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    Tyler Soderstrom (hip) held out of lineup Sunday

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    ATH Left Fielder #21
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    Tyler Soderstrom (hip) was held out of the Athletics’ starting lineup for Sunday afternoon’s skirmish against the Angels.

    Soderstrom was pulled from Saturday’s game due to tightness in his hip and the Athletics will give him an extra day off to rest to make sure that it doesn’t get any worse. Colby Thomas will start in his place in left field and bat fifth for the A’s against Angels’ left-hander Sam Aldegheri on Sunday.
How Padres can climb back into NL Wild Card race
Jason Benetti, Jake Peavy and Orel Hershiser examine what's next for the Padres after snapping their eight-game losing streak with a win over the Dodgers on Sunday Night Baseball.

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  • ATH Left Fielder #21
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    Soderstrom lands on the shelf after making an early exit from Saturday’s game against the Angels with hip tightness. There should be an update regarding his official return timeline at some point this week, but fantasy managers should anticipate a multi-week absence, even if it winds up being on the milder end of the spectrum. The 24-year-old slugger has delivered a respectable follow-up to last year’s 25-homer campaign, hitting .242/.343/.460 with 14 homers, 41 RBI and one steal in 335 plate appearances across 80 games this season.
  • ATH Left Fielder #21
    A’s skipper Mark Kotsay told reporters afterwards that it was bothering Soderstrom enough that they had to pull him from the game. He’ll be re-evaluated on Sunday. It sounds like it’s possible the 24-year-old slugger could wind up missing some time with this one. At the very least, expect him to get the day off in Sunday’s series finale against the Halos.
  • ATH Left Fielder #21
    A series in Las Vegas was just what the doctor ordered for Soderstrom, who hasn’t had much luck while already playing his home games in a very friendly ballpark for offense. He hit homers on 99- and 104-mph flies tonight, bringing his season total to 10. He’s 19-for-47 with five homers and 11 walks in his last 14 games, raising his OPS from .655 to .790.
  • ATH Left Fielder #21
    The Athletics were down 6-0 in what felt like the blink of an eye in this one. Soderstrom’s run-scoring single in the third inning felt like it could’ve helped get a rally going, but it was eventually for naught as the Astros put up an additional touchdown before this one was said and done. For Soderstrom, a nearly 1.100 OPS over his last 15 games with practically twice as many walks as strikeouts has helped raise his season long stats to acceptable levels following an abysmal start to the season. Through 61 games, he now has a .754 OPS with 30 RBI and his 17 doubles are third-most in the American League.
  • ATH Left Fielder #21
    Soderstrom helped complete the Athletics’ comeback with a single off Caleb Thielbar to tie the game in the eighth inning. Heading into this game, he had a .182 batting average against left-handed pitchers, so that knock was as shocking as it was huge. He’s gotten his season back on track with hits in 12 of his last 13 games with three home runs and three doubles over that stretch.
  • ATH Left Fielder #21
    The walk came in the fourth after Soderstrom challenged a called strike that was clearly a ball, was shown to be a ball on the ABS replay and yet deemed a strike anyway.. Statcast thinks Soderstrom has been pretty unlucky this year, but that wasn’t the case tonight, as he got a homer on a 403-foot fly that would have stayed in play in 13 ballparks and a double on an 84-mph liner to right. He’s 10-for-21 with two homers and just one strikeout in his last six games, raising his OPS from .655 to .739.
  • ATH Left Fielder #21
    Soderstrom knocked a base hit in the fifth, then put the A’s on the board for the only run of the game with a solo homer off Andrés Muñoz in the ninth. It was a 110.5 mph shot over the center field wall for his sixth of the season. The 24-year-old outfielder has been a bit unlucky, with a .233 BABIP, while still generating plenty of hard contact. The home run on Tuesday was his first since May 6, but hopefully the two-hit game was the start of a turnaround. Soderstrom is slashing .207/.288/.384 with 24 runs scored and 25 RBI across 222 plate appearances.
  • ATH Left Fielder #21
    Soderstrom’s RBI gave the A’s an insurance run in the top of the ninth. It’s been a slow start following last year’s breakout, but one has to figure the entire Athletics offense will heat up once the summer home games begin piling up. Soderstrom has actually increased his walk rate and lowered his strikeout rate so far. He entered Sunday with a .225 BABIP that should positively regress in the coming months.
  • ATH Left Fielder #21
    Soderstrom plated automatic runner Nick Kurtz in the 10th with a fly that dropped in front of Mike Trout and Josh Lowe in left-center. It looked like Trout might try to dive for it, but he wouldn’t have had much of a chance, and as he crossed in front of Lowe, the ball got by Lowe for a two-base error. Soderstrom is now up to 23 RBI in 46 for the season.
  • ATH Left Fielder #21
    Soderstrom had a 108-mph GIDP in the first, which wound up being the second hardest-hit ball in the game. In the third, he hit a 344-foot fly to right that would have been a homer in 10 ballparks, including Sutter Health, if Jordan Walker hadn’t casually grabbed before it could get over the ballpark’s low wall. In the sixth, Soderstrom barreled up a ball to left-center that projected at 396 feet, making it a homer in 13 ballparks. In this one, though, it was knocked down by the wind and was an easy play for Victor Scott II. Later came a 105-mph groundout for his fourth hard-hit ball of the day. Soderstrom is down to .195 after this, but the hits will come.

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    Mets acquired RHP Matt Seelinger from the Tigers for cash considerations.

    Seelinger has a 3.89 ERA, 1.42 WHIP, and 49/19 K/BB ratio in 39 1/3 innings at Triple-A this season. The 31-year-old can miss bats, but he’s also posted a walk rate over 11 percent in back-to-back seasons at Triple-A. He’s just organizational depth for a depleted Mets pitching staff.
  • TOR Starting Pitcher #28
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    Jake Bloss (elbow) allowed one run on three hits in 4 1/3 innings for Triple-A Buffalo on Sunday.

    He struck out one and walked one while throwing 62 percent of his pitches for strikes. The bigger news was that Bloss saw 94.9 mph on his sinker and 96.3 mph on his four-seam fastball, which were both up by about three mph. He struggled to command the sinker, but that kind of velocity bump, which he held throughout the game, would be big news for the 25-year-old right-hander. He could be an option in the Blue Jays’ rotation after the break.
  • COL Left Fielder #13
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    Rockies OF prospect Zac Veen went 2-for-5 with two home runs and three RBI for Triple-A Albuquerque on Sunday.

    Veen is now hitting .322/.400/.588 with 14 home runs, 55 RBI, and 14 steals in 75 games at Triple-A. He’s being a bit more aggressive than he has been in recent seasons, so even though his swinging strike rate remains a similar 11.5 percent, he’s making more contact and more contact in the zone than before. He deserves another shot at MLB at-bats, but with Jake McCarthy, Brenton Doyle, Mickey Moniak, and Cole Carrigg also in the outfield mix in Colorado, the team likely needs to make a move at the trade deadline.
  • MIN Right Fielder #38
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    Matt Wallner went 1-for-3 with a walk and a home run for Triple-A St. Paul on Sunday.

    Wallner is now hitting .282/.376/.607 with 15 home runs, 42 RBI, and a 49/17 K/BB ratio in 42 games since being demoted to Triple-A. Yes, the strikeouts remain a bit of an issue and probably always will, but the 28-year-old has consistent power that teams covet. It might make sense for the Twins to use this hot stretch to give him MLB at-bats and see if they can trade him at the deadline to a team that wants a left-handed power bat off the bench.
  • LAD Center Fielder
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    Dodgers OF prospect Mike Sirota went 1-for-6 with a solo home run for Double-A Tulsa on Sunday.

    That homer extended Sirota’s on-base streak to 68 games. The 23-year-old is hitting .324/.484/.547 with seven home runs, 25 RBI, and three steals in 38 games at Double-A after being promoted following 35 games at High-A. He has emerged as a top-15 prospect in all of baseball and looks like a major steal for the Dodgers, who drafted him in 2021 only to see him choose to go to college. The Reds wound up drafting Sirota, but the Dodgers traded Gavin Lux for him in January 2025. Looks like a pretty good move at this point.
  • SEA Right Fielder #99
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    Mariners promoted OF prospect Lazaro Montes to Triple-A Tacoma.

    Montes and 2B/OF prospect Michael Arroyo are being promoted to Triple-A Tacoma, according to MLB.com’s Daniel Kramer. Montes is the Mariners’ third-ranked prospect and MLB Pipeline’s 26th overall prospect, while Arroyo is the team’s fourth-ranked prospect and MLB Pipeline’s 43rd overall prospect. Montes hit .236/.365/.554 with 25 home runs and five steals in 78 games at Double-A. That came with a 30.5 percent strikeout rate, 18 percent swinging strike rate, and 62.5 percent contact rate, so those numbers will need to improve in Triple-A before he has a legitimate shot to crack the MLB roster.
  • PIT Center Fielder #15
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    Pirates general manager Ben Cherington said that Spencer Horwitz (hamstring) and Oneil Cruz (hand fracture) are still expected back in July.

    Cherington mentioned that both players “are progressing well in Florida, but both will be sidelined until after the All-Star Break.” The team hopes that they will both be back in the lineup “not too long after the break.” Cruz has been out since June 10 with non-displaced fractures in his hand. He was originally expected to miss “at least one month,” which will be in the middle of this week. He could likely begin a rehab assignment in the next couple of weeks and, assuming he can swing without pain, be back in the Pirates lineup soon after. With both Horwitz and Cruz back, the Pirates may have to be creative to find at-bats for surging Esmerlyn Valdez and Tyler Callihan.
  • ATL Starting Pitcher #32
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    AJ Smith-Shawver threw four scoreless innings for Single-A Augusta on Sunday.

    Smith-Shawver allowed two hits and didn’t walk a batter while striking out five. There is no Statcast data at the park, but reports are that he sat 96 mph on his four-seam fastball and touched 100 mph. He threw 34 of his 47 pitches for strikes in what was an incredibly efficient outing. The Braves will move him up to a higher level and presumably try to get him around 60 pitches next time out. Now would be the time to stash him in fantasy leagues since he could return to Atlanta in two weeks. He had a 3.86 ERA, 1.42 WHIP, and 22 percent strikeout rate in 44 innings for Atlanta last year. At the very least, he should be on the deep-league radar.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #7
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    Blake Snell (elbow) is scheduled to throw another bullpen.

    We know Snell threw a bullpen on June 26, and it appears that he threw another one this weekend, but there aren’t many more details about how many, or what type of, pitches he threw. We would still assume that he will begin facing live hitters if this next bullpen is successful and then begin a rehab assignment. That seems to indicate that we could be looking at an early August return for Snell, if all goes well.
  • BOS Left Fielder #19
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    Roman Anthony (hand/wrist) will visit with a hand specialist this week.

    The Red Sox are referring to the visit as more about “peace of mind,” but it’s obviously concerning that Anthony has made no substantial progress since spraining his wrist and tearing a ligament in his ring finger over two months ago. The 22-year-old will see Dr. Gary Lourie, who is a hand specialist and Braves’ head team physician.