Mets recall LHP Brandon Waddell, INF/OF Jared Young in series of roster moves

The Mets made a few moves ahead of Saturday's game against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

The team announced they have recalled LHP Brandon Waddell, and utilityman Jared Young from Triple-A Syracuse. In corresponding moves, they have designated outfielder Jose Azocar and LHP Genesis Cabrera for assignment.

With the 13-inning game on Friday night, Waddell's call-up comes at a time when the Mets need a lift after using every arm in the pen. Waddell had made one appearance earlier this season, pitching 4.1 scoreless innings against the Arizona Diamondbacks on April 30. It was the 30-year-old's first game in four years.

As for Young, he's batting seventh on Saturday in the DH spot. It'll be his first game in two years. With Mark Vientos and Brandon Nimmo day-to-day with separate ailments, the Mets could use the versatility that Young brings.

In Syracuse, Young was hitting .259 with five home runs across 22 games down in Triple-A.

Cabrera, 28, pitched two scoreless innings on Friday, allowing just one hit and striking out two. In six appearances this year with the Mets, he pitched to a 3.52 ERA and a 1.30 WHIP.

Azocar pinch-ran for Pete Alonso in extra innings on Friday but has had limited playing time with the Mets this season. He was 5-for-18 with a stolen base in 12 games.

Mets recall LHP Brandon Waddell, INF/OF Jared Young in series of roster moves

The Mets made a few moves ahead of Saturday's game against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

The team announced they have recalled LHP Brandon Waddell, and utilityman Jared Young from Triple-A Syracuse. In corresponding moves, they have designated outfielder Jose Azocar and LHP Genesis Cabrera for assignment.

With the 13-inning game on Friday night, Waddell's call-up comes at a time when the Mets need a lift after using every arm in the pen. Waddell had made one appearance earlier this season, pitching 4.1 scoreless innings against the Arizona Diamondbacks on April 30. It was the 30-year-old's first game in four years.

As for Young, he's batting seventh on Saturday in the DH spot. It'll be his first game in two years. With Mark Vientos and Brandon Nimmo day-to-day with separate ailments, the Mets could use the versatility that Young brings.

In Syracuse, Young was hitting .259 with five home runs across 22 games down in Triple-A.

Cabrera, 28, pitched two scoreless innings on Friday, allowing just one hit and striking out two. In six appearances this year with the Mets, he pitched to a 3.52 ERA and a 1.30 WHIP.

Azocar pinch-ran for Pete Alonso in extra innings on Friday but has had limited playing time with the Mets this season. He was 5-for-18 with a stolen base in 12 games.

Red Sox 3B Alex Bregman moves closer to possible IL stint, manager Alex Cora says

BOSTON — Red Sox third baseman Alex Bregman could be nearing a trip to the injured list after leaving Friday’s game with right quadriceps tightness, manager Alex Cora said.

“He’s getting an MRI. He’s sore,” Cora said at Fenway Park on Saturday morning before Boston was set to face the Baltimore Orioles in the first game of a split doubleheader.

“We’ll see where he’s at,” Cora said before later adding that Bregman said it felt “worse” than he expected.

When ask if a stint on the IL could be coming, Cora said: “I don’t want to jump into conclusions, but yes.”

If Bregman does need to go to the IL, who will play third?

Cora said the plan is for the team to “mix and match” and answered “no” when asked if Rafael Devers could be in the immediate plans.

“There’s a lot of guys in the conversation,” Cora said. “Roster construction comes into play, guys in the minor leagues, how they fit the roster — all that stuff.”

Could Devers be in the mix at some point?

“We made a decision in the offseason and this is where we’re going,” Cora said, without completely closing the door. “There are a few things that we took into consideration and I think we’ve been very consistent with it.

“I’m not going react to the outside world because (they) think that’s the right move. Maybe it’s not, right? Maybe we’re doing it right? Maybe we’re doing it wrong?”

Earlier this month, Devers told the Red Sox he wasn’t moving to play first base. The DH has been red-hot lately after collecting a career-best eight RBIs in a lopsided victory over the Orioles on Friday afternoon.

“I know the guy. He’s raking. He’s the best DH in the American League right now,” Cora said. “If he keeps continuing to do this, he’s going to be in the All-Star Game as the DH and going to win a Silver Slugger as a DH. This is where we’re going. We’ll continue to talk. I’m not going to say we’re going to close the door.”

Boston already lost a corner infielder for the season when first baseman Triston Casas ruptured a tendon in his left knee and had season-ending surgery. The loss of Bregman could be a big blow to a lineup that’s struggled, at times.

“We’ll be OK. Obviously, he’s a big part of our offense,” Cora said. “Triston is a big part of our offense. We’ve just got to find a way to score runs in a different way and we’re prepared for that.”

