Kevin and Jeana Millar. (Photo courtesy of the Millars)
THIS IS THE TABLE FORTY PODCAST
WITH MATT AND LESLEE HOLLIDAY
Kevin Millar played 12 seasons in the major leagues, splitting time between the Florida Marlins, Boston Red Sox, Baltimore Orioles and Toronto Blue Jays. He was a member of Boston’s 2004 World Series championship team.
Now, he’s best known for being one of the hosts on MLB Network’s “Intentional Talk,” where he showcases his humor and baseball knowledge for an entertaining program. He and his wife, Jeana, join “Table Forty” this week to talk with Matt and Leslee Holliday about marriage, parenting, baseball and faith.
St. Louis Cardinals second baseman Brendan Donovan, April 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
The season is young, but the St. Louis Cardinals have been one of the hottest-hitting teams in the major leagues. A big reason for that has been second baseman Brendan Donovan, who is hitting .380 entering Thursday, which ranks third in MLB. In 71 at-bats, he’s collected 27 hits with two home runs, 11 runs batted in and two stolen bases.
The Cardinals are in the MLB’s top five in hits, RBIs, slugging percentage, on-base plus slugging percentage, and they lead the majors in batting average. Donovan, who is hitting in the No. 3 hole for the Cardinals, extended his hitting streak to 12 games with a hit in Wednesday’s 4-1 win over the Houston Astros. He enjoyed a four-hit game on Monday.
“Every day is so different up here,” Donovan told reporters following Wednesday’s game. “Everyone is trying to attack you so many different ways. Your body feels different each and every day. But, for me, I think my routine has been pretty consistent. I think the recovery aspect is something that I’m leaning more into as of this past year.”
Donovan had surgery in August 2024 to repair a partial UCL tear in his right elbow, which he credited for a renewed focus on daily recovery in an effort to stay as sharp as possible. He’s begun to focus even more heavily on his preparation as well, he said.
Teammate Lars Nootbaar, who has also enjoyed a strong start to the 2025 campaign, credited new Cardinals hitting coach Brant Brown for implementing new approaches this season that have paid immediate dividends. One of those new tactics is for hitters to be more aggressive when they’re ahead in counts.
“The pressure’s on them, right?” Donovan said, referring to opposing pitchers. “I think we’ve done a good job making them come into our zone of, ‘What am I looking for? Where do I want it? And where do I want to hit it?'”
Donovan made his major league debut in 2022 and immediately made an impact, winning a Gold Glove Award as a utility player and finishing third in the National League Rookie of the Year race. Now with a career .286 batting average, Donovan has cemented himself as one of the most consistent players in the majors on both offense and defense.
He’s also been consistent in speaking publicly about his faith in Jesus and has credited his regular attendance at team chapel gatherings for helping him stay focused on his faith during the busy season, which often includes day games scheduled on Sundays, making it difficult for players to attend church.
“I think baseball actually does an amazing job. We do chapels in the dugout on Sundays,” he said in February on the “Dealin’ the Cards” podcast. “Last year we tried to go through the whole Bible. I think it’s pretty cool because not only does it bring you closer to your teammates, but it’s the most important thing you can do. It’s your framework or your guideline for how we’re supposed to live.”
Donovan was also a part of Christian Day at the Ballpark in July 2022, where he shared about the influence guys like former teammate Paul Goldschmidt and other veterans had on him during his rookie season. Donovan showed up to chapel shortly after he arrived in St. Louis and Goldschmidt immediately added him to their group text message thread.
That helped the rookie feel welcomed and encouraged right away, especially when it came to his faith.
“Going through the Word, going through chapels on the road, having our own Bible studies, it was immediate,” Donovan said during Christian Day. “The minute I got here, they pulled me in, and I’ve just been hooked since. To have those mentors out on the field and in the clubhouse that have great faith is just truly a blessing.”
Playing for an organization like the Cardinals, where winning is expected, can bring a lot of pressure, especially from a restless fanbase eager to see the team reach the playoffs for the first time since 2023. But Donovan has maintained that regardless of the pressure or platform he might receive as part of playing for the Cardinals, he intends to steward his position well.
