STRASBOURG, France (AP) — Strasbourg advanced to the semifinals of the French Cup with a 2-1 win over Reims on Tuesday.
In an eventful finish at Stade de la Meinau, Strasbourg converted two penalties in the space of four minutes and then conceded in stoppage time as Reims fought back.
Joaquin Panichelli’s spot kick broke the deadlock in the 83rd and when David Datro Fofana was brought down in the box moments later, Strasbourg was awarded a second penalty.
Panichelli had already gone off, so Julio Enciso converted from the spot to double the home team’s lead.
Abdoul Ouattara was close to making it 3-0 when he hit the bar in added time, but it was Reims that got the next goal — from Patrick Zabi in the 94th.
MESA, Arizona — The Cubs wore their white pinstripe home jerseys for the exhibition game against Team Italy, and that was more than just a pleasant view. Before the game started I saw a few Cubs minor leaguers enter Sloan Park wearing the blue alternates and wondered why.
“Why” was because several of them played for Team Italy, and that had them match Italy’s blue jerseys. And a couple of the Cubs prospects hit Cubs pitching pretty hard. Owen Ayers, a catching prospect who did well in the Arizona Fall League, smashed a two-run homer and also singled, and Parker Chavers was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded.
While Cubs major leaguers were in the game, though, things went quite well. Cade Horton threw three strong innings, allowing a walk and single and striking out three. Here are the three K’s [VIDEO].
That ball was up and out right in the middle of the zone and was hit a long way:
The Cubs scored three more times in the fourth. Matt Shaw led off with a double and Pedro Ramirez walked. Both runners moved up on a fly ball by Jefferson Rojas and both scored on an infield hit by Nico Hoerner, after the ball was thrown away by Italy shortstop Thomas Saggese, who you’ll remember as a member of the Cardinals.
Jacob Webb and Ethan Roberts threw scoreless innings in the fourth and fifth and so the game went to the sixth with the Cubs up 4-0 and Italy having only one hit.
Jack Neely should have had a scoreless inning, too, only Ben Cowles, just returned from his waiver sojourn to Toronto, threw a ball away for a throwing error to lead off the sixth. Neely retired the next two hitters, but then Ayers homered, and another single and homer made it a four-run inning, all the runs unearned due to the Cowles error.
Another homer in the seventh, by Saggese off Jeff Brigham, gave Italy the lead and they put the game away with a four-spot off Cubs minor leaguers Ben Heller and Tyler Santana.
So, basically, the Cubs major leaguers did what they needed to do and the loss was all off guys who won’t be on this team, some of the runs produced by their own Cubs minor-league teammates.
As noted, only 8,068 paid to see this one. This is one of the smallest crowds in the history of Sloan Park. It makes the total for seven dates this spring 79,377, or 11,340 per date.
The Cubs head to the west side of Phoenix to play the Brewers Wednesday afternoon. Edward Cabrera will start for the Cubs and Brandon Sproat, one of the two top Mets prospects the Brewers got in the Freddy Peralta deal, will start for Milwaukee. Game time Wednesday is 2:10 p.m. CT. The game will be televised on Marquee Sports Network and also Brewers TV. There will also be a radio broadcast on the Brewers flagship station, WTMJ 620.
Keep these players on your radar as Opening Day approaches.
SS Colson Montgomery, Chicago White Sox
The profile:
Montgomery, 24, is perhaps the most promising up-and-comer on a White Sox roster suddenly stocked with young talent. But it wasn’t all that long ago that his status as a future fixture of Chicago’s infield was in doubt. Montgomery surged into the upper echelon of top-100 prospect lists with a loud performance in 2023 but then faltered with a poor showing in Triple-A in 2024 (80 wRC+). That left his prospect stock in a diminished state entering last season, and a back injury during spring training limited his opportunities to reestablish his value in camp. His return to Triple-A to start 2025 wasn’t much better (82 wRC+), but once Montgomery got the call-up in July, he heated up in a hurry and went on to finish fifth in AL Rookie of the Year voting.
Montgomery’s headlining trait has always been his big, left-handed power. That skill was loudly on display last year, as Montgomery slugged .529 and swatted 21 homers in just 71 games, including a particularly scorching stretch in which he homered eight times across 12 games. And while seeing his power play at the highest level was certainly a positive sign for the White Sox, even more encouraging for Montgomery’s long-term prospects was how he looked as a defender.
Listed at 6-foot-3 and 230 pounds, he has long faced questions about whether a player his size can hold up at shortstop, with many evaluators projecting a move to the hot corner sooner rather than later. Montgomery got some exposure at third base in the upper minors and early in his major-league tenure, but by the final two months of last season, he had entrenched himself as Chicago’s every-day shortstop. And among 33 shortstops who logged at least 500 innings at the position in 2025, he ranked eighth in both Defensive Runs Saved and Outs Above Average — a remarkable display of glovework that speaks to Montgomery’s athleticism and aptitude for improvement. If he can replicate that high level of defense over a full season, it’ll dramatically raise both the floor and ceiling for him as a player.
