
Braves place reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Sale on injured list with fractured rib cage
MIAMI (AP) — The Atlanta Braves placed reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Chris Sale on the 15-day injured list Saturday because of a fractured left rib cage.
'He was doing his exercises (Friday) and felt like something wasn't right,' manager Brian Snitker said before the Braves' game Saturday against the Miami Marlins. 'So they had him looked at and it showed what it showed.'
In his previous start, against the New York Mets on Wednesday, Sale sprinted off the mound and made a diving stop of a grounder hit by Juan Soto and threw him out for the first out in the ninth. He then struck out Pete Alonso and was lifted after allowing a single to Brandon Nimmo.
'It's just a freak thing. An unfortunate thing,' Snitker said. 'I saw him after the game that night and he was doing his postgame workout. And then I saw him the next day and I think he maybe felt a little uncomfortable the next day. But then (Friday) is when he wanted to get it checked out.'
Sale is 5-4 and has a 2.52 ERA through 15 starts this season. The 36-year-old left-hander threw a season-high 116 pitches and 8 2/3 innings against the Mets.
'It's a tough blow for us and him,' Snitker said. 'It was going so good. That's a rough one.'
After six seasons with the Boston Red Sox, Sale was traded to the Braves in December 2023. Sale won the pitching Triple Crown in his first season in Atlanta, finishing with an NL high in wins (18) and strikeouts (225) and a league-low ERA of 2.38.
Snitker doesn't have a timeline when his star pitcher will return.
'With bones like that, they've got to heal before you can start the process, but I have no idea how long it will be,' he said.
The Braves began Saturday at 34-40 and 11 games behind NL East-leading Philadelphia. They had won six of seven, including a three-game series sweep against the Mets, before losing the series opener at Miami on Friday.
In the corresponding move retroactive to Thursday, the Braves recalled left-handed pitcher Austin Cox from Triple-A Gwinnett.
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New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Mets' how-to guide for ending a long losing streak
PHILADELPHIA — With half-smiles and shrugs, the New York Mets downplayed the idea of gaining major relief from their season-long seven-game losing streak coming to an end. Yes, players said, they felt great after beating the Philadelphia Phillies 11-4 on Saturday night. But they mostly stressed some of the same virtues that clubhouse leaders had spent time emphasizing over the past week. Advertisement 'It happens, man,' Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. 'We know we're good. We know we got good players. It's part of the grind of 162 (games). You just have to be consistent. It was good to get that one. We got a long way to go.' More than half the season remains. Some of what worked for the Mets (46-31) on Saturday night also went missing for the last week. With that in mind, here's a how-to guide for ending a long losing streak, featuring insights on what to make of the Mets the rest of the way. The Mets have won 28 straight games in which Francisco Lindor has hit a home run. 'I wish I would've hit homers in Atlanta,' Lindor quipped, smiling. Lindor's home run in the third inning snapped an 0-for-20 skid. .@Lindor12BC got all of it! 😤 Vote Francisco! 🗳️👉 — New York Mets (@Mets) June 22, 2025 'It's hard to explain,' Mendoza said. 'It seems like every time he goes, we go.' Sure enough, Brandon Nimmo followed Lindor's home run with his second of the game. Then, Juan Soto crushed a high fastball from rookie starter Mick Abel (who entered with a 2.21 ERA through his first four outings) to make it back-to-back-to-back home runs. BACK-TO-BACK!@You_Found_Nimmo | #LGM — New York Mets (@Mets) June 22, 2025 Lindor is the catalyst. Nimmo is part of the glue. (Pete Alonso had a modest night, going 2-for-4, but he has been the run producer.) As for Soto? He's the difference-maker, capable of taking the Mets offense to another level. AND NOW @JuanSoto25_!!! — New York Mets (@Mets) June 22, 2025 Soto typically takes 28.3 seconds to trot around the bases after hitting a home run. He takes his time, checking in as MLB's 10th-slowest trotter. After hitting his second home run of the game during the fifth inning, off Joe Ross, Soto spent 30 seconds savoring the moment. By the time Mets first-base coach Antoan Richardson outstretched his arm for a congratulatory handshake, Soto had only just reached halfway up the line. Advertisement And why not indulge a few more seconds? Soto's second home run traveled an estimated 437 feet, making it his longest home run as a Mets player. SECOND DECK@JuanSoto25_ | #LGM — New York Mets (@Mets) June 22, 2025 'It feels pretty good,' Soto said, laughing. Soto went 4-for-5 with four RBIs. It was his 26th career multi-home-run game, tying Hall of Famer Jimmie Foxx for the most before turning 27 years old. Over the past three weeks, Soto has hit eight home runs. On May 31, he owned a .770 OPS. Now that figure stands at .877. Soto said he has felt good 'since day one' and attributed his substandard start to poor luck, a theory advanced numbers mostly support, especially after he stopped hitting so many grounders. Throughout the season, Mendoza carried a similar sentiment. After Soto's big day, Mendoza gushed over how Soto controls the strike zone and racks up 'barrel after barrel,' as he put it, while taking a page from Soto's book to appreciate the long home run. 