Training camp position battles to watch for all 32 teams: Who will start at QB for the Pats, Saints and Broncos?
More Videos
Published
4 years agoon
By
admin-
NFL NationESPN
Whether you are a fantasy football hawk, a super fan of your favorite team or prepping to place NFL bets in 2021, figuring out who will come out on top of key position battles is an important part of the preseason.
The New Orleans Saints, New England Patriots and Denver Broncos are among the teams with quarterback battles. The San Francisco 49ers and Washington Football Team are fleshing out their wide receiver corps. Much of the NFL is settling their offensive lines. And the Cleveland Browns, Dallas Cowboys and Arizona Cardinals have competitions at linebacker.
NFL Nation reporters break down the biggest competitions in training camp for all 32 teams.
Jump to:
ARI | ATL | BAL | BUF | CAR | CHI | CIN
CLE | DAL | DEN | DET | GB | HOU | IND
JAX | KC | LAC | LAR | LV | MIA | MIN
NE | NO | NYG | NYJ | PHI | PIT | SF
SEA | TB | TEN | WSH
AFC EAST
Cornerback
Offensive guard and defensive end are honorable mentions here, but the battle between Levi Wallace and Dane Jackson was specifically mentioned by defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier at the beginning of training camp. Wallace is the Bills’ incumbent starter of the past three seasons and has staved off any attempt to take his job during that span — and he has done so again with Jackson during the past two weeks. But Jackson is a playmaker and could make a case for himself during the preseason. — Marcel Louis-Jacques
Center
This wasn’t the position battle Dolphins fans circled in March after the team signed Matt Skura in free agency. But Michael Deiter is also getting a steady run as the Dolphins try to find the five best linemen to start. Miami will let this battle play out over the next few weeks. — Jeremy Fowler
Quarterback
Bill Belichick has said Cam Newton is the starting quarterback, but he has also made it clear that it’s a clean slate for everyone and that every player still has to solidify their place on the depth chart. So nothing is a given. And it sure seems like Mac Jones has been coming on strong, with the preseason opener against Washington on Thursday being another key checkpoint. — Mike Reiss
Right tackle
It’s incumbent George Fant versus recently signed Morgan Moses, who has the edge because of his experience and consistent performances over the years. Fant got off to a slow start because he missed the first eight practices (COVID-19 list), but his return Saturday probably means a rotation for the remainder of the competition. Look for a quick resolution; the starting five needs as many reps as possible. Barring an upset, it will be Moses, who can provide stability on the line. — Rich Cimini
AFC NORTH
Left guard
This is the biggest question mark in the Ravens’ rebuilt offensive line. With Bradley Bozeman moving to center, Ben Cleveland, Ben Powers and Tyre Phillips are competing to replace him at left guard. Cleveland, a burley rookie third-round pick, has become the favorite to win the job because he has impressed even more since the full-padded practices have begun. “He’s stepped in here, and he’s embraced everything we’ve asked him to do,” Ravens offensive line coach Joe D’Alessandris said, “and he’s doing one heck of a job.” — Jamison Hensley
Right guard
The Bengals are still searching for the starting right guard who must keep Joe Burrow upright. The competition features veteran Xavier Su’a-Filo and rookie Jackson Carman, the team’s second-round draft pick who played left tackle at Clemson. Carman started training camp buried on the depth chart. Su’a-Filo has enough savvy to take advantage of his opportunities if the rookie isn’t ready. — Ben Baby
Linebacker
The only real position competition in camp might be at linebacker, where incumbents Mack Wilson, Sione Takitaki, Jacob Phillips and Malcolm Smith are attempting to fend off Anthony Walker and rookie Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah (who missed the beginning of camp after being placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list) for playing time and even roster spots. Despite a minor knee injury, Walker appears to have a starting job all but locked up inside — leaving a fierce series of battles to determine the rest of the Browns’ linebacking corps. — Jake Trotter
Backup quarterback
Neither of the guys battling for this spot will see significant playing time in the regular season unless something goes horribly awry, but the competition between Dwayne Haskins and Mason Rudolph could signal the direction of the quarterback position whenever Ben Roethlisberger hangs it up. Rudolph is the only quarterback under contract for 2022, but Haskins has a real shot to rehab his reputation in Pittsburgh and get his career, one that began as a first-round pick, back on track. The winner of the No. 2 spot could very well wind up being the successor to Roethlisberger if this is indeed his last season. — Brooke Pryor
AFC SOUTH
Running back
The Texans have a crowded running back room after restructuring David Johnson‘s contract and adding veteran backs Phillip Lindsay, Mark Ingram II and Rex Burkhead. Johnson, last year’s starter, is expected to fill a different role, similar to Duke Johnson’s in 2020, with Lindsay as the starter. Coach David Culley has praised Ingram’s leadership on the field … so could Houston keep all four running backs? — Sarah Barshop
Quarterback
No, Carson Wentz is not at risk of losing his starting job. The question is who will start Week 1 if Wentz isn’t back from his foot injury? The two primary candidates are Jacob Eason and Sam Ehlinger. The Colts are giving Eason, who is in his second year, every opportunity to win the job if Wentz isn’t ready, but Ehlinger — who on Tuesday got first-team reps for the first time — is right in the mix. The rookie Ehlinger doesn’t have nearly the same arm strength as Eason, but what he has done much better is make quicker decisions with the ball, which has impressed many in the organization. — Mike Wells
Offensive tackle
Second-round pick Walker Little has been very impressive in camp, so much so that right tackle Jawaan Taylor and left tackle Cam Robinson better be on notice. Coach Urban Meyer said both players needed to be better in 2021 than they were last season (per ESPN Stats & Information, Taylor gave up 18 sacks and Robinson nine). Even though the Jaguars picked up the fifth-year option on Robinson and will pay him $13.75 million in 2021, he’s not a lock to start if Little, who played left tackle at Stanford and has begun cross-training at right tackle this past week, continues to impress. — Mike DiRocco
Right tackle
What was once a three-man race has expanded to include veteran tackle David Quessenberry. Free-agent addition Kendall Lamm appears to have the inside track toward the starting spot for the season opener, while Ty Sambrailo hasn’t done much due to injury. Ideally it would be rookie Dillon Radunz taking hold of the position, but he has been asked to play multiple spots along the line and has struggled a bit in the process. — Turron Davenport
AFC WEST
Quarterback
