Mets’ Clay Holmes’ transforming into bona fide starting pitcher: ‘He’s just on another level’

It’s no longer just a crazy idea – Clay Holmes is a bona fide starting pitcher for the New York Mets.

After another stellar outing against the Los Angeles Angels on Sunday in which he went 6.2 innings while allowing one run on four hits and three walks in the Mets’ 5-1 win, Holmes is now 4-2 with a 1.69 ERA (0.98 WHIP) in seven starts. 

That’s more than simply a good beginning to the season, Holmes is pitching himself into the Cy Young award conversation and it’s time people everywhere took notice.

“It’s unbelievable,” said manager Carlos Mendoza about his right-hander’s performance. “We saw it again today. That first inning was a battle after the first couple of guys get on and he’s up to like 30-something pitches, [but] before you know it he’s able to get to those middle innings.

“[He] kept making pitches and for him to go back out for the seventh, he’s just on another level right now physically, mentally.”

It’s true, Sunday’s outing didn’t start out the best for Holmes who walked the first two batters he faced as part of a 27-pitch first inning. But after giving up a run four batters into the game, Holmes turned it on and settled in nicely, not only holding the Angels scoreless the rest of the way, but keeping his pitch count low enough to go deep into the game.

After the game, Mendoza marveled at the former reliever’s ascension into ace starting pitcher.

“The way he’s making adjustments in games, the way he’s using his pitches, trusting the defense when he needs to… overall from Clay, solid,” the skipper said.

Over his last three starts, Holmes has allowed three earned runs over 19.2 innings and has gone at least six innings in all of them. Twice already this season Holmes has pitched seven innings after achieving that just once in 2025.

Holmes’ 1.69 ERA is the fourth-lowest in the majors and his 42.2 innings pitched this season is top-10, wildly impressive for a guy who made the switch from reliever to starter just last year.

Holmes credits his success with the “confidence and trust” of his sinker, the pitch that made him so effective as a late-inning reliever in his career and why David Stearns believed he could make the transition to the rotation in the first place.

While the sinker is his bread and butter and the pitch he throws 49 percent of the time, according to Baseball Savant, Holmes knew he would have to expand his arsenal to more than just one pitch, which he did.

Mixing in a sweeper, changeup, cutter, curveball and four-seamer, Holmes has options up there. However, instead of shying away from his sinker this season and abandoning what makes him so special just because his role has changed, the right-hander has embraced who he is and is using it to his advantage.

“I think for me there’s kind of a comfort thing and I feel like – you know the trust with the sinker was always there, but I feel like, especially now I just feel like there’s a lot of confidence and trust with the sinker,” he said. “That’s who I was as a reliever and I knew that was who I would be as a starter, but I felt like I kinda had the confidence and the trust of the sinker and when I have that I feel like I’m able to pitch off of it and really feel like myself and pitch with some confidence.”

Now in his second year as a full-time starter, Holmes knows the ropes a bit more and rather than learning how to be a starting pitcher and focusing on superfluous things, he can dial it in on what kind of starter he wants to be.

So who does Holmes want to be? Someone who unapologetically throws his greatest weapon, the sinker, nearly half of the time.

“I knew I would have to expand the arsenal, it wouldn’t be all sinkers, but with that, I’m not gonna say distracted but you know there has to be some kind of widening of the arsenal and so there’s focus there,” he said. “And I think more than anything this year is just the confidence with the sinker, like I can still pitch off this and it’s more of a mentality thing, just kind of attacking with the sinker.

“That’s kind of what I had as a reliever and it’s not so much, okay let me get ahead with the sinker or kind of use it to set up something else, it’s like here’s the sinker. So I think just getting back to that mentality with it has kind of just helped the life and the finish to it and I think it’s just been helpful so far this year.”

