Sports
Pitching phenom Paul Skenes not a fan of automated strikezone: 'I like the human aspect of the game'

Like it or hate it (Paul Skenes leans towards the latter), an automated strikezone is coming to Major League Baseball, likely sooner rather than later.
This year marked the first when players could challenge balls and strikes during spring training, after years of experimentation in the minor leagues.
MLB commissioner Rob Manfred has said he’d like it to be in the regular season by 2026, but Skenes recently said he is “happy” that it isn’t there this year.
Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Paul Skenes (30) pitches in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field. (Benny Sieu-USA Today Sports)
“I like the human aspect of the game, because I think that there are games where the umpire’s zone is big, and there are games where the umpire’s zone is small,” the Pittsburgh Pirates ace said. “You bring in the automatic strikezone, it completely devalues framing, which effectively eliminates the catching position. I have mixed feelings towards it. I do like the human aspect of the game, but there’s definitely something to be said about being objective with the strikezone.”
This spring, teams will get two challenges per game, but they are able to retain each challenge won. Only the batter, pitcher or catcher can challenge a call, and it must be immediately after the call, with no help from the bench or other players.

Paul Skenes, #30 of the Pittsburgh Pirates, delivers a pitch in the first inning during the game against the New York Mets at PNC Park on July 5, 2024, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Justin Berl/Getty Images)
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Skenes’ comments echo those of future Hall of Famer Max Scherzer.
“I’m a little skeptical on this. I get what we’re trying to do here, but I think major league umpires are really good,” Scherzer said last month. “They’re really good. So, what are we actually changing here? We know there are going to be strikes that are changed to balls, and balls that are changed to strikes. . . . So we’re going to basically be even. So are we actually doing to improve the game? Are the umpires really that bad? I don’t think so.”
“Can we just play baseball?” he added. “We’re humans. Can we just be judged by humans? Do we really need to disrupt the game? I think humans are defined by humans.”
It is yet another big change to the sport commissioned by Manfred, who implemented a pitch timer, larger bases and shift limits in 2023. However, fans seem to like the changes, as attendance has increased in each of the last two years.

Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Paul Skenes (30) delivers a pitch in his major league debut against the Chicago Cubs during the first inning at PNC Park. (Charles LeClaire-USA Today Sports)
Skenes was named the NL Rookie of the Year in 2024 and finished third in the NL Cy Young Award voting with a 1.96 ERA 11.5 K/9. A signed rookie card that included the patch he wore for his MLB debut just sold for $1.1 million, which is more than his $875,000 salary for this year.
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Sports
Hernández: Roki Sasaki isn't an instant star. But the Dodgers don't need him to be one

Roki Sasaki chose right when he signed with the Dodgers.
Never mind not being ready to lead the rotation of another team and challenge Shohei Ohtani. The 23-year-old Sasaki doesn’t look ready to pitch in the major leagues.
Sasaki made his second start for the Dodgers on Saturday night, and it was somehow worse than his first. He didn’t make it out of the second inning of a 7-3 victory over the Detroit Tigers at Dodger Stadium, his control problems even more pronounced than they were in his debut in Tokyo.
He recorded only five outs. He walked four. He was charged with three hits and two runs. Of the 61 pitches he threw, only 32 were strikes.
This disheartening start to his major league career — he walked five batters in three innings in his previous start against the Chicago Cubs — shouldn’t sound any alarm bells, but that’s only because he’s playing for the Dodgers.
If Sasaki needs another start or two to get acclimated to the pitch clock or low-quality American baseballs, the Dodgers can afford to give them to him.
If he needs to spend time refining his delivery in the minor leagues, the Dodgers have the necessary depth to cover his absence.
Sasaki won’t have a rookie season like Fernando Valenzuela’s or Dwight Gooden’s, but the Dodgers don’t need him to. The Dodgers are World Series favorites with or without him, and they have the luxury of treating him as if he’s a prospect without compromising their championship ambitions.
Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki delivers during his Dodger Stadium debut on Saturday night.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
His circumstances would be completely different if he’d signed with another team. On the San Diego Padres, he probably would have started the season as the No. 3 starter. Him pitching like this would have erased whatever chance the Padres had of dethroning the Dodgers in the National League West. The pressure to perform would be greater by several orders of magnitude.
However, there is a downside to not being needed, as Sasaki is with the Dodgers, which is that a player can be forgotten. Around this time last year, Bobby Miller was viewed as a star in the making. Miller didn’t have the season the Dodgers envisioned, as his performance declined and his health failed him. He started this season with the franchise’s triple-A affiliate in Oklahoma City.
Sports
The ex-Real Madrid striker who had not scored for 1,135 days or played in 304 – and a glorious return

