
Newcomers Helsley, Rogers and Mullins join Mets in the thick of a pennant race
'Everybody's very excited — they're matching my excitement to be here,' Rogers said before the Mets opened a three-game series against San Francisco.
The Giants traded Rogers to New York for José Buttó and a pair of prospects Wednesday.
The Mets, who fell to the eventual World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers in last year's NLCS, entered Friday with a half-game lead over the Philadelphia Phillies.
'From looking across the dugout a week ago, this is a team where you're like, man, this team is the complete package,' Rogers said as the teams met for the second straight weekend. 'So I'm very excited to be a part of it. Whatever they need from me, hopefully I can give it to them.'
Helsley, who had 21 saves for the St. Louis Cardinals before being acquired for a trio of prospects Wednesday, and Rogers, a side-armer whose 392 appearances since 2019 are tied for the fourth-most in the majors, are expected to fortify a bullpen that was beginning to show vulnerability ahead of All-Star closer Edwin Díaz.
'At first I was kind of surprised, honestly, having Díaz here,' Helsley said. 'But in the playoffs, you'll take as many good arms as you can get.'
Helsley said he was looking forward to serving as a set-up man for the Mets, whose bullpen ERA of 3.80 ranks 11th in the majors. New York made 36 transactions last month involving 18 relievers, including left-hander Gregory Soto, who was acquired from the Baltimore Orioles on July 25.
'If I need to throw the sixth, seventh, eighth — whenever it's going to be, I'm glad to do so,' Helsley said.
Mullins, who was acquired from the Orioles on Thursday for three pitching prospects, didn't start Friday's game after arriving at Citi Field less than three hours before first pitch. He is expected to become the starter in center field, where the slumping Tyrone Taylor and converted infielder Jeff McNeil have been splitting time while Jose Siri recovers from a broken leg.
Mullins, who won the Silver Slugger with the Orioles after going 30/30 in 2021, robbed the Toronto Blue Jays of a pair of homers during his final series with Baltimore earlier this week.
'I'm just trying to be myself and bring the type of game I know I can bring,' Mullins said. 'Bunch of different stuff — using my legs, running, stealing bases, playing solid defense, showing a little bit of power here and there, bunts. Just a little bit of everything.'
The trades were the first as professionals for Helsley, Rogers and Mullins.
'It's pretty crazy,' Helsley said. 'I probably equate it to like the first day of school … where everything's so new.'
Rogers and Buttó, who signed with the Mets as an international free agent in 2017, are likely to make their debuts this weekend for their new clubs against their old ones. Both players flew to New York with their former teams.
'Baseball's funny that way, isn't it?' said Rogers, who was traded the same day his twin, Taylor, was sent from the Cincinnati Reds to the Pittsburgh Pirates. Taylor Rogers was dealt to the Chicago Cubs on Thursday.
Thursdays
Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter.
'Being traded is new and then to go out there and pitch for a new team for the first time ever is going to be weird. And then to look up and see the Giants uniform in the batter's box is going to be something.'
New York aired a tribute video to Butto before the first pitch of Friday's game.
'I was talking to José today, I said the timing of this might not be the greatest thing in the world,' Giants manager Bob Melvin said. 'But I think a day removed from it, I think he understands it's a business as well and he knows he's going to get a very good opportunity here.'
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Canada News.Net
an hour ago
- Canada News.Net
New-look Twins seek to halt skid in finale vs. Guardians
(Photo credit: David Richard-Imagn Images) The Minnesota Twins essentially wiped the slate clean before their series at the Cleveland Guardians, trading almost 40 percent of their roster. Two games and two losses into the new era, they remain undaunted by the challenge. Minnesota right-hander Jose Urena (0-0, 5.40 ERA) will take the mound Sunday afternoon in the finale against Cleveland left-hander Joey Cantillo (2-1, 4.14). 'Some of us now get a second chance with this,' Twins catcher Ryan Jeffers said. 'I don't think we're going to go out there and play terrible baseball. Even last year, the (Detroit) Tigers sold some guys off and got hot and snuck into the playoffs. Anything can happen.' The Guardians took the first game 3-2 on a Kyle Manzardo walk-off RBI single in the 10th inning, then won the second 5-4 after Bo Naylor doubled in Jose Ramirez in the eighth. After dealing all five of their late-inning relief specialists, the Twins were forced to throw Kody Funderburk and Pierson Ohl into the fire -- and paid for it as they both suffered losses. 