
Houston Astros reacquire Carlos Correa in trade
Why it matters: The All-Star shortstop's homecoming lines up with the Houston squad's forward momentum, already in progress.
Driving the news: The Astros acquired Correa from the Twins hours before the MLB trade deadline Thursday, multiple outlets reported.
Correa had to agree to the trade, signaling his eagerness to rejoin the team.
Details of the deal weren't immediately available, but Correa had $96 million and three more years left in his contract with Minnesota.
State of play: The Astros acquired Correa while he's on the injured list, having suffered a sprained ankle during a game on July 11. He's currently day-to-day and had a .267 batting average in 2025 until the injury.
Houston is 62-47 (.569) this season, with 53 games left in the regular season.
The intrigue: Correa, when healthy, will likely replace Isaac Paredes at third base, who will miss at least the next two months with a hamstring injury.
What they're saying:"I'm coming home and there's only one goal in mind and that's to win championships," Correa said, per MLB.com's Brian McTaggart.
Flashback: The Astros selected Correa as the No. 1 overall draft pick in 2012.
He made his debut in 2015 and won American League Rookie of the Year before leading the Astros to their first World Series win in 2017. He's also a three-time All-Star and a Gold Glove recipient.
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Indianapolis Star
an hour ago
- Indianapolis Star
Colts LB Zaire Franklin is back, ready to lead evolving Colts defense: 'I almost shed a tear'
WESTFIELD, Ind. -- Zaire Franklin couldn't take it anymore. Seven practices went by without the booming voice of No. 44 barking from the middle of the Colts defense. He was chiming in from the sidelines and from behind huddles, but each time the ball was snapped, he was a spectator. It's the place this team captain has rarely ever been in an NFL career who had never had a surgery until this ankle issue flared up in the spring. And now that he's back to individual drills for the second straight practice, it's a place he never wants to go back to either. "Man, it's a blessing," Franklin said. "I can't lie, I almost shed a tear yesterday when I got out on that field." Franklin has been in recovery from an ankle cleanup procedure he underwent in May. The injury dates back to a Week 9 game against the Vikings. Franklin wanted to keep playing with the team in the playoff hunt, so he played the final eight games and became the NFL's tackle king with 173 stops to reach his first Pro Bowl. He tried to use rest and recovery to reset the ankle to start the offseason, but by May, he and the team decided it was best to undergo surgery to make sure it was ready for another 17-game slate. This was new territory for a player who has only missed one game across his seven NFL seasons. The surgery brought weeks of uncertainty of when he'd return, and through seven camp practices, he still wasn't on the field. "When you're on that rehab process, it's so easy to get disconnected from the team and really be by yourself," Franklin said. "That's when a lot of that mental stuff starts to weigh on you. I was just very intentional and making sure I was locked in with the guys." Franklin has been that through all of training camp so far, consistently shouting out signals and tips to his fellow linebackers and bonding with new linebacker Joe Bachie. "When it came to my rehab, it was a process," Franklin said. "I didn't take anything personal. I gave myself grace. I committed to my journey and my plan, trusted the trainers I had behind me. Whether it was a step forward or a step back, I took everything one day at a time." COLTS CAMP OBSERVATIONS: Pass rush dominates line of scrimmage But now he's back, and soon, that'll involve running team drills with a defense that has evolved quite a bit since the last time he led it. The Colts signed All-Pro cornerback Charvarius Ward as well as Camryn Bynum in the offseason and added a potential new starting outside cornerback in third-round Minnesota rookie Justin Walley, who is commanding first-team reps while Jaylon Jones and JuJu Brents recover from hamstring injuries. The group is undergoing a scheme change under new defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo, who is shifting from Gus Bradley's Seattle-style, Cover-3 heavy approach to one that thrives on aggressive man coverage. That's led to more pass breakups from the secondary and linebackers than a Colts training camp has seen in recent years. "That was probably the hardest part of the past two weeks," Franklin said. "I was itching to get out there, not only to be out there and compete with my guys but to just see my place in this thing." MOST ESSENTIAL COLTS: Can Zaire Franklin save the linebacking corps? His place will be critical as the player who wears the "green dot" of communication for the group, which Bynum has taken over in his absence. He's the only linebacker on the roster with much NFL experience on defense and must key a run defense that lagged at times last year but now must be serviceable enough to force offenses to drop back and throw against the playmakers Indianapolis has accumulated on the defensive line and in the secondary. That will mean repeating his play as one of the NFL's top tackler while also raising the efficiency, as he missed 31 tackles last year, per Sports Info Solutions. 'Obviously, he's one of the leaders on our team and makes a ton of tackles for us," coach Shane Steichen said. "Obviously, wearing the green dot at that position, the communication piece – getting him back on the practice field is huge." It's unclear yet how much of a role he'll have in Tuesday's joint practice against the Ravens, Thursday's preseason opener against the Ravens and or the two preseason games to follow. The primary focus is to get him ready for the season opener against the Dolphins on Sept. 7. But that time is coming, and he can finally see it on the horizon. "It feels good for me to be out there," Franklin said, "so we can be one band, one sound and get to hunting together."


