Connect with us

Published

on

NEW YORK — Pittsburgh Pirates right-hander Paul Skenes on Tuesday announced his commitment to pitch for Team USA in the 2026 World Baseball Classic, giving the Americans the premier front-line starter they have struggled to recruit in recent tournaments.

Skenes is the second player to publicly reveal his intention to play for Team USA, joining New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge, who was named captain of the American squad last month. The team will be managed by former major leaguer Mark DeRosa for the second consecutive tournament. Team USA lost to Japan in the championship game in 2023.

Skenes, 22, is less than two years removed from being the No. 1 pick in the 2023 draft and one year removed from making his major league debut last May. He was a junior at LSU, after beginning his college career at Air Force, during the last WBC in 2023. Landing him for 2026 represents a breakthrough for USA Baseball — and perhaps a shift in opinion among elite American starters.

With the WBC played during spring training and the possibility of injury terrifying clubs and pitchers alike, enlisting the best American starting pitchers to participate in the WBC has been a challenge. To illustrate: Thirteen American starting pitchers finished in the top 20 in ERA among qualifiers in 2022, and none of them pitched in the 2023 WBC the next spring.

“From a position player standpoint, I can probably fill out five lineups that want to do it,” DeRosa said when he introduced Judge as the team’s captain last month. “It’ll be the pitching that we have to lock down.”

On Tuesday, DeRosa secured a young topflight ace off to a historically outstanding start to his major league career. Skenes was dominant from the jump as a rookie, going 11-3 with a 1.96 ERA in 23 starts for the last-place Pirates. He started the All-Star Game for the National League, won the NL Rookie of the Year Award and finished third in NL Cy Young Award voting.

This season, Skenes is 3-4 with a 2.63 ERA in 54⅔ innings across nine outings for the Pirates, who are again in the NL Central basement and fired manager Derek Shelton last week. On Monday, Skenes held the New York Mets to one run with six strikeouts across six innings. It was the seventh time he has logged at least six innings in a start this season.

Continue Reading

Sports

Torres ‘loved’ playing in N.Y.; admits to struggles

Published

on

By

Torres 'loved' playing in N.Y.; admits to struggles

NEW YORK — Before returning to Yankee Stadium on Tuesday for the first time as an opponent, Gleyber Torres paid a visit to an old friend: the Yankees’ team barber.

The Detroit Tigers‘ All-Star second baseman emerged with a clean fade, cornrows and a well-groomed beard, ready to face the organization that raised him and, after seven seasons, was not interested in retaining him over the winter.

“No, not really,” Torres said when asked if he was disappointed by the Yankees‘ lack of interest before batting second for the Tigers on Tuesday night. “I know it’s a business.”

It’s been nearly a year since Torres last wore the Yankee pinstripes in a disastrous Game 5 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series. An All-Star his first two major league seasons, Torres, once the consensus top-five prospect in baseball, remained a steady contributor but never touched those heights again in the Bronx. He reached free agency after a turbulent year with end-to-end defensive struggles and a strong finish at the plate as New York’s leadoff hitter.

“I really loved playing in New York,” Torres said. “That’s the city everybody wants to play in. It was never pressure. It’s just frustration in the moment because I [didn’t] do my job. I didn’t play good defensively. At the [time], offensively, I didn’t do the job. And, as a player, you got egos and when things aren’t going your way, you’re always going to feel frustration because you’re young and that’s the big thing.

“Playing with Detroit, it’s the same mentality. Do the best I can do for the team and it’s never pressure. It’s just, I think, the pressure is on myself to get better every time and do my job. I think that’s always my mentality.”

Torres was offered multiyear contracts during free agency but opted to sign a one-year, $15 million deal with Detroit, betting on himself to rebound with an organization that had turned the corner with an improbable postseason appearance in 2024.

While still short of his peak performance, the change has yielded positive results. Entering Tuesday, Torres, who made his first All-Star team this summer since 2019, was batting .259 with 15 home runs and a .758 OPS in 128 games for the first-place Tigers in his age-28 season. He’s batting .347 with runners in scoring position and already has recorded a career high in walks.

“He’s a staple in their line and he’s a really good player,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “We saw that here. Especially the kind of finish he had last year, the final two months of the season and then all through October. He’s kind of carried it over there and been really consistent for them.

“He’s such a good hitter. He knows the strike zone so well. The last year, we started to see the maturity. He was always a good hitter, but you really started to see that veteran, mature hitter that really controls the strike zone.”

Hitting in front of Juan Soto and Aaron Judge, Torres noted, allowed for easier success. He said he learned to practice patience, to take his walks if needed and trust teammates behind him. He said he took that approach to Detroit and his on-base percentage, which has jumped more than 30 points from last year, illustrates improvement.

Torres said he’s benefitted from the Tigers’ emphasis on aggressive baserunning, something he said the Yankees did not stress to him. He hopes it concludes with another trip to the World Series in a different uniform, a year after falling just short in New York.

“I really liked the fans and everything from when I was playing here,” Torres said. “Fortunately, whatever happened last year is in the past. I always tried to do the best for the team and for the fans. I tried to bring the energy every night when I got the opportunity to play.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Cubs opt to put Tucker on IL due to calf strain

Published

on

By

Cubs opt to put Tucker on IL due to calf strain

ATLANTA — The Chicago Cubs placed All-Star right fielder Kyle Tucker on the 10-day injured list because of a strained left calf, a move retroactive to Saturday.

Tucker has not played since Sept. 2. He is eligible to be activated on Sept. 16.

“It was just a little worse today than it was yesterday,” Cubs manager Craig Counsell said before Tuesday night’s game against the Braves. “Yesterday was a really good day, just didn’t have any progress today. He wasn’t comfortable playing, so we said, ‘We have to give this a little more time.'”

Tucker is hitting .270 with a team-best .854 OPS. He has 22 home runs in his first year with the Cubs after seven seasons with Houston.

“I don’t think anything has gotten worse,” Counsell said. “We just have to get to a point where he’s not symptomatic and then not feeling it doing baseball activities.”

Catcher Moisés Ballesteros was recalled from Triple-A Iowa.

Continue Reading

Sports

AL East-leading Jays place Bichette on 10-day IL

Published

on

By

AL East-leading Jays place Bichette on 10-day IL

TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays put shortstop Bo Bichette on the 10-day injured list Tuesday because of a sprained left knee, retroactive to Sept. 7.

Toronto recalled outfielder Joey Loperfido from Triple-A Buffalo.

Bichette leads the majors with 181 hits and 44 doubles, and ranks third with a .311 average. The two-time All-Star and two-time AL hit leader has 18 homers and leads Toronto with 93 RBIs in 139 games.

Bichette was injured in the sixth inning of Saturday’s 3-1 loss at Yankee Stadium when he collided with catcher Austin Wells and was tagged out at home plate. Bichette hobbled off the field with the assistance of a trainer after colliding with Wells’ shin guard.

Yankees outfielder Cody Bellinger made a 95.3 mph, one-hop throw from right field to retire Bichette, who was trying to score on a single by Nathan Lukes. It was the final play before rain delayed the game for nearly two hours.

Bichette had X-rays during the delay and returned to strike out in his final at-bat. He did not play in Sunday’s series finale. Toronto was off Monday.

The Blue Jays lead the AL East by two games over the New York Yankees with 19 games remaining, starting with Tuesday’s home game against Houston.

Continue Reading

Trending