Dodgers held to three hits in loss to Padres, falling back into tie for first place

Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani reacts after drawing a walk against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park.
Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani reacts after drawing a walk during the sixth inning of a 2-1 loss to the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on Friday night. (Orlando Ramirez / Associated Press)

Five days ago, the Dodgers finally seemed to be building some late-season momentum.

In the span of a week, however, they have once again squandered any real forward progress.

Coming off a sweep of the San Diego Padres at home last weekend, the Dodgers appeared to be in strong position for the stretch run. They’d built a two-game lead in the National League West. They had the last-place Colorado Rockies up next on the schedule. And even with a trip to San Diego looming after that, they were primed to potentially take a stranglehold in the standings.

Instead, the team split its four-game set in Denver, giving a game back to the Padres while San Diego took three of four from the San Francisco Giants in the same span.

Then, in Friday’s series-opener at Petco Park, the Padres punched back in a rivalry the Dodgers had owned for most of this season, winning 2-1 to draw even for first place in the National League West.

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"I think when you're in it, you don't really have the time to think about disappointment and what could've been,” manager Dave Roberts said of so quickly squandering a division lead they worked so hard last weekend to build.

“You've got to just go out there and deal with what's going on right now. We're tied in the standings and we've got to win a game tomorrow. There's just no other way to look at it."

Before Friday, beating the Padres (73-56) was the one thing this year’s underwhelming Dodgers team had consistently done well. They had taken eight of the previous 10 matchups. Their sweep at Dodger Stadium last week felt like a statement, one that looked to have the club poised to break out of an extended summer funk.

But after a disappointing week against the Rockies, the Dodgers (73-56) once again fell flat in front of a sold-out Petco Park crowd. They managed just three hits, and only one before a failed rally in the top of the ninth inning. They got seven productive innings out of Blake Snell, yet couldn’t get him off the hook for a standings-swinging loss.

“It’s hard for us, not giving him the support he deserved,” outfielder Teoscar Hernández said. “But it’s baseball. He threw the ball really good today. We didn’t get the job done.”

Rookie infielder Alex Freeland hit his first career home run in the third inning, opening the scoring on a hanging sweeper from Yu Darvish. But after that, the veteran Japanese right-hander went on the attack, retiring 10 of the final 11 batters he faced in a dominant six-inning, one-walk, five-strikeout start.

“It’s just one of those days you just tip your cap,” Hernández said of Darvish, who kept the Dodgers guessing with his unpredictable seven-pitch repertoire. “You don’t know where to look. You don’t know what pitches to look for. He was using all the pitches today. Hitting the spot, corners really good with all of it.”

Snell, meanwhile, started strong in his first outing at Petco Park since leaving the Padres at the end of 2023. Through three innings, he had silenced his former club beneath a barrage of curveballs, changeups and sliders, showing more progress in his fourth start back from a three-month shoulder injury.

Dodgers starting pitcher Blake Snell delivers during the first inning Friday against the Padres.
Dodgers starting pitcher Blake Snell delivers during the first inning Friday against the Padres. (Orlando Ramirez / Associated Press)

"I thought Blake was fantastic tonight,” Roberts said of Snell, who left the ballpark immediately after the game for the birth of his second child. “Just a really stellar performance.”

A turning point, however, arose at the end of the third.

With Ramón Laureano on second with two outs, Snell thought he had struck out Fernando Tatis Jr. on a curveball in the dirt. Tatis and Laureano evidently thought the same, with Tatis briefly starting toward the dugout and Laureano walking casually off second. But at first base, umpire Chris Guccione ruled that Tatis checked his swing. The play was still live. And catcher Will Smith alertly threw to third, where Laureano was hung out to dry. 

That might have ended the inning. But it also meant Tatis was back at the plate to begin the fourth. This time, the Padres star managed to work a walk from what started as an 0-2 count. And from there, the home side built a rally. 

Luis Arráez executed a sacrifice bunt (one of three the Padres executed in an apparent pre-determined game plan). Manny Machado followed with an RBI single. Ryan O’Hearn moved him to third with another base hit. Xander Bogaerts then flipped the score with a sacrifice fly to make it 2-1.

“We have a lot of different styles. ... We can beat the other team in a lot of different ways,” Padres manager Mike Shildt said. “Tonight, it was more of an old-fashioned recipe.” 

Snell was excellent the rest of the way, completing seven innings for the first time in his Dodgers career with six hits, two walks and five strikeouts.

Alas, it didn’t matter.

Because even after Darvish left the game, the Dodgers’ offense couldn’t claw back.

Their best opportunity came in the eighth, when hard-throwing Padres deadline acquisition Mason Miller walked Michael Conforto and Freeland to create a jam. With one out, however, Dalton Rushing came to the plate as a pinch-hitter, rolled a ground ball on a 101-mph fastball to the right side, and couldn’t get to first in time to beat out a double play (he was initially called safe, but a Padres challenge overturned the call).