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
A healthy Luis Gil leaves little to be desired out of Yankees return
Access the Yankees beat like never before Don't miss Greg Joyce's text messages from The Bronx and beyond — he's giving Sports+ subscribers the inside buzz on the Yankees. Sign Up Now MIAMI — About the best thing that can be said about Luis Gil's first start of the season is that there will be a second one. 'I felt really, really good, and that's what's important,' Gil said through an interpreter Sunday after giving up five runs in 3 ¹/₃ innings of a 7-3 loss to the Marlins that chased the Yankees away from south Florida as sweep victims. 'If you've got to take something positive from an outing, today health was big, coming back being healthy. But also the movement of the pitches was there.' Gil was pitching for the Yankees for the first time since he started Game 4 of the World Series against the Dodgers on Oct. 29 at Yankee Stadium. The 2024 American League Rookie of the Year had a spring bullpen session cut short with tightness in his right side on Feb. 28. The next day, an MRI exam revealed a high-grade lat strain. 3 Luis Gil made his first start of the season against the Marlins on Sunday. Sam Navarro-Imagn Images After four minor league rehab appearances, Gil was ready to take the ball and try to help the Yankees salvage a game in this weekend series. He worked around a single and a walk in the first inning, but walked two more to start the second. CHECK OUT THE LATEST MLB STANDINGS AND YANKEES STATS Troy Johnston's double scored the tying run, Xavier Edwards drove in another run with a single and Kyle Stowers drove in Johnston with a sacrifice fly. 3 Luis Gil walks off the field during the fourth inning having thrown 77 pitches. AP In the fourth inning, with the Yankees still trailing 3-1, Gil helped let the game get away. He issued his fourth walk of the afternoon to Graham Pauley and was then removed after giving up a single to Edwards. Brent Headrick came on and served up a three-run homer to Stowers. 'Obviously, a struggle,' Aaron Boone said of Gil's outing. 'Just no real command today. I thought he started to maybe get a little bit of rhythm there in the third [which he ended with two strikeouts], but then that kind of went away. 'He flashed some of his stuff. I thought he did some good things down in the zone, especially with some of their lefties. But just, you know, [he was] too inconsistent with the strike throwing.' 3 Luis Gil had been out since Feb. 28 with a high-grade strain in his lat. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect Gil threw 77 pitches, just short of what pitching coach Matt Blake had said was the target. Of those, 44 were strikes and 33 were balls. Gil threw a first-pitch strike to only eight of the 19 batters he faced. His 10 outs broke down to two grounders, five fly balls and three strikeouts. 'Yeah, definitely the command there didn't help out. That wasn't commanding the way I wanted it,' Gil said. The 27-year-old righty understands the Yankees' situation — in third place in the AL East and second in the AL wild-card race. They sit just 2 ¹/₂ games ahead of the Rangers, who are the first team below the cutoff, heading into the teams' three-game set in Arlington, Texas, beginning Monday. Gil knows there isn't time for him to ramp up slowly as he tries to find last season's form. 'Our team is in a fight and we're going to keep fighting to be where we want to be,' he said. 'I need to make quick adjustments and start helping out this ballclub.'
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
New Phillies closer Jhoan Durán throws fastest pitch in park history in home shutout of Tigers
Baseball fans in Philadelphia have never seen anything quite like this. Jhoan Durán made his second appearance for the Phillies Sunday night since arriving via trade from the Minnesota Twins. He secured his second save in those two games. And he highlighted the 2-0 shutout over the Detroit Tigers with the fastest pitch in Citizen's Bank Park history. Durán threw a 103.3 mph fastball on a 2-2 count that All-Star Riley Greene fouled off to set the new park record. One pitch later, he threw a 102.5 mph fastball that struck Greene out as the fastest game-ending strikeout by a Phillies pitcher in the pitch tracking era that started in 2008. It also got Phillies fans on their feet. And those weren't the only records Durán set Sunday night. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Durán threw five pitches in the top of the ninth of 102.4 mph or faster. Each of them was faster than any pitch previously thrown by a Phillies pitcher in the 22-year history of the ballpark. The save capped a standout weekend for the Phillies in the aftermath of acquiring Durán as their bonafide new closer. They end the weekend with a half-game lead over the New York Mets atop the NL East thanks to winning two out of three against the fellow first-place Tigers. Durán closed out both wins. Durán lights up park with electric entrance For the second time in three nights, Phillies fans were treated to the rousing entrance that followed Durán from Minnesota, complete with daunting bell chimes, flames and a creepy digital spider that's a nod to his nickname, the Durantula. On Friday, Durán secured a 5-4 win with a 1-2-3 effort in the ninth. On Sunday, he entered the game in charge of a shutout after eight sensational innings from Cristopher Sanchez. He did not let Sanchez or Phillies fans down. Durán started the inning with a six-pitch groundout of pinch hitter Kerry Carpenter. He induced another groundout on his first pitch to Spencer Torkelson. He then threw five straight fastballs of 101-plus mph to Greene before his 103.3 mph laser ended the game. It was the exact kind of performance the Phillies envisioned when they acquired Durán. And it lowered his season-long ERA to a pristine 1.93. In a baseball postseason where the margins are slim, a strong closer can be difference between advancing and not. The Phillies are hoping that Durán turns out to be a difference maker when the stakes are at their highest.