Edwin Diaz’s 'nasty' outing gave Mets’ offense chance in walk-off win over Phillies

The Mets needed a big-time outing from Edwin Diaz, and boy, did he deliver. 

The All-Star closer entered Tuesday’s game against the Phillies with things knotted at five in the eighth. 

Ryan Helsley endured another rough appearance, retiring just one batter and allowing a game-tying two-run home run to former Mets outfielder Harrison Bader.

Helsley then walked the pinch-hitting Bryson Stott, and was booed off the mound by the hometown crowd.

Diaz entered knowing that the speedy Stott was going to be aggressive on the bases. 

He immediately stole second, but that proved to be no bother, as Diaz struck out the pinch-hitting Brandon Marsh with a slider in the dirt for the second out of the inning. 

Stott then swiped third, but that was no issue for Diaz either, as he retired All-Star shortstop Trea Turner on just four pitches to escape the inning with things still evened up.

“I just tried to stay calm in that situation,” he said. “I know they would run the bases against me with me being slow to that plate, but I was just trying to make pitches and try to make them chase out of the zone.”

After the Mets failed to scratch a run across against Jose Alvarado in the eighth, the righty came back on for the ninth, still in a tie ballgame.

He easily retired the meat of the lineup in order, striking out Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper in the process.

Overall, Diaz struck out four of the five batters he faced in 1.2 gutsy innings of work. The closer got seven whiffs on 13 swings with another four called strikes, for a 50 percent called strike-whiff rate.

And he ended up being rewarded for the efforts, as he took home the win after the Mets rallied to walk things off on All-Star closer Jhoan Duran thanks to Brandon Nimmo’s single.

“He was pretty nasty again today, going through their best hitters,” Carlos Mendoza said. “Runner at third with two outs against Turner, he gets him, then he’s going back out against their best guy and makes it look easy. Gives our offense a chance to win the baseball game -- it was a huge outing for him.”

It was a huge outing for the Mets as well, as they now have a chance to continue closing the gap and sweep the NL East leading Phillies on Wednesday night.

Mets blow late lead, but rally to beat Phillies on Brandon Nimmo's walk-off single

The Mets beat the Philadelphia Phillies 6-5 on Tuesday night on Brandon Nimmo's walk-off single.

New York has now won nine straight games against the Phillies at Citi Field, dating back to last September.

Here are some takeaways...

- Sean Manaea has been up and down since returning from the IL in mid-July, but he fared a bit better in this one. The lefty allowed just one baserunner and struck out four over the first two innings. He worked around an Edmundo Sosa leadoff double in the third, thanks to another strikeout and a pair of groundouts. 

Manaea danced past two singles in the fourth with some help from two more punchouts and a caught stealing, but as has been the case in his recent outings, he was unable to get through the fifth. He was pulled after allowing a two-out single by Trea Turner put runners on the corners. 

Gregory Soto entered, and after issuing a walk to Kyle Schwarber to load the bases, he allowed Bryce Harper to put the Phillies in front with a two-run single the other way. Manaea's book closed with two runs allowed on six hits while tying his season-high with eight strikeouts in just 4.2 innings of work. 

The 33-year-old's ERA is now up to 5.01, and he is yet to complete six innings over nine outings. 

- The Mets wasted a couple of early opportunities against Jesus Luzardo, but they were finally able to break through and answered right back in the fifth. They chased the southpaw after the first four batters of the inning reached base safely, including a Juan Soto RBI single.

Luzardo was ejected by home plate umpire Willie Traynor as he left the mound. 

Orion Kerkering entered and was greeted rudely as Pete Alonso laced a go-ahead two-run double into the left-center gap, the scorching hot Mark Vientos lined an RBI single the other way, and Brandon Nimmo lifted a sacrifice fly to cap off a five-run inning. 

Kerkering entered the night with a 5.59 ERA in 10 career appearances against the Mets. 

- Huascar Brazoban allowed Philly to creep back in but stranded a pair in the sixth. Tyler Rogers followed that with a perfect seventh, but Ryan Helsley's struggles continued in the eighth as he allowed a long game-tying two-run blast to former Met Harrison Bader

Helsley has now allowed 10 earned runs in his 11 appearances since joining the Mets. 

- Edwin Diaz cleaned up Helsley's mess in the eighth and then worked through a scoreless ninth before the Mets pieced together a rally against Phillies trade deadline addition Jhoan Duran with three-straight singles – bullets from Starling Marte and Alonso and a flare to shallow left by Brett Baty – before Nimmo lined a single the other way to walk it off. 

Game MVP: Brandon Nimmo

Nimmo provided the late-inning heroics in the victory, picking up his fifth career walk-off RBI. Honorable mention to Alonso, who went 4-for-5 with two RBI

Highlights

What's next

Nolan McLean (2-0, 1.46 ERA) makes his third career start against former Met Taijuan Walker (4-6, 3.44 ERA) in the final match of this three-game set on Wednesday at 7:10 p.m.

Giancarlo Stanton drives in every Yankees run in 5-1 win over Nationals

Giancarlo Stanton was all the offense the Yankees needed as he drove in all five runs of New York's 5-1 win over the Nationals.

The Yankees were outhit by the Nationals, 8-6, but delivered when it mattered. The Yanks were just 1-for-6 with RISP, with eight runners left on base, while the Nats were 3-for-12 with nine left on base. 

Here are the takeaways...

-Luis Gil was up and down in this one, getting through the first two innings, stranding runners and not allowing a run. However, the Nationals' overaggressiveness benefited them when Robert Hassell III ran through the stop sign at third base and scored on a one-out single that took Cody Bellinger and the Yankees by surprise. There was no urgency to throw the ball in, and Hassell got in ahead of the cutoff throw from a double-clutching Amed Rosario.