Coach Vic Fangio said he has yet to see any “separation” between Drew Lock and Teddy Bridgewater throughout the first week of training camp. The coming week is important for them, as the Broncos will have joint practices with the Minnesota Vikings for two days before facing the Vikings in the preseason opener. Lock and Bridgewater have gotten an equal number of snaps with the offensive starters, and while each has had days when they looked like the answer, neither has strung those days together. For a team that had the most turnovers last season and had the worst turnover margin (by six), those turnovers might be one of the biggest factors during the competition until Fangio names a starter. — Jeff Legwold
Offensive line
The Chiefs have eight legitimate roster candidates who weren’t with the team last year, making for some interesting battles for starting jobs and roster spots. They will likely emerge from training camp with a rookie starting at center (Creed Humphrey), right guard (Trey Smith) and possibly even right tackle (Lucas Niang). Whatever the Chiefs do, they have to get these decisions right. They have too much invested for their line not to be a strength. — Adam Teicher
Nickel corner
New DC Gus Bradley’s base defense is essentially a nickel scheme, and while Nevin Lawson has been getting the majority of first-team reps as the fifth DB, he will serve a two-game suspension to start the season. However, fifth-round draft pick Nate Hobbs has been impressive throughout the offseason program, as well as the first two weeks of camp, setting up an interesting showdown. Do the Raiders continue to run Lawson out there, even if he will be ineligible to start the season, or does the rookie Hobbs get more time? And that’s not mentioning second-year corner Amik Robertson, who also has flashed at times in the slot. — Paul Gutierrez
Kicker
Michael Badgley missed 12 total kicks in 2020 — nine field goals and three extra points. The Chargers brought in Alex Kessman from the University of Pittsburgh and Tristan Vizcaino, who was with the 49ers last season. Coach Brandon Staley believes in working on the kicking game in real time, and the competition figures to be intense as Badgley fights to save his job. — Shelley Smith
NFC EAST
Linebacker
The group looks to be as deep as it has been in years, and how defensive coordinator Dan Quinn divvies up the work will be interesting. Jaylon Smith played 97.8% of the snaps last season. If it’s that high again, it would be surprising. Not because of Smith, necessarily, but because of the packages and different looks Quinn wants to give. This year’s first-round pick, Micah Parsons, has had a strong camp and made plays from multiple spots. Leighton Vander Esch, their No. 1 pick in 2018, has looked as good as he did when he made the Pro Bowl. Keanu Neal has made a smooth transition from safety to linebacker and has Quinn’s trust. Those are four players to mix in for two spots most of the time, considering how much they will use a sub package. Parsons and Smith can rush from the outside, which will allow Quinn to be versatile. — Todd Archer
Right tackle
Second-year tackle Matt Peart is getting every opportunity to be the starting right tackle. But veteran Nate Solder lurks. Solder has looked good after not playing last season as an opt-out. It would be foolish to discount him as the possible starter Week 1 versus Denver. Solder has seemed to sneak in more first-team reps of late. — Jordan Raanan
Running back
Left tackle was the competition to watch entering camp, but Jordan Mailata appears to have taken a sizable lead over Andre Dillard. The attention turns to running back, where there’s sorting out to do behind Miles Sanders. Rookie Kenneth Gainwell and Boston Scott are fighting for snaps, while Jordan Howard, Kerryon Johnson and blazer Jason Huntley jockey for spots on the 53-man roster. Preseason games have meaning for this position group. — Tim McManus
Wide receiver
Washington has far better receiving depth than a year ago. A lot of the fringe guys this season would have been locks in 2020. If it keeps six, the first five would be Terry McLaurin, Curtis Samuel, Adam Humphries, Dyami Brown and Cam Sims. That means players such as Antonio Gandy-Golden, Kelvin Harmon, Steven Sims Jr., DeAndre Carter and rookie Dax Milne are fighting for the last one, or maybe two, spots. Carter could make it just as a dual returner. Gandy-Golden has an edge because he was a fourth-round pick in 2020 and he has flashed. But Harmon and Sims both have had solid moments this camp — and Milne is a guy they want to develop. More than likely they’ll lose someone they wish they could have kept but just didn’t have room. — John Keim
NFC NORTH
Left tackle
The Bears’ original plan was to start rookie second-round pick Teven Jenkins at left tackle in Week 1. However, Jenkins has been sidelined with a back injury since the beginning of training camp, raising questions about whether he’ll be ready when the regular season begins. Next up was veteran Elijah Wilkinson, who handled left tackle at practice before he went on the reserve/COVID-19 list. With Jenkins and Wilkinson both unavailable, the Bears turned to rookie fifth-round choice Larry Borom to fill in on the left side. — Jeff Dickerson
Inside linebacker/safety
Fans should track the positional competition between inside linebacker first, then safety. First-year Lions coach Dan Campbell says these are the most important battles. Why? “I’m not just talking about starting. I’m talking about who’s the next guy in,” Campbell said. “We could have three starters, if you know what I mean. They’re rotating through. We can have four. So much is going to play into how special teams goes too, especially in that position.” The Lions finished 2020 with the worst defense in the league. They will need key guys in those roles, such as Will Harris, Dean Marlowe and Tracy Walker at safety, and also inside linebackers Jamie Collins Sr., Alex Anzalone, Jahlani Tavai and Jalen Reeves-Maybin, to try and make an impact during camp. — Eric Woodyard
Offensive line
What’s more important than keeping Aaron Rodgers upright? Left tackle David Bakhtiari isn’t likely to be cleared from his January ACL repair in time for the opener, so it looks like Pro Bowl left guard Elgton Jenkins will move out to tackle. There are three competing for the two guard spots: returning starter Lucas Patrick plus second-year pros Jon Runyan Jr. and Ben Braden. Runyan played 160 snaps last season as a rookie, while Braden played only four (all kneel-downs) but it has been a close competition. The most common combination has been Runyan at left guard and Patrick at right guard, but Braden remains in the mix. Throw in a new starting center, second-round pick Josh Myers to replace the departed Corey Linsley (who signed with the Chargers in free agency), and it’s imperative that the Packers get their front five right. — Rob Demovsky
Right guard
Last season, 20 of the 39 sacks Kirk Cousins took came through the interior of the offensive line, which prompted the Vikings to improve their personnel around center Garrett Bradbury. Moving Ezra Cleveland to left guard created a competition at right guard where Oli Udoh and Dakota Dozier spent the first two weeks of camp splitting reps with the first-team offensive line. While Udoh might have the edge right now, given how well his length fits at the position, don’t rule out rookie Wyatt Davis. With a couple of strong performances in preseason games, the third-rounder could emerge as a candidate to start at right guard. — Courtney Cronin
NFC SOUTH
Right tackle
