NEW YORK — Devin Williams lost his job as Yankees closer after stumbling repeatedly during his first 10 games with New York.
Manager Aaron Boone made the announcement before Sunday's doubleheader against Toronto, two days after the two-time All-Star wasted a ninth-inning lead in a 4-2 loss to the Blue Jays.
“He’s still got everything to be great, right? This is a guy that is in the prime of his career and he's just going through it a little bit," Boone said. “I tell our players all the time, you make a career at this long enough and you’re going to face some challenging moments, you’re going to face some adversity along the way and the good news for Devin is he’s got everything to get through this and come out better on the other side, and that’s my expectation."
Luke Weaver, who took over as closer last September when Clay Holmes faltered, will get most of the opportunities to finish tight games with leads. Williams will appear in lower leverage situations.
“I think it’s best for everyone that we pull him out of that role and just try and start building some good rhythm and confidence and momentum,” Boone said.
Acquired from Milwaukee in December for left-hander Nestor Cortes and infield prospect Caleb Durbin, Williams is 0-2 with an 11.25 ERA and four saves in five chances. He was booed just 18 pitches into his Yankees career when he allowed the Brewers to load with the bases with no outs before preserving a 4-2 opening day win.
“When I came here in 2003 at the trade deadline, Mariano Rivera was getting booed in August. I couldn’t believe it,” Boone said. “I’m sure there’s some shock to that and like some, OK, get settled, he’s with a new team in a new environment. That’s all part of it. And my reminder to him is you have all the equipment to do this at an elite level. ... I’m sure that’s an interesting feeling to process. But, again, that’s what you do as a big leaguer. You got to deal with different external factors that can leak in and have an effect on you.”
Boone informed Willams of his decision on Saturday, when the Yankees were rained out.
“We had a really good conversation yesterday about it and he’s ready to do whatever,” Boone said. “As you go through these things as a player, even when you’re really good at this, it’s a struggle. But I think - I do believe at his core he knows that he’s going to get through this. It’s just when you’re going through it, it’s a little challenging to find and trust that.”
Williams was one of the major leagues' most dominant pitchers with the Brewers from 2019-24, with a 1.83 ERA, 68 saves in 78 chances, an average of 14.39 strikeouts per nine innings and a .156 opponents' batting average. He has dropped to 9.0 strikeouts per nine innings and a .343 opponents' batting average this season.
Batters had a .097 average last year against his changeup, known as the “Airbender.” They are hitting .273 against it this season. Batters are hitting .462 against his fastball, up from .111.
“It’s been obviously a struggle in a new environment, in a bigger place,” Boone said.
AL Rookie of the Year Luis Gil, sidelined since Feb. 28 because of a high-grade lat strain, started his throwing program Sunday.
“Important step in the process,” Boone said.
Gil is on the 60-day injured list and is projected to return in June at the earliest.
Returning from internal brace elbow surgery on April 12 last year, 30-year-old right-hander Jonathan Loáisiga threw 11 pitches and struck out one in a perfect sixth inning on Saturday for Class A Tampa against Dunedin. It was the first rehab outing for Loáisiga, who could rejoin the Yankees in late May or June.
Infielder DJ LeMahieu, sidelined since straining his left calf in his spring training debut on March 1, was to make a fourth rehab appearance Sunday for Double-A Somerset. He has been playing second base and will start to play third next week.
NEW YORK (AP) — Max Fried won his fifth straight start, Austin Wells capped a six-run third inning with a three-run double off suddenly wild Kevin Gausman and the Yankees routed the Toronto Blue Jays 11-2 on Sunday in a doubleheader opener.
Fried (5-0) allowed a first-inning RBI groundout and six hits in six innings. He has given up one run over 20 2/3 innings in three starts following Yankees losses, and New York has won all six of his starts.
Anthony Volpe homered off Paxton Schultz, and Oswaldo Cabrera drove in a pair of runs with one of the Yankees’ six doubles.
Gausman (2-3) threw 53 pitches in the third, getting just two outs and walking five — one shy of his career high for a game. Cody Bellinger hit a sacrifice fly, Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Volpe forced in runs with consecutive walks and Wells doubled off the right-center wall for a 6-1 lead.
Gausman was ejected by plate umpire Chris Conroy as he walked to the dugout when he was removed after 2 2/3 innings. Toronto manager John Schneider was tossed two innings later for arguing a called strike from Fried to Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
Gausman threw the most pitches by anyone in an inning since Pittsburgh’s Cam Vieaux’s 56 in an eight-run eighth against Milwaukee on July 1, 2022, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. Gausman threw seven pitches to Cabrera, eight to Bellinger and nine each to Volpe and Wells.
Ben Rice caught for the first time this year when moved by the Yankees from DH to behind the plate in the ninth inning.
Key moment
Wells fouled off an 0-2 fastball and a pair of full-count fastballs before doubling on another fastball.
Key stat
Playing a day after his 33rd birthday, Yankees slugger Aaron Judge went 2-for-4 and raised his major league-leading batting average to .412.