Gil escaped the third but walked two in the fourth. The right-hander's velocity seemed a tick low on his fastball (93 mph) and Aaron Boone and the training staff came out to see if Gil was ok. Gil convinced them he was fine and struck out Jacob Young on a 95 mph fastball to end the frame.

After James Wood led off the fifth with a double, Gil bounced back, getting the next two batters, and then Bellinger gunned down Woods at home after a Josh Bell single to keep the Nationals at one run.

Gil's night was done after five innings and 92 pitches (59 strikes), allowing one run on five hits and four walks while striking out five batters.

-Fernando Cruz, activated Tuesday from the IL, was the first arm out of the bullpen and immediately got into trouble. He gave up a leadoff single and hit a batter to put two runners on with no outs. After a strikeout, Hassell bunted for an infield single to load the bases before striking out Young. Boone brought in Tim Hill, who got Wood to ground out to end the threat. 

The rest of the bullpen kept the Nationals at bay to lock down the win. Here's how the relievers broke down:

  • Cruz: 0.2 IP, 2 H, 2 K
  • Hill: 1.1 IP, 1 H, 1 K
  • Camilo Doval: 1.0 IP, 2 K
  • David Bednar: 1.0 IP, 2 K

-The Yankees offense had a tough time with Mackenzie Gore until the third, when Paul Goldschmidt led off the inning with a double before Aaron Judge and Bellinger walked the bases loaded with two outs. Giancarlo Stanton was up with the RBI chance and the slugger delivered, clearing the bases with a double off the left-center field wall.

Stanton wasn't done. With a man on in the sixth, Stanton launched a 451-foot blast to give the Yanks a 5-1 lead. It's his longest home run of the season. The Yankees slugger was replaced in the field by Jose Caballero in the seventh, ending his night after going 2-for-3 with five RBI.

-Anthony Volpe was back in the lineup after two games on the bench. Hitting eighth, Volpe went 0-for-4 with a strikeout. Judge went 0-for-3 with a walk and a run scored.

Game MVP: Giancarlo Stanton

The slugger is arguably on the hottest offensive streak of his career.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees have a short turnaround as they play the series finale against the Naitonals on Wednesday afternoon. First pitch is set for 1:05 p.m.

Max Fried (13-5, 3.14 ERA) will take the mound against Cade Cavalli (1-0, 2.82 ERA).

Phils' losing streak at Citi Field reaches nine as Mets walk it off vs. Duran

Phils' losing streak at Citi Field reaches nine as Mets walk it off vs. Duran originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK – Oh, it’s real. Whether it’s the play of the New York Mets, the frenzied fans, something about Citi Field, or just the Phillies themselves. There might be a curse the Mets have over the Phillies that isn’t as easily explainable as the team and the manager want us all to believe.

How else do you explain Jesús Luzardo’s lack of composure when things get choppy? Or center fielder Harrison Bader, a Gold Glove winner, needlessly attempting a throw out at home instead of hitting a cutoff? How do you explain Mets starter Sean Manaea – who allowed 17 earned runs over his past 19 1/3 innings – striking out eight of the 14 batters he retired? Or how Jhoan Duran blew his second save in less than a week?

Don’t try to make sense of it because it’ll have you praying to the baseball gods for answers, and it doesn’t seem like there are logical ones. The Mets belted four consecutive singles off Duran in the ninth inning to take a 6-5, walk-off win – their second in this three-game series. The Phillies’ lead in the National League East is still at five games, but the momentum factor between these two teams leans heavily in New York’s favor.

It was the Mets’ ninth consecutive win over the Phillies at Citi Field and their 23rd in the last 29. Are the Phillies more frustrated than they would be after a routine loss?

Starter Cristopher Sánchez beat up a trash can when he left the game in the sixth inning on Monday. Jesús Luzardo shouted at home plate umpire Willie Traynor during his exit in the fifth and was ejected.

If you need a bit of a silver lining, Harrison Bader briefly provided it. In the eighth inning, he crushed a Ryan Helsley pitch deep into the seats score him and Nick Castellanos for a 5-5 tie. But that only delayed what has been inevitable of late … and that’s the Mets finding a way to win again on their home field.

“I don’t ever think that way,” said Rob Thomson of everything seemingly going wrong lately against the Mets in New York. “I’m always looking from a positive aspect.

“I’ve been asked that numerous times since we’ve been here. It’s not the building. They’ve been playing good and we played well today, too. We battled back. They get the five-spot in the fifth and I was proud of our guys the way they battled. We come out here tomorrow and do it again.”

As they did Monday, the Phillies jumped out to a lead when Bryce Harper – who was three hits on the nigh – drove in a pair with a single in the fifth inning. All that did was seem to awaken the Mets, who hadn’t done much of anything against Luzardo up to that point.

But Luzardo began the fifth by hitting Luis Torrens and then gave up a single to Francisco Lindor and an RBI single to Juan Soto. Luzardo and catcher J.T. Realmuto both questioned a ball call on Marte, who eventually walked to load the bases, and that was it for Luzardo, before for the arguing. He was also miffed in the first inning when he was called for stopping his windup against Juan Soto, allowing Soto to call time. After throwing the pitch, Luzardo walked towards home to have a word or two with Traynor.

Pete Alonso crushed Orion Kerkering’s second pitch to the left-center field wall for a pair of RBIs and a five-run, game changing inning was in full gear. And it didn’t look good, again, for the Phillies until Bader’s bomb in the eighth.

“Just a good baseball game, good teams on both sides, pretty familiar opponents on both sides,” said Bader, who played for the Mets last season.

