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Reds vs. Nationals predictions, odds: MLB picks, best bets Wednesday

Reds vs. Nationals predictions, odds: MLB picks, best bets Wednesday

New York Post5 days ago
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The Reds visit the Nationals and I haven't been this excited since I tried Mushroom Coffee.
Cincy's Nick Lodolo has won two in a row, allowing just two runs over 13 innings.
Lodolo faced Washington once this season.
Nick was nicked for seven runs on 10 hits over 5 ¹/₃ forgettable frames.
Are the Nats in the playoff hunt? Am I going to have Mushroom Coffee again?
Michael Soroka has given up three runs over his past nine innings, but he hasn't won a game since June 6 — going 0-4 over those seven starts.
Nick Lodolo
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
C'mon Nats! Wake up, smell the coffee (no, not that one, the pot with the dark roast in it) and offer some run support.
$50 on the Nationals.
Phenomenal!
Learn all you need to know about MLB Betting
Cristopher Sánchez pitched a complete game, striking out 12 Dead Sox.
Philly gave Richard Fitts fits, scoring four runs in 3 ¹/₃ and the Phillies beat Boston 4-1.
Winner! Down -212 petrocellis.
Why Trust New York Post Betting
The one and only Stitches has been handicapping baseball, daily, for the Post since 2019. Miraculously, he has finished in the black twice. But wait there's more. He showed his versatility by winning the Post's NFL Best Bet crown last year.
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Twins lose third consecutive series after 7-2 loss to Nationals
Twins lose third consecutive series after 7-2 loss to Nationals

CBS News

time30 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Twins lose third consecutive series after 7-2 loss to Nationals

CJ Abrams hit a leadoff homer, stole three bases and scored three runs as the Washington Nationals beat the Minnesota Twins 7-2 on Sunday. Nationals starter Jake Irvin (8-5), a Twin Cities native pitching at Target Field for the first time, gave up two runs on five hits over seven innings. Josh Bell went 3 for 4 with an RBI. Matt Wallner homered and Harrison Bader had two hits for Minnesota, which has lost six of nine since the All-Star break. Daylen Lile tripled and scored on Paul DeJong's sacrifice fly in the fourth to put the Nationals on top 3-2. Washington broke it open with four runs in the fifth off Travis Adams (1-1), keyed by Alex Call's two-run single. Abrams hit the first pitch of the game from Twins opener Cole Sands for his 14th home run of the season. After the Twins tied it on Wallner's second-inning homer, Abrams manufactured a run for the Nationals. He led off the third inning with a single, stole second and third and scored on Luis García Jr.'s sacrifice fly. Minnesota tied it again on Trevor Larnach's sacrifice fly in the bottom half. Leading 4-2, the Nationals loaded the bases with one out in the fifth. Call hit a grounder up the middle that second baseman Brooks Lee was ready to turn into an inning-ending double play. Instead, the ball skipped off the side of the mound and caromed over Lee's head for a two-run single. Abrams has five leadoff homers this year and 12 in 470 career games. Simeon Woods Richardson (5-4, 4.14 ERA) will take the mound for the Twins on Monday as they open a three-game series against visiting Boston. The Nationals travel to Houston, where Brad Lord (2-5, 3.39) will start on Monday.

CC Sabathia's Hall of Fame induction reminder of enduring impact on Yankees culture
CC Sabathia's Hall of Fame induction reminder of enduring impact on Yankees culture

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

CC Sabathia's Hall of Fame induction reminder of enduring impact on Yankees culture

