What we learned as Robbie Ray's dominant start fuels Giants' win over D-backs

What we learned as Robbie Ray's dominant start fuels Giants' win over D-backs originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

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PHOENIX — Bob Melvin shrugged and grimaced on Thursday afternoon when asked if Camilo Doval and Randy Rodriguez would be available for the series finale. The bullpen had to work hard in Wednesday’s extra-innings win, and Melvin knew he would have to get creative if he was protecting a lead a day later. 

Robbie Ray told his manager not to worry about it. 

Making his first start at Chase Field as a visitor, the left-hander was perfect until a solo homer from Eugenio Suarez in the fifth. That was one of just three hits from the Diamondbacks, as Ray led a dominant 7-2 win that secured a series split that seemed unlikely at multiple points this week. 

Ray cruised through the night, throwing just 57 pitches through six innings. He was at 78 after eight, allowing him to chase his first complete game since 2017, when he was a Diamondback. 

A soft groundout opened the ninth before Ketel Marte yanked a solo homer down the line. After a walk of Geraldo Perdomo, pitching coach J.P. Martinez came out for a mound meeting. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. popped the next pitch up and Ray struck out Eugenio Suarez to end the night.  

Ray Day = Win Day

Ray was likely in line to make his second All-Star team anyway, but you never know how things will shake out when MLB has to account for having one player from every team. His dominant start Thursday was well-timed, giving him one last push three days before teams are announced. Now, it should be a no-brainer. 

Ray finished the night ranked eighth in the NL in ERA and tied for fourth in innings. He is one of three National League pitchers with nine wins and the Giants are 14-4 in his starts. 

Back In Black (Jerseys)

Willy Adames took much better swings in June, but he still had just a .675 OPS in the month. In July, the production has arrived. 

Adames hit a 425-foot rocket in his second plate appearance that would have been a home run in 29 ballparks. At Chase Field, where there’s a mammoth wall in center and an elevated yellow line, it was a very, very long double. Umpires reviewed it, but it hit the wall a few feet under the yellow line. 

Adames later yanked a double down the left field line, giving him his first multi-double game as a Giant. Two days after a loud homer, he also had a walk and infield single. 

That’s Sick, Dude

Heliot Ramos was under the weather early in the series and it showed. Melvin gave him Wednesday off to recover, and when the clubhouse opened on Thursday, Ramos was all smiles. Whatever it was — and he didn’t know — had passed. 

Ramos looked like himself Thursday. He had an RBI double in his first at-bat and an RBI single in the third as the Giants jumped out to a 4-0 lead.

The left fielder is unlikely to make a second straight All-Star team given the depth at outfield in the National League, but he’ll take a .277 average and .804 OPS back to California. 

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Mets' David Stearns: 'My preference is to not bring up a top prospect for a spot start'

As the Mets deal with a growing list of injuries to their starting rotation, president of baseball operations David Stearns said on Thursday that while “every option is on the table,” his preference is to not call up one of the club’s top pitching prospects like Brandon Sproat or Nolan McLean to make a spot start.

“My preference is to not bring up a top prospect for a spot start,” Stearns said. “I also understand this is a unique circumstance and I can’t take anything off the table right now, but my preference would be to figure out a way to do it without doing that.”

While Kodai Senga (hamstring) and Sean Manaea (oblique) continue to take positive steps in their individual recoveries and could each be back in the rotation before the All-Star break, the Mets come into this weekend’s Subway Series against the Yankees with question marks when it comes to both Friday and Sunday’s starters.

Paul Blackburn had been scheduled to start on Friday, but he’s since landed on the IL with a shoulder impingement. Sunday’s game, meanwhile, has been up in the air all week, but Stearns made it seem pretty evident that neither Sproat nor McLean will get called up, though it’s not entirely out of the question.

“I think from a developmental standpoint we prefer -- again, it’s not always possible -- but we prefer and I’ve seen over my career that it’s often beneficial for pitchers who you expect to pitch in your rotation for years to come to have a little bit of runway when they break into the major leagues,” Stearns said. “It’s not easy to come up here and perform right away. Sometimes it takes two, three, four, five starts to get your feet under yourself at the major league level, and I think allowing a pitcher, especially a top prospect pitcher, to have that runway can be helpful sometimes, both from a physical and a psychological standpoint. There’s also the reality of a baseball season that you have to get through, so you don’t always get to follow the perfect path.”

“The clear downside to giving someone the ball and having them not have a good outing, a short start, whatever it is, is you put your major league team in a hole,” Stearns added later. “So step one is we’d like to avoid that outcome. For the individual player’s development, you never know. I’m certain there are pitching prospects and prospects in general who will handle that just fine, and there are others who it probably impacts a little bit more, and trying to figure out which is which can be difficult. It’s also perfectly possible that you call someone up, they give you five good innings, and then go back down and continue their development.

