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15 Best Hitters in MLB The Show 25
His contact probably shouldn’t be in the 70s to 80s like they are in the game after a drastic four-year decline in average that saw him fall roughly 30 points every season from a .333 average in 2021 to a .220 average last year. His OBP has taken a similar beating in recent years and […]

His contact probably shouldn’t be in the 70s to 80s like they are in the game after a drastic four-year decline in average that saw him fall roughly 30 points every season from a .333 average in 2021 to a .220 average last year. His OBP has taken a similar beating in recent years and has also been down over 100 points over the last four years.
Judge is a beast; there is not much else I can say about him. Look at his power, 99s across the board; he’s the only player in the game with that combination. He also has excellent under-the-radar contact attributes. He’s known more as a power guy, but his .322 average last year has made him one of the league’s best “line-movers.” He led the AL in OBP and walks last year with .458 and 133, respectively.
Seager is consistent in his great performance at the plate, outside of a monstrous 2023 in which he doubled his usual home run count and hit nearly 250 OBP points better than his previous season. His numbers came back down to reality in 2024, but he is still riding that 2023 high when it comes to his Show attributes.
It’s not surprising that San Diego Studios wants this game to be offense-focused. After all, most of the new gameplay features (like ambush hitting) were on the offensive side of the game. Of course, they want the game to be exciting for players and to highlight some of the great batters in the game today, but in doing so, they’ve created a somewhat unrealistic dynamic that doesn’t exist in the current MLB. His MLB The Show performances are always better than his actual MLB performances, in which he hits an incredible, but not absurd, .298 career average and around 35 home runs a season. What’s most impressive — and what likely leads to his overperformance in the game — is his impressive OPS, which sits at .973 over his career, which is better than every active player except for Aaron Judge.
Aaron Judge
- 89 Con R
- 87 Con L
- 99 Pow R
- 99 Pow L
- 40 Vision
- 99 Discipline
- 90 Clutch
In order for the game to be exciting, MLB The Show had to inflate offensive numbers while deflating pitching and defense, making hitting the most important feature.
With how vital hitting is in this game, I wanted to find who the most valuable hitters in the game were. Whether it’s to target them in a Franchise Mode trade, work towards their card in Diamond Dynasty, or simply pick their team when playing friends to give you an edge offensively, these stud batters will help win your game in MLB The Show 25.
Shohei Ohtani
- 99 Con R
- 79 Con L
- 99 Pow R
- 86 Pow L
- 57 Vision
- 83 Discipline
- 85 Clutch
Kyle Tucker is always an MLB The Show darling, and this year is no different. He has a high floor to his hitting attributes, with none of them falling below 75 (Yordan Alvarez and Kyle Tucker are the only players in the game for whom this is true). Tucker only has one of the four main attributes, over 90, but it’s an important one in Pow R, which should make him a reliable 30+ home run guy at least per season in franchise mode. MLB The Show 25 is now out, and we’ve had some time to get acquainted with the new rosters and ratings. One thing has clearly stood out to me: this is an offense-heavy game. Something I noticed after the initial top overall rating release was that batters vastly overpowered pitchers across the board. In general, pitchers were almost always underrated, while batters were usually overrated.

Yordan Alvarez
- 82 Con R
- 99 Con L
- 99 Pow R
- 75 Pow L
- 81 Vision
- 84 Discipline
- 97 Clutch
You can never go wrong with Mookie Betts. He’s just such a great player all around despite his power numbers being lower than usual, thanks to a weirdly low home run-producing year for him last season (19 homers, which is 20 less than the year prior). But he’s still a top hitter in the league. Betts’ underwhelming slugging brought his OPS down last year, but it was still over .850, and it hasn’t fallen below .800 in his entire 11-year career. With right-handers making up the majority of the pitchers in the league (matching the makeup of the population at large), the Con R and the Pow R are the most important attributes for hitters in the game. With Ramirez at a respectable but not fantastic 78 and 70 rating, respectively, for each rating, his overall batting value takes a bit of a tumble despite his impressive lefty numbers, elite plate discipline, and 90-clutch rating.

Corey Seager
- 93 Con R
- 76 Con L
- 99 Pow R
- 70 Pow L
- 76 Vision
- 72 Discipline
- 99 Clutch
He’s got similar splits to Yordan Alvarez, albeit with lower ratings than Yordan. They both have high contact against lefties and high power against righties. They are very similar players in a lot of ways. I would say they are probably DH1 (Alvarez) and DH2 (Ozuna) in the game. I suggest getting one of them on your Franchise mode team. I think Jose Ramirez is a beast. He’s one of my favorite players in the league. He is so unassuming in stature, but as soon as he steps into the batter’s box, you can feel his confidence and expertise at the plate. Ramirez has an impressive four attributes at 90 or above, yet his two righty numbers bring him down to seventh on our list.
