Mets reliever Brooks Raley strikes out two in first rehab appearance

Mets left-handed relieverBrooks Raleytook his first small step toward making a return to the big leagues.

Raley made his first rehab appearance on Tuesday night for A-ball St. Luice, pitching a scoreless first inning, allowing one hit, but getting two swinging strikeouts on offspeed pitches down in the zone. Facing two left-handed batters and two righties, he threw 12 pitches (10 strikes).

The lefty threw seven sliders, four changeups, and one sinker and got four called strikes and two whiffs.

This was Raley's first time on the mound in a game in 424 days, which is a quick turnaround considering Tommy John surgery can be a 12-18 month rehabilitation. The lefty underwent the procedure, which also included an internal brace, last May after appearing in eight games with the Mets in 2024, allowing just two hits and three walks over 7.0 innings with nine strikeouts.

Acquired in a December 2022 trade with Tampa Bay, the lefty had a stellar first year in Queens, pitching to a 2.80 ERA and 1.262 WHIP in 54.2 innings over 66 appearances out of the bullpen. He allowed 19 runs (17 earned) on 44 hits with 61 strikeouts to 25 walks.

Raley, who turns 37 in two weeks, re-signed with the Mets this April on a one-year deal with a team option for 2026.

Due to the length of Raley's time out of action, president of baseball operations David Stearns said last week the rehab assignment could last the full 30 days or close to it.

Nick Castellanos benched for 'inappropriate comment' after being pulled for defensive replacement

MIAMI — Nick Castellanos was benched by Phillies manager Rob Thomson on Tuesday for “an inappropriate comment” the outfielder made after he was pulled for a defensive replacement a day earlier, ending Castellanos' streak of 236 consecutive starts.

“One thing about Nick, one of the many things about Nick is that he is very emotional,” Thomson said before Tuesday night's game at Miami. “He loves to play. He loves to play every inning of every game.

“I just thought last night he made an inappropriate comment after he came out. So, today, he’s not in the lineup. And I’m going to leave it at that.”

Castellanos played right field and singled in four at-bats against the Marlins on Monday before Johan Rojas replaced him in the bottom of the eighth. Max Kepler moved to right and Rojas played center.

The 33-year-old Castellanos, who is in his fourth season with the Phillies, is hitting .278 with seven homers and 36 RBIs. Castellanos, born and raised in South Florida, often has dozens of relatives and friends in the stands when the Phillies visit the Marlins.

Kepler started in right field Tuesday night.

How Adames expects to benefit from Giants' Devers addition

How Adames expects to benefit from Giants' Devers addition originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Of all the people that were buoyed by the Giants’ trade for Rafael Devers, Willy Adames might be the happiest of them all.

Adames, a newcomer himself to the Bay, is counting on Devers’ presence in the lineup to change the way opposing pitchers deal with him as he tries to work his way out of what has been to this point a season-long struggle at the plate.

Adames had one of his better nights offensively in San Francisco’s 3-2 loss to Cleveland on Tuesday at Oracle Park, reaching base three times against the Guardians for only the seventh time in 73 games this season.

While not drawing a definitive correlation in connecting his night to Devers’ arrival, Adames is fully aware that the direction of his season can change quickly with the slugger now in the Giants’ lineup.

“Maybe not tonight necessarily … but I know in the long run for a fact I’m going to get more pitches to hit because of him,” Adames said.

For the first two months of the 2025 MLB season, Adames wasn’t very comfortable at the plate and was the target of a lot of fan and media criticism after the Giants signed him to the largest contract in franchise history, a very fat seven-year, $182 million deal.

The trade for Devers was meant to inject some lift into San Francisco’s uneven offense with a seriously powerful bat near the top of the lineup. Some have said he’s the best hitter in a Giants uniform since the days of Barry Bonds.

Coincidentally, Bonds sat in the front row during Devers’ introductory press conference and is expected to work with the new Giant on hitting as the season progresses.

“Another power bat in the lineup,” Giants pitcher Robbie Ray said. “Once we get healthy, get [injured third baseman Matt Chapman] back, we’re going to be that much better.”

Devers’ debut for the Orange and Black included two hits and an RBI in five at-bats, and he was met with multiple standing ovations as the game went along.

“Already a fan favorite,” Giants manager Bob Melvin said. “There’s a lot going on emotionally. We just assume that everything is great, and it’s hard to do what he did today. That’s what impressed me the most, how comfortable he looked in a completely different place.”

Adames, who hit second in the batting order with Devers hitting third, looked pretty comfortable himself.

Although he said he didn’t notice a difference in how Cleveland’s pitchers worked against him, Adames fully embraces and expects things to be different in the coming months — not just for himself, but the entire Giants team.

“I feel like everything is falling into place at the right time,” Adames said. “Now it’s just continue to embrace that feeling and keep trying to get better. With him behind me, and then when we get Chappy back, it’s going to be good.”

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Mets Injury Notes: Sean Manaea heading to Syracuse, Frankie Montas to make another rehab start

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza provided injury updates to a trio of players ahead of Tuesday night's series opener against the Braves in Atlanta.


