If two weeks ago was a mixed bag for the Yankees, this past week was a outright tumble. They did manage to narrowly win a series against the Tigers to start off, but the offense’s lackluster performance outside of a couple key moments came home to roost in their trip up to Boston where they got swept in a four-game series against their archrivals. A humiliating result on several levels, New York got pummeled by the last-place team in their division giving the Rays the opening they needed to close the gap and retake first place while also looking lifeless for significant stretches offensively — they scored just seven runs outside of extra innings across those four games facing nothing but lefty starters and nearly got no-hit by the last of them in former Yankee Sonny Gray.
Needless to say, the vibes aren’t great after that road trip. While June hasn’t been an outright bad month for them, they’ve played to an even .500 record and suffered from some streaky play within the rotation for the first time all year while the offense can’t find its groove. On top of that, the defensive alignments have regressed significantly with Aaron Judge, Trent Grisham, and Ryan McMahon all out: José Caballero hasn’t taken to time in the outfield well, Ben Rice has had a rough showing when he’s manning first base instead of slotting in as the DH, and Amed Rosario is still prone to some maddening errors. Combine all this, and it’s easy to see how frustrating the month has been despite the overall record not being too damning. And as our own Michael Zeno pointed out in his analysis of the so-called June Swoon, the real catalyst for an oncoming slide is a poor performance in Fenway during the month. Buckle up and get ready to see if that trend holds true.
With all of that in mind, there’s still plenty of season left to play and a trade deadline now on the horizon as we approach July. Much can change in a matter of weeks, and as we get into the new month even day-to-day rumors should start to bubble up as the trade market forms. Will an overhaul of the team be on the horizon to buff out the rough edges, or will the front office target a key player or two hoping that one big fix brings relief across the board? How aggressive do you think the Yankees will be in dealing from their prospect pool? Can they avoid considering getting back their injured players as a “deadline acquisition” this time around? If you have questions like these, or anything else on your mind, send ‘em in for a chance to be featured in our Yankees mailbag.
Answers will run on Friday afternoon. All questions received by the night of July 2nd will be considered. You can leave your submissions in the comment section below or by e-mail to pinstripealleyblog [at] gmail [dot] com.
Following Sunday's loss to the Philadelphia Phillies, the Mets optioned right-hander Tobias Myers to Triple-A Syracuse and recalled RHP Joey Gerber in a corresponding move.
The decision came after Myers pitched three innings in a bulk relief role in the series finale and allowed three earned runs on six hits which raised his ERA to a season-high 6.21.
In fact, since Myers was recalled from Triple-A after getting optioned in late May, he has not pitched well at all. In four appearances this month, the right-hander has allowed 14 earned runs on 17 hits (two home runs) and five walks in 8.2 innings for an unsightly 14.54 ERA.
Myers was optioned to Triple-A the first time due to bullpen necessity and flexibility because the 27-year-old had options remaining. Still, it came on the heels of a few rough outings after he had been exceptional early on in many roles out of the bullpen for New York -- he had a 2.05 ERA through May 2.
However, lately Myers has been unable to recapture his early-season form or even pitch to his career numbers (3.71 ERA in 230.2 IP) and has been optioned once again to try and find his groove.
Meanwhile, Gerber is getting recalled by the Mets for the fourth time this season. In limited action this year, the right-hander has a 1.80 ERA in five innings and has a career 3.24 ERA in 25 IP between three clubs. He last pitched for New York on June 9 against the St. Louis Cardinals.
May 1, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees pitcher Jake Bird (59) delivers a pitch during the ninth inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images
The Yankees will try to leave behind their ugly sweep at the hands of the Boston Red Sox starting on Monday, kicking off a three-game set at home against the Detroit Tigers. They will do so with a new face in the bullpen or, rather, an old friend getting another shot: Jake Bird.
The right-hander was sent to Triple-A on June 20th, when the Yankees needed a roster spot for an Elmer Rodríguez start. He was recalled from Scranton on Monday, as the Bombers placed closer David Bednar on the paternity list. The team announced the transaction via their social media channels.
Prior to tonight’s game, the Yankees made the following roster moves: •Recalled RHP Jake Bird (#59) from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. •Placed RHP David Bednar on the paternity list.
It’s unclear who will act as the Yankees’ primary ninth-inning option while Bednar is gone, but right-hander Fernando Cruz and southpaw Brent Headrick figure to be part of the mix depending on matchups. If Cruz is called upon, he’ll need to quickly erase the memory of how the Yankees’ recent sweep at the hands of the Red Sox came to a close.
Bird last pitched in the majors on that June 20th game against the Cincinnati Reds, tossing a scoreless inning and allowing one hit in the process. He has thrown 24 frames for New York this year, with a 4.88 ERA, seven walks, and 27 strikeouts.
While he has been much better than in his short 2025 cameo in pinstripes, Bird remains susceptible to the long ball, surrendering 1.5 homers per nine innings. His swing-and-miss ability, however, is an asset, particularly against right-handed hitters. Bird pitched just one game in Scranton in his most recent stint there, on June 24th, completing 1.1 scoreless innings and striking out two.
On the other hand, the new father has left behind a somewhat rocky start to the season and currently owns a rock-solid 3.09 ERA as the Yankees’ closer, with a 2.67 FIP, 16 saves, and a 27-percent strikeout rate in 35 frames in 2026. Bednar will be missed for as long as he’s gone, but should be back in a few days. After throwing two innings last night, he probably would’ve sat today against Detroit regardless. We send our best to his family on a safe delivery.
The Nationals and Red Sox have been connected in a big way this season, mostly due to the new Washington President of Baseball Operations, Paul Toboni, spending the majority of his front office career in Boston. While neither Jake Bennett nor Luis Perales will appear in this series, the two pieces in Toboni’s first trade with his former club, it’s likely to be a more personal series for the head of the Nats’ front office. Washington snapped a 4-game losing streak with 2 straight wins to close out a series win against an in-state opponent, the Baltimore Orioles, but their brief skid has them 4th in a loaded National League East and 2.0 games back of a playoff spot.
Sky-high expectations to begin the season for the Red Sox have quickly crashed and burned, with preseason predictions of them being a World Series contender followed up by a 36-46 record to this point in the season. They are, however, coming off their best series of the year, capping off a 4-game sweep of the New York Yankees with a come-from-behind walk-off victory in 10 innings on Sunday night.
Game 1 – Monday 7:10 PM EST
WSH: RHP Miles Mikolas (2-6, 5.24 ERA)
BOS: LHP Ranger Suarez (3-3, 2.83 ERA)
The best outing of Mikolas’ season was followed up with a rough go of it against Tampa Bay, but he settled in against the Phillies for a short but effective 3.1-inning appearance where he gave up 2 runs, both of which were unearned. Boston’s lineup is lefty-heavy, so he will have to get creative with his pitch mix to keep their hitters off-balance in the opener.
Former Phillie Ranger Suarez has been nothing short of a fantastic free agent signing for the Red Sox, and his 2.83 ERA ranks 6th in the American League among qualified starters, just .14 behind his teammate Sonny Gray for a spot in the Top 5. Most of the Nats’ hitters have seen the southpaw from his time in Philadelphia, and the lefty’s arsenal is deep and consistently difficult to crack.
Game 2 – Tuesday 7:10 PM EST
WSH: RHP Cade Cavalli (4-4, 4.00 ERA)
BOS: LHP Connelly Early (7-5, 3.59 ERA)
Cavalli will be looking for an improved start to finish off what has been a month to forget, posting a 4.94 ERA across just 23.2 innings. He put up a quality start his last time out with 6.0 innings of 2-run ball against the Phillies, his first since May 26th. That start also tied his season-high in pitches with 97, making his stamina as the game progresses a prime storyline to follow.
The first of Boston’s two young lefty sensations that the Nationals will face this series, Early is another finesse-over-power arm in their rotation. His handful of offspeed pitches have given opposing lineups more than they can deal with for much of the season, with a well-timed mid-90s fastball with excellent ride also at his disposal. The biggest weakness to point to is his tendency to allow home runs, making the long ball an important part of how the Nats’ offense needs to operate.
Game 3 – Wednesday 1:35 PM EST
WSH: LHP Andrew Alvarez (1-1, 3.44 ERA)
BOS: LHP Payton Tolle (4-5, 2.78 ERA)
Alvarez takes the ball on getaway day for Washington, and what a rotation stabilizer he’s been since the start of June. He’s given them nothing but solid starts, surrendering just 2 or fewer runs in each of the 5 starts he’s made this month, good for a 3.00 ERA. The Nats can only hope for more of the same from the 27-year-old, with the bullpen having to expect more heavy work after his presumed shortened outing.
While Early has found success by blending movement and sequencing, Tolle has been the bulldog in the Boston rotation in the wake of Garrett Crochet’s absence due to injury. His elite extension and high-90s power fastball make life incredibly difficult for anyone he goes up against, and he’s been one of the most dominant arms in the AL when he’s been on.
After Pittsburgh Penguins' president of hockey operations and general manager Kyle Dubas spoke with the media on Friday after round one of the 2026 NHL Entry Draft, it became apparent that he and his front office have been poking around at some bigger names in the trade market.
And it appears they have engaged with one of the market's biggest names.
Friedman on Jason Robertson/Pens (32TP): "I heard that there were talks with Pittsburgh on Friday or Saturday...and there were a couple of teams who thought there was some momentum there but obviously it didn't happen"
"I heard that there were talks with Pittsburgh on Friday or Saturday," Friedman said on 32 Thoughts. "And there were a couple of teams who thought that there was some momentum there, but obviously, it didn't happen.
"Pittsburgh, by the way, is another team that people are saying is trying to do something with some heft to it. So, I wasn't so surprised to hear that. But, I think teams are trying to figure out, 'Ok what's he looking for, and would he be interested in coming to us?'."
Robertson, 26, is coming off a 45-goal, 96-point campaign, and he is one of the league's very best wingers. He already turned down an eight-year, $96 million deal from the Stars, and he reportedly rejected extension offers from the Seattle Kraken and St. Louis Blues.
It has not been reported that Robertson or his camp would turn down an offer from the Penguins, should a deal be in the works or should an offer sheet happen.
"I think we continue to work away at it," Dubas said. "As it's happened, you go in, and what I wanted to have was - maybe not so much late-20s - but in the range of some of the guys that have been moved. And, in past years, they haven't gone for that level of asset. There was multiple top-10 picks moved, which isn't overly common."
But acquiring a bigger-name player - perhaps, such as Robertson - is still something Dubas and the Penguins will continue to work through.
"I don't know that we'll pivot," Dubas said. "We'll continue to stay involved in all those discussions and see where it lands."
Welcome to your fantasy baseball starting pitcher happy place. This is a new column for me this year that will combine a few things I've done in the past. In this article, every Monday, you'll not only get a list of my favorite streaming starting pitchers for the whole week, but underneath that, you'll get a breakdown of a few pitchers who are making interesting changes to their pitch mix. Today I covered Joey Cantillo, Sean Burke, Jose Cabrera, and Brandon Young.
It's a little bit of rankings and a little bit of analysis, and hopefully a lot of help for your teams.
As far as which pitchers on this list you'll want to stream, your decisions will change based on your league type and settings. Since I'm listing starters for the whole week, I won't be able to provide a detailed analysis for each one; I'll highlight the matchup and offer some quick thoughts. As is usual with my articles, a streaming starter pitcher is rostered in less than 40% of Yahoo formats, so just keep that in mind as we’re going through because I won't be mentioning pitchers who are rostered in more leagues than that. I also won't be mentioning pitchers that I would not start in any format.
I wrote about Sean Burke in this article last week, and I'm in for his two-start week this week. I like Peter Lambert as a low-ceiling streamer, and Robert Gasser is going to get another start at home against a reeling Reds lineup. If Elly De La Cruz and Eugenio Suarez are both out of the lineup, then I might move Gasser into a more confident territory. I know Eric Lauer has been good for the Dodgers, and I understand using him in a two-start week, but I'd rather avoid this one start in Sacramento if I could.
Tuesday
Strong Preference
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Griffin Jax
41%
at KC
12s and deeper
Fairly Confident
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Cade Cavalli
22%
at BOS
12s and deeper
Martin Perez
32%
vs STL
15s and deeper
Brandon Sproat
10%
vs CIN
15s and deeper
Some Hesitation
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Noah Cameron
28%
vs TB
15s and deeper
Mike Burrows
11%
vs MIN
15s and deeper
Brandon Pfaadt
2%
vs SF
NL-Only
Matthew Liberatore
6%
at ATL
NL-Only
JP Sears
1%
at CHC
NL-Only
I think Griffin Jax needs to be rostered in more formats, so I'm going to keep listing him here. Cade Cavalli gets a recent matchup against the Red Sox, but Boston just swept the Yankees in a four-game series at home and are riding high, so that makes me a bit more concerned. Brandon Sproat has turned the corner lately, and I covered him below.
