Luzardo and his adjustments carry Phillies to win over White Sox

Luzardo and his adjustments carry Phillies to win over White Sox originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CHICAGO – There was no way the Phillies were going to let dejá vu visit Tuesday night at Rate Field. No way the hitters were going to allow it to happen and, more importantly, pitcher Jesús Luzardo.

Put those two together and it equaled out to a 6-3 win for the Phillies over the White Sox. 

Last Wednesday against the Boston Red Sox, the offense gave Luzardo a 5-0 lead after four innings. But in the top of the fifth, Luzardo gave up a double, walked four and allowed a grand slam in what eventually was a 9-8 loss in 11 innings for the Phillies.

Against Chicago, the Phillies lit up White Sox starter Jonathan Cannon for six runs in the first three innings and Luzardo rid the demons of a week ago as the club improved to 61-46 on the season. 

After starting the season so well, Luzardo cooled off mightily. There was talk of tipping pitches, which seemed to be corrected quickly. The real issue that has been plaguing him of late is the inability to find comfort pitching out of the stretch when runners are on base. So his lone bullpen session leading up to Tuesday’s start comprised of all pitches out of the stretch.

When he got into a little bit of trouble in the first inning, pitching coach Caleb Cotham made a visit to the mound to make sure Luzardo was finding his comfort. It worked as he got out of what turned into a bases loaded, two out jam. It helped centerfielder Brandon Marsh, who doubled and homered in the game, make a fabulous sliding catching running full speed towards right and held the runners.

“I was kicking myself last week because I could have gone into the windup and I wanted to and I second guessed it and it didn’t work out,” Luzardo said. “Today I felt like I kind of had an understanding. He wasn’t going to steal. I was aware of the situation, and I just felt more comfortable out of the windup in that role.”

Once that scare was avoided, the bats took over and Luzardo pretty much cruised through his seven innings of work, in which he allowed just two hits and no earned runs.

After a Nick Castellanos walk and a Marsh double, Max Kepler and Otto Kemp each hit sacrifice flies to score them. In the third, the Phillies got two-run home runs from Kyle Schwarber, his 37th of the year, and one from Marsh to make it 6-0. Chicago scored three in the ninth off seldom-used Daniel Robert for the final score.

The story of the night, though, was Luzardo and the hope that he’s back to finding the groove that made him so special early in the season. His performance Tuesday night delivered, even though his velocity was a bit down.

“I think a little bit of both,” said Rob Thomson on if Luzardo was tired or just throwing with less speed in order to find his spots easier. “He was really focused on pitching and not throwing. But I think everybody’s velocity was down a little bit tonight. I don’t know if it was humidity or what. It was hot out there. He could have gone out for another inning, but I wanted him to go out on a good note. I wanted to keep his pitch count under control so it all worked out.”

It did, and Marsh also had a huge role in the win with superior defense and two of the team’s six extra-base hits.

“Maybe I’m just taking advantage of the pitches I’m getting a little bit more,” said Marsh, who is now hitting .258. “Try not to miss as much of the ones over the plate that I’m looking for and not foul them off. Today was a good one and we can build off of it into tomorrow.”

Heliot Ramos faces the music as Giants hit new low vs. Pirates: ‘I'm in my head'

Heliot Ramos faces the music as Giants hit new low vs. Pirates: ‘I'm in my head' originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Win or lose, there typically is one constant in the clubhouse after a Giants game: The starting pitcher talks. That wasn’t the case Tuesday night at Oracle Park after the Giants’ 3-1 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates, despite Justin Verlander having one of his better outings this season. 

Verlander made one costly mistake in five innings, leaving a fastball over the heart of the plate to the last batter in the Pirates’ lineup, Liover Peguero, who turned on it for a solo shot to tie the game at one run apiece in the fifth inning. The 42-year-old had seven strikeouts in five innings and only walked one batter, allowing one earned run and six hits, yet never finding himself in real trouble. But Verlander was gone by the time media members made their way to the clubhouse following manager Bob Melvin’s press conference. 

So was shortstop Willy Adames, who provided one of the Giants’ two hits and their only run with a solo shot of his own, continuing his scorching-hot month at the plate. 

That left Heliot Ramos to face the music, answering every question on a night where he made his second blunder on the base paths in the last three games. Mental mistakes are catching up to Ramos in the outfield and on the bases, and the 2024 MLB All-Star didn’t mince words with where his head is at right now. 

“All that I have in my mind is that I don’t want to mess up,” Ramos said at his locker. “And I think that’s a wrong thought. … I just feel like I have been messing up a lot and I’m in my head. I just have to let it go and get better every day.” 

