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Rockies Suffer Major Loss Before Mets Game
Rockies Suffer Major Loss Before Mets Game

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Rockies Suffer Major Loss Before Mets Game

Rockies Suffer Major Loss Before Mets Game originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Colorado Rockies are as hot as a 12-50 team could be heading into their bout with the New York Mets on Friday night. They swept the Miami Marlins on the road in their last series after losing their previous seven contests, outscoring them 12-8 over the three games. Advertisement Colorado's offense has been unreliable, as they've scored at least four runs in just five of their last 20 games. Even in their sweep of the Marlins, the Rockies won the latter two contests 3-2 after winning the opener 6-4. The team will now have to play New York without an important bat, via Rockies PR. Colorado Rockies shortstop Ezequiel Tovar (14).Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images Colorado placed shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on the 10-day IL (retroactive to June 3) with a left oblique strain ahead of the game. It also selected the contract of infielder Ryan Ritter from Triple-A Albuquerque, recalled catcher Braxton Fulford from Triple-A, reinstated right-handed pitcher Zach Agnos from the bereavement list, and unconditionally released catcher Jacob Stallings. Tovar is slashing .258/.301/406 with three homers and 10 RBI over 32 games this season. The 23-year-old had a career year in 2024, slashing .269/.295/.469 with 26 homers and 78 RBI over 157 contests. Advertisement Meanwhile, the Mets are coming off a 2-2 series split vs. the Los Angeles Dodgers on the road. They hold a 1.5-game lead over the Philadelphia Phillies for first place in the NL East and are a half-game behind the Chicago Cubs for the NL's top seed. New York will finish its road trip in Colorado before hosting the Washington Nationals. Related: Dodgers Make Move After Mets Game Related: Mets Fans Upset With News Before Dodgers Game This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 6, 2025, where it first appeared.

Rockies bring up prospect Ryan Ritter, place shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on injured reserve
Rockies bring up prospect Ryan Ritter, place shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on injured reserve

Washington Post

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Washington Post

Rockies bring up prospect Ryan Ritter, place shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on injured reserve

DENVER — The Colorado Rockies are bringing up prospect Ryan Ritter to fill in for injured shortstop Ezequiel Tovar. Ritter had his contract selected from Triple-A Albuquerque on Friday before Colorado began a three-game series with the NL East-leading New York Mets. Tovar was placed on the 10-day injured list — retroactive to Tuesday — with a strained left oblique. It was part of a series of moves made by the last-place Rockies. They also released catcher Jacob Stallings and recalled catcher Braxton Fulford from Triple-A. Reliever Zach Agnos was reinstated from the bereavement list. The 24-year-old Ritter was picked by Colorado in the fourth round of the 2022 amateur draft out of the University of Kentucky. He's hit .284 with 48 homers, 166 RBIs and 42 stolen bases over parts of four minor-league seasons. Ritter was recently named the Pacific Coast League player of the month after hitting .381 for the Isotopes with 12 homers and 31 RBIs. The 6-foot-1, 200-pound Ritter primarily played shortstop this season for Albuquerque. Tovar, a Gold Glove winner last season, is hitting .258 with three homers and 10 RBIs in 32 games. He spent time on the injured list earlier this season with a bruised left hip. ___ AP MLB:

Rockies bring up prospect Ryan Ritter, place shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on injured reserve
Rockies bring up prospect Ryan Ritter, place shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on injured reserve

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Rockies bring up prospect Ryan Ritter, place shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on injured reserve

Colorado Rockies' Ezequiel Tovar, right, can't beat the throw to New York Mets first baseman Pete Alonso during the first inning of a baseball game, Sunday, June 1, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) DENVER (AP) — The Colorado Rockies are bringing up prospect Ryan Ritter to fill in for injured shortstop Ezequiel Tovar. Ritter had his contract selected from Triple-A Albuquerque on Friday before Colorado began a three-game series with the NL East-leading New York Mets. Tovar was placed on the 10-day injured list — retroactive to Tuesday — with a strained left oblique. Advertisement It was part of a series of moves made by the last-place Rockies. They also released catcher Jacob Stallings and recalled catcher Braxton Fulford from Triple-A. Reliever Zach Agnos was reinstated from the bereavement list. The 24-year-old Ritter was picked by Colorado in the fourth round of the 2022 amateur draft out of the University of Kentucky. He's hit .284 with 48 homers, 166 RBIs and 42 stolen bases over parts of four minor-league seasons. Ritter was recently named the Pacific Coast League player of the month after hitting .381 for the Isotopes with 12 homers and 31 RBIs. The 6-foot-1, 200-pound Ritter primarily played shortstop this season for Albuquerque. Tovar, a Gold Glove winner last season, is hitting .258 with three homers and 10 RBIs in 32 games. He spent time on the injured list earlier this season with a bruised left hip. ___ AP MLB:

Rockies bring up prospect Ryan Ritter, place shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on injured reserve
Rockies bring up prospect Ryan Ritter, place shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on injured reserve

Associated Press

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Associated Press

Rockies bring up prospect Ryan Ritter, place shortstop Ezequiel Tovar on injured reserve

DENVER (AP) — The Colorado Rockies are bringing up prospect Ryan Ritter to fill in for injured shortstop Ezequiel Tovar. Ritter had his contract selected from Triple-A Albuquerque on Friday before Colorado began a three-game series with the NL East-leading New York Mets. Tovar was placed on the 10-day injured list — retroactive to Tuesday — with a strained left oblique. It was part of a series of moves made by the last-place Rockies. They also released catcher Jacob Stallings and recalled catcher Braxton Fulford from Triple-A. Reliever Zach Agnos was reinstated from the bereavement list. The 24-year-old Ritter was picked by Colorado in the fourth round of the 2022 amateur draft out of the University of Kentucky. He's hit .284 with 48 homers, 166 RBIs and 42 stolen bases over parts of four minor-league seasons. Ritter was recently named the Pacific Coast League player of the month after hitting .381 for the Isotopes with 12 homers and 31 RBIs. The 6-foot-1, 200-pound Ritter primarily played shortstop this season for Albuquerque. Tovar, a Gold Glove winner last season, is hitting .258 with three homers and 10 RBIs in 32 games. He spent time on the injured list earlier this season with a bruised left hip. ___ AP MLB:

Rockies by the numbers: 9 stats that tell the story of a historically woeful season
Rockies by the numbers: 9 stats that tell the story of a historically woeful season

New York Times

time29-05-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

Rockies by the numbers: 9 stats that tell the story of a historically woeful season

