MESA, ARIZONA – MARCH 23: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees warms up on deck during the first inning of the spring training game against the Chicago Cubs at Sloan Park on March 23, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The 2026 MLB season kicks off tonight at 7:05pm tonight on ESPNFox Sports Netflix, because of course we are starting with some streaming. It is the first day of the new season, but there are only two teams playing, which never quite feels like an actual opening day. Either way I’m excited that we get real games again. Kicking things off, it will be the Yankees at the Giants.
It is a pretty solid pitching matchup plus plenty of star power in the lineups. What’s not to love?
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Joel Embiid will return to the Philadelphia 76ers’ lineup on Wednesday against the Chicago Bulls after missing 13 consecutive games due to a right oblique strain.
Embiid has been limited to just 33 games this season due to injuries. The latest injury for the 2023 MVP occurred during a 124-117 win over the Miami Heat on Feb. 26.
Philadelphia entered the contest with a 39-33 record and in seventh place in the Eastern Conference, which would mean having to play in the NBA’s play-in tournament. The 76ers are 1 1/2 games back of fifth-place Toronto.
The streak goes back to Barry Bonds’ final season with the Giants. Following that season, MLB’s tainted all-time home run leader hit free agency and somehow couldn’t find a team despite having just hit .276/.480/.565 with 28 homers and an MLB-leading 132 walks. Even the Giants didn’t bring him back, and they were rewarded with nearly two decades of instability at the position.
Hence why we could also call this the Curse of Barry Bonds.
Here’s the full group and what happened to them before the next Opening Day:
Giants’ Opening Day left fielders since Barry Bonds
2007: Barry Bonds (left in free agency, never played in MLB again)
2008: Dave Roberts (retired the next year)
2009: Fred Lewis (traded next offseason)
2010: Mark DeRosa (benched next year)
2011: Pat Burrell (retired the next year)
2012: Aubrey Huff (option declined, never played in MLB again)
2013: Andrés Torres (left in free agency, never played in MLB again)
2014: Michael Morse (left in free agency)
2015: Nori Aoki (option declined, left in free agency)
2016: Ángel Pagán (left in free agency, never played in MLB again)
2017: Jarrett Parker (released next year)
2018: Hunter Pence (left in free agency)
2019: Connor Joe (DFA’d eight games later)
2020: Alex Dickerson (didn’t start Opening Day next season)
2021: Austin Slater (didn’t start Opening Day next season)
2022: Joc Pederson (left in free agency)
2023: Blake Sabol (traded to Red Sox)
2024: Heliot Ramos
2025: Heliot Ramos!
The 19-year streak of different Opening Day left-fielders was tied for the longest in MLB history among all positions. The St. Louis Browns also had 19 straight different left fielders from 1937 to 1955, via Elias Sports Bureau.
With the Giants’ run over, the new longest active streak belongs to the Cleveland Guardians at right field. Their 15-year streak is already guaranteed to extend into 2026, as 2025 Opening Day right-fielder Jhonkensy Noel was designated for assignment last December.
The streak goes back to Barry Bonds’ final season with the Giants. Following that season, MLB’s tainted all-time home run leader hit free agency and somehow couldn’t find a team despite having just hit .276/.480/.565 with 28 homers and an MLB-leading 132 walks. Even the Giants didn’t bring him back, and they were rewarded with nearly two decades of instability at the position.
Hence why we could also call this the Curse of Barry Bonds.
Here’s the full group and what happened to them before the next Opening Day:
Giants’ Opening Day left fielders since Barry Bonds
2007: Barry Bonds (left in free agency, never played in MLB again)
2008: Dave Roberts (retired the next year)
2009: Fred Lewis (traded next offseason)
2010: Mark DeRosa (benched next year)
2011: Pat Burrell (retired the next year)
2012: Aubrey Huff (option declined, never played in MLB again)
2013: Andrés Torres (left in free agency, never played in MLB again)
2014: Michael Morse (left in free agency)
2015: Nori Aoki (option declined, left in free agency)
2016: Ángel Pagán (left in free agency, never played in MLB again)
2017: Jarrett Parker (released next year)
2018: Hunter Pence (left in free agency)
2019: Connor Joe (DFA’d eight games later)
2020: Alex Dickerson (didn’t start Opening Day next season)
2021: Austin Slater (didn’t start Opening Day next season)
2022: Joc Pederson (left in free agency)
2023: Blake Sabol (traded to Red Sox)
2024: Heliot Ramos
2025: Heliot Ramos!
The 19-year streak of different Opening Day left-fielders was tied for the longest in MLB history among all positions. The St. Louis Browns also had 19 straight different left fielders from 1937 to 1955, via Elias Sports Bureau.
With the Giants’ run over, the new longest active streak belongs to the Cleveland Guardians at right field. Their 15-year streak is already guaranteed to extend into 2026, as 2025 Opening Day right-fielder Jhonkensy Noel was designated for assignment last December.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – MARCH 10: Trendon Watford #12, Joel Embiid #21, and Tyrese Maxey #0 of the Philadelphia 76ers sit on the bench during the second half against the Memphis Grizzlies at Xfinity Mobile Arena on March 10, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 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 Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Don’t look now, but the Sixers actually might have over half of their starting lineup available.
Philadelphia released their injury report ahead of their matchup with the Chicago Bulls, and there’s some potentially good news: Joel Embiid is listed as questionable. Embiid has yet to play in the month of March, suffering an oblique strain on Feb. 26 after a collision with Miami Heat center Kel’el Ware. Embiid has only played in five games since the beginning of February.
During this absence, there was a slight glimmer of hope he’d get on the court earlier. Embiid was briefly listed as doubtful for their March 19 matchup against the Sacramento Kings, but was ultimately ruled out hours before tip-off.
The Sixers didn’t hold an official practice Tuesday, but Nick Nurse said in a pregame availability the day before that Embiid would go through a heavier workout and the team would go from there. Given the upgrade in status, it would seem everything is going well so far.