'I liked a lot of what I saw, but at some point, you've got to find a way to score another run,' Minnesota manager Rocco Baldelli said. Urena's recall from Triple-A St. Paul epitomizes what the Twins are going through. The 33-year-old already has pitched for the New York Mets, Toronto Blue Jays and Los Angeles Dodgers this season and was available on short notice to travel to Cleveland. Right-hander Simeon Woods Richardson originally was slated to start on Sunday, but Minnesota's massive series of transactions prompted Baldelli to juggle his rotation. Urena is 0-1 with a 3.95 ERA in 13 2/3 innings over three career starts against Cleveland. 'It's a part of baseball, just the business side,' Twins All-Star outfielder Byron Buxton said. 'We'll be better once we get on the other side of it, but I ain't going nowhere.' The Guardians aren't going away, either -- in terms of the postseason race. They have won 16 of their last 22 contests, pulling within two games of the Seattle Mariners for the final American League wild-card spot. Despite the loss of closer Emmanuel Clase to an MLB-imposed administrative leave and former AL Cy Young Award winner Shane Bieber in a trade to the Toronto Blue Jays, Ramirez is making sure his teammates keep their eyes focused on the prize. '(Ramirez), man, I'm running out of things to say about him,' Cleveland manager Stephen Vogt said. 'He knows when we need homers and singles, and he just needs to get on base to make things happen. I don't take it for granted that we get to watch baseball from him every single day.' Ramirez delivered the tying, two-run homer before scoring the go-ahead run on Saturday, which also was Jose Ramirez Jersey Day at the ballpark. The perennial All-Star third baseman is batting .312 with nine homers and 21 RBIs and 27 runs scored in his last 25 games. 'It makes me happy to see all the fans in my jerseys,' Ramirez said through an interpreter. 'But I get the love from them every day, not just today.' Cantillo will take on the Twins for the fifth time in his two seasons, owning a 0-1 record and 2.77 ERA in 13 innings with two starts and two relief appearances. He is 1-1 with a 4.57 ERA in five starts since being recalled from Triple-A Columbus on July 3.


Toronto Sun
2 hours ago
- Toronto Sun
SIMMONS SAYS: If the Blue Jays can play .500 the rest of the way, they should reach playoffs
Get the latest from Steve Simmons straight to your inbox Toronto Blue Jays manager John Schneider. Photo by Scott Taetsch / Getty Images) The race is to 90 wins. That's all it should take to get to the playoffs in the weakest American League in years — maybe all it will take to finish first in the AL East. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account The Blue Jays need to play only .500 baseball the rest of the way — they don't have to be dominant, they don't have to get red hot or super lucky. They've already have put themselves in a position of strength with two months to go in this unusual season. There are some tough series ahead — three games this month against the World Series-champion Dodgers in Los Angeles, three home games against the Chicago Cubs, followed by three against the streaking Texas Rangers. But the Jays go from those nine difficult games to nine against Pittsburgh, Miami and what's left of the Minnesota Twins. They play the Yankees only three more times, all at Yankee Stadium. They play the Red Sox only three more times, in Toronto in the final month, which works in their favour. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. There are no great teams in the AL this season. On average, over the past 20 seasons, it has taken 97 wins to finish first in the AL East. Six times teams have won more than 100 games. No team has won the division, which includes the 2015 Blue Jays, with fewer than 93 wins. This year, all bets are off. The Jays don't have to be great down the stretch. If they play a little better than .500 ball — say, to 27-23 or 28-22 over their final 50 games — they likely will finish first rather comfortably. This remains the season of the hard to believe, and yet it's happening. This isn't like 2015, when the electric Jays blasted their way to first place. There is no MVP candidate on the Jays, no Cy Young candidate, no Tom Henke or Duane Ward closing games, nobody in line for rookie of the year. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The 2025 Blue Jays just win. They don't have to explain themselves. All they have to do is be ordinary the rest of the way and they'll see you in September — and right after that. THIS AND THAT Shane Bieber is a great trade-deadline guess. Maybe he will bounce back from Tommy John surgery and be terrific the final six weeks of the season. Maybe he'll be a top-of-the-rotation pitcher come playoff time, which the Blue Jays require. Maybe. The truth is, we don't know, he doesn't know and they don't know. This is a gamble and all it can cost the Jays is money. Bieber has a player-option for $16 million next season. If he pitches great for Toronto, he likely will decline the option and see if he can't do better here or elsewhere. And if he doesn't do much here, he becomes next season's Max Scherzer — a lot of money for not much production … It seems every time the Cleveland Guardians have a contract they want to run away from, they dump that deal on their old friends Mark Shapiro and Ross Atkins. Nice to have a buddy like that. The rather frugal Guardians weren't ready to pay Bieber $16 million next year just as they didn't want to pay the $84 million they committed to Andres Gimenez for the next four seasons and the $14 million backup outfielder Myles Straw for this year and next … With a name like Seranthony Dominguez, shouldn't he be playing for the Royals? … Can you just see him on British television — up next, Sir Anthony, he's a Royal … Many who scouted Bieber's recent rehab start in double-A came away impressed. 