Up next
Yankees RHP Clarke Schmidt (0-1, 7.45 ERA) and Blue Jays RHP Chris Bassitt (2-1, 1.88 ERA) were scheduled to start the second game.
Dodgers starting pitcher Tyler Glasnow delivers in the first inning of a 9-2 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday. Glasnow left the game after experiencing discomfort in his right shoulder. (Robert Hanashiro / For The Times)
When Tyler Glasnow left the mound last week at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, because of leg cramps, it was a dreary reminder of the injury struggles he has endured with the Dodgers.
Glasnow missed the postseason, and consequently the Dodgers’ World Series title run, after an elbow sprain last season. After four starts in 2025, was he in danger of seeing his season derailed again?
On Sunday, Glasnow suffered another setback. Warming up before the second inning against the Pittsburgh Pirates — after giving up back-to-back solo home runs in the first — he doubled over to his side after releasing his last pitch. Manager Dave Roberts rushed out to the pitcher’s mound, followed by a trainer.
Glasnow’s day was done. The team announced he left because of right shoulder discomfort.
Starting pitcher Tyler Glasnow walks to the dugout after leaving Sunday's game with discomfort in his right shoulder. (Robert Hanashiro / For The Times)
The Dodgers overcame the departure, collecting nine runs and 14 hits to win 9-2 and claim the series over the Pirates. Often used as a bulk relief pitcher, Ben Casparius took over and excelled — tossing 3⅔ innings no-run ball, striking out five to help bridge the gap to the rest of the bullpen that combined for eight scoreless innings.
Pirates starting pitcher Bailey Falter, who entered Sunday with a 5.19 earned-run average, faltered Sunday. The Dodgers (18-10) tagged Falter for six runs (four earned) and forced Pittsburgh (11-18) to move to the bullpen in the fifth after Teoscar Hernández hit his 200th career home run — a solo shot for his eighth of the season — to give the Dodgers a 6-2 lead in the fifth.
Andy Pages also continued to mash at the plate. The Cuban outfielder entered the series hitting .183 and left his 10-for-12 barrage against the Pirates with a .277 batting average. Pages collected at least three hits in each game. He had four hits, including a two-run home run Sunday, tallying a career-high four RBIs.
Andy Pages celebrates after hitting a home run in the fifth inning Sunday. (Jessie Alcheh / Associated Press)
Despite the victory, attention will shift to how the Dodgers handle their pitchers.
If Glasnow’s injury is deemed longer-term, he could join Blake Snell on the injured list — with both starters now battling shoulder injuries.
Glasnow signed a four-year, $115-million deal — including a 2028 team option — with the Dodgers after the team acquired him from Tampa Bay in December 2023.
After his injury last season, Glasnow experimented with his hydration, much like his mechanics — being one of the pitchers publicly encouraging using technology to retool pitch shapes, increasing spin and movement. Glasnow previously stated that he chugs pickle juice to help subside cramps. The lanky, 6-foot-8 starter took it one step further Saturday and received an IV to help pump fluids into him before his start against Pittsburgh.
As with last season, pitching health has been an issue for the Dodgers. If Glasnow is sent to the injured list, he’ll be the 13th Dodgers pitcher and sixth starter to miss time this season.
Right-hander Tony Gonsolin is set to return from the 60-day injured list and make his first start since 2023 against the Miami Marlins this week. The Dodgers have spots in the rotation to fill Tuesday and Wednesday against the Marlins — and with Glasnow potentially out of action, they may need another spot starter to avoid consecutive weeks with bullpen games.
Landon Knack pitched Saturday for Oklahoma City, while Justin Wrobleski started Sunday — leaving right-hander Bobby Miller as the only fully rested option should the Dodgers make a roster move for a mid-week start.
Clayton Kershaw likely will be the next starting pitcher off the injured list as he makes his third rehabilitation start for triple-A Oklahoma City on Tuesday. Kershaw is eligible to be activated off the 60-day injured list on May 17.
The Mets scored five runs in the top of the first and held a six-run lead for the seventh inning stretch, but a bullpen meltdown and second blown save of the series saw New York fall 8-7 to the Washington Nationals on Sunday.
New York opened the game 3-for-6 with RISP, but went 0-for-6 the rest of the game, including failing to score an insurance run in the top of the ninth despite having two on and nobody out. Washington added five runs in the seventh and two in the ninth to grab the win.
The Mets wasted a solid outing from Tylor Megill that saw the right-hander strike out nine and allow three runs over 6.1 innings.
Here are the takeaways...
- Ryne Stanek, with Edwin Diaz unavailable after pitching on Saturday, got the ninth to protect a one-run lead, but allowed a leadoff double to right by Alex Call on an 0-2 fastball. A grounder to second gave Stanek an out, but put the tying run at third for the top of the Nats order. With the infield in, CJ Abrams yanked a base hit past a diving Pete Alonso to tie the game.
