Brian Cashman preparing to 'go to town' to address Yankees' needs at MLB trade deadline

As the Yankees play out the final few games before the 2025 All-Star break, holes in the roster have begun to form.

Longtime GM Brian Cashman is well aware of these needs and when speaking with the media prior to Wednesday's game against the Mariners at Yankee Stadium, he listed what he sees as pieces the Yankees need.

"I’m definitely going to be looking for upgrades if I can. We’ve lost three starters out of our World Series rotation so far this year. So I’m going to see if I can find a starter despite getting some real quality starts from others who stepped up like Will Warren and others," Cashman said. "I would import a starter, some relievers, because our bullpen is taxed and some injuries. And an infielder, if possible. That’s a long list. I’m not sure if this will be a deep deadline or not. Not sure how active we can be but we’ll try to be active. And try to import improvements, that’s the gig."

Heading into Wednesday's games, there are 15 teams in Wild Card spots or within five games of the final spot, so the number of teams willing to sell is currently limited. Cashman knows this and points to this past offseason as an example of the disparity of opportunities between the winter and summer months.

When Juan Soto signed with the Mets, Cashman said there were opportunities to replace that production and fill out the roster. The Yankees signed Max Fried and Paul Goldschmidt, and traded for Cody Bellinger and Devin Williams this offseason. Opportunities like those may not be available for Cashman, but the GM will continue to look at all avenues.

"We're going to go to town. We're going to do everything we possibly can to improve ourselves and try to match up. Hopefully, at the end of it all, we'll have whatever's here on the current roster remains healthy, and we can add to it and be proud of it and take our shot. Hopefully, I can fix what ails us because there's some areas on this team that need fixing."

Is there a need more pressing than others? Cashman, as he's said in past seasons, pointed to pitching.

"Pitching is always going to be that," he said. "We’ve taken hits in the rotation when we lost [Gerrit] Cole and Luis Gil and now [Clarke] Schmidt. [Ryan] Yarbrough was a hell of a player for us. Fernando Cruz. Whether it’s bullpen guys or starting pitchers, it’s all of it. That’s the area."

Although Gil, Yarbrough and Cruz are expected to return from injuries this season, Cole and Schmidt are not so lucky. The Yankees are starting prospect Cam Schlittler on Wednesday as the team tries to make it to the All-Star break.

And just a few short weeks after that, the trade deadline will be here and Cashman will need to make moves to try and put the Yankees in a position to return to the World Series.

We'll see if he can do it.

The 2025 MLB trade deadline is set for July 31.

Mets excited by 'really good' reports on Brooks Raley's rehab outings

The Mets have been recovering from their early summer swoon without a reliable left-hander working in a high-leverage bullpen role. But it shouldn't be too long until this issue is resolved internally.

Among the handful of injured Mets pitchers completing rehab assignments is Brooks Raley, and the veteran southpaw has undoubtedly resembled a reliever eager to contribute at the big league level after a lengthy absence from the game.

In his second appearance for Triple-A Syracuse on Tuesday, Raley recorded four outs with one strikeout and one hit allowed. His average velocity reached the same high-80s range that radar guns captured before he underwent Tommy John surgery at the age of 35 last season.

"Really good, really good [reports]. The breaking ball, the sinker, the life with the way the ball is coming out," Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said of Raley on Wednesday. "He went one-plus yesterday, something that we wanted him to do. Now we're looking at back-to-back on Saturday and Sunday, and then obviously we have a decision. But the reports are encouraging. This is a guy who I'm really looking forward to having back here."

Raley aimed for a comeback with a familiar team -- he logged 61.2 innings for the Mets between 2023 and 2024 -- and right now, he represents much-needed help for a bullpen that owns the third-worst ERA (5.72) in baseball over the last month. He's struck out 12 batters across eight scoreless frames thus far, demonstrating clear value.

He's long valued movement on his pitches too, and he's struck out at least one batter in each of his seven rehab appearances this summer. Raley was an impact reliever at full strength two seasons ago, with a sharp 2.80 ERA in 66 games, and the Mets would obviously welcome similar production from him in the near future.

Winless Giants starter Justin Verlander makes unfortunate MLB pitching history

Winless Giants starter Justin Verlander makes unfortunate MLB pitching history originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Justin Verlander began the 2025 MLB season needing 38 wins to reach 300 for his career, and 15 starts into his first Giants campaign, he still needs 38 wins to achieve that milestone.

Somehow, Verlander is 0-7 this season after taking the loss in the Giants’ 13-0 defeat to the Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday at Oracle Park.

Per OptaStats, Verlander is the first starting pitcher in the All-Star Game Era (1933) to enter the break with at least 65 strikeouts and zero wins.

Verlander pitched well enough to get the win Wednesday, but the Giants’ offense was silenced by starter Jesús Luzardo and the Phillies’ bullpen. In six innings, the 42-year-old allowed seven hits, four runs, two earned runs and didn’t walk any batters while striking out seven.

This certainly isn’t how Verlander or Giants manager Bob Melvin expected this season to go.

“I thought it was his best stuff of the year, by a pretty good margin,” Melvin told reporters after Wednesday’s loss. “We just didn’t play well behind him and we didn’t score many runs, and that’s kind of been a theme when he’s pitched. But I thought his breaking ball was really good, his heater was good. It’s too bad. [He] ends up [giving up] what, only 2 earned runs, but we just don’t do enough for him on today on either side of the ball. Like I said, he pitched well.”

In eight of Verlander’s 15 starts this season, the Giants have scored two or fewer runs, making it hard for him to pick up that elusive first win with San Francisco.

Melvin understands the frustration of everyone in the clubhouse.

“I come in here saying the same thing,” Melvin told reporters. “It feels like every time we don’t score runs for him and I don’t know. At this point in time, he should certainly have a couple of wins and he doesn’t, unfortunately. I think we all kind of feel it.”

Verlander gets a chance to rest and reset with the upcoming MLB All-Star break, and he’ll resume the pursuit of a win early in the second half.

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Dodgers blow lead in ninth inning, lose to Brewers in the 10th

Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Tyler Glasnow throws to the Milwaukee Brewers during the first inning of a baseball game, Wednesday, July 9, 2025, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Phelps)
Dodgers right-hander Tyler Glasnow, taking the mound for the first time since April because of a shoulder injury, pitched five innings Wednesday, giving up two hits and no runs while striking out five. (Jeffrey Phelps / Associated Press)

During the Dodgers’ season-long five-game losing streak this week, manager Dave Roberts cited a lack of “fight” from his lineup as the most troubling trend in the team’s recent skid.

On Wednesday in Milwaukee, more fight finally returned — only for the Brewers to still land the knockout punch.

In a 3-2 loss at American Family Field that extended the Dodgers' losing streak to six games, the lineup once again scuffled in a five-hit performance while closer Tanner Scott blew a ninth-inning lead to waste Tyler Glasnow’s encouraging return from the injured list.

It was a grind of a game, with the Dodgers scoring their only runs on a bases-loaded walk following a hit-and-run play and a sacrifice fly that briefly gave them a 2-1 lead. After Scott gave up a game-tying RBI single to Andrew Vaughn in the ninth, Jackson Chourio walked it off against Kirby Yates in the bottom of the 10th, sending the scuffling Dodgers their longest losing skid since April 2019.

While a shorthanded offense remained mired in its recent slump, Glasnow’s return at least provided the afternoon with a positive sign. Making his first start since going on the injured list in April because of a shoulder injury, and just his 28th start in two years with the Dodgers since signing a $136.5-million contract two winters ago, the lanky right-hander pitched decently over his five innings, giving up two hits and three walks with five strikeouts.

Glasnow ran into trouble in the second inning, when Christian Yelich singled on a first-pitch fastball, Isaac Collins drew a full-count walk, and both executed a double-steal to move into scoring position. A 10-pitch walk to Caleb Durbin — ending on a curveball that never ducked into the strike zone — loaded the bases with one out.

Read more:Dodgers Dugout: Who's better, Clayton Kershaw or Sandy Koufax?

However, Glasnow responded, jamming Jake Bauers with a sinker for a pop out before blowing Joey Ortiz away with an elevated 96 mph heater.

That sequence was Glasnow at his best: Going after hitters with his premium velocity, and showing no signs of the tentativeness — or, as Roberts described it in his pregame address, “search mode” — that has often derailed his Dodgers career.

“There’s always fine-tuning, but when you’re out there competing, it’s hard to be in search mode,” Roberts said pregame. “I know he’s healthy. The pitching guys feel good with where his delivery is at. So now it’s just go out there and keep that rhythm and execute pitches and compete.”

As Glasnow settled into a rhythm, however, the Dodgers continued to toil at the plate.

Having scored only one run in four of their previous five games, a shorthanded lineup, which got Tommy Edman back from injury but once again was without Teoscar Hernández in the starting lineup, struggled to get a beat on crafty veteran left-hander José Quintana.

With only a 90-mph fastball and a flurry of funky off-speed pitches, the 36-year-old navigated the first four innings without giving up a hit.

A breakthrough finally came in the fifth inning. After Miguel Rojas drew a leadoff walk, the Dodgers executed a well-timed hit-and-run play, drawing the second baseman out of position just as Esteury Ruiz lined a single through the hole he vacated. With two outs, James Outman then checked his swing just enough to draw a full-count walk, loading the bases for Shohei Ohtani to plate the game’s first run on a four-pitch free pass (benefitting from a couple borderline ball calls).

