Reports: Athletics call up top prospects amid nine-game skid

Reports: Athletics call up top prospects amid nine-game skid originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Athletics are pulling all the tricks out of the bag in an effort to end their nine-game losing streak.

The A’s are calling up top prospect Denzel Clarke from Triple-A Las Vegas, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported Thursday night, citing sources. They also are calling up No. 30 prospect Logan Davidson, MLB.com’s Martin Gallegos reported Friday, citing a source.

Clarke, who just turned 25, is hitting .286/.436/.419 through 31 games with Las Vegas.

Passan added that “more moves could be coming” from the Athletics, who just suffered consecutive sweeps by the San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Angels and fell to 22-29 on the season.

Clarke, listed at 6-foot-4 and 220 pounds, already is viewed by the Athletics as a Gold Glove-caliber defender in centerfield (h/t Gallegos).

“From a defensive standpoint in center, he’s probably one of the better ones we have in the organization,” Athletics manager Mark Kotsay said of Clarke back in March. “He’s super talented out there.”

The Athletics now hope Clarke’s energetic spirit and crafty play both at the plate and on the field can help them turn things around.

Davidson was selected by the Athletics in the first round of the 2019 MLB Draft, and through 41 games with Las Vegas, he is hitting .303 with a .879 OPS.

Athletics execute major roster shakeup amid nine-game losing streak

Athletics execute major roster shakeup amid nine-game losing streak originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Athletics are pulling all the tricks out of the bag in an effort to end their nine-game losing streak.

The A’s are calling up top prospect and outfielder Denzel Clarke from Triple-A Las Vegas, They also are calling up No. 30 prospect and infielder/outfielder Logan Davidson, catcher Willie Maclver, infielder CJ Alexander and left-handed pitcher Jacob Lopez.

ESPN’s Jeff Passan and MLB.com’s Martin Gallegos first reported some of the moves Friday morning.

The A’s optioned centerfielder JJ Bleday, right-handed pitcher Carlos Duran and catcher Jhonny Pereda to Triple-A Las Vegas and designated outfielder/infielder Seth Brown for assignment, placed third baseman Gio Urshela on IL and transferred infielder Zack Gelof to the 60-day IL.

“[We’re] obviously in a stretch right now where we’re not finding ways to win,” general manager David Forst told reporters Friday. “Trying to make some changes where we can. … We will continue to look, both from a position player and pitcher’s standpoint, for places where we can make improvements and get back to the kind of baseball we were playing before this stretch started.

“I think we’re better than we’ve shown the last 10 days.”

Clarke, who just turned 25, is hitting .286/.436/.419 through 31 games with Las Vegas. The 6-foot-4, 220-pounder already is viewed by the Athletics as a Gold Glove-caliber defender in center (h/t Gallegos), and Forst told reporters he’ll start there in Friday’s game against the Philadelphia Phillies.

“From a defensive standpoint in center, he’s probably one of the better ones we have in the organization,” Athletics manager Mark Kotsay said of Clarke back in March. “He’s super talented out there.”

Davidson was selected by the Athletics in the first round of the 2019 MLB Draft, and through 41 games with Las Vegas, he is hitting .303 with a .879 OPS. Forst envisions Davidson being a valuable “super-utility guy” for the A’s moving forward.

Maclver, 28, is hitting .389 with a 1.017 OPS through 35 games for Las Vegas, and Alexander, 28, is hitting .252/.348/.509 with a .857 OPS through 42 games. Lopez returns to the A’s with a 3.86 ERA through seven innings during the 2025 MLB season.

The Athletics now hope Clarke’s energetic spirit and crafty play, paired with a batch of fresh faces both at the plate and on the field, can help them turn things around.

Forst said Lopez, alongside Clarke, will start against Philadelphia, giving the call-ups a quick opportunity.

Braves star Acuña to return Friday from left knee injury

WASHINGTON — Ronald Acuña Jr. is ready to make his season debut for the Atlanta Braves on Friday night.

The Braves announced after Thursday night’s loss to Washington that Acuña will return from a left knee injury that has sidelined him for nearly a year when Atlanta opens a three-game series at home against San Diego.

The 2023 NL MVP tore the ACL in his left knee last May 26 and had surgery on June 6. Acuña played six games in the minors on a rehab assignment, going 6 for 15 with two home runs.

Acuña played in only 49 games last season, batting .250 with four homers, 15 RBIs, 16 stolen bases and a .716 OPS.

He was a unanimous winner of the NL MVP award in 2023 when he hit .336 with 41 home runs, 106 RBIs and a league-leading 1.012 OPS. Acuña also stole 73 bases that year to become the only player with 40 homers and 70 steals in one season.

A four-time All-Star, the 27-year-old Acuña has 165 homers and 195 stolen bases in 722 career games.

Mets prospect Nolan McLean solid in third start for Triple-A Syracuse

Mets prospect Nolan McLean, No. 3 in the team's system according to Joe DeMayo, had another strong outing on Thursday in his third start with Triple-A Syracuse.

The right-hander let up two runs (none earned) on two hits with six strikeouts and two walks over 6.0 innings of work against the Rochester Red Wings. Two of his strikeouts came against Washington Nationals No. 3-ranked prospect Brady House, the 11th pick in the 2021 MLB Draft.

McLean threw a career-high 93 pitches with 60 for strikes. His fastball peaked at 96 mph and he used his sweeper 40 percent of the time, DeMayo noted.

