New-look Mets lineup embodied David Stearns’ vision in dominant Opening Day performance

If Opening Day were a prophecy, instead of merely a beginning, the Mets should start planning for a late October destiny.

If they can replicate for a whole season what they did Thursday afternoon — when they were a patient, pitch-eating juggernaut that pushed reigning Cy Young winner Paul Skenes from the game before he could record a third out — they can rewrite history. Suddenly, that 2025 debacle could look more like a painful-but-necessary learning experience, one that nudged David Stearns to remake his lineup into the relentless, dynamic force last year’s team never found a way to be.

Because for one sunny afternoon in Flushing, everything went perfectly for a new-look Mets lineup that included five players who did not appear for them in 2025. By taking close pitches and fouling off uncomfortable strikes, they picked apart one of the best pitchers of this generation so completely that he left the game before finishing one inning, by far the worst start of his career.

“Look, that first inning was pretty impressive,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. “Not gonna lie.”

That first inning was a masterclass in all the things the Mets could not do last year – creating sparks, then igniting them into a full-fledged flame.

Francisco Lindor worked a walk. Juan Soto blooped a hit into short center, at which point Lindor hustled to third base, challenging Oneil Cruz’s cannon in center to take an extra base.

That brought up Bo Bichette, the former American League batting champion, heralded as a runners-in-scoring-position savant the Mets sorely needed. He fell into a two-strike count. He fouled off a pitch up and in. Then he muscled a fly ball just deep enough to right field to score a run, giving the Mets a walk, a bloop, a sprint, and a chip shot. Something out of nothing.

Jorge Polanco, another new addition, singled. Then, Luis Robert Jr. – known as an avid chaser of strikes and balls, alike – worked a walk in just the second 10-pitch plate appearance he has had in the last three years. A batter later, Brett Baty delivered a go-ahead triple. He said seeing so many Skenes offerings to Robert helped.

“That’s what we harp on. We’re a complete lineup,” Baty said. “And if you wear the pitcher down, somebody is going to get a mistake and do some damage with it.”

Now, of course, any team can have a good inning on any given day. And many teams can even have that good inning against Skenes, though it must be said the Mets were helped by two misreads by Cruz that turned Baty’s ball from a sacrifice fly to a triple and Marcus Semien’s bloop into a double a batter later.

But what was encouraging for Mendoza, he said later, was that the Mets put together a similar inning in the fifth inning. Carson Benge reached base for the first time in his career with a walk. Francisco Alvarez singled. Lindor walked for the third time in five innings to load the bases. At that point, Soto poked a ten-hopper through the left side, the kind of hit that can materialize when hitters put the ball in play with runners in scoring position instead of prioritizing big swings and damage.

A batter later, Bichette worked a 13-pitch at-bat that ended in a strikeout.

“I wrote that down,” Mendoza said later. “Even though he struck out, then we see a four-pitch walk right away, right behind him. He’s going to make him work. We’ve got a lot of guys who are going to grind at-bats. Even if we didn’t get the exact result we wanted in that particular situation, the other guy benefitted from it.”

Ironically, Bichette was the only player in the lineup who did not reach base Thursday. But that 13-pitch at-bat preceded a walk and another single that helped the Mets add on after the Pirates started climbing back.

“I know he might have had a couple strikeouts today or something, but he was grinding,” Baty said. “The strikeouts I had too, I was trying to grind, get the pitch count up. All through the lineup, I think we were super scrappy today.”

Unfortunately for the Mets, the keyword in that sentence is “today.” Whether Thursday was a harbinger or aberration will be clearer in time. Small sample sizes cannot be trusted – though they do not always lie.

“It’s 162,” Mendoza said. “There’s gonna be times where it’s gonna be hard. That’s the nature of the business. But just to see it out of the gate against one of the best pitchers in the league, it goes to show you that we’ve got some dangerous guys.”

