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Corey Seager's wife Madisyn stuns in floral dress at wedding weekend with college besties
Corey Seager's wife Madisyn stuns in floral dress at wedding weekend with college besties

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Corey Seager's wife Madisyn stuns in floral dress at wedding weekend with college besties

Image Source: madyseager/instagram MLB star Corey Seager's wife, Madisyn Seager, drew attention when she wore a stunning floral dress to a wedding celebration with her friends from college. Madisyn posted a selfie of herself and some friends on Instagram with the caption " a wedding weekend with your college besties >>>, " where they appeared to be in high spirits and smiling right beside each other. The soft-peach dress with colorful floral details complemented her luminous look and has since been lauded by fans who love her style and elegance. Corey Seager's wife, Madisyn celebrating friendship and milestones It was a stylish weekend, yes, but even more, it was a reminder, in this era of ever-shifting adult lives, of long-term friendship. Madisyn and her college friends reunited for the occasion, where they could laugh, reminisce, and spend time together. The photo, taken in a venue that shone with warmth, evoked not just the spirit of the celebration but the camaraderie between the women as well. This type of moment hits home for a lot of Madisyn's followers who turn to her for inspiration in the wardrobe department and a glimpse into the glamorous yet unfiltered life. Through her raw posts, to her styled looks, she embraces little moments but remains familiar with who she is. Madisyn posting about her friendships in college celebrated a more gentle nature of social media, singularly dedicated to community, ceremony, and salutation in a time when so much is continually shifting. Those posts were such a lovely reminder of welcoming those who had supported along the way. A look into Madisyn's fashionable and balanced life Madisyn Seager proved there is more to being a significant other of a sports star. With her consistent showing up on social media, she created her lifestyle brand—one that focuses on style, home, travel, and close-minded relationships Whether she is posting about baseball games, weekends away with friends, or quiet nights hanging out at home with Corey and the couple's two mini Australian Shepherds, she is always sharing snippets from her daily life. This was simply one more view into her varied, stressed yet healthy kind of lifestyle, which included a recent wedding weekend. Also Read: All you need to know about Corey Seager's $325 million contract with Rangers So whether she's all dressed up for a celebration or enjoying some downtime with family, Madisyn continues to rock her laid-back elegance, ease, and love for those closest to her.

Sonny Gray strikes out 10 in the Cardinals' 2-0 victory over the the Rangers
Sonny Gray strikes out 10 in the Cardinals' 2-0 victory over the the Rangers

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Sonny Gray strikes out 10 in the Cardinals' 2-0 victory over the the Rangers

St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Masyn Winn throws toward first base during the first inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Ronaldo Bolaños) Texas Rangers' Corey Seager swings at a pitch during the fourth inning of a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals, Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Ronaldo Bolaños) St. Louis Cardinals' Masyn Winn is greeted in the dugout after scoring during the fourth inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Ronaldo Bolaños) St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Sonny Gray throws a pitch during the first inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Ronaldo Bolaños) St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Sonny Gray throws a pitch during the first inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Ronaldo Bolaños) St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Masyn Winn throws toward first base during the first inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Ronaldo Bolaños) Texas Rangers' Corey Seager swings at a pitch during the fourth inning of a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals, Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Ronaldo Bolaños) St. Louis Cardinals' Masyn Winn is greeted in the dugout after scoring during the fourth inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Ronaldo Bolaños) St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Sonny Gray throws a pitch during the first inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Ronaldo Bolaños) ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Sonny Gray struck out 10 while allowing only four singles over seven innings and Willson Contreras had a part in both St. Louis runs as the Cardinals beat the Texas Rangers 2-0 on Saturday. Gray's 19th game with double-digit strikeouts made the 35-year-old right-hander in his 13th big league season the 10th active pitcher with 1,800 career strikeouts. Gray (6-1) threw 64 of 91 pitches for strikes and had only one walk. Advertisement Ryan Helsley worked the ninth for his 13th save in 15 chances to wrap up the Cardinals' seventh shutout of the season. Phil Maton pitched the eighth. The Cardinals went ahead to stay by manufacturing a run without a hit after the second inning nearly started with a home run. Contreras led off with a towering flyball near the left-field pole that prompted a crew chief review to determine it was foul as initially called. He then walked, advanced on a wild pitch by Patrick Corbin (3-4), got to third on a groundout and scored on Nolan Arenado's sacrifice fly. Maysn Winn led of the Cardinals fourth with a double and went home on a ground-rule double by Contreras, a ball that hit just fair down the left-field line and bounced into the seats. Advertisement Corbin allowed two runs on three hits and two walks over 5 1/3 innings. Texas, after an 11-1 win Friday night, was shut out for the eighth time. Key moment Cardinals second baseman Brendan Donovan's nifty play in the ninth inning to throw out speedy No. 3 hitter Wyatt Langford for the second out around two strikeouts by Helsley. Key stat The Cardinals finished with a 19-8 record in May, their best record in that month since 20-7 in 2013, their last World Series season. Up next Jacob deGrom (4-2, 2.42 ERA), who has allowed two runs over fewer in each of his last eight starts, pitches the series finale for Texas on Sunday. Eric Fedde (3-4) goes for the Cardinals. ___ AP MLB:

Rosenthal: The Rangers' barren bats, two big Yankees improvements and more MLB notes
Rosenthal: The Rangers' barren bats, two big Yankees improvements and more MLB notes

New York Times

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • New York Times

Rosenthal: The Rangers' barren bats, two big Yankees improvements and more MLB notes

Hey, let's fire the hitting coach! The Texas Rangers, before dismissing Donnie Ecker on May 4 and replacing him with Bret Boone, were 17-18 and averaging 3.23 runs per game. Since the arrival of Boone, who joined the team's other hitting instructors, Justin Viele and Seth Conner, the Rangers are 10-12 and averaging 3.27 runs per game. Advertisement Yes, that's a lower winning percentage. And an uptick in 'production' of a mammoth .04 runs per game. If the Rangers' offensive malaise continues — they currently rank 28th in scoring, wasting perhaps the best pitching in franchise history — the team will have little choice at the trade deadline but to sell. Maybe things will change now that shortstop Corey Seager has returned from his second injury-list stint due to a strained right hamstring — the Rangers are 15-12 with Seager, 12-18 without him. But the Rangers' offensive ineptitude is not a new problem. In 2023, when the Rangers won their first World Series, they ranked third in runs. In '24, they dropped to 18th, prompting general manager Chris Young to add designated hitter Joc Pederson and first baseman Jake Burger during the offseason. Pederson was hitting .131 with a .507 OPS before suffering a fractured right hand. Burger is hitting .208 with a .639 OPS, and recently spent 10 days at Triple A. And they are hardly the only Rangers hitters performing below career norms. Second baseman Marcus Semien's .485 OPS through Wednesday was the lowest in the majors. Right fielder Adolis Garcia's .626 was the 20th lowest. Seager, left fielder Wyatt Langford and third baseman Josh Jung are the only Texas hitters with an OPS above .750. Last year, the Rangers entered the deadline three games under .500 and 3 1/2 games out of first place. With a group of potential free agents that included right-hander Nathan Eovaldi, lefty Andrew Heaney, first baseman Nathaniel Lowe and relievers David Robertson and Kirby Yates, they could have done well as sellers. But coming off a World Series title, Young gave the team the benefit of the doubt, and added lefty reliever Andrew Chafin instead. Now what? Young thought he put together a championship-caliber club. Ten writers from The Athletic, including yours truly, picked the Rangers to win the World Series. The team is 27-30, but just 4 1/2 games out in the AL West. It's not as if the season is lost. Yet. Advertisement The Rangers' pitching, third in the majors in ERA, could get even stronger in the coming weeks with the returns of Jon Gray, Cody Bradford and Kumar Rocker. Perhaps the staff will grow deep enough for Young to trade from strength; Tyler Mahle, fourth in the league in ERA, is a potential free agent, as are Gray and relievers Chris Martin and Hoby Milner. But eventually, the Rangers will need to hit. Evidently, firing the hitting coach wasn't the answer. The Rangers might not be the only team with pitching to spare. The Milwaukee Brewers have won four straight to move above .500, and their staff is growing deeper by the day. Crazy, isn't it? The Brewers had so many pitchers injured to open the season, they started journeyman right-hander Elvin Rodríguez in their home opener and predictably suffered an 11-1 defeat. Less than two months later, the Brewers are in almost the opposite position. On Monday, they optioned right-hander Logan Henderson, who in his first four major-league starts produced a 35.8 percent strikeout rate, 7.4 percent walk rate and 1.71 ERA. And more difficult decisions lie ahead. Lefty José Quintana returns from the injured list Sunday. Righty Brandon Woodruff is on a rehabilitation assignment. Righty Jacob Misiorowski, the team's top prospect, is throwing 100 mph at Triple A. The current rotation includes veteran righties Freddy Peralta and Aaron Civale, plus two emerging starters, Chad Patrick and Quinn Priester. Last year's revelation, Tobias Myers, is at Triple A. Two months from now, the Brewers' situation obviously might look quite different — the moment a team thinks it has a surplus of pitching is generally the moment it starts to disappear. Henderson threw only 81 1/3 innings last season, so it's not as if the Brewers are going to stretch him to 150. The team's bullpen also has thrown the second-most innings in the majors, behind only the Los Angeles Dodgers. The recent returns of lefties Aaron Ashby and DL Hall should help ease that burden. Piggy-backing starters would be another option. Advertisement Still, the Brewers never are afraid to trade, even when in contention. Peralta is earning $8 million with an $8 million club option for next season. Civale is earning $8 million in his walk year. The Brewers conceivably could move one or both and replace