In a baseball season full of intriguing storylines, a handful of veteran players may have located the fountain of youth in 2025. Or at the very least, a return to peak form after years of decline and/or injuries.
This could only happen to the White Sox. On Tuesday, the most embarrassing team in baseball hit another laughable low point during a ninth-inning collapse against the Royals in a 4-3 loss.
The only two things rarer in modern-day baseball than the four-homer game is the Triple Crown and the unassisted triple play. The former is, of course, done over an entire season, while there's a large level of lucky in the unassisted triple play.
Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Andy Pages made one of the best plays of the season on Tuesday night, and it somehow did not look all that difficult for him.
The Red Sox need a new first baseman after Triston Casas suffered a season-ending knee injury last week, and many have wondered if Rafael Devers could fill that role for the team.
The New York Yankees have no time to waste with Devin Williams, their $8.6M reliever whose ERA has ballooned to 10.03. The answer isn't fewer innings or a bullpen demotion — it's converting the broken right-hander into a starting pitcher immediately.
Daniel Schneemann may not be the first name you think of when you consider the potential superstars on the Cleveland Guardians roster. However, manager Stephen Vogt believes that what the former 33rd-round draft pick has done in 2025 has been key to Cleveland's early success.
It’s unclear how much time the Astros expect him to miss, but he wasn’t immediately placed on the IL, so perhaps they just want to give him a bit of a rest.
In 2025, the game of baseball seems to be filled with more talent than ever, with plenty of this talent being relatively new to the league or early in their careers.
San Francisco Giants shortstop Willy Adames has floundered thus far, but Sunday's home game against the Colorado Rockies seemed like a prime opportunity to find his groove.