Dan Johnson takes you through his preview, prediction, and best bet for today’s baseball game between the San Diego Padres and the Colorado Rockies.

Petco Park tends to turn games into shape tests rather than slugfests, and this one lands right in that lane. The San Diego Padres come home at 6-6 after a 4-2 road trip that steadied the season, while the Colorado Rockies arrive at the same record but from a very different path, riding a four-game sweep of Houston. On paper, it looks like two .500 teams meeting in a neutral spot. The final score, though, may not be so even. Below is my preview, prediction, and pick for today’s baseball game between the San Diego Padres and the Colorado Rockies.

Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.

Colorado’s offensive math is better than the price suggests, especially against right-handed pitching. The Rockies are hitting 25.3% with a .316 OBP and .412 slug against righties, good for a .727 OPS with 12 home runs and 29 extra-base hits in that split. But the shape underneath that production matters. This is still a hyper-aggressive lineup, leading the league in swing rate at 52.0% with a 29.5% strikeout rate and just a 6.0% walk rate. That creates volatility—Colorado can ambush early, but if it falls behind in counts, innings disappear quickly. San Diego’s offense has been lighter overall at .213/.282/.336, but the Padres have still created pressure with 26 doubles and 11 stolen bases. This is a lineup built to keep innings alive and force mistakes across multiple pitchers.

Miguel Andujar has been the Padres’ most consistent bat, hitting .364 over the last 10 games with a .417 OBP and .545 slug, while Nick Castellanos has chipped in with a .286 average and five RBI in that same stretch. Fernando Tatis Jr. still drives the top of the lineup with speed and pressure even without a huge power spike, and Jake Cronenworth just found his first homer of the season. Colorado has real bats here too—TJ Rumfield has been scorching, hitting over 38% with a 1.000-plus OPS, Mickey Moniak brings three-homer power, and Hunter Goodman and Ezequiel Tovar have both contributed in this recent run. But the difference is how these bats are being asked to operate. San Diego’s hitters can grind across innings. Colorado’s hitters need to land first.

That brings the game to the mound, where Randy Vásquez is the cleanest piece on the board. He enters with a 0.75 ERA and 1.00 WHIP across 12 innings, allowing no home runs while striking out 11. He’s facing a lineup, tonight, which expands the zone and struggles to recover once behind. On the other side, Jimmy Herget is opens as the first piece of a bullpen game forced by José Quintana’s injury. Even if Herget is sharp for an inning or two, Colorado is asking a stitched-together pitching plan to navigate nine innings against a lineup that can pressure through contact, baserunning, and depth.

Rockies vs. Padres pick, best bet

San Diego has not consistently turned that pressure into separation. The Padres’ team slash sits at .213/.282/.336, and they have only 21 first-five runs this season. There is a real path where this stays tight through the early innings, especially if Colorado’s aggression produces one quick scoring burst. But that case leans on the Rockies sustaining efficiency across multiple pitchers and avoiding the exact middle-inning cracks that bullpen games tend to create. Over nine innings, that is a much harder bet to make than it is over three.

The spot is what turns this from a lean into a position. San Diego’s bullpen has been one of the steadier units in the league, with a 3.38 ERA over the last 10 games and a strikeout-per-inning profile that limits late damage. Colorado, meanwhile, is coming off back-to-back games that required real bullpen usage, including 3.1 innings from Zach Agnos and multiple recent appearances from key relief arms. That matters because every additional inning tonight increases the chance that one of those layers breaks. The Padres should be able to will the structure of this game into whatever they’d like.

Padres -1.5 (+105) is the play. This is a bet on the difference between a full pitching plan and a pieced-together one, and on a lineup that can keep applying pressure until that difference shows. The way it dies is Colorado landing early and forcing San Diego to play from behind into a lower-scoring script, but the deeper path still belongs to the Padres as the innings stack.

Final score: Padres 5, Rockies 2.

Best bet: Padres -1.5 (+105) vs. Rockies

Tail it with me in the DKN Betting Group here!