Mets' Francisco Alvarez hits fourth home run in Triple-A

Down on the farm, Francisco Alvarez went yard once again.

Alvarez wasted no time on Saturday against the Worcester Red Sox, hitting a two-run blast in the first inning to give Syracuse a 2-0 lead. The home run travelled 348 feet to right field -- an opposite field pop by Alvarez whose power has resurfaced since getting demoted to Triple-A in late June.

It had been three games since the catcher last went deep. In fact, Alvarez hit a homer in three straight games, the final two games against Rochester and the opener of the series on the road against Worcester.

Saturday's long ball was Alvarez's first home run hit at home inside NBT Bank Stadium.

Jesse Winker was also in the lineup, on rehab assignment from a right oblique strain he suffered in May.

It was his first game with Triple-A, previously playing one game for High-A Brooklyn and two games with Double-A Binghamton, going 3-for-7 with a home run, double, five RBI, three walks and two runs scored.

However, on Saturday, Winker finished 0-for-4 with a strikeout as the designated hitter. He was batting second, in between Alvarez and Luisangel Acuña who went 1-for-3 with a walk and run scored in the leadoff spot.

Big four in Mets' lineup the driving force behind four-game winning streak

The Mets were beating up on the Yankees and Citi Field felt like a party, with a 12-6 score and three outs to go. In the span of four days they’ve managed to change the vibe dramatically, from the embarrassment of that lopsided sweep in Pittsburgh to once again looking like a team headed for October. 

And yet here came Edwin Diaz, six-run lead or not, because for all the good the Mets have done, their starting rotation is still decimated by injury, leaving them without an obvious starter for the final game of this series on Sunday. 

So manager Carlos Mendoza wasn’t taking any chances. 

Or as he put it, “I wasn’t going to mess around.”

It was absolutely the right move, considering the Mets came into this second installment of the Subway Series with the odds stacked against them because of the pitching matchups.

And here they were with a chance to steal not one, but both of the first two games. No reason to tempt fate by trying to save Diaz for a save opportunity on Sunday that, again, seems highly unlikely. 

Hey, at this point anything is possible, especially the way the Yankees are playing, now having lost six straight games as their pitching continues to falter, this time not the bullpen but in the name of starter Carlos Rodón

And the Mets, well, they’re hot again and their stars are playing like stars, with Brandon Nimmo and Pete Alonsocombining for three home runs and nine RBI to run away from the Yankees on Sunday. 

It’s been that way since Nimmo hit the grand slam in the second game of the doubleheader against the Milwaukee Brewers on Wednesday, the first step toward stopping the bleeding of that 3-14 stretch they endured.

It’s the only way it was going to happen. It’s the way they’re built, the main reason their payroll exceeds $300 million. 

Yes, the Mets have shown a collective toughness again, to be sure, but more than anything this four-game winning streak has been driven by the big boys in the lineup, with Nimmo, Alonso, Francisco Lindor, and Juan Soto.

And never mind that Soto thought it was a good idea to bunt in the first inning on Saturday after the first two hitters reached base. You could hear the collective groan from the fans in the ballpark, one day after Soto had hit that electrifying home run in the first inning to change the nature of Friday’s game.

But when you’re going well in baseball, things tend to go your way. And so while Soto’s sac bunt only served to get Alonso walked semi-intentionally, it paid off when Nimmo hit his second grand slam in four days. 

Even Mendoza couldn’t hide a chuckle when asked about Soto’s bunt.

“It’s part of the show,” he said. “I definitely want him swinging the bat. But I trust these guys with their decision-making.”

Then he smiled again, knowing there really was no defending the decision.

“Hey, it worked out for the best.”

Nimmo and Alonso took care of that. Alonso went deep twice, accounting for five runs and raising his home run total to 20 and his career total to 246, drawing him to within six of Darryl Strawberry’s club record. 

Soto had a quiet day, sac bunt and all, but he was the star on Friday and continues to look locked in at the plate.

Finally, Lindor has come alive again lately as well, and was in the middle of all the scoring on Saturday, with two hits, two walks, a stolen base and four runs scored. 

The Big Four. They’re a little bit like the Los Angeles Dodgers in that way, dependent on the top of the lineup if they’re going deep into October. 

It’s the way it is. The young kids haven’t delivered to this point on their potential, and even with Jesse Winker back soon and a pick-up of some kind at the trading deadline, it’s possible not a lot will change this season. 