The inning ended with Shohei Ohtani waiting on deck. And while he came up to lead off the ninth, he watched a towering fly ball die at the warning track.

“We were fighting,” Roberts said. “Tonight was one of those things where good pitching beat good hitting."

The Dodgers nonetheless mounted one last rally, recording their first hits since Freeland’s homer on singles from Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman against Padres closer Robert Suarez. But with runners on the corners, Hernández struck out to end the game — leaving the Dodgers once again on the back foot, just days after they had finally seemed to have found solid ground.

“Obviously, we’re fighting for the division, but this one is in the past,” Hernández said. “One day you have it. Next day you don’t. You just gotta grind through it, and keep playing.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets' Nolan McLean continues to impress after strong road win: 'This kid is special'

For the second straight start, Nolan McLean was tasked with helping the Mets get back in the win column after a losing streak. 

In his first major league start, the rookie gave New York 5.1 shutout innings to help the Mets snap a three-game losing streak in their win at home, but on the road, against the rival Braves, the 24-year-old was even more impressive. 

He pitched seven innings, allowing just two runs and striking out seven in the Mets' 12-7 win on Friday night, snapping their two-game skid.

"On a night where the sweeper and the curveball, he was having a hard time landing it for strikes, to get ahead and put hitters away, he still found a way to give us seven," manager Carlos Mendoza said after the game. "Kept going back to the fastball, the sinker, he used the changeup, he didn’t shy away, he competed in the strike zone. Reached 97 when he needed to, he moved the ball around and kept trying to throw the breaking balls."

"Felt good. Early in the game, I was getting behind in counts, didn’t love that," McLean said of his outing. "Hit a batter on my first pitch, went smooth after that, found a second wind there in the fifth inning. Felt good."

As Mendoza said, McLean's secondary pitches were a bit all over the place, but the right-hander had the conviction to throw them when necessary to get them back in his repertoire, like any veteran would do.

"It’s all about being able to adjust, try to find a feel that gets it back in the zone," McLean said of trying to find the feel on his pitches on the fly. "And being able to rely on other pitches and trust your catcher to call games to set up other pitches to get outs as well." 

"That right there shows a lot about who he is," Mendoza said. "We saw a lot that first outing, but even today, against that lineup, that was pretty impressive."

McLean, who didn't allow a run in his first start, gave up his first in the third inning and then a solo shot to Ronald Acuña Jr. to lead off the fifth. But that's all the Braves would get off the talented youngster, as he put it, found his second wind and would retire 11 straight batters at one point. The right-hander credited the offense behind him for helping him get back into a rhythm after the Acuña homer.

"Our offense did such a good job to give me so much breathing room that I was able to pound the strike zone, force them to put it in play," he said of the Mets' 21-hit, 12-run outburst. "Get ahead in some counts and punch guys out when I had a chance."

That run support allowed McLean to be pitch efficient and go seven innings. He walked four batters in his first start and didn't walk any on Friday and McLean was pleased overall with his execution, but admits there are still some things he wants to clean up. The Mets are definitely pleased with the results, especially the length McLean gave them.

He became the first Mets starter other than David Peterson to pitch six or more innings since June 7 (62 games). McLean was not aware of that mark but says he tries to treat every start the same.

"I’m just going out there trying to win," he said. "Every batter I face, I’m trying to get them out. Happen to go seven tonight, obviously last week was five and some change and I wanted to be better."

That also includes playing not only in a hostile environment but in his home territory. McLean is a North Carolina native and would go to Braves games and rooted for Atlanta as a kid. But that didn't bother McLean, who had family and friends in the stands on Friday night, and that's what has impressed Mendoza and the Mets so much. McLean's poise and demeanor on the mound. 

"At this point, I don’t know what else to say about him," Mendoza said. "For him to go out there and compete and be himself is not easy to do. Goes to show you that this kid is special." 

 

Mets' Carlos Mendoza not 'concerned' about Ryan Helsley after Friday's outing 'but we've got to help him'

Mets RHPRyan Helsley allowed three runs on as many hits while pitching the ninth inning of Friday's 12-7 win at the Atlanta Braves, continuing his struggles since the St. Louis Cardinals traded him to New York.

After Helsley's latest appearance, in which he threw 16 strikes on 24 pitches with no strikeouts and one walk, Mets manager Carlos Mendoza was asked about his concern level.

"I mean, I'm not going to say that I'm concerned," Mendoza said. "But we've got to help him, because he's not getting swings and misses. He's not getting chases. So, we've got to go back and see how can we continue to help him -- because he's elite, he's elite. Another tough inning there where the hitters are just basically taking the breaking balls, they're right on the fastball, so our job is to help him."

Helsley has allowed 12 runs (eight earned) on 12 hits (one homer) while striking out nine and walking five in 7.1 IP over nine games this month.

The Mets acquired the 31-year-old in a July 30 trade that sent infield prospect Jesus Baez and two pitching prospects, Nate Dohm and Frank Elissalt, to the Cardinals.