Nurse says Joel Embiid had a “decent” on court workout after shootaround today.
Nurse says tomorrow should be a “heavier session” for Embiid and they’ll see where they’re at after it.
After being banged up for most of the month, the Sixers could suddenly get a lot of reinforcements back all at once. Regardless of if Embiid is able to go against the Bulls or not, Paul George will play in his first game back from his 25-game suspension. Despite the lack of practice, George did speak to reporters for the first time since the suspension.
Quentin Grimes, who missed the Sixers’ last game against the OKC Thunder with an illness, is only questionable against the Bulls. Dominick Barlow, who sprained an ankle two games ago in Utah, is not listed on the injury report.
Another reunion with an old friend isn’t likely for this one though. For the Bulls, Guerschon Yabusele is listed as doubtful with an ankle sprain. He didn’t play in their most recent matchup against the Houston Rockets. On top of guys they’re trying to shut down for the year, Anfernee Simons and Isaac Okoro are also doubtful for Chicago.
Update: 3/25/26, 6:42 p.m.
Both Embiid and Grimes are available for the Sixers and will start.
The Angels’ stadium lease is set to expire in six years. (Stephen Dunn / Getty Images)
At the dawn of the 2025 season, we published a column with the headline, “What’s the future for aging Angel Stadium? It feels like an increasingly uncertain one.”
With opening day 2026 upon us, we’d like to update that: “What’s the future for the Angels? It feels like an increasingly uncertain one.”
I don’t mean to be an alarmist. Nothing is happening today, or tomorrow, or in the very near future.
However, the Angels’ stadium lease expires in six years, so what might happen beyond then is starting to come into focus. Angels owner Arte Moreno turns 80 this summer. Moreno — or a new owner, if Moreno eventually sells the team — could simply exercise options to extend the lease for another six years.
But that would not resolve the larger issue of replacing or renovating Angel Stadium. In the coming months, the city expects to release an assessment of what it would take to keep the stadium up and running for years to come, and that could trigger a debate between the city and the Angels about who should pay for what.
The Angels are frustrated by all of this, and in particular by what they consider the curiously timed skirmishes over their 21-year-old Los Angeles name. They are annoyed that, for the second consecutive season, city issues have detracted from the hope and faith and joy that surrounds opening day. It is the city, after all, that walked away from two deals that would have secured the Angels’ long-term future in Anaheim.
During negotiations for the last deal, city officials made clear that keeping the Angels was the top priority, even if Anaheim could make more money selling the stadium property to a developer that would not need to retain the stadium.
Now, with six years left on the lease and no commitment beyond then, the mayor of Anaheim says it is time to prepare for a future with or without the Angels.
“We need to plan for what we see as a vision for that property when the lease has expired,” Mayor Ashleigh Aitken told me. “That’s going to take time. No matter how that deal goes, we’re not breaking ground on any project next year.
“But what we need to do, whether it includes the Angels — which I hope it does — or not, is come up with a vision that includes everything residents want to see happen on that land. And only then can we truly advocate for a project that makes sense for us.”
On the day of the home opener last season, Aitken issued an open letter inviting Moreno to meet with her for “an open and honest conversation about the future of baseball in Anaheim” and listing eight starting points for negotiations on a new deal, including the Angels’ restoration of the Anaheim name.
“They have not reached out to us about reopening negotiations for potential development around the property,” Aitken said.
Moreno previously explored other potential ballpark sites, including Tustin in 2014 and Long Beach in 2019.
In Tustin, the targeted land is no longer available. In Long Beach, the proposed waterfront lot remains vacant, but the challenge remains too: Over 81 games each season, how would tens of thousands of fans drive into and out of a ballpark primarily accessible by a single freeway?
For the Los Angeles Angels, perhaps the solution could be found in Los Angeles County.
The Dodgers could bar every other major league team from moving into L.A., but not the Angels. Under MLB rules, neither team could stop the other team from moving anywhere within Los Angeles County or Orange County.
The logical landing spot would be Inglewood, where the Rams, Chargers and Clippers have moved since 2020. Inglewood Mayor James Butts said SoFi Stadium and Intuit Dome have helped to revitalize the city, with unemployment down, home prices up, and municipal revenue up.
“Before, we were known for gangs and crimes and poverty,” Butts told me.
“Now, we are known as the sports and entertainment capital of the western United States.”
How about a baseball stadium in place of the Forum?
“The Forum parcel is absolutely not large enough for a baseball stadium,” Butts said.
Butts said he believes a baseball stadium there would require about 170 acres for the stadium and surrounding parking. Angel Stadium and its surrounding parking lots cover about 150 acres.
On the other hand, the Athletics are building a ballpark on a nine-acre site in Las Vegas, where nearby parking, entertainment and dining options already exist, with more on the way, and with the A’s not responsible for any of that. The same could be true for the Angels in Inglewood, with Rams owner Stan Kroenke and Clippers owner Steve Ballmer developing the land around the sports facilities.
However, Butts said he did not envision baseball coming to Inglewood, at least so long as he remains the mayor. Not enough room in town, he said.
“We’re maxed out when it comes to sports,” Butts said. “We are not going to reduce the housing stock and move residents out to have a baseball team.”
Anaheim has one, plus a 150-acre site perfect for a new stadium surrounded by restaurants and shops and homes. There will be days to be anxious and worried about the Angels’ future in the city they have called home for 60 years. Today is not one of them.
Take it from the mayor of Anaheim, who told me that even after telling me why she wants the city attorney to look into whether the Angels are violating their stadium lease.
“Opening day, to me, is nothing about clauses in a contract,” Aitken said. “It’s about family traditions. It’s about kicking off summer. And it’s about getting so many factions and neighborhoods of Anaheim together for a singular purpose, which is cheering on our hometown boys. That’s the beauty of baseball.”
And, as a lifelong Angels fan, she had one more thing to say.
