Yankees acquiring reliever Jake Bird in trade with Rockies

The Yankees continue to add to their bullpen, acquiring right-hander Jake Bird from the Colorado Rockies, per multiple reports.

According to ESPN's Jeff Passan, the Yankees are sending second base prospect Roc Riggio and left-handed pitching prospect Ben Shields to Colorado. MLB Pipeline ranked Riggio as the No. 10 overall prospect in the Yankees' system, with Shields coming in at No. 28.

Bird, 29, is in his fourth pro season with Colorado, pitching to a 4.73 ERA with 62 strikeouts in 53.1 innings pitched.

Bird isn't just a rental for the Yankees, as the righty is under club control and arbitration eligible through the 2028 season.

Earlier in the day, the Yankees acquired David Bednar from the Pittsburgh Pirates, and it's clear that improving the bullpen was a huge focal point for GM Brian Cashman and the rest of the front office.

Mets acquiring Cedric Mullins in trade with Orioles

The Mets are trading for Orioles center fielderCedric Mullins, reports SNY MLB Insider Andy Martino.

In exchange for Mullins, who is set for free agency after the season, the Mets are sending three right-handed pitching prospects to Baltimore: Raimon Gomez, Anthony Nunez, and Chandler Marsh.

Gomez, whose fastball has reached as high as 104 mph, was No. 28 on SNY's preseason Top 30 list. Nunez and Marsh were not on the list.

Before dealing for Mullins, the Mets spoke with the White Sox about a potential trade for Luis Robert Jr. But Chicago's asking price was likely prohibitive.

Mullins has picked it up offensively lately, slashing .321/.333/.547 in 57 plate appearances over his last 16 games.

Overall this season, he has hit .229/.305/.433 with 15 home runs, 19 doubles, and 14 stolen bases. His OPS+ is 103, which is a tick above average.

Defensively, Mullins is in the 83rd percentile this season while being worth 2 OAA, via Baseball Savant. On Wednesday afternoon against the Blue Jays in Baltimore, he made a highlight-reel catch while going high above the wall to rob a home run.

An All-Star in 2021, Mullins has hit .250/.318/.426 with 101 home runs and 140 doubles in 784 games over eight big league seasons -- all with the O's.

Adding Mullins to the mix will help provide some length to the bottom of the Mets' lineup, and signal an end to Tyrone Taylor and Jeff McNeil splitting time in center field.

Taylor -- an elite defender -- has been struggling badly at the plate this season, slashing .201/.258/.295 with a 60 OPS+. McNeil had been playing an admirable center field, but was out of position.

How Buster Posey's MLB trade deadline selling approach shapes Giants' future

How Buster Posey's MLB trade deadline selling approach shapes Giants' future originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — The last two weeks have been unfathomably bad for the Giants, but Buster Posey has actually watched this movie before. 

Posey was one of the stars of the 2016 team that came out of the All-Star break with a 1-7 road trip through San Diego, Boston and New York. If your counter is that this 2025 stretch has been filled with particularly hard-to-watch plays, take a few moments and find a video of Santiago Casilla’s walk-off balk at Petco Park nine years ago. 

That collapse led to the stunning Matt Duffy-Matt Moore swap, but there was a key difference back then. The 2016 Giants were the best team in baseball for most of the first half and had built such a cushion that they still found themselves in first place and 17 games above .500 on deadline day. 

This year’s group was nine games up just three weeks ago, but has been in a freefall ever since. The Giants dipped under .500 the day before the deadline, and that was enough for Posey to swallow hard and commit to becoming a seller, something the Giants have just about entirely avoided since moving to Oracle Park 25 years ago. 

“We wanted to be in a different position, to add. Unfortunately, with the way we’ve played, we had to make a decision here to try to add some talent that we felt like could help us going forward,” the president of baseball operations said. “Overall, I think Zack (Minasian) and myself and the rest of the group are happy with the players that we have coming to put on a Giants uniform now.”

