Shea Langeliers' 11-homer August rewarded with AL Player of the Month honor

Shea Langeliers' 11-homer August rewarded with AL Player of the Month honor originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Athletics continue to collect monthly MLB honors.

Catcher Shea Langeliers was named AL Player of the Month for August, the league announced Wednesday.

The Athletics now have won back-to-back AL Player of the Month honors, with rookie first baseman Nick Kurtz capturing the award in July.

Langeliers took home the latest honor by slashing .284/.307/.661 with 31 hits, eight doubles, 11 homers and 22 RBI in 25 August games.

The highlight of Langeliers’ banner month came on Aug. 5, when he went 5-for-6 with a double and three solo homers in a 16-7 win over the Washington Nationals.

In addition to the two AL Player of the Month awards, the Athletics also have three AL Rookie of the Month honors this season (shortstop Jacob Wilson in May and Kurtz in June and July).

Amid all the off-the-field turmoil surrounding the Athletics, Langeliers has been a steady force, as he leads the team with 29 homers entering Wednesday’s game in St. Louis.

The Athletics are building a young core around Kurtz, Wilson and outfielders Lawrence Butler and Tyler Soderstrom. But Langeliers’ first-career AL Player of the Month honor shows that he’s still an important part of what the A’s are trying to accomplish.

Umpire explains Matt Chapman, Willy Adames ejections after Giants-Rockies brawl

Umpire explains Matt Chapman, Willy Adames ejections after Giants-Rockies brawl originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants’ 7-4 win over the Colorado Rockies on Tuesday night at Coors Field produced lots of highlights and just as many questions.

Before most fans could get comfortable in their seats, Rafael Devers crushed a moonshot two-run homer. But Rockies starter Kyle Freeland took exception to the Giants star admiring his work, leading to a benches-clearing brawl.

In the aftermath, Freeland was ejected, along with Giants third baseman Matt Chapman and shortstop Willy Adames, for their actions in the kerfuffle.

Devers wasn’t ejected and after a lengthy delay as the umpires discussed the situation, he was allowed to complete his home run trot.

After the game, The Athletic’s Andrew Baggarly served as the pool reporter and spoke to umpire Dan Bellino about the incident.

Editor’s note: The following transcript has been edited for brevity and clarity:

Baggarly: “Can you just run through the reasons for each player’s being ejected?”

Bellino: “Well, the pitcher was removed after his actions in the bench-clearing. Obviously, his reaction was, you know, he was an instigator, same with Chapman. He was an instigator, and Adames, while initially he was not one of the instigators, he prolonged the bench-clearing situation by instigating a second melee.”

Baggarly: “And with Chapman specifically, was it the shove counted as the instigation?

Bellino: “I would say just his actions in general, it was overly aggressive.”

Baggarly: “Just out of curiosity, are you working in concert with the video replay room?”

Bellino: “No.”

Baggarly: “It’s what you guys see on the field?”

Bellino: “Yes. That is something we are actually not allowed to go to replay review to assist in bench-clearing situations. I think that’s through the players’ association. That’s something that the players’ association, they do not want us to have the replay review make those decisions. It has to be the [on-field] umpires.”

Baggarly: “And we’re warnings issued?”

Bellino: “Yes.”

Baggarly: “Devers, did he leave the base path or was there any reasoning or any way that there was a thought that maybe he could have been called out for leaving the base paths?”

Bellino: “It’s an interesting rule. It’s one of those that you don’t see hardly ever. We discussed it, but ultimately, because it was a dead-ball situation, we did not deem it to be an abandoning or anything like that.”

Baggarly: “And then, if [Devers] had been ejected, or if his actions had warranted an ejection at that point, would a pinch-runner have had to enter for him to complete his home run trot or what would have happened?”

Bellino: “No. Yeah, we wouldn’t do that.”

Baggarly: “Would he have been credited with a home run still?”

Bellino: “I believe, yes.”

The Giants now will await word from MLB if Chapman or Adames face further discipline for their actions.

Manager Bob Melvin would prefer the league take a lenient approach to the situation, considering the Giants are fighting for an NL wild-card spot.

“I hope MLB understands,” Melvin told reporters after the game. “Hopefully this isn’t significant for these two guys.”

Devers has homered in the first two games of the series in Denver and three consecutive contests overall, and after Tuesday’s incident, it’s a safe bet that if he goes deep in Wednesday’s series finale, he won’t be shy about taking his time rounding the bases.

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Mets considering options for Kodai Senga, including a minor league stint: report

The Mets have a decision to make when it comes to Kodai Senga. 

Do you have Senga make his next start -- slated for Sunday against the Reds in Cincinnati -- or skip him or do something more drastic? It seems all options are on the table as a new report from The Athletic's Will Sammon states the Mets are considering a few possibilities, "including potentially asking him to accept an optional minor league assignment" -- according to people familiar with the Mets' thinking. 

Per Senga's contract, he would have to consent to an option.