Yankees officially option shortstop Anthony Volpe to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre

TORONTO, CANADA – OCTOBER 04: Anthony Volpe #11 of the New York Yankees in action during the game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on October 4, 2025 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When Anthony Volpe began his minor league rehab assignment on April 14th, it felt like a foregone conclusion that he has headed to the big league roster once he completed it. Fast-forward to today, and the organization has made the decision to go the other direction, activating him from the IL just to option him down to the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders.

The move comes after days of speculation, as manager Aaron Boone was notably noncommittal on Volpe’s immediate future with his rehab assignment nearing the end. What was seen as his likely activation target in the start of this most recent homestand with the Orioles came and went without a word on his status, pushing the final decision into the weekend. Eventually, time ran out and the Yankees showed their hand, sending down their everyday shortstop since his arrival to the majors in 2023 in favor of keeping José Caballero as the starter.

Caballero’s play has been the biggest factor in this development, seeing as general manager Brian Cashman deemed Volpe’s return a near-automatic assumption right before Volpe’s rehab began, saying “that’s always been the plan.” Caballero was hitting for a paltry .384 OPS at the time of those comments, but has since gone on a heater raising his OPS to .719. His last 12 games he’s been particularly hot, hitting for a .302/.348/.535 triple slash (.883 OPS). Coming off of a season where he played most of the year hurt and consequently looked terrible, Volpe needed his competition to look unimpressive if he hoped to be handed the starting gig back, but that just hasn’t happened.

During his rehab assignment, Volpe played four games with Scranton and eight with Double-A Somerset, earning a .683 OPS with one homer and six RBI when combining his games across the two teams. Had he hit the ground on fire during his rehab, perhaps he still could’ve won out and retained his position, but the team’s last-minute decision indicates that they were waiting to see something from the 25-year-old that didn’t manifest in time for them to feel comfortable inserting him back in their lineup. Volpe will now have to work on his game in Triple-A in order to earn his playing time back, in what may prove to be his first real run through the level of competition. Volpe played just 22 games with Scranton at the end of the 2022 season before winning the starting job with the Yankees in spring training ahead of 2023, and had been with the team through the good times and hard times since.

Volpe’s future will also be impacted by the development of George Lombard Jr., the team’s top prospect who was also recently promoted to Triple-A after raking to start the year in Somerset. Lombard’s trajectory through the organization could see him make his MLB debut as early as the end of this season, with a decent shot at earning a role with the 2027 team. Lombard shifted over to third base to allow Volpe to play his natural position during his rehab, and the fastest track to the majors might see Lombard move around the infield should the team want to play him over Ryan McMahon or Jazz Chisholm Jr., but he’s already an elite defender and finding his bat in the upper levels of the minors. That’s reminiscent of how a young Anthony Volpe looked when he was the team’s top prospect and rising through the organization, but now he finds his security in the team’s future threatened in the short and long-term if he cannot tap into that nascent talent again.

Start time of tomorrow’s Mets game moved up to 5:40pm EDT due to inclement weather

DENVER, CO – APRIL 4: A Colorado Rockies fan uses an umbrella to avoid the snow in the first inning of the home opener against the Athletics at Coors Field on April 4, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Tomorrow’s series opener between the Mets and Rockies at Coors Field has been moved up from 8:40pm EDT to 5:40pm EDT. Adjust your viewing plans accordingly.

The change was made due to the expected inclement weather, with temperatures expected to reach a high of 70 around midday before diving into the 30s in the evening. This, paired with forecasted freezing rain, has resulted in an earlier start time, much like what the Mets did earlier in the year for some home games.

The team will face some weather whiplash after leaving Anaheim, where they took two of three from the Angels this weekend. At their lowest, temperatures during the series never dipped below 60 degrees. To contrast, Denver is expecting snow later in the week, which could potentially affect the later games in the series. For now, no further changes have been announced. The high temperatures for Tuesday and Wednesday’s games are not expected to eclipse 40 degrees.

The Mets announced that they will use an opener on Monday, with David Peterson serving as the bulk man for New York following his most recent ineffective outing. The Mets have not revealed who the opener will be, but he will be opposed by Rockies’ right-hander Tomoyuki Sugano. Freddy Peralta and Christian Scott will pitch on Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively, weather permitting.

