
A decade after crying on the field amid trade rumors, Wilmer Flores is glad he's still a Giant
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But the saddest consequence of the week that wasn't? Wilmer Flores, the precocious, 2 1/2-year-old version known as Baby Flo, wasn't allowed to go cavorting in the Giants' clubhouse after games all week. Manager Bob Melvin's team rules allow players' kids to be in the locker room after wins but not losses. Good luck trying to explain that to Baby Flo.
'Oh, my God, I know. He's been so mad about it,' said Baby Flo's father, Giants first baseman Wilmer Flores. 'We lose a game, he stays in the family room, crying, because he wants to come in.'
Displaying emotion must be a family trait. Ten years ago, on July 29, Flores learned that he'd been traded from the Mets to the Milwaukee Brewers in the middle of a game. He was visibly upset, wiping his eyes with his jersey sleeves and trying to compose himself to be ready for a ground ball on the infield. The infamous trade never went through — the Mets flagged something on outfielder Carlos Gomez's medical review — but the scene forever endeared Flores to Mets fans.
A decade's worth of trade deadlines later, when the Giants arrived at Citi Field for a weekend series against the Mets, Flores experienced more than a homecoming. There was a little déjà vu thrown in as well. Rogers had spent 13 years in the Giants organization, and when he threw his first pitch in a different uniform Saturday night, it happened to be against the Giants. Right-hander José Buttó, one of three players the Mets traded to the Giants, also was seen wiping away tears when he learned of Wednesday's trade while sitting in the visiting bullpen in San Diego. Buttó was in his ninth season in the Mets organization. Like Rogers, his first pitch for another team Friday night game against his former teammates.
Rogers said he had a feeling he might be traded. He even packed a little heavier than usual for the upcoming road trip when he reported to the Giants' waterfront ballpark on Wednesday.
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Buttó was not nearly as prepared, wardrobe or otherwise.
'At first I was very sad, hearing the news,' Buttó said through Spanish interpreter Erwin Higueros. 'But as the hours went by, you start … accepting the fate of what the business of baseball is.'
Buttó traveled on the Mets charter from San Diego and appreciated those extra hours he could spend with his teammates. Rogers did the same, hitching a ride on the Giants' flight to New York. Because Rogers couldn't access his checked luggage, he had to wear his Giants-branded travel sweatshirt and joggers.
'It was kind of a blessing because I got to say goodbye and do stuff on the flight,' Rogers said Friday. 'It actually worked out really well. … Baseball is funny that way, isn't it? To be, I guess, 13 years with the Giants organization, to get traded is new. To go out there and pitch for a new team for the first time ever is going to be weird. And to look up and see a Giants uniform in the batter's box is going to be something new. No real expectations but that. Just take it in stride. It's going to be memorable, for sure. It's the one team I haven't faced yet.'
Buttó made his Giants debut in a difficult situation Friday night, and although he lost the lead on a sacrifice fly in the eighth inning, he stranded the other runner he inherited — a key contribution in the Giants' 4-3, 10-inning victory. It was Rogers' turn on Saturday to face his former teammates, entering with a two-run lead and tossing a scoreless seventh inning as the Mets coasted to a 12-6 win.
Rogers gave up a single to Heliot Ramos that deflected off first base, but he got Rafael Devers and Willy Adames to pop up and coaxed a ground out from Matt Chapman.
'We knew we were going to see it at some point,' Giants manager Bob Melvin said. 'I'm sure it was just as uncomfortable for him, or weird.'
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Rogers and Yastrzemski are impending free agents. So is Flores, who likely would've been dealt if a contending team expressed interest. It might seem hard to believe, but Flores, who turns 34 on Wednesday, has more service time as a Giant than he does with any other major league team. He said he didn't spend much time wondering if he'd be traded. He's been conditioned to understand the business side of the game and to worry about what he can control.
A decade ago? Not so much.
