Star Japanese pitcher Imai posted, has until Jan. 2 to sign

November 19th, 2025

The two-man show powering one of baseball’s hottest teams

De La Cruz, Stewart have combined to produce 66% of Reds' runs in 2026

April 24th, 2026

The Cincinnati Reds are thriving with one of the most imbalanced lineups in baseball.

Although they lost to the Rays on Wednesday, snapping their five-game winning streak, the Reds entered Thursday's off-day at 16-9. They're tied with the Cubs, who are hot themselves with nine straight wins, atop the surprisingly potent National League Central.

Cincinnati certainly owes some of its success to its solid pitching staff, including MLB’s best bullpen in terms of ERA, but you need to score runs to win. And while the Reds haven’t scored a lot of runs this season, they’ve scored enough to win nearly two-thirds of their games.

For that, two Reds hitters in particular deserve much of the credit: superstar shortstop and rookie slugger , who typically bat third and fourth in Cincinnati’s order.

How important have De La Cruz and Stewart been for the Reds? This should put it in perspective. (All stats below are through Wednesday.)

Lowest OPS from lineup spots 1 and 2:

  1. Red Sox: .504
  2. Reds: .566
  3. Mets: .568

De La Cruz // Stewart (typically third and fourth)

  • De La Cruz: .879
  • Stewart: 1.004

Lowest OPS from lineup spots 5 through 9:

  1. Reds: .541
  2. Phillies: .585
  3. White Sox: .610

In short, the Reds have gotten a combined .549 OPS from the seven lineup spots not typically occupied by De La Cruz or Stewart.

To put it another way, the Reds have scored 97 runs this season, and Stewart has either scored or driven in 34% of them. De La Cruz? He's produced 32%. The two rank first and second in MLB in that regard.

Highest percentage of a team’s runs produced by a single player, 2026
Accounts for runs scored and driven in, adjusted to avoid double-counting home runs

  1. Sal Stewart: 34%
  2. Elly De La Cruz: 32%
  3. Matt Chapman: 29.6%
  4. Drake Baldwin: 29.4%
  5. Brice Turang: 28.3%

De La Cruz’s resurgence at the plate is a great sign for the Reds after his power all but evaporated for a large portion of 2025 while he played through a partial tear in his left quad.

The 25-year-old hit just four home runs over his final 83 games last season, slugging .373 in that span, but he already has eight dingers with a .549 SLG through his first 25 games of '26. His contact-quality metrics also have improved significantly from where he ended up in ’25.

Elly De La Cruz's Statcast percentile rankings, 2025 vs. '26
Elly De La Cruz's Statcast percentile rankings, 2025 vs. '26

De La Cruz hasn’t missed a game yet, either, extending his streak to 243 consecutive games played.

Stewart, meanwhile, has picked up where he left off in his brief debut last season. The 22-year-old ranks among the MLB leaders in homers (eight), RBIs (24), SLG (.615) and OPS (1.004) this year, continuing to barrel the ball at an elite rate like he did in the final month of 2025.

No MLB team has relied more on any two hitters than the Reds have on De La Cruz and Stewart for run production. Not even close.

The Giants’ Matt Chapman and Heliot Ramos are the next closest pair of teammates on the list, accounting for 54.3% of San Francisco’s runs this year.

Highest percentage of a team’s runs produced by a duo, 2026
Accounts for runs scored and driven in, adjusted to avoid double-counting home runs

  1. Reds: Sal Stewart and Elly De La Cruz, 66%
  2. Giants: Matt Chapman and Heliot Ramos, 54.3%
  3. Braves: Drake Baldwin and Matt Olson, 53.9%
  4. White Sox: Munetaka Murakami and Miguel Vargas: 53%
  5. Tigers: Riley Greene and Kevin McGonigle, 52.3%

In terms of OPS, the Reds' third-best hitter this season has been center fielder (.750), who has started all of five games while tallying 38 plate appearances. Among regulars, it's first baseman/left fielder (.732).

Ultimately, the Reds are likely going to need to get more production from the rest of their lineup to win their first division crown since 2012. But until someone else starts to heat up, De La Cruz and Stewart will have to keep picking up the slack.

Did you like this story?

Thomas Harrigan is a reporter for MLB.com.

Fielding a full team of feel-good stories from this season so far

April 24th, 2026

In many places on many days in March and April, the conditions, to paraphrase W.C. Fields, ain’t fit for man nor beast nor baseball.

And yet early storylines always emerge that make us feel warm and fuzzy, regardless of whether the sun cooperates.

You could actually field a full team of feel-good stories in 2026, so let’s do that here.

Catcher: Austin Hedges, Guardians

How good of a defensive catcher and clubhouse presence is Hedges? So good that, even as he hit a combined .185 in his first 11 seasons, teams kept giving him money and playing time.

So it’s been fun to watch Hedges have a meaningful breakthrough with the bat. His average (81 points) and on-base percentage (58 points) are both well above his norm. It doesn’t seem a coincidence that the Guardians are 9-0 when Hedges starts and 5-12 when he doesn’t. And he even got engaged on the field after a recent win! A fun start for a tremendous pro.

First base: Munetaka Murakami, White Sox

The prevailing media opinion going into the offseason was that Murakami, the all-time single-season home run leader for a Japanese-born player in Nippon Professional Baseball, could command a nine-figure contract in his move to MLB. He wound up signing a two-year, $34 million deal with a White Sox team coming off 102 losses. Not exactly high profile.

There were big concerns about Murakami’s swing-and-miss issues, and those issues are real. But so is his power. After tying the MLB rookie record with a homer in five straight games, Murakami has 10 on the season. While the 30.8% strikeout rate could catch up with him before long, it hasn’t so far. The guy referred to as a baseball “god” in Japan has been an early-season sensation for a South Side squad that’s become much more watchable.

Second base: Nico Hoerner, Cubs

There was a lot of trade buzz surrounding Hoerner in the offseason after the Cubs signed Alex Bregman. With Hoerner a season away from free agency and the infield newly crowded, it made sense to at least field calls.

Instead, the Cubs wound up extending Hoerner to the tune of $141 million over six years. That was a big commitment to a player whose biggest assets were a dynamic glove, a steady-but-not-spectacular bat and an emerging leadership presence behind the scenes. But now, the respected Hoerner is turning heads with his power: He’s already hit four homers, just three shy of his 2025 total.

Shortstop: Otto Lopez, Marlins

Prior to moving to Montreal as a child when his father got a teaching job there, Lopez’s only baseball experience had come on the streets in his native Dominican Republic, using an empty water cup as a ball. But he played organized ball for the first time in Canada, returned to his native D.R. for a year as a teenager to train further and wound up getting signed by the Blue Jays.

Alas, Lopez was put through the professional wringer from there. Both the Blue Jays and Giants designated him for assignment before the Marlins picked him up on waivers two years ago. He played for the Fish each of the past two years, but his offensive numbers didn’t jump off the page until now. With a .315/.366/.511 slash to go with his terrific range and speed, Lopez looks like a keeper.

Third base: Max Muncy, Dodgers AND Max Muncy, A’s

Just prior to the season, we ran my annual (inaccurate) guesses on the top 10 lineups in MLB (please ignore most of that, especially the Mets), and a reader e-mailed to inform me I had mistakenly listed Max Muncy on the A’s. When I wrote back to tell him that there are, indeed, two third basemen in MLB named Max Muncy, it felt like I was laying out some kind of weird conspiracy theory.

But no, it’s true. Two guys named Max Muncy, at third base and in the state of California … and they even have the same birthday (Aug. 25, 12 years apart). It’s a great sport, isn’t it, folks? And in 2026, this has morphed from fun fact to fruitful one. Because the younger Max Muncy (the A’s one) has two triples among his nine extra-base hits, emerging as a productive player. Kinda like Max Muncy!

Left field: Austin Martin, Twins

Much more was expected of Martin than we had seen entering 2026. His elite contact, as well as his power, speed and instinctive baserunning, made him a premier Draft prospect at Vanderbilt, and his college coach Tim Corbin compared him to Michael Jordan in terms of his cutthroat competitive disposition. The Blue Jays took him fifth overall, only for Martin to put up tepid offensive numbers in five Minor League seasons and ultimately get pigeonholed as a platoon player in the bigs.

A different Martin is emerging early on in his age-27 season. Though he continues to primarily play against lefties, he’s making a case for a more pronounced role with a team-best .311 average and .492 on-base percentage.

Center field: Mike Trout, Angels

Just typing “CF” next to Trout’s name felt good. And it’s felt doubly good watching him look like Mike Trout. In his prime, Trout’s greatness was methodical, not extravagant. He never had one of those Aaron Judge seasons that knock you over the head. Never topped 45 homers or 111 RBIs. Often led the league in rate stats and WAR but rarely counting stats aside from runs. His superpower was the orderly nature of his impact in every facet of the game.

Then Trout started getting hurt a lot, and a new generation of baseball fans could be forgiven if they didn’t understand what all the fuss was about. But now, in Trout’s age-34 season, they’re getting a true taste of what we loved about Trout. He’s ripping extra-base hits, swiping bags, playing center and, yes, leading the AL in runs (25) as I type this. You were missed, Mike.

Right field: Jordan Walker, Cardinals

It would be nice if player development timelines perfectly aligned with our expectations, but baseball doesn’t really work that way. It sure didn’t work that way for Walker, who in 2023 was listed by MLB Pipeline and many others as a top-five prospect in all of MLB. Our prescription at the time was that Walker “should hit enough to feature anywhere [in the lineup] and might not need much more offensive seasoning in the Minors.”

Unfortunately, Walker proceeded to post a .680 OPS in his first 1,039 plate appearances across three seasons and did, in fact, require more seasoning … as well as an overhaul of his swing mechanics. And now we’re seeing a more disciplined hitter whose .292/.357/.607 slash and eight homers have been a big bright spot. Walker turns 24 next month. Turns out, he’s right on time.

Designated hitter: Yordan Alvarez, Astros

Since his 2019 arrival, Alvarez’s offensive production, as measured by OPS+, is second in MLB only to Aaron Judge (166 vs. 186). But persistent and various injury issues limited Alvarez to two games in the shortened 2020 season, 114 in 2023 and just 48 last year. In limited time in 2025, Alvarez was not the dynamic offensive force he had been, and that’s understandable given that he was navigating a power-sapping injury to his hand.

Any doubts that Alvarez could return to an elite level have been quickly and convincingly erased here in 2026. The bat speed, discipline and pure power that made him one of the Astros’ great scouting success stories are all back with a vengeance, and he enters the weekend with an MLB-best 11 homers and 1.245 OPS.

Utility: Ildemaro Vargas, Diamondbacks

“Journeyman utility player” might be the least sexy job description in MLB, and it applied to Vargas entering 2026. He was signed as a teenager in Venezuela by the Cardinals and spent seven years in their Minor League system before latching on with the Bridgeport Bluefish in indy ball. The D-backs signed him out of the Atlantic League in 2015 and he bounced around with various teams, getting part-time big league opportunities.

Finally, here at age 34 and back with the D-backs, a breakout. A big one. Vargas had a two-homer game this week and enters Friday with an out-of-nowhere .357/.375/.671 slash in 18 games.

Starting pitcher: José Soriano, Angels

It’s no secret the Angels have struggled to develop or otherwise acquire premier pitching. So watching it emerge virtually out of the blue in the form of Soriano has been a blast.

Soriano was an accomplished arm coming into this year, having logged an ERA+ that was 9% better than league average over his first 91 career appearances. And you didn’t have to squint too hard at his fastball to know it was potentially special.

But no one saw this coming. Soriano is six starts into his season and has given up just one run. His 0.24 ERA is the lowest in a pitcher's first six starts of a season since earned runs became official in both leagues (1913). The late bloom of this two-time Tommy John recipient has been breathtaking.

Relief pitcher: Louis Varland, Blue Jays

We could salute the absurd Mason Miller here, but we already knew he was an elite closer with an amazing back story (a Division III product) coming into 2026.

Instead, let’s highlight Varland, for the simple fact that he and his arm are both still intact after a 2025 postseason in which he set a record with 15 appearances, totaling 16 innings. It looked like the Blue Jays were running their midseason trade acquisition into the ground in pursuit of a title, but Varland has hit the ground running this year with 13 innings without allowing an earned run across 12 appearances, 19 strikeouts and only three walks.

Apparently, despite all the wear and tear of October, Varland still feels good. And that makes us feel good.

Did you like this story?

Anthony Castrovince has been a reporter for MLB.com since 2004.

What should the Yankees do with Spencer Jones?

April 24th, 2026

The Yankees already have one 6-foot-7 outfielder who was a buzzy college product with big power and surprising athleticism. Is there room for another?

The comparisons to Aaron Judge started as soon as the Yankees selected out of Vanderbilt with the 25th pick in the 2022 MLB Draft. And the gifted-yet-flawed prospect has been an intriguing-yet-divisive name that pops up regularly in Yankees circles, especially among the fanbase.

There was the prodigious performance in 2025, when Jones hit 35 homers -- second most in the Minor Leagues -- and stole 29 bases with a .932 OPS across Double-A and Triple-A.

And of course, there was the impressive Spring Training when he led all Yankees with six dingers, posted a 1.526 OPS and showed off the Shohei Ohtani-like swing similarities that caused quite a stir.

Now the No. 6 prospect in the Yankees’ system, Jones is off to a solid -- if not quite as loud as hoped -- start this year back at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Through Thursday, he’s slashing .231/.351/.500 with 16 runs, five homers and 24 RBIs in 22 games.

On the flip side to all of that, though, is Jones’ bugaboo: strikeouts. He racked up a whopping 200 in 124 games in 2024, another 179 in 116 games a year ago and has 35 so far this season. And that’s in the Minor Leagues, where pitching isn’t as precise and overwhelming as it can be in the Majors.

When it comes to Jones, his eye-popping tools are hard to miss, but he also comes with quite a bit of swing-and-miss. So … what should the Yankees do with Spencer Jones?

Bring him up already!

Let’s see what Jones can do in The Show. The likelihood is that, at the very least, his elite power will play at the big league level, so give him a chance to get his feet wet.

Think: A platoon/backup/pinch-hitter role where the lefty-swinging Jones could start showing what he’s capable of, even if it’s only a few games a week. Plus, that would allow the Yankees to deploy him strategically, in favorable matchups against right-handed starters or relievers.

Thing is, the Yankees’ decision-makers have said they don’t want to promote Jones without an avenue to regular at-bats. Admittedly, that’s tough when three spots where he could see playing time -- right field, left field and DH -- are occupied by three of the highest-paid Yankees in Aaron Judge, Cody Bellinger and Giancarlo Stanton, respectively.

“He's currently blocked with us,” general manager Brian Cashman said of Jones in February, shortly after the Yankees re-signed Bellinger.

That said, could Jones play center field -- his primary position as a pro -- to spell Trent Grisham from time to time? Possibly, although that likely would give back something on defense. Barring an injury, the most likely potential role would have Jones seeing some time in center, filling in at the outfield corners and/or providing a platoon partner for Stanton against tough righties.

That wouldn't make Jones a regular starter necessarily, but it would be an opportunity nonetheless.

Let him keep working on his game at Triple-A

Fact of the matter is, Jones -- despite turning 25 in less than a month -- has not yet played 90 games for Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. And there clearly are aspects of his game and his offensive approach that could get better by repetition and focus at Triple-A.

“There’s still improvements that he needs to make in his game,” manager Aaron Boone said when discussing Jones during the spring. “And the good thing is, he’s done that. He’s shown that. He had a really good platform year at the upper levels last year. I feel like he’s continued to make adjustments this winter.”

That may be so, but the proof is playing out now that Jones is at the Minors’ highest level, where Statcast tracking is available to provide context on his ability -- or inability -- to make consistent contact.

To that end, Jones’ 23.8% whiff rate this year is the highest among all Triple-A hitters (minimum 20 plate appearances). He also is continuing to chase pitches out of the zone 19.5% of the time, which ranks among the 25 highest rates.

If he can make adjustments and enhancements in his plate discipline to go with what is one of Triple-A’s highest average exit velocities at 94.6 mph, it would go a long way toward Jones forcing the Yankees to bring him up in a capacity that could lead to something close to regular at-bats.

Trade him for a 2026 need

For such a strong start this season at 16-9 and riding a six-game winning streak, the Yankees have areas that could use bolstering. Two spots they almost certainly will look to address by the Trade Deadline are third base, where Ryan McMahon is sporting a sub-.500 OPS, and the bullpen, which lacks depth, consistency and proven arms with big stuff outside of closer David Bednar.

Jones is no stranger to trade rumors, and past reports have indicated the Yankees’ hesitancy to move him because of his potential. That’s understandable … to an extent.

Because don’t forget, the organization has been down this road very recently with another uber-hyped phenom. That’s right: We’ve made it this far into a story about Jones wedging into the Yankees’ outfield situation without yet mentioning Jasson Domínguez.

“The Martian” was supposed to be the Next Big Thing in the Bronx, and it sure looked like that was going to be the case when the switch-hitting outfielder put on a show in his September 2023 debut season at age 20.

Alas, Tommy John surgery soon followed, and it took Domínguez most of 2024 to make it back to the Yankees. After an underwhelming 2025, in which he hit .257/.331/.388 and then barely played in the postseason, Domínguez was sent down at the end of Spring Training. In fact, he’s probably more likely than Jones to be called up should an outfield need arise.

Given all of the above, perhaps the best course of action for the Yankees might be to keep Jones at Triple-A -- in the same outfield as Domínguez -- and hope he gets hot leading up to the Trade Deadline, like he did last summer. If an outfield spot does open up the Bronx, it could be Jones’ turn.

Otherwise, if he remains with the RailRiders, each long homer and high-exit-velo base hit would serve to build buzz that the front office could capitalize on with a blockbuster to make the team better by filling a need or two. That way, the Yankees could use Spencer to keep up with the Joneses.

MLB.com’s Yankees beat reporter Bryan Hoch contributed to this story.

Did you like this story?

Jason Catania is a reporter and editor for MLB.com.

https://cdn.onesignal.com/sdks/web/v16/OneSignalSDK.sw.js