Dodgers defeat Diamondbacks to clinch their 12th NL West title in 13 seasons

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - SEPTEMBER 25: Yoshinobu Yamamoto #18 of the Los Angeles.
Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto celebrates with teammates in the locker room after a win over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday to clinch the NL West title. (Chris Coduto / Getty Images)

It was not supposed to be this difficult. It was not expected to feel so frustrating.

Six months ago, the question was not whether the Dodgers would win the National League West, but how far out of the water they’d blow the competition.

It wasn’t whether they’d enter October in position to defend their World Series title, but if they could set a single-season wins record along the way.

Read more:Shaikin: Dodgers fans should take a moment to appreciate team's success before anxiety returns

“Everyone,” first baseman Freddie Freeman recalled, “was talking about our "superteam.'"

What played out instead, of course, was a disappointing regular season relative to the club’s lofty preseason expectations.

The team will not win 100 games, let alone the 120 that some predicted ahead of the year. It will not have a bye for the first round of the playoffs, having limped through much of the second half of the schedule. It did not realize the full potential of its $400 million roster, hampered by starting pitching injuries early in the year, bullpen implosions down the stretch and an extended funk from the lineup in the middle of the summer. It did not play like the star-studded juggernaut or villainous evil empire or ascendant dynastic power the rest of the baseball world had labeled it to be.

Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw, right, celebrates with teammates after the team's win over the Diamondbacks.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, left, and pitcher Clayton Kershaw, right, celebrate with teammates after the Dodgers' win over the Diamondbacks to clinch the NL West title. (Darryl Webb / Associated Press)
Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani, center, celebrates with his teammates after the Dodgers clinched the NL West title on Thursday.
Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani, center, celebrates with his teammates in the locker room after the Dodgers defeated the Diamondbacks to clinch the NL West title on Thursday. (Darryl Webb / Associated Press)

“This is not the route we envisioned,” Freeman said.

“It hasn't been easy,” manager Dave Roberts added.

Now, however, none of that matters anymore.

Because as far as the regular season is concerned, the team checked the only box that matters.

With an 8-0 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday at Chase Field, the Dodgers clinched their 12th division title in the last 13 years. They ensured that they will open the playoffs at home, even though it will start with a best-of-three wild-card round beginning next Tuesday. And most important, despite their struggles over the last couple months, they feel they are entering October playing the kind of baseball that had eluded them for much of the year, finally starting to feel like they are reaching their tantalizing ceiling.

“I do feel that in totality, we're playing our best baseball of the season,” Roberts said. “The win-loss hasn't reflected it, but I think that's what's most important. There's just been a lot of good things and a lot of growth from a lot of players, which has been fun to see.”

Fun is not a word that has often been associated with the Dodgers this season.

Early in the year, their best starters were hurt and many of their best hitters were struggling. They still built a nine-game lead in the division in early July, only to play 10 games under .500 for the next two months, allowing the San Diego Padres to get back in the division race.

“This year was harder than ever, to get to this point,” said third baseman Max Muncy, who missed extensive time himself with knee and oblique injuries. “We went through a lot. We had a lot of injuries. We had a lot of ups and downs.”

They will also begin October facing a litany of questions — none bigger than a bullpen that has been run down by a heavy workload and let down by the struggles of its most trusted veteran relievers.

But with Thursday’s division-clincher, they have won 12 of their last 17 games, and will enter the postseason riding some long-missing momentum.

“Even when it was our darkest, I just always saw our guys stay together and compete,” Roberts said. 

Dodgers infielder Miguel Rojas celebrates in the locker room after the team's win over Arizona to clinch the NL West title.
Dodgers infielder Miguel Rojas celebrates in the locker room after the team's win over Arizona to clinch the NL West title. (Chris Coduto / Getty Images)

“That’s what’s going to make us stronger during October,” echoed pitcher Blake Snell. “It’s what we needed.”

The last two days have epitomized that orthodoxy, with the Dodgers (90-69) sewing up the division with a pair of resilient victories.

After familiar bullpen collapses on Sunday and Tuesday, the team got creative in an extra-innings win on Wednesday, following a strong start from Blake Snell with relief appearances by Roki Sasaki and Clayton Kershaw.

Then, on Thursday, the offense set an early tone by scoring four times in the second inning (on home runs from Freeman and Andy Pages, plus a two-run single from Mookie Betts) and four more in the fourth (on a pair of two-run blasts from Freeman and Shohei Ohtani), giving Yoshinobu Yamamoto plenty of breathing room in a scoreless six-inning start.

“It's been a weird year for everybody, but we're here, we won again,” said Kershaw, shirtless and beer-soaked in what was the final division-clinching celebration of his 18-year career. “Obviously, we've got a lot more to accomplish. But you've got to enjoy this moment. We are. It's a great group of guys. And we're going to have a ton of fun.”

Dodgers players and coaches pose for a team photo at Chase Field after beating the Diamondbacks.
Dodgers players and coaches pose for a team photo at Chase Field after beating the Diamondbacks 8-0 to clinch the NL West title. (Chris Coduto / Getty Images)

The Dodgers will have to replicate a similar blueprint in the playoffs, needing superb starting pitching, out-of-the-box bullpen management and some intangible connectivity to successfully defend their World Series championship.

