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Diamondbacks’ Patrick Forbes: Debuts for High-A club
Forbes (elbow) struck out three and allowed one earned run on three hits and no walks over 2.1 innings in his first start for High-A Hillsboro on Wednesday after being reinstated from the 7-day injured list Tuesday.
A first-round selection in the 2025 First-Year Player Draft, Forbes didn’t pitch at all last summer and then had his professional debut further delayed after emerging from spring training with a flexor tendon injury. The 21-year-old righty was finally cleared to make a two-inning rehab start in the Arizona Complex League on May 27, and that appearance was the only one Forbes needed in rookie ball before being moving up to a full-season affiliate.
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Diamondbacks’ Adrian Del Castillo: Playing time dwindling
Del Castillo has gone 1-for-3 at the plate while making no starts and being used off the bench in just two of Arizona’s last eight games.
After joining the Diamondbacks on April 3 following a brief stint on the injured list to begin the season, Del Castillo had seen fairly steady playing time against right-handed pitching between designated hitter and catcher over the ensuing two months. However, his opportunities to catch began to dry up once Gabriel Moreno coming off the IL on May 1, and Del Castillo’s playing time at DH has now dwindled over the past week with Pavin Smith returning from the shelf. With Arizona signing Max Kepler to a one-year deal Sunday, Del Castillo will likely face an even more difficult path to receiving at-bats once Kepler is eligible to join the Diamondbacks on June 25 upon completing his 80-game suspension.
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Diamondbacks’ Corbin Carroll: Blasts 10th homer Sunday
Carroll went 1-for-3 with a home run, a walk and two runs scored in Sunday’s 5-1 win against Washington.
Carroll set the tone immediately, launching a solo shot off Cade Cavalli in the first inning to give Arizona an early cushion. The young star’s power has been explosive lately, as Sunday’s blast gives him three home runs over his last six games. Carroll’s season line of .285/.375/.553 with 10 homers, 15 doubles, eight triples, 31 RBI, 41 runs and seven steals across just 264 plate appearances represents another season of legitimate five-category production.
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Diamondbacks’ Michael Soroka: Shuts down Nats for eighth win
Soroka (8-3) earned the win Sunday against Washington, allowing one run on three hits and two walks while striking out six across seven innings.
After surrendering a game-tying solo homer to CJ Abrams in the second inning, Soroka was nearly perfect the rest of the way, tossing five scoreless frames to close out his seven-inning effort. It was his first start of at least seven innings with one or fewer earned runs since August 10, 2019 — a meaningful milestone for a pitcher who has spent the better part of those six years battling back from two torn Achilles injuries. Soroka’s ERA at Chase Field sits at an impressive 2.09 across eight home starts this season. With a 3.28 ERA, 1.15 WHIP and 72:17 K:BB in 74 innings, he will seek to build off Sunday’s success in his next scheduled start on the road against Cincinnati.
No. 2 seed Alexander Zverev overcame the challenge of No. 10 Flavio Cobolli on Sunday to claim his first grand slam title at the 2026 French Open. Zverev got it done in five sets against the rising Italian contender (6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7,6-1) on Philippe Chatrier on Sunday at Roland-Garros.
It’s the first time a German has won a grand slam title since Boris Becker claimed the Australian Open in 1996.
Zverev battled back from two breaks of serve in the fourth set to take down Cobolli in the tiebreak thanks to some incredibly timely serving.
Zverev had previously reached the finals of a grand slam three times, but came up short in each appearance, including a 2024 loss to Carlos Alcaraz in five sets. For a long time, Zverev was considered the best player on tour to not claim a grand slam title.
Sunday erased any remaining doubts as his serve remained on point despite a few hiccups down the stretch. He managed to break Cobolli at 4-5 in the fourth set to eventually force a decisive tiebreak. Zverev went up early in the breaker, but Cobolli rallied quickly force a fifth set.
Zverev then secured two breaks of Cobolli’s serve and consolidated both to jump out to a quick 4-0 lead in the final set. He closed it out in style by breaking Cobolli one last time for the 6-1 set win with a slick return after a drop shot from Cobolli that he managed to get to before Cobolli sailed his return out of play.









