
Spencer Turnbull likely to make Jays debut vs. Cardinals
June 11 - Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer appears to be on track to return from his thumb injury before the end of the month.
In the meantime, Blue Jays manager John Schneider must cobble together a rotation. He has been using left-hander Eric Lauer (2-1, 2.08 ERA) to pitch bulk innings during regularly scheduled bullpen starts.
Schneider likely will add newcomer Spencer Turnbull to the bullpen-day equation on Wednesday afternoon when the Blue Jays try to complete a three-game road sweep against the St. Louis Cardinals.
"This is such a cool group," Schneider said of his players. "They don't quit. They're tight. They support each other. They're happy for each other. ... the sum of our parts is pretty damn good."
The Blue Jays won 5-4 in 10 innings on Monday and 10-9 on Tuesday.
"We know going in ... this might be one of our toughest series," Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said. "This might be a tougher series for us as far as matchup goes than even L.A. (Dodgers)."
Turnbull, who signed with Toronto last month, made five minor league starts before the Blue Jays called him up this week.
"I threw a bullpen (session on Monday), so I'm still on my five-day starter's routine that I was working with," Turnbull said. "I'll be available Wednesday, but I don't know if I'll be starting or in bulk relief to start out. We'll see what they want to do."
Turnbull posted a 7.13 ERA in his minor league outings, but he did some tinkering to integrate a sweeper into his arsenal.
"I feel like it added a whole other element to my swing-and-miss," Turnbull said. "Before Tommy John (surgery), my slider was my out pitch. Coming back from TJ, it wasn't as sharp and I was having a hard time finding it again. I didn't have a lot of innings in '23 to figure it out."
Turnbull is 1-0 with a 3.29 ERA in three career games (two starts) against St. Louis. Lauer has faced the Cardinals eight times (seven starts), going 2-4 with a 7.27 ERA.
Blue Jays outfielder Nathan Lukes was a late scratch from the lineup on Tuesday due to neck discomfort, but the team doesn't believe the issue is serious.
The Cardinals' Wednesday starter will be left-hander Matthew Liberatore (3-4, 3.82 ERA), who is looking to rebound from a difficult outing.
Liberatore allowed seven runs on eight hits, including two homers, in four-plus innings during a 7-5 loss to the Kansas City Royals in the second half of a split doubleheader on Thursday.
Marmol removed him from that game when Liberatore experienced a notable decline in pitch velocity. Liberatore insisted the issue was lost mechanics, not an injury.
"Over the course of the season, you're going to have times where you feel synced up and kind of lose the feel for it and find it again," Liberatore said. "I'm not concerned about it. I don't think anybody else is overly concerned about it. It's just a matter of finding it again and being able to stay consistent with it."
Liberatore pitched three scoreless innings in his one previous career appearance against the Blue Jays, a relief outing last year.
Cardinals infielder/outfielder Brendan Donovan is questionable for the series finale after exiting the Tuesday game with left big toe discomfort.
"Day-to-day," Marmol said postgame. "I'll know more tomorrow."
--Field Level Media

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
19 hours ago
- Reuters
MLB roundup: Cramp ends Brewers prospect's no-hit bid in debut
June 13 - In his major league debut, highly touted Brewers prospect Jacob Misiorowski tossed five hitless innings before exiting with a leg cramp to pace Milwaukee to a 6-0 victory over the visiting St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday in the opener of a four-game series. The hard-throwing 23-year-old right-hander struck out five before appearing to stumble on his third pitch of the sixth inning to Victor Scott II. Nick Mears relieved and finished the walk to Scott, the fourth charged to Misiorowski in an 81-pitch outing. The Brewers announced later that Misiorowski left with right calf and quad cramping. Misiorowski (1-0) topped 100 mph on four of his six pitches to Lars Nootbaar to open the game, hitting 102.2 mph on his fifth pitch, and fanned Pedro Pages on a 101.1 mph four-seam fastball to end the fifth. Jackson Chourio hit a two-run homer to cap a five-run fifth against Sonny Gray (7-2) that put the Brewers up 6-0. Sal Frelick, who went 3-for-4 and scored twice, hit a two-run single before Chourio's homer. Gray, who was 4-0 in his previous six starts, allowed six runs on eight hits in 4 1/3 