Stanek, who blew a save on Friday, walked James Wood to put the go-ahead run at second. A slow tapper to first was fielded by Alonso, but as Stanek was late to the bag, the first baseman airmailed the throw way over the pitcher's head to allow the winning run to score on the error.
- Megill, who had a lead before he threw a pitch, struck out Abrams on three fastballs as part of a quick first frame. The righty added a strikeout and two comebackers, but Dylan Crews continued his fine series with a homer to left in the second. Megill cruised from there, retiring 13 of the next 14 batters with six strikeouts to get him through six frames for the first time on the year.
Megill surrendered his second hit of the afternoon to start the seventh when a Luis Garcia pop fly for a double when Juan Soto lost the ball in a very bright Washington sun, which – along with a swirling wind – had been causing problems for fielders throughout the day. After a strikeout, Josh Bell's RBI single to center ended Megill’s day.
- José Butto entered with one on and one out in the seventh and got Crews swinging, but back-to-back singles plated the inherited runner. And after falling behind Riley Adams 3-1, the Nationals' No. 9 hitter cranked a center-cut 95 mph fastball for a 405-foot three-run homer to the right of center to cut the Mets’ lead to one run.
- In the top half of the ninth, the Mets had a great chance to extend the lead and take pressure off the bullpen when Soto singled up the middle, Alonso got hit on the left elbow, and a wild pitch put two in scoring position. But, with the infield in, Mark Vientos and Starling Marte both grounded out to short, with Abrams making a diving stop on the first chance. Ex-Met Jorge Lopez entered and got Brandon Nimmo to ground out to second.
Nimmo had a chance in the seventh with two on and nobody out, but he bounced into a 6-4-3 double play. He finished 0-for-4 with an RBI and the team went 3-for-12 with RISP.
- The Mets got something cooking right away as Francisco Lindor grabbed an infield single on a slow roller to third and Soto and Alonso worked walks to load the bases against Nationals left-hander Mitchell Parker.
Vientos – just 3-for-26 this year with RISP – attacked a first-pitch fastball for a sacrifice fly to the warning track in right. Marte walked to re-load the bases, setting up Nimmo to punch a sac fly to center.
Luis Torrens came through with a base hit up the middle that scored Alonso from second, and the throw to third got past Jose Tena to allow Marte to score and put Torrens on third on the error. Luisangel Acuña kept things going by smacking a splitter the other way for an RBI single, and Tyrone Taylor walked before the inning closed on Parker’s 43rd pitch of the afternoon.
In all, 10 Mets went to the plate, scoring five runs on three hits and four walks. And in retrospect, trading the outs for the runs on the sacrifice flies came back to haunt them.
- Soto opened the second by smacking a ball past the second baseman (113 mph off the bat) and hustling into second with a double, and Alonso followed with an infield hit to short. But the Mets only added one more run as Vientos popped out to the second baseman Garcia, who hung on despite right fielder Call taking out his legs, and Marte beat out the double-play on a slow roller to short.
- Torrens added another RBI with a two-out double into the right field corner in the fifth as Marte hustled all the way around for first and, beating the tag with a great slide at the plate as the relay throw was on target for a 7-1 lead.
Torrens (2-for-4 with two RBI), Vientos (2-for-4 with an RBI), and Soto (2-for-3 with two walks) were the only players with multi-hit days.
- The eighth inning was hairy, but Huascar Brazobán was the lone reliever to not allow a run. A 1-2 changeup got the middle of the plate and Wood hooked it into right for a double to start the inning. The reliever induced a tapper just in front of the plate to get the first out, but walked Nathaniel Lowe to put the go-ahead run at first base.
Brazobán got Bell swinging on three pitches (including a nasty changeup that ran right off the plate) for the second out, but plunked Crews to load the bases. A soft liner caught by Vientos ended the adventurous (and scoreless) frame.
Highlights
Two more first inning runs 🔥
Luis Torrens hits an RBI single to bring in Pete Alonso, and a throwing error brings in Starling Marte! pic.twitter.com/y7SXdlksfU
The Mets look to earn a series split in Washington on Monday with a late-afternoon first pitch of 4:05 p.m.
Right-hander Griffin Canning (3.12 ERA, 1.385 WHIP in 26 innings) against righty Trevor Williams (5.11 ERA, 1.581 WHIP in 24.2 innings) is the scheduled pitching matchup.
It never really left, but was newly rejuvenated by the Mets’ win over the Phillies in the NLDS last October. The Mets also swept a 3-game series from the Fightins at Citi Field last week.
But as Chase Utley can tell you, the hate never really goes away, even after playing careers end. Take former Phils playoff hero Jayson Werth.
Werth was a guest on the “BSBLR show” Podcast, and he shared some strong sentiment regarding New York baseball fans, and which team they should – and should NOT – root for.
“If you live in New York, you have a choice. You have an obvious choice,” Werth said. “You can either be a fan of one of the most storied franchises, one of the greatest franchises in sports history… or the Mets.”
“I have no respect for people that pick the Mets.”
