Shohei Ohtani makes Dodgers pitching debut. Here's how he did vs. Padres

Shohei Ohtani makes Dodgers pitching debut. Here's how he did vs. Padres originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

When Shohei Ohtani stepped onto the mound at Dodger Stadium on Monday night, it was more than just a moment, more than just an average opener, it was history, and the return of the unicorn whose only comparison in MLB history is Babe Ruth.

The ballpark buzzed with electricity and nearly every fan was in their seat ahead of first pitch. That’s something that hadn’t been seen since Game 1 of the 2024 World Series against the New York Yankees.

Cameras clicked, hearts thumped, and 56,000 sellout fans packed the Chavez Ravine stands, holding their breath as baseball’s unicorn took the mound for the first time since August 23, 2023, a span of 663 days.

Ohtani’s debut wasn’t perfect, but it also could have gone a lot worse. After not pitching in nearly two years, the Japanese right-hander clearly showed signs of rust and lack of command in his first big league action of the season. 

Ohtani threw 28 pitches in the first inning, with 16 strikes and 12 balls. 

The first batter he faced was Fernando Tatis Jr., and after working the count full, the Padres’ leadoff man hit a bloop single to centerfield on a 99 MPH fastball from Ohtani. 

One throw later, Ohtani’s pitch went to the backstop allowing Tatis Jr. to advance to second. Luis Arraez would eventually hit a single to centerfield putting runers on the corners with no outs. 

But Ohtani worked his way out of the jam. He got Machado to hit a sac fly to center that scored Tatis Jr. on a bang-bang play at the plate. 

He got a groundout from Gavin Sheets thanks to a nice diving play at second base by Tommy Edman, and then got Xander Bogaerts to ground out to third base to end the inning. 

Ohtani’s final line was one inning pitched, with two hits allowed, one earned run, no walks and no strikeouts. His fastest pitch of the night reached triple-digits, a whopping 100 MPH, a good sign that Ohtani is fully recovered from his second Tommy John surgery.

Just one inning. But this wasn’t about numbers. This was about a man doing something no one else alive can do. A two-way superstar, surgically rebuilt, returning from his second Tommy John surgery with the weight of a city—and arguably the entire baseball world—on his shoulders.

He led off the bottom of the first inning and struck out against Padres’ ace Dylan Cease, much to the chagrin of the sold out crowd, but they already witnessed what they came to see: Ohtani back on the mound, pitching for the first time in Dodger blue.

It had been less than 24 hours since the Dodgers dropped the bombshell: Ohtani would pitch Monday. In minutes, ticket prices exploded on the secondary market. A $30 bleacher seat became a $300 golden ticket. Parking lots filled early. Batting practice was a full-house affair. Even the Padres paused to watch him warm up.

The results weren’t perfect, but if there were doubts—about his health, his command, his readiness—they were silenced like a mic drop at center stage. This wasn’t just a warm-up inning. It was a statement. The Dodgers’ $700 million man showed that even after two Tommy Johns, even after nearly two years off the mound, he still has the stuff that turns All-Stars into punchlines.

Ohtani’s return marks a new chapter—not just for him, but for the Dodgers, Major League Baseball, and fans across the globe. His presence on the mound, and at the plate, brings a different gravity to the game. A sense that you’re witnessing something that shouldn’t be possible. Like watching Da Vinci paint with both hands at once.

He’s not back to full form yet. Patience will be needed as he builds back up to full strength. One inning at a time, one start at a time. But what he gave us Monday night was a glimpse of the magic. A reminder. A promise.

Shohei Ohtani is a pitcher again.

And the world just got a little more fun.

Kurtz proclaims A's have ‘a lot of season left' after walk-off homer

Kurtz proclaims A's have ‘a lot of season left' after walk-off homer originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Athletics aren’t ruling out a turnaround just yet.

After Nick Kurtz blasted a two-run, walk-off homer to defeat the first-place Houston Astros 3-1 on Monday at Sutter Health Park, the A’s rookie first baseman was ecstatic to have extended their win streak to four games.

“Oh, absolutely,” Kurtz said on “A’s Cast” after the win when Chris Townsend asked if the A’s, with their slew of young stars, have discussed their ability to right the ship this season.

“A lot of season left. A lot of baseball to go. This season is nowhere near over, so we’re just looking to win every single day.”

