ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the Washington Wizards from 2014 to 2016 and the Washington Nationals from 2016 to 2018 for The Washington Post before covering the Los Angeles Dodgers and MLB for the Los Angeles Times from 2018 to 2024.
The last time we saw Giancarlo Stanton on a baseball field, he was putting together a historic postseason, blasting seven home runs in the New York Yankees’ 14 playoff games. Four months later, one of several questions surrounding the defending American League champions this spring: When will we see him in the batter’s box again?
On Saturday, the Yankees announced Stanton will begin the season on the injured list with elbow injuries. Stanton was already doubtful for Opening Day when he reported to spring training in Tampa having not swung a bat in weeks because of pain in both of his elbows. A week later, the slugger left camp for New York and hasn’t returned.
Manager Aaron Boone said Stanton’s reason for leaving the team is “personal in nature” and not related to his elbow issues. Before departing Tampa, Stanton did not engage in baseball activities; he was seen going through conditioning drills with trainers while his teammates completed full-squad workouts.
“He has some downtime right now to get things right,” Aaron Judge told reporters last week. “I want a healthy G in the middle of the season.”
A year ago, Stanton, coming off a humbling 2023 season, reported to spring training with less muscle after altering his workout plan to stay on the field. He rebounded by hitting 27 home runs with a .773 OPS in 114 games. Most importantly, he continued his playoff prowess, fueling the Yankees’ offense in October along with Juan Soto.
This year, Stanton is a variable in the Yankees’ calculations for offsetting Soto’s departure. With Opening Day late this month, he won’t be a factor to begin the season. Ultimately, his presence is more important to the Yankees in October than in April. But it’s an ominous start.
Here are five more questions from Yankees camp:
Who’s on third?
The Yankees upgraded their roster in several ways after Soto chose to sign with the Mets, bolstering strengths and filling glaring holes throughout the roster. Acquiring a third baseman, however, was a priority left unchecked.
With Jazz Chisholm Jr. shifting to second base to replace departed free agent Gleyber Torres, the Yankees’ top options at third base are DJ LeMahieu, Oswaldo Cabrera, Oswald Peraza and Jorbit Vivas. Entering camp, a platoon between LeMahieu and Cabrera was the likely solution. But that was before LeMahieu, coming off a nightmare 2024 campaign, tweaked his calf in his Grapefruit League debut Saturday.
LeMahieu, who took two at-bats before leaving the game, will be shut down from baseball activities for an unknown period. Chances are he won’t be ready for the start of the season. This past year, the 2020 American League batting champion was one of the least productive players in the majors, recording -1.6 bWAR in just 67 games before finishing the season on the IL. He has two years and $30 million remaining on his six-year, $90 million contract.
If LeMahieu misses time, the platoon likely becomes one between Cabrera and Peraza. Cabrera, a switch-hitter, would start against right-handed pitchers, with Peraza getting starts against lefties.
Cabrera, who turned 26 on Saturday, posted a 1.3 bWAR season in 2024, slashing .247/.296/.365 with eight home runs in 108 games. He played every position but catcher and center field. Peraza, meanwhile, is a former top prospect still looking to find his footing at the highest level a year after a shoulder injury sidelined him for most of spring training. The 24-year-old Venezuelan has a .216/.297/.315 slash line in 74 career games.
But acquiring a third baseman remains a possibility between now and the July trade deadline. This past season, the Yankees traded for Jon Berti the day before Opening Day.
Which leads to Nolan Arenado. The St. Louis Cardinals, in the nascent stages of a rebuild, have made the eight-time All-Star available very publicly for months, but the Yankees have not been aggressive pursuers. Arenado, who turns 34 in April and is coming off his worst major league season, is owed $74 million through 2027, with the Colorado Rockies on the hook to pay $5 million in each of the next two years.
The Cardinals would certainly need to eat some of the money to facilitate a trade. It’s likely to happen at some point in 2025 — they agreed to a deal with the Houston Astros in December, only for Arenado, who has a full no-trade clause, to block the trade. Maybe it’ll be with the Yankees, who signed Arenado’s good friend and former Cardinals first baseman Paul Goldschmidt in December. But the Yankees are rolling with what they have for now.
Who’s leading off?
It took the Yankees until the middle of August this past season to find stability in the leadoff spot in front of Soto and Aaron Judge. The player who provided that stability, Torres, isn’t on the roster anymore, leaving the role vacant once again.
