Roman Anthony's towering homer vs. Yankees saves Red Sox from frustrating night

Roman Anthony's towering homer vs. Yankees saves Red Sox from frustrating night originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Red Sox lost to the Orioles on Tuesday night in large part because they went 0-for-13 with runners in scoring position.

On Thursday night in the Bronx, even though they held a 4-3 lead, it was more of the same from the Boston offense. Through eight innings, the Red Sox were 2-for-18 with runners in scoring position, stranding 14 runners. And though Aroldis Chapman would have inspired plenty of confidence to lock down the one-run save, the closer would be facing the heart of the Yankees’ order in the bottom of the ninth.

Another frustrating night was potentially in the cards for the Red Sox.

But then, the rookie dug in and changed that in a flash.

With David Hamilton on second base after reaching on an error, Roman Anthony ambushed the first pitch from Yerry De los Santos. Anthony did not miss.

The 370-foot moonshot was a no-doubter, and Anthony took a moment to admire it before flipping his bat and trotting around the bases.

The hit improved the Red Sox to 3-for-19 with runners in scoring position, and that made all the difference in the world.

For the 21-year-old Anthony, this was his first career game at Yankee Stadium. He reached base three times — he also walked in the fifth, scoring on a sacrifice fly, and singled in the sixth, plating Hamilton to tie the game at 3-3 — but that final at-bat was the exclamation point that will be remembered for quite some time.

Clayton Kershaw and rebounding offense help Dodgers salvage split against Rockies

Los Angeles Dodgers' Mookie Betts, left, congratulates Freddie Freeman as he crosses home plate after hitting a two-run home run off Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Chase Dollander in the first inning of a baseball game Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Mookie Betts, left, congratulates Freddie Freeman as he crosses home plate after hitting a two-run homer in the first inning to give the Dodgers the lead Thursday. (David Zalubowski / Associated Press)

When the Dodgers arrived in Colorado on Sunday night they had a golden opportunity to pad their narrow division lead against with the worst team in the majors. Unfortunately, even with Thursday’s 9-5 win over the Rockies, the Dodgers only managed a split of the four-game series.

They now head to San Diego for a crucial three-game-series against the San Diego Padres with the division lead once again up for grabs.

“I wish we had won all four, but it just didn't happen,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “That's just the way baseball is. So we’ve got to go out there and regardless of the standings, we’ve got to beat those guys.”

The standings, however, loom large. On July 7, the Dodgers led the division by six games. The margin is now just a game.

Read more:Rocky, and painful, outing for Shohei Ohtani as Dodgers lose to Colorado

The Padres, who have won 12 of 19 games in August, are the third-hottest team in the National League this month. The Dodgers are a game over .500.

“It is what it is,” Roberts said. “It's where we're at right now and I can't change it. I feel good about our club going into San Diego.”

His club will have a bit of momentum on its side after scoring 20 runs on 30 hits in the two wins at Coors Field. Thursday’s matinee saw four players finish with multiple hits, including third baseman Alex Freeland, who was a career-best three for five with a run scored and another driven in. Freeland had six hits in the final three games in Denver.

“It's just like I'm building confidence now,” said Freeland, who entered Thursday hitting .180 since his call-up from triple-A Oklahoma City three weeks ago. “I've kind of spent a little time here now and I'm getting comfortable.”

The Dodgers also got a fourth straight strong effort from starter Clayton Kershaw (8-2), who gave up three runs in 5⅔ innings. Kershaw has allowed just five runs over 23 2/3 innings this month, dropping his season ERA nearly 50 points to 3.13.

That was also good enough to keep his team in first, something he noted afterward.

Fans applaud as Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw heads to the dugout after being pulled from the mound in the sixth inning.
Fans applaud as Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw heads to the dugout after being pulled from the mound in the sixth inning Thursday. (David Zalubowski / Associated Press)

“You can't take anything for granted in Colorado, obviously,” he said. “But at the end of the day, we're [one] up going in [to San Diego]. So we feel good about it.”

Freeland agreed.

“We definitely could have produced more. But you know what? We're going to take this one today and take this momentum and bring it into San Diego,” he said.

After Kershaw won the opener of a three-game series with the Padres at Dodger Stadium a week ago, the teams were even atop the N.L. The Dodgers wound up sweeping that series and have won eight of 10 with the Padres overall this year.