What they’re saying:
“We saw him early in camp last year, and then he had the back thing, and then we didn’t see him ‘til he came up. And I think that he really exceeded expectations defensively. He’s just such a good athlete, and it really came out. And I thought he got comfortable really quickly out there. He’s a big-league shortstop that is really good and performed well, and [I’m] looking forward to seeing what this year looks like, too.” — White Sox manager Will Venable
“I feel like defense is, it’s an effort thing, too, and more of a mindset thing. So in my head, it’s like anything hit in my general direction, I’m gonna go after it. I felt like I always had that kind of instinct. But I just think the more I went up in the levels, that your intent has to go higher, because they hit the ball a lot harder, and they’re a lot faster. I just think it’s adjusting and adapting to the game.” — Montgomery
RHP Luis Morales, A’s
The profile:
It’s no secret that the A’s have assembled one of the most exciting lineups in baseball, a deep and talented unit that should score a boatload of runs in 2026. But if the team is to be more than just a run-scoring machine and become a legitimate threat to reach the playoffs for the first time since 2020, their run-prevention efforts will need to be improved considerably. Top-10 marks for the A’s in several offensive categories last season were offset by finishing bottom-five by most measures on the mound, and as things stand, projection systems hint that a similar fate could be in store in 2026.
One key figure who could help change this outlook for the better is 23-year-old right-hander Luis Morales. While the A’s have an intriguing wave of pitching prospects looming in the minors who could debut over the next 18 months, Morales is clearly the arm most likely to impact the major-league team from the get-go in 2026.
A native of Cuba, Morales signed with the A’s for $3 million three years ago and immediately began flashing his high-octane arsenal in the low minors. Concerns about his strike-throwing lingered as he climbed, but he fended off doubts about his ability to stick as a starter and joined the big-league rotation in August. His seven scoreless innings against Detroit in his fourth career start was one of the best outings by any A’s pitcher in 2025, which speaks both to Morales’ speedy assimilation and to how little starting pitching success the franchise experienced last season.
Only a handful of starters league-wide throw harder than Morales, whose four-seamer averaged 97.3 mph as a rookie, but the continued honing of his command and development of his secondary pitches (sweeper, changeup) will determine just how good he can be. Whatever happens next, there’s no doubt Morales is one of the most important pitchers on the A’s roster.
What they’re saying:
“Nothing bothers Luis. Came up, made his debut last year. From where he came from, Cuba, being in Mexico for a year and then to work his way through the system. … This kid is ready for the big time, and his stuff is there, too. As close as you can get to sort of penciling yourself into the rotation through a handful of big league starts — he’s pretty close to doing that. …
“These guys need 15 to 20 starts under their belt. We’ve seen it with [J.T.] Ginn and [Jack] Perkins, and they just need the experience of getting out of situations, working command. Luis’s command is not quite where he needs it to be, but man, the stuff is there.” — general manager David Forst
Most of the players on this list are MLB newcomers, but Joc Pederson stands out as a hitter looking to bounce back on a team trying to do the same. (Mallory Bielecki/Yahoo Sports)
DH Joc Pederson, Texas Rangers
The profile:
When Joc Pederson signed with the Rangers as a free agent in December 2024, it seemed like a perfect fit. A proven lefty slugger coming off an outstanding season at the plate joining a franchise looking to flush the odd offensive funk that followed its 2023 World Series run. A well-traveled hitter with ample postseason experience reinforcing a roster filled with accomplished veterans eager to get back to October.
Instead, Texas’ strange struggles at the plate were exacerbated further amid another disappointing season, with Pederson contributing to the woes with a brutal cold spell early in 2025. He endured a shocking 0-for-41 stretch that spanned more than three weeks in April, putting his slash line in a hole that he never climbed all the way out of. He then suffered a right-hand fracture that put him on the shelf for two months, adding injury to what was already a miserable first year in Arlington. After his return, Pederson was much more competent over the final two months (.757 OPS), but by then it was far too little and far too late for both player and team.
Now Pederson is entering the second year of his two-year, $37 million deal as one of several Rangers hitters looking to turn the page on a rough 2025. Even if he’s limited to DH duties mostly against right-handed pitching, Pederson is a crucial character in Texas’ efforts to get back on track.
What they’re saying:
“He came in mentally ready to roll day one in spring, like he’s got something to prove. And when you come in hungry, that’s the goal. It’s not the best shape of your life, physically all the time. It’s, where are they at mentally? Where’s their belief? Where’s their conviction? What was the motivation in the offseason? And I think the great news for a new manager is that a lot of these guys are motivated and ready to roll. …
“He’s a smart baseball player, and just because he’s DH’d a lot lately, I think it shouldn’t take away to what kind of athlete that Joc is. And he is a guy that can lead a clubhouse. He’s a guy that can lead a hitting department. He’s really good on the tips and tells and identifying stuff on what pitchers are doing. He’s really good at helping the young guys, whether that’s scouting or whether that’s taking them to dinner and impacting them that way. He’s such a good teammate, the care factor is there. He’s won, he knows what winning looks like. I’m hoping that he is part of a winning team this year as well.” — manager Skip Schumaker
RHP Landen Roupp, San Francisco Giants
The profile:
The San Francisco Giants have gradually amassed a rather deep stable of homegrown arms. Landen Roupp, Keaton Winn, Hayden Birdsong, Carson Whisenhunt and Trevor McDonald were all drafted and developed in San Francisco’s system and have debuted in recent seasons, and now Blade Tidwell has joined the mix after arriving from the Mets via trade last summer. The Giants are in the process of sorting through the roles for all of these arms in 2026.
