A baseball field in a racetrack? MLB’s Speedway Classic makes history

BRISTOL, Tenn. — A 110-foot Ferris wheel. Race cars painted in MLB team colors. Food trucks. Live music. Pitching tunnels and batting cages. A chance for photos with the Commissioner’s Trophy. And Clydesdales.

Of course, there’s merchandise available for any fans who forgot to grab their gear supporting the Atlanta Braves or Cincinnati Reds or simply commemorating a spectacle unlike any other.

“My sister’s already texted me asking for a t shirt,” said Marcia Lorenzo, 39, from Charleston, South Carolina.

After about four years in the planning, it’s finally time for the MLB Speedway Classic to play ball Saturday night on the diamond constructed on the infield at Bristol Motor Speedway at the place called the “Last Great Colisseum!”

“When you walk up to Bristol Motor Speedway, much like many of our venues, you know you’re at a big iconic sports location,” said Jeremiah Yolkut, MLB’s senior vice president of global events. “You feel it. You walk into Wrigley Field, Fenway Park, you feel it. And that’s what Bristol Motor Speedway is for NASCAR.”

The MLB Speedway Classic was first announced nearly a year ago as part of Commissioner Rob Manfred’s push to take MLB to places where baseball isn’t played every day live. MLB played a game at the movie site in Iowa in both 2021 and 2022. Alabama, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, too.

Now it’s time for Tennessee, which has teams in the NFL, NBA, NHL and MLS but no MLB team even as a group chases an expansion franchise for Nashville. This game mixes the rich racing history of both Bristol, which hosts a pair of NASCAR races each year, and Tennessee.

“So we quickly worked to make it so that we could viably create this magic moment and give fans that don’t get regular season baseball all the time, an opportunity to see it right there in their backyard in Tennessee,” Yolkut said.

The Reds, chasing an NL wild-card berth, split the first two games in this series with Atlanta. The rubber match will be a part of history as the first Major League Baseball game played in the state of Tennessee.

They will play before the largest crowd ever to see an MLB regular-season game, too.

Reds outfielder Austin Hays said this will be a fun game and can’t wait to see how loud it gets.

“I used to go to the truck races and the (Daytona) 500, the Rolex. I went to high school near Daytona,” Hays said Friday after the Reds’ 3-2 win over Atlanta. “It is the only track I’ve ever been to. It’s a pretty big track. I imagine it’s going to be similar standing on the infield, but it will be a baseball field this time.”

MLB didn’t try to sell every ticket inside the speedway that drew 156,990 for the Battle of Bristol college football game in 2016. The track with a racing capacity of 146,000 could host 90,000 or more even with sections blocked off.

Officials announced Monday more than 85,000 tickets had been sold — topping the previous paid attendance of 84,587 set Sept. 12, 1954, when Cleveland Stadium hosted the New York Yankees.

Sean Casey, a three-time All-Star now on the MLB Network, sees this as two super powers coming together in a perfect partnership. NASCAR and baseball already cross over in the Atlanta and Cincinnati markets, and this crossover exposes fans to the other sport.

“It’s such a unique situation,” Casey said Friday after broadcasting from the field with MLB Network. “Kudos to (Commissioner) Rob Manfred of Major League Baseball and also NASCAR and Bristol Motor Speedway for putting this event together because it’s going to be one of a kind.”

Once the time comes for fans to move inside Bristol, the schedule features a pre-game concert with Jake Owen joining stars Tim McGraw and Pitbull. A flyover by Navy jets, and a pair of Hall of Famers in Atlanta’s Chipper Jones and Johnny Bench of the Reds will handle the ceremonial first pitch.

Hunter Greear from Charleston, South Carolina, bought tickets with three friends a year ago. They arrived Thursday camping out and enjoying the weekend. Greear said they really didn’t know what to expect from MLB putting a baseball field in the infield of a racetrack.

“We had an idea,” Greear said. “But everything that’s been leading up to (the game) really has been making that idea even bigger than we could possibly expect it to be.”

Rockies’ stunning 17-16 comeback win over Pirates highlights huge night of offense in MLB

DENVER — Colorado Rockies outfielder Brenton Doyle had a hard time describing what had just taken place after he delivered the crowning blow in perhaps the wildest game of the major league season.

Doyle hit a two-run homer with one out in the bottom of the ninth inning to cap Colorado’s stunning comeback from a nine-run, first-inning deficit in a 17-16 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Friday night.

“Honestly, pretty speechless,” Doyle told reporters. “It’s hard to put into words. Just so proud of everyone in this clubhouse, never giving up. Man, what a win.”

Colorado won despite allowing nine runs during a first inning in which Pittsburgh’s Oneil Cruz hit a grand slam and Andrew McCutchen had a three-run homer.

According to Elias Sports Bureau and MLB.com, the Rockies were the first team to win after giving up nine runs in the first inning since Cleveland did it in a 15-13, 10-inning triumph over the Kansas City Royals in 2006. Cleveland trailed that game 10-1 after one inning.

Back in 1989, the Philadelphia Phillies beat the Pirates 15-11 after falling behind 10-2 in the first inning.

The three other occasions in which a team won a game after allowing at least nine runs in the first inning came way back in 1884, 1896 and 1913.

“Getting down nine in the first, it’s tough to come back from, but we kept the energy high,” Doyle said. “We kept the fight in us. Oh my God, what a game.”

Colorado scored one run in the bottom of the first, three in the third, two in the fourth and four in the fifth to cut Pittsburgh’s lead to 15-10. The Rockies still trailed 16-10 before scoring two runs in the eighth and five in the ninth.

After Pittsburgh’s Dennis Santana started the ninth by striking out Ezequiel Tovar, Hunter Goodman’s 425-foot homer reduced the Pirates’ lead to 16-13. Santana then walked Jordan Beck and allowed an RBI triple to Warming Bernabel.

Thairo Estrada singled home Bernabel before Doyle delivered a 406-foot shot to end the game.

The events in Colorado highlighted a night full of offense across the majors. According to StatsPerform, Friday marked the first time since June 23, 1930, that three major league games on the same day had at least 25 combined runs.

The Miami Marlins erased an early 6-0 deficit and scored three runs in the bottom of the ninth to beat the New York Yankees 13-12. The Milwaukee Brewers had 25 hits while trouncing the Washington Nationals 16-9.