“We've played well against those guys this year,” Roberts said. “They're going to give us everything they have this weekend.”

The Dodgers got started early Thursday with Mookie Betts, who reached base four times, opening the game by walking on five pitches. Freddie Freeman followed with a two-run home run, his 16th of the season, to center field.

Read more:Plaschke: The 'legend' Clayton Kershaw is legendary again for Dodgers

The Rockies cut the lead in half in the bottom of the inning on a popup that got lost in the sun, a sacrifice bunt, a balk and an RBI groundout. But they would get no closer, with the Dodgers scoring in each of the first five innings to take an 8-2 lead.

Freeland had his first career triple along with a double and single, falling a homer shy of the cycle. He had six hits in the final three games in Denver. Betts finished two for three with two walks and two runs scoring while Freeman, who was two for five, raised his season average to .304 and is hitting .328 for August.

Shohei Ohtani feeling fine

Roberts said pitcher/designated hitter Shohei Ohtani is fine after taking a line drive off his right thigh in Wednesday’s game. Ohtani was scheduled to have Thursday off and Roberts said he’ll be back in the lineup Friday.

Tanner Scott and Kirby Yates set to return

The Dodgers will activate reliever Tanner Scott before Friday’s game in San Diego and reliever Kirby Yates on Saturday. Scott has been out a month with inflammation in his left elbow while Yates has missed three weeks with lower back pain.

Roki Sasaki making progress

Right-hander Roki Sasaki made progress in his second rehab start Wednesday, going 3⅓ innings and giving up two runs (one earned) on three hits. He walked three and struck out two before leaving after 60 pitches. He will make another rehab start next week before the Dodgers make any decision on his role in September. The team had talked about using Sasaki in a relief role.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Yankees' Fernando Cruz, Ryan Yarbrough to make at least one more minor league appearance

As the Yankees get closer to the end of the regular season, they are hoping to return two essential arms to the fold.

Before the start of a crucial four-game series against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium, manager Aaron Boone delivered updates on Fernando Cruz and Ryan Yarbrough, who have pitched in rehab starts the last couple of weeks, and both are heading in the right direction.

The Yankees skipper said Cruz will have at least one more rehab appearance, which is set for Friday. And although that will keep him from this weekend's series, the hard-throwing right-hander should be ready by next week.

"We want him to go two ups, a four-out scenario just to have that built in with missing enough time," Boone explained. "The temptation will be to lean on him with how good he’s been all year. I want to have a little bit of volume built so when he gets here, he’s able to jump into any role we need him. We’ll give him one more. That’ll put him in play for the start of the Washington series, hopefully."

After the four-game set with the Red Sox, the Yankees will host the Nationals for a three-game series starting Monday.

Cruz has made three minor league starts over the last week. His last appearance came on Aug. 19 with Double-A, where he struck out three batters and allowed one hit in his one inning of work. In his three minor league starts, he's allowed four runs on five hits and one walk across 2.1 innings while striking out four batters.

In 32 major league appearances this year, Cruz pitched to a 3.00 ERA with 54 strikeouts across 33 innings pitched in his first season in pinstripes. He also closed two games.

As for Yarbrough, the southpaw made his second rehab start on Wednesday, throwing 50 pitches in 3.1 innings with Triple-A. He allowed two runs on three hits while striking out three batters. 

"We want him to go another one to continue to build up a little bit," Boone said. "With the lack of starting depth down the stretch, it’s important to build it out if we can a little bit. It’ll be at least one more for him and then we’ll see from there."

In 16 games (eight starts), Yarbrough has pitched to a 3.90 ERA with a 1.17 WHIP this year with the Yankees.


Yankees sign Paul Blackburn, who was recently released by Mets

The Yankees have signed right-handed pitcher Paul Blackburn, who was released last week by the Mets after being designated for assignment and clearing waivers.

Blackburn, 31, will work out of the bullpen for the Yanks.

In a corresponding move, right-hander Allan Winans was optioned to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

"Some depth, some length, our pen right now is not filled with a lot of guys who can give us a lot of length," manager Aaron Boone said before Thursday's game. "Obviously, a track record of success in the big leagues. A guy that’s built up who can give us some coverage if we get in a situation where we need some real length."

Blackburn had a 6.85 ERA and 1.64 WHIP in 23.2 innings in seven games (four starts) for the Mets this season.