“I’m certainly aware of all of these outcomes, and we’re sorting through it.”

 While nothing is set in stone in regards to this weekend’s pitching plans, Stearns and the Mets will explore every possible avenue, including bullpen games, using an opener with a bulk option to follow, as well as looking at the Triple-A and other major league rosters, in order to fulfill their current needs on the mound.

“I think every option is on the table, and we’re discussing all of them,” Stearns said, ‘whether that’s more days like [Wednesday] with an opener followed by a length option followed by the bullpen, whether we go straight bullpen days, whether we call up additional starters from the minor leagues, whether we seek external help, we’re going to evaluate everything.

“We’ll get through it. I do think we have options to get through this, and this is more of a short-term need than a longer-term need. We feel good about where Senga is in his process. We feel good about where Sean is, getting back, so clearly this weekend we have decisions to make, and then we have an off day and we get into next week and it becomes a little cleaner.”

Mets' Kodai Senga to make rehab start over weekend, could return before All-Star break

Mets ace Kodai Senga, whohas been out since June 12 due to a hamstring injury, appears ready to take another step forward in his rehab.

Manager Carlos Mendoza said prior to Thursday's game that Senga is expected to take the mound Saturday or Sunday for Double-A Binghamton.

"He was going through PFPs, some running drills, and all that," Mendoza said. "The goal is for him to pitch in a minor league game, I think it's in Double-A, either Saturday or Sunday. He's going to make an appearance there and we'll go from there."

Mendoza mentioned on Tuesday that Senga faced hitters on Sunday during "an up-and-down" live bullpen session and was scheduled to throw another bullpen session on Wednesday.

When asked how many rehab starts Senga will need before he could return to the bigs, Mendoza was optimistic on the right-hander's timeline.

"One at a time," Mendoza said. "Hopefully it's the one here this weekend. He might be in play for us before the break, too."

Senga's return would be huge for New York, as they are in need of healthy starting pitchers. Paul Blackburn (shoulder impingement) hit the IL Thursday, joining the recently added Tylor Megill (right elbow sprain) and Griffin Canning (season-ending Achilles injury). Mendoza did note that Sean Manaea is expected to have another rehab start after tossing 60 pitches over three-plus innings on Wednesday and could also be back before the All-Star break.

The Mets wrap up their three-game series with the Milwaukee Brewers on Thursday, followed by a weekend Subway Series at Citi Field, a three-game set in Baltimore, and three more games in Kansas City before the All-Star break, starting on Monday, July 14.

The Rangers' ‘Busy And Exciting’ Offseason Has Been A Grand Success So Far

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New York Rangers president and general manager Chris Drury accomplished everything he wanted to do during the 2025 offseason.

Drury called these past few weeks“busy and exciting” as the Rangers have made a slew of moves over the past few weeks.

What exactly has made this offseason such a grand success so far?

The Blueshirts opened the summer with arguably the most monumental choices by trading longtime Ranger forward Chris Kreider.

It seemed at one point that Kreider would finish his career in New York, but it didn’t quite work out that way. 

Kreider struggled with injuries and saw a steep decrease in his overall stats during the 2024-25 season. On top of it all, he was the subject of trade rumors throughout the year, which certainly didn’t help make matters any better. 

While the 34-year-old should still have some quality hockey in his arsonal, Kreider’s decline was obvious to all watching the Rangers and he’s still under contract for another two seasons at an average annual value of $6.5 million. 

Drury is no stranger to dumping salary as he traded Jacob Trouba without retaining any of his salary and waived Barclay Goodrow when he was still under contract for another couple of seasons. 

The goal was not to retain any of Kreider’s salary, and that’s exactly what Drury did, trading him to the Ducks, who took on his entire contract. 

Speaking to the media on Wednesday, Drury confirmed the Kreider trade had a lot to do with the ability to have more cap space. 

“It’s not always the easiest thing to do,” Drury said about trading Kreider. I could tell you that Chris himself and his agent were terrific to deal with in trying to figure out a solution here… A big piece of it was salary cap. There’s only so much to go around in trying to figure out the pieces that fit under the cap as we tried to rework the roster.”

The next big decision came at around the time of the 2025 NHL Draft when the Rangers had to decide whether to keep their 12th overall pick this year or 2026 first-round pick. 

As part of the J.T. Miller trade, the Rangers had to relinquish either their 2025 or 2026 first-round pick. 

Drury ultimately decided to keep his 2026 first rounder and transfer the 2025 12th overall pick to the Pittsburgh Penguins. 

