I’m on double duty tonight for Rivalry Roundup and our Today on Pinstripe Alley/daily question post, so since I generally try to throw some very quick thoughts on what the Yankees did as well in these, you’ll excuse me for double-dipping in the next two paragraphs.
What an awful road trip. The Yankees got swept in Milwaukee, lost two of three to an underwhelming-as-hell Orioles team, and then did the same against the Mets, who entered as one of the worst teams in baseball. The 2-7 trip ended when
David Bednar couldn’t hold a three-run lead in the ninth, evaporating the edge on a three-run blast by Tyrone Taylor. They then stranded the zombie runner and lost in the bottom of the 10th. That’s some bad baseball, folks.
Now, they get to play the Blue Jays! It doesn’t matter that they’ve been kind of whatever thus far in 2026; it’s not as though the O’s or Mets were rolling when the Yankees faced them this past week. So… joy.
Here’s some of what else was going on around the Junior Circuit.
Tampa Bay Rays (30-15) 6, Miami Marlins (21-26) 3
Just like that, the Rays are the American League’s first team to reach 30 wins — just as we all expected! They’re now three games up on the Yankees as well. Bad.
Early on, the Marlins shook off a Junior Caminero solo shot in the first and made a bigger statement by taking a 2-1 lead on Drew Rasmussen, as they seemed to identify a flaw in the Rasmussen/Nick Fortes battery. Owen Caissie reached on an infield hit, stole second, and scored on an Xavier Edwards single to center. Edwards then repeated the trick with Otto Lopez, swiping second and crossing home on Lopez’s hit. Although Lopez was stranded, he stole the Marlins’ third base of the inning. All told, the Fish went 5-of-6 on steals against this battery.
The Rays had an answer in the home half of of the fourth. Eury Pérez loaded the bases with one out on walks to Yandy Díaz and Cedric Mullins, as well as a double by Jonny DeLuca. He got Fortes to hit into a fielder’s choice, but was burned on a fastball down the heart of the plate to Taylor Walls. The normally light-hitting shortstop cracked a bases-clearing triple to the right-center-field gap that proved to be the difference in the ballgame.
Pérez fanned Chandler Simpson to strand Wells, but in the next inning, Díaz took him deep for a 426-foot shot to dead center. They also got a bases-loaded walk in the sixth, and the Tampa Bay bullpen cruised with a four-run lead.
The Fish did threaten when they loaded the bases themselves in the seventh against Garrett Cleavinger. Kyle Stowers’ RBI single had made it 6-3, and the go-ahead run was at the plate. In came Ian Seymour, and down went Leo Jiménez on strikes, with Heriberto Hernández following with a lineout. Miami never got that close to the lead again.
Toronto Blue Jays (21-25) 4, Detroit Tigers (20-26) 1
The Jays aren’t back or anything and there haven’t been any sweeps, but to their credit, they have won six of their last eight series. Gotta start somewhere! After beating Detroit in 10 innings on Saturday night, Toronto made it two in a row with a pretty smooth victory yesterday. Kevin Gausman muzzled the Tigers with six scoreless innings, and the Jays built up a 4-0 lead against Jack Flaherty on the strength of a solo shot by Vladimir Guerrero Jr., an RBI triple from Daulton Varsho, and a poorly-timed wild pitch.
Yariel Rodríguez allowed a run in relief but limited the damage, and both Joe Mantiply and Tyler Rogers threw up zeroes to nail down the win. Four big games in the Bronx are up next for the Jays to fight their way back into it, their first head-to-head with the Yankees of 2026.
Other Games
Boston Red Sox (19-27) 1, Atlanta Braves (32-15) 8: The team with the best record in baseball wasted no time in getting to Brayan Bello, and a guy who needed a big hit in a disappointing season thus far certainly delivered. Austin Riley clobbered a 431-foot, three-run homer to make it 3-0 after five batters. Grant Holmes kept the zeroes on the scoreboard for Boston with six scoreless innings as Atlanta built the lead up to 7-0 with Mike Yastrzemski going deep, too. The Red Sox sit in the AL East cellar, 11.5 games behind the Rays, though even with a better record than only the Astros and Angels, they’re only three back of the Wild Card. The American League field ain’t great, folks.
Texas Rangers (22-24) 8, Houston Astros (19-29) 0: On the same day that Houston put Jose Altuve on the IL with an oblique strain, Nathan Eovaldi put the offense to bed with an outing familiar to Yankees fans who have seen him dominate them: seven innings, no runs, and eight strikeouts. The Astros mustered five hits, two walks, and a hit-by-pitch, but that wasn’t nearly enough because feel-good story Peter Lambert got smoked for five runs. Jake Burger seared a meaty pitch to the opposite field for a two-run homer, and when Lambert departed with the bases loaded in the seventh, he plated a pair with a double. Kyle Higashioka scored another on a single, and Brandon Nimmo made it a five-run inning with a two-bagger of his own. Higgy had the cherry on top with a homer in the ninth. It’s been a rough season to date for the Higster, so good for him.
The Rangers are still under .500, but they sit one game back of the now-.500 A’s for the AL West, who lost to the Giants yesterday. (Great division! The White Sox would be leading it.)
Seattle Mariners (22-26) 3, San Diego Padres (28-18) 8: Meanwhile, the Mariners continue to sag and underachieve, even if the .500 first-place team means they’re far from out of it. The Padres completed a Vedder Cup sweep in Seattle, with a five-run attack on George Kirby driving the right-hander from the ballgame. Gavin Sheets had a particularly great day, going 3-for-3 with a double, two homers, two walks, and four RBI. Lucas Giolito allowed one hit over five scoreless in his belated season debut following a late signing with San Diego, only faltering in the sixth when his control abandoned him. The already-extended Colt Emerson made his MLB debut for Seattle at third base with Brendan Donovan on the IL, going 0-for-2 with a walk.
Cleveland Guardians (26-22) 10, Cincinnati Reds (24-23) 3: Brady Singer’s season ERA ballooned over 6.00 as the Guardians hit three homers in his four innings of work. Rookie Chase DeLauter clubbed a two-run shot in the first, and though Elly De La Cruz cut into the lead with a 400-foot blast in the second, Kyle Manzardo had his two-run homer in the third. Brayan Rocchio then made it 5-2 with a solo shot, and after Singer left the ballgame, Manzardo launched his second, while Angel Martínez and José Ramírez hit Cleveland’s fifth and sixth homers, respectively.