While I appreciate his unvarnished candor, and I get the hate, there is a draw for rooting for the Yankees’ little brother. Maybe you like to root for the perennial underdog, although the 2025 Mets have a payroll of $273 million, second-most in baseball to the Phillies ($274M).
The trophy cases are definitely different. The Mets have two World Series titles, which is dwarfed by the 27 titles won by the Yankees.
Whatever the case, Werth has thrown another log – and maybe even some gasoline – on the Phillies/Mets rivalry debate.
CHICAGO — Playing at Triple A for the fourth straight day, Brandon Marsh exited after six innings on Sunday with a cramp in the right hamstring he strained April 16.
The Phillies will evaluate Marsh back in Philadelphia on Monday but given it’s the same body part that sent him to the injured list, you can bet they’ll be cautious.
“I watched his at-bats yesterday, it looks like his timing’s OK,” manager Rob Thomson said. “We’ll see. (Hitting coach Kevin Long) seemed to like the swings, the timing, the balance. But I don’t know where we’re at now with the hammy.”
Sunday was the first day Marsh was eligible to return from the IL but the Phillies wanted to extend his rehab assignment until he looked right at the plate. Marsh is just 4-for-42 (.095) on the season with 16 strikeouts so this has also been a chance for him to find a rhythm away from hundreds of thousands of eyeballs.
“I think it’s good for him, sure, because you could see the sawdust coming out of his hands as he was up at the plate,” Thomson said Saturday. “He was just trying to do too much. It’s a process and it takes time.”
They’ll find out Monday whether Marsh needs to sit back down for a few days.
Johan Rojas continues to start every day in center field in Marsh’s absence with Cal Stevenson backing him up. Edmundo Sosa has played a bit of center as well this year for the first time but the Phillies feel most comfortable playing him there during the day.
Suarez whiffs eight
Ranger Suarez threw 78 pitches over 4⅔ innings Sunday for the IronPigs, striking out eight and throwing a first-pitch strike to 18 of the 20 hitters he faced.
Suarez has been sharp in all four rehab starts. The Phillies will determine Monday or Tuesday whether he makes one more to extend to 85-95 pitches or joins their big-league rotation.
“It’s great if he’s pitching like Ranger can pitch and it looks like he has been,” Thomson said. “When he’s good, he’s one of the best in the league.”
Suarez has been out since early March with a lower-back injury. He couldn’t have more incentive to pitch well — free agency looms after the season and it’s been nearly a year since he opened 2024 with a 1.75 ERA through 15 starts.
Sanchez throws bullpen session
Cristopher Sanchez threw a bullpen session Sunday afternoon at Wrigley Field, five days after leaving a start early at Citi Field with left forearm tightness.
Sanchez has been examined by the training staff in the days since and felt normal. He, too, will be reevaluated Monday morning to determine the date of his next start. The Phillies will pitch Zack Wheeler on Tuesday against the Nationals but the rest of the week is currently TBD pending the statuses of Sanchez and Suarez.
SAN FRANCISCO — Perhaps the most fitting ending the Giants could have asked for.
With no outs, nobody on and the score tied 2-2 in the bottom of the ninth, Heliot Ramos dribbled a ball between third base and the pitcher’s mound, and thanks to a pair of throwing errors on the play, circled the bases to deliver a thrilling walk-off little-league-style home run that capped a 3-2 win on Sunday at Oracle Park.
“Honestly, I remember when I got to second, and then after that I blacked out and kept running,” Ramos told reporters postgame. “I saw [third base coach Matt Williams] waving me and I saw the ball and I turned and just kept running.”
Ramos initially stopped as he pulled into second base before he realized where the ball was. Giants manager Bob Melvin pointed out after the game, that had Ramos kept running instead of hesitating, he likely would have eased into third without a throw and the ensuing second throwing error that allowed him to score would not have happened. Although, with how the team has performed in high-leverage situations, it’s fair to assume he eventually would have found his way home.
“For whatever reason, it all worked out about as good as you could … sometimes things happen for a reason, and the theatrics were pretty cool there at the end,” Melvin told reporters.
It wasn’t pretty. And boy, was it exhausting. But it got the job done. The same could be said for a lot of the Giants’ wins on their stretch of 17 games without a day off.
The two-and-a-half-week marathon was a gauntlet. First, a three-game series against the reigning American League champion New York Yankees (17-11). Then four against the perennially-championship-contending Philadelphia Phillies, followed by three against (at the time) a hot Los Angeles Angels squad before consecutive home series against the Milwaukee Brewers and Texas Rangers, two teams off to slow starts, but more than capable of winning their respective divisions at the end of the season.
What do the Giants (19-10) have to show for it? A 10-7 record in those 17 games and first place in the National League West.
Not too shabby.
“I think it was great, and we had a lot of guys playing every day, too,” Melvin said of his team’s performance on the stretch. “So to be able to post up, day games, night games, travel, East Coast, West Coast. It was pretty significant, and these guys just continue to go out there and fight and our best work is usually done at the end. So I think they handled 17 in a row really well.”
