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Mets' ace Scott is finding his groove again
James Schiano discusses Mets' pitcher Christian Scott's strong stretch over his last six starts and why the Mets right-hander could emerge as a top-50 starting pitcher for the rest of the season.

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  • CIN Starting Pitcher #61
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    Petty was just optioned to Louisville on July 4 to make room in the Reds’ rotation for the return of Hunter Greene. Now with Nick Lodolo (finger) landing on the injured list, he’ll get another opportunity. The 23-year-old righty holds a 4.37 ERA, 1.10 WHIP and a 9/7 K/BB ratio over 22 2/3 innings in 10 appearances (two starts) with the Reds this season.
  • CIN Starting Pitcher #40
    He allowed two runs in five-plus innings against the Cubs. Lodolo already missed the first five weeks of this season with blister issues and also lost starts in 2023 and ’24. If this is another IL-type situation, the Reds could replace him in the rotation with Chase Petty.
  • CIN Starting Pitcher #61
    Petty loses his spot with the Reds in a multi-inning relief role with ace Hunter Greene returning from the injured list to make his season debut. The 23-year-old has delivered a respectable 4.37 ERA, 1.10 WHIP and 9/7 K/BB ratio across 22 2/3 innings this season.
  • CIN Relief Pitcher #15
    Pagán returns to Cincinnati’s bullpen as their primary closing option prior to Tuesday’s game against the Brewers. The 35-year-old veteran stopper has been out since early May working his way back from a hamstring strain. He should be rostered in all fantasy leagues based on his track record and minimal in-house competition with the Reds.
  • CIN Starting Pitcher #61
    Petty got the call to close out the game against the Pirates after the team took a two-run lead in the top of the ninth. He worked around one walk, keeping the Pirates off the board to secure the win and lock down his first save of the season. It’s been a full-on committee in Cincinnati while Emilio Pagán has been sidelined with a hamstring injury. Pagán, currently on a rehab assignment, could be returning soon to take back the closer role.
  • CIN Relief Pitcher #15
    The Reds could certainly use Pagán back to shore up the back-end of their bullpen with Tony Santillan hitting the injured list with an oblique strain prior to Friday’s series opener against the Pirates. The 35-year-old veteran stopper’s return to Cincinnati’s relief corps feels imminent and he should be rostered in any fantasy leagues where he somehow ended up on the waiver wire after suffering a hamstring strain back in early May.
  • CIN Relief Pitcher #46
    With Emilio Pagán still working his way back, the Reds went to Ferguson to close out Friday’s win. The lefty retired Endy Rodríguez to start the frame, but then allowed a single to Konnor Griffin, giving Brandon Lowe a chance to be the hero for the Pirates. Ferguson, however, wasted little time with Lowe, taking advantage of the lefty-on-lefty matchup to retire him on three straight strikes and then forcing a lineout by Bryan Reynolds to end the game. This won’t be the new norm for Ferguson with Pagán on his way back, but he’s been reliable in nearly every outing he’s made for the Reds this season and proved he can come through in a big spot if needed.
  • CIN Relief Pitcher #64
    It’s been a rough season for Santillan, who has a 5.23 ERA in 31 innings for the Reds. He had been pitching slightly better in June and had taken over the role as the primary closer with three saves in the month. It’s hard to say who may take the ninth-inning duties now because the Reds’ bullpen has been so poor, but Tejay Antone has the next highest game leverage index in June, and he also has a 0.69 ERA in 13 innings across 11 appearances this month, so maybe he’s worth the gamble.
  • CIN Relief Pitcher #15
    Pagán checked out fine from a physical standpoint after facing hitters in a 25-pitch live batting practice session on Monday and will kick off a rehab assignment later this week. The 35-year-old veteran stopper has been on the shelf recovering from a left hamstring strain since early May. He’s on track to return to closing games for Cincinnati before the end of June, which would push Tony Santillan back to a setup role.
  • CIN Relief Pitcher #64
    Santillan is a difficult guy to trust with his nine homers surrendered on the season and 5.10 ERA, but he has earned saves in three straight appearances and has turned in seven scoreless innings since giving up three runs in a loss on June 3. He had an easy one today, though Amed Rosario and Anthony Volpe both had sharp lineouts to center in the ninth. He will need Monday off after this, so perhaps Tejay Antone could close then.

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  • DET 2nd Baseman #50
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    Hao-Yu Lee delivered a two-out, two-run double off of Kirby Yates in the ninth inning on Friday, propelling the Tigers to a come-from-behind 2-1 victory over the Angels.

    As a team, the Tigers couldn’t do anything against Reid Detmers and company throughout the ballgame, They finally got something going against Kirby Yates in the ninth though as Dillon Dingler was hit by a pitch and Riley Greene worked a one-out walk. Down to their final out, Lee smoked a ball into the gap in right-center, plating both runs and putting the Tigers ahead to stay. The rookie infielder finished the night 1-for-4 and is now hitting .255/.288/.392 with four homers and 17 RBI in 161 plate appearances on the season.
  • DET Starting Pitcher #54
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    Keider Montero picked up a victory out of the Tigers’ bullpen on Friday night, with 3 1/3 innings of scoreless baseball against the Angels.

    Montero came on to relieve Troy Melton with two outs in the sixth inning and the Tigers trailing 1-0. He didn’t allow a baserunner until the ninth, where he started the inning by hitting Jorge Soler before allowing a single to Jose Siri. He battled back though, getting Jo Adell on a pop out to second and Oswald Peraza on a ground out to third before retiring Denzer Guzman on a ground ball to shortstop to end it. Montero punched out five batters in the brilliant outing and didn’t walk a batter. He’s expected to rejoin the rotation next week against the Cubs in Chicago.
  • DET Starting Pitcher #52
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    Troy Melton delivered a dazzling performance in a no-decision against the Angels on Friday night, racking up nine strikeouts over 5 2/3 innings of one-run baseball.

    Melton scattered four hits and four walks on the evening. The lone tally against him came on a ground out off the bat of Josh Lowe in the opening inning, that could have been an inning-ending double play, but Zach McKinstry was late going over to cover second base. Melton got a whopping 18 swings and misses on 94 pitches on the night — six on his fastball — while posting an elite CSW of 38 percent. He now holds a brilliant 1.80 ERA, 0.87 WHIP and a 50/15 K/BB ratio over 55 innings through his first nine starts on the season. He’ll do battle against the Royals his next time out on Thursday.
  • LAA Shortstop #9
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    Zach Neto went 2-for-4 with a pair of singles and scored the Angels’ lone run in a heartbreaking loss against the Tigers on Friday evening.

    Neto led off the game with a single on an 0-2 pitch from Troy Melton. He then scampered home on a fielder’s choice off the bat of Josh Lowe, which wound up being the lone tally for either team until the ninth inning. Neto was also thrown out trying to steal in the ballgame. With his two-hit attack, the 25-year-old shortstop is now hitting .237/.328/.453 with 19 homers, 45 RBI and 12 stolen bases (in 21 attempts) on the season.
  • LAA Relief Pitcher #39
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    Kirby Yates suffered his third blown save of the season on Friday night, giving up two runs on two hits over 2/3 of an inning against the Tigers.

    Yates came on with a 1-0 lead to protect. The 39-year-old hurler made things interesting by plunking Dillon Dingler to open the ninth inning. He then battled back to get Spencer Torkelson on a fly ball to left field before James Outman swiped second base to put the tying run in scoring position. Yates then walked Riley Greene before getting Kerry Carpenter on a fly ball to left field for the second out. Hao-Yu Lee followed with a two-run double that gave the Tigers their first lead of the day and put Yates in position for a loss.
  • LAA Starting Pitcher #48
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    Reid Detmers was brilliant during a tough-luck no-decision against the Tigers on Friday, scattering four hits over six innings of shutout baseball.

    Detmers punched out seven opposing hitters on the night and didn’t walk a batter — outdueling Tigers’ right-hander Troy Melton who was terrific in his own right on the other side. Two of the four hits against him went for extra bases, but the Tigers never advanced a runner past second base against him. The 27-year-old southpaw got 12 whiffs on 86 pitches on the night, posting a strong CSW of 33 percent. He’ll look to replicate this fine effort as he carries a 4.16 ERA, 1.12 WHIP and a 130/35 K/BB ratio (114 2/3 innings) into Wednesday’s battle against the Cardinals.
  • MIL Center Fielder #5
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    Garrett Mitchell went 2-for-4 with a walk and walk-off RBI in a 2-1 win over the Marlins on Friday.

    Mitchell was the hero in this extra-innings affair. He delivered the game-winning hit with two-strikes in the 10th inning and made two other fantastic plays in center field to keep this game going just beforehand. It’s just more great baseball for Mitchell who’s in the midst of the best stretch of his career with a .323/.381/.563 slash line over his last 30 games. Also very importantly for Mitchell, his strikeout rate has held firm below 30% over the span which doesn’t sound great, but is lower than his season average by a few percentage points.
  • MIL Starting Pitcher #43
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    Logan Henderson allowed three hits and one run with zero walks and four strikeouts across five innings in a no-decision against the Marlins on Friday.

    It’s so easy to be bullish on Henderson. As usual, his changeup was lethal in this start, forcing five of his six total swings-and-misses while forcing plenty of weak contact. His cutter was also great in terms of generating strikes and quality fastball command kept the whole thing rolling. The Marlins rarely challenged him and he was cruising right along, but the trainers came out to check on him during the fifth inning. He’d stay in to finish that frame which wound up being his last after just 73 pitches. After the game, he mentioned dealing with a forearm cramp and that the team felt it was best to play it safe. Keep an eye on his status ahead of his next scheduled start against the Mets at home.
  • MIA Left Fielder #18
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    Griffin Conine went 1-for-2 with a solo home run on Friday against the Brewers.

    Conine’s solo home run in the fifth inning stood firm as the Marlins’ only run here. It looked like he’d have another chance in his next at-bat, but was lifted for a pinch-hitter with left-handed Aaron Ashby on the mound. The Marlins have been steadfast with their lefty, righty decisions all season and Conine was a casualty of it here. Alas, he has six home runs and a .909 OPS in 93 plate appearances on the season, almost entirely against right-handed pitchers.
  • MIA Starting Pitcher #22
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    Sandy Alcantara allowed three hits and one run with four walks and seven strikeouts across six innings in a no-decision against the Brewers on Friday.

    This version of Alcantara is a total bulldog. Sure, he’s not missing bats at a prolific rate anymore and his command in this start was pretty all over the place. Yet, he never gave an inch. The Brewers very rarely squared him up and had 19 total foul balls while Alcantara continued to pepper them with sinkers, four-seamers, and cutters. Also a lost art in this day and age, Alcantara has now at least pitched into the sixth inning in 13 consecutive starts dating back to early May. He’ll take a 3.90 ERA, 107 strikeouts, and 37 walks through a league-leading 136 2/3 innings into his next start against the Astros in Houston.