Erie sweeps with walkoff win

Toledo Mud Hens 6, Iowa Cubs 2 (box)

The Toledo Mud Hens took Sunday’s game against Iowa, 6-2, to split the series against the Cubs.

Dylan File was outstanding in this one, giving the Mud Hens five innings of one-hit ball. He went 1-2-3 in every frame but the second and didn’t allow any free bases. File only threw 61 pitches, but he also started on Tuesday. Smart to not overdo it and take him out after he’s in line for the win.

File left with a four-run lead, thanks to a three-spot in the first. Max Clark led the inning off with a walk and stole second — his 18th of the year — and Max Anderson drove him in with a double (initially ruled an error) right after. Gage Workman kept things going with an RBI single up the middle, and Trei Cruz scored him on a sac fly.

Clark scored again in the third after leading off with a single. He stole second, again, and moved to up a bag on another Workman single. Brett Callahan drove Clark in with a base hit. 4-0, Toledo.

Iowa got a run back in the sixth after Yilber Diaz took over for File. Other than that two-out RBI double, Diaz was fine. Luke Taggart relieved him in the seventh and got five straight outs. Toledo turned to Ricky Vanasco for the four-out save.

Vanasco got the job done, but it wasn’t exactly efficient. He walked a batter in the eighth and gave up a pair of singles in the ninth. The Mud Hens traded a run for an out, and they could afford to because of a two-run eighth.

Workman was at the center of the scoring again, doubling in Anderson, stealing third and scoring on another sac fly from Cruz.

Trade: Woo-Suk Go was sent to Minnesota for cash considerations. He has an assignment clause in his contract and will join the Twins on Tuesday, according to Dan Hayes.

Clark: 1-3, 2 R, BB

Anderson: 2-4, 2B (13), 2 R, RBI, 2 K

Workman: 3-4, 2B (24), 2 R, 2 RBI

File (W, 5-5): 5.0 IP, H, 0 R, 0 BB, 6 K

Coming Up Next:The Mud Hens are on the road next week against the Indianapolis Indians, starting Tuesday at 7:05 p.m. ET.

(F/10) Erie SeaWolves 4, Akron RubberDucks 3 (box)

Erie finished off the sweep with its eighth straight on Sunday, but it took extra innings for the SeaWolves to take down the Akron RubberDucks, 4-3.

Hayden Minton went 3.1 innings to start. Besides a solo homer in the fourth, he was fine. Four hits, two walks and three strikeouts. Nothing special, but also not anything bad.

Just after Minton gave up the lead, Erie took it back on a Garrett Pennington double and Max Burt two-run homer.

Minton left the game after getting the first out of the fourth. Tyler Owens replaced him and got the next two outs. Carlos Pena was next, and he worked the same four innings he’s gone in each of his previous relief outings with Erie. A solo homer in the sixth was his only blemish. He had five strikeouts to one walk and allowed just two more hits in the outing. Unfortunately, that homer tied up the game and gave him a blown save.

Both offenses stalled until the ninth. Garrett Pennington finally broke the tie with a leadoff home run, but Wandisson Charles gave the run back in the bottom of the inning, sending the game to extras.

Bennett Lee drove in Viandel Pena from second, but Erie couldn’t add an insurance run. Chris Meyers also got hurt while swinging. It looked like his back, and he was in obvious pain, running to first on a single. Peyton Graham replaced him in the outfield, which is nice because he was hit in the arm with a pitch yesterday and left the game.

Charles closed things out with a 1-2-3 10th, including a pair of strikeouts. Bring out the brooms!

Pennington: 2-4, HR (2), 2B (4), 2 R, RBI, 2 K

Burt: 1-4, HR (3), R, 2 RBI

Bigbie: 2-5, 2B (14), K

Pena (BS, 2): 4.0 IP, 3 H, R, ER, BB, 5 K, HR

Coming Up Next:The SeaWolves are at home next week against the Harrisburg Senators, starting Tuesday at 6:05 p.m. ET.

Lake County Captains 6, West Michigan Whitecaps 4 (box)

West Michigan dropped the series against Lake County, 4-2, with a 6-4 loss on Sunday.

Rayner Castillo had another up-and-down start. He started out fine, going 1-2-3 in the first, but Castillo hit a batter and walked another in the second, which served as a bad omen.

Lake County got to him in the third. A pair of singles and a walk loaded the bases for Nolan Schubart, who cleared them with a double down the right-field line. Castillo worked around a pair of baserunners in the fourth, but that was it for him.

Carlos Lequerica took over on the mound in the fifth. He got into three straight three-ball counts, but only one of them resulted in a walk. The other two were punchouts, both coming on the changeup.

West Michigan threatened in the bottom of the fifth, with men on the corners and only one out, but nothing came of Andrew Sojka’s double.

Ethan Sloan got the sixth. He gave up three straight singles to open the frame. Samuel Gil made a nice diving stop on the third, but the throw was a tad late and forced the first baseman off the bag. A pair of sac flies made it 5-0.

Luke Stofel also had some trouble in the seventh, allowing back-to-back one-out singles, but he worked his way out of it. The Whitecaps finally got some runs on the board in the bottom half of the inning, scoring three on four singles and a walk. Woody Hadeen and Jackson Strong had RBI base knocks, and Clayton Campbell drove one in on a sac fly.

Eliseo Mota gave a run back to the Captains in the eighth, allowing back-to-back hits with two outs. Ryan Harvey faced the minimum in the ninth despite walking the leadoff man, aided by a 4-6-3 double play.

Hadeen reached on an error that could have been ruled a base hit in the ninth. Rainer and Campbell walked to load the bases. Strong cut the deficit to two runs with a sac fly, but the next two batters went down to end the game.

Rainer: 1-4, BB, K

Strong: 2-3, 2 RBI, BB

Sojka: 2-4, 2B (9), R, 2 K

Castillo (L, 1-6): 4.0 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 3 BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next:The Whitecaps are at home next week against the Fort Wayne TinCaps, starting Tuesday at 12:05 p.m. ET.

Palm Beach Cardinals 5, Lakeland Flying Tigers 3 (box)

Despite outhitting the Palm Beach Cardinals 11-5, the Lakeland Flying Tigers couldn’t claim a series win on Sunday, losing 5-3 to split the series.

Connor Fenlong had a nearly identical start to his first with Lakeland a week ago. He went 4.2 innings, struck out eight and walked one. The only differences for him were allowing a pair of runs (one earned) on three hits instead of five. The stuff is clearly good enough to think about High-A. He’s 26 years old, and a recent Indy league signing, so while the Tigers have him in Lakeland tuning some things up, he should be pushed as rapidly as he can handle.

Before those runs scored off Fenlong, Lakeland took a 3-0 lead. In the third, Jesus Pinto hit his third triple of the year to score Jack Goodman (walk), and Beau Ankeney drove in Pinto with a single up the middle.

Hunter Dobbins tripled and scored in the fourth for the other run. Goodman got the RBI this time.

Fenlong left the game with two on and two out in the fifth, giving way to Xiomer Guacache. A single and an error from Pinto in right field cleared the bases, hence the unearned runs. Guacahe gave up another run in the sixth. This one was earned after back-to-back walks to open the frame.

Lakeland kept getting on base, but the Flying Tigers went 2-for-12 with runners in scoring position, stranding eight batters. Clutch hits matter more in games like these.

Donye Evans got the seventh and worked around a one-out walk. Jan Carballo pitched the final two frames, dealing with multiple baserunners in each. Palm Beach scored its fifth run off him in the eighth, and that was the game.

