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  • Keeler: Here’s why Broncos QB Jarrett Stidham makes Patriots fans in Denver nervous

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    Justin Grant had Tedy Bruschi on his back and Brock Osweiler on the brain.

    “I don’t like the storyline with Jarrett Stidham,” he told me as we shivered on the second-floor deck at Jackson’s LODO early Saturday night.

    Then he corrected himself.

    “I hate the storyline,” Grant continued, adjusting his bright blue Bruschi replica Patriots jersey.

    “Why?” I wondered.

    “Because we drafted him. And he gave us two years and then he left. And now he’s, like, the guy who’s coming in. I just don’t like the storyline.”

    New England rolls an MVP-caliber quarterback into Denver — only to get beaten by a Broncos backup? Justin’s seen the movie before. He always ends up crying at the end.

    The last time Grant, who calls Colorado Springs home but grew up in Maine, saw his beloved Pats at Empower Field was November 2015. When Osweiler rallied the Broncos past Tom Brady in the snow.

    Talk about your classic PTSD — Pats Traumatic Stress Disorder.

    “I’m 0-and-1, man,” Grant laughed on the eve of the AFC Championship between the Broncos and Patriots. “We don’t have a good record here.”

    Sure don’t. The Pats are tied with the Steelers for the most Super Bowl victories (six) since the AFL-NFL merger of 1970. But they’ve never won a postseason game in Denver (0-4). Brady went 0-3. Empower Field was the one mountain too high for even the GOAT to climb.

    New England Patriots fan Brian Kureta screams among his fellow fans on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026, at Jackson’s LODO in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    “Honestly, man, after losing two Super Bowls to Eli Manning and one to Nick Foles,” Grant’s friend Jordan Buck, a Pats fan from Lakewood, told me, “I’m not overlooking anybody. But you’ve got to be confident in your squad, so I like my team’s chances.”

    Love them, though?

    Not after Osweiler. Or Foles. Or Eli twice.

    “Yeah, (Stidham) hasn’t played in a long time,” Buck shrugged. “But I mean, he played for us for three years, so he knows us well.”

    What did Broncos fans and Pats fans have in common Saturday? Stidham, who’ll make his first postseason start against New England in place of injured Broncos QB Bo Nix, was on the lips of both teams’ fans the hours before the biggest football game at Empower Field in a decade.

    New Englanders packed into Jackson’s LODO for a pep rally just within shouting distance of Coors Field. Most of the shouts were distinctly of the NC-17 variety.

    Patriot Pat signs New England Patriots fan Sumaya Faggan's bag on Saturday at Jackson's LODO in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)
    Patriot Pat signs New England Patriots fan Sumaya Faggan’s bag on Saturday at Jackson’s LODO in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    “I LOVE DRAKE MAYE!” a Patriots fan cried.

    “(EXPLETIVE) THE BRONCOS!” Another screamed.

    The “Night Before” rally was a brainchild of the Pikes Peak Pats fan club. PPP typically hosts a night-before primer on the eve of an AFC title game in Denver, but it’s been a while. January 2016 brought roughly 700 Front Range Pats fans together. PPP president Anne Stone told me they were expecting at least 1,000 this time around — if not more. With the sun setting and temps falling at 5:15 p.m., a line of at least 100 patrons was seen snaking out from the front door of Jackson’s and around the block.

    Near the DJ stage on the second floor, the Patriots’ “All-Access”  television show did a live shoot for the locals back in Beantown. Pat Patriot danced in one corner. A giant ice sculpture of the New England logo rested in another. Former New England kicker Adam Vinatieri, the Patriots’ honorary captain for Sunday, showed up for his “All-Access” cameo as faithful waved tiny cardboard heads of New England rookie tackle Will Campbell.

    “We all we got?” Vinatieri asked.

    “We all we need!” they cried.

    “We all we got?” Vinatieri repeated.

    “We all we need!”

    “That’s what I’m talking about!” Vinatieri said.

    Former New England Patriots cornerback Logan Ryan signs autographs for fans on Saturday at Jackson's LODO in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)
    Former New England Patriots cornerback Logan Ryan signs autographs for fans on Saturday at Jackson’s LODO in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    It’s OK to roll your eyes. But not at the cause. PPP ran a raffle during the rally on Saturday, with a plethora of signed Pats items, in order to raise money for the Pikes Peak Region Peace Officers Memorial.

    As a Boston native, Stone’s accent is thicker than chowdah, bless her, with a laugh that lilts like a fly ball onto Lansdowne Street. She moved to the Front Range 30 years ago when her husband got a new gig — and never left.

    The Pikes Peak Pats Club started in 2006. Stone became president a year after that. PPP counts about 90 active members now. Before the pandemic, it was closer to 400. Things are more transient now, with East Coast military transplants looking for a good watch pah-ty coming and going as Uncle Sam ships them in and out of the Springs.

    “It’s good,” Stone said. “You get to meet new people all the time.”

    Pats owner Robert Kraft has even visited PPP tailgates and parties over the years, although he wasn’t on the guest list for Saturday’s rally.

    And if Stone’s got any PTSD, deep down, she sure as heck wasn’t showing it.

    “To tell you the truth, in all honesty, I think a lot of people, all of my Pats friends, everyone’s hearts are broken for poor Bo Nix,” Stone said. “Some of us are old enough that he could be our son. Here was a 25-year-old who spent the night crying. It’s just awful.”

    A pause.

    And cue the “but” …

    “That being said, I don’t think we’re a shoo-in,” Stone continued. “I do think we’re going to win. That’s my gut reaction. You know what they say: ‘Any given Sunday.’ It’s true. And we don’t have good luck (in Denver).”

    Oh and four.

    As in, uh-oh and four.

    “That worry you?” I asked Grant.

    “Yes, it does,” he replied. “It worries me a lot.”

    He just wishes Stidham would stop giving him that old Osweiler vibe.

    “So hopefully,” Grant said nervously, “history doesn’t repeat itself.”

    Stiddy as you Bo, man. Stiddy as you Bo.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Five Colorado music moments that provided chills in 2025

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    Editor’s note: This is part of The Know’s series, Staff Favorites. Each week, we give our opinions on the best that Colorado has to offer for dining, shopping, entertainment, outdoor activities and more. (We’ll also let you in on some hidden gems.)


    It would be a fool’s errand to attempt to write about all of my favorite Colorado concertgoing and music-listening experiences from this year. There were simply too many.

    In the four years that I’ve lived in Denver, I’ve found it to be a destination for highly esteemed folk rock, head-turning electronic music and artists finding inspiration at high altitude.

    The experimental electronic shows at the Aztlan Theatre this year were the subject of a previous Staff Favorite of mine, as was “Gentle Worship,” an album by Denver composer Nathan Hall and percussion trio Perc Ens performed using stone instruments from the San Luis Valley.

    Below are five other musical moments that gave me chills this year.

