Tag: AL East

Yogi Berra, New York Yankees Legend and MLB Hall of Famer, Dies at Age 90

Legendary New York Yankees catcher Yogi Berra died of natural causes at the age of 90 Tuesday night at his home in New Jersey.

News of Berra’s death came via the Yogi Berra Museum, and the Yankees’ official Twitter feed paid tribute to their iconic player:

Berra’s family released a statement via the museum: “While we mourn the loss of our father, grandfather and great-grandfather, we know he is at peace with Mom. We celebrate his remarkable life and are thankful he meant so much to so many. He will truly be missed.”

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred also released a statement on Berra’s passing:

Berra, who was inducted into the MLB Hall of Fame in 1972, will be remembered as one of the Yankees’ greatest players. As a player, he played a major part as the club won 10 World Series—five in consecutive years—and was named an All-Star 15 times during his remarkable career. He added three more rings as a coach with the Mets (1969) and Yankees (1977, 1978).

In addition, Berra was named the American League‘s MVP three times: 1951, 1954 and 1955. The Yankees retired his No. 8 jersey in 1972 after he finished his 19-year career with a .285 batting average, 358 home runs and 1,430 RBI.

MLB’s official Twitter feed paid its respects to a true great of the game:

Yankees legend Derek Jeter issued a statement on The Players’ Tribune paying tribute to Berra:

To those who didn’t know Yogi personally, he was one of the greatest baseball players and Yankees of all time. To those lucky ones who did, he was an even better person. To me he was a dear friend and mentor. He will always be remembered for his success on the field, but I believe his finest quality was how he treated everyone with sincerity and kindness. My thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends.

Away from the field, Berra shined, coining such gems as “It ain’t over ’til it’s over” and “It’s like deja vu all over again,” among many more.

Oakland Athletics right fielder Josh Reddick paid tribute to the man and his pearls of wisdom, which became known as “Yogi-isms”:

Berra also fought for his country in World War II with the Navy, landing on D-Day at the Battle of Normandy as a 19-year-old in the Yankees’ minor league system. The Los Angeles Dodgers‘ Chris Hatcher made reference to Berra’s military service in his tribute:

Berra’s influence went beyond the playing field. Samuel L. Jackson, for instance, recounted some fond time spent with the Yankees man:

Fellow Hall of Famer and former Yankees right fielder Dave Winfield also took to social media to express his sadness:

Berra will be remembered as not only a baseball giant but a sporting one. His career achievements on the field speak for themselves, but the manner in which people gravitated to him away from the game is the measure of a man who will be revered as a baseball immortal and an American icon.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Red Sox GM Search: Latest News, Rumors, Speculation Surrounding Vacant Position

The Boston Red Sox have reportedly begun their search for a new general manager and are interviewing a respected candidate to start.

Continue for updates.


Report: Quinton McCracken Interviews for Red Sox GM Post

Monday, Sept. 21

Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports reported the news on Boston’s first GM candidate. McCracken was a longtime MLB outfielder who has garnered deserved acclaim in the Houston Astros front office as director of player development.      

Matthew Pouliot of NBCSports.com weighed in on Boston’s reported pursuit of McCracken:

McCracken has overseen Houston’s drastic turnaround that’s come to fruition in 2015 and seems like a logical fit for Boston on that basis. The Red Sox won the 2013 World Series but are on track to miss the postseason for the second year in a row.

Former Detroit Tigers GM Dave Dombrowski was hired in August as Boston’s president of baseball operations, replacing Ben Cherington. Hiring someone like McCracken would make sense for the Red Sox since it will take a savvy partner alongside Dombrowski to get on the same page in making vital front-office decisions.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


CC Sabathia’s Recent Return to Form Could Pay Off Big for Yankees Come October

How huge (pun sort of intended) would some vintage CC Sabathia be for the New York Yankees down the stretch?

Yes, the hulking left-hander sports a less-than-stellar 4.80 ERA. And yes, he’s an injury-plagued 35-year-old with a creaky right knee.

After two straight solid starts by the six-time All-Star and 2007 American League Cy Young-winner, though, the Yankees can be forgiven for dreaming big.

On Sunday against the New York Mets, in the rubber match of a Subway Series ripe with playoff implications, Sabathia tossed six innings of five-hit, one-run ball with seven strikeouts.

He also picked up his first win since July 8 as New York rolled 11-2, which nudged the Yankees to within 2.5 games of the Toronto Blue Jays in the AL East.

New York and Toronto will clash beginning Monday in a monumental three-game set north of the border. Sabathia won’t pitch in any of those contests, but with the way he’s been going, the Yanks probably wish he could.

Sabathia’s mini-resurgence also includes a game Sept. 14 that saw him put up zeroes for 6.2 frames against the Tampa Bay Rays, striking out six and throwing a season-high 111 pitches.

“I thought his sinker was tremendous tonight,” skipper Joe Girardi told reporters after that appearance. “It just had a lot of movement on it. I thought he used his breaking ball extremely well…he came up big for us and gave us a ton of distance.”

Sabathia returned from the disabled list Sept. 9 and began wearing a knee brace that the New York Post‘s Fred Kerber said the southpaw “once viewed as acceptable as eating poached sand.”

“It feels good,” Sabathia said after his first go-round with the brace, per Kerber. “In the middle of the first inning, once I got over that mental hurdle it held up great and my knee felt fine, so I’m excited about it.”

New York should be equally excited, particularly considering the state of its rotation.

Ace Masahiro Tanaka will miss at least one start, against Toronto, with a hamstring strain, per ESPN’s Wallace Matthews. And hard-throwing right-hander Nathan Eovaldi is out for the remainder of the regular season, and quite possibly beyond, with elbow inflammation.

The rest of the bunch—Michael Pineda, Ivan Nova and rookie Luis Severino—are an uneasy mix of inconsistent and untested.

That leaves a void at the top of the Yankees’ starting corps. The depth of their rotation will only matter if they get past the Wild Card Game, either by winning it or catching the Blue Jays. But assuming New York advances to the division series, it’ll need another starter or two to seize the moment.

Sabathia certainly has experience. He’s pitched in the postseason in six separate seasons, with the Cleveland Indians, Milwaukee Brewers and four times with the Yankees, including a title run in 2009 when he won American League Championship Series MVP honors.

His recent track record, however, is less than sterling. He pitched just 46 innings in 2014 while posting a career-worst 5.28 ERA, and he surrendered a major league-leading 112 earned runs  in 2013.

Entering 2015, it was worth wondering if Sabathia could ever regain his old form. In August, when Sabathia landed on the disabled list with knee inflammation, Brendan Kuty of NJ Advance Media questioned whether he’d ever pitch again.

Now, after avoiding surgery and making a couple of encouraging trips to the hill, he’s teasing the old CC. The good CC. The clock hasn’t turned back yet, but the gears are churning.

Assuming the Yankees end up in the one-game, do-or-die wild-card showdown, they’d surely throw out Tanaka if he’s healthy. But if the Yankees win that game—had the season ended Sunday, their opponent would have been the Houston Astroswould Sabathia be the man to start Game 1 of the division series?

It would have been an improbable notion a few weeks ago—laughable, even. Now, it’s entirely plausible. 

At the very least, expect Sabathia to burn what’s left in the tank the rest of the way. “I’m not going to back off or anything,” he said during his stint on the DL back in late August, per George A. King III of the New York Post. “It’s not that time for that.”

It is, on the other hand, time for a playoff run in the Bronx. And, perhaps, for CC Sabathia to come up hugejust like he did during New York’s sprint to a Commissioner’s Trophy a half-dozen years ago.

 

All statistics current as of Sept. 20 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Masahiro Tanaka Injury: Updates on Yankees Star’s Hamstring and Return

The New York Yankees pitching staff took a hit Sunday when the team announced Masahiro Tanaka will miss Wednesday’s start with a Grade 1 right hamstring strain.     

Continue for updates. 


Ivan Nova to Take Tanaka’s Start

Sunday, Sept. 20

While any injury to a pitcher of Tanaka’s quality is a concern, the silver lining for the Yankees is the severity of the setback. Buster Olney of ESPN noted New York hopes the pitcher only misses one start.

Tanaka missed more than one month from late April to early June because of a forearm strain. But his ERA sits at a solid 3.38, and he boasts an impressive 0.99 WHIP. 

His inconsistencies in the health department were compounded by the fact that CC Sabathia missed a large portion of 2015 with a knee injury. Michael Pineda also missed time, and Ivan Nova is still working his way back from Tommy John surgery last year. 

The Yankees have been able to stay in the American League East and wild-card races despite all of the problems with their starting rotation, but given how well the Toronto Blue Jays have been playing since acquiring David Price, they likely have their eyes on a wild-card spot.

Ideally, Tanaka will return after only one missed start and be fresh for a postseason run in October.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Brandon Martin, Former MLB 1st-Round Pick, Arrested in Double Homicide

A former first-round pick of the Tampa Bay Rays has been arrested in connection with an ongoing double-homicide investigation in Corona, California.

According to KTLA.com’s Anthony Kurzweil, John A. Moreno, Chip Yost and Jennifer Gould, 22-year-old Brandon Martin was taken into custody Friday following the shooting deaths of his 64-year-old father, Michael Martin, and 62-year-old ADT security system subcontractor Barry Swanson. 

Martin’s uncle, Ricky Lee Anderson, reportedly suffered “life-threatening injuries” and is now on life support following the incident, per the Corona Police Department.

According to the Press-Enterprise‘s Ali Tadayon, Brandon Martin was apprehended after a police officer spotted the suspect driving a truck that belonged to one of the victims.

“An off-duty Corona police officer on his way to work located a similar vehicle that was taken from the scene last night,” Corona Police Department Sgt. Paul Mercado said, according to ABC7.com’s Leticia Juarez.

Per KTLA.com, Sgt. Brent Nelson confirmed Martin was detained Tuesday for a mental-health evaluation after he made threats against his family. However, Martin was released Thursday. 

Martin debuted in the Rays farm system as a shortstop in 2011, but he played only three seasons in the minors after the team drafted him 38th overall out of Santiago High School in Corona. 

According to RaysColoredGlasses.com (via Tadayon), Martin missed the 2014 season because of an undisclosed “personal matter.”

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Jackie Bradley Jr. Earns Starring Role in Red Sox Outfield

Boston Red Sox outfielder Jackie Bradley Jr. is a movie fanatic.

Man on Fire, starring Denzel Washington, is his favorite movie of all time. Comedies are his first choice in genre. Among his comedy classics, remember he was born in 1990, are Ace Ventura and Major Payne. His favorite baseball movie is, no surprise, The Sandlot.

He’s yet to see all of the Godfather movies in chronological order.

Spoiler alert, Jackie, you can skip The Godfather Part III.

In the first five weeks after his latest call-up from Triple-A, Bradley was a “man on fire” at the plate. During a 31-game stretch starting Aug. 9, Bradley had the second-highest OPS in baseball (1.228 behind only David Ortiz’s 1.232). In that period, he led the majors with a .373 average and 14 doubles and was second in runs scored with 30.

He also had four triples, 25 extra-base hits, seven home runs and 11 walks.

On Aug. 15, the 25-year-old Bradley became the youngest player in MLB history to get two home runs, five extra-base hits, five runs and seven RBI in one game, according to the Elias Sports Bureau (via ESPN.com’s Buster Olney). It seems Bradley, whom the club has sent to Triple-A Pawtucket five times since his Opening Day 2013 debut for the Red Sox, may have finally earned a starring role in Boston.

“It’s about perseverance and believing in myself,” Bradley told Bleacher Report. Bradley credits an “easy-going, even-keel,” attitude and confidence that “never wavered” for his recent success. “I have a perspective on life the small things don’t really get to me. There’s more to life than baseball. This is what I do; it’s not who I am.”

Bradley’s “perseverance” and “even-keel” nature will be necessary to break his current 1-for-27 rut entering play Friday. He’s also struck out 15 times in eight games heading into this weekend’s series at Toronto. His average has fallen 44 points to .268 during that slide. 

The 2015 Red Sox: Director’s Cut Edition now airing each night usually features Rusney Castillo in left, Mookie Betts in center and Bradley in right. That also appears to be the set outfield moving forward into 2016, which is a far cry from the original 2015 Red Sox outfield of Hanley Ramirez in left, Shane Victorino in right and Betts in center. Injuries, trades, demotions and the disaster that was Ramirez in left field flipped Boston’s script. 

The Red Sox spent $72.5 million to sign Castillo after he fled Cuba, and they tried him at center and right field. Betts was once a middle infielder and played 230 games at second base in the minors. Bradley has been a stellar center fielder his entire career, going back to when he won Most Outstanding Player honors for the 2010 College World Series champion South Carolina Gamecocks.

Boston is partly wasting Bradley’s full defensive potential whenever he isn’t in center field. The massive amount of real estate in Fenway Park that constitutes center field runs from the out-of-town scoreboard part of Boston’s left field wall, back to the triangle’s apex 420 feet from home plate, over to the swath of grass in front of the home bullpen.

“Obviously, I’ve played center most of my life. I’ve been able to adjust to left field and right field,” he said.

But at the end of the day, his positional preference is simply “playing.”

It is that spacious center field at Fenway that has given Bradley a stage to excel. “It’s fun. There’s a lot a space out there.” No ball that stays in the ballpark is safe. “I like to think I can catch any ball until it gets by me.”

“He can navigate any of those three outfield spaces,” added interim Boston manager Torey Lovullo.

Bradley’s highlight reel of leather larceny this year includes this:

And this:

And this: 

Bradley was one of the top center field prospects in baseball when the Red Sox brought him up in early 2013 to fill in for an injured Jacoby Ellsbury. Inconsistency has marked his MLB career at the plate. He hit just .198/.265/.266 in 423 plate appearances in 2014.

The adjustments he made at the plate in the offseason, during his time the minors this spring and summer and since being called back up to Boston on July 29 after the team traded Victorino, have been small but effective.

Bradley moved to Florida this past offseason with his wife and focused on physical conditioning early in the offseason. He then began working with assistant hitting coach Victor Rodriguez, who tightened up Bradley’s swing and pushed his focus toward hitting line drives. “It was his idea,” Rodriguez told the Richmond Times-Dispatch‘s Eric Kolenich. 

Sustaining his recent hitting success will insure his most recent journey to Pawtucket will be his last.

“He’s got a lot of confidence. Got on a roll. He’s worked hard to get to that point. He’s been to the minor leagues to figure things out,” Lovullo said. “He’s made some subtle adjustments with [hitting coach] Chili Davis. He’s surveyed the strike zone. He’s able to take balls and swing at strikes with limited movements. There’s a direct path to the ball. And he’s able to survey the strike zone. Those are the key components.”

The 2015 Red Sox have been a big-money flop along the lines of Fantastic Four. The team’s poor performance led to president Larry Lucchino and general manager Ben Cherington being removed from power. The ace of “five aces” Clay Buchholz has been out since July 10 with an elbow injury. The calamity that is Boston’s bullpen has only been equaled by Ramirez’s antics in left field.

The Red Sox named Dave Dombrowski president of baseball operations on Aug. 18. Dombrowski has joined the Red Sox on their current road trip, complete with a large black satchel laden with notes, media guides and scouting reports. He calls Bradley “versatile.” Bradley has picked the perfect time to impress the new boss, even if it means making him a more valuable trade tool.

“Since I’ve been here he’s played All-Star caliber baseball,” Dombrowski said. “His defense catches your eye. Automatically, he’s an outstanding defensive outfielder. All the way around. He’s one of the best outfielders out there. He’s got a great throwing arm, has good instincts and gets a good jump.”

Bradley is the rare left-handed hitter who enjoys more success against lefties (.389 average as of Friday) than righties (.211). Much of the work of improving Bradley’s swing was completed before Dombrowski’s arrival, but he still sees on video a “significant difference” from earlier.

“He’s swung the bat well,” Dombrowski noted. “They’ve made adjustments with his toe touch. There’s a much smoother swing. The ball is jumping off the bat. He’s a much better all-around player.”

If that growth continues, Dombrowski may just have one of his franchise cornerstones for the next era of Red Sox baseball.

 

Bill Speros is an award-winning journalist, He wrote the “Obnoxious Boston Fan” column for Boston.com from 2011 to 2015. He can be reached on Twitter @RealOBF

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Rays’ Archer Breaks Single-Season Franchise Strikeouts Record

Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Chris Archer broke his franchise’s single-season strikeouts record during the third inning of Wednesday’s 3-1 loss to the New York Yankees, fanning Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner for his 240th punchout of the season, per Sportsnet Stats.

Archer entered the game with 236 strikeouts, needing just four to break Scott Kazmir’s prior franchise record of 239.

Though his record dropped to 12-12 in the losing effort, Archer did mange to strike out seven batters over six innings, giving up just two runs on four hits and four walks.

His breakout season hasn’t quite been enough to keep the Rays in the playoff picture, but Archer does have a fringe case for the American League Cy Young Award, ranking fifth among the league’s qualified starters in ERA (2.95), fourth in WHIP (1.07), fourth in innings (198.1) and second in strikeouts (243).

Per Fangraphs’ measurement of the statistic, Archer ranks fourth among American League starters with 5.5 Wins Above Replacement (WAR), trailing only Chicago White Sox pitcher Chris Sale (6.0 WAR), Toronto Blue Jays pitcher David Price (6.0 WAR) and Houston Astros pitcher Dallas Keuchel (5.5 WAR).

With pitchers on successful teams typically getting a boost in the voting, Keuchel and Price appear to be the favorites, although Keuchel’s case took a big hit when he gave up nine runs to the Texas Rangers in Wednesday’s 14-3 loss.

Archer could perhaps push his name back into the conversation, but he’d likely need to dominate in his final three starts, with Keuchel and Price (and maybe even Sale) falling apart over the same stretch.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Blue Jays Must Get It Right in Fixing MLB’s Most Hated Turf

The day before Troy Tulowitzki got hurt on the very real grass at Yankee Stadium, he said he hadn’t noticed any problem yet with the fake stuff at Toronto’s Rogers Centre.

“Obviously, the turf is slow,” he said. “But playing on it doesn’t seem bad.”

Playing on it this season has been bad enough and controversial enough that the Blue Jays are exploring other options for next year and into the future. They’ve strongly considered switching to a dirt infield for 2016 (similar to Tropicana Field), and they have hopes of going all-natural (grass and dirt) by 2018.

Stephen Brooks, the Jays’ senior vice president of business operations, told John Lott of the National Post the team is “currently evaluating the logistics and costs” of making the switch, which was made possible by the CFL’s Toronto Argonauts moving to BMO Field but is made more complicated by the concrete under the current AstroTurf.

I don’t know about logistics, but the biggest cost I can think of is the cost of getting it wrong.

The turf didn’t cause Tulowitzki’s latest injury, the cracked left shoulder blade that has him on the shelf for what will likely be the rest of the regular season. He was hurt on the very real grass at Yankee Stadium in a collision with center fielder Kevin Pillar that could have happened anywhere.

But in Tulowitzki and Josh Donaldson, the Jays have the most valuable left side of the infield in baseball. Tulowitzki is signed through 2020. Donaldson is under control through 2018.

Quite obviously, they need to keep these guys as healthy as possible. But how do they do it?

Interviews with players and coaches on four of the five American League East teams revealed a general dissatisfaction with the current playing surface in Toronto but no consensus about whether moving to a dirt infield would help.

Blue Jays infielder Ryan Goins said even a move to grass wouldn’t necessarily solve all of the issues.

“The grass might be on concrete,” he said. “The grass isn’t always greener on the other side.”

That said, players generally favor real grass, and most see the Tropicana dirt-infield compromise as no improvement at all on the current all-turf (with cutouts for the bases) setup in Toronto.

“I’m still as sore after a three-game series in Tampa as I am in Toronto,” Orioles shortstop J.J. Hardy said. “It’s like concrete.”

It is concrete, with six inches of soil on top of it, Rays third baseman Evan Longoria said.

“You don’t really get used to it,” said Longoria, who has played all 545 of his major league home games at Tropicana Field. “I feel a difference when we play on the road for a while. I think grass makes a significant difference. I know it feels different and plays different.”

Many of the concerns about the Toronto turf, which is new this year, have centered more around how it plays than how it feels. As Tulowitzki said, the turf is extremely slow, making it very difficult to hit a ground ball through the infield. It’s also inconsistent, subject to odd bounces that some contend have given the Blue Jays an unfair home-field advantage.

The problems were most pronounced early in the season, and when Orioles infielder Jimmy Paredes was hit in the face by a bad-hop grounder, the O’s contacted Major League Baseball and even considered boycotting a game, according to Eduardo A. Encina of the Baltimore Sun.

The Blue Jays said shortly after the field would improve as it settled with time, and some players agree it has. Orioles manager Buck Showalter, though, said he didn’t like the field any more on his third visit than he did the first time he was there.

Showalter, who managed in a retractable-roof stadium in Arizona, is skeptical the Blue Jays will be able to maintain a quality grass field under the retractable roof at the Rogers Centre even if they’re able to install one. Other retractable-roof parks now have grass fields (including Houston, Seattle and Milwaukee), but the roof structures can keep parts of the field from ever getting enough sunlight.

At Tropicana Field, where the roof is not retractable, even the dirt doesn’t feel natural. The concrete under it is one problem, but the Rays say the air-conditioning system also keeps the dirt too dry and too hard.

According to the National Post, the Jays have commissioned the University of Guelph to work on finding an array of grass species that can thrive in the conditions that exist at the Rogers Centre. Even under the best case, though, a grass field is still three years down the road.

“Whatever they decide is fine,” Tulowitzki said.

Tulowitzki has only played 23 games at the Rogers Centre so far this season and only 26 games on turf in his entire career. Whatever injury problems he has had—he hasn’t played 150 games in a season since 2009—came when he played on grass.

When they traded for him, the Blue Jays said the health history wasn’t an issue. They weren’t worried about moving him to turf.

“That wasn’t a big part [of the debate],” general manager Alex Anthopoulos said.

Tulowitzki’s future health should be part of the debate now. Donaldson’s, too.

The Blue Jays have a good thing going and should have a good thing going forward.

They need to do whatever possible to keep these guys happy and healthy. The cost of getting it wrong is far too high.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes were obtained firsthand.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Dream and Nightmare Postseason Matchups for the New York Yankees

With the New York Yankees attempting to make their way into the postseason, everyone is wondering who would be the best and worst matchups for the team. 

Where do the Yankees stand against the New York Mets? Who do the Yankees stand a solid chance against?

Find out in the above video as Adam Lefkoe and Bleacher Report MLB Analyst Scott Miller break down the best and worst possible matches for the Yankees. 

All Stats Accurate for Games Played Through 9/14

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Alex Rodriguez Injury: Updates on Yankees Star’s Knee and Return

New York Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez has been diagnosed with a bone bruise in his left knee after undergoing an MRI on Tuesday.

Continue for updates.


A-Rod Has Bone Bruise, Still Playing

Tuesday, Sept. 15 

Rodriguez, 40, suffered the injury in Sunday’s 5-0 win over the Toronto Blue Jays, per George A. King III of the New York Post. He was in the lineup again Monday after the team traveled to Tampa Bay, knocking in a game-tying RBI as the Yankees pulled off a ninth-inning comeback against the Rays. New York listed him as the designated hitter for Tuesday night.  

While still one of the most controversial players in the sport, Rodriguez has been a revelation for the Yankees in 2015. He’s hitting .257/.359/.501 with 31 home runs and 82 RBI heading into Tuesday night—both numbers at or near the team lead. The former All-Star has also kept a low-profile demeanor for most of the season, something he and the Yankees needed after a whirlwind 2014. 

The former MVP missed the entire 2014 regular season because of a performance-enhancing drug suspension. He was limited to just 44 games in the two seasons prior to 2015 because of the suspension and a degenerative hip condition.

Once viewed among the best players in baseball history, Rodriguez’s injury issues and actions off the field had turned him into a pariah throughout the sport—even in his own clubhouse. 

Now, the Yankees clubhouse likely realizes how much it needs him. With Mark Teixeira out for the remainder of the season, Rodriguez is arguably New York’s most dangerous hitter. If you told fans that at the beginning of the season, they’d most likely be envisioning a doomsday scenario. 

With A-Rod at the center of a team in contention for a division crown, however, their fingers are crossed that this injury doesn’t linger.   

 

Follow Tyler Conway (@tylerconway22) on Twitter.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Copyright © 1996-2010 Kuzul. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress