Tag: NL East

Steven Matz Injury: Updates on Mets Pitcher’s Elbow and Return

New York Mets pitcher Steven Matz is dealing with a bone spur in his left elbow that has delayed his next start but could eventually require surgery that would put him on the shelf for a considerable time.

Continue for updates.


Matz Has Start Pushed Back, Will Eventually Need Surgery

Tuesday, June 28

Anthony DiComo of MLB.com passed along word that Matz will now pitch Thursday against the Chicago Cubs instead of his slated start on Wednesday against the Washington Nationals.

However, DiComo added the Mets believe Matz’s bone spur will need surgery and the team is hoping that procedure can be done after the season.

On Monday, ESPN.com’s Adam Rubin noted that Logan Verrett would take the hill in Matz’s place if he was unable to make the start.


Matz Comments on Injury

Monday, June 27

“I feel like it’s something that I can pitch through, so that is something I have been doing,” Matz told Mike Puma of the New York Post. “I definitely wasn’t finishing my pitches last time in that fifth inning. There were balls definitely up, but if that’s the reason I don’t know. I can’t say.”


Matz’s Bone Spur the Latest Ailment for Mets’ Rotation

Fox Sports 1’s C.J. Nitkowski explained the possible repercussions of pitching through a bone spur in the elbow:

Losing Matz for any significant amount of time would hurt the Mets. He is 7-3 on the year with a 3.29 ERA. However, New York may need to treat this problem before it gets worse. Matz hasn’t recorded a win in his last five starts, with four of those resulting in team losses.

The Mets have the second-best team ERA in the National League behind the Cubs. However, Noah Syndergaard is also dealing with a similar injury, per Kristie Ackert of the New York Daily News, so this issue could become even more harmful for the team moving forward.    

 

Statistics are courtesy of ESPN.com.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Lucas Giolito Called Up from Double-a by Nationals, Will Start vs. Mets

Washington Nationals manager Dusty Baker told reporters Monday that exciting prospect and right-handed pitcher Lucas Giolito would make his MLB debut Tuesday against the New York Mets.

On Tuesday, the Nationals made the call-up official, noting pitcher Rafael Martin was sent to Triple-A and that pitcher Taylor Jordan was released as part of the roster move.

According to MLB Pipeline, the 21-year-old Giolito is the top prospect in all of baseball. 

It will be a bittersweet moment for the Nationals, as the excitement of seeing their top prospect in action will be tempered somewhat by the fact they called him up because Stephen Strasburg went on the 15-day disabled list with an upper back strain. 

Any injury to Strasburg is a major concern, and for all of Giolito’s upside, he’s not equipped to replace one of the top pitchers in baseball. While the Nationals will hope that isn’t necessary and Strasburg will return to action shortly, the opportunity to see Giolito in action will nonetheless be intriguing.

Giolito has had some struggles in 2016, with Roman Stubbs of the Washington Post reporting that the young pitcher “has struggled with command this season.”

But while he got knocked around in his last start for five earned runs in 4.2 innings pitched, prior to that he was excellent. As Pete Kerzel of MASNSports.com noted: “In a span of eight starts between May 9 and June 16, Giolito went 5-0 with a 0.94 ERA in 47.2 innings. He struck out 52 and walked 15.”

Indeed, it’s been an up-and-down year for Giolito. In 71 innings pitched and 14 starts this season, he has gone 5-3 with a 3.17 ERA, 1.423 WHIP and 72 strikeouts. While those aren’t elite numbers, Giolito has elite stuff, with an excellent fastball and curveball and a changeup that continues to improve.

Whether Giolito has consistent command of those pitches and the maturity needed to succeed at the MLB level remains in question. The talent is there. On Tuesday, many Nationals fans will get to see that talent on display for themselves. It’s an exciting moment for the organization, even if it’s one Washington probably would have preferred pushing farther into the future.

 

You can follow Timothy Rapp on Twitter.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Jeremy Guthrie to Marlins: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

The Miami Marlins have reportedly signed veteran pitcher Jeremy Guthrie, who will report to Triple-A before joining the major league club. 

Ken Rosenthal and Jon Morosi of Fox Sports reported the news.

Guthrie, 37, last pitched for the Kansas City Royals in 2015. He previously signed minor league contracts with the Texas Rangers in spring training and the San Diego Padres in April.

The Padres released Guthrie on June 3. He had compiled a 3-6 record with a 6.60 ERA and 1.57 WHIP in 11 starts in the Triple-A Pacific Coast League. Those numbers fell in line with his miserable 2015 in Kansas City, which saw him go 8-8 with a 5.95 ERA and 1.55 WHIP. The Royals sent him to the bullpen late in the season, and he did not pitch in their World Series run.

Guthrie had been an MLB regular for the last nine years, working as a starter with the Baltimore Orioles and Colorado Rockies in addition to Kansas City. He began his career with the Cleveland Indians. The righty has a career 91-108 record and said reaching 100 wins was a career goal.

“That would be a huge accomplishment for me to have been able to win 100 games in the major leagues,” he said in April, per Carter Williams of the Deseret News. “So it’s certainly something that pushes me, I think. It would be a huge motivating factor to get back up there and try to pitch well and help a team win nine more games like that.”

The likelihood of Guthrie making the major league roster depends on how he performs in the minors. Miami starters Wei-Yin Chen (4-2, 5.00 ERA) and Justin Nicolino (2-4, 5.17 ERA) have struggled for most of the season; although the Marlins sit ninth in ERA overall, Jose Fernandez (2.28 ERA) accounts for a lot of that.

Guthrie is unlikely to anchor the rotation with Fernandez, but he could be the difference of one or two wins on the back end if he can return to form. The Marlins (41-35) are third in the National League East and have a real chance at a postseason berth if they can shore up their shortcomings over the next month. Guthrie represents an end-of-the-rotation flier they hope can help on the cheap.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Jose Reyes-Mets Reunion Would Be Low-Risk Gamble on Past Glory

Back when Jose Reyes was an All-Star, the New York Mets didn’t even offer him a contract. Now that he’s absolutely not an All-Star, the Mets want him back.

UPDATE (2:45 PM ET, Saturday, June 25): the deal is now official, per Anthony DiComo of MLB.com—who has been on the story from the start:

/End of update

The crazy part about all that is the Mets were right then and they’re also right now.

They avoided disaster when they didn’t try to counter the six-year, $106 million contract offer Reyes eventually signed with the Miami Marlins back in December 2011. And Reyes might just help them avoid disaster by signing a no-risk deal with them Saturday, as multiple reports Friday night (including this one from Anthony DiComo of MLB.com) said he likely will.

Because the Colorado Rockies released Reyes in the fifth year of that six-year deal he signed with the Marlins, the Rox remain responsible for paying him the bulk of the $40-plus million he has coming. The Mets would pay just the prorated major league minimum, and they only pay that for as long as Reyes remains on their big league roster.

Given that someone has to take that roster spot for at least the big league minimum, Reyes costs the Mets nothing. Given the struggle the Mets have had finding major league-caliber players to fill out their bench, he doesn’t block anyone of importance, either.

He doesn’t keep them from signing Yulieski Gourriel, if the Mets can find a way to get the Cuban free agent. He doesn’t take at-bats away from Asdrubal Cabrera, except when he gives manager Terry Collins a chance to give his starting shortstop a needed break.

As Collins made clear to reporters, including Fred Kerber of the New York Post, the plan would be to play Reyes a little bit of everywherearound the infield and perhaps even in the outfield. The idea would be to find out if he can provide a boost to a Mets team that has little speed and has struggled to score runs with anything but home runs.

To find out if he can do that, the Mets would first send Reyes to the minor leagues. He hasn’t played anywhere but shortstop in more than a decade and has never played anywhere but middle infield as a professional. He’d need a few games to get ready.

With any other team in any other situation, Reyes might mope if presented with all that. The difference here is he never wanted to leave the Mets and always wanted to return. He never gave up his house on Long Island.

Besides, it’s not like other teams have been lining up to give him a chance. Between his greatly diminished abilities on the field and his problems off it, Reyes’ value dropped to near zero this season.

The Rockies didn’t want him when his domestic violence suspension ended on June 1. They obviously couldn’t find any team to take on even a small part of his salary in a trade, or they wouldn’t have released him.

Back when baseball announced Reyes’ suspension in the middle of May, I wrote about how little value he had and wondered if any team would take him. Back then, it didn’t seem the Mets would want or need him.

The domestic violence incident was part of it, to be sure, but only a part. Aroldis Chapman served a domestic violence suspension, too, and not only is he closing without controversy for the New York Yankees, but plenty of other teams want to trade for him in July or sign him as a free agent this winter as well.

As for Reyes, things have changed since last month, more for the Mets than for him. Reyes’ old buddy David Wright had neck surgery and may not play again this season. The Mets have fallen behind the Washington Nationals in the National League East, although a Mets win and a Nationals loss Friday cut the deficit to three games.

Already, the Mets have added James Loney (who had a big night in Friday’s win in Atlanta) and Kelly Johnson. Even with that, it was just five days ago that a frustrated Collins told reporters “we may shake some things up.”

Since then, the Mets have won three of four, but they’ve also watched their best hitter (Yoenis Cespedes) deal with a wrist problem and an ankle problem and their best pitcher (Noah Syndergaard) go off to get his elbow examined. Another rotation staple, Steven Matz, has admitted to elbow tightness after each of his last two starts.

All those guys mean more to the Mets’ chances of going back to the playoffs than Reyes does. But that doesn’t mean he can’t help.

I’m not sure he can. No one can be sure of that.

But now that he costs a lot closer to $100,000 than to $100 million, Reyes is worth a shot.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Giancarlo Stanton’s Awakening Could Be Major Boost for Upstart Marlins

The Miami Marlins have virtually the same winning percentage as the New York Mets. They’ve been flying, er, swimming under the radar, but they have some swagger going.

And now it looks like they may finally have their slugger going too.

Giancarlo Stanton, known to all as a very muscly man who mashes many homers, has spent most of the 2016 season in the kind of slump that could crush a less muscly man. It was only about a week ago that he was hitting just .193 through his first 55 games.

But now, things are looking up. Stanton found his bearings in a recent four-game set against the Colorado Rockies at Marlins Park, and he kept the good times rolling in a 4-2 win over the Chicago Cubs on Thursday. 

The Marlins’ right fielder began his day by clouting a mighty clout, his 14th, off lefty ace Jon Lester in the fourth inning, knotting the score at 1-1:

Later, in the eighth inning, Stanton finished his day by poking an RBI single to right field that gave the Marlins a 3-2 lead. They wouldn’t have won without him, which is basically saying the Marlins got a taste of the way things are supposed to be in Thursday’s game.

The way Stanton is going, there could be more of that on the way. He’s hit .400 with a couple of home runs over his last six games. That’s a small sample size, of course, but it’s a reminder this is the same guy who OPS’d .921 and averaged 32 homers a season over the previous five years.

By contrast, the Stanton the Marlins were seeing over the previous few weeks looked like a hitter who was completely lost. In addition to struggling to reach the Mendoza Line, he was striking out in 34.8 percent of his plate appearances. For a couple of weeks in May, he was mired in a 4-for-48 slump.

“I have to keep working at it,” Stanton told George Richards of the Miami Herald late last month. “I have to keep moving, progress. Don’t worry about the [numbers], worry about the work you’re doing and the process of that.”

One thing Stanton was powerless to control, though, was how he was being pitched. Dayn Perry of CBS Sports noticed the 26-year-old was seeing an unusually high number of sliders in 2016. As Brooks Baseball can show, his percentage of all breaking balls has shot up:

With this being the case, it’s hard to blame Stanton either for making contact on only a third of his swings at pitches outside the strike zone or, in a related story, his career-high 16.5 percent swinging-strike rate.

On the bright side, it never hurts to have one of the most dominant hitters of all time in your corner. And in this case, he was more than happy to help.

“He wanted to get out and work on some things, just tracking the ball and doing some little things,” Marlins hitting coach/legendary slugger of yore Barry Bonds said last month of his work with Stanton, per the Associated Press, via ESPN. “I just stepped in there to give him couple of breaks.”

It’s hard to tell if Stanton’s work with Bonds has resulted in any mechanical changes. But working on tracking the ball could translate into trying to see the ball longer. And the deeper a hitter lets the ball get into the hitting zone, the more likely he is to whack it to the opposite field.

Lo and behold, check out the righty swinger’s before and after usage of right field:

  • First 55 G: 17.8%
  • Next 5 G: 31.3%

In knocking both his home run and his go-ahead single to right field, Stanton continued this trend Thursday. This isn’t likely to be his M.O. the rest of the year, but it could be just what he needs to get comfortable again and ultimately find himself back atop baseball’s list of most feared sluggers.

For the Marlins, there’s no overstating how huge that would be.

They’re already good, as their 39-34 record puts them a mere percentage point behind the New York Mets (38-33) in the NL East standings. They are where they are partially because of a pitching staff that owns one of the 10 best ERAs in baseball, and partially because their collective .737 OPS arguably underrates their offense.

When the Marlins awoke Thursday morning, their cast of regulars included just two hitters who weren’t rating as above-average players in the eyes of adjusted OPS, where an even 100 denotes league average. Look toward the bottom here, and you’ll see one was Adeiny Hechavarria and the other was you-know-who:

It’s impressive that Stanton was rating as a league-average hitter despite all his struggles with consistency. Behold, the powerful effect that lots of power can have.

It’s even more impressive, however, that the Marlins pushed their record above .500 despite the fact the guy who should be their best hitter has been one of their worst. If they could get that far basically without him, the prospect of how far they might get with him is obviously enticing.

Because Stanton’s awakening has taken place over such a small sample size, there’s a limit to how much it can be trusted. Indeed, we’ve already had a similar discussion about Stanton this year. He fell into a slump soon after, which now feels strangely like a warning. 

But after all the Marlins have been through with Stanton this year, even subtle signs of progress are welcome. And in the last week or so, his signs haven’t been subtle.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

Follow zachrymer on Twitter 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Noah Syndergaard Injury: Updates on Mets Star’s Elbow and Return

New York Mets pitcher Noah Syndergaard suffered an elbow injury during his start Wednesday against the Kansas City Royals. He is expected to return on Monday against the Washington Nationals.

Continue for updates.


Syndergaard Comments on Injury

Friday, June 24

“It was just a little thing I was feeling that wasn’t allowing me to finish my pitches and compete to the fullest ability that I’m able to compete at,” Syndergaard said, per Adam Rubin of ESPN.com. “So I just told them that, hey, something is bothering me a little bit. The MRI turned out to be perfect, just a little something that flared up. I’ll be ready to go on Monday, though.”


Latest on Syndergaard’s Recovery

Thursday, June 23

Anthony DiComo of the league’s official site reported Syndergaard will make his next scheduled start Monday against the Washington Nationals.


Syndergaard MRI Shows No Damage

Wednesday, June 22

Rubin reported Syndergaard’s availability to start on Monday is unclear after his MRI came back clean, though he has been cleared to resume his normal routine.


Syndergaard Emerging as One of MLB‘s Best Pitchers

The 23-year-old emerged as an integral piece of the team’s vaunted rotation as a rookie, and he rounded out his first year in the majors with a 9-7 record, 3.24 ERA and 1.047 WHIP. He also tallied the only win among Mets pitchers during the team’s 2015 World Series clash with the Kansas City Royals. 

“At the end of the season, this guy was a bona fide major league pitcher who commanded respect from his teammates because of the way he worked, the way he went about things,” manager Terry Collins said, per the New York Post‘s Ken Davidoff. “And commanded respect from the other side of the field. So he made huge strides, and I think we’re going to see the results of it.”

Before Wednesday, Syndergaard had notched a 7-2 record to go with a 1.91 ERA and 0.965 WHIP. 

Any sort of extended absence from the ace won’t bode well for the Mets’ chances, but Collins’ club has enough depth to withstand a missed start or two.

With Matt Harvey, Jacob deGrom, Bartolo Colon and Steven Matz all integral pieces of New York’s rotation, the Mets can take solace in the fact a minor injury won’t squash their grand aspirations.

However, anything more would serve as a legitimate cause for concern. 

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless noted otherwise.   

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Yoenis Cespedes Injury: Updates on Mets Star’s Wrist and Return

New York Mets outfielder Yoenis Cespedes exited Wednesday’s game against the Kansas City Royals in the sixth inning with a wrist injury. However, he has been cleared to return.

Continue for updates.


Cespedes Active vs. Braves

Friday, June 24

The Mets announced that Cespedes will play against the Atlanta Braves on Friday.


Injury Rare for Durable Cespedes

Cespedes has proved fairly durable, playing more than 150 games in each of the last two seasons, but he dealt with hip soreness earlier in the year before this latest physical setback.

Prior to the injury, he had a .284 batting average with 18 home runs and 44 RBI in 2016.

When healthy, Cespedes anchors the New York lineup. He hit .291 with 35 homers and 105 RBI in 2015, which marked the second straight year he reached the 100-RBI plateau. The 2014 All-Star helped the Mets reach the World Series with his powerful bat but is also a solid fielder.

He won the 2015 Gold Glove and was responsible for 11 total defensive runs saved above average in the outfield that year, per FanGraphs.

While New York at least has options in the outfield behind Cespedes, the team is undoubtedly happy to have its slugger back in the lineup as it looks to chase down the Washington Nationals.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Bartolo Colon Injury: Updates on Mets Pitcher’s Thumb and Return

New York Mets pitcher Bartolo Colon left Tuesday’s start against the Kansas City Royals in the first inning after being hit in the hand by a comeback line drive. He was diagnosed with a right thumb injury, but X-rays were negative, and he is not expected to miss time. 

Continue for updates.


Colon’s Expected Return Date Revealed 

Wednesday, June 22

Anthony DiComo of MLB.com reported that “Colon’s swelling has mostly subsided. The team expects him to start Sunday in [Atlanta] as scheduled.”


Colon Injury Details Revealed 

Tuesday, June 21

The Mets announced Colon left with a right thumb contusion, per DiComo, who added the X-rays showed nothing was broken. 

Royals second baseman Whit Merrifield hit the ball up the middle on Colon’s fourth pitch, sending it caroming off the Mets starter and toward second base.


Colon Remains Reliable Starter for Mets

Colon, 43, is 6-3 with a 3.00 ERA, a 1.19 WHIP and 56 strikeouts this season. He’s given the team a nice veteran option at the back end of its rotation behind Matt Harvey, Jacob deGrom, Noah Syndergaard and Steven Matz.

It wouldn’t be a huge loss for the Mets if he were forced to miss time as the team has one of the best rotations in the majors and depth to spare, but Colon’s proved to be a solid innings-eater late in his career. His longevity has been something of a surprise, though not to his teammates who see him work every day.

“People make assumptions, but if you’re around Bartolo, you see how he prepares,” David Wright told John Harper of the New York Daily News in February. “I’d bet a significant amount of money that he’s the most flexible guy on the team. I see him prepare on the days when he’s pitching. He’s got a stretching routine second to none.”

Mets fans must be happy this was just a minor injury and that Colon is not expected to miss time.

 

You can follow Timothy Rapp on Twitter.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Zack Wheeler Injury: Updates on Mets Pitcher’s Recovery from Tommy John Surgery

New York Mets pitcher Zack Wheeler has experienced a setback in his recovery from Tommy John surgery. According to a Tuesday report by MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo, Wheeler has felt “discomfort” in his elbow and won’t be throwing a scheduled simulated inning this week. 

Wheeler underwent Tommy John surgery in March of 2015 when he tore his UCL. He hasn’t appeared on the mound for the Mets since September of 2014.

Continue for updates.


Discomfort Shouldn’t Stall Wheeler’s Return

Tuesday, June 21

DiComo added that Wheeler will fly to New York on Wednesday and be examined by team doctors, though the Mets don’t believe this is a “serious” concern.

If this discomfort proves to be nothing, then Wheeler should still be on track for a return in early July—the timetable Mike Puma of the New York Post reported in May. 

Before his injury, the 26-year-old Wheeler was yet another young, promising arm in a New York pitching rotation set to take the league by storm. 

Unfortunately for the Mets, they have been unable to get Matt Harvey, Noah Syndergaard, Jacob deGrom, Steven Matz and Wheeler all in the rotation at the same time. 

As Wheeler compiled an 18-16 record with subpar Mets teams from 2013-2014, Harvey had to undergo Tommy John surgery, which kept him out for the entire 2014 season.

During that Harvey-less year, deGrom was spinning together a National League Rookie of the Year campaign, while Matz and Syndergaard weren’t even in the major leagues with the team. Wheeler, on the other hand, was looked upon as a top-end starter, going 11-11 with a 3.54 ERA and 185 strikeouts in 187.1 innings. 

Even though the numbers didn’t jump off the page, Wheeler showed flashes of being a major league ace by winning nine of his final 13 decisions with a fastball that lived in the high 90s and a devastating curveball that was almost 20 mph slower, per FanGraphs.

An extended absence hasn’t been easy for Wheeler, though he’s put his faith in the recovery process that helped Harvey get back on the field and helped the Mets win the National League pennant in 2015, per Tim Rohan of the New York Times: “You see all these guys coming back from it doing well. You’ve just got to trust it.”

It’s hard to say the Mets have missed Wheeler all this time given the depth of their pitching rotation. But a healthy Wheeler in a New York starting rotation that is second in the majors with 3.43 runs allowed per game could make the Mets defense even more unstoppable. 

Given that the Mets offense is third-worst in the league with 3.68 runs scored per game, his return could only help a team that is 5.5 games behind the Washington Nationals for the NL East lead. 

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless noted otherwise.

 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Stephen Strasburg Injury: Updates on Nationals Star’s Back and Return

Washington Nationals pitcher Stephen Strasburg would not make Monday’s start against the Los Angeles Dodgers because of an upper-back strain, per Mark Zuckerman of MASNSports.com. It is unclear when he’ll return to the mound. 

Continue for updates.


Baker Comments on Strasburg’s Injury

Monday, June 20

“We don’t think it’s serious,” said Nationals manager Dusty Baker, via Zuckerman, who added the “hope” is that Strasburg will make his next start in six days. 

Baker said Strasburg first started suffering from a back strain working out a couple of days ago, per Zuckerman


Nationals Have the Depth to Overcome Possible Strasburg Absence 

Yusmeiro Petit made the emergency start in place of Strasburg.

As for Strasburg, this is another injury for Washington to worry about. The right-hander tied for the National League lead with 34 starts in 2014, but he was limited to 23 last year. What’s more, he underwent Tommy John surgery in 2010.

The 2012 All-Star posted a 3.46 ERA and 1.11 WHIP in 2015. In 2014, he struck out 242 batters. He is one of the most effective strikeout pitchers in the majors when healthy. Until last year, he’d also never finished with an ERA above 3.16.

This season, he has been one of the Nationals’ best players with a 2.90 ERA, 1.07 WHIP and 118 strikeouts in 93 innings. The result is a 10-0 record through 14 starts.

Washington ace Max Scherzer will have to carry the load atop the rotation until Strasburg returns. Scherzer won the 2013 American League Cy Young Award and posted a 2.79 ERA and 0.92 WHIP last season in his first year with the Nationals.

Washington can also turn to Gio Gonzalez, a veteran southpaw who has been in the league since 2008, and youngsters Joe Ross and Tanner Roark, who have ERAs of 3.13 and 3.14, respectively.

While they give the first-place Nationals depth, the club could use the dominant Strasburg as it hopes to live up to expectations following its midsummer collapse in 2015.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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