Updated Red Sox playoff odds after comeback vs. Rays extends win streak

Updated Red Sox playoff odds after comeback vs. Rays extends win streak originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox extended their win streak to seven games Thursday night with a comeback victory over the Tampa Bay Rays at Fenway Park, and with a 50-45 record, they’re now five games over .500 for the first time all season.

The Red Sox trailed 3-1 going into the seventh inning and scored three runs. Veteran closer Aroldis Chapman came in for the ninth inning and earned his 16th save of the season to secure a 4-3 victory.

The Red Sox are tied with the Toronto Blue Jays and Houston Astros for the best record in baseball since June 7 at 20-10.

It’s not only one thing driving the Red Sox’ success. They lead the major leagues in runs scored with 172 since June 7, and they also have the best ERA (3.52) during that span. Top prospect Roman Anthony has a seven-game hit streak and the starting rotation is getting more consistently good starts from guys like Lucas Giolito and Brayan Bello.

Perhaps the most impressive aspect of this streak is the Red Sox are doing it without one of their best players in Alex Bregman. The star third baseman hasn’t played since May 23 due to a quad injury, but he’s expected to return in this series against the Rays.

While this win streak has increased the optimism surrounding the Red Sox and their potential for the rest of the season, making the playoffs is still going to be a tough challenge.

The Red Sox entered Friday with a one-game lead over the Seattle Mariners for the third and final wild card playoff spot in the American League.

But according to FanGraphs’ model, the Red Sox still have a less than 50-50 chance to reach the postseason for the first time since 2021.

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Why just a 41.3 percent chance to clinch a playoff berth?

Well, the Red Sox have the toughest remaining schedule of any team, with their opponents having a .519 combined win percentage this season, per Tankathon.

The Red Sox have benefited from an easy schedule the last couple weeks that included back-to-back series vs. the Washington Nationals and Colorado Rockies.

Boston’s schedule gets a lot tougher as the July 31 trade deadline approaches. The Red Sox have three more games in their current series versus the Rays, and they also have to play the Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies, Los Angeles Dodgers and Houston Astros through Aug. 3.

This 18-game stretch could easily determine the fate of this Red Sox team as far as its chances of making the playoffs.

One thing the front office can do to bolster the Red Sox’ chances of staying in the playoff race is being buyers at the trade deadline. Adding another impact starting pitcher would be a huge upgrade for the Red Sox.

Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh: All-Star closer Andrés Muñoz tipping pitches against Yankees

NEW YORK — Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh thinks All-Star closer Andrés Muñoz was tipping pitches when he squandered a two-run lead in the ninth inning Thursday night against the New York Yankees.

Muñoz was handed his sixth blown save in 27 opportunities this season after starter Bryan Woo held the Yankees hitless into the eighth.

With the Mariners holding a 5-3 lead, Muñoz entered in the ninth. He allowed a leadoff single to Trent Grisham and a one-out single to Cody Bellinger before Ben Rice came back from an 0-2 count to draw a walk that loaded the bases with two outs.

Standing at second base while Austin Wells batted, Bellinger waved his arms when Muñoz threw his slider. Wells took a changeup perhaps just below the strike zone for ball three, and on the next pitch he lined a full-count fastball into right field for a two-run single that tied it.

“He was tipping every time (with a runner) on second base,” Raleigh said of Muñoz. “Obviously, they weren’t making it very discreet, but it is part of the game. We have to know about that better going into series, and that made it really hard there at the end.

“You try to do the most you can without trying to distract him from what is happening at the plate. So that’s something that’ll we’ll have to figure out the next couple of days, for sure.”

Seattle manager Dan Wilson, however, said he didn’t think Muñoz was giving away pitch selection.

“I don’t think that’s the case,” Wilson said. “Just, I think we got ourselves into some tough counts and they took advantage of it.”

Wells was the sixth hitter in the inning and by that point Muñoz had thrown 23 pitches.

“I had five great at-bats before me to let me get up there and those guys kind of gave me a lot of confidence to trust I was going to get a pitch to hit,” Wells said.

New York capped its improbable comeback from a 5-0 deficit when Anthony Volpe scored the winning run in the 10th with an acrobatic slide on Aaron Judge’s shallow sacrifice fly.

“We couldn’t get much going against Woo, but this team has a lot of fight,” Judge said. “I’m glad Volpe’s fast.”

Helped by Giancarlo Stanton’s first career pinch-hit homer off Matt Brash in the eighth, the Yankees became the first team to win after being no-hit and trailing by five runs through seven innings since the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Montreal Expos on June 24, 1977.

“It was a lot of fun,” Wells said.

Athletics’ Brent Rooker, Yankees’ Jazz Chisholm Jr. join Home Run Derby lineup

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Brent Rooker doesn’t plan to change his approach at the plate for the Home Run Derby.

“I mean, look, just about every swing I’ve ever taken in my life I’ve been trying to hit a home run,” the Athletics slugger said. “It’s not like I have to change too much in that regard, but I did get out here early yesterday and got a feel for a 3-minute round to kind of feel the timing of it.”

Rooker and New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. were added Thursday to the list of derby participants, completing the eight-player field. The event will take place Monday night in Atlanta ahead of Tuesday night’s All-Star Game.

Rooker will become the first Athletics player in the Home Run Derby since Matt Olson in 2021.

“I think it’s going to be fun,” Rooker said. “I’m looking forward to it. As a kid growing up, that was one of the highlights of the summer was watching the Home Run Derby and seeing the guys participate.”