Ankeney: 2-5, RBI

Dobbins: 2-4, 3B (2), R

MacDonald: 2-4

Fenlong: 4.2 IP, 3 H, 2 R, ER, BB, 8 K

Coming Up Next: The Flying Tigers are on the road next week against the Dunedin Blue Jays, starting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. ET.

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 7/6/26

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JULY 03: (L-R) Carlos Rodon #55, Max Fried #54, Austin Wells #28 and Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees look on from the dugout during the first inning against the Minnesota Twins at Yankee Stadium on July 03, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees have their biggest series of the year lined up starting tonight, and they could not be in a worse state entering it. Losers of eight of their last nine, New York has surrendered the AL East to the Rays who went on a big winning streak of their own at the same time to carve out a four-game lead. Conveniently, they’re now set to open a four-game against Tampa that could bring them right back, but entering their house of horrors at the level of play they’ve shown over the past two weeks is a recipe for disaster. The worst-case scenario for this matchup feels like it could fare just like that fateful series against the Blue Jays last year to open up July that saw them fall out of first place for good, and though the Yankees built themselves a decent lead in the Wild Card race that gap isn’t looking too big anymore either.

Nick opens the day up for us with a look at the pitching matchups that we’ll see in this Rays series, and Kevin follows up with the Rivalry Roundup featuring the Astros besting those Rays to do the Yankees a small favor. Jonathan wishes Willie Randolph a happy birthday and relives his legacy of success as a player and coach with the Yankees. Josh looks over the Giants to see if there’s a reasonable trade the two teams could work towards, Michael examines the inability of the team to work walks of late, and finally I’ll be back later in the day to open up the mailbag for this week.

Today’s Matchup:

New York Yankees at Tampa Bay Rays

Time: 6:40 p.m. EST

TV: YES Network, Rays.TV

Venue: Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL

Questions/Prompts:

1. Get your predictions in now: will the Yankees win zero, one, two, three, or all four of these games in Tampa?

2. Will the USA defeat Belgium tonight to advance to the quarterfinals? Will Folarin Balogun make an impact after getting his one-game suspension reversed?

The Pirates finally spent some money. You'll never guess what happened next.

WASHINGTON – They are the tacit representatives in Major League Baseball’s fight to install a salary cap during collective bargaining negotiations, the embodiment of “what fans want” when the league claims widespread socialism must exist among its billionaire owners for the game to survive.

Yet the Pittsburgh Pirates might be proving a different point as they head toward the All-Star break with a winning record: Spending just a little bit of money can make a big difference.

Two offseason moves – signing designated hitter Ryan O’Hearn to a two-year, $29 million contract and trading for second baseman Brandon Lowe – played significant parts in turning one of the game’s least productive lineups into one of its most potent. And as the 46-45 Pirates remain in the thicket of the National League wild card race, they’re proving one of baseball’s axiom’s to very much be true.

“You have to spend money to win. That’s really what it is,” veteran outfielder Bryan Reynolds tells USA TODAY Sports. “Spend smart money. It doesn’t have to be a ton.

“We spent some money. And it’s paying off.”

Brandon Lowe, here hitting his team-leading 21st home run, says "it's a blast being a part of this lineup" in Pittsburgh.

Let’s be clear: It wasn’t a lot. O’Hearn’s signing and the $11.5 million due Lowe after a three-way trade sent him from Tampa Bay to Pittsburgh helped nudge the payroll to $102 million, 22nd among 30 teams.

It’s the highest the Pirates’ payroll has ranked since 2016, when they had the 20th-highest the year after winning 98 games. Yet their payroll that season was $100 million. That means the Pirates payroll jumped 2% as industry revenues grew 31%, from an estimated $9.5 billion in 2016 to $12.8 billion in 2025.

Certainly, the Pirates’ piece of that pie didn’t grow in lockstep, but they benefited from greater revenue sharing as well as increases in national TV contracts, among other shared revenues.

And while they may be painted as the small market, underdog anti-Dodgers, it’s also clear early proposals shared by MLB run counter to some of their 2026 success.

Wake me up when December ends

O’Hearn knows his way around medium markets. A Kansas City Royals draftee, he broke out as an All-Star in his third season in Baltimore and now totes an .807 OPS with 13 homers for Pittsburgh.

He also knows what saber-rattling looks like when MLB and the MLB Players’ Association lock horns early in negotiations.

“I read the emails. I have an idea what’s going on,” says O’Hearn. “But this’ll be my third CBA. I would be shocked if anything came to a solution before crunch time. So I’m not going to get lost in the day-to-day of it, because I have seen this before.

“The league said they’re going to lock us out. So, OK. Things don’t really happen until crunch time, from my experience. I’ll stick with that.”

That Dec. 1 lockout date can wait just a minute, though.

The Pirates’ offensive turnaround has been startling. In 2025, their payroll was a mere $86 million and the lineup resembled such neglect as they ranked 30th in OPS (.655) and runs (583).

This year? They are second in OPS (.762), trailing only the Dodgers, third in runs (475) and lead the majors with 829 hits.

Many hands have had a part in the uprising, including rookies Konnor Griffin and Esmerlyn Valdez, along with big steps forward from players like infielder Nick Gonzales that manager Don Kelly says began last year under first-year hitting coach Matt Hague.

It’s foolhardy to downplay O’Hearn and Lowe’s impact, though. Lowe’s 42 extra-base hits rank fifth in the major leagues, and his 21 homers already surpass Oneil Cruz’s team high from 2025.

“It’s very helpful,” says Reynolds, in the fourth year of an eight-year, $106.75 million deal that averages $13 million a season. “We’ve got one of the best offenses in baseball now, in big part to those two guys, and some other guys too. It’s been great.”

Lowe leads all major league second basemen in homers, RBIs (63) and slugging, making his omission from the All-Star Game something of a surprise. He put the capper on the Pirates’ Sunday, July 5 conquest of the Nationals, ripping a three-run homer in the eighth inning of their 11-5 victory to cap a winning road trip.

“It’s a blast being a part of this lineup,” says Lowe. “One through nine, and even with guys not starting that day, there’s damage to be found and runs to be scored.

“It’s fun coming to the ballpark understanding that I hit behind (Griffin) or in front of (Reynolds), we got O’Hearn and Valdy behind me.”

Indeed, while Lowe and O’Hearn have had huge hands in the Pirates’ success, another newcomer is simply fortunate an MLB CBA proposal wasn’t already adopted.

The kid stays in the picture

On a single, steamy 94-degree afternoon, Griffin’s play constantly demands attention. One moment, he’s laying out headlong to reel in a fly ball to shallow left field; a couple innings later, he’s going horizontal to reel in another dying quail.

And then with the game on the line, he’s fighting off a pair of two-strike pitches to slash a go-ahead two-run single in the eighth inning Sunday, a knock that preceded Lowe’s game-breaking three-run homer.

Griffin is 20 years old. And if one of MLB’s proposals in early rounds of CBA negotiating was already gospel, he wouldn’t be here.

Griffin reclassified to the 2024 draft class – he was selected ninth overall by Pittsburgh – and was bought out of a commitment to LSU. But an early proposal from MLB to the union included a stipulation that high school players would no longer be draft-eligible, that they’d have to be two years removed from high school graduation and at least 20 years old to be drafted.

Griffin wouldn’t be a Bucco, then, instead serving time in Baton Rouge. The proposal seems all the more drastic when you see Griffin take over a major league game.

“I want to do some special things in Pittsburgh, so it’s been really cool to see how the fans have shown me the love," rookie Konnor Griffin says of commiting long-term to the Pirates.

