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Canada Standard
05-07-2025
- Sport
- Canada Standard
MLB roundup: Nats tie 77-year-old NL mark in win vs. D-backs
(Photo credit: Allan Henry-Imagn Images) The visiting Washington Nationals exploded for 10 runs in the first inning -- including nine before the first out was recorded -- and held on for an 11-7 win against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Saturday night in Phoenix. Washington tied the National League record with those nine runs before the first out, matching the Phillies on Aug. 13, 1948, per the Elias Sports Bureau. The Red Sox scored 10 runs before the first out on June 27, 2003, for the most in the expansion era since 1961, per Elias. Luis Garcia Jr. drove in three runs, while Nathaniel Lowe, Keibert Ruiz and Jose Tena had two RBIs apiece for the Nationals, who have won four straight and scored nine or more runs in each game. Mike Soroka (2-3) was the beneficiary of the early support and got through 5 1/3 innings, allowing four runs on six hits. Randal Grichuk had three hits including a home run, and Josh Naylor had a homer and a double for the Diamondbacks, who have lost four straight, allowing nine or more runs in each game. Arizona's Brandon Pfaadt (7-4) gave up eight runs on six hits and did not retire a batter. Royals 1, Tigers 0 After Michael Wacha and Detroit's Tarik Skubal were locked in a classic pitchers' duel for seven innings, Kansas City managed to break through via Vinnie Pasquantino's RBI single in the eighth for the win. Wacha retired the first 10 batters he faced and didn't yield his only hit until Colt Keith singled into center field with one out in the seventh. He fanned six with one walk while facing 23 batters over 99 pitches before leaving after seven. John Schreiber (2-2) struck out two and allowed a walk in the eighth to earn the decision. Coming off a two-hit shutout for his first complete game last weekend against Cleveland, Skubal allowed only singles to Freddy Fermin and Nick Loftin, while fanning seven without a walk on 90 pitches in the seven innings he lasted. The reigning AL Cy Young Award winner faced just 22 Kansas City hitters. Cubs 2, Reds 0 Seiya Suzuki doubled in a run in the eighth inning to break a scoreless tie, and four Chicago pitchers combined on a one-hitter as the Cubs beat visiting Cincinnati. With two runners on and one out against Graham Ashcraft (3-4), Suzuki hit a fly ball into the right field corner that landed just fair and allowed Ian Happ to score from second base. The Cubs then loaded the bases with two outs before they added an insurance run on Dansby Swanson's infield single. Chicago's Ben Brown followed opener Drew Pomeranz to start the second inning and retired 14 of the first 15 batters he faced. The Cubs opted to use an opener in front of Brown, who has struggled in the first inning this season but responded Saturday by allowing one hit with one walk and nine strikeouts over six scoreless innings. Blue Jays 8, Athletics 7 George Springer hit two home runs, and Toronto held on for a victory over the visiting Athletics. Addison Barger added a two-run blast and Bo Bichette had a solo shot for the Blue Jays, who have won four straight games. Tyler Soderstrom hit a three-run homer and Denzel Clarke and Brent Rooker added two-run blasts for the Athletics, who have lost the first three games of the four-game series with Toronto and 16 of their past 17 games overall. Orioles 4, White Sox 2 Jorge Mateo's first home run of the season -- a two-run shot -- and Dean Kremer's six solid innings of pitching led Baltimore past visiting Chicago. The Orioles won for the fifth time in seven games despite managing only five hits. They've won the first two games of the three-game series between the teams with the two worst records in the American League. Kremer (5-5) gave up one run and six hits over six innings against Chicago, which got three hits from Mike Tauchman but stranded 12 runners. Cardinals 2, Rangers 0 Willson Contreras drove in a run and scored one to back the solid pitching of Sonny Gray and two relievers as St. Louis defeated Texas in the second contest of a three-game interleague series in Arlington, Texas. The Cardinals managed just five hits, but that total