In 36 games with St. Louis this season, Helsley had 21 saves (26 opportunities). He allowed 12 runs on 36 hits in 36 innings while striking out 41 and walking 14.

Jen Pawol, MLB’s first female umpire, back in big leagues working Pirates-Rockies series

PITTSBURGH — Jen Pawol is back in the big leagues.

Pawol, who made history this month when she became the first female umpire to work a Major League Baseball game, is part of the crew working the three-game series between the Pittsburgh Pirates and Colorado Rockies this weekend.

Pawol was at second base for Friday night’s series opener as part of a four-person crew that includes crew chief Ron Kulpa, Alex Tosi and Manny Gonzalez. Pawol is scheduled to work first base on Saturday and then be behind the plate Sunday when Pirates ace and NL Cy Young Award contender Paul Skenes takes the mound.

Mets' offense explodes, Nolan McLean strong again in 12-7 win over Braves

The Mets' offense exploded for 12 runs as New York ended their two-game losing streak with a 12-7 win over the Braves in Atlanta on Friday night.

On a night where the Braves celebrated the 30th anniversary of their 1995 World Series team, having Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine and John Smoltz throw out the first pitch, it was Nolan McLean who was the best pitcher in the building as he pitched seven strong innings to pick up his second career win.

Here are the takeaways...

-McLean's first road start began with a stumble on the mound on his first pitch that resulted in a hit-by-pitch. But the young right-hander bounced back, striking out Matt Olson, getting Ronald Acuña Jr. to ground into a forceout and striking out Michael Harris II on a check swing to end the frame.

McLean continued to stay poised even after allowing a leadoff double in the third inning. Jurickson Profar would drive in that run with a one-out single -- the first run allowed in McLean's big league career -- but a strike 'em-out-throw 'em-out double play ended the inning. 

After a lengthy three-run fourth, Acuña greeted McLean with a leadoff homer. After that, McLean retired nine straight Braves to get through the sixth inning, becoming the first Mets starter to go that far, other than David Peterson, since Clay Holmes on June 7 (62 games). That streak would reach 11 before a two-out single in the seventh. 

McLean tossed 94 pitches (58 strikes) across seven innings, allowing two runs on four hits while striking out seven batters. After he walked four batters in his first start, McLean did not give up a walk in this one. His 15 strikeouts in his first two starts are second in Mets history, behind Matt Harvey's 18 in 2012.

-With Jeff McNeil, Luis Torrens and Brandon Nimmoout of the lineup due to injuries, their replacements got the Mets on the board early. Back-to-back one-out singles from Brett Baty and Tyrone Taylor in the second got the Mets a scoring chance and catcher Hayden Senger came through with a two-out single to score Baty and give the Mets an early 1-0 lead. It's only Senger's second career RBI.

After Francisco Lindor walked to load the bases, Juan Soto worked a six-pitch walk to put the Mets up 2-0. Starling Marte followed by flying out to end the threat. 

The Mets' offense would capitalize on an RBI chance in the third inning, though, as Cedric Mullins lined a two-run triple to put the Mets up 4-0. In the fourth, back-to-back singles to lead off by Lindor and Soto resulted in a sac fly by Marte to put the Mets up 5-1, and knock starter Joey Wentz out of the game after just 3.1 innings. Mark Vientos continued to scorch the ball with a two-out double that drove in Soto from first base. An infield single from Baty and a double by Tyrone increased their lead to 7-1.

-Soto would pour it on in the seventh with a two-run shot that hit off the left field foul pole to give the Mets a 9-2 lead. Soto finished 3-for-4 with four RBI and two walks. He picked up his 100th walk of the season and is now just 25 behind John Olerud (1999) for most in a single season in Mets history.

Senger would hit a two-run single in the eighth to put a bow on his night. The third-string catcher had a career day at the plate, finishing 2-for-5 with three RBI.

-The Mets' offense had 21 hits and although every starter had at least one hit, most of the damage came from the bottom of the order. The 6-9 hitters went a combined 12-for-20 with six RBI. Baty had four hits while Taylor and Mullins had three hits each.

Reed Garrett was tasked with mop-up duty and struggled in his one inning of work. Garrett allowed two runs on three hits and struck out one batter. Ryan Helsley, in a move likely to give the reliever some confidence after some recent struggles, was given the ninth inning. The right-hander walked the leadoff batter and gave up a one-out double. Vidal Brujan, off the bench, hit a two-out single to drive in a run. That was followed by a two-run double from Profar. Helsley would get the final out, eventually, but allowed three runs in the final frame.

Game MVP: Nolan McLean

Yes, the offense went bananas but McLean's outing didn't allow this porous bullpen more innings to allow runs.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets and Braves play the middle game of their three-game set when the first pitch is thrown at 7:15 p.m. on Saturday night. 

Clay Holmes (10-6, 3.64 ERA) takes the mound against recently-acquired Cal Quantirll (4-10, 5.50 ERA).