Devers, the team’s third baseman for eight seasons, was moved to DH after Bregman signed a three-year, $120 million deal as a free agent and was given the job. Following a slow start at the plate, Devers has heated up and is batting .299 with 12 homers and 47 RBIs.

Alex Bregman out with a significant quad strain as Red Sox call up top prospect Mayer

BOSTON — The Boston Red Sox are getting ready to be without one of their most productive hitters for an extended period of time.

Third baseman Alex Bregman will be out with what manager Alex Cora called a significant right quad strain. The big free agent addition for the Red Sox left their game Friday with tightness in the quad.

Turns out it’s a similar injury to his left quad strain in 2021, one that cost him 58 games.

“Very similar to ’21,” Cora said after the Red Sox beat the Baltimore Orioles 6-5 in 10 innings on Saturday.

Bregman agreed.

“Yeah, pretty severe right quad strain,” he said, speaking quietly in Boston’s clubhouse in the middle of a doubleheader. “Pretty similar to ‘21.

“But, it is what it is, and now I’ll try to take it day by day and approach rehab.”

Signed by the Red Sox as a free agent to a three-year, $120 million deal during the offseason, Bregman has been hitting .299 and has 11 homers and 35 RBIs.

To take his place on the roster, Boston promoted top infielder prospect Marcelo Mayer from Triple-A Worcester. It placed Bregman on the 10-day injured list.

“It feels good,” Mayer said before the doubleheader’s second game. “It’s something I worked for my whole life.”

Mayer, who was selected No. 4 overall in the 2021 amateur draft, is slated to make his major league debut at third — a position Cora says will be get a “mix and match” approach.

“There’s a lot of guys in the conversation,” he said. “Roster construction comes into play, guys in the minor leagues, how they fit the roster — all that stuff.”

Cora answered “no” when asked if Rafael Devers could be in the immediate plans, but he didn’t completely close the door.

“We made a decision in the offseason and this is where we’re going,” Cora said. “There are a few things that we took into consideration and I think we’ve been very consistent with it.

“I’m not going react to the outside world because (they) think that’s the right move. Maybe it’s not, right? Maybe we’re doing it right? Maybe we’re doing it wrong?”

Devers was the team’s third baseman for eight seasons and moved to designated hitter when Bregman was given the job. He told the Red Sox earlier this month he wasn’t moving to play first base, as he’s been red hot at the plate. Devers is batting .299 with 12 homers and 47 RBIs.

He collected a career-best eight RBIs in a lopsided victory over the Orioles on Friday.

“I know the guy. He’s raking. He’s the best DH in the American League right now,” Cora said. “If he keeps continuing to do this, he’s going to be in the All-Star Game as the DH and going to win a Silver Slugger as a DH. This is where we’re going. We’ll continue to talk. I’m not going to say we’re going to close the door.”

Boston already lost a corner infielder for the season when first baseman Triston Casas ruptured a tendon in his left knee and had season-ending surgery. The loss of Bregman could be a big blow to a lineup that’s struggled at times.

“We’ll be OK. Obviously, he’s a big part of our offense,” Cora said. “Triston is a big part of our offense. We’ve just got to find a way to score runs in a different way and we’re prepared for that.”

Giants explain motivational reason for jersey switch vs. Nationals

Giants explain motivational reason for jersey switch vs. Nationals originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants took the field in unorthodox fashion for Saturday’s game against the Washington Nationals in America’s capital.

San Francisco sported its black jerseys which typically are reserved for Saturday home games at Oracle Park.

So what was the reason for the Giants bypassing their usual gray road jerseys in favor of a fit normally worn by McCovey Cove? Team unity, according to the Giants.

While the jersey change didn’t produce optimal results on the field in Saturday’s 3-0 loss to the Nationals, don’t expect the Giants to abandon their new road threads any time soon.

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Harrison laments lone mistake in return to Giants' rotation vs. Nats

Harrison laments lone mistake in return to Giants' rotation vs. Nats originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

When Kyle Harrison missed out on the Giants’ final rotation spot in spring training earlier this year, the team remained confident there would be opportunities for him to start at the big league level in 2025.

With veteran pitcher Justin Verlander on the 15-day injured list, that chance came Saturday for Harrison against the Washington Nationals. The 23-year-old felt good about his outing in San Francisco’s 3-0 loss at Nationals Park, but he certainly wishes he could have one pitch back.

“Just proud of how I felt out there and how I responded,” Harrison told reporters after allowing five hits and two earned runs while striking out four in four innings against Washington. “… Just that one mistake [then] felt like I settled in a little bit. Can’t make those mistakes.”

Harrison toed the rubber for his first Giants start of the season after a mild pectoral strain sidelined Verlander earlier this week, and Saturday got off to a rocky start when the young southpaw surrendered a one-out double to Nationals third baseman Amed Rosario in the first inning followed by a James Wood homer that put San Francisco into a 2-0 hole.

