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  • From breakout young stars to ring-chasing old timers, why D-Backs-Rangers is worth watching

    From breakout young stars to ring-chasing old timers, why D-Backs-Rangers is worth watching

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    Look, we didn’t expect this either. 

    Of all the possible World Series matchups, a tussle of the 90-win Texas Rangers against the 84-win Arizona Diamondbacks wasn’t exactly at the top of our wish list. It’s being already decried as a battle of who could care less, and we get it. 

    But we also disagree. 

    Is this World Series custom-made for primetime? Of course not. But when asked to come up with a handful of reasons to watch, it took about two minutes for a small group of baseball writers to bat around more than a dozen storylines, personalities and raw talents that are going to be worth watching for the next however-long-this-lasts. 

    Give us another Game 7, we say, because this might not be the series we expected, it might not even be the series we deserve, but it’s going to be a series worth watching. 

    And here’s why. 


    These teams actually have star power … 

    If you were expecting Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani, you must not have been paying attention for the past decade. 

    But Rangers shortstop Corey Seager made a pretty compelling case for American League MVP this season (non-Ohtani division), and Diamondbacks ace Zac Gallen is going to finish somewhere near the top of the National League Cy Young race (he already started the All-Star Game), and he helped beat his hometown Phillies to get here, even while reflecting on the declining quality of local institution Wawa. That’s pathos.

    … and the hardware to prove it 

    Speaking of All-Star Game starters, the Rangers had five of them this year, including three-quarters of their everyday infield. The Diamondbacks had three All-Star starters, plus their 23-year-old shortstop coming off the bench. 

    And you might not have noticed, but Rangers starter Nathan Eovaldi has the track record of a postseason ace, and he’s on a mission to avenge his one World Series loss. Casual fans might not know their names, but the league knows these guys can play. 

    It’s a matchup of power versus …

    Sure, it would have been interesting to see all those big boppers in the Phillies lineup, but the Rangers hit the third-most home runs in baseball this season, led by Adolis García, a guy who was twice designated for assignment before becoming a must-see offensive beast who went deep 39 times this season and then went berserk for five more home runs and an MVP award in the ALCS. Whatever you do, don’t hit this man with a pitch. 

    … speed.

    The Diamondbacks don’t have the Rangers’ offensive thump, but they did steal 166 bases this season (second-most in the game) while leading the majors with 44 triples. These guys can and will run wild — they stole four bases in decisive NLCS Game 7 — and their second baseman, Ketel Marte, has quietly been one of the game’s best up-the-middle players of the past half-decade (top 40 in position player WAR since 2019) and is earning his place among the best players in franchise history. When the Diamondbacks do need a homer, they still have Christian Walker, who was claimed off waivers three times in his career but hit 69 longballs the past two years. 

    The Diamondbacks might have baseball’s most exciting young player …


    Corbin Carroll mixes elite speed with legit power. (Nick Wosika / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    The Diamondbacks might not have many household names now, but give it a few years and their leadoff hitter, Corbin Carroll, might be the name you remember from this series. The 23-year-old is a shoo-in for National League Rookie of the Year and has a tremendous blend of speed (54 stolen bases) and power (25 home runs) that could make him one of the game’s great players for the next decade. 

    … but he’s not alone. There are young stars all over the place.

    Carroll’s not the only one who’s just starting to make a name for himself. Rangers third baseman Josh Jung (he and Carroll were drafted within eight picks of one another in 2019) was an All-Star as a rookie this season, and Rangers left fielder Evan Carter (who turned 21 in August) reached the big leagues in September and was one of the game’s best hitters in the final month of the regular season. Carter currently ranks as Baseball America’s 10th-best prospect in the entire sport.

    Diamondbacks infielder Jordan Lawler (a bench player for now) ranks ninth on that list, and his teammate Gabriel Moreno (one of the best young catchers in the sport) ranked 12th when the season began but has since accrued too much big-league time to qualify. Second-year center fielder Alek Thomas is still just 23 and already has an all-time postseason moment.

    The Rangers went all-in at the deadline to get here … 

    This year’s trade deadline was a letdown for many teams, but not for the Rangers, who spent heavily the past two offseasons and still supplemented their rotation with deadline deals for both Max Scherzer and Jordan Montgomery. They also traded for Royals flamethrower Aroldis Chapman and Pirates backup catcher Austin Hedgers.

