Brewers sign veteran pitcher Erick Fedde and place All-Star closer Trevor Megill on injured list

MILWAUKEE — Right-hander Erick Fedde joined his third organization this season when he signed with the Milwaukee Brewers, who also placed All-Star closer Trevor Megill on the 15-day injured list on Wednesday with a right flexor strain.

Fedde was activated in time to be available for the Brewers’ home game against Arizona. Fedde signed with the NL Central leaders three days after he was released by the Atlanta Braves.

The 32-year-old Fedde was 1-2 with an 8.10 ERA in five games with Atlanta after going 3-10 with a 5.22 ERA in 20 starts with the St. Louis Cardinals, who designated him for assignment last month.

The Brewers need healthy arms to eat innings in the midst of an 18-day stretch in which they’re playing 19 games.

“Great pickup, I think, for the situation we’re in,” Brewers manager Pat Murphy said.

Murphy also said Quinn Priester, who had been scheduled to start Wednesday's game, was pushed back to Friday due to a wrist issue. Aaron Ashby is expected to work as an opener on Wednesday, with Fedde entering the game later.

Megill, 31, is 5-3 with a 2.54 ERA and 30 saves in 44 appearances while striking out 58 batters over 46 innings. He has blown three of his last four save opportunities.

He underwent imaging that revealed the flexor strain after throwing 34 pitches Sunday in a 4-3 loss to the San Francisco Giants. Megill said it's only a mild strain.

“Nothing too serious,” Megill said. “No damage to the ligament or anything. I've just kind of been grinding through it for the last week. ... Just taking a step back and get this right for the postseason.”

Murphy said Abner Uribe will get the first shot at save opportunities in Megill's absence. Uribe is 2-1 with three saves and a 1.71 ERA in 63 appearances. He has 78 strikeouts over 63 1/3 innings.

The Brewers also transferred right-hander Logan Henderson to the 60-day injured list.

Mets' Francisco Alvarez exits first Triple-A rehab game after getting hit by pitch

In his first game of a rehab assignment with Triple-A after suffering a right thumb sprain against the Seattle Mariners on Aug. 17, Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez had to leave in the top of the sixth inning after getting drilled on the left hand.

Already 1-for-2 in the game after a double in the first inning against Sean Boyle, Alvarez was plunked on the left hand by the right-hander on a 89 mph sinker that ran in on him. Clearly in pain after getting hit, Alvarez took his time getting to first base and was met by trainers who took a look at him.

After checking on his hand, Syracuse decided to remove the 23-year-old for a pinch-runner.

Beginning the season on the IL with a wrist injury, Alvarez has dealt with a lot of hand injuries in his career. The right thumb sprain he was rehabbing resulted from sliding head-first into second base, although he has been hit by numerous pitches and gets banged up behind the plate, as well.

After the Mets' 6-0 win against the Phillies on Wednesday, manager Carlos Mendoza was asked if he had an update on Alvarez. The Mets skipper said he hadn't heard anything yet, but he's getting "checked out." Mendoza did confirm that the backstop was hit in the pinky of his left hand.

Yankees at White Sox: 5 things to watch and series predictions | Aug. 28-31

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Yankees hit the road to take on the White Sox in a four-game series starting on Thursday...


Preview

Can Anthony Volpe get a hit?

Volpe is in a major slump, worse than he's experienced in his short career so far. 

Entering Thursday's series opener, Volpe is 1-for-37 with 14 strikeouts in his last 11 games. In the Yankees' 11-2 pounding of the Nationals on Wednesday, Volpe went 0-for-5 with two strikeouts and was the only starter to not get a hit. 

The Yankees tried to give Volpe a breather and reset with two games off earlier in the week, but at this point, the team is going to try and push through and see if Volpe gets out of his slump by playing. 

On the other side of it, is the shortstop set up for another day off? Jose Caballero was the starting shortstop when Volpe was benched, so it'll be interesting to see how manager Aaron Boone writes up his lineups during this series. 

How much will Giancarlo Stanton play?

As Aaron Judge continues to work his way back to playing in the outfield, Boone has to decide whether to play Stanton in right field in his captain's stead. 

The Yankees need Stanton in the lineup as much as possible. Over his last 30 games, Stanton is slashing .362/.429/.819 with 13 home runs and 32 RBI. Over his last seven games, Stanton launched five long balls and hit .421. Stanton played the outfield in two of the three games at Yankee Stadium against the Nationals, but the last time the Yankees were on the road (and not at George M. Steinbrenner Field), Stanton sat out all three games against the Cardinals in St. Louis. 

Cam Schlittler, Will Warren trying out to be Game 3 starter

If the Yankees make the postseason, Max Fried and Carlos Rodon will pitch the first two games of any series they are in. But who will start Game 3?

Aug 20, 2025; St. Petersburg, Florida, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Cam Schlittler (31) throws a pitch in the first inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at George M. Steinbrenner Field.
Aug 20, 2025; St. Petersburg, Florida, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Cam Schlittler (31) throws a pitch in the first inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at George M. Steinbrenner Field. / Jonathan Dyer-Imagn Images

Warren is set to start Thursday's series opener and will hope to bounce back from his rough outing against the Red Sox. In his four prior starts, Warren had allowed only four runs across 22.1 innings pitched. The 26-year-old is having a solid season for the Yanks. In 27 starts, he's pitched to a 4.47 ERA with 146 strikeouts across 131 innings pitched.

