HOME

What’s Happening in Baseball Today


The First Pitch: May 27, 2026

Within the first 55 games of their season, the Chicago Cubs have two 10-game winning streaks. Now, they also have a streak of 10 straight losses

The Cubs’ riches-to-rags circumstance reaches double-digit standing with a bludgeon, being handed a 12-1 whipping by the Pirates at Pittsburgh. Jordan Wicks, making his first start this season for the Cubs after beginning the year at Triple-A, is lit up for five first-inning runs, and eight before departing midway through the fifth. 

No team in major league history has experienced multiple 10-game win streaks and at least one 10-game skid in the same season—let alone the first third of a single campaign. 

During their slide, the Cubs have been outscored 65-25, are batting .179 and have a staff ERA of 6.18.


A day after being no-hit by Houston, the Rangers quickly make up for lost offense, piling up eight runs on five hits in the first inning alone against the visiting Astros, on their way to a 10-7 victory. Two walks and a hit batsman from Astros starter Jason Alexander helps fuel the Rangers’ initial rally, capped by Joc Pederson’s three-run homer. 

The eight runs are the most scored by the Rangers in the first inning since 2012, and they’re the second most by a team coming off a no-hit loss. In 1905, the White Sox scored nine to start a 15-1 win in the nightcap of a doubleheader, after being no-hit by Boston’s Bill Dinneen in the first game.


Nick Kurtz is kept off the basepaths for the first time in 48 games, failing to reach in either of his four at-bats as the A’s suffer a 4-1 home loss to Seattle. The streak ends with Kurtz tied for the all-time franchise mark within a season, matching Mark McGwire—who reached safely in each of his last 48 games in 1995; McGwire still owns the A’s record over multiple seasons, as he extended his streak to 61 to start his 1996 season. 

During his 48-game streak, Kurtz batted .308 with 11 doubles, a triple, eight homers, 37 RBIs, and 48 walks; he was held hitless in 13 of those games. 

With the loss, the A’s drop below .500 to 27-28—but still lead the AL West by a half-game over the Mariners. Ironically, the NL Central’s two last-place teams—the aforementioned Cubs and Pirates—would share first place in the West by two games.


The Yankees accomplish something none of their almighty predecessors of lore could not. In a 15-1 smacking of the Royals in Kansas City, every member of the Yankees’ starting lineup has at least two hits, with the team in total collecting 21; six of those are home runs, tying a one-game record by a team at Kauffman Stadium. Amed Rosario (see below) leads the way for New York with four hits including a pair of homers. 

Nine other teams have hit six homers in a game at 53-year old Kauffman Stadium. None of them were the Royals. 

The 21 hits by the Yankees are the most given up in the post-1900 modern era by any major league team based in Kansas City (not including the Negro League Monarchs, owing to a lack of data) in a home game. That includes not only the Royals, but also the A’s (1955-67) and the Federal League’s Packers (1914-15).


Recently released by the Mets, veteran closer/reliever Craig Kimbrel finds yet another new home with the Tampa Bay Rays, and gets quickly inserted into the action, pitching a scoreless eighth in a 6-1 loss at Baltimore. The Rays are the 11th team for Kimbrel—and the ninth over just the past five-plus seasons.


Bob Horner, the burly slugger with curly blonde locks drafted by Atlanta in the first round of the 1978 amateur draft and immediately inserted into the Braves’ starting lineup without any minor-league seasoning—blasting 23 homers over 89 games to win NL Rookie of the Year honors—passes away at the age of 68. 

Over a 10-year career in which he amassed 218 homers, four of them in a single game in 1986,—a game which, ironically, the Braves lost—Horner never played a single game in the minors. Injuries and weight issues did take their toll on his playing longevity; salary-depressed collusion also didn’t help, as Horner fled to Japan after 1986 after being offered little to nothing by MLB owners during the offseason; in 1988, he returned to America and played one more season with the Cardinals, collecting just three homers in 60 games before retiring at age 30.