    … while the Diamondbacks built from within.

    The Diamondbacks made smaller deals at the deadline — closer Paul Sewald was their biggest addition — but mostly grew their team from within. All told, the Diamondbacks’ postseason roster includes four different players (Lawler plus pitchers Brandon Pfaadt, Andrew Saalfrank and Slade Cecconi) who made their big league debuts this season (and two of them weren’t in the majors until September). Saalfrank pitched just 10 times in the regular season, and he’s already made eight appearances in the playoffs.

    Old-timers are riding off into the sunset …

    I didn’t call Scherzer old, you did! But seriously, Mad Max is 39, joined the Rangers at the trade deadline, and hasn’t gotten to do much this postseason. He’s already won three Cy Young awards and a World Series ring in his career, but one more dazzling performance in October would be an exclamation point.

    … while chasing one last shot at a ring.

    In the other dugout is 38-year-old Evan Longoria. He hasn’t played in a World Series since his rookie year with the Rays in 2008, and these days he’s more of a complementary role player than the hot-corner superstar he was a decade ago, but he has a legitimate chance to finally win a ring in what could be his final season.

    “Most of the time, when you hear about guys’ legacies, it’s about a ring,” Longoria said this month. “It’s about a World Series. It’s about the impact that they’ve made in the playoffs. That’s more of a legacy thing for me.

    The fantasy football fight guy is here …

    There’s also 35-year-old Diamondbacks outfielder Tommy Pham, an intense veteran perhaps best known to casual fans for his role in a fantasy football-inspired fracas last season, in search of his first championship. He’s joined by 34-year-old Rangers reliever Will Smith, who is in pursuit of his third in a row title (all with different teams).

    … while a certain big lefty with enormous postseason credentials isn’t. 

    And, if you’re the sort who roots for awkward ring ceremonies, Madison Bumgarner could win his fourth career ring after the Diamondbacks released him in April with a 10.26 ERA.

    The Diamondbacks front office is worth rooting for …

    Seven years ago, the Diamondbacks cleaned house and brought in longtime Boston Red Sox executive Mike Hazen to run the show. He brought some Red Sox connections with him — including manager Torey Lovullo — and has many in the industry rooting for him after his wife, Nicole, died of a rare form of cancer in 2022. 

    “Such good, real people,” one longtime executive said of the top Diamondbacks decision makers.

    Hazen has defied the curse of The Athletic’s own Ken Rosenthal to get his team to its first World Series since 2001. 

    … but believe it or not, the Rangers’ front office is fascinating too.


    Chris Young has delivered in his first full year as Rangers GM. (Jim Cowsert / USA Today)

    No one tunes in to see the general manager clapping in his suite, but Rangers general manager Chris Young should be in the mix for Rookie of the Year at 44 years old. Young is in his first full year on the job having moved into the top seat at the end of last season. He was still playing — he was a good big league pitcher — as recently as 2017, worked in the league office for two years, and has been a front office executive only three years, but Young was aggressive at the trade deadline to help push the Rangers over the top and into this position. 

    And if you can’t get into the man behind the curtain, there’s always Rangers manager Bruce Bochy, back in the dugout after three years of semi-retirement, trying to win his fourth World Series title and force another line onto his inevitable Hall of Fame plaque.

    You could just watch because … it’s the World Series.

    OK, we’ll acknowledge this is not the matchup anyone outside of Dallas and Phoenix wanted when the postseason got started. The Braves were the perceived juggernaut, the Orioles were the flashy young upstarts, the Dodgers were the iconic franchise with an all-time ace, and the Phillies had the world-beating offense with a rocking home-field advantage.

    But it’s the Fall Classic! With a pitch clock, so the kids can watch more than a half inning before bedtime!

    Think of Rangers first baseman Nathaniel Lowe’s mother and watch with a touch of sentimental optimism. Think of all the key players your least favorite team gave up and watch with a healthy dose of vindictive cynicism. Or just watch because it’s baseball in October, one team hasn’t won in two decades, and the other hasn’t won at all. The Rangers are trying to make history. The Diamondbacks are trying to shock the world. Goodness gracious, snakes alive!

