Sports
Pirates RHP Jared Jones returns after 20-month absence to face Twins
May 14, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates pitchers Jared Jones (left) and Paul Skenes (right) talk with Bubba Chandler (facing away) during the seventh inning against the Colorado Rockies at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images It will be a night of returns when the Minnesota Twins take on the host Pittsburgh Pirates to open a three-game series on Friday night.
For the Pirates, who are coming off consecutive losses and a series split with the Chicago Cubs, electric right-hander Jared Jones will make his return from right elbow internal brace surgery.
Meanwhile, Twins manager Derek Shelton will make his return to Pittsburgh to face his former team and the club that fired him on May 8, 2025, after the Pirates started the season with a 12-26 record.
Jones, making his first start in the majors since Sept. 27, 2024, will oppose Twins right-hander Taj Bradley (5-1, 2.77 ERA).
Jones adds another power arm to Pittsburgh’s young rotation with his 97 mph four-seamer and a nasty slider.
The 24-year-old California native made five rehab starts in the minors, compiling a 2.89 ERA with 24 strikeouts and six walks in 18 2/3 innings.
“It definitely sucks going through surgery and missing an entire year,” Jones said. “Now that I’m here again, I’m kind of grateful for it. I felt like in my downtime I really got to learn how I can throw my other pitches and make ’em a lot better. I feel like that showed kinda throughout the rehab assignment. Really just getting a better feel of what I’ve got.”
Jones will make his second career start against Minnesota after allowing three runs (two earned) in five innings during a no-decision on June 9, 2024, in Pittsburgh.
Jones’ return will move Carmen Mlodzinski to a bullpen in a bulk/long-relief role. Mlodzinski is 4-3 with a 3.76 ERA in 55 innings this season. He has started nine times and made two relief appearances.
Shelton was in his sixth season as the Pirates’ manager last season when he was fired, and Pittsburgh did not have a winning season during his tenure. Shelton was hired last October by the Twins, the team for which he was the bench coach in 2018 and ’19.
Shelton had positive things to say about the Pirates, ace Paul Skenes and rookie shortstop Konnor Griffin when Minnesota played Pittsburgh during spring training in late February, and he was reflective about his time with the Pirates this week.
“I do think that one of the things that came out of last year was I thought I got away from the attention to detail, what I thought was the attention to detail from my space,” Shelton said. “I wanted to make sure that if I ever did get the next opportunity that I would stay more on top of it and that I would build a staff that stays on top of it.”
Griffin was held out of the Pirates’ lineup on Thursday due to right forearm soreness, and Pittsburgh lost 7-2 to the Cubs.
Bradley returned Saturday from a stint on the injured list and struck out seven, walked two, and allowed one run on three hits in five innings during a win against the Boston Red Sox.
Bradley, who has never faced the Pirates, will try to flip the momentum for Minnesota. The Twins lost three of four games in a series against the host Chicago White Sox this week and have made multiple changes to their rotation due to injuries.
On Thursday, Kendry Rojas was a late scratch from his start due to what the Twins diagnosed as posterior elbow soreness in his left arm. Simeon Woods Richardson took his place and allowed five runs in 2 2/3 innings during a 6-2 loss to the White Sox.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Surging Astros secure series win over Rangers
May 28, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Houston Astros center fielder Taylor Trammell (26) slaps the hand of left fielder Zach Dezenzo (9) after scoring against the Texas Rangers during the third inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images Jeremy Pena and Isaac Paredes homered and Spencer Arrighetti tossed six strong innings as the Houston Astros clinched a series win with a 5-1 win over the Texas Rangers on Thursday in Arlington, Texas.
Arrighetti (7-1) allowed one run on three hits with one walk and three strikeouts for Houston, which took three of four from Texas and has won six of its last seven games.
The Astros needed just three batters to claim a 3-0 lead in the first inning. Pena opened the game by depositing a 2-1 splitter from Nathan Eovaldi (5-6) over the left field wall for his second homer of the season.
After Yordan Alvarez walked, Paredes followed with a two-run shot to left field, his sixth homer.
Alvarez went 0-for-3 after hitting five home runs in his previous three games.
Josh Jung hit a solo homer for Texas, which was held to four hits and has lost six of its past seven to fall a season-worst six games under .500.
Astros right fielder Cam Smith had two hits and turned in the defensive play of the game in the bottom of the first, leaping high at the wall to rob Brandon Nimmo of a solo homer.
Texas got on the board in the second inning on Jung’s leadoff homer to left-center field. The 424-foot shot was Jung’s sixth this season.
Houston added to its lead with two runs in the third inning. Paredes drew a two-out walk, moved to second on a wild pitch and scored on Taylor Trammell’s double. Smith followed with an RBI single to center.
Eovaldi yielded five runs on four hits over seven innings. He walked two and struck out six.
The Rangers were unable to mount a comeback against Arrighetti, who won his third straight outing and lowered his ERA to 1.34 after eight starts.
Nate Pearson, Steven Okert, Enyel De Los Santos and Bryan Abreu followed Arrighetti with a combined three scoreless innings.
Houston won despite being held to two hits over the final six innings. Eovaldi retired the final 10 batters he faced after allowing Smith’s RBI single in the third.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Guardians riding hot rookies as Red Sox come to town
May 24, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Cleveland Guardians second baseman Travis Bazzana (37) watches his home run against the Philadelphia Phillies during the eighth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images Since the Cleveland Guardians have been looking down at the rest of the American League Central for the majority of the season, it’s not a huge surprise that they haven’t yet been swept in a series.