He certainly took notice when MLB and the union exchanged proposals June 19 and the high school draftee ban was floated.

“It makes me think, ‘Dang, what if I couldn’t have gotten drafted out of high school?’” Griffin tells USA TODAY Sports. “It’s definitely a different situation, but I’m just thankful I was able to be a part of that and glad it worked out for me.”

Some guys are just ready.

Griffin was still 19 when he made his debut April 3, and four days later agreed to a nine-year, $140 million contract extension – a term that would also be limited under MLB’s proposals.

Instead, he is a Bucco through most of his 20s, continuing a pattern of moving quickly: Griffin is already married, and already putting down roots in Pittsburgh.

“It’s just cool seeing a lot of my jerseys, my last name in the stands,” he says. “It’s pretty neat seeing all that. I wanted to be somewhere to try to help change a club where we become a winning baseball team.

“I want to do some special things in Pittsburgh, so it’s been really cool to see how the fans have shown me the love.”

He has rewarded them, too, becoming the fastest Pirate in club history to notch 20 steals, and accruing 1.7 WAR in just 59 games, despite missing nearly a month with a forearm strain.

“Being 20 years old and a rookie, he’s way mature beyond his years,” says Kelly, in his first full season as Pirates manager. “He’s going to have huge moments like that, yes, and also understanding that he’s 20 and learning.

“There’s not too many 20-year-olds in the big leagues. It’s the work ethic, the way he goes about it – he’s a mature kid to begin with and when you put the talent on top of that, it’s hard to beat.”

Says Griffin: “I’ve had to grow up pretty quick. Getting drafted out of high school, reclassed a year early, been living on my own a while now, got married, just adapting to what life is throwing at me.”

Lowe says he likes to give Griffin a hard time when he sprawls out for catches as he did Sunday, when sweat mottled the lenses of his sunglasses, he went sans eyewear and then had to lay out for a fly in shallow left field.

At 6-3, 222 pounds, Griffin is an imposing physical figure, featured on ESPN’s “You Got Mossed” segment when he was a Mississippi high school freshman.

“That wide receiver’s coming out on those plays,” says Lowe. “It shows the athleticism and why he’s up here. Not just a hitter or glove. He’s got it all going on.”

Tempting to say the Pirates do, as well. While reigning Cy Young Award winner Paul Skenes and veteran Mitch Keller have scuffled of late, the rotation remains stout. They’re just three games out of a wild card and more important, a biscuit above .500 as the trade deadline nears in less than a month.

At year’s end, they’ll be on the back nine of Skenes’ contractually obligated time with the team. A new CBA may frame just what he can pursue come free agency in 2029, and will certainly set a course of action for the Pirates to pursue.

In the current system, the Pirates – with a TV market size ranked No. 27 – should be more concerned with catching Milwaukee (38th-biggest Nielsen market) than the Dodgers.

But at least the Pirates are in the conversation, proof positive that spending a few bucks can provide an immediate dividend.

“I came into this and it was like, ‘Hey, this team has great pitching but was 30th in offense last year.’ A pretty big turnaround offensively,” says O’Hearn. “I’m proud of what we’ve done so far.

“We’ve got a long way to go, but we’ve got the players to score runs.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: The Pirates finally spent some money. You'll never guess what happened next.

MLB power rankings: As Red Sox dig out of big hole, another big loss looms

Even when they dig themselves out from the lowest point of their season, the Boston Red Sox can't win.

After sinking to their lowest point of the season - 15 ½ games out of first, 14 games under .500 - the Red Sox proceeded to win eight of their next 10 games. They were still in last place - but you could almost see fourth place from there.

Yet throughout that period, second-year lefty Connelly Early was diagnosed with elbow inflammation, went for an MRI, received "some good news," according to manager Chad Tracy - yet now is headed for a second opinion with noted orthopedist Keith Meister. Those often don't end well - and the Red Sox's season doesn't figure to, either.

Oh, they've moved up three spots in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings. Yet Early's loss would put even more of an onus on a lineup that's surprisingly averaged five runs per game in this hot streak. They best keep it up to avoid a wholesale sell-off by the trade deadline.

A look at our updated rankings:

Connelly Early can only hope for good news as he receives additional opinions on his elbow injury.

1. Los Angeles Dodgers (-)

  • Edwin Diaz - remember him? - aiming for a return shortly after All-Star break.

2. Milwaukee Brewers (-)

3. Tampa Bay Rays (+1)

  • Junior Caminero's crazy home run stretch - 11 in 11 games - deserved more attention.

4. Atlanta Braves (-1)

  • Some of that starting pitching magic is dissipating.

5. New York Yankees (-)

  • For the first time this year, they feel like a not very good team.

6. Philadelphia Phillies (-)

  • Bryce Harper says he'll do the Home Run Derby "if he can find someone to pitch to him."

7. Chicago Cubs (-)

  • Pete Crow-Armstrong is their lone All-Star, but he's been as good as three players.

8. Miami Marlins (-)

  • Who needs a perfect game when you're in a virtual tie for the third wild card in early July?

9. St. Louis Cardinals (-1)

  • Non-All-Star JJ Wetherholt leads the majors with 17 outs above average.

10. Chicago White Sox (+2)

  • The joyride continues as they escape Cleveland with a tenuous grip on first place.

11. Cleveland Guardians (-2)

  • José Ramírez eyes return after All-Star break.

12. Seattle Mariners (+3)

  • Logan Gilbert's first-half finishing kick makes his All-Star snub more pronounced.

13. Washington Nationals (-)

  • Luis Garcia Jr. already sets career high in homers, with 19.

14. Pittsburgh Pirates (+2)

  • Big finish to first half, with home series against Atlanta and Milwaukee.

15. Texas Rangers (-1)

  • Life is unpredictable: Jacob Latz loses bid for starting rotation, morphs into All-Star closer.

16. San Diego Padres (-6)

  • They're 44-45, and haven't hit the break below .500 since 2023.

17. Arizona Diamondbacks (-)

  • Seven games with Padres, Dodgers before break may determine team's deadline direction.

18. Houston Astros (+1)

  • 12-6 run has them almost back to .500.

19. Minnesota Twins (+4)

  • Byron Buxton reaggravates hip injury, but confident he's playing it wisely.

20. Baltimore Orioles (+1)

  • Coby Mayo crushing lefties, with a 1.038 OPS.

21. Toronto Blue Jays (-1)

22. Boston Red Sox (+3)

  • The kids aren't much for RBIs these days, but Willson Contreras ranks sixth in the AL with 59 of 'em.

23. Cincinnati Reds (-1)

  • Outfielder Will Benson designated for assignment after batting .188 with 33% strikeout rate.

24. Detroit Tigers (-)

  • 18-12 since June 1, still very confounding.

25. Athletics (-7)

  • The Yolo County loyalists booed the Marlins for punting a perfect game, but perhaps a rotation wtih a 5.23 ERA - 29th in the majors - should've been the target of their ire.

26. New York Mets (-)

  • Kodai Senga "throwing the ball really, really well" in relief, interim manager Andy Green says.

27. San Francisco Giants (+1)

  • Rafael Devers, OPS now up to .791, might be the ultimate "water finds its level" hitter.

28. Colorado Rockies (+2)

  • Hunter Goodman getting that "perennial All-Star" vibe.

29. Kansas City Royals (-)

  • John Wathan receives his blue blazer, inducted into Royals' hall of fame.