The 30-year-old Rooker entered Thursday with a .270 batting average, 19 homers and 50 RBIs, putting him on pace for a third straight season of at least 30 homers. He went deep 30 times in 2023 and had 39 homers in 2024.

His 58 homers since the start of the 2024 season rank him third among American League players.

Joe Caruso, Rooker’s longtime youth coach, will pitch to him. A’s manager Mark Kotsay joked with Rooker that he should have asked him, but Rooker said he “respected my manager’s four-day break.”

“You get the opportunity to go compete and show your skillset,” Kotsay said. “We have all watched Rook hit homers, 39 of them last year, so I think it’s deserving that they selected him. It’ll be fun to have something entertaining to watch on Monday night.”

The only A’s players to win the derby were Mark McGwire in 1992 and Yoenis Céspedes in 2013 and 2014.

Chisholm, a 27-year-old two-time All-Star, is making his first appearance in the derby and will become the seventh different Yankees player to participate. Five have won the event; Aaron Judge was the most recent in 2017.

Acquired from the Miami Marlins last July, Chisholm began the day batting .250 with 17 homers and 43 RBIs in 62 games this season. The left-handed hitter homered twice Wednesday night against Seattle and had seven home runs in his last 12 games. He had 10 homers since returning from an oblique injury on June 3.

Chisholm was asked Wednesday night if he would like to participate in the derby.

“I mean, if they call me and ask me, I probably would be interested in doing it,” he said.

The other scheduled participants are Atlanta’s Ronald Acuña Jr., Minnesota’s Byron Buxton, Tampa Bay’s Junior Caminero, Pittsburgh’s Oneil Cruz, Seattle’s Cal Raleigh and Washington’s James Wood.

Book excerpt: How Buster Posey foresaw Giants' record-breaking 2021 MLB season

Book excerpt: How Buster Posey foresaw Giants' record-breaking 2021 MLB season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

  • Editor’s Note: Alex Pavlovic’s new book “The Franchise: San Francisco Giants: A Curated History of the Orange and Black,” landed on bookshelves Tuesday, July 8. The following is an excerpt regarding the team’s pursuit of Bryce Harper during the 2018-19 offseason. You can purchase the book HERE.

In the spring of 2020, the Giants opened the doors of their new $50 million spring training headquarters. The stunning 40,000 square foot building has a multi-floor weight room, a clubhouse with 10 TVs and mood lighting, and an event space that doubles as an indoor infield on rainy mornings.

There is a float tank for recovery and the booth that Mike Murphy used to eat at every night at Don & Charlie’s. On the third floor, two decks overlook the playing fields and offer stunning views of Camelback Mountain. A lounge is set up with ping-pong tables and leather couches for team meetings.

It was in that room that Buster Posey reset expectations for the 2021 Giants.

It had been five years since the organization’s last postseason appearance and the Giants finished with a losing record during the shortened 2020 season, which Posey opted out of. With their catcher back to lead a rebuilt starting staff, the Giants were internally optimistic about being in the thick of the Wild Card race.

There was no talk of winning the NL West, which had been taken eight consecutive times by the Dodgers. The new staff took a measured approach as camp kicked off, but Posey, as was so often said when he made a perfect throw down to second base, wasn’t having it. 

As the entire team met in the lounge on the first day of camp, Posey had a sense that expectations needed to change. He stood up and talked about the importance of going game by game, series by series, and he talked passionately about how the lineup should focus on becoming the toughest set of nine outs possible. Then he turned to the big picture.

Posey knew that each season gets broken up into sections and overlooked teams often waited to see how they were faring later in the summer before taking a serious run at a division crown. But he felt the group in front of him had the talent to be pretty good, and he thought it was important to get in front of that from day one.

“The bar is not to sneak into a Wild Card spot, the bar for us with the Giants is to go out and win the division. There’s freedom in that, I think. It’s like, ‘All right, here’s the standard,’ and it’s a high bar but I think it also leads to confidence,” Posey said later. “Guys are like, well, shoot, the manager and these players believe we can do this, instead of just thinking we’re going to try to sneak in. I think it kind of rallied the guys early. The first day of camp, it was like, ‘All right, we’ve got to set the bar high.’ ”

The short speech struck the right chord, although there were still plenty who viewed the climb as impossibly steep.

“I’d say probably half the people in the room would admit to taking that with a grain of salt, like, ‘Yeah, but the Dodgers …’ ” said backup catcher Curt Casali.

But Posey had reminded them that it was a challenge worth tackling.

“That was important for us. At that point, nobody had given us a chance for a few years — nobody ever picked us to be first in that division,” Brandon Belt said. “But to hear it out loud from a leader of the team, it gives everybody else a bunch of confidence and gets their head in the right space. He got me in the right frame of mind. We had a few veterans speak up. I think that meeting in spring training was the turning point for us that year.”

It was a message that was particularly powerful coming from a player, but Posey might not have fully grasped how important it was to shift the tone. He had not been in the clubhouse a summer earlier when players started having long conversations about how seemingly everything about the Giants was changing.

The new front office and staff embraced openers, platoons and cutting-edge training and recovery methods. The lingo changed, with manager Gabe Kapler talking of putting his arms in buckets. There were “bulk innings pitchers” but also “sprinters.” The Giants irritated fans by announcing their starting pitchers at the last possible moment and opposing managers rolled their eyes at how late the lineup card would be sent over.

At times it seemed the staff was trying to challenge every tradition and method the game of baseball had, and not always for the better. Early in the 2020 season, a few veterans called a team meeting after a game to make sure that, for the players, at least, the priority was always on winning games.

