ReportWire

Tag: Francisco Lindor

  • A closer look at the pitches by Clase, Ortiz cited in sporting gambling indictment

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK (AP) — Cleveland Guardians pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz were indicted Sunday on charges they took bribes from sports bettors to throw specific pitches that would trigger winnings on in-game prop bets.

    Prosecutors identified pitches from Clase and Ortiz that helped two unnamed gamblers from their native Dominican Republic win at least $460,000. This included throwing pitches intentionally outside of the strike zone or within certain velocity ranges. Here’s a closer look at those pitches.

    Emmanuel Clase

    May 19, 2023

    The indictment cites this outing without a photo of the specific pitch, saying the scheme included a bet of about $27,000 that Clase would throw a pitch of greater than 94.95 mph. Clase began with a 98.5 mph cutter to the New York Mets’ Starling Marte that was low and inside in the 10th inning. Marte flied out on the next pitch, but the Mets rallied for a 10-9 win on RBI singles by Francisco Alvarez and Francisco Lindor. Clase took the loss.

    June 3, 2023

    The indictment cited bets of about $38,000 for a ball or hit by pitch and velocity slower than 94.95 mph. An 89.4 mph slider to Minnesota’s Ryan Jeffers bounced well short of home plate starting the ninth inning and hit catcher Mike Zunino near a shoulder, leading an athletic trainer to check on the catcher. Jeffers struck out four pitches later and Clase got the save in a 4-2 win.

    June 7, 2023

    The indictment cited bets of about $58,000 for a ball or hit by pitch and velocity slower than 94.95 mph. Clase started the ninth inning with a 91.4 mph slider to Boston’s Jarren Duran that was caught just above the dirt. Duran walked on four pitches and was stranded as Clase got the save in a 5-3 win.

    April 12, 2025

    The indictment cited bets of about $15,000 for a ball or hit by pitch and velocity slower than 98.95 mph. An 89.4 mph slider to Kansas City’s Bobby Witt Jr. bounced opening the ninth inning. Witt singled three pitches later, starting a two-run, ninth-inning rally in the Guardians’ 6-3 win.

    May 11, 2025

    The indictment cited bets of about $11,000 for a ball or hit by pitch. A 99.1 mph cutter to Philadelphia’s Max Kepler was in the dirt starting the ninth inning. Kepler grounded out five pitches later and the Phillies went on to win 3-0.

    May 13, 2025

    The indictment cited bets of about $3,500 for a ball or hit by pitch and velocity slower than 99.45 mph. A 89.1 mph slider to Milwaukee’s Jake Bauers bounced opening the ninth inning. Bauers struck out five pitches later and Clase got the save in a 2-0 win.

    May 17, 2025

    The indictment cited bets of about $10,000 for a ball or hit by pitch and velocity slower than 97.95 mph. An 87.5 mph slider to Cincinnati’s Santiago Espinal bounced starting the eighth inning. Espinal singled four pitches later. Clase was relieved by Joey Castillo with two outs and two on and got a strikeout in a game the Reds won 4-1.

    May 28, 2025

    The indictment cites the outing without a photo of the specific pitch, saying the scheme included bets of about $4,000 that a pitch would be a ball or hit batter. Clase started the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Andy Pages with a slider that bounced just behind the plate, but Pages swung and missed. Pages grounded out two pitches later to start the ninth and Clase got the save in a 7-4 win. The indictment says a bettor sent Clase a text with a GIF of a man hanging himself with toilet paper and Clase responded with a GIF of a sad puppy dog face.

    Luis Ortiz

    June 15, 2025

    The indictment cited bets of about $13,000 that a pitch would be a ball. A first-pitch 86.7 mph slider to Seattle’s Randy Arozarena bounced starting the second inning. Arozarena walked on five pitches and scored the game’s first run on Miles Mastrobuoni’s RBI single in a five-run inning of a game the Mariners won 6-0.

    June 27, 2025

    The indictment cited bets of about $18,000 that a pitch would be a ball. A first-pitch 86.7 mph slider to St. Louis’ Pedro Pagés bounced and went to the backstop opening the third inning. Pagés homered two pitches later for the game’s first run in a three-run inning, and the Cardinals won 5-0.