'I had a lot of guys reach out to me, telling me, like, 'I cried like a baby too, but I wasn't on the field. Bartolo Colon told me, 'My first trade, I cried for, like, a whole day. But I was in the clubhouse. Nobody saw it.' … It's a fantasy that you think you're gonna play for one team your whole career,' Flores said.
'If you ask someone about Wilmer Flores, the first thing that comes to mind is 2015, right? Giants fans will remember me as a Giant, I guess. But everybody else, they don't remember the homers I hit or anything. They just remember me crying. I didn't know the business part of the game. I didn't even know I could get traded. Like I said, it was a fantasy. But you learn as the years go.'
Flores was out of the lineup Saturday with a tender hamstring he felt while trying to beat out a ground ball a night earlier. It's considered a mild injury, and he expects to be playing again in a day or two. But it's fair to wonder how much longer the Giants will invest plate appearances in someone likely coming to the end of his time with the organization. The Giants never expected Flores to play as much as he has this season. In the first half, when he was the only player consistently driving in runs for long stretches, Melvin couldn't leave Flores on the bench.
For his part, Flores said he is happy he didn't get traded.
'Since I got here, they've treated me right,' Flores said. 'I've gotten a lot of opportunities to play. I'm glad I'm here. We want to make a run for this team. We've got to win a couple games first and then see what we have. … It's the same lineup, right? We have All-Stars here. We have good players. We still have good pitching. It all comes down to executing. It doesn't matter who we're playing. When we execute, we win. It happened (Friday). It's just one game, but when we execute, we win.'
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The Giants did not execute on Saturday. Kai-Wei Teng, a starting pitcher whom the Giants designated for assignment last season, acknowledged feeling nerves when he hit Mets leadoff batter Brandon Nimmo and walked Francisco Lindor ahead of Pete Alonso's three-run home run in the first inning. The Giants tied it on Dom Smith's two-run shot in the third and pushed ahead when Jung Hoo Lee scored on Grant McCray's single in the fourth. But the Mets went back in front in the bottom of the fourth when Smith, playing first base, fielded Lindor's bunt and didn't throw to the plate even though he had a play. Instead, Smith spun around to second base, double-clutched when he saw nobody covering the bag, and didn't record an out.
Even when good things happened for the Giants, there was a bit of calamity involved. Lee ran through third base coach Matt Williams' stop sign while scoring in the fourth. Melvin said Williams was expecting the throw to be cut off, but it appeared that Lee would've scored easily in any event.
When the Mets blew the game open against right-hander Tristan Beck, the Giants looked every bit like a team just trying to make it to the obligatory end.
They'll always have pride to play for. Maybe other factors, too.
'I try to explain to him, no, when we lose a game, you can't come in,' Flores said of his son. 'That's why I try to shower as fast as I can so I can go to him.'
Win for Baby Flo?
'I know,' Flores said, smiling. 'It's a lot of motivation for me.'

