The Colorado Rockies opened the 2026 season in Miami with a lineup that looked nothing like the one that started 2025 — between debuts and new additions, this felt less like a continuation and more like a reset.

Kyle Karros made his first Opening Day start, following in the footsteps of his father Eric, who made nine in his career.

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TJ Rumfield made his MLB debut, becoming the first rookie to start Opening Day for Colorado since Trevor Story in 2016.

Jake McCarthy and Edouard Julien also made their first Opening Day starts for the Rockies, underscoring just how much this roster has turned over.

Even Warren Schaeffer was managing in his first Opening Day game.

The result? A competitive game that ultimately slipped away, 2–1, with just a hint of familiar frustration on offense.

Freeland battles, bullpen delivers

Kyle Freeland took the loss, falling to 1–3 with a 7.01 ERA in five Opening Day starts — a number skewed to an extent by one rough outing.

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This wasn’t ace-level dominance, but it was veteran pitching.

Freeland bent, but didn’t break. He worked through traffic, issued a couple of walks, and gutted his way through 4.1 innings, allowing two earned runs while keeping the game within reach.

He handed the game off with a chance.

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And from there, the bullpen was awesome.

Jimmy Herget, Brennan Bernardino (making his Rockies debut), and Juan Mejia combined for 3.2 scoreless innings—no walks, two strikeouts, and a key escape in the eighth. Mejia stranded a runner at third with a full-count strikeout on a back-up slider that froze Caissie.

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Alcantara in control

Sandy Alcantara was everything you expect from an ace.

His fastball touched the upper 90’s, his secondaries had sharp depth, and he worked efficiently — seven innings, four hits, one unearned run, five strikeouts. For long stretches, the Rockies looked eager against him, pressing early before settling in late.

But they never fully solved him.

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Manufacturing one, missing more

Colorado’s lone run came in the fourth — and it came the hard way.

The inning started with Jake McCarthy dropping a drag bunt and using his speed to create some chaos and reach first base. McCarthy then stole second base, but his aggressiveness backfired as he was cut down at home after a Hunter Goodman single.

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Willi Castro beat out a double-play ball. Tovar followed with a topped ball that forced a tough play. Rumfield showed discipline with a four-pitch walk in his second MLB plate appearance.  Beck added an infield hit driving in Castro.

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It was a textbook manufactured run. It was also the only one.

The inning that got away

The Rockies had their best chance in the eighth, and couldn’t cash in.

Hunter Goodman, who led the team with two hits, put together a strong at-bat against Anthony Bender, fighting off multiple sweepers before lining a two-out single to left. Karros moved to third, and suddenly Colorado had runners on the corners.

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Willi Castro stepped in.

An ABS challenge flipped a ball to a strike. Castro worked the count full as Bender struggled to land his off-speed.

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Then Bender went back to the sweeper.

Castro chased one down and in — out of the zone — for strike three.

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Threat neutralized.

Bullpen escape keeps it close

Miami immediately applied pressure in the bottom half.

Connor Norby led off with a double, and after a groundout moved him to third, the infield came in. Mejia induced a pop-up in foul territory for the second out, then delivered the biggest pitch of the night:

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Full count. Two outs. Runner on third.

A back-up slider that froze Owen Caissie.

Inning over.

Last chance, same result

The Rockies had one more shot in the ninth.

Facing Peter Fairbanks, they couldn’t break through. Tovar struck out chasing, Beck popped out, and after TJ Rumfield collected his first MLB hit — a broken-bat blooper into shallow right-center — Brenton Doyle lined out to shortstop to end it.

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Ballgame.

Final thoughts

The Rockies lose their opener, 2–1.

There were some familiar frustrations — the inability to sustain innings and cash in with runners in scoring position had a bit of a 2025 feel.

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But it’s too early to spiral there. The hitters were overly aggresive in swing decisions early, but settled in a bit as the excitement of Opening Day dissipated. Colorado struck out nine times — an improvement from Opening Day 2025, when they struck out 12 in another one-run loss in Florida.

This team looked more athletic. More versatile. More aggressive. The bullpen was excellent. Freeland kept them in it.

They were competitive. Gutty. A game within reach all night.

Sandy Alcantara was simply better — and the Rockies couldn’t quite capitalize.

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Up next

The Rockies will look to even the series tomorrow at 2:10 p.m. MDT.

Michael Lorenzen is scheduled to start for Colorado, with Miami countering with Eury Pérez.

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