Sports
Eury Perez, Marlins shut down Mets to end 3-game skid
May 22, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Miami Marlins starting pitcher Eury Perez (39) delivers a pitch against the New York Mets during the first inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images Owen Caissie collected two RBIs and Jakob Marsee made a pair of impressive catches in center field Friday night for the host Miami Marlins, who edged the New York Mets 2-1 in the opener of a three-game series.
Eury Perez and three relievers combined on a three-hitter for the Marlins, who snapped a three-game losing streak. The Mets have lost three of their last four.
Perez (3-6) allowed two hits — both to Juan Soto, who crushed a 449-foot homer to right-center in the first before singling in the fourth — and walked none while striking out five over 6 1/3 innings. He induced Mark Vientos to hit into a double play following Soto’s single and retired the next seven batters.
Perez benefited from Marsee’s defense in center in the first, when he made a running catch at the wall of Carson Benge’s leadoff blast into the right-center-field gap. In the sixth, Marsee again robbed Benge of extra bases with a leaping catch at the wall in center.
Andrew Nardi set down all three batters he faced and Michael Petersen gave up a two-out single in the eighth to A.J. Ewing, who was then caught stealing. Pete Fairbanks walked Benge with two outs in the ninth before inducing Bo Bichette to fly out to Marsee to close out his sixth save.
Caissie and Esteury Ruiz helped build runs against Mets opener Tobias Myers and bulk reliever Sean Manaea (0-1) in the second and fourth. Ruiz doubled with one out in the second to chase Myers before he stole third and scored on Caissie’s groundout to first.
Ruiz tripled with two outs in the fourth and scored on Caissie’s single.
Joe Mack and Javier Sanoja had the Marlins’ other hits.
Myers gave up one hit and one walk in his first start of the season. Manaea allowed four hits and walked none with three strikeouts in 3 2/3 innings. Rookie Jonah Tong made his season debut with three hitless innings of relief.
–Field Level Media
Sports
D-backs' Ketel Marte brings hot bat into series finale vs. Rockies
May 23, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks second baseman Ketel Marte (4) celebrates with outfielder Tim Tawa (13) after hitting a two run home run against the Colorado Rockies during the fourth inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Anna Carrington-Imagn Images Three-time All-Star second baseman Ketel Marte has spent much of this season underperforming with the bat.
But the Arizona Diamondbacks star is on a hot streak and has increased his batting average 42 points in just seven games entering Sunday afternoon’s contest against the Colorado Rockies in Phoenix.
Marte went 3-for-4 with a two-run homer to lead Arizona to a 5-4 victory over the Rockies on Saturday night. The Diamondbacks improved to 2-1 in the four-game series that will conclude on Sunday.
Marte’s homer came in the fourth inning, when he slammed a first-pitch fastball from Michael Lorenzen 424 feet to right field.
That was the signature swing of the night as Marte improved to 14-for-28 (.500) during the seven-game stretch. He has three homers, three doubles, nine RBIs and has scored nine times while lifting his batting average to a season-best .251.
Arizona manager Torey Lovullo said Marte is locked in and not swinging at pitches out of the zone.
“When he’s stubborn, you can see these results; that’s what happens,” Lovullo said.
Not surprisingly, the Diamondbacks are 6-1 during Marte’s hot streak.
Nolan Arenado helped the Arizona cause with a two-run double against his former club on Saturday. Arenado has 11 extra-base hits (nine doubles, two homers) this month.
Left-handed-hitting TJ Rumfield homered to left-center as part of a 3-for-4 night for the Rockies, who have dropped 10 of their past 14 games.
Rumfield’s blast ended a power drought that saw Colorado match a franchise record by going seven games without a homer. The Rockies previously had seven-game outages in 2007 and 2014.
Troy Johnston had two hits and an RBI to raise his batting average to .323, and Hunter Goodman also had two hits for Colorado.
Rumfield, who is batting .289, leads major league rookies with 54 hits.
“TJ put up four solid at-bats on a night in which the ball definitely wasn’t flying,” Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer said. “To get it the other way, that’s real strength. TJ’s had a solid approach since the beginning of the year.”
Colorado’s Jake McCarthy, who spent the past five seasons with Arizona, is just 1-for-13 in the series.
Rockies infielder Willi Castro was scratched prior to Saturday’s game due to low-back tightness. Castro told reporters he thinks he’ll miss two to three more games.
Arizona placed left fielder Lourdes Gurriel Jr. on the 10-day injured list Saturday because of a hamstring strain. He was hurt during the sixth inning of Friday’s game while making a sliding catch of Rumfield’s fly to shallow left.
The Diamondbacks were mindful that Gurriel returned to action last month after a right ACL tear sustained last September. He was back roughly 7 1/2 months after being hurt.
“He probably would have gotten better in three or four days, but we wanted to make sure that we give him enough time, given what he’s worked through, and put his body through to get back to this point,” Lovullo said.
Rockies left-hander Jose Quintana (2-2, 4.08 ERA) will oppose Diamondbacks right-hander Ryne Nelson (1-3, 5.19) on Sunday.
Quintana, 37, beat the Texas Rangers 7-6 on Monday when he gave up three runs and seven hits over 5 2/3 innings. He has struggled against the Diamondbacks, going 1-3 with a 6.85 ERA in nine career starts.
Arenado is a lowly 3-for-26 against Quintana despite hitting two homers, and Corbin Carroll is just 1-for-10 vs. the left-hander. Marte is 5-for-14 with a homer.
Nelson is winless in seven starts since defeating the New York Mets on April 8. He is 1-1 with an 8.80 ERA in three career starts vs. Colorado.
