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  • BOS 2nd Baseman #43
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    Tony Renda has elected free agency.
    Renda made just one plate appearance for Boston in 2018, but still gets a World Series ring. He’ll seek another minor league deal elsewhere.
  • PHI Shortstop #7
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    Trea Turner went 1-for-3 with a home run, two RBI, and two walks in Friday’s loss to the Braves.
    Turner sent his third homer of the season 394 feet into the stands to give the Phillies a 2-0 lead in the top of the third inning. It was the third homer of the season for Turner, who has struggled at the plate this first month of the season. The veteran shortstop is slashing a paltry .190/.288/.362 in his last 15 games and hasn’t recorded a multi-hit game since April 12th. We would expect him to get out of this slump sooner or later, but Turner is becoming increasingly harder to trust while he irons things out.
    Who will play shortstop for Mets with Lindor hurt?
    James Schiano talks about the "suddenly surging" Mets, analyzing how they will recover from "ironman" Francisco Lindor suffering a calf strain and sharing why New York is "in a bit of a pickle" at the shortstop position.
  • ATL Starting Pitcher #66
    Grant Holmes allowed three earned runs over six innings while striking out for to pick up the win on Friday against the Phillies.
    After making it through the first two innings unscathed, Holmes ran into trouble in the top of the third inning. After allowing a single to Garrett Stubbs, Holmes left a fastball just over the heart of the plate to Treat Turner, who sent it 394 feet into right center to put the Phillies up 2-0. Holmes would get through the fourth inning without allowing a run despite loading the bases with two outs, but gave up a solo homer to Bryce Harper in the fifth inning. Holmes continues to be solid for the Braves, allowing three earned runs or fewer in each of his six starts this season. His next start is scheduled for Thursday at home against the Tigers.
  • COL Starting Pitcher #24
    Michael Lorenzen twirled seven strong innings scattering seven hits and striking out three with just one earned run to his ledger in a 4-3 win over the Mets on Friday.
    Didn’t think Lorenzen had this in him. He evaded trouble all night with some well-timed double plays and line drives that found gloves, but got the job done. It felt like more of an old-school start where he appeared to be pitching to contact rather than hunting whiffs. It worked here and he’ll have another chance to start away from Coors Field next time out against the Reds in Cincinnati.
  • COL Relief Pitcher #49
    Antonio Senzatela retired all five of the batters he faced on the way to earning the save against the Mets on Friday.
    Senzatela entered this game in the eighth inning with the tying run on third base and one out and lucked out when Mark Vientos hit a line drive back up the middle that was caught and turned into a double play. Then, he made quick work of the Mets in the ninth inning to earn his second save of the season. Rockies’ usual closer Victor Vodnik blew an ugly save Thursday, allowing five runs against the Padres and throwing 22 pitches in the process, so it makes sense as to why the team didn’t immediately turn back to him here. Senzatela has widened his arsenal in relief this season throwing far more cutters and sinkers than he ever has, making him mildly intriguing as a late-game option besides for the fact that he pitches his home games in Coors Field.
  • COL 1st Baseman #20
    Troy Johnston went 1-for-5 with two RBI on Friday against the Mets.
    With his Rockies up one, Johnston delivered a clutch, two-run knock to stretch their lead out. The Mets wound up responding with a rally of their own, but fell one run short. Just as he and his teammates have done all season, Johnston attacked a first-pitch fastball from Sean Manaea to get his big hit. On the season, he has a .317 batting average and .834 OPS as a pleasant surprise in the middle of the Rockies’ order.
  • PHI Starting Pitcher #24
    Andrew Painter allowed five earned runs over 5 2/3 innings while striking out one in Friday’s loss to the Braves.
    Painter avoided serious trouble in the first inning, pitching a scoreless frame despite allowing two runners to reach base. He would retire all three batters he faced in the second inning, but in the bottom of the third, the rookie allowed back-to-back hits to Eli White and Ronald Acuña to kick off the inning, with Acuña’s hit coming in the form of a two-run homer to tie the game at 2-2. Painter would fall victim to a two-RBI double by Michael Harris in the bottom of the sixth inning to put the Phillies down 4-2, and was pulled later in the inning after walking Acuña. The five earned runs allowed by Painter were the most in any game this season, while his lone strikeout tied a season-low. He’ll make one more start this month when he takes the mound on Thursday against the Giants.
  • NYM 3rd Baseman #7
    Brett Baty went 2-for-4 with a double, two RBI, and a run scored on Friday against the Rockies.
    Baty was one of the few Mets who were able to convert scoring chances in this one. He came around to score the game’s first run after hitting a second inning double and smashed a two-run single through the hole in the eighth that nearly pushed the Rockies to the brink. After a disastrous first few weeks of the season, he’s 6-for-16 over his last seven games while showing much, much better plate discipline and power.
  • NYM Starting Pitcher #51
    Freddy Peralta allowed seven hits and two runs with three walks and eight strikeouts across 5 2/3 innings in a loss to the Rockies on Friday.
    There’s a hump that Peralta just can’t get over at the moment. Just like in many of his other starts this season, he cruised early and then ran into trouble during the fifth and sixth innings. It wasn’t much hard contact – a swinging bunt, some walks, and ball that caromed off the second base bag – but he was pulled with two outs in the sixth after having given up the lead. His fastball and changeup were sharp, combining for 14 of his 16 total swing-and-misses. We’re just still looking for some consistency from his slider. His next start is scheduled to come against the Nationals.
  • TOR 3rd Baseman #7
    Kazuma Okamoto went 2-for-3 with a homer and two runs scored as the Blue Jays lost to the Guardians on Friday.
    Okamoto took Gavin Williams out to dead center -- it landed over the batter’s eye some 430 feet away -- and added a walk and a single to up his season line to .222/.307/.378 with four homers. It hasn’t been what we’d hoped yet, but Okamoto still has a chance to boot up.
  • CLE Relief Pitcher #36
    Cade Smith allowed the first two runners to reach but bounced back to record his sixth save against the Blue Jays on Friday.
    Kazuma Okamoto and Andrés Giménez singled to start proceedings in the ninth, but Smith got pinch-hitter Eloy Jiménez to ground into a double play to quash the rally before Davis Schneider popped up to end the game. Smith’s 4.15 ERA and 1.50 WHIP weren’t what you were hoping for when you sprung an early pick on a closer, but he’s underperforming his xERA by almost a full run and his strikeout rate remains high.