    Autechre at Ogden Theatre (Oct. 1)

    Fliers taped around the lobby of the Ogden Theatre the night of Autechre’s long-awaited return to Denver read:

    “Autechre will perform in darkness. For their set all lights in the venue will be off. Please plan on being in one place for the performance and do not move unnecessarily until it has finished when the lights will come back on again.”

    Quite the opening salvo for a content advisory that goes on seven more sentences and ends with “Thank you.” But to fans of the pivotal UK electronic duo, whose output since the 1990s has consistently pushed the boundaries of bass, techno and dance music, it was a promising sign. Things were about to get weird.

    Singer-songwriter Ethel Cain will headline Red Rocks Amphitheatre on Tuesday, April 21, 2026. (Kristy Sparow, Getty Images)

    Indeed, they did. Barely visible from behind their on-stage equipment, the floating headphones of Autechre dropped a ceaseless, complicated, breathtaking assault on the senses. Industrial grind floated over shifting interlocking drum programming. Having played at Denver’s Bluebird Theater 10 years before, the bass-heavy performance felt like a homecoming.

    Ethel Cain taps Midwife for EP

    Naming her EP “Perverts” was a bold move for Ethel Cain, the Tallahassee-born singer-songwriter who had previously been known for her haunting folk and Americana. (Many publications named Cain’s “American Teenager” the best song of 2022.) The project veered toward her most experimental impulses, stretching to nearly 90 minutes of drones and eerie spoken word. Fleshing out its sound is Madeline Johnston, a guitarist and singer-songwriter from Denver who records delicate, reverb-soaked folk songs as Midwife. The EP’s closer “Amber Waves” features her strongest contributions, a track that unfurls Cain’s pained vocals and Johnston’s gentle guitar over 11 minutes and 32 seconds. Though Cain would return to her roots later that year with her most recent album (“Willoughby Tucker, I’ll Always Love You”), “Amber Waves” is a high-water mark for a ghostly, heart-wrenching sound Johnston has developed over a string of solo and collaborative releases.

    Ben Gibbard at Red Rocks (May 14)

    Ben Gibbard will perform with the Postal Service at Just Like Heaven Festival in Pasadena on Saturday, May 18, 2024. Gibbard's other band Death Cab for Cutie will also perform there. The Postal Service is seen here performing at Riot Fest on Saturday, Sept. 16, 2023, at Douglass Park in Chicago. (Photo by Rob Grabowski/Invision/AP)
    Ben Gibbard performs with his band the Postal Service at Riot Fest on Sept. 16, 2023, at Douglass Park in Chicago. (Photo by Rob Grabowski/Invision/AP)

    When alt-rockers Julien Baker and Torres pulled out of Rilo Kiley’s comeback tour this May, with Baker citing health struggles, none other than Death Cab for Cutie’s Ben Gibbard filled in the opening slot. He and Rilo Kiley’s Jenny Lewis are longtime studio and tour pals.

    By himself on stage and slowly fingerpicking an acoustic guitar, Gibbard cooed hits such as the Postal Service’s “Such Great Heights” and Death Cab’s “I’ll Follow You Into the Dark” along with a song he wrote for The Monkees and a Julien Baker cover. His voice is an iconic one in indie rock, and that night it served as a sort of palate cleanser, bringing the crowd to appreciate the views and each other.

    Paul McCartney at Coors Field (Oct. 11)

    I thought my time to see a living Beatle had passed. Then came “Got Back,” Sir Paul McCartney’s U.S. tour with a stop at Coors Field. There were plenty of theatrics staged at center field, including McCartney performing a virtual duet with John Lennon at their seminal rooftop show. Some of it was clunky, like his on-stage choreography, but that did little to stop the masses from singing along to nearly every song. No matter how jaded you may be about pop music today, it was special and heartwarming to witness a full stadium of fans sing along to “Hey Jude.” That night, witnessed from the highest stadium chairs, it felt like the most popular song on Earth.

    Rare Byrd$ at Manos Sagrados (Sept. 13)

    Rare Byrd$ performs at the 2016 ...
    Rare Byrd$ performs at the 2016 Titwrench Festival in Denver. Photo by Lauri Lynnxe Murphy, provided by Sarah Slater.

    Electronic music hardware is expensive. Computers, hard drives, drum machines, synths, effect pads, sequencers and a spaghetti bowl of cables; it all adds up, and the return in music sales may not surpass the amount put in. That’s why it was a breath of fresh air to see Denver hip-hop duo Rare Byrd$ turn the tables on its audience during a workshop for a music festival my wife put on this summer at Manos Sagrados, a new venue in Aurora. After giving a brief presentation on the capabilities of each instrument and how to mix them live into a song, they invited members of the audience to try their hands at making a beat. I hopped on a touch pad and tapped a drunken bassline. Then the person across from me added a synth arpeggio on top and another set up a hi-hat sequence using a drum machine. We were making the music that boomed over the speakers, talking to each other without saying anything at all.

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    Miguel Otárola

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  • Keeler: CU Buffs QB Julian Lewis brought Shedeur Sanders’ juice, deep ball back to Coach Prime’s attack

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    MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — If Saturday in Morgantown was an audition, Julian Lewis passed.

    And passed.

    And passed.

    Ju Ju looked past open receivers. He looked ready to turtle whenever West Virginia sent the house. But he also looked like Shedeur Sanders out there at times, didn’t he?

    Especially when dropping ball after ball in the bucket for CU wide receiver Omarion Miller.

    The Buffs dropped their third game in a row at Milan Puskar Stadium, falling 29-22 against the Mountaineers and slipping to 3-7 on a lost season.

    Yet it was the most fun the Buffs have been in what, a month? For the first time in what feels like forever, we saw snippets of last fall’s passing game. We saw the deep ball and the vertical passing game that scared the Big 12 half to death.

    2024: Shedeur to Travis Hunter.

    2025: Ju Ju to Omarion.

    Sanders said earlier this week that his decision to start Lewis, a true freshman, at quarterback was guided by “common sense.”

    Hindsight is 20/20, especially when a year goes off the rails. But what took so long?

    Coach Prime should’ve listened to his common sense sooner.

    While senior Kaidon Salter offered zero juice and minimal downfield threat at QB1, Lewis walked into coal country and looked the part. The Mountaineers blitzed from the left. They blitzed from the right. At one point, they even pulled out a piece of Ju Ju’s hair. Kid hung tough: 22 completions on 35 attempts for 299 yards and two touchdowns.

    Lewis to Miler was the combo CU has been waiting for all year. The chemistry was undeniable. The combo was almost unguardable: Miller finished with six catches for 131 receiving yards and a score.

    Ju Ju was at his strongest rolling and throwing to his left, hitting Miller for a 43-yard rainbow early, then Sincere Brown (19 yards) and Joseph Williams (13 yards) on CU’s second drive of the second quarter.

