Giants notes: Bob Melvin explains lineup changes after Rafael Devers addition

Giants notes: Bob Melvin explains lineup changes after Rafael Devers addition originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — The Giants are no longer living platoon life, but they still make tweaks to their lineup depending on whether they’re facing a lefty or a righty. On Tuesday, Jung Hoo Lee led off against a right-hander. A night later he was hitting sixth against a lefty, with Heliot Ramos in the leadoff spot. 

Both nights, however, included Rafael Devers in the third spot, and that wasn’t just to keep him comfortable as he settled in at Oracle Park. Devers has a .909 OPS against right-handed pitching and a .882 OPS against lefties. He hits them all, and he is likely to hit third for Bob Melvin most nights. But the manager said Wednesday that he could change his mind over time.

“I don’t worry about where I hit him. I might worry about where I need him at times,” Melvin said. “Depending on how the offense is doing, you may juggle some stuff. You could see him in the two-hole, you could see him in the four-hole, something like that. But he’s not going to venture too far from where he is.”

Devers hit second in every appearance for the Boston Red Sox this year, but he also has 270 career starts in the cleanup spot and 75 hitting third. Teams often use their best hitter second these days, but having Devers third allows the Giants to keep Willy Adames — who was starting to come around in the week before the trade — near the top of the lineup. It should benefit Adames, too

“I know in the long run for a fact I’m going to get more pitches to hit because of him,” Adames said Tuesday night. 

With a different look at the top of the lineup, Lee hit in the bottom half for the first time in his two seasons as a Giant. Lee has done a nice job against lefties this season, but he is hitting just .192 in June. 

“He hits lefties fine, but Ramos has really probably done the best job in the leadoff spot,” Melvin said of Lee. “With Flo in the lineup today behind Devers, I just moved him down a little bit.”

Disappointing Return

Justin Verlander called his return from the IL “frustrating” and “inconsistent.” He paid dearly for a fastball that was middle-middle and crushed into the seats. Three of the four runs on Verlander’s line came on that pitch, which he called “one of the worst I threw all day.”

Verlander fell to 0-4 and went just 4 2/3 innings in his return from the IL on Wednesday, but the Giants had him on a pitch count since he didn’t have a rehab assignment and instead built up with live BP sessions and bullpens. This is not how anyone imagined his first three months in San Francisco going, but Verlander said he was excited by the Devers addition and hopeful that he soon can join the party. The Giants will need him, since they just traded away some crucial starting pitching depth. 

Slumping At Second

The homer came shortly after Tyler Fitzgerald booted a ball with one out and nobody on. There have been mistakes on the bases and defensively lately, and Fitzgerald also is 8-for-52 over his last 17 games. In both games of this series, he was lifted for a pinch-hitter late in the game. Wilmer Flores hit for him on Tuesday and Dominic Smith replaced him in the ninth Wednesday. 

“He’s a little in-between,” Melvin said of Fitzgerald. “A little late on the heater, out in front on the breaking ball … it’s a little bit of a struggle recently.”

Fitzgerald seemed to find his stride in mid-April but missed 13 games in May with a rib fracture. The latest slump has dropped his OPS to .629, and he has just two homers after breaking out for 15 last season. 

Another IL Stint

In the midst of Devers Mania on Tuesday, there was some roster shuffling. Outfielder Daniel Johnson initially was optioned to Triple-A to open a spot for Devers, but he returned a couple of hours later after Jerar Encarnacion went on the IL with an oblique strain. Melvin said Encarnacion’s strain is a pretty bad one, and he’ll miss extended time.

The injury is the latest tough blow for a player who had a strong spring and looked headed for plenty of at-bats. Encarnacion fractured his hand at the end of spring and missed about two months. He was back for just eight games, going 3-for-22 with six strikeouts and no walks. 

The injury occurred as Encarnacion was trying to find a way out of his slump. Melvin said he came to the ballpark on Monday’s off day and got a lot of swings in. 

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Emmet Sheehan impresses in his return from Tommy John surgery in Dodgers' dramatic win

Dodgers starting pitcher Emmet Sheehan pitches against the San Diego Padres.
Dodgers starting pitcher Emmet Sheehan delivers during a 4-3 win over the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Twenty-nine hours before his official return to the Dodger Stadium mound, Emmet Sheehan took a moment to get himself reacquainted with his home ballpark.

In an empty Dodger Stadium on Tuesday afternoon, Sheehan walked onto the field at Chavez Ravine, climbed up a slope he hadn’t toed since the 2023 season, and practiced his pitching motion a few times before returning to the clubhouse.

For Sheehan, such dry tosses are part of his normal pre-start routine. In any ballpark where he pitches, he likes to get a feel for the mound and its surroundings before the game.

The only difference this time: how long it had been since he’d taken the bump in a big-league stadium.

Read more:Plaschke: Lakers had a great ride with Buss family, but Dodgers owner will give team new life

After an auspicious rookie season in 2023, in which his 4.92 earned-run average belied the potential he flashed with his low-arm-slot and high-velocity delivery, Sheehan missed all of last season and the first three months of this campaign after undergoing Tommy John surgery.

On Wednesday, he finally completed the long road back, spinning four impressive innings in a 4-3 walk-off win over the San Diego Padres that ended on Will Smith’s pinch-hit home run in the ninth.

"It was awesome,” Sheehan said, after giving up just one run while striking out six batters. “Once I was out there, it was kind of just back in compete mode once you see a hitter in the box. But definitely before and then after, [I was] feeling the emotions of just the past year, for sure."

A former sixth-round draft pick who blossomed into one of the organization’s top pitching prospects during an impressive minor-league career, Sheehan became one of the Dodgers' many recent homegrown pitchers to endure a major surgery after injuring his elbow in spring training last year.

As he worked his way back, though, his relatively seamless recovery process had fueled excitement throughout the organization.

