Roki Sasaki is the latest Dodgers pitcher to land on the injured listNew Foto - Roki Sasaki is the latest Dodgers pitcher to land on the injured list

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Touted Los Angeles Dodgers rookieRoki Sasakilanded on the injured list Tuesday with right shoulder impingement. The right-hander is 1-1 with a 4.72 ERA in eight starts. He has 24 strikeouts in 34 1/3 innings while holding opposing hitters to a .225 average. The 23-year-old from Japan joined the Dodgers in January after spending the last four years with the Chiba Lotte Marines of the Nippon Professional Baseball League. It's thelatest blow to the Dodgers' rotation. Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow are on the injured list, althoughClayton Kershawis scheduled to make his season debut Saturday after starting the season on the IL. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Roki Sasaki is the latest Dodgers pitcher to land on the injured list

Roki Sasaki is the latest Dodgers pitcher to land on the injured list LOS ANGELES (AP) — Touted Los Angeles Dodgers rookieRoki Sasakilanded ...
Drake Baldwin helps Braves reach .500 for first time in 2025 with 5-2 win over skidding NatsNew Foto - Drake Baldwin helps Braves reach .500 for first time in 2025 with 5-2 win over skidding Nats

ATLANTA (AP) — Drake Baldwinhit a two-run homer, Spencer Schwellenbach pitched seven strong innings and the Atlanta Braves improved to .500 for the first time this season with a 5-2 win over the skidding Washington Nationals on Tuesday night. The Braves (21-21), who began the season 0-7, handed the Nationals their seventh straight loss. Baldwin was 3 for 4 with two RBIs and three runs scored. Austin Riley was 2 for 4 with an RBI. Atlanta native CJ Abrams homered on the first pitch of the game from Schwellenbach (2-3), who kept the Nationals in check from there. He gave up two runs, four hits and two walks while striking out three. Dylan Lee pitched a scoreless eighth and Pierce Johnson worked the ninth for his first save of the season. Amed Rosario was 2 for 3 with an RBI for the Nats, who have scored just 15 runs during the skid. Washington starter Michael Soroka, an All-Star for Atlanta as a rookie in 2019, went four innings in his first appearance against his former team, giving up four hits and two runs while striking out four. Brad Lord (2-5) gave up two runs in two innings of relief. Key moment With the Braves trailing 2-0 in the fourth inning, Baldwin tied it when he drove a hanging 3-2 slider from Soroka over the right-field wall for his fourth homer of the season. Key stat Atlanta's Ozzie Albies ended an 0-for-28 drought with a one-out RBI single to right field in the sixth inning. It was the longest hitless streak of the nine-year veteran's career and the longest active streak in the majors. Up next Bryce Elder (2-2, 4.97 ERA) will start for the Braves against the Nationals' Mitchell Parker (3-3, 3.97) on Wednesday night. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Drake Baldwin helps Braves reach .500 for first time in 2025 with 5-2 win over skidding Nats

Drake Baldwin helps Braves reach .500 for first time in 2025 with 5-2 win over skidding Nats ATLANTA (AP) — Drake Baldwinhit a two-run homer...
Rain and lightning cut short Indy 500 practice, but Team Penske still shinesNew Foto - Rain and lightning cut short Indy 500 practice, but Team Penske still shines

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Team Penske was fastest on opening day of practice for the Indianapolis 500, a day shortened at the front and back end because of weather. Will Power and two-time defending Indy 500 winner Josef Newgarden went 1-2 in Chevrolets for Penske in Tuesday's abbreviated session. Cars ran only about three hours, first because of morning rain and then a lightning strike ended the session with about 30 minutes remaining. Power turned a lap at 227.026 mph around Indianapolis Motor Speedway, while Newgarden went 226.971 mph. Alex Palou, winner of four of the first five races this season and the current IndyCar points leader, was third fastest for Chip Ganassi Racing. The Honda driver is the two-time reigning IndyCar champion and has won three of the last four series titles. He went 226.673 mph. He was followed by Ganassi teammate Scott Dixon and then Scott McLaughlin, another Penske driver. Four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves was sixth fastest for Meyer Shank Racing, and new father Alexander Rossi, who welcomed his first baby last week, was seventh fastest. The birth of Rossi's son was a surprise to many in the industry as he and wife, Kelly, deliberately did not reveal her pregnancy to many people. "Because why would we?" he asked. The boy, named Benjamin Kenneth, was born last Wednesday. His first name was the only name they could decide on, and his middle name is after her late father. Marcus Armstrong of Meyer-Shank was eighth fastest, Marcus Ericsson, a former Indianapolis 500 winner, was ninth, and Marco Andretti, in his only scheduled IndyCar race of the season, was 10th for Andretti Global. ___ AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Rain and lightning cut short Indy 500 practice, but Team Penske still shines