“Especially early, I was really just strike-focused, attacking those guys, and ultimately that ended in me leaving a little pitches over the plate too much,” Harrison said. “After that inning, looked at the locations and just had to get off the plate a little more because they were willing to swing and chase. As soon as I tapped into that a little bit more, got a little better.”

Unfortunately for Harrison, who cruised through the next three innings and said he felt like he could have pitched the fifth, the Giants’ lineup couldn’t get anything going against Washington righty Jake Irvin. The Nationals starter allowed just three hits and struck out seven Giants over eight frames in his team’s shutout win.

The Giants recalled Harrison from Triple-A Sacramento earlier this month after he posted a 3.46 ERA and 38 strikeouts in 26 innings over six starts with the River Cats. Even after originally missing out on a roster spot this season despite his role in the Giants’ rotation last year, Harrison stayed the course and put in the work in the minor leagues, filling a bullpen role nicely for San Francisco upon his return.

Though Harrison was fully stretched in the minors, he hadn’t thrown more than 38 pitches in an appearance during his time back with San Francisco and was limited to just 57 on Saturday. He threw 43 of those for strikes, however, generating a game-high eight swings-and-misses while topping out at 96.3 mph with his four-seam fastball.

“I thought he threw good,” Giants manager Bob Melvin said of Harrison after the game. “It was just one pitch to Wood, hung a breaking ball. Other than that, [velocity] was up, he was pretty efficient, actually, for his pitch count. Got four innings in, so could move a little bit further along after that. But all in all, it just came down to one pitch.

“When you don’t score any runs, it is what it is.”

The Giants dropped to 30-22 after the loss and are 2.5 games behind the Dodgers for first place in the NL West, with Los Angeles set to face the New York Mets on Saturday afternoon. With Verlander slated to miss at least one more start, Harrison certainly will look to improve upon his first of the season his next time out.

“Felt good to have a day dedicated to me and go out there, went about my business, got to get in the routine again,” Harrison said. “Good to be back, for sure.”

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Mayer gets the call: Red Sox promote top infield prospect to majors

Mayer gets the call: Red Sox promote top infield prospect to majors originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The next phase of the Boston Red Sox’ youth movement has begun.

The Red Sox are promoting top infield prospect Marcelo Mayer to the big-league club, the team confirmed Saturday. ESPN’s Jeff Passan first reported Mayer’s call-up. Mayer is the No. 2 ranked prospect in the organization and the No. 8 prospect in the sport, per MLB Pipeline.

Boston selected Mayer with the No. 4 overall pick in the 2021 MLB Draft. The Southern California native was the consensus No. 1 prospect in his draft class, but he slid to the Red Sox after the Pittsburgh Pirates picked catcher Henry Davis, and the Texas Rangers and Detroit Tigers opted for pitchers Jack Leiter and Jackson Jobe, respectively.

The 22-year-old has lived up to his lofty expectations, shining both at the plate and in the infield throughout his four-plus minor-league seasons. Through 43 games this season at Triple-A Worcester, Mayer slashed .271/.347/.471 with nine homers and a league-leading 43 RBI.

Injuries have been Mayer’s only issue since joining the organization. His 2023 season was cut short due to a nagging shoulder injury, and his 2024 campaign ended prematurely because of a lumbar strain.

If Mayer can stay healthy, he’ll bring plenty of upside to the Red Sox lineup as a highly-touted rookie. It’s unclear at this point whether he’ll play second base, or if veteran Trevor Story will hand over the keys to shortstop. Either way, Boston could use infield help after third baseman Alex Bregman injured his right quad on Friday.

“I feel good. I feel solid,” Mayer told NBC Sports Boston on Friday about playing second base. “Obviously, I’ve played shortstop my whole life, with a little bit of third and second base. But as far as comfortability, I feel really good over there.”

Mayer could make his MLB debut later Saturday when the Red Sox play Game 2 of their doubleheader with the Baltimore Orioles at 6:35 ET.

Check out NBC Sports Boston’s full conversation with Mayer on Friday in Worcester about switching positions, his mindset prior to promotion and more:

Mayer gets the call: Red Sox promote top infield prospect to majors

Mayer gets the call: Red Sox promote top infield prospect to majors originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The next phase of the Boston Red Sox’ youth movement has begun.

The Red Sox are promoting top infield prospect Marcelo Mayer to the big-league club, the team confirmed Saturday. ESPN’s Jeff Passan first reported Mayer’s call-up. Mayer is the No. 2 ranked prospect in the organization and the No. 8 prospect in the sport, per MLB Pipeline.

Boston selected Mayer with the No. 4 overall pick in the 2021 MLB Draft. The Southern California native was the consensus No. 1 prospect in his draft class, but he slid to the Red Sox after the Pittsburgh Pirates picked catcher Henry Davis, and the Texas Rangers and Detroit Tigers opted for pitchers Jack Leiter and Jackson Jobe, respectively.