30. Los Angeles Angels (-3)

  • Mike Trout confident he'll be active shortly, plans to make All-Star post.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB power rankings: As Red Sox dig out of big hole, another big loss looms

Yankees news: Fried tosses successful live BP session

NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 03: Max Fried #54 of the New York Yankees looks on during the game against the Cleveland Guardians at Yankee Stadium on June 3, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

NY Post | Jake Nisse: Yankees’ left-hander Max Fried continues to trend towards a rehab assignment, as he completed another live batting practice session on Sunday. The $218-million man is recovering from an elbow issue that sidelined him in May. He threw 36 pitches and faced Ryan McMahon and Alí Sánchez.

“It’s been good, it’s been a good run-up for him, and obviously another step today,” manager Aaron Boone said. The 32-year-old star boasts a 3.21 ERA in 61.2 innings this season.

NY Post | Mark Sánchez: With their loss on Sunday, the Yankees have now dropped nine of their last 10 games and 13 of their last 17 games. On top of the horrible, sloppy play, second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. had to be removed from Sunday’s finale after the fifth inning with discomfort in his right toe. The team announced that X-rays were negative and said he’ll be reassessed Monday. “Kinda nags him from time to time,” Boone explained after the game.

NJ.com | Adam Zagoria: The Yankees are down right now, but they’ve got their biggest series of the year in front of them. They’re traveling down to Tampa for a massive four-game series against the Rays starting tonight, with a four-game deficit in the AL East that could either be closed entirely or grow to a massive gap. If anything’s going to get this team to wake up and get their season on a lifeboat, this challenge needs to be the one to do it.

SNY | Colin Martin: The Yankees recalled Ángel Chivilli on Sunday morning, and he made his first MLB appearance since April 19th. He pitched well, completing 1.1 scoreless innings in low-leverage duty, allowing one hit, and striking out one to lower his ERA to 2.45 in a tiny sample in the majors. He had posted a 1.08 ERA over 16.2 innings in Scranton, with 17 punchouts.

Perez drives in 2 as the Royals beat the Phillies 5-2 to end a 4-game losing streak

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Salvador Perez drove in two runs, Luinder Avile went five innings, and the Kansas City Royals snapped a four-game losing streak with a 5-2 win over the Philadelphia Phillies on Sunday.

Avila (4-3) held Philadelphia to one run in five innings. He had four strikeouts and one walk. Alex Lange pitched the ninth for this eighth save.

The Royals scored a pair of runs in the first inning when Lane Thomas knocked a two-out double to right-center field. Michael Massey followed with an RBI single.

Philadelphia’s Bryson Stott extended his on-base streak to 12 games with a triple in the fifth inning and scored on a sacrifice fly from Gabriel Rincones Jr.

Avila left after the next out.

Kansas City’s Isaac Collins led off the fifth with a double after successfully challenging a third-strike call for the second time in the game. He scored on a sacrifice fly to center from Jac Caglianone.

Stott struck again in the seventh with a leadoff single. He advanced on a fielder’s choice and throwing error, then scored on another force out.

Phillies starter Aaron Nola (3-6) struck out seven across seven innings, including the last three batters he faced.

Perez sealed the game for the Royals with a two-run double in the eighth inning that scored Bobby Witt Jr. and Thomas.

With a walk in the sixth, Kyle Schwarber has reached base in 11 consecutive games.

Before the game, the Royals inducted former player, coach and manager John Wathan into the organization’s Hall of Fame. He played 10 seasons in the majors and won the 1985 World Series with Kansas City.

Up next

Phillies LHP Christopher Sánchez (10-3, 2.00 ERA) faces Royals LHP Noah Cameron (4-6, 4.95).

Red Sox ride homers by Duran and Contreras plus stout relief work to 7-5 win over Angels

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Jarren Duran and Willson Contreras homered, and five Boston pitchers combined to give up two runs over 6 1/3 innings in relief of injured starter Ranger Suarez to lead the Red Sox to a 7-5 win over the Los Angeles Angels on Sunday night.

Boston’s eighth victory in 10 games completed a three-game sweep of the Angels, who have lost six straight and 12 of 19 since June 14.

Suarez, named to the American League All-Star team Saturday, exited with two outs in the third because of left adductor tightness, an injury he sustained when he jumped for Jo Adell’s chopper over the mound.

The left-hander was followed by Greg Weissert (1-2), Tyron Guerrero and Garrett Whitlock, who combined for 4 1/3 hitless innings. Justin Slaten gave up a run in the eighth, and Aroldis Chapman allowed a solo homer to Zach Neto in the ninth before earning his 18th save.

The Angels scored twice in the first on Jorge Soler’s grounder and Adell’s RBI single. Boston tied it 2-all in the second on Duran’s 13th homer, a two-run shot to right-center off starter Ryan Johnson (1-4).

Neto’s RBI double gave the Angels a 3-2 lead in the bottom half, but the Red Sox took advantage of Neto’s major league-leading 14th error to score three unearned runs in the third.

Tsung-Che Cheng led off with a bunt single. Anthony Seigler and Ceddanne Rafaela flied out, and Wilyer Abreu hit a routine grounder to shortstop that should have ended the inning.

Neto bobbled the ball for an error, though, and Contreras crushed Johnson’s next pitch for his 20th homer, a 446-foot shot to left-center that left his bat at 112 mph and gave Boston a 5-3 lead.

The Red Sox tacked on two insurance runs in the seventh on Abreu’s sacrifice fly and Masataka Yoshida’s RBI single for a 7-3 advantage.

The Angels scored in the eighth on Donovan Walton’s double and Adell’s RBI single.

Up next

Red Sox: LHP Payton Tolle (4-6, 3.39 ERA) faces White Sox LHP Noah Schultz (2-5, 5.86) on Tuesday night in Chicago.

Angels: RHP Jose Soriano opposes Rangers RHP Jacob deGrom (7-5, 3.48 ERA) on Tuesday night in Texas.

Huascar Brazoban’s rust nearly costs Mets in first outing in over a week

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows New York Mets pitcher Huascar Brazoban (43) pitches against the Atlanta Braves during the ninth inning at Truist Park.

ATLANTA — Huascar Brazobán’s worst performance of the season threatened to send the Mets to a doozy of a loss Sunday.

That was before Devin Williams recorded the final two outs in the ninth inning and the Mets escaped with a 10-9 victory over the Braves.

Brazobán, who began the day with a 1.94 ERA, was working with a seven-run lead as he began the final frame. He departed after allowing five earned runs, including a Drake Baldwin grand slam.

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It’s possible that rust — Brazobán was working for the first time in eight days — played a factor.

“There’s waves of usage throughout the season, so guys get used a ton,” interim manager Andy Green said, referring to Brazobán’s 36 appearances.

“He has been used a ton, and then you have stretches where your situation doesn’t arise. He’s a guy that has been ridden all year. He had a gap in the number of times he’s been on the mound. He can handle all that. He’s that type of a pitcher.”

Brazobán allowed four hits and a walk in the ninth. He also committed a throwing error on a pickoff attempt that allowed Mauricio Dubón to score. Baldwin’s grand slam was the first homer allowed by Brazobán since June 2.

New York Mets pitcher Huascar Brazoban (43) pitches against the Atlanta Braves during the ninth inning at Truist Park. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

“He’s been unbelievable for us all year,” Green said. “His ERA is at [3.00] after what just happened; that just tells you how good he’s been for us all year, and it wasn’t his day out there.”

Williams entered with the Mets ahead 10-8 and struck out Ozzie Albies for the second out. But Matt Olson doubled and Michael Harris II followed with an RBI single. Dubón’s ensuing single — he took second on the throw — put the tying run at third and the winning run at second. Williams then struck out Dominic Smith to end it.

