
Last Night in Baseball: Goldschmidt Returned to St. Louis and the Yankees Lineup
Published
Aug. 18, 2025 11:07 a.m. ET
share
x
link
There is always baseball happening — almost too much baseball for one person to follow themselves.
Don't worry, we're here to help you by figuring out what you missed but shouldn't have. Here are all the best moments from the weekend in Major League Baseball :
Goldschmidt's return to St. Louis goes well for New York
The Yankees entered the weekend just half-a-game up on the Cleveland Guardians, and it looked like it was the latter who had the momentum, considering how well they've been playing for some time now, compared to New York, which has been playing under .500 ball since before the summer began.
The Cardinals were apparently just what the Yankees needed to get back on track, though, and at the same time that the Guardians were swept by the Braves, too. With sweeps in both series, New York was able to bump their wild card lead to 3.5 games, leaving Cleveland just half-a-game up on the Royals, too.
Yankees' first baseman — and former Cardinals star — Paul Goldschmidt didn't play in the series opener thanks to a knee sprain suffered on Tuesday, but he made an appearance in the eighth in the second contest, and then started Sunday's game. He received a warm reception via a standing ovation from the Cardinals' faithful, and why not? Goldschmidt spent six years in St. Louis, batting .278/.360/.483 with 153 homers in his time there, and even won the 2022 NL MVP on account of leading the Senior Circuit in slugging (.577) and OPS+ (177), in a nearly 8-win season.
ADVERTISEMENT
Goldschmidt looked a lot like he did in St. Louis facing off against his former club, too. He went 3-for-5 with a pair of doubles and a run and an RBI each, bringing his season line up to .280/.334/.429.
The Cardinals have now lost five in a row, and sit 5.5 back of the last wild card in the National League race. They are not out of it at this point by any means, not with 37 games left on the schedule, but Baseball Reference lists their chances of making the postseason at 3.1% now that they sit 61-64 after a sweep at the hands of the Yankees. They'll have to turn things around fast if they are to avoid missing the postseason for the sixth time in 10 years.
The Dodgers swept the Padres
There was, understandably, a lot of concern about the way the Dodgers had been playing of late, combined with the much more successful way that the rival Padres had been playing. San Diego even moved into sole possession of first place in the NL West on Thursday, on the strength of a roster upgraded at the trade deadline.
When the two faced off over the weekend for a three-game series, though, it was all Los Angeles. The Dodgers swept the Padres, pushing their lead in the West back up to two games. The series was much closer than that suggests — Los Angeles won 3-2, 6-0 and 5-4 — but the standings don't care how much a team wins by. Those dubs are in the bank, as are San Diego's three new losses, and there is that much less time for the Padres to wrest the division from the Dodgers because of it.
Mookie Betts was the hero on Sunday, as the Padres tied the game up in the top of the eighth, and Betts immediately put the Dodgers back up on top in the bottom of the frame with a solo homer to left field.
Betts is having by far his worst season at the plate in the majors, but he's at least been able to contribute defensively, and at a high level: despite his first below-average season offensively, Betts is on pace to finish with a 3-win season, by wins above replacement. He hasn't been a drag on the Dodgers, basically, but if he can return to form offensively even a little bit before the end of the season — time for the postseason — then the Dodgers' lineup is going to look that much better.
Raleigh had a better weekend than his team
Pretty big weekend for the Big Dumper, as Cal Raleigh smacked two doubles and a home run on Friday against the Mets, helping the Mariners to an 11-9 victory. While Seattle would lose the next two contests, Raleigh couldn't be faulted for it. He had another two hits on Saturday, as well as a stolen base — his 14th of the year — and a pair of walks, and then on Sunday he went yard again for his 47th homer of the year as part of his third multi-hit game of the weekend.
Raleigh is leading the majors in home runs, and his 102 RBIs are also tops. And for as unfortunate as losing a series to the August edition of the Mets is for any team, the Mariners do still hold the second wild card in the AL, and are half-a-game up on the Yankees for that spot despite the latter sweeping the Cardinals.