Wednesday
Strong Preference
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Joey Cantillo
40%
vs TEX
12s and deeper
Fairly Confident
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Troy Melton
40%
at NYY
12s and deeper
Colin Rea
8%
vs SD
15s and deeper
Shane Drohan
13%
vs CIN
15s and deeper
Some Hesitation
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Patrick Corbin
3%
vs NYM
15s and deeper
Noah Schultz
9%
at BAL
15s and deeper
Seth Lugo
27%
vs TB
15s and deeper
Reynaldo Lopez
11%
vs STL
15s and deeper
Andrew Alvarez
4%
at BOS
15s and deeper
Walker Buehler
27%
at CHC
15s and deeper
Joey Cantillo was in this article last week and needs to be rostered in more formats. I trust him for this start. I don't trust Troy Melton has much in Yankee Stadium, but he has been pitching well lately, so I can see using him in 15-teamers. Colin Rea has also been solid lately when he's gotten the opportunity, so I think you can trust him in deeper formats.
Thursday
Strong Preference
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Ian Seymour
9%
at KC
12s and deeper
Fairly Confident
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Keider Montero
16
at TEX
15s and deeper
Dustin May
40%
at ATL
15s and deeper
Some Hesitation
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Slade Cecconi
14%
vs CWS
15s and deeper
Stephen Kolek
18%
vs TB
15s and deeper
Grant Holmes
18%
vs STL
15s and deeper
I've been a big Ian Seymour believer in the past, so I'm not going to abandon that belief after his best appearance of the season. Now is the time to jump back in. Dustin May had his past start pushed because of a back injury, and that scares me a little bit going into this start against the Braves.
Friday
Strong Preference
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Jake Bennett
16%
at LAA
12s and deeper
Fairly Confident
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Jack Perkins
7%
vs MIA
12s and deeper
Anthony Kay
26%
at CLE
15s and deeper
Some Hesitation
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Christian Scott
15%
at ATL
15s and deeper
Mitch Keller
35%
at WAS
15s and deeper
Javier Assad
15%
vs STL
15s and deeper
Andre Pallante
40%
at CHC
15s and deeper
Jose Cabrera
2%
vs MIL
15s and deeper
Jake Bennett has turned in a few really good starts as he leans into an approach with fastballs up and changeups down. I think this could work. I'm rolling with him against the Angels. I also think Jack Perkins could be turning into a decent starter for the A's. I just hate that this start is in Sacramento. I also like Christian Scott, but this is a bad matchup, and he hasn't consistently gone five innings, which makes him tougher to roster.
Saturday
Strong Preference
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Sean Burke
43%
at CLE
12s and deeper
Fairly Confident
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Kumar Rocker
11%
vs DET
15s and deeper
Merrill Kelly
39%
vs MIL
15s and deeper
Some Hesitation
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Brandon Young
35%
at CIN
15s and deeper
Brady Singer
26%
vs BAL
15s and deeper
Connor Prielipp
8%
at NYY
15s and deeper
Aaron Civale
7%
vs MIA
15s and deeper
David Peterson
11%
vs STL
15s and deeper
Crisrian Javier
2%
vs TB
AL-Only
Honestly, I'm not fairly confident in Kumar Rocker, but he just keeps delivering, so I think you can roll with him in deeper formats. I don't believe in Brandon Young, but if Elly De La Cruz and Eugenio Suarez land on the IL, then I'd probably use him here. I liked Connor Prielipp's last start, but I would prefer not to start him in Yankee Stadium.
Sunday
Strong Preference
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Griffin Jax
41%
at HOU
12s and deeper
Fairly Confident
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Eric Lauer
16%
vs SD
15s and deeper
Martin Perez
32%
vs NYM
15s and deeper
Robert Gasser
15%
at ARI
15s and deeper
Some Hesitation
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
League Type
Sean Manaea
15%
at ATL
15s and deeper
Zebby Matthews
16%
at NYY
15s and deeper
Erick Fedde
2%
at CLE
AL-Only
Now we get Eric Lauer at home against a Padres team that is really bad against lefties, so I'm far more interested in this matchup. We get decent second starts for Martin Perez and Robert Gasser as well, assuming Gasser remains in the rotation.
Over the last two starts, Tatsuya Imai has allowed three runs on eight hits in 12 innings while striking out 21 and walking one. Understandably, people are getting excited, but is anything different? To be honest, not much.
Yes, his splitter usage is up to 10.3% over his last two starts from 3.6% on the season. However, that's really the result of one game. In his start against Cleveland, he used the splitter 17% of the time, but it was down to 4% against the Tigers, so it's hard to really say he's using the splitter more often. On the year, the pitch is basically league average, with a league average zone rate and swinging strike rate. His changeup is seemingly better, but there's also an argument that they're the same pitch and sometimes get mislabeled, which connects to the larger issue of how hard Imai is to truly understand.
In his last two starts, his four-seam fastball has a 61% zone rate and 71% strike rate. Those are both significant improvements from his 48% zone rate and 60% strike rate on the season. His early called-strike rate on the four-seamer is actually the same, so he's not getting ahead in the count more often. What's happening is that hitters are putting his four-seamers in play more often in early-count situations. Imai is also using the fastball lower in the zone than he did before, perhaps to blend more with his slider.
Regardless, the fastball has still not been a great pitch for him. Even in these last two starts, he's allowed a .294 average, 91.5 mph average exit velocity, 7.7% barrel rate, and 54% Ideal Contact Rate on his four-seamer while posting just a 5.1% swinging strike rate (SwStr%). In fact, he has just four whiffs COMBINED on his four-seamer in the last two starts out of his 36 total whiffs.
So that means much of his success is on the back of his slider. It makes sense because it's a backward breaking slider that moved nearly five inches to his arm-side and barely drops. Hitters don't see anything like it. In these last two starts, he's gotten a 32.2% swinging strike rate on the pitch; however, that comes with just a 35% zone rate, so the success is predicated on hitters chasing out of the zone. In fact, his 8% middle-middle location on his slider over the last two starts is far above the 6.4% league average on sliders this season.
In short, Imai is not really throwing his splitter more. His fastball continues to get hit hard and not miss bats, and his slider is missing tons of bats, but it's not commanded particularly well. All of this leads me to believe that this is more of a flukey stretch for Imai than anything. In part because he has a 38.2% PutAway Rate over his last two starts (which measures how often a two-strike pitch turns into a strikeout), and his season average is 20.9% and the league average is 18.9%. A 38.2% mark is wholly unsustainable. If you want to add him because we were intrigued by him in pre-season and he's pitching well, go for it. But this doesn't feel like a brand new pitcher to me.
He held a 67% putaway rate here after topping that with 73% in his previous outing. He entered this start with a 40% mark, and he won't be so efficient in two-strike counts moving forward.
Aaron Nola - Phillies (New Slider, Four-Seam/Sinker Usage)
Aaron Nola is an interesting pitcher because we know how talented he has been, so his recent step back would lead us to believe he is "done" at just 33 years old. And while he's throwing harder than he did last year. I'm not sure I'm ready to say that. Yes, he has a 5.58 ERA and 1.45 WHIP this season, but he also has a 3.94 SIERA, so is there an argument for him being better in the coming months?
On June 13th, Aaron Nola started using a gyro slider. It's about 83 mph with one inch of vertical break and about four inches of horizontal movement, so nothing about it stands out, especially at that lower velocity. He’s using it almost exclusively to righties, where it's posted a 99th percentile strike rate and an 18.2% SwStr%. He's using it primarily when he's behind in the count, which tells me that he's trying to steal strikes with it, and the reason for that would be that he doesn't want to use his four-seamer in those counts.
That makes some sense since his four-seamer has allowed a 50% Ideal Contact Rate and 21.4% barrel rate to righties this season. Nola will try to use it sometimes in two-strike counts, and it does have a 28.1% PutAway rate to righties (17.1% is league average for a four-seamer), but the pitch gets rocked when it is hit. The new slider could be a way to mitigate that damage, but since he doesn't throw the slider to lefties, we still have a problem because his four-seamer also gets clobbered by lefties.
But, overall, we can see that Nola is trying to use his four-seamer less. Over his last six starts, he's using his four-seamer just 18.7% of the time, down from 27.5% in his first 10 starts. He's countered that by adding in the slider, using the sinker 5% more often and throwing to curveball 37% of the time, up from 32% in his first 10 starts.
He's throwing the sinker more often in early-count situations to lefties and has also bumped up the curveball usage to lefties early in the count. Similar to righties, he has not only dialed back the four-seam usage overall to lefties but also tried to stop throwing it as much when he's behind in the count. Over this stretch, he has a 4.80 ERA but a much better 1.27 WHIP and 23.8% strikeout rate, which pushed his K-BB% to 17% over his last six starts, compared to 14% in his first 10 starts. That's not a nothing jump.
We're not talking about Nola getting back to his peak, but I think continuing to hide his four-seamer and lean into his curveball makes sense for him. I'd like to see him do it even more, but that would put him back on the streaming radar in 12-team leagues and as a guy you can at least hold on your bench through tough starts in deeper formats. He's a smart pitcher, so I'd bet on him continuing to make changes.
We have to talk about the six innings of shutout ball against the Reds last week, where Sproat struck out 10, didn’t walk a batter, allowed one hit, and had 18 whiffs. We should also note that Sproat has not issued more than two walks in his last four starts. On Tuesday against the Reds, Sproat’s command of his four-seamer was exceptional, and he did a great job of keeping it at the top of the zone. The sweeper stayed low and away from righties, and he had four whiffs and a 38.5% CSW on that pitch. The curveball was always low and under the zone (sometimes too low), but we’d rather that than leave it up. He also mixed in sinkers and cutters to allow the four-seamer to play up more as a whiff pitch, and you can see how this can all work. His start before that at Cleveland was really just one bad inning, and the previous start in Sacramento was good, so maybe this is Sproat coming into his own?
If we look at his last four starts combined, he has a 3.48 ERA, 0.92 WHIP, 27% strikeout rate, and 15% SwStr%. We love all of that. Some of that could be the result of reshaping his pitch mix.
In his first 11 starts, he threw his cutter 27% of the time and his four-seamer just 18%. Over his last four, he's 28% four-seamer and 19% cutter. Some of that could be that his cutter has been just an average pitch. On the year, it has an average strike rate, swinging strike rate, and Ideal Contact Rate allowed. It doesn't give up tons of barrels and is a pitch he often used early in the count, but it also had just an average early called strike rate, so everything has been pretty average.
Over these last four starts, he's turned to the four-seamer more and is trying to use it up in the zone more often. His high location rate on his four-seamer is 44.5% on the season, but it was 65.2% in this start against the Reds and 85.7% two starts ago against the Athletics, so it's clear he's trying to elevate it more often. He's also seen improved zone rates on the four-seamer during this stretch, and the pitch has been a good two-strike pitch for him all season, so it makes sense to try and lean into it a bit more often.
He's also doing a much better job of keeping his sweeper low in the zone. In his first 11 starts, he had a 73% low location on his sweeper, but that has jumped to 87.5% over his last four starts. He's also using it in two-strike counts 58.3% of the time (up from 49%) and has a far lower zone rate, down to 25% from 43%. While that may seem like an odd approach, he's basically realized that his sweeper is his best whiff pitch but also saw that it gave up a 12.5% barrel rate in his first 11 starts. His new approach to bury it low in the zone basically means that he's going to get a whiff or a take on it, but hitters aren't going to beat him on his sweeper.
He has the reverse issue with his curve, which he kept under the zone around 75% of the time in his first 11 starts but had just a 21% zone rate and 49% strike rate. He's still keeping it low 67% of the time, but is also throwing it in the zone 33.3% of the time and getting a strike 66.7% of the time. Those are big improvements. It's also led to him using the curve 59.3% of the time in two-strike counts, up from 48.5% earlier in the season.
All of which is to say that it seems like Brandon Sproat is starting to figure things out with his arsenal, optimizing his pitch mix for more whiffs and locating his secondary pitches more consistently. We may be seeing a breakout happen here.
If you need to recall what the Guide is or who I am, please refer to the included links.
Trouble in River City
The Guide has the following to say about going to a game at Sutter Health Park:
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This Guide was created to analyze major league ballparks and the logistics involved in getting there and back. It is this author’s opinion that the Athletics already have a valid Guide Entry: “Farewell to Baseball’s Last Dive Bar.”
I have been critical of venues such as Guaranteed Rate Field/Rate Field, loanDepot Park, Tropicana Field, Truist Park, and Angel Stadium for various justifiable reasons, mostly because millions of dollars have been poorly spent on venues seemingly only designed to line ownership’s pockets, wholly at the expense of the unfortunate fans who visit.
One might expect this Guide entry to put the torch to Sutter Health Park with similar gusto.
However, we have a conundrum best explored through metaphor. To drive this point home, I am using myself as a guinea pig. Imagine that the Dodgers sent Billy Gasparino and David Finley to evaluate my worthiness as a relief pitcher at their own initiative. Rather than offer me a job in the front office or as an attorney, I get cold-called to suit up on the mound upon meeting me.
Alarm bells should be going off for everyone involved.
I am in my forties. I am not an athlete by any measure. I am not in any sort of positive physical shape. I nearly got knocked out by a slide in Milwaukee around Memorial Day. I have been throwing a knuckleball for almost forty years, but it should be instantly obvious to everyone involved that something has gone terribly awry and that everybody’s time, including my own, is being wasted.