Kurtz returned to the A’s lineup last Monday after a stint on the 10-day injured list with a strained left hip flexor, and since has recorded five hits, two home runs, four RBI and two runs scored. His two homers came in the ninth inning of back-to-back wins, first in the A’s 3-2 win over the Kansas City Royals on Sunday and then to end Monday night’s game.

Kurtz became the fifth-youngest player in A’s franchise history to hit a walk-off homer, per MLB’s Sarah Langs, making the feat all the more extraordinary.

“I mean, that’s unbelievable,” Kurtz told Townsend and “A’s Cast” co-host Tony Kemp of his two-day offensive onslaught. “I can’t really even put it into words, but glad to get it done for the guys tonight and try to keep that winning streak going. That’s all that matters.”

The A’s top prospect is up to six home runs on the 2025 MLB season since being called up on April 21 and is beginning to find his confidence at the plate — something manager Mark Kotsay certainly is noticing.

“We knew that [Kurtz] can have an impact and be a middle-of-the-order bat,” Kotsay told reporters after the game. “… Everyone wants to put these guys that have success in Triple-A right in the middle of the order and test it out. And I think the progression for him has been slowly moving up in the order — you saw tonight, he was in the five hole. And I think he’s getting a lot more comfortable.

“The at-bats are looking better, and the results are obviously showing up, and tonight was a big, big swing. It felt great for him. You can see there’s more confidence. You can see him kind of, in some form, starting to be a leader in the clubhouse.”

Kurtz is just one of many talented young players who have stepped up this season for the A’s, and with every win, it’s clear they believe they can overcome the recent bout of losing that stifled their hot start to the year. Though they sit 12 games out of first place in the AL West and eight games back from a wild-card spot at 30-44, Kurtz is right — there is plenty of season left.

WATCH: Red Sox' top prospect Roman Anthony records first MLB homer

WATCH: Red Sox' top prospect Roman Anthony records first MLB homer originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Roman Anthony has officially arrived.

Anthony, the Boston Red Sox’ No. 1 prospect and the top-ranked prospect in MLB, recorded his first career home run during Monday’s game against the Seattle Mariners. He took Logan Gilbert deep to right-center field for a solo shot in the first inning:

Anthony’s first career homer came in the Red Sox’ first game without Rafael Devers, who was traded to the San Francisco Giants on Sunday. Ironically, Devers also hit his first MLB homer in Seattle.

With Devers out of the picture, Anthony will be counted on to carry a heavy load in the Red Sox’ lineup. While the 21-year-old has experienced some growing pains so far in his big-league career, all signs point toward him being a player who can help Red Sox fans get the bitter taste of the Devers deal out of their mouths.

The Red Sox entered Monday’s series opener against the Mariners riding a five-game win streak, which included a three-game sweep of the New York Yankees. Boston will look to maintain its momentum in Seattle, especially with a must-watch series against Devers and the Giants starting on Friday.

Kepler, Marsh and sizzling Phillies stay hot in Miami

Kepler, Marsh and sizzling Phillies stay hot in Miami originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Max Kepler and Brandon Marsh are hotter than they’ve been all season for a Phillies team that has, at times, been desperate for offense from both positions.

Kepler hit a go-ahead solo home run off Sandy Alcantara in the fourth inning Monday night in Miami to extend his hitting streak to six games and the Phillies’ win streak to five. They beat the Marlins, 5-2, and picked up more ground on the idle Mets. The Phils (42-29) were 5½ games back of the Mets as recently as Thursday but now trail by just two with three meetings at Citizens Bank Park this weekend.

Marsh has hit in a seven straight. He tripled with one out in the seventh inning and scored an important third run on a Trea Turner RBI single. He also walked and scored one of the Phillies’ two insurance runs in the top of the ninth. This past week is by far the best Marsh has looked in 2025. He’s 10-for-20 with three extra-base hits and has been squaring up the ball hard, lining singles up the middle and into holes. It’s a promising sign and a reminder of what he can contribute against right-handed pitching.

This is also the sort of production the Phillies hoped they’d receive a bit more consistently from Kepler, who has three homers and two doubles in his last six games. He’s hitting .221/.310/.413 through 213 plate appearances.

“That was my first thought, the at-bats by everyone were really good turning the lineup over,” Turner said over the weekend when the Phillies swept the Blue Jays. “It makes a big difference.””