This is easy because it has been a legitimate question throughout camp. It might not have a real conclusion until Kaleb McGary returns from the PUP list, but third-round pick Jalen Mayfield looked like he was in good position to have a shot at the job. At least until Friday, when Mayfield was moved out of the first five for the first time all camp. On Saturday, Willie Beavers replaced him for every first-team snap. After practice, coach Arthur Smith said Beavers had earned it through his practice play, and he wanted to create competition — but if this continues through the week, it’ll create a real competition at right tackle for at least a little while. — Michael Rothstein
Left tackle
This has been a revolving door since Jordan Gross retired after the 2013 season. Free-agent signee Cameron Erving is first up, with Greg Little and Trent Scott also taking turns with the first team. Right tackle Taylor Moton has gotten some reps there as well, so don’t rule him completely out, though right side is his strength. Preseason games will decide this, and it appears to be Erving’s to lose. But keeping Sam Darnold upright is essential to success. — David Newton
Quarterback
This one is pretty obvious in New Orleans, where the Saints have a job opening for the first time in 16 years, following Drew Brees’ retirement. (So far it’s still too close to call between Jameis Winston and Taysom Hill, who have both performed mostly well taking turns with the first string in practice.) But the QBs aren’t alone. The Saints also have major voids at CB and WR, among other spots, with at least 10 new starters expected in Week 1. — Mike Triplett
Wide receiver
Yes, you read that correctly. The position group that boasts Pro Bowlers Mike Evans, Chris Godwin and Antonio Brown, and is arguably the top group of wideouts in the league, is the most important position group battle in Bucs camp. Hear me out. The question isn’t who wins a starting job. It’s where coach Bruce Arians and GM Jason Licht make the cut. Those three and Scotty Miller will no doubt make the team. But behind them is Jaydon Mickens, rookie Jaelon Darden, Tyler Johnson, Travis Jonsen and Cyril Grayson (Justin Watson is expected to miss another three months due to a knee injury). How many can they afford to keep? Mickens has had an exceptional camp, Darden continues to get a ton of first-team reps, and they’re excited about Jonsen, which might mean Johnson, who started three games last season, is the odd man out. Arians already called Johnson out for coming to camp out of shape, so he’s having to work his way out of the dog house. — Jenna Laine
NFC WEST
Inside linebacker
It might not seem like this is the most important position battle at training camp because first-round pick Zaven Collins and last year’s first-round pick Isaiah Simmons were anointed the starters this offseason, but fellow linebacker Jordan Hicks is pushing the two of them every day to prove he’s still worthy of a starting job — the starting job that he held the last two seasons. It might not change the minds of Arizona’s decision-makers, but Hicks will push the two youngsters as hard as he can for that job. — Josh Weinfuss
Outside linebacker
The Rams opened training camp with most of their starting roles accounted for, but questions remain at outside linebacker opposite Leonard Floyd. Justin Hollins, a 2019 fifth-round pick, whom the Rams claimed off waivers last season, and Ogbonnia Okoronkwo, a 2018 fifth-round pick, are competing for a job. Hollins appears to be the frontrunner to win the role. However, it seems most likely that both will contribute in a rotation. “Justin Hollins is a guy that used all the things that he did really well last year, and he has really continued to build and grow and excited about him,” Rams coach Sean McVay said. “And Ogbo is a guy that has a lot of ability as well.” In 16 games last season, Hollins had three sacks, a forced fumble and a pass deflection. In 20 games over the past two seasons, Okoronkwo has 2.5 sacks and a pass deflection. — Lindsey Thiry
Wide receiver
With Kendrick Bourne off to New England, the Niners aren’t exactly loaded at receiver behind starters Deebo Samuel and Brandon Aiyuk. The contenders for roster spots bring a mix of experience (Mohamed Sanu, Richie James Jr., Travis Benjamin) and potential (Jalen Hurd, Jauan Jennings, Trent Sherfield). Another year removed from ankle surgery, Sanu looks like an early favorite for a role. Although the Niners don’t use three-receiver sets often, compared to most of the league (29th in 2020), it’s important to establish an option for the slot and also to define a pecking order of capable options in case of injury to Samuel or Aiyuk. — Nick Wagoner
Center
Pete Carroll said over the offseason that Kyle Fuller would get a legitimate shot to win the job even though Seattle re-signed Ethan Pocic, who started there last season. Pocic’s experience and his $3 million contract made him the clear favorite heading into camp, but he missed the first few days with a hamstring injury that he recently re-aggravated. So the gap between those two doesn’t seem as wide as it did a few weeks ago. — Brady Henderson
You may like
Sports
Kershaw soaks in curtain call in possible L.A. finale
Published
9 hours agoon
September 20, 2025By
admin
-
Alden GonzalezSep 20, 2025, 12:07 AM ET
Close- ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the L.A. Rams for ESPN from 2016 to 2018 and the L.A. Angels for MLB.com from 2012 to 2016.
LOS ANGELES — It ended with a fastball, dotted on the lower edge of the zone to strike out Rafael Devers looking. It was the first out of Friday’s fifth inning and perhaps the final pitch Clayton Kershaw will ever throw at Dodger Stadium.
Kershaw, who announced his retirement at season’s end, dispersed hugs with the infielders upon seeing Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts emerge from the dugout to remove him from his final regular-season home start. Roberts, his manager for the past 10 years, shook Kershaw’s hand, wrapped him in a hug, shared some words, then watched as the eventual Hall of Fame left-hander soaked in a raucous standing ovation from a sold-out crowd.
Kershaw lifted his hat to the fans, hugged his teammates in the dugout, then came out once more for a curtain call.
Kershaw, 37, wasn’t at his best in this matchup against the San Francisco Giants. He walked four, navigated several prolonged at-bats and allowed a couple of runs. But, as he has so often these past few years, he found a way to navigate a game and left his team with a chance to win.
The Dodgers trailed 2-1 when Kershaw departed but went on to a 6-3 victory, clinching their 13th consecutive postseason berth.
“I wouldn’t change it,” Kershaw said. “Perfect night.”
The night began with Kershaw alone on the mound. His teammates stayed back in the dugout briefly, wanting to give Kershaw and Dodgers fans a moment to themselves. Kershaw urged them back onto the field and allowed a leadoff home run to Heliot Ramos on his third pitch of the game. He wound up throwing 23 pitches in the first inning, later working around a walk and an error.
He did something similar in the second, issuing a couple of walks before inducing a couple of infield popups. And in the third, which featured a double by Matt Chapman and a run-scoring single by Wilmer Flores. And the fourth, when he worked around a leadoff hit. But he limited damage.