Mets vs. Giants: How to watch on SNY on Aug. 2, 2025

The Mets and the New Yorkers-turned-San Franciscans play the second of the three-game set at Citi Field on Sunday at 4:10 p.m. on SNY.

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


Mets Notes

  • Kodai Senga will make his 17th start of the year and brings in a 2.00 ERA and 1.214 WHIP over 85.2 innings with 82 strikeouts to 41 walks. He is looking to bounce back after a tough outing against these same Giants: three runs on four hits over 5.0 innings with five walks allowed
  • Pete Alonso smashed his 249th career home run on Friday, moving him three away from tying Darryl Strawberry's franchise record. The dinger, his 29th of the year, snapped an 0-for-19 cold spell
  • Cedric Mullins gets his first start with the Mets in center field. In his last 16 games with Baltimore, he slashed .321/.333/.547 for an .881 OPS 
  • The Mets are 37-17 at Citi Field this season, their .685 winning percentage is the best in the majors
  • Mark Vientos extended his hitting streak to 10 games and is slashing .343/.361/.486 for an .822 OPS over his last 16 games
  • Giants right-hander Kai-Wei Teng will make his season debut. The Taiwan native tossed 11 innings over four relief appearances last year, allowing 12 runs on 15 hits with seven strikeouts to eight walks. He has pitched to a 3.67 ERA over 54 innings at Triple-A in 2025

GIANTS
METS
Heliot Ramos, LFBrandon Nimmo, LF
Rafael Devers, DHFrancisco Lindor, SS
Wukky Adames, SSJuan Soto, RF
Matt Chapman, 3BPete Alonso, 1B
Dominic Smith, 1BJeff McNeil, DH
Casey Schmitt, 2BRonny Mauricio, 3B
Jung Hoo Lee, CFCedric Mullins, CF
Andrew Knizner, CFrancisco Alvarez, C
Grant McCray, RFBrett Baty, 2B

What channel is SNY?

Check your TV or streaming provider's website or channel finder to find your local listings.

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The new way to stream SNY games is via the MLB App or MLB.tv. Streaming on the SNY App has been discontinued.

In order to stream games in SNY’s regional territory, you will need to have SNY as part of your TV package (cable or streaming), or you can now purchase an in-market SNY subscription package. Both ways will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone. 

How can I watch the game on my computer via MLB? 

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  • Type in your MLB.com credentials and tap “Log In.”  
  • To access live or on-demand content, tap on the "Watch" tab from the bottom navigation bar. Select the "Games" sub-tab to see a listing of available games. You can scroll to previous dates using the left and right arrows. Tap on a game to select from the game feeds available.  

For more information on how to stream Mets games on SNY, please click here.

ICYMI in Mets Land: New faces meet moment, but bats remain shy

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Friday, in case you missed it...


Letters to Sports: Why did the Dodgers keep their hands in pockets at trade deadline?

Los Angeles, CA - July 21: Los Angeles Dodgers relief pitcher Tanner Scott meets with catcher Will Smith, manager Dave Roberts and assistant rehab coordinator Greg Barajasafter after sustaining an injury to his pitching arm during the game as the Dodgers take on the Minnesota Twins at Dodger Stadium Monday, July 21, 2025 in Los Angeles, CA. (Luke Johnson / Los Angeles Times)
Dodgers reliever Tanner Scott talks to catcher Will Smith, manager Dave Roberts and assistant rehab coordinator Greg Barajas. The Dodgers will be banking on Scott and other pitchers to rebound from injury in time for the playoffs. (Luke Johnson / Los Angeles Times)

The self-confident, stay-as-they-are Dodgers did right by not panicking at the trade deadline and keeping the roster pretty much intact. This is still the same group of guys picked by most baseball experts to win a second straight championship.

The slumps will pass. The injuries will go away. Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, Shohei Ohtani and the gang will be there at the end when it counts most.

Marty Zweben
Palos Verdes Estates


Though I don’t agree with his breathless, sky-is-falling sense of urgency, I do think Bill Plaschke is right that the Dodgers should have been more aggressive at the trade deadline. It’s a reasonable gamble to believe that their pitchers will stay healthy enough, their hitters will get untracked and Max Muncy will return and pick up where he left off. But it’s a gamble nonetheless. And if you’ve already sunk $400 million into your payroll, what’s another $10 million to $20 million for a playoff insurance policy: a proven closer and a better outfielder?

John Merryman
Redondo Beach


On Wednesday against the Reds, James Outman attempted to do his best Denzel Clarke-Cedric Mullins imitation by attempting to rob a homer. Unfortunately this last great effort typified Outman’s career with the Dodgers, as it was another case of “so close, but yet so far,” as the ball landed off the heel of Outman’s glove for a two-run triple.

The NL rookie of the month in April 2023 is a great athlete, but it was understandable why the Dodgers traded him.

Ken Feldman
Tarzana


A few hours before baseball's trade deadline Thursday, MLB Network dived into how well top minor league prospects across baseball have succeeded in the major leagues over the years, and it's a pretty dismal percentage. Very few go on to successful big league careers, most just pop back and forth between the minors and majors, move from team to team, while many just fizzle out. They concluded that given the opportunity to garner a quality major league player, let alone an All-Star by just using your draft capital is a no-brainer. The Padres are one team that firmly believes in this while the Dodgers always seem hesitant to do so.

They pointed to the Dodgers with an aging Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, Max Muncy and a 31-year-old, currently healthy Shohei Ohtani that the time to win is now and that holding onto all their draft capital when it could be used to immediately bolster the roster doesn't historically or statistically make much sense.

Jerry Leibowitz
Culver City


Well the trade deadline passed without much movement from the Dodgers. With their deep pockets, I thought they might have become the first organization in MLB history to trade for an entire team.

Joe Kevany
Mount Washington

Halo hope

When Arte Moreno sells the Angels this offseason, please bring in A.J. Preller, the architect behind the Padres, as the GM.

Dean Connor
Fontana

Life of Riley

So Lincoln Riley gets $80 million if USC lets him go before his contract is up. For that amount of money, I presume he’s also curing cancer at the USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Marty Cooper
Encino

Redemption road

As a Trojan fan searching for imminent signs of a return to football glory, it's oddly encouraging to see a certain columnist declare USC nationally irrelevant because if history has taught us anything, it's this: when Bill Plaschke buries you, resurrection tends to follow.