His latest gaffe didn’t take long to be highlighted in front of 38,000 fans that seemed to simultaneously groan together in the bottom of the first inning. Ramos led the inning off with a walk and stole second base, earning some bragging rights off catcher Joey Bart, a former Giants teammate he came through the minor leagues with. A few batters later, Ramos found himself in no-man’s land at second base. 

Matt Chapman’s light-tower pop up that landed in front of the pitcher’s mound on the third-base side was called for an infield fly. The problem is, Ramos appeared to be confused by the rule. Pirates third baseman Ke’Bryan Hayes saw Ramos lurking too far off the bag and threw a strike to second baseman Nick Gonzales, who tagged Ramos out to end the inning.

“He just lost track of the rule,” Melvin said after the game. “He saw them call the infield fly rule. Just lost track of what he needed to do.” 

“Just a mental error,” Ramos explained. “Trying to do too much, overthinking. I messed up. That’s the only thing I can say about it. It’s been happening a lot. I’m just trying to get better, do better every day, every time. Trying to work on it, even on my defense. It hasn’t been the best. 

“I don’t want to mess it up. I don’t know what to do. All I’m doing is working every day, trying to fix everything.” 

In another odd turn of events, Ramos was tagged out by New York Mets third baseman Ronny Mauricio two days prior to end the inning on a groundball hit to third base. Ramos also recently cost the Giants the game to end a three-game series where they were swept by the Toronto Blue Jays when he misjudged a fly ball in left field. The many miscalculations have been happening far longer than the past few games this season.

Ramos went 0-for-2 with two walks and a stolen base, extending his on-base streak to 13 games. The other parts of his game have been a fight between his ears.

As a breath of fresh air where Ramos could have been full of excuses, he admitted a lack of confidence that is hurting him outside of the batter’s box. 

“It’s just a mental battle,” Ramos says. “When I started the season, I felt like I’m the best. I’m the best out there, I’m doing great on defense. … And then when you have a couple of errors, because they do happen, but whenever they’re back-to-back they get in my head. I feel like I’ve cost us the game. It just feels like, ‘Damn, I have to get better.’ 

“I just have to get better and put that pressure on myself.” 

When Adames was struggling – both with his bat and his glove – a day off proved to be exactly what he needed. Giving Ramos a mental reset isn’t an option Melvin is turning to right now. 

The Giants clearly need Ramos’ bat in the lineup. They just can’t have him hurting the team so severely elsewhere. He’s one of their top hitters, and putting him at DH also isn’t in the plan because of players like Rafael Devers and Wilmer Flores. 

With one game to go before Thursday’s MLB trade deadline, Ramos will be in the lineup for Wednesday’s matinee game to end a six-game homestand. 

“It’s hard to do for a guy that tries as hard as he does,” Melvin said when asked if he considered pulling Ramos after the mistake. “It’s not like he doesn’t care. It’s not like he doesn’t hustle. It’s not like he’s not going out there unprepared and working. We’re not swinging the bat very well and he’s one of our biggest bats, so there’s a little catch-22 with that. 

“He’s going to play tomorrow and we have an off day after that.”

The Giants have lost five consecutive games, including seven in a row at home. They’ve dropped 11 of their last 13 and are back down to .500 for the first time since the second game of the season. Since acquiring a superstar in Devers, they quite literally have been the worst team in baseball

Reasons for their tumble down the standings extend far beyond Ramos’ many glaring problems in the outfield and on the bases. At least he faced the music and took accountability, knowing words only mean so much if issues aren’t quickly corrected.

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Mets option Huascar Brazoban to Triple-A, bring back Chris Devenski on big league deal

The Mets made a move for a fresh arm prior to Tuesday's contest in San Diego.

Right-hander Huascar Brazoban was optioned to Triple-A after his shaky outing in Monday's game.

Brazoban came on in relief of the struggling Frankie Montas in the bottom of the fifth, and he appeared to dance his way out of a second and third, one-out jam, but was late covering first on a grounder to Pete Alonso.

The floodgates opened from there, as the Padres' eight and nine hitters rattled off back-to-back singles to bring in the tying and go-ahead runs at the time.

San Diego, of course, walked things off a few innings later.

This continues what's been an up-and-down stretch for Brazoban, who was spectacular at the beginning of the year but allowed 14 runs (13 earned) across just nine outings in June.

He's up to a 3.83 ERA and 1.28 WHIP over 51.2 innings of work this season.

In a corresponding roster move, the Mets brought back Chris Devenski on a one-year big league deal and added him to the active roster.

