logo
MLB acquires stake in Jomboy Media to expand digital presence

MLB acquires stake in Jomboy Media to expand digital presence

NEW YORK (AP) — Major League Baseball has agreed on a strategic partnership with Jomboy Media and will acquire a stake in the company. The two sides announced the deal on Tuesday.
Jomboy Media will be used across MLB's digital channels. MLB will also help grow Jomboy Media's other shows, including 'Talkin' Baseball,' 'Talkin' Yanks,' and 'The Warehouse Games.'
Both sides are also expected to collaborate on IP growth and ad opportunities around MLB's key events, including the All-Star Game and Home Run Derby.
According to the release, Jomboy Media set revenue and profitability records last year, and had more than 93 million engagements on social media. Jomboy Media was founded by Jimmy 'Jomboy' O'Brien and Jake Storiale in 2017.
'We have long admired the passionate fandom of Jimmy O'Brien and his unique ability to connect with baseball fans,' Noah Garden, MLB deputy commissioner, business and media, said in a statement. 'This partnership will ensure that Jomboy Media will have the resources and access to MLB intellectual property necessary to help it continue to grow. We are looking forward to bringing baseball fans more entertaining content to help further expand baseball's online presence and deeper the connection between our sport and its fans.'
Jomboy Media's key property is 'The Warehouse Games,' a league modeled after classic backyard games. The series has nearly 400 million all-time views.
'I continue to be amazed by what our community enables us to do through their endless support. When we started talking about baseball on the internet, it was just a fun hobby. Our community is the reason we've been able to turn this from 'just a hobby,' into something bigger than we ever could've imagined," O'Brien said in a statement. "Partnering with MLB marks a huge moment for Jomboy Media, and through this partnership, we'll be able to give back to our community with storytelling that's deeper than ever before.'
___

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Red Sox takeaways: Marcelo Mayer homers twice, Walker Buehler strong in series win
Red Sox takeaways: Marcelo Mayer homers twice, Walker Buehler strong in series win

New York Times

time19 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Red Sox takeaways: Marcelo Mayer homers twice, Walker Buehler strong in series win

