Rabu, 31 Juli 2019

Sources: Braves add closer Greene, Melancon - ESPN

The Atlanta Braves added two more relievers before the trade deadline, acquiring All-Star closer Shane Greene from the Detroit Tigers, and San Francisco Giants right-hander Mark Melancon, according to ESPN's Buster Olney.

The Greene trade is pending a review of medicals, a source told Olney.

It is unclear what Detroit and San Francisco received in the deals, which were agreed to just before Wednesday's 4 p.m. ET deadline.

The Braves also acquired catcher John Ryan Murphy from the Arizona Diamondbacks on Wednesday for cash considerations, The Athletic reported.

Greene, 30, has a 1.18 ERA and 22 saves this season. The right-hander recorded 32 saves last season in his first full year as a closer.

Melancon, 34, is a three-time All-Star who has a 3.50 ERA in 43 games with the Giants this season.

Greene and Melancon are both under contract through the 2020 season. Greene is eligible for arbitration, and Melancon has a base salary of $14 million.

The Braves already bolstered their bullpen Tuesday night with their acquisition of right-hander Chris Martin from the Texas Rangers.

Luke Jackson has served as Atlanta's closer this season, recording 17 saves. But Jackson has struggled lately, posting a 13.50 ERA with two blown saves in seven appearances since the All-Star break. He blew a save chance on Wednesday against the Washington Nationals, but the Braves won 5-4 in 10 innings.

For the Tigers, the trade of Greene likely clears the closer role for Joe Jimenez, who has been the team's closer of the future for some time. Buck Farmer, who has nine consecutive scoreless appearances to begin the second half, could force himself into the mix if Jimenez initially struggles.

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https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/27296589/braves-add-closer-greene-melancon

2019-07-31 19:50:47Z
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MLB trade deadline: Trevor Bauer heads to Reds, Indians get Yasiel Puig in three-team blockbuster with Padres - CBS Sports

The Indians have traded right-handed starter Trevor Bauer to the Reds as part of a three-team deal that also involves the Padres, the teams announced Wednesday, hours before the trade deadline. The trade was first reported by Jeff Passan of ESPN.com on Tuesday night. The Indians are receiving a large contingent in return, led by outfielder Yasiel Puig (from the Reds) and outfielder Franmil Reyes and pitching prospect Logan Allen (from the Padres). San Diego is getting outfielder Taylor Trammell from Cincinnati, and Cleveland received two other prospects in the deal.

Here are the details of the trade:

The second major blockbuster of the 2019 trade deadline has a lot of moving parts, so let's sort this out from the perspective of each of the three teams. 

Indians

Bauer was a Cy Young contender last season, but otherwise has been pretty inconsistent. He's made it clear he wasn't going to re-sign with the Indians when he hit free agency after next season and they have rotation depth. It's possible his on-field incident over the weekend wasn't taken too kindly by the organization, either. 

As things stand, Mike Clevinger, Shane Bieber, Zach Plesac and a returning Danny Salazar (he'll make his 2019 debut on Thursday after a long road back from injury) as their four members of the rotation. Adam Plutko has made some starts so he'll likely hold down the fifth spot until Corey Kluber comes back (which could be the middle of August). This still has the makings of a good rotation. 

Allen, 22, is a top-100 prospect and figures to get a shot in the rotation in future years (Kluber has club options for 2020 and 2021 and they might not pick both up). Allen has a 5.15 ERA with 63 strikeouts in 57 2/3 innings in Triple-A, but that's the Pacific Coast League, which is notoriously hitter-friendly and, in fact, the league ERA is 5.51, so Allen's been good despite the number looking ugly. He was roughed up in his MLB stint, but he's a 22-year-old rookie. 

Moss, 24, has a 3.44 ERA, 1.38 WHIP and 123 strikeouts in 102 innings in 20 Double-A starts this season. He's a depth play. 

As for the offensive side, the Indians came into Tuesday night ranking 10th in the AL in runs and ninth in slugging percentage. Enter Reyes and Puig. Reyes has 27 homers with a .536 slugging percentage. Puig has 22 homers and a .475 slugging mark. 

Reyes immediately gives the Indians a very good everyday designated hitter, as he's certainly an upgrade over Jake Bauers. If they are so inclined, Puig could serve as a platoon-mate to lefty-swinging Tyler Naquin in right field. 

Interesting side note: Puig was involved in a Reds-Pirates brawl in Cincinnati as the trade was being reported but before he had been notified. He walked off the field for the last time as a Red after being ejected.

As for Nova, he's a bit of a lottery ticket. He's 19 and in Rookie Ball right now, where he's hitting .330/.421/.451 with two doubles, three triples, a homer, 17 RBI, 22 runs and seven steals in 26 games. 

Reds

Trammell is a top-20 prospect per MLB.com, but he's having a rough season (.236/.350/.338) and apparently the Reds wanted Bauer enough to part with him (and two months of Puig, who hits free agency after this season). They are definitely gambling big here on Bauer helping them make the playoffs next season and Trammell not blossoming into a star. 

Maybe Bauer just needs a change of scenery? He had a 2.21 ERA last season and finished sixth in Cy Young voting despite missing the last month with an injury. He leads the majors in innings pitched right now. The Reds could play themselves into contention next season -- they were contending not long ago this year -- and they're losing Alex Wood and Tanner Roark in free agency, in all likelihood. Bauer returning to form along with Luis Castillo and Sonny Gray would give the Reds are very good 1-2-3 in the rotation. 

Padres

Reyes is very good and fun to watch ... when he's batting. He's a negative on the defensive side and that's likely what the Padres were thinking on shipping him out. They have lots of young pitching and pitching prospects, so it's possible they didn't figure Allen would figure in their future rotation plans, especially if they acquire veteran pitching either via trade or in free agency in the offseason, which would be advisable. 

In Trammell, they are looking to the future and dreaming on his upside. As noted, he's having a rough year, but he's only 21. The hits left-handed and could profile as a top-of-the-order guy down the road in front of the likes of Fernando Tatis and Manny Machado. In 393 career minor-league games, he's stolen 107 bases and hit 23 triples. He's good at drawing walks; take note of the .350 on-base percentage in spite of the low average. 

The word on Trammell is he doesn't have five-tool star potential due to his arm, but the other four tools are in star territory with above-average power and excellent speed. MLB.com ranked him as the 16th-best prospect in baseball heading into the season. 

Again, the Padres are dreaming on upside and tools, but it's worth the gamble. The best versions of Trammell, Tatis and Machado as a 1-2-3 looks like the start of a playoff-caliber lineup. 