Devenski was designated for assignment just a week ago as the Mets made a flurry of moves, including bringing hard-throwing right-hander Rico Garcia up to the major league roster.

After clearing waivers, the 34-year-old opted to elect free agency rather than accept an outright assignment to Triple-A, but now he landed back in the Big Apple.

He pitched well before being let go, posting a 2.38 ERA and 0.88 WHIP across 10 appearances.

Mets feeling California, looking MLB Trade Deadline | The Mets Pod

On the latest episode of The Mets Pod presented by Tri-State Cadillac, Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo recap a winning week and stare down the MLB Trade Deadline.

First up, Connor and Joe chat about wins out west, the addition of Gregory Soto, the noise surrounding trades, and then go Down on the Farm to discuss Kevin Parada and the loaded Double-A Binghamton roster.

Later, the guys feature the trade deadline heavily in this week’s Scoreboard bets, and answer mailbag questions about, yes, the trade deadline, but also bad umpires, Juan Soto, and the ghosts of trade deadline past

Be sure to subscribe to The Mets Pod at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

What we learned as Giants' frustrating mistakes lead to loss vs. Pirates

What we learned as Giants' frustrating mistakes lead to loss vs. Pirates originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – The Giants now have one game left before Thursday’s MLB trade deadline, and by definition, they’re as average as it gets. 

Recently, however, they’ve been much worse than average. Far, far worse. Uninspired at best. 

A combination of frustrating mental mistakes and the offense taking a night off ended in a 3-1 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night at Oracle Park. The loss was the Giants’ fifth straight and 11th in their last 13 games, dropping them to .500 on the 2025 MLB season with a 54-54 record. 

Tuesday night’s loss featured yet another mental mistake from Heliot Ramos on the bases, and a play in the eighth inning where second baseman Casey Schmitt fielded a grounder and nailed the batter running down the line nearly square in the face after Tyler Rogers wasn’t paying attention on first base. It again was one of those nights for the Giants. 

Justin Verlander did all he could to secure a second win in a Giants jersey but left with a no-decision instead. Verlander allowed one earned run in five innings when he gave up a solo shot with one out in the fifth inning. He gave up six hits, three in the fifth inning, and tallied seven strikeouts. 

But the Giants put together only two hits at the plate. Former Giants top prospect Joey Bart gave the Pirates the lead with a single through the infield and into left field, one batter after Schmitt’s odd throw in the eighth inning.

Here are three takeaways from the Giants’ second straight loss to the Pirates in this three-game series.

Verlander Does His Part

One swing shouldn’t define what otherwise was a stellar outing from Verlander. 

Toeing the rubber 24 hours after Carson Whisenhunt, 24, made his MLB debut, the 42-year-old Verlander looked like an ace against the Pirates, especially in the first four innings. Verlander entered the fifth inning having only allowed three hits with five strikeouts through four scoreless innings. He then struck out Bart to begin the fifth, but was undone by the No. 9 hitter when Liover Peguero turned on a fastball and launched it over the left-field wall. 

The damage was done. It didn’t balloon out of control, though. Verlander’s final batter of the night ended in a swinging strikeout to finish his night at 94 pitches over five innings. His seven strikeouts were tied for his second-most this season, and Verlander’s fastball hovered around 95 and 96 miles per hour all night. 

Right when the ball left Verlander’s hand, he knew he made a mistake to Peguero. It was one of just a few mistakes Verlander made all night. He now has given up only two earned runs his last two starts in 10 innings. 

Another Baserunning Blunder 

Somehow, Ramos continues to find new lows on the base paths. Coaches, teammates and fans alike didn’t have to wait long to see his latest gaffe Tuesday night. 

With one out in the bottom of the first inning, Ramos was at second base when Matt Chapman hit a sky-high pop up that landed at the feet of third baseman Ke’Bryan Hayes. The play was ruled an infield fly, but Ramos must have forgotten the rules. Even Hayes looked shocked when he saw Ramos hanging out way too far off the bag, confused by what to do next. 

Hayes then fired an easy throw to second baseman Nick Gonzales, who tagged out a befuddled Ramos to end the inning. 

This comes just two days after Ramos was tagged out at third base on a ground ball hit to New York Mets third baseman Ronny Mauricio to end an inning. 

Ramos walked his first two at-bats and finished 0-for-2. What he’s providing offensively is not making up for his many mistakes on the bases and in the outfield.

Summer Of Willy 

The biggest positive the Giants have going for them right now is the turnaround of shortstop Willy Adames. If it were up to him, July would never end. 

