
To avoid MLB's worst record ever, Rockies attack stretch run like pennant race
Finishing school: All-Star catcher Hunter Goodman wants to sprint through the tape of this year, proving he can sustain an .839 OPS at a position young players often wear down in the second half.
Avoiding ignominy: After a 9-50 start buried them in a historic hole, the Rockies have improved to the point they are right on the cut line to break the Chicago White Sox's one-year-old modern record of 121 losses, a 'chase' that should come down to the last week of the season.
And of utmost importance, taking steps to ensure it doesn't get any worse in 2026.
'These next two months, obviously it doesn't look like we're making the postseason this year, but we gotta act like it,' center fielder Mickey Moniak tells USA TODAY Sports. 'Act like we're making that run just to grow as a team and get better.
'And make sure next year, we're in a spot where we can compete and have something like this year not happen again.'
For now, this year remains to be fully defined. At 27-78, the Rockies' .257 winning percentage puts them just ahead of the White Sox's .253 mark, although that's a little deceiving. Chicago was 27-82 before the trade deadline, then proceeded to lose 24 of 28 games after its roster was strip-mined, digging a hole that not even a respectable September could overcome.
The Rockies' long, hard goodbyes have only begun: Third baseman Ryan McMahon, their best all-around player, was dealt to the New York Yankees on July 25, and more players could be on their way out before the July 31 deadline.
Uncomfortably numb
On the field, the Rockies will have to plug holes, shift roles and find production from new faces. Off it, the psychic drag of bidding their best farewell is yet another hurdle.
'It feels like it happens so often, you almost grow numb to it,' says reliever Jake Bird, who debuted in 2022. 'Mac's an awesome guy. It was great having him around. A great player, especially on the defensive end. It's just the nature of the business. It's almost next man up.
'It sucks, but it's part of the business. A new day and you gotta go out and compete.'
Says Moniak, whose .865 OPS likely means he's found a permanent home in Colorado: 'Mac's been a Rockie his whole life. I've been here for a few months, just this year, and you instantly get the feel how much he he meant to this organization and the guys in this clubhouse.
'He was probably the leader of this team. Losing a guy like that, we're going to miss him. But also at the end of the day, the organization made a decision they felt was best for it.
'I'm very excited for Mac to have the opportunity to go play in New York and try to hunt down a postseason this year and a World Series.'
Interim manager Warren Schaefer echoes that, noting his charges' happiness for McMahon's opportunities – he hit a game-tying two-run double at Yankee Stadium on Sunday – while lamenting his departure.
'I think they've processed it well. I think they understand,' says Schaefer, who's posted a 20-44 record after Bud Black got off to a 7-33 start, resulting in the firing of Colorado's all-time winningest manager. 'At the same time, there's a part of every guy in that clubhouse – especially the ones who have been with him for a long time – there's a bit of sadness that he's gone.
'I think that's natural with a friend. But it's not like he's gone forever.'
The four days to come before the 6 p.m. ET deadline will be curious. Colorado has a bevy of veteran starters, yet none of them – Antonio Senzatela (6.68 ERA), left-hander Kyle Freeland (5.24) and German Marquez (5.67, on injured list with biceps injury) – have consistently distinguished themselves.
Bullpen arms are always in demand, yet Bird and current closer Seth Halvorsen have multiple years of club control remaining, with peripheral stats that may not compel contenders to pay a premium for those future years.
It's a similar situation with a handful of veteran position players, whose acquisitions wouldn't necessarily make anyone's list of 'MLB Trade Deadline Winners,' but would nonetheless leave holes on an inexperienced team grasping for any sense of consistency.
'We've gotta learn how to win'
It's already a lineup filled with folks like DH Yanquiel Fernandez, who debuted on July 2, and first baseman Warming Bernabel, who was recalled after the McMahon trade and homered in his second career game.
The progress comes in the likely keepers the club has identified. Moniak, the No. 1 overall pick in 2016 by the Philadelphia Phillies, has, at 27, perhaps finally found a groove with his third team in four seasons.
While he lacks the All-Star berth McMahon once earned, he and other Rockies have seen some things in their career arcs that have value to the less experienced.
'Baseball's kind of a revolving door of wisdom,' says Moniak. 'All of us in here consider us family. Obviously, guys who have more time and been through more experiences can kind fo share that knowledge with the younger guys and pass on stuff that older guys pass on to them.'
For Goodman, it's a matter of building on a season that, other than a soft May, has resulted in monthly OPSes of .829, 1.108 and .814. He's caught 65 games and served as DH for 28 others, with an eye toward preserving his offensive vitality.
