Today’s Best MLB Home Run Prop Bets: Top 5 including Shohei Ohtani, Pete Alonso, and more for March 26, 2026 – Sportskeeda
Today’s Best MLB Home Run Prop Bets: Top 5 including Shohei Ohtani, Pete Alonso, and more for March 26, 2026 Sportskeeda

Today’s Best MLB Home Run Prop Bets: Top 5 including Shohei Ohtani, Pete Alonso, and more for March 26, 2026 Sportskeeda

MLB Opening Day is officially here. As the Los Angeles Dodgers chase a three-peat, which teams are best-positioned to stop them? The latest MLB Power Rankings can answer that.

Plus: Watch a softball pitcher take a line drive off the face.


Offseason/winter recap. Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina “Manny” Machado gifted her Nobel Peace Prize to President Trump before Venezuela upset Team USA at the World Baseball Classic. Everyone but Stitches was named in the Epstein files. “The Bachelorette” was canceled but chair-throwing Taylor Frankie Paul is a shoo-in to win the Bobby Knight Memorial Award....

It all starts again Thursday night. Coming off back-to-back World Series championships, the Dodgers will begin the trek toward a historic three-peat when they host the Arizona Diamondbacks for a prime-time Opening Day showdown at Dodger Stadium. After five long months, baseball will finally be back at Chavez Ravine. And this new season will come...

This Anthem performance will never be topped.

Aaron Judge pinpoints 3 key difference-makers for Yankees’ 2026 World Series push Sportskeeda

New York Yankees starting third baseman Ryan McMahon got a concerning update on his future with the team after Opening Day. The post Ryan McMahon Gets Concerning Update on Yankees Future After Opening Day appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Opening Day is built on statements. For the New York Yankees, that statement came from Max Fried.Fried delivered 6 1/3 scoreless innings to open the season, leading the Yankees to a win while placing himself in rare territory. He became the first Yankees pitcher since David Cone in 1996 to reach that mark on Opening […] The post Max Fried Makes Opening Day History for Yankees, Joins Elite Company appeared first on Heavy Sports.

The Houston Astros begin the 2026 season on Thursday afternoon at home against the Los Angeles Angels. It is going to be a different-looking Astros team than the one that ended the 2025 season missing the playoffs.Gone is left-hander pitcher Framber Valdez, signing with the Detroit Tigers in free agency. General manager Dana Brown traded […] The post Houston Astros Predicted To Trade All-Star Infielder Early in 2026 Season appeared first on Heavy Sports.

A historic baseball moment will forever be remembered for being overshadowed by an in-game manager interview.

Barry Bonds joined the Netflix broadcast during the New York Yankees' 7-0 win over the San Francisco Giants on Wednesday night and shared a story that would have completely shifted the landscape of not only his career, but Major League Baseball as a whole.After spending the first seven seasons of his career with the Pittsburgh Pirates, Bonds became a free agent in 1992. Fresh off a career season at the plate, hitting 34 home runs and posting a batting average of .311, teams around the league battled for his signature. Bonds ultimately signed a six-year deal worth just under $44 million to join the Giants and stayed in San Francisco for the remainder of his career, but as he explained it, that almost wasn't the case, he was extremely close to becoming a Bronx Bomber.George isn't here anymore, so I can tell the truth, right?" Bonds began. "I would've been with the Yankees, but Steinbrenner got on the phone and called us and told me, 'Barry, we're going to give you the money — the highest-paid player at that time — but you got to sign the contract by 2 o'clock this afternoon. And I said, 'Excuse me?!' And I just hung the phone up.""And I went to go get lunch, and Dennis Gilbert, my agent, they were like, 'Do you know what you just did?!' I'm like, 'Did you know what he just said?!'" Bonds continued. "I just said, 'Forget it.' By the time I walked down the street to go get lunch, I said, 'Let me just think about this.' The Giants called me, and I said, 'I'm going home.'"Bonds' mention of the 2 o'clock deadline is new information. The Times reported in ‘92 that the Yankees had given Bonds two days to accept the offer, which still could have been the case and Steinbrenner wanted an answer by 2 o'clock on that second day, but the report also suggested the sixth year on the contract was a major sticking point as well.New York went on to win the World Series in 1996 and then went on a three-year run from 1998 to 2000 after missing out on Bonds, who was a 12-time All-Star with the Giants, a two-time National League batting champion, and hit 586 of his 762 career home runs, the most ever, while in San Francisco.Bonds, who retired in 2007, never won a World Series.