Adames came into July hitting .210 with a .636 OPS. After going 1-for-3 with a solo homer, Adames now is batting .341 with seven home runs and 21 RBI in 23 games this month. His deep fly was one of the Giants’ only two hits and provided their only run scored. 

He now finds himself in historic company when it comes to Giants history at shortstop. Adames is one of five Giants shortstops to have 20 or more RBI in one calendar month, and has one more game to go. Nobody else is following his lead right now.

The boo birds came out from Giants fans at Oracle Park. They certainly weren’t for Adames.

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Mets possibly trading for Brandon Lowe something 'worth watching' ahead of deadline

The Mets are continuing to search for a center fielder, relief help, and a starting rotation upgrade ahead of Thursday's 6 p.m. ET trade deadline, but it's also possible they do something outside the box.

According to SNY MLB Insider Andy Martino, while the Mets have "a lot of balls in the air," the potential of them swinging a trade for Brandon Lowe of the Rays "is worth watching, because they also had interest and talked to" the Rays about Lowe last year.

Lowe is slashing .269/.320/.480 with 19 homers in 350 plate appearances over 86 games this season for Tampa Bay, posting a 121 OPS+.

He has been a steady offensive performer since debuting in 2018, with an .810 OPS over eight big league seasons -- all with the Rays.

The 31-year-old has spent most of his time at second base this season, and can also play first base. He is currently on the IL due to ankle/foot issues, but is expected to return relatively soon.

Lowe is under team control through 2026, with a club option for $11.5 million.

But where would Lowe fit if the Mets traded for him?

One would have to imagine any scenario where the Mets land Lowe would mean trading one or more infielders currently on the active roster -- whether they're moved in a deal for Lowe or someone else.

As Martino reported on Monday, the Mets have discussed trading Mark Vientos. The other primary infielders on the roster whose roles aren't fully cemented are Jeff McNeil (who has been flipping between second base and center field), Ronny Mauricio, Brett Baty, and Luisangel Acuña.

Lowe could conceivably also be used as a DH, but the Mets have been utilizing Starling Marte and others there, and could soon get Jesse Winker back.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Noelvi Marte, Colson Montgomery, and Ronny Mauricio

With the All-Star break in the rearview mirror, it’s time to start positioning ourselves for the championship push. Whether you’re trying to hold onto a top spot, pushing the leader, desperately trying to play catchup, or positioning yourself for the playoffs, reinforcements and upside are vital this time of year.

Most waiver wires have been picked over though and it’s difficult to find impact players readily available in most leagues at this point in the season.

Fear not, because there are still a handful of available players that have the chance to be difference makers that help push us towards glory.

MLB: Toronto Blue Jays at Detroit Tigers
The Blue Jays move into the top spot after taking three out of four from the Tigers.

Here are three players that are under 40% rostered on Yahoo leagues that you should strongly consider adding.

If you want a larger list, Eric Samulski wrote his extended waiver wire piece on Sunday.

Noelvi Marte, 3B Reds

(25% Rostered on Yahoo)

Marte is this exact type of lightning in a bottle player that’s being overlooked. It makes sense why he would be though, coming off a disastrous sophomore season where he missed the first 80 games due to a PED suspension and then struck out over 30% of the time after he returned. It was ugly.

He didn’t make the team out of camp and spent his first week of his year down in Triple-A. After being promoted, he hit three homers and stole four bases in 19 games and it felt like a breakout was happening. Then, he strained his oblique amidst that hot streak and spent two months on the injured list.

Now, he’s been back for nearly a month and while the production has been pedestrian – three homers, two stolen bases, and a .759 OPS – he’s doing a lot of things well.

His raw power is fantastic with a 116.7 max exit velocity – top 98th percentile in the league – and high-end bat speed. It’s translated to game power with three homers already hit at least 420 feet.

Also, his swing decisions have been solid. He’s in the 69th percentile of SEAGER, a metric built by Baseball Prospectus’Robert Orr to assess swing decisions. It takes into account how often a player swings at pitches out of the zone, something Marte struggles with, but also how often they go after pitches in the zone they can do damage on. Marte is great at the latter.

With that, he’s blessed to play in Great American Ballpark, one of the best hitter’s parks in the league.

He’s also started 19 of 20 games since coming off the injured list and 17 in a row. Most of those starts have come at third base and the Reds’ have begun floating the idea of giving him some time in the outfield.

An everyday job with a great home park, good swing decisionsn and great raw power make Marte a fine bet to go on a serious hot streak over these next two months.

