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2026 Washington Nationals season

The 2026 Washington Nationals season is the Nationals' 22nd season as the Major League Baseball franchise in the District of Columbia, the 19th season at Nationals Park, and the 58th since the original team was started in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

This is the first season under new President of Baseball Operations Paul Toboni, new general manager Anirudh Kilambi, and new manager Blake Butera, as well as to be broadcast on television by MLB Local Media (as Nationals.TV).

Offseason

Team news

Several major changes defined the Washington Nationals' 2025–26 offseason, including overhauls of the front office, coaching staff, and player development system; trades, waiver claims, and other roster moves; and a new television broadcast arrangement.

Front office

The Nationals finished out the 2025 season under interim general manager Mike DeBartolo, after dismissing president of baseball operations Mike Rizzo and manager Dave Martinez in July.

Within days of their season ending with a 66–96 record, placing them last in the National League East Division, the Nationals announced the hiring of 35-year-old Boston Red Sox assistant general manager Paul Toboni as their new president of baseball operations. DeBartolo remained with the organization under Toboni as an assistant general manager and senior vice president. Several other members of the front office, including longtime assistant general managers Eddie Longosz and Mark Scialabba, were not retained. Toboni made several key additions to his leadership team, including Philadelphia Phillies assistant general manager Anirudh Kilambi as general manager, former colleague and Red Sox scouting director Devin Pearson and Pittsburgh Pirates scouting director Justin Horowitz as assistant general managers, and Red Sox field coordinator Andrew Wright as his special assistant.

On January 6, 2026, the Nationals announced the hiring of Jason Sinnarajah as president of business operations. Sinnarajah, formerly chief operating officer of the Kansas City Royals, would report to ownership and handle the business side of the Nationals organization, as counterpart to Toboni in his role overseeing baseball operations.

Coaching staff

The 2025 Nationals coaching staff's contracts expired after the end of the World Series.

While Washington was linked in media reports to 2025 interim manager Miguel Cairo, former Minnesota Twins manager Rocco Baldelli, former Baltimore Orioles manager Brandon Hyde, Portland Sea Dogs manager Chad Epperson, Cleveland Guardians bench coach Craig Albernaz, and Los Angeles Dodgers bench coach Danny Lehmann, Toboni's choice for the new manager of the Nationals was a surprise: 33-year-old Blake Butera, the Tampa Bay Rays senior director of player development and two-time Carolina League Manager of the Year. Upon their hiring, both Butera and Toboni were the youngest people in Major League Baseball to hold their positions, respectively as team manager and top executive.

Among 12 coaches the Nationals brought in under Butera, they retained just one holdover from their 2024–25 staff: former Nationals closer Sean Doolittle, who was given the position of assistant pitching coach after two seasons as a pitching strategist. The average age of the coaching staff dropped from 51 in 2025 to about 36, as The Washington Post reported, with several of Butera's coaches still in their 20s and 30s. Many of the new coaches came to the Nationals from backgrounds in player development, including minor league managers Víctor Estévez and Corey Ray and collegiate coach Dustin Glant. The Nationals added more coaching positions than they had in previous years, with changes including two assistant hitting and pitching coaches instead of one and the new role of development coach.

Player development system

More than a dozen minor league coaches and player development staff members were dismissed early in the offseason. Among other areas of the Nationals organization, Toboni moved to overhaul the player development side, staffing it with hitting and pitching coordinators for the lower and higher minor league levels, under directors to provide a cohesive approach up and down the minor league system.

The Nationals hired away former hitting coach Jeremy Barnes and minor league pitching coordinator Grayson Crawford from the division-rival New York Mets to be their new directors of defense, baserunning, and game play and pitching, respectively. They hired CJ Gillman, previously a minor league hitting coordinator with the Seattle Mariners, as their director of hitting. Former Nationals outfielder Gerardo Parra, who was not retained as first base coach after the 2025 season, was kept on as a player development advisor.

The Nationals expanded the number of coaches for their minor league affiliates, adding more training and conditioning coaches, as well as a defensive coach and assistant pitching coach at every level. They retained Class-AAA Rochester Red Wings manager Matt LeCroy and Class-AA Harrisburg Senators manager Delino DeShields with mostly new coaching staffs. More collegiate coaches were brought on to manage Washington's low-minors affiliates: Former University of Central Florida assistant coach Ted Tom was hired to manage the High-A Wilmington Blue Rocks, while Virginia Commonwealth University hitting coach Chris O'Neill joined the organization as manager of the Low-A Fredericksburg Nationals.