The 22-year-old has lived up to his lofty expectations, shining both at the plate and in the infield throughout his four-plus minor-league seasons. Through 43 games this season at Triple-A Worcester, Mayer slashed .271/.347/.471 with nine homers and a league-leading 43 RBI.

Injuries have been Mayer’s only issue since joining the organization. His 2023 season was cut short due to a nagging shoulder injury, and his 2024 campaign ended prematurely because of a lumbar strain.

If Mayer can stay healthy, he’ll bring plenty of upside to the Red Sox lineup as a highly-touted rookie. It’s unclear at this point whether he’ll play second base, or if veteran Trevor Story will hand over the keys to shortstop. Either way, Boston could use infield help after third baseman Alex Bregman injured his right quad on Friday.

“I feel good. I feel solid,” Mayer told NBC Sports Boston on Friday about playing second base. “Obviously, I’ve played shortstop my whole life, with a little bit of third and second base. But as far as comfortability, I feel really good over there.”

Mayer could make his MLB debut later Saturday when the Red Sox play Game 2 of their doubleheader with the Baltimore Orioles at 6:35 ET.

Check out NBC Sports Boston’s full conversation with Mayer on Friday in Worcester about switching positions, his mindset prior to promotion and more:

Pirates ace Paul Skenes on idea Pittsburgh should trade him: ‘Anybody can play GM’

PITTSBURGH — Paul Skenes didn’t hear Pittsburgh Pirates general manager Ben Cherington say that trading the reigning National League Rookie of the Year to give the last-place club an influx of much-needed position player talent is “ not at all part of the conversation.”

When someone relayed Cherington’s comments to him, the 22-year-old ace laughed.

“It doesn’t affect anything,” Skenes told The Associated Press late Friday night after the Pirates rallied for a 6-5, 10-inning win over Milwaukee. “Anybody can play GM.”

True, but it says something about where the Pirates are currently at — well out of playoff position before Memorial Day — that Cherington’s uncharacteristically blunt answer made headlines anyway..

Yet if Skenes, who celebrated his first anniversary in the majors two weeks ago, has learned anything during his rise to stardom over the last three years, it’s that noise is not the same as news.

“There’s no substance to just all that talk that you hear on social media and news outlets and stuff like that,” Skenes said.

It’s one of the many reasons he makes it a point to try and block all the noise out. Yes, Skenes understands that baseball is a business — he said as much after manager Derek Shelton was fired on May 8 — but he also knows his business at this point in his career is focused entirely on throwing a baseball, not worrying about who he’s throwing it for.

There could very well be a time when Skenes moves on, either by Pittsburgh’s choice or his own. That time, at least to Skenes, is not coming anytime soon.

Pittsburgh is last in the major leagues in runs with 157, and no high-profile position player prospect ready to walk into the home clubhouse at PNC Park as a big leaguer anytime soon.

“Ben’s job is to create a winning team and a winning organization,” Skenes said. “So, what it looks like to him (is up to him).”

Skenes added if the Pirates decided to make some sort of highly unusual move by trading one of the sport’s brightest young stars, even though he remains under team control for the rest of the decade and isn’t even eligible for arbitration until 2027, he wouldn’t take it personally.

“I don’t expect it to happen,” Skenes stressed. “(But Cherington) is going to look out for what’s best for the Pirates. If he feels (trading me) is the right way to go, then he feels that’s the right way to go. But you know, I have to pitch well, that’s the bottom line.”

Skenes has been every bit the generational talent Pittsburgh hoped it was getting when it selected him with the top pick in the 2023 draft.

The 6-foot-6 right-hander was a sensation from the moment he made his big-league debut last May and even as the team around him has scuffled — the Pirates tied a major-league record by going 26 straight games without scoring more than four runs, a streak that ended in a loss to the Brewers on Thursday — he has not.

Five days after throwing the first complete game of his career in a 1-0 loss to Philadelphia, Skenes kept the Brewers in check over six innings, giving up just one run on four hits with two walks and eight strikeouts.

When he induced Sam Frelick into a grounder to second to finish the sixth, many in the crowd of 24,646 rose to their feet to salute him as he sauntered his way back to the dugout. He exited with a 2-1 lead, then watched from afar the struggling bullpen let it slip away. The Pirates, in an all-too-rare occurrence, fought back, rallying to tie it in the ninth on Oneil Cruz’s second home run, then winning it in the 10th when Adam Frazier raced home on a wild pitch.

Afterward, music blared and Skenes — who hasn’t won in a month despite having a 2.32 ERA across his five May starts — flashed a smile that was a mixture of happiness and relief.

“It’s nice to see us pull it out, which is something that we haven’t done as much to this point in the year,” he said. “Hopefully it’s a good sign.”

The Pirates sure could use some.