    (Top photo of Evan Longoria: AP Photo / Brynn Anderson)

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    The New York Times

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  • His father murdered his mother. Now, an Angels prospect is finding the light

    His father murdered his mother. Now, an Angels prospect is finding the light

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    MADISON, Ala. — The team-building exercise was simple. Early this season, coaches at Rocket City, the Angels’ Double-A affiliate, asked each player to step forward and share something personal with the entire squad.

    Name a hero in your life, a hardship and a highlight. 

    Zac Kristofak, a 25-year-old starting pitcher, began internally preparing for his turn. In a way, he’d already spent more than 10 years building toward this moment. And while any cursory Google search of his last name would have turned up the disturbing details from a decade ago, none of his teammates knew the full story.

    When Kristofak got up to speak in front of his teammates, there were no nerves. His heart did not pound. His mind did not race. The words tumbled out.

    It was Dec. 22, 2012, a cold afternoon in the Atlanta suburbs. Kristofak, then 15, was coming back from baseball practice with his friend. They pulled up to his home to find a large police presence encircling the house.

    At first, Kristofak thought there was a fire. But he quickly realized there were no fire trucks on the scene. He jumped out of the car and raced to a police officer, who asked him about his parents.

    Just a few hours earlier, Kristofak’s mom, Donna Nations Kristofak, had taken him to baseball practice.

    He returned to find his mother’s black Honda Odyssey near her garage, and blood on the ground where EMTs had attempted lifesaving CPR.

    It was too late. Zac’s mother, he would later learn, had been murdered by his father.

    After Kristofak spoke to the team, “everyone just had a shock to their face,” said Kristofak’s teammate Jack Dashwood. “I think anyone would tell you that Zac Kristofak is one of the toughest dudes that they probably ever met in baseball.”

    “This is who I am,” Kristofak said later. “I’m not afraid of who I am.”



    Zac (left) and Harrison with Donna Kristofak, during what Zac remembers as a happy and normal childhood. (Courtesy of Zac Kristofak)

    In the months leading up to her death, Donna did everything she could to shield her sons, particularly Zac, her youngest, from what her life had become.

    It was impossible to hide the fact that she and their father had split up, or that John spent seven months in jail for aggravated stalking. He’d been arrested in March 2012 after chasing Donna around a Walmart parking lot, while a knife sat in his car — days after he’d sent her a threatening note.

    But Zac didn’t know those details. The day-to-day, minute-to-minute danger she faced was something Donna tried to protect him from.

    Donna, in Zac’s words, would do anything for him and his older brother, Harrison. When the family lost its financial footing after the housing market collapse in 2007, she went back to work. She supported her kids in the midst of economic hardship and her faltering marriage.

    And for much of Zac and Harrison’s childhood, John was a seemingly steady and caring husband and father. He’d been married to Donna for 19 years.

    John coached Zac and Harrison’s baseball teams. Every Friday night was “boys’ night” — when they’d get a Papa Johns pizza and rent a Blockbuster movie. Zac remembers his family as well-off and happy, as normal as normal gets.

    But the financial problems turned into major marital issues. And marital issues turned into a divorce in August 2011. After the divorce, John devolved rapidly. He became furious, bitter and, eventually, violent.

    Zac had a fundamental understanding that the once apparently happy relationship had become toxic. He would receive text messages from his father saying nasty things about Donna. But he hadn’t been aware of how dangerous the situation had become.

    Starting soon after their divorce, John started sending threatening messages to his ex-wife. He stalked her. He left vulgar signs in front of her yard. He sent notes to other people in her life, claiming she was having multiple affairs. The restraining order against him was of little use.

    According to police records, John emailed her at one point, writing, “both kids would rather come to heaven than lose me” and “have you ever been hit by a car going 140 not knowing where it was coming from?,” according to police records. There were other notes threatening her life.

    She had an emergency plan with their neighbors, the Kiebooms — a family that included Zac’s best friend and current Nationals infielder, Carter Kieboom. If John ever came to Donna’s home, the kids were supposed to run there.

    Two months before her murder, she’d pleaded with a Cobb County judge to keep him in jail. According to an Atlanta Journal Constitution account, she told the judge that a restraining order would not be enough.

    “‘May I ask, your honor, that it is on the record that I fear for my life,’” Donna said.

    He was released on Oct. 29, 2012. Less than two months later, he shot Donna twice while she sat in her car.


    Almost immediately after his capture, John admitted to murdering Donna, according to police records. He explained that he’d been planning the murder for some time.

