
New York Yankees brutally cut Marcus Stroman in shock move after mass MLB trade deadline overhaul
The Pinstripes made a splash Thursday when they made a number of blockbuster additions to their bullpen before the trade deadline, acquiring David Bednar, Jake Bird, and Camilo Doval.
However, one mainstay of their pitching rotation became a casualty of the Yankees' moves as the team announced Friday afternoon that Marcus Stroman has been released.
More to follow.
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Reuters
29 minutes ago
- Reuters
Behind Jacob deGrom, Rangers seek split of series vs. Mariners
August 3 - Luis Curvelo will never forget his first major-league victory. And should they make the playoffs, neither will the Texas Rangers. Curvelo replaced injured closer Robert Garcia and pitched 1 1/3 innings of scoreless relief as the Rangers defeated the host Seattle Mariners 6-4 in 11 innings Saturday. Texas is scheduled to send former Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom (10-3, 2.55 ERA) to the mound Sunday in an effort to split the four-game series against its American League West rivals. The Mariners are set to counter with rookie Logan Evans (4-4, 4.22). Curvelo spent six years in the Mariners' organization before signing with the Rangers in the offseason. The 24-year-old right-hander was called up from Triple-A Round Rock on Wednesday and made his major-league debut the next night, pitching two scoreless innings in a 6-0 loss. He got the call Saturday when Garcia exited with a scapula spasm with a runner on first and two outs in the bottom of the 10th. Curvelo struck out Eugenio Suarez to end the inning and retired the Mariners in order in the 11th after the Rangers scored twice in the top of the frame. "I mean, what a great job. These kids came up and really pitch well and you know we needed it," Rangers manager Bruce Bochy said. "(Curvelo's) got a lot of enthusiasm and passion, you can see it out there and he's got confidence. He went out there and did a terrific job. I can't say enough about these guys after a tough loss (Friday night), how they battled back. Just a great effort throughout the lineup." Kyle Higashioka homered and drove in three runs for the Rangers. Randy Arozarena hit a tying two-run homer in the bottom of the 10th for the Mariners after Texas scored twice in the top of the inning. "Coming back again in the extra innings with the home run by Randy, again to tie it back up in the 10th, (that was) huge," Mariners manager Dan Wilson said. "We just weren't able to come out on top of this today. But a great effort on all those guys' part." Seattle's Cal Raleigh, who leads the majors in both homers (42) and RBIs (88), went 0-for-5 with five strikeouts. "He's in a good spot," Wilson said about Raleigh. "It was just one of those days for him. We all have those days. That's going to happen. That's baseball." deGrom is coming off a 6-4 loss Monday against the host Los Angeles Angels in which he allowed five runs over 5 1/3 innings. He's 2-1 with a 2.51 ERA in six career starts against Seattle. deGrom took a no-decision in a 5-3 loss April 11 in Seattle, then beat the M's 8-1 on May 4 in Arlington, Texas, as he allowed one run on three hits over five innings. Evans' lone start against the Rangers came in that 8-1 loss, though just one of the six runs he gave up in five innings was earned. His last start was a 6-1 defeat to the Athletics on Tuesday in West Sacramento, Calif., in which he allowed six runs in 4 2/3 innings. -Field Level Media


Reuters
29 minutes ago
- Reuters
Charlie Morton to make Tigers debut in series finale vs. Phillies
August 3 - The Detroit Tigers acquired Charlie Morton just before the trade deadline expired. They'll waste little time to put him into their rotation. Morton will make his Tigers debut when he starts the finale of a three-game series against the Phillies in Philadelphia on Sunday night. Morton was a key member of the Houston rotation when the Astros won the 2017 World Series with A.J. Hinch as their manager. They're back together again with the American League Central leaders. "His presence alone will be really good for this team," Hinch said. "He's steady. He never gets too high or too low. He's done it, seen it, experienced it. He's gotten some of the most important outs and he's also had to fight and claw his way back into being a factor this year." The 41-year-old right-hander appeared to have nothing left to give earlier this season. He had an 0-7 record with a 9.38 ERA in his first nine appearances with Baltimore. After being banished to the bullpen for a short time, Morton (7-8, 5.42 ERA) returned to the Orioles rotation and turned his season around. Over his last 11 starts, he's 7-1 with a 3.88 ERA. "He's going to really help our rotation," Tigers general manager Scott