Skenes has been fully invested in the franchise since baseball commissioner Rob Manfred called his name in the amateur draft two years ago. He has embraced his role as one of baseball’s first Gen Z stars and has become comfortable being the face of the franchise, even if that franchise hasn’t won much of anything in 30-plus years.

The challenge of trying to help make the Pirates truly matter is something Skenes has eagerly accepted. He’s as invested in the city as he is in the team itself.

Asked if the outside speculation that the club should move on from him so quickly is disrespectful to the effort he’s made to be everything the Pirates have asked him to be, the former Air Force cadet shrugged.

“I don’t feel anything good or bad toward it,” he said.

Maybe because he realizes it’s simply not worth the energy. It hasn’t been the start to 2025 that anybody associated with the Pirates has wanted. Skenes believes there’s been a “little bit more fight” since Don Kelly took over as manager. He believes that he’s gaining more mastery over his ever-expanding arsenal. He believes he’s developing chemistry with catcher Henry Davis.

That’s a lot for a veteran to handle, let alone someone who doesn’t turn 23 until next week.

It’s why focusing on his long-term future — or what others are saying about it — is wasted energy.

Skenes was asked about what it’s been like to work with Davis, the top overall pick in the 2021 draft. His answer could have doubled for where Skenes finds himself in general as he tries to navigate the push-pull of stardom and all the trappings — both good and bad — that come with it.

“Just really got to keep doing what we’re doing,” he said, “continue learning and let everything take care of itself, I guess.”

Pete Crow-Armstrong’s second six-RBI game is one for Chicago Cubs' history books

CINCINNATI — No matter where Craig Counsell puts Pete Crow-Armstrong in the Chicago Cubs lineup, the center fielder is producing at a record rate.

Crow-Armstrong’s first career grand slam in the seventh inning of Friday night’s 13-6 win over the Cincinnati Reds made him the first Cubs player since runs batted in became an official stat in 1920 to have two games with at least six RBIs in a calendar month.

The 23-year old outfielder — who batted cleanup on Friday night — drove in six runs from the leadoff spot in the Cubs’ 13-3 victory over the White Sox on May 16.

“It’s real cool. We always find a lot of interesting stats in this game I’m starting to see,” Crow-Armstrong said. “I’m very lucky to be able to move around throughout this lineup and have a lot of opportunities in front of me. I don’t get that without my dudes on base.”

According to Sportradar, it is the 36th time a major-league player has had two six RBI games in a calendar month. The last player to do it before Crow-Armstrong was Derek Dietrich, who accomplished the feat in May 2019 for the Reds.

Crow-Armstrong had a two-run homer in the fourth inning. With the Cubs trailing 6-4 with two outs in the seventh inning, he connected on Tony Santillan’s elevated slider, which hit off the right-field foul pole to put the Cubs on top for good.

It was his fourth career multi-homer game and second this season.

Crow-Armstrong looked like a golfer after hitting the pitch trying to will the ball to stay fair as it was hooking and then did an emphatic bat flip after it ricocheted off the pole. He celebrated while rounding the bases.

“I thought it was going foul, and then it didn’t,” he said. “I’ve learned that it is nice to be able to enjoy those moments. Getting to look in the dugout after that ball hits the foul pole is one of the more rewarding things as I go about my day. I think this is a sport where you should appreciate those moments, and we’ve had a lot of those this year, so it’s been nice to be able to to kind of cherish those.”

Crow-Armstrong is tied for seventh in the majors with 14 home runs. However, all of them have come in the last 34 games. He is the third Cub since 1901 to have at least 14 round trippers in that span, joining Sammy Sosa and Hank Sauer, who did it twice.

He’s also third in the majors with 45 RBIs and tied for sixth with 14 stolen bases.

According to Elias, he is the third big-league player since 1920 with at least 14 homers, 14 steals and 45 RBIs through the first 51 games of a season. Eric Davis was the last to do it in 1987 with the Reds and Ken Williams the first with the 1922 St. Louis Browns.

“There’s no question that Pete’s kind of doing some things very uniquely right,” Counsell said. “And he does some things that other guys can’t do. And that’s so much fun to watch. That’s why you hear people chant his name all the time. So we’re lucky to be able to watch something like this.”

ICYMI in Mets Land: New York loses marathon game against Dodgers, injury updates

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Friday, in case you missed it...


Mets' Mark Vientos day-to-day with abdominal soreness, could be available off bench Saturday

After getting scratched from the lineup before Friday's game, Mets third baseman Mark Vientos is day-to-day with abdominal soreness, manager Carlos Mendoza said after the 7-5 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers in 13 innings.

However, the skipper gave another update on Saturday, saying Vientos has already begun swinging in the cages and could possibly be available off the bench after missing just one game.

"Mark was just getting done hitting in the cages, so that’s a good sign," Mendoza said. "When we’re talking about that abdominal area, oblique, which it’s not the oblique in this case, but every time you’re talking about this area, the fact that he’s swinging the bat the very next day, that’s a good sign. I think he’s a player for us off the bench today."

