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Tag: High school baseball

  • High school roundup: Stanford baseball commit dominates again for Valley Christian

    High school roundup: Stanford baseball commit dominates again for Valley Christian

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    Baseball

    No. 2 Valley Christian 2, Archbishop Riordan 0

    In three previous games this season, Valley Christian pitcher Quinten Marsh had been about as dominant as it gets — 15 innings, 31 strikeouts, three walks, one run allowed.

    On Tuesday, he had no let up.

    In a West Catholic Athletic League opener on the road against Archbishop Riordan, the junior who has committed to Stanford fired a four-hit shutout with 10 strikeouts and one walk as Valley Christian stretched its season-opening winning streak to seven games.

    Ranked second behind De La Salle in the most recent Bay Area News Group Top 25, the San Jose powerhouse on pace to rise to No. 1 when the updated rankings are released next week.

    The shutout in San Francisco on Tuesday was Valley Christian’s fourth this season. The Warriors have given up just four runs while scoring 40 during their 7-0 start.

    They got all the offense Marsh needed in the first inning against Riordan when Jordan Ortiz’s sacrifice fly to right field knocked in Hunter Fujimoto, who opened the game with a single.

    Nathan Choi’s single in the third drove in Brock Ketelsen to complete the scoring.

    For Riordan, Nathan Zuromski had two hits, Logan Tuman doubled and Rhys Appleby pitched three scoreless innings in relief.

    The Crusaders fell to 3-4-2, 0-1.

    No. 15 Serra 9, Sacred Heart Cathedral 8

    Ian Josephson had himself a game Tuesday. He had three hits, including a home run and a double. He knocked in five runs. He scored twice.

    And Serra needed all of it and more to hold off visiting Sacred Heart Cathedral in a WCAL opener.

    The Padres built a 9-4 lead through innings, but the Irish scored four in the fifth on Tate Medicoff’s grand slam to center to turn the game into a nail-biter.

    Ian Armstrong, Jake Downing, Sammy Rivas and Lucas Schumaker each had two hits for Serra, which improved to 6-1, 1-0.

    SHC is 6-3, 0-1.

    No. 11 Archbishop Mitty 8, No. 10 St. Francis 3

    Trailing by two runs after six innings on the road against St. Francis, Mitty rallied for seven in the seventh to prevail in a WCAL opener.

    Andrew Sauceda had three RBIs and Makoa Sniffen drove in two runs as the Monarchs improved to 6-2, 1-0.

    Luke DeVine finished with two hits and Tanner Wall doubled and had an RBI for St. Francis, which dropped 3-4, 0-1.

    No. 8 Bellarmine 3, No 3 St. Ignatius 0

    Ishaan Khambal pitched six scoreless innings and Arkansas-bound Wade Mountz pitched the final inning for the save as Bellarmine opened WCAL play with a victory at home over St. Ignatius.

    Evan Tavarez, Calem Filipek and Ishaan Khambal each drove in a run for the Bells (5-0, 1-0).

    St. Ignatius fell to 5-2, 0-1.

    Berean Christian 2, Alhambra 1

    Berean Christian, playing on the road in Martinez, got RBIs from freshmen Ryder Walker and Colton Swift in the seventh inning to beat Alhambra in a Diablo Athletic League Valley Division opener.

    Alhambra scored its only run in the first inning on an RBI by Cameron Millar.

    Berean Christian improved to 5-0, 1-0. Alhambra slipped to 1-4, 0-1.

    Santa Teresa 5, Pioneer 4

    Jordan Jackson worked a walk with the bases loaded in the bottom of the sixth to break a 4-4 tie and lift Santa Teresa to a victory over Pioneer in a Blossom Valley Athletic League Mt. Hamilton Division opener.

    Joseph Tapia had two hits and scored a run for Santa Teresa (5-3-1, 0-1).

    Adam Larson singled and knocked in two for Pioneer (3-5, 0-1).

    Foothill 3, Northgate 2

    Take Sato-Kreis drove in two runs and Caden Roth allowed one earned run and struck out six in five innings to lead Foothill to a victory at home over Northgate in nonleague play.

    Foothill evened its record at 3-3.

    Jackson Huffman and Chris Flores each had two hits for Northgate, which dropped to 2-3.

    Softball

    No. 1 St. Francis 11, Carlmont 1

    Jaime Oakland went 3 for 4 with a double and three RBIs and Peyton Tsao homered and drove in three runs to power St. Francis to a six-inning mercy-rule win at Carlmont in nonleague play.

    Shannon Keighran didn’t allow an earned run and struck out 10. She scattered four hits.

    The Lancers scored seven runs in the first inning and added one in the third and three in the sixth to up its record to 4-0.

    Molly Brand had two hits, including a double, for Carlmont (0-3).

    Los Gatos 3, Valley Christian 2 (8 innings)

    Annika Norquist’s double in the bottom of the eighth drove in Alexa Musser with the winning run as Los Gatos won a thriller at home over Valley Christian in nonleague play.

    Musser scored all three of Los Gatos’ runs.

    Makenzie Leon and Talia Haskins each doubled and finished with two hits apiece for Valley Christian (4-4).

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    Darren Sabedra

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  • Some athletes with a fear of flying are leaning on greater resources than their predecessors

    Some athletes with a fear of flying are leaning on greater resources than their predecessors

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    SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco Giants star Joc Pederson is scared to fly. Outfielder Seth Brown of the Oakland Athletics, too.

    They are hardly the only ones. Longtime manager Dusty Baker would bet that anxiety in the air has shortened more than a few careers. He recalls watching terrified teammates and coaches cling tightly to photos of their loved ones during bumpy flights.

    “There’s no helping them,” Baker said. “A lot of times they have a couple drinks more than they should on the plane. I’ve had guys I played with, they had like four or five kids, and the plane was having turbulence and they would start kissing their kids, like they were kissing them goodbye, like it was the last time they would see their kids.”

    In big-time sports, there’s no getting around regular flying. Major League Baseball players might crisscross the country several times in a single week. NBA and NHL teams frequently play on consecutive nights in different cities and time zones. Even 300-plus-pound football players have to be comfortable traveling from one coast to another. And then there are sports like golf and tennis, with professional tour events spanning several continents.

    Hall of Fame football coach John Madden, who died in late 2021, is among the most famous for his trepidation with air travel. Debilitating claustrophobia prompted him to eventually begin taking his own bus around the country.

    Netherlands soccer player Dennis Bergkamp was nicknamed “The Non-Flying Dutchman” for his anxiety, which he said stemmed from traveling on smaller planes while with Inter Milan in the 1990s. Former NBA power forward Royce White, a first-round pick by the Houston Rockets in 2012 out of Iowa State, fought crippling anxiety that became far worse when he flew and led to panic attacks — so he too regularly drove on his own whenever possible. Even Barry Bonds, who hit a record 762 home runs, told The Associated Press he has a fear of heights.

    “We’re pointing to flying but what we’re really pointing at is the feelings of being out of control, the feelings that come with trusting, so it’s the fear that we’re pointing to,” said high performance psychologist Michael Gervais, who has worked with the Seattle Seahawks among other sports teams, Olympians and businesses.

    Athletes find different ways of dealing with the stress at 35,000 feet.

    All-Star pitcher Dan Haren used to visit the cockpit on team charters, hoping for some comfort when he became overwhelmed. Troy Murphy, a former forward with the Golden State Warriors, did the same.

    “You empathize with them, because it’s tough,” said Mike Dunleavy Jr., Murphy’s former teammate and the Warriors new general manager.

    Baker and Atlanta Braves manager Brian Snitker remember how teammates turned to alcohol to ease the nerves.

    For many years with flying, players had to “get used to it,” insists Hall of Fame baseball star Rickey Henderson, who recalled what he described as crazy flights when he would try to “close my eyes and go to sleep.”

    “I was in the minor leagues for a period of time and I rode buses for 14 hours,” Henderson said, “I definitely don’t want to do that.”

    Even with heightened awareness around mental health, there is a greater prevalence of anxiety in society now than people might realize, according to Gervais. He is proud of those who speak up and take on the challenge to cope with it, a part of how they strive to reach peak performance in their sport — and appreciates teams being proactive rather than reactive.

    “What’s great is that there is an attunement and there’s an awareness, more than there has been in the last 15 to 20 years about the importance of the psychological well being of people,” Gervais said. “It’s always had a seat at the table of high performance. Now that seat is not in the poorly lit end of the table, it’s moved up to kind of center court, because if you don’t have the ability to work with your mind, especially under pressure, all of the physical and technical skills are not able to be accessed.

    “It’s an exciting time. Athletes are leading the way with their courage to point to the importance of it.”

    These days, there certainly are more resources to help — and Pederson and Brown are grateful to have that support.

    Pederson, a two-time All-Star, has had a career resurgence since joining the Giants for the 2022 season. Shortly after arriving in San Francisco, he began working with the club’s director of mental health and wellness, sport psychologist Shana Alexander, and human performance specialist Harvey Martin to cope with his flight anxiety.

    Alexander and Martin have helped Pederson develop techniques and tools to get through a flight, such as meditation, visualization and calculated breath work.

    Martin is a former minor league pitcher driven out of baseball by his own anxiety that included a fear of flying. He sat with Pederson on the plane for some flights last season, guiding him through relaxation breathing that has helped Pederson make major strides. They also regularly walk barefoot through the outfield before games to work on mindfulness.

    Pederson said when he joined the Giants, he was immediately impressed with “the amount of energy, money, resources they put into mental health.”

    Reducing anxiety off the field is one of Alexander’s methods to make it easier for someone to get through it, with meditation and visualization of a top performance key components.

    “I think a lot more players struggle with it than come forward. I’m one of them,” the 31-year-old Pederson said. “I really don’t love flying and it’s been something I’ve dealt with my whole career. The first day I got in, they were open-handed trying to help, trying to make the best possible situation out of it, and last year was the best year I’ve had flying since.”

    Brown, also 31, chose to conquer his struggles by reminding himself how fortunate he is to be part of a team at this stage of his life, knowing he will dearly miss it someday when he’s done. At his locker recently, he made a tight fist to demonstrate his frayed nerves when flying that made him “white-knuckled.”