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Los Angeles Times
13 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
The Sports Report: New Dodgers acquisition falters in loss
From Kevin Baxter: Brock Stewart slumped in front of a mostly empty locker in the middle of the Dodgers clubhouse Monday afternoon, a stall that used to belong to pitcher Dustin May, as clubhouse attendants rushed over with boxes of brand new size 13 cleats. A week ago Stewart was pitching for the Minnesota Twins, who wear red cleats. The Dodgers don't, so Stewart needed a makeover. 'I got blue gloves coming too,' he said. Getting dressed properly isn't the only thing players have to worry about when they change teams in the middle of the season. Stewart had a home and family in Minnesota to pack up and move when he learned Thursday that he had been traded from a team with a losing record to one chasing a second straight World Series title. By late Monday evening, Stewart found himself in the middle of that pennant race when he took the mound in the ninth inning of a tie game. It didn't end well, with Stewart (2-2) surrendering a run on three hits while getting just two outs in a 3-2 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals. It was a rude homecoming for the right-hander, who was drafted by the Dodgers in 2014 but waived five years later after pitching 36 times over parts of four seasons. After he remade himself during a six-year sojourn in which dropped down to independent ball, Stewart was brought back to Los Angeles to stabilize an overworked, injury-plagued bullpen that has struggled. In his first appearance at Dodger Stadium in the home uniform since 2019, he added to those struggles, giving up hits to the first two batters he faced, then falling behind 2-0 to pinch-hitter Yohel Pozo, who flared a single over the infield to drive in the go-ahead run. For manager Dave Roberts, one bad outing won't change Stewart's role. 'That's baseball,' he said. Continue reading here Dodgers box score MLB scores MLB standings Jo Adell hit a two-run homer, Yusei Kikuchi surrendered four hits in six innings and the Angels beat the Tampa Bay Rays 5-1 on Monday night. The Rays (55-59) struck in the opening inning when Yandy Díaz doubled to right and scored on Junior Caminero's sacrifice fly to center field. Kikuchi (5-7) escaped without further damage and finished with seven strikeouts and two walks. Angels pitchers combined for 12 strikeouts. Yoán Moncada reached on a fielder's choice for the Angels in the second inning before Adell launched a 428-foot homer to left-center off Adrian Houser (6-3), putting the Angels (55-58) ahead 2-1. Continue reading here Angels box score MLB scores MLB standings From Anthony De Leon: The Los Angeles County District Attorney's office will not pursue charges against Chargers linebacker Denzel Perryman, who was arrested on suspicion of felony weapons possession Friday night, according to Los Angeles County Sheriff Dept. records. Perryman was arrested after deputies allegedly discovered five firearms — including two assault-style weapons — in his vehicle during a traffic stop Friday night, the agency said in a statement. He was released from jail Monday afternoon and his arrest will be listed as a detention on his record. Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh publicly addressed the situation Monday, saying he visited with the veteran linebacker in jail over the weekend. 'He's working through the legalities along with his representation,' said Harbaugh before Perryman's release from jail. 'Had a chance to see him yesterday, whenever I visited, and he was in good spirits. And love Denzel. He's always done right. He's never been in trouble. They've got a beautiful family.' Continue reading here From Michael Wilner: President Trump will order the establishment of a White House task force on Tuesday focused on security for the Olympics Games in Los Angeles in 2028. Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said the president plans on creating the task force by executive order on Tuesday, telling The Times that Trump 'considers it a great honor to oversee this global sporting spectacle.' 'During his first term, President Trump was instrumental in securing America's bid to host the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles,' Leavitt said. 