Washington also invested in more technology and training equipment, one of the major offseason priorities for Toboni and Pearson, to enhance player development. Technology such as Trajekt Arc simulated pitching machines and HitTrax hitting analysis machines was acquired for Nationals team facilities, including their spring training home at the Cacti Park of the Palm Beaches in West Palm Beach, Florida, and their Class-AAA ESL Ballpark in Rochester, New York. The spring training stadium was also upgraded to Statcast standards with systems like Hawk-Eye and Trackman, to provide more game data.

Roster

The Nationals removed several players from the roster before the end of the 2025 World Series: relievers Shinnosuke Ogasawara, Eduardo Salazar, and Mason Thompson and catchers Jorge Alfaro and C. J. Stubbs. Reliever Derek Law, first baseman Josh Bell, and third baseman Paul DeJong became free agents as their contracts expired. The Nationals went on to trim several more players from the roster during the offseason, including pitchers Zach Brzykcy, Andry Lara, Ryan Loutos, and Konnor Pilkington, longtime backup catcher Riley Adams, and infielder Trey Lipscomb. Washington also released reliever Sauryn Lao at his request to pursue a playing opportunity in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).

Washington tendered new contracts to starting pitchers Cade Cavalli, MacKenzie Gore, Josiah Gray, and Jake Irvin and to infielders CJ Abrams and Luis García Jr., who were each eligible for arbitration. They agreed to terms with all of their arbitration-eligible players, including Cavalli on a one-year contract with a club option for the 2027 season.

The team protected three prospects eligible for the Rule 5 draft by adding them to the roster: pitchers Jake Bennett and Riley Cornelio and outfielder Christian Franklin. The Nationals were active in the Rule 5 draft themselves, selecting Philadelphia pitching prospect Griff McGarry to the major league roster.

The Nationals announced their first major league free agent signing under Toboni on December 22, 2025, signing starting pitcher Foster Griffin for a reported $5.5 million after Griffin spent three seasons overseas, pitching for NPB's Yomiuri Giants. They signed another free agent starter, veteran Miles Mikolas, for a reported $2.25 million on February 11. On March 10, the Nationals signed a third free agent starter, adding right-hander Zack Littell on a one-year deal for a reported $3 million, plus a mutual option at a reported $12 million salary with a $4 million buyout.

Throughout the offseason, Washington also acquired several players by claiming them off waivers, including pitchers Paxton Schultz from the Toronto Blue Jays, Gus Varland from the Arizona Diamondbacks, and Ken Waldichuk from the Tampa Bay Rays and outfielder Joey Wiemer from the San Francisco Giants.

Toboni executed his first trade at the helm of the Nationals by sending closer José A. Ferrer to the Seattle Mariners for prospects Harry Ford and Isaac Lyon on December 6. On December 15, the Nationals traded Bennett to the Red Sox for another pitching prospect, Luis Perales. After weeks of trade rumors, Gore went to the Texas Rangers in a five-for-one blockbuster headlined by infield prospect Gavin Fien on January 22. On February 10, days after claiming relief pitcher George Soriano off waivers from the Atlanta Braves and then designating him for assignment, the Nationals traded Soriano to the St. Louis Cardinals for fellow reliever Andre Granillo. The Nationals traded another young pitcher, prospect Sean Paul Liñan, to the New York Yankees on March 22, receiving infielder Jorbit Vivas in exchange.

Other trade rumors swirled around the Nationals throughout the offseason. Both before and after trading Gore to Texas, Toboni publicly acknowledged the Nationals were listening to offers for Abrams and other players as well, although he publicly disputed a report from The Washington Post that the Nationals were "shopping" Abrams and outfielder Jacob Young in particular.

Broadcasting

Ahead of the previous season, the Nationals and MASN agreed to a new one-year broadcasting contract, as part of the settlement of a long-running legal dispute between the Nationals and the Baltimore Orioles over television rights. With the Nationals free to negotiate a new broadcast deal, the team and Major League Baseball announced a new partnership that will see MLB Local Media produce and distribute Nationals television broadcasts starting in 2026, via a new over-the-air cable channel and streaming platform called Nationals.TV.

Nationals play-by-play announcer Bob Carpenter retired at the end of the 2025 season, after 20 years of calling games for the team on MASN television broadcasts. After the announcement of the Nationals.TV channel, the team announced that longtime MASN studio host and sideline reporter Dan Kolko would take over play-by-play duties, alongside returning color commentator Kevin Frandsen. The Nationals also hired Washington-area native Alexa Datt, a St. Louis Cardinals studio host and sideline reporter, to take on a similar role on Nationals.TV.

