San Diego, CA
Padres minors: Jhony Brito solid in El Paso start, Kerrington Cross leads Storm to win
Perhaps the Juan Soto trade isn’t done bearing fruit for the Padres.
Jhony Brito made his first start for Triple-A El Paso on Wednesday, striking out four while allowing a run over four solid innings.
The 28-year-old right-hander allowed the lone run on a solo homer to former top prospect Jarred Kelenic. He finished with four hits allowed and three walks while throwing 44 of his 77 pitches for strikes.
Brito’s two fastballs — a four-seamer and sinker — largely sat 95 mph in the outing, although it ticked downward a bit in his fourth inning of work. He also threw a high-80s slider, a knuckle curve, change-up and sweeper.
It was Brito’s seventh minor league start after missing all of 2025 following an elbow reconstruction. He has a 21-to-9 strikeout-to-walk ratio while posting a 3.18 ERA over 28⅓ innings so far in the minors, which included one run over 11 innings over his final two rehab starts with Double-A San Antonio.
Brito was then activated from the injured list and optioned to El Paso to continue to stretch out as an option to boost the big-league rotation.
The Padres acquired Brito in December 2023 alongside right-handers Michael King, Randy Vasquez and Drew Thorpe and catcher Kyle Higashioka for Soto and outfielder Trent Grisham. Thorpe ultimately helped complete the trade for Dylan Cease and Higashioka departed as a free agent after hitting a career-high 17 homers in 2024 for the Padres, but King, Vásquez and Brito remain in the organization.
At the time of the trade, Brito had just completed his rookie season with the Yankees, striking out 72 batters against 28 walks while posting a 4.28 ERA in 90⅓ innings split between the rotation and bullpen.
The Padres used Brito exclusively in relief in the majors in 2024 (4.12 ERA, 43 ⅔ IP) but was beginning to stretch him out in the minors when forearm trouble began to surface.
After losing all of last year to the elbow surgery, Brito will have one minor league option left to be used in 2027, a valuable commodity for an organization that traded away Stephen Kolek and Ryan Bergert last year, could lose King, Nick Pivetta, Walker Buehler, Griffin Canning, Lucas Giolito and Germán Márquez to free agency after this season and has yet to get Joe Musgrove back from his Tommy John surgery.
Wednesday’s scoreboard
TRIPLE-A EL PASO (28-37)
Round Rock 4, Chihuahuas 2: After Brito’s exit, RHP Logan Gillaspie (6.51 ERA), LHP Miguel Cienfuegos (1-2, 9.75 ERA) and RHP Ethan Routzahn (3.31 ERA) each gave up a run in an inning of work. RHP Ty Adcock (13.50 ERA) struck out two in a scoreless eighth inning. CF Carlos Rodriguez (.731 OPS) went 2-for-5 with an RBI to extend his hitting streak to a career-high 16 games. C Blake Hunt (1.075 OPS) went 1-for-3 with an RBI.
DOUBLE-A SAN ANTONIO (25-34)
Frisco 5, Missions 0: DH Ethan Salas (.805 OPS) went 2-for-3 and was hit by a pitch. RHP Eric Yost (0-2, 3.38 ERA) allowed three runs in 3⅓ innings in the loss.
HIGH SINGLE-A FORT WAYNE (24-35)
Dayton 14, TinCaps 2: RHP Maikel Miralles (0-7, 9.87 ERA) allowed four runs—three earned—in four innings in the loss. 1B Jack Costello (.757 OPS) went 1-for-4 with a double and a run scored. DH Justin DeCriscio (.750 OPS) went 1-for-3 with an RBI and a walk.
LOW SINGLE-A LAKE ELSINORE (34-25)
Storm 6, Ontario 1: RHP Jesus A. Castro (2.72 ERA) struck out 12 over 4⅔ shutout innings in the start, scattering three hits and two walks. RHP Nick Falter (2-1, 2.13 ERA) earned the win with 2⅓ scoreless innings. CF Ryan Wideman (.898 OPS) went 2-for-4 with a walk, a run and two steals to push his total to 39. 1B Kerrington Cross (1.029 OPS) went 1-for-3 with a double, two RBIs, two walks and two runs scored. DH Luke Cantwell (1.011 OPS) went 2-for-3 with a double, an RBI and a walk.
ROOKIE ACL PADRES (15-13)
Padres 11, White Sox 6 (7): C Jack Mathey (.501 OPS) went 1-for-2 with a double, two RBIs and a walk. SS Dawson Willis (.933 OPS) went 1-for-4 with two RBIs.
ROOKIE DSL GOLD (4-2)
Padres 9, Dodgers 0 (7): LHP Carlos Alvarez (4.05 ERA) struck out three and allowed two walks over four no-hit innings in the start. 2B Yorvin Morla (1.023 OPS) drove in two runs on his first homer. LF Eddson Martinez (1.662 OPS) and DH Joniel Hernandez (.962 OPS) both drove in two runs on two hits. Martinez doubled.