    “There are so many tools at our disposal these days with anything involving your mindset, anxieties, anything like that, stress,” said Brown, in his fifth big league season. “And it’s so awesome to have those tools to use at your disposal any time you need them.”

    It’s not just baseball players opening up about that anxiety. English cricket player Mark Wood holds hands with teammate Chris Woakes in an effort to ease the discomfort on planes. Wood shared his fear of flying and wrote a self-help book.

    Sometimes, exhaustion or fatigue can fuel anxiety.

    Take the Giants’ first month of travel this season, for example: Arizona to San Francisco to New York to Chicago, home to San Francisco, to Detroit and Miami then home again before a trip to Mexico City.

    “If you did that for vacation, you’d be tired,” Martin said.

    Sometimes the fear can develop from one particular scary event.

    Rangers manager Bruce Bochy still becomes nervous in the air on occasion. That began after he and late Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn nearly had an accident 28 years ago on the private plane of then-Padres owner John Moores when they hit a wind shear going into Colorado for Gwynn’s Branch Rickey Award ceremony.

    “There’s times when you pucker up a little bit,” Bochy said.

    Haren, now a pitching strategist for the Arizona Diamondbacks, decided to study up on aviation to ease his mind and gain a better understanding of the risks and everything that would have to go wrong for a catastrophic event.

    “Through the course of the season you fly so much that there’s going to be times that we’re flying through rough air and a lot of times, too, I always would be scared because there was no choice but for us to fly somewhere,” he said. “We couldn’t just get delayed ’til the next day, so I always felt like sometimes we were pushing it to get to places.”

    Baker reflected on Madden’s very public life moving around the U.S. by bus, and the Houston manager is happy there are more resources for athletes and staff these days.

    “There are some people, for whatever reason, they don’t like to fly,” Baker said. “And it’s probably shortened some guys’ career. Maybe instead of making a comeback, they’re like, ‘OK, that’s enough.’ Especially if they’ve made enough money.”

    Before the days of breathing sessions and meditation, Bonds had a simple trick when experiencing his fear of heights on planes.

    “Just close the shade,” he said.

    If only it were that easy for everybody.

    ___

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

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  • Bruce Bochy returning to Giants’ ballpark and what is likely to be a loving reception

    Bruce Bochy returning to Giants’ ballpark and what is likely to be a loving reception

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    SAN FRANCISCO — Bruce Bochy landed in San Francisco on Sunday night with plenty of sunlight left to recognize his old surroundings and ponder the fond memories.

    And three World Series trophies.

    The Texas Rangers manager began thinking about the long list of people to thank for his special time guiding the Giants over 13 years that included those every-other-year titles in 2010, ‘12 and ’14.

    “A lot of great memories have gone through my head,” Bochy said this week in Oakland. “I have a lot of thank yous for everybody that played a part of my life here and made it such a wonderful 13 years. They’ve been so good to me, all the fans and friends here.”

    Bochy returns to Oracle Park this weekend as the Rangers play an interleague series with the Giants. Still beloved in the Bay Area, he will surely receive a rousing ovation.

    “We just played in San Diego and it was great, so I can’t imagine what San Francisco’s going to be with three rings (won). I have memories of going and watching him manage,” Rangers second baseman Marcus Semien said. “Those teams saved baseball in San Francisco. Once Barry (Bonds) left there was kind of a little lull. With those teams, the fan base now is unbelievable.”

    Bochy helped bring the city its first World Series championship since moving West in 1958 with an improbable title win against Texas in 2010 — then two more in 2012 and ‘14 in a stretch that became the Giants’ even-year magic.

    Bochy came to the Giants after 12 years as the San Diego skipper just in time for Bonds’ final season in 2007, when he passed Hank Aaron to become baseball’s home run king. Bochy posted a 1,052-1,054 record in San Francisco for the second-most wins as a manager in franchise history behind John McGraw’s 2,583-1,790 mark from 1902-1932.

    “He’ll get a great reception I’m sure, deservedly so, one of the best managers in Giants history, winning those three World Series and being here for a long time, a lot of wins,” Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford said. “So it’ll be a lot of fun to see the crowd’s reaction and have him get the great reception that he deserves.”

    Before Crawford evolved into a sure-handed, Gold Glove-winning shortstop, Bochy always stuck by him. Bochy continued to write Crawford’s name into the lineup day after day despite Crawford’s inconsistent play early on as a major leaguer.

    Crawford still remembers that faith Bochy showed in him all these years later and cherishes his time playing for a manager no doubt headed to the Hall of Fame.

    The 68-year-old Bochy has long taken great pride in not only his on-field decisions but the care he shows his players through honest communication — “I try to treat players the way I would want to be treated,” he always says.

    “Boch is a legend, right, a future Hall of Fame manager,” said A’s manager Mark Kotsay, who played for Bochy in San Diego. “He is a fierce competitor, he’s a mentor and I always enjoy those moments when we get to align and watch him work and work against him from the other side. It’s going to be a pretty wild weekend for Boch.”