Colson Montgomery, SS/3B White Sox

(16% Rostered on Yahoo)

Montgomery has gotten off to an incredible start in his major league career. Through just 20 games, he’s already hit four homers and driven in 16 runs. All four of those home runs have come in his last six starts and his power is very real.

Of all hitters who have taken at least 50 swings this season, Montgomery’s bat speed ranks 17th. That’s right around sluggers like Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Yordan Alvarez.

Also, Montgomery’s max exit velocity of 112.2 mph is in the 78th percentile of all big leaguers. He set that max exit velocity in a game against the Rays last Wednesday where he hit three batted balls at least 107 mph, a rare feat in a single game.

He hits the ball hard, he pulls it, and he lifts it. There is no question or concern about his raw power potential. Yet, there may be some concern as to how consistently he’ll be able to access that raw power in the short term.

Considered a consensus top-15 prospect heading into the 2024 season, Montgomery lost a lot of his shine due to dramatic swing-and-miss issues in the upper minors.

He had a 34% strikeout rate at Triple-A this season before being promoted and while that number has sunk to a more palatable 25% through his first 20 career games, his 18% swinging strike rate is in Joey Gallo territory and tells us regression is likely coming.

To make matters worse, he has a 54% whiff rate against breaking balls despite being thrown them less often than league average. Of the same ilk, his chase rate is well below league average while he’s seeing more pitches in the zone than most hitters.

These numbers are a bit skewed though because of how aggressive he’s been so far. In terms of first-pitch swing rate and overall swing rate he’s been one of the most aggressive hitters in the league lately and seems to know he’s at his best when hunting fastballs. Right now, it’s working. We’ll see if the league adjusts back within the next few weeks.

Regardless, he’s added some needed pop and flash to a White Sox lineup that desperately seeks both of those things. Also, he’s graded out as a plus defender at both shortstop and third base over these last few weeks.

At worst, he will have plenty of chances to work through any growing pains that may arise through the rest of the season and will likely hit plenty of home runs along the way as a dual-eligible player.

Ronny Mauricio, 2B/3B Mets

(6% Rostered on Yahoo)

This is my second time featuring Mauricio in this column so far this season. Mostly, because I’m a sucker for flashy tools, but this is the time of year to bet on those tools and hope we can catch lightning in a bottle.

I highlighted him last after a monster series against the Rockies where he had five hits, a 450 foot home run, and two stolen bases. It was those same tools that caught my eye and the potential to seize playing time in a Mets’ infield that was for the taking.

In 28 games after that series, Mauricio slashed .209/.277/.349 with three homers and just one stolen base. His approach was frenetic with a high chase rate, low contact rate, and he spent a few weeks more as a part-time than full-time player.

The tides may be turning again though. He’s hit dramatic, late-inning, game-tying home runs off high profile relievers – Randy Rodríguez and Robert Suárez – in consecutive games. That homer of Rodríguez also came in the midst of the first four-hit game of Mauricio’s career where he fell just one base short of a cycle.

Again, we’ve already seen some significant peaks and valleys in his production. It’s still translated to something like a 25-homer, 12-steal pace over a full season with a .250 batting average and 119 wRC+. If he can smooth out those cold streaks, there’s a quiet stud here waiting in the wings.

Ironically, Mauricio playing closer to his peak more consistently may come at the expense of some playing time. While being a free-swinging switch-hitter, he’s much more in control as a lefty than righty.

Handedness
PA
Chase Rate
Whiff Rate
xwOBA
As L
96
34.4%
30.1%
.358
As R
30
50.0%
32.8%
.215

The Mets have faced a rash of left-handed starters recently and Mauricio has only started against two of the last eight, ignoring a couple bullpen games started by left-handed relievers. On the flip side, he’s started against nine of the last 10 righties they’ve seen.

The last variable here is Mark Vientos’ status. His name has swirled in trade rumors all week as the Mets seem willing to use him as a chip to clear their glut of young infielders while adding talent to their major league team. If he moves, there isn’t another player to take those reps against lefty pitchers.

Complications aside, Mauricio has unbelievable potential and is on the strong-side of a platoon in a great offense with the possibility for more – albeit less valuable playing time – through the rest of the season.

If no bullpen help is added by deadline, Thomson believes Phillies will be fine

If no bullpen help is added by deadline, Thomson believes Phillies will be fine originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CHICAGO – To say there have been some surprises out of the Phillies pitching staff this year would probably fall under the category of understatement. Starter Cristopher Sánchez was expected to be good, but probably not this good, as he’s been one of the premier pitchers in the National League for most of the year.

