
Marte hits 9th inning go-ahead HRs in back-to-back Dbacks games, from each side of plate at Texas
Martel's three-run homer batting left-handed capped a two-out rally in the ninth inning for the Diamondbacks in their series finale at Texas on Wednesday, a 6-4 win that came less than 24 hours after the switch-hitter's upper-deck solo shot from the right side in the final at-bat for a 3-2 victory.
'He's one of a kind. He's just a special player. When his timing's right and his body's right, he's capable of carrying a ball club,' manager Torey Lovullo said after the All-Star second baseman's latest game-winner. 'And it was a great moment for him. The smile on his face as he was rounding the bases is something that I know we all enjoyed.'
The 413-foot homer to right was Marte's fourth hit Wednesday.
His first three hits were singles, one driving in their first run, off former teammate Merrill Kelly, who made his third start for the Rangers since they acquired him from Arizona at the trade deadline two weeks ago.
'What you saw today is him in a nutshell. He hits good pitches, he hits bad pitches,' said Kelly, who exited the game after six innings with a 3-2 lead. 'He can work the count, he could work the AB and punch a single into left or hurt you with a big-time homer from either side of the plate. Obviously, he proved that the last two nights. He's kind of the guy that you circle in that lineup that you don't want to beat you. ... Unfortunately, we let him beat us the last two days.'
Marte's solo homer with two outs in the ninth Tuesday night, on a two-strike 79.8 mph sweeper thrown by Danny Coulombe, went 445 feet.
In the series finale, Phil Maton had entered with two outs in the bottom of the eighth and struck out the first three batters he faced on nine pitches. James McCann then homered with two outs in the ninth, No. 9 batter Blaze Alexander was hit by a pitch and Geraldo Perdomo walked on four pitches before Marte went deep on a 76.4 mph curveball.
Marte is hitting .297 with 23 homers and 54 RBIs in 88 games, and has an NL-best .329 batting average in road games after going 6 for 9 the last two games in Texas. He missed nearly a month early in the season with a left hamstring strain.
'I'm feeling good. My body is good, I'm healthy,' Marte said.
'He can take it to a whole new level like, you know, a league above the major leagues, and that's hard to do. There's only a few players who can do that,' Lovullo said. 'Everything happened kind of in order to lead up to that moment. He didn't let us down. ... This was a team moment, and Marte made it all happen.'
Split duo
Kelly and Zac Gallen, who started for Arizona on Wednesday, were the dynamic duo atop the Diamondbacks rotation when they made their run to the World Series two seasons ago that ended with a loss to the Rangers.
Gallen allowed two runs over five innings in his 161st start for the Dbacks, one fewer than Kelly made during their time together. Gallen's 61 wins with Arizona are one shy of matching Kelly for the third-most in team history.
Kelly, a 36-year-old right-hander who spent 7 1/2 seasons with the Diamondbacks, struck out five over six innings in his first start against them.
'It was cool. I'm glad it's over, but it was fun just seeing the guys in the box,' Kelly said. 'It's obviously a very different vantage point that I'm used to seeing them from the dugout. But kind of what I expected, a little anxiety to begin leading up to the game. But once the game starts, it's still executing baseball as usual.'

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New York Times
a minute ago
- New York Times
Burning Rangers questions for 2025-26: Should Mika Zibanejad play wing or center?
