Final Mar 29
MIL 9 +139 o9.0
NYY 20 -151 u9.0
Final Mar 29
LAA 1 -159 o8.0
CHW 0 +146 u8.0
Final Mar 29
MIN 1 -112 o7.5
STL 5 +104 u7.5
Final Mar 29
BAL 9 +106 o8.5
TOR 5 -115 u8.5
Final Mar 29
PHI 11 -147 o9.0
WAS 6 +135 u9.0
Final Mar 29
SF 2 +101 o8.5
CIN 3 -110 u8.5
Final Mar 29
CLE 3 -101 o9.0
KC 4 -107 u9.0
Final (12) Mar 29
PIT 4 -115 o8.5
MIA 5 +106 u8.5
Final Mar 29
COL 2 +162 o8.0
TB 1 -177 u8.0
Final Mar 29
BOS 3 +104 o9.0
TEX 4 -113 u9.0
Final Mar 29
ATL 0 -146 o8.0
SD 1 +135 u8.0
Final Mar 29
NYM 1 +107 o9.0
HOU 2 -115 u9.0
Final Mar 29
CHC 4 +108 o9.0
AZ 3 -117 u9.0
Final Mar 29
DET 3 +171 o7.5
LAD 7 -187 u7.5
Final Mar 29
ATH 4 +150 o7.0
SEA 2 -163 u7.0

Pittsburgh @ Miami preview

loanDepot park

Last Meeting ( Sep 11, 2024 ) Miami 1, Pittsburgh 3

It will be a pitching matchup befitting Opening Day when the Pittsburgh Pirates meet the Marlins in Miami on Thursday.

Pittsburgh will send to the mound Paul Skenes, the 2024 National League Rookie of the Year. For Miami, the starter will be Sandy Alcantara, the NL Cy Young Award winner in 2022, sidelined since Sept. 3, 2023, due to Tommy John surgery.

The matchup between the two right-handed fireballers is a rare one, too. According to MLB.com, this is only the second Opening Day clash between a reigning Rookie of the Year and a previous Cy Young winner. The only other time? Carl Morton, the 1970 NL top rookie, who started against Tom Seaver when the Montreal Expos and New York Mets played.

But this is a game of more than just starting pitchers. It features two teams that finished last in their respective divisions in 2024, one with a new manager and one with a manager who could find himself on the hot seat this season if marked improvement isn't shown.

The new manager is Clayton McCullough of the Marlins, who enters the season already with a short-handed lineup as he tries to turn around a 62-100 team.

He said Tuesday that third baseman Connor Norby will be out four weeks or so after being diagnosed with a Grade 1 oblique strain. Also out with an oblique strain, probably into mid-April, is Jesus Sanchez, who hit 18 homers and 64 RBIs last season. He drove in 10 percent of Miami's 637 runs - worst in the NL.

McCullough said he feels for Norby.

"He was in a really good spot with Opening Day right here. Unfortunate for him to go down when he did. But hey, you know what? Guys will step up and get a chance in his absence," McCullough said. "We hope he gets back as quickly as he can. He'll do everything in his power to take care of himself and be ready when his body allows it."

On the other side, manager Derek Shelton is entering his sixth season with the Pirates never finishing above .500 or in better than fourth place in the NL Central. They are coming off back-to-back 76-win seasons.

Success for the Pirates will begin with the starting rotation, which will be led by Skenes and consist of -- at least to start the season -- Mitch Keller, Andrew Heaney, Bailey Falter and Carmen Mlodzinski.

"I think if you look at any team around the league, it starts with their pitching," Keller said. "If you've got good pitching, you're probably going to have a really good chance at the playoffs. We know that as a team. I think our starting five, as a group, we've really taken that to heart. We're the heartbeat of this team, so we've got to make it go."

Skenes (11-3, 1.96 ERA in 2024) has embraced the challenge of helping the Pirates reach the postseason for the first time since 2015.

"We owe it to the city," Skenes said. "The bar needs to be set pretty high."

Skenes has one career start against the Marlins, giving up one run and striking out nine is a 3-2 win on Sept. 9.

Against the Pirates, Alcantara (7-12, 4,14 in 2023) is 1-0 with a 2.91 ERA and 33 strikeouts in six appearances (five games). He will need to regain his Cy Young Award form -- and get massive help from the offense -- for the Marlins to have a chance to reach the postseason.

--Field Level Media

Pages Related to This Topic

About Units and “ROI”

Units are a standardized measurement used to determine the size of each of your bets relative to your bankroll. For example, if you have a bankroll of $200 and you bet 5% of your bankroll each time, each of your units is worth $10. A bettor with a $2000 bankroll who bets 5% per bet has units of $100. We use the number of units to standardize the amount the trend is up or down across different bet amounts.

ROI is the best indicator of success and measures how much you bet vs. how much you profited. Any positive ROI is good in sports betting with great long-term bettors sitting in the 5-7% range.

Sports Betting Bankroll Management and ROI Guide

Weather Forecast