COOPERSTOWN — When Brian Cashman recruited CC Sabathia to play in New York prior to the 2009 season, he knew it would take more than just the promise of trying to win and a giant contract. 'I told him and Amber [Sabathia's wife] we would make them comfortable in New York,'' Cashman said Sunday, just prior to Sabathia's induction speech. 'I looked him in the eye — and threw a ton of money at him — but I knew he wasn't sure about playing in New York. I think we both fulfilled our promise. He became a Hall of Fame pitcher and he and his family were just fine in New York. We both fulfilled our promise.' If Sabathia's speech Sunday was any indication, Cashman's approach was the right one, since the big lefty spent nearly his entire 12-minute speech thanking the women in his life, from his wife to his mother Margie, both of whom were in attendance, to his grandmother and many aunts. While Sabathia noted that he'd shown his appreciation for his father Corky, who died early in Sabathia's career, he went out of his way to tell stories about people he believed may have been overshadowed. 6 CC Sabathia looking at his Hall of Fame Plaque during the National Baseball Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in Cooperstown, New York on July 27. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post From throwing grapefruits in his grandmother's backyard as a youngster, which is where Sabathia said he first 'realized I could throw hard,' Sabathia consistently brought up 'the village of women who raised me … and a few times literally saved me.' It was his mother, Sabathia said, who taught him to become a fan of the game and brought the native of Vallejo, Calif., to A's games at the Oakland Coliseum, where Sabathia watched the 1989 World Series-winning team that included fellow Hall of Fame inductee Dave Parker, who died just a month before the ceremony. His father helped teach Sabathia the game, but Margie was a significant part of his growth, as well. 'My mom loved the game, too,'' Sabathia said. 'She'd put the catching gear on and catch me in the backyard. My mom is the reason I'm a baseball fan. And fans turn into players who sometimes turn into Hall of Famers.' 6 CC Sabathia speaking during the National Baseball Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in Cooperstown, New York. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post 6 CC Sabathia's plaque that will hang in the Baseball Hall of Fame. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post Sabathia's path to Cooperstown began in Cleveland, where he spent the first eight-plus seasons of his career after being a first-round pick of the organization in 1998. And he solidified his status as an ace in 2008, after being traded to Milwaukee, where he consistently pitched on short rest to lead the Brewers to the postseason — even with free agency approaching. But it was in The Bronx where Sabathia cemented his Hall of Fame credentials, pitching the final 11 seasons of his career and leading the Yankees to the 2009 World Series title. 6 CC Sabathia posing for a photo after the National Baseball Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post 'We had a very high assessment of him as a pitcher and that was obviously met, even before he was a Hall of Famer,'' Cashman said. Cashman credited Sabathia for changing the culture of the team at the time. 'I thought we had, in some ways, a broken clubhouse, and he had a reputation as a connector,'' Cashman said. 'He made a fantastic impact.' That impact continues today, with his former teammates still citing Sabathia as an example for how they play. 6 Yankees starting pitcher CC Sabathia throws a pitch during a game against the Rangers on Oct. 20, 2010. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post 6 CC Sabathia reacts after getting out of trouble in the 6th inning in an ALCS game against the Rangers in 2010. Neil Miller Prior to his IL stint, Aaron Judge said Sabathia's performance in 2019, when he pitched out of the bullpen in the postseason until his shoulder gave out, is a reason why he puts his body at risk in the outfield. 'Watching him go out there hurt and then basically throw until his arm came off, you can't help but be motivated by that,'' Judge said of Sabathia, who entered Game 4 of the ALCS against the Astros while pitching with left shoulder soreness and walked off the mound with a subluxation of his left shoulder. 'That last run was a great example,'' Judge said. 'He threw literally until he couldn't throw anymore. I'll never forget that. We didn't finish it that year, but he knew if we were gonna get there, it was gonna take all of your body and soul.' And on Sunday, it landed Sabathia in the Hall of Fame.

Joe Ryan ‘would like to stay' with Twins; Derek Falvey talks trade deadline plans
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New York Times

time3 hours ago

  • New York Times

Joe Ryan ‘would like to stay' with Twins; Derek Falvey talks trade deadline plans