But is a minor league option out of the realm of possibility? It was once when Senga was regarded as the team's best pitcher after pitching to an All-Star selection and becoming the runner-up for the NL Rookie of the Year award in 2023. Even this year, the right-hander pitched to a 1.47 ERA before his injury put him on the shelf for a month. But since returning in mid-July, Senga has struggled. He's posted a 6.56 ERA across 35.2 innings since the return, which includes his last outing in which he allowed five runs in 4.2 innings against the Marlins on Sunday.

That performance prompted manager Carlos Mendozato hint at changing the rotation to help Senga. Another possibility for Senga is pushing his turn in the order altogether.

The Post's Mike Puma reported Tuesday that the Mets are "leaning" on having Nolan McLean pitch the series finale Sunday on normal rest after David Peterson and Jonah Tong pitch Friday and Saturday.

McLean has taken the Mets by storm, winning his first four starts with a 1.37 ERA, including Tuesday against the AL-best Detroit Tigers. Clay Holmes is slotted to pitch Wednesday's series finale, and the off day on Thursday allows the Mets to give McLean that start on Sunday. 

But simply skipping Senga's turn is a temporary solution. The Mets need Senga and Sean Manaea -- another struggling starter -- back to form to make a playoff run, but time could be running out to do so.

“They are until they’re not," Mendoza said of Senga and Manaea's place in the rotation ahead of Tuesday's game. "We haven't made any decisions yet, we’re still having discussions. We’re going to be flexible and we gonna take advantage of off days and continue to have discussions. But as of right now, we haven’t made any decisions yet.”

Shohei Ohtani hits 100th home run with Dodgers as Los Angeles stumbles late in 9-7 loss to Pirates

PITTSBURGH — Tommy Pham and Jared Triolo each drove in two runs, and the Pirates spoiled a big night by Shohei Ohtani to beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 9-7 on Tuesday night.

Ohtani hit his 100th home run with the Los Angeles Dodgers and had a pair of doubles.

Ohtani hit a solo shot off top prospect Bubba Chandler (2-0) for his 46th homer this season. Playing his 294th game with the Dodgers, he became the fastest to reach 100 home runs in team history ahead of Gary Sheffield (399).

Teoscar Hernández then hit a two-out RBI single and Andy Pages led off the next inning with his 24th homer, tying it 4-all.

Henry Davis put the Pirates back ahead on an RBI single off Edgardo Henriquez (0-1) in the sixth. Triolo added a two-out, two-run double.

Chandler gave up three runs on six hits in four innings of relief. The 22-year-old has two wins and a save in his first three major-league appearances.

Dennis Santana walked Miguel Rojas and allowed Ohtani's second double to start the ninth before retiring the next three batters for his 12th save.

Clayton Kershaw yielded four runs, four hits and a pair of walks in the first inning. He recovered to last five innings, denying the Pirates of another hit while allowing two walks over the final four.

Triolo walked with two outs in the eighth and stole second. Nick Gonzales then sent a soft, looping ball into center where Pages came just short of making a sliding catch. Triolo scored an insurance run, putting the Pirates up three with the top of the Dodgers order coming in the ninth.

Ohtani took 444 games to hit 100 home runs with the Los Angeles Angels.

Ohtani (1-1, 4.18 ERA) will take the mound Wednesday opposite Pirates rookie Braxton Ashcraft (4-2, 2.58).

Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh hits his 51st homer and closes in on more records

TAMPA, Fla. — Cal Raleigh hit his 51st homer Tuesday night, extending his major league record for home runs by a catcher and drawing closer to Mickey Mantle for the most by a switch-hitter.

The Seattle Mariners star went deep in the fourth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Steinbrenner Field.

It was Raleigh's 41st homer while playing behind the plate, tying Todd Hundley (1996) for the second most in a season. That record is 42 by Javy López in 2003.

Raleigh had already bested Salvador Perez for the most homers by a player whose primary position is catcher. Perez hit 48 in 2021.

Mantle set the mark for homers by a switch-hitter with 54 in 1961. Raleigh is also within five of Ken Griffey Jr.'s Mariners record of 56 homers in a season, set in 1997 and '98.

The 371-foot shot to right field was his first home run in a week. Raleigh leads the majors in homers by two over Philadelphia's Kyle Schwarber.

Confident Mets bats stay hot by 'doing damage when we have to'

After a tremendous August saw the Mets post one of their best offensive months in franchise history, they arrived in Detroit and stung the AL Central-leading Tigers for 22 runs on 25 hits and nine walks in the first 18 innings of September.

“It’s just a lot of guys playing with confidence now, trusting each other,” manager Carlos Mendoza said about his team after they pounded out 12 runs on 17 hits, including four long balls in Tuesday’s convincing win.

The skipper has often spoken about being a tough lineup one through nine, and he got it all with a pair of solo home runs from Pete Alonso, one from Juan Soto, and three hits from Brandon Nimmo at the top of the order while also getting three hits from Brett Baty out of the nine-hole and two from Luis Torrens in the eight spot, including a three-run shot the blew the game wide open in the fourth.

