Final Jul 29
TOR 4 +108 o9.5
BAL 16 -117 u9.5
Final Jul 29
TOR 2 -117 o9.5
BAL 3 +108 u9.5
Final Jul 29
COL 4 +159 o8.5
CLE 10 -174 u8.5
Final Jul 29
AZ 2 +136 o8.5
DET 12 -148 u8.5
Final Jul 29
TB 5 +158 o8.5
NYY 7 -173 u8.5
Final Jul 29
LAD 5 -146 o9.0
CIN 4 +135 u9.0
Final Jul 29
BOS 8 -115 o9.0
MIN 5 +106 u9.0
Final Jul 29
ATL 6 +109 o9.5
KC 9 -118 u9.5
Final Jul 29
PHI 6 -170 o9.0
CHW 3 +155 u9.0
Final Jul 29
CHC 3 +114 o8.5
MIL 9 -124 u8.5
Final Jul 29
MIA 5 +136 o7.5
STL 0 -147 u7.5
Final Jul 29
WAS 4 +110 o8.5
HOU 7 -120 u8.5
Final Jul 29
TEX 5 +122 o9.0
LAA 8 -133 u9.0
Final Jul 29
NYM 1 -120 o8.5
SD 7 +111 u8.5
Final Jul 29
PIT 3 +146 o8.0
SF 1 -159 u8.0
Final Jul 29
SEA 1 -100 o11.0
ATH 6 -108 u11.0

Pittsburgh @ Miami preview

loanDepot park

Last Meeting ( Mar 27, 2025 ) Pittsburgh 4, Miami 5

With four starting pitchers on the injured list, the Miami Marlins will turn to rookie right-hander Connor Gillispie on Friday night as they again host the Pittsburgh Pirates.

On Opening Day for both teams on Thursday, Miami earned a 5-4 walk-off win.

It will be the first major league start for Gillispie, 27.

After playing at VCU, he was Baltimore's ninth-round pick in the 2019 MLB Draft. The Cleveland Guardians claimed him in December 2023 via the Rule 5 draft, and he went 0-0 with a 2.25 ERA in three MLB relief outings in 2024. He struck out eight and walked five in eight innings.

The Marlins signed him two months ago, and now he will get his big chance with Eury Perez, Edward Cabrera, Ryan Weathers and Braxton Garrett on the injured list. This will be his first appearance against the Pirates.

Weathers and Cabrera should return in April. Perez is expected back in mid-July, and Garrett is out for the year.

The Marlins also are missing two starting position players as right fielder Jesus Sanchez and third baseman Connor Norby likely are out about a month, as is right-handed reliever Declan Cronin. Lefty reliever Andrew Nardi landed on the 60-day IL on March 15.

But even with those eight players on the injured list and the lowest payroll in the majors at $67.9 million, the Marlins are off to a good start.

The Marlins trailed 4-2 in the eighth inning on Thursday before rallying. In the ninth, Nick Fortes tripled off the wall, and left fielder Kyle Stowers lined a walk-off single to give Miami manager Clayton McCullough his first MLB win.

"We're a bunch of fighters," Fortes said. "I know a lot of people have written our team off, but we don't believe that. We know we have a lot talent, and we're going to play hard every night."

Stowers made his first Opening Day start.

"To battle like we did and come up with a win was fun," he said.

The Pirates will start right-hander Mitch Keller on Friday, a day after young star Paul Skenes left his start in the sixth inning with a two-run lead that the bullpen -- and the defense -- couldn't hold.

Keller, who will turn 29 next week, has spent his entire six-year career with the Pirates. In 133 games, including 131 starts, he is 36-50 with a 4.59 ERA. Last season, he started 31 games and finished 11-12 with a 4.25 ERA.

He has made six career starts against the Marlins, going 1-0 with a 3.38 ERA.

The Pirates hope to give Keller better support than what they showed on Thursday. Even though all five runs allowed by the Pirates were earned, catcher Joey Bart was charged with two passed balls, including one that allowed a run to score.

In addition, Pirates first baseman Endy Rodriguez was charged with a fielding error. Worse yet, center fielder Oneil Cruz -- who played shortstop until making the switch late last season -- made a couple of costly miscues.

In the eighth inning, he threw home, allowing a runner to advance to second base. That runner then scored as Miami tied Pittsburgh 4-4.

One inning later, Cruz misplayed Fortes' shot to the wall into a triple, and that led to Stowers' game-winning single.

"We didn't play good enough defense," Pirates manager Derek Shelton said. "We had a lead late in the game, and we didn't close it down."

--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