His stuff still looked sharp, from a mid-90s mph fastball to a tantalizing changeup-slider combination. His command had been surprisingly consistent during a minor-league rehab stint, collecting 16 strikeouts against only one walk in three outings with triple-A Oklahoma City.

And against the Padres on Wednesday, the 25-year-old right-hander looked like he had hardly missed a beat.

He threw 65 pitches, 43 for strikes. He didn’t issue a walk, while yielding only three hits. And the lone score against him came when second baseman Tommy Edman failed to corral a hard-hit one-hopper with two outs in the top of the second.

Read more:The World Series (and traffic) returns to L.A. Stay sharp!

“Emmett was fantastic,” manager Dave Roberts said. “Going into it tonight, [I wanted him to] trust his stuff, be on the attack with his mix. And he did just that. He flooded the zone, kept them on their heels.”

Sheehan wasn’t the winning pitcher. That honor went to another former prospect, left-hander Justin Wrobleski, who followed Sheehan with five stellar innings of long relief in which he flashed his own promising signs (including a fastball that touched 99 mph at one point) after an up-and-down start to his big-league career.

For most of his outing, Wrobleski was protecting a 3-1 lead the Dodgers took in the bottom of the fifth, when Max Muncy hit a leadoff triple, Hyeseong Kim followed an Andy Pages sacrifice fly with a double, and slumping rookie catcher Dalton Rushing plated the game’s go-ahead runs on a two-run single.

"You look at the growth of two young pitchers, and what they did today against a very formidable ball club," Roberts said. "And also Dalton, being the catcher back there with the fingers, I thought it was a big night for him, as well."

With the Dodgers’ relievers worn out from back-to-back bullpen games the previous two nights, Wrobleski went back to the mound in the ninth and gave up two runs after a Muncy throwing error put him in a jam.

But Smith made sure it didn’t matter, coming off the bench in the bottom of the inning to whack a walk-off home run just over the right-field wall.

Will Smith (16) celebrates with his Dodgers teammates after hitting a walk-off home run.
Will Smith (16) celebrates with his Dodgers teammates after hitting a walk-off home run in the ninth inning of a 4-3 win over the Padres on Wednesday night. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The Dodgers (46-29) have now clinched a series victory in this four-game set against the Padres (39-34), with the chance for a sweep Thursday. Overall, they are 17-11 in what has been a daunting 28-game stretch over the last month, extending their lead in the National League West to 4½ games.

“It's definitely been a long few weeks, playing some really good ball clubs, dealing with injuries and everything,” Smith said. “But yeah, we're just sticking together as a team, grinding through it one day at a time. … Try to play good baseball and see what happens.”

Despite the late dramatics, it was Sheehan’s return that had the biggest implications on the rest of the Dodgers’ season, giving their shorthanded rotation a badly needed, and highly intriguing, new option.

While discussing Sheehan before the game, Roberts said the Dodgers always “liked his makeup, his toughness, his ability to repeat his delivery, the swing-and-miss stuff, the preparation.”

But the way he navigated his Tommy John recovery — returning to action 13 months after undergoing the procedure last May — had added another element of optimism among team officials.

Emmet Sheehan delivers against the Padres on Wednesday night at Dodger Stadium.
Emmet Sheehan delivers against the Padres on Wednesday night at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Roberts noted how Sheehan had increased his physical strength during his rehab, with the once lanky 6-foot-5 pitcher (who joked that he was so nervous during his rookie season, he lost weight from hardly eating) now possessing noticeably more mass.

Roberts also explained how Sheehan has “had a chance to watch a lot of baseball, learn and then now apply it.”

“I think that's going to make him a better major league pitcher,” Roberts said.

One start back, signs of such growth were already present — from the way Sheehan attacked the strike zone, put away hitters and commanded a mound he had longed to pitch off the past two years.

“He’s not afraid, he’s not gonna run from it and he’s gonna trust his stuff,” Roberts said. “To be prepared for tonight and not feel [out] his way back to the big leagues, in a big ball game, a lot of credit goes to him.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Fantasy Baseball Closer Report: Daniel Palencia thriving in ninth-inning role for Cubs

In this week's Closer Report, Daniel Palencia continues to thrive in the ninth-inning role for the Cubs. Will Vest seems to have dodged an injury scare in Detroit. Matt Strahm And Garrett Whitlock leads potential closer stashes should the Red Sox look to deal away Aroldis Chapman following their trade of Rafael Devers.

Fantasy Baseball Closer Rankings

Tier 1: At the Top

Josh Hader - Houston Astros

Hader allowed a run last Thursday, just his fifth of the season, before holding on for his 18th save against the White Sox. He then pitched a pair of scoreless outings, falling in line for a win both times. With four wins, 18 saves, a 1.45 ERA, and 48 strikeouts over 31 innings, the 31-year-old left-hander has been the most valuable closer in fantasy.

Tier 2: The Elite

Andrés Muñoz - Seattle Mariners
Edwin Díaz - New York Mets
Robert Suarez - San Diego Padres
Jhoan Duran - Minnesota Twins
Emmanuel Clase - Cleveland Guardians
Mason Miller - Athletics

Muñoz didn't see a save chance this week. After not pitching in eight days, he tossed a scoreless ninth with an 8-0 lead over the Red Sox on Tuesday. Meanwhile, Díaz converted his 15th save last Thursday against the Nationals and pitched a scoreless inning against the Braves on Tuesday in a non-save situation.

Suarez was hit for five runs and took the loss against the Diamondbacks on Saturday. He then surrendered a walk-off solo homer in a tie game against the Dodgers on Wednesday. The five-run appearance was his second such outing of the season, with 10 of his 12 earned runs coming over the two games.

Duran didn't have his best week, either. He gave up a run against the Astros on Saturday to take the loss, then surrendered a run to blow the save chance Sunday.

In Cleveland, Clase has been hittable of late, giving up two hits in four of his last seven outings. It cost him a save Saturday against the Mariners as he allowed two runs on two hits and three walks before stranding the bases loaded Tuesday to convert a save against the Giants. He then worked around one hit, striking out one batter for his 16th save on Wednesday.