José Alvarado got an 80-game suspension for testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance. Mick Abel didn’t allow an earned run in his first two starts in the big leagues that encompassed 11.1 innings. Aaron Nola, who had 32 or more starts in six of the last seven seasons, has just nine so far this year due to a couple of injuries. Taijuan Walker has been shuffled from starting to relieving to starting again and has done a pretty good job of it after a forgettable 2024 campaign.

The biggest surprises, however, may be happening now and it may certainly affect what the Phillies do before Thursday’s trade deadline. Since May 9, the bullpen foursome of Matt Strahm, Orion Kerkering, Tanner Banks and Max Lazar have combined for a 2.53 ERA while striking out 101 and walking only 30 in 106.2 innings going into Tuesday’s game against the Chicago White Sox.

The need for a back of the bullpen arm is still a major talking point when it comes to the Phillies and reaching the trade deadline, but maybe, just maybe, they’ll be all right if a move isn’t made?

“I’m comfortable with it,” said Rob Thomson of his bullpen if there are not deadline additions. “You have (David) Robertson coming. You’ve got to get in (to the playoffs), but if you get in then you have one or two of those starters that can go to your pen. We do have some depth.”

So much depends on a variety of factors. Robertson, the 40-year-old lefty reliever signed by the team last week, is trying to get into the form that has made him such a good reliever through the years, including two other stints with the Phillies. Nola is going to pitch Thursday in Lehigh and may be only a few more rehab starts away from returning. Then you have to wonder if Banks can keep up his terrific work as he’s already pitched the second most game of his four-year career, and if Lazar, with all of 32 games of experience, can continue to be counted on.

“I think he does what we want (Jesús) Luzardo to do, he goes out there and he attacks,” said Thomson of Lazar, who hasn’t allowed any of his 13 inherited runners to score. “I think he has a really slow heartbeat. He’s been really good in those situations. Curve ball is good for lefties. He pitches more south. He can carry a fastball more up in the zone and tunnel it with a breaking ball down. He’s tough to hit.  Especially since last year. He’s 95, 96. He was a little bit more in spring training, too. “

Loaded Lehigh Valley:

If you miss seeing the Phillies before they return home to play the Detroit Tigers on Friday, you may want to head a bit north. The Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs are going to throw some interesting starters out over the next few games, according to Thomson. Andrew Painter will start the game on Wednesday with Aaron Nola going on Thursday and Mick Able on Friday.

If all goes well for Nola, he would probably make about three starts in Lehigh before making his way back up to the big club.

Alec Bohm progressing

Thomson said that injured third baseman Alec Bohm, out with a fractured rib since July 18, took some swings off a tee and did some throwing as he works his way back. As for a timeline of when he may be back, Thomson wasn’t sure.

“Little bit difficult to tell,” he said. “Then maybe some toss then graduate to cage BP and then you graduate to field BP and then live at-bats.”

Rangers Set To Play Flyers In 2025 Rookie Series

Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers will play the Philadelphia Flyers in their 2025 Rookie Series. 

The two games will take place on Friday, Sept. 12 at 7:05 p.m. and Saturday, Sept. 13 at 5:05 p.m. at the PPL Center in Allentown, Pennsylvania. 

This marks the fifth consecutive year that the Rangers and Flyers will face off in the Rookie Series. 

These games are played during Rookie Camp and right before the start of training camp. 

Brennan Othmann’s Road To Making The Rangers' Opening-Night Roster Will Be Difficult, Yet Is Attainable Brennan Othmann’s Road To Making The Rangers' Opening-Night Roster Will Be Difficult, Yet Is Attainable Brennan Othmann’s road to making the New York Rangers’ opening-night roster won’t be easy. 

Last season at the Rookie Series, top Rangers prospects, including Adam Edström, Brennan Othmann, and Brett Berard all participated.

Regardless Of His New Contract Extension, Matt Rempe Is Not Guaranteed A Consistent Spot In The Rangers' Lineup

 Danny Wild-Imagn Images

Some might have assumed after Matt Rempe signed a two-year contract extension with the New York Rangers that he’s bound to be an everyday player in the lineup, but that may not be the case. 

The Rangers signed right winger Taylor Raddysh to a two-year contract, a move that went under the radar. 

Raddysh is a player who is more than capable of serving a consistent role for the Rangers as he played 80 games this past season for one of the most dominant teams in the NHL, the Washington Capitals.

While Rempe may provide more excitement for the fans, Raddysh is a bigger offensive threat and more reliable from a defensive standpoint. 

Jonny Brodzinski also has the capabilities to play right wing, and he’s shown how impactful he could be on any given night over the past two seasons with the Rangers. 

