s only 30 of them, whoever Colorado ends up hiring, is going to have an uphill battle from talent and organizational standpoints.

The White Sox were openly in a rebuild last season. After inheriting the reins of a beaten-down organization, Getz began a long, grueling process to turn the team’s roster over and inject talent back into an organization that needed more of it.

On a team with several strong veterans, Getz moved them for prospect capital. The traded players included Tommy Pham, Tanner Banks, Michael Kopech, Erick Fedde, Eloy Jiménez and Paul DeJong. The trading continued in the offseason as the White Sox dealt All-Star Garrett Crochet to the Boston Red Sox for a huge prospect haul.

Conversely, the Rockies’ roster doesn’t have many, if any players who could help a playoff team. Many of them are young, pre-arbitration guys who are still trying to find their bearings in the big leagues. And with the exception of the team’s best players — shortstop Ezequiel Tovar and center fielder Brenton Doyle, each highly unlikely to be traded — there’s not much else to choose from.

Colorado’s most-tradable asset is third baseman Ryan McMahon. The Rockies could have moved him over the past two seasons as he was productive and has a team-friendly deal. But Colorado kept McMahon and with each passing year, it looks like a bigger mistake. McMahon is having the worst offensive season of his career and while a team could still take a flier on him, the value lost over the past two seasons is immense.

To add insult to injury, even for being in a rebuild as long as they have, the Rockies don’t have a ton of impact prospects knocking on the door of the big leagues like most rebuilding teams. Last season’s No. 3 overall draft pick Charlie Condon is still in High-A and top pitching prospect Chase Dollander (currently on the IL) has already made it to the majors. That’s about it for a while.

Rockies third baseman Ryan McMahon is having a down year, making things worse amid the team’s dreadful season. (Patrick Gorski/Imagn Images)
IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / Reuters

This is where things get tough for Colorado. The NL West is a monster, with two World Series contenders in the Los Angeles Dodgers and the San Diego Padres. The San Francisco Giants and Arizona Diamondbacks are both postseason hopefuls as well.

It’s not hard to imagine a world where all four teams finish the season with at least 84 wins. But if you combine the fact that you have four of the best teams in the National League in one division and the other team in the division is the worst in baseball, what you have is a recipe for an all-time bad season.

The Rockies are 3-13 against their own division and as the other teams in the division get better and likely add at the trade deadline, it could be a long summer in the NL West for Colorado.

The Rockies are on pace to go 26-136 this season, which would be 15 games worse than the White Sox in ’24. And for a team on a winding path to nowhere and lacking talent or a plan to acquire it, Colorado seems destined to be MLB’s newest historic laughingstock.

Here’s why Rockies’ free fall is worse than historically bad 2024 White Sox

The Rockies are on pace to win only 26 games this season, 15 short of the White Sox’s epic face-plant of 2024. (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)

If you can’t stand the sight of bad baseball, shield your eyes from the 2025 Colorado Rockies.

Just one season after the Chicago White Sox set the modern MLB record for worst season in MLB history, a new contender for the infamous claim to baseball infamy has risen. The Rockies are swiftly heading down a tumultuous path to top what the White Sox did and they’re on pace to obliterate the not even year-old record.

Colorado’s 9-46 record entering Wednesday is the worst in baseball. They lost in extra innings to the Chicago Cubs on Tuesday, 4-3, marking the 18th series this season they’ve failed to win. 

Aside from having single-digit victories just a few days from the beginning of June, the Rockies’ slow and grueling drift to the doldrums of baseball’s worst teams somehow feels worse than the White Sox’s free-fall last season.

When comparing the two abysmal seasons, Colorado’s outlook looks even more bleak.

The manager of the worst team in baseball has a tall task. It’s his job to keep things together despite plenty of losing, and there’s always the question of if/when it will be his last day in the dugout. For the 2024 White Sox and 2025 Rockies, both Pedro Grifol and Bud Black, were fired for their respective teams’ poor performances.