“I think it was pretty good,” Ramos added. “I think New York was the toughest for us, it was pretty cold and rainy. I think this stretch, all the wins that we got, playing as a team, it’s going to help us throughout the season with this momentum.”
Again, it wasn’t perfect. The Giants feel as if they should have notched another win or two. But all things considered, they not only kept their heads above water, but proved they have what it takes to contend with the game’s best.
“We don’t have many of those stretches, so it’s important that whenever we have the tougher ones that we come out on top with a winning record,” Giants starting pitcher Jordan Hicks said. “I think we handed it really well. There were some that we probably would have liked back, but at the same time, 10-7 is pretty good.”
What’s their reward? A day off in beautiful San Diego before two big games against the Padres (17-11), one of their division foes, along with the vaunted Los Angeles Dodgers (18-10), who trail them in the standings.
“I can’t wait,” Ramos, with a big grin on his face, said about the day off. “It’s going to be great. A great off day, for sure.”
“Last year was always fun battling those guys, you know what you’re going up against,” Hicks said of the Padres. “Pretty elite lineup and solid pitching as well. It should be fun. It’s always a good environment and one of my favorite stadiums. I get to watch the games, watch [Logan Webb] dominate and hopefully come out with two [wins].”
After their quick stop in Southern California, the Giants then have three games against the MLB-worst Colorado Rockies (4-23) before another tough series against the NL Central-leading Chicago Cubs (17-11).
Then, a much-more favorable month of May that the Giants could use to position themselves quite well for a second-half playoff push.
SAN FRANCISCO — At long last, the marathon has ended, and the Giants should feel very good about how it went.
Monday will be San Francisco’s first day off since April 10. The 17-day, four-city gauntlet against some of MLB’s best teams taught us a lot about the 2025 Giants, who entered Sunday’s series finale against the Texas Rangers at Oracle Park alone in first place in the National League West and held onto it at least for one more day — thanks largely in part to a Little League home run by Heliot Ramos in the bottom of the ninth.
It also taught us a lot about Jordan Hicks, who toed the rubber against young Rangers righty Jack Leiter on Sunday as San Francisco secured its sixth series victory of the 2025 MLB season.
Here are three takeaways from the Giants’ thrilling 3-2 walk-off win, the second in as many games.
Recovered Nicely
Hicks struggled in his three previous starts, but if you take away three of his 27 1/3 total innings before Sunday’s start (ND, 5 IP, 7 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 3 K), his numbers on the season would look pretty good.
Five of the seven earned runs Hicks surrendered in a start against the New York Yankees on April 12 came in the fifth inning alone. All five of his earned runs against the Philadelphia Phillies on April 17 came in the first inning, while three of his five earned runs against the Milwaukee Brewers on Tuesday came in the third inning, before Hicks departed in the middle of an eight-run top of the sixth in an eventual 11-3 loss.
His outing on Sunday followed that same trend. Fortunately for Hicks and the Giants, it was just a two-run top of the first inning before four scoreless frames.
As a reliever, one rough inning likely would spell doom for his team on any given day. That’s much less likely to be the case for Hicks in his role as a starter.
Procrastination At Its Finest
The Giants entered Sunday’s game with four walk-off wins this season, the most in the majors. The last time the Orange and Black had four walk-offs in their first 12 home games was in 2011.
Patrick Bailey delivered the pinch-hit, game-winning single in Saturday’s 3-2 victory over Texas, and on Sunday, it was Ramos. Well, kind of …
With the game tied 2-2 in the bottom of the ninth, Ramos led off with a dribbler up the third-base line into no man’s land between the mound and third base. Rangers reliever Luke Jackson, a former Giant, threw an off-balance throw up the right-field line, which allowed Ramos to advance all the way to third before first baseman Jake Burger overthrew third base and Ramos scored a Little League homer to win the game.
San Francisco had a .761 OPS in what Statcast defines as high-leverage situations this season before Sunday’s game, which was the fifth-best in baseball.
The Giants also now have 16 walk-off wins dating back to last season, which, unsurprisingly, is the most in the majors.
Bird(song) Is The Word
Hayden Birdsong, who has been nothing short of a revelation for the Giants out of the bullpen this season, continues to show impressive poise in his new role.
With the score tied 2-2 in the top of the sixth inning, old friend Joc Pederson roped a leadoff triple into the gap in right-center. Not a problem for the 23-year-old.
Birdsong then struck out Adolis García before getting Marcus Semien and Nick Ahmed to ground out and pop out, respectively, to end the inning. He was awarded an additional inning in the seventh, another scoreless frame. And then a third in the eighth, also another scoreless frame.
Light work.
The three scoreless frames lowered Birdsong’s ERA to 1.13 on the season. It’s unclear what the future might hold for the young righty who still hopes to reprise his role as a starter, but for right now, he provides an already elite Giants bullpen with another very, very exciting weapon.
“The good news for Devin is, he has everything to get through this and come out better from the other side. That’s my expectation," Boone said, via MLB.com's Bryan Hoch. "Right now, it’s best for everyone to pull him out of that role and try to start building some good rhythm, confidence, and momentum.