“Every playing surface just has a different feel to it. Different batter’s box, different batter’s eye. Sometimes it’s just as simple as that, and you try to put your best swing forward. Whatever the numbers say you just going out there and competing and trying to win a baseball game. I can’t really speak to the history of the rivalry or the history of how the Phillies have played here. I’ve always learned growing up from my dad was to just kind of be emotionless because the ball doesn’t really have emotions. Try to just breathe through it.”

With the lead in the East trending down, is breathing a little bit harder now?

“I don’t think anybody got into this room by doing math,” said Bader. “Every game you just try to gather information from it. It is what it is. You just go out there and try to attack the pitcher, swing at strikes, take care of the baseball and just try to go from there.”

Attack Duran is exactly what the Mets did in the ninth in picking up those four consecutive hits to start the celebration near first base.

“I feel good. I threw the pitch where I want to throw it,” said Duran. “The got the ball past the defense. They had good luck today.”

It seems to be a theme. And becoming a very unnerving one at that.

“I think a little bit of both, really,” said Luzardo on his frustration with himself and others. “Obviously take accountability for three walks, two hit batsmen. Frustrated with myself after the hit by pitches.

“I felt amazing today. I’m not really an emotional guy, pretty calm out there, for the most part. When I think something is not fair, I’ll make sure to stick up for it. I didn’t think it was right.”

If the Phillies are going to break this skid while visiting the Mets, the star players are probably going to have to pull them through. Tuesday wasn’t the night for that, however. J.T. Realmuto struck out four times and left a couple runners on base, Trea Turner struck out twice and left two runners in scoring position and Nick Castellanos struck out twice and left a runner on.

“It was really tough for these guys to back the ball up on the lefty (Manaea),” said Thomson, explaining his team’s 15 strikeouts.

“There was some chase but just out front. The slider he’s got is a really good pitch and very deceptive when he mixes off that fastball. You have to really, really stay opposite-field oriented against him.”

As they all said, tomorrow is another day. They can only hope it isn’t like many before it at Citi Field.

Astros' Yordan Alvarez returns from injury after 3 ½ months

HOUSTON (AP) Houston slugger Yordan Alvarez was reinstated from the 60-day injured list Tuesday after sitting out since May 3 while he recovered from a fractured right hand.

Alvarez returns after playing four rehabilitation games for Double-A Corpus Christi, where he went 7 for 15 with four doubles, four RBIs and a stolen base.

He has been out more than 3 ½ months with the small fracture in his right hand that was initially diagnosed as a muscle strain.

His return should be a big boost to the Astros as the postseason approaches after he led the team in batting average (.308), home runs (35) and RBIs (86) last season. Houston entered Tuesday leading the AL West with a 1.5-game lead over Seattle.

The 28-year-old Alvarez hit .210 with three homers and 18 RBIs in 29 games this season before his injury.

Rangers pitcher Nathan Eovaldi's career-best season likely over because of rotator cuff strain

ARLINGTON, Texas — Texas Rangers right-hander Nathan Eovaldi is likely done for the season because of a rotator cuff strain.

Chris Young, the team's president of baseball operations, made the announcement Tuesday, a day before Eovaldi's scheduled start against the Los Angeles Angels when he had another opportunity to take over as MLB's qualified ERA leader. He is 11-3 with a career-best 1.73 ERA in 22 starts.

Eovaldi has been one of baseball's best pitchers all season, but was left off the American League All-Star team and hasn't been among the qualified leaders after missing most of June because of elbow inflammation.

He was MLB's official ERA leader for one night, after he allowed one run in seven innings against Cleveland on Friday. That put him at 130 innings in 130 Rangers games, and put him ahead of All-Star starters Paul Skenes (2.07) and Tarik Skubal (2.28) until the Texas played the following day - pitchers need one inning per team game to qualify.

This is Eovaldi's third consecutive season with at least 11 wins since joining his home state team, and last December he signed a new $75 million, three-year contract through 2027. The 35-year-old Eovaldi and Hall of Fame strikeout king Nolan Ryan are the only big league players from Alvin, Texas.

Eovaldi has a 102-84 career record and 3.84 ERA over 14 big league seasons with six teams, and was of World Series championships with Boston in 2018 and Texas in 2023. He made his MLB debut with the Los Angeles Dodgers (2011-12), and later pitched for Miami (2012-14), the New York Yankees (2015-16), Tampa Bay (2018), Boston (2018-22).

St. Louis' Zeke Wood suspended 80 games, Houston's Emilio Gonzalez for 56 for positive drug tests

NEW YORK — St. Louis pitcher Zeke Wood was suspended for 80 games and Houston catcher Emilio Gonzalez for 56 on Tuesday by Major League Baseball following positive tests for performance-enhancing substances under minor league drug programs.

Wood tested positive for GW1516 and was disciplined under the minor league drug program. Gonzalez tested positive for Boldenone and was penalized under the drug program for minor league players assigned outside of the United States and Canada.

A 25-year-old right-hander, Wood signed a minor league contract with St. Louis in June and had an 8.49 ERA in 12 relief appearances for Class A Palm Beach and High-A Peoria.

Gonzalez, 17, agreed to a minor league deal with the Astros in January for a $67,500 signing bonus and hit .209 with no homers and seven RBIs for the Dominican Summer League Astros. He has served two games and will finish the penalty during the 2026 DSL season.

Thirteen players have been suspended this year for positive tests, including 11 under minor league programs. Atlanta Braves outfielder Jurickson Profar was suspended for 80 games on March 31 and Philadelphia Phillies closer José Alvarado for 80 games on May 25 under the major league program.