Sean Manaea off to Syracuse

With the Mets needing a starter for Friday after losing Tylor Megill to the IL, his replacement won't be a starter off the IL. Manaea, who made three appearances with Brooklyn, is heading to Triple-A Syracuse to continue his rehab.

He will make his first start with Syracuse on Friday.

In his three starts with the Cyclones, Manaea surrendered eight runs (seven earned) on 11 hits with three walks, three hit batsmen, and eight strikeouts in 6.2 innings.

Frankie Montas to man another rehab start

The veteran right-hander will make his next start on Wednesday at Triple-A as his long ramp-up to his Mets debut continues.

"We're gonna wait til he gets through that one to see how he recovers from it," Mendoza said.

Now, Montas' role when he gets to the big leagues is still a bit up in the air. He has struggled so far, allowing four runs in 4.1 innings over two outings with Brooklyn and 16 runs (including seven home runs) in 9.1 innings over three starts with Syracuse, and there was the possibility he could be sent to the bullpen. But even with the injuries to Megill and Kodai Senga, that remains an open question.

"Yeah, we still gotta wait," the manager said. "I'm not gonna get ahead of myself. Let's see how he goes [Wednesday]. Hopefully, he throws the ball well and, not only that, he feels well. And then we have a decision."

Mendoza said that they are hopeful he "gets some good results" and bounces back and is "part of the rotation."

"That would be the ideal scenario," he said.

The manager said that part of Montas' issue during his rehab start has been execution, "getting behind hitters" and "not moving well mechanically on the mound as he's going through the delivery."

"I watched his last bullpen at Citi Field, and he felt really good. So [pitching coach Jeremy Hefner] continues to work with him," Mendoza said. "[Hefner] liked what he saw mechanically from him, even though the results weren't there the last time he pitched."

Brett Baty resumes baseball activities

The plan for Baty -- who is not on the IL and considered day-to-day -- was for him to take ground balls and get some hitting in on the field, Mendoza believed, but the third baseman is "feeling a little bit better."

Baty tweaked his groin in Sunday's series finale against the Tampa Bay Rays at Citi Field. The month of June so far has not been Baty's best friend, as he has just six hits in 44 at-bats (.136) with a .477 OPS, thanks to two of those hits being homers.

Mark Vientos starts rehab

Vientos will be the DH for Syracuse on Tuesday night. The plan is for him to have Wednesday off and then "play on the field" after that as he begins his progression back to full fitness, Mendoza said.

For the 25-year-old to be ready to return, the skipper said it depends on his ability to play "back-to-back" full games, but they are looking for him to get some at-bats and "get some reps at third base." The indication was that, when he is healthy, he will return to the majors.

Vientos, who went down with the injury two weeks ago during the series at the Dodgers, has been slumping, as well. He had just six hits in his last 36 at-bats (.167) and a .549 OPS in the 12 games before hitting the IL.

Start of Tuesday's Mets-Braves game in Atlanta delayed due to rain

The start of the three-game series between the Mets and Braves on Tuesday night has been delayed due to rain.

A new start time of 8:10 p.m. was later announced, barring a further change in the Georgia weather.

Originally scheduled for a 7:15 p.m. first pitch in Atlanta, the tarp went onto the field around 6:10 p.m. as rain began to fall, and it was a heavy rain at times.

Left-hander David Peterson (2.49 ERA, 1.192 WHIP in 79.2 innings) and right-hander Spencer Schwellenbach (3.11 ERA, 1.004 WHIP in 89.2 innings) are still expected to start the series opener.

Peterson is coming off his best start of the year, and arguably the best start of his career, when he pitched a six-hit shutout of the Washington Nationals with six strikeouts. In his last six starts, covering 41.1 innings, the lefty has pitched to a 1.96 ERA with 35 strikeouts to 12 walks.

Not to be outdone, Schwellenbach is another especially tough customer. Atlanta's starter is also coming off a complete game pitched last Wednesday, when he allowed two runs on five hits with nine strikeouts against the Milwaukee Braves.

And Schwellenbach has been particularly tough on the Mets, allowing just nine hits in 73 at-bats (.123 average and .341 OPS) with 20 strikeouts and one walk over three games. Manager Carlos Mendoza called him a "pretty elite arm."

"He's one of the best starters in the league at such a young age," he said. "We saw him a lot last year, the velo and the pitch package, the way he uses all of his pitches. Not only is [he] up to like 98, 99 [mph], but the cutter, the slider, the changeup, the split."

The game marks the first of six on the road for the Mets, who will travel to Philadelphia for a three-game set with the Phillies next Friday through Sunday, before returning to Queens and playing Atlanta four more times.

With the Braves sitting at 31-39 and 13.0 games behind the division-leading Mets (45-27), the seven games over the next fortnight are big.

What we learned as Rafael Devers' Giants debut spoiled in loss to Guardians

What we learned as Rafael Devers' Giants debut spoiled in loss to Guardians originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – After introducing Rafael Devers to Bay Area media earlier in the day, the Giants had plenty of chances to make it a fantastic evening all the way around but stranded seven runners on base over the final four innings and wound up losing 3-2 to the Cleveland Guardians on Tuesday at Oracle Park.