A lot could and likely will change on the pitching side. Help could be on the way in the next several days in the form of their top two starters, Kodai Senga and Sean Manaea each expected to make a start at least by next weekend, going into the All-Star break. 

But for now, it’s a day-to-day proposition. Two days after Justin Hagenman and Austin Warren got them through five innings, the Mets again will try to patch together a game on Sunday with names no one expected to be anywhere near their starting rotation this season. 

Lefty Brandon Waddell, a 31-year old with all of 30 innings pitched in the big leagues, is expected to get the bulk of the innings, whether as a starter or in relief of an opener, perhaps Huascar Brazoban again. 

It’s the reason Mendoza didn’t think twice about sending Diaz out there for the ninth inning on Saturday with that six-run lead. He actually got the most recent acquisition, Zach Pop, up briefly in the bottom of the eighth in case the Mets made it, say, a 10-run lead.

But no, the manager wasn’t messing with the karma. The odds are stacked higher than ever against them Sunday, with Max Fried pitching for the Yankees. So while Mendoza would never say it publicly, he’s probably perfectly fine going 2-1 in this series and getting one day closer to having his two best pitchers back on the mound. 

Until then, well, going 2-0 against the Yankees felt like a party.

Bobby Jenks, two-time All-Star closer, World Series champion with Chicago White Sox, dies at 44

MLB: Oakland Athletics at Chicago White Sox

Aug 1, 2010; Chicago, IL, USA; Chicago White Sox relief pitcher Bobby Jenks throws a pitch during the ninth inning at US Cellular Field. The Sox won 4-1. Mandatory Credit: Jerry Lai-Imagn Images

Jerry Lai-Imagn Images

CHICAGO — Bobby Jenks, a two-time All-Star closer and World Series champion with the Chicago White Sox, has died, the team announced Saturday. He was 44.

The White Sox said Jenks died Friday in Sintra, Portugal, where he was being treated for adenocarcinoma, a form of stomach cancer.

Jenks helped the White Sox win the 2005 World Series, saving four games in six appearances during the postseason. He was an All-Star in each of the next two seasons while saving 41 games in 2006 and 40 in 2007.

Ozzie Guillén, who managed that World Series-winning squad, had a signature move to summon Jenks from the bullpen, throwing his arms wide open to show that he wanted the 6-foot-4, 275-pound closer. Jenks died weeks before the White Sox were set to hold a 20th anniversary reunion for the franchise’s most recent title-winning team.

“Everyone remembers the moment when I called for the big fella in the World Series,” Guillén said in a statement. “Everyone has a favorite story about Bobby, so the 2005 reunion will be a great opportunity to get together with all his teammates and coaches and relive some of our greatest memories of him.”

Jenks retired 41 consecutive batters in 2007, matching a record for a reliever.

“He was embarrassing guys, good hitters, right away,” former White Sox first baseman Paul Konerko said in a video tribute.

Jenks saved 173 games for the White Sox from 2005-10 before finishing his career with 19 appearances in 2011 for the Boston Red Sox. For his career, he was 16-20 with a 3.53 ERA and 351 strikeouts in 348 appearances, all in relief.

“He and his family knew cancer would be his toughest battle, and he will be missed as a husband, father, friend and teammate,” White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf said. “He will forever hold a special place in all our hearts.”

The Colorado Rockies honored Jenks’ memory with a moment of silence before Saturday night’s game against the visiting White Sox.

Jenks is survived by his wife, Eleni Tzitzivacos, their two children, Zeno and Kate, and his four children from a prior marriage, Cuma, Nolan, Rylan and Jackson.

“As a teammate,” former White Sox outfielder Aaron Rowand said, “he was the best.”

Yankees' Aaron Judge 'good' after getting hit near eye with baseball between innings

In a bit of an odd moment in Saturday's game between the Yankees and Mets, Aaron Judge was struck by a baseball as he was jogging off the field after the bottom of the fifth inning.

The culprit? Anthony Volpe.

Obviously an accident, Volpe threw the ball to an unaware Judge as the team was headed back to the dugout following the inning -- customary for the Yanks to do.

Not looking, Judge got plunked near the eye and needed a bandage to cover the wound for the rest of the game.

"I didn’t know what happened initially," manager Aaron Boone said after the 12-6 loss. "I just saw kind of a what felt like something happened. So of course I was concerned. (He) had a little cut. In the end I don’t think anything too serious obviously, but initially obviously very concerned."

Judge finished the game 0-for-4 with a walk and was asked how he felt after being hit to which he responded, "good."