Another crisp night of Giants baseball leads to a first for Justin Verlander

Another crisp night of Giants baseball leads to a first for Justin Verlander originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — For Justin Verlander, the next month will be about big numbers. 

He picked up win No. 264 on Tuesday, and while this disappointing Giants season has put a big dent in his hopes for 300, it’s still a number to chase. He also got to 3,520 career strikeouts, passing Walter Johnson and moving into ninth on the all-time list. 

But Tuesday night was also about a first. 

When Matt Chapman provided a cushion with a two-run homer and the bullpen cruised through the final three innings of a 5-2 win over the Chicago Cubs, Verlander had his first career win at Oracle Park. 

“No offense,” he said, smiling, “But I wish I had one in 2012.”

The Giants are glad he doesn’t, although they have a lot of regrets about the way they’ve handled Verlander’s 14 starts at home this year. They haven’t provided him with run support while also failing to hold his leads, but in recent days, the baseball has been cleaner. All of a sudden, everything is crisp.

On Tuesday, that led to a third win in four games over an NL Central club headed for the MLB playoffs. The Giants remain seven games back of the third wild-card spot with just 30 to play, but they at least feel like they’re on solid footing again. 

“Look, I haven’t been here for that long, but the Giant way is good pitching and good defense and timely hitting,” Verlander said. “If that’s your motto, you’ve got to play clean. Do the little things the right way and good things happen. We’ve shown that we’re capable. We just need to kind of continue to do that and start to expect that from each other.

“There are smart fans here. They watch the game and you guys [in the media] watch the game and you see what the difference is when we play smart baseball and do things the right way.”

There hasn’t been much of that in the second half, especially at Oracle Park. But the Giants got an early homer from Wilmer Flores and Verlander contributed six strong innings. Luis Matos and Heliot Ramos sparked a game-swinging rally and the bullpen — now without closer Randy Rodriguez, too — had a good night. 

Verlander had left six previous starts with the lead and watched it disappear, but those bad vibes didn’t seep into the dugout Tuesday. Manager Bob Melvin said he just had a feeling “we were going to finish it off for him.” He’s hopeful that this is the start of a strong final push.

“We went through a really bad stretch,” Melvin said. “Hopefully we’re getting on the other side of it.”

The Giants would need a miracle to return to the thick of the postseason race, but Verlander should get five or six more starts regardless. He’ll keep trying to tick wins off, and he’s just 14 strikeouts away from reaching eighth all-time. 

Verlander said he has tried to be more present since having Tommy John surgery, and that includes having a greater awareness of what every night on the mound means. He’s well aware that the next guy after Johnson is a Hall of Famer who has a statue outside Oracle Park. Well, at least he is now. 

Verlander smiled when asked if he knew who was eighth in strikeouts. 

“Gaylord Perry,” he said. “Somebody just told me in the food room.”

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Mets Notes: David Stearns on Kodai Senga’s recent struggles, Sean Manaea building ‘stamina’

Ahead of Tuesday night’s game against the Philadelphia Phillies, Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns addressed several topics, including the starting rotation and the bats' return to form.


On Kodai Senga’s recent struggles

“I don’t think we’ve seen the consistent quality of stuff in the zone,” Stearns said. “And when you don’t have the consistent quality of stuff in the zone, you tend to nibble a little bit more, and I think that’s what we’ve seen.

“We’ve had some count control challenges. I think he’s done a really nice job of minimizing damage. We’ve had a lot of traffic in his starts, but he’s generally kept us in the game and competitive.”

In seven starts since the All-Star break, Senga has gone just 31 innings while pitching to a 6.10 ERA, allowing 24 runs (21 earned) on 32 hits (seven home runs) and 20 walks with 29 strikeouts. 

“He’s frustrated and he doesn’t think he’s pitching at his best right now,” Stearns continued. “And so we’re gonna continue to work with him and continue to do our best to get him back to a good spot.”

On Sean Manea regaining sharpness

The second time through the order has been a bugaboo for Manaea this year. In the first three innings this year (21 total frames), he’s allowed just six runs. In innings four through six (13.1 total), he’s allowed 11 runs.

“I still think we’re building up stamina,” Stearns said of the left-hander whose second season with the Mets was delayed until the final game of the season’s first half in July. “We’ve seen periods of dominance with Sean early in games and then it seems like whether it’s one walk or one hit by pitch and things can spiral a little bit.

“The good news is we are still seeing the pitcher that we saw last year. We are seeing the pitcher who is getting very uncomfortable swings on his fastball, lot of swing and miss on the fastball. His sweeper has still showed really well. He’d certainly like to get deeper into games. We’d like him to get deeper into games. And my expectation is as we go forward, we’ll see that.”

Overall, in seven starts, he has pitched to a 5.40 ERA (4.44 FIP), but he has 38 strikeouts to just eight walks in 33.1 innings. 

Ryan Helsley’s adjustment period

Stearns felt that the closer turned set-up man who arrived in a deadline deal with St. Louis threw the ball better in Monday’s scoreless outing, but said that the club is trying to keep the veteran from pressing to find the results

“There’s an adjustment period coming to a new team, we’re asking him to take on a new role, that’s certainly been well documented,” he said. “When you don’t have results immediately, it's natural to press a little bit, and what we’re trying to do is help him exhale a little bit, take a deep breath.

“The stuff is still there. He’s been good in this league for a long time, and he’s gonna be good again.”

