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    Nationals place Brad Lord (side) on 15-day IL

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    WSH Relief Pitcher #41
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    Nationals placed LHP Brad Lord on the 15-day injured list, retroactive to July 6, with left side tightness.

    The 26-year-old hurler was torched for six runs with two outs in the ninth inning on Tuesday against the Phillies and he appears to have injured more than his ERA in the process. He’ll miss at least a week on both sides of the All-Star break as he recovers from the side issue. A corresponding move will be made prior to Friday’s contest.
Trout delivers big performance in return from IL
With Mike Trout back for the Los Angeles Angels, Eric Samulski analyzes Trout's fantasy value and how his return may affect playing time and fantasy production for some of his teammates.

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  • WSH Relief Pitcher #41
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    The Nats were up 5-3 after seven tonight, but Richard Lovelady and Clayton Beeter combined to give up three runs in the eighth. All of the runs were charged to Lovelady, but the big blow was JT Realmuto’s three-run double off Beeter, who was charged with a blown save tonight after earning a save Monday. Since Beeter was pitching for the third time in four days, he wasn’t a candidate to come back out after the Nationals reclaimed the lead in the bottom of the eighth. Instead, Lord, typically a middle reliever, was handed an 8-6 lead. He struck out Edmundo Sosa and Justin Crawford to start the ninth and then gave up five straight hits, two of which were homers. After the next batter walked, Lord departed, and Paxton Schultz came in and gave up two more runs before finally finishing the inning. it’s the first real blemish of the year for Lord, who hadn’t previously been brought in with a lead in the ninth. He had been 5-0 with one two-inning save, four holds and no blown saves. His ERA jumped from 2.29 to 3.31. Beeter probably remains the favorite for saves in D.C., but since he’ll be unavailable Wednesday, perhaps Gus Varland could close.
  • WSH Relief Pitcher #41
    We have no idea who is going to get the next save for the Nationals. This one was a bit odd with Lord coming in for the eighth in a three-run game before two insurance runs were tacked on the board in the bottom of the inning. Still, he stayed on for the ninth and now the last seven converted Nationals saves have gone to six different pitchers.
  • WSH Relief Pitcher #41
    Lord had to be pretty bummed to be tossed back into the pen, given that he was far more valuable last season that any of the Nationals’ other pitching holdovers. Still, it is questionable whether he really has the arm to survive as a starter for the long haul. Working two or three innings at a time in relief might prove to be his best role, and he could sneak in some saves in a wide-open Nationals pen.
  • WSH Pitcher #41
    Lord struck out two batters on the afternoon and didn’t allow a base on balls. The Marlins got to him in the first inning with a run-scoring triple from Christopher Morel then added on another in the second on an RBI double off the bat of Daniel Johnson. Lord got five whiffs on 43 pitches on the day, registering a CSW of 21 percent. He’s a favorite to secure a spot in the team’s Opening Day rotation, but doesn’t offer much upside for fantasy purposes.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #61
    The 25-year-old hurler also issued a pair of walks in the ballgame while punching out four opposing hitters. All of the damage done against him came via the long ball, with Miguel Vargas crushing a two-run shot in the first inning, Brooks Baldwin adding a solo shot in the fourth and Dominic Fletcher launching a two-run blast in the fourth. Lord got nine whiffs on 80 pitches on the afternoon, posting a CSW of 26 percent. He finishes the 2025 season with an uninspiring 5-10 record, 4.34 ERA, 1.29 WHIP and a 108/43 K/BB ratio across 130 2/3 innings in 48 appearances (19 starts). He’ll probably have to battle for a spot in the Nationals’ rotation to open the 2026 campaign.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #61
    The 25-year-old hurler struck out four batters on the night while allowing only one base on balls. All of the damage done against him came via the long ball as Michael Harris II swatted a solo homer in the fifth inning and Ronald Acuña Jr. added a go-ahead blast in the sixth inning. Lord got seven whiffs on 96 pitches on the night — six on his fastball — while posting a CSW of 22 percent. He finishes the season with a 5-9 record, 4.12 ERA, 1.28 WHIP and a 104/41 K/BB ratio across 126 2/3 innings in 47 appearances (18 starts).
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #1
    Gore won’t make a final start Sunday after giving up four runs in two innings against the Braves on Monday. The Nationals could just use Brad Lord, tonight’s schedule starter, on four days’ rest then. Gore, who missed two starts at the beginning of the month with shoulder tendinitis, ends the year 5-15 with a 4.17 ERA. That doesn’t look like much now, but he did make the All-Star team before fading, and his 27.2% strikeout rate is a new high.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #61
    Lord’s season high for pitches in a 2025 split between the rotation and the pen had been 92. Today’s game saw him open with 92 pitches through five scoreless innings. For some reason, though, Miguel Cairo thought this was a good time to extend him in probably his next-to-last start of the season. He opened the sixth by giving up hits to two of the three batters he faced before being lifted and was charged with two of the Braves’ four runs in the frame. So, no positive outcome here. Lord will face the Braves again next week.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #61
    Lord fought through traffic on the bases in nearly every inning here and bent, but didn’t break to wind up with a quality start. He barely barely missed any bats either, it just didn’t matter much against this pitiful Pirates lineup. Next up for Lord is a meeting with the Braves at home.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #61
    A nice rebound from giving up seven runs each of his last two times out. Lord’s 92-96 mph fastball was incredibly effective today; he threw it 40 times and it was put into play just once, with that turning into a 103-mph double-play ball from Ian Happ. It had a 30% CSW. Lord improved to 3-3 with a 5.28 ERA in nine starts since joining the rotation. He’ll face the Marlins on Thursday, unless the Nationals perhaps decide to add a spot starter with no days off next week.

Rotoworld

  • LAA Starting Pitcher #21
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    Grayson Rodriguez (back) will return from the injured list to start against the Twins on Friday.

    That was the expectation all along, but the Angels finally confirmed it on Thursday. Rodriguez looked strong in his latest minor league rehab start, hurling 5 1/3 innings of one-run baseball at Triple-A Salt Lake. Fantasy managers may want to see how he looks one turn through the rotation before throwing him right back to the wolves.
  • TEX 2nd Baseman #14
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    Justin Foscue went 2-for-3 with a homer, two RBI and a walk Thursday as the Rangers held off the Angels 7-6.

    Texas coughed up a 6-1 lead in the seventh but won the game on Wyatt Langford’s single in the bottom of the ninth. Foscue homered off Reid Detmers in the fourth and doubled in a run in the sixth. Both hits were off lefties, as is typical. He’s now hitting .367/.466/.796 in 49 at-bats against southpaws, compared to .216/.255/.353 in 51 at-bats versus righties. As a result, he’ll likely be on the bench Friday against Houston’s Hunter Brown.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #17
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    Nathan Eovaldi surrendered four runs — three earned — in six-plus innings and struck out 10 in a no-decision Thursday.

    Eovaldi had a 6-1 lead after six, but the seventh started with a catcher interference, a walk and a single, at which point Eovaldi exited. Peyton Grey came in and allowed all three runners to score while getting two outs. Tyler Alexander entered then and allowed both of Grey’s runners to score, making it a 6-6 game. Eovaldi still ends the first half on a four-game winning streak. He’s 9-7 with a 4.04 ERA overall. The 10 strikeouts were a season high. He fanned nine in each of his three previous starts.
  • LAA Starting Pitcher #48
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    Reid Detmers gave up five runs and three homers in four innings Thursday against the Rangers.

    Detmers served up homers to Brandon Nimmo in the first, Ezequiel Duran in the third and Justin Foscue in the fourth. All were hit at 104 mph, oddly enough. We’ll feel better about Detmers as a fantasy starter if and when he gets out of Anaheim. He closes out the first half with a 3-6 record and a 4.19 ERA despite an excellent 123/35 K/BB in 108 2/3 innings.
  • LAA Relief Pitcher #39
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    Kirby Yates dropped to 0-4 after giving up a run in the ninth Thursday against the Rangers.

    Yates came into a tie game in the ninth and gave up a groundball single, a sac bunt and then a long single off the wall in left to end the game. It was a tough break for a reliever who has been very good of late with little to show for it. It was the first run he’d allowed since June 22 and the first earned run since June 8. He’s still a candidate for saves in the Angels’ pen, though he has earned just two so far.
  • LAA 1st Baseman #18
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    Nolan Schanuel went 4-for-4 with two doubles, two RBI and a walk Thursday versus the Rangers.

    He had only one hard-hit ball, but Schanuel sent everything to the right spots tonight. It’s his second four-hit game as a major leaguer, with the other coming last July against the Mets. He’s hitting an adequate .269/.339/.393 on the season, but he still isn’t showing much in the way of upside.
  • MIL 1st Baseman #9
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    Jake Bauers clobbered a three-run homer on Thursday night, powering the Brewers to an 8-4 victory over the Cardinals.

    Bauers broke the game wide open with his 391-foot (110.3-mph EV) three-run shot off of Andre Pallante in the third inning, increasing the Brewers’ edge to 6-0. His blast would prove to be the difference in the ballgame. Bauers also singled, walked and struck out twice in the ballgame, finishing the evening 2-for-4. On the season, he’s now slashing .268/.368/.505 with 17 long balls, 57 RBI and five stolen bases.
  • MIL 2nd Baseman #2
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    Brice Turang went 2-for-5 with a homer and two RBI on Thursday night as the Brewers dispatched of the Cardinals.

    Turang came through with an RBI single in the third inning that increased the Brewers’ lead to 3-0. He then rode home on Jake Bauers’ three-run shot. The 26-year-old second baseman then went deep himself in the seventh inning with a 419-foot (103.4-mph EV) solo shot off of Luis Gastelum in the seventh that increased the Brewers’ lead to 7-4. Turang is enjoying a great first half, slashing .269/.361/.464 with 13 homers, 56 RBI and 15 stolen bases in 401 plate appearances.
  • MIL Starting Pitcher #43
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    Logan Henderson defeated the Cardinals in his return from the injured list on Thursday, surrendering three runs on just three hits over his 5 1/3 innings of work.

    Henderson struck out four batters on the evening while allowing only one base on balls. He allowed a run in the fourth inning on an RBI single off the bat of Lars Nootbaar. Henderson then ran into trouble in the sixth, exiting with two men on and one out — and both inherited runners immediately scored on a three-run blast by Jordan Walker. Henderson generated eight whiffs on 76 pitches on the night, posting a CSW of 28 percent. The 24-year-old hurler finishes the first half with a 3-1 record, 3.18 ERA, 0.99 WHIP and a 34/7 K/BB ratio across 28 1/3 innings through his first six starts. As long as he stays healthy, he should have plenty of mixed league viability over the second half of the season.
  • STL Right Fielder #18
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    Jordan Walker went 1-for-4 and swatted a three-run homer on Thursday night, but it wasn’t enough to power the Cardinals past the visiting Brewers.

    Walker turned a five-run deficit into a two-run deficit with his 406-foot (106.5-mph EV) three-run blast off of Chad Patrick in the sixth inning. That would be as close as they would get though. It was also Walker’s only hit in four at-bats in the contest. The All-Star slugger is enjoying an unbelievable first half, slashing .294/.354/.539 with 22 homers, 73 RBI and 12 stolen bases.