Someone should be getting yelled at.
Do you yell at the hypothetical people who started this process? Absolutely; they could and should be doing just about anything else, including goofing off on the job, which would be an infinitely more productive use of their time. Do you yell at me, the potential reliever who has been asked to do his best with the option to live a dream, a dream that we all share? Honestly, maybe a little.
Remember, in this scenario, I did not offer my services. I was approached. Who wouldn’t try if given the opportunity? Join the 2026 Dodgers; that’s like being asked to become the thirteenth disciple and the sixth Beatle at the same time.
That said, one should expect to have enough self-awareness to at least ask why, lest it be some elaborate, mean-spirited prank. In this scenario, it’s not as if I played or managed college ball and then suddenly jumped to the majors with nothing in between. What kind of egotistical moron would do that?!?
With the above as prelude, Sutter Health Park is a fine home for the Triple-A Sacramento River Cats. Yes, you can walk from one end of the ballpark to the other in a single concourse with little effort; it’s a minor league park.
This Guide would take a much more relaxed view of going to minor league facilities for their intended purpose (if I were to go to Ontario, Tulsa, or Oklahoma City someday), asking the important questions, such as:
“Is there baseball here?”
“Could one watch baseball here?”
“…did the stadium catch on fire while watching baseball here?”
Admittedly, that last question is a reference to Brockmire, a vulgar, hilarious love-letter to baseball in the guise of a four-season comedy. Oddly enough, I reevaluated my opinion of Joe Buck as a direct result of this series. And yes, the minor league park did catch fire near the end of the first season. (I won’t spoil how or why.)
But if you insist that I evaluate an out-of-place venue, pressed into service not because of a natural disaster but greed, we will roughly follow the Guide’s format. Here is all you need to know about going to a Dodgers/Athletics game in West Sacramento.
Baseball’s Moped (1. Is it worth going?)
If the Dodgers weren’t there, it’s relatively cheap, have at it. If the Dodgers are there, no, unless you have personal reasons compelling you to go.
As the joke goes, mopeds are fun to ride, but you don’t want your buddies to watch you do it. Normally, I review a ballpark over an entire series. Much like the hypothetical scouts evaluating my fitness as a potential reliever, this exam need not be belabored. We’re not here to embarrass the undeserving.
If you want to experience Sutter Health Park (“SHP”), play the intro clip above. Congratulations, you have experienced 80% of what it’s like to see a game at SHP.
For the remaining 20%, for this upcoming Dodgers series, you will need to pay at least $150, stand in the hot sun (think 90°F/32°C) or a heat lamp, get a literal Ball Park hotdog, and have your car parked in a dirt lot after paying an additional $30-40. Oh, we’ve got trouble — about going to a game in River City!
It would be comforting to think that a sly trickster like Professor Harold Hill came to Sacramento, technically West Sacramento, to hoodwink the locals into letting the now-vagabond Oakland Athletics use the town’s minor league ballpark for a few years as an open tryout to demonstrate the town’s viability as a major league venue, while the team’s “permanent” home in Las Vegas is built.
John Fisher, heir to the Gap, Inc. fortune, is not Harold Hill.
Throughout most of this process, he has been unintentionally funnier than Benny Hill: a blight upon both Oakland and Las Vegas and someone who likely could not find his own hindquarters with the aid of a map, GPS, and both hands.
“I think people needed to hear from me,” said Fisher, whose A’s played in Oakland for 56 years, through the 2024 season. “Not hearing from me, I think, led to frustration from, frankly, the media. Like, who is this guy? Is he hiding? Who’s the real John Fisher?”…
“The news today is not contained within a certain zip code,” Fisher said. “In the sense that people in this community were seeing information coming out of the press in the Bay Area, I felt for sure it was important that they could hear from me … (so they) could understand, why did we make the decision to leave Oakland? But even more importantly, why were we coming to Vegas?”
Eventually, Fisher is also going to need a really strong collection of baseball players. Tourists arriving on the Strip for a handful of nights will have to decide whether to watch acrobats at a Cirque du Soleil show or catch a ballgame.
“Winning is important in every market. It is especially important in this market, in that there’s so many other things for people to do,” Fisher acknowledged. “It’s not enough to just say, ‘Look at our great stadium in this great location, beautiful view, and the food’s great.’ You have to have a product that’s on the field that is compelling, and compelling means winning.”
[Emphasis added.]
If Mr. Fisher is going to make the jokes this easy, I refuse to play. I will give Mr. Fisher credit in one regard: he did open his wallet once the Athletics came to Sacramento and bolstered the roster a bit… before trading Mason Miller. Granted, he did not have to pay rent, got the local team to upgrade their facilities, and faced the possibility of the MLB Players’ Association filing a union grievance if he did not spend on his roster.
Locals were excited upon hearing that the Athletics were coming to town, but after the initial fanfare died down, it became clear the team was going to pretend it had as little to do with the region as possible. Sacramentans got the hint and started staying away. While the percentage of the filled ballpark capacity is higher now, it’s a misleading statistic when one compares the vast differences in capacity between SHP and the now-abandoned Oakland Coliseum. A finger of a shot glass is less impressive than a splash of liquid in a 16 oz. glass.
Unsurprisingly, no tours are offered at SHP, but weirdly enough, one can get a First Game Certificate, which one can sign up for at Guest Services. Mine took four weeks to arrive digitally, which raises even further questions in a “is graphic design their passion?” manner.
In 2025, the Athletics did just about everything possible to keep Sacramento at arm’s length, only having Sacramento on a single patch one could buy at the impossibly cramped gift store. Now, at least the team has uniforms with Sacramento on them. The team refuses to be called anything but “The Athletics,” which is a dumb slap in the face to the citizens of Sacramento. If one is expecting a different posture than in Oakland, one might be best served to wait until the A’s arrive in Sin City.
Once again, Mr. Drellich of The Athletic:
To Fisher, the local fan is “definitely a different customer” than the one who drops into the city for two nights.
To gain the trust of the former, the A’s are trying a grassroots approach: community outreach, donations to youth baseball leagues, and so forth. If a Dodgers fan living in Vegas has a 10-year-old who becomes an A’s fan, eventually, Fisher believes, the parents will jump on the same bandwagon.
“Over time we’re going to convert the people here who support the Brewers, who support the Dodgers, who support whatever the team,” Fisher said.
The A’s want to show they’re not “just another team from California that moved to Vegas,” Fisher said, making a reference to the Raiders’ relocation, but that they’re going to be “Vegas’ team.” He acknowledged that process would take time, however.
[Emphasis added.]
The Brewers fan in Vegas is the hypothetical person I’d like to meet. As for Dodgers fans in Vegas, all I can say is good luck with the conversion. Considering the efforts demonstrated so far in Sacramento, I would not hold my breath as to any competent outreach in Las Vegas.
Friends don’t let friends go to SHP (2. How should I get there?)
Los Angeles-based travelers could drive for eight to ten hours or fly into nearby Sacramento International Airport in what will feel like eight to ten hours, especially if one is flying from Los Angeles International. As with most regional stops (think Fresno, Milwaukee, St. Louis, or Cincinnati), it’s more expensive to fly to regional airports than to fly directly to major hubs. Regardless, the airport is on the outskirts of town, and one would be best served by getting a rental car for one’s visit to Sacramento.
As a minor league park, Sutter Health Park is fine. As a major league venue, it’s anything but.
SHP is about an hour to 90 minutes from San Francisco, so one could conceivably drive to Sacramento or take the Capitol Corridor rail service, which connects buses from San Francisco to nearby Emeryville (home of Pixar!) and is connected to Oakland, and get to downtown Sacramento by rail. The problem is that you will end up on the wrong side of the river from the ballpark.
Another thing to keep in mind for the first-time traveler is that there are some major freeway interchanges very close to the ballpark, as the freeways generally either empty into or exit downtown, or start heading into the mountains via U.S. 50. There are 5,000 parking spots near the ballpark, and the rideshare pickup is down the street. Combine these facts, and you have standstill traffic immediately after games. I sat with my windows down and read until the madness passed.
While Sacramento has modest public transportation for a city its size, it is worth repeating that SHP is just across the river in West Sacramento. Unless one is staying nearby, which is difficult for this venue, one is typically driving or enduring traffic in a rideshare to get to the ballpark.
No, you cannot stay with me. (3. Where should I stay?)
The Sacramento River divides West Sacramento and Sacramento. As you can see, there are a plethora of hotel options in Sacramento, and traffic is funneled towards the iconic Tower Bridge, which would make getting to Sutter Health Park rather easy.
One could stay in Old Town Sacramento (think by the Delta King Hotel on the map below), which has the venerable California State Railroad Museum, if you like trains. One could walk to Sutter Health Park from Old Town Sacramento, but again, the infrastructure is centered around the car, so be mindful and be careful.
The West Sacramento side has fewer options, but they are cheaper. However, the same problem arises: pedestrian access is more hypothetical than practical for this ballpark; the car rules West Sacramento. The area near Sutter Health Park on the West Sacramento side is more industrial, giving way to suburbs. There’s more to do in Sacramento than on the West Sacramento side, but the prices are more forgiving on the stadium side of the river.
Typically, the team’s accommodations are governed by the Collective Bargaining Agreement and are usually at a luxury hotel like the Ritz-Carlton or Hotel Pfister in Milwaukee. Sacramento does not have a Ritz-Carlton, and I sincerely doubt the team is driving the 60 to 90 minutes one-way from San Francisco. My best guess is that visiting MLB teams have been using the hotel across the street from Golden1 Arena, where the Sacramento Kings play downtown, but I will be curious how the Dodgers navigate this hurdle.
Tickets are how much?!? (4. Where should I sit?)
Ah, the center of the shrubbery maze. You should watch these games from home. Otherwise, do you want to pay playoff ticket prices for a regular-season game in July? If yes, proceed. If not, you can skip to the end. There is absolutely no sugarcoating this one, so let us rip the bandage off in one motion.
$200 to $500 is an acceptable range of ticket prices for the NLCS or later, or a really good seat behind home plate anywhere in the league, but for a game in a minor league stadium? Utterly ridiculous and insulting.
I don’t blame the stadium or the regulars who call SHP their home away from home; I blame the avaricious ghouls perpetuating this fraud upon this region and the other cowards who own teams that enable this farce to continue.
Tickets for the Sacramento River Cats, the usual tenant of the ballpark, range from $11 to $44 the night before the Dodgers come to town. Those $11 tickets are for a seat on the lawn on the hill in right field.
But one might say that comparing the Triple-A River Cats to the Sacramento Athletics is unfair. Fair enough. The Miami Marlins start a series on July 3, immediately after the Dodgers’ series ends. Those tickets range from $28 to $250, with lawn seats on the hill being the cheapest option.
In our series, the $193 ticket is for a single seat on the first base side. Seats on the lawn were selling for around $150 from the team before the seating in this area of the event sold out.
For night games, if you have already committed to going, sit wherever you like. A recommendation from me cannot sink or salvage a doomed endeavor. But if you are going during the day, I do have one critical piece of advice.
I sat in section 108, Row 26, Seat 18 with a buddy from law school in seats that cost $40/ticket for my visit in 2025. It was Mason Miller bobblehead day. I needed pictures for this feature. The game started at 1 pm. Every row in front of me was in direct sunlight for virtually the entire game. The two rows behind me were also in the shade for the entire game. Unless you are sitting in the back, sunscreen and a hat are the orders of the day.
Now what? (Conclusion, as the question of a return trip in 2029 is likely moot.)
Here’s the kicker: I am quite fond of Sacramento. I spent three years going to law school at the now-University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law. I graduated eighth in my class, which, honestly, I am a little sore at because one modestly shaky first semester kept me from cracking the top five.
I have friends who still live in Sacramento and who still regularly attend River Cats games. Is Sacramento a major league city? No, and that’s okay. It’s too small, too hot, and has inadequate facilities to host a major league team. The Athletics being in West Sacramento is a vanity project for a basketball owner who seemingly got bored with driving his NBA franchise into the ground.
As a minor league park, Sutter Health Park is fine. As a major league venue, it’s anything but.
I live about an hour from Sutter Health Park, and it would cost me $600 to $ 1,000 to attend these three games as a fan, unless I was willing to sit on the cramped hill overlooking right field. For that amount of money, I was able to go to the following venues, including airfare and hotel, during my travels so far:
PNC Park, 2021
American Family Field, 2021
American Family Field, 2022
Kaufmann Stadium, 2022
Busch Stadium 3.0, 2021
Guaranteed Rate Field, 2024
Oakland Coliseum, 2017 to 2023
Oracle Park, 2018 to 2024
Have I made my point yet? I don’t want to enable John Fisher’s folly. I would hope that this anti-Guide entry is the sole time I actively try to discourage you from enjoying Dodgers baseball in person. I could find nice things to say about the lesser major league venues on this list. If you need a final reminder of whose pockets you’ll line if you go to Sutter Health Park when the Dodgers visit, for a final time, Mr. Drellich:
Fisher maintains that the premise [that he could have stayed in Oakland and preserved his reputation], however, is off. He took the A’s out of Oakland and to Las Vegas, he said, for reasons that were not financial.