Offseason transactions

Spring training

The Nationals held their spring training at the Cacti Park of the Palm Beaches in West Palm Beach, Florida, finishing with a 14–9 record of wins and losses that stood as the third-best in the Grapefruit League. They invited the following non-roster players to major league camp: pitchers Tyler Baum, Trevor Gott, Andry Lara, Bryce Montes de Oca, Shinnosuke Ogasawara, Zach Penrod, Cionel Pérez, Drew Smith, Jarlin Susana, Travis Sykora, and Eddy Yean; catchers Riley Adams, Tres Barrera, Caleb Lomavita, and Max Romero Jr.; infielders Sergio Alcántara, Warming Bernabel, Seaver King, Trey Lipscomb, Orelvis Martínez, Matt Mervis, Yohandy Morales, and Cayden Wallace; and outfielders Phillip Glasser and Andrew Pinckney.

Players in spring training were coached through several drills and exercises introduced by new coaches. Instructors and players also took advantage of new technology added to the ballpark—including by holding live batting practice in the stadium—aligning with many other teams that had been quicker to embrace data and analytics. In another change from previous years, the Nationals also held a supplemental training camp for select minor leaguers, beginning in January.

At the start of spring training, the Nationals placed starting pitchers DJ Herz and Trevor Williams on the 60-day injured list, with both still rehabilitating after elbow surgeries during the 2025 season. Starting pitcher Josiah Gray was placed on the 60-day injured list at the end of spring training with a right flexor strain, after struggling with diminished velocity and missing the cut for the Opening Day roster. Gray had entered camp looking to return to the major leagues after not pitching in MLB in 2025 due to injury. Reliever Paxton Schultz also landed on the injured list at the end of spring training, having been shut down after three Grapefruit League appearances with right elbow inflammation. Outfielders Dylan Crews and Jacob Young both missed a few Grapefruit League games after being hit by pitches during live batting practice.

Longtime second baseman Luis García Jr. saw much of his action at first base during spring training, with new President of Baseball Operations Paul Toboni expressing optimism about García's potential as a first baseman. The Nationals also began giving left fielder James Wood starts in right field and middle infielder Nasim Nuñez starts at third base, for the first time in their respective major league careers.

Crews was optioned to the Class-AAA Rochester Red Wings toward the end of spring training, along with swingman Mitchell Parker, marking the first minor league assignment for either player since the 2024 season. The Nationals also optioned outfielder Robert Hassell III, another former top prospect who spent much of the 2025 season in Washington, to Class-AAA Rochester, choosing instead to roster Joey Wiemer as their fourth outfielder.

Pérez was the only non-roster invitee to break camp with the Nationals, with other non-roster players reassigned to the minor leagues or released. The Nationals also returned Rule 5 draft pick Griff McGarry at the end of spring training. Manager Blake Butera said McGarry "wasn't quite there yet, and we just didn't have the runway to give him at the major league level".

Regular season

Opening Day

Right-hander Cade Cavalli, one of 10 Nationals players making his first appearance on an Opening Day roster, got the start on March 26, 2026, opposing left-hander Matthew Boyd and the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field.

Right fielder Joey Wiemer pulled the first hit and home run of the Nationals' season with one swing in the second inning, giving Washington the early 1–0 lead. Chicago answered back in the third inning, scoring two runs on singles by Michael Busch and Pete Crow-Armstrong. In the fourth inning, the Nationals erupted for six runs, keyed by a near-grand slam to right field by shortstop CJ Abrams that the ballpark just held on a windy day; Abrams, having watched his drive off the wall for a moment, was tagged out at second base. Three batters later, center fielder Jacob Young muscled a drive through the wind, landing in the basket along the right field wall for a two-run homer that made the score 7–2.

Although the Cubs struck back for one run in the bottom of the fourth, chasing Cavalli from the game well short of the five innings he needed to qualify for the win, the Nationals' lead held up. Second baseman Nasim Nuñez manufactured an eighth run for the Nationals in the sixth inning—walking, stealing second, advancing to third on a groundout, and scoring on a wild pitch—while Crow-Armstrong bunted in a run for his second RBI single of the game in the seventh inning, bringing home the Cubs' fourth and final run.

Third baseman Brady House launched a two-run homer in the ninth inning to give the game its final score of 10–4. Cionel Pérez retired the Cubs in order in the bottom of the ninth, striking out Crow-Armstrong to seal the win. Reliever Brad Lord was credited with the win after giving up one run, on Crow-Armstrong's bunt single, over innings pitched.