Rockies take down the D'backs (and themselves)
The Rockies won three of four from the Diamondbacks over the weekend, but of course they couldn't do it in a normal way. This is the 2025 Colorado Rockies we're talking about, which is why their game ended on Sunday with what was basically one player tackling another player.
Now, to their credit, earlier in the season this happening would have resulted in that ball being dropped, and then probably thrown into the stands, or even into the Rockies' dugout into the face of one of their players. Here, though, Juan Mejia managed to avoid the fumble and keep possession of the ball, despite the hard hit. [Football terms.]
Winning five of their last six has undone some of the damage of losing eight straight, so the Rockies are once again on pace to avoid setting the all-time losses record. They also have 38 games left on the schedule, though, and given the season they have had, maybe it's not time to pop the champagne just yet.
Sorry, what?
Catching a ball that has popped out of your glove is the old hotness. Meet the new, catching a ball in between your legs by just squeezing really tight and presumably praying the entire time.
Jung Hoo Lee didn't catch the ball in his glove as much as stop it with the bottom of it, and then it fell and slowly rolled down his leg, until he was able to somehow trap it in between his legs while he himself rolled on the ground. He knew it was there, though, as he even stood up — very carefully — to show what he'd done.
Hey, if it doesn't touch the ground, then it hasn't actually landed. Nothing says you need to catch the ball in your glove.
The Brewers' win streak is over
The Brewers managed to get their win streak to a franchise- and MLB-in-2025-best 14 wins in a row on Saturday, and they can thank Andrew Monasterio hitting a 3-run home run in extra innings for that.
Try as they might, though, they couldn't secure No. 15. The Reds had a 1-0 lead in the ninth inning, and William Contreras hit a 2-run homer to put Milwaukee on top for the first time all game.
The game wasn't being played in Milwaukee, however, so the Reds got a chance to tie things up in the bottom of the frame. Which they did! With runners on the corners and one out, backstop Jose Trevino lined a ball just over the head of Caleb Durbin at second base, scoring Will Benson.
The Brewers would fail to score in the top of the 10th, and with Grant Anderson — who had just blown the save the inning before — still on the mound in the bottom half of the inning, the Reds would score once more by way of the single.
Like with the Padres not losing to the Dodgers by all that much despite the sweep, the Reds shouldn't feel too terrible about this series. They had their own dramatic extra innings victory on Sunday, and while Friday was a high-scoring affair, it was 10-8, not a beatdown by Milwaukee. Of course, Cincinnati would rather win these games rather than lose them, but they sit 1.5 back of the third wild card despite having to face the buzzsaw that is the Brewers. There are worse ways to wake up on a Monday morning.
Carroll crushed
That's 474 feet off of the bat of Corbin Carroll you're about to see.
Arizona's weekend didn't go so hot, but Carroll got all of that one, his 27th blast of the year.
Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account , and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily!
What did you think of this story?
share
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
a few seconds ago
- USA Today
Clock ticking for Arizona Cardinals with cutdown deadline eight days away
Howard Balzer goes through each position, breaking them down by likelihood of making the roster. All NFL teams must reduce their rosters to 53 players by 1 p.m. Arizona time on August 26. For the Arizona Cardinals, several decisions will be impacted by injured players, including those currently on the active/physically unable to perform (PUP) list. Any players placed on reserve/PUP at the cutdown must miss at least the first four games of the season and can't practice while on reserve. With 91 players currently on the roster, there will likely be several reductions made prior to the 26th. That total includes international player, tackle Roy Mbaeteka, who could be the team's 17th player on the practice squad. The waiver period ends earlier than normal after the cut to 53, which is 9 a.m. Arizona time Aug. 27, rather than 1 pm. Practice squad spots can then be filled once players clear waivers. All teams can have six veterans on the practice squad. Those players aren't part of the waiver system as their contracts are immediately terminated. Here is a look at the Cardinals' current roster. It's not a prediction of the 53, but rather the 40 position players considered safe and 17 hoping to survive cutdown day, knowing that there will be roster churn after cutdown day. Many in the 'maybe, maybe not' category will end up on the practice squad. It should never be called the 'final' cut. Wide receivers Tight ends Offensive lineman There are tough choices here with the severity of knee injuries to Conner and Jones unknown. Running backs Quarterbacks If Tune is waived, will the Cardinals sign him to the practice squad. They did last year with Desmond Ridder. Total: 20 rock solid, 7 maybe, maybe not, 3 injured Defensive linemen Jones has been sidelined by a knee injury, while Nichols and Nolen have yet to practice during training camp. Linebackers Defensive backs One of the more intriguing battles is between Crawford and Blount. They both deserve to be on the roster because of their special-teams prowess. Total: 20 rock solid, 10 maybe, maybe not, 4 injured Specialists Overall total: 43 rock solid, 17 maybe, maybe not, 7 injured Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire's Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.