    Donna was usually aware of her surroundings, John told investigators. She had guns, and knew how to use them. He was stalking her neighborhood that day when he saw her driving toward her home. This time, when she pulled into her garage, he said, she didn’t close it immediately. Instead she sat in her car, looking at her phone.

    John said he pulled into the driveway, ran to her car, and shot her twice through the car window. She started honking in the hope that Harrison would come out. An onlooker heard him shout “Mom!” as he raced outside to help, arriving in time to see John run back to his car and drive off. The last thing she said to Harrison, according to police records, was to call 9-1-1.

    For the next five days, with John still on the run, a police officer stood guard outside the Kiebooms’ home, where Zac was staying, 24 hours a day.

    They tracked John down at a Motel 6 in Union City. He spent his days on the run emailing news outlets about Donna. He also attempted to rob a Rite-Aid for Adderall. John claimed that he had planned to commit suicide before his capture, but that police arrested him before he could reach for his gun.

    Hours after being taken into custody, he was interviewed by detectives.

    At one point during the interrogation, John asked, “Does all this have to come out in the newspaper?”

    The investigator said it was between the two of them.

    “Good,” John said, “because my kids have been hurt enough.”



    Kristofak, now a pitcher with the Angels’ Double-A team, hopes that his story will be able to help other people going through difficult times. (Patrick Breen for The Athletic)

    Kieboom and Kristofak: Two last names that start with K. That’s how Carter Kieboom and Zac first met.

    They were 9 years old at baseball tryouts when they were placed next to each other for the 60-yard dash.

    In their first encounter, Kristofak told Carter that he would smoke him in the race. And he did.

    “Zac’s always had a little bit of an edge to him,” Carter said. “He’s had this aura of confidence that’s always surrounded him. Getting to know him, we played the whole season together, it all made sense. He was going to be a little trash talker.”

    Kristofak knows he wouldn’t be where he is now without people like Carter, the Kieboom family and many others who gave him a community when his world had been shattered.

    It was Carter’s mother, Lynette Kieboom, who drove Kristofak to the hospital, where he found out his mother had died. The Kieboom family was there. Carter’s father, Alswinn Kieboom, became a father figure.

    “He’s like my son,” Alswinn said. “He knows I’m always there for him. And I think the relationship is pretty doggone cool in the sense that neither one of us has to advertise it.”

    The people Kristofak is closest to are those who have been there for him. They were all there in that hospital.

    Blaine Boyer was a Major League pitcher at the time, but he was also a mentor and close friend to Zac. When they first met, at the gym they both belonged to, Zac was a “punk middle schooler”; they struck up a friendship because Zac was wearing a hat for a team Boyer once played on.

    Now here was Boyer, consoling the teenage boy in the hours and days after the most traumatic experience of his life.

    “Zac, to this day, has a room at our house,” Boyer said. “It’s his room. He would stay with us. You talk about rallying people around a little. It was from high school seniors and juniors to all the parents to his grandparents to just all the community. Just rallying around this kid, who was so unbelievably loved.”

    Following that awful December 2012 day, Zac moved in with the Kiebooms temporarily. Christmas morning came three days after his mother’s murder. His father was still on the run. The hours, Zac said, were split between numbness and a sharp, painful grief.

    But on that morning, everyone showed up. Zac said that they received more than 300 presents. People came in to deliver them and pay their respects.

    Zac went back to playing baseball just two months after his mom’s death. About 10 days after the murder, his grandmother, Helen Pullium, moved to the area from Alabama and rented a home nearby so that Zac could finish high school there. At a time when everything was uncertain, everyone was trying to tiptoe around him, he could rely on baseball to stay the same.

    “He allowed people into his life, and it just made him that much better,” Carter Kieboom said.



    As a reliever for Georgia, Kristofak — here pitching against LSU in 2017 — reached the NCAA tournament twice before the Angels selected him in the 2019 draft. (John Korduner / Icon Sportswire via AP Images)

    Zac didn’t go far for college. He attended the University of Georgia, and helped the Bulldogs reach the NCAA Tournament twice in three years, operating as both a starter and a closer at various points.

    He kept in touch with the people who were there for him. And everyone was thrilled when Kristofak was drafted by the Angels in 2019, in the 14th round.