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The Mets received shutdown appearances earlier from Brooks Raley and Luke Weaver, each of whom pitched a scoreless frame. Weaver extended his scoreless streak to 25 innings since May 1.

“There’s a lot of good things to take out of this baseball game,” Green said. “We’re going to take the good out of it.”

Red Sox Complete Sweep Of Angels Via The Long Ball

ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA - JULY 5: Anthony Seigler #48 of the Boston Red Sox congratulates Jarren Duran #16 after hitting a two run home run against the Los Angeles Angels in the second inning at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on July 5, 2026 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by John McCoy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s another West Coast late start, and I want to go to bed. Unfortunately, I’m bound to my duties as the Sunday recap guy, so we’re going to do another live blog so I can push publish as soon as this bad boy wraps up. Join me for the next three or so hours as I live-react to the Red Sox, the World Cup, and whatever else is going on in Jake-land on this Sunday evening.

8:53 PM: One of my roommates recently moved out, and his room was much bigger than mine, so I moved in today. The only problem is, my dog is terrified of the beeping noise an air conditioner makes, and every time my roommate would walk in here, he would turn on the AC or a space heater, and my dog would run. Now, she doesn’t want to come into this room even though there’s no AC unit set up. The point is, I’m doing this from my new room for the first time, which is exciting for me because I could pretty much touch all four walls at the same time in my old room.

8:56 PM: My neighbors gave me a Rice Krispie treat that may or may not be infused with other ingredients. I’m not normally one to eat special Rice Krispie treats, but tonight feels like it would make for a fun recap.

8:59 PM: My girlfriend said it was a bad idea.

9:04 PM: I shared this document with her, and she told me I should add that she’s always right. She’s not, but I’m telling her that I’m adding it.

9:15 PM: Just learned that Connelly Early is getting a second opinion. You only get a second opinion if you don’t like the first opinion. Gulp.

9:19 PM: It’s going to be very hard for me to flip over to the Red Sox from the World Cup game at 9:30. There’s nothing I’d like to watch more than Mexico get the boot at their home stadium where they never lose.

9:30 PM: Screw it, soccer is staying on the big screen.

9:32 PM: Is my Peacock playing tricks on me or is this game actually starting even later than advertised?

9;36 PM: GOLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL. Suck it, Mexico.

9:36 PM: What is Ryan Johnson doing? How is he throwing 92 mph like that? What a weirdo.

9:37 PM: GOLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL. Dos a cero.

9:38 PM: Lots of sports going on, Wilyer Abreu spoils an immaculate inning with an 0-2 foul ball on the ninth pitch of the inning.

9:41 PM: Johnson strikes out the side in the top of the first after a 12-pitch battle with Abreu. Mexico has a free kick in a dangerous position and pulls one back to make it 2-1. Great finish.

9:45 PM: Back-to-back bloop singles give the Angels runners at first and third with nobody out.

9:48 PM: Ranger Suarez strikes out Vaughn Grissom with a curveball for the first out, but Caleb Durbin can’t get a handle on a ground ball to third, and the Angels get a run. 1-0, Angels as Mexico has opportunity after opportunity in front of the England net. What a game.

9:51 PM: Jo Adell singles to center and Ceddanne Rafaela bobbles it twice. Some rough fielding early from the Red Sox put them behind, 2-0.

10:02 PM: Jarren Duran CRUSHES a ball to center field to tie the game. 422 feet. 2-2.

10:03 PM: I really think lefties should be able to hit this guy. He can’t really come inside to lefties, so half the plate is basically eliminated. The second time through the order will be telling.

10:08 PM: The Red Sox thought they turned a 3-6-1 double play, but the Angels challenge, and the call is rightfully reversed. England has a hard time playing out from the back through Mexico’s press. If they can break through, Harry Kane will likely have a chance to make a line-breaking pass. That’s the kind of soccer analysis you don’t get on most baseball blogs.

10:11 PM: Suarez hangs a curveball, and Zack Neto doubles in a run. 3-2, Angels. England has a shot go off the post.

10:14 PM: It’s been 45 minutes, and we’re through two innings. Scorching pace here in Anaheim.

10:15 PM: The referee has been called to the monitor for a possible red card. I think it’s harsh, personally, but when they’re called to the monitor, the call is rarely ever upheld. It’s a red for Jarell Quansah — England will now play with 10 men for 40 minutes.

10:17 PM: Tsung-Che Cheng with a beautiful bunt for a single to begin the inning.

10:20 PM: Great header by Harry Kane to play Anthony Gordon in, who draws the penalty. The Mexican players can’t believe the call, because they’ve never believed they’ve committed a foul in their lives. I hate the Mexican national team, if you can’t tell.

10:21 PM: Zack Neto boots a ground ball at shortstop to give the Red Sox two runners on with two outs.

10:22 PM: Willson Contreras makes them pay for that error by putting the first pitch he sees in the left field seats. 5-3, Red Sox. Harry Kane buries the penalty. 3-1, England.

10:29 PM: We’ve got another VAR check. This time, Mexico looks like they’re going to be awarded a penalty. Jarren Duran strikes out with two runners on, but the Red Sox get three runs in the inning to regain the lead.

10:31 PM: Raul Jimenez converts the penalty. 3-2, England.

10:35 PM: Jo Adell gets an infield single with two outs. That’s the issue with pitching to contact.

10:36 PM: Oh god, Suarez is talking to the trainer and exiting the game. There really is no such thing as too much pitching. We’re gonna be here all night.

10:39 PM: It’s Greg Weissert on in the bottom of the third in place of Suarez.

10:41 PM: He gets the first guy to pop out, and we’re through three innings with the Red Sox leading, 5-3.

10:51 PM: Ceddanne Rafaela is locked in a battle with Johnson and started walking to first base on the 10th pitch of the at-bat. Unfortunately, it was only ball three. He struck out on the next pitch, though he should have challenged the strike three call.

10:53 PM: 11 minutes of added time with England leading by a goal. That’s a lot of added time. England took Harry Kane off for some reason. I’m not sure they know there’s an additional 30 minutes should they concede.

10:59 PM: Greg Weissert retires the Angels in order in the fourth.

11:00 PM: England is defending for their lives, and Mexico is screaming at the referee any time something doesn’t go their way. Three minutes to go.

11:03 PM: I didn’t even notice Jose Fermin took over for Johnson, but he’s got two quick outs in the fifth.

11:05 PM: ENGLAND WINS. SEE YA MEXICO. What a game.

11:08 PM: Tyron Guerrero on in relief of Weissert here in the fifth.

11:10 PM: It was weed in the Rice Krispie treat. I didn’t eat it. I don’t think I would have been able to comprehend both a soccer and baseball game at once if I had, so I’m happy with that decision. Don’t tell my girlfriend that she was right.

11:11 PM: I made a wish, but I will not tell you guys what it was, so don’t even bother asking.

11:15 PM: Guerrero works a scoreless inning. 5-3, Red Sox after five.

11:17 PM: I went to get water, and my dog took the treat bribes I left while I was gone. Apparently she’s not scared of the room but doesn’t want me to know that.

11:19 PM: It’s left adductor tightness for Suarez. If he misses time, Sonny Gray will be the only starting pitcher from the opening day rotation on the active roster.

11:22 PM: Weird play in the sixth. Denzer Guzman bobbled the ball at third, Zack Neto caught it and threw to first to get Carlos Narvaez. In the process, Jarren Duran tried to go first to third and appeared to be caught, but Jose Peraza was called for interference at second base. That all nets to a runner on third with two outs for Cheng.

