Outfielders take center stage as Phillies top Rangers, win series

Outfielders take center stage as Phillies top Rangers, win series originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ARLINGTON, TX – While none of them would ever admit they’re in competition against each other, that is just what the Phillies outfielders are right now.

Rob Thomson has recently said he’s basing his decision for consistent starters in the outfield on who has the hotter hand. But that’s just a side story to the lead one, and that is to win baseball games as the Phillies try to hold on to their lead in the National League East over the New York Mets.

Saturday’s outfield consisted of Brandon Marsh, Harrison Bader and Max Kepler, as Nick Castellanos was given a rare day off. Two of the starter’s against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field will join Castellanos as regulars in the outfield at some point it seems, so Saturday it was fitting that the three teamed up to spark the Phillies to a 3-2 win.

Rangers starter and future Hall of Famer Jacob deGrom was cruising through six innings in a fun pitching duel with Jesús Luzardo. With deGrom clinging to a 1-0 lead since the first inning, he got J.T. Realmuto to hit a weak fly to left to start the seventh. Then left fielder Marsh singled, center fielder Bader walked and right fielder Kepler drove them both in with a double down the right field line. Kepler scored on a single by Bryson Stott for a 3-1 lead.

“It felt good, somewhat relieving, too,” said Kepler. “I’m just happy we got the W. (Hitting the ball hard but not getting hits) are always salty, they sting. The best you can do is put them behind you, but if they come in bunches then eventually I feel like they’ll get to me. They always hurt if you hit a ball over 100 and it’s right at a guy, it’s upsetting but the best you can do is get over it ASAP.”

It was a typical outing for the right-hander deGrom, now in his 12th season. Through six he gave up no runs and just four hits and struck out eight. It didn’t seem like a good day for the Phillies, as in his 21 career starts against them, deGrom was 9-1 with a 2.47 ERA. Furthermore, he was 7-0 in 10 starts following a Rangers loss, which this was.

”I don’t know that it’s much different, it’s all been really electric stuff,” said Thomson of seeing deGrom through the years. “It’s like (Zack) Wheeler, the combination of command and control. He’s really good and he has been for a long time and still is.”

And he was Saturday, until the dueling outfielders came to bat in that seventh. Marsh, who had previously struck out twice against deGrom, hit a 1-2 curveball on the ground between first and second to get on. Then Bader worked a five pitch walk, followed by Kepler who hit a shot to deep center in the third and singled in the fifth. He also got the go-ahead 2-RBI double with a liner to right.

“Marsh base hit,” said Thomson. “Bader, who has good at-bats against deGrom in the past, draws a walk and then Kepler, whose hit him in the past, bit double that was huge. And then Stott with a huge base hit. It was a really good game. We played some really good defense. I’m happy for (Kepler). There’s been a lot of talk, a lot of noise, he’s had good at bats for a bit and he showed it tonight, he came through. He hit three balls hard off deGrom. He can hit velocity.”

After giving up a run in the first on three singles, Luzardo settled in nicely for the rest of the game and got some real help from his defense, which has been the norm for Phillies pitchers of late. Catcher J.T. Realmuto gunned down to attempted base stealers, one at third, another at second, to prevent Ranger rallies.

Edmundo Sosa had an outstanding play in the third to save a run. With two outs and Sam Haggerty on second, Sosa slid on his knees towards short and snared and one-hopper off the bat of Wyatt Langford. He made the throw to first to end the inning.

Luzardo mixed in working out of jams and keeping innings clean as he finished the game with six innings under his belt. He gave up seven hits, walked one and struck out four while giving up just that one earned run.

“There was a lot of traffic on the bases and obviously we handled it pretty well,” said Luzardo, who improved to 11-5. “Obviously with J.T. and the defense, which was great. Just kind of understanding their game plan a little bit and just kind of making the adjustments that we needed to keep them off balance a little bit better.

“The plan is always to try and go scoreless but understanding who you’re up against and understanding that he’s a great pitcher, you know you’re not going to score many runs. It adds a little bit to it and you just want to show you can go toe-to-toe with anyone.”

Before the game, Thomson spoke of something he had to do during the game, and that was to get newly acquired sensation Jhoan Duran some work, as he hadn’t pitched since Sunday. After Matt Strahm gave up a solo home run in the eighth to Corey Seager, it couldn’t have played out at a better time for Duran to get work in.

“Bullpen was good,” Thomson said. “(Duran) was up in the eighth. We would have gone for a four-out save if we had to, but Strahmy did a nice job getting out of that inning.”

Pitching, defense and timely hitting are certainly a pretty good recipe for winning baseball … no matter who may be manning the outfield spots.

Mariano Rivera tears Achilles in Yankees Old-Timers’ Day game and needs surgery

NEW YORK (AP) — Hall of Famer Mariano Rivera tore an Achilles tendon while going after a flyball at the New York Yankees’ Old-Timers’ Day game on Saturday and needs surgery.