Steve Ross
Carmel

Bruins longshot

I don't believe DeShaun Foster was "going full Joe Namath" when he guaranteed a packed Rose Bowl this coming football season. A critical college football playoff game will surely pack the place New Year's Day.

As for his certainty of a jam-packed venue during the regular season — I wouldn't bet the house.

David Griffin
Los Angeles

Role models

What a great article Eric Sondheimer wrote on City section coaches uniting in challenging times. Reading about these new coaches, as well as some new stadiums, it has me quite excited about the upcoming season. They appear ready to lead their young men the right way in developing as players and students first and put the cheating at one unnamed City high school in the rearview mirror. These coaches are to be admired as they take on this arduous task with a lot less resources and financial compensation than many of their brethren at other CIF schools.

Mark Kaiserman
Santa Monica

Clip job

What’s older — a California Giant Redwood or the Clippers’ starting lineup?

Barry Smith
Thousand Oaks


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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Fantasy Baseball Closer Report: Post-trade deadline fallout and closer rankings

In this weekend edition of the Closer Report, we'll run through an updated post-trade deadline closer rankings and break down the fallout of Thursday's flurry of activity across the league. We'll also highlight some priority waiver additions following the trade deadline for teams looking to supplement saves over the final two months.

Fantasy Baseball Closer Rankings

Tier 1

Josh Hader - Houston Astros
Andrés Muñoz - Seattle Mariners
Edwin Díaz - New York Mets

Hader remains the top closer in baseball with 28 saves and a 2.22 ERA. Muñoz and Díaz aren't far behind, converting 24 and 23 saves, respectively, with sub-2.00 ERAs. While the Astros and Mariners didn't do much at the deadline to add to their bullpens, the Mets made some significant additions in Ryan Helsley and Tyler Rogers. Helsley has operated as the Cardinals' closer over the last four seasons, breaking out in 2024 with 49 saves and a 2.04 ERA across 66 1/3 innings. The 31-year-old right-hander brings 21 saves and a 3.00 ERA with his this season from the Cardinals and should slot in as the team's primary setup man and next-in-line behind Díaz, hurting his fantasy value where teams were counting on him for saves. Meanwhile, Rogers has been one of the most consistent high-leverage relievers in baseball over his seven-year career with the Giants. He brings a 1.80 ERA over 50 innings from San Francisco. Aside from Helsley becoming a handcuff to Díaz, there isn't much more action we can take here.

Tier 2

Aroldis Chapman - Boston Red Sox
Jhoan Duran - Philadelphia Phillies
Trevor Megill - Milwaukee Brewers
Robert Suarez - San Diego Padres

This next tier consists of the next group of top-end relievers, starting with Chapman, who's had an incredible 16th season in the majors at 37 years old. The veteran left-hander has posted a 1.29 ERA, 0.81 WHIP, and a 62/13 K/BB ratio across 42 innings. The Red Sox added Steven Matz from the Cardinals to help bolster the middle relief group. The 34-year-old left-hander is capable of throwing multiple innings out of the bullpen and has posted a solid 3.44 ERA over 55 innings.

The major mover here is Duran, who goes from Minnesota to Philadelphia. We can stop questioning and trying to chase the Phillies closer as Duran should step in for most, if not all, of the team's save chances. This leaves Matt Strahm and Orion Kerkering free to hit the waiver wire in most formats. The hope for Duran is that moving from the Twins to the 62-47 Phillies will bring more save chances for the 27-year-old right-hander. He locked down his first for the team with a perfect inning against the Tigers on Friday.

The Brewers added veteran Shelby Miller at the deadline. Miller had been operating as the Diamondbacks' closer before landing on the injured list in early July with a right forearm strain. Miller has begun a throwing program and, despite an excellent season in Arizona so far with a 1.98 ERA, should pose no threat to Trevor Megill for saves. Megill has been fantastic in his first full year as the Brewers' closer, converting 24 saves with a 2.19 ERA across 37 innings.

Now things get very interesting here. The Padres landed one of the biggest fish in the reliever market, acquiring Mason Miller from the Athletics for a package that included top prospect, Leo De Vries. The 26-year-old right-hander has been dominant since making the transition from starting pitching at the start of last season. Despite some bumps this year in Sacramento, Miller is one of the best pitchers in baseball and gives San Diego perhaps the best one-two punch in the late innings, adding to what was already one of the league's best bullpens. I would imagine that the Padres continue to roll with the MLB saves leader in Robert Suarez in the ninth inning, at least for now. But don't consider dropping Miller in any format, given his ability to help in strikeouts and perhaps fall in line for some wins. There's also a chance Miller gets mixed in for some save chances to keep Suarez and the rest of the bullpen rested over the final stretch. Remember, Suarez struggled late last season, posting a 4.35 ERA in August and a 6.00 ERA in September.

Tier 3

Devin Williams - New York Yankees
Daniel Palencia - Chicago Cubs
Randy Rodríguez - San Francisco Giants
Will Vest/Kyle Finnegan - Detroit Tigers
Emilio Pagán - Cincinnati Reds
Kenley Jansen - Los Angeles Angels
Pete Fairbanks - Tampa Bay Rays
Cade Smith - Cleveland Guardians
Jeff Hoffman - Toronto Blue Jays
Carlos Estévez - Kansas City Royals
Dennis Santana - Pittsburgh Pirates

The Yankees were one of the most active teams at the trade deadline, adding the Giants' and Pirates' closers in Camilo Doval and David Bednar to significantly bolster their bullpen. While Williams should continue to see most save chances in New York, Bednar has had the best season among the three, posting a 2.72 ERA, 1.16 WHIP, and a 53/10 K/BB ratio across 39 2/3 innings. Doval has had a strong season in his own right, albeit with a few more ups and downs. Both Bednar and Doval should initially slot in as high-leverage setup men behind Williams, while Luke Weaver could move to a versatile role in the back end of the bullpen, capable of giving the Yankees five or six outs when needed.