“Right now,” Aitken said, “we’re tied for first place.”
In a different timeline, Tony Vitello would be gearing up for another grueling weekend of SEC competition right now. Fresh off a walk-off win over USC-Upstate, his Tennessee Volunteers would have just a couple of days to regroup before trekking a few hours west to take on in-state rival Vanderbilt in the second week of conference play.
Instead, a different challenge awaits: the New York Yankees, Vitello’s first opponent as manager of the San Francisco Giants. If anything, facing a franchise that has epitomized the term “professional baseball” for generations is a fitting introduction to Vitello’s new surroundings. But for the former head baseball coach at Tennessee, this is just the beginning.
On Wednesday at Oracle Park, Vitello will make history as the first to make the leap from college head coach to major-league manager without any prior experience at the pro level. It’s a debut that has been in the making since his stunning hiring was announced in October, but it’s also the culmination of so much more: a gradual climb to the mountaintop of collegiate coaching, one that made a strong enough impression to earn Vitello an unprecedented opportunity in the big leagues.
While nine major-league teams named new managers this past offseason, no hire stood out more than the Giants’ choice of Vitello, who spent the previous eight seasons building the University of Tennessee baseball program into a certified juggernaut. Vitello got the gig in Knoxville — his first as a head coach — after serving as an assistant first at his alma mater, Missouri, and then at TCU and Arkansas.
Never a player of particular repute as a walk-on infielder for the Tigers, Vitello found his niche in the coaching space, gaining a reputation as a relentless recruiter. At the time of his hire in 2017, Tennessee had sunk into irrelevance in the unforgiving SEC, a sad state of affairs after thriving in the mid-’90s. But in Vitello’s second season, the Volunteers won 40 games for the first time since 2005. Three years later, they were SEC champions for the first time since 1995. In 2024, they won it all, becoming national champions for the first time in program history.
As Vitello piled up victories and Tennessee started to produce pro prospects as reliably as any program nationwide, his status on Rocky Top rose exponentially. Opponents weren’t always thrilled to compete against his teams, unapologetic purveyors of bombastic celebrations and over-the-top on-field intensity, but his own players revered him. His postgame media conferences occasionally dissolved into rambling tornados of verbal chaos, contrasting with the more composed presentations of some of his coaching peers and highlighting his unwavering commitment to his players and passion for his position. There were speedbumps along the way, but Vitello’s standing within the college baseball ecosystem soared nevertheless; the talent he recruited and helped develop spoke for itself, as did his gaudy win-loss record.
But baseball is not football or basketball, in which high-profile head coaches regularly move between the collegiate and professional levels. Advances in player development have resulted in more specialists moving between college and pro ball; pitching minds, hitting savants and defensive gurus are routinely plucked from the collegiate levels by major-league organizations. But the top jobs have remained separate; the best college skippers have not been floated as realistic options to translate their leadership and coaching bona fides to the pro ranks. As such, gossip about head-coaching movement in college baseball tends to be centered on possible jumps among the top programs, not vaulting up and out of the Division I level.
So when reports surfaced last fall that Vitello was on the Giants’ radar for their managerial opening, the idea seemed outlandish on its face. But those rumors quickly became reality, shattering preconceived notions about the major-league managerial hiring cycle and expanding the scope of who could hold one of the 30 MLB positions. Vitello was introduced as the 40th manager in Giants franchise history on Oct. 30, sending a shockwave of intrigue through the industry.
The Giants’ stunning decision to hire Vitello — and Vitello’s agonizing decision to leave the program he built — rocked two different baseball worlds at once. In Knoxville, it shook up the status quo for one of the most prominent programs in college baseball midway through its fall practices. In San Francisco, it marked the latest bold maneuver by president of baseball operations Buster Posey in his quest to restore the San Francisco Giants to glory.
That Posey identified this season as the time for drastic change for San Francisco shouldn’t come as much surprise. The Giants, a staple atop the National League during the bulk of Posey’s playing career, have descended in recent years into a morass of mediocrity they can’t seem to escape. Since Posey’s final season on the roster — the memorable 107-win campaign in 2021 — San Francisco has arrived at win totals of 81, 79, 80 and 81 the past four years. Bob Melvin, the three-time Manager of the Year hired in 2024 in hopes of steering San Francisco back to contention, had his contract extended last July but was ultimately dismissed at the end of the season following a second straight middling finish.
It was time for something different. So after parting with the steady and stoic Melvin, who’d been there and done that, Posey swerved in the opposite direction, toward a much more animated alternative: Vitello, without a day of professional baseball as a player or coach on his résumé. It was an ambitious bet by Posey and general manager Zack Minasian that despite his lack of experience at the highest level, Vitello’s boundless energy and unfettered passion for winning and the game itself could provide the spark to return San Francisco to relevance.
“It’s the same as the college guys,” Vitello said of his new team. “They love baseball. They like the camaraderie factor. They want to have success.”
Mallory Bielecki/Yahoo Sports
‘Baseball is baseball’
Of course, Vitello will not be embarking on this journey alone, and his knack for recruiting came in handy when constructing his coaching staff. As it turns out, his ability to convince others to come along for the ride is not limited to his past pursuits of the best high school players around the country.
“To be honest with you, he’s a heck of a recruiter,” new Giants infield coach Ron Washington said in February, at the outset of his 56th big-league spring training. “He never mentioned about me coming on as one of his coaches. We talked on the phone. He called me every afternoon, and then he sent me a text and decided to fly me out to Nashville for lunch. So I went out there and had lunch with him, and he continued to call me for a few more days, and then the Monday after Thanksgiving, Zack Minasian got in touch with me and offered me a contract.”
Washington made his MLB debut as a player in 1977 — the year before Vitello was born — and has spent more than three decades coaching, including 10 seasons as a major-league manager. His most recent stint as manager of the Angels was cut short last season when he had to undergo quadruple-bypass heart surgery, but Washington has put that health scare behind him and is eager to contribute to yet another big-league coaching staff.