As for Volpe, he was clearly apologetic about the whole situation and said "yeah, obviously" when asked if he had a helpless feeling watching what was happening.

For his part, the shortstop hit a solo shot in the seventh inning off Richard Lovelady that got the Yanks closer at 7-5. Volpe finished 1-for-4 with two strikeouts.

New York has now lost six straight games as its downward spiral continues.

Brandon Nimmo doing tremendous job setting the tone during Mets’ winning streak

During the Mets’ tough stretch, they had a hard time coming up with the big knock when they needed it the most. 

That was until earlier this week when Brandon Nimmo lifted a second inning grand slam off of young Brewers starter Jacob Misiorowski to break things open and help push them to a skid-snapping Game 2 victory

Since then, things have turned around for this offense with Nimmo leading the way. 

The outfielder has been scorching hot and that continued on Saturday, as he launched a first inning grand slam off left-hander Carlos Rodón to get things going in what ended as their fourth consecutive win. 

It was Nimmo’s third grand slam of the season, and his second in the last four days. 

“We had some great at-bats leading up to that,” Nimmo said. “Even Juan [Soto] giving himself up there, he felt like he wanted to lay a bunt down and at the worst he was able to get guys over into scoring position -- he’ll break that out sometimes. 

“That was inspiring to me, I was like heck yeah -- and then I knew with Pete [Alonso] going up there, there was a good chance that they were going to pitch around him to get to me, so I was just trying to come up with a gameplan and get the barrel on the ball.”

Nimmo would reach again with a single in the bottom of the fifth and stole a base but was retired in his other two plate appearances -- finishing the day 2-for-4 with four RBI and his ninth stolen base of the season.

After a slow start to the season, he’s now up to 18 homers and 52 RBI. 

He’s been particularly hot as the weather has started getting warmer -- hitting an even .300 with nine of those home runs, 22 RBI, and a .916 OPS over his last 30 games. 

“It sets the tone and takes pressure off of everyone,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “He’s been locked in for a good stretch now -- driving the baseball with authority, controlling the strike zone, going the other way when he needs to, taking tough pitches out of the zone.

“Even the ones he’s fouling off there’s been conviction, there’s balance up there, there’s just a lot to like about his at-bats right now.”

Nimmo wishes he had some sort of magic potion behind his dramatic turnaround at the plate, but he says it’s simply the name of the game thus far this year. 

“It’s just staying the course, trying to not panic and kind of trusting that things will come around -- but it’s definitely been nice to be able to help the team out,” he added.

Carlos Mendoza on Juan Soto’s first inning bunt vs. Yankees: ‘That’s part of the show’

The $765 million man laying down a bunt?

Carlos Mendoza doesn’t necessarily want to see it, but in this case it worked.

Juan Soto has been scorching hot of late, but after the first two Mets reached base against Yankees left-hander Carlos Rodón in the bottom of the first on Saturday afternoon, he elected to lay down a bunt. 

It wasn’t exactly clear whether or not he was bunting for a hit or a sacrifice, but it got the job done either way as the runners were able to advance into scoring position. 

After Pete Alonso draw the second walk of the inning to load the bases, Brandon Nimmo then stepped to the plate and crushed his second grand slam of the week to open an early 4-0 advantage. 

It was just Soto’s third sacrifice bunt of his eight-year big-league career. 

“That’s part of the show,” the skipper said. “I definitely want him swinging the bat there -- I trust a lot of these guys with decision making, he got the bunt down and we hit a grand slam after that, so we’ll take it.”

Soto went hitless over his next couple of at-bats but he was finally able to get in on the fun in the bottom of the eighth, as he cracked an RBI single off the right-center fence to put the icing on the cake.

The star outfielder is now hitting a scorching .337 with 11 homers, 23 RBI, and a 1.180 OPS over his last 30 games. 

Mets' Kodai Senga pitches 3.2 innings in first rehab start for Double-A

Coming back from a right hamstring strain he sustained in the middle of June, Mets aceKodai Senga made his first rehab start on Saturday with Double-A Binghamton and pitched 3.2 innings.

Senga's outing started off great as he struck out Cole Carrigg to kick things off, but a walk, fielding error, wild pitch and another walk quickly put the right-hander in danger. He allowed a sacrifice fly with the bases loaded for the game's first run (unearned) before escaping the inning with a flyout.

