Mets' offense stymied by former farmhand J.T. Ginn in 3-1 loss to Athletics

The Mets (9-5) were defeated by the Athletics 3-1 on Saturday afternoon at Sutter Health Park.

Here are some takeaways...

- David Peterson took the mound after leaving his last outing with a stomach issue, and he got off to a terrific start. The lefty retired the first six batters before Luis Urias led off the third with a hit -- but he was quickly erased on a pickoff and Brett Baty made a terrific diving stop to escape the inning facing the minimum.

Then, Peterson's issues the second time through the order resurfaced. Jacob Wilson led off the inning with a double and scored the first run of the game on a Tyler Soderstrom knock. After another run scored on a fielder's choice with the bases loaded, Peterson was able to limit the damage thanks to a groundout.

He bounced back nicely in the fifth, working around a two out double, and then was helped out by a Hayden Senger caught stealing to finish his day strong. Peterson put together his second quality start of the year, allowing just two runs on seven hits while striking out five and issuing no walks.

- The Mets were unable to get to right-hander J.T. Ginn over the first five innings, but then Brandon Nimmo demolished a solo homer to deep right field leading off the sixth. Nimmo has gotten off to a bit of a slow start, but he's now gone deep in back-to-back games, giving him four on the year.

- Other than that, Ginn threw extremely well against the team that selected him back in the second round of the 2020 Draft. The 25-year-old right-hander worked around baserunners in numerous innings but allowed just one run on four hits and two walks while striking out six in 5.1 innings of work.

- Jose Butto allowed a run in the seventh to increase the deficit to two, and the Mets were unable to get to the Athletics' high-powered backend arms -- Tyler Ferguson and Mason Miller, who touched 103 mph as he secured his fourth save of the season.

- Francisco Lindor, Juan Soto and Pete Alonso walked three times, but went a combined 0-for-9 on the day.

- Baty enjoyed a strong day out at second base and he also came up with a much-needed base hit, lining a single in the fourth. The youngster has been losing out on more and more playing time as he's been stuck in a brutal rut at the plate, going 4-for-30 with 12 strikeouts.

- Jose Siri was forced out of the game after fouling a ball off his lower left leg on the first pitch of his first at-bat in the top of the second. Tyrone Taylor took over in his place, and the team said shortly after that he is day-to-day with a shin contusion.

Game MVP: J.T. Ginn

The youngster was certainly fired up to face the organization that traded him, and he held them to just one run.

Highlights

Whats next

Kodai Senga (1-1, 1.80 ERA) takes the ball against old friend Luis Severino (0-2, 4.74 ERA) in the rubber game on Sunday at 4:05 p.m.

Rangers Blame Themselves After Officially Being Eliminated From Playoff Contention

 James Guillory-Imagn Images

With their 7-3 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes on Saturday afternoon, the New York Rangers have officially been eliminated from playoff contention. 

Despite their season quite literally being on the line, the Rangers showed no sense of urgency to start the game as they looked completely out of sorts. 

Carolina took a commanding 4-0 lead in the second period, putting the Rangers in desperation mode. 

The Rangers provided some pushback in the third period to keep the game close. However, it was too little. 

From winning the Presidents’ Trophy just one year ago to missing the playoffs entirely, it’s been a true fall from grace for the Blueshirts. 

“You can't just show up and expect it to go the same way it did last year,” Vincent Trocheck said. “We earned it last year. We certainly didn't earn it this year.”

There’s a feeling of frustration and disappointment not only because they missed the playoffs, but because this team had so many opportunities to make the most of the season and ultimately couldn't salvage their chances. 

Even with all the talent in the world, the Rangers couldn’t even squeak the postseason. The Rangers disappointed the fans and they disappointed themselves.

“It's disappointing for everybody,” Peter Laviolette said. “It certainly wasn't anybody's plan coming into the year, especially coming off of last year. Yet here we are. We had opportunities in the last 20 games to make our own noise and make our own way and we didn't do that. It's on us. We needed to be better…

“I think there's always expectation here. I think every year this team has gone in expecting to be successful, expecting to win a Stanley Cup. The disappointment is real.”

The Rangers have two games remaining with nothing to play for but pride.

Yankees' offense explodes in 8-4 win over Giants

The Yankees' offense exploded for eight runs, including a five-run fifth inning, on 11 hits that pushed them to an 8-4 win over the San Francisco Giants on Saturday afternoon in the Bronx.

With the weather misty, cold and windy again, the Yankees shook off the elements thanks to solid pitching and timely hitting.

Here are the takeaways...

-Saturday's starter, Will Warren, already gave the Yankees more than Marcus Stroman did on Friday. Warren pitched around a two-out walk to get out of the first inning unscathed and threw just 16 pitches in the opening frame as opposed to Stroman's 46.