Carson Benge caps most complete game as a Met with spectacular diving catch

Carson Benge is looking more and more comfortable at the big-league level with each passing day, and on Sunday afternoon he put together easily his most complete showing to this point. 

The youngster helped the Mets on both sides of the ball as they defeated the Los Angeles Angels 5-1 to secure their first series win in nearly a month. 

Benge pieced together tremendous at-bats each of his first two times up, walking on six pitches in the top of the third and then eight pitches in the fourth.

The second one proved to be a big one, as the Mets took the lead just two pitches later when Mark Vientos crushed his first two-run homer of the day. 

Benge grounded out in the sixth but was able to do some damage of his own in the eighth, lining an RBI double down the right-field line to give New York an insurance run. 

Vientos followed that again with a two-run shot, putting this one away for good.

The 23-year-old wasn’t done there, though, as he made the best catch of his career to this point to rob Vaughn Grissom of extra-bases in the bottom of the ninth. 

Benge raced over to the right-field line before laying out full extension to somehow make the pulchritudinous play, as Gary Cohen described it on the SNY broadcast. 

“I was kind of surprised to tell you the least,” Benge said. “If I see a ball that I think I can get to, I’m going to go after it — I’m just glad that I was able to come down with that one there.”

“If that ball falls that’s a completely different inning,” Carlos Mendoza added. 

This is just the latest of what’s been a string of strong performances from the former first-round pick as he continues finding his footing at the big-league level. 

He’s now hitting .290 with three XBH’s, four RBI, and a .333 OBP over his last 10 games. 

“It just feels like a juiced baseball game now,” Benge said. “It kind of took me a while to get my feet settled and different things like that, but now I feel like I’m finding my groove and getting comfortable out there.”

“He can play,” Mendoza added.

Nuggets offseason outlook: Denver doesn’t have many ways to improve

Despite having one of the world’s best players in Nikola Jokić and benefiting from the best season of Jamal Murray’s career, the third-seeded Denver Nuggets saw their season end prematurely at the hands of the injury-ravaged Minnesota Timberwolves. 

This, at a bare minimum, raises questions. 

Jokić, needless to say, is a keeper. He’s not going anywhere, nor does he wish to. 

Murray, presumably, should also be safe given his season and his chemistry with Jokić, which is significant. 

But after that … oh boy. 

Christian Braun’s $125 million extension looks like a problem, unless he bounces back after a rough season. 

Peyton Watson is up for a new deal, but we’ve yet to see how influential he could be in a playoff context. 

Aaron Gordon is a tremendous fit, but his contract is increasing and he’s getting older. 

Sweeping changes likely aren’t needed, but the Nuggets shouldn’t close the door on considering them. 

Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokić didn’t have a great time in Game 6 against the Minnesota Timberwolves.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Record: 54-28, third in the Western Conference. Eliminated in the first round by the Minnesota Timberwolves in six games. 

The play of Jamal Murray, who made his first All-Star team. The championship-winning guard averaged 25.4 points and 7.1 assists in his career-best the season. 

If the Nuggets receive this type of annual production, that’s likely a good sign moving forward. 

Nikola Jokić 

Jamal Murray 

Aaron Gordon 

Cam Johnson 

Christian Braun 

Zeke Nnaji 

Julian Strawther

DaRon Holmes

Peyton Watson (RFA) 

Spencer Jones (RFA) 

Bruce Brown (UFA) 

$201,396,723

Nos. 26 & 49

Draft focus: If the Nuggets want to save money by dumping some of their younger players, it’s crucial they refill the cupboard. They could use more guard play and another big man in case Jonas Valančiūnas doesn’t stick around. 

Virtually none. The Nuggets are extremely expensive and will likely find themselves far above the second apron. If anything, expect them to make some level of financially driven trades. 

