Tampa Bay Rays' Hunter Bigge hit in face with 105-mph foul ball
Bigge was hit in the top of the seventh inning of the 4-1 setback Thursday night in Tampa, Fla. The 27-year-old reliever, who is on the injured list because of a lat strain, was sitting on a bench near the front railing of the Rays dugout at George M. Steinbrenner Field when the ball struck him.
Advertisement
"He's coherent," Cash said Thursday. "He's talking to the physician. He's going to have a lot of tests. ... I don't have a ton to add other than that."
The Rays are expected to provide an update on Bigge later Friday. The relief pitcher gave a thumbs-up sign to the crowd as he was taken away on a stretcher.
Orioles All-Star catcher Adley Rutschman was at the plate during the incident. Rays pitcher Connor Seabold threw in a 3-2 slider for the eighth pitch of his exchange with the Orioles catcher. Rutschman slapped the high-and-inside offering to his right, sending the ball flying toward the dugout and hitting Bigge.
Advertisement
Players from both teams winced in reaction and stopped to watch Bigge taken out of the stadium on a stretcher.
"I saw it off my bat and it's really, really scar," Rutschman said. "I'm praying for him and his recovery. I hope he is doing OK. It's scary. I haven't really been a part of something like that.
"You never want to see that. I think everyone wishes for the best health for everyone in this game. You hate to see that. I hope he's doing OK."
Seabold walked Rutschman when the game resumed. Neither team scored over the final three innings.
Rutschman went 0 for 4 with a strikeout and a walk in the win. Orioles left fielder Colton Cowser went 2 for 4 with a three-run home run and a double. Orioles starter Charlie Morton allowed six hits and one run over six innings to earn his fourth win of the season.
Advertisement
Bigge, a 12th-round pick by the Chicago Cubs in the 2019 MLB Draft, joined the Rays in a July 28 trade. The former Harvard pitcher logged a 2.40 ERA over his first 13 appearances this season. He posted a 2.60 ERA over 19 appearances last season, which he split with the Cubs and Rays.
"It's terrifying," Orioles manager Tony Mansolino said. "We sit in these dugouts every night and, in a lot of ways, you kinda feel like a sitting duck. It's just terrifying. We wish the best for the player that got hit."
The Rays (41-34) will host the MLB-best Detroit Tigers (48-28) at 7:05 p.m. EDT Friday in Tampa. The Orioles (32-42) will take on the New York Yankees (43-31) at 7:05 p.m. Friday in New York.

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


USA Today
13 minutes ago
- USA Today
Tony Vitello discusses Chase Burns' pitching career ahead of MLB Speedway Classic
Cincinnati (58-53) and Atlanta (46-63) will conclude a three-game series Saturday. Saturday's series finale will be contested at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee. First pitch between the Braves and Reds is slated for 7:15 p.m. EDT and the National League contest will be televised by Fox. Former Tennessee pitcher Chase Burns (0-3) is projected to start for Cincinnati in the MLB Speedway Classic. He played for the Vols from 2022-23 before transferring to Wake Forest in 2024. Tennessee won the 2022 SEC Tournament and regular-season championship, and advanced to the 2023 College World Series. Burns was selected No. 2 overall in the first round of the 2024 MLB draft by the Reds. Ahead of Saturday's matchup at Bristol Motor Speedway, Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello appeared on MLB Network in Bristol and discussed his former pitcher. Vitello was asked what he thought of Burns when he saw him for the first time and what he thinks about him now in MLB. "It was actually just playing catch, and I saw his dad is extremely physical, so at the time he was a real lean skinny kid, but you had a hunch he was going to get more physical," Vitello said. "Just playing catch, an incredibly elastic arm with a lot of range of motion. You envision velocity, but it came in triple digits. It was also a deal where the right-handed slider against right-handed hitters was incredibly dominant. "We've talked off the side, I think there are a lot of people who like to pick at him because he's burst on the scene so quickly. The bottom line is, he's always been good, and he's good right now. It should make for a good matchup tomorrow." More: MLB Speedway Classic to feature starting pitchers with Knoxville ties More: Chase Burns pitches shutout in return to Knoxville Follow Vols Wire on Facebook and X (formerly Twitter).