For much of this year, they couldn’t produce those ingredients consistently.

But now, it “doesn't really matter what happened to this point, how we got here,” Kershaw said.

Indeed, with another division crown captured and the pursuit of a second-consecutive title awaiting, the slate has been wiped clean.

Read more:Can Roki Sasaki’s return provide Dodgers trustworthy relief? Early signs were promising

“We have an opportunity to make history,” Roberts said, acknowledging the difficulties that have come with trying to become MLB’s first repeat champion in 25 years. “But that’s part of it. It shouldn't be easy.”

For much of this year, they couldn’t produce those ingredients consistently.

But now, with another division crown captured and the pursuit of a second-consecutive title awaiting, the slate has been wiped clean.

“We have an opportunity to make history,” Roberts said, acknowledging the difficulties that have come with trying to become MLB’s first repeat champion in 25 years. “But that’s part of it. It shouldn't be easy.”

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Red Sox' champagne celebration postponed after series-finale dud in Toronto

Red Sox' champagne celebration postponed after series-finale dud in Toronto originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Tuesday was an excellent day for the Boston Red Sox. So was Wednesday.

Thursday had the opportunity to be a significant day for the team and the organization, as the Red Sox needed only to win in Toronto to clinch a spot in postseason.

But Thursday was not a great day, nor was it even a good day or a mediocre day. In terms of on-field results, it was simply a bad day of work for the Boston Red Sox, who lost 6-1 in Toronto. The defeat officially eliminated the Red Sox from having a shot to win the division, though that wasn’t a realistic goal for this team to reach.

The achievable goal was simple: Win on Thursday, punch a playoff ticket, shower in champagne and light lager, head home for a stress-free weekend vs. Detroit and prepare for a postseason series next week.

Instead, the mission remains unfinished.

With the freefalling Blue Jays going with a bullpen game, the Red Sox couldn’t manage to get a runner on base until the seventh inning.

At that point, though, the game was gone, after Justin Wilson entered a scoreless game to relieve Brayan Bello in the bottom of the sixth, only to immediately serve up a grand slam to Daulton Varsho. Wilson left a 94 mph fastball over the heart of the plate, and Varsho made him pay.

Wilson later surrendered a double and was replaced by Zack Kelly, who served up a two-out, two-run homer to George Springer to allow Toronto to open up a 6-0 lead.

Springer, who let his frustrations boil over after a foul ball call and then a called strike three in the season opener on Tuesday, erupted after the ball cleared the fence.

Bello allowed seven base runners on three hits, three walks and a hit by pitch, but he battled to keep the Red Sox in a scoreless tie before Alex Cora handed the ball to Wilson in the sixth. While Wilson has had issues preventing inherited runners from scoring all year long, Bello loading the bases on a Trevor Story error, a walk and a hit batsman in the sixth caught up to him.

Story’s error — his sixth in his last seven games — tied him with Anthony Volpe for most errors in the American League with 19.

The issue with the Red Sox on Thursday, though, had as much to do with offense as it did with anything else.

Reliever Louis Varland threw two perfect innings as the spot starter, before Eric Lauer pitched 3.1 perfect innings of his own. Yariel Rodriguez was called upon to record the final two outs of the sixth inning, which he did, striking out Rob Refsnyder and inducing a Connor Wong grounder to third.

Boston got its first base runner in the seventh, when Jarren Duran doubled into the right-center field gap. He came around to score on a Story RBI single, but Alex Bregman’s double-play ball killed that potential rally before it could gain any steam.

The Red Sox did load the bases in the top of the ninth, making things suddenly interesting. But Romy Gonzalez popped out behind the mound to end the threat and the game.

And so, the magic number remains at one, where it was when the day began. The Astros fended off the A’s to salvage a win in Sacramento on Thursday afternoon, and they’ll head to Anaheim, hunting a three-game series sweep over the last-place Angels.

The Red Sox, meanwhile, will head home to Fenway Park, where they’ll host the Detroit Tigers, needing one single win to clinch a postseason berth.

One Astros loss or one Red Sox win, and Boston will be playing postseason baseball. It seems like a sure thing (the Red Sox’ playoff odds dropped from 99.4 percent to 98.7 percent on Fangraphs on Thursday), but stranger things have happened than coinciding four-game winning and losing streaks for teams on opposite edges of the playoff pictures.

Not long ago, the Tigers were expected to be treating this series as an opportunity to either rest or set up their pitching for the postseason. Yet after an eight-game losing streak (which Detroit snapped by beating the surging Guardians on Thursday night), the Tigers will need wins of their own this weekend to either win the AL Central or secure a wild-card berth. (Detroit’s magic number was two after Thursday’s win.)

Many balls remain in the air, and the Red Sox don’t technically need to win again in order to clinch a playoff spot.

Yet depending on others — especially the Angels, who entered Thursday with a 7-15 record in September — to get the job done at this time of year is not typically the safest proposition. So the mission for Cora and Co. remains simple: head home, win a baseball game, make the playoffs.

It’s an easy enough goal in theory, but the longer it takes to get accomplished, it’s one that will become increasingly more difficult and stressful for everybody involved.

Fenway has been host to some memorable Friday nights this season. The last one will be the biggest.