USA Today
30 minutes ago
- USA Today
MLB geographic realignment rumors: Everything we know so far
During the Little League Classic between the New York Mets and Seattle Mariners on ESPN, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred hinted at a big change. Manfred spoke with ESPN's Karl Ravech, Eduardo Pérez, and David Cone while on the Sunday night broadcast. While there was only so much that Manfred could say during a relatively short segment, there was one moment that particularly stood out for baseball fans. According to Manfred, some time in the relatively near future, MLB expansion could also lead to divisional realignment based on team geography. But what would exactly would that look like and when would it happen? Here is everything that you need to know based on what we have heard so far. What did Rob Manfred say? If you want to hear the words directly from Manfred, you can watch the clip below. Here is what Manfred said on the broadcast about whether or not he could see expansion and realignment down the road: "I can. I think the first two topics are related in my mind. I think if we expand, it provides us with an opportunity to geographically re-align. I think it would save a lot of wear and tear on our players in terms of travel and I think our postseason format would be even more appealing for entities like ESPN because you'd be playing out of the East, out of the West and that 10 o'clock time slot where we sometimes get Boston-Anaheim would be two West Coast teams. That 10 o'clock slot that's a problem for us sometimes becomes a real opportunity for our West Coast audience." Manfred added owners realize there is a "demand" for Major League Baseball in a lot of great cities and there is an opportunity to do something good around the expansion process. This is not the first time that Manfred has made this argument, though. He said something similar to Ken Rosenthal in 2018 as well (via The Athletic): "The reality of today's media environment is that if you went to 32 teams and you could get to a more geographically-based alignment, you could help your playoff format, you could reduce your travel, you could more easily discuss things like a split season." Manfred hedged at the time by saying that he isn't necessarily in favor of this, but outlined the possibility. When would this actually happen? Based on the comments above, it seems that Manfred wouldn't begin divisional realignment until expansion teams started playing. So reverse engineering from that clue, we can determine the following general timeline (via The Athletic): The commissioner wants to have two new teams' locations picked out by the time he retires in 2029, although the clubs won't yet be playing. But Manfred has long pegged league expansion to the Rays and the Athletics completing their long-running quests for new stadiums. The A's, who are moving to Sacramento, Calif., for at least three seasons starting in 2025, are '100 percent full steam ahead' with their planned subsequent move to Las Vegas for 2028. So we won't anticipate realignment until multiple conditions are met. One is that the Athletics and Rays both need new stadiums, which has a deadline of 2029 (when Manfred's five-year term as MLB commissioner is over) at the latest. The other is that expansion teams will start playing, will come some time after 2029. In other words, this isn't happening any time particularly soon. How would this change the divisions? There are a few points to consider here, but the first is that according to Manfred, we can expect four teams per division instead of five (via Sports Business Journal): "There are also advantages in going from 30 to 32 in terms of schedule and format,' Manfred said on the Questions For Cancer Research podcast. 'It would create an opportunity to realign (divisions) – fours work a lot better in schedules than fives.' Manfred also added that among the expansion teams, one will likely come from the Eastern time zone and the other either Western time zone or Mountain time zone. It seems that eight four-team divisions is currently the preference over four eight-team divisions. MLB may create Eastern Conference and Western Conference Back in 2018, Jayson Stark reported that one way this could work is by getting rid of the American League and National League. According to Stark, this is something that at the time was under serious consideration (via The Athletic): "Imagine if baseball divided its landscape along the geography-based lines of the NBA – as opposed to the artificial, league-based lines drawn up in 1901. Is that really where baseball is headed? To be honest, it's way too premature to tell. What we