Despite not holding a selection in the opening round, the Rangers were able to draft forward Malcolm Spence with the 43rd overall pick, a player many predicted would be off the board by the end of the first round, further validating New York’s big decision. 

“Malcolm is an excellent winger, power play, PK (penalty kill), plays the game the right way,” Rangers director of player personnel John Lilley said. “He doesn't cheat the game. We’ve valued him for a few years now… I think he was projected to go quite a bit higher, so when the opportunity presented itself, we were thrilled to get him in that spot, and we think he's got a lot of potential and a high-character player.”

When it came to free agency, the Rangers were able to fetch one of the most sought-after players available on the market. 

There’s no doubt that the Blueshirts struggled from a defensive standpoint this past season, which is why the team went out and gave Vladislav Gavrikov a seven-year, $49 million contract.

“It starts in our D-zone,” Drury said when explaining the Gavrikov signing. “We have to be better in our zone, we have to be better in front of (Igor Shesterkin) and (Jonathan Quick). To me, that’s the mindset he shows up with every single day. 

Vladislav Gavrikov Is The Most Important Piece Of The Rangers' Massive Defensive Reconstruction Vladislav Gavrikov Is The Most Important Piece Of The Rangers' Massive Defensive Reconstruction The New York Rangers made a substantial financial commitment, giving defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov a seven-year, $49 million contract. 

“The size, the reach, the competitiveness, the way he defends and the way he is able to complement his partner, whether that’s Fox or any other of our right-shot D that we have, that’s what excited all of us in targeting this player. Thrilled to be able to have him as a key part of that D corps.”

The addition of Gavrikov made K’Andre Miller more expendable whom the Rangers were hesitant to give a long-term contract extension to. 

K’Andre’s lack of growth made it difficult for the Rangers to fathom committing a large amount of money to him. 

The Hurricanes were interested in the 25-year-old defenseman, and the two teams completed a sign-and-trade where the Rangers were able to acquire Scott Morrow, a conditional 2026 first-round pick, and a 2026 second-round pick. 

“With a young player that’s a year or a couple years away from free agency, it’s not always the easiest thing to come to an agreement on a long-term contract,” Drury said about Miller. “We just felt at this time it was best to allow him to explore a different opportunity.”

The last major order of business was to sign Will Cuylle to a two-year contract extension worth $3.9 million per season.

Cuylle is an emerging young talent for the Rangers who has shown a lot of potential. The Blueshirts were able to escape not giving Cuylle a long-term contract extension just yet, while no other teams attempted to offer-sheet him.

Now, the Rangers will be able to evaluate Cuylle’s progression even further and assess whether they want to commit to him long-term.  

So to recap it all, the Rangers dumped off some necessary salary, keeped their 2026-first round pick while drafting a high-quality prospect in the second round, signed a defensive anchor, got a quality return for a player they did not want to give a long-term extension to and, signed one of their most high-coveted young players to a team-friendly deal.

All of Drury’s goals have been fulfilled, and now the Rangers will have to build upon this impressive offseason.

Nationals' James Wood joins Ronald Acuña Jr., Cal Raleigh as Home Run Derby participants

WASHINGTON — Washington Nationals outfielder James Wood became the third player to announce he will take part in the Home Run Derby.

The derby will be held on July 14, the night before the All-Star Game, at Truist Park in Atlanta. Wood joins Braves outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr. and Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh, who leads the majors with 33 homers, in the contest.

Wood has 22 homers this season. He’s the third Nationals player to take part in the Home Run Derby, joining Juan Soto (2022) and Bryce Harper (2013 and ’18).

The 22-year-old Wood has 12 homers that have been hit harder than 110 mph. It’s the second most in the league behind Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani’s 13. Wood also has four dingers that have been launched longer than 445 feet.

Wood was acquired from San Diego in August 2022 as part of the blockbuster deal that sent Soto to the Padres.

Yankees signing INF Nicky Lopez to minor-league deal: report

The Yankees are reportedly bolstering their infield depth.

According to FanSided’s Robert Murray, the Yankees are adding infielder Nicky Lopez on a minor-league deal.

Lopez, 30, has played for five different teams during his seven-year big league career. This season alone, Lopez has been with the Angels, Cubs, and Diamondbacks, appearing in 14 games with the Cubs and four with the Angels.

Though Lopez has never been a great hitter (career 72 OPS+ with a .245 batting average), he’s always been a wizard defensively. A Gold Glove finalist with the Royals in 2020 and the White Sox in 2024, Lopez ranked in the 88th percentile last season with 5 Outs Above Average.

While it’s no sure thing that he’ll make his way to the major league roster, Lopez gives the Yankees a very interesting potential bench player who could come into games late as a defensive replacement. Between Jazz Chisholm Jr., Anthony Volpe, and DJ LeMahieu, the Yankees have had their issues along the infield, and Lopez, who can play just about anywhere, could be an instant defensive upgrade.