After going 3-1 with a 1.37 ERA over five Double-A starts, McLean made the jump up to Triple-A on May 9 and threw seven scoreless innings in his first start. He got roughed up a little in his second Triple-A start on May 15 against the Lehigh Valley IronPigs, allowing four runs on five hits over 5.0 IP.

Despite Syracuse's 6-4 loss on Thursday, McLean's bounce-back performance lowered his Triple-A ERA to 2.00 as opposing batters are hitting just .219 against him.

Offensively, CF Drew Gilbert extended his hitting streak to four games with a single in the seventh inning. Gilbert, the Mets' No. 10 prospect according to DeMayo, has had an up-and-down May so far with 15 hits over 66 at-bats (.227 average), including two home runs and two doubles.

Yankees' Jorbit Vivas showing potential with difference-making first career HR: 'He's capable of that'

Yankees rookie Jorbit Vivas had played in 16 big league games heading into Thursday's contest against the Texas Rangers, but was still searching for his first career home run.

That changed in the bottom of the fifth inning when Vivas drilled a 94-mph, first-pitch fastball from Nathan Eovaldi over the wall in right field to give the Yankees a 1-0 lead. Thanks to stellar pitching from Carlos Rodon and the bullpen, New York was able to hold onto the lead to sweep Texas and win their fourth-straight game.

"Pretty cool to get your first in a 1-0 game and be the difference, huge," manager Aaron Boone said. "He's capable of that. Really good swing, jumped on that first-pitch heater and didn't miss it. He's had a couple big at-bats in this homestand for us and that one was obviously big for us and the difference in the game today."

Vivas' homer came off the bat at 101 mph and traveled 360 feet into the right field stands.

Luckily, the team was able to retrieve the ball for him -- and he plans on bringing it back home to Venezuela for his family, he told reporters via an interpreter. After the win, Vivas spoke about what he was thinking about during the special moment.

"Everything is kind of like a flash, so many things in my mind running the bases," Vivas told YES Network's Meredith Marakovits via translator after the game. "Thinking about my family back home in Venezuela, I know they're watching. Like so many things, the road to get here, so many."

He added, "I'm sure they're going to be proud. They're gonna be proud. I'm just very thankful for all the support they've given me."

The 24-year-old wasn't a huge power threat in the minor leagues prior to his May call-up following Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s injury -- he slashed .319/.426/.436 with an .862 OPS, two homers, and five doubles over 26 games with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Although Boone and the Yankees coaching staff believed he was ready for times like this.

"So many things are going through my head in that moment," Vivas said via a translator. "Finally said like, 'My first one, finally.' I'm very excited and happy about finally connecting there."

While Vivas is hitting just .182 over 33 major league at-bats, the home run could help him keep it going at the plate. Plus, he and the rest of the Yanks will likely benefit from the high altitude at Coors Field in Denver when they take on the lowly Rockies (8-42) this weekend.

Yankees at Rockies: 5 things to watch and series predictions | May 23-25

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Yankees hit the road to take on the Colorado Rockies in a three-game series starting on Friday...


Preview

Going up against MLB's worst

The Rockies are having a historically bad start to the 2025 season. Entering Friday, they are 8-42 and are on pace for just 25 wins. The Yankees can continue their winning ways with a series win this weekend, but they could get out of the gate slowly. They had an early game on Thursday before flying out to Colorado for Friday's series opener. Don't be too surprised by the slow start on Friday. They will have Clarke Schmidt on the mound in the opener, and the right-hander has been the weakest arm in the rotation of late.

While the Yankees should win this series, it's hard to sweep a series no matter how poorly a team is playing.

Can Will Warren keep it going?

Warren has been the biggest surprise for the Yankees this season. After a slow start, the young right-hander has been dominant over his last three starts. In that span, he has allowed just three runs while striking out 26 batters across 18 innings. If you extend that to the start before, he's struck out 34 batters.

If Warren wants to cement his spot in the rotation, taking care of the lowly Rockies will go a long way. He's set to pitch in the series finale on Sunday.

Can Max Fried stay perfect?

Fried has been everything the Yankees needed him to be when ace Gerrit Cole went down after season-ending elbow surgery but he can't continue his perfect start to the season, right?

Fried enters his start on Saturday a perfect 6-0 in his 10 starts -- the Yankees are 10-0 in Fried starts this season -- and has been dominant with a 1.29 ERA and a 0.93 WHIP. However, Fried has had to grind a bit over his last couple of starts. He allowed two runs over six innings against the Mets in his last start, and really had control issues against the Mariners the start before. In Seattle, Fried allowed one run but could only go five innings before he told his manager he was done.

The Yankees don't need Fried to be perfect to win against the Rockies, but heading to the thin air of Coors Field could prove tricky. Fried has pitched four games (three starts) in Denver, where he's amassed a 1-0 record with a 2.91 ERA.

Mar 29, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger (35) hits an RBI single in the sixth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium.
Mar 29, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger (35) hits an RBI single in the sixth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium. / Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Cody Bellinger heat check

On the offensive side, Bellinger has arguably been the Yankees' best hitter over the last week or so. His 15-game hitting streak -- snapped on Thursday -- lifted his average from .198 to .257, his OBP from .270 to .326 and his slugging from .343 to .461.

It'll be interesting to see if he can keep it going in Colorado after finally going hitless. Bellinger has plenty of experience in Coors Field from his time with the Dodgers. In 52 games, Bellinger is slashing .286/.370/.526 with an OPS of .896 to go along with eight home runs, 16 doubles and three triples.