The Cubs put their confidence in Palencia, with Andrew Kittredge and Taylor Rogers being their only bullpen additions to fortify the middle innings. The Giants are also rolling with a rookie breakout in the ninth after sending Doval to the Yankees, naming Randy Rodríguez their primary closer. Rodríguez struck out one batter in a scoreless tenth inning on Friday for the save against the Mets and holds a 1.17 ERA, 0.85 WHIP, and a 63/10 K/BB ratio across 46 innings. The 25-year-old right-hander has incredible upside over the last two months of the season and should be universally added in every format as one of this weekend's top waiver targets.

The Tigers added Kyle Finnegan into the saves mix in a trade with the Nationals. The 33-year-old right-hander brings 20 saves and a 4.38 ERA across 39 innings. Will Vest has been working as Detroit's primary closer, but was used in the seventh inning on Friday against the Phillies. Manager A.J. Hinch is likely to be more fluid with the closer role now that Finnegan brings some experience to the late innings. He could go with a committee approach. Through, we may just need to see this play out over the next week.

The Reds didn't acquire any outside help for the bullpen at the deadline, but did make an addition to the starting rotation with Zach Littell. The move shifts Nick Martinez into a relief role behind closer Emilio Pagán. And in Anaheim, the Angels added some middle relief depth behind Kenley Jansen, bringing Luis García and Andrew Chafin in from the Nationals.

Not only did the Rays end up keeping Pete Fairbanks, but they also made a significant improvement behind him with the acquisition of Griffin Jax from the Twins in exchange for starter Taj Bradley. Meanwhile, the Guardians' situation wasn't affected by the trade deadline, but rather by Emmanuel Clase's addition to the restricted list as MLB conducts a potential sports-betting investigation. Cade Smith is expected to step in as closer. The 26-year-old right-hander has posted a strong 3.00 ERA, 1.15 WHIP, and a 68/17 K/BB ratio across 48 innings and is among the top waiver adds for saves.

The Blue Jays brought in some depth at the deadline, acquiring Seranthony Domínguez from the Orioles and Louis Varland from the Twins. Both should get work as quality middle relievers behind closer Jeff Hoffman. And while the situation in Kansas City remains the same, Pittsburgh pulled the trigger on a deal that sent closer David Bednar to the Yankees while holding on to Dennis Santana. Santana filled in as closer for a short time early this season during a brief demotion to Triple-A for Bednar. He stumbled in his save chance Friday in Colorado, giving up five runs against the Rockies to take the loss. Still, the 29-year-old right-hander is expected to finish out the season as the Pirates' closer.

Tier 4

Raisel Iglesias - Atlanta Braves
Jojo Romero - St. Louis Cardinals
Robert Garcia - Texas Rangers
Blake Treinen/Alex Vesia - Los Angeles Dodgers
Cole Sands - Minnesota Twins

The Braves were mostly quiet at the trade deadline as Iglesias remains with the team to continue his closing duties. The 35-year-old right-hander has had a disappointing season, posting a 4.74 ERA and 13 saves across 43 2/3 innings. On the other hand, the Cardinals sent closer Ryan Helsley to the Mets on Wednesday before trading Phil Maton to the Rangers on Thursday, leaving Jojo Romero as the likely closer through the rest of the season. The 28-year-old left-hander has had a strong campaign, recording a 2.04 ERA over 35 1/3 frames. While not the flashiest option with elite strikeout upside, Romero should still be added in most formats where saves are needed.

While Maton takes a 2.29 ERA and a 49/16 K/BB ratio over 39 1/3 innings with him to Texas, Robert García is expected to continue to run with the closer role. García did get Friday's save chance, but blew the opportunity as he surrendered a two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth against the Mariners. While García has otherwise had a strong season, it wouldn't be a shock to see Maton get some save chances over the final two months.

The Dodgers should continue to utilize a committee in the ninth inning while Tanner Scott is shelved with an elbow injury. Scott did start a throwing progression earlier this week and should resume closing duties once he returns. In the meantime, Blake Treinen, Alex Vesia, and potentially new addition Brock Stewart could be in the mix for saves.

Stewart joined the Dodgers in a trade with the Twins, who cleaned house in their bullpen by sending Jhoan Duran to the Phillies and Griffin Jax to the Rays. Manager Rocco Baldelli mentioned Cole Sands and Justin Topa as the likely candidates to work late-inning duties, with Sands presumably getting most of the save chances. Sands should be left for teams in deeper leagues chasing saves.

Tier 5

Anthony Bender/Ronny Henriquez/Calvin Faucher - Miami Marlins
Kevin Ginkel - Arizona Diamondbacks
Corbin Martin/Keegan Akin - Baltimore Orioles
Sean Newcomb/Jack Perkins - Athletics
Jose Ferrer - Washington Nationals
Grant Taylor - Chicago White Sox
Seth Halvorsen - Colorado Rockies

You really don't want to be shopping for saves in this tier. The Marlins situation has been a hard one to pin down all season. While Calvin Faucher leads the team with ten saves, Ronny Henriquez has had the best season of the bunch, posting a 2.96 ERA over 51 2/3 innings. Seth Halvorsen, with a 4.99 ERA in Colorado, leads the rest of this group with 11 saves and is the only other reliever with more than three.

Even with new-look bullpen, Mets still need to solve offensive woes

While Ryan Helsley was electric Friday night in his debut inning as a Met and David Peterson offered his usual terrific stuff in six good innings, the bitter aftertaste from Giants 4, Mets 3 at Citi Field was a pre-deadline woe that the Mets must work out.

Their offense.

Yes, the Mets made a nice comeback, scoring once in the seventh and twice in the eighth to erase a 3-0 deficit. The Fab Four did all of that work, too, driving in or scoring every run. And Pete Alonso moved closer to the franchise home run record by swatting his 249th career longball, three shy of Darryl Strawberry.

But the Mets, who entered the game with a below-average offense in terms of runs per game, were 1-for-7 with runners in scoring position. They struggled against Giants lefty Robbie Ray, who allowed one run in seven innings. The Mets loaded the bases in the 10th inning, thanks in part to the automatic runner, but were 0-for-3 with RISP in that frame alone. The game ended when Ronny Mauricio struck out with the potential tying run on third and the potential winning run on second.

The result was their fourth straight loss, one that perhaps muted some of the warm feelings percolating after what appeared to be a terrific trade deadline. The Mets netted three big relief arms, including Helsley, and solidified their bullpen, which had loomed as a danger zone.