Washington had no personal connection to Vitello before fielding his calls, but those early conversations — and a little bit of digging — made a compelling first impression.
“I’ve heard all the things that people say — ‘How can you hire a college coach?’ — and then I did some studying, I did some research, and he’s done a lot,” Washington said. “Although it’s been in college, baseball is baseball.”
In preparing for his new role, Vitello has also leaned on Bruce Bochy and Dusty Baker, two managerial icons who held the same position in San Francisco, and Bochy has not been shy about endorsing Posey’s pick based on those early conversations. But having Washington, who has navigated the highs and lows of professional baseball for longer than Vitello has been alive, in the dugout alongside him on a daily basis adds another layer of comfort.
“He’s been through a lot,” Washington said. “Even though he was in college, he’s still been through a lot — won championships, then failed, had to bring people together. He did all of that. He led people. And that’s what it takes in baseball.”
Vitello’s bench coach in San Francisco will be Jayce Tingler, who arrives with substantial experience on major-league coaching staffs and ties to the new manager; the two were teammates at Missouri and have remained close in the years since. New hitting coach Hunter Mense — who also played at Missouri while Vitello’s coaching career was just getting started in Columbia — comes over from the reigning AL champion Toronto Blue Jays. New pitching coaches Justin Meccage and Christian Wonders joined from Pittsburgh and Tampa Bay, respectively. New bullpen coach Jesse Chavez just wrapped an 18-year career pitching for nine MLB organizations. If Vitello has any questions as the season gets underway, the answers are probably nearby.
“The thing about the major-league side of it,” Washington said, “[is] he’s got people to stand him up when he starts to fall.”
‘Being around people like that makes you better’
In addition to the wealth of knowledge he’s tapping into, Vitello rallied two familiar faces from his time in Knoxville to join him with the Giants. Frank Anderson, the father of former big-league left-hander Brett Anderson, will serve as director of pitching performance after decades in the college ranks, most recently as Vitello’s pitching coach at Tennessee. Anderson will be making his first foray into working with professional pitchers, but there’s optimism that his track record of developing impact arms in Knoxville can carry over, even in more of an oversight role.
More familiar with the pro experience is the Giants’ new director of sports performance, Quentin Eberhardt, another key figure during Vitello’s Vols tenure. Eberhardt’s roots are in the strength and conditioning sphere, as he spent eight years as a strength coach in the minor leagues with the Astros, Cardinals, Braves and Marlins. One of his minor-league players, Josh Elander, had starred at TCU when Vitello was on staff. When Elander went into coaching and joined Vitello’s staff in 2017, he reached out to Eberhardt, then in Triple-A with the Marlins, to gauge his interest in leaving pro ball to help revitalize the Vols’ program.
“At first I wasn’t too interested. And then he asked if I would be interested in having a conversation with, then, a guy who I’d never heard of, Tony Vitello. And I’m always down for a conversation, right?” Eberhardt said. “… And in business, you know, sometimes people say they’ll call you, and it usually ends up being weeks later. Tony said he’s gonna call me — he called three hours later. We talked for two hours. He and I are very similar, which is how we started to get close over the years. But hearing the vision he had and the vision that I had for success and for winning and for helping build something special, it was like, OK, and those conversations continued.”
As Tennessee blossomed into a premier program, Eberhardt became a crucial figure behind the scenes. His work elevated the Volunteers’ potential on both sides of the ball, achieving physical gains in the weight room and ensuring an edge in the mental part of the game as well. While Elander took over as head coach in Knoxville after Vitello departed last fall, Eberhardt jumped at a new chance to build something special alongside Vitello.
“Me and Q were very aligned, just the mentality, the way we think,” said outfielder Drew Gilbert. One of the faces of the Volunteers’ rise to relevance at the start of the decade, Gilbert is now looking to make his mark in the majors with the familiar support of Vitello and Eberhardt, having been acquired by the Giants last summer. “Being around people like that makes you better. I’m super grateful to have him back here again.”
Gilbert isn’t the only former Vol in the organization, as right-hander Blade Tidwell is also expected to contribute in the majors this year. And even before he was on their radar as a managerial candidate, the Giants corresponded with Vitello last summer about one of his best players, infielder Gavin Kilen, whom San Francisco selected 13th in the 2025 MLB Draft and who is now one of the organization’s top prospects.
‘You could tell he loved the game’
But Vitello’s connections run much deeper than just his former players. “He knows a lot of people,” Washington said.
For instance, Vitello chased hard after top Giants prospect Bryce Eldridge back when Eldridge was an elite high school player in Virginia, only to see him commit to conference rival Alabama (before forgoing college altogether). Reliever Sam Hentges, then the best prep pitcher in Minnesota, committed to Arkansas during Vitello’s Razorbacks tenure, though he ultimately signed with Cleveland instead. Once they teamed up this spring, Vitello didn’t hesitate to tease Hentges about what he missed out on.
“When we met up again here, he was like, ‘Now I don’t have to hate you anymore because we finally get to play together,’” Hentges said. “I was like, ‘You’ve done plenty. You didn’t need me to do what you did.’”
Having interacted with Vitello long before he was a household name, Hentges isn’t surprised by how his career has taken off.
“He was hungry. You could tell he loved the game,” he said. “He still has that same vibe. He loves the game of baseball. He loves competing. He’s very vocal about that and wants everybody to feel the same way. He was like that — what was that — 12 years ago? … [These days] he just has a little bit more experience and wisdom.”
That distant yet personal history affords Hentges a level of familiarity that is rare for a manager and player. “I know my family’s very excited that he’s here because he was up at our house a couple times when I was in high school, and my family loved him,” he said.
While the majority of Giants players don’t have past connections to Vitello, anyone in the clubhouse who played Division I baseball over the past decade likely began this year with some sense of what to expect.