But the young righty couldn't keep the early lead, giving up a two-run homer to Wilmer Flores to tie things up at 2-2 in the second. Surprisingly, Flores pulled into a tie for the MLB lead with his sixth dinger of the season. After he gave up the homer to Flores, Warren settled down, sitting down 10 straight Giants with four strikeouts among them -- and aided by some stellar defense from Goldschmidt. After giving up a two-out walk to the No. 9 hitter, pitching coach Matt Blake came out to talk to Warren. The talk must have settled him down, as Warren responded by punching out Mike Yastrzemski for the third time and put a bow on the outing.

Warren was great after the Flores home run, giving the Yankees some length they desperately needed. While Warren wasn't as efficient as he'd like (91 pitches/54 strikes), he got through five innings, allowing two runs on two hits and two walks while striking out six batters.

-After scoring just one run in five innings on Friday, the Yankees got on the board early thanks to Cody Bellinger. The outfielder launched a pitch the opposite way that continued to carry all the way to the wall. The Giants' Heliot Ramos could not track the ball down at the wall as it kicked passed him for a triple, scoring Aaron Judge -- who singled -- from first. Paul Goldschmidt followed with a sac fly to give the Yankees an early 2-0 lead.

Judge would come up in the second with two outs and the bases loaded, but the captain grounded out on a 1-1 pitch to end the threat.

-Bellinger would come through again in the fifth, following Ben Rice and Judge singles with a single of his own to give the Yankees back the lead, 3-2. Goldschmidt would follow with an opposite-field double that scored another -- and would have been more if it didn't go into the stands. Jazz Chisholm Jr. walked to load the bases -- and chase starter Jordan Hicks -- and an Anthony Volpe sac fly drove in another run.

Jasson Dominguez capped off the five-run inning with a two-run single, going the other way.

-Things got dicey in the top half of the sixth. With Fernando Cruz on the mound, Chisholm had a chance to turn a double play, but his errant throw pulled Volpe off of second, allowing everyone to be safe. Cruz then walked the bases loaded with no out, but got Ramos to fly out to first base, LaMonte Wade Jr. to strikeout swinging. Flores then came up and hit a two-run single to cut the Yankees lead to 7-4.

Luke Weaver was called in to get the final out of the sixth, which he did with a strikeout of Sam Huff. Weaver work out of trouble in the seventh, getting Matt Chapman to strikeout swinging with men on second and third and two outs.

Mark Leiter Jr. worked in and out of trouble in the eighth and Devin Williams was called in for the ninth in a non-save situation. He gave up a leadoff walk and then a double before striking out the next two batters out swinging on his patented changeup. He got Ramos to groundout to end the game.

Despite some hiccups, the Yankees bullpen did not allow an earned run in four innings.

-Rice would get one of those runs back in the home half of the sixth. On the first pitch he saw from former Yankee Lou Trivino, Rice launched a blast over the right field wall at 113.2 mph, the hardest-hit ball of his career.

Game MVP: Cody Bellinger

After being unable to get runs on Friday, it was important that Bellinger got the Yankees on the board in the first and giving them the lead back in the fifth.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees and Giants complete their three-game set on Sunday. First pitch is scheduled for 1:05 p.m.

Carlos Rodon takes the mound for the Yankees while the Giants will send out Logan Webb.

Mets' Jose Siri day-to-day with left shin contusion, IL stint a possibility

Mets centerfielder Jose Siri left Saturday’s game vs. the Athletics with a left shin contusion, and manager Carlos Mendoza said on Sunday that the outfielder is still in pain, making a stint on the Injured List a possibility.

"He’s in pain," Mendoza said on Sunday. "He walked in this morning still on crutches. Like I said, he’s pretty sore, not able to put weight on it. He’s getting treatment right now and we’ll see where we’re at, but he’s in pain."

Mendoza was then asked a follow-up question about whether the injury could result in an IL stint for Siri.

"It could be," Mendoza answered. "We’ll have to have a conversation after the game and maybe tomorrow, but the way he’s feeling right now, I could see this being a potential IL [situation]."

Siri underwent x-rays on Saturday, which came back negative, and the team still considers him day-to-day, at least for the time being.

The 29-year-old stayed down for several minutes after fouling a ball off his leg during his at-bat in the top of the second on Saturday -- the speedster then needed assistance from trainers as he limped back to the dugout and was carted to the clubhouse in left-centerfield.

"Honestly, I was expecting the worst," Mendoza said after the game on Saturday. "When I went out there he was in pain, he couldn't put any weight on it -- so when the trainers got a hold of me and told me in the middle of the game I was like alright at least it's good news but he's going to be in pain."