Seeing more of the Young Yankees

The youth in the Yankees lineup has come up big for the team of late. Jasson Dominguez's walked off the Rangers on Wednesday, and Jorbit Vivas' first career homer was enough to sweep Texas on Thursday. That's not to mention Oswald Peraza's stellar defense at third base. That's all coming after the Yankees have suffered injuries to Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Oswaldo Cabrera.

It's unclear how much time each of them will play this weekend, but all three have contributed to this team of late and seeing more of them will go a long way toward their development for this season.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Cody Bellinger

The slugger has picked it up the last few weeks, and although his 15-game hitting streak was snapped on Thursday, his time with the Dodgers in the NL West will prove helpful this weekend.

Which Yankees pitcher will have the best start?

Max Fried

Warren is a candidate for this, but since this weekend will be the right-hander's first game at Coors Field, I'll say Fried gets the job done this weekend.

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

Hunter Goodman

The young catcher has had a great start to his sophomore season. He's batting .282 with seven home runs and 31 RBI, and with the lefty facing two right-handed pitchers this weekend, Goodman could do some damage.

The Giants place winless Justin Verlander on the IL with a pec strain

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The San Francisco Giants placed winless right-hander Justin Verlander on the 15-day injured list Thursday with a strained right pectoral muscle.

Verlander left his most recent start on Sunday against the Athletics early after struggling with his velocity and command because of discomfort. He threw on the side on Wednesday and still had issues, so he was placed on the injured list before the team begins a road trip on Friday in Washington.

The move is retroactive to Monday and the Giants are hopeful Verlander will be back after 15 days and missing only two starts. Verlander said the issue wasn’t related to the neck problems that sidelined him for much of the 2024 season.

The 42-year-old Verlander has struggled in his first season with the Giants and is still searching for his first win after 10 starts. He is 0-3 with a 4.33 ERA.

The three-time AL Cy Young Award winner and 2011 AL MVP has 41 strikeouts and 21 walks for his worst ratio since 2008 and is allowing the most baserunners per inning (1.404) of any season with more than two starts.

Verlander has a career record of 262-150 with a 3.31 ERA in 536 starts.

The Giants have not decided on who will take Verlander’s place in the rotation on Saturday at Washington.

San Francisco also announced that infielder David Villar cleared waivers after being designated for assignment and elected to become a free agent.

Former Brewers player Darin Ruf sues Reds over injury in Cincinnati that ended his career

CINCINNATI (AP) — Former major league outfielder/first baseman Darin Ruf is suing the Cincinnati Reds for damages after he suffered a career-ending injury while crashing into an uncovered tarp roller at Great American Ballpark two years ago.

The lawsuit filed Thursday in the Hamilton County (Ohio) Court of Common Pleas charges the Reds with negligence in failing to maintain safe field conditions and specifically cites the presence of the unpadded metal tarp roller.

“This didn’t need to happen,” Ruf said in a statement. “I wish it didn’t happen. Players shouldn’t have to worry about hidden hazards like that on a major league field.”

Ruf was playing first base for Milwaukee when he was injured during the third inning of the Brewers’ 5-4, 11-inning victory over the Reds on June 2, 2023. In the third inning, Ruf was chasing a foul pop when his knee hit the end of the tarp roller.

According to the complaint, Ruf suffered “permanent and substantial deformities to his knee.” Ruf went on the 60-day injured list and never played in the major leagues again.

Ruf’s complaint says the end of the tarp roller was made of sharp metal and had no protective cushioning or cap.

“This was an obvious and avoidable risk,” Tad Thomas, Ruf’s attorney, said in a release announcing the lawsuit. “There are basic safety protocols every MLB team should follow. Leaving an unpadded metal roller on the edge of the field is inexcusable.”

The Reds had no immediate response to a message seeking comment.

Ruf is seeking punitive and compensatory damages. The complaint says the Reds didn’t take reasonable precautions to keep the stadium safe and also are liable for the negligent acts of the grounds crew’s “reckless” conduct.

Ruf, 38, played in the majors from 2012-23 with the Philadelphia Phillies (2012-16), San Francisco Giants (2020-22, 2023), New York Mets (2022) and Brewers (2023). He batted .239 with a .329 on-base percentage, 67 homers and 205 RBIs in 582 career games.

Carlos Rodon, Yankees' bullpen continues hot stretch in sweep of Rangers: 'It's a collective effort'

Yankees starter Carlos Rodon had yet another strong performance in Thursday's 1-0 win over the Texas Rangers to cap off the three-game sweep, tossing six scoreless innings with eight strikeouts.

It's Rodon's second straight win, lowering his ERA to 1.90 in May over four starts and 2.88 overall on the year across 11 starts. The left-hander hasn't lost a game since April 13 when he dropped his third straight outing, going 5-0 over his last seven games.

After the win, manager Aaron Boone told reporters that this type of stretch from Rodon was exactly what he warned about earlier in the season, knowing what the lefty is capable of on the mound.

"I tried to tell you this when he gave up the three-run homers and everyone was losing their mind. He's about to roll off a bunch in a row," Boone said. "I think it's been since the start of the season. I think if you go back to Opening Day, you have the two outings that got wrecked by the three-run homer, but even in those it's been (good).

"I don't know, how many starts has he made now? Probably 10, 11? I think they've all been really, really strong. A pitch here and there in a couple of them and it's even at another level, but it's been a lot of really good."

Rodon has tossed six-plus innings in all but three starts this season, saying it's the starting rotation's goal to throw as many innings they can to help the bullpen and get the slugging offense more chances to score.