Fantasy impact

How does this trade impact fantasy baseball players? CBS Sports expert Scott White writes that the fantasy implications range far and wide from the trade. White breaks down the fantasy impact of each player included in the seven-player trade, and there are winners all across the board.

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https://www.cbssports.com/mlb/news/mlb-trade-deadline-trevor-bauer-heads-to-reds-indians-get-yasiel-puig-in-three-team-blockbuster-with-padres/

2019-07-31 15:16:00Z
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Mariners Moose Tracks, 7/31/19: Trevor Bauer, Yasiel Puig, Brawl in Cincy, and Trade Deadline Madness - Lookout Landing

Hello everyone! Happy deadline day! There was a lot of news yesterday, so let’s get to it.

  • How is this...possible?

Around the league...

  • In case you missed it, there was a major trade last night involving Trevor Bauer.
  • Right after that happened, this happened. We’ll see what happens to Yasiel Puig for his involvement in this.
  • Let’s not forget.

Anders’ picks...

  • Congrats, Mina!

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https://www.lookoutlanding.com/2019/7/31/20748172/mariners-moose-tracks-7-31-19-trevor-bauer-yasiel-puig-brawl-in-cincy-and-trade-deadline-madness

2019-07-31 14:00:00Z
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New year, new blockbuster deal for the Tribe - Waiting For Next Year

In what has become an annual tradition, the Cleveland Indians have again gone and got themselves a new cast of characters at the new and unimproved single trade deadline to try and fit themselves into the postseason puzzle. Like Andrew Miller, Jay Bruce and Josh Donaldson before, Yasiel Puig and Franmil Reyes have now been tasked with helping the Tribe not only make it to the postseason but win the World Series. Let’s look at the trade from Cleveland’s point of view as to why it was made and what we can reasonably expect from the return.

Going out: Trevor Bauer

It feels wrong to say the words the only thing Cleveland lost is Trevor Bauer, but it’s the facts. The nuances of why Bauer was on the move are much more in-depth. We know that Bauer has the personal mission to never sign a long term deal, which is completely within this prerogative and makes sense from a player standpoint, but getting players to sign the long term “hometown discount” deal is what allows Cleveland to keep contending and not dip further into the free agency pool than they feel comfortable. Knowing Bauer was due a large raise in next year’s arbitration hearing is what inevitably spurned Cleveland to look to move the mercurial starter.

Bauer’s 2019, while good to great in its own right, pales in comparison to his almost Cy Young-winning 2018. A 27.9 K-rate is nothing to cry about, but down from his 30.8% in 2018, and coupled with a rise in his BB-rate, Bauer was allowing more hitters on and paying for it. 2018 seems to be more of the outlier season as Bauer’s HR/9 ballooned back to more inline career numbers in 2019 after being almost superhero level low in 2018.

Moving Bauer via trade seemingly became priority No. 1 after Sunday’s antics, but despite every single national writer saying the centerfield long toss session hurt his value, Cleveland was able to recoup arguably the two best bats available at the deadline, one controlled until 2024, along with even longer-term options Logan Allen, Victor Nova, and Scott Moss. That return is mighty for a player many thought threw his value as far as the centerfield wall.

Coming in: Yasiel Puig, Franmil Reyes, Logan Allen, Scott Moss, Victor Nova

Let’s quickly run through the lower players before getting into the beefy bats. Victor Nova is a 19-year-old third baseman playing rookie ball but hitting .303. It will be sometime before he is making noise, but he’s a good long term piece nonetheless. Moss is a 24-year-old lefty in Double-A for Cincinnati who struggled in A+ last year but came back around to have a 28.2% K-rate while holding Double-A batters to a .223 average. It remains to be seen whether or not Moss will continue to be stretched as a starter, but he’s an interesting prospect as well. His age could necessitate a move to the pen if he is to be utilized sooner rather than later, but if the developmental team sees him as a possible plus starter, that makes sense as well.

Logan Allen’s fit on the 2019 roster is a little more complicated and convoluted. Allen has been used as a starter throughout his minor league career with good results but has struggled in San Diego’s rotation in 2019. He sits in the mid-90s with his fastball, with a slider that he uses as a weapon to lefties and a changeup against right-handed batters. That mix has done him well, and he’s definitely far from a two-pitch pitcher, but with Cleveland’s rotation, he could see more bullpen time going forward, which makes sense given Tyler Olson’s lacking production. A return to health of Danny Salazar makes up for the loss of Bauer and prospect Aaron Civale is healthy again to help out the big club as well until Corey Kluber and *fingers crossed* Carlos Carrasco get healthy.

Now the big bats. Puig has been a long-time target of Tribe fans for years, always yearning for the Right-Handed-Power-Bat™. Puig might be the closest thing to Manny Ramirez we see in our lifetimes: the ability to get around a baseball, paired with the arm cannon in right and the head of a punch drunk boxer. While only in Cleveland for the rest of the 2019 season Puig instantly ups the level of play in the outfield, offensively and defensively. Taking over The Corner from Tyler Naquin should be easy, as his 54 assists since 2013 puts him at 8th most in that amount of time, and I couldn’t be happier about seeing him gun down runners at the plate in a Tribe jersey.

As good as Puig has been, his 22 home runs would tie the current team leader Carlos Santana, Reyes is the bigger get to me. Cost controlled through the 2024 season, Reyes is prototypical DH most American League teams see themselves using. His 27 home runs are the leader in the clubhouse, and his 117 wRC+ is the third-best mark among qualified Indians hitters. Reyes will fill the DH spot for 2019 with an eye to be in left field in the future, and when you look at the production former DH Jake Bauers was putting out, he will be lightyears better suited for the role. His age and contractual control allow for the team to continue to keep the window open further, putting a big bat like his in the lineup allows for Bauers to go back to Columbus and work a bit more on his swing. An outfield of Reyes, Oscar Mercado, Bauers, Greg Allen, and Daniel Johnson is a group that is young, exciting and the future of the franchise.

While losing Bauer’s abilities does put a damper on what can be expected in a postseason series, the return to health of Salazar and Kluber does loom large. If they come back healthy and productive, this is a slam dunk trade for both the here and now. If either one falters as they come back, the trade for it’s future parts, is still a win for Cleveland.

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https://waitingfornextyear.com/2019/07/new-year-new-blockbuster-deal-for-the-tribe-trevor-bauer-yasiel-puig-franmil-reyes/

2019-07-31 13:30:31Z
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Cleveland Indians' Jason Kipnis on Trevor Bauer trade: 'You're losing a damn good pitcher" - cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Jason Kipnis has seen the scene unfold many times.

