Mets move Jesse Winker to 60-day IL; young infielders will have opportunities at DH

Perhaps lost in the various trade deadline moves the Mets made was the transfer of Jesse Winker to the 60-day IL.

While this sort of move is a paper one, and this does allow Cedric Mullins to be added to the roster, it also means the Mets won't see Winker back on the team until September at the earliest.

Winker, placed on the IL in mid-July with back inflammation, has seen his 2025 injury-riddled. The veteran slugger has appeared in just 26 games this year, and while there's optimism he will return before the end of the season, president of baseball operations David Stearns provided an update that justified the 60-day designation.

"We still have some hope he’ll be back at some point this season, but clearly this has taken a little bit longer than we originally appreciated," Stearns said during his post-deadline Zoom call. "Wink go an epidural. We’ve seen progress since then, but not at the pace he or we were hoping. So the 60-day IL timeframe lined up. Not closing the door on this season, but it’s not going to be August."

Alongside right-handed hitting Starling Marte, Winker was the pairing the Mets were looking to use in the DH spot this season. But with Winker down for most of the season, the team has had to look elsewhere for left-handed at-bats. Mullins fit that profile while also playing elite defense, so he was a natural fit and a target before Winker's diagnosis, but Stearns admitted his slugger's slow recovery pushed him to get a left-handed bat at the deadline.

"[Winker's injury] played into it or was a part of it. We were looking at this segment of the market even before this direction for Wink became clear," Stearns said. "But certainly as it became evident that Wink’s absence was going to be longer, it made us look even harder at this segment, especially left-handed bats."

Now that Mullins is in the fold, and none of the Mets' young infielders (Mark Vientos, Brett Baty, Ronny Mauricio, Luisangel Acuna) were traded, where and how will the lineup be configured?

Jeff McNeil, who was platooning with Tyrone Taylor in center field, will continue to have his bat in the lineup more often than not, but with the addition of Mullins, will not be needed in center as often.

"We’ll work through that. Jeff’s still going to play a lot, he’s swinging the bat very well. There will be outfield opportunities at times, 2B opportunities, probably going to be DH at-bats. For our left-handed hitters, there will be ample opportunity for all of them. It’s just finding where the pieces fit on each day in the lineup."

On that same vein, with McNeil likely playing the bulk of his games at second, that leaves fewer opportunities for those young infielders. Stearns said he's confident that Mendoza will be able to balance the lineup and find ways for all the infielders to get time on the field.

"The good news is, there are a lot of at-bats to go around," he said. "When you talk about a couple of Infield positions, an outfield position, DH at-bats, there’s a lot of bats to go around. All those guys are going to get plenty of time. Is there going to be one or two guys on the bench each day? Yea. And then they’ll probably gonna get a leverage at-bat, or pinch-hit later in the game. Mendy does a great job of figuring out which guys for the lineup based on who we’re facing… We’ll continue to do that."

Update on Jose Siri

While talking about Winker, Stearns was asked about Siri and whether they expect him to return this season.

"With Jose, still possible," Stearns said. "Wouldn’t write it off but we need a little bit more news or an update to see what the timeline is for him to progress."

Siri will get an update on his recovery in 7-10 days and then the Mets will have a better idea.

The first-year Met went down in April with a left tibia fracture and has yet to see the field. He's played in just 10 games this season. 

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

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

However, All-Star outfielder Steven Kwan remains in Cleveland despite attracting a lot of interest.

The Guardians are 54-54 going into this weekend’s series against Minnesota and in second place in the AL Central, nine games behind Detroit. They are three games out of the final wild-card spot, but their moves could signal this has become a spiraling season.

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

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

The Guardians lost 10 straight from June 26 to July 6, but their 14-6 record since July 7 is the second-best mark in the majors.

“We have a lot to weigh around this time of year. The unexpected developments recently (with Clase and Ortiz) were certainly one of them,” said Chris Antonetti, Cleveland’s president of baseball operations. “But in the end, I think we feel good about the roster that we have for the balance of 2025 and are excited about our future."

Many thought Kwan might be moved at the deadline, but the three-time All-Star is staying put. Kwan — who is batting .286 with nine home runs and 38 RBIs — is under team control through 2027 with the possibility of both sides discussing an extension during the offseason.

“Not only do we have a profound appreciation for what he’s able to contribute on the baseball field and in the clubhouse, but so does the rest of Major League Baseball. We are really excited that he will continue to be with us moving forward,” Antonetti said.

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

Antonetti said teams began checking about Bieber’s availability in late June despite him being shut down for a month after experiencing soreness with the elbow after his first rehab start.

Talks began ramping up again though over the past couple weeks.

“I think with the way information has progressed over the course of the last 10 or 12 years, teams were able to get a really good feel of where Shane was in his rehab progression. They were able to not only get the video but get all the pitch metrics, in addition to maybe some scouting,” Antonetti said. “I think that there were teams that felt good about where Shane was in his rehab and what the path for him might be moving forward.”

The Guardians are getting right-hander Khal Stephen from the Blue Jays. After the trade deadline passed, they claimed right-hander Carlos Hernández on waivers from Detroit.

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

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

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

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

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

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

The 28-year old Hernández has split time this season between Philadelphia and Detroit. In 36 appearances he is 1-0 with a 6.69 ERA.

Mariners president Jerry Dipoto hopes his aggressive deadline moves lead to a World Series run

SEATTLE — New Seattle Mariners third baseman Eugenio Suárez made a point of interrupting president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto’s post-trade deadline news conference.

Dipoto, who reacquired the slugging third baseman from the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday in exchange for a trio of minor leaguers, was praising Suárez from the Mariners’ dugout when the 34-year-old best known for his home runs and good vibes butted in.

“Stop it!” Suárez said, more than loud enough for all to hear.

Suárez, Dipoto and the rest of the franchise had plenty to be pleased about after the trade deadline. The Mariners, who entered Thursday night’s game against the Texas Rangers in playoff position, bolstered their lineup by adding more than just Suárez, who has 36 homers this season and is tied with Seattle’s Cal Raleigh for the major league lead with 87 RBIs.

A week ago, the Mariners made another deal with the D-backs for slugging first baseman Josh Naylor. Dipoto believes Seattle acquired the “best bats” available, adding power to a lineup that already ranks fifth in the majors in home runs.