Max Fried returns to form, lacks support in Yankees' 1-0 loss to Red Sox

Max Fried returned to form, but the Yankees gave him no run support in Friday's 1-0 loss to the Boston Red Sox.

Takeaways

  1. Fried (13-5, 3.14 ERA) had his best start in almost a month and his best outing since June 25. After three straight games of eight hits in five innings, Fried fired six scoreless frames while scattering four knocks and striking out seven. He walked three and threw 63 strikes on 99 pitches but dug deep in a rebound no-decision that had the Yankees (69-59) primed for a bounce-back win over the Red Sox (70-59).
  2. Unfortunately for Fried, Brayan Bello was just as good -- if not better. Boston's starter yielded three hits while striking out five and walking one in seven shutout innings before passing the ball to reliever Garrett Whitlock and closer Aroldis Chapman for the perfect final two frames.
  3. With Fried on the verge of 100 pitches,Aaron Boone's Mark Leiter Jr. decision backfired. Promptly, after Ceddanne Rafaela's leadoff flyout, Leiter allowed consecutive doubles to Nathaniel Lowe and Connor Wong. Leiter (5-7, 4.14 ERA) subsequently retired Romy Gonzalez and Alex Bregman, but not before the one-run damage was done.
  4. Ultimately, though, the Yankees did not hit in their third shutout loss of August. Singles by Ben Rice (first inning), Trent Grisham (third inning) and Austin Wells (sixth inning) were all that they got. Wells also ran the Yankees right out of the sixth inning when he jumped too far off the base and got doubled up on Grisham, who lined out to shortstop. This is who the Yankees are, and the Red Sox lapped them for the first wild card as a result.

Who's the MVP?

Bello, who went one inning more than Fried in this pitcher's duel.

What's next

Saturday's 1:05 p.m. game at Yankee Stadium. New York RHP Will Warren (7-5, 4.25 ERA) and Boston LHP Garrett Crochet (13-5, 2.43 ERA) are set to start as the Yankees look to salvage the four-game series with at least a split.

Mets' Tylor Megill pitches five dominant innings for Triple-A Syracuse

Mets starter Tylor Megill made his latest rehab start for Triple-A Syracuse on Friday night and was dominant.

After walking the first batter he faced, the big right-hander mowed down Indianapolis batters for three no-hit innings. Nick Yorke broke up the no-hit bid with a leadoff single in the fourth inning, but that would be the last baserunner against Megill, who kept Indianapolis batters off balance. 

Megill tossed 65 pitches (39 strikes) across five shutout innings, allowing the one hit, one walk and striking out four batters.

Friday was Megill's third rehab start as he tries to make his way back from an elbow sprain. It's also his third shutout appearance after he tossed 1.2 innings in his first start and 3.1 shutout innings in his second start. While Megill didn't have the strikeout stuff like he did in his second start, where he struck out nine batters, he went longer in the game, which is something the Mets are certainly happy to see.

Also of note from Friday's game was first base prospect Ryan Clifford. The young slugger clubbed his first Triple-A homer (373 feet), taking right-hander Wilkin Ramos deep over the left field wall.

Clifford would single in a run in his second at-bat but he wasn't done with the longball. In the eighth, Clifford took RHP Cam Sanders deep for a 397-foot blast. He went 3-for-4 with three RBI.

 

Duran's first blown save with Phillies leads to series-opening loss to Nationals

Duran's first blown save with Phillies leads to series-opening loss to Nationals originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Phillies manager Rob Thomson talked earlier this season about seeing things he’d never seen before in his many years in MLB. He can add a couple more things to the list as the Phillies fell to the Washington Nationals, 5-4, in the series-opener at Citizens Bank Park.

In a game that saw three Taijuan Walker pickoff attempts overturned – two to outs, one to safe – and closer Jhoan Duran blow his first save opportunity for the Phillies in seven tries, the Phillies got excellent pitching.

That is if you take away the first and last innings.

Early on, it didn’t appear to be the Phillies’ night and certainly not Walker’s, as the Nationals tagged him for three runs in a first inning that included two walks, a pickoff at first, a three-run home run and an astounding 38 pitches. In Duran’s ninth inning, he gave up a double to Dylan Crews and a game-tying single to Dayle Lile, who went to second on the throw home by Brandon Marsh, which hit Crews, not enabling catcher J.T. Realmuto to secure the ball. Lile then stole third and scored easily when Realmuto’s throw sailed into left.

The Phillies have been playing so well lately that it seems like it had to take some crazy events for them to lose for the first time in five games.

After a rough first inning, Walker pitched four more and faced the minimum 12 batters. It was an adjustment he made that allowed him to overcome the lengthy first, but the three-run damage had already been done.

“Just the two walks,” Walker said of his first inning troubles. “I feel like when I get in trouble a lot is when I start walking guys. It seemed like they were a little more patient in that first inning. The splitters that they were taking and just out of the zone a little too much. After the first inning I started getting in the zone more and it seemed like they were being more aggressive and putting the ball in play more.”