For the rookie Schlittler, he has the tougher matchup, going up against All-Star Shane Smith on Saturday. In only eight starts, the 24-year-old is pitching to a 2.76 ERA with 46 strikeouts across 42.1 innings pitched. But Schlittler has really started to blossom his last few times on the mound.

In his last two starts (Rays, Nationals), Schlittler has pitched 12.2 scoreless innings while allowing just five hits and striking out 16 batters. If Schlittler repeats that performance on the road against the White Sox, his name will be in serious consideration to pitch behind Fried and Rodon in October.

Is Aaron Judge back?

Judge is still trying to go on a tear like he did pre-injury, but Wednesday's performance may be the start of it. Against the Nationals, Judge went 2-for-4 with a home run in the Yankees' win. It's been tough sledding for the reigning AL MVP. Prior to the series finale against Washington, Judge was 2-for-17 in his previous five games. A series against the lowly White Sox could be what he needs to go on a run.

Taking care of business

The Yankees are one of the best teams in MLB against under-.500 teams and the White Sox come into the four-game set with the second-worst record in baseball.

Like how they did sweeping the Nationals this week, the Yankees need to take care of business and win the series in Chicago. It's hard to sweep a four-game set no matter who you're facing, but the Yankees should take three games from the White Sox. Doing so will continue to solidify their spot in the postseason and perhaps even help them bridge the gap with the Blue Jays and Red Sox.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Aaron Judge 

Judge seemed very comfortable at the plate on Wednesday and should be the start of a great run for him.

Which Yankees pitcher will have the best start?

Carlos Rodon

Rodon has been the most consistent pitcher for the Yankees and going up against the White Sox, his former team, will continue that streak.

Which White Sox player will be a thorn in the Yankees' side?

Colson Montgomery

The rookie shortstop is dealing with a left side injury that sidelined him on Wednesday, but his MRI came back clean, so he should be back in the lineup sooner rather than later.

Phillies get swept by Mets as lead in NL East shrinks to four

Phillies get swept by Mets as lead in NL East shrinks to four originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — The flight patterns for planes landing at nearby La Guardia Airport had them going directly behind Citi Field during much of the game between the Phillies and Mets. The patterns were a little more varied when it came to the Mets hitting Wednesday, as they flew the baseball all over the field in a lopsided 6-0 win.

It was the 10th straight loss against the Mets on their home field for the Phillies, who got swept in the three-game series and now have just a four-game lead in the National League East.

When things are going the way they are for the Mets at home in this rivalry, everything just seems to go a little better. Extra bases are taken without much thought, spectacular fielding plays seem to be the norm and driving in runs when they are out there to be had is expected.

New York did all of that in the three-game series and has climbed itself right back into the divisional race.

“We’ve got a series tomorrow and we’ve got to be able to turn the page and go out there and play the Braves,” Kyle Schwarber said. “I’m sure there’s going to be a lot of people that are going to be thinking about the series, whatever it is, try to do different. But when we show up tomorrow, it’s a new day. We’ve got to be able to walk out of the clubhouse and expect to win the game.

“I don’t think we’re focused on that (the Mets getting back into the race). I think we’re focused on ourselves. It’s about us, us as a team, we’ve got to get back. We have another important series in front of us. Moving forward, we still have another series against these guys. We’re not looking to that, we’re looking to the series ahead. Things happen.”

If the Phillies were itching to get away from the area, the stadium, the other team, their offense sure played like they wanted to climb on the bus and head south as soon as possible. Rookie Nolan McLean, making just his third start in the majors, stymied them during his eight innings as he allowed just four hits, two coming in his final inning of work, walked none and struck out six.

The Mets strung together five straight hits in the third inning off starter Taijuan Walker. Brett Baty started it off with a double to left-center, followed by a bunt single from catcher Hayden Senger that just got past a charging Walker. Francisco Lindor, Juan Soto and Pete Alonso each followed with RBI singles and the familiar beatdown was on.

Walker was out after a fifth inning in which he gave up three hits, a walk and allowed the Mets’ fourth run of the night. In all, he allowed 10 hits and four earned runs.

“I feel like I made some good pitches,” Walker said. “They had a really good approach today. I feel like when I had two strikes, they really battled me, got to deep counts and put the ball in play and found holes. Just one of those series for us. We hit some balls hard, they were just in the right spot and the rest just didn’t go our way.”

McLean has now pitched 20 1/3 innings in his three starts and has given up only two earned runs and 10 hits while striking out 21. He’s also won all three games. So fooled did he have Phillies hitters that twice bats went flying out of hitters’ hands on swings and misses.

“He was as advertised,” Rob Thomson said. “Good sinker, good four-seam fastball and he can spin it. I don’t think we were pressing as much as it is not seeing him before. There are times that I think that guys try to do too much. I kind of chalk it up to not seeing him.”

Added Walker on the rookie: “He’s good. He’s got good stuff. Six pitches. I feel like you have young guys that have one or two pitches, maybe three. But he has a good six-pitch mix and I think that’s going to be key for him moving forward.”

The talk among Thomson and players during the series was often to debunk the idea that there is something more going on when the Phillies visit than just the Mets playing better baseball, that there may be some mental side of the competition that is leaning very heavily in the Mets’ favor. Understandably, manager and players must believe that. But to Phillies fans and observers, it certainly seems to be there for now.

The top of the Mets’ lineup destroyed the Phillies as the first five batters in the order went 9 for 19 with four runs scored and all six RBI. Mark Vientos had a pair of hits, including a two-run home run in the seventh inning. It was the third baseman’s sixth home run in his last 10 games. Brandon Nimmo had three of the Mets’ 12 hits on the night.