His stint in Queens stretched from the second half of last season to a few days ago, and was marred by injuries (including a cerebrospinal fluid leak that required surgery this past October) and ineffectiveness.

In 24.1 innings for the Mets in 2024, Blackburn had a 5.18 ERA and 1.56 WHIP.

He is set to be a free agent after the season.

Mets' Jeff McNeil dealing with right shoulder soreness

Jeff McNeil is dealing with right shoulder soreness, Mets managerCarlos Mendoza said before Thursday's game against the Nationals.

McNeil is not in the starting lineup for Thursday's series finale in Washington, D.C.

Per Mendoza, McNeil has been experiencing the soreness since last week, which is why the versatile defender served as the Mets' designated hitter on both Saturday and Sunday against Seattle.

The hope is that giving McNeil a day off on Thursday will allow the soreness to ease up, as the Mets don't anticipate McNeil needing an MRI.

"It's just the throwing. It's been hard for him," Mendoza explained. "Give him the day, see where we're at."

"We don't think it's anything serious," Mendoza added. "We're not planning on taking imaging or anything like that. We're gonna put him on a medicine, and hopefully calm it down."

Despite not being in the lineup every day and shuffling through multiple defensive positions, McNeil has had a strong season, slashing .259/.351/.444 with 10 home runs, 44 RBI, and 30 runs scored.

HIs 127 OPS+ is the highest he's posted since his All-Star 2022 campaign.

Sloppy Giants continue to look overmatched by Padres after ‘frustrating' series

Sloppy Giants continue to look overmatched by Padres after ‘frustrating' series originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN DIEGO — The San Diego Padres already had the best ballpark food in the National League, but this spring, they decided to kick things up a notch. A mini donut stand showed up down the first base line, and several concession stands now sell replica Western Metal Supply Co. buildings filled with banana pudding and nilla wafers. 

The dessert is the greatest addition to Major League Baseball since the pitch clock, and judging by how many Padres and Giants fans were carrying it around over the last four days, it might singlehandedly cover the next $300 million contract that Padres executive A.J. Preller decides to hand out. 

In just about every way — ballpark atmosphere, food, scoreboard graphics — the Padres are ahead of the curve. Giants employees can feel it when they visit a ballpark that used to be jokingly known as AT&T Park South, and that extends to the field, too.

Thursday’s 8-4 loss was the sixth in seven games between the NL West rivals over the past two weeks. The Padres outscored the Giants 44-13 over those seven games, and the difference between the two teams — once competing for the same Wild Card spot — is now 11 games. 

Overall, the Giants went 3-10 against the Padres this year and got outscored by 36 runs. It’s one thing to finish well behind your division leader, but the Giants now trail the Los Angeles Dodgers and Padres by double-digit games. Given their trajectory — they have the worst record in baseball over the past five weeks — there’s a chance they finish 20 back of two teams in their own division. 

From the top step of the dugout, it has certainly felt like the Giants have been working uphill in just about all of these matchups. 

“If you get behind them, their bullpen is pretty tough to score on. We’ve done that often against them and we haven’t done enough offensively to put any pressure on and keep some of their plus guys out of the game,” manager Bob Melvin said. “They have a good lineup. They played well against us. Earlier in the year, I felt like we matched up a little bit better against them, but certainly it’s frustrating. 

“It’s a team in your division that you feel like you should play better baseball against. To go 3-10 is bad.”

The Padres are addicted to star power, but that’s not necessarily the reason the Giants have been overwhelmed. Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr. have had good years, but not MVP ones. Jackson Merrill’s sophomore campaign has been ruined by injuries. Their bullpen is the best in the league and is even stronger with the addition of Mason Miller, but their rotation has been patched together. 

They do, however, do several key things that the Giants do not. They’re last in the National League in strikeouts, more than 200 behind the Giants, and that’s what stood out to Justin Verlander when asked about the matchup. 

“They put the ball in play a lot,” he said, pausing for several seconds. “They put the ball in play a lot.”

That was on full display in the fifth inning, which ruined Verlander’s day and left him with a 1-10 record. The Padres put down three consecutive bunts, one of which was thrown into right field by Casey Schmitt. When the rolling ball was dropped by Luis Matos, it became a two-error play that led to two runs. 

The Giants caught a couple of breaks early, too, which led to two runs. But they have been unable to fully make an opponent pay in recent weeks. The Padres did, with Machado lining a two-run double off Verlander after the errors, making it a 6-2 game. 