Now the big bats must fix the attack. The top of the order – the Fab Four – did the heavy lifting Friday, but Brandon Nimmo, Francisco Lindor, Juan Soto and Alonso still combined to go just 3-for-15. Alonso had been 0-for-19 before his homer and had been stuck in a 5-for-60 funk entering the night. Lindor’s numbers are plummeting and Soto was coming off a 3-for-19 road trip.

Perhaps new outfielder Cedric Mullins, who popped up as a pinch-hitter, can jolt things with his power and speed.

Maybe Friday is a sign Alonso is getting untracked. In addition to his 23rd homer, a 414-foot shot to right-center, he had a sacrifice fly and his 10th-inning walk against closer Randy Rodriguez seemed to impress Carlos Mendoza, who praised Alonso for laying off a tough 3-2 breaking pitch to work a walk in the 10th.

“There were some good signs from Pete,” the manager said.

And if you want to feel good about something else, Helsley, the newcomer who had the most impact on the game, was impressive. He came into the game to AC/DC’s “Hell’s Bells,” which the crowd loved, and threw a scoreless ninth inning, though he allowed two hits. He struck out the other three batters he faced, though, and coaxed several weak swings from Giants’ hitters with his slider. He also hit 101 miles per hour on the radar gun.

“That’s a really, really good fastball,” Mendoza said. “But then you look at the breaking ball, the slider. He keeps hitters guessing – you’ve got to get ready for 100 and then, before you know it, he’s dropping that breaking ball right there. For strikes. For chase.

“It’s a pretty tough at-bat.”

So is Peterson, the only Met starter who delivers innings in bushels. He’s now at his single-season high of 127 innings pitched and he’s the only Met pitcher who has completed six innings in a game since June 7, when Clay Holmes did it.

Peterson, as MLB managers love to put it, gave the Mets a chance to win Friday night.

Time for their offense to start doing the same with a little more regularity.

Edwards, Ramírez help Marlins come from behind to beat Yankees 13-12

MIAMI — Xavier Edwards hit a tying two-run single in the ninth, then raced home with the winning run on Agustín Ramírez's chopper in front of the plate as the Marlins rallied to beat the New York Yankees 13-12 in front of an electric Miami crowd on Friday night.

Edwards' hit came off new Yankees reliever Camilo Doval (4-3) and he beat the attempted tag at home on Ramírez's fielder's choice grounder.

Giancarlo Stanton and Trent Grisham hit three-run homers that helped the Yankees build a 9-4 lead before the Marlins stunned New York with a six-run seventh.

Kyle Stowers hit a grand slam off newly acquired Yankees reliever Jake Bird, and Javier Sanoja hit a solo shot off David Bednar, another new acquisition. Ramírez singled twice, including a leadoff base hit and a go-ahead single that put the Marlins up 10-9.

Anthony Volpe then tied it at 10 with a leadoff home run in the eighth, and Bednar pitched a scoreless inning before McMahon's single against Anthony Bender (3-5) in the ninth. Volpe, who had four hits, gave the Yankees a two-run cushion with a run-scoring double.

Yankees starter Carlos Rodón was lifted in the fifth after issuing his fifth walk. The left-hander shook his head as he left the mound, with his outing ending after striking out nine and allowing two walks and four runs.

Rodón held the Marlins without a hit before Eric Wagaman's leadoff single in the fifth. Sanoja launched an opposite field two-run shot off Rodón, and pinch-hitter Liam Hicks drove in two with a single off Jonathan Loáisiga that made it 6-4.

Jasson Dominguez also had three hits. Camilo Doval earned his 16th save

Junk went five innings and allowed six runs and six hits while striking out four.

The announced crowd at loanDepot park was a season-high 32,299.

José Caballero, pinch-running for Ben Rice, scored on McMahon's go-ahead single after stealing second.

Marlins pitchers had thrown 22 scoreless innings before Stanton's homer.

Yankees RHP Cam Schlittler (1-1, 4.91) goes against Marlins RHP Eury Pérez (3-3, 3.07) on Saturday.

Phillies slugger Bryce Harper ejected following outburst over called third strike

PHILADELPHIA — Phillies slugger Bryce Harper was ejected in the seventh inning of Friday's game against Detroit for arguing a called third strike on a check swing.

The Phillies scored three runs in the seventh to tie the game 3-all and had two runners on base with two outs when Harper faced Tigers reliever Will Vest.

Harper tried to check his swing on a full-count changeup from Vest, but third base umpire Vic Carapazza rang up the Harper, who ripped his helmet off his head in a outburst and shouted as he waved his arms at Carapazza.

Harper was promptly tossed and kept his helmet with him as he walked into the dugout.

“I left the batter's box walking toward him, so I think it was warranted,” Harper said.

Harper said after the Phillies beat the Tigers 5-4 that he had yet to see the replay, which seemed to indicate he went around with his swing.

“Can't get thrown out in that situation, especially with the ninth inning possibly coming around and my at-bat coming up,” Harper said.

Ryan Helsley makes 'lights out' Mets debut with a little help from 'Hells Bells'

Move over Edwin Diaz

Ryan Helsley made his Mets debut on Friday night and premiered his signature walk-out from the bullpen to the Citi Field crowd.

Similar to Diaz's "Narcos" walk-out, the lights in the stadium go dark as the bell tolls throughout the stadium as AC/DC's "Hells Bells" begins to play as Helsley makes his way to the mound.

Of course, this is the song made famous by Hall of Famer Trevor Hoffman but Helsley has made it his own over the years and has now brought it to Flushing.

But a killer walk-out entrance is nothing without the performance to back it up, and Helsley did. Pitching in a tied game in the ninth, Helsley allowed two hits but struck out three batters to get out of trouble. He became just the sixth Mets pitcher ever to strike out three batters in his debut inning. That performance gave his new team a chance to walk off the Giants. Unfortunately for the Mets, San Francisco would push across the ghost-runner in the 10th to take the 4-3 win.

Despite the result, Helsley's new manager and teammates were impressed with the right-hander.

"He was pretty good. 100 first pitch," Carlos Mendoza said with a smirk after the game. "Around the strikezone, it’s a really, really good fastball then you look at the breaking ball, the slider and some of those pitches, you keep the hitters guessing…. He’s a pretty tough at-bat. He’s a pretty elite arm right there."