Phillies quietly win Marlins series with another successful piggyback game

Phillies quietly win Marlins series with another successful piggyback game originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Sometimes half the battle is just battling.

That was never truer than for Phillies starter Walker Buehler Thursday against the Miami Marlins at Citizens Ban Park. The veteran right hander made his second start of the season for the Phillies and seemed to be immediately struggling on the sticky evening. He still managed his way through five tough innings and picked up the win as the Phillies disposed of the Marlins, 1-0.

Buehler walked two in the first inning and threw just seven of his 19 pitches for strikes. He was aided, however, when catcher J.T. Realmuto caught Jakob Marsee trying to steal second and was able to work his way out of the inning. The beginning of a true workman-like performance.

“Obviously not super explosive in terms of what’s coming out of my hand,” said Buehler, who now has given up just one earned run in 13 innings with the Phillies. “I can make pitches and really good defense on the inside. We made some plays when we had to, I made some pitches when I had to. Kind of is what it is but kind of good workday for me.”

The Phillies scored the first run of the game in the first when Harrison Bader led off with a single, went to third on a Bryce Harper single and scored when Alec Bohm grounded out weakly to shortstop.

The Marlins loaded the bases in the third inning, but Buehler was able to coax Liam Hicks into a popout to second baseman Bryson Stott. Buehler finished his night after five innings and allowed three hits, three walks and struck out two. After that first inning, he threw 37 of his 55 pitches for strikes.

“I think the way I’ve always thought about the game was when you’re not good you should still be able to be good,” Buehler said. “But, given the last two years it’s a little bit harder for me to deal with. I think in some way, like tonight is a huge step forward and something that I can build off of. Any major league team can kill you and take you out of a game, but to be able to make some pitches in big spots was huge for me. Especially with the changeup. That’s my sixth pitch and something I’ve never really been good at. Just makes me feel like I’m in a pretty good spot physically in terms of where I’m moving and how consistent my hand is in being out front and being able to be a little bit creative with my wrist and my hand, I think, is the biggest thing for me.”

It was big for the Phillies on a night where they could only manage seven hits.

Phillies starters have gone three consecutive games without giving up an earned run as Christopher Sanchez, Jesús Luzardo and Buehler combined to pitch 19 innings and allowed nine hits, four walks and 18 strikeouts.

Taijuan Walker replaced Buehler in the sixth, as was manager Rob Thomson’s plan, and allowed the first two hitters he faced to reach base on a walk and single. But he followed that by getting a weak fly ball and two strikeouts to put away any Miami threat before retiring them again in the seventh.

“His velo was up, he touched 94 today,” said Thomson of Walker. “The split was good so it kind of notches up with the velocity. If that velocity just a little bit goes up, he’s really affective.”

Matt Strahm came for a perfect eighth before a rain delay of about two minutes ensued when the umpires asked to have home plate and the pitchers’ mound covered. Strahm got out of the inning and the Phillies got a runner on in the bottom of the eighth with one out before the crew called on the tarp again.

After a one hour and one minute delay, where it even rained sometimes, the remaining fans weren’t even treated to a Jhoan Duran entrance. David Robertson came on in the ninth to pick up the save and give the Phillies another series win, their record-tying 34th of the season, tying the 2011 team. Duran was up before the bigger rain delay and Thomson decided not to use his closer after he had already worked up a sweat.

“I thought his changeup, his cutter was affective,” said Thomson of his starting pitcher. “First inning had trouble finding the strike zone a little bit, but he worked out of it and that’s kind of who he is. He just keeps battling and competing and gives us five shutout innings. He was good. And Taijuan was good. Three strikeouts from Taijuan, that was encouraging to me. He was missing some bats. His split was really good.”

Just where Buehler will wind up in Thomson’s pitching plans for the playoffs is only known right now by the manager. But that doesn’t concern Buehler, who went out to the bullpen for some more work after he was pulled from the game.

“Every pitch in the playoffs is a little bit more,” he said. “If you throw 100 during the regular season, then you’re ready to throw 75 or 80 in the playoffs. I’ve always tried to find some athleticism in my throw when I’ve been good throughout September and build up to the point that fatigue wise, I feel like I can throw 85 pitches as much as I can. I did that last year. Not the buildup but kind of got myself to the point that I felt volume wise I could throw that much. I just think everything in the playoffs is intensified.

 “I’m here to win a world title, whatever kind of piece I can be in that, from a starting pitcher to a cheerleader, I really don’t care. I haven’t been here very long, but I’ve really enjoyed this team and the next time we celebrate I want to feel like I was a part of it and so whatever they ask me to do.”

76ers Jared McCain suffers torn thumb ligament, will miss start of season

Jared McCain was the early frontrunner for Rookie of the Year last season until a torn meniscus in December ended his season. This season, the 76ers are counting on him to take a step forward in his sophomore season as part of a promising young backcourt with Tyrese Maxey, Quentin Grimes (who is still negotiating his contract for this season) and No. 3 pick last June V.J. Edgecombe.

Now comes word that McCain will miss the start of the season with a torn ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) in his right thumb, the team announced.

This injury has hit other NBA players — most notably Paul George — and usually takes about a month to recover from.

