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Rotoworld

  • LAA Shortstop #33
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    Angels recalled INF Charles Leblanc from Triple-A Salt Lake.
    Leblanc was brought up on Sunday as an extra bench bat for Los Angeles for the final few weeks of the regular season. The 28-year-old infielder has gotten into a pair of contests this year in the big leagues.
  • SEA Shortstop #85
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    Mariners recalled INF Colt Emerson from Triple-A Tacoma.
    The 20-year-old Emerson, who was hitting .255/.347/.469 with seven homers and 10 steals in 38 games for Tacoma, has been added to an updated Mariners lineup and will play third and bat ninth in his MLB debut Sunday night against the Padres. Leo Rivas was originally in that spot. With Brendan Donovan on the IL, the Mariners can just play Emerson at the hot corner for now. The team will have to think about him at shortstop later, though. Ideally, he’ll be in the majors for good, but that could change if he struggles during Donovan’s absence.
    Rays show off scrappy identity in 30th win of year
    Matt Vasgersian, Brian Anderson and Jeff Nelson react to the Rays' 6-3 win over the Marlins, where plenty of movement on the basepaths and gutty pitching performances defined Sunday's clash between in-state rivals.
  • SEA 3rd Baseman #33
    Mariners placed INF/OF Brendan Donovan on the 10-day injured list, retroactive to May 16, with a strained left groin muscle.
    It’s the same injury that sidelined him from Apr. 18 to May 8. Donovan had been 6-for-28 with no RBI since returning. Colt Emerson figures to be the Mariners’ primary third baseman for now, and the Mariners won’t have to make any big decisions regarding Donovan or J.P. Crawford until Donovan returns.
  • BOS Catcher #75
    X-rays were negative on Carlos Narváez’s middle finger, and he said he’s day-to-day.
    Narváez said the finger was “sideways” for a time, suggesting that he might have dislocated it. But he apparently won’t miss much time. Connor Wong could start Monday.
  • CLE 1st Baseman #9
    Kyle Manzardo clubbed two homers in Sunday’s 10-3 victory over the Reds.
    The homers were two of six that Cleveland hit in the contest. Manzardo’s first one was a titanic two-run blast against Brady Singer in the third inning, and he followed it up with a solo shot off left-hander Brock Burke. He got off to a very cold start in April, registering a 35 K%, but he’s been hitting better in May and should remain a middle-of-the-order presence against right-handers. Cleveland next heads out on a seven-game road trip to Detroit and Philadelphia.
  • NYM Center Fielder #28
    Tyrone Taylor hit a game-tying three-run homer off David Bednar in the bottom of the ninth Sunday as the Mets came back to beat the Yankees 7-6 on Sunday.
    It kind of looked like the Mets gave up on this one when they brought in Sean Manaea in relief of a wild Freddy Peralta in the sixth inning and then left him in after that turned into a four-run inning. Manaea went on to walk in a run in the seventh, leading him to being booed off the field when the inning ended, but he turned in scoreless eighth and ninth innings, and the Mets pulled off a stunning comeback when Taylor launched his homer off David Bednar with two outs. Devin Williams then kept the Yankees scoreless in the 10th, and the Mets won the game on a grounder up the middle with one out and a runner on third when two members of the Yankees’ five-man infield got in each other’s way while hoping to make a play at the plate. Taylor’s homer was his third of the year. He had come off the bench to replace MJ Melendez four innings earlier against a lefty.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #32
    Gavin Williams picked up his sixth win of the year in Sunday’s 10-3 victory over the Reds, tossing six innings of two-run ball while striking out seven.
    Williams allowed eight hits but didn’t walk anyone, picking up 17 whiffs along the way. One of the runs he surrendered was a third-inning, opposite-field solo blast off the bat of Elly De La Cruz. Williams is sporting the best K-BB% of his career, but his HR/FB% is the one blemish that leads to his 3.67 ERA. His next start lines up on the road against the Phillies.
  • NYM Starting Pitcher #51
    Freddy Peralta walked a career high-tying six while allowing three runs in five-plus innings Sunday against the Yankees.
    Peralta gave up one run over five and then walked Cody Bellinger and Jazz Chisholm Jr. back-to-back to start the sixth. He was pulled at that point, and both runners came around to score off Sean Manaea. Peralta previously walked six on May 19, 2018 and May 5, 2024, so it’s just the time of year, apparently. He’s allowed three runs or fewer in nine straight starts now, but he’s also completed six innings just three times this year (and never gone beyond that). He wasn’t involved in the decision today, leaving him 3-3 with a 3.31 ERA. He’s slated to face the Marlins next.
  • NYM Relief Pitcher #38
    Devin Williams pitched a hitless 10th and was credited with a win Sunday against the Yankees.
    Williams struck out Max Schuermann, walked Anthony Volpe and then got an inning-ending double play from Austin Wells to keep the Yankees scoreless. It’s his ninth straight scoreless outing since an ugly stretch in which he gave up eight runs in two innings over four appearances.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #71
    Elmer Rodríguez pitched one-run ball for 4 1/3 innings Sunday in his start against the Mets.
    Rodríguez allowed five hits, walked one and struck out one. All three of his starts for the Yankees have seen him get between 12 and 14 outs. He’ll take more turn next weekend against the Pirates before Gerrit Cole is activated.
  • NYY Relief Pitcher #53
    David Bednar gave up a three-run homer in the ninth to take his second blown save Sunday against the Mets.
    Bednar allowed two singles before Tyrone Taylor crushed a curveball to left field. It’s the first time this year that Bednar has allowed more than one earned run in a game, but he has now been scored on in 10 of his 20 appearances. The Yankees probably won’t contemplate a closer switch just yet, but Bednar better now blow another opportunity in short order. Fernando Cruz is probably the fallback in the ninth at this point.