
Rays pitcher carted off field and taken to hospital after foul ball into dugout hits him in face
Associated Press
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Rays pitcher Hunter Bigge was carted off the field in a frightening scene and taken to a hospital after getting struck in the face by a foul ball lined into the Tampa Bay dugout Thursday night.
Bigge was placed on a backboard and gave a thumbs up before being driven by ambulance to a nearby hospital for tests. He never lost consciousness and was able to converse with first responders, Rays manager Kevin Cash said.
In the top of the seventh inning, Baltimore Orioles catcher Adley Rutschman sharply pulled a pitch into the Tampa Bay dugout on the first base side and the ball hit Bigge, a 27-year-old right-hander currently on the injured list.
Emergency medical personnel quickly arrived to attend to Bigge. After several quiet minutes, as visibly concerned Rays players knelt in the field, Bigge was loaded onto a stretcher and carted off.
After the game, Cash said Bigge was struck in the face. The ball left Rutschman's bat at 105 mph, according to Statcast.
Bigge, on the 15-day injured list with a lat strain, received a standing ovation from the Steinbrenner Field crowd as he was loaded onto a cart. The game resumed after an eight-minute delay, and Baltimore held on for a 4-1 victory.
Bigge was selected by the Chicago Cubs in the 12th round of the 2019 amateur draft from Harvard and made his major league debut for them on July 9 last year. He was traded 19 days later to Tampa Bay along with Christopher Morel and minor leaguer Ty Johnson for All-Star third baseman Isaac Paredes.
In 32 career appearances, including one start, Bigge has a 2.51 ERA and one save. This season, he has a 2.40 ERA in 13 relief outings covering 15 innings.
___
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New York Times
2 hours ago
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Sliders: For the surging Rays, solid starters grow on fruitful trade trees
Welcome to Sliders, a weekly in-season MLB column that focuses on both the timely and timeless elements of baseball. When a young pitcher joins the Tampa Bay Rays, he learns quickly that time is running out. If you think you're invincible, this is not the place for you. 'A lot of these guys don't realize that, in reality, they have about five years to be as good as they can be,' said Kyle Snyder, the Rays' longtime pitching coach. 'And it's something that I've shared with them, not to scare them, but it creates some sense of urgency. If you want to take advantage of your physical prime, it's right out in front of you.' Advertisement No team understands timing like the Rays, baseball's hottest team for the last month. Since May 20, Tampa Bay is 20-8 and stands just 2 1/2 games behind the Yankees in the American League East entering the weekend. There are several reasons for this: a stellar defense, MLB's best offense since mid-May, a home-heavy early schedule. 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'We all sacrifice some strikeouts for a more efficient inning to be able to go longer and deeper in the ballgame. We all talk about the same thing. It's like, 'OK, we might punch out four or five, but it's fine because we went seven and we had efficient, 15-pitch-or-less innings.' Rays starters were averaging an MLB-low 15.3 pitches per inning through Wednesday. If they get ahead, 0-2 or 1-2, they'll try to induce the hitter to chase a third strike. Hitters, naturally, rarely let them get to that point. 'I think the opposition is recognizing that we're going to throw strikes,' manager Kevin Cash said, 'and more times than not, when you're throwing strikes with the type of stuff that our pitchers are featuring, you're going to get some outs.' The Rays' pitching staff had allowed a .262 batting average on balls in play through Wednesday, second best in the majors behind the Texas Rangers, at .259. 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'He gave me a lot of good advice and that helped me to keep my head up.' Soriano's second operation came while he was pitching in the Pittsburgh Pirates' farm system in 2021, after the team had taken him from the Angels in the Rule 5 draft. Needing a roster spot that November, the Pirates returned the injured righty to the Angels. 'At the end of the season they told me, 'Hey, sorry, we're trying to keep you here, but we need space on the roster,'' Soriano said. 