The bigger questions surrounding Mika Zibanejad's position aren't that different from those in the first installment of this offseason mini-series, which explored whether the Rangers should play Vladislav Gavrikov and Adam Fox together. Does new coach Mike Sullivan want to load up the top of his lineup, at the expense of depth? Or would it be best to balance things out? Advertisement The 32-year-old Zibanejad is coming off a difficult season. His 62 points were his lowest in a full campaign since 2017-18, and his 20 goals were his fewest since 2016-17, his first in New York. Zibanejad has been a force on the power play during his time with the Rangers — he's only eight goals shy of Camille Henry and Chris Kreider for the team record of 116 — but he got demoted to the second unit on multiple occasions in 2024-25. 'I know this wasn't the season that I wanted,' Zibanejad said on locker cleanout day in April. 'That's on me. I have some months here now to make sure I take advantage of and get ready for next season.' Getting Zibanejad back on track is vital for the Rangers, and he showed signs of turning a corner the second half of the season, especially after the Rangers acquired J.T. Miller from Vancouver. The Rangers played Zibanejad on Miller's wing for significant minutes, moving him away from his traditional center slot, and he responded with 11 goals and 33 points in 32 games after the acquisition. 'I thought he played better (on the wing),' said an NHL scout based in the East. 'Obviously when it comes to team needs, having him on a wing may have been a luxury at certain points because center is just so valuable. But I thought him and Miller's chemistry was good. … Once they made that trade for Miller it maybe injected a little bit of life into him.' One Eastern Conference executive said that the Rangers at times looked like 'a completely disengaged team' during the 2024-25 season. But with Miller, he said, 'You're not going to be disengaged with that f—ing guy in your lineup.' Miller and Zibanejad played 259 five-on-five minutes together, according to Natural Stat Trick. The Rangers outscored opponents 14-12 in those minutes and commanded 52.14 percent of the expected goal share. Without each other, both players' expected goal rates dipped below 50 percent after the trade: Miller at 37.98 percent in 166 minutes and Zibanejad at 47.47 percent in 179 minutes. Advertisement Based on last year's results, Zibanejad playing on Miller's wing makes sense — not just to potentially get Zibanejad out of his funk, but also to help Miller, whose numbers dipped away from the Swede. 'It probably gives them their best top six with Zibanejad on the wing for right now,' one Western Conference executive said. 'Having to skate less and have to be less defensively responsible, I feel like that gives (Zibanejad) a little bit more jump where he can focus a little bit more on his game, making plays, creating offense,' the Eastern-based scout added. 'Maybe not having to do as much skating as you do when you're playing center might've been a little bit of a boost for him.' If Sullivan goes that route, he could put Will Cuylle on their line and then keep Artemi Panarin, Vincent Trocheck and Alexis Lafrenière together. He could also put Panarin with Miller and Zibanejad when in need of offense in late-game situations: the Rangers had 59.91 percent of the expected goal share with that trio on the ice in 62 five-on-five minutes last season. All of that sounds appealing, but it comes with a tradeoff. If those six forwards make up the top two lines, the third line would necessarily have Sam Carrick, Jonny Brodzinski or Juuso Pärssinen at center, likely with Taylor Raddysh and a younger winger — maybe Brett Berard, Gabe Perreault or Brennan Othmann — or perhaps veteran Conor Sheary, who is attending camp on a professional tryout. Barring a big jump from one of the less-experienced players, that does not feel like a contending third line. The alternative would be putting Zibanejad at center and having him, Miller, Trocheck and Carrick up the middle. That's a solid center group but leaves the team lighter on the wing. The best-case scenario for the Rangers is that the 24-year-old Pärssinen, acquired from the Avalanche in the Ryan Lindgren trade last deadline, develops into a capable third-line center. But that's a lot to ask for a player who has never played more than 48 games in an NHL season. He was a frequent healthy scratch under then-coach Peter Laviolette after the deadline, though he had multi-point games in two of the season's final three games. Advertisement '(Playing 3C) has been the expectation of him really probably going into the last two training camps,' the Western Conference exec said of Pärssinen. 'He's sort of been that 4C with 3C upside, and he's only 24. The last two years it was a little bit of a younger age. He's definitely coming into the age now that he's going to want to push himself to be that.' Pärssinen's best stretch of play came with Nashville in 2022-23, his rookie year. He got an extended run centering Filip Forsberg and had 20 points in his final 29 games of the year. That success did not continue when the Predators brought in Andrew Brunette as coach ahead of the next season, leading Nashville to trade him to Colorado in the middle of 2024-25. After 22 games with the Avalanche, he was flipped again. 'He kind of fell off for me,' one NHL scout based in the West said. 'I don't know if he just didn't know his role or what he could be or the skill set he would apply to a game. Seeing him after he got moved around, he wasn't the same player. If they can get back a little bit of what he was, I liked him early in his career in Nashville.' If Sullivan keeps Zibanejad on the wing and wants to give Pärssinen or another 3C option a boost, he could consider moving Cuylle to the third line and playing a high-skill youngster like Perreault in the top six. 'That's all part of the process: trying the different combinations and things,' the Eastern-based scout said. 'They can balance their lineup or they can push all their chips up top and rely on those top guys more.' And Zibanejad is perhaps the player who will most affect whatever Sullivan chooses. (Top photo of Mika Zibanejad: Joel Auerbach / Getty Images) Spot the pattern. 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New York Times