And indeed, Thursday did demonstrate that when this remodeled lineup is at its most focused (and, perhaps, gifted a few lucky breaks), it is capable of being one of the game’s more productive groups.

Perhaps Benge will look more like the rookie who struck out in his first two at-bats Thursday more often than he looks like the guy who homered in his fourth. But the fact that he could follow two tough at-bats in his first big league game with two solid ones suggests he will not disappear when at-bats go badly.

Report: Second baseman Nico Hoerner agrees to 6-year deal with Cubs

CHICAGO — Cubs second baseman Nico Hoerner has agreed to a six-year contract, according to a person familiar with the details, marking another major deal for the franchise.

The person spoke to the AP on Thursday on condition of anonymity because the agreement was pending a physical.

The long-term contract for Hoerner comes after All-Star center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong agreed to a $115 million, six-year deal with the Cubs. The team announced Crow-Armstrong’s contract after Thursday’s 10-4 loss to Washington on opening day.

The 28-year-old Hoerner was selected by Chicago in the first round of the 2018 amateur draft out of Stanford University. He is in the last season of a $35 million, three-year contract that was finalized in March 2023.

Hoerner was a key performer last year as Chicago won 92 games and reached the playoffs for the first time since 2020. He batted .297 with seven homers, 61 RBIs and 29 steals in a career-best 156 games. He also won his second Gold Glove.

Rick Barnes isn’t on any UNC wish list. He doesn’t need to be with NIL

CHICAGO — Rick Barnes didn’t give the canned answer like Alabama’s Nate Oats and Iowa State’s T.J. Otzelberger had to because nobody really figured it was worth asking anymore.

“I’m from North Carolina,” the 71-year-old Tennessee men’s basketball coach quipped when told he was likely to be the only head coach at the 2026 NCAA Tournament’s Midwest regional to not have to address the job opening currently driving the college basketball coaching carousel conversation

But the Hickory, North Carolina native is also from another era, joining Michigan State’s Tom Izzo and Houston’s Kelvin Sampson from the old guard of coaches to make it to the Sweet 16 this year. His No. 6 seeded Tennessee team faces No. 2 seed Iowa State Friday, March 27 at the United Center in Chicago.

With that longevity comes a fascinating perspective about the place he’s been for the past decade, the places he might have left for previously, and the places he probably won’t go now that everything about college sports is different.

“The obvious problem today is there’s some fan bases that still think they have an entitlement and they think it’s going to be the same way,” Barnes said on Thursday in reference to North Carolina basketballl. “The game has changed totally because of NIL.”

The statement perhaps minimizes the remarkable consistency forged under Barnes over the past decade on Rocky Top. This is the fourth Sweet 16 appearance in a row for Tennessee under Barnes, and no active coach has more all-time wins (860) without winning a national championship. The Vols have advanced past the first weekend of the men’s NCAA Tournament nearly as many times with Barnes (5) as they had in the previous 106 seasons of program history.

He’s also 23 years removed from a Final Four appearance with Texas and may never be on another blueblood wish list again because of his age and the lifetime contract he signed with the Volunteers last year. But now, with his coaching career much closer to its ending than the beginning, he might not need to be.

That’s what he believes, and so do his counterparts actually being featured on all those UNC hot boards this week. The 2025-26 college football season was proof of concept for some.

“We may not have the tradition that some of these other places had,” Oats said in reference to Alabama, for instance, “but Indiana football probably didn’t have that tradition, either, and they won it. I think their athletic department supported them, they got a good coach and they won it.”

This alignment between administration and coach, Barnes emphasized Thursday, is more important than ever in a system he acknowledged as “broken” because of the rapid evolution of the NCAA rulebook. “You need money. We know that,” Barnes said. “But there’s a lot more to it than that.”

There’s a scenario, for instance, in which he would have already retired in the wake of all the change in college basketball if not for the presence of Tennessee athletic director Danny White.

“I love coaching, and if I didn’t have the leadership – I don’t know,” Barnes said.