“Number one, I didn’t believe that money was going to solve the problem,” Fisher said. “Among other things, there was a high likelihood that we would have gone to a referendum, and referendums for sports teams don’t generally work out so well in California. And losing that referendum would have meant we were done. Like, not, ‘Oh, you can just start from this position, move forward’ — done completely.
“We had just run out of time, and we worked with Oakland for years and spent an enormous amount of money,” he continued.
“And the other thing was, honestly, that what we were doing, it was really important to me that this be a partnership. And that the partnership needed to be with the community and ourselves, and money can’t pay for a successful partnership.”
[Emphasis added.]
What does John Fisher know about spending his own money? He’s built a career spending other people’s money.
The Ducks have erased another pending UFA off of their list. On Monday, they traded defenseman Radko Gudas’ signing rights to the Florida Panthers in exchange for A.J. Greer’s signing rights.
Greer, 29, spent the last two seasons playing for the Panthers, putting up 49 points in 159 games. He is a big, bruising winger who will add plenty of toughness to the Ducks’ bottom-6.
A second-round pick in 2015, Greer began his pro career with the Colorado Avalanche before stops in New Jersey, Boston, Calgary and Florida.
Gudas was the Ducks’ captain for the past two seasons. He joined the organization in the summer of 2023, signing a three-year deal on the same day as longtime teammate Alex Killorn. Gudas’ first season with the Ducks helped Jackson LaCombe settle into the NHL as a rookie, as the former used his physicality and defensive mentality to complement the young defenseman.
Jan 25, 2026; Calgary, Alberta, CAN; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas (7) against the Calgary Flames during the third period at Scotiabank Saddledome. Mandatory Credit: Sergei Belski-Imagn Images
However, after being named captain 2024, Gudas was unable to replicate his stellar performance from the season prior. Whether it was due to age or lingering injuries, he frequently found himself out of position, needing to take a penalty to prevent an opposing scoring opportunity.
Gudas’ Ducks tenure ended unceremoniously due to a sprained ankle that he suffered during the regular season. He returned for Game 1 of their Round 1 series against the Edmonton Oilers, but did not play for the rest of the playoffs after re-aggravating the injury.
With this trade, it’s a return to familiarity for Gudas, who played for the Panthers for three seasons—and helped them get to the Stanley Cup Final in 2024 prior to signing with the Ducks. He’ll likely be on their bottom pair alongside Dmitry Kulikov.
Per Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman, both Greer and Gudas are likely to sign with their new teams.
MINNEAPOLIS, MN - JUNE 13: JJ Wetherholt #26 of the St. Louis Cardinals celebrates with teammates after winning the game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Minnesota Twins at Target Field on Saturday, June 13, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Andrew Ritter/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Following another terrible trip out to California, the Atlanta Braves are finally back at home and looking for any type of spark. Whether that comes from someone in the rotation not named Chris Sale or Martín Pérez delivering a standout performance or quite literally anybody in the lineup actually having a big day, it’s clear that the Braves are currently in desperate need of something going their way so that this slide can finally come to an end.
Atlanta will enter this week’s action with a much better record and outlook than both of their opponents but again, it’s hard to feel confident when the Braves have been in such terrible form as of late. At least when you look at things on paper, it sure seems like this week could provide some opportunities for this team to collectively get their confidence back. The Cardinals haven’t been doing so hot as of late. The Mets usually play the Braves tough regardless but this is still a team that the Braves have the talent to beat. It’s just a question of whether or not the Braves can actually figure out a way to get back to the levels they were at earlier this season against seemingly favorable competition.
Let’s go ahead and figure out what lies ahead for the Braves this week, y’all.
June 30-July 2: St. Louis Cardinals
Current Record: 43-38 Projected Record (via FanGraphs): 82-80
It’s been an up-and-down season for the Cardinals and right now they’re in a bit of a valley after having gone 3-7 over their last 10 games and dropped a series against the Marlins heading into this series. With that being said, St. Louis has got some guys who can thump a baseball and that’s what Atlanta’s pitching staff will have to deal wiht outside of their own set of issues. Cardinals 2024 first-round pick JJ Wetherholt has arrived to the show and he’s been making his presence felt with a .265/.360/.411 slash line along with a .343 wOBA and 120 wRC+ over 77 games. Both he and Jordan Walker have paired up as an exciting 1-2 punch of young guns and they’ll very likely be the two biggest threats to the Braves this week.
Still, it’s a pretty well-rounded lineup as evidenced by their collective team wRC+ of 102 — good for a tie for 10th place in all of baseball with the Athletics when it comes to that particular metric. Alec Burleson figures to be a thread and Ivan Herrera can also do some real damage at the plate as well. Lars Nootbaar has also hit the ground running since getting his season started earlier this month. The easy outs against the Cardinals will be far-and-few inbetween for the Braves, so everybody on the staff will likely have to stay locked in if they’re going to hold the Redbirds at bay.
The pitching for St. Louis is less imposing but at this point with the way the Braves have been hitting, any progress from Atlanta on that front has to be seen before it’s believed. Therefore, probably not great to see that Atlanta’s going to have to deal with a couple of really good starters in the form of Dustin May and Michael McGreevy. May in particular has been pretty solid this season and while his ERA is somewhat high (4.30, ERA- of 106), his FIP (3.31, 81 FIP-) and his walk rate both indicate that as long as he can avoid the usual pratfalls, he’ll be tough to deal with. He’s also coming off of some back issues in recent days so we’ll have to see just how effective he is against the scuffling Braves.
Michael McGreevy has done a solid job of avoiding walks and he’s able to get plenty of ground balls as well so if the Braves fail to hit the ball hard against him, Atlanta could be in line for yet another long and quiet night at the plate. With all of that being said, the Braves could have an opportunity to do something against Matthew Liberatore, who has been struggling as of late. Ever since May 13, Liberatore has put up an ERA of 7.32 (180 ERA-) and a FIP of 5.17 (126 FIP-) and he’s given up thirteen runs (eleven earned) across his past two starts. He’s also given up at least one home run in six of his past eight starts Plain and simple, Tuesday’s game appears to be a golden opportunity for the Braves to potentially break out of their long and collective slump. If there’s no breakout here then this rotten run at the plate really might keep going into the weekend series.
Tuesday, June 30 at 7:15 p.m ET (BravesVision, Gray TV) Wednesday, July 1 at 7:15 p.m ET (BravesVision) Thursday, July 2 at 7:15 p.m. ET (BravesVision)
July 3-6: New York Mets
Current Record: 35-49 Projected Record: 76-86
Yeah, this is a weird one where the series is wrapping around the weekend and into Monday by design. I guess they did it because of the holiday weekend? I can’t tell you but either way, it’s a rare four-game weekend series against a new-look Mets team. The new look comes from the fact that Carlos Mendoza is out of the managerial seat and replaced him with Andy Green on an interim basis.
If New York was looking for a quick ‘new manager bump,’ it didn’t materialize after they dropped a home series against a team that has very much benefited from a ‘new manager bump.’ Maybe they’ll make something happen against the still-sputtering Blue Jays but for now, there’s still plenty of upheaval going on with this team at the moment.
One thing that remains the same is that no matter where these two teams may be in the standings relative to each other, it’s going to be a hard-fought series. The Mets proved that they aren’t going to roll over for the Braves after they were pretty clearly the better team over three-games played between these two back in New York. That may be more indicative of this current extended slump that the Braves are on than anything that the Mets have going on but it’s also clear that at this point, the Braves are going to have to fight and claw for any wins that come their way — divisional foes or not.
As a matter of fact, the Braves and the Mets have the same amount of victories (3) since these two parted ways earlier this month. If that number remains the same heading into this series (whether it’s up or down) then I’d say that this could potentially be the series where we really start to see some red flags popping up when it comes to the Braves.
Anyways, Bo Bichette is likely to be a factor in this series as it appears that the previous series against the Braves did, in fact, revive his season. A.J. Ewing has also been getting the job done for the Mets at the plate since these two teams last locked horns. Francisco Alvarez and Carson Benge have also been faring pretty well since then and Juan Soto is Juan Soto. New York’s hitting has actually been fine over the past couple of weeks — it’s the pitching that’s been the issue for the Mets lately.
Since these two clubs last played each other, New York’s pitching staff has had the highest ERA- in the National League (142) along with a bottom-10 FIP- of 104. With that being said, the Braves have had baseball’s worst wRC+ since their last meeting (51) so this matchup might be a case of the stoppable force meeting a movable object. Atlanta’s offense has got to get going at some point and if they can’t get it done against this Mets pitching staff then it’ll be tough to figure out when this skid will end for the Braves.
Friday, July 3 at 7:15 p.m ET (BravesVision) Saturday, July 4 at 8:08 p.m. ET (FOX) Sunday, July 5 at 12:30 p.m. ET (NBC) Monday, July 6 at 7:15 p.m. ET (BravesVision)
We had the honor and privilege of having Cardinals President of Baseball Operations Chaim Bloom as our guest for this week’s episode. We could not be more excited about the direction of the podcast. Gabe and Scott, you guys are the best, and I can’t do this to the level I want without you, and all of the wonderful guests we have had the privilege of speaking with this year, and will continue to do so, to bring to you, the frequenters of this site, the best product possible. One other unrelated topic, I hope that in my time at VEB, I have provided you all with content that you weren’t expecting or have over-delivered on whatever expectations you had upon my arrival! Enjoy!
Topics discussed:
– Introduction to the Podcast and Guest – Analyzing Matthew Liberatore’s Performance – Nolan Gorman’s Development and Strikeouts – Chaim Bloom’s Experience Across Organizations – Managing Expectations and Early Season Success – Deciding on Pitcher Roles and Performance – Addressing Trade Rumors with Players – Impact of Upcoming Draft on the Franchise – Philosophy on Player Extensions – Player Promotions and Development Strategies – Fostering Growth and Honest Feedback – Catching Depth and Player Versatility – Urgency and Long-Term Strategy – Evaluating Player Performance and Development – Challenges with Tink Hence – Reflections on the Season – Engagement with Fans and Organizational Focus – Trade Conversations and Deadline Dynamics – Leadership Changes and Future Directions
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Transcript:
Jake Wood (00:37) Welcome to the Viva El Birdos Podcast. As always, I am your host, Jake Wood. I am joined by fellow writers Gabe Simons and Scott Plaza. If you enjoy this episode, please be sure to like and subscribe to our channel. We are available on YouTube and all of your favorite audio streaming platforms. Today is a special day. You know very few markets in professional sports make their head decision makers available to come on platforms such as this. And you know, I would be remiss if I didn’t take a second to extend our collective appreciation to our guest today and the St. Louis Cardinals for their willingness to accommodate such a privileged experience. With all of that being said, today’s special guest is the Cardinals’ President of Baseball Operations, Chaim Bloom.
Chaim, we sincerely appreciate your taking the time out of your busy schedule to join us today. How are you?
Chaim Bloom (01:39) I’m doing well, and it’s an honor to be on here with you guys.
Jake Wood (01:42) Thank you so much. Now, before we start grilling you with our exceptionally difficult questions, you know, I wanna throw out a quick disclaimer. ⁓ that we will not be asking Chaim about specific trades or extensions, as he has stated publicly in the past, he will not discuss the details of those discussions, and any disclosure of those details could harm his leverage in those conversations. So I just wanna put that quick blanket statement out there that, you know, those topics are off the table essentially, and that wasn’t Chaim’s doing, that’s our understanding going forward. So but you know, I do ⁓ Chaim, I do want to start with a player who is, you know, a major talking point right now amongst Cardinals fans, and that’s Matthew Liberatore You know, from your seat and the advanced data that you guys have internally, what, if any data points are you are are providing optimism to you that Libby can, you know, right this Ship?
Chaim Bloom (02:33) Yeah, look at the last ⁓ X number of starts and just, you know, recent outings, obviously tough for him, ⁓ tough for all of us. I think it’s not what anybody wants to see. You know, we’ve, as you can imagine, spent a lot of time on this. And, you know, if there were easy answers, we’d have found them, and ⁓ you know, we would be out of this. But I do think there are some nuggets that we’ve seen just in terms of, you know, when you zoom out, there’s a lot of things there that are ⁓ not that different or even in some cases better from ⁓ where he was last year and where he was coming into the season. There are some things that we’ve particularly focused on. You know, a lot of what’s happened has come on contact.
It’s come during a select number of big innings. So there’s been a lot of energy spent on that. Some little things that
You know, we’ve looked into even some things we found, but of course, obviously, you know, even going into last start, ⁓ we did still fall victim to that big inning. So we’ll continue to work on it. There’s a ton of effort being put into it and a ton of optimism ⁓ on getting him out of this. You know, it’s not that long ago we looked at this guy coming off a great spring, going into the season, feeling great about where he was at. He’s had some bright spots during this season. That’s not to diminish obviously the totality of the body of work so far in twenty twenty six. But, you know, we don’t want to be ⁓ passive here, but we also don’t want to be too knee-jerk and reactive and miss an opportunity to get somebody through this who we know has some talent.