A player gets traded, gets hugs from his former teammates, and then tries to process what just happened to him. So it was with Trevor Bauer on Tuesday night following the Indians’ 2-0 loss to Houston.

The Indians traded Bauer to Cincinnati in a three-team deal. They will receive outfielder Yasiel Puig and left-hander Scott Moss from the Reds and outfielder Franmil Reyes, left-hander Logan Allen and infielder Victor Nova from San Diego.

As Bauer was processing the deal, so was Kipnis, who is in his eighth season with the Tribe. He said he wanted to gather his thoughts, and make sure everything was official, before commenting, but he still talked about the pitcher the Indians gave up and what it means to a team in the middle of a race for the postseason.

“You’re losing a damn good pitcher and we’re in a race right now," said Kipnis. "It’s not fun for our clubhouse and I’m sure it wasn’t fun for the front office. It’s a hard trigger to pull, but hopefully we get some guys here who are ready to compete and fit in and ready to buy into what we’re doing here.”

Bauer was quirky. His last pitch as an Indians player saw him throw a ball over the center field fence at Kauffman Stadium in a fit of frustration on Sunday. He was fined by MLB for his actions, but Kipnis said he had confidence in Bauer whenever he took the mound.

“Regardless of what’s has happened with Trevor the last few days here, he was pulling on the same rope we were,” said Kipnis. “He was fighting with us to get back in this division race the whole time. Like I said, he’s a damn good pitcher. Hopefully we get guys who can replace him and keep going.”

Puig and Reyes will join the Indians in the near future. Moss, Allen and Nova will go to the minors.

The Indians acquired Bauer on December of 2012 in a three-team deal with the Reds and Arizona. He has his own training routine and a obsession with drones that may have cost the Indians a chance to win the World Series in 2016 when he suffered a cut right pinky finger early in the postseason. But eventually Bauer found a home with the Tribe and became a key part to one of the best rotations in the big leagues.

“He’s just one of those guys who is set in his ways and you have to get used to him,” said Kipnis. "Telling him just don’t do that doesn’t resonate with him. You have to give him a reason why or show him why that makes sense to him.

"It doesn’t mean he’s a bad person, a bad teammate just because he has his own ways about things. He can be misunderstood at times. You have to find that middle ground, which we have over time. You learn how to communicate with him, learn how to work with him and progress toward having a productive environment here.

“I think we were getting there. I think we got there.”

Like most big-league teams, the Indians are not made up of 25 guys who go out to dinner together after every game. But they have co-existed enough on the field to where they are in contention for their fourth straight AL Central title.

“No one has to be best friends here,” said Kipnis. "No one has to hang out off the field. It’s still business. It’s still work. I think guys come here and are professional about it.

“I don’t think you have to love everybody that you play with. But you will respect everybody you play with, you will fight alongside them and for them. He was doing that.”

Bauer heads to the non-contending Reds with a 9-8 record and a 3.79 ERA in 24 starts this season. He leads the big leagues in innings pitched, hit batsmen, walks and pitches thrown. That does not include the ball he threw over the center field fence on Sunday.

He went 67-53 with a 3.89 ERA with the Indians.

“I’m guessing we were favored in every game he’s started (this year),” said Kipnis. "He’s been in the Cy Young race the last couple of years. You ask opposing hitters. . .he’s one of the top strikeout pitchers in the league and he’s a damn good righty. He eats up innings. There’s a lot of value in that.

“Like I said he’s one of the better pitchers in this league. We know that. He knows that. You can’t really take that away from him. You feel confident when he’s out there on the mound.”

The trading deadline ends Wednesday at 4 p.m. The Indians were still talking to a lot of teams following the Bauer deal. So the possibility of more moves exists.

Kipnis, meawhile, said the players that remain will probably take a moment to regroup.

“Sometimes you don’t even have to,” he said. "Sometimes you take a step back. You want to make the new guys feel as comfortable as possible. Kind of introduce them to what we’re doing here, what we’re trying to accomplish.

"There’s always a trade deadline. It makes you realize there’s a business side of it. It’s not all fun and games all the time. Sometimes a guy you may go to breakfast, lunch and dinner with seven days a week is out of your life forever pretty much. It happens in the minor leagues. It happens with other guys’ careers. It just happens.

“I think we’re getting used to it. At least I have for as long as I’ve been around it. I think we have such a good thing going here that any newcomers will look to jump in immediately because it will be a fun inviting place for them to work.”

But how does a contender deal with losing a pitcher who many felt was the ace of the staff?

“The front office has earned our trust enough not to just second guess any move they make,” said Kipnis. "It’s tough. You consider him No.1, I guarantee you someone else considers Shane Bieber our No.1. Someone else considers Mike Clevinger our No.1.

"That’s the value in having that much starting pitching depth where you might be able to take a shot and fill in some other spots. They knew that was our strong point and it would probably give us our biggest return. I’m guessing that’s what’s happened here.

“You’ll miss him pitching for you every fifth day because he’s a damn good pitcher. But at the same time we’ve always gone with the motto next guy up. Some guy will take the ball every fifth day and do his job.”

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https://www.cleveland.com/tribe/2019/07/cleveland-indians-jason-kipnis-on-trevor-bauer-trade-youre-losing-a-damn-good-pitcher.html

2019-07-31 13:19:00Z
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Sources: Saints, WR Thomas reach $100M deal - ESPN

Michael Thomas has reached agreement with the New Orleans Saints on a five-year, $100 million extension that includes $61 million guaranteed and makes him the NFL's highest-paid wide receiver, league sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter on Wednesday.

Thomas is now tied to the Saints for the next six years, through the 2024 season.

Thomas is set to make $1.148 million this season in the final year of his rookie contract. He did not report for the start of Saints training camp as he sought a new deal.

Thomas was one of several high-profile players holding out from training camp, including Los Angeles Chargers and Dallas Cowboys running backs Melvin Gordon and Ezekiel Elliott, Washington Redskins offensive tackle Trent Williams and Jacksonville Jaguars defensive end Yannick Ngakoue.

Ngakoue noticed news of Thomas' deal and tweeted "well deserved."

Thomas could become the first in a very expensive set of dominoes to fall, with fellow top receivers like Julio Jones, Amari Cooper, A.J. Green and Tyreek Hill also seeking extensions. There was some sense that none of those receivers wanted to sign first, so the others could raise the bar for them. But no one stood to gain more than the 26-year-old Thomas.

Teammate Cameron Jordan tweeted congratulations to Thomas on Wednesday.

