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    Ben Rice hits two-run triple in victory over Nats

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    NYY 1st Baseman #22
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    Ben Rice hit a two-run triple to help the Yankees to a 5-3 win over the Nationals on Sunday.

    Rice is not exactly known for his speed, but he already has three triples on the season, and this one was a big one as it turned a 3-2 deficit into a 4-3 cushion. The 27-year-old was outstanding in the first half, and the Home Run Derby participant has now driven in 68 runs in 2026. Some regression is certainly possible — baseball is hard — but everything Rice has shown over the first few months suggest this is legit.
    - Christopher Crawford
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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  • NYY 1st Baseman #22
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    Rice’s first homer barely scraped over the fence -- in fact it was reviewed by the umpire crew to be sure it crossed the yellow line -- but his second was a no-doubter to right-center that almost hit the Rays aquarium. The Yankees haven’t hit much of late, but Rice has been carrying them with five homers in his last seven games. He’s got a few more warm-up acts before the Home Run Derby -- the two homers he hit here made his total of 28 a career high. He still has a whole second half of the season to play.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #22
    Rice took Rays lefty Ian Seymour deep with an opposite-field shot in the third inning. It was his 26th long ball of the season and second consecutive contest with a round-tripper. The 27-year-old appears to be warming up just in time for next week’s All-Star Home Run Derby.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #22
    Rice joins Junior Caminero as known participants for the event, which will take place Monday in Philadelphia. The 27-year-old has been sensational in 2026 with 25 homers, and it’s not hard to imagine him doing well in the competition next week.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #22
    Rice provided a little extra insurance for New York with a ninth-inning dinger against Rays reliever Chris Roycroft. The power-hitting 27-year-old is one round-tripper away from matching last year’s total and is on pace to threaten the lofty 40-homer plateau. He’s cooled off considerably after a sizzling-hot start to the year, but he’s still providing plenty of over-the-fence pop.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #22
    Rice blasted his 24th homer of the season into the right-field stands in the third inning to give the Yankees a 3-1 lead. It was a much-needed bright spot for the slugger who is slashing a measly .175/.230/.386 over his last 15 games and has cooled off significantly after a blistering start to the season that saw him slashing .306/.397/.658 after May. He’s homered twice in his last two games and hit safely in each of his last three, so hopefully Rice is beginning to turn a corner and find his way out of this slump.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #22
    Rice was one of the few bright spots for New York on a relatively miserable evening as he took Tigers ace Tarik Skubal deep in the opening frame for his 23rd long ball of the season. He struck out in two of his final three at-bats of the one-sided affair.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #22
    His one hard-hit ball today turned into a double play. Rice also managed just two singles in 13 at-bats against the Tigers earlier this week, so his OPS has dropped from 1.004 to .940 in a six-game span. His hard-hit rate has gone from 61 percent in April to 44 percent in May and 32 percent in June.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #48
    Goldschmidt takes a seat with Ben Rice at first base and Cody Bellinger getting the nod at DH to face emerging Reds ace Chase Burns during Sunday afternoon’s matinee at Yankee Stadium. The 38-year-old veteran, who launched his 12th round-tripper of the season during Saturday’s contest, has been tearing the cover off the ball recently, hitting .338 (23-for-68) with six homers in 16 games since the start of June.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #22
    Rice made the most of his opportunity in the second inning when he stepped up to the dish with two runners on. The lefty took a high and inside fastball from Rhett Lowder, 452 feet to deep center to push the Yankees’ lead to 4-0 for his 21st homer of the season. Rice continues to display impressive power and is slashing .254/.362/.475 in the month of June.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #22
    Rice and Paul Goldschmidt both homered in the fourth, giving the Yankees a total of 30 homers from what they were looking at as a first base platoon initially. Of course, both are full-timers right now, but it’s easy to forget that Rice was on the bench for three of the Yankees’ first four games versus lefties during the first couple of weeks. Rice became the eighth player to reach 20 homers this season. He’s third in the majors with his 1.006 OPS.

Rotoworld

  • DET Starting Pitcher #59
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    Tigers activated LHP Framber Valdez off the bereavement list.

    Valdez missed a little under a week while dealing with things more important than baseball. He’s scheduled to start early next week against the Cubs.
    - Christopher Crawford
  • DET Relief Pitcher #4
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    Tigers optioned RHP Beau Brieske to Triple-A Toledo.

    There was a time that Brieske was a pretty key cog to the Detroit bullpen, but his struggles have made him nothing more than an up-and-down arm. He’s down this time, with Framber Valdez taken of the bereavement list in the corresponding move.
    - Christopher Crawford
  • TOR Starting Pitcher #57
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    Shane Bieber allowed just three hits over six innings in the Blue Jays’ 1-0 shutout of the White Sox on Saturday.

    Bieber’s velocity today wasn’t quite as good as in his final start before the break, but at 92.3 mph on average with his fastball, he was still better than in his first three outings back. He was able to generate 13 whiffs and finish with a 33 percent CSW while throwing only 80 pitches to get his 18 outs. If the velocity heads south again, Bieber probably won’t be helpful in mixed leagues. Right now, though, he’s looking good. He’ll get the Rays at home on Thursday.
  • TOR Relief Pitcher #77
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    Louis Varland was perfect in the ninth in protecting a 1-0 lead against the White Sox on Saturday.

    Varland struck out one in earning his 20th save. He’s fanned a batter in 15 straight appearances. He needed just nine pitches to get through this one, so he’ll be good to go on Sunday.
  • CWS Starting Pitcher #65
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    Davis Martin took a tough loss after allowing one run through 5 2/3 innings versus the Blue Jays on Saturday.

    Martin, who opened up 9-2 through 13 turns, is now winless in his last six starts, even though he’s pitched very well in three of those games. He allowed four hits, walked two and struck out five today. He’ll pitch at home against Houston next Friday.
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    Vladimir Guerrero Jr. went 2-for-3 with a double and a walk and scored the only run in the Blue Jays’ win over the White Sox on Saturday.

    Guerrero’s double in the fourth was cranked 107 mph to the wall in center and missed being a homer by a foot or two. George Springer went on to single him in afterwards. Guerrero also had three balls hit in excess of 105 mph last night, so taking the All-Star break off might have done him and his back some good.
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    Kyle Teel went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts versus the Blue Jays on Saturday.

    With 14 RBI in his 15 starts since coming off the injured list, Teel is timing his hits well. However, he’s batting just .198/.275/.323 with a 39 percent strikeout rate through 69 plate appearances. His bat speed is actually well up from last year, but if, as the numbers suggest, he’s sacrificing contact to make that happen, it’s might not be worth it.
  • CLE Relief Pitcher
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    Guardians recalled LHP Will Dion from Triple-A Columbus.

    Dion rejoins the Guardians bullpen with Codi Heuer getting optioned in a corresponding move. He’ll be an option against left-handed lineups while a part of the Cleveland staff.
    - Christopher Crawford
  • CLE Relief Pitcher #50
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    Guardians optioned RHP Codi Heuer to Triple-A Columbus.

    Heuer is optioned to make room for a fresh arm in left-hander Will Dion. It seems likely that Heuer will be back as a mid-inning option for Cleveland at some point this summer.
    - Christopher Crawford
  • NYY Right Fielder #99
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    Yankees manager Aaron Boone told reporters that Aaron Judge (rib) is not ready to resume baseball activities.

    Specialist Dr. Gregory Pearl got back to the Yankees on Saturday and basically confirmed Friday’s news. “There’s healing going on, which is good, but he’s still not able to start any baseball activities or anything,” Boone told reporters. “He needs to get to a point where he’s asymptomatic, where you really start ramping up more upper-body stuff.” Boone did say that the good news was that the pain is starting to subside for Judge, and that it’s more of a dull pain than the sharp one that has bothered the slugger. Judge was moved to the 60-day injured list that won’t allow him to return until the beginning of August, but there’s a good chance he’s not back until closer to the start of September.
    - Christopher Crawford