'Sports is one of President Trump's greatest passions, and his athletic expertise, combined with his unmatched hospitality experience will make these Olympic events the most exciting and memorable in history.' It is unclear whether the executive order will provide relief as city leaders and the Los Angeles Organizing Committee for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, the privately funded nonprofit organization known as LA28 that is planning the Games, negotiate key issues including security costs. Continue reading here 1936 — At the Berlin Olympics, Jesse Owens wins his third of four gold medals, winning the 200-meter race in an Olympic-record 20.7 seconds. 1954 — The first election for the Boxing Hall of Fame is held. Twenty-four fighters are elected, with the most noteworthy from the modern era Jack Dempsey, Joe Louis and Henry Armstrong. Fifteen are selected from the pioneer era including John L. Sullivan, Gentleman Jim Corbett and Jack Johnson. 1967 — The Denver Broncos beat the Detroit Lions, 13-7, in a preseason game, for the first AFL victory over an NFL team. 1984 — American Joan Benoit wins the first Olympic marathon for women in 2:24:52, finishing 400 meters ahead of Norway's Grete Waitz. 1991 — Sergei Bubka becomes the first to clear 20 feet outdoors in the pole vault, breaking his own world record by a half-inch at the Galan track meet in Malmo, Sweden. 1997 — Michael Johnson wins his third straight 400-meter title at the world championships in Athens, Greece, capturing the gold medal in 44.12 seconds. 2005 — Jason Gore shoots a 12-under 59 in the second round of the Nationwide Tour's Cox Classic in Omaha, Nebraska. 2006 — Warren Moon becomes the first Black quarterback to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio; joined by Troy Aikman, John Madden, Rayfield Wright, Harry Carson and Reggie White. 2007 — Lorena Ochoa wins the Women's British Open — the first women's pro tournament played at venerable St. Andrews — for her first major title. 2012 — Jamaica's Usain Bolt claims consecutive gold medals in the marquee track and field event at the Summer Games in London. Only about fifth-fastest of the eight runners to the halfway mark, Bolt erases that deficit and overtakes a star-studded field to win the 100-meter dash final in 9.63 seconds, an Olympic record that lets him join Carl Lewis as the only men to win the event twice. 2012 — Britain's Andy Murray cruises past Roger Federer 6-2, 6-1, 6-4 in the Olympic tennis singles final at Wimbledon. Serena and Venus Williams win the doubles title, as Serena becomes tennis' first double-gold medalist at an Olympics since Venus won singles and doubles at the 2000 Sydney Games. Ben Ainslie earns another gold medal in the Finn class to become the most successful sailor in Olympic history. 2014 — The San Antonio Spurs hire WNBA star Becky Hammon as an assistant coach, making her the first woman to join an NBA coaching staff. 2017 — Justin Gatlin spoils Usain Bolt's farewell beating him in the 100 meters at the world track championships in London. Bolt gets off to a slow start and Gatlin holds him off at the line in 9.92 seconds. American sprinter Christian Coleman takes silver in 9.94 seconds and Bolt took bronze in 9.95. 2018 — The Springfield Lasers win their first World TeamTennis title edging the Philadelphia Freedoms 19-18. The Lasers were 0-5 in WTT championship finals and winless in three meetings with the Freedoms during the 2018 regular season. 2018 — Georgia Hall of England catches Pornanong Phatlum in a final-round duel at Royal Lytham & St. Annes to win the Women's British Open for her first major title. 1921 — Pittsburgh radio station KDKA and announcer Harold Arlin provided listeners with the first broadcast of a major league game. The Pirates beat the Philadelphia Phillies 8-5. 1927 — Philadelphia's Cy Williams hit for the cycle, drove in six runs and scored three times to lead the Phillies to a 9-7 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates. 1931 — For the second time in his career, Jim Bottomley got six hits as the St. Louis Cardinals beat Pittsburgh 16-2 in the second game of a doubleheader. 1932 — Detroit pitcher Tommy Bridges lost his bid for a perfect game on a bloop single by the 27th Washington batter, pinch-hitter Dave Harris. The Tigers beat the Senators 13-0. 1933 — Sammy West of the St. Louis Browns had four extra-base hits in a 10-9, 12-inning win over the Chicago White Sox. 1942 — Don Kolloway's two-out steal of home in the fifth inning was the only run as the Chicago White Sox beat the Detroit Tigers 1-0. 1969 — Pittsburgh's Willie Stargell became the only player to hit a ball out of Dodger Stadium. Stargell's shot off of Alan Foster cleared the right-field pavilion and landed 506 feet from home plate. 