Walker says his cutter just wasn’t there to begin the night but it came back to him with a little work.

“It was a little off in the bullpen,” he said. “I thought the first inning it would be better but it was just off a little bit, made a little adjustment after the first and it started picking up. Just a wrist adjustment, a stiffer wrist.

“It was really just not commanding the zone in that first inning and just not throwing enough strikes. I really didn’t know how many I threw. I didn’t know that. It didn’t feel like 38. I know it was a longer inning but I didn’t feel like 38. But I felt good, the whole game after that started to get quicker outs and got into a good little groove.”

The whole team did. While Tanner Banks, Jose Alvarado and Matt Strahm contributed to keeping the Nationals off the board after the first, the torrid offense came to life for the Phillies.

Nick Castellanos began the second with a single, hustled to third on a Bryson Stott single and scored on a groundout by Trea Turner to cut the lead 3-1. In the sixth, Castellanos doubled for his third hit of the night and scored two batters later when Stott homered to tie the game 3-3.

In the seventh, after Nationals lefty reliever Shinnosuke Ogasawara struck out Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper, Realmuto launched a low, 3-2 changeup, into the left field seats for a 4-3 lead. And when Strahm put down the Nats in the eighth, the general feeling was game over as Duran warmed in the bullpen.

But not on this night as Duran gave up a couple hits and Realmuto aired one into left to help Washington get the winning run.

“That’s the game,” Duran said. “Sometimes that happens. We need to prepare for everything.” Asked if he can easily shake off his first blemish as a Phillie, Duran said, “Right now. I’m good. Sometimes we do good, sometimes we do bad. So, that’s the game. Tomorrow I’ll be ready for tomorrow, so it’s ok.”

Realmuto, after becoming the offensive hero with a late-inning home run, reflected more on the play at the third than his offense after the game.

“I probably shouldn’t have thrown the ball, in hindsight,” he said. “It was a curve ball away and I really didn’t get to set my feet and get around the (batter) so I did have to throw it over his head. In that situation, it’s tough to do, but I probably should have just eaten it, let him have third base and give Duran a chance to strike the next two guys out, which he ended up doing. It’s tough to do in the moment but I probably should have just eaten that one.”

Still, there were positives to the game that manager Rob Thomson was quick to point out afterwards.

“(Casty) swung the bat well, Stott’s hot,” he said. “J.T. with a big home run in the seventh to get us where we wanted to be. We fought back and I’m happy with that. Castellanos also going first to third created a run for us, our first run and Trea busting it down the line to avoid the double play and get us on the board.”

As for his thoughts on his new closer?

“Super confident. Mariano (Rivera) had 80 (blown saves), so it’s going happen every once in a while. He struck out the side. There’s going to be hits in there sometimes.”

As for seeing three overturned pickoffs, add that to the list of an inside-the-park three-run homer that beat the Phillies earlier this year in San Francisco and a walk off win on a catcher’s interference against Boston.

“I don’t think so,” said Thomson of seeing the pickoff situation. “I’m not sure but I don’t think so.”

Astros sign veteran reliever Craig Kimbrel, a nine-time All-Star

BALTIMORE — The Houston Astros have signed Craig Kimbrel to a major league contract, and the veteran reliever reported to the team in Baltimore on Friday.

The 37-year-old Kimbrel posted a 5.33 ERA with the Orioles last year before being released in September. He later returned to the Atlanta Braves - where he began his big league career - but pitched in only one game before being designated for assignment. Texas signed him to a minor league deal in June, and the right-hander was with Triple-A Round Rock before being released Thursday and picked up by the Astros.

In 42 minor league appearances this year at Triple-A and Double-A, Kimbrel is 1-2 with a 3.00 ERA. The nine-time All-Star has 440 saves at the big league level.

“Happy to have him,” Astros manager Joe Espada said before Friday night's game at Baltimore. “This guy has been one of the best for a very long time.”

Houston also reinstated right-hander Lance McCullers Jr. from the injured list and put left-hander Bennett Sousa (left elbow inflammation) on the 15-day IL retroactive to Wednesday. The team optioned right-hander Logan VanWey to Triple-A Sugar Land, transferred left-hander Brandon Walter to the 60-day IL and sent right-hander Tayler Scott outright to Sugar Land.

Orioles reach a $67 million, 8-year deal with 21-year-old catcher Samuel Basallo

BALTIMORE — On a team with plenty of talented young players, Samuel Basallo now has a special distinction - the first to agree to a long-term contract.

The Baltimore Orioles reached a $67 million, eight-year deal with the rookie catcher Friday, less than a week after the 21-year-old made his major league debut. The agreement - a record pre-arbitration deal for a catcher - starts in 2026 and includes a team option for 2034. It has escalators based on awards and playing time at catcher and could be worth $88.5 million.

