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MILWAUKEE — Milwaukee right-hander Nick Mears was left off the Brewers’ roster for their NL Championship Series matchup with the Los Angeles Dodgers after making 63 relief appearances during the regular season.

Milwaukee instead included right-hander Tobias Myers, who wasn’t on the Brewers’ roster for their NL Division Series with the Chicago Cubs. Game 1 of the NLCS is Monday at Milwaukee.

The Dodgers also altered their bullpen for this series. They added one more pitcher by including right-hander Ben Casparius and leaving out Dalton Rushing, who had been one of three catchers on their NLDS roster. Rushing struck out in his lone NLDS at bat.

Los Angeles’ NLCS bullpen will also include left-hander Justin Wrobleski, who was added to the NLDS roster after Tanner Scott, who underwent a surgical removal of an abscess from an infection on his lower body before the final game of the NLDS matchup with Philadelphia.

Because Scott was removed from the NLDS roster during the series, it made him ineligible for the NLCS.

Mears went 5-3 with a 3.49 ERA for the Brewers during the regular season. He pitched 1 2/3 scoreless innings in the NLDS.

Myers was 1-2 with a 3.55 ERA for Milwaukee in 22 appearances, including six starts. That followed a 2024 rookie season in which he went 9-6 with a 3.00 ERA while starting 25 of his 27 appearances. Myers also allowed only two hits over five shutout innings while starting Game 3 of the Brewers’ NL Wild Card Series loss to the New York Mets last season.

Milwaukee’s NLCS roster also doesn’t include two-time All-Star pitcher Brandon Woodruff as he continues to recover from a right lat strain.

Casparius went 7-5 with a 4.64 ERA in 46 appearances this season. He posted a 1.42 ERA in 6 1/3 postseason innings last year – including 4 1/3 scoreless innings in the NLCS – to help the Dodgers in their drive to the World Series title.

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Follow live: Blue Jays, Mariners face off in ALCS Game 5

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Chourio (hamstring cramps) in NLCS G4 lineup

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Chourio (hamstring cramps) in NLCS G4 lineup

LOS ANGELES — Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Jackson Chourio was back in the lineup for Game 4 of the National League Championship Series on Friday, one day after exiting with hamstring cramps.

With the Brewers needing a win to save their season and avoid a sweep, Chourio was slotted into the No. 2 spot of the lineup, playing left field, against Los Angeles Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani.

“I think they’ve got it under control,” Brewers manager Pat Murphy said of Chourio’s troublesome right hamstring. “I think he’s going to perform like he did yesterday. Three hard contacts yesterday. What else can you ask? You might walk away and say, ‘He was 0-for-4,’ but he hit the ball hard three times and nothing to show for it.”

Chourio, 21, fouled off a pitch from Dodgers reliever Blake Treinen in Thursday’s seventh inning and immediately grabbed at the back of his right leg, which had suddenly cramped up. After an athletic trainer came out to see him, Chourio tried stretching the tightness out but hopped off the field without barely putting any pressure on his right leg. Blake Perkins replaced Chourio and eventually struck out.

Chourio was given intravenous treatment following his exit and said after the game, a 3-1 loss by the Brewers, that he feels “physically good,” adding that he expected to play in Game 4.

Chourio has been bothered by right hamstring issues since July 29, when he left a game and wound up missing a month. The injury recurred when Chourio existed the Brewers’ first postseason game on Oct. 4, though he returned for Game 2 on Oct. 6 and hit a home run. Chourio — who signed an eight-year, $82 million contract before his major league debut, then proceeded to break out as a rookie in 2024 — is batting .276/.290/.552 in these playoffs, one of few producers in a slumping Brewers lineup.

Chourio’s presence is crucial with the Brewers attempting to become only the second team in baseball history, aside from the 2004 Boston Red Sox, to overcome a 3-0 deficit in a best-of-seven series. Joe Torre who managed the New York Yankees team that relinquished that lead, called Murphy on Friday morning to offer some advice.

“Do the little things; they lead to the victory tonight,” Murphy recalled him saying. “And he said, ‘Your mantra all year has been win tonight. You can’t win four games tonight; you can win one game. So, win tonight.'”

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Wetzel: The NFL’s Bill Belichick skepticism is being validated in Chapel Hill

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Wetzel: The NFL's Bill Belichick skepticism is being validated in Chapel Hill

For decades, Bill Belichick lorded over the NFL as few ever have. A bully in a hoodie, he led his New England empire to six Super Bowl titles and 17 AFC East crowns and through countless controversies.