“Torrens getting the huge three-run homer with two outs, Baty having a really good night again, guys getting on base, Jeff [McNeil] another good night,” he said, noting McNeil added three hits and three batted in. “It’s a pretty good lineup. Guys controlling the strike zone and then doing damage when we have to.”

In the last 30 days, the Mets lead MLB in every slash line category, .292/.366/.525 with an .891 OPS, while socking 55 home runs and 179 RBI. They've also done the little things, including stealing 35 bags, with four of them coming on Tuesday, including a first career steal by Torrens.

“I’m glad they’re on my team,” Mets starter Nolan McLean said after delivering six innings of two-run ball. “It’s a lot of fun to watch. It’s nine really tough outs for the opposing pitcher every time we go out there.”

Soto, who walked and singled in addition to his seventh-inning 408-foot blast, has homered five times in the last five games and has 37 on the year with 91 RBI to go along with his .923 OPS. (So much for concerns about a down year.) And Alonso, with his two homers, now has 33 on the season with 112 RBI, and raised his OPS to .867 for the season.

“I think we’re doing a really good job of capitalizing on pitches in the zone,” Alonso said. “I think we’re recognizing hanging breaking balls really well, I think we’re doing damage on heaters really well, I think we’re doing a really good job of letting those borderline pitches go and making pitchers pay when they come over the heart of the dish.”

Alonso did just that when he whalloped a 3-0 fastball from Tigers starter Sawyer Gipson-Long for a majestic, 435-foot blast to centerfield with two down in the top of the first inning.

“Just saw a 3-0 heater right over the middle of the plate,” he said. “Saw it in my area and let it fly.”

Mets' Nolan McLean impresses with maturity, adjustments showing 'flair of a superstar'

Nolan McLean had a lead before he threw a pitch in the fourth start of his big league career on Tuesday night in Detroit. But the Mets’ young right-hander gave that lead right back before he escaped the bottom of the first, allowing two runs on two hits and two walks. 

In a worrying sign, it was quite noticeable that McLean didn’t appear to have any feel on two of his three most-used pitches, the sweeper and curveball. In the 24-pitch frame, he threw 11 sweepers with only two going for strikes and spun four curves, resulting in two balls and an RBI single.

That’s when the youngster made the adjustment that ended up powering him to a fourth win in as many big league starts.

“So we started to attack with some harder velo pitches,” Mclean said. After the first, he threw just five sweepers over the next three innings, compared to 10 fastballs, seven changeups, and two cutters. The result? McLean surrendered a walk and a single in the second but closed the day by retiring the last 14 straight Tigers he faced, including six strikeouts. 

Manager Carlos Mendoza said that the battle from the 24-year-old “shows a lot of maturity.” 

“That’s what you call pitching, understanding that you have to make adjustments and find a way to get through five, six innings,” the skipper said. “I thought he attacked, and then once we got the lead, he continued to stay on the attack. He went to the sinker when he needed to, the changeup when he needed to, and then continued to mix in some of those sweepers and the curveball.”

Luis Torrens, who caught McLean for the first time in the game and added a three-run home run to give the starter a four-run cushion in the fourth, called the pitcher’s performance “excellent.”

“He still surprises me to see what he’s been able to do,” Torrens said, speaking through an interpreter. “The adjustments that he’s been able to make, he’s just been excellent since he’s been up here.”

For Pete Alonso, the rookie’s performances have come as no surprise because of the work he is doing off the field between starts, adding that McLean’s “commitment to his process” has been the most impressive aspect.

“What he’s doing on the field is great and awesome and is helping us win, but I am really thoroughly impressed with his day-to-day process, like the stuff that no one really sees on day one, two, three, and four between starts,” Alonso, who socked two homers in the win, said. “I know everyone is gonna be talking about all the great stuff that he’s doing on the field, which is for sure warranted, but how he’s going about his business, the day-to-day, is super impressive. And that’s the reason why he’s able to do what he’s been able to do on the field.

“Huge huge kudos [for] that. He’s been a pro since he’s come up, and, for me, seeing him go about his business, there’s no shock at all about why he’s finding success.”

After allowing just four runs through his first 26.1 innings of his MLB career, his teammates are excited about the future.

“When he throws the rock, he’s got poise, he’s got grit, obviously the stuff to match that. Really impressed so far with his first few starts,” Alonso said.

“It’s the attitude that he has when he’s on that mound,” Torrens added. “He’s always out there trying to compete. He has that attitude and that flair of a superstar.”

On a night when he didn’t have his best stuff at first, McLean being able to dip into his full arsenal – Statcast had him throw six different pitches – it showed Mendoza that the youngster appears to have “a pretty good feel and idea of what he’s trying to do on the mound.”

“Before you know it, you look up and it’s six innings and he’s giving you a chance to win a baseball game,” the manager said. “Another really good sign for a kid that is making his fourth start at the big league level.”

McLean admitted that he started to “lose confidence” in his sweeper and curve because he wasn’t throwing it for strikes. But, once he “got in a groove” with the higher velo pitches went back and found the feel for his offspeed pitches and had them later in the game, getting a called third strike on both pitches in the fifth and sixth.