And it's been an odd season for Miller, who gave up another three runs in a non-save situation against the Royals on Friday before striking out two batters in each of his next two outings for a save and a win. The 26-year-old right-hander has maintained his elite velocity, averaging 101 mph, and continues to collect strikeouts. Miller seems to have moments where he loses his command and unravels. Though it might be tough to stay in a consistent groove when the team has put him in fewer save situations over the last two months.

Tier 3: The Solid Options

Tanner Scott - Los Angeles Dodgers
Aroldis Chapman - Boston Red Sox
Devin Williams - New York Yankees
Trevor Megill - Milwaukee Brewers
Camilo Doval - San Francisco Giants
Will Vest/Tommy Kahnle - Detroit Tigers
Félix Bautista - Baltimore Orioles
Jeff Hoffman - Toronto Blue Jays
Daniel Palencia - Chicago Cubs
David Bednar - Pittsburgh Pirates
Ryan Helsley - St. Louis Cardinals
Pete Fairbanks - Tampa Bay Rays
Emilio Pagán - Cincinnati Reds
Carlos Estévez - Kansas City Royals
Kyle Finnegan - Washington Nationals

Scott has been lights out in June after a rough second half of May. He pitched three clean innings this week, collecting two saves and a hold. The 30-year-old left-hander is up to 14 saves with a 3.63 ERA, 0.95 WHIP, and a 40/4 K/BB ratio across 34 2/3 innings. Scott's 3% walk rate is by far the best of his career and the lowest among closers.

Chapman recorded the final two outs in a non-save situation against the Yankees on Friday, then struck out the side for a save on Monday against the Mariners. The 37-year-old veteran lefty has converted 13 saves with a 1.45 ERA, 0.81 WHIP, and a 43/9 K/BB ratio across 31 innings.

Williams struck out one batter in a clean frame to earn a save against the Royals last Thursday. He struck out one in a scoreless inning in a non-save situation against the Angels on Monday. Williams has been effective since stepping back into the closer role following Luke Weaver's hamstring injury.

Megill also had a strong week. He gave up a run but held on for the save Friday against the Cardinals before striking out the side Sunday for his 15th save. Meanwhile, Doval hasn't seen the mound this week, as the Giants produced no save chances.

Vest was charged with a blown save and a loss after giving up three runs against the Reds on Sunday. He was removed from the contest with an apparent finger injury. He was able to pass all tests and avoid the injured list.

Bautista converted back-to-back save chances against the Angels, then tossed a scoreless frame against the Rays on Tuesday. The 29-year-old right-hander touched 100 mph for the first time this season on Saturday and has improved throughout the season in his return from Tommy John surgery. Bautista has posted a 2.92 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, and a 32/17 K/BB ratio across 24 2/3 innings.

Hoffman worked around a walk with no strikeouts in a scoreless inning to fall in line for a win on Tuesday for his only appearance this week. The 32-year-old right-hander has picked up six wins with 17 saves while posting a 5.52 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, and a 43/9 K/BB ratio across 31 innings.

Palencia has been outstanding for the Cubs since taking control of the ninth-inning role. He made four scoreless appearances this week, picking up two saves and a hold. The 25-year-old right-hander has converted seven saves with a 1.67 ERA, 0.96 WHIP, and a 29/10 K/BB ratio across 27 innings.

Bednar worked a clean inning for a save against the Cubs on Friday, then took the loss against Chicago with a run allowed on Sunday. Meanwhile, Helsley surrendered a solo homer in a non-save situation for his fourth straight outing in which he's allowed a run in. And in Tampa, Fairbanks worked around a hit and a walk, holding the Mets scoreless on Friday for his 13th save.

Pagán continues to get the job done for the Reds. He tossed a scoreless inning against the Tigers on Sunday, then worked around two walks, striking out two batters for his 17th save against the Twins on Tuesday. Behind Pagán, Tony Santillan hasn't produced the same strikeout rate that he flashed last season, but he's been effective nonetheless with 15 holds and a 2.65 ERA over 34 innings.

Estévez made two appearances against the Athletics over the weekend, taking the loss with a solo homer allowed on Sunday. He then pitched a clean inning for his 20th save against the Rangers on Wednesday. Meanwhile, Finnegan tossed a scoreless inning against the Marlins in a non-save situation on Friday, then surrendered three runs and blew the save chance against the Rockies on Monday.

Tier 4: Here for the Saves

Kenley Jansen - Los Angeles Angels
Shelby Miller - Arizona Diamondbacks
Dylan Lee/Raisel Iglesias/Pierce Johnson - Atlanta Brave
Matt Strahm/Orion Kerkering/Jordan Romano - Philadelphia Phillies
Robert Garcia/Luke Jackson - Texas Rangers

Jansen surrendered two runs against the Orioles on Sunday, then struck out two batters in a scoreless inning against the Yankees on Monday before tossing a clean frame Wednesday for his 15th save. Behind him, Reid Detmers continued his scoreless innings streak with a pair of shutout appearances.

Miller was looking to convert his second save since Justin Martinez landed on the injured list, but surrendered two solo homers to blow the lead and take the loss against the Blue Jays on Monday. The 34-year-old right-hander remains the favorite for most save chances in Arizona.

While it looks to be a committee in Atlanta for the time being, Lee has pitched the ninth inning in each of his last two appearances. He pitched the ninth with a four-run lead against the Rockies on Saturday, then held the Mets scoreless in the ninth of a tie game Tuesday. And it's another committee situation in Philadelphia, with Strahm and Kerkering picking up saves for the Phillies this week.

The uncertainty continues in Texas, where Garcia picked up a save against the White Sox on Friday before he was charged with a blown save on Saturday. Jackson stepped in on Sunday to convert his ninth save.

Tier 5: Bottom of the Barrel

Calvin Faucher - Miami Marlins
Seth Halvorsen - Colorado Rockies
Brandon Eisert/Steven Wilson - Chicago White Sox

Relievers On The Rise/Stash Candidates

Garrett Whitlock has been pitching well in high leverage for the Red Sox. He went through a rough stretch from April 30 to May 13, giving up nine runs over six outings. Since then, he's allowed just one run over his last 15 innings with a 17/5 K/BB ratio while picking up four wins and a save in that span. The 29-year-old right-hander has produced a solid 2.89 ERA, 1.13 WHIP, and a 46/14 K/BB ratio across 37 1/3 innings on the season. Should the Red Sox fall behind in the standings over the next month, Chapman could be an ideal trade candidate, with Whitlock possibly in line to step in for saves in Boston. We could see a similar situation play out in St. Louis, with Helsley likely on the trade block until the deadline. Should the Cardinals move the 30-year-old pending free agent, Phil Maton figures to be the next in line for save duties. Maton, himself a free agent following the season, has posted a 2.05 ERA, 1.18 WHIP, and a 34/10 K/BB ratio across 26 1/3 innings.

Mets' Brett Baty unavailable for second straight game, IL stint possible

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza gave an injury update on Brett Baty after Wednesday's 5-0 loss to the Atlanta Braves, saying the infielder was unavailable for the second straight game due to right groin tightness.

"He wasn't available today," Mendoza said. "So we gave him another day. Took BP, ran some sprints. We'll see where we're at tomorrow."

When asked about the possibility of an IL stint for the 25-year-old, Mendoza said he's made "some progress" but the team will make a decision on Thursday.

"We'll see, we'll see tomorrow," Mendoza said. "See how he reports tomorrow, if he's able to do something or we have to make a decision there."

He added: "So yeah, depending on whether he's available because the past two night he hasn't been available. Again, we'll see where we're at. There was some progress today because he ran and all that, but again, not there yet."

Baty left Sunday's loss to the Tampa Bay Rays in the seventh inning and was listed as day-to-day. He said he felt the injury when "going for a foul ball towards the tarp."

Mendoza went on to say that he'll have to talk with David Stearns about if the team will bring someone up in case Baty can't play Thursday in the series finale against the Braves. New York will then head to Philadelphia for a three-game set with the Phillies this weekend.

Dodgers to announce plans to assist immigrant communities in L.A.

LOS ANGELES, CA - JUNE 14, 2025: Some Dodgers fans tip their caps.
Dodgers fans stand and some tip their caps after singer and social media personality Nezza sang the national anthem in Spanish before a game against the Giants at Dodger Stadium on Saturday. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The Dodgers on Thursday will announce their plans to assist the immigrant communities recently impacted in Los Angeles, according to a team spokesperson.

The announcement will mark the Dodgers’ first public comment regarding the recent unrest in the city since federal immigration agents began launching raids throughout the Southland almost two weeks ago.

The Dodgers initially declined to make any public comment when the raids first began. But their silence had become divisive among parts of their fan base, leading to increased calls on social media in recent days for the team to address what was happening around the city.

Read more:Dodgers say Nezza is not banned from stadium for singing national anthem in Spanish

Manager Dave Roberts was asked about the situation last week, saying, “I just hope that we can be a positive distraction for what people are going through in Los Angeles right now.”

Utilityman Kiké Hernández also spoke out on social media on Saturday, writing: “I cannot stand to see our community being violated, profiled, abused and ripped apart. ALL people deserve to be treated with respect, dignity and human rights.”

The Dodgers became embroiled in a related controversy last weekend, when singer and social media personality Nezza sang a Spanish version of the national anthem at Dodger Stadium, in an act of protest against the immigration raids, despite being asked by a team employee to sing in English.

To this point, the only other local professional sports teams to issue public statements in the wake of the raids have been soccer clubs LAFC and Angel City FC, which both acknowledged the “fear and uncertainty” being felt throughout the L.A. community.

The full breadth of the Dodgers’ plans was not immediately clear. But, their silence on the situation will soon be broken.

Read more:Commentary: Angel City takes stand against immigration raids as others stay silent

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Luis Torrens makes strange, costly errors as Mets catchers continue to struggle

It was another rough night behind the plate for a Mets catcher as Luis Torrens made a few uncharacteristic mistakes against the Atlanta Braves on the heels of Francisco Alvarez's errant throw to second base in extra innings.

In the starting lineup to give the young Alvarez a night off following a bad night defensively on Tuesday, the normally sure-handed and heady Torrens cost his team a couple of runs with his own miscues, the first of which coming on a strange play in the first inning.

With Paul Blackburn in trouble and the Mets already down 1-0, Torrens touched the ball that skipped by after a swing-and-a-miss with his mask which is not allowed. It's a very common rule that all catchers know, but for some reason Torrens blanked which cost New York a run as it acted as a balk which brought home the runner at third base.

"I took off my mask and I had the mask in my hand and when I went to grab the ball I touched it and I immediately knew," Torrens said through a translator after the game. "I tried to stop it, but it’s something that shouldn’t have happened."

Another odd play involving Torrens happened in the fourth inning. On a 3-1 count and a runner on third base, Jose Butto threw a fastball inside for a ball. However, Torrens made little to no effort to even catch the ball and it went to the backstop, resulting in another run. It was called a wild pitch on Butto, but it could've easily been called a passed ball on Torrens.

Offensively, Torrens finished 0-for-4 as Chris Sale dominated New York over 8.2 scoreless innings. While the Mets' entire offense looked bad against Sale, Torrens is now 2-for-his-last-25 and has seen his batting average drop to .223.

With Alvarez also struggling at the plate and behind it as well, New York suddenly has a problem at the catcher position -- add it to the growing list lately.

"We did a really good job the first month, two months and a half of playing things through," said Francisco Lindor after the loss. "And this is the time of year that we’re going through it. Every team goes through it and as a team we gotta continue to push each other. We gotta dig deep and continue to climb.