“I heard how Tony was,” left-hander Carson Whisenhunt said with a smirk, having played with Gilbert and Tidwell on the 2021 collegiate national team. “They said he was a great coach. You could go to him for anything.”
Vitello has also made a point to connect with the Giants with zero ties to his previous world, those who signed out of high school or hail from other countries. That includes some of the most important players on the roster, so the new manager wasted no time reaching out to ace Logan Webb and spent time in the Dominican Republic with Rafael Devers and Willy Adames. In January, Vitello and Adames journeyed across the globe with a sizable front-office contingent to visit Jung Hoo Lee in his native South Korea.
These intentional, sometimes international offseason interactions marked important first steps as Vitello ingrained himself in the organization. But the real fun began once he could put on baseball pants and bounce around a more familiar environment on the field. In his new gig, practice, which used to be a time for teaching, is now an opportunity to witness excellence. Now entrenched with some of the best on the planet at their craft, Vitello’s experience with elite college players only heightens his appreciation for what the sport’s highest level looks like up close.
“It’s a higher level of skill, and you’re almost in awe of it sometimes, but also you’re excited about the fact that they approach everything like a pro … they know exactly how they’re going to come to work every day and get better,” Vitello said. “All these guys approach it like that because it is their job. Some people say that like a negative thing, like it’s a kid’s game, but to me, it’s a good thing it’s their job because they approach it in such a methodical fashion that, as a coach, you’re excited to watch, you’re excited to contribute, and sometimes you learn from what they’re doing.”
‘He’s gonna bring it every day’
No matter the depth of Vitello’s preparation, no matter the mentors surrounding him, no matter how smoothly spring training seems to have gone, the novelty of his first MLB season will be unavoidable. Division I baseball features a 56-game regular season starting in February, with the road to the College World Series stretching to mid-June. MLB demands six weeks of spring training before a 162-game regular season and a postseason that pushes into November.
“I think the thing that jumps off the page is obviously just the length of the season,” reliever Tristan Beck said. “A bad two weeks in college can kind of sink the season, versus, you know, a bad two weeks in pro ball — that’s just every year.”
“We’re just gonna have, hopefully, a little more passion,” Logan Webb told reporters earlier this week. “Tony is gonna bring that. He’s gonna bring it every day.”
As the season begins, gone for Vitello are the days of mining the transfer portal, balancing NIL budgets and chasing premium recruits; he must now navigate the usage and evolution of a 26-man roster over a marathon season, even if its construction is no longer under his primary purview. The Giants’ roster is not a group of 18-to-22-year-olds hand-picked by Vitello and his inner circle; it’s a much broader assortment of ages and backgrounds who found their way into San Francisco’s clubhouse for myriad reasons that have nothing to do with the word “recruit.” Working toward October with a vast range of well-paid professionals is a wildly different task than guiding a group of college-aged ballplayers to Omaha. But meshing these personalities is the job of any manager, and Vitello seems to have the interpersonal skills to make that happen.
“It’s the same as the college guys,” he said. “They love baseball. They like the camaraderie factor. They want to have success. They want to be helped. So, you know, as everyone harps on all these differences for my job or what’s going on, or people ask me, ‘What’s the biggest difference?’ … There’s a lot of similarities. And I kind of take comfort in that.”
Outside the clubhouse, Vitello will serve as a vibrant new voice as a near-daily public speaker, a significant change from his prior media responsibilities. Major-league managers are the unofficial spokespeople for their organizations, obligated to speak to reporters before and after every game. How Vitello’s authentic and often endearing yet unpolished presentation manifests in those settings through the highs and lows of a big-league season will be its own subplot to monitor.
And yet, with infinite questions looming over Vitello’s historic transition, optimism abounds. His infectious energy and genuine passion for his new job have injected life into an organization that sorely needed a jolt. Whether Vitello succeeds or fails will depend on much more than his own ability to adjust — after all, managers can control only so much — so as this fascinating, never-before-seen story airs its first official episode on Wednesday (on Netflix, appropriately enough) all we can do now is sit back and watch.
In a different timeline, Tony Vitello would be gearing up for another grueling weekend of SEC competition right now. Fresh off a walk-off win over USC-Upstate, his Tennessee Volunteers would have just a couple of days to regroup before trekking a few hours west to take on in-state rival Vanderbilt in the second week of conference play.
Instead, a different challenge awaits: the New York Yankees, Vitello’s first opponent as manager of the San Francisco Giants. If anything, facing a franchise that has epitomized the term “professional baseball” for generations is a fitting introduction to Vitello’s new surroundings. But for the former head baseball coach at Tennessee, this is just the beginning.
On Wednesday at Oracle Park, Vitello will make history as the first to make the leap from college head coach to major-league manager without any prior experience at the pro level. It’s a debut that has been in the making since his stunning hiring was announced in October, but it’s also the culmination of so much more: a gradual climb to the mountaintop of collegiate coaching, one that made a strong enough impression to earn Vitello an unprecedented opportunity in the big leagues.
While nine major-league teams named new managers this past offseason, no hire stood out more than the Giants’ choice of Vitello, who spent the previous eight seasons building the University of Tennessee baseball program into a certified juggernaut. Vitello got the gig in Knoxville — his first as a head coach — after serving as an assistant first at his alma mater, Missouri, and then at TCU and Arkansas.
Never a player of particular repute as a walk-on infielder for the Tigers, Vitello found his niche in the coaching space, gaining a reputation as a relentless recruiter. At the time of his hire in 2017, Tennessee had sunk into irrelevance in the unforgiving SEC, a sad state of affairs after thriving in the mid-’90s. But in Vitello’s second season, the Volunteers won 40 games for the first time since 2005. Three years later, they were SEC champions for the first time since 1995. In 2024, they won it all, becoming national champions for the first time in program history.