Yordan is a pure hitter. He’s not going to give you any value defensively and should likely be exclusively used at DH, but he’s going to make up for it with elite hitting skills. He is almost always a +.320 average and +45 HR player in every season of the Show that I’ve ever simmed. I can’t tell you how many MVP trophies this guy has won; it is absolutely ridiculous.
Juan Soto
- 83 Con R
- 75 Con L
- 92 Pow R
- 88 Pow L
- 70 Vision
- 99 Discipline
- 99 Clutch
Ohtani might be the best hitter in the game if you were just facing right-handed pitching, but alas, his lefty numbers bring him down below Judge in our rankings. While 79 contact and 86 power are incredible for most batters in the league, they are somewhat underwhelming for Ohtani, who has mastered seemingly every aspect of the game and taken his skills to levels never thought possible.
I mean, he hit 10 home runs in 109 at-bats last year. Clearly, he still is an elite power hitter, but with a .220 average and just 14 RBIs during that stretch, I can’t say with any confidence that Trout is even close to the same hitter that he was during his last full season way back in 2019.
Mike Trout
- 75 Con R
- 83 Con L
- 99 Pow R
- 86 Pow L
- 50 Vision
- 88 Discipline
- 74 Clutch
I wanted to add Ronald Acuna Jr. at the end because I think he was absolutely shafted by the rating team at San Diego Studios and because he’s got a good variety of above-average stats that make him a valuable asset. I think his numbers should be a lot higher, but I do agree that he has a ton of above-average hitting traits and that there isn’t a huge weakness in his game. Ramirez is still a great batter despite his lower-than-expected righty numbers. He has not had a season where he has hit under .800 OPS since 2015. I expect him to continue that trend in both the Show and the real MLB.
Rooker is a great story — well, not for Twins fans like me, but that’s to be expected. We were the team that gave up David Ortiz when he was just Little Papi. Now, the Twins are in a very similar situation with Rooker. After just a few seasons of decent play by a young potential power threat, the Twins let a 26-year-old future star leave the team, only for the player to immediately put up eye-watering numbers for their new team.
Jose Ramirez
- 78 Con R
- 95 Con L
- 70 Pow R
- 92 Pow L
- 92 Vision
- 66 Discipline
- 90 Clutch
All in all, Trout seems to have transformed from one of the best hitters ever to play in the league into a Joey Gallo like power specialist. Although I will say that he is still better than Joey Gallo by a factor of 10, don’t get me wrong, Trout is still a very valuable hitter. Tucker has been a .800+ OPS guy since he’s been in the league, and last year, he put up an impressive .993 OPS in a season that was cut short due to injuries. He’s great in big situations and doesn’t chase on bad pitches.
His OBP nearly touched .400 last season, which likely caused his plate vision and discipline to be so great. But when you consider his .323 average, you realize that his walk rate wasn’t actually that great. He doesn’t strike out as much as other sluggers, which makes him valuable in the game, but he doesn’t offer much value as a base runner or as a plus defender. He is serviceable as a first baseman, but that’s the one position I would trust him at.
Brent Rooker
- 80 Con R
- 83 Con L
- 90 Pow R
- 99 Pow L
- 43 Vision
- 67 Discipline
- 84 Clutch
I swear, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. was a pure power hitter just the other day; now MLB The Show has got him as a contact first batter with numbers that look closer to Luis Arraez than Joey Gallo. What’s up with his power numbers? He hit 30 homers last season and 136 over the last 4 years (an average of 34 HRs a season). His contact numbers make sense for a guy who hit a .323 average last year and was one hit shy of 200 on the year, but that doesn’t mean they need to lower his power numbers.
While we do see huge power numbers from some players in the league, and you will occasionally see some high-scoring games, it should be mentioned that the league-wide OPS has been trending downward since 1990. Last year, batters put up the third-worst combined OPS since 1992 (2014 and 2022 were the worst and second worst, respectively). Given those numbers, you would expect MLB The Show to highlight the dominant pitchers in the league that are quieting offenses, but we have to face the fact that pitchers don’t sell copies quite as well as batters. People love offense, and San Diego Studios is giving it to people.
Regardless of whether it’s a fair rating, he does provide incredible value at the plate in MLB The Show 25. With no hitting attribute under 70 and three 90+ hitting ratings, he sits right around the top five best hitters in the game.
Ketel Marte
- 69 Con R
- 99 Con L
- 77 Pow R
- 90 Pow L
- 70 Vision
- 75 Discipline
- 87 Clutch
Despite only 21 home runs last year, the game decided to max out his power against right-handers and his clutch. His other attributes seem fair and balanced, but it’s clear that he had his numbers inflated above his actual real-life performance. He also got a 99 in batting clutch and a 92 in power against righties. Still, his other power/contact numbers are slightly lower than anticipated, especially considering he’s a 99 overall. Either way, he’s still a top batter in the league, with an elite ability to draw walks and some legit power (putting up his first +40 home run season last year in hitter-friendly Yankee Stadium.)