    ___

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Instant observations: Francisco Lindor’s grand slam sends Phillies home in NLDS loss to Mets

    Instant observations: Francisco Lindor’s grand slam sends Phillies home in NLDS loss to Mets

    [ad_1]

    It’s really hard to win a World Series. The Phillies have been around for 141 years and have just two of them.

    Philadelphia won’t win a third this year. Even though at times it felt inevitable. 

    They faltered in predictable ways in Queens Wednesday night, losing in four games to the rival New York Mets in a 4-1 defeat that was preventable in a bevy of ways.

    It was mismanaged. The pitching was horrendous throughout. The hitting was even worse. The fielding was subpar. Or maybe the Mets are just a team of destiny.

    Baseball is over in Philly and a long (much longer than expected) offseason awaits. 

    If you’re a glutton for punishment and want to re-live the torture, here’s one last look at the good, the bad, and some thoughts on the big picture for this team moving forward:

    The good

    • I am tempted to skip this section entirely. But the Phillies kept fighting (or some of them did). Nick Castellanos has been a total beast in this series and he showed grit with a single in the eighth that sort of gave the Phillies hope (trailing by three). It was just for fun, as he was stranded there.

    • Ranger Suárez’s start Wednesday was one of the most bizarre I have ever seen — playoffs or regular season. He loaded the bases two innings in a row, allowed nine baserunners, struck out eight, and somehow didn’t allow a run. He bent, a lot, but did not break. And while he didn’t go as deep into the game as the other starters usually do, he did create a bridge to the Phillies’ top relievers who would subsequently bail him out. Jeff Hoffman inherited two runners from Suárez with one out in the fifth and didn’t allow them to score. But then he ruined the season (we’ll get to that).

    Suárez got 12 swings and misses from Mets batters, many of them from his curveball which was giving New York hitters fits. The only number that matters is the one under “runs,” and by that measure, the Phillies’ fourth starter got the job done.

    • A little good luck helped the Phillies to get on the board first, when a Bryce Harper walk and Castellanos double set the table for an Alec Bohm fielders choice that was weakly hit and Mark Vientos couldn’t handle it, plating Harper for a 4th inning lead, 1-0. It was the first run scored in the first five innings of a game this series since Kyle Schwarber’s leadoff home run in the opener back on Saturday. It was ugly, but a run is a run.

    The bad

    • Carlos Estévez surrendered a grand slam to Francisco Lindor in the sixth inning that basically ended the Phillies’ season. 

    It wasn’t completely his fault — Hoffman left the bases loaded for him. And manager Rob Thomson let Hoffman stay in to load the bases. The Phillies’ hitters posted just one run up to that point in the ballgame. But the Mets cashed in on their third bases-loaded opportunity. It’s playing with fire when you toss around as many baserunners as the Phillies did Wednesday — 15 in all. The implosion was inevitable. As was their season ending with a whimper.

    • Schwarber got a chance at the plate as the tying run in the ninth, after a pair of Edwin Díaz walks, but he struck out and the Mets flooded the field to celebrate.

    • I really wasn’t sure whether to put Suárez’s first inning under the good or the bad. He threw 30 pitches, and allowed two hits and a walk — but was able to wiggle his way out of the early jam with a pair of strikeouts to keep the Mets off the board. His extended workload in the frame all but assured a lot of bullpen reliance in this one.

    • Definitely belonging under the bad category is Bohm’s misfielding of a chopper that could have been a double play, and should definitely have been at least one out. He missed a tag on the runner crossing from second to third, and after his bobbling of the baseball, threw wide of Harper at first, who was unable to make the force out. Another Bohm misstep came an inning later when a dribbler to third wound up as a base hit as he wasn’t able to maneuver a throw. A slicker infielder turns two there, or at least gets one out on the play. Suárez got out of the jam anyway.

    When the Phillies look for upgrades this offseason, they might have to address third base. 

    • Hoffman might have pitched himself out of a job. After tight-roping a Suárez jam in the fifth, he proceeded to give up a hit, a walk and a hit batter — with two wild pitches mixed in — to load the bases with nobody out in the bottom of the sixth. He was lifted with one out, and responsible for all three runners. A grand slam came minutes later. All of this in addition to him having two dreadful outings already in the NLDS. Thomson has shown a ton of faith in Hoffman and it burned him big time repeatedly in this series.