The New York Yankees got their 2026 season off to a strong start, but some concerns may arise as the season progresses. The post Yankees Look Like Contenders in Season Opening Win appeared first on Heavy Sports.

The Pirates want to make the playoffs this year, and the Mets are essentially World Series or bust. Both of them start their march to their goals here.

It's MLB Opening Day and there are still plenty of high-profile trade candidates in need of a new home. Bleacher Report offered up seven hypothetical swaps.

Opening Day 2026 features a must-watch pitching duel as Tarik Skubal leads the Detroit Tigers against Nick Pivetta and the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Here’s a full breakdown of the matchup.

The Fanatics Sportsbook promo code NYPOST can be used to bet $5, get $200 in FanCash instantly on Mets vs. Pirates on Thursday.

The winterlong celebration is over. Opening Day is finally here.

Two years ago, about a week before Yoshinobu Yamamoto made his MLB debut, a number of players and coaches from the Orix Buffaloes offered me scouting reports about their former ace.

The Houston Astros are looking to sign two of their top young players to long-term contract extensions.

The New York Post believes Trent Grisham will be a disappointment this season.

Here is a look at the key new Mets and a superlative that fits each going into Opening Day against the Pirates at Citi Field.

Major League Baseball's new-look "Opening Night" has come and gone. The Yankees throttled the Giants, 7-0. Aaron Judge struck out four times. Max Fried was unhittable. Tony Vitello probably misses Knoxville at the moment. You know, usual opening night stuff for MLB. The big story around Wednesday, though? Netflix. This was the streaming giant's foray into baseball, and buddy, it was a rocky little ride. Now, that's to be expected. There were always going to be bumps in the road, and there were several here. Elle Duncan was insufferable and didn't know what home plate was. Seems like a problem for an MLB pregame show. I'm not quite sure what the point of Jameis Winston was. The scorebug was for folks with 20/20 vision only, and even then, it was a stretch. The interview with Rob Manfred was pathetic. Lauren Shehadi was, frankly, the only good part of the broadcast because she's a pro, and she's a star for obvious reasons. Otherwise? It was tough. But all of that pales in comparison to what Netflix did – or, better yet, missed – in the fourth inning. For the first time in MLB history, ABS was used. Unfortunately, we'll never get to see it:Goodness gracious. What a miss by Netflix here. What an absolute swing and a miss. HOW does the producer not switch to the scoreboard here? There are a billion camera operators in this production, and you're telling me NONE of them were dialed in on the scoreboard?We've talked about this ABS system for years now. Years. We just spent all spring training watching clips of it. People bitched and moaned all throughout the World Baseball Classic because it wasn't in use. And then, on Opening Night, we finally get a challenge in the fourth inning. The first EVER ball/strike challenge in MLB history … and Netflix missed the entire thing because they were interviewing Tony Vitello in the dugout. Amazing. It's not like it all happened too quick, either. It didn't. The batter had to tap his helmet. The umpire had to call timeout. He had to announce it to the crowd (dumb). They all had to stare at the scoreboard and wait a few seconds. Netflix had plenty of time to switch over and, at the very least, show us the review. But they just … missed the entire thing! The whole sequence. Gone. Poof. Never happened. They never showed the actual pitch, or the actual ABS in use. They only briefly showed the batter and umpire staring at a screen that WE COULDN'T SEE! Oh well. What's done is done. We don't have to deal with Netflix again until the Home Run Derby. I assume they will have the kinks worked out by then. Thank God they've got four months, too, because they're gonna need all the time they can get.