“This is the best lineup we’ve had since I’ve been here,” Dipoto said. “Without question.”

Dipoto, who was hired as the Mariners’ general manager in 2015 and promoted to president of baseball operations in 2021, has overseen a number of competitive clubs in the Emerald City. While Seattle has qualified for the playoffs only once under Dipoto, it has had a winning record in six of the last nine seasons.

Dipoto’s teams have often been in the playoff race ahead of the deadline, but Seattle’s moves haven’t been as aggressive as this year’s additions of Suárez, Naylor and veteran left-handed reliever Caleb Ferguson.

Dipoto said his mindset wasn’t that different from previous seasons, but he said he was more willing to acquire players who will be free agents at the end of the year.

“We feel like this team deserved it, the opportunity to just go out and see if we can win the World Series,” Dipoto said. “We feel like we have as good a lineup as there is in our league. Our rotation, if our guys do the things that they do, has proven that they can be as good as anybody in this league.”

This team is in many ways deeper than previous squads, too. Raleigh is in the midst of what Dipoto called an “MVP-type” season, and the Mariners had four other All-Stars.

Starting pitchers George Kirby and Logan Gilbert, both of whom missed significant time earlier in the season with injuries, are healthy again, adding to a rotation that’s been buoyed by Bryan Woo and Luis Castillo.

“I think if you talk to other clubs in the league,” Dipoto said, “they’re pretty bullish on what we’re capable of when we’re hitting on all cylinders. And while we had a hot streak early in the season, we haven’t hit our next hot streak, and it’s coming.”

To Dipoto’s point, the Mariners’ longest win streak of the season was six games and it came at the end of April and early May. The additions of Suárez, Naylor and Ferguson could push Seattle from being a fringe postseason contender to a legitimate threat to win the AL West, in which they entered Thursday trailing the Houston Astros by five games.

Manager Dan Wilson was confident that he had a good team even if the Mariners hadn’t added talent at the deadline. Unlike previous seasons, though, Dipoto felt compelled to supplement the roster in a meaningful way.

“I believe that adding to this team, adding some energy to the room and just showing the guys that we believe in what we’re doing was important,” Dipoto said. “And I think the response has been great."

2025 MLB Trade Deadline Reaction | The Mets Pod

On the latest episode of The Mets Pod presented by Tri-State Cadillac, recorded live following the 2025 MLB Trade Deadline, Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo recap all the moves made by the Mets!

The guys break down the deals for Cedric Mullins, Tyler Rogers, Ryan Helsley, and Gregory Soto and discuss the strategy and process followed by Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns. The show then goes into Mailbag-mode to answer questions about the best bullpen in the NL East, the immediate future of pitching prospects Nolan McLean and Brandon Sproat, the starting rotation moving forward, and more.

Be sure to subscribe to The Mets Pod at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

Shaikin: Angels didn't let their 'mid' reputation bury their playoff aspirations

New York Yankees third baseman Oswald Peraza fields a ground ball to throw out Cincinnati Reds' Christian Encarnacion-Strand during the ninth inning of a baseball game, Tuesday, June 24, 2025, in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)
The Angels acquired underperforming Yankees third baseman Oswald Peraza as well as two relievers during two trades at the deadline. (Joshua A. Bickel / Associated Press)

In the slang, “mid” means disappointingly mediocre, forgettable, uninspiring. On TikTok, a classic rant starts: “It’s called the Midwest because everything in it is mid! Skyline Chili? Mid! Your Cincinnati Reds, who haven’t won a World Series since 1990? M-M-M-Mid!!!”

Today, the Reds are five games over .500, and one of four teams that appear to be competing for the three National League wild-card spots. They added a starting pitcher, an elite defensive third baseman and a veteran utilityman batting .298 ahead of Thursday’s trade deadline.

The Angels are mid.

They are three games under .500, four games out in the American League wild-card race, with four teams to pass, hoping to end baseball’s longest playoff drought at 10 years.

The Seattle Mariners, tied with the Texas Rangers for the final wild-card spot, traded for middle-of-the-lineup corner infielders in third baseman Eugenio Suárez and first baseman Josh Naylor. The Rangers acquired Merrill Kelly to supplement Jacob deGrom and Nathan Eovaldi atop the starting rotation.

The Angels made two trades, picking up two veteran setup men and an infielder batting .152 for three lightly regarded minor leaguers.

Read more:Dodgers pass MLB trade deadline quietly, add Brock Stewart and Alex Call

Why lightly bolster a team with a 1.3% chance of making the playoffs, as projected by Baseball Prospectus before Thursday’s trades, when you could start building the 2026 roster in the many areas needing improvement?

“Giving them a chance to play this thing out, relative to what was presented [in trade talks], made a lot of sense,” Angels general manager Perry Minasian said.

In large part, he said, this was about the young players.

“The development of our core is obviously very, very, very important,” Minasian said. “Being competitive in August and September is really, really important for this group, not only for the now but for the future — playing meaningful games, understanding there is an expectation to win, showing up to the ballpark every day feeling like you have a chance to win over a six-month period.

“It’s hard to quantify, but I felt like it was very important for this group to go through that, to see what playing in August demands, what playing in September is like.”

Does he see the 2025 Angels playing meaningful games in October?

“I don’t make predictions,” he said.

Beyond shortstop Zach Neto, no one on the Angels’ current roster was likely to command an elite prospect in return.

Yet the Angels could have traded soon-to-be free agents such as pitchers Kenley Jansen and Tyler Anderson, or infielders Yoan Moncada and Luis Rengifo, to fill 2026 needs: a back-end starter, bullpen help, a utility infielder, a defense-first outfielder, upper-level depth in the minor leagues.

Maybe Oswald Peraza, the once-hyped New York Yankees prospect with the .152 average, starts at third base next year, or secures that utility job. Minasian called him “a classic change-of-scenery guy.”

Read more:MLB trade deadline tracker: All the moves by the Dodgers, Angels and everyone else

To get him, however, the Angels surrendered $73,766 in international bonus pool money that could have been better used to sign Latin American prospects. Minasian said the Angels had used what they needed of their $6,261,600 pool they needed this year — and the better prospects cost much more than $73,766 — but they cannot afford to close any avenues for talent acquisition.

