Tag: Game Recap

Boston Red Sox vs. Tampa Bay Rays Live Blog: Instant Reactions and Analysis

The Boston Red Sox struck first in the afternoon half of their doubleheader against the Tampa Bay Rays at Fenway Park. 

Rain delayed the game nearly three hours in the bottom of the fifth inning, which ended the starters’ outings earlier than planned. 

Boston’s Alfredo Aceves went five innings, allowing only three hits and one run.

Chris Archer threw 4.2 innings for the Rays, surrendering five hits, walking five batters and giving up four runs in the process. 

The Red Sox led 4-1 at the time of the delay and added an insurance run in the sixth inning when Shane Victorino tripled to to right field. 

With the 5-1 win, Boston improved to an AL East-best 43-29. The Rays fell to 36-34 and six games behind Boston.

Tampa Bay has now dropped five of its last six games. 

The first game of the doubleheader marked the MLB debut of Wil Myers, one of Tampa Bay’s top prospects. Myers was hitless in four at-bats with one strikeout at Fenway Park.

The nightcap of this AL East doubleheader is important for both teams since the top four teams in the division are so close to each other in the standings.

Felix Doubront (4-3, 4.91 ERA) will start for Boston and Jake Odorizzi (0-0, 8.03 ERA) will take the mound for the Rays. 

Doubront pitched five innings and ultimately earned a no-decision as the Red Sox won in Tampa Bay on May 16. He is 2-1 in his career against Tampa Bay with a 3.91 ERA.

Boston has lost five of the last eight games in which the Venezuelan lefty has started. 

Odorizzi is in his first season with the Rays, and he will make his fifth career start tonight. The 23-year-old native of Breese, Ill. has allowed 17 hits and 11 earned runs in 12.1 innings this season. Tonight will be his first appearance against the Boston Red Sox and only his third time pitching on the road.

The first pitch for Game 2 is scheduled for 8:05 p.m. ET.

Stay tuned with Bleacher Report for live reactions, updates and analysis.

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Twitter Reacts to Pirates Prospect Gerrit Cole’s Spectacular MLB Debut

Gerrit Cole showed the MLB why the Pittsburgh Pirates drafted him No. 1 overall in the 2011 MLB Draft, dominating the San Francisco Giants for 6.1 innings on Tuesday night.

Apart from throwing 99 mph multiple times, striking out his first batter, hitting a two-run single and recording 13 consecutive outs from the second inning through the sixth, Cole energize the Pirates fanbase, and we saw it all come out on Twitter.

Cole’s highly anticipated debut couldn’t have come against a better opponent. Not only was he at home, but he was facing the defending World Series champs and their former Cy Young winner, Tim Lincecum.

 

 

You’d expect the kid to be nervous with so much pressure on him, but he came right at Gregor Blanco to start the game, striking him out on three pitches.

 

 

Funny enough, it wasn’t Cole’s arm that really got fans excited right away. Obviously the kid’s stuff is unreal, but he really got the crowd going when he hit this two-run single to drive in the first two runs of the game.

 

 

 

 

It’s rare to see a player strike out his first batter and hit a two-run single in his first at bat, but those became two of many headlines throughout the night as Cole began to settle in.

As he worked his way back to the top of the Giants’ order Blanco was up again.

 

 

I doubt he saw any of the pitches. I mean, c’mon. Would you have seen this 99 mph fastball for the K?

At any rate he ended up getting out again.

Cole really got into a groove in the middle innings, and everyone took notice.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cole was impressive and notched his first big league win on the start.

 

 

 

 

However, Twitter was far from done with him, as he had his first press conference, and this kid is a clown.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Pirates have found themselves and ace for the future, and the fans sure took notice of him on Tuesday night, practically naming him mayor of Pittsburgh.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cole gave the fans what they wanted, and now we’ll have to wait five days before we see if he can do it again.