was enough to beat the Rangers, who posted four hits but had only one runner reach third base. Gray (6-1) went seven scoreless innings for St. Louis, scattering four hits and walking one while tying a season high with 10 strikeouts. Brewers 17, Phillies 7 Rhys Hoskins blasted a pair of three-run homers to help visiting Milwaukee hammer Philadelphia in the second game of their three-game series. Jackson Chourio went 4-for-5 with five RBIs and three runs scored and Christian Yelich also had four hits for the Brewers, who have won a season-high six in a row. Starter Chad Patrick (3-4) went six innings, allowing two earned runs on five hits with six strikeouts. Phillies starter Jesus Luzardo (5-1) came in with the second-lowest ERA in the NL (2.15), but he was tagged for career highs of 12 runs and 12 hits while lasting just 3 1/3 innings, ballooning his ERA to 3.58. Alec Bohm singled, homered and scored twice and Brandon Marsh also homered for Philadelphia, which has dropped three in a row. Braves 5, Red Sox 0 Austin Riley and Ronald Acuna Jr. each hit home runs to support Spencer Schwellenbach's strong start and host Atlanta blanked Boston to even their three-game interleague series. Riley and Acuna both went deep in the fourth inning when the Braves rallied for four runs to take control. Schwellenbach (4-4) pitched 6 1/3 scoreless innings and allowed five hits and no walks with 11 strikeouts. It was his second straight appearance with 11 strikeouts, matching his career high. Red Sox starter Walker Buehler (4-3) threw a season-high 106 pitches, only 64 for strikes, during 5 2/3 innings. He allowed five runs on 10 hits, two walks and six strikeouts. He had allowed three or fewer runs in each of his last six starts. Rays 16, Astros 3 Junior Caminero posted four extra-base hits and five RBIs as visiting Tampa Bay pounded Houston's bullpen for the second time in three games. Caminero went 4-for-5 with two doubles and two home runs and now is 16-for-37 with 12 extra-base hits and 17 RBIs over his last nine games. The Rays bashed five home runs -- also getting homers from Yandy Diaz, Josh Lowe and Jake Mangum -- and had 18 hits. Tampa Bay right-hander Zack Littell (5-5) was the beneficiary of the run support. He allowed a leadoff homer to Astros shortstop Jeremy Pena in the first, and Pena added a two-run shot off Littell in the third for his ninth homer and second career multi-homer game. But Littell stranded the bases loaded in the ninth inning for his first complete game, tossing 117 pitches. Marlins 1, Giants 0 Outfielders Heriberto Hernandez and Dane Myers made run-saving catches against the outfield fence, Edward Cabrera outdueled previously unbeaten Robbie Ray and host Miami held off San Francisco. Javier Sanoja delivered the game's only run with a two-out single in the second and relievers Ronny Henriquez, Anthony Bender and Calvin Faucher teamed with Cabrera on an eight-hit shutout, allowing the Marlins to successfully rebound from a 2-0 defeat in Friday's series opener. Cabrera (2-1) allowed six hits and three walks with five strikeouts over 5 2/3 innings, and he kept the Giants hitless with runners in scoring position before turning the ball over to Henriquez with two outs and runners at first and second in the sixth. Henriquez struck out Tyler Fitzgerald to retain the 1-0 lead. Guardians 7, Angels 5 Gabriel Arias had a two-run, go-ahead double in the seventh inning as Cleveland rallied from four runs down and held on for a victory over visiting Los Angeles. The Guardians trailed 4-0 heading into the bottom of the fourth before scoring seven times over the next four innings. Carlos Santana's solo homer and Arias' double both occurred after the Angels' Ryan Zeferjahn (2-1) retired the first two batters in the seventh, failing to protect a 5-4 lead. Jose Ramirez had a solo home run in the fifth for the Guardians, tying Earl Averill's franchise mark with his 10th double-digit homer season in a row. Steven Kwan also went deep and Nolan Jones had an RBI triple. Yoan Moncada, Taylor Ward and Jo Adell homered for the Angels in building the four-run lead. Mets 8, Rockies 2 Brett Baty hit a bases-clearing triple in a four-run first inning, Kodai Senga pitched 6 1/3 strong innings and host New York cruised past