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    Cal Quantrill tosses four shutout vs. Blue Jays

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    TEX Relief Pitcher #44
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    Cal Quantrill tossed four shutout innings with five strikeouts in a no-decision against the Blue Jays on Saturday.

    Quantrill was outstanding on Saturday, holding the Blue Jays scoreless over four innings of work, going deeper in his second start as he continues to get stretched out. He scattered two hits and one walk while collecting five strikeouts. The 31-year-old right-hander will take a 3.31 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, and a 25/11 K/BB ratio across 35 1/3 innings into a start against the Tigers in Texas on Thursday.
Brewers travel to Pittsburgh for Sunday Leadoff
Looking to stay alive in the NL Wild Card race, the Pirates welcome the NL Central-leading Brewers to PNC Park for a divisional showdown on MLB Sunday Leadoff at 12pm ET on Peacock and NBCSN.

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  • TEX Relief Pitcher #44
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    Deciding to give Kumar Rocker and Jacob deGrom some extra rest and start Quantrill today probably didn’t hurt the Rangers; Quantrill wasn’t great, but the Rangers offense wound up being shut out anyway. Quantrill has a 3.35 ERA in three starts and 15 relief appearances for Texas. He has a 3-1 record, even though the Rangers are 4-14 when he pitches. Of course, a lot of those games were pretty much over by the time he came in.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #80
    Rocker will receive an extra day of rest with Cal Quantrill being moved up to take the ball on Saturday afternoon against Detroit. The 26-year-old has strung together back-to-back strong outings, striking out 14 batters and allowing just two runs over 11 innings against the Blue Jays and Marlins in his last two starts. There’s some definite streaming appeal for fantasy managers in deeper mixed leagues based on his recent efforts.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #48
    Quantrill has been summoned to gobble up innings out of Texas’ bullpen after failing to make the club as a non-roster invitee earlier this spring. The 31-year-old righty posted a bloated 6.04 ERA across 117 2/3 innings between the Braves and Marlins last year. He can be safely ignored in all fantasy formats.
  • TEX Relief Pitcher #66
    It looked like Sborz had a real chance of making the team after a decent run this spring in his return from shoulder injuries, but Rule 5 pick Carter Baumler got the nod over him. Texas will go with a bullpen of Robert Garcia, Chris Martin, Cole Winn, Jakob Junis, Jacob Latz, Jalen Beeks, Tyler Alexander and Baumler. It doesn’t leave them much flexibility that Garcia and Latz, their two best lefties, are the only guys there who can be sent down.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #48
    Quantrill got the win as Canada advanced to the WBC quarterfinals. It looked like James Paxton would get the save, but he was lifted after 2 2/3 scoreless innings and 49 pitches in order to keep him eligible to pitch Friday. Quantrill could start again if Canada makes the finals. If not, the veteran big leaguer will go back to trying to win a spot on the Rangers’ staff. He gave up seven runs over four innings in his two spring appearances before joining Team Canada.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #48
    Woof. Quantrill struck out one and did not walk a batter in the ballgame. The A’s jumped on him for a pair of runs in the opening inning on run-scoring knocks from Brent Rooker and Jeff McNeil. They then piled on with four more in the second with a two-run single from Tyler Soderstrom and a two-run blast off the bat of Brent Rooker. While he has never been one to rely on velocity, Quantrill’s fastball averaged just 92.3 mph in this outing, that’s a dip of 1.4 mph from his average during the 2025 season. He’s going to need to turn things around quickly if he has any chance of cracking the Rangers’ Opening Day roster.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #48
    Re-signed might come as a surprise to most, but the Rangers inked Quantrill to a minor league deal last September. They never did call him up afterwards, leaving him with a hideous 6.04 ERA in 117 2/3 innings with the Marlins and Braves. Like Patrick Corbin a year ago, he rates as adequate rotation depth, though he probably has even less of a ceiling.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #48
    Quantrill has been hit extremely hard this season across 26 starts between the Marlins and Braves, posting a bloated 6.04 ERA across 117 2/3 innings of work. The 30-year-old righty could presumably get the call to gobble up innings in a low-leverage relief role at some point in the final two weeks.
  • FA Starting Pitcher #48
    Quantrill, who was claimed off waivers from the Marlins last month, gave up five homers and 12 runs over eight innings in two starts for the Braves. He has a 6.04 ERA in 26 starts overall this season. Another team might bring him in to eat some innings, since he’ll only require the major league minimum.
  • ATL Starting Pitcher #48
    Quantrill didn’t walk or strike out a batter in the abbreviated outing. He served up three home runs in the opening inning — to Kyle Schwarber, J.T. Realmuto and Max Kepler — and also gave up a solo blast to Bryce Harper in the third inning. The 30-year-old hurler got just three swings and misses on 53 pitches on the night, posting a miserable CSW of only 17 percent. This is the type of outing that could get him designated for assignment on Friday morning. If he sticks around, he’ll carry a 6.04 ERA, 1.45 WHIP and an 85/35 K/BB ratio (117 2/3 innings) into Wednesday’s matchup against the Cubs in Chicago.

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    Dalton Rushing went 3-for-5 with two doubles and a game-winning hit in the bottom of the 11th as the Dodgers outlasted the Rockies 8-7 on Monday.

    He was also only involved in one near-brawl, so that’s progress. It wasn’t really his fault anyway; Cole Carrigg slid into him at home plate and did a face plant afterwards, but that was mostly because his hand got caught on the leg of home plate umpire Dan Iassogna, who was caught being too close to the plate. The dugouts started to empty when it looked like the two players were going to come together, but cooler heads quickly prevailed. Rushing’s doubles came off Kyle Freeland early in the game, and the second would have been a homer in 22 ballparks, according to Statcast. The game-winner was a 74-mph grounder against a drawn-in infield that just squibbed past Edouard Julien at second base. It was Rushing’s 30th RBI, and it made the Dodgers the first team to 60 wins this season.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #33
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    Eric Lauer yielded three runs in six innings Monday versus the Rockies.

    Lauer left with a three-run lead that held up until the ninth, when Tanner Scott had a rare off night. It’s the third time in four outings that Scott has allowed three runs in exactly six innings. He pitched no-hit ball for six innings in the other game during the span. Lauer isn’t slated to make another start before the break, but he could factor into Sunday’s game behind Emmet Sheehan.
  • LAD Relief Pitcher #66
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    Tanner Scott blew a three-run lead in the ninth Monday against the Rockies.

    Scott managed to walk Ezequiel Tovar with one out before giving up a single and an RBI double. At that point, he intentionally walked Hunter Goodman to load the bases. He followed that with a dominant three-pitch strikeout against TJ Rumfield, but Cole Carrigg then doubled to the gap with two outs. It seemed poised to give the Rockies the lead, but Goodman was called out at the plate after a replay review. It’s just Scott’s second blown save of the year and first to come in the ninth inning. He’ll remain the Dodgers’ primary closer for now, but it does look like the team will be getting Edwin Díaz back before the end of the month.
  • COL Starting Pitcher #21
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    Kyle Freeland gave up six runs through five innings Monday in a no-decision versus the Dodgers.

    He struck out two and surrendered nine hits and 12 hard-hit balls. There’s just nothing here that’s getting any better. It’s the eighth time in 17 starts that Freeland has allowed six runs this season, and he has a 7.46 ERA over 82 innings. He’s due to pitch in San Francisco this weekend.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #17
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    Shohei Ohtani went 3-for-4 with a homer, four RBI and an intentional walk versus the Rockies on Monday.

    Ohtani had a 112-mph lineout in the first inning tonight, but he made up for it with a homer off Kyle Freeland in his next at-bat. He has 19 homers on the year, and he’s tied for fifth in the majors with 61 runs scored and sixth with 59 walks.
  • COL Center Fielder #16
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    Cole Carrigg went 3-for-5 with a game-tying double in the ninth inning Monday against the Dodgers.

    The double with two outs and the bases loaded against Tanner Scott originally gave the Rockies the lead, but Hunter Goodman was called out at home plate after a review. It was Carrigg’s second double of the game. Because he was the batter when the ninth ended, he opened the 10th as the automatic runner and scored his third run of the game then. Carrigg has been just a part-timer against righties (and regular against lefties) lately, but trades should eventually clear the way for him to play full-time, assuming that his production holds up. He’s batting .309/.385/.593 through 97 plate appearances.
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    Playing in his 500th career game, Ezequiel Tovar homered, walked and scored twice Monday against the Dodgers.

    He also knocked in run with a sac fly. It’s the sixth time in those 500 games that Tovar has both homered and walked. He has eight homers and 17 walks while batting .209/.252/.345 in his 321 plate appearances this year.
  • SF Left Fielder #17
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    Heliot Ramos had two homers, a triple and five RBI as the Giants demolished the Blue Jays 10-1 on Monday.

    This would have been a three-homer game in most ballparks and sort of was in San Francisco anyway; Ramos scored on the triple to right-center when the throw got past the third baseman and went into the dugout. Statcast says the triple, hit a projected 399 feet, would have been a homer in 29 parks. Ramos later had an opposite-field homer, hit 349 feet down the right field line, and a 110-mph, 434 foot bomb to left-center. Even his groundout tonight was hit 112 mph. Just a week ago, the Giants were being slow to activate Ramos from the IL because of concerns about how he’d fit in with Casey Schmitt playing the outfield. However, those went away with Matt Chapman getting hurt, and Ramos has hit .313 with four homers, eight RBI and eight runs scored in eight games since returning.
  • SF Starting Pitcher #65
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    Landen Roupp limited the Blue Jays to one run and three hits over eight innings to snap his losing skid Monday.

    Roupp was 0-7 in his previous 11 starts, with the Giants losing all 11 of those games. Roupp didn’t dominate with five strikeouts, 11 whiffs and a 26 percent CSW tonight, but he didn’t need to. The Blue Jays never put together any real threats. They had just two plate appearances with a RISP, going 0-for-1 with a walk. Roupp is 6-8 with a 4.27 ERA overall. He’ll finish the first half with a home start against the Rockies.
  • TOR Starting Pitcher #34
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    Kevin Gausman gave up seven runs — four earned — and walked five in 5 1/3 innings Monday in a loss to the Giants.

    He did strike out eight, at least. Gausman had walked just 24 batters in 18 starts coming into tonight, but he does typically have one start per year in which he walks five. He did so once last year and once in 2024. He did it twice in 2023, but that was just keeping pace after he went without one in 2022. This goes as Gausman’s fifth straight loss. Part of that is the Jays’ offensive struggles, but Gausman’s weaker outings have been particularly weak; in his last 11 starts, he’s allowed one or no runs five times and at least four runs in the remaining six outings. He’ll face the Padres on Sunday.