1973 — Phil Niekro of the Atlanta Braves pitched a 9-0 no-hitter against the San Diego Padres. He walked three and struck out four in recording the first no-hitter by the franchise in Atlanta. 1975 — The first eight batters for Philadelphia Phillies got hits for a major league record, en route to a 13-5 win over the Chicago Cubs. 1984 — Cliff Johnson of the Blue Jays hit his 19th career pinch homer to set a major league record as Toronto beat the Orioles 4-3 at Memorial Stadium. 1999 — Mark McGwire became the 16th member of the 500-home run club, hitting two homers — Nos. 500 and 501 — in the St. Louis Cardinals' loss to San Diego. 2001 — The Cleveland Indians tied a major league record and became the first team in 76 years to overcome a 12-run deficit to win, defeating the Seattle Mariners 15-14 in 11 innings. 2005 — Albert Pujols became the first player in major league history to hit 30 home runs in each of his first five seasons, helping the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Atlanta Braves 11-3. 2006 — Trevor Hoffman set a major league record with his 11th 30-save season and the San Diego Padres defeated the Washington Nationals 6-3. 2007 — Tom Glavine earned his 300th victory in an 8-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs. The 41-year-old left-hander became the 23rd pitcher with 300 victories and only the fifth lefty to win 300. 2013 — Alex Rodriguez was suspended through 2014 (211 games) and All-Stars Nelson Cruz, Jhonny Peralta and Everth Cabrera were banned 50 games apiece when Major League Baseball disciplined 13 players in a drug case — the most sweeping punishment since the Black Sox scandal nearly a century ago. Ryan Braun's 65-game suspension last month and previous punishments bring to 18 the total number of players disciplined for their relationship to Biogenesis of America, a closed anti-aging clinic in Florida accused of distributing banned performing-enhancing drugs. 2019 — Jonathon Villar of the Orioles hits for the cycle in a 9-6 loss to the Yankees. 2021 — Team USA is headed to the Olympic Gold Medal Game for the first time in 21 years, beating South Korea, 7 - 2 at the 2020 Olympics (held in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic). Teenager Eui-lee Lee holds the U.S. to two runs in five innings, one a mammoth homer by Jamie Westbrook, but five relievers are called on in the 6th when the U.S. scores five times. Jack López drives in two for the U.S. while Hyeseong Kim goes 3 for 3 in a losing cause. Ryder Ryan gets the win in relief of Joe Ryan. Compiled by the Associated Press That concludes today's newsletter. If you have any feedback, ideas for improvement or things you'd like to see, email me at To get this newsletter in your inbox, click here.


New York Times
14 minutes ago
- New York Times
Five Michigan football preseason camp questions: Can Mikey Keene beat out Bryce Underwood?
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Following the lead of coach Sherrone Moore, Michigan players made a pact to swear off social media during preseason camp. Assuming everyone honors the deal, the Wolverines will be blissfully unaware of the online discourse leading up to their season opener against New Mexico. 'I like to think of it as going up in the mountains for a month and doing what you've got to do,' edge rusher TJ Guy said. Advertisement Down here in the flatlands, everyone else will have plenty to discuss. The preseason coaches poll, released Monday, had Michigan at No. 14, a ranking that reflects a mix of uncertainty and cautious optimism. The Wolverines have a burgeoning talent in quarterback Bryce Underwood and a defense that should be among the best in the FBS. But Underwood won't turn 18 until midway through camp, and his supporting cast is largely unproven. A top-15 ranking is a happy medium for a team that could climb into the top 10 or just as easily finish unranked. Guy, now in his fifth preseason camp at Michigan, said he walked off the field after Saturday's practice thinking, 'We're going to be really good.' That's a sentiment shared by most players around the country at this time of year, but the Wolverines can say it with a bit more conviction this season. Last year's team had a long list of questions at this stage of the preseason, starting with an extremely murky quarterback picture. The list is shorter this year, but the questions that remain are significant. Here are five big ones that Michigan will try to answer in preseason camp. At Big Ten media days in Las Vegas, Moore began his side session with reporters by issuing a declaration. 