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Dodgers reportedly scratch Blake Snell before his second start back from shoulder fatigue, opt for bullpen game vs. Angels

The Los Angeles Dodgers scratched left-handed pitcher Blake Snell on Friday in Anaheim, hours before their series opener against the Los Angeles Angels, according to The Athletic’s Katie Woo, who reported that the Dodgers are opting for a bullpen game instead.

The news comes just six days after Snell made his long-awaited debut this season. Shoulder fatigue sidelined him at the start of the year, but, per Woo, Friday’s absence is not believed to be related to the inflammation he was previously dealing with.

Still awaiting on official word as to why Blake Snell was scratched, but it is not believed to be related to the shoulder inflammation that cost him the first six weeks of the year: https://t.co/LB1NMl4gWbhttps://t.co/pJ8feN6k6j

— Katie Woo (@katiejwoo) May 15, 2026

In his first outing since Game 7 of the 2025 World Series, the one-time All-Star gave up four earned runs and six hits in just three innings of action amid a 7-2 loss to the Atlanta Braves last Saturday.

Despite those numbers, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts described Snell’s performance as “something to build off of,” via The Los Angeles Times.

While Snell issued a pair of walks, he did strike out five batters.

This story is being updated.

Paul Skenes humorously peels back layer behind ace's pitch selection: 'I’m too stupid to call my own pitches'

Paul Skenes took a no-hitter into the seventh inning of his last start, a 10-strikeout masterpiece that headlined a 3-1 win over the Colorado Rockies on Tuesday.

The Pittsburgh Pirates ace has strung together back-to-back starts where he’s spun eight innings of shutout ball. Skenes hasn’t walked a batter in more than a month. He’s rounding into peak form, and his Pirates are four games above .500 in mid-May.

But the reigning NL Cy Young Award winner is as modest as ever.

During his latest appearance on “The Pat McAfee Show,” the right-handed pitcher shared some insight on his pitch selection.

“I don’t shake a ton,” the soon-to-be 24-year-old said on Thursday. “I’m too stupid to call my own pitches.”

Known for his humility despite the enormous limelight he lives in, Skenes deferred credit to catcher Henry Davis.

“I just let him do it,” Skenes said. “He’s got my career in his hands every fifth day.”

The Pirates use a trio of backstops, with Davis leading the group. He’s started 26 games. Joey Bart has received the nod 17 times this season. And Endy Rodríguez has started behind the plate once.

“Some teams are doing the from the dugout stuff,” Skenes said, when elaborating on the Pirates’ approach to calling pitches, “but we do it where Henry calls the game, and Joey and Endy and our other catchers — they all call the game for themselves.”

"I don't shake off a ton of pitches..

I'm too stupid to call my own pitches 😂😂

My career is in his hands every fifth day"@Paul_Skenes#PMSLivepic.twitter.com/8ElolUhUgX

— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) May 15, 2026

Skenes explained that often there’s no need for conversation between him and Davis. They read and react and typically find themselves on the same page.

“We see how it’s going in the bullpen, we see how it is between innings during the game,” he said on “McAfee.”

“Sometimes a pitch just sucks, so we just stop calling it. Nothing really needs to be said then.”

Paul Skenes, K'ing the Side in the 6th.

10Ks thru 6...and 🤫 pic.twitter.com/r8wqodqrkk

— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) May 13, 2026

Davis has an array of pitches to pick from. Skenes’ arsenal features a four-seam fastball, changeup, slider, sinker and splitter. The two-time All-Star began Tuesday’s gem against the Rockies with six consecutive strikeouts. Although Skenes is quick to brush off praise, it’s clear his intuition is a major factors in his prolific performance.

Skenes described how he tinkers with certain pitches over the course of an outing and, more generally, throughout a season.

“We’re constantly working on all of the pitches,” Skenes said. “I might have made some changes to the changeup or my sinker or something else. I think a lot of the time it’s like kind of subconscious of me, where I make changes to the pitch, and it either gets better or worse, and then we either have to fix it or keep riding with it.”

Last season, the LSU product followed up his 2024 NL Rookie of the Year campaign by posting a 1.97 ERA, the best in MLB in 2025. No other qualifying major-league starting pitcher had gone sub-2.00 since Justin Verlander did it with the Houston Astros in 2022.

Skenes got off to a rough start this time around. After pitching for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic, he gave up five runs and lasted only 2/3 of an inning on Opening Day. He’s been solid since.

“I think we’re getting to midseason form,” Skenes said Thursday on “McAfee.”

“I think May is kind of when it all starts to click for me. … I think everybody’s a little bit different. You get feel of pitches, you lose feel of pitches as the season goes on, so stuff that’s working right now probably in all likelihood isn’t going to be working in a month or two. But we’ll figure it out and go from there.”

Knicks' OG Anunoby reportedly expected to be able to return for Game 1 of Eastern Conference finals

Over the weekend, the New York Knicks completed their first best-of-seven series sweep since 1999. They did so against the Philadelphia 76ers, and without one of the hottest shooters in this year’s postseason, forward OG Anunoby.

He exited Game 2 in the fourth quarter with a hamstring strain in his right leg and missed Games 3 and 4. But, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania, there’s an expectation Anunoby will be able to play in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals.

The latest for @SportsCenter on optimism for New York's OG Anunoby entering the Eastern Conference finals and details on Bob Myers leading the search for the 76ers new top executive: pic.twitter.com/pRdcT3JIYG

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) May 13, 2026

"Barring any setbacks, there's optimism for his status for Game 1,” Charania reported Wednesday on ESPN’s “SportsCenter.”

“Today, OG Anunoby participated in parts of practice. He also had an individual on-court workout. He's missed exactly one week with a hamstring strain. He's been evaluated on a daily basis. The Knicks are gradually bringing him back, including him in basketball activities, but the expectation and hope is that he will be a go for Game 1.”

This story is being updated.

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