The front office ended up parting with relievers Camilo Doval and Tyler Rogers, along with outfielder Mike Yastrzemski. On Wednesday morning, there were five players on the roster who had played with Posey in his final big league season. By 3 p.m. on Thursday, he had traded three of them. Only Logan Webb and Wilmer Flores remain from the last Giants team to reach the postseason. 

A lot has changed for the organization in the past four years, and a lot changed in the past 48 hours. The Giants held out hope for as long as possible that they could add a starting pitcher and make a second half run, but they pivoted to a sale while getting swept by the Pittsburgh Pirates. 

Posey said there was no one moment when a white flag was raised. It just became clear what had to be done. 

“I think it was watching the way we played over the last month and how poorly we played since the break,” Posey said. “We felt like this was a time that we needed to try to get back some players that will help us going forward in the future.”

Posey did not go nearly as far as he could have — Robbie Ray, Justin Verlander and others who could have been trade chips remained. The Giants would have needed to be “blown away” to trade Ray, and nobody crossed that threshold. Posey said he never approached Verlander to ask whether he wanted to continue his pursuit of 300 wins elsewhere. 

The Giants hoped to add to their rotation at the deadline, but when things went south, they opted not to subtract. Those hits went to the bullpen, which is now without the eighth- and ninth-inning arms. The Giants will likely install Randy Rodriguez as their closer, and that might be actually an upgrade, but the team’s best unit was torn apart by the deadline. 

Other than that, the Giants remain just about the same. Yastrzemski was in a platoon with Luis Matos, and the young outfielder might now get a chance to play everyday. The Giants also could call up Drew Gilbert — acquired in the Rogers trade — or give a shot to Marco Luciano or Grant McCray, who was scratched from the Triple-A lineup on Thursday, along with Kai-Wei Teng. 

There was really no excuse for the Giants to play as poorly as they did on the homestand, and if guys like Rafael Devers, Willy Adames, Matt Chapman, Jung Hoo Lee and Heliot Ramos can get going at the same time, they might still pile up some wins against a soft schedule over their next 53 games. 

But the hole is almost certainly already too deep. They are six games behind the San Diego Padres, who hold the final playoff spot at the moment and went absolutely nuts at the deadline, loading up in an attempt to run down the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers. Without Rogers and Doval, the Giants might start coughing up plenty of leads even if they can get them. 

The two right-handers were first and third, respectively, in the National League in appearances since 2022. Yastrzemski, one of Farhan Zaidi’s greatest moves, didn’t debut until he was 28, but he ended up playing 790 games for the Giants and posting seven straight two-WAR seasons. 

Beyond that, Rogers and Yastrzemski had become clubhouse leaders. They are both close with Webb, who is now the only Giant who has been around since the Bruce Bochy era. 

In trading those two and Doval, Posey was sending a message that his predecessor never committed to. Hanging around .500 wasn’t good enough. It was time for a big shakeup, and now it’s time to clean it up. 

“We just haven’t looked like the same team as we did at the beginning of the year,” Posey said. “I felt like at the beginning of the year it was, we harped on doing the little things right, it was clean baseball. We’ve kind of taken a 180. We’ve somehow got to recapture that form, that style of baseball that we had at the beginning of the season. 

“Losing a guy like Rog, like Doval, like Yaz — these are veteran players that do impact your team, but we still feel like we’ve got a group that should go out there and perform much better than they have the last month or so.”

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Report: Phillies add Gold Glove OF Harrison Bader from Twins for two prospects

PHILADELPHIA — The Philadelphia Phillies are acquiring outfielder Harrison Bader for two minor leaguers, a person with direct knowledge of the trade said Thursday, their second deal with the Minnesota Twins in two days after landing closer Jhoan Duran.

The person confirmed the swap to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because it was pending a review of medical records. ESPN was first to report it.

The 31-year-old Bader, a 2021 Gold Glove winner, remains a strong defender at all three outfield spots and has 12 home runs, 38 RBIs and a .778 OPS in 96 games. Bader adds another bat to an outfield that has struggled to put up big offensive numbers. He also has postseason experience, playing in five postseason series with the Cardinals, Yankees and Mets with a .809 OPS and five career homers.