    And yes, some context applies here, too. West Virginia’s defense going into the weekend ranked last in the Big 12 in opponent passer rating (160.25) and 14th in the league in passing yards allowed per game (270.8). It was not unlike debuting a rookie hitter against the 2025 Rockies at Coors Field — a soft landing, a chance to build numbers and confidence.

    Still, you could see that confidence growing in real time. On the CU drive that ended the third quarter and opened the fourth, the freshman faced second-and-7 from the West Virginia 20. He scanned quickly, feeling the pocket constricting to his left and his right. It was the kind of bang-bang play that would’ve been a sure-fire sack earlier in the game, never mind earlier in the season. Lewis stepped up in the pocket and took off for a 3-yard gain, giving CU a third-and-4 at the home 17. CU eventually got a 35-yard field goal from Alejandro Mata to pull the Buffs to within 22-19 with 14:51 left to play in the tilt.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • 2026 Denver concert season taking shape: My Chemical Romance, Ed Sheeran and more

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    It’s not too early to start planning for 2026 concerts, given that tickets for some of these just-announced shows are already on sale as of this week. Here are seven big shows coming to metro Denver next year.

    Chris Pizzello, Invision/AP

    Cardi B performs at the BET Awards on Sunday, June 23, 2019, at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles.

    Cardi B

    Bronx hip hop queen Cardi B is taking to the road for her new album “Am I the Drama?” with a March 9, 2026, concert scheduled for Ball Arena. Tickets for that Little Miss Drama tour stop are available as of Monday, Sept. 22 via ticketmaster.com.

    Yonder Mountain String Band

    Colorado bluegrass favorites Yonder Mountain String Band are set to play Frisco’s 10 Mile Music Hall (Jan. 8, 2026), followed by a two-night run in Denver at Cervantes Masterpiece Ballroom, Jan. 9-10, 2026, as part of a winter tour that extends through March. Tickets are on sale at 10 a.m. Friday, Sept. 26, at etix.com. Prices are not yet available.

    Ed Sheeran

    British singer-songwriter Sheeran returns to Empower Field at Mile High on July 4, 2026, as part of his seemingly never-ending tour over the past three years (also part of the North American leg of his Loop Tour). The public on-sale period begins at 10 a.m. Friday, Sept. 26, via promoter AEG Presents’ axs.com. Ticket prices were not immediately available.

    Ray LaMontagne

    The 20th anniversary of this singer-songwriter’s album, “Trouble,” arrived back in 2024, but LaMontagne is still plotting his “Trouble” shows with a sentimental Red Rocks Amphitheatre concert on Aug. 26, 2026, with opener Weather Station. Tickets, $80-$272, are on sale at axs.com.

    My Chemical Romance

    This pop-punk act is joining dozens of other big names in playing one of its classic albums all the way through on tour — in this case, the moody 2006 chart-topper “The Black Parade.” The band’s nostalgia run has a wide canvas, with an Aug. 27, 2026, concert already set for the 50,000-seat Coors Field, including opening act and ’90s trailblazers The Breeders, which is enjoying its own comeback in recent years. Tickets are on sale at noon on Friday, Sept. 26 via ticketmaster.com. Prices are not yet available.

    Wil Baptiste, left, and Kev Marcus are the classical/hip hop duo Black Violin. (Colin Brennan, provided by Gold Mountain Entertainment)
    Wil Baptiste, left, and Kev Marcus are the classical/hip hop duo Black Violin. (Colin Brennan, provided by Gold Mountain Entertainment)

    Black Violin

    Downtown Denver’s historic Paramount Theatre already has an impressive 20 comedy, touring-celeb and music shows (including ABBA and Bee Gees tribute acts) booked for 2026. But our current favorite is Black Violin, the classical-meets-hip-hop duo of Lauderdale, Fla.’s Kev Marcus and Wil B. The act plays on April 21, 2026; tickets, $48.70, are on sale at ticketmaster.com.

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    John Wenzel

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  • Fan gives back Mike Trout’s 400th career home run ball, but not before getting something cool

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    Many people have a fond memory of playing catch with someone special — a parent, a grandparent, a sibling, a lifelong friend.

    A fan who sat 485 feet from home plate at Coors Field on Saturday probably never dreamed he’d be doing so with a future Hall of Famer.

    But thanks to his quick thinking, the fan, whose first name reportedly is Alberto, boldly asked Mike Trout for the favor after the Angels defeated the Colorado Rockies 3-0.

    What a cool request! Trout had already agreed to give Alberto — who attended the game with his wife and two children — three signed bats and two signed baseballs in exchange for the ball he crushed.

    While Trout signed the balls and bats in the dugout long after the game had ended, Alberto politely asked him while making a throwing motion with his right arm, “You mind if we play catch with a ball on the field?” the three-time American League Most Valuable Player didn’t hesitate, saying, “Yeah, you want to do it?” Alberto grabbed his glove.

    A post on the MLB.com X account shows Alberto tossing the ball back and forth to Trout, who catches it with his bare hands while wearing his cap backward. At one point, Trout says something to Alberto’s young son, who is watching in awe.

    And no wonder. Shortly before Trout hit No. 400, Alberto told Trout he’d turned to his son and said, “He’s got a lot of power.” No kidding, enough to drive the ball deep into the left-center field stands. Alberto caught the blast with his bare hands.

    It was Trout’s third home run of at least 485 feet since Statcast began tracking long balls in 2015, the most of any player. The 34-year old outfielder in his 15th season became the 59th MLB player to reach 400 homers and the 20th to hit them all with one franchise.

    The No. 400 ball clearly had more monetary value than the signed balls and bats, but nowhere near the value of a career 500 home run ball or, say, the home run the Dodgers’ Freddie Freeman hit to win Game 1 of the 2024 World Series — which was sold at auction for $1.56 million.

    The home run was meaningful to Trout, who admitted to feeling pressure as he approached the milestone. It was only his second long ball since Aug. 7.

    He also recognized that catching the ball and returning it to the player who belted it was meaningful to Alberto, who likely has already done what dads do — play catch with his children.

    “Once they get older and realize, that’ll be an awesome memory for the dad to tell the kids, to experience that,” Trout told reporters. “I know how I felt when I went to a ballgame with my dad.”

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    Steve Henson

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  • Tanner Gordon emerges as Rockies’ best starter as season nears close

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    Tanner Gordon was not on a lot of bingo cards to be the Rockies’ best starting pitcher at the end of the 2025 season. But here he is, working with poise, efficiency, confidence and a killer changeup.

    Not to mention a bit of bravado.

    “The No. 1 thing I’ve been impressed with is his ability to pitch inside and not be scared to do it,” interim manager Warren Schaeffer said Tuesday before the Rockies hosted the Marlins at Coors Field. “His stuff plays off of that.”