'Special hitter,' Mendoza said. 'We just have to take a step back and kind of admire.' Even the Phillies fans did so — in their own way. They roared in the seventh inning when reliever Jordan Romano retired Soto on a routine grounder. Such acknowledgement is reserved for traveling stars. Nearing the midway point of the season, Francisco Alvarez's proclamation from spring training that the Mets boast baseball's best lineup appears false. The lineup isn't deep enough for such a title. For the season, its sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth batters own a .646 OPS, better than only 10 other teams' final four in the batting order. In June, as the Mets played without third baseman Mark Vientos, things worsened. Their bottom half of the order carried a .575 OPS for the month into Saturday's game. Advertisement In the fourth inning, the bottom of the Mets' order, featuring Francisco Alvarez, Brett Baty and Ronny Mauricio, mustered just three groundouts that traveled a collective distance of 11 feet. Things finally improved. In the sixth inning, Alvarez hit a one-out single. After Baty struck out, Mauricio singled to provide runners on the corners for Lindor, who cashed in with a two-run double to give the Mets a 7-4 lead. It was a rare instance of the Mets succeeding with runners in scoring position. Griffin Canning spent the last week trying to hit the bottom of the strike zone with his changeup and slider. Canning is a good representation of the sudden downward trend of the rotation. Signed to a one-year deal after a rough season, the 29-year-old shined under the Mets' tutelage early on with a 2.47 ERA through his first nine starts. But he had a 6.75 ERA over his last five starts heading into his outing against the Phillies. He might be back on track. Canning's line looked ho-hum (five innings, three earned runs, six hits, two walks, four strikeouts), but he said he thought it was one of his best starts. He leaned on his slider in big spots and used all of his pitches effectively. He worked out of trouble and overcame defensive mistakes (a ball getting by Alvarez for a run, Jeff McNeil's error in center field). He went back to what worked. Canning is throwing his slider more than ever. He needs the pitch, especially against right-handed batters. The slider helped Canning negotiate the fifth inning after two batters reached base with one out. He got ahead of Nick Castellanos with it and put away Max Kepler with it. In his second year, Mendoza handles tough situations well because of his steadiness. Instead of large meetings, Mendoza prefers to check in with his players one-on-one. In such personal settings, Mendoza learns how to push people. To change his style in the face of adversity would come across as inauthentic. So he never called a grand get-together over the past week. Not his style. Advertisement Mendoza remained consistent. He checked in with players daily. He walked the line of promoting a sense of urgency without overdoing it. He pointed out areas that needed improvement, concerns that the last week underscored, but didn't lose sight of two-plus months of good work. A mostly veteran clubhouse appreciated such stability from its manager. Nimmo, the club's longest-tenured player, called it 'huge' and 'really important.' 'It helped facilitate what you saw tonight,' Nimmo said. For Nimmo and other veterans, any seven-game stretch in a baseball season leads to knee-jerk reactions. So, what to do with one game, one win after a dreadful streak, the club's longest in two-plus years? 'You don't overanalyze it and be like, 'OK, we're done,'' Nimmo said. 'You're like, 'OK, great, it bought us a win; now we gotta go do it again tomorrow.' For me, it's that 1-0 mentality. The only thing you take from it is how you can use it to try to win tomorrow.' The Mets hope that's how to start a winning streak. See you tomorrow ✌️ #MetsWin #LGM — New York Mets (@Mets) June 22, 2025 (Photo of Juan Soto after hitting a solo home run in the fifth inning: Mitchell Leff / Getty Images)


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Phillies' Mick Abel has shown flashes of greatness but is an unfinished product
