Mariners’ Logan Gilbert catches 108 mph liner with his jersey — here’s why it was a ruled a hit
Logan Gilbert is probably thanking his lucky stars he's OK after a 108 mph screamer came right at him on the mound.

Logan Gilbert is probably thanking his lucky stars he's OK after a 108 mph screamer came right at him on the mound.

The Detroit Tigers are taking on the Milwaukee Brewers in a three-game series, and before game two of the series, they have made a roster move with a 36-year-old MLB player. Per multiple reports, the Tigers have selected the contract of Burch Smith and optioned Emmanuel De Jesus. Smith last pitched in MLB in 2024 […] The post Detroit Tigers Announce Roster Decision on 36-Year-Old MLB Player Before Brewers Game appeared first on Heavy Sports.

The hottest pitcher in Major League Baseball right now is right-handed starter Jose Soriano of the Los Angeles Angels. The man is literally unhittable at the moment, and across six starts to begin 2026, Soriano has allowed just one run. In fact, he’s been so dominant that we have not seen anyone do what he […] The post Angels’ José Soriano makes MLB history not seen since 1900 appeared first on ClutchPoints.

With multiple starters sidelined, San Diego lands Giolito on a low-cost deal packed with incentives.

The Blue Jays are reportedly facing a major decision, with rumors linking an All-Star pitcher to a possible exit.

San Francisco Giants trade pitch sends Cy Young winner to California rival for average return sportingnews.com

Mets' Nolan McLean basically told Byron Buxton what pitch was coming before a home run sportingnews.com

The Yankees’ young right-hander is pitching about as well as anyone in baseball, and it has him among some elite company less than a month in the 2026 MLB season.

The Boston Red Sox have had to wait patiently while starting pitcher Kutter Crawford has been on the mend from an injury. It now appears that Crawford is facing yet another setback. “Kutter Crawford said he felt tightness after his last outing and the MRI showed inflammation in his flexor/elbow but no structural damage. He’s […] The post Red Sox dealt troubling starting pitching injury update amid poor start appeared first on ClutchPoints.

Sonny Gray was forced to leave the Boston Red Sox’s 8-6 loss to the Detroit Tigers on Monday after suffering an apparent hamstring injury. On Tuesday, the veteran starting pitcher reportedly sounded optimistic that his stint on the IL won’t be a long one. While the 36-year-old right-hander awaits MRI results to declare the severity […] The post Red Sox’s Sonny Gray drops ‘hopeful’ label on hamstring injury appeared first on ClutchPoints.

The Los Angeles Angels acquired starting pitcher Grayson Rodriguez for outfielder Taylor Ward in a trade with the Baltimore Orioles during the offseason. Rodriguez, however, has yet to pitch for the Angels as he deals with a shoulder injury. In fact, Rodriguez has not pitched in an MLB game since ...

Blockbuster Angels trade idea sees Los Angeles land $115 million Cy Young, create powerful 1-2 punch with Jose Soriano sportingnews.com

Mets ace Freddy Peralta receives huge trade update after New York's awful start to 2026 season sportingnews.com

Blue Jays ace Kevin Gausman receives massive trade update after Toronto's brutal start to 2026 season sportingnews.com

Zack Wheeler could take the mound sooner than expected.

At this stage of his MLB career, Los Angeles Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani has proven there isn’t much he can’t do on the diamond. On Sunday, Ohtani further left his mark in the Dodgers history books. In the team’s matchup against the Colorado Rockies, the designated hitter smashed an RBI double. It extended his on-base […] The post Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani keeps climbing up franchise ranks with on-base streak appeared first on ClutchPoints.

An MLB analyst wants the New York Mets to remove a veteran starting pitcher out of their roster in order to salvage their disastrous start to the 2026 season.

Because Tyler Glasnow has never pitched more than 134 innings in a single campaign during his decade in The Show, it is easy to assume that conditions need to be optimal in order for him to succeed on the mound. Well, the Los Angeles Dodgers right-hander faced almost no trouble amid freezing conditions during Friday’s […] The post How Dodgers’ Tyler Glasnow found success despite Colorado’s freezing weather appeared first on ClutchPoints.

On Saturday, the Houston Astros continued reshaping their roster ahead of their matchup vs. the St. Louis Cardinals, designating right-hander J.P. France for assignment in a notable pitching move. The move came ahead of the second game of their three-game set. France’s status had been uncertain throughout the early part of the season. The Astros […] The post Astros designate pitcher for assignment before Cardinals game appeared first on ClutchPoints.

The Los Angeles Angels are witnessing a breakout, as Jose Soriano’s dominant play headlines a historic pitching stretch across Major League Baseball. His latest performance came during the Angels’ matchup vs. the San Diego Padres, further cementing his place in the spotlight. On Friday in Anaheim, the right-hander delivered another elite outing, leading the Angels […] The post Angels pitcher Jose Soriano rewrites history with dominant 5-start stretch appeared first on ClutchPoints.