Kyle Tucker
- 81 Con R
- 79 Con L
- 90 Pow R
- 77 Pow L
- 75 Vision
- 90 Discipline
- 99 Clutch
He hasn’t hit less than a .285 average since 2020, but since then, he’s only averaged 26 homers a season, compared to an average of 32.8 between 2015 and 2019. His plate discipline and clutch are similar to Kyle Tucker’s, but his plate vision has always been a bit of a problem, with his strikeout rate consistently above 20%.
Soto was a bit of a surprise addition to the 99 club this year, but it’s not surprising that his batting numbers are as high as they are. He had another +.900 OBP season last year (his sixth in seven seasons in the big leagues) and led the AL in runs. Of course, he gets a 99 in plate discipline—I don’t remember the last time he didn’t have a 99 in that attribute. He consistently has one of the highest walk rates in the league.
Bryce Harper
- 82 Con R
- 87 Con L
- 83 Pow R
- 73 Pow L
- 61 Vision
- 91 Discipline
- 99 Clutch
Rooker didn’t quite put up the 88 homers that Ortiz hit in his first two seasons with the Red Sox, but he did hit 69 homers over the last two seasons in Oakland’s far bigger stadium. Use OPS+ — which considers different ballpark conditions like altitude and field size — and you can see that Rooker actually had a better first two seasons on the Athletics at the plate (a combined 292 OPS+) compared to David Ortiz’s first two seasons in Boston (a combined 289 OPS+). His plate vision is only at a 40 because he tends to chase pitchers, but his long arms and bat control allow him to make solid contact on balls way out of the strike zone.
Mookie Betts
- 86 Con R
- 88 Con L
- 73 Pow R
- 75 Pow L
- 80 Vision
- 87 Discipline
- 99 Clutch
Marte had a 1.080 OPS against left-handed pitchers, which accounts for the great Con L and Pow L numbers. However, his righty numbers were also good, with a .841 OPS and a .261 average. I don’t see why he has a sub-70 contact against RHP rating; it’s too low of a grade. Either way, he’s still a great hitter.
An “outstanding” hitter, as the game commentators love to say about Ketel Marte, his righty contact actually makes him much less “outstanding” than he should be. He had arguably the best year of his career last season, putting up career highs in homers, RBIs, OPS+, and MVP votes.

Marcell Ozuna
- 82 Con R
- 89 Con L
- 94 Pow R
- 73 Pow L
- 56 Vision
- 72 Discipline
- 65 Clutch
You can see those fantastic numbers reflected in his MLB The Show attributes, in which he gets 352 attribute points out of 396 in contact/power. His vision, discipline, and clutch might not be as great as those of other players on this list, but those numbers aren’t as important as the main four contact/power numbers.
Don’t try putting Ozuna in the field. He is 100% a designated hitter with very little value outside of the batter’s box. The mental side of his game is not great in MLB The Show, likely reflecting his numerous off-the-field incidents that, much like Tiger Woods, could cause his focus to drift and affect his game. His physical gifts are clearly apparent in the game, though. His .302 average and .925 OPS last season helped him get fourth place in the NL MVP race.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
- 93 Con R
- 90 Con L
- 71 Pow R
- 69 Pow L
- 85 Vision
- 73 Discipline
- 82 Clutch
He drew more walks than strikeouts for the first time in his career, really helping his vision, discipline, and clutch numbers rise as he has been focusing on his approach at the plate and becoming a more methodical and meaningful hitter. If you emphasize OBP and like guys who can get on base multiple times a game and get a significant amount of extra-base hits, Betts is the guy for you.
Ohtani, like Judge, also has a low plate vision attribute, although Ohtani’s is much higher than Judge’s, which reflects Shohei’s better SO% (struck out on 25.4% of at-bats in career) than Judge’s (struck out on 28% of at-bats in career).
Ronald Acuna Jr.
- 85 Con R
- 81 Con L
- 70 Pow R
- 75 Pow L
- 64 Vision
- 78 Discipline
- 80 Clutch
Harper may not be my ideal first baseman of choice, but you can’t ignore the pure dominance at the plate that he has displayed for over a decade now. He has turned into more of a bat for average guys than a power guy in recent years, as reflected by his 169 combined contact rating and 156 combined power rating in The Show 25.
He hit a .337 average and 41 home runs in his last healthy season in 2023, a .900 or above OPS in four of his seven active seasons, and a ridiculous 25.3 WAR over his short career (2818 AB). Ronald Acuna deserves to be on this list, even though his ratings may technically trail guys like Trea Turner and Jose Altuve. I think Acuna Jr., especially in Franchise mode, will be a lot more valuable as a hitter than Turner, Altuve, or anybody else who may have been considered for this list but wasn’t added. I believe in Acuna.