Thomas' deal marks a 1,700% pay raise for the first-team All-Pro, whose 321 career catches are by far the most in NFL history by a player in his first three seasons. Odell Beckham Jr., who signed with the Giants for around $18 million per year last season before being traded to the Browns, ranks second on that list at 288.

The Saints have never paid a skill-position player more than $10 million per year, which was the size of tight end Jimmy Graham's extension before he was traded away in 2015. But Thomas, who was drafted in the second round out of Ohio State in 2016, has played a bigger role in New Orleans' offense than any skill-position player to come before him in the Payton-Drew Brees era.

Last season, Thomas set franchise records with 125 catches and 1,405 yards while catching nine touchdown passes. His catch rate of 84.5% in 2018 was the highest of any NFL receiver since at least 2001, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

No other receiver had more than 28 catches for the Saints last season, and their lack of reliable targets behind Thomas and running back Alvin Kamara really hurt them down the stretch. They signed tight end Jared Cook in free agency to help with that depth issue.

As usual, the Saints will have to get creative with their bookkeeping to fit Thomas under the salary cap and to keep their loaded roster together in future years. They had about $12 million in cap space before Thomas' new deal, after they also signed All-Pro defensive end Cameron Jordan to a lucrative contract extension earlier this offseason.

The Saints already have more than $26 million in "dead money" scheduled to count against their salary cap in 2020 because of the way they have structured Brees' contract. Next year, Brees, backup quarterback Teddy Bridgewater and guard Andrus Peat are scheduled to be free agents, among others. Then Kamara, guard Larry Warford and linebacker Demario Davis come due in 2021, followed by cornerback Marshon Lattimore and offensive tackles Terron Armstead and Ryan Ramczyk in 2022.

Information from ESPN's Mike Triplett was used in this report.

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https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/27293746/saints-wr-thomas-reach-100m-deal

2019-07-31 13:04:40Z
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Saints, Michael Thomas agree to five-year extension - NBCSports.com

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Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas is ending his holdout and signing a lucrative new contract.

The Saints and Thomas have agreed to a five-year extension, according to multiple reports.

The reports say the total value of the extension is $100 million, which would give Thomas the $20 million a year he was looking for, but there’s no word on how that $100 million is structured. The value of the guarantee is said to be $61 million, but again, there’s no word on how that “guarantee” actually breaks down.

Thomas is heading into the fourth and final year of his rookie contract and was holding out for a big pay increase. There was little doubt that he deserves it, given that he has 321 catches for 3,787 yards and 23 touchdowns in just three NFL seasons. At age 26, the Saints think Thomas still has plenty of good years left in him, and they want him to spend those years in New Orleans.

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https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2019/07/31/saints-michael-thomas-agree-to-five-year-extension/

2019-07-31 12:36:00Z
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Reds To Acquire Trevor Bauer In 3-Team Deal With Indians, Padres - MLB Trade Rumors

TODAY: The deal is on track to be announced today, Jon Heyman of MLB Network tweets.

YESTERDAY: The dust has settled on a stunning three-team trade, but not before a dust-up in last night’s Reds-Pirates game threatened to scuttle the arrangement. Even as the Reds, Indians, and Padres completed medical reviews on the players involved, one of them — Cincinnati outfielder Yasiel Puig — was playing a central role in an on-field brawl. That show punctuated what has been a notably slow-moving market in the approach to the trade deadline.

The hoopla began when reports emerged that the Reds had struck a deal for star right-hander Trevor Bauer, who was himself the central figure in a memorable recent display of frustration. In exchange for Bauer, the Indians will pick up Puig and lefty pitching prospect Scott Moss from Cincinnati. They’ll also add a trio of players from the Padres: outfielder Franmil Reyes, young left-hander Logan Allen, and rookie-level infielder Victor Nova. On the San Diego end of the swap, the Friars have landed much-hyped outfield prospect Taylor Trammell from the Reds.

At 49-55 and 6 1/2 games out of wild-card position, Cincinnati’s chances of earning a playoff spot this year appear close to dead. Nevertheless, the poor win-loss results the team has achieved this season didn’t deter president of baseball operations Dick Williams and general manager Nick Krall, whose goal is to make a more serious playoff push in 2020. The Reds may be in position to do that by picking up Bauer, who – barring more deals – could team with Luis Castillo, Sonny Gray, Anthony DeSclafani and Tyler Mahle to give the Reds one of the game’s best rotations next season. Cincinnati’s starting staff has been a formidable group without Bauer this year, but it could lose one or two veterans by Wednesday’s trade deadline. Tanner Roark and Alex Wood look like possible candidates to wind up on the move, but even if they stay put through the season, they’re not under contract beyond then.

The 28-year-old Bauer has been a quality, albeit somewhat frustrating, starter since he entered the pro ranks as the third overall pick of the Diamondbacks in 2011. He went to the Indians in a three-team trade in 2012 (which also involved the Reds) and has since pitched to a 3.89 ERA/3.95 FIP across 1,044 1/3 innings and 180 appearances (170 starts). Bauer was at his best last year, during which he earned Cy Young consideration on the strength of a splendid 2.21 ERA/2.44 FIP over 175 1/3 frames.

While Bauer hasn’t been as effective this season, he has still notched a solid 3.79 ERA/4.17 FIP with 10.63 K/9 against 3.62 BB/9 through a league-leading 156 2/3 innings. That was eminently valuable production to a Cleveland team which has been without Corey Kluber, Carlos Carrasco and Mike Clevinger for significant parts of the season, but the Tribe nonetheless deemed Bauer expendable. In his final act as an Indian, Bauer fired a ball from the pitcher’s mound over the center field wall Sunday after a frustrating outing in Kansas City.

Clearly, Bauer’s on-field tantrum last weekend didn’t have an adverse affect on his trade value. The Indians are bringing back a major haul for Bauer, who’s making $13MM now, will earn an arbitration raise next season and has said he plans to go year to year in free agency thereafter. As a 62-44 team that holds the American League’s top wild-card spot and trails the AL Central-leading Twins by 2 1/2 games, the Indians were only going to trade Bauer if it helped them stay in contention this season. It appears this deal will enable them to accomplish that. It’ll also shave quite a bit of salary from the Indians’ 2020 books while giving them multiple potential long-term pieces.

Puig is only under control through this season, during which he’s making a $9.7MM salary, but will team with Reyes to help give the Indians the right-handed outfield/DH punch they’d been seeking on the trade market. With the Puig and Reyes acquisitions, the Indians have become the first team to ever land two 20-home run hitters in one midseason trade, Joel Sherman of the New York Post points out.