“It’s just their ability to capitalize on mistakes,” Schmitt said. “They capitalized on my mistakes.”

Schmitt made four errors in the series, which generally was filled with sloppy baseball by the Giants. That’s particularly frustrating for the staff, given that Buster Posey’s main directive after executing a trade deadline sale was to play cleaner baseball. 

“It looks terrible,” Melvin said. “When you’re not hitting and you play bad defense, it just looks awful. Two errors on one play — you look at Justin’s line, and he certainly did not pitch to that line. His stuff the first couple innings was just as good as we’ve seen it and we scratch a couple (runs) and then obviously the fourth and the fifth just got away from us.

“We continue to work on it. We do have some guys playing some different positions at this point in time and some new guys here, but that’s no excuse. We have to play cleaner defense.”

Verlander has pitched well in recent weeks, but he was charged with seven earned runs. He has had unfathomably bad defensive luck, run support and help from the bullpen this season, and on Thursday, the frustration showed. The future Hall-of-Famer chose some words carefully, knowing that not much needed to be said about how shaky the defense was behind him.

But he also called it “one of the more frustrating games of my career.” 

“Especially with the season I’ve had, you’re kind of scratching and clawing to find your way out of it and you feel like you’ve finally found something to grasp onto, and then you have a game and inning like that,” he added. “I’m being tested, for sure.”

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What we learned as disastrous fifth inning dooms Giants in brutal loss to Padres

What we learned as disastrous fifth inning dooms Giants in brutal loss to Padres originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

SAN DIEGO — Tim Lincecum was well onto the back nine of his career when he threw a no-hitter at Petco Park. Justin Verlander might be approaching his 18th green, but for about an hour on Thursday, he too was mowing down the San Diego Padres. 

Then it all spun out of control, thanks in part to some sloppy Giants defense. 

After a strong start, Verlander got knocked out in the fifth inning, which included three consecutive successful bunts by the Padres. He fell to 1-10 in an 8-4 loss, the 24th in 33 games for the Giants since July 12.  

They dropped the final three games of the series and lost six of seven to the Padres over the last two weeks, getting outscored 44-13 in those seven games. Overall, the Giants went 3-10 against the Padres, who are neck-and-neck with the Los Angeles Dodgers atop the NL West standings

Well, Poppie Is A Little Sloppy

Verlander retired the first nine batters he faced, striking out three. But the Padres scored two runs in the fourth and then piled on in the fifth as the wheels came off. 

With two runners on, the Padres put down three consecutive bunts. Freddy Fermin’s was generously ruled an infield single after Casey Schmitt whipped the ball down the right field line, and when Luis Matos tried to pick it up, he dropped it. Two runs scored. 

Fernando Tatis Jr. followed with a bunt single and Luis Arraez bunted both runners into scoring position. When Manny Machado lined an elevated fastball into the gap, the Padres had a 6-2 lead. Verlander’s day was done. 

Schmitt is a natural third baseman, but he struggled this week while filling in for Matt Chapman in his hometown. He made four errors in the four games at Petco Park. 

Devers Demolition 

The two early runs for the Giants came after a series of misplays on the other side. Tatis and center fielder Ramon Laureano got crossed up on a high fly ball and it bounced off Tatis’ glove, allowing Matos to reach third. Andrew Knizner followed with a liner to right that skipped past Tatis for an RBI double, and he scored later in the inning, which included a bobble at second base. 

There was only one error on the Padres during the sequence (Tatis is going to win the Gold Glove anyway, he probably does not need the extra help).

The Giants got on the board in a more traditional way in the sixth when Rafael Devers crushed a Dylan Cease fastball well over the right field wall. It left the bat at 108 mph and went 435 feet, making it the fifth-longest homer of the year by a Giant. 

Join The Club

Willy Adames followed the Devers blast with a homer of his own, which ended Cease’s day. It was the third time the Giants have gone back-to-back this year, and oddly, all have come in the last five games. 

Adames’ homer gave him 20 on the year, the most of any Giant who has been here all season (Devers has 25). He’s the third San Francisco Giants shortstop to hit 20 homers while playing the position, joining Rich Aurilia and Brandon Crawford. Aurilia holds the SF-era record with 36 homers as a shortstop in 2001. 

