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Byron Buxton Called Up by Twins: Latest Details, Comments and Reaction

After a surprisingly strong 32-21 start to the season, the Minnesota Twins have cooled off, losing six of their last seven games through Friday’s action. The club needs a spark, so it called up top prospect Byron Buxton on Saturday.

According to the Twins’ official Twitter account, Buxton will be brought up from Double-A to make his Major League debut on Sunday:

The outfielder talked about getting the call, according to Rhett Bollinger of MLB.com:

Mike Berardino of the St. Paul Pioneer-Press passed along more from Buxton:

Berardino also passed along comments from Twins manager Paul Molitor:

Buxton has been regarded as one of baseball’s best prospects since he was drafted second overall in 2012. He was ranked first on MLB.com’s top 100 list each of the last three seasons. Interestingly, the player who ranked second on that list for the 2015 season, Carlos Correa, was called up by Houston earlier this week. 

Injuries did derail Buxton’s minor league output in 2014, as he only played in 31 games. He has been healthy this season, hitting .283/.351/.489 in 59 games with Double-A Chattanooga. 

That overall stat line doesn’t immediately jump off the page, though context does help Buxton. He’s just 21 years old and caught fire after a slow start, per Aaron Gleeman of Hardball Talk:

Given the Buxton’s talent and how quickly he’s adapted to each new challenge the Twins have thrown at him, it shouldn’t take long for the former first-round pick to make his presence felt in Minnesota and the rest of the American League.

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Jason Vargas Injury: Updates on Royals P’s Flexor and Return

Kansas City Royals left-hander Jason Vargas has landed on the disabled list for the second time this season due to an elbow injury. 

Continue for updates. 


Vargas Strains Flexor Muscle

Saturday, June 13

According to the Royals’ official Twitter feed, Vargas has a left flexor strain, and the team will bring up Brandon Finnegan from Triple-A to take his spot:

Vargas missed three weeks in May with the same injury. Andy McCullough of the Kansas City Star reported on May 8 that the injury can serve as a “precursor for Tommy John surgery” because the flexor muscle protects the ulnar collateral ligament, but he was able to return for three starts after coming off the DL. 

In his most recent outing on June 8, Vargas pitched well against the Minnesota Twins, with six shutout innings in a 3-1 win.  

Finnegan does have MLB experience, appearing in seven regular-season games last year and five so far in 2015. The Royals have used Finnegan as a starter and reliever in the minors, as he’s made five starts in nine appearances. He does give manager Ned Yost options to play with as he reworks his rotation without Vargas. 

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Pat Venditte Injury: Updates on Athletics P’s Shoulder and Return

Oakland Athletics switch-pitcher Pat Venditte has fallen victim to the injury bug that has forced him to be placed on the 15-day disabled list. 

Continue for updates. 


Venditte Has Shoulder Strain

Friday, June 12

According to the A’s official Twitter, Venditte has a strained right shoulder that will keep him out for at least the next 15 days:

“I’ve gone from pure joy to this,” Venditte said, according to John Hickey of the Bay Area News Group. Hickey reported the pitcher won’t throw for a week.

Joe Stiglich of CSN California reported the MRI shows Venditte has minor fraying in the area of his shoulder he had surgery on in 2012, but the pitcher hasn’t torn the muscle completely.

Venditte became one of the best stories in 2015 when he made his MLB debut on June 5 against Boston at the age of 29 after spending seven-plus seasons in the minors. He became the first pitcher to throw from both sides since 1995 in that game, throwing two scoreless innings. 

Oakland manager Bob Melvin used Venditte a total of four times covering 5.2 innings before he was injured. It’s especially unfortunate timing for the former 20th-round draft pick after he fought for so many years to reach the big leagues, but hopefully he will be able to return soon. 

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Lance Lynn Injury: Updates on Cardinals P’s Forearm and Return

The hits keep coming for the St. Louis Cardinals, as Lance Lynn will be out for at least two weeks with a forearm injury. 

Continue for updates. 


Lynn Placed on DL

Friday, June 12

The Cardinals announced that Lynn was placed on the 15-day-disabled list, retroactive to June 8, and recalled Tyler Lyons to replace him.  

Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak said Lynn “probably could have pitched” through the injury but the team wanted to err on the side of caution, per Jennifer Langosch of MLB.com.

Per USA Today’s Bob Nightengale, Mozeliak hopes Lynn will be able to return after 15 days before hyping the right-hander’s replacement:

According to Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Cardinals’ current rotation has just one player who made at least 20 starts in 2014:

Lynn has been his usual solid self for the Cardinals this season, posting a 3.07 ERA and 77 strikeouts in 73.1 innings. Tyler Lyons struggled in three earlier MLB starts with a 5.54 ERA in 13 innings, but he did right the ship in Triple-A with a 2.61 ERA and 56 strikeouts against nine walks in 48.1 innings. 

