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Eury Perez looks to continue stellar July as Marlins host Padres

Eury Perez looks to continue stellar July as Marlins host Padres

Reuters21-07-2025
July 21 - Not all elbow operations are created equally.
Take, for example, Miami Marlins right-hander Eury Perez, who is set to start on Monday night against the visiting San Diego Padres.
The 22-year-old native of the Dominican Republic has made an amazing recovery from Tommy John surgery, posting a 3-2 record with a 3.18 ERA this year.
In three July starts, Perez is 3-0 with a 0.50 ERA, meaning he is getting better as the season progresses.
Meanwhile, Perez's teammate and fellow Dominican, Sandy Alcantara, has struggled after his elbow surgery. The 2022 National League Cy Young Award winner is 4-9 with a 7.14 ERA this year.
Perez had his surgery in April of 2024 and he was activated this year on June 9. That's a 14-month recovery.
Alcantara, 29, had his surgery in October of 2023 and returned to the mound this year on March 27. That's a 17-month recovery.
So, despite having a recovery time that is three months shorter than that of Alcantara, Perez is having far and away the better results of the two.
But that hasn't stopped Alcantara from mentoring Perez, who has never faced the Padres.
As for the Marlins overall, they are 21-11 over their past 32 games following Sunday's loss to the Kansas City Royals that snapped Miami's four-game win streak.
"Trying to win series," Marlins rookie manager Clayton McCullough said of the Marlins' mindset on Sunday. "That's what we're going to continue to focus on ... and not get too far ahead of ourselves."
On the other side on Monday will be the Padres, who have won three straight three-game series. They also split a four-game series during that span.
On Sunday, the Padres routed the host Washington Nationals 8-1 as Xander Bogaerts hit a first-inning grand slam.
San Diego's Manny Machado also hit a grand slam in Friday's 7-2 win over Washington.
"We could be 'Slam Diego' again," Padres manager Mike Shildt joked, referring to the nickname given to the team after they hit a grand slam in a record four straight games in 2020. "I'm fine with it."
The Padres, who would be an NL wild-card playoff team if the season ended on Sunday, are expected to pitch right-hander Randy Vasquez (3-4, 3.80 ERA) to open their series in Miami.
Vasquez, a 26-year-old native of the Dominican Republic, is 1-0 with a 4.50 ERA in two career games (one start) against the Marlins.
He made his major league debut in 2023 with the New York Yankees and was part of the December 2023 trade that sent Juan Soto and Trent Grisham from San Diego to New York. He is 9-13 with a 4.10 ERA in 50 appearances (44 starts) in his career.
As for San Diego's key players on offense this year, two of them have ties to Miami.
Machado, who has 18 homers, 60 RBIs and an .843 OPS in 99 games this year, is a Miami native. And reigning three-time batting champion Luis Arraez won the second of those titles while playing for the Marlins. He also began 2024 in Miami before a May trade to San Diego. So far this season, however, he is hitting just .284, 34 points below his career average.
--Field Level Media
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The Twins, with sudden orders from ownership to slash payroll, conducted the biggest firesale in a single day in baseball history. They unloaded 10 players from their 26-man roster, shedding nearly $100 million in payroll. It was so ugly they even paid the Houston Astros $33 million to take Carlos Correa and the remaining $103 million off their hands. It was ugly. It was embarrassing. And for all of those fans who paid for season tickets, they will now be relegated to watching a minor league perform the final two months. Their only hope now is that the Twins can be sold as quickly as possible to erase the memory of the darkest day since they moved to Minneapolis. San Francisco Giants Remember when the Giants were taking baseball by storm, stealing Rafael Devers from the Boston Red Sox and shouting to the world that this was only the beginning, and they were ready to take on the mighty Dodgers? Well, a funny thing happened along the way. 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"Obviously, not all of them work out, but it wasn't from a lack of trying to be as aggressive as possible or from an unwillingness to get uncomfortable." The only thing uncomfortable now is Red Sox Nation squirming in their seats wondering how they can still hang with the Blue Jays and Yankees in the AL East. We should never question the Brewers considering how they are ridiculed for their lack of activity every winter, and still win the NL Central virtually every year. Still, the team with the best record in baseball did absolutely nothing but pick up injured Diamondbacks closer Shelby Miller. Who knows, maybe the Brewers will get the last laugh again. Or maybe, they'll be tormented all winter knowing they passed up a golden opportunity. Chicago White Sox They could have traded center fielder Luis Robert Jr. during the winter, but passed, believing his value would rise during the season. Instead, it was another injury-prone, underachieving season. He's hitting .211 with 11 homers, 43 RBI and a .651 OPS. He's been so bad that no one bothered to make a decent offer, with only the New York Mets showing the slightest interest. And now the White Sox have no choice but to exercise a $20 million option on him and pray that something changes in a year. They were able to move starter Adrian Houser and Austin Slater for fringe prospects, but that was it. The Cubs were supposed to be all-in from the moment they traded for All-Star outfielder Kyle Tucker. Instead, they were almost all-out at the deadline. The only starter they acquired was Mike Soroka (3-8 with a 4.87 ERA). The only position player was utilityman Willi Castro from the Minnesota Twins. And their only reliever was Andrew Kittredge from the Baltimore Orioles along with Taylor Rogers, who was acquired in a salary dump from the Pittsburgh Pirates. Failing to land another starter could haunt them down the stretch, and certainly into October. "We felt the asking price we felt was something we couldn't to the future,'' Jed Hoyer, Cubs president of baseball operations, told reporters. Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

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