"I fully expect him to be a central figure for us moving forward.”
Williams, a two-time All-Star and twice named the Trevor Hoffman National League Reliever of the Year, was acquired in an offseason trade with the Milwaukee Brewers, looking to give the Yankees another lockdown closer in their storied history.
But the 30-year-old's start in New York has been nightmarish, with the right-hander pitching to an 11.25 ERA and a 2.375 WHIP with only eight strikeouts and seven walks in 8.0 innings of work.
With the Yankees preparing for a Sunday doubleheader with the Blue Jays in the Bronx, the team got some good news on the injury front, with right-hander Luis Gil set to start his throwing program, per YES Network's Meredith Marakovits.
The reigning AL Rookie of the Year was originally scheduled to resume throwing earlier this month as he recovers from a lat strain, but the Yankees decided to push the date back by 10 days to give Gil some extra time, following an MRI.
When the Yankees announced they were giving Gil more time, manager Aaron Boone said Gil's rehab is going “fine,” but the team wanted to see a higher level of healing before he resumed throwing.
“It’s just the level of healing. So it’s got to get to, I don’t know, 80 percent,” Boone explained. “When they start, there are checkmarks of when you start the throwing program. It’s going how it should, it’s just, we need another 10 days.”
Gil made 29 starts for the Yankees last season, pitching to a 3.50 ERA with a 1.193 WHIP and 10.1 strikeouts per nine innings.
The Mets announced on Sunday morning that left-hander reliever A.J. Minter has been placed on the 15-day IL with a left lat strain.
In a corresponding move, right-hander José Ureña has been called up from Triple-A Syracuse.
Minter entered Saturday's win over the Nationals in the eighth inning, but threw just nine pitches before exiting with the training staff. While the initial diagnoses was triceps tightness, further testing showed the injury to be a lat strain.
"I can't remember what pitch it was, but about two pitches or a pitch before you can see me move my tricep a little bit, it tightened up," Minter said on Saturday. "I'm just glad it wasn't my elbow. That's what I was happy about. We're probably looking at an IL stint. Come back, get this thing fixed and continue to help the team."
Coming off of offseason hip surgery, Minter has been outstanding for the Mets, pitching to a 1.64 ERA in 13 games.
Ureña, 33, has been well-traveled in his major league career, as the Mets will become his seventh team he's pitched for, including six seasons with the Miami Marlins. Overall, Ureña has a career 4.76 ERA in 232 career games.
Ronny Mauricio's rehab assignment begins
The Mets also announced that infielder Ronny Mauricio is beginning a rehab assignment with Low-A St. Lucie.
Mauricio, the No. 8 prospect in the Mets' system according to Joe DeMayo, initially tore his ACL playing Winter Ball after the 2023 season, and a second procedure was needed to remove scar tissue last August. Not long after that second surgery, Mauricio dealt with inflammation that stalled his recovery a bit, and he was not able to get into a game during spring training or the first few weeks of the regular season.
The Mets (19-8) continue their series with the Washington Nationals (12-15) in DC on Sunday at 1:35 p.m. on PIX11. Here's what to know about the game and how to watch...
Mets Notes
Both of Sunday's starting pitchers have been excellent in the early going, with Tylor Megill posting a 1.09 ERA, while Nats starter Mitchell Parker isn't far behind at 1.39
With three more hits on Saturday, Francisco Lindor is on an absolute tear. In his last seven games, Lindor has a slash line of .448/.484/.759 with three home runs, six RBI, and seven runs scored
The Mets are a perfect 3-0 in Sunday games this season
Brandon Nimmo has yet to get going this season, hitting at a .200 clip overall
METS
NATIONALS
Francisco Lindor, SS
CJ Abrams, SS
Juan Soto, RF
James Wood, LF
Pete Alonso, 1B
Luis Garcia Jr., 2B
Mark Vientos, 3B
Nathaniel Lowe, 1B
Starling Marte, DH
Josh Bell, DH
Brandon Nimmo, LF
Dylan Crews, CF
Luis Torrens, C
Jose Tena, 3B
Luisangel Acuña, 2B
Alex Call, RF
Tyrone Taylor, CF
Riley Adams, C
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Despite taking a loss Friday against the Pittsburgh Pirates, Yoshinobu Yamamoto entered Saturday ranked first in the National League in ERA (1.06), fourth in strikeouts (43) and sixth in innings pitched (34). (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)
“Those two guys, that’s how it should look when you pitch,” Kershaw said a few days later. “The fluidness, the effortlessness, the way it comes out of your hand. That’s how you should throw. DeGrom and Yama are two of the best that just, like, make it look really easy.”
For deGrom, a two-time Cy Young Award winner and four-time All-Star, such plaudits are nothing new. But for Yamamoto, the second-year big leaguer blossoming as one of the sport’s best starters, it was a sign of how far — and how quickly — his young MLB career has progressed.
