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Phillies sign first-round pick Gage Wood, Arkansas pitcher who threw CWS no-hitter
Phillies sign first-round pick Gage Wood, Arkansas pitcher who threw CWS no-hitter

New York Times

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Phillies sign first-round pick Gage Wood, Arkansas pitcher who threw CWS no-hitter

The Phillies signed first-round draft pick Gage Wood, the club announced Tuesday. Selected 26th overall in the 2025 MLB Draft, the Arkansas pitcher is best-known for throwing a no-hitter against Murray State in the 2025 College World Series — the event's third-ever no-hitter and first in more than 60 years. He had a perfect game until the eighth, when he hit a batter in the foot. 'I think about it almost every day,' Wood said of the HBP at Citizens Bank Park on Tuesday. The right-handed pitcher throws a fastball that reaches 98 mph, sitting at 95-96 mph. The pitch drew the highest whiff rate of any fastball in Division I baseball this season. His curveball sits around 83-85 mph. He also throws a cutter and splitter, which the Phillies envision him using in a starter's four-pitch mix. In 10 starts in 2025, Wood went 4-1 with a 3.82 ERA in 37 2/3 innings. He struck out 69 and walked seven. Advertisement Wood was injured for nearly two months of the NCAA season with a shoulder impingement before returning in mid-April. The Phillies were not concerned by the injury as they scouted him. Wood arrived at Citizens Bank Park a few days before Philadelphia announced the signing, catching some Phillies games — including Kyle Schwarber's grand slam on Saturday. 'I've been showing (the video) to all my friends, that this place was going bonkers,' Wood said. Next for Wood: reporting to Florida, where he will 'work as hard as I can to perform the best that I can.'

Red Sox promote top pitching prospect to Double-A after 79 Ks in 49.2 IP in pro debut
Red Sox promote top pitching prospect to Double-A after 79 Ks in 49.2 IP in pro debut

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Red Sox promote top pitching prospect to Double-A after 79 Ks in 49.2 IP in pro debut

One day after three pitchers combined to throw a no-hitter for the Portland Sea Dogs, the Red Sox' Double-A affiliate is adding one of Boston's top pitching prospects to its roster. Left-hander Payton Tolle has been promoted to Double-A and will join the Sea Dogs for their series in Binghamton this week, a source confirmed Monday. Tolle was Boston's second-round pick last season (50th overall). He was recently ranked as the No. 84 prospect in the game, according to Baseball America's latest rankings, and is considered by many to be the best pitching prospects in Boston's system. He'll join fellow standouts Connelly Early and David Sandlin in the Double-A rotation. Tolle, 22, dominated at High-A Greenville, posting a 3.62 ERA and striking out 79 batters in 49 ⅔ innings over 11 games (10 starts) in his first taste of pro action. The TCU alum capped off his time with the Drive by allowing one run on five hits while striking out nine batters Sunday against Greensboro. He has struck out at least eight batters in four of his last five starts. Tolle was ranked as the No. 8 prospect in Boston's system by MassLive before the season. Updated rankings from have him fifth, with the top two spots occupied by Roman Anthony and Marcelo Mayer, who are in the majors. Tolle isn't the only prospect joining Portland. Left-hander Eduardo Rivera (35th on SoxProspects' List) and catcher/first baseman Brooks Brannon (No. 42) were also promoted from High-A, as Beyond the Monster's Josh Ball first reported. Also, lefty Shea Sprague, who has made 10 of 11 appearances this year at Single-A Salem, will join High-A Greenville. More Red Sox coverage One Red Sox player in top two after latest MLB All-Star Game voting update David Ortiz rips Rafael Devers — 'You disrespected yourself' Red Sox trade addition struggles in rehab outing; another will make WooSox debut Thursday Red Sox vent frustration over umpiring crew, resulting in two ejections Red Sox keep beating themselves, so what could have been a sweep turns into a series loss| Sean McAdam Read the original article on MassLive.