Following New York's exhausting loss, Vientos added some context to the injury and said that it was on his left side.

"I just felt a tightness in my stomach area and just a weird pain," he said. "Took a swing in the cages off the machine and just felt it off one swing, and then I took another one, then I stopped."

Third baseman Brett Baty started in place of Vientos and delivered a 2-for-4 game while batting ninth for the Mets.

"I thought we played hard," said Vientos, who is slashing .232/.299/.375 with five home runs and 18 RBI through 46 games. "It was a tough game, tough conditions -- it was raining -- and, honestly, both teams competed and I think we tried our best out there."

Mets’ Brandon Nimmo pulls himself out of Dodgers game with neck stiffness: ‘I couldn’t pull the trigger on anything’

Mets outfielder Brandon Nimmo was removed from Friday's game against the Los Angeles Dodgers with a stiff neck and the team is considering him day-to-day.

After an hour-plus rain delay, Jeff McNeil replaced Nimmo in left field. It was initially thought that the cause of the ailment was when Nimmo collided with the wall, robbing Will Smith of extra bases in the second inning. Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said the neck stiffness occurred before that play.

"After that first at-bat, he came up to me and said, ‘It’s hard for me to pull the trigger right now,'" Mendoza said. "He came in and it’s something that he deals with every so often and usually gets better, but today wasn’t the case."

Nimmo explained after Friday's game that his neck stiffness is something he's dealt with for a few years now.

"This morning, my neck tightened up on me,” Nimmo explained. “It’s from 2019 when I ran into the wall and we’ve been really good with the training staff and myself about keeping it under control and at bay. Sometimes with the travel and just everything, it pops its ugly head and it takes a few days to deal with it.

"I was hopeful that I could get it taken care of today and get into a spot where I can play. I was able to go out there and give it a shot, but once I had my first at-bat with [Clayton] Kershaw, I couldn’t pull the trigger on anything. I told Mendy I was more of a detriment than a help right now because I wasn’t able to do my job at the plate."

Nimmo struck out looking in his only at-bat on Friday.

When asked if slamming into the wall on Friday made it worse, Nimmo said it didn't and that the trajectory of the ball was fortuitous.

"It doesn’t help, but it was not great before that point," he explained. "Able to turn to the left fine, but over my right shoulder was no problem, so I was able to turn and make the play.

"Turning to the right was very limited today. I was going to try and change my whole setup and my swing in order to play, but I wasn’t even able to pull the trigger once I got out there. Yeah, it was frustrating."

The veteran outfielder said that he usually just needs sleep and some muscle relaxer and he's good in a day or two, but he hopes that it'll be quicker.

Nimmo was seen in the team's dugout as the Mets played a marathon 13-inning game against the Dodgers, a contest they ultimately lost 7-5. The Mets scored three runs in the ninth against Dodgers closer Tanner Scott, led by McNeil's two-run triple, to send the game to extras. Despite the loss, Nimmo was proud of his teammates for the effort.

"The way the guys fought back, I’m super proud of that. To come back on Scott, he’s a great pitcher, a great closer. A lot of fight from them, very very proud," he said. "Could have been easy to roll over there against a great closer, chalk it up and get it tomorrow, made them use all of their arms in the bullpen and hopefully that’ll be to our advantage in the next couple of games."

Teoscar Hernández and Dodgers defeat Mets in 13 innings, but pitching issues loom large

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 23: Teoscar Hernández #37 of the Los Angeles Dodgers hits a RBI double.
Teoscar Hernández hits a run-scoring double in the 13th inning to help lift the Dodgers to a 7-5 win over the New York Mets at Citi Field on Friday night. (Daniel Shirey / MLB Photos via Getty Images)

The upcoming month was already going to be tough for the Dodgers.

A rainy Friday night in Queens made it that much tougher.

In the fourth game of a 29-game stretch against playoff-contending teams, the Dodgers beat the New York Mets in a marathon contest at Citi Field, overcoming a three-run ninth-inning blown save from closer Tanner Scott by prevailing 7-5 in the 13th inning.

But, their already shorthanded pitching staff endured more unexpected obstacles in the process. A one-hour, 38-minute rain delay in the top of the third limited starting pitcher Clayton Kershaw to just two innings. A seemingly never-ending game forced their overworked bullpen to combine for 11 more innings in which every reliever was used except one.

“Obviously, it's not the way we envisioned it,” manager Dave Roberts said. “But found a way to persevere.”

“The Mets had to do the same thing and they lost,” Kershaw added. “That doesn’t feel near as good.”

Navigating this difficult portion of the schedule — which began in earnest with a three-game series against the Arizona Diamondbacks this week — was already posing a test for the Dodgers pitching staff missing three of its five opening-day rotation members and many other important arms in the bullpen.

Because of that, Roberts has emphasized in recent days the need to push his starters to take down as many innings as possible.

On Friday, however, the weather didn’t cooperate.

In his second start after offseason toe and knee surgeries, Kershaw seemed to be on his way to a decent start. Over two scoreless innings, he yielded only a lone walk that was quickly erased by a double play. Just 26 pitches in, he felt like he “could find some consistency, some repetition” in his delivery.

Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw delivers in the second inning Friday against the Mets.
Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw delivers in the second inning Friday against the Mets. (Pamela Smith / Associated Press)

“More reps the better for me right now,” he said. “Just trying to get back into it.”

Instead, with the Dodgers mounting a rally in the top of the third, the New York skies opened up for a late May downpour. For the next 98 minutes, fans scattered for shelter and watched the Knicks’ playoff game on the stadium scoreboard. Back in the visiting clubhouse, Roberts watched the clock tick and tick and tick, eventually to the point where keeping Kershaw in was no longer a viable option.

“I tried to stay as loose as I could, but it just kept going longer,” Kershaw said. “In hindsight, they probably should have waited to start the game for a while. Tough to have our bullpen end up covering 10 innings.”

It would have been less, if not for Scott’s fourth blown save in 14 opportunities and second in the last four days; this one coming with the Dodgers ahead 5-2 following three innings of two-run ball from Matt Sauer and three scoreless innings from Ben Casparius.

Starling Marte led off the ninth with a single. Pete Alonso drew a one-out walk. Jeff McNeil got them both home on a triple hit just high enough to evade a leaping Freddie Freeman at first base. Tyrone Taylor then completed Scott’s fourth blown save in 14 opportunities with an RBI single to left.

“I didn’t even think about it like that,” Scott said when asked if he was impacted by pitching for a third time in four days. “I just wish I would have located better and got guys out.”

Somehow, the Dodgers (32-19) still managed to prevail.

Alex Vesia got the game to extras, denying the Mets (30-21) a regulation walk-off by stranding two runners to end the ninth. Both teams wasted opportunities from there, failing to score their automatic runners in the 10th (when the Dodgers had the bases loaded with no outs), the 11th (when Anthony Banda and Luis García combined to escape a bases-loaded threat) and the 12th (when the Dodgers turned an inning-ending double play while employing a five-man infield).

“Just a grindy game,” said third baseman Max Muncy, who was in the middle of some controversy earlier in the night when third base umpire Tripp Gibson ruled he had intentionally stepped into Marte’s line of sight on a potential sacrifice fly, awarding a run to the Mets baserunner on what had been an outfield assist from Hernández on a perfect throw to the plate.

“Really good for the guys to not give up, keep battling,” Muncy added, “and come through in the end."

Indeed, in the 13th, the Dodgers finally broke through, with Teoscar Hernández hitting a leadoff RBI double before scoring on Andy Pages’ sacrifice fly.

García closed it out, completing his 2 ⅓ scoreless innings just minutes shy of 1 a.m. local time.

And while the result will certainly come at the future expense of a pitching staff already running on fumes, Roberts took solace in the way his other six relievers battled, relieved that any bigger-picture complications coming out of Friday at least weren’t squandered in what would have been a crushing late-night loss.

“There was some usage certainly that we're going to talk through as far as protecting some downside in the next handful of days,” Roberts said of his overworked bullpen, which was already leading the majors in innings pitched entering the night. 

“But,” he added, “there was a lot of good things from our ‘pen today. Certainly from Luis and Banda right there, and obviously Caspy continues to be good. So there's a lot of good things.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets rally to force extras but fall to Dodgers, 7-5, in 13 innings

In their first meeting since last season's NLCS, the Mets rallied to force extras but ultimately fell to the reigning champion Dodgers, 7-5, in 13 innings on a rain-drenched Friday night at Citi Field.

The Dodgers and Mets used a combined 17 pitchers. It's also the first time the Mets played a 13th inning since the automatic runner rule was implemented after the 2019 season.

Here are the takeaways...

-- The Dodgers turned to closer Tanner Scott in the ninth with a three-run cushion, and just when it seemed as if the Mets were ready to pack things up, they emphatically defied expectations. After allowing a leadoff single to Starling Marte and a walk to Pete Alonso, Scott grooved a fastball to Jeff McNeil that was sent down the right-field line for a two-run triple. Then, four pitches later, McNeil touched home on a game-tying single from Tyrone Taylor. It was Scott's fourth blown save of the season.

-- Alex Vesia was called upon to clean up the mess and force the game into extras, and he narrowly did just that. After giving up a two-out single to Brett Baty that put the winning run on third in Taylor, Vesia sent Luisangel Acuña down on strikes on a close check swing call.

-- Edwin Diaz was tasked with a pressure-packed 10th inning, and a messy mound that required maintenance from the groundscrew seemingly spelled doom. But the Mets' closer surprisingly left a no-out, bases-loaded jam unscathed, as he induced a forceout at home and a 6-3 double-play chopper between Francisco Lindor and Alonso.