In 2021, the Angels drafted all pitchers and failed to get a collective 1.0 WAR out of them. The Dodgers basically did the same thing: 20 picks, 18 pitchers, same under-1 WAR, although they have gotten some big moments from Ben Casparius, Emmet Sheehan and Justin Wrobleski.

But the Dodgers spend whatever they need, and then some, on deep and talented rosters of players, coaches and executives, and on player development and player acquisition.

It’s not all about money. It’s about creativity too. The Dodgers inserted themselves into a three-team trade Wednesday to bolster their farm system by trading a surplus minor league catcher for two minor league pitchers. The Dodgers last year inserted themselves into another three-team trade to grab reliever Michael Kopech, then-injured Tommy Edman for a depth bat and two minor leaguers.

The last time the Angels were a party to a three-team deal, Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman facilitated that too. The Dodgers got four players from the Miami Marlins, then swapped pitcher Andrew Heaney to the Angels for infielder Howie Kendrick. That was in 2014.

The Angels these days do not spend as much, or as well, on free agents. They do not distinguish themselves in scouting, analytics, player development or international signings.

That forces them to narrow their focus to drafting college players who race through the minor leagues. A weak draft class hurts far more in Anaheim than it does in L.A.

The Angels have their kids, but the optimism inherent in their talk of a young core obscures the fact they are about to have to pay the kids — and, money aside, they are running out of time.

Angels shortstop Zach Neto make a leaping throw across his body.
Shortstop Zach Neto has emerged as a young star for the Angels, who are fighting for a wild-card playoff spot this season. (Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

Neto, the lone star to emerge so far from the young core, is eligible for salary arbitration this winter. The Angels control him for only three more seasons — maybe less, if some or all of the 2027 season is lost to a collective bargaining war.

Catcher Logan O’Hoppe and pitcher José Soriano also are eligible for arbitration this winter. First baseman Nolan Schanuel is eligible next winter.

In the big picture, nothing much changed Thursday. The plan today is the same as it was in spring training: hope enough young players blossom that, when Anthony Rendon’s contract expires next fall, Minasian can persuade owner Arte Moreno that spending big on one or two players in free agency could make the difference. If playing meaningful games this August makes those young players that much better, perhaps this trade deadline was worth it.

Moreno resists rebuilding, as an advocate for fans he believes deserve to see a competitive team. No one in Orange County has to watch what something akin to what the Colorado Rockies are offering — or what the Houston Astros were offering before their ongoing run of success. Rebuilding could mean 100-loss seasons and an even greater drop in attendance; competing could mean sneaking into the playoffs with 84 victories.

The Angels could do that this year. It could work. However, it has not worked over the last decade, and in the meantime the Angels have become an unwitting poster child for a players’ union fighting against a salary cap to say, “Market size is not destiny. Look at the Angels.”

You can say the game plan is to contend every year, in the interest of the fans, but you should not try to win every year on a wing and a prayer.

Your most dedicated fans — represented by the hundreds that decorated themselves in wings and halos at Wednesday’s game, flapping their arms as angels in the outfield — were not shy about letting their feelings be known.

You could hear them loud and clear, at the game and on the television broadcast, “Sell the team!”

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Tigers bolster bullpen and perhaps pitching chaos with righties Finnegan, Morton, Sewald and Heuer

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

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

The Tigers acquired Washington’s Kyle Finnegan, Cleveland’s Paul Sewald and Texas minor leaguer Codi Heuer for prospects and cash, and also announced a deal shortly after the deadline for 41-year-old Charlie Morton from Baltimore.

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

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

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

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

Morton headlines Thursday’s additions. The two-time World Series winner has won 145 games over 18 big league seasons. He’s 7-8 with a 5.42 ERA this year, although he’s been sharper lately with a 3.98 ERA in 10 starts since June 1.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Rangers add veteran right-hander Merrill Kelly in a trade with the Diamondbacks

PHOENIX — The Texas Rangers acquired right-hander Merrill Kelly from the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday, adding a veteran starter with postseason experience to fortify their rotation at the trade deadline.

The D-backs received three minor league pitchers: left-handers Kohl Drake and Mitch Bratt and right-hander David Hagaman.

The 36-year-old Kelly has spent all of his seven major league seasons leagues with the Diamondbacks. He was the only Arizona pitcher to beat the Rangers in the 2023 World Series, throwing seven dominant innings in Game 2.

“We know when he takes the ball, we’ve seen it firsthand playing against him, and we have heard from so many people what an ultra competitor he is,” Rangers general manager Chris Young said. “So happy he’s a Ranger.”

Kelly is 9-6 with a 3.22 ERA and 121 strikeouts over 128 2/3 innings this season.

The Rangers also beefed up their bullpen, adding right-hander Phil Maton from the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange for a pair of minor leaguers — right-hander Skylar Hales and lefty Mason Molina — and international bonus pool money. The 32-year-old Maton has a 2.35 ERA and 48 strikeouts over 38 1/3 innings.

Finally, Texas added left-handed reliever Danny Coulombe from the Minnesota Twins in exchange for minor league left-hander Garrett Horn.

Texas entered Thursday with a 57-52 record, tied with the Seattle Mariners for the final American League wild-card spot.

The D-backs were sellers at the deadline, sending first baseman Josh Naylor and third baseman Eugenio Suarez to the Mariners in separate deals. Outfielder Randal Grichuk was shipped to the Royals. Arizona also sent pitchers Shelby Miller and Jordan Montgomery to the Brewers for cash.

Arizona is 51-58 after entering the season with playoff expectations. General manager Mike Hazen said it was particularly tough to lose Kelly, given his history with the organization.

“There’s the collective disappointment in how we’ve played,” Hazen said. “We all feel it. The players feel it, I’ve certainly taken responsibility, shared that with them, how I didn’t do a good enough job to keep this team in position to keep going.”

Mets believe prospects Nolan McLean, Brandon Sproat 'can help' this season but timing needs to be right

The biggest question after the Mets' trade deadline deals were completed was, why didn't they acquire a starting pitcher?

While Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns said in his post-deadline Zoom he was engaged with teams in that market, he ultimately went with revamping his bullpen. As he put it, "there's multiple ways to build a pitching staff," and he hopes the arms he has on the big league roster and even those in the minor leagues can help his team down the stretch.

"As we saw, there were some starting pitchers that were traded not every pitcher who was rumored to be available was ultimately moved. We were engaged throughout," Stearns said. "We’re really happy with the arms we were able to acquire, who are going to pitch out of our pen. And we have confidence in the starters not only who are here, who will keep us competitive and help us win games, but also pleased with the development of some of the guys in Triple-A are progressing. We understand that they could, may not definitely, but they could be part of the mix going forward if needed."

Nolan McLean and Brandon Sproat are two such minor league arms that are the closest to making the jump to the major leagues. When their names were brought up specifically to Stearns, he praised both of their development so far this season.

"They can help. It’s just a matter of their continued development and when does the opportunity arise, and is it the right time," Stearns said. "Both guys have taken very nice steps forward in their development. We’re going to continue to challenge them. We’re going to continue to ask them to get better and work on things. They are doing a good job. If we need someone from Triple-A, we’ve got people down and they are among them who can help us."

McLean, 24, has had a great year for Syracuse, posting a 3.01 ERA and a 1.12 WHIP across 14 games (11 starts). In his last start (July 30), McLean allowed two runs across six innings while striking out six batters.

Sproat, 24, has been just as good as McLean. Entering Thursday's start, Sproat pitched to a 4.30 ERA with a 1.29 WHIP but hadn't allowed a run in more than a month before his July 25 start, where he gave up two runs. But Sproat is now starting a new streak, as he pitched five scoreless innings for Syracuse on Thursday.

Both have been impressive this year, but like Stearns said, the team needs to wait for the right opportunity for a call-up. The Mets' rotation is healthy, with David Peterson, Kodai Senga, Sean Manaea, Frankie Montas and Clay Holmes pitching without issue -- physically -- in weeks. The team also has Paul Blackburn in the minors, who Stearns said a conversation about his role on the Mets needs to be discussed, so there's currently no room for young arms.

And unless there's an injury, a win-now team in the midst of a race for the division may not want a youngster pitching.

However the rest of the season shakes out, the Mets have made it known they believe in Sproat and McLean, we'll just have to see if that "opportunity" Stearns spoke of arrives.

Brian Cashman evaluates Yankees' trade deadline results: 'I know we have improved ourselves'

Yankees general manager Brian Cashman held his annual post-trade deadline press conference on Thursday night. Here's what he said on the team's activity and outlook...


More today than yesterday

The Yankees made nine total trades over the last week, and of the five that transpired before the league's 6 p.m. deadline, three completely reshaped the structure of their bruised-and-battered bullpen.

Over the course of three hours on Thursday afternoon, Cashman acquired a trio of high-leverage, right-handed relievers: David Bednar from the Pirates, Jake Bird from the Rockies, and Camilo Doval from the Giants. Sandwiched in between the bullpen upgrades were deals that saw utilityman Jose Caballero acquired from the Rays and infielder Oswald Peraza shipped to the Angels.

While the Yankees checked off several boxes with a slew of trades, both large and small -- newly-acquired hitters Ryan McMahon, Amed Rosario, and Austin Slater were all on the active roster Wednesday -- bullpen help was their top priority. Fair strategy, considering that the unit entered Thursday with the league's second-worst ERA (6.29) in July.

"We've improved the team, we believe. We tried to address the areas of need," Cashman said. "We added to the bullpen. We improved the position player group as well, giving the manager more choices to play matchups... He's certainly got more arms to mix and match with the new additions as well... We've addressed a lot of areas of need to give us the best shot we can take."

The deals involving Bednar, Bird, and Doval matter beyond 2025 as well. All three relievers are under team-friendly control through the 2026 season, and Cashman viewed this collective contract situation as an obvious "benefit." It wasn't the motive for the moves, as he also inquired about rental relievers in the marketplace.

But what about the rotation?

Despite the flurry of arrivals and departures, the Yankees didn't come away with any new rotation pieces. While they were linked to several starters in league-wide rumors spanning the entire month -- Sandy Alcantara, Edward Cabrera, Mitch Keller, and Merrill Kelly were mainly at the forefront -- nothing materialized, according to Cashman.

When asked if the Yankees seriously pursued a blockbuster deal for Alcantara, Cashman neither confirmed nor denied any involvement.

"We certainly knocked on many doors regarding potential starting pitching, but obviously weren't able to match up in that category," Cashman said. "We had a lot of conversations in a lot of different places. But again, this is what we have to show for those efforts."

The Yankees' inability to deliver rotation depth places immense pressure on a top-heavy staff that's become more volatile due to injuries and inconsistencies. While they have a quality one-two punch of star lefties Max Fried and Carlos Rodón in full-ish command, the back-end combination of Will Warren, Marcus Stroman, and others isn't reassuring by any means.

They can treat injured starter Luis Gil'simminent return to the rotation as a deadline acquisition, but only time will tell how the 2024 AL Rookie of the Year -- fully recovered from a months-long lat strain -- fares with a closely-monitored workload this summer. The Yankees already know that Gerrit Cole and Clarke Schmidt won't see the mound again until sometime in 2026.

Jul 28, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher David Bednar (51) delivers a pitch against the San Francisco Giants during the ninth inning at Oracle Park.
Jul 28, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher David Bednar (51) delivers a pitch against the San Francisco Giants during the ninth inning at Oracle Park. / D. Ross Cameron-Imagn Images

Top prospects stick around

As the chaotic week unfolded, expectations of the Yankees making highly-coveted outfielder Spencer Jones the centerpiece of any blockbuster trade package waned. This news came as no surprise, as a torrid start to his first stint in Triple-A exponentially boosted his value and altered his stock.

Cashman was asked if he tried to avoid trades that would've required the Yankees to part ways with Jones, or top infield farmhand George Lombard Jr. He didn't speak to either prospect by name in response, but did acknowledge that some players are "more touchable than others."

"There's a lot of guys that we like, and unfortunately, we parted with guys we like," Cashman said. "Just the nature of the beast. We were trying to stay away from certain guys more than others, but we also recognize that you have to give to get...

"That's where the rubber meets the road. You've got to make a decision on certain things, where you pick the lane, holding on and have that for yourself, or use that to get something that's going to help you in the near term. We had to make those tough decisions..."

A brief state of the union

While the Yankees wrapped up July on a three-game winning streak, several of their warts were exposed throughout the month. They produced a sub-.500 record in July for a third straight season, and saw a red-hot Blue Jays squad leap as many as 6.5 games ahead of them for first place in the AL East.

With a tight 1.5-game lead over the Red Sox for second place in the division, the Yankees will need to play a much cleaner brand of baseball in order to supplant the Blue Jays and avoid the extra round of wild-card postseason games. And all that Cashman can do now is cross his fingers for a roster that's largely underwhelmed.

"I know we have improved ourselves, and that's the nature of the beast at the deadline," Cashman said. "You and your group -- and I've got great people behind me advising me -- you get after it and prepare for whatever comes your way because it's so unpredictable. I thought we were buttoned up and we were prepared.

"We were hopeful to try to execute some things, and now it's time to test the theory of how it plays out with the group of players we currently have. I know we're better. We're better today than we were yesterday, so mission accomplished there... We're looking forward to taking our shot -- that's all we can give it."

David Stearns on Mets' sustained competitiveness, pursuit of starting pitching at trade deadline

It was a busy trade deadline for David Stearns and the rest of the Mets front office, as they tried to shore up holes and prepare the team for the final two months of the season and a potential long playoff run.

Stearns was able to accomplish his number one goal of remaking the bullpen with the acquisitions of Ryan Helsley, Tyler Rogers and Gregory Soto -- days prior -- but also grabbed an outfielder in Cedric Mullins.

And outside of some household names, like Jose Butto and a couple of minor leaguers -- more on them later -- the Mets didn't have to give up a lot to get these players. So, how did Stearns accomplish that?

"The story of this deadline, for us, is really an amateur talent acquisition and player development story," Stearns said over Zoom after the 6 p.m. trade deadline. "Our amateur talent acquisition departments and player development group put us in position to have this type of deadline, where we were to go out and acquire players that would help us in the major league level and not touch some really high-upside players at the top of our system. Enormous credit to them."

Stearns lauded Mullins' athleticism and ability to affect games in ways that won't show up in the box score. He also praised the two-headed monster of Helsley and Rogers that will give manager Carlos Mendoza more options to bridge to star closer Edwin Diaz. But some of the minor league capital -- specifically Drew Gilbert and Blade Tidwell in the Rogers deal -- used to acquire some of these arms were met with raised eyebrows.

The Mets' president of baseball operations understands how good the team's minor leaguers are, but also understands it needed to be done in order to compete this year.

"They’re good players, there’s no question they are good players," Stearns said of Tidwell and Gilbert. "Proximity to the major leagues certainly factors into these types of deals. We believe we’ve traded a number of players who are going to play on TV and continue to play on TV and I hope they do…

"We are rooting for them. We are in a position where we thought these deals made sense, giving good players for good players who can help us in a more concentrated fashion right now. Never easy decisions to make, but it was the right decisions to make right now."

Jun 3, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; San Francisco Giants relief pitcher Tyler Rogers (71) looks over his shoulder before a pitch against the San Diego Padres during the eighth inning at Oracle Park.
Jun 3, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; San Francisco Giants relief pitcher Tyler Rogers (71) looks over his shoulder before a pitch against the San Diego Padres during the eighth inning at Oracle Park. / Kelley L Cox-Imagn Images

While Stearns got the outfield bat and remade the bullpen, many felt the Mets would be better off trading for a starter to bolster the rotation. The current starters, outside of David Peterson, have not been able to give the team consistent length, and a proven arm could rectify that.

Of course, the Mets did not deal for one at this trade deadline and Stearns explained his thought process.

"As we saw, there were some starting pitchers that were traded but not every pitcher who was rumored to be available was ultimately moved. We were engaged throughout," Stearns said. "There’s multiple ways to build a pitching staff. We focused on the back-end of the pitching staff. We’re really happy with the arms we were able to acquire who are going to pitch out of our pen.

"And we have confidence in the starters not only here who will keep us competitive and help us win games, but also pleased with the development of some of the guys in Triple-A who are progressing. We understand that they could, may not definitely, but they could be part of the mix going forward if needed."

Those Triple-A arms, which include veteran Paul Blackburn, who was not dealt at the deadline, are options. How viable those options are remains to be seen, but Stearns believes the team is good enough to win it all this year and for years to come.

Since being hired after the 2023 season, Stearns has committed to making the Mets a sustainable winner, and this trade deadline is just one part of it. So while many saw the moves for rental relievers as going all-in on a "window," Stearns sees it as just another part of his grand plan.

"I don’t view this as windows. Our responsibility here is to give ourselves a chance to make the playoffs and win a World Series every single year," he said. "That’s what this should be, that’s what we’re aiming for. I don’t view this era of Mets competitiveness as a window.

"I view it as the beginning of a long and sustained competitiveness at a high level. The moves we made help this year without, in a very material way, sacrificing some really high-end talent that could help us in years to come."

Dodgers pass MLB trade deadline quietly, add Brock Stewart and Alex Call

Los Angeles, CA - July 21: Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Dustin May in the dugout during the game as the Dodgers take on the Minnesota Twins at Dodger Stadium Monday, July 21, 2025 in Los Angeles, CA. (Luke Johnson / Los Angeles Times)
Pitcher Dustin May, in the dugout during a game at Dodger Stadium last week against the Minnesota Twins, was traded to the Boston Red Sox on Thursday. (Luke Johnson / Los Angeles Times)

Before trade rumors heated up and dream scenarios were briefly envisioned, before the Dodgers were linked to a string of big names who all wound up anywhere but Los Angeles, the team’s front office foreshadowed what proved to be a rather straightforward, unremarkable trade deadline on Thursday afternoon.

“This group is really talented,” general manager Brandon Gomes said last week. “I would argue it’s better than the team that won the World Series last year.”

“It’s really about our internal guys, and the fact that these are veteran guys that have well-established watermarks,” echoed president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, amid a July slump that fueled deadline speculation about what the team would need.

“I think the fact that we see the work they put in, how much they care, just makes it easier to bet on.”

Read more:MLB trade deadline tracker: Live updates, news and every major move

On Thursday, maintaining faith in their current group is exactly what the Dodgers did.

The team did address its two main needs ahead of MLB’s annual midseason trade deadline. In the bullpen, it reunited with right-handed veteran Brock Stewart in a trade with the Minnesota Twins. In the outfield, it added solid-hitting, defensively serviceable 30-year-old Alex Call in a deal with the Washington Nationals.