"It got me right there, right on the bone, pretty much," Siri said through a translator on Saturday. "Right now, I feel like I don't have any power in that leg -- it's the first time it's ever happened to me, so I can't really judge it based on how it's going to be in the next couple days.

"I think what we should do is just wait and see how it feels and then we'll have a better idea."

Yankees place Stroman on 15-day injured list with left knee inflammation

NEW YORK — The New York Yankees placed Marcus Stroman on the 15-day injured list with left knee inflammation Saturday, one day after he gave up five runs and got two outs in a rainy 9-1 loss to the San Francisco Giants.

Stroman went to a hospital for tests on his left knee after throwing 46 pitches in the rain on Friday. Manager Aaron Boone said Stroman said his knee was bothering him and the Yankees announced the move about an hour before Saturday’s scheduled first pitch.

Stroman is 0-1 with an 11.57 ERA in three starts after allowing a three-run homer to Jung Hoo Lee and a two-run double to LaMonte Wade Jr. in his shortest career start that was not interrupted by rain, though Boone said he was not sure if the conditions caused the injury.

“I don’t know, tough to say,” Boone said before Saturday’s game. “We’re haven’t been in ideal conditions most of the start of the season here and that affects everyone a little bit different,” Boone said. “Stro has also been doing this a long time and pitched in these situations a lot before, so I’m sure that all plays a role.”

The Yankees recalled pitcher Allan Winans from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes Barre to replace Stroman on the roster.

Winans had a 5.02 ERA in five spring training appearances and pitched 2 2/3 innings in his lone appearance with Triple-A.

Winans made his major league debut with the Braves in 2023 and was 1-4 with a 7.20 ERA in eight starts over the previous two seasons.

The Yankees claimed him off waivers from the Braves on Jan. 23, designated him for assignment on Feb. 5 and invited him to spring training as a non-roster invitee two days later.

New York has lost four of five following a 6-2 start and its starting rotation has a 5.46 ERA, worst among the 30 teams.

Clarke Schmidt is scheduled to rejoin the Yankees on Tuesday or Wednesday after recovering from right rotator cuff tendinitis that has sidelined him since spring training,

Boone did not address who would be dropped from the rotation, though Stroman’s injury creates an easier decision.

“I’m excited to get him back,” Boone said. “He’s turned into a really good pitcher in the league. So feel like he’s in a really good spot too.”

Stroman turns 34 on May 1 and is in the second season of a two-year contract guaranteeing $37 million. The right-hander’s deal includes a $16 million conditional player option for 2026 that could be exercised if he pitches in at least 140 innings this year.

He skipped the Yankees’ first two spring training workouts at a time when he didn’t have a projected rotation role behind Gerrit Cole, Max Fried, Carlos Rodón, Luis Gil and Schmidt. He arrived on Valentine’s Day, eight days ahead of the mandatory reporting date and injuries to Cole, Gil and Schmidt created an need for him.

A two-time All-Star, Stroman hasn’t pitched through the fifth inning this season and has a 2.04 WHIP.

Last season, Stroman was 10-9 with a 4.31 ERA in 30 games (29 starts) when he threw 154 2/3 innings, his most since 2021 with the Mets. Stroman struggled in the second half and did not appear in the postseason when the Yankees made their first World Series appearance since 2009.

Nationals place shortstop CJ Abrams on 10-day injured list

MIAMI — The Washington Nationals placed shortstop CJ Abrams on the 10-day injured list on Saturday because of a right hip flexor strain.

Abrams first experienced discomfort during the Nationals’ home series against Arizona last week and it then flared up again on Friday, when Washington opened a road series in Miami. He was removed after the third inning and underwent an imaging test Saturday that confirmed the strain.

“I told him today to get this thing to calm down and get it right so it doesn’t become a bigger issue,” Nationals manager Dave Martinez said before Saturday’s game. “In a week and a half hopefully he’ll be ready to go.”

The 24-year-old Abrams has four homers through his first 11 games this season.

“CJ wants to play every day,” Martinez said. “He wasn’t happy about it. But this was the second stint that it was bothering him. We’re going to try to get him all healed up so it’s something that he won’t have to worry about for the rest of the year.”

The Nationals recalled infielder Nasim Nuñez from Triple-A Rochester in the corresponding move.

Why Hicks sees learning opportunity in Giants' loss to Yankees

Why Hicks sees learning opportunity in Giants' loss to Yankees originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It was smooth sailing only until it wasn’t.

After throwing four strong innings in the Bronx on Saturday, Giants starting pitcher Jordan Hicks ran into trouble in a fifth inning that ultimately doomed San Francisco in its 8-4 loss to the New York Yankees.