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UFC Atlanta loses bout between fan favorites just days before Kamaru Usman vs. Joaquin …
A massive undercard bout at UFC Atlanta was scratched just days before Saturday’s event. UFC Atlanta is headlined by a pivotal welterweight matchup between top contenders Kamaru Usman and Joaquin Buckley, taking place this Saturday at State Farm Arena. The fight marks Usman’s long-awaited return to the welterweight division, and his first Octagon appearance overall […]

A massive undercard bout at UFC Atlanta was scratched just days before Saturday’s event.
UFC Atlanta is headlined by a pivotal welterweight matchup between top contenders Kamaru Usman and Joaquin Buckley, taking place this Saturday at State Farm Arena. The fight marks Usman’s long-awaited return to the welterweight division, and his first Octagon appearance overall in almost two full years.
The card also marks the UFC’s long-awaited return to Atlanta after a six-year absence, dating back to UFC 236. The event featured a UFC Hall of Fame fight between Israel Adesanya and Kelvin Gastelum.
UFC Atlanta could make more MMA memories this weekend. But just days before the event, the card took a big hit.

UFC Atlanta takes a big hit as matchup between exciting bantamweights canceled
As first reported by MMA publication L’Arena MMA, bantamweight Charles Jourdain was forced to withdraw from his upcoming fight with Ricky Simon due to an eye injury. As of this writing, it’s uncertain if the UFC matchmakers will attempt to find a last-second replacement to face Simon at UFC Atlanta.
Jourdain’s withdrawal comes at an unfortunate time, after a successful bantamweight debut in November at UFC Edmonton. He defeated Victor Henry by second-round submission after making the full-time move to the 135 lb division.
Jourdain traded wins and losses in the UFC’s featherweight division, earning victories over the likes of Kron Gracie and Andre Ewell. A win over a top bantamweight like Simon would’ve moved Jourdain closer to a Top 15 spot.
Simon was set to return to the Octagon for the first time since a devastating knockout over Javid Basharat at UFC Seattle in February. The knockout win snapped a three-fight losing streak.
Charles Jourdain vs. Ricky Simon scratched due to a Jourdain eye injury
Despite the loss of Jourdain vs. Simon, UFC Atlanta remains an intriguing card with an important main event booking between Usman and Buckley. The UFC Atlanta main event winner could potentially earn a title shot for their next fight against either Jack Della Maddalena or Islam Makhachev.
MORE BLOODY ELBOW NEWS
Maddalena earned the UFC welterweight title by defeating Belal Muhammad at UFC 315 last month. Makhachev will vacate the lightweight title later this month for a move to welterweight.
Buckley has been on a roll since moving down to 170 lbs, earning recent wins over the likes of Colby Covington, Stephen Thompson, and Vicente Luque. He enters UFC Atlanta on a six-fight winning streak.
College Sports
ESPN debuts trailer for 30 for 30 doc 'Empire Skate'
Monday, ESPN released the trailer for its latest 30 for 30 documentary film, Empire Skate. “Empire Skate chronicles the colorful rise and enduring influence of New York skateboarding culture–through the global phenomenon of Supreme–while highlighting intimate portraits of the characters who breathed life into that world,” reads ESPN’s release. “From the highs of breakout film success and the creation […]


Monday, ESPN released the trailer for its latest 30 for 30 documentary film, Empire Skate.
“Empire Skate chronicles the colorful rise and enduring influence of New York skateboarding culture–through the global phenomenon of Supreme–while highlighting intimate portraits of the characters who breathed life into that world,” reads ESPN’s release. “From the highs of breakout film success and the creation of a brand and movement, to the lows of fractured families and the loss of close friends, it is a style-and-substance trip through a unique moment when multiple trends converged on one city to create something timeless.”
The film features Tony Hawk, Alex Corporan, Steven Cales, Chris Keeffe, Jeff Pang, Mike Hernandez, Peter Bici, and Ryan Hickey.
The film is directed by documentary filmmaker Josh Swade, who is perhaps best known to 30 for 30 audiences for his work on There’s No Place Like Home, about Kansas Jayhawks basketball, One & Done, about John Calipari’s Kentucky run, and Arthur & Johnnie, about Arthur Ashe and his younger brother.
“Skate shops have always been sacred spaces for me—places of creativity, community, and culture,” said Swade. “When I moved to New York in the mid-90s, Supreme wasn’t just a store, it was a magnet for a movement that reshaped downtown and radiated far beyond. With Empire Skate, we wanted to honor that energy and tell the story of how a small skate shop helped fuel a global cultural shift. This film is as much about identity and expression as it is about skating, and I’m proud to help bring that story to the screen.”
The film will premiere at the 2025 Tribeca Festival on June 12 and then on ESPN on June 30 at 9 p.m. ET. Following the linear premiere, the film will be available to stream on ESPN+, as well as on Disney+ and Hulu.