“Lotta times throwing fastballs gets me right back on track,” he said. “Once I am able to start locating my heater, I am able to kinda find that feel in my hand again to start manipulating other pitches.”

On the night, he threw just 56 of 90 pitches for strikes, but got 15 outs with eight whiffs on 34 swings (24 percent) and 22 called strikes for a 33 percent called strike-whiff rate.

“I was proud of the way I competed,” McLean said. “Obviously first inning didn’t go the way I wanted, but I had trust in my stuff. And I knew if I could find some pitches later in the game, I knew I was gonna be tough to hit.”

Trent Grisham's grand slam one of three Yankees homers in 7-1 win over Astros

The Yankees blasted three homers, capped by Trent Grisham's grand slam, as they took the series opener from the Astros, 7-1, on Tuesday night in Houston.

Here are the takeaways...

-Going up against tough lefty Framber Valdez, Jazz Chisholm Jr. went deep for a two-run shot to give the Yankees an early lead in the second. It's Jazz's 27th blast, just his third against a southpaw this season. It was also the infielder's 500th career hit. 

Jazz wasn't the only lefty to hit a homer off of Valdez on Tuesday. In the fifth, Valdez walked Paul Goldschmidt with one out and gave back-to-back singles to Cody Bellinger and Aaron Judge. Giancarlo Stanton struck out looking to set upGrisham. The outfielder launched a 358-foot blast over the Crawford Boxes to give the Yankees a 6-0 lead. Valdez would only pitch five innings. 

Jazz would add another homer off a southpaw, this time a solo shot, in the eighth.

-Max Fried was on the bump and did not allow a hit through the first few innings, but lost his control in the third. He walked the first batter and hit the next one, but a poor bunt from Jeremy Pena allowed Fried to get the force at third base. A force out at second on a Carlos Correa chopper followed before Fried got Jose Altuve to ground out to get out of the jam.

Fried allowed his first hit to lead the fifth, but bounced back to strike out the next three batters. The Astros would get a couple of hits in the sixth and push across a run on a Yainer Diaz fielder's choice, but that's all Fried would give up. In the seventh, Houston would get two runners on with no outs, but Salazar popped into the air on a bunt attempt. Fried slid to make the catch and then doubled up the runner on first. A groundout ended the frame as Fried got through seven innings, allowing just one run on four hits and three walks while striking out five batters. 

-Jose Caballero got the start at third base with the lefty on the mound, but the speedster's time won't be long. Caballero picked up a single in his first at-bat, but in his second time up, he was hit in the foot with a pitch. However, the home plate umpire correctly determined he swung. Caballero disagreed, and whatever he said upset Ramon De Jesus, who ejected him. 

He was replaced by Ryan McMahon

Game MVP: Trent Grisham

Fried was great, but the grand slam was a backbreaker and allowed Fried. This season with the bases loaded, Grisham is 4-for-9 with three home runs, two walks and 16 RBI. 

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees and Astros play the middle of their three-game set on Wednesday evening. First pitch is set for 8:10 p.m.

Will Warren (8-6, 4.30 ERA) will take the mound against Jason Alexander (4-1, 4.61 ERA).

'We've got to find ways to win.' Inconsistency haunts Dodgers again in loss to Pirates

Pittsburgh Pirates third baseman Cam Devanney, right, tags out Los Angeles Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani, center, to end a rundown between third and home during the seventh inning of a baseball game in Pittsburgh, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)
Shohei Ohtani is tagged out by Pirates third baseman Cam Devanney while caught in a rundown in the seventh inning. (Gene J. Puskar / Associated Press)

Now is the time, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts believes, for his team’s intensity to rise.

And if the external pressures of a tight National League West race, postseason seeding implications and a looming World Series title defense in October don’t do it, then maybe, he hopes, increased internal battles for playing time will.

For a while on Tuesday night, in a series opener against the perpetually rebuilding Pittsburgh Pirates, the Dodgers showed fight. Clayton Kershaw gave up four runs in an ugly first inning, but the lineup clawed its way back to even the score — thanks, in part, to a 120-mph rocket of a home run from Shohei Ohtani in the third, his 46th of the season and 100th as a Dodger and a tying solo blast from Andy Pages in the fourth.

Kershaw, meanwhile, settled down to get through five innings without any more damage, retiring 13 of his final 15 batters to put the Dodgers in position for a come-from-behind win.

Instead…

Read more:What's behind Clayton Kershaw's pitching revival in his 18th season? 'The bowl'

The bullpen faltered, with Edgardo Henriquez (who hadn’t given up a run in his first 12 outings this year) and Blake Treinen (who had finally started looking like himself again after an early-season elbow injury) combining for three runs conceded to break the tie in the sixth.

The lineup couldn’t overcome another big deficit, scoring twice in the seventh only for the Pirates to get the runs back in the next two innings.

And once more, the Dodgers fell to a team miles behind them in the standings, losing 9-7 at PNC Park to drop their 10th game out of the last 14 against opponents with losing records this season.