As Vitello piled up victories and Tennessee started to produce pro prospects as reliably as any program nationwide, his status on Rocky Top rose exponentially. Opponents weren’t always thrilled to compete against his teams, unapologetic purveyors of bombastic celebrations and over-the-top on-field intensity, but his own players revered him. His postgame media conferences occasionally dissolved into rambling tornados of verbal chaos, contrasting with the more composed presentations of some of his coaching peers and highlighting his unwavering commitment to his players and passion for his position. There were speedbumps along the way, but Vitello’s standing within the college baseball ecosystem soared nevertheless; the talent he recruited and helped develop spoke for itself, as did his gaudy win-loss record.
But baseball is not football or basketball, in which high-profile head coaches regularly move between the collegiate and professional levels. Advances in player development have resulted in more specialists moving between college and pro ball; pitching minds, hitting savants and defensive gurus are routinely plucked from the collegiate levels by major-league organizations. But the top jobs have remained separate; the best college skippers have not been floated as realistic options to translate their leadership and coaching bona fides to the pro ranks. As such, gossip about head-coaching movement in college baseball tends to be centered on possible jumps among the top programs, not vaulting up and out of the Division I level.
So when reports surfaced last fall that Vitello was on the Giants’ radar for their managerial opening, the idea seemed outlandish on its face. But those rumors quickly became reality, shattering preconceived notions about the major-league managerial hiring cycle and expanding the scope of who could hold one of the 30 MLB positions. Vitello was introduced as the 40th manager in Giants franchise history on Oct. 30, sending a shockwave of intrigue through the industry.
The Giants’ stunning decision to hire Vitello — and Vitello’s agonizing decision to leave the program he built — rocked two different baseball worlds at once. In Knoxville, it shook up the status quo for one of the most prominent programs in college baseball midway through its fall practices. In San Francisco, it marked the latest bold maneuver by president of baseball operations Buster Posey in his quest to restore the San Francisco Giants to glory.
That Posey identified this season as the time for drastic change for San Francisco shouldn’t come as much surprise. The Giants, a staple atop the National League during the bulk of Posey’s playing career, have descended in recent years into a morass of mediocrity they can’t seem to escape. Since Posey’s final season on the roster — the memorable 107-win campaign in 2021 — San Francisco has arrived at win totals of 81, 79, 80 and 81 the past four years. Bob Melvin, the three-time Manager of the Year hired in 2024 in hopes of steering San Francisco back to contention, had his contract extended last July but was ultimately dismissed at the end of the season following a second straight middling finish.
It was time for something different. So after parting with the steady and stoic Melvin, who’d been there and done that, Posey swerved in the opposite direction, toward a much more animated alternative: Vitello, without a day of professional baseball as a player or coach on his résumé. It was an ambitious bet by Posey and general manager Zack Minasian that despite his lack of experience at the highest level, Vitello’s boundless energy and unfettered passion for winning and the game itself could provide the spark to return San Francisco to relevance.
“It’s the same as the college guys,” Vitello said of his new team. “They love baseball. They like the camaraderie factor. They want to have success.”
Mallory Bielecki/Yahoo Sports
‘Baseball is baseball’
Of course, Vitello will not be embarking on this journey alone, and his knack for recruiting came in handy when constructing his coaching staff. As it turns out, his ability to convince others to come along for the ride is not limited to his past pursuits of the best high school players around the country.
“To be honest with you, he’s a heck of a recruiter,” new Giants infield coach Ron Washington said in February, at the outset of his 56th big-league spring training. “He never mentioned about me coming on as one of his coaches. We talked on the phone. He called me every afternoon, and then he sent me a text and decided to fly me out to Nashville for lunch. So I went out there and had lunch with him, and he continued to call me for a few more days, and then the Monday after Thanksgiving, Zack Minasian got in touch with me and offered me a contract.”
Washington made his MLB debut as a player in 1977 — the year before Vitello was born — and has spent more than three decades coaching, including 10 seasons as a major-league manager. His most recent stint as manager of the Angels was cut short last season when he had to undergo quadruple-bypass heart surgery, but Washington has put that health scare behind him and is eager to contribute to yet another big-league coaching staff.
Washington had no personal connection to Vitello before fielding his calls, but those early conversations — and a little bit of digging — made a compelling first impression.
“I’ve heard all the things that people say — ‘How can you hire a college coach?’ — and then I did some studying, I did some research, and he’s done a lot,” Washington said. “Although it’s been in college, baseball is baseball.”
In preparing for his new role, Vitello has also leaned on Bruce Bochy and Dusty Baker, two managerial icons who held the same position in San Francisco, and Bochy has not been shy about endorsing Posey’s pick based on those early conversations. But having Washington, who has navigated the highs and lows of professional baseball for longer than Vitello has been alive, in the dugout alongside him on a daily basis adds another layer of comfort.
“He’s been through a lot,” Washington said. “Even though he was in college, he’s still been through a lot — won championships, then failed, had to bring people together. He did all of that. He led people. And that’s what it takes in baseball.”
Vitello’s bench coach in San Francisco will be Jayce Tingler, who arrives with substantial experience on major-league coaching staffs and ties to the new manager; the two were teammates at Missouri and have remained close in the years since. New hitting coach Hunter Mense — who also played at Missouri while Vitello’s coaching career was just getting started in Columbia — comes over from the reigning AL champion Toronto Blue Jays. New pitching coaches Justin Meccage and Christian Wonders joined from Pittsburgh and Tampa Bay, respectively. New bullpen coach Jesse Chavez just wrapped an 18-year career pitching for nine MLB organizations. If Vitello has any questions as the season gets underway, the answers are probably nearby.
“The thing about the major-league side of it,” Washington said, “[is] he’s got people to stand him up when he starts to fall.”
‘Being around people like that makes you better’
In addition to the wealth of knowledge he’s tapping into, Vitello rallied two familiar faces from his time in Knoxville to join him with the Giants. Frank Anderson, the father of former big-league left-hander Brett Anderson, will serve as director of pitching performance after decades in the college ranks, most recently as Vitello’s pitching coach at Tennessee. Anderson will be making his first foray into working with professional pitchers, but there’s optimism that his track record of developing impact arms in Knoxville can carry over, even in more of an oversight role.