Turner set the tone again, leading the game off with a homer and piling up three more hits. He leads the National League with 88, four more than Manny Machado and five more than Shohei Ohtani.

It made a winner out of Mick Abel, who is 2-0 with a 2.21 ERA through four starts. After three homers and three walks his last time out against the Cubs, Abel bounced back with five innings of one-run ball against one of baseball’s three worst offenses.

Abel’s only difficult inning was the bottom of the second, when he walked Liam Hicks on a borderline full-count pitch with two outs and a man on third base. The next batter, Connor Norby, also ran a deep count and singled in the Marlins’ only run.

Manager Rob Thomson lifted Abel after five innings and 77 pitches, perhaps cognizant of how much the Phillies will need to rely on the rookie this summer without Aaron Nola.

Taijuan Walker, Jordan Romano, Matt Strahm and Orion Kerkering finished off the win. Kerkering is the seventh different Phillie to earn a save this season and it was the first of his big-league career. He went 1-2-3 and has been close to lights-out for a month.

The streaking Phillies look to make it six in a row on Tuesday behind Jesus Luzardo, who is coming off a 10-strikeout gem after making adjustments to his glove positioning to limit pitch-tipping.

How Craig Breslow and Sam Kennedy addressed Rafael Devers trade

How Craig Breslow and Sam Kennedy addressed Rafael Devers trade originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow and president/CEO Sam Kennedy addressed the media on Monday, more than 24 hours after trading veteran slugger Rafael Devers to the San Francisco Giants in a widely criticized move.

“Alignment” was the word of the night. Breslow and Kennedy used the word numerous times to describe Devers and the front office being on different pages since the team asked him to move from third base to designated hitter in spring training. The relationship worsened when Devers was asked to play first base in the wake of Triston Casas’ season-ending injury.

Devers was traded after the Red Sox completed a three-game sweep of the New York Yankees at Fenway Park, giving them eight wins in their last 10 games. The timing of the move was questionable, as it killed the good vibes surrounding the club and potentially resulted in Boston getting a worse return than it would have received had it waited until next month’s trade deadline.

So, how did Breslow and Kennedy explain the controversial decision to trade Devers? Here were the highlights from Monday night’s press conference:

How does the trade help the Red Sox for 2025?

Breslow made the bold claim that the Red Sox may finish with a better record as a result of trading Devers.

“I understand why the initial reaction would be that it would be tough to sit here and say, when you move a player of Raffy’s caliber, how could I sit here and say that we’re a better team? I acknowledge that on paper, we’re not gonna have the same lineup that we did, but this isn’t about the game that is played on paper. This is about the game that is played on the field and ultimately about winning the most games that we can,” Breslow said.

“I think when you consider the flexibility, the ability to give some of the young players some run … I do think there’s a real chance that at the end of the season, we’re looking back and we’ve won more games than we otherwise would have.”

Was there a mandate to offload Devers’ entire contract?

The Giants took on the remaining $254 million on Devers’ contract. Was Breslow required to dump all of Devers’ contract to facilitate a deal?

“There was no mandate,” Breslow said. “The mandate is to assemble the best team that we possibly could. In order to do that, we needed to create a more functional roster and give certain guys more playing time, be able to rotate through the DH spot, potentially match up there. … Additionally, I do think it gives us some resources as we head toward the deadline.”

What led to Devers being traded in the second season of his 10-year contract?

“In the end, I think it’s pretty clear that we couldn’t find alignment with Raffy, is the truth,” Kennedy said. “We all worked at it over the last several months, going back to the offseason. … We worked at it, we had a different vision for him going forward than he had, and we couldn’t get there. We couldn’t find alignment, and we reached that inflection point and made the decision to make a big move.”

Why was the move made now and not closer to the trade deadline or in the offseason?

The timing of the Devers deal was questionable, especially with the trade deadline just over a month away. Boston likely could have gotten a better return if it waited for a bidding war around the deadline or in the offseason, so why make the trade now?

“I think we rightfully set a really high bar to execute a trade of this magnitude,” Breslow said. We did have conversations with other clubs, we got a sense for the way they might behave, whether it was today or a few weeks from now.

“It’s not that this was the best deal that we could get, because the best deal that we could get may not necessarily be good enough to trade a player like Raffy Devers. But when you consider all of the factors here, this is the one that made sense, this is the path that we went down, and so we ended up where we did.”

What happened during Devers’ meeting with John Henry?