a minute ago
- New York Times
By the numbers: How the Padres overtook the Dodgers in the race for the NL West
SAN DIEGO — Six weeks ago, after returning home from a frustrating road trip, the Padres awoke on the fringes of wild-card contention. They were 46-40. Their odds of making the postseason, according to FanGraphs, were at a little more than 40 percent. The site's projections gave them less than a 1 percent shot of winning the National League West. Advertisement That owed to the continued dominance of their chief rivals. That night, the Los Angeles Dodgers finished off a seventh consecutive winning series and moved to a season-high 24 games above .500. They appeared to be cruising toward a 12th division crown in 13 years. Despite a slew of injuries, their World Series title defense was more or less going according to plan. The Padres have since won 23 of 35 games. The Dodgers have lost 21 of 33 — and now trail San Diego by a full game. Friday at Dodger Stadium, the two teams will meet in the first of consecutive weekend series against each other. It's still August, but the stakes should impart the feel of October. The last time the Padres were alone in first place this late in a season? Sept. 25, 2010, with current Chicago White Sox manager Will Venable batting leadoff. The last time the Padres won the division? The final day of the 2006 regular season, with current Dodgers manager Dave Roberts batting leadoff. (The Padres and Dodgers finished with identical records, but San Diego captured the division because it won the season series.) Almost two decades later, the Padres are threatening to end the Dodgers' reign over the NL West. How, against the odds, did they reach this point? Here are five numbers that tell the story of a midsummer surge. Jeremiah Estrada, in his second full season, has a 0.51 ERA since July 3. Rookie David Morgan has a 1.20 ERA in the same span. Among the Padres' six highest-leverage relievers, these are the only two who have not gone to an All-Star game since the start of 2024. Even veteran Wandy Peralta, who isn't a member of that vaunted group, has a 2.12 ERA over the past six weeks. And, over the past six weeks, no bullpen has a better ERA than San Diego's. For the season, the Padres continue to lead the majors in relief ERA (2.97). Meanwhile, the Dodgers rank 20th with a 4.22 ERA from a bullpen that has shouldered the league's heaviest workload since the start of last October. Advertisement Padres relievers, conversely, are spreading shutdown innings around. Morgan's emergence and the aggressive acquisition of Mason Miller have facilitated more rest for Estrada, Adrian Morejon, Jason Adam and Robert Suarez. Saturday against a good Boston Red Sox offense, the latter five relievers combined for six innings and 13 strikeouts. Less than 24 hours later, Adam, Morejon and Morgan teamed up for three scoreless innings and six strikeouts in a series-clinching win. No club looks better-equipped to shorten games, now or in October. That's up from 4.08 runs per game before the Padres acquired Ramón Laureano, Ryan O'Hearn and Freddy Fermin on deadline day. This month, a newly lengthened offense ranks sixth in the majors in runs scored. If weaknesses remain, they are not obvious. The Padres' only starters with a sub-.800 on-base plus slugging percentage in August are the top three hitters in the lineup: Fernando Tatis Jr. (.679), Luis Arraez (.583) and Manny Machado (.631). Meanwhile, Laureano (1.000) and Fermin (.878) are flourishing in a new environment. O'Hearn (.676) has played more sparingly but also delivered multiple key hits. Gavin Sheets (.804) has gone from playing almost every day to serving as one of the league's better bench bats. Almost all of these hitters contributed in Wednesday's 11-1 shellacking of the San Francisco Giants. (Fermin received a day off, and with the score lopsided, Sheets' services were not required.) It was the kind of performance that often felt unattainable while the Padres still employed Yuli Gurriel, Jason Heyward and Martín Maldonado — three respected veterans whose big-league careers might be done. Does the upgraded Padres lineup have the edge over a Dodgers offense led by Shohei Ohtani? It's debatable, but San Diego at least is not stuck paying $17 million to Michael Conforto; the Los Angeles outfielder has continued starting most games despite below-replacement-level production. Advertisement The Padres considered trading Cease all the way up until the July 31 deadline. They didn't ultimately trade him. It could end up being their best move — or non-move — of the summer. Across his first 22 starts, Cease compiled a disappointing 4.79 ERA while throwing his knuckle-curve just 6.8 percent of the time. Since the deadline, he has more than doubled his usage of that pitch. The increased variety has helped an inconsistent, sometimes-dominant righty string together two of his best outings of the year. In that 11-inning stretch, Cease allowed two runs and struck out 16. The Padres won both games by a comfortable margin. This version of Cease could elevate the