Jake Wood (04:00) As as just a quick follow-up, would you say it’s more of a commitment to Libby as a starter or maybe more of a lack of another younger option forcing their way into the spot, a la like a Jimmy Crooks or a Blaze Jordan did in their situation? Or would it be a little bit of both to kinda hedge that?
Chaim Bloom (04:16) Yeah, I don’t know if it’s an either-or. I mean, we believe that he can do this. I know he does as well. We always want there to be competition, and you know, it’s one thing that I’ve said in a number of different forums that ⁓ we want to make sure that we’re staying with players, not being reactive, and most importantly, not giving up on guys, not giving up on guys prematurely. But there is competition in this game. The competition should come you know from within. It should come from our other players, and the reality is there’s X number of spots, and it’s always a meritocracy. But we also want to make sure that we don’t throw up our hands, and we’re staying with everybody. And if you know, the competition that is inherent in this game means that people take certain opportunities, as has happened in a couple of places this season, and that’s part of the game. But we also got to make sure that we never stop working towards the best version of every player.
Gabe (05:05) Speaking of struggling players, not to focus too much on the players that are struggling, but what’s the plan with Nolan Gorman? Because I know he’s just a guy who’s gonna strike out a lot, so you’re not gonna tell him to stop striking out, ’cause that’s just a part of his game. So what is the plan with a player where you just know strikeouts are part of the deal?
Chaim Bloom (05:22) Yeah, look ⁓
You said it. You know, there are plenty of players whose strikeouts are part of their game and we’ve seen Nolan be productive with that being the case. He had gotten to a point where the swing was just so uphill that it was really not allowing him to get to his power and to get to that quality contact that we know he can make, where it was giving him very limited opportunity ⁓ to hit a fastball, just because of ⁓ this, where the swing plane was. And then also, ⁓ along with that, if he ends up out in front on a changeup, just not giving himself an opportunity to stay through it and make contact. With those pitches, so you end up that proverbial in between. So when he went down to Florida and worked in a lab, a lot of that was creating training environments where he could address that. We were encouraged by the work there, and wanted to test it out in games. Obviously we know that’s gonna be a process too when you’re getting back in game action. But that and the long and short of it is that’s what we’re trying to do. There are obviously some other things that go with that in terms of approach, in terms of timing, but really we wanted to get him back to the version of himself that, while there’s still gonna be swinging and missing there that goes along with the power, gets his swing to a place where he can get to his power more frequently.
Scott Plaza (06:32) I’m gonna zoom this out a little bit. Instead of talking about the struggles, let’s talk about ⁓ kind of the good stuff here. So you’ve been with major league organizations for quite a while here, worked with three different teams, and all three places were very different from each other, market size, history, payroll, and all that stuff. Has that impacted your time in St. Louis at all? And how like is it fun or challenging to figure it out in each new place you go to?
Chaim Bloom (06:54) Yeah, well, first of all, I don’t mind talking about the struggles. It’s kinda I mean, this is sort of what we do. I was actually joking with somebody in-house last night, and this isn’t entirely true. It was a joke, but there’s a little bit of truth to it that so much a part of my job is just imagining all the worst-case scenarios and then doing everything we can to make sure that they don’t happen. That’s part of preparation. ⁓ There are also fun things that we get to do, and fun things that we get to imagine. But one of the cool things about this and all the places I’ve been, you get to wake up motivated by the chance to make something better. And usually that means something’s not exactly where you want it to be. And I personally get a lot of energy from being able to tackle something like that. So I don’t mind those questions. But yeah, look, you know, one of the things that outside of just knowing this is a great organization, great people, ⁓ great ownership, one of the things that I thought was really interesting about.
This opportunity when it first arose is that it had some really cool elements of the different places that I’ve been ⁓ in terms of you know, some of the the sort of all eyes on you nature ⁓ of the Boston market and the history and the importance of the organization in the community, ⁓ and just the deeply, deeply personal relationship that the fans have with the organization. And then also the continuity and the us against the world mentality that I grew up with, with the Rays. Not that every organization can’t have elements of both, but you know, it certainly felt like this one did. And you know, now having spent you know, real time with three different organizations. I think it’s incredibly valuable to just have those different experiences, both the positives, the things you learn from when you had success with something, and you take lessons out of it of what you can replicate or what you can bring to a different situation. And then even some of the setbacks. And you know the reality of it is, you know, I’m so proud of the 15 years that I got to be a Ray and got to spend with that group and some of the things we accomplished. But there are things on the way out the door that once you have that outside view of your own work, you can say, ” Man, we could have been better at this. Or we weren’t you we got a lot of pats on the back there was a little bit of a halo effect around everything that we did there but we weren’t really that great at everything we were really good at some things and there are some things we could have done better and sometimes it’s hard to see that until you’re out of it so you try to take all those lessons and then you know bring them to your next stop and
You know, I’m cognizant of the fact that because I have so much pride in the work that I was able to do in both places, that you walk in here and there’s a lot of people very proud of what is, and you better honor that and respect it and learn from it at the same time as you try to take the lessons that you’ve learned and bring them, you know, bring them here, because that’s part of the job is obviously to bring the benefit of that experience to bear on on whatever you find here.
Jake Wood (09:31) You know, I’m curious, I’m you know, given that experience, I’m curious how you think about navigating the next twelve to twenty-four months. ⁓ You know, some fans I’ve spoken to believe that the rebuild is already over and it’s already time for contention. You know, do you have any concerns that this sugar rush of excitement fans have felt over the first couple of months might lead to higher-than-appropriate expectations, kind of in the immediate future? I know that, you know, all a big part of your job is kind of, you know, ⁓ reining in those expectations. So I’m just kind of curious how you’re looking at the early-season success that the Cardinals have had on the field, ⁓ and how that kind of ties into the direction that the team is going right now.
Chaim Bloom (10:12) Well, really good question. ⁓ first of all, I wanna be very clear about something. We love success anytime we’re able to have it. ⁓ it’s really hard to have success in this business. Big league wins are hard to come by, every single one of them, so you never take any of them for granted. And you know, what we’ve seen early in terms of just seeing some of the energy from our fan base around this team. It’s not just the results, although I know that helps, I think you know, our fans are really smart, and I think they’re able to intuit and see even from a distance that this group has a different energy about it. That this group genuinely enjoys being around each other and competing together, and that energy is picked up on, I think, by our fan base, which is not a surprise. Obviously, you don’t take for granted that it’s happening. So every bit of this is really cool. And the other thing I want to make clear is that our expectations are always sky high. You know, we I’ve you’ve I’ve said it since day one here. This is the organization historically that set the standard for the rest of baseball. We cannot let that standard slip, and we want to have really, really high standards at all times. The things that I the thing that I’ve tried to make clear is that standard’s always changing. And so it’s not just somebody else’s standard that we live up to. It’s a very high standard that we get to set ⁓ time and again as as we go on in this organization. But I also understand the question that ⁓ it’s really easy to think in terms of quote unquote ahead of schedule. I don’t like to think that way. To me, that distracts you from what you’re trying to do. There is always the work in front of you. We have enjoyed more success than I think some people thought we would have early in the season by staying focused on that work, by keeping our feet on the ground, by being realistic about where we’re at, by competing relentlessly, by not taking anything for granted, and but just by grinding day after day, something that I think really is an important part of the identity of this organization. I don’t mind exuberance from the outside. People can get as excited as they want. That’s part of my job is to make sure our feet stay on the ground, make sure we stay head down on the work. ⁓ and certainly a part of that is in the communication you know part with you guys, with our fans, with everybody who loves this organization, but we gotta stay focused on the work. If we get distracted, if we start getting tempted by shortcuts, that will derail us. So it’s really on me and on us as an organization to just make sure we keep doing the right things. And what you hope happens with that, just like what has happened in the first half of the season, is that good things come from not getting tempted by those shortcuts. That if you try to, if you try to do something you shouldn’t, if you try to quote unquote get ahead of schedule, well you the game’s harder than that.
And it’s usually gonna punish you for that. So we’re going to get the best results and and and get rewarded by keeping our focus where it needs to be and just going brick by brick and trying to win every day. ⁓ and I don’t just mean on the field, but win every day in the work that we’re doing and stack those days and then look up and see where we’re at, rather than by trying to reach for things without really having put in the work.
Gabe (13:07) How do you know when it’s time for a starter to go to the bullpen? And sometimes you’ll have players who obviously fail at the major league level and that’ll make it easier, but with all the pitching prospects in the system you’ll have to make that decision before then. So what what makes that decision for you?
Chaim Bloom (13:22) Yeah, again, some of it that the the the game, you know, you gotta try to listen to the game. And again, there’s a that’s there’s an art to that, right? It’s not perfectly easy just because a guy has such and such ⁓ an ERA, or you know, the last week or month or two months have gone a certain way, doesn’t mean that it’s time to do that. There, you know, Oli was talking about it last week with Andre that it would have been really easy to do that at many different points. And, you know, not saying that, hey, we solved the puzzle. Like you cannot solve this puzzle, you can’t beat this game. but the strides that he’s made and the things that he’s accomplished, we would not have seen, you know, had we kind of taken the easy way out with that. So that doesn’t mean it’s always easy. There’s not a perfect answer. There is no formula for this. Trust me, I wish there were.
But there is some judgment layer on it and just really trying to peel back some of the things that are more variable, some of the things that are noisier, and just try to get down to the things that are most indicative of where you’re actually at. And then try to make a real plan that’s grounded as much as you can in evidence and and a little bit of baseball field to try to see the path forward. And again, then factor in the competition. Where’s everybody else at? Because we do only have so much opportunity. So the players are going to compete for that opportunity. But at the same time, we we we gotta try to keep our focus on the things that are most indicative of where someone is, and then all the realistic paths to get them to a better place.
Scott Plaza (14:41) Alright, so I played a few levels of indie ball and I understood that we were the most replaceable players out there. ⁓ ’cause there’s two dates we hated, the draft and the trade deadline. Jake’s gonna get to the draft here in a second and trying to still avoid like the whole, you know, what are we doing at the trade deadline type deal. ⁓ we we we were we worried about those because we knew there were gonna be new faces coming in, some of us were gonna lose our jobs. So as rumors come up, how do you go about like addressing those with the players? Like we know this is, you know, it we hear it’s a business so everybody understands, but like Sonny Gray was on the record of being like, I really don’t want to move again during the season. So how do you go about like addressing those rumors when like there’s either truth or not truth to those?
Chaim Bloom (15:21) Yeah, it’s important to recognize as you just highlighted, obviously we can sit here and sometimes we have to and and think about this very transactionally because we have jobs to do, but everybody in this game is a person. And there is a business side to this game, there’s a dark side to this game, and sometimes we all end up on the business end of it. I know I have. And, you know, those experiences I I like to think they help you handle these. I think number one, first and foremost, look, I believe in operating very relationally. I think that’s been a big part of how I built my career. I think people do appreciate it. I think I’ve gotten a lot out of it. I think it makes it easier to help people to move something forward. so I don’t shy away from trying to understand our players as people and relate to them on on a on a on a personal level to the extent that I can. And I think there’s a lot of good things that can come from that. There’s a lot of trust that can get built from that. Whether that that means your next conversation’s gonna be a great one or a tough one, it comes on a foundation of some kind of trust. At the same time, one thing I think is really important, you cannot hide or pretend, you know, you can’t hide the fact that there is that business side. And I think you you you lose a player when you try to pretend that that that doesn’t exist because they know that it does. So you try to be realistic about that, where you know, there’s there’s on one hand, I feel, you know, I owe it to everybody in here, players and staff, from the second you walk into this organization, from the second you leave, I want to treat you like I would want my own children to be treated if they were here, if they if if they were working somewhere. And try to take that personally. And at the same time, we have to make business decisions, and that comes with the job.
And that is part of it. So I just think you try to be very open and realistic about that. There is some element of, you know, sometimes players don’t want to broach those conversations, even if they want to have them. And you know, there is a feel element to that where sometimes there is a time. And you learn this by when you do it and it goes well. And sometimes when you miss the opportunity to do it and you realize after the fact that somebody would have wanted it.
⁓ that there is a time to to to have a conversation with a player and kind of read them into a little bit of what could happen. And some guys don’t want that. So there is a feel element to that. That’s part of where I think the relationships re the relationships help just to get to know people a little bit and understand what they might want. You know, they know we have jobs to do, but you want to try to make this as easy as possible for them. I think in the case as you mentioned, Sonny, obviously Sonny’s in a little bit different situation because he had a no trade clause. So he had control over this too. So, you know, just from a business standpoint, you need to work collaboratively with someone like that and understand what he wants. But even in the case where a player doesn’t have that, I still think, you know, them feeling like the door is open, look, this game’s hard. ⁓ and you don’t want to add stress onto the stress that’s already there that just comes with the business. So to the extent that players feel less stress around just being open with us, understanding what’s going on to the extent that they want that, I like to think that that can help everybody feel a little bit more comfortable around here and just make it that much easier for them to be their best selves.