Breslow, Kennedy, and team owner John Henry flew to Kansas City for a face-to-face meeting with Devers last month after the three-time All-Star declined to move to first base.

“That meeting was full of candor, openness, honesty between both John and Raffy,” Kennedy said. “Bres has had many discussions with Raffy, I’ve had discussions with Raffy, AC’s (Alex Cora) had discussions with Raffy that have been candid, honest, direct. We just weren’t able to get there on a shared vision for his role going forward. It’s OK. This sometimes happens in a long-term relationship, and we hopefully did the absolute best thing in the best interest of the Boston Red Sox and in this case in Raffy Devers.”

Did Devers ask to be traded?

“There were times during the course of conversations with Raffy’s camp where they had indicated perhaps a fresh start would be best for both sides,” Breslow said.

Why do the Red Sox keep trading generational talents? (Mookie Betts and now Devers)

“Each and every player decision is its own individual decision,” Kennedy said. “I’ll put our record up against anybody else’s in Major League Baseball over the last 24 years. We’re incredibly proud of what we’ve built here. We’ve got more trophies and banners to show for it than any other organization in Major League Baseball. We are so proud of that.”

Is this an admission that extending Devers was a mistake?

The Red Sox signed Devers to a 10-year, $313.5 million contract extension before the 2023 season.

“We thought we had alignment back when we made the contract a couple years ago when we did the deal. Ultimately, we did not. We’re responsible for that. … We had certain expectations that went with that contract, and when we came to the conclusion that we did not have a full alignment, we moved on.”

You can watch the full press conference below:

Ron Taylor, reliever on Mets' 1969 World Series team, dies at age 87

Ron Taylor, a reliever on the Mets' 1969 World Series championship team, died on Monday at the age of 87 after a lengthy illness, the club announced.

Taylor, who pitched for the Mets from 1967-71, appeared in 269 regular-season games, posting a 3.04 ERA and a 1.144 WHIP with 50 saves in a New York uniform.

He led the Mets with 59 appearances and 13 saves in 1969, pitching to a 2.72 ERA. He also earned a save in Game 2 of the 1969 World Series against the Baltimore Orioles.

The right-hander pitched for five teams – Cleveland, St. Louis, Houston, New York, and San Diego – during his 11-year career in the majors, posting a career 3.93 ERA.

After his playing days ended, Taylor went on to become the team physician for the Toronto Blue Jays, a role he served for more than 30 years.

Astros’ Lance McCullers Jr. sidelined with sprained foot, rookie Ryan Gusto to start

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The Houston Astros placed right-hander Lance McCullers Jr. on the 15-day injured list with a sprained right foot Monday before his scheduled start against the Athletics.

The move, which is retroactive to Friday, comes after McCullers made seven starts this year in his return after missing two full seasons with various arm injuries.

Rookie right-hander Ryan Gusto will start in his place Monday as the AL West-leading Astros open a four-game series against the Athletics.

McCullers is 1-2 with a 4.91 ERA this season. He allowed four hits and four runs while striking out six in five innings of a 4-2 loss to the White Sox in his last start on Tuesday.

The injury to McCullers is the latest in a string of injuries to the Astros rotation. Houston starters Hayden Wesneski and Ronel Blanco are both out for the season after having Tommy John surgery and right-hander Spencer Arrighetti has been sidelined since April after breaking his right thumb in a batting practice mishap.

They also are missing right-handers Luis Garcia and Cristian Javier, who are both still recovering from Tommy John surgery.

The Astros recalled right-hander Jason Alexander from Triple-A Sugar Land to take his spot on the roster.

Brady House, 11th overall pick in 2021 draft, gets called up by the Nationals

WASHINGTON — Third baseman Brady House was promoted by the Washington Nationals from Triple-A Rochester on Monday, the club’s latest rookie to get a look at the big league level this season.

In other moves before opening a series against the worst-in-the-majors Colorado Rockies, the Nationals recalled outfielder Daylen Lile from Rochester, optioned outfielder Robert Hassell III and infielder José Tena to the Triple-A club and designated infielder Juan Yepez for assignment.

Washington entered Monday on an eight-game losing streak and with a 30-41 record.

The 22-year-old House was the 11th overall pick in the 2021 amateur draft.

He is considered Washington’s No. 3 prospect and leads the club’s minor league system with 13 homers, 41 RBIs, a .519 slugging percentage and an .872 OPS in 65 games at Triple-A in 2025.