Helsley was one of three relievers the Mets acquired before the trade deadline, along with the Giants' Tyler Rogers and the Orioles' Gregory Soto, days prior. All three hope to give the Mets a boost in the bullpen and depth for a deep postseason run.

"Lights out. He was all over it," David Peterson said of Helsley after the game. "We’re all excited for all the guys we brought over. Now that we’re passed [the trade deadline], this is our group and we’re ready to continue all the way to the end of the year."

 

Yankees blow multiple cushioned leads in disastrous 13-12 loss to Marlins

The Yankees' group of trade acquisitions made a dreadful first impression on Friday night, as multiple leads were blown in a stunning and inexplicable 13-12 loss to the Marlins at LoanDepot Park.

Here are the takeaways...

-- There couldn't have been any legitimate complaints about the early pace of play, as both starting pitchers worked efficiently and held everyone hitless through the first three innings. Janson Junk, the former Yankees farmhand, induced four groundouts and three flyouts in his three perfect frames, while Carlos Rodón struck out four and allowed a walk during the same stretch. But the blemish-free outing didn't last long enough for Junk.

-- The Yankees' bats woke up in the fourth, as back-to-back singles from Trent Grisham and Jasson Dominguez disrupted Junk's rhythm. A flyout to right from Cody Bellinger allowed Grisham to advance to third, and after a steal of second from Dominguez with one out, Giancarlo Stanton ripped a three-run homer to left that broke the ice. The veteran slugger's ninth blast of the season had a scorching 116 mph exit velocity, and it was his first homer at LoanDepot Park since Sept. 28, 2017. At that time, Stanton was playing his final games with the Marlins.

-- While the no-hit bid remained alive for Rodón through four innings, the veteran southpaw had to circumvent a jam due to free passes. He allowed a leadoff walk to Agustin Ramirez, who ultimately reached third with stolen bases that followed strikeouts. With two outs and Ramirez just 90 feet away from home, Rodón walked another to set up runners on the corners, but he craftily left the mound unscathed by fanning Kyle Stowers.

-- Junk's woes continued in the fifth, as the Yankees posted another three-spot to increase their lead to a comfortable 6-0. The rally began with a one-out single from Anthony Volpe, who then stole second with two outs and reached home on an RBI single from Dominguez. A walk from Grisham and another stolen bag from Dominguez set up two in scoring position for Bellinger, who wound up driving in the pair with a single to right. It marked the Yankees' second lead of six-plus runs in as many games.

-- Rodón experienced hiccups of his own after the Yankees padded their cushion. He lost the no-hit bid by allowing a leadoff single to Eric Wagaman, and in the ensuing at-bat, he served up a two-run homer to Javier Sanoja that cleared the wall in right. Rodón recovered with a sweat-drenched uniform, striking out two with another walk sandwiched in between. But he couldn't complete the inning, as his fifth walk of the outing prompted manager Aaron Boone to leave the dugout and take the ball. Rodón threw 107 total pitches (61 for strikes) and punched out nine.

-- Despite using Jonathan Loaisiga as the closer in Thursday's win, the Yankees turned to the right-hander as Rodón's replacement with two outs in the fifth. The strategy quickly backfired, as Loaisiga plunked Otto Lopez to load the bases and then allowed a two-run bloop single to Liam Hicks that cut the Yankees' lead to 6-4. But the inning could've been far worse, as Ryan McMahon stopped the bleeding with a slick snag at third that robbed Stowers of a knock and the Marlins of more runs. In the end, Rodón was charged with four earned runs -- his season ERA is now 3.34.

-- The Yankees didn't take kindly to the Marlins' round of punches. After a quiet sixth inning against reliever Valente Bellozo, they rapidly produced another three runs in the seventh, as singles from Volpe and Austin Wells preceded a towering three-run homer to right from Grisham. It was a milestone dinger off the foul pole for Grisham, who now has a career-high 19 homers on the year.

-- The seventh inning was a nightmare for the Yankees' newly acquired relievers. Jake Bird made his debut first, and after loading the bases via a single, double, and walk, he served up a one-out grand slam to Stowers that suddenly cut the Yankees' lead to 9-8. David Bednar then took the mound,  and after recording the second out, he allowed a game-tying blast to Sanoja that sent the crowd into a frenzy. In the blink of an eye, Bednar gave up three more hits, and the stunning six-run rally from the Marlins put them ahead, 10-9.

-- Somehow, the Yankees' seventh-inning stench wasn't as strong as the game's drunken breath. Just four pitches into the eighth, Volpe knotted the score at 10-10 with a mammoth solo homer to left off Lake Bachar. In spite of his incessant defensive blunders at shortstop, Volpe now has 17 homers this season, and he's hit .438 (7-for-16) over his last four games. Bednar returned for a second inning of work and kept the game tied by retiring the Marlins in order with two strikeouts. 

-- While the Yankees' newest relievers failed to impress, their newest third baseman and utilityman stepped up when it mattered most. After a two-out single from Ben Rice off reliever Anthony Bender, speedster Jose Caballero entered as a pinch-runner and managed to steal second. The hustle from Caballero paid off, as McMahon stepped up to the plate and delivered a go-ahead RBI single to center. Then, six pitches later, Volpe delivered an insurance run, crushing a double to deep center that increased the Yankees' lead to 12-10.

-- Camilo Doval was tasked with closing out the ninth, and his Yankees debut also brought misery. He blew the save in brutal fashion, as Sonoja and Jakob Marsee scored the game-tying runs with one out when a single to right from Xavier Edwards trickled past Caballero's glove. Then, moments later, Ramirez nubbed a ball in front of the plate that forced Wells chasing and allowed Edwards to slide in head-first for the winning run. A stunning collapse for the Yankees, and their worst loss in recent memory.

Game MVP: Javier Sanoja

The second-year infielder found himself in the middle of several Marlins rallies, and finished the night 3-for-5 with a home run and three runs scored.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees (60-50) will continue their three-game weekend set in Miami on Saturday afternoon, with first pitch scheduled for 4:10 p.m.

RHP Cam Schlittler (1-1, 4.91 ERA) is slated to take the mound, opposite RHP Eury Pérez (3-3, 3.07 ERA).

Mets rally to tie game late but fall to Giants in extra innings, 4-3

Dom Smith beat his former team Friday night, smacking an RBI single in the 10th inning off Edwin Díaz to lift the San Francisco Giants to a 4-3 victory over the Mets in front of a sellout crowd of 42,777 at Citi Field.

