
Although It Is Way Too Early, Yankees And Mets Offering Good Initial Impressions
New York Yankees' Aaron Judge homers on a fly ball to right center field, his 500th extra base hit, ... More during the first inning of a baseball game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, Thursday, April 3, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)
The New York Yankees and Mets are up to a combined 18 games and while it is still way early to determine how it looks when both teams complete the marathon 162-game schedule, both are offering decent first impressions a year after nearly engaging in the second 'Subway Series' to determine a World Championship and following an offseason when Juan Soto exited the Yankees to join the Mets on a massive 15-year, $765 million contract.
The Yankees are up to six wins in nine games, which if that pace stayed the course would give them 108 wins. The Mets are also at the same pace, though you figure both will slow their respective paces and if all goes according to plan the teams wind up the low to mid-90s in terms of a win total.
Both teams are doing it in different ways, especially at the plate.
Even with not hitting a home run for the first time this season on Sunday, the Yankees lead the American League with 76 runs, are second with 92 hits while their 25 homers lead the league and are two more than the Dodgers, who rarely seem to lose. The Yankees are second in the majors with a .285 average after getting to the World Series last season with a .248 average.
The lineup is fueled by the noisy start from Aaron Judge, who started slowly last season and in 2022 when he still wound up hitting 58 and 62 homers respectively. Not only is Judge hitting .324, but he is also at six homers and 17 RBIs as a non-torpedo bat user.
While Paul Goldschmidt is doing his part as a novice leadoff hitter, the Yankees are actually fielding a lineup of six homegrown regulars and getting decent results. The batting averages tend to fluctuate in the early going but the Yankees are seeing plenty of positive results from the trio of Jasson Dominguez, Anthony Volpe and Ben Rice, a trio who is combining to produce a respectable .257 average with seven homers and 18 RBIs.
The trio is giving the Yankee good at-bats after entering with questions of varying degree.
Volpe entered with inquiries about whether he would hit with average after producing marks of .209 and .243 in the shortstop's first two seasons. He also entered questions about what his power would be after his homer run total dropped from nine to 12.
The Yankees got their first look at Rice last season after Anthony Rizzo broke his forearm in a collision at Fenway Park on June 16.
While Rice hit three homers July 7 against the Boston Red Sox, he did little else. The condition of Giancarlo Stanton's elbows opened an opportunity, and he showcased strong exit velocity paired with results at the plate during spring training given the Yankees optimism about regular season results.
Dominguez might have come with more hype since he was nicknamed 'The Martian' when he signed as an international free agent in July 2019. He gave the Yankees some highlights in a lost season when he hit four homers in eight games in Sept. 2023 but went down with an elbow injury and when he returned last season was learning the ropes as a novice left fielder.
After a few early struggles in exhibition games, Dominguez seems to be improving defensively though the Yankees still replace him late in games.
As for the Mets, they are winning with a .197 average, which is tied with the Pittsburgh Pirates for the third-worst mark. What they are doing is finding a way to win as three wins in their current four-game winning streak are by one run and two were decided in the late innings, including Saturday when they were hitless in 10 at-bats with runners in scoring position before Jesse Winker hit his second triple of the game in the eighth inning.
New York Mets' Pete Alonso homers on a fly ball to right field during the first inning of a baseball ... More game against the Toronto Blue Jays, Friday, April 4, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)
Perhaps the most sentimental sign of the early positive results is not only the reaction Pete Alonso is getting from the fans but the fact he is off to a good start and his homer was the deciding blow in a much-hyped home opener.
Soto only has one homer and three RBIS through his first 32 at-bats but just last season, his plate appearances represent must see events.
Francisco Lindor is off to a customary slow start with a .172 mark through the first nine, but he built a ton of equity with his strong second half and runner-up finish to Shohei Ohtani in the MVP race, the Mets and everyone following them figures it is matter of time before he gets rolling.
Perhaps the most encouraging sign is the fact the Mets lead the majors with a 1.91 ERA, including a major-league best 1.29 ERA from their relievers. Pitching was considered more of a question mark going into this season with injuries to Frankie Montas and Sean Manaea along with the losses of Luis Severino and Jose Quintana in free agency, but the results are a good development.