Harris said. "We like Charlie because he's battle-tested. He's been up to 97 mph with his fastball and he's got a swing-and-miss curveball. He's pitched for A.J. before and he really endorsed him." In his last outing with the Orioles, he gave up three runs and eight hits in six innings against Toronto. "He's been on quite a good run," Harris said. "His top-line performance (numbers) are a little misleading. Since the end of April, he's been on a really good run, sub-4.00 ERA and throwing a ton of strikes with a ton of swing and miss." He's 5-7 with a 4.81 ERA in 20 career starts against the Phillies. Philadelphia starter Cristopher Sanchez (9-3, 2.55 ERA) had his streak of nine quality starts snapped in his last outing. The left-hander gave up four runs -- tying his season high -- and seven hits in 6 2/3 innings to the Chicago White Sox on Monday. In his previous start, Sanchez notched a complete-game victory while striking out 12 and throwing 106 pitches in a 4-1 win over Boston on July 22. "Didn't know whether it was the travel, or coming off a complete game, the humidity, but the fifth, sixth and seventh, he turned it back on, and he had the finish back to his pitches," manager Rob Thomson said. Sanchez hasn't previously faced Detroit in his career. The teams have split the first two games of the series. Philadelphia rallied for a 5-4 win on Friday and Detroit held on for a 7-5 victory on Saturday. Both games were closed out by the teams' new closers. Jhoan Duran, acquired from Minnesota, got the save for the Phillies in the series opener. Kyle Finnegan recorded the last four outs for the Tigers in their bounce-back win. -Field Level Media


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Cardinals find offense, eye series win vs. Padres
August 3 - On Saturday night, the St. Louis Cardinals tried a novel concept: Scoring runs. After managing just one in 30 innings, they suddenly exploded for four in the fourth inning, got two more in the fifth and went on to a much-needed 8-5 win over San Diego that snapped the Padres' six-game winning streak. That gives St. Louis a chance to earn a series victory in San Diego on Sunday when the teams finish the weekend set, as well as the season series. To be sure, the Cardinals ran into good pitching this week and two hot teams. Miami shut down St. Louis with Sandy Alcantara and Cal Quantrill - 5-0 on Tuesday and 2-0 on Wednesday night - while San Diego's Nick Pivetta allowed only one hit in seven innings on Friday night, a 4-1 Padres win. Still, a struggling team needed something good to happen. By piecing together four hits in the fourth and following up with Masyn Winn's two-run double in the fifth, St. Louis got back to .500 and crawled within 5 1/2 games of the Padres for the last wild-card spot. Part of the reason was because of the guys president John Mozeliak kept at Thursday's trading deadline. He wasn't bowled over by offers for All-Star Brendan Donovan, Nolan Gorman, Lars Nootbaar and Alec Burleson, so he chose to keep them. The quartet made important contributions Saturday night, including Gorman's RBI single that started the four-run fourth and Burleson's run-scoring single in a two-run ninth. "We were not motivated to move hitters that we had under control unless we were blown away," Mozeliak said. "And we just weren't." Andre Pallante (6-7, 4.62 ERA) looks to follow up on a strong start in Monday night's 7-1 win over Miami. He blanked the Marlins on one hit and one walk in seven innings, striking out four. Pallante is 2-0 with a 2.70 ERA in six career outings against San Diego. Opposing Pallante will be Dylan Cease (3-10, 4.79), who had a no-decision on Monday night in his team's 7-6 win over the New York Mets. Cease allowed five hits and five runs in 4 2/3 innings, walking five and fanning nine. He's faced the Cardinals just twice in his career with no record and a 7.84 ERA. Most thought Cease would be traded at the deadline as the Padres looked to fortify their offense and get a return on a free agent-to-be. But Cease stayed and is happy general manager A.J. Preller didn't pull the trigger. "I'm very excited," Cease said on Friday. "We made a lot of - obviously - a lot of moves. We've got a stacked team now, so I'm grateful to be a part of it." Cease's start Monday night was a microcosm of his season: Short stretches of dominance mixed in with lapses in control and ill-timed home run balls. A fifth-inning grand slam by Mark Vientos drove him from the mound, although San Diego rallied to take Cease off the hook. The Padres have averaged 5.7 runs over their last seven games with Luis Arraez and Manny Machado leading the way. Arraez has a career-high 15-game hitting streak and Machado boasts 20 hits in his last 42 at-bats, bumping his average to .301, which leads the National League. --Field Level Media