The right-handed hitting Bader could fall into a platoon with left-handers Brandon Marsh in center or Max Kepler in left.

The Phillies are sending minor league outfielder Hendry Mendez and right-hander Geremy Villoria to the Twins for Bader.

The Phillies acquired Duran to round out the bullpen a day earlier. He has 16 saves and a 2.01 ERA in 49 appearances this season, striking out 53 in 49 1/3 innings. That deal cost the win-now Phillies a stronger pair of prospects in catcher Eduardo Tait and right-hander Mick Abel.

Philadelphia is battling the New York Mets for the NL East title. The Phillies won the division last year before they were eliminated by the Mets in their NL Division Series.

Red Sox settle for Dustin May after missing out on Merrill Kelly, Joe Ryan

Red Sox settle for Dustin May after missing out on Merrill Kelly, Joe Ryan originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The trade deadline roller coaster was a rocky ride for Boston baseball fans on Thursday. But ultimately, after hours of boredom and nerves, they watched the Red Sox swing and miss at their top two targets.

Merrill Kelly? Sorry, he’s now a Texas Ranger.

Last-ditch, desperate efforts to steal the deadline and pony up whatever it costs to land Joe Ryan? No, he’s just about the only member of the Twins roster not on the move.

But perhaps, Red Sox fans, you could be interested in Dustin May?

Ultimately, that’s what Boston was able to get before the deadline bell rang, acquiring the 6-foot-6 May in exchange for James Tibbs III, the outfield prospect whom Boston acquired as part of the return package for Rafael Devers, and fellow outfield prospect Zach Ehrhard. Tibbs ranked fifth on the MLB Pipeline list of Sox prospects, while Ehrhard ranked 27th.

The right-handed May used to be a top young pitcher in baseball before his second Tommy John surgery set his career back in the summer of 2023. 

After missing all of the 2024 season, May returned this year to the Dodgers’ rotation. He’s gone 6-7 with a 4.85 ERA and 1.346 WHIP, a far cry from the 3.10 ERA and 1.049 WHIP he posted from 2019-23.

May previously underwent Tommy John surgery in 2021, which kept him off the mound for more than a year. 

May utilizes a four-pitch mix, heavily relying on a sweeper (41 percent usage rate) and sinker (36 percent). He throws his four-seam fastball just 16 percent of the time, and occasionally mixes in a cutter. He can help fill the fifth spot in the rotation, which has largely been occupied by Richard Fitts (demoted after his last start) and Hunter Dobbins (suffered season-ending knee injury earlier this month) this season, in place of the injured Tanner Houck. But he won’t do much to alter the expectations for a Red Sox team that entered deadline day in the second wild-card spot in the American League.

The Yankees (a game ahead of the Red Sox), Mariners and Rangers (both 1.5 games behind the Red Sox) all made significant additions at the deadline. Division leaders Toronto and Houston also made moves to get better.

The Red Sox got May and Steven Matz.

Making matters more painful for fans who wanted to see the Red Sox get aggressive and make some significant additions in a wide-open American League is the fact that Craig Breslow and Co. reportedly made some strong efforts to land both Kelly and Ryan, only to strike out on both fronts.

The Kelly pursuit seemed reasonable, as the 51-58 Diamondbacks have little use for a 36-year-old starting pitcher who’s due to hit free agency in the winter. And for a stretch, the Red Sox were heavily reported to be in discussions on Kelly. Yet rather swiftly, the Rangers swooped in and offered a package that got the trade done. (The Rangers sent their fifth, ninth and 13th-ranked prospects to Arizona in the deal.)

Yet with time left before the 6 p.m. deadline, Breslow had options. And according to Jon Morosi, he tried to fire up some last-minute talks for Ryan.

Acquiring Ryan — 26 years old, an All-Star for the first time this season, under team control through 2027, a perfect fit as a one-two punch with Garrett Crochet atop the Red Sox’ rotation — would have wiped away all of the frustration fans felt on Thursday. And it would have positioned the Red Sox rather strongly to not just secure a postseason berth for the first time in four years but also to perhaps make some headway toward a return to the World Series once those playoffs got underway.