    • It’s really hard to win baseball games when you’re repeatedly playing from behind. We mentioned it earlier, but just two runs over the first five innings of four games in total is unacceptable. They have one of the most talent-laden tops of the order in all of baseball and they have been too often unheard from until it’s too late. 

    Harper hit a double in the sixth — and Bohm walked — and it amounted to absolutely nothing. Thomson left Bryson Stott in with two men on to face a lefty and he grounded out to end the inning.

    • You don’t want to have too many guys slumping at once in the postseason. We’ve documented Bohm’s issues on offense — he is still working out of it. Add J.T. Realmuto to the list. The Phils’ catcher went 0-for-11 for the series and had some missed opportunities with runners on base Wednesday.

    The big picture

    • I want to use this section to share a few stray thoughts from Wednesday’s game and the playoffs at large. It’s hard to make sense of what happened during this brief playoff run. The five-day layoff was definitely one of the biggest reasons for blame. Teams all across the league have seen bye-winning division winners tossed aside by upstart Wild Cards. At the same time, the Phillies have not been the same team since the All-Star break and that is undeniable. It’s really hard to be the best team in baseball for seven straight months, and the Phillies held the title for about five of those. 

    I’m not entirely sure what the solution is. The starting pitching was among the best in baseball, the bullpen was much improved and mostly reliable. And the offense was laden with stars with proven track records. Show me a baseball team without any flaws.

    Very few of the Phillies’ stars came to play when the season changed into the fall. Are wholesale changes needed to the roster? Or are they still only a piece or two away?

    • The Mets fans are very knowledgeable and they care a lot about their team, but there is a huge difference between the behavior in the stands at Citi Field and at Citizens Bank Park. The Phillies fans are diehards. They breathe baseball. Every single excuse they can muster to cheer on their club they do, and they do it loud. At Citi, there were some tense and important moments and it was pretty chill. Even after Lindor’s grand slam and a 4-1 lead, six outs from clinching, the New York fans were quietly in their seats. Ask anyone who’s been to a playoff game in South Philly, it’s never chill. The fans deserve better, and definitely deserved to see more baseball this October.

    The Athletic ranked postseason atmospheres, and the Phillies faithful landed second behind the Padres. I was in San Diego in 2022 and their fans were probably on par with Philadelphia’s. I was impressed but I didn’t think they were louder. Either way, the Phillies ranked second and the Mets sixth. 

    • Wednesday night’s game marked the 34th postseason game for the Phillies over the last three Octobers, the most in the majors. There hasn’t been a parade down Broad Street, but this team has become reliably active in the playoffs and that doesn’t look likely to change in the near future with the current team tentpoles in place for years to come.


    Follow Evan on Twitter:@evan_macy

    Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice Sports

    [ad_2]

    Evan Macy

    Source link

  • Francisco Lindor, Mets drop series opener to Carlos Correa, Twins after rookie blunders

    Francisco Lindor, Mets drop series opener to Carlos Correa, Twins after rookie blunders

    [ad_1]

    MINNEAPOLIS — The baby Mets have presented well over the last week, but it’s clear there is still a learning curve.

    The Mets dropped the first game of a series against the Minnesota Twins 5-2 on Friday night at Target Field after a defensive blunder in the bottom of the seventh squandered a competitive performance by right-hander Kodai Senga. With the game tied at 2-2 and Sean Reid-Foley trying to keep it tied, Brett Baty and Francisco Alvarez couldn’t connect.

    With runners on first and second and none out, the Twins executed a double steal. Andrew Stevenson overran the base and stumbled on a wild pitch, giving Alvarez time to throw him out at third.

    But Alvarez, the rookie catcher, overthrew Baty at third. Baty’s throw home went wide and Stevenson came home to give Minnesota the lead. If the Mets are looking for things to improve on in the future, holding runners on base should be near the top of the list.

    “He had trouble finding the ball and thought he had a play at third,” said manager Buck Showalter. “He’s out at the plate if we make the throw. It kind of starts with holding the runner to start with.”

    Reid-Foley (0-1) got two outs, but the AL Central-leading Twins (74-67) rallied. Things fell apart for the Mets (64-76).