"At the end of the day, everybody here wants it and we all understand it’s a long year, we’re gonna deal with adversity. Put our heads down and work as hard as you can to get back to the winning side and then don’t look back."

The Mets return to action on Thursday night as they close out their three-game series against the Braves, hoping to not get swept at the House of Horrors that has become Truist Park.

Yankees' Anthony Volpe explains eighth-inning error, looks to turn page amid losing streak: 'Every day is a new day'

The Yankees finally snapped their scoreless streak after 30 innings on Wednesday in the second inning against the Los Angeles Angels, but still struggled at the plate with only three hits and extended their losing streak to six games.

With the game tied up at 2-2 in the top of the eighth inning, LA loaded the bases against Fernando Cruz and forced manager Aaron Boone to bring in Tim Hill to get the final two outs. Hill got the potential double-play ground ball, but Anthony Volpe misplayed it at short and then overthrew second base, allowing the go-ahead run to score.

After the 3-2 loss, Volpe discussed what happened on his costly error.

"I knew right off the bat I got to be aggressive, go get the ball, make the play," Volpe told reporters. "As far as that, that's all it is, it's the first read off the bat."

Boonenoted the team's lack of execution "on the little things" as of late and even said that when Volpe makes an error "you're a little bit surprised." The manager then went on to discuss the shortstop's at-bats, saying he's confident he can "work through" this recent cold stretch.

Volpe is hitting just .115 (3-for-26) over his last seven games, including an opportunity to tie the game in the ninth inning on Wednesday night. The 24-year-old struck out swinging to end the game and his 0-for-4 night.

"I got to take a look at it. I mean, I know I can do better," Volpe said. "Everyone holds themselves to really high standards and we know we're not getting the job done. We're going to keep, like I said, working and holding each other to that. And I'm going to hold myself to that. You know, just not performing and not doing those type of things. You can control a swing decision, so you gotta be better."

Boone mentioned he felt the team "pressed" a little bit in Tuesday's loss, but was much more pleased with their at-bats Wednesday despite the game's result. Volpe was asked his thoughts on if they're "pressing," instead saying the Yanks need to continue supporting each other and can start changing the course tomorrow.

"I mean, you don't feel pressing," Volpe said. "We're just going out there every day, playing like Opening Day and have each other's backs. I messed up and Timmy had my back. He got out of it and we had opportunities to come through and win.

"Every day is a new day and we're not going to let what happened today [affect us]. After it's done, you take what you can from it, the good and the bad. Then tomorrow's a new day. That's the best part of the game."

New York will look to snap their losing streak Thursday and avoid back-to-back sweeps when they take on the Angels at 1:05 p.m.

Yankees snap scoreless streak, but commit late error vs. Angels in sixth straight loss

The Yankees finally snapped their dreadful scoreless streak, but Anthony Volpe's costly error in the eighth inning proved to be the difference in a 3-2 loss to the Los Angeles Angels.

New York had just three hits and extended their losing streak to six games.

Here are the takeaways...

-- New York's scoreless streak reached 30 innings after being sent down in order by 24-year-old righty Jack Kochanowicz in the bottom of the first inning. Thankfully, Jazz ChisholmJr. snapped the offensive nightmare in the bottom of the second inning with a solo home run into the right field stands, tying the game at 1-1.

-- Cody Bellinger gave the Yanks a 2-1 lead with a solo homer to right field of his own in the bottom of the fourth inning. It was NY's first lead in a game since they beat the Kansas City Royals 1-0 on Thursday, June 12 -- a total of 51 innings without a lead.

-- Making just his eighth start of the season, Ryan Yarbrough found himself in a quick hole. The left-hander let up a one-out, solo home run to Nolan Schanuel as the Angels took an early 1-0 lead. Yarbrough nearly made another mistake against Schanuel, but got some help from Aaron Judge against the right field wall to end the third inning and keep it a tie game.

The solo home run continued to be the theme of the night, as Yarbrough left a cutter over the plate for Jo Adell to crush a homer to center field and tie the game at 2-2 in the top of the fifth inning. He settled down to get a flyout and then Volpe came through with an inning-ending 6-4-3 double play. Yarbrough came back out for the sixth inning and got Schanuel to ground out for his final hitter of the night.

Yarbrough's final line: two earned runs on two hits (both HRs) with eight strikeouts and three walks over 5.1 IP.

-- Ben Rice showed off his arm in the top of the second inning, throwing out Logan O'Hoppe trying to steal second base. It was Rice's first career start at catcher, having played a combined 7.2 innings at the position in six previous appearances. Rice went 0-for-1 at the plate and was pinch-hit for by Giancarlo Stanton in the bottom of the seventh inning (flyout) and replaced by J.C. Escarra behind the dish.

-- Reliever Yerry De los Santos lasted just 0.1 IP as Mark Leiter Jr. came in with two on base to get the third out of the sixth inning. He recorded another out in the seventh, but let up back-to-back singles and Fernando Cruz replaced him to get the next two outs. Cruz stayed in to pitch the eighth inning and recorded just one out, walking the bases loaded. Tim Hill came in to escape the jam, but Volpe misplayed Adell's hard grounder and threw it away, allowing the go-ahead run to score and make it a 3-2 game.

-- The Yanks had a scoring chance late as Jasson Domínguez walked and Austin Wells was hit by a pitch. However, the offensive issues persisted and Trent Grisham (popout), Judge (flyout), and Bellinger (popout) all failed to drive in the game-tying run. NY got one more opportunity in the ninth against Kenley Jansen after Paul Goldschmidt reached first on an error, but Chisholm (flyout), Escarra (lineout), and Volpe (strikeout) came up short.

Game MVP: Jo Adell

The former top prospect homered and drove in another run to bury the Yanks.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees (42-31) wrap up their four-game series against the Angels (36-37) on Thursday afternoon. First pitch is scheduled for 1:05 p.m.

Carlos Rodon (8-5, 3.01 ERA) takes the mound and will be opposed by LHP Tyler Anderson (2-4, 4.44 ERA).

Mets outmatched by Chris Sale, Braves in 5-0 loss as losing streak reaches five

The Mets went quietly against Chris Sale and the Atlanta Braves on Wednesday night, losing 5-0.

Here are the takeaways...

-Making just his second start of the season, this time for the injured Kodai Senga, Paul Blackburn was greeted rudely by Ronald Acuña Jr. on the first pitch he threw, allowing a leadoff home run that gave the Braves a quick 1-0 lead. It was far from the end as Blackburn allowed a single and a walk before retiring his first batter of the game on a groundout that advanced the runners to second and third.

-Blackburn's battery mate, Luis Torrens -- in for Francisco Alvarez who did not have a good game defensively on Tuesday night -- made a costly mistake of his own in the first inning when he touched the ball with his mask after the ball got away from on a swing-and-a-miss which is not allowed. The fielding error resulted in the same thing as a balk which scored a run and moved the runner on second base to third base.

Marcell Ozuna drove in the third run of the strange inning with a sacrifice fly to make it 3-0, Atlanta.

-To Blackburn's credit, after that tough start to the game and capped at around 70-75 pitches, he ended up going 3.2 innings and didn't allow another run, exiting with the Mets down 3-0. That is, until reliever Jose Butto entered the game and allowed the stranded runner to score on a wild pitch that should've been a passed ball on Torrens after the catcher just failed to reach for a ball inside.

Torrens made another mistake earlier in the game after he tried framing a pitch which resulted in him not catching the ball with a runner on third base. Fortunately, the runner didn't break for home plate, although he easily could've.

-Opposite Blackburn was Chris Sale who entered the game with a 1.14 ERA over his last seven starts. The left-hander continued his recent dominance, outmatching the Mets over 8.2 scoreless innings. Sale allowed four hits, all singles and two by Starling Marte, entering the ninth inning as he bid for a shutout. However, a Brandon Nimmo pop fly single over third base with two outs would be it for Sale who threw 116 pitches (85 strikes).

-Jeff McNeil extended his on-base streak to 20 games, the longest active streak in the majors, following his single in the fifth inning.

-New York's bullpen went 4.1 innings and allowed just one run, a Matt Olson moonshot off Ty Adcock in the seventh inning. It was the first run Adcock allowed as a Met this season in three innings.

Game MVP: Chris Sale

8.2 innings of shutout baseball is enough for the 36-year-old to get the honors.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets and Braves close out their three-game series on Thursday night with a 7:15 p.m start time on SNY.

RHP Clay Holmes (7-3, 2.87 ERA) goes up against RHP Spencer Strider (1-5, 4.35 ERA).

What is 'pressing' in baseball anyway? We ask Yankees’ Cody Bellinger

Cody Bellinger is standing at his locker at Yankee Stadium on Wednesday afternoon, the day after his manager made the relatively rare admission that his team’s offense was pressing.

Aaron Boone is not one to critique players at a postgame news conference, but he knows his guys, and he knows that their at-bats during Tuesday’s 4-0 loss to the Los Angeles Angels  -- the team’s third consecutive shutout  -- were beneath their capabilities.

That game extended the Yankees’ scoreless streak to 29 innings (it hit 30 before Jazz Chisholm Jr.’s home run in the second inning Wednesday).

“Pressing” is a tricky concept. Even for non-athletes who watch baseball every day, it is difficult to diagnose. The best evidence we can usually find of it is when players chase pitches out of the strike zone. But there has to be more to it.

Bellinger is a thoughtful and seasoned hitter, so it seems worth asking him: What is pressing, anyway? What happens to a hitter when he is doing it, and how does he know?

Bellinger thinks for a beat, then says, “The crazy thing about this game is that there's so many variables. Your swing is feeling bad that day. The pitcher is making pitches on you. Did you swing at the wrong pitch -- or the right pitch, and then miss it?

“That's why it's hard to explain these things, why you're having success and why you're failing. Sometimes I go back [over a game and think], I felt good, why didn’t I get any hits? Well, I only got one pitch in the middle of the plate and I missed it and I missed it.”

Bellinger stops to shake his head.

“Like, it's insane,” he continues. “You did everything right and hit it right at them, right? There are just the variables in this game.”

“When,” I ask, “Do you know when you’re specifically pressing or trying to do too much, versus just dealing with one of those variables?”

“In the game, you don't know,” Bellinger says. “In the moment, you don't know. And then, maybe after a few games, you're like, ‘Okay, I'm doing too much. Let me calm down. Let me go back to the basics. Let me figure out, what am I gonna do today to help the team win?’ Sometimes you have to go back home and reflect.”

May 18, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger (35) hits a grand slam home run in the eighth inning against the New York Mets at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
May 18, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger (35) hits a grand slam home run in the eighth inning against the New York Mets at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images / © Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

“When it’s all happening at game speed, you don’t have time to reflect on it?”

“Yeah,” Bellinger says. “You’re in the competition. It's more like you say to yourself later, ‘Yeah, I was probably getting out of myself a little bit just trying to do too much. My head's at first base. I'm trying to hit the ball into the fourth deck, when, in reality, I don't need to do that.”

“So it’s swinging too hard, trying to pull too much, things like that?”

“Potentially,” Bellinger says. “The crazy part is that it could also be mechanical issues. Am I late, you know what I mean? That's why the game is amazing, though, too. There's not another game like it, right?”

It can also be luck. We talk about a few well-hit balls in Boston that could have changed the entire narrative.

“You go back to the Boston series,” Bellinger says. “[Paul] Goldschmidt hit a ball that was foul by an inch, right? D.J. [LeMahieu] ’s ball was foul by an inch. He hit a 110 mile-per-hour ground balls -- two of them -- and they didn't find holes.”

We haven’t even mentioned the weather yet. I note that the Yankees lost at least two or three home runs to the conditions during the first two games of the Angels series. Austin Wells hit one at 101 mph to right field in the seventh inning Tuesday. On a hot summer night, wouldn’t that ball have gone over the wall?

“That’s right,” Bellinger says. “The wind's been blowing in, it’s a little misty, all that.”

He pauses again. “It's a weird game, right?” he says. “It’s the craziest sport of all -- for sure. Right?”

While we have this conversation, Bellinger is carrying a .125 batting average over his past seven games. A few hours later, he blasts his tenth homer of the season over the right field wall.

Go figure.

Q&A: Dave Roberts says Mark Walter will help make Lakers a perennial title contender

Mark Walter is seen at the Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation Blue Diamond Gala.
Dodgers owner and chairman Mark Walter has agreed to purchase a majority stake in the Lakers. (Jordan Strauss / invision/ap)

The Buss family's decision to sell its majority stake in the Lakers to Dodgers controlling owner Mark Walter sent shockwaves through L.A. on Wednesday.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was among those surprised by the development. Speaking to reporters before his team's game against the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium, Roberts shared his thoughts on what Walter could bring to the Lakers.

Question: What's your reaction to the deal?

“Obviously he’s had some kind of stake the last few years or whatever. He’s really committed to the city of Los Angeles in various ways. Sports is something that he’s very passionate about, and certainly Los Angeles sports. I think it’s a very exciting day for the Lakers, for the city of Los Angeles. And I think speaking from [the perspective of] a Dodger employee, he’s very competitive. He’s going to do everything he can to produce a championship-caliber team every single year and make sure the city feels proud of the Lakers and the legacy that they’ve already built with the Buss family.”

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts smiles before a game against the Texas Rangers in April.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts smiles before a game against the Texas Rangers in April. (Julio Cortez / Associated Press)

When did you learn that about him?

“I would say probably seven, eight, nine years ago, just having a conversation with him as far as how much he enjoyed spending time in Los Angeles, and a lot of low-hanging fruit in the sense of what this city could be, already is, and can be. He wanted to infuse kind of his intelligence, his resources. He just wanted more skin in the game. That’s just speaking for him. But he’s obviously a very smart person.”

How have you seen him be competitive

“I think he does everything he can to provide resources, support. He wants to win. He feels that the fans, the city, deserves that. I think that’s never lost. It’s more challenging us always to, how do we become better and not complacent or stagnant to continue to stay current with the market and the competition to win not only now but for as far as we can see out.”

Read more:Lakers selling majority ownership of franchise to Dodgers owner

What makes a good owner?

“I think a good owner in my eyes is a person that lets the people that he hires do their jobs. He does a great job of letting Stan and Andrew and Gomer, all those guys, Lon, do their jobs right. But also kind of holding us all accountable, and also providing resources needed. In this case, players, to field a team that’s warranted of a championship-caliber team every year. Also, doing stuff for charity and appreciating not only the baseball side but just as important, the business side. He invests a lot of resources in that as well. I think that that’s kind of all-encompassing of what I’ve been fortunate to be around.”

Does this mean you’re sitting courtside?

“Yes. (Laughter). I’m sure a lot of people are hitting Mark up, but I might add myself to the list.”

Read more:Plaschke: Lakers had a great ride with Buss family, but Dodgers owner will give team new life

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets' Frankie Montas has another rough outing in rehab start for Triple-A

Making his sixth rehab start and fourth with Triple-A Syracuse, right-hander Frankie Montas turned in another disappointing outing in what could possibly be his final start before re-joining the Mets.

Things started off well for Montas who went the first three innings without allowing a run before he was dinged for two in the fourth. He then went back out for the fifth with the game tied at 2-2 and gave up a three-run homer to Troy Johnston to put a crimp in his start.

Montas wasn't out of the woods yet after a double and wild pitch put a runner on third base with two outs. He retired the final batter of the inning to strand the runner at third, but the damage was already done.

The righty finished his night by going five innings, allowing five earned runs on seven hits and a walk while striking out two. He threw 80 pitches (47 strikes).

It was the latest in a string of bad outings for the 32-year-old who entered the night with a 13.17 ERA (2.34 WHIP) in just 13.2 innings. After the start, Montas' ERA rose slightly to 13.19.

On the bright side, it was the longest start Montas was able to pitch during his rehab with his previous-long being four innings on June 3 when he also allowed five earned runs (on four home runs).

Manager Carlos Mendozasaid before Wednesday's game against the Atlanta Braves that the Mets will need to make a decision on Montas soon.

"Let’s see how he feels after the outing today," the skipper said. "We wanna see execution, obviously, and then we have a decision. We gotta talk to him, but we’re approaching the deadline where we gotta make a decision on him."

Manager ins and outs – June 2025

Ange Postecoglou
Ange Postecoglou was sacked as Tottenham manager 16 days after leading them to victory in the Europa League final [Getty Images]

BBC Sport tracks all the manager ins and outs in the Premier League, Scottish Premiership, Women's Super League, English Football League and National League.

All of the managerial movements for June will appear below.

Ins

24 June: Rob Edwards - Middlesbrough

22 June: Martin Paterson - Notts County

20 June: Matt Beard - Burnley women

19 June: Gerhard Struber - Bristol City

18 June: Ruben Selles - Sheff Utd

16 June: Brian Barry-Murphy - Cardiff City

16 June: Alun Armstrong - Gateshead

14 June: Adam Lakeland - Halifax

13 June: Tom Cleverley - Plymouth

12 June: Simon Grayson - Hartlepool

12 June: Thomas Frank - Tottenham

11 June: Sergej Jakirovic - Hull City

3 June: Liam Manning - Norwich City

2 June: Ryan Mason - West Brom

2 June: Steven Pressley - Dundee

Outs

24 June: Marti Cifuentes - QPR

18 June: Chris Wilder - Sheff Utd

12 June: Anthony Limbrick - Hartlepool

8 June: Robert Vilahamn - Tottenham women

6 June: Ange Postecoglou - Tottenham

4 June: Michael Carrick - Middlesbrough

3 June: Simone Inzaghi - Inter Milan

3 June: Liam Manning - Bristol City

Mets Notes: Francisco Alvarez not in lineup after defensive blunder; injury updates

After a disappointing loss to the Atlanta Braves on Tuesday night that saw the Mets make a slew of costly mistakes, New York will look to rebound on Wednesday in the middle game of the three-game series.