More familiar with the pro experience is the Giants’ new director of sports performance, Quentin Eberhardt, another key figure during Vitello’s Vols tenure. Eberhardt’s roots are in the strength and conditioning sphere, as he spent eight years as a strength coach in the minor leagues with the Astros, Cardinals, Braves and Marlins. One of his minor-league players, Josh Elander, had starred at TCU when Vitello was on staff. When Elander went into coaching and joined Vitello’s staff in 2017, he reached out to Eberhardt, then in Triple-A with the Marlins, to gauge his interest in leaving pro ball to help revitalize the Vols’ program.
“At first I wasn’t too interested. And then he asked if I would be interested in having a conversation with, then, a guy who I’d never heard of, Tony Vitello. And I’m always down for a conversation, right?” Eberhardt said. “… And in business, you know, sometimes people say they’ll call you, and it usually ends up being weeks later. Tony said he’s gonna call me — he called three hours later. We talked for two hours. He and I are very similar, which is how we started to get close over the years. But hearing the vision he had and the vision that I had for success and for winning and for helping build something special, it was like, OK, and those conversations continued.”
As Tennessee blossomed into a premier program, Eberhardt became a crucial figure behind the scenes. His work elevated the Volunteers’ potential on both sides of the ball, achieving physical gains in the weight room and ensuring an edge in the mental part of the game as well. While Elander took over as head coach in Knoxville after Vitello departed last fall, Eberhardt jumped at a new chance to build something special alongside Vitello.
“Me and Q were very aligned, just the mentality, the way we think,” said outfielder Drew Gilbert. One of the faces of the Volunteers’ rise to relevance at the start of the decade, Gilbert is now looking to make his mark in the majors with the familiar support of Vitello and Eberhardt, having been acquired by the Giants last summer. “Being around people like that makes you better. I’m super grateful to have him back here again.”
Gilbert isn’t the only former Vol in the organization, as right-hander Blade Tidwell is also expected to contribute in the majors this year. And even before he was on their radar as a managerial candidate, the Giants corresponded with Vitello last summer about one of his best players, infielder Gavin Kilen, whom San Francisco selected 13th in the 2025 MLB Draft and who is now one of the organization’s top prospects.
‘You could tell he loved the game’
But Vitello’s connections run much deeper than just his former players. “He knows a lot of people,” Washington said.
For instance, Vitello chased hard after top Giants prospect Bryce Eldridge back when Eldridge was an elite high school player in Virginia, only to see him commit to conference rival Alabama (before forgoing college altogether). Reliever Sam Hentges, then the best prep pitcher in Minnesota, committed to Arkansas during Vitello’s Razorbacks tenure, though he ultimately signed with Cleveland instead. Once they teamed up this spring, Vitello didn’t hesitate to tease Hentges about what he missed out on.
“When we met up again here, he was like, ‘Now I don’t have to hate you anymore because we finally get to play together,’” Hentges said. “I was like, ‘You’ve done plenty. You didn’t need me to do what you did.’”
Having interacted with Vitello long before he was a household name, Hentges isn’t surprised by how his career has taken off.
“He was hungry. You could tell he loved the game,” he said. “He still has that same vibe. He loves the game of baseball. He loves competing. He’s very vocal about that and wants everybody to feel the same way. He was like that — what was that — 12 years ago? … [These days] he just has a little bit more experience and wisdom.”
That distant yet personal history affords Hentges a level of familiarity that is rare for a manager and player. “I know my family’s very excited that he’s here because he was up at our house a couple times when I was in high school, and my family loved him,” he said.
While the majority of Giants players don’t have past connections to Vitello, anyone in the clubhouse who played Division I baseball over the past decade likely began this year with some sense of what to expect.
“I heard how Tony was,” left-hander Carson Whisenhunt said with a smirk, having played with Gilbert and Tidwell on the 2021 collegiate national team. “They said he was a great coach. You could go to him for anything.”
Vitello has also made a point to connect with the Giants with zero ties to his previous world, those who signed out of high school or hail from other countries. That includes some of the most important players on the roster, so the new manager wasted no time reaching out to ace Logan Webb and spent time in the Dominican Republic with Rafael Devers and Willy Adames. In January, Vitello and Adames journeyed across the globe with a sizable front-office contingent to visit Jung Hoo Lee in his native South Korea.
These intentional, sometimes international offseason interactions marked important first steps as Vitello ingrained himself in the organization. But the real fun began once he could put on baseball pants and bounce around a more familiar environment on the field. In his new gig, practice, which used to be a time for teaching, is now an opportunity to witness excellence. Now entrenched with some of the best on the planet at their craft, Vitello’s experience with elite college players only heightens his appreciation for what the sport’s highest level looks like up close.
“It’s a higher level of skill, and you’re almost in awe of it sometimes, but also you’re excited about the fact that they approach everything like a pro … they know exactly how they’re going to come to work every day and get better,” Vitello said. “All these guys approach it like that because it is their job. Some people say that like a negative thing, like it’s a kid’s game, but to me, it’s a good thing it’s their job because they approach it in such a methodical fashion that, as a coach, you’re excited to watch, you’re excited to contribute, and sometimes you learn from what they’re doing.”
‘He’s gonna bring it every day’
No matter the depth of Vitello’s preparation, no matter the mentors surrounding him, no matter how smoothly spring training seems to have gone, the novelty of his first MLB season will be unavoidable. Division I baseball features a 56-game regular season starting in February, with the road to the College World Series stretching to mid-June. MLB demands six weeks of spring training before a 162-game regular season and a postseason that pushes into November.
“I think the thing that jumps off the page is obviously just the length of the season,” reliever Tristan Beck said. “A bad two weeks in college can kind of sink the season, versus, you know, a bad two weeks in pro ball — that’s just every year.”