San Diego, CA
Tatis’ first Petco homer of the year delivers crucial walk-off win
Fernando Tatis Jr. hit just his second home run of the season with two outs in the ninth inning to lift the San Diego Padres to a 5-4 win against the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday.
Tatis lined a 2-1 pitch from Chase Petty (0-1) into the first row of seats in left field, with a launch angle of just 18 degrees. He spread his arms wide in celebration as he approached second base and did an exaggerated stutter step around third. His jersey was torn off during a wild celebration.
He didn’t hit his first homer of the season until May 30 at Washington. Wednesday’s homer was the fifth career walk-off for Tatis and fifth of the season for San Diego, which won for just the fourth time in 16 games.
The Padres took two of three Cincinnati, who scored all their runs Wednesday on three home runs.
Cincinnati took a 4-2 lead on its third homer, by Eugenio Suárez off Ron Marinaccio with one out in the eighth.
San Diego tied it in the bottom of the inning on an RBI double by Gavin Sheets and a run-scoring single by Samad Taylor.
The rally got Michael King off the hook for what would have been his fourth straight loss. He has allowed six home runs in his last four starts, including two in each of his last two starts. Wandy Peralta (1-0) pitched the ninth.
King allowed Spencer Steer’s two-run shot into the second deck in left field in the fourth that gave the Reds a 2-1 lead.
San Diego tied it in the fifth when Tatis’ two-out single brought in Rodolfo Durán, aboard on a one-out double.
JJ Bleday homered off King with two outs in the seventh, his 11th, for a 3-2 lead.
Up next
Reds LHP Nick Lodolo (2-1, 5.51 ERA) is scheduled to start Friday night at home against Arizona.
Padres RHP Griffin Canning (0-4, 6.34 ERA) is expected to start Friday night at Baltimore.
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB
San Diego, CA
Daily Business Report: June 10, 2026, San Diego Metro Magazine
Meet San Diego’s theater organ player, whose music creates a time machine to the 1920s
By Drew Sitton | Times of San Diego
There are old car people. There are aquarium people. And then there are theater organ people.
San Diego has its own.
“You either get it or you don’t,” said Russ Peck, who is known as the preeminent expert on theater organs from San Diego to Los Angeles. “It’s just what turns you on, and this thing… I just love these, I love playing on ‘em. Working on ‘em. It’s a way of life.”
In 1970, Peck heard his first pipe organ while at a music hall in Downey. The only song he had memorized on the piano was “Porky Pig at the Ice Show.” He played it over and over until he was forced to stop. Then, he spent years bugging his parents to get him an organ.
Read more
Morning Report: Arizona Eyes Tijuana’s Sewage
by Voice of San Diego
A state-backed Arizona finance authority is considering a plan to fund a wastewater-to-drinking water facility in the Tijuana River Valley.
The goal? Pipe the purified water back to Mexico, and in exchange, ask Mexico to hand over some of its Colorado River water. It is one of several ambitious concepts backed by a $1billion Arizona fund aimed at identifying new water resources for the drought-stricken state.
But navigating the legal and environmental nuances of cross-border sewage is messy. The reality is that it’s incredibly complex to try to treat another country’s runoff on U.S. soil, our MacKenzie Elmer writes.
Read More
San Diego’s forgotten beer giant: How Aztec Brewing helped shape a city
By Debbie L. Sklar | Times of San Diego
Founded in 1921 during Prohibition, Aztec Brewing Co. was created by American investors who established operations in Mexico in order to serve U.S. consumers who could no longer legally purchase alcohol at home.
Mexicali, just south of the border, became part of a wider regional network where travel, trade, and nightlife flowed between the two countries despite Prohibition restrictions.
When Prohibition ended in 1933, Aztec relocated its operations to San Diego, establishing a large-scale brewery at 2301 Main St. The site sat within the city’s industrial corridor near what is today Logan Heights and the Barrio Logan area, then primarily defined by manufacturing, rail activity, and warehousing rather than formal neighborhood boundaries.
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San Diego, CA
San Diego City Council OKs compromise spending plan, capping a contentious budget season
Weeks of debate and negotiation culminated Tuesday with the San Diego City Council adopting a compromise budget that includes last-minute moves to boost flood prevention and partially restore hours at libraries and rec centers.
The final budget pays for some new expenditures by pairing up police officers in patrol cars more frequently versus having them patrol alone — a change opposed by the city’s police chief.
Other late additions include money for an engineering team that analyzes bike lanes, a bridge in western Mission Valley and two police sergeants — one focused on graffiti and another on registering sex offenders.
The council, which debated the final budget during a contentious public hearing that lasted more than five hours, also came within one vote of eliminating a city contract for automated license plate readers.