Before the game, manager Carlos Mendoza touched on the loss and also gave updates on a few of his injured players.

Francisco Alvarez out, Luis Torrens in

Following a throwing blunder in the bottom of the 10th inning that led to the game-winning run to score, the 23-year-old catcher is not in Wednesday's starting lineup. In Alvarez's place, Torrens is behind the plate and batting sixth against LHP Chris Sale.

With both catchers essentially splitting duties so far this season after Alvarez began the season on the IL with a hamate bone fracture, the decision to bench the young backstop isn't necessarily due to his misplay. However, Mendoza did say that both players will continue to get playing time even with Torrens struggling offensively.

"I’ve been saying it, they’re both gonna play," the skipper said. "So I just thought getting Luis in there, it needs to continue to be that way. Alvy will play, Luis will play and I just thought today was a good day for Luis to be in the lineup."

For what it's worth, Alvarez took responsibility for his gaffe after last night's game and was clearly upset about it. Nevertheless, his production offensively and defensively hasn't been great this season and he went 0-for-3 with a walk and run scored in the loss.

The down year by Alvarez thus far is disappointing after he burst onto the season in 2023 with 25 home runs during his rookie season. He has just five extra-base hits in 115 at-bats this season and is hitting .235 with a .636 OPS.

Regardless, Mendoza has seen some signs that the youngster could be on the right track.

"He’s on time for the fastball," Mendoza said. "Yesterday I didn’t see that, in particular, but I’m gonna go back to the past week where I feel like he’s hitting the ball in the air, he’s hitting the ball hard – something that we didn’t see early on when he got back from the injury.

"I like some of the takes, some of the breaking balls that he’s taking, so I do feel that he’s – I know he’s working and it hasn’t been easy for him, but the one thing with Alvy is he’s very positive and he’ll continue to grind through it."

Despite leaving him out of the lineup, Mendoza knows how important Alvarez is to the team and that to get him out of the funk he's been in, he needs to be in lineup.

"In Alvy’s case, the way you’re gonna fight through it is by being in the lineup. You can hit outside and hit early and things like that, but he knows how important he is for this team and we know how important he is and we’re gonna need him, obviously. So, we’ll continue to help him and work with him. He’s got a lot of potential," Mendoza said.

On the injury front

Frankie Montas (right lat strain) is making his sixth rehab start on Wednesday and his fourth for Triple-A Syracuse.

It hasn't gone well for the right-hander who signed with New York during the offseason, owning a 13.17 ERA (2.34 WHIP) in just 13.2 innings. In his last start, Montas managed to only go 1.2 innings and allowed eight earned runs on seven hits and a walk.

The Mets are hoping for a better performance on Wednesday as they near the deadline to make a decision with the 32-year-old.

"Let’s see how he feels after the outing today," Mendoza said. "We wanna see execution, obviously, and then we have a decision. We gotta talk to him, but we’re approaching the deadline where we gotta make a decision on him."

When asked if by a decision he meant using Montas as a reliever or starter with the big league club, Mendoza clarified.

"No, no like activate him," he said. "Because first he’s gotta be 100 percent healthy, which knock on wood he keeps saying he’s fine. So we just gotta wait, get through today, see how he comes back tomorrow and the next day and then we have a decision."

With the Mets in need of starting pitching help after injuries to Kodai Senga and Tylor Megill, it's a bit telling that the team doesn't seem eager to activate Montas.

Meanwhile, after DHing in his first rehab start, Mark Vientos (hamstring) is off on Wednesday. He's scheduled to play third base soon and New York would like to see him play back-to-back games in the field before proceeding.

As for another third baseman, Brett Baty is feeling better after missing Tuesday's game with a groin injury, but Mendoza and the Mets still need to wait and see.

"He’s better, but I gotta see how he goes during BP today and ground balls and things like that," the skipper said. "But early on when I saw him he said he was feeling a little bit better.”

Who's starting Friday?

The Mets still don't know, but are working through it and will likely have a better idea tomorrow.

What they do know is whoever pitches on Friday will give them length -- it will not be a bullpen game. Whether the pitcher starts the game or comes in after an opener like New York has done a couple of times this season remains to be seen, although the latter hasn't been discussed.

"We’ll see," Mendoza said. "Get through today, tomorrow, but we haven’t talked about a potential opener yet, so we gotta see what kind of shape we’re in going into that game."

Yankees' Marcus Stroman retires first 10 batters in second rehab start for Double-A Somerset

Yankees pitcher Marcus Stroman (left knee inflammation) made his second rehab start with Double-A Somerset on Wednesday night and was dominant through the first three innings, retiring the first 10 New Hampshire Fisher Cats he faced, including four strikeouts.

Things then got a little messy for the right-hander in the bottom of the fourth inning.

Stroman struck out the leadoff hitter, but gave up a double to Charles McAdoo, who stole third and scored on a throwing error by catcher Rafael Flores. He walked a man, let up a single, and threw a wild pitch to give NH runners on second and third base.

The veteran was pulled after the wild pitch, ending his night after 55 pitches (34 strikes) and 3.1 innings. Overall, he allowed two earned runs on two hits with four strikeouts and a walk.

Coincidentally, Stroman also tossed 3.1 innings in his first rehab outing on June 11, allowing one run on one hit and two walks with four strikeouts.

The 34-year-old last pitched in the big leagues on April 11 and had struggled prior to the injury, owning an 11.57 ERA with just seven strikeouts over 9.1 IP across three starts.