From success to scandal, from fashion choices to news conference one-liners, he was always top of mind in the NFL.

He still is, actually.

“I don’t think there is a conversation these days where what is happening with Bill doesn’t get mentioned within the first five minutes,” one NFC player personnel director said.

Train wrecks cause craned necks, and Belichick’s early tenure at the University of North Carolina qualifies as one.

Snubbed by the league he once dominated, Belichick headed to the college ranks this year expecting success. Instead, he has thus far produced a stumbling, embarrassing soap opera of a season. The Tar Heels are 2-3 and desperately lack talent after losing 39 players from last year’s team and bringing in more than 40 transfers. They head to Cal on Friday as 10.5-point underdogs.

The jokes are frequent. So too is the schadenfreude. Most notably, though, the scene in Chapel Hill provides validation for NFL teams, which, after Belichick and the Patriots parted ways after the 2023 season, uniformly passed on hiring him.

Monday saw Belichick’s weekly UNC news conference attended by the school’s chancellor and athletic director, an attempt to show a united front against speculation about a possible firing and/or resignation.

“Reports about my looking for a buyout or trying to leave here is categorically false,” Belichick said. “There’s zero truth to any of that. I’m glad I’m here.”

Where he really had wanted to be was in the NFL. Multiple sources say that as he limped through his final season in New England — a listless 4-13 campaign — the legendary coach began to view life after Foxborough not with dread but with a measure of excitement.

Armed with perhaps the greatest coaching résumé of all time, he expected another NFL team to quickly hire him. He had, after all, spent decades beating them all.

Seven franchises (Atlanta, Carolina, Las Vegas, the Los Angeles Chargers, Seattle, Tennessee and Washington) would have openings. At least four more (Chicago, Dallas and both New York teams) could have reasonably fired their guy just to get to Belichick. Even Philadelphia seemed to be a possibility.

Instead, only Atlanta interviewed Belichick, and the Falcons then chose Raheem Morris.

The belief around the league, according to sources at the time, wasn’t so much that the now-73-year-old might have lost something as a coach.

Far more troubling was that Belichick was stuck in his ways and would not cede control over player personnel decisions, which doomed the end of his time in New England. The trend in the NFL was to have the front office operate with a measure of independence. Could Belichick’s famously controlling ways allow that?

Essentially, the man famous for the phrase “Do your job” wouldn’t do just one job — coach the team. Personality overwhelmed potential. His budding feud with Patriots owner Robert Kraft only added to concerns.

It’s not that all those franchises made good decisions. Las Vegas and Tennessee have already replaced the coaches they chose instead of Belichick. The New York Jets limped through another year before a regime change, only to maybe get worse.

If Belichick were rolling in Chapel Hill as he anticipated, maybe the how-do-you-like-me-now vibes would be swinging the other way. He isn’t, though. Against three Power 4 opponents, his team has been outscored 120-33.

There is no shortage of media stories about disappointed players, disaffected parents and general chaos. A coach who once demanded discipline runs a team without it. A leader who once decried distractions is now in the tabloids. Debates rage about how perhaps the Patriots’ success really was all about Tom Brady.

Belichick and UNC general manager Michael Lombardi clearly didn’t fully understand how college football worked. They dubbed the Tar Heels the NFL’s 33rd team, but roster construction, especially through the transfer portal, has thus far failed.

Flush with money, attention and Belichick’s pipeline-to-the-pros credibility, UNC brought in 70 new players. It should be at least decent. Instead, some NFL scouts call it one of the worst rosters in the ACC.

The duo told multiple sources their plan last fall and brushed off suggestions that college is unique — despite longtime NFL head coaches Herm Edwards (Arizona State) and Lovie Smith (Illinois) trying similar tacks in recent years without much success. Going the other direction, college legends from Urban Meyer to Steve Spurrier have often flamed out quickly in the NFL, and even Nick Saban retreated from the Miami Dolphins to Alabama after two seasons.

This is what the NFL has seized on. This is what diminished interest in Belichick originally, a headstrong run of bad personnel decisions. Only now it’s in the college portal, not the professional draft.

Maybe Belichick can still coach, but not with the roster he’s constructed.

“It’s a learning curve,” Belichick admitted Monday. “We’re all in it together. But we’re making a lot of progress, and the process will eventually produce the results we want like they have everywhere else I’ve been.”

“Everywhere else he’s been” is watching closely, a league still fascinated by him, just not for the reasons that Belichick likely hoped.

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