'I want to keep building off that. I want to play a full season, not just that first half,' says Goodman, a fourth-round pick in 2021 from the University Memphis who has stuck in his third season with Colorado. 'Since the second half started, as a team we've started playing better. There's a lot of confidence in the locker room.
'We've got a really young team. We gotta learn to play the game the right way and learn how to win some ballgames.'
Preferably, one more than 41, the better to avoid the wrong sort of history. It is what will pass as drama for outside observers as the schedule drains away
Within the Rockies' realm, the growth chart is far more difficult to measure, particularly if the team becomes even less recognizable after the deadline. How best to measure an ethos when the record is so grim?
'Continuing to play baseball the right way. Stringing two months together of mostly playing nine-inning games, full games,' says Schaeffer. 'Playing aggressive baseball. The goal when I'm evaluating on a day-to-day basis is the style of play. The intent of what we're doing at the plate.
'Just seeing progress in all facets on a daily basis.'
And hopefully, never having to do this again.

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Los Angeles Times
10 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
‘They've got to perform better.' Three Dodger stars who need to heat up at the plate
The Dodgers are leading the majors in on-base-plus-slugging percentage as an offense this year. They are second in the National League in scoring, and third in team batting average. They have the league's top players in hitting (Will Smith batting .324 and Freddie Freeman batting .306) and OPS (Shohei Ohtani at .982 and Smith at .963). They figure to have several players who will get MVP votes at the end of the season, including the odds-on favorite for the award in Ohtani. And yet, as the club enters the stretch run of the season, their lineup might be the biggest question mark in their bid to defend last year's World Series championship. Since the start of July, they have scored the third-fewest runs in the majors, have the second-lowest team batting average and the fourth-lowest OPS. They stayed relatively quiet at the trade deadline, hopeful a number of struggling superstars would get things going over the campaign's final two months. But to this point, only Freeman (who endured a two-month slump before heating up again on their recent nine-game trip) has shown tangible signs of a late-season revival. 'If you look at it from the offensive side, as far as our guys, they'll be the first to tell you they've got to perform better and more consistently,' manager Dave Roberts said this past weekend, after utility outfielder Alex Call became the team's only deadline addition to the lineup. 'That's something that we're all counting on … Now it's up to all of us to go out there and do our jobs.' While that's true of most hitters in the lineup, all the way down to Andy Pages and (even before his most recent ankle injury flare-up) Tommy Edman, there are three star-level players in particular the Dodgers have been waiting to round back into form. Here's a look at the problems plaguing each of them: First 15 games: .304 average, .554 slugging percentage, .954 OPS Last 87 games: .222 average, .327 slugging percentage, .616 OPS When asked on Sunday for the umpteenth time this season if he knew what was wrong with Mookie Betts' swing, Roberts failed to come up with an answer. 'Honestly, no,' Roberts said. 'I know that he and the hitting coaches have been working diligently, consistently, intentionally. I think that the first thing, the easiest thing, to say is it's a mechanical thing. So I guess kind of that's where he's at. But also, I do believe that there's a mental part of it, too, which is sort of beating him down a little bit.' When Betts was presented with the same question later Sunday afternoon, after running a season-long hitless streak to 17 at-bats and watching his batting average dip to .233, he was left searching for divine intervention. 'I've done everything I can possibly do,' he said. 'It's up to God at this point.' Betts' struggles are not for a lack of effort. He spends hours in the batting cage before (and sometimes after) almost every game. He has tried mechanical tweaks and mental cues and fundamental drills that in the past would get him back on track. His approach has largely remained sound, as he ranks in the top 20% of big-leaguers in chase rate, whiff rate and strikeouts percentage, per Baseball Savant's Statcast data. And while his bat speed is in the 11th percentile of MLB hitters (and down almost 2 mph from his 39-homer season in 2023), it's also about the same as he had last year, when he was still a .289 hitter with 19 home runs (in just 116 games) and a .863 OPS (which only trailed Shohei Ohtani for the best on the team). 'I really don't know what else to do,' he said. 'I don't have any answers.' Perhaps the most confounding metric: Betts is in the 99th percentile in 'squared-up' rate, a metric that effectively determines when a ball is hit off the sweet spot of the bat. But, even when Betts does make solid contact, he simply isn't generating as much power as he usually does — ranking among the bottom third of big-league hitters in average exit velocity and hard-hit percentage; and watching fly balls that used to leave the yard die at the warning track, if they even make it that far. While he has been a victim of some bad luck (his expected .252 batting average is almost 20 points higher than his actual mark), he has had no choice but to 'go back to the drawing board' time and time again this year — gradually grating on his confidence as answers continually fail to appear. 