In this way, perhaps coincidentally, he has been ahead of the curve working at a school with a powerhouse football program. 

Barnes called Tennessee football the “greatest asset we have,” rather than competition for resources, due to the revenue generated and the value of hosting recruits during games at Neyland Stadium in the fall. He joked NIL stands for “now it’s legal,” and yet the version of Barnes players get now seems a lot like the version they got before making six- and seven-figure salaries.

His recruiting pitch even includes the warning that, “this will be the hardest-working program you’ll ever be in,” Ohio State transfer Felix Okpara said.

“He’s as hands on as it gets. He’s ripping into you,” added guard Bishop Boswell. “A lot of times it can be hard to hear, but at the end of the day, he demands perfection. I think the thing we respect the most about him is he’s the same every day. There’s no fall off, even if we might not always want to hear it.”

Barnes savors this part of the job. He loves practice most of all, he said, and told a story Thursday from when he worked for Wimp Sanderson at Alabama 40 years ago.

Barnes walked in on Sanderson “literally lying on the sofa in his office” with his hands behind his head before the first game of the season, and the coach told Barnes this would be a great job “if you never had to play games.” Only Barnes lost his train of thought as the memory flooded back to him and asked to hear the question again.

What’s his driving force after so many years, so many accomplishments and so many changes? This time, Barnes gave the canned answer.

“You don’t ever take it for granted,” he said.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rick Barnes, Tennessee basketball and end of entitlement in NIL era

Alec Burleson’s 2-run HR leads Cardinals’ 9-7 rally over Rays

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Alec Burleson hit a two-run homer to cap off an eight-run outburst in the sixth inning as the St. Louis Cardinals rallied for a 9-7 win over the Tampa Bay Rays on Thursday.

Rookie JJ Wetherholt also homered for St. Louis.

Jonathan Aranda homered for Tampa Bay, which took a 7-1 lead with six runs in the top of the sixth.

St. Louis answered back with eight runs in its half including run-scoring sacrifice flies by Wetherholt and Ivan Herrera, which tied the game 7-all.

Burleson followed with a blast to right field.

Both teams sent 11 batters to the plate in the inning.

Jonny DeLuca had a two-run single to highlight the sixth inning for Tampa Bay, which had won four of its previous five games on opening day.

Riley O’Brien picked up the win with 1 1/3 innings of scoreless relief. Ryne Stanek earned the save. He struck out Richie Palacios with the bases loaded to end the game.

St. Louis outfielder Nathan Church added a two-run hit in the sixth. Church, Burleson and Victor Scott II had three hits each.

Yandy Díaz, Ben Williamson and Nick Fortes had three hits each for the Rays.

Tampa Bay starter Drew Rasmussen allowed just one run on four hits over five innings in his first opening day assignment.

Cardinals starter Matthew Liberatore surrendered one run on seven hits in five innings.

The Cardinals are in rebuilding mode after trading veterans Sonny Gray, Brendan Donovan, Nolan Arenado and Willson Contreras in the offseason for prospects.

The game time temperature of 91 degrees was the hottest opening day in the history of Busch Stadium, eclipsing the previous mark of 73 degrees on April 5, 1999.

Up next

After a day off on Friday, Tampa Bay RH Joe Boyle (1-0, 3. 52 ERA last season) will face RHP Michael McGreevy (8-4, 4.42) in the second game of the three-game set on Saturday,

Kevin McGonigle turned his MLB debut into a showcase

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA – MARCH 23: Kevin McGonigle #85 of the Detroit Tigers warms up before a spring training game against the Colorado Rockies at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on March 23, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Well, it doesn’t get a whole lot better than that. Kevin McGonigle suited up for the first game of his major league career, and when the smoke cleared he had four hits, two RBI, two runs scored, and had a solid day defensively at third base.