It’s clear from watching Rempe last year that he made crucial leaps in his overall game and improved significantly as a player.

Brennan Othmann’s Road To Making The Rangers' Opening-Night Roster Will Be Difficult, Yet Is Attainable Brennan Othmann’s Road To Making The Rangers' Opening-Night Roster Will Be Difficult, Yet Is Attainable Brennan Othmann’s road to making the New York Rangers’ opening-night roster won’t be easy. 

However, it’s yet to be seen if Rempe can be an every-game kind of player. 

What we’ll likely see is Rangers head coach Mike Sullivan pick and choose when the best times are to play Rempe, similar to what we’ve been accustomed to since his arrival during the 2023-24 season.

Mets have discussed multiple names in possible Luis Robert Jr. trade, have competition from Phillies: report

With the MLB trade deadline just over 48 hours away, the Mets are discussing a potential trade with the White Sox that would bring Luis Robert Jr. to Queens. But they could be facing stiff competition.

In addition to the Mets, the Phillies and Padres are also interested in Robert, reports Buster Olney of ESPN.

Olney also noted that the White Sox "are resolute in the stance that they'll either receive a trade return equivalent of what Robert's potential is or hang onto him beyond the deadline."

Mark Vientosand Luisangel Acuña are "among the names that have come up" between the Mets and White Sox, per Olney.

SNY's Andy Martino reported on Monday that the Mets were discussing Vientos in trade talks.

The Mets are currently using Tyrone Taylor and Jeff McNeil in center field, which is less than ideal given Taylor's offensive struggles and McNeil being out of position.

President of baseball operations David Stearns hedged a bit recently when asked about upgrading center field. But he explained that the team would be open to it if the player they acquired passed a certain "bar" for them.

Whether Chicago is bluffing or not when it comes to the return they're seeking for Robert remains to be seen, but it's hard to picture any team paying top dollar in terms of major league talent and/or position players in order to acquire a player who has struggled badly at the plate over the last two seasons, posting a combined OPS+ of 83.

What complicates matters is that while Robert can be a free agent after the season, his contract contains a pair of club options -- worth $20 million each for 2026 and 2027.

That means the Sox could theoretically keep him and pick up his option if he excels down the stretch. It also means an acquiring team isn't taking on much risk, but could reap a serious reward if Robert snaps back into being the player he was as recently as 2023, when he smashed 38 homers and had an .857 OPS.

Still just 27 years old, Robert's potential is immense. And while his offensive ceiling is the most tantalizing part of his game, he's also an elite defensive center fielder.

Giants' struggles since Rafael Devers trade shown by eye-popping stats

Giants' struggles since Rafael Devers trade shown by eye-popping stats originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Rafael Devers trade was supposed to give the Giants a big boost toward a postseason berth.

It’s safe to say things haven’t gone according to plan.

Since acquiring Devers on June 15 in a deal with the Boston Red Sox, San Francisco owns the worst record in baseball at 13-22. 

Dreams of the franchise’s first playoff appearance since 2021 have faded accordingly, with the Giants currently sitting eight games back in the National League West and four games back of the final NL Wild Card spot.

Injuries and inconsistency in the starting rotation have contributed to the downturn, but the main culprit is a lackluster offense. Despite the addition of Devers–considered one of the preeminent hitters in the game–the Giants have scored only 132 runs since the trade, tied for the fewest in baseball over that span. (h/t The Athletic’s Alden Gonzalez)

While Devers’ bat has come around recently, posting an .868 OPS over his last 10 games, his overall production hasn’t reached the level most expected when Giants president of baseball operations Buster Posey brought the 28-year-old slugger to San Francisco. In 35 games with the Giants, Devers is batting .231 with just four home runs and 15 RBI.

Meanwhile, the Red Sox, who received pitchers Kyle Harrison and Jordan Hicks in exchange for Devers, have vaulted into the third and final American League Wild Card spot by going 20-15 since the deal. It’s tied for the fourth-best record in baseball over that span.

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Rays trade for Marlins catcher Nick Fortes a day after sending another catcher to the Brewers

TAMPA, Fla. — Tampa Bay traded for Miami catcher Nick Fortes after the Rays sent veteran catcher Danny Jansen to Milwaukee in another deal as the trade deadline approaches.

The Marlins acquired minor league outfielder Matthew Etzel, who was traded for the second year in a row. Tampa Bay got minor league infielder Jadher Areinamo in the trade with the Brewers.

The 28-year-old Fortes hit .240 with two home runs and 10 RBIs in 59 games for the Marlins. He hit .300 over his final 29 games with Miami.