Perhaps results will be better for the Phillies when the Mets visit Philadelphia for four games in less than two weeks. What the standings will look like then is anybody’s guess after these three games.

“We’ve got an experienced group, I don’t think it does much,” Thomson said of the team’s confidence moving forward. “We know that we need to play better. It’s one of those series. We just need to flush it and move on. It’s one series and I know it’s against the Mets, but admittedly so, we need to play better. We will. We’ve got a good club and that’s not going to change.

“I think there’s disappointment, but again they’re experienced players. I don’t think they get too high or too low. They just keep moving on and that’s what you’ve got to do in this situation. The first game I didn’t think we played well, but the last two I think we battled. The kid today was good.”

The Phillies for three games were not and now the fun really begins with 29 games remaining.

Rangers Ranked 24th In NHL Prospect Pipeline Rankings

Eric Canha-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers have the 24th-best prospect pool according to The Athletic’s prospect pipeline rankings. 

Corey Pronman of The Athletic listed Malcolm Spence, Brennan Othmann, E.J. Emery, Gabe Perreault, Carey Terrance, Noah Laba, and Scott Morrow as the Rangers’ top prospects. 

In last year’s prospect pipeline list, the Rangers ranked as the 15th best team, as the Blueshirts saw a slight drop off. 

The only teams ranked behind the Rangers in this list are the Winnipeg Jets, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators, Tampa Bay Lightning, Florida Panthers, Vegas Golden Knights, Edmonton Oilers, and Colorado Avalanche. 

The Rangers’ opening-night roster may consist of a number of young players, including Othmann, Perreault, Morrow, and Brett Berard.

Rafael Devers' huge night, bizarre Matt Chapman play spark another Giants' win

Rafael Devers' huge night, bizarre Matt Chapman play spark another Giants' win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — Matt Chapman stood on second base and smiled as a ballpark tried to digest a game-altering throw that had hit his helmet and skipped more than 100 feet to the backstop. He held one finger in the air as 30,000 fans alternated cheers and laughter. The grin on his face said it all, but if anything was actually said on the field or in the Giants dugout, the veteran wasn’t going to let it slip.

“I can’t remember,” he said later, smiling. “Maybe I’m concussed.”

When you’re going right, you’re going right, and the Giants finally feel headed back in that direction. They have played solid baseball for five straight games now, winning four of them, and the breaks once again are backing their efforts. 

There were a few of them Wednesday, none bigger than a throw from right field that bounced off Chapman’s helmet as he stood on first base and allowed another two-out run to score in the three-run fifth. When Casey Schmitt followed with a single, Chapman cruised home from second. The Giants kept pouring it on from there, beating the Chicago Cubs 12-3

Chapman — who was fine, by the way — was part of the strangest play, but most of the damage came from another man who has played plenty of third base in the big leagues. Rafael Devers homered twice and also had a double, single and walk. He drove in five runs, showing exactly why president of baseball operations Buster Posey jumped the line in June to bring him to San Francisco. 

“This is the guy that everybody is accustomed to seeing,” Chapman said. “It’s not easy to get traded and come in and instantly be yourself. [We’re] seeing him get more comfortable … when he feels good, he’s that dangerous.”

The Giants are a ways away from being officially eliminated from the MLB playoff race, and Chapman reiterated several times Wednesday that the focus is simply “on tomorrow.” But when the attention does fully turn to 2026, the Giants will be reminded that this summer wasn’t a total loss. 

Devers, their big acquisition, is sneaking up on 30 total homers. His 26th went out to dead center at Oracle Park and his 27th was an opposite-field shot, his specialty. When he’s comfortable at the plate, he’s ballpark-proof, the type of player the Giants have sought for years. On Wednesday, Devers became just the third Giant since 2015 to have at least three hits leave the bat at 106 mph or above. 

“He hit it everywhere today,” manager Bob Melvin said. “We know he’s capable of having games like that.”

The same could have been said of the Giants the past two months. They knew this was in them somewhere, but they couldn’t summon a stretch like this until they already were in a deep hole. With 29 games to go, they remain seven games out of a playoff spot. 

Barring a miracle, they’ll look up in the offseason and wonder where this was against the Pittsburgh Pirates right before the trade deadline, or the Washington Nationals, San Diego Padres and Tampa Bay Rays right after. 

But that’s something they don’t want to think about at the moment. For the first time in a long time, they’re having fun. They’re scoring in traditional ways and in hilarious ways. 

“I don’t know if you get an RBI for hitting one off your head,” Chapman said as the victory soundtrack played in the background. “Hopefully …”

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Ceddanne Rafaela makes up for rare defensive gaffes with game-winning home run

Ceddanne Rafaela makes up for rare defensive gaffes with game-winning home run originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Ask anybody involved with the Red Sox in any way whom they believe to be the best center fielder in baseball, and they won’t hesitate. It’s Ceddanne Rafaela.

It was downright shocking, then, to see Rafaela make not one but two defensive gaffes on Wednesday night in Baltimore. Both were costly, too, as Rafaela dropped a ball while diving to allow a run to score in the bottom of the second and later didn’t take charge as a fly ball fell directly between him and left fielder Jarren Duran in the seventh, allowing another run to score.

Both plays should have resulted in third outs, but they instead accounted for the entirety of Baltimore’s offense on a night when Brayan Bello was dealing.

It was uncharacteristic, to say the least, and it put the Red Sox in position to lose a game they should have won.

Yet baseball has a funny way of creating opportunities for those who need them. And in the top of the ninth, Rafaela got his.

With Duran — who did bear some responsibility for the fallen fly ball — reaching base on a leadoff single, Rafaela stepped to the plate as the go-ahead run in the final frame. After taking the first two pitches from Keegan Akin, Rafaela got an off-speed pitch over the heart of the plate and unleashed on the offering.

The re-modified dimensions of Camden Yards helped out, and by the time the ball came down, Rafaela was casually jogging around first base, having known right off the bat that he had given his team a 3-2 lead.

The home run was Rafaela’s 15th of the season but his first since July 13, and only his second after hitting a walk-off home run against the Rays on July 11.

From there, Aroldis Chapman — in the midst of the best season of his life — shut down the Orioles in a 1-2-3 inning with three strikeouts to secure the victory.

For the Red Sox, the victory secured a second consecutive four-game series win, after they took the first three in the Bronx over the weekend. They’ll have the chance to make this one a four-game sweep on Thursday afternoon.

For Rafaela, it might have meant a little more. He had cost his team a shutout, but he managed to make sure the unexpected miscues didn’t hurt in the standings.

MLB's newest trophy is a guitar. Obviously, Eddie Vedder had to give it a test drive

Pearl Jam's Eddier Vedder waves at fans during a Seattle Mariners game.
The Vedder Cup — which goes to the winner of the Seattle Mariners-San Diego Padres MLB season series — is a custom Fender Telecaster designed with rocker Eddie Vedder, who appeared at T-Mobile Park before the game Monday. (Lindsey Wasson / Associated Press)

Before MLB’s newest trophy was offered up as the prize in a competition between the Seattle Mariners and San Diego Padres, it had to pass through the hands of Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder.

The custom Fender Telecaster guitar, named the Vedder Cup, is said to have been played by its namesake for “about an hour” before it was shipped off to T-Mobile Park in Seattle.

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“He gave it a good run through,” George Webb, Pearl Jam's equipment manager, told the Seattle Times on Monday. “He always likes to feel like he puts a little energy, you know, spiritual energy, into an instrument. Not just hand off something that’s brand-new, never-touched kind of thing. So yeah, jammed on it for about an hour. Had a good time.”

The trophy features many nods from the 60-year-old musician, including a hand-drawn “cresting wave” illustration and an arrow and mod symbol — an allusion to Vedder’s tribute to the Who on his personal guitar. On the back, the Padres and Mariners logos appear alongside text hand-written by the singer and guitarist: “The Vedder Cup Established 2025 by Major League Baseball.”

A Seattle Mariners baseball player lifts a white guitar with black accents up in the air in a stadium
The Vedder Cup, a guitar shown off Monday by Cal Raleigh of the Seattle Mariners, will go each year to the winner of the full-season series between the Mariners and the San Diego Padres. (Lindsey Wasson / Associated Press)

It also contains a logo from EB Research Partnership, a nonprofit co-founded by Vedder and his wife, Jill, after a childhood friend's son was born with the painful skin condition epidermolysis bullosa. The nonprofit funds research on the disease.

Read more:Seattle's Cal Raleigh becomes first catcher to win MLB All-Star Home Run Derby

The cup is intended to bring “meaningful awareness” to the rare disorder, Mariners Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Trevor Gooby said in a statement in March, when the longtime rivalry became official.

“We can't wait to see this rivalry series grow and look forward to battling the Mariners for the Vedder Cup,” Padres Chief Executive Erik Greupner added.

The rivalry, such as it is, arose from forces both real and manufactured, apparently. Vedder has strong ties to both cities, having grown up in San Diego, then moved to Seattle to start Pearl Jam with Stone Gossard and Jeff Ament — hence, the "Vedder" Cup.

Also, upon the introduction of interleague play in the late ’90s, MLB looked for "natural" rivalries between teams like the Padres and Mariners. This year, the league canonized the rivalry, which is said to have begun as geographic, given both teams' West Coast homes, Reuters reports.

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The two teams have met almost annually since 1997. In the informal all-time series, Seattle currently leads 68-63. Additionally, they share a training complex in Peoria, Ariz.

Some fans are still left with questions as to why the competition has turned official, with one claiming on Reddit that "padres and mariners fans literally give no s— about each other."

Still, they conceded it is "likely the most meaningless and yet kinda fun thing in MLB."

The trophy was in the spotlight Monday when the teams met for the fourth time this season. The Mariners notched a 9-6 victory over the Padres, taking the season series after three previous wins in San Diego. The Padres beat the Mariners Tuesday, 7-6, and the final game is Wednesday, but the contest has already been decided. Cal Raleigh, the Mariners’ switch-hitting, homer-hammering catcher, known as "Big Dumper," hoisted and played the trophy in celebration Monday night.

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The name and logo for the cup were first shown off in March, but its final design wasn’t finished until the weeks leading up to the fixture.

“Typically on a custom build like this it will take us six months or so to source the wood, get everything mapped out ready to go and take our time to vet the process, apply the graphics, do some test runs,” Chase Paul, director of product development for Fender, told the Seattle Times. “On this we just kind of headed into it in parallel with testing and the production version at the same time, and kind of getting it ready to go.”

In all, it took Fender eight or nine weeks to get the work done, which Paul called a "really incredible effort by the team in the shop."

Naturally, Vedder doesn’t want the trophy guitar to sit on a shelf for the next year while it's in the Mariners’ possession. According to Webb, “He wants it to be played.”

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“That’s his attitude with everything. It’s a living, breathing instrument. It sounds great,” he added.