    Royce Lewis doubled home Willi Castro. The Mets went to the bullpen for Grant Hartwig and Max Kepler singled to center to score Lewis.

    Then came Carlos Correa, the shortstop who was supposed to be a Met this season.

    Correa’s 12-year $315 million deal fell apart because of concerns about his physical. Negotiations dragged out and he ended up right back where he started last season in Minnesota. The rookie right-hander worked the count full on Correa before the shortstop took a cutter low and inside and pulled it down the left-field line for a double.

    However, this time the damage was contained. Hartwig got Alex Kirilloff to ground out to end the inning.

    Correa did enough damage earlier in the night when he homered off the pitcher that he once expected to be his teammate. The Mets went up 2-1 in the top of the fourth on a two-run double off left-hander Dallas Keuchel by Correa’s friend and Puerto Rican countrymate Francisco Lindor.

    But Correa took Senga deep in the bottom of the inning to tie the game at 2-2.

    It was the only real blemish on an otherwise solid outing by right-hander Senga, who remained competitive throughout. He was undeterred when he missed his spots and when one pitch wasn’t working, he went to another.

    “I know I wasn’t my best, but I really wanted to stay out there and go as long as I could,” Senga said through translator Hiro Fujiwara. “Just mixing in a lot of pitches. I had a lot of missed pitches too, but changing velocity and changing location and doing whatever I can to stay out there.”

    The Mets have been conscious of his innings, not wanting to push him past a certain limit of what he’s been used to in Japan. However, he used 101 pitches through six innings with four walks driving up his pitch count. Minnesota took two runs off of Senga on four hits and he struck out five, exiting with the game tied 2-2.

    The Twins scored one in the bottom of the first inning before Senga settled into the game. This is what the Mets have discovered about Senga — he doesn’t give in on nights when he doesn’t have a feel for all of his pitches.

    “Just because I don’t feel good or I’m not feeling my best, it doesn’t mean I just fold and give up the game,” Senga said through Fujiwara. “I’m given four or five days to prepare for this game and I think it’s my job to stay out there and make the game winnable. I take pride in that, yeah.”

    Senga’s season ERA is down to 3.07. He’ll receive some NL Rookie of the Year consideration, and some of it will likely be because of the way he has been able to persevere through tough outings during his first season in North America.

    “A lot of times, those types of outings, where you’re not carrying the normal command of your pitches, are more impressive,” Showalter said.

    [ad_2]

    Abbey Mastracco

    Source link

  • Today in History: November 14, crash kills Marshall team

    Today in History: November 14, crash kills Marshall team

    [ad_1]

    Today in History

    Today is Monday, Nov. 14, the 318th day of 2022. There are 47 days left in the year.

    Today’s Highlight in History:

    On Nov. 14, 1970, a chartered Southern Airways DC-9 crashed while trying to land in West Virginia, killing all 75 people on board, including the Marshall University football team and its coaching staff.

    On this date:

    In 1851, Herman Melville’s novel “Moby-Dick; Or, The Whale” was published in the United States, almost a month after being released in Britain.

    In 1910, Eugene B. Ely became the first aviator to take off from a ship as his Curtiss pusher rolled off a sloping platform on the deck of the scout cruiser USS Birmingham off Hampton Roads, Virginia.

    In 1915, African-American educator Booker T. Washington, 59, died in Tuskegee, Alabama.

    In 1940, during World War II, German planes destroyed most of the English town of Coventry.

    In 1965, the U.S. Army’s first major military operation of the Vietnam War began with the start of the five-day Battle of Ia Drang. (The fighting between American troops and North Vietnamese forces ended on Nov. 18 with both sides claiming victory.)

    In 1969, Apollo 12 blasted off for the moon.

    In 1972, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above the 1,000 level for the first time, ending the day at 1,003.16.

    In 1973, Britain’s Princess Anne married Captain Mark Phillips in Westminster Abbey. (They divorced in 1992, and Anne remarried.)

    In 1996, singer Michael Jackson married his plastic surgeon’s nurse, Debbie Rowe, in a ceremony in Sydney, Australia. (Rowe filed for divorce in 1999.)

