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NEW YORK — Devin Williams‘ nightmare season continued Monday night with another poor outing in the New York Yankees4-3 loss to the San Diego Padres at a rainy Yankee Stadium.

The right-hander entered in the eighth inning with the Yankees leading 3-0. He exited with two outs — both on strikeouts — and the bases loaded after yielding a hit and two walks, leaving Luke Weaver, who recently replaced him as the club’s closer, to clean the mess. But Weaver surrendered a pair of two-run hits to squander the lead as the Yankees fell to 19-16.

Williams was charged with three runs, increasing his ERA to 10.03 in 14 games this season. He departed to another smattering of boos from a scant crowd that stuck around to brave the elements and watch his first appearance at home since being demoted from the closer role.

But unlike his previous disappointing outings, Williams is confident the appearance was an outlier and attributed his performance to his inability to adjust to the sloppy conditions in the rain.

“Both walks were obviously not what you’re trying to do, but I was kind of battling myself there with the landing spot,” Williams said. “Tough to control the fastball today.”

Williams said his trouble with the landing spot affected his fastball’s release point. The right-hander threw seven of his 12 fastballs for balls, mostly yanking them to his glove side.

He appeared sharp when he struck out Martin Maldonado on four pitches to begin his outing. He also struck out Fernando Tatis Jr. on a changeup with runners on first and second base before Tatis was ejected for expressing his discontent with the strike zone.

But Williams walked Tyler Wade on six pitches, spraying four around the strike zone; yielded a single to Brandon Lockridge on an 0-2 fastball; and surrendered a four-pitch free pass — all fastballs — to Luis Arraez to load the bases and end his night.

Weaver then gave up a two-run double to Manny Machado and a two-run single to Xander Bogaerts to lose the lead. The fourth run was charged to Weaver — the first earned run he has given up this season. The right-hander has an 0.59 ERA over 15⅓ innings this season.

“I feel good, I feel confident on the mound,” Williams said. “I felt like I was in a good spot. It’s one of those nights where you’re not only battling the hitter, I was battling the mound. But we’re all given the same set of circumstances and I couldn’t pull through tonight.”

The 30-year-old Williams was a slow starter in his six-plus seasons with the Milwaukee Brewers, but he never struggled nearly to this extent.

Williams posted a 1.83 ERA in his time in Milwaukee, winning 2020 NL Rookie of the Year and making two All-Star teams behind his elite screwball-like changeup known as The Airbender. He gave up 13 earned runs in 80⅓ innings across 83 appearances as the Brewers’ closer over the past two seasons. He already has matched that earned run total in only 11⅔ innings with the Yankees.

“The biggest thing, again, is just command and being ahead and not putting guys on,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “Stuff’s there. Stuff’s fine and I do believe he’ll get on a roll and be lights out and dominant. But the command part of it, where the walks or getting behind in certain situations, have hurt him a little bit.”

Boos from the home crowd have accompanied the struggles. Williams heard them when he struggled on Opening Day. And he heard them again as he gave up three runs to the Toronto Blue Jays without recording an out on April 25 — his last appearance as the Yankees’ closer, at least for the time being.

On Monday, Carlos Rodon, who sparkled over 6⅔ scoreless innings, voiced his support to Williams after his appearance. Two years ago, Rodon was the recipient of boos during his dreadful, injury-plagued first season in the Bronx. He understands the pressure. He wants his teammate to just stay the course.

“I’ve been through it,” Rodon said. “I know what that feels like. It’s not easy. But we acquired him for a reason. He’s such a great pitcher. Just needs to build that confidence and he needs to know what kind of pitcher he is. He’s so good. He’s tremendous. We got him for a reason and it’s an unbelievable changeup. Just go out there and pitch with some swagger.”

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Mariners, now up 2-1, ‘deserve where we’re at’

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Mariners, now up 2-1, 'deserve where we're at'

DETROIT — The Seattle Mariners are on the brink of a spot in the AL Championship series for the first time in 24 years.

Cal Raleigh hit a two-run homer, Eugenio Suarez and J.P. Crawford had solo shots and Seattle beat the Detroit Tigers 8-4 on Tuesday night to take a 2-1 lead in the AL Division Series.

The Mariners are within a win of their first AL Championship Series since 2001. Their first chance to advance is on Wednesday afternoon in Game 4 at Comerica Park and if necessary, another opportunity awaits on Friday back in Seattle for a decisive Game 5.

“The Seattle Mariners deserve where we’re at right now,” Suarez said.

Detroit manager A.J. Hinch said not to count his team out after it showed resolve following a historic collapse in the regular season and bounced back by eliminating Cleveland in an AL Wild Card series, then won Game 1 against Seattle.

“We’ve had to play more and more back-against-the-wall-type games,” Hinch said. “I know our guys are going to be ready.”

Seattle’s Logan Gilbert gave up one run on four hits while striking out seven and walking none over six innings.

“Can’t say enough about what Logan did,” Mariners manager Dan Wilson said. “Just an incredible outing. He had everything going.”