After shaking off some rust in the first inning Senga went back to work in the second, but his defense let him down once again after a throwing error and passed ball put a runner on second with nobody out. Senga got his second strikeout for the first out of the frame, but soon after uncorked his second wild pitch of the outing. This time it didn't come back to haunt him as he got through the inning unscathed.

In the third, Senga recorded another strikeout before giving up the first hit he allowed despite so much traffic on the bases in the first two innings. But after a scoreless third, things began to unravel in the fourth.

The inning began with a solo shot by Zach Kokoska, followed by a single and sacrifice bunt. Another single drove in the second run of the inning and a sac bunt followed by the third single of the inning put Senga and the Rumble Ponies in a 4-0 hole.

Senga's outing was done after he was unable to get the third out, allowing another single and the fifth hit of the inning.

Overall, the 32-year-old allowed four runs (three earned) on six hits and two walks while striking out four through 3.2 innings. He threw 68 pitches (44 strikes).

Despite the tough fourth inning, it was a solid start for Senga who has a chance to return to the team next week in Kansas City, manager Carlos Mendoza said earlier on Saturday.

How Logan Webb, Robbie Ray have kept Giants afloat amid inconsistent season

How Logan Webb, Robbie Ray have kept Giants afloat amid inconsistent season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

WEST SACRAMENTO – The Giants have two legitimate Cy Young Award contenders. Ironically, neither is the guy on San Francisco’s pitching staff who already owns three of them.

Two days after Robbie Ray threw another in a long line of pitching gems this season, Logan Webb kept his name in the discussion with solid outing in the Giants’ 7-2 win over the Athletics on Friday night at Sutter Health Park.

Pitching about 30 minutes from where he grew up, Webb spun 6 2/3 innings and allowed two runs and seven hits.

Like Ray did on Thursday in the series finale in Arizona, Webb was in control from the start and kept an A’s lineup that has been surprisingly good this season from putting together much of a threat.

“I told Robbie the other day, I was like ‘That looked fun and I’m going to try to do it,” Webb said. “I love watching Robbie throw so much, especially after all the stuff he had to come back from. I know he wasn’t happy with last year.

“I just enjoy it every time he’s out there, the tight pants, the grunts. He’s one of the best pitchers in baseball and it’s a pleasure to watch him throw every five days.”

Webb and Ray have a combined record of 17-9 this season and have essentially carried the Giants’ rotation on their backs while nine-time All-Star Justin Verlander searches for a way to get his season on track.

Both pitchers have respectable ERAs. Ray has a solid 2.68 ERA while Webb’s mark rose slightly to 2.61 after Saturday’s game when he pitched in front of several friends and family at a park he had made only one previous appearance at, and that was while he was in the minor leagues.

Pittsburgh Pirates ace Paul Skenes (2.03 ERA, 0.919 WHIP) is the obvious front-runner for the NL Cy Young. As long as they continue to pitch how they have so far this season, Webb and Ray should have a case to be among the finalists.

At the very least both Ray and Webb should be voted into the 2025 MLB All-Star game, along with one or two of the Giants’ relievers. Webb’s 120 1/3 innings pitched are tops in the National League while Ray’s 107 innings are fourth-most in the NL.

“We both see how good this team can be and we both want to contribute,” Ray told NBC Sports Bay Area. “We’re both competitors and we both want to give our best effort every single time we go out. Watching the other guy kind of gives you that drive, that edge. When he goes out and has a great outing you want to come up behind him and do the same.

“I wouldn’t say it’s a competition or anything. It’s more of just feeding off each other, feeding off the energy.”

Webb had a lot of energy behind him at Sutter Health Park. There were several of his family and friends in the stands, and the right-hander was cheered loudly throughout the night.

“You could feel the interest in him being on the mound,” Giants manager Bob Melvin said. “Every time he came into the dugout there were a lot of people cheering for him., which typically you don’t hear (on the road). He throws a Logan Webb game. It’s pretty typical of what he’s done all year.”

Webb welcomed the once-in-a-lifetime moment and embraced it the same way he’s been embracing feeding off Ray’s pitching.

“It was really cool,” Webb said of the ovations he was greeted with. “I heard it the minute I walked out there, people yelling at me. It was a blast. I love being here and happy I was able to get the win here.”

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Brandon Nimmo, Pete Alonso combine for three homers and nine RBI as Mets slam Yankees

The Mets put on a power show at Citi Field on Saturday, hitting three home runs, two by Pete Alonso and a grand slam by Brandon Nimmo to rout the Yankees, 12-6, and win a second straight Subway Series game. 