Mets place Paul Blackburn and Dedniel Núñez on IL amid flurry of roster moves

The Mets have placed right-handed pitchers Paul Blackburn and Dedniel Núñez on the 15-day IL.

Núñez has an elbow sprain that could possibly require Tommy John surgery, while Blackburn is dealing with a shoulder impingement that will shut him down for three-to-five days.

Additionally, the Mets optioned right-hander Blade Tidwell to Triple-A Syracuse. Tidwell worked as a bulk reliever on Wednesday against the Brewers, tossing 4.1 innings.

With Blackburn and Núñez on the IL and Tidwell optioned, the Mets have called up right-handed pitchers Justin Hagenman, Austin Warren, and Rico Garcia.

Blackburn had been lined up to start the series-opener against the Yankees on Friday, so the Mets will need a fill-in starter.

The Mets also need a starter for Sunday, since Clay Holmes (the original expected starter) had his start pushed to Game 1 of Wednesday's doubleheader due to Tuesday's postponement.

It is conceivable that the Mets will use Hagenman to start on Friday.

Hagenman made his major league debut on April 16 against the Twins, tossing 3.1 innings of one-run ball while allowing three hits, walking none, and striking out four. He also pitched on June 19 against the Braves, going 2.2 scoreless innings.

When it comes to who will start on Sunday, the Mets seemingly have two options -- go with an opener/bullpen game or call up prospect Brandon Sproat, who isn't on the 40-man roster. Fellow prospect Nolan McLean is pitching Thursday night for Syracuse.

Sproat, who is currently lined up to pitch on Friday in Triple-A, is coming off his best start of the season -- he fired 6.0 innings of two-run ball on June 28 while allowing just two hits, walking three, and striking out six.

As far as Blackburn, he had been ineffective in the rotation, while also failing to provide much length.

He allowed four runs (three earned) in 3.2 innings against the Braves on June 18, surrendered three runs in 4.2 innings against Atlanta on June 23, and gave up three runs on six hits in his only inning of work against the Pirates on June 28 -- during a game that was interrupted by a lengthy rain delay.

The rotation should get some help soon, with the Mets awaiting the returns of Sean Manaea (perhaps after one more rehab start) and Kodai Senga (who is about to begin a rehab assignment).

Matt Chapman to make rehab start Friday, could return for Giants-Athletics games

Matt Chapman to make rehab start Friday, could return for Giants-Athletics games originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

PHOENIX — The Giants didn’t take batting practice Thursday, hopeful that a bit of a break could help an offense that has struggled through this three-city trip. But Matt Chapman still worked up a sweat.

Chapman took BP on the field at Chase Field and then faced balls coming out of a machine with the velocity turned up, and everything went well. He said afterward that he was “pain-free” while swinging, and he’s just about ready to return.

Chapman’s sprained fingers felt good, but he wasn’t thrilled with his swing after three weeks off. The plan is for him to suit up for Triple-A Sacramento on Friday night when the affiliate plays in Reno. If all goes well, Chapman could return this weekend in Sacramento against the Athletics. 

“He didn’t feel anything, felt great — he’s frustrated with his swing right now, but that’s the way it goes with him,” manager Bob Melvin said, smiling. “He ended his session mad. That’s a good thing.”

While the Giants aren’t thrilled about their schedule this week — seven night games, including one Thursday on a getaway day and another Sunday to end a holiday weekend — they did catch a break with the Triple-A schedule. The River Cats will be a drive away, likely allowing both Chapman and Casey Schmitt (left hand inflammation) to rehab this weekend. 

Even if Chapman isn’t ready Saturday or Sunday, there’s little doubt that he’ll be in the lineup Monday when the Giants return to Oracle Park to face the Philadelphia Phillies. Originally the staff was targeting next weekend’s series against the Los Angeles Dodgers for Chapman’s return, but he has sailed through the rehab process after injuring three fingers on a slide in early June. 

Schmitt got a cortisone shot Wednesday and should be back when eligible Monday. He’s likely to be the starter at second base given how well he played when he briefly replaced Chapman. 

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Cleveland pitcher Luis Ortiz faces MLB gambling inquiry

Another day, another gambling scandal.

That's the recent vibe as it relates to big-time sports and big-time legal problems.

Days after it came to light that Detroit Pistons guard Malik Beasley is under federal investigation for gambling, Jeff Passan of ESPN.com reports that Cleveland Guardians pitcher Luis Ortiz is under investigation by Major League Baseball for violating the league’s rules regarding sports gambling. Ortiz has been placed on "non-disciplinary paid leave," through July 17.