11:25 PM: Cheng strikes out to end the inning.

11:29 PM: Guerrero quickly gets the Angels to go down, 1-2-3.

11:33 PM: Dave O’Brien is talking about soccer. What kind of lunatic would talk about soccer in baseball content?

11:37 PM: Anthony Seigler and Ceddanne Rafaela with a double steal of second and third. Wilyer Abreu does a good job recognizing the huge jumps and takes the pitch to allow them to advance. Good baseball there.

11:39 PM: Abreu can’t get all the way around the ball, but he muscles it out to center field, and Seigler is able to tag up from third and score. 6-3, Red Sox.

11:39 PM: Willson Contreras almost got hit by a pitch. He did not try to fight anyone. Chants of “sell the team” coming from the outfield.

11:43 PM: Yoshida goes the other way for his third hit of the night. 7-3, Red Sox.

11:46 PM: Durbin strikes out, and the Angels go to a lefty with two outs in the seventh.

11:50 PM: Jarren Duran beats out a broken-bat infield single swinging bunt thing. That was cool.

11:54 PM: Carlos Narvaez strikes out with the bases loaded to end the threat.

11:58 PM: It’s Garrett Whitlock for the bottom of the seventh. I am so tired.

12:01 AM: Happy Monday. Garrett Whitlock got three guys out very quickly. Thanks, Garrett.

12:02 AM: If you read this whole thing, you’re insane, and I appreciate you.

12:06 AM: The Red Sox go quickly in the top of the eighth. Eighth is a weird word to spell. That’s five consonants in a row. I can’t think of many words that have that. In fact, I can’t think of a single other word with five consonants in a row, but I’m far from operating at maximum brain capacity.

12:08 AM: Justin Slaten for the bottom half of the hard-to-spell inning.

12:09 AM: Willson Contreras chased a ball into foul territory and had a nice moment with a Red Sox fan sitting in the front row. Maybe he’s not so scary after all.

12:13 AM: Donovan Walton, whom I have never heard of before today, gets a pinch-hit double with two outs.

12:15 AM: Jo Adell hits a sweeper off the plate down the line; Walton scores. 7-4, Red Sox as Aroldis Chapman begins to stir in the bullpen.

12:16 AM: Wade Meckler, whom I have also not heard of, is now pitching hitting.

12:17 AM: Meckler strikes out to end the inning.

12:22 AM: Went to the bathroom to brush my teeth, et cetera, and came back to two outs in the top of the ninth.

12:24 AM: Here comes Chapman to try to shut the door on the series.

12:27 AM: Caleb Durbin makes a diving stop and throws to first for the out. Willson Contreras stretches and maybe comes off the base, though. I think he held it, but the Angels are challenging.

12:28 AM: Call stands. One down.

12:30 AM: Chapman strikes out Lowe. Two down.

12:31 AM: Zack Neto homers. 7-5, Red Sox.

12:33 AM: Red Sox win! For those of you counting at home, that’s 8 of the last 10. Day off tomorrow before moving on to Chicago to play the White Sox. We couldn’t possibly make a run, could we? I don’t know. But I do know that I’m going to bed. Once again, if you read this whole thing, I appreciate you. It’s 2,000 words of nonsense. Well, actually, it’s 1972 words of nonsense right now. But the official word count really isn’t important, especially because it counts all of my timestamps that aren’t original content. Now it’s 2,000. Goodnight to all.

Angels’ John Mozeliak knows franchise must change ASAP: ‘Anybody can trade anyone’

A man in a suit smiles as he stands in front of a red backdrop with various logos, including a large red
The Los Angeles Angels announce at a press conference in Anaheim on Saturday, June 27, 2026, that they have hired John Mozeliak, pictured, as interim general manager after firing General...

The MLB trade deadline is rapidly approaching, and Angels interim general manager John Mozeliak is ready for it — just not now.

As Mozeliak appeared on MLB Network Radio on Sunday afternoon, he said the Angels aren’t too focused on the trade deadline and are more focused on the MLB draft.

“I have not had any real substantial conversations with clubs … other than what they might be looking for, no names have been exchanged. Nothing like that,” Mozeliak said. “Most of the general managers that have reached out to me over the last week it’s mostly been via text.”

While Mozeliak said no names have been exchanged, he said once the draft concludes, he expects to hear more from fellow GMs about potential trades.

“In that time we’ll also have a better understanding of where we are, of how we think of this roster and what the market may bear for that,” Mozeliak said. “Because I think that’s the most important part. Obviously, anybody can trade anyone, but it doesn’t really make sense if it’s something that’s not going to have long-term value or change some internal dynamic.”

Angels interim GM John Mozeliak plans to evaluate the roster after the upcoming MLB draft. MediaNews Group via Getty Images

The Angels are one of MLB’s most intriguing teams at the deadline because they have multiple players they could sell, including Jose Soriano, Reid Detmers and Jo Adell.

Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic recently said the Angels have enough power to control the MLB trade deadline.

In the past, the Angels have been reluctant to be sellers when the deadline approached because they have held on to prospects for far too long, including in 2023 when former GM Perry Minasian had the chance to trade Shohei Ohtani before he signed with the Dodgers in the offseason.

Of course, owner Arte Moreno got in the way of the Angels dealing Ohtani, despite multiple teams having interest in him.

With Mozeliak now taking over as interim GM, he’s been vocal about the Angels needing to change the way they operate.

“My overall take right now is this club is not where we need it to be. We’re not winning baseball games; we’re finding ways to lose instead of win. That can be frustrating for our fans. It can be frustrating for the people that are here every day and for the players,” Mozeliak said. “So we know something has to be done differently.”

Ryan Weathers tries to gut out lingering stomach issue in rough Yankees outing

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees pitcher Ryan Weathers (40) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Minnesota Twins

It was a tough week for Ryan Weathers.

After recording just five outs Monday — and at some point being afflicted by a teamwide stomach bug or bout of food poisoning — Weathers had another short start in Sunday’s 6-1 loss to the Twins as he was yanked after four-plus 4.0innings.

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The lefty said afterwards that he threw up several times during the game, as he tried to “gut out” the issue.

But he was charged with four earned runs and put runners in scoring position in all but one of the innings he appeared in.

“Credit to him, under the weather today, and still went out there and battled,” manager Aaron Boone said after the game.

“I thought his stuff was really good, as good a change-up as I’ve seen from him, a ton of swing-and-miss with that pitch,” he continued, before conceding that Minnesota “battled him throughout to make it challenging all day.”

Weathers did record six strikeouts but didn’t fully bounce back from a difficult start to the game.

Yankees pitcher Ryan Weathers (40) throws a pitch during the first inning when the New York Yankees played the Minnesota Twins Sunday, July 5, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post

A leadoff double from Minnesota’s Austin Martin set the tone for the pitcher’s day (and helped the Twins grab a 1-0 lead soon after), and Weathers was ultimately pulled after beaning Luke Keaschall and walking Martin in the fifth inning.

“I wanna do well for the team and try to win the ballgame,” Weathers said afterwards. “And it just didn’t happen today.”

Weathers got up to 88 pitches — and one was a wild pitch that moved Royce Lewis to second and allowed him to score on shortly after a Brooks Lee single to left.

Yankees manager Aaron Boone (17) pulls New York Yankees pitcher Ryan Weathers (40) from the game during the fourth inning when the New York Yankees played the Minnesota Twins Sunday, July 5, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post
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The 26-year-old, in his sixth MLB season, is well on his way to blowing past his career high of 94 ²/₃ innings from his rookie season in San Diego.