As a result, the Mets assured themselves of winning this three-game series and have now won three of the five Subway Series games this season.

It was also their fourth straight win overall and the Yankees’ sixth straight loss.

Here are the takeaways...

- For the second time in this four-game winning streak, Nimmo ignited the Mets’ offense with a grand slam as he took Carlos Rodón deep in the first inning for an early 4-0 lead. 

- The Mets tacked on runs from there, thanks mostly to Alonso’s two home runs. He hit a two-run opposite-field shot in the fifth inning, giving the Mets a 7-2 lead, and then essentially put the game on ice with a three-run shot to left off reliever Jayvien Sandridge who was making his MLB debut.

The two home runs give Alonso 20 for the season and 246 for his career, six behind Darryl Strawberry’s club record of 252.

- Frankie Montas gave the Mets a solid start and actually pitched better than his final line showed, thanks mostly to a couple of soft-contact hits in the sixth inning that cost him two runs. He wound up going 5.2 innings, giving up four runs on five hits, no walks, and two strikeouts. Montas gave up solo home runs to Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Austin Wells

The right-hander was leading 7-2 after five innings before giving up two in the sixth, thanks in part to a bloop single by Trent Grisham and a well-placed fly-ball double to left-center by Cody Bellinger

All in all, it was a much better start than last time out in Pittsburgh where he gave up five first-inning runs. In the days afterward, Montas said he believed he was ambushed early that day because he was tipping pitches. His performance on Saturday made the case that he may have been right.

- With the Mets’ bullpen thinned out by injury and illness, they got four outs from Richard Lovelady and Chris Devenski, which got them to the eighth inning and Ryne Stanek. 

Devenski got a very important out in the seventh inning. With two runners on, two outs, the Mets leading 7-5, and Aaron Judge on deck, Devenski fooled Trent Grisham with a change-up and got a weak comebacker to escape the inning. 

Stanek was shaky but got through the eighth, allowing one run, and even with a six-run lead manager Carlos Mendoza brought in Edwin Diaz to close it out.

- On the Yankees’ side, it was a very disappointing start for Rodón. He came in with a 2.95 ERA, having a strong first half, but fell behind early on Saturday thanks to a first-inning grand slam by Nimmo and wound up giving up seven runs in five innings, including another home run to Alonso and a ton of hard-hit balls. 

As a result, Rodon’s ERA jumped to 3.30. With Saturday’s news that Clarke Schmidt will likely need Tommy John surgery, Rodón looms as crucial to the Yankees' hopes in the second half. 

- The Yankees hit three solo home runs, by Chisholm, Wells, and Anthony Volpe.

Game MVP: Pete Alonso

Nimmo’s grand slam set the tone but with the Yankees chipping away at the early lead, Alonso’s home runs proved decisive, accounting for five runs. 

With five RBI, Alonso has 73 for the season, tied for third in the majors, pending other action on Saturday. 

Highlights

What's next

The crosstown rivals will play their Subway Series finale on Sunday afternoon, with first pitch scheduled for 1:40 p.m. on SNY.

The Mets have yet to announce their starter, while ace Max Fried (10-2, 2.13 ERA) is slated to take the mound for the Yanks.

Yankees sign INF Jeimer Candelario to minor-league deal

The Yankees have signed veteran infielder Jeimer Candelario to a minor-league deal, the team's Triple-A affiliate has announced.

Candelario was released by the Cincinnati Reds on June 29 after a rough season that included a lumbar spine strain that forced him on the IL. In 22 games, the 32-year-old slashed .113/.198/.213 with two home runs and 10 RBI.

However, the switch-hitter is just one year removed from hitting 20 homers in 112 games for Cincinnati and is a career .237 hitter with 110 home runs and a .726 OPS.

Candelario's best seasons came when he played for the Detroit Tigers from 2017-2022, but he's also played for the Chicago Cubs and Washington Nationals.

Mostly a third baseman in his career, Candelario has also played first base.

He will report to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and will act as infield depth for New York.

What we learned as Willy Adames' big night powers Giants' win over Athletics

What we learned as Willy Adames' big night powers Giants' win over Athletics originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

WEST SACRAMENTO – What a difference a day makes.

Twenty-four hours after Justin Verlander absorbed another loss and received very little help on the offensive side during the Giants most lopsided loss of the season, San Francisco flipped the script on both ends and beat the Athletics 7-2 on Saturday to even the series with their former Bay Bridge rivals.