    The 27-year-old Gordon, slated to pitch Thursday against Miami, doesn’t have impressive raw numbers — 6-6, 6.14 ERA, 1.50 WHIP over 13 starts — but he’s on a nice run. And it doesn’t appear to be a fluke.

    “I love the way he competes,” veteran Rockies right-hander German Marquez said. “Lately, you have seen that. He’s shown that with his results. He can be a very good pitcher.”

    Last Friday, in Colorado’s 4-2 win over the Padres in San Diego, Gordon pitched six-plus innings, allowing one run on just two hits and one walk. He tied a career high with nine strikeouts. In Gordon’s last six starts, he’s 4-1 (the Rockies 5-1) with a 3.86 ERA, 33 strikeouts and eight walks.

    “It comes down to my mindset and getting more comfortable with myself,” Gordon said Tuesday. “It’s easy to try and go big picture and say, ‘My goal is to go seven innings tonight.’ But really, I’m learning to focus on one pitch at a time. I’m shrinking things down, trying to stay focused on small tasks. I think that has really helped.”

    So has his changeup, a pitch he throws 20.1% of the time, according to Baseball Savant. Gordon sets the pitch up with his 92.2 mph four-seam fastball (53% usage) and an 84.3 mph slider (26.2%). Gordon is not a flamethrower, but the fact that his 80.4 mph changeup crosses the plate almost 12 mph slower than his fastball makes it a terrific weapon.

    “I would love to be able to throw a changeup like Tanner’s,” veteran lefty Kyle Freeland said.

    Earlier in the season, Gordon’s changeup was not nearly as effective, and his fastball command was sporadic. A prime example: An Aug. 4 game against the Blue Jays at Coors when he was pounded for seven runs on 11 hits in just 2 2/3 innings. The Rockies lost 15-1, prompting Gordon to say, “You just have to be better and give your team a chance to win. I’m sure that the bullpen doesn’t like me right now.”

    But Gordon has pitched at least six innings in four of his last five starts, and command of his changeup is a big reason why he’s been effective.

    It’s often a tough pitch to master, but it’s been part of Gordon’s repertoire for a long time, and he made a name for himself using it at the University of Illinois.

    “I’ve thrown it for as long as I can remember,” he said. “All through college and way back to high school. I play catch with it a lot. I even play long-toss with it. I feel comfortable with the feel of it.

    “It’s not going to be great every single outing, and I still play around with it, tweak the grip a little bit.”

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • Hapless Rockies shut out for fourth straight time by Padres at Petco Park

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    The Rockies are zero for San Diego.

    The Padres shut them out again Thursday night at Petco Park, winning 2-0 and limiting the Rockies to four hits.

    On April 11-13, the Padres blanked Colorado three times at Petco, marking the first time in Rockies history that they were shut out in three consecutive games. Add in Thursday night’s game, and the Padres have outscored the Rockies 18-0 over four games at Petco in 2025.

    Compounding the Rockies’ offensive woes is the fact that they were shut out, 9-0, by the Dodgers in Los Angeles on Wednesday night, a game in which the Rockies struck out 17 times. What did the Rockies do for an encore? They whiffed 14 times Thursday night.

    The Rockies (40-107) have now lost 17 of their last 20 games, and all of that talk about progress and turning the corner during the second half of the worst season in franchise history rings hollow.

    Thursday night’s loss was, perhaps, more bitter than Wednesday’s because the Rockies received solid pitching from rookie starter McCade Brown and relievers Jaden Hill, Jimmy Herget, and Victor Vodnik.

    In his last start, Brown got the full Charlie Brown treatment. On Sept. 6 at Coors Field, the Padres knocked Brown’s socks off, scoring six runs on five hits in just 1 2/3 innings.

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • La Alma Lincoln Park residents weigh new Broncos stadium at Burnham Yard: ‘It’s going to change everything’

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    Two schools of thought flitter through the streets just behind the Denver Broncos’ planned future home, separated by just one block but standing an entire world apart.

    On a sunny Tuesday morning, 35-year-old Rita Guerrero stepped out from her door on North Mariposa Avenue, lively pup Olive barely contained by her leash. Guerrero bought her home in the La Alma Lincoln Park neighborhood five years ago, and smiled when she thinks of the wealth of possibilities that now exist a quarter mile away at the defunct Burnham Yard.

    The Broncos just announced their plans to construct a new stadium in her backyard, and it could mean a livelier neighborhood. And exciting features for families. And increased property values.

    “This is very exciting,” Guerrero beamed. “I’m very happy. It’ll be great for the team, great for the neighborhood. I really see that there’s, probably — I mean, there really can only be upside.”

    Broncos name Burnham Yard preferred site for new stadium development

    On a cloudy Tuesday afternoon, a few hundred feet away, 46-year-old Nicole Jones and 51-year-old Desiree Maestas crossed onto North Lipan Street, discussing the change to come. Jones has lived all her life a few houses up the block, and frowned when she thinks of the wealth of possibilities that now exist with the Broncos’ professed plan to develop at Burnham Yard.

    It could mean more traffic. And more construction. And increased property values.

    “I think it’s going to change everything,” Jones said. “Because everything’s going to go up. Especially in this neighborhood, everything’s going to go up. And a lot of us ain’t even going to be able to afford to live here anymore. Because the stadium is going to be right in our neighborhood. Right in our backyard.”

    “So, yeah,” she repeated, somber. “We’re not going to be able to afford to live here no more.”

    Residents of La Alma Lincoln Park who spoke to The Denver Post on Tuesday were split on the complicated reality that now awaits, after the Broncos officially announced that they’ve zeroed in on Burnham Yard as the planned site of a privately-financed mixed-use stadium district.

    Some residents lamented the change that continues to rattle the historic Denver neighborhood, one that has already experienced generations of displacement. Some residents championed the city’s efforts to keep the team local: they are the Denver Broncos, 39-year-old Barbara Ott emphasized from her porch, not the Lone Tree Broncos.

    The general median is a sort of cautious optimism, as community leader Simon Tafoya put it.

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    Luca Evans, Elizabeth Hernandez

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  • Rockies’ Kyle Freeland pitches eight brilliant innings in win over Padres days after ejection

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    Kyle Freeland wasn’t perfect, but he pitched a masterpiece on Friday night in the Rockies’ 3-0 victory over the Padres in front of 30,073 at Coors Field.

    Just days removed from throwing only eight pitches in his last outing, the Rockies’ veteran left-hander threw eight shutout innings, allowed just two hits, and tied a career-high with 10 strikeouts. Freeland did not walk a batter.

    He threw just 88 pitches, but the decision not to let him chase a complete game was likely because of his abbreviated start on Tuesday night against the Giants — one that saw him ejected without recording an out.

    Of course, nothing comes easy for the 101-loss Rockies. Closer Victor Vodnik gave up a walk and a single in the ninth before getting a flyout and a double-play grounder to third to notch his seventh save.