Aug 23, 2025; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; New York Mets left fielder Starling Marte (6) reacts after hitting a home run against the Atlanta Braves during the seventh inning at Truist Park.
Aug 23, 2025; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; New York Mets left fielder Starling Marte (6) reacts after hitting a home run against the Atlanta Braves during the seventh inning at Truist Park. / Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

On Mets’ bats bringing the lumber 

The results of late have been better with 71 runs scored in their last 10 games. The club's .316 average, .386 OPS, and .573 slugging percentage (.959 OPS) in the last 15 days are all tops in MLB during that span. And that is more in line with what Stearns and the organization expected. 

“Throughout the entire season, we thought we had a good offensive team,” he said with a smile. “We’ve talked a lot about the challenges earlier in the season in leverage spots and runners in scoring position, men on base. And some of that was maybe at times we were pressing a little bit, getting a little bit too aggressive.

“But a lot of that was misfortune. And some really unfortunate batted ball luck and that’s tough to stomach for all of us. That’s not a satisfactory answer for any of us. But we did try to focus on what we can actually control: Are we swinging at the pitches we should swing at? When we do, are we putting them in play in ways that we want to put them in play?”

Stearns added that for most, but not all, of the stretches when they were having trouble scoring runs, the club was sticking to that plan, but there were times “when we expand [the zone] too much, we were pressing.”

“But, especially early in the season when we were having offensive challenges, our approach was pretty good,” he said. “We weren’t getting the results, and sometimes that can steamroll on you. But it can also steamroll on you the other way now, and hopefully we get on that run.”

Why Mets went with Tong over Brandon Sproat

When Stearns spoke about potentially calling up some of the Mets’ top pitching prospects for their big league debuts down the stretch, Nolan McLean and Brandon Sproat were the two most likely candidates. After Jonah Tong was handed a surprise call-up to join McLean in Flushing, the question of why not Sproat was asked.

Despite Sproat doing a “tremendous job” at Triple-A and “probably had as good a second-half a season as any pitcher in minor league baseball,” Stearns said it was more to do with Tong’s domination and timing.

“We talked about Brandon a lot, and this was really just what Jonah has accomplished, plus the timing of this, lining up, keeping [Tong] on turn, on his normal rest progression, and taking the start on Friday,” he said. “But we think Brandon’s got a really bright future and we’re excited about it.”

What we learned as Justin Verlander bounces back in Giants' win over Cubs

What we learned as Justin Verlander bounces back in Giants' win over Cubs originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — MLB commissioner Rob Manfred made waves earlier this month when he mentioned the possibility of expansion teams leading to realignment. If it happens, the Giants might want to petition the league to join the NL Central.

After taking two of three from the first-place Milwaukee Brewers, they returned home and beat the Chicago Cubs 5-2. Both Central teams are headed for the MLB playoffs, but the Giants have had their number this season. Tuesday’s win moved them to 8-3 against the Brewers and Cubs. 

It also gave Justin Verlander his second win in orange and black and No. 264 for his career. Verlander did his part over six innings, and Matt Chapman provided a cushion with a two-run blast in the sixth. The homer was Chapman’s first in a month. 

Bouncing Back

Verlander didn’t hide his displeasure after last week’s loss at Petco Park. The defense let him down, but he also failed to limit the damage, allowing seven earned runs. 

On Tuesday, Verlander completed six innings for just the second time in the second half. He scattered seven hits and gave up two earned on two walks and five strikeouts. The first strikeout moved him past Walter Johnson on the all-time MLB list, and he’s now just 14 away from catching Giants Hall-of-Famer Gaylord Perry and moving into eighth all-time. Verlander would need 40 after that to catch Don Sutton, and it looks like he’ll take a shot at it this season. 

The 42-year-old threw 101 pitches on Tuesday night, reaching triple-digits for the third time in five August starts. He was still touching 95 mph in the fifth inning. 

Matos Mania

Verlander was in line for a win thanks to Luis Matos, who has taken off since getting an everyday role. He returned from Triple-A last Thursday and went 8-for-15 on the rest of the road trip with two homers, two doubles and a triple, and his hot streak continued back home. 

Matos thought he homered again in his first at-bat Tuesday, but his 381-foot drive was caught on the track in left-center. With the Giants trailing in the bottom of the fifth, he went the other way for a double off the bricks. Heliot Ramos brought him home with a two-out double and then scored the go-ahead run on Rafael Devers’ single.

The Path To 27 Outs

The final 31 games are an open audition of sorts for 2026 bullpen spots. Tyler Rogers and Camilo Doval are gone and Randy Rodriguez and Erik Miller both seem unlikely to pitch again this season because of elbow injuries. Rodriguez went on the IL on Tuesday with a right elbow sprain and likely will seek a second opinion as he figures out next steps.

Joey Lucchesi took the seventh and then retired lefty Pete Crow-Armstrong in the top of the eighth. He handed the baton to trade deadline acquisition Jose Butto, who breezed through the rest of the inning. 

Ryan Walker opened the season as the closer and returned to that role when Rodriguez’s elbow started barking. He worked around a one-out single in the ninth and picked up his 12th save. 

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What we learned as Justin Verlander bounces back in Giants' win over Cubs

What we learned as Justin Verlander bounces back in Giants' win over Cubs originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — MLB commissioner Rob Manfred made waves earlier this month when he mentioned the possibility of expansion teams leading to realignment. If it happens, the Giants might want to petition the league to join the NL Central.

After taking two of three from the first-place Milwaukee Brewers, they returned home and beat the Chicago Cubs 5-2. Both Central teams are headed for the MLB playoffs, but the Giants have had their number this season. Tuesday’s win moved them to 8-3 against the Brewers and Cubs. 

It also gave Justin Verlander his second win in orange and black and No. 264 for his career. Verlander did his part over six innings, and Matt Chapman provided a cushion with a two-run blast in the sixth. The homer was Chapman’s first in a month. 

