Sports
Athletics RHP Luis Severino headed for tests on sore arm
May 29, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Athletics pitcher Luis Severino (40) follows through on a pitch against the New York Yankees in the first inning at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images Right-hander Luis Severino exited the Athletics’ Friday game against the New York Yankees in West Sacramento, Calif., due to right arm soreness, and he will undergo tests on Saturday.
Severino, 32, was warming up for the start of the second inning when he suddenly walked to the back of the mound and looked toward the dugout, prompting catcher Shea Langeliers to signal to the dugout. Severino left the game following a brief discussion with a trainer and manager Mark Kotsay.
He was replaced by left-hander Jose Suarez.
After the Athletics’ 8-2 loss, Severino said he had felt shoulder tightness since facing the Los Angeles Angels on May 21, when he struck out a season-high 10 without issuing a walk in seven innings.
“I felt something during my start against the Angels, but this time it got worse with every pitch I threw,” Severino said.
Asked if he might miss next scheduled start, Severino replied, “The biggest (worry) is finding something that keeps me out a long time. We’ll see what the tests say. If the worst-case scenario is I miss one or two starts, I’m happy with that.”
Severino was initially scheduled to start against the Seattle Mariners on Tuesday, but his start was pushed back. The initial reasoning was that the A’s wanted left-handers to start against the Mariners.
Kotsay said after the Friday game, “On Tuesday when he threw his side (session). I was there for it, everything looked great and he said felt good. Wednesday felt good.
“Obviously, when you ramp it up and you go into competition, you just don’t know how it’s going to respond. After the first inning, when he went out to warm up, he felt like it was still tight and couldn’t get loose and we made a decision to shut him down.”
Severino gave up four runs — all unearned — in the first inning due to a throwing error by first baseman Nick Kurtz. Aaron Judge had an RBI single, and Paul Goldschmidt drilled a three-run homer. New York led the rest of the way, so Severino was tagged with the loss.
Severino pitched for the Yankees from 2015-23, and the right-hander had been treated rudely by his former teammates entering Friday, compiling an 0-2 record and a 10.66 ERA in three starts. He is in his second season with the Athletics after spending 2024 with the New York Mets.
Through 12 starts this year, Severino is 2-6 with a 4.16 ERA.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Behind Jeremy Pena, Astros chase series win vs. Brewers
May 30, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Astros shortstop Jeremy Pena (3) runs to first base on a single during the fifth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images Houston shortstop Jeremy Pena routinely is lauded for his production and personality, and the Astros missed both while he spent 33 games on the injured list earlier this season because of a hamstring strain.
With Pena back in the lineup, the Astros are reaping dividends. Pena finished 3-for-5 with three runs and two RBIs in the Astros’ 9-2 victory over the visiting Milwaukee Brewers on Saturday, a win that knotted this three-game interleague series heading into the finale on Sunday afternoon.
Pena homered for the first time at home this season and for the third time in his last four starts. Since his reinstatement from the IL on May 18, Pena is hitting .289 with 10 runs and eight RBIs.
“He kind of puts everything together,” Astros manager Joe Espada said. “He’s our leadoff hitter, he’s our quarterback on the field. Keeping him healthy is important; what he means to this team is huge.
“Having him back swinging the bat really well, hitting home runs, we can definitely use that production at the top of the lineup.”
Right-hander Tatsuya Imai (2-2, 6.17 ERA) has the starting assignment for the Astros on Sunday.
Imai worked the first six innings of a combined no-hitter against the Texas Rangers on Memorial Day, issuing four walks while logging two strikeouts. He recorded a season-high innings total and pitches (97) in his second scoreless outing of 2026.
Imai will make his first career appearance against the Brewers and his first vs. the National League.
For Milwaukee, right-hander Jacob Misiorowski (5-2, 1.83 ERA) is scheduled to start the rubber match of the series.
Misiorowski earned a 5-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals last Monday after allowing one run on two hits and one walk with 12 strikeouts in seven innings, ending his scoreless innings streak at 29 1/3, the third-longest in franchise history. He has six quality starts and leads the majors in strikeouts (100), WHIP (0.828) and hits per nine innings (4.8).
Misiorowski will face the Astros for the first time in his career. He is 3-1 with a 2.41 ERA in seven career interleague starts.
Brewers rookie right-hander Brandon Sproat recorded only 13 outs on Saturday, marking the fifth time he failed to complete at least five innings since joining the rotation on April 16, a span of eight starts.
Manager Pat Murphy expressed confidence in Sproat but acknowledged the inherent challenges of an inexperienced pitcher learning on the fly while starting for an organization harboring postseason expectations.
