At long last, baseball is back. Spring Training games began in earnest this weekend, which means that we can all transition from reading way too much into Hot Stove rumors seamlessly into reading way too much into actual at-bats.
Because really, isn’t that what this time of year is all about? The truth of the 2026 season won’t be revealed for a while yet, but it’s not too early to read the tea leaves. And some of the biggest names of this offseason are already giving fans reason to believe.
Pete Alonso makes the Orioles offense very, very scary
Pete Alonso arrives in Baltimore with sky-high expectations, by far the biggest free agent signing in Orioles history after years of begging for the front office to spend more. This is one heck of a way to endear yourself to a new fan base:
— MLB (@MLB) February 20, 2026
Alonso punctuated his first game in an Orioles uniform with a very Polar Bear-esque homer against the rival Yankees, part of a 1-for-3 effort on the day. Is parking a middle-middle slider from a Minor League reliever evidence that another 50-homer season is incoming? Certainly not. Does it nonetheless confirm our priors about how good this Baltimore lineup can be this year? You bet.
Yes, it would help if Jordan Westburg could ever find a way to put together a full, healthy season, and Jackson Holliday’s broken hamate bone doesn’t help either. But even with those two infielders on the shelf, the talent here is obvious: Gunnar Henderson and Alonso anchoring things, with an outfield consisting of Taylor Ward, Tyler O’Neill and Colton Cowser. Oh, and former top prospect Coby Mayo will finally get a shot at regular playing time with Westburg on the shelf, with fellow youngsters Dylan Beavers and Samuel Basallo possessing major upside as well. If just a couple of those breakouts come to fruition, and if Adley Rutschman can get back to how he looked a couple years ago, look out.
Brian Cashman was right to trust the Yankees’ young talent
It’s safe to say that Yankees fans weren’t thrilled with their team’s offseason, one that saw Brian Cashman respond to last year’s ALDS loss by … essentially reconstructing the exact same team, just one year older. But Cashman has consistently projected confidence in the media, and while it’s still February, there’s a chance he might look like a genius by season’s end.
New York does not have the deepest farm system around. But they have potential impact talent at the very top, and that talent was on display over the team’s first two Spring Training games. First was pitching prospect Carlos Lagrange, built like a defensive end at 6-foot-7 and 248 pounds, showing just how sky-high his upside is if he can throw enough strikes:
Carlos Lagrange is Disgusting. 🤮
3 Pitch Sequence:
101.8 mph ⛽️
83.2 mph Slider (with 20 inches Horizontal Break)
102.4 mph ⛽️ pic.twitter.com/np5X73715m— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) February 21, 2026
And then it was the Yankees’ other gargantuan prospect, outfielder Spencer Jones, launching a SCUD missile out to right field in his first at-bat of the spring.
.@Yankees prospect Spencer Jones SMOKES his first #SpringTraining home run! pic.twitter.com/qMrKlV6aUW
— MLB (@MLB) February 21, 2026
Lagrange and Jones still have plenty of questions to answer; the former about his command, the latter about his ability to make contact against MLB pitching. But it’s also not hard to imagine a world in which both contribute meaningfully down the stretch this season — especially Lagrange, if the Yankees want to turn him into a reliever and let his triple-digit velocity play up even more.
These are the sorts of names that Cashman opted against trading this offseason in talks around guys like Freddy Peralta and Edward Cabrera. Time will tell whether that was the right decision, but New York has more upside than its all-too-familiar winter would suggest.
Munetaka Murakami’s game will translate just fine
Murakami was the best power hitter in Japan for years, but he had to settle for a two-year deal with the White Sox this winter over concerns about his ability to make enough contact against MLB pit