"Yeah we just got to keep going, just keep going deep into games," Rodon said. "You know, not taxing the bullpen, just getting through six, seven innings, as many outs as we can. Just getting ahead of hitters and giving our offense a chance to get in the dugout and swing the bats."

Once Rodon's day was done, Mark Leiter Jr. came in and tossed a scoreless inning, followed by another dominant outing from Devin Williams. Since losing the closer role on April 27 allowing three runs on May 7 against the San Diego Padres, Williams has an ERA of 0.00 and 10 strikeouts over seven games (6.1 IP), allowing just two hits and one walk. Williams earned his fifth hold of the year with a 1-2-3 eighth inning on Thursday.

"Devin's the man, he's obviously one of the best in the game," closer Luke Weaver said after the win. "There's adjustment periods... you're just trying to minimize mistakes. Sometimes they are completely uncontrollable and they stack up and you're trying to stop that momentum. Sometimes they're minimal and we can make those mistakes quick. Sometimes we get lucky and sometimes we don't.

"With all that being said, it's awesome to have him do his thing. I certainly wasn't worried about him for one second. He's found his rhythm, he's controlling his game, his tempo, and he's just dominant."

Weaver picked up the save (No. 7 on the year), getting two flyouts and a strikeout to seal the deal. The 31-year-old, who's pitching to a career-best 0.40 ERA across 21 games, added that everyone in the bullpen is rooting for each other's success. The Yankees own the majors' seventh-best ERA at 3.42 and are top-10 in bullpen ERA at 3.38.

"It's a collective effort," Weaver said. "Everybody is rooting hard for each other, we want to make sure that we pick each other up. There's different days where, if a guy's down and we got to go one-plus, we got to figure out ways to piece it together. We always want our starter to go nine, we're just there as backup. When the game dictates situations, we just want to be prepared. We'll give hopefully big high fives and hugs after the fact and say, 'Get 'em tomorrow.'"

After going 15-13 in April, the Yanks have gone 12-6 this month and are riding a four-game winning streak heading out West for a three-game series with the Colorado Rockies.

Carlos Rodon outduels Nathan Eovaldi as Yankees complete sweep of Rangers

The Yankees completed a three-game sweep of the Texas Rangers, winning Thursday’s matinee by a score of 1-0.

Here are the key takeaways…

-Carlos Rodon against Nathan Eovaldi turned out to be one heck of a pitchers’ duel. Rodon came into Thursday’s start on a heater, pitching to a 1.59 ERA over his last seven starts. Eovaldi, meanwhile, has been outstanding all season, coming into the game with a miniscule 1.61 season ERA.

Eovaldi pitched around some traffic on the bases in the early innings, including getting out of a second-and-third, two-out jam in the bottom of the second, when Trent Grisham grounded out to end the threat.

Meanwhile, Rodon got into a groove in the middle innings, striking out the side in the fifth to give him six punchouts on the day, up to that point. In the sixth, Wyatt Langford walked, stole second, and advanced to third on a wild pitch, but Rodon hunkered down and struck out Jake Burger to get out of the inning.

Rodon’s afternoon ended there, as he turned in 6.0 sparkling innings, allowing just two hits while striking out eight and walking two on 105 pitches. With this scoreless appearance, he lowered his season ERA to 2.88.

-The Yankees finally broke the scoreless tie in the bottom of the fifth, when Jorbit Vivas lined his first career home run over the wall in right to put the Bombers up 1-0.

Eovaldi went 6.0 innings of one-run ball, allowing five hits while striking out six and walking one.

-Things got a little dicey for Mark Leiter Jr. in the seventh, as Marcus Semien singled and moved to second on a wild pitch. After a Joc Pederson pinch-hit, infield single, the Rangers had the tying run at third and the go-ahead run at second. But Leiter was able to strike out Josh Smith swinging to escape the inning.

-Devin Williams needed just 11 pitches to toss a one-two-three eighth inning, striking out one hitter in the process. Williams has now gone seven straight outings without allowing a run, striking out 10 hitters over 6.1 innings while allowing just two hits.

Luke Weaver, who pitched in all three games against Texas, closed things out in the ninth without a hitch, picking up his seventh save of the season.

-Cody Bellinger went 0-for-4 with a couple of strikeouts, ending his 15-game hitting streak.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

The Yankees hit the road for a nine-game trip, starting with a three-game series in Colorado against the Rockies.

Clarke Schmidt will go for the Yankees, while the Rockies have not announced their starter.

Phillies complete second straight sweep with Suarez' third straight gem

Phillies complete second straight sweep with Suarez' third straight gem originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

DENVER — Ranger Suarez is usually efficient, but Ranger Suarez on getaway day? Against the worst team in baseball? With a home plate umpire whose strike zone hearkened back to the 1990s?

It’s a winning formula and it worked for the Phillies on Thursday afternoon as they beat the Rockies, 2-0, to complete a sweep. The Phils had back-to-back series against the two worst offenses in baseball, the Pirates and Rockies, and won all seven games.

On Monday, the Phillies came back to beat the Rockies with eight runs in the final three innings. On Tuesday, they led wire-to-wire. They never trailed on Wednesday, homering three times and scoring nine runs. And they shut the Rockies out in Thursday’s 2-hour, 19-minute series finale.

“The day we don’t score many runs, we really pitched well and played good defense,” manager Rob Thomson said. “It was very satisfying.”

Suarez had only one 1-2-3 inning but ran few deep counts and began the sixth inning at just 64 pitches. He left with two men on base and two outs in the bottom of the seventh for Orion Kerkering, who popped Hunter Goodman up on one pitch to keep the Phillies up by two.