 

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Report Card Grades for Gerrit Cole’s Much-Anticipated MLB Debut

Gerrit Cole made his highly anticipated MLB debut for the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday as he shut down the San Francisco Giants for 6.1 innings.

The No. 1 pick from the 2011 MLB Draft, Cole needed just about two years to go from draft pick and top prospect to a successful MLB pitcher.

Cole was dominant on Tuesday, recording 13 straight outs from the second inning through the sixth en route to his first Major League win.  The Pirates beat the defending World Series champion Giants, 8-2, with Cole picking up his first major league victory.

Let’s take a look at how the flame-throwing 22-year-old fared in his MLB debut.

 

Command: A

While the pressure gets to some rookies during their MLB debut and they have trouble hitting the strike zone, Cole was painting the corners all night.

He wasn’t afraid to come right at a powerful Giants lineup, and because of it he threw strike after strike after strike.

 

 

 

 

It’s hard to take away anything from Cole’s command as he was spectacular until the seventh inning.

Overall, Cole threw 59 of his 81 pitches for strikes.

 

Velocity: A+

We knew that Cole threw hard entering Tuesday night, but few people appreciated just how hard he could actually throw.

Cole completely overpowered batters, blowing them away with his stuff and hitting 99 MPH at his peak.

 

 

Cole struck out his very first batter, and we can see how he came right at Gregor Blanco and surprised him with a 99 MPH heater.

I feel bad for Russell Martin having to catch those fastballs all night.

 

Movement: B+

Cole isn’t exactly known for his movement, but it was solid when he needed it, and the Giants simply couldn’t hit his offspeed stuff either.

 

 

While he wasn’t making batters look off-balance all night, he certainly knew how to use his solid curve.

 

High-Level Situations: B+

Few rookies can stand the pressure from just pitching in the big leagues during their first start, but Cole overcame that and the extra pressure that came from allowing baserunners as well.

Cole had a rocky start in his first two innings, giving up two hits in each of the first two innings and hitting a batter in the second as well. However, he found ways to work out of his early jams.

While he was charged with two earned runs from his pitching in the seventh, Cole was calm, cool and collected throughout the game, looking like he’d been there before.

 

 

 

Batting: A

Most of the time it’s unfair to judge a pitcher based on their hitting.

Gerrit Cole isn’t most pitchers.

In his very first Major League at bat, Cole came up with the bases loaded and two outs, and Tim Lincecum looked like he would put away the rookie to get out of the jam. However, Cole had other ideas.

Lining a deep single, Cole drove in two runs on his first base hit in his first at bat.

 

 

His other at-bats were less exciting, but the fans loved Cole’s liner in his third at bat.

 

 

Some fans even joked about him moving up in the order.

 

 

 

Overall: A

Pirates fans couldn’t have asked for more from their rookie pitcher. He looked like an ace on the mound, and sometimes it was hard to figure out if he was a veteran or a newbie.

 

 

His stat line of 2 earned runs, seven hits, a hit batter and two strikeouts in 6.1 innings pitched might not be all that impressive because it was marred by his performance in the seventh, but he was dominant throughout and showed a great deal of promise.

We can expect big things from this kid in the future.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


2013 MLB Draft Results: Team-by-Team Selections and Grades

Now that the 2013 MLB draft is in the books, we can finally figure out which teams made the most improvements to their organization in the long haul, and which teams failed to do so. 

While the biggest picks came off the board on Thursday, the 40-round spectacle carried on until late Saturday when the 40th and final round was completed. 

It takes a ton of research and knowledge to properly execute such a long draft, and some general managers deserve credit for adding the proper pieces and making the right selections in an action-packed draft. 

Players drafted this weekend have no guarantee of making it to the MLB level, as they’ll have to work their way up their respective farm systems before the possibility of being called up to the majors. According to Matt Eddy of Baseball America, less than 40 percent of the top 100 picks make it to the big leagues. 

That only complicates the draft process for front-office decision-makers who are faced with 40 long rounds of picks, most of which won’t even make it in the major league clubhouse. 