    In 1997, a jury in Fairfax, Virginia, decided that Pakistani national Aimal Khan Kasi (eye-MAHL’ kahn KAH’-see) should get the death penalty for gunning down two CIA employees outside agency headquarters. (Five years later on this date, Aimal Khan Kasi was executed.)

    In 2013, former Boston crime boss James “Whitey” Bulger was led off to prison to begin serving a life sentence at 84 for his murderous reign in the 1970s and ’80s. (Bulger was killed Oct. 30, 2018, hours after arriving at a federal prison in West Virginia.)

    In 2020, Donald Trump supporters unwilling to accept Democrat Joe Biden’s election victory gathered in cities across the country including Washington, D.C., where thousands rallied; after night fell in the nation’s capital, demonstrators favoring Trump clashed in the streets with counterprotesters, resulting in injuries to demonstrators and police officers and charges against nearly two dozen people.

    Ten years ago: President Barack Obama, in his first news conference since winning a second term, challenged congressional Republicans to let taxes rise on the wealthiest Americans, saying that would ease the threat of another recession as the nation faced a “fiscal cliff.” Israel said it had killed the leader of Hamas’ military wing in a wave of airstrikes launched in response to days of rocket fire out of Hamas-ruled Gaza. Baseball’s Cy Young Awards went to Tampa Bay’s David Price in the American League and R.A. Dickey of the New York Mets in the National League.

    Five years ago: Three UCLA basketball players who’d been detained in China on suspicion of shoplifting returned home; they were then indefinitely suspended from the team. Papa John’s Pizza apologized for comments made by CEO John Schnatter (SHNAH’-tur), who had blamed sluggish pizza sales on NFL players kneeling during the national anthem. House Speaker Paul Ryan said the House would require anti-harassment and anti-discrimination training for all members and their staffs; the announcement came hours after two female lawmakers spoke about sexual misconduct involving sitting members of Congress.

    One year ago: A 9-year-old Dallas boy became the youngest person to die from injuries sustained during a crowd surge at the Astroworld music festival in Houston nine days earlier; a family attorney said Ezra Blount died at a Houston hospital, where he’d been placed in a medically induced coma after he suffered serious injuries in the crush of fans during a performance by rapper Travis Scott. (The crowd surge left 10 people dead.) Libya’s election agency said Seif al-Islam, the son and one-time heir apparent of late Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi, had announced his candidacy for the country’s December presidential election.

    Today’s Birthdays: Actor Kathleen Hughes is 94. Former NASA astronaut Fred Haise is 89. Composer Wendy Carlos is 83. Britain’s King Charles III is 74. Rock singer-musician James Young (Styx) is 73. Singer Stephen Bishop is 71. Blues musician Anson Funderburgh is 68. Pianist Yanni is 68. Former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is 68. Former presidential adviser Valerie Jarrett is 66. Actor Laura San Giacomo (JEE’-ah-koh-moh) is 61. Actor D.B. Sweeney is 61. Rapper Reverend Run (Run-DMC) is 58. Actor Patrick Warburton is 58. Rock musician Nic Dalton is 58. Country singer Rockie Lynne is 58. Pop singer Jeanette Jurado (Expose) is 57. Retired MLB All-Star pitcher Curt Schilling is 56. Rock musician Brian Yale is 54. Rock singer Butch Walker is 53. Actor Josh Duhamel (du-MEHL’) is 50. Rock musician Travis Barker is 47. Contemporary Christian musician Robby Shaffer is 47. Actor Brian Dietzen is 45. Rapper Shyheim is 45. Rock musician Tobin Esperance (Papa Roach) is 43. Actor Olga Kurylenko is 43. Actor-comedian Vanessa Bayer is 41. Actor Russell Tovey is 41. New York Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor is 29. Actor Cory Michael Smith is 36. Actor Graham Patrick Martin is 31. NHL forward Taylor Hall is 31.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Musgrove pitches hometown Padres past Mets 6-0 and into NLDS

    Musgrove pitches hometown Padres past Mets 6-0 and into NLDS

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK — Joe Musgrove brushed off chants of “Cheater!” after a bizarre spot check by umpires on the mound, pitching his hometown San Diego Padres into the next round of the playoffs Sunday night with seven innings of one-hit ball in a 6-0 victory over the New York Mets.