There are three obvious options: Chisholm, Anthony Volpe and Jasson Dominguez. If handedness is a significant factor — and Boone has said he prefers to split lefties and righties — then the left-handed-hitting Chisholm and switch-hitting Dominguez might have an edge on Volpe, after Boone revealed Judge, a right-handed hitter, will move back to second in the batting order this season.
Chisholm boasts great speed, considerable pop and experience in the role, but his .311 career on-base percentage is low for a leadoff man. Dominguez possesses elite power-speed potential, but he’s a rookie with just 100 major league plate appearances under his belt.
Volpe was the team’s leadoff hitter from early April to the start of July but was moved down after he struggled mightily in the role. Now in his third season, the Yankees are hopeful the shortstop found his stroke in October — he batted .286 with an .815 OPS in the postseason — and will carry that success into a breakout 2025 season. If he does, he could be the answer.
“I just want to take care of the strike zone a lot more,” said Volpe, a Gold Glove winner in 2023 who slashed .243/.293/.364 in 160 games this past season. “When I do that, I feel like I can impact the ball a lot better and just take my natural, normal swing, which I feel like plays.
“But when I get too big or too outside the strike zone, no one hits those pitches. So I think just going through two full seasons, seeing all the pitchers, how they want to attack me, you build a pretty good database and I think being able to tap back on those things and use the things I’ve learned and things I’m working on, I’m really excited.”
Can Jasson Dominguez handle left field?
There is no questioning Dominguez’s talent. One of the most hyped prospects in recent memory, Dominguez’s combination of power and speed shined in the minors once he signed with the Yankees out of the Dominican Republic in July of 2019. This offseason, after two brief September stints in the majors the past two seasons, the Yankees deemed Dominguez ready to be their every-day left fielder. But his defense is a concern.
The Yankees called up Dominguez last September to compete with Alex Verdugo for playing time in left. Verdugo was one of the least productive every-day players in baseball in 2024. But Dominguez’s shoddy defense prompted the Yankees to stick with Verdugo in the postseason because Verdugo was at least reliable with the glove.
Fast forward to March and Verdugo remains a free agent while Dominguez takes a crash course in learning the position. The top prospect arrived in Tampa early to work on his defense in left after starting 237 minor league games in center field and just 58 in left. Grapefruit League games have provided more teaching moments.
Dominguez lost a ball in the sun in his second exhibition game of the spring. In his fourth, he misjudged a hard-hit ball at the wall. The play was not routine. But every chance Dominguez has will be scrutinized until he proves he isn’t a liability. The Yankees believe he has the athleticism and work ethic to make it work, and they’re going to give him the opportunity.
“There’s no reason he shouldn’t be able to handle left field,” Boone told reporters. “And we do like what we’ve seen these first couple of weeks.”
For a few weeks, Stroman’s insistence on remaining a starting pitcher — and not pitching out of the bullpen — made for some awkwardness. Stroman is a prideful veteran, a two-time All-Star with a 3.72 career ERA over 10 seasons who has proven doubters wrong with his 5-foot-7 frame. And if he needed any extra motivation, he must log 140 innings this season to activate an $18 million player option for 2026.
The Yankees, though, had five other pitchers projected to populate their starting rotation ahead of him.
Those quandaries tend to sort themselves out over the course of spring training’s six weeks, and this one might have over the weekend. Luis Gil, one of those five projected starters, had his bullpen session cut short Friday after feeling tightness in his right shoulder and was sent for an MRI on Saturday. On Monday, Boone announced that Gil suffered a high-grade lat strain and will be shut down for at least six weeks, a deflating development for the talented right-hander that opens a door for Stroman.
A year ago, Gil was on the other end of an injury development when Gerrit Cole, coming off a Cy Young season, was shut down with an elbow injury in mid-March. That paved the way for Gil to break camp on the Opening Day roster, capitalize on the opportunity and win the Rookie of the Year Award.
This time, Stroman would be the next in line to claim an empty rotation spot — if the Yankees choose to keep him. The Yankees had been looking to trade Stroman — and his $18.5 million salary — going back to the offseason.
Now, it looks like he’ll remain in pinstripes and get his chance to start — at least to begin the season.
Who’s the backup catcher?
Buried in the Yankees’ transaction frenzy in December were two moves that dented the organization’s catching depth.