Kumar Rocker, Rowdy Tellez lead Rangers past slumping Tigers 4-1
Kumar Rocker, Rowdy Tellez lead Rangers past slumping Tigers 4-1

Washington Post

time5 days ago

  • Sport
  • Washington Post

Kumar Rocker, Rowdy Tellez lead Rangers past slumping Tigers 4-1

ARLINGTON, Texas — Kumar Rocker took a no-hitter into the sixth inning and Rowdy Tellez hit a three-run home run in his second game with the Rangers as Texas beat the slumping Detroit Tigers 4-1 on Saturday night. Rocker (4-4) pitched 6 1/3 innings, allowing only Wenceel Pérez's two-out single in the sixth that was pulled down the first-base line on an 0-2 cut fastball that was low and inside.

How Phillies first-rounder Gage Wood became an Arkansas baseball legend
How Phillies first-rounder Gage Wood became an Arkansas baseball legend

New York Times

time17-07-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

How Phillies first-rounder Gage Wood became an Arkansas baseball legend

A trip to the College World Series was on the line, and Arkansas pitcher Gage Wood did not have his best stuff. Three straight hits loaded the bases in the third against Tennessee in the Super Regional on June 8. A runner scored. Wood wasn't laboring, pitching coach Matt Hobbs said, but batters were getting to him. So he pulled Wood in the fourth, and the bullpen chipped in during an 11-4 win that sent the Razorbacks to the College World Series. Advertisement Nobody was more excited at the end of the game than Wood, Hobbs said, though he easily could have been upset. It was Wood's draft year. He'd thrown around 40 pitches. The next day, when Hobbs borderline apologized to Wood for removing him from the game, Wood told him: 'Who cares? We're going to Omaha.' By any means, any method, Wood wanted to get his home state Razorbacks to Omaha. It was there that Wood became an Arkansas folk hero, throwing just the third no-hitter in College World Series history against Murray State on June 16. There was no removing Wood that day; Hobbs tried after eight innings and 106 pitches, and Wood refused. The Batesville, Ark., native finished the game and his college career on his terms, in 119 pitches and with 19 strikeouts. He will be remembered for delivering one of the College World Series' most dominant performances ever, elevating his state in the process. 'An Arkansas kid standing on the mound in Omaha in a must-win game for the University of Arkansas — I mean, it doesn't get much bigger than that, right?' director of pitching development Zach Barr said. 'We don't win the game, we're going home. The season's over. For him to go out there and do what he did in an environment like that on that day was pretty unbelievable.' A new chapter began Sunday, when Wood was drafted 26th by the Phillies. In Wood, Philadelphia landed a righty with an elite fastball with life and movement that produced the top whiff rate in Division I baseball. His curveball has strong vertical break and ranges from 83 to 86 mph. The club envisions developing Wood as a starter, also liking his slider and split-changeup. But, before first-round projections, the no-hitter and a slot value of more than $3.4 million, Wood was a wide-eyed freshman arriving at the school he'd rooted for since he was a child. Advertisement He left Batesville High School, where enrollment is less than 1,000 students, as one of the state's top prep baseball players. He arrived at Arkansas, which has an undergraduate student population of nearly 29,000, and joined a team with some of the nation's top college players competing against other top talents. 'I thought he was a cartoon character, just very wide-eyed and bushy-tailed,' Barr said of first meeting Wood in 2023. Why? 'There's always a little bit of a 'Holy s —' moment for the young guys that come in,' Barr said. 'Gage is probably one of, if not the best, pitchers from our state. He's got some accolades behind him, but not as highly touted as some of the other guys we had. … You kind of have that moment of realization, 'Oh, it's not my pond anymore. Now it's our pond, and I've got to try to be a big fish in it.'' Wood closed some games in the middle of the season and threw some big innings in 2023. But, Hobbs said, he fizzled out like freshmen tend to do when frequently put in high-leverage situations. He finished the year with 23 appearances, recording five saves en route to a 4.80 ERA. He looked different when he got to campus as a sophomore, coaches said. He was stronger. He'd shed baby fat. On the mound, his delivery was stronger, he used the strike zone more and the breaking ball was sharper. 'We always knew he was serious,' coach Dave Van Horn said, 'but we knew how serious he was now.' What transformed his game: paying attention to the little things, like his diet, sleep and recovery. Hobbs recalled talking about food with Wood, who brought up that he'd run out of his meal prep — a foreign concept to some college athletes, who often eat at state-of-the-art cafeterias. 'I was like, 'Wait a second: you're preparing meals for the week?'' Hobbs said. 'It's something you preach to your players, but it's rare that it actually happens, right?' Advertisement Wood primarily pitched in middle relief in 2024, logging a 4.46 ERA in 40 1/3 innings. What made Wood strong in relief, Van Horn said, was throwing a lot of strikes, repeating pitches well and good velocity. Combining that with a three-to-four-pitch repertoire that he could command made him a starter as a junior in 2025, Van Horn said. Wood, however, made just two starts before tweaking his shoulder in mid-February. There were a few weeks, Van Horn said, where they didn't know if he'd return. 