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Cubs OF Kyle Tucker played with a small fracture in his right hand after he got hurt in June

CHICAGO — Chicago Cubs outfielder Kyle Tucker played with a small fracture in his right hand after he got hurt in June, and manager Craig Counsell said that might have contributed to his trouble at the plate.

Speaking after a 4-3 victory over Milwaukee, Counsell confirmed a report that detailed the extent of Tucker’s injury.

The All-Star slugger jammed his right ring finger during an awkward slide in a victory over Cincinnati on June 1. Initial X-rays were negative. He missed one game and then made a pinch-hitting appearance before returning to the starting lineup on June 5.

“He was sore for a little while, but was able to play,” Counsell said. “We did some more imaging, and it showed a small fracture that was healing, and, you know, that’s it. Is it possible that this has caused kind of like, playing through it, changed some things? Yeah, absolutely. I think it’s probably likely that at some point that happened. But he wanted to play.”

Counsell said Tucker hasn’t had any more imaging since the fracture was found, and it has healed by this point.

“(It) hasn’t been an issue,” Counsell said.

The 28-year-old Tucker hasn’t played since he went 0 for 4 in a 7-0 loss to Milwaukee. He has been getting some time off in hopes of helping him break out of his prolonged slump, but he could return to the lineup as soon as the series finale against the Brewers.

Tucker has brushed off any questions about his health amid his offensive slump.

“I’m fine,” he said. “I mean, I’ve played, you know, for the most part every game this year. So I’m fine going out there.”

Tucker was acquired in a December trade with Houston. He is eligible for free agency after this season.

He got off to a terrific start this year, batting .290 with 17 homers, 52 RBIs and a .923 OPS in his first 85 games. He made the All-Star Game for the fourth time.

But he hasn’t been the same player since the break. He is batting .148 (8 for 54) in August, and he has just two extra-base hits — both doubles — in his last 24 games.

“The fact that he’s going through that and he’s trying to grind for us and get it any way he can to put himself in a good position to play, I mean that just kind of shows you the type of guy is, and the kind of teammate he is,” rookie third baseman Matt Shaw said. “And I think for all of us, that helps motivate us as a team.”

Red Sox call up No. 3 prospect with Wilyer Abreu headed to IL

Red Sox call up No. 3 prospect with Wilyer Abreu headed to IL originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox are making some moves ahead of their big weekend series against the New York Yankees.

According to MassLive, injured outfielder Wilyer Abreu — the team’s home run leader with 22 — is headed for a 10-day stint on the injured list after injuring his calf last weekend, and the team’s No. 3 prospect, Jhostynxon Garcia, aka “The Password,” is headed to the bigs to replace him.

The 22-year-old has mostly played outfield but had been playing some first base for the WooSox.

In another move Thursday, The Boston Globe and multiple other outlets reported that struggling infielder Abraham Toro was designated for assignment, with David Hamilton recalled to fill his roster spot.

The 28-year-old Toro has struggled at the plate recently, though he did hit .244 with seven home runs in 76 games this season.

Since Triston Casas’ season-ending injury on May 2, Toro primarily served as a platoon player at first base, rotating with Romy Gonzalez. But the recent signing of first baseman Nathaniel Lowe made Toro expendable.

The Red Sox are set to face the Yankees at 7:15 p.m. Thursday in the first game of their weekend series. Lucas Giolito is set to take the mound for Boston, with Luis Gil starting for New York.

Carson Whisenhunt returns as Giants pitching staff faces slew of injuries

Carson Whisenhunt returns as Giants pitching staff faces slew of injuries originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN DIEGO — The description that Giants manager Bob Melvin gave Thursday morning was about the last one you want to hear during a season.

“We’ve got a full MRI tube,” he said. 

Landen Roupp is headed back to San Francisco to get an MRI on his left knee, but he won’t be alone. Right-handed prospect Blade Tidwell will also get an MRI on Thursday afternoon after he felt shoulder discomfort. The Giants are hopeful on both, but also realistic. There’s a good chance that both young right-handers have thrown their final pitch of the 2025 season. 

Tidwell’s injury was horribly timed, as he appeared next in line to join the rotation. Acquired at the deadline in the Tyler Rogers deal, Tidwell struck out 23 in his first 16 innings with the Sacramento River Cats and posted a 1.69 ERA over three starts. 

Fellow prospect Carson Whisenhunt joined the Giants in San Diego on Thursday and he’ll start Friday night against the Milwaukee Brewers, allowing the staff to give Logan Webb (Saturday) and Robbie Ray (Sunday) an extra day of rest. After that, the Giants will recalibrate. 