Here’s a full synopsis via ESPN:
“Empire Skate” tells the story of 1990’s New York City skate culture that inspired the global brand Supreme. It is the scene of a rare, energetic convergence of hip-hop, street art, dance, and culture. Kids who grew up in the 1980s as outsiders, going against the grain, bring their own element to this culture: skateboarding. Many of them fleeing hard lives of dysfunction and family desperation, they turn the forbidding landscape of the city into their own personal skate park – setting the stage for a movement that would grow to transform fashion and sports.
While Southern California remains the mass-market capital of skateboarding, this New York City crew creates their own style. Bolstered by charismatic kids like Harold Hunter and enthusiastic entrepreneurs, fledgling skate shops begin to appear across the city. They tap into a NYC skating vibe that is faster, more dangerous, and more improvisational than its West Coast counterpart, and the style echoes that difference: SkateNYC and Zoo York set the tone for this rise, and then another brand is birthed that changes the scene forever.
Supreme, fronted by the mysterious businessman James Jebbia, takes NYC by storm. Playing by its own rules of marketing, store design, and customer service (including refusing to serve those who don’t seem to fit its image and vibe), Supreme becomes a status symbol on the streets of Manhattan – and beyond. It becomes a global phenomenon, with buyers arriving from as far as Asia, pockets bursting with cash, eager to buy a piece of the lifestyle.
The rise pulls the NYC skateboarding crew into other areas of pop culture. The Larry Clark and Harmony Korine indie film Kids is a surprise hit that features several NYC skateboarders including an aspiring young actor named Justin Pierce. They find themselves on a rocket ship of fame that is impossible to navigate, and Pierce commits suicide.
Tragedy and camaraderie, changing trends in fashion and entertainment, and the constant evolution of culture continue to transform the NYC skateboarding landscape. Through it all, Supreme maintains a powerful hold, and those for whom skateboarding was an indispensable part of their lives, the bonds remain forever.
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MLB Draft 2025
The race for the number one pick in the MLB Draft has been wide open. Since the college baseball season started, I have written about at least half a dozen names that could go with the number 1 pick in the draft. I thought I had all my bases covered, but a new contender has […]


The race for the number one pick in the MLB Draft has been wide open. Since the college baseball season started, I have written about at least half a dozen names that could go with the number 1 pick in the draft. I thought I had all my bases covered, but a new contender has risen to the forefront, left handed pitcher Kade Anderson from LSU.
As a draft eligible sophomore who had one good but not great year at LSU, Anderson was under the radar heading into the season. There were bigger names with longer resumes like Jamie Arnold and Tyler Bremner. However, Anderson has out-pitched both of those guys while playing in a tougher conference. He has been the strikeout king of the SEC.
A couple years ago there was another under the radar LSU pitcher who’s dominant run made him the number one overall pick. His name was Paul Skenes, one of the best pitchers in baseball these days. Anderson could be the second LSU pitcher in 3 years to go 1-1.
However, Anderson is a very different profile to Skenes. Skenes was a massive right hander with triple-digit velocity. Anderson is none of those things. He is a lean 6’2 southpaw who’s fastball works more in the low-mid 90’s. However, he is extremely polished and has a great feel for spin.
Some scouts have compared his clean delivery and aptitude to Max Fried according to Baseball America. That is lofty praise, as Fried is a true ace and one of the best pitchers in baseball. However, with the number one pick those are the kind of guys you want.
Despite not having an 100 MPH fastball, Anderson has been a strikeout machine in the SEC. He has 163 strikeouts in 103 innings this year. Along with all the strikeouts, Anderson has done a good job limiting walks, issuing just 2.4 free passes per nine innings. He has had a bit of a home run problem this season, but with all his strengths, teams will overlook that as home run rate tends to fluctuate a bit year over year.
Everything about his arsenal is so advanced and polished. His fastball doesn’t have elite velocity, but it plays much better than the 92-94 MPH range it sits in. This is because it has excellent carry, spin and shape. It gets on hitters very quickly.
Anderson has a great feel for spin as well. Last year he threw a big curveball, which was a signature pitch for him. However, he doesn’t throw that as much because he developed a slider that is even better. He is already showing he has aptitude for a number of breaking ball shapes, something teams like. Despite relying more on that slider, he still has his big hook in his back pocket.
If that is not enough, he also has a changeup that gets plus grades. With that mix, you see the vision for four pitches that are at least above average. Also, with his aptitude and feel to spin he could add even more clubs to his bag.
If you want a guy who can move through the Minor Leagues quickly, Anderson is your guy. He is polished, productive and a whiff generator. There are more exciting upside plays in the draft, but Anderson is one of the safest guys on the board. With the Nationals needing rotation help quickly, you would have to think they are considering the LSU lefty.