Bouncing Back

Verlander didn’t hide his displeasure after last week’s loss at Petco Park. The defense let him down, but he also failed to limit the damage, allowing seven earned runs. 

On Tuesday, Verlander completed six innings for just the second time in the second half. He scattered seven hits and gave up two earned on two walks and five strikeouts. The first strikeout moved him past Walter Johnson on the all-time MLB list, and he’s now just 14 away from catching Giants Hall-of-Famer Gaylord Perry and moving into eighth all-time. Verlander would need 40 after that to catch Don Sutton, and it looks like he’ll take a shot at it this season. 

The 42-year-old threw 101 pitches on Tuesday night, reaching triple-digits for the third time in five August starts. He was still touching 95 mph in the fifth inning. 

Matos Mania

Verlander was in line for a win thanks to Luis Matos, who has taken off since getting an everyday role. He returned from Triple-A last Thursday and went 8-for-15 on the rest of the road trip with two homers, two doubles and a triple, and his hot streak continued back home. 

Matos thought he homered again in his first at-bat Tuesday, but his 381-foot drive was caught on the track in left-center. With the Giants trailing in the bottom of the fifth, he went the other way for a double off the bricks. Heliot Ramos brought him home with a two-out double and then scored the go-ahead run on Rafael Devers’ single.

The Path To 27 Outs

The final 31 games are an open audition of sorts for 2026 bullpen spots. Tyler Rogers and Camilo Doval are gone and Randy Rodriguez and Erik Miller both seem unlikely to pitch again this season because of elbow injuries. Rodriguez went on the IL on Tuesday with a right elbow sprain and likely will seek a second opinion as he figures out next steps.

Joey Lucchesi took the seventh and then retired lefty Pete Crow-Armstrong in the top of the eighth. He handed the baton to trade deadline acquisition Jose Butto, who breezed through the rest of the inning. 

Ryan Walker opened the season as the closer and returned to that role when Rodriguez’s elbow started barking. He worked around a one-out single in the ninth and picked up his 12th save. 

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Mets' David Stearns: Jonah Tong 'conquered everything we put in front of him'

David Stearns had to state the obvious in discussing the Mets’ decision to promote 22-year-old Jonah Tong for his MLB debut just two weeks after promoting him to Triple-A.

“This is fast, there’s no question, this is fast,” the Mets’ president of baseball operations said Tuesday. 

“He’s pushed us on this because of his performance,” Stearns continued. “We think he’s ready for this. We also acknowledged that this has gone faster than any of us would have anticipated at the start of this year.”

Across 22 minor league starts, Tong has pitched to a 1.43 ERA and 0.924 WHIP, surrendering just 20 runs (18 earned) on 58 hits and 47 walks over 113.2 innings while striking out 179 batters. A 14.2 strikeout per nine-inning rate. Now, he is expected to make his next start Friday night in Queens against the Miami Marlins.

And it speaks to how highly the Mets organization thinks of the young right-hander that the rationale is just this: In a tight wild card race, you need to have your best players on the roster at the business end of the season.

“As you roll into the last month of the season, you want to have the best roster you possibly can,” Stearns said. “And we think Jonah has the chance to be among that. He’s earned the opportunity. And so we’re gonna give him the start and look forward to seeing how it goes.”

In his two outings with Syracuse, he tallied 39 whiffs on 91 swings (43 percent) with a 39 percent called strike-whiff rate.

So how did the Mets end up here, with Tong going from pitching in the MLB Futures Game while at Double-A to getting promoted twice in the span of 45 days?

“Combination of where a player is development-wise and then opportunity,” Stearns said. "And this went fast for Jonah. But to his credit, he really conquered everything we put in front of him. He exceeded our expectations throughout this year, and he put himself in a position where he deserved to be considered for a day like this.”

On the first part, the development of the right-hander’s stuff this season has been something that has left the team pleasantly surprised and quite excited.

“He’s obviously got the fastball that plays, and that’s been his calling card throughout his time in the minor leagues,” Stearns said of the heater, which averages around 96 mph and touched 98 mph at Triple-A. “What’s impressed us the most is the speed with which he’s expanded his arsenal in a really effective way. He’s added a changeup this year that’s been really good.

“And we’ve seen outings that have shown tremendous maturity on the mound where something’s not working and he’s able to switch an approach, go to the slider more, throw a few more curveballs. And allow himself to get through outings really successfully even if he’s not following the exact plan that he thought he was gonna follow when he went into the game.”

Stearns pointed to Tong’s two Triple-A outings in which he's pitched 11.2 scoreless innings, allowing eight hits and three walks with 17 strikeouts. “He’s had success in two straight starts in different ways, and that’s encouraging to see,” he said.

But in order to get that chance, opportunity must knock. And Stearns first laid out the possibility of giving some of the club’s top minor league arm talent opportunities down the stretch after the All-Star break, but it was seen thatNolan McLean and Brandon Sporat were the most likely candidates, as both had Triple-A experience and were seen as closer to being big league ready. McLean, who was called up on August 16 for his MLB debut, has made two fine starts and seems to have found himself as the Mets’ fifth starter. With New York looking for a sixth man, which should be a boost for Kodai Senga and Clay Holmes, coupled with Tong’s domination at Syracuse, the decision seemed to be made for them.

“Then ultimately, as we got into planning this week and planning the next series out, it lined up well for him,” Stearns said. “He’s gonna be on normal term, he’s throwing the ball well in two starts in Triple-A, and we’re comfortable giving him the ball.”

And, like with McLean, the Mets are going to go “turn by turn” with the rotation for the time being. 