Kershaw finished the top of the fourth by striking out Willy Adames, ending a nine-pitch at-bat and putting his pitch count at 86. Roberts did not even look at him as he approached the bench, wanting to give Kershaw one last hitter so he could remove him mid-inning. It came in the form of Devers, one of the sport’s most dangerous sluggers. Kershaw retired him on his 91st pitch, resulting in his sixth strikeout — a fitting conclusion to what could be the end of his Dodger Stadium career.
Soon after, Kershaw cheered while Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts delivered back-to-back home runs to give the Dodgers a three-run lead with a four-run fifth.
“It wasn’t his best,” Roberts said, “but like he does, he just finds ways to compete, get outs and put us in a position to win a ballgame.”
Kershaw is scheduled to make one more regular-season start next week. But given the depth and talent in the Dodgers’ rotation, his role on the team’s postseason roster is very much uncertain.
In an 18-year career spent entirely in L.A., Kershaw won three Cy Young Awards and an MVP, has accumulated 222 regular-season victories — 11 shy of Don Sutton for the franchise record — and holds a 2.54 career ERA that stands as the second lowest among those who have thrown at least 1,500 innings in the live ball era. His Friday start was attended by Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford, his childhood friend, and several former teammates, including Austin Barnes, Russell Martin, Jimmy Rollins, Trayce Thompson, A.J. Pollock and Andre Ethier.
Ethier was in the starting lineup when Kershaw made his major league debut at Dodger Stadium on May 25, 2008, and wound up with the walk-off hit.
Seventeen years later, he watched what might have been Kershaw’s final Dodger Stadium appearance.
Sports
The biggest success — and biggest failure — for all 30 MLB teams this season
Published
9 hours agoon
September 20, 2025By
admin
-
Bradford DoolittleSep 16, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- MLB writer and analyst for ESPN.com
- Former NBA writer and analyst for ESPN.com
- Been with ESPN since 2013
Despite a bumpier-than-expected path, the Los Angeles Dodgers might still repeat as World Series champions, becoming the first team to do so since the New York Yankees of the late 1990s. If that comes to pass, few would be surprised. At the same time, based on what we’ve seen since Opening Day, few would be surprised, also, if they fall.
Thus the Dodgers’ season can’t yet be labeled a success or a failure. If the Dodgers win another title, that’s an obvious success. Failure is a little harder to define, but consider that L.A. is one of five teams on pace to finish more than 10 games under their preseason baseline forecast. They’re also leading the tough National League West. Success or failure?
The answer is complicated. Baseball is the most quantifiable and projectable of the major sports, and forecasts are invaluable in setting our expectations for what might happen, and how to react to what actually comes to pass. Yet baseball is also paradoxically and wonderfully unpredictable.
Teams and pundits alike enter the season with a good idea of what each club’s strengths and weaknesses are, yet those observations tend to fly out the window when confronted by the reality of an actual season.
Using preseason expectations as our guide, we’re going to identify the biggest success — and failure — for all 30 teams. Plan and project all you want. In the end, the fates will have their way.
Jump to a team:
AL East: BAL | BOS | NYY | TB | TOR
AL Central: CHW | CLE | DET | KC | MIN
AL West: ATH | HOU | LAA | SEA | TEX
NL East: ATL | MIA | NYM | PHI | WSH
NL Central: CHC | CIN | MIL | PIT | STL
NL West: ARI | COL | LAD | SD | SF
Biggest success: Geraldo Perdomo
Most of the good news for Arizona this season has been on the position player side, led by a career year for Perdomo. After signing a four-year extension that doesn’t kick in until next year, the 25-year-old went out and put up the best season by a shortstop in franchise history. Already a defensive standout, Perdomo entered this season with 14 career home runs. This year, he has 19 and is on pace to drive in 100 runs. He also might get to 100 runs scored and 30 steals. It has been an MVP-level showing.
Biggest failure: The rotation
Arizona entered the season with an on-paper rotation that looked loaded — Corbin Burnes, Zac Gallen, Merrill Kelly, Eduardo Rodriguez and Brandon Pfaadt. That quintet has gone 47-39 with a 4.37 ERA. Burnes went down for the season in June. Kelly was traded. And the other three all have ERA+ figures well below league average. The Arizona bullpen has been even worse, but the roster and the payroll were built on a foundation of elite starting pitching that has not held up.
Biggest success: Nick Kurtz
That Kurtz is good isn’t a surprise. That he’s this good this fast is stunning and exhilarating. After an aggressive promotion in late April, Kurtz didn’t hit his first homer until his 17th big league game. He then went deep 19 times over 49 games with a 1.078 OPS and that was only the lead-up to his 6-for-6, four-homer outburst on July 25 in which he tied the MLB record for 19 total bases in a game. In his age-22 season, Kurtz is on track to become the eighth rookie with an OPS over 1.000 (minimum 400 plate appearances) and of the eight, only Ted Williams and Albert Pujols had a younger baseball age. The A’s have found their cornerstone player.
Biggest failure: Luis Severino
The A’s made a rare splurge in last winter’s free agent market, inking Severino to a three-year, $67 million deal. Year 1 has been disappointing. Severino has gone 6-11 with a 4.82 ERA and an 87 ERA+ while posting the lowest strikeout rate (17.6%) of his career. His struggles in Sacramento have been epic: Severino is 1-9 with a 6.51 ERA over 14 starts at Sutter Health Park.
Biggest success: Hurston Waldrep
Successes have been few and far between for the Braves, but Waldrep’s trajectory seems to be one of them. The sample remains small, but Waldrep went 4-0 with a 1.33 ERA over his first seven starts in 2025 before being roughed up by Houston. He looks like a keeper, if the Braves can keep him healthy.
Biggest failure: The entire season?
The Braves are on pace to miss their forecast by 24 games, a plummet so severe that it’s hard to blame it on any one thing. Injuries have played a part, but other teams are headed to the postseason with plenty of those — the Yankees, Red Sox, Dodgers and Brewers among those with worse health metrics than the Braves. The collapse on the pitching side has been more acute than on offense, but no one is without culpability. Perhaps worst of all, the Braves have baseball’s second-worst organizational record. Things haven’t been any better in the minors.
Biggest success: Trevor Rogers
The Orioles have underperformed across the board, so it could be that we’re damning Rogers with faint praise here, but he has been a genuine revelation. Rogers began the season in the minors and wasn’t that great there, going 0-3 with a 5.51 ERA in eight starts. In the majors? The former Marlin is 8-2 with a 1.43 ERA over 16 starts with solid peripherals. Go figure. Going into what Baltimore hopes will be a bounce-back 2026 season, the Orioles’ rotation needs a lot more success stories like this.