Professional Sports
MLB DFS Picks, Spotlight Pitchers & Top Stacks
Monday brings a nifty nine-game featured slate with a 6:40 p.m. ET first pitch on DraftKings, FanDuel and Yahoo. Today we’re breaking down MLB DFS picks using Stokastic’s industry-leading tools and MLB DFS projections to learn how to build MLB DFS stacks, find the top pitchers and craft optimal daily fantasy baseball lineups. The Stokastic […]

MLB DFS Picks: Spotlight Pitchers and Top Stacks | June 9
MLB DFS Picks: Spotlight Pitchers
In turn, LHP Matthew Boyd is worthy of tournament consideration against the Phillies, with the oft-injured 34-year-old only 10 innings away from his largest workload of the preceding five seasons. The right-handers in the lineup for Philadelphia have struggled this season with southpaws, though they were tremendous last year. It is also worth pointing out that Bryce Harper (wrist) is on the injured list.
Atlanta is in Milwaukee starting a three-game series tonight. Reigning National League Cy Young Award winner LHP Chris Sale will be on the mound against the hometown nine. The 36-year-old has similar numbers to last season, with his strikeouts, walks and home runs each up a tick. The Brew Crew strikes out around league average against southpaws, but their power has disappeared this season with a scant .121 ISO.
Rhys Hoskins and Jackson Chourio are producing like All-Star shoe-ins, but catcher William Contreras is having his worst season against southpaws and Christian Yelich has faltered after a resurgent season last year against fellow lefties. Journeyman Daz Cameron is just happy to be on the field, and former prospect Sal Frelick is much better against righties. The matchup won’t be a walk in the park, but with no Coors Field Extravaganza, there is room under the salary cap to go with a bucks-deluxe pitcher.
Aside from a disastrous performance in his second start of the season, RHP Merrill Kelly has been steady. That game took place in Yankee Stadium, where he allowed nine runs, including a trio of taters in 3.2 innings to the Bronx Bombers. Remember the torpedo bat craze?
In the subsequent 11 starts, Kelly had a 2.55 ERA, 2.56 FIP and a 2.79 xFIP. This was accompanied by just over a strikeout per inning and only five home runs.
The Mariners perform much better on offense away from Seattle, though the team is best positioned to deal with lefties.
Julio Rodriguez and Randy Arozarena are competent at the plate in same-handed matchups, but nothing that should overly intimidate Kelly. Switch-hitters Cal Raleigh and Jorge Polanco do their best work from the left side of the plate, so they will be the biggest worry for the 36-year-old baseball lifer. Rowdy Tellez will be in the lineup until a lefty comes out of the bullpen, and leadoff man J.P. Crawford is a contact maven but short on power.
Kelly is a top-5 option on the full slate, though he really stands out on the three-game late slate, which has some fun contests already posted across the main DFS sites.
MLB DFS Picks: Top Stacks
Main Slate Primary Target: Arizona Diamondbacks
Writing these articles every day is fun, a labor of love and also a reminder of things that go sideways. Your Ol’ Pal said some less-than-flattering things about RHP George Kirby, who had struggled since returning from injury. So naturally, he struck out a career-high 14 Angels, which also is the highest mark in the majors this season, tying RHP Max Meyer of the Miami Marlins. The goal is to be right more often than wrong, and that can be challenging in the highly variant sport of baseball.
Coincidently, the recommendation is again to target a Seattle starter; this time it is RHP Emerson Hancock. Like Kirby, Hancock was a first-round selection, though he is not on the same trajectory as his teammate and is unlikely to ever sniff an All-Star nomination, which Kirby has already earned. RHP Logan Gilbert is nearing a return, with the team wanting him to have one more rehabilitation start in the minors. This means Hancock is likely pitching for a spot in the bullpen; otherwise he is likely to be sent back down to the minors unless the team decides it is struggling RHP Bryce Miller who should be demoted instead.
Tempting fate again, Hancock is not much of a strikeout pitcher, recording more than five in just three of his 25 career starts. The 26-year-old also allows power to hitters swinging the stick from both sides of the plate, with elevated hard-hit and line-drive rates that can turn into extra base knocks.
Pretty much everyone in a Diamondbacks uniform is in play tonight, as only Alek Thomas and Jose Herrera are bats to avoid.
Main Slate Secondary Target: Los Angeles Angels
Tonight LHP Jeffrey Springs will be on the mound for the Athletics, and it appears injuries have gotten the best of the 32-year-old. In 2022, Springs had a breakout season with Tampa Bay, and he was building on that in the early portion of 2023 when he suffered a UCL injury that required Tommy John surgery, though he at least got the bag with a four-year, $31 million deal a couple months prior.
Since returning to action in 2023, Springs has had walk and home run issues, which is not a good combination. He is still a mid-rotation talent on his best days, but those have been few and far between over his 20 outings since returning to action.
Leadoff man Zach Neto, outfielder Taylor Ward and catcher Logan O’Hoppe are the trio to target, along with Angels legend Mike Trout. On the late slate, Jo Adell is worthy of consideration as a discount dandy, though he is a human wind machine when he is not making contact.