The Yankees are winning with a 4.37 ERA and among three winning teams with ERAs over 4.30. They are through two turns through the rotation without Gerrit Cole and are anchored by Carlos Rodon and Max Fried, who have done enough in their outings while seeing Will Warren pitch to a 6.00 ERA in two starts and Marcus Stroman post a 7.27 ERA so far.
The Yankees are getting some help on the horizon with Clarke Schmidt returning sometime next week but seemed likely to be involved in the starting pitching trade market in some shape and form when the season reaches the end of July.
A lot can happen between now and the end of a season but showing some good positive steps early on gives a good impression with an anticipation of an action-packed season for both teams.
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USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
MLB power rankings: Free-falling Phillies now stuck without Bryce Harper
MLB power rankings: Free-falling Phillies now stuck without Bryce Harper Show Caption Hide Caption Seattle Mariners' newest player shares promotion with family Cole Young announces his move to the big leagues playing for Seattle Mariners during an emotional phone call with his family. The Philadelphia Phillies can't win. And Bryce Harper can't swing. Once comfortably perched atop the National League East, the Phillies are in danger of losing touch with the New York Mets and falling into a deep thicket of NL playoff contenders. With nine losses in their past 10 games and franchise slugger Harper tossed on the injured list with a recurring wrist injury, the free-falling Phillies have dropped three spots in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings. Sunday, they were swept in Pittsburgh for the first time since June 2015 and now trail the Mets by four games. Next in town? The dynamic Chicago Cubs, neck-and-neck with the Mets for the NL's best record. A look at our updated rankings: 1. Detroit Tigers (+1) World Series atmosphere in the D as Tigers take two of three from Cubs. Rank second in the NL in defensive runs saved. 3. New York Mets (-) Pete Alonso passes David Wright for second on franchise home run list. Next: Darryl Strawberry. 4. New York Yankees (+2) Jazz Chisholm roars off the IL with eight hits in 16 at-bats. 5. Los Angeles Dodgers (-4) Tony Gonsolin latest pitcher to land on IL heap – though at least his UCL is intact. Score six runs yet take two of three games at Milwaukee, thanks to pair of Manny Machado homers. Folk hero Late Night LaMonte Wade cut loose, but Dom Smith provides quick impact for flaccid offense. 8. Philadelphia Phillies (-3) After giving up 20 runs in two starts, Jesús Luzardo wonders if tipping pitches is to blame. 9. Houston Astros (+3) Jeremy Peña trails only Aaron Judge in AL WAR. 10. St. Louis Cardinals (-1) When it's going well: Yoshinobu Yamamoto shuts them down, but they somehow prevail. 11. Tampa Bay Rays (+6) That's 14 wins in 18 games and what's this, a playoff race? Louis Varland leads AL pitchers with 32 appearances – yet has a 0.99 WHIP. Brandon Woodruff's rehab road hits bump after he's struck in elbow by 108-mph line drive. George Springer's 2025 OPS-plus: 138. In 2024: 91. 15. Cleveland Guardians (-5) They sink to 24th in runs scored, once again imperiling good work of pitching staff. Jac Caglianone's Kauffman Stadium debut Tuesday against Yankees. George Kirby halts a five-game skid by striking out career-high 14. 18. Cincinnati Reds (+1) Christian Encarnacion-Strand returns from IL with a bang, homering in consecutive games. 19. Texas Rangers (-1) Jacob deGrom dominating, offense flailing. Is this the 2018 Mets? 20. Arizona Diamondbacks (+2) "Overall, I don't feel great," says manager Torey Lovullo while getting swept in Cincinnati. 21. Boston Red Sox (-1) An off day for Roman Anthony at Worcester and New England freaks out. Hey, not much else to get pumped about. 22. Washington Nationals (+1) Scored 11 runs in seven games as CJ Abrams, Keibert Ruiz slump. 23. Los Angeles Angels (+1) They scoop LaMonte Wade Jr. off the scrap heap from Giants. No love from California: 0-10 mark in Golden State after Giants sweep. Colton Cowser is back, and shows why they missed him. 26. Pittsburgh Pirates They finally win a Paul Skenes start but are 5-6 in his outings. (His ERA is 1.88). 27. Athletics (-) When they return to Yolo County, temperatures projected to hit 96 degrees. After a nearly 21-month absence, Eury Perez makes return from Tommy John surgery Monday. 29. Chicago White Sox (-) So when will that Ishbia cash kick in?