Grifol was a dark cloud over the White Sox. Even before the losing, there was a disconnect between him, his players and the media. His firing last August after going 28-89 that season was addition by subtraction. It also opened up the path for the hiring of new manager Will Venable, considered around baseball to be one of the bright young minds in the sport. General manager Chris Getz is the running mate to help steer the ship of the rebuild.

Black, who had been in Colorado since 2017, always felt right for the Rockies, and the beginning of his tenure felt much different than the bitter end. Colorado made the postseason each of his first two seasons, but after that, with the departure of franchise staples like Nolan Arenado and Trevor Story, things began to snowball.

Back-to-back 100-loss seasons is usually a recipe for a manager to get fired. In the case of Black, unlike Grifol, his firing was falling on the sword for an incompetent organization that is more of a rudderless ship than a baseball team.

While the team’s third-base coach, Warren Schaeffer, has taken over on an interim basis, it’s not a job that is going to be highly sought after this offseason. And while there’s only 30 of them, whoever Colorado ends up hiring, is going to have an uphill battle from talent and organizational standpoints.

The White Sox were openly in a rebuild last season. After inheriting the reins of a beaten-down organization, Getz began a long, grueling process to turn the team’s roster over and inject talent back into an organization that needed more of it.

On a team with several strong veterans, Getz moved them for prospect capital. The traded players included Tommy Pham, Tanner Banks, Michael Kopech, Erick Fedde, Eloy Jiménez and Paul DeJong. The trading continued in the offseason as the White Sox dealt All-Star Garrett Crochet to the Boston Red Sox for a huge prospect haul.

Conversely, the Rockies’ roster doesn’t have many, if any players who could help a playoff team. Many of them are young, pre-arbitration guys who are still trying to find their bearings in the big leagues. And with the exception of the team’s best players — shortstop Ezequiel Tovar and center fielder Brenton Doyle, each highly unlikely to be traded — there’s not much else to choose from.

Colorado’s most-tradable asset is third baseman Ryan McMahon. The Rockies could have moved him over the past two seasons as he was productive and has a team-friendly deal. But Colorado kept McMahon and with each passing year, it looks like a bigger mistake. McMahon is having the worst offensive season of his career and while a team could still take a flier on him, the value lost over the past two seasons is immense.

To add insult to injury, even for being in a rebuild as long as they have, the Rockies don’t have a ton of impact prospects knocking on the door of the big leagues like most rebuilding teams. Last season’s No. 3 overall draft pick Charlie Condon is still in High-A and top pitching prospect Chase Dollander (currently on the IL) has already made it to the majors. That’s about it for a while.

Rockies third baseman Ryan McMahon is having a down year, making things worse amid the team’s dreadful season. (Patrick Gorski/Imagn Images)
IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / Reuters

This is where things get tough for Colorado. The NL West is a monster, with two World Series contenders in the Los Angeles Dodgers and the San Diego Padres. The San Francisco Giants and Arizona Diamondbacks are both postseason hopefuls as well.

It’s not hard to imagine a world where all four teams finish the season with at least 84 wins. But if you combine the fact that you have four of the best teams in the National League in one division and the other team in the division is the worst in baseball, what you have is a recipe for an all-time bad season.

The Rockies are 3-13 against their own division and as the other teams in the division get better and likely add at the trade deadline, it could be a long summer in the NL West for Colorado.

The Rockies are on pace to go 26-136 this season, which would be 15 games worse than the White Sox in ’24. And for a team on a winding path to nowhere and lacking talent or a plan to acquire it, Colorado seems destined to be MLB’s newest historic laughingstock.

2025 Fantasy Baseball Rankings: Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani & Bobby Witt Jr. lead Top 300 rest of season ranks

If you were following along with the preseason edition, here’s our regular-season top 300 overall rankings, which will be updated weekly on Mondays.

These are rest-of-season rankings for mixed 5×5 fantasy baseball leagues.

You can check out our rankings for dynasty leagues

Eric Samulski breaks down some of the top waiver wire adds for the upcoming week of fantasy baseball.