logo
Starling Marte's knee is latest Mets injury concern after rare start in field

Starling Marte's knee is latest Mets injury concern after rare start in field

New York Post14 hours ago
Access the Mets beat like never before
Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Mike Puma about the inside buzz on the Mets. Try it free
Starling Marte had three more hits Sunday, but suffered an injury scare to his troublesome right knee in the bottom of the ninth that could sideline him.
Carlos Mendoza said Marte's knee 'flared up' and he was clearly in discomfort after taking a pitch during an at-bat against Devin Williams in a 6-4 loss to the Yankees at Citi Field.
Advertisement
He stayed in the game after a visit from the training staff, but only jogged slowly to first base when he grounded out to third for the second out of the inning.
Marte was going for tests Sunday night.
The 36-year-old, whose season ended almost exactly a year ago due to a right knee injury, said he was 'not really' worried about the knee's status.
Starling Marte made a rare start in the outfield during the Mets-Yankees game on July 6, 2025.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
Advertisement
But when asked if he thought he'd be able to stay off the IL, Marte said, 'I don't know yet.'
After the knee limited Marte to 94 games last season, he was also hobbled during spring training.
But he'd come on over his previous 29 games heading into Sunday, with an OPS of .832 over that stretch and followed it up with a third straight multihit game.
Advertisement
Marte also started in the outfield for just the fifth time this season — and first time since June 1 — on Sunday, when he was in left, with Brandon Nimmo as the DH.
Marte said he felt good on defense and it wasn't until that final at-bat — after he'd singled three times and stolen a base (also his first since June 1) — that he felt discomfort.
Mostly limited to DH duties this season, Marte has been used as a right-handed leadoff hitter, with Francisco Lindor bumped down to the No. 2 spot in the lineup, and has hit well there.
Starling Marte (R.) flexes his right knee during the Mets-Yankees game on July 6, 2025.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
Advertisement
The Mets figured to have some roster decisions to make before the All-Star break, with Jesse Winker — sidelined for over two months with an oblique strain — on a rehab assignment and likely due to return to the lineup this week.
Marte is in the final year of a four-year, $78 million deal.
CHECK OUT THE LATEST MLB STANDINGS AND METS STATS
After the Mets failed to off-load Marte in the offseason, he initially had difficulty adjusting to a role in which he didn't play every day.
His production has improved, and with the Mets dealing with injuries, Marte's resurgence has been a welcome one, but it may be halted if his knee doesn't respond well.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

MLB's Luis Ortiz investigation, explained. Plus: Why now, Nats?
MLB's Luis Ortiz investigation, explained. Plus: Why now, Nats?

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

MLB's Luis Ortiz investigation, explained. Plus: Why now, Nats?

The Windup Newsletter ⚾ | This is The Athletic's MLB newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Windup directly in your inbox. Missed out on the action this weekend? We got you. Plus: The Nationals cleaned house (but at a weird time), we make the case for a few All-Stars who aren't (yet), and how the heck did two pitches trigger a gambling investigation? I'm Levi Weaver, here with Ken Rosenthal — welcome to The Windup! If you spent the weekend at the beach or grilling out with family, fret not: Here's a recap of a few key series over the weekend. Yankees at Mets: The Yankees were fresh off being swept out of first place. The Mets were showing signs of righting the ship, coming off two wins against the Brewers after going 3-13 in their previous 16 games. The Mets took the first two to run the Yankees' losing streak up to six before the Yankees took the series finale. Even worse for the Yankees? Clarke Schmidt is 'likely' to have Tommy John surgery. Advertisement Angels at Blue Jays: Coming off that sweep of the Yankees, the Blue Jays notched back-to-back extra-innings 4-3 walkoffs Friday and Saturday. They played it a little less dramatic yesterday, holding a 3-2 lead for the final three innings. Toronto has won eight straight and now leads New York and Tampa Bay in the AL East by three games. Mitch Bannon has a roundup of what's going right in Toronto. Astros at Dodgers: The Astros have spent the last month proving to the baseball world that they're legitimate contenders in the AL. After losing Jeremy Peña to the IL with a rib fracture, they went out and put an exclamation point on that sentence over the weekend, sweeping the Dodgers in Los Angeles — including an 18-1 boat-racing on Friday. Cardinals at Cubs: St. Louis took the middle game of the series between two blowouts by the Cubs — including an eight-homer game on the Fourth of July. As the trade deadline approaches, Patrick Mooney says it's time for the Cubs to go all in, while Jon Greenberg says this is the next great Cubs team fans have been waiting for. Tigers at Guardians: 57-34 Detroit is starting to look a little bit unstoppable. Tarik Skubal is dominant, Casey Mize looks great and the Tigers swept the Guardians over the weekend. They now have a 13 1/2-game lead in the AL Central. The Guardians, by the way, are starting to look a little bit 'unstartable' — they've lost 10 straight. White Sox at Rockies: Well, that happened. From my latest column: Indifferent. Apathetic. Disconnected. All of those words seemed to apply in recent seasons to the Nationals ownership group headed by Mark Lerner. Well, wonder of wonders, ownership just snapped out of it, at just about the oddest time imaginable — one week before the Nats will make the No. 1 pick in baseball's amateur draft, and less than a month before the trade deadline. Advertisement The timing of the Nationals' dismissals of president of baseball operations Mike Rizzo and manager Davey Martinez yesterday was so sudden, ownership did not even appear fully prepared. Lerner named a successor for Rizzo, assistant GM Mike DeBartolo, but held off announcing Martinez's replacement until today. Bench coach Miguel Cairo and Triple-A manager Matthew LeCroy would appear the most logical candidates. If Lerner and Co. were desperate to draw attention away from themselves, a theory advanced by one former team executive, they sure had an odd way of going about it. Not that Rizzo, the game's second-longest tenured head of baseball operations, and Martinez, the manager who led the franchise to its only World Series title in 2019, necessarily deserved to keep their jobs. The Nationals' 37-53 record is the fourth-worst in the majors. More telling, the Nats rank second in the majors in losses, ahead of only the Colorado Rockies, since 2019. True, ownership needed to decide this month on 2026 options for both Rizzo and Martinez. But general managers almost never get fired before the deadline. The last time it happened, as far as I can tell, was when the Minnesota Twins dumped Terry Ryan on July 18, 2016. In dumping Rizzo, the Nationals are leaving both the draft and deadline to DeBartolo. The No. 1 pick, as the Nationals know well, is a monumental opportunity for any franchise. But picking first isn't always about simply choosing the best fit for an organization. Teams sometimes operate strategically, taking a player they can sign for less in order to spread their bonus pool money to other talents in later rounds. That strategy might make particular sense this year, with no clear No. 1 pick emerging. More here. The All-Star rosters have been announced — at least the first draft, before guys start dropping out and the replacements are named — and you can find the full lists in this story about the biggest snubs. Why? Because that's half the fun? Obviously? In that story, Chad Jennings gives us one player at each position (and one bonus outfielder) with the best cases that they were unjustly left off. Advertisement Trea Turner wasn't a random name, by the way. His 3.9 fWAR ranked eighth in the sport, higher than either of the NL shortstops — Francisco Lindor (3.3) and Elly De La Cruz (3.0). This is not a suggestion that either guy was undeserving, though. Seiya Suzuki also has a legit case: He already led the entire sport in RBIs before last night's two-RBI performance. He's at 77. Alas, the RBI just doesn't mean what it used to, I guess. On the pitching side, there will always be deserving candidates left out on the first draft. More will be added later — starters who pitch on the Sunday before the game will be replaced on the roster. The top of the list of replacements should probably be Joe Ryan of the Twins. After another quality start last night against the Rays, he's 8-4 with a 2.76 ERA and 0.89 WHIP. Also … no Juan Soto, eh? More All-Star news: News broke Thursday that Cleveland Guardians pitcher Luis Ortiz was placed on 'non-disciplinary paid leave' through the end of the All-Star break while the league completes an investigation that has something to do with gambling. What we later learned was that the league is investigating two specific pitches that Ortiz threw. Both pitches had a higher-than-usual number of bets placed on them — action that was flagged by a betting integrity firm. Why would two specific pitches trigger a red flag? Buddy, there are essentially an infinite number of ways you can bet on sports these days. One of them is a micro-bet about what the first pitch of a given inning might be: ball, strike, swinging strike, etc. Both of the pitches — the first pitch of the second inning against the Mariners on June 15, and the first pitch of the third inning against the Cardinals on June 27 — resulted in pitches thrown well outside the zone (you can see video in this story). Advertisement That's really all we know for now, but it's worth pointing out that this is just the latest in a recent uptick of gambling investigations. Remember Ippei Mizuhara? Tucupita Marcano? Pat Hoberg? I can't imagine this is the last investigation we'll see. In the meantime, we'll keep you posted if there are any further developments in Ortiz's case. When we left you at the end of last week, Clayton Kershaw had just notched his 3,000th strikeout. Over the weekend, we got some more stories: Kershaw reflecting on the journey, his former catcher trying to will it to completion over the phone and Tyler Kepner's Sliders column reflecting on Kershaw's place among the greats. There's never been a right-handed high school pitcher taken with the first pick of the draft. Melissa Lockard and Dhani Joseph tell us why that might never change. In April, Sam Blum told you about former White Sox closer Bobby Jenks' battle against stomach cancer. Jenks died Friday at 44 years old. After battling elbow inflammation and soreness all season long, Yu Darvish will make his 2025 debut for the Padres tonight.

10 stunningly egregious MLB All-Star snubs in 2025
10 stunningly egregious MLB All-Star snubs in 2025

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

10 stunningly egregious MLB All-Star snubs in 2025

The 2025 MLB All-Star Game rosters are set -- barring players who drop out due to injury and are replaced -- and of course that means it's time to start naming who got left off. This is also a good place to jump up on the soapbox and complain about how each MLB team doesn't need at least one All-Star. If your franchise stinks right now, you don't need a player in the Midsummer Classic. That's it. Anyway, that might explain why some of these names were left off the rosters. Either way, let's dive in and talk about these egregious snubs: SS Trea Turner, Philadelphia Phillies Elly De La Cruz and Francisco Lindor are in ahead of him, but Turner's having a great year. SP Cristopher Sanchez, Philadelphia Phillies He was on this list last year! And now he's having an even better year. What gives? OF Juan Soto, New York Mets Despite the extremely slow start, he's picked it up and was just named NL Player of the Month. C'mon! KYLE STOWERS DOESN'T DESERVE A SPOT EVEN THOUGH HE'S THE ONLY MARLIN! 1B Michael Busch, Chicago Cubs He's been solid, but got robbed because first base is star-studded. 3B Zach McKinstry, Detroit Tigers Can we have like a utility position in MLB All-Star? Because he'd be in with ease. SP Framber Valdez, Houston Astros Another case of positional strength in a league. The AL is stacked with names like Hunter Brown, Kris Bubic, Max Fried and Tarik Skubal. OF Seiya Suzuki, Chicago Cubs Dude LEADS THE LEAGUE IN RBI! What more do you want??? SP Joe Ryan, Minnesota Twins That sub-3.00 ERA is pretty awesome. OF Andy Pages, Los Angeles Dodgers Maybe I have bias because he's on one of my fantasy teams, but he's been so good the whole year. C Carlos Narvaez, Boston Red Sox Would have been nice to see him in the game, but alas. You can't argue with Alejandro Kirk over him, and there was no way Cal Raleigh was going to be out.

Mets' Juan Soto Breaks Silence on All-Star Snub
Mets' Juan Soto Breaks Silence on All-Star Snub

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Mets' Juan Soto Breaks Silence on All-Star Snub

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The New York Mets earned a win in their Subway Series rematch against the crosstown rival New York Yankees as the three-headed monster at the top of their batting order puts it together. After a relatively slow start to the season, blockbuster addition Juan Soto has begun to look more like himself alongside star teammates Francisco Lindor and Pete Alonso. But apparently Soto's resurgence hasn't been enough to earn him a fifth consecutive trip to the All-Star game. Alonso and Lindor will be headed to the Midsummer Classic, as will Edwin Diaz, but Soto lost out to the Arizona Diamondbacks' Corbin Carroll, Miami Marlins' Kyle Stowers, San Diego Padres' Fernado Tatis Jr. and Washington Nationals' James Wood. "Sometimes you're gonna make it and sometimes you don't," Soto said in response to missing the game, per Dan Martin of the New York Post. "It's just part of baseball." PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - JUNE 29: Juan Soto #22 of the New York Mets looks on from the dugout in the seventh inning during the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on June 29,... PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - JUNE 29: Juan Soto #22 of the New York Mets looks on from the dugout in the seventh inning during the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on June 29, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by) More Berl/Getty Soto signed a 15-year, $765 million record contract to join the Mets this year after earning four All-Star nods and four Silver Slugger Awards in a row with three different teams. The fact that he has missed the honor in his debut season with the Mets isn't a great sign for that contract, but he has been enjoying a strong campaign after a turnaround in the past month. He is slashing .263/.396/.508 with 21 homers and a 3.7 WAR so far. Stowers, by comparison, has just a 1.7 WAR mark this year, although he is Miami's lone representative. But in his response about the snub, Soto downplayed the importance of making the All-Star game and vowed to improve. "For me, I try to play as hard as I can and help the team and enjoy the moment," he added, according to Martin. "Everyone wants to be an All-Star and live the experience of being there, but this year it didn't happen. I was glad I was able to be there four years in a row. If I didn't make it this year, it's no big deal. I'll come back stronger next year." For Soto and the Mets, the season will be judged on the playoff results, not those in the first half. More MLB: Blue Jays Set to Be 'Ultra Aggressive' at Trade Dealine, Per Report

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store