McGonigle stepped in against the Padres’ Opening Day starter, right-hander Nick Pivetta, in the first inning with the bases juiced. That could set a rookie’s knees a-quakin’ but instead McGonigle said he knew he’d get something up in the zone, with Pivetta hunting for a pop-up or shallow fly ball to keep the run from scoring at third, and he was correct. Pivetta tried to jam him with a 92 mph cutter up and in, and the young batsmith smoked it down the right field line for a two-run double.

With that out of the way, McGonigle could settle in and do his thing, and his thing is raking. Three more hits followed, one a little infield squibber that he beat out, one a solid single to right centerfield, and one a third inning double off the top of the wall in right field that was followed by a two-run homer from Dillon Dingler. McGonigle became just the sixth player to collect four hits in his MLB debut going back to 1900.

Of note is that fact that McGonigle had hits on four different pitch types, a fourseamer, a sinker, a cutter, and a changeup. Guaranteed he’ll see a lot of breaking balls the next two days in San Diego.

It didn’t take long after draft day for Kevin McGonigle to seize the top spot in the Tigers’ farm system rankings, and by last year he was already near the top of top 100 lists around the game. On draft day, there were minor concerns about the small framed infielder’s raw power projections and ability to stick at the shortstop position. There were never many doubts that he would hit, and hit a lot.

He’s methodically erased the other concerns along the way. McGonilgle has launched numerous tape measure shots over the past year, and while he had work to do to develop his footwork and become more efficient in his actions defensively, he’s clearly put in the work to make that a reality. Hall of Famer Alan Trammell has put in a lot of time working with him on his defensive actions since last season, and that work has paid off big this spring. McGonigle looks a lot slicker anywhere you put him on the field, and while his arm is just average for a shortstop, and not geared to make crazy throws from deep in the hole, his range, quick transfer, and accuracy make up for a lot. I’ve thought he’d be an average shortstop for a while now, but his work this spring has him tracking more like an above average defender.

The final note of the day was the 30.2 feet per second sprint speed he posted on Opening Day in beating out an infield single. We’ve mentioned that his speed is underrated, but frankly that was a shocking number to see. Only Trea Turner averaged a higher sprint speed in the major leagues last year, and he averaged 30.3 feet per second. Stealing bases has been a more modest part of McGonigle’s game in the minor leagues, but the opportunity is clearly there for him to steal a lot more bags than expected. He stole 22 in 2024, but only 10 last year in a somewhat abbreviated season caused by a sprained ankle on Opening Day that cost him six weeks. Perhaps he didn’t push the ankle last year, but he’s clearly back to full speed and apparently one of the fastest players in baseball to go with his rather outrageous gifts in all other aspects of the game.

We didn’t see a home run, but it won’t be long. The other aspect of his game the Tigers’ faithful didn’t get a chance to see was his plus power. Here’s a sampling from earlier in the spring. Only Riley Greene and Javier Báez have more raw power than Kevin McGonigle, and he’s going to get to all of it once he settles in fully as a major leaguer. He makes tons of hard contact, and his swing and approach are already built to pull a lot of balls in the air.

All around, a very good day for the Detroit Tigers and Kevin McGonigle. Every player’s major league debut is special, but for a talent like this, it was a real coming out party that showcased to the Tigers’ fanbase just how good a player they’ve got here. By day’s end, McGonigle had the balls he hit for doubles in his locker, and was anxious to meet up with the family who helped get him here, saying “I didn’t do this. WE did this together.”

Good stuff. We’re going to have a fun time watching this young man’s major league career unfold, and his buddies in the farm system will be chomping at the bit this year to join him.

Mike Trout homers to kick off what he hopes will be a healthy 2026 as Angels blank Astros 3-0

HOUSTON (AP) — Mike Trout homered to launch what he hopes will be a bounce-back year, leading the Los Angeles Angels to a season-opening 3-0 win over the Houston Astros on Thursday.

Trout also walked three times and played center field for the first time since April 2024. The three-time MVP played 130 games last season, his most since 2019 because of various injuries.