Whatever happened this season just can’t happen again, whether you want to blame chemistry issues or roster inadequacy. The Nuggets are in dire need of simply figuring things out and adding depth to get back to competing for another title. They’re too good to let the best years of Jokić’s career slip away, but the big man is often carrying too big of a load.  

Nuggets offseason outlook: Denver doesn’t have many ways to improve

Despite having one of the world’s best players in Nikola Jokić and benefiting from the best season of Jamal Murray’s career, the third-seeded Denver Nuggets saw their season end prematurely at the hands of the injury-ravaged Minnesota Timberwolves. 

This, at a bare minimum, raises questions. 

Jokić, needless to say, is a keeper. He’s not going anywhere, nor does he wish to. 

Murray, presumably, should also be safe given his season and his chemistry with Jokić, which is significant. 

But after that … oh boy. 

Christian Braun’s $125 million extension looks like a problem, unless he bounces back after a rough season. 

Peyton Watson is up for a new deal, but we’ve yet to see how influential he could be in a playoff context. 

Aaron Gordon is a tremendous fit, but his contract is increasing and he’s getting older. 

Sweeping changes likely aren’t needed, but the Nuggets shouldn’t close the door on considering them. 

Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokić didn’t have a great time in Game 6 against the Minnesota Timberwolves.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Record: 54-28, third in the Western Conference. Eliminated in the first round by the Minnesota Timberwolves in six games. 

The play of Jamal Murray, who made his first All-Star team. The championship-winning guard averaged 25.4 points and 7.1 assists in his career-best the season. 

If the Nuggets receive this type of annual production, that’s likely a good sign moving forward. 

Nikola Jokić 

Jamal Murray 

Aaron Gordon 

Cam Johnson 

Christian Braun 

Zeke Nnaji 

Julian Strawther

DaRon Holmes

Peyton Watson (RFA) 

Spencer Jones (RFA) 

Bruce Brown (UFA) 

$201,396,723

Nos. 26 & 49

Draft focus: If the Nuggets want to save money by dumping some of their younger players, it’s crucial they refill the cupboard. They could use more guard play and another big man in case Jonas Valančiūnas doesn’t stick around. 

Virtually none. The Nuggets are extremely expensive and will likely find themselves far above the second apron. If anything, expect them to make some level of financially driven trades. 

Whatever happened this season just can’t happen again, whether you want to blame chemistry issues or roster inadequacy. The Nuggets are in dire need of simply figuring things out and adding depth to get back to competing for another title. They’re too good to let the best years of Jokić’s career slip away, but the big man is often carrying too big of a load.  

Raisel Iglesias expected to be activated from IL Tuesday

ATLANTA, GA – APRIL 15: Raisel Iglesias #26 of the Atlanta Braves reacts after getting the last out as MLB was honoring Jackie Robinson Day during the MLB game between the Miami Marlins and the Atlanta Braves on April 15, 2026 at TRUIST Park in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

After today’s victory against the Colorado Rockies, Atlanta Braves manager Walt Weiss told reporters that closer Raisel Iglesias will be activated from the 15-day Injured List on Tuesday in Seattle where the Braves will be taking on the Seattle Mariners.

Iglesias’ return will help fortify the Braves bullpen has it has dealt with significant turnover in the past two weeks.

The Braves, who are 25-10 after sweeping the Rockies, should also get back catcher Sean Murphy in Seattle, but the exact day Murphy will be activated is not known. With outfielder Ronald Acuña, Jr. going on the 10-day IL due to a hamstring injury and fellow outfielder Michael Harris II nursing a quad injury, Atlanta could have an interesting decision to make with Murphy’s activation. It is possible Harris II could go on the IL.

Iglesias has yet to allow a run this season, striking out 11 in 8.2 inning across eight games. He has also saved five games, which still leads the team.

Yankees send Anthony Volpe to minors in favor of SS José Caballero

Anthony Volpe’s 20-day rehab window has concluded, but he is not returning to the New York Yankees.

The Yankees instead announced Sunday afternoon that they’ve optioned Volpe from the 10-day injured list to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Nobody from the Yankees addressed the decision beyond the statement announcing the transaction.