Sproat doesn’t have the runway to work through the issues that routinely confound young pitchers, so it might take additional opportunities for him to build the experience required to consistently work deeper into his starts.
“When you have those expectations, the manager is going to have a quicker hook,” Murphy said. “How are you going to build up that stamina if your damn manager is taking you out of the game?
“It’s not so much that when he learns to pitch, even if his stuff trails off. He’ll be able to stay out there when his stuff is a little less.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Angel Reese's 18 points, 12 rebounds carry Dream past Fire
May 29, 2026; Portland, Oregon, USA; Atlanta Dream guard Allisha Gray (15) grabs a rebound against Portland Fire center Luisa Geiselsoder (15) during the first half at Moda Center. Mandatory Credit: Jaime Valdez-Imagn Images Angel Reese had 18 points and 12 rebounds for her fourth double-double, Rhyne Howard 14 points and four 3-pointers, and the Atlanta Dream pulled away from the host Portland Fire for an 86-66 victory Friday.
Naz Hillmon had 14 points and Allisha Gray added 13 points with three 3-pointers for the Dream, who built a 54-39 lead midway through the third quarter and opened the fourth on a 15-4 run to put the game out of reach.
Sarah Ashlee Barker scored 14 points, Carla Leite had 11 points, and Megan Gustafson and Emily Engstler had 10 apiece for the expansion Fire, who had a three-game winning streak broken.
Howard made 4 of 7 treys and had six of the Dream’s 16 steals. Hillmon had five steals and Gray had three.
Atlanta scored 33 points off 28 Fire turnovers.
The Dream, who had a 29-23 rebounding advantage, have won three of four.
The Dream began rolling in the third quarter, when Howard made a 3-pointer and Reese hit two free throws to cap a 14-1 run for a 54-39 lead midway through the period.
Barker made two 3-pointers in the final two minutes of the third as the Fire closed the quarter on a 14-5 run to cut the deficit to 59-53, but the Dream scored the first nine points of the fourth quarter to regain control.
Resse had six points and five rebounds in a sluggish first quarter, when the Dream jumped to a 10-3 lead and led 16-14 entering the second. The teams were a combined 10 of 36 from the field.
Gustafson’s 3-pointer from the top of the key capped a 7-0 run to give the Fire their first lead at 21-18 with 6:15 left in the first.
Howard, who had three fouls in the first half, made two 3-pointers in the final 43 seconds of the second quarter to give the Dream a 38-31 halftime lead.
Gray had five points, including her second 3-pointer, as the Dream went on a 7-0 run to open a 47-38 lead with 6:44 left in the third quarter.
Fire forward Bridget Carleton did not play because of back soreness.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Yankees overpower Athletics for fifth consecutive win
May 29, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; New York Yankees first baseman Paul Goldschmidt (48) hits a three run home run against the Athletics in the first inning at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images Paul Goldschmidt hit a three-run homer and Ryan McMahon and Ben Rice added solo blasts as the New York Yankees rolled to an easy 8-2 victory over the Athletics on Friday in West Sacramento, Calif.
Rice had three hits and two RBIs and Aaron Judge also drove in two runs as the Yankees stretched their winning streak to five games. New York has outscored its opponents 36-6 during that stretch.
Carlos Rodon (1-2) gave up one run and four hits over six innings for New York. He struck out three and walked two.
Nick Kurtz homered for the Athletics, who have been outscored 30-6 while losing four consecutive games. Rookie Henry Bolte had a career-best three hits while making his 15th major league appearance.
Athletics starter Luis Severino (2-6) gave up four unearned runs and three hits in the first inning before exiting due to right arm soreness. The former Yankees hurler was warming up for the second inning when he indicated there was a problem and was pulled after a brief talk with a trainer.
Severino dropped to 0-3 with a 9.88 ERA in four career starts against his former teammates.
The four-run first-inning uprising was set up by a throwing error by first baseman Kurtz.
After a balk moved Rice to second, Judge delivered an RBI single. Three batters later, Goldschmidt drilled a three-run homer.
Kurtz smacked a homer to center with one out in the bottom of the first to get the A’s on the board.
New York answered in the second as Jose Caballero hit a one-out double off Jose Suarez, moved to third on Trent Grisham’s single and scored on Rice’s base hit.
With two outs in the third, McMahon homered to right-center off Joel Kuhnel to make it 6-1.
New York added a run in the fourth as Grisham hit a one-out single, advanced to third on Rice’s double and scored on Judge’s infield out.
Rice blasted a homer to center off Scott Barlow on the second pitch of the seventh inning.
The Athletics added a ninth-inning tally on Zack Gelof’s one-out RBI single.
–Field Level Media