“We are thrilled to agree with Samuel long term and are delighted about what this means for him and his family,” general manager Mike Elias said in a statement. “His debut and this extension are big achievements for our organization, beginning with the work of our international scouting staff and carried forward successfully by our entire player development operation."

Basallo will make $1 million a year in 2026, 2027 and 2028, $4 million in 2029, $7 million in 2030, $11 million in 2031 and $15 million in 2032 and 2033. The deal includes a $5 million signing bonus, and the 2034 option is $18 million with a $7 million buyout.

It's the first major long-term deal this Baltimore front office has been able to reach with one of the Orioles' standout prospects, and it comes just four games into Basallo's big league career after he made his debut Sunday. He is ranked as baseball's No. 8 prospect according to MLB Pipeline.

It's a significant move for a Baltimore team that has come out of a rebuild with several impressive young players - Gunnar Henderson, Adley Rutschman and Jackson Holliday among them - but hadn't been able to extend any of them beyond their initial periods of team control.

Elias and Basallo are expected to hold a news conference Saturday. The Orioles didn't announce the deal until after the clubhouse was closed to reporters before Friday night's game against Houston. Basallo wasn't around when it was open, and neither were a number of other key players, but interim manager Tony Mansolino shed some light on the reaction.

“I was sitting in the room, and I won't say who, but I saw several guys right away walk up to Samuel when he walked into the clubhouse and shook his hand, gave him a hug, told him congratulations,” Mansolino said. “And some pretty prominent guys did it. Great joy for Samuel in a lot of ways, and just a lot of leadership right there by some of those guys.”

Rutschman, also a catcher, was terrific for his first couple years in the majors, but he slumped toward the end of 2024 and has hit just .227 during an injury-plagued 2025. Now the Orioles have made a commitment to Basallo, but he can also play first base.

It's been a dismal year in Baltimore, with fan frustration high after the team remained cautious in free agency and quickly fell to last place in the AL East after making the playoffs two straight seasons. Basallo's recent call-up was much anticipated, and now the Orioles have shown a willingness to spend a bit more if that's what's needed to hold onto young talent.

“The agreement with Samuel is just a catalyst for the next exciting period of Orioles baseball,” owner David Rubenstein said. ”I thank Mike Elias, (vice president for international scouting and operations) Koby Perez, and the entire baseball operations group for their effort and diligence in securing Samuel as a key piece of the future of the organization.”

Basallo, a native of the Dominican Republic, originally signed with the Orioles during the 2020-21 international signing period.

“You think back to when Mike came in, there was kind of a lack of a Latin American program,” Mansolino said. “I think there's a lot of significance that the first extension is a guy that came through the brand new Latin American program.”

Also Friday, the Orioles put infielder Jordan Westburg (right ankle sprain) on the 10-day injured list - retroactive to Tuesday - and right-hander Brandon Young (left hamstring) on the 15-day IL. They also transferred right-hander Félix Bautista (right shoulder surgery) and catcher Gary Sanchez (right knee sprain) to the 60-day IL and selected the contracts of right-hander Matt Bowman and infielder Vimael Machín from Triple-A Norfolk.

Willy Adames' emphatic two-homer homecoming spoiled as Brewers walk off Giants

Willy Adames' emphatic two-homer homecoming spoiled as Brewers walk off Giants originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Before his first at-bat back in Milwaukee since departing last offseason in MLB free agency, Willy Adames received nearly a minute-long standing ovation from the Brewers’ home crowd.

The fan-favorite shortstop clearly still is beloved at American Family Field after spending three and a half seasons with the Brewers, even after signing with the Giants this past December.

Well, perhaps not for long, as Adames crushed the first pitch he saw 419 feet into the second deck in left field and promptly was met with boos. He then went deep a second time in the eighth inning, this one to the opposite field, helping fuel a late Giants resurgence.

“It was very emotional, I would say. They changed their mind really quick, though,” Adames told reporters with a laugh, referring to the crowd’s quick switch from celebration to antagonism. “Obviously, I know that they didn’t mean those boos.

“It felt really good to see that they have that much love for me. They know that I have the same love back. It was really special to see it and feel it, and kind of embrace everything and soak it all in.”

But the Milwaukeeans got the last laugh in the end, as the Giants’ late comeback proved fruitless after William Contreras’ walk-off homer in the ninth inning gave the red-hot Brewers a 5-4 win on Friday night.

So, in the end, it was another thrilling win for MLB’s hottest team since the All-Star break, and another heart-wrenching loss for the league’s coldest team in that same span.

“It’s just another day. It feels the same way that it’s been going on for us,” Adames explained postgame. “It felt like we played better baseball — obviously, we had some difficulties … Contreras had a really good pitch there, and he took advantage of it.

Regardless of the result, the night clearly was all about Adames’ emphatic homecoming.

“It was great … to get the reception he did and then hits first-pitch homer,” manager Bob Melvin said. “I mean, that’s pretty cool stuff. And then he hit another homer to get us a little bit closer, and then we tie the game. Willy came in here, obviously looking to put together a good game, and he did.”