'I don't know anybody in the world that would have confidence in the stretch that's going on [for me],' he said. 'It sucks when you don't get stuff done.' Betts can be a streaky hitter. And the Dodgers' hope is that, at some point over these final two months, he'll find something that unlocks more pop in his bat, and go on the kind of heater that can make him an impact producer at the top of the lineup again. Until that happens, however, questions will persist. About whether his shortstop play is to blame for his offensive decline (a theory multiple rival evaluators have increasingly pointed to of late as a reason for his struggles). About whether age is simply catching up to the soon-to-be 33-year-old veteran. And about whether he will ever be the same hitter he was once, amid a season-long slump almost no one saw coming. First 70 games (before resuming pitching): .297 average, 1.034 OPS, 24% strikeout rate Last 40 games (since resuming pitching): .230 average, .886 OPS, 31% strikeout rate The easy demarcation line for Ohtani this year has been before and after he returned to pitching in mid-June, with offensive production dropping even as his stuff has ticked up on the mound. Ohtani has still been a relatively productive hitter since then, continuing to hit home runs at a league-leading pace (he is tied with Kyle Schwarber for the NL lead with 38 on the year). But he has become a much easier out the last couple months, as well, epitomized first and foremost by his climbing strikeout rate. An over-aggressive approach would figure to be the easy explanation here. And there have been times, Roberts noted, the slugger appears to get into a 'swing mode' that prevents him from laying off bad pitches. But on the whole this season, Ohtani is actually swinging less often than he did last year, chasing pitches at an almost identical rate and continuing to draw more walks than almost anyone in the majors (his 71 free passes are seventh-most this season). Ohtani's problem has been an increase in swing-and-miss, with the reigning MVP coming up empty on more than one-third of his hacks. It might simply be a byproduct of the added physical workload he has taken on since resuming two-way duties. But he has insisted such problems remain fixable, citing a lack of balance and consistency in his swing mechanics. Like Betts, Ohtani can also be prone to more extreme highs and lows over the course of a year. Last season, for example, he hit just .235 with an .886 OPS in August, before turning around in September and batting .393 with a 1.225 OPS. The Dodgers could use another late-season tear like that again this term. Whether he can do it while also ramping up as a pitcher looms as one of the biggest questions facing the Dodgers down the stretch this year. First 33 games (pre-groin strain): .315 average, 9 home runs, .933 OPS, 18% strikeout rate Last 57 games (post-groin strain): .211 average, 7 home runs, .619 OPS, 28% strikeout rate Hernández's midseason drop-off is perhaps the easiest to explain of any recently scuffling Dodgers hitter. Before suffering a groin/adductor strain in early May, he was on an All-Star (and potentially even MVP-caliber) pace after re-signing with the Dodgers in the offseason. Since then, however, the 32-year-old simply hasn't looked the same — both at the plate, where he hasn't been able to drive the ball as he usually does, and in the field, where his range has been clearly limited. To that end, a foul ball he took off his foot last month hasn't helped matters either. There have been some recent signs that Hernández is getting healthy again. His slugging percentage has started to tick back up since getting a week off for the All-Star break. He has had more hard contact, especially to center and the opposite field. 'At the beginning [after my injury] it was a little hard,' Hernández said after hitting home runs in consecutive games at Fenway Park last week. 'First I got my groin, then I got the foul off my foot. Couldn't put a lot of weight [on it] for like two weeks. Thank god there was the break in there. I got those four days off, going through that and getting some treatment, getting some rest. And finally feel like myself again.' But, it still hasn't resulted in a total reversal of fortunes, with Hernández finishing the road trip going just five-for-25 with nine strikeouts and only one extra-base hit. Last year, Hernández's ability to be a run-producer behind the Dodgers' star trio of hitters was crucial to both their regular-season and postseason offensive success. Lately, though, he has been more strikeout-prone and less opportunistic at the plate, contributing to a string of frustrating recent defeats marked by squandered chances in leverage opportunities. 'He's bearing down, and he's not trying to give at-bats away,' Roberts said. 'He's grinding.' Much like the Dodgers' other scuffling stars, the team will need him to fully snap out of it, and live up once again to the expectations the club had for him and the lineup at large.