“There were different points in the game that we showed some life,” Roberts said. “And then, unfortunately, we just couldn't kind of put up that zero to build off of it."

Still, the Dodgers’ inability to beat bad teams has underscored a persistent issue with the club.

They’ve been inconsistent, struggling to stack clean performances or any semblance of an extended winning streak. They’ve at times lacked urgency, failing to pull away from the slumping Padres in the division or get back in position for a top-two NL playoff seed (which would give them an all-important first-round bye in the postseason).

For all their efforts to rally on Tuesday, they also saw each of their three outfielders fail to snag tough but catchable balls, an eighth-inning wild pitch by Anthony Banda led to one key insurance run and a general lack of execution cost them in other key spots (like when they managed only one run from a bases-loaded, no-out situation in the second).

“Obviously we didn’t play well. We all know that,” shortstop Mookie Betts said. “Don’t have to necessarily have a team come-to-Jesus [moment] about it. We’ve just got to find ways to win games. There’s no secret formula about it. It doesn’t matter if a team’s below .500 or above .500. Especially right now, we’ve got to find ways to win games. We’re not doing it.”

Still, neither a soft spot in the schedule nor the realities of the calendar has remedied that issue.

Thus, Roberts highlighted another potential solution in his pregame address — acknowledging that players who don’t step up their performance soon could see their playing time get cut as the roster returns to full health.

“We got some guys coming back, and guys are gonna get opportunities,” Roberts said. “As we get into September, where all these games certainly matter, you got to have guys that you trust."

On Monday, when MLB rosters expanded to 28 players, the Dodgers (78-60) activated two key pieces from the injured list: Infielder Hyeseong Kim, who had been out since late July with a shoulder injury; and reliever Michael Kopech, who had been limited to eight appearances this year because of arm troubles and a meniscus surgery in his knee.

Next homestand, more reinforcements could be on the way, with Max Muncy and Tommy Edman beginning rehab assignments with triple-A Oklahoma City this week.

Before long, the Dodgers' long-shorthanded depth chart could suddenly be crowded. And as a result, tough decisions could loom in left field, at second base and in the bullpen — forcing the issues for a number of players at various spots on the roster.

“I do think just kind of naturally it raises the level of performance and intensity,” Roberts said, pointing to veteran infielder Miguel Rojas as one example of someone who is “fighting for playing time” with recently improved play.

“I tip my cap to him,” Roberts said. “I’m expecting that from a lot of other guys as well.”

Read more:Dodgers Dugout: What to do about Tanner Scott?

Roberts said Edman will play mostly center fielder during his rehab stint, something he had been unable to do earlier this season while battling an ankle injury. Once he’s back, that means someone such as Michael Conforto (who went 0 for 3 with a walk Tuesday to dip to .189 on the season in batting average) could drop to the bench, leaving the corner outfield spots for Pages and Teoscar Hernández.

In the infield, Kim will likely figure in at second base (though could also kick out to left field, where he saw time during his own recent rehab assignment). That will create one more slice in an infield pie that is already being divvied between Rojas, Kiké Hernandez and Alex Freeland. Once Muncy is back at third, at-bats will be at even more of a premium.

The same situation could unfold in the bullpen, which will also get Alex Vesia and Brock Stewart back this month from their own injuries. That will raise the pressure on struggling offseason signings Tanner Scott and Kirby Yates to continue earning leverage opportunities.

How it all shakes out remains unclear.

But where there are more options, the Dodgers believe, better production — and intensity — will follow. To this point, nothing else seems to be consistently raising the team’s level of play.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Pete Alonso homers twice, Nolan McLean strikes out seven as Mets pound Tigers, 12-5

The Mets pounded the Tigers with four home runs, including two from Pete Alonso and a three-run shot by Luis Torrens, and Nolan McLean dealt six solid frames with seven strikeouts in a 12-5 win in Detroit on Tuesday night.

New York tallied 17 hits on the night, including three each by Brandon Nimmo, Jeff McNeil, and Brett Baty, with Juan Soto adding two of his own, one going for his fifth home run in his last five games.

McLean, who didn't have his stuff early, got it together and has allowed just four runs in his first 26.1 innings and became the first pitcher in the majors in 11 years to win each of their first four big league starts.

The win moved the Mets to 75-64, good for 5.5 games behind the idle Philadelphia Phillies in the division race and 5.0 games ahead of the Cincinnati Reds for the final NL Wild Card spot after they fell to the Toronto Blue Jays.

Here are the key takeaways...

-  Alonso put the Mets ahead with two outs in the top half of the first inning, pounding a solo home run 435 feet (112.5 mph off the bat) high and deep to center field. Alonso got a belt-high 3-0 fastball right over the plate from Tigers starter Sawyer Gipson-Long and just smoked it. Alonso followed with a fine play in the bottom of the first, taking away a leadoff double with a diving stop on a ball down the first base line.

