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OAKLAND, Calif. — When Perry Minasian arrived to take over as general manager of the Los Angeles Angels in November 2020, he immediately committed himself to improving player development.

He’s about to get a glimpse of that progress for the remainder of the 2023 season following a dramatic roster overhaul that included five players being placed on waivers.

“For multiple reasons, we haven’t played well,” Minasian said.

The Angels on Tuesday placed right-hander Lucas Giolito, relievers Dominic Leone, Matt Moore and Reynaldo Lopez and outfielder Hunter Renfroe on waivers, and all have since been claimed by contenders, three joining the Cleveland Guardians.

New faces arrived Friday for the series opener at Oakland, with touted prospect Kyren Paris set for his major league debut starting at shortstop and batting ninth. Also promoted from Triple-A Salt Lake were right-handers Jimmy Herget, Gerardo Reyes and Andrew Wantz, lefty Kolton Ingram and infielder Michael Stefanic.

“To play right here in the Coliseum is going to be special,” Paris said.

Paris was set to become the 10th Angel to make his major league debut in 2023 and 61st player used by the Angels this season overall, and he grew up in the East Bay suburb of Oakley cheering for the A’s.

Right-hander Jose Marte, called up Thursday, would be No. 62.

Manager Phil Nevin reminded the 21-year-old Paris to “just go out and have fun.”

“I love seeing days like this, especially somebody coming to their hometown and getting an opportunity for their major league debut here,” Nevin said.

While shedding salary was a big factor, the Angels aren’t below the luxury tax threshold even with all the players they let go, but declined to say how close Los Angeles is.

Minasian didn’t find it productive to second-guess moves made at the trade deadline.

“At the time we made decisions we made, we felt like they were the right decisions,” he said. “Sometimes you do things that work, sometimes you do things that doesn’t.”

He also opted not to speak to the Angels after all the moves. Los Angeles sits in fourth place in the AL West.

“They understand where we’re at. There’s a lot of really intelligent individuals in that room who understand where they’re at,” he said. “We have conversations along the way with certain guys but as far as addressing the team, no. It’s part of the game and it’s baseball. Certain things happen. Rosters change depending where you’re at in the standings.”

Angels players joked around and were lighthearted in the clubhouse before heading outside for batting practice and pregame work.

Nevin, too, is seemingly taking all the change in stride as much as he’s able.

“I’m meeting a lot of new people,” he said. “A lot of things I talk about all the time, relationships you create in this game are always special and each call-up and each player that comes here has a different story. You create different relationships with them, whether it’s the young players or a veteran player getting another chance. I like it. Unfortunately we’ve had the injuries we’ve had, had some turnover and this has happened, but it’s also part of the game.

“You don’t anticipate these things starting. You tell them at spring training, ‘Hey, everyone in this room has a chance and there’s some guys that aren’t even in this room right now who have a chance.’ That’s certainly come to fruition this year.”

Minasian certainly didn’t sound concerned about how this roster overhauling might look for business in the offseason when it comes to signing prized free agents.

Including one of their own: two-way star Shohei Ohtani, who Minasian said will continue to hit with a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his elbow until he tells the Angels otherwise.

“I think this is a very desirable place to play,” Minasian said. “If you ask the people that play here and having the conversations I’ve had over the last two days, especially yesterday with some of the individuals that were given a chance to play … there’s a lot of positive things. I know we haven’t necessarily played well over the last month, month and a half. With that being said, there are some good things happening. I think a lot of the players see it, recognize it.”

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Phillies’ Nola hit hard in return from injured list

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Phillies' Nola hit hard in return from injured list

WASHINGTON — Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Aaron Nola‘s first start after returning from the injured list didn’t last long.

The right-hander allowed six runs in 2⅓ innings Sunday against the Washington Nationals, a start that ended when seven consecutive batters reached safely.

Nola struck out four in his first major league outing since May 14.

The former All-Star was one of the majors’ most durable pitchers entering the season, making at least 32 starts and throwing at least 180⅔ innings in each of the last six full seasons. But a sprained right ankle and fractured rib cost him three months this season.

His return became even more significant Saturday when Philadelphia placed ace Zack Wheeler on the injured list with a blood clot in his right arm. Nola already was scheduled to start after making three minor league rehabilitation appearances, though the Phillies scrapped their plans to use a six-man rotation.