Volpe joined the big league club in 2023 and, when healthy, has been New York’s starting shortstop since. He’s done so as a Gold Glove winner, but with middling results at the plate. With Volpe out of the lineup since the start of the 2026 season due to offseason shoulder surgery, José Caballero has thrived at the plate and in the field at Volpe’s position.

The Yankees, meanwhile, have the AL’s best record at 23-11. And they’ve decided to not mess with what’s working. Caballero will continue to start at shortstop — for now, at least. And Volpe, a former first-round pick who was previously considered New York’s long-term answer at shortstop, will return to the minors at 25 years old.

This decision comes three weeks after general manager Brian Cashman said “it’s always been the plan” for Volpe to return as New York’s starting shortstop at the conclusion of his rehab assignment. Cashman also said at the time the decision would be “the manager’s call.”

Manager Aaron Boone alluded to the incoming change of plan with reporters prior to Sunday’s 11-3 win over the Baltimore Orioles.

“Caballero’s playing the heck out of the position and playing really well,” Boone said when asked about Volpe. “So that complicates it. So just deciding — what’s the role that exists right away? Those are things we’ve gotta continue to work through.”

In 32 games, Caballero’s slashed .259/.309/.411 with 4 home runs, 12 RBI and 12 stolen bases. He’s been one of the best defensive shortstops in MLB.

Anthony Volpe’s rehab stint from offseason surgery will not conclude with a return trip to the Yankees.
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

In his three MLB seasons, Volpe has slashed .222/.283/.391 with season-long averages of 17.3 home runs, 64 RBI and 23.3 stolen bases. In his best season at the plate, he hit .243. He hit .209 as a rookie and .212 in 2025 while playing with the partially torn labrum that prompted offseason surgery.

Volpe won a Gold Glove as a rookie, but tied for the AL lead with 19 errors in 2025. And he’s largely failed to deliver at the plate on the promise that came with his selection as a first-round pick in 2019.

For his three-plus season MLB career, Caballero’s a .231/.315/.348 hitter. Unless he’s in the midst of a breakout at 29 years old, his relatively hot start at the plate isn’t likely sustainable.

But he’s the hot hand right now for a hot Yankees team. And the Yankees are going to continue to ride that hand for the time being. Volpe’s future with the Yankees, meanwhile, is unclear.

Yankees send Anthony Volpe to minors in favor of SS José Caballero

Anthony Volpe’s 20-day rehab window has concluded, but he is not returning to the New York Yankees.

The Yankees instead announced Sunday afternoon that they’ve optioned Volpe from the 10-day injured list to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Nobody from the Yankees addressed the decision beyond the statement announcing the transaction.

Volpe joined the big league club in 2023 and, when healthy, has been New York’s starting shortstop since. He’s done so as a Gold Glove winner, but with middling results at the plate. With Volpe out of the lineup since the start of the 2026 season due to offseason shoulder surgery, José Caballero has thrived at the plate and in the field at Volpe’s position.

The Yankees, meanwhile, have the AL’s best record at 23-11. And they’ve decided to not mess with what’s working. Caballero will continue to start at shortstop — for now, at least. And Volpe, a former first-round pick who was previously considered New York’s long-term answer at shortstop, will return to the minors at 25 years old.

This decision comes three weeks after general manager Brian Cashman said “it’s always been the plan” for Volpe to return as New York’s starting shortstop at the conclusion of his rehab assignment. Cashman also said at the time the decision would be “the manager’s call.”

Manager Aaron Boone alluded to the incoming change of plan with reporters prior to Sunday’s 11-3 win over the Baltimore Orioles.

“Caballero’s playing the heck out of the position and playing really well,” Boone said when asked about Volpe. “So that complicates it. So just deciding — what’s the role that exists right away? Those are things we’ve gotta continue to work through.”

In 32 games, Caballero’s slashed .259/.309/.411 with 4 home runs, 12 RBI and 12 stolen bases. He’s been one of the best defensive shortstops in MLB.