“We’re just gonna have, hopefully, a little more passion,” Logan Webb told reporters earlier this week. “Tony is gonna bring that. He’s gonna bring it every day.”
As the season begins, gone for Vitello are the days of mining the transfer portal, balancing NIL budgets and chasing premium recruits; he must now navigate the usage and evolution of a 26-man roster over a marathon season, even if its construction is no longer under his primary purview. The Giants’ roster is not a group of 18-to-22-year-olds hand-picked by Vitello and his inner circle; it’s a much broader assortment of ages and backgrounds who found their way into San Francisco’s clubhouse for myriad reasons that have nothing to do with the word “recruit.” Working toward October with a vast range of well-paid professionals is a wildly different task than guiding a group of college-aged ballplayers to Omaha. But meshing these personalities is the job of any manager, and Vitello seems to have the interpersonal skills to make that happen.
“It’s the same as the college guys,” he said. “They love baseball. They like the camaraderie factor. They want to have success. They want to be helped. So, you know, as everyone harps on all these differences for my job or what’s going on, or people ask me, ‘What’s the biggest difference?’ … There’s a lot of similarities. And I kind of take comfort in that.”
Outside the clubhouse, Vitello will serve as a vibrant new voice as a near-daily public speaker, a significant change from his prior media responsibilities. Major-league managers are the unofficial spokespeople for their organizations, obligated to speak to reporters before and after every game. How Vitello’s authentic and often endearing yet unpolished presentation manifests in those settings through the highs and lows of a big-league season will be its own subplot to monitor.
And yet, with infinite questions looming over Vitello’s historic transition, optimism abounds. His infectious energy and genuine passion for his new job have injected life into an organization that sorely needed a jolt. Whether Vitello succeeds or fails will depend on much more than his own ability to adjust — after all, managers can control only so much — so as this fascinating, never-before-seen story airs its first official episode on Wednesday (on Netflix, appropriately enough) all we can do now is sit back and watch.
New York, NY – September 30: Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora smiles during a press conference before Game 1 of the Wild Card playoff series at Yankee Stadium on September 30, 2025. (Photo by Danielle Parhizkaran/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images
The Boston Red Sox enter 2026 with the clear expectation of returning to the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time in eight years.
The 2026 team stands on a foundation of exceptionally deep starting pitching, horses to stabilize the bullpen, and colossal pressure on Roman Anthony to carry a reshuffled offense. In fact, it’s basically the opposite of how they entered the season last year in terms of roster construction. Boston’s 2025 Opening Day lineup in Texas seemed poised to put on a power show all summer long; the pressure was on newly-acquired ace Garrett Crochet to anchor an injury-plagued, inconsistent rotation. But these two completely different roster constructions should land the Red Sox in the exact same place: A playoff berth, likely followed by an early exit in the building block years of a return to contention.
The 2026 team, like last year’s version, should teeter around 90 wins, though playing through the gauntlet that is the American League East says more about Boston’s talent than the win total. What’s probably ahead for the Red Sox is a simple step forward. Host playoff action at Fenway Park and make it to the ALDS. Anything added on is gravy.
You know what this two-year stretch feels like? The building stages we went through in 2016 and 2017.
The Red Sox offense produced like an absolute wagon in 2016. That year featured David Ortiz’s retirement tour, the last healthy season from Dustin Pedroia, 31 homers from Mookie Betts, and the ascension of Xander Bogaerts. The offense told the story of the team. Despite a solid Boston introduction for David Price and a Cy Young award for Rick Porcello, pitching shortcomings led to a first-round sweep at the hands of the Cleveland Indians.
That feels like the 2025 Red Sox.
In 2017, the Red Sox got real with pitching, as Chris Sale racked up over 300 strikeouts and Craig Kimbrel cruised to 35 saves and a microscopic 1.43 ERA. Ultimately, the offense regressed without any real power threat and found the same result: 93 wins followed by an ALDS loss, this time to the Houston Astros.
In shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone in the 2026 Red Sox trend in that direction. Boston structured two totally different rosters for Alex Cora to navigate to October. Understand the direction. Understand the growth. Understand the value of playoff experience.
These may not be the years the duck boats roll through the city. But what Boston should see this year is October baseball and the early chapters of the next true Red Sox contender.
Of all the people to exceed Kobe Bryant’s legendary 81-point game, it was a bit of a surprise that Bam Adebayo was the one to do it. Kevin Porter Jr. now has an even bigger surprise in mind.
“I’m trying to drive 80. Shout-out to Kobe. Shout-out to Bam, because I’m beating that one day. For sure. Now that Kobe got beat, I gotta beat Bam just for the respect of Kobe.”
Porter posted that 50-point game on April 29, 2021, during his second year in the league while he was with the Houston Rockets. Since then, he hasn’t scored more than 36 points in a game. He has also missed several games this year with a knee issue.
His pledge was met with quick mockery from the Twitch comments. His response:
“There’s a thing called manifestation. You gotta manifest what you believe in.”
The easy response is indeed mockery. Porter has shown talent as a scorer in the NBA, but even his career high, seen as a wild outlier from the rest of his time in the league, is still 33 points short of his stated goal. And you really have to wonder if the best way to honor Bryant’s legacy is for another player — one with significantly less fame than Adebayo — to score in the 80s.
However, the thing about professional athletes is that if you gave the entire NBA truth serum, more than a few of them would probably think they are capable of breaking 80. None of these guys are making millions of dollars playing basketball because they lacked for confidence growing up. Porter is no exception to that.
We could very well see players push to match Adebayo and Bryant — or even Wilt Chamberlain — in the coming years, especially given the discourse around how Adebayo got there. It’s easier said than done, but if a player has a huge first half in a game of little consequence (such as Adebayo’s Heat playing the tanking Washington Wizards), they might start wondering what’s stopping them from asking for the ball on every possession and seeing what happens.