Devers, acquired in a trade from the Boston Red Sox on Sunday, had a nice debut and was greeted warmly by Giants fans, but that was about the extent of the good times on the shore of McCovey Cove.

Starter Robbie Ray threw six uneven innings and lost for the second time in four starts. He allowed all three runs that the Guardians scored.

It’s only the third time that the Giants (41-32) have lost in the 15 games Ray has started this season.

Cleveland (36-35) got to Ray for single runs in the third and fourth innings, but it was Gabriel Arias’ one-out home run in the sixth that provided the deciding run.

Devers and Willy Adames had two hits apiece to lead the Giants’ offense. Devers and Dominic Smith drove in both of San Francisco’s runs.

The Giants got the tying run into scoring position in each of the final four innings but failed to advance them. San Francisco finished the game 1-for-13 with runners in scoring position.

Left fielder Heliot Ranos had an impressive play to keep the game close in the top of the ninth when he caught Angel Martinez’s fly ball and then made a dynamic throw home to get Arias out sliding across the plate. The play was reviewed and upheld.

Not all the news was bad.

Justin Verlander is expected to come off the Injured List and start on Wednesday.

Here are the takeaways from Tuesday’s game:

Devers at the dish

The two-time Silver Slugger award winner, whose arrival in town was expected to boost San Francisco’s up-and-down offense, got the Oracle Crowd roaring when he lined an RBI double into the gap in right-center, scoring Adames.

Devers, who received a standing ovation earlier in the game when he struck out swinging in his first at-bat, crushed a 2-0 fastball from Guardians starter Slade Cecconi to drive in Adames, who scored from first base after drawing a walk leading off the frame. The ball was smoked into Triples Alley and Devers took full advantage with his speed to get into scoring position.

Devers struck out swinging again in the fifth, hit a soft dribbler back to the pitcher in the seventh with two runners on base in the seventh and then hit a one-out single in the ninth.

Ray’s Day

The veteran lefty who has been the Giants’ best pitcher this season suffered through a second consecutive rough outing after being in Cy Young mode for the first two months of the season.

The numbers alone on Ray’s stat line were not up to his standard – six innings, five hits, three runs, five strikeouts and two walks – while throwing 102 pitches, the second-most that he has had this season.

This one went beyond the numbers.

Ray has had a significant mound presence for most of the season but that was missing Tuesday. The Guardians were aggressive at the plate and squared up several hard-hit balls off Ray. Four of the Rays’ hits had an exit velocity of 99 mph or higher, including the Gabriel Arias home run in the sixth that left the park at 107.3 mph.

Although Ray would never cop to it, fatigue might be an issue. Ray lasted five innings, raising his total this season to 86 1/3. That’s more than double the workload that Ray has had in three of his previous five seasons

Signs of life

Slowly but surely, Adames is getting more and more comfortable at the plate and it’s showing.

With three home runs in his six games preceding Tuesday, Adames has been on his best roll of the season. He stayed warm at the plate against Cleveland with two singles and a walk.

It’s only the seventh time in the Giants’ 73 games this season that Adames has reached base three times or more. That’s not a huge deal, with the trade for Devers coinciding with Adames’ comfort at the plate, the prospects for San Francisco’s offense are looking a lot more promising than they were a week ago.

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Yankees bump Jasson Dominguez to leadoff spot for Tuesday's Angels matchup

In the midst of a season-worst four-game losing streak and jarring 20-inning scoreless streak, the Yankees are shaking things up with a new hitter atop their lineup.

Jasson Dominguez will bat in the leadoff spot on Tuesday night against the visiting Los Angeles Angels, and it's the first time the rookie outfielder has been penciled in higher than fifth in the order all season.

Before the game, Yankees manager Aaron Boone said the decision to elevate Dominguez was made with his "obsession with balance" in mind, but the lineup tweak could provide a jolt to a dormant offense that's been shut out in two straight games. Boone also noted days off for Paul Goldschmidt and Ben Rice when explaining Dominguez's new task.

"I felt like this was the best way to go. Hopefully he controls the zone like he does and does his thing at the top today," Boone said of Dominguez. "He's just really good with the strike zone. He kind of always has been. When he's been at his best this season, that's what he's done. Hopefully he sets the tone for us at the top."

Dominguez was by no means an obvious candidate to assume leadoff duties with a few impact players resting on the bench. The switch-hitting youngster hasn't connected on many pitches of late, as he's slashed a measly .204/.259/.245 with no home runs and just three RBI across his last 15 games (49 at-bats). He's also struggled mightily against lefties this season, and his league-average 102 wRC+ ranks 10th on the team.

But the former top prospect has the speed and pop to effectively serve as a table setter, and he'll be able to hit from his more-dominant left side with veteran right-hander Kyle Hendricks slated to start for the Angels.

While the leadoff assignment comes with added pressure and responsibility, this isn't Dominguez's first time in the role. He batted first in the second-to-last game of the 2024 season, finishing 1-for-4 with a walk and strikeout against the Pirates.