Suarez delivered 6⅔ scoreless innings and has excelled in his last three starts, allowing three runs in 20⅔.

“Good,” Suarez said of his outing, “especially in this type of environment where your pitches don’t do the same thing they usually do movement-wise. The cutter was working well. … As I keep pitching, I’ll keep feeling better.”

Suarez also benefitted Thursday from an extremely wide and at times random strike zone from home plate umpire Jonathan Parra. The Rockies had runners on the corners with two outs in the third inning of a scoreless game when Suarez threw a 92 mph fastball that was two full baseballs off the plate outside. Parra rung up Goodman, who might have argued more demonstratively if he wasn’t in such shock. Catcher Rafael Marchan was already throwing the ball back to Suarez and looked surprised himself.

Parra’s eyes deceived him again in the fifth when he called Jordan Beck out looking on a sinker that was below the zone and well inside. Beck was apoplectic, and Parra quickly motioned to Rockies interim manager Warren Schaeffer to come get his player before he ejected him. The Rockies are 8-42 but Parra was even worse on Thursday.

The Phillies’ first run was unearned, the result of a fourth-inning error by shortstop Ezequiel Tovar and an RBI double from Bryce Harper, who is 14-for-28 with four doubles, a homer and nine RBI during the seven-game winning streak.

They added another in the seventh when Kyle Schwarber led off with a walk and chugged all the way around from first base to score on a Max Kepler double. Kepler was cold in four straight series against the Rays, Guardians, Cardinals and Pirates but is perking up a bit, 5-for-13 with three doubles in the last four games.

The Phillies took advantage of Colorado’s blunders on the basepaths and in the field all week. The Rockies threw two would-be outs at first base into right field, had a catcher throw two balls into the outfield that advanced three baserunners and twice made an out trying to take an extra base when already down four runs. They aren’t just normal bad, they’re historically bad.

“It helped for sure but I think we played good baseball, too,” Thomson said. “We swung the bats very well the first three games, got some timely hits today, pitched very well today. I think we did capitalize but that wasn’t the main factor.”

Jordan Romano closed the game out, his ninth straight scoreless appearance, six of which have been 1-2-3. The Phillies swept the season series, winning all seven over the Rockies by an average score of 6-2. The Phils are 32-18 and now own the best road record in the National League at 15-10.

The Mets were off Thursday so the Phils gained another half-game and lead by two in the NL East. They have a chance to widen the gap this weekend when they face a skidding, last-place Athletics team while the Mets host the Dodgers.

“We’re rallying in the right way with our pitching, with our hitting,” Suarez said. “If we keep doing things the right way, we’ll be in a good spot.”

Yankees place Fernando Cruz on injured list with right shoulder inflammation

NEW YORK — New York Yankees reliever Fernando Cruz was placed on the 15-day injured list with right shoulder inflammation after the right-hander felt pain in an outing against the New York Mets.

Cruz said he had been dealing with inflammation for the past three weeks and the pain intensified when he threw 26 pitches to the final seven hitters of a 3-2 loss. Cruz got the final out of the eighth inning, the first out of the ninth but loaded the bases and allowed a tiebreaking sacrifice fly to Francisco Lindor.

“I don’t put any excuse on that game particularly, but I felt different with my arm,” Cruz said before the Yankees concluded their three-game series with the Texas Rangers. “Obviously but we battled through it. We finished the inning and we’re going to be back soon.”

After notifying team trainers, Cruz took a cortisone shot that weakened his arm for the next two days but said imaging and MRI did not show any signs of a further injury.

The move is retroactive and Cruz said he threw from distances of 60 to 75 feet. Manager Aaron Boone said Cruz will join the Yankees on their upcoming nine-game road trip and could start throwing off a mound shortly.

Acquired from the Cincinnati Reds for catcher Jose Trevino on Dec. 20, Cruz is 1-2 with two saves and a 2.66 ERA in 21 outings. Known for his splitter, the 35-year-old has 31 of his 35 strikeouts with the pitch and is holding opposing hitters to a .155 average.

“He’s been great, but these things happen,” Boone said. “I think based on the MRI and stuff, we don’t think it’s anything too significant. So hopefully this little downtime gets him to where he needs to be.”

To replace Cruz on the roster, the Yankees recalled Brent Headrick from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Headrick made four scoreless appearances with the Yankees in the opening weeks of the season and the 27-year-old was 2-0 with a 3.72 ERA in eight outings with Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

Red Sox trade for Angels first baseman, place Yoshida on 60-day IL

Red Sox trade for Angels first baseman, place Yoshida on 60-day IL originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox are exploring another potential first base option not named Rafael Devers, it appears.

The Red Sox acquired first baseman Ryan Noda from the Los Angeles Angels on Thursday in exchange for cash considerations.

Boston optioned Noda to Triple-A Worcester and transferred outfielder/designated hitter Masataka Yoshida to the 60-day injured list to free up a roster spot for Noda.

The 29-year-old made his MLB debut with the Athletics in 2023 and showed promise as a rookie, tallying 16 home runs and 54 RBI with 77 walks and a .770 OPS in 128 games as the team’s everyday first baseman. He regressed significantly in 2024, however, posting a .137/.255/.465 slash line with 37 strikeouts in 36 games.

The Angels claimed Noda off waivers following the 2024 season, and the Illinois native began the 2025 campaign with Los Angeles’ Triple-A affiliate before the team designated him for assignment on May 18.