Biggest failure: Adley Rutschman
You hate to pick on one player when the Orioles have disappointed in so many areas, but Rutschman is an avatar for a number of shortcomings. He has underperformed: Baltimore entered the season with the third-best WAR projection at the catcher position but instead rank 25th. He has been injured: According to an injury impact metric based on data from Baseball Prospectus, the Orioles rank 29th in baseball. After two straight disappointing seasons for Rutschman, and considering the arrival of elite prospect Samuel Basallo, the future of the Orioles at catcher looks a lot different than it did a couple of years ago.
Biggest success: Pitching acquisitions
You really can’t choose between Cy Young candidate Garrett Crochet or reliever of the year candidate Aroldis Chapman, neither of whom was with Boston at this time last year. Crochet has blossomed with the Red Sox, matching the dominance he showed per inning with Chicago with the workload of a true ace. Chapman, at 37, is on pace to record a career-best ERA (1.26) and his second-best bWAR (3.3, just shy of his 3.4 in 2012).
Biggest failure: In-season roster work
The Red Sox have received great production from their rookie class, headlined by Roman Anthony and Carlos Narvaez. But a team in position to challenge for the American League East title ranks 29th in my in-season acquisition index, a metric that looks at the quality and quantity of the production from players signed or traded for during the season. Boston has dealt with a lot of injuries (27th in injury impact) but has been too passive about compensating for them.
Biggest success: The offense
Things have slowed over the second half, but the Cubs’ attack has been one of baseball’s most productive and exciting over the course of the season. Chicago leads the majors in secondary average (patience and power), isolated power and team-level power-speed number. The production has come from up and down the lineup, giving the Cubs one of their deepest offenses in years.
Biggest failure: The bullpen
The Cubs’ rotation has picked up the pace over the second half, which has helped pick up the slack from the regressing hitters. But as October nears, the Cubs still lack clarity in the bullpen. With Daniel Palencia out, the relievers still lack a clear end-of-game hammer. Since the All-Star break, the Cubs’ relief ERA (4.40) is middle of the pack. For the most part, Craig Counsell has pieced things together, but the lack of impact acquisitions during the season, with the exception of Andrew Kittredge, might undermine the Cubs once the postseason arrives.
Biggest success: The rookies
According to my rookie contribution metric — basically adding up the consensus WAR figures for first-year players — the White Sox (11.61 rookie WAR) have four more wins than any other team. In Kyle Teel, Colson Montgomery, Chase Meidroth, Mike Vasil, Shane Smith, Edgar Quero and Wikelman Gonzalez, Chicago has graduated some bona fide building blocks to the majors. With a decent finish, the White Sox can avoid another 100-loss season. That might seem like a low bar for excitement, but when you’re coming off a 121-loss debacle, that’s a huge improvement.
Biggest failure: Luis Robert Jr.
The season began with reports of Roberts’ revamped approach at the plate, but 2025 proved to be another step back for one of the game’s most talented players. Robert did improve his strike zone indicators, but it didn’t pay off at the bottom line, as his OPS+ dropped two more points off his career-low of 86 in 2024. And it looks as if he’ll end the season where he has spent far too much time during his career: on the injured list. Whether you view Robert as a White Sox building block or the team’s last-best chance to generate impactful return in the trade market, none of this is good.
Biggest success: The rotation
The Reds’ pitching, in general, has kept the team on the fringe of the playoff chase all season, but the starters, in particular, have been rock solid. According to my AXE metric used in the Awards Watch series, six of the top nine Reds performers this season have been starting pitchers, led by Andrew Abbott, Nick Lodolo and Hunter Greene. Only three teams have compiled more quality starts.
Biggest failure: The flagging offense
Cincinnati’s hitters are on track to finish around their preseason forecast of 660 park-neutral runs scored. But at the midway point of the season, the Reds were on pace to finish at 693, and during the span of the regression, a trade deadline passed. Miguel Andujar has helped, when he has played, but it hasn’t been enough. The Reds rank 19th or worse at five of the nine positions by OPS, and that’s with the baked in boost of Great American Ballpark.
Biggest success: The stretch-run rotation
After years of forging a reputation as a starting pitcher factory, the Guardians’ actual performance in that area over the past couple of years hasn’t lived up to it. Until recently, that is. After ranking 18th with a 4.17 rotation ERA through Aug. 25, Cleveland is second with a 2.78 mark since. The Guardians have hung in the playoff race with a 14-5 record during that span, despite ranking 22nd with only 4.16 runs scored per game.
Biggest failure: The offense
Take your pick, really. Whatever the offensive metric, the Guardians stink in it. They’re 29th or worse in each of the slash columns, last in BABIP and 24th in isolated power. They rank 29th in OPS at catcher and shortstop, and 30th in center field and right field. There is only so much Jose Ramirez can do.
Biggest success: Attendance
The Rockies are in the pack, drawing 29,676 fans per game, down just 1,211 over last season. They are outdrawing the first-place Detroit Tigers. The world is a very strange place sometimes.
Biggest failure: Everything else
Assuming the Rockies don’t lose out — which could happen, of course — they won’t end up matching or surpassing the 2024 White Sox’s season record for losses. Still, this marks the Rockies’ third straight 100-loss season, fourth straight last-place finish and seventh straight season of finishing fourth or worse in the NL West. The Rockies are long overdue when it comes to asking hard questions about how they do things.
Biggest success: Tarik Skubal
The Tigers are closing in on their first division title in 11 years and second straight playoff berth. They are built largely on internally developed players and hold baseball’s best overall organizational record. In other words, lots more talent is on the way. Still, Skubal stands out on a team full of success stories by replicating or even bettering his Cy Young-winning 2024 campaign. He has become one of baseball’s biggest stars and the face of what Detroit has been building — and this edifice has a lot of faces.
Biggest failure: The rotation depth
Skubal’s is but one turn through the rotation, and the Tigers’ run prevention has lagged over the second half of the season. Since the break, Skubal has a 2.31 ERA with eight quality starts in 10 outings. The rest of the Detroit rotation has a 5.32 ERA with only 10 quality starts in 43 outings. If this bites the Tigers in the postseason, there will be questions about why Detroit didn’t take a bigger swing at the trade deadline.
Biggest success: Front office improvisation
The Astros are almost right at their preseason forecast, but their path to those 87-88 wins has been less than predictable. Because of that, much of the story of Houston’s season can be told in two of the measures we keep mentioning. First, the Astros rank last in the injury impact metric, meaning no team has been more affected by player absences (Yordan Alvarez especially). Second, the Astros rank first on the in-season acquisition leaderboard. Carlos Correa, Jesus Sanchez, Ramon Urias, Craig Kimbrel and others have helped keep Houston’s contention window ajar as we enter the home stretch.