Lile made his major league debut in May.

Hassell, another rookie, hit .218 with one homer and eight RBIs in 21 games since making his debut.

Tena it .248 in 44 games with the Nationals this season.

Yankees reliever Jake Cousins to undergo Tommy John surgery

Jake Cousins’ 2025 season is over before it ever began, as Yankees manager Aaron Boone told reporters on Monday that the right-hander is set to undergo Tommy John surgery.

Cousins, who had been on a rehab assignment while recovering from a right elbow flexor strain and then later battling pectoral discomfort, will have the procedure performed on Wednesday, finishing his season and likely keeping him off the mound for a good chunk of the 2026 season as well.

It’s been a nightmare year for the right-hander, who came into spring training with a forearm strain that landed him on the 60-Day IL to start the regular season. Then, his rehab assignment was recently paused after he "felt some stuff in his elbow," according to Boone.

While the 30-year-old Cousins did not pitch in the big leagues this season, he proved to be a valuable bullpen arm in 2024 after being acquired in a March 31 trade with the White Sox for cash considerations. In 37 appearances last season, Cousins pitched to a 2.37 ERA and a 1.05 WHIP.

Mets' Francisco Lindor leads NL shortstops in first 2025 MLB All-Star Game voting update

The 2025 MLB All-Star Game is just under a month away, and for the first time in his time with the Mets, Francisco Lindor appears primed to make the National League's starting lineup.

With the first update on the initial phase of voting now public, Lindor has received 1,019,273 votes, nearly double the number of the next closest shortstop, Los Angeles Dodgers' Mookie Betts (597,188).

Lindor – with 13 doubles, 14 home runs, and a .279/.353/.475 slashline for an .828 OPS – is the lone Mets position player to be in first for their position.

Juan Soto is closest to grabbing a starting spot, as he is fourth among outfielders with 625,618 votes, behind the Chicago Cubs' duo of Pete Crow-Armstrong (1,126,119) and Kyle Tucker (704,740) and Los Angeles's Teoscar Hernández (685,553).

Pete Alonso (895,900) is also close on the heels of the Dodgers' Freddie Freeman (1,136,389) to be the NL's starter at first base.

While the fan voting is a popularity contest and not always necessarily about statistics, it is tough to find much distance between Alonso and Freeman.

Entering Monday night New York's slugger has 22 doubles, 17 home runs, and 63 RBI with a .293/.390/.579 slashline for a .960 OPS (174 OPS+ and 169 wRC+). LA's man has 21 doubles, nine home runs, and 41 RBI with a .336/.409/.558 slash line for a .967 OPS (173 OPS+ and a 168 wRC+).

What about the Yankees?

No surprise for the team from the Bronx: Aaron Judge received the most votes for any player in the majors and has more than double the votes for any AL outfielder with 1,568,527 (He is 169,756 votes ahead of Shohei Ohtani for the most votes overall).

Even after a rough series in Boston, the reigning MVP has done nothing but prove to be one of the most feared hitters in the game as he has 17 doubles, 26 home runs, and 60 RBI, with a .378/.473/.756 slashline for a 1.228 OPS (238 OPS+ and 236 wRC+).

The Yanks also have Paul Goldschmidt (667,258) in first place at first base, just ahead of Toronto's Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (615, 726).

Ben Rice (232,331) is in second place for DH behind Baltimore's Ryan O'Hearn (353,029). (Rafael Devers led American League DHs with 796,382 votes, but those votes are moot after the Red Sox shipped him off to the Giants on Sunday.)

First-year Yank Cody Bellinger (416,858) is in sixth place among outfielders, but just under 60,000 votes behind the Angels' Mike Trout (475,265), who occupies the third and final outfield slot.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. (250,416) is fourth for AL second baseman, which is currently led by ex-Yank and current Detroit Tiger Gleyber Torres (535,079).

***

The player who winds up as the top vote-getter at each position before phase 1 of voting ends on June 26 will receive an automatic spot on the All-Star team, while the second-highest vote-getter at each position advances to phase 2 of voting (June 30-July 2).

The reserves and pitchers on the team will be determined by the player ballot, which means deserving Mets and Yankees can get in that way if they aren't voted in by the fans.

Each team will have 32 players (20 position players and 12 pitchers, which includes at least three relievers).

