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  • TB Left Fielder #11
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    Gavin Lux (shoulder) could return to the Rays’ lineup this weekend.

    Lux is hitting just .169/.329/.288 in 73 plate appearances in Triple-A with a 20/14 K/BB ratio. Lux has just a 20.5 percent hard-hit rate at Triple-A, so there doesn’t seem to be much to get excited about right now.
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    Ryan Jeffers (hamate) went 1-for-2 with a walk and a home run for Triple-A St. Paul on Tuesday.

    Jeffers had surgery to remove his fracture hamate bone in the middle of May. He has now played four games at Triple-A and gone 6-for-13 with two home runs, two RBI, and a 1/1 K/BB ratio. It’s unclear if the Twins will rush him back before the All-Star break, but he needs to be stashed in any league where you are hoping to get him back into your starting lineup.
    CC breaks down the NL roster for the All-Star Game
    John Fanta and CC Sabathia break down the NL starters for the upcoming MLB All-Star Game. The two also talk potential roster snubs and what advantages the NL squad might have over the AL.
  • TB Left Fielder #11
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    Gavin Lux (shoulder/hip) went 3-for-4 for Triple-A Durham on Tuesday.

    Lux had been dealing with shuolder and hip injuries that sidelined him for essentially all of May and June. He returned to action at Triple-A on June 30th and played two games before sitting out for five days due to discomfort in both shoulders. Lux returned to action on Tuesday and had exit velocities of 100.6 mph, 99.2 mph, and 97.3 mph. However, he was limited to DH duties, and until he can play the field for an entire game, multiple days a week, he won’t be near a return to the Rays lineup.
  • CWS Starting Pitcher #68
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    White Sox RHP prospect Tanner McDougal (forearm) threw a scoreless inning of relief for Triple-A Charlotte on Tuesday.

    McDougal has now made three appearances out of the bullpen at Triple-A since returning from right forearm tightness, pitching one inning in each of them. In his first six outings of the year, McDougal had been operating as a starter, but the 23-year-old, who was put on the injured list back on April 29th, seems to be operating as a reliever for the remainder of the 2026 season. It remains to be seen if that is simply to keep his arm healthy or to expedite his path to the big leagues, but we would expect McDougal to go back to starting games in the 2027 season.
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    Reds OF prospect Héctor Rodríguez went 2-for-2 with two walks, two home runs, and three RBI for Triple-A Louisville on Tuesday.

    The 22-year-old is now hitting .290/.369/.549 with 21 home runs, 56 RBI, and six steals in 84 games at Triple-A. He also has a solid 75/40 K/BB ratio. He’s played both corner outfield spots regularly this season, but it seems unlikely that he gets a chance in Cincinnati this year unless the team decides to move on from slumping JJ Bleday.
  • PIT Center Fielder #15
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    Oneil Cruz (hand fracture) has begun swinging a bat.

    Pirates general manager Ben Cherington said that he believed Cruz would be back soon after the All-Star break, so the fact that he’s swinging a bat now would make sense with that timeline. He will need to progress to facing live pitching and then begin rehab games next week or the week after. It’s looking like the Pirates will get their star back before the end of the month.
  • HOU Starting Pitcher #43
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    Lance McCullers (shoulder) allowed four runs (three earned) on three hits in four innings for Triple-A Sugar Land on Tuesday

    McCullers also walked three and struck out four while throwing 43 of his 77 pitches for strikes. HIs cutter averaged 88.4 mph and he only threw three total four-seam fastballs. He posted a 25 percent whiff rate and just 56 percent strike rate, so it wasn’t a pristine effort. However, his pitch count is built up enough that he could be an option for the Astros rotation after the All-Star break.
  • COL Starting Pitcher #43
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    The Rockies will start Gabriel Hughes on Wednesday and push Ryan Feltner back to Thursday.

    Feltner probably won’t mind, since he’ll now be facing the Giants, rather than the Dodgers. It’ll be Hughes’ first major league start after he debuted with three scoreless innings for a save in 15-3 game last Friday.
  • KC 2nd Baseman #12
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    Nick Loftin homered and doubled twice as the Royals bested the Mets 16-12 on Tuesday.

    As goes Loftin, so go the Royals. This makes seven times this season that the Royals have scored 10 runs with him in the starting lineup, and he’s 17-for-33 with three homers and 14 RBI in those games. He’s hit .177 with one homer and 15 RBI in his remaining 49 appearances.
  • KC Starting Pitcher #67
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    Seth Lugo was slammed for nine runs — six earned — in 4 1/3 innings by the Mets on Tuesday.

    Lugo made his own trouble in the first, when he committed the first of the Royals’ three errors on a three-run infield debacle. After that, though, it was mostly just him getting hit hard. A.J. Ewing hit a two-run homer in the second, and Juan Soto delivered a three-run blast in the fourth. It’s the third time this year that Lugo has given up at least seven runs. He’s allowed two earned runs or fewer in 10 of 18 turns, but the blowups have left him with a 4.56 ERA. He’ll face the Orioles on Sunday.
  • NYM Starting Pitcher #34
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    After coming in to start the second, Kodai Senga gave up four runs and walked four in three innings Tuesday against the Royals.

    Senga left with the Mets up 9-4, which put him in line for a rather undeserved victory, but then the Royals scored 12 runs off Austin Warren and Matt Seelinger between the fifth and seventh innings. That might have made Senga look better in comparison, but four walks while generating just six whiffs isn’t a good combination. He’ll be available to pitch Sunday against the Red Sox, but it remains to see what kind of form that will take. The Mets would probably go with a bullpen game if they get length from Freddy Peralta on Saturday.