'He looked great but it was against double-A competition,' a big-league scout said … When the Jays won the World Series in 1992, they had a playoff bullpen of Henke, Ward, Jimmy Key, David Wells, Todd Stottlemyre, Mike Timlin and Mark Eichhorn, their deepest bullpen in team history. They pitched 18 World Series innings against Atlanta and gave up just one earned run. The bullpen this year, starting with closer Jeff Hoffman, isn't as strong, but the depth behind him with Dominguez, Louis Varland, Yariel Rodriguez, Yimi Garcia (assuming he returns), Brendon Little and Braydon Fisher is rather impressive. You need deep bullpens to go places in the post-season, more than ever before … I heard a baseball fan trying to explain the offensive statistic wRC+ to another fan. He wasn't succeeding. RBIs are easy to explain … Something doesn't seem right with the Alek Manoah comeback from Tommy John. He pitched in a minor-league game on July 20 and no games since. He did throw a simulated game after the minor-league start, which is unusual. Usually, that doesn't happen. In fairness, Manoah's surgery was two months after Bieber had his operation … The best personal news of this season: Buck Martinez heading back to the broadcast booth. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Last season, Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner combined for 60 goals with the Maple Leafs. The number was rather low because of the 15 games Matthews missed, his mystery injury and the fact he had the lowest goal-scoring numbers of his career. If whoever plays right wing alongside Matthews and Matthew Knies scores something around 15 goals, they'll be above the 60 goal mark combined. The Leafs were still third in the East in scoring last season, 16 goals ahead of the Stanley Cup-champion Florida Panthers … The Leafs' largest challenge this coming season: Finding a way to replace the 47 primary assists Marner had last season. That's 20 more than anyone else had on the team. One reason for optimism: Max Domi had 19 primary assists while not playing much power-play time or not playing much on the first two Toronto lines … A weird stat: The Leafs were 26-1 last season in games in which Morgan Rielly had an assist … They were 21-2-1 in games William Nylander had two points … This is why Hockey Canada decided on just three goaltenders — the same three from the 4 Nations team — for its summer Olympic team gathering. General manager Doug Armstrong and staff looked at Washington's Logan Thompson, Edmonton's Stuart Skinner, Los Angeles' Darcy Kuemper and Mackenzie Blackwood of Colorado and considered them quite similar to their three named goaltenders. My understanding of this: Jordan Binnington is a sure thing for the Olympic team and, after that, two of Adin Hill, Sam Montembeault and the other four being looked at while being selected for the team in Milan … Montembeault is French Canadian, which helps his chances of being the third goalie … With rosters enlarged for the Olympics to 25 players, expect the 4 Nations forwards and defence to be much the same on the Olympic team, with the likely additions of Tom Wilson, Nick Suzuki and maybe Mark Scheifele up front and Evan Bouchard on defence. Still in tough to be named: Zach Hyman. A nice invite but with no chance of making it: Maple Leafs forward John Tavares. You can't pick Tavares over Connor McDavid, Sidney Crosby, Nathan MacKinnon, Brayden Point, Suzuki, Scheifele or Rob Thomas. He's not physical enough to play the wing or quick enough to be an effective forechecker. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Elaine Tanner, once known as Mighty Mouse as Canada's greatest swimmer, predicted to me the other day that Summer McIntosh will soon be 'Canada's all-time greatest athlete ever.' So who wins Canada's athlete of the year this year? The MVP and NBA champion Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, or McIntosh, the multi gold-medal winning, record-breaking swimmer. A strong case could be made for both legends, and it's only August … SGA will be honoured in Hamilton on Thursday and presented with the first key to the city in 27 years … The NFL does Hall of Fame much better than Major League Baseball, the NBA or NHL. They do their inductions in the off-season, with no regular-season games playing opposite. Baseball and hockey have their induction ceremonies opposite league games being played. It means if you're a fan, you can't watch the Hall speeches and inductions and your favourite team play because it's happening at the same time. The NHL needs to find a way to honour its Hall of Famers properly on a night when no games are being played and the event could be televised nationally in both Canada and the United States … If you missed Ichiro Suzuki's Hall of Fame speech last Sunday, go find it. It's special and unique, just as he was as a player … Couldn't ESPN have waited another week before announcing it had fired Shannon Sharpe? His older brother Sterling Sharpe was being inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday. There was no reason to put a damper on the weekend for the Sharpe family … I can see why Bryce Harper would be obstinate with baseball commissioner Rob Manfred when it comes to the possibility of having a salary cap in baseball. Harper, who will be paid $150 million over the next six seasons, ordered the commissioner to get the eff out of the Phillies clubhouse if he's talking salary cap. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Terry Greer is the best Argonauts receiver I've ever seen. Mookie Mitchell and Darrell K. Smith not far behind him. Current Argo Damonte Coxie is among the best the team has ever had. And in less than half a season, with below-average quarterbacking, Coxie has 10 catches of more than 30 yards this season. Last season, no one in the CFL had more than that for an entire season … Former Argo Makai Polk, a key Grey Cup contributor last year as a rookie, was an early cut of the Atlanta Falcons. It's never good when you get let go before pre-season games begin. Might be good for the Argos if they can get him back … Yeah, it was eight years ago that John McEnroe predicted big things for the teenager, Denis Shapovalov. It's never quite happened the way McEnroe figured. Shapovalov is 26 years old now and just another guy on the men's tennis tour. He lost in his first match at the National Bank Open, as did fellow Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime, who also looks like he should be significantly better than his results … How much does NHL regular-season scoring matter? In their back-to-back Stanley Cup seasons, the Florida Panthers finished 13th and 11th in goal-scoring … Rafael Nadal won 63 tournaments in his career and lost only 51 matches in his entire career. The retiring Genie Bouchard's reaction to that nearly impossible statistic: 'This makes me want to throw up.' … With Aaron Judge out for some time and the rest of his season in question, does that put Cal Raleigh in the MVP chase, or is it simply Judge and nobody else in the American League race? … This is how bad a season Mookie Betts is having with the Dodgers: He ranks 63rd in the National League in batting, 55th in home runs, 47th in RBIs, 72nd in OPS, 63rd in on-base percentage … I don't suspect Connor Bedard or Macklin Celebrini have much chance of playing for Team Canada in Italy in February, but I do like the idea that both young stars have been included on the summer camp invite list. They both will be on the Olympic roster in 2030 in the French Alps … Happy birthday to Marv Levy (100), Tom Brady (48), Marcel Dionne (74), Jim Gott (66), Dominic Moore (45), Kristaps Porzingis (30), Evander Kane (34), Bombo Rivera (73), Troy Glaus (49), Sid Bream (65), and Tony Amonte (55) … And hey, whatever became of Devon Travis? ssimmons@ Sunshine Girls Sunshine Girls Homes Toronto & GTA Columnists


Winnipeg Free Press
5 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Cubs and Orioles meet in series rubber match
Baltimore Orioles (51-60, fifth in the AL East) vs. Chicago Cubs (64-46, second in the NL Central) Chicago; Sunday, 2:20 p.m. EDT PITCHING PROBABLES: Orioles: Brandon Young (0-5, 6.63 ERA, 1.69 WHIP, 34 strikeouts); Cubs: Colin Rea (8-5, 4.25 ERA, 1.32 WHIP, 75 strikeouts) BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Cubs -187, Orioles +155; over/under is 8 runs BOTTOM LINE: The Chicago Cubs and Baltimore Orioles meet on Sunday with the winner claiming the three-game series. Chicago has a 64-46 record overall and a 34-20 record in home games. The Cubs have gone 52-21 in games when they record eight or more hits. Baltimore has a 51-60 record overall and a 24-33 record in road games. The Orioles have gone 23-13 in games when they hit at least two home runs. The teams meet Sunday for the third time this season. TOP PERFORMERS: Kyle Tucker has 18 home runs, 74 walks and 61 RBIs while hitting .273 for the Cubs. Nico Hoerner is 14 for 38 with a double, a home run and six RBIs over the last 10 games. Gunnar Henderson has 25 doubles, four triples and 13 home runs for the Orioles. Jordan Westburg is 15 for 45 with three doubles and two home runs over the last 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Cubs: 5-5, .240 batting average, 4.55 ERA, outscored by two runs Orioles: 7-3, .299 batting average, 3.34 ERA, outscored opponents by 41 runs INJURIES: Cubs: Miguel Amaya: 60-Day IL (oblique), Jameson Taillon: 15-Day IL (calf), Eli Morgan: 60-Day IL (elbow), Javier Assad: 60-Day IL (oblique), Justin Steele: 60-Day IL (elbow) Orioles: Tyler O'Neill: day-to-day (illness), Zach Eflin: 15-Day IL (back), Colin Selby: 15-Day IL (hamstring), Felix Bautista: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Maverick Handley: 10-Day IL (head), Scott Blewett: 15-Day IL (elbow), Jorge Mateo: 60-Day IL (elbow), Gary Sanchez: 10-Day IL (knee), Ryan Mountcastle: 60-Day IL (hamstring), Cade Povich: 15-Day IL (hip), Cody Poteet: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Grayson Rodriguez: 60-Day IL (elbow), Albert Suarez: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Tyler Wells: 60-Day IL (elbow), Kyle Bradish: 60-Day IL (elbow) ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.