The next spring, that was made clear from the start. An unlikely goal had been set, and seven months later, when Posey caught a 97 mph fastball to end the regular season, he raised both arms and looked to the sky. It took everything they had, but the Giants had won the NL West, and done so in historic fashion.

They set a franchise record with 107 wins, edging the Dodgers by one game in the first divisional race in which both teams won at least 105 games. It was the closest race in MLB history, with the Giants becoming the first to win 107 games but clinch their division on the final day, and the Dodgers setting a record for wins by a second-place team. After 162 games, the Giants made good on a message that Posey teased publicly shortly after he spoke to teammates. 

“As much as I think the sports world loves to try to predict everything, there’s still some parts of it that can’t be predicted,” Posey told reporters at the start of camp. 

His team ended up becoming the greatest outlier in franchise history. In MLB history, that type of win total is generally preceded by years of postseason performances or tanking to stockpile top picks. But the Giants went 29-31 in 2020 and then came back the next year and spent 125 days with the best record in baseball. They got contributions from every corner of the roster, winning endlessly at the margins, something that president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi preached when ownership hired him in 2018.

If ever there was a time for the Giants to take a full step back and tear it down to the studs, that winter of 2018 had seemed to be it. The Giants had lost 98 games a season earlier and then doubled down with expensive trades, but they seemed allergic to the word “rebuild.”

Larry Baer interviewed 10 candidates to lead the baseball operations department, but Zaidi always was a frontrunner. He built a glowing reputation in Oakland and then Los Angeles, and his vision aligned with what the Giants’ board had always embraced. He had no interest in tearing things down.

“Our ownership group has always been constructed in a way that we want to try to win every year and also develop. That’s probably the hardest thing in sports to do,” Baer said. “Some teams have done that — the [New England] Patriots, the [San Antonio] Spurs, the [New York] Yankees to some extent — and our ownership group is aspirational about trying to do that. Farhan matched those aspirations. That’s really what it came down to.“

Perhaps the Giants should have taken a step back. That might have put them in a better position over the long haul, but with key veterans like Posey and the Brandons still in the lineup, that was never really an option. Over the previous four seasons, the Giants won just 45 percent of their games, with GM Bobby Evans getting dismissed. Over the following three seasons, they went 240-246, a run of mediocrity that cost Zaidi and Kapler their jobs.

But in the middle of it all is a remarkable 162-game season. For six months, just about everything went right.

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Cal Raleigh says Yankees picked up on Andres Muñoz tipping pitches in critical ninth inning of comeback win

The Yankees made an improbable comeback on Thursday night against the Mariners.

After Mariners starter Bryan Woo took a no-hitter into the eighth inning, the Yankees erased a five-run deficit in the final two innings before walking off Seattle, 6-5, in the 10th.

The turning point came in the ninth with the Yankees down 5-3 and going up against All-Star closer Andrés Muñoz. Trent Grisham and Cody Bellinger singled to pass the baton to Ben Rice with two outs. With Grisham on second base, it was clear from the broadcast that the Yankees outfielder had a tip on Muñoz's pitches, specifically the slider.

Grisham could be seen making a circular wave motion before Muñoz threw a slider, and didn't wave when a fastball was coming. And a Yankees source told The Athletic's Chris Kirschner and Brendan Kuty that they had indeed picked up on Muñoz's slider.

Rice fell behind 0-2 but took four straight balls -- two from sliders -- to load the bases. With Bellinger on second base, the former NL MVP did the same motion to give Austin Wells a heads-up on Muñoz. What eventually followed was Wells hitting a 3-2 fastball for a two-run single to tie the game.

With the score tied in the bottom of the 10th, the Yankees loaded the bases with one out and Aaron Judge delivered a walk-off sac fly -- with the assist of Anthony Volpe's slide -- to complete the comeback and sweep the three-game series from the Mariners.

“He was tipping it every time at second base,” Raleigh said via The Athletic after the game. “Obviously, they weren’t making it very discreet, I guess is the word. It’s part of the game. It’s our job. We should have known about that going into the series. That made it really hard there at the end.”

As Raleigh said, there's nothing illegal about the practice, but he put the onus on himself and the team for not figuring out Muñoz's tip sooner.

The 2025 MLB home run leader said he figured out Muñoz was tipping his pitches when he saw Grisham and Bellinger motioning to the batter, and tried to let his closer know, but admitted he didn't want to distract him. He said that the team will need to figure out how to combat that moving forward.

Entering Thursday's game, although Muñoz had five blown saves, his ERA was a minuscule 1.06, which included 8.1 consecutive scoreless innings over nine appearances. That's why he was named to his second career All-Star game this year.

The Yankees and Mariners won't meet again in the regular season, so if New York sees Muñoz again, it'll be in the postseason. Perhaps then, the Mariners would have figured out a way to hide Muñoz's slider...or the Yankees would be more discreet than they were on Thursday.

Anthony Volpe's 'sick' slide caps Yankees' comeback win vs. Mariners

The stage was set for Aaron Judge to be the hero in the 10th inning of Thursday's matchup between the Yankees and Mariners.

After being no-hit for seven innings, the Yankees came back from five runs down to force extra innings and they were 90 feet away from taking the game and sweeping Seattle.

With the bases loaded and one out, Judge drove a hanging slider into shallow center field. Julio Rodriguez caught it and launched the ball to catcher Cal Raleigh at home. Anthony Volpe, who was on third, scampered home, but the throw beat him home. However, the Yankee shortstop dove headfirst and did a swim move to avoid the tag and get his hand onto home plate to seal the 6-5 win.

"That was sick. Totally went around him, got his hand in there," Austin Wells, whose two-run single tied the game in the ninth, said after the game. "That was a great slide."