After signing a franchise-record contract worth $182 million over seven years, this hasn’t quite been the season that Adames or the Giants desired. His .224 batting average and .722 OPS both are the second-lowest marks of his eight-year career.

But the 29-year-old shortstop quietly is up to 22 home runs on the season, and his effusive personality shone in the spotlight during Friday’s two-homer game — both primary reasons why the Giants signed him.

“Even my second at-bat, when they started booing me, I was just laughing, because that’s how it is,” Adames admitted. “I enjoyed it like the standing ovation. For me, it was the same. It felt good. I know it was all love.”

So while all hope feels all but lost for the Giants’ playoff hopes in 2025, San Francisco will hope that Friday’s big night could spur on their star shortstop for more production through the rest of this season and beyond

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Mets Notes: Jeff McNeil undergoes precautionary MRI, Brandon Nimmo 'better today'

Prior to Friday's game against the Atlanta Braves, Mets manager Carlos Mendoza gave some updates on the team...


Jeff McNeil undergoes MRI

McNeil is not in the starting lineup for the second consecutive game as he deals with shoulder soreness. The Mets skipper gave an update on McNeil's condition and revealed that they got some imaging done on McNeil's shoulder since yesterday.

"We took some MRI this morning just precautionary and it didn’t show anything," Mendoza said. "He’s just got to play through it. It’s in a real spot. Giving him some extra time for the medicine to start working, but this is something that will be day-to-day... He’s available like last night, but limit his exposure on the field for now."

As Mendoza said, McNeil did pinch-hit in the eighth inning of Thursday's loss to the Nationals. While he did strike out, McNeil played the field in the bottom half of the inning, which is an encouraging sign.

For Friday's series opener against the Braves, the outfield alignment consists of Juan Soto in right, Cedric Mullins in center and Tyrone Taylor making his second consecutive start in left in place of Brandon Nimmo. Brett Baty is starting at second base. If McNeil were to get a pinch-hit opportunity, it would likely be for Taylor just as it was on Thursday.

Brandon Nimmo, Luis Torrens updates

Speaking of Nimmo, the veteran outfielder is out of the lineup again after his recurring neck issue popped up during Wednesday's game. 

Mendoza had a promising update on Nimmo, saying that he's "better today" and received treatment and is moving around. He pointed out that when he came to the ballpark on Thursday, he did not do any activities, but since he is, it's a good sign.

While Nimmo is out of the starting lineup, Mendoza didn't rule out an appearance from his outfielder in Friday's game. But he is going to wait and see how he feels after doing some pregame baseball activities before he decides.

As for Torrens, the backstop is riding the bench for the second consecutive game after his glove hand took a swing in Wednesday's game against the Nationals. While Torrens finished the game, his hand was sore and Mendoza said that is still the case on Friday. The Mets skipper did say Torrens is available off the bench, but wanted to give him another day and that there is still no plans to get imaging done on Torrens' hand.

This will be the first time Senger has started back-to-back games since early July.

Mets remain confident in Ryne Stanek

Stanek's performance of late has been as inconsistent as the team's bullpen as a whole. After back-to-back scoreless outings earlier this week, the right-hander allowed four runs on three hits and two walks in Thursday's 9-3 loss to the Nationals. 

Mendoza was asked how the team plans to get Stanek right for the stretch run.

"Continue to be supportive," he said. "The stuff is there. You look at 100 mph, the split and it’s kinda crazy. We continue to believe in him."

The Mets skipper was asked if Stanek's issues are a product of his lack of execution or the sequence of pitches and Mendoza said it's a combination of both.

"When he’s ahead in counts, not being able to finish hitters," Mendoza said. "A little too much in the strike zone and they put the ball in play, and he’s been a little unlucky as well. Executing when he’s ahead in counts is the biggest thing. Making guys chase as opposed to leaving hittable pitches."

In 50 appearances this season, Stanek has pitched to a 5.65 ERA and a 1.60 WHIP.

Willy Adames homers on first pitch after standing ovation in Giants-Brewers game

Willy Adames homers on first pitch after standing ovation in Giants-Brewers game originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Willy Adames made a grand entrance in his first return to Milwaukee on Friday night.

The Giants shortstop, who spent the previous four season with the Brewers before joining San Francisco last offseason, received a rousing standing ovation from the home crowd at American Family Field.

Adames then jumped on the very first pitch of his first at-bat, crushing a solo home run to left field mere moments after being greeted by a warm reception.

Those cheers quickly turned to boos as the Brewers fans watched their longtime shortstop put Milwaukee into an early 1-0 hole with his towering blast.

The home run was Adames’ 21st of the 2025 MLB season, but it didn’t take long for the slugging shortstop to add another.

Adames teed off on Brewers reliever Aaron Ashby in the eighth inning for his second home run of the night, pulling the Giants within one run.

It likely will be a night Adames never forgets.