Alas, that was not to be. Despite the Twins trading away 10 players before the deadline, they could not be convinced to trade Ryan.

For Breslow, this represents a second consecutive disappointing deadline. Last year, with the 57-51 Red Sox sitting 2.5 games out of the final AL wild-card spot, Breslow acquired James Paxton, who much like May was an underperforming Dodgers starter with an ERA close to 5. He also acquired backup catcher Danny Jansen and a trio of relievers — Luis Garcia, Lucas Sims, Quinn Priester. None helped the Red Sox do much of anything. The team went 24-30 in August and September and missed the playoffs by five games.

Matz should provide some help to a Boston bullpen that could use some. May will likely provide more or less the same type of impact that Dobbins and Fitts have given the team at the back of the rotation.

Yet this current team is eight games over .500 and is building some real interest and excitement in fans who had lost faith amid some of the floundering recent seasons. With so many hoping for Breslow to make a bold move to give the Red Sox a chance to make a real postseason run, the acquisitions of Matz and May certainly looks like the safe route.

Yankees acquiring reliever David Bednar in trade with Pirates

The Yankees are bolstering their bullpen by acquiring right-handerDavid Bednar in a trade with the Pittsburgh Pirates, per multiple reports.

The Yanks are reportedly sending catching prospect Rafael Flores, the club's No. 8 overall prospect per MLB Pipeline, along with C Edgleen Perez and OF Brian Sanchez to Pittsburgh to complete the deal.

An All-Star in both 2022 and 2023, Bednar struggled in 2024 and began this season in the same fashion, but the 30-year-old has turned things around and once again looks like one of the better relievers in the game.

In 42 appearances this year, he's pitched to a 2.37 ERA while converting 17 saves.

Bednar, who is arbitration-eligible next season, joins Luke Weaver and Devin Williams as potential closer options, giving the Yankees a terrific trio of late-inning arms.

Tigers bolster bullpen and perhaps pitching chaos with right-handers Finnegan, Sewald and Heuer

DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit Tigers seem to be setting themselves up to potentially go back to what manager A.J. Hinch calls pitching chaos.

Detroit bolstered its bullpen, and options in games without a traditional starting pitcher, with a series of moves to add a trio of right-handers in the hours before the trade deadline on Thursday.

The Tigers acquired Washington’s Kyle Finnegan, Cleveland’s Paul Sewald and Texas minor leaguer Codi Heuer for prospects and cash.

Detroit made the trades — and one earlier this week — hoping to increase its chances of winning a World Series for the first time in more than four decades.

The AL Central-leading Tigers won their fourth straight game with newly acquired starting pitcher Chris Paddack on Wednesday, two days after he was added in a trade with the Minnesota Twins. Later that day, they acquired right-handed reliever Rafael Montero from Atlanta for minor league infielder Jim Jarvis.

Detroit has nearly a double-digit game lead in a division suddenly filled with rebuilding teams, including the defending AL Central-champion Guardians, and is vying with Toronto and Houston for the best record in the league.

The Tigers, trying to take advantage of ace Tarik Skubal and a balanced lineup, are aiming for their first World Series title since 1984.

Detroit earned a spot in the playoffs last year for the first time in the decade after a late-season surge, using Hinch’s unconventional approach to using relievers to start and pitch in games for an inning or two.

The 33-year-old Finnegan was an All-Star in 2024, but his velocity has been down this season. He has 20 saves with a 4.38 ERA in 2025.

In the trade for Finnegan, the Tigers sent minor league pitchers Josh Randall and R.J. Sales, Detroit’s third and 10th round draft picks from 2024, respectively, to Washington.

The 35-year-old Sewald is eligible to return from the injured list on Sunday after being shut down with a strained right shoulder, but he isn’t expected to pitch until September. He is 1-1 with a 4.70 ERA in 18 games this season, averaging more than one strikeout each inning.

The 29-year-old Heuer, who will report to Triple-A Toledo, was 3-2 with a 3.43 ERA and four saves in 35 games at Triple-A Round Rock this year and pitched in one game for the Rangers.

