





Baseball isn’t called “America’s pastime” for nothing. The game is ingrained in US culture: Some of Hollywood’s greatest sports movies and documentaries take place in the outfield, and every Major League Baseball season brings new and exciting elements to bat. This year, MLB’s top sluggers will step up to the plate for the 2026 T-Mobile Home Run Derby — streaming live on Netflix. You can learn more about the July 13 event on Tudum.
But if you’re looking for even more action on the mound, you’re in luck. Six of your favorite baseball flicks have rounded the bases, slid home, and are available to watch on Netflix now. Who’s your fave diamond in the rough? Tom Hanks yelling, “There’s no crying in baseball?” Philip Seymour Hoffman sporting an Oakland Athletics uniform? Billy Bob Thornton as a recovering has-been? Batter up! It’s time to find out.

A remake of the 1976 classic, Bad News Bears stars Billy Bob Thornton (Landman) as Morris Buttermaker, a washed-up, foul-mouthed, heavy-drinking former pitcher for the Seattle Mariners, who’s hired to coach a floundering Little League team, the Bears. Buttermaker’s young protégés prove so hopeless during their first game that he forfeits. But upon seeing his team utterly downtrodden, he vows to do better as their coach and actually, well, coach. He recruits some new players — including his ex-girlfriend’s sharp-tongued daughter, Amanda (Sammi Kane Kraft), and the neighborhood delinquent, Kelly (Jeffrey Davies) — and steps up his game. Can these social outcasts come together to prove their worth and win the championship? Or will their top-notch rivals, the Yankees, take it all? This comedy, directed by Richard Linklater (Hit Man), also stars Greg Kinnear (Little Miss Sunshine) and Marcia Gay Harden (Point Blank).

David Spade (Father of the Year), Rob Schneider (Real Rob), and Jon Heder (Napoleon Dynamite) co-star as Richie, Gus, and Clark, three perennial nerds who never got to play baseball when they were kids. When they step in to defend a timid boy, Nelson (Max Prado), against a group of bullies at the local ball field, Nelson’s billionaire father (Jon Lovitz) is inspired to fund a statewide Little League tournament. Despite being grown adults, the trio forms a team and enters the tournament in order to compete against the meanest bullies in the league. Gus inadvertently becomes a hero for underdogs everywhere — until a shocking secret about his past is revealed. Dennis Dugan (Big Daddy) directed this comedy, which also stars Craig Kilborn (Old School), Molly Sims (The Wrong Missy), and Tim Meadows (Our Little Secret).

Based on Michael Lewis’s book Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game, this sports drama — directed by Bennett Miller (Foxcatcher) and written by Steven Zaillian (Schindler’s List) and Aaron Sorkin (The West Wing) — tells the true story of Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane, who forever changed pro baseball history. Ahead of the 2002 MLB season, Beane (played by Brad Pitt) loses his star players to the league’s deep-pocketed teams. Desperate to prove that the A’s are capable of more, Beane hires brilliant Yale economics graduate Peter Brand (Jonah Hill). Instead of traditional scouting methods, the pair implement sabermetrics, aka sports analytics, to build a team of overlooked players, compromising on some flashier skills in order to up their on-base percentage and stay on budget. But is it a strategy that can take them to the World Series? Philip Seymour Hoffman (The Big Lebowski), Robin Wright (Damsel), and Chris Pratt (Passengers) also star in this film, which was nominated for six Academy Awards.

In the midst of World War II, Major League Baseball was shuttered, and a group of executives started the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League in 1943, allowing women to play pro ball for the first time. A League of Their Own is a fictionalized account of the first season, and follows the AAGPBL’s most successful team, the Rockford Peaches, on their journey to the Baseball Hall of Fame. In the film, directed by Penny Marshall (Big), sister athletes Dottie Hinson (Geena Davis) and Kit Keller (Lori Petty) are recruited by the Peaches, who are managed by cynical former star player Jimmy Dugan (Tom Hanks). As they work to bolster interest in the mere concept of women playing professional sports, the sisters bond with their colorful teammates — including outspoken Mae Mordabito (Madonna) and rough-and-tumble former bouncer Doris Murphy (Rosie O’Donnell) — and attempt to keep their sibling rivalry in check. This beloved dramedy also stars David Strathairn (A Man on the Inside), Garry Marshall (Mother’s Day), and Bill Pullman (The Sinner).

Twelve-year-old Henry Rowengartner (Thomas Ian Nicholas) has a dream: to play in the majors. The problem? He’s not exactly the world’s best player, and he fears his dreams are really over when he breaks his arm during a Little League game. But after getting his cast removed, Henry attends a Chicago Cubs game and casually catapults a ball over 400 feet from the stands to home plate. Stunned, the Cubs management team recruits Henry as a pitcher, much to the consternation of his fellow players, including aging pitcher Chet “The Rocket” Steadman (Gary Busey). As Henry becomes the youngest MLB player in history, he struggles with both hiding his culture shock as he plays alongside his heroes — and curbing his more childish tendencies. But Henry’s lighthearted approach to the game might be just what the Cubs need to go all the way. Albert Hall (Apocalypse Now), Amy Morton (Chicago P.D.), and Dan Hedaya (The Hurricane) also star in this family comedy.

Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck (Half Nelson) wrote and directed this sports drama that follows Miguel “Sugar” Santos (Algenis Perez Soto), a skilled pitcher from San Pedro De Macorís, Dominican Republic. Sugar, who is 19 years old and the star of his baseball academy, gets his big break when he’s called up to the US minor leagues. He leaves his loving family behind and attends spring training for the (fictional) Kansas City Knights, who send him off to the team’s Single A affiliate in Iowa, the Swing. He’s taken in by the Higgins family, who house Swing players every season, and mentored by veteran Dominican player Jorge Ramirez (Rayniel Rufino). Sugar’s got a wicked curveball, but the young player begins to question his single-minded pursuit of the sport when the pressure of his new environment causes him to falter on the mound. André Holland (Passing) and Michael Gaston (The Land of Steady Habits) also star.
The 2026 Major League Baseball season marks Netflix’s first season of MLB coverage and began with Opening Night between the New York Yankees and San Francisco Giants on March 25.
In addition to the T-Mobile Home Run Derby on July 13 in Philadelphia, Netflix will stream the MLB at Field of Dreams game between the Minnesota Twins and Philadelphia Phillies at the famed cornfield baseball diamond in Dyersville, Iowa, on Aug. 13.
Fans can now find daily highlights and top plays from around Major League Baseball on Netflix.























