That said, Roupp looks to have the inside track on the fifth and final spot in a rotation that currently has four spots settled in staff ace Logan Webb, veteran lefty Robbie Ray and offseason free-agent additions Adrian Houser and Tyler Mahle. After spending most of his rookie season as a reliever in 2024, Roupp made the fourth-most starts (22) of any Giants pitcher in 2025. He really found his groove midsummer, posting a 2.27 ERA across 14 starts from May 5 to July 22. But two stints on the injured list due to right elbow inflammation and a left knee injury limited his effectiveness and availability over the final two months, souring the end to an otherwise encouraging season.
Now back healthy, Roupp has looked sharp early in Cactus League play, with his velocity up a tick on all of his pitches. He attacks with an interesting mix, as a rare starting pitcher who leans on a traditional curveball as one of his primary weapons, and it’s no surprise, considering its elite spin rate. Competition remains fierce among the Giants’ cohort of homegrown arms, but Roupp projects as a pivotal part of San Francisco’s pitching plans regardless of whether he hangs on to his rotation spot or transitions back into a relief role.
What they’re saying:
“I think Landon really started to separate himself last year. I think something that makes him special, just his mound presence, it just feels different. He’s on the attack. He’s a very good competitor. I think we saw his confidence grow and grow as the season went on. And then beyond that, his stuff is good. Really good curveball, really started to pick up, a changeup throughout the season, good velocity. …
“He always spun it really well, and it always got really good results. It might be more of that old-school, like 12-to-6 type that we don’t see as much, but it’s worked for him. I think as the season went on, I think he started to get a feel for when to use it and when not to use it, to make sure it didn’t lose effectiveness. And he ended up having a nice year and a year that we think he can really build off of.” — general manager Zack Minasian
C/DH Moises Ballesteros, Chicago Cubs
The profile:
The most glaring change made to the Chicago Cubs’ offense over the offseason was the signing of All-Star third baseman Alex Bregman in the wake of Kyle Tucker’s departure in free agency. That swap of lineup headliners will be fascinating to follow, but there are a few other fresh faces to monitor among the Cubs’ position-player group, most notably 22-year-old Moises Ballesteros.
Ballesteros memorably cracked his first career home run in September, directly to Anthony Rizzo, who was sitting in the Wrigley Field bleachers after celebrating retiring with the Cubs. But the lefty-swinging backstop projects to be more than just an answer to that Rizzo-related trivia question. He’s still rookie-eligible entering 2026, and his sterling track record of mashing in the minors (.289/.371/.457 across 1,937 MiLB plate appearances) has him comfortably slotted in the 50-60 range on most top-100 prospect lists.
By trading another top-100 prospect in Owen Caissie and shifting Seiya Suzuki back to the outfield to replace Tucker, the Cubs should have plenty of at-bats available at DH for Ballesteros. How that impacts his long-term development as a catcher, his natural position, remains to be seen. But if the Cubs believe Ballesteros’ bat can help them win right now — and the current roster construction indicates they do — they’re going to find a way for him to be in the lineup.
What they’re saying:
“We view him as a catcher. We obviously have two catchers on our roster right now. We want Balle to continue to develop as a catcher, but he also has a great bat. So we’re gonna be trying to win this year, as all years. But we’re gonna try to figure out ways to develop him behind the dish, and if that’s at the big-league level, that’d be awesome. …
“Great hand-eye, the bat to ball, the ability to hit multiple pitches … hitter-ish is the word that you hear a lot from coaches that are around him. And I think the way that he approached his first few at-bats in the major leagues, he just did not seem intimidated. He was ready to face plus stuff and had some big hits for us. That’s something that’s pretty exciting for just how young he is. Should be a guy that’s in the big leagues for a long time.” — general manager Carter Hawkins
RHP David Morgan and RHP Bradgley Rodriguez, San Diego Padres
The profile:
The San Diego Padres supercharged their already stacked bullpen last summer with the acquisition of fireballer Mason Miller at the trade deadline. That unit has since declined somewhat with longtime closer Robert Suarez departing in free agency, but the Padres still project to have one of the best relief corps in baseball. That has a lot to do with Miller’s outsized presence, as well as the tremendous seasons turned in by the likes of Adrian Morejon, Jeremiah Estrada and Jason Adam, all of whom return in 2026. But look down the depth chart, and you’ll find that San Diego has even more impact relievers ready to contribute.
The most intriguing duo from that next wave are 26-year-old David Morgan and 22-year-old Bradgley Rodriguez. Rodriguez zoomed through the minors thanks to his hellacious heater that touches triple-digits, and he debuted briefly in May before making a handful more major-league outings in September. With minimal experience in the upper levels, he might need some more polishing before being unleashed in a regular role in San Diego’s bullpen, but his stuff speaks for itself.