The top of the Yankees order came to the plate and every single one of them delivered, as New York strung together five consecutive baserunners in the fifth before the Giants were able to record an out. At that point San Francisco already was trailing 4-2 when reliver Randy Rodriguez was handed the ball with the bases loaded and no outs, a fire even he wasn’t able to extinguish.

It was another rainy, cold affair at Yankee Stadium, but Hicks didn’t blame the weather for an outing that saw him finish with seven earned runs across four innings of work. Rather it was Hicks’ reliance on his fastball that the flamethrowing right-hander believed led to an outing he and the Giants would like to put in the rearview mirror as soon as possible.

“I’ve definitely been a part of some rainy ones, some cold ones. That was probably top-three, top-five coldest,” “Hicks told reporters after the game. “I feel like I had some good stuff today, probably threw a few too many fastballs. I had the off-speed working, so I should’ve just thrown more of that and mixed it better. Live and learn, and move on to the next one.”

While Hicks has made a living in the big leagues behind his blazing heater, the ability to mix in off-speed pitches will play a major role in his continued development as a starting pitcher after being a back-end bullpen option for the majority of his MLB career.

The Giants are in the midst of a brutal part of their schedule, with 17 consecutive games without a day off on the docket, with more than half of them coming on the road against quality opponents.

San Francisco manager Bob Melvin alluded to that gauntlet when explaining why he wasn’t as quick to yank Hicks off the mound when his starter ran into trouble in the fifth inning.

“Look, I mean I had to give him [Hicks] a little rope there, we got 17 games in a row,” Melvin said. “Second, third and fourth he looked really good as we’ve seen earlier this year, and then in the fifth just couldn’t get an out. Put together some good at-bats and strung them together on him. Had to bring Randy [Rodriguez] in a tough situation, and that obviously was kind of the inning that decided the game at the time, it certainly gave them some breathing room.”

All wasn’t bad in the loss. The air was cold, but Wilmer Flores’ bat stayed hot, as the veteran designated hitter launched a game-tying home run into the stands in the second inning, ultimately driving in all four of the Giants’ runs on the day.

Despite Hicks’ tough outing, the Giants still are in position to grab a series win in Sunday and start their 10-game road trip off on the right foot before heading to Philadelphia for a four-game set with the Phillies.

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Yankees place Marcus Stroman on IL with knee inflammation

When Marcus Stroman left the field after getting just two outs in Friday's 9-1 loss to the San Francisco Giants, the veteran right-hander told the team his knee was bothering him, and it has led to an IL stint.

The Yankees announced that they put the 33-year-old on the IL with left knee inflammation, hours before their game on Saturday. In a corresponding move, the Yankees have called up RHP Allan Winans.

Once Stroman left the dugout, he had an X-ray done at Yankee Stadium before heading to a hospital for further tests. Manager Aaron Boone said before Saturday's game that he hadn't spoken to his starter yet, but once he arrived to the stadium, the team doctors would update them on Stroman's condition.

"The hope is it's not something too serious and that we can attack this and hopefully be a little bit of a source of maybe some of the things not having him as sharp as he needs to be," Boone said after Saturday's 8-4 win over the San Francisco Giants. "Hopefully we can attack this and it be something that we can benefit from and can get him physically where needs to be and then translate that onto the mound."

Friday night's game was not easy to play in. The rain and high winds affected fly balls and clearly affected the pitchers. Stroman couldn't get out of the first and some of the Yankees relievers -- like Yoendrys Gomez -- had trouble gripping the ball.

It led to Boone discussing the weather with the umpires and grounds crew between innings before the game was delayed in the sixth and ultimately called.

The question of whether the weather affected Stroman's ability to pitch on Friday was brought up, and the Yankees skipper couldn't give a definitive answer.

“We haven't been in ideal conditions most of the start of the season here. And that affects everyone a little bit different," Boone said before Saturday's game. "But Stro’s also been doing this a long time and pitched in these situations a lot before. I'm sure that all plays a role, even we saw on the other side. Even though we only got one run last night, it was a grind for [Giants starter] Robbie Ray

“It's just one of those rare games where, you know, it's a challenge and we saw that on the pitching front last night.” 

In three starts this season, Stroman has struggled. He's 0-1 with a 11.57 ERA and a 2.04 WHIP, and allowed nine runs in his last two outings while only pitching 4.2 innings.

Now that Stroman is on the IL, a returning Clarke Schmidt will take his spot in the rotation for the time being. That gives Will Warren and veteran Carlos Carrasco more chances to prove they belong in the rotation when Stroman eventually returns.

Rangers Vs. Hurricanes Preview, Projected Lineup

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers are all set for their matchup against the Carolina Hurricanes today at 3:00 PM EST. 

Here’s everything you need to know from a Rangers perspective. 