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Thomson, Phillies hopeful red-hot offense carries into Nationals series

Thomson, Phillies hopeful red-hot offense carries into Nationals series originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

To say the Phillies offense has been as hot as an August summer day in Philadelphia might be an understatement right now. Consider in their three game series just completed against the visiting Seattle Mariners, they scored 29 runs and collected 49 hits, 17 for extra bases.

It all starts at the beginning and Trea Turner has been absolutely spectacular of late as the shortstop has had two or more hits in six of his last seven games, and scored 11 runs and drove in seven during that time.

Kyle Schwarber leads the National League with 45 home runs, 109 RBI and has a home run in 15 straight series. Bryce Harper is hitting .288 over his last 35 games with 15 doubles, 12 home runs and 26 RBI. Throw in J.T. Realmuto posting a .333 average with 23 multi-hit games, 18 extra base hits and 21 RBI over his last 51 games and you see why the Phillies have been so good offensively.

Before Friday’s game with the Washington Nationals, manager Rob Thomson pointed to something else that has been working quite well for his team.

“The back end of the lineup,” Thomson said. “We’re producing which turns it over to those guys and that’s where you can really do some damage as far as scoring runs. The bottom of the lineup is doing a great job right now.”

Leading the way has been outfielder Brandon Marsh and second baseman Bryson Stott. Because of his continued hot hitting, Marsh has moved up a bit in Thomson’s lineup and understandably so. Since snapping an 0-for-31 slump on May 3, Marsh has hit .296 over an 87-game span and is hitting .338 over his last 24 games.

Stott, along with his always-present excellent glove work, has hit .381 with nine runs scored, four stolen bases, seven extra base hits and eight RBI over his last 14 games.

Outfield carousel continues …

Nick Castellanos heads back to right field Friday while Harrison Bader takes the night off, sliding Brandon Marsh to center and Max Kepler to left against Nationals pitcher Cade Cavalli, whom the Phillies just saw Sunday. Castellanos was held out of the series finale on Wednesday against the Mariners.

“Casty didn’t face him the last time and I don’t want him sitting too many days,” said Thomson. “This would be his third day in a row and I don’t want to do that. He’s in there tonight and then we’ll figure it out moving forward.”

Which means Thomson will probably continue to shuffle his outfield, pending numerous things but he said, “A lot of it has to do with the pitcher.” So it will probably continue that Kepler will face the majority of right-handers and Bader lefties and some right-handers, too.

“I try to get ahead of it if I can and communicate that with the players, if I can,” said Thomson of his platooning. “Sometimes it changes. You schedule a guy for a day off tomorrow, but he hits two homers and a double, you really got to change gears at that point. With a lefty going tomorrow I’ve got a pretty good idea of what I’m doing.”

Wheeler update

Nothing official from the team Friday as far as the condition of pitcher Zack Wheeler, who was diagnosed with a blood clot near his right shoulder last week. Asked what he’s heard, Thomson said there wasn’t much.

“I think we’ll know something in the next couple of days,” Thomson said. “We’ll see him in the next couple of days. Just getting some opinions, that’s all. Just texting (Wheeler). I don’t want to really bother him. He’s resting but he feels good.”

What Alex Cora expects from Red Sox prospect making debut vs. Yankees

What Alex Cora expects from Red Sox prospect making debut vs. Yankees originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Jhostynxon Garcia, also known as “The Password,” is the latest Red Sox prospect to be called up in hopes he’ll provide a spark.

Garcia, who was called up from Triple-A Worcester on Thursday, will bat fifth and start in centerfield as the Red Sox face the rival Yankees on Friday night. A late-August night at Yankee Stadium with the Red Sox playing arguably their most important series in years? No, not a bad night for a Major League debut.

Red Sox manager Alex Cora offered a scouting report of Garcia, a 22-year-old slugger who arrives after recording a .932 OPS in 66 games in Triple-A Worcester. MLB Pipeline views Garcia as Boston’s third-best prospect behind Franklin Arias and left-handed pitcher Payton Tolle.

“He swings a lot,” Cora said of Garcia, who has struck out 110 times in 99 games this season. “That’s the first thing, he swings a lot. But HE drives the ball to right-center, can do that with two strikes. He’s a great defender, good base-runner. So, we’ll see.”

Garcia’s elevation fills a need for the Red Sox with outfielders Wilyer Abreu and Rob Refsnyder on the injured list. Their respective injuries aren’t expected to cause long-term absences, which could result in Garcia returning to Worcester in the not-too-distant future. Unless, of course, he receives one of Boston’s added roster spots when rosters expand in 10 days.

For now, Cora indicated Garcia will start every game against a left-handed pitcher. He’s hit .283 with a .964 OPS against lefties this season.

Yankees left-hander Max Fried might present a different challenge for Garcia. But having watched rookie Roman Anthony blast one into the second deck against the Yankees on Thursday night, and having Anthony next to him in right field, could go a long way in setting the tone.