Mariners' Victor Robles suspended 10 games for throwing bat at pitcher

Seattle Mariners outfielder Victor Robles has received a 10-game suspension and an undisclosed fine for his conduct during the top of the third inning in Sunday afternoon’s game in Las Vegas during a rehab assignment, Major League Baseball announced Tuesday.

Robles is currently with the Triple-A Tacoma Rainiers of the Pacific Coast League as he recovers from a shoulder injury.

Las Vegas starter Joey Estes’ first pitch to Robles in the third inning was inside and Robles whacked at it to avoid getting hit. After taking a few steps behind the plate and dropping his bat, Robles picked up the bat and threw it in Estes’ direction and was immediately ejected from the game by home plate umpire Joe McCarthy.

Robles, who has been hit by a pitch three times in his previous four games with Tacoma, took some steps toward the mound while yelling at the pitcher but was held back by McCarthy and Las Vegas teammates.

The suspension is to be effective on the first day Robles returns to the Mariners' active roster. He is appealing, so the disciplinary action is on hold until that process is complete.

Six NHL Free Agents Who Could Sign PTOs Like Lucic And Smith

Milan Lucic and Brendan Smith joined NHL teams on a professional tryout agreement on Tuesday. 

Lucic joined the St. Louis Blues, while Smith is headed to the Columbus Blue Jackets. After Jack Johnson signed a PTO with the Minnesota Wild on Aug. 11, this could be the start of more NHL free agents taking a tryout to convince teams they deserve a contract this fall.

Lucic, 37, is trying to return to the NHL after a stint in the NHL Players’ Assistance Program. He played with Boston, Edmonton, Los Angeles and Calgary, with his point totals falling in his past few seasons.

The PTO gives St. Louis a low-risk opportunity to evaluate if the power forward can contribute in a bottom-six role. 

As for Smith, the 36-year-old will bring physicality and experienced defensive play to the Blue Jackets in the pre-season. GM Don Waddell said Smith has great character and professionalism, and he competes hard. That said, he averaged only 13:13 of ice time in 32 games with the Dallas Stars last season.

Here are other NHL free agents who may need to go the PTO route to earn a contract.

Robby Fabbri, C/LW

Robby Fabbri, 29, has shown glimpses that he can be a 20-goal guy, even if he’s never reached that marker in the NHL. 

He played 44 games last season with the Anaheim Ducks, posting eight goals and eight assists. This was after an 18-goal, 32-point season with the Detroit Red Wings.

He could be a solid secondary scorer, and if he’s placed with a playmaker, he could see a significant increase in his numbers. His shooting percentage has exceeded 15 percent four times in his nine seasons, which suggests he picks his spots well and has more goal-scoring in him. There is no reason to assume he can’t contribute at the NHL level, but he may need a tryout before earning a prove-it contract.

Victor Olofsson (Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images)

Victor Olofsson, LW

Victor Olofsson, 30, is a three-time 20-goal scorer who posted 15 goals and 29 points in 56 games with the Vegas Golden Knights last season.

Why he doesn’t have a contract offer yet is somewhat baffling. If he doesn’t get a PTO, the hint here is that 32 NHL teams must know something the public doesn’t.

His scoring ability and power-play proficiency make him a strong candidate to contribute. The biggest downside is that after he recorded three 40-point seasons with the Buffalo Sabres, his production dropped to 15 points in 51 games before he joined Vegas and hasn’t fully bounced back.

The assumption is that he’s waiting for a contract offer he likes, but hasn’t received it yet. If he wants bigger bucks, he has to prove in training camp that he’s ready to bounce back.

Luke Kunin, C

Luke Kunin, 27, split 2024-25 between the San Jose Sharks and Columbus, tallying 11 goals, 18 points and 187 hits in 75 games. 

The issue might be that he had no points in his 12 games with the Blue Jackets. That may have soured teams on his ability to produce, but perhaps one team could look quite smart for giving him a bounce-back opportunity.

Kunin can be physical and kill penalties, making him an option in a depth role, even if he doesn’t get regular NHL duties.

Milan Lucic Could Increase The Number Of Visor-less NHL PlayersMilan Lucic Could Increase The Number Of Visor-less NHL PlayersMilan Lucic is attempting an NHL comeback by joining the St. Louis Blues on a professional tryout.

Max Pacioretty, LW

Max Pacioretty, 34, remains a gifted offensive goal-scorer whose injury and health concerns follow him wherever he goes. That makes PTOs the way to go with him, something he tried successfully last season with the Toronto Maple Leafs. 