MLB-worst Colorado. Brandon Nimmo hit a two-run homer and Juan Soto added a homer off the Rockies' Antonio Senzatela (1-10) when the Mets hit back-to-back drives in the fourth. Tyrone Taylor added an RBI single in the first and Jeff McNeil homered in the eighth and Francisco Lindor reached base four times as New York won for the sixth time in seven games. Right-hander Senga (6-3) struck out seven and walked two in an outing that began when Colorado leadoff hitter Jordan Beck struck out on a pitch clock violation. Ezequiel Tovar homered after Beck's game-opening strikeout and Thairo Estrada had an RBI single that chased Senga in the seventh. Senzatela allowed seven runs on eight hits in four innings. The right-hander struck out two, walked two and lost his seventh straight start. Dodgers 18, Yankees 2 Max Muncy hit two home runs and tied a career high with seven RBIs as Los Angeles scored 10 runs in the first two innings and rolled past visiting New York to take the opening two games of a World Series rematch. Rookies Hyeseong Kim and Dalton Rushing added home runs as the Dodgers finished with a season-high 21 hits. Starter Landon Knack (3-2) gave up one run on five hits in six innings with three walks and six strikeouts. Freddie Freeman had two hits, finishing with a .410 batting average in May. He's hitting .374 on the season. Aaron Judge hit two home runs for the Yankees. Judge has three home runs in the first two games of the series and 21 on the season. New York rookie right-hander Will Warren (3-3) was crushed for a season-high seven runs in 1 1/3 innings. Mariners 5, Twins 4 (11 innings) Cole Young drove in the winning run in the 11th inning of his major league debut as Seattle defeated visiting Minnesota. Cal Raleigh continued his home run barrage with No. 22 and J.P. Crawford also went deep as the Mariners snapped a three-game skid and moved back atop the AL West by a half-game over Houston. Collin Snider (2-1) pitched two scoreless innings of extra-inning relief to earn the victory. Matt Wallner, who was making his return after spending six-plus weeks on the injured list due to a left hamstring strain, hit a three-run homer for Minnesota, which also got an RBI single from Byron Buxton. Pirates 5, Padres 0 Bailey Falter tossed 6 1/3 scoreless innings and Andrew McCutchen homered as visiting Pittsburgh blanked San Diego. Falter (4-3) gave up two hits, walked one and fanned one in a 79-pitch effort. He fetched 10 outs via grounders in dominating San Diego for the second time this season. The Pirates outhit the Padres 12-2, with Bryan Reynolds going 3-for-5 and knocking in two runs. McCutchen, Oneil Cruz and Isiah Kiner-Falefa each added a pair of hits. Padres right-hander Dylan Cease (1-4) endured his 10th straight start without a win, working 4 2/3 innings. He allowed seven hits and three runs while walking one and whiffing six. --Field Level Media


Canada News.Net
05-07-2025
- Sport
- Canada News.Net
MLB roundup: Nats tie 77-year-old NL mark in win vs. D-backs
(Photo credit: Allan Henry-Imagn Images) The visiting Washington Nationals exploded for 10 runs in the first inning -- including nine before the first out was recorded -- and held on for an 11-7 win against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Saturday night in Phoenix. Washington tied the National League record with those nine runs before the first out, matching the Phillies on Aug. 13, 1948, per the Elias Sports Bureau. The Red Sox scored 10 runs before the first out on June 27, 2003, for the most in the expansion era since 1961, per Elias. Luis Garcia Jr. drove in three runs, while Nathaniel Lowe, Keibert Ruiz and Jose Tena had two RBIs apiece for the Nationals, who have won four straight and scored nine or more runs in each game. Mike Soroka (2-3) was the beneficiary of the early support and got through 5 1/3 innings, allowing four runs on six hits. Randal Grichuk had three hits including a home run, and Josh Naylor had a homer and a double for the Diamondbacks, who have lost four straight, allowing nine or more runs in each game. Arizona's Brandon Pfaadt (7-4) gave up eight runs on six hits and did not retire a batter. Royals 1, Tigers 0 After Michael Wacha and Detroit's Tarik Skubal were locked in a classic pitchers' duel for seven innings, Kansas City managed to break through via Vinnie Pasquantino's RBI single in the eighth for the win. Wacha retired the first 10 batters he faced and didn't yield his only hit until Colt Keith singled into center field with one out in the seventh. He fanned six with one walk while facing 23 batters over 99 pitches before leaving after seven. John Schreiber (2-2) struck out two and allowed a walk in the eighth to earn the decision. Coming off a two-hit shutout for his first complete game last weekend against Cleveland, Skubal allowed only singles to Freddy Fermin and Nick Loftin, while fanning seven without a walk on 90 pitches in the seven innings he lasted. The reigning AL Cy Young Award winner faced just 22 Kansas City hitters. Cubs 2, Reds 0 Seiya Suzuki doubled in a run in the eighth inning to break a scoreless tie, and four Chicago pitchers combined on a one-hitter as the Cubs beat visiting Cincinnati. With two runners on and one out against Graham Ashcraft (3-4), Suzuki hit a fly ball into the right field corner that landed just fair and allowed Ian Happ to score from second base. The Cubs then loaded the bases with two outs before they added an insurance run on Dansby Swanson's infield single. Chicago's Ben Brown followed opener Drew Pomeranz to start the second inning and retired 14 of the first 15 batters he faced. The Cubs opted to use an opener in front of Brown, who has struggled in the first inning this season but responded Saturday by allowing one hit with one walk and nine strikeouts over six scoreless innings. Blue Jays 8, Athletics 7 George Springer hit two home runs, and Toronto held on for a victory over the visiting Athletics. Addison Barger added a two-run blast and Bo Bichette had a solo shot for the Blue Jays, who have won four straight games. Tyler Soderstrom hit a three-run homer and Denzel Clarke and Brent Rooker added two-run blasts for the Athletics, who have lost the first three games of the four-game series with Toronto and 16 of their past 17 games overall. Orioles 4, White Sox 2 Jorge Mateo's first home run of the season -- a two-run shot -- and Dean Kremer's six solid innings of pitching led Baltimore past visiting Chicago. The Orioles won for the fifth time in seven games despite managing only five hits. They've won the first two games of the three-game series between the teams with the two worst records in the American League. Kremer (5-5) gave up one run and six hits over six innings against Chicago, which got three hits from Mike Tauchman but stranded 12 runners. Cardinals 2, Rangers 0 Willson Contreras drove in a run and scored one to back the solid pitching of Sonny Gray and two relievers as St. Louis defeated Texas in the second contest of a three-game interleague series in Arlington, Texas. The Cardinals managed just five hits, but that total was enough to beat the Rangers, who posted four hits but had only one runner reach third base. Gray (6-1) went seven scoreless innings for St. Louis, scattering four hits and walking one while tying a season high with 10 strikeouts. Brewers 17, Phillies 7 Rhys Hoskins blasted a pair of three-run homers to help visiting Milwaukee hammer Philadelphia in the second game of their three-game series. Jackson Chourio went 4-for-5 with five RBIs and three runs scored and Christian Yelich also had four hits for the Brewers, who have won a season-high six in a row. Starter Chad Patrick (3-4) went six innings, allowing two earned runs on five hits with six strikeouts. Phillies starter Jesus Luzardo (5-1) came in with the second-lowest ERA in the NL (2.15), but he was tagged for career highs of 12 runs and 12 hits while lasting just 3 1/3 innings, ballooning his ERA to 3.58. Alec Bohm singled, homered and scored twice and Brandon Marsh also homered for Philadelphia, which has dropped three in a row. Braves 5, Red Sox 0 Austin Riley and Ronald Acuna Jr. each hit home runs to support Spencer Schwellenbach's strong start and host Atlanta blanked Boston to even their three-game interleague series. Riley and Acuna both went deep in the fourth inning when the Braves rallied for four runs to take control. Schwellenbach (4-4) pitched 6 1/3 scoreless innings and allowed five hits and no walks with 11 strikeouts. It was his second straight appearance with 11 strikeouts, matching his career high. Red Sox starter Walker Buehler (4-3) threw a season-high 106 pitches, only 64 for strikes, during 5 2/3 innings. He allowed five runs on 10 hits, two walks and six strikeouts. He had allowed three or fewer runs in each of his last six starts. Rays 16, Astros 3 Junior Caminero posted four extra-base hits and five RBIs as visiting Tampa Bay pounded Houston's bullpen for the second time in three games. Caminero went 4-for-5 with two doubles and two home runs and now is 16-for-37 with 12 extra-base hits and 17 RBIs over his last nine games. The Rays bashed five home runs -- also getting homers from Yandy Diaz, Josh Lowe and Jake Mangum -- and had 18 hits. Tampa Bay right-hander Zack Littell (5-5) was the beneficiary of the run support. He allowed a leadoff homer to Astros shortstop Jeremy Pena in the first, and Pena added a two-run shot off Littell in the third for his ninth homer and second career multi-homer game. But Littell stranded the bases loaded in the ninth inning for his first complete game, tossing 117 pitches. Marlins 1, Giants 0 Outfielders Heriberto Hernandez and Dane Myers made run-saving catches against the outfield fence, Edward Cabrera outdueled previously unbeaten Robbie Ray and host Miami held off San Francisco. Javier Sanoja delivered the game's only run with a two-out single in the second and relievers Ronny Henriquez, Anthony Bender and Calvin Faucher teamed with Cabrera on an eight-hit shutout, allowing the Marlins to successfully rebound from a 2-0 defeat in Friday's series opener. Cabrera (2-1) allowed six hits and three walks with five strikeouts over 5 2/3 innings, and he kept the Giants hitless with runners in scoring position before turning the ball over to Henriquez with two outs and runners at first and second in the sixth. Henriquez struck out Tyler Fitzgerald to retain the 1-0 lead. Guardians 7, Angels 5 Gabriel Arias had a two-run, go-ahead double in the seventh inning as Cleveland rallied from four runs down and held on for a victory over visiting Los Angeles. The Guardians trailed 4-0 heading into the bottom of the fourth before scoring seven times over the next four innings. Carlos Santana's solo homer and Arias' double both occurred after the Angels' Ryan Zeferjahn (2-1) retired the first two batters in the seventh, failing to protect a 5-4 lead. Jose Ramirez had a solo home run in the fifth for the Guardians, tying Earl Averill's franchise mark with his 10th double-digit homer season in a row. Steven Kwan also went deep and Nolan Jones had an RBI triple. Yoan Moncada, Taylor Ward and Jo Adell homered for the Angels in building the four-run lead. Mets 8, Rockies 2 Brett Baty hit a bases-clearing triple in a four-run first inning, Kodai Senga pitched 6 1/3 strong innings and host New York cruised past MLB-worst Colorado. Brandon Nimmo hit a two-run homer and Juan Soto added a homer off the Rockies' Antonio Senzatela (1-10) when the Mets hit back-to-back drives in the fourth. Tyrone Taylor added an RBI single in the first and Jeff McNeil homered in the eighth and Francisco Lindor reached base four times as New York won for the sixth time in seven games. Right-hander Senga (6-3) struck out seven and walked two in an outing that began when Colorado leadoff hitter Jordan Beck struck out on a pitch clock violation. Ezequiel Tovar homered after Beck's game-opening strikeout and Thairo Estrada had an RBI single that chased Senga in the seventh. Senzatela allowed seven runs on eight hits in four innings. The right-hander struck out two, walked two and lost his seventh straight start. Dodgers 18, Yankees 2 Max Muncy hit two home runs and tied a career high with seven RBIs as Los Angeles scored 10 runs in the first two innings and rolled past visiting New York to take the opening two games of a World Series rematch. Rookies Hyeseong Kim and Dalton Rushing added home runs as the Dodgers finished with a season-high 21 hits. Starter Landon Knack (3-2) gave up one run on five hits in six innings with three walks and six strikeouts. Freddie Freeman had two hits, finishing with a .410 batting average in May. He's hitting .374 on the season. Aaron Judge hit two home runs for the Yankees. Judge has three home runs in the first two games of the series and 21 on the season. New York rookie right-hander Will Warren (3-3) was crushed for a season-high seven runs in 1 1/3 innings. Mariners 5, Twins 4 (11 innings) Cole Young drove in the winning run in the 11th inning of his major league debut as Seattle defeated visiting Minnesota. Cal Raleigh continued his home run barrage with No. 22 and J.P. Crawford also went deep as the Mariners snapped a three-game skid and moved back atop the AL West by a half-game over Houston. Collin Snider (2-1) pitched two scoreless innings of extra-inning relief to earn the victory. Matt Wallner, who was making his return after spending six-plus weeks on the injured list due to a left hamstring strain, hit a three-run homer for Minnesota, which also got an RBI single from Byron Buxton. Pirates 5, Padres 0 Bailey Falter tossed 6 1/3 scoreless innings and Andrew McCutchen homered as visiting Pittsburgh blanked San Diego. Falter (4-3) gave up two hits, walked one and fanned one in a 79-pitch effort. He fetched 10 outs via grounders in dominating San Diego for the second time this season. The Pirates outhit the Padres 12-2, with Bryan Reynolds going 3-for-5 and knocking in two runs. McCutchen, Oneil Cruz and Isiah Kiner-Falefa each added a pair of hits. Padres right-hander Dylan Cease (1-4) endured his 10th straight start without a win, working 4 2/3 innings. He allowed seven hits and three runs while walking one and whiffing six.


Hamilton Spectator
01-06-2025
- Sport
- Hamilton Spectator
Washington's first 11 batters reach base in 10-run first inning vs. Diamondbacks
PHOENIX (AP) — The Washington Nationals had their first 11 batters reach base during a 10-run first inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Saturday night. The Nationals scored nine runs before the D-backs got an out, which is the second-most in the big leagues since 1961. The Boston Red Sox scored 10 runs before the Florida Marlins got an out in a game on June 27, 2003, according to Elias Sports . Luis Garcia Jr. had a double, fielder's choice and three RBIs as the Nationals sent 16 batters to the plate. It took the Diamondbacks 30 minutes to get three outs. Arizona starter Brandon Pfaadt was pulled after the first eight batters reached base. He gave up eight earned runs and his ERA jumped from 3.90 to 5.05. The reeling Diamondbacks have lost eight of their past nine games. Washington has won 10 of its past 14 and scored at least nine runs in each of the past four games. Washington led 11-0 after two innings. ___ AP MLB:
Yahoo
04-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Cincinnati Reds drop finale to Washington Nationals, lose four times on homestand
The Cincinnati Reds departed for their next road trip on a losing note. The Reds never led against the Washington Nationals on Sunday at Great American Ball Park, and the Nationals' bats came alive for three runs in the seventh inning to take the game, 4-1, before a crowd of 23,494. Advertisement The scheduled 4:10 p.m. game was delayed by rain for 21 minutes, marking the fourth straight game the Reds had a rain delay. The club amassed more than four hours worth of delays, plus a rain postponement in the last week. Luis Garcia Jr.'s seventh inning solo home run broke a 1-1 deadlock and proved decisive. Reliever Graham Ashcraft was eventually charged with three runs in the seventh inning as he picked up the loss (2-3). Elly De La Cruz beats the throw to first base on a fielder's choice in the first inning of the Reds' 4-1 loss to the Washington Nationals. The Reds lost four of seven games on the homestand. Cincinnati's record fell to 18-17 as the Reds lost four of seven games on their now-concluded homestand. The Reds split their four-game series with the St. Louis Cardinals and lost two out of three to the Nationals. Advertisement Cincinnati will embark on a seven-game road trip followed by an off day May 12. The road trip begins Monday at the Atlanta Braves' Truist Park for four games and continues against the Houston Astros for three games at Daikin Park in Houston. The Astros will host the Milwaukee Brewers for three games before the Reds arrive. Reds Nationals series Cincinnati Reds roughed up by the Washington Nationals The Braves were 14-18 ahead of