"Rodriguez made a great throw but what a great slide by Volpe," manager Aaron Boone said of the play. "I had the best seat in the house for it. I saw his hand go right in there. I saw the throw was on target, I’m like, ‘oh no,’ but I saw his hand in there and Volpe jumped up safe. It was a good call by [homeplate umpire Nic Lentz]." 

With how shallow Judge's fly ball was, Boone was asked if Volpe's speed and ability to make slides like that are in the thought process to send him. Boone pointed to the situation as the deciding factor for the send of Volpe.

"With that being the second out there, you gotta force them to make the perfect throw," Boone explained. "Rodriguez, as good as he is, still has to make a perfect throw, which he actually did. But it’s absolutely have to go there."

Volpe's slide not only extended the Yankees' winning streak to four, but it gave Judge his first career walk-off sac fly. It also capped the Yankees' biggest comeback win since May 2023, when they trailed by six runs. It was especially impressive considering they were down by five runs after being no-hit by Mariners starter Bryan Woo for seven innings.

More impressive is that the Yankees are only the second team in the Expansion Era (since 1961) to win a game after going hitless and trailing by at least five runs through seven innings, according to Elias. The other team, the 1977 Pirates.

“I knew who was at third. My whole thought going into [that at-bat] was get the ball somewhere in the air and let 11 take care of the rest," Judge said. "Impressive. What a great slide. Nobody else I want at third in a situation like that besides Volpe."

Volpe finished 0-for-4 in Thursday's game, including flying out with an opportunity to walk-off the Mariners in the ninth inning. He's now only slashing .215/.290/.387 on the season. But the Yankees are happy to see their shortstop still find ways to impact and win them games.

Yankees pitcher Clarke Schmidt to undergo a 2nd Tommy John surgery on Friday

NEW YORK — New York Yankees pitcher Clarke Schmidt will undergo a second Tommy John surgery that will sideline him for the rest of this season and much of next season, manager Aaron Boone said Thursday.

Schmidt will have the surgery Friday, and the procedure will be performed by Dr. Keith Meister in Dallas. The 29-year-old right-hander will join Gerrit Cole as the second Yankee to undergo the surgery. Cole, the 2023 AL Cy Young Award winner, was operated on in March.

Boone said before Saturday’s loss to the Mets that Schmidt was likely going to undergo the surgery after acknowledging he had an injury to the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow.

Schmidt had an MRI last Friday was placed on the 15-day injured list because of right forearm soreness, one day after his start in Toronto was cut short following three innings.

Schmidt was 4-4 with a 3.32 ERA in 14 starts this season before getting hurt. He missed New York’s first 17 games recovering from right rotator cuff tendinitis.

“He’s become a really, really good starting pitcher in this league,” Boone said last week. “So it’s a tough blow. Every team has their share of these things that happen, and we’ve got to be able to absorb it and hopefully get some guys back in the mix soon and create another opportunity for somebody else to hopefully step in and pick up the slack.”

Schmidt had Tommy John surgery in May 2017, a month before the Yankees selected him with the 16th overall pick in the amateur draft out of South Carolina.

Now in his sixth major league season, Schmidt said he was dealing with soreness in his arm since a June 4 outing against Cleveland.

Schmidt left a June 21 start versus Baltimore after a career-high 103 pitches in seven hitless innings, part of a streak of 28 1/3 scoreless innings.

Cam Schlitter started for Schmidt on Wednesday, struck out major league home run leader Cal Raleigh twice on fastballs and will get another start after the All-Star break. Schlitter’ has pitched 5 1/3 innings with an average fastball velocity of 97.9 mph, and he threw New York’s seven fastest pitches this season.

Yankees end Bryan Woo's no-hit bid, rally to beat Mariners, 6-5, in extra innings

The Yankees were no-hit for seven innings, but a late rally forced extras and Aaron Judge's walk-off sac fly lifted New York to an improbable 6-5 win over the Seattle Mariners on Thursday night in the Bronx.

Mariners starter Bryan Woo was excellent but the Yankees bats would get to the Seattle bullpen with three runs in the eighth and two in the ninth off of All-Star reliever Andres Munoz to get the game to the 10th inning. Devin Williams shut down the Mariners, allowing the Yankees to bring home the winning run in the bottom half of the 10th.

The Yankees' sweep of Seattle extended the team's winning streak to four games and they will enter the final series before the All-Star break two games behind the AL East-leading Blue Jays, who were off on Thursday.

Here are the takeaways...

-The Yankees lineup had a tall order on Thursday, taking on All-Star Woo. However, the Yanks led off the game with back-to-back walks to put Woo in trouble early.Judge struck out swinging before Cody Bellinger grounded into an inning-ending double play.

The most walks Woo had allowed in a game this season was two. He tied that in the first inning but that's all the Yankees could do against the young right-hander. Woo would retire 20 in a row, working a no-hitter into the eighth inning.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. -- who declared for the Home Run Derby on Thursday -- led off the eighth with a groundball single off of Woo to end the no-hit bid. Ben Rice followed with a single of his own. Austin Wells drove in the Yankees' first run with a sac fly, which knocked Woo out of the game. Manager Aaron Boone had Giancarlo Stanton pinch-hit against reliever Matt Brash and he launched a two-run shot to pull the Yankees to 5-3. It's the first pinch-hit homer in Stanton's career.

Woo was excellent, though, and threw 103 pitches (67 strikes) across 7.1 innings, allowing two runs on two hits, two walks while striking out five batters.