Morgan, meanwhile, racked up 41 appearances with a 2.66 ERA as a rookie last season, marking the latest chapter in his astonishing development story. He was primarily an infielder in junior college and at the NAIA level, but San Diego signed him as an undrafted free agent in 2022 with hopes that his standout arm strength could translate to a full-time future on the mound. Boy, were the Padres right. It took some time for Morgan to fully take to his new focus, but he got better as he climbed each level. His effectiveness as a rookie despite a relative lack of reps on the mound was impressive, and the Padres are confident he’s just scratching the surface of his potential.
What they’re saying:
“Really excited about those two. … They bring electric stuff to the table. And they also bring an attitude, like a not-scared attitude, which is always great to see in a young player, that he’s fearless and puts his best foot out there whenever he can. So are we looking for those guys to take the next step? We’re hopeful of that. I know that the progression of every pitcher is not always straight up the mountain. So we’re prepared for that, but we’re going to take care of them, too, with the workload and all that. They make our bullpen really good. We’ve got great back-end guys. [Morgan and Rodriguez] potentially being able to fill-in when those guys need a breather? That makes us feel really good.” — manager Craig Stammen
“I saw [Morgan] right after we signed him in Arizona, and it was like, this guy’s got talent, but not super polished. That’s really a compliment to him and our development team. Those guys did a great job taking [that velocity] but now getting that to where it’s command, it’s control, it’s secondary pitches … And then the development when he got to the big-league level, because at the big-league level, the four-seamer got hit a little bit, and all of a sudden, now he comes up with a two-seamer. He’s throwing a slider and a curveball. I think those are things that are really exciting. When you see somebody that has the aptitude to add those pitches, I think part of it is development and a big part of it’s on him, that he’s just a really good athlete.” — general manager AJ Preller
Keep these players on your radar as Opening Day approaches.
SS Colson Montgomery, Chicago White Sox
The profile:
Montgomery, 24, is perhaps the most promising up-and-comer on a White Sox roster suddenly stocked with young talent. But it wasn’t all that long ago that his status as a future fixture of Chicago’s infield was in doubt. Montgomery surged into the upper echelon of top-100 prospect lists with a loud performance in 2023 but then faltered with a poor showing in Triple-A in 2024 (80 wRC+). That left his prospect stock in a diminished state entering last season, and a back injury during spring training limited his opportunities to reestablish his value in camp. His return to Triple-A to start 2025 wasn’t much better (82 wRC+), but once Montgomery got the call-up in July, he heated up in a hurry and went on to finish fifth in AL Rookie of the Year voting.
Montgomery’s headlining trait has always been his big, left-handed power. That skill was loudly on display last year, as Montgomery slugged .529 and swatted 21 homers in just 71 games, including a particularly scorching stretch in which he homered eight times across 12 games. And while seeing his power play at the highest level was certainly a positive sign for the White Sox, even more encouraging for Montgomery’s long-term prospects was how he looked as a defender.
Listed at 6-foot-3 and 230 pounds, he has long faced questions about whether a player his size can hold up at shortstop, with many evaluators projecting a move to the hot corner sooner rather than later. Montgomery got some exposure at third base in the upper minors and early in his major-league tenure, but by the final two months of last season, he had entrenched himself as Chicago’s every-day shortstop. And among 33 shortstops who logged at least 500 innings at the position in 2025, he ranked eighth in both Defensive Runs Saved and Outs Above Average — a remarkable display of glovework that speaks to Montgomery’s athleticism and aptitude for improvement. If he can replicate that high level of defense over a full season, it’ll dramatically raise both the floor and ceiling for him as a player.
What they’re saying:
“We saw him early in camp last year, and then he had the back thing, and then we didn’t see him ‘til he came up. And I think that he really exceeded expectations defensively. He’s just such a good athlete, and it really came out. And I thought he got comfortable really quickly out there. He’s a big-league shortstop that is really good and performed well, and [I’m] looking forward to seeing what this year looks like, too.” — White Sox manager Will Venable
“I feel like defense is, it’s an effort thing, too, and more of a mindset thing. So in my head, it’s like anything hit in my general direction, I’m gonna go after it. I felt like I always had that kind of instinct. But I just think the more I went up in the levels, that your intent has to go higher, because they hit the ball a lot harder, and they’re a lot faster. I just think it’s adjusting and adapting to the game.” — Montgomery
RHP Luis Morales, A’s
The profile:
It’s no secret that the A’s have assembled one of the most exciting lineups in baseball, a deep and talented unit that should score a boatload of runs in 2026. But if the team is to be more than just a run-scoring machine and become a legitimate threat to reach the playoffs for the first time since 2020, their run-prevention efforts will need to be improved considerably. Top-10 marks for the A’s in several offensive categories last season were offset by finishing bottom-five by most measures on the mound, and as things stand, projection systems hint that a similar fate could be in store in 2026.
One key figure who could help change this outlook for the better is 23-year-old right-hander Luis Morales. While the A’s have an intriguing wave of pitching prospects looming in the minors who could debut over the next 18 months, Morales is clearly the arm most likely to impact the major-league team from the get-go in 2026.