Three hundred and four days is a long time for a footballer to go without playing in a game. And 1,135 days must feel like a lifetime for a striker to go without scoring.
The former Real Madrid forward Mariano Diaz ended both of those personal droughts within the first 20 minutes of a friendly between the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico this week.
Mariano made 84 appearances for Madrid over two spells between 2016 and 2023, scoring 12 times. He then joined fellow La Liga side Sevilla in 2023 but left them last summer and has been without a club since.
He had scored his last official goal on February 15, 2022, for Madrid against Cadiz in La Liga, and his most recent appearance in any recognised competition was in a Spanish top-flight match for Sevilla against Barcelona on April 26 last year.
Now, he is back in business.
The 31-year-old has committed to the Dominican Republic national team in time for their 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifiers and this summer’s Concacaf Gold Cup in Canada and the United States, with 16 sides from North and Central America and the Caribbean competing.
So, why did the Dominican Republic want Mariano after such a long time out? And how was he able to hit the ground running on his return?
Mariano played 88 minutes in the Dominican Republic’s 2-0 win against Puerto Rico on Tuesday, at Cibao Stadium in the Dominican city of Santiago.
His goal came from a long ball over the top, which he received on his chest while running in behind the Puerto Rican defence. That touch dropped the ball onto his favoured right foot, before he fired a shot into the bottom left-hand corner.
It was a high-quality take and finish from a similar angle to his stoppage-time goal seconds after coming off the bench against Barcelona in March 2020 — his best moment in a Madrid shirt — and showed why the Dominican Republic are so excited to have him, despite his lack of club football over the past 10 months.
“It was a very beautiful feeling to return to the pitch, to score a goal again. It’s what I most like,” Mariano told the Dominican Republic football team’s official channels. “There’s a very good connection (with the rest of the team), very good chemistry, and I hope it continues like that in the next games.”
The goal was of special importance to the Dominican Republic’s Argentinian manager Marcelo Neveleff, who pushed for Mariano’s inclusion.
“I told him before (the game) that I was praying for him to score a goal, and he gave me a big hug. And then after the game, he gave me another big hug,” Neveleff, 62, tells The Athletic. “We were all rooting for him, and he knew that, even without saying words. He showed gratitude to us all, coaching staff and players. We were all really happy for him.”
The two teams had met just four days earlier in Puerto Rico and drew 2-2 without the Dominican Republic’s two most high-profile players, Mariano and Leeds United left-back Junior Firpo, who both scored in the later win in Santiago. Puerto Rico are 157th in FIFA’s world rankings (the Dominican Republic are 141st), so there will be tougher tests ahead for Mariano.
Mariano celebrates his first goal in 1,135 days (Dominican Football Federation)
It was his first appearance for the Dominican Republic — where his mother is from — since his international debut in 2013, when he featured in a friendly against Haiti. He was also eligible to play for Spain, having been born in Premia de Mar, Catalonia.
In a 2018 interview with Spanish news agency EFE, as reported by Marca, he called playing for Spain “a dream I have since I’ve been little” and added: “They (the Dominican Republic) have tried to get me to go (there), but I have the desire and the intention of playing for Spain.”
Neveleff, who was appointed in January 2023, says: “When I got here two years ago, we went over the players of Dominican heritage that played in Europe, and he was on the top of the list. We met a year ago, and then he told me that he was interested but not at the moment, when he was in Seville. But then we started talking again and it was a big-time opportunity for us as a national team to have a player of his calibre.
“He believed that we were going to be able to help him relaunch his career. And that’s why it was a win-win situation for all of us.”
Players without a club very rarely represent their countries.
Notable examples include Cristiano Ronaldo for Portugal at the 2022 World Cup after his second Manchester United exit two days into the tournament and Zinedine Zidane at the 2006 World Cup, as he had announced he would retire when his France team’s involvement ended having already played his last game at club level for Real Madrid.
Goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa put in stellar performances for Mexico at the 2014 World Cup while he was a free agent after leaving France’s Ajaccio to earn a move to Spanish side Malaga and Hal Robson-Kanu helped Wales to the 2016 European Championship semi-finals as a free agent after his deal at Reading expired — his decisive second in the 3-1 quarter-final win against Belgium nominated for FIFA’s Puskas award for the best goal that calendar year — and was then signed by West Bromwich Albion.
But none were without a club for as long as Mariano, who endured a difficult time at Madrid.
He joined their youth system in 2011-12 from Catalan side Badalona and rose to become third-choice striker behind Karim Benzema and Alvaro Morata in 2016-17. He made the most of his limited minutes to earn an €8million ($8.7m; £6.7m at current exchange rates) move to France’s Lyon in summer 2017 and scored 21 goals in 48 games for them across all competitions the following season before Madrid then exercised a right of first refusal to bring him back in 2018.
His final five years at Madrid were characterised by a lack of playing time and it probably did not help that he took on the iconic No 7 shirt worn by Cristiano Ronaldo when he left for Juventus in the summer of 2018. Mariano finally left through the back door in 2023 and signed as a free agent with Sevilla — but failed to score in 13 appearances and has been without a club since leaving last summer after his one-year contract expired.

Mariano scores for Madrid against Barca in March 2020 (David S. Bustamante/Soccrates/Getty Images)
Dominican Republic manager Neveleff describes him as a “tough kid” who is “very strong mentally”.
“These guys are high-level athletes,” says Neveleff. “If they have the idea to come back, they cannot relax, especially (when it comes to) physical training. What is most challenging (for a player) is (going without) the competition. When you play in La Liga, the Premier League or the Championship, whichever, some of the stuff that you were resolving on the field in a split second, it might take you a bit longer to do it and when you take longer, you are already late for the action.
“He missed a couple of chances (in the Puerto Rico game). I told him if he had been in top shape and form he would not have missed. He missed a one-on-one with the goalkeeper before he scored the goal, but he knows.”
But the signs were mostly positive on Mariano’s return. He trained well before the game and played those 88 minutes to a decent level before being replaced.
“I saw him in the first day in practice and it was obvious this guy has been training all the time (despite being without a club),” says Neveleff, “so we had a conversation and I asked him, ‘Do you feel that you are ready to start?’. When he told me ‘Yes’, I believed him.”
The Dominican Republic’s goalkeeper Xavier Valdez, of MLS club Nashville FC, agrees on Mariano’s quality.
“With him as a new addition, it makes our fight for qualification to the World Cup much stronger,” the 21-year-old tells The Athletic. “He brings a lot of quality and effectiveness to the team. Everyone has received him well, and I think we can all say that we are all very excited for him to be part of the team again.”
With two games played and two to go, the Dominican Republic are third in their second-round Concacaf World Cup qualifying group, behind Guatemala and Jamaica, as they chase a historic first appearance in football’s most prestigious tournament.
The top two in each of the six groups (12 teams overall) progress to the third round, where they will be split into three groups of four. The three third-round group winners will qualify directly for next year’s World Cup, with the two best-ranked runners-up entering inter-confederation play-offs also involving teams from Asia, Africa, South America and Oceania.
Neveleff says Mariano is hoping to find himself a club before the Dominican Republic’s next matches in early June, when they visit Guatemala and host Dominica, a fellow Caribbean island nation, in those last two second-round World Cup qualifiers before the Gold Cup starts later that month.