-Against Munoz, Trent Grisham led off the ninth with a single. Judge flew out on the first pitch he saw before Bellinger singled to extend his hitting streak to 15 games. Chisholm flew out and Rice walked to load the bases for Wells. The Yankees backstop singled home two to tie the game at 5-5 before Volpe flew out.

In the 10th, with Volpe on second as the ghost-runner, pinch-hitter Oswald Peraza failed to get the bunt down against left-hander Gabe Speier before the pinch-hitting Paul Goldschmidt was intentionally walked. Speier walkedGrisham, setting up Judge with the bases loaded. The Yankee Captain lofted a hanging slider to shallow center and Julio Rodriguez came home with a strong throw, but Volpe slid around Cal Raleigh's tag for the win.

-Marcus Stroman had a tough task to try and match Woo and did a solid job. After a scoreless first, he allowed one run on two hits and a walk, but worked out of trouble. He worked a one-run game into the fourth inning when he winced in pain covering first on a groundout. Stroman was checked on by trainers but the veteran right-hander said he was fine to continue. He allowed a ground-rule double to the next batter that Grisham couldn't get to -- it had a 60 percent catch rate -- a groundout and then an RBI single to Miles Mastrobuoni. Another single, and a mound visit later, Stroman got Rodriguez to ground out to stop further damage.

Stroman would grind through five innings (90 pitches/55 strikes), allowing two runs on six hits and two walks while striking out three. He also lowered his ERA to 6.66 on the season.

-The Yankees bullpen also did well to keep the Mariners off the board until the seventh inning. Clayton Beeter had pitched 1.2 scoreless innings before he got into trouble. Two walks brought up Jorge Polanco, who deposited a three-run shot over the right field wall to put the Mariners up 5-0.

JT Brubaker picked up three key outs and Ian Hamilton got through the ninth inning without allowing a run to give the Yankees offense a chance.

-Jasson Dominguez led off for the Yankees for the third game in a row but finished 0-for-3 with a walk and a strikeout. Judge went 0-for-4 with a strikeout and his average has dipped to .356 on the season but his first career walk-off sac fly made up for it.

Bellinger went 1-for-4, extending his hitting streak to 15 games. It's the second 15-game hitting streak this season for Bellinger, the first time that's happened since Derek Jeter in 2012.

Game MVP: Austin Wells

Judge's sac fly was great, but the Yankees don't get there unless Wells ties the game in the ninth.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees welcome the Chicago Cubs into the Bronx for a three-game series starting Friday. First pitch is set for 7:05 p.m.

The Cubs will have Chris Flexen (5-0, 0.83 ERA) on the mound while the Yankees have yet to announce a probable starter.

Mets' top pitching prospect Brandon Sproat extends scoreless inning streak in Triple-A

Mets pitching prospect Brandon Sproat has been on a tear recently and is in the middle of a scoreless inning streak after another stellar performance on Thursday for Triple-A Syracuse.

After seven more scoreless innings against the Lehigh Valley IronPigs, the 24-year-old has gone 18 straight innings without allowing a run, which spans three starts. During this stretch, Sproat has allowed just seven hits and has struck out 18 batters. It's also lowered his season ERA from 5.95 to 4.61.

Sproat's seven innings on Thursday night were his longest outing both this season and during his time in Triple-A. It matches his career-high, which he set last season with Double-A Binghamton. In that stretch, he went seven innings in three consecutive starts.

The right-hander was in complete control on Thursday, retiring the first seven batters and facing the minimum after three innings. He also got help from his battery-mate Francisco Alvarez, who threw out two base stealers to help Sproat limit the men on base.

Overall, Sproat went seven innings and allowed three hits, a walk and a hit by pitch while striking out four on 87 pitches (62 strikes). He left in a scoreless tie and had to settle for a no-decision.

After a rough start to the season in Syracuse, Sproat has turned things around and is looking more like the pitcher the Mets saw all of last season when he began turning heads after being selected in the second round of the 2023 MLB Draft.

Mets at Royals: 5 things to watch and series predictions | July 11-13

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Mets and Royals play a three-game series in Kansas City starting on Friday at 8:10 p.m. on SNY.


5 things to watch

Kodai Senga's return

Senga will get the start on Friday night, meaning it took him just under a month to make it back from the hamstring injury he suffered on June 12 at Citi Field.

The right-hander needed only one rehab start before being ready, with him tossing 3.2 innings for Double-A Binghamton on July 5.

Before getting injured, Senga had the best ERA in baseball and was on track to perhaps start for the National League in the All-Star Game.

Overall, he had a 1.47 ERA and 1.11 WHIP with 70 strikeouts in 73.2 innings over 13 starts.

While Senga's season was temporarily derailed, the fact that his injury had nothing to do with his arm should bode well for him quickly regaining the form he was displaying before he was out.

Sean Manaea's return

In addition to Senga, the Mets will also get Manaea back this weekend, with him pitching on Sunday in what will be his first appearance of the regular season.

The Mets are planning to use both Manaea and Clay Holmes on Sunday in what is the final game before the All-Star break. That's because they don't want Holmes' layoff between appearances to be too long. It is not yet known which pitcher will start the game, and which one will piggyback.

With the returns of Manaea and Senga, New York's rotation is at full strength for the first time this year.

The injury that cost Manaea the first three months of the season was to his oblique, but his rehab was delayed a bit due to a loose body in his throwing elbow that required a cortisone shot.

Manaea is expected to be able to pitch through the issue for the remainder of the season, but it's something to monitor.

Ronny Mauricio has been impressive

Entering play on Thursday, Mauricio was starting to settle in very nicely as a regular presence in the lineup.

