logo
Jacob deGrom strikes out 9 and helps the Rangers to a 6-2 win over the Athletics

Jacob deGrom strikes out 9 and helps the Rangers to a 6-2 win over the Athletics

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Jacob deGrom struck out nine and allowed a leadoff homer in six solid innings, and Corey Seager, Marcus Semien and Adolis García homered as the Texas Rangers beat the Athletics 6-2 on Tuesday night.
DeGrom (10-2) was making his first start since July 12. The All-Star right-hander opted not to pitch in the Midsummer Classic and settled down quickly after allowing a homer to Lawrence Butler at the start. DeGrom retired 10 straight A's at one point and allowed just three hits while throwing 86 pitches, 60 for strikes.
Garcia's homer in the fourth inning tied it and Texas went ahead to stay in the sixth on Semien's 364-foot shot off the foul pole in left field that required replay review to be confirmed.
Seager's 3-run shot highlighted a four-run seventh. The Rangers shortstop has reached base in 23 straight games.
Butler's homer was his 14th of the season for the A's, who have lost three straight.
Key stat
DeGrom secured his 10th win of the season, marking the fifth time in his career he has had double-digit wins.
Up next
The Athletics will start LHP JP Sears (7-8, 5.13 ERA) in the finale of the three-game set on Wednesday. The Rangers have not announced a starter.
___
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trey Hendrickson contract: Timeline of dispute with Bengals over long-term deal explained
Trey Hendrickson contract: Timeline of dispute with Bengals over long-term deal explained

USA Today

time24 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Trey Hendrickson contract: Timeline of dispute with Bengals over long-term deal explained

