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MLB rumors: How Mets, Phillies ‘stunned' rivals with trade deadline bombshells

MLB rumors: How Mets, Phillies ‘stunned' rivals with trade deadline bombshells

Yahoo31-07-2025
The post MLB rumors: How Mets, Phillies 'stunned' rivals with trade deadline bombshells appeared first on ClutchPoints.
The MLB trade deadline market is heating up with less than 12 hours to go. Eugenio Suarez is off the market, returning to the Seattle Mariners, putting all eyes on the pitching market. The New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies made trades for much-needed relievers and paid a lot to get them. Buster Olney has the latest on what the Ryan Helsley and Jhoan Duran returns mean for the trade deadline market.
'The amount given up for relievers by the Mets and Phillies stunned rival executives, and the assumption within the industry is that this will embolden the potential offloaders in the last hours before the trade deadline,' Olney wrote for ESPN.com.
The Mets picked up Cardinals closer Ryan Helsley for three prospects, two of which landed among St Louis' top 15 prospects. Duran went from the Minnesota Twins to the Phillies for two of their top-six prospects. Duran is under team control through 2028, while Helsley is a free agent after this season. That led to the price difference between the two pieces.
The MLB trade deadline will undoubtedly see more relief pitchers moving. Olney lists Pirates' closer David Bednar, Angels' closer Kenley Jansen, and Twins setup man Griffin Jax among the top options remaining. Meanwhile, the New York Yankees, Toronto Blue Jays, Detroit Tigers, and Los Angeles Dodgers are looking for bullpen arms.
Teams that are trading a reliever with team control should be holding out until the final minute. While the market is heating up as 6 p.m. Eastern approaches, the bullpen pitchers could be the last pieces moved. Teams are not going to be quick to send out their top prospects for a bullpen pitcher until they absolutely have to.
The MLB trade deadline is at 6 p.m. on Thursday, and ClutchPoints has you covered all afternoon long. Will your favorite team make a move?
Related: 2025 MLB trade deadline: Tracking all trades after Padres' Mason Miller blockbuster
Related: MLB rumors: Rangers linked to Cardinals, Royals relievers at trade deadline
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MLB, ESPN reportedly reach agreement for network to obtain rights to sell out-of-market games, ability to offer MLB.TV
MLB, ESPN reportedly reach agreement for network to obtain rights to sell out-of-market games, ability to offer MLB.TV

Yahoo

time3 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

MLB, ESPN reportedly reach agreement for network to obtain rights to sell out-of-market games, ability to offer MLB.TV

ESPN and MLB are reportedly close to an agreement that would allow the network to carry and the rights to all out-of-market baseball games — and select in-market baseball games — according to Andrew Marchand of The Athletic. The reported deal, which has not been signed yet, would give ESPN the ability to offer to fans as part of the network's newly-launched direct-to-consumer streaming service. ESPN officially announced that service Thursday. It's unclear exactly if — or how — the agreement will change how fans currently access per Marchand. But the network could require fans to have an ESPN direct-to-consumer subscription to get access to From The Athletic: It is not fully clear yet if out-of-market subscribers who pay for the package through cable or other linear subscription would still be able to receive that way. For digital consumers, fans are likely to need an ESPN direct-to-consumer subscription to go along with The overall new pricing for is not yet decided. In addition to that, ESPN would also obtain the rights to every out-of-network MLB game. That's essentially what already provides to customers, as the service offers out-of-network games to fans. But it would also presumably allow ESPN to sell rights for certain out-of-network games to other networks or subscription services. Events such as the Home Run Derby or "Sunday Night Baseball" could be sold to other networks by ESPN, which has previously held broadcast rights for those events. The network could also presumably sell any random out-of-market game to, as an example, Apple TV+. It's unclear if that's what the network has in mind if the deal goes through. ESPN is still expected to broadcast roughly 30 regular-season games per year, according to Marchand. Those games would presumably be available on the network, and not exclusive to its direct-to-consumer offering. As part of the deal, ESPN will also control in-network games for five MLB teams: the Cleveland Guardians, San Diego Padres, Minnesota Twins, Arizona Diamondbacks and Colorado Rockies. Local fans who want to watch those teams would likely have to go through ESPN's direct-to-consumer service. In addition to owning a subscription to that service — which costs $29.99 per month — the network could charge in-network consumers an additional fee to watch their favorite team's games. The reported agreement comes after a months-long feud between MLB commissioner Rob Manfred and ESPN. In February, ESPN decided to opt out of its partnership with the league following the 2025 MLB season. Manfred ripped the network a month later, saying he felt the league was "being treated disrespectfully" by ESPN. It appears those issues are now water under the bridge if Thursday's reported agreement comes to pass. Should the agreement go through, it would reportedly last for three years, per Marchand. MLB reportedly wants all of its broadcast rights to expire in 2029, allowing it to make a massive payday by auctioning off those rights to the highest bidder or bidders.