Biggest failure: Christian Walker
The Astros’ offense is much less dynamic than it has been in a long time. No one player is to blame, and Alvarez’s long stay on the IL has to be kept in mind. But things wouldn’t be quite so severe if Walker had plugged what has become a longstanding hole for Houston at first base. It’s always dicey signing free agent hitters who are well into their 30s, and so it has been so far for Walker, whose OPS+ has slipped from a three-year average of 123 in Arizona to 95 in Houston. He has been better since the All-Star break, so we should hold off final judgment on the signing for now, but the bottom line is that, at the moment, Walker is barely over replacement level on the season.
Biggest success: The starting pitching
Last season, the Royals got 151 starts from their top five starters. This season, they’ve had 12 pitchers make at least two starts and depending on when, and if, Michael Wacha returns before the end of the season, none of them might qualify for an ERA title. The injuries have affected the rotation performance during the second half, but it hasn’t fallen off a cliff, and for the season, Kansas City has MLB’s sixth-best rotation ERA. Whether it’s converting relievers (Kris Bubic), developing midlevel prospects (Noah Cameron) or identifying trade targets (Ryan Bergert), the Royals have become adept at finding rotation answers that fit their system.
Biggest failure: The offense
Bobby Witt Jr. remains a superstar. Maikel Garcia has been one of baseball’s most improved players. Vinnie Pasquantino remains a high-level run producer. But other than a midseason surge, the Royals have just not been able to score consistently enough to hang in the playoff chase, despite their elite pitching-and-defense combo. They’ve tried to paper over their holes with trades during the season, but the baseline for the lineup is just too low to fix on the fly.
Biggest success: Zach Neto
With a second straight five-WAR season, Neto has become one of baseball’s top shortstops at age 24. He sat out time early in the season and his numbers for the most part are similar to 2024, save for a non-trivial uptick in slugging. As he has matured, Neto has hit the ball harder more often, while still shining in the field and on the bases.
Biggest failure: Mike Trout
During the four-year period from 2021 to 2024, Trout averaged just 66.5 games per season. But on a per-162-game basis, he had rates of 46.3 homers, 109 runs and a 160 OPS+. If he could only stay in the lineup. With a move to DH this season, Trout has indeed been more available, but his impact has ebbed. Trout’s OPS+ is 115 — solid, but not Trout-like — and his slugging percentage is a shocking .417. Maybe it’s just the adjustment to DHing, which isn’t always smooth. Trout, after all, is still only 34 years old.
Biggest success: Yoshinobu Yamamoto
Remember, we’re dealing with expectations here, so Shohei Ohtani doesn’t get credit in this context for doing the incredible things he already was doing. But it has been a banner season for Yamamoto, the most stable part of a deep Dodgers rotation that has again been riddled with injuries. Yamamoto has lived up to his pre-2024 hype but ramping up the volume, at least for a Dodgers pitcher. Already over the 162-inning minimum, Yamamoto is the first Dodgers pitcher to qualify for the ERA title since 2022.
Biggest failure: Health
Health has continued to be a general problem for the Dodgers, but it continues to be especially bad on the pitching side. L.A. is baseball’s deepest team but despite that, the injuries have come so frequently that the Dodgers have kept the transaction wire spinning all season. They’ve used 39 different pitchers, 16 of whom have started at least one game and 10 of whom have earned at least one save. How does manager Dave Roberts keep it all straight?
Biggest success: An emerging lineup
Between young players who have hit the ground running (Agustin Ramirez, Jakob Marsee) and young veterans improving as they enter their primes (Otto Lopez, Xavier Edwards and, especially, Kyle Stowers), the Marlins increasingly look like a team that can field an exciting lineup in 2026.
Biggest failure: The rotation
Injuries over the past couple of years have rocked a talented group of Marlins starters. Other than a midseason surge when the Marlins’ pitchers got hot as a group, Miami’s starters have been lit up for most of 2025, ranking 28th in rotation ERA with the second-lowest total of quality starts. Yet the talent of Sandy Alcantara, Eury Perez, Edward Cabrera, Max Meyer and an interesting wave of coming prospects remains tantalizing. Maybe next season it’ll all come back into focus.
Biggest success: Brice Turang
Turang’s ascension into an All-Star-caliber player is undeniable now that he has added power to an already full toolkit. He’s one of the game’s best second basemen, but more than that, he typifies Milwaukee’s transformation into MLB’s top regular-season club. He’s young, athletic, great on defense and gets on base. And he’s exciting, standing out as one of baseball’s most aesthetically pleasing players to watch.
Biggest failure: Reliever health?
Most everything has gone right for the Brewers, so it’s hard to term anything as a failure. Even the bullpen has been excellent over the course of the season. But a spate of late-season injuries has made things a wee bit more interesting as we edge toward the playoffs.
Biggest success: Joe Ryan
The Twins’ right-hander made the leap from solid midrotation starter to top-of-the-rotation ace this season. Ryan will finish with a career-high innings count and will likely match that volume with his best ERA+ (currently 126) and bWAR (4.5). Ryan’s season isn’t out of line with what he has done before on a per-inning basis, but he has done it more often. Now, as Ryan stands to earn a jump in pay per the arbitration system, we’ll see if the frugal Twins pay him or trade him.
Biggest failure: The midseason unloading
The Twins pulled the plug on their season at the trade deadline and the results since have not been pretty, on the field or off the field in terms of fan reaction. Since then, Minnesota has baseball’s second-worst record and has been drawing attendance figures lately indicative of a fan base that entered the season already annoyed by the Twins’ passive offseason. News that the franchise is no longer on the market hasn’t helped. The trajectory is bad.
Biggest success: Juan Soto
No, Soto hasn’t reinvented baseball during his first season as a Met, but he has been Juan Soto, and that has been a reminder of why he was so coveted. Soto is having a down season in the average category thanks to the vagaries of BABIP, but everything is vintage Soto. And it feels as if we forget this part: He still hasn’t turned 27. Soto has more seasons like this ahead of him, but he has some even better than this in his hip pocket. In any event, any concerns that Soto’s huge contract would be his ruination ought to be alleviated by now.