MINNEAPOLIS — Saturday's loss to the Washington Nationals was Joe Ryan's final start before the July 31 trade deadline, and it also could have been the All-Star's last start in a Minnesota Twins uniform. But as rumors swirl around the highly sought-after right-hander who ranks No. 1 on The Athletic's trade deadline big board, Ryan downplayed his odds of being traded and expressed a desire to stay in Minnesota with two years of team control remaining beyond this one. Advertisement 'As far as a trade goes, I don't see it happening,' Ryan said. 'At the same time, it's completely out of my hands, so I really haven't thought about it much. I think we have a good opportunity, years forward, to do something here, so I would like to stay. But like I said, it's out of my control.' Ryan is 10-5 with a 2.82 ERA and 137-to-24 strikeout-to-walk ratio in 121 1/3 innings this season, and the 29-year-old has a career 3.70 ERA over 591 2/3 innings for the Twins since debuting in late 2021. His combination of front-line performance and team control through 2027 makes him very valuable. Of course, those same traits are why the Twins would seemingly need to be blown away by an offer to even consider moving Ryan, who is earning just $3 million this season and figures to make less than $10 million in 2026 via arbitration. But contenders are calling the Twins about Ryan just in case. 'I've obviously seen some of the media side about it,' Ryan said of deadline chatter. 'It hasn't really been a huge topic of discussion (in the clubhouse). People aren't freaking out about anything. Just play baseball and focus on what we can control. And the front office will take care of the rest of that.' That's just the Joe Ryan Experience, baby! — Minnesota Twins (@Twins) July 16, 2025 As for the front office, Twins president Derek Falvey indicated Sunday that the conversations with other teams are still largely in the feeling-out stage, perhaps a result of MLB's expanded playoff field leading to fewer clear-cut sellers and more fence-sitting wild-card hopefuls. 'There are a lot of discussions, don't get me wrong,' Falvey said. 'There are a lot of calls back and forth. But in terms of actual proposals and offers, this stuff tends to come as you get much closer to the deadline. In some of these conversations, they're not advanced yet, because it's just timing.' Advertisement But with only three games left until the trade deadline, the Twins have a 50-55 record that puts them 11th in the 15-team American League and sits eighth in line for three wild-card spots. It also ensures they'll have a losing record on deadline day, which typically leads to a team being sellers. Ryan might be correct that he's unlikely to be traded, but the Twins have six impending free agents who could be cashed in for some future value as two-month rentals instead of leaving for nothing this winter, including solid role players Harrison Bader, Willi Castro, Chris Paddack and Danny Coulombe. High-end relievers Jhoan Duran, Griffin Jax and Brock Stewart are team controlled through 2027, just like Ryan. But there's a growing sense around the league that one or more of the Twins' late-inning bullpen arms could be gettable — or at least more gettable than Ryan — with a big enough offer. 'The job is to evaluate what comes our way and navigate in any direction possible,' Falvey said. 'We still feel like there's a lot of talent on this roster. I've never considered a label on what we do here. And that's going to be our deadline every year. Quite frankly, I've never pivoted from that.' Jhoan Duran's full entrance because it's fun at night — CJ Fogler 🫡 (@cjzero) July 12, 2025 Nearly everything points to the Twins being sellers at the deadline, to some degree. They're below .500, with playoff odds under 15 percent, and there's little reason to think a strong stretch-run push is doable for a team with an AL-worst 19-29 record since June 1 and a 74-88 record in its last 162 games. Worse, their rotation is running on fumes. Pablo López isn't expected back from a shoulder strain for several weeks, David Festa just joined him on the injured list with shoulder problems of his own, and no one can be sure what to expect from Bailey Ober's imminent return after a brutal June. Advertisement And if those aren't enough reasons to write off the slim possibility of a late-season surge into the playoffs, Byron Buxton was removed from Saturday's game with left side soreness and sat out Sunday's loss to the Nationals after an MRI showed rib cartilage irritation. He's considered day to day. On the other hand, selling would all but guarantee missing the playoffs for the fourth time in five seasons. And the uncertain ownership situation also looms over everything, making it tough to plan for the future without even knowing who will be in charge or whether they'll retain the Falvey-led front office. 'We never have an eye on just one season,' Falvey said. 'We try to think about, in this case, what's it mean for 2025? What's it mean for 2026, 2027, 2028? We're going to approach it exactly the same way and continue to try to figure out what the right deals are for the Twins, short- and long-term.' (Photo of Joe Ryan: Justin Edmonds / Getty Images)

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