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
When SailGP came to New York City: Spectators, ‘storytelling' and star-studded investors
In New York City, there is never any shortage of sports and entertainment options. This weekend alone, the New York Yankees hosted the Boston Red Sox in front of a sellout crowd and more than 100,000 people attended the Governors Ball music festival. The battle for market share has rarely felt so fierce, yet a short ferry ride over the water to Governors Island and another live sports event was in demand: SailGP. Just under 10,000 people filled out a grandstand — at $85 (£63) per ticket for adults and $43 for kids — to watch a sport growing in appeal and increasingly marketed as the Formula One of the seas. Advertisement The product is increasingly straightforward: 12 nations compete in 12 destinations for $12.8 million worth of prize money across the season. They race in identical hydrofoil catamaran boats, which can go at speeds of over 60 miles per hour. During this weekend's event, racers navigated rainy conditions and choppy waters on the Hudson River, with the skyscrapers of Manhattan and the Statue of Liberty painting a picture-perfect backdrop. Spain took their second consecutive event win in the difficult conditions. After finishing the Fleet Races in third with 38 points, Los Gallos held off New Zealand and France to take home the victory in the three-boat final. 'Sailing used to be white triangles on a blue background way out at sea,' says Andy Thompson, SailGP's managing director. 'But that is very far from what SailGP is today. It's a racing property.' The past fortnight has offered further evidence that SailGP is captivating investors. First, the Italian team was acquired by the women-led investment firm Muse Capital at a valuation of $45 million in a consortium that includes the Hollywood actress Anne Hathaway. This represented considerable growth for teams that were selling for between $5m-10m only two years ago. The former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry has previously led a group which acquired the U.S. team for $35 million. In March, Real Madrid forward Kylian Mbappe bought into the France SailGP team. If we needed any more evidence that Sail GP is the en-vogue sporting investment, this came last week when Ryan Reynolds added to his growing sporting portfolio by teaming up with Hugh Jackman — yes, that's Deadpool and Wolverine — as the pair became controlling owners of the Australian SailGP team. The Aussies, who have now rebranded as the Bonds Flying Roos — yes, that's Bonds underwear as the title sponsor — won the first three Sail GP championships and were runners-up last season. Advertisement Their star sailor Tom Slingsby, an Olympic gold medallist and CEO of the Aussie SailGP team, says he became aware of visits to SailGP events by Reynolds' team at Maximum Effort, the production company and marketing agency founded by the actor ('maximum effort' being the catchphrase of Reynolds' movie Deadpool). Tentative discussions have already started about a possible docuseries, following on from Reynolds' investment in Welsh soccer club Wrexham and Colombian soccer team La Equidad. 'They bring star power,' Slingsby tells The Athletic. 'To have Deadpool and Wolverine, they're the 'it' people right now. They also bring an element of storytelling. We're seeing what Ryan's done with Wrexham. They're just going to be fun owners. Having chatted with Ryan, he is incredibly funny and he's going to fit really well with our team. 'Importantly, every discussion with them is, 'What do you guys need to do to be successful?'. Obviously there's talk of ways to promote our team in the league, but it all comes second to us being successful on the water. I was obviously pretty strong on us being athletes first, and if we can be entertaining for the public as well, that's great, but we want to win on the water.' The U.S. team's ownership group is similarly stacked with big-time investors and star names. Mike Buckley, the CEO and on-boat strategist for the U.S. team, says: 'We wanted the most diverse ownership group that we could possibly find. We want people who don't think like us and have different areas of expertise. 'I can pick up the phone and call Marc Lasry, who runs one of the most successful private equity firms in the world (Avenue Capital). He won the NBA championship and took the Bucks from the back to the front and the valuation from a few hundred million to three or four billion.' The U.S. ownership also features founding Uber engineer Ryan Mckillen and his wife Margaret, the Resy co-founder Gary Vaynerchuk, Hollywood actress Issa Rae, the NFL's DeAndre Hopkins and boxer Deontay Wilder. For sailors, SailGP provides game-changing security by providing year-round events beyond the America's Cup and Olympic Games. Advertisement 'Sailing used to jump on the radar every four years and then it just disappeared off the mainstream public's vision,' says Slingsby. 'After an Olympics, when you finish your event, you'd just be sitting there and there's no funding, you're out of a job for a while and you're waiting for the phone to ring. 'When I've been between Olympics, I've had other jobs — bartending and boat building, all sorts of things. You're doing anything you can to keep the money coming in. 'In 10 years, we'll definitely be seeing SailGP still here and racing in consistent events. It's going to be the backbone of sailing. It's five years old now, a lot of people were saying that it would be around for a year or two and disappear.' Founded by the billionaire Larry Ellison, the co-founder of tech firm Oracle, SailGP is discovering traction in what their executives describe as the crossover market between lifestyle and experiential sports. Slingsby notes there are markets such as New Zealand where the fandom is more intense, and athletes are approached at hotels and when out for dinner. SailGP's executive Thompson says the event's ratings 'regularly average around 20 million dedicated viewers around the world.' In the U.S., CBS and its Paramount+ streaming platform broadcast the event. Their highest-rated events — which bring in around 1.8 million viewers — have been intentionally scheduled to follow NFL games in order to capture audiences from America's most popular sport. SailGP's chief revenue officer Ben Johnson bristles at any suggestion sailing is a 'niche' sport, but the locations of some races — St. Tropez in France, Abu Dhabi and Dubai in the Middle East, or Manhattan — do lend themselves to an exclusive in-person audience. The aim is a vast broadcast audience and a hot-ticket live event. Johnson says they are taking learnings from events such as the Kentucky Derby, or the Indy 500, as well as F1, and 'leagues who are moving from traditional sports operators to more sports entertainment and even just broadly entertainment properties.' By attracting celebrity investors (or employing DJ Khaled as the league's 'Chief Hype Officer'), SailGP want to make their events, much like F1, a place to see and be seen. Advertisement Johnson says: 'It is very intentional. There are brands like (European soccer champions) Paris Saint-Germain, where they are more of a lifestyle brand than they are a traditional sports team. They are a perfect example of where we see the opportunity in the global sports space. 'We don't need to be a season-ticketed event. We don't need local media rights to validate our audience growth or our revenue model. We think the demand right now from an experiential standpoint is the highest it's ever been and will continue to grow. So we're focused on new fanbases and inspiring the next generation of lifestyle sports fans. 'People (are) looking for social, communal, family-friendly, brand safe moments where they can bring people together. And I think we're the perfect backdrop for that. It's new, it's novel, fast, you know, all the things that you need to really capture people's attention.' Sponsors are certainly discovering the appeal. SailGP's title sponsor is Rolex, but across the league and teams there are now investments or partnerships from sovereign wealth funds, such as Mubadala Capital (of Abu Dhabi), as well as Emirates airline sponsoring the league and Red Bull partnering with the Italian team, while the U.S. team have sponsorships with Tommy Hilfiger, Amazon, and T-Mobile. The British team is title-sponsored by Emirates and has a partnership with JP Morgan, while Deutsche Bank sponsors the German side. 'I would expect next year you (will) see all the teams somewhere close to commercial profitability,' says Buckley. When asked about profitability, Johnson said SailGP does not disclose its financials, but it is 'ahead of our own internal targets.' The growing investment in the sport is also accompanied by increased jeopardy. Only Spain have won more than one event this season, which may be one of the advantages of sailors racing on identical boats — meaning winning and losing come down to conditions on the day and the performances and skill of those on board. That is not to say there have not been challenges. May's SailGP event was supposed to be held in Rio de Janeiro for the first time but it was cancelled after a defect was found in some of the fleet's wingsails. Australia's wingsail collapsed in San Francisco in a moment Slingsby called a 'scary situation.' The 12 boats were all back on the start line in New York. With 12 teams and money swishing around the sport, talk invariably turns to expansion. Russell Coutts, SailGP CEO and an Olympic gold medallist with New Zealand, has previously spoken about expanding the number of events per season to as high as 20 or 24. Plenty of nations remain untapped, notably Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which has poured money into sports elsewhere. Advertisement 'I think the demand right now exceeds 12 teams,' Johnson says. 'We have an opportunity for us to announce expansion teams, continue to look at markets that we think are really additive.' Buckley says 'balance' is key, concluding: 'There are plenty of countries out there that aren't represented currently in the league. It would be great for all of us.'