The Rockies’ Ezequiel Tovar is 3-for-7 against Nelson.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Mike Trout, Angels aspire for rare feat in matchup vs. Rangers
May 23, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels center fielder Mike Trout (27) is greeted in the dugout after hitting a two-run home run during the first inning against the Texas Rangers at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images The Los Angeles Angels will try to finish their first three-game series sweep of the season on Sunday when they close their 10-game homestand with a contest against the Texas Rangers in Anaheim, Calif.
The Angels, just 8-24 over their past 32 games, followed a 9-6 win over Jacob deGrom in Friday’s series opener with a 5-2 victory against Nathan Eovaldi on Saturday.
A win on Sunday would match the longest winning streak of the season for Los Angeles, which won three games in a row from April 4-6.
You have to go back to Aug. 11-13, 2025, to find the last time the Angels swept a three-game series. The opponent was the eventual World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.
Left-handers Reid Detmers (1-5, 5.07 ERA) of the Angels and MacKenzie Gore (3-4, 4.78) are the scheduled starters on Sunday.
Detmers is 3-3 with a 4.43 ERA in 16 career appearances (10 starts) against the Rangers, and Gore is 0-1 with a 2.35 ERA in two career starts against the Angels.
On Saturday, Mike Trout hit a two-run homer in the first inning — his 13th homer of the season and the 417th of his illustrious Angels career. It also was the 108th first-inning homer of his career, which ranks seventh all-time. He needs two more to pass Frank Thomas for No. 6 and four to push Ken Griffey Jr. out of the No. 5 spot.
“He usually comes after me, and I was just trying to be aggressive and got a good pitch to hit,” Trout said of Eovaldi, who had allowed just one run in his three previous starts covering a span of 22 innings.
Angels manager Kurt Suzuki was pleased with the first two games of the series.
“It was good team performances the last couple of nights,” he said. “Timely hitting, pitchers making pitches to get out of innings, and the energy is really good. It’s fun to be a part of when you’re doing something like this on a nightly basis. I know it’s only been two nights, (but) it’s a good reminder of how we can play and, when things are going good for us, how good we can be.”
Texas, which fell to 3-5 on its nine-game road trip, left 11 men on base Saturday. The Rangers were 2-11 with runners in scoring position.
“We just left guys on base all night,” manager Skip Schumaker said. “Bases loaded three times. Tough not to get any runs across there.”
The Rangers, already without shortstop Corey Seager and outfielder Wyatt Langford because of injuries, took third baseman Josh Jung out of the game with left- shoulder soreness after he dived for a ground ball by Zach Neto in the third inning. Jung had labrum surgery on the same shoulder in 2022, but he appears to have escaped injury.
“It scared me more than anything because I had that labrum tear in ’22,” Jung said. “I hadn’t had any pain or weird sensation in that area in a while. So it freaked me out a little bit. I think it’s more precautionary. All the tests are negative, so I think I’m all right.”
Gore was removed from his most recent start Monday after one inning at Colorado due to left lat tightness, but an MRI of the area came back negative. He had allowed one run on three hits in eight innings in his previous start, a 7-4 victory over Arizona on May 12.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Nationals aim to clinch road series against Braves
Washington Nationals pitcher Foster Griffin (22) is visited at the mound before being relieved in the fifth inning of the MLB National League game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Washington Nationals at Great American Ball Park in downtown Cincinnati on Thursday, May 14, 2026. The Reds led 2-0 after three innings. The Reds won 15-1. The Washington Nationals have an opportunity to become the first team to clinch a road series this season against the Atlanta Braves on Sunday afternoon in the finale of the three-game set.
Washington evened the weekend series on Saturday in an atypical way for the upstart club. The Nationals, who lead baseball in scoring (286 runs) but also own the second-worst ERA in the National League (4.87), allowed just one hit in a 2-0 win over Atlanta 2-0.
As Washington looks to climb back to .500, taking two of three from the Braves will be no easy task.
Left-hander Foster Griffin (5-2, 4.02 ERA) will be eager to turn around a rough pair of starts for Washington. After yielding just one earned run across 20 innings in three previous starts, Griffin has allowed 14 earned runs in his last two outings.
Despite giving up five runs in five innings to the New York Mets on Tuesday, Griffin earned the win as the Nationals posted a 9-6 victory.
“I talked to him for a while after the start and just kept telling him how great of a job he did,” Washington manager Blake Butera said of Griffin’s last appearance. “Obviously he would’ve liked to have less runs up on the board, but he grinded through that one. The fact that he was able to get us through five and keep it where it was, that was huge.”
Griffin, a former first-round pick in 2014 by the Kansas City Royals, signed a one-year, $5.5 million deal with Washington in December after spending the last three years playing in Japan. He had seven career games with the Royals and Toronto Blue Jays in 2020 and 2022.
Griffin faced Atlanta for the first time on April 21, tossing six innings of three-run, five-hit ball in an 11-4 win.
The Braves suffered just their fourth shutout of the year on Saturday, but their third in the last 10 games. Atlanta’s pitching staff, however, has remained a constant. The Braves lead the majors with a 3.06 mark.
Veteran Martin Perez (2-2, 2.85 ERA) will make his 11th appearance (seventh start) of the season for Atlanta in the series finale. Perez, 35, tossed five innings in a no-decision against the Miami Marlins on Tuesday, allowing four runs on five hits, while striking out a career-high 10 batters. The Braves won 8-4.
Perez, a starter for most of his 15-year major league career, has filled in any role the team has asked of him.
“He’s been a great pro,” Braves manager Walt Weiss said. “I told him that he’s got a punch card from my office, because I’m always calling him in and telling him we’re changing roles with him. Going to and from the bullpen, into the rotation, sometimes late notice based on our needs. He’s done it with a smile and has been really valuable for us. What a pro.”
Perez is 1-2 with a 6.20 ERA in six career appearances (four starts) against the Nationals.
-Field Level Media