Logan Webb led the charge with another yeoman work effort on the mound while pitching about 30 minutes away from where he grew up. The right-hander scattered seven hits and two runs over 6 2/3 mostly solid innings, striking out six and walking three to get his third win in his last seven starts.

For the third consecutive day, manager Bob Melvin didn’t have to reach too deep into his bullpen.

That’s nothing new when Webb starts.

Randy Rodriguez replaced Webb and retired one batter. Tyler Rogers set down three, and Spencer Bivens worked the ninth to complete the game.

The Giants also showed signs of breaking out of their collective offensive funk in third baseman Matt Chapman’s return from the Injured List.

Heliot Ramos hit his 14th home run of the season, Willy Adames had three hits and drove in four runs and Brett Wisely added a pair of hits ad two RBIs. Rafel Devers reached base four times.

Here are the takeaways from Saturday’s win:

CHAPMAN’S RETURN

Before the game Melvin insisted Chapman’s return to the lineup was advantageous in multiple ways, and the third baseman certainly made things happen Saturday.

Batting in the clean-up spot behind Rafael Devers, Chappy was hit by a pitch and scored on an Adames single in the first inning. In the third Chapman beat out an infield single then took third on Jung Hoo Lee’s single to center and scored on another Adames’ two-out hit.

Chapman reached on a fielder’s choice in the fifth, flew out to center in the sixth then drew a six-pitch walk in the ninth.

More importantly as far as Melvin is concerned, having Chapman back in the lineup adds another experienced veteran voice in the clubhouse. That, as much as his glove and bat, is exactly what the Giants at this juncture.

ADAMES SHINES IN THE 6 HOLE

Chapman’s return enabled manager Bob Melvin to juggle his lineup a little more, including dropping Adames down to No. 6 in the batting order. That’s a spot where Adames has had some of his best production this season, and he kept that roll going against the A’s.

Just when it looked like the Giants were going to waste a huge opportunity in the first inning, Adames laced a two-out, two-run single up the middle to give Webb some early run support.

Adames came through with another two-out hit in the third that knocked in two more runs.

Adames, who has been San Francisco’s No. 2 hitter most of the season, has driven in 22 of his 42 RBIs while batting No. 6.

RAMOS REGAINS POWER STROKE

Ramos ended his second-longest power outage with his solo home run off Severino leading off the fifth. It was Ramos’ team-leading 18th homer and first since June 21, a span of 13 games.

Ramos had been ill for the final two games in Arizona and was in a 5-for-34 rut before crushing Luis Severino’s first pitch in the fifth for a 416-foot home run.

The Giants slugger, who came short of a second home run when he doubled to center in the eighth. was hit by a pitch, grounded out in his other at-bats.

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Notes about the Mets rotation: Sean Manaea, Kodai Senga, Luis Severino and Mitch Keller

If the Mets can survive the next week with a patched-together pitching staff, they might find their way back to relative stability before the All-Star break.

Here is reporting on current and possible future members of the Mets rotation. Information is from league sources.

-- If all goes well, Sean Manaea could make his season debut next Sunday in Kansas City, the day before the All-Star break.

Manaea has so far responded well to the cortisone shot intended to treat the discomfort caused by a bone fragment, or “loose body,” in his left elbow. He is scheduled to make a final rehab start on Tuesday for Triple-A Syracuse. The team will then decide whether to start him on Sunday or wait until after the break. The prediction here is that Manaea will close out the first half.

Kodai Senga is also a solid possibility to return from the IL next weekend in Kansas City.

-- The Mets are actively scouring the trade market for pitching. But they are unlikely to land an impact starter much before the trade deadline, because -- like all buying teams -- the Mets are at the mercy of the market. David Stearns could choose to get ripped off today, or he could wait until late July for prices to settle at their actual level.

-- The Mets have a better chance of trading for a reliever earlier in the month. Those can occasionally become more readily available than starters in mid-July. The Mets acquired Phil Maton last year on July 10.

-- As first reported by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the Mets have expressed interest in starter Mitch Keller. The context for that is that the Mets have made a call on just about every potentially available starter. Nothing is close on any front.

Keller is making $15 million this season and $52.5 million from 2026-2028. Because of that hefty price tag, he is not expected to fetch a top prospect/young position player with years of club control, like Ronny Mauricio.

-- A reunion between the Mets and Luis Severino has to be considered unlikely -- but we wouldn’t call it impossible.

Severino left the Mets because the Mets -- even though they liked the player and person -- didn’t consider the three-year, $67 million contract he signed with the Athletics to be a reasonable deal for him. It made a bit more sense for the A’s, who had to overpay a free agent in order to convince him to play in their minor league ballpark in Sacramento.

But Severino has publicly complained about that ballpark, leading to an industry belief that the A’s would eat money to trade him. If the team absorbs enough of the contract, or takes on a bad contract in return, he could appeal to the Mets. Again, New York liked Severino and would gladly have retained him at a lower price point.

Yankees to call up prospect Cam Schlittler for MLB debut after losing Clarke Schmidt to injury: report

The Yankees are reportedly calling on one of their young talents after losing Clarke Schmidt to an injury.

New York is planning on promoting young right-hander Cam Schlittler to make his MLB debut on Tuesday or Wednesday against the Seattle Mariners, according to Joel Sherman of the NY Post.

Schmidt left his start this week after just three innings due to elbow tightness, and after undergoing an MRI, he is expected to have season-ending Tommy John surgery.

Aaron Boone said pregame Saturday that they are still sorting through their replacement options for the rotation, but it appears they've settled on the hard-throwing 24-year-old.

Schlittler was roughed up his last time out, but he's enjoyed a ton of success this season, posting a 2.82 ERA and 1.21 WHIP in 15 appearances between Double-A Somerset and Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

He's done a good job of consistently keeping the ball on the ground, recording a 47.8 percent groundball rate over his minor league career.

The Massachusetts native can touch 97 mph on his fastball and he's been developing a sweeper.

Mets Notes: Brandon Sproat ‘turning the corner’ in Syracuse, the plan for Brooks Raley

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza provided some updates prior to Saturday’s game against the Yankees…


The plan for Brooks Raley

Raley took the next step in his rehab assignment on Friday night. 

The southpaw jumped up to Triple-A and put together another strong outing, taking home the victory after working around a hit and a walk over 1.1 scoreless innings. 

He has now punched out 11 batters and is yet to allow a run over six appearances (6.2 innings). 

Things continue to go well, but it will be a bit longer before we see the veteran back on the big-league mound. 

“We still want to see back-to-back, two out of three,” the skipper said. “So most likely it won’t be until after the break. But he’s putting himself in a good position, bouncing back well. Now it’s just preparing him for scenarios how we’ll use him.

"We don’t want the first time he’s going back-to-back to be at the big-league level, especially after what he’s been through.”

Brandon Sproat finding his groove

The young right-hander had a bit of a rough start to the season, but of late, he’s begun to find a groove down in Syracuse. 

Sproat put together his second consecutive strong outing on Friday night, allowing just two singles and a walk while striking out eight over five scoreless innings. 

He’s now gone 11 consecutive frames without giving up a run. 

“It’s really good to see,” Mendoza said. “We’re keeping an eye on all of those guys. I was talking to Dickey Scott before the outing yesterday, not only the life on the fastball but the conviction of the way he’s throwing the baseball. It looks like he’s turning the corner here. 

“Reading his report from last night it’s the same thing -- just attacking, life on his pitches, using all of his pitches, the changeup was better. That’s what we want to see out of these kids. They continue to put themselves in a position and we’ll watch them.”

David Stearns said earlier this week that the team would prefer to not bring up one of their talented young arms in a spot start situation.

Sproat certainly has been building his case, though, lowering his ERA to 5.05 on the year.

New addition to the roster

New bullpen addition Zach Pop officially joined the roster prior to Saturday’s Subway Series matchup. 

Pop is active and will be available out of the bullpen for the contest. 

In a corresponding move, Austin Warren was sent back down to Triple-A. 

Reliever Tyler Zuber was designated for assignment to make room for Pop on the roster. 

Zuber was acquired from the Rays ahead of last year’s trade deadline in exchange for relief prospect Paul Gervase, who made his big-league debut this year. 

Suárez eases into yet another tremendous outing, Phillies even series with Reds

Suárez eases into yet another tremendous outing, Phillies even series with Reds originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The ease in which Phillies pitcher Ranger Suárez approaches his profession brings to mind many past and current athletes whose results seem to far outweigh their efforts.

Like a Fred Couples golf swing or a Steph Curry 35-foot jumper, Suárez goes about his business as if every outing is just a 60-foot, six-inch game of catch with J.T. Realmuto. 

Suárez wanders off the mound with all the non-hastiness as if he’s been called to the principal’s office. After a foul ball is corralled by one of the ball girls, he’ll make sure they are all set before he throws his next pitch. He flips the ball in the air to himself before a pitch, seemingly oblivious to the fact a runner could advance if he misses his own toss. He doesn’t really wind up, more like he steps forward to the rubber and begins his pitch there.

