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Royals Call Up Rich Hill, Making MLB History and Lefty its Oldest Active Player

Royals Call Up Rich Hill, Making MLB History and Lefty its Oldest Active Player

Fox News5 days ago
Dick Mountain is back, and he's older than ever. The Kansas City Royals plan to call up 45-year-old pitcher Rich Hill from the minors for a start against the Chicago Cubs on Tuesday, marking the left-hander's 21st season in the majors.
The Royals will be the 14th different team that Hill has played for in his career, tying him with Edwin Jackson for the most of any player in MLB history. He also automatically becomes the oldest player in Royals' history, MLB's oldest active player, the oldest to appear in an MLB game since Ichiro Suzuki in 2019, and MLB's oldest starting pitcher since the days of Jamie Moyer, who retired after the 2012 season at 49 years old.
In a nifty coincidence, the Cubs, Hill's opponent on Tuesday, were the first of his teams: both the Reds (1999) and Angels (2001) drafted him prior to Chicago selecting him in the fourth round of the 2002 MLB Draft, and he would debut with them as a 25-year-old in 2005. Hill then pitched for the Orioles, Red Sox, Cleveland, Angels, Yankees, Red Sox again, Athletics, Dodgers, Twins, Rays, Mets, Red Sox a third time, Pirates, Padres, and, in 2024, the Red Sox yet again.
Hill has been at Triple-A Omaha after joining the Royals on May 14 as a free agent. While he is 4-4 with a 5.36 ERA in nine starts at Omaha, the International League's ERA is 4.69, or, 0.6 runs higher than that of MLB this year, and Omaha's home stadium, Werner Park, is hitter-friendly owing to its short dimensions down the lines.
Kansas City manager Matt Quatraro confirmed the club's plans to promote Hill after Monday night's 12-4 win over the Cubs at Wrigley Field.
Hill made 11 postseason starts during his four years with the Los Angeles Dodgers, including two World Series starts in 2017 and another in 2018. He went 11-5 during the latter regular season.
Hill is 90-74 with a 4.01 ERA and 107 ERA+ in 368 career MLB games. He has pitched 1,409 innings and has struck out 1,428. Tuesday's start will make him one of just 122 players in MLB history to appear in at least 21 seasons.
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Royals put Kris Bubic, Jac Caglianone on IL; newly acquired Randal Grichuk into starting lineup
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Royals put Kris Bubic, Jac Caglianone on IL; newly acquired Randal Grichuk into starting lineup

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Royals placed All-Star left-hander Kris Bubic on the 15-day injured list with a rotator cuff strain and outfielder Jac Caglianone on the 10-day IL with a strained left hamstring amid a series of moves before their series finale against Cleveland on Sunday. The Royals also welcomed outfielder Randal Grichuk, who was acquired on Saturday night in a deal that shipped reliever Andrew Hoffmann to Arizona, and recalled right-handed reliever Jonathan Bowlan from Triple-A Omaha to help the bullpen. Bubic walked the first four batters he faced and only managed to last 2 2/3 innings against the Guardians on Saturday, when he started the second game of a split doubleheader. He needed 42 pitches to get through the first inning, and he wound up allowing four runs and three hits in his shortest start since Sept. 18, 2022, at Boston. 'He's getting some further testing and then we'll talk to the doc here and see what we got,' Royals manager Matt Quatraro said. Bubic said he's experienced some shoulder soreness for much of the season, but he's been able to pitch through it at a break-through level. Even with the rocky start Saturday, he has a 2.55 ERA — the fifth-best mark in the American League. 'I mean, you see how he's performed,' Quatraro said. 'Most pitchers when they go out there, they feel something almost every time. The severity of it and his ability to continue to deal with it has been manageable, by his own admission. ... And it's gotten to the point where, you know, he doesn't, and we don't feel like it's best for him to keep fighting through it.' The Royals rotation has suddenly thinned considerably. Left-hander Cole Ragans remains on the IL with a strained rotator cuff and is not expected back until late August, and right-hander Michael Lorenzen is progressing from his strained left oblique but may need to make a rehab start before he returns to the Royals sometime in August. The Royals already have had to plug one spot with 45-year-old Rich Hill, who pitched well in his debut for them this past week. Caglianone, the Royals' 22-year-old power-hitter, felt tightness in his hamstring while running down a double into the gap in the first game of Saturday's doubleheader. Then he felt the twinge again while running to first on a groundout later the inning. The timing of the injury could have been worse: The Royals had been working on a deal to land Grichuk, who nearly signed with them in the offseason but will now help them primarily against left-handed hitting for the rest of the season. 'You've seen our outfield had gotten very heavily left-handed. Something we thought we needed to add was a right-handed bat,' said Quatraro, whose team began the day 51-54 and 4 1/2 games back in the AL wild-card race. Grichuk was 0 for 2 on Saturday night in Pittsburgh, flying out in the second inning and the fourth, when he was told by the Diamondbacks that he had been traded. He hugged several teammates in the dugout and then headed out, catching a flight first thing Sunday so that he could be in Kansas City in time for the series finale against the Guardians. He was put in the starting lineup right away, batting sixth and playing right field. 'When they called they said, 'If you're willing to be here to play, you know, we want you in the starting lineup,'' Grichuk said, 'and yeah, I want to play. That's kind of my M.O. And so I said, 'Let's do it. We'll make it happen, even if it's crazy travel.'' The one hang-up was Grichuk's number: He's always worn 15 and that number was taken by backup catcher Luke Maile. But it turns out the two knew each other from their days together in Toronto, so a quick text message smoothed things out. Maile took No. 17 and gave his old buddy No. 15 — 'We'll work something out,' Grichuk said of potential compensation. 'It's pretty cool that he was able to give it to me,' Grichuk said. ___ AP MLB:

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