The Cardinals have been fighting injuries all year, with Matt Adams on the 60-day disabled list and Adam Wainwright out for the season. Matt Holliday was also recently placed on the 15-day disabled list. 

With all those injuries, it’s easy to understand why the Cardinals would want to be cautious with Lynn. It also helps they have baseball’s best record entering play on Friday (39-21) and can afford to let player’s wounds heal properly without risking further complications. 

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Hanley Ramirez Injury: Updates on Red Sox Star’s Knee and Return

Hanley Ramirez‘s career has been plagued by injuries. The 31-year-old Boston Red Sox star is once again on the mend, this time dealing with a knee injury.

Continue for updates. 


Hanley Fouls Ball off Knee, Leaves Game

Tuesday, June 9  

According to Scott Lauber of the Boston Herald, Ramirez left the Red Sox’s game against the Baltimore Orioles after drawing a walk, with Rusney Castillo replacing him. 

During the at-bat, Ramirez fouled off a ball that struck him in his left knee and fell to the ground, per Pete Abraham of the Boston Globe. The official injury is considered to be a knee contusion, per Dan Connolly of the Baltimore Sun. After the game, x-rays were negative, showing no structural damage, per Sean McAdam of CSNNE.com

Ramirez has had a rough time since the end of April. He got off to a blazing start with 10 home runs in the month and a .999 OPS, but he fell precipitously in May, with an OPS of .622. 

The 2006 National League Rookie of the Year did suffer a left shoulder injury May 4 against the Tampa Bay Rays after crashing into the left field wall at Fenway Park. He avoided the disabled list, though his left shoulder has previously been operated on twice in 2007 and 2011. 

The Red Sox were hoping to get the Ramirez who made three straight All-Star Games from 2008-10, but he’s had a rough transition back into the American League. His talent is always evident, when healthy, though that hasn’t been the case for most of 2015 so far. 

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Rafael Soriano to Cubs: Latest Contract Details, Comments, Reaction

Rafael Soriano, the well-traveled relief pitcher who has spent the last two years with the Washington Nationals, has reportedly found his home for 2015. 

Soriano agreed to terms on a minor league deal with the Chicago Cubs, the team announced Tuesday:

Gordon Wittenmeyer of the Chicago Sun-Times reported the deal was worth $2 million if he pitches half the season, and had another $4 million in incentives. 

Manager Joe Maddon recently discussed the reliever’s skill set, according to Wittenmeyer:

Me and Raffy have a really good relationship. I haven’t spoken to him. But I like the guy. He knows how to pitch.

The thing I always talked about with him as a closer was he was a guy that didn’t’ just throw the ball 100 mph. He and I used to have a lot of conversations about how we attack certain hitters in a game, because he really sees things. He’d be in the bullpen, and he watches really well, and he’s got definite ideas on how to get out hitters. I’ve always appreciated his pitch-ability.

One of the drawbacks of being an older relief pitcher, even one who has had the success of the 35-year-old Soriano, is that teams shy away from paying them because of the unstable nature of the position. 

Soriano has been one of the most consistent relievers, closer or otherwise, since 2012. He’s appeared in at least 64 games each season with a 2.84 ERA, 179 strikeouts and 60 walks in 196.1 innings total. 

The Nationals took Soriano out of the closer role late in the 2014 campaign after he blew his seventh save of the year, but he rebounded with two scoreless appearances in the division series against the San Francisco Giants

Soriano has often waited a long time in the free-agency process to make decisions, agreeing to deals with the New York Yankees (2011) and the Nationals (2013) in the middle of January. Those contracts worked out, save for a couple of the usual hiccups that come with relievers. 

In 2012, Soriano took over as closer in New York when Mariano Rivera suffered a season-ending knee injury, and he had a 2.26 ERA with 42 saves and 69 strikeouts in 67.2 innings. Considering how big Rivera’s shoes are to fill, Soriano’s performance was every bit as good. 

Despite the fickle nature of the job, teams always value the “proven closer,” so Soriano’s 207 career saves make him more attractive. He’s been around long enough to endure the ups and downs of baseball and has succeeded as a setup man and a closer, so there’s little doubt he will strengthen his new team’s bullpen. 

It’s highly possible that Soriano will slide into the team’s closing role immediately, but even if he doesn’t, expect him to make plenty of appearances as a seventh- or eighth-inning setup man for Chicago.

 

If you want to talk sports, hit me up on Twitter. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


MLB Draft: Tuesday’s Order, Start Time and Live Stream

The first day of the Major League Baseball draft is where stars come from, but it’s on the second day, featuring Rounds 2-10, when all of the scouting work can take a franchise from the doldrums to a championship. 

Because of how the MLB draft works, in which teams are able to cut under-slot deals with top prospects in some cases, there are going to be first-round talents that fall into a bargain spot if a club has the financial resources to sign a later-round player to a lucrative deal. 

There are always intriguing talents throughout the second day of the draft. Not all of the players selected today will sign, but most of them are going to get into professional baseball and add depth to a team’s farm system. 

Here’s all the information to get you set for the second day of the 2015 MLB draft. 

 

Start Time: 1 p.m. ET

Live Stream: MLB.com

 

Team to Watch: St. Louis Cardinals

Since the MLB draft is so rigidly structured, it’s hard to find teams after the first day with more picks than anyone else. 

The one exception this year is St. Louis, as the Cardinals were awarded an extra compensation pick after the third round for failing to sign Trevor Megill last year. That gives them nine picks over eight rounds instead of the eight that 28 other teams have. (The Chicago White Sox are the only team with seven picks.)

One thing that’s made the Cardinals so successful over the last four years, even as they lost players like Albert Pujols to free agency or Adam Wainwright to season-ending injuries twice (2011, 2014), is the depth they have built through the draft. 

For example, St. Louis’ 2009 class is going to be one of the best in recent memory. Here are the big leaguers that have already come out of that group:

That’s a ridiculous amount of high-end talent to get out of one draft class, even if a pitcher like Joe Kelly is dragging the rest of the group down with his 5.40 ERA with Boston. 

Keep in mind the Cardinals have also promoted recent draftees like Kolten Wong (2011) and Michael Wacha (2012) and still have top prospects Stephen Piscotty (2012) and Marco Gonzales (2013), among others, on the way to St. Louis. 

ESPN’s Dan Szymborski did an even more in-depth breakdown of success in the draft through 2012 and found that the Cardinals have been one of the top three drafting teams in baseball based on value over expectations:

Those stats are based on where a player was taken relative to the historical expectations from the same position and how much value the drafting team got before the player hit free agency, per Szymborski‘s explanation in a 2013 article on ESPN.com. 

Few teams are able to find and develop off-the-radar talent better than the Cardinals. That’s allowed them to build such considerable depth and maintain a high level of performance while dealing with the loss of superstars to injuries or free agency. 

 

Storyline to Watch: The Adjustment Bureau

There are always players who fall in the draft due to signability concerns. Some of them end up not signing after being selected. Mark Appel is the most famous recent example to spurn millions of dollars after the Pittsburgh Pirates drafted him eighth overall in 2012. 

The Associated Press (h/t ESPN) reported after Appel failed to sign that Pittsburgh’s offer of $3.8 million was five percent above the assigned slot for the eighth pick:

Pittsburgh was prepared to go as much as 5 percent above its threshold and incur the first level of penalty, a 75 percent tax on the overage. But the Pirates didn’t want to fall into higher levels, which include the loss of future draft picks.

That slot was assigned $2.9 million from the drafting team’s bonus pool in baseball’s new labor contract, which imposes penalties on clubs that exceed the threshold — the totals of the slots for a team’s selections in the first 10 rounds.

In order to go that much over a required slot, teams can either go over the assigned value and risk penalties from MLB, either with the loss of a future draft pick or financially, depending on how much over a team goes. 

There are other ways for teams to manipulate the draft in their favor, as Houston did in that same 2012 draft. The Astros selected Carlos Correa first overall and signed for $4.8 million, which was $2.4 million less than the assigned value of the pick, per MLB.com’s Brian McTaggart

In the same report from McTaggart, he noted it was “likely” the Astros would have to go above the $1.258 million pool to sign supplemental first-round pick Lance McCullers

Houston general manager Jeff Luhnow said during Correa‘s introductory press conference, included in the McTaggart report, that the Astros were hoping to have another big rollout for McCullers if they got him signed. 

“Our goal is to have an event like this during our next homestand for Lance,” Luhnow said. “We have a long way to go to get there, but that’s our goal and I’m optimistic we’ll get something done.”

Sure enough, McCullers would end up signing with the Astros for $2.5 million or virtually double the assigned value of his pick. They were able to do that because of how much they saved from Correa‘s deal. 

Teams will always play the draft in their favor financially. ESPN’s Keith Law even noted in his final mock draft that Arizona seemed like a lock for Dansby Swanson with the top pick, but “one thing that could blow this up would be if Arizona attempts to sign Swanson for well under slot prior to the draft and fails to do so.”

The needs of a franchise, as well as its willingness to invest millions of dollars in a player with no professional experience and what the player believes he is worth are always going to be factors in the MLB draft. 

That leads to a lot of talent falling further than it should on an even playing field and makes for an interesting second day of the draft. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Brett Lawrie’s Broken Bat Strikes and Injures Fan in Stands at Fenway Park

There was a frightening incident Friday during the Oakland Athletics-Boston Red Sox game at Fenway Park, as a broken-bat shard struck a fan, later identified as Tonya Carpenter, in the stands.  

ESPN.com’s Gordon Edes reported that Athletics third baseman Brett Lawrie’s bat broke, sending a piece into the stands. That shard hit a fan who was sitting down the third-base line:

The woman was taken to the hospital where she was initially battling life-threatening injuries, Boston Police told David Wade of WBZ-TV. The family released a statement on the woman’s condition on Saturday, according to Ricky Doyle of NESN:

Tonya Carpenter was admitted to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center last night following injury at Fenway Park. She is in serious condition. Tonya’s family and loved ones are grateful to all who have reached out with thoughts and prayers but are requesting privacy at this time as Tonya recovers.

“She is expected to survive,” said Boston police spokeswoman Officer Rachel McGuire, according to Laura Krantz of the Boston Globe. She was sitting with her son at the time of the incident, McGuire said, according to Michael Vega of the Boston Globe.

“When one breaks like that, there’s jagged edges on it, anything can happen,” Lawrie said following the game, according to Jason Mastrodonato of the Boston Herald. “You’ve got limited netting here in Boston…it’s so close there’s really no time to react,” Lawrie explained, via Mastrodonato.

John Tomase of WEEI described the scene at the time of the incident and noted medics took the fan out of the stadium on a gurney:

The scary incident happened during Lawrie’s first at-bat in the top of the second inning. Fans around the woman did come to her aid before medics could get there.

Every Major League Baseball stadium has protective nets behind home plate to prevent foul balls from striking fans, but it’s nearly impossible to protect against a freak accident like this one.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Ben Zobrist Trade Rumors: Latest Buzz and Speculation Surrounding Athletics Star

With the Oakland Athletics owning the American League’s worst record, they can start going into sell mode as trading season picks up. Utilityman Ben Zobrist is one of their best trade chips and is starting to attract attention around the league.   

Continue for updates. 


Nationals Asking About Zobrist

Friday, June 5

According to Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal, the Washington Nationals have called the Athletics about Zobrist as a potential replacement for Jayson Werth:

Zobrist’s positional versatility would fit well in Washington, which also needs help at shortstop and protection in case players who have had injury problems in the past, such as Anthony Rendon or Ryan Zimmerman, get hurt. 

However, Rosenthal also noted the Nationals aren’t going to be alone if/when the Athletics dive into trade discussions for Zobrist:

Even though he has gotten off to a slow start this season, hitting .222/.304/.383 in 23 games while missing one month with a knee injury, there may not be a more sought-after trade chip this summer because he can play so many positions and is making a reasonable $7.5 million salary. 

Because of Zobrist’s versatility and salary, Oakland general manager Billy Beane can dangle him to the highest bidder without worrying it won’t come. There are going to be a lot of teams buying at the deadline because there are currently 26 clubs either in the playoffs or within 5.5 games of a playoff spot. 

The A’s have had a disastrous 2015 season, made worse by injuries to key players like Zobrist, but Beane should be able to cash in some of those chips before July 31 to help rebuild the system. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Rafael Soriano Rumors: Latest Buzz and Speculation on Free-Agent Pitcher

Veteran relief pitcher Rafael Soriano has been sitting on the sideline so far in 2015, waiting to find the right team and opportunity before he pitches in the big leagues. The 35-year-old appears to be narrowing his choices down.   

Continue for updates. 


Three Teams Aggressively After Soriano

Friday, June 5

According to Nick Cafardo of the Boston Globe, there are three teams aggressively after Soriano, with a possible deal coming before his workout June 11, per his agent, Alan Nero:

The St. Louis Cardinals and the Chicago Cubs are always in competition with each other, and it’s warranted this time. Both teams are over .500—the Cardinals own the best record in baseball—and they have playoff aspirations. The Toronto Blue Jays have a payroll over $125 million, per Cot’s Baseball Contracts, but are desperate to find a life preserver with a 25-30 record. 

The Cubs and the Blue Jays would have more incentive to sign Soriano, as they rank in the bottom 11 in bullpen ERA. The Cardinals could be seeking depth since their relievers rank second in all of baseball with a 2.11 ERA. 

Soriano spent the previous two seasons pitching with the Washington Nationals. He had a 3.15 ERA and 75 saves in 132 games. His past experience in high-leverage situations and as a closer makes him a valuable asset as teams seek to upgrade their bullpen. 

The Cardinals would present Soriano with the best chance to win a title this year, while the Cubs and the Blue Jays could tempt him with the allure of pitching in the closer’s role that he won’t get in St. Louis because of Trevor Rosenthal’s presence. 

 

Stats via ESPN.com.

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