He made the team and produced 13 points in 37 games, as well as eight points in 11 playoff contests. The Leafs could still bring him back, or a contender might be on his radar. That said, teams may be hesitant to give a roster spot to an older veteran who might not play the full season, or even half of it.

Andreas Athanasiou, LW/C

Andreas Athanasiou, 31, is an experienced left winger coming off a difficult stint with the Chicago Blackhawks. Once a speedy 30-goal winger, Athanasiou’s stock has fallen over the past few seasons. He put up only nine points in 28 games in 2023-24, and last season, he played eight NHL games and 30 in the AHL

That said, he’s still quick and had a 20-goal campaign in 2022-23. 

As a free agent, he could take a PTO to prove he still has the skill to contribute effectively in a bottom-six role. Otherwise, he may need to sign in the AHL or overseas to continue his professional hockey career.

Marc-Edouard Vlasic, D

Marc-Edouard Vlasic, 38, played 1,323 games with the Sharks before they bought out his contract in late June. Vlasic told NHL.com’s French website he was under the impression he was going to San Jose next season, based on his end-of-season interview, so he wasn’t impressed the team didn’t tell him then that he might be bought out. 

He’s older, but Vlasic was once a steady shutdown defenseman, and he could bring leadership and quality minutes in a limited role.

A team signing him should know he’s likely not going to eat the minutes he used to, and he’ll be on the slower side, but there have been plenty of older defensemen who remain effective in the right role. Vlasic recently told Le Journal de Québec that he’s looking to come back to the NHL this season, and if the right team asks, a PTO could be a real option.

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Yankees' Jonathan Loáisiga believed to have flexor strain, awaiting more opinions

If there was any chance of the Yankees seeing Jonathan Loáisiga return to their bullpen before the end of August, it's been completely erased now.

Prior to Wednesday's road meeting with the Rays, manager Aaron Boonerevealed to the media that the veteran right-hander "probably" has a flexor strain, as he underwent tests on Tuesday after reporting soreness in his right elbow/triceps area. 

The Yankees are still gathering additional opinions.

The arm issue arrived just two days after Loáisiga began his rehab assignment with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, recovering from back stiffness.

While the severity of Loáisiga's suspected flexor strain remains unclear, the setback can be added to his laundry list of poor injury luck. Before joining the injured list on Aug. 3, the 30-year-old had posted an unreliable 4.25 ERA and 1.48 WHIP with 25 strikeouts across 29.2 innings (30 games).

Loáisiga's rehab appearance in Triple-A last weekend was adequate -- he struck out one while allowing one hit and one walk in one scoreless frame. At this time, there's no telling whether he'll make his way back into the big-league mix this season.

The Yankees also dealt with another bullpen issue on Tuesday, as they placed lefty reliever Brent Headrick on the 15-day injured list with a left forearm contusion.

Mets hope Luis Torrens, Hayden Senger produce with Francisco Alvarez out: 'We'll need those guys to step up now'

The Mets placed everyday catcher Francisco Alvarez on the IL with a thumb sprain, which could impact his availability for the rest of the season.

While the team will have to wait and see if Alvarez will need season-ending surgery, they are prepared to lean on Luis Torrens and recently-recalled backstop Hayden Senger to pick up the slack. 

But it won't be easy.

Since returning from his demotion in late July, Alvarez was slashing .323/.408/.645 with four homers, six doubles, one triple, 13 RBI, and 14 runs scored in 71 plate appearances over 21 games. The 23-year-old was hitting his stride offensively, and now Torrens will look to give the Mets some offense out of that spot in the lineup.

"It’s been tough for him the last couple of months, especially when Alvy was down, and he got to play every day, but he’s a good player," manager Carlos Mendoza said of Torrens. "He showed it last year when we first acquired him. He was a big part of this team, him and Senger both, when we were winning a lot of games, and we’ll need those guys to step up now."

This season, Torrens is slashing .214/.280/.301 with an OPS of .581, but was solid for the Mets when Alvarez started the year on the IL. He batted .258 with a home run and 10 RBI in 22 games (16 starts) in March/April and .300 in 12 games (10 starts) in split time with Alvarez. 

But he has struggled the last three months, hitting .135, .200 and .167. 

When asked if there's a way Torrens can improve offensively, Mendoza gave his opinion on what his catcher needs to do.

"Just continue to believe in the work because he’s a good player. Not trying to do too much," he said. "Get good pitches, be aggressive and use the whole field. Again, just being yourself and trying not to do too much."

Senger, who has played in just 21 games this year, is slashing .174/.208/.196 with an OPS of .404. How much production the Mets get from their catcher's spot will be something to monitor as they determine whether Alvarez can or should return before the end of the regular season.

Mookie Betts remains at shortstop, Teoscar Hernández in right in Dodgers starting lineup

Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts warms up before a baseball game against the Colorado Rockies, Monday, Aug. 18, 2025, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Mookie Betts warms up in the infield before Monday's game against the Colorado Rockies in Denver. (David Zalubowski / Associated Press)

Mookie Betts was back at shortstop and Teoscar Hernández remained in right field for the Dodgers on Tuesday, a day after two questionable fielding plays in the outfield led to two runs in a 4-3 walk-off loss to the last-place Colorado Rockies.

Hernández’s defense has increasingly become a matter of concern for manager Dave Roberts and Monday’s loss was followed by a meeting involving Roberts; Andrew Friedman, the Dodgers president of baseball operations; and Betts, who has expressed a willingness to move back to right field where he was a six-time Gold Glove winner.

Hernández is ranked 64th among National League right fielders with a defensive WAR of -0.4 and his two errors are tied for fourth-most in the league.

“He's got to get better out there. There's just no way to put it,” Roberts said after Monday's game of Hernández. “It's not a lack of effort. But, you know, we’ve just got to kind of get better. We do.”

Betts, meanwhile, twice led the American League in fielding average and putouts as the Boston Red Sox’s right fielder. But he’s played shortstop full-time this season.

“Defense is a big part of postseason baseball and winning baseball,” Roberts said.

Betts’ move to the infield has arguably weakened the Dodgers in two ways: Hernández’s defense and Betts’ offense. Playing the infield, especially shortstop, is far more taxing mentally than playing in the outfield and Betts is slashing a career-low .242/.312/.370 this season.

Read more:Mookie Betts meets with Dave Roberts, Andrew Friedman after Dodgers' loss to Rockies

Moving Betts back to right field would likely mean using Alex Freeland or Miguel Rojas at shortstop, at least in the short term. Freeland played nearly 300 games at shortstop in the minors while Rojas has played more than 940 games there in the majors.

Hernández, second on the team with 74 RBIs and tied for second with 20 home runs, would then move to left field — a less-demanding position defensively than right field — in place of Michael Conforto, whose .190 batting average is the worst in the majors among players with at least 300 at-bats.

Moving Betts back to the outfield could be easier for Roberts when utility players Tommy Edman, Hyeseong Kim and Kiké Hernández return from the injured list, giving the manager more depth and flexibility. Kim, who will begin a rehab assignment this week, is the furthest along and could be back by early next week.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

What we learned as Jung Hoo Lee's homer not enough in Giants' loss to Padres

What we learned as Jung Hoo Lee's homer not enough in Giants' loss to Padres originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — The Giants kicked off the road trip with three home runs in an inning. Since then, they’ve been as silent offensively as they were on a historically bad homestand. 

In the 17 innings since Wilmer Flores made it 4-0 in the first inning on Monday, they have scored just one run. On Tuesday, that run again came early, but they lost 5-1 to the San Diego Padres, falling another game back of the third wild-card spot that soon will be out of reach. 

Jung Hoo Lee led off the game with his seventh homer of the year, but that was it against Nick Pivetta, who picked up his 13th win and third against the Giants. While Monday’s series opener was a nailbiter, this game fit right in with the three the Padres won at Oracle Park last week. It was never in doubt. 

The Giants have five runs in the first inning in this series. In innings two through nine, they’re 7-for-54 with no runs. 

Those Guys Again? 

Kai-Wei Teng has made eight big league appearances across two seasons and three have come against the Padres, including his debut last year and his last two starts this year. This was a big improvement over last week’s start at Oracle Park, but Teng still ended up getting charged with three earned runs in 3 1/3 innings. Two of the runs came in the fourth, when he hit two of the first four batters. 

Teng leaned heavily on his slider, throwing it 28 times with good success. He got 22 strikes and five whiffs, and three of his four strikeouts came on the pitch. 

Overall, though, he continues to struggle with his command. Through four appearances this year, he has nine walks in 13 1/3 innings. He also has hit three batters. Teng cut his walk rate significantly in Triple-A this year, but that hasn’t translated to the big leagues yet.

Leadoff Lee

The second pitch of the game was a 95 mph fastball that Lee crushed to right-center. It was the lone run off Pivetta and gave the Giants a leadoff homer for a second straight day. The last time they did that was last Sept. 17-18 when Mike Yastrzemski did it twice to the Baltimore Orioles, but before that, you have to dig pretty deep.

The previous back-to-back was in 1985 when Dan Gladden got to the Cincinnati Reds and then Houston Astros on consecutive days. Before that it was Bobby Bonds in 1973. 

Lee and Heliot Ramos, who led off Monday’s game with a homer, became just the second set of Giants to lead off consecutive games with a homer. In 1927, Les Mann led off a game against the Chicago Cubs with a home run and then the great Heinie Mueller did it the next game against the Philadelphia Phillies. 

Concerning Trend

The Giants made Pivetta grind, but it didn’t lead to anything. He threw 108 pitches over six innings, the final one freezing Christian Koss and clinching a double-digit strikeout night. Right now, if you’re trying to get there, the Giants are the team you want to see. 

They hit double-digit strikeouts for the fifth consecutive game and eighth time in their last nine games. Over those nine games — seven of which have been losses — the Giants have 100 strikeouts to just 18 walks. 

Entering the night, the Giants had the sixth-highest strikeout rate in MLB in the second half and ranked 23rd in walk rate. For a team that doesn’t hit a lot of homers and doesn’t hit at all with runners in scoring position, that’s not a great starting point. 

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Rangers collapse early against Club Brugge to leave Martin facing fans’ wrath

Russell Martin’s eighth match of a Rangers reign already riddled with doubts veered close to a living nightmare. Championship promotion races and playoffs, the ill winds of struggling in the Premier League have nothing on the fever-dream pressures of trying to turn around an ailing Glaswegian giant.

Martin may be the true believer in his processes but in an environment where snap decisions are often sustained, he will not have long to set them in place. “I think the precursor to change is pain,” he said after an agonising night for Rangers fans. “I knew coming here that there was going to be some pain early on.”

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Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Nolan McLean, Ryan Bergert, and Samuel Basallo

We are officially in the fantasy baseball championship push.

Whether you’re trying to hold onto a top spot, pushing the leader, desperately trying to play catch up, or positioning yourself for playoff matchups, reinforcements and upside are vital this time of year.

Most waiver wires have been picked over though and it’s difficult to find impact players readily available in most leagues at this point in the season.

Fear not, because there are still a handful of available players that have the chance to be difference makers that help push us towards glory. And luckily, we recently got a handful of minor league promotions that could genuinely swing leagues.

MLB: Milwaukee Brewers at Cincinnati Reds
The Brewers now have five more victories than anyone else in baseball.

Here are three players that are under 40% rostered on Yahoo leagues that you should strongly consider adding.

If you want a larger list, Eric Samulski wrote his extended waiver wire piece on Sunday.

Nolan McLean, SP Mets

(27% Rostered on Yahoo)

The Mets called McLean up over the weekend to replace the struggling Frankie Montas in their rotation and he was ready for the task.

Coincidentally, this weekend was also the first time teams could call up minor leaguers and not exhaust their rookie eligibility ahead for next year. So, if that player were to win Rookie of the Year or place in the top-three in MVP or Cy Young voting before arbitration, their team gets a draft pick. Funny timing on these promotions.

Nevertheless, McLean instantly proved he belonged with 5 2/3 innings of shutout ball and eight strikeouts against a solid Mariners lineup. He made their hitters look foolish over and over again mostly with his sweeper and curveball.

McLean’s sweeper has always been his bread and butter. In terms of spin rate, total movement, and velocity, Dustin May has the only one that can compare to it. Just look at this frisbee.

However, the key to his success in this debut was his curveball. He featured it against left-handed batters and it was downright disgusting.

With an average of 3,279 RPM, McLean’s curveball has the highest spin rate of any in the league.

Also very cool (and to nerd out on pitching for a moment), it has a nearly identical spin direction as his sweeper and practically the same amount of horizontal movement. So, it’s very difficult for batters to decide which is coming. Knowing this, they were his two most thrown pitches against left-handed batters combining for a 64% usage rate.

Alone, these pitches are incredible. Together, they’re already one of the best breaking ball parings in the league.

Oddly enough, the curve has somewhat come out of nowhere. He threw 19 in his debut start, the exact same amount as his last three starts in Triple-A combined. Before his promotion, he’d only thrown it 9% of the time. Without throwing it, he struggled a good bit against lefties relative to righties.

Screenshot 2025-08-19 at 4.12.08 PM.png

Whatever happened to make him more comfortable with that pitch, he better keep it up because that with his sweeper and a good blend of fastballs and sinkers that sat around 95 mph can make him a stud instantly.

Be mindful of a possible innings limit though.

He’s already at a career-high 119 and it’s only his first season as a full-time pitcher after being a two-way player. So, expect the Mets to limit him on a per start basis and he may not get the opportunity for many quality starts. His WHIP could run high too with such a breaking ball heavy profile.

Ryan Bergert, SP Royals

(25% Rostered on Yahoo)

Bergert is on a bit of a heater since being traded from the Padres to the Royals at the deadline. Through three starts, he’s allowed five earned runs in 16 2/3 innings (2.79 ERA) with 17 strikeouts and five walks. That’s a nice little run of success and one that should put him on our radars.

Stuff wise, he doesn’t seem that special at first glance. His fastball sits 93 mph and has solid carry, but he throws from a very high slot. So, the batter ‘expects’ some of that rise on it.

Otherwise, he has a distinct sweeper and slider plus a sinker for righties and changeup for lefties. The Stuff+ model doesn’t rate any of these pitches above a 92 where 100 is considered average.

Yet, there’s something interesting going on. First off, he’s been locating his fastball higher in the zone since the trade. That’s a sensible adjustment for him given the good vertical action that pitch gets.

Screenshot 2025-08-19 at 2.59.48 PM.png
Screenshot 2025-08-19 at 3.00.07 PM.png

He’s been more willing to throw his sweeper in the zone to steal strikes against lefties too. His repertoire is reasonably wide and he has great command, so it’s nice to see him mixing everything up more.

Also, his arsenal is unique in nature. Michael Rosen wrote a great piece for FanGraphs recently describing how uncommon it was for a pitcher like Bergert to have great vertical action and spin efficiency on a fastball and also a sweeper without losing much velocity on it. Read the article, it’s amazing and Michael is a fantastic pitching mind.

While possibly special pitch traits may not make Bergert an impact pitcher alone, his upcoming schedule might. He’s set to face the Tigers, White Sox, Angels, and Guardians in his next four starts. If anything switches by a day, he could even get the Twins in the middle of there.

Schedules are very important this time of year and with Bergert’s being so favorable plus him having some fun pitch traits make him an enticing waiver wire option.

Samuel Basallo, C/1B Orioles

(24% Rostered on Yahoo)

Sometimes in fantasy baseball, opportunities come along that are so great, we have to act without thinking and let the pieces fall into place afterwards. Basallo’s promotion to the Orioles is one of those opportunities.

He is already 3-for-10 with a double, two runs scored, and four RBI two games into his big league career. Half of the balls he put in play were hit harder than 95 mph and his 78.1 mph bat speed is in the 99th percentile of all big league hitters. He is a stud.

In terms of an offensive profile, there wasn’t a more impressive hitter in the minor leagues. He just turned 21 years old last week and had 23 homers in 76 games at Triple-A.

His batted ball data may have been more impressive than the homers though. He had a 115.9 mph max exit velocity, 21% barrel rate, 57.4% hard-hit rate, and graded out exceptionally well among other key metrics. Shoutout Prospect Savant for the great work they’ve done with these minor league, Statcast adjacent player pages.

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The one flaw he seems to possibly have is with pitch selection and chasing balls outside the strike zone. Yet, his pitch recognition seems solid because of his high walk rate.

In actuality, Basallo is a spectacular bad-ball hitter. He knows there are pitches that other hitters should not be swinging at that he can do damage on. Like this two-run single from his second career game.

That was a 97 mph fastball at shoulder-height from Jordan Hicks and Basallo turned it around with ease for a rope at 108 mph exit velocity.

Aram’s claim about Basallo being a prolific bad ball hitter holds true too. He saw 496 pitches in the shadow of the zone at Triple-A this season and put 83 of them in play. Of those 83, he had a 59% hard-hit rate, .561 SLG, .409 xwOBA, 19.8% barrel rate, and hit 10 home runs. Those are jaw-dropping results against what we consider pitchers’ pitches.

This is all just to say pick-up up Basallo right now and figure out the rest later. We’re dealing with a special hitter that can do what Nick Kurtz or Roman Anthony have done to this point.