Projected Lineup:

Forwards:

Artemi Panarin-Vincent Trocheck-Jonny Brodzinski

Will Cuylle-J.T. Miller-Mika Zibanejad

Chris Kreider-Juuso Parssinen-Alexis Lafrenière

Brett Berard-Sam Carrick-Matt Rempe

Defensemen:

K’Andre Miller-Will Borgen

Carson Soucy-Adam Fox

Urho Vaakanainen-Braden Schneider

Goaltenders:

Igor Shesterkin 

Jonathan Quick

Notable Storylines:

  • The Rangers are coming off of an 8-5 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers. 
  • Igor Shesterkin is set to start for the Rangers. 
  • Gabe Perreault and Brennan Othmann will be scratched out of the lineup.
  • The Rangers currently hold a 37-35-7 record.
  • The Hurricanes are coming off of a 5-4 loss to the Washington Capitals.

Yankees excited for Clarke Schmidt's return as rotation tries to overcome early struggles

The Yankees rotation is struggling to start the season.

Entering Saturday, New York's starters have an ERA of 5.46 -- the highest in MLB. The non-Max Fried arms (Carlos Rodon, Will Warren, Carlos Carrasco, Marcus Stroman) have not done their jobs consistently enough to help the Yankees bats get through the cold spring months.

Fortunately for the Yankees, reinforcements are on the way in the form of Clarke Schmidt.

The 29-year-old righty completed his second rehab start with Somerset on Friday and rejoined the team on Saturday and says everything went well.

"Everything went good and feeling good," Schmidt said in front of his locker before Saturday's game. "Happy for where everything's at."

Schmidt was slotted to make the rotation out of spring training, but a rotator cuff injury forced him to the IL to start the season. Six weeks later, and Schmidt's return is imminent.

The right-hander said he hasn't been told his return date -- manager Aaron Boone had said he's penciled him for the the Kansas City Royals series early next week -- but Schmidt will throw a side session Saturday and go from there.

And it can't come at a better time. Stroman struggled in the inclement weather in Friday's 9-1 loss to the San Francisco Giants, where the veteran right-hander could only get two outs before being pulled. To add injury to insult, Stroman told the team his knee was nagging and he underwent tests.

While the Yankees await word on Stroman, they'll need Schmidt's steadiness after the rotation's rocky start to the season.

Last season, Schmidt pitched to a 2.85 ERA and a 1.184 WHIP in 16 starts.

“Excited to get him back, obviously," Boone said prior to Saturday's game. "He's turned into a really good pitcher in the league. Feel like he's in a really good spot, too. His setbacks in spring training were pretty minor in nature. So the biggest challenge for him, is just been getting built up. Excited to get him back and know what he can mean to our staff."

When asked if he had a sense of urgency to return knowing the rotation's struggles, Schmidt brushed it off.

"I have a sense of urgency regardless, regardless of how we're doing or how anybody's performing," he said. "I'm eager to get out there. So, doesn't affect me."

What did affect Schmidt was landing on the IL and not being able to help the Yankees (7-6) get off to a better start.

"It's obviously frustrating. I want to be out there competing with my guys," Schmidt said. "This is something that I don't want to happen. Being able to go out there and compete every five days is something that I hold close to my heart and I want to make sure that I'm able to do that. Play at a high level consistently and be one of the guys that these guys rely on.

"Definitely looking forward to putting this past me and getting out there and being able to do that."

After the weekend series with the Giants, the Yankees will host the Royals for a three-game set starting Monday. Schmidt is expected to make his first 2025 start on Tuesday or Wednesday.

Sanchez racks up GIDPs, big day for Castellanos as Phillies even series in St. Louis

Sanchez racks up GIDPs, big day for Castellanos as Phillies even series in St. Louis originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ST. LOUIS – When Rob Thomson decided this weekend to protect Bryce Harper with Kyle Schwarber, the natural next question became, who protects Schwarber?

On Saturday afternoon at Busch Stadium it was Nick Castellanos, who had three hits and a pair of doubles, the first of which scored Harper and Schwarber after both reached base in the opening frame for the second consecutive game.

If the Harper-Schwarber duo remains intact against right-handed starting pitchers, the hitter in the No. 5 spot will have plenty of RBI opportunities. Not only do Harper and Schwarber hit for power but both also walk a ton.

In Friday’s series opener against the Cardinals, Harper and Schwarber walked and singled but were stranded when Castellanos lined out to right field to end the top of the first. Saturday was a good example of how one early swing and a couple of early runs can change an afternoon. With a quick lead and an effective Cristopher Sanchez on the mound, the Phillies were in control the whole way and won, 4-1.

“He’s just driving the ball in the gaps,” Thomson said. “When he does that, he’s in pretty good shape. The five-strikeout game, you don’t see that too often, but like I said the other day, I don’t think a guy like Nick really thinks about it, it’s just a new day and he moves on.”