- Gipson-Long, making just his seventh big league start of his career, shrugged off the homer to get the next seven straight Mets, picking up his second strikeout of the night and needing just 37 pitches to get through three. That came to an end when Soto worked his 114th walk of the season to start the fourth, before he stole his 27th base of the year. (He had 25 steals in his previous 472 games before joining New York.)

Nimmo cracked a one-out single, but the ball was hit so hard on a line toward the second baseman, Soto had to freeze and could only advance to third. After Mark Vientos worked a four-pitch walk, McNeil dumped an RBI single into right and Cedric Mullins gave the Mets a 3-2 lead with a sac fly in foul territory down the right field line. 

After falling behind in the count 0-2, Torrens delivered the big hit, poking an up-and-away fastball the other way off the fair pole for a three-run home run. It was the catcher’s 5th homer of the year, 353 feet, to right to give him 29 RBI.

Baty dumped a single and stole second, but he was left stranded when Francisco Lindor struck out swinging.

- Against the Tigers' bullpen, McNeil nailed the first pitch of the sixth into left, giving him three-straight two-hit games. With one out, Torrens bounced a ball to first, but Spencer Torkelson’s throw toward second pulled the shortstop off the bag, and after a Carlos Mendoza challenge, the Mets had two runners on and then activated the double steal to get two in scoring position with one out. But Baty tapped out to the pitcher and Lindor went down on strikes with a wild swing at a ball that wasn’t even close. The shortstop began the game hitless in four times up, 0-for-2 with RISP, with three left on base.

- The Mets tacked on more runs in the seventh off reliever Chris Paddack as Soto stayed red-hot, driving a down in the zone changeup 408 feet into the seats in right field. He now has 37 homers on the year (and fifth in the last five games) and 91 RBI. Not to be outdone, Alosnso took a changeup down in the zone and drove it 388 feet into left for his second homer of the night. He now has 33 homers and 112 RBI for the year.

Nimmo added his third single of the night in four at-bats, and he hit the ball hard each time he came up, smashing balls 112.2 mph, 110.3 mph, 109.8 mph, and 97 mph. Vientos lifted one to deep right and got a stroke of fortune when two Detroit outfielders failed to come up with the ball, and it went for a double. Vientos was lifted for the recently recalled LuisangelAcuña to pinch-run, and he came around to score on a two-run single to left from McNeil.

After Mullins grounded out for the first out, the hits continued: Torrens squared up a base hit, Baty added on an RBI single, Lindor drove in a run with a sac fly to center to make it a 10-run Mets lead, and Soto grounded a single before Paddack was mercifully lifted after allowing six runs on eight hits in the inning.

- After not issuing a walk in his last two outings, McLean issued back-to-back 3-2 walks with two down in the first inning, missing both times with his sweeper down in the zone. (The second walk came after he appeared to get squeezed on the 2-2 pitch to Riley Greene.) They came back down to haunt him as a 2-0 sinker up in the zone to Torkelson went for an RBI base hit to left. That brought pitching coach Jeremy Hefner out for a visit. Wenceel Pérez stayed on a McLean curveball down and smacked it to right to drive in another run, but was gunned down trying to advance to second on a good throw by Torrens to end the threat, but not before Detroit jumped ahead 2-1.

McLean issued another walk on a 3-2 pitch to start the second, missing down and away with a changeup, but he was erased trying to steal second with a perfect throw from Torrens. He allowed a one-out single before a pair of grounders to second saw him through two frames. 

And that is when McLean settled down with three straight 1-2-3 innings, getting one strikeout in the third, another in the fourth, and three in the fifth. Mclean made it 14 straight retired with another strikeout looking in the sixth

McLean likely could have kept going, but after his offense put together a 20-minute top of the seventh, his night was ended with a final line of two runs on three hits, three walks, and seven strikeouts in 6.0 innings on 90 pitches (56 strikes).

- Kevin Herget, added to the roster ahead of the game, got the call out of the bullpen and pitched two scoreless innings, but couldn't close things down in the ninth, allowing a flyout to the wall in right, a walk, back-to-back RBI doubles, and an RBI single to cut the lead to seven runs. 

Ryne Stanek allowed a single on the first pitch he threw, but got a fly out to center and one to left to end the game.

Game MVP: Luis Torrens

In addition to his three-run shot, which broke the game wide open, the backstop added a caught stealing, an assist on a putout at second, and in the sixth was the trail runner in the double steal, giving him his first stolen base of his big league career in his 401st game. He finished the game 2-for-5 with three RBI and two runs scored.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

The Mets and Tigers conclude the three-game set on Wednesday afternoon with a 1:10 p.m. first pitch on SNY.

Right-hander Clay Holmes (3.60 ERA, 1.314 WHIP with 111 strikeouts in 142.1 innings) gets the ball for the visitors in the matinee and will face a fellow righty in Casey Mize (3.95 ERA, 1.309 WHIP with 107 strikeouts in 120.2 innings).

Mets' Tylor Megill scuffles, Francisco Alvarez and Jose Siri pick up hits with Triple-A Syracuse

Tylor Megill was on his way to having another solid start for Triple-A, but could not finish the fifth on Tuesday night.