And that mileage won’t make things any easier for a pitcher who has already been sliding over the last couple of months.

His ERA had dropped to a flat 3.00 on May 11 after a two-run, 6 ¹/₃-inning start against the Orioles. That figure is now 4.29 after this latest Yankees defeat, in which boos later rang down for relievers Paul Blackburn and Camilo Doval after the bleeding continued.

Weathers will likely pitch next in the back end of the Rays series or against the Nationals, and neither of those spots is massively favorable for a pitcher trying to get back on track.

Mets’ A.J. Ewing continues to step up against lefties: ‘Always been comfortable’

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows New York Mets center fielder A.J. Ewing (9) reacts after hitting a home run

ATLANTA — A.J. Ewing is not deterred by left-handed pitching.

The rookie homered and singled — both against lefties — to finish 2-for-4 in the Mets’ 10-9 victory over the Braves on Sunday. It marked the second time Ewing had multiple hits against left-handers in a game this season.

Ewing launched a Martín Pérez sinker for a homer leading off the third inning. The blast, which cleared the center field fence, was the first of his career that he did not pull. Ewing has five homers.

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“I think I have always been comfortable against lefties,” he said.

Ewing and Carson Benge, the two rookies in the lineup, have been success stories in a dreary season for the Mets. The 21-year-old Ewing boosted his OPS to .756 with his latest performance.

“I think we have believed he’s going to hit lefties in the long run, and it’s good to see him doing it,” interim manager Andy Green said.

New York Mets center fielder A.J. Ewing (9) reacts after hitting a home run against the Atlanta Braves during the second inning at Truist Park. Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

Francisco Lindor is expected to either DH or receive a day off Monday as the team continues to monitor his workload following his return from a calf strain.

“Hopefully, it’s the DH because we love having his bat in the lineup,” Greensaid. “But certainly, we like paying attention to his workload every day. It’s something we talked about [Saturday], and he felt good to go — it puts a good lineup on the field for us, having him at shortstop. He was on the bases quite a bit [Saturday], so it’s good to see him playing well and recovering.”

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Green indicated he likely will deploy Kodai Senga behind an opener for Tuesday’s game against the Royals at Citi Field. Senga pitched 2 ²/₃ innings in relief Friday, allowing one earned run. In his other relief appearance since his displacement from the starting rotation, he allowed two earned runs over five innings against the Phillies.


Juan Soto has reached base in 18 of his past 21 games since June 11 and ranks second in MLB among qualifiers in on-base percentage (.500) during that stretch. He’s third in OPS (1.171) and fifth in batting average (.371). Overall, he leads the NL with a .966 OPS. 

Camilo Doval still struggling to limit damage for Yankees — with one glaring issue

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Yankees pitcher Camilo Doval (75) reacts during the sixth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Yankee Stadium.

Camilo Doval has an ERA of 4.67, a number that does not take into account the eight unearned runs he has surrendered in his past three games.

There are few pitchers in baseball who have been statistically friendlier to lefty hitters, who have torched a very talented right arm.

But the public belief stated both by the Yankees flamethrower and his manager is Doval’s fortunes will turn because poor luck is playing a significant part in the struggles.

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“In my career as a pitcher, I’ve never felt this good,” Doval said through interpreter Marlon Abreu after allowing two more unearned runs in Sunday’s 6-1 loss to the Twins in The Bronx. “I’m not getting the results I expect out of myself. Sometimes it’s out of your control — you execute pitches and then you don’t get the results you want.”

He had a point in the series finale, when Ryan Kreidler reached on an error by Anthony Volpe and when Luke Keaschall did not “execute a bunt,” in the words of Aaron Boone, trying to lay one down and instead popping it over Doval and toward shortstop “no-man’s-land,” the manager said. It went for a single that loaded the bases.

Yankees pitcher Camilo Doval (75) reacts during the sixth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Yankee Stadium. John Jones-Imagn Images

But Doval has not been able to limit damage when poor luck or errors strike, and he walked in one run before a sacrifice fly scored another.

“I know nobody likes hearing it, but he’s throwing the ball really well,” said Boone, who leaned upon Doval’s excellent numbers against righties and acknowledged his issues with lefties. “Obviously the lefties have hurt him. … That’s where we got to get him a little more efficient.”

Among a lengthy list of Yankees issues is Doval, who has the talent and pedigree (a 2023 All-Star) to lock down the late innings but whose ineffectiveness figures to prompt the front office to seek trade-deadline help. He has been shutdown against righty hitters — among pitchers who had logged at least 19 innings versus righties this season, Doval’s .438 OPS-against entered play ranked 13th, narrowly behind Shohei Ohtani’s .430.

But there had been only three pitchers worse against lefty hitters, Doval sporting a 1.044 OPS-against.

When Doval was at his best — during his All-Star season with the Giants — he trusted his cutter and slider against lefties, only mixing in a few sinkers.

Yankees pitcher Camilo Doval (75) throws a pitch during the sixth inning when the New York Yankees played the Minnesota Twins Sunday, July 5, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post
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With the Yankees this year, Doval’s sinker usage has spiked all the way up to 43 percent against lefties.

Asked the key to improving against opposite-handed hitters, Doval cited strike-throwing.

“You really gotta be able to execute and attack the zone against lefties. You can’t lose faith in yourself,” said Doval, who has walked five, allowed 26 hits and given up four homers in 14 ⅓ innings against lefties. “… Just want to be able to keep attacking and being as consistent as possible.”

If the Yankees had plenty of options already on the 40-man roster in Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, perhaps they would demote Doval and allow him to work on his command against lefties at the lower level.

Given the state of the team, Boone did not sound as if such a move would happen.

“The bottom line is he’s got to be part of our solution here,” Boone said. “We’re up against it a little bit from an attrition standpoint.”

Max Fried threw a second live batting practice, building up to 36 pitches.

The lefty, recovering from an elbow bone bruise, will throw another sim game Thursday or Friday, after which a rehab assignment is expected.

Padres snap their 8-game skid with 5-2 win over Dodgers on Manny Machado’s 3-run homer

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Manny Machado hit a three-run homer, Jackson Merrill and Fernando Tatis Jr. added RBI singles, and the San Diego Padres snapped their eight-game losing streak with a 5-2 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sunday.

JP Sears (2-1) threw five scoreless innings of one-hit ball as the Padres ended their longest skid since 2013 and avoided a four-game sweep at the hands of the back-to-back World Series champions with their first victory since June 26. The win was San Diego’s second in its last 13 games at Dodger Stadium.

Four-time MVP Shohei Ohtani had an RBI single on his 32nd birthday for the MLB-leading Dodgers, who lost for only the second time in nine games.

Dodgers catcher Eliézer Alfonzo made his major league debut in extraordinary circumstances, playing the first six innings after Latin American media reports earlier Sunday indicated his sister and stepmother had been confirmed as victims of Venezuela’s earthquakes last month.

Padres manager Craig Stammen and infield coach Ryan Goins were ejected by plate umpire Nick Mahrley only three pitches into the game. Goins was yelling from the dugout when Mahrley tossed him, and Stammen got the boot after subsequently coming onto the field to argue.

Miguel Rojas’ two-out single in the fifth was the Dodgers’ only hit off Sears, who struck out five in his third start this season.

Emmet Sheehan (4-6) couldn’t get out of the fifth for the Dodgers, but yielded only one run on three hits.

Sung-mun Song drew a walk and scored on Tatis’ infield single before Machado’s 407-foot shot to center off Kyle Hurt. The homer was the 18th for Machado, who is nonetheless batting .189.

Alex Freeland and Ohtani singled in the Dodgers’ first runs later in the seventh.

Mason Miller pitched the ninth for his 22nd save and first since June 22, thanks to the Padres’ slump.

Up next

Eric Lauer (4-5, 4.84 ERA) looks to stay unbeaten since joining the Dodgers’ rotation in May when they open a home series with the Colorado Rockies on Monday night.

Walker Buehler (5-4, 4.61 ERA) takes the mound at Petco Park on Monday night when the Padres open a series with the Arizona Diamondbacks.

'I wish she was alive.' Eliezer Alfonzo has emotional day as Dodgers lose to Padres

Dodgers catcher Eliezer Alfonzo walks in the dugout during the seventh inning of a 5-2 loss to the San Diego Padres.
Dodgers catcher Eliezer Alfonzo walks in the dugout during the seventh inning of a 5-2 loss to the San Diego Padres on Sunday at Dodger Stadium. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

As the announcer called out his name in the lineup, Eliezer Alfonzo hugged fellow Venezuelan Miguel Rojas before the catcher walked down the dugout to greet his teammates and coaches. The two had written messages on their caps in silver ink: On Alfonzo’s, “EyP, RIP,” the initials of his stepmother Patricia and his younger sister Eliana. On Rojas’, a cross was drawn next to “Alfonzo” and below “Fuerza Matatan.” In other words, stay strong, Matatan, the nickname given to Alfonzo’s father, the former major league catcher Eliezer “El Matatán” Alfonzo.

An unimaginable weight rested on his shoulders when Alfonzo stepped into the batter’s box to a standing ovation. Alfonzo’s stepmother and sister were reportedly found dead after the earthquakes in Venezuela last month.

Alfonzo went 0-for-2 in an otherwise quiet Dodgers 5-2 loss to the Padres, though even in that performance, he found moments to reflect. His sister, he said after the game, had a dream that she refused to tell him until it came true.

“I’m pretty sure the dream was something about this. I wish she was alive to watch me play in the big leagues,” Alfonzo said. “But I know she’s in God’s side now, and she’s gonna protect me, and she’s gonna enjoy every moment that I’m gonna have.”

He honored his family’s loss by playing as if his sister were sitting in the stands. Because if she were here, he said, she would be yelling from the stands, “Hit the ball hard!”

The Dodgers catcher had previously clung to hope that the two, who had been reported missing, would be found. His father had searched tirelessly for them, his hope bolstered when he found the family’s dog alive. Alfonzo’s father stayed in the country, searching, when the Dodgers called his son to let him know he’d join the team.

The series finale with the Padres should’ve been a happy day. Most players who have toiled in the minor league system debut in front of applauding friends and family. Instead, Alfonzo’s first appearance, the culmination of nine tireless years, was somber , stricken by the grief overshadowing what should’ve been a joyous moment in the Dodgers’ to the Padres.

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Even manager Dave Roberts was lost for words.

“After today, it’s going to really hit him,” Roberts said. “All of us feel for him and his father, who I know, their family. It’s devastating.”

Alfonzo never considered not playing today, despite the personal tragedy. He’s spoken with his brother and his father in Venezuela, who asked him to play in the series finale for his sister. His agent, girlfriend and teammates, like Rojas, also helped Alfonzo approach the game calmly.

“What happened, unfortunately, is out of my hands and part of life,” he said in Spanish. “Only God knows why they happen. I went out there to honor my sister and my stepmother, and give my best in a difficult moment. Unfortunately, we couldn’t get the win, but you have to keep moving forward.”

Rojas, who spoke through reddened, teary eyes after the game, knows the family well. He learned from and played against Alfonzo’s father in Venezuelan winter ball. And, in a country struck by tragedy, this loss felt close to home.

“Everybody in Venezuela loves his dad,” Rojas said. “It’s really tough right now to put into context and to put into words. Just for him to be here today and making the decision that he was going to fulfill his childhood dream of playing in the big leagues, thinking about that and thinking about them and what happened over there and what his dad has to be going through right now by himself in Venezuela, it’s really tough.

“For me, I’m just going to support the whole family and especially Eliezer, because I know how hard it is to play like that. It’s been hard for me. Nothing happened to one of my family members, but as soon as I heard the news about them, it hit me as hard as if it were my family. I consider Eliezer Alfonso Sr. one of my close friends in baseball.”

In a way, playing baseball helps bring happiness to those going through tragedy, Rojas said. He knows because he’s lost both his parents, but his family still asks him to play.

“This is how I make a lot of people happy in my family and people who know me,” he said. “This is not just my job. This is who I am.”

Against the Padres, Rojas helped break a five-inning hitless streak for the Dodgers (59-32), who lead MLB in batting average (.265), with a single in the fifth. However, by then, the team had already found itself in a hole.

Emmet Sheehan gave up an RBI single to Padres’ center fielder Jackson Merrill in the fourth inning. In the fifth, he pitched himself into a jam, giving up a successive walk and double that put two runners in scoring position. With no room for error, Sheehan was quickly replaced by Jack Dreyer, who escaped the inning scoreless.

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Sheehan (4-6) has now had five straight starts that lasted no more than five innings. But, having given up only one earned run in the series closer to the Padres (44-45), Sheehan’s start could be viewed as a step in the right direction: only three hits and five strikeouts.

“I thought the first three innings were great,” Roberts said. “They really were. I thought the stuff was up, he was on the attack, you’re getting the swing-and-miss, getting the soft contact, he was great.”

However, emotions remained high on both sides. San Diego’s manager Craig Stammen and coach Ryan Goins were ejected three pitches into the game after arguing a check-swing call. The ejection seemed to spark the Padres back from a season-high eight-game losing streak, though the Dodgers didn’t make the win easy at times.

The pressure ratcheted up in the sixth when Shohei Ohtani and Andy Pages worked walks off Yuki Matsui, who replaced JP Sears. The Padres switched pitchers again before Mookie Betts’ two-out at-bat, and the move paid off. Betts hit a routine flyball, and the inning — and the Dodgers’ momentum — ended.

After scoring in the fourth, San Diego extended its lead in the seventh courtesy of Fernando Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado. Tatis Jr. beat out a throw from Rojas to Freddie Freeman, driving in one run. And though the Dodgers challenged, the call was upheld. Then, two batters later, reliever Kyle Hurt threw a four-seam fastball down the middle of the plate, and Machado rocketed the pitch to the center field wall beyond the grasp of a leaping Pages.

The Dodgers clawed back two runs in the seventh. Alex Freeland drove in one on a line-drive RBI-single. Ohtani added another one. Neither was enough to win, though it ensured the Dodgers weren’t blanked.

Shohei Ohtani loses his bat during the third inning Sunday.
Shohei Ohtani loses his bat during the third inning Sunday. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

Still, the game’s result seemed minuscule when stacked against Alfonso’s personal tragedy and the earthquake’s destruction in Venezuela. And, as the country and its people begin to piece together the full toll of the destruction amid the rubble, the notion of playing baseball seems absurd in the wake of such tragedy.

“It’s not always easy, but sometimes getting on the field, competing, life goes to the wayside,” Roberts said. “And you can just compete and do your job, and that’s sort of a blessing. But yeah, to play every day, and to have to perform, it’s pressure in itself.”

But for the men who have only known how to play baseball since they were young, there’s little else to do.

“That’s the worst feeling, feeling selfish of being here and playing, and we look out there like we’re having fun and we’re laughing,” Rojas said. “At the end, when I put my head to bed after everything is over, after the show is over, it’s really hard to go to sleep. I’m pretty sure a lot of Venezuelans are going through the same thing.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.