innings. He struck out four and walked one. The Cardinals did not get a hit until Willson Contreras' leadoff single off Aaron Ashby in the seventh. Ashby covered the final three innings for his first save. Mets 4, Nationals 3 Starting pitcher Kodai Senga sustained a hamstring strain in a victory over Washington to complete a three-game series sweep. Senga will spend time on the injured list and undergo an MRI on Friday. The starter allowed only two baserunners and zero runs in 5-2/3 innings before exiting, lowering his ERA to an MLB-best 1.47. Jeff McNeil's three-run home run in the first and Brandon Nimmo's solo shot in the fifth gave the Mets a 4-0 advantage. Washington's bats were silent until the ninth inning. Mets reliever Ryne Stanek gave up three consecutive singles and a run before Edwin Diaz replaced him. Diaz surrendered a walk and a single, and threw a wild pitch to allow two more runs before coaxing a pair of groundouts to pick up his 15th save of the season. Yankees 1, Royals 0 Pablo Reyes scored an unearned run from second base on a wild play in the eighth inning following a pitching duel in New York's victory over the host Royals. The Yankees' Will Warren and Royals' Seth Lugo each pitched 5 2/3 innings and the game was still scoreless in the eighth, when Paul Goldschmidt sent a liner off the glove of Vinnie Pasquantino, who tried to get the out at first but was late. Reyes, meanwhile, stopped between third and home, then again broke for the plate, where Freddy Fermin was unable to grab the low throw from Lucas Erceg, who was covering first. Erceg was charged with an error. New York managed just five hits against four Royals pitchers, yet it was enough for the victory to claim all six games this season versus Kansas City. The Royals sit in a 10-19 rut that has dropped them below .500 for the first time since April 27. Rangers 16, Twins 3 Texas hit six home runs, including a trio of three-run home runs, in a trouncing of Minnesota. The Rangers matched the season-high run total they set on Tuesday in the first game of their series against the Twins. Wyatt Langford, Adolis Garcia and Sam Haggerty hit the three-run shots, while Jake Burger, Josh Smith and Evan Carter added solo homers. Texas had 16 hits, including six hits and four home runs off Minnesota starter Bailey Ober. A five-run second inning allowed Texas to quickly pull away, and a six-run sixth inning to grow the Rangers' lead to 13-1 was further assurance. Minnesota had a solid eight hits, but went 3-13 with runners in scoring position and failed to dig themselves out of an early five-run hole. Rockies 8, Giants 7 Orlando Arcia hit a two-run, walk-off single in the bottom of the ninth to lift Colorado over San Francisco and snap a five-game Rockies skid. The loss snapped the Giants' six-game winning streak in one-run games. San Francisco has had a penchant for tight games this year, with a major-league-leading 30 one-run games, including today's contest. The Giants quickly built a four-run lead in the second inning on the back of a sacrifice fly and a pair of RBI singles. Colorado notched two runs in the fourth to narrow the lead, but San Francisco swiftly responded with a three-run Dominic Smith homer in the fifth. After falling down 7-2, the Rockies scored six unanswered runs, highlighted by a three-run ninth inning and capped by Arcia's decisive base hit. Tigers 4, Orioles 1 Tarik Skubal pitched seven scoreless innings as Detroit won at Baltimore in the decisive game of a three-game set. Dillon Dingler and Parker Meadows drilled fourth-inning home runs, with Meadows' three-run shot the big blow. Skubal (7-2) struck out six and allowed three singles and two walks. Will Vest handled the ninth for his 12th save. Baltimore's Dylan Carlson (three hits) led off the eighth with a home run. Dean Kremer (5-7) permitted four runs on five hits in seven innings. Cubs 3, Pirates 2 Pete Crow-Armstrong belted a two-run homer and Jameson Taillon recorded his fifth win in as many starts as host Chicago earned a victory over Pittsburgh. Taillon (7-3), who began his career with Pittsburgh, allowed two runs on four hits and two walks with seven strikeouts in 6 1/3 innings. Seiya Suzuki added a solo shot for the Cubs, who won the opener of their 10-game homestand despite mustering just four hits. Adam Frazier sliced an RBI double in the seventh among the four hits for the Pirates, who lost for just the second time in seven games. Pittsburgh starter Andrew Heaney (3-5) yielded three runs on four hits with seven strikeouts and no walks in six innings. Astros 4, White Sox 3 Framber Valdez recorded a season-high 12 strikeouts while leading Houston to a victory over visiting Chicago. Isaac Paredes slugged his club-leading 15th homer and Jose Altuve added a two-run double as the Astros claimed the decisive game of the three-game series. Valdez (7-4) won his fifth consecutive start, firing five innings of two-run ball while permitting seven hits and a walk. Chicago's Miguel Vargas finished 3-for-4 with two doubles, a triple, a walk and two runs. Edgar Quero had three hits, including a pair of RBI singles. Davis Martin (2-7) Martin allowed four runs on seven hits and two walks with five strikeouts over six innings. --Field Level Media