Making his franchise-record 14th opening day start, the 34-year-old Trout broke a scoreless tie in the seventh inning when he sent a 96 mph fastball from reliever AJ Blubaugh (0-1) 403 feet onto the train tracks in left-center. It was his fifth opening day homer, also a club record.

The Angels snapped an eight-game road losing streak in season openers, starting 1-0 on the road for the first time since 2013.

Oswald Peraza hit an RBI single in the eighth and Nolan Schanuel homered in the ninth.

José Soriano (1-0) allowed two hits and four walks in six innings while striking out seven. Four relievers completed the three-hitter, with Jordan Romano working the ninth to earn the save in his Angels debut.

Hunter Brown started for Houston and allowed four hits and four walks in 4 2/3 innings. He struck out nine.

The Astros went 0 for 7 with runners in scoring position while stranding nine runners.

Houston designated hitter Yordan Alvarez may have been robbed of a home run in the first inning because the retractable roof at Daikin Park was closed. Alvarez hit a towering shot toward the right field foul pole, but it ricocheted off a horizontal rafter and landed in foul territory.

It was ruled a foul ball. The Astros challenged, and the call was upheld after a review. Alvarez later struck out swinging.

Up next

The teams resume the four-game series on Friday, with lefty Yusei Kikuchi starting for Los Angeles opposite right-hander Mike Burrows.

___

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

Arizona Diamondbacks Gameday Thread, #1: 3/26 @ Dodgers

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 27: A general view during the playing of the national anthem before game three of the 2025 World Series between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on October 27, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today’s Lineups

DIAMONDBACKS DODGERS
Ketel Marte – 2B Shohei Ohtani – DH
Corbin Carroll – RF Kyle Tucker – RF
Geraldo Perdomo – SS Mookie Betts – SS
Gabriel Moreno – C Freddie Freeman – 1B
Nolan Arenado – 3B Will Smith – C
Carlos Santana – 1B Max Muncy – 3B
Jordan Lawlar – LF Teoscar Hernandez – LF
Alek Thomas – CF Andy Pages – CF
Tim Tawa – DH Miguel Rojas – 2B
Zac Gallen – RHP Y. Yamamoto – RHP

The season kicks off for the Diamondbacks, in Los Angeles against the World Champion Dodgers. The game is scheduled to start at 5:30 pm, and I’d probably recommend tuning it as close to that point as possible, unless you want to see the Dodgers getting their World Series rings and all that malarkey. [Hey, we are still the last team to beat Los Angeles in a post-season series] Mind you, with tonight’s game being a national game on NBC and Peacock, I’ve a feeling the broadcast is going to skew quite Dodgers heavy. If they mention us before the fourth inning, I’m going to call that a win.

It has been twenty-five years since the D-backs last beat the Dodgers on Opening Day. So it’s clearly about time, amIrite? That was a 3-2 victory in 2001, behind Randy Johnson, with a two-run shot from Luis Gonzalez in the seventh inning giving Arizona a come from behind victory. Since then, there have been four defeats and, to be honest, it has rarely been close. Only one of those losses has been by a margin less than six runs, with an overall run tally of 8-31. The last time we saw LA on Opening Day was in 2023, when Zac Gallen couldn’t get through five innings and took the L in an 8-2 loss. Still, that season ended up not too bad, didn’t it?

That’s definitely something to remember. It’s very easy to over-react – especially if you get pummeled, like the Giants did last night, or your ace and reigning Cy Young winner can’t get through one inning, like Pirates’ fans had to witness earlier today. But there’s a reason the baseball season is 162 games. It’s almost certain this team will lose sixty of them and win sixty of them. It’s what happens over the remaining forty-two – barely a quarter of the season – which will determine whether this year is a success or failure. So the odds are that today, in and of itself, won’t “matter” in the grand scheme of things.