A native of Cuba, Morales signed with the A’s for $3 million three years ago and immediately began flashing his high-octane arsenal in the low minors. Concerns about his strike-throwing lingered as he climbed, but he fended off doubts about his ability to stick as a starter and joined the big-league rotation in August. His seven scoreless innings against Detroit in his fourth career start was one of the best outings by any A’s pitcher in 2025, which speaks both to Morales’ speedy assimilation and to how little starting pitching success the franchise experienced last season.
Only a handful of starters league-wide throw harder than Morales, whose four-seamer averaged 97.3 mph as a rookie, but the continued honing of his command and development of his secondary pitches (sweeper, changeup) will determine just how good he can be. Whatever happens next, there’s no doubt Morales is one of the most important pitchers on the A’s roster.
What they’re saying:
“Nothing bothers Luis. Came up, made his debut last year. From where he came from, Cuba, being in Mexico for a year and then to work his way through the system. … This kid is ready for the big time, and his stuff is there, too. As close as you can get to sort of penciling yourself into the rotation through a handful of big league starts — he’s pretty close to doing that. …
“These guys need 15 to 20 starts under their belt. We’ve seen it with [J.T.] Ginn and [Jack] Perkins, and they just need the experience of getting out of situations, working command. Luis’s command is not quite where he needs it to be, but man, the stuff is there.” — general manager David Forst
Most of the players on this list are MLB newcomers, but Joc Pederson stands out as a hitter looking to bounce back on a team trying to do the same. (Mallory Bielecki/Yahoo Sports)
DH Joc Pederson, Texas Rangers
The profile:
When Joc Pederson signed with the Rangers as a free agent in December 2024, it seemed like a perfect fit. A proven lefty slugger coming off an outstanding season at the plate joining a franchise looking to flush the odd offensive funk that followed its 2023 World Series run. A well-traveled hitter with ample postseason experience reinforcing a roster filled with accomplished veterans eager to get back to October.
Instead, Texas’ strange struggles at the plate were exacerbated further amid another disappointing season, with Pederson contributing to the woes with a brutal cold spell early in 2025. He endured a shocking 0-for-41 stretch that spanned more than three weeks in April, putting his slash line in a hole that he never climbed all the way out of. He then suffered a right-hand fracture that put him on the shelf for two months, adding injury to what was already a miserable first year in Arlington. After his return, Pederson was much more competent over the final two months (.757 OPS), but by then it was far too little and far too late for both player and team.
Now Pederson is entering the second year of his two-year, $37 million deal as one of several Rangers hitters looking to turn the page on a rough 2025. Even if he’s limited to DH duties mostly against right-handed pitching, Pederson is a crucial character in Texas’ efforts to get back on track.
What they’re saying:
“He came in mentally ready to roll day one in spring, like he’s got something to prove. And when you come in hungry, that’s the goal. It’s not the best shape of your life, physically all the time. It’s, where are they at mentally? Where’s their belief? Where’s their conviction? What was the motivation in the offseason? And I think the great news for a new manager is that a lot of these guys are motivated and ready to roll. …
“He’s a smart baseball player, and just because he’s DH’d a lot lately, I think it shouldn’t take away to what kind of athlete that Joc is. And he is a guy that can lead a clubhouse. He’s a guy that can lead a hitting department. He’s really good on the tips and tells and identifying stuff on what pitchers are doing. He’s really good at helping the young guys, whether that’s scouting or whether that’s taking them to dinner and impacting them that way. He’s such a good teammate, the care factor is there. He’s won, he knows what winning looks like. I’m hoping that he is part of a winning team this year as well.” — manager Skip Schumaker
RHP Landen Roupp, San Francisco Giants
The profile:
The San Francisco Giants have gradually amassed a rather deep stable of homegrown arms. Landen Roupp, Keaton Winn, Hayden Birdsong, Carson Whisenhunt and Trevor McDonald were all drafted and developed in San Francisco’s system and have debuted in recent seasons, and now Blade Tidwell has joined the mix after arriving from the Mets via trade last summer. The Giants are in the process of sorting through the roles for all of these arms in 2026.
That said, Roupp looks to have the inside track on the fifth and final spot in a rotation that currently has four spots settled in staff ace Logan Webb, veteran lefty Robbie Ray and offseason free-agent additions Adrian Houser and Tyler Mahle. After spending most of his rookie season as a reliever in 2024, Roupp made the fourth-most starts (22) of any Giants pitcher in 2025. He really found his groove midsummer, posting a 2.27 ERA across 14 starts from May 5 to July 22. But two stints on the injured list due to right elbow inflammation and a left knee injury limited his effectiveness and availability over the final two months, souring the end to an otherwise encouraging season.
Now back healthy, Roupp has looked sharp early in Cactus League play, with his velocity up a tick on all of his pitches. He attacks with an interesting mix, as a rare starting pitcher who leans on a traditional curveball as one of his primary weapons, and it’s no surprise, considering its elite spin rate. Competition remains fierce among the Giants’ cohort of homegrown arms, but Roupp projects as a pivotal part of San Francisco’s pitching plans regardless of whether he hangs on to his rotation spot or transitions back into a relief role.