Jake Wood (18:31) You know, like Scott had mentioned, the Cardinals hold six of the top eighty six picks in the upcoming amateur draft. You know, how much of another shot in the arm can that be for a franchise looking to reinvigorate a pipeline that, you know, this franchise, like you’ve mentioned, has historically leaned on for annual contention. You know, you y the aforementioned players who were trained in the offseason. Obviously Donnie was another guy that, you know, I’m sure that you yourself and Cardinals fans alike did not really want to see go out the door, but you were able to make a deal where it was worth the while to get this additional draft capital going in the direction that the team is. So just can you again, can you kind of talk about, you know, how how impactful that could be going forward and the amount of picks that you guys have coming up?
Chaim Bloom (19:16) Yeah, and you nailed it as far as the emotions around that deal. I mean, you know, sometimes you have to break your own heart in a sense, just the person and that and the player that he is, but also, like I’ve said, feeling like I would not be living up to all the things that I said in the fall ⁓ if we, if I didn’t pull the trigger on that. And a big part of it was, you know, the value we place, you know, this is not to diminish the value of the three players we got in the deal, but the value we place on the those two picks and the chance to to add to our to the impact we can make ⁓ on this organization coming up in a few weeks. And you know, certainly it’s a big opportunity for us. But every draft is a big opportunity. We just happen to have a a little more opportunity in this one because of that deal. But it’s one of the most impactful days of the year and and it’s important to recognize, you know, everything happens on those couple of days, but the prep is really a year round process that our team in the front office and our scouts are putting in. And it is a massive opportunity. I mean, we will live and die with the strength of our pipeline. That’s not news to anybody who follows the Cardinals. And so making sure that we have the most impact possible out of that draft is a huge focus for us right now.
Gabe (20:27) ⁓ sorry, Jake, I’m gonna ask a little bit of an extension talk. ⁓ so from a process standpoint, what boxes need to be checked, what for you to consider assigning a player to an extension? Like is there something they they need to do? Nobody specific, but just what do you look for when you want to sign somebody to a long term extension who’s currently under team control?
Chaim Bloom (20:48) Yeah, there’s so many things that go into this and I think, you know, it isn’t Jake, you mentioned early on that we wouldn’t talk about that because of the leverage piece. That’s not really what it is for me in this topic. It’s really just that it’s a very personal thing, I feel. ⁓ obviously it’s it’s, it’s a private thing on some level for an organization, but it’s a really personal thing for the player, and so you never. I just don’t feel like it’s our place to talk about those things because inevitably, if you’re gonna do that, you end up talking about them selectively. And I I just not I’m not sure that’s fair to everybody involved. ⁓ you know, so there’s so many things that go into it, which makes it hard to generalize. Obviously, how you assess the player is so important, but I think these sorts of things, and I’ve talked about them as like I don’t like the terminology about hey, we’re bestowing this extension or rewarding a player with an extension that you so often see thrown around. I mean, I guess yes, on some level that’s what’s happening, but to me, you know, the the players have agency in this too. And it’s really kind of a it’s a sharing of risk going forward and a sharing of upside going forward. And that’s something that both parties are gonna have different stances on what that could look like. I think for me, it’s also as much a statement about the person as it is about the player. And again, I don’t think people should read into it when there isn’t an extension that means we don’t like the person or don’t like the player. It’s just there’s a lot of discussions around these in the industry and not a lot of them that happen in the grand scheme. That’s because it is pretty hard to come together on these sometimes. But you know, when you’re talking about ⁓ kind of locking arms with somebody in that way, ⁓ when you still have, you know, a lot of team control with them, ⁓ a lot of it is ⁓ you know, just having a read on who the person is and is the person the right type of person for this sort of arrangement. And again, even if they’re not, that’s not necessarily a negative. There are some guys that you see over the course of their careers that man, they do so much better when that carrot’s always in front of them, when they when they have that chance to go year by year and and max it out. That’s a personal preference, and sometimes it’s our read of the person. But a lot of it is about trust and just feeling very confident that the security that a player gets through the through that type of deal is not going to change them, is not going to diminish their hunger to win or their desire to be great. You can’t know that for sure, but we try to get as good a read on that as possible because again, players are motivated in different ways. So you want to make sure that you know, even when you approach a player, that they’re they’re wired in a way that it makes sense to get into those conversations whether or not they lead to a deal.
Yeah.
Scott Plaza (23:15) Now, talking about a way a player is wired, like Ivan Herrera has played every single game while working, you know, to prove himself as a catcher while also being a top bat in the league. Like was well, being on pace for like four hundred and sixteen, I think, hit by pitches this year. Is playing every game did he come into that like with that was a goal in mind? Or is it just like that’s just the way it’s worked out and it’s been successful so far?
Chaim Bloom (23:37) It’s not a goal that I’ve heard him express. That doesn’t mean that he hasn’t expressed it, but ⁓ you know, we’re fortunate in the way that this has worked out because obviously put a lot of energy into the catching thing throughout the offseason, you know, want to diminish the effects of actually having had a surgery in the offseason and coming off of that, and I give a lot of credit to him, to our staff, both our skilled staff, ⁓ coaching staff and and our performance staff in just monitoring his health and his workload very carefully so he has been able to post for us the way that that he has. And hopefully this is something we’re able to continue. It’s damn hard. For him to do that over the course of a season. You need some luck on your side too, just for it to go well enough for that to be the case and not need to miss some time here and there. But ⁓ believe me, we notice it, we don’t take it lightly. It says a lot about who he is.
Jake Wood (24:22) You know, I wanna clarify something really quickly on the the extension conversation that was had previously. I I didn’t want to get into specific players like Chaim had mentioned. That’s what I was trying to avoid was like, hey, why aren’t you extending JJ or Jordan Walker or Destin Like I don’t wanna like get into specifics, but I felt like your question of the overall ⁓ like how he approached the extension, that’s fine and and fair and in-game. So I like that.
Chaim, I wanna go a different direction. What are some key elements to your philosophy on player promotions, right? What are the elements that you take into consideration the most when determining a player’s readiness, you know, for another level, much less just for the major leagues?
Chaim Bloom (25:03) Yeah, well when it comes to ⁓ promotions within the system, I mean for me, I don’t look at my role as to kind of dictate from up here exactly what should happen level to level. I wanna be in those conversations, particularly around you know, some of our more prominent players. And basically a lot of that for me, my job is to to try to ask tough and smart questions if I can. And you know, to understand the why, especially when something, you know, might be a little atypical. But but you know, I love the way that our our people have thought through these questions. It doesn’t mean we’re gonna get every single one of them right. And sometimes it’s hard to even know if you got it right. really we want to be put these players at all times in the right place for them to grow the most. And the goal of the whole thing is to help these guys reach their ceiling or as close to it as we can get them. And so you want to have players at every step of the way on the right path to do that, understanding that there are 165 of them. And sometimes you have to balance some competing considerations within that. So, you know, I I view my role as really trying to ask those questions and make sure that we are hitting that goal and how and and that we have some thought process behind why this level makes sense for this particular player at this time. The way I can, where I do think I can add some value to those discussions for our PD crew, is sometimes just maybe giving a bigger picture or even just getting into a conversation about how I’m seeing this player’s path, whether it’s in twenty twenty six or beyond, just making sure we’re in sync on that. If I think, you know, this is where a player’s at relative to where he might need to be to come to the big leagues and our people think something different, well let’s talk through that. Sometimes I learn stuff, sometimes we have good baseball conversations, some good debates around that. But for the most part, you know, I view it as something where whenever possible in this game, I think you always want to push decisions to the people who are closest to the action. There are obviously some decisions that can only be made from this chair, but ⁓ a lot of those promotion decisions are not those. So I I just view it as an extension of my responsibility to try to help and push our people and help them grow and just try to challenge them with tough questions. But when push comes to shove, ⁓ are the you you want to make sure like you it’s hard to sit here and think you know more about a particular situation than the people that you have charged and tasked with with those situations. So, you know, I hate and almost will never do it, you know, kind of coming over the top of those decisions like that. But I like to have a seat at the table to be able to challenge and then push people. And, you know, I insist on dissent and honest feedback in those conversations and I want people to do the same for me just because I think it might be time to bring a player to the big leagues. If people who are close to the action feel that is definitely not the case, you know, I need to create an environment where they feel comfortable expressing that so we can get to the best decision for the organization because all that that’s all that matters. It doesn’t matter who’s right.
Yeah.
Gabe (27:56) So I want to address the catching depth a little bit. ⁓ catching is kinda like starting pitching where you want to keep them at catcher as long as possible because it’s the hardest position. I feel like you guys will have to certainly make some trades, but maybe move some people off the position and what would go about like have you had conversations with players in the system or even in the major leagues about moving to a different position and what position they might play?
Chaim Bloom (28:23) Yeah, with respect to our catchers, first of all, it’s amazing to to have this problem because it comes from having some really good catching talent in the organization. And that’s pretty cool. We I think generally speaking, as guys go through the minor leagues, we want to try with almost every player building some versatility into every player. So you see it that our catchers play other positions. And it helps when you have multiple catchers that you want to get some action behind the plate at the same level. Now they’ve got other places they can play. So you don’t just have DH as an outlet to get those guys in the lineup. And that’s something we want to build in for everybody. And so what it means is that if it comes time at some point for them to play another position, or even if it ends up down the road just making sense for the club, not because they can’t catch, but because other people also can and you have different ways and give your manager different options to make out a lineup, especially for the guys that bring a lot to a a lot to the table offensively. You know, that’s part of why it’s good to build versatility into these guys. And that’s how we explain it to really all of our players. So you see, ⁓ you know, we we we’ve got it going with ⁓ a number of our catchers throughout the system that you’ll see them, not just DH, but you’ll see them play first. You might even see them at other spots in the infield or you might even see them in the outfield. Like that’s something that should be the norm for us, and not just at that position, but just have different options, you know, try to create players who are not Faberger eggs, who are not so fragile that they can only do one thing, that they can only play one position, that they can only hit in one spot in the lineup. Like, it’s our responsibility to prepare them for anything and prepare them for all of the differing circumstances and the adversity and the adjustments that they will face at the highest level. So I think that’s all part and parcel of it. If we got to the point where we actually wanted to take the catching away from somebody, you know, then obviously that’s a different conversation. And some guys might welcome that, some guys might not. Obviously you hope at that position in particular that guys wanna do it. ⁓ and you never wanna force it on somebody who doesn’t want to do it because it’s just not gonna work, but you know, for the moment, I think just creating options for ourselves and and creating that versatility, it to me, there’s only positives that can come from that. And again, just gives us more options, gives us more options for a big league club, more insurance against injury or underperformance. And yeah, I think it also creates options for us over time. If if there’s a way for us to use the trade market to do something that makes sense for the organization, it creates some options there too.
Scott Plaza (30:49) I’m sure I know the the kind of vibe of your answer coming to this one based on you as a competitor from what we’ve taken in here. But ⁓ you have the supportive ownership, obviously, with the the promotion and like the length of term in your contract, as well as being able to extend OLLI ⁓ for a couple of years. Does that allow you to take a breath and relax and be like, okay, this doesn’t need to be done now? Like again, I I’m sure that’s gonna be just an absolute no. ⁓ but do you also view like that term as kind of like a a deadline for a lack of better terms to get back?
Chaim Bloom (31:21) You know, I think if I’m gonna sit here and say like, hey, I don’t like the ahead of schedule term, then I think it would be just wrong of me to to look at that look at your question and say like that’s some sort of timetable. ⁓ and also wrong of me to put my own personal considerations into it. To me, you you gotta go you gotta you you just gotta get after it every day. Like I said, regardless of any kind of contract term, like in this business, we all gotta earn it every single day. We all gotta act as if everything’s on the line for us every single day. Like that’s how I feel. And that’s, you know, what I would want from any of our people. You know, I try to talk all the time about urgency. And now where it is important, you know, relative to your question is that does th that still might mean, hey, today is not the day to do something. And some things are going to take time. And there may be some things that it makes more sense to tackle tomorrow or next week or next month or next year or just some things that you can’t expect to bear fruit right now, you still do them. You still get after ⁓ urgently with whatever you can put into them today. So it’s, to me, like the strategy or you know the time that it might take for some things to come to fruition, that is unrelated to me, to the urgency and the effort that we need to put into them. You try to zoom out and take the most honest look at that as you can, but you really have to figure out every possible way that you can further the organization every given day. And yeah, like I said, some things might not might not happen today. But that should be because we decide to prioritize and we prioritize well. It shouldn’t be because we did not just bring enough of ourselves to our jobs to get to it.
Jake Wood (33:12) You know, to to jump off of Scott’s earlier point, you know, I’m gonna bring some positivity, right? We all love to talk about positive things. We’re watching Josh Baez demolish baseballs in Memphis right now, and you know, raw power, in my opinion, is one of the most seductive elements for baseball fans, and that coincides with the current lack thereof from the big league club recently. You know, can you explain the value of things that you’re looking at like chase rate and whiff rate and some of the things that, you know, Baez is currently working on
And how refining those elements ⁓ is is like essential for Baez to have success at the next level?