Still, we hope for the best. There’s a lot of changes to look at here, with half the Diamondbacks line-up different from Opening Day last year:

  • 1B: Naylor > Santana
  • 3B: Suarez > Arenado
  • LF: Gurriel > Lawlar
  • CF: McCarthy > Thomas
  • DH: Grichuk > Smith

On the mound, while Gallen remains the starting pitcher, none of the three relievers to come out against the Cubs (Ryne Nelson, Jalen Beeks and Bryce Jarvis) are in the 2026 version of the Arizona bullpen. All told, of the 26 players on the 2025 Opening Day roster, only eleven are also on the roster today. That feels low, though I haven’t checked to see how it compares to other teams. There may not have been a lot of high-profile changes over the winter – re-signing Kelly and Gallen were far and away the biggest moves – but there has certainly been a significant amount of roster churn. We’ll start to see how it works out tonight! Try and not over-react. 😀

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We back: Phillies 5, Rangers 3

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – MARCH 26: Cristopher Sánchez #61 of the Philadelphia Phillies pitches in the first inning on Opening Day against the Texas Rangers at Citizens Bank Park on March 26, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Thursday’s Opening Day game against the Texas Rangers had everything a Phillies fan could want: A Schwarbomb, an impressive debut from a rookie, filthy pitching from Cristopher Sanchez, and a way-too-interesting ninth inning. Put it all together, and the Phillies improved to 1-0 on the season with a 5-3 win.

After Sanchez worked around two ground ball singles in the first, the Phillies scored their first runs of the season with the old bloop-blast combination. Trea Turner beat out an infield single, and Kyle Schwarber went opposite field.

Rangers started Nathan Eovaldi settled down after that, but he did give up a single to Justin Crawford on the first pitch he saw as a major leaguer.

In the fifth, Crawford improved to 2-2 in his career with another single, and when Turner followed with another hit, it looked like the Phillies were ready to pile on. But Eovaldi struck out Schwarber and Bryce Harper, which left things in the hands of Alec Bohm.

There were a lot of complaints about Bohm serving as the team’s cleanup hitter, but for one game, it certainly worked out well.

Sanchez was faring far better than Eovaldi. He looked to be in midseason form as he tore through the Rangers’ lineup. He even seemed to be getting stronger as the game went on, striking out the last four batters he faced.

There are some questions about the Phillies’ bullpen, and manager Rob Thomson tried to cover the final three innings with middle relievers Jonathan Bowlan, Zach Pop, and Kyle Backhus. Bowlan and Pop were able to get through their innings – including the Phillies’ first ever ABS challenge.

I question why Thomson didn’t use closer Jhoan Duran in the ninth. Yes, you normally don’t want to use your closer with a five-run lead, but it’s Opening Day: You’ve got an off day tomorrow, so why not give the festive crowd what they want to see? Not to mention, this would have been an excruciating loss, so why mess around?

Instead, we got Backhus, and the Spring Training darling did not look good. Two batters in, and the lead was cut to 5-2.

After another single, Backhus was finally able to retire a batter, but a poor fielding decision by Bryson Stott and an errant throw by Bryce Harper, put a runner at third base.

Duran belatedly entered the game, and although he allowed the tying run to reach the plate, he eventually got Even Carter to ground out to secure the win.

Sadly, the Phillies’ momentum will be stalled by tomorrow’s off day. I understand why they schedule the break, but it’s one of the most annoying things in sports. On the bright side, we get an extra 24 hours to celebrate the big days by Schwarber, Bohm, Crawford, and Sanchez There are certainly worse fates in the world!

MLB Opening Day 2026: New-look Mets set tone for season ahead by clobbering Paul Skenes, Pirates

NEW YORK — When the New York Mets last exited a big-league ballpark, they did so in shame, with heads hung low.

For the Queens ballclub, the final day of the 2025 season was an epic embarrassment, with a 4-0 loss to the Marlins the grand finale to a collapse of historic proportions. One of the most expensive rosters ever assembled would spend October on the couch. It was a gut-churning moment for a franchise quite familiar with the perils of comic tragedy.

