Latest news with #MaxScherzer


CTV News
an hour ago
- Sport
- CTV News
Nathan Lukes taken off seven-day injured list and inserted into Blue Jays lineup
Toronto Blue Jays right-fielder Nathan Lukes (38), middle right, is looked at by a trainer after a collision with teammate second baseman Ernie Clement (22) during the sixth inning of a baseball game against the Minnesota Twins, Sunday, June 8, 2025, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr) TORONTO — Nathan Lukes was reinstated from Toronto's seven-day injured list on Friday and was immediately inserted into the Blue Jays lineup against the Chicago White Sox. The outfielder was out with a concussion and his addition to Toronto's batting order delayed the announcement of the Blue Jays' lineup by about 30 minutes. Lukes was pencilled in to hit seventh and play left field. Right-handed pitcher Nick Sandlin (right lat strain) was reinstated from Toronto's 15-day injured list and was also available to pitch against Chicago. Lefty Justin Bruihl and outfielder Will Robertson were optioned to triple-A Buffalo in corresponding moves. Right-handed starting pitcher Max Scherzer (thumb) had a bullpen session scheduled for Saturday. It appears that the surefire Hall of Famer will likely start against the Cleveland Guardians at some point next week. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 20, 2025.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Blue Jays Fans Upset After Max Scherzer News on Thursday
Blue Jays Fans Upset After Max Scherzer News on Thursday originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Toronto Blue Jays have been eagerly awaiting Max Scherzer's impact on the team after they signed the veteran ace to a one-year, $15.5 million deal in February. His debut on March 29 against the Baltimore Orioles was promising—yet cut short after just three innings due to lingering thumb inflammation, followed by a placement on the injured list. Advertisement Since then, Scherzer has been methodically ramping up his comeback. He made his first rehab start for Triple-A Buffalo on June 14—throwing 56 pitches over 4.2 innings with eight strikeouts—and emphasized that the thumb issue is 'serious' and he is 'still not out of the woods.' On Thursday, SportNet's Ben Nicholson‑Smith provided a new update on Scherzer's recovery: Per Manager John Schneider, Scherzer's thumb was 'sore as expected after 75 pitches' during his last outing, but he's scheduled to throw a bullpen in Toronto this weekend. That bullpen session is setting him up for a possible start against the Guardians next week—though nothing is official yet. Even with the good news, Blue Jays fans have voiced concern over his still-healing thumb, posting comments on X. Advertisement 'If he still has thumb soreness why are there discussions about Scherzer being called up soon?' one fan wrote. 'So his thumb is still sore. Damn!' another fan added. 'So why rush him back?' a fan questioned 'He [is] done,' another fan concluded. Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer (31)© Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images "So his thumb is still sore," added one. "Great." "Thumb sore doesn't sound great?" added another. "if his thumb is still sore nothing is fixed?" wrote one. A healthy Scherzer would be a massive boost for a Toronto team that already boasts a shorthanded pitching staff. The 40-year-old brings a career 3.16 ERA, three‑time Cy Young credentials, and a proven ability to stabilize rotations—and do so in high-pressure moments. Advertisement Related: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Sends Addison Barger Message After Blue Jays Game Related: Max Scherzer Announcement Made After Blue Jays' Move for Ex-Phillies Pitcher This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 19, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Two found shot dead inside Massachusetts home in apparent domestic murder-suicide
Two people were found shot dead inside a Brockton home Tuesday evening in an apparent domestic murder-suicide, the Plymouth County District Attorney's Office said. Authorities began investigating the deaths after Brockton police received multiple reports that two adults had been found dead inside a home at 641 North Main St., authorities said. Officers responded to the home shortly before 5:45 p.m. and found the two bodies inside. Detectives from Brockton police and the district attorney's office are investigating. No further information about the deaths has been released. Starfires score 7, stifle late rally to knock off FCBL-leading Bravehearts Powerball: See the winning numbers in Wednesday's $101 million drawing Max Scherzer and Tanner Houck face Triple A at Polar Park Revere community mourns death of retired police officer who died in fire Worcester man charged with murder in fatal stabbing of college student from 2008 Read the original article on MassLive.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Blue Jays blast D'backs as Max Scherzer's long-awaited return could be as soon as next week
The boxscore will show that Eric Lauer made his fourth start of the season Wednesday night at the Rogers Centre, allowing one earned run over five-plus innings in a blowout 8-1 Blue Jays win over the Arizona Diamondbacks. However, with due respect to the lefty's latest handiwork — which included eight strikeouts on Wednesday — the Jays are hoping and intending this latest outing was just keeping the rubber warm in that spot of the rotation for the long-awaited return of it's big off-season pitching acquisition, Max Scherzer. With that in mind, as the Jays breezed to their second in a row over the D'Backs, the bigger development in the zoomed-out view of their season unfolded down in Worcester, Mass., where Scherzer was brilliant in what surely had the feel of his final rehab start with the Jays' triple-A affiliate Buffalo Bisons. The 40-year-old veteran reached his intended pitch limit of 75 and did so by striking out eight Red Sox hitters over 4.1 scoreless innings. Assuming everything is OK with Scherzer's bothersome thumb, returning to a big league mound for just his second start with the Jays next Tuesday in Cleveland is a real possibility. 'Having the name, having the competitiveness, having the stuff,' Jays manager John Schneider said when asked prior to Wednesday's game what Scherzer could bring to his team. 