
White Sox LHP Tyler Gilbert (knee) heads to 15-day IL
May 17 - The Chicago White Sox placed left-hander Tyler Gilbert on the 15-day injured list Saturday with a sprained MCL in his left knee.
The White Sox recalled left-hander Jared Shuster from Triple-A Charlotte in a corresponding move.
Gilbert exited the team's 13-3 loss to the Chicago Cubs on Friday in the sixth inning after facing just two batters.
He is 1-1 with a 4.85 ERA in 13 games (three starts) this season.
Gilbert, 31, is 3-8 with a 4.30 ERA in 47 career appearances (16 starts) with the Arizona Diamondbacks, Philadelphia Phillies and White Sox.
Shuster, 26, has a 7.59 ERA without a decision in eight relief appearances this season with the White Sox.
--Field Level Media

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


Daily Mail
13 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Fever dealt another blow with head coach Stephanie White set to miss Sky clash amid Caitlin Clark injury woes
Indiana Fever coach Stephanie White is set to miss the team's showdown against the Chicago Sky on Saturday night, according to a report. The Fever will now be without both their head coach and superstar Caitlin Clark as the guard remains out injured. White, 47, missed practice for personal reasons on Friday and didn't make the trip to Chicago with her status for Saturday's clash left in doubt. While it was feasible that she could have followed the team to the Windy City at a later time, the IndyStar reported that the team confirmed White would miss the game. Assistant coach Austin Kelly will serve as head coach, with assistants Karima Christmas-Kelly and Briann January set to step into bigger roles. It is currently unclear how long White will be absent for but she has previously expressed a lot of faith in her staff. 'My staff is so good and trusting in them that if I needed to be away for a period of time, it's status quo,' White told IndyStar ahead of the season. 'Our team knows that, they have great respect for them, and I know that, and I trust them implicitly, so it gives even more peace of mind.' It is the first season of White's second stint as Indiana's head coach. She led the Fever from 2015-16 and returned after spending the past two seasons coaching the Connecticut Sun. Kelly has worked with White for three years, having joined her staff in Connecticut in 2023 and following her to Indianapolis after she took the helm at the Fever. Games between the Fever and Sky have had a charged atmosphere due to the rivalry between Clark and Chicago's Angel Reese that goes back to college. However, the occasion was spoiled when it was confirmed Clark will also miss Saturday's game with a quadriceps injury. Clark told reporters that the quad strain she suffered in her left leg in a game against the New York Liberty will be re-evaluated over the weekend. If all goes well, Clark could possibly go back to playing for the Fever against Atlanta on Tuesday. The Fever have been a shell of themselves since Clark went down with the injury four games ago - having lost two of three contests. After falling to the Liberty, the Fever struggled against the Washington Mystics before being defeated in a close game by the Connecticut Sun - which picked up their first and only win of the season so far. Indiana then beat the Mystics in the WNBA Commissioner's Cup on Tuesday night. Clark's absence has seen the Fever lose ground in the Eastern Conference standings - now four games back of the Liberty and two games behind the Dream.


Reuters
44 minutes ago
- Reuters
Rodgers' long, strange trip through free agency ends in Pittsburgh
NEW YORK, June 7 (Reuters) - Quarterback Aaron Rodgers' ended his long-running free agency saga as the polarizing four-times NFL MVP launched a new chapter of his career with the Pittsburgh Steelers on Saturday. The team posted on social media a photo of Rodgers wearing a Steelers hat with a pen in his hand and a smile on his face two days after reports of the first broke. "Done deal," the photo caption said. The one-year contract is for $13.65 million, which includes $10 million guaranteed and has a maximum value of $19.5 million, ESPN reported on Saturday, citing sources. The deal is pending a physical, the team said. Rodgers will hold a press conference on Tuesday after minicamp practice. Months of speculation gave way to frustrated impatience from fans seeking any clue to his future following Rodgers' acrimonious split from the New York Jets almost four months ago. The 41-year-old left the team after a turbulent two-year-tenure that began with a torn Achilles tendon and ended with a clumsily concealed behind-the-scenes spat with owner Woody Johnson. Analysts laid out a few possible destinations for the twice NFL passing touchdown leader but as teams recruited talent in free agency and at April's Draft, the odds Rodgers would play again appeared to dwindle with each passing day. NFL experts and insiders indicated last week that the Steelers were no closer to sealing the deal. "We've heard Art Rooney, the Steelers owner, say they expect that Rodgers will eventually sign. But here we are, June 4, nothing but silence," ESPN's Adam Schefter said. But Rodgers, once criticised for misleading fans and reporters about his COVID-19 vaccination status, again confounded expectations on Thursday, as news broke he would join the Steelers on a one-year deal. Rodgers produced a solid 3,897 passing yards and 28 touchdowns across 17 games last season, but some experts are skeptical. "It's a joke. What are you going to do? Bring him in just for a year? He should stay (at home) in California," four-times Super Bowl winner-turned-broadcaster Terry Bradshaw said on his "Morning Mayhem" radio show last week. Once the face of Green Bay during his 18 seasons with the Packers, Rodgers hoisted the Lombardi Trophy with the team in 2011 and will come face-to-face with them again - playing for the team they beat in the Super Bowl - in Week Eight. He will open the season against the Jets.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
This win is for Americans who look like me, says French Open champion Gauff
PARIS, June 7 (Reuters) - Newly-crowned French Open champion Coco Gauff, the first Black American to win the title in a decade, said on Saturday her victory in Paris was for people back home who looked like her and struggled amid ongoing political turmoil. Gauff battled from a set down to beat Aryna Sabalenka 6-7(5) 6-2 6-4 and lift her first French Open crown and her second Grand Slam title after the 2023 U.S. Open. She is the first Black American to win the French Open since Serena Williams in 2015. "It means a lot (to win the title), and obviously there's a lot going on in our country right now with things -- like, everything, yeah. I'm sure you guys know," she said, smiling but without elaborating further. "But just to be able to be a representation of that and a representation of, I guess, people that look like me in America who maybe don't feel as supported during this time period, and so just being that reflection of hope and light for those people." There has been ongoing political turmoil in the United States following the election of President Donald Trump last year. Trump's first few months in office have featured an unapologetic assault on diversity and inclusion efforts, unravelling decades-old policies to remedy historical injustices for marginalised groups in a matter of weeks. In his second term, Trump revoked a landmark 1965 executive order mandating equal employment opportunities for all, slashed environmental actions to protect communities of colour and ordered the gutting of an agency that helped fund minority and women-owned businesses. The actions have alarmed advocates, who say they effectively erase decades of hard-fought progress on levelling the playing field for marginalised communities. "I remember after the election and everything, it kind of felt a down period a little bit and my mom told me during Riyadh (in November 2024) 'just try to win the tournament, just to give something for people to smile for'. "So that's what I was thinking about today when holding that (trophy). "Then seeing the flags in the crowd means a lot. You know, some people may feel some type of way about being patriotic and things like that, but I'm definitely patriotic and proud to be American, and I'm proud to represent the Americans that look like me and people who kind of support the things that I support." Trump has previously denied claims he has employed racist attacks and an agenda throughout his political career.