New York Post
13 minutes ago
- New York Post
Rob Manfred opens up on heated clubhouse confrontation with Bryce Harper
Rob Manfred took the nothing-to-see-here approach when addressing being cursed out by Bryce Harper during a recent visit to the Phillies' clubhouse. The MLB commissioner spoke with reporters Friday after announcing the 2027 All-Star Game is headed to Wrigley Field and discussed the heated verbal confrontation with Harper last week, first reported by The Post's Joel Sherman and Jon Heyman. 'You know, I don't talk about those player meetings,' Manfred said in Chicago. 'Let me say this: I think more has been made out of this than needs to be made out of it. Bryce expressed his views, at the end of the meeting, we shook hands, and went our separate ways. Not all that significant.' Rob Manfred speaking in Chicago on Friday. Getty Images Harper told Manfred to leave the Phillies clubhouse if he was there to discuss the possibility of a salary cap in the next collective bargaining agreement (CBA), with ESPN reporting the first baseman told the commissioner he should 'get the f–k out' if that was the case. The visit was part of Manfred's annual tour of MLB teams and he was only about five minutes into seeing the Phillies when Harper strongly interjected himself. A salary cap has long been a contentious issue, with MLB being the only major sport without some form of one, and appears to be so again with the league's CBA set to expire after next season. The Phillies are among MLB's highest spending teams, fourth in the league at $289 million, only trailing the Dodgers, Mets and Yankees. Bryce Harper was not a fan of Rob Manfred's recent appearance in the Phillies' locker room. Bill Streicher-Imagn Images But there are also teams like the Marlins, who have a payroll of just $66 million. MLB has yet to publicly state what it wants at the bargaining table. But The Post reported the commissioner's office would like some form of a salary cap and there is the expectation of a lockout that could jeopardize a large portion of the 2027 season. Until then, Harper will be mostly focused on keeping the Phillies on top of the NL East as they battle with the Mets in his attempt to win his first World Series. Philadelphia enters Saturday a half-game ahead of the Mets after the latter lost their fourth straight game Friday night, this one a 4-3 home setback in 10 innings to the Giants.

CNN
14 minutes ago
- CNN
Katie Ledecky wins 800m freestyle gold at World Aquatics Championship, defeating rival Summer McIntosh
American star Katie Ledecky won her seventh world title in the women's 800-meter freestyle on Saturday, fending off the challenges of Canadian sensation Summer McIntosh and Australia's Lani Pallister. This World Aquatics Championships was billed as a showdown between Ledecky, the established star of the sport, and McIntosh, her 18-year-old challenger who was attempting to equal Michael Phelps' record of winning five gold medals at a single world championship. When they competed against each other earlier this week in the 400m freestyle, it was McIntosh who emerged victorious but, this time, Ledecky once again demonstrated her dominance over longer distances. They pulled away from the field alongside Pallister and the three of them produced an extraordinary final, separated by no more than a couple of strokes for the entire race. Ledecky eventually touched the wall first with a championship-record time of 8:05.62 while Pallister finished second, just 0.36 seconds slower, and McIntosh rounded out the podium in third, another 1.31 seconds back. 'We got three under 8:10 there. That's pretty incredible,' Ledecky said afterward. 'Lani with the 8:05, Summer with the 8:07. That's incredibly fast and they pushed me all the way. I'm just really happy I could put that together. I just kept telling myself to trust my legs, because I've gotten a little better at kicking. So, I brought it home in the end.' They set off fast – all three swimmers were inside world-record pace at the halfway point – but Ledecky eventually finished just over a second outside the record she set in May. Aside from a short period with about 100m to go when McIntosh edged in front, Ledecky led for almost the entire race, and had enough energy left to hold off any late sprints from her rivals. 'I just came in tonight trying to enjoy this as much as I can,' she added. 'I don't feel like I have anything to lose at this point in my career. I just enjoy it every time I get to walk out in front of a crowd like this and swim against the best in the world.' This victory marks Ledecky's second gold medal at this championship and the 23rd world title of her glittering career after she won the 1,500m earlier this week. McIntosh, meanwhile, has already won three gold medals at this championship – in the 200m butterfly, 400m freestyle and 200m medley – and has a chance to win a fourth in the 400m individual medley on Sunday.