The game will take place at Truist Park in Atlanta on July 15.

Bombshell report sheds light on Breslow's dysfunctional front office

Bombshell report sheds light on Breslow's dysfunctional front office originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Was the Boston Red Sox’ stunning Rafael Devers trade the result of dysfunction within Craig Breslow’s front office?

Breslow, Boston’s chief baseball officer since Oct. 2023, traded Devers to the San Francisco Giants amid a strained relationship with the veteran slugger. Devers called out Breslow after being asked to play first base earlier this season, when he had already reluctantly moved from third base to designated hitter.

Apparently, Devers wasn’t the only member of the organization miffed by Breslow’s approach to baseball operations. On Monday, a revealing Yahoo Sports report from Joon Lee detailed how the Red Sox front office has “lost cohesion” under Breslow’s leadership. One example cited in Lee’s report was Breslow’s firing of a longtime scouting supervisor for insulting him during a team Zoom meeting.

Read the excerpt from Lee’s piece below:

Meanwhile, Breslow has grown increasingly insulated. Multiple sources within the organization describe a front office losing cohesion. Staffers who helped build four championship teams — veterans of the Theo Epstein, Ben Cherington, Dave Dombrowski and Bloom regimes — now feel shut out of the operation. The collaborative spirit that once defined Red Sox baseball operations has frayed.

The discontent intensified in May 2024, when Breslow brought in sports consulting firm Sportsology to conduct an organizational audit. The stated purpose was to streamline baseball operations. In practice, it triggered a wave of firings and accelerated the marginalization of some of the longest-tenured voices in the building, “characterizing the cultural shift to align more with Wall Street efficiency.

One of the clearest signals came during an internal team Zoom meeting earlier this season. Toward the end, Carl Moesche — the Red Sox’s scouting supervisor and a team employee since 2017 — thought the call had ended. It hadn’t. As the meeting wrapped, his voice cut through a quiet moment.

‘”Thanks, Bres, you f***ing stiff,’ Moesche said, according to two team sources.

Lee’s report also states that Breslow and manager Alex Cora “have not seen eye-to-eye on the direction of the team.” The coaching staff has “grown frustrated with the state of player development, specifically how much emphasis is placed on swing mechanics and hitting data, often at the expense of fundamentals.”

You can read the full report here.

Breslow, a former MLB relief pitcher, played for the Red Sox in 2006 and 2012-15. He joined the Chicago Cubs front office in 2019 and was promoted to assistant general manager in 2020. After the 2023 season, he replaced Chaim Bloom as the Red Sox’ front-office leader.

So far, Breslow hasn’t done much to convince the Fenway Faithful that he’s an improvement over Bloom. The Red Sox stayed mediocre at 81-81 last season and are an uninspiring 37-36 this year. Now, like his predecessor, Breslow’s tenure will likely be remembered for trading a face of the franchise.

Without Devers, the Red Sox will begin a three-game series in Seattle on Monday night. They will start a three-game series in San Francisco against Devers and the Giants starting on Friday.

Giancarlo Stanton set to make season debut for Yankees after missing first 70 games

NEW YORK — Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton was activated Monday and set to start against the Los Angeles Angels and bat fifth after missing New York’s first 70 games because of inflammation in the tendons of both elbows.

Stanton was 3 for 11 with 4 RBIs in three rehab games last week with Double-A Somerset, an assignment cut short by rainy weather.

Stanton has not played a full season since 2018, the first year after the Yankees acquired him from the Miami Marlins. Entering Monday, he had missed 364 of 940 games (39%) since the beginning of the 2019 season.

The 35-year-old appeared in 114 games last season, hitting .233 with 27 homers and 72 RBIs, then had seven homers in 14 postseason games and was voted the MVP of the AL Championship Series.

Given a then-record 13-year, $325 million contract by the Marlins, Stanton had 59 homers and 132 RBIs in 2017, winning the NL MVP award. He was traded to the Yankees and has 38 homers and 100 RBIs in his first season in the Bronx.

He missed time because of a strained right biceps and strained posterior cruciate ligament in his right knee (2019), strained left hamstring (2020), strained left quadriceps (2021), right ankle inflammation and left Achilles tendinitis (2022) and strained left hamstring (2023 and 2024).

Stanton was activated from the 60-day injured list and infielder/outfielder Pablo Reyes was designated for assignment.