Pitching in his third start with Syracuse, Megill scattered base runners for the first three innings before a 1-2-3 fourth put the Mets' big right-hander in the driver's seat. However, the wheels would fall off in the fifth inning for Megill. With a 3-0 lead, Megill would allow a single and a double to lead off the inning as Buffalo scored their first run. After he walked, Syracuse pulled Megill from the game without him recording an out in the fifth. 

Alex Carrillo relieved Megill and allowed his two inherited runners to score. Megill allowed three runs on six hits, two walks, while striking out five batters across his four-plus innings (79 pitches/44 strikes). 

Tuesday's start was similar to his last start with Syracuse when he allowed three runs in four innings of work. After not allowing a run in his first three minor league starts (10 IP), Megill has now allowed six runs in eight innings. 

On the offensive side, the Mets had Francisco Alvarez and Jose Siri rehabbing with Syracuse on Tuesday. For Siri, it's his first rehab game with the Triple-A club, and he led off the game with a single. Siri would come around to score on a Ryan Clifford single. Siri, who started as Syracuse's DH, finished 1-for-5 with a run scored and four strikeouts. 

Alvarez caught all nine innings of Tuesday's 4-3 loss but also had a hit. The backstop hit a groundball single up the middle in the fifth inning and scored on a Carson Benge single. Alvarez finished 1-for-4 with a run scored and two strikeouts. 

As for the Mets' prospects, Jett Williams struck out three times in his 0-for-4 night, but walked and came around to score. Clifford went 2-for-3 with a walk and an RBI. Benge drove in two runs on one hit in three at-bats and struck out once.

The Mets roller coaster rolls on, starters go up and down, Juan Soto is on fire | The Mets Pod

On the latest episode of The Mets Pod presented by Tri-State Cadillac, Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo cover another crazy week for the Mets as the September stretch run begins. The guys start with a week of highs and lows, which included exciting performances from young hurlers Nolan McLean and Jonah Tong, and uninspiring performances from older hurlers Sean Manaea and Kodai Senga. Connor and Joe also discuss the red-hot Juan Soto, the idea of calling up pitching prospect Brandon Sproat, and also answer Mailbag questions about the rules surrounding September call-ups and the future of second base and center field.

Be sure to subscribe to The Mets Pod at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

Red-hot Giants continue cruising even after Willy Adames, Matt Chapman ejections

Red-hot Giants continue cruising even after Willy Adames, Matt Chapman ejections originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — When the Giants traded for Rafael Devers, one of the first things they did was eliminate the possibility of him playing third base again.

The focus was on learning first base, with the idea that in the offseason, or down the line at some point, the front office would figure out how to handle the Devers-Bryce Eldridge combination. Matt Chapman twice has gone on the IL since Devers joined the Giants, but there never has been any real talk of moving the new slugger back across the diamond. Instead, Casey Schmitt has been the fill in, with others taking grounders just in case. 

The staff figured it would take something completely unexpected to ever see Devers at the position he played for more than 900 games in Boston. On Tuesday, the unexpected arrived. 

Devers’ first-inning homer was followed by fireworks, and after the benches and bullpens cleared and everyone traded the usual round of shoves and shouts, Chapman and Willy Adames got ejected, along with Colorado Rockies starter Kyle Freeland. Without any more realistic options, manager Bob Melvin turned to Devers to play third. 

“He didn’t even have a glove. He used Chapman’s glove,” Melvin told reporters in Denver. “He didn’t even have his third baseman’s glove here and he played well over there.”

Devers looked like, well, someone who had played third base his entire career until this season. More importantly, the scramble drill did nothing to harm the defense or put extra stress on starter Logan Webb. In fact, it might have helped in a way.

Schmitt came off the bench to play second a day after taking a pitch off his elbow and hit a huge homer. Wilmer Flores hit one, too, and Patrick Bailey added an insurance blast when the Rockies crept within one. The Giants won 7-4, shaking hands on the mound for the ninth time in 10 games. 

It was there where everyone gathered in the first inning, and the teams had differing views on why it happened. 

Freeland told reporters at Coors Field that he found it “extremely disrespectful” that Devers watched his two-run blast in the first fly for a couple of extra beats. 

“Standing there watching it, taking your sweet time getting down to first base,” he said. “I’ve been in this league for quite some time — I know he has as well — I just found it extremely disrespectful and felt that I needed to let him know about that.”

Webb, who picked up his 13th win, indicated the Giants were not that surprised that Freeland popped off. 

“I’m surprised it hasn’t happened before with that guy,” he told reporters. “He just kind of runs his mouth a lot of times and Rafi got him good.”

The Devers blast was one of four by the Giants, tying a season-high. They all of a sudden are the hottest team in baseball, and even losing their two most valuable position players couldn’t slow them Tuesday. The win was the type that will be remembered for years to come if there’s a miracle over the final month and they reach the MLB playoffs, although because the New York Mets won earlier in the night, the Giants remained five back in the wild-card race. 