Biggest failure: The collapsing rotation
The Mets’ pitching free fall has been one of the most stunning stories of the season. Through the end of July, the Mets had baseball’s fifth-best rotation ERA (3.44). The starters ranked 27th in quality starts and 25th in innings, so they weren’t going deep, but they were effective while out there. Since then, New York’s starters have a 5.40 ERA (24th), further taxing a bullpen that has arguably been just as bad or worse. The avatar is Kodai Senga, who went from Cy Young candidate to minor leaguer in about six weeks. Maybe the rookie trio of Nolan McLean, Jonah Tong and Brandon Sproat will save the day, but this is not how the Mets drew it up.
Biggest success: Bronx bombing
This isn’t a perfect Yankees team, but they’ve bashed their way back into the World Series picture in a very literal way. A stunning 59% of the Yankees’ runs this season have come via the home run. When Anthony Volpe hits his next homer, the Yankees will feature a regular lineup in which every slot is occupied by a player with at least 20 homers this season. That includes Ryan McMahon, who hit most of his dingers for Colorado, but it’s still going to be amazing to see.
Biggest failure: Devin Williams
Across the past three seasons before coming to New York, Williams gave up 26 earned runs over 148 games with a 1.66 ERA. In his first Yankees season, he has given up 33 earned runs in 61 games with a 5.30 ERA. With a strikeout rate down around 5% off his career figure and 10% from last year, Williams just hasn’t been the same pitcher, and as the season has progressed, the numbers just keep getting worse.
Biggest success: Kyle Schwarber
Already one of baseball’s most dangerous sluggers, at 32 Schwarber has never been better. He already has joined Ryan Howard as the only Phillies in the 50-homer club and leads the majors with 128 RBIs, 24 above his previous career best. He has done this with his best strikeout rate in six years and his typically high walk rate. Good timing, too: Schwarber will be a free agent this winter.
Biggest failure: Aaron Nola
Nola has always been a little up and down, but his downs have never been like his injury- and performance-plagued 2025 showing. Nola’s 6.44 ERA over 15 starts has him under replacement level, and while the Phillies’ overall rotation has been dynamite, Nola’s struggles are more pressing with Zack Wheeler gone for the season. Nola has shown flashes and remains in the rotation, but he’s running out of time before a playoff season that the Phillies will enter as one of the favored teams.
Biggest success: Paul Skenes
Yes, we expected Skenes to be this good, but who else are we going to put here? Skenes has been even better in Year 2, somehow bettering (so far) his sub-2.00 rookie ERA, dropping from 1.96 to 1.92 even while ramping up his innings total. The Pirates are 27-17 when Skenes starts so far in his career, which translates to a 99-win team over 162 games. In the non-Skenes games, they’ve won at a rate of 69 games per 162. He’s pretty good.
Biggest failure: An anemic offense
The Pirates’ lack of any kind of spending or success in developing hitters has left them with a tragic attack. The median run total for a team in a game is four. Let’s say any time a team scores more than four, it’s a win for the offense and a loss for the defense. Finishing at exactly four runs represents a push, or a tie. Using this framework, the Pirates’ pitchers have a record of 77-55-18, giving them the fifth-best winning percentage in the majors. The hitters are 44-88-18, ranking last. That’s your 2025 Pittsburgh Pirates.
Biggest success: Winning the deadline
The Padres haven’t launched since A.J. Preller’s frenetic activity at the trade deadline, but his work then was still crucial. Rather than finishing the roster as Preller probably hoped, the newcomers have helped cover for drop-offs and injuries from those already on hand. That has been especially true for the bullpen, where Jason Adam was injured and Jeremiah Estrada has hit some speed bumps. But acquisition Mason Miller has been even more electric than expected. Meanwhile, Freddy Fermin has solidified the catcher spot and Ramon Laureano, brought in to raise the floor of a struggling outfield slot, has been San Diego’s best percentage hitter since arriving.
Biggest failure: Xander Bogaerts
At 32, Bogaerts has posted his second straight subpar offensive season. His OPS+ (98) is up from last season’s 92 but remains well off the 130-ish level he reached in Boston. The change in ballparks has been more severe for Bogaerts than expected. His career slugging percentage at Fenway Park is .496 but is just .402 at Petco Park. This season, only three of Bogaerts’ 10 homers have come at home.
Biggest success: A revamped lineup
The Giants were subtractors at the trade deadline, particularly when it came to emptying out the back of the bullpen. Yet San Francisco remains on the cusp of a wild-card slot, and it’s not all because the Mets went into a spiral. The Giants have featured a top-10 offense since the end of July, featuring a stable everyday lineup that has coalesced into a nice unit. After a slow start, Willy Adames has come on strong, Rafael Devers had adapted to his post-Boston life, and Matt Chapman has been mashing. A new outfield mix featuring ex-Met Drew Gilbert and Jung Hoo Lee has become a gas to watch. The Giants are fun.
Biggest failure: Defensive range
You have to get specific, because the Giants’ overall defensive metrics are above average because of Patrick Bailey‘s off-the-charts work behind the plate. But out in the field, the Giants rank 27th in Statcast’s outs above average, a disappointing result for a club with flashy defenders up the middle and at third base with Chapman.
Biggest success: Cal Raleigh
This is perhaps the most obvious selection on the board. Raleigh is having one of the most shockingly historical seasons we’ve ever seen. To be sure, Raleigh had been plenty good before this season, one of the best all-around backstops in the game. But this? The best homer season ever by a catcher? The best by a switch-hitter — even Mickey Mantle? It’s unreal. Using the FanGraphs version of WAR, which is more laudatory of Raleigh’s framing skills, his 2025 total (8.0) ranks seventh all time among primary catchers, and he’s still going.
Biggest failure: The rotation
Again, let’s remember that we’re keeping preseason expectation at the forefront of our minds. Seattle’s rotation has been solid, very consistent. The M’s rank 17th in rotation ERA (4.08) and fifth in quality starts. But before the season, Seattle figured to have a top-five rotation at the very least. The group was supposed to be the strength of the roster. Bryan Woo has been great, but everyone else has been worse than projected, either because of injuries, performance drop-off or both. Yet the Mariners regained first place with two weeks to go. If the rotation had been what we thought it would be, they would have already clinched the AL West.
Biggest success: Matthew Liberatore
Well, we have to put something down. Frankly, even though the Cardinals have managed to stay around baseball’s middle, this has felt like a disheartening season. With just a little boost from the front office, the low bar of postseason contention in this year’s NL might have been cleared. St. Louis hasn’t received much in terms of breakout performances, though some of the younger players have shown progress. That pretty much describes Liberatore, the touted prospect St. Louis acquired way back on Jan. 9, 2020, from Tampa Bay for Randy Arozarena. Until 2025, Liberatore hadn’t been able to establish himself as a rotation regular, but he has made 27 starts and stayed within shouting distance of league average. His strikeout rates don’t scream “untapped upside!” but you never know.