    Only a handful of players remain from Bochy’s last San Francisco team in 2019: Crawford, Tyler Rogers, Austin Slater, Logan Webb and Mike Yastrzemski.

    The 36-year-old Crawford was part of the 2012 and ’14 title teams.

    “Obviously, he did a great job managing those teams, the two World Series teams that it was like he never pressed the wrong button,” Crawford said. “He would always figure out which guy to bring in in the right situation and I think that’s what makes him one of the best in-game managers of all time.”

    Bochy hoped to go fishing during Thursday’s off day — and knew he would be overcome by so many feelings being back at the waterfront ballpark. Even fans were planning early arrivals with hopes of saying hello to the skipper.

    “The emotions will be flying,” Bochy said. “But still, we got work to do. Both teams are playing for a lot, so that’s where the focus has to be.”

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

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  • O’Hearn ties career high with 4 RBIs, Orioles beat Blue Jays 6-5 in 10 innings

    O’Hearn ties career high with 4 RBIs, Orioles beat Blue Jays 6-5 in 10 innings

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    TORONTO — Ryan Mountcastle scored the go-ahead run in the 10th inning when third baseman Matt Chapman’s throw hit him in the back on Austin Hays’ grounder, and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Toronto Blue Jays 6-5 Saturday to become the second team to reach 30 wins.

    “Our guys are really competing every game right now,” Orioles manager Brandon Hyde said. “It’s a fun team to watch.”

    Ryan O’Hearn went 3 for 5 and tied his career high with four RBIs, including a three-run homer in the eighth off Jordan Romano that tied the score 5-5. Cedric Mullins hit a solo homer as the Orioles (30-16) won for the eighth time in 11 games. Baltimore trails Tampa Bay (34-13) by 3 1/2 games in the AL East.

    “Coming in here and getting a series win against a team we’re competing for the division with is huge,” O’Hearn said. “It does nothing but build confidence for the guys. It’s pretty fun to be a part of right now.”

    O’Hearn said he was looking for a fastball from Romano but recognized the slider after seeing it earlier in the at-bat. He drove the ball 406 feet to center.

    “I just caught it right,” O’Hearn said. “I knew I got enough of it off the bat to get it out and tie the ballgame.”

    George Springer hit a two-run homer and Danny Jansen hit a solo shot for the Blue Jays.

    Toronto has lost three straight and five of six since sweeping a three-game series against Atlanta last weekend. The Blue Jays dropped three of four to the Yankees this week and have lost consecutive series for the first time this season.

    Mountcastle started the 10th on second as the automatic runner and advanced when Adam Frazier sacrificed against Yimi Garcia (1-1). Hays hit a two-hopper that Chapman backhanded and fired home. The ball bounced away from Jansen at the plate and was scored a fielder’s choice.

    Romano’s blown save was his third in 13 chances.

    Kevin Kiermaier singled leading off the ninth and stole second, but Félix Bautista (3-1) struck out Bo Bichette, got Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to fly out, then fanned Alejandro Kirk. Bautista pitched the 10th and struck out his final four batters.

    Coming off his first career loss, Baltimore rookie right-hander Grayson Rodriguez allowed two runs and four hits in five innings.

    “I thought he grew today,” Hyde said. “It’s a tough environment to pitch in, 41-thousand here in Toronto. To do what he did, I thought was a really good step for him.”

    After working almost exclusively with catcher Alejandro Kirk since the start of the 2022 season, struggling Blue Jays right-hander Alek Manoah was paired with Jansen.

    Manoah walked a career-worst seven and allowed five earned runs in his previous start, a May 15 loss to the Yankees. Against Baltimore, Manoah gave up two runs and six hits in 5 2/3 innings. He walked one and struck out five.

    Blue Jays pitching coach Pete Walker came to the mound after Anthony Santander’s one-out single in the sixth. Manoah hit Mountcastle with an 0-2 fastball, then struck out Frazier. Manager John Schneider then came out, apparently forgetting that Walker had just visited the mound. Schneider initially left Manoah in to face Gunnar Henderson, but plate umpire and crew chief Dan Iassogna told Schneider he had to replace Manoah.

    Schneider acknowledged his mistake after the game.

    “I (messed) up,” Schneider said. “I forgot Pete went out there because we were talking about a lot of different stuff.”’

    Even Manoah, who knew Walker had just visited, was confused.

    “The umpire was like ‘Hey, that was your second visit,’” Manoah said. “I was kind of hoping everyone forgot about the first one.”

    Mayza came on and Baltimore replaced Henderson with right-hander Joey Ortiz, but Kevin Kiermaier made a leaping catch on the warning track to retire Ortiz.

    TRAINER’S ROOM

    Blue Jays: 2B Santiago Espinal left because of a sore right hamstring after stealing second base in the seventh. He was replaced by Whit Merrifield. Espinal went 3 for 3 before departing.

    DOUBLE PLEASURE

    Chapman’s double in the fourth was his major league-leading 19th.

    GRAYSON’S Ks

    Rodriguez reached 50 strikeouts, the most ever by an Orioles pitcher after nine career starts. He has struck out six or more five times.