Today’s Top Sports Betting Picks
If you’re serious about making sharp MLB DFS picks, you already know that long-term success starts with using the right tools. The same approach applies to sports betting — and that’s where Portfolio EV shines.
Take Chris Sale under 7.5 strikeouts, for example. This is a +EV bet, meaning it has positive expected value based on the best odds available. But smart betting with Portfolio EV isn’t about chasing isolated plays; it’s about consistently firing off a high volume of +EV wagers. With the Mass Entry tool, you can scale your action and let the math compound your edge over time.
Just like one DFS lineup won’t guarantee a takedown, one bet won’t define your night — it’s the consistent process that leads to profit.
Portfolio EV is built for bettors who want to win over the long haul. By identifying market inefficiencies, the best available odds and stacking a portfolio of +EV bets, it sets you up for compounding returns over time. This isn’t about chasing hot streaks — it’s about trusting the numbers and executing a smart, consistent and scalable strategy to beat the books.
Clearly, Sale is an amazing pitcher and future Hall of Famer, but he is projected for just over seven strikeouts tonight, and this wager is plus money for him to fail to reach eight whiffs. The projected lineup for the Brew Crew has a sub-20% strikeout rate against southpaws over the last season-plus, which means Sale is going to need to make his own magic at the plate. In this same timeframe, he has a 31.6% strikeout rate, which is stellar, but the math favors the under in this scenario.
Professional Sports
UFC 316
Brett OkamotoJun 9, 2025, 07:00 AM ET Close Brett Okamoto has reported on mixed martial arts and boxing at ESPN since 2010. He has covered all of the biggest events in combat sports during that time, including in-depth interviews and features with names such as Dana White, Khabib Nurmagomedov, Conor McGregor, Nate Diaz, Floyd Mayweather, […]

As soon as Julianna Peña tapped Kayla Harrison‘s back in the penultimate fight of UFC 316 to signal she had had enough of Harrison’s Kimura lock, the Newark, New Jersey, crowd cheered its approval and all eyes turned to future UFC Hall of Fame bantamweight Amanda Nunes, who was sitting cageside with her family.
“Come on up here, Amanda!” Harrison yelled in Nunes’ direction during her postfight interview. “This is the next fight.”
She’s right, of course. If all goes to plan, Nunes will come out of retirement to be Harrison’s first title challenger in what will instantly be a fight of the year candidate — in whatever year that might be.
A similar story played out in the final fight of the night, after Merab Dvalishvili frustrated and ultimately finished fan favorite Sean O’Malley with a guillotine in the third round of their men’s bantamweight title rematch.
Cory Sandhagen, just about the only current UFC bantamweight contender Dvalishvili hasn’t beaten, smiled from the audience as the champion called for him to be his next target. Sandhagen has been in the UFC since 2018, but it appears his time has come to challenge for a title.
Let’s take a deeper look at those championship scenarios and possible next steps for many of the fighters featured at UFC 316.
Merab Dvalishvili, men’s bantamweight
Who should be next: Cory Sandhagen
The UFC doesn’t always make matchups on fight night, but it’s nice when it does — especially an obvious one like this. Sandhagen has taken a long route to his first official title fight, and he gets some blame for that. He has come up short in big moments, but if you look at his body of work — not to mention his obvious talent — it’s kind of wild that it has taken this long for him to get here. Now that he is here, though, he has a sizable champion to try to take down. Sandhagen knows what he’s up against. He said Saturday that he has to get a knockout against Dvalishvili. That’s a lot easier said than done. Sandhagen is one of the biggest knockout threats in the division, but he would need to capitalize on any small moment Dvalishvili gives him.
Wild card: Petr Yan
If he beats Marcus McGhee on July 26 in Abu Dhabi, Yan will be right there for a chance to reclaim the belt he lost in 2022. His obvious problem is that he lost a non-competitive fight to Dvalishvili in 2023, but that doesn’t mean Yan can never get a second chance at the championship. He would have to look amazing against McGhee and still need the Sandhagen matchup to fall through to get a title shot, though.
Sean O’Malley, men’s bantamweight
There is no obvious next opponent for Sean O’Malley after losing back-to-back title challenges to Merab Dvalishvili. Elsa/Getty ImagesWho should be next: José Aldo
This is the tough one. There is no obvious path forward right now for O’Malley after two consecutive defeats, so a recently retired Aldo is a nonobvious answer. I respect Aldo’s choice to say he’s done, but let’s also acknowledge that a lot of us weren’t happy with the way the UFC matchmade him during his comeback. The potential of an O’Malley matchup might actually get him very excited, though. It would also get fans excited. The UFC would benefit by putting together an O’Malley fight people care about, and there’s a shortage of those. Aldo surprising everyone with another return to the Octagon would garner a ton of attention.