Jun 24, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets second baseman Ronny Mauricio (10) follows through on an RBI double against the Atlanta Braves during the ninth inning at Citi Field.
Jun 24, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets second baseman Ronny Mauricio (10) follows through on an RBI double against the Atlanta Braves during the ninth inning at Citi Field. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images

In 10 games from June 24 to July 8, Mauricio slashed .344/.417/.594 with two home runs, two doubles, three RBI, seven runs scored, and four walks.

There has still been a bit too much chase in his game, but Mauricio is starting to control the strike zone a bit better.

He's also been really smooth defensively while getting the most time at third base.

Kansas City's offense has been among the worst in baseball...

The Royals' season has been a disappointing one. They enter this series with a record of 46-48, and are 3.0 games back of the final Wild Card spot in the American League.

The main reason for those struggles? The offense.

Kansas City entered play on Thursday having scored the second-fewest runs in the AL (321) and third-fewest in baseball -- ahead of only the White Sox (318) and Pirates (319).

Aside from Bobby Witt Jr., Vinnie Pasquantino, and Maikel Garcia, Kansas City hasn't gotten a lot from its regulars.

Slugging rookie Jac Caglianone could help, but he's struggled in his first taste of the bigs -- with a .490 OPS over his first 32 games.

... Kansas City's pitching has been among the best in baseball

While the Royals' offense has been a detriment, their pitching has been elite.

They have allowed only 343 runs this season, which was the second-lowest in baseball entering play on Thursday.

A lot of that is due to the starting rotation led by Kris Bubic (2.48 ERA), Seth Lugo (2.67 ERA), Noah Cameron (2.56 ERA) and Michael Wacha (3.83 ERA), though the loss of Cole Ragans due to a shoulder injury will hurt.

With Bubic having pitched on Wednesday, the Mets won't face him in this series. They're also not scheduled to face Lugo.

The Mets are set to go against Wacha on Friday, Michael Lorenzen on Saturday, and the rookie Cameron on Sunday.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Pete Alonso

The Polar Bear will end the first half with a bang.

Which Mets pitcher will have the best start?

Kodai Senga

The right-hander will pick up where he left off.

Which Royals player will be a thorn in the Mets' side?

Salvador Perez

Perez went 3-for-4 with two homers on Wednesday against the Pirates.

Mets swept in doubleheader against Orioles after 7-3 loss in Game 2

The Mets lost Game 2 of Thursday's doubleheader against the Baltimore Orioles, 7-3, to get swept on the day and lose the series.

Here are the takeaways...

-Two batters into Game 2, the Mets started things off the same way they started Game 1 -- with runners on second and third and nobody out. Unlike in the first game, though, New York didn't waste this golden opportunity to score and pushed across two runs on two productive outs by Juan Soto (RBI groundout) and Pete Alonso (sacrifice fly) to make it 2-0 early.

-After a scoreless first inning that required 32 pitches and ended with a lineout with the bases loaded, spot starter Brandon Waddell went back out for the second and wasn't so lucky. Back-to-back doubles by Cedric Mullins and Alex Jackson gave the Orioles their first run of the game, cutting New York's lead in half. Then, with two outs, Jordan Westburg homered to put Baltimore on top, 3-2.

Waddell pitched a 1-2-3 third to end his outing. He allowed three runs on four hits and a walk while striking out two.

-Brett Baty tied the game with a two-out single after Soto began the inning with a walk and a stolen base. The Mets were dangerously close to wasting that opportunity against Orioles starter Tomoyuki Sugano after an Alonso lineout and Mark Vientos strikeout sandwiched a Jeff McNeil walk before Baty came through. Unfortunately, it was the only hit with runners in scoring position that New York would have all game.

-Like Waddell, Justin Hagenman had a scoreless frame in his first inning of action, but things took a turn in the following frame. With runners on first and second and two outs, Colton Cowser broke the tie with a single and Ramon Urias brought home another run on Baty's fielding error at third base to give the O's a 5-3 advantage.

-Hagenman went back out for the sixth but was pulled after a leadoff double. LHP Richard Lovelady entered from there and got the lefty Jackson Holliday to ground out before getting a similar result from the righty Westburg who hit it on the ground to shortstop on the drawn-in infield. Francisco Lindor snared it on the backhand and threw home to try and nab the runner, but it was a second late as Baltimore scored once again.

Lovelady allowed a single and a walk to load the bases, which forced manager Carlos Mendoza to use a third reliever of the inning in Rico Garcia. Garcia got the groundball he needed to escape the jam, but the Mets couldn't turn the double play and another run scored.

-After stalling out for a run on five hits in the first game and going 1-for-11 with RISP, New York's offense couldn't make it up in the second game of the twinbill. Despite back-to-back hits to start the game, the Mets finished with five total hits. They also went 1-for-8 with RISP to go a staggering 2-for-19 with RISP in the doubleheader sweep.

-Brandon Nimmo was the only bright spot in the lineup, going 2-for-4 with a run scored and a stolen base out of the leadoff spot.

Game MVP: Tomoyuki Sugano

Entering Thursday's game with a .276 batting average against, Sugano was able to keep the Mets' hitters at bay through six innings to earn his seventh win of the season.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets play their final series before the All-Star break as they take on the Kansas City Royals for three games starting on Friday night. First pitch is scheduled for 8:10 p.m. on SNY.

RHP Kodai Senga (7-3, 1.47 ERA) makes his return to the mound after a hamstring strain cost him a month on the IL. He will be opposed by former Met RHP Michael Wacha (4-9, 3.83 ERA).