    UP NEXT

    Blue Jays RHP Kevin Gausman (2-3, 3.27 ERA) faces his former team for the third time when he starts Sunday’s series finale. RHP Dean Kremer (5-1, 4.94) goes for the Orioles. Gausman had a 7.00 ERA in two starts against Baltimore last season.

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    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • Haase 2 HRs in twinbill, knocks in 6 as Tigers sweep Mets

    Haase 2 HRs in twinbill, knocks in 6 as Tigers sweep Mets

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    DETROIT — Eric Haase homered in both games of a doubleheader, driving in six runs, and the Detroit Tigers tagged Max Scherzer in his return from a suspension to sweep the New York Mets with an 8-1 victory Wednesday night.

    Haase had five RBIs in the first game, including a go-ahead single in the eighth inning of a 6-5 comeback win, and then added one of Detroit’s two homers off Scherzer in the nightcap.

    “I’ve watched him pitch a lot,” said Haase, who grew up a Tigers fan in Detroit. “I want to say that was just another homer, but it was obviously pretty cool.”

    The slumping Mets have lost eight of 10. They were playing their second consecutive doubleheader in three days after getting rained out three times since Saturday.

    “We’ve got to be a lot better than this, and it isn’t just about Max,” manager Buck Showalter said. “We only scored one run in the second game, which isn’t going to beat many teams.”

    New York had gone 25 doubleheaders without getting swept, since Washington took both games from the visiting Mets on Sept. 26, 2020. That was the second-longest such streak of the expansion era. The New York Yankees went 30 doubleheaders without losing both games between 1996-2006.

    The Tigers were hosting the Mets for the first time in seven years. The series opener was rained out Tuesday and rescheduled as part of a day-night doubleheader.

    In the second game, Scherzer struggled against his former team. Detroit scored twice in the first inning, Haase homered in the second and Matt Vierling hit a two-run homer in the fourth.

    “It’s always a good feeling when you can knock any starter out early,” Vierling said. “It doesn’t matter who it is — that’s going to give you some momentum.”

    Scherzer (2-2) allowed six runs and eight hits in 3 1/3 innings. He was suspended for 10 games by Major League Baseball on April 20 after getting ejected for having a foreign substance on his pitching hand during his April 19 start against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

    “I was spraying the ball around, and I wasn’t good from the stretch,” Scherzer said. “That’s what you expect after a layoff.”

    Michael Lorenzen (1-1) allowed one run in seven innings to get his first win with Detroit, which is 2-14 against the AL East and 10-3 versus everyone else.

    “It’s just random,” manager A.J. Hinch said. “That’s just baseball.”

    The Tigers trailed 5-4 in the eighth inning of the first game, but Vierling blooped a single with one out and Adam Ottavino (0-2) hit Javier Báez with a pitch. Riley Greene grounded to first for the second out, advancing both runners, and Haase hit a two-run single to right-center.

    Tyler Alexander (1-0) got the win by retiring the last batter in the eighth. Alex Lange pitched the ninth for his fourth save.

    With a strong wind blowing out to left field, the hitters had the advantage in the early innings. Detroit took a 3-0 lead on Haase’s first homer of the season in the first, but the Mets came back in the second with solo home runs from Tommy Pham and Mark Canha.

    Báez made it 4-2 in the third with a long homer over the first section of seats above the Tigers bullpen in left — his first of the season — but the Mets took the lead in the fifth. Brett Baty singled, went to second on Greene’s error in center and then scored when Tomás Nido singled and left fielder Andy Ibanez threw wildly to the plate.

    Starting pitcher Joey Wentz retired the next two hitters, but Francisco Lindor made it 5-4 with a long homer to left-center.

    ROSTER MOVES

    The Mets brought up RHP José Butto to serve as the 27th man for the doubleheader, and they activated Scherzer from the suspended list. Scherzer entered 2-0 with a 1.59 ERA against Detroit since leaving in 2015, striking out 34 batters in 17 innings without a walk.

    The Tigers called up RHP Brendan White to be their 27th man.

    WET SPRING

    A cold rain fell off and on during the first game. The Tigers were playing their third doubleheader in their last three home series.

    UP NEXT

    The Tigers are scheduled to face another old friend in Thursday’s series finale. Justin Verlander is scheduled to make his Mets debut against Detroit LHP Eduardo Rodriguez (2-2, 2.21 ERA). Verlander has been sidelined all season with a muscle strain in his upper back.

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    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • Padres rookie Sullivan hits 1st HR, has 4 RBIs in 7-1 win

    Padres rookie Sullivan hits 1st HR, has 4 RBIs in 7-1 win

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    SAN DIEGO — Rookie Brett Sullivan hit his first home run and had his first four RBIs, and Juan Soto hit a three-run double to make up for a baserunning blunder that cost Xander Bogaerts a club-record on-base streak as the San Diego Padres beat the Cincinnati Reds 7-1 Wednesday to take two of three.