PHILADELPHIA — It took Juan Soto 30 seconds to round the bases, every tick excruciating for Mick Abel. The rookie righty retrieved a new ball before Soto was halfway to second base. He fiddled with the rosin bag while Soto shuffled to third. Soto had not yet stepped on home plate before Philadelphia Phillies pitching coach Caleb Cotham emerged from the dugout to meet Abel on the mound. Advertisement Francisco Lindor had bashed a 3-2 fastball at the knees. Brandon Nimmo had smashed a 2-2 curveball down and in. Then, Soto demolished a full-count fastball above the strike zone. Three batters, three homers. Abel needed to be consoled. 'I kind of have to take it as it is,' Abel said after an 11-4 Phillies loss to the New York Mets. 'Just be honest with myself. I wasn't locating my fastball.' These are the hard lessons for a 23-year-old pitcher, suffered in a rivalry game on national television. The Phillies and Mets have traded blowouts this weekend. They are tied for first place; one team will leave here with a one-game lead after Sunday night's contest. And Abel will have five days to think about his next start at the Atlanta Braves. It all begins with the fastball. It sat at 97 mph against the Mets. But Mets hitters whiffed at only four of the 43 fastballs Abel threw. They fouled off 12. Abel handled the four through nine hitters in New York's lineup; they went 1-for-9 with a single. But Lindor, Nimmo and Soto are productive big-league hitters. Abel's mistakes were punished. 'They've all got really good approaches,' Abel said. 'I think they can all hit the heater whenever they want. I have to pitch off my fastball, so pretty tough.' That, then, is how Abel has surrendered seven homers in two starts to two of the National League's potent lineups (the Mets and Chicago Cubs) and zero home runs in his three other outings. He wants to pitch at the top of the zone. He must do that to be successful here. The Phillies are asking Abel to keep them in games every fifth day. They have seen flashes of greatness from him, but they know he is an unfinished product. He has already contributed more than they might have anticipated in spring training. Phillies officials were excited to see how Abel would react on this stage. It was June 21, a game with the same meaning as April 21, but a certain juice comes with a packed ballpark on a Saturday night. Advertisement By the time the third inning ended, Phillies manager Rob Thomson explained to Abel why he was removing him. Abel needed 32 pitches to survive the third inning. 'I thought his poise was pretty good when I talked to him,' Thomson said. 'That's a lot for a young guy. And we have to protect him.' The Phillies allowed seven homers in a game for only the 11th time in franchise history. Abel was only the fifth pitcher in Phillies history to allow four homers in three innings or fewer. The others: Jerad Eickhoff (2019), Brian Sanches (2007), Vicente Padilla (2005) and Robert Person (1999). Abel has somehow yet to surrender a home run with a runner on base, which has saved his ERA. (It's 3.47 in 23 1/3 innings.) He's walking a fine line. The Phillies were impressed with his composure during his first four big-league starts, but it was hard not to see long drive after long drive affect Abel in Saturday's game. Before Cotham reached the mound in the third inning, Realmuto put his hand on Abel's chest. Before the game, Thomson said Abel proved something last month when he dueled the Pittsburgh Pirates' Paul Skenes. But Abel had the luxury of pitching to the flaccid Pirates lineup that afternoon. Even before the Mets mashed Abel's mistake pitches, the club knew he had to improve his location at the top of the zone. 'He's really good at tunneling the curveball off that riding fastball,' Thomson said before Saturday's game. 'So sometimes you have to change eye level, that's for sure.' It's something Abel said he'll have to fix in his bullpen session this week. He has a rotation spot for the foreseeable future. Andrew Painter, who also pitched Saturday but at Triple-A Lehigh Valley, went five innings and showed erratic command with four walks. He would be an option for the Phillies if they suffer a rotation injury, but absent that, Painter will continue to pitch in the minors. Advertisement Aaron Nola is out until at least after the All-Star break; the earliest he can be activated is July 18. Nola, who has a stress fracture in his right ribs, played a light catch indoors that was monitored by the medical staff. He could progress to playing catch outside next week. It'll be a slow process, but Nola throwing now is better than not at all. Abel fired 25 pitches in a harrowing first inning. It showed the promise and the current constraints. He prevented the damage from being worse by stranding two in scoring position. But he threw far too many hittable fastballs. Nimmo crushed a belt-high one. Abel said he wasn't deterred afterward. 'Just keep attacking hitters,' he said. 'I mean, first-pitch strikes are a big deal to me.' This is a lot for a 23-year-old rookie on a team with championship aspirations. 'He's just got to get back,' Thomson said, 'to doing what he does.' (Photo of Mick Abel as Juan Soto rounds the bases: Kyle Ross / Imagn Images)