Yankees' Jazz Chisholm Jr. confident 70 percent mentality will work in 2025 Home Run Derby

There's going to be some jazz at this year's Home Run Derby.

Yankees infielder Jazz Chisholm Jr. declared for the 2025 Home Run Derby in Atlanta on Thursday and is looking to bring the same "70 percent" mentality that has served him well since he returned from the IL on June 3. Of course, Chisholm made headlines when he said that he's stopped going all out when he plays, and that 70 percent allows him to stay balanced.

Speaking with the media before Friday's series opener against the Cubs, Chisholm said he's not thinking too much about his preparation for the contest.

"I ain't trying to think that hard about it. I'm not even gonna really practice it for it, Chisholm said. "The only person that really needs to practice is my stepdad. But for me, I'm just gonna go out there, have fun.

"Seventy percent, don't do too much. Just hit a couple homers. Hopefully, I win it by doing that.  I'm just gonna enjoy the time out there."

Chisholm will have his stepfather, Geronsands, toss to him. He's already traveled to New York from the Bahamas to be with the Yankees infielder.

"He thows to me all the time. When I was a kid, he's been throwing to me," Chisholm said of his stepfather's credentials. "He throws to me all the time in the Bahamas Derby. So, ain't nothing new to us."

Chisholm is confident in his ability to do well in Atlanta, even at 70 percent, because he's done well in the aforementioned Bahamas Derby using a similar mentality. That derby is in the middle of the offseason when he's not swinging like he would in spring training, and he's going to tap into those memories next week, while also enjoying the festivities and hitting as many homers as he can.

"I don't really try to go out there and try and hurt myself. Just go out there having fun," Chisholm said of his confidence competing at 70 percent. "Hit a couple. Might catch a couple that will go further than the others, but just try to be accurate and consistent, more than trying to hit the ball further than [Pirates outfielder] Oneil Cruz."

When asked who he felt the biggest threats are in this year's Home Run Derby, Chisholm said it's Cruz and the Braves' Ronald Acuna Jr.

But he'll have to worry about more than those two. Chisholm will also be competing against the Athletics' Brent Rooker, the Mariners' Cal Raleigh, the Rays' Junior Caminero, the Nationals' James Wood, and the Twins' Byron Buxton.

Chisholm is the seventh different Yankee to participate in the Derby. He joins Tino Martinez (1997), Jason Giambi (2002-03), Nick Swisher (2010), Robinson Cano (2011-13), Aaron Judge (2017) and Gary Sanchez (2017).

We'll see next week if Chisholm's 70 percent is good enough to make him the fifth Yankee to win the Home Run Derby (Martinez, Giambi, Cano and Judge).

It's been an up-and-down season for the second-year Yankee. After a hot start to the year, Chisholm went through a cold spell before missing time with an oblique injury. But since he's been back, Chisholm has been one of the best home run hitters in the American League. His 10 long balls since his return from the IL on June 3 are only eclipsed by Judge and Raleigh, who both have 13.

Entering Friday's game, Chisholm has 17 home runs.

Dodgers unveil Kobe Bryant bobblehead to be given away Aug. 8 at Chavez Ravine

Kobe Bryant was in a great mood as the Lakers assembled in El Segundo for their 2009 media day.

And for good reason. The Lakers had just won their 15th NBA title a few months earlier and were favored to win No. 16 at the conclusion of the upcoming season (spoiler alert: they did).

The Times' article covering that preseason kickoff event described Bryant as "beaming" as he posed for photos and filmed various promotional videos, including one intended for use at Dodger Stadium.

Read more:Dodgers used Kobe Bryant's 'Job's not finished' quote in World Series run. Vanessa says they got it done

At one point, Bryant stood with a baseball bat ready to take a swing. At another, he placed an oversized, blue foam finger over his hand. Throughout the process, the reigning Finals MVP wore his full Lakers uniform.

"Let's go Dodgers!" he said into the camera.

On Thursday, the Dodgers unveiled a Bryant bobblehead that seems to have been inspired by that day nearly 16 years ago. The late Lakers legend is wearing his basketball uniform, holding a bat and standing in a batter's stance.

And he is beaming.

The Dodgers will be giving away the bobblehead to the first 40,000 ticketed fans when they play the Toronto Blue Jays on Aug. 8 at Dodger Stadium.

Bryant and daughter Gianna were among the nine people who died in a Jan. 26, 2020, helicopter crash in Calabasas. During a pregame ceremony honoring Bryant on his birthday (Aug. 23) that year, every Dodgers player and coach took the foul line wearing a gold Lakers jersey featuring either No. 8 or No. 24, the two numbers he wore during his Hall of Fame career.

The team also honored Bryant by giving fans special Dodgers jerseys designed in his honor at one game each in 2023 and 2024.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Tyler Soderstrom caps huge night with ‘special' walk-off hit in Athletics' win

Tyler Soderstrom caps huge night with ‘special' walk-off hit in Athletics' win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

When the Atlanta Braves intentionally walked Miguel Andujar to get to Athletics left-hander Tyler Soderstrom in the 11th inning on Thursday night, they got the matchup they wanted with southpaw Aaron Bummer on the mound.

And Soderstrom made them pay.

The 23-year-old collected his fourth RBI of the night on a walk-off single, scoring Brent Rooker from second base and sending the crowd at Sutter Health Park home happy with a 5-4 win and series victory over Atlanta.

The walk-off hit was the first of Soderstrom’s young MLB career — a surreal moment for the former first baseman-turned-left fielder who has made major strides at the plate this season. His hero moment in extras came after he hit his 16th homer of the 2025 MLB season in the first inning with a three-run shot to right center field, and the 2020 first-round draft pick is now slashing .370/.414/.704 over his last seven games.