Rain and lightning cut short Indy 500 practice, but Team Penske still shines INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Team Penske was fastest on opening day of p...
Ramírez homers, Allen pitches 6 sharp innings as Guardians blank Brewers for 2nd straight night, 2-0New Foto - Ramírez homers, Allen pitches 6 sharp innings as Guardians blank Brewers for 2nd straight night, 2-0

CLEVELAND (AP) — José Ramírez hit his seventh homer, Logan Allen allowed three hits in six innings, and the Cleveland Guardians beat Milwaukee 2-0 on Tuesday night, their second consecutive shutout of the Brewers. Kyle Manzardo drove in the Guardians' other run with his second triple this season, a short flyball that got past a diving Jackson Chourio in center field to score Ramírez in the eighth inning. Allen (2-2) walked one and struck out six. Matt Festa, Hunter Gaddis and Emmanuel Clase completed the shutout. Clase got his ninth save. The Guardians have six shutouts this season, includingMonday night's 5-0 winover the Brewers. They have won five of seven overall. Ramírez went deep in the first inning off Quinn Priester (1-2), who allowed three hits in five innings. Ramírez and Steven Kwan each had two hits, including Kwan's ninth double. Carlos Santana walked twice to extend his on-base streak to 16 games. Chourio had two of Milwaukee's three hits, including his 14th double, and stole his seventh and eighth bases of the season. The Brewers have lost five of six. Key moment Chourio doubled to open the sixth but Allen then retired the 2-3-4 hitters, striking out Christian Yelich to end the inning. Key stat Guardians starters have a 2.16 ERA over their last 14 games. They had a 5.24 ERA over the prior 28 games this season. Up next Milwaukee hadn't announced a starter for Wednesday's series finale. Gavin Williams (3-2, 4.38) will pitch for the Guardians. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Ramírez homers, Allen pitches 6 sharp innings as Guardians blank Brewers for 2nd straight night, 2-0

Ramírez homers, Allen pitches 6 sharp innings as Guardians blank Brewers for 2nd straight night, 2-0 CLEVELAND (AP) — José Ramírez hit his s...
Pete Rose timeline: How MLB's all-time hits leader got on and off the ineligible listNew Foto - Pete Rose timeline: How MLB's all-time hits leader got on and off the ineligible list