“It’s gonna be a combination of what the matchups are, who we think matchup well, how are guys are throwing, who we think needs rest, who doesn’t need rest,” Stearns said. “I think in September, we try not to plan too far ahead.”

BTS singer V surprises broadcasters at Dodger Stadium by being athletic

Los Angeles, CA - August 25: BTS's V throws the 1st pitch at the game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on Monday, Aug. 25, 2025 in Los Angeles, CA. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)
BTS member V — real name Kim Taehyung — throws the ceremonial first pitch Monday in Chavez Ravine. Unseen here? He got to play the fan for once, cozying up with Dodgers pitchers. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

V from BTS got to be the devoted fanboy for once Monday night at Dodger Stadium, where he was lucky enough to share an embrace with Shohei Ohtani and give a deep bow on the field to Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

The K-pop heartthrob posed for photos in the dugout with three-time MVP Ohtani, who returned to the mound this season in addition to continuing as the Dodgers' designated hitter, and more pics on the field with pitching ace Yamamoto, who helped the team beat the Padres in San Diego on Sunday. Dude even spent a few minutes chatting up the legendary Clayton Kershaw.

Read more:BTS plots comeback with new album and tour in 2026

Seems V — real name Kim Taehyung — might be a fan of pitching in general?

That's a good thing, if true, because the K-pop star was at Chavez Ravine to deliver the ceremonial first pitch before the Dodgers shut out the Cincinnati Reds 7-0. BTS fans were definitely there in the crowd to support him.

The seven members of BTS — Jin, Suga, J-Hope, RM, Jimin, Jung Kook and V — surfaced on social media in July after a long hiatus to announce that a new album would be coming in spring 2026, now that they all completed their mandatory 18-month South Korean military service.

Announcer Todd Leitz referenced the band's "highly anticipated" reunion over the stadium PA system Monday. "NO more waiting now, V. The mound is yours!" he said.

Read more:K-pop superstars BTS were on hiatus in 2023. It may have been their most interesting year yet

Taking the mound, V delivered a strike to Yamamoto, who was crouched down as the honorary catcher. The pop star earned a "wow, what a pitch" from Leitz and screams from the fans in the stands.

"He's been on the field for 30 minutes. We finally hit the crescendo with the first pitch tonight for V from BTS," a voice is heard saying in a video chronicling the moment.

"Yeah, and he dotted up a strike, man," another voice adds. "Good for him. He's been out here practicing every 13 seconds. We got the crowd going nuts, we don't know why. He's over there playing catch, throwing halfway down the left field line. And you put the guy on the mound, turns into a pretty good strike thrower."

After the pitch, V also got to speak the five legendary words that open every home game for the boys in blue: "It's time for Dodger baseball."

Read more:BTS' Suga offers fans 'deep apologies' for driving electric scooter while intoxicated

“Starting in July, all seven of us will begin working closely together on new music," the band said in a statement July 1. "Since it will be a group album, it will reflect each member’s thoughts and ideas. We’re approaching the album with the same mindset we had when we first started.”

BTS last released an album, "Proof," in June 2022 and performed live together later that year in their home country. Each member has released solo material since then, including Jung Kook’s song “Seven,” which topped the Billboard Hot 100 in 2023, and RM’s “Right Place, Wrong Person,” which reached No. 5 on Billboard’s album chart last year.

Times pop music critic Mikael Wood contributed to this report.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets promoting top pitching prospect Jonah Tong to make big league debut on Friday

The Mets are promoting top pitching prospect Jonah Tong.

Tong will make his major league debut on Friday when he starts against the Miami Marlins at Citi Field, according to manager Carlos Mendoza.

"I think it’s all about him dominating the minor leagues," Mendoza said on Tuesday afternoon. "You could make a case, alright it’s Double-A, you want to give him a better look at the Triple-A level, but, man, a couple of outings and I think it’s hard to keep him there. So, here he is now. We knew we were going to need a sixth starter, and he put himself in the conversation and here he is now. He’s going to get an opportunity for us."

He added: "It's an exciting time for the organization."

Tong, 22, has had a meteoric rise through the Mets system, and he's been almost unhittable at every step along the way.

"There's too much to like and we gotta give the kid an opportunity," the skipper said. "With only two outings at the Triple-A level, but we feel like he's ready to come up here and help us win a baseball game."

Originally a seventh-round draft pick in 2022, Tong began this season with Double-A Binghamton, overpowering hitters to the tune of a 1.59 ERA and 162 strikeouts in 202 starts. 

Tong was promoted to Triple-A Syracuse earlier this month, tossing 11.2 scoreless innings with 17 strikeouts in two appearances. 

The No. 2 overall prospect in the Mets' system and their top pitching prospect according to SNY contributor Joe DeMayo, Tong spoke with SNY's Danny Abriano in June, discussing his evolving pitching arsenal and saying that he hadn't yet thought about what it would be like to take the mound at Citi Field.

"It’s always nice to dream," he said. "It’s always nice to imagine yourself out there. I’m trying to live up to just being where my feet are. I’ll let everybody else get excited about that. For me, I’m just really focused on one day at a time. I know eventually I’ll get into that position, but don’t know the timetable. So I’m just gonna take each day as it is."

On Friday, Tong's dream will become reality. 

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Mark Vientos, Parker Messick, and Ian Seymour

We are officially in the fantasy baseball championship push.

Whether you’re trying to hold onto a top spot, pushing the leader, desperately trying to play catch up, or positioning yourself for playoff matchups, reinforcements and upside are vital this time of year.

Most waiver wires have been picked over though and it’s difficult to find impact players readily available in most leagues at this point in the season.

Fear not, because there are still a handful of available players that have the chance to be difference makers that help push us towards glory.