What they’re saying:
“I think Landon really started to separate himself last year. I think something that makes him special, just his mound presence, it just feels different. He’s on the attack. He’s a very good competitor. I think we saw his confidence grow and grow as the season went on. And then beyond that, his stuff is good. Really good curveball, really started to pick up, a changeup throughout the season, good velocity. …
“He always spun it really well, and it always got really good results. It might be more of that old-school, like 12-to-6 type that we don’t see as much, but it’s worked for him. I think as the season went on, I think he started to get a feel for when to use it and when not to use it, to make sure it didn’t lose effectiveness. And he ended up having a nice year and a year that we think he can really build off of.” — general manager Zack Minasian
C/DH Moises Ballesteros, Chicago Cubs
The profile:
The most glaring change made to the Chicago Cubs’ offense over the offseason was the signing of All-Star third baseman Alex Bregman in the wake of Kyle Tucker’s departure in free agency. That swap of lineup headliners will be fascinating to follow, but there are a few other fresh faces to monitor among the Cubs’ position-player group, most notably 22-year-old Moises Ballesteros.
Ballesteros memorably cracked his first career home run in September, directly to Anthony Rizzo, who was sitting in the Wrigley Field bleachers after celebrating retiring with the Cubs. But the lefty-swinging backstop projects to be more than just an answer to that Rizzo-related trivia question. He’s still rookie-eligible entering 2026, and his sterling track record of mashing in the minors (.289/.371/.457 across 1,937 MiLB plate appearances) has him comfortably slotted in the 50-60 range on most top-100 prospect lists.
By trading another top-100 prospect in Owen Caissie and shifting Seiya Suzuki back to the outfield to replace Tucker, the Cubs should have plenty of at-bats available at DH for Ballesteros. How that impacts his long-term development as a catcher, his natural position, remains to be seen. But if the Cubs believe Ballesteros’ bat can help them win right now — and the current roster construction indicates they do — they’re going to find a way for him to be in the lineup.
What they’re saying:
“We view him as a catcher. We obviously have two catchers on our roster right now. We want Balle to continue to develop as a catcher, but he also has a great bat. So we’re gonna be trying to win this year, as all years. But we’re gonna try to figure out ways to develop him behind the dish, and if that’s at the big-league level, that’d be awesome. …
“Great hand-eye, the bat to ball, the ability to hit multiple pitches … hitter-ish is the word that you hear a lot from coaches that are around him. And I think the way that he approached his first few at-bats in the major leagues, he just did not seem intimidated. He was ready to face plus stuff and had some big hits for us. That’s something that’s pretty exciting for just how young he is. Should be a guy that’s in the big leagues for a long time.” — general manager Carter Hawkins
RHP David Morgan and RHP Bradgley Rodriguez, San Diego Padres
The profile:
The San Diego Padres supercharged their already stacked bullpen last summer with the acquisition of fireballer Mason Miller at the trade deadline. That unit has since declined somewhat with longtime closer Robert Suarez departing in free agency, but the Padres still project to have one of the best relief corps in baseball. That has a lot to do with Miller’s outsized presence, as well as the tremendous seasons turned in by the likes of Adrian Morejon, Jeremiah Estrada and Jason Adam, all of whom return in 2026. But look down the depth chart, and you’ll find that San Diego has even more impact relievers ready to contribute.
The most intriguing duo from that next wave are 26-year-old David Morgan and 22-year-old Bradgley Rodriguez. Rodriguez zoomed through the minors thanks to his hellacious heater that touches triple-digits, and he debuted briefly in May before making a handful more major-league outings in September. With minimal experience in the upper levels, he might need some more polishing before being unleashed in a regular role in San Diego’s bullpen, but his stuff speaks for itself.
Morgan, meanwhile, racked up 41 appearances with a 2.66 ERA as a rookie last season, marking the latest chapter in his astonishing development story. He was primarily an infielder in junior college and at the NAIA level, but San Diego signed him as an undrafted free agent in 2022 with hopes that his standout arm strength could translate to a full-time future on the mound. Boy, were the Padres right. It took some time for Morgan to fully take to his new focus, but he got better as he climbed each level. His effectiveness as a rookie despite a relative lack of reps on the mound was impressive, and the Padres are confident he’s just scratching the surface of his potential.
What they’re saying:
“Really excited about those two. … They bring electric stuff to the table. And they also bring an attitude, like a not-scared attitude, which is always great to see in a young player, that he’s fearless and puts his best foot out there whenever he can. So are we looking for those guys to take the next step? We’re hopeful of that. I know that the progression of every pitcher is not always straight up the mountain. So we’re prepared for that, but we’re going to take care of them, too, with the workload and all that. They make our bullpen really good. We’ve got great back-end guys. [Morgan and Rodriguez] potentially being able to fill-in when those guys need a breather? That makes us feel really good.” — manager Craig Stammen
“I saw [Morgan] right after we signed him in Arizona, and it was like, this guy’s got talent, but not super polished. That’s really a compliment to him and our development team. Those guys did a great job taking [that velocity] but now getting that to where it’s command, it’s control, it’s secondary pitches … And then the development when he got to the big-league level, because at the big-league level, the four-seamer got hit a little bit, and all of a sudden, now he comes up with a two-seamer. He’s throwing a slider and a curveball. I think those are things that are really exciting. When you see somebody that has the aptitude to add those pitches, I think part of it is development and a big part of it’s on him, that he’s just a really good athlete.” — general manager AJ Preller
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Florida coach Jon Sumrall has a new appreciation for the gator chomp.