Fortes is a .225 hitter over a career spent entirely with the Marlins, who took him in the fourth round of the 2018 amateur draft. He has 25 homers and 96 RBIs in 363 games.

Etzel has been on the injured list since June 22. He hit .230 with five homers and 34 RBIs in 56 games with Double-A Montgomery. The Rays acquired him from Baltimore last summer in a trade that sent Zach Eflin to the Orioles.

Brewers hitting coach Al LeBoeuf returns to team after cancer surgery

MILWAUKEE — Milwaukee Brewers hitting coach Al LeBoeuf returned to the team after leaving to have surgery for prostate cancer.

LeBoeuf is coaching in the majors for the first time this year. The Brewers named him lead hitting coach last October after he’d worked as a hitting coach in Triple-A the previous six seasons.

“We’re happy he’s back,” manager Pat Murphy said. “Any time anybody goes through something like that, it’s difficult. We kept in good contact and he was eager to be back and be part of it.”

The Brewers have three hitting coaches on staff: LeBoeuf, Connor Dawson and Eric Theisen.

LeBoeuf, 65, is in his 16th season in the Brewers’ organization with many Milwaukee hitters having long ties with him that began as they worked their way through the minors, including leadoff hitter Sal Frelick.

“We love Buffy so much. I’ve been with him for the past four or five years now,” said Frelick, who was one of three Brewers players to hit home runs in an 8-4 win over the Chicago Cubs. “It was really tough losing him for a little bit. Everyone said their prayers and luckily he was able to have a good procedure and he’s healing up quick. So happy to have him back.”

Rays trade catcher Danny Jansen to his hometown Brewers for minor league infielder

NEW YORK — Veteran catcher Danny Jansen was traded by the Tampa Bay Rays to his hometown Milwaukee Brewers for minor league infielder Jadher Areinamo.

Jansen was in Tampa Bay’s original lineup against the New York Yankees but got pulled about 45 minutes before the first pitch. The trade was announced shortly after the Rays ended a four-game losing streak with a 4-2 win at Yankee Stadium.

Jansen said he found out about the deal after meeting with manager Kevin Cash and president of baseball operations Erik Neander.

“I was getting ready to play the game, and I understand that side of baseball,” said Jansen, in his eighth major league season. “Just grateful for the time spent here with the guys.”

Tampa Bay signed Jansen to a one-year, $8.5 million contract on Dec. 13. He batted .204 with 11 homers and 29 RBIs in 73 games for the Rays, who also sent cash to the Brewers as part of the deal.

“He’s a leader. He’s a hitter. He’s been in big games. I’ve gotten great reports,” Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy said after his team’s 8-4 victory at home over the Chicago Cubs.

Brewers catcher Eric Haase was designated for assignment to clear a roster spot for Jansen.

“It’s a hard day for the Brewers in some ways because Eric Haase for two years has been an incredible team member. When he plays, he helps us win. Anytime we subtract a guy who’s been a leader in that clubhouse, too, it’s a really tough day,” Murphy said. “I don’t know Danny Jansen. I know his reputation. I know he’s a great player. And I trust our front office. I just do. They’re trying to make upgrades in every little area they can.”

The 30-year-old Jansen grew up in Appleton, Wisconsin. He is joining the NL Central leaders to serve as a backup to William Contreras, who is playing through a fractured finger. Contreras is hitting .245 with six homers and 42 RBIs in 100 games.

“I don’t live too far,” Jansen said. “That’s going to be something that my wife and I had never experienced.”

Jansen was moved right around the MLB trade deadline for the second straight season.

Toronto dealt him to Boston on July 24, 2024, and he wound up making baseball history by playing for both teams in a game at Fenway Park that got suspended June 26 and resumed two months later.

“Having gone through a trade last year will probably make this process a little bit easier for me, going into a team as a catcher learning pitchers and all that,” Jansen said. “So, looking forward to the challenge and task at hand with that. I think having a little bit of experience helps.”

Areinamo, 21, was batting .297 with 11 homers, 51 RBIs and 15 stolen bases in 94 games for Class A Wisconsin of the Midwest League. He has started at third base, shortstop and second base.

Last season, Areinamo hit .301 with 30 doubles in 110 games for Wisconsin and won the Midwest League batting crown. He was rated the No. 10 prospect in Milwaukee’s system by Baseball America and No. 24 by MLB.com.

The Rays are 8-18 in their last 26 games following a 25-9 stretch from May 20 to June 26. Tampa Bay is 2 1/2 games back of the final wild-card spot in the American League.