
Papers: Man Utd ready to spend £150m on three midfielders this summer
Manchester United plans to invest £150m in three midfielders this summer.
The San Francisco Giants and San Diego Padres are set to face off after a contrasting start to the season, with the Padres boasting an 18-7 record in April compared to the Giants' 11-15. Both teams previously met, with the Giants winning 2 out of 3 games.
The San Francisco Giants were still licking their wounds after the pasting the New York Yankees gave them opening week and it seemed as though their division rival the San Diego Padres would extend the misery. Instead, the Giants took 2 out of 3 and left San Diego with the same 2-4 record as the Padres. But, from this point, the two teams diverged.
The Padres exploded for an 18-7 record in April while the Giants went 11-15. The surprise was less that the Giants underperformed and more that the Padres were great. As I mentioned in the last preview:
Itās expected to be a down year for the Padres, right? The teamās finances are such that AJ Preller couldnāt make a big splash in free agency and years of huge trades has emptied their farm system. They scored just 7 runs in their opening series against the Tiges, tied for third with the Rockies and just behind the Diamondbacks, putting all four non-Dodger NL West teams in the bottom 5 of the sport in terms of runs scored. By wRC+, San Diegoās 66 puts them just outside that bottom 5 at 6th place. Sustainable for all these NL West teams? Probably not.
San Diego sold at a valuation of $3.9 billion not long after the series and that seemed to gas them up to competing with the Dodgers for the top of the NL West. Except thereās been one cute little storyline accompanying all that winning:
Fernando Tatis Jr. has not hit a home run this season.
As of now, the San Francisco Giants have an 11-15 record, while the San Diego Padres have an 18-7 record.
The Giants won 2 out of 3 games against the Padres in their last series.
The Padres are facing financial challenges that prevented them from making significant moves in free agency, impacting their performance.
Despite expectations of a down year, the Padres have surprised many with their strong performance, currently competing at the top of the NL West.

Manchester United plans to invest £150m in three midfielders this summer.

Man City draws with Everton in a thrilling match that could cost them the title.