The Red Sox have cycled through a number of first basemen since Triston Casas suffered a season-ending knee injury on May 2. Triple-A call-up Nick Sogard is currently manning the position, while Romy Gonzalez and Abraham Toro saw time at first base as well. Rookie second baseman Kristian Campbell even has been taking first base reps in practice, although manager Alex Cora said Campbell likely won’t move to first in the near future.

One player we won’t see at first base, it seems, is Rafael Devers, as the Red Sox slugger has refused to switch positions again after moving from third base to designated hitter earlier in the season. With Noda now in the fold, it’s probably even less likely that Devers tries his hand at first base.

Boston will play a doubleheader with the Baltimore Orioles at Fenway Park on Friday after being rained out Thursday.

Using swing path metrics to find fantasy baseball power breakouts: Keep the faith in Nick Kurtz

On Wednesday, Statcast dropped a brand new set of metrics to measure a hitter's bat path both on the way to contact and at the contact point. This is important data because bat path is one of the aspects of hitting that hitters not only think about the most, but also train the most. Hitters want to make sure they are making quality contact as often as possible, and that takes root in the path of their swing from load to contact.

There's a great article from Mike Petriello that explains all four of the metrics, and I encourage you to read that to get a more in-depth sense of everything I'm going to discuss here. All of these metrics are going to be specific to the player, their skillset, and their approach, so the best use of these metrics is likely going to be choosing a specific player and looking at his swing path and attack angle and seeing if something has changed to lead to more power production or a higher pull rate or better contact, etc.

However, we can just have some fun today and try to use these new metrics to find power hitters.

For this article, I'm operating under the basic principle that if a hitter has good bat speed and a slight upswing, they are more likely to produce good power numbers. The upswing will create loft on contact, and the bat speed will create exit velocity that will help the ball carry out of the park. To do that, the first stat we're going to look at is swing tilt or swing path, which tells us "the shape of the swing on the way towards contact." A higher angle is a steeper swing, and a lower angle is a flatter swing.

The Statcast folks looked at the production on swing paths and found, as the graphic below shows, that hitters who have a steeper swing, between 33 and 38 inches, tend to produce the best offensive results, even if they swing and miss slightly more than players with a flatter swing.

Swing Ttlt and Power.jpg

Statcast

So let's run with that premise and look for hitters who swing the bat fast but also have steep bat paths to see if we can identify some potential power breakouts. First, we can test the premise to see if many power hitters fall within this range.

Elite Fantasy Baseball Power Hitters

NamePABat SpeedSwing Path Tilt
Judge, Aaron21476.639
Suárez, Eugenio20172.538.8
O'Neill, Tyler9374.137.2
Ozuna, Marcell19773.836.9
Alvarez, Yordan12176.636.6
Merrill, Jackson8972.336.5
Trout, Mike12173.236.4
Ohtani, Shohei22276.336.2
Casas, Triston11275.136
Wood, James21675.740.4
Harper, Bryce21574.435.5
Rooker Jr., Brent21473.934.9
De La Cruz, Elly21775.233.9
Tucker, Kyle22672.333.8
Cruz, Oneil17378.933.7

There's not much to say about the hitters listed above, but we know they are all some of the better power hitters in modern baseball. Since they all had above league average bat speed and a swing tilt between 33 and 40 degrees, it's a bit of confirmation bias that maybe this isn't a crazy exercise.

Fantasy Baseball Power Breakouts

NamePABat SpeedSwing Path Tilt
Kurtz, Nick8977.739.3
Walker, Jordan14977.732.3
Adell, Jo13177.132.1
Canario, Alexander8576.833.7
Baty, Brett9076.335.7
Mountcastle, Ryan16975.435.8
Herrera, Iván6675.432.3
Smith, Cam13175.336.7
Stowers, Kyle18174.833.7
Greene, Riley19974.645.6
Rice, Ben16574.334.2
Bart, Joey15373.934.4
Soler, Jorge18073.932.7
Langford, Wyatt16573.834.7
Dezenzo, Zach9273.539.8
Jones, Nolan12173.334.7
Torkelson, Spencer20373.239.7
Pages, Andy18172.841.4
Neto, Zach12571.937.8
Moncada, Yoán8371.838.1

A few of these names shouldn't be surprising since Kyle Stowers, Ben Rice, Riley Greene, Wyatt Langford, Spencer Torkelson, and Zach Neto are enjoying strong starts to the season and have all shown ample power to help fantasy teams. Jorge Soler is also somebody we have always regarded as a premier power hitter. The production hasn't quite been there so far this season, but

Having Nick Kurtz on a power list shouldn't surprise you. He had seven home runs and a .655 slugging percentage in 20 games in Triple-A before getting called up. In his 24 MLB games, he has already had a batted ball that was 113.6 mph and has an average exit velocity of 91.8 mph, so he's making authoritative contact. His 36.5% fly ball rate is higher than we saw in the minors, but not as high as I might expect. The nearly 16% infield fly ball rate tells me that maybe the swing is just a bit too steep right now. However, the bigger issue is that Kurtz had a 12.6% swinging strike rate (SwStr%) in Triple-A, and that was always going to be higher against MLB pitching. Kurtz is not a high-contact rate hitter, so he may be a .240 guy the rest of this season with an elevated strikeout rate, but the power should be there.