Castellanos was indeed 0-for-5 with five K’s on Thursday in Atlanta, but the Phillies have played 13 other games and he’s performed in most of them. He’s looked comfortable at the plate since Opening Day. His plate coverage has been solid. He had four at-bats Saturday and picked up hits on a pitch down-and-in, a pitch up-and-in, a pitch over the middle, and he lined out on a pitch just off the plate away. He’s also consistently driving the ball to right and right-center, which has always been his trademark when going well.

“It reassures that I’m in a good spot,” Castellanos said, “and I really like my work that I’m doing with (hitting coaches) Kevin (Long), Raffy (Pena) and Dustin (Lind).

“If you take out that one night in Atlanta, I just feel like I’ve controlled my at-bats decently for the most part.”

Sanchez dealt with traffic on the basepaths but induced double plays in four of the first five innings. Three of them weren’t even on particularly well-located pitches, but Sanchez has an elite changeup, a mid/high-90s sinker and a slider that continues to improve. The better the stuff, the more wiggle room a pitcher is afforded.

“That keeps me in the game, too,” he said. “That’s one of the reasons I was able to stay out there until the seventh inning. I love double plays. The defense did a great job today.”

Sanchez’ sinker averaged 96.1 mph in his first two starts but, curiously, he threw a couple at 91 in the first inning. The velocity was right back to the 96 mph range thereafter, including some 97s. Sanchez said his body just felt off on Saturday.

The results weren’t. The Phillies lefty is 1-0 with a 3.12 ERA through three starts after Orion Kerkering, Jordan Romano and Jose Alvarado recorded eight outs to uphold his win.

“The first inning, he looked a little lethargic but then he picked it up in the second and got back to normal,” Thomson said. “He was really efficient, which was something we needed today. We should, for the most part, have a full bullpen tomorrow.”

Thomson used the same top half of the order as in Friday’s series opener, leading off Bryson Stott, followed by Trea Turner, Harper, Schwarber and Castellanos. J.T. Realmuto was back after a night off, so Alec Bohm moved from seventh down to eighth. Bohm struck out looking and grounded out sharply in his first two at-bats before finally finding a hole in the seventh with an infield hit between short and third.

Stott, 0-for-4 on Friday in his first game out of the leadoff spot, made better contact on Saturday, lining out to begin the game and doubling home Brandon Marsh in the top of the fifth. Stott has hit .344 this season against right-handed pitchers and will likely continue to lead off against them. Marsh’s run came after a two-out walk and had to feel good given his recent lack of production. He also sacrificed Bohm to second base in the seventh inning, enabling him to score two batters later on a Turner single.

It will be interesting to see how the Phillies set the lineup Sunday against left-hander Matthew Liberatore. The top four could be Turner, Harper, Schwarber, Castellanos in that order. Bohm will likely move up a couple of spots, and Edmundo Sosa could start for Stott.

With Zack Wheeler on the mound for the rubber match, the 9-5 Phillies have a good chance to make it a .500 road trip and win their fourth series out of five.

“It gives us a lot of confidence knowing we don’t have to get it done the first time through the lineup, even second time through the lineup, that we’re still in the game,” Castellanos said of the Phillies’ top-tier rotation. “I think it also helps us relax a little bit because we do have an explosive group of guys that can put up runs pretty quick.”

Sanchez racks up GIDPs, big day for Castellanos as Phillies even series in St. Louis

Sanchez racks up GIDPs, big day for Castellanos as Phillies even series in St. Louis originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ST. LOUIS – When Rob Thomson decided this weekend to protect Bryce Harper with Kyle Schwarber, the natural next question became, who protects Schwarber?

On Saturday afternoon at Busch Stadium it was Nick Castellanos, who had three hits and a pair of doubles, the first of which scored Harper and Schwarber after both reached base in the opening frame for the second consecutive game.

If the Harper-Schwarber duo remains intact against right-handed starting pitchers, the hitter in the No. 5 spot will have plenty of RBI opportunities. Not only do Harper and Schwarber hit for power but both also walk a ton.

In Friday’s series opener against the Cardinals, Harper and Schwarber walked and singled but were stranded when Castellanos lined out to right field. Saturday was a good example of how one early swing and a couple of early runs can change an afternoon. With a quick lead and an effective Cristopher Sanchez on the mound, the Phillies were in control the whole way and won, 4-1.

Sanchez dealt with traffic on the basepaths but induced double plays in four of the first five innings. Three of them weren’t even on particularly well-located pitches, but Sanchez has an elite changeup, a mid/high-90s sinker and a slider that continues to improve. The better the stuff, the more wiggle room a pitcher is afforded.