Regardless, they’re playing good, clean baseball — even when forced to play (sort of) out of position. 

“He made a really good decision on the double play — he was thinking about for a moment going home, figured out the speed of the runner and gets the double play,” Melvin said of Devers, his third baseman for the night. “He gets a ball right away [in the bottom of the first] at third base. For a guy that hasn’t played there in a year or whatever it’s been, he stepped up for us, for sure.”

Like the rest of the Giants, Melvin was left smiling. It was one of the more memorable wins of what has been an unexpectedly rocky year, and it got the Giants back above .500. Melvin did have one concern, though. 

Ejections generally come with suspensions, and the Giants have no margin for error right now. They were able to pound the Rockies without Adames and Chapman, but they don’t want to be missing either for a game or two down the stretch, especially against a more competitive opponent. 

“I hope MLB understands,” Melvin said. “Hopefully this isn’t significant for these two guys.”

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Mets Notes: Jesse Winker shut down; no decision yet on Sean Manaea, Kodai Senga rotation roles

Manager Carlos Mendoza hit on several topics facing the Mets ahead of Tuesday night’s game in Detroit against the Tigers.


Jesse Winker shut down

The Mets have shut down DH Jesse Winker from baseball activities, Mendoza announced.

Winker, who has been dealing with a back issue that landed him on the IL in early July, began a rehab assignment with Low-A St. Lucie last week. But that has been cut short.

“He’s back in New York, and he’s shut down from baseball activities. Continues to feel symptoms in the lower back,” the manager said. “He’s scheduled to see a doctor [Wednesday] and we’ll go from there.”

With under four weeks remaining, Mendoza added that they are “probably running out of time” to get the veteran bat back in the lineup before the season’s end.

“We gotta get him right. He plays a game or two, and he continues to feel discomfort. We have to make sure we’re not missing anything,” he said.

This injury has been a big blow for the Mets, who have appeared to be a left-handed bat light off the bench at times. 

“When we signed him, the role for him was to have that left-handed bat as a DH, occasionally in the outfield, and the pinch-hitting off the bench,” Mendoza said. “We miss that bat. Jared Young has gotten some opportunities; he’s back here on the roster. Guys will continue to step up and get opportunities. 

“At this point, it sucks for Wink, but we gotta get him right. We have to keep going here.”

Winker played just two games in July after he missed two months with an oblique strain before the back injury landed him on the shelf. He has played just 26 games this season, with 16 hits in 70 at-bats (.229) with five doubles, two triples, and a home run for a .709 OPS.

(Young was recalled from Triple-A Syracuse earlier on Tuesday after outfielder Tyrone Taylor was placed on the IL with a left hamstring strain.)

Rotation remains in flux

The Mets' rotation remains in flux, with Nolan McLean getting the ball on Tuesday and Clay Holmes in Wednesday’s series finale against the Tiges. But after that? The Mets are still having discussions about what to do, Mendoza said.

“Gotta get through this series first, off day on Thursday, ” the skipper said, adding that it could be David Peterson to get the start on Friday’s series opener in Cincinnati, and there is “a good chance” Jonah Tong starts on Saturday. “That’s what we got so far.”

Amid the recent struggles from Sean Manaea and Kodai Senga and whether they will remain in the rotation, Mendoza said, “They are until they’re not.”

“We haven't made any decisions yet, we’re still having discussions,” he continued. “We’re going to be flexible and we gonna take advantage of off days and continue to have discussions. But as of right now, we haven’t made any decisions yet.”

Jose Siri needs more game time

Despite Taylor landing on the IL, Mendoza said that doesn’t mean Jose Siri will be rushed during his rehab assignment from a broken bone in his leg sustained in early April.

“He’s gotta continue to play, we gotta continue to build him up and build up volume and get him used to playing back-to-back and full games and things like that,” the skipper said. “He’s gotta go through the progression and then we have a decision there.”

Siri appeared in three games with St. Lucie, collecting three hits in six at-bats, before he made the jump to Triple-A, where he is in the lineup as the DH on Tuesday night.

Yankees' Cody Bellinger named AL Player of the Week

Cody Bellinger was a huge force behind the Yankees’ recent seven-game winning streak, and on Tuesday, he was named American League Player of the Week.

In seven games from Aug. 25-31, Bellinger hit .444 (12-of-17) with a .778 slugging percentage, hitting two home runs, three doubles, and walking four times while driving in eight and scoring six runs.

Bellinger led all AL batters with 21 total bases and was tied for the league lead with eight RBI.

The versatile Bellinger has been a key piece of the Yankees lineup during his first season in the Bronx. In 127 games, the lefty has slashed .279/.333/.504 with 26 home runs, 83 RBI, and 75 runs scored, providing some serious protection while often hitting behind Aaron Judge in the lineup.

The Yankees, 2.5 games back of the Blue Jays for first place in the AL East and percentage points ahead of the Red Sox for the top Wild Card spot, begin a crucial 12-game stretch on Monday that includes series against Houston, Toronto, Detroit, and Boston.