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
With family in the stands, Marlins starter Perez makes big impression
Eury Pérez touched 100.4 mph in the third inning — the fastest pitch of his major-league career. The 22-year-old right-hander hit triple digits again an inning later and at least 99 mph a total of 11 times. His 89th and final pitch, yet another blazing four-seam fastball, clocked 98.5 mph. If Pérez looked especially fired up in his third start since returning from Tommy John surgery, it's because he was. It was his first outing of the three at home, and the buzz at loanDepot park during the Marlins' 7-0 loss to the Braves — thanks in part to Flanigan's Fest and an announced crowd of 21,198, the largest since Opening Day — added to the energy, Marlins manager Clayton McCullough said. But Pérez's adrenaline came from something more personal: his parents from the Dominican Republic, sitting behind home plate, watching him pitch in person for the first time in his professional career — a moment they had been planning since 2023. 'It was very exciting just having them and feeling the support from all of my family was very special for me,' Pérez said via team interpreter Luis Dorante Jr. 'We were planning to have my family here and then the injury happened, and it was not possible. So, we were aiming to have them here at home. 'I truly hope they stay here for a long time, and they can watch me play for several other games.' Pérez noted his parents' seats were just a few rows above home plate, so he had a clear view of them on every pitch he threw. He tossed 4 2/3 innings Saturday, allowing three runs on four hits while striking out six and walking two. Pérez threw 70 pitches through three innings while giving up four runs on June 9 in Pittsburgh and followed that with a 79-pitch, one-run outing through four innings on June 15 in Washington. 'I think there's been a huge improvement since the first [start],' Pérez said. 'I'm continuing to build up each outing and just working on some of the pitches, like the slider. But I'm out there, and I'm competing every time I go out there on the mound and feeling better with each start.' With two outs in the fifth and the Marlins trailing 2-0, McCullough turned to the reliever Lake Bachar even though Pérez had just gotten Matt Olson out on a groundout. McCullough said after the game Pérez had reached his target of 85 to 90 pitches. 'I thought Eury was terrific today, really encouraging,' McCullough said. 'All his pitches had life. Great to see him be able to utilize and trust in his breaking stuff today. His slider was very good. His arsenal being that much deeper is going to make it really tough on opposing hitters.' 'You know, it's good to see, good for the game when a guy like that comes back,' Braves manager Brian Snitker said of Pérez. 'Because you know what? He's one of the young stars in the game. I'm glad he's healthy and glad he's pitching because he's good for the game.' Braves starter Grant Holmes was even more effective than Pérez on Saturday. He pitched 5 2/3 scoreless innings, allowing five hits, with five strikeouts and five walks. The Marlins couldn't capitalize despite getting at least one runner on base in five of the first six innings. They finished 1 for 9 with runners in scoring position — Liam Hicks' single in the second advanced Eric Wagaman from second to third — and left nine runners on base. 'We weren't able to finish off some of those innings,' McCullough said. 'Unfortunate that we were not able to cash some of those in and get some [runs] early on in the game.' ▪ Left-handed reliever Josh Simpson made his major-league debut in the eighth inning, one day after right-hander Robinson Piña did the same. Simpson pitched two innings, allowing four runs (three earned) on three hits, including a three-run homer by Drake Baldwin. He was selected from Triple A Jacksonville, and Piña was designated for assignment before Saturday's game. ▪ After giving up only four earned runs over 17 innings his past three starts, Sandy Alcantara is aiming to pitch deeper than his season-high six innings in Sunday's start. What's the key? 'I just leave that in my manager's hands. He knows I can be there longer now,' Alcantara said. 'He knows the way I've been competing since the first pitch. And my [velocity] is still there in the fifth, sixth inning. He's just got to believe in [me] and give me another opportunity to be out there in the sixth or seventh inning and just trust and leave me out there.'