The Dominican Republic qualified for the 2024 Olympics and are now aiming for a first World Cup appearance (Alex Grimm – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)
“I don’t think he will be without a team for long, but if that happens, I am going to start bugging him,” says Neveleff.
“I know it is in the middle of the season (for many leagues), but hopefully, he will get somewhere. If not, he will stay training, and I’ll see how I can help him. Maybe we can bring him over and train with a group of players here, but I believe in his quality.
“The next international window is only a few months away. I don’t think he will lose his quality from today to June, so my plan is to have him at all costs.”
The Dominican Republic have made important strides in football in recent years.
Their qualification for the Gold Cup marks the men’s team’s first major tournament, one year after the women first qualified for their equivalent competition.
The men’s side also appeared at the 2024 Olympics in France, where they were knocked out at the group stage, drawing with Egypt (0-0) and Uzbekistan (1-1) and losing 3-1 to eventual gold medallists Spain. Mariano was listed in their preliminary squad but ultimately got left out, with competing countries only allowed three players over 23 years old in their selected 18.
The country’s increased commitment to football also saw it host the Under-17 Women’s World Cup from October to November last year.
Higher standards have been set partly thanks to the successful recruitment of dual-national players playing in Europe, including Firpo, who committed his future to them in February 2024, Getafe forward Peter Gonzalez, and left-back Juan Familia-Castillo of Dutch side RKC Waalwijk.
If he can continue to score, Mariano could take the Dominican Republic closer to history — and perhaps relaunch his club career in the process.
(Top photo: Mariano celebrates scoring for Madrid in 2019; David S. Bustamante/Soccrates/Getty Images)
Sports
Yankees record historic inning with home runs on three consecutive pitches

The New York Yankees had a historic first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers on Saturday at Yankee Stadium.
After Yankees’ starting pitcher Max Fried pitched a scoreless top of the first inning, the bats went to work right away.
On Brewers’ starting pitcher Nestor Cortes’ first pitch of the game, Paul Goldschmidt deposited a fastball at the top of the zone into the bullpen in left-center field.
New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) hits a solo home run in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium on March 29, 2025. (Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images)
It was Goldschmidt’s first time ever leading off a game in his 15-year career, and with one swing gave the Yankees a 1-0 lead with his first career Yankees home run.
On Cortes’ second pitch of the game, Cody Bellinger turned on a high fastball and demolished into the bleachers over the bullpen in right-center field to give the Yankees a 2-0 lead. Before the fans could even sit down, Aaron Judge crushed Cortes’ third pitch 468 feet over the left field wall to make it 3-0.
The three consecutive home runs, on three consecutive pitches, marked the first time in Yankees’ history that the team led off a game with three straight home runs. It is the first time that any team has hit a home run on three straight pitches since 2000, according to MLB Stats.
But the Yankees weren’t done yet, as catcher Austin Wells hit an opposite-field home run just over the left-field wall to make it 4-0 in the first inning.
YANKEES PAY TRIBUTE TO MILLER GARDNER, LATE TEEN SON OF FORMER STAR OUTFIELDER

New York Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger (35) scores after hitting a solo home run in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium on March 29, 2025. (Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images)
This was the first time in team history that the Yankees hit four home runs in the first inning of a game.
Cortes escaped further trouble, and the Brewers’ offense immediately cut into the lead in the top of the second inning. They scored three runs, taking advantage of some poor Yankees’ defense to make it 4-3.
However, the Yankees responded in the bottom of the second inning, as shortstop Anthony Volpe hit a three-run to extend to the lead to 7-3. With Volpe’s second-inning home run, it was the first time in Yankees history they hit five home runs in the first two innings of a game.
The Yankees’ offensive onslaught continued in the third inning. Judge hit a grand slam for his second home run in two innings to make it 12-3.

New York Yankees first baseman Paul Goldschmidt (48) is greeted by right fielder Aaron Judge (99) after hitting a solo home run in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium on March 29, 2025. (Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images)
Jazz Chisholm Jr. followed Judge’s grand slam with a solo home run of his own.
Of the Yankees’ first 22 hitters to come to the plate, 16 of them reached base, and seven of them hit home runs.
At the time of this writing, the Yankees lead the Brewers 13-3 in the bottom of the fourth inning.
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