Agent Fern Cuza said the 55-year-old closer, baseball’s career leader in saves, will have the operation within a week.

In his lone at-bat, Rivera singled off former teammate Andy Pettitte and easily ran to first base. During an at-bat by Willie Randolph, Rivera took a step and fell to the ground in shallow center field behind second base.

The Yankees restored the Old-Timers’ Day game for the first time since 2019.

“It was a fun day until we heard about Mariano. Mariano hurt his Achilles,” seven-time Cy Young Award winner Roger Clemens told WFAN broadcaster Suzyn Waldman. “I don’t know what was going on. We all thought it was a hamstring, but I think it’s a little worse than that. I think he’s at the hospital now. Unbelievable.”

Rivera tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee in May 2012 while shagging fly balls in batting practice in Kansas City. He returned for his final season in 2013 and finished as baseball’s career saves leader with 652 and posted 42 postseason saves.

In 2019, the 13-time All-Star became the first player unanimously inducted into the Hall of Fame by getting all 425 votes in balloting conducted by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. He helped the Yankees win five World Series titles and seven American League pennants.

Rivera was playing in the Old-Timers’ Game for the second time. He hit an inside-the-park homer in 2019.

The event commemorated the 25th anniversary of the 2000 championship team, the last team to win three straight World Series titles. Clemens was a first-time attendee at the event, which had captain Derek Jeter give a short video message when he was introduced following Rivera.

Before the event, Rivera said he intended to speak with struggling reliever Devin Williams.

Shea Langeliers, Brent Rooker fuel one another as Athletics clobber Orioles

Shea Langeliers, Brent Rooker fuel one another as Athletics clobber Orioles originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Athletics’ starting pitching has been a primary storyline for their recent success.

Much like J.T. Ginn in Friday’s loss, starter Jack Perkins rebounded from a three-run first inning to deliver a solid start the following night.

But Saturday night’s 11-3 win over the Baltimore Orioles at Camden Yards was all about the A’s offense, which found hard contact early and often to give Perkins his first MLB win.

Shea Langeliers homered yet again — his AL-leading 11th since the MLB All-Star break — before Brent Rooker smashed his 24th round-tripper of the season. The two sluggers combined to drive in seven of the 11 runs scored by the Green and Gold.

All nine A’s starters scored a run and eight recorded a hit, which pleased manager Mark Kotsay.

“I think offensively, when we get going, there’s some momentum behind it and they feed off one another, which you saw tonight,” Kotsay told reporters postgame. “The at-bats just continue to be put together in a way that was really productive.”

Langeliers started that momentum quickly on Saturday with his first-inning shot, and he capped it off with a fifth-inning ground-rule double. He parroted Kotsay’s words about the Athletics’ ability to feed off each other’s success at the plate.

“We’re just building confidence, and the momentum is going from one guy to the next,” Langeliers said. “It’s a lot of fun when you stack a night like this — one through nine through the lineup and everybody’s producing and building momentum going into tomorrow.”

Amazingly, the A’s catcher now has six games this season — and three this month — in which he has finished just a triple shy of the cycle. That’s two more instances than any other MLB player in 2025, per Stathead.

But Langeliers hasn’t thought about those near misses too much. After all, it’s hard to complain about a three-hit night with a home run.

“When you say it, it’s kind of funny,” Langeliers explained with a smile. “I mean, I’ll take a night like this any time.”

Perhaps Langeliers finally can complete all four legs of the cycle in Sunday’s series finale against the Orioles, as the A’s chase a series win.

Mets Notes: Frankie Montas tasked with bulk relief work; Cedric Mullins navigating rough team debut

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza spoke on a variety of topics before Saturday night's meeting with the Brewers. Here's what he said...


Frank change for Montas

While the Mets are entrusting Frankie Montas to deliver a starter's workload on Saturday night, the veteran right-hander won't face the Brewers' top hitters immediately. Reed Garrett has been assigned as the opener, with Montas slated to follow in bulk relief duty.

The adjustment to Montas' routine was predictable, as he's struggled mightily during the first inning this season. In seven starts since coming off the injured list, he owns a bloated 6.43 ERA with three doubles and two home runs allowed in that first frame. Leadoff hitters are also hitting a collective .333 against him.

"It's not a secret, it's been a struggle for Frankie the past couple of outings," Mendoza said. "We're just trying to go with one of our bullpen arms to face the top of the lineup, and the goal is for Frankie to go through the middle innings and win us a ballgame. The stuff has been there. Now it comes down to executing, pitch selection. That's what we all need."

Montas' delayed entrance in this bulk-relief setup could be beneficial, but the Mets' patience with him must be wearing thin. The 32-year-old has been largely ineffective on the mound, as he's given up 12 earned runs across his last two outings (8.1 innings). Montas also hasn't logged a quality start.