    Seth Lugo (3-2) pitched six strong innings for the Padres, who have won 7 of 10 heading into a home weekend series against the rival Los Angeles Dodgers. It’ll be the teams’ first meeting since the Padres eliminated the 111-win Dodgers in four games in the NL Division Series to reach their first NL Championship Series in 24 years.

    The 29-year-old Sullivan, catching a day game after a night game, hit a two-run double down the right field line with one out in the second and then drove a two-run homer to right with two outs in the fourth. His double, off Luis Cessa (1-4), snapped the Padres’ 0-for-15 skid with runners in scoring position and brought in Jake Cronenworth and Ha-Seong Kim.

    Sullivan’s homer came off Alex Young and scored Rougned Odor. Sullivan made his major league debut on April 18 against Atlanta and got his first hit, a single, at the Chicago Cubs on Thursday. Sullivan was recalled from Triple-A El Paso on April 16, two days after Luis Campusano sprained his left thumb. He was obtained in a trade with Milwaukee for catcher Victor Caratini on April 6, 2022.

    “I’m feeling pretty good,” said Sullivan, who had more than 200 messages waiting for him on his phone. “Just to be able to get those RBIs for the boys early to take the lead, that’s what probably felt the best. Then seeing that ball get out was a dream come true, and I definitely heard the fans. I tried to soak it in as much as I can but I blacked out a little bit.”

    Said manager Bob Melvin, a former big league catcher: “I had one big game, too, so he’s got a couple at this point already. To come up to the big leagues and you don’t really know what to expect and to catch a couple of wins, get your first big league hit and you have a game like that, it resonates with you. It’s great we have an off day, too, that he can answer all his phone calls and texts.”

    Soto cleared the bases with a two-out double into the right field corner with two outs in the sixth. He also walked three times to extend his big league lead to 31. He was erased on a double play in the third and then committed an embarrassing baserunning error in the fifth that cost Bogaerts a single.

    Soto took off for second on Bogaerts’ sinking liner that bounced just in front of diving right fielder Stuart Fairchild. Soto, who rounded second, thought Fairchild caught it and touched second again as he headed back to first even though Bogaerts and acting first base coach David Macias were motioning for him to go back to second. It was ruled a 9-4 force-out.

    Bogaerts had two more chances to extend his club-record on-base streak of 30 games to open a season but he popped up to end the sixth and struck out to end the eighth.

    “What can I say, it’s baseball,” Bogaerts said. “You never know what to expect when you come to the ballpark. Obviously Soto didn’t want to do it on purpose. So definitely he feels bad also. But I’ll get more.”

    Looking back on his streak, Bogaerts said, “It’s good, man. Now I can use my other cleats. I have two pair of cleats so I’ve been riding that one pretty hard. I’ve been superstitious with that one so I can probably break in my other set of cleats now.”

    Lugo allowed only one run and seven hits in six innings while striking out five. His only big mistake was allowing Spencer Steer’s leadoff homer to left in the sixth, his third.

    Cessa lasted only 3 1/3 innings, giving up three runs and four hits.

    NICE D

    Padres center fielder Trent Grisham, a two-time Gold Glove winner, doubled TJ Friedl off first to end the first after catching Steer’s fly ball. Lugo made a terrific snag of Fairchild’s liner to end the second, one play after Jake Fraley went first to third, sliding in headfirst, on Nick Senzel’s routine grounder to third. In the bottom of the inning, Fraley made a nice diving catch of Odor’s sinking liner to left.

    SOMBRERO SEASON

    The Padres are getting great use out of the black, green, red and white sombrero Fernando Tatis Jr. bought at the team hotel in Mexico City on Friday night. Not only do the Padres put it on the head of whoever hits a home run and use in it clubhouse piñata parties after wins, but Nelson Cruz wore it out to the plate meeting to exchange lineup cards before Wednesday’s game. Cruz wore the sombrero as he destroyed a Buzz Lightyear piñata while his teammates danced around, many wearing lucha libre masks, after a 16-11 win against San Francisco on Saturday night. Manny Machado, who got the day off, placed the sombrero on Sullivan’s head after his homer.

    UP NEXT

    Reds: RHP Hunter Greene (0-1, 2.89 ERA) is scheduled to start Friday night in the opener of a home series against the Chicago White Sox, who counter with Lance Lynn (0-4, 7.16).

    Padres: In a marquee matchup, Dodgers LHP Clayton Kershaw (5-1, 1.89) opposes RHP Joe Musgrove (1-0, 10.80) on Friday night in the opener of a three-game series.

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  • MLB lefty batting average up, game time down 28 minutes

    MLB lefty batting average up, game time down 28 minutes

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    NEW YORK — Batting average for left-handed hitters was up 13 percentage points through the first full month of the season, an impact of baseball’s new rule changes.

    The biggest noticeable impact has been when games are ending. Average time of a nine-inning game is 2 hours, 37 minutes, down from 3:05 at the same point last year.

    Clubhouse staff and players are getting home while their families are still awake.

    “It definitely makes life easier,” Cleveland’s Shane Bieber, the 2020 AL Cy Young Award winner, said Monday.

    Boosted by new rules designed to speed play and increase action, stolen bases rose 40% to their highest level in nearly a quarter-century and scoring increased by 1.1 runs per game.