The 28-year-old Puig joined the Reds last winter in a previous blockbuster involving the Dodgers. Although Puig got off to a horrible start this season, his production has taken off over the past several weeks. Puig now owns a .252/.302/.475 slash with 22 home runs and 14 stolen bases (19 attempts) across 404 plate appearances. Long a capable defender in right field, Puig has also performed well in that aspect this year.

One of the key elements of this deal for Puig is that it completely wipes out the possibility of him receiving a qualifying offer after the season. Puig only looked like a borderline candidate for a QO, but now that he’s off the Reds, he’s on schedule to reach free agency unfettered over the winter.

Just as Bauer’s Indians stint ended in bizarre fashion, so did Puig’s days with the Reds. He was involved in a brawl during the Reds-Pirates game Tuesday when news of the trade came down. Puig may have to serve a suspension early in his Tribe tenure as a result.

There are no such concerns centering on Reyes, who has emerged as one of the game’s foremost power bats since he debuted a year ago. Although Reyes has struggled to consistently get on base this season, his first full campaign in the majors, the big-bodied 24-year-old has still batted .255/.314/.536 (117 wRC+) with 27 home runs in 354 PA. Given his prolific home run totals, Reyes could eventually rake in sizable sums via arbitration, but that isn’t something the Indians will have to worry about for the foreseeable future. Reyes isn’t on track to reach arbitration until after the 2021 season, and he’s not scheduled to become a free agent until the conclusion of the 2024 campaign.

Not to be forgotten, the Indians are also getting three less established players in this deal in Allen, Nova and Moss. The 22-year-old Allen entered the season as a top 100-caliber prospect. He has since struggled in a 25 1/3-inning major league sample and in 57 2/3 frames with Triple-A El Paso of the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League. However, Allen was still regarded as one of the many high-end prospects in a jam-packed Padres system. FanGraphs’ Kiley McDaniel and Eric Longenhagen ranked Allen as the Padres’ eighth-best farmhand back in May, writing that he “comfortably projects as a No. 4 starter.”

Nova, 19, was not grouped in with the Padres’ premier farmhands, but Longenhagen tweets that the infielder’s “an interesting, bat-first flier.” The Dominican Republic native has held his own this year in rookie ball, where he has batted .330/.421/.451 (136 wRC+) with seven steals in 109 PA.

Now 24, Moss became a Red when they used a fourth-round pick on him in 2016. The former Tommy John patient has since put up appealing results in the minors, including this year. In his first experience in Double-A ball, Moss has thrown 102 innings and recorded a 3.44 ERA/3.52 FIP with 10.85 K/9, though he has walked just over five hitters per nine. Moss ranked as the Reds’ 12th overall prospect at MLB.com, which notes he has a “somewhat limited” ceiling but could turn into a back-end starter or swingman at the MLB level.

The highest-ranked prospect in this trade is Trammell, whom Baseball America and ESPN’s Keith Law (subscriptions required) placed near the top of the sport in their most recent updates. BA rates Trammell 41st, while Law’s even more bullish (No. 14). This hasn’t been a hugely effective season for the 21-year-old Trammell, who has batted .236/.350/.338 (108 wRC+) with six homers and 17 steals in 377 PA during his initial taste of Double-A action. However, youth and injuries have played a part in Trammell’s unspectacular output, explains Law, who contends the youngster has the tools to become “a good regular or a star” in left field.

The Padres, of course, surrendered a substantial amount to acquire the unproven Trammell. But trading Reyes will somewhat enable the club to alleviate its current logjam in the outfield. With Reyes out of the mix, the Padres still have two starting-caliber corner outfield options in Hunter Renfroe and the maligned, expensive Wil Myers. They also have rookie Josh Naylor, Travis Jankowski and Franchy Cordero as 40-man options who are either in the minors or injured at present.

Weighing all the pieces in this trade, it’s all the more surprising the Blue Jays couldn’t reel in a greater return for righty Marcus Stroman this past weekend. At $7.4MM, Stroman’s cheaper than Bauer, under control for the same period and has arguably been the better of the two this season. Nevertheless, in a trade with the Mets, the Jays were only able to secure two non-elite prospects – pitchers Anthony Kay and Simeon Woods Richardson – for Stroman. There was plenty of chatter afterward that teams were clinging to their prospects and unwilling to give up truly outstanding young talent anymore, but this three-way deal shows that isn’t the case.

Jeff Passan of ESPN broke the news of the deal. Additional players involved were conveyed by Jon Heyman of MLB NetworkKen Rosenthal of The Athletic, Dennis Lin of The AthleticAJ Cassavell of MLB.com, and Jonathan Mayo of MLB.com.

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

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https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2019/07/reds-to-acquire-trevor-bauer-in-3-team-deal.html

2019-07-31 11:13:00Z
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The one pitcher the Mets should look to deal - New York Post

CHICAGO — Well, after this display Tuesday night at Guaranteed Rate Field (worst ballpark name ever), you know what the scouts on site will report back to their respective central commands:

Go get Noah Syndergaard.

Stay away from Edwin Diaz.

The Mets, naturally, should do the opposite with Wednesday’s trade deadline arriving. Now winners of five in a row after they overcame another Diaz blown save, with homers by Jeff McNeil and Michael Conforto producing an 11-inning, 5-2 victory over the White Sox, the Mets are sort of in this playoff race, trailing the Cubs by five games in the pursuit of the National League’s second wild card. Because they already damaged their farm system further with the trade for the Blue Jays’ Marcus Stroman, it would be silly to jettison Syndergaard and his ace-like stuff, not to mention his larger-than-life persona.

Diaz, though? If they receive a fair offer for him, they should quit while they’re behind on Brodie Van Wagenen’s biggest and worst trade.
Syndergaard looked absolutely brilliant in going 7¹/₃ innings and allowing one unearned run on five hits and one walk while striking out 11. His fastball reached 100 miles per hour on the radar gun, and his slider, missing in action for much of this campaign, played an integral role in his dominance.

“I think tonight was probably the top it’s felt mechanically [this season],” said Syndergaard, who dropped his ERA from 4.33 to 4.10. “Felt really good out there.”

“Wow. He was electric,” Mickey Callaway said. “I thought he had all pitches working. To pitch that deep in the game, he did a tremendous job. That was probably the best I’ve seen him.”

In his postgame interview, Syndergaard acknowledged that he has been in touch with the team’s front office concerning his future and professed confidence that he would still be a Met come 4 p.m. (Eastern time) on Wednesday. He agreed with the premise that the Mets wouldn’t have let him pitch Tuesday if they were close to trading him away.

