Nightly briefing

Baseball last night

Games of 2026-07-14

The All-Star break: baseball pauses, the chases don't. The board below is exactly where the first half left it — every number here is what the second half has to answer.

Kyle Schwarber has struck out 144 times, projecting to 240. Mark Reynolds' record is 223. That pace would be the most strikeouts in any season since 1901. But he's doing damage too: he leads MLB in home runs (32) — one every 10.9 at-bats. The strikeouts are the price of the power.

The so-what: through 97 team games, Kyle Schwarber sits 12 HR behind Bonds' 73-homer pace (44 at this point). That's the number that decides whether this season becomes a chase or a footnote.

Active streaks

The game is running hot

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Title races

Who owns the season?

Full watch →

Record Radar · 2026-07-14

Records in danger this season

Full Record Radar →
Batter Strikeouts NEGATIVE HISTORY
Kyle Schwarber headshot
Kyle Schwarber

Kyle Schwarber is on pace for 240 strikeouts

Kyle Schwarber has struck out 144 times, projecting to 240. Mark Reynolds' record is 223. That pace would be the most strikeouts in any season since 1901. But he's doing damage too: he leads MLB in home runs (32) — one every 10.9 at-bats. The strikeouts are the price of the power.

Mark Reynolds struck out 223 times in 2009, a mark that has survived the highest-strikeout era in history.

98History score
Current
144
Projected
240
Record
223 Mark Reynolds · 2009

Lahman + Retrosheet

What history says about the board

How it works →

Thresholds approaching

Milestone watch

Club races →

Tonight's stakes

What to watch today

01

The .400 burndown: Otto Lopez carries a .334 average into today; a .400 finish takes a .498 clip the rest of the way (127-for-255). A 3-for-4 tonight lowers the requirement to .494; an 0-for-4 raises it to .506.

02

30/30 watch: Pete Crow-Armstrong sits at 21 HR / 24 SB — 9 homers short and 6 steals short of a 30/30 season, projecting to 35/40.

How to read the site

The chase, in plain English

Otto Lopez leads MLB at .334, but .400 is still a mountain. He would need 42 straight hits to get there today, or roughly a .498 average the rest of the way (127-for-255) to finish at .400.

Every chase gets a 0–100 History Score against the record book, allowing home-run pace, streaks, Statcast extremes, and even negative history to share one radar.