    The Rockies entered the night having lost 11 of their last 13 games, but led by Freeland and catcher Hunter Goodman, they put a crimp in the Padres’ playoff path. San Diego, in a race with the Dodgers for the National League West division title, lost its fifth game in a row.

    Freeland has never pitched a complete game. The closest he came was on July 9, 2017, when he pitched 8 1/3 no-hit innings against the White Sox, the longest no-hit bid for a Rockies pitcher at Coors Field in franchise history.

    Friday night, Freeland pitched a perfect game until Ramon Laureano ripped a one-out double to left in the fifth inning. No worries, he got Jackson Merrill to fly out to left and struck out Jose Iglesias with a wicked knuckle curve to end the inning.

    San Diego’s only other hit off Freeland was a two-out single by Jose Iglesias in the eighth.

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • Kyle Freeland on Rafael Devers home run trot that started brawl: “Extremely disrespectful”

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    Kyle Freeland barked, but the Rockies didn’t have enough bite.

    Falling behind 2-0 and losing their starter to a self-inflicted ejection eight pitches into the game, the Rockies never fully recovered Tuesday in a 7-4 loss to San Francisco — their 100th of the year.  That makes Colorado the first franchise since the 2011-13 Houston Astros to lose 100 games in three consecutive seasons.

    “Was tonight 100?” manager Warren Schaeffer said.

    With dozens of dogs among an announced Coors Field attendance of 18,934, the Giants scored all seven runs via the long ball, none more dramatic than the first. After Freeland served up a towering two-run shot to Rafael Devers two batters into the game, the Rockies lefty interrupted Devers’ slow home run trot, aggressively urging him to hurry it up.

    “Extremely disrespectful to show me up like that in the first inning after hitting a home run. Standing there, watching it, taking your sweet time getting down to first base,” Freeland said afterward, emphasizing that he would understand if the celebration occurred after a clutch home run in the late innings. “I’ve been in this league quite some time, and I know he has as well. I just find that extremely disrespectful, and I felt that I needed to let him know about that.”

    Devers hadn’t even reached first base yet. His freshly flipped bat barely had any time to cool down on the grass before tempers heated up around it. The former Red Sox slugger shouted back at Freeland and veered away from the base path. Dugouts and bullpens emptied.

    What followed probably wouldn’t qualify as a brawl according to the old-school definition of the word — but it did include a series of shoves, instigated by Giants first baseman Matt Chapman on Freeland. Then it was a mess of hands indistinguishable from one another. In the end, Freeland, Chapman and Giants shortstop Willy Adames (responsible for a second mini-skirmish) were thrown out.

    “I was slightly surprised to be ejected,” Freeland said. “I understand that I was the one who instigated it, so that right there is grounds for ejection. I understand that. Slightly surprised, but also not, because I understand the rules.”

    Devers was sent back to first base to belatedly finish his home run trot while Antonio Senzatela warmed up to replace Freeland, even though Freeland said afterward that Devers also shoved him.

    “I don’t know why Chapman and Adames got ejected. I’m assuming it was because they came up and shoved me,” Freeland said. “Devers also shoved me. That’s the spot that I don’t understand why he wasn’t ejected.”

    Schaeffer commended the umpires for how they handled the conflict, saying he expected Freeland to be ejected after the benches cleared. When asked if he thought Devers’ celebration was excessive, the Rockies manager said he didn’t see that part.

    “Happens a lot in today’s game, but those things are subjective,” Schaeffer said. “A guy like (Freeland) has been pitching a long time. I think he felt disrespected, and he did what he did. At the end of the day, when your starter doesn’t get an out in the first inning and he’s out of the game, that hurts the ballclub. That hurts the ballclub. And he knows that.”

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Antonio Senzatela blasted, Rockies hitters a no-show in 9-0 loss to Pirates

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    Pittsburgh is home to the “Immaculate Reception,” but there were no miracle endings for the Rockies on Friday night.

    The Pirates blanked them 9-0 at PNC Park, pounding starting right-hander Antonio Senzatela, though not quite like they did on Aug. 1 at Coors Field.

    In that wild game, the Rockies trailed 9-0 after the first inning, and Pittsburgh ravaged Senzatela for seven runs on eight hits and two walks in a mere two-thirds of an inning. But the Rockies rallied for a 17-16 walk-off victory.

    Friday night, Senzatela wasn’t good, but hung around for four innings, giving up five runs on eight hits. He walked three and struck out four. Veteran designated hitter Andrew McCutchen hit a pair of two-run doubles off Senzatela — in the first inning and also in the second.

    “The offspeed command, overall, I don’t think was good,” manager Warren Schaeffer told reporters in Pittsburgh. “When you don’t have that, you have to rely on the heater a little more. They got after the heater a little bit and they hit it hard.”

    Senzatela was coming off a strong start. Coming off the injured list, he pitched five scoreless innings vs. the Diamondbacks in Colorado’s 6-5 win at Coors Field. He allowed four hits with one walk (intentional), one hit batter and two strikeouts. But after Friday night’s loss, his ERA stands at 7.15.

    Keep in mind that the Rockies released veteran left-hander Austin Gomber on Friday. He had a 6.49 ERA, but he was scheduled to become a free agent at the end of this season. Senzatela, however, has one year remaining on his contract, and he’s guaranteed $12 million in 2026.

    In their Aug. 1  miracle comeback vs. Pittsburgh, the Rockies had 22 hits. Friday night, Rockies hitters were a no-show. While the Pirates had 14 hits, the Rockies managed only three and were shut out for the 12th time.

    There was no whiff of divine intervention, a la the 1972 AFC Divisional playoff game between the Raiders and Steelers at Three Rivers Stadium, when Hall of Fame running back Franco Harris caught a deflected pass for a touchdown in the closing seconds to lift the Steelers to a stunning 13-7 victory.

    Pirates young right-hander Braxton Ashcraft dominated the Rockies for five innings, allowing just one hit and one walk while striking out six.

    “Ashcraft was really good with the fastball-slider combo,” Schaeffer said.

    Pittsburgh rookie right-hander Bubba Chandler, making his big-league debut at age 22, pitched four scoreless innings, allowing two hits and striking out three.

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • 100 losses loom as Rockies’ offense no-shows in loss to Cardinals

    100 losses loom as Rockies’ offense no-shows in loss to Cardinals

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    LoDo, we have a problem.

    An ongoing problem to be precise.

    Playing at a hitter’s paradise, better known as Coors Field, the Rockies’ offense continues to underperform.

    The Rockies had nine mostly empty hits in a 5-2 loss to the Cardinals on Wednesday night. They were 1 for 6 with runners in scoring position and struck out 11 times.

    Fireworks came late with Brenton Doyle’s leadoff homer in the ninth off lefty reliever Matthew Liberatore. It was Doyle’s 23rd homer of the season, but his first since Aug. 29.

    Colorado, on course for its second straight 100-loss season, has scored three runs or fewer 35 times at home this season, extending a franchise record. The old mark was 31 times in 2011.