And while that 1-0 lead didn’t last long — in the bottom of the fifth, Glasnow walked leadoff man Bauers, moved him to second with a balk, then watched helplessly as Bauers stole third and scored on a throw that bounced to the outfield — the Dodgers went back in front in the seventh when Mookie Betts lifted a bases-loaded sacrifice fly.

The Dodgers, though, squandered opportunities to stretch the lead from, leaving the bases loaded to end the seventh inning before stranding more baserunners in both the eighth and ninth.

That left Scott with too little margin to complete a four-out save. While the left-hander stranded a runner at second base he inherited in the eighth, three ninth-inning singles from the Brewers tied the score, culminating with a broken-bat, bloop single from Vaughn that made it 2-2.

Then, after Brewers closer Trevor Megill struck out the side in the top of the 10th, Yates surrendered the game-winning single to Churio in the bottom half of the inning, handing the Dodgers their second-straight series sweep.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Giolito becomes first Red Sox pitcher since 2018 to accomplish this feat

Giolito becomes first Red Sox pitcher since 2018 to accomplish this feat originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Not only has Lucas Giolito stepped up as the Boston Red Sox’ most reliable starter after Garrett Crochet, but he has arguably been the best pitcher in MLB for the last month.

Giolito continued his torrid stretch with another stellar performance Wednesday vs. the Colorado Rockies. The veteran right-hander tossed six scoreless innings, striking out six while allowing four hits and no walks in Boston’s 10-2 victory.

According to MassLive.com’s Christopher Smith, Giolito is the first Red Sox pitcher to go six or more innings with two or fewer runs allowed in six straight outings since David Price in 2018. He has posted a 0.70 ERA over that span, the second-best mark in MLB after Philadelphia Phillies ace Zack Wheeler (0.53 ERA across five starts).

Wednesday’s outing lowered Giolito’s season ERA to 3.36, the third-best on the Red Sox behind Crochet (2.39) and Brayan Bello (3.27). Bello tossed his first career complete game in Tuesday’s win over Colorado.

Giolito struggled to start the campaign after missing all of 2024 due to Tommy John surgery. The soon-to-be 31-year-old has since settled in and looked more like the pitcher who earned Cy Young votes for three straight seasons (2019-21) with the Chicago White Sox.

The Red Sox will turn to Walker Buehler on Thursday when they open their four-game series against the Tampa Bay Rays at Fenway Park. Boston will enter its final series before the All-Star break on a six-game win streak, 5.5 games back in the American League East standings and a half-game behind in the Wild Card race.

Wednesday's Mets-Orioles game postponed due to inclement weather

After Tuesday's game between the Mets and Baltimore Orioles experienced a roughly 45-minute rain delay at the start, Wednesday's contest will be postponed altogether due to continued rain and thunderstorms in the area.

The game will be made up as part of a split doubleheader on Thursday. Game 1 will be played at 12:05 p.m., while Game 2 is scheduled for 5:05 p.m.

Both games will be broadcast on SNY.

Right after the postponement, manager Carlos Mendoza spoke to reporters and confirmed that LHP David Peterson, Wednesday's scheduled starter, will pitch in the first game of the doubleheader. As for the second game, it is still to be announced, but it will likely be a bullpen game, which was the case even before the postponement.

Originally, Thursday's series finale was scheduled to start at 1:05 p.m. with New York traveling to Kansas City right after to begin a three-game weekend set with the Royals on Friday night, which will take the Mets and the rest of the league to the All-Star break.

Yankees designate DJ LeMahieu for assignment after ominous benching

There's no longer any uncertainty about DJ LeMahieu's future with the Yankees.

The team officially designated the veteran infielder for assignment on Wednesday, just one day after a lineup reshuffling that kicked him off regular work at second base and into a new bench role.

The writing was on the wall for LeMahieu, who'd been a shell of himself in recent seasons due to a slew of injuries. Yankees manager Aaron Boone acknowledged on Tuesday that the 36-year-old isn't considered an everyday player at this point, and the notion is undoubtedly backed by the numbers and eyetest.

"It’s been a tough couple of days. Some hard conversations, and then ultimately coming to this decision," Boone said ahead of Wednesday's game against the Mariners. "Obviously not easy for what has been a great player who has done a lot of great things for this organization. Difficult, but at the end, feel like this is the right thing to do at this time. Wish all the best for what’s been a great player."

With limited range in the field and a weakened swing at the plate, LeMahieu offered little to the bottom of the Yankees' order. While he was considered an option at third base entering the season, a calf injury in spring training delayed his debut until mid-May, and he ultimately slashed .266/.338/.336 with just five extra-base hits across 45 games (142 plate appearances).

LeMahieu became a player without a position on Tuesday when the Yankees decided to move Jazz Chisholm Jr. back to second base, where he's far more comfortable and valuable. A return to third base was deemed too physically demanding by LeMahieu, according to Boone.