As an added bonus to fans, the league announced it would give away limited-edition Vedder Cup hats during the last 2025 game between the two on Wednesday.

To no surprise, the exclusive ticket package that included the hats has sold out.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

What we learned as Rafael Devers homers twice in Giants' blowout win vs. Cubs

What we learned as Rafael Devers homers twice in Giants' blowout win vs. Cubs originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — With two outs in the bottom of the fifth and the Giants nursing a one-run lead, Dominic Smith hit a single to center. Rafael Devers eased into third, and then looked around in confusion as the ball rolled around near the bag. 

Had Chicago Cubs rookie Matt Shaw fielded the throw cleanly, Devers might have been out because he slowed down as he approached the bag. Instead, he scored a few seconds later on Matt Chapman’s bloop single, and then turned and watched as Smith scored, too, after a throw from right field hit Chapman’s helmet and bounced all the way to the backstop.

It was the type of sequence that would have fit right in with games of April or May. Right now, everything once again is going right for the Giants, who crushed the Cubs 12-3 to clinch a second straight series against an NL Central team headed for the MLB playoffs. 

The Giants’ own postseason odds haven’t improved much in recent days since the New York Mets picked up steam at the exact same time. They completed a sweep of the Philadelphia Phillies earlier Wednesday, leaving the Giants seven out with 29 to play.

Stranger things have happened, but right now they’re happy to just be back on the right track. Their fourth straight win got them to 65-68, and they’ll go for a sweep Thursday behind ace Logan Webb. 

Devers Demolishes

Here’s how Rafael Devers’ night went: 106 mph homer, 107 mph double, walk, 106 mph homer, single. 

The first blast went to dead center and got the Giants on the board in the first inning, and the second one was a three-run shot to left in the sixth that got them to double-digits. With the two-homer night, Devers reached 27 homers on the season. 

Devers won’t really break the long-running 30-homer drought since most of that damage happened with the Boston Red Sox, but he certainly looks capable of doing it next year. When he’s right, Devers is the kind of hitter who can make even Oracle Park feel small. 

W for Whis

Willy Adames’ athletic double play got Carson Whisenhunt through the fifth and allowed him to pick up his second big league win. It wasn’t easy, but Whisenhunt twice got double plays with the bases loaded. 

Whisenhunt gave up five hits, walked three and hit one, but allowed just three earned over those five innings. The Giants are watching everything he does right now, and that includes dealing with adversity. Wednesday wasn’t the cleanest night, but Whisenhunt found a way to limit the damage, which is a positive sign as he tries to lock up a long-term rotation spot

Double Trouble

Jung Hoo Lee caught a break in the fourth when left fielder Willi Castro misjudged his liner to left. It went for a double, his 30th of the year, and that put him in a small club.

Lee became the fifth San Francisco Giant to pick up 30 doubles and 10 triples in a single season, joining Willie Mays, Bobby Bonds, Garry Maddox and Angel Pagan. Lee is second in the National League in triples and now ranks eighth in doubles. 

While there have been some home runs, most notably in New York, peppering the gaps is what the Giants expected when Lee signed a long-term contract. He had just four doubles and no triples as a rookie, but he has found his stride in the second half of his sophomore season. Lee has now picked up a hit in 21 of 23 games this month. 

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The unique quirks, oddities and head-scratchers of Red Sox' 2026 schedule

The unique quirks, oddities and head-scratchers of Red Sox' 2026 schedule originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The National Football League likes to make a spectacle out of its schedule release date, teasing the moment as must-see TV for months and generating enough hype to actually squeeze some ratings out of the ordeal.

Major League Baseball, meanwhile, just dumps the thing on a random weekday while the current season is still taking place.

It’s a decision. We can say that all right.

In any event, considering that schedule release came on the aforementioned random weekday, it’s possible you didn’t have time to lay out the calendar and analyze everything that made an eyebrow or two rise around Boston. Fortunately, we can fix that.

Opening Day in Cincinnati

In theory, having a historic franchise like the Red Sox open the season in Cincinnati, which marked the location of the first game of the MLB season for 100 years or so, is pretty cool. In actuality? It’s tough to get excited about a Red Sox-Reds game in March.

That season opener — on March 26! — kicks off a six-game road trip to start the season, with the Red Sox heading to Houston after Cincinnati.

(A bonus to this matchup is Terry Francona managing the Reds. Yet the novelty of the Red Sox facing Francona wore off some time during his 1 million games managing Cleveland.)

No Yankees in September

Do you love a good rivalry game in September, when a chill hits the air, the sun sets early, and everybody knows the game just mean a little bit more?

Well, too bad! No soup for you.

The Red Sox and Yankees will wrap up their season series the weekend of Aug. 28-30, leaving the final month without any potential playoff-implication matchups.

The final month of the season is devoid of most AL East competition, too, with only six of 24 games coming against divisional opponents (three in Baltimore, three in Tampa). The Red Sox’ final home series against an AL East opponent will take place July 24-26 against Toronto.

That’s all good for the sake of variety, but it could theoretically make it difficult for the Red Sox to gain ground if there’s a race for the division playing out over the final two months of the season.

Season finale vs. the Cubs

Interleague play has been around for almost 30 years. With pitchers no longer batting in the NL, and with interleague series taking place at all times, it’s become a very normal part of Major League Baseball.

Still. The Red Sox close out their regular season at home against the Cubs. Which means, by necessity, the Cubs are closing out their season on the road against the Red Sox.

It’s weird.