Reuters
a day ago
- Reuters
Cardinals reinforce bullpen with RHP Andre Granillo
June 12 - The St. Louis Cardinals selected the contract of right-hander Andre Granillo and recalled outfielder Michael Siani from Triple-A Memphis on Thursday. In corresponding moves, right-hander Chris Roycroft was optioned and outfielder Ryan Vilade was designated for assignment. Granillo, 25, is set to make his major league debut after he went 4-0 with a 1.82 ERA in 18 relief appearances at Memphis, holding opponents to a .159 batting average. Siani, 25, was 4-for-16 (.250) in 18 games for the Cardinals earlier this season and is a career .222 hitter with two home runs and 20 RBIs in parts of four seasons with the Cincinnati Reds (2022-23) and Cardinals. Roycroft, 27, was 1-3 with a 6.92 ERA in 14 relief appearances for the Cardinals this season, while Vilade, 26, was 1-for-13 (.077) in seven games. --Field Level Media


Reuters
2 days ago
- Reuters
Brewers look to future with Jacob Misiorowski set to debut vs. Cardinals
June 12 - The highly anticipated MLB debut of pitching prospect Jacob Misiorowski is set to take place on Thursday when the Milwaukee Brewers host the visiting St. Louis Cardinals in the first of a four-game set. Misiorowski, 23, is the top pitching prospect in the Milwaukee system, compiling a 4-2 record with a 2.13 ERA in 13 games with Triple-A Nashville. The 2022 second-round draft pick made just 14 starts over two seasons with the Nashville Sounds, but the Brewers are already proving their faith in the 6-foot-7, Blue Springs, Mo., native. "I think it just plays into the fact that the Brewers trust me, and they think I have the strength to do it," Misiorowski said on Wednesday. "I think I'm ready and willing to do it. So, I'm excited." The Brewers enter play having dropped three of four games -- including two of three against the Atlanta Braves. Milwaukee scored just seven runs throughout the series loss to Atlanta while striking out 36 times. The club has totaled just 11 runs over its six-game homestand -- which will continue against the Cardinals on Thursday. "One thing about our guys is that we're always going to battle, but we just haven't thrown it all together so far," Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy said of the lackluster offense over the last week. "It's not that anybody has been terrible, it just hasn't all happened for us." St. Louis is also aiming to turn the tide after losing its fourth straight game on Wednesday, which concluded a three-game sweep by the visiting Toronto Blue Jays. The Cardinals' pitching staff has surrendered 27 runs over the four-game skid. "We talked about it before the series started, this might have been one of our toughest series' as far as matchups go," St. Louis manager Oliver Marmol said of the Toronto series. "Just because of the amount of contact that group makes and what we do as a pitching staff. We knew there would be challenges we'd have to navigate and (Toronto) continued to show why they're first in the league at being the toughest to strike out." Since winning 12 of 13 games in May, St. Louis has gone 10-12 and sits five games behind the National League Central-leading Chicago Cubs. The Cardinals enter the four-game series a half-game ahead of the Brewers. Veteran right-hander Sonny Gray (7-1, 3.35 ERA) is slated to make his 14th start of the season for the Cardinals and will look to continue his recent dominant stretch. Gray has thrown 13 1/3 consecutive scoreless innings, including a seven-inning, 10-strikeout appearance in a win over the Texas Rangers on May 31. He followed that outing up with 6 1/3 scoreless innings against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday, striking out five in a 5-0 St. Louis win. The 35-year-old is 4-5 with a 3.23 ERA in 17 career starts against the Brewers. He allowed three earned runs across six innings in a no-decision against Milwaukee on April 26. The Cardinals won 6-5 on Nolan Arenado's walk-off home run. --Field Level Media