Congrats, Your Box Score Line Was the Best (Hitters Edition)

6-3-4-4—Amed Rosario, New York Yankees                                   
The veteran utility guy has been feeling some of that Bronx Bomber energy in this, his second season with the Yankees. In New York’s 15-1 pasting of the Royals at Kansas City, Rosario enjoyed his second multi-homer game of the year—doubling his career total—while adding a pair of singles. As much as Rosario looks to be enjoying playing for the Yankees, he definitely enjoys playing against the Royals; in 50 career games against K.C., he’s batting .329 with seven homers and 32 RBIs.


Congrats, Your Box Score Line Was the Best (Pitchers Edition)

6-1-0-0-2-3—Emerson Hancock, Seattle                                   
The 26-year-old right-hander continues what’s evolving into a breakout season. At Sacramento against the A’s, Hancock retired the first 12 batters before a walk and (only) base hit began the fifth. Perhaps just as impressively, he kept Nick Kurtz off the basepaths in three at-bats, helping to end his 48-game on-base streak. In 11 starts this season, Hancock is 4-2 with a fine 2.78 ERA.


It Was Whatever-Something Years Ago Today

2017: No team scores more than six runs in any of the 16 games played. In 703 previous days in which 16 games were played going all the way back to the beginning of big-league ball in 1876, that had never happened.


You Say It’s Your Birthday

Happy birthday to:

Cuban-born Angels third baseman Yoan Moncada (31) 

Toronto pitcher Jose Berrios (32), pitcher of 108-82 record who just underwent Tommy John surgery 

Todd Hundley (57), two-time All-Star catcher; collector of 202 home runs including 41 alone in 1996 

Frank Thomas (58), Hall-of-Fame slugger with 521 career home runs; unquestionably the greatest hitter in White Sox history; two-time AL MVP, five-time All-Star; four-time league leader in walks, on-base percentage and OPS 

Jeff Bagwell (58), Cooperstown-bound first baseman who tops Astros all-time lists in home runs, RBIs and walks; 1991 NL Rookie of the Year; 1994 NL MVP; top NL hitter in 1994 and 1999; 152 runs scored in 2000 most by major leaguer since 1936 

Gary Nolan (78), 10-year pitcher for Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine, 1972 All-Star with 15-5 record and 1.99 ERA 

Born on this date:

Terry Moore (1912), four-time All-Star outfielder for the Cardinals; career .280 batting average 

Pinky Higgins (1909), third baseman of 1,941 hits; three-time All-Star; twice knocked in over 100 runs (on less than 10 home runs) 

Frank Snyder (1894), 16-year catcher; member of two world champion Giants teams (1921-22)


Shameless Link of the Day

Check out our story on Houston’s Daikin Park, which was notoriously known as Enron Field when it opened.


Join Us on X and BlueSky

Besides our growing and active presence on X, TGG has spread its social media wings to BlueSky for those who’ve found the X culture too toxic. For those who are wondering, we provide the same posts on both platforms, and they’re non-political. We’re just talking baseball.

Meanwhile, we’ve given up our fight trying to reactivate our Facebook page, which was hacked last year. The page remains up but is frozen in time, as we are unable to access it—and Facebook, in all its infinite lack of wisdom, continues to provide absolutely no customer support in the matter as they literally have none. All the more reason to join us on X and BlueSky.


To Whom It May Concern

We are proud of what we have built at This Great Game, but we also admit it is not perfect. Occasionally, fans from all walks of life check in and point out errors, and we are grateful to these external editors. Our site is all the better because of you.

Also, we have had many folks chime in on our various lists in the Lists and Teams sections, many of them disagreeing with some of our choices. Since all lists are made to be argued, this is to be expected. If your arguments are respectful, we will respond in kind and join in a civilized debate—and we’ll often see your viewpoints, since no list should qualify as The Gospel. But if your responses contain the sort of vitriol found so often these days in social media circles, you’re going to get ignored. So please, respond respectfully, engage in polite conversation with us, and enjoy the site!

1939 Baseball History
The Ballparks: Candlestick Park
Houston Astros History
2003 Baseball History
Ed Attanasio, 1958-2023
The TGG Comebacker