The Mets had a late chance with the Fab Four coming up in their half of the 10th inning. The top of the order had started a rally in the eighth inning, but couldn’t do it again. The Mets left the bases loaded in the 10th inning when Ronny Mauricio struck out for the final out against Giants closer Randy Rodriguez. 

It was the fourth straight loss for the Mets, who fell to 62-48.

Here are the takeaways...

-The Mets rallied for two runs in the eighth inning, thanks to the top of their lineup. With one out, Brandon Nimmo walked and Francisco Lindor lined a single to right. Juan Soto hit a ball off the foot of Giants reliever Joey Lucchesi, the former Met, and the ball bounded into left field for an RBI single. Pete Alonso followed with a sac fly to center off Jose Butto – his Mets teammate as recently as two days ago – to knot the score at 3-3. Lindor had been in a 0-for-13 slide before his hit and Soto had been 0-for-8.

-With the Mets trailing, 3-0, in the seventh, Pete Alonso led off with a rocket over the fence in right-center, his 23rd home run of the season. It was also the 249th of his career, bringing him within three home runs of tying Darryl Strawberry’s franchise record of 252. Before the homer, which traveled 414 feet and had an exit velocity of 110.1 miles per hour, according to Statcast, Alonso had been mired in a 0-for-19 skid. It was Alonso’s second homer since July 10. 

-In his first inning of work as a Met, Ryan Helsley, acquired from the Cardinals this week, allowed two singles but struck out three in a scoreless ninth with the score tied. His high-octane fastball, which got as high as 101.4 miles per hour, finished off one strikeout and his slider ended the other two. Fans seemed entertained.

-David Peterson, perhaps predictably, pitched well yet again and provided the Mets some length. He gave up two runs and four hits over six innings and has now thrown at least six innings 14 times this season. Except for a slight wobble in the second inning, Peterson did not give the Giants much. In that frame, he walked the leadoff man, Matt Chapman, and then gave up a single to Wilmer Flores and then an RBI double to Casey Schmitt. The second Giant run scored on Jung Hoo Lee’s RBI grounder and broke Peterson’s streak of four straight starts allowing one earned run or fewer. Friday’s start was Peterson’s 21st of the season, matching his career high set in each of the previous two seasons. He also achieved a new career-best for innings pitched in a single season with 127. He started the night with 121 innings, the exact number he set as a personal best last year. 

-Friday was the first time all season the Mets had lost a home start by Peterson. They had won the first 10. It is the second-longest such streak in club history, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. In 1989, the Mets won the first 11 games started by David Cone. 

-Mark Vientos extended his hitting streak to 10 games with a single to center with one out in the fifth. It was the Mets’ first hit of the game off Ray. One out later, Luis Torrens singled up the middle to give the Mets two baserunners, by Tyrone Taylor grounded out to end the inning. 

-In the sixth inning, Alonso missed a foul pop-up by Flores and was charged with an error. It was harmless, though, as Flores flew to right shortly thereafter and the Mets escaped the inning unscathed. 

-Giants lefty Robbie Ray, who lost to the Mets last Saturday in San Francisco, threw seven sharp innings, allowing only one run and four hits. Ray struck out six and walked one and lowered his ERA to 2.85. 

Game MVP: Dom Smith

Smith played for the Mets from 2017-22. His clutch pinch-hit extended his hitting streak to six games and made him 11-for-his-last-33 (.333). 

Highlights

What's next

The Mets continue their three-game set on Saturday. First pitch is set for 4:10 p.m.

Kodai Senga (7-3, 2.00 ERA) will take the mound against Kai-Wei Teng, making his season debut.

With a little help from a Coldplay meme, Freddie Freeman stays hot in Dodgers' win

Los Angeles Dodgers' Freddie Freeman hits a two-RBI double during the first inning.
Freddie Freeman hits a two-RBI double during the first inning of the Dodgers' 5-0 win over the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday night. (Jason Behnken / Associated Press)

First, the meme made Freddie Freeman laugh.

Then, in a serendipitous twist, it gave him a lightning-bulb epiphany about his recently ailing swing.

At the end of a long day during last week’s homestand — when Freeman was hit by a pitch on July 20, immediately removed from the game to get an X-ray, then informed he somehow hadn’t sustained serious injury — the first baseman received a comical video edit on Instagram from a friend. A light reprieve at the end of a stressful afternoon.

Read more:Plaschke: Andrew Friedman struck out on the Dodgers' urgent need for a closer

In it, Freeman’s walk-off grand slam in last year’s World Series was superimposed over a spin-off of the Coldplay kiss cam video that recently went viral on social media (yes, that Coldplay kiss cam).

Freeman got a chuckle out of the clip in which the couple who were infamously shown at a recent Coldplay concert are edited to look like they are instead reacting to his iconic slam.

But, while rewatching his Fall Classic moment, Freeman also drew an observation from something in his batting stance.

“I’m more in my front ankle,” Freeman said of his stance during the at-bat.

It was a subtle, but profound, contrast to how he had been swinging amid his recent two-month cold spell — reminding him to reincorporate his legs more into his mechanics and not lean as far back in his setup at the plate.

So, for the rest of that evening, Freeman thought about the difference (which, he joked, kept him up for much of the night). The next afternoon, he went straight into the Dodgers’ batting cages, focused on driving into his front ankle in an attempt to get his swing realigned.

“It’s a different thought of being in your legs when you’re hitting,” said Freeman, who had started the season batting .371 over his first 38 games, before slumping to a .232 mark over his next 49 contests. “It’s just more [about leaning] into my front ankle. It’s helping me be on time and on top [of the ball].”

“We’ll see,” he added with a chuckle, “how it goes in the game.”

Ten games later, it seems to be going pretty well.

Since making the tweak on July 21, Freeman is 14 for 39 (.359 average) with two home runs, four extra base hits, 10 RBIs and (most importantly) a renewed confidence at the plate.

After collecting his first three-hit game in a month Tuesday in Cincinnati, then his first home run in all of July the next day against the Reds, he stayed hot in the Dodgers’ series-opening 5-0 defeat of the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday, whacking a two-run double in the first inning and a solo home run in the fifth in front of a crowd of 10,046 at Steinbrenner Field (the New York Yankees’ spring training park serving as the Rays’ temporary home).