Chaim Bloom (33:48) Yeah, and you kinda hit on what I would point to. And I think it’s awesome that I keep getting this question because of what he is doing down there. We should not take that for granted. Obviously, you know where where Josh was a couple years ago and how remarkable last year was and and just how rare that is. So much credit to him. So happy for the people that poured into him and worked with him to get him to a point where he could get to his power the way that he has and really show off all of his tools as he continues to do on the bases and on defense and continues to improve there. And love where his head’s at and how he gets after his work. ⁓ the the example he sets. I mean there’s so much to like about this guy. ⁓ and those are things that we monitor. Obviously the power ⁓ the power is there, the understatement of of the podcast, right? ⁓ it it’s it’s big league power. ⁓ early in the year actually, like ⁓ even though you know you would see that power play and you and he would create those highlights I think particularly early in the year, actually when you look under the hood, there was even some backsliding a little bit off of spring training in terms of swing path, in terms of some of those things, in terms of pitch selection and in terms of contact. And it was even something you could see actually in his path and some of the other things that we monitor and measure. And you know, i as more season has gone on, and I I like to think due in part to the work that he’s been doing with our staff, we’ve seen that actually trend back in a in a good direction and get a lot closer to where he was last year. And some of that’s now being reflected in those numbers that are easy to track in in terms of strikeouts, in terms of of pitch selection. So you want to see those continue to move in a good direction. We know those will be tested and you know tested big time in the big leagues. So seeing those go in a good direction is is really gratifying. Just shows that he is putting in good work and, you know, continuing to master this level. And like I told you guys, there’s there is some art to it. I can’t promise you there’s a perfect formula to know, okay, like when has he done that to the point where you know he cannot benefit anymore at that level, and it’s time ⁓ for the next challenge and certainly he’s moving in a good direction towards that. I like I said, I can’t promise you there’s a there’s a perfect way to assess that, but love what we’re seeing from him, you know, particularly in recent weeks and months.
Gabe (36:00) What is the ⁓ status update on Tink Hence? Because usually when ⁓ his problem is injuries, but he’s, I think, been healthy all year. So what has been going on with him and is do you think he’s close to fixing whatever’s going on with him?
Chaim Bloom (36:13) Yeah, this has been a tougher one. And it’s not due to lack of effort by our staff or by Tink, who is a a a wonderful kid and a tremendous worker. As you can see, just following him outing to outing, we have struggled to help get him to a point where he can bring his A plus game from pitch one every time. And he’s flashed it, but we have not been able to see it consistently. There’s been a lot of work behind the scenes just on getting him ready for those outings in in from a movement perspective and from a prep perspective so that he can access some of those but high end velos and obviously this his superpower has been, you know, that velo and also the changeup that then goes with it to be able to speed guys up and slow them down, but also from that slot that he’s able to create it from. We just gotta make sure that we can help him bring that from pitch one every time. And, you know, obviously as you can see just by watching him, to this point it has not been there. that doesn’t mean it’s not in there somewhere because we’ve seen him flash it, but we have not yet solve that puzzle of being able to get him there consistently. So we continue to talk about that and continue to work at it.
Scott Plaza (37:15) Alright, my last question. ⁓ besides being on this podcast, what has been the best part of this season for you, either personally or professionally?
Chaim Bloom (37:23) that’s awesome. ⁓
I’m I’m lucky in that as challenging as this business is, and as much as there’s times when you wake up in the middle of the night and you’re just staring at the ceiling trying to figure something out, like the game also brings us so many wonderful things. And man, you just gotta keep your your yourself open to them because there’s so many great things that happen every day. Like I’m always super energized just by the relationships I get to build through this game, the people I get to be around. ⁓ so much of what, you know, I take pleasure from in this game is not just the the challenge of trying to build something great, but to do it with people that I’m invested in. That’s sort of my professional why, so to speak. ⁓ I think with that, you know, probably the the most fun part of this so far. I mean, look, winning is winning always makes things more fun, believe me. It’s ⁓ you know, you’re kidding yourself if you’re not it if you’re not honest about that. But beyond that, I think it’s where the culture ⁓ you know, within the organization and particularly within our big league clubhouse right now is going and that player group specifically. ⁓ you know, there’s a couple things that I would highlight and and even, you know, with our staff where ⁓ I think the way that they’ve embraced this project and just embraced some of what we’ve talked about about really when you can see that light at the end of the tunnel really sticking with players and you know staff, good staff take the successes and failures of players personally. And so it can lead when a player, when it’s not clicking for a player, can lead to frustration. And, you know, when that goes wrong, it leads to, you know, we talked about earlier, it can lead to giving up on a player before you should. And I’ve just been so happy with the way our staff has I haven’t felt that at all from them. that doesn’t mean they’re not frustrated when things aren’t going well, but they’re they’re staying in the fight with these guys. And I think that’s what a young group needs. And then from the players, like we talked about it from from day one. It’s really I I I think we spent as much time this off season and in spring training as a staff and particularly me and Ollie talking about culture and where we wanted this to go. And, you know, we had different ways and touch points to try to to lay that down for the players, but we can’t do it for them. They’re the ones that are that need to do this. And so trying to create that feeling with them of what I talked about earlier that, you know, the standard here is really high, but it’s not somebody else’s standard that you have to live up to. It’s yours that you get to create. You know, this is, it’s an amazing organization within an amazing game, and you have this privilege of setting your standard and writing your chapter and and they’re doing that and they feel that and they’ve kind of picked it up and they’re running with it. It’s not perfect every day. But I think, you know, taking ownership of that for themselves and running with it and defining for themselves what that’s going to look like. Look, look, this is something we build on every day and hopefully this is something that continues to evolve and grow ⁓ for years to come.
But just feeling that actually become real for these guys and every game, you know, there’s obviously wins that it becomes real through, and there’s also close losses where we battle back from a four-nothing deficit and score three in the in the ninth, or a six to one deficit and score four in the ninth. And yeah, at the end you don’t win and you’re you’re you’re sitting there with a bad taste in your mouth. But it’s like, hey, this is part of it too. This is part of this identity that these guys are building for themselves. And knowing that we wanted to see that and wanted to try to nurture that, like they have to do it, but we can hopefully till the soil in such a way that makes it a little easier for them. And so then when they pick it up and run with it and you get to see do it, like it’s it’s it’s pretty gratifying.
Jake Wood (40:50) Chaim, I want to kind of flip the script on you a little bit. You know, whenever you’re in a professional interview, it’s always good to ask the interviewer questions. I want to ask you, what do you think is a question that’s not being asked of you enough, or an area or element of the franchise that’s not being talked about or covered enough that you think needs to be highlighted more?
Chaim Bloom (41:13) This is a good one. I, you know, I was not ⁓ eating breakfast this morning and trying to think, what are these guys gonna ask me? What do I need to be ready for? This wasn’t on my bingo card, so good work. ⁓ might be hard for me to say in a sense because you know, it’s hard to always know exactly what’s on people’s minds. And I know no matter what’s going on in the organization, big league wins and losses are where the focus are gonna be at i is gonna be at, and that’s the way it should be. ⁓ so I so it’s it’s it might be hard for me to pinpoint. ⁓ I’ll say this is a complete dodge of your question, but I’ll say this. Like it was kind of it’s become even more apparent to me in this seat as it was the last couple of years, like our fans are on top of this.
Like I think this is a fan base that even more than its reputation, like follows this closely enough to really intuit what’s happening and what’s important. ⁓ both the good and the bad. I like it because it pushes us. You know, it brings the best out of us. Like you should want and welcome that engagement and that scrutiny. So I’m not sure that really that many stones are being left unturned, man. I don’t, I don’t ⁓ I don’t know that there’s anything that’s been missed. I just think it’s hard, obviously, for you guys or anybody who’s not within the walls to really see what it looks like every day. I think where so much of my focus, my energy is on is making sure like it’s cool that we got off to a good start. We actually have not accomplished anything yet. And my focus needs to be on and trying to make sure like we don’t do what you said, that some people might be doing is saying like, hey, we’re ahead of schedule, mission accomplished, cool, we figured it out. Like we can’t ever feel that way. And just to make sure that that hunger in the building is still the same as if we were 20 games under 500 and wondering, you know, all these different things that need to move forward that that but that’s not something that I necessarily expect people to see from the outside. You know, there for me, you know, we’re really just at the beginning of this. There’s so many things that I think we have so much room to grow in. ⁓ the fruits of that ultimately you’re you see them on the field, ⁓ if they work. So it’s not something that ⁓ really can be seen from the outside. probably a lot of them I couldn’t even tell you about, or at least my thoughts on them. ⁓ so I don’t expect it to necessarily be the subject of questions, but you know, to me it’s a lot of this is about just regardless of the results so far. You know, I I’ve talked about it a little bit, where I’m happy to be able to get questions about your farm systems rank this and that relative to where it was a couple of years ago. That’s awesome. But if if my ask of our people is like, hey, we should a always act like we’re thirtieth, then what does that look like every day? What does it mean we try to move forward on or or or or fix every day? And that should happen no matter what’s going on in the big leagues.
Gabe (44:08) So for my last question, I I feel compelled to ask a little bit about the deadline. when do conversations start with other teams?
Jake Wood (44:14) Broke the two rules I had,
Gabe. You broke the two rules!
Chaim Bloom (44:18) How can you not ask though, right? Like I would ask.
Gabe (44:19) Yeah.
Well when did when did the conversation start with other teams?
Jake Wood (44:23) sure. Go for it. Go for it, Gabe. I’ll let
I’ll but I’ll let him I’ll let him answer. Go for it.
Gabe (44:28) All right. when do they start getting serious and then how long are you typically talking with a team when you actually decide to execute a trade at the deadline?
Chaim Bloom (44:36) So in my experience, this shifted a little bit when the draft moved back into July. It just kind of changed the cadence of deadline talks in that you almost have like a little bubbling up of them now. That doesn’t necessarily mean there’s gonna be that many deals. Usually there are not, but you have these sort of like, you know, before the halfway point, after the first third of the season, you have these check-ins. And to me it used to be more of a straight line, just kind of leading up to the deadline. But now that the draft is where it is.
When you get that close to the draft, unless they’re trades specifically that might involve some of those few tradable picks that exist, you know, usually teams are kind of putting that on the back burner because they need to focus on the draft. And then you have the all-star break and everybody like takes a little bit of a breath, like make sure our families don’t completely kick us out of the family for a few days, and then and then now you’re back into it and it really heats up.
But you try to lay some of that groundwork. You don’t want to miss an opportunity if there’s something that could happen at this time of year that actually makes sense for you. It’s just usually that urgency created by the deadline tends to mean that most of those happen later anyway. But there are some conversations. Teams are already assessing needs, or they’re already think that there’s something that they might want to do. Sometimes there’s particular urgency that an organization feels to execute on a certain thing. But it’s kind of like you you you get some of it, and then everybody
Sort of focused on the draft, and then then it really picks up again. So it does it does start to happen kind of about now. And actually we’re almost approaching to where we are going to be pretty buckled down on the draft to where that’s less likely to happen, unless, like I said, it involves a pick. sometimes you do see those close to the draft. And as far as deadline trades and how much conversation, man, it’s all over the map in my experience. There are things that
I mean, I’ve been a part of trades, including some really big ones at the deadline, where literally some version of that concept had been talked around for y years between these two organizations, either because they want one of your players, you want one of their players, vice versa, you know, no one’s really ready to meet the price, or you could you can’t quite align, and then something happens and you could literally say, Man, we’ve been talking to them about so and so for years, and finally something happened. And then there are others where they come out of nowhere.
I’ve also been part of some things that you didn’t even conceive of this opportunity until deadline day. And maybe it’s spurred by somebody else makes a different trade, and now a player is available, or a team really changes their goals or their threshold like within hours of the deadline. And that’s it’s it’s fun, it’s exhilarating. It can get pretty crazy when that happens, but it’s all over the map. You know, there are some years where like wild stuff happens within the last couple hours and some years where you’re waiting for that and it ends up being exactly like what you thought, which can still be fun and exciting, but it’s a little bit of a different kind of excitement. So there’s not there’s not any any one formula for those, which is part of why it’s it helps to stay engaged.
Jake Wood (47:39) Chaim, we’re kinda starting to get to the the close of the show and so I have quite a few topics still on the top of my head, so if you want to we can just kind of quickly touch on some of these. First one, Dustin May was reported that he’s gonna skip his start and then make it on Wednesday. ⁓ everything good on that he just needs a little more rest, or is there anything more to be concerned about more long term?
Chaim Bloom (48:03) No, we’ve ⁓ it is ⁓ the former, what you said, you know, especially coming off of that complete game was just feeling it a little bit in his low back. you know, we actually did some precautionary testing just to make sure there was nothing ⁓ you know, more serious going on there and and that all looked good. You know, I’m really just trying to be smart with him and you know, try to try to again like the ounce of prevention worth a pound of cure type thing. so we’re still you know, figuring out exactly how we’re gonna slot guy, especially with the rain out.
I’m kinda ⁓ we’re moving things around a little bit, just to try to slot everybody for the next road trip, but anticipate him pitching ⁓ midweek and and being just fine.
Jake Wood (48:42) This past week you guys had ⁓ announced a little bit of change in the structure and the dynamic at the top of the organization with Bill DeWitt the third taking over as CEO, Anuk being elevated to president of business operations, just your relationship with Anuk, and ⁓ you know, the how if any like a legitimate change in that structure looks for the Cardinals moving forward?
