Tag: NL West

Andrew Cashner Injury: Updates on Padres Pitcher’s Hamstring and Return

San Diego Padres starting pitcher Andrew Cashner will be placed on the 15-day disabled list retroactive to May 9 after suffering a right hamstring strain, manager Andy Green announced Friday, per the team’s official Twitter account.

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Cashner Not Expected To Be Out Long

Friday, May 13

The team has yet to announce a spot starter to fill Cashner’s place in the rotation. He was slated to pitch Saturday against the Milwaukee Brewers.

It could be the only start he misses, as sports writer Andrew Gruman reported Green expects this to be a “short stint” on the DL.

The Padres removed Cashner from his last start May 8 against the New York Mets in the sixth inning for precautionary reasons after he suffered what the team described as a “slight right hamstring cramp.”

After reaching base with a bunt single, Cashner was thrown out at home plate in the bottom of the fifth inning:

In a mediocre Padres pitching rotation whose WAR was at 0.1 (14th in MLB) entering Friday night, Cashner was the team’s No. 2 arm behind James Shields with Tyson Ross recovering from a shoulder injury.

Cashner is 2-3 this season with a 4.93 ERA. He hasn’t lasted more than six innings in a game this season and has allowed three or more earned runs in five of his seven starts.

But the 29-year-old has shown in the past that he can dominate, which makes him a solid option in the middle of the rotation:

Due to the expected short-term status of the injury, the Padres might call a player out of the bullpen to step in for Cashner on Saturday. If he’s out for longer than anticipated, though, the Padres may have to make a transaction to get another starter.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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Jose Reyes Suspended by MLB: Latest Details, Comments and Reaction

Major League Baseball has suspended Colorado Rockies shortstop Jose Reyes without pay through May 31 after he was ordered to stand trial on domestic abuse charges, according to ESPN’s Buster Olney.

Yahoo Sports’ Big League Stew provided the league’s official statement Friday, which confirmed the unpaid suspension is retroactive to Feb. 23:

Reyes also released a statement shortly after MLB‘s announcement, according to Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal:

Commissioner Rob Manfred previously placed Reyes on paid leave after the 32-year-old allegedly assaulted his wife in a Hawaii hotel room, according to Hawaii News Now’s Chelsea Davis, but he’ll officially lose $7.06 million in game checks now that terms of the cumulative 52-game suspension are official, per Yahoo Sports’ Jeff Passan.

“His wife told responding officers that Reyes grabbed her off the bed and shoved her,” Davis reported. “Sources say she also told police that he grabbed her throat and shoved her into the sliding glass balcony door.”

According to ESPN.com, Reyes posted $1,000 bail and was ordered to stay away from his wife for three days following the incident.

However, charges against the shortstop were dropped after his wife failed to cooperate with prosecutors, according to the Associated Press. Should she change her mind and decide to cooperate within the next two years, charges can be refiled.

In baseball terms, Reyes is becoming an afterthought for the Rockies.

Rookie Trevor Story has been a revelation, batting .266 with 11 home runs and 27 RBI. He’s also clubbed three triples and seven doubles during his rapid rise in the Rockies’ order, earning National League Rookie of the Month honors in April.

Beyond Story’s development into an offensive linchpin for the Rockies, Reyes is staring at a long road back from a polish perspective.

“He has been working out on his own in New York, away from the Rockies’ facilities in Colorado and Arizona, but even if he returned tomorrow, Reyes would still likely need weeks to ready himself for major league games,” the Denver Post‘s Nick Groke wrote. “He missed all of spring training and any live competition since last fall.”

And then there’s the matter of the Rockies’ monetary commitment to Reyes. The veteran shortstop is earning $22 million this season—part of which the team will recoup following the suspension, per Groke—and another $22 million next season before the team can decline his $22 million club option for 2018.

With Story established as the franchise’s future shortstop and Reyes a past-his-prime piece who figures to have a hard time garnering regular playing time, the Rockies could be in a bind when it comes to relieving themselves of a hefty financial burden.

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Clayton Kershaw Sets Dodgers Record with 5 Straight Starts of Double-Digit Ks

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw continued to be in top form, posting his fifth straight start with at least 10 strikeouts in a 5-0 win over the New York Mets on Thursday.

Kershaw is the first Dodgers pitcher since 1913 to put together such a strikeout streak, per MLB Stat of the Day:

That means Kershaw has accomplished something even Don Drysdale, Sandy Koufax and Orel Hershiser couldn’t do.

The three-time Cy Young Award winner and 2014 National League MVP could add to his trophy case at the end of the year, as the Dodgers’ ace (4-1) is having a phenomenal 2016 campaign, which MLB.com’s Mike Petriello pointed out:

ESPN Stats & Info added another stat to highlight Kershaw’s dominance:

If Chicago Cubs ace Jake Arrieta was not also dominating this season, Kershaw would be the runaway favorite for another Cy Young honor. Arrieta is 6-0 with a microscopic 1.13 ERA.

If both pitchers keep up their play throughout the season, Arrieta may get a slight edge since the Cubs appear likely to finish with one of the best records in baseball. Regardless, Kershaw is still a generational talent whom fans should appreciate as a future first-ballot Hall of Famer.

 

All statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference.

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David Peralta Injury: Updates on Diamondbacks OF’s Wrist and Return

Arizona Diamondbacks outfielder David Peralta is dealing with a wrist injury. Though there’s no structural damage, it’s unclear when he will return to the field.

Continue for updates.  


Peralta Out vs. Giants

Friday, May 13

The Diamondbacks announced Peralta will not be in Friday’s starting lineup against San Francisco.


Peralta Provides Diamondbacks with Underrated Bat

This is a setback for Peralta, especially since he battled his way to the major league level and was looking to become a household name in 2016. 

Tony Blengino of ESPN.com called Peralta “the game’s most unknown—and unlikelystar” in a piece before the season because he started as a pitcher but never made it past the rookie-level Appalachian League. However, he reinvented himself as an outfielder and had a breakout campaign in 2015.

Peralta appeared to turn the corner in that 2015 season and hit .312 with 17 home runs and 78 RBI. According to ESPN.com, he posted an impressive 3.7 offensive WAR and an .893 OPS, and many expected him to be a critical part of Arizona’s push toward the playoffs in 2016.

Thus far, he is hitting .260 with three home runs in 2016. 

Peralta is versatile enough to play all three outfield spots if needed, which gives manager Chip Hale the ability to mix and match his lineup choices.

The Diamondbacks won’t enjoy that luxury while Peralta is out, but they still have Paul Goldschmidt to anchor the offense and a strong pitching staff that features Zack Greinke and Shelby Miller. 

With Chris Owings manning center field, Arizona will likely turn to Brandon Drury, Rickie Weeks Jr. or Yasmany Tomas to fill in for Peralta on the corners.

Arizona has enough depth to survive this injury, but it could use Peralta back and healthy to bolster what is already a promising lineup.

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Rockies Set Franchise Record with 13 Runs in 1 Inning

The Colorado Rockies set a franchise record for runs scored in an inning when they plated 13 during the fifth frame of Thursday’s 17-7 win over the San Francisco Giants, per ESPN Stats & Info.

The offensive barrage began when Rockies shortstop Trevor Story launched a two-strike, hanging slider from Giants starting pitcher Matt Cain over the left field wall.

Sprinkle in a couple of bloops and a few liners to the gap, and suddenly Colorado owned a 17-3 lead. In the top of the fifth inning alone, the Rockies tallied 10 hits and knocked both Cain and Giants relief pitcher Vin Mazzaro out of the game.

Not only did the Rockies set a franchise record with their offensive eruption, but they also became the first team since the 1890 Chicago Colts to score 13 runs in the fifth inning of a National League game, per Sportsnet Stats.

Of course, while new records such as the one set on Thursday are nice, the most significant franchise first would be an NL West division title.

Thursday’s win improved the Rockies to 14-14, pushing them into a three-way tie for first place with the Giants (15-15) and Los Angeles Dodgers (14-14)—two of the preseason favorites to win the NL.

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Shelby Miller Looking Early on to Be One of Worst MLB Trades in Decades

Shelby Miller could throw a no-hitter in his next start. He could rip off a streak of run-suppressing dominance and propel the Arizona Diamondbacks to the top of the National League West standings.

Those things could happen, and if they do, what you’re about to read will seem silly and alarmist and premature.

I’m willing to take that risk.

Because right now, “fresh” off another lousy start Sunday, Miller is a raging tire fire. And the trade that brought him to Arizona from the Atlanta Braves this winter is looking increasingly like one of the most disastrous in recent memory.

Before we delve into that, let’s survey the carnage that is Miller’s stat sheet.

Through 23.1 innings scattered over six starts, he has allowed 27 hits and 22 earned runs. He’s struck out 19, which is also the number of walks he’s issued. His ERA sits at a gaudy 8.49, and his FIP—which adjusts for factors beyond a pitcher’s control—is a still-ugly 7.22.

By any measure, Miller has been one of the worst starting pitchers in baseball.