Forbes
3 hours ago
- Forbes
Hunter Dobbins Enters Red Sox-Yankee Rivalry With Unique Pitching Line
Boston Red Sox pitcher Hunter Dobbins did not allow a walk or get a strikeout in his Yankee Stadium ... More Sunday night when he pitched five innings in an 11-7 win Hunter Dobbins entered the narrative portion of the Red Sox-Yankees rivalry for comments made to the Boston Herald regarding his thoughts about the Yankees. The narrative did not necessarily die down Sunday night, but when Dobbins actually took the mound, he produced a highly unique pitching line. He allowed three runs in five innings so nothing notable there in a game that ended with the Red Sox winning 11-7. Instead, the notable part was the fact that none of the 18 at-bats ended with a walk or a strikeout. And when Dobbins earned the win as a starting pitcher, it became something that according to the game finder section of baseball reference rarely occurs against the Yankees. Dobbins is now the 18th pitcher to achieve that distinction. Overall, there are 711 instances of it occurring but against the Yankees it is so rare that it was the first time at the current Yankee Stadium. The last time it occurred was Paul Byrd giving up three homers but hanging in there for 5 2/3 innings in a 6-4 win in Cleveland on April 25, 2008. The last time it occurred in New York was David Wells allowing one run in five innings on April 29, 2000 for Toronto in a 6-2 win. For the Red Sox, it was only something that occurred twice in their rivalry with the Yankees. Denny Galehouse got a three-run lead before throwing a pitch on Sept. 25, 1947 and managed to pitch a complete game without a strikeout or a walk and this was a little over two months after achieving the feat against the Chicago White Sox. Before Galehouse, Wes Ferrell achieved the feat in a two-hitter on April 16, 1935. It was a game notable for the Yankees playing without Babe Ruth on the team for the first time since 1919 but also because plate umpire Bill Dinneen decided balls and strikes nearly 30 years after achieving the feat for the Red Sox in an eight-hitter against the St. Louis Browns. There is no evidence if Galehouse or Ferrell made any comments about the Yankees ahead of their games. Dobbins achieved the feat after entering the chat within the context of the rivalry when he was asked something about pitching for the first time against the Yankees by the Herald on Saturday afternoon. Often those types of questions elicit responses along the lines of 'I'm excited to start, but it's just another game and I'm hoping to give our team a chance to win.' Instead it was a comment that may be viewed as a critique against the Yankees, when he said he 'would rather retire if the Yankees were the last team to give me a contract'. He noted his father was a hardcore Red Sox fan and that he expressed the belief previously. To show the differences between the internet and real life, there was virtually no reaction to Dobbins when he was announced in pregame introductions or during the game when he was announced. The most reaction was when Aaron Judge sent the first pitching he saw from the 25-year-old into the stands. 'You can't really say something like that and not expect a passionate fan base like the Yankees' to say something,' Dobbins said after an outing where he reached ball three on three occasions and strike two in eight instances. 'If anything, it made the rivalry atmosphere feel a lot more fun. I enjoyed it a lot. Looking forward to more of it in the future to kind of get this rivalry going.' Eventually word got back to the Yankees, who may or not have discussed it in their pregame hitters meeting well ahead of Sunday's game. 'I like it, I do like it,' Yankees third baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. said before seeing nine pitches from Dobbins. 'I like the competitiveness. I'm a huge fan of college baseball right now just because of how they are. They are super-competitive and super-fiery, and I like that. 'It adds a little bit of fun,' he said of Dobbins' remarks and trash talk in general. 'It adds a lot of spiciness. You enjoy it more. You are more locked in as a fan because you know what is going on. It's fun. I think it's fun, at least.' As for others, manager Aaron Boone chuckled before answering and saw Dobbins' remark as youthful enthusiasm about being on the Red Sox. 'It's a little funny,' Boone said. 'It sounds like a hypothetical.' As for their take after the game where the Yankees allowed the Red Sox to show incremental progress with their losing record the past two nights by allowing 21 runs, Judge seemed kind of surprised about it. 'I've only heard Ken Griffey Jr. say that, so I was a little surprised,' he said. Perhaps the Yankees would be equally as surprised to find out they played a game where they did not get a walk or a strikeout against an opposing starter who lasted five innings for the 63rd time in their history and first time since 2008 when Byrd took a 6-3 loss while pitching seven innings without a walk or a strikeout. Either way the comment added another talking point for a rivalry that is nowhere near the levels of the mid-2000s but still compelling enough for national television to swoop in.