This makes the draft even more crucial, as it can either be a big-time boost for your organization’s future or a big swing-and-miss. And while it’s too early to tell as of now, there’s still enough to judge from to get a solid grasp of how each team did. 

Let’s take a look at grades for each team’s decisions in the 2013 MLB draft. 

Team Best Pick Worst Pick Grade
Houston Astros Mark Appel (P, Stanford) James Ramsay (OF, USF) A-
Chicago Cubs Kris Bryant (3B, San Diego)  Charcer Burks (OF, HS) B
Colorado Rockies Jonathan Gray (P, Oklahoma) Konner Wade (P, Arizona) A-
Minnesota Twins Stuart Turner (C, Ole Miss) Aaron Slegers (P, Indiana) B-
Cleveland Indians Clint Frazier (OF, HS) Kyle Crockett (P, Virginia) C+
Miami Marlins Colin Moran (3B, North Carolina) Ben Deluzio (SS, HS) B+
Boston Red Sox Jon Denney (C, HS) Mike Adams (P, Univ. of Tampa) A-
Kansas City Royals Sean Manaea (P, Indiana State) Hunter Dozier (SS, Stephen F. Austin) B
Pittsburgh Pirates Austin Meadows (OF, HS) Cody Dickson (P, Sam Houston State) B+
Toronto Blue Jays Clinton Hollon (P, HS) Patrick Murphy (P, HS) C+
New York Mets Dominic Smith (1B, HS) Jared King (OF, Kansas State) B+
Seattle Mariners D.J. Peterson (3B, New Mexico) Ryan Horstman (P, St. John’s) B
San Diego Padres Hunter Renfroe (OF, Miss. State) Jake Bauers (1B, HS) B
Arizona Diamondbacks Braden Shipley (P, Nevada) Justin Williams (OF, HS) C+
Philadelphia Phillies Andrew Knapp (C, California) Trey Williams (3B College of Canyons) B
Chicago White Sox Tim Anderson (SS, East Central CC) Thaddius Lowry (P, HS) B+
Los Angeles Dodgers Tom Windle (P, Minnesota) Jacob Rhame (P, Grayson County College) B
St. Louis Cardinals Marco Gonzales (P, Gonzaga) Mike Mayers (P, Mississippi) B+
Detroit Tigers Jonathon Crawford (P, Florida) Kevin Ziomek (P, Vanderbilt) C+
Baltimore Orioles Hunter Harvey (P, HS) Jonah Heim (C, HS) B+
Oakland Athletics Dillon Overton (P, Oklahoma) Dylan Covey (P, San Diego) B
San Francisco Giants Brian Ragira (1B, Stanford) Christian Arroyo (SS, HS) C
New York Yankees Aaron Judge (OF, Fresno State) Michael O’Neill (OF, Michigan) A-
Cincinnati Reds Phillip Ervin (OF, Samford) Ben Lively (P, Central Florida) B
Tampa Bay Rays Ryne Stanek (P, Arkansas) Kean Wong (2B, HS)  A
Texas Rangers Alex Gonzalez (P, Oral Roberts) Akeem Bostick (P, HS)

B-

Atlanta Braves Jason Hursh (P, Oklahoma State)  Tanner Murphy (C, HS) B-
Milwaukee Brewers Devin Williams (P, HS) Taylor Williams (P, Kent State) A-
Los Angeles Angels Kenyan Middleton (P, Pierce College) Hunter Green (P, HS) C+
Washington Nationals Jake Johansen (P, Dallas Baptist) Drew Ward (3B, HS) C+

For any individual team’s picks, click on the respective team’s grade or check out MLB.com.

 

Notable Draft Performances

Boston Red Sox: A-

While the Red Sox might be overachieving and contending in 2013, they made it clear in the draft that they’re looking forward.

With seven of their first 10 picks being pitchers, the Sox are making sure they boost the potential in their farm system, and it all begins with Trey Ball, a high school left-hander who was picked seventh overall. 

Ball will be a long-term project for Boston, but if low signability doesn’t cause any problems, he’ll become a fine prospect in the organization and one who will reach the majors in just a few seasons.

It continued its successful draft in Day 2 with the selection of Jon Denney. This catcher is also straight out of high school, but is arguably the best high school slugger in the class with the type of potential that will immediately respond to a MLB structure.

The Sox answered many questions about their future roster in this draft and made some safe selections with high-potential stars. 

 

Miami Marlins: B+

Sitting at pick No. 6 in the first round on Thursday, it was no guarantee that the Marlins could make a safe pick that would pay off sooner rather than later. But they still managed to.

Luckily for Miami, North Carolina third baseman Colin Moran fell in its lap. Quite possibly the most polished hitter in the class, Moran comes in with a heap of experience in playing with the Tar Heels. He’s had one of the hottest bats in college baseball over the last two years and is just about as safe as you can get.

This pick works perfectly for the poor-hitting Marlins, too. Ever since its overhaul, Miami has been hapless offensively with a constant battle to score runs, and the acquisition of Moran will allow for it to get some quick help in that department.

The Marlins had two other picks in the first 44 of the draft, and they added two pitching prospects in the process. It has a bit to do with their talent right now, but it looks like the 2013 draft will pay off for the Marlins quicker than it will for most teams. 

 

San Francisco Giants: C

In a first round that wasn’t filled with too many surprise picks, the Giants made perhaps the most head-scratching move in selecting high school shortstop Christian Arroyo. 

Arroyo was picked 25th overall and wasn’t even in MLB.com‘s rankings, which says all you need to know about how much of a shocker this pick was. 

With only one more pick in the top 100, it was tough for the defending World Series champions to make up for a dud of a first-round pick. 

The MLB is unpredictable, thus Arroyo could turn out to be a great prospect and develop into a solid major league player. But the Giants could’ve received much better value if they had looked at some of the pitchers available here. 

 

Los Angeles Angels: C+

It hasn’t been a season to remember for the star-studded Angels thus far in 2013, which is all the more reason to regain some fan hype with a solid draft. If the current players aren’t getting it done, the first thing fans look to is their prospect base. 

Instead, they went with high school pitcher Hunter Green with the 59th pick to kick things off poorly. Green’s signability is a concern, and although he has loads of potential, it’s hard to see that far down the road for a player who may not even sign.

Green isn’t a bad pick in the second round by any means. It’s more of the fact that their best pick to work with was No. 59. The commitment to the draft and filling their prospect base isn’t there, so why should we think Green will succeed?

The Angels must put a bigger focus on the draft in future years and add to their farm system, or they’ll be in short supply after players like Albert Pujols leave L.A. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Atlanta Braves: Grand Slam by Justin Upton Powers Victory over Dodgers

After a brutal 10-game road trip that saw the Atlanta Braves go 4-6 against the Cincinnati Reds, San Francisco Giants and Arizona Diamondbacks, they returned home to Turner Field and finally got back on track with an 8-5 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers.

The main talking point going into Friday night was the return of Jason Heyward, but by the time Craig Kimbrel closed the game out in the top of the ninth inning with his 12th save of the season, all everyone wanted to talk about was the grand slam delivered by Justin Upton in the bottom of the sixth inning. 

Upton’s 14th home run of the season came at a crucial point in the game, as the Braves were down by two runs and starting pitcher Paul Maholm was reaching the end of his start after throwing 95 pitches. 

After Upton’s shot to left field scored Jordan Schafer, Andrelton Simmons and Heyward, the Braves bullpen got down to business. 

The trio of Luis Avilan, Eric O’Flaherty and Kimbrel conceded just two hits, one of which was a home run by Scott Van Slyke in the eighth off of O’Flaherty, as they preserved Maholm’s fifth win of the season. 

The performance of Avilan was the most important to Braves fans, especially after the news of Jonny Venters’ second Tommy John surgery (via Atlanta Journal-Constitution) was delivered yesterday. Avilan will be one of the many Braves relievers who will be asked to fill in for Venters and bridge the gap to O’Flaherty and Kimbrel for the rest of the season. 

As for how the returning Heyward performed in first game back, the right fielder went 2-for-4 at the plate, and he delivered an important insurance run in the seventh inning as he brought home Simmons on a RBI single. 

With Heyward’s activation from the disabled list on Friday, manager Fredi Gonzalez was forced to make a roster move, and he did so by placing right-hander Jordan Walden on the disabled list (via ESPN.com).

By placing Walden on the DL, Gonzalez has given himself more time to demote or release a position player, which should come before the Braves hit the road in a week’s time to play the New York Mets and Toronto Blue Jays

On Saturday, Mike Minor will take the mound for the Braves against Matt Magill of the Dodgers in the second game of a three-game set in Atlanta. 

Follow me on Twitter, @JTansey90. 

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San Francisco Giants: Lessons Learned from Their Series vs. Toronto Blue Jays

The 2002 World Series Loss Still Stings

Winning World Series titles in 2010 and 2012 should have pushed any lingering pain of the San Francisco Giants 2002 World Series loss far into the stratosphere—especially since I was among the million at the purely joyous 2010 parade.

Laying eyes upon a villain from that 2002 series, however, proved I’m not fully healed—at all. Most of those Los Angeles Angels are long retired. As the saying goes, out of sight, out of mind.

The pain quickly flooded back Wednesday when the CSN camera locked on Toronto‘s starter—Ramon Ortiz, 40 years young, back in MLB after a two-year absence. He was the winning pitcher in Game 3 of that World Series (thanks to run support, it should be noted).

Just seeing his face brought it all back. Some folks lead very successful adult lives and still withdraw upon spotting an old high school bully at a reunion. This wasn’t much different.

To have the title all but ripped out of the Giants’ grasp that fall devastated me like the death of a loved one; I then knew how it felt to be a 1997 Cleveland Indians or a 1986 Boston Red Sox fan. 2011 Texas Rangers fans: I feel your pain and just know that it may never completely subside. Mine hasn’t.

 

Toronto’s “New” Uniforms Make Me Feel Younger

Over the years, I’ve watched countless players enter the major leagues, enjoy 15-year careers, retire and become coaches/managers. They are living reminders of just how much older I’ve become. I was 10 when I first discovered MLB—23 years ago. There are players today who didn’t exist when I caught my first ballgame. 

So, despite being one of about six people who actually liked the 2004-11 Blue Jays “steel” logo, I’ve enjoyed their conversion to a look reminiscent of the one used during my fledgling years as a hardball fan.

The Jays were the truth in the early ’90s; watching them in their old/new uniforms allows me to pretend it’s 1992 and my biggest problem is memorizing my class schedule rather than paying rent, repairing a shattered taillight and finding a competent preschool for my kid.

 

Damon Minor is One Scary-Looking Dude

The Giants television broadcasts occasionally jump into the wayback machine and come out with classic Giants (or Giants-related) highlights (such as then-Diamondback Randy Johnson accidentally donning a discarded Giants cap during a 1999 brawl in an eerie bit of foreshadowing or Dave Winfield charging the mound after being plunked by Mike Krukow in 1980).

Tuesday’s flashback: a four-hit game by the otherwise-forgettable Damon Minor the last time SF played in Toronto, back in 2002. I never realized just how much fright his face could generate when in mid-swing (answer: very). Now I must be extra-cautious when watching Orioles games; his twin bro Ryan was the starter at third when Cal Ripken Jr. ended The Streak.

 

I Will Probably Never Forgive the “Unnamed Left Fielder”

I’m skeptical and pessimistic by nature, and I never participate in fads—especially related to athletics. Slumps occur, bottoms fall out, players come back down to earth.

Wearing Panda hats and long, stringy wigs is all well and good when Pablo Sandoval and Tim Lincecum are succeeding. That’s how it goes in sports. You’re the man when you’re producing; you’re a bum when you’re not (see: Huff Daddy).

This brings me to the “Unnamed Left Fielder,” who got the entire fanbase behind him on the strength of a scorching-hot offensive performance (and some saucy defense as well). He had hundreds of fans donning idiotic dairy costumes in tribute. He was “The Man.”

Only, he really wasn’t. He was juicing the whole time. He was a fraud. At the time of his suspension, the Giants’ season seemed to be wrecked. He, not Buster Posey, had been their best hitter to that point. He’d been the league’s best hitter to that point. He got everybody to believe in him and depend on him, and then he got busted.

I know in the end, everything worked out, so logically I should be past what happened. But a re-marriage to a wonderful person doesn’t magically erase the bitterness and pain of an ugly divorce.

As you can see, I still won’t say or type his name or his ridiculous, unimaginative nickname of ’12. It’s my right as a fan and as a person to hold grudges—and it sure didn’t help that the ULF abused the Giants’ pitching staff during the Giants/Jays series.

(Note: Don’t question why I hold a grudge against the ULF and not Barry Bonds, Marvin Benard, Benny Santiago, Willie Mota or any other Giants PED noteworthies. I just do, okay? I still dislike the NBA’s Amar’e Stoudemire for showing up Golden State’s Adonal Foyle after a dunk seven years ago—even after since learning he’s not that bad a guy.)

 

AstroTurf Just Isn’t Baseball And Sloppiness is Contagious

Though I’m sure Angel Pagan didn’t mind, a standard major league base hit should not bounce over an outfielder’s head unless the outfielder is on his back napping or the outfielder in question is Emmanuel Lewis. (Google him; I’m not here to talk about the past).

But that’s exactly what happened in the third inning of the second game; Pagan’s single bounced off the Toronto turf over the ULF’s head and graduated to a double. Fortunately, there are only two of these wretched surfaces remaining in the bigs (as opposed to the 11 in use when I began following MLB in 1990.)

The following Giants made defensive mistakes during their 18 innings in Canada: Pablo Sandoval, Nick Noonan, Hunter Pence, Angel Pagan, Angel Pagan, Marco Scutaro. (Furthermore, Scutaro and Brandon Belt allowed solidly struck balls to skip under them on the turf; these plays were ruled hits but may have been outs on a dirt infield.) They can’t all be blamed on the surface, but it didn’t help.

Giants Fans Should Emulate Jays Fans

Well, at least one of them.

One of the most annoying aspects of the AT&T Park experience (and most—if not all—other parks) are the fans who turn catching a foul ball into a Showcase Showdown triumph. They scream, hop up, throw their hands in the air as if at gunpoint and rotate around the park to ensure everyone in the park knows they did something any Little Leaguer can do—catch a baseball.

It’s pathetic at times. Such reactions are acceptable if the fan has caught the pennant-clinching home run ball or even made a difficult catch on a hard-hit foul. But our fans will ham it up on anything—even a popup that bounced off three pairs of kids’ hands first. The older the fan, the more drawn-out the celebration seems to be—sometimes lasting the remainder of the at-bat.

And of course, their “achievement” is instantly forgotten when the next guy snags one a couple of minutes later and repeats the cycle.

But I must give props to a Jays fan who calmly caught a bat flung from the hands of Pence in the sixth inning of Tuesday’s game. He snared it, grinned—and returned to his seat, as if he’d done it dozens of times before. To all AT&T Park visitors (and any of the other 29 parks) from now through eternity, please borrow a page from that guy’s book. Catch the ball and move on.

And of course, Go Giants.

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Chicago Cubs vs. St. Louis Cardinals: Live Updates, Commentary, and Analysis

 

 

SCORE UPDATE:  2-1 Cubs Win!!

                           Two-run blast by Nate Schierholtz – 4th inning

                           Solo shot by Allen Craig – 2nd inning

 

That’s a wrap, folks.  Thanks for joining me in my first foray into B\R live blogging.  Hope I get to do this again sometime soon.

Go, Cubs, Go!

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Cincinnati Reds vs. St Louis Cardinals: Live Score, Analysis of Rivalry Battle

Baseball’s best rivalry will be on display Tuesday night when the Cincinnati Reds take on the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium. 

The season series is tied 2-2, and the winner of this game could move ahead of the Pittsburgh Pirates atop the NL Central. The Reds have won back-to-back games on the road for the first time all season, but the Cardinals have dropped their past three home games.

Right-hander Bronson Arroyo (2-2, 4.24 ERA) will get the ball for the Reds, and southpaw Jaime Garcia (2-1, 2.89 ERA) will toe the rubber for the Cardinals.

Tune in to MLB Network or Fox Sports to catch it live, and be sure to stick around for updates.

Final: St. Louis 2 – Cincinnati 1 

Winning pitcher: Jaime Garcia (3-1)

Losing pitcher: Bronson Arroyo (2-3)

Save: Edward Mujica (5)

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New York Mets vs. Philadelphia Phillies: Live Scores, Analysis of NL East Battle

Final Score: Phillies 9

                         Mets 4

 

WP: Jonathan Pettibone (1-0)

LP: Shaun Marcum (0-1)

 

The Phillies and Mets will conclude their series tomorrow at 1:10 p.m. ET.  The Phillies will be sending out Cole Hamels, who is winless this season despite pitching eight innings and giving up just two earned runs in his last start.  For the Mets, Jonathon Niese will take the mound and try and help the team avoid a sweep, after leaving his last start after taking a ball off his leg in the third inning.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Atlanta Braves vs. Washington Nationals: Live Score, Analysis of NL East Battle

Join in at 1 p.m. ET for coverage of the NL East battle between the Atlanta Braves and Washington Nationals. The two teams are coming off an excellent early-season fight last night in which the Braves came back late to pull out a 6-4 victory in 10 innings in their first meeting of the season, and now we get to watch aces Tim Hudson (1-0, 3.27 ERA) and Stephen Strasburg (1-1, 4.38) square off.

Can Hudson and the 9-1 Braves do it again? Can Strasburg turn things around for the 7-3 Nationals coming off a bad start last weekend? Check in right here for live analysis.

Braves 3, Nationals 1- FINAL

W-Tim Hudson(2-0)

L-Stephen Strasburg(1-2)

S-Craig Kimbrel(6)

 

HR: Evan Gattis(4), Danny Espinosa(1)

Lineups

Atlanta

Name Average HR RBI Today
BJ Upton, CF .091 1 2  1-5, K
Jason Heyward, RF .097 1 2  0-4, RBI, HBP
Justin Upton, LF .385 6 10  0-4, Reached on E, 2 SB, R, K, BB
Evan Gattis, C .333 3 6  1-3, HR, 2 RBI, K, BB
Dan Uggla, 2B .182 2 3  1-4, 2 K
Juan Francisco, 3B .310 1 5  0-4, 2 K
Chris Johnson, 1B .357 1 2  1-4, R, K
Ramiro Pena, SS .357 1 6  2-3, BB
Tim Hudson, P .250 0 1  7.0 IP, 1 R, 4 H, 0 BB, 3 K, and 2-3 at plate

 

Washington

Name Average HR RBI Today
Denard Span, CF .333 0 3  1-4, K
Jayson Werth, RF .286 3 8  1-4, K
Bryce Harper, LF .400 5 10  0-3, K
Ryan Zimmerman, 3B .235 0 7 1-3
Adam LaRoche, 1B .185 2 4  0-3
Ian Desmond, SS .316 2 3  0-3
Danny Espinosa, 2B .162 0 2  1-3, HR, RBI
Wilson Ramos, C .353 2 3  0-3
Stephen Strasburg, P .000 0 0  6.0 IP, 2 R, 0 ER, 5 H, 1 BB, 7 K, 0-1 at plate

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