It was also a catalyst for change. Of the 16 souls who trudged off the field that September day in Miami, just three — Francisco Lindor, Juan Soto and Francisco Alvarez — were penciled into the Mets’ 2026 Opening Day lineup. The other 13 either departed in free agency or were traded, benched or relegated to the minors. 

In their place, a parade of fresh faces helped the Mets clobber reigning NL Cy Young winner Paul Skenes and the Pittsburgh Pirates 11-7 on Thursday at Citi Field.

Draft your Yahoo Fantasy Baseball team for the 2026 MLB Season

Rookie Carson Benge, making his MLB debut, hit the first homer of New York’s season (and his career). Center fielder Luis Robert Jr. — acquired from the White Sox in January — had two knocks and a crucial first-inning walk. Bo Bichette — signed for big money in January — had a key first-inning sac fly and multiple über-competitive at-bats. Starting pitcher Freddy Peralta — added via trade in January — was solid, if unspectacular, in his first outing as a Met.

A barrage of first-inning runs, several of them the result of unacceptable outfield defense from Pittsburgh center fielder Oneil Cruz, sent Skenes to the showers after recording just two outs. It was a stunning knockout, one that set the tone for the rest of the afternoon and, perhaps, the rest of New York’s season.

“That first inning was pretty impressive, not gonna lie,” Mets skipper Carlos Mendoza said after the game. “Controlling the strike zone, creating traffic. We’re putting the ball in play with two strikes. We’re going the other way when we need to. That’s a sign of a good offensive team.”

Collapse and all, the Mets were a good offensive team last year as well. They finished 10th in baseball in runs, sixth in OPS and fifth in homers. They led MLB in wRC+, an all-encompassing offensive metric, over the season’s final two months as they nosedived in the standings. But too often, the 2025 lineup struggled to string hits together or push runs across in big spots. Their strong process didn’t always lead to strong results.

That’s part of why president of baseball operations David Stearns embarked on such a dramatic offseason overhaul. The Mets, no longer content with the status quo, set out to reinvent themselves. Stearns was aggressive, calculating, emotionless, willing and eager to part with established fan favorites in order to construct a better, more dynamic roster.

That winter of frantic activity effectively wiped the slate clean. And so, for the Mets and their fans, this Opening Day meant more than the typical clichés about rebirth and hope and the changing of the seasons. It went beyond a fresh coat of paint and a few new taglines. The team on the field is legitimately different. On Thursday, that energy could be felt throughout the stadium.

“We weren’t going to run back the same group,” Stearns said in spring training. “We were committed to changing our team, improving our team, becoming better in certain areas, and I think we’ve made progress toward that.”

Sure enough, New York’s new-look offense put pressure on Skenes from the jump, with Lindor working a leadoff walk before a Soto bloop put runners on the corners. That put the 23-year-old ace on his back foot. Later in the frame, the Mets benefitted from a pair of outfield miscues from Cruz. First he misplayed a Brett Baty liner to center, breaking in on a ball that zipped over his head and cleared the bases to give New York a 4-2 lead. Then Cruz lost a routine fly in the sun, extending the brutal inning and allowing another run to score. A few batters later, Skenes was done, yanked from the proceedings by manager Don Kelly, who didn’t want his ace’s pitch count to skyrocket.

From there, the game lazed forward, though not without incident. In the third, Cruz took a 3-2 fastball from Peralta on the inner black for what was initially called ball four. But Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez immediately tapped his helmet, activating the league’s brand-new automated ball-strike (ABS) challenge system. The call was overturned, sending Cruz back to the dugout on strike three, a continuation of his horrendous day. Pittsburgh’s next hitter, Brandon Lowe, cranked a 1-0 Peralta heater into the visiting bullpen.

Had this been last season or had Alvarez not challenged, Cruz would’ve been on base for Lowe’s homer. That would’ve trimmed New York’s lead to one, upping the stress level for the middle innings. Instead, Peralta limited the damage and avoided further danger. The Mets tacked on in the fourth and pulled away in the fifth.

But the day’s most memorable swing came in the sixth, courtesy of Benge, New York’s much-hyped rookie. The 23-year-old made the club’s Opening Day roster out of spring training, despite having zero big-league experience, in part because Mets brass had faith he could handle the bright lights. After the game, Benge admitted to being sped up and overly excited during his first at-bat, a three-pitch strikeout against Skenes. 

But he settled into the game well, exhibiting the maturity and poise that convinced Mendoza and Stearns to make him the every-day right fielder. In his fourth at-bat, Benge connected crisply with a poorly located sweeper, sending it flying over the wall in right. The club’s top hitting prospect literally jumped for joy as he rounded first before zipping around the bases like a bat out of hell.

The young Oklahoman had 22 friends and family in attendance, all of whom gathered for a postgame photo on the diamond. Somehow, that contingent included a golden retriever. At one point, everyone sang happy birthday to Benge’s girlfriend, Kennedy, while the two posed for a picture. It was a beautiful scene, the support system sharing in the jubilation of a dream debut.

“I just got chills,” Benge said of the curtain call following his home run. “You know that this is where [you’re] supposed to be, and just having fun every day, playing baseball.”

As Benge floated over home plate and back toward the dugout after his blast, a throng of gleeful teammates awaited with congratulations. Mendoza, for whatever reason, was facing the other direction as the hero of the moment shuffled down the steps. The skipper then suddenly turned and hollered something at Benge, who smiled as he bounded through a wave of cheering teammates.

“He just told me: ‘It’s fun here,’” Benge recounted. “And I was like, ‘You’re right.’”

Kevin McGonigle begins his career with 4 hits in Tigers’ 8-2 win over Padres on opening day

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Kevin McGonigle got four hits and drove in two runs in his auspicious major league debut during the Detroit Tigers’ 8-2 victory over the San Diego Padres on Thursday.

The 21-year-old McGonigle hit a two-run double with the bases loaded on the first big league pitch he saw in the first inning. He had a second double and an infield single while scoring two runs in his next two at-bats, and added a single in the ninth.

McGonigle finished 4 for 5 while batting sixth and playing third base. After just 46 games last season in Double-A, the multi-position infielder made Detroit’s major league roster with an undeniably strong spring, skipping Triple-A entirely.

Two-time AL Cy Young award winner Tarik Skubal (1-0) pitched six innings of three-hit ball with six strikeouts in his third straight opening day start for Detroit, allowing only an unearned run.

Dillon Dingler homered and drove in three runs while Detroit jumped to an 8-0 lead in the fifth inning and cruised to its 12th win on opening day in the last 15 seasons.

Xander Bogaerts hit an RBI double off Skubal in the sixth inning of a rough opener for rookie manager Craig Stammen and the Padres, who are coming off only the second back-to-back playoff appearances in franchise history. Stammen, the former Padres reliever, replaced Mike Shildt.

Nick Pivetta (0-1) lasted just three innings in his first career opening day start, struggling through a 33-pitch first inning and getting the hook after yielding six runs on seven hits and three walks.

Spencer Torkelson drew a bases-loaded walk from Pivetta right before McGonigle’s first-pitch double.

McGonigle then lined a 105.9-mph double off the right-field wall in the third, barely beating Fernando Tatis Jr.’s throw to second. He scored his first big league run moments later on Parker Meadows’ single.

Ramón Laureano homered in the seventh for San Diego. Nick Castellanos flied out to center with the bases loaded to end the eighth in his Padres debut.

Up next

Longtime Astros ace Framber Valdez (13-11, 3.66 ERA) debuts for the Tigers on Friday after signing a $115 million free-agent deal last month. The Padres send out Michael King (5-3, 3.44 ERA), who re-signed on a $75 million deal after a solid but injury-plagued 2025.

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