BOSTON — On the strength of four solo homers, including two from rookie third baseman Marcelo Mayer, along with a strong effort from starter Walker Buehler, the Boston Red Sox won their second series in a row against an American League East rival. Jarren Duran's leadoff shot, Mayer's two homers and a go-ahead solo slam over the Green Monster from Abraham Toro in the fifth helped the Red Sox to a 4-3 win over the Tampa Bay Rays. Advertisement Some takeaways from a successful series win ahead of an off day Thursday: Mayer hasn't even been in the majors for a month, but the 22-year-old has already hit three homers and is finding his groove. After Duran's leadoff homer, the Rays tied the score in the top of the second, but Mayer put Boston back in the lead in the bottom of the inning with his first homer at Fenway Park. He took a first-pitch slider 418 feet to right field with an exit velocity of 108.7 mph. 418 ft for Mayer! 😤 — Red Sox (@RedSox) June 11, 2025 Two innings later, he made it a 3-1 game, smoking a 1-1 splitter 410 feet to right, off the bat at 104.9 mph. 'They felt really good,' Mayer said. 'To get the first one at home was special. Then, obviously, to get the second one, anytime you could help the team out offensively means a lot.' Mayer hit his first homer over the weekend on the road against the New York Yankees. He's hitting .250 with an .836 OPS with three homers and three doubles in 15 games. 'The process always stays the same,' he said. 'I feel more comfortable every single day I'm here. Obviously, a little bit of adjustments on me that have helped me be more on time.' For the first time since late April, the Red Sox got five consecutive starts of five innings or more from their rotation. Garrett Crochet started the trend with six innings on Saturday, and Hunter Dobbins followed with five innings Sunday. Brayan Bello threw 6 1/3 innings Monday, Lucas Giolito followed with six innings Tuesday, and Buehler capped the turn through the rotation with seven innings Wednesday. It's little surprise the team went 4-1 in that stretch. Buehler allowed three runs on six hits and a walk, striking out seven for the win. He had given up 10 earned runs in his previous two starts, lasting just two innings in New York last weekend. He said he went back to the basics to find his rhythm again on the mound and also fed off the other starters in the rotation. Buehler holding it down through 7. — Red Sox (@RedSox) June 12, 2025 'I think the goal is all five guys push each other to do better and punch more and throw more innings,' he said. 'Right now, obviously, it's kind of being led by Garrett, and Dobby is throwing well. But for Gio and I to kind of bounce back, I think it's huge. And it's something that he and I are in very similar boats. This just happens to be my second year doing it. But we're both trying to figure it out and to try and reinvent who we were and take the good stuff that we still can do and find the new stuff. For us to do it kind of back to back against the team in our division, I think it's huge. And it's something I'm excited about.' Advertisement The Red Sox have not been good defensively this season, leading the majors with 61 errors. Before the game, Cora referenced some of the underlying metrics with better defense this year from Carlos Narváez behind the plate, Alex Bregman at third base and now Mayer and Ceddanne Rafaela in center. But he acknowledged the errors can't keep happening. 'At the end, you get 27 outs; you've got to make them,' he said. 'When you give the opposition more than 27, you're going to struggle, and we have struggled.' Wednesday, the Red Sox played one of their cleaner games of the season. Shortstop Trevor Story made a terrific jump throw on a ball deep in the third-base hole to open the sixth inning. MAKE A PLAY STORY! 😤 — Red Sox (@RedSox) June 12, 2025 'His defense is taking another step,' Cora said. 'He seems like he feels very comfortable in where he's at, and that's the guy we envision the last few years kind of like to slow down things with the defense.' Narváez continued to impress behind the plate, throwing out two runners. In the fifth, after a leadoff single to Taylor Walls, Narváez made an on-target throw to second to get the runner. In a tighter spot in the eighth, he also came through. Justin Wilson allowed a one-out single and hit a batter, allowing pinch runner José Caballero to move to second. Cora turned to Greg Weissert, who kept a speedy Caballero close to the bag, stalling his momentum so that when he took off for third, Narváez had plenty of time to throw him out in an inning that could have unraveled. Weissert walked a batter, then allowed a single before a big strikeout of Matt Thaiss. '(Weissert) was very patient with Caballero,' Cora said. 'We knew he was going to take off. He's really good at what he does. Weissert stepped off, and then he was patient enough for him not to gain momentum. And the throw was right on.' Advertisement Toro has quietly put together a solid season over the past six weeks since being added to the roster when Triston Casas went down. Not only has Toro played the corner positions well, but as a switch hitter, he has offered lineup flexibility for Cora. Wednesday, he smashed Boston's fourth solo homer in the fifth inning. It proved the deciding run in a close game. Toro said "MY TURN!" 🐂 — Red Sox (@RedSox) June 12, 2025 Toro is hitting .330 with a .928 OPS, eight doubles and five homers in 27 games. 'Huge — if you look at the numbers, the production, the versatility — not only defensively but offensively,' Cora said of Toro's importance. 'From both sides, we can hit him where he's at now, third, knowing that they might bring some lefties for Jarren and Raffy (Rafael Devers), and he can hit lefties, too. The right-handed at-bat is great. Hitting the ball very hard. A very humble kid. He's a good guy; he's been in this situation before with Houston and Seattle. He's a good player, and he showed it in spring training, did everything we asked him to do. He went to Triple A — wasn't upset about it. Stuff happened, and now he's here. He's doing an outstanding job.' After Thursday's off day, the Red Sox host the Yankees over the weekend for the first time at Fenway this season. The Red Sox will have Crochet, Dobbins and Bello on the mound. 'It's going to be fun,' Mayer said of his first home series against the Yankees. 'I know this place is going to be rocking. I know we're ready for it. We're going to go out there and play really hard and see what happens.' Despite having just played New York last weekend, Cora said the series versus the Yankees is always a challenge, but it's one they're familiar with. 'It really doesn't matter,' he said. 'We've been doing this forever. We don't play them for two months, then we play them six times in 10 days. We know them; they know us. It's always a challenge because it's a long weekend.' Advertisement New York won its first two games against the Kansas City Royals this week, with one more on tap Thursday. Despite winning the series last weekend, the Red Sox still have their work cut out for them, starting Friday. 'Where we're at in the year, there's plenty of time for us to make a run,' Buehler said. 'And it starts with winning series against teams in our division. And to do that back to back (this week), I think, is huge. We don't know when Bregman is going to be back exactly, but that's not going to hurt us in any way. We got these young kids up that are going to learn and get better, and we feel good about ourselves.' (Photo of Marcelo Mayer: Brian Fluharty / Getty Images)