The Yankees obviously want more production from Dominguez, who's batting .236 overall and trying to meet lofty expectations set by scouts and fans years ago when he was still a teenager. But it's easy to forget Dominguez has played in only 53 career Triple-A games, plus he's been learning a new outfield position.

"He's done a nice job. He's shown you in these couple months, or cemented for us, 'Man, this guy's going to be a really good player,'" Boone said. "His at-bat quality is there. He's still coming around from the right side, but I feel like that's improving. That's an experience thing, he'll get better and better with time... You see his talent pretty much every night that he's out there..."

The Yankees' new-ish lineup will also feature Giancarlo Stanton for a second straight night, as he's slated to bat fourth as their designated hitter. The veteran slugger returned from the injured list and made his season debut in Monday's extra-innings loss, going 2-for-4 with a double.

Control issues doom Luzardo as Phillies' winning streak ends at five

Control issues doom Luzardo as Phillies' winning streak ends at five originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Jesus Luzardo’s control was off and the Phillies’ bullpen was unable to keep the Marlins at bay as the five-game winning streak came to a close.

Luzardo walked four, including back-to-back hitters in the bottom of the sixth to end his night. The Phillies had taken a one-run lead the prior half-inning on RBI singles by Johan Rojas and Kyle Schwarber but the Marlins changed the game in the sixth and kept tacking on against the bullpen in an 8-3 Phillies loss.

Tanner Banks took over for Luzardo with two on and nobody out and was nearly out of the jam with the game tied when Miguel Sanoja tripled in a run with two strikes and two outs. Xavier Edwards followed with a shallow fly ball to right field that Max Kepler appeared to lose in the lights.

Kepler was starting in right field for the first time this season in place of Nick Castellanos, who was benched by manager Rob Thomson for making an inappropriate comment after being removed in the eighth inning Monday for a defensive replacement.

The loss was the first since last Tuesday for the Phillies, who are 43-30. They have a 19-8 record against the five worst teams they’ve played — the Rockies, Marlins, Pirates, Nationals and A’s — though they’ve lost four of the last five.

Luzardo (6-3, 4.41 ERA) has undoubtedly been more effective his last two times out since adjusting his glove positioning to limit pitch-tipping with runners on base, but four walks will drive up a pitch count and hurt you no matter the weakness of the opposing offense. The Phillies have lost four of his last five starts.

A two-run deficit might have been manageable but Joe Ross (4.98 ERA, 6 HR allowed) was taken deep in the seventh inning by Jesus Sanchez, and the last man in the ‘pen — Michael Mercado — allowed two more in a long bottom of the eighth.

The Phillies play the Marlins twice more this week and have Ranger Suarez and Cristopher Sanchez on the hill. They didn’t need to use any of their main relievers in the loss.

It was another multi-hit effort for Trea Turner, who leads the National League with 90 hits and looks like a sure-fire All-Star. He launched a towering 413-foot home run to left field in his second at-bat, No. 9 on the season, all of them on the road.

The 2021 batting champ is hitting .308 and looks to set the tone again Wednesday night to start another Phillies winning streak.

Mets sweep and get swept, now Braves and Phillies up next | The Mets Pod

On the latest episode of The Mets Pod presented by Tri-State Cadillac, Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo recap a good sweep and a bad sweep, plus preview some NL East showdowns for the Mets. Connor and Joe recap the week that was, including a fun time against the Nationals, tough struggles against the Rays, and some marks against the starting pitching staff.

The guys also cover the injury to Kodai Senga, the stepping up of David Peterson, the wait for several young players to make a case to stay, and the upcoming matchups with the Braves and Phillies.

Later, the show goes Down on the Farm for a status update on the red-hot Jett Williams, and takes on Mailbag questions about the long-term plan for center field, moving certain starters to the bullpen, the changes to the physical baseballs in 2025, and what it would cost to trade for Aroldis Chapman.

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Mets place Tylor Megill on IL due to elbow injury

The Mets have placed right-handed pitcher Tylor Megillon the IL due to a sprained right elbow.

Megill struggled badly during his start against the Rays on Saturday at Citi Field, allowing seven runs (three earned) on seven hits while walking two and striking out five.

He has taken a downturn since starting the season hot, allowing four runs or more in five of his last eight starts.

Speaking in the clubhouse on Tuesday, Megill said the good news is that an MRI revealed his elbow is structurally fine, but he's dealing with inflammation, saying he felt "some pulling" in his elbow during his last start, particularly when throwing breaking balls, and that he had "no idea" where his sliders were going.

"Just lots of inflammation around the elbow," Megill said. "That’s kind of what’s pissing off the tendons and ligaments."

The plan for now, according to Megill, is to rest his arm for 7-10 days before getting reassessed. According to manager Carlos Mendoza, even if the inflammation subsides in 7-10 days, it would likely be 4-5 weeks before Megill is fully ramped back up to pitch in the majors.

With Megill on the IL, reliever Justin Garza has been called up from Triple-A Syracuse -- possibly to keep a spot warm until the Mets decide who starts in Megill's place the next time through the rotation.

The way Megill had been pitching recently, it was possible he was nearing the end of his run in the rotation, since Frankie Montas is expected back after making one more rehab start for Triple-A Syracuse.

Beyond Montas, the Mets are also expected to get Sean Manaea back relatively soon. Manaea has already made three rehab starts, and will likely make two or three more before being activated.

Still, the loss of Megill so soon after the Mets placed Kodai Senga on the IL due to a hamstring injury that could keep him out until around the All-Star break will challenge their depth at least for a short time.

New York's current rotation consists of Clay Holmes, David Peterson, Griffin Canning, and Paul Blackburn -- who will return to the rotation on Wednesday in place of Senga.

On Tuesday against the Braves in Atlanta, the Mets begin a stretch of 13 games in 13 days, which means they'll need someone to fill a rotation spot on Friday in Philadelphia, which had been Megill's next expected turn.

They could conceivably opt to use an opener in place of Megill, or could turn to a myriad of options currently with Triple-A Syracuse.

Brandon Waddell (who last pitched on June 12) could be an option, as could a prospect such as Nolan McLean.

McLean last pitched on June 14, and has been pitching every fifth or sixth day, which means he would line up for a potential spot-start on Friday.

According to Mendoza, Friday will likely be a spot start for whoever gets the ball, and the Mets will then have a decision to make with Montas, if all goes well in his next rehab start.

Behind the scenes of how Giants stunned MLB world with Devers trade

Behind the scenes of how Giants stunned MLB world with Devers trade originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — It all started with a text message.

About a month ago, Giants president of baseball operations Buster Posey needed to talk to Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow about something minor, but there was something else that he couldn’t stop thinking about. He opened his group chat with general manager Zack Minasian and assistant general manager Jeremy Shelley and asked a question that would transform the future of the team they run.

“Do you guys think I should ask about Devers?” he wrote.

Both Minasian and Shelley pressed down on the message and waited for their options to pop up. Both clicked on the “thumbs up” emoji.

What followed was one of the quietest pursuits of a superstar in MLB history, one that shocked the industry on Sunday, when Rafael Devers was traded to the Giants as they were preparing to face the rival Los Angeles Dodgers on Sunday Night Baseball. Two days later, Devers was introduced on the club level at Oracle Park during a press conference that was attended by his new teammates and set them on a new path, one that Posey believes will bring a championship back to San Francisco. 

The first three since the team moved West are largely because of Posey. If there’s a fourth, it might be traced back to that text message and the month that followed. There were stops and starts, but the Giants kept pushing. They wanted to avoid the madness of the MLB trade deadline, which led to a situation that’s just about unprecedented. On June 15, six weeks before the deadline, they acquired Devers for pitchers Kyle Harrison and Jordan Hicks, along with two prospects. 

“I give Buster a lot of credit. He seemed very determined,” Minasian said Tuesday. “He worked pretty hard at it with Craig Breslow. There’s always ups and downs to these conversations, but he wanted to see it through. Our baseball operations group wanted to see it through. We’re just thrilled this was the outcome.”

As with most major life decisions, the initial thought quickly had to escape the group chat. Two weeks ago, during a home game against the Atlanta Braves, Posey, Minasian and Shelley met with chairman Greg Johnson in the front office’s suite at Oracle Park. Acquiring a player owed roughly $255 million over the next eight and a half seasons would require early buy-in from ownership, but Johnson already was on the same page. 

Late last month, as the Giants were getting swept by the Detroit Tigers, Johnson and Minasian had a conversation about the offense, which went 16 straight games without scoring more than four runs at one point. Johnson watched the offense flounder and mentioned to his general manager that they needed a bat. A few days later, as they sat in the booth and discussed Devers, Minasian smiled.

“I said, ‘Did you think we were going to come to you with a bat controlled for the next eight years?'” he recalled. 

Posey’s ambition did not catch Johnson by surprise. The president of baseball operations is also a member of the ownership group, and he had started to set the stage for taking on what will be the biggest contract in franchise history. Plus, there was no doubt in anyone’s mind about what the roster needed. Johnson called the hole in the lineup “obvious” and noted that the organization is thrilled with how all of the young pitching has developed. The window to contend opened sooner than most expected. 

As Johnson sat with his baseball operations team, he asked about the short- and long-term implications. 

“We’ve got what’s in front of us, the opportunity, but we’ve also got to look down the road, as well, for the group,” Johnson told NBC Sports Bay Area. “We talked a lot about that and there have been deals we didn’t do by that process, where we all got together and went around and everybody was just a little, ‘Well, maybe not’ and we just kind of killed it at the last minute. That was kind of the start and we just rolled from there.”

It was not, however, an entirely smooth process. 

The Red Sox, per sources, began negotiations by asking for top prospect Bryce Eldridge. The Giants considered him 100 percent off-limits, and eventually the conversation turned to players like Hayden Birdsong, Carson Whisenhunt, Harrison and 2024 first-rounder James Tibbs. The front office eventually parted with two of them, but the Red Sox initially pushed for a larger group. Johnson said negotiations “stalled” several times.

“I called their ownership group and just said, ‘We’re serious about this, and I think you guys are maybe pushing a little too hard in players that they want as part of the deal,'” he told NBC Sports Bay Area. “There were times where it looked like it was dead and then it came back online. We just kept the dialogue alive. I think just putting the pressure [on] — we weren’t going to be around at the deadline. We wanted to make it clear to them that if this deal gets done, it gets done in the next few weeks. We’re not going to drag it out and we’ll move on to something else. I think that was very important.”

The stunning timing of the deal led many in the sports world to compare it to the Luka Dončić trade, and if there’s an element that’s particularly similar, it’s that desire from the Giants to get the deal done early and avoid a bidding war, and their ability to convince the Red Sox to follow the same path. 

The Giants felt the Red Sox were motivated to simply move on from Devers, who did not see eye to eye with management. Getting it done early allowed them to avoid the noise of the deadline, and the awkwardness that would come with potentially not trading Devers after rumors got out. 

The Red Sox likely could have found better prospect hauls elsewhere, but the Giants had a key card to play. They were willing to take on the entirety of Devers’ contract. Does the deal get done if they don’t do that?

“No,” Johnson said. 

The Giants’ own sense of urgency was pushed by their lack of offensive thump, and in the end, after a month of back-and-forth, the deal came together quickly. Posey was on the road trip but flew home Sunday to be with his family. He has joked during his tenure as an executive that the hardest part is always being on the phone, and on Father’s Day, he took calls as he watched his four children run around the backyard. 

Minasian had plenty of conversations in recent weeks with Red Sox VP of Baseball Operations Brian O’Halloran, but they both knew that at some point the ball would be turned over to Posey and Breslow. On Sunday morning, Posey informed Minasian that they were close. Thirty minutes before first pitch later that day, Harrison was told to leave the field, where he had been preparing to start against the Dodgers. 

The deal was a shock to most of the clubhouse, but manager Bob Melvin had known for some time that it was in the works. His big concern Sunday was about what to do with his lineup card. Major League Baseball asks that an official version gets turned into their computer system at least half an hour before first pitch, but Melvin stalled because he knew Posey was on the phone with the Red Sox. With players starting to stretch, Posey told Melvin to turn in a card without Harrison on it. 

The paperwork was fully approved by MLB a couple of minutes before first pitch, and as players prepared for the Dodgers, word spread that they had a new face of the franchise. Two days later, Devers arrived and got a standing ovation in his first at-bat. In an early reminder that this isn’t Boston, he also heard cheers after striking out. 

In the 48 hours between the trade becoming official and Devers getting introduced at Oracle Park, the Giants sold thousands of additional tickets, and you can’t ignore that part of this. They are up about 2,500 fans per game without even getting the annual boost of kids being out of school yet, and on the last homestand, as negotiations went on, they drew more than 35,000 to six of seven games. On the day that the front office met to discuss Devers, they sold out Oracle Park. 

The vibes changed in October when the Giants made Posey their president of baseball operations. That has carried over through a winning first half, and they’re hopeful that the Devers addition takes them to the next level, where they were for most of Posey’s playing career. 

“It speaks to what Buster has done, the tone he has set with the organization, bringing Willy [Adames] in and how he has just been a tremendous clubhouse presence,” Johnson said. “Obviously part of our comfort level in getting this deal done is how fans have been so engaged and showing up at the park. That helps, I think, the board and ownership group make this kind of commitment, when we see that kind of commitment coming from our fans.” 

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Mets promote flamethrowing relief prospect Dylan Ross to Triple-A Syracuse

Right-handed reliever Dylan Ross continues to skyrocket through the Mets’ system, with the organization promoting him to Triple-A Syracuse on Tuesday.

Ross, drafted by the Mets in the 13th round of the 2022 draft, had a UCL revision in 2023 (after previously undergoing Tommy John surgery while in college) and made just one appearance for Low-A St. Lucie in 2024. He began this season at High-A Brooklyn, but was promoted to Double-A Binghamton after posting a 1.54 ERA in 10 relief appearances, striking out 23 hitters in just 11.2 innings.

While Ross posted a 4.35 ERA in 11 appearances with Binghamton, he continued to strike out hitters at a high rate, fanning 18 batters in 10.1 innings. Across both levels, Ross averaged 16.77 strikeouts per nine innings.

Joe DeMayo highlighted Ross recently when writing about five Mets prospects having breakout seasons.

“A pure reliever, the 24-year-old Ross comes equipped with three power pitches, headlined by a big four-seam fastball that will sit in the upper 90s and touch 101,” DeMayo wrote in his scouting report on Ross. “His best secondary offering is his splitter in the low 90s that can have Double-A hitters waving. He also throws a hard upper-80s slider.

“It’s been some time since the Mets have developed a homegrown, true power reliever with late-game potential,” DeMayo wrote. “Ross has a chance to break that trend.”

It seems that Ross in on the fast track toward the major leagues, and it’s not out of the realm of possibility that he could be a factor in the Mets’ bullpen at some point this season.

