
Mike Yastrzemski homers in his first at bat with Royals after they acquired him at trade deadline
Yastrzemski hit a 370-foot blast over the wall in right-center field while facing Kevin Gausman in the second inning of the Royals' game against the AL East-leading Toronto Blue Jays. His two-run shot gave the Royals a 2-1 lead.
The Royals gave up minor league pitcher Yunior Marte in the trade that brought Yastrzemski to Kansas City. Yastrzemski, who is eligible for free agency at the end of the season, was batting .231 with a .330 on-base percentage, .355 slugging percentage, eight homers, 28 RBIs and six steals in 96 games with the Giants.
The 34-year-old Yastrzemski had spent his entire major league career with San Francisco. The Giants acquired him from the Baltimore Orioles in March 2019, and he made his major league debut later that year.
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San Francisco Chronicle
13 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Guardians reliever Nic Enright, battling lymphoma, earns emotional first save
NEW YORK (AP) — The first career save for Nic Enright was a particularly meaningful one. Enright, who was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma in late 2022 and is scheduled to complete his treatments later this year, allowed an unearned run in the 10th inning Monday night to close out the Cleveland Guardians' 7-6 win over the New York Mets. 'He was almost crying on the field just now,' Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said. 'If you read his story, it's pretty inspirational.' Cleveland selected Enright in the 20th round of the 2019 amateur draft out of Virginia Tech. He received his diagnosis Dec. 22, 2022 — 15 days after the Miami Marlins took him in the Rule 5 draft. After four rounds of immunotherapy in early 2023, Enright made nine minor league rehab appearances for the Marlins before being designated for assignment and returning to the Guardians in late May. He missed most of last season due to a right shoulder strain, but went 2-1 with a 1.06 ERA in 16 appearances with Triple-A Columbus. The right-hander has one more round of cancer treatment scheduled for November. 'I made the decision when I was diagnosed in 2022 with Hodgkin lymphoma that I wasn't going to let that define my life and dictate how I was going to go about my life,' Enright said. 'It's something where, for anyone else who is going through anything similar, (it shows) I haven't just holed up in my house and felt sorry for myself this whole time.' Enright made his major league debut May 25 and has a 2.01 ERA in 19 appearances for the Guardians, whose bullpen is in flux with All-Star closer Emmanuel Clase on paid leave as part of a sports gambling investigation. Hunter Gaddis and Cade Smith pitched the eighth and ninth innings Monday before Enright entered with a two-run lead. He gave up a two-out RBI single to Brett Baty before retiring Luis Torrens on a fly out to the warning track in right. 'I definitely held my breath as I saw Nolan (Jones) kind of keep running,' Enright said. 'But I had faith. As he kind of got closer to the wall, I realized it was losing steam.' Enright was showered with beer by teammates in the locker room. 'I was so happy, oh, I was going nuts in here,' Guardians starting pitcher Slade Cecconi said with a smile. 'I was going absolutely berserk. He came in running up the stairs, smile on his face.' Enright thanked his wife, his parents and the rest of his family for their support throughout an interview at his locker. He got the ball from the final out and plans to set aside his uniform and hat as well as a lineup card. 'Really, really cool,' Enright said. 'These last couple of years, especially, I've gone through a lot of adversity and just everything that's gone on. And so for me, it's being able to reflect on those in these moments. I think that helps being able to slow the game down. Because it hasn't exactly been a red-carpet rollout for my career trajectory.' ___
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Guardians reliever Nic Enright, battling lymphoma, earns emotional first save
NEW YORK (AP) — The first career save for Nic Enright was a particularly meaningful one. Enright, who was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma in late 2022 and is scheduled to complete his treatments later this year, allowed an unearned run in the 10th inning Monday night to close out the Cleveland Guardians' 7-6 win over the New York Mets. 'He was almost crying on the field just now,' Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said. 'If you read his story, it's pretty inspirational.' Cleveland selected Enright in the 20th round of the 2019 amateur draft out of Virginia Tech. He received his diagnosis Dec. 22, 2022 — 15 days after the Miami Marlins took him in the Rule 5 draft. After four rounds of immunotherapy in early 2023, Enright made nine minor league rehab appearances for the Marlins before being designated for assignment and returning to the Guardians in late May. He missed most of last season due to a right shoulder strain, but went 2-1 with a 1.06 ERA in 16 appearances with Triple-A Columbus. The right-hander has one more round of cancer treatment scheduled for November. 'I made the decision when I was diagnosed in 2022 with Hodgkin lymphoma that I wasn't going to let that define my life and dictate how I was going to go about my life,' Enright said. 'It's something where, for anyone else who is going through anything similar, (it shows) I haven't just holed up in my house and felt sorry for myself this whole time.' Enright made his major league debut May 25 and has a 2.01 ERA in 19 appearances for the Guardians, whose bullpen is in flux with All-Star closer Emmanuel Clase on paid leave as part of a sports gambling investigation. Hunter Gaddis and Cade Smith pitched the eighth and ninth innings Monday before Enright entered with a two-run lead. He gave up a two-out RBI single to Brett Baty before retiring Luis Torrens on a fly out to the warning track in right. 'I definitely held my breath as I saw Nolan (Jones) kind of keep running,' Enright said. 'But I had faith. As he kind of got closer to the wall, I realized it was losing steam.' Enright was showered with beer by teammates in the locker room. 'I was so happy, oh, I was going nuts in here,' Guardians starting pitcher Slade Cecconi said with a smile. 'I was going absolutely berserk. He came in running up the stairs, smile on his face.' Enright thanked his wife, his parents and the rest of his family for their support throughout an interview at his locker. He got the ball from the final out and plans to set aside his uniform and hat as well as a lineup card. 'Really, really cool,' Enright said. 'These last couple of years, especially, I've gone through a lot of adversity and just everything that's gone on. And so for me, it's being able to reflect on those in these moments. I think that helps being able to slow the game down. Because it hasn't exactly been a red-carpet rollout for my career trajectory.' ___ AP MLB:


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Aaron Boone's 'Laissez-Faire Attitude' Ripped After Yankees' Humiliating Sweep
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. The Miami Marlins began life as an MLB franchise in 1993 in the fourth round (of five) of major league expansion. Regular season interleague play began in 1997, and since then, the Marlins — who were called the Florida Marlins until 2012 — had faced MLB's most iconic and winningest team, the New York Yankees, 46 times. Perhaps not surprisingly, the Marlins had a losing record going into the weekend's matchup of the two teams, dropping 24 and winning 22 against the Bronx Bombers. But at no time in the history of the two teams had the Florida/Miami franchise swept a three game series from the 27-time World Series champions. Until now. TORONTO, ON - JULY 21: Manager Aaron Boone #17 of the New York Yankees looks on during batting practice before a game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on July 21, 2025 in... TORONTO, ON - JULY 21: Manager Aaron Boone #17 of the New York Yankees looks on during batting practice before a game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on July 21, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. MoreThe Yankees, who dropped from a seven-game American League East lead on May 28 to 3 1/2 game deficit heading into Friday, looked like they were righting the ship, taking the final three games of a four-game series against their divisional rivals, the Tampa Bay Rays, before arriving in Miami. But their momentum went straight out the window as the Marlins captured all three contests for the first sweep of the Yankees in the history of the two teams. More MLB: Yankees Manager Called 'Brainwashed' Over Anthony Volpe, 'Weird' Relationship As if the unprecedented sweep was not humiliation enough for the defending AL champions, the three victories raised the Marlins' head-to-head record against New York to 25-24 — making them, unbelievably, the only team in baseball with an all-time winning record against the Yankees. The Marlins' most famous victory over the Yankees came in the 2003 World Series, when the underdog Florida squad, led by righty ace Josh Beckett, beat New York 4-2 to take the second championship in seven years for the franchise — which has not won one since, and has appeared in the postseason only twice in the last 21 years. START SPREADING THE NEWS WE'RE BRINGING THE BROOMS 🎶 — Miami Marlins (@Marlins) August 3, 2025 As the Marlins celebrated, the Yankees tried to make sense of their downward spiral. The three-game series was highlighted, or low-lighted, by a Friday night 13-12 loss which marked the first game since Aug. 12, 1973 — almost exactly 52 years earlier — in which the Yankees scored 12 runs and lost anyway. After the sweep, Yankees catcher and designated hitter Ben Rice told reporters, "I wouldn't say there's concern, but I would say I think a little sense of urgency would be good for us," as quoted by The Athletic beat writer Chris Kirschner. But Kirschner went on to note that a "sense of urgency" is exactly what the Yankees have not been displaying during their two months of mediocrity, in which they have compiled a sorry 25-32 record since leading their division by seven games. More MLB: Yankees Accused of Less-Than-Full Honesty in Aaron Judge Injury Reports "They tend to operate with a laissez-faire attitude that starts with manager Aaron Boone," Kirschner wrote. "Since team captain Aaron Judge said they would hit a hot streak, they're 4-6. Since the Yankees lost two of three to the Los Angeles Dodgers on June 1, they are 24-30, a worse record than the Chicago White Sox, Pittsburgh Pirates and Athletics during this span." Boone, in his statements after Sunday's game, expressed confidence that the Yankees would pull themselves out of the prolonged doldrums. "It's certainly not too late for us," Boone said, quoted by ESPN. "I am confident that we're going to get it together. But that's all it is right now is, you know, it's empty until we start doing it." With such Yankees greats from earlier eras as Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez criticizing the team on national television, Boone may wonder if his job is safe. There has certainly been no shortage of calls for the eighth-year manager to be replaced, or at least to take greater "accountability" for the team's lengthy and embarrassing skid. More MLB: Is Jazz Chisholm Jr. Fiasco Proof Aaron Boone Losing It With Yankees?