Biggest failure: Season approach
Nothing about St. Louis baseball has made much sense for about a year. If the Cardinals had truly reset, that at least would have been a clear direction. As it stands, it’s still completely unclear why the Cardinals didn’t just try to build the best possible roster they could for the 2025 season. After this finally ends, the baton will pass to Chaim Bloom and perhaps he can paint a more coherent portrait. Let the Ray-ification of the Redbirds begin.
Biggest success: Junior Caminero
This has been a mildly disappointing season for Tampa Bay, but not so for its powerhouse, 21-year-old third baseman. Caminero’s 44 homers already rank second in Rays history, and he needs only two more to tie Carlos Pena’s 18-year-old franchise record. The only other age-21 player to reach 44 homers is Hall of Famer Eddie Mathews, who hit 47 in 1953. Caminero still has a shot at that mark.
Biggest failure: Close games
This has been a strange season for Tampa Bay, and not only because the Rays have had to call the Yankees’ spring training facility their home park. Tampa Bay has had a couple of stretches where it looked like one of baseball’s top teams but has been thwarted by close losses — which is the antithesis of what the last few good Rays teams have been like. This season, Tampa Bay is just 33-40 in games decided by one or two runs. Because of that, the Rays are on pace to fall 7.3 wins shy of the record predicted by their run differential, tied with Texas for the biggest shortfall in baseball.
Biggest success: Overcoming injuries
Over their past 20 games coming out of the weekend, the Rangers had won 15, the best last-20 mark in baseball. This has allowed Texas to close its sizable gap with Houston and eke closer to the Mariners. The postseason remains very much in play. During that 20-game stretch, Texas got five games from Corey Seager, zero from Marcus Semien, 10 from Adolis Garcia and zero from Evan Carter. Ace starter Nathan Eovaldi made his last appearance of the season the day before that 20-game window began. The more beat-up the Rangers are, the more they seem to thrive.
Biggest failure: Home offense
The Rangers have just a .676 OPS at Globe Life Field, while they’re at .724 on the road. Last season, they were 34 points better at home. The season before, when the Rangers won the World Series, they were 107 points better. It is a baffling thing. In his first Texas season, DH Joc Pederson has hit .155 with a .559 OPS at home. He hasn’t been great on the road, either, but his OPS is 103 points better while traveling. All of this is too bad for the hitters, but while bemoaning their fate at GLF, we should also note that the Rangers have been baseball’s best home team this season (by run differential) thanks to an absurdly-low 2.77 home ERA by the pitching staff.
Biggest success: Ernie Clement
No, really. The Blue Jays have the AL’s best record. Among all teams, they are 10th in OPS+ and 15th in ERA+, solid but not No. 1-seed solid. There are some facts that align with the standing — a 50-25 home record, and a 40-28 mark in games decided by one or two runs. Toronto leads all teams in FanGraphs’ DEF metric, suggesting the Jays have a strong claim as baseball’s best defensive team. For all that, it just feels as if there is something intangible going on with this club, and no one typifies that more than Clement, a jack-of-all trades infielder who contributes on both offense and defense. Clement is a very different kind of player than Ben Zobrist — and not as good — but there is something reminiscent of Clement on Toronto to Zobrist’s roles with championship teams in Kansas City and Chicago last decade.
Biggest failure: Jeff Hoffman
It’s hard to believe Toronto’s record in close games is as good as it is given Hoffman’s up-and-down season as the Blue Jays’ primary closer. Hoffman has 30 saves but he has blown seven games and somehow has a 9-7 win-loss record, which isn’t the kind of thing you expect to see from a 2025 closer. Heck, if he blows a couple of more saves that the Jays rescue him from, he could tie for Toronto’s team lead in wins. Seriously, though, Hoffman has been barely replacement level this season. He has been on a nice roll of late, until he gave up a ninth-inning homer to Houston’s Yainer Diaz that resulted in his seventh loss last Wednesday. If Toronto’s feel-good season is going to last deep into October, the Jays really need Hoffman to be part of the happy tidings.
Biggest success: James Wood
It hasn’t been a happy season for the Nats, who are likely to lose more games than the 91 they dropped in 2023 and 2024. That’s not how rebuilding is supposed to work. Wood has been the best player in a bad situation, adding some power to his solid rookie season percentages and improving his defensive metrics. He has struggled at home, though, and his first-half OPS — a star-like .915 — has dropped to .663 since the All-Star Game. Even the Nats’ good news is bad.
Biggest failure: The rebuild
It will continue, of course, because there is no other choice. But the post-championship reset embarked upon by the old regime of Mike Rizzo and Dave Martinez is officially kaput, and those two were put out of work on the same day in July. This offseason represents a fresh start for a franchise that very much needs one.
Sports
Ex-Pirates SS Wilson recreates 1st pitch to son
Published
9 hours agoon
September 20, 2025By
admin
-
Associated Press
Sep 19, 2025, 07:37 PM ET
PITTSBURGH — Former Pirates shortstop Jack Wilson threw out the first pitch Friday to his son, Jacob, who plays the same position for the Athletics as they revisited a similar scene from 19 years ago.
In 2006, 4-year-old Jacob Wilson threw out the first pitch to Jack before a Pirates game.
Jack Wilson played 12 seasons in the major leagues, including 2001 to 2009 in Pittsburgh. His best season was in 2004 when he batted .308 with 59 RBIs and a league-leading 12 triples.
Jacob Wilson entered Friday’s game hitting .320 with 13 home runs and 59 RBIs. This season, he became the first fan-elected rookie shortstop for the All-Star Game.
Jack Wilson, wearing a Pirates jersey, clapped and pumped his right fist in the eighth inning when Jacob Wilson chased down a hard grounder between short and third base and then made a jump throw to toss out the batter. The Athletics won 4-3.
Trending
-
Sports3 years ago
‘Storybook stuff’: Inside the night Bryce Harper sent the Phillies to the World Series
-
Sports1 year ago
Story injured on diving stop, exits Red Sox game
-
Sports2 years ago
Game 1 of WS least-watched in recorded history
-
Sports2 years ago
Button battles heat exhaustion in NASCAR debut
-
Sports2 years ago
MLB Rank 2023: Ranking baseball’s top 100 players
-
Sports4 years ago
Team Europe easily wins 4th straight Laver Cup
-
Environment2 years ago
Japan and South Korea have a lot at stake in a free and open South China Sea
-
Environment12 months ago
Here are the best electric bikes you can buy at every price level in October 2024