Wild card: Henry Cejudo
O’Malley has always wanted to fight Cejudo. They’re from the same area in Arizona. O’Malley has always found Cejudo’s way of promotion a bit … lame. O’Malley, 5-foot-11, loves fighting shorter opponents and likes to remind the 5-4 Cejudo just how much shorter he is. Cejudo has said he might be done, but you definitely get the sense he doesn’t want to finish his career on a fight-ending eye poke in a February loss to Song Yadong. If Cejudo decides to fight again, I could see both sides wanting this fight.
Kayla Harrison, women’s bantamweight
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Kayla Harrison submits Julianna Pena to become new UFC bantamweight champ
Kayla Harrison taps out Julianna Pena in Round 2 at UFC 316 to become the new women’s bantamweight champion.
Who should be next: Amanda Nunes
Easiest matchmaking of all time. We’ve basically been waiting for this since Harrison entered MMA. We always knew it would take a long time to happen, and there were moments along the way when it looked like it never would. Harrison signed with the PFL as a lightweight and said she’d never cut weight to bantamweight. Nunes lost to Peña when Harrison was looking to test free agency and join the UFC. Then Nunes retired. Still, the fight always seemed very much alive, and it doesn’t seem like it’s happening too late. It’ll be the biggest fight in women’s MMA in a very long time. By the time it happens, after all of the promotion, maybe it’ll be the biggest ever.
Kevin Holland, welterweight
Kevin Holland, blue gloves, stopped Vincent Luque, red gloves, with an anaconda choke to begin the UFC 316 main card. Vincent Carchietta/Imagn ImagesWho should be next: Carlos Prates
When Holland is focused (and competing at 170 pounds), he’s a title contender. He came within one scorecard of defeating the current champion, Jack Della Maddalena, in 2023. Holland has always said he doesn’t care about the belt and that he’s willing to bounce between welterweight and middleweight, but it seems that’s about to change. When he said he wants to stay at 170, it was music to my ears. He’s good at this weight class. When he fights at 185 pounds, I get the sense that sometimes even he doesn’t think he’s supposed to win. Prates looks like the real deal, despite a loss to Ian Machado Garry in his last bout. Holland vs. Prates would be absolutely fire.
Wild card: Stephen Thompson
They fought in 2022, and it was an instant classic. Thompson won, which means there’s incentive for Holland to get revenge. No one wants to see Thompson in a fight in which he’s constantly defending takedowns, and while Holland might jump on a choke here and there, he’s not going to spend an entire fight trying to take “Wonderboy” down. This fight would be good for both of their careers, not to mention the fans.
Mario Bautista, men’s bantamweight
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Who should be next: Marlon Vera
If Bautista feels a little slighted by fans and media after his win over Patchy Mix, it’s with good reason. It was probably inevitable that the majority of the prefight focus would surround his UFC 316 opponent, considering Mix was making a long-awaited move from Bellator MMA to the UFC. But still, Bautista was on a seven-fight win streak and coming off a victory over former UFC champion Jose Aldo. After how good he looked Saturday, I don’t expect him to be underappreciated again in the next one. He was supposed to face “Chito” Vera at UFC 316, but Vera withdrew because of an injury. Vera is a popular fighter; Bautista could benefit from adding to Vera’s name to his résumé, and I think Bautista would be favored to win.
Wild card: Song Yadong
Yadong is coming off a controversial victory over Henry Cejudo in which Cejudo was badly impacted by an accidental eye poke. Yadong is for real, though. And at this point, it’s hard to say Bautista isn’t as well. The UFC might choose to hang on to this fight, because it’s a good one that seems inevitable at some point. But if they chose to do it now, it would be a highly entertaining one.
Azamat Murzakanov, light heavyweight
Azamat Murzakanov, red gloves, is 5-0 in the UFC after finishing Brendson Riberio. Elsa/Getty ImagesWho should be next: Aleksandar Rakic
In terms of matchups, Murzakanov has been the victim of bad timing and bad luck. He’s 5-0 in the UFC, but he hasn’t faced the highest-ranked competition. At various times, he was booked to fight Volkan Oezdemir, Khalil Rountree Jr., Nikita Krylov and Johnny Walker, and every single one of those fights fell through. It’s time to get him a big jump in competition. He needs it, and this division needs it. Rakic has lost three in a row, but every loss has been to the very top of the division. He’s at a point where he needs to defend his spot, and that should be against Murzakanov.
Wild card: Jan Blachowicz
I love Blachowicz, as does the rest of the MMA world. His rise to UFC champion was unexpected at his age. That said, the 42-year-old is kind of sitting on a ranking at this point. He’s officially ranked No. 5 at light heavyweight by the UFC but hasn’t won a fight since 2022. His last win was against Rakic, who, as we just mentioned, has lost three in a row. If Blachowicz wants to maintain his spot in the rankings, this is the kind of fight he needs to accept.
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