First, on Dec. 11, the Yankees traded catcher Carlos Narvaez, who made his major league debut in July, to the Boston Red Sox for a minor league pitcher and international bonus pool money. Nine days later, they traded catcher Jose Trevino, an All-Star in 2022 who lost his starting job to Austin Wells this past summer, to the Cincinnati Reds for reliever Fernando Cruz and catcher Alex Jackson. Trevino was the sixth catcher the Yankees have traded since the end of the 2023 season. The moves have left New York without a clear backup to Wells.
The group of candidates includes Jackson, a former first-round pick and plus defender — who was also one of the least productive hitters in the majors this past season. There’s Ben Rice, who logged just one inning at catcher in the majors as a rookie this past season. And there’s J.C. Escarra, a 29-year-old journeyman still looking to make his MLB debut. Prospect Rafael Flores has turned heads in camp after posting an .875 OPS with 21 home runs between High-A and Double-A this past season, but he’ll go back to the minors for more seasoning.
The Yankees are high on Rice’s potential. They value his power, plate discipline and makeup. Those attributes and his positional versatility — Rice, who said he gained 10 pounds of muscle over the offseason, started 41 games at first base in 2024 — could give him the edge if the Yankees determine he is ready to regularly catch at the highest level. Rice could also see time at designated hitter during Stanton’s absence. If it’s not Rice, Escarra, a former Uber driver and high school substitute teacher who spent two years playing independent ball before standing out in Double-A and Triple-A this past season, could make his breakthrough.
Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
The last-place Washington Nationals fired president of baseball operations Mike Rizzo and manager Davey Martinez, the team announced Sunday.
Rizzo, 64, and Martinez, 60, won a World Series with the Nationals in 2019, but the team has floundered in recent years. This season, the Nationals are 37-53 and stuck at the bottom of the National League East after getting swept by the Boston Red Sox this weekend at home. Washington hasn’t finished higher than fourth in the division since winning the World Series.
“On behalf of our family and the Washington Nationals organization, I first and foremost want to thank Mike and Davey for their contributions to our franchise and our city,” principal owner Mark Lerner said in a statement. “Our family is eternally grateful for their years of dedication to the organization, including their roles in bringing a World Series trophy to Washington, D.C.
“While we are appreciative of their past successes, the on-field performance has not been where we or our fans expect it to be. This is a pivotal time for our club, and we believe a fresh approach and new energy is the best course of action for our team moving forward.”
Mike DeBartolo, the club’s senior vice president and assistant general manager, was named interim GM on Sunday night. DeBartolo will oversee all aspects of baseball operations, including the MLB draft. An announcement will be made on the interim manager Monday, a day before the club begins a series against the St. Louis Cardinals.
Rizzo has been the top decision-maker in Washington since 2013, and Martinez has been on board since 2018. Under Rizzo’s leadership, the team made the postseason four times: in 2014, 2016, 2017 and 2019. The latter season was Martinez’s lone playoff appearance.
“When our family assumed control of the team, nearly 20 years ago, Mike was the first hire we made,” Lerner said. “Over two decades, he was with us as we went from a fledging team in a new city to World Series champion. Mike helped make us who we are as an organization, and we’re so thankful to him for his hard work and dedication — not just on the field and in the front office, but in the community as well.”
The Nationals are in the midst of a rebuild that has moved slower than expected, though the team didn’t augment its young core much during the winter. Led by All-Stars James Wood and MacKenzie Gore, Washington has the second-youngest group of hitters in MLB and the sixth-youngest pitching staff.
The team lost 11 straight games in a forgettable stretch last month. And during a 2-10 run in June, Washington averaged just 2.5 runs. Since June 1, the Nationals have scored one run or been shut out seven times. In Sunday’s 6-4 loss to Boston, they left 15 runners on base.
There was industry speculation over the winter that the Nationals would spend money on free agents for the first time in several years, but that never materialized. Instead, the team made minor moves, signing free agents Josh Bell and Michael Soroka, trading for first baseman Nathaniel Lowe and re-signing closer Kyle Finnegan. Now, the hope is a new management team, both on and off the field, can help change the franchise’s fortunes.
The rosters for the 2025 MLB All-Star Game will feature 19 first-timers — and one legend — as the pitchers and reserves were announced Sunday for the July 15 contest at Truist Park in Atlanta.
Los Angeles Dodgers left-hander Clayton Kershaw, a three-time Cy Young Award winner who made his first All-Star team in 2011, was named to his 11th National League roster as a special commissioner’s selection.
Kershaw, who became only the fourth left-hander to amass 3,000 career strikeouts, is 4-0 with a 3.43 ERA in nine starts after beginning the season on the injured list. He joins Albert Pujols and Miguel Cabrera as a legend choice, after the pair of sluggers were selected in 2022.