We're seeing something similar with Cam Smith, who had a steep learning curve to adjust to MLB pitching after playing just five games above High-A with the Cubs last year. Smith's bat speed stands out here, and he does have a 113 mph max exit velocity hit on the season, so there is some power here. However, his production has ticked up in May, going 12-for-40, while his flyball rate has dropped to 18% of that stretch. However, Smith has also seemingly opened up his stance a bit in May and is hitting the ball farther out in front of the plate. These are strong changes for May, and I'd expect the fly ball rate to tick back up.

Andy Pages is enjoying a bit of an under-the-radar breakout for the Dodgers with nine home runs and a .274/.326/.482 slash line in 181 plate appearances. His average exit velocity is not great at 88.4%, but he has solid fly ball and pull rate numbers, which are helping him get to his power. The only issue for Pages now is whether the emergence of Hyeseong Kim is creating a bit of a playing time crunch with Teoscar Hernandez, Tommy Edman, and Michael Conforto all still getting regular at-bats.

Oh, what are we to do with Brett Baty? Every time we want to buy in on him for fantasy baseball, it seems like he ends up back in Triple-A. The bat speed obviously jumps off the page here as one of the best marks for all hitters, and Baty has been hitting the ball exceptionally hard in his at-bats this season with a 90.1 mph average exit velocity and 13.1% barrel rate in 61 batted ball events. He has dropped his groundball rate by 7% as he hits more fly balls and line drives, but he was far too passive in his first stint with the Mets this season, getting himself into bad counts and chasing pitches out of the zone.

Joey Bart and Ivan Herrera both pop on this list, but Herrera leads all catchers with at least 70 plate appearances in ISO with a .350 mark. Now, 70 plate appearances is a small sample size, but both are in the top 15 among catchers in barrel rate and max exit velocity. They also both happen to play the majority of games for their teams and make for solid two-catcher league targets.

Ryan Mountcastle has always interested me. I never thought he was the 33 home run hitter he showed off in 2021, the year of the juiced ball. But I also thought people were writing him off too much the last two years, as he was dealing with myriad injuries. This year, he's posting an 11% barrel rate and has two of the hardest-hit balls of his career. He's also pulling the ball more than ever, but is perhaps being overly aggressive, swinging more than ever, and making less contact than he has since 2022. I still think Mountcastle is a solid hitter who can be a 20+ home run guy with a .260-.270 average. With Baltimore imploding this season, I would love to see them trade him to a team that would play him every day in a better home ballpark (Hello, Boston!).

Alexander Canario is an intriguing name here because he's a plus raw power prospect who is now getting the chance to play every day in Pittsburgh. In 16 games in May, Canario is hitting .273/.322/.436 with two home runs and five RBI. He does have a 27% strikeout rate over that span, and that will likely always be part of his game, but he also has an 18.6% barrel rate and 90.1 mph average exit velocity in 59 batted ball events. His 69% contact rate overall is not great, nor is his nearly 17% swinging strike rate, and so I don't believe you're getting some major breakout star here, but if the Pirates are going to let him remain in the lineup regularly, Canario could easily push for 15+ home runs from here on out. There's a strong risk that his swing-and-miss will get him removed from the lineup at some point.

Since I mentioned earlier on that all of these swing path metrics are going to be hitter-dependent, there are a few hitters on here who may have top-end bat speed and the approach that would allow them to lift the ball out of the park but have other issues in their approach that will prevent them from being fantasy producers. Those guys are Jordan Walker, Jo Adell, Nolan Jones, and Yoan Moncada. Moncada is playing well right now, but the issue for him is always health. Those other guys are simply not making enough contact to produce results at the moment, but they're names you should keep in the back of your mind since they technically qualify for this leaderboard.

More Fantasy Baseball Power Breakouts

Another of the new Stacast metrics I wanted to look at is Attack Angle, which "is the bat’s angle at impact." Attack angle then tells us "what’s happening with the bat at contact – at what vertical angle the bat is moving as it impacts the ball (or comes closest to doing so, on misses)." For this metric, 0° would be perfectly flat, with positive numbers showing a bat moving upward and negative numbers showing the bat moving downward.

It's important to understand that a hitter's attack angle is really about timing. Since it measures the bat's angle at impact, it can be heavily influenced by how early or late a hitter is on his swing, as evidenced by this image of a James Wood swing that Statcast used in their article.

James Wood bat path

Statcast

According to this new data, the average MLB attack angle is 10 degrees, but the ideal attack angle, meaning "the angles that produce the most value for a hitter," is between five and 20 degrees. Since a larger attack angle would mean getting under the ball more, and that's better for power, I created a leaderboard of hitters with above-average bat speed (again) and an average attack angle between 10 and 20 degrees.

Some players in the 10-20 degree range that have been proven to be consistent power hitters are Eugenio Suarez (19.2 degree attack angle), Willy Adames (18 degrees), Cal Raleigh(17.8 degrees), Shohei Ohtani (15.1 degrees), Aaron Judge (14.9 degrees), Marcell Ozuna (14 degrees), Brent Rooker(13.4 degrees), Kyle Schwarber (13 degrees), Bryce Harper (12.2 degrees), Yordan Alvarez(11.3 degrees), Pete Alonso (10.2 degrees), and Oneil Cruz (10.2 degrees).

So, who else could emerge as reliable power hitters for fantasy baseball?