Nola gave up Luis Garcia Jr.’s leadoff single in the first inning, then appeared to settle in. He retired the next seven batters as Philadelphia built a 6-0 lead.

The Nationals stitched together three consecutive singles in the third, the last by CJ Abrams to score a run. That led to a mound visit from pitching coach Caleb Cotham, but Nola then walked Paul DeJong before giving up Daylen Lile‘s two-run single and Dylan Crews‘ two-run double. Jose Tena followed with a tying double to end Nola’s day.

Nola allowed seven hits while throwing 53 pitches. His ERA rose to 6.92.

In addition to Nola taking Wheeler’s roster spot, the Phillies activated third baseman Alec Bohm from the injured list and optioned infielder Otto Kemp to Triple-A Lehigh Valley. To make room on the 40-man roster for Nola, Philadelphia released outfielder Cal Stevenson.

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Reds DFA fan favorite Fraley, activate Stephenson

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Reds DFA fan favorite Fraley, activate Stephenson

CINCINNATI — Cincinnati Reds outfielder Jake Fraley was designated for assignment on Sunday, with catcher Tyler Stephenson‘s thumb injury and a short bench contributing to the decision.

The Reds also recalled right-hander Connor Phillips and outfielder Will Benson from Triple-A Louisville and optioned left-hander Joe La Sorsa to Triple-A.

“We came to the idea of kind of giving Jake a chance to play where maybe he thinks he deserves to play, which I understand, is maybe better than him sitting the bench here,” Reds manager Terry Francona said. “Stephenson is banged up. We were a little concerned about playing short, maybe a two-man bench.”

Fraley, 30, is in his fifth major-league season, his fourth with Cincinnati. He is batting .232 with six home runs and 23 RBI in 67 games.

He hyperextended his knee after making an error in left field to allow a run to score in the 10th inning of a 6-5, 11-inning loss to the first-place Brewers on Saturday. Francona said neither the miscue nor the injury factored into the DFA move.

Stephenson reaggravated an injury to his left thumb during the Pittsburgh series and is day to day. Jose Trevino, who was behind the plate Saturday night, got the start for Sunday’s day game.

Francona said the decision on Fraley, a popular player among fans and in the clubhouse, wasn’t easy.

“Not that I needed an excuse to lose sleep last night, but you do, because you’re thinking about it,” Francona said. “You’re making decisions that alter their life. The day when I stop thinking about it, I will re-retire.”

Cincinnati, the only team this season that hasn’t been swept in a series, has dropped the first two games of the three-game set against the Brewers, who have won 14 straight games.

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Red Sox’s Mayer set for season-ending surgery

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Red Sox's Mayer set for season-ending surgery

BOSTON — Red Sox infielder Marcelo Mayer says he will have season-ending surgery on his right wrist.

The 22-year-old Mayer injured the wrist in late July. He got an injection to try to come back but decided to have surgery. He said he has a tear that hadn’t improved with the anti-inflammatory injection.

“I knew definitely that it was going to be on the table,” he said Sunday, sitting in the Red Sox dugout at Fenway Park before they faced the Miami Marlins in the series finale.

“As an athlete and somebody that loves this game so much, all I want to do is play and be out there every single day, especially when you’re in the big leagues and the playoffs are so important,” he said. “The way that my wrist is right now, there’s just no way to come back and play. It made the decision pretty easy to have the surgery.”

Drafted fourth overall in 2021, Mayer was called up in late May. A natural shortstop, he played mostly third base, batting .228 with four homers and 10 RBIs in 44 games.

“The shot wasn’t working. It’s a three-month recovery. He should be fine if everything goes well for spring training,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “He’s a big part of the future of this organization. Just get him right, get him ready and see what happens in the future.”

Cora said he knew things weren’t going well after Mayer played catch on Thursday’s day off.

“He didn’t sound too positive about it. ‘My swing is not right,'” Cora said Mayer told him.

Mayer said he “gave it my all” but knew that surgery was the best option.

“Obviously with options given, I could have had surgery when I first injured it or get the shot,” he said. “I tried everything I could with the slight chance to come back and play.”

He also missed the final two months in the minors last season with a shoulder injury and didn’t play after July 31.

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