Sumrall got hissed at and snapped at while posing for promotional pictures with a live alligator last week. It was enough to prompt Sumrall to backpedal like his college playing days at Kentucky.
“I’m pretty certain I’d look like Chubbs from Happy Gilmore if the alligator had gotten close to my hand,” Sumrall joked Tuesday following his first spring practice at Florida. “Yeah, that was cool, man.”
A little nerve-racking, too.
“In my mind, I had this visual image of we’re going to have like a little baby alligator, like a 1-foot alligator you might see on a riverboat cruise in Louisiana, mouth’s taped,” he said. “I walk up and there’s this 7-foot alligator.
“I’m like, ‘Hang on. What am I doing here?’ They’re like, ‘We’re going to take some pictures. You can get this close.’ I’m like, ‘Look, during COVID I wasn’t allowed to get this close to people. I don’t know about an alligator.’”
The alligator was named Helena and was from a nearby gator farm. She may have been relatively friendly, but she was far from trained. She walked in and out of shots while Sumrall flipped a football — and eventually turned on the former Troy and Tulane head coach.
“As soon as I started to get kind of comfortable … I’m like, ‘All right, this thing isn’t going to do anything crazy, I don’t think.’ I get 4 or 5 feet away and it starts to kind of hiss a little and it snaps,” he said. “I’m like, ‘What the hell is going on? I’m out of here.’”
He didn’t actually bail. Helena simmered down, and they got the photos done. But it was an experience Sumrall won’t soon forget.
“I’m not necessarily looking for when that’s coming up on my schedule again,” he said. “But it was a fun experience.”
NEW YORK (AP) — Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Johan Rojas is contesting a possible 80-game suspension by Major League Baseball following an alleged failed test for a performance-enhancing substance, a person familiar with the process told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the positive test had not been announced.
Under MLB’s drug agreement with the players’ association, the appeals process for an initial positive test for a performance-enhancing substance takes place before a public announcement of discipline.
A 25-year-old who made his major league debut in 2023, Rojas was dropped from the Dominican Republic’s World Baseball Classic roster, team general manager Nelson Cruz told reporters Monday.
Rojas hit .224 with one homer, 18 RBIs and 12 stolen bases for the Phillies last season. He was demoted to Triple-A Lehigh Valley on Aug. 1 and didn’t play for Philadelphia during the remainder of the season. Rojas is 1 for 11 for the Phillies during spring training.
He has a .252 career average with six homers, 73 RBIs and 51 stolen bases over 250 games.
Dodgers right-hander Roki Sasaki throws during the first inning against the Cleveland Guardians on Tuesday. He was lifted after not retiring any of the first five batters he faced, but was re-inserted in the second inning and retired the last six batters he faced. (Mike Christy / Getty Images)
Roki Sasaki’s struggles from his first Cactus League start carried over into Tuesday’s game against the Cleveland Guardians at Goodyear Ballpark.
The Dodgers right-hander gave up three walks and two hits, including a grand slam to Guardians slugger Kyle Manzardo, before he was lifted after 23 pitches. He displayed no command, missing arm side repeatedly and throwing only eight strikes. None of the five batters he faced in the first inning saw a first-pitch strike.
But then, he flashed the tantalizing potential that the Dodgers saw when they signed him before last season.
Re-inserted into the game to start the second inning, which is allowed in spring training, the 24-year-old settled down and retired all six batters he faced in his last two innings of work while throwing 22 pitches — 13 for strikes — in the Dodgers’ 5-4 win.
Working in a healthy mix of fastballs, cutters and splitters, Sasaki struck out two and was able to limit hard contact, which had been an issue for him in the first inning and in his first start last week against the Arizona Diamondbacks. The home run by Manzardo recorded an exit velocity of 104.6 mph.
“I wasn’t overly concerned,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “But it was good to see him bounce back.”
Sasaki said through an interpreter after he was lifted from the game that something felt off about his upper-body mechanics. He made a simple adjustment and found success in it.
“It was actually my upper body,” Sasaki said. “My lower half actually felt pretty good. My upper body felt a little off, so I was trying to make an adjustment.”
Said Roberts when asked about Sasaki missing arm side: “Maybe he’s trying to be a little too fine and/or just a little bit out of sync with the delivery. That’s why you have spring training, you work though it, you’ve got to be able to make in-game adjustments. As he gets more experienced, you would expect that to happen in the inning rather than sit for 20 minutes, come in and reset.”
Gavin Stone has shoulder inflammation
Roberts said before Tuesday’s game that right-hander Gavin Stone received a scan, which revealed shoulder inflammation. The 27-year-old pitcher, who struck out two in a perfect inning of work in his first Cactus League start last week, will stop all throwing activities for two weeks and be re-evaluated.
“I think we dodged a bullet,” Roberts said. “We feel good about it.”
Stone is working his way back from a right shoulder surgery that he underwent in October 2024, which caused him to miss all of last season.