Padres in September and beyond. He tends to work fewer innings than Nick Pivetta or the healthy versions of Michael King and Yu Darvish, but Cease possesses the kind of swing-and-miss stuff that should play especially well in the postseason. It hasn't yet; Cease owns a 12.91 ERA in four career postseason outings. The pending free agent is motivated to change that, and an elite bullpen could ease at least some of the pressure. On June 18 at Dodger Stadium, Bogaerts laced a tying double in the top of the ninth. Later, after a walk-off loss, he lamented that he was still failing to provide enough production. At the time, the $280 million shortstop ranked 109th among qualifying players with 0.7 WAR, according to FanGraphs. The majority of that value had come through his defense. Bogaerts has since been one of the most productive players in baseball. His 2.3 WAR over the past eight weeks is fifth most among major-league hitters — one spot ahead of Ohtani, the NL home run leader. Bogaerts is still playing solid defense and still stealing bases, but he's also gone from an offensive liability to a middle-of-the-order asset. Since June 19, he has hit .326 with a .908 OPS. And it's not as if a previously unlucky hitter is getting especially lucky. Entering Wednesday, Bogaerts' batting average was 11 percentage points lower than his expected batting average. His slugging percentage was 24 percentage points lower than his expected slugging percentage. Scouts say Bogaerts, 32, looks more athletic than he did early this season. Advertisement He might never again be an All-Star, but with Tatis and Jackson Merrill still searching for past offensive form, Bogaerts has buoyed the Padres for weeks. Elsewhere, the Dodgers acquired Alex Call and Brock Stewart, the latter of whom landed on the injured list this week. Their modest approach to the deadline was not without logic; Los Angeles, after another offseason of extravagant spending, is counting on its depth, improved health and increased production from some underperforming stars. And as wild as A.J. Preller's day was, the Padres general manager also made understandable moves while working with payroll constraints. Four of San Diego's big-league additions are controllable beyond this season, but there was no mistaking the intent: With their veterans not getting any younger, and several key contributors heading toward free agency, the Padres are all in on this October. Spot the pattern. 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Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Diamondbacks at Rockies Prediction: Odds, expert pick, starting pitchers, betting trends, stats for August 14
It's Thursday, August 14 and the Diamondbacks (59-62) are in Denver to take on the Rockies (32-88). Eduardo Rodriguez is slated to take the mound for Arizona against Bradley Blalock for Colorado. Arizona is 7-2 versus Colorado this season and swept the Rockies just a few days ago (Aug 8-10). The Rockies are coming off two wins agains the Cardinals to win the series and also break an eight-game losing streak. The DBacks have won their past two and are 5-1 in the last 6 games and 8-3 in the past 11 contests with three series won in the previous four. Let's dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two. We've got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts. Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long. Game details & how to watch Diamondbacks at Rockies Date: Thursday, August 14, 2025 Time: 8:40PM EST Site: Coors Field City: Denver, CO Network/Streaming: ARID, COLR, FS1 Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out. Odds for the Diamondbacks at the Rockies The latest odds as of Thursday: Moneyline: Diamondbacks (-176), Rockies (+147) Spread: Diamondbacks -1.5 Total: 12.0 runs Probable starting pitchers for Diamondbacks at Rockies Pitching matchup for August 14, 2025: Eduardo Rodriguez vs. Bradley Blalock Diamondbacks: Eduardo Rodriguez, (4-7, 5.68 ERA)Last outing: 8.44 ERA, 5 Earned Runs Allowed, 6 Hits Allowed, 5 Walks, and 2 Strikeouts Rockies: Bradley Blalock, (1-3, 7.89 ERA)Last outing: 9.64 ERA, 5 Earned Runs Allowed, 7 Hits Allowed, 3 Walks, and 4 Strikeouts Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type! Expert picks & predictions for tonight's game between the Diamondbacks and the Rockies Rotoworld Best Bet Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700. Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts. Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager. Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Thursday's game between the Diamondbacks and the Rockies: Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Arizona Diamondbacks on the Moneyline. Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Colorado Rockies at +1.5. Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the under on the Game Total of 12.0. Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC. Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Diamondbacks at Rockies Arizona is 7-2 versus Colorado this season Arizona swept Colorado in the previous meeting Colorado is 2-0 in the last 2 games Colorado is 2-8 in the last 10 games The Diamondbacks have won 4 of their last 5 on the road, while the Rockies have lost 4 straight home games The Rockies' last 6 home games have gone over the Total The Diamondbacks have covered in 4 of their last 5 games for a profit of 1.53 units If you're looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports! Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff: Jay Croucher (@croucherJD) Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper) Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports) Trysta Krick (@Trysta_Krick)