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MN Twins Interested in Former (Familiar) Top Reliever

MN Twins Interested in Former (Familiar) Top Reliever

Yahooa day ago
The Minnesota Twins traded nearly 40% of their roster prior to the MLB trade deadline. Of those moved, five-of-eight bullpen spots were turned over. Rocco Baldelli once had baseball's best bullpen, and now has next to nothing.
After Travis Adams made his first career start, and looked good doing so, Noah Davis came on and blew the game against Detroit on Monday night. There is going to be much more of that if Baldelli can't get a level of competency from his bullpen.
The Twins don't have much to play for, but they could put a better foot forward in terms of pride. That may have them grabbing a quality arm off the open market, and Ryan Pressly now happens to be there.
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Ryan Pressly drawing MN Twins interest
Before the season the Houston Astros traded closer Ryan Pressly to the Chicago Cubs in a salary dump. It gave the former Twins setup man an opportunity to rack up saves again. Unfortunately he has struggled this year and was DFA'd when the club acquired former Twins closer Taylor Rogers at the deadline. Now he's on the Twins radar.
With an inexperienced back end of the bullpen, multiple league sources said the Twins have reached out to veteran free agent Ryan Pressly about a possible reunion. Pressly converted five of seven save attempts and notched seven holds with a 4.35 ERA in 44 games this season before he was designated for assignment by the Chicago Cubs on Thursday and released on Friday.
Dan Hayes – The Athletic
As The Athletic's Dan Hayes points out, the Minnesota Twins would represent a reunion for Pressly. Minnesota grabbed him as a Rule 5 pick from Boston prior to the 2013 season and he spent the first six seasons of his career with the Twins.
Pressly went on to win a World Series with the Houston Astros, and continued his development from Minnesota to become an elite high-leverage arm. Pressly made two separate All-Star appearances while pitching in his home state, and has turned in a very nice career.
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Now 36 years old, Pressly owns a 4.35 ERA (5.02 FIP) for Chicago. The strikeouts have dipped, the walks have risen, and his 1.3 HR/9 is the second highest of his career. With Minnesota though, the pressure would be non-existent and he could look to rebuild value going into next season.
Suitors aplenty for Ryan Pressly
Although Pressly has had a tough go of it this season, he still represents a level of upside. Checking with a direct source, Pressly has multiple options to consider and the Twins are just one of them.
He is making $14 million this year in the final season of his three-year contract signed with the Houston Astros. After clearing waivers though, he can be signed for the major league minimum. A team may need to do a bit better to secure his services, but he won't cost much of anything.
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Although the Twins don't represent a level of competitiveness, they do have a potential advantage. Pressly and his family are familiar with the organization and city. Beyond that, he'd immediately assume whatever role he wants in the bullpen. It gives him a level of control he may not have elsehwere.
It would be a fun full circle moment if things can fall into place.
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In a battle of 3,000K stars, Clayton Kershaw outduels Max Scherzer in Dodgers' win
In a battle of 3,000K stars, Clayton Kershaw outduels Max Scherzer in Dodgers' win

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

In a battle of 3,000K stars, Clayton Kershaw outduels Max Scherzer in Dodgers' win

They've played 18 respective big-league seasons. They've combined for nearly 6,500 strikeouts and 435 career wins. They each have two World Series titles, and three individual Cy Young Awards. And one day, they'll share immortal plaques in Cooperstown, future first-ballot Hall of Famers who defined their generation of pitchers. For Clayton Kershaw and Max Scherzer, there's nothing left to prove. That doesn't mean, however, that there's nothing left to play for. On Friday night at Dodger Stadium, in a pitcher's duel that saw both veteran aces turn in vintage performances, two players who have meant so much to the sport's past found themselves in the center of its present. They were both pitching for first-place teams. They were both effective despite their diminished stuff. They were both wrapped up in what felt like a pivotal game at the start of each team's late-season push. 'I think it's going to be kind of quiet intensity from both of them,' Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said before the game. 'I think that they both are obviously great competitors.' And in the Dodgers' 5-1 win over Scherzer and the Toronto Blue Jays, it was Kershaw who proved to be a fraction better. Over his six innings, the 37-year-old left-hander navigated traffic and limited damage, giving up seven hits and one walk, but only one run, thanks to four well-timed strikeouts and three crucial double-plays turned behind him. The 41-year-old Scherzer, meanwhile, saw what had been a scoreless night shattered in the span of two swings in the fifth, with Shohei Ohtani hitting a two-out double before Mookie Betts belted a go-ahead, two-run homer. The Dodgers (67-49) eventually pulled away late, scoring three times against the Blue Jays' bullpen in the seventh. But up until then, the night's two starting pitchers were hardly separable. 'I don't know,' Roberts said, 'if you're gonna see this one again.' Early on, Scherzer appeared to be the one on the ropes. In the first, the Dodgers loaded the bases against him on two singles and a walk. Scherzer appeared to be battling his command, missing the zone on seven of 14 pitches at one point. And the side was only retired after Teoscar Hernández missed a couple of fastballs left over the heart of the plate, before eventually striking out on a slider in the dirt. Kershaw, by comparison, needed only 11 pitches in a clean opening frame. From there, however, the tables started to turn. Kershaw quickly ran into trouble in the second. Bo Bichette hit a squibber past Freddie Freeman for a leadoff double. The Blue Jays (68-49) opened the scoring on Addison Barger's RBI single off a hanging two-strike curveball. Two more base hits from Ty France and Daulton Varsho loaded the bases. Kershaw escaped the jam, but only with the help of a diving play by Betts at shortstop, who snared a line drive from Myles Straw before doubling off France at second for an inning-ending double-play. Kershaw encountered more traffic in the third (working around a Davis Schneider leadoff single), the fourth (when Barger's one-out hit was erased by a France double-play grounder), the fifth (when second baseman Alex Freeland helped strand a runner with a sprinting catch in shallow right field) and the sixth (when a leadoff walk to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. was canceled out by yet another double-play grounder). But after getting through each new threat unscathed, he ended his 74-pitch night with a 3.14 season earned-run average — the lowest it has been since late June. Scherzer, meanwhile, bounced back from his shaky first inning by finding a midgame groove. Starting with his strikeout of Hernández, he retired nine consecutive batters. And even after Andy Pages led off the fifth with a single, it appeared Scherzer had caught a break, with Pages getting doubled-off at first base on a Freeland pop-up after getting back to the bag late following an attempted steal of second. Five pitches later, though, Scherzer hung a 2-and-2 slider that Ohtani drove to right field for a double off the wall. Then Betts came to the plate and continued his recent — and long-awaited — turnaround offensively, ambushing a first-pitch slider for his first home run since July 5. Since a career-worst 0-for-22 skid ended Tuesday, Betts is six-for-his-last-11 with three extra-base hits and, just as encouragingly, one walk to zero strikeouts. Read more: 'Straight grinder.' How new Dodger Alex Call became one of MLB's toughest at-bats Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Abreu homers off Pivetta to help the Red Sox beat the Padres, 10-2
Abreu homers off Pivetta to help the Red Sox beat the Padres, 10-2