But compared with the flurry of blockbuster deals that reverberated around them in the National League — from a head-spinning seven-player shopping spree by the San Diego Padres, to a bullpen arms race between the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies — the Dodgers’ moves were mild, tame and certainly cost-conscientious.

They didn’t splurge for one of the several established closers that were dealt for sky-high prices throughout the league. They didn’t remake their lineup by landing someone such as Steven Kwan, or any other hitter with anything close to All-Star pedigree.

In fact, the Dodgers hardly gave up much at all, content to round out the margins of their roster while parting with little in the way of prospect capital.

High-A pitchers Eriq Swan and Sean Paul Liñan (the 16th- and 20th-ranked players in their farm system by MLB Pipeline) were shipped to Washington. But otherwise, the only other departures were 40-man roster players unlikely to factor much into the team’s late-season plans: James Outman, who went to Minnesota in exchange for Stewart; Dustin May, who was dealt to the Boston Red Sox for a prospect a few months before entering free agency; and minor league catcher Hunter Feduccia, who was part of a three-team deal late Wednesday night that netted the Dodgers two pitching prospects and a journeyman catcher.

The Dodgers' James Outman (33) celebrates after hitting a three-run home run during a game against the Miami Marlins in May.
The Dodgers' James Outman (33) celebrates after hitting a three-run home run during a game against the Miami Marlins in May. (Marta Lavandier / Associated Press)

Compared to last year — when the Dodgers added Jack Flaherty (their eventual Game 1 starter in the World Series), Tommy Edman (the eventual National League Championship Series MVP) and Michael Kopech (a key piece in a bullpen that carried the team to a World Series title) — it all felt rather anticlimactic.

Which, as the Dodgers’ top two executives had noted the week before, appeared to be perfectly fine by them.

In Stewart, the team got a lower-cost addition in what was an expensive seller’s reliever market.

The 33-year-old has only two career saves, and is unlikely to fix the Dodgers’ ninth-inning problems. But, he is having a strong statistical season with 14 holds and a 2.38 ERA, 14th-best in the American League among relievers with 30 innings. He will give the Dodgers a stout option against right-handed hitters, who have just a .104 average and .372 OPS against him. And he comes with familiarity in the organization, still thought highly of after starting his career with the Dodgers from 2016-2019 — back before he reinvented himself with a fastball that now sits in the mid-to-upper 90 mph range.

In Call, the Dodgers gave themselves more versatility in the outfield.

Read more:Dodgers begin deadline with minor trade, while still seeking upgrades in bullpen and outfield

The right-handed hitter has appeared in just 277 career games over four MLB seasons with the Nationals and Cleveland Guardians.

But the former third-round draft pick is having a nice 2025 season, highlighted by a .274 batting average, .756 OPS and decent (if unspectacular) defensive grades at all three outfield positions.

While Call’s role wasn’t immediately clear, he could factor into a platoon with recently resurgent left-handed hitting outfielder Michael Conforto. He also gives the Dodgers another option in center field, specifically, which would allow Andy Pages to spend more time in a more naturally suited corner outfield spot.

For those Dodgers, the moves checked off their two big priorities: Adding another dependable right-handed reliever in the bullpen, and improving their defensive options in the outfield.

What was missing from the Dodgers’ deadline, however, was the kind of big splash so many other contenders reeled off this week. The Padres acquired Mason Miller, Ramon Laureano, and Ryan O’Hearn without sacrificing any key big-league pieces. The Mets added Tyler Rogers, Ryan Helsley and Gregory Soto to their already stout bullpen, while the Phillies upgraded theirs with the addition of Jhoan Durán.

Already this year, the rest of the NL was keeping pace with what was billed as a seemingly invincible Dodgers team. Suddenly, the competition looks that much stronger, not only for the club to defend its World Series, but even to preserve the narrow three-game lead it holds over the Padres in the NL West.

The Dodgers, however, see internal improvement as the key to the rest of the season.

Read more:Shohei Ohtani leaves pitching start because of cramping, Dodgers go on to lose to Reds

Already, their pitching staff is getting healthy. Tyler Glasnow, Blake Treinen and (as of this coming Saturday) Blake Snell are all back from extended injuries. Michael Kopech, Brusdar Graterol, Tanner Scott and Roki Sasaki are also scheduled to return over the final two months.

Offensively, the club is confident that slumping stars Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman and Tesocar Hernández will get back on track, and that Max Muncy will provide a jolt in his return from injury next week. All that — coupled with the MVP-caliber play of Shohei Ohtani and Will Smith — they believe should yield a lineup capable of repeating a run to the World Series.

“It’s always tricky when you’re in the midst of a swoon in team performance, because in those moments you feel like we need everything,” Friedman acknowledged leading into the deadline, with the team enduring a 10-14 slide in July. “So for us, it’s about, all right, let’s look ahead to August, September. Let’s look at what our best-case scenario is. Let’s look at, if we have a few injuries here and there, what areas are we exposed? What areas do we feel like we have depth?”

Apparently, the Dodgers still liked what they already had, rolling the dice on their current group while other contenders stocked up all around them.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets find a center fielder in trade with Orioles for Cedric Mullins

NEW YORK — Turning their attention to offense, the New York Mets acquired center fielder Cedric Mullins from the Baltimore Orioles for three minor league pitchers before the Major League Baseball trade deadline Thursday.

The last-place Orioles received right-handers Raimon Gómez, Anthony Nunez and Chandler Marsh.

The speedy Mullins gives the Mets an all-around upgrade in center, where Tyrone Taylor was playing terrific defense but providing little offense. Versatile veteran Jeff McNeil has also been getting starts in center because of his bat, but he has much more experience at second base and the corner outfield spots.

The 30-year-old Mullins, an All-Star in 2021, can become a free agent this fall. He’s batting .229 with 15 homers, 49 RBIs, 14 stolen bases and a .738 OPS in 91 games this season — but his numbers have picked up dramatically of late.

A patient left-handed hitter, he batted .290 with three homers, seven doubles and an .868 OPS in July.

It was the second trade in seven days between the Orioles and Mets, who obtained left-handed reliever Gregory Soto from Baltimore for a pair of minor league pitchers last Friday.

New York went all-in on a bullpen makeover Wednesday, landing All-Star reliever Ryan Helsley from St. Louis and right-hander Tyler Rogers from San Francisco in separate deals that cost the Mets six players. Helsley and Rogers also are eligible for free agency after this season.