    Simply reaching Rocket City, playing in Double A, is an accomplishment. The first few years of Kristofak’s pro career were tough. COVID deprived him, and many others, of competition in 2020. The year after, he struggled, posting a 6.14 ERA in 44 innings out of the bullpen. He left that year not knowing if he’d get another shot.

    Since then, Kristofak has steadily risen through the Angels system. The front office was so impressed with him that he was in consideration for a major-league call-up earlier this season before an elbow injury shelved him in June. He watches and follows every Angels game. He wants to be a part of it.

    Making the majors someday is about more than fulfilling his own dream. It’s about changing the narrative of his family’s name.

    “I’ll get to write my own story,” Kristofak said this summer, sitting on a restaurant patio overlooking his apartment complex in Alabama. “I think that what I want to do, more than anything in life, is rewrite the Kristofak name.”

    Kristofak wants to be known as a baseball player. He wants to be known for the community that lifted him up after his mother’s murder — not for the man locked up in Hays State Prison for the rest of his life.

    “I know that if my mom were here right now,” Kristofak said, “she would be really proud of my brother and I.”

    While Kristofak is now comfortable discussing his mother’s murder, the rest of his family still isn’t. Harrison declined to talk for this story, as did Zac’s other family members. But Harrison and Zac talk weekly, and regularly visit each other.

    “He’s the only person that really understands what I’m going through. So there’s …” Zac said, before pausing to try and figure out the right words. “It’s hard to explain, honestly.

    “There’s a mutual understanding that no matter what, we will always have each other’s backs. I could go my whole life without saying it, and we would both know it.”

     



    One of Kristofak’s most vivid early memories is watching a Braves game with his mother, and telling her that he wanted to be an MLB player. (Patrick Breen for The Athletic)

    When Kristofak finished sharing his story with his teammates earlier this season, Dashwood, one of Kristofak’s closest friends on the team, approached him. He was the emotional one, telling Kristofak that sharing his story that way revealed his character.

    “He gained an unbelievable amount of respect — on top of the respect everybody already has for him,” said Angels prospect Kenyon Yovan, Kristofak’s Double-A roommate. “Everyone is always there for him.”

    Kristofak wants to be an open book. He believes his story might help people get through their own painful moments.

    “I think he understands his purpose a little better than most of us,” said Boyer. “I think Zac truly wants to help people that are hurting.

    “His scars are what make him incredible.”

    It’s not always easy for Kristofak after games. He sees players celebrating with their parents. On Mothers Day, Fathers Day.

    Rocket City would have been a perfect place for him to play. It’s so close to where he grew up. Instead, he’s constantly reminded that his father is a two-hour drive away, serving a life sentence after pleading guilty to malice murder and possession of a firearm during commission of a felony.

    Kristofak has never visited his father in prison, and while he says he has forgiven him, the anger and frustration are still palpable.

    “It’s not fair,”Kristofak said. “Even though he’ll never walk a sidewalk again or never be a member of society ever again. He gets to breathe. And she doesn’t. That’s not fair.”

    So much of the coverage of the case focused on the breaking news — the shocking murder and the fugitive capture.

    It never focused on Donna, and what she meant to her children. That’s how Kristofak remembers her. He acknowledged that he’s scared to grow older and have those memories fade. But he plans to have a family of his own one day. He wants to be an incredible father. And he wants to have kids who will learn about, and appreciate, the grandmother they will never meet.

    The day he turned 18, he memorialized her with a large “D.N.K.” tattoo on his left wrist.

    One of Kristofak’s most vivid early memories of Donna is sitting next to her, watching an Atlanta Braves game. He was 5 years old, watching Chipper Jones play against the Florida Marlins, when he turned to her and said: “I want to be a Major League Baseball player.”

    Making the big leagues certainly won’t change what happened. But reaching that level — putting on an Angels uniform with Kristofak sewn on the back — will mean something that perhaps only Kristofak and his mother could fully understand.

    “I can put the light into it,” Kristofak said of his story. “Because there is light.”

    (Top image: Samuel Richardson / The Athletic; Photos: Patrick Breen for The Athletic)

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    The New York Times

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  • Joey Votto hits a two-run home run to snap an 0-for-21 drought as the Reds beat the Nationals

    Joey Votto hits a two-run home run to snap an 0-for-21 drought as the Reds beat the Nationals

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — Joey Votto hit a two-run home run to end an 0-for-21 slump, Ian Gibaut pitched out of a jam in the sixth inning and the Cincinnati Reds beat the Washington Nationals 3-2 Monday night in the opener of a four-game series.