“All of us are given these blessings and this platform to show faith, to show what kind of people we are and how we can impact others,” Donovan said during Christian Day in 2022. “To have success out here, we get to use that platform and we get to promote our faith. Obviously, we want to have success out here, but people remember you for what kind of person you are, so that’s how I try to view it.”
St. Louis opens a four-game series against the Mets in New York on Thursday at 7:10 p.m. ET.
Catcher Harry Ford, Feb. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
Less than a year after becoming aware of the global water crisis, Harry Ford was standing in the hot and humid Amazon rainforest. He made the decision to join Water Mission on a vision trip to see its safe water work in Peru after learning about the ministry through attending Pro Athletes Outreach’s MLB Increase Conference. Ford, a 22-year-old premier prospect in the Seattle Mariners organization, felt a pull on his heart when he heard that the global water crisis leaves 2 billion people worldwide without access to safe water.
“It blew my mind to hear that many people were suffering,” Ford said. “It lit my heart on fire, and I wanted to be part of what Water Mission was doing to address it.”
The Water Mission team in Peru. (Photo courtesy of Water Mission)
It was this passion that led Ford to travel with Water Mission staff and partners to Peru, where 57% of the population lives without access to safe water. The group visited several remote communities located deep in the Amazon rainforest, where safe water is extremely scarce. Ford met with Water Mission’s country program staff in Peru, learned about the organization’s community development work in the region, and visited with residents who have benefited from those projects.
“It was not like anywhere I had ever been before,” Ford said, recalling the poverty and living conditions in the area. “I was constantly asking myself, ‘Is this real life?’”
Ford had been moved by what he learned about the global water crisis at the Increase Conference, but seeing the devastation of its effects firsthand had a profound impact on his heart.
“These are real people,” Ford said. “You meet them and hear their stories and realize they’re just like you and me.”
As difficult as it was to see and hear about suffering, hope shined through. Ford and the group met with a woman who detailed her struggles before Water Mission implemented a safe water project in her community.
“When her kids got sick from drinking unsafe water, she had to spend a lot of her money and time traveling several hours by boat to get medicine for her children,” Ford recalled. “But now, she has safe water directly connected to her home. She’s saving so much time and money and has a newfound freedom in her life. That was so beautiful to see.”
The Water Mission team in Peru. (Photo courtesy of Water Mission)
Returning home from Peru, Ford continued to feel God’s call to help those impacted by the global water crisis. Alongside other professional athletes, Ford now serves as a brand ambassador for Water Mission, using his platform and standing as a professional athlete to tell others about their safe water and Living Water work around the world.
“I really just want to use my talent to serve the Lord,” Ford said. “I love Water Mission’s purpose, and I love that they are also spreading the Gospel.”
Ford has started the 2025 season with the Mariners’ Triple-A affiliate, the Tacoma Raniers, and this year will be a special one. For every home run Ford hits, he will give a gift that provides two people with Water Mission’s life-saving safe water solutions. Ford is choosing to use these personal accomplishments to give back to a cause close to his heart, all in the name of Jesus.
“I’m just trying to find ways to incorporate what God loves into baseball,” Ford said. “It will be honoring to the Lord. My ultimate goal is to honor the Lord with this campaign.”
Ford understands the position that God has put him in to serve others. He considers it a blessing to serve the Kingdom through playing the game he loves. Not to mention, there’s the added motivation of knowing every home run he hits is providing people in need with the life-changing gift of safe water.
“The better I play, the more people will hear about the work and how important it is,” he said. “Hopefully, they’re moved the same way that I was.”
To learn more about Ford’s season-long campaign or join him in support, follow his Instagram.
If you are interested in learning more about Water Mission, visit their website at watermission.org.
Scott Linebrink in 2011 with the Braves. (AP Photo/Gregory Smith)
THIS IS THE SPORTS SPECTRUM PODCAST WITH MATT FORTE & JASON ROMANO, FEATURING SCOTT LINEBRINK
Scott Linebrink is a former MLB pitcher and now the host of Sports Spectrum’s “Get in the Game” podcast. He pitched for 12 years in the big leagues with the San Francisco Giants, Houston Astros, San Diego Padres, Milwaukee Brewers, Chicago White Sox, Atlanta Braves and St. Louis Cardinals. He made his MLB debut on April 15, 2000.
Today on the podcast, we talk to Scott Linebrink about the 25th anniversary of his MLB debut, what it means to be humble and others-focused, what the Bible says about serving, and encouragement for athletes on what it means to serve.
San Diego Padres designated hitter Gavin Sheets, March 31, 2025. (AP Photo/Tony Ding)
The San Diego Padres have been a force to reckon with three weeks into the 2025 MLB season. They hold the best record in the majors at 13-3, leading the National League West by 1.5 games over the San Francisco Giants, and are top-10 in both runs scored and runs allowed per game.
One of the many reasons for San Diego’s blistering start has been the play of 29-year-old outfielder Gavin Sheets. Primarily serving as the designated hitter this season, Sheets has compiled 12 hits and eight RBIs in 38 at-bats. His .316 batting average would be the best of his career.
The lefty slugger is in his first year with the Padres after spending his first four MLB seasons with the Chicago White Sox, and he has quickly become somewhat of a fan favorite. Yet Sheets’ hot start with the best team in baseball and throngs of adoring fans didn’t seem likely just five months ago.
On Nov. 22 — after wrapping up a season in which his batting average was .233, he struck out more times than he got a hit, and his team set a modern-era record for most losses in one season (121) — the White Sox non-tendered Sheets and forced him into free agency.
“I didn’t see it coming,” Sheets told the San Diego Union-Tribune earlier this month. “But it’s part of the game. It’s part of where [the White Sox were] at. … Looking back at it now, it fueled me a little bit to say the least. I thought that where they were at and where I was at, we could work together.”
Instead of dwelling on his ending in Chicago, however, Sheets turned his attention to the next step in his baseball career. Before long, the Padres — who finished with a 93-69 mark in 2024 — came calling. On Feb. 9, they signed Sheets to a minor-league contract.
Yet with six home runs in spring training, he impressed the front office so much that he was added to the opening-day roster. He hasn’t slowed down since.
“We have our superstars here,” Sheets told MLB.com after his opening-day performance. “I knew that I wasn’t coming in to be a superstar. I was coming in to add depth and lengthen the lineup out as long as possible, come off the bench if needed, just do whatever.”
Sheets’ positive approach to what has been one of the more uncertain stretches of his baseball career is rooted ultimately in his faith in Christ. He writes “To God be the Glory” in both his Instagram and X bios, and he joined the Sports Spectrum Podcast this past offseason.
“Not making baseball my idol, that was the biggest thing,” Sheets said on the podcast about a rough year individually and as a team in 2024. “Being a man of faith in the clubhouse, leading guys in Bible study, leading guys in chapel, speaking on what was actually important in my life.
“Obviously baseball is a huge part of my life and it is very important to me, but it’s not everything. And being able to separate the results and the statistics with leading a Bible study, getting guys to [the White Sox’s Faith and Family Day], getting guys to chapel, walking guys in their faith. As difficult as it was at times to separate those two things, I think that when you take a step back from the season and you look back at things like Faith and Family and seeing guys that grew to Christ, you realize that the season wasn’t a failure in the grand scheme of life.”
Later, Sheets spoke about who Jesus is to him.
“Jesus Christ is my Savior,” he said. “He’s my Savior, He’s my Friend, He’s my Father. He’s everything that you want a man to be in your life. He’s my everything. When I’m in need, when I’m giving grace, when I’m giving thanks. He’s there when I’m at my highest of high and my lowest of low. Without Him — we don’t go through anything alone. He’s everything to me.”
"Jesus Christ is my savior."
Our latest SS podcast features MLB player Gavin Sheets sharing his story of baseball and Jesus. Tune in. pic.twitter.com/JnXly7CCLl
Sheets and his team will seek to continue the hot start with a three-game homestand against the Chicago Cubs (11-7). The first game is set for Monday at 9:40 p.m. ET.