Byron Buxton's all-around effort leads Twins over Rangers; Jorge Alcala traded to Red Sox
Byron Buxton's all-around effort leads Twins over Rangers; Jorge Alcala traded to Red Sox

New York Times

time19 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Byron Buxton's all-around effort leads Twins over Rangers; Jorge Alcala traded to Red Sox

MINNEAPOLIS — Byron Buxton achieved 'big boy' status in the third inning. In both halves of the inning, the dynamic Twins outfielder demonstrated his full capabilities when healthy, first with a run-saving, diving catch, then as he walloped a mammoth home run, the longest of his career and second furthest hit in the majors this season. Advertisement Buxton's outstanding all-around game, David Festa's recovery and a late offensive outburst highlighted by Willi Castro's two-run triple propelled the Twins to a 6-2 victory over the Texas Rangers in front of 18,904 at Target Field. Buxton, who blasted a three-run, go-ahead homer, which traveled 479 feet, finished 3-for-3 with a walk and a stolen base as the Twins improved to 36-31. Buxton, whose homer traveled to a part of the park previously reached by former Twins, the likes of Miguel Saño and Kennys Vargas, leads all major-league center fielders with an .857 OPS. BYRON BUXTON!!! 479 FEET!!!!! 🤯 (make him an All-Star: — (@twinstv) June 12, 2025 'I knew that was a good one,' Buxton laughed. 'I ain't going to lie. I knew that was a good one. It's weird. My last (long homer) was off a slider, too. I don't hit fastballs far, but I can hit a slider. … That's big boy status. That's exactly how far I can hit it right there.' Buxton was far happier with his catch, one which prevented Texas from taking a big early lead a night after it routed the Twins. Already ahead 2-0 with two on and two outs, Marcus Semien, who earlier hit a solo homer, ripped a 97 mph liner toward the gap in left-center off Festa. But as he's done so many times before, Buxton soared toward the ball, dove and hauled it in as he safely tumbled to the ground. 'It caught me by surprise when he caught that because I knew it was hit right between us,' Castro said. 'It was a hell of a play.' You know where we heard is a good place to spend the All-Star break for guys that make catches like this? ATLANTA Get him there: — Minnesota Twins (@Twins) June 12, 2025 Buxton matched the impact with his bat a few minutes later. Facing outstanding rookie Jack Leiter, the Twins finally got something going in the third. Brooks Lee extended his career-high hitting streak to 11 games with a leadoff double and Christian Vázquez followed with a walk to bring up Buxton, who was walked in his first trip to the plate. Advertisement After fouling off a 2-2 fastball to stay alive, Buxton got all of a slider off the outside edge, hammering it off the stairs of the second deck in dead center field. Mike Trout's 484-foot blast hit in April is the only homer to travel further this season. 'There are a few homers that you remember,' Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. 'That one will stick.' Buxton nearly made more memories if not for a potential missed call at the plate by umpire Ryan Wills. With the Twins leading 3-2 in the fifth inning, Buxton doubled to left and advanced to third on a fly ball to deep right. Buxton then appeared to score on a grounder hit directly at first baseman Josh Smith, who was playing in and made a perfect throw home, only for Wills to call him out. The Twins immediately challenged the call, and replay officials determined the call stood and Buxton was out. Buxton joked he'd review the replay because he thought he was safe. But with the knowledge he shifted the game's momentum and, more importantly, a win secured, Buxton was in a good mood. 'Especially with saving the runs and immediately putting something on the board,' he said. 