Chaim Bloom (49:07) Yeah, obviously a big announcement and big news for the organization and and ⁓ great ⁓ and and well deserved for both those guys and that you know been nothing but great in the time that I’ve gotten to know each of them. ⁓ it’s actually, you know, within the organization, really like day to day, it’s not going to change much. To me, it’s just the next step in in where we’ve been going. You know, Nook has been here actually a little longer than I have ⁓ on the business side. And so, you know, like, I got, he comes into this now with a ⁓ a runway and some impact already in the organization and some great relationships throughout the organization. You know, I’ve enjoyed getting to know him and working with him and looking forward to partnering with him so that we can move towards our goals together. ⁓ and as far as Bill the Third, again, when I when I came in here and and and particularly in you know late summer in 24 when we were you know talking about the succession in this role, you know, to me, this has actually been very straightforward and ⁓ you know, very smooth in terms of the DeWitt family and and and working with both of those guys to make sure I understand where their heads are at and their expectations for how this organization needs to be run. And like I’ve said before, I think the consistency of that operating model and how they’ve thought about this is something that’s really envied throughout the industry. And it’s been incredibly smooth working with both of them. ⁓ I I’ve looked at it as my responsibility to do that from day one here. And you know that’s continuing forward. So to me it’s actually it’s really smooth and and very continuous. And you know that’s how you hope it goes. That you know over time in organizations there’s going to be different people taking on different responsibilities. There’s going to be succession plans. You want those to be smooth. ⁓ you know not not to say that we can’t all benefit from having our personal snow snow globe shaken up every now and then, but when possible to avoid unnecessary disruption, you want to do that. And I think so many of the ways that the organization’s going about things, whether it was what they did with with me, or what’s going on now with those two guys is actually helping that. And, you know, hopefully that helps us avoid some of the bumps in the road that could come when you’re not doing this in as smooth a way. So it’s been great.
Jake Wood (51:15) You mentioned the word succession and ⁓ you know, Mo yesterday it was announced that he is the new interim GM for the Angels. what was that short amount of time that you were able to work with Mo pretty hand in hand? What was that like and what was like the key thing you were able to take away from working with him on a daily basis? And what do you think he’s gonna bring most to the angels and in that new capacity for them?
Chaim Bloom (51:38) Well, first and foremost, I mean, I think what a great get for the Angels. And, you know, it looks like ⁓ something that’s ⁓ an amazing opportunity for all parties, really well set up. I’m sure he’s gonna do a great job with it. You know, the more the more time I’ve had to kind of reflect on that period that we overlap, the the more ⁓ privileged I feel to have had that time. You know, in this business, you compete against your counterparts all the time. You don’t unless it’s somebody that you kind of came up with and came up with in the organization, you don’t really have the chance to work together. So you don’t have the chance to really see people operate. And here’s someone who operated a really high level for a long time, accomplished some great things that, you know, I got to work with and and see operate ⁓ you know, for his last couple of years in this role. And again, that’s just not something that a lot of people get to have. And there’s a lot of things that I was able to take from it, hopefully that feeling is is mutual for him. ⁓ but I really enjoyed it and it was something that, you know, I really treasure. I think probably one of the best things I took from ⁓ from him and just seeing him particularly at that stage of his time here and what was an incredibly long tenure in an organization and in this role was just the value of time and the value of being present and how well he ⁓ did and does that, ⁓ something that really sticks with me.
Jake Wood (53:00) You know, I actually forgot at the very beginning that Chaim promised to tell us exactly who he’s trading for, who he’s extending, and what’s gonna happen in over the next two months, but unfortunately we’re out of time today. So thank you so much, Chaim, for joining us. we really appreciate you hopping in here and and we hope to be able to have you back on in the in the future to talk some more ball. We really appreciate this. Thank you so much.
Chaim Bloom (53:19) You bet. Thanks for having me. We’ll have to get to all that juicy stuff next time.
Jake Wood (53:23) That’s right, we’ll talk about what happened as opposed to what’s going to. Thank you so much for joining us for this episode of the Viva El Birdos Podcast. Don’t forget to rate and review and hit that subscribe button so you’re notified every Monday morning when a new episode is released. We will talk to you all next week when we are joined by Cardinals’ longtime public address announcer, “U-Man” John Ulett will join us. Have a great day, St. Louis, and let’s go cards!
San Diego, CA - August 17: Gio Rojas pitches for the East team during the Dick's Sporting Goods Perfect Game All-American Classic at Petco Park on August 17, 2025 in San Diego, CA. (K.C. Alfred / The San Diego Union-Tribune via Getty Images)
The 2026 is less than two weeks away — the first round kicks off on July 11, 2026 — so its time to start offering capsule looks at players the Texas Rangers could select with their top picks. The Rangers’ first round pick is at #16, their second round pick is at #54, and their third round pick is at #89.
Leading up to draft day, we will be doing writeups of some of the players who could end up getting selected by the Rangers with one of their first three picks. Today we are looking at Florida high school pitcher lefthanded pitcher Gio Rojas.
Gio Rojas is a 6’4″, 190 lb. lefthanded pitcher out of Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Rojas turns 19 today. He is committed to the University of Miami, though it appears unlikely he will actually hit campus.
Rojas has a quality fastball that sits in the mid-90s and has touched 98 with high spin. BA says his size and athleticism are such that he has the potential to reach triple digit with his fastball as he matures. He has a slider as his primary secondary, with big movement and high spin that gives high school batters fits and results in a lot of swings and misses. His third pitch is a changeup that, as is the case with most high school pitchers, he’s rarely had to use, and which will need work.
Rojas is tall and athletic, with what is describe as a clean three-quarters delivery and very good arm action. He has good control for a pitcher of his age and with his stuff, and per MLB Pipeline, he commands his fastball well to both sides of the plate. The total package gives him top of the rotation potential.
I was debating whether to include Rojas, given that he’s generally expected to be off the board when the Rangers pick at #16. BA mentioning him as a possibility for Texas in this latest mock draft led me to decide to write him up.
When I read the reports on Rojas, I think he won’t get out of the top 10. However, teams have gotten much more leery about taking high school pitchers in recent years — Keith Law mentions that only six different teams have taken a high school pitcher in the first round in the last four years. The Rangers haven’t taken a high school pitcher in the first two rounds since 2018, when they took Cole Winn and Owen White in the first two rounds.
The Padres’ journey this year has been somewhat similar to the Cubs’.
On May 23, they defeated the A’s and were 31-20, in second place in the NL West, just half a game behind the Dodgers.
Since then, they’re 12-19, the worst record in MLB. They have played a bit better recently, winning four straight before dropping the last two of a series in Los Angeles against the Dodgers. But their Sunday loss put them 10 games out of first place.
This is the first time the Padres will visit Wrigley Field since last year’s Wild Card Series.
For more on the Padres, please visit our SB Nation Padres site Gaslamp Ball.
Fun facts
There will be 75 games to go for the Cubs after this series ends, but they will be done for the year with the Padres, as they already are with two of the four other NL West teams, the Giants and Rockies. They will play three final games at home vs. the Dodgers on Aug. 3-5, then wrap things up at Arizona on Aug. 24-26.
The Cubs lost their season debut vs. the Padres at San Diego on April 27 by a score of 9-7, then won, 8-3 and 5-4, to start their first 10-game winning streak.
They have dominated the Padres at Wrigley Field all time, winning 152 games and losing only 110, for a winning percentage of .580. But they are 4-8 the past four years, in order: 0-4, 2-1, 1-2 and 2-1. The sweep in 2022 was only the Padres’ sixth at Wrigley Field. The Cubs have swept the Padres in 17 series, but in only three of 26 series since 2000: three games each in 2009, 2012 and 2021.
After the surprise Joseph Woll trade earlier this month, at least one former Philadelphia Flyers is going to be kept by the Toronto Maple Leafs.
On Monday, with the dawn of free agency fast approaching, the Maple Leafs began extending pending free agents, and issuing qualifying offers to restricted free agents.
The Maple Leafs have already begun doing extensive work to reshape their defense, signing Darren Raddysh, trading Brandon Carlo, and extending Troy Stecher.
Their next step, for all intents and purposes, is going to be signing former Flyers prospect Emil Andrae, who was acquired in that Woll trade package.
Andrae, 24, is a restricted free agent whose qualifying offer is an extremely modest $874k; if and when he signs a new contract, it is highly likely his cap hit will far exceed that number.
Andrae scored two goals, 11 assists, and 13 points in 61 games with the Flyers at the NHL level this season, playing limited minutes despite being arguably the Flyers' best defenseman at breaking pucks out and starting plays with his passing.
As for former Flyers goalie Sam Ersson, who was traded alongside Andrae and a third-round pick for Woll, the Maple Leafs already traded him away to the Atlantic Division rival Ottawa Senators for a fifth-round pick.
While the deadline for qualifying offers is 5 p.m. on Monday, the Senators are expected to sign Ersson is all things go well.
The Flyers have not yet released their list of qualified free agents at the time of this writing.
TORONTO, ON - CIRCA 1990: Tony Fernandez #1 of the Toronto Blue Jays bats during an Major League Baseball game circa 1990 at the SkyDome in Toronto, Ontario. Fernandez played for the Blue Jays from 1983-90, 93, 1998-99 and 2001. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images
You’d think there’d be more demand from top players for the number 1 on the back of the jersey, especially since it was worn by some notable players. However, it has largely been the designation of contact first, defensively solid infielders over the years and the Jays are no exception. When the Yankees and Indians first added numbers to the jerseys at the start of the 1929, they did so based on the starting lineup first, which meant that Indian’s shortstop Jackie Tavener and Yankee’s centerfielder Earl Combs, each club’s respective lead off man, earned the number. Since then, 1 has been mostly allotted to contact hitters and defense first players throughout the last 77 years.
Tavener, who didn’t last out the season, had always been a weak hitter and was at the end of his career at age 31. Combs, on the other hand, was a tremendous fielder and an excellent hitter, sporting a career wRC+ of 126. Other than his lack of home runs, he was a perfect leadoff hitter, with a career line of .325/.397/.459, excelling hitting into the gaps at Yankee Stadium’s cavernous outfield and leading the league in triples 3 times.
Hall of Fame players to wear no 1 include Richie Ashburn, Bobby Doerr, Pee Wee Reese, and Ozzie Smith; three infielders and a centerfielder, all excellent defenders.
The first Jay to wear 1 was also, ironically, the first player they chose in the 1976 Expansion Draft; Bob Bailor. Selected from Baltimore, Bailor was primarily an outfielder but saw time at short and third during his four years with the Jays.
Who is the most successful player to wear 1 as a member of the Toronto Blue Jays?
WWIB: Tony Fernandez 1983-1990, 1993, 1998-1999, 2001 (37.5 bWAR)
Fernandez was one of legendary scout Epy Guerrero’s signings in 1979 and first came up in 1983 as a September callup. By 1985, he had seized the role of starting shortstop, winning four Gold Gloves, known for his ability to get balls deep in the zone and rainbow throws back to first half a second ahead of the runner. He was a five-time All-Star, all of them while playing for the Jays. He was part of the blockbuster trade between San Diego and Toronto, which sent him and Fred McGriff to the Padres in exchange for Roberto Alomar and Joe Carter. Fernandez was a tremendous patient hitter, walking almost as much as he struck out, and used his speed to take extra bases and steal. Interestingly, his second last run with the Jays – 1998 and 1999 – were the two best offensive years of his career, getting onbase at the best clip of his career and hitting 15 of his 94 career home runs. Fernandez was part of the World Series winning team in 1993, going 7-21 in the series, driving in 9 runs as a key part of the lineup.
Fernandez was a deeply religious man, to the point that the Jays Front Office was occasionally unsure whether he might retire during the offseason to start his ministry during the height of his career. Fernandez received just 4 votes for Cooperstown, falling off the ballot in 2008, but he was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 2008 and the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame in 2016. Fernandez passed away in 2020 following complications stemming from polycystic kidney disease.
Other Jays to wear number Orlando Hudson 2002-2005 (12.6 bWAR), Bob Bailor 1977-1980 (3.5 bWAR), Joe Inglett 2007-2009 (3.0 bWAR), and Aledmys Díaz 2018 (2.1 bWAR).
According to PuckPedia.com, the deal is worth $1.35 million per season.
The Leafs plucked Stecher off the waiver wire from the Edmonton Oilers on November 15, as they looked for a right-shot defenseman in the wake of some injuries. One of those was injuries was to Brandon Carlo.
Stecher logged 16:44 of 5-on-5 ice time in 58 games with the Leafs, where he scored three goals and added 11 assists. Despite the Leafs missing the playoffs for the first time in 10 years, the veteran defenseman enjoyed his time in Toronto and was not shy about expressing his desire to stay beyond the season.
Ironically enough, it was the departure of Carlo's services that opened the door for Stecher again. The Leafs moved Carlo to the St. Louis Blues over the weekend for a pair of third-round picks at the 2026 NHL Draft.
Stecther's deal is one-way, but is just $125,000 above the NHL's burial amount from a salary-cap calculation perspective. Meaning, if he doesn't start on the main roster, the cap charge is negligible.
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