The duration of the paid leave was negotiated by Major League Baseball and the MLBPA. It could be extended.

Ortiz, 26, had been scheduled to start Thursday night's game against the Cubs. He was traded by the Pirates to the Guardians before the season, after spending three years on the Pittsburgh roster.

There are, to date, no details as to how, when, and why the MLB's gambling policies were violated.

Both the NBA and MLB have had multiple gambling scandals in recent years. The NFL has managed to avoid anything that would potentially undermine the integrity of the game or of the statistics generated during a game.

So far.

Mets prospect Jonah Tong named Eastern League Pitcher of the Month for June

Mets prospect Jonah Tonghas been overmatching hitters all season while pitching for Double-A Binghamton, and now he has (another) award to show for it.

Tong has been named the Eastern League Pitcher of the Month for June.

He also took home the honors for his performance in May.

In June, Tong had a 0.93 ERA while allowing just three earned runs in five starts spanning 29.0 innings. He gave up 11 hits, walked nine, and struck out a league-leading 43 batters.

Tong also led the league in BAA (.113), WHIP (0.69), hits per nine (3.41), and strikeouts per nine (13.39). He gave up just two extra-base hits all month.

Overall this season, Tong has a 1.73 ERA and 0.92 WHIP with 115 strikeouts in 73.0 innings over 14 starts.

Speaking with SNY last month, Tong said one of the things he was working on was limiting his walks.

"The most obvious one for me is the walks right now," he said. "They’re definitely there. I do think – and I’m really confident -- that they’re not always gonna be there. It’s just more getting my feet wet and getting into the season. Last year happened for me right out of the gate, and this year it’s just a little bit slower when it comes to that.

"It’s just being more consistent, and knowing that when I’m in the zone we’re gonna have a lot of success. And just feeling confident in that. So I think just being in the zone early and often, and having the ability to put away hitters is something I’ve shown I can do – I just need to do it a little more consistently."

Along with teammate Carson Benge, Tong will represent the Mets during the Futures Game at All-Star Weekend.

It's a bit bizarre that Tong hasn't yet been promoted to Triple-A Syracuse, with his continued presence in Double-A possibly due to a logjam in the Triple-A starting rotation.

Nolan McLean and Brandon Sproat are among the pitchers in Syracuse's rotation.

Jonathan Pintaro, who recently made his big league debut, was a mainstay in the Triple-A rotation earlier this season. But he's now being converted to a regular reliever.

How Devers, others in Red Sox-Giants deal have fared since trade

How Devers, others in Red Sox-Giants deal have fared since trade originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Rafael Devers’ absence from the Boston Red Sox lineup has been glaring since his shocking departure, but the veteran slugger hasn’t been himself with the San Francisco Giants.

Devers has cooled off considerably since homering against his former team on June 21. Through 15 games with San Francisco, he has slashed .203/.299/.356 with two homers and six RBI. He has struck out an MLB-leading 25 times in that span.

Both the Red Sox (6-9) and Giants (5-10) have struggled since the blockbuster deal, but Boston has actually averaged more runs per game (4.53) than San Francisco (3.33) without the three-time All-Star.

Despite his recent woes, Devers is confident he’ll turn things around soon.

“I’m feeling very comfortable right now,” Devers told the San Francisco Standard’s John Shea on Wednesday. “Things aren’t going the way I want for me or the team, but I know eventually I’m going to get out of it and the team is going to get out of it. …

“It happens to all the hitters,” he continued. “I know I’m trying to make my adjustments. I know that I’m trying to contribute to the team, trying to get my hits and also contribute to wins.”

The Red Sox received right-hander Jordan Hicks, left-hander Kyle Harrison, minor-league outfielder James Tibbs III, and minor-league righty Jose Bello from the Giants in exchange for Devers. Hicks is the only player to appear in a game for Boston thus far.

The hard-throwing Hicks has allowed one earned run on three hits and one walk with one strikeout across two appearances (1.2 innings) out of the Red Sox bullpen. Harrison, MLB’s top left-handed pitching prospect heading into the 2024 season, has let up seven earned runs on 13 hits and three walks while striking out six in two starts (eight innings) at Triple-A Worcester.

Tibbs is slashing .280/.373/.340 with 13 strikeouts and seven walks in 13 games at Double-A. The 13th overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft has 14 hits with the Portland Sea Dogs, including one double and a triple.

Bello has made two appearances in rookie ball for the Florida Complex League Red Sox, allowing just one hit and tallying five strikeouts with four walks across five scoreless innings.

It’s far too early to declare the “winner” of the trade, but so far, it hasn’t hurt the Red Sox or helped the Giants like many expected it would. That said, we should expect Devers to snap out of his slump and return to All-Star form, just as he did after starting the season 0-for-19 with 15 strikeouts.