“We are trying everything. We are working with him,” Diamondbacks manager Chip Hale said Sunday after Miller lasted just 3.2 innings in a 6-3 loss to the Colorado Rockies, per ESPN.com. “We want him to stay positive. It’s tough. He’s not very happy about it.”

The Diamondbacks should be unhappy, too. To land Miller along with 21-year-old lefty Gabe Speier, Arizona coughed up a package that included outfielder Ender Inciarte, shortstop Dansby Swanson—the No. 1 overall pick in the 2015 draftand hard-throwing pitching prospect Aaron Blair.

Inciarte has played just three games for Atlanta because of a hamstring issue, but the 25-year-old is coming off a promising season that saw him hit .303 with 21 stolen bases and 5.3 wins above replacement (WAR).

The 22-year-old Swanson has lived up to his pedigree, posting a .978 OPS in 24 games between High-A and Double-A, and appears destined to make an impact in the big leagues sooner than later.

Blair, meanwhile, made his MLB debut April 24 after posting a 1.42 ERA in three starts at Triple-A.

It’s easy to weigh the trade now and scoff in light of Miller’s early struggles. But it was widely panned at the time, as well.

As ESPN.com’s David Schoenfield opined back in December, “Heck, Inciarte may be worth more than Miller by himself and is certainly proof that executives Dave Stewart and Tony La Russa are out of touch in the analytics game.”

To be fair, Miller was an All-Star in 2015 despite his 6-17 record. He eclipsed 200 innings for the first time in his career and posted a 3.02 ERA.

There was reason to hope Milleralong with big-ticket free agent Zack Greinke—could shore up the front end of Arizona’s rotation.

The price, however, seemed unreasonably exorbitant before Miller threw a single pitch in a D-backs uniform. Now, it looks like straight-up highway robbery.

Troll through the last few decades, and you can find some seriously lopsided deals.

In 1992, the Philadelphia Phillies acquired Curt Schilling from the Houston Astros for right-hander Jason Grimsley, who never pitched an inning for the ‘Stros.

In 1997, the Boston Red Sox sent two serviceable arms in Carl Pavano and Tony Armas to the Montreal Expos for a guy named Pedro Martinez, who wound up doing a few good things in Beantown.

In 2003, the Minnesota Twins snagged Joe Nathan, Francisco Liriano and Boof Bonser from the San Francisco Giants for catcher A.J. Pierzynski. Nathan went on to become an All-Star closer, and Liriano blossomed into an ace-level arm. Pierzynski had one of his worst seasons by the Bay and promptly skipped town via free agency.

In 2008, the Baltimore Orioles got Adam Jones, Chris Tillman and George Sherrill from the Seattle Mariners for left-hander Erik Bedard. Jones became a five-time All-Star, Tillman slotted into the front of the O’s rotation and Sherrill saved 51 games out of the Baltimore bullpen. Bedard battled injuries and never did much for the M’s.

There are more examples, but that’s a representative sampling. Suffice it to say, the Miller swap is in the mix.

If things continue like this, it could well pace the pack.

Again, there’s time for a turnaround. Miller is just 25, and he proved what he’s capable of a season ago.

In fact, some of his troubles could be the result of pressing and trying to live up to the trade, as Stewart recently suggested.

“Shelby Miller, I think it’s more, really, he’s just feeling some pressure: of the trade, the players that we traded for him, trying to fit in,” the D-backs general manager told SiriusXM’s MLB Network Radio. “I think the whole ordeal has just been different for him than it was leaving St. Louis going to Atlanta.”

The only problem with that take is Miller went from St. Louis to Atlanta in exchange for Jason Heyward, a Gold Glove winner and five-tool talent, and pitched well. Surely there was pressure then, too. What’s the difference?

Since arriving in Arizona, Miller has battled wonky mechanics and a slight dip in velocity, as MLB.com’s Mike Petriello outlined.

Correcting the first issue could well correct the second. And, Petriello added, “Nothing seems unfixable. It doesn’t seem to be a health issue, and if Miller turns it around quickly to pitch the rest of the year as he did with Atlanta, no one will remember this.”

There’s your glass-half-full perspective.

If, on the other hand, Miller can’t turn it around, everyone will remember thisfor all the wrong reasons.

 

All statistics current as of May 4 and courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

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Erisbel Arruebarrena Suspended by Dodgers: Latest Details and Reaction

The Los Angeles Dodgers have suspended troubled infielder Erisbel Arruebarrena for the remainder of the 2016 season. 

Dodgers director of player development Gabe Kapler announced Arruebarrena’s suspension Wednesday “for repeated failure to comply with the terms of his contract,” per Eric Stephen of True Blue LA. Barry Lewis of Tulsa World noted this is the second time in less than one year the Dodgers have suspended Arruebarrena.

Arruebarrena’s career with the Dodgers has been a disappointment basically since he signed with the team. The 26-year-old received a five-year, $25 million contract in February 2014 and was expected to be their shortstop of the future. 

Stephen broke down the remaining money that Arruebarrena is owed for his contract with the Dodgers:

After spending six weeks in the minors during the 2014 season, Arruebarrena was called up to the big leagues on May 23 while Hanley Ramirez sat out a few games due to injuries. He played a total of 22 games in his debut season, hitting .195/.244/.220 in 41 at-bats. 

Arruebarrena’s most infamous moment in 2014 came on July 26 while playing with the Triple-A Albuquerque Isotopes. He started a brawl with the Reno Aces that led to 10 total ejections. The Dodgers designated him for assignment that winter, but he wound up reassigned to the minors after no team claimed him. 

On May 21, 2015, the Dodgers placed Arruebarrena on the suspended list for not complying with his contract. He filed an appeal of the suspension with Major League Baseball, and the Dodgers ended up reducing his punishment to 30 days.

The Cuban star played 17 games with the Double-A Tulsa Drillers this season before being suspended. He was hitting .182/.224/.400 in 55 at-bats. 

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Josh Ravin Suspended 80 Games for PEDs: Latest Details, Comments and Reaction

Major League Baseball announced on Monday that Los Angeles Dodgers relief pitcher Josh Ravin tested positive for a performance-enhancing substance. As a result, he will be suspended 80 games without pay.

Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports initially reported the news and cited sources who said the pitcher “tested positive for a banned peptide.”

Ravin issued a statement after the ruling, via Jill Martin of CNN:

Passan noted Ravin is the sixth major league player to be disciplined for performance-enhancing drugs this year. Ravin is yet to appear in a game in 2016 because he broke his arm in a car accident at spring training.

Despite his injury, Ravin is on the Dodgers’ 40-man roster and was expected back in May, per Passan. Now he will not be available to join the bullpen until after July’s All-Star break.

In addition to Ravin, Passan said Miami Marlins star and defending National League batting champion Dee Gordon, Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Chris Colabello, Cleveland Indians center fielder Abraham Almonte and Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Daniel Stumpf were suspended for 80 games for PEDs.

What’s more, New York Mets relief pitcher Jenrry Mejia tested positive for a third time in February and was given a lifetime ban.

Detroit Tigers pitcher Justin Verlander responded to the Gordon suspension on Twitter (warning: contains NSFW language): “This PED s–t is killing me. If you test positive, you need to not play. You shouldn’t be allowed to [affect] games while appealing.”

Mark Zuckerman of MASNSports.com described MLB’s testing system as “a drug-testing program that has instituted harsher penalties several times over the years and remains the strictest PED system in American professional sports.”

As for Ravin, he made his major league debut for the Dodgers last season and pitched 9.1 innings with a 6.75 ERA, 12 strikeouts and a 1.82 WHIP. Passan said the 28-year-old righty was in the minor leagues for a decade before he finally broke into the majors in 2015.

Ravin has a plus-fastball (Passan described it as a pitch that “touched 99 mph”), and when he returns, he could bolster a Dodgers club that is a middling 16th in the league in bullpen ERA as of Monday, per ESPN.com.

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Clayton Kershaw Doing It All for Up-and-Down Dodgers

Entering play Sunday, the Los Angeles Dodgers were in a free fall.

They’d dropped six straight to the lowly Miami Marlins and punchless San Diego Padres. They’d slid a game below .500 and were looking less and less like big-spending, three-time defending division champs.

Then Clayton Kershaw swooped in and, for an afternoon at least, single-handedly stopped the nosedive in a 1-0 victory at Chavez Ravine. All that was missing was a cape and tights.

Really, at this point, we’re running out of adjectives to describe Kershaw. Brilliant, dominant, filthy, transcendent—all apply, plus a bunch more. Grab your thesaurus and go to work.

The latest evidence of the lanky left-hander’s amazingness came at the expense of the Pads. For nine frames, Kershaw was utterly in control, racking up 14 strikeouts with nary a walk and only a trio of singles between him and perfection.

Heck, only two of his 27 outs left the infield, as MLB.com’s Jack Baer and AJ Cassavell noted.

As if that weren’t enough, Kershaw also picked up the Dodgers’ lackluster offense, driving in the game’s only run with a single in the third and possibly inspiring the following internal monologue, courtesy of the Los Angeles Times‘ Andy McCullough:

In the process, Kershaw did something that hasn’t been done in more than three decades, per ESPN Stats & Info:

With Sunday’s glistening gem—his 13th career shutoutKershaw now sports a 1.96 ERA to pair with an MLB-leading 54 strikeouts in 46 innings.

Yes, on Tuesday Los Angeles will face another game without Kershaw on the mound (or at the plate) as it heads east to open a two-game set against the Tampa Bay Rays. He can only do his thing every fifth day.

As long as he’s wearing Dodger blue, however, this team is dangerous. It’s that simple.

Oh, there’s talent on the rest of the roster. Despite an anemic streak during which the team has plated a scant 12 runs in seven games, the hits will come courtesy of reliable studs like first baseman Adrian Gonzalez and budding stars like shortstop Corey Seager. 

And while Kershaw’s former co-ace, Zack Greinke, split for a massive payday with the Arizona Diamondbacks, Japanese import Kenta Maeda looks like a more-than-capable No. 2 after posting a 1.41 ERA through a month of starts.

The Dodgers aren’t perfect. There are questions at the back end of the rotation and in the bullpen. And mercurial outfielders Joc Pederson and Yasiel Puig need to find consistent grooves.

But this team is good enough to fend off the D-Backs and even-year San Francisco Giants.

If that happens, it’ll begin and end with Kershaw. He’s the franchise linchpin. The guy with the case full of Cy Young trophies and a National League MVP Award. 

He might have temporarily ceded the title of best pitcher in baseball to the Chicago Cubs‘ Jake Arrieta. 

But make no mistake: Kershaw is a generational talent, the type of arm that will be referenced in subsequent decades. As in: This guy is so stellar, he’s positively Kershaw-esque

Here’s one instructive measure of Kershaw’s greatness, per MLB.com’s Michael Clair:

Over the last three seasons, Kershaw has posted a 188 ERA+, a statistic that normalizes performance and compares it to the league average (which is 100). [Justin] Verlander’s best season: 172. [Tim] Lincecum’s: 171. [Felix] Hernandez: 174. That means Kershaw has been better, on average, over the past three years than any one of those guys was in his very best season.

We could go on, piling stat on top of stat. You get the idea, though. Watch Kershaw do what he did Sunday, or the next time he does something similar, and you don’t even need numbers. Your eyeballs tell the tale.

Rookie skipper Dave Roberts has liked what he’s seen, via MLB.com’s Jon Cooper:

It’s incredible. Every day I get to learn him a little bit more and kind of see how he goes about his business. No one is more critical of himself than [Kershaw] is. He just kind of finds a way. He’s as competitive a person as I’ve ever seen, and he just kind of sometimes wills himself and wills the team to victories.

Insane ability. Unending drive. A blazing competitive fire. Mix those ingredients and stir, and you’ve got the recipe for a baseball-slinging superhero capable of halting any free fall.

Are the Dodgers in trouble? Just say the magic words: Clayton Kershaw to the rescue.

 

All statistics current as of May 1 and courtesy of MLB.com and Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

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Story Finishes April with 17 Extra-Base Hits, Including 10 Home Runs

Colorado Rockies shortstop Trevor Story finished April with 17 extra-base hits, joining Joe DiMaggio (23 in May 1936) and Albert Pujols (17 in April 2001) as the only players since 1900 to record 17 or more extra-base hits during the first calendar month of their respective careers, per Elias Sports Bureau (via ESPN.com).

One of the biggest surprises early in the season, the 23-year-old Story was never viewed as a top-notch prospect, and he might not have even made the big-league roster out of spring training if not for Jose Reyes’ absence in the wake of a domestic violence allegation.

Nonetheless, Story made history by hitting seven home runs in the first six games of his career, with six of those long balls coming in the first four games.

He’s slowed down considerably since the season’s first week, yet still managed to break Pujols’ National League record of eight home runs by a rookie in April.

What’s more, Story tied the MLB rookie record of 10 home runs in April, which was originally set by Chicago White Sox first baseman Jose Abreu in 2014.

It seems Story has emerged from a mid-April slump, as he tallied two homers, a triple and a double—along with six RBI, four runs and two walks—over the final three games of the month.

Of course, it remains to be seen whether he’s the second coming of former Troy Tulowitzki or merely a short-lived rookie sensation.

Story’s 37 strikeouts in 92 at-bats might hint at the latter, but there’s still no denying that he possesses rare power for a middle infielder.

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