It's unclear how long Montas' leash truly is, but the Mets have two budding prospects -- Nolan McLean and Brandon Sproat -- who could assume rotation roles if called upon. Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns was asked about the future of both youngsters on Friday, and said they're "putting themselves in the position" for a big-league promotion.

Can Cedric entertain?

The Mets are still waiting to see the All-Star version of Cedric Mullins, who's hit a measly 1-for-17 (.059) since being acquired in a trade deadline deal with the Orioles less than two weeks ago.

But the veteran outfielder's early woes in his new uniform aren't discouraging to Mendoza. He believes Mullins' timing at the plate is a little off and the six-game slump can be erased soon with consistent at-bats and some adjustments.

"I feel like he's missing some good fastballs to hit. We know he's a good hitter," Mendoza said. "We've just got to get him back on track, especially against fastballs... This is a guy who's been in the league for a long time. As we continue to get to know him, we'll find out more. But in the meantime, we're counting on him... There's a lot he brings to the table."

It's been a strange 2025 campaign for Mullins, who's been the epitome of streaky. In spite of his meager .221 season average, he wrapped up July hitting a sharp .290 with 10 extra-base hits across a 23-game span. The warm weather doesn't guarantee results, though -- he hit just .156 in June.

Blackburn nearing closer

The plan for Paul Blackburn's potential return to the majors remains unclear, according to Mendoza, but the veteran right-hander took another step forward in his rehab assignment on Friday night.

In his fourth start with Triple-A Syracuse, the 31-year-old allowed three runs on seven hits while striking out three across 5.2 innings. Blackburn also improved to 5-1 with a 2.55 ERA in eight Triple-A outings this season -- four have come in his rehab stint that began in mid-July.

"I know he pitched yesterday. I haven't heard anything from him today," Mendoza said. "We've just got to wait for the next couple of days to see what we've got... We're getting close to make that decision, and we'll make that decision when we have to. But he continues to feel good. Let's wait for the next couple of days to see what's the next step."

Mendoza also couldn't offer a clear update on Tylor Megill, who threw live batting practice on Thursday and remains on track ot begin a rehab assignment soon.

Yankees legend Mariano Rivera injures Achilles during Old Timers' Day game

Yankees legends played in the once-annual Old Timers' Day game for the first time since 2019, but one of the franchise's most beloved players was injured on Saturday.

Mariano Rivera, 55, left the game with an Achilles injury, a Yankees spokesperson confirmed to the Daily News' Gary Phillips. The severity of the injury is not known, but he did meet with trainers. One of Rivera's teammates, Roger Clemens, broke the news to Suzyn Waldman during the team's radio broadcast on WFAN of Saturday's 5-4 win over the Houston Astros.

“It was a fun day until we heard about Mariano. Mariano hurt his Achilles," Clemens said. "I don’t know what was going on. We all thought it was a hamstring, but I think it’s a little worse than that. I think he’s at the hospital now. Unbelievable."

Later, Rivera's agent told The Athletic that Rivera tore his Achilles

It's unclear when Rivera was injured. He did lace a single against Andy Pettitte in his only at-bat. Waldman speculated Rivera may have injured his Achilles running to first base. 

However, The Athletic uncovered that in the bottom half of the inning after the single, Rivera was in center field when the Hall of Fame closer fell to the ground when he took a step during a Willie Randolph at-bat.

Of course, this harkens back to 2012 when Rivera tore his ACL shagging fly balls during batting practice in Kansas City. 

The 2025 Old Timers' Day game not only brought back the fan-favorite exhibition between legends, but was also the 25th anniversary celebration of the 2000 World Series, in which Rivera recorded the final out.

Jen Pawol breaks MLB’s gender barrier as first female umpire to work regular-season game

ATLANTA — Jen Pawol felt love and support from fans, family, peers and players as she made history as the first female umpire to work a regular-season game in the major leagues.

“It was amazing when we took the field,” Pawol said. “It seemed like quite a few people were clapping and calling my name. That was pretty intense and emotional.”

Pawol’s much-anticipated debut came as the first base umpire for Saturday’s first game of a split doubleheader between the Atlanta Braves and Miami Marlins. It was a smooth debut.

“She did a good job,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “You can tell she knows what she does.”

Pawol said she had a group of about 30 friends and family members, including her father, at the game and she immediately identified a major difference of working in a major league stadium. Those familiar faces were not so easy to find at Truist Park.

“When I looked up they weren’t in the lower tier like in the minor leagues,” Pawol said. “When I looked up it took me a while. Whoa, they’re up there! I’ll never forget that. That was just awesome.

“The dream actually came true today. I’m still living in it. I’m so grateful to my family and Major League Baseball for creating such an incredible work environment. … I’m just so thankful.”

Pawol’s first real test came in the third inning of Atlanta’s 7-1 win when she called Braves catcher Sean Murphy safe on a close play. Marlins manager Clayton McCullough did not challenge the call.

Pawol also showed she will make animated calls. When Miami’s Xavier Edwards grounded into a double play in the third inning, Pawol pumped her fist and lifted her leg when she called Edwards out.

Pawol couldn’t help but notice her debut was being watched closely. Fans responded with a warm ovation when the video board focused on the umpire between innings, forcing her to take a quick glance at her image.

Pawol worked third base in the second game of the doubleheader. She will be in the spotlight when she calls pitches behind the plate in Sunday’s final game of the series. As a rover, she’ll then be waiting for her next assignment.

While she waits, the umpire cap she wore in her first game will be on the way to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

“This is one of the proudest moments in all my career,” crew chief Chris Guccione said. “I’ve been blessed with working playoffs, I’ve worked two World Series, All-Star games, and this is right up there. It gives me chills even thinking about it. And the magnitude, it just hit me just now the magnitude of this thing and how hard she’s worked.

“This is just a great role model for girls and women out there and I’m just so proud of her. This is a special moment. I’m so proud of her.”

There was much anticipation for her historic debut on Saturday. A crowd of photographers gathered while waiting for the umpires to walk onto the field from their entry ramp near the Marlins dugout.

McCullough and Braves bench coach Walt Weiss greeted Pawol when lineups were exchanged at home plate before the game. Pawol then jogged down the first base line. She shook hands with Marlins first base coach Tyler Smarslok before taking her position on the right field line for the first pitch.

Pawol said Thursday she was “overcome with emotion” when notified she would make her Major League Baseball debut this weekend.

Pawol, 48, has been working in the minor leagues since she was assigned to the Gulf Coast League in 2016. She was assigned the Triple-A championship game in 2023 and worked spring training games in 2024 and again this year.

“Anytime anybody grinds their way through the minor leagues, I don’t care who it is, that’s a tough thing,” Snitker said. “I’m happy for anybody who grinds it out.”

Asked if she is prepared for a confrontation with a manager upset about a call, including some known to kick dirt onto umpires, Pawol said it wouldn’t be the first time.

“More than dozens of times,” she said. “It doesn’t go very well for him. The night is usually over for him. It’s just part of the game.”

Pawol, who is from New Jersey, had only a few days to prepare for Saturday’s doubleheader. She said she was told of her long-awaited promotion during a Wednesday conference call with director of umpire development Rich Rieker and vice president of umpire operations Matt McKendry.

Pawol was a three-time all-conference softball selection pick at Hofstra. She worked as an NCAA softball umpire from 2010-16.

Pawol’s rise to make MLB history came 28 years after the NBA gender barrier for game officials was broken and 10 years after the NFL hired its first full-time female official. The men’s soccer World Cup first hired a female referee three years ago. The NHL has not had any women as on-ice officials.

Trent Grisham's go-ahead home run propels Yankees to 5-4 win over Astros

The Yankees bullpen blew another lead but Trent Grisham's go-ahead homer in the eighth inning propelled New York to a 5-4 win over the Astros on Saturday afternoon at Yankee Stadium.

After the bullpen allowed two runs on two walks, one hit and one big error in the eighth, Grisham smoked a fastball from left-hander Bryan King over the right field wall 408 feet. It's Grisham's 21st homer of the season, extending his career high. 

Here are the takeaways...

- Luis Gil had a rude start to his second start this season when Jeremy Pena took him deep to begin the game. Gil would settle in nicely, however, as he worked into the sixth inning. Gil had his command, unlike his first start when he allowed four walks against the Marlins down in Miami. That pointpoint command allowed him to clip corners and strike out seven batters, including the side in the third inning.

The 2024 AL Rookie of the Year tossed 91 pitches (60 strikes) across 5.1 innings, allowing two runs on six hits, one walk and striking out seven batters.

- The Yankees had another test in Framber Valdez, just a day after taking on Cy Young candidate Hunter Brown. Manager Aaron Boone sent out an unconventional lineup. Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Jasson Dominguez were on the bench against the lefty, while Jose Caballero got the start at second and Giancarlo Stanton parked himself in right field.

The hitters would get to the southpaw early, loading the bases on two hits and one walk with no outs. A bases-loaded walk to Stanton pushed across the Yankees' first run and a Ben Rice sac fly gave New York the lead. Anthony Volpe could not push across more, as his inning-ending double play put a stop to the second. New York would get traffic on the bases against Valdez after the first but had trouble cashing in. Through three innings, they were 1-for-6 with RISPS and left four runners on base.

- After Houston tied the game, the Yankees would score a pair in the fifth. A walk by Judge followed by back-to-back singles from Cody Bellinger and Stanton gave New York the lead. Rice grounded into a double play but it allowed Bellinger to score from third.

- It was a bit of an adventure for Stanton in right field. He had not problem on balls hit at him, but when he had to drift back toward the wall, you could tell he can't bust it with his history of injuries. In the fourth, Jesus Sanchez lined a double off the wall that Stanton backed off to try and play it off the wall but let it skip past him. The play would cost the Yankees as Carlos Correa hit a single to right field to drive in Sanchez. To Stanton's credit, his throw home on the single was a seed but was a half second too late to get Sanchez.