'Before anybody asks, it's an open competition,' Moore said. '(Underwood) is not the starter right now. There is no starter. We'll figure out who that is in camp, and we'll do a really good job evaluating that position to make sure we've got the best person to lead our program.' That comment was likely a response to the widespread expectation that Underwood will take Michigan's first snap against New Mexico. That may be where things end up, but Moore is determined to keep the competition going. In doing so, Michigan is leaving an opening for Keene, a transfer from Fresno State, to show what he can do after he was sidelined by an injury in the spring. Offensive coordinator Chip Lindsey said Michigan has 'two new guys' taking reps at quarterback, referring to Keene and East Carolina transfer Jake Garcia, who signed in June. Adding two veteran quarterbacks makes for a more traditional quarterback rotation than Michigan had in the spring, when Underwood and Jadyn Davis were the only healthy quarterbacks. Advertisement 'With two guys getting reps in the spring, it's pretty easy to rotate them, right?' Lindsey said. 'Now we're getting all those guys in the mix, and it's been good.' Lingering concerns about Keene's injury contributed to the decision to sign Garcia, a top-50 prospect from the Class of 2021 with past stops at Miami, Missouri and ECU. Keene is 'coming along great now,' Lindsey said, and Michigan wanted another quarterback for depth purposes anyway. But even if Keene is 100 percent healthy, unseating Michigan's quarterback of the future won't be easy. 'He's 17 years old, and he's playing with 21, 22, maybe 25-year-olds,' left guard Giovanni El-Hadi said of Underwood. 'He just has that ability to lead us.' After he decided to leave Indiana, McCulley and his father had an honest conversation with Moore about the role he could play at Michigan. The topic of wearing the No. 1 jersey came up, and Moore said it would be an option if McCulley earned it in the spring. 'I wouldn't want it any other way,' McCulley said. 'I started out with 13, earned it, and I'm still earning it right now.' The No. 1 jersey has a history at Michigan. Anthony Carter wore it, as did Braylon Edwards and David Terrell, a wide receiver McCulley tries to emulate. Awarding that jersey to McCulley before he's played a snap at Michigan conveys an expectation that he'll be a star right away. Last season's woes at wide receiver have been well documented, and Michigan will be counting on McCulley to provide an instant upgrade. Moore used the words 'big, tall, strong, fast and explosive' to describe his game and said he'll bring an element that's been missing in Michigan's offense since Nico Collins' breakout season in 2019. 'In the spring, he flashed more often than not being a big-play receiver,' Moore said. 'We're excited to see what he does.' Advertisement Take McCulley out of the equation, and Michigan's receiving corps looks similar to last year's, minus Tyler Morris, who led all Michigan wideouts with 248 receiving yards. Andrew Marsh, Jamar Browder and Jacob Washington are promising freshmen, but McCulley is Michigan's best shot at having an all-conference wide receiver. Between freshmen and incoming transfers, Michigan has quite a few summer enrollees who are getting their first action in preseason camp. Those players have ground to make up after missing spring practice, but it's not uncommon for transfers who arrive in summer to become contributors as the season goes on. Who from that group could win a job in camp? Lawrence Hattar, a transfer from Division II Ferris State, has a shot to compete with Nathan Efobi and others at right guard. Running backs CJ Hester and John Volker could challenge for snaps behind Justice Haynes and Jordan Marshall, and wide receiver Anthony Simpson brings playmaking ability in the slot, backed up by 792 receiving yards at UMass in 2023. 'He's real quick,' McCulley said about Simpson. 'I've never seen somebody move how fast he moves. I haven't seen a lot of Simp, but he's progressing.' Most of the summer transfers are at Michigan to provide depth, not to step into major roles right away. That's the plan for Garcia, who threw for 1,426 yards with eight touchdowns and 12 interceptions last year at East Carolina. That also could be the case for punter Hunter Robertson, a late addition who transferred from Division II Clarion. Robertson committed after punter Luke Bauer, a transfer from Missouri, changed his plans. The Wolverines already signed a kickoff specialist in Texas State transfer Beckham Sunderland and have Hudson Hollenbeck returning at punter. Robertson gives Michigan insurance at both spots. Hill is one of the biggest enigmas on Michigan's roster. His first season as a starting cornerback began on a rough note and ended in similar fashion, but there were moments in between when Hill showed what he can do. Enough of them, in fact, that Hill's name is showing up in the first round of a few 2026 mock drafts. If he plays up to that first-round potential, Michigan could turn a vulnerability into a strength. Advertisement 'He looks way more locked in,' Guy said. 