Last season, McCain stood out to start the season, averaging 15.3 points, 2.6 assists, and 2.4 rebounds a game while shooting 38.3% from beyond the arc. He's also a standout NBA player on social media, most recently because of a team photo of him looking like he was about to bench 10-pound weights. McCain had fun with that and posted a video of himself doing bicep curls with a 2.5-pound dumbbell.

That was funny. To Sixers fans his injury is not as this team has the potential to be a contender in a down East, but only if everyone stays healthy.

Yankees Notes: Aaron Boone will take first-round bye 'all day long' with AL East title still in reach

If anyone outside the Yankees clubhouse last week genuinely envisioned the AL East race up for grabs entering the final weekend of the season, their hopes couldn't have been any higher. After all, the Blue Jays owned a commanding five-game lead for first place just 10 days ago.

But the window to a division title never closed for the Yankees. With four games left on the calendar, they've entered Thursday in a stunning deadlock with the Blue Jays atop the standings. While the head-to-head tiebreaker isn't in their favor, they've defied expectations amidst chaos.

The Yankees (90-68) must finish one game better than the Blue Jays in order to steal the crown and clinch a first-round bye. What once seemed like too tall of an order is now easily attainable, and the satisfaction of already securing a postseason spot isn't enough for Aaron Boone.

"I'll take the bye all day long. It's winning a series, essentially, without having to play one," the Yankees' manager said ahead of Thursday's series finale with the White Sox. "We've seen teams come out of the wild-card situation and run the table. We've seen it the other way. But if you're asking me if I get to choose, I'll take the bye."

It's no surprise Boone prefers a shorter journey to the World Series. His team took this route last season as AL East champions and the top-overall seed, bypassing the best-of-three Wild Card series and outlasting the Royals and Guardians before falling to the Dodgers in the Fall Classic.

The weekend pitching plan

The first-round bye offers clear advantages. Not only do teams receive nearly a week of vital rest from a grueling 162-game campaign, but they also get the luxury of a stress-free alignment of their starting rotation. So, the fewer taxing games, the better.

Yankees ace Max Fried pitched in Wednesday's win, and Carlos Rodón is lined up to start Thursday's contest. The pair of valuable left-handers can, in all likelihood, be ruled out for weekend appearances against the Orioles, and this reality shouldn't bother Boone.

But who's slated to take the mound in the coming days? Boone said the "probables" are Will Warren (Friday), Cam Schlittler (Saturday), and Luis Gil (Sunday). Based on this normal order, Schlitter would be available on regular rest for a potential do-or-die Game 3 of the Wild Card round.

Boone also mentioned there aren't any plans of asking Ryan Yarbrough or Paul Blackburn to spot-start or provide bulk relief work, but nothing is set in stone. The strategy is fluid while their fate is simultaneously decided by the Blue Jays, on the brink of a total September meltdown.

A familiar postseason strategy

Whether the Yankees host a best-of-three series of a best-of-five next week, their October success will be contingent upon familiar factors. They're trusting arms like Fried and Rodón to thrive under the brightest lights. They desperately need Aaron Judge to deliver at the plate.

Their recipe for wins requires home runs, and they'll once again have the opportunity to demonstrate this years-long philosophy from the franchise can actually yield results the fanbase has grown to doubt.

By design, the Yankees lead the majors in homers (266) and OPS (.786) this season. The threat of the long ball isn't disappearing, and Boone believes their power bats throughout the lineup provide an edge. But he also hopes to see more athleticism and timely hitting this time around.

"It's about getting on base as much as you can, and hopefully you put a few balls in the seats," Boone said. "But there's going to be those games you've got to win that are low-scoring, that you're going to be kept in the ballpark. I've seen athleticism return more and be a little more valued over the years. Some of that is rule-based.

"Defense, little things that happen over the course of the game become important in those one-off games. But at the end of the day, it's hard to just hit, hit, hit, double, hit, walk. You've got to usually take advantage of putting some mistakes in the seats. We've seen that play out a lot over the years of, teams that do that, usually continue to advance."

Since the league expanded its postseason field to 12 teams and introduced the new Wild Card round in 2022, only three teams with a first-round bye have reached the World Series. The rest doesn't guarantee a deeper playoff run, but the AL and NL pennant winners last season enjoyed the reward.

Flyers evaluate plenty of bubble players in preseason loss to Capitals

Flyers evaluate plenty of bubble players in preseason loss to Capitals originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

HERSHEY, Pa. — The Flyers’ roster evaluation picked up Thursday night as the team suffered a 5-1 preseason loss to the Capitals at Giant Center, the home of Washington’s AHL affiliate.

Jacob Gaucher provided the Flyers’ lone goal, which whittled the Capitals’ lead to 3-1 in the second period.

But Washington countered with a goal just 1:07 minutes into the third period and later added one more for good measure.

“I don’t know if there are any guys that played well,” Rick Tocchet said. “That’s OK, though. Third game, two-, three-hour bus ride. There are some factors to it. I’ll probably have to give these guys off the ice tomorrow, to give them some rest. It was just a tough night for a lot of guys. That’s going to happen.”

Tocchet’s club is 1-2-0 in the preseason with four games to go.