NFL Preseason Week 3 schedule: Dates, times, TV channels, how to watch
NFL Preseason Week 3 schedule: Dates, times, TV channels, how to watch

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time34 minutes ago

  • USA Today

NFL Preseason Week 3 schedule: Dates, times, TV channels, how to watch

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A shorter MLB season on the horizon? Plus: Rules around using Ohtani in relief
A shorter MLB season on the horizon? Plus: Rules around using Ohtani in relief

New York Times

time35 minutes ago

  • New York Times

A shorter MLB season on the horizon? Plus: Rules around using Ohtani in relief

The Windup Newsletter ⚾ | This is The Athletic's MLB newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Windup directly in your inbox. For the last 64 years, the number 162 has been the standard. Could that change soon? Plus: Ohtani in relief is trickier than you might think, Ken tells us about Roman Anthony's spring training prediction, and: Are bullpens worse in the second half? I'm Levi Weaver, here with Ken Rosenthal — welcome to The Windup! We talked earlier this week about the commissioner's comments on expansion and geographic realignment, and even showed you Stephen Nesbitt's cool charts explaining how it might look with minimal upheaval. But Jayson Stark has an article today with an angle that — go figure, it's Jayson — I hadn't previously considered. If the league expands to 32 teams, it seems likely that it would adjust the schedule down, from 162 games to either 154 or 156. Advertisement Why? Well, it's math, so I'll let Jayson take it from here: 12 games apiece versus the other three teams inside the division. That's 36 games. Six games apiece versus the other 12 teams in your league. That's 72 games. Three games apiece versus the 16 teams in the other league. Now we're at 156. Bingo. Another reason he mentions: A 156-game schedule would also essentially ensure that every team gets at least one day off every week. It's also doable — with a little creative scheduling — to go back to the 154-game schedule that MLB used from 1908-1961. That would at least offset a little of the record-book confusion that would no doubt emerge from decreasing the number of games. There's more, of course. Jayson isn't in the habit of leaving stones unturned. Check it out here. From my latest column: 'I'll see you soon.' That's what outfielder Roman Anthony told Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora upon being informed at the end of spring training that he would open the season at Triple A. 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The short answer: a little bit, but not drastically so. In the first half, relievers across the league posted a 4.06 ERA in 10,510 innings. In the second half so far: 4.20 in 3,317 2/3 innings. While I did find the answer I was looking for, I also found some other interesting notes, so I can't rob you of those, right? Here are the outliers … Best first-half bullpen ERA: Giants (3.14) Worst first-half bullpen ERA: Nationals (5.88) Best second-half bullpen ERA: Padres (2.11) Worst second-half bullpen ERA: Rockies (6.82) Biggest improvement from first half to second: Athletics (5.50 to 3.27 — difference of 2.23) Biggest decline from first half to second: Blue Jays (3.57 to 5.87 — difference of 2.30) Takeaways: The conversation started when Dodgers pitching coach Mark Prior said on 'The Dan Patrick Show' that he could 'Absolutely' see Ohtani pitching in relief in the postseason. Prior later clarified that the team had discussed the possibility and looked into the rules. 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