The Colorado Rockies lost again on Wednesday. It was their sixth straight loss, 2-1 on the road against the Chicago Cubs, and their 22nd loss since May 2. They've won only three times in that span, continuing a trajectory that has them on pace to far exceed last year's Chicago White Sox for the worst season in modern baseball history. Advertisement At 9-47, the Rockies are easily the worst team in baseball, and there's little to suggest it's a fluke. Based on their runs scored and allowed, Baseball-Reference calculates that they should be slightly better — 12 wins instead of nine — but the Rockies' league-worst run differential is twice as bad as the third-worst Athletics, and both their staff ERA (30th) and runs per game (29th) rank at or near the bottom of the league. Two months into the season, it's difficult to overstate just how awful the Rockies have been, but we've come up with nine numbers — one for each of their wins — that help tell the story of a historically bad team. The Rockies left spring training with some sense of optimism. Their clubhouse was loose and hopeful on Opening Day, and a narrow walk-off loss in the season opener was followed immediately by a good one-run win in Game 2. But those were the only two games in which the Rockies have used their preferred lineup. Brenton Doyle, Ezequiel Tovar, Ryan McMahon and Kris Bryant were the top four hitters on Opening Day, and those four have not played together in that order since April 8. Bryant and Tovar have missed considerable time due to injury, Jordan Beck has supplanted Doyle in the leadoff spot, and McMahon — despite below-average offensive numbers — has become the go-to cleanup hitter. Beck, Tovar and catcher/DH Hunter Goodman are the regular top three hitters these days. They're also the only Rockies hitters with an above-average OPS+. According to FanGraphs, four individual Rockies position players have a positive WAR this season, but the team as a whole has generated a positive WAR at only two positions: third base and left field. Third base has been driven by Rockies mainstay McMahon, who's been a below-average hitter (81 wRC+) but a strong defender. Left field is the product of Beck's second-year breakout (from a minus-1.0 fWAR last year to 0.9 this year). Otherwise, the Rockies are awash in performances that could, in theory, be replicated or even improved by calling up someone from Triple-A. (Though, the fact Tovar is healthy again should push shortstop into positive WAR territory in the relatively near future.) This is a low number by any standard — only the Pirates have scored fewer runs than the Rockies this season — but it's shockingly low for a team that plays half its games at notoriously hitter-friendly Coors Field. In their 33-year history, the Rockies have never scored fewer than 4.21 runs per game, and even that low-water mark is relatively new (set last season). Before 2023, the Rockies had only once averaged fewer than 4.54 runs per game, and in more than half of their seasons, the Rockies have averaged at least 4.8. In their first three decades (from 1993 to 2022), the Rockies scored the most runs in the National League (only the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox scored more in all of baseball), but in the past three seasons, only four teams have scored fewer runs than the Rockies. Advertisement The Rockies have two games remaining in the month of May. They're tough matchups — Friday and Saturday on the road against the New York Mets — but they represent two chances to push their season win total into double digits while accumulating five wins in May. So far, they've won only four in May after winning just four in April. The Rockies became only the third team since 2000 to win fewer than five games in April, and they're so far the only team in the 2000s to win only four games in May. Last year's White Sox set a modern record for losses in a season, but even they managed to win 15 games by the end of May and had at least six wins in four of six months. The Rockies are on pace to be substantially worse. The Rockies are largely homegrown. Their current 26-man roster includes 15 homegrown players — the most in baseball — and only five who came to the team via free agency (it was four before Wednesday's addition of Orlando Arcia, who was signed after being released by the Atlanta Braves earlier this month). It's not the fewest free agents in baseball — and two others, Bryant and reliever Scott Alexander, played for the Rockies earlier this season — but it's near the bottom of the league. The Rockies have been nearly as reliant on their own first-round draft picks (six) as all of free agency to come up with the 41 players they've used this season. They've built from within. They just haven't built enough to win. The Rockies have used eight starting pitchers this season. Six of them — including the four with the most innings on the team — have ERAs higher than 6.00. Kyle Freeland, Anthony Senzatela, and Germán Márquez have been on the Rockies for nearly a decade. All three made their Rockies debuts in either 2016 or 2017, and all three remain in the rotation all these years later. Freeland finished fourth in Cy Young Award voting in 2018, and Márquez was an All-Star in 2021, but the trio are now in the bottom 12 in ERA among the 125 pitchers who have thrown at least 40 innings this season. Touted rookie Chase Dollander was showing signs of turning his season around (4.66 ERA in his last four starts; 2.53 in just the last two) before landing on the IL on May 22 with right forearm inflammation. It's all relative, of course, but the bullpen has been kind of a strength for the Rockies. Almost all of their wins have been close enough to record a save, and four different relievers have at least one (including rookie Zach Agnos, who was called up in late April and has a 1.20 ERA as the primary closer). Setup man Jake Bird has pitched well, hard-throwing Seth Halvorsen has been solid outside of two brutal outings, and Victor Vodnik, coming off a decent rookie season, returned from the IL this week to further fortify the bullpen. The Rockies rank 20th in bullpen ERA, which isn't necessarily good, but on this team, that's considered a bright spot. The shocking thing is not so much that the Rockies have lost eight games in a row — the Athletics lost 11 straight at one point — but that the Rockies have lost eight in a row, three times! They opened the season 3-9, which was bad, but basically on pace to match last year's White Sox or the 1962 Mets. Historically awful, but not unprecedented. Then, from April 11 to the first game of an April 20 doubleheader, the Rockies lost eight straight. They won the second game of the doubleheader, followed by another eight-game losing streak through April 29 (meaning, the Rockies took a loss every game day for two and a half weeks). They finally won two in a row April 30 and May 1, then they lost eight in a row again! Advertisement The Rockies have played 18 series. They've lost all of them and been swept in half of them (including, most recently, a three-game sweep by the Cubs that ended on Wednesday). The Phillies swept the Rockies twice, seven games in all. The first-place Los Angeles Dodgers and Detroit Tigers have swept the Rockies, but so have the underperforming Texas Rangers and Cincinnati Reds. The Rockies have yet to beat any team more than once. Their only back-to-back wins came in separate series and even separate months (against the Braves on April 30, then the San Francisco Giants on May 1). They've lost by five or more runs 15 times, and even when scoring seven or more runs, they have only a .500 record (4-4). Their most lopsided win (a 12-5 thrashing of the A's on April 6) was followed two days later by a 17-2 blowout loss to the Milwaukee Brewers, which was dwarfed a month later by a 21-0 humiliation at the hands of the San Diego Padres. (Top photo of CF Brenton Doyle after his team gave up a go-ahead home run: Justin Edmonds / Getty Images)

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