them with cheaper alternatives. Peralta, with a 2.77 ERA in 11 starts, would be especially attractive. How much of a step back competitively would the team take without its ace? Depends upon the return. For now, the Brewers are in a fairly good spot. And they can maneuver in any number of ways. The Seattle Mariners will be another team to watch at the deadline. Their farm system is the best in the game, according to The Athletic's Keith Law. And of the six Mariners prospects Law included in his top 100, four are middle infielders. True, the Mariners are budget-conscious, placing high value on affordable talent. But twice in the past three seasons under president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto and general manager Justin Hollander, they traded future impact for present impact. In 2022, the Mariners included two prized infielders, Noelvi Marté and Edwin Arroyo, in the four-player package they sent to the Cincinnati Reds for right-hander Luis Castillo. And in '24, they parted with outfielder Aidan Smith and right-hander Brody Hopkins in a deal with the Tampa Bay Rays for outfielder Randy Arozarena.  Among their current prospects, Colt Emerson (Law's No. 5 overall) and Felnin Celesten (No. 24) are the purest shortstops. Cole Young (No. 45) is more of a second baseman, and his .849 OPS at Triple A could make him an option sooner than later. Michael Arroyo (No. 81), whose opposite-field stroke draws comparisons to Howie Kendrick's, profiles at second or third. What might the Mariners seek to acquire? Assuming their injured starting pitchers return and perform at their previous levels, first base (25th in OPS) and right field (27th) are two positions where the team clearly needs offensive help. Luke Raley and possibly Victor Robles could return from injuries in right, and the Mariners picked up Leody Taveras in the interim, but an upgrade at the position still is warranted. Advertisement Two areas the New York Yankees sought to improve during the offseason were their bullpen's strikeout rate and their lineup's performance against left-handed pitching. Mission accomplished on both fronts. The bullpen's strikeout rate, 23.9 percent in each of the past two seasons, has increased to 26.6 percent, third in the majors behind only the Toronto Blue Jays and Houston Astros. Fernando Cruz, acquired during the offseason from the Cincinnati Reds, leads Yankees relievers at 37.6 percent. Mark Leiter Jr., acquired from the Chicago Cubs at last year's deadline, is second at 36.5, followed by Ian Hamilton at 33.8, Devin Williams at 28.3 (down from 43.2 in 2024) and Luke Weaver at 25.6 percent. The Yankees' .858 OPS against left-handed pitching, meanwhile, ranks first in the majors, a significant increase from their .721 mark last season, which was 12th. Aaron Judge's league-leading 1.653 OPS vs. lefties is a big part of that, of course. But Paul Goldschmidt, signed to a one-year, $12.5 million free-agent contract, is not far behind Judge at 1.571. This is nothing new for Judge and Goldschmidt, who rank 1-2 in OPS against left-handers since 2018. Another of the Yankees' acquisitions, Cody Bellinger, is carrying a .998 OPS against lefties, a significant improvement from his previous .778 career mark. It's easy to interpret the Dodgers' recent promotion of rookie Dalton Rushing as the possible prelude to a trade. But even though Hunter Feduccia could slide into the backup catcher's role, the Dodgers are not inclined to move Rushing, and certainly not for a short-term fix. Good hitters are in increasingly short supply, and Rushing offers considerable offensive promise. If the Dodgers are willing to forsake the value he would provide as a catcher, he could end up replacing Michael Conforto next season in left field. Advertisement The entire point of the Dodgers' offseason buildup was to avoid overpaying at the deadline. The team, even with all its injuries, should be plenty deep in starting pitchers and position players. Right-handed relief is another matter, and the Dodgers took the first step toward shoring up that area Thursday by acquiring Alexis Díaz from the Cincinnati Reds. He isn't Tarik Skubal throwing 102.6 mph in the final pitch of a Maddux or Paul Skenes competing for a Cy Young Award in his first full season. But Kansas City Royals rookie left-hander Noah Cameron has achieved a rare feat of his own, becoming only the second pitcher since 1893 to work at least 6 1/3 innings and allow one run or fewer in his first four major-league starts. Cameron's sample might be small, but in an era of diminishing workloads, Zack Wheeler and Max Fried are the only current starters averaging 6 1/3 innings. Now the Royals must figure out how Cameron fits in their rotation going forward. Believe it or not, his place is not secure. Righty Seth Lugo is expected to come off the injured list Friday and lefty Cole Ragans one week later. With lefty Kris Bubic mounting an All-Star bid and righty Michael Wacha delivering his usual quality performance, the Royals can