“That visual helped him kind of tap into something,” manager Dave Roberts said recently of Freeman’s post-meme swing adjustment. “He is early, for a change. Versus being late, chasing.”

On Friday, Freeman said he is no longer thinking about the ankle cue.

“I’m just getting in the box and swinging now,” he said. “I've been taking some pitches, working a couple of walks, getting deeper in counts, hitting the pitches I need to hit. ... It's just been, [get] in the box and [be] on time.”

Still, he acknowledged, the meme-inspired swing thought might have served as a helpful reset.

“I feel like I've been grinding for six, seven weeks ... but obviously I'm trending in a great direction right now,” he said. “I just try and ride it. I know my work is usually going to end up working at some point.”

Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw delivers during a 5-0 win over the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday.
Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw delivers during a 5-0 win over the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday. (Jason Behnken / Associated Press)

Indeed, Freeman’s turnaround is something the Dodgers — who also got six scoreless innings out of Clayton Kershaw on Friday, lowering his season earned-run average to 3.29 in 13 starts — are expecting out of several superstar sluggers over the final two months of the regular season.

During Thursday’s trade deadline, the team didn’t splurge on big-name acquisitions. The only addition they made to their recently slumping lineup (which ranked 28th in the majors in scoring during July) was versatile outfielder Alex Call from the Washington Nationals.

Instead, both Roberts and club executives have preached of late, the team is banking on players like Mookie Betts (who is batting .237), Teoscar Hernández (who has hit .217 since returning from an adductor strain in May), Tommy Edman (who has hit .211 since returning from an ankle injury in May) and even Shohei Ohtani (who leads the National League in home runs, but is batting only .221 since resuming pitching duties in June) to play up to their typical, potent standards.

“I think if you look at it from the offensive side, as far as our guys, they’ll be the first to tell you they’ve got to perform better and more consistently,” Roberts said. “That’s something that we’re all counting on.”

Read more:Dodgers welcome deadline additions, hopeful arrival ‘raises the floor for our ballclub’

For much of the summer, Freeman had been squarely in that group of underperforming veteran stars.

But his recent rebound (regardless of what triggered it) is providing a template for the rest of the lineup to follow — the start, the Dodgers continue to hope, of more roster-wide improvements over the stretch run.

“Five or six months ago in spring training, we were talking about how great of a team we have,” Freeman said. “We still have that great of a team. Obviously, some of us haven't played as well, so it's on us to get going. And a few of us are getting going right now. I think we're going to be just fine going forward.”

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Jhoan Duran owns the night and feels the love in ‘electric' Phillies debut

Jhoan Duran owns the night and feels the love in ‘electric' Phillies debut originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Jhoan Duran was light on sleep Friday night.

He’d had to wake up in the wee hours to catch a flight from Minneapolis to Philadelphia. And once he arrived, the Phillies’ new closer didn’t have much chance at a peaceful hotel snooze.

“I’m not sleeping because my little boy, he’s got a lot of energy,” Duran said.

At Citizens Bank Park, all was well on the energy front.

Duran made his elaborate entrance, locked down a 5-4 win over the Tigers in four pitches and enjoyed his first post-trade deadline taste of Phillies fans’ passion. 

“I can see they love baseball,” he said. “They do everything for baseball, so I love that.”

Duran spent his first four MLB seasons in Minnesota, where he saved 74 games and compiled a 2.47 ERA. By many metrics, he’s been elite this year. According to Baseball Savant, Duran ranks in the 99th percentile in off-speed run value, barrel percentage and ground ball percentage. Duran has allowed a single home run. His four-seam fastball’s averaged 100.2 mph. 

New Phillies outfielder Harrison Bader saw Duran’s Twins dominance firsthand.

“Plain and simple, he has close-the-door stuff,” Bader said pregame. ”That’s the best way to describe it. … Baseball happens, maybe he puts runners on, he’s got strikeout stuff to go and strike out three in a row.”

The Phillies did their best to make Duran feel at home in his debut.

The flashing lights and pulsating music and virtual flames were ready to roll as he jogged out for the ninth inning. Duran did so wearing No. 59 because Phillies manager Rob Thomson offered it up. 

“He was very respectful,” Thomson said. “I called him and we were chit-chatting. I just said, ‘Hey look, the number really doesn’t mean much to me, but if it makes you feel better, I’m all-in.’ He said, ‘Well, you know, yeah …’ And I said, ‘Then it’s yours.’ 

“The only one that’s upset at this point is my wife because all her merchandise has 59 on it. Now we’ve got to go find her new stuff.”

Thomson’s switched to No. 49, which he said is to honor Yankees great and friend Ron Guidry. 

Following the Phils’ three-run seventh inning and two-run eighth, the night culminated in Duran’s ninth.

“It looked good from my locker,” Bryce Harper quipped after his seventh-inning ejection. “We all know what it was like in Minnesota when he came into the game. Lights-out stuff.” 

Thomson described Duran as “electric.”

“Four pitches. The first pitch was a 98 mph split,” he said. “I don’t know if I’ve seen that before. He threw strikes. He was calm, cool. It was great.” 

Duran’s first pitch was technically his splinker, a go-to splitter-sinker hybrid. In fact, so were his second, third and fourth pitches.

After he grabs some shut-eye, there’s a lot left to show. 

“I haven’t thrown my fastball yet,” Duran said. 

SEE IT: Mets unveil video tribute to former reliever Jose Butto at Citi Field

It didn't take long for the Mets to show their appreciation for reliever Jose Butto.

Days after trading Butto in the Tyler Rogers deal with the Giants, the organization played a video tribute at Citi Field before the series opener between the Mets and San Francisco.

Take a look at the tribute video, highlighting Butto's best moments as a Met, and the 27-year-old -- now in a Giants uniform -- giving the fans a salute.

Butto, who posted a 2.55 ERA for the Mets last season, had struggled for New York this season. He entered Friday's game with a 3.64 ERA and 1.38 WHIP in 47.0 innings over 34 games.

Over his four years in the big leagues, all with the Mets, Butto recorded an 11-9 record with a 3.45 ERA and a 1.126 WHIP to go along with 163 strikeouts in 167.0 innings pitched. Of his 74 appearances, he made 15 starts for the Mets.