NamePABat SpeedAttack Angle
Kurtz, Nick8977.714
Canario, Alexander8576.812.7
Barger, Addison8376.210.7
Varsho, Daulton6075.313.9
Stowers, Kyle18174.810.1
Greene, Riley19974.612.6
Nootbaar, Lars22574.410.5
Goodman, Hunter18774.312.6
Rice, Ben16574.311.6
Langford, Wyatt16573.817.5
Soderstrom, Tyler20773.811.2
Beck, Jordan14473.810.5
Dezenzo, Zach9273.514.4
Wells, Austin15773.511.3
Torkelson, Spencer20373.214.6
Campbell, Kristian17472.911.9
Báez, Javier14572.611
Naylor, Bo12372.515.6
Dingler, Dillon13572.411.7
Amaya, Miguel9472.111.5

I removed Zach Neto and Pete Crow-Armstrong because their bat speed was just under the mark I was searching for at 71.8 mph; however, both of them have proven to have more power than many initially thought, so I wanted to highlight them here.

We also see a few repeat hitters on here with Nick Kurtz, Kyle Stowers, Riley Greene, Ben Rice, Wyatt Langford, Spencer Torkelson, Zach Dezenzo, and Alexander Canario.

Addison Barger is a player who jumped out for me a bit in spring training because he was crushing the ball and mentioned that he had gone back to an older version of his swing mechanics that made him feel more free with his movements. That has led to some really interesting changes and is why these Statcast metrics are so cool. As you can see in the image below, Barger has opened his stance considerably and is now making contact with the ball much farther out in front of home plate. His bat speed is up almost two mph to an elite 76.1 mph mark, and his swing path has changed to be a touch flatter, which has given him a better attack angle. All of these are changes that I like, and when you pair that with a small sample size 14% barrel rate and 95 mph average exit velocity, there might be something here.

Addison Barger

Statcast

Lars Nootbaar is another hitter who has improved his bat speed by almost two mph and flattened his swing path a bit to lead to a much better attack angle. He's now sporting an ideal attack angle of 60.4% while hitting the ball more out in front of the plate. Perhaps that's also because he's moved up in the box slightly, but he's catching the ball out in front more, which is leading to more consistent authoritative contact. We've waited for the Nootbaar breakout for a few years, but we could be looking at a .270, 20 home run season here.

Among catchers with at least 100 plate appearances, Bo Naylor ranks sixth in barrel rate (12.7%), seventh in ISO (.211), eighth in average exit velocity (91.2 mph), and ninth in home runs (nine). His bat speed is up this season, and he's opened his stance up more while getting to his ideal attack angle 55% of the time. The issue may be that his emphasis on power has led to a 56% fly ball rate that has tanked his batting average. A lot of the changes Naylor has made are good, but perhaps the Guardians can get him to dial back the lift in his swing just a bit.

Jordan Beck and Hunter Goodman both get the benefit of playing in Coors Field, but are also sporting an approach that should lead to some power production. Beck still has some real swing-and-miss in his game, so even though he's being a bit more selective this season, it's hard to see him ending the year hitting above .250. That being said, he is making lots of hard contact and lifting the ball much more this season, which is obviously good for power production in the thin air of Coors Field. Goodman has made his swing slightly steeper this year and raised his attack angle, and while that has made his ideal attack angle rate worse, he's able to do more damage when he makes contact with the ball. Much like Beck, his nearly 16% swinging strike rate is high, but he is aggressive in the zone, so he gives himself plenty of chances to make contact and drive the ball.

Carlos Mendoza confident struggling Mets will be ready for rematch with Dodgers: ‘It’s gonna be a fun matchup’

The Mets were able to get themselves back in the win column -- snapping their first three-game losing streak of the season on Wednesday night in Boston. 

Facing one of the top pitchers in the game in ace lefty Garrett Crochet, New York’s struggling offense was finally able to come up with some timely hits with runners in scoring position to pull out a 5-1 victory.

First, it was Brett Baty who remained in the lineup against the tough southpaw because of his defensive play -- but he delivered with his bat in the second, getting the scoring started with a two-out RBI single. 

Tylor Megill put together a terrific bounceback outing -- striking out 10 batters over 4.2 innings of work, but some shoddy infield defense helped the Red Sox scratch across the tying run in the bottom of the fifth. 

But a few innings later, Baty would deliver for the Mets again, this time lining a two-run opposite-field double off another tough lefty Brennan Bernardino with the bases loaded to put New York back in front for good. 

Francisco Lindor put the exclamation point on the victory -- crushing the Mets’ first home run since last Tuesday just over the Green Monster in the top of the ninth. 

“When you’re going through stretches like this, guys want to come through so bad,” Carlos Mendoza said. “At times it takes a little longer than we’d like it to, but it was good to see the guys today not panicking -- not that we have been.

“You just continue to play your game, continue to execute and we were able to come through. Lindor with the homer, the first one in a while which is very rare. Overall a good team win, and now we have to go home and play another good team.”

That good team? The defending champion Dodgers. 

The last time LA was in town there was much more at stake -- the Mets had defeated them in Game 5 of the NLCS to extend their season -- but a few nights later, that miraculous run came to an end with a 10-5 loss at Chavez Ravine.

The Dodgers then went on to beat the Yankees in five games in the World Series -- securing the franchise’s eight overall title, but first since 1981.

Much has changed for both organization's since then -- but one thing remains the same. 

Even with the Mets hitting a rough patch and the Dodgers battling numerous injuries, these are two of the top contenders in the National League again this year -- and Mendoza is expecting another electric atmosphere for their three-game set this weekend at Citi Field. 

“They’re a good team, we’re a good team too,” the skipper said. “We’ll be ready for them. Obviously, they beat us last year in the NLCS and they added a lot more people in the offseason, but we did the same -- I think it’s gonna be a fun matchup."

The series kicks off on Friday night with Griffin Canning taking the mound against Clayton Kershaw.