Sanchez’ sinker averaged 96.1 mph in his first two starts but, curiously, he threw a couple at 91 in the first inning. The velocity was right back to the 96 mph range thereafter, including some 97s, so it might have been a matter of Sanchez either settling in or intentionally adding and subtracting.

The Phillies lefty is 1-0 with a 3.12 ERA through three starts after Orion Kerkering, Jordan Romano and Jose Alvarado recorded eight outs to uphold his win.

Thomson used the same top half as in Friday’s series opener, leading off Bryson Stott with Trea Turner, Harper, Schwarber and Castellanos following. J.T. Realmuto was back after a night off, so Alec Bohm moved from seventh down to eighth. Bohm struck out looking and grounded out sharply in his first two at-bats before finally finding a hole in the seventh with an infield hit between short and third.

Stott, 0-for-4 on Friday in his first game out of the leadoff spot, made better contact on Saturday, lining out to begin the game and doubling home Brandon Marsh in the top of the fifth. Stott has hit .344 this season against right-handed pitchers and will likely continue to lead off against them. Marsh’s run came after a two-out walk and had to feel good given his recent lack of production. He also sacrificed Bohm to second base in the seventh inning, enabling him to score two batters later on a Turner single.

With Zack Wheeler on the mound for Sunday’s rubber match, the 9-5 Phillies have a good chance to make it a .500 road trip and win their fourth series out of five. It will be interesting to see how they set the lineup against left-hander Matthew Liberatore. The top four could be Turner, Harper, Schwarber, Castellanos in that order. Bohm will likely move up a couple of spots, and Edmundo Sosa could start for Stott.

Severino set to face former teammates in Athletics’ series finale against Mets

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Athletics right-hander Luis Severino greeted some of his former New York Mets teammates Friday before the teams opened a three-game series at Sutter Health Park.

“I was really happy to see those guys. They’re like family to me,” the 31-year-old pitcher said. “Even (though) it was one year, I feel like I was there for a long time.”

Severino (0-2, 4.74 ERA) is scheduled to face the Mets in the series finale on Sunday.

In December, Severino signed a two-year, $45 million deal with the Athletics with a player option for 2027. He went 11-7 with a 3.91 ERA with the Mets in 2024. Severino said he had hoped to remain with them.

“I actually asked for less money to stay there,” Severino said, “but I was not in their plans. At the beginning, I was shocked, but at the end, I knew that it was a business and it needs to take care of itself.”

Severino began his career with the New York Yankees and spent nine years with them before joining the Mets for last season. He is now with an Athletics team that is sharing a ballpark with the Sacramento River Cats, the San Francisco Giants’ Triple-A club. The A’s spent 57 years in Oakland before leaving after last season. They hope to begin play in Las Vegas in 2028.

Severino was asked what it’s like to be at Sutter Health Park after previously playing at Yankee Stadium and Citi Field.

“What do you think? It’s way different,” Severino said. “The situation we have right now is not good, but this is what we have right now. So, we have to just adjust to what we have and try to do the best job we can.”

He went 54-37 with a 3.79 ERA with the Yankees, including All-Star selections in 2017 and ’18. Mets manager Carlos Mendoza was a coach for the Yankees from 2018-23.

“I had a really good relationship with (Severino) even when we were both with the Yankees,” Mendoza said. “He’s proud of the fact that he got a nice contract. The hard work paid off and I’m proud of him.”

And on Sunday, Mendoza and the Mets will take on Severino, who will be looking for his first win with the Athletics.

“It’s going to be fun facing those guys,” Severino said. “I’m going to bring my best, and best of luck to them.”

On Saturday, J.T. Ginn will start for the Athletics against New York. The 25-year-old right-hander was selected by the Mets in the second round of the 2020 draft before being traded to the Athletics as part of the Chris Bassitt deal.

Freddie Freeman returns to Dodgers’ lineup after missing nine games with shower ankle injury

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles Dodgers slugger Freddie Freeman came off the injured list Friday after missing nine games with a right ankle injury that resulted from slipping in the shower at home.

Freeman said an MRI showed fraying of the scar tissue in his surgically repaired ankle, but he was back to running bases a few days ago.

“I hate to say it, but I might have needed the 10 days,” said Freeman, who loathes missing games. “I feel the best I’ve felt since I’ve gotten hurt.”

The 35-year-old first baseman went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts, was hit by a pitch and scored a run in the Dodgers’ 3-0 win over the Chicago Cubs, his first game since March 29.

“Got on base by way of hit-by-pitch and it was just his first game back,” manager Dave Roberts said. “He does a lot of great things, but this was a tough one. He’ll be back in there tomorrow.”

Fans chanted “Freddie! Freddie!” as he came to the plate for the first time in the series opener against the Chicago Cubs on his bobblehead night.