'You just never know how that's going to go,' he said. The MRI and other imaging came back fine. But it was a risk to come back, Hobbs said, especially in Wood's draft year. Still: 'I don't know that ever really entered his mind,' Hobbs said. The shoulder impingement — an injury that occurs when the shoulder blade pinches the rotator cuff — likely contributed to Wood going late in the first round, though Phillies assistant general manager Brian Barber said it did not concern the Phillies. Wood listened to the doctors, trusted his coaches' plan and kept asking: 'How fast can you get me back on the mound? When can I pitch again?' Barr felt encouraged a few weeks into Wood's throwing progression, when he began throwing full speed and didn't feel sore or move slowly afterward. Van Horn said he knew four to five weeks after the injury that they'd get Wood back; it was just a matter of how they used him. What allowed Wood to return to the mound less than two months after the injury? His mindset toward rehab, Hobbs said. 'He was going to attack it, not just worry about what might happen,' Hobbs said. 'He also had the work ethic and was good at the monotonous stuff. He's good at the boring things. He's good at the pre-throws, the post-throw. He's good at making sure he's taking care of himself.' Advertisement He returned April 18, throwing 25 pitches in a third of an inning. Hobbs saw some of Wood's prior excellence in his next outing against Florida, when he struck out five of the 10 batters he faced in three innings. The fastball reached 97-98 mph, Hobbs said, with strong command at the top of the zone. A couple of outings later, he struck out nine in four innings against Texas. He finished his junior season with 69 strikeouts and seven walks in 37 2/3 innings. 'He's got stuff that he'd show up on days where you're like, 'If he's pretty good today, if he commands it pretty well, they're going to have a really hard time getting more than a couple hits,'' Hobbs said. Wood's college pitching career culminated on the mountain top, jumping up and down on the mound and using his hand to underline the Arkansas Razorbacks name on his jersey before his teammates mobbed him. Arkansas ultimately fell to Louisiana State in the semifinals on June 18. But, just moments removed from the joyous jumping with teammates on Charles Schwab Field, Wood told reporters post-game that he was on 'cloud nine.' 🚨 COLLEGE WORLD SERIES NO-HITTER ALERT 🚨 Gage Wood throws the 3rd no-hitter in College World Series HISTORY … with 19 STRIKEOUTS! (🎥: @ESPN) — MLB (@MLB) June 16, 2025 Connor Cunningham, Murray State's starting shortstop, could not have felt more differently after losing the elimination game. Wood had struck out Cunningham, his hometown catch partner, for the second-to-last out. After celebrating with his teammates and before his ESPN interview, Wood found his friend. 'I mean, that was the third no-hitter in the College World Series, first since 1960,' Cunningham said. 'Our season's over and what he does is come over to the dugout and hug me. It shows how good of a human being he is.' On the mound, Wood is '10 feet tall and bulletproof, and when you step in that box, he's pretty confident that he's going to get you out,' Barr said. The same fierceness extends to helping his friends and teammates. For more than two years, Cunningham has worked with Wood during the winter. They did not overlap at Batesville, as Cunningham transferred to the school the year Wood left for Arkansas. But Wood needed a catch partner and Cunningham a throwing partner. They play catch in the football team's indoor facility, then move to the weight room to lift. Wood workshops different pitches on Cunningham. And it's not a problem that Cunningham doesn't have a catcher's mitt, though, 'I won't lie, it kind of hurts the hand a little bit,' he said. Advertisement Cunningham, a high school junior when they started working together, had lots of questions for Wood. On mental cues, what to expect in college, what to do in the weight room, what Arkansas was like. 'Some guys like to work alone,' Cunningham said. 'But him inviting me to work with him, asking him questions to help improve my game (was valuable).' Wood also offered advice to Arkansas teammates when not on the mound, Barr said, calling him their 'biggest fan on the whole team.' 'I mean, he's on the rail,' Barr said. 'He's trying to help you between innings, tell you what he saw, maybe what he was doing. For a lot of our guys, that's pretty irrelevant because they don't throw 100 with an absolute hammer curveball. But I think his confidence bleeds into everybody else.' Wood, upon signing with the Phillies, will report to the team's Clearwater, Fla., facility. His standout run in his home state has ended. He has an opportunity to begin a new one as he climbs the Phillies' system. But memories of delivering Arkansas' greatest pitching performance will never be too far away. 'It's something he'll be able to carry with him his whole life,' Van Horn said. 'I don't think he'll ever have a problem getting a job in this state. I don't think he'll ever have a problem going out to dinner. He'll get a lot of dinners bought for him in this state because that's the way people do it.'