Detroit opens a three-game series Friday night at Philadelphia.

Athletics trade veteran Miguel Andujar to Reds ahead of 2025 MLB trade deadline

Athletics trade veteran Miguel Andujar to Reds ahead of 2025 MLB trade deadline  originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Athletics continued making moves after Thursday’s blockbuster trade that shipped All-Star closer Mason Miller to the San Diego Padres.

The A’s traded veteran infielder/outfielder Miguel Andújar to the Cincinnati Reds in exchange for righthanded pitching prospect Kenya Huggins.

Andújar spent the last two seasons with the A’s, hitting .290 in 135 appearances for the Green and Gold. He slashed .298/.329/.434 in 60 appearances during the 2025 MLB season, making him an appealing trade chip entering Thursday’s deadline.

Huggins appeared in 18 games this season for Cincinnati’s Single-A affiliate Daytona Tortugas, posting a 3.64 ERA in 63 1/3 innings of work. The 22-year-old pitcher was selected in the fourth round of the 2022 MLB Draft by the Reds.

Andújar ended his Athletics tenure with a bang, launching two home runs in the team’s 5-4 win over the Seattle Mariners on Wednesday night.

Mets still looking to trade for center fielder ahead of deadline

As the MLB trade deadline nears, the Mets are still attempting to trade for a center fielder, reports SNY MLB Insider Andy Martino.

Among the options are Luis Robert Jr. of the White Sox and Cedric Mullins of the Orioles.

Harrison Bader, another potential target, was dealt to the Phillies earlier on Thursday.

Per Martino, talk between the Mets and White Sox on Robert had "cooled" by Wednesday night, though Martino noted they could reignite before the deadline.

The Mets acquiring Mullins was labeled as a "maybe" by Martino.

Multiple reports Thursday afternoon suggested that the White Sox could be more likely to hold Robert than deal him -- with Chicago not satisfied with the kind of offers they were getting.

In theory, the White Sox could keep Robert and then exercise the $20 million option for him after the season.

As far as Mullins, who is a pending free agent, it would be a shock if he isn't dealt by Baltimore.

Like Robert, Mullins has picked it up offensively lately, slashing .321/.333/.547 in 57 plate appearances over his last 16 games.

Both Robert and Mullins are elite defenders in center field, while bringing much more offensive upside than Tyrone Taylor.

If the Mets acquire a center fielder, it's fair to believe Jeff McNeil -- who has been splitting time with Taylor in center -- would return to second base on a more regular basis.

Giants' 2024 first-round draft pick James Tibbs III traded by Red Sox to Dodgers

Giants' 2024 first-round draft pick James Tibbs III traded by Red Sox to Dodgers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants weren’t the only team making moves ahead of Thursday’s MLB trade deadline.

The Los Angeles Dodgers and Boston Red Sox made a deal of their own, and while the Giants weren’t involved directly, the move hit close to home.

James Tibbs III, who was sent to the Red Sox when San Francisco acquired All-Star Rafael Devers on June 15, was traded to the Dodgers on Thursday for Dustin May.

May’s contract expires at the end of this season, which surprised some since Tibbs was listed as the No. 5 prospect in the Boston farm system and a key piece in the deal that sent away the team’s most recognizable face.

Tibbs was the Giants’ No. 13 overall selection in the 2024 MLB Draft and was with the Giants’ High-A club when he was traded. He had a slash line of .246/.379/.478 with the Eugene Emeralds in 2025 in 57 games played.

Since joining the Red Sox’s Double-A affiliate, the Portland Sea Dogs, the 22-year-old outfielder/first baseman had struggled with just a .205/.321/.268 slash in 29 games.

Known for his bat power and his offensive abilities, time will tell if Tibbs’ revenge tour comes to haunt San Francisco.

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Padres add All-Star closer Mason Miller and lefty JP Sears in trade deadline blockbuster

SAN DIEGO (AP) — The San Diego Padres acquired hard-throwing closer Mason Miller and left-hander JP Sears in a deal with the Athletics on Thursday, adding major upgrades to their pitching staff in a trade deadline blockbuster.