    “Offensively, it hasn’t been the year that we had hoped for,” manager Bud Black said. “When you start the season, you have expectations for your group. We had some guys take a step back, but we also had some guys take a step forward.

    “But this season … there haven’t been enough guys have the type of season we anticipated.”

    Black hopes the younger players will continue to grow, but knows the whole team needs to improve.

    “We have talked about this a lot,” he said. “We have to cut down on our strikeouts and we need a better two-strike approach. (Our) situational hitting needs to improve.

    “Tonight, again, we had double-digit strikeouts. We have to make sure that (improving the offense) is a huge priority going into next year, whether it’s personnel or whether it’s major adjustments.”

    With a 60-98 record, the Rockies must win three of their four remaining games to dodge 100 losses. Last year’s 103-loss season was the worst in franchise history.

    Cardinals right-hander Erick Fedde was in command for seven innings, scattering six hits, allowing one run, and fanning 10.

    Rockies starter Austin Gomber wasn’t great in his final start of the season, but he wasn’t as bad as the black-and-white box score will show: Four runs allowed on seven hits over five innings. He struck out three and didn’t walk any.

    Gomber took pride in the fact that he “went to the post” all season and his rigorous offseason routine kept his back healthy.

    “Compared to the last couple years I feel great,” he said. “My back feels great. Not one day this year did I wake up with a sore back or anything. That was nice and it shows that the adjustments I made paid off.”

    Wednesday night, the left-hander was victimized by a few hard hits balls and several hits that rolled to daylight.

    St. Louis scored a single run off Gomber in the second, third, fourth and fifth innings:

    • Thomas Saggese’s RBI double to drive in Ivan Herrera was the key hit of the second.

    • Masyn Winn led off the third with a triple off the right-field wall and scored on Brendan Donovan’s sacrifice fly.

    • Singles by Nolan Arenado, Saggese and Pedro Pages produced a run in the fourth.

    • In the fifth, Winn scorched a leadoff double off the right-field wall, advanced to third on Donovan’s groundout to second and scored on Paul Goldschmidt’s sacrifice fly to right.

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • Charlie Blackmon triples and doubles, but Cardinals cruise past Rockies

    Charlie Blackmon triples and doubles, but Cardinals cruise past Rockies

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    On cue, that old Blackmon magic showed up Tuesday night at Coors Field, but the Rockies’ chances of beating the Cardinals disappeared with the return of late-inning pratfalls.

    St. Louis scored a run in the seventh and four more in the eighth to turn a tight game into a 7-3 cruiser.

    Colorado lost when leading after six innings for the 15th time this season (a 43-15 record), the second-most such losses in the National League behind the Mets (61-16).

    A day after announcing his retirement, 14-year veteran Charlie Blackmon swung his magic wand and gave the Rockies a short-lived 3-2 lead in the fifth with an RBI triple into the right-center gap.

    Blackmon is 38, but he still has the wheels of a much younger player, and he burned up the basepath on his way to third. The triple was Blackmon’s team-leading fifth of the season and the 68th of his career, the most in franchise history and the most among all active major leaguers.

    Blackmon also led off the eighth with a double, but the Rockies failed to bring him home. Colorado has now scored three runs or fewer 34 times at home, extending a franchise record. The old mark was 31 times in 2011.

    The Cardinals turned four hits and a walk into four runs in the eighth off right-handed relievers Angel Chivilli and Jake Bird. The clutch hits were RBI singles by Jordan Walker and Victor Scott off Chivilli and a two-run double by Masyn Winn off Bird.

    “When you elevate the ball, you are putting yourself in danger,” Rockies manager Bud Black said, referring to Chivilli. “You look at the changeups to Walker and they were all elevated. That gave them the go-ahead run, at 4-3. And then they got the seeing-eye groundball from Scott — that’s baseball.”

    St. Louis tied the game, 3-3, in a bizarre seventh inning.

    Rockies starter Ryan Feltner, working on a fine game, left with cramping in his pitching arm while facing leadoff hitter Lars Nootbar. Feltner said after that game that he should be fine and expects to make his final start on Sunday in Colorado’s season finale against the Dodgers at Coors.

    Right-hander Victor Vodnik replaced Felnter in the middle of the at-bat and walked Nootbar before striking out Walker.

    Then pinch hitter Matt Carpenter crushed a double to right-center, advancing Nootbar to third. Winn hit a shot back to Vodnik, who caught Nootbar in a rundown, but the Rockies botched it when they failed to tag Nootbar and second baseman Aaron Schunk failed to cover the second-base bag. As Nootbar scampered back to third, Scott (pinch-running for Carpenter) scooted back from third base to second, and Winn ended up on first on a fielder’s choice.

    The Cardinals then cashed in on Alex Burleson’s RBI groundout to short.

    St. Louis struck first when they rocked Feltner for two runs on four hits in the third. Michael Siani led off with a single and stole second. Siani waltzed home on Winn’s two-run homer to left on Feltner’s hanging slider.

    The inning could have gotten away from Feltner — he gave up a one-out single to Paul Goldschmidt and a two-out single to Brendan Donovan — but Feltner struck out Nolan Arenado and got Ivan Herrera to fly out to right to put down the St. Louis rally.

    Feltner said he handles dangerous innings like that much better than he used to.

    “Those are situations where offenses can get a little bit more aggressive, and I had the tools, but I just didn’t have the consistency or wherewithal in terms of where we are in the game,” Feltner said. “I need to know that I have to make a pitch here, or that this guy will be aggressive here. Little things like that add up, so just having been through those experiences has helped me.”

    Colorado countered in the bottom of the third on Schunk’s solo homer off right-hander Michael McGreevy. It was Schunk’s second homer of the season. Schunk also hit an RBI infield single in the fifth, extending his hitting streak to six games. He’s batting .400 (10 for 25) through his last nine games.

    Feltner made another quality start, his third straight in September. He pitched six innings, allowing two runs on six hits. He walked only two. He has a 2.22 ERA in September and has posted a 3.21 ERA through 14 starts since June 26.

    “I have had a lot of help with (catcher Jacob) Stallings behind the plate, guiding me,” he said. “He’s helping me use my stuff in the best way possible. Also, I’m just feeling super sharp with all of my pitches and I’m able to land them or put them in the dirt for a chase. Throughout the season I think I’ve just gotten more sharp.”

    Wednesday’s pitching matchup

    Cardinals RHP Erick Fedde (8-9, 3.38 ERA) at Rockies LHP Austin Gomber (5-11, 4.67)

    6:40 p.m. Wednesday, Coors Field

    TV: Rockies.TV (streaming); Comcast/Xfinity (channel 1262); DirecTV (683); Spectrum (130, 445, 305, 435 or 445, depending on region).

