ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the L.A. Rams for ESPN from 2016 to 2018 and the L.A. Angels for MLB.com from 2012 to 2016.
ANAHEIM, Calif. — The Detroit Tigers designated Kenta Maeda for assignment Thursday, marking the end of a frustrating year-plus stint for the veteran right-hander.
Maeda, 37, was signed to a two-year, $24 million deal by the Tigers in November 2023, then proceeded to post a 6.21 ERA in 36 appearances spanning 120⅓ innings over his two seasons with Detroit. This year, he allowed eight runs (seven earned) on nine hits and six walks in eight innings out of the bullpen.
“It’s tough,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said of parting ways with Maeda. “When he was good, he really helped us. And when he struggled, we really didn’t get him back on track. And so it’s a frustrating end to his time here. We do want to create opportunity for the young players and young pitchers we’re really excited about.”
The Tigers called up Tyler Owens, a 24-year-old right-handed reliever, to take Maeda’s spot on the roster.
Maeda came over from Japan in his late 20s and established himself as a weapon in the rotation and out of the bullpen with the Los Angeles Dodgers from 2016 to 2019, posting a 3.87 ERA in 137 games during the regular season and a 3.31 ERA in 24 appearances in the playoffs. Maeda then posted a 2.70 ERA and finished second in American League Cy Young Award voting while with the Minnesota Twins in the COVID-19-shortened 2020 season.
But his ERA ballooned to 4.66 in 2021. He spent the 2022 season recovering from Tommy John surgery, posted a 4.23 ERA in 21 games (20 starts) in 2023 and hardly got right upon going to Detroit the following season.
Maeda’s ERA stood at 7.26 on July 9, 2024, prompting a transition to the bullpen. His stuff played up, triggering some initial success, but consistency continued to elude him. The Tigers were encouraged by how he looked in spring training this year, but his struggles continued once the regular season began.
Hinch and Tigers president of baseball operations Scott Harris met with Maeda at the team hotel Thursday morning to inform him they were essentially moving on.
“I just think it was a frustrating time for him,” Hinch said. “We couldn’t get him on track, and he couldn’t get himself on track. And that is a bad combo. We’ve had a lot of success stories here with guys who have gotten better. But unfortunately, we couldn’t get this one going.”
Detroit has seven days to trade or release Maeda, or the Tigers could send him outright to the minors if he clears waivers. Maeda, however, could refuse a minor league assignment because of his service time and instead choose to become a free agent.
Owens, whose fastball sits at 96-98 mph, went 0-1 with a 4.50 ERA in 12 games for Toledo, striking out 11 and walking nine in 14 innings.
Oklahoma starting quarterback John Mateer, after screenshots of past references to “sports gambling” on his Venmo account surfaced online Monday, denied ever being involved with gambling, saying Tuesday it was instead “inside jokes” with his friends.
School officials became aware of the screenshots late Monday night and are looking into the situation, a source told ESPN’s Pete Thamel.
“The allegations that I once participated in sports gambling are false,” Mateer posted to X on Tuesday. “My previous Venmo descriptions did not accurately portray the transactions in question but were instead inside jokes between me and my friends.
“I have never bet on sports. I understand the seriousness of the matter but recognize that, taken out of context, those Venmo descriptions suggest otherwise. I can assure my teammates, coaches, and officials at the NCAA that I have not engaged in any sports gambling.”
Screenshots posted online Monday night showed Mateer allegedly twice included “sports gambling” in memos for transactions on Nov. 20, 2022, while he was a freshman at Washington State. Both transactions were allegedly made to a Venmo account for Richard Roaten, believed to be a teammate at Washington State at the time.
College athletes are prohibited from betting on any sport offered by the NCAA, with penalties up to loss of eligibility.
OU Athletics issued a statement saying it “takes any allegations of gambling seriously and works closely with the NCAA in any situation of concern.” The school said its “unaware of any NCAA investigation and has no reason to believe there is one pending.”
Mateer, the No. 1 overall player in ESPN’s portal rankings, transferred to Oklahoma from Washington State this offseason. He passed for 3,139 yards and 29 touchdowns last season, his third with the Cougars.
Eli Lederman covers college football and recruiting for ESPN.com. He joined ESPN in 2024 after covering the University of Oklahoma for Sellout Crowd and the Tulsa World.
Oklahoma secured its most significant commitment yet in the 2026 recruiting cycle on Tuesday when defensive end Jake Kreul, No. 22 in the 2026 ESPN 300, announced his pledge to the Sooners on “The Pat McAfee Show.”
Kreul, a 6-foot-3, 235-pound edge rusher from Florida’s IMG Academy, entered August as the lone remaining uncommitted among the 23 five-star prospects in ESPN’s prospect rankings for the 2026 cycle. He chose Oklahoma over Ole Miss and Texas following a slate of official visits this spring that included trips to all three finalists as well as Colorado, Florida and Ohio State.
Kreul lands with the Sooners as the 16th overall pledge and only the third ESPN 300 commit in Oklahoma coach Brent Venables’ 2026 recruiting class following the program’s 6-7 finish to the 2024 season. Kreul now stands as the top-ranked member of Venables’ latest class alongside fellow top-300 pledges in No. 5 dual-threat quarterback Bowe Bentley (No. 168 overall) and wide receiver Daniel Odom (No. 258). If Kreul ultimately signs later this year, it will represent Oklahoma’s fourth consecutive cycle with at least one five-star addition dating to the 2023 class.
Kruel took part in the 2025 Under Armour All-America Game earlier this year and will enter his senior season at IMG Academy this fall. One of the most polished defensive prospects in the 2026 class, he closed his junior campaign in 2025 with 39 tackles, 11 hurries and 6 sacks.
Oklahoma joined the likes of Florida and Ole Miss among the first major programs to prominently enter the mix for Kreul’s commitment nearly two years ago. Kreul told ESPN last month that his relationships with Sooners defensive line assistants Todd Bates and Miguel Chavis, along with Venables’ background of nearly two decades as a defensive coordinator were driving factors in his heavy interest in Oklahoma.
“The opportunity to play for a defensive-minded head coach and one of the best minds in the sport in coach Venables is something you may not get at every school,” Kreul said. “That piece is something that’s been very present for me throughout in terms of building my relationship with Oklahoma.”
Kreul now stands as the seventh defender bound for Oklahoma in 2026 and a cornerstone member of the Sooners’ latest class. Along the defensive line, Oklahoma also holds pledges from three-star defensive tackle Brian Harris and defensive ends Matthew Nelson and Daniel Norman.
EUGENE, Ore. — Oregon wide receiver Jurrion Dickey has been suspended indefinitely, coach Dan Lanning announced Tuesday.
Dickey, a former five-star recruit, has played in 15 games in two years with the Ducks but has had only two catches for 14 yards.
Lanning did not specify the reason for Dickey’s suspension but said the team has two team rules: “Be respectful, be on time.”
“There’s some pieces of that where I felt like he needed a break from us and we needed a break from that so we could focus on what’s in front of us right now,” Lanning said. “Wishing him nothing but the best, as far as success, and want to see him get back to where he can be a contributor somewhere. That might be here. That might be somewhere else.”
The Ducks were ranked No. 7 in the preseason AP Top 25 poll. The team was already thin at wide receiver with the loss of Evan Stewart, the Ducks’ top returner who injured his knee in the offseason and could miss the season.