Trey Hendrickson wants the Cincinnati Bengals to show him the money. The star pass rusher is in a familiar spot as the ramp-up for the 2025 regular season begins – without a new contract. It's an issue that has spanned multiple offseasons now, before rearing its ugly head this time around. What he wants, the Bengals aren't willing to give. Hendrickson wasn't just on the sidelines as training camp began, he wasn't even in the building – or the state. The All-Pro went home to Florida while waiting to see who blinks first. Ultimately, it's him. In a gesture of good faith, the Bengals star reported to training camp on July 30 without a new contract in place. It comes less than a week after Cincinnati signed first-round pick Shemar Stewart to his rookie contract – ending one dispute along its defensive line. It remains a mystery when, and if, Hendrickson will receive a new contract, but perhaps the best way to understand the current situation is to look back at how we arrived here. Trey Hendrickson contract timeline After spending his first four seasons with the New Orleans Saints, Hendrickson hit the open market and elected to sign with the Bengals in free agency. He inked a four-year, $60 million deal coming off a 13.5-sack season at age 26. Hendrickson was tasked with replacing Carl Lawson, who departed for the New York Jets. The former Saint delivered in a big way, outplaying his contract by a large margin, recording 57 sacks in 65 games. Coming off two consecutive Pro Bowl seasons, it was clear that Hendrickson's production didn't match his salary. He posted 22 sacks and six forced fumbles in just 31 games over his first two seasons in Cincinnati. The Bengals awarded him with a one-year extension worth $21 million, including $8 million guaranteed, keeping Hendrickson in Cincinnati through the 2025 season. Hendrickson told the Associated Press at the time that he wanted to remain with the Bengals. "They gave me a tremendous opportunity two years ago, there was a lot of question marks around my name," Hendrickson said, via the AP. "They believed in me. And I still have the same desire to prove them right in the way they've invested in me. And that's not something I take lightly. I have a tremendous amount of respect for them. And the way they handle things, the organization, the way they care about people, like I said earlier, so just staying in the building personally for me is important." Hendrickson responded in a big way after earning the one-year extension, recording 17.5 sacks during the 2023 season – a new career-high. That put the pass-rusher in a position to seek some more long-term security, but the Bengals weren't willing to entertain those talks. The team already extended Joe Burrow the year prior and then faced the looming reality of new deals for Ja'Marr Chase and Tee Higgins. Hendrickson opted to rejoin the team in May after requesting a trade in late April. "When you're told 'no,' it's something that I want to explore all options," Hendrickson said, via the Cincinnati Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network, of why he requested a trade. "If it wasn't going to happen long-term here for the security of my family, exploring the option where they would have a benefit also in potentially looking elsewhere but I'm also humbled by the experience that they want me to be here. The communication is very open and transparent, very respectful so I have nothing but good things to say. At the end of the day, it was a decision for my family." He ended up playing under the contract, as constructed, during the 2024 season. By this point, it was clear that Hendrickson's performance was no fluke. He followed up a dominant 2023 season with an even better year in 2024. He led the league with 17.5 sacks and was named a first-team All-Pro for the first time in his career. Hendrickson finished second in Defensive Player of the Year voting, putting an exclamation point on a dominant season. Without a new contract looming, the star requested a trade for the second time in as many years and this time, the Bengals granted him permission to seek employment elsewhere. "I think he should be happy at certain rates that maybe he doesn't think he'd be happy at," Blackburn said via Kelsey Conway of the Cincinnati Enquirer. "I think some of it is on him to be happy at some point, and if he's not, you know, that's what holds it up sometimes. So, you know, it takes him to say yes to something, and also, we have all the respect in the world for him. He's been a great player. We're happy to have him. And so maybe we'll find a way to get something to work. We're just gonna see where it goes." Blackburn's comments can be seen as somewhat of a turning point in the saga, sparking a war of words in the media. One day later, Hendrickson made an appearance on "The Pat McAfee Show," where he detailed his disappointment in Blackburn's comments and the situation as a whole. Chase and Higgins both received their extensions by this point, leaving Hendrickson as the last remaining star on the team without one. "Communication has been poor over the last couple months," Hendrickson said at the time. "They have not communicated with my agent directly. It's been something that's been a little bit frustrating." Hendrickson said his understanding was that a deal would get done this offseason and added that he had no desire to be the highest-paid. Over a month later, Hendrickson showed up to the team's voluntary workout as a spectator and opted to hold an impromptu press conference – where he expressed that he won't play the upcoming season without a new contract. He said that the situation had become personal and was asked if he wanted to remain in Cincinnati. "That's a tough question too," Hendrickson said via WPCO 9's Marshall Kramsky. "You try to not let the business become personal, I think over the last week or so it's become personal unfortunately. When there's a lack of communication in any relationship, if it's business or personal relationship, lack of communication leads to animosity. That leaves my narrative only to me with no clear direction." Hendrickson later elaborated on his decision to start speaking out publicly. "I think a lot of players in the past have been silent or didn't stand on values where telling the truth will set you free," Hendrickson said. "I'm a Floridian. So there is unprovoked shark attacks and there is provoked shark attacks. The comments that are being made, whatever happened at the combine, whatever happened at the owner's meetings and the text I got yesterday, this is not something where I'm just twiddling my thumbs and thinking, 'how can I get the next one up?'" A cease-fire of sorts, the two sides returned to the negotiating table in June, according to ESPN's Jeremy Fowler. It was presumably the first time the parties resumed discussions since before the 2025 NFL Draft, as Hendrickson previously noted that he hadn't spoken to the team in the aftermath of the offseason's marquee event. On the eve of training camp report day for veterans in Cincinnati, Bengals de-facto general manager Duke Tobin said he expected Hendrickson to show up on July 22. "Trey is an important part of our team," Tobin said. "He's under contract and we expect him to be here... He's a guy who has been very valuable. He has earned a raise and extension. We'll see if we can come together on something.' Bengals owner Mike Brown took a different approach, stating that the team will not trade Hendrickson and that he can sometimes be a difficult person to deal with. "Trey Hendrickson is a fine player and a good guy," Brown said. "We want him here. Dealing with him is sometimes not so easy. That's all right. He's got the right to argue his case, we'll try to make sense of it from our perspective... as far as I'm concerned, the sooner the better." Contract talks broke down over guaranteed money, according to NFL Network's Ian Rapoport, and Hendrickson elected to return to Florida as training camp opened. "All I know right now is Trey Hendrickson is in Florida," ESPN's Adam Schefter told USA TODAY Sports in an interview. "The Bengals have offered him one year of guaranteed money. He wants at least three years of guaranteed money like the other top pass rushers – Maxx Crosby, Myles Garrett and T.J. Watt – have gotten. He hasn't gotten that." ESPN's Adam Schefter said on "The Pat McAfee Show" that a deal is in place between Hendrickson and the Bengals, but issues remain regarding guaranteed money. Schefter noted that the dispute is in the $6 million to $10 million range. He expects that, if and when a deal gets done, it will be for three years. In a surprising turn of events, Hendrickson opted to end his holdout and report to training camp. The Bengals star officially walked out to the practice field on July 30, which also puts an end to the $50,000-per-day fine that he was subjected to for missing camp. Hendrickson notably wasn't in uniform and won't participate in practice, but it appears to be a step in the right direction. All the NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY's 4th and Monday newsletter.