"It ultimately comes down to how this roster sits," Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said. "You want to provide your manager with enough chess moves to deal with on a day-in and day-out basis... At any point, we could've just kept rolling with it. But I met with DJ last night, met with DJ today. I ultimately made a decision that's best for the roster configuration going forward."

LeMahieu's tenure with the Yankees started on an impressive note, as he finished fourth in AL MVP voting in 2019 with a career-high 26 home runs and 102 RBI. He then became the first player in baseball's Modern Era (since 1900) to win a batting title in both leagues when he hit a stellar .364 during the pandemic-shortened 2020 campaign.

The Yankees signed LeMahieu to a six-year, $90 million extension before the 2021 campaign, and that investment clearly backfired. He didn't hit above .270 in any season under the new deal, and he averaged just eight homers and 37 RBI during the five-year stretch. He's still owed nearly $22 million on a contract that runs through 2026.

In a corresponding move, the Yankees called up infielder Jorbit Vivas from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

MLB plans to use robot umpire challenge system in All-Star Game

NEW YORK — Major League Baseball plans to use its robot umpire technology for ball-strike challenges in Tuesday’s All-Star Game at Atlanta, another step toward possible regular-season use next season.

MLB said Wednesday it intends to make the All-Star announcement Thursday.

Teams won 52.2% of their ball/strike challenges during the spring training test, with 617 of 1,182 challenges successful in the 288 exhibition games using the Automated Ball-Strike System. ABS was installed at 13 spring training ballparks hosting 19 teams, and an animation of the pitch was shown on video boards displaying the challenge result for spectators to see.

Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said last month that the ABS system was likely to be considered for regular-season use by the 11-man competition committee, which includes six management representatives.

“I do think that we’re going to pursue the possibility of change in that process and we’ll see what comes out at the end of that,” he said. “The teams are really positive about ABS. I do have that unscientific system that I use: my email traffic. And my distinct impression is that using ABS in spring training has made people more prone to complain of balls and strike calls via email to me referencing the need for ABS.”

During the 2024 regular season, 10.9% of called pitches in the strike zone were ruled balls and 6.3% of called pitches outside of the strike zone were ruled strikes, according to MLB Statcast.

MLB has been experimenting with the automated ball-strike system in the minor leagues since 2019.

MLB AL Rookie of the Year Prediction: Odds, expert picks, including Cam Smith, Jacob Wilson, Roman Anthony

The American League Rookie of the Year race looked all but locked up by the A's Jacob Wilson entering June, but after a monster month, Cam Smith of the Astros has entered the chat.

Wilson is a -110 favorite at BetMGM whereas Smith is +105. Wilson's teammate, Nick Kurtz hangs around at +550 and the No. 1 prospect in the MLB right behind him. I have a 0.5 unit bet on Boston's Roman Anthony (No. 1 prospect) at +1200 odds and he still roams around that number, but his production doesn't rival Smith's.

While a case could be made for Wilson as he ranks second in the MLB with a .335 batting average, or Anthony because he is raking .345 to start July after hitting .210 in June, or maybe even Kurtz who has 14 homers, including nine over the last month!

However, this is becoming Smith's award to lose and he's setting himself apart from the field in more ways than just his hitting.

American League Rookie of the Year: Cam Smith (+150)

Cam Smith is a former No. 14 overall pick of the Cubs last year, but he was a part of the trade that sent Kyle Tucker from Houston to Chicago — so Smith is living up to his expectations as a part of that deal — as much as he can anyway.

No player among the top eight in the AL Rookie of the Year race has increased their odds more than Smith -- who was 80-to-1 entering the season at BetMGM!

That's because Smith has raised his batting average almost every month as seen below.

.125 in March (8 AB)
.224 in April (67 AB)
.307 in May (75 AB)
.303 in June (89 AB)
.350 in July (40 AB)

Entering the July 9th games, Smith is batting .343 over the last seven days and .348 in the past 30 days, so he's stayed hot and has 21 multi-hit games on the year.

The potential impact of being a star player has been shown. He has seven home runs, a .287 batting average, 2.3 WAR, 38 runs scored, 80 hits, and 39 RBIs, which the latter two rank second among all rookies. However, he's made a significant splash on defense to the point where managers and experts are claiming he will be a gold glover.

There are stats to back that up to. According to the Outs Above Average metric at Baseball Savant and the Fielding Bible’s Defensive Runs Saved stat, Smith ranks second out of all right fielders to in Outs Above Average with four (ranks behind Fernando Tatis Jr.) and second, again, with 9 Defensive Runs Saved (trails only Adolis Garcia).

Smith is a dynamic two-way player, and once Jacob Wilson's batting average drops below .300 in the second half of the season, Smith will overthrow him as the favorite — some markets even have the two tied or a 5 to 10-cent difference per dollar, so time is running out to get involved with Smith.

I played Cam Smith at +150 to win AL ROY and would go down to -110 odds for 2 units. He is +100 or better everywhere as of July 9. I still like Roman Anthony as a 0.5 unit bet at +1000 or better as well.

Pick: Cam Smith to win AL Rookie of the Year (2u)

Vaughn Dalzell’s MLB Futures Card

2 units: Aaron Judge to lead MLB in home runs (+130)
2 units: Cam Smith to win AL Rookie of the Year (+150)
2 units: Jacob Misiorowski to win NL Rookie of the Year (-110)

1 unit: Shohei Ohtani to win NL MVP (-110)
1 unit: Bobby Witt to win AL MVP (+450)
1 unit: Elly De La Cruz to win NL MVP (+2000)
1 unit: Garrett Crochet to win AL CY Young (+450)
1 unit: Paul Skenes to win NL CY Young (+300)
1 unit: Jacob Misiorowski to win NL Rookie of the Year (+100)
1 unit: Byron Buxton to win AL Comeback Player of the Year (+430)
1 unit: New York Yankees to win AL East (+115)

0.5 unit: Dodgers to win 117-plus games (+650)
0.5 unit: Paul Skenes to lead MLB in wins (+1400)
0.5 unit: Garrett Crochet to lead MLB in wins (+2200)
0.5 unit: Juan Soto to lead the MLB in homers (+2800)
0.5 unit: Yordan Alvarez to lead the MLB in homers (+2000)
0.5 unit: Roman Anthony to win. AL Rookie of the Year (+1200)
0.5 unit: Jacob Misiorowski to win NL Rookie of the Year (+1100)

0.25 unit: Aaron Judge to bat .400 by the All-Star break (+800)
0.25 unit: Aaron Judge to bat .400 for the season (+5500)
0.25 unit: Oneil Cruz to lead MLB in stolen bases (+15000)

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC.

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Phillies have offensive outburst to avoid sweep vs. Giants

Phillies have offensive outburst to avoid sweep vs. Giants originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

SAN FRANCISCO – Having used just about all of his bullpen on Tuesday night due to a Taijuan Walker, limited-pitch start, manager Rob Thomson needed some serious innings, and pitches, from starter Jesus Luzardo in a Wednesday matinee game against the San Francisco Giants.

It wouldn’t have hurt had the team also found a way to overcome some recent offensive struggles, particularly with runners in scoring position.

Check the boxes on both. Emphatically.

Luzardo has struggled of late, posting a 5.40 ERA in the month of June and got hit hard his last start to the tune of five earned runs in two innings against the Cincinnati Reds last week. Wednesday, the lefty returned to the form that he has flashed many times this season, going seven innings without a run, allowing just three hits and striking out seven on 106 pitches.

The Phillies recovered from Tuesday’s devastation to take the final of the three-game series with a 13-0 thumping of the Giants. It eased the memory of losing on a three-run, inside-the-park walk-off home run the night before.

Reassurance wasn’t just found in the form of Luzardo. The offense showed more punch than it had in quite a while, ripping 17 hits.

Bryce Harper, who has expectedly struggled since his return from his wrist injury on June 30, had three doubles and a solo home run, all to the left side of the outfield. His four hits in six at-bats came after he’d gone 4-for-24 since coming back.

A 7-run eighth inning, speared by a three-run, opposite field home run by Kyle Schwarber put the game away after the Phillies had scored four times off starter Justin Verlander through his six innings of work.

It’s no secret that Harper is the key to this team offensively and his performance on Wednesday is a microcosm is just what he means.

“It’s great and it looked like in the last couple of days that he’s staying balanced, he’s letting the ball travel and the bat speed is there,” said Rob Thomson. “That’s a big day for him, a big day for us. Really. I really liked his at bats and really like the at-bats up and down the lineup, too. I thought we were really good.”

It’s no coincidence. When Harper is going well, everyone is that much better. It makes at-bats easier for the likes of Schwarber, who is protected right behind him in the order by Harper. It makes Alec Bohm more effective from the four spot, and so on and so forth.

With an off day Thursday and a final series against the Padres In San Diego before the All-Star break, having Harper find his swing right about now will go a long way as to what this team may be able to do in the proverbial second half of the season after the break.

“It’s huge,” said Thomson. “Those first three guys (Trea Turner, Schwarber and Harper) are the guys that run the show. They are the guys that we rely on most and especially Harper. If he’s going it’s contagious. It really is.”

While his Modus operandi isn’t to talk about himself or put his play above the team, Harper couldn’t help but let his feelings known about what could be coming from him moving forward.

“After last night’s tough loss and to come back today and have good at-bats and Luzardo threw the ball really well today, also,” Harper said. “I just think all around we had great at-bats and put it on an all time great in (Giants starter Justin) Verlander. If I can get ahead in counts and not chase and all those things, obviously my swings gonna play. I feel great, I feel strong. It’s just getting good counts and doing damage when I need to. It sounds super simple and it should be simple. It’s just doing it and buying in on that and when I’m ahead in the count it’s pretty good swings and usually have pretty good opportunities to do that.”

Then Harper amped up his reaction to his swing, not in a braggadocious way, but more in a factual one.

“I’m really good,” he said. “I really am. I know when I’m going well. I’m one of the best in baseball. I’m healthy, I’m strong, I’m feeling great. It’s just putting myself into plus counts. I haven’t done that. I feel stronger than ever.”  

A stroll past the manager’s office on Tuesday after that unimaginable loss had Luzardo and Thomson make a quick encounter.

“He was phenomenal,” said Thomson of Luzardo. “He did exactly what he told me he was going to do. Attack the hitters, fill up the strike zone, trust his stuff and just let it happen. He was walking back and forth from the food room there and so I called him in and said, ‘what’s your approach, tomorrow?’ And he told me exactly what he did.”

It hasn’t been so much that Luzardo has struggled with his “stuff” but more with the mechanics of how he was getting ready to throw it. There has been work on hand location and so many different things and now, using a bigger glove to hide the baseball, he seems to now be able to rely on his good, strong pitching.

“I feel like the times I get in trouble, for the most part, are self-inflicted,” said Luzardo. “Long innings, then walks turn into runs almost every time. I can’t stand walks. If I’m gonna get beat I’d rather get beat by them hitting it as opposed to me just letting them on. So what we talked about was just attacking. I went back to having my hands a little lower. I felt a lot more comfortable out of the stretch when I was there today. Just filling the zone up, throwing a lot of strikes, hopefully get weak contact and that’s what we did today.”

After his strong performance, Luzardo knew what the key was to the win and what it is for the future of the team.

“When Bryce goes the whole team goes,” he said. “He’s obviously a big part of our club, a leader for us. When we see him doing that I feel like we’re all getting on a roll.”

Kepler exits early

Outfielder Max Kepler fouled a ball on his lower leg late in the game and was removed from it. Thomson said after the game Kepler was in quite some pain but was hopeful that a day off Thursday will go a long way in the healing process.

Dodgers send Alexis Díaz back to the minors as Tyler Glasnow comes off the injured list

MILWAUKEE — Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow’s return from the injured list on Wednesday caused reliever Alexis Díaz to be sent back to the minor leagues one day after getting called up.

Glasnow, who had been dealing with shoulder inflammation, was activated in time to start the Dodgers’ afternoon matchup with the Milwaukee Brewers as the NL West leaders attempted to snap a five-game skid. It marked Glasnow’s first appearance with the Dodgers since April 27.

The 31-year-old right-hander went 1-0 with a 4.50 ERA in five starts with the Dodgers before going on the injured list.

Díaz still hasn’t pitched for the Dodgers since they acquired him from Cincinnati in a May 29 trade that sent minor league pitcher Mike Villani to the Reds. The 28-year-old has gone 0-1 with a 9.64 ERA, seven walks and three strikeouts over 4 2/3 innings for Oklahoma City, the Dodgers’ Triple-A affiliate.

The Dodgers called him up Tuesday but didn’t use him in their 3-1 loss at Milwaukee.

Díaz, the younger brother of New York Mets closer Edwin Díaz, totaled 75 saves with the Reds from 2022-24 and made the NL All-Star team in 2023.

He opened this season on the injured list with a left hamstring strain, then went 0-0 with a 12.00 ERA in six appearances with Cincinnati. Díaz lost his job as the Reds’ closer and was eventually sent to the minors before getting traded to the Dodgers.

Is Trevor Story back? Red Sox' patience with veteran has paid off

Is Trevor Story back? Red Sox' patience with veteran has paid off originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox didn’t give up on Trevor Story, and the veteran shortstop has rewarded them for it with a scorching stretch at the plate.

Story has been one of the hottest hitters in MLB since the calendar flipped to June. In that span, the 32-year-old is slashing .315/.346/.567 with eight homers and 34 RBI in 33 games. His three-run blast in Tuesday’s win over his former team, the Colorado Rockies, gave him four homers and 16 RBI with a 1.277 OPS over his last 10 games.

Story’s surge has proven that the Red Sox were right to stay patient throughout his brutal slump. We pondered the possibility of designating the two-time All-Star for assignment after he went 9-for-78 (.115) with one homer, four RBI, and a .332 OPS in 19 games from April 22 to May 15. With top infield prospect Marcelo Mayer looming, Story’s underwhelming tenure with Boston appeared to be nearing an unceremonious end.

Now, Story leads the Red Sox in batting average (.313), hits (30), homers (seven), RBI (24), runs scored (19), and stolen bases (four) over the last 30 days. He and Cincinnati Reds phenom Elly De La Cruz are the only MLB shortstops with at least 15 homers and 55 RBI this season, and Story has one fewer RBI (57) than Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani.

This is the first season that Story has stayed healthy since he signed his six-year deal with the Red Sox in 2022. He has played in 89 of 93 games, nearly matching his total production in his previous three years with the club (163 games).

He needs only 54 more hits, six homers, and 33 RBI to match his total from 2022-24.

Trevor Story stats 2025
Trevor Story’s 2025 numbers are on pace to eclipse his production with the Red Sox from 2022-24.

Story has gone from unplayable to unstoppable, and the Red Sox need him in the lineup every day as they aim for their first postseason berth since 2021. So, what does that mean for Mayer?

Mayer has proven capable of playing third base at a high level, but Alex Bregman will soon reassume his role as the everyday third baseman when he returns from injury. That means the 22-year-old could shift over to second base, or he may be sent back down to Triple-A when Bregman is activated from the injured list. Mayer has struggled at the plate since his promotion — particularly against left-handed pitching — posting a .672 OPS with 34 strikeouts and six walks in 35 games.

The Red Sox might also look to sell high on Story ahead of the July 31 trade deadline, but they’re trending toward being buyers. They entered Wednesday on a five-game win streak and only one game back in the American League Wild Card race.

Story and the Red Sox will look to stay hot in Wednesday’s series finale against the Rockies at Fenway Park.

Sham Yankees: MLB Suit Targets Alleged Counterfeiter With 5 Names

A man who goes by as many as five different names is accused in a new federal lawsuit of repeatedly selling counterfeit New York Yankees merchandise around Yankee Stadium.

MLB Advanced Media and MLB Properties contend that Jemal Dortch—who is also called Jamal Dortch, Jamal Wiggins, Jemal Wiggins and Jamaal Wiggins—is liable for trademark counterfeiting, trademark infringement and related claims. The case is detailed in a 34-page complaint filed on Tuesday in the Southern District of New York.

MLB Advanced Media and MLB Properties (hereinafter MLB) own and officially license various apparel and other products that feature among the more than 1,000 trademarks of MLB and its teams. As MLB tells it, Dortch has been a serial counterfeiter and infringer who has ignored “repeated warnings” to stop the distribution and selling of baseball caps, headwear and other products bearing MLB trademarks. 

The complaint, authored by Robertson D. Beckerlegge and other attorneys from BakerHostetler, refers to undercover investigators hired by MLB to pose as buyers of merchandise outside of Yankee Stadium. MLB cites 18 separate examples of Dortch running afoul of the law between September 2022 and last month by selling counterfeit and infringing goods. 

Despite being arrested or caught in the act by private investigators, Dortch doesn’t appear deterred by the consequences. He’s accused of simply trying again months, weeks, days or even hours after being caught.

For example, on Sept. 23, 2022, Dortch was arrested for trademark counterfeiting in connection with his distributing, offering for sale, and/or selling infringing goods. On April 1, 2023, Dortch was arrested again for the same offense. On July 7, 2024, Dortch was observed selling caps bearing Yankees logos. MLB then served Dortch with a cease-and-desist letter and he agreed to surrender 56 counterfeit Yankees caps. 

But a couple of weeks later, he was observed engaged in the same activity, leading to another cease-and-desist letter and him surrendering more than two dozen counterfeit Yankees caps and hats. 

MLB cites still other incidents that occurred closer in time. On Aug. 24, 2024, Dortch surrendered 18 counterfeit Yankees caps and hats. A day later there were two separate incidents. In the first one he surrendered counterfeit Yankees caps, hats and t-shirts and later in the day he was spotted again. He then turned over more caps, hats and t-shirts. 

The complaint’s inventory of incidents is extensive and includes surveillance photos.

MLB highlights that the sale of counterfeit goods is likely to “cause confusion and mistake in the minds of the purchasing public.” Some consumers might wrongly believe they’re buying officially licensed products. MLB also points out its intellectual property and goodwill are harmed since its trademarks stand for “the reputation for quality” that officially licensed products demand.

Among the demanded remedies, MLB wants a permanent injunction to block Dortch from selling any “any reproduction, counterfeit, copy or colorable imitation of the MLB Trademarks to identify any goods or the rendering of any services not authorized.” The league also demands that Dortch be barred from “making any statement or representation whatsoever” that could induce consumers into believing he’s selling legit items. The destruction or “otherwise dealing with the unauthorized products” is also demanded, as is a requirement that Dortch supply MLB “with the name and address of each person or entity from whom or from which it has purchased any item bearing the MLB Trademarks.” In addition, MLB wants Dortch’s profits and other financial compensation as well as total sales figures for any sales of unauthorized MLB items. 

The case has been assigned to U.S. District Judge Loretta A. Preska, who has presided over several high-profile cases over the years. In the late 1990s, Preska was the judge for the defamation lawsuit brought by wrongly accused Olympic Park bombing suspect Richard Jewell against the New York Post. That litigation settled out of court.

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Red Sox ‘monitoring' Twins pitcher ahead of trade deadline: Report

Red Sox ‘monitoring' Twins pitcher ahead of trade deadline: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox must upgrade their starting pitching if they hope to stay in the postseason hunt. It appears the Craig Breslow-led front office is already doing its due diligence with the 2025 MLB trade deadline looming.

On Wednesday, Jon Morosi of MLB Network named the Red Sox as one of the teams “monitoring” Minnesota Twins right-hander Joe Ryan as a potential trade candidate.

“They could be a buy-and-sell posture with a focus on adding a longer-term arm to the starting rotation,” Morosi said of the Red Sox. “And the man that the Red Sox and a number of teams in the Major Leagues are monitoring, at least right now, (is) Joe Ryan of the Minnesota Twins. Ryan has been excellent so far this season. … I think he’s one of the best starting pitchers in the American League and he’s only getting better.”

Shortly after mentioning Ryan as a Red Sox trade target, Morosi noted that Minnesota will “need to be out of the AL postseason picture and completely overwhelmed by an offer” to part ways with the 29-year-old. The Twins are currently 14 games back in the AL Central and four games back in the Wild Card race.

Ryan is in the midst of the best season of his five-year MLB career. Through 18 games (17 starts), he boasts a 2.76 ERA and 0.89 WHIP with 116 strikeouts and 21 walks in 104.1 innings. He would immediately slot in as a rock-solid No. 2 starter in the rotation behind ace Garrett Crochet.

As Morosi mentions, Ryan will be costly as a frontline starter under team control through 2027. But if the Red Sox are serious about contending, they’ll have to get uncomfortable and part ways with some of their prized prospects to bring in proven MLB talent. Breslow showed his willingness to trade highly-touted prospects for pitching in the offseason when he sent catcher Kyle Teel to the Chicago White Sox for Crochet.

Perhaps the Red Sox would sweeten the trade package by including 2024 All-Star Game MVP Jarren Duran. Boston’s outfield logjam with the emergence of MLB’s No. 1 prospect Roman Anthony has made Duran the subject of trade rumors ahead of the deadline.

“Jarren Duran posts,” Morosi added. “And not to necessarily say that this would be the deal, Ryan for Duran, but the Twins (are) a team that has needed guys that post consistently.

“Duran would fit very nicely for the long term in a lineup like what the Twins have. I’m not putting two and two together and getting 10, but these are just scenarios where the Red Sox, when you’ve already traded Rafael Devers, what’s one more consistent, everyday player who’s been an All-Star in the past in Jarren Duran?”

The 2025 MLB trade deadline is set for 6 p.m. ET on July 31.

Pirates at Royals Prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends and stats for July 9

It's Wednesday, July 9 and the Pirates (38-55) are in Kansas City to take on the Royals (45-48). Bailey Falter is slated to take the mound for Pittsburgh against Kris Bubic for Kansas City.

Kansas City took game 2 versus Pittsburgh, 4-3 on a Nick Loftin launched a two-run homer that put the Royals up momentarily in the seventh inning before he landed a walkoff single to win the game.

The Royals go for the sweep and look to extend their winning streak to four games. The Pirates have lost five consecutive games and scored six total runs in that span.

Let's dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two. We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Pirates at Royals

  • Date: Wednesday, July 9, 2025
  • Time: 7:40PM EST
  • Site: Kauffman Stadium
  • City: Kansas City, MO
  • Network/Streaming: SNP, FDSNKC

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Pirates at the Royals

The latest odds as of Wednesday:

  • Moneyline: Pirates (+164), Royals (-199)
  • Spread:  Royals -1.5
  • Total: 8.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Pirates at Royals

  • Pitching matchup for July 9, 2025: Bailey Falter vs. Kris Bubic
    • Pirates: Bailey Falter, (6-4, 3.69 ERA)
      Last outing: 5.2 Innings Pitched, 3 Earned Runs Allowed, 3 Hits Allowed, 0 Walks, and 4 Strikeouts
    • Royals: Kris Bubic, (7-6, 2.36 ERA)
      Last outing: 7.0 Innings Pitched, 3 Earned Runs Allowed, 7 Hits Allowed, 3 Walks, and 6 Strikeouts

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Pirates and the Royals

Rotoworld Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Wednesday’s game between the Pirates and the Royals:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Pittsburgh Pirates at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 8.0.

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC.

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Pirates at Royals

  • Kansas City is 5-1 in the last six games
  • The Royals have lost 48 of their 93 games this season
  • The Under is 7-3 in the Pirates' last 10 games
  • Pittsburgh is 0-5 in the last five games
  • Pittsburgh is 10-8 in Falter's 18 starts this season
  • Kansas City is 9-8 in Bubic's 17 starts this season

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

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  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
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  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
  • Brad Thomas (@MrBradThomas)