As part of the A’s young-and-upcoming homegrown core, Soderstrom reflected on playing and growing alongside teammates like Lawrence Butler, whom he rose through the team’s farm system with.

“It’s super fun,” Soderstrom told Chris Townsend and Steve Sax on “A’s Cast” after the win. “I’ve played with some of these guys like [Butler] since Low-A, so it’s cool to be up here in the big leagues, sharing these experiences with them. Getting my first walk-off hit tonight was super special. Something I always dreamed of, for sure.”

After A’s starting pitcher Mitch Spence surrendered five home runs to the Braves and was optioned to Triple-A Las Vegas following Wednesday night’s 9-2 loss, JP Sears took the mound for Thursday’s rubber match and allowed three earned runs across five innings while striking out six and walking none.

Another member of the A’s young core, first baseman Nick Kurtz, took the MLB rookie home run lead with his 15th blast of the season — a solo shot in the eighth that tied the game 4-4 and ultimately allowed the Green and Gold to go to extras with Atlanta.

It was just one of several clutch moments Kurtz has delivered for the A’s this season, and the team certainly hopes there’s more to come from the first baseman and the rest of the roster as the season’s halfway point nears.

“It’s a great feeling, especially with All-Star break coming up, to kind of grind through that one — come up early, then lose the lead and then be able to come back late was awesome,” Kurtz told Townsend and Sax. “Sodey had a great game, came up huge when we needed him. So it’s great team win. …

“[The front office] has done a great job drafting guys, and it’s kind of cool, because a lot of those guys who were drafted came up together, know each other really well and are best friends. Then me joining and coming into the fold made it really easy to just kind of go along with the group. And it’s been really fun.”

As the A’s approach their final series before the MLB All-Star break with the Toronto Blue Jays coming to town, the youthful group, now 39-56, will look to carry some momentum into the second half and continue building upon what they’ve accomplished so far together.

“We’re always trying to win these games, trying to stay hot and have some momentum going into the All-Star break and ready to roll for the second half,” Soderstrom told Townsend and Sax. “So just continue to learn and just get better. …

“We feel like one through nine, you see the lineup, all the young guys in there for the last couple of weeks. So we’re all really confident in each other. We’ve played together for a while now. So one through nine, we can get it done.”

Tyler Soderstrom caps huge night with ‘special' walk-off hit in Athletics' win

Tyler Soderstrom caps huge night with ‘special' walk-off hit in Athletics' win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

When the Atlanta Braves intentionally walked Miguel Andujar to get to Athletics left-hander Tyler Soderstrom in the 11th inning on Thursday night, they got the matchup they wanted with southpaw Aaron Bummer on the mound.

And Soderstrom made them pay.

The 23-year-old collected his fourth RBI of the night on a walk-off single, scoring Brent Rooker from second base and sending the crowd at Sutter Health Park home happy with a 5-4 win and series victory over Atlanta.

The walk-off hit was the first of Soderstrom’s young MLB career — a surreal moment for the former first baseman-turned-left fielder who has made major strides at the plate this season. His hero moment in extras came after he hit his 16th homer of the 2025 MLB season in the first inning with a three-run shot to right center field, and the 2020 first-round draft pick is now slashing .370/.414/.704 over his last seven games.

As part of the A’s young-and-upcoming homegrown core, Soderstrom reflected on playing and growing alongside teammates like Lawrence Butler, whom he rose through the team’s farm system with.

“It’s super fun,” Soderstrom told Chris Townsend and Steve Sax on “A’s Cast” after the win. “I’ve played with some of these guys like [Butler] since Low-A, so it’s cool to be up here in the big leagues, sharing these experiences with them. Getting my first walk-off hit tonight was super special. Something I always dreamed of, for sure.”

After A’s starting pitcher Mitch Spence surrendered five home runs to the Braves and was optioned to Triple-A Las Vegas following Wednesday night’s 9-2 loss, JP Sears took the mound for Thursday’s rubber match and allowed three earned runs across five innings while striking out six and walking none.

Another member of the A’s young core, first baseman Nick Kurtz, took the MLB rookie home run lead with his 15th blast of the season — a solo shot in the eighth that tied the game 4-4 and ultimately allowed the Green and Gold to go to extras with Atlanta.

It was just one of several clutch moments Kurtz has delivered for the A’s this season, and the team certainly hopes there’s more to come from the first baseman and the rest of the roster as the season’s halfway point nears.

“It’s a great feeling, especially with All-Star break coming up, to kind of grind through that one — come up early, then lose the lead and then be able to come back late was awesome,” Kurtz told Townsend and Sax. “Sodey had a great game, came up huge when we needed him. So it’s great team win. …

“[The front office] has done a great job drafting guys, and it’s kind of cool, because a lot of those guys who were drafted came up together, know each other really well and are best friends. Then me joining and coming into the fold made it really easy to just kind of go along with the group. And it’s been really fun.”

As the A’s approach their final series before the MLB All-Star break with the Toronto Blue Jays coming to town, the youthful group, now 39-56, will look to carry some momentum into the second half and continue building upon what they’ve accomplished so far together.

“We’re always trying to win these games, trying to stay hot and have some momentum going into the All-Star break and ready to roll for the second half,” Soderstrom told Townsend and Sax. “So just continue to learn and just get better. …

“We feel like one through nine, you see the lineup, all the young guys in there for the last couple of weeks. So we’re all really confident in each other. We’ve played together for a while now. So one through nine, we can get it done.”