Kai-Wei Teng had been in the rotation but he was optioned back to Triple-A on Thursday. The Giants also optioned outfielder Grant McCray and called up hard-throwing right-handed reliever Joel Peguero, who was the talk of camp but struggled early in the Triple-A season.

Peguero at least provided some smiles on Thursday. The 28-year-old is thrilled to be on the verge of his MLB debut and said his wife and family members all cried when told the news. A few relatives plan to join him in Milwaukee this weekend. 

“We’ve waited for this moment,” Peguero said. “They were so happy.”

Luis Matos also returned and went right into the starting lineup. The staff is going to try to give him some additional starts against right-handed pitching to see if he can get going. 

Another Setback

Lefty Erik Miller is another pitcher who is running out of time given how late in the season it is. Miller’s rehab assignment was halted last week because he felt something in his elbow, but an MRI came back clean from a structural standpoint. 

Still, Miller will be shut down for at least two weeks because of lingering inflammation in the elbow. He went on the 60-day IL on Thursday. 

Miller went on the IL on July 3 and at this point there seems little reason for the Giants to get him back on a big league mound this season. They need a healthy Miller next season, not just to give them a go-to lefty, but also another hard-throwing option in the late innings. Had his rehab gone smoothly, Miller would have joined Randy Rodriguez and Ryan Walker in the late-game mix. 

Some Good News, For Once

Matt Chapman has been fielding grounders and taking swings at Petco Park and all signs point toward the third baseman returning on Saturday in Milwaukee. Chapman got a cortisone injection in his aching right hand last week and said it worked wonders. 

When Chapman returns, Casey Schmitt will slide back to second base, which now looks like his long-term home. 

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Phillies minor league report: Prospects heating up in August

Phillies minor league report: Prospects heating up in August originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies went for quality over quantity at the Trade Deadline.

In landing Jhoan Duran, they dealt away two of their top five prospects — both ranked on MLB Pipeline’s Top 100 — catcher Eduardo Tait and right-hander Mick Abel. A separate swap with Minnesota brought in Harrison Bader at the cost of organizational top-20 outfielder Hendry Mendez and Geremy Viloria.

With September approaching and MLB Pipeline updating its rankings, here’s a look at a handful of Phillies prospects who have caught fire this month:

Aidan Miller, SS, Double-A Reading — No. 2 prospect (MLB No. 48)

The Phillies’ top pick from 2023 got off to a slow start in his third pro season, hitting just .222/.343/.354 through July. But as the weather heated up, so did his bat.

In August, the 21-year-old is hitting .338 with 12 extra-base hits and a .999 OPS. Miller has also been a terror on the bases, going 47-for-55 in steals. He’s one of just two Double-A players this year with 30+ extra-base hits and 40+ steals.

Justin Crawford, OF, Triple-A Lehigh Valley — No. 3 prospect (MLB No. 68)

A hitting machine at every stop, Crawford has piled up 39 multi-hit games this season and has reached base in 26 of his last 29 contests.

This month, the 2022 first-rounder is batting .352/.403/.479 with eight multi-hit efforts. His K/BB ratio in August (18/6) is wider than usual, but it’s led to more hard contact — and more chances to showcase his speed. Crawford has already swiped 41 bases, his third straight 40+ steal season.

Caleb Ricketts, C, Double-A Reading — No. 22 prospect

At 6-foot-3 with left-handed pop, Ricketts has been one of Reading’s most consistent bats in August.

After missing nearly two months earlier this season with an injury, the 2022 seventh-rounder has hit .351/.383/.526 this month, recording hits in 12 of his last 13 games. He’s particularly thrived against righties, slugging .485 with 20 extra-base knocks in 160 AB’s.

Mavis Graves, LHP, High-A Jersey Shore — No. 25 prospect

Graves’ strikeout stuff has always been loud, but command issues plagued him early. In his first 13 starts, he carried a 6.70 ERA with a 65/32 K/BB ratio, and opponents crushed him for an .887 OPS.

The 21-year-old has flipped the script over his last six outings, posting a 0.67 ERA in 27 innings with 30 strikeouts. The difference? Fewer walks, more soft contact. Opponents had a .386 batting average on balls in play (BABIP) early on, but just .220 since his turnaround.