Kershaw said he didn’t want to discuss the selection Sunday.
Overall, the 19 first-time All-Stars is a drop from the 32 first-time selections on the initial rosters in 2024.
Kershaw would be the sentimental choice to start for the National League, although Pittsburgh Pirates ace Paul Skenes, who leads NL pitchers in ERA and WAR, might be in line to start his second straight contest. Philadelphia Phillies right-hander Zack Wheeler, a three-time All-Star, is 9-3 with a 2.17 ERA after Sunday’s complete-game victory and also would be a strong candidate to start.
“I think it would be stupid to say no to that. It’s a pretty cool opportunity,” Skenes said about the possibility of being asked to start by Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. “I didn’t make plans over the All-Star break or anything. So, yeah, I’m super stoked.”
Kershaw has made one All-Star start in his career, in 2022 at Dodger Stadium.
Among standout players not selected were New York Mets outfielder Juan Soto, who signed a $765 million contract as a free agent in the offseason, and Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts, who had made eight consecutive All-Star rosters since 2016.
Soto got off to a slow start but was the National League Player of the Month in June and entered Sunday ranked sixth in the NL in WAR among position players while ranking second in OBP, eighth in OPS and third in runs scored.
Earning his fifth career selection but first since 2021 is Texas Rangers righty Jacob deGrom, who is finally healthy after making only nine starts in his first two seasons with the Rangers and is 9-2 with a 2.13 ERA. He has never started an All-Star Game, although Skubal or Brown would be the favorite to start for the AL.
“Red carpet, that’s my thing,” Chisholm said. “I do have a ‘fit in mind.”
Rosters are expanded from 26 to 32 for the All-Star Game. They include starters elected by fans, 17 players (five starting pitchers, three relievers and a backup for each position) chosen in a player vote and six players (four pitchers and two position players) selected by league officials. Every club must be represented.
Acuna, Wood and Raleigh are the three All-Stars who have so far committed to participating in the Home Run Derby.
ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the Washington Wizards from 2014 to 2016 and the Washington Nationals from 2016 to 2018 for The Washington Post before covering the Los Angeles Dodgers and MLB for the Los Angeles Times from 2018 to 2024.
NEW YORK — The New York Yankees were seemingly in deep trouble Sunday when Juan Soto cracked a pitch to left field in the seventh inning.
The New York Mets, down two runs, were cooking up a rally with no outs. Francisco Lindor stood at first base, Pete Alonso loomed on deck, and Brandon Nimmo was in the hole. This was the heart of the Mets’ potent lineup. Given the Yankees’ recent woes, fumbling their two-run lead and suffering a Subway Series sweep at the hands of their neighbors — and a seventh straight loss — seemed almost fated.
Then Cody Bellinger charged Soto’s sinking 105 mph line drive, made a shoestring catch and fired a strike to first base for an improbable double play to secure a skid-snapping 6-4 win — and perhaps rescue the Yankees from another dreadful outcome.
“Considering the context of this week and everything,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said, “that’s probably our play of the year so far.”
Soto’s line drive off Mark Leiter Jr. had a 10% catch probability, according to Statcast, but Bellinger, a plus defender at multiple positions who started at first base Saturday, was just able to snatch it before it touched the grass. Certain that he caught it clean, he made an 89.9 mph toss that reached first baseman Paul Goldschmidt on a line, over Lindor, who didn’t slide into the bag.
“I saw it in the air and had a really good beat on it,” said Bellinger, who went 2-for-3 with a double and a walk at the plate.
The Mets challenged the catch, but the call stood.
“That was incredible,” said Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge, who swatted his 33rd home run of the season in the fifth inning. “I’ve never seen something like that on the field.”
For the past week, a stretch Boone described as “terrible” for his ballclub, poor defense has been an issue for the Yankees. Physical errors. Mental lapses. Near disasters. The sloppiness helped sink a depleted pitching staff, more than offsetting the offense’s strong production.
That combination produced the team’s second six-game losing streak in three weeks and a three-game deficit in the American League East standings behind the first-place Toronto Blue Jays.
The surging Blue Jays won again Sunday to extend their winning streak to seven games and keep their division lead at three games, but Bellinger’s glove and arm ensured it didn’t grow to four.
“That was an unbelievable play,” Goldschmidt said. “Amazing catch and absolute cannon to me at first. To make that play was a game-changing play and potentially game-winning play for us today. And we needed it.”