'He's making plays out there. He's going to be a different guy this year, for sure.' Though Will Johnson missed much of last season with injuries, his departure still leaves a void. Hill was thrown into the fire last season and got torched by Texas, then dealt with a late-season demotion. The optimal scenario for Michigan is that he comes out of that experience ready to be a No. 1 cornerback who can lock down the other team's best wide receiver, much as Johnson did when he was healthy. This title comes with a few parameters. It's not for can't-miss prospects like Underwood or offensive tackle Andrew Babalola or veteran players who are next in line for starting jobs. It's for players with enough recruiting buzz to be noticed but not enough to be considered blue-chip prospects. It's usually someone who's been in the program for a year or two, long enough to make an impression but not long enough to be a household name. And it's usually a player who makes a leap and earns snaps that, on paper, weren't necessarily up for grabs. It's too early to anoint anyone, but linebacker Cole Sullivan is one player worth watching. Sullivan was a top-300 prospect in the 247Sports Composite rankings for the Class of 2024 with a mix of three- and four-star evaluations. His offer list and athleticism pointed to a high ceiling, and that's been borne out with the reports of Sullivan's growth in the offseason. Defensive coordinator Wink Martindale said Sullivan 'completely changed his body,' and Moore predicted that Sullivan is going to 'take the college football world by storm.' The bar's been set, and now it's up to Sullivan to clear it. Barring injuries, he'll have a tough time unseating Ernest Hausmann or Jaishawn Barham as a starting linebacker, but Michigan has no shortage of ways to get him on the field. It won't be a shock if he emerges from camp as Michigan's No. 3 linebacker and expands his role as the season goes on.


New York Times
14 minutes ago
- New York Times
Cubs' newest acquisition, Michael Soroka, exits with shoulder injury, will go on IL
CHICAGO — Two innings and just 31 pitches into his first start with the Cubs, a game the team would eventually lose 3-2 to the Cincinnati Reds, Michael Soroka was pulled in favor of Ben Brown. Was this the plan all along? Was manager Craig Counsell really leaning into his 'out-getter' mantra and using Soroka for just eight batters? Advertisement It wasn't managerial ingenuity. Instead, a rotation that's suffered three injuries to its Opening Day staff and a fourth in Javier Assad, who has yet to make a big-league pitch this season, has suffered another blow. Not long after he exited the game, the team announced that Soroka had right shoulder discomfort. 'He said he let a pitch go in the second inning and it just didn't feel good,' Counsell said. 'Came in the dugout and said the shoulder was not feeling good. It's an IL (stint) and we'll see what the next steps are.' Soroka was acquired from the Washington Nationals on July 30 for a pair of prospects. For the trade to go through, he had to get cleared medically. But there were signs that perhaps something was off. Through July 11, Soroka was averaging 94.1 mph with his four-seam fastball. In his three starts after the All-Star break, he averaged 91.3 mph on the four-seamer. That's a pretty dramatic drop in velocity and did ring some alarm bells. That led to Soroka getting an MRI before his final start with the Nationals on July 29 against the Houston Astros. 'That's kind of what we did for my peace of mind before my outing against the Astros,' Soroka said. 'We looked at some avenues mechanically, some other things as to where the velocity went. We decided to check that other box off and there was nothing that presented to be an issue at the time there. 