Griff McGarry, RHP, Double-A Reading — Not ranked

At 26, McGarry isn’t typically considered a prospect, but he’s been dominant lately.

He was named Eastern League Player of the Week after firing six shutout innings with 12 strikeouts on Aug 13. Across his last three starts, McGarry has allowed just three runs in 15 innings while piling up 27 K’s. The key has been keeping the ball in the park — he’s given up only three homers in 56 1/3 innings this year.

September callups are just around the corner, with rosters expanding to 28 (max of 14 pitchers). After adding Robertson and Duran, plus José Alvarado’s return from suspension, it’s unclear how much room the Phillies will have for reinforcements.

Mets at Nationals: How to watch on SNY on Aug. 21, 2025

The Mets conclude a three-game series against the Nationals in Washington, D.C. on Thursday at 4:05 p.m. on SNY.

Here's what to know about the game and how to watch...


Mets Notes

  • Francisco Lindorhas 15 hits in his last 33 at-bats
  • Juan Soto has reached base safely in all 17 games this month
  • Brett Baty has an eight-game on-base streak and has homered each of the last two nights

METS
NATIONALS
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Importance of ‘different types of leadership' inside Phillies clubhouse

Importance of ‘different types of leadership' inside Phillies clubhouse originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

There are many obstacles the Phillies and Rob Thomson have had to navigate this season, from injuries and suspension to health scares and unsettled lineups. Some come expected, as injuries occur every season no matter the sport and slumps and hot streaks are normalized. But unique to baseball is the 162 games of it all. “Those things happen during a 162-game season.”

And inevitably, a time of tribulation in a season usually presents the question of leadership. But what really is leadership and how important is it?

I once asked a player what kind of leader he saw himself being, because his head coach had just labeled him one because he was one of the older players on a very youthful team. “I’m not a leader,” said the journeyman veteran. “I’m just trying to keep my (butt) in the league.”

Another time I asked a player about the presumed leader on the team. His response, not in a controversial way, was “if he’s the leader, does that make me a follower? Because I’m not a follower.”

Both made good points. One was anointed to be a leader but didn’t perceive himself to be. The other believed that where he was in his professional life, playing at the highest level of the sport that there is, he didn’t need to follow a leader.

It’s an interesting conversation when discussing the importance of it in sports. And while Thomson’s Phillies may still be dealing with a platooning outfield, a shuffled starting rotation and the normal ebbs and flows of a season, they do seem to have an abundance of leadership to help them through.

And they know that this is a time of need for it as their ace pitcher, Zack Wheeler, deals with a blood clot near his right shoulder that puts the game of baseball and its importance into perspective.

But the game has to go on. Wheeler’s spot in the rotation needs to be replaced. There is a division lead that needs to be held, playoff series expectations to be met. All with a team that has largely remained the same over the past couple of seasons.

“We have a lot of leadership because we have a veteran group,” said Thomson. “So, they’ve been through the ringer, they know what it’s like to play 162 games year after year after year. They know that, especially our guys, what I talk about all the time is the ebbs and flows of the season and how to maintain that. Their leadership is about not only reminding each other of that, but by teaching the young players what that’s like. Coming in with energy every day and having a short memory.”

Maybe that doesn’t seem as important as Kyle Schwarber banging home runs at the pace he’s doing this year, or Trea Turner being the ultimate leadoff man, or Bryce Harper being Bryce Harper, and so on and so forth. But with so many trying times this season – none more than the recent news of Wheeler – it is a great resolve to fall back on.

“I think quality leadership is important,” said veteran outfielder Nick Castellanos. “Not just in sports, just like in anything period. I think that we have a lot of players that have been around. We also have a lot of players around that the only thing they really have left to do in their career is win. So, when you have that, a lot of the shenanigans kind of fall by the wayside. And then because you have people with large resumes doing things correctly, that kind of sets the tone for everybody else.

“There’s a lot of different types of leadership. Character of a team is important. A lot of times when people say ‘leader,’ people are assuming there’s one guy that is rallying up the troops. I don’t really think that’s the case here. I think you have a good group of men that go about their business the right way. The game has rewarded them with contracts and this and that, and now they’re in a space where all they want is to win.”

Yes, the slumps that have plagued the team in the playoffs the past couple of years cannot happen again if they are to reach the ultimate goal of World Series champions. And the bullpen certainly needs to be less rocky come October. Perhaps the lack of change in key personnel will be questioned whenever this season comes to an end.