    Trent Grisham hit an RBI single and made a terrific catch in center field that helped the Padres take the best-of-three National League wild-card series 2-1. Austin Nola and Juan Soto each had a two-run single.

    San Diego advanced to face the top-seeded Los Angeles Dodgers in a best-of-five Division Series beginning Tuesday — ensuring the Padres will play in front of their home fans in the postseason for the first time in 16 years when they return to Petco Park for Game 3.

    “We know that. We would love for them to be able to see some postseason games,” manager Bob Melvin said Sunday afternoon. “To an extent, we feel like they’re a part of us.”

    It was the fifth time the Padres have won a playoff series. They took a first-round matchup against St. Louis in their own ballpark with no fans permitted after the pandemic-shortened 2020 season before being swept in the Division Series by the eventual World Series champion Dodgers.

    For the Mets, a scintillating season ended with a whimper at home in front of empty seats. Baseball’s biggest spenders won 101 games — the second-most in franchise history — but were unable to hold off Atlanta in the NL East after sitting atop the division for all but six days.

    New York was up by 10 1/2 games on June 1 and seven on Aug. 10 before finally ceding control last weekend. The defending World Series champions snatched away their fifth consecutive division title and a first-round playoff bye on the strength of a head-to-head sweep in Atlanta — and the Mets never fully recovered.

    New York ace Max Scherzer got rocked in a Game 1 loss to San Diego and, after the Mets won Game 2 behind Jacob deGrom to stave off elimination, they mustered almost nothing against Musgrove and finished with one hit in the loss.

    No. 3 starter Chris Bassitt lasted just four innings, giving up three runs and three hits with three costly walks to batters near the bottom of the order.

    Pete Alonso’s leadoff single in the fifth and Starling Marte’s walk to start the seventh were the only baserunners permitted by Musgrove in his first postseason start.

    Robert Suarez and Josh Hader finished up for the Padres.

    Musgrove grew up a Padres fan in the San Diego suburbs and pitched the franchise’s first no-hitter last year in his second start with the team.

    He was working on a one-hitter and warming up for the sixth inning Sunday when Mets manager Buck Showalter came out of the dugout and spoke to first base umpire Alfonso Marquez.

    All six umps huddled and then went to the mound as Marquez, the crew chief, felt Musgrove’s glove, cap — even his ears — apparently searching for any illegal sticky substances.

    The spin rate was up on all six of Musgrove’s pitches. Umpires let him continue, and he worked a 1-2-3 sixth.

    Fans yelled “Cheater!” at Musgrove, a member of the 2017 Houston Astros World Series champions that were found by Major League Baseball to have stolen signs illegally to help their hitters.

    The Astros’ cheating scandal rocked the sport. Musgrove has said he feels uncomfortable wearing his championship ring and wants “one that feels earned” with the Padres.

    “I guarantee Musgrove has Red Hot on his ears,” Milwaukee outfielder Andrew McCutchen tweeted. “Pitchers use it as mechanism to stay locked in during games. It burns like crazy and IDK why some guys thinks it helps them but in no way is it `sticky.′ Buck is smart tho. Could be trying to just throw him off.”

    THINKING OF MR. PADRE

    During batting practice, San Diego second baseman Jake Cronenworth wore an old-school Tony Gwynn No. 19 uniform T-shirt, a giveaway at Petco Park one day this season.

    “We all got ‘em,” Cronenworth said. “Usually a lot of us wear ’em, but I think everybody’s wearing hoodies today.”

    Cronenworth, however, figured this was a day to salute the late Padres Hall of Famer.

    “It was just in my locker and I brought it with me for a reason, so I decided I’d wear it,” he said. “Tony was one of the best, so give us some support from up above.”

    TRAINER’S ROOM

    Mets: Francisco Lindor was shaken up after fouling a ball off the inside of his right knee in the fourth. As the star shortstop was checked by an athletic trainer, manager Buck Showalter strolled to the plate, picked up Lindor’s bat and handed it back to him. Lindor stayed in the game and struck out.

    UP NEXT

    San Diego went 5-14 against the first-place Dodgers this season and finished 22 games behind them in the NL West.

    New York begins its spring training schedule next year with split-squad games Feb. 25 against Miami and Houston. The regular-season opener is March 30 at Miami.

    ———

    More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

    [ad_2]

    Source link