their Sunday Night Baseball matchup with the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers took the first two games of the series. On Sunday, the Astros fell to 17-16 in a rain-shortened, seven-inning loss to the Chicago White Sox. Advertisement On Sunday in Cincinnati, Washington opened the scoring in the second inning. Nathaniel Lowe led off the inning with a double and later scored on Luis Garcia Jr.'s sacrifice fly. The Reds would answer in the bottom of the frame on Tyler Stephenson's 365-foot solo home run to left field. Both pitchers settled in and seemed to cruise through the middle innings, which included playing a period of run in the fourth through sixth innings. In the fifth inning, Nationals starter MacKenzie Gore slipped on the mound during a battle with Elly De La Cruz that eventually ended with a walk. The slip necessitated a brief stoppage so grounds-crew members could tend to the mound and the area around home plate. Advertisement Earlier in the at-bat with De La Cruz, it appeared the Reds shortstop had hit a go-ahead two-run homer down the left field line for a 3-1 Reds lead. Third base umpire Sean Barber called the ball fair and fireworks were ignited, but De La Cruz was eventually made to return to the plate to continue the at-bat. The umpires conferred and ruled the hit a foul ball. A replay review confirmed that. De La Cruz stretched his career-best on-base streak to 23 games in one of the few Reds highlights of Sunday's contest. Gore (no decision) would get out of the inning even though he bounced some pitches into catcher Keibert Ruiz, but the fifth was Gore's final frame of work. He allowed four hits, one run, four walks and had nine strikeouts. Advertisement Reds starter Nick Martinez (no decision) lasted six innings, allowing just one run and striking out six. Ashcraft entered the game in relief in the seventh, and allowed a one-out, 379-foot solo homer to Garcia Jr. Ashcraft ran into traffic after that, too, and departed having record only two outs. Reliever Taylor Rogers then came on with runners on the corners, and he allowed a C.J. Abrams double that plated both runners. This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Reds drop finale to Nationals, lose four times on homestand


Fox Sports
24-04-2025
- Sport
- Fox Sports
Garcia hits tiebreaking sacrifice fly, Wood and Bell homer as Nationals edge Orioles 4-3
Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — Luis Garcia Jr.'s sacrifice fly to deep center plated Alex Call with the go-ahead run in the bottom of the eighth, James Wood led off the game with his eighth homer and the Washington Nationals beat the Baltimore Orioles 4-3 on Wednesday. Wood drove the fifth pitch of the game by Orioles starter Tomoyaki Sugano 431 feet over the right-center field wall and Josh Bell added a two-run shot as the Nationals raced out to a 3-0 lead on three hits in the first inning. Kyle Finnegan allowed two singles but struck out Tyler O'Neill and got Heston Kjerstad to pop out in the ninth for his ninth save of the season. Jorge Lopez (1-0) earned the win. Gregory Soto (0-1) took the loss. Wood's blast left the park at 116.3 mph and was second career leadoff homer. The first came against Mitch Keller on April 15 at Pittsburgh. Bell's homer was his fourth of the season and 27th of his career at Nationals Park. Down 3-0, the Orioles scored single runs in the third, seventh and eighth innings. Jordan Westburg's triple led off the eighth. Ramon Urias's sacrifice fly to center field brought him home to tie the game at 3. Trevor Williams skirted through trouble later in his outing, allowing one run on six hits over five innings, striking out five and walking one. He threw 99 pitches, 61 for strikes. Key moment Sugano settled in after the first inning, allowing just two hits over the next six to toss seven innings for the second consecutive start. He struck out one and walked none. Key stat After going 2-for-26, Rutschman singled in his first two at-bats, including an RBI single to get the Orioles on the board in the third. Up next Nationals left-hander MacKenzie Gore (2-2, 3.41 ERA), who leads the majors with 45 strikeouts, takes on Orioles left-hander Cade Povich (0-2, 6.38) in the series finale. ___ AP MLB: recommended