'That deflates you very quickly.' Jorge Alcala's Twins tenure ended after the team's victory. The team announced Alcala was traded to the Boston Red Sox for 21-year-old High-A outfielder Andy Lugo late Wednesday. A team source confirmed no cash was included in a deal which was set in motion earlier in the day when the Twins claimed left-hander Joey Wentz off waivers from the Pittsburgh Pirates. Though the Twins made space on the 40-man roster by transferring Pablo López to the 60-day injured list, they still needed to make space on the active roster for Wentz, who is expected to be activated for Thursday's game. '(Wentz has) got good ride on the heater,' Baldelli said. 'He's got an assortment of pitches that he works with. We're excited. … It gives you an opportunity to make good adjustments and maybe even help him go beyond even anything that he's been doing to this point.' Advertisement Acquired in a July 2018 trade that sent Ryan Pressly to Houston, Alcala never lived up to his prospect hype. A big arm capable of topping 100 mph, who debuted in 2019, Alcala struggled against left-handed hitters. Over the last 11 months, Alcala struggled against everyone, posting a 7.47 ERA with 13 home runs allowed in 47 innings. Adding Wentz gives the Twins a second lefty to split the load with Danny Coulombe. A former Detroit Tiger, Wentz posted a 4.15 ERA with 22 strikeouts in 26 innings this season for the Pirates. Baldelli also noted Wentz's ability to pitch multiple innings as intriguing. With the Twins clinging to a one-run lead after 4 1/2 innings, Festa's night appeared to be over. Then the Twins bats produced a three-spot as Castro laced a two-out, two-run triple and Carlos Correa followed with an RBI double. The bullpen went silent and Festa, who appeared to be on the verge of a quick exit in the second and third innings, needed only 10 pitches to retire the heart of the Texas lineup in order. Bailed out by Buxton's diving grab in the third after he narrowly avoided surrendering a two-run homer — Smith doubled high off the wall to bring in a run instead — Festa recovered nicely. Starting with Buxton's grab, Festa retired nine of the last 10 he faced. He even quickly erased the one batter who reached base, picking off Evan Carter after issuing a one-out walk in the fourth. Festa allowed two earned runs and three hits, and walked two with four strikeouts in six innings. 'I felt good to go back out there,' Festa said. 'Whatever the team needed in that situation. I didn't know what the plan was. But in my situation, you're just kind of putting your head (down) and focusing until Roc takes the ball from you.' Though he doesn't think it'll result in a trip to the injured list, Bailey Ober acknowledged knee and hip discomfort is playing a part in mechanical issues that have resulted in reduced fastball velocity. Advertisement Set to start Thursday, Ober thinks he's cleaned up the issues that led to his fastball averaging under 90 mph in two consecutive starts, his lowest of the season. Ober worked on mechanics during a bullpen session Tuesday and thinks he's in a good place, though he'd like to feel better physically. Ober first experienced the discomfort in spring training after a pickoff attempt and has received daily treatment to manage it, which he said is atypical. Ober's average fastball has peaked at 91 mph and is sitting at 90.4 mph for the season. 'I would like to be better, but it is what it is,' Ober said. 'It's nothing I haven't pitched through. … Felt good going into the season. I feel like my velo was OK. It was still a little down, up until two weeks ago in Seattle, but not as much as it is right now. But, yeah, it feels majority mechanical and battling the ups and downs of feeling good and not good during the season.' (Top photo of Byron Buxton celebrating his three-run homer: Jordan Johnson / Imagn Images)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store