Here are three players that are under 40% rostered on Yahoo leagues that you should strongly consider adding.

If you want a larger list, Eric Samulski wrote his extended waiver wire piece on Sunday.

Mark Vientos, 3B Mets

(64% Rostered on Yahoo)

Breaking the 40% rule here with Vientos because he’s had such a turbulent and chaotic season that warrants attention since he may have finally gotten back on track.

He broke out in a huge way last year with 27 home runs in 111 games after taking over as the Mets’ full-time third baseman in May. He carried his strong play into the playoffs where he hit five home runs and drove in 14 runs in 13 games. Bottom line, he was one of the most impactful players on a team that reached the Championship Series.

When this year began, he was the starting third baseman and a mainstay in the heart of the order. It took about two months of being a below average hitter and poor defender to finally cede playing time before a hamstring injury in June knocked him out for three weeks.

When he came back, playing time was sporadic and there was a stretch earlier this month where he started just two out of eight games. His name came up in trade rumors too as he looked well behind both Brett Baty and Ronny Mauricio in the pecking order.

Things have finally turned around though. Vientos has started in eight straight games and has a 1.429 OPS over that span with five home runs and 13 RBI. Even stretching back to his last 30 games, he has a .304 average, .893 OPS, and 17 extra-base hits.

There’s plenty of statistical signal that his turnaround could be real too. Take this home run he hit last Tuesday against the Nationals.

At the time, it was his hardest hit pulled fly ball of the season at 106.0 mph. Since then, he’s hit two harder and all four of his hardest hit pulled fly balls have come in the past week.

In turn, he’s also had three of his four fastest swings on pulled fly balls in the past week. His overall bat speed is trending up too.

Month
Bat Speed
Mar/Apr
70.3 mph
May
70.9 mph
June
72.6 mph
July
71.4 mph
August
71.8 mph

That spike in June only came with 31 total swings because of the time he missed with his hamstring strain. So, seeing him sustain two months now right up near the 71.8 mph he averaged last season is great news.

Being back to playing every day, producing, and better accessing the raw power that made him seem like a rising star last season is enough to take a flier down the stretch if you need help at third base or corner infield.

Parker Messick, SP Guardians

(15% rostered on Yahoo)

Messick was called up by the Guardians last week and had an excellent debut where he allowed one run and scattered seven hits over 6 2/3 innings against the Diamondbacks with six strikeouts.

While that’s a great start, Messick has received very little attention for it.

He’s not a heralded prospect and did not receive much top-100 consideration on most major lists. Physically, he doesn’t particularly stand out either as a shorter, stockier, left-handed pitcher. His repertoire is a bit mundane too with a fastball that sits around 93 mph and a slew of secondary options off it.

Yet, one of those secondaries is a changeup that could set him apart. It forced four of the eight swings-and-misses he induced overall and got this nod of approval from veteran Lourdes Gurriel Jr.

As a lefty, that changeup can take Messick a long way. It’s a plus pitch movement wise with more drop and arm-side run than the league average and graded out as his only standout pitch by Stuff+ with a 107. No other pitch was over 100.

That’s supported by a 45.6 whiff rate in the minors this season and future 70-grade on the 20-to-80 scouting scale via FanGraphs. By all accounts and measures, this changeup is legit.

Apart from that, a wide repertoire with a four-seam fastball, sinker, curveball, and slider gives him plenty of options against hitters from each side of the plate. He also has great overall command and average velocity compared to other lefties. With an out-pitch to tie that all together, it wouldn’t be surprising to see him find success.

Lastly, we must pay close attention to upcoming schedules for pitchers this time of year.

If Messick stays on schedule and pitches every five games after his start tonight against the Rays, he’ll have the Red Sox and Rays on the road followed by Royals, Tigers, Twins, and Rangers to close out the season. That’s a fairly soft landing for a pitcher that needs more attention.

Ian Seymour, SP Rays

(4% Rostered on Yahoo)

Another lefty pitcher in what’s sneakily become the year of the lefty, Seymour was outstanding on Monday in his first start as a big leaguer. He shut the Guardians out over five innings with eight strikeouts and only allowed two base runners.

The Guardians simply could not square him up. They had just three hard-hit balls, saw only two three-ball counts, and hit one line drive among their eight total balls in play. There was almost no moment where Seymour left himself susceptible to damage.

Yet, similar to Messick, Seymour does not have standout stuff. He doesn’t even have a dominant pitch, like Messick’s changeup.

Rather, he’s incredibly solid across the board with an acceptable fastball, cutter, sweeper, changeup, and command. FanGraphs rated each right around or slightly better than average.

Screenshot 2025-08-26 at 2.49.17 PM.png

With so many tools, Seymour did a great job of mixing up his locations in that start against the Guardians and changing their eye levels with fastballs and cutters high offset by changeups low.

Those are cool points of pitch-ability that can help someone like Seymour carve out his spot in the league.

Funny enough, he was overlooked all season even with a 2.62 ERA and 29.2% strikeout rate through 86 innings at Triple-A.

Partially, that’s because the Rays had the most stable and consistent starting rotation through the first half, only needing six different starters to get through their first 100 or so games.

Also, because Joe Boyle was the first alternate and is the anti-Seymour with his 100 mph fastball, wipeout slider, and horrific command despite having similarly excellent results at Triple-A. Now, Boyle is back down there and Seymour is with the Rays with what looks like a stable rotation spot.

Lastly, his upcoming schedule is fantastic. He’s facing the Nationals this Sunday followed by the Guardians again, White Sox and Blue Jays through the middle of September. That’s good enough with his profile to grab him if you need pitching help.