either move righty Michael Lorenzen to the bullpen to clear a spot, or return Cameron to the minors. Good as the Royals' rotation is, ranking third in the majors in ERA, the team lacks depth at Triple A. By demoting Cameron, the Royals could keep him stretched out and ready for his next major-league opportunity. Such a move, though, would appear self-defeating. Lorenzen's adjusted ERA is slightly below league average, and he has bullpen experience. A six-man rotation, with the team off the next four Mondays, is probably unnecessary at this point — though club officials are mindful of protecting Bubic, who threw only 66 innings last season between the majors and minors, and Wacha, who has a lengthy injury history. Advertisement Like the Rangers, their spring-training neighbor in Surprise, Ariz., the Royals are far more concerned with their offense than their pitching. Unlike the Rangers, they soon could get a jolt from one of the game's top offensive prospects — Jac Caglianone, a left-handed hitter who was the sixth pick out of the University of Florida in the 2024 draft. Caglianone, 6 feet 5 and 250 pounds, plays first base (and also pitched in college). The problem is, Vinnie Pasquantino already occupies that position and Salvador Perez also requires time at first base and DH. So, the Royals are converting Caglianone to the outfield at Triple A. For the past two weeks, he has worked one-on-one with longtime Royals instructor Rusty Kuntz. While outfield defense is important at spacious Kaufman Stadium, club officials expect Caglianone will be adequate in a corner. The Royals, whose outfielders have combined for the second-worst OPS in the majors, cannot afford to be picky, even as they worry about Caglianone's tendency to chase. He has torn up Double A and Triple A with a combined 14 homers and .986 OPS. One rival evaluator, in his writeup of Caglianone as an amateur, described him as having 'ridiculous strength' and giving off 'peak Matt Olson vibe, look and profile,' with the potential to one day lead the majors in home runs. • The Baltimore Orioles, while not yet giving up on their season, are informing clubs that if they continue at their present trajectory, they will be sellers at the deadline. Stating the obvious? Perhaps. At 19-36, the Orioles' playoff odds as of Thursday stood at 1.3 percent. And the expected addition of John Mabry to their coaching staff isn't likely to be a game-changer. First baseman/outfielder Ryan O'Hearn, a potential free agent whose .977 OPS ranks fourth in the majors, is among Baltimore's intriguing trade candidates. O'Hearn's .327 expected batting average is just 11 points below his actual mark, and his .518 expected slugging percentage is just 32 points below. Advertisement • Teams generally use their most athletic defenders in the middle of the diamond, so why are the Yankees playing Jazz Chisholm Jr. at third base on his rehabilitation assignment? One reason: DJ LeMahieu, though less athletic than Chisholm, is more comfortable at second base than third. Another: The supply of second basemen at the deadline might be greater than the supply of third basemen. If LeMahieu fails to sufficiently revive — and he's batting .184 with a .507 OPS in his first 12 games back from the injured list — Chisholm's willingness to be versatile would enable them to address either position. • Anyone interested in a potential Hall of Fame reliever? Right-hander Craig Kimbrel has a 1.54 ERA and is averaging better than a strikeout per inning at Triple A. Kimbrel's minor-league contract with the Atlanta Braves includes a rolling opt-out. If a club offers him a major-league job, the Braves must promote him to their roster or let him go. Kimbrel, who turned 37 on Wednesday, had 23 saves in 28 chances with the Orioles before the All-Star break last season and a 2.80 ERA. He collapsed in the second half, and the Orioles released him in late September. • The 2023 Arizona Diamondbacks went through a 7-25 stretch and made it to the World Series. So, while the team's decision-makers shook up the roster Thursday by optioning reliever Kevin Ginkel and infielder Jordan Lawlar to the minors, they aren't necessarily panicking over the club's current 1-7 slide. The Diamondbacks rank fifth in the majors in runs per game and second in rotation innings. The problem is their bullpen. Three times this season, the Diamondbacks have lost games in which they scored 11 or more runs. Justin Martinez came off the IL last Friday. A.J. Puk is expected back in June. But the Diamondbacks need to find solutions in the middle innings. Advertisement • A Cincinnati Reds official expressed concern before the start of the season, saying he feared the team was short at least one run-producing hitter. Turns out he was onto something. The Reds have been shut out eight times, four times by 1-0 scores. They are 0-5 in extra innings, and scoreless in extras on the season. Finally, they are 0-22 trailing after six innings. (Top photo of Marcus Semien: Duane Burleson / Getty Images)