Red Sox exec reveals Boston discussed Devers trade with other teams

Red Sox exec reveals Boston discussed Devers trade with other teams originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants got their guy in Rafael Devers with Sunday’s shocking blockbuster trade, but they weren’t the only ones interested in acquiring the three-time MLB All-Star.

In a press conference via Zoom on Monday, Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow revealed what went into Boston’s decision to trade its prized slugger to San Francisco in return for pitchers Jordan Hicks and Kyle Harrison, as well as prospects James Tibbs III and Jose Bello — a return package that left many of the team’s fans fuming.

“There were a number of paths that we felt like we could explore in order to get a more kind of cohesive and more functional roster,” Breslow said. “This was one of them, and it was ultimately the path that we went down. Now, whether or not we negotiated with one team exclusively … I have seen some some commentary that we didn’t shop this deal, whatever that means. And I don’t know that it makes a ton of sense to get into the kind of mechanics or strategy, but I do believe we had a thorough process, and we had a good idea of what the market would or could look like, and this was a deal that we felt like made sense …

“I think we rightfully set a really high bar in order to execute a trade of of this magnitude. And we did have conversations with other clubs. We got a sense for the way that they might behave, whether it was today or a few weeks from now, and felt like this — it’s not that this was the best deal that we could get, because the best deal that we could get may not necessarily be good enough to trade a player like Raffy Devers, but when you consider all of the factors here, this is the one that made sense. This is the path that we went down, and so we ended up where we did.”

There was plenty that went into Boston’s decision to trade Devers after some early season drama over his role with the team, during which the 28-year-old was moved from third base to designated hitter before eventually refusing to play first following an injury to his Red Sox teammate Triston Casas.

But now Devers will try to help the Giants win in a new setting, and the Red Sox feel good about what they received in return. Breslow stated the trade helps Boston address some of its starting pitching and bullpen needs while giving the team assets to potentially utilize as the MLB trade deadline approaches.

Breslow expressed excitement in bringing on Hicks, who the team views as a late-inning reliever, and Harrison, who they envision as a front-of-the-rotation starter after he develops more in the minor leagues. He described Tibbs as a hitter who “makes great swing decisions” and Bello as “an exciting young arm.”

“I understand the reaction from fans, the criticism that we are taking, the surprise,” Breslow said. “I do understand all of that, and I also will stand here and say that we would not have made this trade if we didn’t think it was best for the organization and the vision and the beliefs and culture that we’re trying to create.

“We have a number of young players who are in the big leagues, and we’re really excited about them, and we’re very deliberate and intentional about the environment that we want to create.”

As Devers prepares to make his Giants debut against the Cleveland Guardians on Tuesday at Oracle Park, it won’t be immediately clear who won the trade. But it’s clear after assessing the market, the Red Sox believe they got the best deal available.

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Shane Smith and Mike Vasil look like two Rule 5 hits for the rebuilding Chicago White Sox

CHICAGO — Shane Smith pitched a total of 10 1/3 innings during his college career at Wake Forest. He had a shoulder operation as a freshman, and his sophomore year was shut down by the COVID-19 pandemic. Then he had elbow surgery.

At that point, even Smith began to wonder if baseball was going to work out for him.

“My dream of playing professional baseball, to say it didn’t waver would probably be lying,” he said. “But I knew there was an avenue somehow.”

There sure was.

Smith has turned into a pleasant surprise for the last-place Chicago White Sox after he was selected by the team in the Rule 5 draft. The White Sox also have Mike Vasil, another 25-year-old Rule 5 right-hander who was claimed off waivers from Tampa Bay in March.

The Rule 5 draft provides an opportunity for players left off big league team’s 40-man rosters after several minor league seasons. Teams pay $100,000 to select a player in the major league portion. The players must stay on the active 26-man major league roster all season or else clear waivers and be offered back to their original organization for $50,000.

Between 10 and 20 players are selected in the big league Rule 5 draft most seasons, but most don’t actually stick with their new clubs. Even fewer develop into All-Star-worthy contributors. Hall of Fame outfielder Roberto Clemente and two-time Cy Young Award winner Johan Santana are two of the most famous Rule 5 success stories.

So far, it looks as if Smith and Vasil are going to stick with the rebuilding White Sox — quite an accomplishment for an organization from one Rule 5 draft. Smith has a 2.37 ERA in 68 1/3 innings over 13 starts, and Vasil has a 1.99 ERA in 45 1/3 innings over 20 appearances, all but two in relief.