Raleigh, who had a major league-high 60 homers during the regular season, hit a 391-foot, two-run homer to left-center in the ninth to make it 8-1.

The offensively challenged Tigers were limited to four hits and one run through eight innings before suddenly generating some offense in the ninth against Caleb Ferguson, who allowed three runs on three hits and a walk without getting an out.

Spencer Torkelson hit a two-run double and Andy Ibanez followed with an RBI single.

All-Star closer Andres Munoz entered with one on and no outs and ended Detroit’s comeback hopes with a flyout and game-ending double play.

Detroit’s Jack Flaherty lasted just 3 1/3 innings, allowing four runs (three earned) on four hits and three walks.

Seattle scored two runs in the third after starting the inning with three hits and a walk.

Victor Robles led off with a double and scored on an error, which was credited to left fielder Riley Greene for an errant throw that could have been fielded on a bounce by catcher Dillon Dingler.

“A little bit of a breakdown all the way around,” Hinch said.

Randy Arozarena‘s RBI single put the Mariners ahead 2-0 in the third.

Suarez sent a 422-foot shot to left in the fourth to make it 3-0. Raleigh’s two-out RBI single in the inning gave Seattle a four-run cushion.

The Tigers were hoping their first home game in two-plus weeks might make them more comfortable at the plate, but it didn’t help and they lost an eighth straight at Comerica Park.

Detroit finally scored in the fifth on Kerry Carpenter‘s fielder’s choice on what was potentially an inning-ending double play. Crawford’s throw from second base pulled first baseman Josh Naylor off the bag and he didn’t secure the ball in his glove, allowing Dingler to score.

Crawford’s homer in the sixth restored Seattle’s four-run lead.

The Tigers allowed the Mariners to score a second unearned run in the eighth inning after Carpenter dropped Victor Robles‘ fly in right field, allowing Luke Raley to advance to third and to score on Crawford’s sacrifice fly.

Detroit RHP Casey Mize and Seattle RHP Bryce Miller are expected to start Game 4 on Wednesday.

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Blue Jays vs. Yankees (Oct 7, 2025) Live Score – ESPN

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Blue Jays vs. Yankees (Oct 7, 2025) Live Score - ESPN

1st Guerrero Jr. homered to center (427 feet), Schneider scored. 2 0 1st Stanton singled to left, Judge scored, Rice to second. 2 1 3rd Varsho singled to center, Schneider scored, Guerrero Jr. to second. 3 1 3rd Clement singled to left, Guerrero Jr. scored, Clement to second, Varsho to third. 4 1 3rd Santander singled to right, Varsho scored and Clement scored. 6 1 3rd Judge doubled to left, Grisham scored. 6 2 3rd Stanton hit sacrifice fly to center, Bellinger scored. 6 3 4th Judge homered to left (373 feet), Wells scored and Grisham scored. 6 6 5th Chisholm Jr. homered to right (409 feet). 6 7 5th Wells singled to right, Rosario scored, Wells thrown out at second. 6 8 6th Rice hit sacrifice fly to right, Judge scored. 6 9

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Phillies star Harper OK with boos: ‘I love our fans’

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Phillies star Harper OK with boos: 'I love our fans'

LOS ANGELES — The loud booing by angry Philadelphia Phillies fans at their home ballpark likely drowned out similar noise Bryce Harper was making.

The Phillies slugger has a single and three strikeouts in the NL Division Series, which Philadelphia trails 2-0 against the defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.

“I love our fans. I boo myself when I get out,” Harper said Tuesday.

Game 3 is Wednesday at Dodger Stadium, with the Phillies facing elimination in the best-of-five series.

“I will probably get booed tomorrow night, too,” Harper said.

He didn’t agree that a change of venue — away from their frustrated fan base — is a good thing for the slumping Phillies.

“We’ve got some of the best fans in baseball and they make me play better, so I enjoy it,” Harper said. “They show up for us every day. They spend their hard-earned dollar to come watch us play; they expect greatness out of us and I expect greatness out of myself and my teammates as well.”

Third baseman Nick Castellanos came up big in a wild ninth inning that nearly saw the Phillies steal a win Monday. The fan reaction whipsawed between huge cheers and deafening boos in the 4-3 loss.

“I think that the stadium is alive on both sides, right?” Castellanos said. “When the game is going good, it’s wind at our back, but when the game is not going good, it’s wind in our face. The environment can be with us, and the environment can be against us.”

Harper was glad to be in sunny Los Angeles, not far from his hometown of Las Vegas where he was a Dodgers fan.

He became a father for the fourth time last week, when his wife, Kayla, gave birth to a son.

“I’ve got an incredible wife, man. She pushed that thing out in three pushes and 30 seconds,” Harper said. “She’s an absolute monster doing it. Women. Man, what a breed. I’m serious, it’s an incredible thing. Being able to hold your son for the first time is something. It’s one of the greatest moments of my life.”

The couple now has two boys, Krew and Hayes, and two girls, Brooklyn and Kamryn, all of whom are age 6 and under.

Harper said he loves baseball but his family means the most.

“I definitely miss them right now,” he said.

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