Devers open to playing anywhere for Giants: ‘They're the men in charge'

Devers open to playing anywhere for Giants: ‘They're the men in charge' originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Rafael Devers is looking forward to having a fresh start with the San Francisco Giants.

Devers was officially introduced as the Giants’ newest slugger on Tuesday, two days after being traded by the Boston Red Sox. The Red Sox front office failed to “find alignment” with Devers, who refused to play first base after already reluctantly moving from third base to designated hitter.

Wth the Giants, however, it sounds like Devers will be a team player. The three-time All-Star was asked during his introductory press conference if he’s willing to play first base for San Francisco.

“They’re the men in charge. I am here to play wherever they want me to play,” Devers answered.

What a difference a change of scenery makes.

Sure enough, Devers has begun taking grounders at first base to prepare to play the position for the Giants. He could also return to his natural position at third base with Matt Chapman still on the injured list.

As for what went wrong in Boston, Devers avoided the question.

“That’s in the past,” he said. “I’m moving forward (from the Red Sox). I don’t really want to talk about it.”

While his Red Sox tenure ended on a sour note, Devers shared kind words for the fans who have cheered him on for the last nine years.

“I just want to thank the Boston fans,” he said. “They supported me throughout my whole time there. I just want to give them a thank you.”

Devers will make his Giants debut Tuesday night against the Cleveland Guardians, donning No. 16 and hitting third in the lineup as the DH. He won’t have to wait long to get revenge against his former team as the Red Sox will visit San Francisco for a three-game series starting Friday night.

How Devers trade is ‘inspiring' Melvin, Giants in middle of season

How Devers trade is ‘inspiring' Melvin, Giants in middle of season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – About 24 hours before the Giants held an introductory press conference to celebrate the arrival of trade acquisition Rafael Devers, manager Bob Melvin already had a good feel for how well the three-time All-Star infielder would be welcomed by fans in the Bay Area.

Taking a walk near his home in downtown San Francisco, Melvin spoke with a few fans who excitedly shared their feelings about Devers with the Giants skipper.

“There was such a buzz, it was really cool,” Melvin said. “It was really inspiring to know that everybody’s following this closely and there’s an excitement to it. Can’t say enough good things about him and the quality of the acquisition that we got.”

Devers, a 28-year-old power-hitting infielder from the Dominican Republic, was obtained in a blockbuster trade from the Boston Red Sox that some are comparing to the deal that went down in the NBA when the Los Angeles Lakers traded Anthony Davis to the Dallas Mavericks in the middle of last season to obtain Luka Dončić.

The Giants’ deal for Devers isn’t on that level because San Francisco didn’t have to give up a star player in exchange. They shipped promising young pitcher Kyle Harrison along with veteran pitcher Jordan Hicks and a pair of prospects, James Tibbs III and Jose Bello, to the East Coast.

As part of the trade the Giants also agreed to pay the $250 million remaining on Devers’ contract that he initially signed with the Red Sox two seasons ago, a massive 10-year, $313.5 million deal through the 2033 MLB season.

Agreeing to that no doubt was a factor in negotiations, although Giants pitcher Justin Verlander seemed perfectly fine with it. Verlander has given up only one hit in 10 at-bats against Devers, the one hit being a home run in 2019.

“Been a fan from afar,” Verlander said. “Excited to add a player like that to our lineup.”

Devers’ departure from Boston came amid his frustrations that stemmed from the Red Sox consistently moving him around rather than allowing him to focus in one spot.

Traditionally a third baseman, Devers was moved to DH when Boston traded for Gold Glove winner Alex Bregman in the offseason, then was asked by team officials to change positions again after first baseman Triston Casas suffered a leg injury.

That isn’t expected to be an issue in San Francisco.

Melvin penciled Devers in as designated hitter batting in the No. 3 slot against the Cleveland Guardians at Oracle Park for Tuesday’s game. Dominic Smith is at first base while Wilmer Flores will begin the game on the bench.

Some combination of that trio will be used in future games, although Melvin was adamant that he has no designs on playing Devers at his normal third base, even with Matt Chapman and his Gold Glove on the injured list.

“I don’t want to move him around too much,” Melvin said. “He hasn’t played any defense this year. To put him at third for a couple weeks then move him over to first, DH him, I don’t think that’s a great idea. Casey [Schmitt] is good at third. We’re comfortable with that.

It helps that Devers is much more open and agreeable to the Giants’ plans for him as opposed to the mess he left behind in Boston.

He came in and said, ‘I’ll do whatever you ask me to do,’” Melvin said. “He couldn’t have been more all-in on whatever we need. I didn’t expect any different, I don’t know completely, nor do I care really [what happened with the Red Sox]. He’s here with us now, and he’s inspired to be here.

Devers’ arrival is expected to return immediate dividends, although Melvin envisions bigger and better production down the road as Devers settles in and other key players return from the IL.

“The offense has been better here recently, but this just makes us that much better,” Melvin said. “Having a guy in the middle of your order like that, it’s pretty extreme. Then when we get everybody back and healthy, it definitely lengthens the lineup for us.”