Diaz didn’t speak with the media, though what could he say at this point, anyway? His actions speak loudest, and they continue to disturb.
Handed a 2-1 lead for the ninth, after Seth Lugo escaped an eighth-inning jam by inducing the dangerous Jose Abreu to hit into a double play, Diaz put together an impressive display of inaccuracy: Walk, strikeout, wild pitch, hit batter, wild pitch, sacrifice fly. Tie game, and not a hit to be found in the mix, and with his fifth blown save in 28 tries, Diaz exceeded last year’s total of four blown saves in 61 opportunities with the Mariners.

“His arm’s late,” Callaway said. “The [sliders] that are up, going up and into righties, his arm is just late. So I know [Diaz and pitching coach Phil Regan] are going to get together tomorrow and see if we can figure it out.”

Catcher Tomas Nido said Diaz could be “a little anxious, opening up [his front shoulder] a little quick.”

It’s fair to start wondering whether Diaz can tackle New York. If the Mets can unload him and replenish their farm system, you can envision Seth Lugo closing, and maybe the Mets can find a walk-year veteran for sale go give them another body.

In any case, if these Mets are to make a miracle run to October, it’ll happen with Syndergaard serving as an enormous wingman to ace and reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom, then with Suffolk County boys Stroman and Steven Matz serving as a strong secondary one-two punch. If they’re going to choose a questionable path, though, the Mets might as well do so with flair. And no active player — where have you gone, Yoenis Cespedes? — does it with more flair than Syndergaard.

Diaz’s flair has gone with the wind. If he joins Zack Wheeler as departees by the deadline, it might just be for the best.

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https://nypost.com/2019/07/31/the-one-pitcher-the-mets-should-look-to-deal/

2019-07-31 07:35:00Z
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Podcast: Trevor Bauer trade rumors become ‘Trevor Bauer - Cincinnati Reds pitcher’ - Red Reporter

We set out to record a routine pre-deadline podcast. It was nothing more complicated than that.

While recording, however, the Cincinnati Reds not only got in yet another newsworthy brawl with the Pittsburgh Pirates after their shenanigans, the Reds also engaged in a 3-team trade that had massive, massive ramifications for both the present and the future of the club.

As the dust settled, we assessed both the rumors that the Reds might acquire Cleveland starter Trevor Bauer, as well as what the Reds might do in other deals at the deadline. By the end of recording, however, we were presented with the breaking news of the actual deal that sent Bauer to the Reds, cost the Reds their top prospect in Taylor Trammell, and saw Cleveland net a haul from both Cincinnati and the San Diego Padres that made them come out looking incredibly rosy by most every single prospect evaluator involved.

Oh yeah - the Reds included Yasiel Puig in the deal, too, which just made this one of the more ill-fitting, unsatisfactory deals that I could possibly fathom. Don’t worry, you’ll absolutely hear that in the reactions from me, Tony, and Grimey.

Tune in, if you will. If you choose to tune out after this deal, however, I sure as hell wouldn’t blame you.

If Google hasn’t jobbed you out of the html link to our SoundCloud post below, you can find this latest episode by clicking here.

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https://www.redreporter.com/2019/7/31/20748262/trevor-bauer-trade-cincinnati-reds-trammell-puig

2019-07-31 06:21:02Z
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Selasa, 30 Juli 2019

New US Soccer fact sheet eviscerates Megan Rapinoe's 'equal pay' narrative - Washington Examiner

The United States has the best women’s soccer team in the world, as evidenced by our recent Women’s World Cup win. But we're told that the women’s team still faces blatant sexism and a pay gap compared to our men’s team.

That’s what woke feminists like USWNT Captain Megan Rapinoe keep telling us. In fact, the women’s team has even filed a lawsuit against U.S. Soccer alleging gender-based pay discrimination. I’ve already made the argument against equal pay and explained why Rapinoe is far from a good role model, but a new open letter and fact sheet released by U.S. Soccer completely refutes the equal pay crusaders’ argument.

First, it reveals that while U.S. Soccer is the target of the USWNT’s equal pay lawsuit, they’re not even the ones paying the men and women unequally. According to U.S. Soccer President Carlos Cordeiro, they actually pay the women more than the men. He writes:

Over the past decade, U.S. Soccer has paid our Women’s National Team more than our Men’s National Team. From 2010 through 2018, U.S. Soccer paid our women $34.1 million in salaries and game bonuses and we paid our men $26.4 million—not counting the significant additional value of various benefits that our women’s players receive but which our men do not.

How’s that for sexist? Cordeiro explains that this pay gap — in favor of the women — is due to different pay structures the men and women have negotiated, as the women’s team is given an annual salary and benefits while the men are paid more sporadically, proportional to participation. This disparity is necessary because the men have more professional soccer opportunities outside of international competition, such as the leagues in Europe and Major League Soccer. National soccer is a side gig for them, not a full-time job.

Now, it is true that the men’s World Cup offers significantly higher prize money, and that when prize money is counted, the men received $41 million from 2010 to 2018 and the women received just $39.7 million despite vastly outperforming the men relative to their own competition. And more generally, the winning team in the last men’s World Cup received $38 million in prize money, while the winners of this year’s Women’s World Cup get a relatively modest $4 million.

But this is up to the International Federation of Association Football, not U.S. Soccer, which means the “equal pay” lawsuit hasn't even been filed against the right entity. Moreover, the differential in prize money offered by FIFA is explained by differences in revenue generation and viewership, not sexism.

As I wrote before:

Almost half the world watched the men’s 2018 World Cup, with nearly 3.6 billion total viewers tuning in to watch some part of the tournament. The final match alone reached an audience of over 1.1 billion people. Subsequently, the tournament’s sponsor, FIFA, brought in a profit of over $6 billion.

The women’s team garners significant but substantially lower viewership. We don’t have data for the 2019 tournament, but during the women’s last World Cup in 2015, 764 million viewers tuned in for some portion of the tournament. This is quite good, but it still pales in comparison to the men’s tournament's audience.

Unsurprisingly, Cordeiro’s letter explains, “We look forward to the day when Americans choose to spend their time and money equally between women’s and men’s soccer.” But as the U.S. Soccer fact sheet makes clear, today is not that day, and the pay structures reflect that reality.