March/April

Washington began its first season under new manager Blake Butera with a series win in Chicago. After defeating the Cubs 10–4 on Opening Day, the Nationals—missing All-Star shortstop CJ Abrams due to a death in the family—were held down on March 28 by Cade Horton and the Cubs bullpen, while Nationals starter Miles Mikolas labored. After reliever Andre Granillo was taken out after of an inning, bequeathing two runners to left-hander Ken Waldichuk, the southpaw surrendered a three-run home run to Ian Happ on his first MLB pitch since 2023. The Cubs won 10–2. The Nationals bounced back with a 6–3 victory in the March 29 rubber game, riding a solid five innings from starter Jake Irvin and a 3-for-3 performance by right fielder Joey Wiemer that included a three-run homer and a triple. The Cubs scored all three of their runs on solo homers, two off the bat of Alex Bregman along with Happ's second home run of the series.

Heading to Philadelphia for a three-game series against the division-rival Phillies, the Nationals made a roster move, optioning first baseman Andrés Chaparro and adding newly acquired utility player and former top prospect Curtis Mead to the roster. By singling in his first two plate appearances in a 13–2 win over Philadelphia on March 30, Wiemer tied a major league record for most consecutive plate appearances reaching base to begin the season and set a new major league record for consecutive plate appearances reaching base to begin his tenure with a team. Foster Griffin earned the win in his first career start, as well as his first MLB appearance since 2022. The Phillies struck back to win the next two games, including a comeback from a late 5–1 deficit on April 1. With Philadelphia down to their last strike, Edmundo Sosa singled in a pair of runs to tie the game in the bottom of the ninth off reliever Cole Henry, before rookie Justin Crawford walked off Henry and the Nationals in the tenth inning.

Transactions

Overall

Season standings

National League East

National League Wild Card

Record vs. opponents

Game log

|-style="background:#bfb;" | 1 || March 26 || @ Cubs || 10–4 || Lord (1–0) || Boyd (0–1) || — || 39,712 || 1–0 || W1 |-style="background:#fbb;" | 2 || March 28 || @ Cubs || 2–10 || Horton (1–0) || Mikolas (0–1) || — || 34,834 || 1–1 || L1 |-style="background:#bfb;" | 3 || March 29 || @ Cubs || 6–3 || Irvin (1–0) || Imanaga (1–0) || Beeter (1) || 33,559 || 2–1 || W1 |-style="background:#bfb;" | 4 || March 30 || @ Phillies || 13–2 || Griffin (1–0) || Walker (0–1) || — || 35,609 || 3–1 || W2 |-style="background:#fbb;" | 5 || March 31 || @ Phillies || 2–3 || Painter (1–0) || Littell (0–1) || Durán (2) || 40,709 || 3–2 || L1 |-style="background:#fbb;" | 6 || April 1 || @ Phillies || 5–6 || Durán (1–1) || Henry (0–1) || — || 37,469 || 3–3 || L2 |-style="background:#;" | 7 || April 3 || Dodgers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 8 || April 4 || Dodgers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 9 || April 5 || Dodgers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 10 || April 6 || Cardinals || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 11 || April 7 || Cardinals || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 12 || April 8 || Cardinals || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 13 || April 10 || @ Brewers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 14 || April 11 || @ Brewers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 15 || April 12 || @ Brewers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 16 || April 13 || @ Pirates || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 17 || April 14 || @ Pirates || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 18 || April 15 || @ Pirates || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 19 || April 16 || @ Pirates || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 20 || April 17 || Giants || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 21 || April 18 || Giants || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 22 || April 19 || Giants || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 23 || April 20 || Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 24 || April 21 || Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 25 || April 22 || Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 26 || April 23 || Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 27 || April 24 || @ White Sox || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 28 || April 25 || @ White Sox || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 29 || April 26 || @ White Sox || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 30 || April 28 || @ Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 31 || April 29 || @ Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 32 || April 30 || @ Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — ||

|-style="background:#;" | 33 || May 1 || Brewers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 34 || May 2 || Brewers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 35 || May 3 || Brewers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 36 || May 5 || Twins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 37 || May 6 || Twins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 38 || May 7 || Twins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 39 || May 8 || @ Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 40 || May 9 || @ Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 41 || May 10 || @ Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 42 || May 12 || @ Reds || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 43 || May 13 || @ Reds || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 44 || May 14 || @ Reds || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 45 || May 15 || Orioles || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 46 || May 16 || Orioles || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 47 || May 17 || Orioles || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 48 || May 18 || Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 49 || May 19 || Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 50 || May 20 || Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 51 || May 21 || Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 52 || May 22 || @ Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 53 || May 23 || @ Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 54 || May 24 || @ Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 55 || May 25 || @ Guardians || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 56 || May 26 || @ Guardians || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 57 || May 27 || @ Guardians || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 58 || May 29 || Padres || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 59 || May 30 || Padres || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 60 || May 31 || Padres || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — ||