A Red Sox-Cubs series is always a big deal, with fans of both teams dishing out big bucks to make pilgrimages to both Wrigley Field and Fenway Park. They used to be very rare, but next year will mark the fifth straight season with a Cubs-Red Sox matchup.

The oversaturation and the fact that it could be a meaningless series for both teams drains quite a bit of juice out of this one.

Home opener against the Padres

Keeping it with the interleague-is-a-little-strange theme, the Red Sox will open Fenway Park on Friday, April 3, against the … San Diego Padres.

On the one hand, Red Sox fans will (most likely) get to finally say hello to Xander Bogaerts, who’s yet to return to Boston as a vistor.

On the other … there’s something discomforting about an interleague series opening the home slate for the Red Sox, even if it happens quite often. It happened this year, with St. Louis visiting Boston and getting swept by the Red Sox. It also happened in 2017, when the Red Sox swept the Pirates (one game got postponed, but the Red Sox later won that one, too), and in 2015, when the Red Sox took two out of three from the Nationals. But the Brewers swept the Red Sox in their first home series in 2014, so the results haven’t been perfect.

Either way, given the fact that it’s happened quite often, you’d think everybody would be used to an interleague series for the home opener by now. But … we’re not.

(By the way, after the Padres leave Boston, the Brewers will head to town, and then the Red Sox will visit St. Louis. The Red Sox may be honorary National League members in April.)

On the road for the Fourth of July

If you like catching a Red Sox game as the appetizer before your evening of Boston Pops and fireworks, you’ll have to readjust. The Red Sox are in Los Angeles to play the Angels on July 4, in the early part of a nine-game road trip ahead of the All-Star break.

After a series finale against the Nationals on July 1, Fenway won’t host a baseball game again until July 17. Sounds like Concert Season.

Raffy returns

The Rafael Devers trade was a bit messy. Its full impact won’t be judged for years. Yet the early indications are that somehow, the Red Sox have been better off without him, and the Giants are worse with him. That’s an odd early result for a three-time All-Star, two-time Silver Slugger in the prime of his career.

In any event, most fans stuck with Devers even as he refused to play first or third base after getting moved to DH this year. When he comes back as a visitor, will they cheer for the 2018 champion? Or will they boo him for the ugly and abrupt ending?

We’ll all find out together when the Giants visit Fenway Park from Aug. 21-23.

Unique visitors and potential road trips

For all of the complaining about interleague play, it’s still fun to occasionally see some jerseys inside Fenway Park that you don’t see too often. Likewise, when fans plan out potential road trips, variety is always a good thing.

Teams visiting Fenway that fit that bill:

  • San Diego (April 3-5)
  • Milwaukee (April 6-8)
  • Philadelphia (May 12-14)
  • Atlanta (May 26-28)
  • Washington (June 29-July 1)
  • Arizona (Aug. 17-19)
  • San Francisco (Aug. 21-23)
  • Chicago Cubs (Sept. 25-27)

And the potential NL road trips:

  • Cincinnati (March 26-29)
  • St. Louis (April 10-12)
  • Atlanta (May 15-17)
  • Colorado (June 22-24)
  • New York Mets (July 10-12)
  • Los Angeles Dodgers (July 31-Aug.2)
  • Pittsburgh (Aug. 14-16)
  • Miami (Aug. 24-26)

Scheduled double-header

You don’t see scheduled double-headers too often, but the Red Sox have one in Seattle on June 20.

There’s a hot dog-themed video about it all

The Red Sox announced some of their home series in a video starring hot dogs.

Some of the homages and references make more sense than others.

Yankees launch six homers, use nine-run third inning to rout Nationals and secure sweep

The Yankees tromped the Washington Nationals 11-2 on Wednesday afternoon in the Bronx. 

New York secured the three-game series sweep and has now won four in a row. 

Here are some takeaways...

- The Yankees took full advantage of this three-game set with the lowly Nationals pitching staff, getting their bats back into a groove. They outplayed them from beginning to end, putting up double-digit runs twice, including in Wednesday afternoon's blowout series finale. 

- Trent Grisham's leadoff homer set the tone in what ended up being a complete shellacking in the Bronx. Grisham turned on a third pitch fastball from Cade Cavalli and lifted it over the short porch to build on his new career-high of 26 long balls on the season.

- The biggest blow, though, came in a monster third inning that lasted a total of 45 minutes. Aaron Judge (two-run) and Cody Bellinger (solo) went back-to-back to get things started, Jasson Dominguez had a pair of run-scoring hits (double, single), Ryan McMahon lifted a three-run shot, and Ben Rice a solo blast.

Rice finished the day 3-for-4 with the homer and two singles, continuing his red hot month of August. 

Judge (41), Grisham (26), and Bellinger (25) are just the second Yankee outfield trio with 25+ HR in a season.

- Austin Wells got in on the fun as well, lifting New York's sixth home run of the game leading off the bottom of the fourth. While the other four were good to see as well, it was certainly encouraging for him and McMahon to be able to snap out of their funks at the plate. 

- After being handed the early cushion, Max Fried was able to build off his success from his last time out facing a familiar opponent. He was extremely efficient, retiring the first 11 Nationals hitters he faced before issuing a two out walk to Riley Adams in the top of the fourth.  

Fried worked around another walk in the fifth, before allowing his first hit of the game in the sixth. Three straight singles from Washington broke up the no-hitter and shutout, but the lefty escaped without further damage thanks to a strikeout and double play. 

Josh Bell lofted a two out single to right, but Fried struck out Brady House looking to end his day on a positive note and close his final line with just the one run allowed on four hits and two walks while punching out six. 