To clear roster space for newcomers, the Mets transferred designated hitter Jesse Winker to the 60-day injured list and optioned reliever Chris Devenski to Triple-A Syracuse.

New York, which leads the NL East by a half-game over rival Philadelphia, moved to improve its everyday lineup Thursday with the deal for Mullins, in his eighth major league season — all with the Orioles.

His 30-30 campaign in 2021 was a bright spot during a terrible season in Baltimore, and he remained a factor as the Orioles became a playoff team in 2023 and 2024.

Now, with the Orioles struggling, he was one of several players they dealt leading up to the deadline.

Most of the minor leaguers the Orioles acquired over the past few days are pitchers. Baltimore hasn’t developed arms as successfully as position players recently.

The hard-throwing Gómez, 23, is 5-5 with a 4.63 ERA and two saves in 24 relief appearances and three starts at High-A Brooklyn and Class-A St. Lucie this season. He threw a 104.5 mph pitch on April 26, the fastest in any ballpark equipped with Statcast technology this year, and he’s topped 103.4 mph eight times.

He was rated the No. 30 prospect in the Mets’ system by MLB.com.

Nunez, 24, is 2-1 with a 1.58 ERA and five saves in 32 outings between Double-A Binghamton and High-A Brooklyn. He has 60 strikeouts and 17 walks in 40 innings.

He was rated the No. 14 prospect in the Mets’ system by MLB.com.

Marsh, 22, is 4-1 with a 2.57 ERA and three saves in 33 appearances at High-A Brooklyn and Class A St. Lucie combined.

MLB trade deadline tracker: Astros reunite with Carlos Correa, Padres swing several deals

Major League Baseball's trade deadline brought plenty of chaos Thursday, with dozens of deals capping a frenetic 24 hours as teams sought to improve their rosters ahead of the postseason.

Among the highlights: All-Star shortstop Carlos Correa is reuniting with the Houston Astros, the San Diego Padres went on a trading spree that brought in hard-throwing closer Mason Miller and the New York Yankees grabbed two-time All-Star reliever David Bednar.

In other moves, outfielder Cedric Mullins was dealt to the New York Mets while former Cy Young award winner Shane Bieber is joining the Toronto Blue Jays.

The recent swaps are on top of several deals over the past few days - including the Mariners landing slugger Eugenio Suarez - and the final hours saw a whirlwind of activity as teams made trades right up until the 6 p.m. EDT deadline.

Trades were still rolling in as the deadline passed but here are some highlights from Thursday:

Astros reunite with Carlos Correa, giving club familiar veteran

Correa is returning to Houston in a deal with the Minnesota Twins, giving the franchise a boost as it tries to stay atop the AL West, according to a person with direct knowledge. The person spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because the deal hadn’t been announced.

Correa spent his first seven years in Houston, where he became one of the most beloved players in franchise history, helping the team to six playoff appearances, three American League pennants and its first World Series title in 2017 - a championship tainted by a sign-stealing scandal.

Correa has exclusively played shortstop in his 11-year MLB career but will almost certainly move to third base with shortstop Jeremy Peña close to returning from the injured list. The Astros need help at the hot corner with All-Star Isaac Paredes out indefinitely with a hamstring injury.

The 30-year-old Correa has had a down season by his standards, batting .267 with seven homers and 31 RBIs. He's under contract through 2028.

Active Padres add All-Star Mason Miller and others

The 26-year-old Miller is one of the game's top relievers and has a fastball that averages more than 101 mph. The 2024 All-Star has 20 saves in 23 opportunities, a 3.76 ERA and 59 strikeouts this season. He's under team control through 2029.

The Padres also added JP Sears, a lefty who has a 7-9 record and 4.95 ERA this season, striking out 95 batters over 22 starts.

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

The active Padres also acquired catcher Freddy Fermin from the Kansas City Royals.

Mets get needed boost in center field with Baltimore’s Cedric Mullins

Mullins give the Mets an upgrade in center field, where Tyrone Taylor was playing terrific defense but providing little offense. The 30-year-old Mullins - who was an All-Star in 2021 - is batting .229 with 15 homers, 49 RBIs and 14 stolen bases.

Versatile veteran Jeff McNeil has also been getting starts in center because of his bat, but he has much more experience at second base and the corner outfield spots.

The last-place Orioles received right-handers Raimon Gómez, Anthony Nunez and Chandler Marsh.

Yankees add to bullpen, acquire Bednar from Pirates, Bird from Rockies

Looking to fortify their bullpen for the stretch run, the Yankees agreed to acquire Bednar from Pittsburgh and Jake Bird from Colorado.

New York was set to send catcher/first base prospect Rafael Flores, catcher Edgleen Perez and outfielder Brian Sanchez to the Pirates in exchange for Bednar, according to a person familiar with the deal. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the deal had not been announced.

The Yankees sent infielder Roc Riggio and lefty Ben Shields to the Rockies for Bird.

The 30-year-old Bednar struggled early in the season and spent some time in the minors but has been dominant since his return. He joins a bullpen that already has Luke Weaver and Devin Williams. Bird has a 4.73 ERA and 62 strikeouts over 53 1/3 innings.

They were the fourth and fifth trades made by the Yankees since last Friday. They obtained third baseman Ryan McMahon from Colorado on Friday, reserve infielder Amed Rosario from Washington on Saturday and reserve outfielder Austin Slater from the Chicago White Sox on Wednesday.

Shane Bieber off to Blue Jays, nearing MLB return

Bieber is headed to the AL East-leading Blue Jays in a deal with the rebuilding Cleveland Guardians.

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

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

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

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

Phillies stay aggressive, add OF Harrison Bader in deal with Twins

The Phillies got outfielder Harrison Bader in exchange for two minor leaguers. It is the team’s second deal with the Minnesota Twins in two days after landing closer Jhoan Duran.

The 31-year-old Bader, a 2021 Gold Glove winner, remains a strong defender at all three outfield spots and has 12 home runs, 38 RBIs and a .778 OPS in 96 games. He also has postseason experience, playing in five playoff series with the Cardinals, Yankees and Mets with a .809 OPS and five career homers.