Or maybe president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski, a future Hall of Famer, and Thomson see more in this team than just the need to add another outfielder (Harrison Bader) and a lights-out closer (Jhoan Duran) last month at the trading deadline.

Maybe it’s about leadership.

“There’s a lot of service time on this team, a lot of experience and I think there’s a lot of guys to learn from,” said Weston Wilson. “I think it’s incredibly important. It’s what kind of controls the clubhouse, brings everybody together. But a lot of that can be unsaid because of just the presence of people in the clubhouse and how they go about their business and setting examples for younger guys. Just leading by example and verbally I think is very important.

“There’s a lot of people that stand up in different ways. A lot of it has to do with personality, whether you’re a verbal guy, non-verbal guy. I think you’ve got some guys in the bullpen; you’ve got some guys in the starting pitching. You have hitters, defensive guys, all that stuff. Everybody is putting in their portion.”

No barrier this season – from reliever José Alvarado getting suspended for 80 games to Aaron Nola being shelved by injury for more than three months – may deter the Phillies more than the recent news of Wheeler. If recent results from starters like Ranger Suárez, Cristopher Sánchez and Jesús Luzardo become the norm, Wheeler’s absence may be somewhat replaced on the field. Off it though, learning how to deal with news such as that, requires more.

“Rob addressed the team and he kind of told us all officially,” Castellanos said. “We kind of all started hearing whispers of it the day before. And then first thing first, life comes first. So, we all know that we need him to be okay. How’s Dominique doing (his wife), just make sure his household is good. And then after that, the starting pitchers, again, we don’t have a bunch of kids in our rotation, we have grown men in our rotation. They all know what they have to do. They know that Zack’s going to need some time so each individual person kind of needs to tighten it up a little bit, step up a little bit, collectively. But again, a lot of that goes unsaid. It’s not like we need a teacher to tell us what to do.

“Baseball doesn’t lie. There’s a lot of things you have to do correctly for baseball to reward you. Winning just doesn’t happen by accident.”

No. And leaders make sure it doesn’t. We will see in the next few months if that’s enough for these Phillies.

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Astros at Orioles Prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats for August 21

Its Thursday, August 21 and the Astros (69-58) are in Baltimore to take on the Orioles (59-67). Jason Alexander is slated to take the mound for Houston against Brandon Young for Baltimore.

Baltimore and Houston just met August 15-17 and the Orioles won two out of three against the Astros. Baltimore met Boston since then and won both games, while Houston dropped three consecutive games to Detroit. The Astros have lost four straight games, while the Orioles have won the past three.

Let's dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two. We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Astros at Orioles

  • Date: Thursday, August 21, 2025
  • Time: 7:15PM EST
  • Site: Oriole Park at Camden Yards
  • City: Baltimore, MD
  • Network/Streaming: FOX

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Astros at the Orioles

The latest odds as of Thursday:

  • Moneyline: Astros (-109), Orioles (-110)
  • Spread:  Orioles 1.5
  • Total: 9.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Astros at Orioles

  • Pitching matchup for August 21, 2025: Jason Alexander vs. Brandon Young
    • Astros: Jason Alexander, (3-1, 18.00 ERA)
      Last outing: 3.00 ERA, 2 Earned Runs Allowed, 3 Hits Allowed, 0 Walks, and 6 Strikeouts
    • Orioles: Brandon Young, (1-6, 5.68 ERA)
      Last outing: 0.00 ERA, 0 Earned Runs Allowed, 1 Hits Allowed, 0 Walks, and 6 Strikeouts

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Astros and the Orioles

Rotoworld Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Thursday’s game between the Astros and the Orioles:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Houston Astros on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Houston Astros at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 9.0.

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC.

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Astros at Orioles

  • Baltimore is 2-1 versus Houston this season
  • Houston is 0-4 in the last 4 games
  • Houston is 2-6 in the last 8 games
  • Baltimore is 3-0 in the last 3 games
  • Baltimore is 6-1 in the last 7 games
  • The Astros have won 4 of their last 5 away games against teams with losing records
  • The Under has cashed in 10 of the Orioles' last 12 games with a rest advantage over their opponents
  • The Astros have failed to cover in their last 3 games against the Orioles

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
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  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
  • Trysta Krick (@Trysta_Krick)