    Radio: 850 AM, 94.1 FM

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • Rockies rattle Diamondbacks’ playoff hopes with 8-2 victory at Coors Field

    Rockies rattle Diamondbacks’ playoff hopes with 8-2 victory at Coors Field

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    Spoiler alert: Should the Diamondbacks fall out of the wild-card playoff race, they might point to this September series with the Rockies.

    Last year’s surprise National League pennant winner has owned the Rockies for the last two seasons. But these September Rockies aren’t those Rockies.

    They proved it again Tuesday night with an 8-2 romp over the D-backs at Coors Field. Colorado won Game 1 of the series, 3-2, on Monday night. The Rockies might still be roadkill away from LoDo, but they’re tough to beat at Coors, where they have a 19-12 record since July 4.

    The victory was the 535th for manager Bud Black, who bypassed Clint Hurdle for the most in Rockies history.

    “I’ve been a part of (milestones) before … it’s great,” Black said after veteran players Charlie Blackmon, Kyle Freeland, and German Marquez doused him with a celebratory beer-and-shaving-cream shower. “It’s great. It’s part of what makes us love the game. And when it’s over for all of us, it’s moments like this that you remember.”

    Colorado’s formula Tuesday night included an excellent start from right-hander Ryan Feltner, home runs from Ezequiel Tovar and Hunter Goodman, and timely hitting up and down the order. Colorado hit 5 for 14 with runners in scoring position.

    Arizona entered the night 8-3 in its last 11 games vs. the Rockies, and 18-6 in its last 24 dating back to the start of the 2023 season. But after losing two straight at Coors, they are now tied with the Mets for the NL’s final wild-card playoff spot.

    Feltner, his fastball humming, pitched 6 1/3 innings, giving up just one run on five hits. He struck out only two but got a lot of weak contact, and Colorado’s defense backed him up with stellar play.

    “I was on the same page with ‘Stahls’ all night, and we had great defense all night,” said Feltner, referring to veteran catch Jacob Stallings. “Just being able to trust Stahlings back there, and trusting the defense, it just frees me up. All of my pitches were working tonight and I just kept trying to pound the zone.”

    Second baseman Brendan Rodgers fed Tovar at short to turn a sweet double play to end the sixth, and center fielder Brenton Doyle, in the hunt for his second straight Gold Glove, made a running catch in center field to rob Eugenio Suarez of extra bases in the seventh.

    “It’s incredible,” Feltner said. “He floated like 20 feet in the air, it looked like from the pitcher’s mound.”

    Feltner is turning the corner. Since July 2, he’s posted a 3.25 ERA, with a 1.26 WHIP and a .230 batting average against. Plus, the Rockies have won in each of his last five starts.

    “The conviction with the fastball is key,” Black said. “When a pitcher believes in his fastball, and you have a good fastball, it makes the fastball better.

    “It’s still a fastball of 93-94-95-96, and he’s had it all year. But for whatever reason, his conviction with his fastball for the past month makes it better. He wills it to good spots. He wills it to get outs.”

    Still, Feltner had not won a decision at Coors since Aug. 9, 2022, vs. the Cardinals, an unwanted franchise record of 21 consecutive starts without a win at home. He was aware of the history, but not concerned.

    “It doesn’t matter to me, and I don’t look into that stuff,” he said. “I just go out there to try and win the game.”

    Second baseman Brendan Rodgers and shortstop Tovar turned a sweet double play to end the sixth, and center fielder Brenton Doyle made a running catch in center field to rob Eugenio Suarez of extra bases in the seventh.

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • Hunter Goodman’s career night, Austin Gomber’s strong start lead Rockies past Cubs

    Hunter Goodman’s career night, Austin Gomber’s strong start lead Rockies past Cubs

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    Hunter Goodman was working on a nice game when he stepped into the batters’ box in the bottom of the eighth inning.

    He made a career night with one more swing.

    Goodman’s go-ahead grand slam was the exclamation point on a 9-5 victory Friday night for the Colorado Rockies against the Chicago Cubs in front of 38,406 at Coors Field. It was Goodman’s second home run of the game and his third hit. He had seven runs batted in, the most by a Colorado hitter since Elias Diaz had seven in a Sept. 9, 2022 game against Arizona.

    The Rockies’ bullpen has been a strength of late, but Michael Busch crushed a three-run homer off reliever Victor Vodnik to pull the Cubs even in the eighth inning. Chicago had put two guys on with no outs twice since the first inning without scoring, but Busch left no doubt with a moonshot into the second deck in right field.

    Adalyn Gomber’s dad didn’t work out his first-inning issues while on leave for her birth, but he pieced together an excellent outing in his first start back.

    Austin Gomber allowed a pair of runs on three hits and a walk in the first inning. He’s now allowed 33 runs on 47 hits and 12 walks in 28 first innings, an ERA of 10.61.

    He now has a 2.84 ERA in the 130 innings he’s pitched after the first this season.

    Gomber entered the game with an MLB-high 27 home runs allowed. A big key to this one: He kept the ball in the field of play, while the Cubs pitchers could not.

    The Cubs had multiple chances against Gomber after the first inning, but he induced an inning-ending double play in the fourth and then got back-to-back-to-back weak fly ball outs after the first two guys reached base in the sixth.

    Goodman had the big hit during a three-run second inning to put the Rockies in front. His 430-foot, two-run homer to left field gave Colorado a 3-2 advantage. Brendan Rodgers got the Rockies on the board with a double down the left-field line that scored Ryan McMahon before Goodman’s two-out heroics.

    Goodman also pushed across the club’s fourth run in the fourth inning with a soft line drive to left that plated Michael Toglia. He didn’t miss another home run by much in the sixth inning, sending Cubs centerfielder Pete Crow-Armstrong toward the wall with a 401-foot out that would have been gone in five of the 30 MLB parks.

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    Corey Masisak

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  • Rockies cool off sizzling Padres with 3-2 win to take three-game series

    Rockies cool off sizzling Padres with 3-2 win to take three-game series

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    If the Padres fail to catch the Dodgers in the National League West, or should they slip in the wild-card race, they’ll no doubt mutter under their breath about those blankity-blank Rockies.

    The Rockies beat San Diego again Sunday afternoon at Coors Field, winning 3-2 behind timely hits and a stellar start from rookie Bradley Blalock. The Rockies won the three-game series, halting the Padres’ streak of eight consecutive series victories.

    Victor Vodnik shut down San Diego in the ninth for his ninth save.

    Colorado is tracking toward another 100-loss season, but it went 8-5 vs. the Padres this season. The Padres entered Sunday’s game having won 20 of their last 24 games.

    Colorado center fielder Brenton Doyle’s leadoff triple off of reliever Bryan Hoeing ignited the Rockies’ game-clinching two-run sixth. With one out, San Diego decided to intentionally walk the dangerous Michael Toglia, put runners on the corners, and pitch to slow-footed catcher Jacob Stallings.