Unfortunately for the Mets, they could not capitalize in their half of the 10th. Lindor would strike out for the third time before Marte was hit by a pitch. Juan Soto hit a slow grounder to first for the second out, but moved the runners up. Alonso then hit a long flyball that Andy Pages snagged at the warning track to end the threat.

-Reed Garrett got through the 11th and 12th without allowing a run, but the Mets squandered another chance. Lindor was intentionally walked and Marte laid down a great bunt to move the runners up. Soto was intentionally walked for Luis Torrens, who replaced Alonso in the field after he was pinch-run for. Torrens grounded into an inning-ending double play.

-- Huascar Brazoban came out for the 13th and was the Mets' ninth and final pitcher out of the bullpen. Teoscar Hernandez roped a double to push across the automatic runner. Hernandez would score on a Hyeseong Kim single and Pages sac fly.

-- Mets starter Griffin Canning navigated his first trip through the Dodgers' lineup with some help from his teammates. In the first inning, Francisco Alvarez pulled off a slick back pick behind the plate to get a leaning Mookie Betts tagged out at first base. The Dodgers challenged the play, but replay review confirmed the call. Then, in the second, Brandon Nimmo took extra bases away from Will Smith with a leaping catch at the wall in left.

-- A week of incessant chatter about his effort and energy levels didn't seem to faze Soto in his first at-bat back home. The fans who wanted to see the return of his signature "Soto Shuffle" were somewhat amused, as the superstar slugger appeared to shimmy a tad after taking a pitch from Dodgers veteran Clayton Kershaw. While the battle ended with a double-play groundout, Soto patently hustled out of the box and down to first.

-- Betts found himself involved in another reviewed play in the third, when his fly to right-center with two runners on bounced off of Soto's glove and somehow found Taylor's bare hand for the out. Michael Conforto tagged up at second and advanced to third, but the Mets presumed he left early, completed the process of doubling him off, and then challenged. After review, it was determined Conforto took off on the touch instead of the catch, and both runners legally moved up. How? A wrinkle in MLB's rulebook states a runner can tag up as soon as the glove touches the ball.

-- Just moments after the confusing sequence, heavy rain arrived at Citi Field, forcing the game into a lengthy 98-minute delay. Play resumed with Max Kranick pitching in relief of Canning, and the Dodgers took advantage of the rally they'd built. A walk to Freedie Freeman loaded the bases for Smith, who then drove in the first run with an infield single deep in the shortstop hole. Five pitches later, Hernandez bumped the lead to 3-0 with a two-run single to left.

-- The rain showers cut Canning's outing to just 2.2 innings. The right-hander threw 54 pitches -- 27 for strikes -- and was unfortunately responsible for the three third-inning runs. He also walked a season-high four. Nimmo didn't come back out either -- the Mets said he was removed with a stiff neck. McNeil entered in left as the replacement.

-- Kershaw's night was cut short too, and the Dodgers turned to reliever Matt Sauer for the third. With one out in the inning, Baty put the Mets on the board with a solo home run to right-center. He entered Friday with a .583 slugging percentage and an .833 OPS in 36 plate appearances since returning from Triple-A Syracuse.

-- Max Muncy found himself responsible for a pair of errors in the fourth, and the mistakes cost the Dodgers another run. The Mets' funky rally began with a wild throw from Muncy on a soft grounder that allowed leadoff man Marte to reach first and advance to second. Then, with one out, Marte was awarded home on a sac fly from Alonso after the umpires ruled that Muncy obstructed Marte's view. It was a huge break for the Mets, as Hernandez threw a perfect missile home that beat Marte attempting to score. The effort was all for naught -- Muncy's gaffe made the score 3-2.

-- The Dodgers were able to shrug off Muncy's blunders with another multi-run rally in the fifth, this time against Jose Butto. It was also sparked with two outs, as Butto lost control by walking Smith and plunking Hernandez. Muncy then atoned with an RBI single to left, and Pages pushed the Dodgers' lead back to three with a sharp liner to left.

-- After the Mets removed Butto in the fifth, the bullpen combination of Jose Castillo, Ryne Stanek, and Genesis Cabrera held the Dodgers to just one hit and struck out five across 4.1 innings. Los Angeles relied on considerable length from Ben Casparius -- he struck out six and allowed one walk across three hitless innings.

Game MVP

Hernandez, whose 2-for-5 night and three RBI -- including the go-ahead double in the 13th -- made the difference.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets (30-21) will continue their three-game series against the Dodgers (32-19) on Saturday night, with first pitch scheduled for 7:15 p.m. on Fox.

David Peterson (2-2, 2.86 ERA) is slated to take the mound, opposite right-hander Tony Gonsolin (2-0, 4.05).