The Padres sent the A’s a package of prospects, including highly-regarded shortstop Leo De Vries and right-handed pitchers Henry Baez, Braden Nett and Eduarniel Nunez.

The 26-year-old Miller — who has a fastball that averages 101 mph — has 20 saves in 23 opportunities, a 3.76 ERA and 59 strikeouts this season. He was an All-Star in 2024 and is under team control through the 2029 season.

The 29-year-old Sears has a 7-9 record and 4.95 ERA this season, striking out 95 batters over 22 starts.

The Padres entered Thursday with a 60-49 record and currently holds the last National League wild card spot.

Kyle Schwarber will defer his Indiana University Hall of Fame selection because of attendance rule

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — All-Star Game MVP Kyle Schwarber is deferring his selection to Indiana University’s Athletics Hall of Fame to a future year because of a rule requiring all living inductees to attend the ceremony.

Indiana’s induction is set for Sept. 5, a day Schwarber’s Philadelphia Phillies visit the Miami Marlins as they attempt to win their second straight NL East title. Schwarber was selected in his first year of eligibility. Indiana’s athletic department announced the selections.

Schwarber was one of the school’s biggest baseball stars, leading the Hoosiers to two Big Ten regular-season and tournament titles while ranking among career leaders in hits (238), home turns (40), runs (182) and slugging percentage (.607) while batting .341.

He was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in 2014, made his major league debut the following June and helped the Cubs win the World Series in 2016.

This season, the 32-year-old Schwarber ranks among the major league leaders with 37 home runs. He hit home runs on all three of his swings in the first All-Star Game swing-off to give the National League a victory over the American League.

The three-time All-Star has 321 home runs and 738 RBIs in 11 seasons with the Cubs, Washington Nationals, Boston Red Sox and Phillies.

Schwarber was the headliner of Indiana’s seven-member Hall of Fame class.

The other selections are Cody Zeller, who has spent the last 11 seasons playing in the NBA, All-American rower Meradith Dickensheets, 2008 NCAA wrestling champion Angel Escobedo, former football star Mel Groomes, five-time track and field All-American Glenn Terry and Peggy Martin, a pioneering three-sport star in field hockey, women’s basketball and softball from 1969-72.

Larry Baer admits disappointment, frustration with Giants' losing streak

Larry Baer admits disappointment, frustration with Giants' losing streak originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

July hasn’t been kind to the Giants, with a 9-15 record in the month driving the team under the .500 mark for the first time this season.

But, as team president Larry Baer told KNBR’s “The Murph & Markus Show” on Thursday, San Francisco isn’t giving up on 2025, even as they sit six games back of a playoff spot.

“From the clubhouse guys all the way up through [Bob Melvin], Buster [Posey], etcetera … we’re disappointed,” Baer told Markus Boucher and F.P. Santangelo several hours before the 3 p.m. PT MLB trade deadline. “Things have just not been going our way. Very frustrating. But … a number of guys on the bus and on the plane said to me, ‘Hey, you know, the fans have been awesome. We’re really disappointed and we’re going to turn this around.’ ”

It will take quite an effort to do just that. Since the Giants’ June 13 victory over the Dodgers in Los Angeles, which put the team’s record at 41-29, they’ve gone 13-26. It’s the worst record in baseball over that stretch.

Additionally, Baer’s comments came before Thursday’s MLB trade deadline, which saw San Francisco deal closer Camilo Doval to the New York Yankees and right fielder Mike Yastrzemski to the Kansas City Royals.

But the white flag won’t fly at Oracle Park just yet. When Santangelo brought up examples of recent postseason teams that were at or around .500 at the trade deadline, Baer affirmed that the goal remains to play better and make a run.

“That’s what needs to happen,” Baer said. “We’re not getting blown out, we’re just not getting there. And it’s been extremely frustrating.”

Baer pointed to the fact that seven of the Giants’ last 12 losses have come by two runs or fewer, and that the team still has a foundation of players expected to remain with the organization for years to come.