    The move backfired. Stallings punched a single to right, and when David bobbled the ball for an error, Toglia raced to third. Toglia scored on Sam Hilliard’s groundout to second for a 3-1 Colorado lead.

    Manny Machado’s big swing cut the lead to 3-2 with a leadoff homer off Tyler Kinley in the eighth. Kinley left a hanging slider over the heart of the plate and Machado ripped it down the left-field line for his 19th homer.

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • Red-hot Brendan Rodgers sparks Rockies’ 7-3 win over Padres

    Red-hot Brendan Rodgers sparks Rockies’ 7-3 win over Padres

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    Brendan Rodgers had another hot August night, and the Rockies cooled off the sizzling Padres.

    Rodgers’ three-run, first-inning homer sparked the Rockies’ 7-3 victory Friday at Coors Field. San Diego, trying to topple the Dodgers from the National League West throne, came into the game having won 19 of its previous 22 games.

    Rodgers extended his hitting streak to 10 games and is hitting .392 this month, with six doubles, three homers and a 1.115 OPS.

    His 10th homer of the season was the catalyst to Colorado’s four-run first. Rodgers blasted a 77.3 mph knuckleball from right-hander Matt Waldron 439 feet and deep into the left-field bleachers.

    “It’s been fun,” Rodgers said. “I usually do struggle in August. But I talked to my hitter guy and some people I trust a lot with the developmental part of the game.  So I decided to trust it and just keep going.”

    Manager Bud Black is thrilled with Rodgers’ production and his ability to “go to the post” as the season heads into its final weeks.

    “He’s driving the ball better, and we’re seeing him hit to the gaps and send the ball over the fence,” Black said. “His swing is crisp with some bat speed to it.

    “And what’s good about it for me, and to the coaching staff, is that it’s happening in the dog days of August, and it’s happening when guys are tired. It’s happening at the time of year when you really have to fight through some things, physically and mentally. This is a tough time for all players. I’m proud of Brendan.”

    Rodgers had plenty of help Friday night. Rookie Jordan Beck (3-for-4) singled in the second and waltzed home on Charlie Blackmon’s eighth homer of the season. In the sixth, Beck drove in Michael Toglia with a single to right. Toglia led off with a hustle double to right.

    Blackmon’s homer was his first since July 22 vs. Boston. His 223 career home runs are four shy of tying Carlos Gonzalez for fifth in franchise history.

    Colorado right-hander Cal Quantrill, making his first start since Aug. 4 because he was sidelined with forearm soreness, turned in a workmanlike, five-inning start.

    “Early on, I was a little tentative and I made some bad pitches in the first and second,” Quantrill said. “But I think we settled in after that. I thought (catcher Jacob Stallings) called a good game, and we kept mixing it up just enough. We didn’t rely too heavily on the fastball or the splitter, we just had a nice change of pace.

    “It probably won’t be my best start ever, but we’ve talked about the importance of winning at home. That’s a team that’s really hot right now and we beat them.”

    Quantrill is 4-2 with a 3.47 ERA in 10 starts at Coors, the seventh pitcher in franchise history to post a sub-3.50 ERA through his first 10 starts in LoDo as a member of the Rockies. The others are Austin Gomber, Kyle Freeland, Tyler Anderson, Juan Nicasio, Jeff Francis and Denny Stark.

    All three runs Quantrill gave up came on home runs — a two-run blast by Ha-Seong Kim in the second and a leadoff blast by Xander Bogaerts in the fourth.

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • Rockies place Kris Bryant on injured list for third time this season

    Rockies place Kris Bryant on injured list for third time this season

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    The Rockies’ return on investment on Kris Bryant continues to dwindle.

    Colorado placed the often-hurt Bryant on the 10-day injured list on Monday for the third time this season, this time with a back strain as the outfielder/first baseman’s arthritic back continues to be an issue.

    Bryant, who missed 31 games in April/May with a back strain and then 43 games in June/July with a rib/oblique issue, is batting .218 with two homers, a .301 slugging and -0.7 WAR in 2024.

    The Rockies’ highest-paid player with a $28 million salary this year, Bryant is under contract on a seven-year, $182 million deal through 2028. Colorado’s largest free-agent contract in club history has been a bust to this point, as Bryant’s first two seasons in LoDo were also hampered by injuries. He’s played just 36% of the Rockies’ games while in purple pinstripes with 17 total homers.

    Bryant’s presence on the roster could soon become an albatross, especially with the Rockies trying to groom younger players at first base (Michael Toglia) and in the corner outfield (Hunter Goodman, and Jordan Beck until he got hurt) amid their rebuild.

    In corresponding roster moves on Monday, Colorado recalled Beck from Triple-A Albuquerque as well as right-hander Bradley Blalock from Double-A Hartford.

    The rookie Beck hasn’t played in the majors since breaking his hand while diving for a ball on May 25 at Coors Field, but has been hitting well with the Isotopes since getting healthy again. Blalock appeared in one game for the Brewers earlier this season, and has a 6.17 ERA in two starts with Hartford. He is set to start on Monday against the Diamondbacks in Arizona, his first MLB start.

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    Kyle Newman

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  • Benches clear in Rockies-Red Sox game at Coors Field

    Benches clear in Rockies-Red Sox game at Coors Field

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    On a 93-degree Wednesday afternoon at Coors Field, tempers boiled over between the visiting Red Sox and Rockies.

    Colorado right-hander Cal Quantrill escaped a jam in the fourth inning by getting Reese McGuire to fly out to center fielder Brenton Doyle for the third out. Quantrill, a demonstrative player, pumped his arms to celebrate and then exchanged heated words with McGuire as McGuire ran up the line.

    The two players moved toward each other, and players from both benches and bullpens rushed onto the field. Colorado catcher Jacob Stallings got between Quantrill and McGuire.

    No punches were thrown and no one was ejected. Colorado was leading 8-2 at the time of the incident. It scored five runs in the bottom of the fifth to take a 13-3 lead.

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    Patrick Saunders

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  • Rockies’ rookie Jordan Beck breaks hand in loss to Phillies

    Rockies’ rookie Jordan Beck breaks hand in loss to Phillies

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    Rockies rookie outfielder Jordan Beck broke a bone in his left hand in the Rockies’ 8-4 loss to the Phillies Saturday night at Coors Field.

    Beck, 23, jammed his left (glove) hand while making an excellent diving catch on Nick Castellano’s sinking line drive in left field at the end of the first inning. Beck was in obvious pain when he ran off the field.

    Sean Bouchard will likely be called up from Triple-A Albuquerque to replace Beck on the big-league roster.

    Beck is currently ranked by MLB Pipeline as the Rockies’ No. 4 prospect and the 65th-best overall prospect in baseball.

    Manager Bud Black said during his postgame press conference that Beck had broken his hand but did not elaborate. Black said he did not think Beck had broken his hand when the injury occurred.

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    Patrick Saunders

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