Watch Jazz Chisholm Jr. spoil Mariners SP Bryan Woo's no-hit bid
Watch Jazz Chisholm Jr. spoil Mariners SP Bryan Woo's no-hit bid

Yahoo

time12-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Watch Jazz Chisholm Jr. spoil Mariners SP Bryan Woo's no-hit bid

The post Watch Jazz Chisholm Jr. spoil Mariners SP Bryan Woo's no-hit bid appeared first on ClutchPoints. The New York Yankees were looking for a series sweep against the Seattle Mariners Thursday. However, Mariners ace Bryan Woo had other ideas. Seattle's starter spun seven shutout innings in the series finale, taking a no-hitter into the eighth. But the Yankees' All-Star second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. broke up the bid. Advertisement Chisholm led off the eighth inning with a single to spoil Woo's no-hitter, per Talkin' Yanks. The sixth-year veteran then helped New York get on the board, going first to third on a Ben Rice single and scoring on Austin Wells' sacrifice fly. After losing the no-hit bid and the shutout, the Mariners removed Woo from the game. Jazz Chisholm Jr. steps up for the Yankees again Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images The Yankees started the month on a brutal six-game losing streak that cost them the division lead. New York broke out of the slump with three straight wins thanks to Chisholm's bat. In the last three games entering Thursday, Chisholm had three home runs, six RBI and four runs scored. Advertisement After a slow start to the season, Chisholm was sidelined for all of May with an oblique strain. However, since returning on June 3 he's heated up, slashing .316/.388/.640 with 10 homers, 26 RBI and 20 runs scored in 31 games. Despite missing a month of play, Chisholm is up to 17 home runs on the season, well within reach of his career-high mark of 24 from last season. He intends to display his new-found power stroke by participating in the 2025 Home Run Derby. The Yankees landed Chisholm in a trade with the Marlins at the deadline last season. The team moved him to third base, where he played well for the American League pennant winners. At the start of the 2025 season, New York moved him back to second base. But when DJ LeMahieu returned from injury, he was switched to third again. Now, Chisholm has once again been moved to second base. Advertisement Related: Yankees' Giancarlo Stanton makes bold statement after sweeping Mariners Related: Yankees sweep Mariners in walk-off fashion

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