“We’ve got core guys, and we have a lot of faith in the core guys that we know are going to be here for a while … Matt Chapman and Willy Adames and [Rafael] Devers and Jung Hoo [Lee] and Logan Webb,” Baer said. “That gives us a good feeling … that we’re going to continue to build on All-Star-caliber players.”

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Rebuilding Guardians trade pitchers Shane Bieber and Paul Sewald to contending Blue Jays and Tigers

Pitcher Shane Bieber is headed to the AL East-leading Toronto Blue Jays in a deal with the rebuilding Cleveland Guardians, who also dealt right-hander Paul Sewald in the division to the AL Central-leading Detroit Tigers on Thursday.

The Guardians began trade deadline day in second place in the AL Central, nine games behind Detroit and potentially in the wild-card race, but their moves signal this has become a spiraling season.

Cleveland closer Emmanuel Clase, a three-time All-Star, was placed on non-disciplinary paid leave as part of a Major League Baseball investigation into sports betting earlier in the week.

Luis Ortiz also is on non-disciplinary leave through Aug. 31, stemming from an investigation regarding in-game prop bets on two pitches thrown by the right-hander that received higher activity than usual during his starts at Seattle on June 15 and against St. Louis on June 27. The gambling activity on the pitches was flagged by a betting integrity firm and forwarded to MLB.

Bieber, who is working his way back from April 2024 Tommy John surgery, has made five rehab starts. His most recent outing was Tuesday for Double-A Akron, in which he allowed one run on three hits and struck out seven in four innings. His next rehab start was scheduled for Sunday.

The Guardians are getting right-hander Khal Stephen from the Blue Jays.

Bieber had spent his entire career in Cleveland, including winning the AL Cy Young Award in 2020. He has a career record of 62-32 with a 3.22 ERA and 958 strikeouts in 136 games, with 134 starts since his debut in 2018.

He agreed to a one-year, $14 million contract last fall with a $16 million player option for 2026.

The 22-year old Stephen has a combined record of 9-1 with a 2.06 ERA in 18 games, with 17 starts, in the Blue Jays’ farm system this season. He was a second-round selection (59th overall) by Toronto in the 2024 amateur draft. He made one start for Double-A New Hampshire following his promotion on July 20 before being placed on the injured list with right shoulder impingement.

Cleveland traded Sewald to Detroit for a player to be named later.

The Tigers bolstered their bullpen with the 35-year-old Sewald, who is eligible to return from the injured list on Sunday after being shut down with a strained right shoulder.

Sewald is 1-1 with a 4.70 ERA in 18 games this season, averaging more than one strikeout each inning. He is 21-26 with a 4.11 ERA with 86 saves in 377 appearances with the New York Mets, Seattle, Arizona and Cleveland.

Yankees among teams in the mix for Marlins starter Sandy Alcantara: report

As the 6 p.m. MLB trade deadline draws nearer, the Yankees appear focused on adding pitching, both in the rotation and in the bullpen.

According to Jon Heyman of the New York Post, the Yanks are among the teams interesting in Miami Marlins starter Sandy Alcantara.

The Astros, Cubs, and Red Sox are also said to be in on the right-hander.

Alcantara, the 2022 NL Cy Young winner, hasn’t looked like himself this season after missing all of 2024 due to Tommy John surgery.

Overall, Alcantara has pitched to a 6.36 ERA in 21 starts this season, but he’s recently begun to show signs of being his former self. Over his last two starts, Alcantara has pitched 12.0 scoreless innings, allowing seven hits while striking out eight and walking three.

The 29-year-old is under contract through the 2027 season, which includes a club option for $21 million in that final 2027 season.

Meanwhile, the Yankees also seem committed to improving their bullpen, with SNY MLB Insider Andy Martino reporting that they are still “hoping/expecting” to trade for bullpen help, though the team wants to hold on to names like Jasson Dominguez, Ben Rice, Spencer Jones, George Lombard Jr., and Cam Schlittler.

On Wednesday, big names like Jhoan Duran, Tyler Rogers, and Ryan Helsley were moved, and the Padres made a huge splash on Thursday by landing Mason Miller from the A's.