can tell you, though, is that baseball's Strategic Planning Committee has looked at that realignment-by-geography scenario long and hard." Then in 2023, former MLB executive Jim Bowden laid out one proposal based entirely on geography. Here was his plan, with asterisks next to expansion teams awarded to Charlotte and Nashville (via The Athletic): EASTERN CONFERENCE East Division North Division Mid-Atlantic Division Southeast Division Let's just Eastern Division looks like a juggernaut. WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Southwest Division Pacific Coast Division West Division Given the history, it is difficult to imagine a world in which the World Series is not played between the winners of the National League and American League. Additionally, this proposal would also ruin some fun rivalries by placing the Giants and Dodgers in different divisions. Would Major League Baseball really break up such important rivalries? In a February 2024 column, Bradford Doolittle wondered about this predicament (via ESPN): "A key question: How do we identify, maintain and create the highest number of genuine rivalries? The importance of rivalries, whether they are based on geography or tradition, will be one of the key elements of baseball's structure to watch in the seasons to come. The importance of some rivalries are obvious and longstanding. Others come to the fore, while others recede. The task for baseball will be to understand the extent to which rivalries help sell the game as in person and broadcast products." Later, he continued: "Before we accept the inevitably of radical realignment, we need many answers. How important are rivalries to the game's brand? What are the real advantages in a schedule and travel with a geographic realignment? To what extent is MLB willing to alienate traditionalists when it comes to longtime league affiliations? How is relative market size attached to the issue of alignment? These are the debates we will have during the years leading up to the next expansion, and there are a lot of them. Buckle up." So with that in mind, perhaps the American League and National League will stay intact after all. How could realignment retain the AL and NL? In his newsletter, Nate Silver also attempted a breakdown that was slightly more aligned with that idea. Here was what he suggested in March 2024, with expansion teams awarded to Montreal and Nashville. Like above, one asterisk denotes an expansion team while two denotes a move from one league to the other: American League East American League Midwest American League South American League West National League East National League Midwest National League South National League West Will MLB divisional realignment happen for sure? No, not necessarily. Former MLB commissioner Fay Vincent lobbied for divisional realignment, and it did not go well. He was eventually defeated in court and the idea did not pass. Ultimately, we are still a long way from a radical realignment in baseball. But it is at least a consideration and something fans should keep in mind.


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
CNN's Nick Watt Reports in 'Sports Betting: America's Big Gamble'
CNN's Nick Watt Reports in 'Sports Betting: America's Big Gamble' for The Whole Story With Anderson Cooper EPISODE PREMIERES SUNDAY, AUGUST 24 AT 10PM ET/PT NEW YORK, NY – (August 18, 2025) – The Whole Story with Anderson Cooper, a five-time Emmy® Award-winning CNN Original, returns with an incisive look at the now booming sports gambling industry in America. 'Sports Betting: America's Big Gamble' with CNN National Correspondent Nick Watt premieres Sunday, August 24 at 10pm ET/PT on CNN. Last year, Americans bet around 150 billion dollars on sports. Point spreads, prop bets and parlays have entered the vernacular of a burgeoning new generation of young gamblers, a group particularly susceptible to addiction. In states where sports betting has become legalized, overall credit scores have gone down and bankruptcy filings have gone up, and athletes are facing harassment and threats from losing gamblers. Now, attorneys are filing a class action lawsuit claiming that sports betting apps were designed to create and feed addiction. 'I'm not a gambler, so diving into this world is fascinating,' said Watt. 'We see the pleasure and the pain, and I'm blown away by how far this industry has come since the Supreme Court unleashed the beast and legalized this back just seven years ago. This isn't your grandad dropping a couple of bucks at the horse track.' In 'Sports Betting: America's Big Gamble,' Watt seeks answers from those at the forefront of America's sports betting industry, including President of the American Gaming Association Bill Miller, President of the NCAA Charlie Baker, Executive Vice President of NFL Communications, Public Affairs and Policy Jeff Miller, and more. He also speaks with the everyday people who have been impacted by the legalization of sports betting, including professional sports gamblers and recovering gambling addicts. The Whole Story with Anderson Cooper is a collection of unique and immersive single subject, one-hour episodes from CNN's Emmy® and Peabody Award-winning longform storytelling team showcasing character-driven stories, special interviews, and investigative deep dives featuring reporting from CNN's anchors and correspondents. The series is executive produced by Susan Chun. The Whole Story with Anderson Cooper will stream live for pay TV subscribers via CNN connected TV and mobile apps on Sunday, August 24. 'Sports Betting: America's Big Gamble' will also be available on demand beginning Monday, August 25 to pay TV subscribers via CNN connected TV and mobile apps, and Cable Operator Platforms. Past episodes of The Whole Story are available to stream on demand now on Max. The Whole Story is also available as a CNN Podcasts showcast. Visit or listen wherever you get your podcasts. ### About CNN Originals The CNN Originals group develops, produces and acquires original, long-form unscripted programming for CNN Worldwide. Amy Entelis, executive vice president of talent, CNN Originals and creative development, oversees the award-winning CNN Originals portfolio that includes the following premium content brands: CNN Original Series, CNN Films, CNN Flashdocs, and CNN Studios. Since 2012, the team has overseen and executive produced more than 60 multi-part documentary series and 70 feature-length documentary films, earning more than 120 awards and 450 nominations for the cable network, including CNN Films' first Academy Award® for Navalny. Acclaimed titles include the Peabody Award winning and 13-time Emmy® Award-winning Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown; five time Emmy® nominee, Apollo 11, directed by Todd Douglas Miller; Carville: Winning is Everything, Stupid directed by Matt Tyrnauer; Emmy® nominated Eva Longoria: Searching for Mexico; the Emmy® Award-nominated 'Decades Series': The Sixties, The Seventies, The Eighties, The Nineties, The 2000s, and The 2010s, executive produced by Tom Hanks and Gary Goetzman; The Last Movie Stars, directed by Ethan Hawke about the lives and careers of actors and humanitarians Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman; the Emmy® Award winning Little Richard: I Am Everything, directed by Lisa Cortés; Luther Vandross: Never Too Much, directed by Dawn Porter; The Many Lives of Martha Stewart; Primetime Emmy® and duPont-Columbia Award-winning, RBG, directed by Betsy West and Julie Cohen; See It Loud: The History of Black Television, executive produced by LeBron James and Maverick Carter; Space Shuttle Columbia: The Final Flight in partnership with the BBC; the Producers Guild Award and three-time Emmy® Award-winning Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy; This is Life with Lisa Ling; BAFTA nominee and Directors Guild Award winner, Three Identical Strangers, directed by Tim Wardle; the five-time Emmy® Award-winning United Shades of America with W. Kamau Bell; the American version of the long-running UK comedy series, Have I Got News For You, hosted by Roy Wood Jr; and the five-time Emmy® Award-winning The Whole Story with Anderson Cooper. CNN Originals can be seen on CNN, the CNN Original Hub on Max and discovery+, the CNN Originals FAST channel, and for pay TV subscription via CNN apps and cable operator platforms. About Warner Bros. Discovery Warner Bros. Discovery (NASDAQ: WBD) is a leading global media and entertainment company that creates and distributes the world's most differentiated and complete portfolio of content and brands across television, film and streaming. Available in more than 220 countries and territories and 50 languages, Warner Bros. Discovery inspires, informs and entertains audiences worldwide through its iconic brands and products including: Discovery Channel, discovery+, CNN, DC, Eurosport, HBO, HGTV, Food Network, OWN, Investigation Discovery, TLC, Magnolia Network, TNT, TBS, truTV, Travel Channel, Max, MotorTrend, Animal Planet, Science Channel, Warner Bros. Film Group, Warner Bros. Television Group, Warner Bros. Games, New Line Cinema, Cartoon Network, Adult Swim, Turner Classic Movies, Discovery en Español, Hogar de HGTV and others. For more information, please visit Press Contacts The Whole Story Press Contacts Nick Watt Press Contact