Pete Rose is officially off MLB's ineligible list and has a clear path to the National Baseball Hall of Fame, assuming Cooperstown actually wants him. MLB commissioner Rob Manfred ended a decades-long saga Tuesday by announcing he will reinstate all deceased members of baseball's ineligible list, reversing the decisions that prevented Rose, Shoeless Joe Jackson and several others from entering the Hall of Fame. The decision reversed Manfred's prior decisions that specifically turned down reinstatement for Rose and Jackson. It is generally known that Rose was kept out of the Hall of Fame because he bet on baseball while serving as manager of theCincinnati Reds, but the story is much more complicated than some realize. It was not as simple as kicking Rose out of the game for breaking one of its firmest rules, nor did reports of Rose's transgressions end after his ban. Here is a timeline with what you need to know about a man who could enter the Hall of Fame as soon as 2028. Outgoing MLB commissioner Peter Ueberroth gets tipped off by Sports Illustrated that it is writing a story on a bookie claiming Rose bet on baseball. Ueberroth calls a meeting with Rose that includes incoming commissioner Bart Giamatti and future commissioner Fay Vincent. At the time, Rose is working as manager of the Reds, a role he took when he joined the team as a player-manager in 1986. He retired as a player in 1986 and ultimately posted a 412-373 record as manager. He remains MLB's most recent player-manager. When asked if he has ever bet on baseball, Rosereportedlysays "I'm not stupid. I've bet on horses, basketball and football, but I don't bet on baseball." The commissioner's office announces it is investigating "serious allegations" against Rose. It does not specify the nature of the allegations. Former federal prosecutor John Dowd is chosen to lead the investigation. The Sports Illustrated story comes out and it's bad for Rose. An investigative report details troubling behavior by Rose, who is said to be potentially at risk of a permanent ban from MLB. Multiple subsequent reports find additional problems for Rose, such as past scrutiny for gambling in the 1970s when he was a player and the IRS seizing betting slips from his alleged bookie. Speaking with reporters for the first time since the allegations emerged, Rose denies some aspects of Sports Illustrated's reporting, but gives a "no comment" on whether he bet on baseball games. Dowd, who reportedly told Vincent, "Fay, I've only been here three days and the evidence is overwhelming that he bet on baseball," submits his 225-page report to Giamatti and it's devastating. The report is later published June 27 and contains strong evidence that Rose not only bet on baseball, but on the Reds while managing them. Rose's lawyers file a lawsuit attempting to stop an already-postponed June 26 hearing and remove Giamatti from the case. They succeed in obtaining a 14-day restraining order to delay the hearing, but not in keeping the case out of federal court. A potentially nasty legal fight is ended when Rose and MLB reach a settlement,which you can still read here, that sees Rose voluntarily placed on the ineligible list. MLB declines to officially rule he bet on games, while he neither confirms nor denies he did so. Here are the crucial statements: a. Peter Edward Rose is hereby declared permanently ineligible in accordance with Major League Rule 21 and placed on the Ineligible List. b. Nothing in this Agreement shall deprive Peter Edward Rose of the rights under Major League Rule 15(c) to apply for reinstatement. Peter Edward Rose agrees not to challenge, appeal or otherwise contest the decision of, or the procedure employed by, the Commissioner or any future Commissioner in the evaluation of any application for reinstatement. c. Nothing in this agreement shall be deemed either an admission or a denial by Peter Edward Rose of the allegation that he bet on any Major League Baseball game. Five months after becoming commissioner and eight days after banning Rose, Giamatti dies of a heart attack at 51 years old. Vincent succeeds him as commissioner. Among the legal repercussions of Rose's various scandals is that he ends up pleading guilty to two charges of filing false income tax returns, after hiding income from autograph sales and betting winnings from the IRS. He is sentenced to five months in prison at a federal facility in Illinois. While it is commonly known that Rose is out of the Hall of Fame because of his permanent ban, what some do not know is he is the singular reason there is a written rule that players on the ineligible list aren't allowed in the Hall of Fame. Despite being banned from the game and having spent time in federal prison, Rose was still on track to be on the BBWAA Hall of Fame ballot for the Class of 1991, having retired as a player in 1986. The Hall of Fame, not wanting to publicly deal with the stain of Rose, unanimously votes to exclude all ineligible list players, formalizing what was already an unwritten rule. Rose's first bid for reinstatement goes nowhere. Vincent doesn't officially reject the bid, he just declines to rule on it. Bud Selig had a lot of issues with Vincent, so much so the former Brewers owner took over as commissioner after leading the charge to depose him, but one area where he agreed with Vincent was Rose. Like his predecessor, Selig receives a request for reinstatement and declines to rule on it. Despite being banned from baseball, an exception is made to allow Rose to take part in MLB's All-Century team festivities. He receives a roaring ovation from the crowd at Turner Field in Atlanta, then takes part in one of the most awkward interviews in the history of televised sports. To that point, Rose had continued to lie about betting on baseball, pleading innocent while hoping MLB would reinstatement him without ever having to publicly confess. NBC's Jim Gray clearly felt it was time for Rose to come clean, and repeatedly