'And then that's what they told me and everyone knows the results now.' Soriano spent most of 2022 recovering and reached the majors as a reliever in 2023. He moved to the rotation last year and has a 3.44 ERA in 35 career starts. His breakthrough came in 2023 when, then-bullpen coach Matt Wise and another staffer, changed his sinker grip. Soriano, who had been throwing across the two seams at their narrowest point, now uses a 'one-seam' sinker that produces an extraordinary combination of velocity and depth. 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With other Tigers slowed by injuries, the team picked Graterol, 24, as a stopgap to face the defending champion New York Yankees in their 1999 home opener. 'We're definitely looking down the rifle barrel,' Tigers manager Larry Parrish told the Detroit Free Press, in a vividly candid assessment. 'We're asking a lot of the kid.' They asked for too much. On a day best remembered for Yogi Berra's return to Yankee Stadium after a 14-year absence, the home team celebrated by pummeling Graterol in a 12-3 blowout. Tino Martinez hit a solo homer, Scott Brosius a two-run shot and Chili Davis a grand slam. Berra predicted the slam in the broadcast booth, chuckling with delight as Davis rounded the bases: 'I'll do better next time,' the poor pitcher said later, but there was no next time. Graterol soon returned to the minors and is linked with a strikebreaking priest forever. If you're reading this on a weekend in the Northeast, it's probably raining. Last weekend was the 14th in a row with rain in Boston, and it hasn't been much clearer in New York or Philadelphia. Baseball players are experts at waiting out the rain, as the Arizona Diamondbacks and Chicago Cubs relievers demonstrated at Wrigley Field in 2018. The Diamondbacks won the talent show, if you can call it that — with bits that included Rubby De La Rosa rolling himself like a bowling ball, toppling Archie Bradley and Andrew Chafin in a 7-10 split. Advertisement The well-traveled Chafin, now with the Washington Nationals, gives a convincing effort as a wobbly bowling pin. But a different part of the act stands out to him now. 'I literally roped our bullpen catcher and flipped him, dropped him on his back and hog-tied him,' Chafin said. 'He hit the ground with a thud and I was like, 'Oh, sorry.' I got a little carried away, because anytime you're working with cows, you've got to be a little aggressive.' Was Chafin speaking from experience? Yep. Here's how our conversation went from there: Chafin: 'My buddy called us one day and his cows got out. Their gate wasn't quite right or their fencing needed adjusted and we ended up wrangling like 25 to 30 head in the back of my Ranger. And after we got them all back in, one tried to jump back out and it got out! It was running in circles, trying to kick. So I literally just jumped on its neck, grabbed its head, and just folded it backwards onto the ground.' Sliders: When was this? Chafin: 'Oh, this is like five years ago.' Sliders: 'Really? That's a valuable arm you've got there.' Chafin: 'Well, I grabbed it with my right arm, kept my left arm further away. But you ever had to chase cows that got out?' Sliders: 'No!' Chafin: 'You don't want to do it. And it was also like 15 degrees out, I think, so it's even worse. Chasing cows in the cold is miserable for everybody.' We'll take his word for it. Anyway, enjoy these bullpen frolics – and stay dry! (Top photo of Ryan Pepiot:)


Fox Sports
2 hours ago
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Former NBA great Vlade Divac breaks a hip in motorcycle accident in Montenegro
Associated Press PODGORICA, Montenegro (AP) — Former NBA center Vlade Divac underwent emergency surgery after breaking a hip in a fall from his motorcycle in Montenegro, doctors said Friday. The accident happened Thursday on a road near the Montenegrin Adriatic Sea coast. Hospital officials said the 57-year-old Divac sustained a fracture and that an artificial hip was implanted. 'During the day, a surgical procedure was performed,' said Ljubica Mitrovic, a spokeswoman of the hospital in the town of Risan. 'He is in a stable general and physical condition and is under a careful supervision of the medical staff.' The 7-foot-1 (2.16m) Serbian center started and ended his 16-year NBA career with the Los Angeles Lakers. He also played for the Charlotte Hornets and Sacramento Kings. He was an All-Star in 2001. He later served as general manager of the Kings. When he joined the Lakers in 1989, he was among the first group of European players to transfer to the NBA. Divac was also the first player born and trained outside the United States to play in over 1,000 games in the NBA. He was elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2019. Divac served two terms as head of Serbia's Olympic Committee. ___ AP NBA: recommended