|-style="background:#;" | 61 || June 1 || Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 62 || June 2 || Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 63 || June 3 || Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 64 || June 5 || @ Diamondbacks || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 65 || June 6 || @ Diamondbacks || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 66 || June 7 || @ Diamondbacks || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 67 || June 8 || @ Giants || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 68 || June 9 || @ Giants || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 69 || June 10 || @ Giants || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 70 || June 12 || Mariners || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 71 || June 13 || Mariners || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 72 || June 14 || Mariners || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 73 || June 15 || Royals || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 74 || June 16 || Royals || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 75 || June 17 || Royals || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 76 || June 19 || @ Rays || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 77 || June 20 || @ Rays || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 78 || June 21 || @ Rays || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 79 || June 22 || Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 80 || June 23 || Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 81 || June 24 || Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 82 || June 25 || Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 83 || June 26 || @ Orioles || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 84 || June 27 || @ Orioles || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 85 || June 28 || @ Orioles || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 86 || June 29 || @ Red Sox || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 87 || June 30 || @ Red Sox || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — ||

|-style="background:#;" | 88 || July 1 || @ Red Sox || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 89 || July 3 || Pirates || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 90 || July 4 || Pirates || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 91 || July 5 || Pirates || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 92 || July 6 || Astros || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 93 || July 7 || Astros || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 94 || July 8 || Astros || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 95 || July 10 || Yankees || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 96 || July 11 || Yankees || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 97 || July 12 || Yankees || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |- style="text-align:center; background:#bbb;" |colspan=10| All–Star Break (July 13–16) |-style="background:#;" | 98 || July 17 || @ Athletics || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 99 || July 18 || @ Athletics || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 100 || July 19 || @ Athletics || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 101 || July 20 || @ Rockies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 102 || July 21 || @ Rockies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 103 || July 22 || @ Rockies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 104 || July 24 || Diamondbacks || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 105 || July 25 || Diamondbacks || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 106 || July 26 || Diamondbacks || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 107 || July 27 || Blue Jays || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 108 || July 28 || Blue Jays || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 109 || July 29 || Blue Jays || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 110 || July 30 || @ Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 111 || July 31 || @ Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — ||

|-style="background:#;" | 112 || August 1 || @ Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 113 || August 2 || @ Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 114 || August 3 || @ Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 115 || August 4 || @ Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 116 || August 5 || @ Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 117 || August 6 || @ Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 118 || August 7 || Reds || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 119 || August 8 || Reds || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 120 || August 9 || Reds || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 121 || August 11 || Cubs || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 122 || August 12 || Cubs || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 123 || August 13 || Cubs || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 124 || August 14 || @ Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 125 || August 15 || @ Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 126 || August 16 || @ Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 127 || August 18 || @ Rangers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 128 || August 19 || @ Rangers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 129 || August 20 || @ Rangers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 130 || August 21 || @ Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 131 || August 22 || @ Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 132 || August 23 || @ Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 133 || August 24 || Rockies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 134 || August 25 || Rockies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 135 || August 26 || Rockies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 136 || August 27 || Rockies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 137 || August 28 || Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 138 || August 29 || Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 139 || August 30 || Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 140 || August 31 || Marlins || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — ||

|-style="background:#;" | 141 || September 1 || Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 142 || September 2 || Braves || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 143 || September 4 || @ Dodgers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 144 || September 5 || @ Dodgers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 145 || September 6 || @ Dodgers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 146 || September 7 || @ Padres || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 147 || September 8 || @ Padres || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 148 || September 9 || @ Padres || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 149 || September 11 || Angels || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 150 || September 12 || Angels || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 151 || September 13 || Angels || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 152 || September 15 || Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 153 || September 16 || Phillies || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 154 || September 18 || @ Cardinals || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 155 || September 19 || @ Cardinals || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 156 || September 20 || @ Cardinals || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 157 || September 21 || @ Tigers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 158 || September 22 || @ Tigers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 159 || September 23 || @ Tigers || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 160 || September 25 || Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 161 || September 26 || Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — || |-style="background:#;" | 162 || September 27 || Mets || — || (—) || (—) || — || || — ||

Current roster

Farm system

Notes

References

External links