    Pitch clock violations averaged 0.74, and the New York Mets topped the major leagues with 17 while the Los Angeles Dodgers and Detroit tied for the fewest with four each. Of 313 clock violations, 204 were by pitchers, 91 by batters and four by catchers.

    In addition, there were five penalties for batter timeouts, eight for pitcher disengagements and one for violation the shirt restrictions.

    “The data looks really promising so far,” Theo Epstein, the former Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs executive who consulted on the innovations, said Monday. “The game had been veering in a direction where the only way to score was hope for a walk and a homer. And now we’re seeing with an increased batting average on balls in play, the increased rate of stolen-base attempts the improved success rate of stolen bases a lot of rallies that start with a single, then you have a stolen base and then you have another single and there’s a run. And that’s more entertaining.”

    Limits on infield shifts, a pitch clock and larger bases were implemented in an attempt to counter the impact of the Analytics Era suffocation of offense.

    The big league batting average was .248 through 425 games. Lefties hit .242, up from .229 through April last year. Righties are hitting .250, an increase from .234.

    Lefty batting average on balls in play went up nine points to .292 and righty BABIP rose seven points to .302.

    New York Yankees first baseman Anthony Rizzo thinks he may have gotten 10 additional hits already.

    “I’m just throwing a number out there,” he said. “You hit the ball well, you obviously want to be rewarded.”

    Runs have increased to 9.2 from 8.1.

    Stolen bases average 1.4 per game — with a 79.2% success rate, up from 1.0 steals and a 75.5% success rate. The average is the highest since 1999, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, and the success rate the highest on record.

    Houston third baseman Alex Bregman has noticed the speedier games after foul balls.

    “You got to like run back to your position and you’re out of breath, ready to go for the next player,” he said. “It’s going to be interesting to see how the pressure-packed playoff games are played at rapid-fire speed like that.”

    Statcast’s time between pitches, which starts 6 seconds ahead of the clock, ranged between 11.1 seconds (Cooper Criswell) and 19.0 (Andrew Bellatti), down from last year’s 12.6 (Brent Sutter) to 25.8 (Giovanny Gallegos and Jonathan Loáisiga).

    Michael Kopech dropped from 21.1 to 13.2, Tanner Houck from 20.3 to 13.1 and Shohei Ohtani to 21.7 to 15.3.

    “How many hours during the course of the rest of my career is that going to save?” said Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole, who cut from 17.6 to 13.9.

    ___

    AP Sports Writer Kristie Rieken contributed to this report.

    ___

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  • MLB players find less time for small talk with pitch clock

    MLB players find less time for small talk with pitch clock

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    DENVER — Home plate used to be a place where the sociable Brandon Crawford would touch base with catchers and umpires.

    Just a casual conversation to catch up: How’s the family? What’s up? That sort of thing.

    These days, the San Francisco Giants infielder keeps the chatter to a minimum. There’s simply no spare time for small talk while on a pitch clock.

    Because that 15 seconds between pitches — 20 when someone’s on base — goes by fast at the plate. The penalty for idle chatter could be stiff — a called strike on the hitter.

    Social hour just has to wait.

    “You have to figure out a different time to get your conversations in, whether it’s pregame or going to dinner or breakfast,” Crawford said.

    The pitch clock hasn’t just made baseball quicker. It’s quieter now, too. There’s no real chance to talk shop on the bases with former teammates, good friends or umpires. Batters only get 30 seconds between at-bats to get set.

    Dodgers manager Dave Roberts can’t even imagine the strikes he might’ve had called on him if he was playing under these rules. He’s well known for his affable personality and would always greet the home-plate umpire when he batted, along with the catcher. He’d carry it right over to the bases, too, when he got aboard.

    “Some guys are having a little harder time with it,” Roberts said of cutting back on conversations. “I think the salutations and stuff like that have to be more minimized.”

    Roberts joked that he could strategize around his gift for gab — maybe engage players he knows before they dig into the box.

    “Try to get his attention and get that clock going,” Roberts cracked.

    The players, though, are starting to realize that silence is golden. This is no social call when they step up. They can’t afford to fall behind 0-1 in the count.

    Last week, Padres slugger Manny Machado became the first player ejected in an argument that followed a pitch clock violation, which carries a penalty of an automatic strike for hitters and an automatic ball for pitchers. It wasn’t for talking, but rather he thought he had called timeout as the pitch clock wound down to eight seconds — the deadline for batters to be alert to the guy on the mound.

    A cautionary tale, though, that every second matters.

    “It’s all business,” Giants outfielder Joc Pederson said.

    Rangers first baseman Nathaniel Lowe once received friendly advice from longtime umpire Joe West: Greet each ump by their first name and make a little small talk.

    It’s guidance Lowe took to heart. It’s guidance that’s now hard to follow.

    “It feels like I’m more worried about, ‘Am I facing the pitcher with 14, 12 seconds? Should I have my foot on the gas?’” Lowe explained. “I think the pitch clock definitely takes away from the social aspect of it.”

    Know this about Dominic Smith: He’s not going to be as inviting at first base this season. The slick-fielding Washington Nationals player means no offense by the silent treatment, either.