Arsenal can clinch the Premier League title if they beat West Ham, says Carragher.
Carolina Hurricanes sell 4,687 Beer Skates after viral debut!
Tarik Skubal's elbow surgery could impact his contract value significantly.
Patricky Pitbull criticized Karate Combat after his fight was canceled due to a brawl in Miami. He claims the organization is covering for his opponent, Shahzaib Rind, who they say was not involved in the incident.
See every story in Sports ā including breaking news and analysis.
Heās slashing .261/.333/.311 in 139 PA (32 G) with just 4 doubles and a triple. He is 9-for-11 in stolen base attempts and heās playing his normally great defense in right field, but why has the power disappeared? Has he caught the Matt Chapman Virus? Not according to Statcast, which puts him in the 99th percentile of Hard Hit rate. According to MLB.comās Thomas Harrigan, āWhile he has been hitting rockets, he hasnāt been producing contact thatās conducive to slugging, recording theĀ lowest pull and fly-ball ratesĀ of his career.ā He warns, āAt some point, though, the dam is going to break.ā Could that be at Oracle Park, where heās enjoyed a .908 OPS thanks to 10 home runs, and 9 doubles in 178 career plate appearances?
While the Padres and their fans hold their breaths, Giants fans will be holding theirs to see if the teamās #1 hitting prospect, Bryce Eldridge, can finally hit his first major league home run. At the end of Spring Training during the exhibition schedule, those willing to attend a game that didnāt count got a look at Eldridgeās opposite field power in Oracle:
Heās been called up along with Jesus Rodriguez to give the Giants a season-saving shot of talent. In a 10-game, 37-PA cup of jav at the end of last year, he was 3-for-28 with a pair of doubles. Heās been striking out in 30% of his plate appearances for Triple-A Sacramento, though, and those seem likelier to stick than the .900+ OPS heās also sporting. Still, who will homer first this season: Fernando Tatis Jr. or Bryce Eldridge?
*Who:*San Diego Padres (20-13) vs. San Francisco Giants (13-21)
Where: Oracle Park | San Francisco, California
*When:*Monday & Tuesday at 6:45pm PT, Wednesday at 12:45pm PT
*National broadcasts:*None.
Projected starters
Monday: Randy Vasquez (RHP 3-0, 2.94 ERA) vs. Trevor McDonald (RHP season debut)
Tuesday: Walker Buehler (RHP 1-2, 5.40 ERA) vs. TBD
Wednesday: Matt Waldron (RHP 0-1, 9.88 ERA) vs. TBD
Randy Vasquez: Is the 27-year old good and breaking out or has he just had a few good starts here in the early season? Last year, he posted a 3.84 ERA in 133.2 IP (26 starts) but with a 4.85 FIP and just a 5.3 K/9. Through his first 6 starts here in 2026, heās at 2.94 in 33.2 IP (3.45 FIP) and a 9.1 K/9. His game log looks like this:
Heās allowed just 1 run on the road ā okay, admittedly, just 2 starts on the road, but they were in Boston (Start 2) and Colorado (Start 5).
Still, his Statcast page is unremarkable, bordering on poor. Itās when you look at the raw stuff that you see the upside: a 95 mph fastball (has both a four-seamer and sinker) and wicked spin on his cutter, curveball, slider, and sweeper. He also throws a changeup. The Giants lineup has a tough assignment ahead of them, as is often the case.
Miguel Andujar: Along with Xander Bogaerts (138 wRC+) and Manny Machado (112), Andujar (161) has really helped the Padres hit their way to victory over the past month or so. He has just a 2.9% walk rate against a 15.7% strikeout rate, but an impressive .209 Isolated Slugging percentage. His .389 batting average on balls in play suggests this is all pretty unsustainable, and maybe the Giants will pitch him into a cold streak, but for now, this utility guy is hitting the ball hard (41.5 Hard Hit%) and heās doing it by pulling the ball in the air at an elite rate (23.1%).
Mason Miller: Heās not a ālights outā closer, heās a soul devouring one. On top of all the strikeouts (32 in 16.1 IP), heās got a 65.2% groundball rate. If he gets the ball at the end of the game, and you havenāt already done so, give the Giants the L.
Matt Chapman: Is he, like Willy Adames, the ghost of the player we once knew? Did Chapman and Adames fall down an elevator shaft at the team hotel and what weāre seeing on the field now is merely their ghosts? Whatās happened to Chappy? Whatās happened to Willy? Their career-threatening slumps are getting a little silly.
Trevor McDonald: The only named starter for this series as of publication, it will be exciting to see if he can pickup where he left off at the end of last season as sort of the āhey, why didnāt the Giants stick him in the rotation sooner?ā guy. Heāll be going against a strong lineup who might not be all that impressed with 93-94 and a big olā curveball.
Who will close: It couldnāt possibly be Ryan Walker at this point, which means Caleb Kilian, Erik Miller, and Keaton Winn are on closer watch.
You know, Hunter Wendlestedtās jab at Director of Pitching Frank Anderson was a really sudden reminder that the top step of the dugout crew for the Giants is not respected around the league. Makes sense. Thatās got to be earned. At the same time, the disrespect is compounded by all the losing. I donāt know if these Giants have any resiliency, but when Tony Vitelloās answer in the post-game presser goes like this:
āIt all kind of got pretty hot pretty quick,ā Vitello said. āI was trying to figure out, can we take a look at it and what can be done from there. I kind of blacked out, to be honest with you amongst all the extra riffraff after something about ārah-rahā and āpom-poms,ā which I assume was something to do with either college or my behavior in the dugout.
I become concerned about focus and priorities. Whatās coming across is that Vitello & co. are overwhelmed right now, likely in over their heads, and theyāre (especially Vitello) lurching from feeling to feeling. The abject failure of the roster has to be making this all seem surreal or nightmarish, so I have some sympathy, but at this point, I think I only know Vitello by his visceral reaction to events or situations and not really anything about his philosophy on baseball or the players under his management. Am I going to learn any of that in this three game series? Probably not, but Iāll be on the lookout.
The Giants wonāt get swept, but it might feel like they did. Unless they win the series, in which case weāll all be a little crabby about how they didnāt get a badly needed sweep.