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

Tigers pry closer Kyle Finnegan from Nationals, also add Paul Sewald, Codi Heuer

AL Central-leading Detroit acquired Kyle Finnegan from Washington for two prospects, a person familiar with the deal told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the trade wasn't announced.

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

The Nats received minor league pitchers Josh Randall and R.J. Sales, Detroit's third and 10th round draft picks from 2024, respectively.

The Tigers also added right-hander Paul Sewald in a deal with the Guardians and minor-league righty Codi Heuer in a trade with the Rangers.

The 35-year-old Sewald is eligible to return from the injured list on Sunday after being shut down with a strained right shoulder. He is 1-1 with a 4.70 ERA in 18 games this season, averaging more than one strikeout each inning.

Cubs add more pitching, trade for Andrew Kittredge from Orioles

The Cubs continued seek help on the mound, adding right-hander Andrew Kittredge from the Baltimore Orioles one day after agreeing to a deal with the Washington Nationals for righty Michael Soroka.

The 35-year-old Kittredge was an All-Star in 2021 and has a 3.44 ERA over nine seasons. The reliever has a 3.45 ERA in 31 games this season. He signed a $9 million, one-year deal with Baltimore last offseason that includes a $9 million club option for 2026 with a $1 million buyout.

Other deals, notes

- The Rays acquired catcher Hunter Feduccia from the Los Angeles Dodgers in exchange for right-handed pitcher Paul Gervase, catcher Ben Rortvedt and left-handed pitcher Adam Serwinowski.

- The Dodgers acquired outfielder Alex Call from the Washington Nationals for minor leaguer right-handers Eriq Swan and Sean Paul Liñan.

- The Angels took infielder Oswald Peraza from the Yankees for minor league outfielder Wilberson de Peña and international bonus pool money.

- The Reds acquired utility player Miguel Andujar from the Athletics in exchange for right-hander Kenya Huggins.

- The Rangers added left-handed reliever Danny Coulombe from the Twins in exchange for minor league left-hander Garrett Horn.

- Baltimore put right-hander Zach Eflin on the injured list with lower back discomfort Thursday. Eflin was a potential trade target, but has made only 14 starts this year and is on an expiring contract.

Yankees produce pair of homers in rain-soaked 7-4 win over Rays

The Yankees extended their winning streak to three games on Thursday afternoon, as a pair of early-inning homers helped them outlast the Rays in a rain-soaked 7-4 victory at Yankee Stadium.

Here are the takeaways...

-- It didn't take long for the Yankees to inflict damage on Rays starter Ryan Pepiot. After a lucky one-out double to shallow left from Paul Goldschmidt -- the high fly was lost in the sky and found grass between four fielders -- Cody Bellinger continued his torrid pace at the plate with an RBI single to right-center that broke the ice. The swirling Bronx winds didn't impact the ensuing at-bat for Giancarlo Stanton, however, as the veteran slugger bumped the first-inning lead to 3-0 with a mammoth two-run homer to left that traveled 432 feet.

-- The Yankees posted another three-spot off Pepiot in the second. Following back-to-back one-out walks from Ryan McMahon and Anthony Volpe, leadoff man and catcher Ben Rice ripped a cutter to right-center that landed in the bullpen for a three-run blast. The 410-foot shot was No. 16 on the season for Rice, who finished July with just two homers in 56 total at-bats. The Yankees jumped out to a 7-0 lead in the third, when newly-acquired outfielder Austin Slater grounded into a fielder's choice that scored Jazz Chisholm Jr., who sparked the brief rally with a one-out walk of his own.

-- The early and ample run support appeased Marcus Stroman, who managed to hold the Rays hitless through three innings with three strikeouts across 38 pitches. But the groove didn't last for the veteran right-hander, as he gave up a leadoff single to Brandon Lowe in the fourth that snowballed into a five-hit, four-run rally and cut the Yankees' lead to three. Stroman needed 28 pitches to complete the frame, and it marked his first start with four-plus runs allowed since returning from the injured list on June 29.

-- Heavy rain began to fall in the top of the fifth, and Stroman worked quick enough to produce three outs on eight pitches and make the game official. While play resumed after a mid-inning chat between a grounds crew member and umpire, the tarp was rolled out shortly thereafter with runners on the corners for the Yankees and one out. Rather than handing the Yankees a rain-shortened win, the league made both teams sit through a nearly three-hour delay, and the prolonged fifth inning ended with a double-play groundout from Slater.

-- Yerry De Los Santos was tasked with bulk relief duty following the delay, and didn't disappoint the Yankees. He faced the minimum through three innings of work, punching out five across 33 pitches. Jonathan Loaisiga then handled the ninth inning, and worked around a leadoff double to earn his first save of the season. The Yankees' offense produced just a pair of singles after the rain showers.

Game MVP: Ben Rice

Rice's three-run shot in the second inning wound up providing just enough cushion, as the Yankees' seven-run lead was cut down to three by the fourth. It was welcomed power from Rice, who's hitting just .228 over his last 30 games.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees (60-49) will fly down to South Beach and begin a three-game weekend set with the Marlins on Friday night. First pitch is scheduled for 7:10 p.m.

LHP Carlos Rodón (11-7, 3.18 ERA) is slated to take the mound, while the Marlins have yet to name their starter.

Yankees trading for Giants reliever Camilo Doval

The Yankees continued their quest to bolster the bullpen just minutes before the end of the trade deadline.

According to multiple reports, the Yankees have acquired Giants reliever Camilo Doval. The Yankees traded No. 19 prospect Trystan Vrieling, No. 25 prospect Jesus Rodriguez, Parks Harbor, and Carlos De La Rosa.

Doval has had a solid season for the Giants. In 47 appearances, he's pitched to a 3.09 ERA to go along with 50 strikeouts in 46.2 innings pitched. He's also closed 15 games for the Giants.

It's a nice bounce-back year for Doval, who pitched to a 4.88 ERA last season and lost the closer's job. But he's not far removed from his All-Star season in 2023 when he saved 39 games and pitched to a 2.93 ERA.

The Doval trade culminates an active deadline for GM Brian Cashman, as he brought in a total of three relievers to remake the bullpen, including former Pirates closer David Bednar and former Rockies reliever Jake Bird.

Like Bednar and Bird, Doval will be under Yankees control for multiple seasons. Doval is arbitration-eligible for two more seasons before becoming an unrestricted free agent in 2028.