
Newcomers Helsley, Rogers and Mullins join Mets in the thick of a pennant race
NEW YORK (AP) — Pitchers Ryan Helsley and Tyler Rogers and outfielder Cedric Mullins jumped into a pennant race Friday when they joined the National League-East leading New York Mets in search of the franchise's first championship since 1986.
'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 Jose Butto 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 Diaz.
'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.
'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
recommended
Item 1 of 2
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Mets' bats go cold, squander lead in 3-2 loss to Guardians
The Mets took an early two-run lead but their bats went cold and failed to generate anything, falling to the Cleveland Guardians on Tuesday night, 3-2. New York finished with just four hits. Here are the takeaways... -- Pete Alonso, searching for his record-tying HR, got the Mets on the board against LHP Logan Allen in the bottom of the first inning with a sacrifice fly, driving in Francisco Lindor from third base to make it a 1-0 game. It's RBI No. 91 on the season for the first baseman -- already three more than he had all of 2024. -- After his 11-game hitting streak ended Monday, Mark Vientos picked it back up at the plate with a double to the right field corner in the second inning. He advanced to third base on Jeff McNeil's sac-bunt and scored on Tyrone Taylor's single to put New York up 2-0. The RBI-single snapped Taylor's 0-for-19 streak. Starling Marte reached on a fielder's choice to load the bases, but the Guardians turned a smooth double play on Lindor's grounder to limit the damage. -- Clay Holmes struck out four of the first six Cleveland batters he faced with two identical innings of groundout-strikeout-strikeout. He tossed another 1-2-3 inning in the third, capping it off with his fifth strikeout of the night. The right-hander gave up his first three hits of the night in the fourth inning, including two RBI-singles as the Guardians tied things up at 2-2. The longer inning pushed his pitch total to 68 through 4.0 IP. Holmes bounced back for another 1-2-3 inning in the fifth, needing just seven pitches for two groundouts and his sixth K. That would be all for Holmes though, as he finished after 5.0 IP and 75 pitches. He allowed two runs on three hits with six strikeouts and a walk. David Peterson remains the only Mets starter to complete the sixth inning since Holmes did on June 7 (h/t Laura Albanese). -- Gregory Soto replaced Holmes in the sixth and avoided trouble after hitting the leadoff man by retiring the next three Guardians. Tyler Rogers entered in the seventh and got the first two Guardians out before allowing three-straight singles, including an RBI-single up the middle to Steven Kwan as Cleveland took a 3-2 lead. Rogers then hit Daniel Schneemann in the hand to load the bases, but luckily got star José Ramírez to ground out to first to end the inning. -- New York's hitting woes continued for the rest of the game, failing to get a hit after McNeil's leadoff single in the fourth inning. 14 straight Mets went down to end the game following Juan Soto's one-out walk in the fifth inning. Marte, Lindor, Soto, Nimmo, and Francisco Alvarez all went hitless. -- Brooks Raley and Ryan Helsley both tossed 1-2-3 frames in the eighth and ninth innings, respectively. Game MVP: Steven Kwan Kwan went 2-for-4 with the go-ahead RBI in the seventh inning. Highlights What's next The Mets' three-game series with the Guardians concludes Wednesday afternoon at Citi Field. First pitch is scheduled for 1:10 p.m. LHP David Peterson (7-4, 2.83 ERA) goes up against RHP Gavin Williams (6-4, 3.33 ERA).
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Kwan lifts surging Guardians to 3-2 win over slumping Mets
NEW YORK (AP) — Steven Kwan singled home the tiebreaking run with two outs in the seventh inning, and the Cleveland Guardians beat the slumping New York Mets 3-2 on Tuesday night. Kyle Manzardo and Gabriel Arias each had an RBI single off starter Clay Holmes in the fourth as the Guardians erased an early 2-0 deficit. They won for the sixth time in seven games and improved to 18-7 since snapping a 10-game losing streak on July 7. Pete Alonso had a sacrifice fly in the first for the Mets, who have dropped seven of eight and are 1-4 on their six-game homestand. They fell 2 1/2 games behind first-place Philadelphia in the NL East. Alonso remained at 251 career homers, one shy of Darryl Strawberry's franchise record. Mark Vientos doubled leading off the second and scored on Tyrone Taylor's single, but New York's offense went silent after that against starter Logan Allen and four relievers. Matt Festa (3-2) struck out two in a perfect sixth, and Cade Smith worked a 1-2-3 ninth for his fourth save. Cleveland broke a 2-all tie by stringing together three consecutive soft singles off Tyler Rogers (4-4) with two outs in the seventh. Key moment With a 2-0 lead, New York had Allen on the ropes following a throwing error by first baseman C.J. Kayfus that loaded the bases in the second. But second baseman Brayan Rocchio and shortstop Arias turned a slick double play to end the inning on Francisco Lindor's hot shot up the middle. Key stats Cleveland pitchers retired their final 14 batters. Jeff McNeil's leadoff single in the fourth was the last of New York's four hits. ... Cleveland has won five in a row against the Mets dating to last year. Up nex t RHP Gavin Williams (6-4, 3.33 ERA) starts against Mets LHP David Peterson (7-4, 2.83 ERA) as Cleveland goes for a three-game sweep in a Wednesday matinee. ___ AP MLB:
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Things are finally turning around for Dodgers' Roki Sasaki
Between now and October, the Dodgers will be evaluating their increasingly healthy pitching staff, trying to identify the best 13 arms for their World Series push. And for now, they remain hopeful that rookie right-hander Roki Sasaki could be part of that mix; writing an unexpected end to what once seemed like a lost 2025 campaign. After being one of the biggest stories of the Dodgers' offseason this winter, Sasaki has become more of an afterthought in the eight months since. Back in January, the Dodgers' acquisition of the Japanese phenom felt like a coup. The 23-year-old right-hander was billed as a future star in the making. He came advertised with a 100-mph fastball, devastating splitter and seemingly limitless potential as an ace-caliber pitcher. Most of all, he was a bargain addition financially, requiring only a $6.5-million signing bonus (for six years of team control) after making a rare early career jump from Japan. The reality, to this point, has been nowhere near the expectation. At the start of the season, Sasaki made eight underwhelming starts — with wild command and declining fastball velocity contributing to a 4.72 ERA — before being sidelined by a shoulder impingment. Since then, he has sat on the injured list and largely faded into the background. An important piece of the Dodgers' long-term plans, sure. But a wild card, at best, to contribute to their World Series defense this fall. Lately, however, the narrative has started to shift again. Read more: Dodgers welcome deadline additions, hopeful arrival 'raises the floor for our ballclub' Over the last month, Sasaki has finally started progressing in a throwing program, twice facing hitters in recent live batting practice sessions. He has another three-inning simulated game scheduled for Friday, after which he could go out on a minor-league rehab assignment. And after his early-season struggles to locate pitches or reach triple-digit velocities, the Dodgers have been encouraged with the changes he has made to his delivery and pitch mix. In a bullpen session Tuesday, Sasaki hit 96 mph with his four-seam fastball while also showcasing a two-seamer he has added during his time injured. 'I'm expecting to see pounding of the strike zone, conviction behind the throws, and just a better performer,' manager Dave Roberts said of Sasaki, who could rejoin the active roster near the end of August. 'At the end of the day, I just think that Roki has got to believe that his stuff plays here, which we all believe it does.' The team's title chances, of course, don't exactly hinge on Sasaki. If their current rotation stays healthy, they should have more than enough starting pitching depth to navigate another deep October run. But getting Sasaki back would provide some welcome pitching insurance. Read more: Hernández: By joining Dodgers, Roki Sasaki prioritizes development over being a team's top star He could also be a candidate to eventually shift to the bullpen, with Roberts leaving open the possibility of using him as a hard-throwing reliever come the end of the season (even though they intend to stretch him out to six innings as starter for now). 'We're gonna take the 13 best pitchers [into the playoffs],' Roberts said. 'If Roki is a part of that in some capacity, then that would be great. And if he's not, then he won't be.' For much of the summer, it seemed like a long-shot the Dodgers would be having such conversations about Sasaki at this point. For all the hype that accompanied his arrival, the results made him look like more a long-term project. In his eight early-season starts, his fastball averaged only 96 mph, and was punished by opposing hitters for its flat, relatively easy-to-hit shape. His slider was a work-in-progress, leaving him without a reliable third pitch. His go-to splitter did induce the occassional awkward swing from opponents, and garnered much praise from teammates. But Sasaki failed to consistently use it to generate chase out of the strike zone. As a result, he pitched from behind in the count too often (evidenced by his 24-to-22 strikeout-to-walk ratio). He seemingly lacked confidence to attack opposing hitters over the plate (and gave up six home runs in just 34 ⅓ innings when he did). And once he went down with his shoulder injury (which was similar to one that had bothered him during his Japanese career), the early stages of his rehab did not go smoothly, with Sasaki requiring a pain-relieving injection in June almost two months after initially going on the IL. Since then, though, Sasaki has finally turned a corner. He told reporters Tuesday that he now has 'no pain' and is feeling 'better about being able to throw harder' upon his return. Read more: Four major questions the Dodgers face in the second half of the season He has used his recent ramp-up as an opportunity to reset his mechanics, and clean up an arm path that Dodgers personnel believed was impacted by his shoulder problems at the start of the season. 'What we saw early on is probably not indicative of what everybody expects and has seen from him in the past when he's been 100%,' pitching coach Mark Prior said. While out injured, Sasaki has also had an opportunity to sit back and watch big-league games up close, something Roberts and Prior insisted would be beneficial for a young pitcher who came to the majors with only 394 career innings over four seasons in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball league. 'He's down there in that [dugout] stairwell when we're at home pretty much all nine innings,' Prior said. 'You can't not learn by just watching and at least having some experience … I think he understands now the importance of, 'I've got to be ahead. I've got to attack the strike zone.' He doesn't necessarily needed it to be executed precisely, but it's got to be in the strike zone. You can't be living behind in counts." There may be no bigger sign of growth than Sasaki's embrace of the two-seam fastball. Before he got hurt, it was a pitch that people within the organization thought could help keep hitters off his diminished four-seam heater. Prior said that, before Sasaki was shut down, the coaching staff had initiated a conversation about adding it to his repotoire. 'Clearly, everybody would love a fast, high-riding four-seam,' Prior said. 'But even that being said, these [hitters] have gotten a lot better and know how to attack those things. So just giving them different looks and stuff to lean into and keeping the righties honest, just gives him some flexibilities and some options.' The hope is that it will help Sasaki be more competitive when he returns, and complement the rest of his highly-touted arsenal. That, when coupled with improved health and refined mechanics, will trigger a late-season resurgence capable of making him an option for the postseason roster. 'My every intention is to get back on the major league mound and pitch again,' Sasaki said through interpreter Will Ireton. 'With that being said, I do need to fight for the opportunity too. I don't think that I'll just be given the opportunity right away.' Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.