'It would be huge just to have him, knowing that you have that calibre of pitcher waiting on your staff every fifth day would be a nice shot in the arm.' It would be much more than that, of course. The Jays rotation has been in tatters over the past month, held together by overusing the bullpen at times and sticking with struggling Bowden Francis. That's why Lauer's effort was so critical on Wednesday, causing minimal strain on a bullpen that will be asked to cover multiple innings here on Friday against the Chicago White Sox. In fact, Lauer has been so reliable for the Jays that, down the road, he could slide into the other black hole of the rotation. Bigger things first, though. When you have a three-time Cy Young Award winner and two-time World Series champion ready to contribute, you tend to get a little bit excited if you are the Blue Jays. 'That would be good,' Schneider said with a smile and no further explanation when next Tuesday was raised as a possibility for Scherzer, who hasn't pitched in the bigs since a three-inning outing on March 29. 'That would line up nicely.' It would also give the Jays the boost that they need at a time of the season when wear and tear starts to hit pitching staffs around baseball. And as easy as it is to forget, given that Scherzer has spent 70 games on the injured list with that wonky thumb, the Jays paid him $15.5 million US on a one-year deal for a reason. Prior to Wednesday's win, the Jays' 14th in their past 19 to move their record to 40-33, Schneider was asked what it was like to be on the other side when Scherzer's name came up as a probable pitcher for the opposition. 'It sucked,' the manager said. 'You know what you were getting into. You know that it's a future Hall of Famer that knows how to pitch. And whether he's got 94 (miles per hour on his fastball) or 98 in the tank that night, he knows what he's doing.' Down in Worcester, Scherzer certainly appeared to be accelerating on the right track, with a fastball hovering around 94 miles per hour and confounding triple-A hitters. 'He always thinks his stuff is ready,' Schneider said. 'I think it's more the physical part, how he's feeling tonight, tomorrow and the days in between. He thinks he could strike everybody out right now.' Doing it for the Blue Jays and doing so soon could be one of the biggest developments of a season headed in the right direction for the better part of the past month. On Wednesday, the Jays picked up where they left off in Tuesday's dramatic ninth-inning comeback victory, when leadoff hitter Bo Bichette launched his 10th homer of the season in the first, a 418-foot blast to centre field. They broke it open in the sixth when back-to-back doubles from Addison Barger and Vlad Guerrero Jr. (and how are those bats back-to-back working for you?) were part of a three-run burst to increase the lead to 5-1 before a crowd of 27,635. Barger continued his torrid play at the plate with a pair of doubles and a single. Of his 46 base hits this season, 24 have been for extra bases. In taking the first two against the D'Backs for a rousing start to a six-game home stand, the Jays have now won 11 of their past 12 Rogers Centre contests. That three-game weekend sweep at the hands of the Phillies in Philadelphia is the Jays' only series loss in their previous seven.


National Post
2 days ago
- Sport
- National Post
Blue Jays blast D'backs as Max Scherzer's long-awaited return could be as soon as next week
The boxscore will show that Eric Lauer made his fourth start of the season Wednesday night at the Rogers Centre, allowing one earned run over five-plus innings in a blowout 8-1 Blue Jays win over the Arizona Diamondbacks. Article content However, with due respect to the lefty's latest handiwork — which included eight strikeouts on Wednesday — the Jays are hoping and intending this latest outing was just keeping the rubber warm in that spot of the rotation for the long-awaited return of it's big off-season pitching acquisition, Max Scherzer. Article content Article content Article content With that in mind, as the Jays breezed to their second in a row over the D'Backs, the bigger development in the zoomed-out view of their season unfolded down in Worcester, Mass., where Scherzer was brilliant in what surely had the feel of his final rehab start with the Jays' triple-A affiliate Buffalo Bisons. Article content The 40-year-old veteran reached his intended pitch limit of 75 and did so by striking out eight Red Sox hitters over 4.1 scoreless innings. Assuming everything is OK with Scherzer's bothersome thumb, returning to a big league mound for just his second start with the Jays next Tuesday in Cleveland is a real possibility. Article content 'Having the name, having the competitiveness, having the stuff,' Jays manager John Schneider said when asked prior to Wednesday's game what Scherzer could bring to his team. 'It would be huge just to have him, knowing that you have that calibre of pitcher waiting on your staff every fifth day would be a nice shot in the arm.' Article content It would be much more than that, of course. The Jays rotation has been in tatters over the past month, held together by overusing the bullpen at times and sticking with struggling Bowden Francis. That's why Lauer's effort was so critical on Wednesday, causing minimal strain on a bullpen that will be asked to cover multiple innings here on Friday against the Chicago White Sox. Article content In fact, Lauer has been so reliable for the Jays that, down the road, he could slide into the other black hole of the rotation. Article content Bigger things first, though. When you have a three-time Cy Young Award winner and two-time World Series champion ready to contribute, you tend to get a little bit excited if you are the Blue Jays. Article content 'That would be good,' Schneider said with a smile and no further explanation when next Tuesday was raised as a possibility for Scherzer, who hasn't pitched in the bigs since a three-inning outing on March 29. 'That would line up nicely.' Article content It would also give the Jays the boost that they need at a time of the season when wear and tear starts to hit pitching staffs around baseball. Article content And as easy as it is to forget, given that Scherzer has spent 70 games on the injured list with that wonky thumb, the Jays paid him $15.5 million US on a one-year deal for a reason. Article content Prior to Wednesday's win, the Jays' 14th in their past 19 to move their record to 40-33, Schneider was asked what it was like to be on the other side when Scherzer's name came up as a probable pitcher for the opposition.