Track and field sets Sept. 1 deadline for female eligibility gene tests ahead of worlds in Tokyo
Track and field sets Sept. 1 deadline for female eligibility gene tests ahead of worlds in Tokyo

San Francisco Chronicle​

time24 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Track and field sets Sept. 1 deadline for female eligibility gene tests ahead of worlds in Tokyo

MONACO (AP) — Clarifying promised rules on female eligibility, track and field's governing body set a Sept. 1 deadline Wednesday for athletes to pass a gene test for competing at the world championships. World Athletics said in March it would require chromosome testing by cheek swabs or dry blood-spot tests for female athletes to be eligible for elite-level events. The next worlds open Sept. 13 in Tokyo and Sept. 1 is 'the closing date for entries and the date the regulations come into effect,' World Athletics said in a statement. The latest rules update gives certainty for the 2025 championships in an issue that has been controversial on the track and in multiple courts since Caster Semenya won her first 800 meters world title as a teenager in 2009. Semenya won a ruling at the European Court of Human Rights three weeks ago in Strasbourg, France, in the South Africa star's years-long challenge to a previous version of track and field's eligibility rules affecting athletes with medical conditions known as Differences in Sex Development. That legal win because she did not get a fair hearing at the Swiss supreme court did not overturn track's rules. World Athletics drew up rules in 2018 forcing two-time Olympic champion Semenya and other athletes with DSD to suppress their elevated natural testosterone levels to be eligible for international women's events. Semenya refused to take medication. Now, the Monaco-based track body requires a 'once-in-a-lifetime test' to determine athletes it says are biologically male with a Y chromosome. The governing body is covering up to $100 of the costs for each test with the protocol overseen by its member federations at national level. Test results should be ready within two weeks. 'The SRY test is extremely accurate and the risk of false negative or positive is extremely unlikely,' World Athletics said. World Athletics has combined its eligibility framework for DSD and transgender athletes, with transitional rules that let 'a very small number of known DSD athletes' continue competing if they are taking medication to suppress natural testosterone. 'The transitional provisions do not apply to transgender women as there are none competing at the elite international level under the current regulations,' World Athletics said. Now age 34, and her track career effectively over, Semenya should now see her legal case go back to the Swiss federal court in Lausanne, where she lost her original appeal against track and field's rules at the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Braves place 5-time All-Star Ronald Acuña Jr. on the injured list with Achilles tendon inflammation
Braves place 5-time All-Star Ronald Acuña Jr. on the injured list with Achilles tendon inflammation

Fox Sports

time24 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

Braves place 5-time All-Star Ronald Acuña Jr. on the injured list with Achilles tendon inflammation

Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Atlanta Braves put five-time All-Star Ronald Acuña Jr. on the 10-day injured list with right Achilles tendon inflammation Wednesday, though the exact severity of the injury to the slugging outfielder may not be known until additional testing is done. The Braves recalled outfielder Jarred Kelenic from Triple-A Gwinnett to take his place on the roster. Acuña first experienced discomfort in his calf area Monday night, when he scored from first on Austin Riley's double to help the Braves to a 10-7 victory over Kansas City. Acuña lobbied to play on Tuesday night and Braves manager Brian Snitker assented, only for Acuña to come up limping while trying to chase down a ball in right field in an eventual 9-6 loss. 'It happened when I scored from first to home on that play,' Acuña explained after the game, speaking through an interpreter. 'They are going to examine me (Wednesday) so we'll see how it goes.' Even after he came up limping, Acuña wanted to remain in the game. He headed out to his position in the field but saw Eli White trotting out to replace him. That Acuña was able to jog into the dugout at least generated some optimism that the injury to the Achilles tendon was not a complete tear and he could be back this season. 'I was kind of out there hoping they wouldn't hit it my way and of course any time you do that, they always hit it your way," Acuña said. 'I told them (about the pain Monday) and everyone said: 'Take the day if you want it. You can have the day off.' I've missed so much time already through injuries I didn't want to miss any more time.' Acuña, the National League MVP in 2023, has dealt with injuries for much of his career. He missed time as a rookie in 2018 with a sprained left knee ligament, then tore the ACL in his right knee to end his 2021 season. Last year, he pivoted awkwardly as he was taking his lead on the bases and wound up tearing the ACL in his left knee, ending his season after 49 games. Only twice in eight seasons has Acuña managed to play more than 119 games. After missing the start of this season, Acuña returned May 23 and began playing at an All-Star level again. He was hitting .306 with 14 homers and 26 RBIs in 55 games, including a 2-for-4 night with a homer against the Royals on Monday night. 'It's an injury, I'm worried,' Acuña said of the latest issue, which comes amid a season in which Atlanta has been devastated by injuries — particularly to its starting rotation. 'It's more pain, but it feels kind of — I feel it a lot when I try to put pressure on it.' Kelenic, the sixth overall pick of Seattle in the 2018 amateur player draft, has struggled to live up to his potential. He hit .231 with 15 home runs and 45 RBIs in 131 games for Atlanta last season but was sent to Gwinnett in April of this season, after he hit .167 with two homers and just two RBIs over the first 23 games with the Braves. White is expected to be Acuña's primary replacement. He is hitting .255 with four homers and 18 RBIs in 72 games. ___ AP MLB: recommended Item 1 of 2

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store