Anthony Volpe’s rehab stint from offseason surgery will not conclude with a return trip to the Yankees.
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

In his three MLB seasons, Volpe has slashed .222/.283/.391 with season-long averages of 17.3 home runs, 64 RBI and 23.3 stolen bases. In his best season at the plate, he hit .243. He hit .209 as a rookie and .212 in 2025 while playing with the partially torn labrum that prompted offseason surgery.

Volpe won a Gold Glove as a rookie, but tied for the AL lead with 19 errors in 2025. And he’s largely failed to deliver at the plate on the promise that came with his selection as a first-round pick in 2019.

For his three-plus season MLB career, Caballero’s a .231/.315/.348 hitter. Unless he’s in the midst of a breakout at 29 years old, his relatively hot start at the plate isn’t likely sustainable.

But he’s the hot hand right now for a hot Yankees team. And the Yankees are going to continue to ride that hand for the time being. Volpe’s future with the Yankees, meanwhile, is unclear.

Paolo Banchero wonders about the Magic’s future after their playoff collapse against the Pistons

DETROIT (AP) — Paolo Banchero wanted to say the diplomatic thing.

He just couldn’t do it.

Shortly after Banchero’s Orlando Magic lost 116-94 to the Detroit Pistons on Sunday in Game 7 of their playoff series, he was asked if they have enough talent to win in the NBA.

Seated on the postgame press conference stage, Banchero hesitated before answering.

“I want to say yes, but this the third straight time we haven’t gotten out of the first round,” he said. “So if you are going off the last three years, the answer is no. The nice answer is yes, but honestly speaking, I can’t say we’re good enough to be in the finals or the Eastern finals, because the last three years, we’ve had the same result.

“So that’s your answer.”

Banchero has every reason to wonder. In the first four games of the series, he averaged 20 points and Franz Wagner scored 17.8 per game as Orlando took a 3-1 lead.

Wagner, though, sustained a calf injury that kept him out of the last three games. Banchero picked up his pace, averaging 33.3 points in the final three games, including 38 in Game 7, but he never got any help.

He had 32 points on 12-for-22 (54.5%) shooting through the first three quarters Sunday, but his teammates only scored another 32, making 27% (10-for-32) of their shots. Banchero was 4 for 7 on 3-pointers (57%), while his teammates were 4 for 16 (25%).

“We just couldn’t find the basket,” Orlando coach Jamahl Mosley said. “We were playing well on defense, but we couldn’t put the ball in the hole.”

That capped off five horrific quarters of offense that cost Orlando a chance to win the series as the No. 8 seed.

It started at halftime of Game 6. The Magic held what looked like a comfortable 22-point lead, only to score 19 points in the second half on 10.8% shooting.

They put up a decent 49 points in the first half on Sunday, then slumped to 15 in the third quarter as the Pistons built a 19-point lead. That’s 83 points in six quarters — an average of 16.6 points. That’s on pace for 66.4 points for four quarters, which would struggle to win playoff games in the 1950s, much less the 2020s.

Mosley, though, wasn’t ready to question his roster.

“There’s time to reflect on this and start thinking about changes we might be able to make,” he said. “Today is about the gratitude for these guys and how they gave us a chance to play in a Game 7.

“They fought and battled the whole way. We just didn’t get the job done.”

On the other side of Little Caesars Arena, the Pistons were talking about how they solved the same problem Orlando couldn’t fix.

Cade Cunningham averaged 32.5 points in the first six games, but wasn’t getting enough help. Sunday, he put up another 32 points, but Tobias Harris added 30 and Jalen Duren had 15 points and 15 rebounds.

“No one can ever say (stuff) to me about Tobias Harris,” Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. “He’s a leader and a great human being, and he’s a high-level competitor. He showed up tonight and did what he did with everything on the line.”

Harris and Duren did what Banchero’s teammates couldn’t do, which is why the Pistons are off to the second round.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba