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  • WSH Outfield
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    Elijah Dukes isn’t in the starting lineup on Wednesday.
    No injury here, just a case of manager Jim Riggleman rotating in a number of outfielders. Jorge Padilla got the start in right field on Wednesday.
  • PHI Designated Hitter #12
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    Kyle Schwarber went 2-for-4 with a home run, two RBI, two runs scored, and one walk on Wednesday against the Blue Jays.
    The Phillies’ lineup jumped all over Max Scherzer in this one for six quick runs. A 423 foot, two-run shot from Schwarber was right in the middle of the party. That was his 24th home run of the season, two ahead of Yordan Alvarez for most in the league. His .239 batting average is also nearly identical to where it wound up last year. That’s just fine with him on a 50-homer pace for the second straight season.
    Inside May's resurgence for Cardinals this season
    Eric Samulski dives into Dustin May's turnaround for the St. Louis Cardinals with changes in his pitch mix to make his arsenal more effective and become more valuable in fantasy lineups.
  • TOR 1st Baseman #27
    Vladimir Guerrero Jr. went 1-for-3 with one run batted in and two walks on Wednesday against the Phillies.
    The Blue Jays simply did not have enough power to forge a comeback after falling down by six runs early against the Phillies. They chipped away and put some runs on the board, but ultimately couldn’t find that home run to get over the hump. In fact, they didn’t have a single extra-base hit, only eight singles. This is nothing new for Guerrero, who only has two extra-base hits in June and whose last home run came way back on May 17th. Him having just three homers and a .740 OPS in the middle of June is not what we expected.
  • TOR Starting Pitcher #31
    Max Scherzer allowed five hits and five runs with three walks and four strikeouts across 3 1/3 innings in a loss to the Phillies on Wednesday.
    Scherzer was not sharp at all in his return from the injured list. Bryce Harper wasted little time welcoming him back with a first inning home run and Alec Bohm hit a three-run shot in the third. Scherzer was missing plenty of bats with 13 whiffs, but these same home run issues that have plagued the twilight of his career remain. He’ll take a rough 10.23 ERA and 13 to 12 strikeout to walk ratio over 22 innings into his next scheduled start against the Red Sox at Fenway Park.
  • MIA Shortstop #6
    Otto Lopez went 2-for-5 with two runs batted in and one run scored in an 8-0 win over the Diamondbacks on Wednesday.
    All this guy does is hit. Two more singles – both with runners in scoring position – raised his league best batting average to .342 in one of the best stories of this season. A big reason for Lopez’s massive step forward is that he’s hitting the ball harder than he ever has. In this game, he had four hard-hit balls, including one at 111.9 mph. That is harder than he’d ever hit a ball before this season began. Enjoy the ride.
  • MIA Starting Pitcher #65
    Ryan Gusto allowed three hits and one walk across four scoreless innings with four strikeouts in a no-decision against the Diamondbacks on Wednesday.
    This was both Gusto’s longest major league outing this season and his most effective. He mixed six different pitches and worked the edges of the plate well with each of them. There wasn’t much hard contact either despite him only forcing five swings-and-misses. Also, he worked up to 66 pitches after throwing 40 and then 33 in his two prior outings. He’s lined up to face the Phillies on the road next.
  • AZ Catcher #14
    Gabriel Moreno went 2-for-3 with a walk on Wednesday against the Marlins.
    The Diamondbacks’ were blanked in what was mostly a bullpen game by the Marlins here, but Moreno still got his. Coming in on a two-game homer streak, he couldn’t push that forward while putting up his eighth mutli-hit game since the beginning of May. On the season, he has a .266 batting average, .779 OPS, and five home runs in 43 games as a very solid catcher.
  • AZ Starting Pitcher #19
    Ryne Nelson allowed eight hits and seven runs with one walk and two strikeouts over four innings in a loss to the Marlins on Wednesday.
    The avalanche against Nelson occurred in the fourth inning when the Marlins put up six runs – all scoring with two outs – on two home runs, three other singles, and a hit batsmen. Truthfully, he was fortunate to have gotten through the first three innings barely missing any bats and having allowed eight hard-hit balls on just 10 total balls in play. Nelson will take a 5.19 ERA and 57 to 22 strikeout to walk ratio over 76 1/3 innings into a two-start week against the Angels and Twins.
  • LAA Catcher #14
    Logan O’Hoppe went 2-for-2 with a homer and a sac bunt Wednesday in the Angels’ 3-2 defeat of the Astros.
    Jose Siri won the game by singling in automatic runner Nick Madrigal in the 10th. O’Hoppe’s homer off Peter Lambert was just his third in 45 games this season. The fractured wrist he suffered in April seems to have sapped his power, but it might be coming around now; since Monday, four of his five balls in play have been hit hard (not counting tonight’s sac bunt). Tonight’s homer left the bat at 107.7 mph and was projected at 423 feet.
  • LAA Starting Pitcher #48
    Reid Detmers allowed one run and one hit in seven innings and struck out nine against the Astros on Wednesday.
    Detmers might have been this pitcher two or three years ago if drafted into a healthier organization, but better late than never. He has a 97/24 K/BB in 81 innings, and while his ERA still sits at 4.00, the estimators have him right around 3.00, which is how he’ll be valued if the Angels finally trade him this summer. He’ll face Arizona next Tuesday.
  • LAA Relief Pitcher #56
    Ryan Zeferjahn picked up his third win Wednesday after throwing a scoreless 10th in a tie game against the Astros.
    Zeferjahn struck out two, intentionally walked Joey Loperfido and then got Shay Whitcomb to ground out to strand the automatic runner. That he’s unintentionally walked 21 batters in 31 2/3 innings this season has held him back, but he has an argument for being the Angels’ best reliever. It’d just a better one if he could be trusted at all to throw strikes.