Stanton finished 1-for-2 with two walks and two RBI.

- With the bullpen short on Friday, leading to another subpar Devin Williams appearance, it was well-rested on Saturday. Mark Leiter Jr. got an inning-ending double play to end the sixth, Luke Weaver got through the seventh in order on 11 pitches while Camilo Doval had the eighth. After allowing a leadoff walk, the new right-hander had an opportunity to end the inning when a chopper was hit right back to him, but his throw took Volpe off second base and everyone was safe. After Doval allowed a run-scoring single and walked the bases loaded, Boone went to David Bednar for the five-out save. Unfortuantely, Bednar walked in the tying run but struck out the next two batters to get out of the jam.

Bednar would mow down the Astros in order in the ninth after getting the lead for his second consecutive five-out save with the Yanks.

Game MVP: Trent Grisham

The Yankees looked destined for another heart-breaking loss, but Grisham's three hits including that homer saved the day.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees and Astros finish off their three-game set on Sunday at Yankee Stadium. First pitch is set for 1:35 p.m.

The Yankees will send Max Fried (12-4, 2.78 ERA) to the mound while Houston has yet to announce a starter.

Turner slugging away from home, outfield merry-go-round continues

Turner slugging away from home, outfield merry-go-round continues originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ARLINGTON, TX – A laugh, a shrug and a shake of the head is the reaction given Friday night from Trea Turner following the Phillies 9-1 win over the Texas Rangers. He went 2-for-4 with five RBI, a double and a home run.

That isn’t what particularly caused the response from Turner after the win … it was when the subject came up concerning his home and away power numbers.

Here’s the breakdown heading into Saturday’s game: Turner has 12 home runs on the road, none at Citizens Bank Park this season. His RBI totals are 14 at home compared with 37 on the road, and his slugging percentage is .500 on the road to .365 at home.

Pretty interesting when you consider Turner has played 58 games at home and 55 away and has only eight more at-bats on the road. Most of the rest of his numbers are comparable in the home and road splits, it’s just those power numbers.

“I have no idea to be honest with you,” Turner said of the disparity. “So I looked at my heat zones for home and away, and away I have a lot more zones. And then at home, I’m just hitting the ball away really well. I don’t think I’ve ever had that in my career to where I’ve always been good at pulling the ball. I take my hits the other way but at home it just seems like that outer third is kind of my sweet spot. I couldn’t tell you why. We were talking about it in the cage and I have no idea. Hopefully with a little adjustment the last few days, hopefully that kind of turns around and goes back to normal.”

In a nine-game stretch from July 27 to August 5, Turner hit a bit of a lull where he went 4-for-38 and saw his average dip down to .280. His last three games before Saturday, Turner has seemed to find a rhythm with six hits in 12 at-bats with a home run and six RBI.

“I have no idea what that is,” said Thomson of the road power surge. “I think it’s just coincidence, really. He’s hit home runs in CBP before. I don’t know what it is.”

Thomson’s extended plan for outfield rotation

The search for a “regular” outfield lineup continued Sunday as Nick Castellanos got a day off and the outfield consisted of Brandon Marsh in left, Harrison Bader in center and Max Kepler in right to go against Jacob deGrom.

“So, it was pre planned,” Thomson said. “I didn’t give it to you yesterday because I hadn’t seen Casty yet. This turf is, I like the turf because it plays a little bit more like grass than other turf but it’s pretty firm, pretty hard. So, I was trying to give all the outfielders one day off on it. That’s one thing. Plus, Bader’s had pretty good success against him. Three at-bats but he’s hit the ball hard twice and he’s got a couple of hits. I just felt it was a good day to give Casty the day off. I just thought, where we’re at, we’re trying to figure out who everybody is and how we’re going to align this thing. Just the matchup and the surface is probably the best day to do it.”

So, the question was posed, once you do figure it out, will there be pretty much a set starting outfield moving forward?

Thomson was non-committal.

“It’s probably just a day-to-day thing right now, unless somebody gets super-hot and then we have to go with the hot hand.”

Odds and ends

Thomson said that Jhoan Duran would see action Saturday, no matter what. “He needs to pitch today. Banks has had four days off, he’s had five days off. Although we had up last night and he got hot, he doesn’t like to go more than five days without seeing hitters. We’ll get him in tonight for sure. And Banks is really good when he pitches more often so we need to get him in too.”

On the pitching front, Thomson added that reliever David Robertson will join the team Sunday after his stint in Lehigh Valley. Aaron Nola will get another start there on Tuesday, and if all goes well it appears he will join the Phillies after that and possibly get a start next weekend. José Alvarado will pitch for the Iron Pigs on Sunday and then go again either Tuesday or Wednesday. He can rejoin the team on August 19th.

