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  • BOS Starting Pitcher #89
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    Monday’s spring training contest between the Yankees and Red Sox was postponed due to rain.
    Houck was set to make his Grapefruit League debut in this contest with veteran Carlos Carrasco making his first appearance in Pinstripes. The 28-year-old righty threw a bullpen session in place of his scheduled start, so he won’t be taking the ball on Tuesday when the Red Sox square off against the Braves.
  • KC Right Fielder #14
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    Jac Caglianone was removed as a precaution Saturday because he was favoring his right shoulder on his swing.
    Caglianone was dealing with some soreness after running into the wall shoulder first during Friday’s game. “He’s just a little sore,” manager Matt Quatraro said. “We don’t think it’s anything structural.” Lane Thomas will likely play right field if Caglianone can’t on Sunday.
    PCA showing signs of offensive breakout in June
    James Schiano discusses the improvement that Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong has made on offense in recent weeks, including the .455 batting average and 1.409 OPS he has posted in his last five games.
  • MIL Relief Pitcher
    Brewers placed LHP Brian Fitzpatrick on the 15-day injured list with a left elbow injury.
    The Brewers are still being vague here after Fitzpatrick was due to get scanned today. He said he felt a pop in his elbow while warming up for a second inning of work on Friday.
  • MIL Starting Pitcher #63
    Brewers selected the contract of LHP Drew Rom from Triple-A Nashville.
    Welcome back, Drew Rom. The former Orioles prospect made eight starts with the Cardinals in 2023 after being sent to St. Louis in the Jack Flaherty trade, but he needed shoulder surgery afterwards and spent a year and a half rehabbing. The Brewers signed him to a minor league deal in December and had him work out of the pen for the first time with very nice results to date; he had a 3.04 ERA and a 39/9 K/BB in 26 2.3 innings for Indianapolis. He does have two option years left, so he’ll probably do some bouncing back and forth between the majors and Triple-A over the next few months.
  • KC Catcher #22
    Carter Jensen had a leadoff homer in the first and a game-tying sac fly in the ninth as the Royals edged the Twins 3-2 on Saturday.
    After Jensen’s sac fly, Bobby Witt Jr. looped a liner over Orlando Arcia to give the Royals the lead. Jensen’s homer off Joe Ryan was his eighth of the year, though just his second in his last 37 games. He’s gone 5-for-31 with a 11/1 K/BB in seven games since the Royals moved him in the leadoff spot. It worked out today, but fifth or sixth is probably still the right slot for him,
  • KC Starting Pitcher #58
    Luinder Avila held the Twins to one run and two hits through five innings on Saturday.
    Avila was sharp through four hitless innings before loading the bases with none out in the fifth. He escaped with minimal damage after getting a sac fly and starting a double play on a comebacker from Ryan Kreidler. Apparently, that gave the Royals enough of a scare that they didn’t trust him to come back out for the sixth at 70 pitches. Avila has allowed one run over five innings in both of his starts to date, though that has included seven walks between the outings. He has a 28/19 K/BB overall in 31 1/3 innings this season. He’s doing enough to stick as a starter, but he’s not very interesting in fantasy leagues yet. He’ll likely face the Astros on Friday.
  • KC Relief Pitcher #60
    Pitching for the first time since taking his third straight blown save on Tuesday, Lucas Erceg worked a scoreless seventh against the Twins on Saturday.
    Erceg walked one, but he also got two easy popups and a strikeout while pitching in a 1-1 game. Just two of his 15 pitches today were four-seamers, which may or may not be an indication that he’s working on his pitch mix. He usually throws the four-seamer about one-third of the time. With Alex Lange getting his third save in four days, Erceg doesn’t seem worth rostering in mixed leagues right now. However, given Lange’s volatility, things could always change again in a hurry.
  • KC Relief Pitcher #56
    Alex Lange picked up his third save after striking out three of the five batters he faced Saturday against the Twins.
    That’s three saves in four days for Lange, all of them taking at least 20 pitches to get three outs. He threw 28 while giving up a double and hitting a batter today. There’s certainly no comfort to be had with Lange closing, given his wildness. He’s also already surrendered10 barrels this season, but since only two have turned into homers, he has a respectable 4.03 ERA. He’ll probably keep getting save chances until he blows at least one, but he shouldn’t be available Sunday. Maybe Matt Strahm and Lucas Erceg will be the choice then.
  • MIN Starting Pitcher #41
    Joe Ryan gave up only a leadoff homer to Carter Jensen in six innings Saturday in a no-decision against the Royals.
    The first inning was eventful for Ryan. After the leadoff homer, Bobby Witt Jr. sent a shot to left-center that both Trevor Larnach and Ryan Kreidler tried to catch, leading to a collision. Fortunately, both were OK after being checked on and Kreidler actually held on to the ball. After that, things were pretty quiet. Ryan struck out five and allowed no additional extra-base hits. He remains 4-3 with a 3.07 ERA. He’ll next face the Tigers on Thursday, unless the Twins decide to add a fifth starter before then and push Ryan back to Friday against the Cardinals.
  • MIN Relief Pitcher #19
    Eric Orze took a blown save and a loss after giving up two runs in the ninth Saturday against the Royals.
    Orze’s pitching wasn’t so much the issue; he allowed a pair of singles, neither of which were hit hard, and threw 13 of his 17 pitches for strikes. However, he made a bad judgment call on a comebacker following a leadoff single and a stolen base, choosing to try to throw out the runner returning to second instead of taking the easy out at first. The gambit failed, and after a successful sac bunt, the Royals tied the game on a sac fly and took the lead on a Bobby Witt Jr. liner just over a leaping Orlando Arcia at short. It’s Orze’s third blown save, but he’ll still be in mix for saves in the wide-open Twins pen.
  • MIN 3rd Baseman #23
    Royce Lewis went 0-for-3 with a walk and a strikeout and committed an error at second base Saturday against the Royals.
    Lewis made his second career start at second base and, after some shuffling, his first major league appearance at first today. The error came on what should have been a routine double play turn, but Lewis, still a novice at second, didn’t realize how much time he had with his back to the runner and made a bad throw. Of course, that still wouldn’t have been an error, since the double play can’t be assumed, but the ball went into the dugout and allowed the batter to advance to second. On offense, Lewis had a weak groundout, a walk and a weak popout before coming up with two on and two outs while down by one run in the bottom of the ninth and striking out looking against Alex Lange. It’s all a good reminder that there might not ever have been a bigger skill gap between Triple-A and the majors than there is right now. Still, Lewis will surely get another chance Sunday.