“Obviously Mike and I are, I think, putting our best foot forward as of now,” Smith said. “The biggest thing we can do is just keep it going, keep doing the same stuff.”

Smith or Vasil very well could represent the last-place White Sox at the All-Star Game in Atlanta. Dan Uggla with the Florida Marlins in 2006 is the only player to be named an All-Star in the season after he was selected in the Rule 5 draft, according to Sportradar.

Being a Rule 5 player is a unique situation in that first year, but Vasil said he doesn’t think about it very often.

“I’ve spent my whole life trying to get here,” he said. “So I think it’s already hard enough, don’t put more pressure on yourself.”

The 6-foot-5 Vasil was selected by the New York Mets in the eighth round of the 2021 amateur draft out of the University of Virginia. He was picked by Philadelphia in the Rule 5 draft in December and then traded that same day to the Rays for cash.

The White Sox are Vasil’s fourth organization since the end of last season.

“It’s a lot,” he said. “But I think for me, at the same time, I guess you could say you feel wanted by a lot of different teams.”

Vasil began the season in Chicago’s bullpen, recording a 1.89 ERA in his first 18 appearances. He got his first career win when he pitched 2 1/3 scoreless innings against Houston on May 4 and his first save when he got three outs at Cincinnati on May 14.

But Vasil’s six-pitch arsenal — highlighted by an effective sinker and sweeper — makes him a strong candidate for the rotation. He pitched four shutout innings in his second start at Texas.

“Not something that’s unfamiliar for me,” he said of starting. “I started all my minor league career, so in terms of routine I probably know this one a little bit better than my relief one right now.”

Smith went right into Chicago’s rotation during spring training — an unusual spot for a Rule 5 player. Since 2016, Luis Perdomo, Brad Keller and Mitch Spence are the only pitchers who made at least 20 starts in the majors in the season after they were selected in the big league phase of the Rule 5 draft.

Keller began the 2018 season in Kansas City’s bullpen before moving into the rotation in late May. He finished his rookie year with a 9-6 record and a 3.08 ERA in 20 starts and 21 relief appearances.

“I think you definitely pull for all the Rule 5 guys because I feel like, not to say this in a bad way, but Rule 5 guys kind of get a bad rap, right?” said Keller, a key reliever for the Chicago Cubs. “It’s like they’re like nobody’s got a chance. That’s not true. Some organizations are in different situations where they can’t protect guys that they want to.”

Smith had been in Milwaukee’s organization since he signed with the Brewers as an undrafted free agent in 2021, just weeks after he had Tommy John surgery. He had a 3.05 ERA in 32 appearances over two minor league stops last season, finishing the year with Triple-A Nashville.

Smith has a big four-seam fastball that gets into the high 90s, to go along with a good slider and curveball. But the biggest key to his success this year has been the development of a nasty changeup that really came together in the offseason after years of work.

Fortunate timing for Smith and the White Sox.

“For a guy that hasn’t really pitched above Double-A, he had some innings in Triple-A, but to come here and pitch the way that he does, it just speaks to his ability and his confidence and also speaks to the group of players and staff here to support him,” general manager Chris Getz said. “Shane is doing really well and we expect him to have a really productive, healthy season for us.”

Mets reliever Brooks Raley set to begin rehab assignment

Mets left-handed relieverBrooks Raleyis about to take a huge step toward his return.

Raley, who underwent Tommy John surgery last May that also included an internal brace, is set to begin a rehab assignment on Tuesday for A-ball St. Lucie.

Given the length of Raley's absence and the need to get fully into game shape, his rehab assignment could last the full 30 days or close to it, president of baseball operations David Stearns said last week.

Once Raley returns, the Mets could be getting a key cog to help fill the lefty relief hole that was left by season-ending injuries to A.J. Minter and Danny Young.

New York has been relying heavily on Jose Castillo lately in that role.

Raley, 36, had a tremendous season for the Mets in 2023 after being acquired from the Rays.

In 54.2 innings over 66 appearances, he posted a 2.80 ERA and 1.26 WHIP with 61 strikeouts.

He was off to a strong start in 2024, tossing 7.0 scoreless innings, before his season ended due to the Tommy John surgery.

Raley re-signed with the Mets this April on a one-year deal with a team option for 2026.