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Abreu homers off Pivetta to help the Red Sox beat the Padres, 10-2

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Luke Keaschall, new-look Twins keep rolling with fourth win in five games
Luke Keaschall, new-look Twins keep rolling with fourth win in five games

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Luke Keaschall, new-look Twins keep rolling with fourth win in five games

MINNEAPOLIS — Luke Keaschall and the new-look Minnesota Twins keep winning after their trade deadline fire sale removed Carlos Correa and nine other veteran players from an underperforming roster. Friday night's 9-4 win over the Kansas City Royals was the Twins' fourth in five games, including a series victory over the first-place Tigers in Detroit. It's far too little and much too late to turn this season around, but manager Rocco Baldelli has them playing hard and playing well since the selloff. Advertisement 'My job right now is to put our team and organization in the best possible position to succeed,' Baldelli said. 'And that's a combination of us winning games … and also finding out who can do what in our clubhouse right now and who is going to help us win (in the future). I don't have time to dwell, but I do have time to get to work and to do everything I can for the team.' 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Christian Vázquez and Ryan Jeffers are the lone MLB catching duo to make every start since the beginning of the 2023 season, a league-leading streak of 439 consecutive games, but the Twins' remarkable run of relying on two catchers will be coming to an end soon. Vázquez was placed on the injured list Friday with a left shoulder infection and the Twins called up 29-year-old journeyman catcher Jhonny Pereda, a recent waiver claim, from Triple-A St. Paul. Pereda and Mickey Gasper will back up Jeffers, whose workload behind the plate figures to increase. 'You're not going to find too many teams that have had that luxury of guys that dependable and durable and able to handle that,' Baldelli said. 'It'll be a little different. But you've got to take it for what it is, a good opportunity and a challenge for the guys we put in there.' 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In that same span, Vázquez has hit .212/.262/.305 for a .567 OPS that ranks 38th out of the 41 catchers with at least 150 games. Vázquez, who turns 35 later this month, has hit just .174 this season. And while Vázquez has the far superior defensive reputation — it's largely why the Twins targeted him in the first place — the pitching staff's overall ERA has been very similar throwing to Vázquez (4.06) and Jeffers (4.19) in their three seasons paired together. The next time Jeffers gets a day off from catching — likely Saturday or Sunday — either Pereda or Gasper will become the Twins' first catcher other than Jeffers and Vázquez to start a game since Gary Sánchez on the final day of the 2022 regular season. Pablo López's recovery from a strained right shoulder sustained on June 3 has progressed to throwing off a mound, including 30 pitches Wednesday at Target Field while the Twins were on the road. He remains on schedule for what was initially expected to be an 8-12 week timeline. Advertisement 'It's getting good because it's getting serious now,' López said. 'I hit all my marks. I was 89 (mph) most of (the pitches). And then the last five pitches, I simulated facing a batter and the first pitch was 92. It's just funny how the mind tricks the body, like there's a batter in the box.' López's next step will likely be facing hitters in live batting practice, which will also be used to simulate a game environment with mid-inning breaks. And if those go well, a minor-league rehab assignment could follow, during which López would need to build up his pitch count for several outings. 'There haven't been any setbacks or slowdowns,' López said. 'There's no hesitation. Body is feeling good. Mechanics are coming out well. … I want to make sure that by the time I come back, I'm here for good. Also, because of the gravity of the injury, it doesn't give us wiggle room.' At the time of the injury, López had a 2.82 ERA in 11 starts, and the Twins were in prime playoff position with a 33-27 record. They've gone a league-worst 22-33 since then, falling out of the postseason picture and making it logical to be more conservative with López's workload down the stretch. 'Crossing that finish line being healthy is the number one priority,' López said. 'Making sure, whenever our last game of the year is, I'm able to walk into the offseason and have a good, normal offseason. But then the second-most priority, for me, I want to squeeze in as many starts as possible.' Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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