“He’s learned his way really well,” Kershaw said. “And honestly fast, for what it was.”
Last year, as a rookie with massive expectations following his record-breaking $325-million signing out of Japan, Yamamoto was good. Great at times, even. He went 7-2 with a 3.00 earned-run average. He struck out 105 in just 90 innings. He was the Dodgers’ Game 1 starter for the National League Division Series.
And yet, it often felt like something was missing. Like there was another level he couldn’t consistently reach.
“As we can all expect or imagine, there was a lot of uncertainty,” manager Dave Roberts recalled this spring of Yamamoto’s acclimation process. “I wouldn’t say anxiety. But [he was] new somewhere. And there’s expectations that everyone has.”
Entering Year 2, those expectations still were present. And one month in they’ve easily been met — if not surpassed.
Through six starts Yamamoto is all over statistical leaderboards, entering Saturday ranked first in the NL in ERA (1.06), fourth in strikeouts (43), sixth in innings pitched (34) and top-10 in both walks plus hits per inning pitched (1.00) and batting average against (.190).
Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto celebrates with teammates in the dugout after throwing six scoreless innings against the Chicago Cubs on April 11. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea / Associated Press)
And that was after arguably his worst start of the season Friday night, a loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates in which he gave up three runs (one earned) on five hits and a career-high four walks over five innings in another high-profile pitchers' duel against Paul Skenes.
“Certainly there's a lot of talent,” Roberts said of Yamamoto. “But it just speaks to how great he wants to be, his own expectations, the work that he puts in to continue to stay at the top of this game."
Beyond the work, Yamamoto’s transformation has, in the view of many around the team, also come down to a few simple things: more confidence in himself, more comfort in his surroundings and more conviction on the mound.
“Today’s stuff was obviously a little bit of a struggle,” Yamamoto, ever-modest, said through interpreter Yoshihiro Sonoda after Friday’s start. “But if I evaluate my stuff up to this game, it [hasn’t been] bad.”
Getting there required last season’s growing pains. But now he's blossoming into one of the best pitchers.
“It’s just human nature,” Kershaw said. “If you’ve been somewhere for a year, you get more comfortable, you get more acclimated. And when you have success, you gain confidence.”
After the Dodgers’ postseason opener last year, Kiké Hernández simply had a feeling.
While sitting in the dugout that night as an unused bench bat, the veteran utility man watched Yamamoto’s start against the San Diego Padres closely, trying to understand why a pitcher with so much talent had looked so out of sorts in a three-inning, five-run struggle in his postseason debut.
Hernández had long been convinced of Yamamoto’s potential, wowed by the pinpoint command of his upper-90s fastball and seemingly unhittable movement of his breaking pitches. Hernández had seen the proof of concept too, when Yamamoto blanked the New York Yankees over seven spectacular innings in the Bronx in June.
After that outing, however, Yamamoto suffered a shoulder injury that sidelined him for almost three months. And though he was healthy again by the time of his Game 1 start in the division series, Hernández couldn’t help but feel like the 26-year-old lacked the swaggering — or, at least, assertive — demeanor of a bona fide big league star.
“He was kinda down after Game 1,” Hernández said.
So, during the team’s day off in San Diego following Game 2, Hernández sought out Yamamoto for a one-on-one conversation — meeting with him and an interpreter from the Wasserman Media Group (the agency that represents both players) for almost two hours at a Starbucks on the ground floor of the club’s hotel.
“I just wanted to pick his brain,” Hernández said, “and know where his head was at.”
What Yamamoto shared was illuminating, expressing uncertainty about who he was as a big league pitcher and how to best deploy his arsenal against opposing lineups.
“I felt that he wasn’t very convicted with the pitches he was throwing,” Hernández said. “And he just mentioned that he was feeling a little overwhelmed.”
It was an understandable dilemma. Virtually all rookie pitchers — even those with previous professional experience in Japan — go through such an acclimation period, trying to refine raw talent into tangible results. That learning curve can be particularly steep with a club like the Dodgers, as pitchers have to balance their own personal preferences with the highly detailed game-planning information that goes into the team’s advanced scouting reports.
“When you’re throwing pitches that you don’t want to throw,” Hernández noted, “your conviction is not the same as when you are throwing a pitch that you are committed to throwing.”
Yamamoto’s season being shortened by injury to just 18 starts also detracted from that process. His language barrier with the coaching staff was yet another complication.
“I feel bad for these guys,” bench coach Danny Lehmann, a key voice in the team’s game-planning meetings, said of the challenges Yamamoto and other Japanese imports face early in their MLB careers. “The language barrier, the culture, all that stuff is just a lot. Especially going straight to the big leagues.”
Hernández, however, offered simple encouragement as the two finished coffee: Commit to throwing his best stuff and trust his premium talent would play no matter who stood in the batter’s box.
“I was like, ‘You are already one of the best pitchers on the planet,’” Hernández recounted. “But it still felt like there was more in there. And in order for him to come out and bring his best, he needed to be committed to the pitches he was throwing.”
