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The Atlanta Braves placed ace pitcher Max Fried on the 15-day injured list with a strained left forearm.

The roster move, announced Tuesday, marks the second IL trip this season for Fried, who also missed two weeks in April after suffering a hamstring injury on Opening Day. The Braves have not disclosed how long the All-Star left-hander will be sidelined or whether he will undergo further testing.

The Braves said the 15-day IL stint is retroactive to May 6, one day after Fried’s most recent start Friday against the Baltimore Orioles. Fried allowed a season-high five earned runs in six-plus innings against Baltimore and also committed two throwing errors.

Fried did not indicate after Friday’s loss that he was injured, saying he would “make sure that what happened tonight doesn’t happen again.” Fried was not listed by the Braves as a starter for this week’s series against the Boston Red Sox, however, and manager Brian Snitker told reporters Sunday that the team was “working through things” when asked about Fried’s availability.

The Braves still have not listed a starter for Wednesday’s game against Boston. Left-hander Danny Young was recalled from Triple-A Gwinnett in a corresponding roster move Tuesday.

Fried is the second Atlanta starter to go to the IL, joining right-hander Kyle Wright, who is out with shoulder soreness. The Braves have not announced who will join their rotation alongside Spencer Strider, Charlie Morton and Bryce Elder, although rookie left-handers Dylan Dodd and Jared Shuster both started games last month when Fried and Wright were sidelined.

Fried, 29, is 2-1 with a 2.08 ERA in five starts this season, his seventh with the Braves. He finished second in voting for the National League Cy Young Award last season after going 14-7 with a 2.48 ERA but lost his salary arbitration case against the Braves earlier this year and will make $13.5 million in 2023 instead of his $15 million request.

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Follow live: Jets, Stars battle in Game 3 as series shifts to Dallas

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Jung hits HR for mom while facing brother Jace

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Jung hits HR for mom while facing brother Jace

DETROIT — Josh Jung delivered a special Mother’s Day gift to his mom, Mary.

The Texas Rangers third baseman hit a two-out, two-run homer in the fifth inning off Beau Brieske at Detroit on Sunday. Jung’s brother, Jace, was in the Tigers’ lineup at the same position.

Before the game, Mary Jung delivered the game ball to the mound and her sons joined her on the field.

“My heart is just exploding,” Mary Jung said in an interview on the Rangers’ telecast. “I mean, I couldn’t ask for a better Mother’s Day gift. We’re all in the same place, to begin with. But then to watch them live their dream, do what they love to do, I couldn’t be more proud.”

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, it was the first home run by a player facing his brother’s team on Mother’s Day since at least 1969.

The Jungs’ parents, Mary and Jeff, have been in attendance throughout the three-game series. The brothers also started Saturday when Texas recorded a 10-3 victory.

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Yankees’ Stroman has setback in rehab of knee

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Yankees' Stroman has setback in rehab of knee

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — New York Yankees pitcher Marcus Stroman had a setback as he tries to return from a left knee injury that has sidelined him for the past month.

Manager Aaron Boone said Sunday that Stroman still had “discomfort” in the knee after throwing a live batting practice session in Tampa, Florida, on Friday and will be reevaluated before the team figures out the next step in his rehabilitation process.

“He’s gotten a lot of treatments on it and stuff,” Boone said. “It just can’t kind of get over that final hump to really allow him to get to that next level on the mound. We’ll try and continue to get our arms around it and try and make sure we get that out of there.”

Stroman hasn’t pitched since allowing five runs in two-thirds of an inning against the San Francisco Giants on April 11. He was placed on the 15-day injured list the next day with what Boone hoped at the time would be a short-term absence.

But there is no timeline for the right-hander’s return, and Boone said the injury likely impacted the way Stroman pitched before going on the IL. He was 0-1 with an 11.57 ERA in three starts.

“Certainly that last start, I think he just couldn’t really step on that front side like he needed to,” Boone said. “I talk about how these guys are like race cars, and one little thing off and it can affect just that last level of command or that last level of extra stuff that you need. So we’ll continue to try to get him where we need to.”

Stroman had surgery March 19, 2015, to repair a torn ACL in his left knee. He returned to a major league mound that Sept. 12.

Stroman, 34, is in the second season of a two-year contract guaranteeing $37 million. His deal includes a $16 million conditional player option for 2026 that could be exercised if he pitches in at least 140 innings this year.

Last season, Stroman was 10-9 with a 4.31 ERA in 30 games (29 starts) when he threw 154⅔ innings, his most since 2021 with the Mets. Stroman struggled in the second half and did not pitch in the postseason, when the Yankees made their first World Series appearance since 2009.

In other injury news, DJ LeMahieu played for the second straight day on a rehab assignment at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre on Sunday and could join the team in Seattle this week to make his season debut. LeMahieu had a cortisone injection last week in his right hip, dealing with an injury stemming from last year.

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