Final (10) Aug 29
STL 7 +125 o9.0
CIN 5 -136 u9.0
Final Aug 29
TB 4 -140 o9.0
WAS 1 +129 u9.0
Final Aug 29
ATL 1 +173 o9.0
PHI 2 -189 u9.0
Final Aug 29
MIL 7 +122 o8.0
TOR 2 -132 u8.0
Final Aug 29
SEA 4 -153 o7.5
CLE 5 +140 u7.5
Final Aug 29
PIT 4 +103 o7.5
BOS 2 -112 u7.5
Final Aug 29
MIA 9 +153 o8.0
NYM 19 -167 u8.0
Final Aug 29
NYY 10 -214 o8.5
CHW 2 +194 u8.5
Final Aug 29
LAA 0 +138 o9.0
HOU 2 -150 u9.0
Final Aug 29
DET 5 +101 o9.0
KC 3 -109 u9.0
Final Aug 29
SD 4 -120 o9.0
MIN 7 +111 u9.0
Final Aug 29
CHC 11 -207 o11.0
COL 7 +188 u11.0
Final Aug 29
TEX 5 +131 o10.0
ATH 2 -142 u10.0
Final Aug 29
AZ 3 +187 o8.5
LAD 0 -206 u8.5
Final Aug 29
BAL 8 +134 o7.5
SF 15 -146 u7.5

St. Louis @ San Diego preview

PETCO Park

Last Meeting ( Jul 27, 2025 ) San Diego 9, St. Louis 2

If the San Diego Padres are contending, it's a given that general manager A.J. Preller is going for it.

After making five trades on Thursday, Preller showed he is swinging for the fences to bring the franchise its first World Series title. The acquisition of Mason Miller, J.P. Sears, Freddy Fermin, Ryan O'Hearn, Ramon Laureano, Will Wagner and Nestor Cortes checked every box on Preller's wish list.

Some of those players might get their first chance to help their new team on Friday night when San Diego opens a three-game series with the visiting St. Louis Cardinals.

The Padres enter with a five-game winning streak and a 3 1/2-game lead on Cincinnati for the National League's last wild-card spot. They also are only three games behind the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL West.

Not only did San Diego add to its already formidable bullpen, which had three All-Stars, but it lengthened its lineup while improving a woefully thin bench. And the team also kept starter Dylan Cease and MLB saves leader Robert Suarez, who many felt would be dealt for the kind of help the Padres received at the deadline.

Manager Mike Shildt was feeling good about his team before Preller made his many moves, spending a good chunk of the team's prospect capital.

"The team we have, I love," Shildt said after a 5-0 blanking of the New York Mets on Wednesday clinched a series sweep. "As far as expectations go, I love the 26 we have right now."

One of those 26 is right-hander Nick Pivetta (10-3, 2.81 ERA), who will start on Friday night.

While Pivetta is coming off a 3-0 loss last Friday in St. Louis -- giving up all three runs (two earned) and three hits over 6 1/3 innings -- he's still enjoying a career year and would be the team's opener in a playoff series. Pivetta is 3-2 with a 3.38 ERA in seven career starts against the Cardinals.

Left-hander Matthew Liberatore (6-8, 4.04) will oppose Pivetta on Friday night. Liberatore most recently pitched on Saturday, losing to San Diego 3-1. He gave up two runs, one earned, on six hits and two walks in 4 1/3 innings while striking out three. He is 0-2 with a 2.79 ERA in six career outings against the Padres.

St. Louis is 5 1/2 games behind San Diego for the NL's last wild-card spot but pivoted to a seller's role after going 4-9 following the All-Star Game. That included a 2-0 home loss Wednesday night to Miami, the second straight game the team was blanked.

It marked the sixth time in July that the Cardinals were shut out, capping an 8-16 month that was enough to convince the front office to cash in most of the team's tradeable chips. Closer Ryan Helsley was shipped to the Mets for three prospects, lefty reliever Steven Matz went to Boston, and righty reliever Phil Maton was moved to Texas.

One guy who appears likely to stick around for a rebuild is first baseman Willson Contreras, who told outgoing club president John Mozeliak that he wants to stay with the team.

"It's a business and (Mozeliak) doesn't seem like he wants to trade me," Contreras said Tuesday night. "He said no and I said no, so we're good."

St. Louis and San Diego split four games last weekend in a contentious series that saw the benches clear twice after hit batters.

--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

// Scripts for MLB A/B test