“I owe my performance today to my teammates,” he said.
And ever since, Yamamoto hasn’t looked back.
Around the same time Yamamoto met with Hernández, he also had a breakthrough with the coaching staff.
The playoffs, Lehmann said, afforded the team’s so-called “run-prevent department” to take a deeper dive with each starting pitchers. They honed in especially close on Yamamoto, concerned he might have been tipping his pitches in his Game 1 defeat.
From that process, Lehmann recalled, “we got to get to know him a little bit better, and what he wants to do.”
“We just had more time to sit down and watch videos, like, ‘Here’s how your pitches play’ … Even the way his pitches play off each other,” the bench coach recalled. “I think he had a better sense of what we’re spewing at him, and how to decipher it.”
After his Game 5 gem, Yamamoto was solid again in Game 4 of the NL Championship Series (4⅓ innings, two runs, eight strikeouts) and terrific in Game 2 of the World Series (6⅓ innings, one run, four strikeouts), serving as the backbone of a shorthanded, championship-winning pitching staff.
“He was a different animal,” Hernández said.
It carried into spring training, when Yamamoto became an immediate standout with his renewed poise and consistent daily work ethic.
"I think it's just human nature. If you've been somewhere for a year, you get more comfortable, you get more acclimated. And when you have success, you gain confidence," said Clayton Kershaw of Yoshinobu Yamamoto, here embracing one another following Yamamoto's performance in Game 2 of the World Series. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
“The way Yama throws long toss is amazing,” Kershaw said.
And over the opening month of this season, Yamamoto’s confident mound presence has been mirrored behind the scenes, the pitcher becoming more vocal in game-planning meetings and assured in his clubhouse demeanor.
“You just see, like, his body language, the way he carries himself this year, there’s so much more security in himself,” Hernández said. “When you have that confidence that, ‘Hey, I can do it. I can do it at the highest level.’ That’s what it looks like to me. He’s just so much more confident in his entire routine. He just seems very, very comfortable in his own skin.”
It was all reflected in the pride he took from last week’s duel against deGrom, outpitching the Texas Rangers star with seven shutout innings and a career-best strikeout-to-walk ratio of 10 to 0.
“He elevated his game to another level,” Roberts said. “You could see that he was going against one of the game's best in deGrom, and he obviously matched him pitch for pitch.”
It was evident again in the disappointment Yamamoto felt following Friday’s loss to the Pirates, when lacked his typical command while getting bested by Skene’s 6⅓ scoreless frames.
“I was falling behind in the count, and then I couldn’t establish my rhythm,” Yamamoto said. “I couldn’t grind through and get myself out of trouble.”
It was another lesson, but this time in a different context. No longer is Yamamoto looking for validation at the big league level. Now it’s about polishing the rest of his rapidly improving game.
“I don’t think it’s rocket science,” Kershaw said. “That’s just like life in any business, or any avenue. You get more comfortable, you get more confident, as you have success and do it.”
Then, thinking back to Yamamoto’s start against the Rangers, the future Hall of Famer paid Yamamoto one of the biggest compliments he could.
“The way he throws,” Kershaw said, “is how I think you would teach it.”
PHOENIX — Arizona Diamondbacks slugger Eugenio Suárez has had an all-or-nothing type of season.
It's safe to say that his performance Saturday night falls squarely into the “all” category.
Suárez became the 19th player in Major League Baseball history to hit four homers in a single game, accomplishing the feat in an 8-7 loss to the Atlanta Braves in 10 innings. The third baseman is the first player in the big leagues to do it since J.D. Martinez - also for the D-backs - in 2017.
“What can I say - obviously it's awesome,” Suárez said. “I never thought in my life that I would be able to hit four homers in a game.”
Suárez came into the game batting .167 with six homers and 15 RBIs. After Saturday, he has 19 hits this season, including 10 homers.
The 33-year-old Suárez hit a solo shot in the second, a two-run homer in the fourth and two more solo homers in the sixth and the ninth to finish with five RBIs. His fourth homer off Braves closer Raisel Iglesias tied it at 7 as the home crowd of more than 43,000 at Chase Field roared in disbelief.
D-backs manager Torey Lovullo admitted he couldn't believe Suárez had done it again.
“I thought there's no way he goes deep. When does that happen?” Lovullo said. “It's like a fairy tale. When it happened, I just was shaking my head. I couldn't believe it. He turned around a pretty good pitch. ... It's one of those magical nights. It's hard to describe.”
The four baseballs traveled a combined 1,655 feet, with the longest being a 443-foot shot to center for his third homer. The first three homers came off Grant Holmes.
The Braves rallied in the 10th to win after Matt Olson scored on a wild pitch.
“Mixed feelings right now because we didn’t win the game,” Suarez said. “But this is baseball, that’s why this game is so special. I just want to glorify God with this for the game today. It’s a gift and I don’t take it for granted.”
The Venezuelan-born veteran has hit 286 homers over a 12-year career with the Reds, Mariners and Diamondbacks.