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https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/new-us-soccer-fact-sheet-eviscerates-megan-rapinoes-equal-pay-narrative

2019-07-30 14:29:00Z
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Marcus Stroman Let The Blue Jays Know Exactly How He Felt About Being Traded To The Mets - Deadspin

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  1. Marcus Stroman Let The Blue Jays Know Exactly How He Felt About Being Traded To The Mets  Deadspin
  2. Report: Marcus Stroman wasn't happy he was traded to a team out of the race  Yahoo Sports
  3. Opinion: Marcus Stroman trade is a stroke of genius by the Mets  USA TODAY
  4. The Stroman trade verdict might not take long  Toronto Star
  5. Yanks discovering that asking price for pitchers is high  Newsday
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://deadspin.com/marcus-stroman-let-the-blue-jays-know-exactly-how-he-fe-1836813570

2019-07-30 12:58:00Z
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US women's soccer national team spokesperson slams federation's pay pushback: 'It is a ruse' - Fox News

A U.S. women’s soccer spokeswoman Monday slammed the U.S. Soccer Federation after the organization’s president claimed the women's team -- whose members have publicly campaigned for what they say is equal pay -- actually made more money than its male counterpart.

U.S. Soccer President Carlos Cordeiro said the federation paid out $34.1 million in salary and game bonuses to the women between 2010 and 2018 compared to $26.4 million paid to the men during the same time. The figure didn’t include the value of benefits received only by women.

U.S. SOCCER SAYS WOMEN’S TEAM HAS BEEN PAID MORE THAN MEN’S TEAM

Molly Levinson, a spokeswoman for the players in the gender discrimination lawsuit against the U.S. Soccer Federation, blasted the letter as nothing more than a “ruse” built on misleading figures and a "sad attempt" to quash the controversy.

“The USSF fact sheet is not a ‘clarification.’ It is a ruse,” Levinson said in a statement. “Here is what they cannot deny. For every game a man plays on the MNT he makes a higher base salary payment than a woman on the WNT. For every comparable win or tie, his bonus is higher. That is the very definition of gender discrimination."

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Levinson added: “For the USSF to believe otherwise, is disheartening but it only increases our determination to obtain true equal pay.”

The spokeswoman called the pay figures a “sad attempt by the USSF to quell the overwhelming tide of support the USWNT has received from everyone from fans to sponsors to the United States Congress.”

“The USSF has repeatedly admitted that it does not pay the women equally and that it does not believe the women even deserve to be paid equally,” Levinson said. “This is why they use words like 'fair and equitable,' not 'equal' in describing pay.”

Cordeiro said the numbers referred to in the letter were generated from a federation analysis of its finances during the last 10 years. In a bid to clear up what he called "confusion" about the pay structures of both teams, the federation said it pays the women’s national team a base salary of $100,000 per year and an additional $67,500 to $72,500 per player as a salary for playing in the National Women’s Soccer League.

The federation said the men have the ability to make higher bonuses than the women while also getting paid by training camp call-ups, game appearances and through performance bonuses. The federation added that the men’s team generated $185.7 million in revenue in 191 games between 2009 and 2019 while the women generated $101.3 million in 238 games.

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According to The Wall Street Journal, the U.S. Soccer Federation and its women’s team will soon head into mediation over the gender discrimination lawsuit.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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https://www.foxnews.com/sports/us-womens-national-team-ruse-pay-fact-sheet

2019-07-30 11:15:21Z
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MLB trade rumors: WFAN's Mike Francesa says why Yankees-Mets Noah Syndergaard deal won't happen - NJ.com

Nobody seems to have a sense of what the New York Mets are doing before Wednesday’s 4 p.m. trade deadline. Picking up right-hander Marcus Stroman was a move that came out of nowhere for general manager Brodie Van Wagenen. Trading left-hander Jason Vargas (to the Phillies) was almost a given. Now the first-year GM has to decide if he wants to move right-handers Zack Wheeler and Noah Syndergaard.

The 29-year-old Wheeler, who will be a free agent after the season, seems more likely to go as a short-term rental for a contender.

But the 26-year-old Syndergaard has two more years of arbitration eligibility remaining and won’t be a free agent until after the 2021 season.

So Syndergaard is the more highly-coveted pitcher, which means he also has the higher price tag.

The New York Yankees are one of several teams shopping for starting pitching before the deadline. General manager Brian Cashman has been linked to both Wheeler and Syndergaard.

But WFAN’s Mike Francesa said Monday there’s no way the Yankees will be able to pry Syndergaard from the Mets. Per WFAN:

“What I have heard in the last hours is that … in the Mets’ process here, and in their belief system of what they want, there are very few teams that can give them what they want here, and the Yankees don’t seem to be one of those teams, from what I understand. The Yankees, which is what you’re interested in, do not really have the prospects that would give the Mets enough that they would be content ... They like (Deivi) Garcia, but they don’t like anybody else. So, unless they put (Gleyber) Torres in the deal, which we all know they’re not doing … Syndergaard is not going to go to the Yankees, because they don’t have a group that’s going to work, they don’t have a package that’s going to work. Now, what teams do? From what I understand, the Braves do, but I don’t see the Mets and Braves making a trade … and San Diego … according to what I understand from people I trust, they have the prospects that could make the deal.”

This isn’t Francesa’s first dip into the trade deadline pool.

Last week, he openly campaigned against the Yankees trading for Cleveland Indians right-hander Trevor Bauer, calling him a “nutcase” and a “fool.”

Bauer lived up to that reputation with an epic mound meltdown on Sunday.

Mike Rosenstein may be reached at mrosenstein@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @rosenstein73. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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https://www.nj.com/yankees/2019/07/mlb-trade-rumors-wfans-mike-francesa-says-why-yankees-mets-noah-syndergaard-deal-wont-happen.html

2019-07-30 10:50:00Z
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Trade Deadline Thread: How Far Would You Go to Add an Ace? - Minnesota Twins - Articles - Homepage - Twins Daily

It’s clear this 2019 Twins lineup is special. The pitching staff? Not quite. How far would you be willing to go for balance? Would you trade Royce Lewis? Alex Kirilloff? How about both?

Would you trade Byron Buxton? Reports are indicating that's what it will take to land Noah Syndergaard.

Image courtesy of © Jon Durr-USA TODAY Sports

Friday, La Velle E. Neal III of the Star Tribune reported that the Mets asking price for Noah Syndergaard is sky high. According Neal’s sources, the Mets are “eyeing both Lewis and Kirilloff as part of a package for Syndergaard.”

Wow. Royce Lewis AND Alex Kirilloff ... and that’s just PART of the package?

Last night, La Velle passed along another trade tidbit, saying that the Mets’ asking price included Byron Buxton.

It’s not at all surprising the Twins were “turned off” by that price, but from the Mets’ perspective, the worst thing that could happen is the Twins say no. Why not ask, right?