After avoiding that fate once again against the Washington Nationals on Wednesday afternoon, Cleveland — which holds a three-game lead atop its division — shifts its focus to a weekend visit from the Boston Red Sox. The teams open their three-game series on Friday night.
Rookies Travis Bazzana and Chase DeLauter powered the go-ahead, three-run fifth inning that propelled the Guardians to a 3-2 win in the series finale against Washington. Both had 2-for-4 nights, with Bazzana cracking two doubles and scoring a run.
“They’re confident,” Cleveland manager Stephen Vogt said of the organization’s top two prospects entering the season. “They know they belong in the big leagues.”
Bazzana is hitting a team-best .302 and carries a five-game hit streak into the new series.
“Whether he’s swinging it hot or not, you can’t tell,” DeLauter said of the Australian-born Bazzana. “He shows up every day, has competitive at-bats, works the box. He doesn’t swing at balls, hits the strikes hard. What more can you ask for?”
The Guardians’ scheduled Friday starter, Slade Cecconi (3-5, 5.18 ERA), allowed three runs in five innings last Saturday against the Philadelphia Phillies, taking his first loss in five May outings.
Cecconi had given up just four runs over his previous three outings (16 2/3 innings), including a 7 1/3-inning outing to beat the host Detroit Tigers on May 18.
In his only previous start against the Red Sox, Cecconi was touched up for seven runs on 11 hits in 5 1/3 innings on Sept. 2, 2025.
The Red Sox had a chance at a marquee series win before hitting the road, but the recent loss of reliever Garrett Whitlock quickly doomed them as the major-league-leading Atlanta Braves scored the final eight runs and cruised to a 10-2 Thursday win in Boston.
“If you said before the game that we’d get (Chris Sale) out of there after five and it’s 2-2, you’d be feeling pretty good about that,” interim Boston manager Chad Tracy said. “Then, obviously, it just got away from us.”
Starter Payton Tolle (4 2/3 innings) and reliever Tyron Guerrero got Boston through the fifth. Then, four different relievers allowed runs en route to the blowout defeat.
Whitlock was placed on the injured list with left knee inflammation before Thursday’s game, a day after receiving a pain-killing injection. He had not pitched since Sunday, when he hyperextended his knee while warming up in muddy conditions.
Boston is now 9-19 at home and 14-13 on the road.
One silver lining? Before Thursday, the first four losses on the recently completed six-game homestand against the Minnesota Twins and Atlanta were decided by two runs or fewer.
“I think there was a lot of good in this homestand, but obviously, at the end of the day, it’s wins and losses. That’s what matters,” Red Sox third baseman Caleb Durbin said.
Tracy is expected to use left-hander Tyler Samaniego (0-2, 1.04) — who was recalled from Triple-A Worcester to replace Whitlock — as an opener ahead of Brayan Bello (2-5, 6.43) on Friday. It will be the 27-year-old rookie’s first start in the majors.
Bello is 1-0 with a 0.98 ERA in 18 1/3 innings (three appearances) as a bulk reliever. By comparison, he is 1-5 with a 9.68 ERA in 30 2/3 frames across seven starts.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Spurs dominate Thunder to force Game 7
May 28, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Dylan Harper (2) dribbles the ball past Oklahoma City Thunder guard Cason Wallace (22) in the first half during game six of the western conference finals for the 2026 NBA playoffs at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Dustin Safranek-Imagn Images Victor Wembanyama scored 28 points with 10 rebounds to lift the San Antonio Spurs to a 118-91 home win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals.
The teams will play one last time in Game 7 on Saturday in Oklahoma City.
After the Thunder’s 127-114 win in Game 5 on Tuesday, when Wembanyama had 20 points and six rebounds, Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said his team needed more from its superstar.
It didn’t take long for Wembanyama to show a difference from Game 5, with two 3-pointers and a block in the game’s first 90 seconds as San Antonio jumped in front early and never trailed.
The Spurs led by 15 early in the second quarter but the Thunder closed the deficit to five just before halftime before going into the break trailing by seven.
San Antonio ratcheted up its defense late in the third and put together a 20-0 run to put the game away by the end of the third quarter.
The Thunder missed 14 consecutive shots, going nearly eight minutes between points.
Oklahoma City scored just 13 third-quarter points, its fewest in a quarter this season.
With the game out of reach after three quarters, Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault sat Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Chet Holmgren in the fourth quarter.
Gilgeous-Alexander finished with just a team-high 15 points on 6-of-18 shooting. It was Gilgeous-Alexander’s lowest-scoring output since he scored 14 in Game 3 of last season’s Western Conference finals against Minnesota.
Dylan Harper scored 18 points off the bench for San Antonio while Stephon Castle added 17 points and nine assists with just one turnover.
While the Thunder’s bench has dominated the Spurs’ for much of the series, San Antonio’s reserves outscored Oklahoma City’s 46-38 in Game 6.
The Spurs got going early with a barrage from beyond the arc.
San Antonio hit eight first-quarter 3-pointers, three from Wembanyama.
The Thunder were just 1 of 6 from beyond the arc in the first.
Oklahoma City’s Jalen Williams returned after missing the last three games with a hamstring strain, but played just 10 minutes, coming off the bench for the first time since Dec. 10, 2022, during his rookie season. Williams scored one point.
–Field Level Media