- Paul Blackburn put the finishing touches on this one, only giving up a double and solo homer over the final two innings.

- Anthony Volpe continues to struggle mightily at the plate. His well-struck lineout stranded the bases loaded in the bottom of the first. He then made two of the team's three outs in the nine-run third, lining out again with a man in scoring position, and later striking out with the bases loaded to end the inning.

The youngster grounded out to short in the fifth, and struck out swinging in the eighth to finish 0-for-4.

Volpe was the only Yankee who didn't reach base on the afternoon, stranding seven men. He is now an ugly 1-for-38 over his last 11 games, bring his average down to .204 on the season to go along with a .662 OPS. 

Game MVP: The third inning

I know, I know that isn't a player. 

This was a complete shellacking from the Yanks offense from top-to-bottom, and they put it away for good with the nine-run marathon frame. 

Highlights

What's next

The Yanks start a seven-game road trip with a meeting with the White Sox on Thursday at 7:40 p.m.

Will Warren (7-6, 4.47 ERA) will toe the rubber for the Bombers, and Chicago hasn't announced a starter. 

Mets are calling up their No. 4 prospect to make MLB debut on Friday

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - JULY 12: Jonah Tong #16 of the New York Mets throws a pitch in the second inning during the 2025 All-Star Futures Game at Truist Park on July 12, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
The Mets' Jonah Tong, delivering a pitch during the 2025 All-Star Futures Game, is scheduled to make his MLB debut on Friday against the Marlins. (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

The New York Mets are calling up pitcher Jonah Tong, their No. 4 prospect and No. 44 overall, who leads the minor leagues in strikeouts and earned-run average.

The 22-year-old right-hander will make a start Friday against the Miami Marlins, according to Mets manager Carlos Mendoza. Tong will join a team that finds itself in the middle of a playoff race. The Mets are behind the Philadelphia Phillies by 5 games in the National League East and hold a 3½ game lead for the last wild card spot.

“This went fast for Jonah,” Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns said during a news conference Tuesday. “But to his credit, he really conquered everything we put in front of him. He exceeded our expectations throughout this year, and he put himself in a position where he deserved to be considered for a day like this.”

The Mets’ seventh-round draft pick in 2022 opened the season in double-A Binghamton, where he made 20 starts. Tong struck out 162 batters and led the league with a 1.59 ERA when he was promoted to triple-A Syracuse in earlier this month.

Tong will make a start with the big league team after pitching 11.2 innings in Syracuse without giving up a run while striking out 17.

The Mets are in the middle of a season-long 16 games in a 16-day stretch and the front office wanted to have a sixth starter to give its starting pitchers an extra day of rest.

“He earned it, man. He earned it,” Mendoza told reporters. “I’m excited. We are all excited.”

Tong and the Mets will face Eury Pérez and the Marlins on Friday at 4:10 p.m. PDT at Citi Field.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Huascar Brazoban being replaced on Mets' active roster by Kevin Herget

Mets reliever Huascar Brazoban is dealing with a side/oblique issue that could require an IL stint, reports Joel Sherman of The New York Post.

With Brazoban's status unclear, reliever Kevin Herget was called up from Triple-A Syracuse ahead of Wednesday's game against the Phillies at Citi Field.

Brazoban has spent a chunk of the season in the minors, and his results at the big league level have been mixed.

He has a 3.91 ERA (4.12 FIP) and 1.32 WHIP in 43.0 innings across 46 appearances.

Brazoban struggled during his inning on Tuesday against the Phillies, allowing one run on three hits.

Herget has pitched 4.1 innings over two games for the Mets this season, allowing two runs (one earned) while walking none and striking out one.

More changes to outfield as Phillies try to end New York woes against Mets

More changes to outfield as Phillies try to end New York woes against Mets originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — Whatever this thing is that’s going on at Citi Field, causing the Phillies to lose nine in a row here to the Mets, manager Rob Thomson doesn’t really worry about it.

He doesn’t let negative thoughts enter his mind. Doesn’t think his team is doomed nor unable to compete with the Mets in their ballpark. He is more convincing than others when he states that, and before Wednesday’s series finale, he even had some evidence as to why he’s there.

“It’s tough but you’ve got to grind through it,” Thomson said. “I was looking at some of the Yankees’ stuff from when I was there. So, from ‘05 to ‘09, when we were in California against the Angels, we went 3-13. In ‘08 and ‘09, we were 0-6. Actually, we had lost eight in a row and we beat them in the ALCS. It’s one of those things. You’ve just got to fight through it.”

Maybe the Phillies have just the right person taking the mound in Game 3 against the Mets. Taijuan Walker had a couple of decent seasons for the Mets, so he’s used to their home field. More than that, though, he’s got the makeup that maybe a situation like this calls for, according to his manager.

“I’m happy for him, he put a lot of work in [last] offseason,” Thomson said of Walker. “Came in, velocity jumped up. Now it’s kind of settled in but it’s still more velocity than he had last year. The other stuff moves up just because of the velocity — the split, cutter’s been really good, the slider’s been really good.

“But I’m really happy for him because he went through some rough times last year and he’s fought through it. That’s the sign of a competitor, a grown man.

“It’s tough and he hasn’t complained, he’s done everything we’ve asked. He’s been a true professional while he’s doing it. I love him because you know that he’s going to prepare and you know nothing is going to scare him. He’s going to compete through thick and thin.”