Newsweek
11 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Dodgers 'Creative' 3-Team Trade Earns High Praise From MLB Insider
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Compared to some of their fellow World Series contenders, the Los Angeles Dodgers didn't make the flashiest moves at this year's trade deadline. The Dodgers' division rivals, the San Diego Padres, were wheeling and dealing. So, too, were the Philadelphia Phillies and New York Mets. Comparatively, the Dodgers' modest moves for names like Brock Stewart and Alex Call didn't generate a ton of fanfare. However, one Dodgers move flew under the radar to many in the moment, but caught the eye of a Major League Baseball insider. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 31: A detailed view of Los Angeles Dodgers hats and gloves during the game against the Atlanta Braves at Dodger Stadium on March 31, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 31: A detailed view of Los Angeles Dodgers hats and gloves during the game against the Atlanta Braves at Dodger Stadium on March 31, 2025 in Los Angeles, Thursday, the Dodgers were involved in a trade where they shipped away just one player, catcher Hunter Feduccia, and acquired three more, two from the Tampa Bay Rays and one from the Cincinnati Reds. Jim Bowden of The Athletic was a big fan of the trade, and lauded decision-maker Andrew Friedman for pulling the trigger on Monday. "Most creative executive: Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, who once again won a three-way trade, this time with the Rays and Reds, that netted Los Angeles lefty Adam Serwinowski, righty Paul Gervase and catcher Ben Rortvedt," wrote Bowden. Gervase and Rortvedt were the two players that arrived in the deal from Tampa Bay, while Serwinowski came from the Reds. There were only three others involved: Feduccia, who went to the Rays alongside ex-Reds right-handed pitcher Brian Van Belle, and right-handed pitcher Zack Littell, who went from Tampa Bay to Cincinnati. Got all that? It's certainly not a trade the Dodgers made with the goal of drastically improving their World Series odds in the here and now, but it gave them two new pitchers that could amount to something eventually in exchange for slightly downgrading their third-string catcher spot. Only history will determine whether the Dodgers "won the trade," but it certainly makes sense from a logical perspective. More MLB: Phillies' Kyle Schwarber Projected to Break Bank With Free Agent Contract


Newsweek
40 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Twins Bombshell: Star Reliever Reportedly Asked Out Amid Chaotic Trade Deadline
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. For better or worse, the Minnesota Twins became the talk of Major League Baseball at this year's trade deadline. Between Wednesday and Thursday, the Twins traded away 11 players, including 10 from the major league roster. They were big names, too: three-time All-Star shortstop Carlos Correa, fire-balling closer Jhoan Duran, and fellow star reliever Griffin Jax. Jax's trade in particular raised a lot of eyebrows around the game. The 30-year-old still has two-plus years of team control, he's a strikeout machine, and he was traded the day after a very public dugout dispute with manager Rocco Baldelli. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JULY 22: Relief pitcher Griffin Jax #22 of the Minnesota Twins celebrates after striking out Will Smith #16 of the Los Angeles Dodgers for the last out of the seventh inning... LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JULY 22: Relief pitcher Griffin Jax #22 of the Minnesota Twins celebrates after striking out Will Smith #16 of the Los Angeles Dodgers for the last out of the seventh inning at Dodger Stadium on July 22, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. MoreAfter Baldelli removed Jax mid-inning during a 13-1 loss to the Boston Red Sox on Wednesday, the righty was shipped to the Tampa Bay Rays for starting pitcher Taj Bradley just before the 5 p.m. CT deadline on Thursday. On Monday, Dan Hayes of The Athletic reported that Jax requested a trade, after Correa both facilitated a joint meeting with Baldelli and informed Jax that he had spoken to general manager Derek Falvey about the team's impending fire sale. "After Jax agreed, Correa brought him into Baldelli's office and helped smooth things over once the manager explained his decision," Hayes wrote for The Athletic. "Correa later informed Jax of the conversation he'd had with Falvey about the franchise's direction. He told Jax he'd waive his no-trade clause for a deal only to Houston if the Twins really were set to break up the roster." "Once the teardown was underway Thursday, including the shocking deal which sent Correa back to the Astros, Jax asked his representative to put in the trade request, multiple league sources confirmed." Hayes also reported that the Twins were seemingly leaning toward hanging onto Jax before the request was made. "While the Twins felt compelled to trade Jhoan Duran earlier because they liked the offers they received, that initially wasn't the case with Jax," wrote Hayes. "Duran was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies early Wednesday evening, only hours after Jax erupted at manager Rocco Baldelli late in a blowout loss to Boston." In the grand scheme of things, Jax can be replaced as a bullpen piece, as great as he was at times. But the larger task, long-term, will be undoing the damage these trades did in the clubhouse, because Jax surely wasn't the only one displeased. More MLB: Phillies' Kyle Schwarber Projected to Break Bank With Free Agent Contract