Rookie Parker Messick is 3-0 with a 1.05 ERA and came within three outs of a no-hitter in his latest start. He possesses a six-pitch repertoire with elite command and an absurd curveball spin rate. This authoritative analysis looks at his pedigree, early 2026 starts, and underlying metrics to determine whether his breakout is legitimate greatness or small-sample luck that fantasy managers should buy low on now.


The 2023 AL Cy Young winner, who isn’t expected to rejoin the Yankees until late May or early June, hadn’t pitched in an official game since Game 5 of the 2024 World Series.

The regional aspect of modern Major League Baseball makes it easy to miss out on stories or players from across the country. The San Diego Padres might be one of the best examples of that, considering most of their games start after 9pm Eastern and finish well after midnight.So it's forgivable if some baseball fans have not followed Padres closer Mason Miller this season. But boy oh boy, should baseball fans be following Mason Miller. Because what he's doing to opposing hitters this season, along with his performance for much of last season, is virtually unprecedented and may never be accomplished again. RELATED: Here's What The San Diego Padres Record $3.9 Billion Sale Means For Major League BaseballWednesday night, Miller entered in the ninth inning with the Padres up 5-2 on the Seattle Mariners. He struck out the side, getting J.P Crawford, Mitch Garver, and Cole Young looking. Nothing too unusual about that, right? But what is unusual is that Wednesday's dominant performance added to what's become an unimaginable run from Miller. To the point where the stats he's putting up would be unrealistic in a video game.Wednesday's outing meant that Miller had officially passed nine innings pitched this season. And in those 9.1 innings, he's allowed one hit. Not one hit per inning, one total hit. He's also allowed one walk, meaning that out of 30 total batters faced, two have reached base. His batting average allowed this season is .034. He's making professional hitters look worse than when pitchers hit. But that's just one side of it. The other remarkable side is that of the 30 hitters he's faced, he's struck out 23 of them. Nearly 77% of hitters who've come to the plate against him have struck out. Last season, the MLB leader in strikeout percentage among qualified pitchers was Tarik Skubal at 32.2%. Put differently, Miller's 23 K's in 9.1 innings correlates to just over 22 strikeouts per nine innings. For reference, the Major League record for strikeouts in a nine-inning game is 20. That's only been achieved four times in baseball history.Obviously, Miller is a reliever, not a starter, and it's easier to put up these kinds of numbers in sporadic outings compared to one game where hitters have multiple opportunities to face the same pitcher. Still, the scale of what he's doing is mind-boggling. And it's not just this season.Since June 20, 2025, Miller has allowed two runs. Total. Over 43.1 regular season innings, he's allowed two runs. He's struck out 81 hitters over that same time frame and allowed 10 hits. 149 total batters faced, 10 hits allowed. That's a .075 batting average, to go along with an .098 slugging percentage. Again, he's making big league hitters look worse than pitchers. Here's another way to think about this. Baseball-Reference has a statistic called ERA+, where 100 would be effectively league average. Last year, Paul Skenes had a 219 ERA+ on his way to winning the NL Cy Young Award. In his time in San Diego, Miller's ERA+ is 780. Then there's this, per OptaSTATS. Miller has struck out, including the playoffs:"No other MLB pitcher in the last 50 years has matched any of those stretches at any point in his career. Regular or postseason."So how is this possible, you might be wondering. Rob Friedman, aka Pitching Ninja on X, put together an overlay video of Miller's 103+mph fastball and slider that explains why hitters have so much trouble.They have to sit fastball, because otherwise it's nearly impossible to catch up to 103-104mph. But his slider looks nearly identical halfway to the plate, meaning hitters are either way too late for his fastball, or way too early on his slider. When he's throwing strikes, as he has been all season, they can't sit back and wait for a 3-0 fastball down the middle either. Even when they guess right, the quality of his fastball and slider as individual pitches makes him exceptionally hard to it. This bears out when looking at contact rates. Thus far in 2026, hitters are making contact just 51.6% of the time when they swing at pitches inside the strike zone. In 2025, when hitters swung at pitches in the strike zone from Tarik Skubal, they made contact 77.3% of the time. When hitters chase against Miller, the contact rate drops to just 25.8%. Last year, Skubal's contact rate allowed on pitches off the plate was 50.1%. His stuff is so good that he can throw it for strikes and still get swings and misses. When hitters swing at balls, they have little-to-no chance of even making contact, let alone high-quality contact. You can't wait him out and hope he walks you, because he's walked one out of 30 hitters this season. And his fastball and slider look the same, despite a 15-18mph speed differential. What we're seeing is a level of dominance that's almost impossible to comprehend. It's only 9.1 innings, so it's possible that these stats regress a bit as the season wears on. But at this point, Miller has essentially broken the modern day hitter. And made the Padres virtually unbeatable with a lead in the ninth inning.