Rafael Devers' hot stretch at plate coincides with growing comfort at first base

Rafael Devers' hot stretch at plate coincides with growing comfort at first base originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Rafael Devers, daily, is taking extra work to improve his defense at first base and get more comfortable at the position.

If the three-time MLB All-Star can get that to match his comfort level at the plate, there’s no limit on what the veteran slugger can do.

One day after making a pair of spectacular defensive plays, Devers went deep for a second consecutive day when he connected for a home run leading off the sixth inning.

It was the seventh time Devers has gone deep in 45 games in a Giants uniform, showing why president of baseball operations Buster Posey targeted him just before the trade deadline.

“I think it’s just him being Devers at this point,” Giants manager Bob Melvin said in the aftermath of Saturday’s 4-2 loss to the Washington Nationals at Oracle Park. “He’s just a really good hitter who knows what his strengths are.”

That was the scouting report on Devers before joining San Francisco: A well-accomplished slugger with a career .277 batting average who has clubbed 10 or more home runs in each of his 10 MLB seasons.

Things didn’t start well for Devers with his new team on the West Coast. He had some inconsistencies at the plate and in the field, leading some to question the trade with Boston.

A lot of that noise has been muted lately.

Devers is playing a lot more effectively at first base and is currently one of the hottest hitters in Melvin’s lineup.

After ending July in a 0-for-14 funk, Devers has found a nice rhythm at the plate. In eight games this month, he has gone 9-for-28 (.321) with three home runs, eight walks and seven RBIs.

In the 45 games since his acquisition from the Red Sox, Devers has 22 RBIs.

“Just basically doing the same thing that I’ve done all year, just making sure that I take advantage of all my at-bats,” Devers said through interpreter Erwin Higueros. “I don’t think that it’s necessary for me to change anything. I’m just being the type of player that I am. Things are beginning to work out for me.”

That includes playing first base, one of the issues that led to his exit from Boston. He was reluctant to play a position he had never played before at the big league level.

Devers faced early criticism from the media and Giants fans but has quieted that chatter with some smooth fielding. That included a heads-up play Friday when the Nationals loaded the bases and hit a grounder to first that Devers snagged and wisely threw home to get the out.

“Every single day, I’m always making sure that I work at first and make sure that I’m ready for everything that’s going to be thrown my way,” said Devers, who had two hits and two walks as the Giants’ designated hitter on Saturday.

It’s worth noting that Devers’ comfort level on defense has coincided with his output at the plate. It makes sense that less stress and concerns in one area would translate into success in other areas.

Devers isn’t sure if that’s what’s happening but acknowledged that playing in the field keeps him more engaged.

“I really don’t know if that’s something that’s working out. I just know that when I play first base, I’m more involved in the game,” Devers said. “You’re thinking about different aspects of the game, not just thinking about your next at-bat.”

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Former Yankees manager Joe Torre: ‘I feel for Aaron Boone, I’ve been in that place’

The Yankees are going through it right now. 

They were defeated by the Houston Astros in extra innings on Friday night, cutting their lead for the final wild card spot in the American League to just a half game. 

They've now dropped six of their last seven games, and with each loss, Aaron Boone’s seat seemingly gets hotter and hotter. 

The boos have been loud and heavy lately in the Bronx. 

Joe Torre has been there before; he understands what the long-time skipper is going through. 

“People always ask me who I root for, I root for people,” he told SNY’s Chelsea Sherrod at Old Timers' Day. “I feel for Aaron, I’ve been in that place before -- you’re trying to rearrange the furniture and hopefully it makes a difference.”

Though things aren’t looking good right now, Torre remains confident in the team under Boone’s leadership.

The four-time World Series champ certainly knows what it takes. 

“This club is too good to not have a run, there’s still time left,” he said. “If it were Sept. 1, I’d be more concerned, but I have a lot of confidence -- Booney has been down this road before, he’s a third-generation major leaguer.

“I feel that they’re going to make a run and will be where they are supposed to be at the end of things.”

Yankees legends provide insight on team’s current struggles: ‘Teams aren’t afraid of us anymore’

Wille Randolph

Jorge Posada

Tino Martinez.

Johnny Damon.

That’s just a few of the Yankees stars who were in attendance at the Stadium on Saturday afternoon for this year’s Old Timers’ Day festivities. 

It’s the 77th annual Old Timers' Day game, but the first since 2019.

The event also celebrated the 25th anniversary of the 2000 World Series championship.

While that team and all the great memories they shared were a hot topic of discussion, so was the current state of the organization as they fight through a brutally tough stretch. 

The Yankees currently find themselves trailing the Blue Jays and Red Sox in the AL East and hold a slim advantage for the final wild card spot after dropping Friday’s series opener in extra innings to the Astros.  

“They’re going through a tough time,” Damon told SNY’s Chelsea Sherrod. 

“Teams are not afraid of us anymore,” Randolph added. “We need to get that mojo back to where when they come into Yankee Stadium and places like that, they know they’re going to be in for a big fight.”