    “I’m trying to just kick people’s butt, I guess, so I don’t talk as much as I used to,” Smith said with a smile. “I don’t mind not talking to guys over there. I like being in my own space, thinking about the game, trying to figure out ways to help us win.”

    Dodgers pitcher Dustin May never quite understood being on speaking terms with the opposition during a game.

    “Once I cross the lines, I didn’t really talk to anybody” on the other team, May said.

    Consider May a fan of the new rules. Batters can’t step out as much to re-fasten their batting gloves over and over.

    “We’d stand on the mound forever waiting on them,” May said. “Now they’re kind of forced to get in. They’re on our pace now.”

    Rockies first baseman C.J. Cron prefers the quicker pace, too. He can afford to be a little more antisocial due to the time crunch.

    “I’m not much of a converser over there,” Cron said. “Just say, ‘What’s up?’ and then move on with my life.”

    The lack of talk on the bases may actually fuel more rivalries — or at least that’s the thinking of Dodgers infielder Max Muncy.

    “Because you’re not having a chance to converse with people and you don’t get to know people as much,” Muncy said. “Maybe there’s a chance of that?”

    But it takes some getting used to. Crawford would greet the umpire behind the plate before the game and the catcher as he stepped into the box. It was almost part of his routine.

    The times have changed.

    “It’s such a rush from the on-deck circle to the plate that you don’t have time to do that,” Crawford said. “I’ll say that real quick as I’m walking by. But there’s no more conversations after that.”

    That’s good, said Giants manager Gabe Kapler.

    “I don’t love seeing players talking to the first baseman and umpires,” Kapler said. “I hope that is erased by the time.”

    Some players, though, simply enjoy holding conversations while holding on runners.

    “If I know the guy or if I’ve got a pretty good rapport with him, for sure, absolutely,” Mets first baseman Pete Alonso said. “If it’s just like an awkward silence, that’s no fun.”

    ___

    AP Baseball Writers Janie McCauley and Mike Fitzpatrick, and AP Sports Writer Schuyler Dixon contributed to this report.

    ___

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sport

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  • Red Sox sign Japanese batting champ Masataka Yoshida

    Red Sox sign Japanese batting champ Masataka Yoshida

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    BOSTON — Former Boston pitcher Daisuke Matsuzaka passed along some advice to Masataka Yoshida, another Japanese star who came over to play for the Red Sox.

    “His advice to me: Boston is really cold,” the 29-year-old outfielder said through a translator on Thursday after he signed a five-year, $90 million deal with the Red Sox. “Obviously, you have to bring your jacket.”

    Yoshida won a gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics and twice led Japan’s Pacific League in batting. He also helped Orix to a victory in the Japan Series in October, homering twice in Game 5 — including a walk-off as the Buffaloes rallied from a ninth-inning deficit.

    “We became the champion in Japan. Next season, I would like to contribute to your world championship for the Red Sox,” he said, offering this assessment of Fenway Park upon seeing it for the first time: “The Green Monster is really tall.”

    Yoshida has a .326 average with a .419 on-base percentage in seven seasons in Japan, all with Orix.

    He greeted the Boston media on Thursday by explaining — in English — that he doesn’t speak English.

    “So, nervous,” he said. “I want to learn English and I want to speak it my daughters. I am honored to be in Red Sox Nation. I will do my best. Thank you.”

    Although the Red Sox have signed other Japanese players — including closer Koji Uehara, who helped them win it all in 2013 — Yoshida is Boston’s highest-profile addition from Japan since Matsuzaka arrived in 2007 after a bidding war that resulted in the team paying more than $100 million in posting fees and salary.

    The Red Sox never let this one get to that, making an offer on the first day teams were allowed to talk to Yoshida’s agent, Scott Boras, and convincing him to cancel scheduled Zooms with other teams.

    “You have to be prepared with the evaluation of the player when the light turns green,” Red Sox chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom said. “We felt we were. We knew that there was going to be a lot of interest.”

    Word of Yoshida’s signing first emerged at the winter meetings at the same time that free agent shortstop Xander Bogaerts agreed to leave the Red Sox and join the San Diego Padres. Bogaerts had been the cornerstone of Boston’s offseason plans.

    To make room for Yoshida on the roster, Boston designated infielder Jeter Downs for assignment. Downs had been acquired in the trade that sent former Mookie Betts to the Los Angeles Dodgers and hit .154 in a 14-game major league tryout.

    “I think that speaks to some of the struggles we’ve had getting him on track,” Bloom said. “I still think there’s a lot of physical ability there, but we haven’t been able to unlock it consistently.”

    Bloom said there was no added disappointment in setting Downs free just because he was a key part of a decision — already unpopular — to trade Betts, the 2018 AL MVP.

    “No doubt he’s a big part of a really significant trade, and that we haven’t gotten him to the level that we expected hurts,” Bloom said. “But at the end of the day, we we want to do right by all of the players. And he was the right decision (in) this case.”

    ———

    AP Baseball Writer Ronald Blum contributed to this report.

    ———

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

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