'I didn't have any discomfort, I didn't have any pain. There was no reason to believe there was anything wrong. We cleared that. Unfortunately, that changed a little bit in the second inning today.' Soroka said he 'went to go put a little extra on a fastball and it grabbed me a little bit.' When he continued to feel the pain the rest of that inning, he knew something was wrong and decided to say something once he got back in the dugout. The 28-year-old has a long injury history, with multiple Achilles tears that waylaid his career after a breakout 2019 season. He's dealt with shoulder issues multiple times as well, most recently in July 2024. That issue kept him sidelined for over two months. Advertisement 'There's difficulties in this game,' Soroka said. 'I'm no stranger to them. Unfortunately, this is another one. I'm going to be working with the staff day and night to get back out there.' The hope has to be that this is a short stint on the IL. But even upon his acquisition, there were calls from many that team president Jed Hoyer and his front office needed to do more to supplement a team that entered the deadline with the second-best record in baseball. Soroka was looked at as a solid depth addition to the rotation. The assumption by many was that Hoyer would spend the next 24 hours before the trade deadline adding one more starter, perhaps one with more of a track record of success and less concerning injury history. But that never happened. Hoyer pointed to the lack of starters who were moved and the exorbitant prices being asked by sellers. He may not be wrong. But his team still looks a starter short. The good news for the group is that Assad and Jameson Taillon are both working their way back. Assad will make another rehab start on Tuesday and his next steps will be determined after that. Taillon will pitch again on Friday with Triple-A Iowa, his second start with them since his calf injury. Brown also looked strong in his four innings of work Monday night, giving up just one run while striking out five. In actuality, Chicago's pitching doesn't seem to be its biggest concern at the moment. It certainly wasn't on Monday, with Brown's lone run given up coming on an Elly De La Cruz double that Ian Happ wasn't able to field cleanly and Ryan Brasier giving up the third Cincinnati run on a series of soft-contact singles. 'Everybody pitched very well,' Counsell said. 'Ben Brown did a heckuva job. He had bad luck on the run he gave up. He gave us a chance to win. The bullpen pitched well. We just didn't hit. Simple as that. We had three hits. Not going to win many games with three hits.' While the offense as a whole has been incredible this season, they're in a stagnant stretch, struggling to stack up runs like they had been capable of for much of the season. Monday marked their fourth-straight low-scoring game, with their only runs coming on Dansby Swanson's two-run homer. Advertisement Swanson seemed to have tied the game up with a two-out infield single in the seventh. But replays showed that as he stretched for first, his toe came up just short. He dragged the foot, but it touched the bag just after the ball was caught by the first baseman. 'I don't know if I've ever done that in my baseball life, to be honest,' Swanson said. 'Just pretty unfortunate timing on the night.' Timing has not been on the Cubs' side of late. They have been unable to pull away in close games, leading to Counsell leaning on his high-leverage relievers. A group that's been stout for much of the season has suddenly coughed up some leads. But an offense that needs to tack on to keep the group fresh has struggled to keep up its end of the bargain. In his last 15 games, Seiya Suzuki has one extra-base hit and no home runs. Kyle Tucker has just one home run and five extra-base hits since June 29. Pete Crow-Armstrong is in a mini-slump with eight strikeouts in his last 10 plate appearances. Michael Busch has a .516 OPS since July 10. Since a five-homer barrage on the Saturday following the All-Star break, the team as a whole has not shown the power it displayed for much of the season. Others can step up, but the Cubs need that group to slug so the offense can be the behemoth they know it can be. 'I like the lineup we throw out there every day,' Counsell said. 'I'm very optimistic that we're going to score runs. Absolutely. The other team's trying to prevent it. Sometimes they do a pretty good job of it. They did a good job of it tonight. We'll score runs.' The bats will have to turn soon because the Milwaukee Brewers don't seem to be slowing down. A 6 1/2 game division lead for the Cubs has become a three-game deficit in just a month-and-a-half. There's still plenty of time left for the Cubs to make sure this is just a blip. But the stars have to start looking like the best players on the field and take a little pressure off everyone else. Otherwise, Milwaukee may be celebrating its third straight division title.