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Devers' Oracle arrival leads to surreal day for Giants organization

Devers' Oracle arrival leads to surreal day for Giants organization originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — The scene was a familiar one in a lot of ways, but also absolutely surreal.

When new Giants star Rafael Devers walked into Oracle Park, he was accompanied by smoke machines and a camera crew. Every video board around him, along with the $10 million scoreboard, included his face and a message welcoming him to a new city. The team officials who followed his every step had traded quarter-zips for suits and ties.

The press conference was held on the club level at Oracle Park in the exact same spot where, last year, the Giants introduced Buster Posey as president of baseball operations and Willy Adames as their shortstop and — briefly — the highest-paid player in franchise history. It was attended by dozens of reporters, some of whom had not covered a Giants game since Posey was in the squat. There also were multiple reporters who had flown in from Boston three days ahead of the Red Sox. 

The scene, in many ways, resembled exactly what the Giants had planned for Carlos Correa two and a half years earlier. Except this time, it was another MLB All-Star coming over from the American League. And there was one other crucial detail that was different. 

It was June 17.

A lot of Tuesday afternoon’s festivities at Oracle Park fit in with the way the Giants traditionally have welcomed their stars, but there was nothing normal about this. You’re not supposed to be able to acquire a hitter like Devers in June, and if you’re the Giants, you’re not really supposed to be able to acquire a hitter like him, period. 

But there he was, sitting alongside Posey, with Barry Bonds watching from the front row.

“San Francisco Giants fans love great players,” Posey said in prepared remarks. “Great players have the ability to transcend generations, and Rafael Devers is one of those players.”

In introducing Devers, Posey talked of the organization’s Hall of Famers but also informal conversations that scouts often have. They try to figure out if a guy is a dude or “A Dude.” Devers, Posey said, is clearly in the camp of guys you build a franchise around. 

“Rafael Devers is A Dude,” Posey said. “He’s been to the top, he has won it all, and we can’t wait to watch him help us bring a World Series back to San Francisco.”

Devers had one in Boston, but his run there ended poorly. The situation became so untenable earlier this season that the Red Sox were willing to play along with the Giants, who pushed for a resolution to talks well before others might get involved at the MLB trade deadline. The deal was finalized minutes before Sunday’s game at Dodger Stadium, and on Monday, Devers flew to San Francisco. A day later, he walked into the ballpark with a huge smile on his face.

The theme from Devers’ end was that he’s thrilled with how this all played out. He shrugged off questions about his time in Boston and the way it ended, saying his preference is to focus on what’s ahead. He told manager Bob Melvin that he’ll play anywhere after refusing to move to first base for Red Sox manager Alex Cora. Shortly after 4 p.m., he walked across the infield to take grounders at a new position.

All of it, every moment of his first day, included a crowd. The cameras surrounded the cage as he started taking BP, with Bonds coming out to take a glimpse and offer some advice. Devers plans to take advantage of that perk often. 

“I went to say hi to him and then I got really nervous,” he told NBC Sports Bay Area. “I know that eventually I’ll get comfortable and I’ll start asking questions. He’s the greatest hitter in the big leagues so you have to take advantage and ask questions.”

Logan Webb, Hayden Birdsong and Landen Roupp lingered after their own workouts to watch Devers hit for the first time. Even after others had departed, Webb stood on the edge of the grass, a glove and football in his hand as he studied his new teammate.

It never looks like this at the ballpark on June 17, but this day became a celebration. The first question about Boston during the press conference was met with some booing from team employees who stood in packs at the back of the room. Devers’ more fan-friendly answers were met with applause, and when he skirted one question, some team employees cheered enthusiastically. At one point, an answer was interrupted by an excited team employee who was talking loudly on a balcony located a level above.

This certainly is what it would have looked and sounded like with Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge, although there was a key difference Tuesday. Because the transaction happened in-season, all of Devers’ new teammates took an elevator up to the club level to watch from tables set 50 feet from the stage. 

The stage was exactly where the Giants once had expected to introduce Correa, and had that happened, none of Tuesday would have been possible. Devers sat behind a podium with owner Greg Johnson, Posey, general manager Zack Minasian and Melvin. The latter three almost certainly would not be in those positions had Correa passed his physical. The Giants ultimately committed about $100 million less to Devers than they had planned to with Correa. 

In recent years, the Giants have held more huge press gatherings to hire and fire execs and managers than to introduce marquee players, but things are changing. Among that crowd on the club level sat Jung Hoo Lee, Willy Adames and Matt Chapman, all of whom have agreed to spend their primes hitting at Oracle Park. 

Since the Bonds press conference three decades ago — likely the last for the Giants that had this sort of atmosphere — the organization has had trouble convincing stars to play in San Francisco. Devers had no choice because it was a trade, but that didn’t matter at all Tuesday.

The surreal day for the organization was his first as a Giant, and it wasn’t hard to read his emotions about all that has happened. After 72 hours that reshaped two franchises and altered the course of his career, Devers was all smiles. 

“It was really crazy, it happened so fast,” Devers said. “I’m just happy to be here.”

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