After two years, Brandon Woodruff is excited to go pitch again on an MLB mound

It wasn't supposed to be this long for Brandon Woodruff. When the right-hander had surgery on his right shoulder to repair the anterior capsule back in October of 2023, the expectation was that he would miss the entire 2024 season and be ready to pitch at the start of 2025. Yet, the calendar has flipped to July, and the 32-year-old just now looks set to return to an MLB mound.

"I know we talked about this in spring training, to not necessarily judge myself on the first half," Woodruff discussed with a group of reporters in front of his locker at Citi Field on Tuesday. "Here we are, getting close to the second half, and I've yet to throw a baseball in a major league game."

Woodruff's shoulder issues first cropped up back in April of 2023 when he landed on the injured list after making just two starts. He wound up missing four months before returning to the Brewers' rotation in August. Then, in his ninth start, in Miami against the Marlins, he felt discomfort in his shoulder again. He would wind up undergoing surgery a few weeks later after being ruled out for the postseason.

While Woodruff's offseason rehab ostensibly went smoothly, his in-season return to the mound has been anything but.

He pitched for most of spring training and began a rehab assignment on April 12th, which seemed to put him in line for a return at some point in May. However, he suffered an ankle injury on May 11th and was forced to begin a new rehab assignment for his new injury. Then, on June 4th, in what should have been his final rehab start, Woodruff was struck on the elbow by a line drive in the second inning and had to leave the game. He would miss the next three-plus weeks before returning to Triple-A Nashville for what wound up being his final rehab start on June 29th.

It's been a long road to get to this point, but Woodruff seems to be looking at the situation through a positive lens, acknowledging simply that "circumstances have led me to this point...Looking at it now," he explained, "I would have gotten to Cleveland, I would have had that [ankle injury] pop up there, and then I would have went back. I would have never been able to do it."

The line drive off the elbow may have been another story, but Woodruff believes the delayed return may have been for the best. It also creates a storybook moment where Woodruff can return to an MLB mound after 652 days in the same place where he last stepped on one.

"When I went down with the elbow and got hit, and we started mapping out the days, I started looking [at the schedule]," he smiled. "Just the chances of that happening. Last time I pitched a major league game was on that mound, and that's kind of when stuff started going south for me. It's weird how this game works, and how full circle that comes around."

That's the kind of baseball magic that gets noticed by a man who's made 130 appearances in big league games but doesn't quite surprise him. The nine-year MLB veteran has seen a lot during his time in Milwaukee. The Brewers made the playoffs in four of the first five seasons that Woodruff was with the big league club and came one game away from the World Series in 2018. They failed to win a playoff game the next two years, didn't make the playoffs at all in 2022, and then failed to win a playoff game in 2023 with Woodruff on the sideline. His rotation-mate, Corbin Burnes, was traded away after that 2023 season, and his manager, Craig Counsell, fled for the division rival Cubs.

Through it all, Woodruff has been a rock in that Brewers' rotation. He has a career 3.10 ERA in 680.1 innings in Milwaukee and hasn't posted an ERA over 3.05 or a WHIP higher than 1.07 since 2019. His strikeout rate hasn't fallen below 29% since 2018, and he has a career batting average against of .212. For all intents and purposes, Brandon Woodruff is an ace. But will he be one when he returns?

"Honestly, I had a plan going in the whole time with the minor league rehabs of not getting too caught up in results," he admitted. "This is a results-oriented business, and I'm the first one who wants to go out and compete and do well, just like anybody else in this room, but I knew that this was going to be a tough process in terms of, like, I can't look at that. I have to get myself healthy. You know, the best advice I got was from Dr. [Keith] Meister [who performed Woodruff's surgery] before we left spring training. He said, 'This year, for you, is not about results; it's about getting healthy.' And I think that was the biggest thing that stuck with me."

In truth, the results for Woodruff haven't been that bad. Over his seven starts in Triple-A this season, Woodruff has a 3.55 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, and 23/8 K/BB ratio in 25.1 innings. They're not the impressive numbers that we've seen from him during his MLB career, but they're results that Woodruff himself has been happy with.

"Up until this point, I didn't know how these rehabs were going to go," he said. They went extremely well, to be honest, so I was happy about that. I think it's just the knowledge of how to pitch, and just going down and trying to get my work in and focus on that side of it. I think it was a good balance."

He certainly got his work in, throwing more innings in the minor leagues this season than anybody expected. But that extra time may have helped him shake some of the additional rust. His final few starts have been some of his better ones, and he hit 95.4 mph on the radar gun with his four-seam fastball in his last outing, which is right in line with the velocity he showed before the injury. Now, hitting that velocity and sitting there are two different things, but it's nice to see that there is still some juice in that surgically repaired arm.

"I feel like consistency of the stuff is where I want to be," confirmed Woodruff. "Actually, [my last start], my stuff felt pretty good. I don't get too hung up on the metrics of stuff, but I do like to pay attention just to make sure my stuff's not getting out of whack, and everything seemed to be pretty consistent, so I was happy about that."

But even with that satisfaction, Woodruff is keeping realistic expectations for himself. His fastball won't have the velocity it used to, at least not right away. His changeup has been struggling to generate whiffs in his rehab starts, and his sinker isn't showing the same velocity or movement. However, perhaps he can emerge from this as a new version of himself.

Woodruff has seemingly split his slider into two pitches now. In 2023, he was throwing an 87 mph slider with 3.2 inches of horizontal break. In his last rehab outing, he showed off a 90.2 mph slider with three inches of horizontal break but also an 82 mph sweeper with 12 inches of break. The sweeper was only thrown three times, all to righties, and didn't generate a single whiff, but it's a new evolution that shows the 32-year-old is thinking differently about how to attack MLB hitters.

"It's just getting back into a routine and hopefully just continuing to stay healthy," he said. "I know if I can do that, I will figure out how to get guys out at a high level again. It's just a matter of consistency, and that's it... I don't know when it's going to click. I always say this every year, when it does, it does, and I don't know when that's going to happen. As far as physically, I feel good. And then it just comes down to execution, execute, mix it up, and just be a pitcher. That's what it comes down to."

The truth is that it might not "click" for Woodruff this season. We've seen many talented pitchers, like Sandy Alcantara, Spencer Strider, and Eury Perez, struggle with consistency in their first year back after major surgery. Woodruff is the oldest of the group, so he's unlikely to be immune to the inconsistencies and poor starts. For those in fantasy leagues, Woodruff is unlikely to be somebody that can be relied on week in and week out. His strikeout rate figures to be down, and his pitches won't be as crisp as they used to be. That could lead to more hard contact and some tough innings that he used to be able to avoid. The Brewers also have a full rotation of healthy starters who are performing well, so they may be cautious with how often they use the 32-year-old after his two years away. He's certainly worthy of being rostered in fantasy leagues, but might be best suited on benches until we can see how he looks on the mound again.

However, just being on that mound is all that matters in the bigger picture.

"Just knowing that I'm going to pitch again in the major leagues is exciting. You know, it's been a long time," Woodruff chuckled. "Honestly, I don't know how I'm going to feel... I'll be excited to go pitch, but I don't know the emotions. I'll just be excited just to go out and pitch in a Major League Baseball game again, and whatever happens, happens, and then just go from there."

Going from there could set up another start a week from Sunday at home against the Nationals. That's the one that Woodruff has mentally circled on the calendar.

"I'll probably be a mess on the first one back at home," he admitted. "This is the only organization I've been a part of now for 10-11 years. These fans know me the best, and I just want to go pitch well in front of them, but I want to get that out of the way and then get back to the business of just competing and pitching again."

All the veteran has to do now to make that a reality is simply make it to Sunday.

"It's almost strange. I just want this to still go day-by-day, even though I'm not pitching until the next [series]... I don't want something to happen. I'm like, crossing my fingers, the whole thing."

If he needs to insulate himself inside a plastic bubble, Brandon Woodruff is going to make sure he steps on that mound on Sunday. And when it does, it would be an incredibly special return.

Cleveland pitcher Luis Ortiz placed on non-disciplinary leave by MLB amid investigation

Cleveland Guardians pitcher Luis Ortiz was placed on non-disciplinary leave on Thursday due to an investigation by Major League Baseball.

MLB said Ortiz’s paid leave will be through the end of the All-Star break on July 18. MLB and the Guardians had no further comment on the investigation. Ortiz returned to Cleveland on Wednesday night.

The 26-year old Ortiz is in his first season with Cleveland after he was acquired in a trade with Pittsburgh last December. The right-hander is 4-9 with a 4.36 ERA and 96 strikeouts in 16 starts this season. The nine losses are tied for the most in the American League.

Ortiz was slated to be the starting pitcher for Thursday night’s game at the Chicago Cubs. Instead, left-hander Joey Cantillo will be recalled from Triple-A Columbus. Cantillo is 1-0 with one save and a 3.81 ERA in 21 appearances this season.

Cleveland (40-44) has dropped a season-high six straight games and is 9-18 since May 1.

Dodgers’ Max Muncy injured while tagging out Michael A. Taylor of White Sox

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy was injured while tagging out Michael A. Taylor in the sixth inning against the Chicago White Sox.

Taylor was caught stealing as catcher Will Smith threw to Muncy, who tagged Taylor for the second out of the inning.

Muncy sprawled on his back as a Dodgers athletic trainer came out to check on him. He had to be helped off the field. He was barely able to put any weight on his left leg. The team said he had left knee pain and he will have an MRI, manager Dave Roberts said.

“We feel optimistic,” Roberts said. “Our hope is that it’s a sprain. Obviously, for the next few days I’m sure he’ll probably be down.”

A White Sox trainer checked on Taylor, who sustained a bruised left trapezius in his back and left the game.

The incident occurred just before Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw got his 3,000th strikeout against Vinny Capra to end the inning.

“We’re all thinking about Munce right now,” Kershaw said. “He’s a huge part of our team. Made a great play there. I don’t really know why he stole third, like it just seemed unnecessary. I feel bad that it happened. We’re all holding our breath that Muncy will be OK.”

Brewers phenom Jacob Misiorowski gets tagged for 1st time in loss to Mets

NEW YORK — Jacob Misiorowski made everything look so easy in his first three major league starts.

Now he knows it’s not.

The hard-throwing rookie finally got knocked around, serving up back-to-back homers as the Milwaukee Brewers lost 7-3 to the New York Mets in the second game of a day-night doubleheader at Citi Field.

Barely touched by opposing batters since getting called up from the minors, Misiorowski (3-1) gave up five runs, five hits and three walks over 3 2/3 innings in his fourth career outing. Brandon Nimmo connected for a grand slam in the second and a slumping Francisco Lindor followed with another longball off Misiorowski to give the Mets a 5-0 lead.

“He wasn’t in sync tonight, for sure. You could see it early. He’d have it for one pitch and then you could just see the ball wasn’t coming out of his fingers the same. You could see the frustration building,” Brewers manager Pat Murphy said.

“That’s too good of a team and too good of a lineup. (These are) the days you realize how good these guys are, all major league players. It’s so tough to perform at the highest level and be consistent. But when you’re off a little bit, it can be the difference, and Miz just wasn’t in sync.”

A touted prospect, the 6-foot-7 Misiorowski had more than lived up to the hype since his arrival.

He began his career with 11 hitless innings and then a scoreless start in a win over Pirates ace Paul Skenes before a crowd of 42,774 in Milwaukee. The 23-year-old right-hander carried a perfect game into the seventh June 20 at Minnesota and racked up 19 strikeouts in his first 16 big league innings.

“He has amazing stuff,” Nimmo said.

Misiorowski threw 62 pitches at least 100 mph in his first three games, and opposing batters were 3 for 49 (.061) against him — making him the first pitcher in the modern era (since 1900) to have as many wins as hits allowed through three career starts.

“He’s really good. Crazy future ahead of him,” Lindor said. “It’s going to be fun to watch him and fun to play against him.”

But on this night, Misiorowski walked consecutive batters with two outs in the second and was unable to corral a high comebacker off the bat of No. 9 hitter Hayden Senger.

The ball glanced off Misiorowski’s glove and spun away from second baseman Brice Turang for an infield single that loaded the bases.

“There was a fastball at the bottom of the zone for a walk that I thought was there. But I thought, good spot, and maybe get it up a little bit more,” Misiorowski said. “Just frustrated at myself for not making a play.”

Nimmo pulled the next pitch, a 96 mph slider, to right field for his third career slam and second this season. Lindor then drove a 1-2 fastball to right-center for his 17th home run.

“I threw good pitches and they hit ’em. Plain and simple as that,” Misiorowski said. “I mean, you’re facing the best of the best. They’re getting paid what they’re getting paid for a reason.”

Misiorowski said his problem was mechanical.

“My fingers were just a little too far on the right side of the ball, and it kind of spun a little different than I’m used to,” he said. “I think I came back pretty well after that. ... I fixed it that next inning.”

Murphy said Misiorowski didn’t feel good while warming up in the bullpen, and that carried over to the game.

“His whole body was not in sync,” the manager explained. “All the arms and legs, it’s hard to sync it all up.”

Misiorowski came out firing 100 mph fastballs, touching 102 mph against Lindor in the first inning — but it didn’t last.

“He learned his lesson. He’s ticked about it. Even some of the sequencing he’s ticked about,” Murphy said. “He can see it that there’s just a really fine line between being dominant and being just OK.”

Misiorowski, however, won’t dwell on this disappointment.

“It’s done. Use the old Tiger Woods approach and move on to the next hit. Move on to the next pitch. It is what it is. I got a loss but, oh well,” he said. “It’s frustrating. But at the same time like, young career, it’s good figuring it out now. Not when we’re in the playoffs and it matters most.”