Freeman saw fans waiting outside the stadium when he arrived 6 1/2 hours before gametime. Not quite the madness of a Shohei Ohtani giveaway, but impressive nonetheless.

“That was kind of crazy,” he said. “I do appreciate it. I just want to say thank you. My family is really excited about this bobblehead, too.”

Charlie Freeman, the oldest of Freeman’s three sons, threw a ceremonial first pitch. The 8-year-old has a locker next to his father in the Dodgers clubhouse.

Charlie nonchalantly walked to the rubber on the pitcher’s mound and fired a strike, just like he did last year. The crowd cheered and he walked off and into the arms of his father, who scooped him up.

The Freeman family, including wife, Chelsea, and father, Fred, gave the traditional pregame call of “It’s time for Dodger baseball!”

The World Series MVP has played in just three games so far. He missed the opening series against the Cubs in Tokyo with left rib discomfort and sat out last week’s three-game series against his old team, the Atlanta Braves. Freeman has batted .250 with two home runs and four RBI.

Then came the shower incident.

Freeman slipped and fell on March 30 in what he called a “freak accident.”

It was another mishap involving the same ankle Freeman sprained on a play at first base in late September. He struggled in the first two rounds of the postseason, but it was hardly evident during the World Series. He homered in the first four games and had 12 RBIs as the Dodgers beat the New York Yankees in five games.

He had debridement surgery in December to remove loose bodies in the ankle.

Utilityman Kiké Hernández filled in at first during Freeman’s absence.

“When you lose Freddie to have a backfill like Kiki has been huge for us,” Roberts said. “Certainly in preventing runs and making plays defensively.”

Freeman said he feels good enough to steal a base.

But he doesn’t have the green light.

“No,” Roberts said. “It’s as red as it can be, fire engine red.”

Marcus Stroman goes to hospital for knee tests after getting chased in five-run first inning

NEW YORK — Yankees pitcher Marcus Stroman went to a hospital for tests on his left knee after he gave up five runs before getting chased in the first inning of a 9-1 loss to the San Francisco Giants on a cold and rainy Friday night.

New York manager Aaron Boone had just about finished his postgame news conference when he revealed Stroman was not in the clubhouse to speak with reporters.

“He came out. His knee was bothering him, so he went to get some tests done on his knee, so we’ll see what we have from there,” Boone said. “He said his left knee was bugging him so he got some X-rays here and I think he went to the hospital to get some more testing, and so we’ll see what we have tomorrow.”

Jung Hoo Lee hit a three-run homer and LaMonte Wade Jr. a two-run double in the first inning as the Giants won for the ninth time in 11 games. The game was played on a cold night with rain throughout and was called in the top of the sixth inning after conditions deteriorated.

New York has lost four of five following a 6-2 start and its starting rotation has a 5.46 ERA, worst among the 30 teams. While Max Fried has a 1.56 ERA, Carlos RodĂłn is at 5.19, Will Warren at 6.00, Carlos Carrasco at 7.71 and Stroman at 11.57.

“We got to do better,” Boone said. “Obviously we’re coming off a great start with Max. But we’ve struggled to this point. ... It’s 13 games in, but we’ve got night in and night out to pitch a little bit better to put us in a good situation.”

Stroman lasted nine batters, throwing 46 pitches and getting two outs while allowing four hits and three walks.

Clarke Schmidt is slated to rejoin the Yankees on Tuesday or Wednesday after recovering from right rotator cuff tendinitis that has sidelined him since spring training, Boone wouldn’t address who would be dropped from the rotation.

Stroman’s ERA would be the highest in the major leagues if he had enough innings to qualify.

“He’s dotting off the plate,” Boone said, “and then when he came into the zone he got hurt.”

A right-hander who turns 34 on May 1, Stroman (0-1) is in the second season of a two-year contract guaranteeing $37 million. His deal includes a $16 million conditional player option for 2026 that could be exercised if he pitches in at least 140 innings this year.

He skipped the Yankees’ first two spring training workouts at a time when he didn’t have a projected rotation role behind Gerrit Cole, Fried, Rodón, Luis Gil and Schmidt. He arrived on Valentine’s Day, eight days ahead of the mandatory reporting date.

“I won’t pitch in the bullpen. I’m a starter,” Stroman said, repeating ”I’m a starter” seven times in a 13-second span. Injuries to Cole, Gil and Schmidt created an opportunity.

A two-time All-Star, Stroman hasn’t pitched through the fifth inning this season and has a 2.04 WHIP. Batters are hitting .467 (7 for 15) against him in the first inning with four walks.

“The movement qualities are there. Again, it’s less margin for error and there’s probably some adjustments we can all make,” Boone said. “The stuff’s not much different than the first half of last season to the second half to now, so just we got to execute a little better.”