Joel Sherman of the New York Post reported that an executive who has communicated with the Mets said “They are definitely trading Syndergaard.” If that truly is the case, the Mets front office will need to lower its asking price, but they can certainly expect to command a hefty return for the 26-year-old Syndergaard, who still has two more seasons of team control.

The beauty of the deadline is this will all have to be resolved one way or another by 3 pm CT tomorrow afternoon.

La Velle’s piece called Syndergaard a target “no longer viable,” but only time will tell. That price may drop. Among the bullpen targets the Twins could pivot to, Neal listed Kirby Yates, Greg Holland, Archie Bradley and Mychal Givens.

What do I think is going to happen? Well, here’s nearly 15 minutes of me sharing my thoughts on the deadline, the front office’s intentions and some of what my expectations are. This could end up looking really, really bad. It’s so difficult to even guess what may happen, since this is the first real contending Twins team of the Derek Falvey era.

To answer my own question purposed in the headline, the furthest I’d personally go to trade for an ace-calibur pitcher would be Alex Kirilloff as the marquee piece. Cody wrote an article last night that asked Is Alex Kirilloff Expendale? I think to a certain degree he is. That’s much less of a shot at Alex as it is an indication of how stacked this organization is with corner outfield/first base options right now.

It’s not that I view Lewis as completely untouchable, but it’d take multiple good, long-term pieces coming back. There’s a chance Royce both reaches his ceiling and stays at shortstop. If that happens, he’ll be among the most valuable players in the league. It’d take a lot to walk away from that.

Not that I don’t believe in Alex. There’s no questioning his feel for hitting, and I think he’s more athletic than most people give him credit for, but corner outfielders or first basemen are easy to find, relatively speaking. C.J. Cron hit 30 homers and was non-tendered. The entire current Twins outfield will remain in tact for multiple seasons and there are some other attractive outfielders in the pipeline as well.

If the Twins end up aiming lower on the trade market, there are reasons why I could understand that. This is the first year on the job for Rocco Baldelli, Wes Johnson and Jeremy Hefner. This is a franchise on the rise, not one who sees its window closing.

A lot of the players carrying this team right now will be around for years to come and the minor league system ranks among the best in the game. That doesn’t guarantee you anything, but I feel like there’s a very good chance we’re entering an extended period of sustained winning baseball in Twins Territory.

Even if they aim gets lower, this front office still has plenty of incentive to make some moves. In mid-June, I wrote about the potential impending roster crunch this offseason. Lewin Diaz was among the guys I mentioned who needed to be added to the 40-man roster at the end of the season. He’s already been shipped out to Miami.

Beyond all the top prospects is a nice tier of players that should be attractive to a team who has a barren system. Ben Rortvedt, Ryan Jeffers, Jose Miranda and (though he’s injured right now) Travis Blankenhorn could be dangled for more pitching help. Guys performing in Triple-A like Nick Gordon or Jaylin Davis would have some appeal to certain teams. And those are just some of the bats.

This is going to sound harsh, but it wouldn’t take a lot to improve the outlook of the Twins bullpen right now. Even marginal upgrades would go a long way. They’ve looked good at times, but it’s just not realistic to roll with rookies Lewis Thorpe, Sean Poppen and Cody Stashak in the bullpen down the stretch.

So while the market for a top of the rotation starter may seem steep right now, there’s still time for things to change. If prices don't come down, I still fully expect the Twins to make multiple moves between now and the deadline, given their incentive to clear some room.

I still can’t believe how quiet things have been league-wide to this point. Things could get nuts leading up to tomorrow’s 3 pm CT deadline.



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http://twinsdaily.com/_/minnesota-twins-news/minnesota-twins/trade-deadline-thread-how-far-would-you-go-to-add-an-ace-r8178

2019-07-30 04:55:00Z
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Senin, 29 Juli 2019

Fortnite World Cup Delivers 4M+ Hours Watched: Top 10 Twitch Channels, July 22 – 28 - The Esports Observer

Mentioned in this article

Companies:

The World of Warcraft raid race helped esports organization Method lead the way for viewership on Twitch again this past week. 

Meanwhile, the Fortnite World Cup maxed out at more than half a million viewers on Sunday, averaging nearly 200K viewers over 21 hours of coverage throughout the weekend. 

The following channels are ranked according to the total number of hours watched on Twitch Database-Link-e1521645463907 from Monday to the following Sunday, with data compiled using TEO Access.

To the Victor Go the Spoils

Esports organization Method Database-Link-e1521645463907 completed its third victory in the World of Warcraft Database-Link-e1521645463907 race to be the world’s first guild to beat all bosses in a new raid since beginning to stream its efforts, and it’s no surprise that the guild’s Twitch channel reaped the benefits of its players’ success

Top channels RWF

After a falling out with Red Bull Database-Link-e1521645463907 that resulted in the energy drink brand having its own competing stream featuring other guilds, Method still managed to dominate Twitch in terms of viewership. While this raiding race lasted significantly longer than the previous one at the end of January, the build-up to Method’s win on Sunday was evident by the channel’s viewership. 

As guilds slowly but surely progressed on the final boss of the player-vs-environment instance, the average CCV of Method’s channel increased with fans interested in being able to say “I was there watching” when the boss was finally defeated. 

World Cup Worthy

Despite the Fortnite channel regularly producing sub-par viewership compared to personal streams over the course of the year during online qualifiers for the World Cup and other events, the World Cup this weekend produced the strongest viewership for any channel broadcasting Fortnite all year. 

Peaking at more than half a million viewers, the main Fortnite channel averaged 196K concurrent viewers racking up 4.4M hours watched in just three days of broadcasting and 21 hours of airtime. 

Co-Stream, Co-Star

Turner “Tfue” Tenney and Tyler “Ninja” Blevins weren’t able to tend to their personal streams much over the weekend because they were in New York for the World Cup. However, Twitch’s top Fortnite influencers were able to generate massive viewership over the weekend by co-streaming the exact broadcast that the Fortnite channel was airing in live time.

There was no editing or voiceovers involved, but with a strong enough fanbase, the influencers were able to get support from their viewers who decided to watch the same World Cup broadcast that they’d get on the Fortnite channel on a personal stream instead. 

While the viewership of channels like Blevins’ and Tenney’s took away from the main Fortnite channel, the viewership helped Fortnite as a category accrue 14M hours watched from Friday to Sunday. 

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https://esportsobserver.com/top-10-twitch-channels-july22-28/

2019-07-29 18:09:35Z
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