“You hit the wall,” Tocchet said. “It’s my job to help the team out a little bit, so I think I’ll have to keep them off the ice tomorrow.”

• Rodrigo Abols knows that stringing together consistent performances will be his ticket to staying with the Flyers.

Tocchet and management decided to make Abols the only skater to play in all three preseason games so far. The head coach definitely wanted to see if the big forward could sustain his effectiveness from a strong opener.

“There’s some good stuff there,” Tocchet said. “I think there are things to work with going forward.”

The 29-year-old continued to make his case for the season-opening roster. In the second period, Abols and Nicolas Deslauriers had a hard-working shift pay off on Gaucher’s goal.

“You could feel it, I’m not going to lie, you could feel it was the third game in five nights,” Abols said. “But I think that’s where I’ve got to learn to pick my spots and put myself in good positions — not cheat for offense, not get stuck out there. But I think I managed that pretty well.”

Rodrigo AbolsDerek Souders/NBC Sports Philadelphia

• The Flyers dressed Alex Bump, Nikita Grebenkin and Jett Luchanko, three of their top young roster hopefuls.

Bump saw a showcase with Travis Konecny and Noah Cates. He nearly made the Capitals pay for a turnover in the first period when he rung iron on a blast.

But the 21-year-old winger was unable to crack the scoresheet. Grebenkin and Luchanko couldn’t get much going offensively on the Flyers’ second line.

“It’s hard to evaluate, I think the overall team looked really tired,” Tocchet said. “We looked tired tonight, you could tell. Even, like, a six-foot pass was tough for us tonight. We’ve got to just stick with it and we’ve got to refresh it a little bit.”

• Dan Vladar, the club’s goaltending addition this offseason, saw his first preseason action with the Flyers.

The 28-year-old played the first period and converted eight saves on nine shots. He did a nice job tracking pucks through traffic.

The goal he allowed was on a Washington power play after Noah Juulsen, who’s trying to win a job on defense, was whistled for kneeing. The shot was a laser from the circle by Andrew Cristall.

Aleksei Kolosov, who has played in all three exhibition games, stopped 16 of 20 shots over the final two periods. The Capitals’ third goal was a leaky one for Kolosov as a loose puck snuck through his legs.

Washington’s fourth marker came at shorthanded. Jack Nesbitt had a turnover near the Flyers’ offensive blue line that led directly to Connor McMichael’s breakaway tally.

The 23-year-old Kolosov entered with 27 saves on 30 shots through his first two preseason outings.

• A lot of bubble defensemen suited up for the Flyers.

Helge Grans was one of them and had a tough moment in rush coverage during the second period. Ivan Miroshnichenko beat Grans to the outside on his way to the net for the Capitals’ 2-0 goal.

Dennis Gilbert had a painful blocked shot in the second period. He has played the part when it comes to a reliable sixth or seventh defenseman.

Adam Ginning committed a first-period penalty but also made a heads-up defensive play not long after to help prevent a goal. He picked up an assist on Gaucher’s goal.

• The Flyers trimmed their roster to 42 players with 10 cuts Thursday afternoon.

Oscar Eklind was placed on waivers for the purpose of reporting to AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley.

Samu Tuomaala, Massimo Rizzo, Tucker Roberston, Cooper Marody, Garrett Wilson, Zayde Wisdom, Sawyer Boulton, Keith Petruzzelli and Yaniv Perets were sent to the Phantoms.

• The Flyers are back in preseason action Saturday when they host the Bruins at 5 p.m. ET.

Genk’s Oh Hyeon-gyu seals winning return to Glasgow and deepens Rangers’ gloom

More punishment for Rangers at the hand of a Belgian opponent. A familiar combination of self-destruction and the poor defending endemic under Russell Martin deepened Ibrox’s gloom. Reduced to 10 after Mohamed Diomande’s reckless first-half challenge, insult was added by Genk’s goal being scored by a former Celtic striker in Oh Hyeon-gyu.

Martin has talked of “results coming through difficulty” but could not have chosen to manage a club where poor results will cause more difficulty. Ibrox was undersold, just 38,000 present, though in attendance was Andrew Cavenagh, the chairman gladhanding fans before kick-off. The American co-owner’s scheduled visit to Glasgow has allowed him to experience what fans have been served during the new ownership’s choice of manager. “I’ll find out in about 15 minutes,” said Martin, asked if he had yet received Cavenagh’s verdict. “I look forward to seeing him.”

Continue reading...

Giants GM Zack Minasian addresses Bob Melvin's future after underwhelming season

Giants GM Zack Minasian addresses Bob Melvin's future after underwhelming season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Zack Minasian has a specific approach to assessing Bob Melvin and the rest of the Giants’ coaching staff as San Francisco’s underwhelming 2025 MLB season nears a close.

Minasian, in his first year as San Francisco’s general manager under first-year president of baseball operations Buster Posey, revealed his thought process to KNBR’s “Murph and Markus” on Thursday.

“You’re always evaluating it, even with how well you play … as well as the other departments of baseball operations,” Minasian told Brian Murphy and Markus Boucher. “When you have years like this, it pushes you more and more to evaluate all of your departments and how they’re firing, and it makes you really question, ‘Are we good enough here, are we good enough there?’ 

“I’m probably still at the point of evaluating myself, and what can I do differently, and how can I play my part to get us where we want to go as opposed to anybody else.”

The 78-81 Giants were eliminated from National League playoff contention after Tuesday’s 9-8 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals at Oracle Park.

Despite key offseason additions such as Willy Adames and the blockbuster mid-year acquisition of Rafael Devers, San Francisco couldn’t sustain its intermittent stints of success long enough, thus missing the postseason for the eighth time in nine campaigns.

Minasian shared more thoughts about Melvin, San Francisco’s second-year skipper, and the staff amid the team’s disappointing finish.

“There’s always going to be conversations — whether you’re winning or losing, you’re always going to have conversations about your staffing, and how it looks,” Minasian said. “In regards to Bob, he’s a consummate professional, and he really cares about the Giants. 

“Beyond that, we’ll just continue to do our work. And as the season ends, we’ll evaluate the team and evaluate our system and our options going forward …”

Minasian and San Francisco appear to be committed to Melvin after exercising his contract option for the 2026 season in July.

However, changes must be made for the Giants to return to the glory days Posey experienced firsthand as a player.

Download and follow the Giants Talk Podcast

Three Standout Performers From The Kraken's 4-1 Pre-Season Win Over Oilers

The Seattle Kraken defeated an Edmonton Oilers roster that featured Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, Evan Bouchard and starting goaltender Stuart Skinner 4-1 in their third pre-season game. 

The Kraken got the scoring started in the first period despite minimal efforts on goal, but they never felt like the game was ever getting away from them.

Jagger Firkus tapped in a power play goal on a rebound, and Logan Morrison scored his first of the pre-season, before Ben Meyers and Jani Nyman scored insurance markers in the third period. Joey Daccord and Nikke Kokko turned away 24 of the 25 shots they faced.

Here are three standout performers from last night's win:

Tyson Jugnauth

The 21-year-old blueliner took part in his first pre-season game of the season and fit in perfectly. He recorded 18:13 of ice time, and despite not recording any points, Jugnauth looked comfortable with the puck on his stick and in the defensive zone.

His defensive skills were put to the test on several occasions, including defending consecutive 2-on-1s that featured McDavid, the world's best hockey player. Jugnauth stayed calm and composed, deflecting a pass by Draisaitl intended for McDavid and then later forcing Ekholm into a weak shot and negating any passing lane to send the puck to McDavid. 

In the third period, Jugnauth defended a 3-on-1, once again deflecting a pass before the Oilers could get off a Grade A chance. 

Jagger Firkus

Firkus is a point producer, and he has been throughout his entire junior career and in the early stages of his pro career. Last night, we got a glimpse of how Firkus can leave his imprint on hockey games. 

The power play goal capped off the strong performance, but the 21-year-old was making nifty passes and was eager to get the puck into high-danger scoring areas. He finished the game with a goal and three shots on target in 14:39 of ice time. 

Jagger Firkus (Candace Kludt | The Hockey News)

Ben Meyers and Logan Morrison

Meyers and Morrison each finished with a goal and an assist in last night's game, and the duo looked like they fit in at the NHL level. They each filled the score sheet and were effective offensive chance creators throughout the game. 

Meyers finished with two shots on goal, four hits and two blocks in 17:10 of ice time, while Morrison put up three shots on goal, one hit and one block in 13:21 of ice time. Meyers and Morrison are likely on the outside looking in for an NHL roster spot, but with the injuries the Kraken are facing, the pair have moved up the depth chart and could be one of the first names called up from the AHL to start the season. 

Honorable mention to Oscar Fisker Molgaard, who has come as advertised in his first two pre-season games. The 20-year-old has two assists, but his attention to detail and defensive acumen have been noticeable.  If he can carry the momentum into the start of the AHL season, Fisker Molgaard could see some NHL action towards the tail end of the season. 

Several Kraken Prospects Shine In Pre-Season Opener Against CanucksSeveral Kraken Prospects Shine In Pre-Season Opener Against CanucksThe Seattle Kraken kicked off the beginning of pre-season with a 5-3 win over the Vancouver Canucks, dressing several NHL players and top prospects. 

John Tortorella Insists He Never 'Quit' On the Flyers

(Photo: Charles LeClaire, Imagn Images)

Despite the comments he made at the end of his tenure, John Tortorella insists he never quit on the Philadelphia Flyers... or anything else, for that matter.

Tortorella, 67, was fired by the Flyers on March 27, just two days after a 7-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs that prompted the veteran coach to say, "I'm not really interested in learning how to coach in this type of season, where we're at right now."

But, Tortorella wanted to set the record straight on why he said what he said. In his eyes, he didn't want to become the guy who lets everyone off easy at the end of the year because they're miles off a playoff position.

“It was kind of weird for me, getting fired with nine games left. It really surprised me. [General manager Danny Briere] and I did have some disagreements on discipline of a player, had some disagreements the last few weeks of that season," Tortorella told Nick Cotsonika of NHL.com. "I loved coaching them."

One such incident of discipline handed down by Tortorella was the benching of Cam York during that game against the Maple Leafs, when the 24-year-old's night ended after just eight shifts and 3:50 of ice time.

Matvei Michkov Says He Was 'Very Upset' When Flyers Fired John TortorellaMatvei Michkov Says He Was 'Very Upset' When Flyers Fired John TortorellaThe relationship between star Philadelphia Flyers rookie Matvei Michkov and fired head coach John Tortorella was much better than many have made it out to be.

York was benched by interim head coach Brad Shaw for the entirety of the following game for disciplinary purposes, too, but then things eventually blew over.

“I’ve seen teams be really good playing out a season when it means nothing. You’re relaxed. I’ve seen players play better," added Tortorella. "I don’t want to be that guy. It was out of respect to my team that I was not doing a good job. I wasn’t. Do I think I should have got fired for it? No, but I have too much respect for those players to kick the hell out of them right to the bitter end.

“It was the right thing to do by Danny [to sell at the deadline]. They’re doing it the right way, and I was on board with that. But it’s hard. It’s hard for those guys, and that’s what I was trying to say after Toronto.”

With his team falling out of playoff position two seasons in a row, Tortorella had to cope with the departures of players like Morgan Frost, Joel Farabee, Scott Laughton, and Sean Walker ahead of the last two NHL trade deadlines.

The key difference from 2024 to 2025 was that in 2025, the Flyers were never particularly close to the postseason and ultimately finished with the fourth-worst record in the NHL.

How John Tortorella Protected Matvei Michkov in Flyers Debut, Rookie SeasonHow John Tortorella Protected Matvei Michkov in Flyers Debut, Rookie SeasonJohn Tortorella may not be the head coach of the Philadelphia Flyers anymore, but in his short time coaching rookies Matvei Michkov and Jett Luchanko, the polarizing bench boss left his mark.

Tortorella also assured Cotsonika he wants to coach again, regardless of what others think of how things ended with the Flyers.

“Do I want to coach again? Yeah. I heard a couple NHL coaches accuse me [of quitting on the team]. Did I quit on the team after those comments I made in Toronto? I haven’t quit on a [bleeping] thing in my life. Those comments were totally taken out of [context]," Tortorella said.

“Listen, I don’t think I explained myself totally correctly, either. But I miss it already. I miss preparing [for] camp. I miss the camaraderie of camp. Yeah, I want to coach, so we’ll see what happens.”

The gruff coach's next opportunity at the NHL level will have to wait, as all of the offseason vacancies have been filled in between his dismissal from the Flyers and now.

In the interim, Tortorella will be coaching the United States at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, where he'll be joined by new New York Rangers head coach Mike Sullivan, Minnesota Wild head coach John Hynes, and Rangers assistant coach David Quinn.

LAFC Continue Their Hot Streak! Are They the New MLS Juggernaut? + Who’s Leading the Race to Be USMNT’s #9?

Christian Polanco and Alexis Guerreros break down LAFC’s hot run of form since acquiring Son Heung-Min, and what it could mean for the club as we head into the playoffs. Next, they recap USMNT activity across Europe, including which striker abroad is staking his claim to be the national team’s #9. Later, they react to some of the biggest news in world soccer, including Harry Kane’s possible return to Tottenham, Ousmane Dembélé’s Ballon d’Or win, and more.

Mets call up Kevin Herget, DFA Richard Lovelady in latest bullpen shuffle

The Mets shuffled up their bullpen once again on Thursday, calling up right-hander Kevin Herget from Triple-A Syracuse.

In a corresponding move, left-hander Richard Lovelady was designated for assignment, while righty Chris Devenski was outrighted to Triple-A.

Herget, 34, has appeared in five games for the Mets this season, pitching to a 3.27 ERA with five strikeouts and 10 hits allowed over the course of 11.0 innings. His most recent appearance was 1.2 scoreless innings against the Reds on Sept. 6.

Lovelady, meanwhile, continues to bounce back and forth between the active roster and the minor leagues. The lefty pitched 2.0 innings for the Mets in Wednesday’s loss to the Cubs, allowing two runs (one earned) while throwing 31 pitches.

All about Cal Raleigh's 60th home run — and a fan's random act of kindness that followed

=Cal Raleigh finishes his swing with the bat behind his head as he watches his 60th home run
Seattle Mariner Cal Raleigh joins elite MLB company as he hits his 60th home run of the season during the eighth inning of a game against the Colorado Rockies on Sept. 24. (Ryan Sun / Associated Press)

Seattle catcher Cal Raleigh became the seventh player in MLB history to hit at least 60 home runs in a season Wednesday night when he drove two hits out of T-Mobile Park during the Mariners' 9-2 win over the Colorado Rockies.

In related news, the man who reportedly caught the milestone ball appears to have given it away to a young fan sitting nearby. Sure, the gesture wasn't nearly as historic as what the player lovingly known as Big Dumper had just accomplished, but it was pretty cool — especially considering the ball's potential value.

Read more:Fan gives back Mike Trout's 400th career home run ball, but not before getting to do something cool

Here's more on Raleigh's 60th home run and the act of kindness that followed.

Big night for Big Dumper

Seattle Mariners' Cal Raleigh waves to the crowd after hitting his 60th home run
Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh takes a curtain call after hitting his 60th home run of the season against the Colorado Rockies. (Ryan Sun / Associated Press)

Raleigh entered the night with 58 home runs, already well beyond his previous career high of 34 from last season. The switch-hitting catcher was batting left-handed in the first inning when he blasted a 93-mph fastball from Tanner Gordon 422 feet into the upper deck behind right field for home run No. 59.

Then, with two out in the bottom of the eighth inning, chants of "M-V-P" were already raining down on Raleigh as he stepped to the plate, batting left-handed again, against Rockies reliever Angel Chivilli.

One pitch later, the at-bat was over and Raleigh had made history. He ripped a 98-mph fastball from Chivilli 389 feet into the right field stands to join Babe Ruth (1927), Roger Maris (1961), Sammy Sosa (1998, 1999, 2001), Mark McGwire (1998, 1999), Barry Bonds (2001) and Aaron Judge (2022) as the only players to hit at least 60 home runs in a season.

Raleigh rounded the bases, then took a curtain call in front of an ecstatic crowd that included his parents, Todd and Stephanie Raleigh.

It was the 11th time this season Raleigh has hit multiple home runs in a game, which ties the MLB record held by Hank Greenberg (1938), Sosa (1998) and Judge (2022). Raleigh, who also had a two-run double in the second inning, finished with four RBIs to give him an American League-leading 125 this season.

In addition to Raleigh's personal achievements Wednesday night, the Mariners clinched their first AL West title since 2001.

Read more:Roki Sasaki and Clayton Kershaw boost bullpen, Dodgers magic number reduced to 1

"It's crazy,” Raleigh said after the game. “Sixty is, I don't know what to say. I didn't know if I was going to hit 60 in my life. And then I did it like this. Just tonight, I mean, what a way to do it."

Raleigh has four regular-season games left to try to break Judge's AL record of 62 home runs, set in 2022. The all-time MLB record is 72, set by the San Francisco Giants' Bonds in 2001.

Kind gesture in the stands

Cal Raleigh is seen from behind lifting his arm as he rounds the bases with 'Home Run' displayed on the scoreboard
Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh rounds the bases after his 60th home run of the season Wednesday at T-Mobile Park. (Steph Chambers / Getty Images)

Based on a fan video posted on social media, it appears that a man wearing Mariners gear initially ended up with the historic ball. That fan can be seen holding the ball over his head while others seated nearby applaud his (and Raleigh's) accomplishment.

A second video, posted by the same fan who posted the first one, appears to show that the man gave the ball to a younger fan (someone can be heard in the video joyfully exclaiming, "Oh my God! They gave it to this kid!"). The boy and an adult appear to be following security out of the stands, presumably to somewhere the Mariners might be able to make an offer to secure the ball for Raleigh.

The Times did not receive an immediate response from the Mariners regarding the current whereabouts of the ball, what the young fan may have been offered for it and whether the original fan who got the ball was recognized in any way for his gesture.

The fans sitting around him definitely appreciated it. The same video shows them applauding the man, who tipped his hat to them and seemed genuinely happy with his decision to part with the ball.

Read more:Phillies fan explains why he plucked a home run ball from his son's glove and gave it to a total stranger

It's a feel-good story that helps cleanse the palate weeks after another viral incident took place in the stands at a game between the Philadelphia Phillies and Miami Marlins in Florida. Phillies fan Drew Feltwell secured a home run ball hit by Harrison Bader and placed it in the glove of 9-year-old son Lincoln.

A woman quickly approached Feltwell, however, and angrily declared that the ball belonged to her. In an effort to set an example for his children by de-escalating the situation, Feltwell later said, he reached into his son's glove and gave it to the woman, who quickly became known on social media as "Phillies Karen."

Selfless to a fault?

Cal Raleigh waves to the crowd as executive Kevin Martinez holds a framed poster acknowledging Raleigh's 57 home runs.
Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh waves to the crowd after being acknowledged Tuesday by Mariners president of business operations Kevin Martinez for setting the team record for home runs in a season. (Ryan Sun / Associated Press)

Still, some folks on X are calling the Mariners fan "stupid" and "foolish" for giving away a ball that could be worth a fortune. Last year, the home run ball that gave Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani the distinction of being the only MLB player to have 50 home runs and 50 stolen bases in a single season sold at auction for a record $4.4 million.

It still remains to be seen, however, just who will receive that money. Three individuals have claimed to have been the rightful owner of the ball, and the matter remains tied up in Florida’s 11th Judicial Circuit Court. A calendar call in the case has been set for January.

Last week, another act of selflessness followed a different milestone home run for Raleigh. When he hit his 57th home run of the season Saturday against the Houston Astros, Raleigh broke Ken Griffey Jr.'s team record for home runs in a season.

Read more:How Bill Russell stayed connected to baseball, and reconnected with the Dodgers

The ball landed in the Astros bullpen and was recovered by longtime Houston bullpen catcher Javier Bracamonte, who personally took the ball to Raleigh and placed it in his glove.

“He said: 'Thank you so much, I appreciate it. That means a lot to me,’” said Bracamonte, who received a hug from the opposing team's star catcher. “And I said, ‘This is great.’”

Raleigh said of Bracamonte: “Class act over there with him, so I'm very grateful. He could have easily just thrown it up in the air, but he, I guess, understood and kept it for me ... so very nice thing to do.”

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.