Though things are looking bleak, there is still plenty of baseball to be played.

“They’re struggling right now, but they’re still in the hunt,” Martinez said. “As long as you’re there this time of year and you can improve from here, they have a chance, but they have to minimize the mistakes and play better baseball.”

“It’s more of an attitude than anything,” Posada added. “They have to get a little angry, hopefully a fight or something to get them going -- they need to have that chip on their shoulder, they need to play like that.”

Devers homers early and Giants blank Nationals 5-0

SAN FRANCISCO — Rafael Devers and Casey Schmitt homered, and the San Francisco Giants beat the Washington Nationals 5-0 on Friday night to snap their longest home losing streak in more than a decade.

Matt Chapman had two hits and an RBI for the Giants. Dominic Smith added two singles to extend his hitting streak to 12 games.

Kai-Wei Teng (1-1) pitched five smooth innings in relief for his first major league win. The 26-year-old from Taiwan followed opener Matt Gage and allowed three hits with one walk with four strikeouts.

Joey Lucchesi, José Buttó and Tristan Beck each retired three batters to complete the four-hitter.

The Giants had lost eight straight at Oracle Park — one shy of their longest home skid of the San Francisco era — before beating the Nationals for the third time in four meetings this season.

Devers, acquired from Boston in June, launched his 21st home run of the season off Jake Irvin (8-7) in the first. Chapman’s RBI single later in the inning made it 2-0.

Schmitt’s homer, a two-run drive in the sixth, was his second in six days.

San Francisco added a run in the eighth on Patrick Bailey’s infield single.

Irvin allowed eight hits and four runs (three earned) in 5 1/3 innings.

Key moment

After the Nationals loaded the bases with no outs in the fifth, Devers fielded a grounder to first base and threw out Josh Bell at home plate before the next batter, Jacob Young, grounded into a double play.

Key stat

Teng threw 64 pitches in five innings and allowed only two runners past second base.

Up next

Giants top pitching prospect Carson Whisenhunt (1-0, 4.35 ERA) faces Nationals right-hander Brad Lord (2-6, 3.42) on Saturday.

Dwight Gooden discusses outlook of struggling Mets, Yankees

It’s been a tough stretch for New York baseball. 

Despite adding a handful of big pieces ahead of the trade deadline, both the Mets and the Yankees have remained in their deep slumps over the past week.

The Mets now sit 3.5 games behind the Phillies in the NL East after dropping their fifth consecutive game in frustrating fashion on Friday night. 

The Yanks were knocked off by the rival Houston Astros in the series opener Friday too, and they now find themselves with just a half-game lead for the final AL wild card spot. 

They are 3.5 games back of the Red Sox for second in the AL East and 6.5 games behind the Blue Jays for first. 

Things are not looking good for either World Series hopeful team right now, but a former New York baseball legend is confident they'll be able to turn things around down the stretch.

“I think the Mets are going to be okay,” Dwight Gooden told SNY’s Chelsea Sherrod at Yankees Old Timers' Day. “I still like to say pitching wins, you have to have consistent pitching because the lineup is nice, but they have to get more consistent.

“The main thing is they have to stay healthy because they are right there -- once you get into the postseason, it’s the hottest team that wins, not always the best, so I think they’ll be okay, they just have to get more consistent.”  

Gooden feels the same way about the Yankees, who he says are playing not to lose.

“You just have to have confidence you’re going to win,” he said. “When you go out there and try not to lose, you put a lot of pressure on yourself -- they just have to take things one game at a time, sometimes all it takes is getting back to the basics.”

Both teams will look to get back on track on Saturday. 

The Mets face off with right-hander Tobias Myers in Milwaukee, while Luis Gil makes his second start of the season against ace left-hander Framber Valdez in the Bronx.

What we learned as Carson Whisenhunt allows three homers in Giants' loss to Nats

What we learned as Carson Whisenhunt allows three homers in Giants' loss to Nats originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

SAN FRANCISCO – Rafael Devers homered for the second consecutive day and reached base four times, but the Giants’ offense was otherwise muffled in a 4-2 loss to the Washington Nationals on Saturday at Oracle Park.

One day after putting up five runs during a shutout victory in the series opener, the Giants generated good traffic on the bases but couldn’t cash in on the opportunities. Manager Bob Melvin’s club stranded seven runners on base, including leaving the bases loaded in the third.

Devers provided one of the few offensive highlights with his 22nd home run of the season and seventh in a Giants uniform. He also singled and walked twice.

Wilmer Flores added a pinch-hit sacrifice fly in the eighth to drive in San Francisco’s other run.

It didn’t help that the guy holding down the Giants’ offense was rookie Brad Lord, whose only career victories came in relief. Lord allowed four hits and one run over six innings.

San Francisco needed much more from its offense on a day when top pitching prospect Carson Whisenhunt lasted four innings in his third career MLB start. Whisenhunt allowed three runs — all solo homers — and five hits in four innings while striking out five with three walks.

Carson Seymour helped ease the pain of the afternoon with three innings of solid relief. He allowed one run and four hits.

Shortstop Willy Adames gave the Oracle Park crowd a jolt with a defensive gem in the eighth inning, chasing down Daylen Lile’s grounder up the middle, making a 360-degree spin and then throwing to first base for the out.

Heliot Ramos singled twice to extend his career-high on-base streak to 22 games.

Here are the takeaways from Saturday’s loss that drops the Giants to 59-58:

Serving it up

Whisenhunt had surrendered two home runs through his first two starts this season but was battered for three solo shots in the first three innings against the Nationals.

The rookie pitcher seemed to settle down after James Wood hit his third pitch out of Oracle Park in the first inning, pitching out of a mini-jam in the second.

Things really went south in the third when Washington’s batters were squaring up nicely and hitting almost every pitch hard. The back-to-back homers by Paul DeJong and Josh Bell – both estimated longer than 420 feet – gave the Nats a comfortable lead.

All three home runs came off sinkers, which have been Whisenhunt’s most effective pitch this season.

Devers heating up

Devers’ career with the Giants got off to a shaky start but the three-time AL All-Star has been dialing in at the plate lately and has homered in the last two games and three of the last six.

This is the hitter whom the Giants believed they were getting when they traded for him in June, a game-changing bat with the capabilities of carrying an offense. Devers also showed good patience at the plate, drawing two walks.

Lucky No. 13

Clean-up hitter Dominic Smith’s fourth-inning double extended his hitting streak to 13 games, the longest active streak in the majors and the longest by a Giants player since Brandon Belt’s 14-game stretch in 2021.

During the streak, Smith has wielded one of the hottest bats in manager Bob Mevlin’s lineup, going 16-for-44 (.390) with three extra-base hits and three walks while raising his batting average from .235 to .280.

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Jen Pawol breaks MLB's gender barrier as first female umpire to work regular-season game

Jen Pawol breaks MLB's gender barrier as first female umpire to work regular-season game originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Jen Pawol has made history as the first female umpire to work a regular-season game in the major leagues.

Pawol’s much-anticipated debut came as the first base umpire for Saturday’s first game of a split doubleheader between the Atlanta Braves and Miami Marlins. She enjoyed a quiet first inning, watching as Braves right-hander Hurston Waldrep struck out the first two batters before Agustin Ramirez lined out to third baseman Nacho Alvarez.

The Braves also were set down in order by Miami right-hander Ryan Gusto in the bottom of the first inning, with no calls from Pawol needed at first base.

As the first base umpire, Pawol’s responsibility was to check Waldrep’s hands for foreign substances following the inning. During that brief encounter she also appeared to receive a warm greeting from Braves catcher Sean Murphy on his way to the dugout.

Pawol’s first real test came in the third inning when she called Braves catcher Sean Murphy safe on a close play. Replays indicated Murphy may have been out, but Marlins manager Clayton McCullough did not challenge the call.

Pawol also showed she will make animated calls. When Miami’s Xavier Edwards grounded into a double play, Pawol pumped her fist and lifted her leg when she called Edwards out in the third inning.

Pawol couldn’t help but notice her debut was being watched closely. Fans responded with a warm ovation when the video board focused on the umpire between innings, forcing her to take a quick glance at her image.

Pawol will work third base in Saturday night’s second game of the doubleheader. She will be in the spotlight when she calls pitches behind the plate in Sunday’s final game of the series.

There was much anticipation for her historic debut on Saturday. A crowd of photographers gathered while waiting for the umpires to walk onto the field from their entry ramp near the Marlins dugout.

McCullough and Braves bench coach Walt Weiss greeted Pawol when lineups were exchanged at home plate before the game. Pawol then jogged down the first base line. She shook hands with Marlins first base coach Tyler Smarslok before taking her position on the right field line for the first pitch.

Pawol said Thursday she was “overcome with emotion” when notified she would make her Major League Baseball debut this weekend.

“It was super emotional to finally be living that phone call that I’d been hoping for and working towards for quite a while, and I just felt super full — I feel like a fully charged battery ready to go,” Pawol said.

Pawol, 48, has been working in the minor leagues since she was assigned to the Gulf Coast League in 2016. She was assigned the Triple-A championship game in 2023 and worked spring training games in 2024 and again this year.

Pawol, who is from New Jersey, had only a few days to prepare for Saturday’s doubleheader. She said she was told of her long-awaited promotion during a Wednesday conference call with director of umpire development Rich Rieker and vice president of umpire operations Matt McKendry.

Pawol was a three-time all-conference softball selection pick at Hofstra. She worked as an NCAA softball umpire from 2010-16.

Pawol’s rise to make MLB history came 28 years after the NBA gender barrier for game officials was broken and 10 years after the NFL hired its first full-time female official. The men’s soccer World Cup first hired a female referee three years ago. The NHL has not had any women as on-ice officials.