No one is complaining about the ways Suárez goes about his business, of course, as he has been one of the best pitchers in baseball the past couple of months.

Not much changed with him on Saturday at Citizens Bank Park against the Cincinnati Reds, as the left-hander strolled through five innings and 80 pitches using a curveball in the mid to low 70-mile-an-hour mark, a changeup that hovered around 80 and a rarely used four-seam fastball that was low 90s. His pitches don’t pop Realmuto’s mitt the way his fellow starters do, rather his balls kind of land.

Saturday’s performance by Suárez was slowed even more due to him being on an 85-pitch count because of some soreness after his last outing against Atlanta. Still, in his limited time, he allowed just one run on a Will Benson home run and struck out six. Three of the Phillies five hits left the yard en route to a 5-1 victory.

“I felt it in my last start in Atlanta, my body wasn’t feeling 100 percent so the pitch limit was because of that just to see how we progress and how we go forward, said Suárez. “It’s my shoulder and my back overall. I felt a little bit better, that’s why they told me we were going to have a pitch limit. But today was good overall. I felt way better.”

It’d be hard to tell if he had no feeling at all with the nonchalant, robotic way he goes about his business. Now in his last 11 starts, Suárez has a 1.23 ERA over his last 11 starts and hasn’t allowed more than one earned run in his last five games.

To say he’s earned a little bit of a break at this point of the season is a huge understatement.

“It was designed,” said manager Rob Thomson. “In June he had six starts. Five of them were seven innings, one of them six innings, all of them 94 pitches or more. So we went in today just trying to pull back a little bit. So we had an 85-pitch limit today.” 

Before finding out that the pull back was planned, there was wonder if something more was wrong. In his last few outings the velocity of Suárez’ pitches had gone down a little bit and yesterday it still wasn’t peak. But that doesn’t seem to matter to the pitcher nor his boss.

“I’m just looking up at the board but I saw a 93. So that was a good sign,” Thomson said. “I don’t really concern myself with that because he pitches. That’s what he did today. He threw strikes, first pitch strikes. The changeup was really good. A lot of soft contact, other than the (Will) Benson home run. He just missed location on that. I thought Ranger was really good today and I thought the bullpen was outstanding as well.”

Effortless without result was much of the Phillies offense early in the game and the reason Suárez departed without a decision. The only mustered two hits off Reds’ lefty starter Nick Lodolo, both by Trea Turner, in the first four innings. But Edmundo Sosa deposited a home run into the right field seats to tie it at 1-1, then Alec Bohm drove in Kyle Schwarber with a 400-foot bomb to left-center for a 3-1 lead. Not to be let out of the home run fun, Schwarber went the opposite way off Reds lefty Brent Suter on a 2-0 count in the 8th with Turner on first and the Phillies busted it open to a 5-1 lead.

It helped that Thomson was able to use his high-leverage guys out of the pen as Jordan Romano, Tanner Banks, Orion Kerkering and Matt Strahm kept the Reds off the board for the final four. Though things got a little dicey in the eighth when Kerkering enticed Austin Hays into a tailor-made double play that was bobbled by Turner. But on the very next at-bat, Turner made a solid play to his left, stepped on second and threw to first for the rally-killing double play.

As for Suárez, there will be one more start before next week’s All-Star break and probably him going to Atlanta as part of the National League pitching staff. If he does get the nod, he said he’d love it and that he’d want to pitch in the game. But you just get the feeling that if he doesn’t, he’ll still have the same demeanor either way.

For now, the health of him and the other starters who have been so great in this “first half” of the season is a major focus of Thomson’s. Asked if any other starters might get some pitch limitations in the coming week, Thomson responded, “you’ll know when you see it.”

What we do know is that when we see Suárez take the mound of late, there is nothing but goodness that comes out of it.

“Last season during the second half I got hurt, so the pitch limit was to see how we can progress to keep feeling better going forward,” Suárez said. 

“I think I’ve felt pretty good overall throughout the season. I didn’t feel as good during my last start in Atlanta but it’s just that one thing that’s holding me back. I think we’re going to be able to go forward without (pitch limits). I think it’s more about being careful and not trying to rush it to the end of the season.

“I felt really good today. Great, actually. My changeup was great, the curveball and cutter too. Overall I think all of my pitches were fantastic today.”

And again, so was he.