Marsh sits

In the ever-changing world that is the outfield for the Phillies, Brandon Marsh was the odd-man out on Wednesday against the Mets’ right-handed rookie Nolan McLean.

“I’ve liked Casty’s (Nick Castellanos) at-bats the last couple of weeks,” Thomson said. “Marsh is in a little bit of a tailspin and (Harrison) Bader’s been hot, (Max) Kepler’s had good at-bats. Just give him the night. He’ll be back in there tomorrow.”

It’s another part of the continued platooning that has become the norm for Thomson. And changing things doesn’t seem to be in the plan anytime soon.

“A little bit of that (hot player), a little bit of history, a little bit of the pitcher’s stuff versus Casty hits velocity for the most part,” Thomson said. “So, it’s a combination of a lot of things, really. I’d like five guys hot. That’s what I’d like.”

In McLean, the Phillies are facing him for the first time. In his two games, he’s won both and allowed just six hits and two earned runs in 12 1/3 innings.

“He can really spin it,” Thomson said. “He’s got carry to his fastball. It’s heavy, he can spin it. For the most part he can throw strikes, but you still have to be patient with him. Yeah, he’s got good stuff. It’s tough because you can do all the film and all the machine work, you can set up his breaking ball to how it’s going to look in the game. But until you get out there, you really don’t know.”

Romano speaks

It was announced Tuesday that relief pitcher Jordan Romano was being placed on the injured list because of right middle finger inflammation. This came a day after he got tagged for four earned runs in an inning of work in a 13-3 loss Monday.

“This just popped up a few days ago,” Romano said. “It’s my middle finger. When I woke up (Monday) it was numb for a little bit, like four or five hours. We got it going, worked on it to where I felt comfortable throwing at least. Then after the game just feeling a little off a bit the next morning, too. Shut it down, run some tests on it, make sure everything’s good.”

Romano has struggled most of the season, posting an 8.23 ERA in 42 2/3 innings pitched this season. After three stellar seasons with Toronto, in which he made two All-Star teams, Romano made just 15 appearances last season and had arthroscopic surgery on his throwing elbow.

“My last pitch that inning was 97, so it’s kind of frustrating to me, too,” he said. “I know it’s in there. It could be a delivery thing, health thing. So, we’re just kind of running through it and then see how it goes throwing and hopefully be able to be consistent again.

“For sure more motivated to pitch. Just missing time absolutely sucks, I just wanted to be available, at least. Obviously, I wasn’t pitching well, but if there’s one thing I can do is at least be available. A little more motivation to pitch.”

What Justin Slaten's return could mean for dominant back end of Red Sox' bullpen

What Justin Slaten's return could mean for dominant back end of Red Sox' bullpen originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Justin Slaten is ready to pitch for the Boston Red Sox. As a result, the team may just have the best back end of any bullpen in the American League.

Of course, with closer Aroldis Chapman having the best season of his career, the most important part of that equation has been in place for the whole year. Yet with Garrett Whitlock turning a corner this summer (to the tune of a 0.87 ERA and 0.823 WHIP since June 29), an effective Slaten could give the Red Sox a 1-2-3 punch that will be relied upon to lock down the most important wins of the season.

That may be a lot to put on the (recovering) right arm of Slaten, but the 27-year-old has certainly displayed the stuff that would lead to such proclamations being made.

Slaten will be activated from the injured list on either Wednesday or Thursday in Baltimore, manager Alex Cora told reporters, according to The Boston Globe’s Tim Healey. Slaten spent all of June and July and most of August on the IL due to a nerve issue in his neck and shoulder. He made three rehab appearances with Triple-A Worcester, pitching three innings of relief while allowing just one unearned run on one hit and one walk while striking out five of the 12 batters he faced.

Prior to the injury, Slaten made 24 appearances out of the Boston bullpen this season. Though his 3.47 ERA was higher than his 2.93 ERA from his rookie season, he did have a 0.900 WHIP, having allowed 14 hits and seven walks in his 23.1 innings of work.

Provided Slaten pitches as well as he’s capable of pitching, his value should come through particularly on nights when Whitlock — or Chapman — is unavailable. Slaten, who’s gone more than one inning in 20 of his 68 career appearances, also can be the lone bridge from the starter to Whitlock when needed.

Chapman’s season, his first in Boston, has been well-chronicled. But the absurdity of his numbers has only grown as the season has gone on. He hasn’t allowed a hit or a run since July 23. He’s allowed one earned run since May 28. On Fangraphs, his 2.1 WAR is the second-highest for a reliever in all of baseball, just behind Adrian Morejon at 2.2. Baseball Savant has him in the 100th percentile for xERA and xBA, and in the 99th percentile for whiff rate and K rate.

At 37 years old, Chapman is maintaining a 1.07 ERA. His career-best ERA in any full season was 1.51, all the way back in 2012. He hasn’t posted an ERA under 2.00 since 2016.

Whitlock hasn’t been quite as dominant … but he’s been close. His 1.7 WAR on Fangraphs has him ranked eighth among MLB relievers this year. He’s allowed one earned run since July 6. After blowing four saves between April 30 and May 13, he’s blown zero, picking up 17 holds and a win since June.

Obviously, the eighth and the ninth innings are easy decisions for manager Alex Cora.

In the innings prior, though, Cora has turned to a variety of arms in late-and-close situations — Greg Weissert, Justin Wilson, Jordan Hicks, Brennan Bernardino and deadline addition Steven Matz chief among them — to varying degrees of success.

With the highest-stress games now coming in September and October, Slaten now figures to be Cora’s top option.