But with him and left-hander Blake Snell sidelined, that opens some spots in the starting rotation — which presents an opportunity for the likes of Emmet Sheehan, who has yet to appear in a Cactus League game, and River Ryan, who looked sharp in two scoreless innings of work Tuesday. Ryan recorded three strikeouts against the Guardians.
Tommy Edman taking batting practice, Kiké Hernández progressing
Roberts revealed Tuesday that utilityman Tommy Edman has started taking batting practice, as he recovers from ankle surgery. He will likely open the season on IL.
“I think he has [taken batting practice] in a cage,” Roberts said. “I don’t think he’s been on the field yet, but he’s swinging from both sides, he’s running, playing catch, and all of that stuff. So, he’s progressing nicely. Still, obviously a ways away from playing in a game, but it’s been really good to see his kind of progression.”
Roberts says that utilityman Kiké Hernández, who is recovering from offseason surgery on his left elbow, is also trending in the right direction.
“He is [making progress],” Roberts said. “I think he’s going to be with us for a few more days, and then he’s going to join Team Puerto Rico down there, but from what I hear every day he’s progressed really well. I’ve seen him running around and doing some movements, but yeah, I don’t know what his progression is with the hitting, but from what I’ve heard, it’s getting better each day.”
Hernández will not participate in the World Baseball Classic.
Kyle Tucker goes home to be with family
Noticeably absent from the Dodgers’ lineup and clubhouse this week is Kyle Tucker. Roberts explained that Tucker has returned to his offseason home as his wife is close to giving birth to the couple’s first son.
“He went home,” Roberts said. “He and his wife are expecting, and so hopefully we have some news here soon, and then once he does, he’ll be back.”
Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Johan Rojas, 25, is facing an 80-game suspension following a failed PED test, according to multiple reports.
Rojas is appealing the test results.
He was originally slated to be a part of the Dominican Republic World Baseball Classic team, but dropped off the roster last week. He was not with the team when it made its trip to Miami over the weekend.
This marks the second consecutive year the Phillies have had a player suspended due to PEDs. In 2025, reliever Jose Alvarado received an 80-game suspension of his own, which has kept him off Venezuela’s roster for the World Baseball Classic.
Johan Rojas stats
Rojas, lauded mostly for his defensive prowess, was expected to platoon in center field alongside rookie Justin Crawford. The three-year vet struggled offensively in 2025, posting a 57 OPS+ and slashing .224/.280/.289 in 71 games.
When will Johan Rojas return?
If Rojas’ appeal fails, he will be eligible to return in late June. That said, Rojas’ suspension would make him ineligible to participate in the MLB postseason this year. The Phillies have reached the playoffs in four consecutive seasons.
CLEVELAND, OHIO – JANUARY 04: Sam Merrill #5 of the Cleveland Cavaliers rebounds a shot during the second half against the Detroit Pistons at Rocket Arena on January 04, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Cleveland Cavaliers will look to avenge their loss on Friday to the Detroit Pistons. Fortunately for them, they’ll have the services of James Harden this time around.
I’ll be in the comments throughout the game sharing my thoughts. Feel free to join in on the conversation and let your voice be heard in the comments below.
Luis Rey holds a Mexican flag outside of Chase Field before they play Colombia during the World Baseball Classic in Phoenix on March 11, 2023. Baseball World Baseball Classic Opening Day
The tune-up for the World Baseball Classic also gave the D-backs a chance to run out some young players, with the absence of a number of regulars, now off to play for their country. Those actually include Alek Thomas, who was in the opposition dugout here, and went 2-for-3, driving a run against his regular employers. Six of the eight Arizona pitchers used put up a zero today. That included starter Zac Gallen, who worked two innings in his second start of spring. It only took him 22 pitches for Zac to get through his work today, allowing one hit, without a walk or a strikeout.
After that, there were zeroes put up by Taylor Clarke, Joe Ross, Andrew Hoffmann, and in his debut, Grant Homan, of the players expected to be competing seriously for a roster spot. Hoffman looked particularly good, striking out two of the three batters he faced in the sixth. Most of the damage came off Juan Morillo, who was ambushed for four hits in his first handful of pitches, on his way to a four-run fourth for Mexico. Dylan Ray allowed a home-run in the eighth to land mammal Rowdy Tellez, and another in the ninth to Alejandro Osuna. ABS was not in play this afternoon, so nothing to report there.
On offense, both sides notched eleven hits. Tim Tawa and Jordan Lawlar each had a pair of hits among the starters, while LuJames Groover went 2-for-2 off the bench. James McCann had an RBI single and a walk, but the D-backs spurned a number of chances to come back after falling 4-0 down. They were 3-for-15 with runners in scoring position – significantly more chances than the Mexican squad, who were 3-for-9 with RISP. Still, a better performance by the D-backs than the Giants, who were murdered to the tune of 15-1 by ‘Merica. Hey, and the British team beat the Brewers 7-3, Kristin Robinson notching a pair of hits for Blighty.
Normal Cactus League service will be resumed again at Hohokam, with a game against the Athletics. Brandon Pfaadt is your scheduled starter there, in a 1:05 pm first pitch.