    Votto homered in the fourth off Jake Irvin, depositing the ball just inside the visiting bullpen in left-center field and driving in Elly De La Cruz. It’s his fourth home run in 12 games this season since returning in June.

    “He’s just great,” starter Luke Weaver said. “When he’s in the box, you just feel like something could happen at any moment, and it did tonight.”

    Pinch-hitter Tyler Stephenson broke an eighth-inning tie with a two-run homer that sent the Cincinnati Reds to their latest dramatic victory, 4-3 over the San Diego Padres.

    Juan Soto hit a tiebreaking, three-run homer in the sixth inning, Manny Machado followed three pitches later with the first of his two home runs and the San Diego Padres stopped a six-game losing streak with a 12-5 win over the Cincinnati Reds.

    Spencer Steer hit a game-winning two-run home run in the 11th inning and the Cincinnati Reds overcame Alexis Díaz’s first blown save of the season in a wild 7-5 win over the stumbling San Diego Padres.

    The AL Central-leading Cleveland Guardians have been below .500 since late April. The Cincinnati Reds top the NL Central standings while on an 86-win pace.

    The 2010 NL MVP missed the previous 10 months recovering from surgery to repair his left biceps and rotator cuff. The 39-year-old entered the game hitting .143.

    “I have felt good,” Votto said. “It’s been frustrating. Any time you go through a cold spell, especially early, it can be a bit irritating because you want to be chill at the plate and you want to feel good about yourself.”

    Weaver (2-2) picked up the win by allowing two earned runs on six hits in five-plus innings. He was spared a 10th consecutive no-decision — or worse — when Gibaut got through the sixth, allowing just one hit, striking out Corey Dickerson and inducing a flyout from Derek Hill.

    “A win’s a win,” Weaver said. “Just happy to help contribute on the day I’m pitching. It seems that we don’t lose when I’m pitching, regardless of my results, but it’s a great place to be.”

    Catcher Tyler Stephenson drove in the Reds’ other run with an RBI single in the second. Fresh off being named an All-Star for the first time, closer Alexis Díaz picked up his 24th save.

    Cincinnati is getting hot again. The Reds have won five of six since a three-game losing streak to keep pace with Milwaukee atop the NL Central, and Votto was happy to contribute.

    “When the momentum of the team is moving in a certain direction, you want to continue to be the wind behind the sails,” he said. “You want to continue to push the team in that direction.”

    Last-place Washington fell to 13-28 at home, this one in front of 36,290, the biggest crowd at Nationals Park this season. Manager Dave Martinez pointed to his team going 1 for 9 with runners in scoring position as the difference.

    “That hurt us, from the first inning on,” he said.

    Jeimer Candelario hit his 12th home run of the season, a solo shot in the fourth inning. Irvin (1-4) struck out three and allowed six hits.

    “A couple pitches that I’d want back, but just another time out trying to earn the trust and respect of my teammates,” Irvin said. “I think it went pretty well.”

    TRAINER’S ROOM

    The Nationals put right-handed reliever Thaddeus Ward on the 15-day injured list, retroactive to Sunday, with right shoulder inflammation. Martinez said Ward may have been taxed by his 30 1/3 innings of work in 22 appearances.

    UP NEXT

    RHP Brett Kennedy could start his first major league game since 2018 for the Reds, facing the Nationals and LHP Patrick Corbin (5-9, 4.82).

    ___

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

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  • Nationals-Mets game rained out, doubleheader Tuesday

    Nationals-Mets game rained out, doubleheader Tuesday

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    NEW YORK — The scheduled game between the Washington Nationals and New York Mets was postponed by rain Monday night and will be made up as part of a single-admission doubleheader Tuesday at Citi Field.

    The first game is set to begin at 4:10 p.m., though the forecast Tuesday is similarly soggy.

    New York (98-61) began the day two games behind the first-place Atlanta Braves in the NL East with three to play. The playoff-bound Mets have led the division for 175 days this season, but their chances of winning it all but disappeared last weekend when they were swept in three games at Atlanta.

    The only way the Mets take the NL East and bypass a best-of-three wild-card series this weekend is by sweeping three games from the last-place Nationals while Atlanta loses all three at Miami.

    ———

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

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