Rangers activate SS Corey Seager (hamstring) from IL
Rangers activate SS Corey Seager (hamstring) from IL

Reuters

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Reuters

Rangers activate SS Corey Seager (hamstring) from IL

May 28 - The Texas Rangers activated star shortstop Corey Seager from the 10-day injured list prior to Wednesday night's game against the Toronto Blue Jays. Seager has missed the past 16 games due to a right hamstring injury sustained on May 10 against the Detroit Tigers. The Rangers were 8-8 during his latest absence. Seager is batting third and serving as the designated hitter on Wednesday. The 31-year-old Seager has served two stints on the IL this season due to the same injury and has appeared in only five of the past 33 games. Seager is batting .300 with six homers and 12 RBIs in 26 games this season. The five-time All-Star is in his fourth season with the Rangers. He is batting .281 with 102 homers and 265 RBIs during his Texas tenure. Seager was named World Series MVP for the second time in his career when he led the Rangers to the 2023 title. He finished second in American League MVP balloting that season after batting .327 with 33 homers and 96 RBIs Texas optioned infielder Blaine Crim to Triple-A Round Rock in a corresponding move. Crim, 27, is hitless in 11 at-bats over five games for the Rangers this season. --Field Level Media

Corey Seager is reinstated by Texas Rangers after shortstop's second IL stint this season
Corey Seager is reinstated by Texas Rangers after shortstop's second IL stint this season

Fox Sports

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • Fox Sports

Corey Seager is reinstated by Texas Rangers after shortstop's second IL stint this season

Associated Press ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Two-time World Series MVP shortstop Corey Seager was reinstated by the Texas Rangers on Wednesday after his second stint on the injured list this season because of a right hamstring strain. The Rangers activated Seager before their series finale against Toronto. Seager hadn't played since hitting two home runs on May 10 at Detroit. He missed 28 of their previous 33 games going into Wednesday night. Seager was out 16 games while on the IL for the second time, but that didn't count the two games he didn't play before his two-homer game against the Tigers. He missed 10 games while out the minimum 10 days for his previous IL stint from April 23-May 2, then played only five games after being reinstated before being getting sidelined again. Infielder Blaine Crim was sent back to Triple-A Round Rock after not playing in either of the two games he had been back with the Rangers since getting called up Monday to fill an open spot on their 26-man roster. He appeared in five games in his first major league stint last month, going 0 for 11 with a walk. Seager, a five-time All-Star, is in the fourth season of his $325 million, 10-year contract with the Rangers. He went into the finale against the Blue Jays hitting .300 with six homers and 12 RBIs in 26 games this season, and 102 homers in his 419 games with Texas. Seager missed the end of last season after his second hernia surgery in less than eight months. That operation in September was a right sports hernia repair, on the opposite side of his abdomen from a procedure the previous January. He dealt with the left hernia issue at the end of 2023, when he still hit .318 with six homers, 12 RBIs and 15 walks in 17 postseason games as the Rangers won their first World Series title. He was on the IL twice that season (left hamstring issue and right thumb sprain). ___ AP MLB: recommended in this topic

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