The $2 million in savings would have allowed full reversal of Mayor Todd Gloria’s proposed cuts to hours at nine libraries and 24 recreation centers. A full reversal would have cost $3 million, but the final budget includes only $900,000.
In the final budget, four library branches would have their Saturday hours cut in half: La Jolla, Point Loma, downtown and Rancho Bernardo. Two other branches would lose their Monday hours: University Heights and Allied Gardens.
For recreation centers, weekly hours will be cut to 40 at La Jolla, Pacific Beach, Cabrillo, North Clairemont, Ocean Beach, Carmel Mountain Ranch, Hilltop, Tierrasanta, Scripps Ranch, Mira Mesa, Rancho Bernardo, Allied Gardens, San Carlos and Serra Mesa.
The four council members in favor of canceling the contract for license plate readers were Kent Lee, Henry Foster, Vivian Moreno and Sean Elo-Rivera.
They said license plate readers do more harm than good by putting residents under surveillance and providing data that could potentially be used for immigration enforcement.
After the proposal was rejected, Elo-Rivera called it a mistake.
“We’re leaving $2 million in resources on the table that could be opening more rec centers, opening more libraries and opening more parks,” Elo-Rivera said. “I think that’s a shame, and I don’t think we’re safer for it.”
Councilmember Marni von Wilpert said license plate readers help get criminals caught and make the city safer.
“We can go back to the old way of policing if we want, but there will be consequences,” she said.
Von Wilpert was joined in opposition to canceling the contract by Stephen Whitburn, Raul Campillo, Jennifer Campbell and Joe LaCava.
The issue also divided the speakers who attended Tuesday’s hearing.
Larry Webb, leader of a resident group called the Coastal Coalition, said license plate readers are crucial to the city’s understaffed Police Department.
“Eliminating a proven force multiplier will only worsen the challenges,” he said.
Khalid Alexander said the council’s choice was between supporting police with the readers or supporting residents with the kind of crime prevention that comes from better neighborhood services.
“We request you support the people who are begging you to support programs that prevent crime and that you defund the police,” he said.
The mayor didn’t announce Tuesday night whether he would sign the budget or possibly use his line-item veto power to reverse some of the last-minute changes. An announcement was expected Wednesday.
Another contentious issue was making officers share patrol cars to reduce gas and vehicle costs.
Councilmember Henry Foster praised the move, despite concerns raised by the city’s independent budget analyst that it could raise costs for overtime and slow response times.
“Officers don’t show up by themselves,” said Foster, contending that it makes sense for officers to travel together to incidents serious enough that multiple officers respond.
Police Chief Scott Wahl said he would grudgingly figure out how to implement the change, which the labor union representing city police officers has supported.
“We’ll do our best to try to make it work,” Wahl said. “If it was an idea that I thought was a good one, I would have proposed it.”
Deputy City Attorney Leslie Fitzgerald said it was unclear whether Wahl would be required to actually implement the change.
“Although the city charter gives the council the authority to adopt the budget and make cuts, the charter also gives the police chief the power and authority to operate and control the Police Department,” she said.
Other last-minute additions included $750,000 for a program that helps small businesses, $900,000 to help council offices fund community events and $200,000 to restore a position devoted to promoting San Diego as a setting for movies and TV.
The final budget includes $2 million to clear flood channels, responding to a request from Fire Chief Robert Logan.
The council also restored funding for the Office of Child and Youth Success, expanded a wellness program for city lifeguards and funded 24-hour security for a storage site on 20th Street for homeless people.
The council showed some spending restraint Tuesday when it chose to place $1.7 million in excess cash from the ongoing fiscal year into the city’s relative sparse reserve fund.
It’s the first time the city has contributed to the reserve fund since 2023. The fund will now rise from $207 million to $209 million — about $80 million below where the independent budget analyst says it should be.
The council’s vote marks the climax of one of the most controversial budget seasons in many years, with officials trying to close a $146 million gap just one year after making unpopular cuts to close a $250 million deficit.
Arts funding had been expected to be the most controversial issue during final budget negotiations, but proposed cuts of $11.8 million were mostly reversed Friday with a deal redirecting $6 million in convention center expansion funding to arts and a $3 million philanthropic donation.
Other controversial issues during budget season — such as proposals to wipe out the popular December Nights holiday festival and cut neighborhood crime prevention programs — got reversed by the mayor last month.
The final budget includes layoffs, but the chaos of so many last-minute decisions prevented city officials from providing an exact number Tuesday evening. Many employees will also be forced to take unpaid furloughs.
An employee whose position is eliminated in the final budget told the council Tuesday that such cuts come with consequences.
“I’m not here to save my job,” said Marc Frederick, a program manager focused on city real estate. “Based on my experience, the quality, quantity and efficiency of these transactions will go down.”
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