asked if Rose was ready to admit and apologize for betting on baseball. Rose declines. After sitting on Rose's reinstatement request for five years, Seligis reportedto have met with him and starts talking about a potential deal. The key requirement: Rose comes clean about his gambling. It doesn't work out. However... In an interview with ABC's Charles Gibson, Rose concedes he bet on baseball in 1987 and 1988. Rose continues to come clean, releasing the book "Pete Rose: My Prison Without Bars," which lays out his new story: He bet on Reds games, but only on his team to win (which is still clearly against MLB rules and comes with its own issues, starting with bookies have leverage over an MLB manager). However, that isn't enough for Selig, who also wants an apology. The timing of the book, which overshadows the Hall of Fame elections of Paul Molitor and Dennis Eckersley, rubs some people the wrong way. Rose's old teammate Joe Morganeven writes a column about it: "I'm disappointed that he chose this course. Rather than holding a press conference, standing up and apologizing for what he's done, Rose has written a book that he'll profit from. Writing a book is the easy way out — plus you profit from it. "I know I haven't seen a genuine apology from Rose yet. Nor have I seen any contrition." X-rays show that a bat used by Rose in 1985, as he was chasing Ty Cobb's hits record,features the telltale signs of corking. A Florida mansays a decade later he did it for Rose. The apology everyone wanted comes six years later, with Rose tearfully admitting that he not only bet on baseball but disregarded the late Giamatti's request to make changes to his life. Fromthe Cincinnati Enquirer: "I disrespected the game of baseball," Rose said. "When you do that, you disrespect your teammates, the game and your family." And here, he broke down, and began to sob. He fought off the tears, as he struggled to finish what he had come here to do. He talked about the late baseball commissioner Bart Giamatti telling him back in 1989 that he needed to "reconfigure" his life. "I didn't know what that meant," Rose said. "It took me years and years (to come to grips with it) . . . I'm a hard-headed guy . . . But I'm a lot better guy standing here tonight (because of finally owning up to it)." Even after admitting to betting on baseball as a player, Rose insisted for years he never bet while playing. A notebook seized from the home of one of his associatesbegs to differ. Another exception is made to Rose's ban, allowing him to appear at the 2015 MLB All-Star Game in Cincinnati,where received loud applause. His relationships with his former teams continued to soften as time went on. The Reds retire his No. 14 a year later, with MLB's approval. Manfred, who succeeded Selig at the start of that year, goes a step further than his predecessors andofficially denies a bid for reinstatement from Rose. In short, Manfred says he does not believe Rose's confessions, that has been truthful even in his confessions or that he has not changed his life at all: "Mr. Rose's public and private comments, including his initial admission in 2004, provide me," Manfred wrote, "with little confidence that he has a mature understanding of his wrongful conduct, that he has accepted full responsibility for it, or that he understands the damage he has caused." Amid the drama about betting on baseball, Rose was dealing with allegations of a far more serious nature. Dowd alleged in a 2015 interview that Rose had committed statutory rape with 12-to-14-year-old girls provided by a memorabilia dealer at spring training in the 1970s, when he was a married father of two in his 30s. Rose sued for defamation and Dowd's legal team responded witha sworn statement from a woman who said she had a consensual relationship with Rose in Ohio when she was 17 years old. The age of consent in Ohio is 16. Rose is fired from his job at Fox Sports. The defamation lawsuitis later dismissed with prejudice after an agreement. MLB embraces sports gambling after its legalized by the Supreme Court but, crucially, keeps in firm rules against players betting in effect. If anything, the rules are enforced even more stringently,as some players can attest. Rose applies for reinstatement with a new strategy:pointing out the hypocrisy of not punishing any Houston Astros players who cheated their way to the 2017 World Series title.Manfred ignores the petition. Rose takes another shot andgets another response from Manfred: "I believe that when you bet on baseball from Major League Baseball's perspective, you belong on the permanently ineligible list. When I dealt with the issue the last time he applied for reinstatement, I made clear that I didn't think the function of that baseball list was the same as the eligibility criteria for the Hall of Fame. That remains my position. Rose dies at heart disease of 83. He is still on the ineligible list, but isn't the baseball pariah he once was. MLB extends its condolences but doesn't indicate it plans to reinstate him. The recently elected Trump, who has endorsed Rose's reinstatement in the past, announces on social media he is signing a "complete pardon" for Rose while railing against his ban. Because MLB is not a federal entity, the most Trump could do is vacate Rose's tax evasion conviction. The same day, Manfred isreported to be considering a petition from Rose's daughter Fawn Rose. Manfred reinstates Rose and every other deceased player in the ineligible list, opening a path to the Hall of Fame. Rose's first real chance at Cooperstown will come in 2027, when the Classic Baseball Era Committee meets. He will need 12 out of 16 votes from the committee.

Pete Rose timeline: How MLB's all-time hits leader got on and off the ineligible list

Pete Rose timeline: How MLB's all-time hits leader got on and off the ineligible list Pete Rose is officially off MLB's ineligible l...

 

TEC SPORTS © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com